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HOSPITAL News.
NEWS

Board hears· dispute
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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

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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

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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

~oz. 59~

. VIEITI
PORK OR BEEF

acc~pt

PlannerS
.

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power into the executive

NEW COACH
cLEVELAND (UP!) - The
Cleveland Browns announced
Thursday the appointment of
George Sefcik as the new of·
iensive backfield coach of the

branch ."

Browns.

Dean·· cites penal system inequalities
'

By NANCY KERCHEVAL

own fate," he said. "I realized
ClEVELAND (UP!) - John that I couldn't tell my inDean III, convicted Watergate · volvement in the Watergate
conspirator , said his four- affair without implicating
month prison sentence showed everybody ."
him the gross lnequalltles that
He said no one believed he
are present in the penal would tell very much, especialsystem.
ly after President Richard
"You read about It and you ' Nixon announced there would
hear about," Dean said at be no Immunity for any White
Cleveland State University House officials.
Wednesday, "but it's the in"In their effort to stop me,
: credible, lm)lervaslve injustic they even put out false stories
in the penal system."
about me ," he said.
Dean said he learned things
Dean said the Watergate
about the prison system that scandal
prevented
the
would never be taught in the executive branch from a mass
. classroom of a law school, reorganization which had been
· adding, "'There are incredible planned after the 1972 election.
1momalles in the sentencing He said the wide margin by
·system," he said.
which Nixon was reelected
: Dean said the government, would have been used as an
·.before he was convicted, put expression of the wishes of the
fourth an all-out effort to people.
,prevent him from testifying
"The President had been
·. about the Watergate affair .
reelected by a heavy margin of
"It's true, at first I was votes which would have been
concerned about my own Loken as a mandate.
:(future), but then the stakes
"The reorganization would
became much higher than my not have been called a die-

by Cbet Tannehill
How do you feel about a ration system based on allocations
related to need for the scarce necessltie·s of gasoline, fuel oil and
naturalg,., compared to a free-for-all system based on ability to
pay with prices artificially jacked up ?
The latter, baslcally,ls the system the Administration thinks
bestfor Americans. Painful to all, yes, admits our President, but
necessary. If you agree with him you should communicate your
agreement to Rep. Clarence Miller and Senators Glenn and Taft.
If you don'tagree, you also should get the word of same to the
above gentlemen. They do want to know.
11 Is my feeling that Rep. Miller, a conservative Republican,
generally represents the majority opinion of his, this Tenth
Congr(!SS!onal Di:. :riel. When the conservative line goes against
what he feels Is the best for his district - in terms of human need
- he is not afraid to go maverick.
Perhaps an excellent example of this was observed when the
House voted Tuesday to delay President Ford's' proposed increase in the amount the poor must pay for food stamps. Only 38
hard liners stuck with the Administration on that one. Rep.
Mlller and 373other Republicans and Democrats voted to delay.
The food stamp system comes in for extraordinary criticism.
Itseemsthatnearly everyone has ob6ei-ved a fellow drive up in a
Cadillac to buy food with food stamps. When you question such
claims cloesly, however, usually it was someone else saw the
Cadillac. Pressed, the Cadillac observer who did not actually
observe defeats all argument with, ''Oh, well, you know It's going
(II,"

Certainly It is; 10 of every IOObables are born with a genetic
physical or mental defect, yet we do not kill all babies because of

II.

.

Rep. Miller, though he hasn't explained his vote yet, apparenUy figured there simply are so many elderly, poor people in
hla dtstrlctanincrease In the cost of food stamps -In view of the
brutal increases In heat and energy fuels - would be ·to act
inhwnanely ..
By the way, has It occurred to you there Is an entirely new
clasa of "Poor" arising if not already arrived. Immediate
poorness bas been created where electric and natural gas bills
have soared upward.
Untll the new poor can rearrange their priorities away from
the new color TV, the gas guzzling 1975 model Image-maintaining
car, the annual sununer vacation driving four to six thousand
mUes, or met mignon nightly, the pinch will be felt, and complaints heard.
· When President Ford asks for' Americans to support hla plan
for evetyhody to bite the bullet, one thing disturbs me. Some
people have to bite a lot deeper than others through no fault of
their own.
Rationing of gaS&lt;Jline (on allocation of need) would not mean
•that every American would get just nine gallons a week as Mr.
Ford repeatedly said on national TV and in the press. Thai was a
lie, plain and simple, and It had to be calculated to prnduce fear
so as to sway opinion unreasonably. I'm surprised no one with
access to the nation's media called him on it.
The Greeks had a name for It, indeed an entire school. They
call~ It rhetoric, in contrast to Plsto and.Socrates who sought to
discover real meanings behind this facade of appearances we
deal with dally.
It's a battle - rhetoric vs reality - siill at full heat roughly
2400 years later. We haven't learned a thing.

t.atorship because that would
call for the elimination of
Congress and the courts ."

By EDWARD S. LECIITZIN
UP! Auto Writer
DETROIT (UP!) - Openended layoffs in the crippled
U.S . auto Industry have
climbed above 206,000 --&lt;Jne of
every three blue collar workers
-and no one is sure the top has
been reached.
"'The problem is that we ·
can't seem to get a handle on
where this is all settlin~ out,"

;.~~~~y~~ DR. LAMB - I bruise

miisUy in my legs. My
seem to be close to my
yet my sltin is very tough
)nd it doesn't break through.
ily blood clots normally . One
e my physician gave me
taqlin Cinheavy doses, but it
, . nothing for that problem, so
J stopped it.
~ . Most of the leg bruises clear
'liP within a week's time .
'tlleeper ones take longer. r
. :puetlnes wonder if something
~lse Is wrong. Are the vein
•lls thick enough? Can this
ted blood . be dangerous?
It cause a stroke or other
.e,ults?
C: DEAR READER - · The
1fden variety of Sll)all bruises
~e caused by injury to the
IIX!•llest blood vessels. 'The
~r veins are very thin·
. ,wailed and the larger ones
. .ve thiclter l!l'alls that don 't .
· fbptilre so easily.
~ 1be Injured
vessels ·
~~~ a small amount o( blood
Into the tissues and 'this is
brulae. 1be size and length
lime It stays Is aHected by
mucb lilood leakS out. ·
· ~Sollie people . Wtth frequent
small · bruises · do , have
·~tly thin-walled, ·easily
1

t;

E

sm.u

'(r '·

William
V.
Luneburg,
president of American Motors,
said Wednesday. "Trying to
outguess what's going on in this
market today is lmposalble.
"You.'re not smart, you're
just lucky if you guess right,"
said the chief executive of the
smallest of the major auto
companies.
AMC h8S just 450 hourly

Berry's World

.

TOP

®

·

d . h t .L . . •' F . .d '

·:·:····

The Marauders once again

$1

win of the season Friday night

loop play, Meigs is staggering

when the I.ogan Chiertain s
co me to Larry Morri son

82.S2.

under '' 1-10 mark . Th c
Maraudet·s need a viCtory to
get them out or a tie with
Wellston fo r last place .
Meigs is capable of beating
Logan . 1£ they put it all
toge the r the Chiefta ins better

Both tea ms are coniin g off
losses. Logan wa~ beaten 61 -55
by Gallipolis which is tied for
third in the SEGAL. Meigs
gave Ironton a rough time
before dropping- a 67·59

had wa tch out. The Mara uders
were in much the same position
when Logan cam e to Rock
Springs la st year . Anyone
attending thut game witne ssed
one of !he frw tinw&lt;.: MPi p&lt;: h:1d

By Denny
Fobes

::::::~

:

~:~.·.t:~:',__:f~.[ '

:

..
·:·:...-:

Bo Schembechler , coach of "that team up north " as Woody
Hayes refers to it, will be the main speaker Thursday, April 24, at
the 14th annual Green and White Club Recognition Banquet.
The annual affair will be held at the Ohio University Convocation Center beginning at 6:30p.m., with the list of honorees
and ticket information to be announced later .
Schembechler has had an outst.anding record during his
tenure at Michigan, including a 30-2-1 record the past three
years, although failing to participate in the Rose Bowl during
that time.

+++

Antoher Athens event coming up is the 6th annua l AthensMarathon, scheduled for Sunday, March 2.
The start and finish of the race will again be at Peden
Stadium on the OU campus, although a change in the course will
be made because of road construction. The exact layout of the 26mile, 385 yard course will be announced in the near future .
The meet is sponsored by the Hocking Track Club of Athens,
and entry blanks and additional information may be obtained
from Ellsworth J. Holden, Jr., 26 Northwood Dr., Athens. Entry
fee for the marathon is $2 with an additional charge of $1 for
runners not holding an AAU null)ber.
Individual awards will be presented to each of the first 10
finishers, with an additional award to the first finisher 40-years
old or over.
A team champion will also be detennined, restricted to
certified clubs only. No more than five runners can be designated
as representing any individual club.
First aid st.ations will be provided along the route to assist
the runners and mileage and times will be provided through
markers and at official checking stations during the course of the

+ + .+

·A winter road race will be held this Saturday at Rio Grande
College, with 5 mile, 3mile and 1 mile runs scheduled, beginning
at I pm.
The race , under the direction of Rod O'Donnell, Rio Grande
track coach, will include awards for the first, second and third
place fioishers in the 3 and 5 mile races, and certificates to all
finishers in the I mile race which is billed as a fitness run.
Shower facilities and refreshments will be available
following the races and anyone interested in taking part should
meet at Lyne Center on the Rio Grande campus by noon Saturday for registration.
The courses will consist mainly of hilly, paved roads and a $1
entry fee will be charged for the 3 and 5 mile runs and contributions will be accepted for the I mile fitness race.
Anyone desiring additional information should contact
O'Donnell at Box 836, Rio Grande, or by telephone at 245-5353,
ext. 67 or 68.
Another raf e is scheduled for March 8, with 10, 5 and I mile
races slated .

"Excuse me, Miss! Are seamed stockings
REALLY making a comeback?"

Whalen disagrees
.with energy plan
WASHINGTON (UP!) President Ford's energy program will have "little effect"
on Industrial and individual ·
consumption of oil, Rep.
Charles W. Whalen, R.Ohlo,
said Wednesday in a House
Door speech.
Ford's program will exact "a
very high economic and social
cost," said Whalen, a former
University
of
Dayton
economics professor.
Whale!\ reiterated his support for legislation to suspend
for 90 , days the President's
authority to Impose added
Import duties . The energy
pollcy will reduce further the
consumer's ability to buy,
leading to curtalled production
and Increased unemployment,
said Whalen.
The progr~m will penalize
low..,nd middle-income Americans, Whalen said.
"If the Issue involved the
utilization· of luxury items chocolate eclairs or vacation
trips to Florida -the principle
might be defensible," Whalen

Gymnasiillll ror the second
meeting of both teams. The
ChieftainS had an easy evening
in the firs t encotmter at J...Qgan,

decision to ttl(' scrund plal'e
Tigers.

t•vclytlun g wurklll!-( for thC' m.
A. ~.:u mbin atiu n of ho t

Logan owns a 5-6 record in shooli ng uy lhe lcam and
tremendous s upport trUm ttw
crowd brought Mcig::; a victory.
It ct~ n be don ~ ag&lt;-Jin this ye;1r ,
although sm: h a repeat per·
formaiH.:e depends ~ at le&lt;.~st
par tly - on hometown fan s
coming to the game to show thl'
tea m how murh they wtm t tt
vi c tory .
Meigs ts led by sophom ore
Greg Browning who coach
Hoger Bntuer feels has bee n
impressive :;i uce' being c.alled
up
from
the r ese r ves .

W. P. Snowden
dies in Dayton

RUTLAND - William P.
Snowden, 82 , formerly of
Rutland, died F•iday, Jan. 31,
at a Dayton nursing home
following a two-year illness.
Funeral services were
conducted at 1:30p.m. Monday
at the Morton Funeral Home in
Vandalia. Burial was in
Memorial Park Garden between Dayton and Vandalia.
While residing in Ruiland,
Mr. Snowden was employed in
local mines and later worked
for the State Highway
Department. He served as
custodian at the Rutland High
School several years. After
moving to Dayton, he was head
custodian at the Dayton City
Schools until his retirement.
He was· a member of the
Rutland Church of Christ.
He is survived by his widow,
Mrs . Ada Snowden; four
daughters, Mrs. Francis
Higginbotham of Arizona, Mrs.
Jessie Gidley· of Akron, Mrs .
Kathleen Smith of San Leondro, cal., and Mrs. Lucille
. Meyers of Vandalia; three
sons, George of Wadsworth,
and Floyd and Jim of Dayton;
two siste.rs, Mrs. Ethel McDole, Bradner, Ohio, and Mrs.
Mildred Sheeler, . Flagler
Beach, Fla., and a brother,
Roy Snowden, of Rutland.
Mr. Snowden was preceded
in death by a son, Frank; a
sister, Mrs. Opal Powell,
Cheshire, and three brothers,
Clarence, Jerry City ; Earl, of
Akron, and Harry, of Rutland .
Spending the weekend in
Vandalia with the family were
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Snowden and
Mr. and Mrs. Bruce May .

Model WP5530

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from a new tube design , simple to use
lnstamatic color tuning, trouble-free
chassis with plug in solid state mini
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ranty, energy saver switch, instant on
sound and picture, all at the lowest
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Kyger Creek's offense which
had been averaging 47 .5 poinls
in 13 previous games exploded
for an tu1believable 100 poinls
Wednesday afternoon as the
Bobcats set a school record
enroute to a 100-63 romp over
Hannan , W. Va.

Never in the history of Kyger
Creek High School had a cage
team hit the century mark.
Eigh t years ago, Coach John
Wickline's SVAC champs
scored in the 90's but never
reached the magic 100 number.
Coach Keith Carter's Bobcats hit a season high of 55 pet.
from the floor sinking 43 of 78
attempls . The Bobcats also
converted 14 of 24 free throw
attempts.
Leading the offensive display
were seniors Terry Lucas and
Dave Wise with 23 poin\S eactr.·
Bill Metzner, junior forward,
had 22 points and senior center
Joe Stidham canned 17 points.
Kyger Creek jumped into a 2:&gt;12 lead at the end of the first
period. Leading the way were
Wise and Lucas with eight
points and Doug Co ttrell,
senior forward, had seven

points.
The Bobcats pushed their
lead to 50-28 at the half. During
the second stanza, Lucas had
10 poinls, Stidham dumped in
seven and Metzner and Wise
had four points each. Darrell

CONSOLE COLOR TV
REDUCED~: 580.00

ASMART TIME TO

Black led Hannan's first half
Ralp h Bay lor ted lh e
sc orin g with nine points . Boukitlens w1 th 14 points.
Wayne Richardson had eighl Jen·y Edmonds hart 12 in a
poinls and Greg Hill chipped in losing cause. Kyger Creek, 2·
with seven points .
12, will hos l North Gallia
The Bobcat of!ense cooled off Friday night.
during the third period as Hannan
12 16 19 14- u:1
Hannan outscored the ''Ca ts' ' Kyg erCk.
25 25 18 32-- 100
19-18. Richardson and Keith
Plants paced the visitors
during the third can to.
Kyger Creek's offense ex·
ploded in the fourth quarter
with 32 poinls to hit the century
CINCINATI (UP! ) - The
mark . The rally was led by
Cincinnati
Reds have signed
Metzner and Wise, with 12 and
three
more
players,
all of them
11 points respectively.
With 20 seconds left in the candidates for the open third
game and KC leading 99-63, base position. They are Darrel
Wise dribbled down the floor Chaney, John Vukovich and
for another basket. Hannan Ray Knight.
Chaney is a veteran woo hit
Coac h Bo Napora argued that
.200
in 117 games for the Reds
Wise cliarged one of his players
in
1974.
Vukovich was obtained
-but the orficials disagreed.
Napora was assessed with this winter from Milwaukee in
three technicals and ejected a trade for pitcher Pat Osburn,
and Knight is a rookie up from
from the game.
Wise stepped to the foul line the Reds' Indianapolis farm
and canned the first foul shot team.
Pete Rose, meanwhile, is
giving KC ils 100 poinls and the
considering
filing for arbitrapartisan crowd roared.
Richardson finished as high tion in his contract negotiations
point pl."oducer for Hannan with with the team - talks he says
21 poinls. Darrell Black had 15 have gotten "nowhere."
The Reds reportedly want
and Hill 10.
Hannan hit 22 of 6o at temp is Rose to t.ake about an 18 per
for 34 pet. and 19 of 35 at the cent,pay cut from tbe $160,000
that last seaS&lt;Jn made Rose the
foul line. ·
club's
highest paid player ever.
Kyger Creek look the reserve
"The ball club has a definite
game. 44-30.

...

·I

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College Basketball Re$ults
East

Ade lph i 63 Brooklyn 58

Assum ptn 84 Ntheasfrn 77
Bridgpt 80 St . Fran NY 72

--·.

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FURNITURE
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fl oor.

action FrldaynJght.

the game out of reach at 69-50 OD board work with 8 rebounds
each.
with 7:40 remaining.
Rio hit 38 of 82 field goal
The largest Rio lead of the
attempts
for 46 pet., while OD
night came at the 2:26 mark as
the Redmen opened an 81-58 canned just 28 in 78 tries for 36
margin on a 17 fooler by Gil pet. The Redmen hit 11 of 16
charity chances to just 10 of 18
Price .
The game, which saw OD for the visitors and held a
slapped with 4 technical fouls, commandin g 43-34 rebotulding
was called with 29 seconds left edge.
The Redmen now prepare for
when a free-for-all broke out in
the bleachers after a group of the top game of the season ·
Ohio Dominican fans crossed Saturday when league-leading
to the other side of the gym to Malone 16-0) invades Lyne
join the Rio Grande cheering Center.
In Wednesday's preliminary ,
section.
the
Rio junior varsity, behind a
The Redmen were paced by
of Dusty Moran free
pair
another strong effort by the
front line- duo of Dan Bollinger throws with 6 seconds left ,
and Stewart. Bollinger con- edged the Ohio Dominican
nected for 21 points and 7 reserves 79-77,
Ted Chaffin and Ch uck King
rebounds while Stewart added
led
the Rio att.ack with 19 and
17 points and 8 caroms.
18
points
respectively, while
Jim Nne and Andy DavenArtie
DeStephens
added 12 and
port tossed in 12 points each,
while Nne led all rebounders Moran and John Lusher tossed
in II each .
with 12.
Kim Tumblison and Mark · Russ Witherspoon led OD
Lum led the Panthers with 13 with 34 poinls.

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gunnlng for tbelr second W:tn
of the season o'ver tbe

:s2

will be out for revenge for a 6045 loss at Logan.
AlthoUgh their· overall record
is 8-6, the Meigs reserves have
been in every g&amp;me until the
end with the excePtion of their
earlier I,J)gan defeat. Coach
Leman feels his team always

winter.

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DOLL RESIGNS
MIAMI (UP!) - Don Doll
••signed Wednesday as defen•ive coordinator of the BaJ.
timore Colts to accepr'a job as
defensive assistant 'to Head
Coach Don Shilla of the Miami
Dolphins.
Shula said the 48-year-old
Doll will coach the Dolphins'
linebackers and pass defense.
Doll ~.eplaces Vince Coslello,
who resigned recently to
become defensive coordinator
of the Kansas City chiefs.

1onrth with identical 6-5league

'

Hannan (63 ) - Ri chardson 6·
9· 21: Villa rs 0.0-0; Bla c k 6·3· 15;
Hill 3-4 10 ; Plants 3·0·6 ,
Presto n 1.Q./ ; Chap man 3· 1·7
an d Blake 0·2·2. Totals 22-19-63.
Kyger Creek ( lOO i - Cottrell
5 1 11; Metzner 7·8 22 , Wi se JJ .
123 ; Sl idhilm8 11 7; Lucas 10·
3·13 ; Sm 1lh 0·12 : Ke rn 1-0·1
and Baylor 1·0·2. Totals 43 -14 100.

slates. A Mara uder victory

combined with a toss by the
GAHS reserves to Waverly
could put Meigs in a tie for

third with the Blue Imps.
The reserve game begins a t

6:30.

We Feature and Recommend

and positive attitude that I've
got to take a cut," complained
Rose.
Rose planned to confer with
his attorney, Reu~en Katz, to
discuss the possibility of arbitration, in which the club and
player defend what they think
is a fair salary. The arbitrator
then picks one, not trying for a
compromise amount. Deadline
for filing for arbitration is next
Monday.
Rose, the National League's
Most Valuable Player in 1973
when he won the batting title·
with a .338 average, slipped to•
.284 last season, the first lime
in 10 years he hit under .300.

MYERS

Also Wednesday, the Reds
announced that workhorse
starting pitcher Jack Billingham has signed his 1975 contract. Terms were not
disclosed.
The signing was a bit of a
surprise because Billingham
reportedly was unhappy over
earlier money offers and was
believed to be seeking advice
on arbitration procedures.
Billingham was on the verge
of becoming a 20-game winner
in both 1973 and 1974. He posted
a 19-10 mark in 1973 and was 19!llast year.

Shoitow WoN wilt.
Conventional Tank

Shallow Well-204 .00 up
Deep Well-224.00 up

We sell and recommend Myers Electo pumps,
for service beyond the water· mains. There's •
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formation here.

Ebersbach Hardware
Everything In Hardwan
MAIN ST•.

POMEROY

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heritage house
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

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be

prov id e additional sco1·ing .and · VlkJngs, having taken 8 SS.SI
rebounding help.
decision at Willow Wood. The
Preceding the va rsHy match
Eagles on the other h d
jack E lgin•s Pagooses go
will b~ avenging 8
agai nst Ron Logan's r eserve
double overtjme loss to the
Mara uders. The Meigs quintet
HJghlanders earlier this

with the exclusive
Roma lining by

•I '

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The Tornados will

scoring or Mitch Wright'. Don
Yo un g and ,Jim Kemper

Olt.1er offensive leaders are
~oph om ore Sleve Ha ndolph.
the l e~Hicr in assis ts; junim·
Mit'k DHvcnpurt , a li2 pd . free
throw shooter. and 6·6 jumor
Mitch Meadow s whu leads the
team in offensive rebounds .
On dden sr, se nio r Dnn
Dobson h&lt;ls 'puliNI do wn the
most missed shots. Sophomore
Chip Brauer anti Davenpor t
have
been the
busiest
Milrauders recovering loose

..

Southwestern in SVAC cage

Logan's a ttack is led by the

Reds sign three

STEVE ,SNOWDEN
st:,

ARR
-,

here

however, and came out gun·

ning in the second period,
t.aking back the lead for good at
39-37 as Stewart and·Davenport
hit layups.
Ohio Dominican managed to
st.ay within 4 points at 49-45
with 11:58 to go before the
Redmen outscored !he visitors
20-5 in the next 4 minutes to put

Rio-Dominican box...

=,.,..,~oo";:\.~:;~,~~BUY YOUR COLOR 'FV

I•

Dominican

Rio regrouped at the half,

Brockpt St . 94 Oswego 71
Cent . Conn . 82 New Hv n 66
Cheney 90 Kutztown 56
Colby 81 Bowdo in 73
Conn . 106 Boston U . 85
Del. St . 10-4 Lncln U. 90
Edinboro 74 Mrcyhrsl 66
Fairfield '11 lona 70, ot
OHIO DOMINICAN (66)
Frn kl in &amp; Mrsh I 7 4 Hv r frd 61
FG-A FT-A RB PF TP
PLAYER
Geo lown 102 Dckn sn , Pa . 60
3
1·9 1·1
8
I
Gary Brewer
Glssbora 68 Kean 56
4 ~ 15
3· 3
11
0
0
Don Gardner
Hofstra 70 C.W . Po st 54
6-11 1-2 B 4 13
Mark Lum
Hunter Bl Pace 67.
6-17 1-2
I 13
5
King's NY 78 w. Conn . St . 76
Ken Tumb liso n
L aSalle 80 Drexel 63
4
2-3
0-0
0
3
Kim Rauch
Le moyne 83 Buffalo 77
4-1
2-4
4
10
3
Chris Essman
LIU 114 CCNY88
I ~6
0-0
1
I
2
Don Gropp
Lack Haven 65 Cal if . .Pa . 60
2
1-2
0-1
1
0
Rick Oiedalis
L ycom i ng 72 Eliztown 56
0-2
0-1
2
0
0
John Hopkins
Mans l ld St . 85 Blmsbrg 70
3-6
0· 0
5
0
6
Sean O'Drlscoll
Marshll 54 FDU ·Rihfrd 44
1
0-0
1-2
0
0
Rick Boone
Mass. 80 Boston Co l i 71
0-0
1~2
Mercy 77 vassar 69
0
0
1
Clylon Chenault
M il lrsvl 91 E . Stroudsbg 77
13 66
28-78 10-lS 34
TOTALS
Montclr St . 73 Trnln St. SB
RIO GRANDE (87)
75 Muhlnbg 68
FG-A FT·A RB PF TP Moravian
PLAYER
Navy 82 Johns Hopkins 53
4-10 4-8
3
12
12
Jim Noe
New Hamp . 81 Me .. orono 77
4·8
0-0
2
2
8
Bob Ca ldwell
N .Y . Tech 89 FDU ·Mdsn 81
3
3
3-S
0-0
6
Mac Barbee
Ph il a. Text 97 Albr ight 53
3 21
10-2 3 1-1
7
P itf . Jhnstwn 88 Geneva 84
Dan Bollinger
RIU 89 Manhattan BJ
4
17
B
7-12 3· 3
Jim Stewart
Scran ton 89 Del . Val 50
J.s
1-2
2
7
2
Gil Pr ice
Seton Hall 99 Villnva 91
5-11
2-2
12
5
3
Andy Davenport
Shippnsbg 73 W. Chester 68
I
0
0-3
0-0
2
Gary Swinehart
St . Vincent 81 Pfrostbg 78
1-3
0-0
0
2
2
Brownie Wilson
Stevn s Tch 4.4 Kings Pt. 40
2
I
0
1·2 0· 0
George Vickroy
St . Ptr's 81 Kin'gs Pa . 6~
22 87 .
38-82 11-16 43
TOTALS
.
Upsala 82 Wagner 59
Vermont 95 St . Michae l 's 82
Haflllme: OD 37 Rio ~5
VMI 51 Br idgwtr St. 37 .
W illiams 68 M iddlebry 53
Wilkes 60 Susquehnna 59
Sou ttl
Ala .. HntSV I 83 St . Brnrd 82
Asheville 63 Augusta 61
Chatt 113 Jcksnvl St . 93
Duke 75 Wake Forest 68
Fla . A&amp;M 85 Fla . Tech 82
. Guiford 112 Catawba 91
. 'High Pt . 83 All . Chris 78
Mercer 92 Georgia st . 80
· Montevallo 98 Troy St . 83
Nrflk St. 118 Sl. Aug . 81
Rollins 52 St . Leo '51
Shaw 97 Ky . Wesleyan 92
Sthwstrn 64 Sewanee 63
So. C·ar . 64 Pi tts 62
So . Conn . St. 122 Baruch 62
Springhill 74 Huntng_dn 63
VP' 87 OePal,ll 14
Walsh 74 Malone 71. ot
Midwest
Alliance 75 Pa . St .· Bhrnd 73
Ball St .' 83 Kent St. 80
Capital 70 0 . Wesleyan 52
Cerd . Mich . 95 No . I ll . 67
Chi ·Ci rcle 73' Ill. Tech ·71
· Cleveland St . 68 Akron 66
Defiance 84 BtufiiOn 71
Here's my new State Farm office, where I can serve
Gannon 78 Steubnvt 59
you with the best value in car, ho'lne, life and health
Hiram 83 TPie l SA
Ill . Weste.yan 81 Mllkn 75
in5urance. I invite you to call or drop in any t.ime.
Kansas St. 91 M issouri 8A
Kansas· 72 Nebraska 44
LewiS: 82 Lo'r as 78 :
1258.Powooi
Midili~Port, Ph. 99'1·1 1&gt;S
Marielfa 79 Mt . Union 76
Mich . St. 76 Notre Dame 73
STAll f...
Miam i 60 E . Michigan 51
Okl.a homa '111 Iowa St . 89
. tt..lllra:
.St . Cloud St . 68 Bemidji 67
.
So . III. ~Crbndle 9.4 Sttsn 60
· Tri n ity 103 Roosevelt 69
Wheaton 71 No . ce,rlt '11
Wittel'l~rg 79 K enyOn 70
Wr ig ht SL 82 Urban.a 76

30

THIRO &amp;

35 intenriission margin :

With Rio up 35-32 and playing
for a last shot with just 15
Wednesday night.
seconds remaining in the
The triumph was Rio's tenth opening period, Panther Don
against 8 losses overall and Gardner stole the ball and hit a
vaulted the Redmen into ·sole layup to pull Dominican to
possession of second place in within 1 at 3:&gt;-34 with 9 seconds
the MOC with a :&gt;-2 record. on left. Gary Brewer then pilfered
dropped to third place with a 4· · R~o's · inbounds pass and
scored, following with a
2 mark.
The Redmen, taking a 2-0 charity toss to complete the 3lead early on a pair of Jim point play .
over Ohio

•
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Stewart free throws, held the
upper hand the entire way
except late in the first half
when Dominican bolted to a 37·

b 11
as and bad passes.

Bruwlllll).: i::; lhc lead ing Mcif:!,S
shooter, hilting 47 pe t. from the

,.. ,

······::!s~~~:~~::

erves are presently tied for

1'

LYNE CENTER - The Rio
Grande Redmen, winning their
eighth game in their last 9
starts, gave head coach Art
Lanham a belated birthday
present with an 87-66 victory

,.,.,.,..,...,......

Bobcats clobber Hannan ::·:~::,: ~d~:::k~::~;:

Redmen dump Dominican

said. ·11However, we are cona
cerned with restricting the ust
of a necessity."

Many complex text.s are
broken, small blood vessels.
needed
to determine the nature
The tiny blood vessels can also
be affected by disease. Scurvy, of the problem. Somellmes it is
from lack of vitamin C, can an inherited defect, as seen in
cause these small blood vessels the royal families of Europe. In
to break easily and then there other instances a defect can be
is bleeding from the gingiva caused by soine other disease ..
(gums ) around the teeth and Here a common example is
bleeding tendencies in the liver disease. The liver is
body. It is true that some cases important in forming subof multiple broken small veins stances needed to induce
are caused by· lack of vitamin normal dotting. A jaundiced
C. In these instances large person commonly has a
doses of vitsmin C are helpful. bleeding tendency.
Those common everyday
If the perS&lt;Jn is already getting
adequate amounts of vitsmin small bruises are not
C,takingll)orewon'thelpsolve dangerous. Blood in the tissues
Tfte Daily Sentinel
the nillltiple bruises problem. won't escape and cause
DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
Besides the defects or problems.However,if a person
MEIGS·MASON AREA
weakness in the small blood has a bleeding tendency then
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL
vessels that can occur, things hemorrhage in almost any
ROBE~~·~~:FLICH
.
City Edllor
.
can go wrong with the blood place can occur . and cause
·
·
c1
ding
·
th
·
'Published
dallv
e-xce-pt
clotting mechanism, causing compUCations, 10 U
10 e
Saturdo~ by The Ohio Vall•y .
Publls.hmg Company , 111
brain.
easy bruising.
.
Court St . , Pomeroy . o·hiq
Those aotlclotthlng
•5769. Buslnen Olfice Phone
NormaHr blood clotting
mll$6. Edilorial Phone 992.
dep~nds upon vitamin K•. medicines, incorri!CUy. called
with
p Secont;f class postage paid at
ca!c!;Uffi, complex enzym~s (n. blood thinners, interfere
.
omeroy, Otlio. •
·
the
cmnpl9:
chemical
actions
· National advertis i ng
tlie blood, the tiny b1ood
representative Bott lnelli platelets, and the blood protein of clotting. Coumadin, used in . Gallagher
, 'Inc ., 12 East _.2nd
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called fibrinogen. When the former President Nb::on 's case,
-"'-- heart · 1 O~llvered
Subscripllon
rates ,.
by carrltr where
clot!ing . mec~an_ism
~s Is Conunonly used w~·
75 cents per week ;
triggered, the .fibrinogen IS •ttaclts and similar P1'9blems. · available
By Motor R:oute where carrier
service. no I available, One
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00 year ; Six monltlS
clo\. Red blood cells are
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future
historians
COuld
do
with
S1J.SO : lhree monlhs, 17.50)
trapped within the fibers.
Subscription price includes
that bit of information.'
Sundar Ti""'r-Senlfnel.

Byl\1el&lt;.:rt•mrans .

:~ will be looking for their second

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PRICE!

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The race is scheduled to begin at noon.

I

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if:~;

;:::~;

QUALITY
LOW

'lffiployes on indefinite layoff,
but Wednesday announced it
will tighten its belt by skipping
its semiannual dividend of 10
cents a share. The company
operated $5.6 million in the red
in tbe final three months of
1974, andjt.MC Chairman Roy
D. Chapi(l Jr. said l1e expected
no financial Improvement in
the first three months of the
year.
General Motors Wednesday
pushed the layoff list up by
28,000 workers when it confirmed its indefinite layoffs
now stand at 121,000 workers
instead of the 93,000 it had
predicted for the end of
January . . It said layoffs at
parts plants added the extra
28,000 worke•s.
Those figures could climb
Whel) GM, Ford and Chrysler
announce their production
plans for next week. Even with
$200 to $600 cash rebates that
pushed end-of-January sales
up 45 per cent over the midmOnth figures, automakers are
planning to build fewer cars
this month.

,@.'M~=i1~= ~=~i:~:~;~ =~i~!i:!:i: :;:;t;~;!r.~!:i:~~~i=!i!~~Wl~M!tl:~~li!=i!M~ilJlt:.~W

the Baltimore Colts the past
two seasons.

race.

Reader bruises too easily ·
;!

Dean said , " however, one
could say it was the one last
incredible grab at drawing

Sefcik , 35, a native
Clevelander, has coached with

Fever yet to peak in auto _industry

DR. LAMB

Lawreoce E. La mb, M.D.

M.

-~ - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, U.,'l'hursday. Feb. 6, 1975

2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Feb. 6,1971

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power into the executive

NEW COACH
cLEVELAND (UP!) - The
Cleveland Browns announced
Thursday the appointment of
George Sefcik as the new of·
iensive backfield coach of the

branch ."

Browns.

Dean·· cites penal system inequalities
'

By NANCY KERCHEVAL

own fate," he said. "I realized
ClEVELAND (UP!) - John that I couldn't tell my inDean III, convicted Watergate · volvement in the Watergate
conspirator , said his four- affair without implicating
month prison sentence showed everybody ."
him the gross lnequalltles that
He said no one believed he
are present in the penal would tell very much, especialsystem.
ly after President Richard
"You read about It and you ' Nixon announced there would
hear about," Dean said at be no Immunity for any White
Cleveland State University House officials.
Wednesday, "but it's the in"In their effort to stop me,
: credible, lm)lervaslve injustic they even put out false stories
in the penal system."
about me ," he said.
Dean said he learned things
Dean said the Watergate
about the prison system that scandal
prevented
the
would never be taught in the executive branch from a mass
. classroom of a law school, reorganization which had been
· adding, "'There are incredible planned after the 1972 election.
1momalles in the sentencing He said the wide margin by
·system," he said.
which Nixon was reelected
: Dean said the government, would have been used as an
·.before he was convicted, put expression of the wishes of the
fourth an all-out effort to people.
,prevent him from testifying
"The President had been
·. about the Watergate affair .
reelected by a heavy margin of
"It's true, at first I was votes which would have been
concerned about my own Loken as a mandate.
:(future), but then the stakes
"The reorganization would
became much higher than my not have been called a die-

by Cbet Tannehill
How do you feel about a ration system based on allocations
related to need for the scarce necessltie·s of gasoline, fuel oil and
naturalg,., compared to a free-for-all system based on ability to
pay with prices artificially jacked up ?
The latter, baslcally,ls the system the Administration thinks
bestfor Americans. Painful to all, yes, admits our President, but
necessary. If you agree with him you should communicate your
agreement to Rep. Clarence Miller and Senators Glenn and Taft.
If you don'tagree, you also should get the word of same to the
above gentlemen. They do want to know.
11 Is my feeling that Rep. Miller, a conservative Republican,
generally represents the majority opinion of his, this Tenth
Congr(!SS!onal Di:. :riel. When the conservative line goes against
what he feels Is the best for his district - in terms of human need
- he is not afraid to go maverick.
Perhaps an excellent example of this was observed when the
House voted Tuesday to delay President Ford's' proposed increase in the amount the poor must pay for food stamps. Only 38
hard liners stuck with the Administration on that one. Rep.
Mlller and 373other Republicans and Democrats voted to delay.
The food stamp system comes in for extraordinary criticism.
Itseemsthatnearly everyone has ob6ei-ved a fellow drive up in a
Cadillac to buy food with food stamps. When you question such
claims cloesly, however, usually it was someone else saw the
Cadillac. Pressed, the Cadillac observer who did not actually
observe defeats all argument with, ''Oh, well, you know It's going
(II,"

Certainly It is; 10 of every IOObables are born with a genetic
physical or mental defect, yet we do not kill all babies because of

II.

.

Rep. Miller, though he hasn't explained his vote yet, apparenUy figured there simply are so many elderly, poor people in
hla dtstrlctanincrease In the cost of food stamps -In view of the
brutal increases In heat and energy fuels - would be ·to act
inhwnanely ..
By the way, has It occurred to you there Is an entirely new
clasa of "Poor" arising if not already arrived. Immediate
poorness bas been created where electric and natural gas bills
have soared upward.
Untll the new poor can rearrange their priorities away from
the new color TV, the gas guzzling 1975 model Image-maintaining
car, the annual sununer vacation driving four to six thousand
mUes, or met mignon nightly, the pinch will be felt, and complaints heard.
· When President Ford asks for' Americans to support hla plan
for evetyhody to bite the bullet, one thing disturbs me. Some
people have to bite a lot deeper than others through no fault of
their own.
Rationing of gaS&lt;Jline (on allocation of need) would not mean
•that every American would get just nine gallons a week as Mr.
Ford repeatedly said on national TV and in the press. Thai was a
lie, plain and simple, and It had to be calculated to prnduce fear
so as to sway opinion unreasonably. I'm surprised no one with
access to the nation's media called him on it.
The Greeks had a name for It, indeed an entire school. They
call~ It rhetoric, in contrast to Plsto and.Socrates who sought to
discover real meanings behind this facade of appearances we
deal with dally.
It's a battle - rhetoric vs reality - siill at full heat roughly
2400 years later. We haven't learned a thing.

t.atorship because that would
call for the elimination of
Congress and the courts ."

By EDWARD S. LECIITZIN
UP! Auto Writer
DETROIT (UP!) - Openended layoffs in the crippled
U.S . auto Industry have
climbed above 206,000 --&lt;Jne of
every three blue collar workers
-and no one is sure the top has
been reached.
"'The problem is that we ·
can't seem to get a handle on
where this is all settlin~ out,"

;.~~~~y~~ DR. LAMB - I bruise

miisUy in my legs. My
seem to be close to my
yet my sltin is very tough
)nd it doesn't break through.
ily blood clots normally . One
e my physician gave me
taqlin Cinheavy doses, but it
, . nothing for that problem, so
J stopped it.
~ . Most of the leg bruises clear
'liP within a week's time .
'tlleeper ones take longer. r
. :puetlnes wonder if something
~lse Is wrong. Are the vein
•lls thick enough? Can this
ted blood . be dangerous?
It cause a stroke or other
.e,ults?
C: DEAR READER - · The
1fden variety of Sll)all bruises
~e caused by injury to the
IIX!•llest blood vessels. 'The
~r veins are very thin·
. ,wailed and the larger ones
. .ve thiclter l!l'alls that don 't .
· fbptilre so easily.
~ 1be Injured
vessels ·
~~~ a small amount o( blood
Into the tissues and 'this is
brulae. 1be size and length
lime It stays Is aHected by
mucb lilood leakS out. ·
· ~Sollie people . Wtth frequent
small · bruises · do , have
·~tly thin-walled, ·easily
1

t;

E

sm.u

'(r '·

William
V.
Luneburg,
president of American Motors,
said Wednesday. "Trying to
outguess what's going on in this
market today is lmposalble.
"You.'re not smart, you're
just lucky if you guess right,"
said the chief executive of the
smallest of the major auto
companies.
AMC h8S just 450 hourly

Berry's World

.

TOP

®

·

d . h t .L . . •' F . .d '

·:·:····

The Marauders once again

$1

win of the season Friday night

loop play, Meigs is staggering

when the I.ogan Chiertain s
co me to Larry Morri son

82.S2.

under '' 1-10 mark . Th c
Maraudet·s need a viCtory to
get them out or a tie with
Wellston fo r last place .
Meigs is capable of beating
Logan . 1£ they put it all
toge the r the Chiefta ins better

Both tea ms are coniin g off
losses. Logan wa~ beaten 61 -55
by Gallipolis which is tied for
third in the SEGAL. Meigs
gave Ironton a rough time
before dropping- a 67·59

had wa tch out. The Mara uders
were in much the same position
when Logan cam e to Rock
Springs la st year . Anyone
attending thut game witne ssed
one of !he frw tinw&lt;.: MPi p&lt;: h:1d

By Denny
Fobes

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:

~:~.·.t:~:',__:f~.[ '

:

..
·:·:...-:

Bo Schembechler , coach of "that team up north " as Woody
Hayes refers to it, will be the main speaker Thursday, April 24, at
the 14th annual Green and White Club Recognition Banquet.
The annual affair will be held at the Ohio University Convocation Center beginning at 6:30p.m., with the list of honorees
and ticket information to be announced later .
Schembechler has had an outst.anding record during his
tenure at Michigan, including a 30-2-1 record the past three
years, although failing to participate in the Rose Bowl during
that time.

