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16 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Dec. 3, 1975

Strike not over
Gallipolis State Institute
Superintenden t Dr . flernard
Niehm said today that until
legal problems are clarified,
none of the empl oyees let go
following the recent strike by
the Communications Workers
of America will be rehired or
reinstated.
The superintend en! sa id he
was surprised a I Ihe Judge
Rona ld R. Calhoun's decision
Monday afternoon when the
judge ordered the state to
rehire approx imaii'IJ' :t:t fir ed
employees.
"Our pos ition now is that
we're still tryi ng to determine what Is lega l and what
is not legal," Niehm said . The
superintendent sa id none of
U1c individuals let go earlier
las t month have been reinstated or rehired.
Niehm added individuals
arc bt ing told they will be
called later on whether or not
they should or should not
report back to work .
" If we rebire them now,
wh&amp;t would this do to theii'

MEIGS lHEATRE
TONITE THRU THURS.
DEC . 3-4
NOT OPEN
FRI., SAT. &amp; SUN.
DEC. 5-6-7
BRANIGAN
( Technicolor)

Starring John Wayne and
Ri chord Attenborough.
Show •tart• at 7:00p.m .

appea ls which have been
filed,'' Niehm continued.
The superin tendent said ,
" If the stat a ree ls Judge
Ca lhoun's order is correct,
then we'll abide by his order ."

Mea nwh il e. th e Ohio
Ocpartmeiil or Mental Health
and Mental Hel&lt;!rdation has
refused to comply with Judg e ,
Calhoun's order to rehire the
fired workers sayin g th e
.Judge does not hav e
jurisrlicli on in the ma tter.
"We don't think the judge
has the authori ty to tell us to
put these pe ople back to
work , even on a tEmporary
basis," said AI Dopkln g,
communications director or
the meni&lt;ll health departme nt. " We're going to
challenge his decision."
Gallia County Co mmon
Pleas Court Judge Ronald R.
Ca lhoun issued a preliminary
injunction Monday ordering
lite fired employes to return
to work pending the outcome
of their appeals to the Ohio
Board of Personnel Review.
Dopkin g said department
att orneys would Uilk to the
judge some lime this week to
"explain our position ."
'!'he court order stemmed
from a motion filed by Local
1790 of ·the Communications
Workers of America (CWA )
asking that 33 of Its fired
members be rehired until the
Ohio Board of Personnel
Review aclll on their appeals ,
Contacted
at
CW A

PLAYING NITELY

nJESDAY THRU SATURDAY

GEO. HALL
TU ES.-THURS.

FRL&amp; SAT

8: 30-1: 00

9:30-2: 00

· The MEIGS INN
Pomeroy

992-3629

Best In
Live Entertainment

Weather

Car sales up in Novembe~
By EDWARDS. LECHTZIN
UPI Au!o Writer
DETROIT (UPI) - Paced
by their ~t llklay sales
period in over a year ,
automal!ers
sold
an
estimated 672,000 cars in
November to give them a 38
per cent jump over last
year's recession levels, industry analysts said today .
Reports scheduled today
were expected to show sharp
gains for each of the four U.S.
companies . which
in
Novembed974 had the worst
non-strike sales In 15 years.
On a seasonally adjusted
basis, the way automakers
themselves judge their
success or failure , this
November's sales were at an
eight million-a-year ra lethe best sliowlng since
September, 1974.
Imports, with an estimated
110,000 sales, were up about
18 per cent over a year ago,
although their share of the
U.S. market was 14 per cent
of total sales. For the first
eight months of the year,
imports had been taking a
record 20 per cent of total
sales.
Four importers - Datsun,
Fiat, Alia-Romeo and
Peugeot - reported their
November sales results·
Tuesday.
In the finalllklay period of .
the month, sales of U.S.-built
cars were an estlma ted
220,000 cars, a 41 per cent
headquarters in Columbus,
union spokesman Bill O'Neill
said the union would file a
motion to hold the state in
· conU,mpt ol the court order.
"The Injunction was rather
clear," O'Neill said. "I don 't
see any room for movement
on our side.''

BAZAAR SET
The Ladles Auxiliary of ·
the United Pentecostal
Church, South Third Ave.,
Middle~ort, will h~ld. a
· Christmas bazaar begmmng
at 10 a.m. Friday and
Saturday In the small
building next to the church.

month of the year, is :g per
jump from last year.
Analysts . said November cent.
sales were down about 2 per
Even with the str'onger
cent from tbe October level sales, auto factories · were
when the 1976 models were working at only 70 per cent of
introduced . The normal capacity and 68,000 wdrkers
dropolf from October, were still listed on long.term
traditionally the strongest layoffs.
·
1
------------------------~--)

!
I

Area Deaths

Mrs. Holmes dies at Newark
•

Mrs. E. May Holmes, 91, a
native of Meigs County, died
Monday in Ucklng County
Memorial Hospital at
Newark.
Mrs . Holmes was the
daughter of the late Alvin W.
Vale and Mattie Wilcox Vale
ol this county. She was
preceded in death by her
parents, a sister, Nora , two

brothers, Clair and Alton and
her husband, J. J. Holmes.
Mrs. Holmes was a member
of the Order of Eastern Star
for 73 years.

Surviving are a daughter ,
Mrs . Leverett (Pauline I
Roush, Middleport; a :son, '
James of Buckeye Lake i two
brothers, Fern, Columbus,
and Ralston of Florida ;: two
gr~ndsons , Paul R. Rqush,
Route I, Reedsville , .and
William L. Roush, El ~aso,
Texas, and three grea tgranddaughters.
Funeral services will be
held at 10 a.m. Thursday at
the Boring Funeral Home in
Hebron with burial to be in
Carroll.

ASK ACTION
MIAMI BEACH (UPI)
The nation's Republican
mayors have urged their
Democratic colleagues 19 join
them in persuading Congress
to grant their req~est for a
continuation of federal
revenue sharing gunds.

Mrs. Perry died Monday

PORTSMOUTH - Mrs .
Lydia Bruch Hysell, BS ,
formerly of Middleport. died
Saturday at the Elmwood
VIllage convalesce~! center
In Port•mouth. ·
Mr~ . Hysell was born In
Pomeroy on Nov. 15, 1890,
the daughter of the late
Phillip and Kathryn Hellman
Bruch. She was preceded also
In death by her husband, Leo
M. Hy•ell In 1971, and. five
sister..
Surviving ore a daughter,
Miss Kathryn Hysell, Mid·
dleport; three sisters, Mrs.
Helen Blake and Mrs. Emma
Berry, both of Erie, Pa., and
Mrs. Frieda Devol, Oregon,
Ohio. ond two brothers,
Delbert Bruch, Pomeroy, and
Albert ·Bruch , Sonnyvllle,
Ohio.
Mrs. 'Hysell wa• a member·
of Heath United Method ist ,
Church, Middleport.
Funeral services will be
held at 10 a.m·. Friday at the
Rawlings-Coats Funeral
Home wllh the Rev . Robert
Bumgarner officiating .
Burial will be In lhe Gravel
Hill Cemetery at Cheshire.
Friends may call at the
funeral home from 2 to 4 and
from 7 to 9 p.m. Thursday.

