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•

.,

'·

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"
;
••
,,,,
"Yes!". So If you need a loan for almost
tho t go everywhere.
color film series will be shown
I
'
I
:
'
. 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
I
. .,
\,
New clinical tests completed at a February 5 at 2: 50 p.m. in
sizes
5
to
~
3,
·
I
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.
·

I

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

•

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

~~

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OH 10

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

FIGHTS UGLY FAT
3 TIMES A DAY

~~I. \:..

.

'

:II
!

DEPOSITS

TO •40,000

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

I

II:('

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

',II
.\ i·

\i

]I

. I'

Ii

\I

\I

\I \t'

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

\~

Button-front, self belt
17" skirt

I

ASl&gt;li:TACIUII WUIILD Of ltATUIIE!

•

I

When You Visit, Park FREE

I\

lnt e r·esl.~

;
I

litbens /~ational

I\

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

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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. .
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. 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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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-

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"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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�3- TheDailySentmei Mlddlepo1t Pmnero) 0 Wednesday

2- The Daily Sent mel Mujdleporl Pomeroy 0 Wednesday Feb 5 !975

"D1d You Hear a H1ccup?"

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Don't underestimate voluntary conseroation
....

Last winter s gasoline shortage was all or moslly phony - a contnvance of the 01! compames
rather than the Arabs - according to famll1es surveyed m the Detroit area last sprmg by the In
stitute of Labor and Industnal Relations
Yet - paradoXIcally - the same people who doubled the authenticity of the ener!lJ criSIS and
thus m1ght have been expected to 1gnore It actual!&gt; undertook conservatiOn measures
For example more than four out of five sa1d they turned out lights or lowered thermostats two
out of three reported usmg the1r cars less for pleasure Nearly half reduced the use of electrical
appliances and about one 111 four cancelled a planned tnp or vacatwn
Overall the fanulles 111terv~ewed took an average of four actiOns to save energy w1th 40 per cent
taking five or more Only two per cent sa1d they made no efforts reports Donald I Warren semor
research sc1entlst at the mstltute a JOint proJect of the Uruvers1ty of Michigan and Wayne State
Uruvers1ty
Because of these find1ngs Warren disagrees w1th the federal governments assertwn that
voluntary conservation hasn t worked illS JUS! the oppos1te and all the more amazmg m VIe\\ of the
high degree of alienation and distrust people felt toward the government durmg th1s per1od
He proposes that the government allocate fund s that may be transmitted as rate adjustments or
rebates to llldiVJduals or commumt1es that s•gmflcanlly lower 1/lelr energ) consumptiOn Incentives
such as these which were practiced durmg World War II could certamly be reinstated he says
In any case he urges we must do all we ca n to encourage a nationwide program of \oluntary
conservation And we must deVIse a way of linkmg conservatiOn w1th tangible benefi ts mstead of
punishment

Bicentennial restoration
Arnenca s BJcentenn~al•s expected to be 111 sharp contrast to her JOOth anruversary m !876 when
Pluladelplua staged a world s fa1r that highlighted the natwn s technologiCal progress and prowess
The 1876 festiVal awed Americans w1th such mventwn,s as the ~0-foo t h1gh 7IJO.ton Corliss steam
engme the first electric light and the telephone For 50 cents a VISitor could have a letter tapped out
to a friend on the newfangled typewriter Women still largely lumted to home and hearth welcomed
the Smger sewmg machine and an automatic baby feeder (whatever happened to that )
Lack of money and riValry between Cities and states have ruled out another fa1r on the 1876 scale
Present lnd1cati9ns are that observances of the Bicentenmal m 1976 will for the moo t part sk1p the
wonders of 20th-century technology and concentrate on nostalg1~ and restoration
The energy Crisis mflation recession and other economic Ills have g1ven riSe to a des1re among
many Americans to recapture our roots
In keeping with this mood one of the nation s oldest fmns B1rd &amp; Son Inc of East Walpole
Mass manufacturer of roofmg sidmg and mdustr1al machmery has launched a program of
providing fmanclal assistance to hJstoricai restoration and preservatiOn proJects throu ghout the
United States
Matchmg grants of up to $5 000 will be considered for any project des1gned to Improve the ex
terior of historic properties to make them more accessible understandable or enVIronmentally
compatible to the public they serve
A ghost town In Utah has as much chance of receivmg assiStance as a salt box on Cape Cod
says Ral!XJ E Helm, president of the firm that was founded 1n 1795 In fact we hope that groups
from every state and region will apply for funds
So far he says more than 300 requests have been received

Averting Boston's

Easy on sunlamp

second revolution

to avoid problems

lntell~

'How far you think wed get if we wrote a letter to the
editor•• grumps a man In a tam o shanter at the South Boston
lnfonnation Center ''The highest up you get In tills neighborhood
la a cop We got no open line to the mayor you know Sometimes
you bust heada to get at~tlon '
n would, of colll'8e be ever 110 much better If the • bust head
theory of persua.sloo was absent here Yet at least the prac
tltloners come by it honestly, civil rights movements historically
(p'ab headlines with lrutality 'And the thing Is, ' says Nancy
Votta 'no matter hll'll' we tn!llt about it, the protest would he
rapped We're not black, )'OU see we 're white Try getting
Jylllplltby 011 that
I'D fad, JIIOil Soutbles do not really want sympathy, only
111denlandlng And fair judgmellt Given that, the American
way lbere lbould be 110 reuon to e:zpect bloodletting fort!ver
be~ Dented 1~, honwr, tlHi wOridng class ii stripped of 1ts
cberllbed protect1oo of juBilee, ai1d results may be dreadful
'1bere 11110 revolution like a working man's revolutlon - Boston
1ltandl by Ita ._ctbone

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AKRON - Goodyear has set
up a sidewalk showroom of
ney, cars at 1ts corporate
headquarters here and IS of
fenn g a $100 bonus to any of the
compan) s 100 000 domeshc
employes and rehrees who buy
a 1975 aut omobile
Cars made b) eac h of
Detrmt s b1g ~~tpma kers
are parked on the Side;~ aik
tmder a 3().foot w1de banner

DR. LAMB

BOSTON - It still seems strange to some to hear Nancy
Yotts criticize the syst1em Even in these times when such Is the
predilection of increasing munbers of citizens when grumbles
can be ~ed at the drop of an opportunity from young people
PD&lt;Il' people black people it remains a kind of contradiction for
Mrs Yotts to do likewise
!lie is lower middle class white married to a hard hat back
bone of the ~unity and ali that It Is accurate to say the
larger society has grown used to her kind suffering In silence and
anonymity
Small wonder then that as Yotts and much of the rest of the
working class population of South Boston continue their loud
protest against school busing, thell' motlves and emotlons are
largely misunderstood Branded racists since last September s
school opening the epithet IS Inappropriate
' All we want is fairness says Mrs Yotts her arms folded
over a housewife s cardigan, part of her hair pinned in curls
macks have been caught up in It sure, but we d be complaining
whatever their color If you pulled my boy out of his school and
replaced him with anybody I'd stand up and howl
There Is no reason not to beUeve Mrs Yotts If anything Is
known about America's fundamental work~ class it is that its
members are candid to a fault If a trucker hates blacks he picks
no bones about It Similarly the obvious racists connected with
the Boston busing dispute have Identified themselves by word
and deed They however do not predominate Why then the
racl!tcharge• Because It is an easy answer the hard thing to do
would be for Boston and America to admit that the wants and
reaaonings of Its working stiffs have, for decades, been omitted
from the process of progreSSive thought
The omission is easily explained Descendants of Jacksoman
America heroes of democratic mythology the working whites
(largely comprlaed of ethnic groups - In Boston the )rlsh) have
been thought to be primary beneficiaries of the American ex
perience This is theJ nation that has made common dreams
reaUty The rich got richer which is true In all nations but here
workers profited too
As the nation changes however the class does no! Thus the
workers have been left behind socially econonllcally and
plillosophically 91oulderlng the heaviest of aU tax burdens and
worried about changing moralities as the late Saul Allnsky said
they now 'feel more alone than any other members of society
This then Is the root of the Boston matter 'Goddamlt
sayd a Southle I pay for this country out of my own pocket but
nobody gives a crud what I say Buffeted by the black lobby, the
liberal lobby and jlO)Itlcal muscle unchamploned labor has
simply decided to fight back Violence may be the wrong kind of
combat but men who work oo the docks know they can 1 compete

Sll VER RIDGE - A Budd)
Ervm Jumper from the foul! ne
w1th 4 seconds remam ng hftcd
the Southern Tornados to a 4
46 VICtOr) over th e Easle~ 1
Eagles here Tuesday mght
chmaxwg a heche see sa\\
battle be t11 een the Soulhe•n
Vaile) Athlel!c Conferences

President 1s not loymg w1th
nterventwn m the M1ddle East
By Ray Cromley
WASHINGTON - A fnend or w1 th bombmg m Southeast
then m charge of antJbalhshc Asia Some go so far as to
m1ss• le
research
and nd1cule the hmts as futile
development was prepared to saber rattling Others scoff al
argue at the drop of a hat tha t the F o rd K1ss1nge r
the ADM was essential to our Schiesmger candy sword
But w1th ali that the
arsenal because 1t would add
m•ghhly to the uncertamty of Russ 1an s Arabs Is raeli
Russia s 1n1htary and pohhcal Chmese and the Nor th VIetplanners
namese cannot be sure The
When you bu1ld a maJOI h1gh U S offlc~a ls whooe
radiCally different weapon that decJswns count the Senate the
a potential enemy canno t House of Representatives and
obta m to study my fnend Arnen can pubhc opmwn most
would say 1t confuses the1r cer tamly are today strongly
experts They can never be agamst armed landmgs m the
sure what your system can and Middle East mlf1elds and d~rect
cannot do They must assume mtervenhon m VIetnam I But
the worst Th1s uncertamty the world kn o;~s by now that
then IS of greater value to our op m10n m the Umted States can
secur1ty than the actual ac turn 180 degrees overmght It
curacy or rehab•hty of the has m the pas t
ABM Itself
Mr N1xon as president
Defense Secretary J ames virtually formahzed th1s un
Schiesmger has much of the certamty strategy 1n both war
same feebng to th ose who and peace H1s brea kthroughs
arg ue the Russians th e to Russia and Chma were
Chmese the North V1etnamese abrupt turnabouts H1s on
and the members of the world agam off agam actwns m
ml cartel Will grow arrogant Southeast Asw culmmatmg
and reckless m the1r ac!Jons w1th the surpnsmg •maswn of
bemg convmced that we have Cam bodia and the fmal ali-out
lost our w1ll he has one reply bombmg of North V1etnam
But you forge t uncertamty
most cer tamly surprised Hano1
A democracy Schlesmger IS and the world s m1htary and
convmced acts m such un pohllcal experts
prediCtable ways not even the
But we need not hm1l our
most astute Russ1an Arab selves to Mr Nuwn Our
lsraeb Chmese or VIetnamese movement mto Korea much to
can foreteli what an Arnencan the astomshment of the
president or Congress Will do Russians came not long after
poratwn Akron The Kelly or what the Arnencan pubhc Secretary of State Dean
wJli favor from one day to the Acheson had made 1! clear we
Spnngf1eid T1re Company
next
We don t know ourselves cons1dered the area outside our
Cwnberiand Md Lee T1re &amp;
Th1s rea sonmg IS be~md the zone of v1lal mterest
Rubber Company
Con
senes
of md1rect hmts by
Our entry mto the V1etnam
shohocken Pa and Motor
President
Ford
Secretary
of
war followed a long penod of
Wheel Corporatwn Lansmg
State K1ssmger and by years m whiCh our highest
MICh
Schiesmger on the possJbJhty offi cials an d our ieadmg
Goodyear and 1ts sub
sJdJarJes operate 70 produchon of an armed takeover of m1htary men had regularly
ollflelds 1n the Middle East 1f recorded the w1dsom of staymg
facJbhes m the U S em
pioymg more than 85 000 the mdustnal econom1es of the completely clear of the area
persons About 15 000 retirees West are strangled by an 011 m1h tar~l y From the facts
embargo lt may also have available 1t seems that
are ebg1ble for the bonus
Ptlhod sa1d other sidewalk been m the mmd of Mr Ford President Eisenhower con
showrooms w11l be se I up aI when he refused to rule out a s1dered 1! extremely unw1se
ali maJOr Goodyear plants and renewed bombmg m V1etnam 1f even to mtervene temporanly
mstaliahons mcludmg those at the s1 tuatwn there should turn b&gt; a1r to ass•st the French
crJ heal for Sa1gon
temporanly m the D1en B1en
Umon City Tenn Gadsden
Now
everyone
knows
the
Phu
penod
Ala Topeka Kan Danvtlle
Va Houston and Los Angeles

flercc st rt\als

En 1n s basket 11 as the e 1d
resu lt of the 1ntra count;
mat chup that sal\ the ga me
l1ed m d-&lt;Jr the lead cha nge
hand s 24 t mes as th e lor
nados upped the1r seaso n
record to 9 7 6-4 m ti e SV AC
Eastern drops lu 3-13 overall I
7 IP league pia)
Southern gettmg last second

read1ng
Get
Amenca
Rollmg m a move wh1ch
Goodyear Chairman Charles J
P1lhod Jr hopes w11i be
another shot m the arm for
the economy
For most makes and models
he sa1d AmeriCan Motors
Chrysler Ford and General
Motors w11l match the
Goodyear bonus as an addition
to any rebates or mce ntives
prevwusiy offered to shmulate
new car sales
The Goodyear bonus plan
covenng ney, cars dehvered
Jan 13 through Feb 28 IS
ava•la ble to employes and
re tirees of Goodyear and ali 1ts
s ub s •d•ane s Including
Goody ear Aerospace Cor

I
I

should he checked early 1

Report

penods
rt e Tor nad&lt; s JIUllped out I
a I 0 lead 1n the f1rst q1 arter

scUl l

as netther team cmmd mo1ml
an1 II ng offe nsl\ ei) 1n the

stm za

Southern aga n h1l a o porI

4

Southwes teJ n s va rsit y
record dipped lo 8-7 overall and
55 1n lhe SVAC The
Highlander reserve squad IS 6
4

Hannan Trace has a two
game lead \H th JUst one game
to pia; Overall the Wildcats
have an outstandmg 13 2 slate
It ;~as also Hf s 32nd straight
North Galha s Pirates won
v1ctory on the~r home planks thm lOth game of the year
The Wildcats won the SVAC Tuesda; mght w1th a 81 72
cage crown m 1973 74 and tnumph over the non league
shared 1t the prev1ous yea r Wahama Wh1te Falcons
w1th Eastern and Synunes
The viCtory was spearheded
Valley Remammg games will by a 71 pOin t combmed effort
be played agamst T••mble by Semor Mike Ca mden Jumor
Southern and Wahama
guard Greg James and
Tuesday s VIctory was led by
Wayne Hesson s 25 pom ts
Mark Swam semor gua rd and
all state candidate had 22
pomts wh1ie the eve r
N BA Stand ngs
1mprovmg Charhe Cremeans
By Un t ed Pr ess nl ernat ona
Eastern Confe rence
canned 19 pomts
Atlant c o v son
HT Jumped mto a 22-18 lead
w
pet g b
on
36 1.:1 720
at the end of the first penod Bos
B uff a o
JJ 19 63 5 ~
27 25 5 19 10
The Wildcats led 38-31 at the N ew Yo r K
l ph a
22 31 4 15
5
half only to see a stubborn P h adeCe
ntra l D vts on
Southwestern squad coached
w t pet g b
Wash n g ton
36 15 706
by Richard Hamilton pulled Hou
ston
25 27 48
1
even midw ay through the th1rd Cl eve and
24 27
47 1 2
lant a
22 33 400 6
period The stanza ended w1th NA ew
0 ea n s
6 42
25 28
Hannan Trace holdm g a
Wes t ern Conference
Mtdwe st D v so n
pre ca nous 58 57 lead The
w
pet g b
JO 2
588
Wildcats wrapped 11 up w1th a Ch cago
De
tro
J
l
23
57 4
26 pom t fourth quarter
K C On a a
27 26 509
4
;14 25
490
5
Pacmg the Highlander at M waukee
Pac he D v s on
lack were Terry Carter Uoyd
w
pet g b
Wood and Kevm Walker Go d en Stat e 31 20 608
Sea t! e
25 26 49 ~ 6
Carter led the way w1 th 27 Phoen
x
2 1 27 438
8
22 29 43
9
pomts Wood dumped m 17 Por and
les
9 3
380 11
Walker 14 and J1m N1da L os Ange
Tu es dav s .Re sults
scored II pomts
Ph ade lph a 11 Buffalo 105
k 09 L os Ange es 94
Hannan Trace sank 38 of 77 ANtlewa ntYor
a
C eve land 97
floor attempts for 49 pet and Ch cago 102 Por land 90
ld en State 107 Houston 05
seven of II free thj'ows South Go
Pt1 oen x 90 Wash ngton 89
western h1t 28 of 70 attempts
Wedn esday s Game s
Los Ange es a t Ph adelpt1 a
for 40 pet and 18 of 25 at the Hous
ton a t New 0 eans
chanty str1pe The Wildcats Port and vs KC Omaha
at Kansas C y
grabbed 35 rebounds w1lh Bos on a M waukee
Phoen x a Seatt e
Cremeans gettmg II
In the reserve game South
western edged Coach Dan
N Hl Stancl ngs.
Bv Untted Press Internal on a
Cornell s W•ldkJitens 28 27
Dvswnl
M1ke Fortner and John Gilham
w J I pts gf ga
Ph ad ph a 32
7 71 178 106
had s1x each for the wmners NYRang
er s 26 5 10 62 210 166
Wh1tt paced HT w1th 12
NY l sl ande s21 7 13 55 172 139
22 20 0 54 47 49
Southwestern s vars1ty All a n Ia Ovtson2
record d1pped to 8-7 overall and
w I t pts gt ga
Vancouver 26 2 5 57 76 62
55 m the SVAC The Ch
cago
24 22 6 54 67 st
Highlander reserve squad IS 6- St Lou s
19 23 9 47 164 184

I1

'r

I lt

11

ccnte1 Tm

w1th

Spence•

Ba

t~ ,

1e:;p{ u.1cd w1th a len up

sc 11 e

~ nd I 1glt .St._ vc Ncb 1

"rp

fi UII

(I

II\ up

I

fl
J-; 1\ c

J-4 2? Jn t~ J H li S~ I r'I'J

,, ld
Tit lwu &gt;q 1His b IItied b tk
md fmth m ti e th 1rd q 1 r t:
d 1&lt;- h "a s 11 11ul
U\
m 1 e uu:; fu Us \Hth a BoHle\

18 fuule1 kn olllng tlu t 1nl I

agchn

Dann) Brm\n c.:ashed 1 Ill
SCl:Ond of J free lluows to give
the J ,. nados 1 1 pomt m arg1

P I" J.,;m ng Jll o tl t

f

1 1! 8

r tn1t cs

Jhe st1 ea k sl

t agcun to
hm st Easlc• mto the lead f01
the fu stllm e al 21 20" lh I 41
Jell n tJ e f1 sl half
Rober Is lui a pa1r of fr ee

bef1 r e Spencer h

c Hight fn e

11

II

It d \\llh JL SI l 07 l l! IH II Jg

!Il l)

Dun 11g

d~ll t: 1tl

s( u ul

las

IJ

!he

G~eg

l&gt;ef It

11 II t 1\Cietl
~ l lht:rr

se n or

I tt r ~

llu ee qwck b 1skets
St utherr pulled ahead tn I
11 Ihe I l4 n 11 k befm t Cre g
It ttc the

\\

l lflntd I It

B1

1

got

1

bu trv" u
l(S ldt I

df'l H.Uth \li t h 4J SCl

pull S mllwrr I• 11 lh r I I 4G
4o f llo11 ed ll\ 1 d 11 ~ 11 ~ t 1il
tg lll!SI Spence!
sr c prl s 1 ( m un n ~

\\ tl

)OJ

S 1tl et 1 w01 kc t fu 1 I st
\\I Cr I tppl e ntl v lu I II
b II 1 I &lt; f b 1 1 ds B 11 ]111Hp
b II "' called 11nde~ lh
I 1 J&lt;io b 1skct 11111 18 e r I
cn11 n 1g a 1d tl c I u11 u It

til

I ng Ba l&lt;1
t

n

fu al fr a me

nI oiled the lip
W1th I slcrr I 1 k1 g f

I{&lt;bcrls lc lokc the I sl sh&lt;t
8 11iey led ail scorers on the
I e S 1I er floor Je ulc1 f md mght "1th 18 poml&lt; 14 commg
f 111r PC! 11 the fu II hr c or d 111 tJ e second half l he only
lhe 5 I se mor guaul s siH t htt other Eagle m twm f1gures was
Ihe f 01I of the r llll II e back Spencer " 1lh 1I
lx tl md the ns1 ic lefl SJde of
B1own paced the Tm nado
lh c Jill "s II c bail curled atl&lt;lck w1th 14 pomts 11h1ie
tlu Ol gh tht.: 1c t \\ltl 4 SH: 11 ds Rober ts added 12
t '"'ng on the lloLk
1 he ror nados hit 20 or 50 held
llv II c I me tl e l':aglcs co!ld goa l attemp l&lt; f&lt; 1 40 pel and 7
II tam e o 11 JUS1 Ur c sec )J d &lt;f 15 at the foul ome for 47 pet
n: m ur ed n I 1 I 1st I tel
fhe Ea~les connected 19
I ree-q 1 tt: 1 u u1 t sl ot by
tunes 1n 'J7 tnes from the floor
Hil ke fe ll IIC ii si r I of the fo1 13 pet while cashmg m 8
I [I!

k

l11llrng 4 b 1skcts mosth f1 1
tl c 18 22 f1 ot r 11 ge !l ong tJ e
b 1sehne

f1 om

ts E(istc n

be lied

4I 40 ctef1&lt; 1 to 1 ~G-43

Sport Parade

Han nan f 1ace 111ll t1 a vel to
Southwestern (74) - Wa ker
s
4
14 Wood 7 l 17 Car ter 11 s
Tnmbie Fnday Soutlmestern
27 Grate I 3 S N1da 4 3 11
will ht;&gt;st Eas te r~ Fnday
Totals 28 18 74
Hannan Trace (83) -

lly MILTON RICHMAN
UP I Sports Editor

Hesson

Eastern reserves of Duane
Wolfe used first and thJrd
quarter sconng margms to
defeat the Southern juniOr
vars1 ty 49-43
The Eagles took a 9-5 first
quarter lead and held that 4
p01nt margm at mterm1ssion
23 19 Eastern outscored South
ern 12 9 m the th1rd frame to
take a 35 28 lead in the fmal
period
Phil LaComb led th&lt;&gt; Eagle
reserves With 12 pomts wh1le
tums 1r 14 attemp~ at the Joe Kuhn added 11 The Tor
chanty stupe fm 57 pet
nado alta&lt;;!&lt; was paced by Joe
Eas ter n held a 40 32 Brown s 12 markers with
reboundmg advantage led by R•chard Teaford addmg 10
,te' e Nelson w1th 15 Ba1iey
SOUTHE RN (471 - Dunning
l 0 4 Hrll 33 9 Erv n 3 0 6
11th 10 a1d Spencer w1th 8
Is S 2 12 Shultz I 0 2
B1 own ha lied m 14 nussed Rober
Brown 6 2 14 TOTA~S 20 7 47
hots for Southern to go w1 th
EASTERN (46) - Bailey B 2
li S 8 blocked shots
wh1ie 18 Blake l 0 6 Spencer 6 I 13
Harr s o o o
Bo wen 0 3 J
Dunmng added 7 cal oms
Nelson 2 2 6 Good o 0 o
in the p1 eh mma1y game the TOTAL S 1 9 8 46

Rio in "must"
'
battle tonight

NEW YORK ( UPI ) - Pubhc opmwn the m1ght1est moot
mexorable
force mall tbe world gradually keeps pushmg J1nuny
1 19 Halley 4 0 B Swa n 10 2
Connors
toward
a deciSion he inevitably has to make He can
22 Totals lB 7 83
delay 1t but he can t put 1t off fore ver
There will come a tune when he II run out of options when he II
rhe Rw G1 an de Redmen can te nth leadmg rebounder w1th
have to declare one way or the other whether he Wishes to play on
lake
over
undisputed 7:8 bounds per game
the U S DaVIs Cup tenrus team and represent h1s country or not
possesswn of set:ond place and
Ohio Domm1can 1s commg 1
Sooner or later Jumny Connors \\Ill have to say yes or no kee p ti e1r shm M1d Ohw
off an 83 79 victory over Ur I
sophomore gua rd Fred I ogan stand to f1msh second behmd defmlllvely and I m sure his answer Will be yes because ever
Conference tJtle hopes ahve bana a team R10 Grande
James led the wa) w1th 35 Hannan Trace
smcehe has been a little boyheal\\ays wanted to play on th e U ~
11 hen
they
host OhiO clobbered earher m the season
pomts on 15 baskets and f1ve
Th e Pu ates have f1v e Dav1s Cup team
Domm1can tomght at Lyne 120.75 at Lyne Center
free throw s Logan and remammg games pn or to the
Yet for three years now he has turned down InVItations to do Center
Elsewhere m Ohw college
Camden contubuted 18 pomts Class A Sectwnal Tournament so He has decimed for what he calls personal reasons ones
1 he Redmen are currently 4 actwn lomght M1am1 opens
eac h
at Me1gs Friday mghl NG "111 which men t that complex or difficult to understand when you 2m MOC play 2 games behmd
what 11 hopes to be a dnve for
The wm pushed North play at Kyger Creek Other know the enllre background for his answers
leag ue leadmg Malone at G-0 the top spot m the Mid
Gaiha s season record to 10.3 opponents are Southwestern
It IS generally known that he and Denrus Ralston one tune
Ohw Dom uucan meanwhile IS
overall lns1 de lhe SVAC Miller Eastern of P1ke Coun ty coach and prdent captam of the U S DaVIs Cup team aren t JUS! a half game ahead of Rw Arnencan Conference when the
Redskms host
Eastern
Coach J1m Foster s Pirates and Wahama
crazy about each other This many people says IS one of the at ~ 1
Michigan
Tuesday mght North Ga iha ovemdmg reasons Connors keeps saymg no every tune he gets
Rw paced by sophom ore
M1am1 4 3 m the MAC tails
Jumped mto an Jll-13l ead at the an mv1te to play from the DaviS Cup committee The startmg
J1m Noe the league s second ieadmg Bowhng Green ( 6-3 ) by
end of the f•rst penod The pomt for all th1s goes back three years to 1972
top scorer and top rebounder a game but 1f the Redskms get
Jinuny
Connors
had
just
come
East
from
Cabforru~o
play
on
Pirates
were
ahead
34
29
at
the
Tuesdav s R esults
despite playmg at the guard
Buffa o 6 Detro t
half and out shot Wahama •a the Independent Players AssocJatwn run by B1ll Riordan his spot 1s expected to start Noe by the Hurons tomght they can
Ch cago 3 Kansas C ty 3
26 to move mto a 62 55 lead close fnend and adv1sor Connors was an unknown at the hme a and freshman G1I Pr1ce at the grab at least a share of the IItle
Toronto 5 S Lou s 3
Saturday mght w1th a win at
19 year-old freshman at UCLA
P t sb ur g h 3 V a n couver 2
gomg mto the fma l per~od
guards w1th Andy Davenport home over BG
Wednesdays Game s
Playmg m the Georgetown Uruvers1ty tournament lor Vmce and Dan Bolhnge1 m the
Leadmg Wahama s scoung
:l h lad e ph a a N Y Ranges
Weste r n M1ch1gan wh1ch
Bos ton a A t a Ia
were Chuck Johnson wtth 24 Lombardi Concer Research he f1rushed second lhe Nastase won corners and J1m Stewart at
Detro t a Man r ea
plays
at Eastern M1Ch1gan
pomts Jeff Gilland w1th 18 and and received $4&lt;1 000 Connors the runnerup got nothing because center
h cago a t M nnesota
Saturday could also share the
wash ng on a t ca fo r n a
he was an amateur He talked to h1s fnend B11l Riordan who
Ray Tucker had II pomts
rhe Panthers on the other lead
p
sburgh a t L os Ange les
North Galha hJt 34 of 70 at was and still IS president of the Independent Players Associ~
hand are led by Mark Lum
The Eastern at M1ami game
tempts for 48 pet and 13 of 18 at lion and told him he wanted to turn professiOnal Riordan talked the leagues seventh ieadmg
lomght IS tHe only MAC game
..,ternat onal Hockey
the foul ime Wahama sank 32 w1th Connors mother and told her he thought 11 was time
scorer w1th a 15 6 ppg average
Lea gue Stand ng s
So Jumny Connors turned pro and Riordan who has known and Ken Tumb1lson the MOC s on tap although Kent State
By Un ted Pre ss Inferna l ortal of 56 shots for 57 pet and e•ght
North
Contmued on page 6
of 18 free throws The Pirates him smce he was a little boy uruned1ately got hun a $3 000 deal to
w 1 t pts gf ga held a 47 23 reboundmg edge play m Caracas
Sag naw
33 20 2 68 213 18
F nl
Gee Denrus (Ralston) has InVIted me to play on the DaVIs
32 17 4 68 199 52 w1th James gelling 19 and
Muskegon 32 20 2 &lt;66 214 56
C\jp team agrunst the Bnt1sh West Indies m Jama1ea Connors
Pt Huron 2 28 3 45 7d 87 Bruce Runyon 10
Kalama
4 ?3 3 3 1 34 91
Wahamll edged Nor th informed Rwrdan the day after the Georgetown tourney ended
x La n s
2 28 I 25 45 2 7 Galha s L1ttie Bucs 58 57 m the
What should I do •
South
Jumny when your country asks you to play 1t s an honor
w I t pts gf ga reserve hit
Day ton
32 7 3 67 2
80
18 16 28 19---81 Riordan replied You automatically acce pt There s no question
Co l um bu s 30 23
6 224 195 North Gaiha
To edo
2 27 3 5 200 198 Wahama
13 16 26 17-72 what you do
D es Mones 22 28 3 47 179 200
Connors caught a Jet for Kingston Jan181ca the following day
North Galloa 181)
Logan B
F t Wayne
8 29 J 39 17 197
and began pracllcmg w1th two other team members Tom
x team d sband ed
2 18 Runyon 1 0 2 Camden 7
Tuesda y s Result s
4 18 James 15 5 35 Payne 3 2
Gorman and Enk Van Dillen On the eve before the openmg
Af Star Game at Ka amazoo 8 Totals 34 13 81
matches
Ralston announced Gorman and Van D1Uen would play
North 4 So ut h 3 ot
Wahama !721 - Gilland 9 0
Ton ght s Games
m
those
matches
18 Johnson 10 4 24 Harmon 4
Colu mbus at Fort Way n e
1 9 Young 3 I 7 Holbrook 1 0
You re not plaYIIIg well enough Connors he sa1d You re
F ! nt a To edo
2 R T ucker 5 l ll and R•ggso
Muskegon a Dayton
not gonna play
1 1 Totals 32 B 72
Ka ama zao at Sag naw
Juruny Connors was crushed He felt he knew why Ralston
wasn t play111g hun He believed 1t was because he hadn t s1gned
w1th Donald Dell who was represenlmg every member of the
DaviS Ct!p learn mciuding Ralston Dell1s a former DaVIs Cup
Instant-On
captrun a players agent and legal counsel to the Association of
Performance
Tenms Professionals arch mals of Rwrdan s group
For Today's
Connors p1cked up the phone and called Riordan after bemg
Cars AI A
turned down by Ralston The followmg day Connors grand
Popular
mother who had helped brmg hun up and whom he was so close
to died m Los Angeles When Rwrdan called Connors In Jalll8lca
Low Pnce!
BALTIMORE (UPI) - Na- members who have refQsed to to tell him 1t was hiS world had come to an end Alter the funeral
thaniel Frazier who last year play unless thell' coach IS he had a long heart-to.!Jeart talk w1th R1ordan about h1s future
led Morgan State s basketball remstated
Riordan advised hun to go to Europe play the clay courts and
Fraser sa1d the suspensiOn get experience
team to the NCAA small
college championship ap will stand pending a lull 1n
You re gomg to be homesiCk you re going to be miserable
peared Tuesday to be on his vestigatlon ofa Jan II InCident you re gomg to get beat Riordan told hun but before you
way out as coach and professor at Brockport State 111 which become world champiOn you re gomg to have to take your
because of an Incident With a referee Peter Pavia com lickmgs
• Dry c} o. rg cd ford pr. nd
plamed that Fraz1er cursed
referee
Connors listened He went to Europe and was elunlnated m
bl ong lasl ng J ower
Dr Thomas Fraser mterun and touched him durmg an every tournament he played m generally m the f1rst or second
• 1 oly1 opylen~ c se and
cuver f r I gh power to
pres1dent of Morgan State sa•d argument over a foul call
round
w gl t r t o
heat and
sa1d
the
sc
hool
w11i
Fraser
the coach would rell!aln sus
He was low He called Riordan nearly every rught for a month
shock
s
5f fm c
pended pendmg an 1n dec1de on the coach s status Finally after a month, Riordan made a trip to Pans to see
• Non fi P as! ll ng vent
Cll l s I rgc pia cs plas t c
vestJgatJon of the mcldent before Morgan s scheduled Connors He found Connors very depressed On the day Riordan
12 Vol t
w th exchanae r b se1 ara tors
addmg he s out anyway you game Fr1day ngaiJISI North arr1ved Connors lost to a long tune bitter nval Harold Solomon
G o~p AW 22f
Carolina Central He sa1d the of Silver Sprmg Md m the first round ot the French Open
know
Amp Hou
Capat ly 36
He s put coachmg above the players would remam on
Riordan took Connors to a little French restaurant on the
liP 1o AHC45 w lh C ou p AW 24
quality of education We JUSt scholarship even if they refuse Champs Elysee trymg to cheer hun up Connors only fooled w1lh
FREE INSTAlLATION'
p ced ~ ~ ght ~ ~ &amp;he
to
play
the
rest
of
the
season
can t have that Fraser sa1d
his food
Coach Frazier unavailable
during a recess of a state
Holy smoke the f1rst round - but to Solomon- ! can t beheve
legislative budget hearmg for comment on the president s 11 he snddehly exclauned But wa1t a m111ute Connors in
remarks has satd he thought terrupted hunself hal(mg second thoughts The guy played
here
his
suspension was an mju.s better than I did and he beat me
He dldn t get tenure and he
m 2101
would have been out th1s sprmg lice
BID Riordan smiles recounhng the ep1sode
The Bears were 12-3 this
anyway and I think that s part
That s when I knew I had a world champiOn he says
season
and 72-28 for 3,. 'years
of hiS problem '
And about hun playmg on the DaviS Cup team Rwrdan
Fraser s remarks were his under Frazier before the a.dds he 11 play tomorrow 1f they get~th~e:po~li~tl~cs~o~u::tl~t::__ _,.;...._ _ _ _ _ _
first public comment about the forfeits The team won last
dispute wtth the baskethall years small college champion
coach wh1ch alrea.!fy has led to ship with a 23-li record
two forfeitures by the team
Ki Y®Ui H®tmJJB 'll'@NIDHT
1 3 25 Ha l 4 1 9 Cremea ns 9

Southwestern 18 20 18 18---74
Hannan Trace 22 19 16 26---83

Pirates upend Wahama

Pro Standings

M nn esota
Kansas c ty

.CARLSON CAlLED UP
BLOOMINGTON
Mmn
(UPI) - Jack Carlson a 2().
year-old left wmger has been
called up by the World Hockey
AssoCiation s Mmnesota F1ght
mg Samts from the club s
Johnstown Pa farm club

13 30 6
o 34 7
0 v s on 3
w r 1
Montr ea l
J O 9 13
Los Ange es 29 9 13
P f sbur g h
21 19 1
3 28 0
De tro t
Wash ng ton
4 42 5
Dvt s on4
w I I
Buffalo
3&lt;1 1 7
Boston
27 14 0

Toronto

20 25

Ca tarn a

12 33

321 332 5
271 27 21 9
pfs gf

71 17812
53 207 192

36 149 204
13 108 265

pts gf ga
75 23 1 158
64 232 151
7 47 175 203
9 33 41 214

BARTON WEIDEL
WILL BE HERE

THURS., FEB. 6
To present A mer cas

r nesr

colle ctlpn of

quality fabr cs for gentlemen s clothes custom

~

ta1lored by -

Thrs 1s your opportunity to
1nterpret fash Oil your own
way

~

ga

7J 240 145

Open All Day Thursday

Trophy
money
is1needed

I

111 1 12 fm ter Ul the opcmng
m ru te
the second penod
bcfm c Ihe E 1glcs knotted Ill&lt;

western

I
I
I
I
I
I
I,

By Lawrence E Lamb M D
the amount of asp1nn he takes
DEAR DR LAMB - I am 17 combmed w1th h1s dnnkmg has
By Clarence
and hke many of my friends I me womed I d s ure ap
use a sunlamp for my com prectate an answer
Miller
Th1s IS the fourth m a senes teeth or overlappmg bite •f left II
piexwn I kn ow !hat too much
DEAR READER - He of s1x ar!Jcles on dental health untreated may lead to
ultra VIolet li ght can be shouidn t do 11 It 1s not the published by th1s newspaper m
detenoratlon of the teeth and
For qwte some time now we abandonment proposals would
dangerous
same danger that you get from cooperahon w1th the Reb gwns and to other disorders
have been workmg closely with be stacketl agamst rural raJ!
I usually take 11 10 mmutes at the comb1natwn of asp mn and wmkel Dental Soc1ety m ob
In
many
cases
no
treatment
local offiCials and ra1l users hnes under th1s pian I voted
a hme but I m not sure when a barbiturates or sleepmg p11is servance
of
Nahonal Is reqwred The looth comes m throughout Southeastern OhiO agamst the Reorgamza!Jon Act
safe hme would be to use 1! bul there are dangers
Children s Dental Health crooked or rotated and on the Important Issue of ra1l when 11 ongmally came before
agam
l am more warned about the Week February 2-8
corrects Itself w1th the normal lme abandonments At the the House A ra1i abandonment
I m concerned about th1s posslbthty of bleedmg Alcohol
muscle
movement of the present hme the newly
report ISSued by the U S
and I msure 1! would be helpful 1s a powerful 1rntant to the
MY CHILD S FIRST per tongue and cheeks However 11 created U S Railway Deparlment of Transportatwn
to other users 1f ) ou would stomach and using much of 11 manent teeth seem to be
IS Important to consult w1th the AssOCJa!Jon (USRA ) IS m the
apprOlumately one year ago
comment on th1s
can cause an mflammatwn of commg mcrooked What would fam1Iy dentist as early as
supported
my susp1cwns about
process
of
drawmg
up
a
DEAR READER - I m not the stomach or gastnhs That you suggest be done at th1s
poss1bie
as
he
IS
the
only
one
rural
areas
suffenng most m
Prehmmary
Ra1l
Systems
an enthusiast of the use of sun IS part of the reason for the bme ?
who
can
diagnose
the
child
s
the
ra1i
reorgamzatwn
exer
Plan mtended salvage and
lamps Enough ultra VIolet stomach upse t th at often
The f1rst step IS to un problem and dec1de on a course
c1se
The overwhelmmg
rev1tahze several fmanc1aliy
hght to mamtain a tan can follows dnnkmg
derstand that malocclusion of treatment
proporhon
of lmes constdered
troubled
raJ!
lmes
operatmg
cause mjury to the underlymg
Asp~rm m any large quan
the Irregular alignment of
of
the
Improper
alignment
excess
m
the
DOT report were
throughout a 17 state Nor
sk1n and adds to the ac ht1es tends to decrease the
teeth
may
be
hereditary
or
theast and Midwest regwn of m the rural regwns ana In
cumulahve effects of sun bght blood s clottmg actiOn or may
may
be
caused
by
accidental
or
1
the
na!Jon The Prelimmary Ohw the Southeastern corner
That lovely sun tan hab1t leads mduce bleedmg Aspmn may
environmental
factors
Systems
Plan w1ll be made of the Slate felt the greatest
to an old skm before your hme also burn a small hole m the
Prolonged
thumb
suckmg
pubhc February 26 1975, w1th a 1mpact of proposed wholesale
specifically loss of skm hmng of the stomach causmg
mouth breathing or the habit of Fmal System Plan to be drawn ra1i abandonments Early last
eiasllcJty and wrmkhng
bleeding Obv10usi)
the
biting the lips or tongue may up and submitted for ) ear we opposed these DOT
Some are more susceptible to combmatwn of aspmn and
mcrease
a tendency to a Congressional ac!Jon th1s proposals at pubhc heanngs 1n
the harmful effects of too much lll cohol is a n&lt;&gt;-no Th1s IS a
particular
dental ll'l'egularJty summer or fall
Columbus
sun than others and are apt to good thmg for cold sufferers to
If
a
primary
tooth
is
lost
W1th the ISSUance of the
The
ent~re
railroad
develop spots on the skm that remember when they take
prematurely
a
ne1ghbormg
USRA
Prellmmary Systems
process
is
evalua twn
are often the forerunner to skm asp1r1n and try to cure their
tooth
may
dnlt
mto
the
space
proceedmg
under
the Plan nearmg we have vo1ced
cancer So If you want to have colds w1th booze
causmg problems when the provisions of the Ra1l the deep concerns of
a h1de that looks hke an
The b1g question 1s why does
permanent teeth erupt
ReorganiZatiOn Act of 1973 Southeastern Oh10 rail users
alligator early m hfe just lour husband take aspirin ' If
Whatever
the
problem
direcUy to federal decision
approved m the 93rd Congress
overdo th e sun worsh1ppmg he has a mediCal problem he
howeve
your
denUst
can
he
of
As one who feared that the makers A strong case for
bit ~hether 1t IS the summer should get some attention and
help
He
may
replace
a
missing
retaming many of the present
sun for fun or the sum lamp In proper treatment
tooth
with
a
space
maintamer
hnes has been made Without
the bedroom
dev1ce
that
keeps
the
teeth
a
adequate rail serv1ces to serve
For those "ho ms1st on usmg
sh11tmg
mto
empty
from
SHOWER
GIVEN
present
job producmg en
11 I 11 ould recommend that lou
and
saving
room
for
the
A
shower
was
g•ven
m
honor
spaces
terpr1ses
and
attract new ones
follo;~ the directions carefully
permanent
teeth
JOHN
B
ARTRIP
of
Julius
Preston
Jr
at
the
the economiC reVIva l and
for both d1stance and hme
Army SpeclaUst Five John
If a permanent tooth •s ready Blue and Grey Restsurant growth of Southeastern Ohio
exposure Try to hm1t that ur.ge
to erupt but there is no room Monday Gifts were presented can be ll'l'eparably damaged
B Artrip, bemedaled suo-toto get a deep tan and be
for
11 the tooth may come m to him by hiS employes Dons
law
of
Mrs
Bessie
Napper
Is
In adHition to deahng wt!h
satisfied With aVOiding a ffiJJk
crooked
and
push
other
teeth
McDonald
Jane
Roush
Jo
Ann
currently
on
leave
at
1%9
USRA on thiS matter I am
;~hJte appearance For safe
out
of
line
For
thiS
reason
the
Butternut
Ave
Pomeroy
King
Goldie
Reeds
Charlotte
agam
co-sponsoring a b1il that
distances you should hm1t
denUst
may
have
to
extract
the
before
departlq
early
in
LewiS
Paula
McKinney
and
would
prOhibit the USRA from
exposure to no more than a fell
pnmary
tooth
February
for
Korea
Chuck
Miller
Cake
1ce
cream
¥PProvmg the abudonment of
nunutes a da y A low level
RACINE
The
Southern
The
dent1st
may
also
and
coffee
were
served
He
Is
being
reaulped
anyra•ll111e
until December 31
dati) expooure •s better than
recommend
that
you
consult
an
from
Fort
Campbell,
Ky
for
Girls
Athletic
Club
has
raised
1976
In
essence
the b1ll places
mfrequent
large
and
enough
money
to
pay
for
new
orthodonUst
a
specialist
m
duty
at
Chejado
Island
just
mor1tonurn
on
any rail
a
somehmes harmful doses
NAME OMITTED
uniforms
and
members
are
oH
tbe
South
Korea
shore
correcting
deformities
of
the
READ mE DIRECTIONS ON
The name of Irene Barnes, abandonment ac!Jon The
teeth
and
jaws
now
working
on
funds
for
During
his
Army
career
be
mE LAMP, THEN FOI.;LOW
Pomeroy was onu !ted from federal government has gone
trophies
to
be
given
away
at
However
good
preventive
bas
spent
14
months
In
THEM but stay on the short
!lie list of Oh1o Umvers1ty ahead w1th plans to abandon
care
should
start
early
dental
the
basketball
tournament
Germany
and
two
years
in
certam ra1l lines
many m
s1de of the tune rang e
Regular dental visits begm students who received grades our area
Tbe tournament will be held VIetnam
even
before
a
recommended
to qualify for the dean s list for
at
Southern
H1gh
School
this
nmg
when
a
child
IS
about
2
Among
his
awards
and
comprehensiVe
railroad
ser•
DEAR DR LAMB - I am
years of age or when all his the fall quarter Miss Barnes IS vice plan ls fully considered by
concerned about the amount of year and schools competing decorations are the Natloaal
a jun1or majoring m home
Defense Service Medal,
pnmary teeth have erupted
the Congress Once such lines
aspirin my husband consumes are Kyger Creek Me1gs
economics education
Gaihpohs
Easter'~!'\
and
Vietnam
!iervlce
Medal
with
wiD
help
the
denUst
foresee
are
abandoned they are not
He takes as many as four
Southern
The
club
'extends
six
campaigns,
Vietnam
correct
future
problems
and
only
expensiVe to reopen bul
aspirin at a tune How often I
TO MEET FRIDAY
thanks
to
Cross
Grocery
Star
Campaign
Medal
with
10
couldn t sa) He also drinks
Tbe Pomeroy Elementary 111 the case of Southeastern
Hardware
Brinker
s
Jewelry
devices,
Good
Conduct
Sloppmg Set"VIce IS
and I know the aspll'ln hasn t
PTA execuhve comnu !tee will OhiO
Johnson
TV
Racine
Plurnb111g
l\1edal
second
award,
Army
disastrous
to manufacturmg
worn off as he s so dope) when
hold a meeting at the school at
and
Heatmg
Vista
Rosen
Commendatlon
Medal
wltb
he drinks along w1th taking
2 p m Friday All officers are busmess and agricultural
berry Pennzoll and R C first oak leaf cluster, 8ronze
concerns 111 our area To date,
DANCE PLANNED
aspmn
urged to attend
BotllinS
Co
for
donations
Star
Medal,
Aircraft
we
have endeavored to keep
A SQuare dance Will he held
1 m concerned he could kill
The
next
game
will
be
played
crewmemberll
badge,
uput
rail users posted on matters of
Sat\ll'day from 9 to lllldnight at
PTA TO MEET
himself on aspmn and alcohol
at
Southern
High
School
on
marksman
badge
mtereslal
the federal level and
the
Shade
School
by
Frog
Stack
Tbe
Metgs
County
Council
of
I read that one should never
Feb
11
at
t
)I
m
aga1nst
Kyger
Meritorious
Uolt
Cllatloa,
'o\1!
wtll
cootinue
to make every
and, The Greenhorns under PTA wtU meet at 7 30 p m
nux batbJturales or sleepmg
Creek
The
poblic
IS
mv1ted
Cro~s
of
Vietnamese
sponsorship of the Shatle PI'A Thursday at the Salisbury effort to see that adequate rail
p11ls and alcohol I know
Gallantry
with
palm
and the
AdnussJOn
IS
50
cents
for
adults
Door pnzes will be awaided Elementary School A Faun serviCe to Southeastern Ohio IS
aspmn 1sn t a barbiturate yet
and 25 cents for students
Presidential Unit Citation.
The public IS lnv1ted
ders Day program will be held maintained and protected'

and 24 22 11 mtt:rn t.ss or
befo1e the Eagles knotted the
score at 32 l2 afler lhrec

ea rl v go mg
So 1lhern 1pped Ihe lead to IS
m1ch as B pomts at II 5 w1th
I 19 rema mmg n the f rsl
pe n od before a pan of Rand\
Blake buckets m the !mal
rmuute p1~l ed the Eagles lo
111th n 4 at 13 9 aft e1 tJ e first

Coach Paul Dillon s Hannan
Trace Wildcats captured the1r
th~rd straight league cham
p10nsh1p and second outr1ght
!Jtle m twovears Tuesda) mght
w1th an 83- 7~ over So uth

--------------------------1I

! Washington

1 rar gm 1ts l 1rgest lead •f II
mgl I a&gt; M1kc Rubc1Is popped

HT clinches title

I

Crooked teeth in yormg

baskels m ail but one qua1ler
led 13 9 aft er the !Irs! penod

Today 's

Goodyear posts $100 lure
to purchase new 1975 auto

TOM TIEDE

By Tom Tiede
The law is wrong the government is wrong I m sick and
llredofbelngpushedaround ' - Nancy Volts South Boston

Democracy's secret
weapon: Uncertainty

-- - -::=:.::·:::::-::::~

o 1'175

Tornados edge by Eastern in closing seconds

RAY CROMLEY
'

Editorial comment,
• •
opznzon, features

h~

t'l

KA}{N~..

~~\

&lt;:&gt;

SJtlart new
opt anal

buttons

models
I n1ngs and

skolled

techn• cal

adv ce
perfect on of f t
un
cond1t1ona~

guaranteeAli add up to clothes
that expre~ s your own ';:j~~;
life styl"' and pe" ~
sonahty
t o let you
dress lor yourse lf

•

New York Clothing House
KERM'S KORNER
POMEROY, OHIO

~

GOODYEAR

Regular •34.95 Save

•a.oo

Former star on

way out as coach

''Al~

BAnERY

$

95

Meigs Tire Center

..,---:-:'-:::=-:=:::::::-1

THE APPALAtHIAN GREEN PAl\KS rMJF.CT

The
E x clu s ve fa bn cs

~

Da1~

COLUMBUS

Sentinel

Sports, Vacation and TraveJ Show

DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS MASON AREA
CHESTER L TANNEHILL
Ex:ec Ed
ROBERT HOEFLICH
ClfY Ed tor
'Publ Shed da ly except
Saturday by The Otuo Va ley
Publtsh ng Company
111
Cour t St
Pomeroy
Oh o
45769 Bus ness Off ce Phone
99 2 2156 Ed torta Phone 992

Columbus, Ohio

FEBRUARY 8-16- OHIO STATE
FAIRGROUNDS COLISEUM
AND ADJOINING PAVILION
Intersta te 71 -

Extt a t lltn or 17th

AH~

Sponsored by Dispatch Chanties

21 57

Second c la ss postage pa d at
Pam eroy Oh lo
Nat anal
adverts ng
r epresent at ve
8ott nell
Ga tagh er Inc 12 E as t 42nd
Sl New York New York
Subscript on
rates
D~ ltvert d by carr er wnere

r)roduced b.) Hart ProduetiOn!O

Saturday and Sunday
IPMtollPM

*
*

Weekdays

6PMtoiiPM
•

ava labl e 75 cents per week

I a.~t Sunday I P M to 7 JJ m

month $3 25 Bv mall n Oh o
and w va One YeC~r S22 oo
s x months Sll 50 Three

• Boats
e ( •If Te nnl!'i and
• ~r1.1nK EqUipment
Other Outdoor \ &lt;tl\ 1t1es
• C'ountl'} Western Staxt Sho"
e Sta le Sect 1onal and ( anadum 1'nncl Uureaus

By M otor Route where carr er
serv ce not availab le One

months
S7 00
Elsewhere
S26 00 year
S1x months
513 SO
thr ee months S7 50
Subsu pt on price
nc u(Jes
Sundav T mes Sf!ntinel

\J)ULTS I
~ 00

&lt; h(ldren 1 I and l nder

75 CENTS

'

I

�3- TheDailySentmei Mlddlepo1t Pmnero) 0 Wednesday

2- The Daily Sent mel Mujdleporl Pomeroy 0 Wednesday Feb 5 !975

"D1d You Hear a H1ccup?"

\\I

Don't underestimate voluntary conseroation
....