+++

Antoher Athens event coming up is the 6th annua l AthensMarathon, scheduled for Sunday, March 2.
The start and finish of the race will again be at Peden
Stadium on the OU campus, although a change in the course will
be made because of road construction. The exact layout of the 26mile, 385 yard course will be announced in the near future .
The meet is sponsored by the Hocking Track Club of Athens,
and entry blanks and additional information may be obtained
from Ellsworth J. Holden, Jr., 26 Northwood Dr., Athens. Entry
fee for the marathon is $2 with an additional charge of $1 for
runners not holding an AAU null)ber.
Individual awards will be presented to each of the first 10
finishers, with an additional award to the first finisher 40-years
old or over.
A team champion will also be detennined, restricted to
certified clubs only. No more than five runners can be designated
as representing any individual club.
First aid st.ations will be provided along the route to assist
the runners and mileage and times will be provided through
markers and at official checking stations during the course of the

+ + .+

·A winter road race will be held this Saturday at Rio Grande
College, with 5 mile, 3mile and 1 mile runs scheduled, beginning
at I pm.
The race , under the direction of Rod O'Donnell, Rio Grande
track coach, will include awards for the first, second and third
place fioishers in the 3 and 5 mile races, and certificates to all
finishers in the I mile race which is billed as a fitness run.
Shower facilities and refreshments will be available
following the races and anyone interested in taking part should
meet at Lyne Center on the Rio Grande campus by noon Saturday for registration.
The courses will consist mainly of hilly, paved roads and a $1
entry fee will be charged for the 3 and 5 mile runs and contributions will be accepted for the I mile fitness race.
Anyone desiring additional information should contact
O'Donnell at Box 836, Rio Grande, or by telephone at 245-5353,
ext. 67 or 68.
Another raf e is scheduled for March 8, with 10, 5 and I mile
races slated .

"Excuse me, Miss! Are seamed stockings
REALLY making a comeback?"

Whalen disagrees
.with energy plan
WASHINGTON (UP!) President Ford's energy program will have "little effect"
on Industrial and individual ·
consumption of oil, Rep.
Charles W. Whalen, R.Ohlo,
said Wednesday in a House
Door speech.
Ford's program will exact "a
very high economic and social
cost," said Whalen, a former
University
of
Dayton
economics professor.
Whale!\ reiterated his support for legislation to suspend
for 90 , days the President's
authority to Impose added
Import duties . The energy
pollcy will reduce further the
consumer's ability to buy,
leading to curtalled production
and Increased unemployment,
said Whalen.
The progr~m will penalize
low..,nd middle-income Americans, Whalen said.
"If the Issue involved the
utilization· of luxury items chocolate eclairs or vacation
trips to Florida -the principle
might be defensible," Whalen

Gymnasiillll ror the second
meeting of both teams. The
ChieftainS had an easy evening
in the firs t encotmter at J...Qgan,

decision to ttl(' scrund plal'e
Tigers.

t•vclytlun g wurklll!-( for thC' m.
A. ~.:u mbin atiu n of ho t

Logan owns a 5-6 record in shooli ng uy lhe lcam and
tremendous s upport trUm ttw
crowd brought Mcig::; a victory.
It ct~ n be don ~ ag&lt;-Jin this ye;1r ,
although sm: h a repeat per·
formaiH.:e depends ~ at le&lt;.~st
par tly - on hometown fan s
coming to the game to show thl'
tea m how murh they wtm t tt
vi c tory .
Meigs ts led by sophom ore
Greg Browning who coach
Hoger Bntuer feels has bee n
impressive :;i uce' being c.alled
up
from
the r ese r ves .

W. P. Snowden
dies in Dayton

RUTLAND - William P.
Snowden, 82 , formerly of
Rutland, died F•iday, Jan. 31,
at a Dayton nursing home
following a two-year illness.
Funeral services were
conducted at 1:30p.m. Monday
at the Morton Funeral Home in
Vandalia. Burial was in
Memorial Park Garden between Dayton and Vandalia.
While residing in Ruiland,
Mr. Snowden was employed in
local mines and later worked
for the State Highway
Department. He served as
custodian at the Rutland High
School several years. After
moving to Dayton, he was head
custodian at the Dayton City
Schools until his retirement.
He was· a member of the
Rutland Church of Christ.
He is survived by his widow,
Mrs . Ada Snowden; four
daughters, Mrs. Francis
Higginbotham of Arizona, Mrs.
Jessie Gidley· of Akron, Mrs .
Kathleen Smith of San Leondro, cal., and Mrs. Lucille
. Meyers of Vandalia; three
sons, George of Wadsworth,
and Floyd and Jim of Dayton;
two siste.rs, Mrs. Ethel McDole, Bradner, Ohio, and Mrs.
Mildred Sheeler, . Flagler
Beach, Fla., and a brother,
Roy Snowden, of Rutland.
Mr. Snowden was preceded
in death by a son, Frank; a
sister, Mrs. Opal Powell,
Cheshire, and three brothers,
Clarence, Jerry City ; Earl, of
Akron, and Harry, of Rutland .
Spending the weekend in
Vandalia with the family were
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Snowden and
Mr. and Mrs. Bruce May .

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Kyger Creek's offense which
had been averaging 47 .5 poinls
in 13 previous games exploded
for an tu1believable 100 poinls
Wednesday afternoon as the
Bobcats set a school record
enroute to a 100-63 romp over
Hannan , W. Va.

Never in the history of Kyger
Creek High School had a cage
team hit the century mark.
Eigh t years ago, Coach John
Wickline's SVAC champs
scored in the 90's but never
reached the magic 100 number.
Coach Keith Carter's Bobcats hit a season high of 55 pet.
from the floor sinking 43 of 78
attempls . The Bobcats also
converted 14 of 24 free throw
attempts.
Leading the offensive display
were seniors Terry Lucas and
Dave Wise with 23 poin\S eactr.·
Bill Metzner, junior forward,
had 22 points and senior center
Joe Stidham canned 17 points.
Kyger Creek jumped into a 2:&gt;12 lead at the end of the first
period. Leading the way were
Wise and Lucas with eight
points and Doug Co ttrell,
senior forward, had seven

points.
The Bobcats pushed their
lead to 50-28 at the half. During
the second stanza, Lucas had
10 poinls, Stidham dumped in
seven and Metzner and Wise
had four points each. Darrell

CONSOLE COLOR TV
REDUCED~: 580.00

ASMART TIME TO

Black led Hannan's first half
Ralp h Bay lor ted lh e
sc orin g with nine points . Boukitlens w1 th 14 points.
Wayne Richardson had eighl Jen·y Edmonds hart 12 in a
poinls and Greg Hill chipped in losing cause. Kyger Creek, 2·
with seven points .
12, will hos l North Gallia
The Bobcat of!ense cooled off Friday night.
during the third period as Hannan
12 16 19 14- u:1
Hannan outscored the ''Ca ts' ' Kyg erCk.
25 25 18 32-- 100
19-18. Richardson and Keith
Plants paced the visitors
during the third can to.
Kyger Creek's offense ex·
ploded in the fourth quarter
with 32 poinls to hit the century
CINCINATI (UP! ) - The
mark . The rally was led by
Cincinnati
Reds have signed
Metzner and Wise, with 12 and
three
more
players,
all of them
11 points respectively.
With 20 seconds left in the candidates for the open third
game and KC leading 99-63, base position. They are Darrel
Wise dribbled down the floor Chaney, John Vukovich and
for another basket. Hannan Ray Knight.
Chaney is a veteran woo hit
Coac h Bo Napora argued that
.200
in 117 games for the Reds
Wise cliarged one of his players
in
1974.
Vukovich was obtained
-but the orficials disagreed.
Napora was assessed with this winter from Milwaukee in
three technicals and ejected a trade for pitcher Pat Osburn,
and Knight is a rookie up from
from the game.
Wise stepped to the foul line the Reds' Indianapolis farm
and canned the first foul shot team.
Pete Rose, meanwhile, is
giving KC ils 100 poinls and the
considering
filing for arbitrapartisan crowd roared.
Richardson finished as high tion in his contract negotiations
point pl."oducer for Hannan with with the team - talks he says
21 poinls. Darrell Black had 15 have gotten "nowhere."
The Reds reportedly want
and Hill 10.
Hannan hit 22 of 6o at temp is Rose to t.ake about an 18 per
for 34 pet. and 19 of 35 at the cent,pay cut from tbe $160,000
that last seaS&lt;Jn made Rose the
foul line. ·
club's
highest paid player ever.
Kyger Creek look the reserve
"The ball club has a definite
game. 44-30.

...

·I

'
College Basketball Re$ults
East

Ade lph i 63 Brooklyn 58

Assum ptn 84 Ntheasfrn 77
Bridgpt 80 St . Fran NY 72

--·.

WA
lSI
DE
FURNITURE
. STREET

'
'

' .• I

fl oor.

action FrldaynJght.

the game out of reach at 69-50 OD board work with 8 rebounds
each.
with 7:40 remaining.
Rio hit 38 of 82 field goal
The largest Rio lead of the
attempts
for 46 pet., while OD
night came at the 2:26 mark as
the Redmen opened an 81-58 canned just 28 in 78 tries for 36
margin on a 17 fooler by Gil pet. The Redmen hit 11 of 16
charity chances to just 10 of 18
Price .
The game, which saw OD for the visitors and held a
slapped with 4 technical fouls, commandin g 43-34 rebotulding
was called with 29 seconds left edge.
The Redmen now prepare for
when a free-for-all broke out in
the bleachers after a group of the top game of the season ·
Ohio Dominican fans crossed Saturday when league-leading
to the other side of the gym to Malone 16-0) invades Lyne
join the Rio Grande cheering Center.
In Wednesday's preliminary ,
section.
the
Rio junior varsity, behind a
The Redmen were paced by
of Dusty Moran free
pair
another strong effort by the
front line- duo of Dan Bollinger throws with 6 seconds left ,
and Stewart. Bollinger con- edged the Ohio Dominican
nected for 21 points and 7 reserves 79-77,
Ted Chaffin and Ch uck King
rebounds while Stewart added
led
the Rio att.ack with 19 and
17 points and 8 caroms.
18
points
respectively, while
Jim Nne and Andy DavenArtie
DeStephens
added 12 and
port tossed in 12 points each,
while Nne led all rebounders Moran and John Lusher tossed
in II each .
with 12.
Kim Tumblison and Mark · Russ Witherspoon led OD
Lum led the Panthers with 13 with 34 poinls.

.•

I

. I

I

gunnlng for tbelr second W:tn
of the season o'ver tbe

:s2

will be out for revenge for a 6045 loss at Logan.
AlthoUgh their· overall record
is 8-6, the Meigs reserves have
been in every g&amp;me until the
end with the excePtion of their
earlier I,J)gan defeat. Coach
Leman feels his team always

winter.

:::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;::::~:::(.~»':"«:::::::::::-;;:::x:::;:~

DOLL RESIGNS
MIAMI (UP!) - Don Doll
••signed Wednesday as defen•ive coordinator of the BaJ.
timore Colts to accepr'a job as
defensive assistant 'to Head
Coach Don Shilla of the Miami
Dolphins.
Shula said the 48-year-old
Doll will coach the Dolphins'
linebackers and pass defense.
Doll ~.eplaces Vince Coslello,
who resigned recently to
become defensive coordinator
of the Kansas City chiefs.

1onrth with identical 6-5league

'

Hannan (63 ) - Ri chardson 6·
9· 21: Villa rs 0.0-0; Bla c k 6·3· 15;
Hill 3-4 10 ; Plants 3·0·6 ,
Presto n 1.Q./ ; Chap man 3· 1·7
an d Blake 0·2·2. Totals 22-19-63.
Kyger Creek ( lOO i - Cottrell
5 1 11; Metzner 7·8 22 , Wi se JJ .
123 ; Sl idhilm8 11 7; Lucas 10·
3·13 ; Sm 1lh 0·12 : Ke rn 1-0·1
and Baylor 1·0·2. Totals 43 -14 100.

slates. A Mara uder victory

combined with a toss by the
GAHS reserves to Waverly
could put Meigs in a tie for

third with the Blue Imps.
The reserve game begins a t

6:30.

We Feature and Recommend

and positive attitude that I've
got to take a cut," complained
Rose.
Rose planned to confer with
his attorney, Reu~en Katz, to
discuss the possibility of arbitration, in which the club and
player defend what they think
is a fair salary. The arbitrator
then picks one, not trying for a
compromise amount. Deadline
for filing for arbitration is next
Monday.
Rose, the National League's
Most Valuable Player in 1973
when he won the batting title·
with a .338 average, slipped to•
.284 last season, the first lime
in 10 years he hit under .300.

MYERS

Also Wednesday, the Reds
announced that workhorse
starting pitcher Jack Billingham has signed his 1975 contract. Terms were not
disclosed.
The signing was a bit of a
surprise because Billingham
reportedly was unhappy over
earlier money offers and was
believed to be seeking advice
on arbitration procedures.
Billingham was on the verge
of becoming a 20-game winner
in both 1973 and 1974. He posted
a 19-10 mark in 1973 and was 19!llast year.

Shoitow WoN wilt.
Conventional Tank

Shallow Well-204 .00 up
Deep Well-224.00 up

We sell and recommend Myers Electo pumps,
for service beyond the water· mains. There's •
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Ebersbach Hardware
Everything In Hardwan
MAIN ST•.

POMEROY

- "ete' 6

\O ~,\48C"8\\

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~"ti)Bf

otl

••
\.;1
C ~ at\d 'I~ f(\ot\8'1
~\9

~~cAn_

'

heritage house
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

.

'

'

.

'

'I

I .

be

prov id e additional sco1·ing .and · VlkJngs, having taken 8 SS.SI
rebounding help.
decision at Willow Wood. The
Preceding the va rsHy match
Eagles on the other h d
jack E lgin•s Pagooses go
will b~ avenging 8
agai nst Ron Logan's r eserve
double overtjme loss to the
Mara uders. The Meigs quintet
HJghlanders earlier this

with the exclusive
Roma lining by

•I '

·

The Tornados will

scoring or Mitch Wright'. Don
Yo un g and ,Jim Kemper

Olt.1er offensive leaders are
~oph om ore Sleve Ha ndolph.
the l e~Hicr in assis ts; junim·
Mit'k DHvcnpurt , a li2 pd . free
throw shooter. and 6·6 jumor
Mitch Meadow s whu leads the
team in offensive rebounds .
On dden sr, se nio r Dnn
Dobson h&lt;ls 'puliNI do wn the
most missed shots. Sophomore
Chip Brauer anti Davenpor t
have
been the
busiest
Milrauders recovering loose

..

Southwestern in SVAC cage

Logan's a ttack is led by the

Reds sign three

STEVE ,SNOWDEN
st:,

ARR
-,

here

however, and came out gun·

ning in the second period,
t.aking back the lead for good at
39-37 as Stewart and·Davenport
hit layups.
Ohio Dominican managed to
st.ay within 4 points at 49-45
with 11:58 to go before the
Redmen outscored !he visitors
20-5 in the next 4 minutes to put

Rio-Dominican box...

=,.,..,~oo";:\.~:;~,~~BUY YOUR COLOR 'FV

I•

Dominican

Rio regrouped at the half,

Brockpt St . 94 Oswego 71
Cent . Conn . 82 New Hv n 66
Cheney 90 Kutztown 56
Colby 81 Bowdo in 73
Conn . 106 Boston U . 85
Del. St . 10-4 Lncln U. 90
Edinboro 74 Mrcyhrsl 66
Fairfield '11 lona 70, ot
OHIO DOMINICAN (66)
Frn kl in &amp; Mrsh I 7 4 Hv r frd 61
FG-A FT-A RB PF TP
PLAYER
Geo lown 102 Dckn sn , Pa . 60
3
1·9 1·1
8
I
Gary Brewer
Glssbora 68 Kean 56
4 ~ 15
3· 3
11
0
0
Don Gardner
Hofstra 70 C.W . Po st 54
6-11 1-2 B 4 13
Mark Lum
Hunter Bl Pace 67.
6-17 1-2
I 13
5
King's NY 78 w. Conn . St . 76
Ken Tumb liso n
L aSalle 80 Drexel 63
4
2-3
0-0
0
3
Kim Rauch
Le moyne 83 Buffalo 77
4-1
2-4
4
10
3
Chris Essman
LIU 114 CCNY88
I ~6
0-0
1
I
2
Don Gropp
Lack Haven 65 Cal if . .Pa . 60
2
1-2
0-1
1
0
Rick Oiedalis
L ycom i ng 72 Eliztown 56
0-2
0-1
2
0
0
John Hopkins
Mans l ld St . 85 Blmsbrg 70
3-6
0· 0
5
0
6
Sean O'Drlscoll
Marshll 54 FDU ·Rihfrd 44
1
0-0
1-2
0
0
Rick Boone
Mass. 80 Boston Co l i 71
0-0
1~2
Mercy 77 vassar 69
0
0
1
Clylon Chenault
M il lrsvl 91 E . Stroudsbg 77
13 66
28-78 10-lS 34
TOTALS
Montclr St . 73 Trnln St. SB
RIO GRANDE (87)
75 Muhlnbg 68
FG-A FT·A RB PF TP Moravian
PLAYER
Navy 82 Johns Hopkins 53
4-10 4-8
3
12
12
Jim Noe
New Hamp . 81 Me .. orono 77
4·8
0-0
2
2
8
Bob Ca ldwell
N .Y . Tech 89 FDU ·Mdsn 81
3
3
3-S
0-0
6
Mac Barbee
Ph il a. Text 97 Albr ight 53
3 21
10-2 3 1-1
7
P itf . Jhnstwn 88 Geneva 84
Dan Bollinger
RIU 89 Manhattan BJ
4
17
B
7-12 3· 3
Jim Stewart
Scran ton 89 Del . Val 50
J.s
1-2
2
7
2
Gil Pr ice
Seton Hall 99 Villnva 91
5-11
2-2
12
5
3
Andy Davenport
Shippnsbg 73 W. Chester 68
I
0
0-3
0-0
2
Gary Swinehart
St . Vincent 81 Pfrostbg 78
1-3
0-0
0
2
2
Brownie Wilson
Stevn s Tch 4.4 Kings Pt. 40
2
I
0
1·2 0· 0
George Vickroy
St . Ptr's 81 Kin'gs Pa . 6~
22 87 .
38-82 11-16 43
TOTALS
.
Upsala 82 Wagner 59
Vermont 95 St . Michae l 's 82
Haflllme: OD 37 Rio ~5
VMI 51 Br idgwtr St. 37 .
W illiams 68 M iddlebry 53
Wilkes 60 Susquehnna 59
Sou ttl
Ala .. HntSV I 83 St . Brnrd 82
Asheville 63 Augusta 61
Chatt 113 Jcksnvl St . 93
Duke 75 Wake Forest 68
Fla . A&amp;M 85 Fla . Tech 82
. Guiford 112 Catawba 91
. 'High Pt . 83 All . Chris 78
Mercer 92 Georgia st . 80
· Montevallo 98 Troy St . 83
Nrflk St. 118 Sl. Aug . 81
Rollins 52 St . Leo '51
Shaw 97 Ky . Wesleyan 92
Sthwstrn 64 Sewanee 63
So. C·ar . 64 Pi tts 62
So . Conn . St. 122 Baruch 62
Springhill 74 Huntng_dn 63
VP' 87 OePal,ll 14
Walsh 74 Malone 71. ot
Midwest
Alliance 75 Pa . St .· Bhrnd 73
Ball St .' 83 Kent St. 80
Capital 70 0 . Wesleyan 52
Cerd . Mich . 95 No . I ll . 67
Chi ·Ci rcle 73' Ill. Tech ·71
· Cleveland St . 68 Akron 66
Defiance 84 BtufiiOn 71
Here's my new State Farm office, where I can serve
Gannon 78 Steubnvt 59
you with the best value in car, ho'lne, life and health
Hiram 83 TPie l SA
Ill . Weste.yan 81 Mllkn 75
in5urance. I invite you to call or drop in any t.ime.
Kansas St. 91 M issouri 8A
Kansas· 72 Nebraska 44
LewiS: 82 Lo'r as 78 :
1258.Powooi
Midili~Port, Ph. 99'1·1 1&gt;S
Marielfa 79 Mt . Union 76
Mich . St. 76 Notre Dame 73
STAll f...
Miam i 60 E . Michigan 51
Okl.a homa '111 Iowa St . 89
. tt..lllra:
.St . Cloud St . 68 Bemidji 67
.
So . III. ~Crbndle 9.4 Sttsn 60
· Tri n ity 103 Roosevelt 69
Wheaton 71 No . ce,rlt '11
Wittel'l~rg 79 K enyOn 70
Wr ig ht SL 82 Urban.a 76

30

THIRO &amp;

35 intenriission margin :

With Rio up 35-32 and playing
for a last shot with just 15
Wednesday night.
seconds remaining in the
The triumph was Rio's tenth opening period, Panther Don
against 8 losses overall and Gardner stole the ball and hit a
vaulted the Redmen into ·sole layup to pull Dominican to
possession of second place in within 1 at 3:&gt;-34 with 9 seconds
the MOC with a :&gt;-2 record. on left. Gary Brewer then pilfered
dropped to third place with a 4· · R~o's · inbounds pass and
scored, following with a
2 mark.
The Redmen, taking a 2-0 charity toss to complete the 3lead early on a pair of Jim point play .
over Ohio

•
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Stewart free throws, held the
upper hand the entire way
except late in the first half
when Dominican bolted to a 37·

b 11
as and bad passes.

Bruwlllll).: i::; lhc lead ing Mcif:!,S
shooter, hilting 47 pe t. from the

,.. ,

······::!s~~~:~~::

erves are presently tied for

1'

LYNE CENTER - The Rio
Grande Redmen, winning their
eighth game in their last 9
starts, gave head coach Art
Lanham a belated birthday
present with an 87-66 victory

,.,.,.,..,...,......

Bobcats clobber Hannan ::·:~::,: ~d~:::k~::~;:

Redmen dump Dominican

said. ·11However, we are cona
cerned with restricting the ust
of a necessity."

Many complex text.s are
broken, small blood vessels.
needed
to determine the nature
The tiny blood vessels can also
be affected by disease. Scurvy, of the problem. Somellmes it is
from lack of vitamin C, can an inherited defect, as seen in
cause these small blood vessels the royal families of Europe. In
to break easily and then there other instances a defect can be
is bleeding from the gingiva caused by soine other disease ..
(gums ) around the teeth and Here a common example is
bleeding tendencies in the liver disease. The liver is
body. It is true that some cases important in forming subof multiple broken small veins stances needed to induce
are caused by· lack of vitamin normal dotting. A jaundiced
C. In these instances large person commonly has a
doses of vitsmin C are helpful. bleeding tendency.
Those common everyday
If the perS&lt;Jn is already getting
adequate amounts of vitsmin small bruises are not
C,takingll)orewon'thelpsolve dangerous. Blood in the tissues
Tfte Daily Sentinel
the nillltiple bruises problem. won't escape and cause
DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
Besides the defects or problems.However,if a person
MEIGS·MASON AREA
weakness in the small blood has a bleeding tendency then
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL
vessels that can occur, things hemorrhage in almost any
ROBE~~·~~:FLICH
.
City Edllor
.
can go wrong with the blood place can occur . and cause
·
·
c1
ding
·
th
·
'Published
dallv
e-xce-pt
clotting mechanism, causing compUCations, 10 U
10 e
Saturdo~ by The Ohio Vall•y .
Publls.hmg Company , 111
brain.
easy bruising.
.
Court St . , Pomeroy . o·hiq
Those aotlclotthlng
•5769. Buslnen Olfice Phone
NormaHr blood clotting
mll$6. Edilorial Phone 992.
dep~nds upon vitamin K•. medicines, incorri!CUy. called
with
p Secont;f class postage paid at
ca!c!;Uffi, complex enzym~s (n. blood thinners, interfere
.
omeroy, Otlio. •
·
the
cmnpl9:
chemical
actions
· National advertis i ng
tlie blood, the tiny b1ood
representative Bott lnelli platelets, and the blood protein of clotting. Coumadin, used in . Gallagher
, 'Inc ., 12 East _.2nd
1
st., New York , Ntw York .
called fibrinogen. When the former President Nb::on 's case,
-"'-- heart · 1 O~llvered
Subscripllon
rates ,.
by carrltr where
clot!ing . mec~an_ism
~s Is Conunonly used w~·
75 cents per week ;
triggered, the .fibrinogen IS •ttaclts and similar P1'9blems. · available
By Motor R:oute where carrier
service. no I available, One
converted tO fibrin, which then !tis also used to ltil1 rats. When
they
eat
ennnah
it
causes
lmon1h
, S3.25. By mall In Oh io
Is tiny gelatlilous flbei'S that
-...,
an:d W . va .• One Year, S2'2.00 ;.
Sf• months, 111 .50; Three
fonil a matted material· for the . massive hemorrbaging, in the
months
.. S7 .00. Elsewherli
's body. !hate to thinlt what ' 126.
rat
00 year ; Six monltlS
clo\. Red blood cells are
·
future
historians
COuld
do
with
S1J.SO : lhree monlhs, 17.50)
trapped within the fibers.
Subscription price includes
that bit of information.'
Sundar Ti""'r-Senlfnel.

Byl\1el&lt;.:rt•mrans .

:~ will be looking for their second

:::::;:;

~ll~~ffi

PRICE!

'

~~%
·&amp;~

The race is scheduled to begin at noon.

I

I

if:~;

;:::~;

QUALITY
LOW

'lffiployes on indefinite layoff,
but Wednesday announced it
will tighten its belt by skipping
its semiannual dividend of 10
cents a share. The company
operated $5.6 million in the red
in tbe final three months of
1974, andjt.MC Chairman Roy
D. Chapi(l Jr. said l1e expected
no financial Improvement in
the first three months of the
year.
General Motors Wednesday
pushed the layoff list up by
28,000 workers when it confirmed its indefinite layoffs
now stand at 121,000 workers
instead of the 93,000 it had
predicted for the end of
January . . It said layoffs at
parts plants added the extra
28,000 worke•s.
Those figures could climb
Whel) GM, Ford and Chrysler
announce their production
plans for next week. Even with
$200 to $600 cash rebates that
pushed end-of-January sales
up 45 per cent over the midmOnth figures, automakers are
planning to build fewer cars
this month.

,@.'M~=i1~= ~=~i:~:~;~ =~i~!i:!:i: :;:;t;~;!r.~!:i:~~~i=!i!~~Wl~M!tl:~~li!=i!M~ilJlt:.~W

the Baltimore Colts the past
two seasons.

race.

Reader bruises too easily ·
;!

Dean said , " however, one
could say it was the one last
incredible grab at drawing

Sefcik , 35, a native
Clevelander, has coached with

Fever yet to peak in auto _industry

DR. LAMB

Lawreoce E. La mb, M.D.

M.

-~ - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, U.,'l'hursday. Feb. 6, 1975

2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Feb. 6,1971

.

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II

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•

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"

I'

5-'l'lle DaUv Sentlnei,MldcllePOrt-Plmlei'OY.0.. 11tursdav. Feb 6. 1!1'15

~:::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;~:::;:;:;:;:;:;:~;:::;:;~:;:;.;:;:;:;:;:~;:;:;:;o;:;:;:;:;.;:;:;:;.;-~x·:::::·:·:·:::·:·:::::·:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::l:::::::::::::·::::::::::::::::-.::::::::::::::::::::::%::::::::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::;:;:;:;:;;::;:::;:;:::;:;:;:;:;::::;:::::;

.
.
~ Coping: Americans and the rec~~sion

Miami edges Eastern Michigan
lly Ultiled Press International
The Miami Redskms boosted
their Mld-Amen can Conference record to 5-3 Wednesday mght behmd the game·
hi gh shooting of Rand y Ayers
w,tm got 14 points in defeatmg
Gastern M1ch1gan 60-57.
Chuck Goodyear tallied 13

Sport Parade
By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sporll Editor
NEW YORK (UP!) - Publicly, many people alteady are
conceding the New York Yankees wmners thiS year because
they've picked up Catfish Hunter and Bobby Bonds, ·and this may
or may not surprise you, but privatelY", so have a good many
major league managers.
Earl Weaver hasn't, and that shouldn't surpnse you at all
Never in hiS lifetime has the peppery, little Balttmore Onoles'
pilot followed the crowd blindly. If he thinks it's headed m the
wrong direction, he'llpeel off m a hurry and go his own way, and
that's,\he move he's making now
He believes the $3million the Yankees paid for Catfish Hunte•
isn't that much out of line, but he doesn't feel Hunter and Bonds
guarantee ·a firstillace 'finish for the New Yorkers
"They've gotten themselves two exceptional players but that
doesn't make ·em automatic wmners," says Weaver, completely
recovered from his auto accident of two months ago "It all
depends on what they do on the field Remember when they went
out and got both (Pat) Dobson and (Sam) McDowell two years
ago? They p1cked them up in mid ..eason and right away
everybody began talkmg about how they were gonna wm. But 11
didn 't tW'n out that way . They didn't wm the diviSIOn title. we
did."·
Earl Weaver grants the Yankees, who fimshed second to h•s
club by two games in the Amencan League East last year , f1gure
to he better this yea r
"I say 'figure' to he better because they st1ll have to doll on Uw
field," he says. "They should be better every fourth day thiS year
than they were last because that's the day Hunter will be out
there pitching for them . But we figW'e to be better every foW'lh
day, also, because I'm sure (Jim) Palmer will bounce back. He
was throwing very good at the end of the year So we're in the
same position as the Yankees. We'll be better eve ry fourth day
also.n .
Wait a mil)ute. What about Bonds'
"He 's an excellent· ball player," Weaver says. "But let's look
at that good year (Bobby) MW'cer had for the Yankees a few
seasons back. (He had 94 RBis , 25 homers and batted .331 m
1971). How much more can Bonds add than Murcer did that year,
and we still won. He probably can add a httle more, but not that
much more."
The Orioles haven 't been sleeping eith-er this winter.
The way things ••e going, their franchise could wind up being
moved to New Orleans before the swruner 1s out, but wherever
they are, they'll have a representative ball club with a pitching
staff built around Palmer, Mike Cuellar, Ross Grimsley and
Mike Torrez and more solid offense with Lee May and Ken
Singleton added through a pair of deals.

SEO cage stats.
OVERALL STA NDINGS !Asol Feb 51

TEAM

W

Wav er ly
Hannan Trace
Nor th Gall•a
Nel sonville York
FedN.al Hock 1ng
Ir onton
Ja ck son
Be lpre
Logan
Southwestern
Ga l li po l is
Southern
Alexander
Tnmble
Vm ton Cou n ty
Pomt Pleasant
Worren Local
Athens
Mil ler
Wahama
Eastern
Wellston
Symmes Val ley
Kyger Cr eek
M e1g s

Waverly
Iron t on
Gall1pol1s
Ja ckson
Logan
Athens
Me1gs
Wellston

l)

10
10
10

5 6

683 64 2
4761860 1

' 10 619 730
' 10 545 778

Waverly

9 2 450

Gal l ipoli s
Logan
Me1gs .
Jackson
Ironton
Wellston

7 4 428 414
6 5 471 417
6 5 417 361
5 6 442 457
3
410 ABO
0 11 34 1 590

Alhens

341

8 3 500 399

a

OVERALL SCORING
tAs ol Feb. l)
Name, T.
FG FT Pts Avg
Swa 1n , HT
B1se , FH
Canter , NY
Myers , SV
Tatterson. PT

176 42 394 28 1
129 83 34 1 22 7
11874 31 022 1
102 29 233 19 •I
11 5 45 275 18 3
73 43 18Q 17 2

McDonald, J
Camden. NG

105 26 236 16 9
83 36 202 16 8

Gil l iland , Wah
Hern , M

96 72 264 16 5

James. NG

55 Al 151 16 8

SEOAL SCORING
Name, T
FT FT Pts Avg
Wnght , Log
Peoples, We l l

75 41 191 17 4
80 26 186 16 9

N1day. G

67 48 182 16.6

McDonald, J
Young, L
Holland , Wav

82 16 180 16 4
63 41 170 15 5

Howard. I.
Dudu 1t , Wav
Pfeifer , Wav
Tracy , Wav

had 10 for Me1gs. B Becker
had e1ght.
Gallipolis led 12-6, 25-15 and
35·21 at the quartcrmarks
Box score:
MEIGS EIGHTH t33)
Becker, 3-2-8. And rew. 0-0-0:

4; Blake 1 4-2-10 , Carman, 1-0-2;

Rawlings. 2-0--4 . Gardner. 0-0-

.

THIS IS IT
Even 1f you weren 't looking
for a Bus•ness Opponun1ty,
but of course you are, or yoU
wouldn't be readmg th1s ad .
So, you must be excited over
this unusual proposal and
you may begm full or pa~·
t1me. Don' t you believe rt
would be worth your t1me to
take 11 couple of m•nutes and
f1nd out the details? We need
a Otstributor at once to service large industnal anp commercial accounts Distnbutor
will be sup_phed wnh segned

serv1ce Contracts~
These firms eagerly
awa ft this service. If thiS isn't

for you we won't waste each
others time finding out. We
are a large Texas concern
w1ih excellent references that
will ·,. withstand your most
vigorous investigatiOn. To

obtam additional information
writeMarkattng D1rector, giv-

4, Sickles, 1-0-2; C Brown 0- 1l , Ster r ett , 2 l 5, N Thomas. 20-4 , S Thomas , 0 0 0, Ba r r , 1 0

to 10920 Indian Trail, Butldtng
3()7, Dall... Te.as 7~
'
'

9
9

5

10
10

83 1
982 11 10
822
855
965 1039
826 ' 805
930 963
857
852

4

'2

858

2
3
2
2

13
12
13

'

'2

10
7

618
889
693
946
617

8

13

760
983
943

850

168
909
11 7 11 10 6
11 3 11 10 J
101 11 9 2

Dudud , Wa v
Chonko, A l h
Young . L

5·ck les Gal l
96 II 8 7
OFFENSIVELY
Team

Hannan Trace
Pl . Plea sant

Pts (G) Avg
Q61 ( 14) 68 6

N Ga lli a

755 ( II I 68 6
821 ( 121 68 4

Ironton
Fed Hock•ng

Q29 ( 14 )
697 ( 15 )

66 4
64 5

900 I l&lt;tl 64 J
946 115) 63 1

Waverly
Logan

QJQ ( 15) 62 6
13 76 ( 1tl ) 62 5

Alexander
Sout hwest ern

982 ( 16 )
856 ( 14)
546 (9)
965 ( 16)

W Local

930 I 15) 62 0

Wahama

Vtnton Co

Belpre

61 4
61.1
60 7
60 3

876 I 15) 58 4

Ga ll ipO l is
Jackson

814 ( 14)
796 ( 17)

AIhens
Eastern

852 ( 151 56 8
843 (l SI 56 2,

Me1gs
Tnmb le

768 ( 14)
822 ( 15)

58 1
56 9

54 9
54 8

Mi ller
Sout hern

858 ( 16 ) 53 6
784 11 5) 52.3

Wellston
Kyg er Cr eek

693 ( 14)
617 ( 13)

Team

49 5
47 5

DEFENSIVELY
Pis (G) Avg.

Waverly
Gall1po l• s
Nels York
Hannan Tra ce
Southern
Ja ckson
Fed Hock1ng

Belpre

77 1
73 3
745
756
814
767
840

Logan

( 15) 51 4
( 14 ) 52 4
( 14) 53 2
( 1&lt;~1 54 0
(15 ) ' 54 3
( 14) 54 8
{ 15) 56.0

843 1151 56.2

8ll {1 4) 57 .9

NGall1a

Ironton
Eastern
Warren Local
Vmton Co
Me•gs

708{1 2) 590

856
936
936
1039
909

.211 616

424
417

343

Percentage
FTM-A Pet.
139-203 .685
163 242
151 -238
133 220

.674
634
.605

127 213 .S96

98 167 .587
122 2 17 562
112 21:1 .528
Rebounds
No. G Avg .
440 11 40 0

381 11 34 6
375 11 34.1
372 1l 33 8

Waverly
Me1g s

357 11 32.5
345 11 31.4
Wellston
331 1l 30.1
Jackson
318 11 28 9
Personal Fouls
Team
No. G Avg .
Jackson
l 79 1l 16.3
Athens
186 11 16 .9
Logan
189 11 17 .2
Waverly
200 11 18 2
Ironton
201 11 18 3
Meigs
214 11 19 5
Wellston
217 11 19 7

had 12
Appleton to down the Lords 79- sixth in a row and second of the
In the Ohw Conference , 70 m another Ohio Conference season over the Akron
Umversity
Zips,
Sophomore Jeff Faloba
68-66 .
game.
pumped in 25 points and · The v1ctory left Wittenberg Cleveland is 9-7 while the Zips
grabbed H re!x&gt;unds to lead
11-7 overa ll and 7-3 m the are 11-7.
Marietta College to a 79-76 leHgue. Kenyon rell to 11-8 for
-Youngstown State fought
off a last-minute rally that saw
conrerence victory over Mount all games and 5-4 m the loop
Uruon
J1m Evans scored 13 points Ashland College score 10 points
Marietta. now 8-2 m the for Wittenberg, wh1ch held a for a 71-&amp;1 victory over the
conference and 15·2 overal1 , 34-19 edge at halftime, Don Eagles. Youngstown State is
wound up a fast.p•ced first half
Lynam tallied 12 and Tom now Hhl this season while
Willi H 46-40 margin The Dunn 10. Dave Meyer added 12 Ashland is 5-13.
- Forward Pete Accetta and
league-!6ading P•oneers pulled pomts to the Kenyon cause.
out to an 11-point margm with
Capital's V•c Wolfe notched a .center Jerry Foley tW'ned m
three minutes rematrung m the game-h1gh 18 pomts as the ca reer-high scoring perforsecond half and held on for the Crusaders doubled the score on mances for Xavier m leadmg
vic fory
Oh io Wesleyan at halftime and the Musketeers to a 70-&lt;36
7..etlie Stms' 22 pomts was then went on to a 70-52 Ohio trmmph over Wheeling (W.
high for Mount Umon, as the Conference wm at Delaware Va.) Colle]le. Accetta connected for 29 points and Foley
PUrple Raiders dropped to 5-4 Wednesday. night
m the conference and 12-7
Gene Cashn scored 10 pomts for 22 as Xavier upped 1ts
overa ll ttus season
for Capital, 6-4 m the league record to 8-9 Wheeling IS now
Art Clark scored 20 points and 14-5 for all games. The 16-7
and picked off 19 rebounds 1n Crusaders had the Bishops
Results of other Wednesday
helpwg the Pioneers to Victory. down by a 32-16 halftime count. night games included Ball
At Spnngfleld, R1ck Wh1te
Van Jackson led OWU, 2-7 State over Kerit State ~;
and Sk•p Freeman each tossed aga1nst c•rcu1t foes and 3-13 Gannon ( Pa.)
defeated
in H Wittenberg points as the overall, Wllh 10 points.
Stuebenville 78-59, Defiance
T1gers overcame a 34-point
dawned Bluffton 84-71, Hiram
In other games
performance by Kenyon 's Tim
- The Cleveland State swamped Thiel (Pa.) IIJ.54,
Uruvers1ty Vlkmgs won !herr Allegheny edged John Carroll

1108

58 4

Wellston
Free Throw

Logan
Gallipolis
Athens

1082

817 (1 4)

Field Goal Percentage

Name, T
Chonko, Alh .
Sickles. Gall.

FGM-A Pet.
57· 101 .564
57 · 104 548
537

Young , Logan

66 123

02 157
S3-102

522
520

Tracy . Wav .
F1tzpatrick , I
Free Throw

52 100
51 98

520
520

McDonald, Jack
Horn. Athens
Name, T
Niday. Gall.
Wrtghl, Logan

Percentag'e
FTM-A Pet.
48 SO 020
40-49 816

Holland, Wav .
30 39
Tracy, Waverly
34-JS
Young . Logan
40 4J
'Rebounds

Name, T
f1tz tri ck. I

769
756

COLUMBU~

r an ked

( UP I )

ldt h

111 l h1s

wee k 's

Un ti ed Press ln ter n a t to n al
Oh 10 H 1QI1 Schoo l Bo ar d of
Coac h es'

b a s. k r lb n l l

r,; t rngs.

Here's a ll t h e rar tngs, W1 l h
11r st p lo ce vo t es and w on losl
reco rd s 111 p ar en lh eses

Barb er t on ( 9 15 OJ
3 Ca n McK ( ,1 14 11
I Ke l ' g A ll (3 14 0}

268

5 Cm Hugh es ( 1 12 OJ
6 To t sc ot! ( 14 1 J
l (h e) N ewark (15 1)
7 ( t, el Day R ' vett ( 13 1)
9 Cm E ld e r ( 11 2)

167
144
128

2

S e co nd 1 o

Team

Pomt s

1 M 1dd l er own ( 19 14 OJ

328

16

15 Or e gon Clay (1) 19

Cleveland H e1gh ls 17 ,

Tole do

De vdb1SS

I

-i

20

CLASS AA

Team

Po1nts
1 Del St John' s (6 14 1J 266
2 We ll s vill e ( 10 til l
261

109
8 Up Sc Val ( 1 17 OJ
102
9 Pe 111 SVi ll e 12 16 OJ
87
10 Anna ( 15 1)
77
Second ID 11 Monroe.,n t le
46 , 11 Wmd h am 36. 13 Han nan Trace (2 ) 34; 14 Wynford
29

Zanesville

15

Rosecrans

( 11 26 16 Manon Local 24, 17
Chll ltcoth e F lage t 23 , lB
Seneca East 19 , 19 Orwell
Grand Valley 18 , 20 Richmond
Heights 17
Others With 10 or more
po1nts
Freder1cktown,
Covtngton ,
North Gal11a,
C l eve l an d Lutheran East,
Buckeye Centra l. Ar canum ,
McDonald and New Boston

3 C~r c lev111 e ( 5 15 OJ
222
I War R 1\i V1 ew (7 15 0 ) 203
5 Waverly (4 14 11
19 8

6 Ro ssford ( 2 15 1J
7 Col Mwk ( l 11 3)

161
146

B Sp Shawnee(1121 J

127

9 Bu cke ye So ( 10 2)

62

10 Br ooklyn ( I J 11
39
Secon d 10
11
Lo r a1n
Ca~hol1 c 37
12 0 1e J Granville
a nd Dayton St 1vers, 3J each ,
14
Wh eelersburg 2 3 , 15
War:r e11 Kennedy 18 16 L1 sbon
Be a ve r 16. 17 ( t•e l Cmc1n n a t 1
M c N1 c hotas , Fort Rye and
Fa1rv 1ew 14 each
20 Cm

C1 nll a t1 Gr eenh ill s
O th e rs w1th 10

or mo r e
po1nt s As htabu la Harbor and
F1re1and s
Team
Potnf s
1 Mans St Pet (13 15 21 24 1
2 Ca n W1n ch ( 6 15 1)
224
3 M 1nst er (4 16 OJ
201
J N or

St Paul ( l 141 )

137

Jackson at Ironton
Logan at M e1gs

TRIVALLEY

Alexander at N e lsonv t l le York
V1nton County at Belpre
Federal Hockmg at Warren
Local

SVAC

Eastern at Southwestern

North Gallla at Kyger Creek

"nil CIIAIQI 01'
Me'Qcluu DIUG 111c:1r

SATUROAY

PIICU! 992..s759

.