I'MTlCIPATING &amp;TORE!"

&lt;

DIVORCE ASKED
A suit for divorce has been
liled and a dis5olution of
marriage entered in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court.
Marcia Gall McEwen,
Albany, asks divorce from
David Myron McEwen, Rt. 2,
Pomeroy, on charges of gross
negiect or duty and extreme
cruelty. Patricia A. Imboden,
Rt. 4, Pomeroy and Robert L.
Imboden, Rt. i, Rutland, filed
to dissolve their, marriage.

HALT CALLED
TOKYO (UP[) - Government workers today called a
halt to a wildcat strike that
. a. li·f:; two step-sons, shut down rail transportation
ATHENS - Mrs . Rosa Lee C
Cross Per ry ' 80 ' Rt · 1' Woodrow Perry. Beckley, and d1'srupted mail and
Athens. died at 11 : 20 p.m. and Etmer Perry, Detroit) 29
Monday in Pleasant Valley grandchildren and 31 great. communication and comHospital following a long grandchildren . .
munication services for eight
1
illness.
She
was
the
mother
of
d
Mrs. Myrldeen Litchfield, of
ays.
Point Pleasant, and had Samuel]. Nixon 1
relatives In Gallia and Meigs
1
Counties.
NEW STRAITSVILLE OHIOANS VOTE
Funeral services will be Samuel J. Nixon, 85, Rt . ' l.
WASHINGTON (UP!) conducted Thursday at 1: 30 Rutland, formerly of New
p,m. from the Wilcoxen Straitsville, died Monday Ohio delegation balloting in
Funeral Home with the Rev . afternoon at Hocking Yalley the vote by which the House
Gerald Sayre officiating . Community Hospital .
!
Tuesday passed and sent to
Burial will follow In the
Mr. Nixon was born ,tn
'd
su ncr est c em e t e r y . Perry County, the son ot t~e the Senate a bill to provt e
Visitation hours at the late James H. and ·cta(a aid to New York.
funera l home will be after 4 Davis Nixon . A retired oil
Voting for were 175 Demo·
p.m.
Wednesday.
field
worker
,
he
had
worked
crats
and 38 Republicans.
Mrs . Perry was born for the Fairfield School for
March 10. 1895. at Clarks· Boys. His first wife, lcley and
Voting against .were 103
burg, W. Va ., and was a a son, Don, preceded him in Democrats and 100 Repubmember of the Bellemead U. death.
.
!leans.
M. Church . Her first
Mr . Nixon is survived by
husband, Harley Cross, died his wife, Anna Pearl Nixon , Ohio, 8 Democrat!, 15
in 1949.
Rl. 1, Rutland : two Republicans
She is survived by . her daughters ,
Mrs .
Tim
Democrats for : Ashley,
second husband , Chesler (Elaine) Blankenship, Sah
Perry, Rl. s, Athens; five Diego, Cat it. , and Mrs . Carney, Hays, Seiberling,
daughters . Mrs . Julia Warren tConsuella) Dunkt~, James Stanton, Vanik.
Palmer, Penn Springs, W. New Straitsville; three sons,
Democrats against: Mott.
Va .; Mrs. Ora Logue, Bid· Loren E., New Stralfsvllhi;
Democrats not voting :
well ; Mrs. Litchfield, Point w. William , of Columbus, and
Mrs . Ruth Harold M- of Kingston ; a Stokes.
Pleasant ;
Thomas, Martinsville, Va .; daughter-in-taw. Mrs . Don
Republicans lor : Brown,
Mrs. Paul Sullivan, Ashland, (Georgia) Nixon, New Mosher, J. William Stanton,
Ky .; three sons, Leroy Straitsville ; seven grand·
I Dickie! Cross, Athens; children, and eight greal- Wylie.
Melvin Cross, Langsville ; grandchildren.
Republicans against: Ashand Arley Cross, Findlay ;
Funeral services will bf brook, Clancy, Devine,
tour step-daughters . Mrs. held Thursday ot 2p.m. at the Gradlson, Guyer, Harsha,
Virginia Whitlock , Hunt. Humphrey Funeral Home
lngton ; Mrs . Maxine Wood, with the Rev. Frank Cheese- Kindness, Latta, Miller,
Mrs. Viola Koenig, both · brew officiating. Burial wiiJ Regula ,
Detroit, Mich.; and Mrs. be in Gore Cemetery . Friends
Republicans not voting:
F•ve Peterson, Los Angeles. may call at the funeral home
any time.
, Whalen.
.

Lydia B. Hysell

" OPTIONAL WIIH

Cloudy tonight an~ Thurs- .
day, lows tonight low 30s.
Highs Thursday in the, low
50s .
Probability
of
precipitalion 20 per cent
today, 10 per eent tonight and
Thurs_day.