Last winter s gasoline shortage was all or moslly phony - a contnvance of the 01! compames
rather than the Arabs - according to famll1es surveyed m the Detroit area last sprmg by the In
stitute of Labor and Industnal Relations
Yet - paradoXIcally - the same people who doubled the authenticity of the ener!lJ criSIS and
thus m1ght have been expected to 1gnore It actual!&gt; undertook conservatiOn measures
For example more than four out of five sa1d they turned out lights or lowered thermostats two
out of three reported usmg the1r cars less for pleasure Nearly half reduced the use of electrical
appliances and about one 111 four cancelled a planned tnp or vacatwn
Overall the fanulles 111terv~ewed took an average of four actiOns to save energy w1th 40 per cent
taking five or more Only two per cent sa1d they made no efforts reports Donald I Warren semor
research sc1entlst at the mstltute a JOint proJect of the Uruvers1ty of Michigan and Wayne State
Uruvers1ty
Because of these find1ngs Warren disagrees w1th the federal governments assertwn that
voluntary conservation hasn t worked illS JUS! the oppos1te and all the more amazmg m VIe\\ of the
high degree of alienation and distrust people felt toward the government durmg th1s per1od
He proposes that the government allocate fund s that may be transmitted as rate adjustments or
rebates to llldiVJduals or commumt1es that s•gmflcanlly lower 1/lelr energ) consumptiOn Incentives
such as these which were practiced durmg World War II could certamly be reinstated he says
In any case he urges we must do all we ca n to encourage a nationwide program of \oluntary
conservation And we must deVIse a way of linkmg conservatiOn w1th tangible benefi ts mstead of
punishment

Bicentennial restoration
Arnenca s BJcentenn~al•s expected to be 111 sharp contrast to her JOOth anruversary m !876 when
Pluladelplua staged a world s fa1r that highlighted the natwn s technologiCal progress and prowess
The 1876 festiVal awed Americans w1th such mventwn,s as the ~0-foo t h1gh 7IJO.ton Corliss steam
engme the first electric light and the telephone For 50 cents a VISitor could have a letter tapped out
to a friend on the newfangled typewriter Women still largely lumted to home and hearth welcomed
the Smger sewmg machine and an automatic baby feeder (whatever happened to that )
Lack of money and riValry between Cities and states have ruled out another fa1r on the 1876 scale
Present lnd1cati9ns are that observances of the Bicentenmal m 1976 will for the moo t part sk1p the
wonders of 20th-century technology and concentrate on nostalg1~ and restoration
The energy Crisis mflation recession and other economic Ills have g1ven riSe to a des1re among
many Americans to recapture our roots
In keeping with this mood one of the nation s oldest fmns B1rd &amp; Son Inc of East Walpole
Mass manufacturer of roofmg sidmg and mdustr1al machmery has launched a program of
providing fmanclal assistance to hJstoricai restoration and preservatiOn proJects throu ghout the
United States
Matchmg grants of up to $5 000 will be considered for any project des1gned to Improve the ex
terior of historic properties to make them more accessible understandable or enVIronmentally
compatible to the public they serve
A ghost town In Utah has as much chance of receivmg assiStance as a salt box on Cape Cod
says Ral!XJ E Helm, president of the firm that was founded 1n 1795 In fact we hope that groups
from every state and region will apply for funds
So far he says more than 300 requests have been received

Averting Boston's

Easy on sunlamp

second revolution

to avoid problems

lntell~

'How far you think wed get if we wrote a letter to the
editor•• grumps a man In a tam o shanter at the South Boston
lnfonnation Center ''The highest up you get In tills neighborhood
la a cop We got no open line to the mayor you know Sometimes
you bust heada to get at~tlon '
n would, of colll'8e be ever 110 much better If the • bust head
theory of persua.sloo was absent here Yet at least the prac
tltloners come by it honestly, civil rights movements historically
(p'ab headlines with lrutality 'And the thing Is, ' says Nancy
Votta 'no matter hll'll' we tn!llt about it, the protest would he
rapped We're not black, )'OU see we 're white Try getting
Jylllplltby 011 that
I'D fad, JIIOil Soutbles do not really want sympathy, only
111denlandlng And fair judgmellt Given that, the American
way lbere lbould be 110 reuon to e:zpect bloodletting fort!ver
be~ Dented 1~, honwr, tlHi wOridng class ii stripped of 1ts
cberllbed protect1oo of juBilee, ai1d results may be dreadful
'1bere 11110 revolution like a working man's revolutlon - Boston
1ltandl by Ita ._ctbone

'

AKRON - Goodyear has set
up a sidewalk showroom of
ney, cars at 1ts corporate
headquarters here and IS of
fenn g a $100 bonus to any of the
compan) s 100 000 domeshc
employes and rehrees who buy
a 1975 aut omobile
Cars made b) eac h of
Detrmt s b1g ~~tpma kers
are parked on the Side;~ aik
tmder a 3().foot w1de banner

DR. LAMB

BOSTON - It still seems strange to some to hear Nancy
Yotts criticize the syst1em Even in these times when such Is the
predilection of increasing munbers of citizens when grumbles
can be ~ed at the drop of an opportunity from young people
PD&lt;Il' people black people it remains a kind of contradiction for
Mrs Yotts to do likewise
!lie is lower middle class white married to a hard hat back
bone of the ~unity and ali that It Is accurate to say the
larger society has grown used to her kind suffering In silence and
anonymity
Small wonder then that as Yotts and much of the rest of the
working class population of South Boston continue their loud
protest against school busing, thell' motlves and emotlons are
largely misunderstood Branded racists since last September s
school opening the epithet IS Inappropriate
' All we want is fairness says Mrs Yotts her arms folded
over a housewife s cardigan, part of her hair pinned in curls
macks have been caught up in It sure, but we d be complaining
whatever their color If you pulled my boy out of his school and
replaced him with anybody I'd stand up and howl
There Is no reason not to beUeve Mrs Yotts If anything Is
known about America's fundamental work~ class it is that its
members are candid to a fault If a trucker hates blacks he picks
no bones about It Similarly the obvious racists connected with
the Boston busing dispute have Identified themselves by word
and deed They however do not predominate Why then the
racl!tcharge• Because It is an easy answer the hard thing to do
would be for Boston and America to admit that the wants and
reaaonings of Its working stiffs have, for decades, been omitted
from the process of progreSSive thought
The omission is easily explained Descendants of Jacksoman
America heroes of democratic mythology the working whites
(largely comprlaed of ethnic groups - In Boston the )rlsh) have
been thought to be primary beneficiaries of the American ex
perience This is theJ nation that has made common dreams
reaUty The rich got richer which is true In all nations but here
workers profited too
As the nation changes however the class does no! Thus the
workers have been left behind socially econonllcally and
plillosophically 91oulderlng the heaviest of aU tax burdens and
worried about changing moralities as the late Saul Allnsky said
they now 'feel more alone than any other members of society
This then Is the root of the Boston matter 'Goddamlt
sayd a Southle I pay for this country out of my own pocket but
nobody gives a crud what I say Buffeted by the black lobby, the
liberal lobby and jlO)Itlcal muscle unchamploned labor has
simply decided to fight back Violence may be the wrong kind of
combat but men who work oo the docks know they can 1 compete

Sll VER RIDGE - A Budd)
Ervm Jumper from the foul! ne
w1th 4 seconds remam ng hftcd
the Southern Tornados to a 4
46 VICtOr) over th e Easle~ 1
Eagles here Tuesday mght
chmaxwg a heche see sa\\
battle be t11 een the Soulhe•n
Vaile) Athlel!c Conferences

President 1s not loymg w1th
nterventwn m the M1ddle East
By Ray Cromley
WASHINGTON - A fnend or w1 th bombmg m Southeast
then m charge of antJbalhshc Asia Some go so far as to
m1ss• le
research
and nd1cule the hmts as futile
development was prepared to saber rattling Others scoff al
argue at the drop of a hat tha t the F o rd K1ss1nge r
the ADM was essential to our Schiesmger candy sword
But w1th ali that the
arsenal because 1t would add
m•ghhly to the uncertamty of Russ 1an s Arabs Is raeli
Russia s 1n1htary and pohhcal Chmese and the Nor th VIetplanners
namese cannot be sure The
When you bu1ld a maJOI h1gh U S offlc~a ls whooe
radiCally different weapon that decJswns count the Senate the
a potential enemy canno t House of Representatives and
obta m to study my fnend Arnen can pubhc opmwn most
would say 1t confuses the1r cer tamly are today strongly
experts They can never be agamst armed landmgs m the
sure what your system can and Middle East mlf1elds and d~rect
cannot do They must assume mtervenhon m VIetnam I But
the worst Th1s uncertamty the world kn o;~s by now that
then IS of greater value to our op m10n m the Umted States can
secur1ty than the actual ac turn 180 degrees overmght It
curacy or rehab•hty of the has m the pas t
ABM Itself
Mr N1xon as president
Defense Secretary J ames virtually formahzed th1s un
Schiesmger has much of the certamty strategy 1n both war
same feebng to th ose who and peace H1s brea kthroughs
arg ue the Russians th e to Russia and Chma were
Chmese the North V1etnamese abrupt turnabouts H1s on
and the members of the world agam off agam actwns m
ml cartel Will grow arrogant Southeast Asw culmmatmg
and reckless m the1r ac!Jons w1th the surpnsmg •maswn of
bemg convmced that we have Cam bodia and the fmal ali-out
lost our w1ll he has one reply bombmg of North V1etnam
But you forge t uncertamty
most cer tamly surprised Hano1
A democracy Schlesmger IS and the world s m1htary and
convmced acts m such un pohllcal experts
prediCtable ways not even the
But we need not hm1l our
most astute Russ1an Arab selves to Mr Nuwn Our
lsraeb Chmese or VIetnamese movement mto Korea much to
can foreteli what an Arnencan the astomshment of the
president or Congress Will do Russians came not long after
poratwn Akron The Kelly or what the Arnencan pubhc Secretary of State Dean
wJli favor from one day to the Acheson had made 1! clear we
Spnngf1eid T1re Company
next
We don t know ourselves cons1dered the area outside our
Cwnberiand Md Lee T1re &amp;
Th1s rea sonmg IS be~md the zone of v1lal mterest
Rubber Company
Con
senes
of md1rect hmts by
Our entry mto the V1etnam
shohocken Pa and Motor
President
Ford
Secretary
of
war followed a long penod of
Wheel Corporatwn Lansmg
State K1ssmger and by years m whiCh our highest
MICh
Schiesmger on the possJbJhty offi cials an d our ieadmg
Goodyear and 1ts sub
sJdJarJes operate 70 produchon of an armed takeover of m1htary men had regularly
ollflelds 1n the Middle East 1f recorded the w1dsom of staymg
facJbhes m the U S em
pioymg more than 85 000 the mdustnal econom1es of the completely clear of the area
persons About 15 000 retirees West are strangled by an 011 m1h tar~l y From the facts
embargo lt may also have available 1t seems that
are ebg1ble for the bonus
Ptlhod sa1d other sidewalk been m the mmd of Mr Ford President Eisenhower con
showrooms w11l be se I up aI when he refused to rule out a s1dered 1! extremely unw1se
ali maJOr Goodyear plants and renewed bombmg m V1etnam 1f even to mtervene temporanly
mstaliahons mcludmg those at the s1 tuatwn there should turn b&gt; a1r to ass•st the French
crJ heal for Sa1gon
temporanly m the D1en B1en
Umon City Tenn Gadsden
Now
everyone
knows
the
Phu
penod
Ala Topeka Kan Danvtlle
Va Houston and Los Angeles

flercc st rt\als

En 1n s basket 11 as the e 1d
resu lt of the 1ntra count;
mat chup that sal\ the ga me
l1ed m d-&lt;Jr the lead cha nge
hand s 24 t mes as th e lor
nados upped the1r seaso n
record to 9 7 6-4 m ti e SV AC
Eastern drops lu 3-13 overall I
7 IP league pia)
Southern gettmg last second

read1ng
Get
Amenca
Rollmg m a move wh1ch
Goodyear Chairman Charles J
P1lhod Jr hopes w11i be
another shot m the arm for
the economy
For most makes and models
he sa1d AmeriCan Motors
Chrysler Ford and General
Motors w11l match the
Goodyear bonus as an addition
to any rebates or mce ntives
prevwusiy offered to shmulate
new car sales
The Goodyear bonus plan
covenng ney, cars dehvered
Jan 13 through Feb 28 IS
ava•la ble to employes and
re tirees of Goodyear and ali 1ts
s ub s •d•ane s Including
Goody ear Aerospace Cor

I
I

should he checked early 1

Report

penods
rt e Tor nad&lt; s JIUllped out I
a I 0 lead 1n the f1rst q1 arter

scUl l

as netther team cmmd mo1ml
an1 II ng offe nsl\ ei) 1n the

stm za

Southern aga n h1l a o porI

4

Southwes teJ n s va rsit y
record dipped lo 8-7 overall and
55 1n lhe SVAC The
Highlander reserve squad IS 6
4

Hannan Trace has a two
game lead \H th JUst one game
to pia; Overall the Wildcats
have an outstandmg 13 2 slate
It ;~as also Hf s 32nd straight
North Galha s Pirates won
v1ctory on the~r home planks thm lOth game of the year
The Wildcats won the SVAC Tuesda; mght w1th a 81 72
cage crown m 1973 74 and tnumph over the non league
shared 1t the prev1ous yea r Wahama Wh1te Falcons
w1th Eastern and Synunes
The viCtory was spearheded
Valley Remammg games will by a 71 pOin t combmed effort
be played agamst T••mble by Semor Mike Ca mden Jumor
Southern and Wahama
guard Greg James and
Tuesday s VIctory was led by
Wayne Hesson s 25 pom ts
Mark Swam semor gua rd and
all state candidate had 22
pomts wh1ie the eve r
N BA Stand ngs
1mprovmg Charhe Cremeans
By Un t ed Pr ess nl ernat ona
Eastern Confe rence
canned 19 pomts
Atlant c o v son
HT Jumped mto a 22-18 lead
w
pet g b
on
36 1.:1 720
at the end of the first penod Bos
B uff a o
JJ 19 63 5 ~
27 25 5 19 10
The Wildcats led 38-31 at the N ew Yo r K
l ph a
22 31 4 15
5
half only to see a stubborn P h adeCe
ntra l D vts on
Southwestern squad coached
w t pet g b
Wash n g ton
36 15 706
by Richard Hamilton pulled Hou
ston
25 27 48
1
even midw ay through the th1rd Cl eve and
24 27
47 1 2
lant a
22 33 400 6
period The stanza ended w1th NA ew
0 ea n s
6 42
25 28
Hannan Trace holdm g a
Wes t ern Conference
Mtdwe st D v so n
pre ca nous 58 57 lead The
w
pet g b
JO 2
588
Wildcats wrapped 11 up w1th a Ch cago
De
tro
J
l
23
57 4
26 pom t fourth quarter
K C On a a
27 26 509
4
;14 25
490
5
Pacmg the Highlander at M waukee
Pac he D v s on
lack were Terry Carter Uoyd
w
pet g b
Wood and Kevm Walker Go d en Stat e 31 20 608
Sea t! e
25 26 49 ~ 6
Carter led the way w1 th 27 Phoen
x
2 1 27 438
8
22 29 43
9
pomts Wood dumped m 17 Por and
les
9 3
380 11
Walker 14 and J1m N1da L os Ange
Tu es dav s .Re sults
scored II pomts
Ph ade lph a 11 Buffalo 105
k 09 L os Ange es 94
Hannan Trace sank 38 of 77 ANtlewa ntYor
a
C eve land 97
floor attempts for 49 pet and Ch cago 102 Por land 90
ld en State 107 Houston 05
seven of II free thj'ows South Go
Pt1 oen x 90 Wash ngton 89
western h1t 28 of 70 attempts
Wedn esday s Game s
Los Ange es a t Ph adelpt1 a
for 40 pet and 18 of 25 at the Hous
ton a t New 0 eans
chanty str1pe The Wildcats Port and vs KC Omaha
at Kansas C y
grabbed 35 rebounds w1lh Bos on a M waukee
Phoen x a Seatt e
Cremeans gettmg II
In the reserve game South
western edged Coach Dan
N Hl Stancl ngs.
Bv Untted Press Internal on a
Cornell s W•ldkJitens 28 27
Dvswnl
M1ke Fortner and John Gilham
w J I pts gf ga
Ph ad ph a 32
7 71 178 106
had s1x each for the wmners NYRang
er s 26 5 10 62 210 166
Wh1tt paced HT w1th 12
NY l sl ande s21 7 13 55 172 139
22 20 0 54 47 49
Southwestern s vars1ty All a n Ia Ovtson2
record d1pped to 8-7 overall and
w I t pts gt ga
Vancouver 26 2 5 57 76 62
55 m the SVAC The Ch
cago
24 22 6 54 67 st
Highlander reserve squad IS 6- St Lou s
19 23 9 47 164 184

I1

'r

I lt

11

ccnte1 Tm

w1th

Spence•

Ba

t~ ,

1e:;p{ u.1cd w1th a len up

sc 11 e

~ nd I 1glt .St._ vc Ncb 1

"rp

fi UII

(I

II\ up

I

fl
J-; 1\ c

J-4 2? Jn t~ J H li S~ I r'I'J

,, ld
Tit lwu &gt;q 1His b IItied b tk
md fmth m ti e th 1rd q 1 r t:
d 1&lt;- h "a s 11 11ul
U\
m 1 e uu:; fu Us \Hth a BoHle\

18 fuule1 kn olllng tlu t 1nl I

agchn

Dann) Brm\n c.:ashed 1 Ill
SCl:Ond of J free lluows to give
the J ,. nados 1 1 pomt m arg1

P I" J.,;m ng Jll o tl t

f

1 1! 8

r tn1t cs

Jhe st1 ea k sl

t agcun to
hm st Easlc• mto the lead f01
the fu stllm e al 21 20" lh I 41
Jell n tJ e f1 sl half
Rober Is lui a pa1r of fr ee

bef1 r e Spencer h

c Hight fn e

11

II

It d \\llh JL SI l 07 l l! IH II Jg

!Il l)

Dun 11g

d~ll t: 1tl

s( u ul

las

IJ

!he

G~eg

l&gt;ef It

11 II t 1\Cietl
~ l lht:rr

se n or

I tt r ~

llu ee qwck b 1skets
St utherr pulled ahead tn I
11 Ihe I l4 n 11 k befm t Cre g
It ttc the

\\

l lflntd I It

B1

1

got

1

bu trv" u
l(S ldt I

df'l H.Uth \li t h 4J SCl

pull S mllwrr I• 11 lh r I I 4G
4o f llo11 ed ll\ 1 d 11 ~ 11 ~ t 1il
tg lll!SI Spence!
sr c prl s 1 ( m un n ~

\\ tl

)OJ

S 1tl et 1 w01 kc t fu 1 I st
\\I Cr I tppl e ntl v lu I II
b II 1 I &lt; f b 1 1 ds B 11 ]111Hp
b II "' called 11nde~ lh
I 1 J&lt;io b 1skct 11111 18 e r I
cn11 n 1g a 1d tl c I u11 u It

til

I ng Ba l&lt;1
t

n

fu al fr a me

nI oiled the lip
W1th I slcrr I 1 k1 g f

I{&lt;bcrls lc lokc the I sl sh&lt;t
8 11iey led ail scorers on the
I e S 1I er floor Je ulc1 f md mght "1th 18 poml&lt; 14 commg
f 111r PC! 11 the fu II hr c or d 111 tJ e second half l he only
lhe 5 I se mor guaul s siH t htt other Eagle m twm f1gures was
Ihe f 01I of the r llll II e back Spencer " 1lh 1I
lx tl md the ns1 ic lefl SJde of
B1own paced the Tm nado
lh c Jill "s II c bail curled atl&lt;lck w1th 14 pomts 11h1ie
tlu Ol gh tht.: 1c t \\ltl 4 SH: 11 ds Rober ts added 12
t '"'ng on the lloLk
1 he ror nados hit 20 or 50 held
llv II c I me tl e l':aglcs co!ld goa l attemp l&lt; f&lt; 1 40 pel and 7
II tam e o 11 JUS1 Ur c sec )J d &lt;f 15 at the foul ome for 47 pet
n: m ur ed n I 1 I 1st I tel
fhe Ea~les connected 19
I ree-q 1 tt: 1 u u1 t sl ot by
tunes 1n 'J7 tnes from the floor
Hil ke fe ll IIC ii si r I of the fo1 13 pet while cashmg m 8
I [I!

k

l11llrng 4 b 1skcts mosth f1 1
tl c 18 22 f1 ot r 11 ge !l ong tJ e
b 1sehne

f1 om

ts E(istc n

be lied

4I 40 ctef1&lt; 1 to 1 ~G-43

Sport Parade

Han nan f 1ace 111ll t1 a vel to
Southwestern (74) - Wa ker
s
4
14 Wood 7 l 17 Car ter 11 s
Tnmbie Fnday Soutlmestern
27 Grate I 3 S N1da 4 3 11
will ht;&gt;st Eas te r~ Fnday
Totals 28 18 74
Hannan Trace (83) -

lly MILTON RICHMAN
UP I Sports Editor

Hesson

Eastern reserves of Duane
Wolfe used first and thJrd
quarter sconng margms to
defeat the Southern juniOr
vars1 ty 49-43
The Eagles took a 9-5 first
quarter lead and held that 4
p01nt margm at mterm1ssion
23 19 Eastern outscored South
ern 12 9 m the th1rd frame to
take a 35 28 lead in the fmal
period
Phil LaComb led th&lt;&gt; Eagle
reserves With 12 pomts wh1le
tums 1r 14 attemp~ at the Joe Kuhn added 11 The Tor
chanty stupe fm 57 pet
nado alta&lt;;!&lt; was paced by Joe
Eas ter n held a 40 32 Brown s 12 markers with
reboundmg advantage led by R•chard Teaford addmg 10
,te' e Nelson w1th 15 Ba1iey
SOUTHE RN (471 - Dunning
l 0 4 Hrll 33 9 Erv n 3 0 6
11th 10 a1d Spencer w1th 8
Is S 2 12 Shultz I 0 2
B1 own ha lied m 14 nussed Rober
Brown 6 2 14 TOTA~S 20 7 47
hots for Southern to go w1 th
EASTERN (46) - Bailey B 2
li S 8 blocked shots
wh1ie 18 Blake l 0 6 Spencer 6 I 13
Harr s o o o
Bo wen 0 3 J
Dunmng added 7 cal oms
Nelson 2 2 6 Good o 0 o
in the p1 eh mma1y game the TOTAL S 1 9 8 46

Rio in "must"
'
battle tonight

NEW YORK ( UPI ) - Pubhc opmwn the m1ght1est moot
mexorable
force mall tbe world gradually keeps pushmg J1nuny
1 19 Halley 4 0 B Swa n 10 2
Connors
toward
a deciSion he inevitably has to make He can
22 Totals lB 7 83
delay 1t but he can t put 1t off fore ver
There will come a tune when he II run out of options when he II
rhe Rw G1 an de Redmen can te nth leadmg rebounder w1th
have to declare one way or the other whether he Wishes to play on
lake
over
undisputed 7:8 bounds per game
the U S DaVIs Cup tenrus team and represent h1s country or not
possesswn of set:ond place and
Ohio Domm1can 1s commg 1
Sooner or later Jumny Connors \\Ill have to say yes or no kee p ti e1r shm M1d Ohw
off an 83 79 victory over Ur I
sophomore gua rd Fred I ogan stand to f1msh second behmd defmlllvely and I m sure his answer Will be yes because ever
Conference tJtle hopes ahve bana a team R10 Grande
James led the wa) w1th 35 Hannan Trace
smcehe has been a little boyheal\\ays wanted to play on th e U ~
11 hen
they
host OhiO clobbered earher m the season
pomts on 15 baskets and f1ve
Th e Pu ates have f1v e Dav1s Cup team
Domm1can tomght at Lyne 120.75 at Lyne Center
free throw s Logan and remammg games pn or to the
Yet for three years now he has turned down InVItations to do Center
Elsewhere m Ohw college
Camden contubuted 18 pomts Class A Sectwnal Tournament so He has decimed for what he calls personal reasons ones
1 he Redmen are currently 4 actwn lomght M1am1 opens
eac h
at Me1gs Friday mghl NG "111 which men t that complex or difficult to understand when you 2m MOC play 2 games behmd
what 11 hopes to be a dnve for
The wm pushed North play at Kyger Creek Other know the enllre background for his answers
leag ue leadmg Malone at G-0 the top spot m the Mid
Gaiha s season record to 10.3 opponents are Southwestern
It IS generally known that he and Denrus Ralston one tune
Ohw Dom uucan meanwhile IS
overall lns1 de lhe SVAC Miller Eastern of P1ke Coun ty coach and prdent captam of the U S DaVIs Cup team aren t JUS! a half game ahead of Rw Arnencan Conference when the
Redskms host
Eastern
Coach J1m Foster s Pirates and Wahama
crazy about each other This many people says IS one of the at ~ 1
Michigan
Tuesday mght North Ga iha ovemdmg reasons Connors keeps saymg no every tune he gets
Rw paced by sophom ore
M1am1 4 3 m the MAC tails
Jumped mto an Jll-13l ead at the an mv1te to play from the DaviS Cup committee The startmg
J1m Noe the league s second ieadmg Bowhng Green ( 6-3 ) by
end of the f•rst penod The pomt for all th1s goes back three years to 1972
top scorer and top rebounder a game but 1f the Redskms get
Jinuny
Connors
had
just
come
East
from
Cabforru~o
play
on
Pirates
were
ahead
34
29
at
the
Tuesdav s R esults
despite playmg at the guard
Buffa o 6 Detro t
half and out shot Wahama •a the Independent Players AssocJatwn run by B1ll Riordan his spot 1s expected to start Noe by the Hurons tomght they can
Ch cago 3 Kansas C ty 3
26 to move mto a 62 55 lead close fnend and adv1sor Connors was an unknown at the hme a and freshman G1I Pr1ce at the grab at least a share of the IItle
Toronto 5 S Lou s 3
Saturday mght w1th a win at
19 year-old freshman at UCLA
P t sb ur g h 3 V a n couver 2
gomg mto the fma l per~od
guards w1th Andy Davenport home over BG
Wednesdays Game s
Playmg m the Georgetown Uruvers1ty tournament lor Vmce and Dan Bolhnge1 m the
Leadmg Wahama s scoung
:l h lad e ph a a N Y Ranges
Weste r n M1ch1gan wh1ch
Bos ton a A t a Ia
were Chuck Johnson wtth 24 Lombardi Concer Research he f1rushed second lhe Nastase won corners and J1m Stewart at
Detro t a Man r ea
plays
at Eastern M1Ch1gan
pomts Jeff Gilland w1th 18 and and received $4&lt;1 000 Connors the runnerup got nothing because center
h cago a t M nnesota
Saturday could also share the
wash ng on a t ca fo r n a
he was an amateur He talked to h1s fnend B11l Riordan who
Ray Tucker had II pomts
rhe Panthers on the other lead
p
sburgh a t L os Ange les
North Galha hJt 34 of 70 at was and still IS president of the Independent Players Associ~
hand are led by Mark Lum
The Eastern at M1ami game
tempts for 48 pet and 13 of 18 at lion and told him he wanted to turn professiOnal Riordan talked the leagues seventh ieadmg
lomght IS tHe only MAC game
..,ternat onal Hockey
the foul ime Wahama sank 32 w1th Connors mother and told her he thought 11 was time
scorer w1th a 15 6 ppg average
Lea gue Stand ng s
So Jumny Connors turned pro and Riordan who has known and Ken Tumb1lson the MOC s on tap although Kent State
By Un ted Pre ss Inferna l ortal of 56 shots for 57 pet and e•ght
North
Contmued on page 6
of 18 free throws The Pirates him smce he was a little boy uruned1ately got hun a $3 000 deal to
w 1 t pts gf ga held a 47 23 reboundmg edge play m Caracas
Sag naw
33 20 2 68 213 18
F nl
Gee Denrus (Ralston) has InVIted me to play on the DaVIs
32 17 4 68 199 52 w1th James gelling 19 and
Muskegon 32 20 2 &lt;66 214 56
C\jp team agrunst the Bnt1sh West Indies m Jama1ea Connors
Pt Huron 2 28 3 45 7d 87 Bruce Runyon 10
Kalama
4 ?3 3 3 1 34 91
Wahamll edged Nor th informed Rwrdan the day after the Georgetown tourney ended
x La n s
2 28 I 25 45 2 7 Galha s L1ttie Bucs 58 57 m the
What should I do •
South
Jumny when your country asks you to play 1t s an honor
w I t pts gf ga reserve hit
Day ton
32 7 3 67 2
80
18 16 28 19---81 Riordan replied You automatically acce pt There s no question
Co l um bu s 30 23
6 224 195 North Gaiha
To edo
2 27 3 5 200 198 Wahama
13 16 26 17-72 what you do
D es Mones 22 28 3 47 179 200
Connors caught a Jet for Kingston Jan181ca the following day
North Galloa 181)
Logan B
F t Wayne
8 29 J 39 17 197
and began pracllcmg w1th two other team members Tom
x team d sband ed
2 18 Runyon 1 0 2 Camden 7
Tuesda y s Result s
4 18 James 15 5 35 Payne 3 2
Gorman and Enk Van Dillen On the eve before the openmg
Af Star Game at Ka amazoo 8 Totals 34 13 81
matches
Ralston announced Gorman and Van D1Uen would play
North 4 So ut h 3 ot
Wahama !721 - Gilland 9 0
Ton ght s Games
m
those
matches
18 Johnson 10 4 24 Harmon 4
Colu mbus at Fort Way n e
1 9 Young 3 I 7 Holbrook 1 0
You re not plaYIIIg well enough Connors he sa1d You re
F ! nt a To edo
2 R T ucker 5 l ll and R•ggso
Muskegon a Dayton
not gonna play
1 1 Totals 32 B 72
Ka ama zao at Sag naw
Juruny Connors was crushed He felt he knew why Ralston
wasn t play111g hun He believed 1t was because he hadn t s1gned
w1th Donald Dell who was represenlmg every member of the
DaviS Ct!p learn mciuding Ralston Dell1s a former DaVIs Cup
Instant-On
captrun a players agent and legal counsel to the Association of
Performance
Tenms Professionals arch mals of Rwrdan s group
For Today's
Connors p1cked up the phone and called Riordan after bemg
Cars AI A
turned down by Ralston The followmg day Connors grand
Popular
mother who had helped brmg hun up and whom he was so close
to died m Los Angeles When Rwrdan called Connors In Jalll8lca
Low Pnce!
BALTIMORE (UPI) - Na- members who have refQsed to to tell him 1t was hiS world had come to an end Alter the funeral
thaniel Frazier who last year play unless thell' coach IS he had a long heart-to.!Jeart talk w1th R1ordan about h1s future
led Morgan State s basketball remstated
Riordan advised hun to go to Europe play the clay courts and
Fraser sa1d the suspensiOn get experience
team to the NCAA small
college championship ap will stand pending a lull 1n
You re gomg to be homesiCk you re going to be miserable
peared Tuesday to be on his vestigatlon ofa Jan II InCident you re gomg to get beat Riordan told hun but before you
way out as coach and professor at Brockport State 111 which become world champiOn you re gomg to have to take your
because of an Incident With a referee Peter Pavia com lickmgs
• Dry c} o. rg cd ford pr. nd
plamed that Fraz1er cursed
referee
Connors listened He went to Europe and was elunlnated m
bl ong lasl ng J ower
Dr Thomas Fraser mterun and touched him durmg an every tournament he played m generally m the f1rst or second
• 1 oly1 opylen~ c se and
cuver f r I gh power to
pres1dent of Morgan State sa•d argument over a foul call
round
w gl t r t o
heat and
sa1d
the
sc
hool
w11i
Fraser
the coach would rell!aln sus
He was low He called Riordan nearly every rught for a month
shock
s
5f fm c
pended pendmg an 1n dec1de on the coach s status Finally after a month, Riordan made a trip to Pans to see
• Non fi P as! ll ng vent
Cll l s I rgc pia cs plas t c
vestJgatJon of the mcldent before Morgan s scheduled Connors He found Connors very depressed On the day Riordan
12 Vol t
w th exchanae r b se1 ara tors
addmg he s out anyway you game Fr1day ngaiJISI North arr1ved Connors lost to a long tune bitter nval Harold Solomon
G o~p AW 22f
Carolina Central He sa1d the of Silver Sprmg Md m the first round ot the French Open
know
Amp Hou
Capat ly 36
He s put coachmg above the players would remam on
Riordan took Connors to a little French restaurant on the
liP 1o AHC45 w lh C ou p AW 24
quality of education We JUSt scholarship even if they refuse Champs Elysee trymg to cheer hun up Connors only fooled w1lh
FREE INSTAlLATION'
p ced ~ ~ ght ~ ~ &amp;he
to
play
the
rest
of
the
season
can t have that Fraser sa1d
his food
Coach Frazier unavailable
during a recess of a state
Holy smoke the f1rst round - but to Solomon- ! can t beheve
legislative budget hearmg for comment on the president s 11 he snddehly exclauned But wa1t a m111ute Connors in
remarks has satd he thought terrupted hunself hal(mg second thoughts The guy played
here
his
suspension was an mju.s better than I did and he beat me
He dldn t get tenure and he
m 2101
would have been out th1s sprmg lice
BID Riordan smiles recounhng the ep1sode
The Bears were 12-3 this
anyway and I think that s part
That s when I knew I had a world champiOn he says
season
and 72-28 for 3,. 'years
of hiS problem '
And about hun playmg on the DaviS Cup team Rwrdan
Fraser s remarks were his under Frazier before the a.dds he 11 play tomorrow 1f they get~th~e:po~li~tl~cs~o~u::tl~t::__ _,.;...._ _ _ _ _ _
first public comment about the forfeits The team won last
dispute wtth the baskethall years small college champion
coach wh1ch alrea.!fy has led to ship with a 23-li record
two forfeitures by the team
Ki Y®Ui H®tmJJB 'll'@NIDHT
1 3 25 Ha l 4 1 9 Cremea ns 9

Southwestern 18 20 18 18---74
Hannan Trace 22 19 16 26---83

Pirates upend Wahama

Pro Standings

M nn esota
Kansas c ty

.CARLSON CAlLED UP
BLOOMINGTON
Mmn
(UPI) - Jack Carlson a 2().
year-old left wmger has been
called up by the World Hockey
AssoCiation s Mmnesota F1ght
mg Samts from the club s
Johnstown Pa farm club

13 30 6
o 34 7
0 v s on 3
w r 1
Montr ea l
J O 9 13
Los Ange es 29 9 13
P f sbur g h
21 19 1
3 28 0
De tro t
Wash ng ton
4 42 5
Dvt s on4
w I I
Buffalo
3&lt;1 1 7
Boston
27 14 0

Toronto

20 25

Ca tarn a

12 33

321 332 5
271 27 21 9
pfs gf

71 17812
53 207 192

36 149 204
13 108 265

pts gf ga
75 23 1 158
64 232 151
7 47 175 203
9 33 41 214

BARTON WEIDEL
WILL BE HERE

THURS., FEB. 6
To present A mer cas

r nesr

colle ctlpn of

quality fabr cs for gentlemen s clothes custom

~

ta1lored by -

Thrs 1s your opportunity to
1nterpret fash Oil your own
way

~

ga

7J 240 145

Open All Day Thursday

Trophy
money
is1needed

I

111 1 12 fm ter Ul the opcmng
m ru te
the second penod
bcfm c Ihe E 1glcs knotted Ill&lt;

western

I
I
I
I
I
I
I,

By Lawrence E Lamb M D
the amount of asp1nn he takes
DEAR DR LAMB - I am 17 combmed w1th h1s dnnkmg has
By Clarence
and hke many of my friends I me womed I d s ure ap
use a sunlamp for my com prectate an answer
Miller
Th1s IS the fourth m a senes teeth or overlappmg bite •f left II
piexwn I kn ow !hat too much
DEAR READER - He of s1x ar!Jcles on dental health untreated may lead to
ultra VIolet li ght can be shouidn t do 11 It 1s not the published by th1s newspaper m
detenoratlon of the teeth and
For qwte some time now we abandonment proposals would
dangerous
same danger that you get from cooperahon w1th the Reb gwns and to other disorders
have been workmg closely with be stacketl agamst rural raJ!
I usually take 11 10 mmutes at the comb1natwn of asp mn and wmkel Dental Soc1ety m ob
In
many
cases
no
treatment
local offiCials and ra1l users hnes under th1s pian I voted
a hme but I m not sure when a barbiturates or sleepmg p11is servance
of
Nahonal Is reqwred The looth comes m throughout Southeastern OhiO agamst the Reorgamza!Jon Act
safe hme would be to use 1! bul there are dangers
Children s Dental Health crooked or rotated and on the Important Issue of ra1l when 11 ongmally came before
agam
l am more warned about the Week February 2-8
corrects Itself w1th the normal lme abandonments At the the House A ra1i abandonment
I m concerned about th1s posslbthty of bleedmg Alcohol
muscle
movement of the present hme the newly
report ISSued by the U S
and I msure 1! would be helpful 1s a powerful 1rntant to the
MY CHILD S FIRST per tongue and cheeks However 11 created U S Railway Deparlment of Transportatwn
to other users 1f ) ou would stomach and using much of 11 manent teeth seem to be
IS Important to consult w1th the AssOCJa!Jon (USRA ) IS m the
apprOlumately one year ago
comment on th1s
can cause an mflammatwn of commg mcrooked What would fam1Iy dentist as early as
supported
my susp1cwns about
process
of
drawmg
up
a
DEAR READER - I m not the stomach or gastnhs That you suggest be done at th1s
poss1bie
as
he
IS
the
only
one
rural
areas
suffenng most m
Prehmmary
Ra1l
Systems
an enthusiast of the use of sun IS part of the reason for the bme ?
who
can
diagnose
the
child
s
the
ra1i
reorgamzatwn
exer
Plan mtended salvage and
lamps Enough ultra VIolet stomach upse t th at often
The f1rst step IS to un problem and dec1de on a course
c1se
The overwhelmmg
rev1tahze several fmanc1aliy
hght to mamtain a tan can follows dnnkmg
derstand that malocclusion of treatment
proporhon
of lmes constdered
troubled
raJ!
lmes
operatmg
cause mjury to the underlymg
Asp~rm m any large quan
the Irregular alignment of
of
the
Improper
alignment
excess
m
the
DOT report were
throughout a 17 state Nor
sk1n and adds to the ac ht1es tends to decrease the
teeth
may
be
hereditary
or
theast and Midwest regwn of m the rural regwns ana In
cumulahve effects of sun bght blood s clottmg actiOn or may
may
be
caused
by
accidental
or
1
the
na!Jon The Prelimmary Ohw the Southeastern corner
That lovely sun tan hab1t leads mduce bleedmg Aspmn may
environmental
factors
Systems
Plan w1ll be made of the Slate felt the greatest
to an old skm before your hme also burn a small hole m the
Prolonged
thumb
suckmg
pubhc February 26 1975, w1th a 1mpact of proposed wholesale
specifically loss of skm hmng of the stomach causmg
mouth breathing or the habit of Fmal System Plan to be drawn ra1i abandonments Early last
eiasllcJty and wrmkhng
bleeding Obv10usi)
the
biting the lips or tongue may up and submitted for ) ear we opposed these DOT
Some are more susceptible to combmatwn of aspmn and
mcrease
a tendency to a Congressional ac!Jon th1s proposals at pubhc heanngs 1n
the harmful effects of too much lll cohol is a n&lt;&gt;-no Th1s IS a
particular
dental ll'l'egularJty summer or fall
Columbus
sun than others and are apt to good thmg for cold sufferers to
If
a
primary
tooth
is
lost
W1th the ISSUance of the
The
ent~re
railroad
develop spots on the skm that remember when they take
prematurely
a
ne1ghbormg
USRA
Prellmmary Systems
process
is
evalua twn
are often the forerunner to skm asp1r1n and try to cure their
tooth
may
dnlt
mto
the
space
proceedmg
under
the Plan nearmg we have vo1ced
cancer So If you want to have colds w1th booze
causmg problems when the provisions of the Ra1l the deep concerns of
a h1de that looks hke an
The b1g question 1s why does
permanent teeth erupt
ReorganiZatiOn Act of 1973 Southeastern Oh10 rail users
alligator early m hfe just lour husband take aspirin ' If
Whatever
the
problem
direcUy to federal decision
approved m the 93rd Congress
overdo th e sun worsh1ppmg he has a mediCal problem he
howeve
your
denUst
can
he
of
As one who feared that the makers A strong case for
bit ~hether 1t IS the summer should get some attention and
help
He
may
replace
a
missing
retaming many of the present
sun for fun or the sum lamp In proper treatment
tooth
with
a
space
maintamer
hnes has been made Without
the bedroom
dev1ce
that
keeps
the
teeth
a
adequate rail serv1ces to serve
For those "ho ms1st on usmg
sh11tmg
mto
empty
from
SHOWER
GIVEN
present
job producmg en
11 I 11 ould recommend that lou
and
saving
room
for
the
A
shower
was
g•ven
m
honor
spaces
terpr1ses
and
attract new ones
follo;~ the directions carefully
permanent
teeth
JOHN
B
ARTRIP
of
Julius
Preston
Jr
at
the
the economiC reVIva l and
for both d1stance and hme
Army SpeclaUst Five John
If a permanent tooth •s ready Blue and Grey Restsurant growth of Southeastern Ohio
exposure Try to hm1t that ur.ge
to erupt but there is no room Monday Gifts were presented can be ll'l'eparably damaged
B Artrip, bemedaled suo-toto get a deep tan and be
for
11 the tooth may come m to him by hiS employes Dons
law
of
Mrs
Bessie
Napper
Is
In adHition to deahng wt!h
satisfied With aVOiding a ffiJJk
crooked
and
push
other
teeth
McDonald
Jane
Roush
Jo
Ann
currently
on
leave
at
1%9
USRA on thiS matter I am
;~hJte appearance For safe
out
of
line
For
thiS
reason
the
Butternut
Ave
Pomeroy
King
Goldie
Reeds
Charlotte
agam
co-sponsoring a b1il that
distances you should hm1t
denUst
may
have
to
extract
the
before
departlq
early
in
LewiS
Paula
McKinney
and
would
prOhibit the USRA from
exposure to no more than a fell
pnmary
tooth
February
for
Korea
Chuck
Miller
Cake
1ce
cream
¥PProvmg the abudonment of
nunutes a da y A low level
RACINE
The
Southern
The
dent1st
may
also
and
coffee
were
served
He
Is
being
reaulped
anyra•ll111e
until December 31
dati) expooure •s better than
recommend
that
you
consult
an
from
Fort
Campbell,
Ky
for
Girls
Athletic
Club
has
raised
1976
In
essence
the b1ll places
mfrequent
large
and
enough
money
to
pay
for
new
orthodonUst
a
specialist
m
duty
at
Chejado
Island
just
mor1tonurn
on
any rail
a
somehmes harmful doses
NAME OMITTED
uniforms
and
members
are
oH
tbe
South
Korea
shore
correcting
deformities
of
the
READ mE DIRECTIONS ON
The name of Irene Barnes, abandonment ac!Jon The
teeth
and
jaws
now
working
on
funds
for
During
his
Army
career
be
mE LAMP, THEN FOI.;LOW
Pomeroy was onu !ted from federal government has gone
trophies
to
be
given
away
at
However
good
preventive
bas
spent
14
months
In
THEM but stay on the short
!lie list of Oh1o Umvers1ty ahead w1th plans to abandon
care
should
start
early
dental
the
basketball
tournament
Germany
and
two
years
in
certam ra1l lines
many m
s1de of the tune rang e
Regular dental visits begm students who received grades our area
Tbe tournament will be held VIetnam
even
before
a
recommended
to qualify for the dean s list for
at
Southern
H1gh
School
this
nmg
when
a
child
IS
about
2
Among
his
awards
and
comprehensiVe
railroad
ser•
DEAR DR LAMB - I am
years of age or when all his the fall quarter Miss Barnes IS vice plan ls fully considered by
concerned about the amount of year and schools competing decorations are the Natloaal
a jun1or majoring m home
Defense Service Medal,
pnmary teeth have erupted
the Congress Once such lines
aspirin my husband consumes are Kyger Creek Me1gs
economics education
Gaihpohs
Easter'~!'\
and
Vietnam
!iervlce
Medal
with
wiD
help
the
denUst
foresee
are
abandoned they are not
He takes as many as four
Southern
The
club
'extends
six
campaigns,
Vietnam
correct
future
problems
and
only
expensiVe to reopen bul
aspirin at a tune How often I
TO MEET FRIDAY
thanks
to
Cross
Grocery
Star
Campaign
Medal
with
10
couldn t sa) He also drinks
Tbe Pomeroy Elementary 111 the case of Southeastern
Hardware
Brinker
s
Jewelry
devices,
Good
Conduct
Sloppmg Set"VIce IS
and I know the aspll'ln hasn t
PTA execuhve comnu !tee will OhiO
Johnson
TV
Racine
Plurnb111g
l\1edal
second
award,
Army
disastrous
to manufacturmg
worn off as he s so dope) when
hold a meeting at the school at
and
Heatmg
Vista
Rosen
Commendatlon
Medal
wltb
he drinks along w1th taking
2 p m Friday All officers are busmess and agricultural
berry Pennzoll and R C first oak leaf cluster, 8ronze
concerns 111 our area To date,
DANCE PLANNED
aspmn
urged to attend
BotllinS
Co
for
donations
Star
Medal,
Aircraft
we
have endeavored to keep
A SQuare dance Will he held
1 m concerned he could kill
The
next
game
will
be
played
crewmemberll
badge,
uput
rail users posted on matters of
Sat\ll'day from 9 to lllldnight at
PTA TO MEET
himself on aspmn and alcohol
at
Southern
High
School
on
marksman
badge
mtereslal
the federal level and
the
Shade
School
by
Frog
Stack
Tbe
Metgs
County
Council
of
I read that one should never
Feb
11
at
t
)I
m
aga1nst
Kyger
Meritorious
Uolt
Cllatloa,
'o\1!
wtll
cootinue
to make every
and, The Greenhorns under PTA wtU meet at 7 30 p m
nux batbJturales or sleepmg
Creek
The
poblic
IS
mv1ted
Cro~s
of
Vietnamese
sponsorship of the Shatle PI'A Thursday at the Salisbury effort to see that adequate rail
p11ls and alcohol I know
Gallantry
with
palm
and the
AdnussJOn
IS
50
cents
for
adults
Door pnzes will be awaided Elementary School A Faun serviCe to Southeastern Ohio IS
aspmn 1sn t a barbiturate yet
and 25 cents for students
Presidential Unit Citation.
The public IS lnv1ted
ders Day program will be held maintained and protected'

and 24 22 11 mtt:rn t.ss or
befo1e the Eagles knotted the
score at 32 l2 afler lhrec

ea rl v go mg
So 1lhern 1pped Ihe lead to IS
m1ch as B pomts at II 5 w1th
I 19 rema mmg n the f rsl
pe n od before a pan of Rand\
Blake buckets m the !mal
rmuute p1~l ed the Eagles lo
111th n 4 at 13 9 aft e1 tJ e first

Coach Paul Dillon s Hannan
Trace Wildcats captured the1r
th~rd straight league cham
p10nsh1p and second outr1ght
!Jtle m twovears Tuesda) mght
w1th an 83- 7~ over So uth

--------------------------1I

! Washington

1 rar gm 1ts l 1rgest lead •f II
mgl I a&gt; M1kc Rubc1Is popped

HT clinches title

I

Crooked teeth in yormg

baskels m ail but one qua1ler
led 13 9 aft er the !Irs! penod

Today 's

Goodyear posts $100 lure
to purchase new 1975 auto

TOM TIEDE

By Tom Tiede
The law is wrong the government is wrong I m sick and
llredofbelngpushedaround ' - Nancy Volts South Boston

Democracy's secret
weapon: Uncertainty

-- - -::=:.::·:::::-::::~

o 1'175

Tornados edge by Eastern in closing seconds

RAY CROMLEY
'

Editorial comment,
• •
opznzon, features

h~

t'l

KA}{N~..

~~\

&lt;:&gt;

SJtlart new
opt anal

buttons

models
I n1ngs and

skolled

techn• cal

adv ce
perfect on of f t
un
cond1t1ona~

guaranteeAli add up to clothes
that expre~ s your own ';:j~~;
life styl"' and pe" ~
sonahty
t o let you
dress lor yourse lf

•

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KERM'S KORNER
POMEROY, OHIO

~

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Regular •34.95 Save

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Former star on

way out as coach

''Al~

BAnERY

$

95

Meigs Tire Center

..,---:-:'-:::=-:=:::::::-1

THE APPALAtHIAN GREEN PAl\KS rMJF.CT

The
E x clu s ve fa bn cs

~

Da1~

COLUMBUS

Sentinel

Sports, Vacation and TraveJ Show

DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS MASON AREA
CHESTER L TANNEHILL
Ex:ec Ed
ROBERT HOEFLICH
ClfY Ed tor
'Publ Shed da ly except
Saturday by The Otuo Va ley
Publtsh ng Company
111
Cour t St
Pomeroy
Oh o
45769 Bus ness Off ce Phone
99 2 2156 Ed torta Phone 992

Columbus, Ohio

FEBRUARY 8-16- OHIO STATE
FAIRGROUNDS COLISEUM
AND ADJOINING PAVILION
Intersta te 71 -

Extt a t lltn or 17th

AH~

Sponsored by Dispatch Chanties

21 57

Second c la ss postage pa d at
Pam eroy Oh lo
Nat anal
adverts ng
r epresent at ve
8ott nell
Ga tagh er Inc 12 E as t 42nd
Sl New York New York
Subscript on
rates
D~ ltvert d by carr er wnere

r)roduced b.) Hart ProduetiOn!O

Saturday and Sunday
IPMtollPM

*
*

Weekdays

6PMtoiiPM
•

ava labl e 75 cents per week

I a.~t Sunday I P M to 7 JJ m

month $3 25 Bv mall n Oh o
and w va One YeC~r S22 oo
s x months Sll 50 Three

• Boats
e ( •If Te nnl!'i and
• ~r1.1nK EqUipment
Other Outdoor \ &lt;tl\ 1t1es
• C'ountl'} Western Staxt Sho"
e Sta le Sect 1onal and ( anadum 1'nncl Uureaus

By M otor Route where carr er
serv ce not availab le One

months
S7 00
Elsewhere
S26 00 year
S1x months
513 SO
thr ee months S7 50
Subsu pt on price
nc u(Jes
Sundav T mes Sf!ntinel

\J)ULTS I
~ 00

&lt; h(ldren 1 I and l nder

75 CENTS

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t-'lbli Dllily Sedlnei, Mlddleoort!.Pcmeroy, o .• ~!day, Feb. 5,19'1~
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A;:~UR CHUNK BOLOGNA

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26 oz.l4 5
46

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IHANOVER
GREEN BEANS

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PRIDE OF· INDIA

oz.

5
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oz.

4 OZ.

SWEEPSTAKE

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SUPERIORS . .
BEEF OR MEAl

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12 oz.
PKG.

69¢

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NAVY

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· · '·s- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Feb. 5, 1975

.

'

7- The Daily Sentinel, Middl'lJlOrt-~o~eroy, u., Wednesday. Feb. 5, 1975

like I do and those that are content to he in the wheel chair.
."I'll never be that way.l thank God for the use of my hands
and that I can see. I'll n~ver be satisfied until I'm out of this
wheel chair."
Sharing the TCU Horned Frogs bench Tuesday night was
Waldrep's first public outing since being injW'ed, making a
tackle in the TCU-Alabarna game last season.' II took a
lengthy operation at the Alabama Medical Center to save his
life.
Waldrep said early diagnosis was that his spinal cord had
been crushed, but now. it appears to be only badly bruised .

The fourth , fifth and .sixth vertebrae are damaged and the
fifth one was pushed in and cut the area around the spinal
cord.
·
He can lilt a glass of water and hold playing cards although
the muscles in his hands are extremely weak. A tingling in
his legs and feet give him more hope.
"My feet were like foreign objects for a while," he said.
'' You just have to gain patience. and I didn't have that for a
while."

'

Waldrep, undergoing therapy at the Texas Institute for
Research and Rehabilitation, exercises for one hour in the ·
motning and again in the afternoon. He's trying to lift

-

By BERNARD BRENNER

UPI Farm Editor
WASHINGTON (UPI) Government farm economists
are punning a new annual

weights and do pushups.
.
"Doing that pushup feels like I'm trying to lift up the
wilding. I can get my bead six to eight inches off the floor."
Waldret&gt; said he wanted to get back in classes at T0J
where he is majoring in business by next fall. By then he S81d
he inrended to be walking everi if II requires braces or
crutches. His high school golf coach, Jerry Goen, gave him a
new putter this week after a tournament named in Waldrep's
honor.
"It (golf) will probably be the flrsl thing I'll do when I get
back on my feet -sportswise."

1

withstand 15th-ranked
Clemson, 92-.!9.
J
Maryland led, 44·31, at the
half, on a 12-point spurt mid·

way through, but Virginia
came on strong in the second
half. Maryland struggled to a
74-&lt;&gt;0 lead with 7:48 left and

then watched the cavaliers
The Terp.s went into a foW'reel off II straight points in the corner stall at 2:2Q and held a
next four minutes behind Andy 7&amp;-75 lead with 1:10 left. But
Boninti and Wally Walker.
Walker missed a shot and the

76ers win· in overtime
By Uolted Press International
Of all the teams in the
National Basketball Association, perhaps only the New

Orleans Jazz have a slimmer
chance of making the playoffs
than the Philadelphia 7~rs.
After dumping the Buffalo

Braves in overtime Tuesday
night, though, the 76ers were
feeling like real live contenders.
Bob McAdoo, the NBA's
leading scorer, reeled off 39
points ('25 in the second half)
but the 76ers put the clamp on
the rest of Braves and rallied
behind Fred Carter and Billy
Cunningham in the extra
period to win, lll-105, only
their 221ld victory in 53 games
this
season. •
MOC
Carter
hit six of his 37 points
Team
WL
in
the
overtime
while CunningMalone
6 0
Ohio Dominican
4 I ham added four of his 18 points
Rio Grande
4 2 to give Philadelphia four· wins
Cedarville
3 3 in the last six games. CunningUrbana
I 5 ham helped put the game into
Tiffin
0 7 overtime with 10 points in the
fourth quarter.
Overall
The Braves' loss left them
Team
WL
Malone
17 3 four games behind idle Boston
and only six ahe.ad of the
Ohio Dominican
9 10
Rio Grande
9 8 victorious New York Knicks in
Cedarville
10 8 the Atlantic Division. PhilaUrbana
7 13 delphia is 5\i! games behind
Tiffin
6 17 New York.
Elsewhere, Golden State
edged Houston, t07·105, Atlanta
Colloge Basketball Results
ripped Cleveland, IJI-97, New
East
York
downed Los Angeles, 109-.
Bentley 106 Tufts 89
94,
Phoenix
nipped
Bsn St. 74 Frmghm St. 58
Brdgwtr St. 111 Nichols 87
Washington, 90-89, and Chicago
Coast Guard 76 Babson 67
heat Portland, 102-90.
Davis &amp; Elkins 106 Wynsbg 102
Dickinson 81 Leb Val 63
Drew 92 Nyack 51
Fredonia St. 45 Alfred 42
Hartwick 68 Ithaca 66
Hobart 63 Rochester Tech 60
Lafayette 74 Lehigh 57
Marls! 9'1 New Paltz 76
Machias 811 Unity 63
Merrlmck 95 Lowell Tech 80
No. Adms St. 81 Wrcstr St. 77

Malone can wrap up
title with win over Rio
Malone College con tinued its
rampage last week defeating
two non-conferen ·e teams to
boost its season record to 17-3.
Malone edged Steubenville 5756 and Davis &amp; Elkins, 65-54.
Malone's Mark Klein continues to pace MOC scorers
with 374 points ln 20 games for
an 18.7 average.
·
There's a tight batUe for
second among Jim Noe of Rio
Grande (17.6), Steve Young of
Cedarvllle (17 .5), and Ben
Tillman of Malone( 17. 4).
Malone College leads the
conference in field goal per·
centage with a team mark of
53.1 per cent. Five of the top 10
shooters in the Moe belong to
Malone. Mark Klein leads the
•Way with 61.3 pel. ( 157 of 256) .
Rio's Jim Noe also leads the
MOC In rebounclllig with an
average oll1.4 caroms a game.

R. .

A. J. Collins, 6'10" center from
Urbana, and 6'6" Don Smtih
from Cedarville are locked In a
tight battle for second place
with a 10.3 average.
Cedarville's Dave Burtner
leads the pack at the free throw
line, missing only two shots in
24 attempts for a 91.7 pet.
mark.
With the conference season
drawing to a close, each game
becomes more important. One
of the biggest games of the
season is Saturday. Malone (60) will travel to Rio Grande (4·
2) . Rio Grande has won seven
of Its last eight games. Only
loss in that stretch was to a
strong Wright State team.
On Wednesday, Rio Grande
will host Ohio Dominican in an
equally Important game. !Ohio
Dominican (4·1) must win in
order to have a shot at the MOC
crown. 1

Girls gymnasts

10m

led by John Webster's 18
·Con linued from page 3)
points,
rallied to win going
plays at Ball Stat~, a conference member but not yet away.
Meanwhile, Denison won the
competing for the basketball
battle
for conference survival
CfOWD.
Three Ohio Conference between the Big Red and
contests are scheduled, Muskingum at New Concord,
featuring Mount Union at 45-41.
The Big Red, now 6-3 in the
Marietta and Kenyon at Wit·
OC, also had to come from
tenberg.
Marietta is the OC leader behind after trailing 25-22 at
with a 7-2 mark, while Wit· halftime in· the low-scoring
· tenberg is at6-3 and Mount and game.
Todd Harris tossed · in 16
Kenyon both ii-3.
points
and Lee Bowman added
The other Ohio Conference
10
for
Denison, while Marvin
game tonight finds Capital (:;.
4) at Ohio Wesleyan (2.0 ), Smalley scored 12 and Tim
while Ohio Northern is at Gebhardt 10 for the Muskies,
Marian (Ind.) in a non-league who just ahout fell from title
contention with their foW'th OC
tussle.
In other key games tonight, loss in nine games.
In Tuesday night's other
Youngstown State is at
Ohio
Conference encounter,
Ashland, Akron at Cleveland
State and Gannon ( Pa.) at Jim English scored 20 points to
pace Baldwin-Wallace to a 66Steubenville.
52
decision over Ohio
In Tuesday night's games,
Wesleyan
.
Heidelberg moved into second
In other games Central State
place ln the Ohio Conference
rollfl\l
over Wllberforce 98-09,
with a come.from-behind 60-.51
Wilmington
tripped Man·
win over Otterbein.
The Student Princes (7~) chester (Ind.) 94-83, and An·
trailed 29-26 at halftime, but derson (Ind.) edged Findlay 8886.