Portsmouth at Gallipolis

271 M. ..._., -..
"VIR
........._

Wellston at Oak Hill

Federal Hocking at M1ller
Fort Frye at Warren Local

TUESDAY(fob.l1)
SEOAL

SOLDIER OF THE MONTH - 1st Lt. William F. Hockenberry, left, commanding of!lcer 01
the 3664thl\!alntenance Co., (illS) presents the "Soldier of the Month" award for January to
SP-li Larry V. Parsons, Rt. 4, Pomeroy. Larry and his wife, Sonia, have two children, Larry, 8,
and Sue, 6. He is employed at the combined support mamtenance shop near Point Pleasant.

,.........

The

Me1gs at Ath ens
Ga ll 1pol •s at Ironton
Waverly at Ja ckson
Logan at Wellston

SVAC

Others
Barboursvil le at Pt Pleasant
Trimble at Berne Un1on
Wahama at Ripley

MEN'S BROWN JERSEY

ONE GROUP MEN'S LONG SLEEVE

SWEAT SHIRTS

WORK·
GLOVES
.

MENS&amp; BOYS
TVBE&amp;O'RLON

ONE RACK

Slim · Reg.-Husky

~

44

$

BOYS
PANTS
Values To $9.00

•&amp;&amp;''

S PLASTIC

RAIN BONNETS

12C

IES

PULL.ON PANTS
Values To $8.95

.....99

Florals &amp; Clear

ONE RACK

Ladies Screen

DIES&amp; GIRLS

COATS &amp; JACKETS

LADIES 'DRESSES

BLOUSES
sa:9s
22

lf2 PRICE
MIDDLEPORT· DEPARTMENT STORE

lf2 PRICE

$

&lt;

livestock auctions Wednesday,

Feb. 5, 197S.
Cattle: Compared to last
Wednesday slaughter steers .75·
2.00 higher, except Urbana
steady to 1 tower , slaughter
heifers .50 higher at Mt.
Vernon, 1-2 tower at Urbana.
slaughter cows 1-2 higher,
slaughter bulls 1.50 higher,
veaters 3 lower, Ieeder cattle
steady.
Slaughter steers· Choice and
prime 850-1200 lb yield grade 23 37 . 1038.~0. yield grade 3-4
36.00-37: Choice 34.00-36. good
JO.oi0-33.10, standard 24-31.
Choice
750·
Slaughter
1105
lb yield heifers:
grade 2-4
33.-37.25,
good 29-33.20.
Slaughter cows: Utility
and
commerclal800-16751b
15.-21.85.
cutter 800-1100 15.-19.70.
Slaughter bulls: Yield grade 1
1370-2190 lb 25,25-29.50.
Vealers : Choice 200-260 lb 48.·
cattle: Choice, steers

300-Ql lb 25.75-27.50, 780-87S lb

partly fatter\ed 25.-30, good

higher, U.S. 1-2 212-239lb 39.90'
&lt;10.85. u.s. 2-3 205·23~ lb 39.·
39.80, sows 1.50 higher, U.S. t-3
338-5551b 3&lt;4.90·39.
.
Feeder pigs u:s. 2-3 J0-50 lb
8.-23 per head.
· Sheep: Slaughter lambs steallOib-43.10--1&lt;1.

•

{

,.

JAMES SELECTED
COLUMBUS - State Rep.
Ronald James I D-92) has been
appointed to a new select
committee on retirement by
House Speaker Vernal Riffe .

Here

THE JEWELRY PEOPLE

Exqulsllely lapered, bahgle
In the front, cha1n In the
back- with heart br taasel.
Your choice ot yellow or

whlta and a varlely of pat·

terns! Value priced lrom

$5.951

Goessler's

ENDS TODAY
992-5302

•

MEIGS
THEATRE
Main St., Pomeroy
SHOW TIMES

1

oo

JEWELR'Y STORE
Court St., Pomeroy·

1 00

Sears

Automotive

SALE
Save 50%

Free Estimates- No Obligation

on 2nd

FOREMAN &amp; ABBOTT

Radial 36S
Tire
When you buy
1st tire at
regular price
plus F.E.T.
on each tire

BETIY'S 3RD
ANNIVERSARY

FRIDAY and
SATURDAY

LOSE UGLY FAT

2

Women's Shoes

'5

•Price• Include Federal taebe Ta•

SAVE '4.00 on 42-Month

Guaranteed Battery
· Was

'6"
'8"
-·------_,...:..·------------------------·

, Women's Shoes

'4

Ladies' Dress Boots

....

.--------------·---------------_.2

llll•••••••••••••llil•~••••-

Sh op

k'ens
t
PIC
a.
•

FOR

'5

Children's Shoes

...

-------------------------·---------..
ONE GROUP
BROKEN SIZES

Men's Dress Shoes

'10"

------------~------------------·
'

EAR.LY PRING
s·

Weyenberg

Men's Dress Shoes
.._._._.__..__ _.. __

OFF REG.
PRICE

,_...__...-.-,~-~--~u-•-•-~"-..--_.._..

Ladtes'
Children's
pers, Ladies' Dress
Special
Group
___._._._.._._ _..___.._..._._.._...,_,___,_.;__
and

FIX-UP·
MA TE~IALS
'
.

•3

_ _.. __

'

BETIY OHLINGER

102 E. MAIN

-

. .

Wilh1n !HI days or
l~rt:h!lllll if b.tt«y
Jlrtl\fea defect! 'I e .
After !:HI da~r. we will
rt!JllaetJ 1l w1th a new
battery ir defediv.,
charaint onl)' r9f the
J~llod of owrM!hhip,
Your mont.hb' charta
f&lt;A ownenhip wlllb.f
compulM hy dlvld-

llllll'h V(l!t1•11't mcanKIIlriUKht
throufll'lr. • the - lltlrl1l1oo ~ell

conneetor11 del1ver more 1n1 •

tial atartmll' power th•o an

·&lt;
l

"'••

"'I
•

'}

",,•

lh' theturrent ..mnr

otherwii'Kl identica l h11Uery
w1lh u)J·and -over «II con -

_,..,

1M1 uade-1n •t.
the tlme of return, hy
the numb.. of munU.
JWK"e

J

•

n( fi'UAtlllltiM',

Sears Hal A Credit Plan to Suit Mo.t Every Need
• Pri~es Are Catal&lt;e Price•
• Shipping, Installation Extra • $ale Ends M8r. 15

.._,~-~-r---r~---~-

POMEROY

.~
Auth~rized

'i
l
.,•

.992-2178

,,..

CA'fAWG SALES MERCHAN?'

j

----.2-20-E-.-M~A-IN----.~~--~~-----,-POM~~~~RO=Y~'~~ i

.,

''

..

6UARANTEE
Free repla&lt;:e1nent

• • • Satil/ac~~ Gu~rante~d or,Your M~'&gt;'. Ba.cle

SlipShoes.

Marguerite's.Shoes
-

$31.45

With trade-In

---"S3

Women's

dy, choice and prime shorn 92-

•

Ideas

POSITIVELY '

Blown Into Walls
and Attics
-Fire Retardant-

BUFFALO, W.VA. - Jean
F. Cobb, 52, Buffalo, a former
employe of Phillip Sporn Plant
at New Haven, died early today
In 1957, Cassius Clay defe~ted
in Charleston General Hospital E:rnie Terrell to retam the
Middleport, Ohio
after several months illness. heavyweight boxing crown. ,
Mr. Cobb had been tran•
sferred sometime ago to the
Amos Plant at Winfield. He
spent several years in
Gallipolis while employed at
the Gavin Plant.
The Alamanac
His widow, Mary Margaret
By United Press International , Cobb, was a nurse's aid at the
Today is ThW'sday, Feb. 6, old Holzer Hospital 10 years.
the 37th day of 1975 with 328 to
The body is at the Valley
follow .
Funeral Home in Whitesville,
The moon Is between 1ts last W. Va., where funeral
quarter and new phase.
arrangements will be anThe mormng star is.Mars.
nounced.
The evemng stars are MerCW'Y, Jupiter, Saturn and
Venus.
Those born on this date are
~3.00
Dress &amp; Sport
under the sign of Aquarius.
Start losing weight today or money
Pr.
Pair
Vat. lo $19
Actresses Zsa Zsa Gabor and back. MONADEX ill a tin't_ tablet
and ,easy to take. MONADEX will
Mamie Van Doren were born help
curb your des1re for 8XC8SI
Eat 1-- weigh ltM. Contains
on Feb. 6 - the former in 1923 food.
no dangerou1 drutt and will not
BeHer Dress &amp; Sport
and the latter m !933.
IT'IIke you nervouL No strenuous
Values
to $23.00
axarcistl. Change your life ... stan
On this day m history:
today , MDNADEX coot $3.00 fo•
'~
.
~
.In 1778, Massachusetts rati- 1 20 drf supply. Lerge economy
size
~
$5.00.
Alto
try
AQUA
TABS:
ONE
fied the U.S. Constitution.
they work Qtl!l_ly to help You lote
GROUP
1n 1943• Gen. Ow'tght D· wtltr·bloat. AQUATABS -a "water
pill" tim wortt• - $3.00. Botti
Eisenhower was named com- guarantMd
and sold _by:
-------·-----------------·~·
Naturat111rs, Auditions, FanOFF REG.
mander of Allied Expeditionary Swishir &amp; Lohse Pharmacy,
laras, Jolene and F1shlon Craft.
PRICE
Forces in North Africa. He 112 E. Main, Pomeroy;
All from regular .tock.
•
later became World War II ·Dutton Drug Store, Mid·
...
Supreme Allied Commander in dleporl.
$3.00
EW'ope .
PR.
Pair

Q!.

500 tb 23.50-26.50; choice heifers
400-500 lb 20.-23.
Hogs: Barrows and gilts 1.50

OPEN FRIDAY AND.SATURDAY UNTIL 8:00
'

COLUMBUS I UPI l - Federal state summary of Oh10

in Charleston

~

WORDIR
OriTAI.I.

-INSULATION-

Pleasau1 VaHey Hospital
DISCHARGES - Ronald
Payne, Apple Grove; Ernie
Willis, South Pomt; Mrs. Davi&lt;l
Eskridge, Hartford; Floyd
White, Ken tuck, W. Va .;
William Bailes, .Leon ; Mrs.
Oscar
Richards,
Pomt
Pleasant.

Gift

DANCE FRIDAY .
A dan ce w1ll be held from 10
to 12 Fnday a1 Southern H1gh
chool Wllh muSIC by Bob Jones
from WMOV The pos t game
dance is bemg sponsored by the
semor class

By Ray Cromley
WASHINGTON - Larry Pressler, freshman representative
from the First Distrtct of South Dakota, IS a most unusual young
man.
He's decided that as long as he's m Congress, his income tax
returns, all personal financial dealings and business connections
w1II be open to the public. Top members of hts staff w1U follow the
same rule.
Pressler plans to co,.ponsor a bill . to levy the state
requirement on all senators, representatives and their staffs.
He refuses honorariwns for speech making, an ln)portant
source of income for many congressmen. In his campaign, he
turned back all contributions from orgaruzatwns - business,
agricultural, labor and educational. Three-fourths of his money
came in donations of $25 or less.
When running for office, Pressler promised to retW'n 10 per
cent of his congressional salary. Finding he could not legally take
a unilateral pay cut, he's turning a tenth of his pay over to the
goverrunent of his state .
The blg, fancy, expensive congressman's chair that came
with his office makes Presslel" nervous. He's attempting to ex·
change it for a smaller, less pretentious model.
at a time when polls say 60 per cent of all Americans call
He figW'es no representative should serve more than foW' themselves conservatives, but less than one out of five admit to
terms, and intends to quit after eight years.
being Republicans.
Pressler is already in an open public fight with the
In the few weeks he's been in office, he's become concerned
over the huge amounU; of money easily available to congressmen Republican National Conumttee, and lUI chairman, Mary Louise
from spec1al interest groups this year even though there are no Smith. He thinks there's too much emphasis on raising funds
elections. By his estimate, he could pick up an easy $10,000 for from special interest groups. And he's written a letter to the
incidental expenses, a few hundred doJJars here, a few hundred eiditor in the Washington Post, opposing the National Comthere, from one lobbymg committee or another - even as a mittee's $2 million raise-the-GOP image public relations cam·
freshman with little political clout on the Hill. He's amazed at the paign, holding the dollars would be better spent if given to
number of senators and representa lives who snap up this money. · Republican candidates. In return, Pressler's been threatened
At home, where he goes three weekends out of lOW', Pressler with retaliation in 1976when he's up for r~lectlon .
There is one special point that should be noted in this matter.
is attempting to draw more small farmers, labor union men and
small businessmen into South Dakota's Republican party, where In the Democratic landslide of 1974, when 36 House Republican
power for years has centered in a rather small, tight-kmt group. incumbents went down in defeat and when GOP strength, in iU;
He attempted unsuccessfully to get a labor union man to run for traditional Middle West stronghold was severely weakened,
the GOP chairmanship in one of his First District counties. Presaier was one of only loW' Republicans nationwide to upset a
Friends are now putting together a group of 100 to 200 young men Democratic incumbent.
and women, 25 to 40 years of age, that they've checkmarkl!d as
future leaders. Both Republians and Democrats are included.
Presaler plans to meet with this group several times a year to
develop politial issues and congressional reforms.
This approach 1s the only means, Pressler believes, by which
the image of the Republican party can be meaningfully changed

J, F. Cobb dies

Lots of

:::::::::::·:·!·!·!·!•!•!•!·!·!·!·!·!•!•!•:;;.;:;.;:;:;:;::;;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;.;:;:;:::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;.;.;.:-:•!•!!!•!0:•!·!•!·!·!·!·!·!·!·!;!;!:!:!·!::·:·:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;.;-:-:·:·:·:-:·:·:-:·:·:-:-:-:-:-:·:·:·:·: ·•. ;.;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;~:;::=.-:::::::)~=

political charisma

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED - Mary King,
Mmersville; Thomas McClung,
Pomeroy; Lisa Willford, Long
Bottom; John Blosser, Middleport; Linda Wright, Vmton;
Susan Jeffers , Middleport;
Everett Roush, Rae me;
Frances Clonch; Rutland;
Harry E. Oldaker, Letart, W.
Va.; Frances Hoffman,
Middleport.
DISCHARGED - Susan
King, Grace' Roush, Rhoda
South, Ruth Hawkins, Roy
Neece, Brenda Smith, Charles
Schoolcraft, Mur1 OW's.

than

t

Continued from page I
The first step in the development of these maps and books
would be aerial photographs which would cost between $75,000
and $110,000. Buehl was named chairman of a conunlttee to at·
tack the problem with members of his committee being named
Charac ter actor Sidney
including David Parry, Blakeslee and county conunissioner
Greenstreet's
first movte was
Henry Wells.
made
m
1941
..
when he was 61
Burt explained a new housing assistance plan for low and
years old - " The Maltese
moderate income people.lt is non-metropolitan type funding and Falcon."
applications for first year funding must be made from March I
this year to May 15thlsyear. The funding is !OOpct., with no local
matched funds required and is handled by HUD, Burt said.
A meeting at Middleport Council Chambers at 7:30p.m. next
Wednesday to formulate plans for protesting the removal of
railroad lines from Metgs County was announced.
"ONE OF THE BEST EVER MADE!"
Speaking on industrial sites, Ohio Power Co. Manager Fred
l01 IM(tln IIIIIU
Morrow said 11 is transportation that plays a major role· In the
selection of industrial locations. He said taking out railroad lines, 1
or not having adequate roads to sites, would be a hindrance.
Morrow, Orion Roush and David Parry were named to a committee to update industrial sites available in Meigs County.
Attending were Blakeslee, Johnson, John Rice, E. F.
Robinaon, Edison Baker, Morrow, David Parry, Wesley Buehl,
Henry Wells and Burt.

ss.Feeder

Values To

J
J

Using honesty as

.

February ooL~R FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY

)jj

Continued from page I
welfare, crime and despair. Some of our central cities are
wasteland. We can wait no longer on the federal goverrunent or
any other government. We must act now. Halfway measW'es will
not work. Only a revolutionary approach will work "
Question Asked
The govtlrnor was asked why such a plan was not devised
before. "We didn't need it before," he replied. "When I was
governor before, we had the lowest taxes, the lowest unemployment and the lowest welfare caseload. But now, we've got a
bad, bad tax structure in the state of Ohio ."
Rhodes said he will hold three more news conferences,
beginning perhaps on Friday, to give details of the rest of his
Inner city plan, including a bond issue to finance the industrial
attraction.
He said he has received "excellent response" from Ohio
mayors, legislative leaders and some 50 corporate executives he
has peraonally contacted. ''They'd like to have had It 10 years
ago," he said.
Rhodes satd the proposed new state board would decide which
industrial expansions would be eligible for the tax exemptions.
He declined to name Ohio cities likely to benefit, except to say
that "every city !tom Martins Ferry to Cleveland is m trouble
with jobs."
Rhodes dismissed observations that the tax exemptions might
cut into existing revenues.
11
What tax revenues~" the governor asked. 11How can they lose
any taxrevenues if they don 'I have any coming in' "
Rhodes said unemployed persons would be able to find jobs
paying up to $17,000 a year if his plan works. He said unskilled
residents of the inner city woold be trained in special vocationaltechnical schools to be built.

Market Report
1

The s!X hens left are doing a good job. ·=·:
Even in the winter slack period they :;:
provide nearly ~ree dozen eggs a week .
-ample for us.
:·,·
On a cost accounting basis, we get
nine dozen eggs out of a 50-pound bag of ,,,
,reed. The pnce of that bag is now $5.50, ::::
which means we pay 61 cents for a
dozen eggs. That isn't bad for truly ~i
fresh extra large eggs. But it tsn't ~;:
great. The local grocery store price has :~:~
been fluctuating between &gt;9 cents Hnd )~:
8JcentsforadozenofGradeAeggs.
:;:;
However, when you add in the money ~o
11 took to set up the backyard chicken
coop in the first place, the chickens will ::;:
have gray feathers before we recoup :;:;
our losses.
1::

Planners accept

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

-

chicken wire for a small yard, a
watering devtce and a feeder. Used
lumber made a nest and an old cartop
carrier became a roost. All that came
to about $3!:.
Then we had to buy food
Baby chicks~ides being cute and
loveat!e , aren' bl eaters. We didn 't
think we'd ha any trouble with that
expense until they were old enough to
lay eggs.
We discovered it took the chickens six of which turned out to be hens between five and eight months to begin
laying eggs. By the time they were
three months old they were 'eating a 50pound bag of feed every three weeks
and that cost, at the beginnmg, $4.35 a

Rhodes would proof

Shoe Box

Southern at Hannan Trace
Southwestern at North Gallia

:·:· It's fresher than what the stores sell
:::: and can be as natural as you want it j~~ but it ISn't always cheaper.
&lt;·
Take, for instance, eggs.
My wife and' I, along w1th two
:; growing boys, love to eat eggs.
~= Possessing a house in an agrlcultW'al
area and a)(eady having met limited
::~: success with a vegetable garden, we
;:;: , decided to go mto the poultry business.
;:;:
It seems simple enough -get a
;:; chicken, the chicken lays an egg and
~:; youeat1\. No middleman to boost the
~ prices and to let the eggs sit around the
~ · store several weeks. Just fresh, cheap
~ eggs.
~:
We started from scratch. We paid 25
*~ cents each for a dozen assorted day-&lt;~ld

::::
::::
~
·:&lt;

RAY CROMLEY

Holzer Medical Center
(Discharged, feb. 5)
Jay Adkins, Mrs William
Adkms and daughter, Iris
Ba1ley, Joshua Bartles, Diane
Btttner, Jenmfer Byers,
Patricia Condee, Freda DaviS,
Ida Delong, Mrs. Howard
DeWeese and son, Clara
Ehrman, Peggy Elkins, Billy
Evans,. Sarah Eynon, Goldie
Fraley, Dana Halfhill, Georgia
Henry, Mary Houck, Delores
Huffman, James Jividen,
Thomas Marshall Jones,
Marguerite Kostival, Samuel
Larch, Kathryn Leedy, Mrs.
Terry May and daughter,
Hazel Miller, Mary E. Miller,
Michael Richmond, Kimberly
Ridge, Fred Sands, Virgima
Souders, Debra Staley, Shirley
Still, Russell Stiverson, Bar·
bara Tornstrom, Andrew Van
Maire, Charles Watson,
Christina Wilgus , James
Williams.
(Births)
Mr. and Mrs. LaW'is Johnson, a daughter, Jackson; Mr.
and Mrs. Ricky Ousley, a son,
Wellston; Mr. and Mrs. Donald
Riffle, a son, Jackson; Mr. and
Mrs. Bobby Roush, a son,
Middleport; Mr. and Mrs.
Thomas Edward Wilson, a son,
•Pomeroy .

73 9
75 4

symmes Val ley at Souther n
Othe r s
Hannan Trace at Trrmble
Parker sburg at Pt, Pleasant
Wahama at Winf1eld

I'

HOSPITAL NEWS

CLASS A

69 4

99~

MIDDLI; PORT ·

12 ,

Clay lo n Northmonr 11

132
124

bag.
·,
Two of the chicks died within a few
weeks. Four roosters were killed for

t

·Support Center

65 4
67.0
67.4
67 6

WINTUK YARN

992-2709

17

(il eJ New Ph rladelptHa and
Co lu m bu s Cent r al , 13 each , 19

5 Lo rd stown ( 2 16 OJ
6 Lor Cl ' w ( 1 12 2}
7 Se brmg (1 31 1

chicks - Rhode Island Reds, Black
Minorcas and Australorps.
A toolshed in the back of the house

*

AND SURGICAl

*WHEEl CHAIRS
*WALKERS
*CRUTCHES &amp; CANES
* BACK BRACES
* BEDSIDE COMMODES
* SUPPORT STOCKINGS
*TRUSSES
*TRACTION EQUIPMENT
* ELASTIC SUPPORTS ·
*SURGICAL DRESSINGS
* INCONTINENT
SUPPLIES

~ ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (UP!) :-:: One way to heat mflation while en·
~
=·~ joying the frwts of your labors, so the

l\l! st~~~~o:n~r~i~/i~:;;.';.~';!. :n~ C:~Ji~~~~~~u~p:~~e~~:· ~: ~~d when they were about six months lll

PRESCRIPTION

( 14) 61 1
( 151 62 4
{ 151 64.2
( 16 ) 64 9
( 14) 64 9

. COATS&amp;CLARK

Valley 'Lumber·&amp;.Supply Co.

so ,

12 Cmc1nna 11 Rog e r Bacon 49

~

REMODELING
'
NEEDS

70
51

11. Zan esv tll e

SOCK

FOR ALL YOUR

128

13 ( I re) Ety r 1a and Al l1an ce. 33

eac h

HARNESS DRIVER
BOCARATON ,Fia (UP! )The Harness Tracks of
America have named recordbreakmg Herve F1hon harness
dnver of tl1e year for the s1xth
consecutive time.
The 3~-year-&lt;~ ld Canad••n
fimshed with 95 of a possible
100 points in the HTA ratmgs
by w1nnmg 637 of the 2,999
races he drove in 1974. He won
$:1 ,4:11,366 1n ourses and
fmished m the money m 36 per
cent of the races he drove. The
figures were all-ltme records
Following Filion m the HTA
standmgs were Joe O'Brien,
ChriS Bormg, Norman Dupla•se, Lucien Fontaine, Bill
Haughton, Walter Paisley,
Shelley Gourdreau, M1ke
Arnold and Daryl Busse.

236
224

IOC I E T ec h ( I S l l

CLASS AAA

755

No G Ayg,
139 l1 12.6

Wright State scored an
82-76 victory 'over Urbana,
Walsh edged Malone 74-71 in
overtime, and Ohio Northern
defeated Marian (Ind .) 81).73,
Only two games are scheduled for tonight. Cincinnati is
at South Florida and Mt.
Vernon is at Wilberforce.

Tigers fifth zn UPI poll
Waverly ' s Class AA T tge r s ar e

I Backyard chicken coop no bargain I

~2.

•

Gal lIpolis
220 11 20 o
INO. LEADERS

YOUR
HEADQUARTERS

lrd AVE.

7
6

Southwestern

260-625 .4 16
2&lt;16-647 .380

Team
Ironton

2. Simon. 0·0-0: Isaac, 0·1·1
TOTALS 22-7-51 . ·

i~ name and phone number

8"

62 23 148 13 5
49 48 146 13 3
52 34 138 12 6

Ja ckson
Me1gs

Ja ckson
Well ston
Athens

4. Smith. 7-2·16; Lanham , 2-0·

NO COMMENT
CHAMPAIGN, Dl. (UPil
Dlinois Coach Gene Bartow
Wednesday had 1 'no comment' '
on reports that he was so upse t
about baske tball officiating
that he planned to file a
complaint w1th Big Ten
Comnussioner Wayne [luke.
Bartow allegedly blasted
officials after last Saturday's
game against Michigan State.
" I won't confirm quotes from
any newspaper on the subject," he SBld . "I'm just trymg
to stay closed mouth which is
hard for me to do sometimes.
"I have all the confidence m
the world in the Big Ten of·
fice."
Michigan State defeated the
Dlini, ~. in the SatW'day
game.

7

65 20 150 13 6

299 705
257 616

Me1gs

Harris, 6-0-12 , McGhee, 1 2

12 13 10 16- 51

6

9

57 o
57 1

Iron ton
Gallipolis

Wa verl y
Gall1polis
Iron t on

0; Lyne. 0-l I. TOTALS 13-7-33.
GALLIPOLIS EIGHTH ISH

Gal l1a Oth

8

900
733
860

855 ( 15)
857 ( 15}

75 24 174 1Y 3

Team
Logan

Magnotta, 2-0-d; Ke nnedy, 1 2-

Score by quarters :
Me1gs 8th
6 q 6 12- 33

FELKER WINS TROPHY
STARKVILLE, Miss. (UP!)
-Quarterback Rockey Felker
of Mississippi state will be
presented, the Bishop Frank A.
Juhan Trophy at a banquet in
Tullahoma, Tenn. Feb. 17.
The award is named mhonor
of the late Bishop Juhan,
longtime bishop of the state of
Florida , who wa~ an all·
Southern football ayer and
champion boxer at e University of the South.
Jackson said the trophy is
awarded to the "best college
football player in America who
•s equal m his churchmanship."

868

82 26 190 19 0
68 21 157 17' Kyger Creek
850 (13)
Camden, NG
69 31 169 16 9
Pl. Pleasanl
737 (20)
Loga n, NG
61 20 142 14 2 Wellston
943 114)
Brammer . SV
54 20 128 14.2 Miller
1182 ( 16)
Spencer . East 50 27 127 14.1 Alexander
1110 ( 16)
Bailey, East
58 9 125 13 9 5 Valley
1108 f15l
Myers, SV
50 10 120 13 3 Wahama
679 (9)
TEAM STATISTICS
THURSDAY
Fteld Goal Percentage
Pt Pleasant at Wa hama
Team
FGM-A Pet.
FRIDAY
Wa verly
272 584 466
SEOAL
Athens
253·547 463 Athens at Wellston
Logan
273-625 437 Waverly at Gallipolis

Gallia 8th grade
•
wms
sixth tilt

m.

944

930

Tnrnbl e
Athens

62 30 154 14 0

SVAC SCORING
Name, T
FG FT Pts Avg
Swain . HG
Ill 29 299 29 9
Myers, SV

796
876

7

Nels -York
W L P OP S Vall ey

Team

8"

840
856
767
843

8

I

579
7 4 618 618

957
967
929

9
9

5
5

580
658

PT5 OPP
939
771
1044
830
902
780

5

6

11 0 707
8 J 731
7 •I 665

• •

5
5
5
6
6

9

James. NG
Carter. SW

-

J

9

{ Re ser ve)

"We've got some home run power back w1th May," says

L

" 2'

SEOAL STANDINGS
&lt;VarStlyl
Team
W·l
P OP

Weaver, "and Singlet.on will relieve OW' platoomng Slluallon.
He'll start out in right, but I won't guarantee htm a JOb. He'll
have to produce. We've got some pretty good guys sitting down.
guys like ( AI ) Bumbry and (Jim ). Fuller."
The Orioles never got into the general bidding for Hunter,
mostly because they simply couldn't afford him. As for all the
money Hunter got, Weaver has this to say :
"He deserves ti- the type pitcher and person he •s. Salary·
wise, he won1 be the highest paid player m baseball, you know.
(Hank Aaron is ). From what I've heard, Hunter (who Signed for
a salary of $200,00Q.a·year for five years) won't be able to ask for
a raise for the next five years. I think pitchers hke Palmer and
(Ferguson) JenklllS, if they continue wmning, could possibly
pass him in salary."
Yeah, Earl, but ne1ther ever figW'es to pass lum m all that
other bread he got up front.

Coach Bill Leedy's Gallipolis
eighth grade basketball team
defeated Meigs' visiting eighth
graders 51-33 in a makeup
contest on the Washington
hardwood Wednesday evening.
The v1ctory left Gallipolis
with a 6-4 season mark. Today,
the Gallipolis seventh and
eighth grade teams battle Pt.
Pleasant on Wa shmgton
hardwood , starting at 4 p.
Wednesday, Mark Smith
tallied 16 points and Jim Harris
12 for the winners. D. Blake

markers lor Miami , now 1 ~-5
overall , and l{od D1ennger had
10 The Redskms enjoyed a 10pomt ha ~ r~1me c.tdvantagc, 23IR.
~·or the Hurons, 9-9 for all
games and 2'5 m the loop, Bob
Riddle connected for 15
pomlers and Talmadge Bell

I
i~

~

'

SHE'S .. MRS.''NOW
~
Mrs, Steve Dalley, the for~
mer Rhonda Ervin, Racine:
was piclW'ed in the Wednesda&gt;:
edition of The Dally Sentinel
with her malden nam~
erroneously listed rather
her married name. Mrs!
Dailey, R.N., was presentecj
her numbered badge an4
appointed card as a National
'
Amencan
Red Cross Dlsaste~'
Nurse at a meeting of titd
Me1gs County Red Cros ~
Chater Tuesday night.

I.

Owned and Op~~rotod by LIRt Osborl)e

•

'

I~

,I
I"

1

1t

•••

•••

�'

'I

'

II

I

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..

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"

I'

5-'l'lle DaUv Sentlnei,MldcllePOrt-Plmlei'OY.0.. 11tursdav. Feb 6. 1!1'15

~:::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;~:::;:;:;:;:;:;:~;:::;:;~:;:;.;:;:;:;:;:~;:;:;:;o;:;:;:;:;.;:;:;:;.;-~x·:::::·:·:·:::·:·:::::·:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::l:::::::::::::·::::::::::::::::-.::::::::::::::::::::::%::::::::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::;:;:;:;:;;::;:::;:;:::;:;:;:;:;::::;:::::;

.
.
~ Coping: Americans and the rec~~sion

Miami edges Eastern Michigan
lly Ultiled Press International
The Miami Redskms boosted
their Mld-Amen can Conference record to 5-3 Wednesday mght behmd the game·
hi gh shooting of Rand y Ayers
w,tm got 14 points in defeatmg
Gastern M1ch1gan 60-57.
Chuck Goodyear tallied 13

Sport Parade
By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sporll Editor
NEW YORK (UP!) - Publicly, many people alteady are
conceding the New York Yankees wmners thiS year because
they've picked up Catfish Hunter and Bobby Bonds, ·and this may
or may not surprise you, but privatelY", so have a good many
major league managers.
Earl Weaver hasn't, and that shouldn't surpnse you at all
Never in hiS lifetime has the peppery, little Balttmore Onoles'
pilot followed the crowd blindly. If he thinks it's headed m the
wrong direction, he'llpeel off m a hurry and go his own way, and
that's,\he move he's making now
He believes the $3million the Yankees paid for Catfish Hunte•
isn't that much out of line, but he doesn't feel Hunter and Bonds
guarantee ·a firstillace 'finish for the New Yorkers
"They've gotten themselves two exceptional players but that
doesn't make ·em automatic wmners," says Weaver, completely
recovered from his auto accident of two months ago "It all
depends on what they do on the field Remember when they went
out and got both (Pat) Dobson and (Sam) McDowell two years
ago? They p1cked them up in mid ..eason and right away
everybody began talkmg about how they were gonna wm. But 11
didn 't tW'n out that way . They didn't wm the diviSIOn title. we
did."·
Earl Weaver grants the Yankees, who fimshed second to h•s
club by two games in the Amencan League East last year , f1gure
to he better this yea r
"I say 'figure' to he better because they st1ll have to doll on Uw
field," he says. "They should be better every fourth day thiS year
than they were last because that's the day Hunter will be out
there pitching for them . But we figW'e to be better every foW'lh
day, also, because I'm sure (Jim) Palmer will bounce back. He
was throwing very good at the end of the year So we're in the
same position as the Yankees. We'll be better eve ry fourth day
also.n .
Wait a mil)ute. What about Bonds'
"He 's an excellent· ball player," Weaver says. "But let's look
at that good year (Bobby) MW'cer had for the Yankees a few
seasons back. (He had 94 RBis , 25 homers and batted .331 m
1971). How much more can Bonds add than Murcer did that year,
and we still won. He probably can add a httle more, but not that
much more."
The Orioles haven 't been sleeping eith-er this winter.
The way things ••e going, their franchise could wind up being
moved to New Orleans before the swruner 1s out, but wherever
they are, they'll have a representative ball club with a pitching
staff built around Palmer, Mike Cuellar, Ross Grimsley and
Mike Torrez and more solid offense with Lee May and Ken
Singleton added through a pair of deals.

SEO cage stats.
OVERALL STA NDINGS !Asol Feb 51

TEAM

W

Wav er ly
Hannan Trace
Nor th Gall•a
Nel sonville York
FedN.al Hock 1ng
Ir onton
Ja ck son
Be lpre
Logan
Southwestern
Ga l li po l is
Southern
Alexander
Tnmble
Vm ton Cou n ty
Pomt Pleasant
Worren Local
Athens
Mil ler
Wahama
Eastern
Wellston
Symmes Val ley
Kyger Cr eek
M e1g s

Waverly
Iron t on
Gall1pol1s
Ja ckson
Logan
Athens
Me1gs
Wellston

l)

10
10
10

5 6

683 64 2
4761860 1

' 10 619 730
' 10 545 778

Waverly

9 2 450

Gal l ipoli s
Logan
Me1gs .
Jackson
Ironton
Wellston

7 4 428 414
6 5 471 417
6 5 417 361
5 6 442 457
3
410 ABO
0 11 34 1 590

Alhens

341

8 3 500 399

a

OVERALL SCORING
tAs ol Feb. l)
Name, T.
FG FT Pts Avg
Swa 1n , HT
B1se , FH
Canter , NY
Myers , SV
Tatterson. PT

176 42 394 28 1
129 83 34 1 22 7
11874 31 022 1
102 29 233 19 •I
11 5 45 275 18 3
73 43 18Q 17 2

McDonald, J
Camden. NG

105 26 236 16 9
83 36 202 16 8

Gil l iland , Wah
Hern , M

96 72 264 16 5

James. NG

55 Al 151 16 8

SEOAL SCORING
Name, T
FT FT Pts Avg
Wnght , Log
Peoples, We l l

75 41 191 17 4
80 26 186 16 9

N1day. G

67 48 182 16.6

McDonald, J
Young, L
Holland , Wav

82 16 180 16 4
63 41 170 15 5

Howard. I.
Dudu 1t , Wav
Pfeifer , Wav
Tracy , Wav

had 10 for Me1gs. B Becker
had e1ght.
Gallipolis led 12-6, 25-15 and
35·21 at the quartcrmarks
Box score:
MEIGS EIGHTH t33)
Becker, 3-2-8. And rew. 0-0-0:

4; Blake 1 4-2-10 , Carman, 1-0-2;

Rawlings. 2-0--4 . Gardner. 0-0-

.

THIS IS IT
Even 1f you weren 't looking
for a Bus•ness Opponun1ty,
but of course you are, or yoU
wouldn't be readmg th1s ad .
So, you must be excited over
this unusual proposal and
you may begm full or pa~·
t1me. Don' t you believe rt
would be worth your t1me to
take 11 couple of m•nutes and
f1nd out the details? We need
a Otstributor at once to service large industnal anp commercial accounts Distnbutor
will be sup_phed wnh segned

serv1ce Contracts~
These firms eagerly
awa ft this service. If thiS isn't

for you we won't waste each
others time finding out. We
are a large Texas concern
w1ih excellent references that
will ·,. withstand your most
vigorous investigatiOn. To

obtam additional information
writeMarkattng D1rector, giv-

4, Sickles, 1-0-2; C Brown 0- 1l , Ster r ett , 2 l 5, N Thomas. 20-4 , S Thomas , 0 0 0, Ba r r , 1 0

to 10920 Indian Trail, Butldtng
3()7, Dall... Te.as 7~
'
'

9
9

5

10
10

83 1
982 11 10
822
855
965 1039
826 ' 805
930 963
857
852

4

'2

858

2
3
2
2

13
12
13

'

'2

10
7

618
889
693
946
617

8

13

760
983
943

850

168
909
11 7 11 10 6
11 3 11 10 J
101 11 9 2

Dudud , Wa v
Chonko, A l h
Young . L

5·ck les Gal l
96 II 8 7
OFFENSIVELY
Team

Hannan Trace
Pl . Plea sant

Pts (G) Avg
Q61 ( 14) 68 6

N Ga lli a

755 ( II I 68 6
821 ( 121 68 4

Ironton
Fed Hock•ng

Q29 ( 14 )
697 ( 15 )

66 4
64 5

900 I l&lt;tl 64 J
946 115) 63 1

Waverly
Logan

QJQ ( 15) 62 6
13 76 ( 1tl ) 62 5

Alexander
Sout hwest ern

982 ( 16 )
856 ( 14)
546 (9)
965 ( 16)

W Local

930 I 15) 62 0

Wahama

Vtnton Co

Belpre

61 4
61.1
60 7
60 3

876 I 15) 58 4

Ga ll ipO l is
Jackson

814 ( 14)
796 ( 17)

AIhens
Eastern

852 ( 151 56 8
843 (l SI 56 2,

Me1gs
Tnmb le

768 ( 14)
822 ( 15)

58 1
56 9

54 9
54 8

Mi ller
Sout hern

858 ( 16 ) 53 6
784 11 5) 52.3

Wellston
Kyg er Cr eek

693 ( 14)
617 ( 13)

Team

49 5
47 5

DEFENSIVELY
Pis (G) Avg.

Waverly
Gall1po l• s
Nels York
Hannan Tra ce
Southern
Ja ckson
Fed Hock1ng

Belpre

77 1
73 3
745
756
814
767
840

Logan

( 15) 51 4
( 14 ) 52 4
( 14) 53 2
( 1&lt;~1 54 0
(15 ) ' 54 3
( 14) 54 8
{ 15) 56.0

843 1151 56.2

8ll {1 4) 57 .9

NGall1a

Ironton
Eastern
Warren Local
Vmton Co
Me•gs

708{1 2) 590

856
936
936
1039
909

.211 616

424
417

343

Percentage
FTM-A Pet.
139-203 .685
163 242
151 -238
133 220

.674
634
.605

127 213 .S96

98 167 .587
122 2 17 562
112 21:1 .528
Rebounds
No. G Avg .
440 11 40 0

381 11 34 6
375 11 34.1
372 1l 33 8

Waverly
Me1g s

357 11 32.5
345 11 31.4
Wellston
331 1l 30.1
Jackson
318 11 28 9
Personal Fouls
Team
No. G Avg .
Jackson
l 79 1l 16.3
Athens
186 11 16 .9
Logan
189 11 17 .2
Waverly
200 11 18 2
Ironton
201 11 18 3
Meigs
214 11 19 5
Wellston
217 11 19 7

had 12
Appleton to down the Lords 79- sixth in a row and second of the
In the Ohw Conference , 70 m another Ohio Conference season over the Akron
Umversity
Zips,
Sophomore Jeff Faloba
68-66 .
game.
pumped in 25 points and · The v1ctory left Wittenberg Cleveland is 9-7 while the Zips
grabbed H re!x&gt;unds to lead
11-7 overa ll and 7-3 m the are 11-7.
Marietta College to a 79-76 leHgue. Kenyon rell to 11-8 for
-Youngstown State fought
off a last-minute rally that saw
conrerence victory over Mount all games and 5-4 m the loop
Uruon
J1m Evans scored 13 points Ashland College score 10 points
Marietta. now 8-2 m the for Wittenberg, wh1ch held a for a 71-&amp;1 victory over the
conference and 15·2 overal1 , 34-19 edge at halftime, Don Eagles. Youngstown State is
wound up a fast.p•ced first half
Lynam tallied 12 and Tom now Hhl this season while
Willi H 46-40 margin The Dunn 10. Dave Meyer added 12 Ashland is 5-13.
- Forward Pete Accetta and
league-!6ading P•oneers pulled pomts to the Kenyon cause.
out to an 11-point margm with
Capital's V•c Wolfe notched a .center Jerry Foley tW'ned m
three minutes rematrung m the game-h1gh 18 pomts as the ca reer-high scoring perforsecond half and held on for the Crusaders doubled the score on mances for Xavier m leadmg
vic fory
Oh io Wesleyan at halftime and the Musketeers to a 70-&lt;36
7..etlie Stms' 22 pomts was then went on to a 70-52 Ohio trmmph over Wheeling (W.
high for Mount Umon, as the Conference wm at Delaware Va.) Colle]le. Accetta connected for 29 points and Foley
PUrple Raiders dropped to 5-4 Wednesday. night
m the conference and 12-7
Gene Cashn scored 10 pomts for 22 as Xavier upped 1ts
overa ll ttus season
for Capital, 6-4 m the league record to 8-9 Wheeling IS now
Art Clark scored 20 points and 14-5 for all games. The 16-7
and picked off 19 rebounds 1n Crusaders had the Bishops
Results of other Wednesday
helpwg the Pioneers to Victory. down by a 32-16 halftime count. night games included Ball
At Spnngfleld, R1ck Wh1te
Van Jackson led OWU, 2-7 State over Kerit State ~;
and Sk•p Freeman each tossed aga1nst c•rcu1t foes and 3-13 Gannon ( Pa.)
defeated
in H Wittenberg points as the overall, Wllh 10 points.
Stuebenville 78-59, Defiance
T1gers overcame a 34-point
dawned Bluffton 84-71, Hiram
In other games
performance by Kenyon 's Tim
- The Cleveland State swamped Thiel (Pa.) IIJ.54,
Uruvers1ty Vlkmgs won !herr Allegheny edged John Carroll

1108

58 4

Wellston
Free Throw

Logan
Gallipolis
Athens

1082

817 (1 4)

Field Goal Percentage

Name, T
Chonko, Alh .
Sickles. Gall.