HOSPITAL NEWS
Haven . Robert Crawford, '
'
Na~cy '
ADMITTED - Mildred Apple Grove;
Arnold, Pomeroy; Alva Will, Chapman, Patriot; Mrs . •
Pomeroy; Hugh Bush , Elmer Newberry , Letart; ·
Racine; Clifford Holter, Mrs Ralph Frutl), Mason;
Racine; Dixie Flowers, Fulton Spears, Henderson;
Letart, W. Va.; Mildred Janel White, Mrs. Conrad
Sisson, Middleport; Annette Berkley, Mrs. Melvin Wears,
Lambert, Pomeroy; all Point Pleasant.
Charlene McDaniel, Jr.,
Rutland; Thurston Stone,
Pomeroy; Joyce Bing,
(Continued from page I!
Middleport.
Susan.
DISCHARGED - Joy Rife,
Ford · appears tired and
Illary Turley, Rosalee
9omewhat somber - not hla
Clarke, Clarence Longstreth.
usual sunny self. When he
Holzer Medical Center
grabbed a 25-minute cat nap
(Dilebarges, Qec. Z)
during the day, press
Herman Borland, Allee ilecretary Ron Nessen said:
Bowyer, Addie Brown, Mrs . . "He needed it."
Larry . Burnette and son,
And Susan, 18, bowed out of
Ullian Burt, Jean Castor, the dinner and sports events
Thomas Cummons, Mindy in the evening. "Susan is just
Frazier, Shannon Halfhill, tired," Nessen said.
Margie Hammond, Teresa
At this point In their llklay
McCarty,GeorgeMenshouse, Far East tour, In fact, the
Robert Sanders n, Ruby buoyant Ford was Betty. She
f ··unders, Charles Scott, Carl took a solo tour of the old
~ wart, Sheila Taylor, imperial Forbidden City, JX'O·
Evelyn Trivett, Morgan nounced the gold-roofed
Turner, Mrs. Jerry Van pagodas and prlcelesa jades
Inwagen and son, Lana "fascinating," and join the
Watson, Alta Wray.
fun at a Peking dancing
~Births, Dec. Z)
school.
Mr. and Mrs. Roller!
The First Lady, once a
· J ackso n; ·M.r. profess1ona
· !dancer • kicked
Brisker, son,
--" joined 8
and Mrs. William Johnson, off her shoes a...
f
I
daughter, Gallipolis; Mr. and · troupe of young erna e .
Mrs. John Smith, son Langs- dancers at the Central May 7
ville·, Mr. and Mrs. Francis Art College rth
and swayed
,..._, __
Smlthson,son,Letart,W. Va. through a No ern.,,......,
folk dance. She was a Uttle
PLEASANT VALLEY
out of step and, laughing,
DISCHARGED - Mrs. asked reporters, "You won't
,.,
W t
George
rayne,
es send this home, wlll you?"
Columbia ; Floyd Bush, New
The Chinese media played
Ford's trip prominently. A
picture of Ford and Mao .was
splashed on the front page of
the Peking People's Dally,
(Continued from page I)
and Chinese televl•lon
•
would strengthen curbs on showed film of the two
real estate tax shelters, leaders greeting one another
th th minimum tax arm1 t Mao' --'den
Streng en e
w
ya
s ,...,. ce.
on the wealthy, continue
Rumors that recent strokes
withholding taxes on tbe U.S. have left the 81-year-old Mao ·
vestments of foreigners, allb ta~lpplelargelywere
u ~
eliminate a thre'*'ear dispelled by Ford's visit.
carryback for capital losses
"MaoTse-tungwaarlghton
in excess of $30,000 and speed top of It-there Ia no question
the effect of curbs on special bo tIt" Geor B"-L bead
a U ,
ge ""''•
tax breaks for exporters.
of the U.S.llalson office, said
today. "Mao was right In
tbere."
TO HOLZER
ThesiteofFord'atalkawlth
The Pomeroy E·R squad Teng today was the
answered a call to the George President's own residence,
Young home at Dark Hollow 'G
H
N a" .._
sd y
' ues1 01181! 0. 1 , w•..,.~
at 5:50p.m. Tue ay. oung, the Fords live surTounded by
having difficulty breathing, landacaped ~. Chlneee
was taken to the Holzer Army ~··""· and electric
Medical Center.
e-.
fences.
Veteran~ Memorial Hospital

·"""~·""""""""""----"""-------

rJ

-----~lfHII
'

Ford talk

Tax biJl

m·

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

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I!Iil'llilt'lliltlJiilo!ll

'

2.14

I

h tESI! AilE SOOOfSf€0 t.O

VILLAGE PHARMACY
MIDDUPORT, OHIO
992-5759

I.

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p rd
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fi n ds paU1Ce
•-

~- museum sights fascinating
~
~
'i.:~

~ UP! White Houae Reporter

~

PEKING
(UP!)
{'·:·: President Ford and Mao Tse0

f

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By HELEN THOr.fAS
;;:;
i~!; UPI White Roue Reporter
,
.
:;:
~[~ PEKING (UP!) - Betty Ford loday toured the fabled !!:'
~~ Forbidden City and called Its ancient art treasures ·and ;:;:
;1l: pagoda-roofed architecture "fasclna\itlg ... un· :!;!
»
r.:~"' bel!evable. ''
::::
;~;·, Mrs. Ford, sporting a new belted brown mink coat (
iii: which was a ,gift from her husband, toured the palace :;;:
rnusuem in tbe Forbidden City and shook her head in awe ;:;:
q:; at the priceleas jade relics that were tbe imperial jewels :;:;
i*'. of the Oling and Mlng dynasty empresses.
':!:
Among tbe 20,000artobj~ts In the museum is a five-ton ;:;:
piece of blue jade encased in glass that took artisans six !:!:
years to carve. She learned from her white-llaired Chinese ;:;:
$Ulde that blue jade israres~ and therefore most valuable, :!:!
:::-; followed by yellow and white Jade.
:::;
.it:~ "Absolutely el(quisite," she said. "It's so much of a ::::
§f. temptation - I tbink I'm going to have to go shopping this :!:!
~ alternoon."
!:!:
;a. ' Construction of the Forbidden City began in the third :;:;
Mlng Dynasty in 1400. Once the official .residence of
j emperors, the palace was off limits to all but the highest !!!:
~ officials for centuries. Now It is open to the public.
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By UDlled Press Internallooal
~ COLUMBUS ~ THE OHIO PUBLIC Expenditures Council
'reported today that nearly ~ billion worth of real estate in
bbio was tax exempt In 1975, The council said this represents
ill Increase of 68.2 per/ cent In the amount of tax exempt
P,:operty in Ohio over me past 10 years.
· • The council, a non-partisan research organization, reports
lhat $3.8 billion In tax exempt real estate represents governIncluding state and federal property, school
munic1ipal property and parks. Churches In Ohio
about
million In tax exemptions and another
represents charitable institutions, private colleges and
~

The council said It supports a resolution now in the Ohio
~!!!nate which asks the Legislative Service Commission to
the poaalbillty of the state paying local governments for
JI'Operly taxes lost due to the tax exemption of state-owned
p-operty.

*!ldY

-..

ST. CLAIRsVILLE, OHIO - \JNITED MINE Workers
. Union president Arnold Miller Is going to write a book telling of
tile "deplorable" condition which now-imprisoned former
· IJMW (ll'lllident Tony Boyle left the union, it was reported

"today.

i .. . .

• ..

!

•

-::•• Coal Monthly, a monthly newspaper dealing with energy
')!_Oblemawhlchlspublished here,saidMiller claimed his book
;Would allow how he had "turned the union around" from onefmllll dmllnatlon to rule "by the rank and file." When I write
~ book telUng how It was, It will be In the hope that young
~rs comins up In tbe union will read It and never let it
:l:*ppen again," Miller said.

-

.....-

! ,f.,.

....''

' \4

:;.~ BEIRUT, LEBANON - THE LEBANESE goverrunent,

'.

Head{Iuarters For Mens Van Heusen
SI?ORT and DRESS SHIRTS

'.

'·
,

.ilililble to control new outlreaks of fighting, has passed a law
:!Biting thousands of men into the army In a desperate at)141!1Pt to break up waiTing Christian and Moslem militias.
~ernment leaders said they hoped at least 15,000 men would
~ dralted into the 18,001h9trong anny by the end of thts'month.
.;., The biD, paaaed Tuesday, is a last ditch effort to end eight
:montha of bloody civil war by breaking up the various armies
illl.ached to tbe battling political and religious factions. The
'w Ql'dera Lebanese males between the ages of 18 and 40 to
18 months In tbe armed forces.