SEE

Knit
Pickings

Po~ester

-=""~ ·

Knits
Plain·and
Coordinated .

&lt;

•,

.,

fOr
Spring

Prints

Announcing

In A

KWIK·

New

SEW

placed third

Providence 65 Brown 62
Slippery Rock 84 Ind. IPa.) 72

Syracuse 97 St. Bonnie 89
Trinity 88 Wesleyan 76
W. New Eng 66 Keene

Meigs High girl gymnasts
coached by Kenda Rainey
placed third in a recent meet at
Wellston. Athens won the meet
scoring 50 pis., Wellston came
in second with 40 pts .. and
Meigs was close behind with

St. 63

W. Va . 'St. 66 Glenv ille 56
Westvl St. 81 Salem St. 65
South
Centenary 101 NW La . 81
Davidson 103 Richmond 79
Grnsbro 101 St. Andrews 90
Ky . Sf . 96 Bellarmine 87
Lenoir Rhyne 103 Pfeiffer 78
Maryland 84 Virginia 79
No. Car. St. 92 Clemson 89
Pembroke St. 64 UNC.Wilm .~1

36.9.

The only Marauder to take a
first was Becky Thomas who
won on the balance beam.
Thomas also placed foW'th in
the vault.
Placing with Thomas on the
balance beam were Lori
Wayne who finished third and
Sally Walters fifth. Completing
the Marauder scoring, Mary
Blaettnar tied for second on the
uneven parallel bars and
Walters was fourth in the same
event.

Troy 57 livingston S6
Midwest

Bldwn-WIIce 66 Wooster 52
Cent. St. 98 Wilberfor ce 69
Denison 45 Muskingum 41
Heidelberg 60 Otterbein 51 ·

Marquette 69 Wisconsin 63
No. Oak. St. 76 Moorhed 60
Wayne St. 72 UW-Green Bay 71
W. Ill . 82 Purdue-indpls 65
Southwest
Blhny Naz 70 Okla . Bapt 62
TeKaS A&amp;M 102 SMU 77
Te.as Tech 72 Baylor 61
W. TeK . St . 62 N. TeK. St. 53

PHOTO SPECIAL
8x10

.IN
': LIVING
•

points for the U!kers; who shot
a horrendous 35 per cent in the
first half.
Suns 90, Bullets 89:
Dick Yan Arsdale scored a
season-high 30 points to lead
Phoenix to a come.from-behind
win over Washington. Van
Arsdale's performance
compensated for the loss of the
Suns' leading scorer, Charlie
Scott, out with the flu. Elvin
Hayes led the Bullets with 27
points.
Bulls '102, Blazers 90:
Bob Love hU his season-high
with. 38 points to lead· Chicago
.to its fourth straight victory
and seventh in the last eight
games. The victory came on
free throws as the Bulls hit only
35 field goals compared to 39
for Portland. But Chicago
cashed in on 32-of-35 fouls shots
and Portland made only 12-of·
18.

r~• MEA~
)ft

c•ttom

a~r

FRESH

MEAT

tw ,..,,

F..._.Atl"'"t~frosll

cut ·&amp;

oNLY

aae

wr•"*'·

PLUS 50' HANDLING · ·~~~~"'~~~~-.;;t%,,-o;;:&amp;.~

NO AGE LIMIT
liMIT·1 PER SUBJECT
2 SPECIAL PER FAMILY
GROUPS TAKEN AT THE !-OW
PRICE
OF 99• .PER SUBJECT.
' .

In the only other game involving a ranked-team, No. 12
Marquette, with Earl Tatum
leading the way with 22 points,
ran its record to 14-3 with a 6963 victory over Wi:iconsin.
Wisconsin led by a point at the
half but Marquette's 13-4 spurt
halfWay through the second
half sent the Badgers to their
13th loss in 17 games.
In other games, Providence
edged Brown, 65-62, Syracuse
beat St. Bonaventure, 97-$,
Davidson crushed Richmond,
103-79, Texas A&amp;M topped
SMU, 102·77, Texas 1 Tech
downed Baylor, 72-01, · West
Texas Slate trimmed North
Texas State, 62-03, and Arkansas stopped Texas, 56-52.

MEN'S
DRESS SHOES
DRESS BOOTS
Reduced
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Chapman's Shoes
MAIN ' ST.

(595)

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HOURS: 8:00.5:00 WEEKDAYS
8:00.1:00 SATURDAY '

4 lb. Beef Roast
3 lb. Pork Steak $
3 lb. Cube Steak
4 lb. Ground Beef
4 lb. Sliced Bacon
3 Round

50

81~

lb.

FRONTS . 72~ lb.
SIDES ·

3 lb. Sirloin Steak
4.lb. Beef ·Roast
4 lb. Ground Beef.
3 lb. Pork Chops
3·lb. Pork Butt Roast
3·lb. Cube ·Steak
3 lb. Sliced Lunch Meat
.

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Onassis has

lb.

78~

PRICE INCLUDES WTTING,
WRAPPING &amp; FREEZING.

ROUNP ·STEAK .............! 1 29 1b.

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for

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find out the details? We need
a Distributor at once to sarv·
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PH. "2'2214
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Chuck Roast ...........~. 69 ~

1

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Beef Stew..............~· 99 ~
Gro~nd Beet.~;.r.....~. 59 ~
£ngl1sh .Roast. ........~~ 89 ~

•
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MEDAL 5 lb.

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Shou

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to \0920 Indian pa1l, 8uotd1ng
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75229.
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wif axcellent references that
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this unusual proposal and
you may begin f(Ji) or parttime . Don't you beli~ve it
¥would be· worth your trme to
take a couple of minutes and

SIRLOIN TIP ROAST.....$139'lb.
•

a

but of course you are, or you

PHOTO HRS: 11 AM TIL 7 PM

The .Fabric Shop

PRICES GOOD

STORE HOURS

ATHENS (UP!) - Family
sources said Greek shipping
magnate Aristotle Onassis was
battling against a relaJ&gt;!e·of a
potentially deadly muscular
disease today, but a
; spokesman for Onassis En·
• lj!rprises said it was only a
;. virus infection with com·
:. plications.
· "Mr. Onassis went to the
airport without a coat and
,caught a coJd;" the spokesman
for Onassis Enterprises said.
"His condition was aggravated
by com~llcations from a virus
infection . He is now resting
comfortably."
. The spokesman said an
American heart specialist, Dr.
Isldor Rosenfeld, new froni
N.W York with Jacqueline
Kennedy Onassis to slay at the
bedside of her 69-year-old

THIS IS IT

8 PK.

QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED
NO SALES TO DEALERS

virus ills

.DATE: FRI., FEB. 7
PLACE: SHOPPERS MART

POMEROY, OHIO

'I

Elva Young Hudson, Lewis
R. Hudson to Sarah . Jean
Roush, Harry E. Roush, Life
Estate, Chester.
Anna M. Ryther, Com.,
Lennie Taylor, dec. to Clifford
Taylor, James Taylor, Virgil
H. Taylor, William Taylor,
Joseph Taylor, Zeima Grady,
Delbert Taylor, Evelyn Taylor,
25 Acres, Lebanon.
Clifford Taylor, James
Taylor, William Taylor,
Carolyn Taylor, Joseph Taylor,
Marilyn Taylor, Zelma Grady,
Delmar Grady, Delbert.
Taylor, Evelyn Taylor to Virgil
. H. Taylor, 25 Acres, Lebanon.
Carl Fred Goeglein, Frances
Goeglein to Fred B. Goeglein,
Barbara A. Goeglein, Ease.,
SalisbW'y.
Fred B. Goeglein, Barbara
A. Goeglein to Donald E.
Collins, Pandora E. Collins,
Lot 6, SalisbW'y . Rock Springs
Sub.
Delbert R. Yost, Maxine
Yost to David C. Bradley, 51.17
Acres, Orange.
Milo B. Hutchinson, Betty A.
Hutchinson to .Hawthorne
. Murphy, Flora Murphy, Lot 11,
Hutchinson Sub., Rutland .
Glen Ed.ward Beebe, R~ma
Jean Beebe to Pomeroy Cong.
·of Jehovah's Witnesses, Inc.
one and one-sixth acre, .92
acre, Sali,bury.

U.S.O.A. Meat
For Your Freezer
HINDS

economists · c'an develop
estimates on the margins of
processors .and induslri~s
which make farm supplies like '
fertlll~er . Efforts will also be
made, he said, to come up y;tth
eatimates pinpointln(l profit
levels In food processing and
marketing.
' ·

.298 SECOND,ST

Transfers
4 lb. Beef Roast
·4 lb. Ground B~ef
2 lb. Pork Chops $
3 lb. Pork Butr Roast
2 lb. Round Steak
1 lb. Sliced.Bacon

(596)

crop and livestock forecastS ..
Plans for the new survey
were disclosed when President
Ford's budget was sent to
Congress on Monday.
Kenneth Farrell, an official
in the AgricultW'e Department's Economic Research
Service, said the new· annual
survey was planned because
current data gathering
systems often leave wide gal&gt;!
in information on the farm
economy. Those gaps in up-todate knowledge ahout farm
production costs and inventories . leave "too much
guesswork" in official esti·
·mates of costs and fann in-

"After all, he is a friend. of
Mr. Onassis and his personal
physician," the spokesman
said. Christina Onassls, 25, the
multimilllonaire's daughter,
also was there.
Family sources said Onilssis
was suffering a , relapse of
myasthenia gravis, a disease
that weakens the muscles.

POMEROY

(594)

4 lb. Ground Beef
4 lb. Beef·Roast
3 lb~ Round Steak $
3 lb. Pork Butt Roast
2 lb. Pork Chops
4 lb. Sl
Bacon

of

l
. liC

~usband.

DAILY

PH. 992-3502

.

hit two foul shots to put the
game away, snapping the
Tigers' five-game winning
streak.
Thompson scored 12 of N.C.
State's first 18 points and had
23 in the first half as State
outscored the Tigers, 17·2, in
the final six minutes before
intermission .. The Wolfpack
led, 78-83, with 7:41 remaining,
but during the next three
minures, Clemson outscored
State, 12-2, to close the gap to
IJ0.75.
Skip Wise scored with 15
seconds left to give Clemson a
chance for vi'ctory. The freshman guard scored 16 of his 22
points in the second half and
led Clemson.
·

.

(597)

COLOR

New

Warriors 107, Rockets 105:
Rick Barry scored 38 points
to help Golden State break a
four-game losing streak.
Barry, the NBA's second·
leading scorer, hit 15 baskets in
27 shots and all eight free
throw s. Houston's leading
scorer this season, Rudy
Tomjanovich, missed the game
with the flu but Cliff Meely
filled in with 21 points and
Calvin Murpby had 24.
Hawks Ill, Cavs 97 :
Atlanta, spurred by Tom
Henderson's 14 third quarter
points, pulled away from
Cleveland in the second half to
win. Henderson finished with
27 points while teammate John
Drew added 20.
Knlcks 109, Lakers 94 :
Walt Frazier and Earl
Monroe hit 20 points apiece to
lead New York to an easy win.
Cazzie Russell provided the
only excitement for Los An·
geles with 18 points in the
second half after scoring none
during the first half. Lucius
Allen scored a game-high 23

Terps iced the game at the free
throw line as Virginia tried
fouling as its only hope .
John Lucas led Maryland
with 25 points and Brad Davis
added 24. Boninti had 22 and
Walker 20 for the Cavaliers.
Maryland is now 1:&gt;-3 overall
and 6,2 in the ACC. Virginia fell
to 9-8.
Upset-specialist Clemson
pulled to within a point of North
Carolina State at 90-89 with 15
seconds left before Mo Rivers·

survey

fuel on years-old surveys
Supp lemented by patchwork
reports Pl·cked up from industry sources. If the resulting
estimates are off, they could

annUijl projects later this year. fa~ms will come from units
Th~ survey, Farrell said, will with annual sales of $10,000 imd
be made by ch'ecking a up which produce most of the
representative cross sample_of nation's crops and llVI!stock.
the nation's farms . The survey Farrell said the bud,get also
list will be tailored to focus includes a proposed spending
primarily on commercial increase of $300,000 for an
agriculture, he said. This ~xperimental research
means most of the sur\&gt;eyed project designed to see If

the farm front

Maryland, NC State-'withstand scares
Maryland
and
North
Carolina State continued along
their merry way in the Atlantic
Coast Conference Tuesday
night wt not without a scare.
Fourth-ranked Maryland
blew a big lead and then had to
go into a stall for nearly 2%
minutes at the end to hold off
Virginia, 8&amp;-79. And North
Carolina state, ranked No. 6,
· needed 39 points from All·
America David Thompson to

'economic

.
come, Farrell said.
.At . present, for examp1e,
Farrell said department
·
economists have to base
estimares of farm spending for

up-to-date crop inventories on
farms, livestock movement
between farms and similar
daiB
will be gathered in a new
substantially reduce the acf t f
~e annual survey. Ford's budget
curacy
ne f arm
vw
r·1gW'es boecause
1·
j
ue
1
s
a
rna or for tbe year starling July 1
f
od ti
ts proposes spending shout $2.6
factor in arm pr u ,ondcos
d . million for the first of the
Farrell said improve ala

agriculture" designed to take
some of the guesswork out of
federal !ann income estimates
· and to improve the accW'acy of

·0

By Uolled Press International

im items like fuel use and costs,

.· Ne~· agriculture .survey is planned

Paralyzed TCU gridder refuses to give up

HOUSTON (UP!) - Kent Waldrep, the Texas Christian
U!dversity football player partially paralyzed in a game last
fall, plans to be walking this summer.
His doctors told him after his injury he would probably
never have feeling or movement below his neck.
Tuesday n\ght he wheeled himself to the sidelines of the
Rlce-TCU basketball game and received a standing ovation.
He lifted his right ann and brushed his eye, an embarassed
smile drifting across his face.
"I never thought my recovery would be anything but all the
way,'; he said before he was introduced to the crowd. "Being
in the hospital you see two kinds of people - those that feel

.

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.

'

7- The Daily Sentinel, Middl'lJlOrt-~o~eroy, u., Wednesday. Feb. 5, 1975

like I do and those that are content to he in the wheel chair.
."I'll never be that way.l thank God for the use of my hands
and that I can see. I'll n~ver be satisfied until I'm out of this
wheel chair."
Sharing the TCU Horned Frogs bench Tuesday night was
Waldrep's first public outing since being injW'ed, making a
tackle in the TCU-Alabarna game last season.' II took a
lengthy operation at the Alabama Medical Center to save his
life.
Waldrep said early diagnosis was that his spinal cord had
been crushed, but now. it appears to be only badly bruised .

The fourth , fifth and .sixth vertebrae are damaged and the
fifth one was pushed in and cut the area around the spinal
cord.
·
He can lilt a glass of water and hold playing cards although
the muscles in his hands are extremely weak. A tingling in
his legs and feet give him more hope.
"My feet were like foreign objects for a while," he said.
'' You just have to gain patience. and I didn't have that for a
while."

'

Waldrep, undergoing therapy at the Texas Institute for
Research and Rehabilitation, exercises for one hour in the ·
motning and again in the afternoon. He's trying to lift

-

By BERNARD BRENNER

UPI Farm Editor
WASHINGTON (UPI) Government farm economists
are punning a new annual

weights and do pushups.
.
"Doing that pushup feels like I'm trying to lift up the
wilding. I can get my bead six to eight inches off the floor."
Waldret&gt; said he wanted to get back in classes at T0J
where he is majoring in business by next fall. By then he S81d
he inrended to be walking everi if II requires braces or
crutches. His high school golf coach, Jerry Goen, gave him a
new putter this week after a tournament named in Waldrep's
honor.
"It (golf) will probably be the flrsl thing I'll do when I get
back on my feet -sportswise."

1

withstand 15th-ranked
Clemson, 92-.!9.
J
Maryland led, 44·31, at the
half, on a 12-point spurt mid·

way through, but Virginia
came on strong in the second
half. Maryland struggled to a
74-&lt;&gt;0 lead with 7:48 left and

then watched the cavaliers
The Terp.s went into a foW'reel off II straight points in the corner stall at 2:2Q and held a
next four minutes behind Andy 7&amp;-75 lead with 1:10 left. But
Boninti and Wally Walker.
Walker missed a shot and the

76ers win· in overtime
By Uolted Press International
Of all the teams in the
National Basketball Association, perhaps only the New

Orleans Jazz have a slimmer
chance of making the playoffs
than the Philadelphia 7~rs.
After dumping the Buffalo

Braves in overtime Tuesday
night, though, the 76ers were
feeling like real live contenders.
Bob McAdoo, the NBA's
leading scorer, reeled off 39
points ('25 in the second half)
but the 76ers put the clamp on
the rest of Braves and rallied
behind Fred Carter and Billy
Cunningham in the extra
period to win, lll-105, only
their 221ld victory in 53 games
this
season. •
MOC
Carter
hit six of his 37 points
Team
WL
in
the
overtime
while CunningMalone
6 0
Ohio Dominican
4 I ham added four of his 18 points
Rio Grande
4 2 to give Philadelphia four· wins
Cedarville
3 3 in the last six games. CunningUrbana
I 5 ham helped put the game into
Tiffin
0 7 overtime with 10 points in the
fourth quarter.
Overall
The Braves' loss left them
Team
WL
Malone
17 3 four games behind idle Boston
and only six ahe.ad of the
Ohio Dominican
9 10
Rio Grande
9 8 victorious New York Knicks in
Cedarville
10 8 the Atlantic Division. PhilaUrbana
7 13 delphia is 5\i! games behind
Tiffin
6 17 New York.
Elsewhere, Golden State
edged Houston, t07·105, Atlanta
Colloge Basketball Results
ripped Cleveland, IJI-97, New
East
York
downed Los Angeles, 109-.
Bentley 106 Tufts 89
94,
Phoenix
nipped
Bsn St. 74 Frmghm St. 58
Brdgwtr St. 111 Nichols 87
Washington, 90-89, and Chicago
Coast Guard 76 Babson 67
heat Portland, 102-90.
Davis &amp; Elkins 106 Wynsbg 102
Dickinson 81 Leb Val 63
Drew 92 Nyack 51
Fredonia St. 45 Alfred 42
Hartwick 68 Ithaca 66
Hobart 63 Rochester Tech 60
Lafayette 74 Lehigh 57
Marls! 9'1 New Paltz 76
Machias 811 Unity 63
Merrlmck 95 Lowell Tech 80
No. Adms St. 81 Wrcstr St. 77

Malone can wrap up
title with win over Rio
Malone College con tinued its
rampage last week defeating
two non-conferen ·e teams to
boost its season record to 17-3.
Malone edged Steubenville 5756 and Davis &amp; Elkins, 65-54.
Malone's Mark Klein continues to pace MOC scorers
with 374 points ln 20 games for
an 18.7 average.
·
There's a tight batUe for
second among Jim Noe of Rio
Grande (17.6), Steve Young of
Cedarvllle (17 .5), and Ben
Tillman of Malone( 17. 4).
Malone College leads the
conference in field goal per·
centage with a team mark of
53.1 per cent. Five of the top 10
shooters in the Moe belong to
Malone. Mark Klein leads the
•Way with 61.3 pel. ( 157 of 256) .
Rio's Jim Noe also leads the
MOC In rebounclllig with an
average oll1.4 caroms a game.

R. .

A. J. Collins, 6'10" center from
Urbana, and 6'6" Don Smtih
from Cedarville are locked In a
tight battle for second place
with a 10.3 average.
Cedarville's Dave Burtner
leads the pack at the free throw
line, missing only two shots in
24 attempts for a 91.7 pet.
mark.
With the conference season
drawing to a close, each game
becomes more important. One
of the biggest games of the
season is Saturday. Malone (60) will travel to Rio Grande (4·
2) . Rio Grande has won seven
of Its last eight games. Only
loss in that stretch was to a
strong Wright State team.
On Wednesday, Rio Grande
will host Ohio Dominican in an
equally Important game. !Ohio
Dominican (4·1) must win in
order to have a shot at the MOC
crown. 1

Girls gymnasts

10m

led by John Webster's 18
·Con linued from page 3)
points,
rallied to win going
plays at Ball Stat~, a conference member but not yet away.
Meanwhile, Denison won the
competing for the basketball
battle
for conference survival
CfOWD.
Three Ohio Conference between the Big Red and
contests are scheduled, Muskingum at New Concord,
featuring Mount Union at 45-41.
The Big Red, now 6-3 in the
Marietta and Kenyon at Wit·
OC, also had to come from
tenberg.
Marietta is the OC leader behind after trailing 25-22 at
with a 7-2 mark, while Wit· halftime in· the low-scoring
· tenberg is at6-3 and Mount and game.
Todd Harris tossed · in 16
Kenyon both ii-3.
points
and Lee Bowman added
The other Ohio Conference
10
for
Denison, while Marvin
game tonight finds Capital (:;.
4) at Ohio Wesleyan (2.0 ), Smalley scored 12 and Tim
while Ohio Northern is at Gebhardt 10 for the Muskies,
Marian (Ind.) in a non-league who just ahout fell from title
contention with their foW'th OC
tussle.
In other key games tonight, loss in nine games.
In Tuesday night's other
Youngstown State is at
Ohio
Conference encounter,
Ashland, Akron at Cleveland
State and Gannon ( Pa.) at Jim English scored 20 points to
pace Baldwin-Wallace to a 66Steubenville.
52
decision over Ohio
In Tuesday night's games,
Wesleyan
.
Heidelberg moved into second
In other games Central State
place ln the Ohio Conference
rollfl\l
over Wllberforce 98-09,
with a come.from-behind 60-.51
Wilmington
tripped Man·
win over Otterbein.
The Student Princes (7~) chester (Ind.) 94-83, and An·
trailed 29-26 at halftime, but derson (Ind.) edged Findlay 8886.

SEE

Knit
Pickings

Po~ester

-=""~ ·

Knits
Plain·and
Coordinated .

&lt;

•,

.,

fOr
Spring

Prints

Announcing

In A

KWIK·

New

SEW

placed third

Providence 65 Brown 62
Slippery Rock 84 Ind. IPa.) 72

Syracuse 97 St. Bonnie 89
Trinity 88 Wesleyan 76
W. New Eng 66 Keene

Meigs High girl gymnasts
coached by Kenda Rainey
placed third in a recent meet at
Wellston. Athens won the meet
scoring 50 pis., Wellston came
in second with 40 pts .. and
Meigs was close behind with

St. 63

W. Va . 'St. 66 Glenv ille 56
Westvl St. 81 Salem St. 65
South
Centenary 101 NW La . 81
Davidson 103 Richmond 79
Grnsbro 101 St. Andrews 90
Ky . Sf . 96 Bellarmine 87
Lenoir Rhyne 103 Pfeiffer 78
Maryland 84 Virginia 79
No. Car. St. 92 Clemson 89
Pembroke St. 64 UNC.Wilm .~1

36.9.

The only Marauder to take a
first was Becky Thomas who
won on the balance beam.
Thomas also placed foW'th in
the vault.
Placing with Thomas on the
balance beam were Lori
Wayne who finished third and
Sally Walters fifth. Completing
the Marauder scoring, Mary
Blaettnar tied for second on the
uneven parallel bars and
Walters was fourth in the same
event.

Troy 57 livingston S6
Midwest

Bldwn-WIIce 66 Wooster 52
Cent. St. 98 Wilberfor ce 69
Denison 45 Muskingum 41
Heidelberg 60 Otterbein 51 ·

Marquette 69 Wisconsin 63
No. Oak. St. 76 Moorhed 60
Wayne St. 72 UW-Green Bay 71
W. Ill . 82 Purdue-indpls 65
Southwest
Blhny Naz 70 Okla . Bapt 62
TeKaS A&amp;M 102 SMU 77
Te.as Tech 72 Baylor 61
W. TeK . St . 62 N. TeK. St. 53

PHOTO SPECIAL
8x10

.IN
': LIVING
•

points for the U!kers; who shot
a horrendous 35 per cent in the
first half.
Suns 90, Bullets 89:
Dick Yan Arsdale scored a
season-high 30 points to lead
Phoenix to a come.from-behind
win over Washington. Van
Arsdale's performance
compensated for the loss of the
Suns' leading scorer, Charlie
Scott, out with the flu. Elvin
Hayes led the Bullets with 27
points.
Bulls '102, Blazers 90:
Bob Love hU his season-high
with. 38 points to lead· Chicago
.to its fourth straight victory
and seventh in the last eight
games. The victory came on
free throws as the Bulls hit only
35 field goals compared to 39
for Portland. But Chicago
cashed in on 32-of-35 fouls shots
and Portland made only 12-of·
18.

r~• MEA~
)ft

c•ttom

a~r

FRESH

MEAT

tw ,..,,

F..._.Atl"'"t~frosll

cut ·&amp;

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PLUS 50' HANDLING · ·~~~~"'~~~~-.;;t%,,-o;;:&amp;.~

NO AGE LIMIT
liMIT·1 PER SUBJECT
2 SPECIAL PER FAMILY
GROUPS TAKEN AT THE !-OW
PRICE
OF 99• .PER SUBJECT.
' .

In the only other game involving a ranked-team, No. 12
Marquette, with Earl Tatum
leading the way with 22 points,
ran its record to 14-3 with a 6963 victory over Wi:iconsin.
Wisconsin led by a point at the
half but Marquette's 13-4 spurt
halfWay through the second
half sent the Badgers to their
13th loss in 17 games.
In other games, Providence
edged Brown, 65-62, Syracuse
beat St. Bonaventure, 97-$,
Davidson crushed Richmond,
103-79, Texas A&amp;M topped
SMU, 102·77, Texas 1 Tech
downed Baylor, 72-01, · West
Texas Slate trimmed North
Texas State, 62-03, and Arkansas stopped Texas, 56-52.

MEN'S
DRESS SHOES
DRESS BOOTS
Reduced
I
•

Clearanc~ From Stock Now!

Chapman's Shoes
MAIN ' ST.

(595)

.

HOURS: 8:00.5:00 WEEKDAYS
8:00.1:00 SATURDAY '

4 lb. Beef Roast
3 lb. Pork Steak $
3 lb. Cube Steak
4 lb. Ground Beef
4 lb. Sliced Bacon
3 Round

50

81~

lb.

FRONTS . 72~ lb.
SIDES ·

3 lb. Sirloin Steak
4.lb. Beef ·Roast
4 lb. Ground Beef.
3 lb. Pork Chops
3·lb. Pork Butt Roast
3·lb. Cube ·Steak
3 lb. Sliced Lunch Meat
.

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PRICE INCLUDES WTTING,
WRAPPING &amp; FREEZING.

ROUNP ·STEAK .............! 1 29 1b.

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FEDERAL FOOD COUPONS.

find out the details? We need
a Distributor at once to sarv·
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merdal accounts. Distributor
wiU be supplied wilh signed

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Gro~nd Beet.~;.r.....~. 59 ~
£ngl1sh .Roast. ........~~ 89 ~

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10 A.M. • 10 P.M. SUKDAYS

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wif axcellent references that
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vig -,uS inV$1tigation,. Jo

Photos By
HONEY PORTRAITS
.

·

These firms eogertv
awairthi.,service. If this isn't
for you we won'! waste Nch.
others time find1ng out. We

I

'~

Business Opponuntty,

wouldn't be reading this ad.
so~ you mu$tbe excited over
this unusual proposal and
you may begin f(Ji) or parttime . Don't you beli~ve it
¥would be· worth your trme to
take a couple of minutes and

SIRLOIN TIP ROAST.....$139'lb.
•

a

but of course you are, or you

PHOTO HRS: 11 AM TIL 7 PM

The .Fabric Shop

PRICES GOOD

STORE HOURS

ATHENS (UP!) - Family
sources said Greek shipping
magnate Aristotle Onassis was
battling against a relaJ&gt;!e·of a
potentially deadly muscular
disease today, but a
; spokesman for Onassis En·
• lj!rprises said it was only a
;. virus infection with com·
:. plications.
· "Mr. Onassis went to the
airport without a coat and
,caught a coJd;" the spokesman
for Onassis Enterprises said.
"His condition was aggravated
by com~llcations from a virus
infection . He is now resting
comfortably."
. The spokesman said an
American heart specialist, Dr.
Isldor Rosenfeld, new froni
N.W York with Jacqueline
Kennedy Onassis to slay at the
bedside of her 69-year-old

THIS IS IT

8 PK.

QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED
NO SALES TO DEALERS

virus ills

.DATE: FRI., FEB. 7
PLACE: SHOPPERS MART

POMEROY, OHIO

'I

Elva Young Hudson, Lewis
R. Hudson to Sarah . Jean
Roush, Harry E. Roush, Life
Estate, Chester.
Anna M. Ryther, Com.,
Lennie Taylor, dec. to Clifford
Taylor, James Taylor, Virgil
H. Taylor, William Taylor,
Joseph Taylor, Zeima Grady,
Delbert Taylor, Evelyn Taylor,
25 Acres, Lebanon.
Clifford Taylor, James
Taylor, William Taylor,
Carolyn Taylor, Joseph Taylor,
Marilyn Taylor, Zelma Grady,
Delmar Grady, Delbert.
Taylor, Evelyn Taylor to Virgil
. H. Taylor, 25 Acres, Lebanon.
Carl Fred Goeglein, Frances
Goeglein to Fred B. Goeglein,
Barbara A. Goeglein, Ease.,
SalisbW'y.
Fred B. Goeglein, Barbara
A. Goeglein to Donald E.
Collins, Pandora E. Collins,
Lot 6, SalisbW'y . Rock Springs
Sub.
Delbert R. Yost, Maxine
Yost to David C. Bradley, 51.17
Acres, Orange.
Milo B. Hutchinson, Betty A.
Hutchinson to .Hawthorne
. Murphy, Flora Murphy, Lot 11,
Hutchinson Sub., Rutland .
Glen Ed.ward Beebe, R~ma
Jean Beebe to Pomeroy Cong.
·of Jehovah's Witnesses, Inc.
one and one-sixth acre, .92
acre, Sali,bury.

U.S.O.A. Meat
For Your Freezer
HINDS

economists · c'an develop
estimates on the margins of
processors .and induslri~s
which make farm supplies like '
fertlll~er . Efforts will also be
made, he said, to come up y;tth
eatimates pinpointln(l profit
levels In food processing and
marketing.
' ·

.298 SECOND,ST

Transfers
4 lb. Beef Roast
·4 lb. Ground B~ef
2 lb. Pork Chops $
3 lb. Pork Butr Roast
2 lb. Round Steak
1 lb. Sliced.Bacon

(596)

crop and livestock forecastS ..
Plans for the new survey
were disclosed when President
Ford's budget was sent to
Congress on Monday.
Kenneth Farrell, an official
in the AgricultW'e Department's Economic Research
Service, said the new· annual
survey was planned because
current data gathering
systems often leave wide gal&gt;!
in information on the farm
economy. Those gaps in up-todate knowledge ahout farm
production costs and inventories . leave "too much
guesswork" in official esti·
·mates of costs and fann in-

"After all, he is a friend. of
Mr. Onassis and his personal
physician," the spokesman
said. Christina Onassls, 25, the
multimilllonaire's daughter,
also was there.
Family sources said Onilssis
was suffering a , relapse of
myasthenia gravis, a disease
that weakens the muscles.

POMEROY

(594)

4 lb. Ground Beef
4 lb. Beef·Roast
3 lb~ Round Steak $
3 lb. Pork Butt Roast
2 lb. Pork Chops
4 lb. Sl
Bacon

of

l
. liC

~usband.

DAILY

PH. 992-3502

.

hit two foul shots to put the
game away, snapping the
Tigers' five-game winning
streak.
Thompson scored 12 of N.C.
State's first 18 points and had
23 in the first half as State
outscored the Tigers, 17·2, in
the final six minutes before
intermission .. The Wolfpack
led, 78-83, with 7:41 remaining,
but during the next three
minures, Clemson outscored
State, 12-2, to close the gap to
IJ0.75.
Skip Wise scored with 15
seconds left to give Clemson a
chance for vi'ctory. The freshman guard scored 16 of his 22
points in the second half and
led Clemson.
·

.

(597)

COLOR

New

Warriors 107, Rockets 105:
Rick Barry scored 38 points
to help Golden State break a
four-game losing streak.
Barry, the NBA's second·
leading scorer, hit 15 baskets in
27 shots and all eight free
throw s. Houston's leading
scorer this season, Rudy
Tomjanovich, missed the game
with the flu but Cliff Meely
filled in with 21 points and
Calvin Murpby had 24.
Hawks Ill, Cavs 97 :
Atlanta, spurred by Tom
Henderson's 14 third quarter
points, pulled away from
Cleveland in the second half to
win. Henderson finished with
27 points while teammate John
Drew added 20.
Knlcks 109, Lakers 94 :
Walt Frazier and Earl
Monroe hit 20 points apiece to
lead New York to an easy win.
Cazzie Russell provided the
only excitement for Los An·
geles with 18 points in the
second half after scoring none
during the first half. Lucius
Allen scored a game-high 23

Terps iced the game at the free
throw line as Virginia tried
fouling as its only hope .
John Lucas led Maryland
with 25 points and Brad Davis
added 24. Boninti had 22 and
Walker 20 for the Cavaliers.
Maryland is now 1:&gt;-3 overall
and 6,2 in the ACC. Virginia fell
to 9-8.
Upset-specialist Clemson
pulled to within a point of North
Carolina State at 90-89 with 15
seconds left before Mo Rivers·

survey

fuel on years-old surveys
Supp lemented by patchwork
reports Pl·cked up from industry sources. If the resulting
estimates are off, they could

annUijl projects later this year. fa~ms will come from units
Th~ survey, Farrell said, will with annual sales of $10,000 imd
be made by ch'ecking a up which produce most of the
representative cross sample_of nation's crops and llVI!stock.
the nation's farms . The survey Farrell said the bud,get also
list will be tailored to focus includes a proposed spending
primarily on commercial increase of $300,000 for an
agriculture, he said. This ~xperimental research
means most of the sur\&gt;eyed project designed to see If

the farm front

Maryland, NC State-'withstand scares
Maryland
and
North
Carolina State continued along
their merry way in the Atlantic
Coast Conference Tuesday
night wt not without a scare.
Fourth-ranked Maryland
blew a big lead and then had to
go into a stall for nearly 2%
minutes at the end to hold off
Virginia, 8&amp;-79. And North
Carolina state, ranked No. 6,
· needed 39 points from All·
America David Thompson to

'economic

.
come, Farrell said.
.At . present, for examp1e,
Farrell said department
·
economists have to base
estimares of farm spending for

up-to-date crop inventories on
farms, livestock movement
between farms and similar
daiB
will be gathered in a new
substantially reduce the acf t f
~e annual survey. Ford's budget
curacy
ne f arm
vw
r·1gW'es boecause
1·
j
ue
1
s
a
rna or for tbe year starling July 1
f
od ti
ts proposes spending shout $2.6
factor in arm pr u ,ondcos
d . million for the first of the
Farrell said improve ala

agriculture" designed to take
some of the guesswork out of
federal !ann income estimates
· and to improve the accW'acy of

·0

By Uolled Press International

im items like fuel use and costs,

.· Ne~· agriculture .survey is planned

Paralyzed TCU gridder refuses to give up

HOUSTON (UP!) - Kent Waldrep, the Texas Christian
U!dversity football player partially paralyzed in a game last
fall, plans to be walking this summer.
His doctors told him after his injury he would probably
never have feeling or movement below his neck.
Tuesday n\ght he wheeled himself to the sidelines of the
Rlce-TCU basketball game and received a standing ovation.
He lifted his right ann and brushed his eye, an embarassed
smile drifting across his face.
"I never thought my recovery would be anything but all the
way,'; he said before he was introduced to the crowd. "Being
in the hospital you see two kinds of people - those that feel

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8_- The Daily Sentinel, Middl~port:Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Feb. 5, 1975

,'

Africa pictured

n~rrl-~SCQUt'~~*m"lPTA planning actio

'I 0iary

By Charlene Hoeflich

*

I

da ~s ruom s

add iti ona l \\Crt~ · Hppotnl ed lu
at · the Salem nominating con)mJ1li.•c .

Middleport Jualor Troop 39
Plans
were
made
for
a skating jlarty to be held Saturday at
•
the Skate-a-Way Rink, at a meeting of Troop 39 Monday night of
Heath United Methodist Church.
Scouts are to meet at the church at 1:30 p.m. to board the
bus. Each gtrl is permitted to take a guest.
Mrs. Judy Crooks, cookie chairwoman, reminded the girls
that orders are due at Monday's meeting .
Mrs. Florence Snowden's patrol worked on their cooking
badge and during the meeting baked peanut butter cookies. The
other patrol under the leadership of Mrs. Crooks, worked on the
dabbler badge.
Pomeroy Browale Troop 77
Valentines were made when the Pomeroy Brownie Troop
met Tuesday night at the Pomeroy Elementary School. A party
was planned for next week .

Women meet in Racine
se lf-denial offer in g was
prese nted. The offering goes to
de aco ns
ana
home
missionaries .
Mrs. Alleyne Rees conducted
the business meeting. On Feb .
12, Ash Wednesday will be
observed at io a. m. with a
comm uni on brun ch at th e
Ra~i ne Churc h for all of the
Methodist Cluster. That same
. day the Methodist men will
meet at the church and the
U.M.W. will serve refreshments.
Tote bags are being ordered
to sell. Reported were given on
the sick and shut-in . Mrs. Ruth
Wolfe and Mrs. Roberts se rved
refreshments to Mrs. Shiveley,
Mrs. Betty Roush. Mrs. Libbv
Willford, Mrs . Ruth A. Hill,
Mrs . Alice Wolfe , Mrs .
Margaret West, and Mrs. Rees.

Artificial lnselllinalion?
Dear Helen :
My wife and I want a child and are cohsidering artificial
Insemination because adoptions are too much of a wailing game.
Will I have to adopt my child? Will we be allowed to know the
donor? Should the child be ·told who his or her biological father
is? How about law suits• Could the donor possibly claim the child
if he wanted to ?
How can I find out all these things, and more ? Even our
doctor seems vague on many of my questions. - HOPEFUL
FATHER

Center Elemenl&lt;lry Sehool was
d1seusscd and tenta tive plans

parents to meC' I with the Meigs
· Local Board of F:ducatwn at
the Monday night meeting of
lhe Salem Center PTA
Mrs Kathryn Colwe ll .
commenting on the classroom
need, recalled that the Board of
Education had promised ad.ditwnal space two yea rs ago It
was her suggestion that the

'·

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'

Offt cer reports were 1-(iven
with the treasurer showing a

The Me1g' County Council of

balance of $B63.98. Mrs Robert
W•\son read a thank you note
from Mrs. Marga ret Pars'ons
lhank1ng the PTA for cards and
fl owers. The attendance award
went to· M1ss Becky Triplett's
llurd grade .
Mrs , Wh itley introduced
teac hers and parents i&lt;lking
par t 1n a ski t on Founder 's
Day. The thtrd grade students
prese nted "Caps for Sale " with
David Ba rr as narrator . Others
l&lt;lking part were John Whtte,
the peddler, and Kenny Sue
Thoma s, Ricky Zeigler, Keith
Barrett, Mike Willford, Jennifer Jones, Cindy Priddy,
Trina Jolmson, J1mmy Sptres
and Teddy Helton as monkeys.

Parents

a nd
wa~

Teih.' hcrs'

announced for

Feb G at the Salisbury
Elcmenl&lt;lry School. It was

rwt ed that Distr ic t 16 is
currently without a direc tor

anrl that on Feb. 18 there will
be a mrehng at the Hocking
Valley Motor Lodge to try lu
find one
Al so announced Wa s th e

Teacher Corps Program for
de legation meet with the parents wh odesire lo help their
board .
chtldren with readm g to be
Plans were made fo r the held from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m .
annual pancake supper to be eac h Thursday in the Rutland
held on Marc h 15 from 5 to 8 a uditoriwn .
Mrs Robert Dugan reported
p.m. an.d PTA members are
urged to ass1st in servi ng. the on the legisla tive workshop
supper There will be a potluck held at the Pomeroy
supper with enterl&lt;linment by Elementary School recently
the Grate family. Both Meigs Bottle caps are to be turned
County and Meigs Local School into the school in a week.
Mrs. Wallace Fetty presided
Distncl offtcials and board
members will be invited to at the meetmg wh1ch opened
with Dea n Colwell s1ngin g
attend
The Rutland Fire Depart- "Beulah Land." Mrs . Colwell
ment asked for a lime to led 1n devotwns l&lt;lken from
demon s tra te fir e protectiOn John I on the theme "No Need
and the PTA voted to invite the to Doubt God ." There was a
fi remen for the Apnl meeting poem on forgiveness and
Mrs Russell Whitley . Mrs . prayer, along with a reading on
Earl Riggs, Mrs. !.ita Jones, February and the pledge to the
and Mrs. Kenneth Longstreth flag.

Past presidents honored and

prese nted corsages were Mrs.
Phylli s Dugan ,' Mrs .. Anna
Turne r , an d Mrs Fetty. Mrs.

Whitley also presented corsages to Mrs . Ne llie Vale and
Mrs. Marvin .Wilson.
Suggestion s on items which
the PTA could purchase included a small calculator and
filing cabmets.
Refreshments 'of a decorated

ca ke

m the Founder 's Day
theme , coffee and punch we re

se rved .

Worthy causes supported
I

.

Several donations were
made at the Monday night
meetu&gt;g of the Meigs Salon 710,
Eight and Forty, held at the
Middleport home of Mrs .
Rhoda Ha ckett.
The Salon contributed $2o on
the $1,1100 to be raised in Ohio
for the endowment of the 25th
bed at the National Jewish
Hospil&lt;ll in Denver, Colo ., a
facility for the treatment and
care of children with cys hc
hbrosts and tuberculosis.

The Salon also contributed
$10 to the American Legion
Child Welfare Foundation for
research, and ga ve $5 each to
the Clevelan d Cystic FibrosiS
C• mp, th e Toledo Cystic
Fibrosis Camp, the Cen tral
Ohio Chapt er of Cys ti c
Fibrosis, and to the all ·
partners ' proJect of purchasing
Airway machine for use with
cys tic fibrosis children.
Als o contributed was $2 to
the Ohio Medici ne Fund . To the

POllY'S POINTERS
BY POLLY CR.\MER

Roasting may save
year-old pecans
POLLY'S PROBLEM
durable than shelf paper.
DEAR POLLY - Is the re MARIE .
any wHy to remove the rank or
DEAR POLLY - When the
old l&lt;lste from last year 's length of a readymade garpecans ? I overlooked several ment needs to be changed
pounds that I would now like to carefully pull out the !~read
use . - MRS. C. H.
and wmd it on a spooL Moisten
DEAR MRS. C. H. - The the fingers as the thread passes
nut companies we consulted do through them . This helps
not think you can freshen the stra ighten the thread and
navor of your pecans. The only keeps 1! fr om knotting. This is
suggestion offe red was lo well worth the little trouble
perhaps put them In a 2W. because the thread used is
degree oven for 15 to 20 usually a better match than
minutes. We would be In- what you can buy.
terested in knowing If any
I also moisten seam tape
readers have discovered a way · before using it as it has a
to do this. - POLLY.
tendency to shrink. Leave it on
the cardboard and ironing will
DEAR POLLY _:_ I have not be necessary. - ANNE.
three Pet Peeves and all totally
unrelated. One IS with the
"mara'.han" fast i&lt;llkers on TV

.

Ohio dairymen
offered·tour

Slides of Botswana, Africa
were shown by Miss Susan
Fleshman, daughter of
missionary parents, at a
meeting of the Young Adult
Class of the Laurel Cliff Free
Methodist Church, held at the
home of Mrs : Mildred JacObs,
teacher.
The Rev. Floyd Shook gave a
study on "Foundations of a
Christian Home," and refreshments were served by Mrs.
,Jacobs and Mrs. Sybll Dorst to
the Rev. and Mrs. Shook, Mrs.
Mildred Jacobs, Mr. and Mrs.
Virgil Phillips, Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Friend, Jr., Mr. and
Mrs. Ernest Haggy, Mr. and
Mrs. George Folmer, Mr. and
Mrs. Michael Wright, Craig
Howard, Jean Windon, and
Mrs. Becky Card.

\

An educational tour for Ohio
dairymen and their wives is
being planned to Australia and
New Zealand ea rly m 1976,
according to John Rice. Meigs
County Extension Agent,
Agriculture .

Dunng a single !~inch snowfall more than one-million
flakes may collect on a two-foot
square.

Columbia Gas of Ohio
Wednesday endorsed proposals
outlined in a Public Utilities
Commission of Ohio (PUCO )
plan to help elderly and
financially troubled customers
to avoid having their utility
services shut off and agreed to
publicize
the
program
throughout its 62-eounty Ohio
operating area.
In discussing the four-point
program, announced by the
PUCO on Jan . 31 after a
meeting with representatives
of major utility companies and
various consumer interest
groups, J. M. Koebel, manager
in the Gallia-Meigs area for the
gas company, said Columbia
recognizes that high bills can
cause problems from time to
time and has followed similar
procedures in the past in
working with customers who
have had ' problems paying
bills.

shoppers · because there is no

Peeve. I have been embarrassed on more than one

Reg. SS!¥15 Upright
with Reg.S1995
Albove·The·Fioor

occasion by asking a shoP,per
National Jewish Hospita l, the Hayes Hote l 1n Columbus. for help. - PQLLY.
DEAR POLLY - Cords for
Salon sent $2 each for the funds Going from here will be Mrs.
of bed maintenance, camp, Walker , Mrs. Pearl Knapp, bathrobes invariably wear out
clothing, medicme, camera Mrs . Hackett, Mrs . Catherine before the robes so I crochet
and band. Given $5 each were Welsh. and Mrs. Martin . Both new cord belts with scrapbag
the hospil&lt;ll funds of cys tic Mrs. Walker and Mrs. Welsh materials. Cut a strip.of double
fibrosi s resea rch, tuberculosis s erve on depar temental knit polyester about one-inch
wide and crochet a chain to the
r esea r c h ,
em ph esema commi ttees .
des1red
length. - DAISY.
rese arch , · and as thm a ti c · Turned in at the meeting
DEAR POLLY - Never
researc h, gifts for the children, we re 12 more birthday cards
d1scar,
d any lengths of nylon
parties, and a phone fund for with dimes to be sent to the
flshmg
line. Use it fo r repairing
use by the children.
Nahona l Jewish Hospil&lt;ll. Mrs
Mrs.
Myrtle Walker. Iva Powell was nam'ed tents and other sports and
CoMBINATION FOR ONLY
childr en and yo uth chai r - ··wrec k'' (initia ti on) chair· campin g equipment. It is
\YOman, noted that a dona tion woman , and will plan activi ties weat h er- r es i s t a nt .
ELIZABETH.
had been given to the family of for row· partners.
DEAR POLLY - Plastic rug
a local cystic fibrosis ch1ld for
Mrs. Pearl Knapp, la orrunners
are grea t for lining the
medicine and transportahon. chiviste, ta lked on the history
cupboards
where pots and pans
Mrs. Mary Roush. chair- re port . Ways and mea ns
woma n of nurses sc holara projects were discussed and are stored. They are easy to
ships, reported a total jewelry and kn1ves are now for clean and so much more
of $32.75 and each member was sale by the Salon. Plans were
Model 1416
asked to contributed $2 so that made to send va lentines to the
the goal of $100 can be reached. Denver Hospital and to Sherrie
~
Powe rozen lo c lean on rhe Hoor
Announced at the meeting by Marshall. a cyshc fibrosis
or
lhc tr oor w• !r-t lewer
PARTY GIVEN
Mrs. Mary Martin, chapea u, child.
£0GE UEEioltll ' ·WillY
strokes Hu!ie drsoos ab!e du~1
CIOalll IIIII
DIU •• NAP •
bllg has 560 cu
usable
Leroy Wheeler was honored
lfii iOIIIft
'
~ .. "lloftt•lc&gt;
was the pouvior to be held
Names of secret sisters were
c ap a cr 1 ~
L rFehl":e lubrr cat ed
1ft&lt; ~ tl ~ft ·
&lt;10ift ''' "' ., .
with
a
surprise
farewell
party
lilt OtMIIol t&lt;l
,
,
.,
motor never needs or!rnq
March 2 and 3 at the Fort exchanged. Mrs. Veda Davis
will host the March 3 meeting. Sunday at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Grace Pratt was a gues t Mrs. Harold Hood, Lincoln
and others attending were Mrs. Heights, Pomeroy . Wheeler
Eunie Brinker , Mrs. Lula recently received a promotion
Hampton and Mrs . Ruby in his employment which
requires that he move from
Marshall .
Pomeroy
to Chesapea ke. Gifts ·
Mrs. Hackett served sandwiches, coffee and soft drinks. were present.!d to him and
re!reshmen Is were served to
the hosts and their son, Phillip,
Mrs. Fred Spears, special
Mr. and Mrs . Jack Handley,
education teacher, Wahama
992-2635
. CHILDREN COME
MIDDLEPORT
Becky
and Jackie , and Mr. and
High School ; and Mrs. Judith
Wee kend guests of Mrs. Mrs. Jim Neutzling and Path.
Scites, Mason School.
Walter Hamm and son, Mike,
Senior citizens attending were all of her children in' i
were Ralph Gibbs, Sr., Mrs. cluding Dr. and Mrs. Charles
Lillian Smith, Letart; Mrs. Hamm and children, Stefanic
Folden Hazelett, Letart; Miss and Rebecca of Indianapolis,
Lelah Jane Powell, Mrs. Henry Ind.; Mrs. E. R Johnson and
John and The Rev; Mrs. A. children, Jeffrey and Eric of
Mmer.
Dublin ; Mrs. Luis Crujeiras,
A highlight was viewing the Brooklyn, N. Y., and Miss
new shelves and Improvements Nancy Hamm of Columbus.
made recently. The shelves The entire group and William
were made available by the Hamm of Middleport and Mr.
Mason County Commissioners. and Mrs. Robert Harnm of
During January the Volunteer Chillicothe attended the
Committee for the library funeral service of Albert Smith
worked several days to held in Hunting,ton, W. Va.
reorganize the library.
James Gengerrelll, honorary
. ALUMNITOMEET
pstron of the library who
A
meeting of the Pomeroy
resides in Los Angeles, Cell!.,
continues to send books, during Alumni Association will be held
January !50 vtilumes. Mrs. at 7 p.m. Thursday night at the
Powell and her staff thank Mr. home of Mrs . Gene Mitch,
Wright St., Pomeroy. All inGengerrelli.
The library has received terested alumni are invited to
several new books from the attend.
Library Commission. Others
who have recently donated
books are Mason County Farm
Women's Council, Mr. and
Mrs. Charlie Dodd, Mrs. Judith
&amp;ites, Mrs. M. J. LingeneJt,
Mrs. Olet Campbell, Donald
Bumgarner and Mrs. Donna
Bartram.
Mrs. Powell has announced
For Interior Walls· and Woodwork
new hours for tile library ai
follows :
Monday , 1~p.m .; Tuesday, 9
a.m.-12 noon and I~ p.m.;
Wednesday, 9 a .m.-12 noon and
I~ p.m. ; Thursday, 9 a.m.-12
noon, I~ p.m.; ~ p.m. and
Friday, 1-6 p.m.
•
Mrs. Powell thanks all who
have
helped
during
Shop Our Complete Paint Department
reorganization of the library.
She extends a special thanks to
Mr. Charles Smith, -mayor of
New Haven and the town
employees, the library committeeofMrs. Phil Batey, Mrs.
O!et Campbell, Mrs. Charles
Smith, Mrs. Karl Wiles, Mrs.
Olarlle Dodd, Mrs: ' Donald
Divers, Mrs. Dan Edwards,
Mrs. Carol Edwards, ll!rs. Tom
Hoffman, and the Library
Board of Directors, Charles
Smith, R. G. Greene, Donald
Roush and Mrs. Hilda Smith.

Cleaning Tools

&lt;~b o ve

''l

CLEANS SHAGS!

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WALL PAINT
~6·· gal.

LARGE SELECilON
OF OOLORS

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Fonner Alfred

x:m~::-~:;:::,:i

~

resident dies

~

WILKENSBUR, Pa.
Joshua E. Pitts, 94, Murrysville, Pa., formerly of the
Alfred Commun1ty m Me1gs
·county, died Tuesday · in
Columbia Hospital, Wilkensbur, Pa., following a week's
illness.
Mr. Pitts .was born at Alvy,
W. Va., the son of the late
Christopher and Arzan Haught
Pitts.
Mr. Pitts was a member of
the Orange Christian Church,
Modem Woodmen of America,
Camp 10900, Alfred, and he was
a farmer the greater part of his
life.
He is survived by one

aen ar

~~
:~

,:;

IN WHO'S WHO - Front row, Betty Lambert, Barbara

Eisensinuner, Sharon Vannoy, Sheri Lenhart, and Iesa
Wagner; second row, Thomas Weston, Carel Tornes, Thomas

'

Smith, James Johnson, Randy Greenberg, Uoyd Brewton,
Dwight Shumway , President of Rio Grande College, Alphus
Christensen, and Jake Bapst (not pictured, Debra
Vulgamore, Joyce Madry, John Bryant).

16 Rio students make Who's Who
RIO GRANDE - Sixteen Rio
Grande College students have
been selected to appear in the
1974-75 edition of "Who's Who
Among Students in American
Universities and Colleges."
The students were selected
from competition with all
junior and senior students at
the college. The selection
committee was composed of
Arion (Bud) Sellers, chairman,
and Ray Matura, Ed Prince,

Dallas W. Ball
died Tuesday

POINT PLEASANT
Dallas W. Ball, 61, Rt. 2,
Letart, died Tuesday in
Pleasant Valley Hospital. He
was an owner and operator of
Ball's Grocery In Letart .
Funeral services will be
conducted Friday at 2 p.m.
from the Guiding Star Advent
Church with Rev. Wilbur S.
Baxter and Rev . Milton J.
Bartram officiating . Burial
will follow in the Evergreen
Cemetery at Letart. Friends
daughter, Mrs. Earl Pearl" may call at Foglesong Funeral
Summerfield, Murrysville; Home after 3 p.m. Thursday.
two grandsons, Roger Sum- The body will be taken to the
merfield, Murrysville, and church one hour prior to the
Sherman Summerfield, service.
Tuppers Plains; a brother, Eli
Mr. Ball was born July 11,
Pitts, Akron, and two sisters, 1913, at Letart, a son of William
Mrs. Stella Boles, Newark, and anct Nora Adkins Ball. He was
Miss Emma Pitts, Clarksburg. a former employe of Marietta
Mr. Pitts was preceded in Manufacturing Co. and Foote
death by his wife Delila Glover Mineral Co. He was treasurer
Pitts in 1957. He was also of the Evergreen Cemetery
preceded in death by one sister Association at Lei&lt;lrt.
and four brothers.
Survivors include his .widow,
Funeral services will be Marie Grimm Ball ; three sons,
Friday at 1 p.m. at the Orange Charlie, Don and William, all
Christian Church with Eugene of Letart; one daughter, Mrs .
Burial will be in the church Judy Hunt, Letart; three
cemetery.
grandchildren, Davi'd and
.. Friends n.ay call at the Tracy Ball, and Kevin Hunt, all
White Funeral Home in of Letart and one stepCoolville this evening from 7 to grandson, Brian Felder ; two
9, Thursday lrom 2 to 4 and 7 to brothers, Charles Ball, Letart,
9 p.m.
and Iris Ball, Pomeroy; two

Paul Lloyd, and Robert
Pfieffer, professors, and Dr.
Clyde Evans, vice president for
student affairs, at Rio Grande .
Criteria used for selection
included grade point average,
fraternity 1 sorority members hip, co-curri cular ac·
tivities, athletics, and student
government participation.