FGM-A Pet.
57· 101 .564
57 · 104 548
537

Young , Logan

66 123

02 157
S3-102

522
520

Tracy . Wav .
F1tzpatrick , I
Free Throw

52 100
51 98

520
520

McDonald, Jack
Horn. Athens
Name, T
Niday. Gall.
Wrtghl, Logan

Percentag'e
FTM-A Pet.
48 SO 020
40-49 816

Holland, Wav .
30 39
Tracy, Waverly
34-JS
Young . Logan
40 4J
'Rebounds

Name, T
f1tz tri ck. I

769
756

COLUMBU~

r an ked

( UP I )

ldt h

111 l h1s

wee k 's

Un ti ed Press ln ter n a t to n al
Oh 10 H 1QI1 Schoo l Bo ar d of
Coac h es'

b a s. k r lb n l l

r,; t rngs.

Here's a ll t h e rar tngs, W1 l h
11r st p lo ce vo t es and w on losl
reco rd s 111 p ar en lh eses

Barb er t on ( 9 15 OJ
3 Ca n McK ( ,1 14 11
I Ke l ' g A ll (3 14 0}

268

5 Cm Hugh es ( 1 12 OJ
6 To t sc ot! ( 14 1 J
l (h e) N ewark (15 1)
7 ( t, el Day R ' vett ( 13 1)
9 Cm E ld e r ( 11 2)

167
144
128

2

S e co nd 1 o

Team

Pomt s

1 M 1dd l er own ( 19 14 OJ

328

16

15 Or e gon Clay (1) 19

Cleveland H e1gh ls 17 ,

Tole do

De vdb1SS

I

-i

20

CLASS AA

Team

Po1nts
1 Del St John' s (6 14 1J 266
2 We ll s vill e ( 10 til l
261

109
8 Up Sc Val ( 1 17 OJ
102
9 Pe 111 SVi ll e 12 16 OJ
87
10 Anna ( 15 1)
77
Second ID 11 Monroe.,n t le
46 , 11 Wmd h am 36. 13 Han nan Trace (2 ) 34; 14 Wynford
29

Zanesville

15

Rosecrans

( 11 26 16 Manon Local 24, 17
Chll ltcoth e F lage t 23 , lB
Seneca East 19 , 19 Orwell
Grand Valley 18 , 20 Richmond
Heights 17
Others With 10 or more
po1nts
Freder1cktown,
Covtngton ,
North Gal11a,
C l eve l an d Lutheran East,
Buckeye Centra l. Ar canum ,
McDonald and New Boston

3 C~r c lev111 e ( 5 15 OJ
222
I War R 1\i V1 ew (7 15 0 ) 203
5 Waverly (4 14 11
19 8

6 Ro ssford ( 2 15 1J
7 Col Mwk ( l 11 3)

161
146

B Sp Shawnee(1121 J

127

9 Bu cke ye So ( 10 2)

62

10 Br ooklyn ( I J 11
39
Secon d 10
11
Lo r a1n
Ca~hol1 c 37
12 0 1e J Granville
a nd Dayton St 1vers, 3J each ,
14
Wh eelersburg 2 3 , 15
War:r e11 Kennedy 18 16 L1 sbon
Be a ve r 16. 17 ( t•e l Cmc1n n a t 1
M c N1 c hotas , Fort Rye and
Fa1rv 1ew 14 each
20 Cm

C1 nll a t1 Gr eenh ill s
O th e rs w1th 10

or mo r e
po1nt s As htabu la Harbor and
F1re1and s
Team
Potnf s
1 Mans St Pet (13 15 21 24 1
2 Ca n W1n ch ( 6 15 1)
224
3 M 1nst er (4 16 OJ
201
J N or

St Paul ( l 141 )

137

Jackson at Ironton
Logan at M e1gs

TRIVALLEY

Alexander at N e lsonv t l le York
V1nton County at Belpre
Federal Hockmg at Warren
Local

SVAC

Eastern at Southwestern

North Gallla at Kyger Creek

"nil CIIAIQI 01'
Me'Qcluu DIUG 111c:1r

SATUROAY

PIICU! 992..s759

.

Portsmouth at Gallipolis

271 M. ..._., -..
"VIR
........._

Wellston at Oak Hill

Federal Hocking at M1ller
Fort Frye at Warren Local

TUESDAY(fob.l1)
SEOAL

SOLDIER OF THE MONTH - 1st Lt. William F. Hockenberry, left, commanding of!lcer 01
the 3664thl\!alntenance Co., (illS) presents the "Soldier of the Month" award for January to
SP-li Larry V. Parsons, Rt. 4, Pomeroy. Larry and his wife, Sonia, have two children, Larry, 8,
and Sue, 6. He is employed at the combined support mamtenance shop near Point Pleasant.

,.........

The

Me1gs at Ath ens
Ga ll 1pol •s at Ironton
Waverly at Ja ckson
Logan at Wellston

SVAC

Others
Barboursvil le at Pt Pleasant
Trimble at Berne Un1on
Wahama at Ripley

MEN'S BROWN JERSEY

ONE GROUP MEN'S LONG SLEEVE

SWEAT SHIRTS

WORK·
GLOVES
.

MENS&amp; BOYS
TVBE&amp;O'RLON

ONE RACK

Slim · Reg.-Husky

~

44

$

BOYS
PANTS
Values To $9.00

•&amp;&amp;''

S PLASTIC

RAIN BONNETS

12C

IES

PULL.ON PANTS
Values To $8.95

.....99

Florals &amp; Clear

ONE RACK

Ladies Screen

DIES&amp; GIRLS

COATS &amp; JACKETS

LADIES 'DRESSES

BLOUSES
sa:9s
22

lf2 PRICE
MIDDLEPORT· DEPARTMENT STORE

lf2 PRICE

$

&lt;

livestock auctions Wednesday,

Feb. 5, 197S.
Cattle: Compared to last
Wednesday slaughter steers .75·
2.00 higher, except Urbana
steady to 1 tower , slaughter
heifers .50 higher at Mt.
Vernon, 1-2 tower at Urbana.
slaughter cows 1-2 higher,
slaughter bulls 1.50 higher,
veaters 3 lower, Ieeder cattle
steady.
Slaughter steers· Choice and
prime 850-1200 lb yield grade 23 37 . 1038.~0. yield grade 3-4
36.00-37: Choice 34.00-36. good
JO.oi0-33.10, standard 24-31.
Choice
750·
Slaughter
1105
lb yield heifers:
grade 2-4
33.-37.25,
good 29-33.20.
Slaughter cows: Utility
and
commerclal800-16751b
15.-21.85.
cutter 800-1100 15.-19.70.
Slaughter bulls: Yield grade 1
1370-2190 lb 25,25-29.50.
Vealers : Choice 200-260 lb 48.·
cattle: Choice, steers

300-Ql lb 25.75-27.50, 780-87S lb

partly fatter\ed 25.-30, good

higher, U.S. 1-2 212-239lb 39.90'
&lt;10.85. u.s. 2-3 205·23~ lb 39.·
39.80, sows 1.50 higher, U.S. t-3
338-5551b 3&lt;4.90·39.
.
Feeder pigs u:s. 2-3 J0-50 lb
8.-23 per head.
· Sheep: Slaughter lambs steallOib-43.10--1&lt;1.

•

{

,.

JAMES SELECTED
COLUMBUS - State Rep.
Ronald James I D-92) has been
appointed to a new select
committee on retirement by
House Speaker Vernal Riffe .

Here

THE JEWELRY PEOPLE

Exqulsllely lapered, bahgle
In the front, cha1n In the
back- with heart br taasel.
Your choice ot yellow or

whlta and a varlely of pat·

terns! Value priced lrom

$5.951

Goessler's

ENDS TODAY
992-5302

•

MEIGS
THEATRE
Main St., Pomeroy
SHOW TIMES

1

oo

JEWELR'Y STORE
Court St., Pomeroy·

1 00

Sears

Automotive

SALE
Save 50%

Free Estimates- No Obligation

on 2nd

FOREMAN &amp; ABBOTT

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Tire
When you buy
1st tire at
regular price
plus F.E.T.
on each tire

BETIY'S 3RD
ANNIVERSARY

FRIDAY and
SATURDAY

LOSE UGLY FAT

2

Women's Shoes

'5

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SAVE '4.00 on 42-Month

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Sh op

k'ens
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PIC
a.
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FOR

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ONE GROUP
BROKEN SIZES

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'10"

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EAR.LY PRING
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Wilh1n !HI days or
l~rt:h!lllll if b.tt«y
Jlrtl\fea defect! 'I e .
After !:HI da~r. we will
rt!JllaetJ 1l w1th a new
battery ir defediv.,
charaint onl)' r9f the
J~llod of owrM!hhip,
Your mont.hb' charta
f&lt;A ownenhip wlllb.f
compulM hy dlvld-

llllll'h V(l!t1•11't mcanKIIlriUKht
throufll'lr. • the - lltlrl1l1oo ~ell

conneetor11 del1ver more 1n1 •

tial atartmll' power th•o an

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l

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lh' theturrent ..mnr

otherwii'Kl identica l h11Uery
w1lh u)J·and -over «II con -

_,..,

1M1 uade-1n •t.
the tlme of return, hy
the numb.. of munU.
JWK"e

J

•

n( fi'UAtlllltiM',

Sears Hal A Credit Plan to Suit Mo.t Every Need
• Pri~es Are Catal&lt;e Price•
• Shipping, Installation Extra • $ale Ends M8r. 15

.._,~-~-r---r~---~-

POMEROY

.~
Auth~rized

'i
l
.,•

.992-2178

,,..

CA'fAWG SALES MERCHAN?'

j

----.2-20-E-.-M~A-IN----.~~--~~-----,-POM~~~~RO=Y~'~~ i

.,

''

..

6UARANTEE
Free repla&lt;:e1nent

• • • Satil/ac~~ Gu~rante~d or,Your M~'&gt;'. Ba.cle

SlipShoes.

Marguerite's.Shoes
-

$31.45

With trade-In

---"S3

Women's

dy, choice and prime shorn 92-

•

Ideas

POSITIVELY '

Blown Into Walls
and Attics
-Fire Retardant-

BUFFALO, W.VA. - Jean
F. Cobb, 52, Buffalo, a former
employe of Phillip Sporn Plant
at New Haven, died early today
In 1957, Cassius Clay defe~ted
in Charleston General Hospital E:rnie Terrell to retam the
Middleport, Ohio
after several months illness. heavyweight boxing crown. ,
Mr. Cobb had been tran•
sferred sometime ago to the
Amos Plant at Winfield. He
spent several years in
Gallipolis while employed at
the Gavin Plant.
The Alamanac
His widow, Mary Margaret
By United Press International , Cobb, was a nurse's aid at the
Today is ThW'sday, Feb. 6, old Holzer Hospital 10 years.
the 37th day of 1975 with 328 to
The body is at the Valley
follow .
Funeral Home in Whitesville,
The moon Is between 1ts last W. Va., where funeral
quarter and new phase.
arrangements will be anThe mormng star is.Mars.
nounced.
The evemng stars are MerCW'Y, Jupiter, Saturn and
Venus.
Those born on this date are
~3.00
Dress &amp; Sport
under the sign of Aquarius.
Start losing weight today or money
Pr.
Pair
Vat. lo $19
Actresses Zsa Zsa Gabor and back. MONADEX ill a tin't_ tablet
and ,easy to take. MONADEX will
Mamie Van Doren were born help
curb your des1re for 8XC8SI
Eat 1-- weigh ltM. Contains
on Feb. 6 - the former in 1923 food.
no dangerou1 drutt and will not
BeHer Dress &amp; Sport
and the latter m !933.
IT'IIke you nervouL No strenuous
Values
to $23.00
axarcistl. Change your life ... stan
On this day m history:
today , MDNADEX coot $3.00 fo•
'~
.
~
.In 1778, Massachusetts rati- 1 20 drf supply. Lerge economy
size
~
$5.00.
Alto
try
AQUA
TABS:
ONE
fied the U.S. Constitution.
they work Qtl!l_ly to help You lote
GROUP
1n 1943• Gen. Ow'tght D· wtltr·bloat. AQUATABS -a "water
pill" tim wortt• - $3.00. Botti
Eisenhower was named com- guarantMd
and sold _by:
-------·-----------------·~·
Naturat111rs, Auditions, FanOFF REG.
mander of Allied Expeditionary Swishir &amp; Lohse Pharmacy,
laras, Jolene and F1shlon Craft.
PRICE
Forces in North Africa. He 112 E. Main, Pomeroy;
All from regular .tock.
•
later became World War II ·Dutton Drug Store, Mid·
...
Supreme Allied Commander in dleporl.
$3.00
EW'ope .
PR.
Pair

Q!.

500 tb 23.50-26.50; choice heifers
400-500 lb 20.-23.
Hogs: Barrows and gilts 1.50

OPEN FRIDAY AND.SATURDAY UNTIL 8:00
'

COLUMBUS I UPI l - Federal state summary of Oh10

in Charleston

~

WORDIR
OriTAI.I.

-INSULATION-

Pleasau1 VaHey Hospital
DISCHARGES - Ronald
Payne, Apple Grove; Ernie
Willis, South Pomt; Mrs. Davi&lt;l
Eskridge, Hartford; Floyd
White, Ken tuck, W. Va .;
William Bailes, .Leon ; Mrs.
Oscar
Richards,
Pomt
Pleasant.

Gift

DANCE FRIDAY .
A dan ce w1ll be held from 10
to 12 Fnday a1 Southern H1gh
chool Wllh muSIC by Bob Jones
from WMOV The pos t game
dance is bemg sponsored by the
semor class

By Ray Cromley
WASHINGTON - Larry Pressler, freshman representative
from the First Distrtct of South Dakota, IS a most unusual young
man.
He's decided that as long as he's m Congress, his income tax
returns, all personal financial dealings and business connections
w1II be open to the public. Top members of hts staff w1U follow the
same rule.
Pressler plans to co,.ponsor a bill . to levy the state
requirement on all senators, representatives and their staffs.
He refuses honorariwns for speech making, an ln)portant
source of income for many congressmen. In his campaign, he
turned back all contributions from orgaruzatwns - business,
agricultural, labor and educational. Three-fourths of his money
came in donations of $25 or less.
When running for office, Pressler promised to retW'n 10 per
cent of his congressional salary. Finding he could not legally take
a unilateral pay cut, he's turning a tenth of his pay over to the
goverrunent of his state .
The blg, fancy, expensive congressman's chair that came
with his office makes Presslel" nervous. He's attempting to ex·
change it for a smaller, less pretentious model.
at a time when polls say 60 per cent of all Americans call
He figW'es no representative should serve more than foW' themselves conservatives, but less than one out of five admit to
terms, and intends to quit after eight years.
being Republicans.
Pressler is already in an open public fight with the
In the few weeks he's been in office, he's become concerned
over the huge amounU; of money easily available to congressmen Republican National Conumttee, and lUI chairman, Mary Louise
from spec1al interest groups this year even though there are no Smith. He thinks there's too much emphasis on raising funds
elections. By his estimate, he could pick up an easy $10,000 for from special interest groups. And he's written a letter to the
incidental expenses, a few hundred doJJars here, a few hundred eiditor in the Washington Post, opposing the National Comthere, from one lobbymg committee or another - even as a mittee's $2 million raise-the-GOP image public relations cam·
freshman with little political clout on the Hill. He's amazed at the paign, holding the dollars would be better spent if given to
number of senators and representa lives who snap up this money. · Republican candidates. In return, Pressler's been threatened
At home, where he goes three weekends out of lOW', Pressler with retaliation in 1976when he's up for r~lectlon .
There is one special point that should be noted in this matter.
is attempting to draw more small farmers, labor union men and
small businessmen into South Dakota's Republican party, where In the Democratic landslide of 1974, when 36 House Republican
power for years has centered in a rather small, tight-kmt group. incumbents went down in defeat and when GOP strength, in iU;
He attempted unsuccessfully to get a labor union man to run for traditional Middle West stronghold was severely weakened,
the GOP chairmanship in one of his First District counties. Presaier was one of only loW' Republicans nationwide to upset a
Friends are now putting together a group of 100 to 200 young men Democratic incumbent.
and women, 25 to 40 years of age, that they've checkmarkl!d as
future leaders. Both Republians and Democrats are included.
Presaler plans to meet with this group several times a year to
develop politial issues and congressional reforms.
This approach 1s the only means, Pressler believes, by which
the image of the Republican party can be meaningfully changed

J, F. Cobb dies

Lots of

:::::::::::·:·!·!·!·!•!•!•!·!·!·!·!·!•!•!•:;;.;:;.;:;:;:;::;;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;.;:;:;:::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;.;.;.:-:•!•!!!•!0:•!·!•!·!·!·!·!·!·!·!;!;!:!:!·!::·:·:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;.;-:-:·:·:·:-:·:·:-:·:·:-:-:-:-:-:·:·:·:·: ·•. ;.;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;~:;::=.-:::::::)~=

political charisma

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED - Mary King,
Mmersville; Thomas McClung,
Pomeroy; Lisa Willford, Long
Bottom; John Blosser, Middleport; Linda Wright, Vmton;
Susan Jeffers , Middleport;
Everett Roush, Rae me;
Frances Clonch; Rutland;
Harry E. Oldaker, Letart, W.
Va.; Frances Hoffman,
Middleport.
DISCHARGED - Susan
King, Grace' Roush, Rhoda
South, Ruth Hawkins, Roy
Neece, Brenda Smith, Charles
Schoolcraft, Mur1 OW's.

than

t

Continued from page I
The first step in the development of these maps and books
would be aerial photographs which would cost between $75,000
and $110,000. Buehl was named chairman of a conunlttee to at·
tack the problem with members of his committee being named
Charac ter actor Sidney
including David Parry, Blakeslee and county conunissioner
Greenstreet's
first movte was
Henry Wells.
made
m
1941
..
when he was 61
Burt explained a new housing assistance plan for low and
years old - " The Maltese
moderate income people.lt is non-metropolitan type funding and Falcon."
applications for first year funding must be made from March I
this year to May 15thlsyear. The funding is !OOpct., with no local
matched funds required and is handled by HUD, Burt said.
A meeting at Middleport Council Chambers at 7:30p.m. next
Wednesday to formulate plans for protesting the removal of
railroad lines from Metgs County was announced.
"ONE OF THE BEST EVER MADE!"
Speaking on industrial sites, Ohio Power Co. Manager Fred
l01 IM(tln IIIIIU
Morrow said 11 is transportation that plays a major role· In the
selection of industrial locations. He said taking out railroad lines, 1
or not having adequate roads to sites, would be a hindrance.
Morrow, Orion Roush and David Parry were named to a committee to update industrial sites available in Meigs County.
Attending were Blakeslee, Johnson, John Rice, E. F.
Robinaon, Edison Baker, Morrow, David Parry, Wesley Buehl,
Henry Wells and Burt.

ss.Feeder

Values To

J
J

Using honesty as

.

February ooL~R FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY

)jj

Continued from page I
welfare, crime and despair. Some of our central cities are
wasteland. We can wait no longer on the federal goverrunent or
any other government. We must act now. Halfway measW'es will
not work. Only a revolutionary approach will work "
Question Asked
The govtlrnor was asked why such a plan was not devised
before. "We didn't need it before," he replied. "When I was
governor before, we had the lowest taxes, the lowest unemployment and the lowest welfare caseload. But now, we've got a
bad, bad tax structure in the state of Ohio ."
Rhodes said he will hold three more news conferences,
beginning perhaps on Friday, to give details of the rest of his
Inner city plan, including a bond issue to finance the industrial
attraction.
He said he has received "excellent response" from Ohio
mayors, legislative leaders and some 50 corporate executives he
has peraonally contacted. ''They'd like to have had It 10 years
ago," he said.
Rhodes satd the proposed new state board would decide which
industrial expansions would be eligible for the tax exemptions.
He declined to name Ohio cities likely to benefit, except to say
that "every city !tom Martins Ferry to Cleveland is m trouble
with jobs."
Rhodes dismissed observations that the tax exemptions might
cut into existing revenues.
11
What tax revenues~" the governor asked. 11How can they lose
any taxrevenues if they don 'I have any coming in' "
Rhodes said unemployed persons would be able to find jobs
paying up to $17,000 a year if his plan works. He said unskilled
residents of the inner city woold be trained in special vocationaltechnical schools to be built.

Market Report
1

The s!X hens left are doing a good job. ·=·:
Even in the winter slack period they :;:
provide nearly ~ree dozen eggs a week .
-ample for us.
:·,·
On a cost accounting basis, we get
nine dozen eggs out of a 50-pound bag of ,,,
,reed. The pnce of that bag is now $5.50, ::::
which means we pay 61 cents for a
dozen eggs. That isn't bad for truly ~i
fresh extra large eggs. But it tsn't ~;:
great. The local grocery store price has :~:~
been fluctuating between &gt;9 cents Hnd )~:
8JcentsforadozenofGradeAeggs.
:;:;
However, when you add in the money ~o
11 took to set up the backyard chicken
coop in the first place, the chickens will ::;:
have gray feathers before we recoup :;:;
our losses.
1::

Planners accept

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

-

chicken wire for a small yard, a
watering devtce and a feeder. Used
lumber made a nest and an old cartop
carrier became a roost. All that came
to about $3!:.
Then we had to buy food
Baby chicks~ides being cute and
loveat!e , aren' bl eaters. We didn 't
think we'd ha any trouble with that
expense until they were old enough to
lay eggs.
We discovered it took the chickens six of which turned out to be hens between five and eight months to begin
laying eggs. By the time they were
three months old they were 'eating a 50pound bag of feed every three weeks
and that cost, at the beginnmg, $4.35 a

Rhodes would proof

Shoe Box

Southern at Hannan Trace
Southwestern at North Gallia

:·:· It's fresher than what the stores sell
:::: and can be as natural as you want it j~~ but it ISn't always cheaper.
&lt;·
Take, for instance, eggs.
My wife and' I, along w1th two
:; growing boys, love to eat eggs.
~= Possessing a house in an agrlcultW'al
area and a)(eady having met limited
::~: success with a vegetable garden, we
;:;: , decided to go mto the poultry business.
;:;:
It seems simple enough -get a
;:; chicken, the chicken lays an egg and
~:; youeat1\. No middleman to boost the
~ prices and to let the eggs sit around the
~ · store several weeks. Just fresh, cheap
~ eggs.
~:
We started from scratch. We paid 25
*~ cents each for a dozen assorted day-&lt;~ld

::::
::::
~
·:&lt;

RAY CROMLEY

Holzer Medical Center
(Discharged, feb. 5)
Jay Adkins, Mrs William
Adkms and daughter, Iris
Ba1ley, Joshua Bartles, Diane
Btttner, Jenmfer Byers,
Patricia Condee, Freda DaviS,
Ida Delong, Mrs. Howard
DeWeese and son, Clara
Ehrman, Peggy Elkins, Billy
Evans,. Sarah Eynon, Goldie
Fraley, Dana Halfhill, Georgia
Henry, Mary Houck, Delores
Huffman, James Jividen,
Thomas Marshall Jones,
Marguerite Kostival, Samuel
Larch, Kathryn Leedy, Mrs.
Terry May and daughter,
Hazel Miller, Mary E. Miller,
Michael Richmond, Kimberly
Ridge, Fred Sands, Virgima
Souders, Debra Staley, Shirley
Still, Russell Stiverson, Bar·
bara Tornstrom, Andrew Van
Maire, Charles Watson,
Christina Wilgus , James
Williams.
(Births)
Mr. and Mrs. LaW'is Johnson, a daughter, Jackson; Mr.
and Mrs. Ricky Ousley, a son,
Wellston; Mr. and Mrs. Donald
Riffle, a son, Jackson; Mr. and
Mrs. Bobby Roush, a son,
Middleport; Mr. and Mrs.
Thomas Edward Wilson, a son,
•Pomeroy .

73 9
75 4

symmes Val ley at Souther n
Othe r s
Hannan Trace at Trrmble
Parker sburg at Pt, Pleasant
Wahama at Winf1eld

I'

HOSPITAL NEWS

CLASS A

69 4

99~

MIDDLI; PORT ·

12 ,

Clay lo n Northmonr 11

132
124

bag.
·,
Two of the chicks died within a few
weeks. Four roosters were killed for

t

·Support Center

65 4
67.0
67.4
67 6

WINTUK YARN

992-2709

17

(il eJ New Ph rladelptHa and
Co lu m bu s Cent r al , 13 each , 19

5 Lo rd stown ( 2 16 OJ
6 Lor Cl ' w ( 1 12 2}
7 Se brmg (1 31 1

chicks - Rhode Island Reds, Black
Minorcas and Australorps.
A toolshed in the back of the house

*

AND SURGICAl

*WHEEl CHAIRS
*WALKERS
*CRUTCHES &amp; CANES
* BACK BRACES
* BEDSIDE COMMODES
* SUPPORT STOCKINGS
*TRUSSES
*TRACTION EQUIPMENT
* ELASTIC SUPPORTS ·
*SURGICAL DRESSINGS
* INCONTINENT
SUPPLIES

~ ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (UP!) :-:: One way to heat mflation while en·
~
=·~ joying the frwts of your labors, so the

l\l! st~~~~o:n~r~i~/i~:;;.';.~';!. :n~ C:~Ji~~~~~~u~p:~~e~~:· ~: ~~d when they were about six months lll

PRESCRIPTION

( 14) 61 1
( 151 62 4
{ 151 64.2
( 16 ) 64 9
( 14) 64 9

. COATS&amp;CLARK

Valley 'Lumber·&amp;.Supply Co.

so ,

12 Cmc1nna 11 Rog e r Bacon 49

~

REMODELING
'
NEEDS

70
51

11. Zan esv tll e

SOCK

FOR ALL YOUR

128

13 ( I re) Ety r 1a and Al l1an ce. 33

eac h

HARNESS DRIVER
BOCARATON ,Fia (UP! )The Harness Tracks of
America have named recordbreakmg Herve F1hon harness
dnver of tl1e year for the s1xth
consecutive time.
The 3~-year-&lt;~ ld Canad••n
fimshed with 95 of a possible
100 points in the HTA ratmgs
by w1nnmg 637 of the 2,999
races he drove in 1974. He won
$:1 ,4:11,366 1n ourses and
fmished m the money m 36 per
cent of the races he drove. The
figures were all-ltme records
Following Filion m the HTA
standmgs were Joe O'Brien,
ChriS Bormg, Norman Dupla•se, Lucien Fontaine, Bill
Haughton, Walter Paisley,
Shelley Gourdreau, M1ke
Arnold and Daryl Busse.

236
224

IOC I E T ec h ( I S l l

CLASS AAA

755

No G Ayg,
139 l1 12.6

Wright State scored an
82-76 victory 'over Urbana,
Walsh edged Malone 74-71 in
overtime, and Ohio Northern
defeated Marian (Ind .) 81).73,
Only two games are scheduled for tonight. Cincinnati is
at South Florida and Mt.
Vernon is at Wilberforce.

Tigers fifth zn UPI poll
Waverly ' s Class AA T tge r s ar e

I Backyard chicken coop no bargain I

~2.

•

Gal lIpolis
220 11 20 o
INO. LEADERS

YOUR
HEADQUARTERS

lrd AVE.

7
6

Southwestern

260-625 .4 16
2&lt;16-647 .380

Team
Ironton

2. Simon. 0·0-0: Isaac, 0·1·1
TOTALS 22-7-51 . ·

i~ name and phone number

8"

62 23 148 13 5
49 48 146 13 3
52 34 138 12 6

Ja ckson
Me1gs

Ja ckson
Well ston
Athens

4. Smith. 7-2·16; Lanham , 2-0·

NO COMMENT
CHAMPAIGN, Dl. (UPil
Dlinois Coach Gene Bartow
Wednesday had 1 'no comment' '
on reports that he was so upse t
about baske tball officiating
that he planned to file a
complaint w1th Big Ten
Comnussioner Wayne [luke.
Bartow allegedly blasted
officials after last Saturday's
game against Michigan State.
" I won't confirm quotes from
any newspaper on the subject," he SBld . "I'm just trymg
to stay closed mouth which is
hard for me to do sometimes.
"I have all the confidence m
the world in the Big Ten of·
fice."
Michigan State defeated the
Dlini, ~. in the SatW'day
game.

7

65 20 150 13 6

299 705
257 616

Me1gs

Harris, 6-0-12 , McGhee, 1 2

12 13 10 16- 51

6

9

57 o
57 1

Iron ton
Gallipolis

Wa verl y
Gall1polis
Iron t on

0; Lyne. 0-l I. TOTALS 13-7-33.
GALLIPOLIS EIGHTH ISH

Gal l1a Oth

8

900
733
860

855 ( 15)
857 ( 15}

75 24 174 1Y 3

Team
Logan

Magnotta, 2-0-d; Ke nnedy, 1 2-

Score by quarters :
Me1gs 8th
6 q 6 12- 33

FELKER WINS TROPHY
STARKVILLE, Miss. (UP!)
-Quarterback Rockey Felker
of Mississippi state will be
presented, the Bishop Frank A.
Juhan Trophy at a banquet in
Tullahoma, Tenn. Feb. 17.
The award is named mhonor
of the late Bishop Juhan,
longtime bishop of the state of
Florida , who wa~ an all·
Southern football ayer and
champion boxer at e University of the South.
Jackson said the trophy is
awarded to the "best college
football player in America who
•s equal m his churchmanship."

868

82 26 190 19 0
68 21 157 17' Kyger Creek
850 (13)
Camden, NG
69 31 169 16 9
Pl. Pleasanl
737 (20)
Loga n, NG
61 20 142 14 2 Wellston
943 114)
Brammer . SV
54 20 128 14.2 Miller
1182 ( 16)
Spencer . East 50 27 127 14.1 Alexander
1110 ( 16)
Bailey, East
58 9 125 13 9 5 Valley
1108 f15l
Myers, SV
50 10 120 13 3 Wahama
679 (9)
TEAM STATISTICS
THURSDAY
Fteld Goal Percentage
Pt Pleasant at Wa hama
Team
FGM-A Pet.
FRIDAY
Wa verly
272 584 466
SEOAL
Athens
253·547 463 Athens at Wellston
Logan
273-625 437 Waverly at Gallipolis

Gallia 8th grade
•
wms
sixth tilt

m.

944

930

Tnrnbl e
Athens

62 30 154 14 0

SVAC SCORING
Name, T
FG FT Pts Avg
Swain . HG
Ill 29 299 29 9
Myers, SV

796
876

7

Nels -York
W L P OP S Vall ey

Team

8"

840
856
767
843

8

I

579
7 4 618 618

957
967
929

9
9

5
5

580
658

PT5 OPP
939
771
1044
830
902
780

5

6

11 0 707
8 J 731
7 •I 665

• •

5
5
5
6
6

9

James. NG
Carter. SW

-

J

9

{ Re ser ve)

"We've got some home run power back w1th May," says

L

" 2'

SEOAL STANDINGS
&lt;VarStlyl
Team
W·l
P OP

Weaver, "and Singlet.on will relieve OW' platoomng Slluallon.
He'll start out in right, but I won't guarantee htm a JOb. He'll
have to produce. We've got some pretty good guys sitting down.
guys like ( AI ) Bumbry and (Jim ). Fuller."
The Orioles never got into the general bidding for Hunter,
mostly because they simply couldn't afford him. As for all the
money Hunter got, Weaver has this to say :
"He deserves ti- the type pitcher and person he •s. Salary·
wise, he won1 be the highest paid player m baseball, you know.
(Hank Aaron is ). From what I've heard, Hunter (who Signed for
a salary of $200,00Q.a·year for five years) won't be able to ask for
a raise for the next five years. I think pitchers hke Palmer and
(Ferguson) JenklllS, if they continue wmning, could possibly
pass him in salary."
Yeah, Earl, but ne1ther ever figW'es to pass lum m all that
other bread he got up front.

Coach Bill Leedy's Gallipolis
eighth grade basketball team
defeated Meigs' visiting eighth
graders 51-33 in a makeup
contest on the Washington
hardwood Wednesday evening.
The v1ctory left Gallipolis
with a 6-4 season mark. Today,
the Gallipolis seventh and
eighth grade teams battle Pt.
Pleasant on Wa shmgton
hardwood , starting at 4 p.
Wednesday, Mark Smith
tallied 16 points and Jim Harris
12 for the winners. D. Blake

markers lor Miami , now 1 ~-5
overall , and l{od D1ennger had
10 The Redskms enjoyed a 10pomt ha ~ r~1me c.tdvantagc, 23IR.
~·or the Hurons, 9-9 for all
games and 2'5 m the loop, Bob
Riddle connected for 15
pomlers and Talmadge Bell

I
i~

~

'

SHE'S .. MRS.''NOW
~
Mrs, Steve Dalley, the for~
mer Rhonda Ervin, Racine:
was piclW'ed in the Wednesda&gt;:
edition of The Dally Sentinel
with her malden nam~
erroneously listed rather
her married name. Mrs!
Dailey, R.N., was presentecj
her numbered badge an4
appointed card as a National
'
Amencan
Red Cross Dlsaste~'
Nurse at a meeting of titd
Me1gs County Red Cros ~
Chater Tuesday night.

I.

Owned and Op~~rotod by LIRt Osborl)e

•

'

I~

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I~The ~ily~ntlnei,Mlddleport-Pomeroy , 0., Thursday,

,'Generatiri;;··ii;;m,·~~

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By Helen and Sue Hottel
Thooe ObBceDe Calls ...

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My girl friend keeps telling me about the obscene phone calls
abe geta, all from the same guy. She goes into a lot of details, and
u,ys she's scared.
I told her to get her phone number changed, but she argued
the phone company wouldn't do that.
What can she do ? - CONCERNED
·

Concerned:
·
I'd guess you are more ~~concerned" than your girl friend i.s .
A phone number can be changed for the ' asking, especially if
obscene caUs make it necessary. - SUE

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Dear Helen and Sue :
I'm 14and !can't tell my folks as they wouldn't understand. I
know it's kind of usual for teens to fall in love with an actor or
rock star, but this is different. I'm a boy, and I dream about a
male actor.
I just know I'm a homosexual.! hate myself, but I can't help
' lt. Flveyearsagoihad some experiences with the boy next door,
and ever since I've been scared about myself.
Don't tell me to get In touch with a mental health agency
because I haven't any money, and I would be ashamed to get my
folks' permission.
But please help end my agony . - DON'T KNOW WHERE TO

TIJRN
Dear DKW'IT :
!!'san unusual boy (or girl) who doesn't have a few same .. ex
e:tperiences or fantasies on the road to growing up. Tbese don 't
lock you Into homosexuality - but guilt and worry can
aometimeo push _you into a life you don 't want, simply because
you've told yourself there 's no hope.
Talldng lhln8s out with an understanding adult often gets
your mind together. Why not try an anonymous teen hot line '
There's one .listed in your phone book.
You'd be surprised how easily you can talk wben you know
you won't be recognized. - HELE;N AND SUE

+++

Dear Rap :
.
'lbls is for "Faltering," the girl who gets more doubtful as
her wedding day draws near.
I went through -xactly the same thing. I thought I was In love
and that only this person could make me happy. The galmour of
my beautiful diamond helped. Also, all the great, exciting
wedding pl8118.
But the nearer the date came, the more panicky I was, at the
real lear of spending the next 40 or so years with "him." Other
men began to look better and better.
It was the moet painful thing I've ever done, but I broke our
enPSement. The next few weeks were the hardest of my 21
;pears, lwu ftlled with self-&lt;loubt and dread of being alone.
1
Now, six months later, I'm having more fun than I ever
thought po881ble. Have found Interesting friends, go many
places, really ENJOY.
TeU "Faltering" that a broken engagement is not the end of
the world, though It may seem so. If she's not sure, she'd better
walt. - t.,ynn.

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moder!1 nursing today, you're

invited to attend th~ Open
House and Tea at the Holzer
Medical Ce nter Sc hoo l of
Nursing, Dav is Hall, &gt;14 First
,\ve ., Gallipolis, Sunday, Feb. 9
from 2 to l p.m.
High school seniors from the
surroun ding area and their
parents wh o have expressed an
interest in the School of Nurstudents who may be considering a prOfessional nursing
ca reer are also welcome.
Juniors from the School of
Nursing will serve as hostesses
for the afternoon, with Tina
Coffman, Nelsonville, class
president, serving as the open
house chairwoman . Her

A disc ussion on finding
the

church

nurse ry wa s held at th e
Monday night meeting of the
Young Adult Class of the
Bradford Church of Christ at
tl1e home of Catheri ne RusselL

John Blake presided, with
Madeline Painter giving the

devotions titled " The In comparable Christ" . Scripture
was taken from Isaiah.
It was suggested that the
junior church pews be painted .
Flowers will be sent to a
bereaved family of lhe
congregation, and cards to
several who were reported ill.
Plans were reported ill. Plans
were also made for sending
birthday cards to the children 's
home in Mexico.
Refreshments were served
by Sylvia Blake and Polly
Smith to the 17 in attendance .

r

Mrs. Cassell hosts club

assista nt s will ' be ' Ca thy
Glassco, Chillicothe; Debbie
Bailey. Thurman ; Kathe
" Create a dried arrangeSteiner , Akron; Cheryl fitzmen t" was the theme of
ge rald ,
He ath;
Jayne .
a program ·prese nted Monday
Wiggle ~ worth and
Denise
night at a meeting Or the
· Broyle s , Gd lipoli s; Lisa
Middleport Garden Clu b held
Brunch, Urbana; Melissa
Burger. Vienna, W. Va.; at the home of Mrs. Roy
Cassell .
Stephan ie Alfrey, Ironton , and
Mrs. John Kincaid, assisted
Vicki Tomlinson, Bidwell .
· by Mrs. Cassell, created an
arrangement usi ng money
plant and greenery in a bottle
t:ontainer. Mrs. Kincaid also
made a valentine arrangement
using black container and red
ve lvet roses and on display was
Dr . Paul Warford, area
resource minister of the Ohio
Baptist Convention, Granville,
was guest speaker at the annual fellowship tea of the B. H.,
Sanborn Missionary Society of ·
the Middleport First Baptist
Observance of lni&lt;&gt;rnational
Church Monday night at the
Women 's Year through public
church .
Dr. Warford, accompanied presenl&lt;ltion of women and
here by hi s wife. l&lt;llked on a their accomplishments was
Baptist work project in HaitL dis cussed at the recent
Attendin g in addition to meeting of the Middleportmembers of the host . church, Pomeroy Area Branch of the
were women from · the American Association of
Pomeroy Baptist Church, the Universi ty Women meeting in
Cheshire Baptist Church, the the Meigs High School Library.
Mrs. fay Sauer presided and
United Methodist and Church
presented
material on In·
of Christ in Middleport, the
Mount Moriah Baptist Church, ternational Women 's Year and
Middleport, and Trinilv the suggestion for monthly
Church, Pomeroy.
' · articles featuring women's
Mrs. Janice Gibbs presented accomplishments in various
a prelude at the organ to open fields for newspapers. The
the meeting with Miss Rhoda AAUW state convention was
Hall giving the call to worship annoW1ced for April 25-27 in
by reading Psalm 100. There Cleveland .
Also annoW1ced was Annual
was a welCome to the visitors,
Legislat
ion Day March 19 with
hymn sing ing and prayer. Mrs.
Elizabeth Slavin had charge of a workshop at the State House
the love gift dedication with in Columbus, and the Ohio
Mrs. Ethel Hughes asSisting. Coalition for Implementation
Refreshments were served in of the Second ERA on Saturday
the social room of the church. at Mees Hall, Capital
Mrs . Clara Mae Darst University, Columbus.
AI the suggestion of Miss
decorated the tables and Mrs.
Kathleen Anthony and MisS Susan Fleshman, librarian,
Hall presided.

Sanborn group
enjoys speaker

0 U Sta6a.es
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ATHENS - The Ohio
To keep to the orig inal
Umvers1ty Expenmental feelingoftheplayandlodefer
Series presents a unique to the au!hor '.s wishes. "Noye's
•
contem~,orary ope_ra, "Noye's Fludde"· will be presen.ted for
Fludde, as lis f1rst presen- its three-night nut at the
tation of 197&gt;, opening Feb. 7. Presbyterian Church in Athens
Written in 19&gt;8 by English at the corner of Court and
Rap :
•
I
had
"Faltering's"
doubta
and
fears
before
my
wedding.
We
composer Benjamin Britten, Washington Streets. Britten
•
began to !Ifill. I broke It off . He begged nie to come back. I
"Noye's Fludde" is based on prefers a church rather than a
refilled, Then he found another girl. Now I realize how wrong I
the story of Noah as told in one theater for the show's setting.
wu. Don't back out unless you're SURE.- REGRETFUL
of the !6th-eentury Chester
·•we are also singing the
M1racle plays.
Middle English score ac·
" But it's really more of a cording to Britten's wishes:
pageant than an · opera," without the true dialec t
Harolyn Brient, the show's pronounced as if they wer~
For those wlio are unable to are in Secretarial, General ~trecto~, ~ys, . "and we're · modern English words/' the
attend day classes, Gallipolis Office, Jr. Accounting and presentmg tt as 1t would have director says.
One of the . most appealing
Business College Is instituting Business Administration. All been se~n by those attending
a new night school program programs are approved for the ongrnal play at the Wh1~; aspects of the show for Harolr'
sun tide Festivals m the 1500s.
Brient, graduate student in the
beginning with the Spring veterans' benefits.
School
of
Theater's
Quarter.
For information, ca ll Mr.
professional directing
Night classes will meet three Pollitt or Mrs. Eaton, Adprogram; is that the audience
evenings a week, Monday, missions Office, 446-4373.
can
participate in the perTuesday, and Thursday, at 6
formance.
p.m. Students wiU be able to
"Britten has purposely inMIDKIFF PROMOTED
pursue any diploma program
eluded
three well-known
Danlel R., Midkiff, who is
offered in day classes in the
in
the score " she
hymns
The fourth birthday annew night program on a one- serving with the U.S. Marines
and is stationed at ·. Camp niversary of Chuckie Smith reveals. "In that w~y, the
half lime basis.
Diploma programs available LeJeune, N. C., has been was celebrated Tuesday at the audience can be a part of the
promoted to the rank of Cor- home of his grandparents, Mf. performance, just like they did
in the 16th century, instead of
poral. His wife, the former and Mrs. Norman Smith.
Attending besides his just watching it."
Cynthia Domigan, is with him.
lj)ANCE PLANNED
Another attribute of the show
The Pomeroy ER Squad and He is the son of Mr . and Mrs. grandparents were his mother, that excites the director is
Volunteer Fire Department Ray Midkiff, Langsville, Rt. I. Mrs. Sharon Smith, Mr. and
Mrs. Alfred Wolfe and Debbie
will sponsOr a Valentine Dance
Werry. Sending gills Were
Saturday, Feb. 15 at the
George
Swauger, Janice Sayre
Pomeroy Junior High from 9
and Deanna, Mr. and Mrs.
p.m. to I a.m. Music will be
WOMAN ILL
James R. Smith, Rob, Ray and
provided by the Red Stewart
The Pomeroy Emergency Michael, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas
. Band. Admission is $5 per Squad answered a call to the
Werry and Tommy, Anna
couple. All proceeds will be Langsville area at 8:30 p.m.
Filch, Alice Beaver, and his
Wled toward payment of the Wednesday for Alice McClellan
great-gra ndmother, Mrs.
new building. Door prizes will who, was ill. She was taken to
Leora Schar!.
be awarded.
Veterans Memorial Hospital.