...«ve
.
1flo,."!

4

'':' ISRAELI WARPLANES FLASHED ACROSS the
·f,ebanese border 'today and flew over Palestinian refugee
.~Jltl for tbe second day, touching off air raid alerts
.J!Irouchout the ciluntry, military sources In Beirut said. The
,planes made no attempt to attack and apparently were on a
·r'«onhalaslnce mission ·to phptograph damage done In
.tuesday's heavy raids, the sources said.
:,;; The alia-aft Dew over Palestinian refuliee camps In
Jqablltlyeh In the south and near Tripoli In the north - the
,argeta of I.araell bombing raids Tuesday. In Israel, troops
:,tent on alert In tbe north In the face of a Palestinian threat to
:~:-k velljjeance with all avallable methods" for the air raids
tbat kllled and wounded more than 200 'persons In Lebanese
ftfugee cam)lll.

'

WALLACE SKIPS SPEECH
WASHINGTON (UP!) George Wallace was the
governor who came to lunch
and the presidential candidate whb didn't show up at
the winter meeting of the
nation's
Democratic
governors Tuesday.
'Wallace, who accepted an
.invitation to appear before
the governors with nine other
announced candidates for the
Democratic presidential
nomination, showed up for a · '
luncheon at midday, but then
left the meeting.
He sent word he was too
"preoccupied" with Alabama
business to appear as a
candidate.
Gov. Philip Noel of Rhode
Island, conlerence chairm4n,,
irled to dissuade Wallace at
the luncheon from canceling
his appearance.
"He
Indicated
that
everyone here knew his vlelra
and that be had other tlangs
to do. He said If he got them
done he'd come back, but hla
aide caUed during the break
and said he was tied up,"
Noel told reporters.

..." .
·~

,.yAN H

!EUSEN:J

So soft , silky and sensuous.

l.t's Van Heusen 's touch of
IU)(urv every man Ob ·

$ervu Euv care elegance

because they 're 100 pet . .
Qlana nylon and com .
pletely machine washable
and dryable .' A Van Q Shirt
has • great sensual feel
and It's lust as remarkably

comfort•ble . Styled as onty

Van H ..•usen can tor pertect
drape and smooth fiiWitSS

tiL Lett. sport shlrl m .oo.
R lghl dren shirt llj.OO,
And available with short
looves $15 .00. All In

distinguished collect ion

olld colors . So

and lllke the Van Q
lest ' end you ' ll BELl

I

•

Open lJiis Fri~ and Saturday Night Tl

g pM

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

,.,

By HELEN THOMAS

~!~-::;::::~:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;: ;:;:;:;:;:;: ;:;:;:;:;:;:;::::: ::::::;:; : ; :;: ;:;:;:;:;::::::::: :::::: :::::::: ::::::::::::: :::::;:;:

::_ WASHINGTON - FRESH SNOWS and rains have
lflchtened the outlook for 1976 grain production in both tbe
~ted States and the Soviet Union, Agriculture Department
~iclala said today In two separate reports.
~ There had been warnings that drought conditions
:fllfeatened the 1976 Soviet winter grain crop after an already
~ilaastrollll 1975 harvest. The poor 1975 harvest led to heavy
lWssian grain purchases from the United States.

.r

8

·Ford's talk with Mao
~said 'very important'
.
tung discussed the touchy
issue of U.S.Sovlet detente in
their long private chat, Wblte
House officials said today,
declaring it would be "a
terrible mistake" to underestimate the value of
Ford's Peking mission.
White
House
Press
Secretary Ron Nessen also
confirmed there would be no
communique to mark any
new breakthroughs in u.s.Chlnese relations at tbe close
of Ford's visit, but he insisted
the mission produced many
"good signs" that · should
offset skeptical questioning of
this development.
"Every public sign has
been a good sign" Nessen told
reporters at the end of the
third of Ford's four days in
Peking. "There have been no
had signs."
In response to questions, he
confirmed Ford and Mao
indeed had discussed
detente- which China has
blasted publicly during
Ford's stay-and agreed with
a reporter's suggestion they
had achieved "a better understanding" as a result of

-

warned :
"You are making a terrible
mistake to believe the
meetings are not going well."
Ford put in another full day
of diplomacy and protocol at
a pace that seemed to be
fatiguing him, starting with
the morning meeting with
Teng,
·
Uttle information has been
disclosed on the substance or
tone of these talks-perhaps
because there is little room
for agreement on such major
issues as U.S.-&amp;lvlet detente
and America's Taiwan
· policy . The White House
merely described this round
as "a continuation of
silinificant discussions on a
wide range of issues."
Then, in rapid succession,
Ford conferred for two hours
on U.S. budgetary problems
with an aide; tramped
through the stuffed animal
and communal farm of an
agriculture exhibit; attended
an informal dinner thrown in
his honor; and watched an
exhibition of ping pong and
gymnastics · in Peking's
sports arena.
All this activity seemed to
be taking ita toll on the
President and on daughter
(Continuo&lt;~ on page 16)

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VOL. XXVII NO. 163

TWO

POMEROY ·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Conversion to
single slot
'
phones begun

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ent1ne
PRICE 15'

WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1975

;:;:::;:::;:::::::::::::::::::::;:::;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:::;:::::::::::

charged in
armed robbery
and abduction

POINT PLEASANT Alert area law enforcement
agents were credited today
lor the quick arrest of two
men accused of robbing the
Kom Pak Store on Jackson
Ave. and abduction of its
clerk.
Taken into custody within a
rna Iter of minutes and
charged with armed robbery
and abduction - were Gerald
Lee Loper, 18, and Jack Lee
Young, 18, both of Mason.
The pair was arraigned this
morning before justice of the
peace Charles (Sonny) Smith
who set bond at $10,000 for
each.
The teenagers were
charged early this morning
by Point Pleasant Police
Officer Raymond Cox after
they had been escorted from
Pomeroy to Point Pleasant
by Mason County Sheriff's
Deputies K. W. Love and
Detner Roush III.
In addition to armed
robbery, the two are charged
with the abduction of store
clerk Sharon N. Devault, 25,
502 Second St., Point
Pleasant.
According
to
Potnt
Pleasant Police Chief Jim
Gaskins, his department
received a call at II :40 p.m.

