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16 - T'!e Daily Sentinel., l\liddlepart-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Feb. 19, 197~

.Letart and Portland win

Doris Col'Jurn
died Tuesdav•

TV rate

r.oou SPORTS
Tht• \' idor iuu s Mci~s
Marauder "'rcstlt~rs wer e
"1-( nud sportsmen" following

Rhodes
Continued from page 1

News ... in Briefs

Reading classes impress visitor· Doubled

Continued tram pqe I ,
payments should be made to
men
Republican
congressmen,
·invited for a sunset reception.
other school employes,"
tlwir malrh at Nelsonvillt'The firth gradl' eha m- s ha de.
(onnc rly
of
Ford
took
it
for
granted
he
would
looe today's cofllll't!Sslonal wte
Rhodes said in his statement.
York
Tu•·~da
y
in
lht
fa{'C
of
pwnship game, IJetwern
Harrisonville, died Tuesday
"The majority in the Ohio on postponing his ordered $3-aSbarrel hike on on Imports. Hi.s
a p1Jar c n t cxcessi \' C
Ructnt.1 und Syrac~r.;e , wil l morrnnt-: CJI th t! Knnes CunGeneral Assembly has decided hospitality aimed beyond that and instead sought congres&amp;onll.
prtJvocation, "nerording to
proceed the s tx lh grudc ltllc
·
valescent Cen ter in Athens
instead to give the money to the approval for his full program.
bo ut Thursday at 6: 30p.m .
hrad
coach
Ray
Goodman.
Mrs. Colburn was born tn
school boards. In my opinion,
MASON - Modi fiealion of an those who voted against House
WASHINGTON ~ FARM INOOME prospects have
Ha iTi sonville, the da•tghter or Ht· said some Nelsonv ille
Bertha Derry Welch Sargent, prrsons acted so as to create ord inance that would grant a Bi ll 81 (the Democratic- weakened In recent months, Agriculture Department economlsta
o disturba nt·e following the rflte increase to PoinTView
Rl. 2, Pomeroy, and the late
sponso red appropriation) say. "A sizeable downturn In net fann income In 1975 may be In
final
heavyweight
victory
by
Cable
TV
was
turned
down
by
Leo Welch . She was a graduate
voted in favor of the teachers." · prospect," experts said in a Demand and Price Situation report,
Mt&gt;igs
that
turned
the
''irtury
Ma
son'
s
Town
Co
un
cil
of the for mer Scipio Htgh
The governor said he did not adding that major crop prices have slumped In recent montb!
State Hep . Honald .James 1D· Sc hool in Harrisonv ille and to Meigs. Sec pagt• 3 for Tuesday nrght at a regu'ar veto the bill, however, "be· while farm costa still iocrease.
each. Others sconn~ for tht.&gt; Pmt' lorvi!le J has annutm ced he
account.
meeting upon vottng on the cause it would have worked a
There were no new figures or details, but department
wa s formerly employed in the
victors were Forttme wtlh ~ is C[).sponsonllg leg islatiOn to
third
a
nd
rmal
r
ead
ing
.
economists
said the outlook was worse than it was In December,
Hcg islrar's offi ce of Olu o
partisan hardship on our
points, Wolfe and Riffle with 2 in cl ude ow ne rs of house Universtty for 13 yeCjr s.
Mayor Fred Taylor prestded. schools."
1974, when they predicted 1975 net !ann iocome might range bee-ach and Bar nett with 1 pmnt . tratlers tmd er provasiuns of the
CoWlcilmen Dayton Haynes,
She attended the Shade
"I will, therefore, allow it to tween $24 billion and $27 billion compared with $27.2 billion In
Racmc wa s pat·cd by Terry llomc.S tcctd Exemption Act.
Hobert Hoach and Lawrence become law without my signa- 1974.
Unt ied Methodist Church and
Clar k with 12 markers, Rob
Under the bill, the assessable was a member of Harrisonville
Housh and Kenneth Heynolds, ture and continue to insist in
Lee with 4 and Wolfe and va lue of house t r ~ilcrs owned Cha pter ~~ . Order of Eastern
Hecorder, voted nu
OOLUMBUS - GOV. JAMES A. RHODES proposed
the future that the bulk of new
Curfman w1lh 2 pomts apiece. by persons H5 a nd older 1with Star .
Rtchard Newell and Paul school money go to those who Tuesday a combining of physical faclllties to make possible
li• the nightca p, Por tland an mcome of $10,000 or less)
Gerard, rep resenta ti ves of the need it -the teachers and "one-&lt;&gt;top" visits for welfare recipients, Wlemployment comSurviv in g bes ades
her
wa s led by Johnson with 1:1, would be reduecd by up to mother are her husband , Fred,
TV fi rm. made sta tements. employes," said Rhodes.
pensation applicants and food stamp users. " All the government
Talbot with 7, Dailey and $5,000. Th e prese nt act ex· a brother, Cecil Welch, a sister,
Newell said restdents who have
The deadline for signing or agencies are aided by the same people," Rhodes said, "the
Seedhn g wt ldltfe packets
Evans with 4 each and Persons el udes house tratlcr owr1ers Mrs. Alton I Virgima ) Douglas,
paid
the
higher
rate
since
vetoing bills is 10 days from the taxpayers. It's just common sense for the agencies to work
avai lable through the Meigs
had 2.
from recetv ing the red uction in ~ all of Rt . !, Shade.
January wtll be given the time they reach the governor's , together to provide these services.
Soil and Water ConservatiOn
- Syracuse's top scorer was assessable value . State
" It doesn't make sense for a man out of work or a mother on
Funeral services will be held Service must be ordered no option of e ither credit or a desk from the General AssemHayes With 9 points, while H.cpresenli1 tiv e Dennis Eckar t at I p.m. Friday at the Hughes
refund.
bly, not counting Sundays. If he welfare to have to spend money for a Car or a bus to travel all
Atkins chipped 111 ~. McNic kle 4 I D-Euc hd lis the )ltll's sponsor. FWleral Home in Athens with later than Fnday, Feb 21.
Gary
Roush
asked
about
fails to do either, the bill over town to apply for these services," said Rhodes. "If the
The packets are for sprin g
availabilily
of
town
water
the Rev Cecil Cox officiatin g. pla ntmg to a id in rerorestation
becomes law without his counties and the cities will work with us, on this, it can only result
in better management of all the programs,' ' said Rhodes.
se
rvice
to
.Riv
ers
ide
Golf
Burial will be 111 the Pratts or wildhfe protection . Vartous
signature.
Fork Ce mei;,ry. Friends may sized packets are ava ilable Course northeast of Mason.
The governor received the
DETROIT - IN ITS SEOOND MAJOR recall campaign of
call at the funeral horne any ranging in price fr om $&gt; CoWlcil took no acti on but will bill Feb. 7. Democrats had
study
the
request.
the
year, General Motors Corp. said Tuesday it has begun
time today.
pushed it through in a threethrough $14 dependin g upon the
notifying
the owners of 220,000 mid-6ized 1975-model cars of a
In oth er action , coun cil week period over Republican
Veterans Memorial Hospital
stze packet ordered and the
Helen Howard, Anna Hysell,
defect that could cause a rear wheel to fall off,
agreed to extend the how·s of objec tions.
ADMITTED Hona ld Eva Hysell , Teresa Jayjohn,
vm·iety of seedhngs.
One accident has occurred because of the defect but there
the
Library
three
hour
s
a
week
Robinson, Middleport, Reulah James
Forestall Closings
Anyone interested in placing
Betty
Jo hn son ,
were
no injuries, a GM spokesman said. The cars that will be
at
the
reques
t
of
Evelyn
Roush , Ra ci ne: Pauli ne Kano use, Huc ky Kearns , Keith
Democrats had claimed
an orde r for seedlings may
255,000
Ohioan
s
recalled
and inspected are 1975 model Cllevrolets, Pontiacs,
Deren ber ge r, Pome r oy ; Unck, Mrs. Gilber t Mollett and
contac t th e ser vice office, Proffttt, Ltbrarian Also, tt was school districts needed the
Gladys Hober ts, Racine; Zelia daughte r, Gladys Moo re,
immedia tely
to Oldsmobiles, Buicks and GMC Sprints built between Sept. 13 and
located in the Farmers Bank agreed that drycleaning ser- money
are
out
of
work
vtces
for
pohce
uniforms
will
Lawso n, Racine; Joseph Ca thy Mulford, Me lissa
forestall spring closings. They Nov. 20 of last year. They will be inspected and repaired at no
and Savmgs Co. building, W.
be
paid
for
by
the
town.
Qmvey, Pomeroy; Le lah Mulhern, Barbara Murnahan
also pointed out that many cost to the owners, GM said.
Second St., Pomeroy., phone
school districts had to pay bills
COLUMBUS (UP! I - The 992-3628. Complete details are
Robin son, Syracuse; J ohn Wayne Neal , James Perry,'
ALGIERS - TIIE DEVELOPING NATIONS, Inspired by the
on equipment and fuel, both
Mayes, New Haven : Cassie Elsie
Ple asant,
Bess ie Ohio Burea u of Employment available through the offic e.
new
power of the on bloc, today demanded an overhaul of the
more costly than when they
Baum, Pomeroy.
Plu mmer , Mi chae l Potts , Scrvil'es reported today that The packets will be available
world's
economy to give them a ~ per cent slice of Industrial
budgeted last spring.
DISCHARGED - Delmar Beatrice Hat)ey , Grego ry 255,000 Ohioans were Wlem- for pick up in April.
Also , Democrats said, the output. Delegates from 104 developing nations ended a four.&lt;Jay
Larkins, Dewey King, Brian Kees, Eli za beth Heicher t, ployed for one week or more as
school administrations needed meeting of the U. N. Industrial Development Organization this
Thorla, Eva Stewart, Carla Hobert Rocchi, Bessie Smith, of the week ended Feb. 15,
Four
fined
by
the money to plan for next morning by calling for a radical transformation of the -world
Kauff, Tan1mie Kauff , Oris Mrs. Marvm Snyder and son, compared wi th the aver age
The
board
of
direc
tors
of
year, including the hiring of economy.
Hubburd , Honald Blev in s, Doris Stapleton, Ezra Steele, week for February, 1974 of
Adopt a Child Today, Inc. teachers in April.
The delegates approved an "action program" aimed at inMayor Hoffman
Jeffrey Sayre, Mar tha Repp, Pau la Steve nson, Kath ryn tll8,419.
I
ACT
)
at
a
recent
meehng
in
creasing
the developing nations' share of world industrial output ·
Republicans argued that the
The burea u also reported
Judith Eicl1ingc r, Clarence Th ornu s, Josephone Wilso n,
Four defendants were fined Ma nsfi eld elec ted Penn y
from
seven
per cent to 25 per cent by the end of the century. The
that 35,231 Ohioa ns were newly and two forfeited bonds in the
flat 3P,propriation would
Murray, Hussell Tucker .
Mad ison Wil son.
Parisea
u
as
vice
president.
enable rial districts to waste program, which cails for an eight per cent annual increase in
tmemployed as of Feb . "15 court of Middleport Mayor
!Births)
A
graduate
of
Waverly
High
industrial growth among the developing nations, will be officially
Mr. an d Mrs. Dennis Depue, compared to the average of Fred Hoffman Tuesday night. School who attended Morehead the money because they do not unvelled during a March 12-26 UNIDO meeting In Peru . .
Holzer Medical Center
Terry W. Stobart, 20, Mid- State Unrversity, she resides in ' need it as much as poor
a daughter, Hamden ; Mr. and 22,846 111 February, 1974.
1Discharged, Feb. 18 )
dleport, was filled $125 and Glen Roy and is the daughter of districts. The GOP also sald
Mrs. Lowe ll Halfhill , a
WASHINGTON. - ALMOST HALF the states are rapidly
Betty Adams, Sarah Adams,
costs and was given a five day Mr . and Mrs. Hober t Freed of the state should wait until the running out of money to pay unemployment insurance and will
Mrs. William Allen and son, daug hter , Cheshire; Mr. and
school foundaton formula Is
jail se ntence on a charge of Middlepor t.
Imogene Armstro ng, Mary Mrs . Donald Holco mb, a
equalized
among districts have to borrow from the federal government to keep their·
assa ulting a police officer ;
daughter , Ewing ton ; Mr. and
Penny
is
a
lso
co-ordmato
r
of
Aum iller, Hebecca · Bt·own ,
before allocating any more programs going, the nation's governors were told Tuesday.
.,
Joh
n
Michael
Wheeler,
~.
Mrs.
John
Lynch,
a
daughter,
Continued from page 1
the Ohio Vall ey for ACT, and
Washington, New Jersey, Cotulecticut and Vennont have
Mar cella Ca rm on, Will ard
West Columbia, was fined $150 has been invited by David Sl;h- money.
already
obtained loans from the federal unemployment InCo pley , Te ndra Downard, Rio Grande; Mr. and Mrs. servation .
Democrats also argued that
and cos ts and given a Jhree day wertfager, Chief, Bureau of
Hobert
Ousley,
a
daughter,
The
Senate
ideas
will
go
to
a
surance
fund, according to infof1118tlon accwnulated by a
Patricia Durbin, Opha FitzWellston.
jail sentence or\ a charge of Serv tces for Fa milies an d giving school boards the money committee of the Mid-Winter National Governors' Conference.
House
task
force,
then
to
the
water, Albert Gabrielli, Patty
would prov;ne desirable local
Democratic caucuses of both drivin g wh ile ·-l~toxicated ; Children, to serve on the control over how it is spent.
Grimm, Bertha Gross, Me lissa
chambers . Key parts of the Frank Laudermilt, 24, Mid- subcommittee of the Children's They pointed out, however,
Hancock, Bernice Howard,
Pleasant Volley Hospital
Senate Democrats' plan in- dleport, $10 and costs, on an Services Adv isory Board for that 60 per cent of the money
DISCHARGES
Leo
assa ult and battery charge, th e State Department of
cluded :
would go to scbool teachers
Whi ttington, Buffalo; Charles
aod $10 and costs, on a charge Welfare.
penny-a-gallon
gasoline
A
anyway
.
Fowler, Jr ., Point Pleasant;
of disltarbing the peace, and
to
Start
only
after
unem.
tax
A
program
for
persons
Ill·
Mrs . William Cromlish ,
Rhodes' action avoided a
Wedne•doy &amp; Thu rsday
Rov Curtis, 79, Pomeroy, $5
A Mason child was treated cident is still under inFeb. 19 &amp; 20
Gallipoli s; Blai ne Van ce, ployment drops, and to in- and costs, driving the wrong teresi;,d in the welfare of quick confrontation with
and
released Tuesday in Holzer vestigation and no citation has
crease
by
a
penny
every
time
NOT OPE N
children will be presented the Democrats controlling the
Bidwell ; Hoger Shin n, Mt.
way
on
a
one
way
street.
Medical
Center with injuries been Issued.
frrst we ek of March in legislature. They have the 20
Alto; Mrs. J ohn Lambert. Wlemployment goes down an
Forfeiting
bonds
were
FRI .. SAT., SUN,
Chillicothe. More about thi s votes to override his veto in the received in a vehiclePoin t Pleasant ; Mrs. James additional mlllion.
Donald Guinther, Middleport, uni.queprogram will be given at
FEB. 21 ·22-·23
-Quotas
on
olltmports,
also
Senate . In the House they have pedestrian mishap at 11 :25
Cheesebrew and daughter,
$30, on a charge of disturbing a later date. Mrs. Pariseau
THAT'S
tied
to
Improvement
in
the
59 of the 60 votes needed to a.m. in Mason Tuesday.
Point Pleasant ; Mrs. Herbert
ENTERTAINMENT
the
peace,
and
David
K.
Hobin Foreman, lll-year old
urges all those who are in- override, but five Republicans
DIVORCES GRANTED
Sharp, Point Pleasant ; Melissa economy.
(Te&lt;hnl&lt;olor)
Carsey,
18,
Middleport,
$~on
a
1
daughter
of
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Tax
incentives
and
pena
teres ted in children to please also voted for the school ap.
Three divorces have been
(Com in; Soon)
Harris, Ga llipolis; Raymond
charge of spinning tires.
Lawrence Foreman, Horton granted in Meigs County
ties
tied
to
autos'
energy
efthis
program
.
attend
- -'\FE RICAN GRAFITTIpropriation.
Black. Point Pleasant ; Ida
St., was transported by the Common Pleas Court. On
Feb. 281hru Mar. 4
ficiency and to efforts to
Those special people who
WllliBI\lsOn, Southside.
Mason E-R Squad to the charges of gross neglect of
conserve energy.
SING SCHEDULED
want to adop t and wtll consider
- An income tax rebate plus
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Feder· a school aged child, siblings, a
A hymn sir1g will be held hospital with injuries received duty and extreme cruelty
a
l
state
summar't_
of
Ohio
a tax cut, with emphasis on the
chtld of minority race, or SWlday, Feb. 23, at 2 p.m. at when she was struck by a car. Linda Wyatt was granted a
livestock auctions Tuesday :
Detner Roush Ill, Police divorce from Larry Wyatt and
poor and middle income.
Callie: Compared to last mixed, or a handicapped child, Freedom Gospel Mission at
-Gasoline rationing only in Tuesday s laughter steers may call ACT 614-384-4371. ACT Bald Knobs. The Music Makers Chief, said the child ran out in Willie Harris from James N.
an emergency, but creating a s teady lo 1. 50 ~igher, slavghter will make an appowtrnent to from Wesleyan Holin ess front of a car driven by Ro)lert' Harris. On charges of gross
heifers stead y to 1 higher,
sta ndby program for that slaughter
calle rs attrac tive Mission will be featured along Lewis Housh, 19, New Haven. neglect of duty Audra M. Keyse
Eows s teady to 1 show
TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY. THURSDAY
eventuality,
wtth other local singers . The She was returning from the was granted a divorce from
higher, slaughter bulls 1 higher, children.
Mason Post Office. , The ac- Earl C, Keyse.
FEBRUARY 18-20
Hugh Scott, the Senate vea lers steady to 7 higher,
publio is invited to attend.
feeder
cattle
I
lower.
Republican leader, said he
MARKET REPORT
Slaughter steers : Choice BOO·
does not think Democrats 1230 lb yield grade 2-3 35. 10·
Point Pleasant, W.Va.
" really want any com- 36.40, yield grade J.4 34-35, good
February 15, 1975
prehensive ef)flrgy legislation 30-34.85, standard 26-31.75.
SLAUGHTER STEEHS
Slaughter heifers Choice 870at this time" because they are 1045
lb y1eld grade 2-4 32-34.75, Good &amp; Choice 800-1100 lbs.
afraid of losing votes if they good 29.50-33.75.
For Your listening Pleasure ·
Slaughter cows : Ulllity 875· 27.50, Standard 800-1100 lbs. 23
sacrifice
on
Impose
GUITAR&amp; PERCUSSION
SLAUGHTER HEIFERS 1625 lb 16-22.85, cutter 13-20.
Americans.
Slaughter bulls· Yield grade 1 Good &amp; Choice 700-1000 lbs.
Sen. James McClure, H- 1180-2055 lb 24-29.50.
22.50, Standard 700-1000 lbs. 18ldaho , said he and other
Vea lers · Choice 175-250 lb 56· 18.20.
conservatives have told Ford 64
SLAUGHTER COWS Feeder cattle : Choice steers
they do not like this tariff 300-630
lb
20-25.50,
good
steers
Commercial
19.25-22.~. Utility
Ph. 992-3629
Pomeroy
pr ogram, but " liked the 300-600 tb 18·20.50. Choice
Canner
&amp; Cu tter 1618.31).18.90,
heifers 370-700 lb 18-23.50, good
alternatives even less."
18.20.
300·600 lb 15-21.25 .
Hogs : Barrows and ~ilts .SO
VEAL - Choice &amp; Prune 19().
tower, US 1-2 202.237 1b. 40.40·41 ,
25:i
lbs. ~2 . 50 , 226-265 lbs. 53.
r-----·----~-·------..----------.---,
us 2.3 214-240 lb 39 40-40.20.
HOGS-Choice
&amp;
Prime
191).
Final Reductions Sale!
Sows steady to 2.75 lower. US
i SPECIAL PURCHASE
2-3 475-543 lb 38 .95·39.25, us 1·3 38.50, U.S. 1-3 241l-260 lbs. 38,
355-450 ib 36. 70·38.
Sows, U.S. 1-3 300-500 lbs. 3().
Feeder pigs steady, US utility
WASHINGTON'S BIRTHDAY
and 2.3 30-70 lb 10.50-18.50 per 36.25, Boars 300-&lt;iOO lbs. 26. 7&gt;head
27.75, Pigs (by head ) 21).40 lbs.
Sheep
Cho ice slaughter ~ . 51l-8, 4D-60 lbs . 8-12, 60 lbs.
Jambs shorn 89-90 lb 38-40.50.
plus 14-27.50.
I
I
YEAHUNG HEIFERS TlfURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY SALE
All FIRST QUALITY
Good &amp; Choice 5~ lbs.
RACINE .,... Letart defeated
Racine 25-20 and Portland held
off Syracuse 31).22 in sixth
grade ' tournament action at
Southern Tuesday mght.
Portland will face Leta rt in
the championsl1ip game Tinars·
day night, Wlth the ttpoff at
7:30.
Leading the Letart charge in
th e first game were Rick Miller
and Charles Hupp with 8 points

and Nan('C 1.

Mrs . IJ1wb Colburn . Rt . I,

ordinance

"ln~mparable to anything I have seen in
this country, Japan, or Scotland, "Is how Alfred
Amodu of Nigeria described what he saw
Wednesday happening in reading classes at
Pomerqy Elementary School.
Amodu, a native of Nigeria who is working
toward his doctoral degree 'in education at Ohio
University, visited here in connection with his
studies. He said he has found nothing comparable to the Pomeroy school's reading
classes.
'
He was Impressed particularly by the
multl-l.evel realling work going on during the
"reading hour" in several classrooms Also
Impressive w,its the enthusiasm of puptls for
their work and the 'apparent absence of
discipline problems.

is denied

James hacking
exemption bill

Order deadline
for seedlings

•

is on Friday

Devoted To The Interests of The

VOL. XXVI

NO. 218

WASHINGTON (UP!) Secretary of State Henry
Kissinger Is back from the
Middle East -temporarily and says "some progress" was
made toward a pennanent
peace agreement between
Israel and Egypt
If he succeeds, It will be
another diplomatic breakthrough.
Kissinger talked with President Ford as 9000 as he
reached Washington Wednesday. The congressional leadership was getting a report
today.
Kissinger will have about
enough time to Wlpack his
suitcases from the lll-day,
15,33s.mlle trip that covered
nine nations, then he will be
going back, presumably to
conclude an agreement.
"I believe we have made
some progress toward el¢ablishlng a framework for
negotiations in the Middle
East, am I plan to return there
in a few weeks to see w~
be a~Ushed to complete
It," he said.
Kissinger added, "We will
stay In close contact with the
Soviet leaders as we negotiate
another step In the Middle East
and also In the preparation of a
final
settlement." The
Russians have been kept out of
direct n~otiations.
Both Egypt and Israel have
issued public statementa which
Indicated there may be room to
negotiate over Important Israeli-held
territory -the
strategic Milia and Gidl passes
in the Sinai Desert and the Abu

Democrats

Orlld struck by automobile

Market Report

At The Inn-Place

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Rodels on·fields .
Israel's chief of staff, Gen.
Mordecai Gur, said an agreement with Egypt was even
more important than keeping
the Milia and Gidl passes.
Egypt's president, Anwar
Sadat, suggested the United
States guarantee an Arab
pledge not to attack Israel until
an agreement can be reached.
Israel has said withdrawing
from the passes and other
lands it captured In 1967 would
leave it wlnerable to Arab
attacks.
A senior American official
with Kissinger said the United
States was studying the proposal. He would not elaborate.
During other negotiations,
much of Kissinger's function
has been .to guarantee that
either the Arabs or the Israelis
have made a proposal in good
faith.
It Is not known if this is the
kind of guarantee Sadat means
or whether a guarantee of
ISraetl security would have to
be backed up by American
troojts -.a step certain to be
unpopular with Congress. In
Tel Aviv, goverrunent sources
talked of a formal defense
treaty, not rejecting It but
considering it warily,
Areturn to the Geneva peace
talks, In which the United
States and the Soviet Union are
co-chainnen, also is likely even
though Egypt Is Insisting the
Palestine Uberation Organization be invited beforehand by
both the Americans and the

Russians.

8:30 TIL 12:30

Elberfelds In Pomeroy
I
I

I

!

SPECIAL
I

Group ladies'

Saddle ·
Oxfords

INTEREST

On Certificates
Of Depcm

Values to n s.ou

I

Group

I

lot of

Children's$250 Men's

Shoes

· Shoes
Val. to S2o.oo

MARGUERITE'S
· SHOES
102 E. Main Betty Ohlinger Pomeroy

'1,000 Minimum
30 Mo. Term
Ni nety day lnJerest penalry
if
withdr awn
before

matur ity date .

Meigs Co. Branch

@
The Athens Coun ty

Savings &amp; Lo•n Co.
296 Second St.
Pomeroy, Ohio -

STEER CALVES - Good &amp;
Choice under 400-W0 lbs. 24.7~.
500-600 lbs. ~ BULL CALVES - Good &amp;
Choice 300-400 lbs. Z0.50, 400-500
lbs. 22.
HEIFER CALVES - 300-400
lbs. 24.50, 400-S50 lbs. 20, Cows
(by head) 15S-330.
BABY CALVES (by head )Beef 3i-46', Holstein &amp; Brown
Swiss 10-27.50,
ARREST MADE
The Meigs County Sheriff's
Department reported today
Jimmy A. Graham, 22, Hartford , was arrested Friday by
Ma~on County police officers
on a warrant from the Meig~
Coun ly Sheriff's office which
stated that Graham knowingly
caused serious physical harm
to four-month-old Jimmy
Graham, II.
Graham was released from
jail afterposting $2,500 bond.
For S11 le

1914 CL 200 Honda , :! ,000 m iles.
pertecf condi t i on w i lh 2
helmets . 5675. P,one 9'12 7845.
2· 19 6tc

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WOMENS PANTY HOSE

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18 . ~20.

I Group Girls'

By UDited Preulnte1'118tlooal
CINCINNATI - HARD TIMES HAVE mT THE shoe industry. Vulcan . Corp., headquartered here, amounced Wednesday operations at its Lawrence, Mass., molding plant wW
soon cease and the plant closed atleast by March 3t
The plant currently employs 75 persons and manufactures
plastic heels, unit soles and cloga for the shoe industry. "The
volume of the Lawrence operation has been steadily decreasing
despite the addition of new products because of the decline in
domestic non-rubber footwear production," said R. L. Mason,
division president.
"Most of the decline Is attributable to Imported shoes which
have increased from 175 mlllion pairs in 1968 to 293 mlllion pairs
in 1974."

SHOP AND SAVE THIS WEEK DURING OUR
ANNUAL WASHINGTON'S BIRTHDAY SALE

The MEIGS INN

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Regular and Queen Size Panty Hose

!

PITI'SBURGH- THE ALUMINUM 00. OF AMERICA said
Wednesday it had selected several thousand acres of land near
Brandenburg, Ky., as the site of a major mlll to produce
alumlnwn sheet rolls.
But the company said it had no immediate idea when
production might begin or how much the new plant would cost,
Alcoa said it departed from its usual policy of BIUlOWJCing new
tnJects Ol)iy when specific commitments have been made to
avoid "misconceptions" cone~ the company's land op.
tioning program. "

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WASHINGTON- THE OHIO VOTE DURING which the
House, on a ~137 roll call, W~esday approved a bill
authorizing SM7 t:nilllon In aid to Northeast railroads, iocluding
the Perm Central, which had threatened to shut down. Voting for
were 192 Democrats and 78 Republicans. Voting against were 79
Democrats and 58 Republicans.
(Jiio's I Democrats, 15 Repullllcima went: Democrats for,
Ashley, Carney, Hays, Seiberling, James Stanton, Stokes,lVanlk;
Democrats aga,lnst, Mottl.
Replubllcana ffll', Brown, Devine, Guyer', Kindness, Mosher,
Regula, J. W. Stanton, Whalen, Wylie; Republicans against,
Ashbrook, Caney, Gradiaon, Harsha, Latta, Miller.

Sheer Support Panty Hose

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While They LBst
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pairs

Shop every department on all three floors, Home Furnishings
Annex and Mechanic Street .Warehouse, for tremendous
savings during this Annual Sales EventJ
Main Stor~. Annex and Warehouse Open lhursdav 9:30 to s
. Shop Bot II Friday and Saturday 9:30to I p.m.

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

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Mr. Amodu wus the guest of school prinCipal Robert Morris. He stopped during his tour
of observation to speak to the fifth grade class
taug ht by Mrs. Mary Hysell.

Meit(s-Mll~on

Area

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 1975

PRICE 15'

Kissinger sees
peace advanced

Pariseau named
vice president
of Ohio ACf

RON BRINKER

will retur,n to Ohio University later to con&gt;plete
his doctorate.
In Nigeria he has been employed by the
Department of Education Administration
•
~titute of Education, and is observing the
American education system in order to train
Nigerian school administrators. His recommendations will be guidelines of new programs
In the training of Nigeria 's teachers.
Nige rian schools, which are conducted yearround, teach the English language beginning in
the first grade.

entine

at

HOSPITAL NEWS

MEIGS THEATRE

even though tuition is charged. Next year tbe
goverrm1ent will muke primary education free
to all.
Amodu, who has no record of his btrU1 date,
but estimates he is 45 years old, has 29 brothers
and si~ters, six of whom are full brothers and
sisters, the remaining half-brothers and halfsisters. Only about three of the 29 are educated,
in contrast to today when educa tion is "on the
move" in Nigeria .
The visitor studied in Scotland and EnKland
in 1957 and 1%8 on scholarships and is in
America on two scholarships. He will return to
Nigeria next September .
He likes America, but has no desire to Jive in
it because of his strong famil y responsibilities
at home, among which are seven cluldren. He

Corning to the United States in September,
1973, Amodu selected Ohio University to work
on his doctorate over Harvard because his
immediate supervisor of Abmadu Delio
University was a graduate of Ohio University
and highly recommended the Athens school.
Amodu credits Ohio University and its staff
members who have been teaching in Nigeria
with doing a great deal for his country.
Ohio University personnel who went to
Nigeria asked what was needed then went
about providing those needs . They did not force
their values on the country, Amodu said.
Education has piJJgressed far in Nigeria in
recent years. A generation ago only a few ,
children of wealthy homes were educated.
Today, practically every child attends school,

'

COLUMBUS (UPI ) - Gov. James A. Rhodes
said today that if his four-point economic program is
not passed by the voters in June the state income tax
will have to be doubled to keep up with rising welfare
costs.
Rhodes told a news conference his transportation and public construction bond Issues,
totaling $4.14 billion, will have to get on the ballot in
June along with two other constitutional amendments.
"These programs must be
voted on in JWle," said Rhodes.
"November will he too late,"
The four point plan to
provide jobs through Industrial
upanslon ,
public
lm·
provements and highway
oonstruction was sent to the
General Assembly Wednesday
and hearings were immediately begun.
The proposals must be
cleared by the legislature by
March 5 if.they are to appear
an the June 3 primary ballot.
"With unemployment reach·
lng toward 10 per cent it Is now
obvious that Ohioans will be
paying for a jobs program,"
Rhodes said. "The question is
whether they will get jobs in

1970 to fl.l billion this year:
"And they are going to go to
between fU bllllon aoo $2
billion during the nell live
years," Rhodes said. "'lbe
state income tax ralsea fGOO
mlllion a year, am It's going to
have to be doubled juat to keep
up with welfare,"
Rhodes Insisted that hlo
proposals requiring extra salee
and gasoline tans were not a
violation of his campaign
pledge to avoid new taxeo.
"'Ibis is in the hands of the
Ohio voters," . Rhodllll said.
"They are going to do it tbla
way or they are going to double
the Income tax and that will be
mandated on ll)em."
Rhodes ~aid that if 11!1 plan
lalla to clear the ~neral
Assembly or Is defeated by the
voters he will p~ an
acroaa.the-board reduction of
the state budget.

return.u

The governor said public
welfare ezpenses have in·
creased from f400 mllllon In

Pack 245of
Middleport
in reactivation
Middleport Cub Scout Pack
245, which is being reactivated ·
with Jack Bacon as cubmaster,
Wednesday night issued
Bobcat awards to these boys
(above), at the Feeney-Bennett
Post 128, American Legion
Horne. Left' to right of Den 1,
are John Bacon, Ronnie
Denney, Chris Burdette , Bobby
Southern, Jimmy Farley and
Melvin Van Meter.
At right, Den 2 receives the
"Cubby" award for the most
participation. From the left are
Allen Hoss Spaulding, Jeffrey
Harrison, Keith Scott, Sammie
Charles Plants , Brian Lee
George and Brent Edward
George.
All boys at least 8 years old
or in the second grade are
invited to join the pack. They
should contact Cubmaster
Jack Bacon or den mothers By RICHARD HUGHES
Marsha Spaulding or Ella Mae UPI Business Writer
Business and labor leaders,
Southern. Feeney-Bennett Post
several
governors and some
128 is sponsoring the pack.
unemployed workers are
urging President Ford and
Congress to do something to
put recession victims back to
work.
· But L. William Seidman,
Ford's economic policy, coordinator, indicated Wednesday
there was little government
could do immediately to stem
unemployment.
Meanwhile, several companies announced new layoffs,
McARTHUR - Officials at
the Ohio Department of ranging from copper miners in
Transportation are inviting Montana to paper workers in
Vinton County residents to South Carolina.
Seidman told the nation's
attend a public meeting ,