.GBC offers night school

Birthday
observed

SAVE

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Henry Block has
17 reasons why you
should conte to us
for'income tax help.
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Reason 5. If the IRS should call you
in for an audit, H &amp; R Block will go
with you, at no additional cost. Not
as a legal representative ... but we
can answer all questions about how
your taxes were prepared.

'

IJ{)IOlBLOCM ..
THE INCOME TAX PEOf'LE
618 E. MAIN ST.
POMEROY, OHIO
Optn 'A.M. to S P.M. Mon.-S.t.' '

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Ph. m-3795

NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY

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BIRTHDAY OBSERVED
CHESTER - The 89th birthday anniversary of Mrs.
Mary Reed was celebrated
Friday Jan. 31 at ber home.
Friends and relatives calling in
afternoon were Mrs, Donna
lhle, Kathy and David, Racine;
Willie Frecker, Mrs. Sharon
Michael
and
Matthew
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Minersville ; Norman McCain,
Marietta; Clifford Smith ,
Bradbudy, and Mrs. Starling
Massar, local. Evening visitors
were Mr . and Mrs . Ross
Cleland, local ; Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Frec.ker, Pine Grove,
Mr. and Mrs. George
Frederick, Beth Pickens,
Missy King, Fannie Belle
Brown, Mr. and Mrs. Dana
McCain , Gladys Shumway,
Esta White and Mary Newell,
Long Bottom. Mrs . ' Reed
received phone caUs from Mrs.
David Tysinger, Johnson, City,
Tenn.' Mrs. Nora Damefood.
Akron , and SFC Jerry Cl land,
Fort Sill, Okla ., and man nice
gifts.
REVIVAL ROWING
CHESHiru:: - A revival at
the Cheshire Methodist Church
is continuing through Feb: 6, 7
and 8 at 7:30 p.m. nlghUy.
Evangelist is Merlin Teets.
TI~ere is special singing each
evening..

an arrangement made by Ml'l!.
James Titus using corkscrew
willow to create an abstract
form . She used the cordonne
puff for color and to create
several areas of interest rather
than
one focal
point.
Skeletonized magnolia leaves
completed the arrangement.
For roll ca ll at the meeting
conducted by Mrs. Sibley
Slack, members discussed
their spring planting -plans.
The verse of the month was
given by Mrs. Slack.

Mrs . Rachael Downie was
appointed library represen l&lt;ltive from the branch. Mrs.
Martha Husted was named
representative from AAUW to
the Meigs County Bicentennial
Commission, and Mrs. Downie
will serve on the Meigs County
Committee on Retardation at a
meeting Thursday in the Meigs
County Courtroom.
Mrs. Sauer spoke on her
· contac t with Ohio University
regarding
a continuing
education prggram and the
possibility of sponsoring
classes here .
Speaker at the meeting was
John Redovian, coordina tor of
Meigs Teachers Corps. He
spoke on how the program was
obtained for Meigs, and the
purpose and objectives of it.
Program for February will
feature Mrs. Jeanette· Thomas
talking on the parents' role of
establishing values in youth .
Refreshments were served by
Mrs. Husted, Miss Helen Smith
and Miss Janis Schmoll.

Read at ·the meeting was a
letter from The Daily Sentinel
regarding Green Thumb Notes
with March 14 and May 30
being the scheduled -column
dates . A communication was
read from Mrs. Aron Kelton
advising · that the Meigs
Museum is available for club
meetings, Flower shoWs or open
house· programs.
.A.lso read was a communication from the Meigs
County Committee on Mental
Retardation asking that a
representative of the club
att&lt;&gt;nd a meeting Thursday
night at the Meigs County
Courthouse,
The club received an invitation from the Widning Trail
Garden Club to an open
meeting, March II, 8 p. m. at

BY POLLY CR,u!ER

the Episcopal Parish House
with Mr.s . Nan Moore, Middleport, to show slides of
Hawaii. The club was asked to
notify Winding Trail by March
5 as to the number who will
attend.
Miss Nellie Zerkle gave the
annual treasuce,r's report .
Yearbooks provided by Mrs,
Mildred McDaniel were
di&amp;tributed.
Refreshments were served
from a table centered with a
valentine arrangement of
white chrysanthemums and
greenery with red bows, the
gift of Miss Kathy Francis to
Miss Nancy Large, granddaughter of Mrs, Cassell. Other
hosteeses for the meeting were
Mrs. Wall&lt;&gt;r Hayes and Mrs.
Edward Tewksbary .

Business and professional
women from over Ohio are
being invited to participate in
the Ohio Coalition for Implementation of the Equal
Rights Amendment workshops
to be conducted Saturday at
Mees Hall, Capital University,
Columbus, . according to
material received by Miss
Freddie Houdashelt, president
of the Middleport BPW Club.
T~e workshops will be
conducted from 9 a. m. to 3 p.
m. and carry the theme

,ffqJQ&gt;.~·X

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Valentine's

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Day
FEB. 14th

a woman never forgets,,,
the man who remembers

SWISHER - LOHSE
Pharmacy

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m.2f55

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BAKER
FURNITURE ·
.

ANNUAL
-..-NKLII)I

AND SAVE

•

Specials ·

We·, BIG on con•-nc..

p/NUIIt friMd/y f_,p~o
ond 6Pft(lr Hl'!lico root

99c

Big Selection Toys, SlleCill

7tc

Spec it~ I Modeling Kits

5tc

Reg. nc pr. Pantyhose
2 pr. 99c
·"!-Reg . S1.29 pr. Queen Size Pantyhose 79c pr .
' Reg . SI.39-4ot.WintukYarn
Uc
Reg. S4.69 Porta F iles
Sl.at
Reg. S3 .79 File Boxes
$2.79
Asst. Plastic Housewares
ttc ea.
Reg.toS1.49 Alum . Bakeware
2 for 99c
Jtc u.
2 tor 99c

· Reg. to79c Kitchen Toots

Reg.1otac Kitchen Gadgets

Also assort. at
ate
Big Asst . Jigsaw P:uizfes stc up
Big Asst . Games
$1.29
Gtant Beasty a an~ Spec.
99c
Reg. U.t9 20 gal. Tras·h Can i2.99
While They Lnt· ·

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Coloring Books
S9c
Re.g . 49c Crayolas
2 bxs. 89c
Reg. 11 .20 Print by Numbers 79c
Reg. 99c Play· Doh
69c
Reg. 15c Candy Bars
tc ea.
Reg. 10c Wrigleys Gum
4 pkgs.

NOW IN PROGRESS. ASK FOR A SALE BILL
V•lues to ISc Asst. Sewlnt Notions llor 99c
250 yd . spool Polyester Thread 3 spools Stc
. Reg . 52 .99 pr. Pillowcases to em ·
broider
·
12.39 pr .
Reg . $7 .99 Spanish Lace Afghln Kits $6.99
Reg . l:1.59 Corn Husk Dolls
99c
Reg. ~tc Assort. Eurinqs
2 tor 99c
Reg . 79( pr. Stretch Knee-Hi's
6tc p~ .
R.eg . 6tc Assort. Glassware
2 tor 9tC
Reg . S2.49·24dd in. Rug,. ~upners
Sl.t9

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~1 . 00

.(
I.

$2.65 Value

32 oz.

$1.09 Value

DUNCAN
GINES

Weber, Mrs . Ada Van Meter,
Mrs. Ethel Orr, Mrs: Letha
Wood, Mrs. Ada Bissell, Mrs .
Sadie Trussell, Mrs . · Mary
Newell, Mrs. Betty Roush,
Mrs . Dorothy Lawson and Joe
Bissell .

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1 lb. 7 oz.
$1.19 Value

'

Value

CRAFT MASTER
PAINT
BY NUMBERS
Young Adults
8 Yrs. to Adults

s1.oo

99. ~

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KODAK

NOXZEMA
SHAVE CREAM

POCKET SMILE-SAVER
KIT

11 oz. Size
Si.49 Value

$29.95 Value

AMAZING LIVE

TRAC II
RAZOR

SEA MONKEYS
Just Add Water

!TRIAL
SIZE)

CREATE
INSTANT PETS

49c Value

98c Value

PANASONIC ,
AM·FM PORTABLE
RADIO .
No. RF 508
$21.95 Value

'1988
PERSONAL FILES OR
CHECK
FILES
FAIRaiiLD
CHECKERS OR BINGO

$1J99

$2.50 Value

$4.00 Value

•299

$}99

Gillette

TRAC:U

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GILLEnE

CHERRY HUMPS
CRAZY CURL

TRAC .II

CANDY BARS

' $22.95 Value

BLADES

15c. Value

s's
$1.39 Value

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Value

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GALLIA County 8 and 40,
;; Sidon 612, will meet at 7:30
~; p.m. Thursday at the home o! '
' ~ Mrs. Grace Pratt in Mid·•·•·• dleport. SATIJRDAY•
; HYMN Sing, Hazel Com'.
; munlty Church, 7:30 p.m.
: Saturday featuring "Gospel
:: Tones''. Public .inviled., .

Size

$2.75 Value

THURSDAY
CATHOLIC Women's Club,
Sacred Heart Parish church
hall, 8 p.m. Thursday,
preceded by Mass at 7:30p.m. ·
COMMITTEE FOR the
Mentally Retarded, Thursday,
7:30p.m. Meigs County court.
room. Public invited.

'

fVORY
SOAP
Personal

REG. $1.99

•• MONTHLY meeting, Meigs
,.
,. County Pioneer and Historical
;: Society, 7:30p.m. Thursday at
&gt;! museUI1l. Gayle Price, Port·
1'. land, will present material on
•• the Portland area and the
:: Price and CUrtis families. The
~: public is invited.
j .,

CLAIROL
HAPPINESS

8 oz.

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Cleland and Mrs, Opal Hollun pian ist for the evening. Others
to bl' hos tesses. Each member attending were Mrs. Eileen
is 1o take an .unsigned v&lt;:~.len­ Martin, Mrs. A.da Morri s, Mrs.
tine .
Margaret Tuttle, Mrs. Ma~
A silent miction was held by McPeek, Mrs. Ada Neutzling,
·the hume and orphans com- Mrs . Leona Hensley , Mrs .
mittee . Mrs. Helen Wolf was Dorothy Ri tchi e, Mrs, Zelda

SOFT &amp; DRY

. 525.95 Value

· ·

~-

oz.

RAGU
SPAGHml
SAUCE

LECTRIC
TOASTMASTER

29c
Reg. 51.35 Bag Chocolate Candv

MIDDLIPORT, OHIO

the ricxl
llll'CI.ing with all members ilnd
officers uq;ed to wear white .
The past count ilor \s mccling
was nnnoun ced for Feb. 12 at
the lodge hall with Mrs ..
lniticllioll Wi:l!) set for

NICE
'N'
EASY

HEATER

Reg.

IJryw ,. .• ,. • ,. • ,.

card .

..:.

Throughout The Store
To Mention Only A Few

WCIWCD
Wlllhor ........... •ut.~

14

PRESCRIPTIONS
pij,
Frlelldly Ser¥1~
112 E. MAIN
POMEROY, 0.

BUY NOW

lwgoin,;,_,_,u
touve
,, ,k.,•,,-.9,•. yl•

of your family reunion.
POLLY.

- Past councilor
Mr:-; . Mm'l'ill Keller presided
pins were presen ted to Mrs, with the flagbearcrs escor ting
Erma Cleland and Mrs. Mary Mrs.' Clc-l:md and Mr~. Holl.e1'
Hoilh at the Tuesday night tu the altqr for the prese nIJJeeling of Chester Council :l2.'t, lotiun·. Also escorted to the
Daughters of America. at the altar ·was Mary Ju Pooler who
hall
·
was given a past councilor's

K-Ill McCIIIIMIII, R. Pia. 0 r lw -In, • . Pll.
a,.. Drily

BOOSTERS TO MEET
The Meigs Girls Athletic
Boosters will meet at 7 p.m.
Monday at the Meigs High
School. All interested persons
are invited.

It's relll1y big!
Ono gifllllllk

.ji

CHE~Tt·: ll

DEAR POLLY - My Pet
Peeve concerns the way so
many people drop their voices
when they speak in public, in
church or at any gathering .
Often the listener can hear all
of the message except for the
very last. This often contains
the punch line of the story so it
is missed entirely. - KAY.
DEAR POLLY and P.L.H.
- I have a great method for
putting sharp creases in
double-knit trousers so they
will last through repeated
washings. Tear· an Ordinary
brown paper bag open, spread
it over the trousers and
dampen the bag with plain
whit&lt;&gt; vinegar. Press with a
mediwn-hot iron. The creases
are still sharp in a couple of
pairs of pants I made for my
husband two years ago. CAROL
DEAR POLLY - Tell P. L.
H. That to permanently press ·
double-knit polyester trousers
turn the iron setting to 111inen."
Lay trousers on ironing board
with the crease in place . Place
a damp linen towel over the
pan.ts and press, but be very
careful not to let the iron touch
the fabric as it will melt. Such a
crease put in carefully should
last through many washings .
Do not pin crease in to hold it as
pins conduct heat and leave
marks. Baste crease in if you
are nervous about it being
straight. - MARY ANNE
DEAR POLLY - Several
months ago I sent in a Pointer
telling how lo avoid soap scum
and water spots on our glass
shower doors by wiping them
down with a small hand towel
after each shower.
All our family is' coming
home soon for a family
reunion. We have on ly one
shower. I wondered how I could
convince thoSe using it to
continue with this care. I cut
out the heading to your column
and the article and put these
along with the Polly DOllar I
received in a small frame and
hung it in a conspicuous place
in the bathroom. It has become
quite a conversation piece
besides getting the message
tactfully across to the family.
- MRS. S.L.B.
DEAR MRS. S.L.B. Thanks for letting us be a part

REMEMBER WITH

DOUBLE

FRIGIDAIM

.

DEAR L.H. - The past few
years the word ''antiQue" has
been stretched conSiderably.
Now it seems that anything
that belonged to Grandma is so
considered. I am sure such
chairs are for sale in some
antique shops. Originally to be
a real antique the !J. s. _
customs authorities said an
article must ha\'c been made
before 1830. Now it must be 100
years old. My advice is to paint
it If you want and enjoy it. Sand
off any rust, cover wJth a
commercial rust prevenUtJve
and spray paint the chair any
color you like. -POLLY

•.-».•.•.·-';~.~

It cSocial
I d

Two past councilors receive recognition

- L. H.

"Action Agenda '75". Par·
ticipants will be able to attend
two workshops for th e
registration fee of $5.
They include prospectives on
family law, women and credit,
civil rights , 197&gt; projection,
crime and punishment, employment, the insurance ripoff, child care and related
issues, school house blues,
sports
and
guidance,
volunteerism, disappearing
resources, and the ADC mother
- a double. victim.

a en ar: :

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POLLY'S PROBLEM .
DEAR P&lt;JLLY - Can you
or any readers tell me how to
refinish an old ice cream
parlor chair? I wanted to spray
mine while and put a blue
velvet cushion on it but have
been told not to do this because
it is an antique and such
changes would lower its value.

BPW invited to workshops

Britten:.• score. " l.t:s.great
musiC, she says. Its con- :~:
!$
temporary, being only a 17·
yearoQid show, but st:Il very ~:
tuneful and catchy, It IS by no :;.
:·:·
means old-fashioned music THURSDAY
there are modern rhythm and
MEIGS COUNTY PTA
key changes, and the in- Council, 7:30 p. m. at ~lisbury
strumentation itself is very Elementary School, Founders
curious."
Day program.
The orchestra of two dozen
pieces, wh:ch Will accompany
FRIDAY
the performance, includes
MEETING OF executive
some interesting instruments: committee
of
Pomeroy
English handbells, a whip, Elementary PTA 2 p. m. at the
sl~g mug~, chm. blocks, a school; officers asked to atwmd machme, Clunese gong, tend.
recorders - and the church's
own ?.1pe organ. The r~sult wtll
SATIJRDAY
be a sort of wooden, med1eval
SOUP AND Bake Sale, II :30
sound, " according to Brien!.
a. m. at Syracuse First United
And , the director if quick to Presbyterian Church annex.
add, there 1s nothmg deep or
Take containers for carry-out
psychological about the show.
orders.
II is pure entertainment.
MODERN
WOODMEN
" Noye's flndde" will be Camp 7230 Burlingham, 7:30 p.
performed Friday, Saturday
m. Bring covered dish for
and Sunday, Feb. 7, 8 and 9 at 8
potluck following meeting.
p.m. in the Presbyte_rian
Meat and beverage will be
Church, . Athens. For t1_cket
furnished. All members and
mf~rmat:on and reservallons, their famHies are ·invited.
Vlslt the theater box office in
the Memorial Auditorium
SUNDAY
lobby, or call 594-5010 weekDAN HAYMAN AND THE
days.
Country Hymn timers will be at
the Church of Christ in
Christian Union, Hartford, 7:30
p.m.
FLOWERS BROTHERS of
Marietta will be at the Enterprise UM Church, Sunday,
1:30 p. m. for concert.
Everyone welcome.

,

Ertjoy 'antique
ice cream chair

rDIU;];]
t: uu '~="'''"''''W'&amp;''',';',"'No''' ' '

SPECIAL PRICE PLUS
7200 S&amp;H GREEN STAMPS

.•.•;!

POLLY'S POINTERS :.: ·

-'

A A uw marks year

You,ng Adults
discuss carpet
carpeting for

•''
:yo,

~
I

GAI.L!POLIS - - If you're
interested in kn owing more
ab" ul a fulfilling career in

sing have beerl invited . All

Dear Con:
People who "go into detail" about obscene calls may secretly
enjoy them. TeU your girl friend she can either hang up fa st,
Biart correcting Old Uglylips' grarruna~ (which may make HIM
hanguplnconfusion ),or go unlisted. - HELE!'I

•

0 . h
Ia d
'Pen quse s te

Feb. 6,1975

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I~The ~ily~ntlnei,Mlddleport-Pomeroy , 0., Thursday,

,'Generatiri;;··ii;;m,·~~

.....
•-.

l~~

By Helen and Sue Hottel
Thooe ObBceDe Calls ...

~;

I

My girl friend keeps telling me about the obscene phone calls
abe geta, all from the same guy. She goes into a lot of details, and
u,ys she's scared.
I told her to get her phone number changed, but she argued
the phone company wouldn't do that.
What can she do ? - CONCERNED
·

Concerned:
·
I'd guess you are more ~~concerned" than your girl friend i.s .
A phone number can be changed for the ' asking, especially if
obscene caUs make it necessary. - SUE

.'

+++

+++

Dear Helen and Sue :
I'm 14and !can't tell my folks as they wouldn't understand. I
know it's kind of usual for teens to fall in love with an actor or
rock star, but this is different. I'm a boy, and I dream about a
male actor.
I just know I'm a homosexual.! hate myself, but I can't help
' lt. Flveyearsagoihad some experiences with the boy next door,
and ever since I've been scared about myself.
Don't tell me to get In touch with a mental health agency
because I haven't any money, and I would be ashamed to get my
folks' permission.
But please help end my agony . - DON'T KNOW WHERE TO

TIJRN
Dear DKW'IT :
!!'san unusual boy (or girl) who doesn't have a few same .. ex
e:tperiences or fantasies on the road to growing up. Tbese don 't
lock you Into homosexuality - but guilt and worry can
aometimeo push _you into a life you don 't want, simply because
you've told yourself there 's no hope.
Talldng lhln8s out with an understanding adult often gets
your mind together. Why not try an anonymous teen hot line '
There's one .listed in your phone book.
You'd be surprised how easily you can talk wben you know
you won't be recognized. - HELE;N AND SUE

+++

Dear Rap :
.
'lbls is for "Faltering," the girl who gets more doubtful as
her wedding day draws near.
I went through -xactly the same thing. I thought I was In love
and that only this person could make me happy. The galmour of
my beautiful diamond helped. Also, all the great, exciting
wedding pl8118.
But the nearer the date came, the more panicky I was, at the
real lear of spending the next 40 or so years with "him." Other
men began to look better and better.
It was the moet painful thing I've ever done, but I broke our
enPSement. The next few weeks were the hardest of my 21
;pears, lwu ftlled with self-&lt;loubt and dread of being alone.
1
Now, six months later, I'm having more fun than I ever
thought po881ble. Have found Interesting friends, go many
places, really ENJOY.
TeU "Faltering" that a broken engagement is not the end of
the world, though It may seem so. If she's not sure, she'd better
walt. - t.,ynn.

•
•
-

moder!1 nursing today, you're

invited to attend th~ Open
House and Tea at the Holzer
Medical Ce nter Sc hoo l of
Nursing, Dav is Hall, &gt;14 First
,\ve ., Gallipolis, Sunday, Feb. 9
from 2 to l p.m.
High school seniors from the
surroun ding area and their
parents wh o have expressed an
interest in the School of Nurstudents who may be considering a prOfessional nursing
ca reer are also welcome.
Juniors from the School of
Nursing will serve as hostesses
for the afternoon, with Tina
Coffman, Nelsonville, class
president, serving as the open
house chairwoman . Her

A disc ussion on finding
the

church

nurse ry wa s held at th e
Monday night meeting of the
Young Adult Class of the
Bradford Church of Christ at
tl1e home of Catheri ne RusselL

John Blake presided, with
Madeline Painter giving the

devotions titled " The In comparable Christ" . Scripture
was taken from Isaiah.
It was suggested that the
junior church pews be painted .
Flowers will be sent to a
bereaved family of lhe
congregation, and cards to
several who were reported ill.
Plans were reported ill. Plans
were also made for sending
birthday cards to the children 's
home in Mexico.
Refreshments were served
by Sylvia Blake and Polly
Smith to the 17 in attendance .

r

Mrs. Cassell hosts club

assista nt s will ' be ' Ca thy
Glassco, Chillicothe; Debbie
Bailey. Thurman ; Kathe
" Create a dried arrangeSteiner , Akron; Cheryl fitzmen t" was the theme of
ge rald ,
He ath;
Jayne .
a program ·prese nted Monday
Wiggle ~ worth and
Denise
night at a meeting Or the
· Broyle s , Gd lipoli s; Lisa
Middleport Garden Clu b held
Brunch, Urbana; Melissa
Burger. Vienna, W. Va.; at the home of Mrs. Roy
Cassell .
Stephan ie Alfrey, Ironton , and
Mrs. John Kincaid, assisted
Vicki Tomlinson, Bidwell .
· by Mrs. Cassell, created an
arrangement usi ng money
plant and greenery in a bottle
t:ontainer. Mrs. Kincaid also
made a valentine arrangement
using black container and red
ve lvet roses and on display was
Dr . Paul Warford, area
resource minister of the Ohio
Baptist Convention, Granville,
was guest speaker at the annual fellowship tea of the B. H.,
Sanborn Missionary Society of ·
the Middleport First Baptist
Observance of lni&lt;&gt;rnational
Church Monday night at the
Women 's Year through public
church .
Dr. Warford, accompanied presenl&lt;ltion of women and
here by hi s wife. l&lt;llked on a their accomplishments was
Baptist work project in HaitL dis cussed at the recent
Attendin g in addition to meeting of the Middleportmembers of the host . church, Pomeroy Area Branch of the
were women from · the American Association of
Pomeroy Baptist Church, the Universi ty Women meeting in
Cheshire Baptist Church, the the Meigs High School Library.
Mrs. fay Sauer presided and
United Methodist and Church
presented
material on In·
of Christ in Middleport, the
Mount Moriah Baptist Church, ternational Women 's Year and
Middleport, and Trinilv the suggestion for monthly
Church, Pomeroy.
' · articles featuring women's
Mrs. Janice Gibbs presented accomplishments in various
a prelude at the organ to open fields for newspapers. The
the meeting with Miss Rhoda AAUW state convention was
Hall giving the call to worship annoW1ced for April 25-27 in
by reading Psalm 100. There Cleveland .
Also annoW1ced was Annual
was a welCome to the visitors,
Legislat
ion Day March 19 with
hymn sing ing and prayer. Mrs.
Elizabeth Slavin had charge of a workshop at the State House
the love gift dedication with in Columbus, and the Ohio
Mrs. Ethel Hughes asSisting. Coalition for Implementation
Refreshments were served in of the Second ERA on Saturday
the social room of the church. at Mees Hall, Capital
Mrs . Clara Mae Darst University, Columbus.
AI the suggestion of Miss
decorated the tables and Mrs.
Kathleen Anthony and MisS Susan Fleshman, librarian,
Hall presided.

Sanborn group
enjoys speaker

0 U Sta6a.es
1

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ATHENS - The Ohio
To keep to the orig inal
Umvers1ty Expenmental feelingoftheplayandlodefer
Series presents a unique to the au!hor '.s wishes. "Noye's
•
contem~,orary ope_ra, "Noye's Fludde"· will be presen.ted for
Fludde, as lis f1rst presen- its three-night nut at the
tation of 197&gt;, opening Feb. 7. Presbyterian Church in Athens
Written in 19&gt;8 by English at the corner of Court and
Rap :
•
I
had
"Faltering's"
doubta
and
fears
before
my
wedding.
We
composer Benjamin Britten, Washington Streets. Britten
•
began to !Ifill. I broke It off . He begged nie to come back. I
"Noye's Fludde" is based on prefers a church rather than a
refilled, Then he found another girl. Now I realize how wrong I
the story of Noah as told in one theater for the show's setting.
wu. Don't back out unless you're SURE.- REGRETFUL
of the !6th-eentury Chester
·•we are also singing the
M1racle plays.
Middle English score ac·
" But it's really more of a cording to Britten's wishes:
pageant than an · opera," without the true dialec t
Harolyn Brient, the show's pronounced as if they wer~
For those wlio are unable to are in Secretarial, General ~trecto~, ~ys, . "and we're · modern English words/' the
attend day classes, Gallipolis Office, Jr. Accounting and presentmg tt as 1t would have director says.
One of the . most appealing
Business College Is instituting Business Administration. All been se~n by those attending
a new night school program programs are approved for the ongrnal play at the Wh1~; aspects of the show for Harolr'
sun tide Festivals m the 1500s.
Brient, graduate student in the
beginning with the Spring veterans' benefits.
School
of
Theater's
Quarter.
For information, ca ll Mr.
professional directing
Night classes will meet three Pollitt or Mrs. Eaton, Adprogram; is that the audience
evenings a week, Monday, missions Office, 446-4373.
can
participate in the perTuesday, and Thursday, at 6
formance.
p.m. Students wiU be able to
"Britten has purposely inMIDKIFF PROMOTED
pursue any diploma program
eluded
three well-known
Danlel R., Midkiff, who is
offered in day classes in the
in
the score " she
hymns
The fourth birthday annew night program on a one- serving with the U.S. Marines
and is stationed at ·. Camp niversary of Chuckie Smith reveals. "In that w~y, the
half lime basis.
Diploma programs available LeJeune, N. C., has been was celebrated Tuesday at the audience can be a part of the
promoted to the rank of Cor- home of his grandparents, Mf. performance, just like they did
in the 16th century, instead of
poral. His wife, the former and Mrs. Norman Smith.
Attending besides his just watching it."
Cynthia Domigan, is with him.
lj)ANCE PLANNED
Another attribute of the show
The Pomeroy ER Squad and He is the son of Mr . and Mrs. grandparents were his mother, that excites the director is
Volunteer Fire Department Ray Midkiff, Langsville, Rt. I. Mrs. Sharon Smith, Mr. and
Mrs. Alfred Wolfe and Debbie
will sponsOr a Valentine Dance
Werry. Sending gills Were
Saturday, Feb. 15 at the
George
Swauger, Janice Sayre
Pomeroy Junior High from 9
and Deanna, Mr. and Mrs.
p.m. to I a.m. Music will be
WOMAN ILL
James R. Smith, Rob, Ray and
provided by the Red Stewart
The Pomeroy Emergency Michael, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas
. Band. Admission is $5 per Squad answered a call to the
Werry and Tommy, Anna
couple. All proceeds will be Langsville area at 8:30 p.m.
Filch, Alice Beaver, and his
Wled toward payment of the Wednesday for Alice McClellan
great-gra ndmother, Mrs.
new building. Door prizes will who, was ill. She was taken to
Leora Schar!.
be awarded.
Veterans Memorial Hospital.

.GBC offers night school

Birthday
observed

SAVE

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Henry Block has
17 reasons why you
should conte to us
for'income tax help.
.

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

'

IJ{)IOlBLOCM ..
THE INCOME TAX PEOf'LE
618 E. MAIN ST.
POMEROY, OHIO
Optn 'A.M. to S P.M. Mon.-S.t.' '

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Ph. m-3795

NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY

'

BIRTHDAY OBSERVED
CHESTER - The 89th birthday anniversary of Mrs.
Mary Reed was celebrated
Friday Jan. 31 at ber home.
Friends and relatives calling in
afternoon were Mrs, Donna
lhle, Kathy and David, Racine;
Willie Frecker, Mrs. Sharon
Michael
and
Matthew
'
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Minersville ; Norman McCain,
Marietta; Clifford Smith ,
Bradbudy, and Mrs. Starling
Massar, local. Evening visitors
were Mr . and Mrs . Ross
Cleland, local ; Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Frec.ker, Pine Grove,
Mr. and Mrs. George
Frederick, Beth Pickens,
Missy King, Fannie Belle
Brown, Mr. and Mrs. Dana
McCain , Gladys Shumway,
Esta White and Mary Newell,
Long Bottom. Mrs . ' Reed
received phone caUs from Mrs.
David Tysinger, Johnson, City,
Tenn.' Mrs. Nora Damefood.
Akron , and SFC Jerry Cl land,
Fort Sill, Okla ., and man nice
gifts.
REVIVAL ROWING
CHESHiru:: - A revival at
the Cheshire Methodist Church
is continuing through Feb: 6, 7
and 8 at 7:30 p.m. nlghUy.
Evangelist is Merlin Teets.
TI~ere is special singing each
evening..

an arrangement made by Ml'l!.
James Titus using corkscrew
willow to create an abstract
form . She used the cordonne
puff for color and to create
several areas of interest rather
than
one focal
point.
Skeletonized magnolia leaves
completed the arrangement.
For roll ca ll at the meeting
conducted by Mrs. Sibley
Slack, members discussed
their spring planting -plans.
The verse of the month was
given by Mrs. Slack.

Mrs . Rachael Downie was
appointed library represen l&lt;ltive from the branch. Mrs.
Martha Husted was named
representative from AAUW to
the Meigs County Bicentennial
Commission, and Mrs. Downie
will serve on the Meigs County
Committee on Retardation at a
meeting Thursday in the Meigs
County Courtroom.
Mrs. Sauer spoke on her
· contac t with Ohio University
regarding
a continuing
education prggram and the
possibility of sponsoring
classes here .
Speaker at the meeting was
John Redovian, coordina tor of
Meigs Teachers Corps. He
spoke on how the program was
obtained for Meigs, and the
purpose and objectives of it.
Program for February will
feature Mrs. Jeanette· Thomas
talking on the parents' role of
establishing values in youth .
Refreshments were served by
Mrs. Husted, Miss Helen Smith
and Miss Janis Schmoll.

Read at ·the meeting was a
letter from The Daily Sentinel
regarding Green Thumb Notes
with March 14 and May 30
being the scheduled -column
dates . A communication was
read from Mrs. Aron Kelton
advising · that the Meigs
Museum is available for club
meetings, Flower shoWs or open
house· programs.
.A.lso read was a communication from the Meigs
County Committee on Mental
Retardation asking that a
representative of the club
att&lt;&gt;nd a meeting Thursday
night at the Meigs County
Courthouse,
The club received an invitation from the Widning Trail
Garden Club to an open
meeting, March II, 8 p. m. at

BY POLLY CR,u!ER

the Episcopal Parish House
with Mr.s . Nan Moore, Middleport, to show slides of
Hawaii. The club was asked to
notify Winding Trail by March
5 as to the number who will
attend.
Miss Nellie Zerkle gave the
annual treasuce,r's report .
Yearbooks provided by Mrs,
Mildred McDaniel were
di&amp;tributed.
Refreshments were served
from a table centered with a
valentine arrangement of
white chrysanthemums and
greenery with red bows, the
gift of Miss Kathy Francis to
Miss Nancy Large, granddaughter of Mrs, Cassell. Other
hosteeses for the meeting were
Mrs. Wall&lt;&gt;r Hayes and Mrs.
Edward Tewksbary .

Business and professional
women from over Ohio are
being invited to participate in
the Ohio Coalition for Implementation of the Equal
Rights Amendment workshops
to be conducted Saturday at
Mees Hall, Capital University,
Columbus, . according to
material received by Miss
Freddie Houdashelt, president
of the Middleport BPW Club.
T~e workshops will be
conducted from 9 a. m. to 3 p.
m. and carry the theme

,ffqJQ&gt;.~·X

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II

Valentine's

l

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Day
FEB. 14th

a woman never forgets,,,
the man who remembers

SWISHER - LOHSE
Pharmacy

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m.2f55

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BAKER
FURNITURE ·
.

ANNUAL
-..-NKLII)I

AND SAVE

•

Specials ·

We·, BIG on con•-nc..

p/NUIIt friMd/y f_,p~o
ond 6Pft(lr Hl'!lico root

99c

Big Selection Toys, SlleCill

7tc

Spec it~ I Modeling Kits

5tc

Reg. nc pr. Pantyhose
2 pr. 99c
·"!-Reg . S1.29 pr. Queen Size Pantyhose 79c pr .
' Reg . SI.39-4ot.WintukYarn
Uc
Reg. S4.69 Porta F iles
Sl.at
Reg. S3 .79 File Boxes
$2.79
Asst. Plastic Housewares
ttc ea.
Reg.toS1.49 Alum . Bakeware
2 for 99c
Jtc u.
2 tor 99c

· Reg. to79c Kitchen Toots

Reg.1otac Kitchen Gadgets

Also assort. at
ate
Big Asst . Jigsaw P:uizfes stc up
Big Asst . Games
$1.29
Gtant Beasty a an~ Spec.
99c
Reg. U.t9 20 gal. Tras·h Can i2.99
While They Lnt· ·

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Coloring Books
S9c
Re.g . 49c Crayolas
2 bxs. 89c
Reg. 11 .20 Print by Numbers 79c
Reg. 99c Play· Doh
69c
Reg. 15c Candy Bars
tc ea.
Reg. 10c Wrigleys Gum
4 pkgs.

NOW IN PROGRESS. ASK FOR A SALE BILL
V•lues to ISc Asst. Sewlnt Notions llor 99c
250 yd . spool Polyester Thread 3 spools Stc
. Reg . 52 .99 pr. Pillowcases to em ·
broider
·
12.39 pr .
Reg . $7 .99 Spanish Lace Afghln Kits $6.99
Reg . l:1.59 Corn Husk Dolls
99c
Reg. ~tc Assort. Eurinqs
2 tor 99c
Reg . 79( pr. Stretch Knee-Hi's
6tc p~ .
R.eg . 6tc Assort. Glassware
2 tor 9tC
Reg . S2.49·24dd in. Rug,. ~upners
Sl.t9

:
•

••
.•

~1 . 00

.(
I.

$2.65 Value

32 oz.

$1.09 Value

DUNCAN
GINES

Weber, Mrs . Ada Van Meter,
Mrs. Ethel Orr, Mrs: Letha
Wood, Mrs. Ada Bissell, Mrs .
Sadie Trussell, Mrs . · Mary
Newell, Mrs. Betty Roush,
Mrs . Dorothy Lawson and Joe
Bissell .

;~
~

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1 lb. 7 oz.
$1.19 Value

'

Value

CRAFT MASTER
PAINT
BY NUMBERS
Young Adults
8 Yrs. to Adults

s1.oo

99. ~

-·••

KODAK

NOXZEMA
SHAVE CREAM

POCKET SMILE-SAVER
KIT

11 oz. Size
Si.49 Value

$29.95 Value

AMAZING LIVE

TRAC II
RAZOR

SEA MONKEYS
Just Add Water

!TRIAL
SIZE)

CREATE
INSTANT PETS

49c Value

98c Value

PANASONIC ,
AM·FM PORTABLE
RADIO .
No. RF 508
$21.95 Value

'1988
PERSONAL FILES OR
CHECK
FILES
FAIRaiiLD
CHECKERS OR BINGO

$1J99

$2.50 Value

$4.00 Value

•299

$}99

Gillette

TRAC:U

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GILLEnE

CHERRY HUMPS
CRAZY CURL

TRAC .II

CANDY BARS

' $22.95 Value

BLADES

15c. Value

s's
$1.39 Value

•

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. I •
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Value

·.'. .!"

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~
GALLIA County 8 and 40,
;; Sidon 612, will meet at 7:30
~; p.m. Thursday at the home o! '
' ~ Mrs. Grace Pratt in Mid·•·•·• dleport. SATIJRDAY•
; HYMN Sing, Hazel Com'.
; munlty Church, 7:30 p.m.
: Saturday featuring "Gospel
:: Tones''. Public .inviled., .

Size

$2.75 Value

THURSDAY
CATHOLIC Women's Club,
Sacred Heart Parish church
hall, 8 p.m. Thursday,
preceded by Mass at 7:30p.m. ·
COMMITTEE FOR the
Mentally Retarded, Thursday,
7:30p.m. Meigs County court.
room. Public invited.

'

fVORY
SOAP
Personal

REG. $1.99

•• MONTHLY meeting, Meigs
,.
,. County Pioneer and Historical
;: Society, 7:30p.m. Thursday at
&gt;! museUI1l. Gayle Price, Port·
1'. land, will present material on
•• the Portland area and the
:: Price and CUrtis families. The
~: public is invited.
j .,

CLAIROL
HAPPINESS

8 oz.

, •·

I

Cleland and Mrs, Opal Hollun pian ist for the evening. Others
to bl' hos tesses. Each member attending were Mrs. Eileen
is 1o take an .unsigned v&lt;:~.len­ Martin, Mrs. A.da Morri s, Mrs.
tine .
Margaret Tuttle, Mrs. Ma~
A silent miction was held by McPeek, Mrs. Ada Neutzling,
·the hume and orphans com- Mrs . Leona Hensley , Mrs .
mittee . Mrs. Helen Wolf was Dorothy Ri tchi e, Mrs, Zelda

SOFT &amp; DRY

. 525.95 Value

· ·

~-

oz.

RAGU
SPAGHml
SAUCE

LECTRIC
TOASTMASTER

29c
Reg. 51.35 Bag Chocolate Candv

MIDDLIPORT, OHIO

the ricxl
llll'CI.ing with all members ilnd
officers uq;ed to wear white .
The past count ilor \s mccling
was nnnoun ced for Feb. 12 at
the lodge hall with Mrs ..
lniticllioll Wi:l!) set for

NICE
'N'
EASY

HEATER

Reg.

IJryw ,. .• ,. • ,. • ,.

card .

..:.

Throughout The Store
To Mention Only A Few

WCIWCD
Wlllhor ........... •ut.~

14

PRESCRIPTIONS
pij,
Frlelldly Ser¥1~
112 E. MAIN
POMEROY, 0.

BUY NOW

lwgoin,;,_,_,u
touve
,, ,k.,•,,-.9,•. yl•

of your family reunion.
POLLY.

- Past councilor
Mr:-; . Mm'l'ill Keller presided
pins were presen ted to Mrs, with the flagbearcrs escor ting
Erma Cleland and Mrs. Mary Mrs.' Clc-l:md and Mr~. Holl.e1'
Hoilh at the Tuesday night tu the altqr for the prese nIJJeeling of Chester Council :l2.'t, lotiun·. Also escorted to the
Daughters of America. at the altar ·was Mary Ju Pooler who
hall
·
was given a past councilor's

K-Ill McCIIIIMIII, R. Pia. 0 r lw -In, • . Pll.
a,.. Drily

BOOSTERS TO MEET
The Meigs Girls Athletic
Boosters will meet at 7 p.m.
Monday at the Meigs High
School. All interested persons
are invited.

It's relll1y big!
Ono gifllllllk

.ji

CHE~Tt·: ll

DEAR POLLY - My Pet
Peeve concerns the way so
many people drop their voices
when they speak in public, in
church or at any gathering .
Often the listener can hear all
of the message except for the
very last. This often contains
the punch line of the story so it
is missed entirely. - KAY.
DEAR POLLY and P.L.H.
- I have a great method for
putting sharp creases in
double-knit trousers so they
will last through repeated
washings. Tear· an Ordinary
brown paper bag open, spread
it over the trousers and
dampen the bag with plain
whit&lt;&gt; vinegar. Press with a
mediwn-hot iron. The creases
are still sharp in a couple of
pairs of pants I made for my
husband two years ago. CAROL
DEAR POLLY - Tell P. L.
H. That to permanently press ·
double-knit polyester trousers
turn the iron setting to 111inen."
Lay trousers on ironing board
with the crease in place . Place
a damp linen towel over the
pan.ts and press, but be very
careful not to let the iron touch
the fabric as it will melt. Such a
crease put in carefully should
last through many washings .
Do not pin crease in to hold it as
pins conduct heat and leave
marks. Baste crease in if you
are nervous about it being
straight. - MARY ANNE
DEAR POLLY - Several
months ago I sent in a Pointer
telling how lo avoid soap scum
and water spots on our glass
shower doors by wiping them
down with a small hand towel
after each shower.
All our family is' coming
home soon for a family
reunion. We have on ly one
shower. I wondered how I could
convince thoSe using it to
continue with this care. I cut
out the heading to your column
and the article and put these
along with the Polly DOllar I
received in a small frame and
hung it in a conspicuous place
in the bathroom. It has become
quite a conversation piece
besides getting the message
tactfully across to the family.
- MRS. S.L.B.
DEAR MRS. S.L.B. Thanks for letting us be a part

REMEMBER WITH

DOUBLE

FRIGIDAIM

.