SIMOti, THE CHIMP, and Riccaro will be among the lea tured performers at a ''Magic
Holiday Fantasy" show to be held at 7:30p.m. Thursday at the Meigs Junior Righ School,
Middleport, under the sponsorship of the Middleport Fire Dept. A major circus
review, the magic show includes acts by Riccaro, world famous magician ; Simon, the
almost human chimp; the Gunga Family who table balance, juggle and roll globes; and
Mike, the magic clown. Aspecial visit from Santa Claus will be featured with a free gift for
every child under 12. The show will last an hour and a half. Advance ticketa are being sold
by members of the fire department.

a1 y

e

~; BEILEN, THE NETHI!:RLANDS - FIVE Hl!:AVILY
ctmeci teri'orlsts holding scores of hostages aboard a hijacked
:t!'lln ppened fired on a mediator loday, then released two
~ptives with a new list of demands. The hijackers, who have ' Kenley Krinn, customer
weady killed two men and thrown their bodies on tbe iracks, service manager,. said ef:nred three allots at the unidentified mediator when he tried to fective today . General
Telephone Company of Ohio
litin them ori a bullhorn from a car 350 yards away.
" The mediator's ltrst call drew a slight stir from the iraln, will start conversion to the
)lopped In Oat, open DUtch farmland about 75 miles from new single slot ~oin
telephones in the Pomeroy
~ of Amaterdam. A aecond hall brought three shots,
Cille rnilllnB the car by only ten yards. The gunmen, beUeved to area.
· )ia Soutb Moluccana born in Holland, killed at least two men
The dilference of this type
instrument
is that It will no
When they selud the train Tuesday. The mediator was
llilcrtbed only as a leader In ijolland's South Moluccan longer be necessary to
ilammunlty.
deposi I coins until a party has
,jo.
answered . Also, nickels ,
dimes
and quarters are
""'
,1::; WASHINGTON ~ OONGRESS HAS VOTED to strike deposited in the same slolln
I!Olm state ''fair trade" laWB that allow manufactlirers to set an emergency the operator
,lhi! price retallers can charge for their producta.
may be contacted by dialing
; The biD wu •PFoved by voice vote In the Senate Tuesday ' '0" (no coin deposit
IIlii 11e11t to the White House. President Ford Ia expected to sign necessary ).
It:The legislatl911 repeals the elfemptlon from antitrust laws The manager asks patrons
dlit allowed llates to Impose "fair trade" Jaws. The exemp- to read Ihe Instructions on the
.Ulil bad been granted twice by Congress after tbe Supreme lace of the instrument before
CGUrt ruled the llate laWB illegal.
plnring a call.

..

their talk.
Ford and Mao met Tuesday
for one hour and 50 minutesa remarkably long audience
for the alllng '81-year-old·
Chinese Communist party
chairman. Ford today called
It "a significant conversation."
Ford, beginning to show
signs of fatigue from his
grueling schedule of summitry 'aod sightseeing, made
his comment at the start of
another 2* hours of formal
talks this morning with
Acting Premier Teng Hsiaoping in Ford's Peking
residence.
Nessen took pains to
squelch speculation Ford's
visit might be interpreted as
a !allure because of the lack
of visible progress In improving
U .S.Chinese
relations.
"You should not take the
absence of a communique as
a negative factor," he said.
''The accompllahments and
purposes of this meeting have
nothing to do with a signed
document."
When a reporter suggested
Ford and Mao might have
had a diplomatic battle over
the question of U.S. relalipns
with the Soviet Union, Nessen

ol a possible robbery in
)X'Ogress at Kom Pak Store.
Gaskins said officer Cox, who
was working In plain clotehs
in the nearby area at the
lime, responded to the call
within 60 seconds.
However, wh en Cox
arrived at the scene the
·suspeclS had fled the scene.
Several witnesses told Cox
lhe clerk appeared to have
been forced to go with the
youths, and gave a
description of the suspects
and their car. The witnesses
said a knife was used in the
hold-up.
Cox immediately put out an
"all points bulletin.' 1
Shortly !hereafter, according to Gaskins, Mason
County authorities received
a call from Middleport Pollee
lhey had detailed a car with
two men fitting the
description.
Apparently before they had

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Friday through Sunday,
chance of showers and mild
Friday and Saturday. Fair
and cooler Sunday. Highs
will be lq the 60s Friday,
lowering to tile 40s by
Sunday. Lows will be In the
30s to the luw ~. )i'riday
1110mfng, lowering to the
lower 30s by Sunday.

driven to the Ohio side of the
river, and were detained near
the Jones Boys Store, the two
had let the Devault woman
out in the vicinity of her
home on Second St. In Point
Pleasant. She immediately
called police, Gaskins said .
Uni ts fr om the Mason
County sherilf's Dept. were
dispatched to Pomeroy where
the teenagers were being
detained by P.ll. Smith and
Ward. The suspects agreed to
return to Point Pleasant
under
their
own
recognizance , with the
sherifl's Dept. escorL
Miss Devault later picked
the two out of a police line-up,
it was revealed.
Chief Gaskins this morning
ollered praise for the quick,
elficient cooperation ol the
Mason Sheriff's Dept. , Mason
Police, and Middleport and
Pomeroy p~llce .

Tax bill faces
2 big hurdles
By DON PHIU.IPS
WASHINGTON (UP!)
The legislation necessary to
prevent everyone 's taxes
from spurting upward In
January faces two major
battles on tbe House Door,
with Republicans trying to
attach a celllng on federal
spending and liberals trying
to strengthen lts tax reform
proviBions.
Debate was scheduled to
begin In the House today on
the 674-p~~Be tax revision bill.
Final votes on amendments
and the bill are expected
Thursday or Frldlly.
Before the debate, Republi·
calli were trying to overturn
a Houae Rules Committee
decision that denied them tbe
right to offer President
Ford's proposed $395 billion
spending celllng as an
amendment to the tax bill.
Ford h11aald he would veto
the bill If It does not contain
the ceiling on fiscal 1977
spending.
U no blllls passed, 1975 tax
culS will expire Dec. 31 and

all income tax withholding
rates will rise.
Internal Revenue Commissioner Donald Alexander said
Tuesday Congress already
has waited so late that employers will find it impossible
to calculate the correct
withholding rates for the first
six months of the year.
It Is a foregone conclusion
the Senate will spilt tbe bill
into two ~rts, sending the
$15.5 billion tax cut section to
Ford right away and saving
the tax revision -reform
portion until next year.
The cuts essentially will
continue tax rates for both
individuals and business at
about their current rate.
But liberal Democrats lee!
that no matter what the
Senate does, It is necessary
for the House pass a reform
bill this year , If House
passage Is delayed until next
year, Senate opponentll of
reform could stall the bill to
death, they feel.
The liberals' amendments
(Contlnioed on page 161