3 arson, B&amp;E
suspects held

Unemployment picture
gloomy, more layoffs

Vinton's
roads on
agenda

~u~~a{o':t~:~! ~rt ~:oJ:~ t~~

~~~o;! ~~a~~;~r~r~~riot~

governors meeting in Washington that even if a $75 billion taz
cut were enacted this year,
Wlemployment would not be
brought down to 6 per cent. In
January, 8.2 per cent of the
nation's work force of 91
million persons were jobless.
But, Seidman said, the
President was prepared to
back a tax cut In 1976 in addition to the $16 btllion
proposed for 1974, if the jobless
rate remains as high as the 7.9
per cent projected in Ford's
budget forecast.
Henry Ford II, chairman of
Ford Motor Co., and Leonard
Woodcock, president of the
United Auto Workers, told
Congress' Joint Economic

·l:~·;:;::::::::;;:::::·:~·:·:·:·:::·::::::::::::=::·:::::::::::::.:::::::::::::::::::::::::i!!:::::::::::::::~::::::::-.::::::::::».:~~::~::Y.::-:::~ff:

Taft calls for help

County Cow-thouse, to insure :::
that local concerns and ;:;

!i[

to put coal plant in Ohio

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WASHINGTON (UPI) _ Sen. Robert Taft, Jr., R·

sportation development "for '~l
many years to come" may he ~!,
influenced by the upcoming f.
public meeting.
Presently programme d {
projects in Vinton County, :9.
discussed at an earlier ?;
meeting. will be presented j
again at the public meeting.
Th~ cost of these projects · is j
estimated to be approxunately · ~

million coal couvenlon plan! for the Buckeye State.
The Office of Coal Researeh has awarded tho contract
lor the plant to Coaleon of New York City, which bas ID·
dlcated a preference for locating the plant In the Ohio
RiverValley,eltherlnWestVirgiolnorOhlo,accordlngto
the senator.
·
Taft said Belmont County In southesstern Ohio was
"ideally situated" for the pisot,
"Millions of tons of uncommitted coal reserves Jn
southeastern Ohio could support a demoastration period
and ultimate commercial operation," Taft said.
·

development here.

Burien Henline, district len

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million and · include: u. s:
Route 50 from Allensville to
Ratcliffburg ; Lake Hope State
Park (slip repair on Park Road
17)
and two projects which are
CINCINNATI - A DECISION BY AMERICAN Airlines
programmed for preliminary
Wednelday will mean up to 450 .w jolte here aitd an ema $5
only, State Routes
engineering
million In peyrolla per year, Amerla!n announced It will expand
160
·and
124
frllm the Ap.
Its Cinclmatl reoervatlma ofllces within the nell two years. ·
palachian
Highway
to the
The .Is pert of the company'• centralization of
operatlanll from 11 cities to four clUes- Cincinnati, New York, • Meigs County line east of
Wilkesville; State Routes 93,
Dallal and Los Anl!elea. Clnclmati !rill lake care ~I reservation
324,
and 160 from McArthur to
senices ciltrenUy being handled In Oricago, Detroit, Cleveland
the
Appalachian
Highway, and
and Pittsbu'gb.
'
State Route 160 from
Fl', CAMPBElL, KY. - ARMY PILOTS In hellcopiers Wilkesville to the Gallia
County·line.
.-,;ra~ a ~nt on mmw &lt;i ~ blaCkbirds
Additional
topics
for
late Wednellday. The blrda were tben diiUied with water and
on
page
12),
(Continued
(CGntlmled oa Pille ~)
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state tax
predicted

Second plan is given approval
MAHlE'ITA - The second
year area-wide plan coordinating local programs for the
aging was approved )ly the
Regional Advisory Council on
aging at its bi-monthly meeting
Tuesday at the Marietta Senior
Center.
The plan, submitted by the
Buckeye Hills-Hocking Valley
Regional Development
District, will provide available
funds under Title lli of the
Older 'Americans Act to
Alhens, Hoc kin g, _ Il!eigs,

Monroe, Morgan, Noble, Perry
and Washington Counties.
Included in the plan was a
$100,000 grant which will
enable local aging programs in
the BH-HVRDD to provide
supporting services such as·
information and re ferral ,
transportation, outreach and
escort.
The council also heard
progress ~'~!ports fr om each of
the county aging programs
represented.

Committee government must
do something Immediately to
stem unemployment.
"People are rapidly coming
to the conclusion that nobody
lotows what to do, nobody Is
steering, the problems are
running away with us and the
country Is headed straight for
disaster," Ford said.
He said the American people
"will not am should not" accept administration policies
that would lead to nearly 7 per
cent unemployment as late as
1978. Several governors expressed the same misgiving in
meetings with administration
officials.
Woodcock said he fears
unemployment may rise to 9 or
10 per cent unless something Is
done soon. He said these
figures would mean more than
20 million Americans will
experience joblessness in 1975.
"Counting dependents ,"
Woodcock said, "this means
that the lives of 45 or 50 million
Americans -nearly 1 in 4 will be directly scarred by the
bitter failure of our society to
provide useful work for all who
want and need it."
In Lansing, Mich., about 200
unemployed auto workers, students and teachers chanted
"we want jobs" and showered
lawmakers with pamphlets
from the gallery of the
Michigan House.

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LOTI'ERY WINNERS
CLEVELAND (UP!) Here are this week's winning
numbers In the Ohio lottery:
Number 039 (zero-threenine) in any box on ticket
wios $20.
Numbers 412 (four-ooetwo) an~639 (six-three-nine)
in green and blue wlnB $500.
Numhen 412 and 639 in
blue boxes wins $1,000.
Numbers 412 aild 639 In
green boxes eligible for
$300,000 drawiog aod
automatically wins $15,000.
.Tbe Gold Rush number
drawn is 596963 (five-nlnesix:nlne-slX·three) ,
~·:·AA.~~~·iJi.:~~·;-x:«:~

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POINT PLEASANT - Joint
law enforcement work by
Mason pollee, Mason County
Sheriff's Dept. and the State
Fire · l\larshall's office was
credited today with the jalllng
of three supsects in the
breaking and entering and fire
at the Mason Grade 5!:hool
SWlday night.
Shirley Leland Barker, 35,
Wesley Fay Gibbs, 26, and
Charles E. Meadows, 23, all of
Mason, have been taken into
custody in connection with the
B&amp;E and possible arson which
caused damages esUmated at
$15,000 and disrupted classes
this week in the bend area
school.
Prosecuting Attorney Don C.
Kingery said the three were
lodged In the Mason County
Jail Wednesday night and were
scheduled for arraignment
today in a Magistrate's Court.
Kingery had only words of

praise for area police and the
state fire marshal's office.
"This demonstrates the efficlency of law enforcement
officers when there is
cooperation," he said.
Mason Pollet! Cblef Deimr
Roush III, Sgt. George R.
Plants, and Deputy K. W. Love
of the Sheriff's Dept. with E. L.
Roush of the State Fire Mar'
shal 's office, were among those
commended for breaking the
case in such a short time.
Sheriff Elvin E, Wedge, also
commending the officers, said
the first arrest was made
Sunday night shortly after the
fire. This led to the other
arrests.
·

Rhodes plan :•
touted £or
J.t

homes
$1 million new
By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouae Reporter
awarded to chiefCOLUMBUS
Tije
sponsor of Gov. James A.
Rhodes' propoiBi to sell mort-·
gage revenue bonds to finance
'coal' owner
,. low Income housing said today
(UP!) -

OOLUMBUS (UPI) - The the plan would furnish 20,000
Island Creek Coal Co, has been new houalng urdts and up to
ordered to pay more than fl 30,000 new jobs in Ohio,
mlllion to Blair Riggs, FreeState Rep. Norman A. l\lurport, Ohio, for coal mined dock, R-Cinclnnatl, presented
under Riggs' property,
the plan to the Ho~ Economic
The order was filed In U.S. Affairs Committee.
District Court here, although
Rhodes ' plan io a conthe case was heard in stitutional amendment which
SteubenvWe.
wolild expand the authority of
Judge Carl Weinman award- the (Jiio Housing DeveiQillll«&lt;t
ed Riggs basic damages of Board to tnvtde low lntereet
$1.05 mlllion, $126,000 In In- loans for construction of
terest and f100,ooo- in at- housing, nursing ilolm!tl and
torneys' fees.
senlOI' citizens facllltlllll.
·
Weinman, In his order, said
Bonds would be paid elf by
that Riggs' ancestors in 1923 rents am feftl from the homes ·
signed a warranty deed for and facllltles constructed
coal to the predecessors of under the tnfll'am.
'
defendant Island Creek Coal
"What this bW will do Is to
Co. which has offices in get rid of any delays and get
Lexington, Ky.
this show on the I'OIId," said
The judge ruled the deed John c. Dowd; of Squire,
(ll'anted rights to mine No. 6 Sanders and Dempsy, the
vein or seam and specified Cleveland law firm supporting
depths at various locations the measure.
where the , coal vein was
Rep. Arthur R. ' Willtilwt!ld,
D-Toledo, committee chairlocated.
From 1968 through 1972 man said he plana additional
Island Creek Coal Co. mined bearings nell Monday and
coal from the 1tl().acre tract- Tul!lday Jilght witb • ~
but mined oeam No, 7 wltiCh vote at the end of tile tbird
happened to be at depths hearing.
specified In the 1923 deed, tbe
judge said.
Welmnan noted In granting
SEOEMS RUNs
Riggs the award that seam
The l\leiga Unit of SEOEMS
numbers were the normal and ' answered two calla Wedneiday
accepted means to convey coal and Thursday, at 11 a.m.
Wednesday, Lona M. Adldns,
rights.
. He aatd using drlll hole Cheshire, a medical patient,
deptlte would require 'WCJ!:·· wat taken to Veterana
marking" a whole region With·' Memorial HOIPIIII. At 7:30
.drW holes since a single coal a.m. Thorlliay,Eu~~ene Ycuq,
seam is found at dllferent Harrisonville, waa lltea to
depths ~t varl~~ll_Ons.
•Veterans, r~

Hotlll·

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2-The DaUvSent~l.!d_iddleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Feb. 20,1975

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Editorial comm_ent,
opinion, features

Quote/Unquote
'

What people
are saying .. .
stimulation lot the economy
now ts the desperate cry of ad·
d1cts for , a hx to ease the
withdrawal pams "
- John Sheehan, a member of
the Federal Reserve Board
" What the hell separates
them !rom the rest of the
Amencan people' What are
they afra1d of' "
-John P . Mohr, lor mer

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Caught with our hyperbole down

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As long as we seem to be dreaming up new ways to enlarge the scope of government, we might

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very well conmder establishing something caned the Bureau or Hyperbole Management
A hyperbole (wtth accent on the second syUable ) is, according to Webster, "extravagant
exaggeration by which something is represented as much greater or less, better or worse, or as
involving a greater mtensity, than in reality, or beyond possibility . a statement exaggerated
fancifully through excitement, or for effect."
It might be added that these days it is often an exaggeration the true facts about which seldom
catch up with its effect upon the public.
A prime example is the allegation enshrined in a report last year by the Senate's Select C&lt;lmmlttee on Hwnan Nutrttion and Needs that a thtrd of the poor people m Amenca had been reduced
to eating pet foods.
Where the claim originally came from and what evidence 1t was based on is not qui te clear.
Suffice to say that many people have accepted it as gospel.
Yet neither the Food and Drug AdmllllBiration nor tlie Pet Food lnslltu te has been able to verify
that any poor people, let alone many, are resorting to pet food diets.
So asserts Dr. Robert H. Wilbur of the institute, writing in a recent issue of the Journal of the
American Medtcai Assn. Rather than people being driven to buy pet foods because they can't afford
other foods, he says, sales of canned dog food have actually fallen over the past year. (Maybe
they 're eatting cat food.)
. A similarly sensational horror story was contained in a news release sent out in December by
the Consumer Product Safety Commission. Of some 5.5 million household and property fires occurring in one year, it said 196,000 or them were caused by defective television sets.
"Highly exaggerated and misleading," cries the Electronics Industries Assn., after investigating the claim.
They would seem to have a case. The commission 's finding was based on data from a survey ri
33,000 homes sponsored by it and the National Bureau or Standards. The total or 196,000 defective
television sets was extrapolated from 89 "fire incidents" reported by household - 89 out of 33,000 in which a television set was claimed to be the ignition source.
At least 61 of these 89 incidents involved reports only that the TV receiver smoked. None or the
89 incidents was claimed to have caused any injury to any person or any damage to anything except
the receiver Itself.
It Is Inherent with high-voltage components, says the Electronics Industries Assn., that they
may produce smoke or crackling or arcing or other symptoms if they fail, which may be mistaken
as evidence or an internal ''fire".
Such failures are by no means fires or ignition sources but merely the built-in fail-aafe perfonnance of certain parts, alerting the owner that replacement and servicing are nece5$8ry.
The highest previous figure of TV-related fires claimed by the safety commission was 10,000
yearly, a figure the television makers say was also arrived at by dubious methods. But even double
it, triple It or qual!ruple it and it Is sUII a long way from 196,000.
Unfortunately, miWons or Americans who read the headlines were convmced that not only are
television sets highly dangerous things to have around but that It was one more proof that American
Industry Is committed to making a buck at any cost.
And this Is the most dangerous hyperbole or all.

"Result s have been un believable Today 's Army IS a
stronger Army than we have
ever had m peacetime "
-Sec retary of the Army
Howard H Callaway calling the
!Jreation of an all-volunteer
Army "a n unqualifi e d
success ."
"The answer to meeting the
world's long-term demands for
food IS not for Americans to eat
less and give away more..
fhe m1racle of ag r~cultural
productiO n wh1ch the Amer~can
fa rmer has achieved can be ac:omplished by others "
- John Scali, U.S . ambassador to the United Nations.
"O ne-s 1d ed onenta ti on
towar d satisfaction of conmmer demands, espectaliy
when it ts not followed by the
1ecessary Indoctrination, is
fraught with the danger of
spreading 'soc1ai tlis ' such as
mdividualism, egotis m and
~reed , or , on the contrary.
jependency " ,
-Excerpt from the Soviet
economic monthly " Pianovoye
Kbozyalstvo" on tbe danger of
creeping capitalist-style consumerism In the USSR.
" I have served all connections wtth soctety, both Enghsh
1nd Amer~can I feel that peo- ole in that kind of society are
Jredatory and live ·off other
JeOple's energtes. I want to
This Is still a long way from the 85 per cent save mine for things that I want
or the population which enjoys some form of · to'· ~ o al\11 niii lfaste my brpe on
medical coverage, etther through private plans JeOple l id ratlier not see."
- Actor Richard Harris responor Medicare and Medicaid.
flng to aecusatlons be bas been
Increasingly, however, prepaid dental care ontl-social and rude to former
is being used as a bargaining tool by trade ocqualntances.
unions when negotiatin g contracts . The
"The demand for massive
American Dental Association estimates that by

Insured to the teeth
In 1973, Americans spent $5.4 blliion on
dental care. While only a fraction of this bill
was met by insurance , there is a definite
national trend towards this kind or health
coverage.
Ten years ago, only about 100 organizations
around the country offered prepaid dental
insurance to thetr employes, reaching some
two-million people. Today, 3,000 institutions
offer the coverage directly to 22-milllon
Americans.

1980, more than so-million Americans will be
receiving direct dental-care coverage.

DR. LAMB

Constant fears

call for help
, By Lawrente E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - I ha ve
been bothered with what I
think is a very unusual
' problem for about five years. It
· sounds so foolish, but it is very
: frightening to me , and I
desperately hope you wtll prmt
this with some kind of an answer for me.
Whenever I get arounl\
people or children, which or
course is every day, terrible
thoughts flash throngh my
mind . I mean of hurling
someone. They just come and
go and I have a lot of pressure
in the head which could be
!rom these scary feelings.
I have always been considered well adjusted, have a
lovely family, and have always
been a happy person. I don 't
understand these thoughts.
Also a year ago I went to the
doctor wtth these headaches
and he found my blood
pressure was 190 over 110. He
put me on a blood pressure pili,
Hydropres.
Strangely the te rrible
thoughts seem to go away - a
tremendous relief. But around
the time of my period they
come back, headache and all.
I'm 36 years old. Please, do I
need psychiatric help or
medical help ' I will do
anythmg you say. Life ts too
precious to be miserable.
DEAR READER - You
could probably benefit from
some professional counseling
With a psychiatrist. It IS not
unusual lor people to have

momentary
frightening
thoughts, but if they occur
regularly, as yours seem to,
then you should try to get at the
root of their cause. They are
entirely out of your conscious
control, and you will need some
help to evaluate their Importance and what to do about
them.
Your blood pressure level is
m the range that should be
treated, if the pressure levels
you men tion are persistent.
Many people have temporary
elevaltons of the blood
pressure during pain, fright or
sudden anxiety as might accompany a visit to the doctor.
Severai readings over several
days are oflen necessary to
hnd out what the blood
pressure really is. It is best to
lmow this before any form of
treatment, other than weight
control, is star ted.
If the pressure ts perststently
elevated. treatment should be
started. The treatment varies
in accordance wtth how serious
The problem ts and how the
patient reacts to medicine.
Some of the medicines are
really ~angerous. The doctor
chooses between the lesser of
two evils - the untreated high
blood pressure and the
da ngerous effects of the
medicine.
The rawolfia serpantina or
serpasil group, as only one
example, has the side effect ol
causmg depression and menial
changes Tbe small amount ol
serpasti m your Hypropres ts

The Almanac
By United Press lnlematlonal
Today is Thursday, Feb . 20,
the &gt;1st day or 197&gt; with 314 to
follow .
The moon is approaching its
lull phase .
The morning stars are
Mercury and Mars.
The evening stars are Jupi·
ter, Saturn and Venus.
Those born on this day are
under the sign of Pisces.
American operatic soprana
Mary Garden was born Feb. 20.
1877.
On this day in history:
In 1800, the U.S. Supreme
Courl ruled that the power of
the federal government was no
greater than that of any
individual state of the Union.
In 1872. the Metropolitan
Musewn of Art in New York
City was opened to the public
for the first time
not likely to cause depression,
but for anyone who already has
symptoms or any mental
dt sturban ces . it is not a
medtcine to take lightly . At the
very least your doctor must
know about your reaction if he
ts going to treat you properly.
I think you should be seeing a
medtcal doc tor for your blood
pressure until it is properly
evaluated or controlled, as well
as a psyc hiatr ist. Some
medicines used in treating high
blood pressure may well be out
of the question for Y.OU.
Send your questions to. Dr .
Lamb. in care or thi s
newspaper, P.O. Box 1551 ,
Radio City Station, New York,
N.Y. 10019. For a copy of Dr .
Lamb's bookie! on ulcers, send
50 cents to the same address
and ask for the "Ulcers"
booklet.

business today

Washington
Window .. .

Rocky as
Ford's
deputy

Brother, can you
spare a tank?

illegal ~ers .
AT&amp;T attorney H. W.
W1lliam Camlng told a House
aound at a precise electrooic judiciary subcommittee
level Is belitg aold on the Tuesday that despite the phone
American black market -and company's efforts, illegal tolllbe telepbone company BBYII free caUa "continues at flood
the device Is costing it miWons levels today."
Appearb)g before the Civil
of dollan in lolt loll call
Uberties Subc;ommlttee, CarDWllnga.
.
-11o
The American Telephone It ing showed hoW the
Telesraph Otmpany randomly 18rger than a pack of clgaret1es
monll«ed more than 30 mWion -works.
phone calls between 1885 and
When a white buUoo Is
18'10 to
the tm·~r, by pressed, ~ ~ ped signal
WASHINGTON ( UP! )

" Beep.n
A tiny IKm that emits Ibis

tm

tp

'

I

"seizes" a teleplxme Une and
allows the caller to make long
distance caUa whlle circumventing the phone company's
automatic bl1llng system.
The bous cost a doUar or
less to [li'OWce. They are
selling on the black market at
up to $3,600 and are ll8ed by
racketeers and unethical businessmen, Calnlng said.
He esHmated tbe devices
have c:ost the phooe company
about $1 million in lost billings,
and _this figure reuresented
· T1

.

I

By Ralph Novak
"Excuse me, Miss, but thfngs sure are boring waiting here on
the unemployment line, aren't they '"
·
" Yes , they are, str. I usually try and pass the time by readmg a
newspaper I was just noticing here where the Defense Department wants a budget of $105 btllion for next year. That means
that everybody m the country gets to spend about $520 apiece next
year to make sure the airplane manufacturers don't go out of
business and the generals don't lose their special dining rooms
"Tell me, str. what do you want to buy with your $520?"

WASHINGTON (UPI) - No
President, not even hts beloved
Harry S Truman, dared do
what Gerald R Ford has done.
Ford has made his vice
president into somethmg or a
lion someplace Nothmg maJor, nund you - Just a few
assistant to FBI director J . deputy president.
Edgar Hoover, maintaining
The C&lt;lnstitution gives the hehcopters and Green Berets, maybe Just a little something in a
that the agency bas a right to vice president only task, troptcal country where I could be sure my money wasn 't going to
waste.
keep hies on members of presiding over the Senate.
"How about you? "
Congress.
Harry S Truman, for all hla
"It's hard to say. I'd kmd of hke to buy one of those smart
" I beheve m anythmg that 1s fondness for his "veep," Alben bombs It doesn't have to be a real gem us bomb, mind you- JUst
an American Institubon- such Barkley, gave him nothing a nice smart one, that can tell the difference between an enemy
as Hugh Hefner, Walt DISney , more.
&amp;r held and the Astrodome, for instance. I wouldn 't even mind if
the Boy Scout s a nd Neither did other Presidents. 1t got a httie rambunctious Bombs wtll be bombs. I always say ''
Budweiser "
" Well , yes, Miss, but I wonder how we go about lettmg the PenOne big reason is a presiden- Rock star Alice Cooper after
tagon know what we'd like to do with our money?"
tial
fear
that
an
ambttious
vice
being listed in the latest edition
"You don 't think we could JUSt call Secretary of Defense
president would accept an inch
of " Who's Wbo.''
Schiesmger
and give him our list?"
and take a mile or presidential
"
Commg on the heels of clout . Some White House · ''Somethmg tells me that might not work. He's probably pretty
busy, you know, scourmg the budget to make sure there's no
th~ 5 5 per cent pay raise for
regulars
chiefly
remember
wa
ste and that nobody's taking unfair advantage or us. I'll bet
federal workers IS an mcrease
H.
Humphrey
as
vice
Hubert
even
now he's trying to figure a way to save some money on new
of 25 per cent and more in the
pnce of food served in the president for his being denied, weapons so we can spend tt more efftc1ently to build new housing
Senate cafetenas. I questiOn In a moment or LBJ pique, use and create more jobs.''
" What a thrifty Secretary of Defense we have, don't we, sir'
thts method of taking back the rl. presidential autos.
pay Increase for Senate But Ford has made But then how can we let hun know where we want our $520 spent'
employes . I do not unders- Rockefeller vice · chairman- Even though some of we teachers are out of work, I want to let
ta nd how the House I of day-to-day boss-of the h1m know I'm glad those poor defense contractors aren't starRepresentallves I cafetena ts Domestic Council. The council vmg .''
"Right on, Mtss Us guys in the factory were really glad to put
able to operate effecllveiy With
an overall 25 per cent lower aerves as think tank and action m our $520, too, when we were working, of course. Maybe we
cos t to employes who eat there desk for White House ma~ters could form a group, sort of pool our contributions and ask the
The pnce of chth rose better on almost everything that gOI!Il Pentagon to buy a battleship or something with it "
" I have an idea. How about if we write in and ask him to let us
than 30 per cent - from 65 to 85 on between the Atlantic and
Pacific.
have our $520 back so ,we can dectde how we want to use it That
cents. Over on the House stde,
way, while we 're thmking it over, we can have the money to pay
where pnces have gone up , chih Insiders see it this way :
the
rent and things for the time being."
goes for 55 cents."
- Ford figures he nee~ help
Then tf he decides be really needs the money back in a
"
Great!
-Sen. Hubert Humphrey Ia • In such matters as federalspeech to Coagress and state relations. The President hurry, he can call us and ask, 'Brother, can you spare $520?'
" Of course. we 'd never even think of teiiinl! him no."
reprinted in the Congressional
Record protesting lallallonary himself is the resident White
trends In tbe Senate cafeteria. House expert on Congress. But
Rockefeller, four-term
Sunday dinner guests of
governor of New York, lmows
Clara Follrod and Nina
what goes on out there in the 50
Robinson were Mr. and Mrs.
state capitals.
Pete Follrod, Stephen and
- Ford needs the kind of
Kathy, local. Afternoon guests
Sunday School attendance on
planning on domestic affairs
were Mr. and Mrs. Bill FoUrod
that Secretary of State Henry Feb. 16was42, the offering was
and Sue Ann of Athens,and Mr.
A. Kissinger's National $24.39.
and Mrs. Otto Swartz of Shade.
The Pension Crusade
Security Council and James T.
Among recent guests of Mr.
Lynn's budget office gives him Sunday was observed. Wor- and Mrs. WllUam Carr and
oo foreign, defense and red Ink ship services here held at 11
family have been Sue Woode,
matters. Rockefeller has made with lay speaker Dennis Circleville; Lillian Penn, fliUa.
a career of orgsnizing and Creeger of Coolville U. M. boro; Robert White, Keno; the
running
think
tanks. Church speaking from John Albert Hoffners of Pcmeroy;
Kissinger's
wife,
Nancy,
for 10: 10. Attendance was 21, of- Mr. and Mrs. Erneat Taylor
s.n. Hubert Humpbrey'
one, is a paid Rockefeller fering $19.75, pledges $12.
and Mr. and Mrs. Hobart
researcher.
Swartz. A few others, local,
- Rockefeller frankly is suggestions from the Domestic have called briefly.
grateful to Ford for making Council will go through Ford's
Sunday visitors of Mr. and
him vice president at a time White House staff.
Mrs. Arthur Atherton were Mr.
when the New Yorker had aU
In other words, the flow will and Mrs. Kenneth Griffith of
but given up hope for national cross the desk of Donald Sandyville, W. Va.; Mr. and
office. Rockefeller has pledged Rwnsfeld, Ford's tough chief Mrs. Clarence Atherton and
privately as well as publicly of staff.
family of Long Bottom and
that he is Ford's man. Senior
But more than that, the best Larry Alberton of Great Lakes
rudes to both men insist there Is insurance or political bannooy Naval Base, W.
not
the least chance is the nature and character of
Recent visitors of Genevieve
growing ratio of debt to equity Rockefeller will use the the two leaders. Both Ford and Guthrie were Mr. and Mrs.
in the capital structure or Domestic Council to build up Rockefeller are regarded In John Cllvlnee (Beth Yost)
his political machine at the Washington politics as men of formerly stationed In Atlanta,
American business. The
expense
of the President.
their word. There is no Ga. here oo leave from Army
burden or interest payment on
It is wtlikely Rockefeller suggestion or one intriguing
such debt, much of it at recent
duty and to be sent to Gennany
could make political magic of against the other.
very high rates, Is a staggering
when his leave Is over. Beth
the
Domestic
C&lt;luncil
if
he
For
example,
Ford
said
he
burden and an impetus to inwill remain at Sugar Grove
wanted to.
would mesh Rockefeller's stall wttil later.
flation.
Certainly, Ford has allowed with that of his own.
McKeon and Henry KaufMr. and Mrs. Russell Yost
him to place two top Rockefellman, Salomon general partner,
Historically,' vice presidential and family or Lancaster came
authors of the booklet on which er men-James M. Cannon and staffers have been lodged in on Saturday also aiu! worked to
the forecast Is based, said, Richard N. Dunham-at the splendid isolation, in high- empty Ute Yost ji'Operty here,
despite the need for record head of the comcil. But all the cetlinged but powerless which was recenUy sold.
bond borrowing this year, the instructions to and policy quarters in the Old Executive
Mr. and Mrs. Delbert Yost
Office Building next door to the and EUa Yost of Sugar Grove
busmess world's total credit
requirements will drop to $163 gets worse than now is ex- White House.
came Sunday morning and
bUUon from last year's $172 pected. If business improves a
Not only were they not to be spent the day.
bUUon.
Charles D. Woode called on
little , "the (federal) deficit heard from; they were not
That dJ:op won 't mean much, would lead either to a vicious even to be seen.
Rev. Robert Meece, at the
however. The amount of new struggle for funds between
But, true to Ford's word, Camden-Clark Hospital In
credit needed still is enormous private borrowers and the Rockefeller men sit in at the Parkersburg laat Friday af.
for a recession year . If the $163 government, or the Federal White House Cabinet Room ternoon.
billion in new credit is for- Reserve banks would have to and Roosevelt Room planning
The Cluster Hymn Sing will
thcoming it will increase the supply the funds without sessions.
be held here at Alfred Church
total outstanding credit instru- regard to their long range
One Ford aide, Philip Ibis Saturday evening, Feb. 22,
menta of American business to responsibilities."
Areeda, just resigned mainly at 7:30 Everyone welcome.
more than $2.2 trillion.
The Wednesday evening
"In any event," they added, because Rockefeller men Kaufman and McKeon said "a larger than expected deficit Cannon and Dun~ - got )X'ayer services at the church
the seriousness of the situation would threaten economic what he wanted, according to here have been canceled mtil
can be appreciated more recovery despite the best In- some While House insiders.
further notice, due to Inreadily if it is looked at in the tentions or government by
Loyalty to teamwork could clement weather and 10 much
light of the perils raised by crowding out medium to lower have no higher evidence than slckneas.
President Ford's projected rated business borrowers, Ford asking Jim Cannon to join
Clarence Henderson bas
$51.9 bUUon federal deficit.
many of wbom already are In him at the White House dinner suffered another relapse !rem
Ironically, they said , a pe.
'rU ..
Monday night for the con- the effects of the flu .
deficit of the size projected by
Grace Swartz visited at
A real resurgence of. the servative Republican senators ,
the White House, or perh8ps market In Wall Street for new a group which tends to see red White's Funeral Home one
even a larger deficit, can be stock Issues could ease this when they see .a Rockefeller evening paying respect to her
absorbed only if· the recession dilemma If not avert it.
cousin, Charles Bentz.
man.

s.;;~friu~~ ~~\~~e~~"tfu~t ~a~b:·:~::ia~~~u~~!r~~~~.:;~~ ~:

Alfred ·
Social Notes

New issues need
market's support

NEW YORK (UP!) - The
recovery in stock market
activity Is raising hopes it soon
may be possible to sell new
stock issues again.
About $3.5 billion in new
stock issues were sold in the
United States in 1974 but that's
only a drop in the bucket
compared with the need. In
1971 Wall Street sold $1U
billion of such issues and in
1972 the sales were $10.9 billion.
Bul even in those years, the
amount of stock sold for
completely new ventures,
small companies going public
or new businesses being formed, was relatively small. The
"new Issues" market, which
once supported a big corps of
underwriting firms, dried up in
the late 196&lt;E.
The desperate need for a
revival of the new issue market
ls wtderlined heavily by a
forecast just published by
Salomon Brothers, a top In-·
vestment house. Slllomon says
the bond borrowing needs of
American industry this year
will be a record $31 billion, up
from the $25 bUUon borrowed
on bonds in 1974 by industry.
''Obvtously, a real revival of
the equity (sto ck) market
could reduce business's need to
Indulge in such huge borrowings ," James McKeon,
Salomon senior capital market
analyst, told United Press
International. __
M8ny wan Streeters and a
number of economists and
corporate chief executives
Tbe
Mariner
in- particles.
have been complaining for two
PASADENA, Calif. (UPI) - outer space to begin early life
forms
on
Ibis
planet?
strumentatioo
would
measure
It Is not known If comets
years or more about the Two engineers want to fire a
Studies
of
other
planets,
even
temperatures,
magnetic
fields,
would be dangerous to space
space probe past the comet
the travelers of tbe future. That ·
Encke in 1980 to learn asteroids, tell us onlY what Is radiation, Identify
something of. what our solar happening now. Comets, which chemical makeup ri the comet answer Is another objective.
system was Uke in its Infancy. are still primitive in their and send pictures of the The tan. of comets stretch for
Two other comets will swing fofmation, can tell us what comet's core back from 58- millions mUea into space.
Coolets are believed to have
around the sun before Encke, solar system bodies were made million mlles in space.
of
In
the
embryo
stages.
The
spacecraft
would
be
far out in the aol8r
formed
but Dr. Clayne Yeats and Jerry
"merely that portion of the Nock of the Jet Propu!sjon
The proposed ji'Oject, called launched Aug. 'II, 1980, and system, at very low tl!lnIceberg vlsfble to the eye.
Early Mariner Comet Flyby, come within a few bmdred peratures, and their cores
''The actual losses currently
was presented in a detailed miles of the rore of. the comet apparently resemble dirt7
being sustained may be 10 to 20
paper in Jaruary before a on Nov. 'II as il curves In snowballa.
times as great as our provable Laboratory said it will tBke the meeting or the American In- around the sun. The probe
It Is known that some
losses," he said.
,
five years to ji'Operly plan and stitute of Aeronautics and would be flying about 38,000 material fnm ccmeta, called
- ml1es an bwr, slower than Ute meteotltkl carboaaceaua cbooCamlng testified ,that 30 fund the project, expected to Astronautics here.
The
feasibility study speed of Encke.
millions calls were elec- tWt between $40 miWon and
drltes, wbich have fallen to
There is great uncertainty in earth contain organic comIronically ''scanned" and more , $50 !Dillion.
. ji'Oposes that the National
than 1.5 miWon of these were
Encke awroaches the sun Aer01111utics and Space Ad- lbe size, mass and density r1. pounda and may be earrleri crt '
monitored with recording from deep space once every 3.3 ministration use a spacecraft p811lcles In a comet environ- )X'imllive life forma.
devices in an attempt to un- years. Among the questions It built as a spare for the Mariner ment, Nock and Yeatal said.
''1b111, comets are attraccover ,fraudulent uses. The could answer Is: Did comets 10 television probe that One of the instruments a~ tive," they said, "if 1111t' ror t11e
monitoring mco'vered ab,out carry the basic structure -the recently phbtographed Venus the vehicle would !IMW•re the seardl for life, then for tile
25,000 illegal calls, he said.
primitive molecules -from and MelPII'Y.
,,
type
veli&gt;ctlj of dust seardl for Ita~ -"

Space probe proposed to comet

B·e eps cheat AT&amp;T of millions
By DONALD LAMBRO

or

science today

~

Tigers cause mess
in Big Eight race

Ralph Novak

Jnrl

0

'

' .

'

I.

Ualted Press International
has thrown the Big
Eight basketball race mto a
mild hysteria.
Kansas, tied with NevadaLas Vegas for the No. 18
ranking, was caught looking
ahead Wednesday nfght and it
may cost the Jayhawks a postseason berth.
Saturday's Kansas-Kansas
State game was to decide the conference title but
Missouri changed all that with
an 87-72 upset of Kansas.
Willie Smith scored 'J:I points
and Kim Anderson added 23 to
lead Mlssourt's upset. The
victory left Missouri and
Kansas tied for second with 7-3
records, a game behind Kansas
State. Missouri now Is I~
overall and Kansas 15-7. Rick
Suttle led Kansas with 22
points.
Kansas State maintained Its
lead with a final-second
desperation rebound and
basket by Carl Gerlach to pull
out a~ win over Nebraska.
Kansas State Is 8-2 in Big Etght
play.
In other games involving
ranked teams, Maryland (3)
crushed Virginia, 711-&gt;1, North
Carolina State (4) downed
Duke, 92-78, American upset
16th-ranked LaSalle, 68-62, and
Nevada-Las Vegas bombed
Pepperdine, 123-16.
John Lucas had 18 points and
Owen Brown 17 as Maryland
maintained its one-game lead
in the · Atlantic Coast C&lt;lnference by ripping Virginia.
David Thompson's 24 points
helped North Carolina State
keep pace a game behind with
a triumph over Duke .
Calvin Brown's 28 points
helped American upset
Mi.!~uri

LaSalle, now 19-5. Joe Bryant
hit his first II shots for LaSalle
and J:H&gt;f-18 overall for 30
points.
Ricky Sobers scored IS

Cager shot
PRAIRIE VIEW, Tex.
(UPII- The Waller County
Sheriff said he expected to
make au arrest today in a

shooting incident at a
basketball game which injured a Prairie Vic" A&amp;M
University student.
" We got a gun," Whit·
worth sa id, u and I'm driving

to Houston to pick up a bullet
we recovered.''
Senior Alfred Johnson, 23,
is hospitalized in Houston
from a gunshot wound he
received during a chairthrowing mel ee betwee n
players and fans of Prairie
View and visiting Bishop
College.
The sheriff said his suspect
was from Dallas but It was
not determined if he was a
student at Bishop.
" We know he came with
the team," Whitworth said.
"Tbe way I get it was
someone pulled a gun and
was shooting it up In the air
in the gym. And this Alfred
Johnson was going to try to
take it away lrom him ... "
The important NAIA
District 8 south zone game
was stopped with less than
two minutes left. Play never
resumed with Prairie Vew
leading, 105-93. No decision
has been made by the NAIA
as to a winner.

pomts and added a West Ccast
Athletic Conference record 15
assists as Nevada Las Vegas
rolled over Pepperdme. The
win gives the Rebels an 11-1
WCAC mark and 19-1 overall.
Sobers' 15 assists also enabled
him to estabhsh a WCAC
season mark of 74.
In other major games, St.
Bonaventure edged Rutgers ,
93-91,
Canisius
blasted
V1llanova, 111-81, Pittsburgh
dumped Niagara, 80-6&gt;,
Clemson trounced Georgta
Tech, ~9, Georgetown (DC)
downed St. Francis (Ps .), 9071, Wake Forest beat Davidson, 711-&lt;l9, Houston defeated St.
Mary's
(Tex .),
90-77,
Oklahoma State whipped Iowa
State, 95-70, C&lt;&gt;lorado shaded
Oklahoma, 90-87, and U&gt;yola
(Calif.) beat Nevada-Reno, 6877 .

Ohto H1gh School
Tournam ent R esults
B y Unti e d Press Internationa l
CLASS AAA
Af Canton
Sta rk
County
Perry
62
Marlmgton 53
Canton T im pk en 77 Massillon

67

At Copley
Norton 60 Kent Roosevelt sa
Barber to n 100 Tal l madge 44

CLASS AA

At Canton
,
Loudenvll le 55 Tuslaw 41
AK r on South 86 Orv 1lle 45
At Manon
Ma ry sville 7l Dubl 1n 48
At Cleveland South
St
Cl e Col linWOOd 79 Cle
J os eph 60
AI Lorain
Nor th Olmsted 45 Cloverleaf 38
Cle Sf Edward 71 Ro cky R1 ver
43
At Cleveland Lmcoln West
Normand y 84 Cle Max Hayes 75
At Easllake
Willo ughby South 85 West
Geauga 58

·Hannan Trace tenth

Middies back on top
COLUMBUS (UPI ) - For
the first time in 12 years, Middletown's Middies are mighty
agam.
Not since 1963 have the Paul
Walker-c"oached Middies been
voted No. I in the final United
Press International Ohio High
School Board of Coaches'
ratings, but that drought came
to an end Wednesday.
Middletown, along with
Wellsville in Class AA and
Mansfield St. Peter's m Class
A, was picked the No. I AAA
team.
Middletown, which won one
state title after another hack m
the 50s and early 60s, including
three in a row in the Jerry
Lucas era, got the nickname or
"Mighty Middies."
Although there have been
some lean years of late-at
least by Middletown standar~
- the Middies will carry a 17~
record Into their final game
Friday night at Hamilton Taft
and have been rolling up fopmded victories as in the past.
PoUahed Off
Middletown, which polished
off Springfield South 77-60
Tuesday night, was a runaway
choice, collecting 22 or 36
possible first plltce ·votes and
finishing with a 334-'J:I8 spread
over
runnerup
Cantop
McKinley (17-1).
McKinley, which lost its ftrst
game of the season to Alliance
and then won 17 in a row, was
the defending poll champion.
Kettering Alter, 17~, was the
only other Class AAA team to
be in a challenging position, as
the Knights finished third with
259 points.
Toledo Scott moved up to
fourth the final week at 189 and
then came Dayton Roosevelt,

Barberton, Newark,' Cleveland
East Tech, Zanesville and
Alhance. Zanesville and Alliancce were making their first
top ten appearances, replacing
two Cincinnati teams, Hughes
and Roger Bacon.
Wellsville, which led the AA
ratings most of the season only
to be overtaken by Delphos St.
John's two weeks ago, reclauned the No. I spot on the
strength Of a pair Of Impressive
weekend victories and St.
John's second loss of the
season. The final point totals
favored Wellsville 23a-231.
The Tigers or coach Bobby
Dawson, who finished second
to Manchester in last year's AA
ratings, beat a good U&gt;wsville
Aquinas team 72-62 Friday
night and avenged their only
loss of the season (by one
pointl Saturday with a 69-55
victory over Steubenville Big
Red .
Meanwhile, St. Jolm 's ran
into trouble Swtday at Lima,
losing a 7"-72 declson to Central
Catholic.
Conilnued Move
Circleville, the only unbeaten
team in the AA top ten with an
18-0 mark, continued Its move
towards the top spot the final
week, but had to settle for third
with 217 points.
Columbus Mohawk finished
In fourth, followed in order by
Rossford, Waverly, Warsaw
River View, Springfield Shawnee, Buckeye South and U&gt;rain
Catholic.
St . Peter's, again playing a
rugged schedule consisting or
mostly AA and AAA schools,
finished with a handsome 18-2
record, which was good enough
to gain the Spartans a second
straight poll title.

St. Pete, which had been in a
hattie for the No I spot with
Canal Wtnchester (17-1) the
last few weeks of the season
emerged with a 207-200 margt~
over the Indians in the !mal
voting.
Minster, which had moved
inlo a challenging posttion, was
soundly beaten by Marion
Local over the weekend, but
sllll managed to stay in third
place, while Lordstown, which
also lost for the first time last
weekend, remained In fourth.
From there on down there
was a shakeup with Pettisville
the only unbeaten team m th~
Class A top ten, moving ail the
way from eighth to fifth,
Sebring dropping a notch to
stxlh and Norwalk St. Paul to
seventh.
Roundmg It out was Upper
Scioto Valley tn eighth, Anna in
ninth and U&gt;rain Cleai'view
and
Hannan-Trace,
a
newcomer, tied for tenth.

Archibald spurs
playoff hopes .
By Uolted Press International
The guy they call "Tiny" has

the Kansas City-Omaha Kings
suddenly thinking big.
Nate "Tiny" Archibald, one
of the best offensive players in
the National Basketball Association despite his rather
diminutive S-foot-1, Is the man
most responsible for the Kings'
recent surge that has catapulted them into second place in
the ll'fldwest Division and
within earshot of a playoff
berth.
Archibald scored 27 points
Wednesday night, despite sitting out the entire fourth
quarter and paced Kansas
Clty.Qmaha to a 115-92 victory
over the Los Angeles Lakers,
the Kings' fifth straight
triumph and lith in their last 12
games._==:-c
The VIctory was the Kings'
34th this season, one more than
all of last year, and the club
seems destined to reach the
playoffs for the first time since
the 1965-86 season when the
franchise was based in Cincinnati.
The Kings led all the way In
Wednesday night's contest,
jumping to a quick 10-2 lead
and taking a commanding 6~
lead at halftime. Jimmy
Walker chipped In with 18

The

Dai~

Sentinel

points for the Kings while
Brian Winters led Los Angeles
with 18.
In other games, New York
routed
Detroit,
109-94,
Washington whipped Phoenix,
120-97, and Seattle upset
Boston, 121-95.
Knlcks 109, Pistons 9C:
Walt Frazier scored 35 points
to lead New York to its second
victory in a row after five
straight losses. Detroit now has
lost 10 of II games and has
alumped from first to within
I'h games or last place In the
Midwest Division. Bob Lanier
led the Pistons with 20 points.
Bullets IZO, SUDS 97:
Elvin Hayes scored 32 points
-his fourth game in a row over
30 points-to lead Washington
to its fourth win In a row and
17th straight at Capital Center.
Dick Van Arsdale had 20 points
for Phoenix.
Soalcs 121, Celtlcs 95:
Rookie guard Rod Dertine
scored a career-lllgh 20 points
and sparked a second'&lt;lllarter
rally to put the Seattle ahead to
stay as the Sonics downed
Boston. It was only the fifth
losa in 29 games on tbe road for
the ,Celtics this season. Two
other Sonics hit for career
highs. Tommy Burleson had 28
points and Slick Watts 23.
Boston got 18 points from Jo Jo
White.

District 22 tournament.
The loss also dramed some
steam out of the Big Red
Machine that saw victory 10 of
its last 11 trips onto the court
and had been coined, deservedly so, the hottest team in
Ohio college basketball.
It was a disappointing defeat
for the Redmen in another
way, as the Bulldogs got
revenge for an 88-68
shellacking at Rio a month ago.
Wilberforce combined that
tomd shooting by Green (14 of
24 from the field ) with an
enormous home court advantage in its quonset hut type
gym to bolt into a 48-35 halftime advantage.
The Redmen took the early
upper hand, going up by as
much as 9 points at 21-12 behind
the deadly long range shooting
of freshman guard Gil Price.
The BulldOgs stormed back
with 3 unanswered buckets and
a patr of free throws to pull to
wilh10 I at 21-20. Wilberforce
kept pace and took the lead at
24-23with 7:55 remaining in the
opening period before Rio
center Jim Stewart hit two
charity tosses to give the
Redmen the lead for the last
time at 25-24.
Green hit a 20 footer and free
throw, followed by a I&gt; footer
and the Bulldogs were olf and
runmng.
The closest the Redmen
came the rest of the game was
moments later on a 17 footer by
sophomore Browne Wilson to
pull Rio to within 2 at 31-29.
Wilberforce then spurted just
before intermission, outscoring
Rio 17-6 in the last 5 minutes of
the first half.
The Redmen staged several
rallies in the second half,
pulling to within 3 on two occasions. The first came at the
6:13mark as junior guard Paul
Albanese canned a pair of free
throws to close to 69-66.
The ever-present Mr. Green
retaliated by hitting both ends .
of a one-and-one before senior
forward Dan Bollinger canned

'a 22 footer from the baseline to
make tt 71-68.
From that point, Green hit
from 12 feet and Bob Mikhell
canned a driving &gt; footer and
once again the hosts were off to
the races .
While Wilberforce placed 4
players in twin figures, the
Redmen countered with 3, led
by Bollinger with 21. Jim Noe
added 17 points before fouling
out with 4:02 remaining, and
Price pumped in 16.
. The Bulldogs hi I 3o of 75 field
goal attempts for 47 pet., while
the Redmen connected just 31
times in 87 tries for a 'cool 36
pet.
Wilberforce burned the nets
from the charity stripe to the
tune of 78 pet. on 25 of 32, whtle
Rio hit 75 pet. on 15 of 20.
The Redmen held a 49-36
rebounding advantage, led by
Noe with 14 and Stewart with
12. Gordon's 16 bounds were

tops for the hosts .
The Wilberforce junior
varstly made it a clean sweep
with an 82-72 tnumph in
Wednesday's preliminary. The
Rto junior varsity was led by
Ted Chaffin wtth 23 points,
followed by John Lusher wtlh
19 and Chuck King with 16 .
The heavily whistled affatr
also saw King haul m 14
rebounds.
Saturday the Redmen, at 12-9
overall and 8-2 10 MOC play,
lry to put that tourney berth on
ice at Ohio Dominican 10 an
afternoon battle.
SOLOII(ON NAMED
CARBONDALE, Ill. (UPI) Southern Illinois University
Wednesday named Rich Solomon as assistant football coach
responsible for defensive ends.
Solomon, 25, will join the sro
coaching staff March 1.

~~~~f~~~~~Nn

:n

Po,.,eroy, Ohio.
National
advert1S1ng
represen t a tive
Bo ttine tl i ·
Gallagher, Inc .• 12 Etlst -42nd
St , New York . New York .
Subscription
rates :
Delivered bY carr ier where
available 7S cents per we ek ;
By Motor Route where carrier
service not availa ble, One
month, $3 25 By ma11 1n Oh io
'nd W. Va , One Year, 522 .06;
S!K.. months, 511.50. Three
months
$7 tlD. Elsewhere
S26 . 00 'year; Six. months
$1 3. 50 ; •three m .onths . S7.50.
Su bscr i p t ion pnce Inc ludes
Sunday T imes -Sentinel.

m
217

171)

~~

14. 1) 1

Step onto this lush, thickly padded
m rpet and leave dull , barren floors
behind! You'll love the hint of
sculpturing that define• the design.
Hercuion• olefin pile is a superb
stain fighter. And one look at the
bright and beautiful color will tell
why it's named Show stopper!

10 Lor Ca t h . ( 16 21
51
Second 10 : 11 Granv i ll e ( 1)
35 , 12. Brooklyn 34 ; 13 Cln
t1 nnati Greenhills ( ll 23 . 14
Dat!o n
St1ve r s
20 .
15
F1relands f 11 19 , 16 Lisbon
Bea ver 18 , 17 N ew ton Faits 16 ,
18 Wh ee ler sburg 14 , 19 Fort
Frye 12 ; 20 Sherwood Fair view 11

CLASS A

Team
Poinh
1 Mans Sf P et ( 11 18 · 2) 207
'1 Can Winch ( 5 17 1J
200
3 M 1nster (1 17. 1)
154
4 Lord s town ( 1 19 · 1l
1:14
5 Petttsvllle (4 18·0)
11 8
6. Se bring ( 17 1 J
105
7 Nor St Paui ( J7 .1)
80
8 Up SCIOtO Val ( 1 191)
58
9. Anna ( 19 ll
57
10. &lt;T1e) Lora•n Cl earvlew ( 15·
3)
(tie) Hannan· Trace I 2-16·21

8821

RIO GRANDE (771

PLAYER
Jim Noe
Dan Bollinger
Jim Stewart
Gil Price
Mac Barbee
Bob Caldwell
Gary Swinehart

Satis/actwn Guaranteed or Your. Money Back

44

/Sears /

Second nine : 12 . ~ onrO fiVIlle
39 , 13 Marion L0 1ca l 31, 14
Wyntord 30. 15. Freder icktown
27, 16 Orwe l l Grand Vall ey 2.d,
17 (tie ) Windh am (IJ and
North Gallia) 20 each ; 19.
Cleveland LUth eran East 19 ,
20. Zanesville Rose c rans lll16.
Others w i th 10 or more
points Covington, Richmond
H et ghts , Chillicothe F l age t,
Tinora and Arcanum

3-4 14
1-2 5
4-6 12
2·2 4
2-2 5
0-0 3

Attlhori:ed CATALOG SALES MERCHANT
220 E. MAIN

POMEROY
Owned and Operetod by Lou Osborne .

0-3o-o 2
1-3 0·0 2
2·2 2-2 2

Browne Wilson

5 17
3 21
2 6
4 16
5 6
3 2

2
1
1

o·
2
6

0-2 1-2 0 0
1
31-87 15-20 49 26 77

WILBERFORCE {9ll
FG-A FT·A RB PF TP

PLAYER

Norman Shepherd
Ken Gordon

Greg Brown
Abe Turner
Isaac Green

Bob Mitchell
Ricco Brown
TOTALS
Halftime: Wilberforce 48 Rio 35
Officials: Steve Rainer and Roland Smith

2-S 0-0 S 4 4
8-17 6-8 16 4 22
7-13 S-7 6 4 19
0-40-0100
14-24- 8-9 1 2 36
4-11 6-8 s 2 14
0-1 0-0 2 0 0
3S-7S 2S 32 36 16 95

VANYL-ITE LATEX INTERIOR
PAI.NT

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typn., lnltrlor wellt end
Cllllnti-ICONOMICAL
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I:APIDLY - In thirly

TUESDAY, ~EDNE_SOAY.._JHURSDAY
FEBRUARY 18-20

WlltNIH

For Your Ustening Pleasure
GUITAR &amp; PERCUSSION

s me flOOd IJIJighbor.
Here's my new State Farm office, where I can serve
you with the hast value in car, home, lifo and health
insurance. I invite you to call or drop in any time.

STEVE SNOWDEN
125S Powell 51., Middleport, Ph. m-7155

'

'

The MEIGS INN
Ph. 992-3629

lflllli"'

IIIIINnt ldOf' -

8:30 TIL 12:30

RON BRINKER

992-2178

FG-A FT-A RB PF TP
7-19
10-24
1· 11
7-11
2-10
1-2

Paul Albanese
George Vickroy
TOTALS

Sea ra Haa a
Credit Plan to Suit Moat Every Need
• Prices Are Catalog Prlce1
• Shipping, fnatallatfon Extra

. • Sale Ends Mar. 12

Rio-Wilberforce box

City Editor

2157 .
Second class postage pa td at

Was $7.79 sq. yd .

Points
235
23 1

Here's New Ufe
for Tired Walls!

DE'"VOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
I· MEIGS-MASON AREA
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL
euc. Ed .
ROBERT HOEFLICH
Published da l ly except
Seturdav by The Ohio Valley
PubltSh1ng Company , 111
Court St, Pomeroy , Oh i o
45769 . Bus in e!iiS Office Phone
992-2156 Editorial Phone 99 2·

SAVE 12%,

CLASS AA

Tea m
l. Wellsville (8 16· 1)
2 Del St John (6 16
3 (I'Vil le (2 HI 0)

~ : :~,;~e~~es;:~~:::2

Mtlcheli with 14 as the
Wilberforce Bulldogs downed
the Redmen 115-77 here Wednesday night.
It was a severe setback for
Rio, as the Redmen now need a
victory over Ohio Dominican in
the regular season !male
Saturday 10 Colwnbus to be
assured of a spot in the NAIA

The Carpeting with
Wall-to-Wall Excitement
Now on Sale!

COLUMBU S (UP I J The
fmal 1975 Un •t ed Press In
ternat1ona l OhiO High School
Board of Coach es' basketball
rat1ngs with f irst pl ace votes
and won los t re cords m
pare nth eses
CLASS AAA
Team
Pomls
I M1ddl etwon (22 17 OJ
334
2 Can McK (J 17 n
278
3 Kef At l (3 17 OJ
259
4 Toi ScottfJ7 . 1J
189
5 Day . R 'velt ( 16·1l
135
6Barberton(16 2J
118
7 Newark (16 2l
86
8 Cl E Tec h ( 16 1)
77
9 Zanesville ( 1 17 1J
76
10, A llian c e ( 16 2)
75
Second 10 11 Ely ri a (3) 69 ,
12 C•ncmnafi Hug h es 67 : 13
Cmc mnah Roger Bacon S9, 14
Oregon Cl ay (2) 47 , 15 Cln
cmna ll Elder 22 , 16 Cl eveland
Height s (2l21 , 17
Toledo
Devllb1 l l I S . 18 Columbus
Cent ral 11 , 19 Dayton Dunbar
10 . 20 Groveport Madi son 9

Redmen blistered by Bulldog'
WILBERFORCE - If the Rio
Grande Redm'en never agam
see Isaac Green tl will be only
too soon.
The 6-0 sophomore from
Dayton blistered the baskets
for 36 points, and was joined in
double figures by teamma les
Ken Gordon wtth 22 points,
Greg Brown with 19 and Bob

. fSears
"Showstopper'

---.-ITAU 'AIIM

Pomeroy

..

ftD

GALLON

•7 1
QUART

•2.32

Yll ·

CLIAN
IASIL Y - Wllft ""'P·
mtnt In . .,,.., IHIIY wet.r
SU~t:•ION
WAIHAeU,. ITY - dlrllnct
llfttllf' 11rlnf1. wllh Iff
Mill~ MU•M tt'll ftf'*
V•ftYI·Ifl 11•1 unsurpetHCI

WAter rttltllnct .

Ebersbach
Hardware
"EVERYTHING IN
HARDWARE~'

110W.MAIN

"'

•'

-

�''

-

''

-

..
'
2-The DaUvSent~l.!d_iddleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Feb. 20,1975

,.

..,-,

.

~ .

I

Editorial comm_ent,
opinion, features

Quote/Unquote
'

What people
are saying .. .
stimulation lot the economy
now ts the desperate cry of ad·
d1cts for , a hx to ease the
withdrawal pams "
- John Sheehan, a member of
the Federal Reserve Board
" What the hell separates
them !rom the rest of the
Amencan people' What are
they afra1d of' "
-John P . Mohr, lor mer

••

Caught with our hyperbole down

••

'~

As long as we seem to be dreaming up new ways to enlarge the scope of government, we might

~

•

'

-·

:
•
,
'

•
,
,.
.:
I ·

;:

'

,

very well conmder establishing something caned the Bureau or Hyperbole Management
A hyperbole (wtth accent on the second syUable ) is, according to Webster, "extravagant
exaggeration by which something is represented as much greater or less, better or worse, or as
involving a greater mtensity, than in reality, or beyond possibility . a statement exaggerated
fancifully through excitement, or for effect."
It might be added that these days it is often an exaggeration the true facts about which seldom
catch up with its effect upon the public.
A prime example is the allegation enshrined in a report last year by the Senate's Select C&lt;lmmlttee on Hwnan Nutrttion and Needs that a thtrd of the poor people m Amenca had been reduced
to eating pet foods.
Where the claim originally came from and what evidence 1t was based on is not qui te clear.
Suffice to say that many people have accepted it as gospel.
Yet neither the Food and Drug AdmllllBiration nor tlie Pet Food lnslltu te has been able to verify
that any poor people, let alone many, are resorting to pet food diets.
So asserts Dr. Robert H. Wilbur of the institute, writing in a recent issue of the Journal of the
American Medtcai Assn. Rather than people being driven to buy pet foods because they can't afford
other foods, he says, sales of canned dog food have actually fallen over the past year. (Maybe
they 're eatting cat food.)
. A similarly sensational horror story was contained in a news release sent out in December by
the Consumer Product Safety Commission. Of some 5.5 million household and property fires occurring in one year, it said 196,000 or them were caused by defective television sets.
"Highly exaggerated and misleading," cries the Electronics Industries Assn., after investigating the claim.
They would seem to have a case. The commission 's finding was based on data from a survey ri
33,000 homes sponsored by it and the National Bureau or Standards. The total or 196,000 defective
television sets was extrapolated from 89 "fire incidents" reported by household - 89 out of 33,000 in which a television set was claimed to be the ignition source.
At least 61 of these 89 incidents involved reports only that the TV receiver smoked. None or the
89 incidents was claimed to have caused any injury to any person or any damage to anything except
the receiver Itself.
It Is Inherent with high-voltage components, says the Electronics Industries Assn., that they
may produce smoke or crackling or arcing or other symptoms if they fail, which may be mistaken
as evidence or an internal ''fire".
Such failures are by no means fires or ignition sources but merely the built-in fail-aafe perfonnance of certain parts, alerting the owner that replacement and servicing are nece5$8ry.
The highest previous figure of TV-related fires claimed by the safety commission was 10,000
yearly, a figure the television makers say was also arrived at by dubious methods. But even double
it, triple It or qual!ruple it and it Is sUII a long way from 196,000.
Unfortunately, miWons or Americans who read the headlines were convmced that not only are
television sets highly dangerous things to have around but that It was one more proof that American
Industry Is committed to making a buck at any cost.
And this Is the most dangerous hyperbole or all.

"Result s have been un believable Today 's Army IS a
stronger Army than we have
ever had m peacetime "
-Sec retary of the Army
Howard H Callaway calling the
!Jreation of an all-volunteer
Army "a n unqualifi e d
success ."
"The answer to meeting the
world's long-term demands for
food IS not for Americans to eat
less and give away more..
fhe m1racle of ag r~cultural
productiO n wh1ch the Amer~can
fa rmer has achieved can be ac:omplished by others "
- John Scali, U.S . ambassador to the United Nations.
"O ne-s 1d ed onenta ti on
towar d satisfaction of conmmer demands, espectaliy
when it ts not followed by the
1ecessary Indoctrination, is
fraught with the danger of
spreading 'soc1ai tlis ' such as
mdividualism, egotis m and
~reed , or , on the contrary.
jependency " ,
-Excerpt from the Soviet
economic monthly " Pianovoye
Kbozyalstvo" on tbe danger of
creeping capitalist-style consumerism In the USSR.
" I have served all connections wtth soctety, both Enghsh
1nd Amer~can I feel that peo- ole in that kind of society are
Jredatory and live ·off other
JeOple's energtes. I want to
This Is still a long way from the 85 per cent save mine for things that I want
or the population which enjoys some form of · to'· ~ o al\11 niii lfaste my brpe on
medical coverage, etther through private plans JeOple l id ratlier not see."
- Actor Richard Harris responor Medicare and Medicaid.
flng to aecusatlons be bas been
Increasingly, however, prepaid dental care ontl-social and rude to former
is being used as a bargaining tool by trade ocqualntances.
unions when negotiatin g contracts . The
"The demand for massive
American Dental Association estimates that by

Insured to the teeth
In 1973, Americans spent $5.4 blliion on
dental care. While only a fraction of this bill
was met by insurance , there is a definite
national trend towards this kind or health
coverage.
Ten years ago, only about 100 organizations
around the country offered prepaid dental
insurance to thetr employes, reaching some
two-million people. Today, 3,000 institutions
offer the coverage directly to 22-milllon
Americans.

1980, more than so-million Americans will be
receiving direct dental-care coverage.

DR. LAMB

Constant fears

call for help
, By Lawrente E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - I ha ve
been bothered with what I
think is a very unusual
' problem for about five years. It
· sounds so foolish, but it is very
: frightening to me , and I
desperately hope you wtll prmt
this with some kind of an answer for me.
Whenever I get arounl\
people or children, which or
course is every day, terrible
thoughts flash throngh my
mind . I mean of hurling
someone. They just come and
go and I have a lot of pressure
in the head which could be
!rom these scary feelings.
I have always been considered well adjusted, have a
lovely family, and have always
been a happy person. I don 't
understand these thoughts.
Also a year ago I went to the
doctor wtth these headaches
and he found my blood
pressure was 190 over 110. He
put me on a blood pressure pili,
Hydropres.
Strangely the te rrible
thoughts seem to go away - a
tremendous relief. But around
the time of my period they
come back, headache and all.
I'm 36 years old. Please, do I
need psychiatric help or
medical help ' I will do
anythmg you say. Life ts too
precious to be miserable.
DEAR READER - You
could probably benefit from
some professional counseling
With a psychiatrist. It IS not
unusual lor people to have

momentary
frightening
thoughts, but if they occur
regularly, as yours seem to,
then you should try to get at the
root of their cause. They are
entirely out of your conscious
control, and you will need some
help to evaluate their Importance and what to do about
them.
Your blood pressure level is
m the range that should be
treated, if the pressure levels
you men tion are persistent.
Many people have temporary
elevaltons of the blood
pressure during pain, fright or
sudden anxiety as might accompany a visit to the doctor.
Severai readings over several
days are oflen necessary to
hnd out what the blood
pressure really is. It is best to
lmow this before any form of
treatment, other than weight
control, is star ted.
If the pressure ts perststently
elevated. treatment should be
started. The treatment varies
in accordance wtth how serious
The problem ts and how the
patient reacts to medicine.
Some of the medicines are
really ~angerous. The doctor
chooses between the lesser of
two evils - the untreated high
blood pressure and the
da ngerous effects of the
medicine.
The rawolfia serpantina or
serpasil group, as only one
example, has the side effect ol
causmg depression and menial
changes Tbe small amount ol
serpasti m your Hypropres ts

The Almanac
By United Press lnlematlonal
Today is Thursday, Feb . 20,
the &gt;1st day or 197&gt; with 314 to
follow .
The moon is approaching its
lull phase .
The morning stars are
Mercury and Mars.
The evening stars are Jupi·
ter, Saturn and Venus.
Those born on this day are
under the sign of Pisces.
American operatic soprana
Mary Garden was born Feb. 20.
1877.
On this day in history:
In 1800, the U.S. Supreme
Courl ruled that the power of
the federal government was no
greater than that of any
individual state of the Union.
In 1872. the Metropolitan
Musewn of Art in New York
City was opened to the public
for the first time
not likely to cause depression,
but for anyone who already has
symptoms or any mental
dt sturban ces . it is not a
medtcine to take lightly . At the
very least your doctor must
know about your reaction if he
ts going to treat you properly.
I think you should be seeing a
medtcal doc tor for your blood
pressure until it is properly
evaluated or controlled, as well
as a psyc hiatr ist. Some
medicines used in treating high
blood pressure may well be out
of the question for Y.OU.
Send your questions to. Dr .
Lamb. in care or thi s
newspaper, P.O. Box 1551 ,
Radio City Station, New York,
N.Y. 10019. For a copy of Dr .
Lamb's bookie! on ulcers, send
50 cents to the same address
and ask for the "Ulcers"
booklet.

business today

Washington
Window .. .

Rocky as
Ford's
deputy

Brother, can you
spare a tank?

illegal ~ers .
AT&amp;T attorney H. W.
W1lliam Camlng told a House
aound at a precise electrooic judiciary subcommittee
level Is belitg aold on the Tuesday that despite the phone
American black market -and company's efforts, illegal tolllbe telepbone company BBYII free caUa "continues at flood
the device Is costing it miWons levels today."
Appearb)g before the Civil
of dollan in lolt loll call
Uberties Subc;ommlttee, CarDWllnga.
.
-11o
The American Telephone It ing showed hoW the
Telesraph Otmpany randomly 18rger than a pack of clgaret1es
monll«ed more than 30 mWion -works.
phone calls between 1885 and
When a white buUoo Is
18'10 to
the tm·~r, by pressed, ~ ~ ped signal
WASHINGTON ( UP! )

" Beep.n
A tiny IKm that emits Ibis

tm

tp

'

I

"seizes" a teleplxme Une and
allows the caller to make long
distance caUa whlle circumventing the phone company's
automatic bl1llng system.
The bous cost a doUar or
less to [li'OWce. They are
selling on the black market at
up to $3,600 and are ll8ed by
racketeers and unethical businessmen, Calnlng said.
He esHmated tbe devices
have c:ost the phooe company
about $1 million in lost billings,
and _this figure reuresented
· T1

.

I

By Ralph Novak
"Excuse me, Miss, but thfngs sure are boring waiting here on
the unemployment line, aren't they '"
·
" Yes , they are, str. I usually try and pass the time by readmg a
newspaper I was just noticing here where the Defense Department wants a budget of $105 btllion for next year. That means
that everybody m the country gets to spend about $520 apiece next
year to make sure the airplane manufacturers don't go out of
business and the generals don't lose their special dining rooms
"Tell me, str. what do you want to buy with your $520?"