Selected were Jacob Bapst, Po rtsmouth ; Carel Tornes,
Rio Grande; Lloyd G. Brewton, Waterford; Sharon J. Vannoy,
Lodi, N. J.; John Bryant, Belpre; Debra Vulgamore,
Wagner,
Vinton; Barbara . Eisen- Jasper ; · lesa
Marietta,
and
Thomas
Weston,
zimmer , Cuyahoga Falls ;
Tom
•s,Ri
~\1}'·
N.
J
.,
all
seniors.
Randy Greenberg, HackenTwo
juniors
selected
were
sack, N. J.; James :Johnston,
Mar ion;
Joyce
Madry, Betty Lambert, of Ironton, and
Columbus; Dw1ght Shumway, Sheri Lenhart, Scott Depot, W.
Sciotov11le; Thomas E. Smith, Va.

gal.
•

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•

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SEATTLE (UP!) - All
sports at the University of
Washington except football and
basketball will be stripped of
athletic scholarships beginning
with the 1975-76 season unless
unexpected financial aid is
forthcoming, according to UW
Sports Director Joe Kearney.
"At this time, I have not
given any coach the g&lt;H!head
to recruit any athletes at all,"
Kearney said Tuesday. "ln
fact, I told them just the opposite, that no scholarships
could be offered at this time in
sports outside of foolball 11nd
basketball."
Kearney said the cutback is
necessary because the athletic
program lost money for the
first time last year. Kearney
said the program wUl try to
generate more revenue and to
make some cuts.

\

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•,

ay YOU

_&gt;.._,/

(care (fiMUA;Y.
'.,·.,

)

\14TH/
. ...\
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.············· .\/

,/

suffered by
II

Senator Taft
WASHINGTON (UP! )
U.S. Sen. Robert Taft Jr.
suffered a heart attack last
Wednesday, officials anoounced for the first time here
Tuesday, The Ohio Republican
has been transferred from the
coronary care unit of Bethesda
Naval Hospital to the hospital's
convalescent area.
Taft suffered the heart attack last Wednesday after
returning from Columbus,
Ohio, where he attended the
funerals of three friends killed
in an atrplane crash here.
Taft had Invited the three
men, Columbus Dispatch Publlaher Edgar .Wolfe Jr., attor·
ney Carlton Dargusch and
businessman
Frederick
LeVeque Jr., to Washington
and was deeply distressed by
the accident.

I

by Anson

Delicate
Baubles
to win her
Heart

only

I

$850

ExQU ISit e swlngmg pendan ts
with syr1thetic Spinels in
Sterling Silver or Gold .
Elec tr o Plate on Sterling
Silver. Simply charming!
(nla•~t ed !o shOW !le la •!

DELIGHTFUL CASUAL
WEAR
.-.
'

Scho-Peds
by Scholl

Fash ionable styling with .
builr•vp areft an\l glove· ·
so ft leather ... a combination to make your
leisure hours more
comfortable!

CLEVELAND (UP!) -Convicted Watergate conspirator
John Dean III was scheduled to
speak at Cleveland State
University today as part of a
six-week tour of speaking
engagements in which he
expects to gross more than
$100,000.
Dean said he needs the cash,
but making so much money for
the tour bothers him.
In Huntington, W.Va., earlier
this week, Dean said, "I'm not
here to prove that crime pays. I
have no alternative."
Dean attended the College of
Wooster and is a native of·
Akron.
When he testified before the
Watergate committee, it was
his word against that of the
President of the United States
and Dean's word ultimately

WOMAN STABBED
AKRON, Ohio (UP!) - The
body of Mrs. Linda McClain ,
27, Akron, with 13 stab wounds,
was found early today on a
floor at her home here . Police
said her husband, Herbert, 33,
was questioned .

proved more accurate, more

believable.
His testimony -eomblned
with the White House tapes toppled Richard M. Nixon from
the presidency and helped
convict
Nixon 's
top
lieutenants, H.R. Haldeman,
John D. Ehrlichman, John N.
Mitchell and Robert Mardian,
of conspiracy in the Watergate
coverup.
Dean pleaded guilty Ocl. 19,
1973 to c.onspiracy to obstruct
justice and defraud the United
states and was sentenced on
Aug. 4, 1974 to one to four years
in prison. His release by U.S.
District Ju!\l!e John J. Sirlca
Jan. 8 meant he had spent just
over five months at Ft.
Holabird, Md.
Nixon made it clear Dean,
hls counsei, was'fired while the

President praised Haldeman
and Ehrlichman when he
accepted their resignations
April 30, 1973.
Ten days before he was
dismissed Dean had said :
''Some may hope or think that I
will become a scapegoat in the
Watergate case. Anyone who
believes this does oot know me,
oor the true facts nor understand our system of justice."
He had not cleared hls
statement with the White
House, and the hattie lines
were drawn.
Dean was minority counsel
for the House Judiciary Committee and later an associate
deputy attorney general under
Mitchell before joining the
White House staff in 1971.

DR. SCHOLL'S
FOOT COMFORT SHOES
Brown or white. Available In widths AAA to E,
sizes 4112 to 11 . Other styles to choose from.
Prices Range From $17.99 to $33.99.

NEW SPRING
SHOES
ARRIVING DAILY

Hartley 's Shoes
Middle of Upper Black- Pomeroy
Open Al 1 Day Thursc!ays-Til B.p.m. Friday·

POMEROY BOWLING
LANES
MORNING GLORIES

Jan . 2.1975
Standings

Team

Excelsior OH Co.

119

Gibbs Grocery
G. &amp; J . Auto Parts

94
84

Newell Su noco
WMPO
•

76
66

Spencer's Market ·
41
High Ind . Game- Margaret

Fotlrod 182, M. · Wilson. T.
Osborne and M. Gillilan 176 .
H ig h

Wilson

USDA CHOICE

ROUND
·
'
STEAK

$}~~

Series Marlene
spa, Thelma Osborne

479.

sisters, Mrs. Inez Cunningham ,
Team High Game- WMPO
Point Pleasant, and Mrs. 837 .
Team High Senes - WMPO
Genevieve Roush, Letart.
2381

'

on the new list either had not
Here are some of the other (140 cu. in.) 18, 26; Maserati
been · tested at that time or models on the new list, In Merak (181 cu . in.) 10, 17;
Oldsmobile Delta 88 ( 400 cu.
were resubmitted by their alphabetical order, With city
in.)
12, 17; Plymouth Road
manufacturers for.a new test. mileage listed first and highRunner-Fury (360 cu. in.) 11,
The EPA said conswners way mileage second :
should be able to get the
Alfa Rorileo 2000 SpiCier ( 120 18; Pontiac Gran Prix (400 cu.
complete list about Mardi.
cu. in.) 19, 27; American in.) 12, 17; Triumph TR7 (122
TheRoilaSilverShadowdoes Motors Pacer (232 cu. in.) 18, cu. in.) 20, 29; Volkswagen
better on the highway,-acconf. 24; Buick LeSabre Limousine Rabbit (90 cu. in.) 24, 38;
ing to EPA, to the tune of 12 (45S cu. in.) U, 15; Olecker Volkswagen Dasher.(90 cu. in.)
Marathon Wagon (350 cu. in.) 23, 36.
miles per galloo.
,The best city driving gas 12, 17; Olevrolet Monza (140' The same models were
covered in a separate list for
mileage in the supplemental cu. tn.) 19, 28;
lists was 1'1111 up by the Honda
Chrysler CordOba (360 cu. cars sold in California where
Civic -41t 'l/ m.p.g.- 1111 .high- in.) 11, 18; Dodge Coronet the air pollution exhaust rules
way perfonnance was rated at. Olarger (360 cu. in.) 11, 18; are more Stringent.
Copies of the Gas Mileage
39 m.p.g., also the best in that Dalallll 280 (188 cu. in). 16, 25;
Guide
for 1975 are available
category but o~Jy sli'ghtly · Ferrari Dino 308 GT4 (179 cu.
1
from
the
Consumer Center,
better
than
several in. ) 8, 15; Flat 128 (79cu. in.) 8,
·
Volkswagen models.
15; Uricoln-Mercury Bob&lt;;at, Pueblo, Colo. 81009.

ONIONS

3 lb. . zge

GROUND
DtUCK

99~

lb.

It C.
DIET POP
5 qts. $}00

SLICED
BOLOGNA $129

2 LB.

10 lb.
NO. 1 POTATOES

69C

Bacon Ends, Pan Pudding, Head Cheese, Sauce, All Meat-Kielbassie
Smoked Sausage. Pork or Beef liver. Beef Tongues, Fresh Side, Salt
Side.
.
·

!!,p(]eial

!dp(]eiaf ·
COUPON

FAVORITE
BREAD

R. C. COLA

•1 00
·

Sat. Only
SIMON'S

GAl-

-

'11~

4 LOAVES
With ·
Coupon

2% MILK

8.,-16 oz. bottles
Reg.

With Coupon

$1.59

Sat. Only

.'

$·109
Fri.-Sat. On!Y
SIMON'$

SIMON'S

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r'···v·~,.-S
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Heart attack

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Kearney • $aid Uiere is a
question of whether uw would
have the "kind of learn worthy
of sending to a Pac~ championship," and finally there
was the question of whether
there would be anyone, who
would qualify for NCAA
standards.
Kearney also said the cut
would mean retrenching at the
administrative and service levels .
Washington Is one of the few
institutions at the natloital
level which receives no student
funds for athletics.

Dean in Cleveland for talk

You don't go far in·a Silver Shadow ·

$799

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Latex

I .·

dustries and universities to
learn about the fine ·dairy industry in these countries.
Outstanding sce ner y and
sightseeing attractions will be
seen. For people with more
time, a stopover m Fiji or
Honolulu can be made on the
return night.
' I
Preliminary information .
indicates the cos t will be approximately $1,995 per person
with some meals included. The
exact cost and what it includes
will be available shortly .
,
For. more information on this
'
tour to these two unique
countries "down under" write
lo Flair Travel Consultants,
Inc. , 346 E. Bowman St ..
Wooster, Ohio 44691. Better
yet, send your $25 deposit per
person to Flair Travel Consultants, Inc . (made out to
them) . Hosting th1s tour will be
TIP-TOE THROUGH THE TUNDRA - A bird's nest has escaped damage after being
Dr. Glen Schmidt, Chairman,
grazed by one of Goodyear's nearly 4-foot-wide Terra-Tire 1'undr• tires . The tread was
Depart111ent of Dairy Science
specially designed to allow Alaskjln oil pipeline vehicles tb achieve maximum traction without
at Ohio State University and
damaging the delicate tundra. Carrying a load of over 5,1100 pounds, a Tundra tire puts about
Dr. William Crist, Area Ex1
half the pressure on the ground as a man's he eL
tension Agent, Dairy Industry
in the Canfield Area.

credit.' '

POMEROY Lodge 164 F&amp;AM
7:30 p.m. All Master Masons
invited.
MIDDLEPORT IJTERARY
Club, 2 p.m. Wednesday at the
home of Mrs. Forest Bachtel.
Mrs. Thereon Johnson to
review the book, "Thomas
Jefferson" by Fawn Brodie,
and Miss Kathryn Philson to
review "The Cabin" by Walter
Collins O'Kane. ROll call will
be a comment on the book.
THURSDAY
CATHOLIC Women's Club,
Sacred Heart Parish church
hall, .e p.m. Thursday,
preceded by Mass at 7:30p.m.
COMMITTEE FOR the
Mentally Retarded, Thursday,
7:30p.m. Meigs CoUI)ty courtroom. Public invited.
MONTHLY meeting, Meigs
County Pioneer and Historical
Society, 7:30p.m. Thursday at
museum. Gayle Price, Port·
land, will present material on
'he Portland area and the
''rice and Curtis families. The
1•ublic Is invited.
GAWA County 8 and 40,
&amp;•nn 612, will meet at 7:30
p.m. Thursday at the home of
Mrs. Grace Pratt In Middleport.
SATURDAY
HYMN Sing, Hazel Community Church, 7:30 p.m. By MICHAEL J. CONLON
Salurdily featuring "Gospel
WASHING'roN (UPI) - If
you've been watrtlng to buy a
Tones". Public invited.
RoiJa.Royce Sil~r Shadow, wt
didn't know the gasoline mileaSECRETCEREMONY
ge, here's the answer: Plan on
LOS ANGELES, Callf..(UPI) about 9 miles a gallon in the
- Aclresit Merle Oberon was city.
married last week · for the ·, That perticular Rolls, with a ·
fourth lime, in a secret. 412 cubic incb engine, Was
ceremony' to Dutch actor among the bigger gas guzzlers
Robert Wolders, friends in a new list of mileage r~ts
disclosed Tuesday. Miss · publilhed today' by the EnOberon, 57, and Wolders, 38, vironmental . Protection
were married by a Santa Agency·
.
MonlCa SUperior Court Judge at The rather brief list is a
a eotmley club in a ceremony ~~to a more COIIIJlre" •
witneaed only by her children heiiSIVe group of mileage test
by her third husband, Fran- results published for 1975
cesca and Erunp' Pagliai.
IIHidei,.£BrS Jast_fall.1 'j'he ~

Chief Interior

Semi-Gloss

non -

ayment."
I 2) "That companies work
with local organizations to
relay this information to
customers who may not be
reached through other means.
For example, scheduling group
meetin gs to familiarize
customers with new company
procedures in this area."
(3)
" That companies
promote standard budget plan
billing. Budget plans should be
available to all residential
customers. The company by
agreement may arrange that
customers who face an apparent hardship in payment of
their gas or electric bills be
able to submit payments,
weekly, bi-weekly or monthly
or other form of extended

·WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT Firemen's
Auxlllary, 7:30 p.m. at the
(!rehouse. Mrs . Euvelte
Bechtle and Mrs. Emma
Wayland,
hostesses.
Nomination of officers.

Give Rooms New Look Now!

Chief Latex

0

IcSocial
I d

INGELS
FURNITURE

LATEX WALL PAINT

to

"That any residential
"We urge our customers to service location, which has
contact their local gas com- · reached the state of disconpany office immediately if they nection due to non-ayment,
have any que'\tion about a gas through the company's normal
bill or anticipate having a collection proc'edure, be visited
problem paying it on time," by a field person prior to the
Koebel said . "We do not want ac.tual disconnection. If no
to dlscon tinue service to any contact is made with an adult
customer and will work with member of the household this
customers to attempt to field p,ersonnel will leave an
arrange a paymen I schedule or important notice on the
other solution If they will only premises which will specify the
contact our local gas company reasons for disconnection and
office by telephone, or in alternatives
which
the
person."
customer may seek through
Provisions of the program, the credit department of the
as ,presented
by
the company. This important
PUCO include :
notice will also urge the
(1) "That companies embark customer to contact the
on an informational campaign company, and will indicate
to
Inform
customers possible
alternative
threatened With disconnect of arrangements.''

Regular 58990

·........-· -..

due

to dairy farms, dairy in·

'

alternatives available through
the company to alleviate
disconnects

Huskies slow it

-~
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· ·-- "

services policy

forced to i&lt;lke French fri ed
potatoes whether you want
them or not and then have to
pay for them . The last is one's
inability to idenllfy sales
people m stores from the
Identification for the sales
· fo rce . - MRS. J.
DEAR MRS. J.- I certainly
agree with you on the last

The proposed 21 day tour will
depart Sunday, Feb. 15 and
return March 6, 1976. This tour
IS beng sponsored by the Ohio
Dairymen 's Association and
the Ohio '.Coopera tiv e Ex-

GasCo supports

and radio. Another 1s that in
man y restauran ts you are

Library Appreciation
Day held on Sunday

NEIW HAVEN - The New
Haven Public Library and the
Mason Library observed the
Second Annual Library Appreciation Day Sunday at The
New Haven Public Library.
Libraries state-wide were
asked by the · West Virginia
Library Commission to have
Dear Father :
Open House to honor
Your doctor ~ vague with good cause! Laws governing ar- legislators, senators, and
tificial inseminatiOn haven't caughl up with the times: there are delegates whose interest in
libraries extends throughout
still many gray areas which might cause future problems .
the year. By observing ApPresently, only three states - California, Kansas and
Oklahoma - have specific legislation on the legitimacy of an preciation Day the public was
given an opportunity to honor
AID (artificial insemination donor) child. In other states it's
possible that the baby might be ruled Ulegittmate, and entitled to them and exprt!Sll gratitude for
the continuing services.
neither the support nor Inheritance of the husband. For this
As the guests arrived they
reason, doctors suggest adoption, which can be done in closed
court, with Illes kept secret so that the child need not know. were greeted by Mrs. Paul
Powell, New Haven Librarian,
unlt!Sll parents choose to tell him.
and Mrs. Ray Proffit, Mason
Legal adoption diminishes the possibility of law suits or
divorce action on groundS of "adultery." It ~lso protects the Librarian . Guests were
donor, who, in the absence of specific laws, might be named the registered by Mrs. Charlie
Dodd and Mrs. Che t Campbell.
"father" and liable for support.
Since an estimated quarter million U. S. citizens were AID- After the guests were given the
conceived babies, and the number grows each year, it's high opportunity to browse through
time legislators worked out definite rulings on the subject! - H. the Library, they were then
invited to enjoy !Inger sand+++
wiches, punch and coffee. The
tlear Helen :
serving table was decorated in
On December 20, an ad appeared in our local paper. I quote:
red
and white.
"An offer to Area Residents:
·
Arrangements of red carTo ease death at this hour - AGift Funeral.
" - Moftuary, though this advertisement, aMounces an nations and mums were used to
decorate the library . Tlie
offer to families bereaved during this Christmas season - a
flowers
were sent by Miss Jane
funeral at no cost, (including casket and services up to $475 limit, ·
after whidl survivors pay the difference ).
Powell and Miss Sandra Moore
"lf a death occurs in your family between the hours of &lt;t Dayton, Ohio. Mrs. Dan
midnight, lli!!:f!Diber 20 and midnight lletember 31, call us im- Edwards and Mrs. Charles
~th presided at the punch
mediately. We will take the entire burden of the funeral off your
bowl. Mrs. Tom Hoffman, Mrs.
sboulders, at no cost to you.
" ... This Is our way to thmik area residents for accepting us. Phil Batey, and Mrs. Karl
Sincere, from the heart, no strings attached, we will provide gift Wiles asatsted tn. serving.
Outo(lf-town guests attending
funerals f~ the peri(\() stated above. If death strikes, you have
were Mr. L. W. Getty, Mason
hutto call."
The ad was signed by a local cemetery-mortuary com- County Clerk; Wllllam Rardin,
chairman of Mason Cowrty
bination.
I've heard &lt;t holiday marll-downs, but this beats all. Ubrary Board ; Mrs. Wllllam
Woulml't it inspire bargain shoppers to perhaps slip arsenic in a Rardin, Miss Jane Powell,
mate's coffee ... or attempt a suicide to save the family money ? professor at Sinclair College,
Dayton ; Miss Francis Roush
-ASTOUNDED
anil Mrs. Eloise Wilson,
Middleport, and Miss Sandra
bear AS :
rd say this is a holiday gift to end all gifts- but literaily! ' Moore, Dayton.
Teachers visiting the library
Have you checked the number of takers- or is that information
during the day Included Miss
claulfled? -H. .
Mary Jane Getty, librarian at
' +++
Point Plea,sant Junior High
Dear Helen :
A lot of yow- complaining writers rnf8ht benefit from this school ; Miss Shirley Miller,
Mason County Supervisor d.
jingle:
Decca;
Rick Powell, principal
Qttlag stlll .and wishing
of Letart Eleinentary School;
Mates no pera&gt;in great.
Mrs. Dorothy Pyatt, teacher at
The good Lord sends the fiahing,
Letart
Elementary School;
But you m~ dig the ~t. - PAh,

'•

the

r~r

~ made for a de lega ti on o,f meeting

Practice for a Founder's Day play to be presented by the
troop at tile February meeting of the Salisbury PTA was held at
the'l'bUI'!lday nlghl meeting of the Salisbury junior troop.
The troop also made plans for a bowling party to be held at
the Pomeroy Bowling Lanes on Saturday, Feb. 15at 3:30p .m.
Camille Swindell opened the meeting with flag ceremony
conducted by Peggy Shaw, Laura Shaw, Kathleen Parker and
Camille SwindelL Badge reports were given by Jena Welker,
Teressa Dorst, Linda Williams, Kathleen Parker, and Laura Gail
Smith. Leslie Cole se rved refreshments.

RACINE - The annual call
to pra ye r and se lf-denial
program was presented by
Mrs. Betty Shiveley when the
United Methodist Women met
at the Racine Wesleya n Church
recently.
"Transformatie" of the Self
and the World" was the theme
of the program with Mrs. Betty
Roush reading scripture from
St. Luke 4, I through 14,
followed by silent prayer.
" Lord Jesus I Love Thee"
was sung with Alice Wolfe at
the plano. Mrs. Shiveley had a
responsive reading, "The Lord
Is My Light" with eac h
member standing and greeting
each other with a hand shake
or embrace, and saying, " May
the peace of God be with you."
Mrs. Frances Roberts read
from John 3and the prayer and

The need

9- The Daily Sentinel, Middl~port-Pomeroy, 0. , Wednesday. Feb. 5, 1975
h.•t.Sion Scrvl&lt;'e.
Nine days will be spent in
Australia and 10 days in New
Zealand . The main points of
inte rest in both countries will
be visited. This includes visits

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I

8_- The Daily Sentinel, Middl~port:Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Feb. 5, 1975

,'

Africa pictured

n~rrl-~SCQUt'~~*m"lPTA planning actio

'I 0iary

By Charlene Hoeflich

*

I

da ~s ruom s

add iti ona l \\Crt~ · Hppotnl ed lu
at · the Salem nominating con)mJ1li.•c .

Middleport Jualor Troop 39
Plans
were
made
for
a skating jlarty to be held Saturday at
•
the Skate-a-Way Rink, at a meeting of Troop 39 Monday night of
Heath United Methodist Church.
Scouts are to meet at the church at 1:30 p.m. to board the
bus. Each gtrl is permitted to take a guest.
Mrs. Judy Crooks, cookie chairwoman, reminded the girls
that orders are due at Monday's meeting .
Mrs. Florence Snowden's patrol worked on their cooking
badge and during the meeting baked peanut butter cookies. The
other patrol under the leadership of Mrs. Crooks, worked on the
dabbler badge.
Pomeroy Browale Troop 77
Valentines were made when the Pomeroy Brownie Troop
met Tuesday night at the Pomeroy Elementary School. A party
was planned for next week .

Women meet in Racine
se lf-denial offer in g was
prese nted. The offering goes to
de aco ns
ana
home
missionaries .
Mrs. Alleyne Rees conducted
the business meeting. On Feb .
12, Ash Wednesday will be
observed at io a. m. with a
comm uni on brun ch at th e
Ra~i ne Churc h for all of the
Methodist Cluster. That same
. day the Methodist men will
meet at the church and the
U.M.W. will serve refreshments.
Tote bags are being ordered
to sell. Reported were given on
the sick and shut-in . Mrs. Ruth
Wolfe and Mrs. Roberts se rved
refreshments to Mrs. Shiveley,
Mrs. Betty Roush. Mrs. Libbv
Willford, Mrs . Ruth A. Hill,
Mrs . Alice Wolfe , Mrs .
Margaret West, and Mrs. Rees.

Artificial lnselllinalion?
Dear Helen :
My wife and I want a child and are cohsidering artificial
Insemination because adoptions are too much of a wailing game.
Will I have to adopt my child? Will we be allowed to know the
donor? Should the child be ·told who his or her biological father
is? How about law suits• Could the donor possibly claim the child
if he wanted to ?
How can I find out all these things, and more ? Even our
doctor seems vague on many of my questions. - HOPEFUL
FATHER

Center Elemenl&lt;lry Sehool was
d1seusscd and tenta tive plans

parents to meC' I with the Meigs
· Local Board of F:ducatwn at
the Monday night meeting of
lhe Salem Center PTA
Mrs Kathryn Colwe ll .
commenting on the classroom
need, recalled that the Board of
Education had promised ad.ditwnal space two yea rs ago It
was her suggestion that the

'·

'

'

Offt cer reports were 1-(iven
with the treasurer showing a

The Me1g' County Council of

balance of $B63.98. Mrs Robert
W•\son read a thank you note
from Mrs. Marga ret Pars'ons
lhank1ng the PTA for cards and
fl owers. The attendance award
went to· M1ss Becky Triplett's
llurd grade .
Mrs , Wh itley introduced
teac hers and parents i&lt;lking
par t 1n a ski t on Founder 's
Day. The thtrd grade students
prese nted "Caps for Sale " with
David Ba rr as narrator . Others
l&lt;lking part were John Whtte,
the peddler, and Kenny Sue
Thoma s, Ricky Zeigler, Keith
Barrett, Mike Willford, Jennifer Jones, Cindy Priddy,
Trina Jolmson, J1mmy Sptres
and Teddy Helton as monkeys.

Parents

a nd
wa~

Teih.' hcrs'

announced for

Feb G at the Salisbury
Elcmenl&lt;lry School. It was

rwt ed that Distr ic t 16 is
currently without a direc tor

anrl that on Feb. 18 there will
be a mrehng at the Hocking
Valley Motor Lodge to try lu
find one
Al so announced Wa s th e

Teacher Corps Program for
de legation meet with the parents wh odesire lo help their
board .
chtldren with readm g to be
Plans were made fo r the held from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m .
annual pancake supper to be eac h Thursday in the Rutland
held on Marc h 15 from 5 to 8 a uditoriwn .
Mrs Robert Dugan reported
p.m. an.d PTA members are
urged to ass1st in servi ng. the on the legisla tive workshop
supper There will be a potluck held at the Pomeroy
supper with enterl&lt;linment by Elementary School recently
the Grate family. Both Meigs Bottle caps are to be turned
County and Meigs Local School into the school in a week.
Mrs. Wallace Fetty presided
Distncl offtcials and board
members will be invited to at the meetmg wh1ch opened
with Dea n Colwell s1ngin g
attend
The Rutland Fire Depart- "Beulah Land." Mrs . Colwell
ment asked for a lime to led 1n devotwns l&lt;lken from
demon s tra te fir e protectiOn John I on the theme "No Need
and the PTA voted to invite the to Doubt God ." There was a
fi remen for the Apnl meeting poem on forgiveness and
Mrs Russell Whitley . Mrs . prayer, along with a reading on
Earl Riggs, Mrs. !.ita Jones, February and the pledge to the
and Mrs. Kenneth Longstreth flag.

Past presidents honored and

prese nted corsages were Mrs.
Phylli s Dugan ,' Mrs .. Anna
Turne r , an d Mrs Fetty. Mrs.

Whitley also presented corsages to Mrs . Ne llie Vale and
Mrs. Marvin .Wilson.
Suggestion s on items which
the PTA could purchase included a small calculator and
filing cabmets.
Refreshments 'of a decorated

ca ke

m the Founder 's Day
theme , coffee and punch we re

se rved .

Worthy causes supported
I

.

Several donations were
made at the Monday night
meetu&gt;g of the Meigs Salon 710,
Eight and Forty, held at the
Middleport home of Mrs .
Rhoda Ha ckett.
The Salon contributed $2o on
the $1,1100 to be raised in Ohio
for the endowment of the 25th
bed at the National Jewish
Hospil&lt;ll in Denver, Colo ., a
facility for the treatment and
care of children with cys hc
hbrosts and tuberculosis.

The Salon also contributed
$10 to the American Legion
Child Welfare Foundation for
research, and ga ve $5 each to
the Clevelan d Cystic FibrosiS
C• mp, th e Toledo Cystic
Fibrosis Camp, the Cen tral
Ohio Chapt er of Cys ti c
Fibrosis, and to the all ·
partners ' proJect of purchasing
Airway machine for use with
cys tic fibrosis children.
Als o contributed was $2 to
the Ohio Medici ne Fund . To the

POllY'S POINTERS
BY POLLY CR.\MER

Roasting may save
year-old pecans
POLLY'S PROBLEM
durable than shelf paper.
DEAR POLLY - Is the re MARIE .
any wHy to remove the rank or
DEAR POLLY - When the
old l&lt;lste from last year 's length of a readymade garpecans ? I overlooked several ment needs to be changed
pounds that I would now like to carefully pull out the !~read
use . - MRS. C. H.
and wmd it on a spooL Moisten
DEAR MRS. C. H. - The the fingers as the thread passes
nut companies we consulted do through them . This helps
not think you can freshen the stra ighten the thread and
navor of your pecans. The only keeps 1! fr om knotting. This is
suggestion offe red was lo well worth the little trouble
perhaps put them In a 2W. because the thread used is
degree oven for 15 to 20 usually a better match than
minutes. We would be In- what you can buy.
terested in knowing If any
I also moisten seam tape
readers have discovered a way · before using it as it has a
to do this. - POLLY.
tendency to shrink. Leave it on
the cardboard and ironing will
DEAR POLLY _:_ I have not be necessary. - ANNE.
three Pet Peeves and all totally
unrelated. One IS with the
"mara'.han" fast i&lt;llkers on TV

.

Ohio dairymen
offered·tour

Slides of Botswana, Africa
were shown by Miss Susan
Fleshman, daughter of
missionary parents, at a
meeting of the Young Adult
Class of the Laurel Cliff Free
Methodist Church, held at the
home of Mrs : Mildred JacObs,
teacher.
The Rev. Floyd Shook gave a
study on "Foundations of a
Christian Home," and refreshments were served by Mrs.
,Jacobs and Mrs. Sybll Dorst to
the Rev. and Mrs. Shook, Mrs.
Mildred Jacobs, Mr. and Mrs.
Virgil Phillips, Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Friend, Jr., Mr. and
Mrs. Ernest Haggy, Mr. and
Mrs. George Folmer, Mr. and
Mrs. Michael Wright, Craig
Howard, Jean Windon, and
Mrs. Becky Card.

\

An educational tour for Ohio
dairymen and their wives is
being planned to Australia and
New Zealand ea rly m 1976,
according to John Rice. Meigs
County Extension Agent,
Agriculture .

Dunng a single !~inch snowfall more than one-million
flakes may collect on a two-foot
square.

Columbia Gas of Ohio
Wednesday endorsed proposals
outlined in a Public Utilities
Commission of Ohio (PUCO )
plan to help elderly and
financially troubled customers
to avoid having their utility
services shut off and agreed to
publicize
the
program
throughout its 62-eounty Ohio
operating area.
In discussing the four-point
program, announced by the
PUCO on Jan . 31 after a
meeting with representatives
of major utility companies and
various consumer interest
groups, J. M. Koebel, manager
in the Gallia-Meigs area for the
gas company, said Columbia
recognizes that high bills can
cause problems from time to
time and has followed similar
procedures in the past in
working with customers who
have had ' problems paying
bills.

shoppers · because there is no

Peeve. I have been embarrassed on more than one

Reg. SS!¥15 Upright
with Reg.S1995
Albove·The·Fioor

occasion by asking a shoP,per
National Jewish Hospita l, the Hayes Hote l 1n Columbus. for help. - PQLLY.
DEAR POLLY - Cords for
Salon sent $2 each for the funds Going from here will be Mrs.
of bed maintenance, camp, Walker , Mrs. Pearl Knapp, bathrobes invariably wear out
clothing, medicme, camera Mrs . Hackett, Mrs . Catherine before the robes so I crochet
and band. Given $5 each were Welsh. and Mrs. Martin . Both new cord belts with scrapbag
the hospil&lt;ll funds of cys tic Mrs. Walker and Mrs. Welsh materials. Cut a strip.of double
fibrosi s resea rch, tuberculosis s erve on depar temental knit polyester about one-inch
wide and crochet a chain to the
r esea r c h ,
em ph esema commi ttees .
des1red
length. - DAISY.
rese arch , · and as thm a ti c · Turned in at the meeting
DEAR POLLY - Never
researc h, gifts for the children, we re 12 more birthday cards
d1scar,
d any lengths of nylon
parties, and a phone fund for with dimes to be sent to the
flshmg
line. Use it fo r repairing
use by the children.
Nahona l Jewish Hospil&lt;ll. Mrs
Mrs.
Myrtle Walker. Iva Powell was nam'ed tents and other sports and
CoMBINATION FOR ONLY
childr en and yo uth chai r - ··wrec k'' (initia ti on) chair· campin g equipment. It is
\YOman, noted that a dona tion woman , and will plan activi ties weat h er- r es i s t a nt .
ELIZABETH.
had been given to the family of for row· partners.
DEAR POLLY - Plastic rug
a local cystic fibrosis ch1ld for
Mrs. Pearl Knapp, la orrunners
are grea t for lining the
medicine and transportahon. chiviste, ta lked on the history
cupboards
where pots and pans
Mrs. Mary Roush. chair- re port . Ways and mea ns
woma n of nurses sc holara projects were discussed and are stored. They are easy to
ships, reported a total jewelry and kn1ves are now for clean and so much more
of $32.75 and each member was sale by the Salon. Plans were
Model 1416
asked to contributed $2 so that made to send va lentines to the
the goal of $100 can be reached. Denver Hospital and to Sherrie
~
Powe rozen lo c lean on rhe Hoor
Announced at the meeting by Marshall. a cyshc fibrosis
or
lhc tr oor w• !r-t lewer
PARTY GIVEN
Mrs. Mary Martin, chapea u, child.
£0GE UEEioltll ' ·WillY
strokes Hu!ie drsoos ab!e du~1
CIOalll IIIII
DIU •• NAP •
bllg has 560 cu
usable
Leroy Wheeler was honored
lfii iOIIIft
'
~ .. "lloftt•lc&gt;
was the pouvior to be held
Names of secret sisters were
c ap a cr 1 ~
L rFehl":e lubrr cat ed
1ft&lt; ~ tl ~ft ·
&lt;10ift ''' "' ., .
with
a
surprise
farewell
party
lilt OtMIIol t&lt;l
,
,
.,
motor never needs or!rnq
March 2 and 3 at the Fort exchanged. Mrs. Veda Davis
will host the March 3 meeting. Sunday at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Grace Pratt was a gues t Mrs. Harold Hood, Lincoln
and others attending were Mrs. Heights, Pomeroy . Wheeler
Eunie Brinker , Mrs. Lula recently received a promotion
Hampton and Mrs . Ruby in his employment which
requires that he move from
Marshall .
Pomeroy
to Chesapea ke. Gifts ·
Mrs. Hackett served sandwiches, coffee and soft drinks. were present.!d to him and
re!reshmen Is were served to
the hosts and their son, Phillip,
Mrs. Fred Spears, special
Mr. and Mrs . Jack Handley,
education teacher, Wahama
992-2635
. CHILDREN COME
MIDDLEPORT
Becky
and Jackie , and Mr. and
High School ; and Mrs. Judith
Wee kend guests of Mrs. Mrs. Jim Neutzling and Path.
Scites, Mason School.
Walter Hamm and son, Mike,
Senior citizens attending were all of her children in' i
were Ralph Gibbs, Sr., Mrs. cluding Dr. and Mrs. Charles
Lillian Smith, Letart; Mrs. Hamm and children, Stefanic
Folden Hazelett, Letart; Miss and Rebecca of Indianapolis,
Lelah Jane Powell, Mrs. Henry Ind.; Mrs. E. R Johnson and
John and The Rev; Mrs. A. children, Jeffrey and Eric of
Mmer.
Dublin ; Mrs. Luis Crujeiras,
A highlight was viewing the Brooklyn, N. Y., and Miss
new shelves and Improvements Nancy Hamm of Columbus.
made recently. The shelves The entire group and William
were made available by the Hamm of Middleport and Mr.
Mason County Commissioners. and Mrs. Robert Harnm of
During January the Volunteer Chillicothe attended the
Committee for the library funeral service of Albert Smith
worked several days to held in Hunting,ton, W. Va.
reorganize the library.
James Gengerrelll, honorary
. ALUMNITOMEET
pstron of the library who
A
meeting of the Pomeroy
resides in Los Angeles, Cell!.,
continues to send books, during Alumni Association will be held
January !50 vtilumes. Mrs. at 7 p.m. Thursday night at the
Powell and her staff thank Mr. home of Mrs . Gene Mitch,
Wright St., Pomeroy. All inGengerrelli.
The library has received terested alumni are invited to
several new books from the attend.
Library Commission. Others
who have recently donated
books are Mason County Farm
Women's Council, Mr. and
Mrs. Charlie Dodd, Mrs. Judith
&amp;ites, Mrs. M. J. LingeneJt,
Mrs. Olet Campbell, Donald
Bumgarner and Mrs. Donna
Bartram.
Mrs. Powell has announced
For Interior Walls· and Woodwork
new hours for tile library ai
follows :
Monday , 1~p.m .; Tuesday, 9
a.m.-12 noon and I~ p.m.;
Wednesday, 9 a .m.-12 noon and
I~ p.m. ; Thursday, 9 a.m.-12
noon, I~ p.m.; ~ p.m. and
Friday, 1-6 p.m.
•
Mrs. Powell thanks all who
have
helped
during
Shop Our Complete Paint Department
reorganization of the library.
She extends a special thanks to
Mr. Charles Smith, -mayor of
New Haven and the town
employees, the library committeeofMrs. Phil Batey, Mrs.
O!et Campbell, Mrs. Charles
Smith, Mrs. Karl Wiles, Mrs.
Olarlle Dodd, Mrs: ' Donald
Divers, Mrs. Dan Edwards,
Mrs. Carol Edwards, ll!rs. Tom
Hoffman, and the Library
Board of Directors, Charles
Smith, R. G. Greene, Donald
Roush and Mrs. Hilda Smith.

Cleaning Tools

&lt;~b o ve

''l

CLEANS SHAGS!

~

~

~
~
j

.......".

WALL PAINT
~6·· gal.

LARGE SELECilON
OF OOLORS

'

...

~

( 4)

Fonner Alfred

x:m~::-~:;:::,:i

~

resident dies

~

WILKENSBUR, Pa.
Joshua E. Pitts, 94, Murrysville, Pa., formerly of the
Alfred Commun1ty m Me1gs
·county, died Tuesday · in
Columbia Hospital, Wilkensbur, Pa., following a week's
illness.
Mr. Pitts .was born at Alvy,
W. Va., the son of the late
Christopher and Arzan Haught
Pitts.
Mr. Pitts was a member of
the Orange Christian Church,
Modem Woodmen of America,
Camp 10900, Alfred, and he was
a farmer the greater part of his
life.
He is survived by one

aen ar

~~
:~

,:;

IN WHO'S WHO - Front row, Betty Lambert, Barbara

Eisensinuner, Sharon Vannoy, Sheri Lenhart, and Iesa
Wagner; second row, Thomas Weston, Carel Tornes, Thomas

'

Smith, James Johnson, Randy Greenberg, Uoyd Brewton,
Dwight Shumway , President of Rio Grande College, Alphus
Christensen, and Jake Bapst (not pictured, Debra
Vulgamore, Joyce Madry, John Bryant).

16 Rio students make Who's Who
RIO GRANDE - Sixteen Rio
Grande College students have
been selected to appear in the
1974-75 edition of "Who's Who
Among Students in American
Universities and Colleges."
The students were selected
from competition with all
junior and senior students at
the college. The selection
committee was composed of
Arion (Bud) Sellers, chairman,
and Ray Matura, Ed Prince,

Dallas W. Ball
died Tuesday

POINT PLEASANT
Dallas W. Ball, 61, Rt. 2,
Letart, died Tuesday in
Pleasant Valley Hospital. He
was an owner and operator of
Ball's Grocery In Letart .
Funeral services will be
conducted Friday at 2 p.m.
from the Guiding Star Advent
Church with Rev. Wilbur S.
Baxter and Rev . Milton J.
Bartram officiating . Burial
will follow in the Evergreen
Cemetery at Letart. Friends
daughter, Mrs. Earl Pearl" may call at Foglesong Funeral
Summerfield, Murrysville; Home after 3 p.m. Thursday.
two grandsons, Roger Sum- The body will be taken to the
merfield, Murrysville, and church one hour prior to the
Sherman Summerfield, service.
Tuppers Plains; a brother, Eli
Mr. Ball was born July 11,
Pitts, Akron, and two sisters, 1913, at Letart, a son of William
Mrs. Stella Boles, Newark, and anct Nora Adkins Ball. He was
Miss Emma Pitts, Clarksburg. a former employe of Marietta
Mr. Pitts was preceded in Manufacturing Co. and Foote
death by his wife Delila Glover Mineral Co. He was treasurer
Pitts in 1957. He was also of the Evergreen Cemetery
preceded in death by one sister Association at Lei&lt;lrt.
and four brothers.
Survivors include his .widow,
Funeral services will be Marie Grimm Ball ; three sons,
Friday at 1 p.m. at the Orange Charlie, Don and William, all
Christian Church with Eugene of Letart; one daughter, Mrs .
Burial will be in the church Judy Hunt, Letart; three
cemetery.
grandchildren, Davi'd and
.. Friends n.ay call at the Tracy Ball, and Kevin Hunt, all
White Funeral Home in of Letart and one stepCoolville this evening from 7 to grandson, Brian Felder ; two
9, Thursday lrom 2 to 4 and 7 to brothers, Charles Ball, Letart,
9 p.m.
and Iris Ball, Pomeroy; two

Paul Lloyd, and Robert
Pfieffer, professors, and Dr.
Clyde Evans, vice president for
student affairs, at Rio Grande .
Criteria used for selection
included grade point average,
fraternity 1 sorority members hip, co-curri cular ac·
tivities, athletics, and student
government participation.

Selected were Jacob Bapst, Po rtsmouth ; Carel Tornes,
Rio Grande; Lloyd G. Brewton, Waterford; Sharon J. Vannoy,
Lodi, N. J.; John Bryant, Belpre; Debra Vulgamore,
Wagner,
Vinton; Barbara . Eisen- Jasper ; · lesa
Marietta,
and
Thomas
Weston,
zimmer , Cuyahoga Falls ;
Tom
•s,Ri
~\1}'·
N.
J
.,
all
seniors.
Randy Greenberg, HackenTwo
juniors
selected
were
sack, N. J.; James :Johnston,
Mar ion;
Joyce
Madry, Betty Lambert, of Ironton, and
Columbus; Dw1ght Shumway, Sheri Lenhart, Scott Depot, W.
Sciotov11le; Thomas E. Smith, Va.

gal.
•

•

•

•••

..
•'
•

' I

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SEATTLE (UP!) - All
sports at the University of
Washington except football and
basketball will be stripped of
athletic scholarships beginning
with the 1975-76 season unless
unexpected financial aid is
forthcoming, according to UW
Sports Director Joe Kearney.
"At this time, I have not
given any coach the g&lt;H!head
to recruit any athletes at all,"
Kearney said Tuesday. "ln
fact, I told them just the opposite, that no scholarships
could be offered at this time in
sports outside of foolball 11nd
basketball."
Kearney said the cutback is
necessary because the athletic
program lost money for the
first time last year. Kearney
said the program wUl try to
generate more revenue and to
make some cuts.

\

I

'1

.

•,

ay YOU

_&gt;.._,/

(care (fiMUA;Y.
'.,·.,

)

\14TH/
. ...\
' ,I

.············· .\/

,/

suffered by
II

Senator Taft
WASHINGTON (UP! )
U.S. Sen. Robert Taft Jr.
suffered a heart attack last
Wednesday, officials anoounced for the first time here
Tuesday, The Ohio Republican
has been transferred from the
coronary care unit of Bethesda
Naval Hospital to the hospital's
convalescent area.
Taft suffered the heart attack last Wednesday after
returning from Columbus,
Ohio, where he attended the
funerals of three friends killed
in an atrplane crash here.
Taft had Invited the three
men, Columbus Dispatch Publlaher Edgar .Wolfe Jr., attor·
ney Carlton Dargusch and
businessman
Frederick
LeVeque Jr., to Washington
and was deeply distressed by
the accident.

I

by Anson

Delicate
Baubles
to win her
Heart

only

I

$850

ExQU ISit e swlngmg pendan ts
with syr1thetic Spinels in
Sterling Silver or Gold .
Elec tr o Plate on Sterling
Silver. Simply charming!
(nla•~t ed !o shOW !le la •!

DELIGHTFUL CASUAL
WEAR
.-.
'

Scho-Peds
by Scholl

Fash ionable styling with .
builr•vp areft an\l glove· ·
so ft leather ... a combination to make your
leisure hours more
comfortable!

CLEVELAND (UP!) -Convicted Watergate conspirator
John Dean III was scheduled to
speak at Cleveland State
University today as part of a
six-week tour of speaking
engagements in which he
expects to gross more than
$100,000.
Dean said he needs the cash,
but making so much money for
the tour bothers him.
In Huntington, W.Va., earlier
this week, Dean said, "I'm not
here to prove that crime pays. I
have no alternative."
Dean attended the College of
Wooster and is a native of·
Akron.
When he testified before the
Watergate committee, it was
his word against that of the
President of the United States
and Dean's word ultimately

WOMAN STABBED
AKRON, Ohio (UP!) - The
body of Mrs. Linda McClain ,
27, Akron, with 13 stab wounds,
was found early today on a
floor at her home here . Police
said her husband, Herbert, 33,
was questioned .

proved more accurate, more

believable.
His testimony -eomblned
with the White House tapes toppled Richard M. Nixon from
the presidency and helped
convict
Nixon 's
top
lieutenants, H.R. Haldeman,
John D. Ehrlichman, John N.
Mitchell and Robert Mardian,
of conspiracy in the Watergate
coverup.
Dean pleaded guilty Ocl. 19,
1973 to c.onspiracy to obstruct
justice and defraud the United
states and was sentenced on
Aug. 4, 1974 to one to four years
in prison. His release by U.S.
District Ju!\l!e John J. Sirlca
Jan. 8 meant he had spent just
over five months at Ft.
Holabird, Md.
Nixon made it clear Dean,
hls counsei, was'fired while the

President praised Haldeman
and Ehrlichman when he
accepted their resignations
April 30, 1973.
Ten days before he was
dismissed Dean had said :
''Some may hope or think that I
will become a scapegoat in the
Watergate case. Anyone who
believes this does oot know me,
oor the true facts nor understand our system of justice."
He had not cleared hls
statement with the White
House, and the hattie lines
were drawn.
Dean was minority counsel
for the House Judiciary Committee and later an associate
deputy attorney general under
Mitchell before joining the
White House staff in 1971.

DR. SCHOLL'S
FOOT COMFORT SHOES
Brown or white. Available In widths AAA to E,
sizes 4112 to 11 . Other styles to choose from.
Prices Range From $17.99 to $33.99.

NEW SPRING
SHOES
ARRIVING DAILY

Hartley 's Shoes
Middle of Upper Black- Pomeroy
Open Al 1 Day Thursc!ays-Til B.p.m. Friday·

POMEROY BOWLING
LANES
MORNING GLORIES

Jan . 2.1975
Standings

Team

Excelsior OH Co.

119

Gibbs Grocery
G. &amp; J . Auto Parts

94
84

Newell Su noco
WMPO
•

76
66

Spencer's Market ·
41
High Ind . Game- Margaret

Fotlrod 182, M. · Wilson. T.
Osborne and M. Gillilan 176 .
H ig h

Wilson

USDA CHOICE

ROUND
·
'
STEAK

$}~~

Series Marlene
spa, Thelma Osborne

479.

sisters, Mrs. Inez Cunningham ,
Team High Game- WMPO
Point Pleasant, and Mrs. 837 .
Team High Senes - WMPO
Genevieve Roush, Letart.
2381

'

on the new list either had not
Here are some of the other (140 cu. in.) 18, 26; Maserati
been · tested at that time or models on the new list, In Merak (181 cu . in.) 10, 17;
Oldsmobile Delta 88 ( 400 cu.
were resubmitted by their alphabetical order, With city
in.)
12, 17; Plymouth Road
manufacturers for.a new test. mileage listed first and highRunner-Fury (360 cu. in.) 11,
The EPA said conswners way mileage second :
should be able to get the
Alfa Rorileo 2000 SpiCier ( 120 18; Pontiac Gran Prix (400 cu.
complete list about Mardi.
cu. in.) 19, 27; American in.) 12, 17; Triumph TR7 (122
TheRoilaSilverShadowdoes Motors Pacer (232 cu. in.) 18, cu. in.) 20, 29; Volkswagen
better on the highway,-acconf. 24; Buick LeSabre Limousine Rabbit (90 cu. in.) 24, 38;
ing to EPA, to the tune of 12 (45S cu. in.) U, 15; Olecker Volkswagen Dasher.(90 cu. in.)
Marathon Wagon (350 cu. in.) 23, 36.
miles per galloo.
,The best city driving gas 12, 17; Olevrolet Monza (140' The same models were
covered in a separate list for
mileage in the supplemental cu. tn.) 19, 28;
lists was 1'1111 up by the Honda
Chrysler CordOba (360 cu. cars sold in California where
Civic -41t 'l/ m.p.g.- 1111 .high- in.) 11, 18; Dodge Coronet the air pollution exhaust rules
way perfonnance was rated at. Olarger (360 cu. in.) 11, 18; are more Stringent.
Copies of the Gas Mileage
39 m.p.g., also the best in that Dalallll 280 (188 cu. in). 16, 25;
Guide
for 1975 are available
category but o~Jy sli'ghtly · Ferrari Dino 308 GT4 (179 cu.
1
from
the
Consumer Center,
better
than
several in. ) 8, 15; Flat 128 (79cu. in.) 8,
·
Volkswagen models.
15; Uricoln-Mercury Bob&lt;;at, Pueblo, Colo. 81009.

ONIONS

3 lb. . zge

GROUND
DtUCK

99~

lb.

It C.
DIET POP
5 qts. $}00

SLICED
BOLOGNA $129

2 LB.

10 lb.
NO. 1 POTATOES

69C

Bacon Ends, Pan Pudding, Head Cheese, Sauce, All Meat-Kielbassie
Smoked Sausage. Pork or Beef liver. Beef Tongues, Fresh Side, Salt
Side.
.
·

!!,p(]eial

!dp(]eiaf ·
COUPON

FAVORITE
BREAD

R. C. COLA

•1 00
·

Sat. Only
SIMON'S

GAl-

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'11~

4 LOAVES
With ·
Coupon

2% MILK

8.,-16 oz. bottles
Reg.

With Coupon

$1.59

Sat. Only

.'

$·109
Fri.-Sat. On!Y
SIMON'$

SIMON'S

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Heart attack

'
'

Kearney • $aid Uiere is a
question of whether uw would
have the "kind of learn worthy
of sending to a Pac~ championship," and finally there
was the question of whether
there would be anyone, who
would qualify for NCAA
standards.
Kearney also said the cut
would mean retrenching at the
administrative and service levels .
Washington Is one of the few
institutions at the natloital
level which receives no student
funds for athletics.

Dean in Cleveland for talk

You don't go far in·a Silver Shadow ·

$799

,

\

11

Latex

I .·

dustries and universities to
learn about the fine ·dairy industry in these countries.
Outstanding sce ner y and
sightseeing attractions will be
seen. For people with more
time, a stopover m Fiji or
Honolulu can be made on the
return night.
' I
Preliminary information .
indicates the cos t will be approximately $1,995 per person
with some meals included. The
exact cost and what it includes
will be available shortly .
,
For. more information on this
'
tour to these two unique
countries "down under" write
lo Flair Travel Consultants,
Inc. , 346 E. Bowman St ..
Wooster, Ohio 44691. Better
yet, send your $25 deposit per
person to Flair Travel Consultants, Inc . (made out to
them) . Hosting th1s tour will be
TIP-TOE THROUGH THE TUNDRA - A bird's nest has escaped damage after being
Dr. Glen Schmidt, Chairman,
grazed by one of Goodyear's nearly 4-foot-wide Terra-Tire 1'undr• tires . The tread was
Depart111ent of Dairy Science
specially designed to allow Alaskjln oil pipeline vehicles tb achieve maximum traction without
at Ohio State University and
damaging the delicate tundra. Carrying a load of over 5,1100 pounds, a Tundra tire puts about
Dr. William Crist, Area Ex1
half the pressure on the ground as a man's he eL
tension Agent, Dairy Industry
in the Canfield Area.

credit.' '

POMEROY Lodge 164 F&amp;AM
7:30 p.m. All Master Masons
invited.
MIDDLEPORT IJTERARY
Club, 2 p.m. Wednesday at the
home of Mrs. Forest Bachtel.
Mrs. Thereon Johnson to
review the book, "Thomas
Jefferson" by Fawn Brodie,
and Miss Kathryn Philson to
review "The Cabin" by Walter
Collins O'Kane. ROll call will
be a comment on the book.
THURSDAY
CATHOLIC Women's Club,
Sacred Heart Parish church
hall, .e p.m. Thursday,
preceded by Mass at 7:30p.m.
COMMITTEE FOR the
Mentally Retarded, Thursday,
7:30p.m. Meigs CoUI)ty courtroom. Public invited.
MONTHLY meeting, Meigs
County Pioneer and Historical
Society, 7:30p.m. Thursday at
museum. Gayle Price, Port·
land, will present material on
'he Portland area and the
''rice and Curtis families. The
1•ublic Is invited.
GAWA County 8 and 40,
&amp;•nn 612, will meet at 7:30
p.m. Thursday at the home of
Mrs. Grace Pratt In Middleport.
SATURDAY
HYMN Sing, Hazel Community Church, 7:30 p.m. By MICHAEL J. CONLON
Salurdily featuring "Gospel
WASHING'roN (UPI) - If
you've been watrtlng to buy a
Tones". Public invited.
RoiJa.Royce Sil~r Shadow, wt
didn't know the gasoline mileaSECRETCEREMONY
ge, here's the answer: Plan on
LOS ANGELES, Callf..(UPI) about 9 miles a gallon in the
- Aclresit Merle Oberon was city.
married last week · for the ·, That perticular Rolls, with a ·
fourth lime, in a secret. 412 cubic incb engine, Was
ceremony' to Dutch actor among the bigger gas guzzlers
Robert Wolders, friends in a new list of mileage r~ts
disclosed Tuesday. Miss · publilhed today' by the EnOberon, 57, and Wolders, 38, vironmental . Protection
were married by a Santa Agency·
.
MonlCa SUperior Court Judge at The rather brief list is a
a eotmley club in a ceremony ~~to a more COIIIJlre" •
witneaed only by her children heiiSIVe group of mileage test
by her third husband, Fran- results published for 1975
cesca and Erunp' Pagliai.
IIHidei,.£BrS Jast_fall.1 'j'he ~

Chief Interior

Semi-Gloss

non -

ayment."
I 2) "That companies work
with local organizations to
relay this information to
customers who may not be
reached through other means.
For example, scheduling group
meetin gs to familiarize
customers with new company
procedures in this area."
(3)
" That companies
promote standard budget plan
billing. Budget plans should be
available to all residential
customers. The company by
agreement may arrange that
customers who face an apparent hardship in payment of
their gas or electric bills be
able to submit payments,
weekly, bi-weekly or monthly
or other form of extended

·WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT Firemen's
Auxlllary, 7:30 p.m. at the
(!rehouse. Mrs . Euvelte
Bechtle and Mrs. Emma
Wayland,
hostesses.
Nomination of officers.