Red takeover of
Laos completed
~BANGKOK, Thailand (UP!) -

King Savang Vatthana of

Lilli!! abdicated today and the nation's coalition government
was disbanded, completing tbe Communist takeover of the
country, the Laotian national radio reported.
The broadcast, monitored In Bangkkok, said the coalition
gove!'nment ·led by Prime Minister Souvanna Pbouma was
abolished in "response to the demand of the people." The
broadcast said the country would now be known as "the
Democratic Peoples Republic of Laos."
Several demonstrations
were. recen~y held. in. the
Laotian capital of VIentiane
demanding the ouster of the
19-rnonth-old government.
At least 1,000 people
gathered outside the office
and home of Souvanna
Pbouma, demanding that he
be removed from office.
Souvanna, 74, is a
A letU,r from the Meigs neutralist and has been a
Count y Ministerial Assn . sy ,·~bol of the country's
protesting rafnes and games fa ' ·ring stance against
or chance in the county's swelling Communist inschools was read into the fluence.
record when the Meigs
The Laotian throne was
County Board of Education established 600 years ago.
met in regular session
The Communists began
Tuesday night.
consolidating their power in
It was the consensus that the landlocked country last
lhe county board does not May.
have jurisdiction in such
The broadcast said the
rna tters , and so copies of the king 's offer to abdicate was
letter will be sent to each or reviewed by the Central
the three local school Committee of the Peoples
districts.
Patriotic Committee In
The board agreed to con- Vientiane Dec. 1·2 and
tinue Its membership on the "representatives of the entire
Ohio School Bo~rds Assn. and people of Laos accepted the
se t Tuesday, J~n . 6, at 7:30 abdication.
p.m. for its annual
"By accepting the notes on
organizational session. A dissolution of the temporary
temporary budge t for 1976 coalition government, we
was adopted.
unanimously agreed that we
Attending were Supt. will abolish the monarchy
Robert Bowen and board and replace it with the
members George Perry , People ' s Democrati c
Harold Lohse, Harold Roush, Republic of Laos," the radio
Gordon Collins and Robert said.
·BurdQtte .
The four-minute broadast

Games Of
chance
opposed

did not specUy ~~ authority
for the announcement nor did
it mention the fate of the 68year old king , who has
reigned ·since 1959.
The radio said further
details would be given at a
news conlerence in Vientiane
tonight.
REPORT ERRED
In a wreck reported by the
Meigs County Sheriff's Dept.,
in which tw·o vehicles were
involved, it was stated one of
the vehi cles was parked
which was incorrect. A car
driven by William W. Russell,
Pomeroy, was backing out of
a parking place at the Vista
Service Station at the intersec tion of county road 25
and SR 7when struck by a car
driven by Ronnie Staats,
Pomeroy, as he pulled into
the station.

TWO ARE FINED
Two dfendants were lined
$10 and costs each and a third
forfei ted his $30 bond in the
court ot Middleport Mayor
Fred Hoffman Tuesday night.
Fined were George A. McDaniel, 48, charged with
disorderly manner, and
Melani e W. Pullin , Middl eport, charged with
loitering. Forfeiting.bon&lt;l was
Dav id
D.
Campbell,
Pomeroy, for disturbing the
peace .
NOW YOU KNOW
Lake Ba ikal In Siberia
contains one fifth of all the.
li quid fr esh water on earth.

Utility fonnula may he changed
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Rep . Tuesday a bill to repeal
Dennis L. Wojtanowskl, D- Ohio's formula for setting
Willoughby Hills, predicted utility rates would pass the
Ohio House of Representatlves by February.
The House Committee on
Insurance, Utilities and
Financial Institutions today ·
began hearings on the rormula which allows utlities to
price their lands, buildings
and equipment at what it
would cost to reproduce them
at today's inflated prices.
· The total value of the assets
forms the rate base, which
determines the rates that
need to be charge d to
customers.

DAYS TO
CHRISTMAS

An original cost fonnula
would require the utilities to
list the price of their holdings
at the time they were first put
into public service.
"I am absolutely conlident
that we wtll have a bill to
repeal the ... formula by late
January or early February
and it will pass the House,"
sa~? Wojtanowskl.
We have the support of tbe
(Democratic) leadership. We
can show the leadership we
can write a strong consumer
bill that can be fair to utilties
and that we're not out to get
them," he said .

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�2- The Dally Sentinel , Middleport Pomeroy 0 , Wednesday Dec. ~3~19...75~.......?..::&gt;-&lt;::&gt;&lt;::&gt;&lt;::&gt;&lt;:&gt;&lt;-:k.X&gt;&lt;~&gt;&lt;::"G"G"G"G"&lt;:&gt;'-d'o-o-b-o-..o~tat

Berrys World

3- The Datly Sentmei,Middleport-Pomeroy 0, Wednesday, Dec 3 1975

"Maybe if we don't look, it won't hurt!"

Editorial comment,
opinion, features

f---p~---l Rockets drop overtime
Archie: An inspiration .Standmgs
il
T•
88 85

'

By GENE CADDES

J

Driving habitual offenders off road

1m
·Let me put It this way You're not stable I'm
not stable Why should we expect our
GOVERNMENT to bfl stablt?

The day after.