WASHINGTON (UPI) - No
President, not even hts beloved
Harry S Truman, dared do
what Gerald R Ford has done.
Ford has made his vice
president into somethmg or a
lion someplace Nothmg maJor, nund you - Just a few
assistant to FBI director J . deputy president.
Edgar Hoover, maintaining
The C&lt;lnstitution gives the hehcopters and Green Berets, maybe Just a little something in a
that the agency bas a right to vice president only task, troptcal country where I could be sure my money wasn 't going to
waste.
keep hies on members of presiding over the Senate.
"How about you? "
Congress.
Harry S Truman, for all hla
"It's hard to say. I'd kmd of hke to buy one of those smart
" I beheve m anythmg that 1s fondness for his "veep," Alben bombs It doesn't have to be a real gem us bomb, mind you- JUst
an American Institubon- such Barkley, gave him nothing a nice smart one, that can tell the difference between an enemy
as Hugh Hefner, Walt DISney , more.
&amp;r held and the Astrodome, for instance. I wouldn 't even mind if
the Boy Scout s a nd Neither did other Presidents. 1t got a httie rambunctious Bombs wtll be bombs. I always say ''
Budweiser "
" Well , yes, Miss, but I wonder how we go about lettmg the PenOne big reason is a presiden- Rock star Alice Cooper after
tagon know what we'd like to do with our money?"
tial
fear
that
an
ambttious
vice
being listed in the latest edition
"You don 't think we could JUSt call Secretary of Defense
president would accept an inch
of " Who's Wbo.''
Schiesmger
and give him our list?"
and take a mile or presidential
"
Commg on the heels of clout . Some White House · ''Somethmg tells me that might not work. He's probably pretty
busy, you know, scourmg the budget to make sure there's no
th~ 5 5 per cent pay raise for
regulars
chiefly
remember
wa
ste and that nobody's taking unfair advantage or us. I'll bet
federal workers IS an mcrease
H.
Humphrey
as
vice
Hubert
even
now he's trying to figure a way to save some money on new
of 25 per cent and more in the
pnce of food served in the president for his being denied, weapons so we can spend tt more efftc1ently to build new housing
Senate cafetenas. I questiOn In a moment or LBJ pique, use and create more jobs.''
" What a thrifty Secretary of Defense we have, don't we, sir'
thts method of taking back the rl. presidential autos.
pay Increase for Senate But Ford has made But then how can we let hun know where we want our $520 spent'
employes . I do not unders- Rockefeller vice · chairman- Even though some of we teachers are out of work, I want to let
ta nd how the House I of day-to-day boss-of the h1m know I'm glad those poor defense contractors aren't starRepresentallves I cafetena ts Domestic Council. The council vmg .''
"Right on, Mtss Us guys in the factory were really glad to put
able to operate effecllveiy With
an overall 25 per cent lower aerves as think tank and action m our $520, too, when we were working, of course. Maybe we
cos t to employes who eat there desk for White House ma~ters could form a group, sort of pool our contributions and ask the
The pnce of chth rose better on almost everything that gOI!Il Pentagon to buy a battleship or something with it "
" I have an idea. How about if we write in and ask him to let us
than 30 per cent - from 65 to 85 on between the Atlantic and
Pacific.
have our $520 back so ,we can dectde how we want to use it That
cents. Over on the House stde,
way, while we 're thmking it over, we can have the money to pay
where pnces have gone up , chih Insiders see it this way :
the
rent and things for the time being."
goes for 55 cents."
- Ford figures he nee~ help
Then tf he decides be really needs the money back in a
"
Great!
-Sen. Hubert Humphrey Ia • In such matters as federalspeech to Coagress and state relations. The President hurry, he can call us and ask, 'Brother, can you spare $520?'
" Of course. we 'd never even think of teiiinl! him no."
reprinted in the Congressional
Record protesting lallallonary himself is the resident White
trends In tbe Senate cafeteria. House expert on Congress. But
Rockefeller, four-term
Sunday dinner guests of
governor of New York, lmows
Clara Follrod and Nina
what goes on out there in the 50
Robinson were Mr. and Mrs.
state capitals.
Pete Follrod, Stephen and
- Ford needs the kind of
Kathy, local. Afternoon guests
Sunday School attendance on
planning on domestic affairs
were Mr. and Mrs. Bill FoUrod
that Secretary of State Henry Feb. 16was42, the offering was
and Sue Ann of Athens,and Mr.
A. Kissinger's National $24.39.
and Mrs. Otto Swartz of Shade.
The Pension Crusade
Security Council and James T.
Among recent guests of Mr.
Lynn's budget office gives him Sunday was observed. Wor- and Mrs. WllUam Carr and
oo foreign, defense and red Ink ship services here held at 11
family have been Sue Woode,
matters. Rockefeller has made with lay speaker Dennis Circleville; Lillian Penn, fliUa.
a career of orgsnizing and Creeger of Coolville U. M. boro; Robert White, Keno; the
running
think
tanks. Church speaking from John Albert Hoffners of Pcmeroy;
Kissinger's
wife,
Nancy,
for 10: 10. Attendance was 21, of- Mr. and Mrs. Erneat Taylor
s.n. Hubert Humpbrey'
one, is a paid Rockefeller fering $19.75, pledges $12.
and Mr. and Mrs. Hobart
researcher.
Swartz. A few others, local,
- Rockefeller frankly is suggestions from the Domestic have called briefly.
grateful to Ford for making Council will go through Ford's
Sunday visitors of Mr. and
him vice president at a time White House staff.
Mrs. Arthur Atherton were Mr.
when the New Yorker had aU
In other words, the flow will and Mrs. Kenneth Griffith of
but given up hope for national cross the desk of Donald Sandyville, W. Va.; Mr. and
office. Rockefeller has pledged Rwnsfeld, Ford's tough chief Mrs. Clarence Atherton and
privately as well as publicly of staff.
family of Long Bottom and
that he is Ford's man. Senior
But more than that, the best Larry Alberton of Great Lakes
rudes to both men insist there Is insurance or political bannooy Naval Base, W.
not
the least chance is the nature and character of
Recent visitors of Genevieve
growing ratio of debt to equity Rockefeller will use the the two leaders. Both Ford and Guthrie were Mr. and Mrs.
in the capital structure or Domestic Council to build up Rockefeller are regarded In John Cllvlnee (Beth Yost)
his political machine at the Washington politics as men of formerly stationed In Atlanta,
American business. The
expense
of the President.
their word. There is no Ga. here oo leave from Army
burden or interest payment on
It is wtlikely Rockefeller suggestion or one intriguing
such debt, much of it at recent
duty and to be sent to Gennany
could make political magic of against the other.
very high rates, Is a staggering
when his leave Is over. Beth
the
Domestic
C&lt;luncil
if
he
For
example,
Ford
said
he
burden and an impetus to inwill remain at Sugar Grove
wanted to.
would mesh Rockefeller's stall wttil later.
flation.
Certainly, Ford has allowed with that of his own.
McKeon and Henry KaufMr. and Mrs. Russell Yost
him to place two top Rockefellman, Salomon general partner,
Historically,' vice presidential and family or Lancaster came
authors of the booklet on which er men-James M. Cannon and staffers have been lodged in on Saturday also aiu! worked to
the forecast Is based, said, Richard N. Dunham-at the splendid isolation, in high- empty Ute Yost ji'Operty here,
despite the need for record head of the comcil. But all the cetlinged but powerless which was recenUy sold.
bond borrowing this year, the instructions to and policy quarters in the Old Executive
Mr. and Mrs. Delbert Yost
Office Building next door to the and EUa Yost of Sugar Grove
busmess world's total credit
requirements will drop to $163 gets worse than now is ex- White House.
came Sunday morning and
bUUon from last year's $172 pected. If business improves a
Not only were they not to be spent the day.
bUUon.
Charles D. Woode called on
little , "the (federal) deficit heard from; they were not
That dJ:op won 't mean much, would lead either to a vicious even to be seen.
Rev. Robert Meece, at the
however. The amount of new struggle for funds between
But, true to Ford's word, Camden-Clark Hospital In
credit needed still is enormous private borrowers and the Rockefeller men sit in at the Parkersburg laat Friday af.
for a recession year . If the $163 government, or the Federal White House Cabinet Room ternoon.
billion in new credit is for- Reserve banks would have to and Roosevelt Room planning
The Cluster Hymn Sing will
thcoming it will increase the supply the funds without sessions.
be held here at Alfred Church
total outstanding credit instru- regard to their long range
One Ford aide, Philip Ibis Saturday evening, Feb. 22,
menta of American business to responsibilities."
Areeda, just resigned mainly at 7:30 Everyone welcome.
more than $2.2 trillion.
The Wednesday evening
"In any event," they added, because Rockefeller men Kaufman and McKeon said "a larger than expected deficit Cannon and Dun~ - got )X'ayer services at the church
the seriousness of the situation would threaten economic what he wanted, according to here have been canceled mtil
can be appreciated more recovery despite the best In- some While House insiders.
further notice, due to Inreadily if it is looked at in the tentions or government by
Loyalty to teamwork could clement weather and 10 much
light of the perils raised by crowding out medium to lower have no higher evidence than slckneas.
President Ford's projected rated business borrowers, Ford asking Jim Cannon to join
Clarence Henderson bas
$51.9 bUUon federal deficit.
many of wbom already are In him at the White House dinner suffered another relapse !rem
Ironically, they said , a pe.
'rU ..
Monday night for the con- the effects of the flu .
deficit of the size projected by
Grace Swartz visited at
A real resurgence of. the servative Republican senators ,
the White House, or perh8ps market In Wall Street for new a group which tends to see red White's Funeral Home one
even a larger deficit, can be stock Issues could ease this when they see .a Rockefeller evening paying respect to her
absorbed only if· the recession dilemma If not avert it.
cousin, Charles Bentz.
man.

s.;;~friu~~ ~~\~~e~~"tfu~t ~a~b:·:~::ia~~~u~~!r~~~~.:;~~ ~:

Alfred ·
Social Notes

New issues need
market's support

NEW YORK (UP!) - The
recovery in stock market
activity Is raising hopes it soon
may be possible to sell new
stock issues again.
About $3.5 billion in new
stock issues were sold in the
United States in 1974 but that's
only a drop in the bucket
compared with the need. In
1971 Wall Street sold $1U
billion of such issues and in
1972 the sales were $10.9 billion.
Bul even in those years, the
amount of stock sold for
completely new ventures,
small companies going public
or new businesses being formed, was relatively small. The
"new Issues" market, which
once supported a big corps of
underwriting firms, dried up in
the late 196&lt;E.
The desperate need for a
revival of the new issue market
ls wtderlined heavily by a
forecast just published by
Salomon Brothers, a top In-·
vestment house. Slllomon says
the bond borrowing needs of
American industry this year
will be a record $31 billion, up
from the $25 bUUon borrowed
on bonds in 1974 by industry.
''Obvtously, a real revival of
the equity (sto ck) market
could reduce business's need to
Indulge in such huge borrowings ," James McKeon,
Salomon senior capital market
analyst, told United Press
International. __
M8ny wan Streeters and a
number of economists and
corporate chief executives
Tbe
Mariner
in- particles.
have been complaining for two
PASADENA, Calif. (UPI) - outer space to begin early life
forms
on
Ibis
planet?
strumentatioo
would
measure
It Is not known If comets
years or more about the Two engineers want to fire a
Studies
of
other
planets,
even
temperatures,
magnetic
fields,
would be dangerous to space
space probe past the comet
the travelers of tbe future. That ·
Encke in 1980 to learn asteroids, tell us onlY what Is radiation, Identify
something of. what our solar happening now. Comets, which chemical makeup ri the comet answer Is another objective.
system was Uke in its Infancy. are still primitive in their and send pictures of the The tan. of comets stretch for
Two other comets will swing fofmation, can tell us what comet's core back from 58- millions mUea into space.
Coolets are believed to have
around the sun before Encke, solar system bodies were made million mlles in space.
of
In
the
embryo
stages.
The
spacecraft
would
be
far out in the aol8r
formed
but Dr. Clayne Yeats and Jerry
"merely that portion of the Nock of the Jet Propu!sjon
The proposed ji'Oject, called launched Aug. 'II, 1980, and system, at very low tl!lnIceberg vlsfble to the eye.
Early Mariner Comet Flyby, come within a few bmdred peratures, and their cores
''The actual losses currently
was presented in a detailed miles of the rore of. the comet apparently resemble dirt7
being sustained may be 10 to 20
paper in Jaruary before a on Nov. 'II as il curves In snowballa.
times as great as our provable Laboratory said it will tBke the meeting or the American In- around the sun. The probe
It Is known that some
losses," he said.
,
five years to ji'Operly plan and stitute of Aeronautics and would be flying about 38,000 material fnm ccmeta, called
- ml1es an bwr, slower than Ute meteotltkl carboaaceaua cbooCamlng testified ,that 30 fund the project, expected to Astronautics here.
The
feasibility study speed of Encke.
millions calls were elec- tWt between $40 miWon and
drltes, wbich have fallen to
There is great uncertainty in earth contain organic comIronically ''scanned" and more , $50 !Dillion.
. ji'Oposes that the National
than 1.5 miWon of these were
Encke awroaches the sun Aer01111utics and Space Ad- lbe size, mass and density r1. pounda and may be earrleri crt '
monitored with recording from deep space once every 3.3 ministration use a spacecraft p811lcles In a comet environ- )X'imllive life forma.
devices in an attempt to un- years. Among the questions It built as a spare for the Mariner ment, Nock and Yeatal said.
''1b111, comets are attraccover ,fraudulent uses. The could answer Is: Did comets 10 television probe that One of the instruments a~ tive," they said, "if 1111t' ror t11e
monitoring mco'vered ab,out carry the basic structure -the recently phbtographed Venus the vehicle would !IMW•re the seardl for life, then for tile
25,000 illegal calls, he said.
primitive molecules -from and MelPII'Y.
,,
type
veli&gt;ctlj of dust seardl for Ita~ -"

Space probe proposed to comet

B·e eps cheat AT&amp;T of millions
By DONALD LAMBRO

or

science today

~

Tigers cause mess
in Big Eight race

Ralph Novak

Jnrl

0

'

' .

'

I.

Ualted Press International
has thrown the Big
Eight basketball race mto a
mild hysteria.
Kansas, tied with NevadaLas Vegas for the No. 18
ranking, was caught looking
ahead Wednesday nfght and it
may cost the Jayhawks a postseason berth.
Saturday's Kansas-Kansas
State game was to decide the conference title but
Missouri changed all that with
an 87-72 upset of Kansas.
Willie Smith scored 'J:I points
and Kim Anderson added 23 to
lead Mlssourt's upset. The
victory left Missouri and
Kansas tied for second with 7-3
records, a game behind Kansas
State. Missouri now Is I~
overall and Kansas 15-7. Rick
Suttle led Kansas with 22
points.
Kansas State maintained Its
lead with a final-second
desperation rebound and
basket by Carl Gerlach to pull
out a~ win over Nebraska.
Kansas State Is 8-2 in Big Etght
play.
In other games involving
ranked teams, Maryland (3)
crushed Virginia, 711-&gt;1, North
Carolina State (4) downed
Duke, 92-78, American upset
16th-ranked LaSalle, 68-62, and
Nevada-Las Vegas bombed
Pepperdine, 123-16.
John Lucas had 18 points and
Owen Brown 17 as Maryland
maintained its one-game lead
in the · Atlantic Coast C&lt;lnference by ripping Virginia.
David Thompson's 24 points
helped North Carolina State
keep pace a game behind with
a triumph over Duke .
Calvin Brown's 28 points
helped American upset
Mi.!~uri

LaSalle, now 19-5. Joe Bryant
hit his first II shots for LaSalle
and J:H&gt;f-18 overall for 30
points.
Ricky Sobers scored IS

Cager shot
PRAIRIE VIEW, Tex.
(UPII- The Waller County
Sheriff said he expected to
make au arrest today in a

shooting incident at a
basketball game which injured a Prairie Vic" A&amp;M
University student.
" We got a gun," Whit·
worth sa id, u and I'm driving

to Houston to pick up a bullet
we recovered.''
Senior Alfred Johnson, 23,
is hospitalized in Houston
from a gunshot wound he
received during a chairthrowing mel ee betwee n
players and fans of Prairie
View and visiting Bishop
College.
The sheriff said his suspect
was from Dallas but It was
not determined if he was a
student at Bishop.
" We know he came with
the team," Whitworth said.
"Tbe way I get it was
someone pulled a gun and
was shooting it up In the air
in the gym. And this Alfred
Johnson was going to try to
take it away lrom him ... "
The important NAIA
District 8 south zone game
was stopped with less than
two minutes left. Play never
resumed with Prairie Vew
leading, 105-93. No decision
has been made by the NAIA
as to a winner.

pomts and added a West Ccast
Athletic Conference record 15
assists as Nevada Las Vegas
rolled over Pepperdme. The
win gives the Rebels an 11-1
WCAC mark and 19-1 overall.
Sobers' 15 assists also enabled
him to estabhsh a WCAC
season mark of 74.
In other major games, St.
Bonaventure edged Rutgers ,
93-91,
Canisius
blasted
V1llanova, 111-81, Pittsburgh
dumped Niagara, 80-6&gt;,
Clemson trounced Georgta
Tech, ~9, Georgetown (DC)
downed St. Francis (Ps .), 9071, Wake Forest beat Davidson, 711-&lt;l9, Houston defeated St.
Mary's
(Tex .),
90-77,
Oklahoma State whipped Iowa
State, 95-70, C&lt;&gt;lorado shaded
Oklahoma, 90-87, and U&gt;yola
(Calif.) beat Nevada-Reno, 6877 .

Ohto H1gh School
Tournam ent R esults
B y Unti e d Press Internationa l
CLASS AAA
Af Canton
Sta rk
County
Perry
62
Marlmgton 53
Canton T im pk en 77 Massillon

67

At Copley
Norton 60 Kent Roosevelt sa
Barber to n 100 Tal l madge 44

CLASS AA

At Canton
,
Loudenvll le 55 Tuslaw 41
AK r on South 86 Orv 1lle 45
At Manon
Ma ry sville 7l Dubl 1n 48
At Cleveland South
St
Cl e Col linWOOd 79 Cle
J os eph 60
AI Lorain
Nor th Olmsted 45 Cloverleaf 38
Cle Sf Edward 71 Ro cky R1 ver
43
At Cleveland Lmcoln West
Normand y 84 Cle Max Hayes 75
At Easllake
Willo ughby South 85 West
Geauga 58

·Hannan Trace tenth

Middies back on top
COLUMBUS (UPI ) - For
the first time in 12 years, Middletown's Middies are mighty
agam.
Not since 1963 have the Paul
Walker-c"oached Middies been
voted No. I in the final United
Press International Ohio High
School Board of Coaches'
ratings, but that drought came
to an end Wednesday.
Middletown, along with
Wellsville in Class AA and
Mansfield St. Peter's m Class
A, was picked the No. I AAA
team.
Middletown, which won one
state title after another hack m
the 50s and early 60s, including
three in a row in the Jerry
Lucas era, got the nickname or
"Mighty Middies."
Although there have been
some lean years of late-at
least by Middletown standar~
- the Middies will carry a 17~
record Into their final game
Friday night at Hamilton Taft
and have been rolling up fopmded victories as in the past.
PoUahed Off
Middletown, which polished
off Springfield South 77-60
Tuesday night, was a runaway
choice, collecting 22 or 36
possible first plltce ·votes and
finishing with a 334-'J:I8 spread
over
runnerup
Cantop
McKinley (17-1).
McKinley, which lost its ftrst
game of the season to Alliance
and then won 17 in a row, was
the defending poll champion.
Kettering Alter, 17~, was the
only other Class AAA team to
be in a challenging position, as
the Knights finished third with
259 points.
Toledo Scott moved up to
fourth the final week at 189 and
then came Dayton Roosevelt,

Barberton, Newark,' Cleveland
East Tech, Zanesville and
Alhance. Zanesville and Alliancce were making their first
top ten appearances, replacing
two Cincinnati teams, Hughes
and Roger Bacon.
Wellsville, which led the AA
ratings most of the season only
to be overtaken by Delphos St.
John's two weeks ago, reclauned the No. I spot on the
strength Of a pair Of Impressive
weekend victories and St.
John's second loss of the
season. The final point totals
favored Wellsville 23a-231.
The Tigers or coach Bobby
Dawson, who finished second
to Manchester in last year's AA
ratings, beat a good U&gt;wsville
Aquinas team 72-62 Friday
night and avenged their only
loss of the season (by one
pointl Saturday with a 69-55
victory over Steubenville Big
Red .
Meanwhile, St. Jolm 's ran
into trouble Swtday at Lima,
losing a 7"-72 declson to Central
Catholic.
Conilnued Move
Circleville, the only unbeaten
team in the AA top ten with an
18-0 mark, continued Its move
towards the top spot the final
week, but had to settle for third
with 217 points.
Columbus Mohawk finished
In fourth, followed in order by
Rossford, Waverly, Warsaw
River View, Springfield Shawnee, Buckeye South and U&gt;rain
Catholic.
St . Peter's, again playing a
rugged schedule consisting or
mostly AA and AAA schools,
finished with a handsome 18-2
record, which was good enough
to gain the Spartans a second
straight poll title.

St. Pete, which had been in a
hattie for the No I spot with
Canal Wtnchester (17-1) the
last few weeks of the season
emerged with a 207-200 margt~
over the Indians in the !mal
voting.
Minster, which had moved
inlo a challenging posttion, was
soundly beaten by Marion
Local over the weekend, but
sllll managed to stay in third
place, while Lordstown, which
also lost for the first time last
weekend, remained In fourth.
From there on down there
was a shakeup with Pettisville
the only unbeaten team m th~
Class A top ten, moving ail the
way from eighth to fifth,
Sebring dropping a notch to
stxlh and Norwalk St. Paul to
seventh.
Roundmg It out was Upper
Scioto Valley tn eighth, Anna in
ninth and U&gt;rain Cleai'view
and
Hannan-Trace,
a
newcomer, tied for tenth.

Archibald spurs
playoff hopes .
By Uolted Press International
The guy they call "Tiny" has

the Kansas City-Omaha Kings
suddenly thinking big.
Nate "Tiny" Archibald, one
of the best offensive players in
the National Basketball Association despite his rather
diminutive S-foot-1, Is the man
most responsible for the Kings'
recent surge that has catapulted them into second place in
the ll'fldwest Division and
within earshot of a playoff
berth.
Archibald scored 27 points
Wednesday night, despite sitting out the entire fourth
quarter and paced Kansas
Clty.Qmaha to a 115-92 victory
over the Los Angeles Lakers,
the Kings' fifth straight
triumph and lith in their last 12
games._==:-c
The VIctory was the Kings'
34th this season, one more than
all of last year, and the club
seems destined to reach the
playoffs for the first time since
the 1965-86 season when the
franchise was based in Cincinnati.
The Kings led all the way In
Wednesday night's contest,
jumping to a quick 10-2 lead
and taking a commanding 6~
lead at halftime. Jimmy
Walker chipped In with 18

The

Dai~

Sentinel

points for the Kings while
Brian Winters led Los Angeles
with 18.
In other games, New York
routed
Detroit,
109-94,
Washington whipped Phoenix,
120-97, and Seattle upset
Boston, 121-95.
Knlcks 109, Pistons 9C:
Walt Frazier scored 35 points
to lead New York to its second
victory in a row after five
straight losses. Detroit now has
lost 10 of II games and has
alumped from first to within
I'h games or last place In the
Midwest Division. Bob Lanier
led the Pistons with 20 points.
Bullets IZO, SUDS 97:
Elvin Hayes scored 32 points
-his fourth game in a row over
30 points-to lead Washington
to its fourth win In a row and
17th straight at Capital Center.
Dick Van Arsdale had 20 points
for Phoenix.
Soalcs 121, Celtlcs 95:
Rookie guard Rod Dertine
scored a career-lllgh 20 points
and sparked a second'&lt;lllarter
rally to put the Seattle ahead to
stay as the Sonics downed
Boston. It was only the fifth
losa in 29 games on tbe road for
the ,Celtics this season. Two
other Sonics hit for career
highs. Tommy Burleson had 28
points and Slick Watts 23.
Boston got 18 points from Jo Jo
White.

District 22 tournament.
The loss also dramed some
steam out of the Big Red
Machine that saw victory 10 of
its last 11 trips onto the court
and had been coined, deservedly so, the hottest team in
Ohio college basketball.
It was a disappointing defeat
for the Redmen in another
way, as the Bulldogs got
revenge for an 88-68
shellacking at Rio a month ago.
Wilberforce combined that
tomd shooting by Green (14 of
24 from the field ) with an
enormous home court advantage in its quonset hut type
gym to bolt into a 48-35 halftime advantage.
The Redmen took the early
upper hand, going up by as
much as 9 points at 21-12 behind
the deadly long range shooting
of freshman guard Gil Price.
The BulldOgs stormed back
with 3 unanswered buckets and
a patr of free throws to pull to
wilh10 I at 21-20. Wilberforce
kept pace and took the lead at
24-23with 7:55 remaining in the
opening period before Rio
center Jim Stewart hit two
charity tosses to give the
Redmen the lead for the last
time at 25-24.
Green hit a 20 footer and free
throw, followed by a I&gt; footer
and the Bulldogs were olf and
runmng.
The closest the Redmen
came the rest of the game was
moments later on a 17 footer by
sophomore Browne Wilson to
pull Rio to within 2 at 31-29.
Wilberforce then spurted just
before intermission, outscoring
Rio 17-6 in the last 5 minutes of
the first half.
The Redmen staged several
rallies in the second half,
pulling to within 3 on two occasions. The first came at the
6:13mark as junior guard Paul
Albanese canned a pair of free
throws to close to 69-66.
The ever-present Mr. Green
retaliated by hitting both ends .
of a one-and-one before senior
forward Dan Bollinger canned

'a 22 footer from the baseline to
make tt 71-68.
From that point, Green hit
from 12 feet and Bob Mikhell
canned a driving &gt; footer and
once again the hosts were off to
the races .
While Wilberforce placed 4
players in twin figures, the
Redmen countered with 3, led
by Bollinger with 21. Jim Noe
added 17 points before fouling
out with 4:02 remaining, and
Price pumped in 16.
. The Bulldogs hi I 3o of 75 field
goal attempts for 47 pet., while
the Redmen connected just 31
times in 87 tries for a 'cool 36
pet.
Wilberforce burned the nets
from the charity stripe to the
tune of 78 pet. on 25 of 32, whtle
Rio hit 75 pet. on 15 of 20.
The Redmen held a 49-36
rebounding advantage, led by
Noe with 14 and Stewart with
12. Gordon's 16 bounds were