Give Rooms New Look Now!

Chief Latex

0

IcSocial
I d

INGELS
FURNITURE

LATEX WALL PAINT

to

"That any residential
"We urge our customers to service location, which has
contact their local gas com- · reached the state of disconpany office immediately if they nection due to non-ayment,
have any que'\tion about a gas through the company's normal
bill or anticipate having a collection proc'edure, be visited
problem paying it on time," by a field person prior to the
Koebel said . "We do not want ac.tual disconnection. If no
to dlscon tinue service to any contact is made with an adult
customer and will work with member of the household this
customers to attempt to field p,ersonnel will leave an
arrange a paymen I schedule or important notice on the
other solution If they will only premises which will specify the
contact our local gas company reasons for disconnection and
office by telephone, or in alternatives
which
the
person."
customer may seek through
Provisions of the program, the credit department of the
as ,presented
by
the company. This important
PUCO include :
notice will also urge the
(1) "That companies embark customer to contact the
on an informational campaign company, and will indicate
to
Inform
customers possible
alternative
threatened With disconnect of arrangements.''

Regular 58990

·........-· -..

due

to dairy farms, dairy in·

'

alternatives available through
the company to alleviate
disconnects

Huskies slow it

-~
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services policy

forced to i&lt;lke French fri ed
potatoes whether you want
them or not and then have to
pay for them . The last is one's
inability to idenllfy sales
people m stores from the
Identification for the sales
· fo rce . - MRS. J.
DEAR MRS. J.- I certainly
agree with you on the last

The proposed 21 day tour will
depart Sunday, Feb. 15 and
return March 6, 1976. This tour
IS beng sponsored by the Ohio
Dairymen 's Association and
the Ohio '.Coopera tiv e Ex-

GasCo supports

and radio. Another 1s that in
man y restauran ts you are

Library Appreciation
Day held on Sunday

NEIW HAVEN - The New
Haven Public Library and the
Mason Library observed the
Second Annual Library Appreciation Day Sunday at The
New Haven Public Library.
Libraries state-wide were
asked by the · West Virginia
Library Commission to have
Dear Father :
Open House to honor
Your doctor ~ vague with good cause! Laws governing ar- legislators, senators, and
tificial inseminatiOn haven't caughl up with the times: there are delegates whose interest in
libraries extends throughout
still many gray areas which might cause future problems .
the year. By observing ApPresently, only three states - California, Kansas and
Oklahoma - have specific legislation on the legitimacy of an preciation Day the public was
given an opportunity to honor
AID (artificial insemination donor) child. In other states it's
possible that the baby might be ruled Ulegittmate, and entitled to them and exprt!Sll gratitude for
the continuing services.
neither the support nor Inheritance of the husband. For this
As the guests arrived they
reason, doctors suggest adoption, which can be done in closed
court, with Illes kept secret so that the child need not know. were greeted by Mrs. Paul
Powell, New Haven Librarian,
unlt!Sll parents choose to tell him.
and Mrs. Ray Proffit, Mason
Legal adoption diminishes the possibility of law suits or
divorce action on groundS of "adultery." It ~lso protects the Librarian . Guests were
donor, who, in the absence of specific laws, might be named the registered by Mrs. Charlie
Dodd and Mrs. Che t Campbell.
"father" and liable for support.
Since an estimated quarter million U. S. citizens were AID- After the guests were given the
conceived babies, and the number grows each year, it's high opportunity to browse through
time legislators worked out definite rulings on the subject! - H. the Library, they were then
invited to enjoy !Inger sand+++
wiches, punch and coffee. The
tlear Helen :
serving table was decorated in
On December 20, an ad appeared in our local paper. I quote:
red
and white.
"An offer to Area Residents:
·
Arrangements of red carTo ease death at this hour - AGift Funeral.
" - Moftuary, though this advertisement, aMounces an nations and mums were used to
decorate the library . Tlie
offer to families bereaved during this Christmas season - a
flowers
were sent by Miss Jane
funeral at no cost, (including casket and services up to $475 limit, ·
after whidl survivors pay the difference ).
Powell and Miss Sandra Moore
"lf a death occurs in your family between the hours of &lt;t Dayton, Ohio. Mrs. Dan
midnight, lli!!:f!Diber 20 and midnight lletember 31, call us im- Edwards and Mrs. Charles
~th presided at the punch
mediately. We will take the entire burden of the funeral off your
bowl. Mrs. Tom Hoffman, Mrs.
sboulders, at no cost to you.
" ... This Is our way to thmik area residents for accepting us. Phil Batey, and Mrs. Karl
Sincere, from the heart, no strings attached, we will provide gift Wiles asatsted tn. serving.
Outo(lf-town guests attending
funerals f~ the peri(\() stated above. If death strikes, you have
were Mr. L. W. Getty, Mason
hutto call."
The ad was signed by a local cemetery-mortuary com- County Clerk; Wllllam Rardin,
chairman of Mason Cowrty
bination.
I've heard &lt;t holiday marll-downs, but this beats all. Ubrary Board ; Mrs. Wllllam
Woulml't it inspire bargain shoppers to perhaps slip arsenic in a Rardin, Miss Jane Powell,
mate's coffee ... or attempt a suicide to save the family money ? professor at Sinclair College,
Dayton ; Miss Francis Roush
-ASTOUNDED
anil Mrs. Eloise Wilson,
Middleport, and Miss Sandra
bear AS :
rd say this is a holiday gift to end all gifts- but literaily! ' Moore, Dayton.
Teachers visiting the library
Have you checked the number of takers- or is that information
during the day Included Miss
claulfled? -H. .
Mary Jane Getty, librarian at
' +++
Point Plea,sant Junior High
Dear Helen :
A lot of yow- complaining writers rnf8ht benefit from this school ; Miss Shirley Miller,
Mason County Supervisor d.
jingle:
Decca;
Rick Powell, principal
Qttlag stlll .and wishing
of Letart Eleinentary School;
Mates no pera&gt;in great.
Mrs. Dorothy Pyatt, teacher at
The good Lord sends the fiahing,
Letart
Elementary School;
But you m~ dig the ~t. - PAh,

'•

the

r~r

~ made for a de lega ti on o,f meeting

Practice for a Founder's Day play to be presented by the
troop at tile February meeting of the Salisbury PTA was held at
the'l'bUI'!lday nlghl meeting of the Salisbury junior troop.
The troop also made plans for a bowling party to be held at
the Pomeroy Bowling Lanes on Saturday, Feb. 15at 3:30p .m.
Camille Swindell opened the meeting with flag ceremony
conducted by Peggy Shaw, Laura Shaw, Kathleen Parker and
Camille SwindelL Badge reports were given by Jena Welker,
Teressa Dorst, Linda Williams, Kathleen Parker, and Laura Gail
Smith. Leslie Cole se rved refreshments.

RACINE - The annual call
to pra ye r and se lf-denial
program was presented by
Mrs. Betty Shiveley when the
United Methodist Women met
at the Racine Wesleya n Church
recently.
"Transformatie" of the Self
and the World" was the theme
of the program with Mrs. Betty
Roush reading scripture from
St. Luke 4, I through 14,
followed by silent prayer.
" Lord Jesus I Love Thee"
was sung with Alice Wolfe at
the plano. Mrs. Shiveley had a
responsive reading, "The Lord
Is My Light" with eac h
member standing and greeting
each other with a hand shake
or embrace, and saying, " May
the peace of God be with you."
Mrs. Frances Roberts read
from John 3and the prayer and

The need

9- The Daily Sentinel, Middl~port-Pomeroy, 0. , Wednesday. Feb. 5, 1975
h.•t.Sion Scrvl&lt;'e.
Nine days will be spent in
Australia and 10 days in New
Zealand . The main points of
inte rest in both countries will
be visited. This includes visits

'

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Tilt~ Senllnei,MiicHeJlOrt·Pomeroy, 0., Wednesda~, Feb. 5, 1975

.

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~I - The.Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wiidnesday, Feb. 5, 1975

-•,.,.•

I ·-'
•
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OJihl DAILY
10 TO 9

••

..•

"''·

F.REE

·~
'!'

•·);
...
,•.
~

..•••
•
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MEN'S
2 PIECE

~

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POLYESTER

"

'•
I

LEISURE

AVOCADO STEEL

••

SUIT

CLOTHES
DRYER

'

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•'
'
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l ulh•&lt;'rH•h~ ·

,,'

$

1288

1uol 1

ott

HECK'S
REG .

.

$17 .88

8 oz.
NESTLE'S

HARDWARE DEPT.

'

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'
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le·,-.oo·

A tl ow~ )lOu to hong out a lo r g~
omount ol clo t he~ 1n a l1m•ted
~pac e . Per fect lor -,oc k yo rd1 .
opartme r.h o r rool to p1

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'JU"I '" ~ "'" ~,I,U t u l Nu_., A ( uo, ~ l
!&lt;"'' ' ,, ,.., l&lt;'· •of. "'-'""'' ,. ,~ , .10 4(.)

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WINCHESTER
22 AUTOMATIC

RIFLE

'
'

BLADES
S's

..

'49~5

·:.:.:

HECK'S
REG.

HECK'S REG. 11.19

oz.

Wh ite heow)' thermo! sadn with red
around top . Siru 10 to I J .

$5

44

$119
PLACE

AUTO-TRUCK
· GUNRACK

HECk'S
REG.
$2.18

$199

$2.99

5

25

BeottJfif ul se lection of so lids ,
.strip es and prinh.

BATH TOWEL

s 144
. HECK' S REG.
TO $1.79
CLOTHING
. DIP1.

TUBUlAR STEEL

CLOTHES
PROP

GUN

COLANDER

Ideal for rinsing lrui k and
vege to ble s, ·d ro,
nood l le~, e k . E~t r a
conning lime. B~ ig h t f.
ed finish , imide stJ nroy.

. 3 QUART

$122

The fi t ~ ! lady No reko lrip le -lu:odl!r 1 Some clme
\hnvmg a ~ men \ Tnp le heade r\ wt th o " faminin c"
TOu( h• C f o~e . rom forto blt•. o nd ln•t s h ove~ Su·
pet Mio og roove ll oo tong he(l(h, &lt;.elhhorpcning
roTary blodb , on/ o ff ~ w o Tc h , Cotl co td EleQOil l
royal pu r p le and loven d et

$

HECK'S
REG.
$8.99

JEWElRY
DEPT.

JEWElRY DEPT.

Po laroid' s new Min~le Mo~er ~il : everything
)'O\J 11 ee d for mslont pte turn t o ~ing . Polaroid's
Mmute MohH Ki t co nloimo Square $' ~aate r
land Co n1e ro, u oock of Ty~ 88 Color
land ldm. tw o Sylvania 4-!hot lloshwb"
for 8 ~eouli l ul _imlont picture s. And yatJ gel o
w it ·~~nyl corrymg cme IO hold e11ery1hing.

5''
·

5

25''

'

Aluminum

I

; Aluminum

SAUCE
POTS

14 QT.

ROUND ··
DISH
PAN

12QUART

S]88

$199
HECK'S REG .
TO $3.19
NOUSIWARE DIP1.

ine wa!ahOOie and

$488

$

HECK'S REG.
TO $9.63
NOUSIWARE DEPT.

HECIC'S REG .

AIREQUIPT
DUALS

CHENILLE BEDSPREAD ·
Fu ll .size bedspreads in si:x ba sic co lors. Mach ·

20QUART

$199

.. S QUART

·PROJECTOR

lint f ree.

4

99

F I .5 Zo om len s automotic threa ding. Dual
format. StJpc r 8mm and regvlot·Smm fi lm.

Forwo rd rcc i·IO ·reel rew ind. 500·wolt
lamp ~e lf · con toi ned ccm ying wse and
400' lakc ·up reel.

FULL SIZE

HECK'S,REG. $7.99

$4999

ClOTHIN' DEPT.

HECK'S REG.

EMERGENCY
STRAP CHAINS

564.96

JIWIUY DEPT.

'122

'•

HECK'S REG. '1.77

/lA ••,,,.,,_

TUBE TYPE sox·

88&lt;

IAICY RICHEY

LOCK

MINUTE MAKER
KIT

ALUMINUM

lI

WIL$01 ·
TOIY TtAIERT
All
•

MASON

LADIES SHAVER

_JJ

BATH TOWELS

57(
HANDTOWEL
97(

MAKE-UP
MIRROR

POLAROID

. ~]

$188
SPORTS DEPT.

.

CANNON

HICK'S IIEG. 99'

Illustration

TENN'IS SETS ·

•3"

JEWElRY DEPT.

WAStl CLOTH

SUNBEAM

HECK'S REG. •19.96

_tfECK'S REG. •23;56

99'
COSMETIC
DEPT.

G.E. LIGHTED

•16''

l

IIEG.

HARD WAll
. DEPT.

Sim ilar
&lt;o

SPORTS DEPT.

IMl

-~lgat' ,

HECK'S IIEG.
TO $5 .44

"D;' CELL
MAGNETIC
FLASHLIGHT

'

HECK'SREG.

EACH

HARDWARE DEPT.

COLEMAN FUEL
HECK'S REG. •1.39
SPORTS DEPT.

FOR
FAST PAIN
RELIEF

$2~.!

HECK'S REG. $7.99 EACH

SPORTS
DEPT.

SO's

ASSORTED COLORS &amp; WHITE

:

$1.49

ANACIN

O.tochable dart ti nt K rte n. Molded hidden· lta ~
~It, Speed-O.Vi~ion, ~ow .40W power co n"'mp!ton. ~o lmlf g ra •n ca bi net. With earphone. Comes
tn w~tte, orange, a nd_a vocado.

· TOILET SEATS

~tripe

HECK'S REG.

The econom)l a nd podobil il)l
makes this stove popula r for t~ e
li~ht-trc'le ling ca mper.

COSMETIC
DEPt.

CLOTHES
T-POST

94&lt;

STOVE

COSMETIC
DEPT,

7HOOK

HUNTING

.

HECK'S IIEG .

HECK'S lliG.
61'

COSMETIC
DEPT.

INSULATED

sox

.,6

NASAL
SPRAY

IRON

(~~''""' ~" diagonal w: reen portoble TV rtalu re1
wild-na te chauis, int~groted circuitry . 3
Vlf stages VHF monopole and UHF loop onttnnos.

•

CHEWAILE
. COLD TAILETS

Fdl .

HECK'S i!EG.

COSMETICS DEPT.

COSMETIC
DEPT.

~

. BURNER

4WAY

49'

~

DELUXE
TWO

1/zOZ.

:

ALCOHOL

69~

69'·

CONGESPIRIN

36's

HECK'S

SPORTS DEPT.

GALLON

·-==~·

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,_

STEAM

9" BLACK AND WHITE
TELEVISION

,......( 69(
43 . ·~·
19' 59'
•••
16

99'

HECK'S REG. '65.95

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4
ONLY

SUPER II

,_

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MAGIC
NET

SCHICK

ANACIN.

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PANASONIC

HECK'SIIIG .
$1.11

GO 951 • GO 940
HECK'S •13 197 · CHOICE

SI'OITI IB'T.

99

BERmA

12 GAUGE

..

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'

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HECK'S REG. '273.00
SPORTS

GIIILS'

00

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DELUXE
HOUSEWARE ASSORTMENT

EMBROIDERY

LADIES'
NYLON

.DENIM
JEANS

·TOPS

TEE SHI~TS
lodiot• lo... ~~ co,..for&gt;ot:J. .. .,.,, """ QOe-1:1 IOQI.• ot ,..._
"'ulli·cole• ..... .,.oodt·~ lOin
!! . ... •loc ~ · ~·

foshionoblt ladies i'ons .,;..ith .!1

c..;.. , "''

pockefS, fly front ord 2'1" flant.
Slz•s 8· 18 in no'Y (l~ly .

...,n._ ,.Jito""' &lt;oiod col!l r ')otl qtbo.INI h.....o ,.., , .. rlfl
&gt;hod •'-•••· S• r... S·M1\..

. SLACKS

love the comforta ble wear ond good
IQ(Ikl ,of the ~ ulti-cdor ernbrotdt;y
t~ps .

permanent pr•u .&amp;acts. Siztl

Greol for drtn slodu or jeans,

StZe l .. · lA.

$200

... . GilLS
Pull-on.sklckl f~tatvr• ollelost!c
pull· on woiu bol'ld. Choo se
lrom p rints &amp; ) olich in tM•

Exciting wea r fOr tht youngtr set. Girts

2·.. &amp; l -\6X.

$~ 1 00

GilLS

PAJAMAS
lcng'-g2 pc. pj's for

Adorable
tho~a

cold wintt&gt;f nights. Sho~
. siMft lops in sites A-l A.

c~~:;~··•• SJ88

HICIC'S IIG . TO
$1.M

aor:

2 BURNER .

. e DELUXE 2 IUS..LLAUiiDiY BASKET
e 8 PC. COVIIIED LIIEAII MilliNG BOWL SET
e CIIYSTAL CAkE TIAT AND COVIR
,. e 32 QT.UTILin Till
.
e TOTIANDCLEAI .. CADDY WITH PAPER TOWEL HOLDER
e 44 QT. SWING T.OP nDY-ALL
e 3• QT.IKTANGULAI WAsn BASKET
e 48 .QT. ROUND WASTE BASKET
. e 10GAL. TIIASHCAN &amp; COVER WITII METAL

l1l' .,,.

HOT PLATE

D22-Ajo~ Hot Plate dooble btJrner. Cord ol·
!ached. T"'(o " On-Off" rocker switchn 120
· voh- 1320 wa tts. Color: ~orYe-st ha mmer
10

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REG.
$8.99

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$

Each
NOt/SIWARIDI/11.

lrlf'!; REG. $2.991ach

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Tilt~ Senllnei,MiicHeJlOrt·Pomeroy, 0., Wednesda~, Feb. 5, 1975

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~I - The.Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wiidnesday, Feb. 5, 1975

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OJihl DAILY
10 TO 9

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"''·

F.REE

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MEN'S
2 PIECE

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POLYESTER

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LEISURE

AVOCADO STEEL

••

SUIT

CLOTHES
DRYER

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"

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''

l ulh•&lt;'rH•h~ ·

,,'

$

1288

1uol 1

ott

HECK'S
REG .

.

$17 .88

8 oz.
NESTLE'S

HARDWARE DEPT.

'

t :

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•
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i'

le·,-.oo·

A tl ow~ )lOu to hong out a lo r g~
omount ol clo t he~ 1n a l1m•ted
~pac e . Per fect lor -,oc k yo rd1 .
opartme r.h o r rool to p1

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'JU"I '" ~ "'" ~,I,U t u l Nu_., A ( uo, ~ l
!&lt;"'' ' ,, ,.., l&lt;'· •of. "'-'""'' ,. ,~ , .10 4(.)

.

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WINCHESTER
22 AUTOMATIC

RIFLE

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'

BLADES
S's

..

'49~5

·:.:.:

HECK'S
REG.

HECK'S REG. 11.19

oz.

Wh ite heow)' thermo! sadn with red
around top . Siru 10 to I J .

$5

44

$119
PLACE

AUTO-TRUCK
· GUNRACK

HECk'S
REG.
$2.18

$199

$2.99

5

25

BeottJfif ul se lection of so lids ,
.strip es and prinh.

BATH TOWEL

s 144
. HECK' S REG.
TO $1.79
CLOTHING
. DIP1.

TUBUlAR STEEL

CLOTHES
PROP

GUN

COLANDER

Ideal for rinsing lrui k and
vege to ble s, ·d ro,
nood l le~, e k . E~t r a
conning lime. B~ ig h t f.
ed finish , imide stJ nroy.

. 3 QUART

$122

The fi t ~ ! lady No reko lrip le -lu:odl!r 1 Some clme
\hnvmg a ~ men \ Tnp le heade r\ wt th o " faminin c"
TOu( h• C f o~e . rom forto blt•. o nd ln•t s h ove~ Su·
pet Mio og roove ll oo tong he(l(h, &lt;.elhhorpcning
roTary blodb , on/ o ff ~ w o Tc h , Cotl co td EleQOil l
royal pu r p le and loven d et

$

HECK'S
REG.
$8.99

JEWElRY
DEPT.

JEWElRY DEPT.

Po laroid' s new Min~le Mo~er ~il : everything
)'O\J 11 ee d for mslont pte turn t o ~ing . Polaroid's
Mmute MohH Ki t co nloimo Square $' ~aate r
land Co n1e ro, u oock of Ty~ 88 Color
land ldm. tw o Sylvania 4-!hot lloshwb"
for 8 ~eouli l ul _imlont picture s. And yatJ gel o
w it ·~~nyl corrymg cme IO hold e11ery1hing.

5''
·

5

25''

'

Aluminum

I

; Aluminum

SAUCE
POTS

14 QT.

ROUND ··
DISH
PAN

12QUART

S]88

$199
HECK'S REG .
TO $3.19
NOUSIWARE DIP1.

ine wa!ahOOie and

$488

$

HECK'S REG.
TO $9.63
NOUSIWARE DEPT.

HECIC'S REG .

AIREQUIPT
DUALS

CHENILLE BEDSPREAD ·
Fu ll .size bedspreads in si:x ba sic co lors. Mach ·

20QUART

$199

.. S QUART

·PROJECTOR

lint f ree.

4

99

F I .5 Zo om len s automotic threa ding. Dual
format. StJpc r 8mm and regvlot·Smm fi lm.

Forwo rd rcc i·IO ·reel rew ind. 500·wolt
lamp ~e lf · con toi ned ccm ying wse and
400' lakc ·up reel.

FULL SIZE

HECK'S,REG. $7.99

$4999

ClOTHIN' DEPT.

HECK'S REG.

EMERGENCY
STRAP CHAINS

564.96

JIWIUY DEPT.

'122

'•

HECK'S REG. '1.77

/lA ••,,,.,,_

TUBE TYPE sox·

88&lt;

IAICY RICHEY

LOCK

MINUTE MAKER
KIT

ALUMINUM

lI

WIL$01 ·
TOIY TtAIERT
All
•

MASON

LADIES SHAVER

_JJ

BATH TOWELS

57(
HANDTOWEL
97(

MAKE-UP
MIRROR

POLAROID

. ~]

$188
SPORTS DEPT.

.

CANNON

HICK'S IIEG. 99'

Illustration

TENN'IS SETS ·

•3"

JEWElRY DEPT.

WAStl CLOTH

SUNBEAM

HECK'S REG. •19.96

_tfECK'S REG. •23;56

99'
COSMETIC
DEPT.

G.E. LIGHTED

•16''

l

IIEG.

HARD WAll
. DEPT.

Sim ilar
&lt;o

SPORTS DEPT.

IMl

-~lgat' ,

HECK'S IIEG.
TO $5 .44

"D;' CELL
MAGNETIC
FLASHLIGHT

'

HECK'SREG.

EACH

HARDWARE DEPT.

COLEMAN FUEL
HECK'S REG. •1.39
SPORTS DEPT.

FOR
FAST PAIN
RELIEF

$2~.!

HECK'S REG. $7.99 EACH

SPORTS
DEPT.

SO's

ASSORTED COLORS &amp; WHITE

:

$1.49

ANACIN

O.tochable dart ti nt K rte n. Molded hidden· lta ~
~It, Speed-O.Vi~ion, ~ow .40W power co n"'mp!ton. ~o lmlf g ra •n ca bi net. With earphone. Comes
tn w~tte, orange, a nd_a vocado.

· TOILET SEATS

~tripe

HECK'S REG.

The econom)l a nd podobil il)l
makes this stove popula r for t~ e
li~ht-trc'le ling ca mper.

COSMETIC
DEPt.

CLOTHES
T-POST

94&lt;

STOVE

COSMETIC
DEPT,

7HOOK

HUNTING

.

HECK'S IIEG .

HECK'S lliG.
61'

COSMETIC
DEPT.

INSULATED

sox

.,6

NASAL
SPRAY

IRON

(~~''""' ~" diagonal w: reen portoble TV rtalu re1
wild-na te chauis, int~groted circuitry . 3
Vlf stages VHF monopole and UHF loop onttnnos.

•

CHEWAILE
. COLD TAILETS

Fdl .

HECK'S i!EG.

COSMETICS DEPT.

COSMETIC
DEPT.

~

. BURNER

4WAY

49'

~

DELUXE
TWO

1/zOZ.

:

ALCOHOL

69~

69'·

CONGESPIRIN

36's

HECK'S

SPORTS DEPT.

GALLON

·-==~·

-

~.2.S.l..':t!.'!.!!!.'!.!!.~.

,_

STEAM

9" BLACK AND WHITE
TELEVISION

,......( 69(
43 . ·~·
19' 59'
•••
16

99'

HECK'S REG. '65.95

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I

W/SCOPE

4
ONLY

SUPER II

,_

·-----

MAGIC
NET

SCHICK

ANACIN.

I . . . I

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PANASONIC

HECK'SIIIG .
$1.11

GO 951 • GO 940
HECK'S •13 197 · CHOICE

SI'OITI IB'T.

99

BERmA

12 GAUGE

..

SHOTGUN
'

'178
t

I

HECK'S REG. '273.00
SPORTS

GIIILS'

00

'

~EPT.

DELUXE
HOUSEWARE ASSORTMENT

EMBROIDERY

LADIES'
NYLON

.DENIM
JEANS

·TOPS

TEE SHI~TS
lodiot• lo... ~~ co,..for&gt;ot:J. .. .,.,, """ QOe-1:1 IOQI.• ot ,..._
"'ulli·cole• ..... .,.oodt·~ lOin
!! . ... •loc ~ · ~·

foshionoblt ladies i'ons .,;..ith .!1

c..;.. , "''

pockefS, fly front ord 2'1" flant.
Slz•s 8· 18 in no'Y (l~ly .

...,n._ ,.Jito""' &lt;oiod col!l r ')otl qtbo.INI h.....o ,.., , .. rlfl
&gt;hod •'-•••· S• r... S·M1\..

. SLACKS

love the comforta ble wear ond good
IQ(Ikl ,of the ~ ulti-cdor ernbrotdt;y
t~ps .

permanent pr•u .&amp;acts. Siztl

Greol for drtn slodu or jeans,

StZe l .. · lA.

$200

... . GilLS
Pull-on.sklckl f~tatvr• ollelost!c
pull· on woiu bol'ld. Choo se
lrom p rints &amp; ) olich in tM•

Exciting wea r fOr tht youngtr set. Girts

2·.. &amp; l -\6X.

$~ 1 00

GilLS

PAJAMAS
lcng'-g2 pc. pj's for

Adorable
tho~a

cold wintt&gt;f nights. Sho~
. siMft lops in sites A-l A.

c~~:;~··•• SJ88

HICIC'S IIG . TO
$1.M

aor:

2 BURNER .

. e DELUXE 2 IUS..LLAUiiDiY BASKET
e 8 PC. COVIIIED LIIEAII MilliNG BOWL SET
e CIIYSTAL CAkE TIAT AND COVIR
,. e 32 QT.UTILin Till
.
e TOTIANDCLEAI .. CADDY WITH PAPER TOWEL HOLDER
e 44 QT. SWING T.OP nDY-ALL
e 3• QT.IKTANGULAI WAsn BASKET
e 48 .QT. ROUND WASTE BASKET
. e 10GAL. TIIASHCAN &amp; COVER WITII METAL

l1l' .,,.

HOT PLATE

D22-Ajo~ Hot Plate dooble btJrner. Cord ol·
!ached. T"'(o " On-Off" rocker switchn 120
· voh- 1320 wa tts. Color: ~orYe-st ha mmer
10

"' ·

. HECK'S
REG.
$8.99

,,
5

5 ONLY

$

Each
NOt/SIWARIDI/11.

lrlf'!; REG. $2.991ach

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12--' The Daily Sentinel, MiddlePQrt-Pomeroy, u .. Wednesday. Feb. 5. 1975

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13 ~ The Daily Sentinel, Mi~dlePQrt·Pomeroy , o.,' Weduesday, Feb. 5, 1975

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-Ford likes chances as 1976

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M

LOOK FOR ·

COMMUNITY
MERCHANTS

.

' SPECIALS
IN EVERY DEPT.I
EVERY STOREI
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MOR-FLO WATER HEATERS
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30 GALLON

CHUCK
ROAST
lb.

ENGLISH

•

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GAS
40 GALLON
GAS

Special Meat Buys
FRESH LEAN

30 GALLON

GROUND
BEEF

ELECTRIC
52 GALLON
ELECTRIC

.,

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STAR SUPPLY

lb.

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candidate ~

'JQo

•' , By HELEN THOMAS
UPI White House Reporter
· WASHINGTON (UPI J President Ford says the economic picture in 1976 will be
bright enough- to justify his
rWining for another presidential
term.
Ford retW'ned to the capital
in a heavy snowiall Tuesday
night, obviously buoyed by a
two-day trip to Atlanta . He had
sought lo promote his antirecession package to a wide
variety of southern leaders in
politics, media, business and
labor .
"The President feels it went
well," said Press Secretary
Ron Nessen.
Ford plans several more
cross-country trips to seek the
backing he needs to sell his
· program · to a recalcitrant
Congress.
Asked how the economy
might affect his candidacy,
Ford told an Atlanta news
conferenee : "! believe that the
economic situation in 1976 will
be an improving pictW'e. It
won't be perhaps as good as we
like, but I believe Wlemployment will be going down and
employmenl will be going up. I
think the economic circumstances will be good enough to
justify at least my seeking (the
'

presid ency)."

·

price controls as the "worst

kind of medicine " for the
coun try .
Relaxed and fielding questions with ease dW'ing the 41J.
minute news conference, Ford
also said:

FEBRUARY

.

~ H e expects his ncxl smnmit the two sides on nuclear arms ·

- He Uelieves Congress will

On reports that Sen . Howard
Baker. R-Tenn .. is considering
seeking the Republican pr.,sidential nomination - probably
star ting in the New Hampshire
primary - Ford said : " I have
indicated that it is ~n y in tenti on
to be a candidate in 1976. and
of course in our system
anyboily can if they so desire
qualify to be a candidate in any
primar y."
On the economy. Ford said
the second and third quarters
of this year would produce a
"switch on the plus side," wilh
a 5 per cent increase in th~
gross national product and
possibly a two million reduction
in joblessness .
·
Earlier. the President passed
the word through aides that he
could get along with the House
Ways and Means Committee's
tentative $8.4 million tax
rebate. But at his news
conference he was more cauti·
ous. "I'll have to wait for the
final version,'' he said .
He again ruled out wage·

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approve his $300 million supplemental ·appropri ation requ~st
for South Vietnam . If Congress
refu ses " it will certa inly
complicate the military situa·
tion from the point of view of
the South Vietnamese .' '

meeti ng with Soviet Commw&lt;ist
Party leader Leonid Brczhnev
will be held this swnmer in
Washington and th ai th e
. "relatively minor' differences"
' in negotiating positions between

.

.•

cc-m be rceonciled.

- The State Department and
National Security Council are
stud ying the growing Arab
in vestments

in

the

United

States.

Fed will ease credit rules
By RICHARD HUGHES
UP! Business Wrllet·
The Federal Reserve Bank,
the nation's money manager,

says it Intends to make more
and easier credit available to
fight the recession.
Effective today, the Federal
Reserve made it cheaper for
commercial banks to borrow
"overnight" from the Fed's
reserve funds .
In the third decline in as
many months, the Fed lowered
the discount rate on such loans
to 63/, per cent from 7¥• per
cent.
"It is a signal by the Federal
Reserve to the market place
that it intends to pursue a
somewhat more expansive
monetary policy than it has
heretofore," said Lei! Olsen,
chief .economist at First
National City Bank.

Olsen sald other recent
action by_the Fed, including the
lowering of Ute amount of cash
banks must keep in reserve to
cover deposits and the purchase
of
government
securities, has had greater
influence in creating more
money for commercial loans .
But, he said, a more
significant factor in declining
interest rates has been the
dwindling demand for loans .
In an ent'OUraging development for the auto industry,
automakers said new car sales
in the final 10 days of January
jum!l"d 42 per cent over the
middle of the month. Detroit
credited the cash rebate
promotions for thegain.
President Ford, in his
Atlanta news conference, cited
the rebate program as an
example of how "good old
American free enterprise'' can
help get the esonomy moving.

"The unusual and I think
suc c essful mark e tin g
technique shown by the
automotive industry in the last
few months, and the annoWicement that some of the
appliance manufacturers are
going to use the same
teclmiques .. . will hl!ve a very
good stimulus, not only to the
economy but to public confidence," Ford said .
In Etu'ope, the U.S. dollar,
shored up by . the Federal

GHOST FISH THAT'S GETTING AWAY It isn't. "Fisherman" is actuaUy a Depariment of
Agriculture researcher givmg a booster shot of sodium bicarbonate to an Arizona stock pond.
The trealruent has been found 'effective in $ealing pond bottoms to prevent seepage in tbe arid
Southwest. ·

Reserve and European central

banks, gained strength against
European currencies Tuesday.
On the New York Stock
Exchange, stock prices were
down slightly at the close after
larger losses in early trading.
The Dow Jones industrial
average, off more than 10
PQints at the outset, lost 3.37 at
708 .07. Volume again was
heavy with 25.4 million shares
traded.

Inflation catches famous old
newspaper of the west

TUCSON, Ariz. (UP!) - The was glVIng the right lo the ners .
Tombstone Epitaph, the news- newspaper 's name to the
Wyatt Earp .served as lbe
paper that covered the gunfight University of Arizona journal- toWn marshal. Backed by his
at the O.K. Corral as a routine ism department rather than sell brothers, Morgap and VirJU,
local crime story, has itself the historic weekly.
and . the tubercular denlilt
been killed - by inflation .
The Epitaph currently has a "Doc" Holliday, he shot II out
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs .
The 95-year-old pioneer news- circulation of about 4,000, but 90 with the Clanton gang, kl11lpg
Robert Aart and family.
paper that built its reputation per cent of the copies are sold three, one autumn dax._ln 1181
Mr . and Mrs. Everette covering the likes of Wyatt outside Tombstone.
at a corral that gave lllname
Parsons of Negley spent Earp, "Doc" Holliday and the
The newspaper was founded to one of the most famous
Tuesday evening with Mr . and Clanton gang, will publish for by John P. Clum who in 1673 gunfights In Western hlltory .
Mrs . Herbert Roush . They the last time Feb. 28.
became the first civilian Indian
The Epitaph stuck ll!e 1tory
spent Monday and Tuesday
Harold 0. l..ove, a Detroit agent In the Arizona territory . on Page 3 the neJ.t day.
~
nights with his mother. Mrs. attorney who bought the Epi· The first issue came off the
By Mrs. Herbert Roush
The newspaper carried the
Mrs. Alice Balser and Mr . Ruth Parsons Preston, Mrs. taph a decade ago to preserve presses May 1, 1880, as the battle at the O.K. CorraliDider
and Mrs. Jack Ables and Edna Parsons and Mark.
its place in Americana, said the . town began to acquire its the headline "Yeaterday'a
Mr
.
and
Mrs
.
Dale
Perkins
children were dinner guests
financial pressures ·are too reputation as a rip-roaring stop Tragedy, Thri!O Men Hurled
Sunday of Mr. and Mrs. and children of Portsmouth great to keep going. He said he for cattlemen and silver mi· into Etel'l\ltY in the Duration of
spent a weekend with Mr . and
Laurence Ables at Racine.
a Moment." The Epitaph called
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Jewell Mrs. Ralph DW'st.
it a "sad affair," but did noqet
and children of Letart, W.Va.,
the shootout crowd out the aciB
spent Wednesday evening with
or social notes.
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Hayman
The Epitaph was regarded as .
and Keith.
"pro-Earp" in . a poUUc!al
Miss Lorna Bell of Columbus
By EDWARD S. LECHTZIN
But, even H they didn't cut . controversy that spUt the to'!!n
spent Wednesday night with
UPI Auto Writer
into the unsold stockpUe, the over Earp's (iosltion. .· "
her parents. Mr. and Mrs. Don
The • newspaper took lbe
DETROIT (UPI) - Despite 232,300 cars delivered In the
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Feder cash rebates and massive plant final 10 days of January violent days of -the Old ·Wejlt
Bell returning to Columbus
al -state summary of Ohio
ThW'sday.
closings, Detroit automakers marked a t8 per cent jump with an occa:Uonal touch :of
livestock auctions Tuesday :
Mr . and Mrs . Don Bell enCattle: Compared to last turned out abnost as many over the ntiddle lo,day period, melodrama and a balancillc
Tuesday
slaughter steers stea - cars as they sold in-January. II which already was up 41 per navor of tongue-in-cheek _&lt;(I·
tertained at dinner Friday
ins
lances
.50 lower on
dy,
evening in· honor of John Hill standard, slaughter
heifers meant they had • barely any cent from earlier In the month . sualness . One editorlll noted
who was celebrating a bir-. steady, slaughter cows 1-2.75 reduction in their record pile of Gains over mld·January that "the party who thtiew the
thdax. Attending were Mr. and higher, vealers B higher, feeder 1.7 million unsold cars.
ranged from 17 to 58 per cent. slick of wood through tlie froilt
Mrs. John Hill and daughter, cattle steady to 2.25 higher.
The
"Big
Four"
companies
The
Jan. 21-31 period was lbe window of the (newspaper 1i)
Slaughter steers : Choice 890Linda, Mr. and Mrs. Charles 1260 lb yield grade 3-4 34-36.75, reported sa1es Tuesday of first In which aU companies office yesterdliy" should not try
Mugrage and children, Jen- good 31 -33.50, standard 25-31.
456,667 cars In January, off 17.1 were offering rebates.
to have Ita value.credited to his
Slaughter heifers : Choice 790- per cey~t from last year and the
:0:.:~-----t nifer Mugrage and friend.
It was tbe second straight subscription cost.
1030 lb yield grade 2-3 33-34.60,
loweslfor the month since 1961. period In which sales jumped
George Ridge, head of the
YARD GOODS 25% TO 50% OFF
Mrs. Juanita Justice, Mrs . good 30.55-33.50
Ethel Sarsons visited Mrs .
Slaughter cows : UtllitS and In the same month, even with . over an earlier period and University of Arizona journal·
commercial 800-1675 lb 14.75- plant closings, the four turned came within ·9.9 per cent of lsm department, sald atudenta
cutter 14.50-t8.75 .
SEWING NOTIONS 50% TO 75% OFF ~~~ ::~:~:·.:e~~~k. Mrs. 21.50,
matching tbe period last year. will carry on · the newspaper's
Vealers : Choice 185·230 lb 54- out 441,245 cars.
Mrs. Iva Orr retW'ned· home 59.
Industry analysts said the
Industry executives at- name by making regular trlptl
Feeder cattle : · Choice and four still have close to a 97-day ·lrlbuted the successful period
Saturday from Holzer Medical
to Tombstone, 40 miles south of
steers and bulls 370-595 supply of cars - the same to the rebate program started
Center after undergoing prime
here, to gather news and put
lb 20-24 .75, choice steers 400~500
surgery. Mrs. Orr is staying at lb 27.80-29.50, good 395-590 lb number they had at the Jan. 12 by Olrysler Corp. and out on Wllverslty· presses an
the home of Mr. and Mrs. 17.05-22. Choice heifers 400-500 beginning of January. A 50-to joined within a week by other edition of the "Epitaph." II w!ll
VALUES UP TO 112.00 Herbert Roush while lb 26-28 at Damascus 18.75-22 at 60-day supply Is considered automakers to reverse their be distributed free and carry .no
TO 18.00
Washington Court House.
worst postwar slump.
recuperating. Mr. and Mrs.
ads.
Hogs: Barrows and gilts .25 normal.
Roger Roush are assisting in higher, US 2-3 200~ 232 lb 39.70What the $200 to $600 rebates
"God knows where we'd
' •t
SALE
her care. Those visiting her 40.55.
did as allow dealers to move have ·been . without the
Sows .50 lower at Damascus,
PRICE
were Mr. and Mrs. Crill .30-1.10
hlg her at Washington out their huge stockpile of rebates," one analyst said.
SAFETY IS BEAUTIFUL
Bradford, Racine, t.jrs . Ralph Court House, US 2-3 489-667 lb smau models and bring inven- "We might haYI! had a better
A
new trend in jewelry is
Durst, Mr. and Mrs. Charles 37.85-38.35. 1-3 290-680 lb 30.50- torles into a better balance .of first period In Jamary, but the "safety" jewelry such ao at·
.
·Michael, Mrs. Alice Balser, 35.25
second and third periods are tractively designed large
Feeder pigs steady, US 2-3 3() • large and small cars.
Mrs. Kathryn HWlt and Mrs. 40 lb 7.50-15.00 per head, 50-65 Chrysler alone dropped Its better than anything we could whistles on heavy neck chain•
lb 17.50-19 per head.
car and truck inventory !rom have ·~xpected
Jl'lthout or big pins or neckpieces with
Margie HWl t.
Sheep: Slaughter lambs .50 136 days on Jan. I to 112 days rebates,"
slots in the back to hide your
Mr. and Mrs . Gerald higher,
1
choice fu ll wool 80,90 lb
key.
by the end of the month.
Hayman and son, Keith, spent 38.5041.

·
AppIe GrOVe

• • •

News, Events

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ALL WINTER MERCHANDISE REDUCED

&lt;

LADIES

POTATOES

GOLDEN ISLE

FRUIT
COCKTAIL

16 oz.
can ·

... ANU

PEARS
.

WE HAVE A VERY

GOLDEN ISLE
181/z

oz.

box

MIX

5g~

* 3RD. ST.

11

8 PAK
16 oz.

TICKETS ON SALE .
HERE
NOW

0

•

-

'•
.,

Prices effective

BP5604KW

Mon. thru ~at.
Th~rsday

..•

SALES

lhru Saturday

•'

REG. 1149.95

'$13995

&lt;Xll.UMBUS (UPI) - G&lt;lv.
James A. RhOdes Is faced with
a dedslon on wbether to veto or
sign a ilemoailtic-tiJIOIUIOred
t40-piJ'1)Upli supplemental app-opiatlon £or public schools
~ through a projected
tel million surplus of state

tevenues.
The Ohio Senate . Tuesday
ratlfled the House--pasaed bill
on a 21·12 vote, basically along
party lines. It calls for four
monthly payments ot $10 per
pupil to each ,of the state's 613
public
school
districts
beglmq In Martib.
Lut "'*Rhodes offered his
own lltemallve plan d. a June
bonus far each teacher and
IChool employe, plus a 15 per
0111t bite Ill fi'qe ·benenflts,
motq about .11» mllllon • .
The govauar hu 10 cl.ys to
dliclde wlurt Ill ilo once be gets
the biD, perbapa as early . as
I

a

'1
.

'

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"'

I

since they drew up their
current budgets and to pay
extra bills for fuel and textbOoks.
Ocasek also pointed out that
schools must have a financial
commitment by April 30 so
they can decide how many
teachers to hire for the. next
school year .
Republicans have argued
that no appropriation should be
m8de until the school foWida·
tionforrnulaisequalizedforall
school districts a~ording to
their need&lt;! Wider the next state
budget.
Sen. Hal'ry •Meshel, DYoungstown, floor manager of
the bill, said the mtent of the
legislature was written _!nto the
bill to provide for no recurring
paynient of a flat $4lJ per pupil
in future budgets.
"If that's so," COUiitered
Maloney, "I challenge you to
commit y~urselves to an
~ualization fonnilla tl)at w!ll
'

VALUES UP

VAWES UP TO 13.00

90-DAY CARRY-IN
ONE YEAR GUARANTEE
ON ALL COMPONENT PARTS

· RAY rS

reduce the payments we are hands on it and spends it."
making today to the districts
Democrats defeated three
that don't need the money. I 'Republican amendments, in-'
subntit these reductions w!11 eluding Rhodes' teacher bon'"'
not be made and this ap- proposal. · The other two
prop-iation will cost us $527 amendments would have
million extra when carried committed $l09' ntillion to the
through the next budget schools but deferred paym~
period ."
until after the foundation
Collections Increased
formula . is equalized, and
Meshel said m~ recent treated the $91 ll\illlo_n
revenue reports show collec- payment as an advanee.., the
tions had increased by 7 per 197S--76 allocation if the money
cent as of the end of January, is not available in JWie-. •
producing an extra $13 million: Crossed Over He . said abnost 200 districts
One senator from each party
have borrowed rno~y or Will crossed over on the final vote.
have to do so by March 1 to - Sen. Donald J . Pease, [).
keep operating this year. · · Oberlin, chairman of the
"I'd like to know wbere the Education Review Committee
great clamor is," Maloney· which recoinmended a revised
said: "l haven't heard of one ~OOI1!Ubsld;y formula, voted
distric~ . that's going to clo.e against the bill,. Sen. Oakley c.
before June. There seems to be . -Collins; R-lronton, who said a
a disp&lt;isition that any unex- flat appropriation was better
· peeled -balance, wl!ether it's than nothing for ·his schools,
there ol not, must be spent voted for it. '
·
before somebodr ~ts their ' The . House P!'ssed 87-li and

I

I .
--

I..

Market Report

OFF

ONE TABLE

,'
1

SALE
, PRICE

''
'..
•••

..•
•

•·

®

This Instrument is !/sled by Under~
writers' Laboratories, Inc. _
'r Is desfgned
and manufactured to meet rigid U.L..
safety standards against X·ray radla·
lion, fire, e/ectrica/ shock hazards end casually.
Design ce rlmed under F.CJC. rules .

TV

sent to the Senate a bill
alloWing local boards of .electiontohireinterpretersat$35a
day to assist non-English
speakihg voters at the polls.
As originally offered by ~p.
J. Leonard camera, D-Loram,
the bill was designed to belp
only Spanish-epeaklng voters.
But the House overwhelmingly
agreed ·to an amendment by
House Minority Leader

•••

,

5th ·and PEARL srs.. ·RACINE .

.

cauoe

..,

..

~,-·

MARGARINE BUYS!

PRODUCE BUYS!

- ~ Blue

D'ANJOU

Bonnet, lf.t's
·Miracle, 6 stick
Whipped

PEARS

EACH -69~

-

j

,.
:
:
:

--

Yft\1

.

•

•

lb. 59'

lb.

LB.

t'o\ t)\St(J4tt

.

•

SIRLOIN

pt\ebe's Spec\a\t\es

Jo.lo Dog Food
· 6 cans l.OO
F.U Bread, 16 oz.
3 b 89'
3 lb. 1.69
SIIortening, 'Annix.'

1 ··

lb.

·.··
.

lb. $119

WIENERS

PRICES

•

'

·-

•·

I

...

GROUND ROUND

French City

•

EV{R'{D~ Y_LOW

:

:
•

ANY
'
AMOUNT

Sa~e WJtb Phebe's .

:

•
:;
•

11

' Q.OSED SUNDAYS

:

-

GROUND·. BEEF

CHOPPED

Prices Effective Feb. S:12
9:00 to 7:00
· Saturday 9 to 9

The Lowest Price In A Yeor:l

Yellow
COOKING ONIONS 3 lb. 39'

We Glad~ Acc*pt Fed. Food Slam ps

Monday Thru Friday

lb.

RED ONIONS 2

Right Reserved to Lim1t Quantities .

.

USDA
CHOICE

each

CABBAGE

Parkaj Soft Bowl

' ThP. Store With A Heart
You, WE LIKE"

•

TO DEFEND T1'11.E
VAN NUYS, calif. (tiPI) University of Southern Clll·
fomla w!ll deleJid 118 Gnat
Canoe 1\ICe title at llulcb
Gardena Feb. 1'-17.
u&amp;; wat. the ftnt two 7Sbcile
marathon
races at lbe
amuieme~ part by one lap.
Last year tile Trojanl paddled
325 m11ea and m 1IFL

.

_,.,._.,,~~

•••

'

Charles F. Kurfess R-liowllng
' Green, elpallding to Include
others. ·
,.
The House also pasaed 11&amp;-6
a bill authorizing rell ~~
tax reductions for totally and
. permanent·'y
disabled
homeownen. Tbe ri!ductionll
could go'as high as $5,000 on lbe
tauble value of propa t) 'of lbe
estimated 80,0110 dh!abled Ohl·
oans. It w~ cost the state•.
about $500,000.
. Both Chambers .scbeduled
i:30 p.m. floor sesslaila for

tOday.

I':' _

Featuring french City Brand Meats ...

It

&lt;XlREY JOINS BROWNS
CLEVELAND (UPI) - Walter Corey has joined the
Cleveland
Browns
as
· linebacker coach and weight
and condll!onlng programs
director~ joba be held with the
~, City Otiefs· the put
three years, Browna owner Art ·
Modtll said Monday.
Corey succeeds Dale Undsay, who COilched the Browns'
.linellllckers last season follow.
ing his retirement as a player . .

•

~··•._,

SERVICE

)·

\,

Car lag holding

'

Govr Rhodes must sign or. veto ·$40-per•pupil school.aid hill
By LEE LEONAN&gt;
' UPI 8181ehlaae Reporter

ONE TABLE

ONE TABLE

'
,.''
•
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and
HOME·
ENTERTAINMENT
CENTER_
Phone 949-3151
Racine, Ohio ·

We Reserve Right To Limit Quantity

today. Thus far, he has not power . They said he .was nonrevealed his plans.
committal, but added they
Take Prompt Acllon
were "hojlelul" of a veto.
Chan Cochran, an executive
Republi~ns argued during
assistant to Rhodes, predicted · the on~our Senate debate
the . governor .. will t~ke Tuesday that school districts
"prompt" action, whatever his have not demonstrated need
course.
for the money.
Cochran said be does not
"The question is ," said
believe Rhodes will choose a Senate Minority Leader
third option -aUowing the bili Michael J . Maloney, Rto become law without his Cincinnati; "whether the needs
signature.
.of Ohio's elementary and
A veto ' could be overridden secondary schools in the last
by the Democratic-controlled four months of the year are
.. General Assembly. Democrats sl\fficiently lireat to merit an
have the' needed 20 . votes to I!Ppropriation. Nobody can ten
override in the Senate, ~nd me how many districts are
they need Dilly one or two going to get $4ll. pupil and
JtepubUcans. in the House . . squander it on luxuries."
They altracted five Republican Combat IDILiuoa
votes when the bill cleared the
But Senate President Pro
House last week. ·
. Tempore OliVer Ocasek, [).
If Rhodes signs the bill, he Akron, wllo conceded he ha$ .
wlll!llldetcutRi!pubiiCillllegls- . ''spent a uteliffie trying 111
lalive leaders, _)fho urged. him· improYil the funding of educa·
again Tuesday m a pnvate lion," said schools need money
meeting to exercise his veto · to combat 11 per cent inflation .

33 1/3 TO
50% OfF

PortabeTV

Open.
9Tir7
i&gt;RICES E~ECTIVE

CHILDREN'S
SWEATERS, SHIRTS
SLACKS, DRESSES
IT TOPS

•

DacL&amp;~Ilt

FREE!

•

COATS ~4~~9s

,,·

RACINE, OHIO

SALE

AND GET
8 PAK SUGAR FREE
16 OZ. DR. PEPPER

0

. ...................... ,_,_

.

MEN'S
ALL WEATHER

•·

·Valentine Special

DR. PEPPER

2% MILK

••
I
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•*************************************************••••••

BROUGHTON

i

...,

'FDiCi
RACINE HOME NATIONAL BANK
949-3311-

1/3

'·

LIMIT ON THE NUMBER OF CHECKS

SI'EClAL CHECKING
YOU WRITE
ACCOUNT FOR YOU
'Another Community Service From'

can

CAKE

•.

YOU PAY ONLY 50• PER MONTH
COVER CHARGE ON YOUR
CHECKING ACCOUNT WITH NO

BAG

16 oz.

Dresses, Slack Suits, Vests,
long Sleeve Blouses, Sweaters,
Skirts, Capes &amp;Blazers

.·•

CHECK THIS!

¢

10 LB.

GOLDEN ISLE ·

'

I

French City

lb. 99~

CUBE

SAUSAGE STEAK
lb~
~. lb:$. 39

\

.

TASTEE

BOLoGNA
lb.

. I

..

,

.,

�•
c

•

·•

12--' The Daily Sentinel, MiddlePQrt-Pomeroy, u .. Wednesday. Feb. 5. 1975

'

13 ~ The Daily Sentinel, Mi~dlePQrt·Pomeroy , o.,' Weduesday, Feb. 5, 1975

,.

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-Ford likes chances as 1976

..

M

LOOK FOR ·

COMMUNITY
MERCHANTS

.

' SPECIALS
IN EVERY DEPT.I
EVERY STOREI
.

'

MOR-FLO WATER HEATERS
.•.

'

•

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30 GALLON

CHUCK
ROAST
lb.

ENGLISH

•

•

GAS
40 GALLON
GAS

Special Meat Buys
FRESH LEAN

30 GALLON

GROUND
BEEF

ELECTRIC
52 GALLON
ELECTRIC

.,

..' ..

STAR SUPPLY

lb.

....
'·
.."'"•. .
•

candidate ~

'JQo

•' , By HELEN THOMAS
UPI White House Reporter
· WASHINGTON (UPI J President Ford says the economic picture in 1976 will be
bright enough- to justify his
rWining for another presidential
term.
Ford retW'ned to the capital
in a heavy snowiall Tuesday
night, obviously buoyed by a
two-day trip to Atlanta . He had
sought lo promote his antirecession package to a wide
variety of southern leaders in
politics, media, business and
labor .
"The President feels it went
well," said Press Secretary
Ron Nessen.
Ford plans several more
cross-country trips to seek the
backing he needs to sell his
· program · to a recalcitrant
Congress.
Asked how the economy
might affect his candidacy,
Ford told an Atlanta news
conferenee : "! believe that the
economic situation in 1976 will
be an improving pictW'e. It
won't be perhaps as good as we
like, but I believe Wlemployment will be going down and
employmenl will be going up. I
think the economic circumstances will be good enough to
justify at least my seeking (the
'

presid ency)."

·

price controls as the "worst

kind of medicine " for the
coun try .
Relaxed and fielding questions with ease dW'ing the 41J.
minute news conference, Ford
also said:

FEBRUARY

.