I

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I

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By Chet T111nehlll
There will be several public-oriented jobs left undone for a
liine after John Reece, Garfield St , Middleport leaves town m
a week or ao
rn the Pomeroy Middleport area since July, 1971, John and
Wilma Reece and thelt two daughters, Ann, 8, and Damelie, 7
wm be returning to Canton to live John 1s taking a position m
Ohio Power Company's Purchasing and Stores Dept , after
having functioned as public affairs coordinator at OPCO s
Gavin Power Plant the past 4'h years
These undone jobs around the community ore suggested
by the roles John served or is serving in, to whit
- Served on the church board of the Middleport Church of
Chrlsl
- Was co-ehalrman in 1972 of the Meigs Chapter Cancer
Society with Paul Cascl, masterminding with Case! the most
succeasful crusade In hiitory locally, he 111111 serves on the
society's board, doing much of the public Information work. on
the recent alwnni football game
- Represents the Ohio Power Company to the
Southeastern Ohio Regional Council
- Made iMumerable talks to groups of all kinds m the
MeigKlallla area explaming the Gavin Plant project as a
marvel of engineering, Its economic Impact and 1ts effect on
the envirllnment
- Wrote a column from time to time m this newspaper
called "Scouting armmd the M.{l-M" and designed the attractive heading for II uaed by local news media
-Ia IIICond vice president of the Oh Kan Coin Club
- And when my department was desperate for a sports·
writer In Sept~ber, just gelling Into the football ae&amp;llllll, John
followed the Marauders through their creditable 5.$ season,
himself dolnj! a better than ordinary job
Neither John nor Wtlrna Is keeping it a secret that if they
had their druthers they'd like to stay m this area
Two things, however, about John I don't like
~e Ia be pad-mouths the ClnciMall Reds, calls Pete Rose
a hot dog, Sparky Anderaon the one thing that kept the Reds
from winning 130 games last summer and the World ,ser1es In
four straight
The other Is he's for any team Ohio State is playmg Wilma
could make 100 yards a game with the blocking Archie Griffin
gets 'l'heBucka' ll~record this year is pure luck He can't yet
understand how Michigan had only 14 poinl:l at the e(l(i of 60
minutes of playing time, and Ohio State 21, Inasmuch as
Michigan played so much better a game
Both of these smgularly undesirable tra11B are understandable bavmg been nurtured In the Canton area for 10
years or thereabouts before coming down to the Ohio River
wuntry, Reece, as do many citizens of northeast Oh10,
downgrades all achtevement In sports or whatever by anyone
west, east and south of a circle so or so miles in diameter that
has Cleveland In its center
What, of course makes these poople ao funny these days ts
what bas been happening to the Cleveland Indians for the last
20 or so years, and to the Cleveland Browns the past couple of
years ~ly Cleveland lnd1an or Cleveland Brown fans show
frustration of such heat that II must blow off as Hayes Hatmg
and Red!' Ranting
It's all very amusing, and considerable fun We even laugh
abo11t his favorite quarterback, the famous Sonny Sixklller of
the Washington Huslues (Unlv of Wa!!hlngton, Seattle) who
threw Ilia Iaiii pass In college 111 the autumn of 1971 and has not
been heard of since except In the cut lists of the NFL and mor~
lately the WFL There was a brief revival of excitement for
Reece this Fall when Sixktller's name appeared in the scoring
line of the Hawaii entry of the WFL But the WFL folded up •Is
tent, and unfortunately, so apparenUy did Sjxluller his tepee
John Reece being here the past few years bas had a speCial
poignancy for me
His father, Hugh, (deceased) and I were next-door naghbors In I.oogvlew, Washington (1929-1930) when Hugh was a
lith and 12th grader and I was in the 9th and lOth grades at
Robert A l.oog H1gh School My father and John's grandfather
Reece for many years were the closest frtends H1s grand·
mother Reece was one of the f1nest ladles the Tannehills knew
That, my friends Is how small the world REAU.Yis

Frank Nuskey and Mrs Roy
MONITORS LISTED
Grose
3 lo 5 p m Sundays
R1verby momtors for this
momtors
are Mrs W1ll1am
weekend have been an·
Eachus
and
Mrs Phillip
nounced
Saturday s
f110nllors are Mrs John Ba1ley, l lo 3 p m, Mrs
Knepper and Mrs T1m Betsy S1mpson and Mrs
Cocnell, I to 3 p m , Mrs Donald Warehime 3 to 5 p m

lltttrn &amp;o lltu
'WITHOUT REALIZIN6 IT, •
PETER AND PENNY
-:-:~
PEN6UIN HAD WANDERED
INLAND !=ROM THE ANTARC.TIG
SEA 1 AND AWAY I=ROM Tl-lEIR