tops for the hosts .
The Wilberforce junior
varstly made it a clean sweep
with an 82-72 tnumph in
Wednesday's preliminary. The
Rto junior varsity was led by
Ted Chaffin wtth 23 points,
followed by John Lusher wtlh
19 and Chuck King with 16 .
The heavily whistled affatr
also saw King haul m 14
rebounds.
Saturday the Redmen, at 12-9
overall and 8-2 10 MOC play,
lry to put that tourney berth on
ice at Ohio Dominican 10 an
afternoon battle.
SOLOII(ON NAMED
CARBONDALE, Ill. (UPI) Southern Illinois University
Wednesday named Rich Solomon as assistant football coach
responsible for defensive ends.
Solomon, 25, will join the sro
coaching staff March 1.

~~~~f~~~~~Nn

:n

Po,.,eroy, Ohio.
National
advert1S1ng
represen t a tive
Bo ttine tl i ·
Gallagher, Inc .• 12 Etlst -42nd
St , New York . New York .
Subscription
rates :
Delivered bY carr ier where
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By Motor Route where carrier
service not availa ble, One
month, $3 25 By ma11 1n Oh io
'nd W. Va , One Year, 522 .06;
S!K.. months, 511.50. Three
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$1 3. 50 ; •three m .onths . S7.50.
Su bscr i p t ion pnce Inc ludes
Sunday T imes -Sentinel.

m
217

171)

~~

14. 1) 1

Step onto this lush, thickly padded
m rpet and leave dull , barren floors
behind! You'll love the hint of
sculpturing that define• the design.
Hercuion• olefin pile is a superb
stain fighter. And one look at the
bright and beautiful color will tell
why it's named Show stopper!

10 Lor Ca t h . ( 16 21
51
Second 10 : 11 Granv i ll e ( 1)
35 , 12. Brooklyn 34 ; 13 Cln
t1 nnati Greenhills ( ll 23 . 14
Dat!o n
St1ve r s
20 .
15
F1relands f 11 19 , 16 Lisbon
Bea ver 18 , 17 N ew ton Faits 16 ,
18 Wh ee ler sburg 14 , 19 Fort
Frye 12 ; 20 Sherwood Fair view 11

CLASS A

Team
Poinh
1 Mans Sf P et ( 11 18 · 2) 207
'1 Can Winch ( 5 17 1J
200
3 M 1nster (1 17. 1)
154
4 Lord s town ( 1 19 · 1l
1:14
5 Petttsvllle (4 18·0)
11 8
6. Se bring ( 17 1 J
105
7 Nor St Paui ( J7 .1)
80
8 Up SCIOtO Val ( 1 191)
58
9. Anna ( 19 ll
57
10. &lt;T1e) Lora•n Cl earvlew ( 15·
3)
(tie) Hannan· Trace I 2-16·21

8821

RIO GRANDE (771

PLAYER
Jim Noe
Dan Bollinger
Jim Stewart
Gil Price
Mac Barbee
Bob Caldwell
Gary Swinehart

Satis/actwn Guaranteed or Your. Money Back

44

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Second nine : 12 . ~ onrO fiVIlle
39 , 13 Marion L0 1ca l 31, 14
Wyntord 30. 15. Freder icktown
27, 16 Orwe l l Grand Vall ey 2.d,
17 (tie ) Windh am (IJ and
North Gallia) 20 each ; 19.
Cleveland LUth eran East 19 ,
20. Zanesville Rose c rans lll16.
Others w i th 10 or more
points Covington, Richmond
H et ghts , Chillicothe F l age t,
Tinora and Arcanum

3-4 14
1-2 5
4-6 12
2·2 4
2-2 5
0-0 3

Attlhori:ed CATALOG SALES MERCHANT
220 E. MAIN

POMEROY
Owned and Operetod by Lou Osborne .

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WILBERFORCE {9ll
FG-A FT·A RB PF TP

PLAYER

Norman Shepherd
Ken Gordon

Greg Brown
Abe Turner
Isaac Green

Bob Mitchell
Ricco Brown
TOTALS
Halftime: Wilberforce 48 Rio 35
Officials: Steve Rainer and Roland Smith

2-S 0-0 S 4 4
8-17 6-8 16 4 22
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VANYL-ITE LATEX INTERIOR
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TUESDAY, ~EDNE_SOAY.._JHURSDAY
FEBRUARY 18-20

WlltNIH

For Your Ustening Pleasure
GUITAR &amp; PERCUSSION

s me flOOd IJIJighbor.
Here's my new State Farm office, where I can serve
you with the hast value in car, home, lifo and health
insurance. I invite you to call or drop in any time.

STEVE SNOWDEN
125S Powell 51., Middleport, Ph. m-7155

'

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The MEIGS INN
Ph. 992-3629

lflllli"'

IIIIINnt ldOf' -

8:30 TIL 12:30

RON BRINKER

992-2178

FG-A FT-A RB PF TP
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10-24
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1-2

Paul Albanese
George Vickroy
TOTALS

Sea ra Haa a
Credit Plan to Suit Moat Every Need
• Prices Are Catalog Prlce1
• Shipping, fnatallatfon Extra

. • Sale Ends Mar. 12

Rio-Wilberforce box

City Editor

2157 .
Second class postage pa td at

Was $7.79 sq. yd .

Points
235
23 1

Here's New Ufe
for Tired Walls!

DE'"VOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
I· MEIGS-MASON AREA
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL
euc. Ed .
ROBERT HOEFLICH
Published da l ly except
Seturdav by The Ohio Valley
PubltSh1ng Company , 111
Court St, Pomeroy , Oh i o
45769 . Bus in e!iiS Office Phone
992-2156 Editorial Phone 99 2·

SAVE 12%,

CLASS AA

Tea m
l. Wellsville (8 16· 1)
2 Del St John (6 16
3 (I'Vil le (2 HI 0)

~ : :~,;~e~~es;:~~:::2

Mtlcheli with 14 as the
Wilberforce Bulldogs downed
the Redmen 115-77 here Wednesday night.
It was a severe setback for
Rio, as the Redmen now need a
victory over Ohio Dominican in
the regular season !male
Saturday 10 Colwnbus to be
assured of a spot in the NAIA

The Carpeting with
Wall-to-Wall Excitement
Now on Sale!

COLUMBU S (UP I J The
fmal 1975 Un •t ed Press In
ternat1ona l OhiO High School
Board of Coach es' basketball
rat1ngs with f irst pl ace votes
and won los t re cords m
pare nth eses
CLASS AAA
Team
Pomls
I M1ddl etwon (22 17 OJ
334
2 Can McK (J 17 n
278
3 Kef At l (3 17 OJ
259
4 Toi ScottfJ7 . 1J
189
5 Day . R 'velt ( 16·1l
135
6Barberton(16 2J
118
7 Newark (16 2l
86
8 Cl E Tec h ( 16 1)
77
9 Zanesville ( 1 17 1J
76
10, A llian c e ( 16 2)
75
Second 10 11 Ely ri a (3) 69 ,
12 C•ncmnafi Hug h es 67 : 13
Cmc mnah Roger Bacon S9, 14
Oregon Cl ay (2) 47 , 15 Cln
cmna ll Elder 22 , 16 Cl eveland
Height s (2l21 , 17
Toledo
Devllb1 l l I S . 18 Columbus
Cent ral 11 , 19 Dayton Dunbar
10 . 20 Groveport Madi son 9

Redmen blistered by Bulldog'
WILBERFORCE - If the Rio
Grande Redm'en never agam
see Isaac Green tl will be only
too soon.
The 6-0 sophomore from
Dayton blistered the baskets
for 36 points, and was joined in
double figures by teamma les
Ken Gordon wtth 22 points,
Greg Brown with 19 and Bob

. fSears
"Showstopper'

---.-ITAU 'AIIM

Pomeroy

..

ftD

GALLON

•7 1
QUART

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Hardware
"EVERYTHING IN
HARDWARE~'

110W.MAIN

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•

•

Redskins
Sport Parade
By MILTON RlaiMAN
UPI Splrll Editor

NEW YORK (UP! ) - This wasn't the summer of '42, more like
the spring of '55. God was in his heaven and a little boy honestly
felt he was up tllere, too, because never before in his We had he
ever seen a dream come true like this one.
The kid who couldn't really believe It all was Steve Garvey, six· .
year-old son of the Brooklyn Dodgers' bus driver, Joseph Garvey.
II was the first lime young Garvey had ever been to spring
training and what made the whole thing more memorable was
the fact he had been designated balboy and outfitted with a
miniature Dodgers' uniform. Between keeping track of tile
basel:lalls and straightening out the bats, Steve Garvey blinked
his eyes more than once to marvel at the incredible panorama in
frOnt of hlm.
Just look out there in tile outfield!
Carl Erskine, Johnny F'odres, Billy Loes, Joe Black, Kenny
Lehman, Clem Labine, Roger Craig, Don Bessent and Ed
Roebuck are all sprinling slde-by&lt;~ide, gelling their legs in
shape. Running last, naturally, is big Newk- Don Newcombe.
And isn't that Tom Lasorda pitching batting practice? Nobody
enjoys pitching batting practice more than he does.
That's JaCkie Robinson In tile cage hitting, and standing
around the cage waiting their turns are Duke Snider, Roy
Campanella, Pee Wee Reese, Jim Gilliam and Carl F'urillo.
If this is some kind of dream, It's a truly incredible one, and
Steve Garvey sllenUy pleads that nobody wakes him up.
"The biggest thing any little boy or li!Ue girl has is
imagination," says Steve Garvey now, 20 years later, "and if you
happen to be. that litUe boy and have never seen a ballplayer
before, that first time is awe inspiring.
"You expect them to be so big because you've always put them
up on a Hille pedestal, and aU of a sudden you meet a Gil HOdges
and he's just like your Dad. I remember him as a very warm
human being, insid.e and out. He asked me to play catch orrce,
and I said, 'Gee, Gil Hodges!'
"'lYe played catch. It was tremendous. This is where you say to
yourself, 'I'd lllleto be a ballplayer some day when I grow up, I'd
lllle to be lllle Gil Hodges."'
Steve Garvey reminds you of Gil Hodges in some respects,
the slmllarlly going deeper than the mere fact he's playing
Hodges' old first-base position now with the Dodgers. Garvey has
the same type lemreramenl and outlook Hodges had. He also has
the same raw ability. If anything, the solidly put-together 26year-old Tampa, Fla., native is a better hitter than Hodges was
although he doesn 't have as much power.
Hodges put In 18yearsln the big leagues, batted .300 only twice
and never was designated MVP. The 26-year-old Garvey, in only
his fourth full big league season last year, wound up the National
League's MVP after batting .312, driving in 111 runs and hilling
21 homers. Then he went out and hit .381 against the Oakland A's,
leading all tile World Series' regulars on both sides.
Yeal'llback when he was batboy, Steve Garvey, looking for the
assurance of somebody he knew, would stand right next to the
driver each lime he boarded the Dodgers' bus. His father still
drives the team bus in. the spring.
"Now I sllln the back so I can ride the driver," laughs the
Dodger first-baseman.
Don't believe that. Sieve Garvey respects his father and
anybody else who earns hla respect. Insofar as baseball is concerned, he admires Pete Rose for h1s tremendous dedication to
the game. "I think he has made a positive Influence on baseball
and on the fans," 'lilY• Garvey.
Twenty years have gone by since he first "joined" the
Dodgers. He knows them aU from way, way hack, Walter and
Peter O'Malley, AI Campanis, Red Patterson, Lee Scott, Nobe
Kawano and the rest.
"I remember you when you were six or seven," Walt Alston
said to Garvey when he reported to the Dodgers as a player for
the first Ume a few yeal'll back.
Steve Garvey is a relatively young .man yet but he grows
nostalgic when he talks about the "old Dodgerll" lllle Sandy
Koufax, Don Drysdale and Gil Hodges. He thinks back to them
and doing that makes him especially aware·of the way he treats
youngalel'll coming over to talk with him or ask him for his
autograph.
"What I try to do now is treat Uttle boys and girls the way Gil
Hodges treated me," he says. "There was a time In the '60's
When It was fashionable to be anti-bero. I think now we're gelling
back to the so-called 'hero' type. Young people are looking for
somebody to look up to now. They are the foundation of this
country-the youth. I! there's anything I can do to make them
any stronger, physically or spiritually, thaJ) I think it's my duty
to dolt. I love doing it. It comes naturally tome. "
College Basketball Results

8y United Prtn International

,
Euf
Bowdo in 97 Gordon 51
Brandeis 85 RPI 83

Brklvn Coli 89 Pratt 82
Bridgepor t 7'1 lona 68
Canislus 11 1 Vllanva 81
· Cheyrtv 86 .Sh lppensbg 6'
Clarion 87 Alliance 67
Cornell 101 Buffalo av
Conn . 94 Boston U _ 79
Delaware 82 Bu cknell 76

Oic " lnson 53 Al br ight SO
E . Strdsbg 114 Kulztwn 71
Esse-x 73 Wentwor t h 72
Frnkln &amp; .Yj rsht 76 Jun i ata 50
Gannon 15 Youngstown 64
GeneSeo !t. 11 5 Houghton too
Grove Citv 62 St. Vince 59
Holy Cross 96 N ew Hamp . 85
Kean 67 Trenton St . 57
Lafayette 7l Leh igh 60
LIU 61 F . Dcknsn -Rthrfd 57
M i llersvl 86 Mansfield 76
M i ddleb ury 74 Amhers t 6.5
LeMoyne 77 Al fred 59
New Haven 107 SE M a ss . 83
Phila TeK 66 Dre xel 57
P i11Sburgh 80 N iagara 65
Pt sdm St . 81 Oswg o St . 61
R i der 66 Gettysburg 62
Salem St . 82 Curr y 76
Seton Halt 59 wag ner s 1
Slip-pry R: ck 78 Ca l. P a . 17
Springf iel d 104 Am In t i 90
St . Bonn ie 93 Rutgers 9
Suffolk BD MIT 78
Susquehanna 69 Scranton 66
Swarthmor e 89 U rs in us 75
W . Conn . 100 Coast Guard 90
Wayhsbg 96 Wst mnstr , Pa . 74
South
Berry 86 Pi edmont 78
Bllrmne 62 Thos More 60
Clemson as·Ga . Te ch 69
El iz City , Va . Union 71
Ga . Sou thern 98 Mercer 78
Geotwn DC 90 St . Frn Pa . 7 1
,Gui!frd 98 UNC -Wilm 72
Maryland 70 Virg in ia 51

N .C. St. 92 Duke 78
St . .Auoustn 94 Lvngstne 92
UNC -Ashvl 73 Mars Hill 68
Wake Forest 78 Davidson 69
Wm . &amp; Mary 67 VMI' 66
Wrigh t St. 80 No . Ky . St . 78
Midwest
Akron 97 Bflo St. 6(1
Albion 91 Adrian 11
Aquinas 71 Hope 67
Augsbg 92 Macalstr 66
Bwlng Grn 66 W . M ich . 64
Calvin 82 Kalamazoo 73
Dayton 78 Xavier 0 . 67
E . Mich. 84 Duqu esne 14
Earlham 78 Findlay 76
Evansville 91 DePauw 60
Fairfld a.c Clev-e St. 7S '
Grnd Val St . 69 Frrs Sl . 64
Ind. Cent 72 Wabash 69
Kan . St. 65 Nebraska -64
Marl,a n u Franklin 71
.
M faml 0 . 52 Kent St . SO .
Missouri 8'1 Kansas 12
Minn. · Oul 89 St. Olaf 88
Moorhed St . " Bemdii St . 85
Oakland 94 Northwood 81
Olivet 84 Aim.- 7S
Oshksh
Stevens Pt . 9

'f

'

'

Platt "YI 81 La Crosse 70
Rolla so Harr i s 51
Spr ing Arbor 97 Ti ffin 84
Stout (113 Superior 79
S1. x a v ier 72 Trntv Chris 70
St . Norbert 87 L oras 73
Tol edo 90 Cen1 . Mich . 80
Valparaiso 87 Butler 77
Southwest
Husln 90 St . Mry ' s Tex . n
Okla . St . 95 Iowa St . 70
· West
Colorado 90 Oklahoma 87
Nev . -LV 123 Pepperdine 86

By United Press lnlernallonal
Miami University, tied for
second place in the Mid·
American Conference, scored
a key victory Wednesday night
by downing Kent State 52-M
and upping its reoord to 7-4 in
tile loop.
Rod Dieringer's 14 points
powered tile Miami Redskins
to tlleir win and paved the way
for. Miaml's encounter with
Toledo Saturday.
MAC-leading Bow ling Green,
a 116-64 winner over Western
Michigan Wednesday night, is

Southern gals
rout Eastern
The Southern girls basket·
ball team defeated the Eastern
girls at Eastern last night 4223.
It was Southern's fifth
straight victory without a
defeat tllis year.
Southern jumped to a 16-10
lead after one period and held
the Eastern gals scoreless the
second quarter to lead at the
half 22-10.
In the second half the Southern starters were taken out by
coach CoMee Andrews to give
her reserves a chance to do
some scoring of their own and
tllat is what they did by winning going away.
The leading scorers for
Southern were Cindy Roush
and Cheryl Larkins with 13
each. Others scoring for the
Tornados were Jean Rltchh8rt
10, Jennifer Mugrave, Nancy
Roy and Oleryl Roseberry
with 2 points each.
The leading reboundel'll were
Becky
Sayre,
Brenda
Lawrence, and Mugrave.
Scoring · for Eastern were
Tammy Fitch with 9, Jull
Whitehead 4, VIcki Epple 4,
Jan Wilson 2, Ktm Batey 2, an.d
Rachel Hunter witll 2 points.

•

Wln,

.

basketball action.
Otherwise, Spring Arbor
(Mich.) defeated 111fln 8'1-14,
GBMoli (Pa). downed Youngs.

Literary club welcomes membe.r
Mr s.

oullliot Steubenville 1IIHI and
Cue Western edged by Thiel

home of Mrs. Nau M oo l't~.

Mrs.

5W5.

Calley 's own s tory of
VISIT PARNTS'

FLAG PRESENTATION - An American flag was
Jl'esented to Pomeroy Brownie Troop 76 at a meeting
Tuesday at the Pomeroy Elementary School. Mrs. Gertrude
&lt;;asto, left, leader of tile troop, accepted the flag from Pam
Powers, president of tile American Legion Auxiliary, Drew
Webster Post 39, Junior Unit. Others participating in a

World Day of Prayer service
at the Rutland United
Metllodist Church March 7 by ·
Church Women United was
announced at the Tuesday
night meetings or the circles of
the B. H. Sanborn Missionary
Society of tile Middleport First
Baptist Church .
Planned at the circle
meetings were several spring
projects.
LOVE JOY CIRCLE
The Love Joy Circle meeting
with Mrs. David Darst made
arrangements to make a
layette lo take to the Sanborn
meeting in April. Mrs. Harold
Hubbard presided in the absence of Mrs. Willis Anthony
who is iii and opened with a
poem, 'jTo Love One Another';.
For devotions, Mrs. Fred

Last week the Public Utilities Commission of
Ohio, all Ohio utilities, and interested consumer

Colors &amp; Styles

groups worked out an agreement to help those

for a missionary project will-be
colle ~ted by the Dorcas Circle
members and taken to the
April meeting for a work
session, it was decided when
the gro up met Tuesday night at
the home of Mrs. Dale
Walburn .
Scholarship student dues
were collected and plans were
made to remember Charles
Bennett on his birthday.
Devotions by Mrs. Steve
Skaggs were from Phil. awith
a meditation, " Blueberry
Hill". Mrs. John Werner gave
the program using material )In
George Washington and
Abraham Uncon . Prayer by
Mrs. Beulah White concluded

" Let Your Ught
Thank-you notes for holiday
'.)'
remembrances were read from
The Meigs Chapter Order of
Mrs . Maud Betz, Mrs . DeMolay held their Sweetheart
Raymond Saxton, Mrs. James contest Dec. 31, at the Mid·
Murray, Miss Paula Sarver, dleport Masonic Hall.
Judson College student, Rev.
The crown was won by Miss
Thomas Olsen, missionary in Lynne Gauze, daughter of Mr.
Philadelphia, and Mr. and Mrs. and Mrs. Paul Gauze,
Wally Davis.
Gallipolis. Miss Gauze was
Mrs .
Manning
Kloes escorted by Scott Reuter,
presented a program, "Always senior councilor of the chapter.
a Missionary" and Mrs. Darst She was presented a bouquet
served a salad course to those and $5() U.S. Savings Bond by
named and Mrs. Charles Bert Moshier, maste r of
Edwards, Mrs. Tony Fowler ceremonies.
and Mrs. Arland King.
First runner-up was awarded
DORCAS CIRCLE
to Marlene Harrison, second
Old sheets to make bandages runner-up Beth Layne, and

Pair

their gas and electric bills.

..

··:

One provision of the agreement was instituted

Valuesto$9.00
Slim-Reg.- Husky
8-18

in an effort to prevent disconnections to hardship
cases. Columbus and Southern Ohio Ele~tric Company's
Credit Department, as it has done in the past, will

$499

endeavor to work out payment plans with ttardship
cases such as the elderly, low income customers and

LADIES'

those on fixed incomes.

POLYESTER

PULL ON PANTS
Assortment of Colors

$199

'5"

Columbus and Southern urges these hardship

I

cases to contact the Company and indicate possible

-

alternative arrangements.

MIDDLEPORT
DEPARTMENT STORE

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On Friday, January 31 our Company

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announced that it will also participate in the agreement

, P.M.
Open Fri. and ....,
Sat. Until8:00

by making a budget payment plan available to all

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residential customers.

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Kerm's l(orner Friday &amp; Saturday

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The budget payment plan is based on a

Money for games will be
given to each classroom
teacher at the Salisbury
Elementary School, it was
decided at the Tuesday night
meeting of the Salisbury PTA.
The PTA voted to give each
teacher $15. In addition it was
decided to proceed with
lighting under the recently
constructed canopy which
extends from the roadway
where buses unload to tile Iron I
door of the school. A report on
the recent meeting !'f the Meigs
County Council of Parents and
Teachers was given by Mrs . .
Barbara Fry, delegate.
Founder's Day was observed
with the recognition of past
presidents. As a specialtribule
to the men and women who
have served as president, the
·PTA voted to buy a plaque
which will have the names of
pasl presidents inscribed and
tile new ones added each year
to be hung in the school

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altered periodically when automatic reviews will

·.Men's Baseball

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Details of the plan and your monthly budget

Permanent press
stripes,
checks,
plains. S.M- L.

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VAL.

EA.

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amount will be included with an application in your

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March bill. The plan will become effective April 1.

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To enroll in the bud9et payment plan you

SPECIAL!

simply return the application to the Company.

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These provisions are our way of letting you
knQw that we care about providing not only reliable,

MEN'S KNIT

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but continuous electric service.

SPORT SHIRTS

Filled

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·"ew York .Ciothi~g House

COLUMBUS AND SOUTHERN OHIO ELECTRIC COMPANY

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MARK BIRTHDAY
The family of Mrs. George
Nesselroad, Sr., gathered at
her home on Laurel St. Sunday
to honor her Of\ her birthday
anniversa ry. Attending the
birthday dinner were Mr.· and
Mrs. George Nesselroad, Jr.,
and son, Michael, Mr. and Mrs.
Lanny Jenkins, Mr. and Mrs.
. Gerald Rought and daughters,
Gerri, Stephanie, and Kellie
and Mrs. Mildred Milch.

Christian

Cen ter and

with

unc

enli ghte ning

and

(DISCONTINUED STYLES)

Ann' s · educalional onaspecl."&gt;ufurm y

THE SHOE BOX
MIDDLEPORT OHIO

THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY, SUNDAY

cr oss quota has been met and

members were reminded that

a farewell party will be held
Sunday at 7 p.m. for Rev. and
Mrs. Steve Skaggs. Mrs . Milton
Hood presided and opened the
mee ting with a meditation
"Two Ears and One Mouth":
She thanked those who assisted
with the fellowship tea .
Cherry pie was served to
those named and Mrs. John
Fultz, Mrs. Fred Hoffman ,
Mrs. Isabelle Win ebren ner,
Mrs. Eiecta Souders, Mrs.
Eloise Wilson, Mrs. Elizabeth
Gardner, Mrs. Bert Bodimer
and a guest, Mrs. Edi th Sauer.

David Phillips, band director
at Kyger Creek High School,
and Liz Blackner, District
DeMolay Sweetheart and first
runner-up in the State
Sweetheart contest. Immediately following the contest
a party and dance was held.
DeMolay and adults at·
tending were Bert Moshier,
Scoll Reute r , Mike Hen·
dri ckson, Carl Myers, Bill
Quickie , Scmaki Corflas,
Randy Keller. Don Vaughn,
Oliver Taylor, Mike Belz ,
Herbert Carson, David Canterbury, Dennis Wolfe, Bill
Meek , Mrs. Sarah Moshier,
Mr. Robert King and Mr . and
Mrs. Paul Gauze.

The Meigs Chapter, Future
Homemakers of America,
gathered at the home of Pam
Holcomb Thursday night for a
valentine party.
Streamers, heart cutouts,
balloons and flowers decorated
the Holcomb home and a
valentine exchange was a
feature of the party. Heartshaped cookies, potato chips,
dip and punch were served .
Pam
Attending
were
Holcomb, Opal Dyer, Lorain
McElhaney, Vicki Johnston,
Melody Scaggs, Joyce Bing,
Ci ndy Dorst, Brenda Hysell,
Penny Hysell and Miss Leda
Mae Kraeuter , advisor. Guests
were Marcia and Bill Holcomb.

goodies you need .

COLOR TV

EASTER
LILIES, TULIPS,
HYACINTHS
.
.

•

OUR PACKAGED FLOWER

•BLACK
.......&amp;

and GARDEN SEEDS ARE HERE

WHITE TV

"'JHONif
~--· .

. 200-202 East Mitln Sf.
· PO~EROY. OHI~

O,lrN I'RIOIIT lo SATUiiUA y '"'"" r.

U... Our

c:on...lent .;.,.~Way !'tan.

.

Easy Terms!
.F.ree Delivery!

PRICES
GET THE
AXE!

16 oz.
Reg. 82c

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Only

10 Blades
Reg. 51.89

Reg. $1.49

6 oz. with Sprayer
Reg. $1.71
ONLY

DR. SCHOLL'S
AIR PIU.O INSOLES
1 Pair .
Reg. 79c

24 Tablets
Reg. 98c
ONLY

- ·,

24

REXALL
HAIR SPRAY

oz .

Reg . S4.50

13 oz .
Reg . 99c

PREPARATION H
SUPPOSITORIES

EFFERDENT TABLETS
DENTIJRE CLEANSER

Box ol 1.2
Reg . 51.99

eSTER EO

40 Tablets
Reg. Sl.49

ONLY

ONL~. 86~

MASON RIRNITURE'

HERMAN GRATE .
773-5592
MASON, W. VA.

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ALCO.REX
RUBBING ALCOHOL

RAZOR BLADES.

A'ITEND MEETING
Several members of Mary
Shrine 37, Order of the White ·
Shrine of Jerusalem, were in
Gallipolis Tuesday night for
the ceremonial of Lafayette
Shrine. Goi~g from the
Pomeroy Sh~ine were Mr. and
Mrs. Allen Hughes, Mr. and
Mrs . Jesse Brinker, Mrs .
Marie Hawkins, Mrs. Edith
Hu ts inpiller , Mrs. Pearl
Reynolds, Mrs. Erma Yoho,
Mrs. Ne llie Casto and Mrs.
Beatrice Robson.

ZENITH

,-*N,Fi LANKUIII

10 Capsules
Reg. $1.95

Meigs FHA
has meeting

Baskets,
Be Filled,
Grass - all the

SHOPPING

to

remember sh u t~ in s at Easter.
II was noted that the white

to

Baskets

l
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•3 EA.

POMEROY, OHIO

FLOWERS,
.CANDY,
TOYS

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either increase or decrease the monthly budget amount.

SHIRTS

$7.95

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is determined by previous usage history and will be

27 ONLY

· TO

IH're

S'i.'12~theart

third runner-up Vicki Jordan .
They were also presented with
a bouquet and savings bond by
Scott Reuter and Semaki
Corfias.
The four girls are all
members of Bethel 73,
Gallipolis, of the International
Order of Job's Daughters.
They were judged on perso nality, appearance, and
talent.
Judges were Mrs. Lola Mae
Suiter, secretary, and past
inatron of Gallipolis Chapter
283, Order of Eastern Star, and
past grand matron of Ohio,

hallway.
served at the March 18 meeting
Mrs. Sally Lambert, Mrs. with all fathers to be counted
Jackie Brickles and Mrs. twice. AI that time a program
Bonnie LeMaster were named will be presented by the
to the nominating committee. Department of Natural
It was noted that the senior Resour ces. The sixth grade
citizens are coming to the won the attendance award.
school each .. Wednesday
The nag ceremony· to open
morning to instruct the sixth the meeting was given by the
graders in square dancing.
boy scouts with the junior Girl
Father's night will be ob- Scout troop at Salisbury giving
two skits, one on the scout
promise and the other on world
CHILD BORN
friend ship. Delores Will gave
Mr. and Mrs. Don Roush, Rt. the devotiuns.
3, Pomeroy, are announcing
the birth of a son, Feb. 11 at the
KEY WOMEN MEET
Holzer Medical Center. The 8
Preparations
for the World
lbs., 1 oz. baby has been named
Day
of
Prayer
service
March 7
Michael Wayne. Mr. and Mrs.
Roush have another son, at the Rutland United
Jeffrey, five. Grandparents Methodist Church by Church
are Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Roush, Women United of Meigs County
Rt. 3, Pomeroy and Mr. and will begin with a meeting of
Mrs. Harry Lodwick, Chester. key women of tile churches of
Mrs. Harry Lodwick, Sr., the county Friday. The key
Chester,
is
a
great- women are asked to meet at
1:30p.m. at the Rutland United
grandmotller.
Methodist Church by Mrs.
Thomas Bentz, president.

twelve month (&gt;eriod . The annual consumption figure

Long sleeve styles .in ·S.M- L.
Values to 58.98.

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the meeting attended by those
named and Miss Rhoda Hall ,
Mrs. Fred Gibbs, Mrs. Pearl
Hoffman, Mrs. Louise Davis,
Mrs. Allen Hughes, Mrs .
Charles White, and Mrs. Leora
Sigman.
ELECT A CIRCLE
Reviewed at the meeting of
the EJecta Circle at the home of
Mrs. Elizabeth Slavin was a
list of items to be collected for
the Piqua Baptist Home and
the Trumbull Baptist Ministry.
The items are to be taken to the
Women 's Conference of the
Ohio Baptist Convention to be
held in Columbus in June.
The circle members also
made arrangements to collect
items for a layette lor the

PTA will help purchase games

customer's annual consumption spread equally over a

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right, Erma Smith, Americanism chairwoman for the
Auxmary •. Mrs . Grace Pratt, president; Paula Kloes, junior
Amencarusm. chairperson, and Mrs. Veda Davis, junior
aciiVlhes ch~trwoman lor the Auxiliary. The Brownies sang
several palrtollc songs for tile visiting Auxiliary members.

DeMola1J selects '75

~;~...read

TO
ALL OUR
CUSTOMERS:

· Assortment of

KING SIZE

Cull eg(', spent the

patriotic Jl'Ogr&amp;m presented for the Brownies were left to

customers who are experiencing difficulty paying

Blue -Pink -While

Ott e rb ~'in

we ek t""llcl

II

TOE SOX

SWEAT SHIRTS

as his recen t acquittal. Mrs.

COME IN .:A.ND
LOOK OVER OUR BARGAIN
TABLE
SHOES 1h PRICE

Society plans projects

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BOYS' PANTS

and se ntence to prison as well
c1

parents, Mr . mul Mrs. Ph il protocol.
Ohlinger .
Mrs. Moore served comely.

Phone 985-3537

Toddler Hooded

hi ~

classmate, Miss La urie lltfe. Hort on described the book as

Smalley's Gift Shop

$298

Wail"""

Mi ss Ann Ohlinger and

Flowers, etc.

25C

Dwi ght

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pres ided wilh members givin g
the collect in tmisml. ~.. or the
progra111 Mrs. Dewey Horl 011
l'evlewed '' I.ieutemmt CH iley' '
by .John Sack. The book, according to the reviewer, is I,t.

ciden ts which led up to hi s trial

Noveltys, Gifts,

CHOICE OF JO COLORS

wu s

at a meet ing Wednesday at .thr

In that Bowling Green·
Western Michigan game, Jeff
Montgomery hit a jump shot at
the buzZj!r to give Bowling
Green their win.
The Broncos had led through
the first half and held a 33-21
margin' with 3:50 left, but
Bowling Green scored six
straight points to cut Western's
advantage to :!WI at intermission.
The teams were deadlocked
6U2 with 41 seconds left.
Montgomery sank two free
throws 14 seconds later and
Western's Jeff Tyson tied it up
once more with two of his own,
but Montgomery's final basket
gave the game to the Ohio
team.
Skip Howard led Bowling
Green scorers with 24 while
Montgomery added 16 and
Cornelius Cash had 13. Tyson
was high for the Broncos with
19, followed by Paul Griffin
with 13 points and a game-high
16 rebounds.
The win gave Bowling Green
an 8-4 mark In the conference
and a 14-8 season record, while
WeStern slipped to 6-5 in the
MAC and I~ overall.
Toledo, also with four losses
In the MAC, hit 59 per cent of
their field goal attempts In the
second half, to only 29 per cent
accuracy
for
Central

KNiniNG
WORSTED
YARN
to oz. Skeins

Hl'c ce

the Middl cport · Jjtenu·y Club

town 76-64, Point Park (Pa.)

II.

RED HEART

,J ohn

Wl•lcomed in to membership of

fi ghtin g in Vietnam , lhe in-

Chester1 Ohio

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hold second place

the only team in the conference
which can lose a league game
and still win · the circuit
championship.
Captain Ricky1Gates scored
14 points Wednesday night for
the Golden Flashes, 2-9 in MAC
play and 4-17 for aU games, and
teammate Tom Brabson tallied

Lyla Cal . 88 Nev .-Reno 77
. Portlnd 91 St . Mrtin 'S 72
Occid ental 87 Whittier 82
Redlands 71 Pomona 58

BATH
TOWELS

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Redskins
Sport Parade
By MILTON RlaiMAN
UPI Splrll Editor

NEW YORK (UP! ) - This wasn't the summer of '42, more like
the spring of '55. God was in his heaven and a little boy honestly
felt he was up tllere, too, because never before in his We had he
ever seen a dream come true like this one.
The kid who couldn't really believe It all was Steve Garvey, six· .
year-old son of the Brooklyn Dodgers' bus driver, Joseph Garvey.
II was the first lime young Garvey had ever been to spring
training and what made the whole thing more memorable was
the fact he had been designated balboy and outfitted with a
miniature Dodgers' uniform. Between keeping track of tile
basel:lalls and straightening out the bats, Steve Garvey blinked
his eyes more than once to marvel at the incredible panorama in
frOnt of hlm.
Just look out there in tile outfield!
Carl Erskine, Johnny F'odres, Billy Loes, Joe Black, Kenny
Lehman, Clem Labine, Roger Craig, Don Bessent and Ed
Roebuck are all sprinling slde-by&lt;~ide, gelling their legs in
shape. Running last, naturally, is big Newk- Don Newcombe.
And isn't that Tom Lasorda pitching batting practice? Nobody
enjoys pitching batting practice more than he does.
That's JaCkie Robinson In tile cage hitting, and standing
around the cage waiting their turns are Duke Snider, Roy
Campanella, Pee Wee Reese, Jim Gilliam and Carl F'urillo.
If this is some kind of dream, It's a truly incredible one, and
Steve Garvey sllenUy pleads that nobody wakes him up.
"The biggest thing any little boy or li!Ue girl has is
imagination," says Steve Garvey now, 20 years later, "and if you
happen to be. that litUe boy and have never seen a ballplayer
before, that first time is awe inspiring.
"You expect them to be so big because you've always put them
up on a Hille pedestal, and aU of a sudden you meet a Gil HOdges
and he's just like your Dad. I remember him as a very warm
human being, insid.e and out. He asked me to play catch orrce,
and I said, 'Gee, Gil Hodges!'
"'lYe played catch. It was tremendous. This is where you say to
yourself, 'I'd lllleto be a ballplayer some day when I grow up, I'd
lllle to be lllle Gil Hodges."'
Steve Garvey reminds you of Gil Hodges in some respects,
the slmllarlly going deeper than the mere fact he's playing
Hodges' old first-base position now with the Dodgers. Garvey has
the same type lemreramenl and outlook Hodges had. He also has
the same raw ability. If anything, the solidly put-together 26year-old Tampa, Fla., native is a better hitter than Hodges was
although he doesn 't have as much power.
Hodges put In 18yearsln the big leagues, batted .300 only twice
and never was designated MVP. The 26-year-old Garvey, in only
his fourth full big league season last year, wound up the National
League's MVP after batting .312, driving in 111 runs and hilling
21 homers. Then he went out and hit .381 against the Oakland A's,
leading all tile World Series' regulars on both sides.
Yeal'llback when he was batboy, Steve Garvey, looking for the
assurance of somebody he knew, would stand right next to the
driver each lime he boarded the Dodgers' bus. His father still
drives the team bus in. the spring.
"Now I sllln the back so I can ride the driver," laughs the
Dodger first-baseman.
Don't believe that. Sieve Garvey respects his father and
anybody else who earns hla respect. Insofar as baseball is concerned, he admires Pete Rose for h1s tremendous dedication to
the game. "I think he has made a positive Influence on baseball
and on the fans," 'lilY• Garvey.
Twenty years have gone by since he first "joined" the
Dodgers. He knows them aU from way, way hack, Walter and
Peter O'Malley, AI Campanis, Red Patterson, Lee Scott, Nobe
Kawano and the rest.
"I remember you when you were six or seven," Walt Alston
said to Garvey when he reported to the Dodgers as a player for
the first Ume a few yeal'll back.
Steve Garvey is a relatively young .man yet but he grows
nostalgic when he talks about the "old Dodgerll" lllle Sandy
Koufax, Don Drysdale and Gil Hodges. He thinks back to them
and doing that makes him especially aware·of the way he treats
youngalel'll coming over to talk with him or ask him for his
autograph.
"What I try to do now is treat Uttle boys and girls the way Gil
Hodges treated me," he says. "There was a time In the '60's
When It was fashionable to be anti-bero. I think now we're gelling
back to the so-called 'hero' type. Young people are looking for
somebody to look up to now. They are the foundation of this
country-the youth. I! there's anything I can do to make them
any stronger, physically or spiritually, thaJ) I think it's my duty
to dolt. I love doing it. It comes naturally tome. "
College Basketball Results

8y United Prtn International

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Euf
Bowdo in 97 Gordon 51
Brandeis 85 RPI 83

Brklvn Coli 89 Pratt 82
Bridgepor t 7'1 lona 68
Canislus 11 1 Vllanva 81
· Cheyrtv 86 .Sh lppensbg 6'
Clarion 87 Alliance 67
Cornell 101 Buffalo av
Conn . 94 Boston U _ 79
Delaware 82 Bu cknell 76

Oic " lnson 53 Al br ight SO
E . Strdsbg 114 Kulztwn 71
Esse-x 73 Wentwor t h 72
Frnkln &amp; .Yj rsht 76 Jun i ata 50
Gannon 15 Youngstown 64
GeneSeo !t. 11 5 Houghton too
Grove Citv 62 St. Vince 59
Holy Cross 96 N ew Hamp . 85
Kean 67 Trenton St . 57
Lafayette 7l Leh igh 60
LIU 61 F . Dcknsn -Rthrfd 57
M i llersvl 86 Mansfield 76
M i ddleb ury 74 Amhers t 6.5
LeMoyne 77 Al fred 59
New Haven 107 SE M a ss . 83
Phila TeK 66 Dre xel 57
P i11Sburgh 80 N iagara 65
Pt sdm St . 81 Oswg o St . 61
R i der 66 Gettysburg 62
Salem St . 82 Curr y 76
Seton Halt 59 wag ner s 1
Slip-pry R: ck 78 Ca l. P a . 17
Springf iel d 104 Am In t i 90
St . Bonn ie 93 Rutgers 9
Suffolk BD MIT 78
Susquehanna 69 Scranton 66
Swarthmor e 89 U rs in us 75
W . Conn . 100 Coast Guard 90
Wayhsbg 96 Wst mnstr , Pa . 74
South
Berry 86 Pi edmont 78
Bllrmne 62 Thos More 60
Clemson as·Ga . Te ch 69
El iz City , Va . Union 71
Ga . Sou thern 98 Mercer 78
Geotwn DC 90 St . Frn Pa . 7 1
,Gui!frd 98 UNC -Wilm 72
Maryland 70 Virg in ia 51

N .C. St. 92 Duke 78
St . .Auoustn 94 Lvngstne 92
UNC -Ashvl 73 Mars Hill 68
Wake Forest 78 Davidson 69
Wm . &amp; Mary 67 VMI' 66
Wrigh t St. 80 No . Ky . St . 78
Midwest
Akron 97 Bflo St. 6(1
Albion 91 Adrian 11
Aquinas 71 Hope 67
Augsbg 92 Macalstr 66
Bwlng Grn 66 W . M ich . 64
Calvin 82 Kalamazoo 73
Dayton 78 Xavier 0 . 67
E . Mich. 84 Duqu esne 14
Earlham 78 Findlay 76
Evansville 91 DePauw 60
Fairfld a.c Clev-e St. 7S '
Grnd Val St . 69 Frrs Sl . 64
Ind. Cent 72 Wabash 69
Kan . St. 65 Nebraska -64
Marl,a n u Franklin 71
.
M faml 0 . 52 Kent St . SO .
Missouri 8'1 Kansas 12
Minn. · Oul 89 St. Olaf 88
Moorhed St . " Bemdii St . 85
Oakland 94 Northwood 81
Olivet 84 Aim.- 7S
Oshksh
Stevens Pt . 9

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Platt "YI 81 La Crosse 70
Rolla so Harr i s 51
Spr ing Arbor 97 Ti ffin 84
Stout (113 Superior 79
S1. x a v ier 72 Trntv Chris 70
St . Norbert 87 L oras 73
Tol edo 90 Cen1 . Mich . 80
Valparaiso 87 Butler 77
Southwest
Husln 90 St . Mry ' s Tex . n
Okla . St . 95 Iowa St . 70
· West
Colorado 90 Oklahoma 87
Nev . -LV 123 Pepperdine 86

By United Press lnlernallonal
Miami University, tied for
second place in the Mid·
American Conference, scored
a key victory Wednesday night
by downing Kent State 52-M
and upping its reoord to 7-4 in
tile loop.
Rod Dieringer's 14 points
powered tile Miami Redskins
to tlleir win and paved the way
for. Miaml's encounter with
Toledo Saturday.
MAC-leading Bow ling Green,
a 116-64 winner over Western
Michigan Wednesday night, is

Southern gals
rout Eastern
The Southern girls basket·
ball team defeated the Eastern
girls at Eastern last night 4223.
It was Southern's fifth
straight victory without a
defeat tllis year.
Southern jumped to a 16-10
lead after one period and held
the Eastern gals scoreless the
second quarter to lead at the
half 22-10.
In the second half the Southern starters were taken out by
coach CoMee Andrews to give
her reserves a chance to do
some scoring of their own and
tllat is what they did by winning going away.
The leading scorers for
Southern were Cindy Roush
and Cheryl Larkins with 13
each. Others scoring for the
Tornados were Jean Rltchh8rt
10, Jennifer Mugrave, Nancy
Roy and Oleryl Roseberry
with 2 points each.
The leading reboundel'll were
Becky
Sayre,
Brenda
Lawrence, and Mugrave.
Scoring · for Eastern were
Tammy Fitch with 9, Jull
Whitehead 4, VIcki Epple 4,
Jan Wilson 2, Ktm Batey 2, an.d
Rachel Hunter witll 2 points.

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basketball action.
Otherwise, Spring Arbor
(Mich.) defeated 111fln 8'1-14,
GBMoli (Pa). downed Youngs.

Literary club welcomes membe.r
Mr s.

oullliot Steubenville 1IIHI and
Cue Western edged by Thiel

home of Mrs. Nau M oo l't~.

Mrs.

5W5.

Calley 's own s tory of
VISIT PARNTS'

FLAG PRESENTATION - An American flag was
Jl'esented to Pomeroy Brownie Troop 76 at a meeting
Tuesday at the Pomeroy Elementary School. Mrs. Gertrude
&lt;;asto, left, leader of tile troop, accepted the flag from Pam
Powers, president of tile American Legion Auxiliary, Drew
Webster Post 39, Junior Unit. Others participating in a

World Day of Prayer service
at the Rutland United
Metllodist Church March 7 by ·
Church Women United was
announced at the Tuesday
night meetings or the circles of
the B. H. Sanborn Missionary
Society of tile Middleport First
Baptist Church .
Planned at the circle
meetings were several spring
projects.
LOVE JOY CIRCLE
The Love Joy Circle meeting
with Mrs. David Darst made
arrangements to make a
layette lo take to the Sanborn
meeting in April. Mrs. Harold
Hubbard presided in the absence of Mrs. Willis Anthony
who is iii and opened with a
poem, 'jTo Love One Another';.
For devotions, Mrs. Fred

Last week the Public Utilities Commission of
Ohio, all Ohio utilities, and interested consumer

Colors &amp; Styles

groups worked out an agreement to help those

for a missionary project will-be
colle ~ted by the Dorcas Circle
members and taken to the
April meeting for a work
session, it was decided when
the gro up met Tuesday night at
the home of Mrs. Dale
Walburn .
Scholarship student dues
were collected and plans were
made to remember Charles
Bennett on his birthday.
Devotions by Mrs. Steve
Skaggs were from Phil. awith
a meditation, " Blueberry
Hill". Mrs. John Werner gave
the program using material )In
George Washington and
Abraham Uncon . Prayer by
Mrs. Beulah White concluded

" Let Your Ught
Thank-you notes for holiday
'.)'
remembrances were read from
The Meigs Chapter Order of
Mrs . Maud Betz, Mrs . DeMolay held their Sweetheart
Raymond Saxton, Mrs. James contest Dec. 31, at the Mid·
Murray, Miss Paula Sarver, dleport Masonic Hall.
Judson College student, Rev.
The crown was won by Miss
Thomas Olsen, missionary in Lynne Gauze, daughter of Mr.
Philadelphia, and Mr. and Mrs. and Mrs. Paul Gauze,
Wally Davis.
Gallipolis. Miss Gauze was
Mrs .
Manning
Kloes escorted by Scott Reuter,
presented a program, "Always senior councilor of the chapter.
a Missionary" and Mrs. Darst She was presented a bouquet
served a salad course to those and $5() U.S. Savings Bond by
named and Mrs. Charles Bert Moshier, maste r of
Edwards, Mrs. Tony Fowler ceremonies.
and Mrs. Arland King.
First runner-up was awarded
DORCAS CIRCLE
to Marlene Harrison, second
Old sheets to make bandages runner-up Beth Layne, and

Pair

their gas and electric bills.

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One provision of the agreement was instituted

Valuesto$9.00
Slim-Reg.- Husky
8-18

in an effort to prevent disconnections to hardship
cases. Columbus and Southern Ohio Ele~tric Company's
Credit Department, as it has done in the past, will

$499

endeavor to work out payment plans with ttardship
cases such as the elderly, low income customers and

LADIES'

those on fixed incomes.

POLYESTER

PULL ON PANTS
Assortment of Colors

$199

'5"

Columbus and Southern urges these hardship

I

cases to contact the Company and indicate possible

-

alternative arrangements.

MIDDLEPORT
DEPARTMENT STORE

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..

On Friday, January 31 our Company

,

announced that it will also participate in the agreement

, P.M.
Open Fri. and ....,
Sat. Until8:00

by making a budget payment plan available to all

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residential customers.

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Kerm's l(orner Friday &amp; Saturday

"

The budget payment plan is based on a

Money for games will be
given to each classroom
teacher at the Salisbury
Elementary School, it was
decided at the Tuesday night
meeting of the Salisbury PTA.
The PTA voted to give each
teacher $15. In addition it was
decided to proceed with
lighting under the recently
constructed canopy which
extends from the roadway
where buses unload to tile Iron I
door of the school. A report on
the recent meeting !'f the Meigs
County Council of Parents and
Teachers was given by Mrs . .
Barbara Fry, delegate.
Founder's Day was observed
with the recognition of past
presidents. As a specialtribule
to the men and women who
have served as president, the
·PTA voted to buy a plaque
which will have the names of
pasl presidents inscribed and
tile new ones added each year
to be hung in the school

'•'...

altered periodically when automatic reviews will

·.Men's Baseball

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Details of the plan and your monthly budget

Permanent press
stripes,
checks,
plains. S.M- L.

•

VAL.

EA.

•

amount will be included with an application in your

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March bill. The plan will become effective April 1.

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To enroll in the bud9et payment plan you

SPECIAL!

simply return the application to the Company.

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These provisions are our way of letting you
knQw that we care about providing not only reliable,

MEN'S KNIT

i•

but continuous electric service.

SPORT SHIRTS

Filled

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i

·"ew York .Ciothi~g House

COLUMBUS AND SOUTHERN OHIO ELECTRIC COMPANY

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MARK BIRTHDAY
The family of Mrs. George
Nesselroad, Sr., gathered at
her home on Laurel St. Sunday
to honor her Of\ her birthday
anniversa ry. Attending the
birthday dinner were Mr.· and
Mrs. George Nesselroad, Jr.,
and son, Michael, Mr. and Mrs.
Lanny Jenkins, Mr. and Mrs.
. Gerald Rought and daughters,
Gerri, Stephanie, and Kellie
and Mrs. Mildred Milch.

Christian

Cen ter and

with

unc

enli ghte ning

and

(DISCONTINUED STYLES)

Ann' s · educalional onaspecl."&gt;ufurm y

THE SHOE BOX
MIDDLEPORT OHIO

THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY, SUNDAY

cr oss quota has been met and

members were reminded that

a farewell party will be held
Sunday at 7 p.m. for Rev. and
Mrs. Steve Skaggs. Mrs . Milton
Hood presided and opened the
mee ting with a meditation
"Two Ears and One Mouth":
She thanked those who assisted
with the fellowship tea .
Cherry pie was served to
those named and Mrs. John
Fultz, Mrs. Fred Hoffman ,
Mrs. Isabelle Win ebren ner,
Mrs. Eiecta Souders, Mrs.
Eloise Wilson, Mrs. Elizabeth
Gardner, Mrs. Bert Bodimer
and a guest, Mrs. Edi th Sauer.

David Phillips, band director
at Kyger Creek High School,
and Liz Blackner, District
DeMolay Sweetheart and first
runner-up in the State
Sweetheart contest. Immediately following the contest
a party and dance was held.
DeMolay and adults at·
tending were Bert Moshier,
Scoll Reute r , Mike Hen·
dri ckson, Carl Myers, Bill
Quickie , Scmaki Corflas,
Randy Keller. Don Vaughn,
Oliver Taylor, Mike Belz ,
Herbert Carson, David Canterbury, Dennis Wolfe, Bill
Meek , Mrs. Sarah Moshier,
Mr. Robert King and Mr . and
Mrs. Paul Gauze.

The Meigs Chapter, Future
Homemakers of America,
gathered at the home of Pam
Holcomb Thursday night for a
valentine party.
Streamers, heart cutouts,
balloons and flowers decorated
the Holcomb home and a
valentine exchange was a
feature of the party. Heartshaped cookies, potato chips,
dip and punch were served .
Pam
Attending
were
Holcomb, Opal Dyer, Lorain
McElhaney, Vicki Johnston,
Melody Scaggs, Joyce Bing,
Ci ndy Dorst, Brenda Hysell,
Penny Hysell and Miss Leda
Mae Kraeuter , advisor. Guests
were Marcia and Bill Holcomb.

goodies you need .

COLOR TV

EASTER
LILIES, TULIPS,
HYACINTHS
.
.

•

OUR PACKAGED FLOWER

•BLACK
.......&amp;

and GARDEN SEEDS ARE HERE

WHITE TV

"'JHONif
~--· .

. 200-202 East Mitln Sf.
· PO~EROY. OHI~

O,lrN I'RIOIIT lo SATUiiUA y '"'"" r.

U... Our

c:on...lent .;.,.~Way !'tan.

.

Easy Terms!
.F.ree Delivery!

PRICES
GET THE
AXE!

16 oz.
Reg. 82c

'

Only

10 Blades
Reg. 51.89

Reg. $1.49

6 oz. with Sprayer
Reg. $1.71
ONLY

DR. SCHOLL'S
AIR PIU.O INSOLES
1 Pair .
Reg. 79c

24 Tablets
Reg. 98c
ONLY

- ·,

24

REXALL
HAIR SPRAY

oz .

Reg . S4.50

13 oz .
Reg . 99c

PREPARATION H
SUPPOSITORIES

EFFERDENT TABLETS
DENTIJRE CLEANSER

Box ol 1.2
Reg . 51.99

eSTER EO

40 Tablets
Reg. Sl.49

ONLY

ONL~. 86~

MASON RIRNITURE'

HERMAN GRATE .
773-5592
MASON, W. VA.

.•

!

.I

ALCO.REX
RUBBING ALCOHOL

RAZOR BLADES.

A'ITEND MEETING
Several members of Mary
Shrine 37, Order of the White ·
Shrine of Jerusalem, were in
Gallipolis Tuesday night for
the ceremonial of Lafayette
Shrine. Goi~g from the
Pomeroy Sh~ine were Mr. and
Mrs. Allen Hughes, Mr. and
Mrs . Jesse Brinker, Mrs .
Marie Hawkins, Mrs. Edith
Hu ts inpiller , Mrs. Pearl
Reynolds, Mrs. Erma Yoho,
Mrs. Ne llie Casto and Mrs.
Beatrice Robson.

ZENITH

,-*N,Fi LANKUIII

10 Capsules
Reg. $1.95

Meigs FHA
has meeting

Baskets,
Be Filled,
Grass - all the

SHOPPING

to

remember sh u t~ in s at Easter.
II was noted that the white

to

Baskets

l