DEAR L.H. - The past few
years the word ''antiQue" has
been stretched conSiderably.
Now it seems that anything
that belonged to Grandma is so
considered. I am sure such
chairs are for sale in some
antique shops. Originally to be
a real antique the !J. s. _
customs authorities said an
article must ha\'c been made
before 1830. Now it must be 100
years old. My advice is to paint
it If you want and enjoy it. Sand
off any rust, cover wJth a
commercial rust prevenUtJve
and spray paint the chair any
color you like. -POLLY

•.-».•.•.·-';~.~

It cSocial
I d

Two past councilors receive recognition

- L. H.

"Action Agenda '75". Par·
ticipants will be able to attend
two workshops for th e
registration fee of $5.
They include prospectives on
family law, women and credit,
civil rights , 197&gt; projection,
crime and punishment, employment, the insurance ripoff, child care and related
issues, school house blues,
sports
and
guidance,
volunteerism, disappearing
resources, and the ADC mother
- a double. victim.

a en ar: :

..

POLLY'S PROBLEM .
DEAR P&lt;JLLY - Can you
or any readers tell me how to
refinish an old ice cream
parlor chair? I wanted to spray
mine while and put a blue
velvet cushion on it but have
been told not to do this because
it is an antique and such
changes would lower its value.

BPW invited to workshops

Britten:.• score. " l.t:s.great
musiC, she says. Its con- :~:
!$
temporary, being only a 17·
yearoQid show, but st:Il very ~:
tuneful and catchy, It IS by no :;.
:·:·
means old-fashioned music THURSDAY
there are modern rhythm and
MEIGS COUNTY PTA
key changes, and the in- Council, 7:30 p. m. at ~lisbury
strumentation itself is very Elementary School, Founders
curious."
Day program.
The orchestra of two dozen
pieces, wh:ch Will accompany
FRIDAY
the performance, includes
MEETING OF executive
some interesting instruments: committee
of
Pomeroy
English handbells, a whip, Elementary PTA 2 p. m. at the
sl~g mug~, chm. blocks, a school; officers asked to atwmd machme, Clunese gong, tend.
recorders - and the church's
own ?.1pe organ. The r~sult wtll
SATIJRDAY
be a sort of wooden, med1eval
SOUP AND Bake Sale, II :30
sound, " according to Brien!.
a. m. at Syracuse First United
And , the director if quick to Presbyterian Church annex.
add, there 1s nothmg deep or
Take containers for carry-out
psychological about the show.
orders.
II is pure entertainment.
MODERN
WOODMEN
" Noye's flndde" will be Camp 7230 Burlingham, 7:30 p.
performed Friday, Saturday
m. Bring covered dish for
and Sunday, Feb. 7, 8 and 9 at 8
potluck following meeting.
p.m. in the Presbyte_rian
Meat and beverage will be
Church, . Athens. For t1_cket
furnished. All members and
mf~rmat:on and reservallons, their famHies are ·invited.
Vlslt the theater box office in
the Memorial Auditorium
SUNDAY
lobby, or call 594-5010 weekDAN HAYMAN AND THE
days.
Country Hymn timers will be at
the Church of Christ in
Christian Union, Hartford, 7:30
p.m.
FLOWERS BROTHERS of
Marietta will be at the Enterprise UM Church, Sunday,
1:30 p. m. for concert.
Everyone welcome.

,

Ertjoy 'antique
ice cream chair

rDIU;];]
t: uu '~="'''"''''W'&amp;''',';',"'No''' ' '

SPECIAL PRICE PLUS
7200 S&amp;H GREEN STAMPS

.•.•;!

POLLY'S POINTERS :.: ·

-'

A A uw marks year

You,ng Adults
discuss carpet
carpeting for

•''
:yo,

~
I

GAI.L!POLIS - - If you're
interested in kn owing more
ab" ul a fulfilling career in

sing have beerl invited . All

Dear Con:
People who "go into detail" about obscene calls may secretly
enjoy them. TeU your girl friend she can either hang up fa st,
Biart correcting Old Uglylips' grarruna~ (which may make HIM
hanguplnconfusion ),or go unlisted. - HELE!'I

•

0 . h
Ia d
'Pen quse s te

Feb. 6,1975

,_,__. .................-,•.&lt;==....._,,.,,,.,,

1,

.'

I

·,

'

I

.

• •'
I

�'I
,j

8 -ThO Daily Sentinel, Middleport-l:'omeroy, U., 'I'I)ursday, Feb. 6, 1975

• don' tal d•Isease can
Peno
attack children's teeth

Ed Note · Thos os the fofth m a bactenal trntants cause the
series of SIX articles on dental tossues to become red, puffy.
health published by tho s sore and hkel) to blood
newspaper m cooperatoon wo th
If plaque os not removed
the RehWinkel Dental Socoety da ol y, ot ca n hard en and
in observance · of National develop on to calculus 1tartar )
Children's Dental Health As calculu s buolds up , the gum
Week, February 2~
sepa rate from the teeth, levmg
pocket:&gt; or spaces between the
THE DENTIST says our 11 - tee th anrl gums that foil up woth
year-&lt;&gt;ld has gum dosease How bacteroa and eventually pus
can a chold sq young have such
An onsodoous aspect of the
a problem '
doseaseis tha t tl does not occur
WHILE IT'S TRUE that overmght Sometimes tt tak es
periodontal (gum ) doseasc os years of t::hromc IIT!latJOn to
more prevalent among adult:&gt;, develop
many choldren , unfortunately,
Pe roodontal dosease can be
also have some form of thts treated, and the sooner the
dtsease
treatment JS started the better
Periodon ta l dt sease norDen lost.&lt;; are alert to the early
mally develops m two stages sogns of gmg ov1tos and other
Symptoms of the early stage, penodon ta l pr oblems 1n
called gongovolls, a re swollen choldren They recogmze that a
and mflamed gums whoch may maJOr portoon of adult gum
bleed easoly A more advanced problems undoubtedly stem
stage, penodonto tos mvolves !r om un che cked cases of
both the gums and the bone choldhood gmgovttos
supportmg the teeth If left
That's why ot os so Important
untreated , tht s destructtve to learn proper oral hygoene
form of the dosease woll destroy proce dure s
1ncludmg
the bone and cause the teeth to brus hong and flossmg - at an
loosen
ear ly age
Choef vollaon os bactenal
Make sure your chold has
plague - a sticky him of peroodoc dental exammatoons
harmful bacten a that con- The chold who learns the value
stantly forms on the mouth As or good oral health woll carry
the plaque builds up on the thos plulosophy throughout hos
teeth along the gum hne, hfe

School welcomes visitors
POINT PLEASANT
February has been desognated
as Voca tiO'Ila) Educatoon
Month It woll be observed
through
th e state
by

educatiOnal tn st 1tut 10 ns ,
teachers and students Woll
Edwards, assostant dorector,
Mason Co unty Vocat1on
Center, s tated tha t the purpose
of thos observance os to brmg
attentoon to the merots and
accomplishments of vocational
education He enco ura ges
cot1zens of the communoty to
v1sot the school durong thos
week to voew on-gomg prOJects

Ohio
Eta Phi
welcomes
two
New pledges, Partrocia
Shnvers and Vocky Keatley,
were welcomed at the Tuesday
night meeting of Ohoo Eta Phi
Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority at the Columbus and
Southern Oh1o Electroc Co
Granted a leave or absence
from active membership was
Jenmfer Sheets The Beta
Sigma Phi Convention was
ann!lllllced for May 16-18 on
Cleveland
Mrs.
Karen
McGraw noted that she will be
moving from Meogs County
about March I and resigned as
chairwoman of the ways and
means commottee
Mrs
Debbie Buck was appoonted to
fill the vacancy.
A report was given by Mrs
Janel
Dow nie,
servoce
chairwoman , on the Mother's
March of Domes In Pomeroy
$405.92 was collected whole in
Syracuse, $101 was collected.
Thank you notes woll be sent to
those who assosted woth the
ltmrl drive.
It ,, ,. ,announced that a pozza
pany will be held m March and
also at that tome a do-your·
own-thong auction will be held.
Mrs. Sharon Bailey gave the
cultural report whoch consosted
of a film titled "Breast Can·
cerWhere Are We '"
presented by Nancy Rishel,
district representatove for the
Amencan cancer Society
Mrs Baoley and Kathy
Cumings served refreshments.

PAY RESPECTS
LONG BOTIOM - Mr. and
Mrs. Joe Btssell, Long Bottom,
visited recently at the Leav1tl
Funeral Home on Parkersburg
to pay respects to his nephew,
James Keffer, who was the son
of Marshall Keffer, Naples,
Fla., and the late Eupha Bosse II
Keffer. Burtal was near
Spencer, W. Va

MESAROS RETIRES
SAN JOSE, Calif. (UPI)
Mike Mesaros, who played in
the World Cup 1958 soccer
duompiClMblpll for Yugoslavia,
u!liledfnlm lbe game Wednesday.
Meaaroa, 36, has been
playLc with the San Joee
Earthquakes of the North
American Soccer League.

'

and programs
Edwards also stated that
bo th yo un g people and adults
today face a tremendous task
of selectmg career development programs Careful in-

I -. A Nl IO lhank evervon c Nho
thought of or helped 10 a n y
wav d urmg my recen t sray m
th e hospt l rtl Spec •a l I hank.~ 10
the members of wests1de
Church o t Ch r1 SI
Sha ron
S mt ih
7 6 l! c

lypes of c thzens for ema

pl oyment wothon our communoty It trams our youth woth
kn owledge
and
skolls;
upgrades the skolls of emplo yees whose JObs have
become more complex ; and
retrams workers who have
been do splaced from theor
posotoons due to technologocal
mnovattons or physocal ompalrments
Edwards urges all cotozens of
the community to vis1t the
scho ol during Vocatoonal
Educaloon Month You can
learn a lot about career
education by observing the
exosting vocational programs
and talking w1th communoty
employers who serve on school
vocatoonal advosory commottees.
If you are concerned about
educahon, come by the Center
for a visot. The schoolos located
on the Ohoo Rover Road , North
of Pomt Pleassnt For further
mformatton, call the school at
67[&gt;.3039.

ROOM

FO R

lo c at •on .

RENT

m n1ce

pr e fer

loca l

Notice

SH OOTI NG MATCH
Co rn
Hollow Gun Club , turn f•rst
r.ght after Mtles Ceme tery ,
Ru tl an d F actory c hok ed
guns only Su nday, February

SHOO TING Mat ch Ractne Gun
Club Sunday . Feb 9, 1 p m
2 5 4tC

AUC TION Sale , Every Frtday,
7 p m Vdlagt .hu ctton 215 N
Second Mtddleport
1 10 lOfC

IN CO ME TA.X Prepared by
appotntment Phon e 992 3388
2 2 ore
A UCTION Thursday nt!jlhf , 1
p m
at Meson Auct10n
Horton St In Mason w va
Co n s q;~n m e nt s
welcome
Phone (304 ) 773 547 1
2 2 tfc
~ a rm .

NOW se llrng Fuller B r ush
Products phOne 992 34 10
l 24 ttc

-----Thursday
----- and

AuCrrON

S~lurday nloht. 7 p
m at
Mason Auct ion Horton St tn
Muon , W Va ConS t!jlnments
welcome Pt10ne (30"t 773
5471
10 3 tfc

FO R

you r

" 011 of Mink "
Phone BROWN ' S

Cosme ~1cs

992 5113

Tuppers
Pla i n s Cheste r
Water D•slrtct has for sale a
1970 - J,,. ton Fo rd Stvleslde
P1 ckup Tru ck . J speed trans
m•ss lon . heevv duty spr.ngs
w1th a 360 cu m engme W ill
acc ept b1dS until noon Frtdi!ly ,
Feb r uary 14. 1975 at the off ice m
Chester , Oh10 Castt m hand day
ot sate Truck may be seen at
wateroff1ce m Ches ter R1ghl •s
reser¥ed to r elecl any or all
btdS

(2) 6, 7 10 11 . 12. 13. 6tc

REMODELING.
plumbing ,
healing and all types of
general
repair
Work
guaranteed 20 ve-ers ex
perlence Phone 992 2"09
1 19 He

--------------Wanted To Buy

OLD furniture , Ice boxes , brass
beds , or complete househOlds
Wrtte M 0 M iller. Rt " ·
Pomeroy Ohio Call 992 7760
10 7 H
JU N K autos , complete tnd
delivered to our yard We pick
up auto bodies and buy all
ktnds of scrap metals and
•ron R •der 's Sal v age , St R:l
12-4. Rt 4, Pomeroy . Ohio .
Ca ll 992 5"68
10 17 tfc
CAS H paid lor all makes and
models of mobile homu .
Phone area code 6U 423 9531
4 13 tfc
WANTED to buy 1 used
Gr&amp;vely Tractor with Mowtr
and rldtng sulky and plow
attllchments Phone (JO.tl 882
252 5 or even,ngs, 8112 234.&amp;
1 26 121c
OLO COINS and paper money
for Metos County 's only
m onthly coin auction Call Ed
Burkett. 992 3.&amp;16, alter 5 · 30
pm
1 31 12tc

~oa;L~s;f~;~d;i;-;-h-.-y
Phone 742 3192

ORDINANCE NO 1020-75

(I)

30 (2)

Be 11 ordalntd by th~ Council
of the Villagt of M tddleport u
follows
Sec I That Section 1135 01
f Perm ltt&amp;d uses)
8 3 CEN ·

TRAL BUSINES S ADO Mulll

Fa mi ly Dwe llings
Sec II That sect ion ll61 02
(Number of Off Street Parking
Spaces r equ ired ) Under VSE
add Apartment Houns , Under

PARKING

SPACES

Mann ing 0 Webster
Judge
By Ann B Watson

Judge

21c

---

___ __________ _

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

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

--------------USE~

FUEL OIL
HEATER, s50

---;------------For Rent

30 t21

6,

13, lie

IPOMEROY LANDMARK '

I

~• .: JICk W. Carsty, Mgr.
~

FURNISHED ettlcltncy epl
utilillet pa id, S100
Phone 992·311o&amp;

2 6 Jlc 1953 30 FERGUSON lraclor.

FURNISHED apt. In M i d
dleport , utilltlnpald . No calls
1 tter 1 p m Phone 992 3205
2 6 ltc

2 BEDROOM mobltt home,
country IOC1t10n
Close to
Mlddltporf or Pomeroy
Children welcomt Cell 992
76•9 after .t p m
2 5 61c

TRAILER sptct, 2 tnllll from
Pomeroy , Rt 1.t3, Phone H2

Sl51

10·27 tic

APT 3 rooms . all tltctrlc, has
tablf top range, wall oven ,
r .. t nice and cleen. mOdern
Located
In
Pomeroy
overlooking tht 01110 R:1vtr
Phont Gallipolis. day ,...,
7499 . even1n91 ••6 9539
1 26 tfn
2 BEDROOM trellar,
only Phone H2 332.&amp;

.

Phone 992-2111

.

month

tdults
2 .. lfc

r~;;~EA-s PAC E-:--~--mlle
north of Meigs H lgh School on
old Rt Jl Phone 992 29AI
1 23

lie

COUNTRY Mobile Home Park,
R I 33, ten m lies north of
Pomeroy
Llrllt lots with
concrete petlos, IICJtwetks,
runntrs end off strttl
••rklng Pbont 992 7•79
12 3111c
l enCI "' ROOM furnllhl'd and
unfurntthlct
epntmtnts

new motor, good rubber, new
p11nt S1 ,200 Phone 985 3594
2 2 7tp

6' MOWER , 3 pt hitch fits Ford
or Ferguson tractor, SIOO
New cultivator , Sl25 Phone

985 359&lt;

, 2 71p

JOHN Deere Oozer , "'
cylinder, dtlstl. 8' blade
canopy ,
New
clutches,
brakes . and tracks , A 1
condition $6,500 Phone 9853594

1965

7 2 71p
S50 R EWAR 0 for the return of
our Black and Decker eltetr1c
sew , 7 1/ 2 In blade Phone (1)
661 3737 VIvian Maxey

Route 1
Rutland

/~-

COMMANO!

Marshalt 3J
oo- News 3,4,6,8, 10, 13, 15 ABC News J3

J~Horace

10

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC. •

Open Mon . Sat .

8A .M ·6PM.

Ph. 992·2174

Pomeroy

D&amp;D
CONSTRUCTION

For Sale
CLOSE OUT on new Z1g Zag
sewmg mach•nes For sewing
stretch fabrtcs . buttonholes,
fan c y des tgns , etc Patnt
sltghtly blem1shed Chotce of
carrvt ng c ase or sew !no
stand S4.11 80 cash or terms
available Phone 992 7755
12 18trc

PHONE
949-3832 or 843-2667

All Types of
BUILDING
and REMODELING
From a shelf to a house .
Patnting, Siding. rooftng,
paper hanging, kttchen
cabtnets , expert carpet1ng,

Real Estate For Sale

Approximately one acre In J.:e.:.tc=·--------~
Rutland , set up for mobtle
home Phone (I) .446 9662
CREMEANS CONCRETE de
1 30 7tc
ll¥ered Monday through
Saturday and e¥entngs
NEW HOMES No Money Down
Phone 446 1142
P'a ym ents accordtng to
6 13 tfc
mcome on Farmers Home
Adm101Sirat10n loan Con
EXCAVATING, dozer, loader
ven t tonal ftnanctng also
and backhoe work , sept1c
available with mln1mum
tanks mstalled. dump trucks
down Lovely homes •n three
an clio boys for htre , w111 haul
locattons 1n Me igs County
1111 dirt. top sotl. limestone &amp;
Some home s w1th wooded
gravel. Call Bob or Roger
lots
Call for more 1n
Jeffers , day phone 992 7089,
formation , 992 5976
n1ght phone 992 3525 or 992
1 15 26tc

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

Reftnish1ng BurniShing

With

D-5

Liquor

Permit for sale.

oo- Tomorrow

~1'0\BU...

~ IF PRESit:€lJI

R?RD OMf. HeRE.

WQL.,~ COURSe
~ l.Ol..t.D FII-JD

A RCXJM feR 1fl!7:

COMI~,SOI1 U..
TA~ HIS RCQIA 1

8 3~B ig Valley 6
9 00---A M 3, Phd Donahue 4, Ph il Donahue IS, Bullwlnkle 8,

Morning w1th D J 13
25-C huck White Reports 10
9 3D-Not For Women Only 3, Dmah 6, Galloping Gourmet a,

~'I,~OU

9

1-\IM A

Limestone &amp; Fill Dirt
Cammerclei-Resldenllol
Conslructoon &amp; Remodel

JJlY~M®Ikal

RooM~

OOMPANY
777 l'eorl Street
Middleport, Olllo
Phone f92·5367 or 992-3161

house needs some repair

Whole works at just $4,700
NEAR LANGSVILLE About 10 ocr .., on good
fishing creek, close to mine
areas, good blacktop road
ASKING just $4,000
ALL CASH FOR YOUR
PROPERTY - lET US
KNOW WHAT YOU HAVE
PROPERTY IS SELLING
FAST AT THIS TIME .
992·2259 or m-2568

.

WE'RE GOING 11J
4AVE TO MAKE
A RU N "OR IT,

11vered ngtlt to your prolect
Fast
and
easy
Free
est 1mates Phone 992 328'4
Goeglem Ready MtX Co
M tddleport Oh to
6 30 ffc

I

SELLA,,

I

()

II

YERSIM

SEWING MACHINE. Repa rrs,
service, all makes, 992 2284
The Fabnc Shop , Pomeroy,
Authortzed Smger Sates and
Servtce we sharpen Scissors
3 29 lf c

[)

t)

tIJ

Ye1terday'•
OH- lklT

"""' Of'4l..... ....

SIIURMIItoiWl~"f-

1

,,

·-

OR

.51.08BOVIA'-I
WAL-RU5E52

YO' CAIN'r
GO HOME!' TH' PLAfJE"

'

WINNIE

' •·

•

Wagoner J, Pop\ Goes the Country 4; New Candid
Camer.!!l6 , Pop! Goes the Country 8; Treasure Hunt 10, , To

)~Porter

' l •

VOU UKE TO MIMIC

PEOPlE .WHY NOT
!XJ IT WITHIN THE
FRAMBVORK OF
~EJ..AW?

SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov. 22)

SCHOOL BEFORE, SO I

Ill

GOT MY K ICK!7

DOING
IT INTHE ONLY WAY 1:

ZENITH

JA

COLOR TV

I

'

1

"

J ·R E P N

"

eBLACK &amp;

CDRQD

GEMINI (Mey 21-Juno 20) You

Yesterday's Answer
8 Wmged
23 Substance
boots, like 24 - rest
Mercury's 25 Primp
9 Naol polish 28 Harry the
11 Sadat's
- (Runyon
capital
character)
15 Indication 29 Command
18 Stood up
31 Squan19 Unyielding
dered
22 Losing
34 Ufe (comb
candidate
fonn)
(hyph. wd,) 35 Hold it!

50 SCAIRT OF A

LEETLE THUNDER

•STEREO

Important
one-to-one
re lattonshlp needs tactful
handlmg A wrong mo¥e by
e1ther party wtll cause a flare -

up
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Take

••

HEitMAN GltA TE
MASON. W.VA.

"

L

you financially Hide your
checkbook l t~r the next few
days

CAPRICORN (D•c. 22·Jen.
19) You re apt to be too selfsee k i ng today to suit
assoclales It you must be
pushy push t or everyone s
benefll

AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Fob. t9)
Obltgatlons you ve sktrted will
be ca tch1ng up with you Face
them Get them off yQur back
once and for all

PISCES (Fob. 20·M11ch 20) A
problem you 've had with one
you had been fnendly with Is
l1 kely to surface again A¥old
this person, 11 possible

more-than-u sual
safe ty
precautio ns wh1le working
Don t attempt someth1ng alone
that requires a competent
assistant

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sopt. 22)
You'll really gel miffed when
soclallzmg and all disappear
when tl's time to dlv1de the
check

LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) The

Fob. 7, 197S
Success Is li kely this year II you
don 't spread ycur efforts too
th in Concentrate on your most
promising area, usa time and
talent wisely and rewards Will
be realized

Never take a losing finesse
NORTH (0)
6
•KJ6
¥ K962
t A2
oloAQJ3
WEST
EAST
• 95 3
oloQ 1084
¥43
¥A5
tK 10743
• QJ

as

o!ol09H

• 86 4
Neither vulnerable
West

SJ
RV

Norcb

Eaat

South

tlo!o

lt

1¥

4•

Pass

Pass

the king of doamonds ana got
out With a low trump I won the
trock, proceeded to cash dummy's ace of clubs, came to my
hand woth a trump, and led a
club to dummy's queen East
took his kong and had to lead a
diamond to gove me a ruff and
doscard or a spade roght up to
dummy's king-jack "
Z's play was wellthou~ht out
He would still make hos con·
tract If West held the kin~ of
clubs He wouldn' t make ot of
East held four to the king, bu I
that was an unlikely holding It
would make no difference 1f
East held exactly three, but it
dod brong ot home agaonst East's
doubleton kong.
!NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSNl

J A

RJ

o!oK2

SOUTH
• A 72
vQJt087
HB

Pasa
Openong lead - Q •

ZN NI

AL

VDN

GAPRVN

RJ

ROGAJ -

LNJNIV

Pass

- XFPRS

The boddong bas been·

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Old man Z, who used to play
the dummy in the columns
about auction brodge, was back
in duphcate action agam. Smce
he wao the only declarer to
bring home four hearts, he was
asked how he played the hand
"Quickly" was his reply
"Back in th'l days when I used
to appear in Milton Work's
column, I learned never to take
Ws"'f! fmesses. East was marked wtth lbe kmg of clubs for hos
diamond overcall The play
started with a queen of
diamoncfll lead. I won in dummy
and led a trump East hopped
nght up woth the ace caShed

.,

•. R1511KALLEOUOOOO'

n~

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·Doc.
21) Thi s ISa very shaky t tme for

WIN AT BRIDGE

ZSTSI&amp;_KD
Yesterday'• Cryploquole: THE WORLD IS FILLED WITH
W!LUNG PEOPLE; SOf,IE W!LUNG TO WORK, THE \
W!u..lNG TO LET THEM~ROBERT FROST
(CJ 18'15 Kiftl Fnture1 Syndlc:ale, lnc.,

I NEVER SEEN ENN'IBODV

II

CANCER (June 21-July 22) An

BNPV,

VA

For Friday, Fib. 7, 1975

ARIES (Morch 21·Aprlt 19)

won t be as fortunate today 10
bustness matters as you were
yesterday Don 1 m ake rm puiSIVB moves

AXYDLJIAAXI.
LONGFELLOW

RIJFPV

ZNNJPM

RIJFPV

''
'

'II

One letter simply slancfll for onotber. In this sample A II
used for the three L's, X for the two O'a, etc Single leiters,
apootrophes, the length and formation of the words are oil
hints. Each day the code !etten are dilrerent
CRYPTOQUOTE

KNEW HOW I

CDSV

&amp;.sy Ttrmsl ,
Free Dlllvtry 1

You 're not In a very forgiving
mood tod ay Woe betide tho se
who block your path Later.
you II be remorseful

would be a big mistake to try
now to force your Ideas on one
who 1sn't willing to go alon g
w1th them

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:

I. NEVER COUlD AFRJI?D

GREAT COUNTRY STEREO
From 6:00A.M. Til12:00 P.M.

•'t

]j

Paul

harmony you're looking for m
order to I unction at your best Is
not likely to be found around
home tod ay

TAURUS (April 20-Mey 20)

25 Uama's
land
21 Hartebeeste
27 "ElGrande"
30 Tonuny's
foUower
31 Wager
32 Constel
lation's
main star
13 Fit for
tillage
35 Flock
36 Connecticut hr-+-1'-+--+city
fl To be (Lat.) L-...1.-,.I,.....I......L--

Phone

. I

\ An.wer, 'lhou/d btl flood u hnr pn: IIIUilfJ a
llmt- INTENTIONS

ACROSS ""
Ptrov\de
"·
(\ ' ,)38
,, w1
,,.;
t'
1 Relic
....1...,
chest
39 Belgian
5 "Beau -"
r1ver
10 "Grand
DOWN
Hotel"
I Nautical
dil'ection'
author
11 Cole Porter 2 Mathe·
matical
mus1cal
(2 wds.i
proportion
12 Gorl's
3 Make it;
name
succeed
13 Luanda os
(sl., •3 wds.)
its capital ',4 Society of
14 Islet
physicoans
15 Hold a
5 Thomas
sesston
Wolfe
16 L.A.
hero
pro
6 MIT grad
17 Goat
(abbr.)
7 Come out
coat
19 Withered
on top
20 Therefore
(3 wds.)
21 Follow
ZZ Egyptian
god
23 Butte's
cousin
24 Neultra

WMPO-FM

992·30?8

Aviation Weather 20

7

You need co-o per ati on for
what you hope to accomplish
It s not likely you II get 1t tl you
behave too Independently

Jumble•' PATIO STEED IRONIC NUANCE

by rHoMA.s JOUPH

LISTEN TO GREAT
COUNTRY STEREO

WHITE 1V

sonality &amp; Behavioral D evelopment 33

3D-NBC News 3,4.15; ABC News 1J ; Bewllc~ed 6, CBS News
8.10. Zoom 20
7 oo-Truth or Cons 3, Bowling tor Dollars 6, WCHS TV Report
8, Aviation Weather 33, News 10, Jimmy Dean ll, I Spy IS,

6

lt.J THE THEAlEJC:.

~M'tJt!(

WOM'T
(JI\If Uf $0
'IMI'(

LEFT-

•

00-FBt J, Andy Griffith 8. Mi ste r Roger' s Neighborhood
20,JJ. Ironside 13
5 3D-News 6, Beverly Hillbillies 8, Hodgepodge Lodge 20. Gel
Smart 15, Ele c Co 33
6 00-News 3,4,8,10,13,15, ABC News 6. Etec. Co 20. Per-

!He USUAL PR'ACTICE

(Au_,.. lo•orrewl

UTTLE ORPHAN ANNIE

PHONE 742-5431 AFTER 6 PM

S·Q'•\,."

Cartoon J. I Dream of J ean nie 4, Som erset 15,

Gotllgan 's Is 6, Tallleta les 8, Sesame St 20,33 , Movie "The
Gorl Can'l Hel p It" 10. Mike Douglas 1l
4 3D-Bewitched 3, Merv Grtlfln 4, Mod Squad 6. Lucy Show 8,

Nuchlms 33
10 3D-World Press 20
II oo-News 3,4,6,8, 10, IJ, \5 , ABC News JJ.

[IIIXXIJXJ

2 MILES NORTH OF HARRISONVIU! ON RT. 143

r\

As the World Turns 8,10
2 oo-Oays of Our Lives 3,4,15. 510.000 Pyram1d 6,13 , Guiding
Light a. 10
2 JD-Doclors 3.4,15 ; Big Shoowdown 6,13, Edge of Night 8,10

aurreoted by the lbo•e cortoon.

1970, 52x12, 2 bedroom Skyline, partially
furnished, cathedral ceiling living room, lined
drapes, built-in bookshelves divided, good
condition; approx. 8 acres partially wooded,
approx. 5 acres cleared.

BARGAIN - •
'TI frame
with ·
·V' water,
.clrlc on
natura
~ - ~,.,uo .oo.
POMEROY - Nice renovated
3 bedroom home. Lots of nIce
paneling, wall to wall carpeting, l porches, basement,
and fenced yard. $17,500.00
H VING TROUBLE
~~:;~j~;~~IA~CALL
A
PI
SALESMAN

&amp;

Restless 10, Not For Wom en Only 15.
1 JG-How to Survive a Marriage 3,4, 15 Let's Make a Deal 6, 13.
HlP.

Now arranre the clr&lt;led leltert
to form the atii'PJiH anawer, u

MOBILE HOME AND ACREAGE

.

I oo- News 3, All My Children 6,13. Phil Donahue a, Young

vlvat Kit ll

READY MIX CONCRETE-.re:'

92.1
WITH_BOB COOPER, JAY HILL
BILL PYNE, and CRAIG RAMSEY

Tomorrow 8, 10, To Be Announ ced 33

12 45-E tec Co 33
12 55- NB C News 3,15

9 Jl}-{)dd Couple 6, ll, Asslgnmenl Ameri ca 3J
10 oo-Oean Martin 3,4,15,. Baretta 6,13 , News 20,

_____________ _

PORTLAND - 4 nice tots,
good droHed well and water
system , block garage,
storage building, 2 story

Club 4, News 8,1 0
1
12 3D-Blank Check J 15. Split Second 6.13 . Search tor

" Dillinger" 8, 10, Masterpiece Theatre 20; Consumer Sur

Real Estate For Sile

.

Lofe 8,10 Sesame Sf J3
11 55-Take Kerr wit~ Graham Kerr 8, Dan Imel's World 10,
News 13
12 00-Jackpot 3. IS Password All Stars 6, 13, Bob Braun's 50 50

Tell the Truth \3; Black Perspecllve on the News 20,33
8·oo-Sanlord &amp; Son 3,4,15, Night Slalker 6,\3 , Khan 1 8,10;
Washington Week In Review 20,33
8 3D-Chico &amp; the Man 3,4, 15, Wall Street Week 20,33
9 oo-Rocktord Files 3,4, 15, Hot L Baltimore 6, \3, Movie

Unscramble these four Jumblea.

~ ---- -- - --- ::- ---

Investment. Prtced to sell.

" " ' 110 11 1 If

one letter to each square, to
form four ordinary words.

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

acres. s8;QOO oo.
POMEROY - Business R.
and furnished apartment.
Located on Main 51 In good
traffic area Good Income

..... ,'"~-"" ,_

lo y II! Nil! AIIN (H U

8-K EXCAVATING

8, 10

11 JQ-Holtywood Square s 3, IS, Brady Bun ch 6. News 4. Love of

Bonanza 15

8 oo-Lass1e 6, Capt Kangaroo 8, Popeye 10 Sesame St 33
8 25-Capt Kangaroo 10

l)laL, ~~s NOr

11 QO-H1gh Roller s 3,4, 15, One Life to Live 6, Now You See It

5

7 00-Today 3.4.15. AM Amenca 6,13. CBS News a.IO

'OJ
Water, Electric, G•s, Sewer
Lines, Instilled. Work
gul'rantHCI.
Dozer, BackhOe, Trucks

Public Affairs 10, Blue R1dge Quartet 13
35- Cotumbus Today 4

6 45- Mornlng Report 3, Farmllme 10

BORN WSER

Sweepstakes J. 15. Joker's Wild 8, 1~ . Movie
"The Naked Prey" 13
10 JQ-Wheel of Fortune J,4, 15, Gambll 8,10

4 00-Mr

15-Engtosh 505 3
25-Far m Report 1l

6 3Q- F tve Minutes to Ltve By 4, News 6, Bib le Answers 8
6

oo-Cele~rlly

Rig ht 8, 10, Ascenl of Man 20, Wal s ~ ' s An imals 33.
3 31}-{)ne Lite lo Live 13, Lucy Show 6, Mat ch Game 8,10, M U
Report ll

6 oo-Svnnse Seminar 4, Sunn se Semester 10

6
6

Tattletales 10, N ew Zoo Revue 13

10

3 oo-Another World 3,4, 15, General Hospital 6, 13, Price Is

3.4 . News 13

FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 1, l97S

Caning

DOZER work land cleartng by
the acr e, hourly or contract
EXPERl tree serv tce , free
Farm ponds roads, et c
est1mates, 20 years ex
Large dozer and operator
perlence Call ( 1) 667 3041 or
Wi th over 20 years e x
992 3057
penence Pull ins Excavetmg,
1-21 26tp
Pomeroy, Oh 10 PHone 992
--- -- ~--- - ---- 2478
C BRADF-ORD , Aucttoneer
12 19 tfc
60 ACRE farm i)t Vrnton, Oh 10
Complete Servtce
SSS.OOO includmg all farm
Phone 9.t9 3821 or 949 3161
EXCAVAl i NG ,
dozer
ma ch•nery Phone 388 8420
Racine, Oh io
backhoe ,
and
dttcher.
2 4 Jtc
Cntt Bradford
waterline , footers , drams,
----- - - - - - ----.,.s
1 tfc
roads,
and brush cl eaning, no
IN MIDD LE PORT , 7 room s and
iob too small , no weather too(
bat h 3 bedrooms laundry
bad Charles R Hatfteld. Rt 1
TANKS cleanea
r oom , garage and carport , 2 ·; EPfiC
Rutland, 0 Phone 742 6092
Modern San tfa tl on , 992 3954 or
ntce lots 4 rms carpeted ,
992 7349
I 7 261C
new floor covertng, dmmg
9
I
B
tic
room , k.tlchen and laundry
Improvement
and
room 3 rms paneled and new WILL rr~m or cut t rees or iOME
Repatr Servtce - Anyth tng
parnt , natural gas , new hot
shrubbery
clean
ou t
fixed around the home-, from
water tank Phone 992 3"42
basements, attics , etc Phone
roof to basement You w111
2 0 SIC
9.49 3221 or 742 4441
like our work and rates
1 26 261c
Phone 142 5(181
1229tfc
-CARPET tnsta ll ation, Sl 25 per
Yatd Phone Richard West. P&amp;J
Home
Matntenance ,
8.43 2667
healing, coo l ing, refng •
12 24 26tp
p l umbing , el ect rtcal ap
p l iances We serv1ce and
repatr anyt1ng in the home or
bustness 215 N Second,
Middleport Phone 992 3509
1 9 30tc
5 ROOM house , Darwtn Phone
J 8 O' Brien, atlorney , 992
ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR
2720
- Sweepers. toasters, trons,
2 2 61p
CARPENTER - 2 story
all small appliances Lawn
frame , 4 BR. 1'12 baths,
mowers, neKt to State High
5 ROOM house, 55,000 Phone
way Garage on Route 7 Home
dining R, porches, storage
992 5871
bldg. 2 garages, about 2
2 2 12tp ....... Phone 985 382.S
2 2 26tc

.

Golltpoll' ... 274t,

1

We Also Buy Antiques
P1ck-up Service Available

11
rural \)•
t,Julet with
modtt
Cornpiete Wilh 111
$12,000.00.
cl•anlng attachments and orlvac,
'
uses ptptr bags. Slightly ustd BUILDING LOT- With stone
but cleans and looks like new
Will sell for S37 25 cash or foundation on good quiet street,
terms lvailable Pilant 992. out of hlg~ waler.

'•

Banacek 8, Movie " Harlow ' 10, News 20 Janak• 33

2 11 tfc

3 ROOM 2 bath , bu 11t •n k.tl che n
wtth bar . carport 1Bx 40 sun
deck . complete
Prtvate
wooded
acre ,
near
Ha r nsonv111e $24,500 Phone
742 6261
2 4 6tc

FB I 6,

12 3Q-Wide World Spec 1at 6

Repairtng

Upholslerong.

3, 4 ,1 ~ , Wtoe vvorta :,pedal 13

5232

--------------ELECTROLUX
7155

11 3Q-Johnny Carson

STRIPPING· FINISHES
FURNITURE·METALS·ETC.
MODERN &amp; ANTIQUE

Rad1ator Specialslt

NEW LISTING - 5 room
home, bath, gas furnace, lots of
paneling and ce\llng tile City
water, with large level lot.
Only S\0,000.00
NEWLISTtNG dcr... 8ot'
10171fc bottom ••
f\ woods, 2
bedro ~ ()-\: V gas heat,
Sweeper L, w t

Lincoln titfl., ftomtroy ,
Pt'tont Pomtro_y H2 3S1S or

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

WERE ~ O W 5AillN'
FE R ADEN T MEET
YE R UNClE YUSEF!

O F THI? Y~ RE ROYAL
5U PER T At-JKER PR INCE5, !
Y 5 EEt THE RE 5 SEE~ WOT Y
MIC. HT CALL A CHANGE 0'

Phone (614) 992-2798

Nathan Biggs

Ph . 992-5682 or 992-7121
All Mechamcal Work

1957 CHEVY perts . NEW
Lakewooel traction bars, hi
IIcker air Jhocks . hooker
heedtrs, with 3" collectors for
small blo~k can 992 3496
lfttr 4 p m BEST OFFER

HOUSE FOA· ·· RENT. · 1634

2·61p

C AP"! BUL L.
OAWSO '-! MA AM
Al YE~ 5.ERVICE:

100 Kerr Street

Bulldozer Radiator to the

comb1natron. AM FM ractlo , "'
way speaktr, sound system
Balance S107 89, or use our
budget terms Call 992 3965
2·3-tfc

3·11 ·11&lt;

~

CA PTAIN EASY

Pomeroy, Ohio

smallest Heater Core

--------------STEREO radio, 8 track tape

'

1

From the largest Truck or 1

towards

I 22 18tp

FQRSAL£
.
-------------RESTAURANT

.,,.m7.

20. Wild Kingdom 10; To Tell the Truth 13, American Out
doorsm an 15
8 QO--Mac Oav1s 3.4 15, Barney M i ller 6 13. T he Waltons 8, 10.
B1ll Moyers' Journal 20.33
8 JQ---Karen 6,13
9 oo---Archer 3,4, 15. Streets of San Fr&lt;lnn.,co 6, 13 , Mo¥ie
" Roustabout" 8, Movie " Haraktrt '' 20, Movie ' Bullltt" 1
Fortunes ol N1gel 33
10 oo-Mov1n' On 3,4,15, Harr y 0 6,13 Woman 33

Modem Chemicals

Service ' ::- _'. 1

Auto Parts. Rutland , Ohio
Phone {OU) 7o42 609•

------...-------- ------------lf7S.

by pass

.- I

Radl~to

--------------USED parts , Frye's Truck and

12 111 ttc ,

PRIVATE mtttj ng room for
1n y org1n IZitlon, phont 992·

THURSDAY , FEBRUARY 6. 1915
00-News 3,4,8, 10,13,15,ABC News 6 , Etec Co 20, Tea ching

oo-

heating service and
general sheet metal
works .
Free
Estimates.
Phone 949-5961
Emergency 992-3995
or 992-57DO

EXPERIENCED

log for easy viewing

Ch 1ldren w 1lh Spec 1al Needs 33
6 JQ-NB C News 3.4. 15. ABC News 13 , Bew 1tched 6, CBS News
8, 10. Zoom 20,. M u.. fReport 33
1
Truth or Cons 3,4, Bowling lor Dollars 6 What' s My Line
8, News 10, Let's M ake a Deal 13 , Jimmy Dean 15: Lock
Stoc k &amp; Barrel 20, Nova 33
7 Jo--Hollywood Squares 3, Hollywood Squares 4, Fred Tyler
Basketball 6, New Price ts Rtgh t 8, Consumer Survival Ktt

RACINE PWMBING
&amp; HEATING
Complete plumbing 6.

Free Ptckupand Delivery

I ll 6tp

'

2 2 ttc
---------1 HOUS C. uufurnllhtd . 7 rooms
ana b•'"· ni ce Phont 992 ·2110
or H2·34J2.
1-t tfc
___
------.. uR'ur'sHI!O
•
,.
"'
·~1 J room 1 anCI
Mann ino J . Wtblt~r
b•th , newly elf\ ""' 1ttc1 Pttont

(1)

1

Woll lined.

" · 12 tfc

NOTICE OF

Phone 99'2·3993
Daily Alter 5:00

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

Phone ttl ·5434.

APPOINTMENT
Cast No. l140l
Estate of Seldon J . White
Deceased.
'
Notice is htnby given that
Roberts . Whitt of Aoutt 2, eo•
161 . Coolville, Otllo, hn bHn
duly appolntect Administrator
w w A ot the Ettltt of Sttcton
J White, decenflt , latt of
Orange
Township,
Mtlgs
County, Ot'tlo .
Creditor$ are required to flit
their claims with said f leluclary
Within four months
Dated this 25th Clay ot
January 1975.