~ H e expects his ncxl smnmit the two sides on nuclear arms ·

- He Uelieves Congress will

On reports that Sen . Howard
Baker. R-Tenn .. is considering
seeking the Republican pr.,sidential nomination - probably
star ting in the New Hampshire
primary - Ford said : " I have
indicated that it is ~n y in tenti on
to be a candidate in 1976. and
of course in our system
anyboily can if they so desire
qualify to be a candidate in any
primar y."
On the economy. Ford said
the second and third quarters
of this year would produce a
"switch on the plus side," wilh
a 5 per cent increase in th~
gross national product and
possibly a two million reduction
in joblessness .
·
Earlier. the President passed
the word through aides that he
could get along with the House
Ways and Means Committee's
tentative $8.4 million tax
rebate. But at his news
conference he was more cauti·
ous. "I'll have to wait for the
final version,'' he said .
He again ruled out wage·

';-,;

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approve his $300 million supplemental ·appropri ation requ~st
for South Vietnam . If Congress
refu ses " it will certa inly
complicate the military situa·
tion from the point of view of
the South Vietnamese .' '

meeti ng with Soviet Commw&lt;ist
Party leader Leonid Brczhnev
will be held this swnmer in
Washington and th ai th e
. "relatively minor' differences"
' in negotiating positions between

.

.•

cc-m be rceonciled.

- The State Department and
National Security Council are
stud ying the growing Arab
in vestments

in

the

United

States.

Fed will ease credit rules
By RICHARD HUGHES
UP! Business Wrllet·
The Federal Reserve Bank,
the nation's money manager,

says it Intends to make more
and easier credit available to
fight the recession.
Effective today, the Federal
Reserve made it cheaper for
commercial banks to borrow
"overnight" from the Fed's
reserve funds .
In the third decline in as
many months, the Fed lowered
the discount rate on such loans
to 63/, per cent from 7¥• per
cent.
"It is a signal by the Federal
Reserve to the market place
that it intends to pursue a
somewhat more expansive
monetary policy than it has
heretofore," said Lei! Olsen,
chief .economist at First
National City Bank.

Olsen sald other recent
action by_the Fed, including the
lowering of Ute amount of cash
banks must keep in reserve to
cover deposits and the purchase
of
government
securities, has had greater
influence in creating more
money for commercial loans .
But, he said, a more
significant factor in declining
interest rates has been the
dwindling demand for loans .
In an ent'OUraging development for the auto industry,
automakers said new car sales
in the final 10 days of January
jum!l"d 42 per cent over the
middle of the month. Detroit
credited the cash rebate
promotions for thegain.
President Ford, in his
Atlanta news conference, cited
the rebate program as an
example of how "good old
American free enterprise'' can
help get the esonomy moving.

"The unusual and I think
suc c essful mark e tin g
technique shown by the
automotive industry in the last
few months, and the annoWicement that some of the
appliance manufacturers are
going to use the same
teclmiques .. . will hl!ve a very
good stimulus, not only to the
economy but to public confidence," Ford said .
In Etu'ope, the U.S. dollar,
shored up by . the Federal

GHOST FISH THAT'S GETTING AWAY It isn't. "Fisherman" is actuaUy a Depariment of
Agriculture researcher givmg a booster shot of sodium bicarbonate to an Arizona stock pond.
The trealruent has been found 'effective in $ealing pond bottoms to prevent seepage in tbe arid
Southwest. ·

Reserve and European central

banks, gained strength against
European currencies Tuesday.
On the New York Stock
Exchange, stock prices were
down slightly at the close after
larger losses in early trading.
The Dow Jones industrial
average, off more than 10
PQints at the outset, lost 3.37 at
708 .07. Volume again was
heavy with 25.4 million shares
traded.

Inflation catches famous old
newspaper of the west

TUCSON, Ariz. (UP!) - The was glVIng the right lo the ners .
Tombstone Epitaph, the news- newspaper 's name to the
Wyatt Earp .served as lbe
paper that covered the gunfight University of Arizona journal- toWn marshal. Backed by his
at the O.K. Corral as a routine ism department rather than sell brothers, Morgap and VirJU,
local crime story, has itself the historic weekly.
and . the tubercular denlilt
been killed - by inflation .
The Epitaph currently has a "Doc" Holliday, he shot II out
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs .
The 95-year-old pioneer news- circulation of about 4,000, but 90 with the Clanton gang, kl11lpg
Robert Aart and family.
paper that built its reputation per cent of the copies are sold three, one autumn dax._ln 1181
Mr . and Mrs. Everette covering the likes of Wyatt outside Tombstone.
at a corral that gave lllname
Parsons of Negley spent Earp, "Doc" Holliday and the
The newspaper was founded to one of the most famous
Tuesday evening with Mr . and Clanton gang, will publish for by John P. Clum who in 1673 gunfights In Western hlltory .
Mrs . Herbert Roush . They the last time Feb. 28.
became the first civilian Indian
The Epitaph stuck ll!e 1tory
spent Monday and Tuesday
Harold 0. l..ove, a Detroit agent In the Arizona territory . on Page 3 the neJ.t day.
~
nights with his mother. Mrs. attorney who bought the Epi· The first issue came off the
By Mrs. Herbert Roush
The newspaper carried the
Mrs. Alice Balser and Mr . Ruth Parsons Preston, Mrs. taph a decade ago to preserve presses May 1, 1880, as the battle at the O.K. CorraliDider
and Mrs. Jack Ables and Edna Parsons and Mark.
its place in Americana, said the . town began to acquire its the headline "Yeaterday'a
Mr
.
and
Mrs
.
Dale
Perkins
children were dinner guests
financial pressures ·are too reputation as a rip-roaring stop Tragedy, Thri!O Men Hurled
Sunday of Mr. and Mrs. and children of Portsmouth great to keep going. He said he for cattlemen and silver mi· into Etel'l\ltY in the Duration of
spent a weekend with Mr . and
Laurence Ables at Racine.
a Moment." The Epitaph called
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Jewell Mrs. Ralph DW'st.
it a "sad affair," but did noqet
and children of Letart, W.Va.,
the shootout crowd out the aciB
spent Wednesday evening with
or social notes.
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Hayman
The Epitaph was regarded as .
and Keith.
"pro-Earp" in . a poUUc!al
Miss Lorna Bell of Columbus
By EDWARD S. LECHTZIN
But, even H they didn't cut . controversy that spUt the to'!!n
spent Wednesday night with
UPI Auto Writer
into the unsold stockpUe, the over Earp's (iosltion. .· "
her parents. Mr. and Mrs. Don
The • newspaper took lbe
DETROIT (UPI) - Despite 232,300 cars delivered In the
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Feder cash rebates and massive plant final 10 days of January violent days of -the Old ·Wejlt
Bell returning to Columbus
al -state summary of Ohio
ThW'sday.
closings, Detroit automakers marked a t8 per cent jump with an occa:Uonal touch :of
livestock auctions Tuesday :
Mr . and Mrs . Don Bell enCattle: Compared to last turned out abnost as many over the ntiddle lo,day period, melodrama and a balancillc
Tuesday
slaughter steers stea - cars as they sold in-January. II which already was up 41 per navor of tongue-in-cheek _&lt;(I·
tertained at dinner Friday
ins
lances
.50 lower on
dy,
evening in· honor of John Hill standard, slaughter
heifers meant they had • barely any cent from earlier In the month . sualness . One editorlll noted
who was celebrating a bir-. steady, slaughter cows 1-2.75 reduction in their record pile of Gains over mld·January that "the party who thtiew the
thdax. Attending were Mr. and higher, vealers B higher, feeder 1.7 million unsold cars.
ranged from 17 to 58 per cent. slick of wood through tlie froilt
Mrs. John Hill and daughter, cattle steady to 2.25 higher.
The
"Big
Four"
companies
The
Jan. 21-31 period was lbe window of the (newspaper 1i)
Slaughter steers : Choice 890Linda, Mr. and Mrs. Charles 1260 lb yield grade 3-4 34-36.75, reported sa1es Tuesday of first In which aU companies office yesterdliy" should not try
Mugrage and children, Jen- good 31 -33.50, standard 25-31.
456,667 cars In January, off 17.1 were offering rebates.
to have Ita value.credited to his
Slaughter heifers : Choice 790- per cey~t from last year and the
:0:.:~-----t nifer Mugrage and friend.
It was tbe second straight subscription cost.
1030 lb yield grade 2-3 33-34.60,
loweslfor the month since 1961. period In which sales jumped
George Ridge, head of the
YARD GOODS 25% TO 50% OFF
Mrs. Juanita Justice, Mrs . good 30.55-33.50
Ethel Sarsons visited Mrs .
Slaughter cows : UtllitS and In the same month, even with . over an earlier period and University of Arizona journal·
commercial 800-1675 lb 14.75- plant closings, the four turned came within ·9.9 per cent of lsm department, sald atudenta
cutter 14.50-t8.75 .
SEWING NOTIONS 50% TO 75% OFF ~~~ ::~:~:·.:e~~~k. Mrs. 21.50,
matching tbe period last year. will carry on · the newspaper's
Vealers : Choice 185·230 lb 54- out 441,245 cars.
Mrs. Iva Orr retW'ned· home 59.
Industry analysts said the
Industry executives at- name by making regular trlptl
Feeder cattle : · Choice and four still have close to a 97-day ·lrlbuted the successful period
Saturday from Holzer Medical
to Tombstone, 40 miles south of
steers and bulls 370-595 supply of cars - the same to the rebate program started
Center after undergoing prime
here, to gather news and put
lb 20-24 .75, choice steers 400~500
surgery. Mrs. Orr is staying at lb 27.80-29.50, good 395-590 lb number they had at the Jan. 12 by Olrysler Corp. and out on Wllverslty· presses an
the home of Mr. and Mrs. 17.05-22. Choice heifers 400-500 beginning of January. A 50-to joined within a week by other edition of the "Epitaph." II w!ll
VALUES UP TO 112.00 Herbert Roush while lb 26-28 at Damascus 18.75-22 at 60-day supply Is considered automakers to reverse their be distributed free and carry .no
TO 18.00
Washington Court House.
worst postwar slump.
recuperating. Mr. and Mrs.
ads.
Hogs: Barrows and gilts .25 normal.
Roger Roush are assisting in higher, US 2-3 200~ 232 lb 39.70What the $200 to $600 rebates
"God knows where we'd
' •t
SALE
her care. Those visiting her 40.55.
did as allow dealers to move have ·been . without the
Sows .50 lower at Damascus,
PRICE
were Mr. and Mrs. Crill .30-1.10
hlg her at Washington out their huge stockpile of rebates," one analyst said.
SAFETY IS BEAUTIFUL
Bradford, Racine, t.jrs . Ralph Court House, US 2-3 489-667 lb smau models and bring inven- "We might haYI! had a better
A
new trend in jewelry is
Durst, Mr. and Mrs. Charles 37.85-38.35. 1-3 290-680 lb 30.50- torles into a better balance .of first period In Jamary, but the "safety" jewelry such ao at·
.
·Michael, Mrs. Alice Balser, 35.25
second and third periods are tractively designed large
Feeder pigs steady, US 2-3 3() • large and small cars.
Mrs. Kathryn HWlt and Mrs. 40 lb 7.50-15.00 per head, 50-65 Chrysler alone dropped Its better than anything we could whistles on heavy neck chain•
lb 17.50-19 per head.
car and truck inventory !rom have ·~xpected
Jl'lthout or big pins or neckpieces with
Margie HWl t.
Sheep: Slaughter lambs .50 136 days on Jan. I to 112 days rebates,"
slots in the back to hide your
Mr. and Mrs . Gerald higher,
1
choice fu ll wool 80,90 lb
key.
by the end of the month.
Hayman and son, Keith, spent 38.5041.

·
AppIe GrOVe

• • •

News, Events

.'"

..•
..•

ALL WINTER MERCHANDISE REDUCED

&lt;

LADIES

POTATOES

GOLDEN ISLE

FRUIT
COCKTAIL

16 oz.
can ·

... ANU

PEARS
.

WE HAVE A VERY

GOLDEN ISLE
181/z

oz.

box

MIX

5g~

* 3RD. ST.

11

8 PAK
16 oz.

TICKETS ON SALE .
HERE
NOW

0

•

-

'•
.,

Prices effective

BP5604KW

Mon. thru ~at.
Th~rsday

..•

SALES

lhru Saturday

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REG. 1149.95

'$13995

&lt;Xll.UMBUS (UPI) - G&lt;lv.
James A. RhOdes Is faced with
a dedslon on wbether to veto or
sign a ilemoailtic-tiJIOIUIOred
t40-piJ'1)Upli supplemental app-opiatlon £or public schools
~ through a projected
tel million surplus of state

tevenues.
The Ohio Senate . Tuesday
ratlfled the House--pasaed bill
on a 21·12 vote, basically along
party lines. It calls for four
monthly payments ot $10 per
pupil to each ,of the state's 613
public
school
districts
beglmq In Martib.
Lut "'*Rhodes offered his
own lltemallve plan d. a June
bonus far each teacher and
IChool employe, plus a 15 per
0111t bite Ill fi'qe ·benenflts,
motq about .11» mllllon • .
The govauar hu 10 cl.ys to
dliclde wlurt Ill ilo once be gets
the biD, perbapa as early . as
I

a

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since they drew up their
current budgets and to pay
extra bills for fuel and textbOoks.
Ocasek also pointed out that
schools must have a financial
commitment by April 30 so
they can decide how many
teachers to hire for the. next
school year .
Republicans have argued
that no appropriation should be
m8de until the school foWida·
tionforrnulaisequalizedforall
school districts a~ording to
their need&lt;! Wider the next state
budget.
Sen. Hal'ry •Meshel, DYoungstown, floor manager of
the bill, said the mtent of the
legislature was written _!nto the
bill to provide for no recurring
paynient of a flat $4lJ per pupil
in future budgets.
"If that's so," COUiitered
Maloney, "I challenge you to
commit y~urselves to an
~ualization fonnilla tl)at w!ll
'

VALUES UP

VAWES UP TO 13.00

90-DAY CARRY-IN
ONE YEAR GUARANTEE
ON ALL COMPONENT PARTS

· RAY rS

reduce the payments we are hands on it and spends it."
making today to the districts
Democrats defeated three
that don't need the money. I 'Republican amendments, in-'
subntit these reductions w!11 eluding Rhodes' teacher bon'"'
not be made and this ap- proposal. · The other two
prop-iation will cost us $527 amendments would have
million extra when carried committed $l09' ntillion to the
through the next budget schools but deferred paym~
period ."
until after the foundation
Collections Increased
formula . is equalized, and
Meshel said m~ recent treated the $91 ll\illlo_n
revenue reports show collec- payment as an advanee.., the
tions had increased by 7 per 197S--76 allocation if the money
cent as of the end of January, is not available in JWie-. •
producing an extra $13 million: Crossed Over He . said abnost 200 districts
One senator from each party
have borrowed rno~y or Will crossed over on the final vote.
have to do so by March 1 to - Sen. Donald J . Pease, [).
keep operating this year. · · Oberlin, chairman of the
"I'd like to know wbere the Education Review Committee
great clamor is," Maloney· which recoinmended a revised
said: "l haven't heard of one ~OOI1!Ubsld;y formula, voted
distric~ . that's going to clo.e against the bill,. Sen. Oakley c.
before June. There seems to be . -Collins; R-lronton, who said a
a disp&lt;isition that any unex- flat appropriation was better
· peeled -balance, wl!ether it's than nothing for ·his schools,
there ol not, must be spent voted for it. '
·
before somebodr ~ts their ' The . House P!'ssed 87-li and

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Market Report

OFF

ONE TABLE

,'
1

SALE
, PRICE

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This Instrument is !/sled by Under~
writers' Laboratories, Inc. _
'r Is desfgned
and manufactured to meet rigid U.L..
safety standards against X·ray radla·
lion, fire, e/ectrica/ shock hazards end casually.
Design ce rlmed under F.CJC. rules .

TV

sent to the Senate a bill
alloWing local boards of .electiontohireinterpretersat$35a
day to assist non-English
speakihg voters at the polls.
As originally offered by ~p.
J. Leonard camera, D-Loram,
the bill was designed to belp
only Spanish-epeaklng voters.
But the House overwhelmingly
agreed ·to an amendment by
House Minority Leader

•••

,

5th ·and PEARL srs.. ·RACINE .

.

cauoe

..,

..

~,-·

MARGARINE BUYS!

PRODUCE BUYS!

- ~ Blue

D'ANJOU

Bonnet, lf.t's
·Miracle, 6 stick
Whipped

PEARS

EACH -69~

-

j

,.
:
:
:

--

Yft\1

.

•

•

lb. 59'

lb.

LB.

t'o\ t)\St(J4tt

.

•

SIRLOIN

pt\ebe's Spec\a\t\es

Jo.lo Dog Food
· 6 cans l.OO
F.U Bread, 16 oz.
3 b 89'
3 lb. 1.69
SIIortening, 'Annix.'

1 ··

lb.

·.··
.

lb. $119

WIENERS

PRICES

•

'

·-

•·

I

...

GROUND ROUND

French City

•

EV{R'{D~ Y_LOW

:

:
•

ANY
'
AMOUNT

Sa~e WJtb Phebe's .

:

•
:;
•

11

' Q.OSED SUNDAYS

:

-

GROUND·. BEEF

CHOPPED

Prices Effective Feb. S:12
9:00 to 7:00
· Saturday 9 to 9

The Lowest Price In A Yeor:l

Yellow
COOKING ONIONS 3 lb. 39'

We Glad~ Acc*pt Fed. Food Slam ps

Monday Thru Friday

lb.

RED ONIONS 2

Right Reserved to Lim1t Quantities .

.

USDA
CHOICE

each

CABBAGE

Parkaj Soft Bowl

' ThP. Store With A Heart
You, WE LIKE"

•

TO DEFEND T1'11.E
VAN NUYS, calif. (tiPI) University of Southern Clll·
fomla w!ll deleJid 118 Gnat
Canoe 1\ICe title at llulcb
Gardena Feb. 1'-17.
u&amp;; wat. the ftnt two 7Sbcile
marathon
races at lbe
amuieme~ part by one lap.
Last year tile Trojanl paddled
325 m11ea and m 1IFL

.

_,.,._.,,~~

•••

'

Charles F. Kurfess R-liowllng
' Green, elpallding to Include
others. ·
,.
The House also pasaed 11&amp;-6
a bill authorizing rell ~~
tax reductions for totally and
. permanent·'y
disabled
homeownen. Tbe ri!ductionll
could go'as high as $5,000 on lbe
tauble value of propa t) 'of lbe
estimated 80,0110 dh!abled Ohl·
oans. It w~ cost the state•.
about $500,000.
. Both Chambers .scbeduled
i:30 p.m. floor sesslaila for

tOday.

I':' _

Featuring french City Brand Meats ...

It

&lt;XlREY JOINS BROWNS
CLEVELAND (UPI) - Walter Corey has joined the
Cleveland
Browns
as
· linebacker coach and weight
and condll!onlng programs
director~ joba be held with the
~, City Otiefs· the put
three years, Browna owner Art ·
Modtll said Monday.
Corey succeeds Dale Undsay, who COilched the Browns'
.linellllckers last season follow.
ing his retirement as a player . .

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~··•._,

SERVICE

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Car lag holding

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Govr Rhodes must sign or. veto ·$40-per•pupil school.aid hill
By LEE LEONAN&gt;
' UPI 8181ehlaae Reporter

ONE TABLE

ONE TABLE

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and
HOME·
ENTERTAINMENT
CENTER_
Phone 949-3151
Racine, Ohio ·

We Reserve Right To Limit Quantity

today. Thus far, he has not power . They said he .was nonrevealed his plans.
committal, but added they
Take Prompt Acllon
were "hojlelul" of a veto.
Chan Cochran, an executive
Republi~ns argued during
assistant to Rhodes, predicted · the on~our Senate debate
the . governor .. will t~ke Tuesday that school districts
"prompt" action, whatever his have not demonstrated need
course.
for the money.
Cochran said be does not
"The question is ," said
believe Rhodes will choose a Senate Minority Leader
third option -aUowing the bili Michael J . Maloney, Rto become law without his Cincinnati; "whether the needs
signature.
.of Ohio's elementary and
A veto ' could be overridden secondary schools in the last
by the Democratic-controlled four months of the year are
.. General Assembly. Democrats sl\fficiently lireat to merit an
have the' needed 20 . votes to I!Ppropriation. Nobody can ten
override in the Senate, ~nd me how many districts are
they need Dilly one or two going to get $4ll. pupil and
JtepubUcans. in the House . . squander it on luxuries."
They altracted five Republican Combat IDILiuoa
votes when the bill cleared the
But Senate President Pro
House last week. ·
. Tempore OliVer Ocasek, [).
If Rhodes signs the bill, he Akron, wllo conceded he ha$ .
wlll!llldetcutRi!pubiiCillllegls- . ''spent a uteliffie trying 111
lalive leaders, _)fho urged. him· improYil the funding of educa·
again Tuesday m a pnvate lion," said schools need money
meeting to exercise his veto · to combat 11 per cent inflation .

33 1/3 TO
50% OfF

PortabeTV

Open.
9Tir7
i&gt;RICES E~ECTIVE

CHILDREN'S
SWEATERS, SHIRTS
SLACKS, DRESSES
IT TOPS

•

DacL&amp;~Ilt

FREE!

•

COATS ~4~~9s

,,·

RACINE, OHIO

SALE

AND GET
8 PAK SUGAR FREE
16 OZ. DR. PEPPER

0

. ...................... ,_,_

.

MEN'S
ALL WEATHER

•·

·Valentine Special

DR. PEPPER

2% MILK

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BROUGHTON

i

...,

'FDiCi
RACINE HOME NATIONAL BANK
949-3311-

1/3

'·

LIMIT ON THE NUMBER OF CHECKS

SI'EClAL CHECKING
YOU WRITE
ACCOUNT FOR YOU
'Another Community Service From'

can

CAKE

•.

YOU PAY ONLY 50• PER MONTH
COVER CHARGE ON YOUR
CHECKING ACCOUNT WITH NO

BAG

16 oz.

Dresses, Slack Suits, Vests,
long Sleeve Blouses, Sweaters,
Skirts, Capes &amp;Blazers

.·•

CHECK THIS!

¢

10 LB.

GOLDEN ISLE ·

'

I

French City

lb. 99~

CUBE

SAUSAGE STEAK
lb~
~. lb:$. 39

\

.

TASTEE

BOLoGNA
lb.

. I

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.,

�r
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14 - The DaUy Sentinel, MlddleJ"lrl-Pomeroy, 0 , Wednesday, Feb &gt;. 197&gt;

~------~----------~-~~~----~----~·

For
Fast Results Use Sentinel ClasSifieds ]_ Business Services
•
NOTICE

To

PUBLIC NOTICE

Cha r les E Hm man wh ose

.J

Theodor e T R eed J r Norb ert
Water, Elec t,ric, Ga;s, Sewer
Compton AMon Kelton Norma IN lOVI N G memory of ou r
l1nes ,
•ns, alled
Work
mothe r
Jil n te
El /ilb CI/1
Amsbary Larry Brogan Frank
dtllg e nce be as cer tam e d
guaranteed.
Sn td er who le f t us 5 vcc1rs aqo
S1s5on Ch!lrles Wllde r multl
f cb r ua ry S 1 97~
Charlo fl e Dillard im d Ann1e
Dozer, Backh9e, Trucks
You are adv•sed that a Chapman a s th e du ly a ppo1n ted
Our dean• s r moOHr you are
L1meslone &amp; Fill D1rt
pet•t •on for ad o ption has been qualt l ted ana act.ng Ves try of
gon e
Commerc1ai-Resldent1al
f1l ed m the Metgs Co un ty the Grace Ep• sco pal Chur c h
REPAIR-Broken
Blown Into Walls
But ou r fondest mcrnorn:&gt;s of
Construction &amp; Remodel
Probat e CO urt , P omero y OhtO Pomeroy Ohto have fl ied th e• r
you Sf1 1i I ng er on
and
Attics
Parts Mended
45769
tn Case No 21.. 05 pet tron •n the Common Preas
al legmg t h at you have wt i H u l ly
Th e IO\Ie we shared an d hCJppy
Free Estimates
STRIPPING-By
Cour l tn ' lc.as Coun tv Ohto
fat led to proper ly support Dawn ca se No
IS73.J p ray• ng for
times wtth you arc ours
Hand
Mtchel e Hmmo'ln for a penod o f iluthor tty to sell co nvey and
alone to keep
1974 CHEVELLE
$)095
mo re than tw o yea r s m
NO DIP TANKS
trans fer ra Dale E
Sh ultt
Rul we know new 1t1at you .uc a t
med tltl e ty prec edmg the f 1 ng Athens
Maltbu H T Cpe 350 V 8 e ngme power stee rrng f actory
p('a ce
Ohto
l or th e con
o f the petttron
Supplies - Strippers
~cldly llliS'&gt;eC1 IJy cl1ildren
atr l tn led gla ss radr o wheel cov er s good ft res, blk
S. 1de r a !t on o f $75 000 00 ltl e
7111 Pearl Street
Hearmg on Slltd pe tt f tOn sha l l
Rc1ymond
Da le
Ronn 1e
fo ll ow ng descrtbed real es tnre
Phone
992
3993
tn t er•or Sti ver grey ftn 1sh
Slams - Finsihes
Middleport, Oh1o
be had on t he 14th d ay o f
Ruth Bf.•a tr Cf' J&lt;1 H'T Jean
The followtng rea l CSia t c
Phone
992
5367
or
992
3861
Da1iy
Alter
5:00
February 1975 at 10 o c lcok s tuat ed 1n th e village ot
7 ) lf p
Free Prckup and Delivery
AM
1973 PLY STA WAGON
52795
Pomerov county of Metgs and
state of Oh•o
Suburba n J Sea t V 8 eng me , automat•c trans
power
Ma nnmg 0 Webster
Being the r~ver f ront or that
st eermg &amp; bra kes factory .=ur co ndt t 1onrng l uggage r ack
Judge o f
part Of Lot 1a9 1n Pomeroy
gre en li nrsh rad•o l1 ke n ew w w trr es
Common P leas Cou rt
Metgs County
Oh•O whi Ch
St-I OOT IN G ma l ch Rac rne Gun
Prob a r e 0 lo'tSton
A t mona A Dav 1es sold to L w
Clu b Sun da y I p m Ass.orled
M e gs Co un t'!' Oh ro
Rousl'l, by deed da te d the l?t h
1972 NOVA 55
521 95
me at s and l ac l ory chok e guns
day of Ap r r A D 1'100 an d
on l y
2 Door 3SO v 8 au tomatic Ra ll y wheels&amp; w w t1 res, r a dto
(1)
19121 5 J tc
r ecord ed 11 vor 86 Pages 69
11 n tf c
bt own f Jnt sh blk v 1n y l 1nter tor loca l ca r &amp; r eal nt ce
and 70 of th e Reco rd s of Dcea'.
On State Rt 124 ' '~ m1 from
Complete plumbmg 6:
ot sad M P gs County and s. SHOOT 1N G Matc h Ra c tne Gun
From t h e largest Truck or
Route 7 by pa ss towa r d s
bounded on the E as terly 5t d e5
Club Su 11day Fe ll 9 I p m
Bulldozer Radtator to the
Rutland
heating
serv1ce
and
by th e lines o t satd lot so ld to L
? s ltc
smallest
Heater Core
w Roush produ ced to l hc Oh10
general sheet metal
Nathan Btggs
R tver on th e Northerly St de o l SWE EP ER Repa r Parts a nd
Ph
992
5682
or
992-7121
OPEN EVES 8: 00P.M
works.
Free
Front St ree r n Pomeroy On. o
Radiator Spec1als1t
Suppl es
Oav tS V a cuum
AU Mechanical Work
and on !he Sou th erly Stdc by th e
POMEROY, OH 10
Est1mates
.
'
cre.1n e r 11 mt le up Geo r ges
Oh 10 Rtver Excepltng fr om It tS
Cree k. Rd off Stille Rou re 7
Phone 949-5961
conveyan ce !hat part of Sa i d
Ph on e ~ 10 079&gt;l
Open Mon Sal
Rtv e r Front and L afl d tn g
? s l tc
Emergency
992 -3995
19
68
CH
EVROLET
J
~
I
On
BA .M. 6 PM
t'l er e rofore conveyed by I he sa d
Pnon e 992 2107
Pomeroy
Ph 992 2174
or 992 -5700
Al mena A Da ... tes and her late SH OO TIN G Mat ch Rutland
WOULD l tke to buv ?00 bal es of
___2~~ tp
hus band A lban Da v1es ro the
Gu n Clu b N ew L ma Rood
Mr and Mrs Robert Mattox Trusr ees of the Pom eroy Belt
qood hay Phone 99?. 27~YS Ole I Y7J CU TL ASS
S
2 dr
Friday 6 30 p m Shot guns
R.atlway th etr suc cesso r s and
any gauge ?2 rr fl es fa c l ory
have returned home from a asstg
aut
om
al
tC
Power
St
eenng
ns wh1 Ch deed s dat ed lh e
c ho ke gu n s only
WA N TED old upngh l p 1anos
brakes and w ndow s crutse
trip which took them to lith d a y o r J une 187 1
7 s Jl c
USED parts F r ye s Tr uck and
ilny con d1l on
Payrng $10
co nlr o l
1•11 wh eel
am f m
t o f sa tdL ot 189soso ld
H1111tsville, Ala , where they byThepilr
Au to Pa rt s Ru tl and Oh o
rap
e
p
la
yer
new
s
t
e
r
eo
eac
h
F
1rs
t
fl
oor
on
ly
Wrr
te
to
Armona A Davtes and her
Phone (6 1&lt;1l 7&lt;12 6094
T IO N Sal e Evt!ry Frtday
and qtve dtrecltons l o Wtttcn
brakes and sho c k s r ad al s
100 Kerr Street
viljited with friends They aloo hu Sband to s.atd Trusi E&gt;eso f Silld AUC
I 22 7atp
7 p m Vtllage Auc r on ?IS N
and 1ow httch Me tallt c blue
P ano Co
Box 188 Sard s
Pomf:' r oy Aelt Railway Co
Pomeroy, Oh1o
PHONE
viewed sights on the Tennessee lhe•r successors ana ass1g ns tS
Sec ond M•dd epo rr
w Th black nter.or Worth
Ol1i0 i1391b
Phone
(6141
992
2798
949
3832
or 843 2667
ST
EREO
radto
a
!ra
c
k
rap
e
? 3 61p
~J 100 se ll for $2 500 Ca ll 99 ?
2 10 30 tc
River which included Wiloon d f:'SC rtb ed a~ follow s n sa1d _
combtna tton AM FM radro 4
345) or 992 3381
AU Types of
way speake r sound sys lem
and Wheeler Dams and caUed deed tow t Bcgtnnmg at the I NCOME T AX Prep ar ed by WA NTED to buy a used
STRIPPING FINISHES
I 31 SIC
So uth ea st corner o f tha t parr o f
appo n t men t Phon f' 99?. 3388
Ba l an ce $ 107 BY or use our
Grr~vely
Tr
ac
ror
w
lh
Mower
FURNITURE METALS-ETC
BUILDING
on idends 1n Manchester, Lot No I RY tn the Cilv o f
?. 'l c
bud ge t t erm s Ca ll 992 3965
61
dlld rtd nq sul k y and p l ow IY 77 VEGA Hatchback 3 sp ee d
MODERN &amp; ANTIQUE
and
REMODELING
Tenn They journeyO'&lt;l then to Pom eroy County of Metgs and
1
3
IIC
a
ulomal
tc
EK
c
el
l
e
nt
cc
n
illti1Chm ent5 Phone (30 1) 1182
Re lrmshrng
State Of O tuo now owned and AUCTION Thursd ay n1ght
Repitrlng
d111on Phone 9n JY I&lt;I a ft er S
2S25 or eiJe ntn gs aa2 23 4.:1
Augusta, Ark., where they got occupted
by A l mon ta A D avt es
p m
at Mason Auctton
From a shelf to a house
Burna s htng
pm
19 57 CHEVY p arts
N EW
Canrng
1 26 11tc
Horton St I n Ma son w va
strawberry pla1.ts for spring as a n•s1dence th en ce Sou th 39
? 4 Mp
Pamtrng , stdtng, roofing,
Lake vood traclton bar s h
Upholstermg.
degrees Easf toward !he Ohto
C onsrgnments w elcome
O L D CO I N S an d paper mo n ey
hooker
tac k er .:11 r sh 9c k s
paper hanging ,
k1tchen
planting.
We
Al
so
Buy
Antrques
R1v er to a po ml f tve fee t
Phone (3 04 ) 773 S&lt;l7 1
for M e,gs Cou nt y 5 only 1&lt;173 OL D SM OBILE Cu tla ss S
he ad er s Wtth 3' co rr ec tors for
cabrnets,
expert
carpettng,
Ea
srerly
from
th
e
foot
of
I
he
li
e
?
Pt~k up Serv1ce Available
Mr and Mrs Dwame Jor- re t atnrng wa l l now betn!il bu II _ ~- ________ _ 2
mon thlY com auc l ton Ca ll Ed
small block
Cal l 992 3496
P S P B and factory atr
elc
Burl\e ll 99 ? 3 176 af rer s 30
a ft er!'. p m BEST OFFER
?5 500 miles
Cal l 992 3914
dan , Bryan, Ke1th and Sarah by !he sad Tru ste es of I he
Pill
ilfler
5
p
m
l
O
l7
lfc
MEIG
S
muzzl
e
loaders
pu
b
l
tc
Pom eroy Be lt Ratlway Com
· Faye and Mr and Mrs. Walter pany
E XCA V A TI NG dozer , loader READY MIX CONC RE TE ife
1 31 1?tc
2 2 61p -- ---------- - ~t zaa k Walton F arm
shoot
rhencr.o up sai d Rtv er
11vered nght to your protect
and ba c khoe work
sept tc
Cheste r Ohto Sunday Feb Y
Jordan, local, and Mrs Ken- parallel w tth the foor of sa td
ELECTROLUX Sweepe r ~ wtt.. e
Fas '
and
easy
Free
CO N SI GNME N TS w e l come at l969l IMPALA Cust om
ta nk s m stal l ed dump t rucks
IY75 at I p m
good
rcl
atntng
wall
about
100
fee
l
mod
el
Complete
W tlh
d
ll
neth CrabtreeMcArthur, jomed unttltt s trtkes the N or ther ly I me - - - - - - es ttm a tes Phon e 992 32a4
P&amp;J 1\uc t on
215 N or lh
and
lo
boy
s
for
h1r
e
Will
haul
cond tlton Fact ory atr p s.
t 3 6tc
cl ean.ng ana c hments and
Goeg l em R eady M1x Co,
Seco nd Mtdd lepor t
fil l d •rt top sod l tm es ton e &amp;
p b pnced lo se ll Ph one 9Y2
their parents, Mr and Mrs of satd re s1 d en ce lot of sad
uses paper bags Sl tghtly used
Middl eport Oh to
g r avel
Ca ll Bob or Roger
761
7
I
9
30
tc
but clean s and look s l •k e new
Almon
a
A
oa
..
nes
pro1eCf
ed
to
N
O
W
se
lltng
Fulle
r
Brus
h
Mendal Jordan lor a b~rthday the Ohto Rtver t h e nc e Norlh 39
6 30 tfc
Jeffers day phon e 992 7089
1 29 6tc
Wil l se ll fer $37 15 cas h or
Produc t s phone 99? 3.1 10
700 BA L ES of good da r v hay
n1 g ht phone 992 JS25 or Y92
supper honori~ g Dwame degrees. Wus r along said to the
rerm s availab l e Phone 992
I 21 ti c
Phon e 7&lt;t1 J IB?
5232
SEWING MAC HINE RepatrS
19 73 FO RO Co untr y SQ utr e
n ss
North eas t cor n er of satd
Jordan 's bU'thday
se r v1ce al l makes , 992 228.4
2
2
6tp
wagon
20
000
m
ti
es
a
ll
2
ll
lfc
restdence rot th ence Soulll 53
12 18 ffc
COME Tax Pr ep are d bo th
Th e F a br i c Shop Pomeroy
eq u, prnenr $3 50 0 PhO n e 992
~----Mr and Mrs Rex Cheadle deg r ees wes r a lon g the rnner i NFed
era l and St a re Taxes wtll
Au thon zed Sr ng er Sat es and
) 19 3 or 992 2720
CASHUS1i FOR J UNK CA R S
E XPE RT tree serv tce
fr ee
nne o f F ront St reet o r th e stu d
were m Charleston where they Ct ty of Pom eroy to lh e p lace of
be done by appo1ntmcn ts
$59fREW A RD lor the r etu rn o f
Se r v ce w e sharp en Sc •ss ors
Comp le l e FR YE S T RU CK
es t ma tes
20 yea r s ex
onl y Pl ease phone 991 2171 or
ou r Bl ac k and Dec k er etecrrrc
3 29 tfc
A ND AUTO PARTS Rutland
pen ence Ca ll ( 1) 667 304 1 or
viSited Ben Caster and Mr and begmnm g Sa1d r eal e sta t e to be
1
see
Mr s Wa n da E IJ I1n Laure l
saw
7
, .n
blade
Phone
(
11
Phon
e
7
12
6094
992
)
057
and u sed by th e satd
Cl tft Rd Pom eroy Oh10
Mrs. Chester Spencer and also held
FURNIS HED a pl 3 r oomsa nd
667 373! Vtvta n Ma xe y
1 , 1161
1 21 26t p
Tru stees thetr successors an d
,.
P
ba f11 new l y d eco r ated Phon e
DOZER work land cl earmg by
1 3 JO t c
1 31 61p
caUed to see her Wiele and ass tgn s for ra lwa y purpo ses
99? 2937
the ac r e, hou rl y or con tra ct
only
C
BRAD
F-ORD
Aucltonee
r
a1111t, Mr and Mrs Marvm
Far m ponds
roads , e tc
A U \.. TION
Ttwr sday
and
2 2 6tp
II betng th e ob 1ecl and tn
Co mp le te Servtce
--·- - - - - - - - Larg e dozer and operator
Sat urday ntgh t 7 p m at
CLOS E OUT on new Z tg Zag
Phone 949 382 1 or 949 316 1
Covey, South Charleston.
len lion of th e form e r Gra ntor ro
w1th over 20 years ex
Mason Au c l ton 1-tor l on St tn R E MODELIN G
sewmg machtnes F or se wmg
Rac 1ne Ohro
p lu mbtng
and sell o nly lh e r•g t11
Mr and Mrs Albert Qwvey, convey
p e r.enc e Pullm s E xcava tmg ,
Mason W Va Consrgnmenls
stretch fa bncs buttonholes
c r 1tt Bradford
heat n g
and all type s of
and t tt e 10 a n d t o th e l andrng
fancy destgns E&gt; f c
Pamt
51 t fc
Pomeroy OhtO Phone 99 2
we tco m e Phone ()04 l 773
Qe n e rar
r e pa , r
Wor k 1 AM tn need o f men o r women
Dover, VISited here w1th h1s between F rent St r ee r m
247 8
J47 1
Sl• g t11t y bl emt shed Cho 1ce o f ---- --~ --- ~---­
g uarant eed
20 years e)(
to work 1n local P I Pleasanr
Pomeroy Oh •o a nd !H e Oil o
ca r ryrng case o r se wrng
mother, Martha Mays, h1s Rt\ler In fron t of the to t so ld to L
12 19 lfc
10 3 lf c
pertence Phon e 99 2 2&lt;1 09
br an c h o f l a r ge nat ona l
st and S4980 c ash or t erms ~ EPTIC
TA N KS
cle a n ed
ompan
y
Must
IJ
e
able
to
c
I 19 ti c
grandfather, Ney Carpenter, W Roush It b etng ex pre 5s l y FOR YOUr Otl o f Mtnk
ava ila ble Phon e 992 77S5
Modern Sant l atr on 991 3954 or
F or tn
E X CAVA t! N G
dozer,
s ra r t tmmedta te l y
a s a part of the
11 18 tf c • 99 2 7349
local, and h1s cousin, Mildred understood
...€osme lt cS Phone BR OW N S
te
r
vtew
apply
Holid
ay
In
n
ba c khoe
and
d tt cher,
co nsrd erat lon hereo f thiU no
99 7 5113
9 18 t fc
------ ~ -- -- Ga ll polt S OhiO
6 30 p m
wate rltn e foo te rs d rams ,
Carpenter at the nursmg home building or superstructure shal l
1 1 li e
Thursday e\len n g
Feb 6
roads and bru sh clea n mg . no
be er ec ted thereon that wt\1
WI
L
L
trrm
or
cut
trees
or
in Albany They then went to Interfere wt lh the v ew fro m
10b too small no weather tooAs k t or Mr Doyle No phon e
19 72 MOBI L E hOme 12x60 ?
shrubbe r y ,
clean
out
ca l ls please
bad Ch a rl es R Hatfteld Rt 1
Darwin to see his father , B1ll SOld lol sold •••d L w Rou sh
bedrooms Pn ce d reasonable
basements at t tcs etc Phone
Rutland 0
Phon e 742 6092
2 5 21c 5 ROOM hoU se Darw n Phon e
P hon e 99'} ?.709 or 7ti 56 41
Th e Grantor John V Wood
9&lt;1 9 322 1 or 742 4441
Quivey
1 7 26tc
J B 0 Br ten at t o rn ey 99Z
as admtnl stralor as aforesatd
?
4
61
C
1 26 26tc
Old uprtghl PIANO S
ME N an d women needed ro
2720
Callers at the Ney carpenter he r eby r es erves f rom th e above WANTED
any c on dttton
Paymg SlO
work for lar ge natronal l y
2 1 6tp CAR PET m stallat ton $1 25 p er
descnbed prem .se s
land ng
-lOME
Improvem ent
and
home were Mr. and Mrs ne
ea c h F .rst f loor only Wnt e MOBILE HOME S FOR SALE
known com pany Mus t be abl e
rbo r and moo r mg rtgh ts
Repa1r Servt ce Anythmg
ya rd Phon e R •chard Wes t
N O TI CE'
Due
to
lhe
and
grv
e
dt
r
ec
t
ons
to
Wtll
en
to
start
tmm
ed
•ate
ly
s
hor
t
5 ROOM hou se $5 000 Phone
Robert Stout and Mr and Mrs
Refe r en ce Dee d s
Vol 242
ftxed ar o und the home from
B43 1667
fo r ec lo sure on one of Oh to s
Ptano Co , Bo x 188 Sardt s
tra1n1n g pertod r eq u,r ed For
992 5871
Page 239 VO l 218 Pil'tg e 497
roo f to basement Y ou will
1114
16tp
l argest Mobt l e Home Dea l er s
OhiO 43946
Dale Queen and He1di, Mrs Vol
tn ter v ew ca ll 675 3490 ask
2 1 12t p
12 1 Pages l58 and 159 Deed
l tke our work and rates
we Wt l l o ff er for sa l e the
1 30 lltp
for p er sonnel manag er
Phone 7A2 5081
MID'rell Bailey and Beth, and Reco rd s M e ig s Coun t y Oil o
follow ng Mobt l e Hom f.'S at a
2 5 Jtc
e f.OIIOW1ng real estate rn
12 29 tfc
v er y ve r y lar ge d tscoun r
App ro K mate l y one a c r e 10
Una Beam, local, and Mrs theThvtllage
of Pom eroy county OLD furniture rce boxes bra ss
----------~ - -1- 64x 12 L tberty 3 bedroom
Rutland
set
up
fo
r
mob•
l
e
beds or comp l ete households
Mary LoveD, Teresa, Debbie of Me1gs state of Oh to and
WAI TR E SS E S needed app l y m
P&amp; J
Hom e
Ma i n te nance
1- 60x 12 L ber ty 1 bedroom
home Ph one (l) 446 9662
W r tte M
0 Mtller
Rt 4
BUILDING lot 80ft frontage
descr bed as follows
person Crow s St eak House
heatmg
c ooltng
refr 1g
150)(
12
R1chard
son
2
bedroom
and Robin of Charleston, W
l
30
7fc
eroy
Oil
tO
Ca
ll
991
77/JO
Po
m
by 165ft Th e second l ot on lef t
Berng that part of L ot No 189
Pomeroy
plumbtng
ele ct r1 ca l a p
1 60x 12 PM C 3 bed roo m
1
0
7
74
Va
on Rtvervtew Drtve Lmcoln
m sa•d V I llage and d esc nbed as
1 7 lfc
Pl 1a nc es W e servtce and
l - 60x 12 Ttta n 2 b ed roo m
Hill , Pom eroy Ohto If tn
Begtnn rn g at the
foll ows
repatr anytmg tn the hom e or
1- 60x 12 Par kwood 1 bedroom
Mr. and Mrs Harold Southea
complet e and
teres ted call992 3230a ft er 5 p
st c orn er of that parr of J UNK autos
bu s n ess
215 N
Second
l - 60x12 Elcona 2 bedrooms
d el i vered to our yard We p1ck
m
Gillogly, Vicky and Bruce, said lot sold ~nd conveyed by
M dd leport Phone 992 3509
central a1 r
up auto bodtes and bvy all
lr\lm a nd M ary lrvrn to
l O 17 tf c
l - 65 x12
Rt c hardson
3
1 9 30tc
were m Colurn bus durmg the 0Th omas
kinds of scrap m et als and
Bran c h sa1 d c orn e r be tnQ on
197
1
Y
AMA
H
A
250
new
par
ts
bedroom
2
f
ull
baths
8x
12
1ron Rtder ' s Salvage St Rt
weekend and v•sited his Sister, ttle nort h S•de of Main Stree t
ELWOOD BOWERS REPA I R
ex pancto
ext ra s good cond tt on Phon e
NEW HOMES No Money Down
114 R t 4 Pomeroy Oht O
formerly F ront St r ee t ttl ence
- s w eepers toasters , trons,
W e a l so hav e a gooq,sc lec llon of
99'/
22
58
a
tt
er
6
p
m
Payments
accordtng
to
Bernice McKn1ght and fam1ly North
Cal l 992 5468
53 Oeg East 100 fe et to a
a
ll sma l l appliances Lawn
o
th
er
a
1
0
and
12
Wtde
Mobile
1ncome on F a r m er s Hom e
1 30 6tc
10 17 rtc
. Nancy Smith of Columbus stake th en ce North 39 Deg
mowers neKt to State H tgh
Homes Th t se are mostly a ll
Admtntstrat ton l oan Con
to the foot of roc ks or c llfl
way Garage on Reule 7 Home
lat e mod el Hom es (some have
vent tonal I nanctng
also
spent a weekend with her West
Phone 9as 3a25
fa emg th e Ohio R1 ver th en ce CASH pa•d for all ma kes an d
10
R EG I STERED
A ngu s
n
eve
r
be
en
ltv
ed
n
l
If
you
available
w
llh
m1n1mu
m
models of mob ile homes
parents, Mt and Mrs. Lew1s Sou thw esr along the foot of the
hetlers
B 1ll W ttte
Ro c k
2 2 26tc
a
r
e
tnteresled
m
a
good
down
Love
ly
homes
•n
t
hree
NEW
LISTING
5
room
Phone ar ea code 6 14 413 9531
Sp rtngs Ohto Phone 99117BY
cl rff to the east l me of the tot
Mobile Home ar a very large
Snuth
localtons •n Metgs County
home
bath.
gas
fu
r
nace,
lots
of
.1
l3
tf
c
conveyed to sa1d Bran c h
7 5 6tc
CRE MEAN S - CON C RETE de
dt sc ounl don t watt Sl op tn
Some hom es w1th wooded
Mr and Mrs Theodore th ence South 39 Deg east a long
panelmg and cerlmg tde Crty
livered Monday
t hrough
l oday at BERRY MILLER - - - lots
Call fo r
mo re
n
td ltne to the place of
Saturday
and
evenmgs
Mobile H ome Sa le s
705 REMINGTON a7 0 Wtnch ester
w ater, w 1fh large level lot
forma l 10n 99 2 5976
Boring, Columbus and Mrs sa
begrnnmg
12 gauge full c hok e w th Only $10,000 00
Phone 44 6 1142
Farson Street Bel pre Ohto
...._
l IS 76tc
Otho Gregory and Beth Ann of
Reference D eeds
Vol 2&lt;1 1
v entilat ed rrb P hone 99 2 53 48
phon
e
423
9531
6 13 ttc
NOTICE
e 59 Deed Re cords Metgs
acres.Bof
2 6tc NEWLISTING 1 30 IOt c
Radcliff called on their Sister, Pag
3
ROOM
2
bath
bud!
1n
k
tc
hen
Count y Oh o
bottom "
{ \ woods, 2
wtth bar carport 18X40 sun
Mrs G&lt;lld1e Gillogly
The prayer of sard pe titiOn 1S To C h a~es E Hmman who se
TABLE saw and ro tnler for
deck
co mplet e
Pr1vale
bedrc
( ) ..
gas heat,
as follows
Satd p e flt10ner s p lace o l re s1d ence 1S unk.nown 10x 55 Part tally c a rp e ted a c
sale ,. Phone 843 2292
Mr and Mrs Boyd Ohver pray tor an order of the Court and c annot wtth r easo nable
wooded
acre
near
52 ga l l on hot water heater
1Ju1et w1th
2 5 6t c rural \)..
Harrtsonv•lle $2 4 500 Phone
underprnnmg
Call 992 Sl53
and son of Columbus spent a au thort :r tn g them to Sell con v ey dtltg ence be as certatned
or1 vac, i12.000 00
741 6261
1 30 12t c
tr ansfer th e real estate
day wtth Mr and Mrs Walter dt'lnd
19Sl F OR 0 f la th ea d , v a engtne
You are adv•sed that a - - - 2 4 6tc
escr bed I n th s p ettt 1on to Da te
BUILDING LOT - Wtlh stone
w tlh st a ndard t ra n sm rsston
Jordan Mr. Ohver and Walter E Shultz A th ens Ohto , fo r th e pel Iron for adopt1on has been
foundation
on
good
qutet
street,
1965 l i ncoln Cont tnental 430
60 ACR E fa rm at V1nton , Ohto
c ons tdera tton o f $25 000 00 and fded In the Metgs Cou nt y
Jordan attended the Cincmnat1 for
out of htgh water
c u tn mo tor w 1fh auto m at c
$55,000 mclud1ng all farm
su ch o t her re lief as tS Proba l e Court Pomeroy Oh• o
tran s mts st on
One
4576~ .
tn
Case No
7 1-1 07
machmery
Phone 3a8 a.420
5 RM APT furn iShed ullltt 1eS
School of Embalmmg together proper '
BARGAIN - 'T1 frame
ret r rge ra tor green 1n good
2 4 Jtc
pard !.lOO month Phone 99?.
Sad app lic ation Will come on alleg i ng that y ou ha\le w •l lfull y
and Mr Ohver IS employed by for hearmg on the 1st day of fail ed to prop e rly support
w1th·
() \
water,
condtlron Call 949 5185 any
) 87 I
r rme or 985 42 19 after 7 p m
natura
.ctnc on
2 5 31p
Evans
F1111eral Home m Ma r ch 19 75 or as soon Shawn M 1chae t Hmman for a
2 4 3tp
per 1od of mo r e th a n two years
corner
_.,vuo
00
thereafter as may be
Columbus
tmmed t atel y ~r ecedmg th e 2 BEDROOM mobile home
POMEROY - N 1ce renovated
t thng or t he pet11ton
country loc atton
Close to
Mr. and Mrs Alfred Rice of
Theodore T Reed Jr
Heart ng on satd p efllton sha ll
J bedroom home lots of nrce
Mtddlepor l or
Pomeroy HOOVER Otal A Matte Wtfh
Se
n
to
r
Warden
Of
Vest
r
y
Columbus were overnight
power d r 1ve and artachm ents
be had on th e 24 th day of
Ch 1l d ren welcome Ca l l 99 2
Norbert Co mpton
paneling, wall to wall car
S7S Phone 985 4132
Febr
u
ary
19
75
at
10
o
c
ro
c
k
764
9
after
&lt;I
p
m
guests of her parents, Mr. and
A.e~ron Kelton .
pehng. 2 porches basement.
AM
'-I 2Y JOtp
2 5 6tc
Norma Amsba r y
Mrs . William Culwell and
and fenced yard $17 ,500 00
Larr y Brogan
Clean
used
apMann 1ng D Webste r
A PT lor rent Ph one 992 513 1
caUed on other relatives here
F ran k Stsson
ST
EREO
R
A
DI
O
8
t
ra
ck
tape
HAVING
TROUBLE
pliances. All with 30J udge of
day 11me or 992 3173 after 6
Ct1e~r le s W 1l dermurh
comb rnat on am fm rad 10 4 SELLING,
Common P l eas Court
CALL
A
pm
Chill r lotte 0 1llard
day
money-back
way speaker sound syste m
Prob a t e DIVI SIOn
Ann1e Chapman
2 5 3tc
PROFESSIONAL SALESMAN
Ba lance S107 89 or use ou r
Metgs
Count
y
Onto
guarantees!
as members of the
AT 992-3325
budyet te rm s Call 992 3965
Vestry of Gra ce
1 7Y lfc
(I! n n (2J 5 Jrc
T RAILER space 2 miles from
EptSCOpal Church
Pom eroy Rt 143 Phone 99Z
5858
Cr ow Crow and Porter
1
10 27 tfc GROCERY IJusm ess for sale
A ttorn eys tor Pe l rt 1oners
Sutldtng for sa le or l ease
Phon e 773 561 8from 8 30p m
NOTICE OF
[ 1] 19 (1) 5 12 l9 4IC
APT 3 rooms all e l ec lnc ha s
to 10 p m lor appomtment
APPOINTMENT
table top ra nge wall oven
3 'O rfc
Case No 21396
rea l n1ce and clean mod ern
Estate of John C
P r offttt
L ocated
1n
P ome ro y
Deceand
By Mn. Herbert Rousb
NOTICE
over took ng lh e Oh 10 Rtver ST EREO RADIO 8 track tape
Not tce tS hereby 91\/en that
combmat ton am f m rad to , 4
Pllone Ga lt DOl tS day 4J6
Harold Proff•tt of Portland
To Charles E Hmman wt10se
way sp eaker so und system
7699 even tngs 446 95J9
Bill Donohue of Detroit, place of res 1d en ce IS unknown Oh1o and Robert Pro fl 1tt of
Balance SlOB 74 or use our
I 26 tfn
Befpre . Oh io . ha\le been dul y
and
canno
t
w
tlh
reasGna
ble
tYUdge
t terms Ca l l 99 2 3965
Mich., IS visiting his mother, dd tgence be ascertamed
appotnted Co Adrl'\m tstrators of ---- ~ ---------1 2l lfc
2 BE DR OOM t r ailer
the Estate of Jolln c Proff ttl
Mr&amp;. Mary Donohue and
adults
on l y Phone 992 3324
You are adv •sed tnat a de c eased , lillie of Portland
David.
pettflon tor adopt ton ha s been Me tgs County , OhtO
1 J tf c
Creditors are requtred to fil e
Mrs. Dolly Wolfe VISited Mrs f t led tn tn e Metgs Cou n ty
l4
m de
Court Pomeroy Ot110 the•r cll!ltms w i th satd fud uc 1ar y TRAI L ER SPA CE
"AI Cout1on Light, Rt 7"
Ruth Parsons Monday at Probate
wtthtn four mon tns
north ot Me•gs H tgh Sc hool on
45169 , •n Case No
2 1406
Tuppers Plams, Ohto
Dated th 1s l7 th day of
old Rt 33 Phon e 99 129.:11
AnUquity
alleg tng that you h e ve w rllfully
Phone667 31158
January 1975
1 23 ttc
fat
ted
to
prop
er
ly
support
Paul
Mr. and Mrs. James Patsons Patrick H i nman . lor a p ertod of
CARPENTER 2 story
OPEN WED. THRU
Mannmg D Webster COUN TR Y Mobile Home Park
Ail New Heaters
and Ouiltopber Eugene of more th an twO years 1m
SUNDAY9A.M -7PM.
lra me, 4 BR, l 'h baths,
J udge
Rt 33 t en m 1tes nor t h 01
med
tately
prec
edmg
the
f
tltng
dlnrng R , porches. storage
New Carlisle, Ohio and Mr and of the pet 1110n
Now
Courtot Common Pl eas
Pomeroy
La rge lo ts wtth
bldg 2 garages, about · 2
Probate O tVI Ston
co ncret e pattOS
Stdewa l ks
Mrs . Carroll Wh1le and
Heartng on sard pet 111on Shall
Discounted!
acres
SMOO 00
IJe
had
on
the
24th
day
of
r un ners
and
off
s tr eer
New Wood Burnmg
children and Billy Parsons of February , 1975, at 10 o 'c lock (l) 22 29 121 s 3tc
~Ja rk 1 ng Phone 99 2 7479
HEATER
39
POMEROY - Busu)&lt;!ss R
11 31 lfc
- - - - - - 52 95
Calcl,.ell were Saturday guests AM
and furn rshed apartment
------------ Deluxe model wtth cabmet
of Mrs. Ruth Parsons and
Located on Matn St 1n good
Mann1ng 0 Webster .
3 and 4 ROOM furntsh ed and W-.U hned
famlly.
Judge of
traff1c area Good mcome
unfurniShed
apartments r
!POMEROY LANDMARK
NOTICE OF
Common Plea s Co urt
rnv estment Prtced t o sell.
Phone 992 5434
Carsey, Mrr
Miss Mel Waldmg of
APPOINTMENT
1. . . ~ Jack
Probate DIV ISIOn
A
l2
tf
c
,...Phone
992·
2181
PORTLAND - • n1ce lots,
case No 11404
Syracuse spent S1111day wtth
Me tgS Coun t y , Oh10
- - - - - - -- - - - - - - - I
good
Estate Of MARGIE SUMMERS,
drilled well and waler
PRIVATE meetmg room for ~.~----------­
Sharon and Cindy Roush. ·
Deceased
( I I 22 '9 121
31C
any organ tzalton phone 9:92
block
garage,
Not rce Is hereby c;;n ve n tha t
J97S
bu
ilding,
2 story
1953
30
FERGUSO
N
tractor
Hel
en
Madelyne
Woodyard
of
16
i8POi!il'l\l I ,E.tJl'l
3 11 ftc
new m otor, good rubber , new
house need~ some repa~r
R!l tlroad St , Mtddleport Oh to,
. NEW YORK (UPI) -Phil
pat nl Sl ,200 Phone 985 3594
has been ful y appoi nted Ad
Whole works at IUS! $:1,700.
F URNISHED ap t Adu lts 01'\ IY
l 2 7tp
m tntstratrrx ot the E state ol
Espotl+o ci tbe BoltOn Bruins
Mtddleport Phon e 992 3874
NEAR LANGSVILLE Margie Summers, deceased
1114 tfc 6 M O WER , 3 pt h 1fCh f itS Ford
About 10 acres, on good
tbe NaUonal Hockey SCORES 'l1UPLE
late of Me 1gs County . Ohro
---~--- ------ -o r Ferguson tra ctor , $100
ftshu"tQ creek, close 1o mine
Cred1tors are r equ tred to f 1te
CHERRY HILL, N.J. (UP!)
wllb 1111 poinll and Ia
RENT
1634
New cutt1vator , $125 Phone
fhe •r c1a1ms w tth sa i d frductary HOUSE FOR
areas. good blacktop road.
L tn coln Hgts 1.. Pom eroy
wtlldn
poinll
985 3$94
-Jockey Jun Edwards, scored w•thm
four months
ASKING just U ,OOO
Phone
Pomeroy
992
3575
or
2 2 7tp
Da ted til ts 18th da y of
a triple at Garden State
liJO.pciDt .......
GaHtpolls c46 2749
ALL CASH FOR YOUR
Januar y 19'75
2 2 tfc 196~ J OHN Deere Do zer , A
EIP"'to
47
l!ld 49 Monday when he WO!I aboard
PROPERTY LET US
cyttnder , de tsel , 8 ' blade
Mann•ng D Webster
''l4,
Ia Q-owned Aboard fn the third
KNOW
WHAT
YOU
HAVE
c anopv
New
clutches,
. U11furn tshed 7 ro oms
PROPERT Y IS SELLING
Hlllyi Joe fn the fourth Judge Court of Common Pleas 1 HOV~.::
Bobby
bra kes , and tracks , A 1
and bath , nrce Phone 992 2780
c011d 1t•on S6,500 Phone ~as
FAST A'r THIS TIME
Probate D IVISIOn
wtlb
lllcludlng 110 and Royal Supre 1n the
or 992 3432
35 94
992-2259 or 992-2568
1 9 li e
aUowance leature
2 2 7tp

place Of restden ce tS unknown
and &lt;: &amp;nnot With r easonable

2 SIGNS
OF
QUALITY

~omeroy

Motor Co.