••

•3 EA.

POMEROY, OHIO

FLOWERS,
.CANDY,
TOYS

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'
••'

either increase or decrease the monthly budget amount.

SHIRTS

$7.95

•

is determined by previous usage history and will be

27 ONLY

· TO

IH're

S'i.'12~theart

third runner-up Vicki Jordan .
They were also presented with
a bouquet and savings bond by
Scott Reuter and Semaki
Corfias.
The four girls are all
members of Bethel 73,
Gallipolis, of the International
Order of Job's Daughters.
They were judged on perso nality, appearance, and
talent.
Judges were Mrs. Lola Mae
Suiter, secretary, and past
inatron of Gallipolis Chapter
283, Order of Eastern Star, and
past grand matron of Ohio,

hallway.
served at the March 18 meeting
Mrs. Sally Lambert, Mrs. with all fathers to be counted
Jackie Brickles and Mrs. twice. AI that time a program
Bonnie LeMaster were named will be presented by the
to the nominating committee. Department of Natural
It was noted that the senior Resour ces. The sixth grade
citizens are coming to the won the attendance award.
school each .. Wednesday
The nag ceremony· to open
morning to instruct the sixth the meeting was given by the
graders in square dancing.
boy scouts with the junior Girl
Father's night will be ob- Scout troop at Salisbury giving
two skits, one on the scout
promise and the other on world
CHILD BORN
friend ship. Delores Will gave
Mr. and Mrs. Don Roush, Rt. the devotiuns.
3, Pomeroy, are announcing
the birth of a son, Feb. 11 at the
KEY WOMEN MEET
Holzer Medical Center. The 8
Preparations
for the World
lbs., 1 oz. baby has been named
Day
of
Prayer
service
March 7
Michael Wayne. Mr. and Mrs.
Roush have another son, at the Rutland United
Jeffrey, five. Grandparents Methodist Church by Church
are Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Roush, Women United of Meigs County
Rt. 3, Pomeroy and Mr. and will begin with a meeting of
Mrs. Harry Lodwick, Chester. key women of tile churches of
Mrs. Harry Lodwick, Sr., the county Friday. The key
Chester,
is
a
great- women are asked to meet at
1:30p.m. at the Rutland United
grandmotller.
Methodist Church by Mrs.
Thomas Bentz, president.

twelve month (&gt;eriod . The annual consumption figure

Long sleeve styles .in ·S.M- L.
Values to 58.98.

'

the meeting attended by those
named and Miss Rhoda Hall ,
Mrs. Fred Gibbs, Mrs. Pearl
Hoffman, Mrs. Louise Davis,
Mrs. Allen Hughes, Mrs .
Charles White, and Mrs. Leora
Sigman.
ELECT A CIRCLE
Reviewed at the meeting of
the EJecta Circle at the home of
Mrs. Elizabeth Slavin was a
list of items to be collected for
the Piqua Baptist Home and
the Trumbull Baptist Ministry.
The items are to be taken to the
Women 's Conference of the
Ohio Baptist Convention to be
held in Columbus in June.
The circle members also
made arrangements to collect
items for a layette lor the

PTA will help purchase games

customer's annual consumption spread equally over a

'

right, Erma Smith, Americanism chairwoman for the
Auxmary •. Mrs . Grace Pratt, president; Paula Kloes, junior
Amencarusm. chairperson, and Mrs. Veda Davis, junior
aciiVlhes ch~trwoman lor the Auxiliary. The Brownies sang
several palrtollc songs for tile visiting Auxiliary members.

DeMola1J selects '75

~;~...read

TO
ALL OUR
CUSTOMERS:

· Assortment of

KING SIZE

Cull eg(', spent the

patriotic Jl'Ogr&amp;m presented for the Brownies were left to

customers who are experiencing difficulty paying

Blue -Pink -While

Ott e rb ~'in

we ek t""llcl

II

TOE SOX

SWEAT SHIRTS

as his recen t acquittal. Mrs.

COME IN .:A.ND
LOOK OVER OUR BARGAIN
TABLE
SHOES 1h PRICE

Society plans projects

----------------·--"!

BOYS' PANTS

and se ntence to prison as well
c1

parents, Mr . mul Mrs. Ph il protocol.
Ohlinger .
Mrs. Moore served comely.

Phone 985-3537

Toddler Hooded

hi ~

classmate, Miss La urie lltfe. Hort on described the book as

Smalley's Gift Shop

$298

Wail"""

Mi ss Ann Ohlinger and

Flowers, etc.

25C

Dwi ght

·

pres ided wilh members givin g
the collect in tmisml. ~.. or the
progra111 Mrs. Dewey Horl 011
l'evlewed '' I.ieutemmt CH iley' '
by .John Sack. The book, according to the reviewer, is I,t.

ciden ts which led up to hi s trial

Noveltys, Gifts,

CHOICE OF JO COLORS

wu s

at a meet ing Wednesday at .thr

In that Bowling Green·
Western Michigan game, Jeff
Montgomery hit a jump shot at
the buzZj!r to give Bowling
Green their win.
The Broncos had led through
the first half and held a 33-21
margin' with 3:50 left, but
Bowling Green scored six
straight points to cut Western's
advantage to :!WI at intermission.
The teams were deadlocked
6U2 with 41 seconds left.
Montgomery sank two free
throws 14 seconds later and
Western's Jeff Tyson tied it up
once more with two of his own,
but Montgomery's final basket
gave the game to the Ohio
team.
Skip Howard led Bowling
Green scorers with 24 while
Montgomery added 16 and
Cornelius Cash had 13. Tyson
was high for the Broncos with
19, followed by Paul Griffin
with 13 points and a game-high
16 rebounds.
The win gave Bowling Green
an 8-4 mark In the conference
and a 14-8 season record, while
WeStern slipped to 6-5 in the
MAC and I~ overall.
Toledo, also with four losses
In the MAC, hit 59 per cent of
their field goal attempts In the
second half, to only 29 per cent
accuracy
for
Central

KNiniNG
WORSTED
YARN
to oz. Skeins

Hl'c ce

the Middl cport · Jjtenu·y Club

town 76-64, Point Park (Pa.)

II.

RED HEART

,J ohn

Wl•lcomed in to membership of

fi ghtin g in Vietnam , lhe in-

Chester1 Ohio

_________

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hold second place

the only team in the conference
which can lose a league game
and still win · the circuit
championship.
Captain Ricky1Gates scored
14 points Wednesday night for
the Golden Flashes, 2-9 in MAC
play and 4-17 for aU games, and
teammate Tom Brabson tallied

Lyla Cal . 88 Nev .-Reno 77
. Portlnd 91 St . Mrtin 'S 72
Occid ental 87 Whittier 82
Redlands 71 Pomona 58

BATH
TOWELS

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\

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•

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Showerfetes Karen Lisle
A bridal shower honoring
Karen Johnson Lisle, recent
bride of Keith Lisle, was held
Sunday at tl!e Heath United
Methodist Church. Hostesses
were Mrs . Marilyn Swan
Anderson and Mrs. Margie
Harris Blake.
A valent in e

motU was

carried out in the decorations
and punch, nuts, candy and
candies were served. Games
were played with prizes going
to Mrs. M. L. French and Mrs.
Gary Swope. Mrs . Gra ce
Johnson won the door prize .
The guest list included Mrs.
Grace Johnson, Miss Sandy
Johnson, Mrs. Donald Lisle,
Mrs. Bob Byer, Mrs. Charles
Byer. Mrs. Edward Blake,
Mrs. Charles Bradbury, Mrs.
Bernard Fultz, Mrs. Kenneth

Cook Mrs. Ernest Frazer,
Mrs. Earl D•venport, Mrs.
Robert Bumgarner . Mrs.
1

John Krawsczyn, Mrs. Steve
Hotichin s, Mrs . 0&lt;-wey Horl on,

Mrs . 'Gal')' Swope, Mrs. Edward

Kilchen

and

Robso n, Mrs. James Clal worthy, Mrs.

CharlL~s

YmmJ..(,

Mrs M. L. French. Mrs. K~i th
Goble, Me,•. Bobby Archer ,
Mrs . Willi am -i\uit and Merri
Au! I.

Newman Burdette.
Mrs. Gene Murray , Mrs.
Evelyn Bauer, Mrs. Earie

RETURNS HOME
f!UT LAND - Mrs. Margaret
Parsons,
Rutland , has
returned home following her
recuperation from surgery at

the Holzer Medical Center at
the home or her daughter, Mrs.
David Wiseman, and family at
Woodsfi eld . She plans to return
to her reg ular duties at the
Salem Cent&lt;r School in the
nea r future.

The "NOTHING NECKLACE"
The
" NOTHIN G
NE CKLACE" proves that
less Is more! We cons ider
th is to be the most femin ine
item in o.ur Jewelry Line
th is season!
Suc h a touch of "sparkle"

worn at the neckline. so
chic, so smart , so fabulous!

Other New

Spring
JeweiiY
Chain Bibs

Bracelets- s:z .ao up
Bangles. Cameos, Stone
Set

large Lockets

large Crosses
Also Simulated Turquoise
Jewelry

Bracelets , Pendants,
Pierced Earrings

~

~ ~~~

Pierced Eorrlngs- $2.00 up
Hoops. Pierced Look- $2 .00

Saints plan for new year

By Helen and Sue ,Bottel

By Goldie Clendeula
He's AChattaoooga Chew-Chew!
PORTLAND - After looking
Dear Rap :
back over the past year, .the
I can understand why a teacher wouldn't want a bunch of Reorganized Church of Jesus
elementary school kids popping their gum or sticking it in Christ of Latter Day Saints is
someone's hair.
·
looking ahead now, working
But tell me why this one high school teacher cracks down on tnward more hopes and plans
gum chewers . II she catches you with gum in your mouth, she for the next year, knowing
makes you stay after school and completely clean and wax a there will be problems and
bunch of desks and chairs.
setbacks, to reaching our
I argued I'm not a union man and if I do the jani!Dr's job, the goals.
union will fight it. She ignored me. It could cause a strike, even!
But God has been good tD us
The idea of goind to school is tD learn (and chewing gum as we work !Dgether in helping
helps me concentrate.) It isn't my job doing jani!Drial work. 1 ID build Zion, the Kingdom of
don 't make noises or stick it under my chair. Other high school God on earth; we are a
teachers don't mind.
peculiar people: we do not
What would you suggest? - CHATTANOOGA CHEWER
discourage easily.
Recently we had our third
Dear Chat :
class in "Leadership" or public
The easy way: park your gum behind your ear (or wherever) speaking - with Jim Cleland
before class, and save your righteous indignation for something coordina!Dr and Joe SIDbart,
that really matters. - HELEN
ll'esident. This was planned
+++
last year. Weather and road
Dear Chewer :
conditions held us up ; also,
You might win, if you took this case to the principaL But you illness and a death in our
might lose more than you'd gain. Antagonizing a teacher over a midst. We've had good at·
minor rule (even though it seems silly these days) is oo way to tendance with more coming in.
prove you "go to school to learn." - SUE
This leadership program is
++ +
one among the best programs
Dear Helen and Sue:
we've had, perhaps because all
Have you had any good hoaxes lately ' How about printing age groups are combined in
one' - READER
one class rather than being
separated as in Bible School.
Dear Reader:
We see no generation gap. ln
Here's a hoaxer who gave herseU away because she laid it on speaking and evaluating one
!Do thick:
·
another, we learn from each
+++
other, which is the main point.
Rap:
The class meets at 7 p. m.
My girl friend and I share a similar problem .
with a break for 10 minutes and
Her father works with my mother and my father works with refreshments at 8, then
her mother, in different offices. We went tD my Dad's office tD get II'Oceed till 9.
money for the movies, and discovered her mother was not at her
We use the social room
secretary's desk. So we looked inside and found them necking. where chairs can be placed lor
Then we ran out and went to HER father's office. We hid In round table discussion.
the closet waiting for him and my mother (his secretary tD
Freda Middleswart is
return. Sure enough, when they came in they were realloveydovey. As soon as they left on a coffee break, we came home and
are writing to you.
Should we tell our parents we know aU? - BEHIND THE
SCENE
a
A thought for the day:
American poet John Greenleaf
Dear BTS:
Whittier said, "For all sad
words of tongue and pen, the
You aren't quite ready tD write for TV soap operas, but keep
trying. - HELEN AND SUE
saddest are these 'It might
have been." '
+++
Rap:
This is for "Dreads Pity, " who became tame from an ac·
cident and thinks she should break up with the guy who wants tD
lnarry her (because she's oot "perfect").
The guy I'm engaged to wants ME, oot just a perfect figure
or walk.
What I'm trying to say is: your personality hasn'tgot a limp
- it's only in your leg. Soe be yourseU! When YOU don't notice
the Ump, no one else will either. - AUVE AND FEELING .
GREAT

Reva Simms and Emogene
Simms were welcomed into the
membership of the Woman 's
Auxiliary of the Veterans
Memorial Hospital at a

Court Street • Pomeroy

'.

-2 DAYS ONLY8 Beautiful • Good' Quality
AT

-PRICE

1

meeting Tuesday night at the
hospital.
Mrs. Janice Daniels presided
with Mrs. Clara Burris giving
the secretary's report and Mrs.
Nettie Hayes, the treasurer's
report. Mrs. Lucille Leifheit
gave the auxiliary prayer .
Thank you cards were read
from Mildred Mitch and Mrs.
Ethel Guthrie for flowers and
cards during their recent
hospitalization . Mrs. Daniels
reported on progress toward
purchasing several items for
the hospital.
Mrs. Bertha Parker gave the
reading, "The Old Rocking
Chair" and Mrs. Jessie White
conducted a word game won by
Mrs. Jestie Molden and Mrs.
Leona Karr. Names as
hostess·es for March were
Janet Jeffers, Donna Aleshire
and Mrs. Helen Jeffers.
Ice Cream, cookies, nuts,
coffee and iced tea were served
by Mrs . White, Mrs. Jestie
Molden and Mrs. Freda
Molden .

Reg. $54'. '5

Price Special

Mediterranean style mellow Russett velvet
comfortable - and it looks it!

REG. 1329.95

84" Traditional Sofa - comfortable loose
cushion back. high arms with pillows and kick
pleat. bronze matelasse.

$16998

1

REG. 339.95

1h Price Special

1h Price Special

Traditional Style nylon print blue·green &amp;, gold
oil beige background T-cushion · coil springs.

Comfortable .loose cushion back, ball casters,
we'll let vou discribe the color- it's pretty.

!REG. 1389.95

REG. '359.95

1h Pnce Special

$19.398

From Covey, this Mediterranean Sofa features
sturdy construction, loose back pillows. wood ·
accents, and comes covered in a bold orange and
gold matetasse cover.

REG, 399.95
1

1h Price Special

1h Price Special
Early American style Sweefl\eart Back, nylon
fabric in marine blue &amp; gold, good coil spring
construction.

REG. 1329.95

$1&amp;4•

_lh Price Special

'4" Tra,ditional sOfa with kick pleaT, ioo5e :·cush~on back and. arm cus~ions, l

'22498
% Prke Special

cushion style with self covered deck, good co• I spring construction, beautiful teal
blue-gold &amp; green Mafelasse fabric.

leg. •449.95

THURSDAY
JUNIOR American Legion
Auxiliary, Drew Webster 39, 7
p.m. at the home of Mrs. Harry
Davis. Miss Erma Smith, unit
Americanism chairwoman,
will be the guest speaker.
MIDDLEPORT Child
Conservation League, 7:30
p.m. at the Meigs 'Slim and
Trim. Members are asked tD
take a trade stamp book.
REGl.iLAR meeting Twin
City Shrine Club, 7:30p.m. at
Racine Shrine Park.
FRIDAY
SPRING Carnival Friday at
. Harrisonville school from 6:30
to 8:30 p.m. Sponsored by
Harrisooville PTO. King and
queen and prince and princess
will be chosen.
SOUTHERN Local Sehoul
Board, 7:30p.m. at high school.
CEREMONIAL, Mary
Shrine 37, Order of the White
Shrine of Jerusalem, 7:30p.m.
at the Pomeroy Masonic
Temple.

R~GULAR

l

Evans' bought the Jividen
place at Old Town Flats. The
house has been remodeled,
including picture windows, but
the big trees and an old milk
house are still there like when I
used to vistt with Stella Gainer
and her younger sister more
than 50 years ago.
Young folks used ID gather in
homes back then for play
parties. Ullian Mosier Proffitt
and I used to attend with her
older sister, Mabel and Rich
Powell. Rich and Stella are
gone now.
I enjoy reading about what
folk are doing in church work,
especially friends and neighbors on Portland Bot!Dm. Their
theme on Happiness was really
good. Reminds me of the

LETART, W. Va.
Relatives of Mrs . Nancy Bell
Smith, Rt. I, Letart, gathered
Sunday , Feb. 16, at the Krodel
Park Clubhouse in Point
Pleasant to help her celebrate
her 82nd birthday.
Billy Smith asked the
blessing for the buffet dinner.
Mrs. Smith and her children
were seated at a special table
so they could eat !Dgether and
reminisce. It had been quite
some time since all the family
was together.
Mrs. Smith opened many
lovely gifts and all present
sang "Happy Birthday" to
Nancy.
The afternoon was spent in
conversation and taking P\1.'tures. Ahighlight of the pi~lure
taking was one of five
generations of Mrs. Smith's
family .
/

PRESCRIPTION
AND SURGICAL
Support Cente r
*WHEEl CHAIRS
*WALKERS
*CRUTCHES &amp; CANES
BACK IRACES
BEDSIDE COMMODES
* SUPPORT STOCI(iNGS
*TRUSSES
TRACTION EQUIPME~T
* ELASTIC SUPPORTS
*SURGICAl DRESSINGS
* INCONT:NENT
SUPPLIES

**

1

1.39

74¢

Program anniversary

*

The 25th Anniversary of syndicated program featuring
Faith for Today, the oldest Pastor and Mrs. William A.
religious program in television Fagal, is carried today by
history, was marked by the more than 250 stations in the
Sevenlh·Day Adventist . UnitedStatesandeightforeign
Church, Mulberry Heights countries. Produced in
Road, Pomeroy, Feb. 8 with a Thousand Oaks, Calif., by the
special Silver Anniversary Seventh-day Adventist Church,
Offering for the telecast the half·hour television show,
ministry·
in a medical drama format,
First televised over WABC- offers practical Christian
TV, New York, in 1950, the solutions to life's problems.

Ohio Eta Ppi
has
meeting
·'

The birthday of one of the
Meigs County children at the
Gallia County Children's Home
will be observed Sunday and
members of the Ohio Eta Phi
Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority will deliver a cake for
U1e youngster.
During a meeting Tuesday
night conducted by Mrs.
Connie Bailey, president, plans
were also made for the annual
Easter egg hunt . and party
March 25 at the Meigs Community School, Rutland. Mrs.
Janet Downie is service
chairwoman.
Mrs. Debbie Buck, ways and

DISH
CLOTH
SALE

99~

A
· special low price for this
weekend. Pull on polyester pants in a
variety of colon ·and paHerns. Actual

$

Choose

a

LARGE

18"

99

chain for
any purpose

HEIGHTH

PR.
FAMOUS PLANTERS

EARLY AMERICAN

DRY ROASTED
PEANUTS
A 11.17 VALUE

12 OZ.
JAR
NO
SUGAR
NO OILS

•fRENOf'S'
DOG OR CAT

74•..

KEROSENE
LAMP
COMPARE AT '5.95

,

STAINLESS
FLAlWARE

FLEA
COLLAR

Table spoons, serving
spoons, teaspoons, dessert
fortes, saYd, forks, ladles,

REGULAR 51.98

WHILE IT LASTS

butter
knives,
Docoratecl handles.

'

'

•

$}
YOU

TIME!
'

·MlNTSTOil

Michelle and Daphne ;. Mrs.
Billy Smilh. Mrs. Donnie Smith
a nd Donnie, Mrs . Sumner
Smith. Mrs. Roy Hall. John
Hall, Mr . and Mrs. Lest&lt;r
Adkins, John Sayre , Mrs .
Osca r Casto Jr. , Mrs. Leo
Smith, Mr. and Mrs. Stanley
Stephens, Mrs. Harding
Stephens. Linda Hall, Carl a
Hayman, Mrs. Connie Smith,
John, Beth and Tonya Smith,
Karen Deweese, Phyllis Hall,
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Stone,
Junior and James Stone, Mr.
and Mrs. Darrell Smith, David
Smith and son, Mike, from New
Jersey, Mrs. Pearl Elliott,
Mrs . Lillian Davis, Ronnie
Deweese, Steve Smith, Charlie
Stephens, Kandy Hall , Carl
Hall, Mrs. Albert Stephens,
Marty Stephens , Charlena
Stephens Chase, Vernor
Stepehns and Dianne Morrison.

RAGJNE, OHIO

In addition to the present
format, Faith for Today is
producing a new religious
children's program. With a
target age-group of six-yearold, the new show will be ready
for release later in 1975.

HOSPITAL
NEWS
Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED . Fannie
Deweese, Dexter ; Leslie Price,
Pomeroy; Mary Wippel,
Pomeroy; Linda Bailey,
Rutland; Benjamin Rhodes,
Racine.
DISCHARGED - Freda Van
Inwagen, Goldie Bruce.

Holzer Medical Center
(Discharged, Feb.l9)
Mrs. Frank Akers and son,
Joshua Bartels, Marilyn
Beatty, Chester Boster,
Virgin-ia . Cope,
Arthur
Drwnmond, Mary Gardner,

Sylvia Gilland, William
Gillespie, Myrna Hall, Angela
Harlow, Paul Hedrick, Rose
Huffman, William D. Jenkins,
Thomas Meadows, Herbert
Noel, Clarence Oiler, Harold
Rose, Mrs. Joseph Shrader and
son, Mrs. Merrell smlih, ji.,
and daughter, Patricia
Thomas, Sheila Timmons,
Claire Vermillion, Bobbi
Westfall, Kenneth Wheaton,
Mildred Williams, Annie Wine.
(Births)
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Lambert,
a daughter, Jackson; Mr. and
Mrs .' Gerald Wisecup, a son,
Oak Hill.

Unwind kit yarn
with slow care

Sh_o p Any Day ••• All Week Long Celebration
·

·

.

SEE OUR

....

WIDE SELECTION

BIRTHDRY

5e Sale
It
It
It
It
It
It
It
It
It

-8COLORS

,.,.

,.,.

PLATFORM
ROCKERS

,.,.,.
,.

1 Chair••••••••••••••• 29.95

,.,.,.
,.,.

1 Chair.••••••• •••••••••• .05

,.
,.,.

It

NOW ONI.Y

It

,.,.,.
,.,.~

,.,.
,.,.
,.,.
,.,.
,.,.
·*,.
,.,.
,.,.

ON SALE
THRU FEB. 22
t************" *~'*'~***'*~'*'t***'*~'*"***•'*'~**•

t*********************************

LIVING ROOM SUITE SALE!
2 Pc. Living Room ............'299.95
3 Pc. Set of •120.00

Tables, For.....................05
NOW ONLY

Offer Good On

Any Living Room
Suite, 299.95 up

POLLY.
.
DEAR POU.Y - Keep
four or five plastic bleach
bottles of sand in your car
trunk to provide needed
tra~tion when trying to move.
from an icy parking place.
Make a plywood sign with
hinges on opJ10&lt;&gt;ite ·sides with
indications to show your need
for aid to oncoming motorists
by saying ·"Flat Tire", "Out of·
Gas" and · "Motor Trouble".
When not in use this can be
folded flat for storage in the
car trunk. It is also wise to
carry an empty gas can to get
gas when you run out ...:.

MOWERS
•
·Houn: 1:116-S:lt Thun.

··-

VI.

LEWIS.

..

'

'j

I

'

,I

.. .

WH§HIN6TON'§

impossible to remove. -

'

.-

••
•••
•
•
••

THRU FEBRUARY 22 · . .

DEAR POLLY - I ha\•e an
Polly's Problem
DEAR POLLY -I bought an answer for Mrs. W. who has
afghan kit and then had a trouble getting iron vitamin
pitiful mess of tangled yarn · stains out of her baby's clothes.
after unwinding it from a Put lemon juice on such a
cardboard 27xl7 inches. I stain, rub salt on top of the
certainly need help before juice and put clothes in the sun
trying ID unwind the other to dry. Alter the sun draws the
' stains out wash the clothes as
seven colors. - L.E.D.
DEA:R L.E.D. - I have usual. I even use this to remove
never had a kit with the yarn so stains left from chocolate, tea
wound but am sure some of the and ink and certainly hope it
readers have and wiD tell us works as well for Ms. W. how they managed it. ·There is BETTY R.
not a more frustrated feeling
DEAR POLLY - Mrs. W.
than being laced with a mass of could remove liquid iron
tangled yam. Did you jry vitamin stains from her baby's
unwinding ouly a fard or so at clothes by rubbing a paste of
a time, immediately rewind meat tenderizer and water on
· that Into a ball and then the spots. Let this stand and
proceed with another yard or then scrub the spots with an old
so?- POU.Y.
.
!Dothbrush. Rub lightly. If a
slight stain remains it should
DEAR POLLY My come out easily when the
greatest Peeve at this point is clothes are washed with a
with the makers of skillets that regular detergent containing
do not have a pouring lip. This bleachc - MILDRED.
DEAR READERS - Do
certainly makes it hard for us
to save oil or shortening remember that OLD stains are
much bardet to remove than .
without spilling quite a bit. new "ones and sometimes
MRS. E.M.

BUY EARLY•..

SAVE
YOU

ob~erved

BY POLLY CRAMER

OF HUFFY ~

•m,·

r~~----~----~-, ----~-~~
- ~-·

Polly's Poin

...

wru
I.UOUlttT

Star Supply

'

etc.

WE'U.
SAVE

members that the next meeting
at the home of Mrs. Joyce
Bartimus in Gallipolis, will
feature a da-your-awn-thing
auction and pizza party.
Those who are interested in
assisting with the Silver
Slipper to be staged this spring
were asked to advise Mrs.
Jan~t Pickens.
For the program, Mrs. Libby
Sayre, cultural leader, in·
traduced Mrs . John Reibel who
showed slides of a recent trip to
the Holy Land , Refreshments
were served by Mrs. Kathy
King and Mrs. Linda Sauvage.

LADIES TO MEET
Drew Webster Auxiliary will
·meet Tuesday, Feb. 25, at 7:30
p. m. Mrs. Florence Richards,
.: District
Americanism
Chairwoman, will be the guest
speaker.

FOR

55.95 Value.

means chairwoman, reminded

BAKE SALE SET .
Syracuse Boy Scout Troop
SON BORN
242 will hold a bake sale
Mr. and Mrs. Daniel SpenSaturday at the Racine Home cer, Middleport, are an·
National Bank beginning at 9 a. nouncing the birth of a 9lbs., 3
· f'l· Residents are urged to ozs. son, Bradley Keith, Jan.· 28
support the troop.
at the Holzer Medical Center.
Maternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Herman Sorrell,
DIVORCES GRANTED
Columbus, and paternal
In Meigs County Common grandparents are Mrs. Nannle
Pleas Court Jane Harmon was Speneer, Wellston, and Lee
·granted a divorce from Roy E. Spencer, Harold, Ky. Mr. and
, Harmon on charges~ ross Mrs. Spencer also have two
negiect of duty an
erne daughters, Melissa, 10, and
cruelty and Audra M. eyse Lesley Ann, 5.
from Earl C. Keyse on charges
· of gross neglect of duty.

3

POLYESTER
PANTS
very

Mrs. Smith's eight children
joining the ce lebr~tion were
Sumner Smith, Leon: Donald
Smith. Columbus, Ohio; Billy
Smith, Maso n; Beauford
Smith, Letart; Briciel Smith,
Southside; Leo Smith, Grove
City. Ohio; Floyd Smith.
Columbus, and Mrs. Donald
(Esther ) McDade, Grove City.
The five generations prese nt
were Mrs. Nancy Smith ,
Swnner Smith, Mrs. Vernor
(Mary Smith) Stephens, Mrs .
Sheldon (Kathy Stephens)
Morriso n and
Darlene
Morrison .
Others present were Donald
McDade, Brenda Gay, Sue and
Donald McDade, Penny Smith,
Mr. and Mrs. Rickie Smith and
Chris, Belinda Taylor, Bryan
Smith, Mrs. Briciel Smith,
Mrs. Floyd Smith, Mrs . Susan
Smith and twin daughters,

. ,.

/

W_AFFLE WEAVE

WOMEN'S NEW SPRING

.

,.

Evans' home in January. The

UMIT 2

In 1933; Anthony Eden resigned as British foreign
secretary to protest the "appeasement" policy of prime .
Minister Neville Chamberlairi ·
toward Nazi Germany.

·.

·Mrs. Smith has birthday

•

couplet about "time".
·
To the ll'"acher life's a
sermon, To the singer life's a
song.
Anyway, time and hapjllneaa
mean different things to dif.
ferent folk.
We had a good turnout at ~
Circle meeting. After devotions
a silent auction, and enjoyed
Linda's hospitality and
delicious refreshments.

PLANTERS
PEANUT BUTTER

~ Soc1al 1
I Calendar~

'274 98

••

THE JUMBO 18 OZ. SIZE

~ - · ==~~~

Beautifully styled
Flexsteel Sofa in a nylon &amp; rayon
print. Traditional styling featuring Flexsteel's
patented lifetime spring construction.

secretary. Sht said she's never
done' this before, but she~
does a good job. She also filla in
other ways such as introducing
speakers.
Larry Spene« of Racine
attends with his parents.
(Dorothy is treasurer) . The
church sponsors the program
but accepts goodwill offerings
and the Women's Department
furnishes refreshments .
Russell RadcllH is Sgt ....tArms. He and Freda were
baptized last year, so are new
members and are always
willing to help.
The Denny Evans' had ID
mlas a class because of his
night shift work and flu. Linda
lost her mother, Betty Proffitt
Adams, last week and is ex·
peeling their second child in
early spring.
We were all saddened by the
sudden death of Betty Adams
and the families have our
deepest sympathy. The
parents, Roy and Lillian,
aren't well either.
The Emma Smith Circle of
our church met at Linda

.

1- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 .. Thursday. Feb. 20,1975

TONIGHTFRIDAYSATURDAYSUNDAY-

Auxiliary has meet

Goessler's Jewelry Store

SOFAS

.

Generation Rap

Mr s .

Wood. Mrs. Richard Slack,
Mrs. Forest Bachtel. Miss
Vi cki Slack, Miss Ca rol
Bachtel. Mrs . Allie Hawley,
Mrs. John Compton. Mrs. Orin
Smith,
Mrs.
James
Brewin gton, Mrs. Glenn
Lambert , Mrs. Emerso n
Jones. Mrs. Lee McComas,
Mrs . Rober t Fisher . Mrs .
Donald Stivers, Mrs. William
Sprague. Mrs . Nan Moore,
Mrs. Roscoe Wise. Mrs. Bill

.

••

6,- The pauy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 .. Thursday. Feb. 20, 1975

J.;z

..........

. I

. r.

•
I

�·"'

.•'
•

.

Showerfetes Karen Lisle
A bridal shower honoring
Karen Johnson Lisle, recent
bride of Keith Lisle, was held
Sunday at tl!e Heath United
Methodist Church. Hostesses
were Mrs . Marilyn Swan
Anderson and Mrs. Margie
Harris Blake.
A valent in e

motU was

carried out in the decorations
and punch, nuts, candy and
candies were served. Games
were played with prizes going
to Mrs. M. L. French and Mrs.
Gary Swope. Mrs . Gra ce
Johnson won the door prize .
The guest list included Mrs.
Grace Johnson, Miss Sandy
Johnson, Mrs. Donald Lisle,
Mrs. Bob Byer, Mrs. Charles
Byer. Mrs. Edward Blake,
Mrs. Charles Bradbury, Mrs.
Bernard Fultz, Mrs. Kenneth

Cook Mrs. Ernest Frazer,
Mrs. Earl D•venport, Mrs.
Robert Bumgarner . Mrs.
1

John Krawsczyn, Mrs. Steve
Hotichin s, Mrs . 0&lt;-wey Horl on,

Mrs . 'Gal')' Swope, Mrs. Edward

Kilchen

and

Robso n, Mrs. James Clal worthy, Mrs.

CharlL~s

YmmJ..(,

Mrs M. L. French. Mrs. K~i th
Goble, Me,•. Bobby Archer ,
Mrs . Willi am -i\uit and Merri
Au! I.

Newman Burdette.
Mrs. Gene Murray , Mrs.
Evelyn Bauer, Mrs. Earie

RETURNS HOME
f!UT LAND - Mrs. Margaret
Parsons,
Rutland , has
returned home following her
recuperation from surgery at

the Holzer Medical Center at
the home or her daughter, Mrs.
David Wiseman, and family at
Woodsfi eld . She plans to return
to her reg ular duties at the
Salem Cent&lt;r School in the
nea r future.

The "NOTHING NECKLACE"
The
" NOTHIN G
NE CKLACE" proves that
less Is more! We cons ider
th is to be the most femin ine
item in o.ur Jewelry Line
th is season!
Suc h a touch of "sparkle"

worn at the neckline. so
chic, so smart , so fabulous!

Other New

Spring
JeweiiY
Chain Bibs

Bracelets- s:z .ao up
Bangles. Cameos, Stone
Set

large Lockets

large Crosses
Also Simulated Turquoise
Jewelry

Bracelets , Pendants,
Pierced Earrings

~

~ ~~~

Pierced Eorrlngs- $2.00 up
Hoops. Pierced Look- $2 .00

Saints plan for new year

By Helen and Sue ,Bottel

By Goldie Clendeula
He's AChattaoooga Chew-Chew!
PORTLAND - After looking
Dear Rap :
back over the past year, .the
I can understand why a teacher wouldn't want a bunch of Reorganized Church of Jesus
elementary school kids popping their gum or sticking it in Christ of Latter Day Saints is
someone's hair.
·
looking ahead now, working
But tell me why this one high school teacher cracks down on tnward more hopes and plans
gum chewers . II she catches you with gum in your mouth, she for the next year, knowing
makes you stay after school and completely clean and wax a there will be problems and
bunch of desks and chairs.
setbacks, to reaching our
I argued I'm not a union man and if I do the jani!Dr's job, the goals.
union will fight it. She ignored me. It could cause a strike, even!
But God has been good tD us
The idea of goind to school is tD learn (and chewing gum as we work !Dgether in helping
helps me concentrate.) It isn't my job doing jani!Drial work. 1 ID build Zion, the Kingdom of
don 't make noises or stick it under my chair. Other high school God on earth; we are a
teachers don't mind.
peculiar people: we do not
What would you suggest? - CHATTANOOGA CHEWER
discourage easily.
Recently we had our third
Dear Chat :
class in "Leadership" or public
The easy way: park your gum behind your ear (or wherever) speaking - with Jim Cleland
before class, and save your righteous indignation for something coordina!Dr and Joe SIDbart,
that really matters. - HELEN
ll'esident. This was planned
+++
last year. Weather and road
Dear Chewer :
conditions held us up ; also,
You might win, if you took this case to the principaL But you illness and a death in our
might lose more than you'd gain. Antagonizing a teacher over a midst. We've had good at·
minor rule (even though it seems silly these days) is oo way to tendance with more coming in.
prove you "go to school to learn." - SUE
This leadership program is
++ +
one among the best programs
Dear Helen and Sue:
we've had, perhaps because all
Have you had any good hoaxes lately ' How about printing age groups are combined in
one' - READER
one class rather than being
separated as in Bible School.
Dear Reader:
We see no generation gap. ln
Here's a hoaxer who gave herseU away because she laid it on speaking and evaluating one
!Do thick:
·
another, we learn from each
+++
other, which is the main point.
Rap:
The class meets at 7 p. m.
My girl friend and I share a similar problem .
with a break for 10 minutes and
Her father works with my mother and my father works with refreshments at 8, then
her mother, in different offices. We went tD my Dad's office tD get II'Oceed till 9.
money for the movies, and discovered her mother was not at her
We use the social room
secretary's desk. So we looked inside and found them necking. where chairs can be placed lor
Then we ran out and went to HER father's office. We hid In round table discussion.
the closet waiting for him and my mother (his secretary tD
Freda Middleswart is
return. Sure enough, when they came in they were realloveydovey. As soon as they left on a coffee break, we came home and
are writing to you.
Should we tell our parents we know aU? - BEHIND THE
SCENE
a
A thought for the day:
American poet John Greenleaf
Dear BTS:
Whittier said, "For all sad
words of tongue and pen, the
You aren't quite ready tD write for TV soap operas, but keep
trying. - HELEN AND SUE
saddest are these 'It might
have been." '
+++
Rap:
This is for "Dreads Pity, " who became tame from an ac·
cident and thinks she should break up with the guy who wants tD
lnarry her (because she's oot "perfect").
The guy I'm engaged to wants ME, oot just a perfect figure
or walk.
What I'm trying to say is: your personality hasn'tgot a limp
- it's only in your leg. Soe be yourseU! When YOU don't notice
the Ump, no one else will either. - AUVE AND FEELING .
GREAT

Reva Simms and Emogene
Simms were welcomed into the
membership of the Woman 's
Auxiliary of the Veterans
Memorial Hospital at a

Court Street • Pomeroy

'.

-2 DAYS ONLY8 Beautiful • Good' Quality
AT

-PRICE

1

meeting Tuesday night at the
hospital.
Mrs. Janice Daniels presided
with Mrs. Clara Burris giving
the secretary's report and Mrs.
Nettie Hayes, the treasurer's
report. Mrs. Lucille Leifheit
gave the auxiliary prayer .
Thank you cards were read
from Mildred Mitch and Mrs.
Ethel Guthrie for flowers and
cards during their recent
hospitalization . Mrs. Daniels
reported on progress toward
purchasing several items for
the hospital.
Mrs. Bertha Parker gave the
reading, "The Old Rocking
Chair" and Mrs. Jessie White
conducted a word game won by
Mrs. Jestie Molden and Mrs.
Leona Karr. Names as
hostess·es for March were
Janet Jeffers, Donna Aleshire
and Mrs. Helen Jeffers.
Ice Cream, cookies, nuts,
coffee and iced tea were served
by Mrs . White, Mrs. Jestie
Molden and Mrs. Freda
Molden .

Reg. $54'. '5

Price Special

Mediterranean style mellow Russett velvet
comfortable - and it looks it!

REG. 1329.95

84" Traditional Sofa - comfortable loose
cushion back. high arms with pillows and kick
pleat. bronze matelasse.

$16998

1

REG. 339.95

1h Price Special

1h Price Special

Traditional Style nylon print blue·green &amp;, gold
oil beige background T-cushion · coil springs.

Comfortable .loose cushion back, ball casters,
we'll let vou discribe the color- it's pretty.

!REG. 1389.95

REG. '359.95

1h Pnce Special

$19.398

From Covey, this Mediterranean Sofa features
sturdy construction, loose back pillows. wood ·
accents, and comes covered in a bold orange and
gold matetasse cover.

REG, 399.95
1

1h Price Special

1h Price Special
Early American style Sweefl\eart Back, nylon
fabric in marine blue &amp; gold, good coil spring
construction.

REG. 1329.95

$1&amp;4•

_lh Price Special

'4" Tra,ditional sOfa with kick pleaT, ioo5e :·cush~on back and. arm cus~ions, l

'22498
% Prke Special

cushion style with self covered deck, good co• I spring construction, beautiful teal
blue-gold &amp; green Mafelasse fabric.

leg. •449.95

THURSDAY
JUNIOR American Legion
Auxiliary, Drew Webster 39, 7
p.m. at the home of Mrs. Harry
Davis. Miss Erma Smith, unit
Americanism chairwoman,
will be the guest speaker.
MIDDLEPORT Child
Conservation League, 7:30
p.m. at the Meigs 'Slim and
Trim. Members are asked tD
take a trade stamp book.
REGl.iLAR meeting Twin
City Shrine Club, 7:30p.m. at
Racine Shrine Park.
FRIDAY
SPRING Carnival Friday at
. Harrisonville school from 6:30
to 8:30 p.m. Sponsored by
Harrisooville PTO. King and
queen and prince and princess
will be chosen.
SOUTHERN Local Sehoul
Board, 7:30p.m. at high school.
CEREMONIAL, Mary
Shrine 37, Order of the White
Shrine of Jerusalem, 7:30p.m.
at the Pomeroy Masonic
Temple.

R~GULAR

l

Evans' bought the Jividen
place at Old Town Flats. The
house has been remodeled,
including picture windows, but
the big trees and an old milk
house are still there like when I
used to vistt with Stella Gainer
and her younger sister more
than 50 years ago.
Young folks used ID gather in
homes back then for play
parties. Ullian Mosier Proffitt
and I used to attend with her
older sister, Mabel and Rich
Powell. Rich and Stella are
gone now.
I enjoy reading about what
folk are doing in church work,
especially friends and neighbors on Portland Bot!Dm. Their
theme on Happiness was really
good. Reminds me of the

LETART, W. Va.
Relatives of Mrs . Nancy Bell
Smith, Rt. I, Letart, gathered
Sunday , Feb. 16, at the Krodel
Park Clubhouse in Point
Pleasant to help her celebrate
her 82nd birthday.
Billy Smith asked the
blessing for the buffet dinner.
Mrs. Smith and her children
were seated at a special table
so they could eat !Dgether and
reminisce. It had been quite
some time since all the family
was together.
Mrs. Smith opened many
lovely gifts and all present
sang "Happy Birthday" to
Nancy.
The afternoon was spent in
conversation and taking P\1.'tures. Ahighlight of the pi~lure
taking was one of five
generations of Mrs. Smith's
family .
/

PRESCRIPTION
AND SURGICAL
Support Cente r
*WHEEl CHAIRS
*WALKERS
*CRUTCHES &amp; CANES
BACK IRACES
BEDSIDE COMMODES
* SUPPORT STOCI(iNGS
*TRUSSES
TRACTION EQUIPME~T
* ELASTIC SUPPORTS
*SURGICAl DRESSINGS
* INCONT:NENT
SUPPLIES

**

1

1.39

74¢

Program anniversary

*

The 25th Anniversary of syndicated program featuring
Faith for Today, the oldest Pastor and Mrs. William A.
religious program in television Fagal, is carried today by
history, was marked by the more than 250 stations in the
Sevenlh·Day Adventist . UnitedStatesandeightforeign
Church, Mulberry Heights countries. Produced in
Road, Pomeroy, Feb. 8 with a Thousand Oaks, Calif., by the
special Silver Anniversary Seventh-day Adventist Church,
Offering for the telecast the half·hour television show,
ministry·
in a medical drama format,
First televised over WABC- offers practical Christian
TV, New York, in 1950, the solutions to life's problems.

Ohio Eta Ppi
has
meeting
·'

The birthday of one of the
Meigs County children at the
Gallia County Children's Home
will be observed Sunday and
members of the Ohio Eta Phi
Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority will deliver a cake for
U1e youngster.
During a meeting Tuesday
night conducted by Mrs.
Connie Bailey, president, plans
were also made for the annual
Easter egg hunt . and party
March 25 at the Meigs Community School, Rutland. Mrs.
Janet Downie is service
chairwoman.
Mrs. Debbie Buck, ways and

DISH
CLOTH
SALE

99~

A
· special low price for this
weekend. Pull on polyester pants in a
variety of colon ·and paHerns. Actual

$

Choose

a

LARGE

18"

99

chain for
any purpose

HEIGHTH

PR.
FAMOUS PLANTERS

EARLY AMERICAN

DRY ROASTED
PEANUTS
A 11.17 VALUE

12 OZ.
JAR
NO
SUGAR
NO OILS

•fRENOf'S'
DOG OR CAT

74•..

KEROSENE
LAMP
COMPARE AT '5.95

,

STAINLESS
FLAlWARE

FLEA
COLLAR

Table spoons, serving
spoons, teaspoons, dessert
fortes, saYd, forks, ladles,

REGULAR 51.98

WHILE IT LASTS

butter
knives,
Docoratecl handles.

'

'

•

$}
YOU

TIME!
'

·MlNTSTOil

Michelle and Daphne ;. Mrs.
Billy Smilh. Mrs. Donnie Smith
a nd Donnie, Mrs . Sumner
Smith. Mrs. Roy Hall. John
Hall, Mr . and Mrs. Lest&lt;r
Adkins, John Sayre , Mrs .
Osca r Casto Jr. , Mrs. Leo
Smith, Mr. and Mrs. Stanley
Stephens, Mrs. Harding
Stephens. Linda Hall, Carl a
Hayman, Mrs. Connie Smith,
John, Beth and Tonya Smith,
Karen Deweese, Phyllis Hall,
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Stone,
Junior and James Stone, Mr.
and Mrs. Darrell Smith, David
Smith and son, Mike, from New
Jersey, Mrs. Pearl Elliott,
Mrs . Lillian Davis, Ronnie
Deweese, Steve Smith, Charlie
Stephens, Kandy Hall , Carl
Hall, Mrs. Albert Stephens,
Marty Stephens , Charlena
Stephens Chase, Vernor
Stepehns and Dianne Morrison.

RAGJNE, OHIO

In addition to the present
format, Faith for Today is
producing a new religious
children's program. With a
target age-group of six-yearold, the new show will be ready
for release later in 1975.

HOSPITAL
NEWS
Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED . Fannie
Deweese, Dexter ; Leslie Price,
Pomeroy; Mary Wippel,
Pomeroy; Linda Bailey,
Rutland; Benjamin Rhodes,
Racine.
DISCHARGED - Freda Van
Inwagen, Goldie Bruce.

Holzer Medical Center
(Discharged, Feb.l9)
Mrs. Frank Akers and son,
Joshua Bartels, Marilyn
Beatty, Chester Boster,
Virgin-ia . Cope,
Arthur
Drwnmond, Mary Gardner,

Sylvia Gilland, William
Gillespie, Myrna Hall, Angela
Harlow, Paul Hedrick, Rose
Huffman, William D. Jenkins,
Thomas Meadows, Herbert
Noel, Clarence Oiler, Harold
Rose, Mrs. Joseph Shrader and
son, Mrs. Merrell smlih, ji.,
and daughter, Patricia
Thomas, Sheila Timmons,
Claire Vermillion, Bobbi
Westfall, Kenneth Wheaton,
Mildred Williams, Annie Wine.
(Births)
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Lambert,
a daughter, Jackson; Mr. and
Mrs .' Gerald Wisecup, a son,
Oak Hill.

Unwind kit yarn
with slow care

Sh_o p Any Day ••• All Week Long Celebration
·

·

.

SEE OUR

....

WIDE SELECTION

BIRTHDRY

5e Sale
It
It
It
It
It
It
It
It
It

-8COLORS

,.,.

,.,.

PLATFORM
ROCKERS

,.,.,.
,.

1 Chair••••••••••••••• 29.95

,.,.,.
,.,.

1 Chair.••••••• •••••••••• .05

,.
,.,.

It

NOW ONI.Y

It

,.,.,.
,.,.~

,.,.
,.,.
,.,.
,.,.
,.,.
·*,.
,.,.
,.,.

ON SALE
THRU FEB. 22
t************" *~'*'~***'*~'*'t***'*~'*"***•'*'~**•

t*********************************

LIVING ROOM SUITE SALE!
2 Pc. Living Room ............'299.95
3 Pc. Set of •120.00

Tables, For.....................05
NOW ONLY

Offer Good On

Any Living Room
Suite, 299.95 up

POLLY.
.
DEAR POU.Y - Keep
four or five plastic bleach
bottles of sand in your car
trunk to provide needed
tra~tion when trying to move.
from an icy parking place.
Make a plywood sign with
hinges on opJ10&lt;&gt;ite ·sides with
indications to show your need
for aid to oncoming motorists
by saying ·"Flat Tire", "Out of·
Gas" and · "Motor Trouble".
When not in use this can be
folded flat for storage in the
car trunk. It is also wise to
carry an empty gas can to get
gas when you run out ...:.

MOWERS
•
·Houn: 1:116-S:lt Thun.

··-

VI.

LEWIS.

..

'

'j

I

'

,I

.. .

WH§HIN6TON'§

impossible to remove. -

'

.-

••
•••
•
•
••

THRU FEBRUARY 22 · . .

DEAR POLLY - I ha\•e an
Polly's Problem
DEAR POLLY -I bought an answer for Mrs. W. who has
afghan kit and then had a trouble getting iron vitamin
pitiful mess of tangled yarn · stains out of her baby's clothes.
after unwinding it from a Put lemon juice on such a
cardboard 27xl7 inches. I stain, rub salt on top of the
certainly need help before juice and put clothes in the sun
trying ID unwind the other to dry. Alter the sun draws the
' stains out wash the clothes as
seven colors. - L.E.D.
DEA:R L.E.D. - I have usual. I even use this to remove
never had a kit with the yarn so stains left from chocolate, tea
wound but am sure some of the and ink and certainly hope it
readers have and wiD tell us works as well for Ms. W. how they managed it. ·There is BETTY R.
not a more frustrated feeling
DEAR POLLY - Mrs. W.
than being laced with a mass of could remove liquid iron
tangled yam. Did you jry vitamin stains from her baby's
unwinding ouly a fard or so at clothes by rubbing a paste of
a time, immediately rewind meat tenderizer and water on
· that Into a ball and then the spots. Let this stand and
proceed with another yard or then scrub the spots with an old
so?- POU.Y.
.
!Dothbrush. Rub lightly. If a
slight stain remains it should
DEAR POLLY My come out easily when the
greatest Peeve at this point is clothes are washed with a
with the makers of skillets that regular detergent containing
do not have a pouring lip. This bleachc - MILDRED.
DEAR READERS - Do
certainly makes it hard for us
to save oil or shortening remember that OLD stains are
much bardet to remove than .
without spilling quite a bit. new "ones and sometimes
MRS. E.M.

BUY EARLY•..

SAVE
YOU

ob~erved

BY POLLY CRAMER

OF HUFFY ~

•m,·

r~~----~----~-, ----~-~~
- ~-·

Polly's Poin

...

wru
I.UOUlttT

Star Supply

'

etc.

WE'U.
SAVE

members that the next meeting
at the home of Mrs. Joyce
Bartimus in Gallipolis, will
feature a da-your-awn-thing
auction and pizza party.
Those who are interested in
assisting with the Silver
Slipper to be staged this spring
were asked to advise Mrs.
Jan~t Pickens.
For the program, Mrs. Libby
Sayre, cultural leader, in·
traduced Mrs . John Reibel who
showed slides of a recent trip to
the Holy Land , Refreshments
were served by Mrs. Kathy
King and Mrs. Linda Sauvage.

LADIES TO MEET
Drew Webster Auxiliary will
·meet Tuesday, Feb. 25, at 7:30
p. m. Mrs. Florence Richards,
.: District
Americanism
Chairwoman, will be the guest
speaker.

FOR

55.95 Value.

means chairwoman, reminded

BAKE SALE SET .
Syracuse Boy Scout Troop
SON BORN
242 will hold a bake sale
Mr. and Mrs. Daniel SpenSaturday at the Racine Home cer, Middleport, are an·
National Bank beginning at 9 a. nouncing the birth of a 9lbs., 3
· f'l· Residents are urged to ozs. son, Bradley Keith, Jan.· 28
support the troop.
at the Holzer Medical Center.
Maternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Herman Sorrell,
DIVORCES GRANTED
Columbus, and paternal
In Meigs County Common grandparents are Mrs. Nannle
Pleas Court Jane Harmon was Speneer, Wellston, and Lee
·granted a divorce from Roy E. Spencer, Harold, Ky. Mr. and
, Harmon on charges~ ross Mrs. Spencer also have two
negiect of duty an
erne daughters, Melissa, 10, and
cruelty and Audra M. eyse Lesley Ann, 5.
from Earl C. Keyse on charges
· of gross neglect of duty.

3

POLYESTER
PANTS
very

Mrs. Smith's eight children
joining the ce lebr~tion were
Sumner Smith, Leon: Donald
Smith. Columbus, Ohio; Billy
Smith, Maso n; Beauford
Smith, Letart; Briciel Smith,
Southside; Leo Smith, Grove
City. Ohio; Floyd Smith.
Columbus, and Mrs. Donald
(Esther ) McDade, Grove City.
The five generations prese nt
were Mrs. Nancy Smith ,
Swnner Smith, Mrs. Vernor
(Mary Smith) Stephens, Mrs .
Sheldon (Kathy Stephens)
Morriso n and
Darlene
Morrison .
Others present were Donald
McDade, Brenda Gay, Sue and
Donald McDade, Penny Smith,
Mr. and Mrs. Rickie Smith and
Chris, Belinda Taylor, Bryan
Smith, Mrs. Briciel Smith,
Mrs. Floyd Smith, Mrs . Susan
Smith and twin daughters,

. ,.

/

W_AFFLE WEAVE

WOMEN'S NEW SPRING

.

,.

Evans' home in January. The

UMIT 2

In 1933; Anthony Eden resigned as British foreign
secretary to protest the "appeasement" policy of prime .
Minister Neville Chamberlairi ·
toward Nazi Germany.

·.

·Mrs. Smith has birthday

•

couplet about "time".
·
To the ll'"acher life's a
sermon, To the singer life's a
song.
Anyway, time and hapjllneaa
mean different things to dif.
ferent folk.
We had a good turnout at ~
Circle meeting. After devotions
a silent auction, and enjoyed
Linda's hospitality and
delicious refreshments.

PLANTERS
PEANUT BUTTER

~ Soc1al 1
I Calendar~

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secretary. Sht said she's never
done' this before, but she~
does a good job. She also filla in
other ways such as introducing
speakers.
Larry Spene« of Racine
attends with his parents.
(Dorothy is treasurer) . The
church sponsors the program
but accepts goodwill offerings
and the Women's Department
furnishes refreshments .
Russell RadcllH is Sgt ....tArms. He and Freda were
baptized last year, so are new
members and are always
willing to help.
The Denny Evans' had ID
mlas a class because of his
night shift work and flu. Linda
lost her mother, Betty Proffitt
Adams, last week and is ex·
peeling their second child in
early spring.
We were all saddened by the
sudden death of Betty Adams
and the families have our
deepest sympathy. The
parents, Roy and Lillian,
aren't well either.
The Emma Smith Circle of
our church met at Linda

.

1- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 .. Thursday. Feb. 20,1975

TONIGHTFRIDAYSATURDAYSUNDAY-

Auxiliary has meet

Goessler's Jewelry Store

SOFAS

.

Generation Rap

Mr s .