6,

1973 VEGA Hat chback. 4 speed
tr.!!ln Smi SSI On , new ttres, radto
WOULD like to buy 200 bales of
and tape player Good gas
good hay Phone ~92 2789
mileage Call 992 2732 after
2 s 6t c
-4 JO p m
2 6 6tc
WANTED Old uprtght p tanos
any cond•Hon Paymg 110 1972 VE GA Hatchback . 3 speed
au tom atiC E xcelle nt co n
each First floor only Wrtte to
d1f1on Phone 99 2 3914 after 5
and Ot¥1!! dtrecltons to W•tten
pm
Ptano Co Bo111 188, Sarct1s.
2 4 61p
011 lo 113946
- - - - - - - -- -- - 2 J 6tp
1973 OLDSMOBILE Cutlass S
P S , P B ana factory air
75 ,500 m!le$
Call 992 3914
after 5 p m
'2 2 6tp
WAITRESSES needed . apply rn
person Crow •s Steak House ,
197 3 FOR D Count r y Scturre
Pomeroy
wagon , 20. 000 miles , all
1 1 tfc
equ1pmen t. SJ ,SOO Phone 992
3493 or 991 2720
I AM '" need of men or women
to work •n local PI Pleasant
branch of large ntt tonal
company Must be able to
slart •mmtdtlttly For 1n
terv lew , apply Hol•dey Inn ,
REGISTERED
Anous
Glllltpol ls. Oh io 6 JO p m 10he1fers
, Btll W1t1e, Rock
Thursday t¥tnlng , Feb 6
Spr ings , Oh10 Phone 992 2789
Ask for Mr Doyle No phone
2 5 61 c
calls plnu
1 s 1tc
TABLE saw and lo•nter for
MEN and women nnd~d to
sale Phone 843 2292
work for ltrg,t nat•onally
2 5 6tc
known company Must bt able
to start tmmedlately, short 1'51 FOR D. flathead, V 8 engine
training period rtqulrtd For
W1th standard transmtSSion
lnter;vtew , call 6U H90, 1sk
1965 Lincoln Continental, 430
for personnel m1n1ger
cu in motor w1th automat tc
...._
2l lie
transmtSston
One
refrigerator , green 1n good
conditton Call 94~ 5185 any
time or 985 .&amp;219 after 7 p m
2 4 3tp
1972 MOBILE home , HdO . 2
bedrooms Pr iced renonable HOOVER D1al A Maltc w tt h
Phone 992 2709 or 1.&amp;2 .56.&amp;1
power drive and attachmen ts
2 "" 6tc
515 Phone 985 4132
l 29 lOtp
10x55 Partially Cllrpeted. 1 c .
52 !illlllon hot water lleeter.
uncserp10nmo Call 992 SIS3 STEREO RAD IO 9 track li!lpe
combmalion, am fm rad to, 4
I 30 12tc
way speaker sound system
Balance 5107 89 , or use our
budget terms Call 992 3965
MOilLE HOMES FOR SALE
1 29 ti C
NOTICE I
Due
to
the
foreclosure on one of Ohto 's
largest Mobile Home Dealers GROCERY business tor sale
Building for sate or tease
wt will offer for sale the
Phone- 17 3 5618from 8 JOp. m
following Motillt Homes at a
to 10 p m for appomtment
very , very taro.e discount
l - 6.tx12 Liberty, 3 bedroom
3 10 lfc
l - 60x 12 Liberty , 2 bedroom
1- !0x 12 R: lchlrdson , 2 bedroom STEREO R:AOIO , 8 track tape
comb1natton. am fm radio. 4
l-60x 12 PMC , 3 bedroom
wlly speaker sound system
l - 60:MI2 Titan, 2 bedroom
Balance SlOB 7.4 , or use our
1- 60•12 Perkwood. 2 bedroom
budget terms Call 992 3965
1- 60x 12 Elcona , 2 bedrooms .
central air
1 21 trc
1- 65M 12
Richardson,
3
bedroom, 2 full baths, &amp;x12
txpando
We alSo hll¥t a good sel"tlon of
other 8. JOand 12 wide Mobile
Homes Thtst trt mostly all
lete model Homes (tome h1ve
never betn liVId In) If you
art Interested In a good
All New Heaters
Mob lit Home It t very llrg'
Now
dllcount , don't wall Stop In
today at BER:RY MILLER:
Discounted!
Mobllt Home Sales, 70S
New WDOd Burmng
Farson Street. Btlpre. Ot!lo .
phone .&amp;23 9S31
HEATEA-----.$239.95
1 30 10tc
Deluxe model with cabonot.

An Ord i nan c e to amend APT tor rent Phone 992 5131
Sec t tons 11 35 01 and 1161 02 ot
day ltmt , or 992 3113 lfttr 6
Zonm9 Ordinance No 871A of
pm
Cod1f11U Ordlnancu of lhe
2-5·31&lt;
Village of M tddleport

21381

Deputy Clerk

2 5 41p

1 7 If~
- - -------- -Mobile Homes For Sale
Employment Wanted

---

REQUIRED add , one (H for
each Apartment
Sec Ill 8t It furthtr or
da lned tl"lat this Ordintnct Is
NOTICE ON FILING
declllred to be an Emerge~ cy
OF INVENTORY
ancllt Is, therefore, ordtred t1"11t
AND APPRAISEMENT
the rules bt dlspanstd with
providing It receives an at
The State of Oh1o , Meigs ftrmatlve vott of two th lrels of
County , Court of Common the members of Council end
Pleas, Probate 01¥t5ton
Shill takt tfftct at the ttrllest
To the Admmtstrator of the date sllowect i by law
e'sta le, to such of the followmo
Sec IV Th 1S Ordinance- shall
as are res1dents of the State of tak e effect and be 1n force from
Onto , vtz
the surv tvinQ and after January 13, 1975
spouse , the nut of k in , the
Passed the 13th dty of
beneftc tar tes under the wtl l
January 1975.
and to the attorney or attorneys
represent ing
any
of
the
M L Kelly
aforementioned persons
Prttldent of Council
Jerry Culwell , Rt 3, Albany, (I) 23. 30 17)
6, 31c
Ohto. Colum bh!i TownShtp, No
You are hereby not ll1ed that
the
Inventory
and
Ap
pra1semen t 01 the estate of the
afore ment ioned , deceased , tare
of said County , was ftled in th is
Court Sa1d I nventor y and
Appraisement will be for
heanng b efore thts Court on the
14th da y of February. 1975. at
10 OQ o'clock A M
Any person des tnng to f1te
exceptions thereto must f1le
them at least ftve days pnor t o
the date ut for hearmg
Giv en under my hand and
seal of sa id Court 1 th rs 27th day
of January 1975.

ton

l .,.

For Sale

1 J JOtc

Ph one

PUBLIC NOTICE

1968 CHEVROLET
Phone 992 2307

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

INCOME Tax Prepar.ed bOth
Fed era l and State Ta xes will
be done by appomtments
on ly Pl ene phone 992 2212 or
see Mrs Wanda Eblin, Laurel
Clt ff Rd , Pomeroy , Oh10

Lany Lavender

6

HE(L

REPAIR-Broken
Parts Mended
STRIPPING-By
Hand
NO DIP TANKS
Supplies· Strippers
Stains - Finsihes

Blown into Walls
and Attics
Free Estimates

On State Rt 124, 112 mt. from

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

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

Insulation

843-2824 or 843-2293
Portland, Ohio

ROGER HYSELL'S
GARAGE

OPEN EVES. B: OO P.M.
POMEROY, OHIO

Wanted To Buy

Te~evision

11

Help Wanted

Chester Ohio Sunday Feb 9,
19 75 o!ll 1 p m
2 3 6tc

The Furniture Fixer

$3495

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

--------------MEI GS munte loaders publ •c --- --------- -shoot lz aak. Walton

949 298 1

2 6 6t c

$2695

1971 CHEV. I TON CAB
JSO engine, 2 speed, 825 tlr..

2 4 Jtc

SHOO TING Ma tc h RutlanCI
Gun Club New L 1ma Road
Fr •day , 6 30 p m Shotgun5 ,
any gau9e 22 nfles , fac tqry
chok.e guns only
2 5 3tc

Fire Retardant

2 Door. orangeftnlsh, blk vinyl Interior , bucket seats, less
than 5,000 mtles. Radio. deluxe bumpers

1p m

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

1973 VW Super Beetle

""'
'
19740PELMANTA

;( Tbe Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Feb. 6, 1975
DICK TRACY

Bus~~·~ _ ~~rvices

$41J5

10,..00 m1 1 , V 8 engine with
automatic, power steering , P. brakes, fac a1r , t inted
glass, deluJte body and wheel opening mouldings, sand
stone v inyl seats Beautiful dark red flm1h Truly a cream

SH OO TING match. Racine Gun
Club Sund ay l p m Anorted
me ars and factory choke guns
only
17 :n tfc

Ph one 99 2 72 4-t

AUTO SA LES

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

1974 CHEV. IMPALA
~ Or, 1 owner car &amp; only

2 2 6tp
2 6 3tc C A s HssSs- FoR- JUNK-CARs
Complete, F RYE 'S TRUCK
TW O BEDROOM mobile home .
AND AUTO P'ARTS Rutland
4 13 Spri ng Ave , Pomeroy
Phone 742 6094
Phon e 99 '2 14'29
I 22 ·26tp
2 6 6tp
res rdent

·2 SIGNS
OF
QUALITY

LOS T strayed or stolen tH a c k
A ngus bull calf beht nd
Sy ra cuse Phc.ne 9912719 or
992 5906
7 6 Jtc

CONSIGNMENTS welcome at
P&amp;J AuctJon , 215 North
Second , M iddleport
1 9 JOtc

FOR RENT

Auto Sales

I \h l

ves tigation and observation
are necessary for the potential
student to choose the career

tra mmg program whoch woll
provide the most sallsfymg and
rewardtng careers
Vocatoonal educallon at the
Maso n Count y Voca llonal
Techmcal Center prepares all

For Fast Results Use Sentinel Classifieds:

I : •t1 ot Thanks

9

),
'

?

Welt

North

East

Pass

1•

Pass

6

Souob
It
?

You, South, hold
•AQ76¥2 tKH4o!oAQ82
What do you do now~
A- Bid three clubs. Your baad It
too stroDe for a ju.mp to three or

ldur tpadH.
TODAV'S QUESTION
Your partner continues to three
diamonds What do you do now?

Sond $1 for JACOBY MODERN
book to "Win at Br~dge," (c/o
th1s newspaper), P 0 . Box 489,
Rad1o C1ty Station, New York,
NY 10019

�'I
,j

8 -ThO Daily Sentinel, Middleport-l:'omeroy, U., 'I'I)ursday, Feb. 6, 1975

• don' tal d•Isease can
Peno
attack children's teeth

Ed Note · Thos os the fofth m a bactenal trntants cause the
series of SIX articles on dental tossues to become red, puffy.
health published by tho s sore and hkel) to blood
newspaper m cooperatoon wo th
If plaque os not removed
the RehWinkel Dental Socoety da ol y, ot ca n hard en and
in observance · of National develop on to calculus 1tartar )
Children's Dental Health As calculu s buolds up , the gum
Week, February 2~
sepa rate from the teeth, levmg
pocket:&gt; or spaces between the
THE DENTIST says our 11 - tee th anrl gums that foil up woth
year-&lt;&gt;ld has gum dosease How bacteroa and eventually pus
can a chold sq young have such
An onsodoous aspect of the
a problem '
doseaseis tha t tl does not occur
WHILE IT'S TRUE that overmght Sometimes tt tak es
periodontal (gum ) doseasc os years of t::hromc IIT!latJOn to
more prevalent among adult:&gt;, develop
many choldren , unfortunately,
Pe roodontal dosease can be
also have some form of thts treated, and the sooner the
dtsease
treatment JS started the better
Periodon ta l dt sease norDen lost.&lt;; are alert to the early
mally develops m two stages sogns of gmg ov1tos and other
Symptoms of the early stage, penodon ta l pr oblems 1n
called gongovolls, a re swollen choldren They recogmze that a
and mflamed gums whoch may maJOr portoon of adult gum
bleed easoly A more advanced problems undoubtedly stem
stage, penodonto tos mvolves !r om un che cked cases of
both the gums and the bone choldhood gmgovttos
supportmg the teeth If left
That's why ot os so Important
untreated , tht s destructtve to learn proper oral hygoene
form of the dosease woll destroy proce dure s
1ncludmg
the bone and cause the teeth to brus hong and flossmg - at an
loosen
ear ly age
Choef vollaon os bactenal
Make sure your chold has
plague - a sticky him of peroodoc dental exammatoons
harmful bacten a that con- The chold who learns the value
stantly forms on the mouth As or good oral health woll carry
the plaque builds up on the thos plulosophy throughout hos
teeth along the gum hne, hfe

School welcomes visitors
POINT PLEASANT
February has been desognated
as Voca tiO'Ila) Educatoon
Month It woll be observed
through
th e state
by

educatiOnal tn st 1tut 10 ns ,
teachers and students Woll
Edwards, assostant dorector,
Mason Co unty Vocat1on
Center, s tated tha t the purpose
of thos observance os to brmg
attentoon to the merots and
accomplishments of vocational
education He enco ura ges
cot1zens of the communoty to
v1sot the school durong thos
week to voew on-gomg prOJects

Ohio
Eta Phi
welcomes
two
New pledges, Partrocia
Shnvers and Vocky Keatley,
were welcomed at the Tuesday
night meeting of Ohoo Eta Phi
Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority at the Columbus and
Southern Oh1o Electroc Co
Granted a leave or absence
from active membership was
Jenmfer Sheets The Beta
Sigma Phi Convention was
ann!lllllced for May 16-18 on
Cleveland
Mrs.
Karen
McGraw noted that she will be
moving from Meogs County
about March I and resigned as
chairwoman of the ways and
means commottee
Mrs
Debbie Buck was appoonted to
fill the vacancy.
A report was given by Mrs
Janel
Dow nie,
servoce
chairwoman , on the Mother's
March of Domes In Pomeroy
$405.92 was collected whole in
Syracuse, $101 was collected.
Thank you notes woll be sent to
those who assosted woth the
ltmrl drive.
It ,, ,. ,announced that a pozza
pany will be held m March and
also at that tome a do-your·
own-thong auction will be held.
Mrs. Sharon Bailey gave the
cultural report whoch consosted
of a film titled "Breast Can·
cerWhere Are We '"
presented by Nancy Rishel,
district representatove for the
Amencan cancer Society
Mrs Baoley and Kathy
Cumings served refreshments.

PAY RESPECTS
LONG BOTIOM - Mr. and
Mrs. Joe Btssell, Long Bottom,
visited recently at the Leav1tl
Funeral Home on Parkersburg
to pay respects to his nephew,
James Keffer, who was the son
of Marshall Keffer, Naples,
Fla., and the late Eupha Bosse II
Keffer. Burtal was near
Spencer, W. Va

MESAROS RETIRES
SAN JOSE, Calif. (UPI)
Mike Mesaros, who played in
the World Cup 1958 soccer
duompiClMblpll for Yugoslavia,
u!liledfnlm lbe game Wednesday.
Meaaroa, 36, has been
playLc with the San Joee
Earthquakes of the North
American Soccer League.

'

and programs
Edwards also stated that
bo th yo un g people and adults
today face a tremendous task
of selectmg career development programs Careful in-

I -. A Nl IO lhank evervon c Nho
thought of or helped 10 a n y
wav d urmg my recen t sray m
th e hospt l rtl Spec •a l I hank.~ 10
the members of wests1de
Church o t Ch r1 SI
Sha ron
S mt ih
7 6 l! c

lypes of c thzens for ema

pl oyment wothon our communoty It trams our youth woth
kn owledge
and
skolls;
upgrades the skolls of emplo yees whose JObs have
become more complex ; and
retrams workers who have
been do splaced from theor
posotoons due to technologocal
mnovattons or physocal ompalrments
Edwards urges all cotozens of
the community to vis1t the
scho ol during Vocatoonal
Educaloon Month You can
learn a lot about career
education by observing the
exosting vocational programs
and talking w1th communoty
employers who serve on school
vocatoonal advosory commottees.
If you are concerned about
educahon, come by the Center
for a visot. The schoolos located
on the Ohoo Rover Road , North
of Pomt Pleassnt For further
mformatton, call the school at
67[&gt;.3039.

ROOM

FO R

lo c at •on .

RENT

m n1ce

pr e fer

loca l

Notice

SH OOTI NG MATCH
Co rn
Hollow Gun Club , turn f•rst
r.ght after Mtles Ceme tery ,
Ru tl an d F actory c hok ed
guns only Su nday, February

SHOO TING Mat ch Ractne Gun
Club Sunday . Feb 9, 1 p m
2 5 4tC

AUC TION Sale , Every Frtday,
7 p m Vdlagt .hu ctton 215 N
Second Mtddleport
1 10 lOfC

IN CO ME TA.X Prepared by
appotntment Phon e 992 3388
2 2 ore
A UCTION Thursday nt!jlhf , 1
p m
at Meson Auct10n
Horton St In Mason w va
Co n s q;~n m e nt s
welcome
Phone (304 ) 773 547 1
2 2 tfc
~ a rm .

NOW se llrng Fuller B r ush
Products phOne 992 34 10
l 24 ttc

-----Thursday
----- and

AuCrrON

S~lurday nloht. 7 p
m at
Mason Auct ion Horton St tn
Muon , W Va ConS t!jlnments
welcome Pt10ne (30"t 773
5471
10 3 tfc

FO R

you r

" 011 of Mink "
Phone BROWN ' S

Cosme ~1cs

992 5113

Tuppers
Pla i n s Cheste r
Water D•slrtct has for sale a
1970 - J,,. ton Fo rd Stvleslde
P1 ckup Tru ck . J speed trans
m•ss lon . heevv duty spr.ngs
w1th a 360 cu m engme W ill
acc ept b1dS until noon Frtdi!ly ,
Feb r uary 14. 1975 at the off ice m
Chester , Oh10 Castt m hand day
ot sate Truck may be seen at
wateroff1ce m Ches ter R1ghl •s
reser¥ed to r elecl any or all
btdS

(2) 6, 7 10 11 . 12. 13. 6tc

REMODELING.
plumbing ,
healing and all types of
general
repair
Work
guaranteed 20 ve-ers ex
perlence Phone 992 2"09
1 19 He

--------------Wanted To Buy

OLD furniture , Ice boxes , brass
beds , or complete househOlds
Wrtte M 0 M iller. Rt " ·
Pomeroy Ohio Call 992 7760
10 7 H
JU N K autos , complete tnd
delivered to our yard We pick
up auto bodies and buy all
ktnds of scrap metals and
•ron R •der 's Sal v age , St R:l
12-4. Rt 4, Pomeroy . Ohio .
Ca ll 992 5"68
10 17 tfc
CAS H paid lor all makes and
models of mobile homu .
Phone area code 6U 423 9531
4 13 tfc
WANTED to buy 1 used
Gr&amp;vely Tractor with Mowtr
and rldtng sulky and plow
attllchments Phone (JO.tl 882
252 5 or even,ngs, 8112 234.&amp;
1 26 121c
OLO COINS and paper money
for Metos County 's only
m onthly coin auction Call Ed
Burkett. 992 3.&amp;16, alter 5 · 30
pm
1 31 12tc

~oa;L~s;f~;~d;i;-;-h-.-y
Phone 742 3192

ORDINANCE NO 1020-75

(I)

30 (2)

Be 11 ordalntd by th~ Council
of the Villagt of M tddleport u
follows
Sec I That Section 1135 01
f Perm ltt&amp;d uses)
8 3 CEN ·

TRAL BUSINES S ADO Mulll

Fa mi ly Dwe llings
Sec II That sect ion ll61 02
(Number of Off Street Parking
Spaces r equ ired ) Under VSE
add Apartment Houns , Under

PARKING

SPACES

Mann ing 0 Webster
Judge
By Ann B Watson

Judge

21c

---

___ __________ _

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

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

--------------USE~

FUEL OIL
HEATER, s50

---;------------For Rent

30 t21

6,

13, lie

IPOMEROY LANDMARK '

I

~• .: JICk W. Carsty, Mgr.
~

FURNISHED ettlcltncy epl
utilillet pa id, S100
Phone 992·311o&amp;

2 6 Jlc 1953 30 FERGUSON lraclor.

FURNISHED apt. In M i d
dleport , utilltlnpald . No calls
1 tter 1 p m Phone 992 3205
2 6 ltc

2 BEDROOM mobltt home,
country IOC1t10n
Close to
Mlddltporf or Pomeroy
Children welcomt Cell 992
76•9 after .t p m
2 5 61c

TRAILER sptct, 2 tnllll from
Pomeroy , Rt 1.t3, Phone H2

Sl51

10·27 tic

APT 3 rooms . all tltctrlc, has
tablf top range, wall oven ,
r .. t nice and cleen. mOdern
Located
In
Pomeroy
overlooking tht 01110 R:1vtr
Phont Gallipolis. day ,...,
7499 . even1n91 ••6 9539
1 26 tfn
2 BEDROOM trellar,
only Phone H2 332.&amp;

.

Phone 992-2111

.

month

tdults
2 .. lfc

r~;;~EA-s PAC E-:--~--mlle
north of Meigs H lgh School on
old Rt Jl Phone 992 29AI
1 23

lie

COUNTRY Mobile Home Park,
R I 33, ten m lies north of
Pomeroy
Llrllt lots with
concrete petlos, IICJtwetks,
runntrs end off strttl
••rklng Pbont 992 7•79
12 3111c
l enCI "' ROOM furnllhl'd and
unfurntthlct
epntmtnts

new motor, good rubber, new
p11nt S1 ,200 Phone 985 3594
2 2 7tp

6' MOWER , 3 pt hitch fits Ford
or Ferguson tractor, SIOO
New cultivator , Sl25 Phone

985 359&lt;

, 2 71p

JOHN Deere Oozer , "'
cylinder, dtlstl. 8' blade
canopy ,
New
clutches,
brakes . and tracks , A 1
condition $6,500 Phone 9853594

1965

7 2 71p
S50 R EWAR 0 for the return of
our Black and Decker eltetr1c
sew , 7 1/ 2 In blade Phone (1)
661 3737 VIvian Maxey

Route 1
Rutland

/~-

COMMANO!

Marshalt 3J
oo- News 3,4,6,8, 10, 13, 15 ABC News J3

J~Horace

10

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC. •

Open Mon . Sat .

8A .M ·6PM.

Ph. 992·2174

Pomeroy

D&amp;D
CONSTRUCTION

For Sale
CLOSE OUT on new Z1g Zag
sewmg mach•nes For sewing
stretch fabrtcs . buttonholes,
fan c y des tgns , etc Patnt
sltghtly blem1shed Chotce of
carrvt ng c ase or sew !no
stand S4.11 80 cash or terms
available Phone 992 7755
12 18trc

PHONE
949-3832 or 843-2667

All Types of
BUILDING
and REMODELING
From a shelf to a house .
Patnting, Siding. rooftng,
paper hanging, kttchen
cabtnets , expert carpet1ng,

Real Estate For Sale

Approximately one acre In J.:e.:.tc=·--------~
Rutland , set up for mobtle
home Phone (I) .446 9662
CREMEANS CONCRETE de
1 30 7tc
ll¥ered Monday through
Saturday and e¥entngs
NEW HOMES No Money Down
Phone 446 1142
P'a ym ents accordtng to
6 13 tfc
mcome on Farmers Home
Adm101Sirat10n loan Con
EXCAVATING, dozer, loader
ven t tonal ftnanctng also
and backhoe work , sept1c
available with mln1mum
tanks mstalled. dump trucks
down Lovely homes •n three
an clio boys for htre , w111 haul
locattons 1n Me igs County
1111 dirt. top sotl. limestone &amp;
Some home s w1th wooded
gravel. Call Bob or Roger
lots
Call for more 1n
Jeffers , day phone 992 7089,
formation , 992 5976
n1ght phone 992 3525 or 992
1 15 26tc

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

Reftnish1ng BurniShing

With

D-5

Liquor

Permit for sale.

oo- Tomorrow

~1'0\BU...

~ IF PRESit:€lJI

R?RD OMf. HeRE.

WQL.,~ COURSe
~ l.Ol..t.D FII-JD

A RCXJM feR 1fl!7:

COMI~,SOI1 U..
TA~ HIS RCQIA 1

8 3~B ig Valley 6
9 00---A M 3, Phd Donahue 4, Ph il Donahue IS, Bullwlnkle 8,

Morning w1th D J 13
25-C huck White Reports 10
9 3D-Not For Women Only 3, Dmah 6, Galloping Gourmet a,

~'I,~OU

9

1-\IM A

Limestone &amp; Fill Dirt
Cammerclei-Resldenllol
Conslructoon &amp; Remodel

JJlY~M®Ikal

RooM~

OOMPANY
777 l'eorl Street
Middleport, Olllo
Phone f92·5367 or 992-3161

house needs some repair

Whole works at just $4,700
NEAR LANGSVILLE About 10 ocr .., on good
fishing creek, close to mine
areas, good blacktop road
ASKING just $4,000
ALL CASH FOR YOUR
PROPERTY - lET US
KNOW WHAT YOU HAVE
PROPERTY IS SELLING
FAST AT THIS TIME .
992·2259 or m-2568

.

WE'RE GOING 11J
4AVE TO MAKE
A RU N "OR IT,

11vered ngtlt to your prolect
Fast
and
easy
Free
est 1mates Phone 992 328'4
Goeglem Ready MtX Co
M tddleport Oh to
6 30 ffc

I

SELLA,,

I

()

II

YERSIM

SEWING MACHINE. Repa rrs,
service, all makes, 992 2284
The Fabnc Shop , Pomeroy,
Authortzed Smger Sates and
Servtce we sharpen Scissors
3 29 lf c

[)

t)

tIJ

Ye1terday'•
OH- lklT

"""' Of'4l..... ....

SIIURMIItoiWl~"f-

1

,,

·-

OR

.51.08BOVIA'-I
WAL-RU5E52

YO' CAIN'r
GO HOME!' TH' PLAfJE"

'

WINNIE

' •·

•

Wagoner J, Pop\ Goes the Country 4; New Candid
Camer.!!l6 , Pop! Goes the Country 8; Treasure Hunt 10, , To

)~Porter

' l •

VOU UKE TO MIMIC

PEOPlE .WHY NOT
!XJ IT WITHIN THE
FRAMBVORK OF
~EJ..AW?

SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov. 22)

SCHOOL BEFORE, SO I

Ill

GOT MY K ICK!7

DOING
IT INTHE ONLY WAY 1:

ZENITH

JA

COLOR TV

I

'

1

"

J ·R E P N

"

eBLACK &amp;

CDRQD

GEMINI (Mey 21-Juno 20) You

Yesterday's Answer
8 Wmged
23 Substance
boots, like 24 - rest
Mercury's 25 Primp
9 Naol polish 28 Harry the
11 Sadat's
- (Runyon
capital
character)
15 Indication 29 Command
18 Stood up
31 Squan19 Unyielding
dered
22 Losing
34 Ufe (comb
candidate
fonn)
(hyph. wd,) 35 Hold it!

50 SCAIRT OF A

LEETLE THUNDER

•STEREO

Important
one-to-one
re lattonshlp needs tactful
handlmg A wrong mo¥e by
e1ther party wtll cause a flare -

up
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Take

••

HEitMAN GltA TE
MASON. W.VA.

"

L

you financially Hide your
checkbook l t~r the next few
days

CAPRICORN (D•c. 22·Jen.
19) You re apt to be too selfsee k i ng today to suit
assoclales It you must be
pushy push t or everyone s
benefll

AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Fob. t9)
Obltgatlons you ve sktrted will
be ca tch1ng up with you Face
them Get them off yQur back
once and for all

PISCES (Fob. 20·M11ch 20) A
problem you 've had with one
you had been fnendly with Is
l1 kely to surface again A¥old
this person, 11 possible

more-than-u sual
safe ty
precautio ns wh1le working
Don t attempt someth1ng alone
that requires a competent
assistant

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sopt. 22)
You'll really gel miffed when
soclallzmg and all disappear
when tl's time to dlv1de the
check

LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) The

Fob. 7, 197S
Success Is li kely this year II you
don 't spread ycur efforts too
th in Concentrate on your most
promising area, usa time and
talent wisely and rewards Will
be realized

Never take a losing finesse
NORTH (0)
6
•KJ6
¥ K962
t A2
oloAQJ3
WEST
EAST
• 95 3
oloQ 1084
¥43
¥A5
tK 10743
• QJ

as

o!ol09H

• 86 4
Neither vulnerable
West

SJ
RV

Norcb

Eaat

South

tlo!o

lt

1¥

4•

Pass

Pass

the king of doamonds ana got
out With a low trump I won the
trock, proceeded to cash dummy's ace of clubs, came to my
hand woth a trump, and led a
club to dummy's queen East
took his kong and had to lead a
diamond to gove me a ruff and
doscard or a spade roght up to
dummy's king-jack "
Z's play was wellthou~ht out
He would still make hos con·
tract If West held the kin~ of
clubs He wouldn' t make ot of
East held four to the king, bu I
that was an unlikely holding It
would make no difference 1f
East held exactly three, but it
dod brong ot home agaonst East's
doubleton kong.
!NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSNl

J A

RJ

o!oK2

SOUTH
• A 72
vQJt087
HB

Pasa
Openong lead - Q •

ZN NI

AL

VDN

GAPRVN

RJ

ROGAJ -

LNJNIV

Pass

- XFPRS

The boddong bas been·

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Old man Z, who used to play
the dummy in the columns
about auction brodge, was back
in duphcate action agam. Smce
he wao the only declarer to
bring home four hearts, he was
asked how he played the hand
"Quickly" was his reply
"Back in th'l days when I used
to appear in Milton Work's
column, I learned never to take
Ws"'f! fmesses. East was marked wtth lbe kmg of clubs for hos
diamond overcall The play
started with a queen of
diamoncfll lead. I won in dummy
and led a trump East hopped
nght up woth the ace caShed

.,

•. R1511KALLEOUOOOO'

n~

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·Doc.
21) Thi s ISa very shaky t tme for

WIN AT BRIDGE

ZSTSI&amp;_KD
Yesterday'• Cryploquole: THE WORLD IS FILLED WITH
W!LUNG PEOPLE; SOf,IE W!LUNG TO WORK, THE \
W!u..lNG TO LET THEM~ROBERT FROST
(CJ 18'15 Kiftl Fnture1 Syndlc:ale, lnc.,

I NEVER SEEN ENN'IBODV

II

CANCER (June 21-July 22) An

BNPV,

VA

For Friday, Fib. 7, 1975

ARIES (Morch 21·Aprlt 19)

won t be as fortunate today 10
bustness matters as you were
yesterday Don 1 m ake rm puiSIVB moves

AXYDLJIAAXI.
LONGFELLOW

RIJFPV

ZNNJPM

RIJFPV

''
'

'II

One letter simply slancfll for onotber. In this sample A II
used for the three L's, X for the two O'a, etc Single leiters,
apootrophes, the length and formation of the words are oil
hints. Each day the code !etten are dilrerent
CRYPTOQUOTE

KNEW HOW I

CDSV

&amp;.sy Ttrmsl ,
Free Dlllvtry 1

You 're not In a very forgiving
mood tod ay Woe betide tho se
who block your path Later.
you II be remorseful

would be a big mistake to try
now to force your Ideas on one
who 1sn't willing to go alon g
w1th them

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:

I. NEVER COUlD AFRJI?D

GREAT COUNTRY STEREO
From 6:00A.M. Til12:00 P.M.

•'t

]j

Paul

harmony you're looking for m
order to I unction at your best Is
not likely to be found around
home tod ay

TAURUS (April 20-Mey 20)

25 Uama's
land
21 Hartebeeste
27 "ElGrande"
30 Tonuny's
foUower
31 Wager
32 Constel
lation's
main star
13 Fit for
tillage
35 Flock
36 Connecticut hr-+-1'-+--+city
fl To be (Lat.) L-...1.-,.I,.....I......L--

Phone

. I

\ An.wer, 'lhou/d btl flood u hnr pn: IIIUilfJ a
llmt- INTENTIONS

ACROSS ""
Ptrov\de
"·
(\ ' ,)38
,, w1
,,.;
t'
1 Relic
....1...,
chest
39 Belgian
5 "Beau -"
r1ver
10 "Grand
DOWN
Hotel"
I Nautical
dil'ection'
author
11 Cole Porter 2 Mathe·
matical
mus1cal
(2 wds.i
proportion
12 Gorl's
3 Make it;
name
succeed
13 Luanda os
(sl., •3 wds.)
its capital ',4 Society of
14 Islet
physicoans
15 Hold a
5 Thomas
sesston
Wolfe
16 L.A.
hero
pro
6 MIT grad
17 Goat
(abbr.)
7 Come out
coat
19 Withered
on top
20 Therefore
(3 wds.)
21 Follow
ZZ Egyptian
god
23 Butte's
cousin
24 Neultra

WMPO-FM

992·30?8

Aviation Weather 20

7

You need co-o per ati on for
what you hope to accomplish
It s not likely you II get 1t tl you
behave too Independently

Jumble•' PATIO STEED IRONIC NUANCE

by rHoMA.s JOUPH

LISTEN TO GREAT
COUNTRY STEREO

WHITE 1V

sonality &amp; Behavioral D evelopment 33

3D-NBC News 3,4.15; ABC News 1J ; Bewllc~ed 6, CBS News
8.10. Zoom 20
7 oo-Truth or Cons 3, Bowling tor Dollars 6, WCHS TV Report
8, Aviation Weather 33, News 10, Jimmy Dean ll, I Spy IS,

6

lt.J THE THEAlEJC:.

~M'tJt!(

WOM'T
(JI\If Uf $0
'IMI'(

LEFT-

•

00-FBt J, Andy Griffith 8. Mi ste r Roger' s Neighborhood
20,JJ. Ironside 13
5 3D-News 6, Beverly Hillbillies 8, Hodgepodge Lodge 20. Gel
Smart 15, Ele c Co 33
6 00-News 3,4,8,10,13,15, ABC News 6. Etec. Co 20. Per-

!He USUAL PR'ACTICE

(Au_,.. lo•orrewl

UTTLE ORPHAN ANNIE

PHONE 742-5431 AFTER 6 PM

S·Q'•\,."

Cartoon J. I Dream of J ean nie 4, Som erset 15,

Gotllgan 's Is 6, Tallleta les 8, Sesame St 20,33 , Movie "The
Gorl Can'l Hel p It" 10. Mike Douglas 1l
4 3D-Bewitched 3, Merv Grtlfln 4, Mod Squad 6. Lucy Show 8,

Nuchlms 33
10 3D-World Press 20
II oo-News 3,4,6,8, 10, IJ, \5 , ABC News JJ.

[IIIXXIJXJ

2 MILES NORTH OF HARRISONVIU! ON RT. 143

r\

As the World Turns 8,10
2 oo-Oays of Our Lives 3,4,15. 510.000 Pyram1d 6,13 , Guiding
Light a. 10
2 JD-Doclors 3.4,15 ; Big Shoowdown 6,13, Edge of Night 8,10

aurreoted by the lbo•e cortoon.

1970, 52x12, 2 bedroom Skyline, partially
furnished, cathedral ceiling living room, lined
drapes, built-in bookshelves divided, good
condition; approx. 8 acres partially wooded,
approx. 5 acres cleared.

BARGAIN - •
'TI frame
with ·
·V' water,
.clrlc on
natura
~ - ~,.,uo .oo.
POMEROY - Nice renovated
3 bedroom home. Lots of nIce
paneling, wall to wall carpeting, l porches, basement,
and fenced yard. $17,500.00
H VING TROUBLE
~~:;~j~;~~IA~CALL
A
PI
SALESMAN

&amp;

Restless 10, Not For Wom en Only 15.
1 JG-How to Survive a Marriage 3,4, 15 Let's Make a Deal 6, 13.
HlP.

Now arranre the clr&lt;led leltert
to form the atii'PJiH anawer, u

MOBILE HOME AND ACREAGE

.

I oo- News 3, All My Children 6,13. Phil Donahue a, Young

vlvat Kit ll

READY MIX CONCRETE-.re:'

92.1
WITH_BOB COOPER, JAY HILL
BILL PYNE, and CRAIG RAMSEY

Tomorrow 8, 10, To Be Announ ced 33

12 45-E tec Co 33
12 55- NB C News 3,15

9 Jl}-{)dd Couple 6, ll, Asslgnmenl Ameri ca 3J
10 oo-Oean Martin 3,4,15,. Baretta 6,13 , News 20,

_____________ _

PORTLAND - 4 nice tots,
good droHed well and water
system , block garage,
storage building, 2 story

Club 4, News 8,1 0
1
12 3D-Blank Check J 15. Split Second 6.13 . Search tor

" Dillinger" 8, 10, Masterpiece Theatre 20; Consumer Sur

Real Estate For Sile

.

Lofe 8,10 Sesame Sf J3
11 55-Take Kerr wit~ Graham Kerr 8, Dan Imel's World 10,
News 13
12 00-Jackpot 3. IS Password All Stars 6, 13, Bob Braun's 50 50

Tell the Truth \3; Black Perspecllve on the News 20,33
8·oo-Sanlord &amp; Son 3,4,15, Night Slalker 6,\3 , Khan 1 8,10;
Washington Week In Review 20,33
8 3D-Chico &amp; the Man 3,4, 15, Wall Street Week 20,33
9 oo-Rocktord Files 3,4, 15, Hot L Baltimore 6, \3, Movie

Unscramble these four Jumblea.

~ ---- -- - --- ::- ---

Investment. Prtced to sell.

" " ' 110 11 1 If

one letter to each square, to
form four ordinary words.

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

acres. s8;QOO oo.
POMEROY - Business R.
and furnished apartment.
Located on Main 51 In good
traffic area Good Income

..... ,'"~-"" ,_

lo y II! Nil! AIIN (H U

8-K EXCAVATING

8, 10

11 JQ-Holtywood Square s 3, IS, Brady Bun ch 6. News 4. Love of

Bonanza 15

8 oo-Lass1e 6, Capt Kangaroo 8, Popeye 10 Sesame St 33
8 25-Capt Kangaroo 10

l)laL, ~~s NOr

11 QO-H1gh Roller s 3,4, 15, One Life to Live 6, Now You See It

5

7 00-Today 3.4.15. AM Amenca 6,13. CBS News a.IO

'OJ
Water, Electric, G•s, Sewer
Lines, Instilled. Work
gul'rantHCI.
Dozer, BackhOe, Trucks

Public Affairs 10, Blue R1dge Quartet 13
35- Cotumbus Today 4

6 45- Mornlng Report 3, Farmllme 10

BORN WSER

Sweepstakes J. 15. Joker's Wild 8, 1~ . Movie
"The Naked Prey" 13
10 JQ-Wheel of Fortune J,4, 15, Gambll 8,10

4 00-Mr

15-Engtosh 505 3
25-Far m Report 1l

6 3Q- F tve Minutes to Ltve By 4, News 6, Bib le Answers 8
6

oo-Cele~rlly

Rig ht 8, 10, Ascenl of Man 20, Wal s ~ ' s An imals 33.
3 31}-{)ne Lite lo Live 13, Lucy Show 6, Mat ch Game 8,10, M U
Report ll

6 oo-Svnnse Seminar 4, Sunn se Semester 10

6
6

Tattletales 10, N ew Zoo Revue 13

10

3 oo-Another World 3,4, 15, General Hospital 6, 13, Price Is

3.4 . News 13

FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 1, l97S

Caning

DOZER work land cleartng by
the acr e, hourly or contract
EXPERl tree serv tce , free
Farm ponds roads, et c
est1mates, 20 years ex
Large dozer and operator
perlence Call ( 1) 667 3041 or
Wi th over 20 years e x
992 3057
penence Pull ins Excavetmg,
1-21 26tp
Pomeroy, Oh 10 PHone 992
--- -- ~--- - ---- 2478
C BRADF-ORD , Aucttoneer
12 19 tfc
60 ACRE farm i)t Vrnton, Oh 10
Complete Servtce
SSS.OOO includmg all farm
Phone 9.t9 3821 or 949 3161
EXCAVAl i NG ,
dozer
ma ch•nery Phone 388 8420
Racine, Oh io
backhoe ,
and
dttcher.
2 4 Jtc
Cntt Bradford
waterline , footers , drams,
----- - - - - - ----.,.s
1 tfc
roads,
and brush cl eaning, no
IN MIDD LE PORT , 7 room s and
iob too small , no weather too(
bat h 3 bedrooms laundry
bad Charles R Hatfteld. Rt 1
TANKS cleanea
r oom , garage and carport , 2 ·; EPfiC
Rutland, 0 Phone 742 6092
Modern San tfa tl on , 992 3954 or
ntce lots 4 rms carpeted ,
992 7349
I 7 261C
new floor covertng, dmmg
9
I
B
tic
room , k.tlchen and laundry
Improvement
and
room 3 rms paneled and new WILL rr~m or cut t rees or iOME
Repatr Servtce - Anyth tng
parnt , natural gas , new hot
shrubbery
clean
ou t
fixed around the home-, from
water tank Phone 992 3"42
basements, attics , etc Phone
roof to basement You w111
2 0 SIC
9.49 3221 or 742 4441
like our work and rates
1 26 261c
Phone 142 5(181
1229tfc
-CARPET tnsta ll ation, Sl 25 per
Yatd Phone Richard West. P&amp;J
Home
Matntenance ,
8.43 2667
healing, coo l ing, refng •
12 24 26tp
p l umbing , el ect rtcal ap
p l iances We serv1ce and
repatr anyt1ng in the home or
bustness 215 N Second,
Middleport Phone 992 3509
1 9 30tc
5 ROOM house , Darwtn Phone
J 8 O' Brien, atlorney , 992
ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR
2720
- Sweepers. toasters, trons,
2 2 61p
CARPENTER - 2 story
all small appliances Lawn
frame , 4 BR. 1'12 baths,
mowers, neKt to State High
5 ROOM house, 55,000 Phone
way Garage on Route 7 Home
dining R, porches, storage
992 5871
bldg. 2 garages, about 2
2 2 12tp ....... Phone 985 382.S
2 2 26tc

.

Golltpoll' ... 274t,

1

We Also Buy Antiques
P1ck-up Service Available

11
rural \)•
t,Julet with
modtt
Cornpiete Wilh 111
$12,000.00.
cl•anlng attachments and orlvac,
'
uses ptptr bags. Slightly ustd BUILDING LOT- With stone
but cleans and looks like new
Will sell for S37 25 cash or foundation on good quiet street,
terms lvailable Pilant 992. out of hlg~ waler.