Notice

HElL

RACINE PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING

n

..

1..E.T~

.

WEDNESDAY , F'EBRUARY 5, 197)
' '
6 00 - News 3 48,1013 15 ABC News6, E lec Co 20 lTV
Ut1llza tt on 33
6 3(}-NBC News 3 4 15 ABC News 13, Bew1tched 6 CBS News

8 10, Zoom 20 , Your Fu ture Is N ow 33
7 oo-Truth or Cons 3 4, Bow ltng for Do ll ar s 6 What s My Ll nP.

e

Larry Lavender

ROGER HYSEll'S
GARAGE

(

CAPTAIN EASY
PIPE DOWN·· f!&gt;OTH

OF YOU : A ND
TR'i U51'-l eo YOUR I!&gt;RAt'-'5 FOR A
CHAIVG5 IN5T5Ar OF YOU R LUtJG5:

EXPERIENCED

WHATS
THE SEN5E
OF G E TTI N G

YOURSE L F
KILLED

.

ASDUL

1

IF I KNOW TH15
BllSE RAT, HE 5
AFTE R MONEY AND
HE SURE WONT GET
IT I!Y HAI&lt;M IN6

WHO DARE'S SPEAK MY NAME AND
CAUSo SUCH COMM OTION OtJTSIDE
§l:&gt;m-'-M~~Y
ROYAL C AI!I'-' z

Pli!IN CE.SS
J ASMIN!

'

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

Carpenter

News, Event

For Sale

Modern Chemicals

33

12 JD-Wtde World Special 6
1

Life 8 10 Sesame Sf 33

BORN WSER

D&amp;D

News 13
12 oo-Jackpo f 3,15 Password All Stars 6 13 Bob Braun s 50 50

CONSTRUCTION

C lub 4

N ews 8 10
THUR~DAY, FEBRUARY 6,1975

6 00-Sun rlse Sem m ar 4

Sunnse Se m ester 10

6 JG-- F1ve M inutes to Ltv e By 4 News 6 B ib le Answers 8
Sc hool Scene 10 Pa t tersn for Llv rng ll

6 J&gt;-Col um bus Today 4
•
6 45- Mornlng Report J Farmllme 10
7 110-Today 3 4.15 AM Amenca 6,1J, CBS News 8, 10
e 110-Lassle 6, Capt Kangaroo 8 Popt•y e 10 Sesame Sf J3

~1YWJ]31brn ; lkJ Jc•d'..l..-1 ,_.
Lnscramble these four Jumbles,
on~ letter to t'ach ~uare, to

ALLEY OOP

I

form four ordmar}' words

81: 8&lt;\CK AS SOON
CAN, OSCAR!

I HOPE HE

DOESN'T TAKI:
100 LONG'
I ... WHAT 7
IS IT, MARKO

0/'TIA

JUST MY
IMAGINATION,

I I

I GUESS . ••

I ('IRION
I r)

.... U ..

'II '"'l&lt;erdl) '•

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

GASOIJNE AILEY

________ _____ _

l .V

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

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

s-

ULABNER

22_ THAT WALRUS

j$ EiOING TO S:AT

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

THAT MANrr-

I THIN!&lt;
ITS THG

OTHER
WAY

.ARoU,~-JD''-

EITHE'R WAY
ITS A GOOD
DEAL ONE

OF 'f:M GET5
OLJTOFTHE'
CO~D!•-

Wf:'VC BeEN IN
LOWEiST' S!DB80VIA
30 SECCNDS ~­

LCIN6 SIIIOUGH !!

1.sns ao

CN WHAT~­
NO PILOT STAYS
HEiRG MORE'N

15 SIE'CONDS "-

HOMer:-

REFRIGERATORS
from 25

News Notes

Electric or Gas Ranges;

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

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

'

WINNIE
lD LIKE 10 5ET UPA .9CHOLAR ·
$HIP

t.cue

tuar
llriUPt

you will have !hem
8AOITTARIU8 (Nov. 23-Dtc.
21) You could gain some unex.~
pected advantages from your
business dealings If you re
bargain -conscious and know
reel value

CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-~on.
11) Conditions are starting to

shift You II be breaking clear

/lim

d•1 ymt gt I

OPPOSE

of Influences that kept you
bottled-up the past few days

CROTCH

wmmd' - TRAMP

AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Fob. 11)
A responalblllly you though't
you would be burdened with

will suddenly be assumed by a
considerate ally

PISCES (Fob. 20-Morch 20)
You 're going to be getting
some unexpected but pleasant, news from a rrlend who Is
separated from you by some
distance

~~

Yesterday's Answer
16 Smger
Sunone
21 Summary
22 Model to
emulate
Z3 InfleXIble
24 Des1gnate
25 Scold
26 Bundle

28 Port-auPr111ce IS Its
capital
29 "The
Tempest"splrll
3D Actor
ArmendariZ
33- reckorung
35 R1ver
inlet

Fob. I, 1875

Advancement will come
suddenly this year In your
chosen field of endeavor Build
upon acquaintances you make
with persons of Influence who
share similar Interests
lNEWSP o\PE:R ENTERPRISE ASSN

A little deception might do it
•eu

.9 8 52

U Melody
Z5 InVIted
26 Sword's
SUperiOr
Z'l Generation
28 Short of
funds
(2 wds )
31 Crash
mto
3Z Wearmg
maU
34 Mushroom
38 Extensive
31 Word on

•Js

QBXXBKV

'

BKV

NF

BKV

NF

.KQ82

WEST

EAST

•a

•JI0953
¥A4

¥73

.73
•9642

.Al0964
.Al0873
SOUTH CDJ
• AKQ7
¥ K QJ t06
.J5

.KQ
East· West vulnerable

Wesl

North

E11t

Soutb

Pass

2¥

Pass

4¥

Pass

Pass

Pass

t¥

CRYPI'OQUOTE
BW
ZBXXHG

OHFOXH;
QFCI,
XHN

NMH

QBNM

WFSH

QBXX·

CHWN

QBXX-

NMHS.-CFJHCN

BARNEY
ZCFWN

-- AN'MAKE 'IORESELF
COMFORTABLE

DOC PRiTCHART·I COMETOGiT

Yestenll!y's· Ceyptoqaote: IT REQUIRES FAR MORE
GENIUS TO MAKE WVE THAN TO COMMAND
NINON DE L'ENCLOS

M'-1 TEETH
CHECKED

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

......

n wlntl,

.

• I I I 22. 29 ( 21 5, 3tc

I

•

•

•

I

Well
Pass

Nortll

'
'

•

1

Soot•

t•

5•

,

H

3.

1¥

Pus

Pass
Pau

4•
5¥

Pan

••

Pa11

••

Pall

?

You, Soulh, botd ·

.AQ7~2 eKHI.AQU
What
you do now'
·

";
1

:1. lilt ~- Five ...- :
woakl beJ aede.-&amp;e
TOD:I.Y'S QVESTlON

Instead of r-.xUac 0110 beart
your partner baa responded 0110 i
opade WM.t do you do DOW'

ALL IMHi,

'

"

Eul

Pa..

WHO MOVED
1HE TV?!

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

'

The bidding has been

'

UP

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

•

u:H:I:},~tt@U

By Oswald &amp; Jameo Jacoby
As anyone wbo looks at all 52
cards can see, South is gomc to
wmd up one trick short ot his
four-heart contract West can
take his ace of trumps and lead
a second spade to ~ive his
partner a ruff after which start
It will be a cmch for East to
take h1s two aces
Can South do anything about
117 Not if the defense d00111't
falter, but South can try to
deceive h1s opponents Af a
starter which h1gh spade should
he use at trick one• Clearly the
queen is not the right one to
play The average false-carder
w1ns with the ace That also 1s
wrong West 1s very likely to
lead a second spade South's

en race,

BoltG!I teemmete

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN J

Opening lead - J •

ol h1a fifth

lu ioa1a
In
IICCIId place
,

best bet is to win ·with the king
that play will show the ace but
not the queen and might encourage a shift
So SOuth should play the king
of spades at tr1ck one and lead a
trump. Clearly not the king.
The king play will get the ace to
come right up How about the 10
or even the six' Too apparent
an attempt at deception. West
will know that South holds
higher trumps .
So we find the right one to
lead is the queen. West may
think that South holds s1x
trumps to the queen-Jack-10 and
is trYing to bump tile ace aod
king together For this reason
West may duck 1
Not too likely ilgamst alert
opponents, but the best try he
can make

NORTH

QFCXG

1

WIN AT BRIDGE

Z%-- cake

NMH

w

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

\ An~wer

BOOTY

II LONGFELLOW
One letter aimply aIandi for another In thia 11111ple A Ia
UHd for the three L'a, X for the two O's, etc Slncle lettel'l,
apoatrophea, the length and formation of the wordl are all
blots. Eaoh day the codelettera are ~liferent

HEATER, $50

Je.dl

Keep busy Proceed as If you
have all ttle answers Sur·
prlsingiy when you need ttlem

1r I 11 I 111rx J

m!INS·~...

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work
AXYDLBAAXR

m DRAMATIC .SCHOOl

FOR YOU AFTER YOU
GET OJT OF PRISON 1
OF COtJR$E I ;-,~::::

USED FUEL OIL

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

doorsman 15

8 110-Mac Oavls 3,4, 15, Barney Miller 6,13, The Waitons 8.10,
Bill Moyers' Journal 20,33
8 3()-Karen 6,13
9 DO-Archer 3,•. 15, Streets of San Francl&lt;eo 6, 13, Movie
"Roustaboul" 8, Movie "Harakiri" 20. Movie "8ullltt" 1
Fortunes of N !gel 33

'

38Itallan
river

Wringer Washers

J

1

a marquee

Electric Dryers; and

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

I Dream of Jeannie 4, Somerset 15,

5 110-FIBI a, Andy Grlffllh 8, !rooslde 13
5 31f-News6, Beverly H!llblllles ' ' Hodgepodge Lodge 20, Get
Smart IS, Elec Co 3J
6 110-News 3,. ,8,10,13,15,ABC News 6. Elec Co 20, Teaching
Children with Special NHds 33
6 3(}-N BC t-tews J••• IS, ABC News 13, Bewitched 6. CBS News
e, 10, Zoom 20, M . U Report 33
7 po- Truth or Cons J.~ . Bowling for Dollars 6, What's My Line
e, News 10, Let's Make a Deal 13; Jimmy Dean 15, Lock
Stock &amp; Barrel 20, Nova 33
•
7 3D-Hollywood Squares J, Hollywood Squares 4, Fred Tylor
Baskelball 6, New Price Is Right 8, Consumer Surviva l Kit
20, Wild Kingdom 10, To Te!l lhe Truth 13, American Out

Zl Frost

IN TRADE

Fairview

Cartoon 3,

Gilligan ' s Is 6, Tafllelales 8, Sesame Sl 20,33, Movie
" Lovers and Lol!lpops" 10 M ike Douglas 13
• J()-Bewltched 3 Merv Griffin • · Mod Squad 6, Lucy Show 8,

!0 Connective

OUR STOCK

for

Future Is Now 20
4 00-Mr

nest

·\:0

Search

12 4&gt;-E iec Co 33
12 5&gt;-NBC News 3, 15
1 DO-News J, All My Children 6,13 Phil Donahue 8, Young &amp;
lhe Restless 10, Nol For Women Only 15
I 3(}-How To Survive a Marriage 3,4,15, Let' s Make • Deal
6,13, As the World Turns 8,10
2 DO-Days of Our Lives 3,4,15, $10,000 Pyramid 6,13, Guiding
Light 8, 10
2 3(}-0octors 3,4 15, Big Showdown 6, 13, Edge of NlghiB,IO
3 110-Another World 3,4, 15, General Hospital 6, 13, Price Is
Right 8, 10, Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20
3 3D-One Ltfe to Live 13. Lucy Show 6, Match Game 8, 10, Your,

5HOULI7 6E 00017 WHt;N
P~ES51N6 A SU IT

ACROSS 39 Reqwre
I Doctors' 40 Israeli
all'pOrt
group
DOWN
4 Forage
1 Sale
grass
10 Infamous
words
marqms
2 "-I'm
Adam"
12 Elizabeth
3 Writer
I to the
poets
St. John
4 Gilbert13 Footnote
5 Irregularly
word
notched
14 Attractive
6
God (It.)
gil'I
(colloq.)
7 Hood·
w1nked
15 Birthplace
(2 wds.)
of John
Steinbeck 8 Former
9 Procession
17 Greek
letter
11 H•gh Arab
U Leatheroff1ce
neck
It Bird's

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

For Rent

Split Second 6, 1J,

8 10. To Be Announced 33

by TH0"1AS JOSEPH

For Sale

----------

Tomorrow

~~-~,at

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

~

Club 4, News 8 10
12 3()-B iank Check 3, 15,

SCORPIO (Ocl. 24-Nov. 22)

tIJ

Jumbl'"' GAMUT

Real Estate For sale

s
_w___ ----------

N ews 13

12 110-Jackpot 3,15, Password AI! Slars 6, 13, Bob Braun' s 50 50

( Aaewen lomorrow}

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

----------

Li f e 8, 10

11 5.1-'-Take Kerr wllh Graham Kerr 8 Dan !mel's World 10,

Now arrana:e the circled letters
to form the surprise anawer, u
suggested by the above cartoon.

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

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

8, 10

11 3()-Hollywood Squares 3. 15 Brady Bunch6, News • · Love of

you ve felt uncertain about
This will reverse the odds In
your favor

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

•

8 3(}-Big Val!ey 6
9 110-A M 3, Phil Donahue • · Phi! Donahue 15, Rocky &amp;
Friends 8, Morning w1lh D J 13
9 2&gt;-C huck White Reporls 10
9 3(}-Not For Women Only 3, Dinah 6 Galloping Gourmet 8.
Talllelales 10 New Zoo Revue 13
10 00-Cefebrlly Sweepstakes 3 • .15, Joker's Wild 8,10, Movie
'Heller In Pink Tlghls" 13
10 3(}-Wheel of Forlune 3 • · 15 Gambll 8,10
11 110-High Rollers 3. ~ . 15, One Life to Live 6, Now You See !I

Bonannz:a 15

6 2&gt;- Farm Report 13

1

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

8 1o-Your Future Is Now 20

8 1&gt;-Capt Kangaroo 10

11 55-- Take Kerr w tth Graham K er r B Dan \ m el s World 10

Help Wanted

Wanted To Buy

3 4 Nws 13

8 10

Employment Wanted

Real Estate For Sale

oo- Tomorrow

11 3D- Hollywood Squares 3, 15 Brady Bunch 6, News 4, Love of

------For Rent

Mobile .'-iomes For Sale

News 10 Country M usic Jubilee 13 I Spy IS, Behind the

Lrnes 20. Know Your Sc hool s 33
7 Jo-- Pollce Surgeon 3 Nam e That Tune 4 Lets Mak, a Deal
6 Wilburn Bro thers 8 Th e Judge 10 , T o Tel l th e Truth 13
Book Beat 20 E p tsode Actron 33
8 OG- ltttle H ouse on the Prai r ie 3 4 15 Th a t s My M ama 6 13
Tony Orlando and Sa wn 8, 10 What Makes a Good Father 20
Sinners 33
a 30-M ov le All Toge ther Now ' 13, M ov1e Twa for the
Money' 6
9 oo- Lucas Tann er 3,4, 15, Cannon 8 10 Appa la c tlllan Green
Parks Projec t 20 M asterp tece Thea t re 33
10 oo- Pet rocelll3 4 15 , Get Chn s tr e L ove6 13 M anhunter 8 lO
News 20 Family At Wa r 33
10 30- Your Future IS Now 20
11 OD-News 3,4,68101 3 15 A BC News 33
11 30-Johnny Car son 3 4 15 W1d e World Special 13 FBI b
Movte T he La st Cha l lenge' 8 Mov 1e Synanon 10 Janakr

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

Wan ted To Buy

Television log for easy viewing

C.ET " ·-

S.K EXCAVATING .

COMPANY

(

·ALL I SI\ID WAS·

·-

- --1
Fire Retardant
The Furniture Fixer
843-2824 or 843-2293
Insulation
Portland, Ohio

Auto Sales

NOI IC(' IS hereby CJIIo't'11 th a t

1
I
15 - Tlie Daily Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Wednesday, Feb &gt;. t97!i
DICK TRACY

·-

�r
'I

14 - The DaUy Sentinel, MlddleJ"lrl-Pomeroy, 0 , Wednesday, Feb &gt;. 197&gt;

~------~----------~-~~~----~----~·

For
Fast Results Use Sentinel ClasSifieds ]_ Business Services
•
NOTICE

To

PUBLIC NOTICE

Cha r les E Hm man wh ose

.J

Theodor e T R eed J r Norb ert
Water, Elec t,ric, Ga;s, Sewer
Compton AMon Kelton Norma IN lOVI N G memory of ou r
l1nes ,
•ns, alled
Work
mothe r
Jil n te
El /ilb CI/1
Amsbary Larry Brogan Frank
dtllg e nce be as cer tam e d
guaranteed.
Sn td er who le f t us 5 vcc1rs aqo
S1s5on Ch!lrles Wllde r multl
f cb r ua ry S 1 97~
Charlo fl e Dillard im d Ann1e
Dozer, Backh9e, Trucks
You are adv•sed that a Chapman a s th e du ly a ppo1n ted
Our dean• s r moOHr you are
L1meslone &amp; Fill D1rt
pet•t •on for ad o ption has been qualt l ted ana act.ng Ves try of
gon e
Commerc1ai-Resldent1al
f1l ed m the Metgs Co un ty the Grace Ep• sco pal Chur c h
REPAIR-Broken
Blown Into Walls
But ou r fondest mcrnorn:&gt;s of
Construction &amp; Remodel
Probat e CO urt , P omero y OhtO Pomeroy Ohto have fl ied th e• r
you Sf1 1i I ng er on
and
Attics
Parts Mended
45769
tn Case No 21.. 05 pet tron •n the Common Preas
al legmg t h at you have wt i H u l ly
Th e IO\Ie we shared an d hCJppy
Free Estimates
STRIPPING-By
Cour l tn ' lc.as Coun tv Ohto
fat led to proper ly support Dawn ca se No
IS73.J p ray• ng for
times wtth you arc ours
Hand
Mtchel e Hmmo'ln for a penod o f iluthor tty to sell co nvey and
alone to keep
1974 CHEVELLE
$)095
mo re than tw o yea r s m
NO DIP TANKS
trans fer ra Dale E
Sh ultt
Rul we know new 1t1at you .uc a t
med tltl e ty prec edmg the f 1 ng Athens
Maltbu H T Cpe 350 V 8 e ngme power stee rrng f actory
p('a ce
Ohto
l or th e con
o f the petttron
Supplies - Strippers
~cldly llliS'&gt;eC1 IJy cl1ildren
atr l tn led gla ss radr o wheel cov er s good ft res, blk
S. 1de r a !t on o f $75 000 00 ltl e
7111 Pearl Street
Hearmg on Slltd pe tt f tOn sha l l
Rc1ymond
Da le
Ronn 1e
fo ll ow ng descrtbed real es tnre
Phone
992
3993
tn t er•or Sti ver grey ftn 1sh
Slams - Finsihes
Middleport, Oh1o
be had on t he 14th d ay o f
Ruth Bf.•a tr Cf' J&lt;1 H'T Jean
The followtng rea l CSia t c
Phone
992
5367
or
992
3861
Da1iy
Alter
5:00
February 1975 at 10 o c lcok s tuat ed 1n th e village ot
7 ) lf p
Free Prckup and Delivery
AM
1973 PLY STA WAGON
52795
Pomerov county of Metgs and
state of Oh•o
Suburba n J Sea t V 8 eng me , automat•c trans
power
Ma nnmg 0 Webster
Being the r~ver f ront or that
st eermg &amp; bra kes factory .=ur co ndt t 1onrng l uggage r ack
Judge o f
part Of Lot 1a9 1n Pomeroy
gre en li nrsh rad•o l1 ke n ew w w trr es
Common P leas Cou rt
Metgs County
Oh•O whi Ch
St-I OOT IN G ma l ch Rac rne Gun
Prob a r e 0 lo'tSton
A t mona A Dav 1es sold to L w
Clu b Sun da y I p m Ass.orled
M e gs Co un t'!' Oh ro
Rousl'l, by deed da te d the l?t h
1972 NOVA 55
521 95
me at s and l ac l ory chok e guns
day of Ap r r A D 1'100 an d
on l y
2 Door 3SO v 8 au tomatic Ra ll y wheels&amp; w w t1 res, r a dto
(1)
19121 5 J tc
r ecord ed 11 vor 86 Pages 69
11 n tf c
bt own f Jnt sh blk v 1n y l 1nter tor loca l ca r &amp; r eal nt ce
and 70 of th e Reco rd s of Dcea'.
On State Rt 124 ' '~ m1 from
Complete plumbmg 6:
ot sad M P gs County and s. SHOOT 1N G Matc h Ra c tne Gun
From t h e largest Truck or
Route 7 by pa ss towa r d s
bounded on the E as terly 5t d e5
Club Su 11day Fe ll 9 I p m
Bulldozer Radtator to the
Rutland
heating
serv1ce
and
by th e lines o t satd lot so ld to L
? s ltc
smallest
Heater Core
w Roush produ ced to l hc Oh10
general sheet metal
Nathan Btggs
R tver on th e Northerly St de o l SWE EP ER Repa r Parts a nd
Ph
992
5682
or
992-7121
OPEN EVES 8: 00P.M
works.
Free
Front St ree r n Pomeroy On. o
Radiator Spec1als1t
Suppl es
Oav tS V a cuum
AU Mechanical Work
and on !he Sou th erly Stdc by th e
POMEROY, OH 10
Est1mates
.
'
cre.1n e r 11 mt le up Geo r ges
Oh 10 Rtver Excepltng fr om It tS
Cree k. Rd off Stille Rou re 7
Phone 949-5961
conveyan ce !hat part of Sa i d
Ph on e ~ 10 079&gt;l
Open Mon Sal
Rtv e r Front and L afl d tn g
? s l tc
Emergency
992 -3995
19
68
CH
EVROLET
J
~
I
On
BA .M. 6 PM
t'l er e rofore conveyed by I he sa d
Pnon e 992 2107
Pomeroy
Ph 992 2174
or 992 -5700
Al mena A Da ... tes and her late SH OO TIN G Mat ch Rutland
WOULD l tke to buv ?00 bal es of
___2~~ tp
hus band A lban Da v1es ro the
Gu n Clu b N ew L ma Rood
Mr and Mrs Robert Mattox Trusr ees of the Pom eroy Belt
qood hay Phone 99?. 27~YS Ole I Y7J CU TL ASS
S
2 dr
Friday 6 30 p m Shot guns
R.atlway th etr suc cesso r s and
any gauge ?2 rr fl es fa c l ory
have returned home from a asstg
aut
om
al
tC
Power
St
eenng
ns wh1 Ch deed s dat ed lh e
c ho ke gu n s only
WA N TED old upngh l p 1anos
brakes and w ndow s crutse
trip which took them to lith d a y o r J une 187 1
7 s Jl c
USED parts F r ye s Tr uck and
ilny con d1l on
Payrng $10
co nlr o l
1•11 wh eel
am f m
t o f sa tdL ot 189soso ld
H1111tsville, Ala , where they byThepilr
Au to Pa rt s Ru tl and Oh o
rap
e
p
la
yer
new
s
t
e
r
eo
eac
h
F
1rs
t
fl
oor
on
ly
Wrr
te
to
Armona A Davtes and her
Phone (6 1&lt;1l 7&lt;12 6094
T IO N Sal e Evt!ry Frtday
and qtve dtrecltons l o Wtttcn
brakes and sho c k s r ad al s
100 Kerr Street
viljited with friends They aloo hu Sband to s.atd Trusi E&gt;eso f Silld AUC
I 22 7atp
7 p m Vtllage Auc r on ?IS N
and 1ow httch Me tallt c blue
P ano Co
Box 188 Sard s
Pomf:' r oy Aelt Railway Co
Pomeroy, Oh1o
PHONE
viewed sights on the Tennessee lhe•r successors ana ass1g ns tS
Sec ond M•dd epo rr
w Th black nter.or Worth
Ol1i0 i1391b
Phone
(6141
992
2798
949
3832
or 843 2667
ST
EREO
radto
a
!ra
c
k
rap
e
? 3 61p
~J 100 se ll for $2 500 Ca ll 99 ?
2 10 30 tc
River which included Wiloon d f:'SC rtb ed a~ follow s n sa1d _
combtna tton AM FM radro 4
345) or 992 3381
AU Types of
way speake r sound sys lem
and Wheeler Dams and caUed deed tow t Bcgtnnmg at the I NCOME T AX Prep ar ed by WA NTED to buy a used
STRIPPING FINISHES
I 31 SIC
So uth ea st corner o f tha t parr o f
appo n t men t Phon f' 99?. 3388
Ba l an ce $ 107 BY or use our
Grr~vely
Tr
ac
ror
w
lh
Mower
FURNITURE METALS-ETC
BUILDING
on idends 1n Manchester, Lot No I RY tn the Cilv o f
?. 'l c
bud ge t t erm s Ca ll 992 3965
61
dlld rtd nq sul k y and p l ow IY 77 VEGA Hatchback 3 sp ee d
MODERN &amp; ANTIQUE
and
REMODELING
Tenn They journeyO'&lt;l then to Pom eroy County of Metgs and
1
3
IIC
a
ulomal
tc
EK
c
el
l
e
nt
cc
n
illti1Chm ent5 Phone (30 1) 1182
Re lrmshrng
State Of O tuo now owned and AUCTION Thursd ay n1ght
Repitrlng
d111on Phone 9n JY I&lt;I a ft er S
2S25 or eiJe ntn gs aa2 23 4.:1
Augusta, Ark., where they got occupted
by A l mon ta A D avt es
p m
at Mason Auctton
From a shelf to a house
Burna s htng
pm
19 57 CHEVY p arts
N EW
Canrng
1 26 11tc
Horton St I n Ma son w va
strawberry pla1.ts for spring as a n•s1dence th en ce Sou th 39
? 4 Mp
Pamtrng , stdtng, roofing,
Lake vood traclton bar s h
Upholstermg.
degrees Easf toward !he Ohto
C onsrgnments w elcome
O L D CO I N S an d paper mo n ey
hooker
tac k er .:11 r sh 9c k s
paper hanging ,
k1tchen
planting.
We
Al
so
Buy
Antrques
R1v er to a po ml f tve fee t
Phone (3 04 ) 773 S&lt;l7 1
for M e,gs Cou nt y 5 only 1&lt;173 OL D SM OBILE Cu tla ss S
he ad er s Wtth 3' co rr ec tors for
cabrnets,
expert
carpettng,
Ea
srerly
from
th
e
foot
of
I
he
li
e
?
Pt~k up Serv1ce Available
Mr and Mrs Dwame Jor- re t atnrng wa l l now betn!il bu II _ ~- ________ _ 2
mon thlY com auc l ton Ca ll Ed
small block
Cal l 992 3496
P S P B and factory atr
elc
Burl\e ll 99 ? 3 176 af rer s 30
a ft er!'. p m BEST OFFER
?5 500 miles
Cal l 992 3914
dan , Bryan, Ke1th and Sarah by !he sad Tru ste es of I he
Pill
ilfler
5
p
m
l
O
l7
lfc
MEIG
S
muzzl
e
loaders
pu
b
l
tc
Pom eroy Be lt Ratlway Com
· Faye and Mr and Mrs. Walter pany
E XCA V A TI NG dozer , loader READY MIX CONC RE TE ife
1 31 1?tc
2 2 61p -- ---------- - ~t zaa k Walton F arm
shoot
rhencr.o up sai d Rtv er
11vered nght to your protect
and ba c khoe work
sept tc
Cheste r Ohto Sunday Feb Y
Jordan, local, and Mrs Ken- parallel w tth the foor of sa td
ELECTROLUX Sweepe r ~ wtt.. e
Fas '
and
easy
Free
CO N SI GNME N TS w e l come at l969l IMPALA Cust om
ta nk s m stal l ed dump t rucks
IY75 at I p m
good
rcl
atntng
wall
about
100
fee
l
mod
el
Complete
W tlh
d
ll
neth CrabtreeMcArthur, jomed unttltt s trtkes the N or ther ly I me - - - - - - es ttm a tes Phon e 992 32a4
P&amp;J 1\uc t on
215 N or lh
and
lo
boy
s
for
h1r
e
Will
haul
cond tlton Fact ory atr p s.
t 3 6tc
cl ean.ng ana c hments and
Goeg l em R eady M1x Co,
Seco nd Mtdd lepor t
fil l d •rt top sod l tm es ton e &amp;
p b pnced lo se ll Ph one 9Y2
their parents, Mr and Mrs of satd re s1 d en ce lot of sad
uses paper bags Sl tghtly used
Middl eport Oh to
g r avel
Ca ll Bob or Roger
761
7
I
9
30
tc
but clean s and look s l •k e new
Almon
a
A
oa
..
nes
pro1eCf
ed
to
N
O
W
se
lltng
Fulle
r
Brus
h
Mendal Jordan lor a b~rthday the Ohto Rtver t h e nc e Norlh 39
6 30 tfc
Jeffers day phon e 992 7089
1 29 6tc
Wil l se ll fer $37 15 cas h or
Produc t s phone 99? 3.1 10
700 BA L ES of good da r v hay
n1 g ht phone 992 JS25 or Y92
supper honori~ g Dwame degrees. Wus r along said to the
rerm s availab l e Phone 992
I 21 ti c
Phon e 7&lt;t1 J IB?
5232
SEWING MAC HINE RepatrS
19 73 FO RO Co untr y SQ utr e
n ss
North eas t cor n er of satd
Jordan 's bU'thday
se r v1ce al l makes , 992 228.4
2
2
6tp
wagon
20
000
m
ti
es
a
ll
2
ll
lfc
restdence rot th ence Soulll 53
12 18 ffc
COME Tax Pr ep are d bo th
Th e F a br i c Shop Pomeroy
eq u, prnenr $3 50 0 PhO n e 992
~----Mr and Mrs Rex Cheadle deg r ees wes r a lon g the rnner i NFed
era l and St a re Taxes wtll
Au thon zed Sr ng er Sat es and
) 19 3 or 992 2720
CASHUS1i FOR J UNK CA R S
E XPE RT tree serv tce
fr ee
nne o f F ront St reet o r th e stu d
were m Charleston where they Ct ty of Pom eroy to lh e p lace of
be done by appo1ntmcn ts
$59fREW A RD lor the r etu rn o f
Se r v ce w e sharp en Sc •ss ors
Comp le l e FR YE S T RU CK
es t ma tes
20 yea r s ex
onl y Pl ease phone 991 2171 or
ou r Bl ac k and Dec k er etecrrrc
3 29 tfc
A ND AUTO PARTS Rutland
pen ence Ca ll ( 1) 667 304 1 or
viSited Ben Caster and Mr and begmnm g Sa1d r eal e sta t e to be
1
see
Mr s Wa n da E IJ I1n Laure l
saw
7
, .n
blade
Phone
(
11
Phon
e
7
12
6094
992
)
057
and u sed by th e satd
Cl tft Rd Pom eroy Oh10
Mrs. Chester Spencer and also held
FURNIS HED a pl 3 r oomsa nd
667 373! Vtvta n Ma xe y
1 , 1161
1 21 26t p
Tru stees thetr successors an d
,.
P
ba f11 new l y d eco r ated Phon e
DOZER work land cl earmg by
1 3 JO t c
1 31 61p
caUed to see her Wiele and ass tgn s for ra lwa y purpo ses
99? 2937
the ac r e, hou rl y or con tra ct
only
C
BRAD
F-ORD
Aucltonee
r
a1111t, Mr and Mrs Marvm
Far m ponds
roads , e tc
A U \.. TION
Ttwr sday
and
2 2 6tp
II betng th e ob 1ecl and tn
Co mp le te Servtce
--·- - - - - - - - Larg e dozer and operator
Sat urday ntgh t 7 p m at
CLOS E OUT on new Z tg Zag
Phone 949 382 1 or 949 316 1
Covey, South Charleston.
len lion of th e form e r Gra ntor ro
w1th over 20 years ex
Mason Au c l ton 1-tor l on St tn R E MODELIN G
sewmg machtnes F or se wmg
Rac 1ne Ohro
p lu mbtng
and sell o nly lh e r•g t11
Mr and Mrs Albert Qwvey, convey
p e r.enc e Pullm s E xcava tmg ,
Mason W Va Consrgnmenls
stretch fa bncs buttonholes
c r 1tt Bradford
heat n g
and all type s of
and t tt e 10 a n d t o th e l andrng
fancy destgns E&gt; f c
Pamt
51 t fc
Pomeroy OhtO Phone 99 2
we tco m e Phone ()04 l 773
Qe n e rar
r e pa , r
Wor k 1 AM tn need o f men o r women
Dover, VISited here w1th h1s between F rent St r ee r m
247 8
J47 1
Sl• g t11t y bl emt shed Cho 1ce o f ---- --~ --- ~---­
g uarant eed
20 years e)(
to work 1n local P I Pleasanr
Pomeroy Oh •o a nd !H e Oil o
ca r ryrng case o r se wrng
mother, Martha Mays, h1s Rt\ler In fron t of the to t so ld to L
12 19 lfc
10 3 lf c
pertence Phon e 99 2 2&lt;1 09
br an c h o f l a r ge nat ona l
st and S4980 c ash or t erms ~ EPTIC
TA N KS
cle a n ed
ompan
y
Must
IJ
e
able
to
c
I 19 ti c
grandfather, Ney Carpenter, W Roush It b etng ex pre 5s l y FOR YOUr Otl o f Mtnk
ava ila ble Phon e 992 77S5
Modern Sant l atr on 991 3954 or
F or tn
E X CAVA t! N G
dozer,
s ra r t tmmedta te l y
a s a part of the
11 18 tf c • 99 2 7349
local, and h1s cousin, Mildred understood
...€osme lt cS Phone BR OW N S
te
r
vtew
apply
Holid
ay
In
n
ba c khoe
and
d tt cher,
co nsrd erat lon hereo f thiU no
99 7 5113
9 18 t fc
------ ~ -- -- Ga ll polt S OhiO
6 30 p m
wate rltn e foo te rs d rams ,
Carpenter at the nursmg home building or superstructure shal l
1 1 li e
Thursday e\len n g
Feb 6
roads and bru sh clea n mg . no
be er ec ted thereon that wt\1
WI
L
L
trrm
or
cut
trees
or
in Albany They then went to Interfere wt lh the v ew fro m
10b too small no weather tooAs k t or Mr Doyle No phon e
19 72 MOBI L E hOme 12x60 ?
shrubbe r y ,
clean
out
ca l ls please
bad Ch a rl es R Hatfteld Rt 1
Darwin to see his father , B1ll SOld lol sold •••d L w Rou sh
bedrooms Pn ce d reasonable
basements at t tcs etc Phone
Rutland 0
Phon e 742 6092
2 5 21c 5 ROOM hoU se Darw n Phon e
P hon e 99'} ?.709 or 7ti 56 41
Th e Grantor John V Wood
9&lt;1 9 322 1 or 742 4441
Quivey
1 7 26tc
J B 0 Br ten at t o rn ey 99Z
as admtnl stralor as aforesatd
?
4
61
C
1 26 26tc
Old uprtghl PIANO S
ME N an d women needed ro
2720
Callers at the Ney carpenter he r eby r es erves f rom th e above WANTED
any c on dttton
Paymg SlO
work for lar ge natronal l y
2 1 6tp CAR PET m stallat ton $1 25 p er
descnbed prem .se s
land ng
-lOME
Improvem ent
and
home were Mr. and Mrs ne
ea c h F .rst f loor only Wnt e MOBILE HOME S FOR SALE
known com pany Mus t be abl e
rbo r and moo r mg rtgh ts
Repa1r Servt ce Anythmg
ya rd Phon e R •chard Wes t
N O TI CE'
Due
to
lhe
and
grv
e
dt
r
ec
t
ons
to
Wtll
en
to
start
tmm
ed
•ate
ly
s
hor
t
5 ROOM hou se $5 000 Phone
Robert Stout and Mr and Mrs
Refe r en ce Dee d s
Vol 242
ftxed ar o und the home from
B43 1667
fo r ec lo sure on one of Oh to s
Ptano Co , Bo x 188 Sardt s
tra1n1n g pertod r eq u,r ed For
992 5871
Page 239 VO l 218 Pil'tg e 497
roo f to basement Y ou will
1114
16tp
l argest Mobt l e Home Dea l er s
OhiO 43946
Dale Queen and He1di, Mrs Vol
tn ter v ew ca ll 675 3490 ask
2 1 12t p
12 1 Pages l58 and 159 Deed
l tke our work and rates
we Wt l l o ff er for sa l e the
1 30 lltp
for p er sonnel manag er
Phone 7A2 5081
MID'rell Bailey and Beth, and Reco rd s M e ig s Coun t y Oil o
follow ng Mobt l e Hom f.'S at a
2 5 Jtc
e f.OIIOW1ng real estate rn
12 29 tfc
v er y ve r y lar ge d tscoun r
App ro K mate l y one a c r e 10
Una Beam, local, and Mrs theThvtllage
of Pom eroy county OLD furniture rce boxes bra ss
----------~ - -1- 64x 12 L tberty 3 bedroom
Rutland
set
up
fo
r
mob•
l
e
beds or comp l ete households
Mary LoveD, Teresa, Debbie of Me1gs state of Oh to and
WAI TR E SS E S needed app l y m
P&amp; J
Hom e
Ma i n te nance
1- 60x 12 L ber ty 1 bedroom
home Ph one (l) 446 9662
W r tte M
0 Mtller
Rt 4
BUILDING lot 80ft frontage
descr bed as follows
person Crow s St eak House
heatmg
c ooltng
refr 1g
150)(
12
R1chard
son
2
bedroom
and Robin of Charleston, W
l
30
7fc
eroy
Oil
tO
Ca
ll
991
77/JO
Po
m
by 165ft Th e second l ot on lef t
Berng that part of L ot No 189
Pomeroy
plumbtng
ele ct r1 ca l a p
1 60x 12 PM C 3 bed roo m
1
0
7
74
Va
on Rtvervtew Drtve Lmcoln
m sa•d V I llage and d esc nbed as
1 7 lfc
Pl 1a nc es W e servtce and
l - 60x 12 Ttta n 2 b ed roo m
Hill , Pom eroy Ohto If tn
Begtnn rn g at the
foll ows
repatr anytmg tn the hom e or
1- 60x 12 Par kwood 1 bedroom
Mr. and Mrs Harold Southea
complet e and
teres ted call992 3230a ft er 5 p
st c orn er of that parr of J UNK autos
bu s n ess
215 N
Second
l - 60x12 Elcona 2 bedrooms
d el i vered to our yard We p1ck
m
Gillogly, Vicky and Bruce, said lot sold ~nd conveyed by
M dd leport Phone 992 3509
central a1 r
up auto bodtes and bvy all
lr\lm a nd M ary lrvrn to
l O 17 tf c
l - 65 x12
Rt c hardson
3
1 9 30tc
were m Colurn bus durmg the 0Th omas
kinds of scrap m et als and
Bran c h sa1 d c orn e r be tnQ on
197
1
Y
AMA
H
A
250
new
par
ts
bedroom
2
f
ull
baths
8x
12
1ron Rtder ' s Salvage St Rt
weekend and v•sited his Sister, ttle nort h S•de of Main Stree t
ELWOOD BOWERS REPA I R
ex pancto
ext ra s good cond tt on Phon e
NEW HOMES No Money Down
114 R t 4 Pomeroy Oht O
formerly F ront St r ee t ttl ence
- s w eepers toasters , trons,
W e a l so hav e a gooq,sc lec llon of
99'/
22
58
a
tt
er
6
p
m
Payments
accordtng
to
Bernice McKn1ght and fam1ly North
Cal l 992 5468
53 Oeg East 100 fe et to a
a
ll sma l l appliances Lawn
o
th
er
a
1
0
and
12
Wtde
Mobile
1ncome on F a r m er s Hom e
1 30 6tc
10 17 rtc
. Nancy Smith of Columbus stake th en ce North 39 Deg
mowers neKt to State H tgh
Homes Th t se are mostly a ll
Admtntstrat ton l oan Con
to the foot of roc ks or c llfl
way Garage on Reule 7 Home
lat e mod el Hom es (some have
vent tonal I nanctng
also
spent a weekend with her West
Phone 9as 3a25
fa emg th e Ohio R1 ver th en ce CASH pa•d for all ma kes an d
10
R EG I STERED
A ngu s
n
eve
r
be
en
ltv
ed
n
l
If
you
available
w
llh
m1n1mu
m
models of mob ile homes
parents, Mt and Mrs. Lew1s Sou thw esr along the foot of the
hetlers
B 1ll W ttte
Ro c k
2 2 26tc
a
r
e
tnteresled
m
a
good
down
Love
ly
homes
•n
t
hree
NEW
LISTING
5
room
Phone ar ea code 6 14 413 9531
Sp rtngs Ohto Phone 99117BY
cl rff to the east l me of the tot
Mobile Home ar a very large
Snuth
localtons •n Metgs County
home
bath.
gas
fu
r
nace,
lots
of
.1
l3
tf
c
conveyed to sa1d Bran c h
7 5 6tc
CRE MEAN S - CON C RETE de
dt sc ounl don t watt Sl op tn
Some hom es w1th wooded
Mr and Mrs Theodore th ence South 39 Deg east a long
panelmg and cerlmg tde Crty
livered Monday
t hrough
l oday at BERRY MILLER - - - lots
Call fo r
mo re
n
td ltne to the place of
Saturday
and
evenmgs
Mobile H ome Sa le s
705 REMINGTON a7 0 Wtnch ester
w ater, w 1fh large level lot
forma l 10n 99 2 5976
Boring, Columbus and Mrs sa
begrnnmg
12 gauge full c hok e w th Only $10,000 00
Phone 44 6 1142
Farson Street Bel pre Ohto
...._
l IS 76tc
Otho Gregory and Beth Ann of
Reference D eeds
Vol 2&lt;1 1
v entilat ed rrb P hone 99 2 53 48
phon
e
423
9531
6 13 ttc
NOTICE
e 59 Deed Re cords Metgs
acres.Bof
2 6tc NEWLISTING 1 30 IOt c
Radcliff called on their Sister, Pag
3
ROOM
2
bath
bud!
1n
k
tc
hen
Count y Oh o
bottom "
{ \ woods, 2
wtth bar carport 18X40 sun
Mrs G&lt;lld1e Gillogly
The prayer of sard pe titiOn 1S To C h a~es E Hmman who se
TABLE saw and ro tnler for
deck
co mplet e
Pr1vale
bedrc
( ) ..
gas heat,
as follows
Satd p e flt10ner s p lace o l re s1d ence 1S unk.nown 10x 55 Part tally c a rp e ted a c
sale ,. Phone 843 2292
Mr and Mrs Boyd Ohver pray tor an order of the Court and c annot wtth r easo nable
wooded
acre
near
52 ga l l on hot water heater
1Ju1et w1th
2 5 6t c rural \)..
Harrtsonv•lle $2 4 500 Phone
underprnnmg
Call 992 Sl53
and son of Columbus spent a au thort :r tn g them to Sell con v ey dtltg ence be as certatned
or1 vac, i12.000 00
741 6261
1 30 12t c
tr ansfer th e real estate
day wtth Mr and Mrs Walter dt'lnd
19Sl F OR 0 f la th ea d , v a engtne
You are adv•sed that a - - - 2 4 6tc
escr bed I n th s p ettt 1on to Da te
BUILDING LOT - Wtlh stone
w tlh st a ndard t ra n sm rsston
Jordan Mr. Ohver and Walter E Shultz A th ens Ohto , fo r th e pel Iron for adopt1on has been
foundation
on
good
qutet
street,
1965 l i ncoln Cont tnental 430
60 ACR E fa rm at V1nton , Ohto
c ons tdera tton o f $25 000 00 and fded In the Metgs Cou nt y
Jordan attended the Cincmnat1 for
out of htgh water
c u tn mo tor w 1fh auto m at c
$55,000 mclud1ng all farm
su ch o t her re lief as tS Proba l e Court Pomeroy Oh• o
tran s mts st on
One
4576~ .
tn
Case No
7 1-1 07
machmery
Phone 3a8 a.420
5 RM APT furn iShed ullltt 1eS
School of Embalmmg together proper '
BARGAIN - 'T1 frame
ret r rge ra tor green 1n good
2 4 Jtc
pard !.lOO month Phone 99?.
Sad app lic ation Will come on alleg i ng that y ou ha\le w •l lfull y
and Mr Ohver IS employed by for hearmg on the 1st day of fail ed to prop e rly support
w1th·
() \
water,
condtlron Call 949 5185 any
) 87 I
r rme or 985 42 19 after 7 p m
natura
.ctnc on
2 5 31p
Evans
F1111eral Home m Ma r ch 19 75 or as soon Shawn M 1chae t Hmman for a
2 4 3tp
per 1od of mo r e th a n two years
corner
_.,vuo
00
thereafter as may be
Columbus
tmmed t atel y ~r ecedmg th e 2 BEDROOM mobile home
POMEROY - N 1ce renovated
t thng or t he pet11ton
country loc atton
Close to
Mr. and Mrs Alfred Rice of
Theodore T Reed Jr
Heart ng on satd p efllton sha ll
J bedroom home lots of nrce
Mtddlepor l or
Pomeroy HOOVER Otal A Matte Wtfh
Se
n
to
r
Warden
Of
Vest
r
y
Columbus were overnight
power d r 1ve and artachm ents
be had on th e 24 th day of
Ch 1l d ren welcome Ca l l 99 2
Norbert Co mpton
paneling, wall to wall car
S7S Phone 985 4132
Febr
u
ary
19
75
at
10
o
c
ro
c
k
764
9
after
&lt;I
p
m
guests of her parents, Mr. and
A.e~ron Kelton .
pehng. 2 porches basement.
AM
'-I 2Y JOtp
2 5 6tc
Norma Amsba r y
Mrs . William Culwell and
and fenced yard $17 ,500 00
Larr y Brogan
Clean
used
apMann 1ng D Webste r
A PT lor rent Ph one 992 513 1
caUed on other relatives here
F ran k Stsson
ST
EREO
R
A
DI
O
8
t
ra
ck
tape
HAVING
TROUBLE
pliances. All with 30J udge of
day 11me or 992 3173 after 6
Ct1e~r le s W 1l dermurh
comb rnat on am fm rad 10 4 SELLING,
Common P l eas Court
CALL
A
pm
Chill r lotte 0 1llard
day
money-back
way speaker sound syste m
Prob a t e DIVI SIOn
Ann1e Chapman
2 5 3tc
PROFESSIONAL SALESMAN
Ba lance S107 89 or use ou r
Metgs
Count
y
Onto
guarantees!
as members of the
AT 992-3325
budyet te rm s Call 992 3965
Vestry of Gra ce
1 7Y lfc
(I! n n (2J 5 Jrc
T RAILER space 2 miles from
EptSCOpal Church
Pom eroy Rt 143 Phone 99Z
5858
Cr ow Crow and Porter
1
10 27 tfc GROCERY IJusm ess for sale
A ttorn eys tor Pe l rt 1oners
Sutldtng for sa le or l ease
Phon e 773 561 8from 8 30p m
NOTICE OF
[ 1] 19 (1) 5 12 l9 4IC
APT 3 rooms all e l ec lnc ha s
to 10 p m lor appomtment
APPOINTMENT
table top ra nge wall oven
3 'O rfc
Case No 21396
rea l n1ce and clean mod ern
Estate of John C
P r offttt
L ocated
1n
P ome ro y
Deceand
By Mn. Herbert Rousb
NOTICE
over took ng lh e Oh 10 Rtver ST EREO RADIO 8 track tape
Not tce tS hereby 91\/en that
combmat ton am f m rad to , 4
Pllone Ga lt DOl tS day 4J6
Harold Proff•tt of Portland
To Charles E Hmman wt10se
way sp eaker so und system
7699 even tngs 446 95J9
Bill Donohue of Detroit, place of res 1d en ce IS unknown Oh1o and Robert Pro fl 1tt of
Balance SlOB 74 or use our
I 26 tfn
Befpre . Oh io . ha\le been dul y
and
canno
t
w
tlh
reasGna
ble
tYUdge
t terms Ca l l 99 2 3965
Mich., IS visiting his mother, dd tgence be ascertamed
appotnted Co Adrl'\m tstrators of ---- ~ ---------1 2l lfc
2 BE DR OOM t r ailer
the Estate of Jolln c Proff ttl
Mr&amp;. Mary Donohue and
adults
on l y Phone 992 3324
You are adv •sed tnat a de c eased , lillie of Portland
David.
pettflon tor adopt ton ha s been Me tgs County , OhtO
1 J tf c
Creditors are requtred to fil e
Mrs. Dolly Wolfe VISited Mrs f t led tn tn e Metgs Cou n ty
l4
m de
Court Pomeroy Ot110 the•r cll!ltms w i th satd fud uc 1ar y TRAI L ER SPA CE
"AI Cout1on Light, Rt 7"
Ruth Parsons Monday at Probate
wtthtn four mon tns
north ot Me•gs H tgh Sc hool on
45169 , •n Case No
2 1406
Tuppers Plams, Ohto
Dated th 1s l7 th day of
old Rt 33 Phon e 99 129.:11
AnUquity
alleg tng that you h e ve w rllfully
Phone667 31158
January 1975
1 23 ttc
fat
ted
to
prop
er
ly
support
Paul
Mr. and Mrs. James Patsons Patrick H i nman . lor a p ertod of
CARPENTER 2 story
OPEN WED. THRU
Mannmg D Webster COUN TR Y Mobile Home Park
Ail New Heaters
and Ouiltopber Eugene of more th an twO years 1m
SUNDAY9A.M -7PM.
lra me, 4 BR, l 'h baths,
J udge
Rt 33 t en m 1tes nor t h 01
med
tately
prec
edmg
the
f
tltng
dlnrng R , porches. storage
New Carlisle, Ohio and Mr and of the pet 1110n
Now
Courtot Common Pl eas
Pomeroy
La rge lo ts wtth
bldg 2 garages, about · 2
Probate O tVI Ston
co ncret e pattOS
Stdewa l ks
Mrs . Carroll Wh1le and
Heartng on sard pet 111on Shall
Discounted!
acres
SMOO 00
IJe
had
on
the
24th
day
of
r un ners
and
off
s tr eer
New Wood Burnmg
children and Billy Parsons of February , 1975, at 10 o 'c lock (l) 22 29 121 s 3tc
~Ja rk 1 ng Phone 99 2 7479
HEATER
39
POMEROY - Busu)&lt;!ss R
11 31 lfc
- - - - - - 52 95
Calcl,.ell were Saturday guests AM
and furn rshed apartment
------------ Deluxe model wtth cabmet
of Mrs. Ruth Parsons and
Located on Matn St 1n good
Mann1ng 0 Webster .
3 and 4 ROOM furntsh ed and W-.U hned
famlly.
Judge of
traff1c area Good mcome
unfurniShed
apartments r
!POMEROY LANDMARK
NOTICE OF
Common Plea s Co urt
rnv estment Prtced t o sell.
Phone 992 5434
Carsey, Mrr
Miss Mel Waldmg of
APPOINTMENT
1. . . ~ Jack
Probate DIV ISIOn
A
l2
tf
c
,...Phone
992·
2181
PORTLAND - • n1ce lots,
case No 11404
Syracuse spent S1111day wtth
Me tgS Coun t y , Oh10
- - - - - - -- - - - - - - - I
good
Estate Of MARGIE SUMMERS,
drilled well and waler
PRIVATE meetmg room for ~.~----------­
Sharon and Cindy Roush. ·
Deceased
( I I 22 '9 121
31C
any organ tzalton phone 9:92
block
garage,
Not rce Is hereby c;;n ve n tha t
J97S
bu
ilding,
2 story
1953
30
FERGUSO
N
tractor
Hel
en
Madelyne
Woodyard
of
16
i8POi!il'l\l I ,E.tJl'l
3 11 ftc
new m otor, good rubber , new
house need~ some repa~r
R!l tlroad St , Mtddleport Oh to,
. NEW YORK (UPI) -Phil
pat nl Sl ,200 Phone 985 3594
has been ful y appoi nted Ad
Whole works at IUS! $:1,700.
F URNISHED ap t Adu lts 01'\ IY
l 2 7tp
m tntstratrrx ot the E state ol
Espotl+o ci tbe BoltOn Bruins
Mtddleport Phon e 992 3874
NEAR LANGSVILLE Margie Summers, deceased
1114 tfc 6 M O WER , 3 pt h 1fCh f itS Ford
About 10 acres, on good
tbe NaUonal Hockey SCORES 'l1UPLE
late of Me 1gs County . Ohro
---~--- ------ -o r Ferguson tra ctor , $100
ftshu"tQ creek, close 1o mine
Cred1tors are r equ tred to f 1te
CHERRY HILL, N.J. (UP!)
wllb 1111 poinll and Ia
RENT
1634
New cutt1vator , $125 Phone
fhe •r c1a1ms w tth sa i d frductary HOUSE FOR
areas. good blacktop road.
L tn coln Hgts 1.. Pom eroy
wtlldn
poinll
985 3$94
-Jockey Jun Edwards, scored w•thm
four months
ASKING just U ,OOO
Phone
Pomeroy
992
3575
or
2 2 7tp
Da ted til ts 18th da y of
a triple at Garden State
liJO.pciDt .......
GaHtpolls c46 2749
ALL CASH FOR YOUR
Januar y 19'75
2 2 tfc 196~ J OHN Deere Do zer , A
EIP"'to
47
l!ld 49 Monday when he WO!I aboard
PROPERTY LET US
cyttnder , de tsel , 8 ' blade
Mann•ng D Webster
''l4,
Ia Q-owned Aboard fn the third
KNOW
WHAT
YOU
HAVE
c anopv
New
clutches,
. U11furn tshed 7 ro oms
PROPERT Y IS SELLING
Hlllyi Joe fn the fourth Judge Court of Common Pleas 1 HOV~.::
Bobby
bra kes , and tracks , A 1
and bath , nrce Phone 992 2780
c011d 1t•on S6,500 Phone ~as
FAST A'r THIS TIME
Probate D IVISIOn
wtlb
lllcludlng 110 and Royal Supre 1n the
or 992 3432
35 94
992-2259 or 992-2568
1 9 li e
aUowance leature
2 2 7tp

place Of restden ce tS unknown
and &lt;: &amp;nnot With r easonable

2 SIGNS
OF
QUALITY

~omeroy

Motor Co.