Wood. Mrs. Richard Slack,
Mrs. Forest Bachtel. Miss
Vi cki Slack, Miss Ca rol
Bachtel. Mrs . Allie Hawley,
Mrs. John Compton. Mrs. Orin
Smith,
Mrs.
James
Brewin gton, Mrs. Glenn
Lambert , Mrs. Emerso n
Jones. Mrs. Lee McComas,
Mrs . Rober t Fisher . Mrs .
Donald Stivers, Mrs. William
Sprague. Mrs . Nan Moore,
Mrs. Roscoe Wise. Mrs. Bill

.

••

6,- The pauy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 .. Thursday. Feb. 20, 1975

J.;z

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. I

. r.

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1,'

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8- The Dally Sentinel. Middleoort-Pomei'Oy, o..

Why this
·
bomb?

I

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' .·
'

.
I
Thuradayr Feb. 20, 1975 1.

S·l

·

.

~l

Jane G
W ithers will help
CO LUMB US

!DtrnlERN HIGH satJOL Vanity dleerleailll'l IN

front , 1~. Stephanie Ord, Cheryl Larkins and Pam Panons;
in back, Debbie Roush and Ronda Ash, and on top, Vicki
Wolle.

Ford campaigns for tariff
a barrel oil import fee increase
Ford ordered . to start fuel
conservation while Congress
enacts his basic program. Ford
announced immediately he
would veto the measure and
rally votes to sustain the veto.
That done, Ford's strategy
calls for Congress then to enact
his economlc~ergy program
-allowing for compromises
with the Democrats.
Key to White House strategy
Is Ford 's conviction there
exists among the public and in
Congress growing support for
getting action on an energy
program that w!ll make
America independent of Arab
and other foreign oil suppliers.
Ford put It this way Wed·
nesday after the Senate vote:
"I regret today's vote b~t do
not regard It as finaL I believe
the Congress wlll ultimately
respond to the will of the
American people and s~e
national rather than narrow
interests ... !Intend to veto this
legislation ."

Once Congress sends·the blll
to the White House, Ford has 10
working days to stamp his veto
on it. He could spin out the
whole 10 days to take advantage.of what he regards as the
rising momentum among the
public for his program.
Ford expected the Wednesday Senate action.
White House aides stressed
the oil import tariff hike was
and is not an energy program.
They call it a stop-gap measure
Ford fashioned to begin work
on his goal of culling U.S. fuel
consumption by a million
barrels a day and to give
Congress time to enact a full
program.
Thus, according to White
House thinking, the delay
Congress wants is the delay
Ford is giving them in the oil
Import tariff hike. His full
program calls for a permanent
$2 a barrel increase in Import
tariffs balanced by a $2 boost in
taxes on domestic fuel production.

Dean's $4,000 fee draws heavy shots
RIC!t VAN

Motion

piclW'e and telev is ion Clctress

The bomb was found next to
a door at the Ross Suooco
Station at the intersection ci
Ohio 126 and Ohio 128. An
anonymous telephone caller
had told the Buller County
sheriff's office about the bomb
Tuesday night.

By

~

Jane Withers will greel about
400 volunteers al the sta tewide
Ea&amp;ter Seals campaign kickoff
lu ncheon in Co lumbus on
Satu rd ay, Feb. 22 . Miss
Withers is making a special
trip to Ohio from Hollywood to
serve as celebrity hostess for
. the all -&lt;lay Easler Seals even t
at The Ohio State University
Student Un ion.
A colorful a nd unusual
Decorated Wheelchair Contest
will highli ght the day's aclivities . More than a dozen
hantlicapped childr en . and
adults are en tered in the
contest. This year's theme will
be: "Love Is ... " Prizes will be

The bomb was disarmed by
an Army demoliton team from
Columbus early Wednesday
morning. The device consisted
· of five sticks of dynamite taped
together with a wil'f ruming
into a tin can.

WASHINGTON (UP! ) President Ford opened a
campaign today to turn a
congressional ''no" on his oil
import tariff hike into a "yes"
on his economic-energy program.
It began with a breakfast at 7:30a.m., a late start for the
early-rising Ford - at the
White House for majority
Democratic and minority
Republican
leaders
of
Congress.
"lllstorians may note the
battle began between the eggs
and the sweet rolls," said a
White House aide.
The main CO\lrse of the meal
was the confrontation between
the Republican President and
the Democratlc-(;ontrolled
Congress
over
Ford's
suggested solutions for
America's recession and
energy llhortage.
. Following the lead of the
House of Representatives, the
Senate voied Wednesday, 66 to
28, to suspend for 90 days the $3

and. territories . Last year, the
Ohio Easter Seal Society
serve d ' more than 20,000
handicapped persons through
its 77 state affiliates.
Dozens of Eastern Seal
poster children from Easter
more than the $1.146,039 raised l~1rgest voluntary agency Seal affiliates wiil travel to
last year.
providing direct rehabilitation Columbus to meet and be
Miss Withers, who devotes serv ices to handi capped' photographed with Miss
much of her time to philan - persons of all ages . The Society_ Withers.
thropic and charity work, will
speak at the luncheon on "The
Importance of Volunteers. "
Her film career dates back to
the 1930s, when she was a child
star "a bi t more misch ievous"
than her roval, Shirley Temple.
Her rrlovie credits include

SANT

"He has a right to speak at
OXFORD, Ohio (UPI)- The Miami just as anyone else
flak Is Dying about John Dean's does, but does his right of free
speech at Miami University speech give him the right of
March 3 for a $t,OOO fee.
unfair and undue cash recom.
Student newspaper editor pensation?" the student editor
Bill Schumacher said, "Miami asked. "I say strongly no.
llhould stand up to this man and
"Miami llhould stand up to
refuse his contract demand."
this man, refuse his contract
Laments campus columnist demand, simply say 'You'll get
Bob White, "I wish (Judge what people pay at the door.•
John) Slrlca had sentenced
"let people in their own
Dean to · sis months ol free conscience decide If they want
lectures."
to subsidize John Dean. And let
Dean, ~ ex•ttomey for individuals in their own minds
former President Nixon who decide If they want to enWas convicted In the Watergate courage such fame . I for one
case, Is scheduled to speak at 8 don't want my money going to
p.m. March 3 in Millet Hail, line the pockets of 'Honest John
Miami's spacious basketball Dean.'u
arena with 9,200 permanent
Schumacher also comileata, There will be a $1 ad- plained Dean "was once an
mlasion charge.
integral part of that horrid
Dean's ·appearance here Is White House conspiracy of
sponsored by •'The lecture silence and guilt.. . he went
Board," a student group that along with the boys until he
acta as an agency of the was singled out as the fail
''campus activities council.''
guy."
. ''The Lecture board" has its
Columnist White also was
own budgei approprlsted from burnedaboot Dean's price , but
student fees and there usually figured it was alright for him to
is no admlasion fee for most speak because "There 's
speakers It brings in.
nothing new about heing exBut because most of this ploiied. " ·
year's budget has been com"I also resent having to pay
milled, It was decided a $1 50 cents for a gallon of gasoline
admission fee was needed to . but If you want something you
snag Dean .
have to pay for it and $t,OOO is
Dean has been criticized at the going rate (for Dean),"
other lecture stops for his fees. White said. "I wish Sirica had
He replies that he would Uke to sentenced Dean to six ·months
speak for free, but is in debt.
ol free lectures instead of a few
Schumacher blasted Dean's months at a government
$t,OOO contract· In the student cOuntry club, but that's reality,
newBjaper.
folks.

"Gian t," "Captain Newman ,"
" Fears of Gera ldin e " and
many others. Television ap·
pea ranees have ranged from

Sterrett also proposed the
PUCO set up an advisory board
on school energy problems
composed of representatives of
. the Ohio PTA and other
statewide education~elated
organizations.
Sterrelt said the board could
offer PUOO direct Input from

eduators and interested
citizens on the energy
problems schools face.
"The board could also Improve communication between
the PUOO and local educators
and citizens concerning actions
'which wlll affect schools,"
Sterrett said.
"The Ohio PTA Is vitally
concerned that the education
and weUare of children be
strongly considered in any
decisions by the Public
Utilities Commision of Ohio on
energy matters ," Sterrett said.

FOREMAN &amp; ABBOTT
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MOORE IS
AMERICAN HARDWARE

"I think we could do this for a
man who practiced and
espoused non-violence in · a
violent nation," Bowen said.
"What he stood for )las no
dollar value."
Mussey offered an amendment to eliminate the legal
Monday oholldsy and make It a
commemorative day
the
third Sunday in January.
"Hew much longer can we
lreak up our working period
and pay the great cost of these
holidays?" asked Mussey.

BOOSTERS TO MEET
"We're being exploited, so
EASTERN - The athletic
what is new? (Carl) Bernstein boosters at Eastern High
and
(Bob)
Woodward School will meet Monday, Feb.
(Washington Post reporters 24, at 8:30 p. m. Plans for the
who. pursued the Watergate spring sports banquet will be
story) are getting rich through made . All interested persons
Watergate and I'm sure Nixon are urged to attend.
will If he writes a book.
"Dean is only that great
American tradition -making a
buck when he sees the opStlf't loslr~ ~t Cod1y or money
portunity.''
back. MONADl:X II e tiny_ t8blet

LOSE UGLY FAT

CHANGES ADDRESS
Mrs . Ray (Norma) Hecox,
Middleport, is rec uperating
from a hip fracture received in
a recent fall. After having been
confined to the MI. Carmel
Hospital for three weeks, she
was moved Friday to
St. Luke Convalescent Ce nter,
Room 201, 44 South Souder St.,
Columbus, 43222, for further
treatment.

.,

c.,~~~
()~

food. Elt I•- weigh 1-. Contains

no dangM'Ous drug~ 1nd will not
m.b yoo nervous. No l1ftrluous
IXIrCill. Change your life .. , Jtert
tod.ty. MONADEX coot $3.00 lor
• 20 day oupply. L01110 ~~e&lt;~nomy
slzt ~ $5.00. Alto lry ADUATABS:
they work 18'!.1.1y to help vou lose
w.ter·bloat, AOVA TABS - e "wettr

..-

..

pill" thol works - $3.00. Both
gueren._, end 101d _by:
Swisher &amp; Lohse Pharmacy,

"
,,

,

112 E.. Main. Pomeroy ;
· Dutton Drug Store, Mid·
dleport.

Henry Block has
17 reasons why )Uti

Buy one gallon
of Dutch Standard

should come to us
for income tax help.

"

•

Paint from any
of our stock and
buy the second
gallon at

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

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standards we have heard here
today.
"His spirit deserves to be
honored because it is more
relevant today than those of the
men we already honor," said
Sen. Valiquette. "le1 us have a
relevant holiday.''
"They say he was a man of
non-violence and apostle of
peace, bull question ·this," Van
Meter said. "Everywhere he

BUILDING SITES

we're asking for is a share in
the Image-building to project to
our youngsters the kind of
person they should be.
, But Sen. M. Ben Gaeth, RDefiance, said the Senate was
"opening up a can of worms."
He suggested if black heroes
were to be honored, the first
ones should he George Washington Gar ver, Booker T.
Washington and Hank Aaron.

went, violence followed. Maybe
there is a great demand for this
bill, but if there is, I don't see
it ."

Sen. M. Morris Jackson, !).
Cleveland, said King "calmed
the black conununity down
during riots in his district in the
1960 5.
1

"He created the kind of
image to work within the
system," Jackson said. "All

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Pennsey's
loss heavy

lnd ...., to Uko. MDNADEX will
help curb your dtli,. for excea

"Rather than create another "speak abou t his great
long three-day paid holiday in achievements." The amendthe state of Ohio, I would --kent was defeated on a 11).19
recommend we observe a vote.
Nol Measure Up
commemorative day on ~un­
Sen.
Marigene
Valiquette, Dday.
" Dr. Martin Luther King's Toledo, said King should be
civil rights movement Is so honored as "a man of peace.
closely tied to the Christian Many we have already honored
ethic that the holiday should be were men of war," she said,
"and they would not nieasure
on Sunday," said ; Mussey,
.
up
to the high legislative
adding that clergymen could
r,

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OOLUMBUS (UP! ) - The
, Ohio Senate has approved alld
·sent to the Ho~~ae legislation
; setting aside a legal holiday for
the late Dr. Martin Luther
' King despite complaints that it
;woUld put the slain civil rights ·
•leader on a par with
: Chrislppher Columbus and
Jesus Ou-ist.
• The .bill, sponsored by Sen.
:Wt!Uam F. Bowen, R-Cincin'natl, one of Ohio's two black
:.senators, would designate the
•. :third Monday in January as
;Martin Luther King Day. It
;cleared the Senate Wednesday
'on a 24-li vote.
House passage would of'ficlally establish the holiday
:now observed in King's home
·state of Georgia, as well as
;~tucky, Illinois, Massachusetts and Maryland.
Bowen said Michigan now
observes a commemorative
'day on a Sunday but is in the
process of making it a Monday
holiday.
· He said King deserves a legal
holiday in his name because of
," all the things he stood
for ... the American dream ...the
Constitution ... the Emancipation Proclamation."
Remove Lustre
, BUt Sen. William 11. Mussey,
R-Batavia, . complained that
Washington's and Lincoln's
!Jirtlxlays already have been
combined, removing lustre
from their rememlrance, and
Sen. Thomas A. Van Meter, RAshland, agreed.
. "The only two people that
have a day to themselves
anymore are Christopher
Columbus and Jesus Ou-ist,
and I can't buy the notion that
Martin Luther King fils into the
category of those two," Van
Meter said:
The five Republicans who
opposed the bill also grumbled
that II would cost anywhere
from $2 milllon to $16 mllUon to
pay wages for government
workers given a paid holiday.
Bowen argued the cost of
another holiday would be
"very minimal, something llke

i lfthe ~ea

,772,5181

Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 ., Thursday, Feb.'20. !975 .

~

Latex

.-INSULATION-

'

-

Tire Prices

Chief Interior

Schools urged.
to watch fuel

tem."

The

Give Rooms New Look Now!

the US Steel Hour, Alfred
Hi tchcock's Thea ter Hour and
The Munsters, to a character
called "Josephine the plumber ' ' on commercia)s for a
awarded to winners in severa l house'hold product.
Miss Withers has retired as
categories.
The 1975 campaign will begin " Josephine " a nd is forming a
Feb. 24 and extend through production company for family
Mar . 30, Easter Sunday . entertainment for both TV and
Jimmy Crum, sports director motion pictures. Two projected
for WLWC-TV is 1975 .Ohio teJeviston specials are a
Easter Seals Chairman. He musical and a fea ture on anwill s erve as ma s ter of tique automobiles, which she
ceremonies for the kickoff collects.
The National Easter Seal
luncheon. Crum said goal for
this year's statewide campaign Society for Crippled Children
is $1 1250,000, or about 8 percent and Adults, Inc. the oldest and

OOLUMBUS (UP!) - Ohio
schools should participate In
the effort to keep energy uses
to a minimum but should be
provided ''with sufficient fuel
to remain open and to heat
classrooms to 68 degrees," an
official of the Ohio PTA said
Wednesday.
Stephen Sterrett, . public
information specialist for the
organlzatioo, told a Public
Utilities Commission hearing
on a request for further gas
curtailments by Columbls Gas
of Ohio, the utWty should
"continue its practice of allowIng curtailments to individual
school buildings to he spread
across the whole school sys-

t•g- ~ily
tSenate votes 24-5 for Dr. 1llartin Luther King holiday

For t.he LoWest

Ohio Easter Seal drive .

ROOS, .Ohio (UP! ) - A
' dynalrute bomb found at ·a gas
station In this small town
northwest of Cincinnati has left
authorities puuled.

Seven .families
were
evacuated from nearby liOilHII
for about four hours until the
bomb was disarmed . The
dynamite was turned over to
the sheriff's department for
further Investigation.
"I don't know why anyone
would want to do a thing Uke
that," said station owner
Edwar~
Burwlnkel, who
bought 1:te business a year ago.
"We've had no difficult 1 with
anyone in the year we've been
here.

was founded in 1919 in Elyria,
Ohio, and now is a nationwide
network opera ting in 52 states

I

"' ~

PHILADELPHIA (UP!) Citing the "llharp downturn in
the nation's economy," the
trustees of the bankrupt Penn
Central Railroad Wednesday
reported a net loss of
f/3,196,180 for the last quarter
of 1974, $32 million more than
the loss In the same period in
1973 .
In a preliminary report
before bankruptcy court here,
the trustees said the railroad
lost $t1,148,199in December, or
almoS: 58 per cent more than
the $26,068,306 lost in
December of last year.
The railroad's net ·Joss for
1974 ,as $198,024,162, or
$9,021,262 more than the
$189,002,900 the line's 1973 loss.
According to the trustees, the
nation's economy also cost
Pem Central an estimated $78
mUllon In revenue in the final
quarter due to a decline of
approximately 200,000
carloads.
Total operating revenues last
year Increased by 14.4 per cent
to $2,247 m!Won and operating
expenses roae' 12.8 per cent to
$1,832 million.
The trustees said the hike in
· prbne interest rates, higher
chargell for use of equipment
and Increased railroad retlreIJISit lues ralseli costs In 1974
more -than $89 millioo over
1973.
Carloadings dropped 19.5 per
cent in Deceplher, the tnJstees .
iaJd noting the effect ol the
coai. miners' strike and the.
decllne In automobile and
coostnictkllllndustries.
' Ftelgbt reveuue for Decem· '
ber waa $140 mDJion or f4.3
· miDlon higher than the same ·
month In ·1973, reflecting a
r'lm'llative increue In freight
mi. of more than II per cent
over DeC!!mber, 1973, the
lrulteeJ 1814.
.
Tatal revenuu for December
'""$181 mlllkcl, Climp8red to
$157 miiJicn for December,
1973 an 1ncreaae of 5.8 per
r:lt.flt: Operalin8 expenses for
the month were $161 million, up
11.7 per cent from tile $144
mlman repeated in December,.

lfl3.
.I

OR
POWDER. ·

No. RQ-309

REG.

REG.

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149.95

FIFTH AVENUE
CANDY BARS

PAY DAY
CANDY BARS

TUCO
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$}823
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RIGHT GUARD
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REG.
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AP 5

oz.

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ONE:A-DAY VITAMINS
PLAIN 100's

REG .
$3.49

Colgate••MFP

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77~

1.40

1

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Expires Feb. 23rd. 1975

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ONE-A-DAY VITAMINS
I
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I

$219

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Expires Feb. 23rd, 1975

"

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REG. ,
53.9 5 -

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J-------- --------- ---~----~

c~

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•

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••
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'
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1,'

...
8- The Dally Sentinel. Middleoort-Pomei'Oy, o..

Why this
·
bomb?

I

.

' .·
'

.
I
Thuradayr Feb. 20, 1975 1.

S·l

·

.

~l

Jane G
W ithers will help
CO LUMB US

!DtrnlERN HIGH satJOL Vanity dleerleailll'l IN

front , 1~. Stephanie Ord, Cheryl Larkins and Pam Panons;
in back, Debbie Roush and Ronda Ash, and on top, Vicki
Wolle.

Ford campaigns for tariff
a barrel oil import fee increase
Ford ordered . to start fuel
conservation while Congress
enacts his basic program. Ford
announced immediately he
would veto the measure and
rally votes to sustain the veto.
That done, Ford's strategy
calls for Congress then to enact
his economlc~ergy program
-allowing for compromises
with the Democrats.
Key to White House strategy
Is Ford 's conviction there
exists among the public and in
Congress growing support for
getting action on an energy
program that w!ll make
America independent of Arab
and other foreign oil suppliers.
Ford put It this way Wed·
nesday after the Senate vote:
"I regret today's vote b~t do
not regard It as finaL I believe
the Congress wlll ultimately
respond to the will of the
American people and s~e
national rather than narrow
interests ... !Intend to veto this
legislation ."

Once Congress sends·the blll
to the White House, Ford has 10
working days to stamp his veto
on it. He could spin out the
whole 10 days to take advantage.of what he regards as the
rising momentum among the
public for his program.
Ford expected the Wednesday Senate action.
White House aides stressed
the oil import tariff hike was
and is not an energy program.
They call it a stop-gap measure
Ford fashioned to begin work
on his goal of culling U.S. fuel
consumption by a million
barrels a day and to give
Congress time to enact a full
program.
Thus, according to White
House thinking, the delay
Congress wants is the delay
Ford is giving them in the oil
Import tariff hike. His full
program calls for a permanent
$2 a barrel increase in Import
tariffs balanced by a $2 boost in
taxes on domestic fuel production.

Dean's $4,000 fee draws heavy shots
RIC!t VAN

Motion

piclW'e and telev is ion Clctress

The bomb was found next to
a door at the Ross Suooco
Station at the intersection ci
Ohio 126 and Ohio 128. An
anonymous telephone caller
had told the Buller County
sheriff's office about the bomb
Tuesday night.

By

~

Jane Withers will greel about
400 volunteers al the sta tewide
Ea&amp;ter Seals campaign kickoff
lu ncheon in Co lumbus on
Satu rd ay, Feb. 22 . Miss
Withers is making a special
trip to Ohio from Hollywood to
serve as celebrity hostess for
. the all -&lt;lay Easler Seals even t
at The Ohio State University
Student Un ion.
A colorful a nd unusual
Decorated Wheelchair Contest
will highli ght the day's aclivities . More than a dozen
hantlicapped childr en . and
adults are en tered in the
contest. This year's theme will
be: "Love Is ... " Prizes will be

The bomb was disarmed by
an Army demoliton team from
Columbus early Wednesday
morning. The device consisted
· of five sticks of dynamite taped
together with a wil'f ruming
into a tin can.

WASHINGTON (UP! ) President Ford opened a
campaign today to turn a
congressional ''no" on his oil
import tariff hike into a "yes"
on his economic-energy program.
It began with a breakfast at 7:30a.m., a late start for the
early-rising Ford - at the
White House for majority
Democratic and minority
Republican
leaders
of
Congress.
"lllstorians may note the
battle began between the eggs
and the sweet rolls," said a
White House aide.
The main CO\lrse of the meal
was the confrontation between
the Republican President and
the Democratlc-(;ontrolled
Congress
over
Ford's
suggested solutions for
America's recession and
energy llhortage.
. Following the lead of the
House of Representatives, the
Senate voied Wednesday, 66 to
28, to suspend for 90 days the $3

and. territories . Last year, the
Ohio Easter Seal Society
serve d ' more than 20,000
handicapped persons through
its 77 state affiliates.
Dozens of Eastern Seal
poster children from Easter
more than the $1.146,039 raised l~1rgest voluntary agency Seal affiliates wiil travel to
last year.
providing direct rehabilitation Columbus to meet and be
Miss Withers, who devotes serv ices to handi capped' photographed with Miss
much of her time to philan - persons of all ages . The Society_ Withers.
thropic and charity work, will
speak at the luncheon on "The
Importance of Volunteers. "
Her film career dates back to
the 1930s, when she was a child
star "a bi t more misch ievous"
than her roval, Shirley Temple.
Her rrlovie credits include

SANT

"He has a right to speak at
OXFORD, Ohio (UPI)- The Miami just as anyone else
flak Is Dying about John Dean's does, but does his right of free
speech at Miami University speech give him the right of
March 3 for a $t,OOO fee.
unfair and undue cash recom.
Student newspaper editor pensation?" the student editor
Bill Schumacher said, "Miami asked. "I say strongly no.
llhould stand up to this man and
"Miami llhould stand up to
refuse his contract demand."
this man, refuse his contract
Laments campus columnist demand, simply say 'You'll get
Bob White, "I wish (Judge what people pay at the door.•
John) Slrlca had sentenced
"let people in their own
Dean to · sis months ol free conscience decide If they want
lectures."
to subsidize John Dean. And let
Dean, ~ ex•ttomey for individuals in their own minds
former President Nixon who decide If they want to enWas convicted In the Watergate courage such fame . I for one
case, Is scheduled to speak at 8 don't want my money going to
p.m. March 3 in Millet Hail, line the pockets of 'Honest John
Miami's spacious basketball Dean.'u
arena with 9,200 permanent
Schumacher also comileata, There will be a $1 ad- plained Dean "was once an
mlasion charge.
integral part of that horrid
Dean's ·appearance here Is White House conspiracy of
sponsored by •'The lecture silence and guilt.. . he went
Board," a student group that along with the boys until he
acta as an agency of the was singled out as the fail
''campus activities council.''
guy."
. ''The Lecture board" has its
Columnist White also was
own budgei approprlsted from burnedaboot Dean's price , but
student fees and there usually figured it was alright for him to
is no admlasion fee for most speak because "There 's
speakers It brings in.
nothing new about heing exBut because most of this ploiied. " ·
year's budget has been com"I also resent having to pay
milled, It was decided a $1 50 cents for a gallon of gasoline
admission fee was needed to . but If you want something you
snag Dean .
have to pay for it and $t,OOO is
Dean has been criticized at the going rate (for Dean),"
other lecture stops for his fees. White said. "I wish Sirica had
He replies that he would Uke to sentenced Dean to six ·months
speak for free, but is in debt.
ol free lectures instead of a few
Schumacher blasted Dean's months at a government
$t,OOO contract· In the student cOuntry club, but that's reality,
newBjaper.
folks.

"Gian t," "Captain Newman ,"
" Fears of Gera ldin e " and
many others. Television ap·
pea ranees have ranged from

Sterrett also proposed the
PUCO set up an advisory board
on school energy problems
composed of representatives of
. the Ohio PTA and other
statewide education~elated
organizations.
Sterrelt said the board could
offer PUOO direct Input from

eduators and interested
citizens on the energy
problems schools face.
"The board could also Improve communication between
the PUOO and local educators
and citizens concerning actions
'which wlll affect schools,"
Sterrett said.
"The Ohio PTA Is vitally
concerned that the education
and weUare of children be
strongly considered in any
decisions by the Public
Utilities Commision of Ohio on
energy matters ," Sterrett said.

FOREMAN &amp; ABBOTT
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,_Ohio
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BEND TIRE CENTER.
Milson, W. ••·

WALL PAINT

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MOORE IS
AMERICAN HARDWARE

"I think we could do this for a
man who practiced and
espoused non-violence in · a
violent nation," Bowen said.
"What he stood for )las no
dollar value."
Mussey offered an amendment to eliminate the legal
Monday oholldsy and make It a
commemorative day
the
third Sunday in January.
"Hew much longer can we
lreak up our working period
and pay the great cost of these
holidays?" asked Mussey.

BOOSTERS TO MEET
"We're being exploited, so
EASTERN - The athletic
what is new? (Carl) Bernstein boosters at Eastern High
and
(Bob)
Woodward School will meet Monday, Feb.
(Washington Post reporters 24, at 8:30 p. m. Plans for the
who. pursued the Watergate spring sports banquet will be
story) are getting rich through made . All interested persons
Watergate and I'm sure Nixon are urged to attend.
will If he writes a book.
"Dean is only that great
American tradition -making a
buck when he sees the opStlf't loslr~ ~t Cod1y or money
portunity.''
back. MONADl:X II e tiny_ t8blet

LOSE UGLY FAT

CHANGES ADDRESS
Mrs . Ray (Norma) Hecox,
Middleport, is rec uperating
from a hip fracture received in
a recent fall. After having been
confined to the MI. Carmel
Hospital for three weeks, she
was moved Friday to
St. Luke Convalescent Ce nter,
Room 201, 44 South Souder St.,
Columbus, 43222, for further
treatment.

.,

c.,~~~
()~

food. Elt I•- weigh 1-. Contains

no dangM'Ous drug~ 1nd will not
m.b yoo nervous. No l1ftrluous
IXIrCill. Change your life .. , Jtert
tod.ty. MONADEX coot $3.00 lor
• 20 day oupply. L01110 ~~e&lt;~nomy
slzt ~ $5.00. Alto lry ADUATABS:
they work 18'!.1.1y to help vou lose
w.ter·bloat, AOVA TABS - e "wettr

..-

..

pill" thol works - $3.00. Both
gueren._, end 101d _by:
Swisher &amp; Lohse Pharmacy,

"
,,

,

112 E.. Main. Pomeroy ;
· Dutton Drug Store, Mid·
dleport.

Henry Block has
17 reasons why )Uti

Buy one gallon
of Dutch Standard

should come to us
for income tax help.

"

•

Paint from any
of our stock and
buy the second
gallon at

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

'

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'

standards we have heard here
today.
"His spirit deserves to be
honored because it is more
relevant today than those of the
men we already honor," said
Sen. Valiquette. "le1 us have a
relevant holiday.''
"They say he was a man of
non-violence and apostle of
peace, bull question ·this," Van
Meter said. "Everywhere he

BUILDING SITES

we're asking for is a share in
the Image-building to project to
our youngsters the kind of
person they should be.
, But Sen. M. Ben Gaeth, RDefiance, said the Senate was
"opening up a can of worms."
He suggested if black heroes
were to be honored, the first
ones should he George Washington Gar ver, Booker T.
Washington and Hank Aaron.

went, violence followed. Maybe
there is a great demand for this
bill, but if there is, I don't see
it ."

Sen. M. Morris Jackson, !).
Cleveland, said King "calmed
the black conununity down
during riots in his district in the
1960 5.
1

"He created the kind of
image to work within the
system," Jackson said. "All

'

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Pennsey's
loss heavy

lnd ...., to Uko. MDNADEX will
help curb your dtli,. for excea

"Rather than create another "speak abou t his great
long three-day paid holiday in achievements." The amendthe state of Ohio, I would --kent was defeated on a 11).19
recommend we observe a vote.
Nol Measure Up
commemorative day on ~un­
Sen.
Marigene
Valiquette, Dday.
" Dr. Martin Luther King's Toledo, said King should be
civil rights movement Is so honored as "a man of peace.
closely tied to the Christian Many we have already honored
ethic that the holiday should be were men of war," she said,
"and they would not nieasure
on Sunday," said ; Mussey,
.
up
to the high legislative
adding that clergymen could
r,

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OOLUMBUS (UP! ) - The
, Ohio Senate has approved alld
·sent to the Ho~~ae legislation
; setting aside a legal holiday for
the late Dr. Martin Luther
' King despite complaints that it
;woUld put the slain civil rights ·
•leader on a par with
: Chrislppher Columbus and
Jesus Ou-ist.
• The .bill, sponsored by Sen.
:Wt!Uam F. Bowen, R-Cincin'natl, one of Ohio's two black
:.senators, would designate the
•. :third Monday in January as
;Martin Luther King Day. It
;cleared the Senate Wednesday
'on a 24-li vote.
House passage would of'ficlally establish the holiday
:now observed in King's home
·state of Georgia, as well as
;~tucky, Illinois, Massachusetts and Maryland.
Bowen said Michigan now
observes a commemorative
'day on a Sunday but is in the
process of making it a Monday
holiday.
· He said King deserves a legal
holiday in his name because of
," all the things he stood
for ... the American dream ...the
Constitution ... the Emancipation Proclamation."
Remove Lustre
, BUt Sen. William 11. Mussey,
R-Batavia, . complained that
Washington's and Lincoln's
!Jirtlxlays already have been
combined, removing lustre
from their rememlrance, and
Sen. Thomas A. Van Meter, RAshland, agreed.
. "The only two people that
have a day to themselves
anymore are Christopher
Columbus and Jesus Ou-ist,
and I can't buy the notion that
Martin Luther King fils into the
category of those two," Van
Meter said:
The five Republicans who
opposed the bill also grumbled
that II would cost anywhere
from $2 milllon to $16 mllUon to
pay wages for government
workers given a paid holiday.
Bowen argued the cost of
another holiday would be
"very minimal, something llke

i lfthe ~ea

,772,5181

Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 ., Thursday, Feb.'20. !975 .

~

Latex

.-INSULATION-

'

-

Tire Prices

Chief Interior

Schools urged.
to watch fuel

tem."

The

Give Rooms New Look Now!

the US Steel Hour, Alfred
Hi tchcock's Thea ter Hour and
The Munsters, to a character
called "Josephine the plumber ' ' on commercia)s for a
awarded to winners in severa l house'hold product.
Miss Withers has retired as
categories.
The 1975 campaign will begin " Josephine " a nd is forming a
Feb. 24 and extend through production company for family
Mar . 30, Easter Sunday . entertainment for both TV and
Jimmy Crum, sports director motion pictures. Two projected
for WLWC-TV is 1975 .Ohio teJeviston specials are a
Easter Seals Chairman. He musical and a fea ture on anwill s erve as ma s ter of tique automobiles, which she
ceremonies for the kickoff collects.
The National Easter Seal
luncheon. Crum said goal for
this year's statewide campaign Society for Crippled Children
is $1 1250,000, or about 8 percent and Adults, Inc. the oldest and

OOLUMBUS (UP!) - Ohio
schools should participate In
the effort to keep energy uses
to a minimum but should be
provided ''with sufficient fuel
to remain open and to heat
classrooms to 68 degrees," an
official of the Ohio PTA said
Wednesday.
Stephen Sterrett, . public
information specialist for the
organlzatioo, told a Public
Utilities Commission hearing
on a request for further gas
curtailments by Columbls Gas
of Ohio, the utWty should
"continue its practice of allowIng curtailments to individual
school buildings to he spread
across the whole school sys-

t•g- ~ily
tSenate votes 24-5 for Dr. 1llartin Luther King holiday

For t.he LoWest

Ohio Easter Seal drive .

ROOS, .Ohio (UP! ) - A
' dynalrute bomb found at ·a gas
station In this small town
northwest of Cincinnati has left
authorities puuled.

Seven .families
were
evacuated from nearby liOilHII
for about four hours until the
bomb was disarmed . The
dynamite was turned over to
the sheriff's department for
further Investigation.
"I don't know why anyone
would want to do a thing Uke
that," said station owner
Edwar~
Burwlnkel, who
bought 1:te business a year ago.
"We've had no difficult 1 with
anyone in the year we've been
here.

was founded in 1919 in Elyria,
Ohio, and now is a nationwide
network opera ting in 52 states

I

"' ~

PHILADELPHIA (UP!) Citing the "llharp downturn in
the nation's economy," the
trustees of the bankrupt Penn
Central Railroad Wednesday
reported a net loss of
f/3,196,180 for the last quarter
of 1974, $32 million more than
the loss In the same period in
1973 .
In a preliminary report
before bankruptcy court here,
the trustees said the railroad
lost $t1,148,199in December, or
almoS: 58 per cent more than
the $26,068,306 lost in
December of last year.
The railroad's net ·Joss for
1974 ,as $198,024,162, or
$9,021,262 more than the
$189,002,900 the line's 1973 loss.
According to the trustees, the
nation's economy also cost
Pem Central an estimated $78
mUllon In revenue in the final
quarter due to a decline of
approximately 200,000
carloads.
Total operating revenues last
year Increased by 14.4 per cent
to $2,247 m!Won and operating
expenses roae' 12.8 per cent to
$1,832 million.
The trustees said the hike in
· prbne interest rates, higher
chargell for use of equipment
and Increased railroad retlreIJISit lues ralseli costs In 1974
more -than $89 millioo over
1973.
Carloadings dropped 19.5 per
cent in Deceplher, the tnJstees .
iaJd noting the effect ol the
coai. miners' strike and the.
decllne In automobile and
coostnictkllllndustries.
' Ftelgbt reveuue for Decem· '
ber waa $140 mDJion or f4.3
· miDlon higher than the same ·
month In ·1973, reflecting a
r'lm'llative increue In freight
mi. of more than II per cent
over DeC!!mber, 1973, the
lrulteeJ 1814.
.
Tatal revenuu for December
'""$181 mlllkcl, Climp8red to
$157 miiJicn for December,
1973 an 1ncreaae of 5.8 per
r:lt.flt: Operalin8 expenses for
the month were $161 million, up
11.7 per cent from tile $144
mlman repeated in December,.

lfl3.
.I

OR
POWDER. ·

No. RQ-309

REG.

REG.

'3995

149.95

FIFTH AVENUE
CANDY BARS

PAY DAY
CANDY BARS

TUCO
1000 PIECE
PUZZLES'

REG. 15'

~EG.

3/35~

8 oz.

2.09

1

I

•

REG. 15'

1.89

1

'149
«~
ll•l••• '"''"

LADY

OPTILETS

DURAFlAME

REMINGTON

EVERYNIGHT
LONG HAIR
CONDITIONER

M-500
-

PD600 .Deluxe

LOGS

100 W.JO FREE

HAIR DRYER

CASE OF 6

REG. $12.16

REG. $1.98

REG. 119.95

$}823
.
RIGHT GUARD
DOUBLE PROTECTION
ANTI-PERSPIRANT
REG.
Uf&lt;SCENTEO

AP 5

oz.

.•
••

--------,I

ONE:A-DAY VITAMINS
PLAIN 100's

REG .
$3.49

Colgate••MFP

'

FAMILY SIZE

77~

1.40

1

r-------- COUPON

..

; Wi1h

Coupon

.
Expires Feb. 23rd. 1975

.

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

I

4---- -------------~

ONE-A-DAY VITAMINS
I
I
I

Wi1h

Coupon

I

$219

.
Expires Feb. 23rd, 1975

"

I

W-IRON 100's

REG. ,
53.9 5 -

••
••

I,

I
I
).
I

J-------- --------- ---~----~

c~

--

••

:•
•••

••

•:•
•

.

••
•..
••
..

•

'
\ .

I

�.'' .

.;, ·.

I .
I.

•

;t6;t"j'a"';i']f;;~y;,;··'usq Sentinel Classifieds[
'
·Jn Memory

Pels For Sale

IN LOVIN G m ern ory of 011r
h\Jsband and father . JO{'
Ebersbach who pa ssed &lt;I.W c1Y
9 years ago Feb . 19 Al though
the y ears ha \le passed , Our
lov ing memorv of him w i ll
alwa ys last . S('l dly m 1ssed by
wife . Ann , and family
2 70 lie

Ill &lt;"' t'

76 I I

.

II

''lil lf'

Pt10n c 99 7

Th"! month . w e shall nor for get :
For i n our hearts , yo u wi ll st ay ,
Lnv ~d and r emem b er ed every
day .
Sadly m i ssed by c hildren and
g r andc hi !cJren
'} JO He

Wanted To Buy

For Trade

'1 H OUSE S in Pomeroy , Ohio
On e 1S l arg e comp le tely
remodeled , new f vr na ce ,
si d i ng , w i ndows . p an el ing .
fully Earp eted . Ot11er is sm al l
house , 4 room s. Would like to
tr ad e both hou ses fo r a far m
or business prop erly Phon e
(30 41 ) 88'} 798 4.
2 11 12tc

1. WI SH to tha nk the Rut land
bran ctr or t h e SEO M S and all
ttrose who helped me during
my stay and i l lness a t t h e
HMC. Sp ecial thanks to th e
Sal em Ce nter tea ch er s upon
my entry i nto the h osp i tal and
tho se wh o sen t me my ca rds ,
letters , phon e calls , flowers
and gi ft s Thank you to all my
·ne igh bors for your kind ness
and th oug htfulness show n
1.mto me
Margare t Par son s.
1·10 · l tc

Notice
NOTICEI
Anyone owning stock
in the

Local Bowling

DIVERSIFIED

POMEROY BOWLING
LANES
MORNING GLORIES
Feb. 11 , 1975

FRANCHISE

Standings
Team

Osborne 515, Marlene Wilson

Team Hig h G"me - Gibbs
Grocery 897,
Team High Series - Gibbs
TUESDAY TRIPLICATE
Feb. 11. 1975
Standings
Friendly Tavern
40 16
Kl~~g BulldcSuppty
32 24
N~tothlng House
28 28
Tu~r 's Grocery
24 32
RoyaPCrown Bot! .
22 34
Royal Oak Park
22 34
High Ind. Game - Pat
C..rson 212, Ma~lne Dugan 181.
High Series - Pal Carson
542. Maxine Dugan 506.
Team High Game - Royal
Oak Park 498.
Team .High Series - Roya l
Oak Park 1412.
WEDNESDAY
EARLY BIRD
. ... _ .Standings
..

Te.w ,\···- ·
,
.,
Depend.oibte Contracting 44 12
Roush's Landing
35 21
Ben, Tom Corp.
33 23
Ebersbach Hdw.
22 34
Franc is' Florists
18 38
Evel)in's Grocery
16 o10
High Ind. Game
Rheba
Harrison

196.
High Series Betty
Whitlatch 505 , louise Harrison
496.
Team Hl~h _ Game
Ben .
Tom Corp . ~·
Team High Series
BenTom C-orp: ;!308.

s HooTING Mat ch , Racine Gu n
Club , Sunday , Feb r uary 23, 1
p.m .
2-19 -4t c

22

RIFLE shooting, match ,
Rutland Gun Club , S ~mday, I
p . m . Open flights ar),P SC.9PQh
e\le rvon e welcome . N e w
Lima Road .
2-20 -3t c

SHO O TIN G MAT CH , Corn
Hollow Gun Club . t ur n first
r ight alf er Miles Cemete r y ,
Rutlan d . Fac tory choked
guns only . Sunda'y , February
23 , 1 p . m.
2 20 3t c
MR AND MRS . Ronald Dougan
would l ike to invite you t o
allend Sunda y SchOol at th e
Middleport
Un i t ed
Pen
tecostat Church , Sol.Jth Third
Avenue , sta rt i ng at 10 a . m.
2-20 -ltp
AT HEN S F fen Market a t Jr .
Fair Bldg . March 2nd and
16th . Spaces availab le , 593
8460 . highly advertised .
2-18-1Btc
ATHENS Flea Market at Jr .
Fair Bldg ., Mar c h 2 and 16.
Spaces available . Phone 593 •
8460 . Hlghtv advertised .
2-18 -18tc

'

'

MORNING newspaper , Her ald
Dispatch , del i vered dally
from Kanauga t o Middleport .
Pome rov area and f rom New
Ha ven and Mason area to
north Point P leas.-m t·. Phone
(6 14) 446 - 14 21
2- 17 -5rc

-~:--~-------·--

Team

223, Louise

742 -6456
before Friday evening,
February '21.

F OR YO Ur " O il of M i nk "
Cosmerics . Phon e BROWN ' S
99151 13. .
1-7-tt c

Grocery 2517.

Hysell

Please call Lee Wood

GU N Shoot , on M i l e Hill Road ,
fa c tory c hoked g uns only .
by
Ra ci n e
Sponsored
Ameri ca n Legion . Saturday .
F eb . n. 1 p .m .
2-18-M c

Eden News

GROVERST U 0 iO~-MiddTr-Po-;t .

Ohio , will be open Fri day and
Sa turd ay on ly 1111 f urther
not i ce .
2-9 12t c

Social Notes
BY MAR111A HOUIINGER
Attendance at Eden Sunday
School was .64.
Mr. iiDd ·~ . Ray Adams
visited Sa~ evening with
Mr. and .. V\rgU Holsinger
' Alesnla,
lf!'-'t,, "'
and
oors. Martha
H~r,ariit Mr. and Mrs. Sol

A U CTIO N . Thursda~ night , 7
p . m . at Mason Aucfion .
Horton St. In Mason , W . Va .
Consignments wel co me .
Phone {304) 173 -547 1.
2-2-tfc

.w,

NUvw sel li ng Fu ll er Brush
Products, phone 992 -3.&amp;1 0
_...
1-24 .1f c

____ _________ _

Au~,. ••v•" ; oio: , Every Friday ,
4

Bigley.

7 p.m . Village Au c lion . 215 N .
Sec ond , Middleport
2-20 ·30tc

Rt\v. · Eldon Blake visited
recently with Mr. and Mrs.
Mike Kerwin .
Mr. and Mrs. William
Gillilan and family , Canlon,
visited over. the weekend wilh
their parents, Mr. and Mrs.
JameS Carjer and family and
Mt'.''and Mrs. LeRoy Gillilan

S'HOOT IN G match, Rac ine Gun
Cl ub, Sunda y 1 p . m . Assorted
meafs and f&lt;"l cfory chok e guns
only
11 22 -ltc

RESPON SIBLE LADY lo live
i n with elderly l"'dy Call 66 7

Mrs . Madeline Buchanan
and son, Joe, visited Wednesday ·with Mrs. Geraldine
Holsinger and Al~a.
;Mt~ Mta,: Eddie Bigley
~ Sllt!ltdaY evening with
Mr. and Mrs. Rodney Hwne,
little HoCking.
Mrs . Geraldine Holsinger ·
and Aleshia visited Friday'
evening with Mrs. J"!!nnie
Blake and Jeremy.
Martba Holsinser visited Mr.
and Mrs. Jim Eddy and family,
Tuesday uenlng.
Carl · Swain visited recently
with Jirllmy Carter.

.

3305.

1-20 Jt c
LOCAL concern reQuir i ng part
time
office
he l p .
Ap .
prQK i matelv 80 hrs . per
monlh . Genera l offi ce ski l ls
required . Send ha"d ·wr i tten
resume end experience to Sox
729T , c -o The Dailv Sent inel ,
Pomeroy , Oh io .
2-16 -5rc

CAlLED UP
KANSASCITY,Mo. (UP!)Defensemin Henry Lehvonen
was cAned up Tuesday to the .
Natfooal Hockey League Kansas .Qty Scouts from Port
Huron . Qf· the International
Hockey; League.
'

';:·

'

CA SHU$$ FOR JUNK CARS .
Com pletl', FRYE ' S TRU CK
AND AUTO PART S, R:ulland .
Phone 742 -6094 .
1·22 ·26tp

..--·
.... - '
OLD fvrn iturt , ice boKes , b·rass
beds . or complete households .
Write M . 0 . Miller . Rf. 4,
Pomeroy . Ohi o . Call 992 -7760 .
10-7-H
,·

SO X 10 TRAILER. ruuy fur .
nished,
air
c onditioned ,
washer and dtyer·, fullv

carptfed. Phone ?49-3663.
.

. .

- - - .-- ..,.,"'"r'--:--;:--,..~

-

r

JUNK autos, complete and
delivered to our yard . We pick
up auto bod ies and buy all
k.nds of scrap metals and
iron . Rider 's Salvage, St . Rt .
124 , Rt. 4, Pomero y , Ohio . •
Call 992 -5468 .
10·17 -tfc
CASH pa id for all makes and
models of mob ile homes .
Pho•~ area code 614-423 -9531.
:
4-b -tfc

'

'
,Mobi~ tbnes For Sale

•

2· 19-·l lp
...... __ _ _

CO UNTRY Mobile Home· Park ,
Rt 33. ten mi les north of
Po,meroy . Large rots w ith
concrete patios. sidewalks ,
runners
and
ott
street
pa rkin g . Phone 992 7479 .
12-31-tf c
APT . 3 rooms , all electr ic, has
tab le top range. wall oven .
r eat ni ce and c l ea n , modern .
Located
in
Pomeroy
overl ooking t he Ohio R iver .
Phon e Ga l lipolis , day 446 ·
7099 , evenings 4146 -9530 .
1 26 -tfn
HOUSE F OR RENT , 163.4
Lincoln Hgts ., Pomeroy ,
Ptrone Pom eroy 99 2-3575 or
Gallipoli s 446 -27 49 .
2-2-tf c
J

397 5.

'E111ployrnent Wanted
-R·E..,ODEL'ING ,

'&gt;

prumblng ,

heating,
general

and all types of
repa i r .
Work
gU~ranteed . 20 years ex .
per.ence . Phone 992-2409.
1-19 -ttc

3-11 -tfc

• F f.'

1

~ y !&gt; t (' l11 ,

~t·p,1r,1 1e

SOUIId
: onlro l s
or budq et

CLO SE OUT on new Zig .l .:14
se w in g ma chin es For sewi.ng
str etch fabr ics . bu ttonhole s.
fan c y de sig ns , etc. Pa i n t
sl ig h tl y blemi sh ed . Ch oi ce o f
car r y i ng c asE' or se w ing
stan d _ S49 .80 ca sh or t er ms
a11ailable . Phone 99'1. 7755
I 'l lA lf c
19 70 SCOT T 1E ca mp er , very
good condition . PhonL' 992
71/ 0

•

L E G HOR N
949 3R6R

h ens,

') 1B TI C

Phone

SOc.

1 18 51c

TW O used ru gs and pad s,
and 12 )( 15 Both l or S25
Bed coil sp r in gs . SI O
R ide nour , Che srcr .
Ph one 985 3912 .

9 x l.S

Twin
Ru el
Oh io

2 18 3tp

NEW whe e l c ha i r and wa lker .
never used . Phone 142 446 1.
2 18 Jt c
19 57 CHEVY part s : NEW
Lakewood tra ction bars , hi ·
iacker air sho cks, hoo ker
headers, with 3" collectors for
sm al l block . Call 992 -3496
a ft er 6 p . m BEST OFFER .
10 -17 -tfc
'
- - - - - - - - - - . . - - - -.-.
INOU STR tA L 6 inch stroke sa w
S75; 18 inch meta ll at ag 6 in ch
sw in g ,
co mpl ete
w i th
tl1read ing gears motor and
bits, SIOO . 2 h .p . 220 bolt Si ngl e
phase motor . industr ia l type
Wifh pulley , $50 ; a ir com pressor motor and ta nk , S25 .
Lin e sha ft 3 pul leys , bea r ings
and belt. SIS . Phone 985 4118 .
2-1J -26tc

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

--------------1971 BUI CK Electra 225, Full

power , a ·C. good cond ition .
S2,850 . JOB Page St ., Phone
992 -3509 .
1· 18 -Mc

1967 ~~ N"TER-NAT1ONAl.--.- l"ton
wi th aluminum van . 50.000
miles . $1 ,095 . JOB Page St .,
Phone 992 -3509 .
2-IB -6t c

-----------

19 73 CHEVROLET Impala , 4
dr har-dtop , 350 cu bic Inch .
p .s , brakes , aut oma ti c t rans
miSSio n . air c onditioning ,
s tereo tape and radial t ire s,
eHe l lent condition . Call 992 .
53 46 af t er 4 p .m .
2· 18 6t c
---·-----10 73 FORD (~;,;y- SqlJire
wagon , 20. 000 miles , all
eQ uipme n t , 53, 500 . Phone 99 '1 ~93, 0~9..!~2!]0 . - - - - - - -1911 VW camper , pop -pop 1966
L TD , 1972 Yamaha 125 ,
t r ailbike. Phon e 992 -7513 .
2-20-Jt c
197 1
CU T LASS
Supr e me ,
Oldsmob i le , a i r cond i t ion.
factory tape , r adio , mag
wl1eels ,
power
brakes .
steer ing , 4 new t ires . In eK cellenr condition . W i ll sel l
r easonab le . Call 992 -1268 after
5 p. m .
2-20-6tp
1968 JEEP J30000 . Lots of ac ·
cessori es and c amper top .
Phon e 985 -4227 .

2 20 61p

1967 CJ 5 Jeep , phone 91J2 -2797
2-20-Jrc
1913 VEGA Hat c hba c k . 4 speed
transmission . new tires, tape
player . -eKce ll enl co nd ition .
Wi ll se l l reasonab l e. Phone
( 6141 9921317 or 99'1 ·2732 after
4 p .m .
2-12-12tc

608 ' E.1
REALTY~
MAl~
. ~P0M:E.RO Y......O...

Ph. 992-5682 or 992-7121
All Mechanical Work
OPen Mon .- Sat.
8A.M. - 6 P.M.

TOTA L

$16,600.
POMEROY -

POMEROY -

Id eal for

rental. 1 stor y fr a m e, bath,
basement, wide lot, porches.

All Types of
BUILDING
and REMODELING
From a shelf to a .house.
Painting , siding, roofing,
paper hanging , kitchen
cabinets, f)Cpert carpeting,
etc .

$3,800.
WANT TO SE LL? ALL
CASH
FOR
YOUR
PROPERTY - WE ARE IN
NEED
OF
HO USES
ESPECIALLY
NEWER
HOMES. CALL TOOAY .