'•

Banacek 8, Movie " Harlow ' 10, News 20 Janak• 33

2 11 tfc

3 ROOM 2 bath , bu 11t •n k.tl che n
wtth bar . carport 1Bx 40 sun
deck . complete
Prtvate
wooded
acre ,
near
Ha r nsonv111e $24,500 Phone
742 6261
2 4 6tc

FB I 6,

12 3Q-Wide World Spec 1at 6

Repairtng

Upholslerong.

3, 4 ,1 ~ , Wtoe vvorta :,pedal 13

5232

--------------ELECTROLUX
7155

11 3Q-Johnny Carson

STRIPPING· FINISHES
FURNITURE·METALS·ETC.
MODERN &amp; ANTIQUE

Rad1ator Specialslt

NEW LISTING - 5 room
home, bath, gas furnace, lots of
paneling and ce\llng tile City
water, with large level lot.
Only S\0,000.00
NEWLISTtNG dcr... 8ot'
10171fc bottom ••
f\ woods, 2
bedro ~ ()-\: V gas heat,
Sweeper L, w t

Lincoln titfl., ftomtroy ,
Pt'tont Pomtro_y H2 3S1S or

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

WERE ~ O W 5AillN'
FE R ADEN T MEET
YE R UNClE YUSEF!

O F THI? Y~ RE ROYAL
5U PER T At-JKER PR INCE5, !
Y 5 EEt THE RE 5 SEE~ WOT Y
MIC. HT CALL A CHANGE 0'

Phone (614) 992-2798

Nathan Biggs

Ph . 992-5682 or 992-7121
All Mechamcal Work

1957 CHEVY perts . NEW
Lakewooel traction bars, hi
IIcker air Jhocks . hooker
heedtrs, with 3" collectors for
small blo~k can 992 3496
lfttr 4 p m BEST OFFER

HOUSE FOA· ·· RENT. · 1634

2·61p

C AP"! BUL L.
OAWSO '-! MA AM
Al YE~ 5.ERVICE:

100 Kerr Street

Bulldozer Radiator to the

comb1natron. AM FM ractlo , "'
way speaktr, sound system
Balance S107 89, or use our
budget terms Call 992 3965
2·3-tfc

3·11 ·11&lt;

~

CA PTAIN EASY

Pomeroy, Ohio

smallest Heater Core

--------------STEREO radio, 8 track tape

'

1

From the largest Truck or 1

towards

I 22 18tp

FQRSAL£
.
-------------RESTAURANT

.,,.m7.

20. Wild Kingdom 10; To Tell the Truth 13, American Out
doorsm an 15
8 QO--Mac Oav1s 3.4 15, Barney M i ller 6 13. T he Waltons 8, 10.
B1ll Moyers' Journal 20.33
8 JQ---Karen 6,13
9 oo---Archer 3,4, 15. Streets of San Fr&lt;lnn.,co 6, 13 , Mo¥ie
" Roustabout" 8, Movie " Haraktrt '' 20, Movie ' Bullltt" 1
Fortunes ol N1gel 33
10 oo-Mov1n' On 3,4,15, Harr y 0 6,13 Woman 33

Modem Chemicals

Service ' ::- _'. 1

Auto Parts. Rutland , Ohio
Phone {OU) 7o42 609•

------...-------- ------------lf7S.

by pass

.- I

Radl~to

--------------USED parts , Frye's Truck and

12 111 ttc ,

PRIVATE mtttj ng room for
1n y org1n IZitlon, phont 992·

THURSDAY , FEBRUARY 6. 1915
00-News 3,4,8, 10,13,15,ABC News 6 , Etec Co 20, Tea ching

oo-

heating service and
general sheet metal
works .
Free
Estimates.
Phone 949-5961
Emergency 992-3995
or 992-57DO

EXPERIENCED

log for easy viewing

Ch 1ldren w 1lh Spec 1al Needs 33
6 JQ-NB C News 3.4. 15. ABC News 13 , Bew 1tched 6, CBS News
8, 10. Zoom 20,. M u.. fReport 33
1
Truth or Cons 3,4, Bowling lor Dollars 6 What' s My Line
8, News 10, Let's M ake a Deal 13 , Jimmy Dean 15: Lock
Stoc k &amp; Barrel 20, Nova 33
7 Jo--Hollywood Squares 3, Hollywood Squares 4, Fred Tyler
Basketball 6, New Price ts Rtgh t 8, Consumer Survival Ktt

RACINE PWMBING
&amp; HEATING
Complete plumbing 6.

Free Ptckupand Delivery

I ll 6tp

'

2 2 ttc
---------1 HOUS C. uufurnllhtd . 7 rooms
ana b•'"· ni ce Phont 992 ·2110
or H2·34J2.
1-t tfc
___
------.. uR'ur'sHI!O
•
,.
"'
·~1 J room 1 anCI
Mann ino J . Wtblt~r
b•th , newly elf\ ""' 1ttc1 Pttont

(1)

1

Woll lined.

" · 12 tfc

NOTICE OF

Phone 99'2·3993
Daily Alter 5:00

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

Phone ttl ·5434.

APPOINTMENT
Cast No. l140l
Estate of Seldon J . White
Deceased.
'
Notice is htnby given that
Roberts . Whitt of Aoutt 2, eo•
161 . Coolville, Otllo, hn bHn
duly appolntect Administrator
w w A ot the Ettltt of Sttcton
J White, decenflt , latt of
Orange
Township,
Mtlgs
County, Ot'tlo .
Creditor$ are required to flit
their claims with said f leluclary
Within four months
Dated this 25th Clay ot
January 1975.

6,

1973 VEGA Hat chback. 4 speed
tr.!!ln Smi SSI On , new ttres, radto
WOULD like to buy 200 bales of
and tape player Good gas
good hay Phone ~92 2789
mileage Call 992 2732 after
2 s 6t c
-4 JO p m
2 6 6tc
WANTED Old uprtght p tanos
any cond•Hon Paymg 110 1972 VE GA Hatchback . 3 speed
au tom atiC E xcelle nt co n
each First floor only Wrtte to
d1f1on Phone 99 2 3914 after 5
and Ot¥1!! dtrecltons to W•tten
pm
Ptano Co Bo111 188, Sarct1s.
2 4 61p
011 lo 113946
- - - - - - - -- -- - 2 J 6tp
1973 OLDSMOBILE Cutlass S
P S , P B ana factory air
75 ,500 m!le$
Call 992 3914
after 5 p m
'2 2 6tp
WAITRESSES needed . apply rn
person Crow •s Steak House ,
197 3 FOR D Count r y Scturre
Pomeroy
wagon , 20. 000 miles , all
1 1 tfc
equ1pmen t. SJ ,SOO Phone 992
3493 or 991 2720
I AM '" need of men or women
to work •n local PI Pleasant
branch of large ntt tonal
company Must be able to
slart •mmtdtlttly For 1n
terv lew , apply Hol•dey Inn ,
REGISTERED
Anous
Glllltpol ls. Oh io 6 JO p m 10he1fers
, Btll W1t1e, Rock
Thursday t¥tnlng , Feb 6
Spr ings , Oh10 Phone 992 2789
Ask for Mr Doyle No phone
2 5 61 c
calls plnu
1 s 1tc
TABLE saw and lo•nter for
MEN and women nnd~d to
sale Phone 843 2292
work for ltrg,t nat•onally
2 5 6tc
known company Must bt able
to start tmmedlately, short 1'51 FOR D. flathead, V 8 engine
training period rtqulrtd For
W1th standard transmtSSion
lnter;vtew , call 6U H90, 1sk
1965 Lincoln Continental, 430
for personnel m1n1ger
cu in motor w1th automat tc
...._
2l lie
transmtSston
One
refrigerator , green 1n good
conditton Call 94~ 5185 any
time or 985 .&amp;219 after 7 p m
2 4 3tp
1972 MOBILE home , HdO . 2
bedrooms Pr iced renonable HOOVER D1al A Maltc w tt h
Phone 992 2709 or 1.&amp;2 .56.&amp;1
power drive and attachmen ts
2 "" 6tc
515 Phone 985 4132
l 29 lOtp
10x55 Partially Cllrpeted. 1 c .
52 !illlllon hot water lleeter.
uncserp10nmo Call 992 SIS3 STEREO RAD IO 9 track li!lpe
combmalion, am fm rad to, 4
I 30 12tc
way speaker sound system
Balance 5107 89 , or use our
budget terms Call 992 3965
MOilLE HOMES FOR SALE
1 29 ti C
NOTICE I
Due
to
the
foreclosure on one of Ohto 's
largest Mobile Home Dealers GROCERY business tor sale
Building for sate or tease
wt will offer for sale the
Phone- 17 3 5618from 8 JOp. m
following Motillt Homes at a
to 10 p m for appomtment
very , very taro.e discount
l - 6.tx12 Liberty, 3 bedroom
3 10 lfc
l - 60x 12 Liberty , 2 bedroom
1- !0x 12 R: lchlrdson , 2 bedroom STEREO R:AOIO , 8 track tape
comb1natton. am fm radio. 4
l-60x 12 PMC , 3 bedroom
wlly speaker sound system
l - 60:MI2 Titan, 2 bedroom
Balance SlOB 7.4 , or use our
1- 60•12 Perkwood. 2 bedroom
budget terms Call 992 3965
1- 60x 12 Elcona , 2 bedrooms .
central air
1 21 trc
1- 65M 12
Richardson,
3
bedroom, 2 full baths, &amp;x12
txpando
We alSo hll¥t a good sel"tlon of
other 8. JOand 12 wide Mobile
Homes Thtst trt mostly all
lete model Homes (tome h1ve
never betn liVId In) If you
art Interested In a good
All New Heaters
Mob lit Home It t very llrg'
Now
dllcount , don't wall Stop In
today at BER:RY MILLER:
Discounted!
Mobllt Home Sales, 70S
New WDOd Burmng
Farson Street. Btlpre. Ot!lo .
phone .&amp;23 9S31
HEATEA-----.$239.95
1 30 10tc
Deluxe model with cabonot.

An Ord i nan c e to amend APT tor rent Phone 992 5131
Sec t tons 11 35 01 and 1161 02 ot
day ltmt , or 992 3113 lfttr 6
Zonm9 Ordinance No 871A of
pm
Cod1f11U Ordlnancu of lhe
2-5·31&lt;
Village of M tddleport

21381

Deputy Clerk

2 5 41p

1 7 If~
- - -------- -Mobile Homes For Sale
Employment Wanted

---

REQUIRED add , one (H for
each Apartment
Sec Ill 8t It furthtr or
da lned tl"lat this Ordintnct Is
NOTICE ON FILING
declllred to be an Emerge~ cy
OF INVENTORY
ancllt Is, therefore, ordtred t1"11t
AND APPRAISEMENT
the rules bt dlspanstd with
providing It receives an at
The State of Oh1o , Meigs ftrmatlve vott of two th lrels of
County , Court of Common the members of Council end
Pleas, Probate 01¥t5ton
Shill takt tfftct at the ttrllest
To the Admmtstrator of the date sllowect i by law
e'sta le, to such of the followmo
Sec IV Th 1S Ordinance- shall
as are res1dents of the State of tak e effect and be 1n force from
Onto , vtz
the surv tvinQ and after January 13, 1975
spouse , the nut of k in , the
Passed the 13th dty of
beneftc tar tes under the wtl l
January 1975.
and to the attorney or attorneys
represent ing
any
of
the
M L Kelly
aforementioned persons
Prttldent of Council
Jerry Culwell , Rt 3, Albany, (I) 23. 30 17)
6, 31c
Ohto. Colum bh!i TownShtp, No
You are hereby not ll1ed that
the
Inventory
and
Ap
pra1semen t 01 the estate of the
afore ment ioned , deceased , tare
of said County , was ftled in th is
Court Sa1d I nventor y and
Appraisement will be for
heanng b efore thts Court on the
14th da y of February. 1975. at
10 OQ o'clock A M
Any person des tnng to f1te
exceptions thereto must f1le
them at least ftve days pnor t o
the date ut for hearmg
Giv en under my hand and
seal of sa id Court 1 th rs 27th day
of January 1975.

ton

l .,.

For Sale

1 J JOtc

Ph one

PUBLIC NOTICE

1968 CHEVROLET
Phone 992 2307

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

INCOME Tax Prepar.ed bOth
Fed era l and State Ta xes will
be done by appomtments
on ly Pl ene phone 992 2212 or
see Mrs Wanda Eblin, Laurel
Clt ff Rd , Pomeroy , Oh10

Lany Lavender

6

HE(L

REPAIR-Broken
Parts Mended
STRIPPING-By
Hand
NO DIP TANKS
Supplies· Strippers
Stains - Finsihes

Blown into Walls
and Attics
Free Estimates

On State Rt 124, 112 mt. from

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

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

Insulation

843-2824 or 843-2293
Portland, Ohio

ROGER HYSELL'S
GARAGE

OPEN EVES. B: OO P.M.
POMEROY, OHIO

Wanted To Buy

Te~evision

11

Help Wanted

Chester Ohio Sunday Feb 9,
19 75 o!ll 1 p m
2 3 6tc

The Furniture Fixer

$3495

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

--------------MEI GS munte loaders publ •c --- --------- -shoot lz aak. Walton

949 298 1

2 6 6t c

$2695

1971 CHEV. I TON CAB
JSO engine, 2 speed, 825 tlr..

2 4 Jtc

SHOO TING Ma tc h RutlanCI
Gun Club New L 1ma Road
Fr •day , 6 30 p m Shotgun5 ,
any gau9e 22 nfles , fac tqry
chok.e guns only
2 5 3tc

Fire Retardant

2 Door. orangeftnlsh, blk vinyl Interior , bucket seats, less
than 5,000 mtles. Radio. deluxe bumpers

1p m

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

1973 VW Super Beetle

""'
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19740PELMANTA

;( Tbe Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Feb. 6, 1975
DICK TRACY

Bus~~·~ _ ~~rvices

$41J5

10,..00 m1 1 , V 8 engine with
automatic, power steering , P. brakes, fac a1r , t inted
glass, deluJte body and wheel opening mouldings, sand
stone v inyl seats Beautiful dark red flm1h Truly a cream

SH OO TING match. Racine Gun
Club Sund ay l p m Anorted
me ars and factory choke guns
only
17 :n tfc

Ph one 99 2 72 4-t

AUTO SA LES

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

1974 CHEV. IMPALA
~ Or, 1 owner car &amp; only

2 2 6tp
2 6 3tc C A s HssSs- FoR- JUNK-CARs
Complete, F RYE 'S TRUCK
TW O BEDROOM mobile home .
AND AUTO P'ARTS Rutland
4 13 Spri ng Ave , Pomeroy
Phone 742 6094
Phon e 99 '2 14'29
I 22 ·26tp
2 6 6tp
res rdent

·2 SIGNS
OF
QUALITY

LOS T strayed or stolen tH a c k
A ngus bull calf beht nd
Sy ra cuse Phc.ne 9912719 or
992 5906
7 6 Jtc

CONSIGNMENTS welcome at
P&amp;J AuctJon , 215 North
Second , M iddleport
1 9 JOtc

FOR RENT

Auto Sales

I \h l

ves tigation and observation
are necessary for the potential
student to choose the career

tra mmg program whoch woll
provide the most sallsfymg and
rewardtng careers
Vocatoonal educallon at the
Maso n Count y Voca llonal
Techmcal Center prepares all

For Fast Results Use Sentinel Classifieds:

I : •t1 ot Thanks

9

),
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?

Welt

North

East

Pass

1•

Pass

6

Souob
It
?

You, South, hold
•AQ76¥2 tKH4o!oAQ82
What do you do now~
A- Bid three clubs. Your baad It
too stroDe for a ju.mp to three or

ldur tpadH.
TODAV'S QUESTION
Your partner continues to three
diamonds What do you do now?

Sond $1 for JACOBY MODERN
book to "Win at Br~dge," (c/o
th1s newspaper), P 0 . Box 489,
Rad1o C1ty Station, New York,
NY 10019

�·,
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10 - The Daily SeQtinel,Middleport-Pomeroy.
0 .• Thur&gt;rlay, F't•b. 6, 1975
I
,

Syracuse says no
fuel cost clause
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SALE

PEN I
RAND
ELBERFELD$ A
114 EAST MAIN

SALE
STARTS
FRIDAY
AT 9:30AM

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By Kathryn Crow
SYRACUSE Village
Council Thursday night
rejected a proposed new
contract with the Ohio Power
Co. because of the addition of a
fuel cost clause.
Meeting with council were
Fred Morrow, local manager
of the Ohio Power Co. and
Roger Wheeler of the division
office in Por-tsmouth.
Wheeler explained that
Syracuse Village is in the last
two years of its contract. It wlll
be necessary by March 1, 1976,
for Syracuse Vlllage to renew
Its contract, Wheeler said.
Wheeler went on to explain
that because of inflation the
cost of llghting has been increased. For example the cost
of 7,000 lumens will increase
!rom $3.83 a month to $4.40,
2,ii00 lumens, $2.60 a month to
$3.70, plus adjustments as fuel
costs inCI'ease.
He also indicated that the
Ohio Power Co. would like to
ellminate all 1,000 lumen
lights,
Robert Wingett, president of
COWlcil, said the village would
not accept a new contract with
a fuel cost clause.
"It is necessary for village
offic!ais to know each month
what the street lighting costs
wiD be as revenue for street
lighting ts llmited. W~ cannot
enter into a contract until we
know exacUy what the cost Is
going to be per month,"
Wingett said, and other
COWlcilmen agreed.
Wingett explained that the
vlllage ts bound by a levY and
has to keep within a budget. He
said if a ceiling Is placed on the
fuel cost clause, council might
consider accepting it.
Wheeler said Wingett made a
good point, and .that he would
report back to the company
and present the result to
COWlcillater.
Council has been wanting for
8 ome time to change 15
emting llghts to 7,000 lumen,
however, they took no action on
this Thursday night.
Wingett also asked Wheeler
if Ohio Power Co. would assist
the village in laying out plans
for placement of poles on . the
ball field. Wheeler said ''they
would be glad to give any
aaslslance they could,

IN THE MIDDLE BLOCK - FORMERLY ELBERFELDS TOY STORE
YOUR NEW
HEADQUARTERS
''

FOR TOW_ELS, SHEETS,
TABLE COVERS, BEDSPREADS,
BLANKETS, CURTAINS,
DRAPERIES, AREA RUGS,
DRAPERY HARDWARE, APRONS,
DOMESTICS, WALLPAPER,
WINDOW SHADES.

GRAND OPENING SALE

CONE BEDSPREADS

CALICO KATY TABLECOVERS
Heavy vinyl · wipe clean-easy care scalloped
edges, by Sunweave.
REG.
REG.
REG.
REG.

3.49 52x52 - · · · · - - - 4.99 52x70 - - - - - - - 7.49 60x84 - - - - - - - - 7.9970" ROUND- --· -··

SALE
SALE
SALE
SALE

GRAND

GRAND OPENING SALE

1.99
2.99

3.49
3.99

WHILE THEY LAST

.•6''

SALE . , 77

Our entire stock of. Twin, Full, Queen and King
Si ze Spreads is included for this event.

We've made a Special Purchase oi our bestselling pa«ern in Canno,. Royal Family no iron percale sheets and pillowcases .
Choose Pink, Blue or Yellow
Reg. s13.99 KING SIZE SHEETS SALE

SALE PRICE

~.79

Reg. $7.99

FULL SIZE

SHEETS

Reg. $6.491WIN SIZE SHEETS

TOSS CUSHIONS .
VALUES

4.79 pr.
PILLOWCASES· 3.79 PR.

Reg. 55.59 pr . 42x46 PILLOWCASES
Reg . $4.99 pr . 42x36

Matching Bath Towels, Hand Towels and
Wash Cloths in solids, prints and jacquard
patterns.

WHITE SALE PRICES

PAIR

GRAND OPENING SAI.E

NO-IRON SHEETS

AREA RUGS

Our entire stock of famous Quality
Cannon Royal Family no-iron sheets
and pillowcases is included.

Take advantage of the Special Sale
Prices . You'll want several of these for
your home. Our entire stock is in cluded .

TO s10.00

SALE PRICES

GRAND OPENING SALE

(Slight Irregulars)
Single width by 84" length. Solids and patterns, some foam lined.
SALE

BARGAINS IN THE MAIN STORE AND AT THE MECHANIC STREET WAREHOUSE
Mens $12.95 Quilt Lined

SALE!

WORK JACKETS

BOYS SWEATERS

Polyesler cotton blend · waist length jacket .
100 per cent red nylon quilt lining · zipper
front .
Charcoal · dark ol ive · forest green . Sizes 36 to

Coat styles - vests - sl ipovers - turtle
necks .
Sizes 6 to 18. Limited quantity.

so.

SALE

WOMEN'S KNIT TOPS WINTER SLEEPWEAR
Brushed Tricot, Flannel, Challis
AND BLOUSES
GOWNS- PAJAMAS -ROBES.
WHILE THEY

3.95 to 6.95 Sweaters - - - - - - 1.00
8.95 and 9.95 Sweaters • - - - - - 2.00

PRICE

WOMENS

WHIRLPOOL

WASHER· AND
DRYER PAIR

NQW SAVE OVER

SPORTSWEAR COORDINATES
Misses and Womens Sizes
(Not all sizes in all styles. colors)

GIRLS· SPORTSWEAR
VALUES TO s10.00
Pants - Jeans- Shirts- Knit Tops
(Broken Sizes)

50 %

MENS AND LADIES

SPECIAL GROUP

Reg . 284.95 2-speed. 4-cycle Washer Sale 265.00
Reg. 199.95 3-temp. 5-cycle Dryer - Sale 185.00

a,

LAST

-LUGGAGE
Save 25 Percent on our entire stock of
famous brand Luggage.

::~~~!s=~~~~~n;~~~~u:e.
SALE lfz PRICE .
LAST . $1 00
SAVE 25% ·_
- ..
MAIN STORE • ANNEX • MtCHANIC STREET WAREHOUSE
OPEN ·BOTH·. FRIDAY 'AND SATURDAY 9:30 ·TO 8 PM
·

ELBERFELD
\
'

WHILE THEY

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P

ER

y

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't" .
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VICKI WELDERS CLUB members, above, at Meigs High School
donated the most money - $35 - of any club at Meigs High School toward
the recent chanties drive. Members of the club are, first row, 1-r, Bob Ball,
Jim Lewis, Kim Browning, Mark Hudson, Roger HyseU, Roger Dent, Bryan
!ilank, Mike Haley, Roger Nelson, Danny Taylor and Rick McKnight;
second row, Steve Nease, Larry Hysell, Jack Well. 'T'Im l!earhs, Mike

Gilmore, Orrion Blanchard, Brian Juatlce, Don HyseU, Chrla Neece and
Randy Faulk; third row, Ryan Dill, Bill Lavender, Paul Clay, Ted Woods,
Don Smith, Ron Wilson, Joe Justice, Bob Musser, Frank Shane, Bryan
Klzzee, and Ernie Will. Home roo111 311 donated more than the other home
rooms, a total of $60.

Devoted To The Interests of The Meigs-Mason 'Area
VOL. 'XXVI NO. 209

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FRIDAY. FEBRUARY 7. 1975

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

PRICE 15'

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Chamber favors priority
to improving route 124

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The Middleport Chamber of
Commerce endorsed the improvement of SR 124 in western
Meigs County as the top
priority need in highway
development when It met at a

STUDENTS WHO TOOK part in the charltiee drive recently at Meigs High School are
shown with the thermometer (center) that shows tbe goal reached in a recent charity drive.
'lbe goal was $800, but it rea¢\ed $843. The money was divided equaUy between the heart,
cancer, tuberculosis, mental retardation and muscular dystrophy~~ - Tbl!! VICKI Welders
Club gave the largest donation of aU the clubs at the School and home room 311 gave the largest
home niom donation. Shown are, front 1-r, Bonnie Dillon; and Tamra Stanley; back, Paula
Eichinger, Gary George, Steve Walburn and Perk Ault.

nlum."

WOMENS

ODD LOT

}

en tine
.

Taft.
COLUMBUS - PI,.ANS TO EsTABIJSH regional' state
welfare offices in r.mesville, Athens and Uma have been
IICI'apped by the Ohio Department of Public Welfare for
economic rea801111. Asalslant Ohio Welfare Director Robert
Canary aald Thursday "The department simply does not have
lllfflclent lunda in thts biennium to open these three offices, and
we do not antlclpnte receiving adequate funds in the next bien·

WON BY OUR CUSTOMERS. NO PURCHASE IS NECESSARY AND YOU NEED NOT BE PRESENT TO WIN.

.'

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Th:J.8 from his bed at Bethesda Naval Hospital, where he ts
recove-'w• from a heart attack, Taft aaid the President's
•u"'
U ould
"serl
atrategy of rtildng the price of crude 0 w
cause
ous
lnllatloo and dlslocation in key industries, and still may not
reduceoUoonaumptlonenough."Gilslessweekends, measures to
promote fuel-efficient automobiles and possibly a partial
rationing or aUocation approach in which the U/le of gasollne
beyond basic needs would be heavily taxed were suggested by

'2''
BE SURE TO REGISTER IN OUR NEW ANNEX FOR THE $200 IN GIFT CERTIFICATES TO BE
All AT SPECIAL SALE PRICES

Board of Public Affairs, in the
municipnl building .
Maxine Varian, who works
for that board, also had worked
for Syracuse Home Utilities.
She has resigned her position
with the utility company . When
working for both she collected
both the water and gas bills.
Now it will be necessary for
residents to go to the city
(Continued on page 12)

' I

By United Press Intematfolllll
WASHINGTON _ PRESIDENT FORD'S Import tariff
should be delayed by Congress for 90 days "because It wiU drain
lilllona of dollars from American incomes, just the opposite of
wbat our economy needs," Sen. Robert Taft Jr., R.Ohio, said

DOMESTIC ITEMS FIBERGLASS DRAPERIES

Mattress Pads, Covers, Pillow
Protedors, Ironing Board Cbvers,
Appliance Covers, Aprons, Dresser
Scarfs.

Also meeting with council
was Don ·Griffin of Scientific
·Sanitation Inc. in regard to a
rate increa set in garbage pick
ups.
Griffin explained that he
cannot make any money at the
present rate. He stated that he
. had 145 paying customers and
the present rate Is $2.50 per
month. Grlflln asked for a 50
cent a month Increase. He said
be could not guarantee how
long he could continue the
service at the present rate.
Most of the council thought
the raise was justified,
however, Wingett pointed out
that he would like to see the
village have its own garbage
service. Council agreed to
meet Feb. 20 at 7:30 p.m. to
decide the Issue.
It was announced that gas
bills will no longer be collected
at the office of the Syracuse

CINCINNATI -A CRACKDOWN ON rursing homes without
automatic fire sprinkler systems has been relaxed. Two weeks
ago 21 ol the city's 58 nursing llomes were ordered not to accept
patients until sprinklers had been !nalalled, as required by
state law.
.
But City Health Commissioner Arnold Leff, who imposed the
ban uys he wiU consider allowing homes that have atarted
"acUve lnatallatloo ol sprinkler systems" to take new patients.
Leff iald he has talked to nursing home operators and learned
tbat aome homes would have to shut down soon becall/le of the,
ban.

The executive board of the
Gallia-Meigs Community
Action Program Thursday
night hired James T. driffln
Ill, Gallipolis, as manpower
training director. ·
Griffin, a 1974 Rio Grande
College graduate, succeeds
James Baughman whose
resignation was accepted by
the board last night.
The board also accepted the
resignation of Dorleen Phllllps
as site manager of the senior
nutrition program in Meigs
County.
In other matters, the
executive board approved
participation in the Com-

Station
robbed
TUPPERS PLAINS _ The
Vista Service Station at
Tuppers Pla!na was robbed and
an employe was knocked unconscious Thursday at approximately 8 a.m. Deputy
Ray Manley of the Meigs
County Sheriff's Departrn~nt

._w

re~t.

prehensive Employment
and
.....
Training Act (Cc.•A 6). This
will being an addilional $14,228
into the area.
Under the above program,
the board employed Anna
Schuler for clerical duties.
The board heard progress
reports on the nutrition and
head start programs and '
reviewed state grants, food
stamps and energy crisis
problems.
Two Meigs Countlans, Dixie
Smith and Donna Boyd, were
granted salary increases by
the board.
The board signed a contract
with the Meigs. County Council
on Aging for a continuation of
the senior nutrition program.
It was reported that the head
start program is now in a
conversion period. The board
announced there w!U be no
head start program in either
county this summer, but added
a year-around program will
begin in September, pending
approval from the Office of
Child Development, Department of Health, Education and
Welfare.
~«~~:!:'!".::&gt;.mY&amp;Q.«»'&amp;H.»m.?

EXTENDED FORECAST
Sunday through Tuesday,
·snow Ourrieo ID the northeast portion Sunday and a
chance of snow over the state
Monday or Tuesday. Highs
will ·be moot1y ID the 20s or
the lower 30s and lows wm be
In the teens IG low 20s.

Mrs. Eugene (Lula) J. Westfall, 'll, opened the station at 6
WASHINGTON- LABOR SECRETARY Peter J. Breilnan a.m. Her husband was at the
say. he Is reslgnin8 with no regret&amp;, but be does wish he could station with her unlll6:30, then
have done more for :worklnl people.
left.
"1 have wrlttauny letter of reaignetlon," Bren)18n told UPI
Mrs. Westfall went into the
TbundaY ID an interview. He aald It probably would go to the hack room to do some.work and
White Houle 111e same day, but be would stay on the job until the heard the beD on the front door
latw plri of Marcil. His succeuor baa ~!ready been choeen, ring and walked back into the t&gt;."..;:;o.:::::.x.;::::::::::::::::::r;;~::::o:··········-w.m
Jo1m T. Daniop,,81, former director ol the Cost of Uvlng ColDicll. ·front of the store when she waa MEN NAMED
Pi 'zct Ford offered Brennan the job ol .ambassador to struck in the head from behind . . COLUMBUS (UP!) - 'lbe
JrUnb, but Brennan, 58, eeemenot IDci!ned to take it.
She waa found lying on the reappointment of Frank E.
. floor unconscious by Ira Avren, 80, Columbus, to the
WASHINGTON - PtmsmENT FORD PLANS to fOCIII his Roach. She was taken to Ohio ·Personnel Board 9f
'1111a1t1oa 011 the Senate to halt further setbacb in his econmlc- Veterans Mel!lorlal Hospilal Review and the appointment of
-ID rer:ota) pro&amp;ralll aft&amp;' chiding HOule members for by the · COolvWe E-R Squad 'IIxlllaa CarroU McMlllan, 48, .
tUlDC 1 te1M1ay nee~~. Prelcl Secretary Ron N-sald Ford ts ~ whet:e she was admitted with a WIIJnlnCion, to the arto Ex·,
boillac tbe s.mte "will act differently" than the Houle, wjjch !light
concuulon. A total of · posltl01111 Commlulon were anl~Md. Qmwhe\m"WWY to block for 90 days his oil Import larlff_ $225 waa taken 111 the robbery . DOIIlced here Thursday by
It ts Wlknown if there were one Gov. James ·A, Rhodes.
or more persons involv4!d. 'lbe ' · Avren's flrlt five-year term
incident !a Wider inveetlgatlon. expires next Tue_sday. He has
been a newapaper reporter and
(ilotograpber for the Columbua
Dllpatch and the oil! Ohio State
Lows ll!nlght between 10 and Jo~. . .
15. Cloudier Saturday, a
McMillan aucceedl Edward
chance of anow, ~ in the c..Scheid who died Jan. 22.
upper 201. Probability of McMjllan owns and operates a
predpltatlon 40 per cent 1,iro!acre grain and llvestoc~
Saturday.
farm in Clinton County.
.

CONFINE DOGS
Dogs tn Pomeroy must be
confined or tied, Chief of
Pollee Jed Webster warned
today. Dogs not tied or
confined are in violation of
the Ohio Code 301.06 and
owners ol offending animals
will he prosecuted. Dogs
running loose will be picked
up by the dog catcher and
taken to the county dog
pound.

luncheon at the Martin
Restaurant Thursday.
A public hearing by the
division staff of the Ohio
Department of Highways at
7:30p.m. Feb. 13 to determine
sentiment on highway needs
and priorities was announced
and members were urged to
attend. The meeting will be in
the Common Pleas Courtroom.
Hershel McClure, Middleport business operator, met
with lhe chamber to discuss the
problems he encountered
recently with village officials
in constructing an addition to
his business on Locust St. The
chamber ogreed to attend a
meeting of Middleport Council

'

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Weather

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for Saturday, April 12, with
special promotions by participating merchants. A
discuasion was held on the
possibility of closing stores on
Saturday
evening
and
remaining open instead on
Monday evening each week. No
decision was made on the
matter and additional buslneaa
people wiD be contacted for
their opinions.
Attending the meeting were
Mr. and Mrs. Don Wilson, Mrs.
Clifford Stumbo, Ferman
Moore, Mr. and.Mrs. Manning
Kloes, Mr . and Mrs. John
Werner, George Ingels, Edison ·
Baker, Cash Bahr, Hershel
McClure and RichardS. Owen.

in order to hear both sides of
the problem and agreed to
assist McClure in any way
poasible.
Mrs. June Kloes reported on
her attendance at the recent
meeUng of the Bicentennial
Commiasion In Pomeroy PJtd
Mrs. Alwilda Werner gave the
treasl!l'er's report.
During the meeting, presided
over by president Don Wilson,
it was reported that two signs
welcoming people to Middleport have been repainted
and will be placed at entrances
to the COfllmunlly . A third sign
will be prepared so the 1igns
will be at all three entrances.
A sldewalk sale was planned

Portland history recalled. . ·
· · - · ; ' • . . , ,......,

Heights
darkened
Director hired 11"jJ:2 h0 ur

' pv;ws~'.'in Bri~

Choose fancies or bleached in King - Queen Full and Twin Sizes, Regular and Queen Size
Pillowcases.
·

GRAND OPENING SALE

GRAND OPENING SALE

7.69
SALE 5.29
SALE 4.19

Reg. $10.99 QUEEN SIZE SHEETS SALE

BATH ENSEMBLES

GRAND OPENING SALE

BEDSPREADS

NO-IRON PERCALE SHEETS

. CANNON ROYAL FAMILY

Big seleclin in t his special purchase.
36'' to 63"

OPENING SALE
GRAND OPENING SALE

GRAND OPENING SAI.E

SALE

RUFFLED NOVELTY CURTAINS

Big selection of -colors in beaut iful no -iron
fabric .
Twin -Full-Queen - King

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l'. _• ..._ ......'!'! .. ~~~~
.... ,~-.....,·........ ~,._..
-;,1 •'- "~~ ..
~
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- - , -,

.....+J"•

--?·...... - --- -lll' i ' , .
,.

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;(h ... -~ .:t;.o(;/U: .._.r; •. ;J4.,;. """......,.;t.
j

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'\{'K'~·~

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"L·~ ·~·'•&gt;"1
.

A talk on the history of Port- introduced u the new assistant Pomeroy, Jr., the laiter having
land by Gayle Price, In- director of the museum. She · later donated land .for the
troducUon of a new ·aaalslant w!U start working one day a Grace Episcopal Chilrcll in
director of the muaewn, and · week at once. During the Pomeroy.
The
bound
announcement of several meeting, pres!ded over by newspapers and book , have
acquisitions for the mu- Charles E. Blakeslee, hope was ~ given to the museum by
seum highlighed a meeting expressed that the museum John and lthamer Wsed in
of the Meigs · County Pioneer might be open for research and memory of their parenta, the
and Historical Society at the Yiew!ng of dtsplays after the late 1. B. and Beule Wsed.
mll/leum in Pomeroy Thursday . first of AprU.
It was announced allo that
night.
The acqufaltion of the Meigs
Lincoln Heights in Pomeroy
Blaettnar had loaned his
Fred
Price illustrated his talk with County Tribune files for the
was without power an hour and photographs, Including a year of 1892, and The Leader collection of pictures and.
one-half Thursday night when picture of the Caleb Price for 1895, 1896, 1897, 18119 and newspaper 1 torlee, many
wires were torn down by a grave marker, dated 177S.l821, 1901 and 1902 in bound volumes concerning the Blaettnar Auto
tractor-trailer.
one of George Thompson who was reported. Also a book Co. and tbe upper area of ·
A Columbus and Southern built boats at Portland (one of · · oopywrlted in London in 18M Pomeroy, to the museum.
Ohio Electric Co. spokesman • which ts in the Campus MartiUB has been given to the museum.
Mrs . Patrick Lechary,
said the outage for . the Museum) and photos of one of The hook carries the names of hospitality chairwoman;
Heights was from 9 to his relatives with a cannonbaU C. Pomeroy and C. R. served llght refrealunenta. ·
10:30 p.m. Pomeroy Pollee · left in the Price front yard
said the vehicle, driven by Earl following Morgan's Raid
William Hicks, Jr., Lexington, during the Civil War.
Ky .. tore down power llnes,
Price displayed a horse
telephone lines and cable fiddle an lnatnunent used in
television lines because of ita early 'tlmea at beU!ngs and
height. The accident occurred other social events, and .
at 8:18 p.m. There was no minutes of the Portland School
arrest. .
Board taken up until the time
Icy roads caused by in· the school was washed away in
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Gov. ·buyer !natead of 11 or 12 per
clement weather were credited the 1913 flood.
James A. Rhodes today an· cent. ·
as the cause of two other acPrice traced his family nolinced plans to place on the
"'lbe Ohio hou.sing ·Industry
cidents in town Thursday genealogy down to the present June 3 ballot a proposed ts now virtually at a atandltlll,
evening.
day, He was donated a·1900 era constitutional amendment giv· with the rellllt that tbolll&amp;llda
AI 9:55p.m ., cars driven by Smith Premier Typewriter . ing the state hoard powers to ol Ohioans are Uvlng ID dirty,
Carl Norton, Pomeroy, and which he took to Thursday tssue an unllm!ted amount of unsafe, run down housing, "
Wayne Klein, Pomeroy, night's meeting.
revenue bonds to spur con- the governor said.
colllded on Uncoln Heights
Mrs. George Glaze, Jr., wife structlon of low cost housing,
"Housing programs for
with minor damages. On the of ·the minister of the Mid- nursing home and health care Ohio 's senlor citizens are
Jones Boys parking lot earlier, dleport Church of Christ, was facWtles, and senior citizen almoat ·nonexistent. This
a car driven by Belva Johnson,
actiYity centers and ctinlca.
proposed amendment and the
Mason, backed into the pnth of
Rhodes aald his proposal Is programa to follow, will
an eastbound car, driven by
designed 'to replace Olilo's . atimulate a resurganee of the
Carol Ruttgen, New Haven,
cuiTent houllng financing po- housing !nduatry in Ohio."
causing minor damages. No
wers, which are now being
Rhodes said money railed
charges were flied in either
reviewed as to their consUtu- through the sale of an
accideqt.
i''our defendants were fined tlonality.
unllmited number of mortgoge•.
and two others forfeited bonds
"We cannot hold thts pro- revenue bonds at IQII' interest
in the court of Pomeroy Mayor gram in jeopardy while·waiting rates would be lent to financial
Dale E. Smith Thursday night. for the Supreme Court of Ohio Institutions.
Mlll'k Barton, 51, Pomeroy, to act," said Rhodes.
'lboee lnltltutiorul would ID
was fined $125 and costa and
"Thesecretofgettingh- turn lend money to devflopers,
was given a three day jail for people ts low interest
and lndlvlclsala t,o construct
sentence on a charge of driving we are going to provide In- housing, illq'linl homes and
while Intoxicated. Dennis tereat which Ia 2 to 4 per cent IBIIior cltlzelll facllltl111.
fi1!ed below tlle.prlme rate. When we
The banU and lavq. and ·
LANGSVILLE ,... Joyce Adkins, Syracuse,_
$125
and
costs
and
given
a
get
thts
finished
not
one
penny
.
loan
aaaoclationa would cbar81i
Janey, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Dallas Janey ol Langs- three day jail sentence on a of taxpayen lllllftey w!U be a maxlnll!m ol ODe per cent tor
bancD!ng the IMI!ey, ilhodM ·
ville, is the spelling chl!mpion driving while Intoxicated spent," said Rh_odes.
charge
and
was
fined
$10
and
·
l\hodel'
propoaal
must
be
ila!d. ·
·
of the Salem Center
costa
lor
driving
without
a
sent
to
the
Demoa-alc
con'lbe
gowmor
said ha would
Elementary School. Joyce ts 12
years old and a sixth grader at license. Gene Bass, Pomeroy, trollad Ohio Generai.Uumbly antlclpeteconatructlanof- .'
was lined $125 and coats and and enacted by.Marc)l 5 to get NQO mllll!ln ID houling tmlng
the school. .
Runner-up in the competition was given a three day Jail It on the June ballot. Rhodes the nat three to five 1'C'I
under the program.
·
· was Timniy JarreD, son of sentence on a OWl charge. said , be beUevea thts can
.,
He allo said &lt;Ilia neildl
Mrs. Sarah JarreD, Langsville. Ronald Jones, Minersville, was accompllahed.
fined
$10
and
costs
on
a
Rhod81
aalci'
that
if
the
about
40 more hecla ID nanlng ·
He Is 11 years old and a fifth .
speeding
charge.
'
legislature
and
voters
approve
hOmes
ciwr tbe' nat fin to
grader. Joyce w!U represent
Forfeiting $30 bonds were lhebondllluethepowersolthe seven yeart.
,
her school in the Melga CoWlty
Michael
Ooaton,
·
VInton,
Qblo
HoUI)ng
Development!
~~CO:,:";
speU!ng bee to be held in the
bomlll to npU .
near future. If she ts lUiable to charged with squealing tires, ' Board will be ezpanded to life
and
John
Foley,
Pittsburgh,
allow
tX11181nlctlon
of
homes
at
"""·eture~
·
wbteh
han ben
compete for some reuon, then
·
P,a.,
charged
with
falling
to
an
ID!erelt
CGBt
ol
betwetn
5
Timmy will repreaen! the
yield the right of way.
and I per cent to the b~
. ~linued 011
12l
Salem Center School.

BondS proposed
•
to spu·r build
. mg

Four fined by

Mayor Smith

Joyce Janey is

and

spelling champ ·

was

hi!

nunbll

..,M ,

I.

, ,o ,
I·'

If''

.

\

'.

' .

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