Notice

HElL

RACINE PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING

n

..

1..E.T~

.

WEDNESDAY , F'EBRUARY 5, 197)
' '
6 00 - News 3 48,1013 15 ABC News6, E lec Co 20 lTV
Ut1llza tt on 33
6 3(}-NBC News 3 4 15 ABC News 13, Bew1tched 6 CBS News

8 10, Zoom 20 , Your Fu ture Is N ow 33
7 oo-Truth or Cons 3 4, Bow ltng for Do ll ar s 6 What s My Ll nP.

e

Larry Lavender

ROGER HYSEll'S
GARAGE

(

CAPTAIN EASY
PIPE DOWN·· f!&gt;OTH

OF YOU : A ND
TR'i U51'-l eo YOUR I!&gt;RAt'-'5 FOR A
CHAIVG5 IN5T5Ar OF YOU R LUtJG5:

EXPERIENCED

WHATS
THE SEN5E
OF G E TTI N G

YOURSE L F
KILLED

.

ASDUL

1

IF I KNOW TH15
BllSE RAT, HE 5
AFTE R MONEY AND
HE SURE WONT GET
IT I!Y HAI&lt;M IN6

WHO DARE'S SPEAK MY NAME AND
CAUSo SUCH COMM OTION OtJTSIDE
§l:&gt;m-'-M~~Y
ROYAL C AI!I'-' z

Pli!IN CE.SS
J ASMIN!

'

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

Carpenter

News, Event

For Sale

Modern Chemicals

33

12 JD-Wtde World Special 6
1

Life 8 10 Sesame Sf 33

BORN WSER

D&amp;D

News 13
12 oo-Jackpo f 3,15 Password All Stars 6 13 Bob Braun s 50 50

CONSTRUCTION

C lub 4

N ews 8 10
THUR~DAY, FEBRUARY 6,1975

6 00-Sun rlse Sem m ar 4

Sunnse Se m ester 10

6 JG-- F1ve M inutes to Ltv e By 4 News 6 B ib le Answers 8
Sc hool Scene 10 Pa t tersn for Llv rng ll

6 J&gt;-Col um bus Today 4
•
6 45- Mornlng Report J Farmllme 10
7 110-Today 3 4.15 AM Amenca 6,1J, CBS News 8, 10
e 110-Lassle 6, Capt Kangaroo 8 Popt•y e 10 Sesame Sf J3

~1YWJ]31brn ; lkJ Jc•d'..l..-1 ,_.
Lnscramble these four Jumbles,
on~ letter to t'ach ~uare, to

ALLEY OOP

I

form four ordmar}' words

81: 8&lt;\CK AS SOON
CAN, OSCAR!

I HOPE HE

DOESN'T TAKI:
100 LONG'
I ... WHAT 7
IS IT, MARKO

0/'TIA

JUST MY
IMAGINATION,

I I

I GUESS . ••

I ('IRION
I r)

.... U ..

'II '"'l&lt;erdl) '•

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

GASOIJNE AILEY

________ _____ _

l .V

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

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

s-

ULABNER

22_ THAT WALRUS

j$ EiOING TO S:AT

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

THAT MANrr-

I THIN!&lt;
ITS THG

OTHER
WAY

.ARoU,~-JD''-

EITHE'R WAY
ITS A GOOD
DEAL ONE

OF 'f:M GET5
OLJTOFTHE'
CO~D!•-

Wf:'VC BeEN IN
LOWEiST' S!DB80VIA
30 SECCNDS ~­

LCIN6 SIIIOUGH !!

1.sns ao

CN WHAT~­
NO PILOT STAYS
HEiRG MORE'N

15 SIE'CONDS "-

HOMer:-

REFRIGERATORS
from 25

News Notes

Electric or Gas Ranges;

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

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

'

WINNIE
lD LIKE 10 5ET UPA .9CHOLAR ·
$HIP

t.cue

tuar
llriUPt

you will have !hem
8AOITTARIU8 (Nov. 23-Dtc.
21) You could gain some unex.~
pected advantages from your
business dealings If you re
bargain -conscious and know
reel value

CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-~on.
11) Conditions are starting to

shift You II be breaking clear

/lim

d•1 ymt gt I

OPPOSE

of Influences that kept you
bottled-up the past few days

CROTCH

wmmd' - TRAMP

AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Fob. 11)
A responalblllly you though't
you would be burdened with

will suddenly be assumed by a
considerate ally

PISCES (Fob. 20-Morch 20)
You 're going to be getting
some unexpected but pleasant, news from a rrlend who Is
separated from you by some
distance

~~

Yesterday's Answer
16 Smger
Sunone
21 Summary
22 Model to
emulate
Z3 InfleXIble
24 Des1gnate
25 Scold
26 Bundle

28 Port-auPr111ce IS Its
capital
29 "The
Tempest"splrll
3D Actor
ArmendariZ
33- reckorung
35 R1ver
inlet

Fob. I, 1875

Advancement will come
suddenly this year In your
chosen field of endeavor Build
upon acquaintances you make
with persons of Influence who
share similar Interests
lNEWSP o\PE:R ENTERPRISE ASSN

A little deception might do it
•eu

.9 8 52

U Melody
Z5 InVIted
26 Sword's
SUperiOr
Z'l Generation
28 Short of
funds
(2 wds )
31 Crash
mto
3Z Wearmg
maU
34 Mushroom
38 Extensive
31 Word on

•Js

QBXXBKV

'

BKV

NF

BKV

NF

.KQ82

WEST

EAST

•a

•JI0953
¥A4

¥73

.73
•9642

.Al0964
.Al0873
SOUTH CDJ
• AKQ7
¥ K QJ t06
.J5

.KQ
East· West vulnerable

Wesl

North

E11t

Soutb

Pass

2¥

Pass

4¥

Pass

Pass

Pass

t¥

CRYPI'OQUOTE
BW
ZBXXHG

OHFOXH;
QFCI,
XHN

NMH

QBNM

WFSH

QBXX·

CHWN

QBXX-

NMHS.-CFJHCN

BARNEY
ZCFWN

-- AN'MAKE 'IORESELF
COMFORTABLE

DOC PRiTCHART·I COMETOGiT

Yestenll!y's· Ceyptoqaote: IT REQUIRES FAR MORE
GENIUS TO MAKE WVE THAN TO COMMAND
NINON DE L'ENCLOS

M'-1 TEETH
CHECKED

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

......

n wlntl,

.

• I I I 22. 29 ( 21 5, 3tc

I

•

•

•

I

Well
Pass

Nortll

'
'

•

1

Soot•

t•

5•

,

H

3.

1¥

Pus

Pass
Pau

4•
5¥

Pan

••

Pa11

••

Pall

?

You, Soulh, botd ·

.AQ7~2 eKHI.AQU
What
you do now'
·

";
1

:1. lilt ~- Five ...- :
woakl beJ aede.-&amp;e
TOD:I.Y'S QVESTlON

Instead of r-.xUac 0110 beart
your partner baa responded 0110 i
opade WM.t do you do DOW'

ALL IMHi,

'

"

Eul

Pa..

WHO MOVED
1HE TV?!

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

'

The bidding has been

'

UP

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

•

u:H:I:},~tt@U

By Oswald &amp; Jameo Jacoby
As anyone wbo looks at all 52
cards can see, South is gomc to
wmd up one trick short ot his
four-heart contract West can
take his ace of trumps and lead
a second spade to ~ive his
partner a ruff after which start
It will be a cmch for East to
take h1s two aces
Can South do anything about
117 Not if the defense d00111't
falter, but South can try to
deceive h1s opponents Af a
starter which h1gh spade should
he use at trick one• Clearly the
queen is not the right one to
play The average false-carder
w1ns with the ace That also 1s
wrong West 1s very likely to
lead a second spade South's

en race,

BoltG!I teemmete

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN J

Opening lead - J •

ol h1a fifth

lu ioa1a
In
IICCIId place
,

best bet is to win ·with the king
that play will show the ace but
not the queen and might encourage a shift
So SOuth should play the king
of spades at tr1ck one and lead a
trump. Clearly not the king.
The king play will get the ace to
come right up How about the 10
or even the six' Too apparent
an attempt at deception. West
will know that South holds
higher trumps .
So we find the right one to
lead is the queen. West may
think that South holds s1x
trumps to the queen-Jack-10 and
is trYing to bump tile ace aod
king together For this reason
West may duck 1
Not too likely ilgamst alert
opponents, but the best try he
can make

NORTH

QFCXG

1

WIN AT BRIDGE

Z%-- cake

NMH

w

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

\ An~wer

BOOTY

II LONGFELLOW
One letter aimply aIandi for another In thia 11111ple A Ia
UHd for the three L'a, X for the two O's, etc Slncle lettel'l,
apoatrophea, the length and formation of the wordl are all
blots. Eaoh day the codelettera are ~liferent

HEATER, $50

Je.dl

Keep busy Proceed as If you
have all ttle answers Sur·
prlsingiy when you need ttlem

1r I 11 I 111rx J

m!INS·~...

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work
AXYDLBAAXR

m DRAMATIC .SCHOOl

FOR YOU AFTER YOU
GET OJT OF PRISON 1
OF COtJR$E I ;-,~::::

USED FUEL OIL

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

doorsman 15

8 110-Mac Oavls 3,4, 15, Barney Miller 6,13, The Waitons 8.10,
Bill Moyers' Journal 20,33
8 3()-Karen 6,13
9 DO-Archer 3,•. 15, Streets of San Francl&lt;eo 6, 13, Movie
"Roustaboul" 8, Movie "Harakiri" 20. Movie "8ullltt" 1
Fortunes of N !gel 33

'

38Itallan
river

Wringer Washers

J

1

a marquee

Electric Dryers; and

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

I Dream of Jeannie 4, Somerset 15,

5 110-FIBI a, Andy Grlffllh 8, !rooslde 13
5 31f-News6, Beverly H!llblllles ' ' Hodgepodge Lodge 20, Get
Smart IS, Elec Co 3J
6 110-News 3,. ,8,10,13,15,ABC News 6. Elec Co 20, Teaching
Children with Special NHds 33
6 3(}-N BC t-tews J••• IS, ABC News 13, Bewitched 6. CBS News
e, 10, Zoom 20, M . U Report 33
7 po- Truth or Cons J.~ . Bowling for Dollars 6, What's My Line
e, News 10, Let's Make a Deal 13; Jimmy Dean 15, Lock
Stock &amp; Barrel 20, Nova 33
•
7 3D-Hollywood Squares J, Hollywood Squares 4, Fred Tylor
Baskelball 6, New Price Is Right 8, Consumer Surviva l Kit
20, Wild Kingdom 10, To Te!l lhe Truth 13, American Out

Zl Frost

IN TRADE

Fairview

Cartoon 3,

Gilligan ' s Is 6, Tafllelales 8, Sesame Sl 20,33, Movie
" Lovers and Lol!lpops" 10 M ike Douglas 13
• J()-Bewltched 3 Merv Griffin • · Mod Squad 6, Lucy Show 8,

!0 Connective

OUR STOCK

for

Future Is Now 20
4 00-Mr

nest

·\:0

Search

12 4&gt;-E iec Co 33
12 5&gt;-NBC News 3, 15
1 DO-News J, All My Children 6,13 Phil Donahue 8, Young &amp;
lhe Restless 10, Nol For Women Only 15
I 3(}-How To Survive a Marriage 3,4,15, Let' s Make • Deal
6,13, As the World Turns 8,10
2 DO-Days of Our Lives 3,4,15, $10,000 Pyramid 6,13, Guiding
Light 8, 10
2 3(}-0octors 3,4 15, Big Showdown 6, 13, Edge of NlghiB,IO
3 110-Another World 3,4, 15, General Hospital 6, 13, Price Is
Right 8, 10, Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20
3 3D-One Ltfe to Live 13. Lucy Show 6, Match Game 8, 10, Your,

5HOULI7 6E 00017 WHt;N
P~ES51N6 A SU IT

ACROSS 39 Reqwre
I Doctors' 40 Israeli
all'pOrt
group
DOWN
4 Forage
1 Sale
grass
10 Infamous
words
marqms
2 "-I'm
Adam"
12 Elizabeth
3 Writer
I to the
poets
St. John
4 Gilbert13 Footnote
5 Irregularly
word
notched
14 Attractive
6
God (It.)
gil'I
(colloq.)
7 Hood·
w1nked
15 Birthplace
(2 wds.)
of John
Steinbeck 8 Former
9 Procession
17 Greek
letter
11 H•gh Arab
U Leatheroff1ce
neck
It Bird's

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

For Rent

Split Second 6, 1J,

8 10. To Be Announced 33

by TH0"1AS JOSEPH

For Sale

----------

Tomorrow

~~-~,at

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

~

Club 4, News 8 10
12 3()-B iank Check 3, 15,

SCORPIO (Ocl. 24-Nov. 22)

tIJ

Jumbl'"' GAMUT

Real Estate For sale

s
_w___ ----------

N ews 13

12 110-Jackpot 3,15, Password AI! Slars 6, 13, Bob Braun' s 50 50

( Aaewen lomorrow}

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

----------

Li f e 8, 10

11 5.1-'-Take Kerr wllh Graham Kerr 8 Dan !mel's World 10,

Now arrana:e the circled letters
to form the surprise anawer, u
suggested by the above cartoon.

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

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

8, 10

11 3()-Hollywood Squares 3. 15 Brady Bunch6, News • · Love of

you ve felt uncertain about
This will reverse the odds In
your favor

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

•

8 3(}-Big Val!ey 6
9 110-A M 3, Phil Donahue • · Phi! Donahue 15, Rocky &amp;
Friends 8, Morning w1lh D J 13
9 2&gt;-C huck White Reporls 10
9 3(}-Not For Women Only 3, Dinah 6 Galloping Gourmet 8.
Talllelales 10 New Zoo Revue 13
10 00-Cefebrlly Sweepstakes 3 • .15, Joker's Wild 8,10, Movie
'Heller In Pink Tlghls" 13
10 3(}-Wheel of Forlune 3 • · 15 Gambll 8,10
11 110-High Rollers 3. ~ . 15, One Life to Live 6, Now You See !I

Bonannz:a 15

6 2&gt;- Farm Report 13

1

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

8 1o-Your Future Is Now 20

8 1&gt;-Capt Kangaroo 10

11 55-- Take Kerr w tth Graham K er r B Dan \ m el s World 10

Help Wanted

Wanted To Buy

3 4 Nws 13

8 10

Employment Wanted

Real Estate For Sale

oo- Tomorrow

11 3D- Hollywood Squares 3, 15 Brady Bunch 6, News 4, Love of

------For Rent

Mobile .'-iomes For Sale

News 10 Country M usic Jubilee 13 I Spy IS, Behind the

Lrnes 20. Know Your Sc hool s 33
7 Jo-- Pollce Surgeon 3 Nam e That Tune 4 Lets Mak, a Deal
6 Wilburn Bro thers 8 Th e Judge 10 , T o Tel l th e Truth 13
Book Beat 20 E p tsode Actron 33
8 OG- ltttle H ouse on the Prai r ie 3 4 15 Th a t s My M ama 6 13
Tony Orlando and Sa wn 8, 10 What Makes a Good Father 20
Sinners 33
a 30-M ov le All Toge ther Now ' 13, M ov1e Twa for the
Money' 6
9 oo- Lucas Tann er 3,4, 15, Cannon 8 10 Appa la c tlllan Green
Parks Projec t 20 M asterp tece Thea t re 33
10 oo- Pet rocelll3 4 15 , Get Chn s tr e L ove6 13 M anhunter 8 lO
News 20 Family At Wa r 33
10 30- Your Future IS Now 20
11 OD-News 3,4,68101 3 15 A BC News 33
11 30-Johnny Car son 3 4 15 W1d e World Special 13 FBI b
Movte T he La st Cha l lenge' 8 Mov 1e Synanon 10 Janakr

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

Wan ted To Buy

Television log for easy viewing

C.ET " ·-

S.K EXCAVATING .

COMPANY

(

·ALL I SI\ID WAS·

·-

- --1
Fire Retardant
The Furniture Fixer
843-2824 or 843-2293
Insulation
Portland, Ohio

Auto Sales

NOI IC(' IS hereby CJIIo't'11 th a t

1
I
15 - Tlie Daily Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Wednesday, Feb &gt;. t97!i
DICK TRACY

·-

�I.,._

.-

!

•

\
'•

HOSPITAL News.
NEWS

Board hears· dispute
' '

-:"

'

.. '1

•

1 ·· JP:ll ~&gt;l f · d

t

.. in Briefs
frulll

1''-~ J.tl' 1

rights of privacy of the student.
House bill, an elderly indillidual with a $148 a month net lnccme
who now pays $30 for stamps which ll'lll buy $48 ·w.orth of
Dave McWilliams, assistant director of the Teacher
Holzer Medical Center
or March 4.
groceries would have to pay $43 for the same stamps under
Education Corps in Mei~ County on reading, was high in his
(Discharged, Feb. 4) .
In hi s ina ugural address,
Ford'~ proposal.
praise for the Bradbury School. He11oted the Bradbury ~rogram
Ard ell Borin g, Elec tia
Rhodes s•id he hoped to takes "tremendous plal)lling" for staff members.
Br own, Russe ll Browning,
accomplis h much of his con·
WASHINGTON
FOUR OHIO REPUBLICAN
In reference to an article in the cUrrent Readers Digest on a
Robert Bunce, Edna Carter, congressmen voted in favor of a March !Increase in the cost of
stru r ti on pr og ram through
fundamental end an open education school, McWilliams said that
K &lt;~•. hr y n
Crow, Sherman food stamps, a measure which was defeated 37f.,19. The House
reve nu e-bondin ~. meaning the
Bradbury is not an open education school.
Cundiff, Auroda Duncan, voted to delay until Dee. 30 the administration plan to increase
bonds would be financed
In closing McWilliams said that although his daughter is only
through revenues generated by
Rufus Ellcessor, Paul Evans, the cost of the food stampa by seven per cent of a pei'!IOII's ad·
two years old, he hopes that she can attend school at Bradbury ar
each projec t, theoretically cost· at least, attend classes at a schoollike Bradbury. He also felt that Norman Fa nnin g, Kenneth justed income.
·
ing the ta xpayers nothing.
Voting in favor of the March !increase were Reps. Jclm Ashthe written comprehensive reports issued on each student by the Gi llenwa ter, Mrs. Harry
House Mir ority Leader Bradbury staff tell more than a report card could reveal.
Goodri.c h and daughter, Lillian brook, Clarence J. Brown, Donald D. Clancy and Samuel Devine.
Charles F. Kurfess, R·Bowling
Grimm
, Beverly Hixson, Carla All other Ohio congressmen except for Reps. ThQ1118S'L. Ashley;
Carsey discussed the teacher-ratio situation at the Brad6ury
Green, said Rhodes revealed
School stating that a teacher there has fewer students than at Hudnell, Mrs. Thomas Hun t D.()hio and William H. Harsha, R.Ohio, who were absent, voted
lew details of his prog rams.
,
other schools and therefore should have more time for individual and daug hter, Betty Jane Kay , to delay the plan.
Nancy Lon g, Mary Marcum,
"One is always impressed attention.
'
with the optimism and enWASHINGTON - AN ESTIMATED 10,000 JOBLESS auto
Mrs. Gertrude Casto, secretary of the Bradbury School, said Elizabeth McDani el, Betty
thusiasm of the governor, " the teacher-&lt;~tudent ratio at B.radbury is near that of other Miller , Car ol Miller, Fern workers headed for the nation's capital today to demand "qulc)t
Kurfess said in evaluating the schools. Bradbury has five homeroom teachers, or "class Mit chell, James Ni chols , action'' by the federal government oo the failing economy.
session.
And if the big rally doesn't stir action, the labor movement
teachers," with approximately 25 students to the teacher, Mrs. Mi chelle Ogawa , Gl adys
Pe
rroud
,
Joy
ce
Peterson
1
should
send 250,000 unemployed workers to Washington this
Casto said. Mrs. Casto said that she has no children at Bradburv
Evel
yn
Ram
sey,
William
but hopes that her daughter ~ll get to go to Bradbury or a school
spring, says United Autoworkers President Leonard Woodcock.
Roush, Eadker Russell, Myrta ,
like it.
Leaving Detroit and other automobile manufacturing cenAs for grades, Mrs. Casto said her daughter at Pomeroy · Slagle, Donald Wilson, Alma
ters where unemployment has hit the hardest, about 150 to 200
Wood , Michael Woodall , Callie buses embarked Tuesday night and early today with their cargo
Elementary receives no grades in reading or mathematics.
Mrs . Johnson spoke ag,ain, pointing out that some parents Wooten.
of idle workers for Washington. The UAW arranged to depoelt the
I Birth)
like the Bradbury program and some don 't. She stressed the need
workers at the Washington armory during the early afternoon for
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Edward a rally dramatizing the nation's unemployment sltuatioo, then
for choice and said that children removed from Bradbury to be
ci ties and attrac t co rporale
Stewart! a son, Wellston .
sent
to
Pomeroy
by
their
parents
should
be
bus'
e
d
by
the
district
put them back on busei for home tonight.
Widely kn own horse race
headquarters .
buses.
driver and trainer Sidney A.
- Aconstihtlional amendment
Hargraves said it is a board policy that a child not attending
Pleasant Valley Hospital
Spence
r, 60, Pomeroy, died this
Larry Collins will present a
on the June ballot setting up a
the
school
to
which
he
is
assigned
must
have
transportation
PRQGRAM NOTED
Discharges
- Mrs. ·Robert
morning
at
hi
s
res
idence.
film,
"The Early Warning , ·
permanent housing auth ority to
REEDSVILLE
Past
Mr . Spencer raised and provided by the parent or guardian. However, Hargraves ad- Cook, Apple Grove; Mrs. Don
mitted the policy was adopted many years ago by a former board Swick, Vinton; Jan et Snyder, presidenls will be honor~d at a Sings of Heart Attack".
Residents of surrounding
. .- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -. . trained
fl11lilaea of education on his recommendation.
Gallipolis; James Oldaker, meeting of the Riverview PTA communities are invited to see
past 25harness
years. horses
He was
Mrs. Carolyn Young spoke on bet children attending Brad- Gallipolis Ferry; Polly Miller, at 7:30 p.m. Monday. Mrs .•
direc tor of the Ohio Harness
bury. She said that one of her children had difficulty in making
Point Pleasant ; Mrs. Joseph
Hor semen 's Association, a
•he transition to junior high school. She stressed that there are Mullins, Bidwell; Chester
member of the Ohio Stanindividual differences among children and that parents should Leport, Point Pleasant ; Mrs .
dardbred Breeders Association
have a choice based on the knowledge that they have of their
and United States Trotting children. The program at Bradbury is right for some but not Paul Thornton , Leon ; Mrs.
Mark Cheng, Point Pleasant;
Association. He wa s ma yor of
right for others, she believed.
Evelyn Lockett , Clifton;
Pomeroy in the 1950s.
Allen King said that he felt the same as Mrs . Young . He said Samuel Holliday . Point
Mr. Spencer was preceded in parents should have the choice of program since Bradbury is not
Pleasant; Roy Miller, Letart;
death by his parents, Albert conventional and that bus transportation should be provided for
Teresa Griffin , Middleport;
and Myrtle Heaton Spencer, those choosing not to send thejr children to Bradbury.
Point
Mark
Sturgeon ,
two brothers. Ralph and Clair.
Board of education member Robert Snowden spoke on the Pleasant ; Raymond Black,
He is survived by his wife, evaluations which had been made on Bradbury students as well
Poin t PleaSant ; Mrs. Louis
Pauline Diehl Spencer; two as others from information provided by County Supt. Robert
Pullins, Point Pleasant.
sons, Donald Lee, Marietta, Bowen at the request of the Meigs Local Board, and made
and Micha el Albert, Colum· general statements relative to the Bradbury School.
bus ; one daughter, Sedonia
DAUGHTER BORN
Mrs. Boyles said that she would like to have the progress
ASPECTACULAR
Ann Spencer, Marietta; two report on Bradbury students more frequently, but was thjtnkful
DETROIT, Mich.- Mr . and
granddaughters, Kimberly and that "our kids are getting an education."
WORLD OF
Mrs. Dennis Carol , Detroit,
Michelle ; one grandson, Scot
(nee Sandy Zerkle, Syracuse ),
Magnotta spoke again on the Bradbury program
NATURE!
Spencer; one brother, Roger, stating .that fast students at Bradbury are given a chance to announce the birth of their first
Pomeroy; a niece, Deborah advanpo their abilities while the slow student is also given child . a daughter, Feb. 3 at
Spencer, and one ne)lhew, consideration.
Kutzel Hospital there weighing
Kenneth Murray.
In answer to the complaint of some parents about the lack of 6'·&gt; lbs. Maternal grandparents
Funeral services will be homework at Bradbury, Mrs. June Kloes said that she, "feels are Mr . and Mrs . William
Friday at t p.m. at the Ewing sure that any parents wishing their children to have homework Zerkle , Syracuse ; paternal
Chapel with Rev. William . can inform the Bradbury teachers of this and the Bradbury grandparents are Mr . and Mrs .
.. NOW SHOWING
Middlesworth
officiating. teachers will cooperate."
LeonardCarol, Detroit, and
ENDS THURSDAY
Burial will be in Meigs
Mrs. Kloes said, however, that it is the opinion of some that no great·grandparents are Mr.
Memory Gardens. Friend s homework ls a better situation in some instances because of and Mrs . Ross Norris,
may call at the fun eral home home situations.
Syracuse. Mrs . Zerkle will
after 7 p.m. this evening.
leave
this weekend to spend a
Smith again stressed his preference for homework, and Mr.
POMEROY, OHIO
A new selection just received of VAN HEUSEN ShOrt
Dod8on spoke , saying he had no oomplaints about Bradbury. week with her daughter and
Sleeve Shirts. Patterns and solid colors in cotton polyester ·
SHOW TIMES 7:00 · 9:00
He said that his son is doing line in the Bradbury program, but he family .
blends and 100 per cent polyester knits .
. 50AR'I' NO
wants to see how the youth progresses when he moves from
Neck sizes 141f:z to 17 or sport shirt sizes small (14-14V:z).
Bradbury to junior high. Mr. Dodson said that although his son is
medium
115·15 112), large (16· 161;,), extra large (17·17'121.
a fast student, the boy does homework each night.
·
ASK TOWED
Carol Pierce, president of the Meigs Local Board, thanked
Freddie Junior Lemley, 22,
the crowd for attending the meeting and said that information
Middleport, and Deloris Eloise
received will provide background for considerations by the
Phillips, 16, Gallipolis.
board.
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
Kin!! questioned why the Bradburv_ orOl!ram concept was not
Public Utilities Commission of being placed in grades I through 4 and Hargraves explained
lltuo O..im
Oliio Tuesday ended 10 days of that It would be an imposition to Ioree the program on schools
TRI.TOTE
hearing on a rate increase that reflect the contributions of staffs of those schools. Pierce, in
3 Way Super 1119
95
by the Columbus and adjourning the meeting, commented that some members of the
request
FREE-With Purdul,.
Southern
Ohio Electric Co. and board of education have felt that expansion of programs such as
oflhts -MMinoiT.Y.
the PUCO staff said It would •Bradbury should be looked into.
make no specific recommendation in the matter.
William Donahue, an attorney-examiner for PUCO, said
'
the case has "unique probSUPERIORS
MEAT SPECIALS
lems" but said any recommendations would be deferred, at
The Ohio Environmenta l by the applicant or interested
least pending a PUCO audit of
DINIII DUDE
Protection Agency has an- citizens. The director of the
..o.t 12NK
the entire case .
SMOKED
The utility has asked ihe nounced it proposes to issue agency may also withdraw and
12" (dlog, me81.) ·;oo% Solid
Stole B 6 W Portable TV
PUCO to approve a $50.7 water pollution control permils revise the proposed permits
million rate increase with $27.1 to 14 applicants, specifying and after cons ideration of the
Slim, trim , covered in simul ated
patchwork blue denim! Uses less
million of that as an emergency limiting their discharge of record of a public meeting,
1 ••
power than a 40 watt light bulb.
pollutants into state water- wri tten comm ~nts, or disap·
provision.
" Equal Ease" UHF tun ing , ea rproval
by
the
U.
S.
EPA.
Donahue said normally a ways . Among them is
phone , other deluxe features.
Written comments on the
company must show an emer- Southern Ohio Coal Co., one
CARNATION
PRODUCE
proposed
permits may be
permit
in
Vinton
County,
one
in
gency rate increase is needed
submitted until March 4, 1975.
as a last resort to avoid injury Meigs County .
U. S. N0.1 MAINE
INSTANT
10 lb.
Comments
may
be
sent
to
the
The
Ohio
EPA
's
preposal
to
to business or the public.
.
I
The · examine said C&amp;SOE 1ssue NPDES permits is based Ohio EPA, NPDES Permits
wants its rate increase based upon a preliminary staH Section , P. 0 . Box 1049, 361 E.
' pkgs.
on the need to preserve the review and applicati on of state Broad Street, Columbus, Ohio
financial integrity of the water pollution standards and 43216. The Ohio EPA permit
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
regulations. The decision to number and the public notice
company in · the future.
issue the permits will become nuntber should be included on
. l~b.
final May 5, 1975 unless an the envelope and on each page
appeals hearing is requested of submitted commen ts.
By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
&lt;;GLUMBUS (1UP! l - Gov.
James A. Rhodes was to hold a·
news coolerence tOday to unveil
several of his proposed new
government prog rams, some of
them requiring state bond
issues to be placed on the June
primary ballot.
·
The news conference was
scheduled for 2 p.m.
Republican legislative leaders
were briefed on the governor 's
plans late Tuesday, and Senate
President Pro Tempor·e Oliver
Ocasek , D·Akron. and House
Speaker Vernal G. Rille Jr., D·
New Boston, were to receipe a
preview tod ay.
Although Rhodes· office de·
clined to release any detai ls of
the governor's proposals, it is
believed he will call for :
- An Ohio Ce ntra l Busi ness
District Development Authori ty
to use state aid and revenue
bonding to revitali ze central

invest at least $500 milli on in
new housi ng construction.'
· -0"eation of an Ohio River
Port Authori ty to build port
facilities at 10 locations along
the ri ver from East Liverpool
to Cincinnati , and perhaps
an other bond issue to finan ce
port im provements 'at Cleveland . •
- A new seven-member Ohio
Energy Development Authority
to coordi nate government and
industrial efforts to develop
sour ces a nd use of energy, plus
revitaliza tion of pollution control authorities toI help fi nance
indu.s trial cleanup and constructi on projects.
•
"He will propose three and
perhaps four new pr ograms,"
sa id Chan Cochran , executive
assistant to Rhodes . "At least
two of them will be bold ,
imaginative and dramatic.''
Cochran said Rhodes wants to
get his proposed bond issues
Wlder prompt consideration in
the General Assembly so they
can be passed in about a
month . They are eonstitutional
amendmenlc; and mu st receive
le gislative approval at least 90

days before the J W1e primary,

Sid Spencer
of Pomeroy
dead at 60

OKDIR

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

orzTAZ.I.

"GREi\T NEW Ni\TURE FILM FOR 197:i"

MEIGS THEATRE

10 days of

hearings
. are ended

. ' ·.IN· POMEROY
ffUTLAND
DEPARTMENT STORE
:

$124

742-5543

Pollution control pennits are

proposed for area coal finn

RUTLAND, 0.

BOLOGNA ..;...~~.. !.!~£L ....................... ~~: .. 69e

POLISH SAUSAGE ...... :..................'.~·.. 75e
HAM SALAD...... ~~.~.~~~.~ .................. ~·; 89e

BAKER
FURNITURE

12
loz.

WHITE
~ CHOC.
79~
___________________
....,.tiiioiiiiiiii
_____
_
POTATOES bag 69 pkg.
FLORIDA
VELVEETA

_cE_LE_RY_3ob~-:~t_2_5....,.~ CHEESE

'.

Atherton ready

(J(J-IT-YfJU!IttD

AND

No game s, No gimmics

I

Utility. Grade 2x;4x8

STUDS.

c

LONG BOTI'OM - Navy
Seaman Larry A. Atherton, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Clarence
Atherton of Route 1, Long
Bottom, has completed basic
electricity and electronics
training at the N~val Training
Center , Great Lakes, . Ill.
Atherton is scheduled to begin
Eleclronics Technician A
School. A 1974 graduate of
Eastern High School, he joi'ned
the Navy in September, 1974.

FROZEN FOOD

Just Highest
Interest Rates
In The Area

for •A' school

POT PIES

3

CASH AND CARRY

each

MEN AND BOYS
SAMPLE SHOES

SALE ENDS FEB. 12

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN
77~554

.MATERIALS

co.

M.A. so . . .
. N,W. VA.

heritage house

Your T~m MCAn Store ·
Middleport, 0.

a9~ JELL02':8
.

SHOWBOAT

,

No Minimum . Interest from

date of de'posit to date of

3oz.

withdrawat Interest com.

jar

$149

4")MEIGS

~~RANCH

COMET
CLEANSER

The Athens County
Sa'!'ings &amp;.loan Co.

Pomeroy,. Ohio

All Accounts t nsufed To
$40,000 by FS Ll C.

· 1!~·~1

I

NESTE
A
..

per cent year paid on
Regular Passbook Savings.

51 4

296 Second St.

MEN'S 111·1, DA,C width
BOYS' 4-4'11 , D&amp; Cwidth

s..

ASSORTED FLAVOR

INSTANT

ON PASSBOOK
SAVINGS

pounded quarterly. ·

JUST RECEIVED

89'

.

'2

KIDNEY
BEANS

NO. 1 CAN

.

BARBECUE
TEEN .QUEEN

'·

Apriva.te orrJ to underwlrte a survey costing between $2,000
and $3,000w~s accepted by.the executive committee of the Meigs
County Reg~onal Planning Commission Wednesday.
Charles E. Blakeslee, executive director of the conunission,
brought the offer but he could not disclose its source. The James
Jennings Associates firm will be invited to serve as the consulting finn for the study . The executive committee decided that
"housing': would be a useful area to have surveyed .
The survey will npt begin until spring, and the subject area
could be changed later if the cOmmittee desires ~
During Wednesday's meeting at The Farmers Bank and
Savings Co. presided over by Thereon Johnson, chairman,
comrruttees for 1975 were named and housing, including a local
rest home (top priority this year) were discussed. Blakeslee
indicated a group has expressed interest in developing housing
but mdicated further information should come from it.
Named to the housing and rest home committee were Edison
Baker, Carl Barnhill and H. E. Shields.
Bob Wingett, Fred Hoffman, Carolyn Thomas and Shields
were named to the recreation committee for the year .
Recreation has also been tabbed one of the top priority areas-for

2

PEACHES

79$
~oz.

$1°

9

private survey offer

work by the conunission this year.
The executive committee discussed a public meeting to be
held at 7: 30p.m. next Thursday in the county courtroom by the
division office of the Ohio De partment of Highways on the su!J..
ject of transportation . Blakeslee said the meeting will give the
public an opportunity to express its wishes on what. highway
Improvements should be made in Meigs County.
.
The commission has given SR 124 in western Meigs County
the top priority at present because of the heavy traffic on the
route related to the coal mine development.
The conunission hopes that public interest will also be shown
in the direction of SR 124. However, it was conceded that there is
"some interest" In the completion of improvements to US 33 between Pomeroy and Athens.
The executive committee indicated it would like to ask
Governor James Rhodes to tour the SR 124 area to see the

•

at

By United Press International
WASHINGTON -PRESIDENT FORD SUMMONED his top
economic advisers to the White House for strategy U.lks today as
his disputes with the heavily Democratic 94th Congress mounted.
Among the.disputes were food stamps for the poor, miliU!ry
aid for Turkey and the first step in Ford's energy-economy
program - a tariff on imported oil.
. Among those conferring with Ford were Treasury Secretary
Willlam Simon, economic counselor William Seidman, chairman
Arthur Burns of the Federal Reserve Board and Federal Energy
Adminisrator Frank Zarb.
AMERICAN CONSUMERS, WORRIED ABOUT possibly
losing their jobs, are paying off their debts at a record rate. The
Federal Reserve Board said Wednesday consumer borrowing
fell by a record $877 million in December.
"It's a typical recession response," said Richard Clay, an
economist specializing in debt of Morgan Guaranty in New York.
"People are very concerned about the state of their personal
finances and want to get monthly payments down in anticipation
of a higher rate of unemployment and lower personal income."
COLUMBUS - APPROVAL FOR THE EAST OHIO Gas Co.
to curtail service to about 500 large industrial users was announced Wednesday by the Public Utilities Conunission of Ohio
because of the shortage of natural gas. PUCO officials said the
curtaihnent would also affect commercial customers since they
are being asked to voluntarily cut usage by 10 per cent and would
be next in tine for further curtailments depending on the severity
of the winter and other factors.
The PUCO also specified that food processors and hospitals
would be given top priority. East Ohio said during hearings in
December and January that its supply would be sharply cut back
beginning Feb. 1. The company said without curtailments
r~erves could run so low by late February that customers might
be cut off altogether.
CINCINNATI -THE PRESIDENT OF THE American Bar
Association has called for legislation requiring all judges in the
nation to be selected Instead of elected to their posts. ·~I say the
elec;_tion of 'judges should be abolished," contended James D.
Fellers, Oklahoma City, Okla., here ;to address the local bar
association. "The selection process would assure that people
placed on the bench will be there because they should be."
Fellers urged the establishment of an independent
nominating conunission of lawyers and laypersons which, he
said, would ensure judges would be qualified and "not just
somebody who has a popular name or a popular appeal." Asked
about th!irationale of taking power away from the voters, Fellers
figured, "It would give the people a better shot at justice."
TRENTON, N. J . - BOSTON CELTICS owner Robert Schmertz has been indicted by a New Jersey grand jury for allegedly
tribing an Ocean County mayor to gain approval for a $200
million housing development. Schmertz was indicted Wednesday
along with Leisure Technology Corp. of Lakewood, the construction finn he formed in 1969, and Donald Safran, a Lakewood
insurance consultant.
Schmertz, 48, issued an immediate denial of any wrongdoing
in his. dealinJI,! wiUt M"anchester Township Mayor Joseph S.
Portash. The indic6nent charged Schmertz and Safran with
paying $31,730 to Pottash In 1971 and 1972 to use his position as
mayor and a member of the township's Municipal Utilities
Authority to help them obtain approval from various government
agencies for a 5,000 unit retirement village. The project is under
construction in Manchester T&lt;iwnshlp.

VOL. 'XXVI NO. 208

'
.,

I .
'

"

.I .

from the county' the power company and federal funds, the work
will be done on force account rather than by eontJ:act since a
contract would undoubtedly cost more than the available funds,
Buehl said.
The. committee Wednesday rehired Blakeslee as executive
director and Blakeslee is to represent the local group on the
regional planning commission advisory group which is being
formed by the Buckeye Hills-Hocking Valley Regional
Development Commission. H. E. Shields was named alternate to
the regional advisory groqp. The representative was named at
the request of Jeffrey Burt, originally of Pomeroy, who is em·
ployed as assistant planner of the Buckeye Hills organization.
Buehl also discussed the development of tax maps for the
county. Outdated plat books and maps are being used. Buehl said
he has three propo~ for work from three firms.
!Continued on page 5)

en tine

R h0 des

POM EROY·MIDOLE PORT. OH 10

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1975

COLUMBUS (UPI)-Gov. James A. Rhodes has unvealed the
first phase of a four-part plan through which he proposes to
revitalize Ohio 's inner cities, make them ''depression-proof' ' and
create up to 100,000 jobs by enticing manufacturers to expand
operations.
Rhodes told newsmen Wednesday his plan, which he described
as "revolutiqnary," would spur up to $1.5 billion worth of construction in urban core areas during the next 18months if all goes
well, and cut unemployment in Ohio to about 4 per cent of the
labor force.
·
He ~dded that his plan would not cost the cities any tax
revenues and that eventually, some $75 million in additional
taxes would be collected each year from persons employed in the
central cities.
·
Democratic leaders controlling the Ohio General Assembly
reacted coolly to the governor's plan, which involves long-term
tax exemptions for manufacturing firms expanding Ohio
operations or moving in from other states.
Want Details
They said they want more details about tax implications, and
would await subsequent announ~ements by the governor before
commenting further . ·
Rhodes said he will offer a constitutional amendment in the
legislature next week setting up a new state board to grant expanding manufacturing companies full exemptions from the
state corporate income and franchise taxes, the state tangible
personal property tax and a oO per cent reduction in real estate
taxes.
Companies would have three years to apply for the exemptions
and get their plans under way. The program will be stopped and
r~valuated as o~ July I, 1978, Rhtes said.
•
Industries l!xj)!!n&lt;liitlftii'Ohio's in\t r i:fties would be granted a
· 25-year abatement of taxes. Those xpandlng ~lsewhere in the

state would receive 12 years of relief.
The governor explained that no Ohio company would be
allowed to move within the state to receive the tax break. Only
expanding operations would qualify.
Rhodes said only manufacturing firms and not service industries would be eligible. A company would not be eligible if
construction is already under way or building permits have been
issued.
Taxes Paid
Ohio corporauons pay a tax of 4 per cent on Income up to
$25,000 a year. They pay 8 per cent oo net income above that

:::::::::::::~:::;:::::::::::;:;:~~;::::::::::::s:::::::::::.:=t=:::=:::;..::

.Weather ·
Chance of snow tonight,
much colder with lows in the
teens. Cloudy Friday, cold with
highs in the middle 20s.
Probability of precipitation is
90 per cent today, 50 per cent
tonight and 20 per cent Friday.

$7,500 judgment made by court

A judgment in the amount of and cannot be moved from one
$7,500 has been filed in Meigs location to another.
County Common Pleas Court in
Two suits for divorce have
favor of Robert Dean Lovelace, ·also been filed, each charging ·
Rt. 4, St. Clairsville, against gross neglect of duty and exBOOSTERS TO MEET
Kanauga Mobile Home Sales, treme cruelty. They were by
The Meigs Band Boosters
Brenda Kay Haley, Pomeroy, will hold a rummage sale
et al.
The plaintiff charged that he vs . Mark Haley, Pomeroy, and Friday and Saturda,y, Feb . 7
purchased a mobile home from Darlene Jeffers, Rt. I, ,Racine, and 8, in the Trinity Church
the defendant that had latent vs. Harold E. Jeffers, · Rt. I, basement, from 9 a. m. to 3 p.
defects, is unfit for occupancy, Racine.
m.

WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Labor Department said
today that during a three-week period In Jauuary iDore tbau
' 2.5 mllllon America~&gt;~ oougbt unemployment Insurance
benefits for the first fme.
Durtng the week ending Jan. lB about t,m,ooo pers001
received wemploymeut luourauce payments, up 189,.00
from tbe previous week. At the eud of l97t, 85 mlWou of tbe
,.·uoa'• II mlWon work force were covered by the In·
ourance.
Of those covered by the Insurance, 7-.Z per cent were
job,less during at. Ieaat a po~on of Iaiit moutb, tbe depart·
montsald. II was the hlgbeat rate aluce Jauuary, llHllwbon
II wu 7.6 per cent. ·

Lottery nets $13.4 million
COLUMBUS (UFI) - State
Auditor Thomas E. Ferguson
t:eported today that $2.2 million
in lottery receipts were
transferred to the state's
general fund .in· January,
bringing the total amount
produced ·by. the lottery In Its
1 first five months to $13 .4
million .
Ferguson said .the state has
received 30 per cent of gross
lottery ticket sales since the
game began last · August, Including $2 million repaid on a
loan .to the state Lottery
Commission
to · begin
.operations.

Ford II

, ._

'''

operating a grocery on Main
St. However, his love being the
training and racing of horses,
he gave up his busipess to
devote full time to working
with horses.

in three weeks of January

WASIIINGToN (UPI) - 'lbo Hoaae aDd Senate
wted, by lml• marglna ta bloclt: PretldeDI Ford'• attempt
nile tbe price the poor pay for fo!Jd tlampt.
.
·
aide said
Qtoly to live In
alp tbe ooqre~~loMiaetlla bec...O tbe volel aplut
1u ..Ch boule wore far mor"e tUu the two-lblrdJ aeeded
otet ride a wto. Tbe Boaae voted tit ta 31 011 Tuesday
tile SeDate 'It ta 8 oa Weduelllay to bar any lncreae ill
....., prfeel tbraalb Doc •••
ll wa1 1110 first biB paned by tbe boavll)' Dou•om•lfe
Mill Cal,_ wldcbeatmed ill Jauuary, and llwu a

""I II reduced.

Sidney Spencer: horseman by choice

2.5 million jobless signup

Food stamp ~e blocked

z

MR. SPENCER AND YUM YUM GmL -The late Sidney A. SpenC!!r and "Yum Yum
Girl", one of the best horses of the harness driver and trainer in recent years.

~ ·ormer Pomeroy Mayor
Sidney A. Spencer, 60, died
Wednesday at his home in
Syracuse.
Mr. Spencer at one time was
a Pomeroy businessman

PHILADELPffiA ~ TWO FORMER LEHIGH County .
maintenance supervisors were indicted by a federal grand Jury
Wednesday in connection with a. probe Into allegedly kickbacks
the county. The ~ount Indictment was returned against former
supemsors John Shumbjlrger III, of Whitehall Township, and
Richard L. Miller, of Allentown, and two mainleJU!nce comP.,nles. The firms were the Institution Drug Supply Corp., Long
Island, and Globe Otemlcallnc., of Ohio.
The defendants were chargecl with mall fraud, conspiracy and
aiding and abetting with the purchases and sales of chemical and
c1eanq supplies for use In the I.ebigh County courthouse, in
return for kickbacks, namely substantial merchandise checks
and other materlaiB including television sets, refrigerators,
stereo equipment, and a Honda motorcycle.

..,.nhrd'of lbllanocoaQDIIe
Mll"'ed aim ol ca1111111::r;:~:::-:~:.
ptup11D1, lit

amount or 5 mills on their net worth, whichever is greater. The
U!x ral8es about '700 million everytwo years for the state
· Tangible personal property for corporations is asse~ at f5
per cent of the valuation of inventories and 50 per cent of the
valuation of furniture and fixtures. CorpQration ·real estate Is'
U!xed at the local level,
·
Rhoctes.s aid his inner city plan is unmatched by any other
state. "This will make Ohio depressioo-proof," he said. "It will
place Ohio head and shoulders above any state.
"No program Is too bold to break the cycle of unemployment,
(Continued on page 5)

WINNING NUMBERS
CINCINNATI (UP!) Here are this week's winning
numbers in the Ohio lottery:
Number 337 (ihree-threeseven) in ~ny box on ticket
wins $20.
Numbers 679 1slx·sevenninc) and 341 (thre&lt;'lourscven) In green and blue
wins $500.
Numbers 619 and 347 in
blue boxes wins $1,000.
Numbers 679 and 347 In
green boxes eligible for
$300,000 drawing and
automatically wins $15,000.

COLUMBUS- THE ADMINISTRATION OF Gov. James A.
Rhodes has proposed a $14.7 million supplemental approfriations bill to offset rising costs and dealing with public
welfare cases. Rhodes mentioned the need for a special welfare
appropriation 1aat week when he announced a projected $122
mlllioo state surplus and called for $109 million of it to go to
public school employes.
· The bill would allocate $6.5 million for aid to families with
dependent children (ADC) and tbe otber $8.2 million to general ·
public assistance. An extra 50,000 ADC cases may result by June
because of unemployment in Ohio. The caseload increased by
11,343 in Ja!Diary, and February and March are considered the
heaviest months of the year.

, AWb1W H_.

PRICE 15'

offers depression proof plan

Ferguson reported that as of
Jan. I, 76 milll&lt;in tickets had
been sold, producing $38
million. Forty-five per cent of
the money, or $17.!' million,
.was paid out in prizes, he said.
»»h~!//..W!Ct!

.. ....... ... ... W::!"::

In recent years, Mr. Spwcer
had driven frequently at Scioto
Downs. He returned annually
to the Meigs County Fair to
take part in the harness racing
program. He was frequently in
the winner's . circle to the
delight of local racing fans.
Mr. Spencer was a director
¢ the Ohio Harness Horsemen's Assn., a · member of
the
Ohio Standardbred
Breeders Assn ., and the United
States Trotting Assn. ·
·
1
Funeral services willlie held
at I p.m. Friday at the Ewing
F1111eral Home.

Third Armorized
holding reunion
The
Third
Armored
(Spearhead) Division
Association rs seeking to
contact its World War II
combat veterans. The National
Association is holding Its 28th
annual reunion at the Seven
Springs Mountain Resort (near
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania)
July 23 through 26, 1975.
Former members may write
for further information to Mr.
J. Edward Hergenroeder, ·
National President, 623
Buckingham Drive, Greensburg; Pa. 15601.

EXTENDED FORECAST
Mayor fined two
Saturday threugb !l'londay,
Two persons were fined, but
fair aud cold Saturday.
costs only were assessed in a
third case, in the court of
Temperatures will moderate
Sunday and Mouday with
M\ddlepor,t Mayor fred .
snow In the north aut! rain In
Hoffman Tuesday night.
southern areas SUDday and a
Chades Hall, 37, Point
chance of snow flurries or
Pleasant, was fiited $150 and
show'eno . on Mouday. Higbs · costs and. sentenced· to three
Saturda)' will, be 111 tbe zoo,
days in jail on cooVIctioo of
warming to tbe upper 30o or driving while intozicated and
· McCloud;
Mid·· .
Ibe 1ow fOs by Mooda y. 'Lo ws [!onna
tlleport, Jwas
fined ... lllld -ts
will be five ot 15 early
_.
·Saturday and In the lower or for a pettf larceny· Asse8aed
middle ZOo by early Mouday. co,t;ts ooly for falling to yield
~
..
right of way was Paula Jean
~:::~::~::::~c:e. 1wwrc:·:·w ". Ha~et, 21, syricuse.

=·

LOCAL TEMPS
Temperature in downtown
.Pomeroy today at 11 a. m. was
39 degrees under cloudy Skies.

MEIGS VARSITY CHEERLEADERS - Standing 1-r Debbie Baker Demarish Ash and
April Fraser (heeling), and top, Saridy Curtis, Diana
and Merri A~t. They will do what
they can to fl@1l up tbe Marauder basketball team and fana Friday nighl at Meigs High School
with Logan the oppositiiJ!I.
·
·
.
· :
·
.

Simth

~

'

problems involved with traffic. It was pointed out that SR 124 has
been given the first priority in the comprehensive planning of the
county.
. Named to formulate the commission's plans for highway
m1proveme~t requests were John Rice, E. F . Robinson , Fred
Morrow and Orion Roush . The committee was authorized to ask
an yon~ wh~ might be valuable in planning to approach to help the
commtttee tn tts work . Endorsements will be sought on the need
for improvemenls to SJ;\ 124 from the Pomeroy and Middleport
chambers of conunerce·.
. Wesley Buehl, county eogineer, discussed plans for the
unprovements to county roads I, I·A and 17 in western Mei~
County. He said that about four more right-of-ways are needed
for the project and that work is expected to start when the
weather breaks. ·
In order to complete the job with the some $300,000 available

Devoted To The lrttPrests of The Meig.~-Masort Area

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