992-2259 or 9?2-2568
Teaford

f.~ •

. ,, ..

.1y

For Sale
' GROCERY business for sale .
Building for S-'le or le.,se .
Phone 773 -S618from 8 : 30p . m .
to 10 p . m . fo r appo i ntment.
3- fO . tfc

-USED
------------:Jr"parts , Frye ·s TrUck. and
Auto Parts , Rutland , Ohio.
Phone { 61A) 742 -6094 .
1-22-78tp

-------------·-AKC
Registered
male

m iniature Schnauzer . Also,
smal l bl., c k and white por table Zen i th TV , 900d COO ·
d i tion . Phone 992 -2386 .
2-19-4tc
OPE N HOUSE!!! !! SATU R .
DAY
A ND
SU NDAY ,
FEBRUARY
22 and 23.
ST A RCRA F T SPECIALS . A ll
trailer s, 100 Pet . conta ined .
S7,024 for S5 .499 ; U ,774 for
SJ.72S. STARMAS TER FOLD ·
DOW N S, $1 ,925 includes spare
gas hookvp .free heater . we
service what we sell . One
year
100 P et. warranty ,
finan cing arranged . Reg ister
for
free
g i fts .
CAMP

CONLEY

STARC RAFT

SALES . Rt . 62 North of Poin t
P l euant beh ind Red Carl)et
Inn .

MASS EY . FE RG USON

SO

tra c tor , 52, 250·. Twe Allis
Chet l rners W .O . tractors , S8SO
each . .J;:i ght sets of 2 and 3
boffom 3 p1 . plows , sn s and
S350. Fo ur new 6' ~ rt . J p t .
lmco disc . S350 each . Two
wheel d iSc . SS20 . each . New S
fl ., J p t. and pull typ e ro t ary
mowers , S360. $3BO . One John
D.eere 246; 31pt . Corn planter ,
S3 76. One New ldea ,. used t ra il
tvpe sickle bar mower, S225.

carry

Jack w. Carsey , Mgr.
Phone 992· 2181

garage . $37,500.00.
INVESTMENT - A bus iness
of your own. An $8,000.0Q investment that has made a
fami l y a good living. All cash
bus1ness , no credit. Want an

offer.
NEW LISTING -

SPRINGER cow s and heifers ,
Here.ford or Cttarolais cross .
Phone 992 -7888 .
2-16-6t c

m ents . One rented, owner li\les
in other. Out of high water on
good paved street. lots of new
features .

NE W IMPROVED " Zipp ies" ,
the grea t ir on pill now with
Vitami n C. N el son Drug .
2-20-ltp
FOLEY
SAW
Sharpening
eq ui pm ent (J p c . hand saw
sharp ener)
and
ca rbid e
gr inder . A l1 l ike new . Phone
992 -2386.
2-20-41p
NEW AVOCADO West inghouse
portable convertib le diSh ·
wtt sh er . Phon e 992 -591 0.
'l -20 -3fp

:tEW LISTING -

2. apart-

Id ea lly

located older hom e in M id- ·
dleport. 8 room s, 2 baths , hot
water hea t, gas fireplace ,
family room , full basement, 4
bedrooms, all w ith closets .
large workshop, 4 garages,
larg e 2 story cabinet shop. A
real place .for a woodworking
business. 545,000.00.

·WE MAKE OUR MONEY IN
SELLING, IF NO SALE, NO
FEE. TRY US AT 992-3325.

ELECTROLU X Sweeper 1....: n. e
model. Com,ptete w ith all
c leaning atta c hments and
vses paper bags . Slight ly used
but cleans and looks l ike new .
Will sell for 537 .25 cash or
terms availab le. Phone 992 -.
7755 .
12 -18 tfc.

,I

ln•tolltd .

'"'&gt;.

Work ·

MES5A3 E,MAf e'l: ....w,\·
MORE OF "o\ 1. U" ur
A'-ID YOLJ 'LL gE

SCREI'IMING
H16H C's

~

•. ,
Cammtrci•I-Rtsldtnflll ,.::..

Minersville, 0.

Construction &amp; Romodtt

Blocks
Cement and Mortar
Wood Burning Stoves
Heatilators
and
Fireplace Accessories
2-19-Lmo .

:

8-K EXCAVATING '
'

COMPANY
777 Purl StrHt
Mlcldloporl, Ohio
f'llone m-5361 or

-I-·

Professional
WEDDING
Photography

The Furniture Fixer:
REPAIR-Broken
Parts Mended
STRIPPING-By
Hand
,.
NO DIP TANKS '
Supplies- Strippers
Stains- Finsihes
Free Pickup and Delivery

For lnfonnation

EXCAVATING, dozer , loader
and backhoe work; sept i c
tanks installed ; dump trucks
and to -boys for hire ; will hau l
fill d irt , top soil, limestone &amp; ·
gravel ; Cat I Bob or Roger
Jeffers , day phone 992 -7089 ; .
nigh,t phone 992 -3525 or 992- .
5232 .
2-11 .ffc ·

-i'OME
Improvement
and
Repalr Serv tce Anyth ing
fi Ke d around the home. from
roof to basement. You will
like our work and rat es .
Phone 742 -5081.
12· 29 -tfc

2-17-75c

- - - - - - -- - - - - - 1-21·26tp
READY MIX CONCRETEc le'" - - ----c---- - - - - - -

livered right to vour prote ct .
F ast
and
e.asy .
Free
, estimates. Phon _e 992 -328·4
Goeglein Ready -Mi x co . ,
M iddleport . Ohio .
6.30-tfc

~\lal'1 ET~IIJ~A~~

Portland; Ohio

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR

- Sweepers , toa sters , Irons ,
all small appl iances . Lawn
mOwers , n ex t to State High way Garage on Route 7. Hom e
Phone 985 -3825 .
2-2-26 tc

CAIIl AA'IE t\ ax::K~ !

843-2824 or 843-2293

1 (614) 247-3644

WILL tnm or cut trees or
shrubbery,
. clean
out
basements , atttcs, etc . Phone
949-3221 or 742 -4441.

roR
'PIF-

{::1o,€

JJ~WIDllJ];""-~ ==~!--!c

.

ALLEY OOP

I SOYUL

'

I I · t) I
IFLUBEMt
I I X)

heating service an~;
general sheet metal,'
works.
Free·
Estimates.
"
'
Phone 949-5961 .
Emergency 992-3995 ,

or 992a5700 .

r :A

(A..-n to-.ol'f'Ctw)

DOtER work, land cl ea ring by
the acre , hour l"y or contract .
Farm ponds, roads , etc .
La r ge dozer and operator
with over 20 vears eK ·
perl ence. Putt ins Excavating ,
Pomeroy, Ohio . Phone 992 ·
247 8.

LITTLE ORPHAN ' AHHIE-WORDI 01' PROMISE
r--,..----""f
LOOK • "THEM

lWO, COMIN'
OU'l W&amp;~., •

IS GREAT COUNTRY STEREO

COM£ PROWUN' MOUJooiD
OUR PLII.Ci AGAIN, ANIJ
'fou· ~o.~o. M GeniN' FVUND

'1E-.H? WELL, LET
ME lELL "101J
SOMElHIN' , WI$~

GU'" --·

~~ EAIL"1
NUl MO'lHIM' IN

18t:tlliiHl

~li E

TH' JIILLE"'. Willi 1\-i'

CA.T1 $1A.RIH' ,..,- ,UH ~

WHERE YOU CAN HEAR THE OHIO RIVER
REPORT AT 9:20 A.M.
I

- C.BRAD~O~ lY,A ~.,~c t ioneer
Complete Ser\lice
Phon e 949 ·3821 or 949 -3161
Racine , Ohio
Critt Bradford
S-l -Ife

1'11'

FROM 6:00 A.M. TIL 12:00 MIDNIGHT

SAVINGS THROUGH FEB. 28

Hou ::, e in Mason , w . va .
Corner lot , Mapl e &amp; Rt . 33 , al l
elec tric, Jlh bath , fully car
peted , hardwood flo ors , sfove ,
dishwasher ,
garbage
disposal , refr igerator , a tfic
for
Sfo rag e.
fu ll
s i ze
basemen t. wh i te p icket fence
in front yard . 2 car garage
with patio , SJ 4. Phone (304)
173 -547 6.
2-14.6tc

LAY-AWAY
SPECIAL

A $$0 .d eposit will hold
your new Gravely
Tractor until you need
it. Buy now and take.
advantage of our OffSeason Discounts.

.

on TY-·"DEB-ON-AIR"

DOWN
1 Nautical
direction
2 Reach
effectively
(2 wds.)
3 Slot
machines
(3 wds.)
4 Rolled
inlo a

ball
5 Took on
help

•• ~At Pomeroy Motor Co.

FACTORY REBATES THROUGH FEBRUARY 28
9 NOVAS
3 VEGAS

•200 REBATE ON ·
NOVAS &amp; VEGAS

1 MONZA

Yesterday's Aoswer
I Japanese. · 2% "Strauss"
statesman
opera
7 Arabian
23 Island
Nights tale
tomb of
(3 wda.)
King Arthur
9 Participant 24 - hammer
10 Intact
26 Quickly
11 Library
21 Dress lalrlc
patron
21 Undersized
18 Ruminant 3G FW with
21 Scottish
delight
Highlander 35 Meadow

BIG SAVINGS ON

·.

lf.

Get Our
Anniversary Price!

*
*
-----------------------· *
*
(6) Only - '74 Models
1 NOVA

2 VEGAS
1·'h T. and 1- 1 T. VAN TRUCKS

~

·

Anniversary Savings On

OCCASIONALLY...

NEVER HAPPENS
A6AIN!

Our Largest Stock Of

See the lf2 and '1'4 ton models. We
can't get factory to quit shipping
these. So come in and get OUR·&gt;
PRICE. Buy no~, we need room;

All Used Cars &amp; Trucks

I JEST HOPE IT

I WISH

No

fadoty Rebate

-*~~*

See a Legion of Leaders Salesman,
George Harris, Dallas Blevins, Roger Dillard

GRAVELY·

ERRORS 0F.JUI::GMENT1

LEC1\JRIN0
IT 105AY
FOR:;IVfN...
PROWOING TH/6

'75 Ole¥. Ught Trucks

T-

LIO (Jutr 21-Aug. 22) You're
vary elfectlve now If you remain
the power behind the throne.
Pull the strings. Let others front
for you.

IT LOOKS LIKE
,
EVER'BOOV IN HOOTIN
HOLLER'S HERE FER TH'
BIG SALE

MOVE

TH'DADBURN
LINE WOULD

DOWN NO tYIORE

'rOJ MEAN WE CAN
GO BACK 10 1\QRK?

.

You wiH blm~-lng elllll....,.

new contact .. Ttlll ,.,_ wll. ·
play o big role In your luiUfe M
o moat hllplullflr;
.
.

.,.11;ttn .

=

Thll will bt In tllaftlng ,.., •
you IOCII!Iy.' Vou'H bllrlutli..
with aevarll new tun
Thell' I 1 alrong ~
you'll be m1ktng 1 ••-•...
long-dlttance trip.
· -;:

LIBRA (8ep1. 23·0ct. 231 The
ne)(l couple days can be times

..·
'

Honorable play not called fot
NORTH (D)
4H43
•KQ2
tAQ
4A K85
EAST
WEST
4A
4 K 10 2
711
•J 1095
t9.763
t10842
4QI092
4J6
SOUTH
4Q9876

.A

• 83

t KJ 5
4743
Both vulnerable
West

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to worll'lt:
II

AXYDLBAAXa
L 0 N G F B ,L L 0 W

North

East

Pass
14
Paso . 44
Pass
Pass
Opening lead - J •

South

the·Pro!euor. "I IIIII III,...
on occuian. HowetW, 1111:11•
time when you IIIIIIW 111M
played low. 1At'1 11M* llllltt
•
possiblllttea. II 8aulll 111111 ·IIi
trumps lo the ac1
.llltt
cover was col'rld.
M
four or five to !be·I ill 1 •' ,
South would uve led 1 IIIII
trump,
tbe jack,
my. He would nat!Aiplef.JII
for a sincleton llllc ir 1111•
small.
, · . ··
'"Thus, in thll - llibiMII*
the jack play ...W I'« un.
either the euct llllldlltjr • 11W
to the ace In tile Soullllillllll _. ··
a sin1letoa qu- Ill tilt.Wilt .
hand. Your cvv.r cailtl ·IIIII ,
· cost you a trldt Net&lt;itr liwe Jll

'£:•'

no'

r--..,.

one."

·

14
Pass

One letter simply atanda lor another. In this sample A II
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Slnc1e letten.
apostrophes, the length and formation . of the wordJ are 1D.
· By O.wald ·&amp; Jamea Jacoby
.
hints. Each day the code letterw are difet~nt.
The student put his ace of
CRYPTOQUOTE
·hearts on dummy's queen and
led back a heart. South won in
p
E LV LQ Q K V- dummy and led the jack of ·
OCPJBCT:
VJBNNQ
trumps. The student covered
OBLRG
UB~
·
KVCE
ON
with his king and West had ~
LNRCE YLTQ
waste his ace o~ h1s par!'Jer. s
trick
. Alter that II wa~ a stmple
JBLQETCR. --,QLGCE
V BC
matter for South lo p1ck up the
10 of trumps and make his imBCTACTO
PRRP
possible contract.
" How will I ever learn when
Yesterday's Cryptoquole: PRIDE IS· AN ADMISSION OF to cover an honor with aR honor
WEAKNESS· IT SECRETLY FEARS ALL &lt;XlMPEIITION and . when not to'" asked the
student.
AND DREADs ALL RIVAI.S. - FULTON SHEEN
.
"Probably never." replied
(C li7&amp; KiDI Faat.W"'IIJndleate, IDC,i)

The biddinc bu bela:
WHt Nartll

- .·lltll.

'·

It

1•
1 N.T. · 1'111 1
You, South; llold :' ·
.
4AQ71•2 tKJH ••\IUt ·
Wba1, do y,. • pow!
A - Bid ~· elaiiL Yl!ll' lliliillt
oae dlot . - , . . , IIi 1 IIIII.
TODAY'I QIJDI'IOIII· '
West and Nartll ,..; lilt liWI
two hearli. W1llt do .. .. • • t ',,
..

l

I

•

MOVE UP

.,

:'

i:
('

. .!

d

'

·'
.'

614·992-2975

2 · lO

I

I

•everet unexpected bon 111¢.

Pul oul the belt tllll't tn ·)'OU.
PIICII (,_ • PI lf1 Ht

Good rlewa will revive your
hopes and Inspire you to move
upward with renewed vigor.
Quick action Is called f~r.

POMEROY MOTOR .CO.

"TRACJOR ·SALES

AQUAIIIUI (.llrt. . . . . . fit

Work or oorvkle you , . , . el·
llcontly now will rtoutt. I~

VIIIGQ (Aug. 23·8tpl. 22)

(LaL)

WELL, IVE NEVER BEEN
A VINIJICTIVE PEfiSCJN_
... AND WE ALL Mi\KE

jr

n'wlllbleaaylar'youiOifl
co-ope&lt;atlon lfom .,.._ •
day, so don't ntl. T-IH
wilt bo enol"- tiOIJ.
•·

boost In 11 manner -that never
to you.

3'1 Covenant
between
powers
0\N\UJ FIND
IT IN '&gt;OUR
"IOU WEllE SO G0C0
HEAI2T 10
TO U5ANDWE
FORrSIVE
WERE DISLOYAL ...
US?

1~

occurr~d

away
34 Goddess

•

CAPIIItOIIN (Dee; ·; II

WIN AT BRIDGE

MSiaving

ON MONZA

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

Outside Interests will .oo

smoothly, but things get a trifle
·bumpy al home lhls p.m.
TAUIIUB (April 20-Mor 20)

CANCER (JUIII 21-July 22)
Something you 're very In·
1eraa1ed In personally will gal a

dignitary

'500 REBATE

are generally to

your liking mos1 of lhe day .

lnlluences having an ertect
upon your resources and ear- .
nlngs are especially promising
today. t:~e alert for unusual op·
portunllles ..

31 Creaky
3Z Steiger
33 Colloidal
substance

ONLY 13 CARS TO SELL

CondUions

because of another worry.

~· Church

WAYA~~-~==~~

For Frldar. Ftb. 21, 1111
ARIEl !Mtroh 21-Aprll 11)

QEMINI (Mor 21-Junt 20)

22 Weapon at
.Balaklava
2t Less risky
25 Caucasian
language
%8 West Pointer
%1 Swedish
county

IT TAKES 57 DAYS I3Y '!WIMP
STEl\MER1 BUf ITS CH5.APER
IHAN FL-YING BE'CAUSE
Wfiii CAN WJRK 0LR

.,_Mil.

lilted. It should brlgh1en your
splrlls, but the glow will dl!1l

38 Suffix for
contest or
account
39 Former
Japanese
premier
40 Tint

·

of real 1cltlovemet\l willie
go ala art
"*''I
will move swlflty. Hlntllllllril, , ·.
ICOIIPIO lOti. ....... . ,
You'll g1ln from l!le 11111M&gt;
lltu111on whttt olhllt .fllll!l
como up IOittl. TrUll yourlliil.
Do thlnga yaur WI)'.
.
t:.GITTAIItUI (Met. II I
21) You 1tnd IO 111ft- ffGIII
o olluatlon 1101 _.., Gl your
own m1klng: H.,...., ,--.
shore In btnelltt tlttll 11011 iiP•

Roadblocks will be suddenly

Insert

, 1 CAMARO

Gravely
Tractors

.

21 Garment

~EW

't HVV.:n:::.;, 111 r-omerqy, Ohio .
One is large . com pletely
r emod~ l ed ,
new fu rna ce ,
s id i ng , w indows , p·anel i ng ,
futtv carpeted . Olher is small
house . 4 rooms . Wou ld li ke lo
trad e both houses for a farm .
or business property . Phone
( 3_Q4 ) 882 -298ol .

•

by THOMAS JOSEPH

It Reward,
old style

ACREAGE for sal e. Wooded
lot s at Rock Spr ings to be
used for residential home use
only . S i l l W ine , 992 -2789 .
2 11 -26tc
H OM E S: No Money Uown
Payments accord ing to
income on F arm er s Home
Admin istrat i on loan . Co n ·
f i n ancing also
\le nt ional
a\lai lab !e with mi n imum
down . Lovely homes in three
lo.;at ions in Me igs County .
So me h om es with wooded
lots . Call for more in format ion , 99 2-5976.
1-15-76tc

OAKEN BABIED· MODIFY

.

~~·wd'
1 "Long and Far
Away"
4 Chat's partner
8 Dancer
Vereen
9 Glide,
as a snake
12 Paris season
13 Brave lass ·
lf One- time
(2 wds.)
15 Daunt
18 Greek letter
17 Treacherous
knight of the
Round Table
u Splicing pill

.

•

ANwen Tlu•lltlld-ltearfrtl AOCir/11 ga/11

ACROSS

WMPO FM 92.1

"'S'EPT I C
TANKS
c leaned.
Modern San it at ion , 992 -39 SA or
992 -7349.
.

l

lo...W..• CHAIR

Ye•terclay'•

10: Jenekl 33.

'

1

•

'

-.

1:GO--Midnight Special 3,4, 15; Wide World Speci1l f.
1: 15--Movle 10.
1:30-News 13.
.
2:30-Movle "Nevada Smith" 4.
4:011-Movle "Man In the Dark" 4.
5 : ~ovle "Dark Intruder" .4.

Now ........,. the circled lellert
to form the aurpriH ........ U · .
auoeoted bJ the above corloon.

_ .

~

. J.ITI'LE ORPHAN ANNIE

WMPOFM

II I

'IOU MU5T liE
51-iA&amp;f!;IL'Y t'R'E!7SEI::&gt;
IF OUT AT
THE~E .JOINT!&gt;.

I~I:::::::Piii~..==.:::IIII~IIIS1~.wa~-.~~1 (I X I IX J
WHAJGE

).

•·-

.

c.-

."Crosscurrent~~

RACINE PWMBING :•
&amp;HEAliNG _;:
"Complete plumbing sf.·:
.

'

«:..-

IIJILL fOvER !

..-

HE~

bAD, N\1'-N,~T
1 VJOI..X...ON'T

-- ----------~~·6- 26tc

SEWING MACHINE , ·Repairs,
serVice , all makes , 992 -2284 .
Tt)e Fab,.i c Shop , Pomeroy ,
Authorized Singer Sales ·and
Se rvi ce . We sharpen Scissors .
3-29·1fC

I

I

Lints,

992 -2047

RD No. I

/

gu•r•ntetd.
Doltr, Bad: hoe, Truckt
Llmestoftt &amp; Fill Dirt

Phone. 992-3993
Daily After 5: 00

HOUSE FOR sale , 6 rms .• 2
bedrooms , I floo r, closed
porch , excellent loca tion in
Racine , Ohia . By owner, Ott
Boston , Phone 949 -3021.
2-1B·31c

Pomeroy, Ohio

(

THt~K

I

Real Estate For sale

Ohio . ·698 -7881 or 698 ·3032 .
2· 18-3tc

--

O N ~ ...

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

512 E . Main

--~--..!...---

FOREST RUN
BLOCK CO.

Call

c, 1

room older home, 3 bedrooms,
large closets , 2 baths, one
en c losed, large living with gas
f i replace . Bu i lt -in bookcase
and c hina closet. Mod ern
kitchen with stove and dish·
washer, full basement with 2
fru it rooms, 2 porches , and

CAP£ AIN EASY

Pameroy ·•

W•ier, Electric, Gu, Sewer ·

l.any Lavender

(lhH "

TWIN or bunk beds, old desk.,
metal det ec tor , book case
head b.oard . Phone 992 -3068
after 5 p.m .
2-1ll -6tc

ERMEL LUCKETT . Albany ,

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

Ph. 992 -2174

'

I'

'VOU'I&lt;:E GC TTIN6 THE

Blown Into Walls
and Attic!!'
Free Estimates

1971 AUTOMATIC , 4 whee l
drive , bl lu er w i th t ilt wheel ,
air and t inted w i ndows ,
household goods . mechanical
HOU SE for sate , 6 room . 2
toots . Phon e 142 ·382 1
bedrooms , 1 floor , closed
2-14 -12t c
porch , eK cellent locati on in
2968 CHEVELLE 390, 4 speed
Rac ine , Ohio . By~wner , Otf
Boston . Phone 94
1.
tor S650 . Phone 142 -6205 .
. 19-3t c
2-14-6tc
1970 1 TON Chev r ol et V -8, 4
speed . dual wheels , runs
good , good body . Phone
H"rold Brewer . Long Bottom .
985 3554 .
1-16-rfc

SMITH NELSON_
MOTORS, &gt;INC.

!2-19-1 mo.)

Fire Retardant
Insulation

[hokPr
1\1 (

-"•--u•

Nathan Biggs
.Radiator Specialsit

Bring in your appli ., A. C., &amp;
ect. and save .

10 :3D-Wheel of Fortune 3,,.,15; Gambit 8,10. ·
'·,
7:oo--Truth or Cons. 3,4; Bowling lor Dollars 6; What's My Line ·11 :GO--High Rollers 3,4, IS; One Life to Llvt ••· N4!w You S.lt ·
,~
.
.
a: News 10; Let's Make a Deal13 ; Jimmy Dean 15; Oren Lee
11
:30-Hollywood
Squares
3,
15;
Brady
Bunch6;
NtM41
I.Mif
Slanley &amp; the N.F.O. 20: Nova 33.
.
Life 8, 10; Sesame St. 33.
'
7:30-Hol lywood Squares 3,4; Fred Taylor : Baskelball6; New
11 :55--Graham Kerr 8; Dan l"]el's World 10; Ntw113.
.·
Price Is Right a; Consumer Survival Kit 20; Wild Kingdom
12 :GO--Jackpot 3,15; Password All ~tors6,13; To It
10; To Tell! he Trulh 13; American Dutdoorsman 15:
4; News 8.10.
.
'
a:oo--Mac Davis 3,4,15 ; Barney Miller 6,13 ; The Waltons 8,10;
12
:311-Biank
Check
3,
15;
Split
Second
6;13; s..,cJI llr
Bill Moy ers" Journal 20 .33 .
Tomorrow
8,
10;
To
Be
Announced
33.
8:30- Karen 6,13.
'
12 :45--E iec. Co. 33 .
9:QO-Archer 3,4,15: Streets of San Francisco 6,13; Movie
12 :55--NBC News 3,15.
" Attack on Terror " 8,1 0; Mov ie " Night Drum " 20; Fortunes
1:GO--News 3; All My Children 6,13; Phil Dontllue II YIUIIt &amp;
of Nigel 33.
the Restless 10; Not For Women 0!1ty 15.
.
·
1:30-How To Sunllve a Marriage 3,4,,15; ~tl's Malee a Dell
10:oo--Movin' On 3,4,15; Harry D 6,13; Woman 33.
6,13; As the World Turns 8. 10.
1• .
10 :30-Horace Marshall 33.
2:oo--Days
of
Our
Lives
3,4,15;
Slo,OOO
Pyramid
6,13; Qulllfll
11 :0Q--News 3,4,6.8,10,13,15,20; ABC News 33. __
Light
8,
10.
... .
11 :30-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Wide World Special 13; FBI 6;
2: 30-Anothr World 3.~. 15; General Hospltll 6, 13; Prlcw IS "liM
Movie " " A Bullet for Pretty Boy" 8; Movie ."The little
8,10: .-.scent ot Man 20: Walsh's Animals 33.
.
Foxes" 10; Janakl 33.
3:30--Qne
Life
to
live
13;
Lucy
Show
6;
Match
Gllllt
I. Itt M.
12:30-Wide World Special 6.
U.
Rport
33.
.
l : oo-Tomorrow 3,4; News 13.
4:GO--Mr. Cartoon 3; I Dream of Jeannie 4; SolroHIIt 111
FRID.-.Y, FEBRU.-.RY 21 , 1975
Gilligan's Is. 6; Tattletales 8; StMme St. 10.»1 Mtvle
"E lopement" 10; Mike Douglas 13.
·
6 : DO--Sunrlse Seminar 4; Sunrise Semester 10.
• :30-Bewltched 3; Merv Griffin 4; Mod Squacl6; ~llchyy IIIIIW
6:15--Engllsh 505 3.
a· Bonanza 15. ·
.
·
. ·'
6:25--Farm Report 13.
5 : ~FBI 3; .-.ndy Griffith 8; Mister Rogeri' tleii'Nitut ·
6:30-Five Minutes to Live By 4; News 6 ; Bible Answers 8;
20,33; Ironside 13.
·
Public Affairs 10; Blue Ridge Quartet 13 ..
5:30-News 6; Beverly Hillbillies 8; Hodgepodge LIMIII ~ott
6:35--Columbus Today 4.
Smart 15; Elec. Co. 33.
6:45--Mornlng Report 3; Farmtlme 10.
6 : ~News 3,4.8.10,13,15; ABC News 6; Eiec. Co. Itt f&gt;tt·
):GO--Today 3,4,15; A.M. America 6,13: CBS News 8,10.
sonallty &amp; Behavioral Development 33.
·
· ·.
8:GO--Lassle6; Copt. KangarooS; Popeye 10; SesameS!. 33.
6:30-NBC News 3,4,15; ABC News 13; BtwllchtcU; C8S NIWI
8:25--Capt. Kangaroo 10 . ·
8.10; Zoom 20.
·
•
· ' ·...:,
8:30-Big Valley 6.
7:GO--Truth or Cons. 3,4; Bowling lor Dclllllts .fl. WCHS...9:oo--A.M. 3; Phil Donahue 4; .'le'&gt;ll : Bullwlnkle 8; Morning with
R~port 8; Aviation Weather 20,33; News lOr Jimmr Dill! Ill
D.J 13.
I Spy 15. ·
·'
9:25--Chuck White Rports 10.
7:30-Porter Wagoner 3; Pop Goes the Country 4; Ntw
9:30-Not For Women Only 3; Dinah 6 ; Galloping Gourmet 8;
Camera 6: Pop Goes the Country 81 Treeue Hunt Ill Tt
Tattletales 10; New Zoo Revue 13.
Tall the Truth 13; Black Pers.,.Ctlveon lhelltMat.33.
IO :oo--Celebrtty Sweepstakes 3,4, 15; Joker's Wild 8,10; Movie
&amp; : ~Sanford &amp; Son 3,4,15; Jacques CouatMu 6,111 Kllllll,le,,
"The Pleasure of His Company" 13.
Washl~gton Week In Rvtew 20,33.
8:3().-Chko&amp; the Man 3,4, 15; Wall StrMt Will&lt; 21,».
9 : ~Rockford Files 3,4,15; Hot L .Baltimore f,lll Mtvle
"Attack on Terror" 811o; Maaterpltce ThNtre 101
Survival Kit 33.
U111&lt;ramble the,. four Jumblet,
9:30-0dd Couple 6, 13; Aulgnment Amtrlcll 33.
one letter to each square, to
10 : ~Pollce Woman 3,4,15; Lily Special 6,13; NtM Ill II_.
form four ordinary word1.
Nuchlms 33.
10: 30-World Pre.. 20.
li:~News 3,4,6.8,10,13,15; ABC Nowa 33. ·
·
.
11 : 30-Johnny. Carson 3,4, 15; Wide World Stleclll II; Mitwtll ,.
·
"The Mummy's Tomb" 6: Movie "ltn" 11 Mlwlt

.

_ BORN LOSER

Realty

fL Sr

V1rq11

THURSD.-.v. FEBRUARY 20,1975

From the largest Truck

P92-3509

PHONE

949-3832 or 843-2667

reception or mu si c . R.,
sew ing R., ca rpeted , ti l ed ,
paneled
r ece ntly ,
f ull
basement, porc hes, garage .
You must see th is . $19,900.

RECIPIENTS

, I

•

Television log for easy ·viewbig

PICK UP A SUS PEer

WE'LL QUIETLY TAPE
HI VOICE FO!'i

Bulldozer Radiator to
smallest Heater Core .

Electrical Parts &amp; Service.
Also service on Mowers,
Compressors &amp; all small
Engines.

0&amp;0
CONSTRUCTION

PRICE

4 BR . 2 baths. double lol ,

FIL.E, ~

TI-IEN, WI-lEN WE

!:l.J 6 HT

681 ,

2 st ory frame ,

WILL BECOME

I~ THE FIRST BA'Tl:H OF
' - VOICE ·CiRAPHS FROM

-

close to Forked Run Lake ,
13 5 ACRES, m ineral s, TP

wa ler ,

- . u

NEW LISTING - Desirable 7

- 10.000 feet bates

our cash and

308 Page St., Middleport
Retrig:, A. c.. Heating,
Gutters, Roofing, Plumbing,

Rutland.

l

-•'

·.

OF LEVVD CAUS.•

On State Rl . l24, lfl mi. from
Route 7 by -pa ss towards

R . ha s fir eplace, carpeted ,
t iled. panel ed , porche s,
garage $9 ,500 .

Rl.

-- --~'-----'---

P &amp; J HOME
MAINTENANCE

RUTLAND - 1 story fram e ,
2 BR , ba th . din ing R, l ivi ng

· REEDSVILLE -

-

ROGER HYSELL'S
GARAGE

$10,500.

''

TWINE
-Ask for
price.

lfoo11e,

space, basem ent, porches,
ga s floor furn ace. ASKING

l'•·mo·l

BALER

1 ~ 10r y

POMEHU1 -

3 BR , bath, dining R, u t i lity

TRAILER-LOAD

iPOMEROY LANDMAR"ifl

1970 DOD GE Challenger, Rt.
JBJ automalfcr good condition ,
S1 ,400 or oest offer . Call 992 7423 .
2-19-4fc

.

-

'&gt;P • ~ •llo..('r

A&lt;llilncf' \ 1\16 10
IPrm&lt;; C all '1'1 .' 1 9 0~

Auto Sales

-- -

~J W ,,lr.u 1 '-. 1L' r L·O r ~ciiO ,

.1 •1 1 I 1H

ana o~ rct.Ju 1v1 furnished a"nd
unfurnished
apartments .
Phone 992 -5434 .
4·12 -Hc

PRIVATE m ee t ing room for
any organization ; phOne 992 ·

Wanted To Buy

--..:...------~ - ---

LEIIY(WEN

D UPLEX , ?3 8 '; Walnut Sl .
Middl eport , Ohio Phon e 9n
27 80 or 99~ 3432
2-19 tf c

Help Wanted

and family.

... ,

T RAILER SP ACE • .1• m ile
norlh of Me igs High Sc hool on
old R t . JJ . Phone 992 294 1.
1 n tic

f,l ("l f

• 19 tf c

P I CK lN G up piano in your area
Look.,ng
tor
respons rbi C
pa rt y Ctl l l Cr!i"di t Manager .1 RM f ur nish ed apr Phone qn
77 '1 5M9 or wr i lc Chillico the
16SB
P i;m o and Orqan . 160 E Main
'J 7 tt c
5 1 . Chllli c orhc . -1560 1
·1 14 Ol e
TWO bed room mob i le hom e
corn er Broadway and Elm in
Middl eport
Phone qq-z 2580
afl er 6 pm
2 16 tf c
WA N"T E D old up r ,g nt p1iln os.
any cond i t ion . Pay inQ 'S IO
ea ch F 1r s l f loor only W r 11e to 7 BEDROOM !rail er , adult's
and give dir ec tion s lo W1 1t en
onl y. P hon e 992 3J24 .
Piilno Company , Box lBR
7 4 tf c
Sardis , Oh rO .tJ94 6
1 I!! 6tp 7 1'\E D RO O M house w i lh ba th in
R ut lan d Phone 992 5858
2 18 ti c

Card of Thanks

509.

UR NI SH ED tw o bedro om
ll10 il ,lc ltOnt l' Ca l l 99'} J.I?Q
1 1.1 l :' tp

TRA ILER space . 1 ni iles fro m
Pomero y , R t . 1!1 3, Phon e 99 7
5BS8
10 11 1fc

Musical Instruments

r~pre t ,

Excelsior 011 Co.
129
Gibbs Grocery
100
G, &amp; J . Auto P~rts
98
Newell Sunoco
84
WMPD
84
Spencer's Mar ket
41
High Ind. Game - Thelma
Osborne 201. Margaret Follrod
191.
Hig h Se ries - Thelma

'r

I

7 70 31(

IN LOV IN G MEMORY o l ou r
d !ar f afher . Ca rt Manley , wh o
passed away nine yea rs ago
Feb .
'10,
1966 ·
' today ,
February co mes with sa d

For Sale

For Rent

AK( POt ! '' 1· ', I Owceksold

-

.Business Services

- 11 - T!'e Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday. Feb. 20.1975
' DICKTRACY

'

' .· "•

�.'' .

.;, ·.

I .
I.

•

;t6;t"j'a"';i']f;;~y;,;··'usq Sentinel Classifieds[
'
·Jn Memory

Pels For Sale

IN LOVIN G m ern ory of 011r
h\Jsband and father . JO{'
Ebersbach who pa ssed &lt;I.W c1Y
9 years ago Feb . 19 Al though
the y ears ha \le passed , Our
lov ing memorv of him w i ll
alwa ys last . S('l dly m 1ssed by
wife . Ann , and family
2 70 lie

Ill &lt;"' t'

76 I I

.

II

''lil lf'

Pt10n c 99 7

Th"! month . w e shall nor for get :
For i n our hearts , yo u wi ll st ay ,
Lnv ~d and r emem b er ed every
day .
Sadly m i ssed by c hildren and
g r andc hi !cJren
'} JO He

Wanted To Buy

For Trade

'1 H OUSE S in Pomeroy , Ohio
On e 1S l arg e comp le tely
remodeled , new f vr na ce ,
si d i ng , w i ndows . p an el ing .
fully Earp eted . Ot11er is sm al l
house , 4 room s. Would like to
tr ad e both hou ses fo r a far m
or business prop erly Phon e
(30 41 ) 88'} 798 4.
2 11 12tc

1. WI SH to tha nk the Rut land
bran ctr or t h e SEO M S and all
ttrose who helped me during
my stay and i l lness a t t h e
HMC. Sp ecial thanks to th e
Sal em Ce nter tea ch er s upon
my entry i nto the h osp i tal and
tho se wh o sen t me my ca rds ,
letters , phon e calls , flowers
and gi ft s Thank you to all my
·ne igh bors for your kind ness
and th oug htfulness show n
1.mto me
Margare t Par son s.
1·10 · l tc

Notice
NOTICEI
Anyone owning stock
in the

Local Bowling

DIVERSIFIED

POMEROY BOWLING
LANES
MORNING GLORIES
Feb. 11 , 1975

FRANCHISE

Standings
Team

Osborne 515, Marlene Wilson

Team Hig h G"me - Gibbs
Grocery 897,
Team High Series - Gibbs
TUESDAY TRIPLICATE
Feb. 11. 1975
Standings
Friendly Tavern
40 16
Kl~~g BulldcSuppty
32 24
N~tothlng House
28 28
Tu~r 's Grocery
24 32
RoyaPCrown Bot! .
22 34
Royal Oak Park
22 34
High Ind. Game - Pat
C..rson 212, Ma~lne Dugan 181.
High Series - Pal Carson
542. Maxine Dugan 506.
Team High Game - Royal
Oak Park 498.
Team .High Series - Roya l
Oak Park 1412.
WEDNESDAY
EARLY BIRD
. ... _ .Standings
..

Te.w ,\···- ·
,
.,
Depend.oibte Contracting 44 12
Roush's Landing
35 21
Ben, Tom Corp.
33 23
Ebersbach Hdw.
22 34
Franc is' Florists
18 38
Evel)in's Grocery
16 o10
High Ind. Game
Rheba
Harrison

196.
High Series Betty
Whitlatch 505 , louise Harrison
496.
Team Hl~h _ Game
Ben .
Tom Corp . ~·
Team High Series
BenTom C-orp: ;!308.

s HooTING Mat ch , Racine Gu n
Club , Sunday , Feb r uary 23, 1
p.m .
2-19 -4t c

22

RIFLE shooting, match ,
Rutland Gun Club , S ~mday, I
p . m . Open flights ar),P SC.9PQh
e\le rvon e welcome . N e w
Lima Road .
2-20 -3t c

SHO O TIN G MAT CH , Corn
Hollow Gun Club . t ur n first
r ight alf er Miles Cemete r y ,
Rutlan d . Fac tory choked
guns only . Sunda'y , February
23 , 1 p . m.
2 20 3t c
MR AND MRS . Ronald Dougan
would l ike to invite you t o
allend Sunda y SchOol at th e
Middleport
Un i t ed
Pen
tecostat Church , Sol.Jth Third
Avenue , sta rt i ng at 10 a . m.
2-20 -ltp
AT HEN S F fen Market a t Jr .
Fair Bldg . March 2nd and
16th . Spaces availab le , 593
8460 . highly advertised .
2-18-1Btc
ATHENS Flea Market at Jr .
Fair Bldg ., Mar c h 2 and 16.
Spaces available . Phone 593 •
8460 . Hlghtv advertised .
2-18 -18tc

'

'

MORNING newspaper , Her ald
Dispatch , del i vered dally
from Kanauga t o Middleport .
Pome rov area and f rom New
Ha ven and Mason area to
north Point P leas.-m t·. Phone
(6 14) 446 - 14 21
2- 17 -5rc

-~:--~-------·--

Team

223, Louise

742 -6456
before Friday evening,
February '21.

F OR YO Ur " O il of M i nk "
Cosmerics . Phon e BROWN ' S
99151 13. .
1-7-tt c

Grocery 2517.

Hysell

Please call Lee Wood

GU N Shoot , on M i l e Hill Road ,
fa c tory c hoked g uns only .
by
Ra ci n e
Sponsored
Ameri ca n Legion . Saturday .
F eb . n. 1 p .m .
2-18-M c

Eden News

GROVERST U 0 iO~-MiddTr-Po-;t .

Ohio , will be open Fri day and
Sa turd ay on ly 1111 f urther
not i ce .
2-9 12t c

Social Notes
BY MAR111A HOUIINGER
Attendance at Eden Sunday
School was .64.
Mr. iiDd ·~ . Ray Adams
visited Sa~ evening with
Mr. and .. V\rgU Holsinger
' Alesnla,
lf!'-'t,, "'
and
oors. Martha
H~r,ariit Mr. and Mrs. Sol

A U CTIO N . Thursda~ night , 7
p . m . at Mason Aucfion .
Horton St. In Mason , W . Va .
Consignments wel co me .
Phone {304) 173 -547 1.
2-2-tfc

.w,

NUvw sel li ng Fu ll er Brush
Products, phone 992 -3.&amp;1 0
_...
1-24 .1f c

____ _________ _

Au~,. ••v•" ; oio: , Every Friday ,
4

Bigley.

7 p.m . Village Au c lion . 215 N .
Sec ond , Middleport
2-20 ·30tc

Rt\v. · Eldon Blake visited
recently with Mr. and Mrs.
Mike Kerwin .
Mr. and Mrs. William
Gillilan and family , Canlon,
visited over. the weekend wilh
their parents, Mr. and Mrs.
JameS Carjer and family and
Mt'.''and Mrs. LeRoy Gillilan

S'HOOT IN G match, Rac ine Gun
Cl ub, Sunda y 1 p . m . Assorted
meafs and f&lt;"l cfory chok e guns
only
11 22 -ltc

RESPON SIBLE LADY lo live
i n with elderly l"'dy Call 66 7

Mrs . Madeline Buchanan
and son, Joe, visited Wednesday ·with Mrs. Geraldine
Holsinger and Al~a.
;Mt~ Mta,: Eddie Bigley
~ Sllt!ltdaY evening with
Mr. and Mrs. Rodney Hwne,
little HoCking.
Mrs . Geraldine Holsinger ·
and Aleshia visited Friday'
evening with Mrs. J"!!nnie
Blake and Jeremy.
Martba Holsinser visited Mr.
and Mrs. Jim Eddy and family,
Tuesday uenlng.
Carl · Swain visited recently
with Jirllmy Carter.

.

3305.

1-20 Jt c
LOCAL concern reQuir i ng part
time
office
he l p .
Ap .
prQK i matelv 80 hrs . per
monlh . Genera l offi ce ski l ls
required . Send ha"d ·wr i tten
resume end experience to Sox
729T , c -o The Dailv Sent inel ,
Pomeroy , Oh io .
2-16 -5rc

CAlLED UP
KANSASCITY,Mo. (UP!)Defensemin Henry Lehvonen
was cAned up Tuesday to the .
Natfooal Hockey League Kansas .Qty Scouts from Port
Huron . Qf· the International
Hockey; League.
'

';:·

'

CA SHU$$ FOR JUNK CARS .
Com pletl', FRYE ' S TRU CK
AND AUTO PART S, R:ulland .
Phone 742 -6094 .
1·22 ·26tp

..--·
.... - '
OLD fvrn iturt , ice boKes , b·rass
beds . or complete households .
Write M . 0 . Miller . Rf. 4,
Pomeroy . Ohi o . Call 992 -7760 .
10-7-H
,·

SO X 10 TRAILER. ruuy fur .
nished,
air
c onditioned ,
washer and dtyer·, fullv

carptfed. Phone ?49-3663.
.

. .

- - - .-- ..,.,"'"r'--:--;:--,..~

-

r

JUNK autos, complete and
delivered to our yard . We pick
up auto bod ies and buy all
k.nds of scrap metals and
iron . Rider 's Salvage, St . Rt .
124 , Rt. 4, Pomero y , Ohio . •
Call 992 -5468 .
10·17 -tfc
CASH pa id for all makes and
models of mob ile homes .
Pho•~ area code 614-423 -9531.
:
4-b -tfc

'

'
,Mobi~ tbnes For Sale

•

2· 19-·l lp
...... __ _ _

CO UNTRY Mobile Home· Park ,
Rt 33. ten mi les north of
Po,meroy . Large rots w ith
concrete patios. sidewalks ,
runners
and
ott
street
pa rkin g . Phone 992 7479 .
12-31-tf c
APT . 3 rooms , all electr ic, has
tab le top range. wall oven .
r eat ni ce and c l ea n , modern .
Located
in
Pomeroy
overl ooking t he Ohio R iver .
Phon e Ga l lipolis , day 446 ·
7099 , evenings 4146 -9530 .
1 26 -tfn
HOUSE F OR RENT , 163.4
Lincoln Hgts ., Pomeroy ,
Ptrone Pom eroy 99 2-3575 or
Gallipoli s 446 -27 49 .
2-2-tf c
J

397 5.

'E111ployrnent Wanted
-R·E..,ODEL'ING ,

'&gt;

prumblng ,

heating,
general

and all types of
repa i r .
Work
gU~ranteed . 20 years ex .
per.ence . Phone 992-2409.
1-19 -ttc

3-11 -tfc

• F f.'

1

~ y !&gt; t (' l11 ,

~t·p,1r,1 1e

SOUIId
: onlro l s
or budq et

CLO SE OUT on new Zig .l .:14
se w in g ma chin es For sewi.ng
str etch fabr ics . bu ttonhole s.
fan c y de sig ns , etc. Pa i n t
sl ig h tl y blemi sh ed . Ch oi ce o f
car r y i ng c asE' or se w ing
stan d _ S49 .80 ca sh or t er ms
a11ailable . Phone 99'1. 7755
I 'l lA lf c
19 70 SCOT T 1E ca mp er , very
good condition . PhonL' 992
71/ 0

•

L E G HOR N
949 3R6R

h ens,

') 1B TI C

Phone

SOc.

1 18 51c

TW O used ru gs and pad s,
and 12 )( 15 Both l or S25
Bed coil sp r in gs . SI O
R ide nour , Che srcr .
Ph one 985 3912 .

9 x l.S

Twin
Ru el
Oh io

2 18 3tp

NEW whe e l c ha i r and wa lker .
never used . Phone 142 446 1.
2 18 Jt c
19 57 CHEVY part s : NEW
Lakewood tra ction bars , hi ·
iacker air sho cks, hoo ker
headers, with 3" collectors for
sm al l block . Call 992 -3496
a ft er 6 p . m BEST OFFER .
10 -17 -tfc
'
- - - - - - - - - - . . - - - -.-.
INOU STR tA L 6 inch stroke sa w
S75; 18 inch meta ll at ag 6 in ch
sw in g ,
co mpl ete
w i th
tl1read ing gears motor and
bits, SIOO . 2 h .p . 220 bolt Si ngl e
phase motor . industr ia l type
Wifh pulley , $50 ; a ir com pressor motor and ta nk , S25 .
Lin e sha ft 3 pul leys , bea r ings
and belt. SIS . Phone 985 4118 .
2-1J -26tc

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

--------------1971 BUI CK Electra 225, Full

power , a ·C. good cond ition .
S2,850 . JOB Page St ., Phone
992 -3509 .
1· 18 -Mc

1967 ~~ N"TER-NAT1ONAl.--.- l"ton
wi th aluminum van . 50.000
miles . $1 ,095 . JOB Page St .,
Phone 992 -3509 .
2-IB -6t c

-----------

19 73 CHEVROLET Impala , 4
dr har-dtop , 350 cu bic Inch .
p .s , brakes , aut oma ti c t rans
miSSio n . air c onditioning ,
s tereo tape and radial t ire s,
eHe l lent condition . Call 992 .
53 46 af t er 4 p .m .
2· 18 6t c
---·-----10 73 FORD (~;,;y- SqlJire
wagon , 20. 000 miles , all
eQ uipme n t , 53, 500 . Phone 99 '1 ~93, 0~9..!~2!]0 . - - - - - - -1911 VW camper , pop -pop 1966
L TD , 1972 Yamaha 125 ,
t r ailbike. Phon e 992 -7513 .
2-20-Jt c
197 1
CU T LASS
Supr e me ,
Oldsmob i le , a i r cond i t ion.
factory tape , r adio , mag
wl1eels ,
power
brakes .
steer ing , 4 new t ires . In eK cellenr condition . W i ll sel l
r easonab le . Call 992 -1268 after
5 p. m .
2-20-6tp
1968 JEEP J30000 . Lots of ac ·
cessori es and c amper top .
Phon e 985 -4227 .

2 20 61p

1967 CJ 5 Jeep , phone 91J2 -2797
2-20-Jrc
1913 VEGA Hat c hba c k . 4 speed
transmission . new tires, tape
player . -eKce ll enl co nd ition .
Wi ll se l l reasonab l e. Phone
( 6141 9921317 or 99'1 ·2732 after
4 p .m .
2-12-12tc

608 ' E.1
REALTY~
MAl~
. ~P0M:E.RO Y......O...

Ph. 992-5682 or 992-7121
All Mechanical Work
OPen Mon .- Sat.
8A.M. - 6 P.M.

TOTA L

$16,600.
POMEROY -

POMEROY -

Id eal for

rental. 1 stor y fr a m e, bath,
basement, wide lot, porches.

All Types of
BUILDING
and REMODELING
From a shelf to a .house.
Painting , siding, roofing,
paper hanging , kitchen
cabinets, f)Cpert carpeting,
etc .

$3,800.
WANT TO SE LL? ALL
CASH
FOR
YOUR
PROPERTY - WE ARE IN
NEED
OF
HO USES
ESPECIALLY
NEWER
HOMES. CALL TOOAY .
992-2259 or 9?2-2568
Teaford

f.~ •

. ,, ..

.1y

For Sale
' GROCERY business for sale .
Building for S-'le or le.,se .
Phone 773 -S618from 8 : 30p . m .
to 10 p . m . fo r appo i ntment.
3- fO . tfc

-USED
------------:Jr"parts , Frye ·s TrUck. and
Auto Parts , Rutland , Ohio.
Phone { 61A) 742 -6094 .
1-22-78tp

-------------·-AKC
Registered
male

m iniature Schnauzer . Also,
smal l bl., c k and white por table Zen i th TV , 900d COO ·
d i tion . Phone 992 -2386 .
2-19-4tc
OPE N HOUSE!!! !! SATU R .
DAY
A ND
SU NDAY ,
FEBRUARY
22 and 23.
ST A RCRA F T SPECIALS . A ll
trailer s, 100 Pet . conta ined .
S7,024 for S5 .499 ; U ,774 for
SJ.72S. STARMAS TER FOLD ·
DOW N S, $1 ,925 includes spare
gas hookvp .free heater . we
service what we sell . One
year
100 P et. warranty ,
finan cing arranged . Reg ister
for
free
g i fts .
CAMP

CONLEY

STARC RAFT

SALES . Rt . 62 North of Poin t
P l euant beh ind Red Carl)et
Inn .

MASS EY . FE RG USON

SO

tra c tor , 52, 250·. Twe Allis
Chet l rners W .O . tractors , S8SO
each . .J;:i ght sets of 2 and 3
boffom 3 p1 . plows , sn s and
S350. Fo ur new 6' ~ rt . J p t .
lmco disc . S350 each . Two
wheel d iSc . SS20 . each . New S
fl ., J p t. and pull typ e ro t ary
mowers , S360. $3BO . One John
D.eere 246; 31pt . Corn planter ,
S3 76. One New ldea ,. used t ra il
tvpe sickle bar mower, S225.

carry

Jack w. Carsey , Mgr.
Phone 992· 2181

garage . $37,500.00.
INVESTMENT - A bus iness
of your own. An $8,000.0Q investment that has made a
fami l y a good living. All cash
bus1ness , no credit. Want an

offer.
NEW LISTING -

SPRINGER cow s and heifers ,
Here.ford or Cttarolais cross .
Phone 992 -7888 .
2-16-6t c

m ents . One rented, owner li\les
in other. Out of high water on
good paved street. lots of new
features .

NE W IMPROVED " Zipp ies" ,
the grea t ir on pill now with
Vitami n C. N el son Drug .
2-20-ltp
FOLEY
SAW
Sharpening
eq ui pm ent (J p c . hand saw
sharp ener)
and
ca rbid e
gr inder . A l1 l ike new . Phone
992 -2386.
2-20-41p
NEW AVOCADO West inghouse
portable convertib le diSh ·
wtt sh er . Phon e 992 -591 0.
'l -20 -3fp

:tEW LISTING -

2. apart-

Id ea lly

located older hom e in M id- ·
dleport. 8 room s, 2 baths , hot
water hea t, gas fireplace ,
family room , full basement, 4
bedrooms, all w ith closets .
large workshop, 4 garages,
larg e 2 story cabinet shop. A
real place .for a woodworking
business. 545,000.00.

·WE MAKE OUR MONEY IN
SELLING, IF NO SALE, NO
FEE. TRY US AT 992-3325.

ELECTROLU X Sweeper 1....: n. e
model. Com,ptete w ith all
c leaning atta c hments and
vses paper bags . Slight ly used
but cleans and looks l ike new .
Will sell for 537 .25 cash or
terms availab le. Phone 992 -.
7755 .
12 -18 tfc.

,I

ln•tolltd .

'"'&gt;.

Work ·

MES5A3 E,MAf e'l: ....w,\·
MORE OF "o\ 1. U" ur
A'-ID YOLJ 'LL gE

SCREI'IMING
H16H C's

~

•. ,
Cammtrci•I-Rtsldtnflll ,.::..

Minersville, 0.

Construction &amp; Romodtt

Blocks
Cement and Mortar
Wood Burning Stoves
Heatilators
and
Fireplace Accessories
2-19-Lmo .

:

8-K EXCAVATING '
'

COMPANY
777 Purl StrHt
Mlcldloporl, Ohio
f'llone m-5361 or

-I-·

Professional
WEDDING
Photography

The Furniture Fixer:
REPAIR-Broken
Parts Mended
STRIPPING-By
Hand
,.
NO DIP TANKS '
Supplies- Strippers
Stains- Finsihes
Free Pickup and Delivery

For lnfonnation

EXCAVATING, dozer , loader
and backhoe work; sept i c
tanks installed ; dump trucks
and to -boys for hire ; will hau l
fill d irt , top soil, limestone &amp; ·
gravel ; Cat I Bob or Roger
Jeffers , day phone 992 -7089 ; .
nigh,t phone 992 -3525 or 992- .
5232 .
2-11 .ffc ·

-i'OME
Improvement
and
Repalr Serv tce Anyth ing
fi Ke d around the home. from
roof to basement. You will
like our work and rat es .
Phone 742 -5081.
12· 29 -tfc

2-17-75c

- - - - - - -- - - - - - 1-21·26tp
READY MIX CONCRETEc le'" - - ----c---- - - - - - -

livered right to vour prote ct .
F ast
and
e.asy .
Free
, estimates. Phon _e 992 -328·4
Goeglein Ready -Mi x co . ,
M iddleport . Ohio .
6.30-tfc

~\lal'1 ET~IIJ~A~~

Portland; Ohio

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR

- Sweepers , toa sters , Irons ,
all small appl iances . Lawn
mOwers , n ex t to State High way Garage on Route 7. Hom e
Phone 985 -3825 .
2-2-26 tc

CAIIl AA'IE t\ ax::K~ !

843-2824 or 843-2293

1 (614) 247-3644

WILL tnm or cut trees or
shrubbery,
. clean
out
basements , atttcs, etc . Phone
949-3221 or 742 -4441.

roR
'PIF-

{::1o,€

JJ~WIDllJ];""-~ ==~!--!c

.

ALLEY OOP

I SOYUL

'

I I · t) I
IFLUBEMt
I I X)

heating service an~;
general sheet metal,'
works.
Free·
Estimates.
"
'
Phone 949-5961 .
Emergency 992-3995 ,

or 992a5700 .

r :A

(A..-n to-.ol'f'Ctw)

DOtER work, land cl ea ring by
the acre , hour l"y or contract .
Farm ponds, roads , etc .
La r ge dozer and operator
with over 20 vears eK ·
perl ence. Putt ins Excavating ,
Pomeroy, Ohio . Phone 992 ·
247 8.

LITTLE ORPHAN ' AHHIE-WORDI 01' PROMISE
r--,..----""f
LOOK • "THEM

lWO, COMIN'
OU'l W&amp;~., •

IS GREAT COUNTRY STEREO

COM£ PROWUN' MOUJooiD
OUR PLII.Ci AGAIN, ANIJ
'fou· ~o.~o. M GeniN' FVUND

'1E-.H? WELL, LET
ME lELL "101J
SOMElHIN' , WI$~

GU'" --·

~~ EAIL"1
NUl MO'lHIM' IN

18t:tlliiHl

~li E

TH' JIILLE"'. Willi 1\-i'

CA.T1 $1A.RIH' ,..,- ,UH ~

WHERE YOU CAN HEAR THE OHIO RIVER
REPORT AT 9:20 A.M.
I

- C.BRAD~O~ lY,A ~.,~c t ioneer
Complete Ser\lice
Phon e 949 ·3821 or 949 -3161
Racine , Ohio
Critt Bradford
S-l -Ife

1'11'

FROM 6:00 A.M. TIL 12:00 MIDNIGHT

SAVINGS THROUGH FEB. 28

Hou ::, e in Mason , w . va .
Corner lot , Mapl e &amp; Rt . 33 , al l
elec tric, Jlh bath , fully car
peted , hardwood flo ors , sfove ,
dishwasher ,
garbage
disposal , refr igerator , a tfic
for
Sfo rag e.
fu ll
s i ze
basemen t. wh i te p icket fence
in front yard . 2 car garage
with patio , SJ 4. Phone (304)
173 -547 6.
2-14.6tc

LAY-AWAY
SPECIAL

A $$0 .d eposit will hold
your new Gravely
Tractor until you need
it. Buy now and take.
advantage of our OffSeason Discounts.

.

on TY-·"DEB-ON-AIR"

DOWN
1 Nautical
direction
2 Reach
effectively
(2 wds.)
3 Slot
machines
(3 wds.)
4 Rolled
inlo a

ball
5 Took on
help

•• ~At Pomeroy Motor Co.

FACTORY REBATES THROUGH FEBRUARY 28
9 NOVAS
3 VEGAS

•200 REBATE ON ·
NOVAS &amp; VEGAS

1 MONZA

Yesterday's Aoswer
I Japanese. · 2% "Strauss"
statesman
opera
7 Arabian
23 Island
Nights tale
tomb of
(3 wda.)
King Arthur
9 Participant 24 - hammer
10 Intact
26 Quickly
11 Library
21 Dress lalrlc
patron
21 Undersized
18 Ruminant 3G FW with
21 Scottish
delight
Highlander 35 Meadow

BIG SAVINGS ON

·.

lf.

Get Our
Anniversary Price!

*
*
-----------------------· *
*
(6) Only - '74 Models
1 NOVA

2 VEGAS
1·'h T. and 1- 1 T. VAN TRUCKS

~

·

Anniversary Savings On

OCCASIONALLY...

NEVER HAPPENS
A6AIN!

Our Largest Stock Of

See the lf2 and '1'4 ton models. We
can't get factory to quit shipping
these. So come in and get OUR·&gt;
PRICE. Buy no~, we need room;

All Used Cars &amp; Trucks

I JEST HOPE IT

I WISH

No

fadoty Rebate

-*~~*

See a Legion of Leaders Salesman,
George Harris, Dallas Blevins, Roger Dillard

GRAVELY·

ERRORS 0F.JUI::GMENT1

LEC1\JRIN0
IT 105AY
FOR:;IVfN...
PROWOING TH/6

'75 Ole¥. Ught Trucks

T-

LIO (Jutr 21-Aug. 22) You're
vary elfectlve now If you remain
the power behind the throne.
Pull the strings. Let others front
for you.

IT LOOKS LIKE
,
EVER'BOOV IN HOOTIN
HOLLER'S HERE FER TH'
BIG SALE

MOVE

TH'DADBURN
LINE WOULD

DOWN NO tYIORE

'rOJ MEAN WE CAN
GO BACK 10 1\QRK?

.

You wiH blm~-lng elllll....,.

new contact .. Ttlll ,.,_ wll. ·
play o big role In your luiUfe M
o moat hllplullflr;
.
.

.,.11;ttn .

=

Thll will bt In tllaftlng ,.., •
you IOCII!Iy.' Vou'H bllrlutli..
with aevarll new tun
Thell' I 1 alrong ~
you'll be m1ktng 1 ••-•...
long-dlttance trip.
· -;:

LIBRA (8ep1. 23·0ct. 231 The
ne)(l couple days can be times

..·
'

Honorable play not called fot
NORTH (D)
4H43
•KQ2
tAQ
4A K85
EAST
WEST
4A
4 K 10 2
711
•J 1095
t9.763
t10842
4QI092
4J6
SOUTH
4Q9876

.A

• 83

t KJ 5
4743
Both vulnerable
West

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to worll'lt:
II

AXYDLBAAXa
L 0 N G F B ,L L 0 W

North

East

Pass
14
Paso . 44
Pass
Pass
Opening lead - J •

South

the·Pro!euor. "I IIIII III,...
on occuian. HowetW, 1111:11•
time when you IIIIIIW 111M
played low. 1At'1 11M* llllltt
•
possiblllttea. II 8aulll 111111 ·IIi
trumps lo the ac1
.llltt
cover was col'rld.
M
four or five to !be·I ill 1 •' ,
South would uve led 1 IIIII
trump,
tbe jack,
my. He would nat!Aiplef.JII
for a sincleton llllc ir 1111•
small.
, · . ··
'"Thus, in thll - llibiMII*
the jack play ...W I'« un.
either the euct llllldlltjr • 11W
to the ace In tile Soullllillllll _. ··
a sin1letoa qu- Ill tilt.Wilt .
hand. Your cvv.r cailtl ·IIIII ,
· cost you a trldt Net&lt;itr liwe Jll

'£:•'

no'

r--..,.

one."

·

14
Pass

One letter simply atanda lor another. In this sample A II
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Slnc1e letten.
apostrophes, the length and formation . of the wordJ are 1D.
· By O.wald ·&amp; Jamea Jacoby
.
hints. Each day the code letterw are difet~nt.
The student put his ace of
CRYPTOQUOTE
·hearts on dummy's queen and
led back a heart. South won in
p
E LV LQ Q K V- dummy and led the jack of ·
OCPJBCT:
VJBNNQ
trumps. The student covered
OBLRG
UB~
·
KVCE
ON
with his king and West had ~
LNRCE YLTQ
waste his ace o~ h1s par!'Jer. s
trick
. Alter that II wa~ a stmple
JBLQETCR. --,QLGCE
V BC
matter for South lo p1ck up the
10 of trumps and make his imBCTACTO
PRRP
possible contract.
" How will I ever learn when
Yesterday's Cryptoquole: PRIDE IS· AN ADMISSION OF to cover an honor with aR honor
WEAKNESS· IT SECRETLY FEARS ALL &lt;XlMPEIITION and . when not to'" asked the
student.
AND DREADs ALL RIVAI.S. - FULTON SHEEN
.
"Probably never." replied
(C li7&amp; KiDI Faat.W"'IIJndleate, IDC,i)

The biddinc bu bela:
WHt Nartll

- .·lltll.

'·

It

1•
1 N.T. · 1'111 1
You, South; llold :' ·
.
4AQ71•2 tKJH ••\IUt ·
Wba1, do y,. • pow!
A - Bid ~· elaiiL Yl!ll' lliliillt
oae dlot . - , . . , IIi 1 IIIII.
TODAY'I QIJDI'IOIII· '
West and Nartll ,..; lilt liWI
two hearli. W1llt do .. .. • • t ',,
..

l

I

•

MOVE UP

.,

:'

i:
('

. .!

d

'

·'
.'

614·992-2975

2 · lO

I

I

•everet unexpected bon 111¢.

Pul oul the belt tllll't tn ·)'OU.
PIICII (,_ • PI lf1 Ht

Good rlewa will revive your
hopes and Inspire you to move
upward with renewed vigor.
Quick action Is called f~r.

POMEROY MOTOR .CO.

"TRACJOR ·SALES

AQUAIIIUI (.llrt. . . . . . fit

Work or oorvkle you , . , . el·
llcontly now will rtoutt. I~

VIIIGQ (Aug. 23·8tpl. 22)

(LaL)

WELL, IVE NEVER BEEN
A VINIJICTIVE PEfiSCJN_
... AND WE ALL Mi\KE

jr

n'wlllbleaaylar'youiOifl
co-ope&lt;atlon lfom .,.._ •
day, so don't ntl. T-IH
wilt bo enol"- tiOIJ.
•·

boost In 11 manner -that never
to you.

3'1 Covenant
between
powers
0\N\UJ FIND
IT IN '&gt;OUR
"IOU WEllE SO G0C0
HEAI2T 10
TO U5ANDWE
FORrSIVE
WERE DISLOYAL ...
US?

1~

occurr~d

away
34 Goddess

•

CAPIIItOIIN (Dee; ·; II

WIN AT BRIDGE

MSiaving

ON MONZA

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

Outside Interests will .oo

smoothly, but things get a trifle
·bumpy al home lhls p.m.
TAUIIUB (April 20-Mor 20)

CANCER (JUIII 21-July 22)
Something you 're very In·
1eraa1ed In personally will gal a

dignitary

'500 REBATE

are generally to

your liking mos1 of lhe day .

lnlluences having an ertect
upon your resources and ear- .
nlngs are especially promising
today. t:~e alert for unusual op·
portunllles ..

31 Creaky
3Z Steiger
33 Colloidal
substance

ONLY 13 CARS TO SELL

CondUions

because of another worry.

~· Church

WAYA~~-~==~~

For Frldar. Ftb. 21, 1111
ARIEl !Mtroh 21-Aprll 11)

QEMINI (Mor 21-Junt 20)

22 Weapon at
.Balaklava
2t Less risky
25 Caucasian
language
%8 West Pointer
%1 Swedish
county

IT TAKES 57 DAYS I3Y '!WIMP
STEl\MER1 BUf ITS CH5.APER
IHAN FL-YING BE'CAUSE
Wfiii CAN WJRK 0LR

.,_Mil.

lilted. It should brlgh1en your
splrlls, but the glow will dl!1l

38 Suffix for
contest or
account
39 Former
Japanese
premier
40 Tint

·

of real 1cltlovemet\l willie
go ala art
"*''I
will move swlflty. Hlntllllllril, , ·.
ICOIIPIO lOti. ....... . ,
You'll g1ln from l!le 11111M&gt;
lltu111on whttt olhllt .fllll!l
como up IOittl. TrUll yourlliil.
Do thlnga yaur WI)'.
.
t:.GITTAIItUI (Met. II I
21) You 1tnd IO 111ft- ffGIII
o olluatlon 1101 _.., Gl your
own m1klng: H.,...., ,--.
shore In btnelltt tlttll 11011 iiP•

Roadblocks will be suddenly

Insert

, 1 CAMARO

Gravely
Tractors

.

21 Garment

~EW

't HVV.:n:::.;, 111 r-omerqy, Ohio .
One is large . com pletely
r emod~ l ed ,
new fu rna ce ,
s id i ng , w indows , p·anel i ng ,
futtv carpeted . Olher is small
house . 4 rooms . Wou ld li ke lo
trad e both houses for a farm .
or business property . Phone
( 3_Q4 ) 882 -298ol .

•

by THOMAS JOSEPH

It Reward,
old style

ACREAGE for sal e. Wooded
lot s at Rock Spr ings to be
used for residential home use
only . S i l l W ine , 992 -2789 .
2 11 -26tc
H OM E S: No Money Uown
Payments accord ing to
income on F arm er s Home
Admin istrat i on loan . Co n ·
f i n ancing also
\le nt ional
a\lai lab !e with mi n imum
down . Lovely homes in three
lo.;at ions in Me igs County .
So me h om es with wooded
lots . Call for more in format ion , 99 2-5976.
1-15-76tc

OAKEN BABIED· MODIFY

.

~~·wd'
1 "Long and Far
Away"
4 Chat's partner
8 Dancer
Vereen
9 Glide,
as a snake
12 Paris season
13 Brave lass ·
lf One- time
(2 wds.)
15 Daunt
18 Greek letter
17 Treacherous
knight of the
Round Table
u Splicing pill

.

•

ANwen Tlu•lltlld-ltearfrtl AOCir/11 ga/11

ACROSS

WMPO FM 92.1

"'S'EPT I C
TANKS
c leaned.
Modern San it at ion , 992 -39 SA or
992 -7349.
.

l

lo...W..• CHAIR

Ye•terclay'•

10: Jenekl 33.

'

1

•

'

-.

1:GO--Midnight Special 3,4, 15; Wide World Speci1l f.
1: 15--Movle 10.
1:30-News 13.
.
2:30-Movle "Nevada Smith" 4.
4:011-Movle "Man In the Dark" 4.
5 : ~ovle "Dark Intruder" .4.

Now ........,. the circled lellert
to form the aurpriH ........ U · .
auoeoted bJ the above corloon.

_ .

~

. J.ITI'LE ORPHAN ANNIE

WMPOFM

II I

'IOU MU5T liE
51-iA&amp;f!;IL'Y t'R'E!7SEI::&gt;
IF OUT AT
THE~E .JOINT!&gt;.

I~I:::::::Piii~..==.:::IIII~IIIS1~.wa~-.~~1 (I X I IX J
WHAJGE

).

•·-

.

c.-

."Crosscurrent~~

RACINE PWMBING :•
&amp;HEAliNG _;:
"Complete plumbing sf.·:
.

'

«:..-

IIJILL fOvER !

..-

HE~

bAD, N\1'-N,~T
1 VJOI..X...ON'T

-- ----------~~·6- 26tc

SEWING MACHINE , ·Repairs,
serVice , all makes , 992 -2284 .
Tt)e Fab,.i c Shop , Pomeroy ,
Authorized Singer Sales ·and
Se rvi ce . We sharpen Scissors .
3-29·1fC

I

I

Lints,

992 -2047

RD No. I

/

gu•r•ntetd.
Doltr, Bad: hoe, Truckt
Llmestoftt &amp; Fill Dirt

Phone. 992-3993
Daily After 5: 00

HOUSE FOR sale , 6 rms .• 2
bedrooms , I floo r, closed
porch , excellent loca tion in
Racine , Ohia . By owner, Ott
Boston , Phone 949 -3021.
2-1B·31c

Pomeroy, Ohio

(

THt~K

I

Real Estate For sale

Ohio . ·698 -7881 or 698 ·3032 .
2· 18-3tc

--

O N ~ ...

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

512 E . Main

--~--..!...---

FOREST RUN
BLOCK CO.

Call

c, 1

room older home, 3 bedrooms,
large closets , 2 baths, one
en c losed, large living with gas
f i replace . Bu i lt -in bookcase
and c hina closet. Mod ern
kitchen with stove and dish·
washer, full basement with 2
fru it rooms, 2 porches , and

CAP£ AIN EASY

Pameroy ·•

W•ier, Electric, Gu, Sewer ·

l.any Lavender

(lhH "

TWIN or bunk beds, old desk.,
metal det ec tor , book case
head b.oard . Phone 992 -3068
after 5 p.m .
2-1ll -6tc

ERMEL LUCKETT . Albany ,

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

Ph. 992 -2174

'

I'

'VOU'I&lt;:E GC TTIN6 THE

Blown Into Walls
and Attic!!'
Free Estimates

1971 AUTOMATIC , 4 whee l
drive , bl lu er w i th t ilt wheel ,
air and t inted w i ndows ,
household goods . mechanical
HOU SE for sate , 6 room . 2
toots . Phon e 142 ·382 1
bedrooms , 1 floor , closed
2-14 -12t c
porch , eK cellent locati on in
2968 CHEVELLE 390, 4 speed
Rac ine , Ohio . By~wner , Otf
Boston . Phone 94
1.
tor S650 . Phone 142 -6205 .
. 19-3t c
2-14-6tc
1970 1 TON Chev r ol et V -8, 4
speed . dual wheels , runs
good , good body . Phone
H"rold Brewer . Long Bottom .
985 3554 .
1-16-rfc

SMITH NELSON_
MOTORS, &gt;INC.

!2-19-1 mo.)

Fire Retardant
Insulation

[hokPr
1\1 (

-"•--u•

Nathan Biggs
.Radiator Specialsit

Bring in your appli ., A. C., &amp;
ect. and save .

10 :3D-Wheel of Fortune 3,,.,15; Gambit 8,10. ·
'·,
7:oo--Truth or Cons. 3,4; Bowling lor Dollars 6; What's My Line ·11 :GO--High Rollers 3,4, IS; One Life to Llvt ••· N4!w You S.lt ·
,~
.
.
a: News 10; Let's Make a Deal13 ; Jimmy Dean 15; Oren Lee
11
:30-Hollywood
Squares
3,
15;
Brady
Bunch6;
NtM41
I.Mif
Slanley &amp; the N.F.O. 20: Nova 33.
.
Life 8, 10; Sesame St. 33.
'
7:30-Hol lywood Squares 3,4; Fred Taylor : Baskelball6; New
11 :55--Graham Kerr 8; Dan l"]el's World 10; Ntw113.
.·
Price Is Right a; Consumer Survival Kit 20; Wild Kingdom
12 :GO--Jackpot 3,15; Password All ~tors6,13; To It
10; To Tell! he Trulh 13; American Dutdoorsman 15:
4; News 8.10.
.
'
a:oo--Mac Davis 3,4,15 ; Barney Miller 6,13 ; The Waltons 8,10;
12
:311-Biank
Check
3,
15;
Split
Second
6;13; s..,cJI llr
Bill Moy ers" Journal 20 .33 .
Tomorrow
8,
10;
To
Be
Announced
33.
8:30- Karen 6,13.
'
12 :45--E iec. Co. 33 .
9:QO-Archer 3,4,15: Streets of San Francisco 6,13; Movie
12 :55--NBC News 3,15.
" Attack on Terror " 8,1 0; Mov ie " Night Drum " 20; Fortunes
1:GO--News 3; All My Children 6,13; Phil Dontllue II YIUIIt &amp;
of Nigel 33.
the Restless 10; Not For Women 0!1ty 15.
.
·
1:30-How To Sunllve a Marriage 3,4,,15; ~tl's Malee a Dell
10:oo--Movin' On 3,4,15; Harry D 6,13; Woman 33.
6,13; As the World Turns 8. 10.
1• .
10 :30-Horace Marshall 33.
2:oo--Days
of
Our
Lives
3,4,15;
Slo,OOO
Pyramid
6,13; Qulllfll
11 :0Q--News 3,4,6.8,10,13,15,20; ABC News 33. __
Light
8,
10.
... .
11 :30-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Wide World Special 13; FBI 6;
2: 30-Anothr World 3.~. 15; General Hospltll 6, 13; Prlcw IS "liM
Movie " " A Bullet for Pretty Boy" 8; Movie ."The little
8,10: .-.scent ot Man 20: Walsh's Animals 33.
.
Foxes" 10; Janakl 33.
3:30--Qne
Life
to
live
13;
Lucy
Show
6;
Match
Gllllt
I. Itt M.
12:30-Wide World Special 6.
U.
Rport
33.
.
l : oo-Tomorrow 3,4; News 13.
4:GO--Mr. Cartoon 3; I Dream of Jeannie 4; SolroHIIt 111
FRID.-.Y, FEBRU.-.RY 21 , 1975
Gilligan's Is. 6; Tattletales 8; StMme St. 10.»1 Mtvle
"E lopement" 10; Mike Douglas 13.
·
6 : DO--Sunrlse Seminar 4; Sunrise Semester 10.
• :30-Bewltched 3; Merv Griffin 4; Mod Squacl6; ~llchyy IIIIIW
6:15--Engllsh 505 3.
a· Bonanza 15. ·
.
·
. ·'
6:25--Farm Report 13.
5 : ~FBI 3; .-.ndy Griffith 8; Mister Rogeri' tleii'Nitut ·
6:30-Five Minutes to Live By 4; News 6 ; Bible Answers 8;
20,33; Ironside 13.
·
Public Affairs 10; Blue Ridge Quartet 13 ..
5:30-News 6; Beverly Hillbillies 8; Hodgepodge LIMIII ~ott
6:35--Columbus Today 4.
Smart 15; Elec. Co. 33.
6:45--Mornlng Report 3; Farmtlme 10.
6 : ~News 3,4.8.10,13,15; ABC News 6; Eiec. Co. Itt f&gt;tt·
):GO--Today 3,4,15; A.M. America 6,13: CBS News 8,10.
sonallty &amp; Behavioral Development 33.
·
· ·.
8:GO--Lassle6; Copt. KangarooS; Popeye 10; SesameS!. 33.
6:30-NBC News 3,4,15; ABC News 13; BtwllchtcU; C8S NIWI
8:25--Capt. Kangaroo 10 . ·
8.10; Zoom 20.
·
•
· ' ·...:,
8:30-Big Valley 6.
7:GO--Truth or Cons. 3,4; Bowling lor Dclllllts .fl. WCHS...9:oo--A.M. 3; Phil Donahue 4; .'le'&gt;ll : Bullwlnkle 8; Morning with
R~port 8; Aviation Weather 20,33; News lOr Jimmr Dill! Ill
D.J 13.
I Spy 15. ·
·'
9:25--Chuck White Rports 10.
7:30-Porter Wagoner 3; Pop Goes the Country 4; Ntw
9:30-Not For Women Only 3; Dinah 6 ; Galloping Gourmet 8;
Camera 6: Pop Goes the Country 81 Treeue Hunt Ill Tt
Tattletales 10; New Zoo Revue 13.
Tall the Truth 13; Black Pers.,.Ctlveon lhelltMat.33.
IO :oo--Celebrtty Sweepstakes 3,4, 15; Joker's Wild 8,10; Movie
&amp; : ~Sanford &amp; Son 3,4,15; Jacques CouatMu 6,111 Kllllll,le,,
"The Pleasure of His Company" 13.
Washl~gton Week In Rvtew 20,33.
8:3().-Chko&amp; the Man 3,4, 15; Wall StrMt Will&lt; 21,».
9 : ~Rockford Files 3,4,15; Hot L .Baltimore f,lll Mtvle
"Attack on Terror" 811o; Maaterpltce ThNtre 101
Survival Kit 33.
U111&lt;ramble the,. four Jumblet,
9:30-0dd Couple 6, 13; Aulgnment Amtrlcll 33.
one letter to each square, to
10 : ~Pollce Woman 3,4,15; Lily Special 6,13; NtM Ill II_.
form four ordinary word1.
Nuchlms 33.
10: 30-World Pre.. 20.
li:~News 3,4,6.8,10,13,15; ABC Nowa 33. ·
·
.
11 : 30-Johnny. Carson 3,4, 15; Wide World Stleclll II; Mitwtll ,.
·
"The Mummy's Tomb" 6: Movie "ltn" 11 Mlwlt

.

_ BORN LOSER

Realty

fL Sr

V1rq11

THURSD.-.v. FEBRUARY 20,1975

From the largest Truck

P92-3509

PHONE

949-3832 or 843-2667

reception or mu si c . R.,
sew ing R., ca rpeted , ti l ed ,
paneled
r ece ntly ,
f ull
basement, porc hes, garage .
You must see th is . $19,900.

RECIPIENTS

, I

•

Television log for easy ·viewbig

PICK UP A SUS PEer

WE'LL QUIETLY TAPE
HI VOICE FO!'i

Bulldozer Radiator to
smallest Heater Core .

Electrical Parts &amp; Service.
Also service on Mowers,
Compressors &amp; all small
Engines.

0&amp;0
CONSTRUCTION

PRICE

4 BR . 2 baths. double lol ,

FIL.E, ~

TI-IEN, WI-lEN WE

!:l.J 6 HT

681 ,

2 st ory frame ,

WILL BECOME

I~ THE FIRST BA'Tl:H OF
' - VOICE ·CiRAPHS FROM

-

close to Forked Run Lake ,
13 5 ACRES, m ineral s, TP

wa ler ,

- . u

NEW LISTING - Desirable 7

- 10.000 feet bates

our cash and

308 Page St., Middleport
Retrig:, A. c.. Heating,
Gutters, Roofing, Plumbing,

Rutland.

l

-•'

·.

OF LEVVD CAUS.•

On State Rl . l24, lfl mi. from
Route 7 by -pa ss towards

R . ha s fir eplace, carpeted ,
t iled. panel ed , porche s,
garage $9 ,500 .

Rl.

-- --~'-----'---

P &amp; J HOME
MAINTENANCE

RUTLAND - 1 story fram e ,
2 BR , ba th . din ing R, l ivi ng

· REEDSVILLE -

-

ROGER HYSELL'S
GARAGE

$10,500.

''

TWINE
-Ask for
price.

lfoo11e,

space, basem ent, porches,
ga s floor furn ace. ASKING

l'•·mo·l

BALER

1 ~ 10r y

POMEHU1 -

3 BR , bath, dining R, u t i lity

TRAILER-LOAD

iPOMEROY LANDMAR"ifl

1970 DOD GE Challenger, Rt.
JBJ automalfcr good condition ,
S1 ,400 or oest offer . Call 992 7423 .
2-19-4fc

.

-

'&gt;P • ~ •llo..('r

A&lt;llilncf' \ 1\16 10
IPrm&lt;; C all '1'1 .' 1 9 0~

Auto Sales

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~J W ,,lr.u 1 '-. 1L' r L·O r ~ciiO ,

.1 •1 1 I 1H

ana o~ rct.Ju 1v1 furnished a"nd
unfurnished
apartments .
Phone 992 -5434 .
4·12 -Hc

PRIVATE m ee t ing room for
any organization ; phOne 992 ·

Wanted To Buy

--..:...------~ - ---

LEIIY(WEN

D UPLEX , ?3 8 '; Walnut Sl .
Middl eport , Ohio Phon e 9n
27 80 or 99~ 3432
2-19 tf c

Help Wanted

and family.

... ,

T RAILER SP ACE • .1• m ile
norlh of Me igs High Sc hool on
old R t . JJ . Phone 992 294 1.
1 n tic

f,l ("l f

• 19 tf c

P I CK lN G up piano in your area
Look.,ng
tor
respons rbi C
pa rt y Ctl l l Cr!i"di t Manager .1 RM f ur nish ed apr Phone qn
77 '1 5M9 or wr i lc Chillico the
16SB
P i;m o and Orqan . 160 E Main
'J 7 tt c
5 1 . Chllli c orhc . -1560 1
·1 14 Ol e
TWO bed room mob i le hom e
corn er Broadway and Elm in
Middl eport
Phone qq-z 2580
afl er 6 pm
2 16 tf c
WA N"T E D old up r ,g nt p1iln os.
any cond i t ion . Pay inQ 'S IO
ea ch F 1r s l f loor only W r 11e to 7 BEDROOM !rail er , adult's
and give dir ec tion s lo W1 1t en
onl y. P hon e 992 3J24 .
Piilno Company , Box lBR
7 4 tf c
Sardis , Oh rO .tJ94 6
1 I!! 6tp 7 1'\E D RO O M house w i lh ba th in
R ut lan d Phone 992 5858
2 18 ti c

Card of Thanks

509.

UR NI SH ED tw o bedro om
ll10 il ,lc ltOnt l' Ca l l 99'} J.I?Q
1 1.1 l :' tp

TRA ILER space . 1 ni iles fro m
Pomero y , R t . 1!1 3, Phon e 99 7
5BS8
10 11 1fc

Musical Instruments

r~pre t ,

Excelsior 011 Co.
129
Gibbs Grocery
100
G, &amp; J . Auto P~rts
98
Newell Sunoco
84
WMPD
84
Spencer's Mar ket
41
High Ind. Game - Thelma
Osborne 201. Margaret Follrod
191.
Hig h Se ries - Thelma

'r

I

7 70 31(

IN LOV IN G MEMORY o l ou r
d !ar f afher . Ca rt Manley , wh o
passed away nine yea rs ago
Feb .
'10,
1966 ·
' today ,
February co mes with sa d

For Sale

For Rent

AK( POt ! '' 1· ', I Owceksold

-

.Business Services

- 11 - T!'e Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday. Feb. 20.1975
' DICKTRACY

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12- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday. Feb. 20, ,m:~:::=~=~~===~~:::::::::::::::::•:•:•:•:·:•:•s;:•:·:·:::::;:·:&gt;:

.
News •

e

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.r.n Brle· .+J;8

' Coollnued 'from page l

~ganfalllng out of trees and dying

in subfreezing temperatures
early today. The detergent washes ·away protective oils and the
blrda 'die of' ellJI(lsure. Temperatures dipped into the lower ~
belore dawn.
Thuwannsofblackbtrdswerea healthhazard because they
CBIT)' several lllileases including histoplasmosis, a disabling
lllnea ·Whiclr attacks the lungs and Is similar to tuberculosis.
There were so many birds that droppings accumulated in some
areas to an inch thick . . Environmentalists denotmced the
ldllings, saying they would upset the area 's ecology.

EX'I'ENtiEll HIHEl'AST
Satnnl:11 ,;,: ... g!: '!nnday,
('hant•t: ut rain Saturday :md

Sunday, "''"""'' nf """'
flurrit·s in northcastrrn
('OIIIIIirs Monday.
Highs will bt· in the upper
40s or lowt•r 50s Saturday
and in th1• 40s bn Monday.
. ov.crnight lows will he
mostly In the 30s Saturday
and Sunday morning,
dropping to the lower 30s by
Monday morning.

Rainy
well tests
funded

Increases of up to 355% granted
Ohio gas utilities

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY
Friday, February 21st - Saturday, February 22nd

··

( :o/umhi11 li11:. wms c11se with Ohio PUC()

LAST TWO DAYS

to

POINT PLt:ASANT
Funding for providing testing
for "rainy" wells on the C. C.
Lewis Farm, in preparation for
making application for federal
Shop both days untiiB P. M. and save at the main store · home furnishings
funds lor a water supply was
l!HNOM PENH - GOVERNMENT COMMANDERS have
annex
and Mechanic Street Warehouse.
granted by the Mason County
agreed to abandon a besieged base to free troops for another
'
Board ol Commissioners
attempt to reopen, Ute rebel-controlled Mekong River, military
Wednesday night. The action
sources said today. Rebel gunners hit Phnom Penh and i.t.s airwas another major sU!p toward
port with a nlrie-cound rocket barrage this morning, killing three
I
development
of the long sought
pei'IOII.I and wounding nine.
project being undertaken .bY
Neak Luong, Ute only government strongpoint on the
Basic and fashion styled jeans in misses
the Public Service District.
• Mekong, was In "desperate" trouble, military officers said. A
The Mtdwest Weldm g
and junior sizes. Includes entire stock.
Vitus Hartley Jr., a member
~ UP! correspondent who visited Ute town Wednesday reported
Automation and Safety Ex- of PSD, and Micbael Shaw,
: · rebel mortars were hitting at the rate of one a minute, and four positioir will be held · at the
Ready to Wear Department· 2nd floor.
cotmsel lor the group, asked
•• U. S. alreraftlringing in supplies were hit.
Indiana Convention-Exposition approximately $10,000 to get
•
H!!Bvy fighting was reported northwest, south and southeast Center, Indianapolis , Ind.
of Phnom Penh, although government forces were said to be March 6, 7 and 8. The hours are the testing underway.
In other matters, needs of
" holding their lines.
10 a.m. to 9 p.m. Thursday and emergency squad vehicles,
•
Friday; 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. on both in Ute bend area and in
WASHlNGTON - THE SUPREME COURT says Saturday.
Point Pleasant, wei:e cited by
Washington state must honiH' an 1891 agreement with Ute Colville
Featured wilt be live Richard Grinstead, Civil
• lndians which allows b1be members to hunt and !Ish on a million demonstrations of automation
• acres of land forever. In Ute 6-3 decision Wednesday, Justice equipment and current welding Defense Direct,.., who ap• Wllllain Brennan Jr. said two Colville lndians, Alexander An· processes such as election peared before the comtolne and his wife, should not have been convicted for hunting beam, automatic and semi- missioners to discuss amAll of our stereo L.P, Records are indeer out of season. They were hunting in a section of the old automatic pulsed gas-medal- bulance service and lire needs
in
Hartford.
Colville reservation. In 1881, the Indians gave up the million arc and gas-tungsten-arc ,
cluded.
Grindstead explained that
: acres for $U million, but Congresa promis!f that Indian hun ling electromagnetic
Instrumental, vocal. country western
arc presenUy there are 25 persons
• and fishing rig!lts would not be abridged.
oocillation, tube to tube, plastic
and rock. Excellent selection.
:
Washington State said its flsb and game laws could still he welding, metal sculpturing, taking Emergency Medical
Technicians training for EMT
: applied to Indians in Ute same way they applied to other citizens.
current cutting methods, metal qualifications. He asked Ute
• The state said the agreement was a contract, not a treaty or law,
joining aids and materials commissioners only for per: and therefore it could be modified by Ute state. Brennan said the
including the latest and most mission to institute the
~ Supreme Court must inlrepret treaties and agreements in favor
co mprehensive Safety Volunteer Emergency Squad
• of the Indians when the language is ambiguous.
Includes our entire stock - good colors . Com"OSHA" type supporting here.
plete
selection of sizes.
devices
and
personnel
No official action was taken
protection.
other tban that arrangements
or special interest will be a were made for Grinstead to
Irons . Can Openers . Blenders · Coffee
"Centralized Consulting appear again before the CQunty
Center" which will avail body with Joe Richards of
Makers . Toasters - Fry Pans.
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The million. The company bad
welding
design
and
electrical
Charleston concerning
Includes our entire stock.
• Ohio Edlaon Co. was granted sought permission to increase
engineers,
metallurgists,
establishment
of
Ute
squad.
permlsslon for emergency rate annual gross revenues by
Grindstead asked $1,200 each
increases Wednesday by the sllghttly more tban $58 million. safety engineers and constructural
and
management
for Mason and . New Haven
Obio Edison, which serves
Public Utlllties Commission of
consultanls to participate in from Ute county pertaining to
751,024
electric
consumers
in
Ohio.
The commission gave the various areas throughout the solving problems and ap- Rescue Squad maintenance.
electric company permission state, claimed It needed' the proaching specific applications However, the commissioners
to Increase rates to produce an emergency rate Increases to toward utilization of welding agreed to table this matter for
study and will reconsider it
annual grDS~ · revenue of $34 p-ovide adequate service to Ita processes in automation.
Industry
is
invited
to
bring
when Richrds makes his apcustomers and to ensure
samples
for
carry-in
piecepart
pearance.
uninterrupted service. The
The director was authorized
firm said it has experienced a possible " on ~ the-spot"
170per cent increase In the cost simulation runs and product to. spend ~ from his budget
of coal since November, .JV/3, bi\WP~ints and developl!lenl for a base station and to make
..,
and a 25 per cent increase in designs for expert consultatnt repairs to present units as
Buy any of these Sunbeam appliances
maintenance costs since advice . The show is being service improvemenls.
presented
by
Allied
Weldand receive rebates as listed.
Regarding fire protection lor
December, 1972.
CHiCAGO (UP!) - Si~
Craft,
Inc.
of
Indianapolis
and
Hartford, Grinstead said the
An application by Ohio
Midwest states"will share $1.2 Edison for a pennanent rate Fort Wayne.
community Is served by the
billior(.ln federal water cleanup increase Is pending before the
New Haven and Mason
funds thanks to a Supreme commission.
Volunteer Fire Departmenls.
Court decision to release $5
He said attempts . are being
billion In impounded enCOLUMBUS IUPI) _Feder- made to get a siren fiH' Hartvironmental cleanup funds,
PLEASANT VALLEY
al -state svmmary of Ohio lord and said nine men from
according to the EnDISCHARGES - Mattie
livestock avcllons Wednesday: Hartford between the ages of 18
$3.00
vironmental
Protection Whittington, Buffalo ; Lena
Cattle: Compared to last and 30 are. affiliated with the
$3.00
Wedne•day slaughter steers
·
tm t
Agency.
Crookham,
Leon ; Jane sleady
to 1 lower, slaughter New Haven Fire Depar en .
$3.00
Francis .T. Mayo, EPA Phillips, Gallipolis; David heifers .75-t higher, ~laughter
The commission agreed to
Midwest administrator, said he Watterson, Apple Grove; Mrs. cows 1-2.50 lower, slaughter investigate needs and study a
$3.00
expects • Illinois to receive Johnny Donohue, Henderson; bulls steady to 1 lower, vealers request by the Mason Cotmty
$3.00
lower, feeder cattle steady to
1321,742,400; Wisconsin, Mrs. John Vance, Bidwell; 51 higher.
Men's Softball Association for
$175,667,400; Michigan Cbarles Deweese, Letart; Mrs.
Slaughter steers: Choice 900· a prac!ice field after a
$306,735,900;
Indiana, Julius Metheny, Leon: Mrs. 1190 lb yield grade 2-4 "3&lt;4·1M. delegation comprised 0t Tom
high dressing 36-36.85, good JO.
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$116,9tl3,800; Ohio, $226,279,400 John Young, Jr., Mason; Carl 33.50,
standard 27.40-29.80.
• Sauer, Carl ·Swtsher, Harry
and Minnesota $00,748,500.
Lieving, Point Pleasant;
Slaughter heifers : Choice 800· Simpkins, and Miles Epling,
Mayo said the additional Worthy Kinniard, Apple 1085 lb·-y.leld grade 2-4 32·3·05, president, asked the comhigh dressing 34.60-36.t0, good
. .
h 1 the establts
' h
money would allow more Grove; Kathy Fultz , Cot- 27
.75-JO. '
mtsston 1o e p m
municipalies to begin planning tageville; Mrs. Elvin Blitck,
Slaughter cowo: Utility and a pennanent practice area. ,
and designing new sewage Point Pleasant; Mrs . Max commercial 800-t600 lb 14·21.60,
12-t9.75.
treatment facilities .
Graham and Angela Rollins, cutter
Slaughter bulls: Yield grade I
Leon; Byron Dudding, Point 1150-18051b 24-27.90.
Veafers: Choice 220-235 lb 44'Pleasant, and Mrs. Mervin
Clear tonight, lows ranging
50.
Morris, Lakin.
to
the lower 30s. Increasing
Feeder cattle : Choice and
prime
steers
300-600
lb
22-27.50,
cloudiness Friday, high near
CGntlnuecl fram page I
•
good JOO. oi()O lb 22.25·25. 400-500 50. Probability of precipitation
dlscusston and public comment
lb t8.25-22. choice and prime
Is near zero per cent today,
heifers otOO·S851b 19 ..50-24.
• will include not only the
Hogs:
Barrows
and
gilts
tonight and Friday.
prese,nlly . programmed
strong to 1 higher, US 1·2 213·
Sizes 29 to 46 waist. Brand new selection of solid
PTA TO MEET
projecls but also citizen ex232 lb 41.10-41.45, us 2-3 206-236
colors
and patterns. Buy what you need Friday
ORDERED ONTO JOBS
p....,tpns · on priorities . and
EASTERN - The Eastern lb 40-40.85.
Sows
1-1.50
lower,
US
t-3
3t5·
and Saturday.
CHARLESTON, W. Va.
• other transportation needs. A PTA will meet at 7:30 p.m. 400 lb 34-36.50, us 2-3 400-600 lb
Monday
at
Ute
high
school.
-United
Mine
Workers
(UP!)
be
: questionnaire
will
36-38.75.
Feeder pigs 2 higher, US President Arnold Miller
distributed to provide a means Members of Ute student council
and 2-3 30-50 lb 8.50-22 Wednesday ordered about 5,000
'' !Or those attending to express will present the program ex• utility
per head, 50-60 lb 22-32.
• priorities, needs and social, plaining the council's functions
Sheep: Siavghter lambs 1.50 striking West Virginia coal
ecooomlc ·and environmental and how members are selec- lower, choice and prime 91 -t09 miners to end their wildcat
walkout. Miller said the
concerns related to tran- ted. A question and answer lb •horn 42.80·44.90.
session will be held.
strikers staged a wildcat sb1ke
sportation development.
because of a delay in passing
out copies of Ute new UMW
Long sleeves · neck sizes 14'12 through 17. True
FIREMEN TO MEET
contract, was a waste of time
western style with snap front · triple snap cuffs
TUPPERS PLAINS - The and money.
and 2 snap flap pockets.
Orange
Township
Fire
Friday and Saturday
Department will hold a special
meeting Saturday, Feb. 22, at 7
TWO APPOINTED
p.m.
COLUMBUS (UP!) -Gov.
James A. Rhodes today announced the appointments of
DANCE PLANNED
Floyd C. Moon, 66, Dublin, to
TUPPERS PLAINS - The the Liquor Control Conimtssion
Orange
Township
Fire and Robert E. Zellar, 57,
Department will sponsor a Zanesville, to the Board of Tax
square dance March 8 at ~ Appeals.
Permanent, press· cotton polyester blend. Sizes
Tuppers Plains Grade School
· 14'/2t017.
from 9 p.m. to 12 midnight.
Friday- Saturday
Admission is $1.50.
AGAINST FORD
$689.00 XL-100 Color TV Set, 25 inch
WASHlNGTON (UP!)
LOCAL TEMPS
screen . maple Early American.
Ohio Democratic Sen. John :
The temperature in downwas among the 58 Senate ~-----------"-'"------"1
town Pomeroy at II a.m. Glenn
Democrats voting,in favor Of a
Mens Sl.OO
Thursday was oW degrees under bill Wednesday suspending for
cloudy skies .
90days President Ford's tax on
imported oil. The Senate apSave '50.00 RCA Con$Oie Stereo
proved the measure on a 6&amp;-28
Choose bulky knit.orlon or banlon panel. Famous
.'
roll call vole. Ohio's
brand. Big selection of colors.
You don't have to spend a lot of money to
RepubliCan Sen. Robert Taft
with AM.fM, FM Stereo Radio,
·
Friday and Saturday
.
.
have some fun. Not if you know the rWtt
Jr. was absent. He is
place. At Kentucky Fried Chid&lt; en. we'll give
recovering from a heart at8 Trac~ Tape Player, 3 Speed
TonJtM, Fob. 20
You agix;dmeal and a good tme.
tack.
NOT OPEN
At a good_price.
Record Changer.

cOLUMBUS (UP!) ~ Increases in rates up to as much as 355
per cent were approved for three major Ohio utilities - The
Dayton Power &amp; Light Co., Columbia Gas of Ohio, Inc., and the
Ohio Valley Gas Co. -in action ThW'Srlay by the Public Utilities
Conunission of Ohio.
'
Columbia Gas was granted permission to increase natural gas
rat~ charged in the unincorporated area of Clark County, the
villages of Canal Winchester and Dublin and in the Columb ...
suburbs of Reynoldsburg and Whiteball.
The PUCO authorized a 7.52 per cent rate of return for
Columbia, well below the 16.25 per cent sought by tbe company
during hearings on the request.
The action means a 355.7 per cent increase in the rate of return
in the Clark County areas, an 82.9 per cent increase in Canal
Winchester, an 86.1 per cent increase in Dublin, a 70.1 per cent
hike in Reynoldsburg and a 92.8 per cent increase in Whitehall.
Columbia had been receiving a 1.65 per cent rate of return in
Ute Clark County areas since 1968; a 4.11 per cent rate of return in
Canal Winchester since 1970; a 4.04 per cent rate of return in
Dublin since 1969; a 4.42 per cent rate of return in Reynoldsburg
since 1968; and a 3.90 per cent rate of return in Whitehall since

WASHINGTON'S BIRTHDAY SALE

Welding show
coming 3 days
March 6, 7, 8

SAVE! WOMEN'S JEANS

SALE PRICES

1969.
The commission gave approval to Ute Dayton utility for a 51.6
per cent increase in the finn's rate of return on investment.
Dayton Power &amp; Light had been earning 3.68 per cent rate of
return on investment , a rate the commission termed "insufficient compensation for the service provided by the company."
The PUCO granted Dayton Power &amp; Light a 5.58 per cent rate
of return, "Well wi!hin the range of (rates of) return allowed in
recent comparable applications," the commission said.
Dayton Power &amp; Light, which serves 16 counties in west central
Ohio, bad sought a 12 per cent rate of return.
Specific rate increases for each class of customers served by
Dayton Power &amp; Light will be availsble after the firm withdraws
its current rate schedules and submits new ones for PUCO approval.
Because of increases in· fuel costs and Ute burden which the
state excise tax places on the uUlity, the PUCO said it also upheld
Dayton Power &amp; Light's request for reimbursement through Ute
fuel escalation clause for the 4 cents per dollar it pays in state
excise taxes.

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STEREO RECORDS

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Sale Prices

will split up
..
$h2 billion

Speed of inc~eases slowed
in cost of living indexes

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(DIRECT FROM SUNBEAM)

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INews
'". .. .••. . "zn. Brzefi

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DRESS SOCKS

MEIGS lHEATRE

~S. SJEAK

HOUSE

POMEROY, OHIO

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Fell. Zl III(U tNr. 4·

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Register - Home Furnishings Annex for $200 in Gift Certi!icates t~ be given
away. Na purchase necessary. You need not be present ta wm. Draw1ng Saturday, February 22njl.

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By United Press lntemational
COLUMBUS - GUARDS REPRESENTED BY THE Ohio
Slate Government Employes will strike the Southern Ohio
Correctional Facility at Lucasville If no new contract
negotiations are scheduled, the director of the union said Thursday.
''No contract, no work,:' said Herschell Sigall. "Apparently
Ute Department of Correction and Reluibilitation no longer wants
to deal with unions. The current contract expires at midnight
Tuesday.
"We have a long list of proposals and would rather take them
to the negotiating table than to the news media," Sigall said, "but
our problem Is, we can 'I get to the table.''

•3.50

.E-R SQUAD CAll ED
• RACINE - The Racine E-R
squad was call&amp;! Wednesday
atlU p.m. to Rt. 2, ·Racine, for
Benny Rhodes who was baving
difficulty breathing. He WIS
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.

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Sport and Dress Shirts

FRI., SAT., SUN.
FEB: 21-2M3
THAT'S
ENTERTAtNMI;NT
( Techo\icolorl
&lt;Coming Soonl
- AMEfttCANGRAFFITt •

*

FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1975

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COLUMBUS -TWO MORE MEMBERS of the Democratic
National Committee are scheduled to be elected at a meeting of
Ute Ohio Democratic Executive Committee at party
headquarters here March 7. Several persons have been
suggested as candidates, and state party Chairman Paul Tipps
lildd that before Ute meeting their names will be given to Sen.
JOiirf Glenn, O.Ohio, and the state party's ad hoc advisory
committee for recommendations.
Already advanced as possible choices are former Gov. John
J. Gilligan; John Wiethe of Cincitinati, first vice chairman of Ute
'state committee; Marvin Warner of Cincinnati, a major party
conb1butor and an Ohio Board of Regenta member; Wiiiialn F.
Boyle of Toledo, third vice chairman of the state ~ommittee;
James Friedman of Cleveland, a fonner top aide to Gllllgan and
member of the state committee; and Mary Rose Okar, a
Cleveland City CouncU' member and state conunittee member.
Three more seata on the national committee were awarded
to Ohio at last (the midterm) Democratic convention last
December. Former state party Chairman William A. Lavelle of
Athens. already has been elected to serve among Ute 12 committeemen from Ohio.

By EDWARDS. LECHTZIN
UP! Auto Writer
DETROIT (UP!) -For the
"Big Three" automakers, It
was their worst annual earnings report since the 1958
recession, and Ford Motors
warned of possible further
manpower cutbacks to
maintain ebbing profits.
However, General Motors
and Chrysler cut some of Ute

gloom Thursday by an- Motors reported a $950 million
nouncing Ute first significant 1974 profit, lowest for a nonrecall of laidoOff workers.
strike year since 1981, and
The three automakers, Chrysler Corp. said it lost $52
plagued by an energy crisis million' worst in the company's
early in the year and a deep ~year hisory, following a
recesaion by fall, reported 1974 $73.5 mllllon fourth quarter
earnings of less than $1.3 loss.
bllllon ..:.a 65 per cent drop
Together, the three compafrom record 1973 and the lowest nies earned $1,259,000 in 1974,
since the 1958 recession year. lowest since a $720.1 million
Earlier this month, General performance in recessionplagued 1958. Fourth quarter
for the trio amounted
earnings
EXTENDED FORECAST
FOUR FINED
to
$458.5
mllllon, one-third
Sunday through Tuesday,
Four defendants fined
a chance of rain Sunday, lower than 1973's Arab oil
Thursday night in the court of
changing to snow flurries embargo-depressed level and
Pomeroy Mayor Dale E. Smith · Monday and a chance of lowest since a $377.1 million
were Andy Laudermilt,
showers on Tuesday. Highs performance in 1960.
Pomeroy, and Gerald Arnold,
Ford Motor completed Ute
w!U be In the mid 40s or mid
Pomeroy, $10andcosls each on
gloomy
reporting cycle Thurs50s on Sunday and Tuesday
charges of disturbing the
day
when
it announced record
and in the 30s or lower 40s on
peace; Paul Card, Pomeroy,
saiesof$23.6bUlion
in 1974, up 3
Monday.
$125 and costs and three days in
Overnight lows will he In · per cent from a record set one
jail on a cbarge of driving
the 40s or upper 3Gs early year earlier. But profits fell 60
while intoxicated, and Larry
Sunday and in the mid 20s to per cent from record 1973
. Whitt, Mason, $10 and costs,
mid 30s early Monday and earnings to $361 mllllon, lowest
malicious destruction or
for any nonstrlke year since
Tuesday.
property.
(Continued on page 10)

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by July l.
Council suggested that Of.
ficers of the emergency squad
attend the next regular
mee ling of council to discuss
how to keep the local service.
Eber Pickens, councilman,
and newly elected fire chief,
reported that at a recent
meeting Of the fire department
and emergency squad it was
proposed to ask each resident
to pledge, over, a three year
period, a sum of $75 to pur·
chase a new E~R ambulance. If
a person cannot afford the $J5
pledge they could pledge wbat
they can afford.
On 'a 3 to I vote council
agre!ld to allow Don Griffin,
Scientific Sanitation, Inc .. a SO
cents a month increase and
continue with his garbage
collection service.
Voting against the proposal
submitted by , Griffin was
Robert Wingett, presiden\ of
council.
Griffin's proposal asked for a
basic rate of $3 P.r month for
.each househoid, subject to (A)
Trash and garbage must be set
out at Ute curb in garbage cans
or plastic · bags on the
designa,ted pickup days; (B)
There will be one pickup per
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week lor each household: (C )
Limit will be considered to be
amount normally accumulated
each week in household; (D)
Brush and twigs will not be put
in garbage cans, but will be cut
and tied in bundles for convenient handling, and (E) Cans
or plastic bags weighing over
60 potmds will not be picked up
due to the danger of injury to
operating personnel.
Heavy materials can be
distributed in several containers to reduce the weight.
Any deviation from the above
standards will be left for
negotiation with the individual
concerned.
Heavy metals and wood
cannot be put into a packer
truck due ,to the high pressure
exerted by the hydraulic ram
and possible resulting damage
to tlie packer. As room permils, these items will be
carried in Ute cab of Ute truck.
It may require two or more
weeks to remove such iteiiiS.
Bricks, rocks and .dirl'are not
considered garbage and can
also cause damage to the
packer , These cannqt be put in
garbage . .
Griffin asked resii!ents who
pay the drivers of t1l&lt;i truck to

I

HAVE A HEART! - "nne yearo0ld Jemlfer Buell,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Buck, hopes Meigs Countians will "have a heart" Sunday. Heart Sunday, to raise
money for the county's heat'! fund drive, will be held in
Middleport from I to 4 p.m. and in Pomeroy during the afternoon hours. In Middleport, the Middleport Business and
Professional Women's Club will canvass the town using
village hall as headquarters. The solicitation in Pomeroy will
be done by Xi G8llllllll Mu Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority. The residence of Mrs. Sue Zirkle, chairperson, will
be headquarters in Pomeroy.

Watergaters
PRICE 15'

unprecedented. In past recessions, prices fell.
The AFLCIO said it would
take $60 bllllon in increased
purchasing power to bring
buyu1g power back to Ute level
o, late 1973.
Retail sales remained slug.
gish last week, the Commerce
Department said. Retall sales
increased just 2..3per cent from
Ute previouS week and were up
only 3 per cent from the same
week in 1974. This represents a
substantial decline in volume
when an Inflation rate of 12 per
cent is considered.
In Detroit, Ford Motor Co.,

la.s t of the major U.S.
automakers to repori earnings,
said its profits were down 60
per cent in 1974 to $361 miliion,
the worst since the 1958
recession.
Ford, General Motors and
Oli')'Sier earned $1.3 bllllon in
1974, lowesi industry earnings
for any nonstrlke year also
since 1958.
Railroad freight busines&amp; Is
in a sharp decline. Stehen
Ailes, president of the
Association of American
Railroads, said a 12-15 per cent
drop in freight bauled this
quarter is Ute \Vorst In 14 years.
The fall in freight traffic is
accelerating and is even worse
for truckers than railroads, he
said.
Railroads laid off 21,600
workers in January on top of
11,500 furloughed in December,
Alles said.
The Labor Department said
Ute number of peraons flllng for
various forms of unemployment compeiiSl!tion rose
130,000 to 5.7 mllllon in the first
week of February. But the
nwnber of first-time claints
eased 16,600 to 731,000.

Two pool meetings set in Syracuse

aee

I

continued strength. The Dow
Jones industrial average of 3U
stocks on the New York Stock
Exchange rose nearly 9 points
to 745.38 in active trading.
The Commerce Department's report on Ute Gross
Natlonal Product, Ute broad
measurement of the nation's
total production of goods and
services, showed a record
annual rate of Inflation of 14.4
per cent in Ute last three
months of 1974.
The GNP itself declined ' 9.1
per cent in the second sharpest
pb,mge in '!1 years. It was Ute
fifth consecutive quarterly fall
In the GNP.
The continuing rise in prices
at a time of severe recession is

Some ·workers recalled

By katie Crow
SYRACUSE - Citizens of
this town will help decide
whe Uter or not their village
council will ask for a federal
'grant to help build a comCLEVELAND..:. A DrYORCED FA 'mER of six, unable to
munity swinuning pool.
work since being shot in the stomach last year, Thursday won Ute
Council Thursday night in a
top prize In the Ohio Lottery's Buckeye 300 drawing. Joseph E.
meeting continued from Feb. 7
Brown, 38, Columbus, won $300,000.
.
set the first of two public
·Winner of $30,000 was Milton Klivans of YoWlgstown. Robert
meetings for 7 p.m. on ThursC. Bielawski of Parma, Valdis Lapsins of Kettering, Wilbur
day, Feb, '!1 at the municipal
Goetter of Barberton and Phyllis L. Rea of Washington C. H. won
building when "community
$15,000 each.
input" will be welcomed on Ute
proposal.
CINCINNATI - CHER, THE POPULAR singer who wears
It was explained that one Of
eyOi)OI)Iling costwnell on her television show, bas heated up her
the requirements of . the
1ut picture tube here, The new "Oter" program on the CBS Housing' Urban Development
tele'vision network has been banned by the locai .CBS affiliate.
( HUD)
Community
WCPO-TV biltlally b-led to bave' the show pushed back to a late
Development Act to qualify for
night time period, but the netwiH'k said no, and so the local
an 8().20 grant is to hold two
· IIB&amp;a dropped the p-ogram.
meetings to permit community
Bob Gordon, general manager of WCPO-TV, doesn't think
opinion to be heard on proposed
Cter's manner of dress makes for fit viewing at 7:30p.m. Sun- · projec.ls.
day, the time the network rolls the show. Gordon objects to
Council set the s~cond
Cter's·aometimes-cllnging, sometime&amp;{'evet~ling costumes. He
meeting March 6 at 7 p.m. at
c!aJuw the ltbow hal too much of a "las Vegas nightclub" look
the conuriunity building. Pre... 7:.pJIL, wbldl .. cqwjdel'l''famlly viewing" time.
application .is being made for
i · WASHrNGTON- 'l'!fl\!,,AMEIDCAN MEDICAL A.uoclaUon . the grant.
In other business Mayor
wmc. the Su(Aeme Court to reject the federal govet'lllllllllt's
Hennon
London and council
retirement at age 70 rule as harmful to both the Individual and
members
agref.d informally
IOdety. It hopes to get~ favorable hearllig from -the Nine Old
Utat, a new emergency truck
Men.
.
must
be obtained and trained
· "The pblloeophy ..of the ma~et place hal brainwubed
·secured or the
personnel
lbou1'811da of Americans Into the belief !bat a penon is over the
ambulance
service, under
lill at
70," the liMA told the justices, five of whom are in
federal law,. will be abolished
.
tbelr middle or late IIC8.
·~

Ute nation's money supply rose
$2.1 billion, to $12.83.9 billion
last week, indicating its easier
monetary policy is beginning to
take hold after a three-month
decline In growth. Loan demand was up, signaling lower
interest rates have encouraged
business to borrow.
-Treasury Secretary
William Simon said he was
"reasonably confident"
unemployment and inflation
would be on the decline by Ute
last three months of this year.
lndependent economists with
the Business Council in
Washington said the Inflation
rate would be down to 51&gt; per
cent by that time.
- The stock market showed

i~

11!8'11!8'=::m::::&amp;&amp;::::::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::.~

Vinton

·,·.Have a Barrel of Fun..

WASHINGTON (UPI) -The cost of living edged up 0.8
per ceolin January, Ita smallest Increase since last Aprll,
the labor Department reported today.
Price dropo on clothing, new cars, beef and home mort·
gage loterest rates helped the Inflationary slowdown.
Tbe government's Consumer Price, lndex hlt156.Ilast
month, m~anlng goods that cost $100 In 1967 now cost
$156.10.
Seasonally adjusted, the 0.1 was the smallest monthly
rile since April. Tbe Index has been advancing at a slower
rate eaeb month ·since September' and, coupled with two
consecutive monthly declines ·In wholesale prices, tbe
tlpres Indicate steady progress against lnflatloo.
Tbere were some sharp price hikes, however, at lbe

prices all Increased for the month. "'

Weather

75" pair

By RICHARD HUGHES
UP! Business Writer
@ American consumers and
•'•'
businesses were tightly
.!!l squeezed in the last months of
1974 by Ute worst rise in prices
:~~
in the country's history and by
one of the sharpest declines in
:~
:::; productloo in '!1 years, the
~l govenunent says.
Other reports it)dicate the
:~~ p-esent
is no better, if not
~
worse.
The unprecedented
:.~
sweep
inflation and
~ recession ofcontinues
to move
~
through
the
nation's
economy.
:~
But there were bright spots
~:~
and
cautious optimism for
:!;l
better
days by the second ball
::;:
of Ute year:
-The Federal Reserve said

=~e~~!sm;:h·f:~ c;:~ :::~e":~ u::~ ~

Market Report

A
A.

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

~m:tm:t=:::&gt;':~~;:;:~~»»X«~~;:;:;:;s~:::~-::~:::::::::::::::~:--:=::::::::::::::;:;::::::~:;::::;::;:;:;:~~:.
·.·~

SUNBEAM APPLIANCES

'

en tine

Cautious cheer .is showing

Save 20%

~

NO. 219

VOL: 'XXVI

SALE PRICES • SMALL APPUANCES

Midwest states

The PUCOallowed Ohio Valley a 7.52 per cent rate of return on
investment, an increase of 106.5 per cent, giving the firm $311,779
in added annual gross revenue.
The comrilission said Ohio Valley 's pr"vious 3.114 per cent rate
of return was insufficient compensation for services rendered.
The company had sought a 10.25 per cent rate of return.
Ohio Valley now must withdraw Ute rate schedule it bad filed
with the PUCO showing specific rates to different classes of
customers and submit a new one for commission approval.
The PUCO said public hearings wm be scheduled within 30
days to consider priority for the Woodsfield Municipal Light
Plant regarding a proposed natural gas curtailment by the River
Gas Co.
The PUCO said the company cannot curtau the municipal
power plant more than 30 per cent until a final resolution is
reached. ·
Over the next 30 days, the plant and River Gns will try to
resolve difficulties caused by natural gas curtailment, said the
PUCO. The commission also said the municipal plant will make
adequate preparation for using alternative fuels.

Devoted To The lnterests of The Meigs-Mason Area

Save 25%

: Rate hike okayed

lillie 7.:&gt;:2 mte of return in p11rts of

•

get prison
WASHINGTON CUPI) - John N. Mitchell, H.
R. Haldeman, and John Ehrlichman, Richard
Nixon's most trusted aides, were ~entenced today to
up to eight years in prison for their part in covering
up America's worst political scandal.
In writing perhaps the final major chapter of
Watergate, U. S. District Judge John J. Sirica also
sentenced Robert C. Mardian to up to three yeats in
prison.
All four were convicted
New Year's day of conspiring month to thre!! year sentence.
to cover up the scandal. MitAll low: bave said they will
chell bad been Nixon's at- appeal their convictions, and
torney general and campaign they were released · without
manager; Haldeman and bond, They showed no visible
Ehrlichman his chief White emotion on sentencing.
House aides; and Mardlan was
Sirica made ' no direct
Mitchell's chief deputy at conunent about Ute Watergate
Justice and in Ute re-election case as he pronounced Ute
campaign.
stiffest sentences so far in the
Sirlca sentenced Mitchell, scandal except for the original
Haldeman and Ehrllchman to burglars.
a minimum of 2'k years to a
He said he had given
•of
·
h
"~ref\11 and aerious thought to·
IIII!X..uum
.etg t YUtlt-on .... r "'fli ,. - ~· .. ~~- ·
·
.charges of obstruction of wlia•
e proper sentence
justice, conspiracy and lying. should be" and considered "th,~
Mardian, convicted only of deterrent effect on others.
conspiracy, was given a II). (See Page 2 earlier report.)

Bachelor days to
end for J. Bench
CINCINNATI (UP!) - Johnny Bench says "I do" tonight.
When the Cincinnati Reds
star catcher exchanges vows
with model VIckie Chesser at 7
p:m., !twill be one of Ute sports
world's most eligible bachelors
biting the dust.
And the dust has hardly
settled from the couple's fast
romance.
They met less than two
months ago and just 24 days
tater Bench was announcing
the marriage date.
Love at first sight?
"Well," Johnny answers,
"I'm not sure, but I will admit
It came on pretty fast."
Christ Church, in the heart of
downtown Cincinnati, Is expected to be jammed for the
marriage, one of the social
events of the year here.
More than 900 wedding invitations went out to such
persons as President Gerald
Ford, Bob Hope, Dinah Shore,
eotmlry singers Charley Pride
and Buck Owens and fonner
ballplayers Mickey Mantle and
Joe Dimaggio.
Bench doesn 't figure the
president will be able to make
it and staffers at Bench's
"celebrity management" firm
say they have "No idea just
who will be attending and who
won't." .
"Things have been so
harried we just don't know," a
staffer said. "But even if some
cel~b~lties can't make it,
there's still going to be a crowd
of people. "
Despite the last-minute
~e. Bench has tried to
remain serene.
"Everything's going smooth·
ly," he said. "It's all going to

Miss Chesser, 25, a native of
Mt. Pleasant, S.C. and a
graduate of the University of ·
South Carolina, has . won
several beauty contests and
was runnerup in Ute Miss USA
pageant in 1970.
She.is one of Ute pretty faces
that a toothpaste company uses
in Its "sex appeal" television
commercials.
Before that first blind date on
Dec. 28, Vickie didn't know
much about baseball, but she
bas been learning and expects
to become an ardant fan.
To keep trim, she runs a lot
and has been jogging with
Jobnny here in recent days.
A lot more running is in
Jolumy's inunedlate future.
The eouple will bave to
combine their honeymoon with
Bench's · spring training. He
must report to Tampa, Fla.,
Saturday.

Trespassers hit
pay by check.
Council approved the second
Wayne Forest
reading of an ordinance In
regard to building pennits
IRONTON - During the past
which pertain to certain areas
two weeks the Iron ton District
subject to flooding from the
of the Wayne National Forest
Ohio River, streams and
bas suffered a rash of timber
tributaries. The ordinance is
trespasses. Most of the
necessary due to provisions of
'violations are in the Telegraph
:the National Flood [nsurance
Tower vicinity. The Forest
Actof1968. Without Ute passing
Service is actively ino( the ordinance building loans
vestigating these cases of
cannot be made available.
timber theft.
Pickens announced the
District Ranger Al Wolter
eiection of new Officers for the
stated, "State law and federal
emergency squad and fire
regulations ~pply oo any person ·
department.
th e
F or
illegally cutting timber on
emergency squad Utey are
National Forest land." Ranget
Ralph Lavender, chief;
Walter added, "Persons who •
Howard Black, asst. chief;
knowingly buy or manufacture
Mary Pickens, captain; Oris
stolen timber are also liable".
Hubbard, Lt., and Howard
turn out fine."
.
Black, reporter. For the ftre
department, Eber Pickens, fire After he ceremony, a giganClear tonight with lows in the
chief; Bob Gibbs, ass'!. chief; tic reception is planned at Ute
upper :ros. Fair and warmer
Rollie Stewart, Lt. ; Howard swank· Netherland Hifton Saturday, highs in the upper
Black; president; Susie Hill, Hotel.
50s or the lower 60s,
vice president; Mary Pickens, Bench contends he'.s not
Probability of precipitation
secretary, and Oris Hubbard, having any second thoughts
near zero today; tonight and
treasurer.
about marriage. So hOoked is Saturday:
Attending were Mayor Jolumy that he wanta to 11tart a .
LOCAL TEMPS ..
London, Troy Zwilling, family of two .or three.chlldren
The temperature in d"'I'JI'
Pickerui, Barry McCoy and; before he Is 30, three years
town
Pomeroy at II a.m. today
Wingett, council members, from now.
was
41
degrees WJder slinny·
Griffin and Kathryn Crow
Says Vlclde, also sure of
skies.
·' ·
clerk. '
' her~, ~'I'm Johnny's."..
•

\.

,,.

.'

.I

.

.

~

Weather

..

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