FAMILY

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More than half of those killed and matmed on Amenca s highways each year - and there
were 46,200 In the first category m 1974 - are VIctims of the HOD the Hab1tual Offender
Dr1ver, says the National Association of Insurance Agents (NAIA)
Statistically, the number of HODs 1s few, only about 5 per cent of the drtvmg populatiOn
but the wake of destructton they leave 1s enormous
The Hab1tual Offender Dnver drtves too fast, and the number one cause of all fatal ac
cldents on rural roads m 1974 was speedmg
The HOD dr1ves left of center, and that was the number two cause cf 1974 fatal accidents
Then comes failure to YJeld nght of way, improper overtakmg, makmg Improper turns and
followmg too closely - and the arrogant and trrespons1ble HOD 1s gu11ty of all these
Pollee flies m one state show a HOD who In II years was arrested 25 tunes for traffic
VIolations - 10 arrests for drunk dr1vmg, 10 for dr1vmg under suspenSion, and ftve for
speedmg reckless drlvmg and runnmg a red hght He has been arrested an average of 2 3
t1mes a year has held h1s license legally for only three months durmg the 11 years, yet he
contmues to drive, says the NAJA
Records from another stale show 1,365 conv1ct10ns for 100 habitual offenders Still another
state shows one man with 32 convictions that have cost him over $5 000 Desprte h1s revoked
dnver's license, he ts still drivmg
The NAIA, which represents tndependent msurance agents m each state has long cam
pstgned for laws to get the HODs off the road and keep them off, which means puttmg them 1n
)atl 1f necessary
In 1968, Virginia became the f1rst state to psss hab1tual offender legtslallon Its law stated
that any driver With three major or 12 mmor traffic conVIctions wrthm a J().year period was to
be certified as a Habitual Offender Dr1ver, lose h1s drtver's license for 10 years and go to prtson
for one to live years 1f caught driVIng after losmg hiS hcense
When the law went mto effect m V1rgm1a, 36 HODs dtdn't beheve 11 They d1d after they
started servmg tune m the state pemtenllary
The law was credited w1th a drop m V1rg1ma's highway death rate of some 20 per cent
wlthm two years By contrast, states which lacked anti-HOD laws contmued to record m
creases m trafltc fatahlles
Other legtslatures began lookmg at the NAJA's model law, whtch reqwres no outlay of
state funds, requtres no additional manpower, keeps licensing at the state level and makes lor
uniform deflnlmtlons, enfor\j!llent and penalties
Since VIrginia m 1968, 20 other states have passed habitual offender legislation North
Carolina, New Hampshire RThode Island Vermont, Mame, Massachusetts, Washmgton
Indiana, Georgl8 Flor1da, Kansas, Oh10, Delaware, l..ou1s1ana, South Carolina Oregon
By Tom Tiede
Colorado Tennessee, Iowa and Montana
WASHINGTON - From
But m29 states the HOD 1s still allowed at large
the ltme P1lgr1m offtcers
Until aU the states jom the f1ght to get the Habitual Offender DriVer off the road, says M ISSued shoet-to-klll orders as
Jay Wanamaker, president of the NAJA, the natton 's auto fataltty and m)ury toll wrll continue a means of defendmg set
to be tragJcally and needlessly high
tlement larders from
thtevery, Amencans have
waged a VIgorous and at the
same lime meffect1ve
campaign
agamst cnme
One of the most disturbmg things about the recent vole m the Umted Nat tons condemmng
Harsh
pumshmenls
have not
Z1omsm as a form of • rac1sm and raCial d1scrunlnallon' rs that so many countr~es refused to
11 or ked, dreadful penal
take a stand on this tssue
The vote mthe General Assembly was 73 for the resolutiOn and 35 agamst, and among the condtltons have been no
majority, as expected were aU the Arab states and the Commurust bloc A httle more sur· deterrence, and more recent
prlsmg Is the fact that they were jomed by such ostensibly' free world" countries as Braz1l and mvestments 10 a humane
approach have failed as well
Mexico
Today the Umted States
But fully 32 other delegations elected to abstam from votu1g Among them were nme other
Latin American countnes - Argentina, Bolivia Chile, Colombia, Ecuador, Guatemala employs many of the most
Paraguay, Peru and Venezuela - and even such countries as Japarl, Greece and the Phlltp brutal law enforcement
acltvtltes 10 the world and
pmes
Even if all the abstainers had joined with the 35 in opposition •thts invtdJous resolution also many of the most
would still have earned the day BulliS VIctory would have been a narrow one and the Umted philosoph•ca11y enhght.!ned,
yet accordmg to poll
Nat1ons would not be mquite the moral shambles It IS now
One ts reminded of the words of Martin NiemoUer, the German theologian who belatedly measurements perhaps one
of four adult Amencans IS
opposed Nazism m the 1930s
'In Germany they first came for the Communists, and I didn't speak up because I wasn't a attacked by thuggery 10 any
Communist Then they came for the Jews, and I didn't speak up because I wasn't a Jew Then g1ven annum
So baffling has the
they came for the trade uniOnists, and I didn't speak up because I wasn't a trade un1on1st
dilemma become, acluaUy,
Then they came for the Catholics, and I dldn t speak up because I was a Protestant
that 10creas10g numbers of
Then they came for me - and by that tune no one was left to speak up"
c1llzens and authonlles are
trendmg toward an accommodatiOn wllh rather
than an ulllmate solulton to
Two factors keepmg the electric automobtle all httle more than an experimental curiosity cr1me
are the great weight of the huge banks of batteries reqwred and therr long rechargmg times
Notmg that law enThat may be changmg Two Japsnese compsmes claun to have developed a rap1d-eharge forcement agencies now
process for storage batter1es that cuts rechargmg tlffie to one-e1ghth of normal The new clear by arrest only about 20
technology mvolved the remodelmg of conventional lead-ac1d batteries and battery chargers per cent of known cnmes,
Batteries that usually take around four hours for each round of chargmg up to 60 per cent of and perhaps less than 5 per
the1r capacttles can now be charged m 30 mmutes, say Daihatsu Kogyo Co , a maker of In
dustrlal vehicles, and Yuasa Battery Co
large enough electncal
The greater efftclency of the batteries makes It possible to reduce the number of battenes
discharge
occurs to cause
Thill permits more loading and, say,the companies prom1ses easier startmg and stoppmg of
muscles to contract, and wtth
the electric motor and better accelerallon
One battery-powered pickup truck has been tned out for 15,000 kilometers of durabllrty a senes of discharges, 10 no
testmg and was found to cover a distance of 60 kilometers, or about 37 miles w1th each 3(). orgamzed fashton , the
UTegular contractions of the
minute charging
convulsion
may occur
Thts Is st1ll far short of the performance of theconvenltonal mternal combus10n engme, but
The
simple
JOlt reactiOn
the electric car Is getting there
you
have
11
not
a
convulston
Daihatsu wm shortly start marketing a new midget commercial vehicle ulllizmg the new
and tl does not mean you have
system
anythng wrong wtth your
brain It IS a normal
discharge of a bwld up of
perfectly notmaJ and even cond1t10ns w1thm a muscle
common The sudden In· Itself that leads to contractwn
voluntary contraction of a and then relaxatiOn In the
muscle or set of muscles will process the factors leadmg to
do Ibis
con traction are diSSipated,
In some ways they are hke and the muscle returns to a
a hm1led momentary con normal restmg state
vuls1on Every voluntary
Why do you feel better'
By La"rence E. Lamb, M D are so strong that they have muscle In your body 1s
DEAR DR I AMB - I have shaken my entire frame as related to a spec1f1c set of People often feel more
a puzzhng cond1t10n that I wen as the bedstead Other cells 10 your bram You can relaxed after dissipation of
have been unable to get an than the JOlt there 1s no effect map out the area tn the bra10 chemicals related to muscle
ans,.er to It ts what l call or result, although I tend to for the hand, foot, knee, contractwn Th1s may be one
JOlts " I "\II be lymg prone seem to feel better af· elbow and all movmg parts factor why a person feels
- on m~ back - usually ter,.ards - the same kmd of When these cells are better alter exercise When a
asleep or ~ ~ rest, and a good feehng that you get after destroyed , as 10 a strike the convulsion occurs lhe person
may be relaxed afterward, as
portion of my body w11l feel as a sneeze I would appreciate part becomes paralyzed
after
a hard day's physical
tf the muscle 1s Jwnpmg fh1s your comments regard10g
You
can
stimulate
any
of
work
Agood example here ts
has occurred at my foot, at thiS
these
cells
and
cause
the
eleclncal
shock treatment
DEAR READER - This
1nany points along each limb,
appropnate
muscle
to
move
The pallent tends to sleep
at the heart, and, as l recall, may g1ve you another jolt,
In the laboratory we can do after treatment and Is much
but
those
reacttons
are
even at the head The JOlts
tins m ammals w1th an calmer The electrtc shock
eleclncal probe to the ceU causes widespread muscle
The neurosurgeon uses such contractions or In essence, a
Information to tell where he Is convulsion
cutling 10 some mstances He
For
Informs lion
on
can ask the patient to move a psychological factor~m heart
hand or a foot or g1ve other disease, send 60 cents for The
responses or st•mulate an Health U!tler number 4-1,
area and observe the Behavior
Pattern,
response
Psychological Factors,
When an electrical charge Stress, and Heart Disease
builds up in the cell 11 can Address your request to Dr
discharge and stimulate the Lamb, In care of this news
muscle to contract forcefully, paper, P 0 Box 1551, Rad1o
causing the sensation of a C1ty Station New York, NY
JOlt Th1s ts really what 10019 Send a long, stamped,
happens m the more senous sell-addressed envelope for
cond11t0n of a convulsiOn A ma1bng

TOM TIEDE

No more cowboys,
Indians and trees

Abstaining is no answer

Battery sparks interest

DR. LAMB

Reader's 'iolts'
are quite norntal

•

•

cent of actual cnmes, Boston
Pohce Comm1sstoner Robert
D1Graz1a says flatly that cops
cannot ebmmate or reduce
enme tn at's somethmg
beyond our capabilities "
Pohce m1ght do 11, DIGraZia
allows, but only under cond•hons clearly unacceptable
m a democracy Pollee state
authonty
Ommously, even though
unacceptable the pohce state
cond1t1on IS not altogether an
unposslbtllty Conceding to
necessity that 1s m the me of
personal safety cnme·
buffeted Amencans have
already accepted numerous
hm1ts on their pubhc

freedoms Surveys mdlcate
nearly half the people in the
nat10n are afraid to walk In
the1r neighborhoods at night
Most communities statutorily
forbid achvl hes once constdered routme leaving keys
m automobiles, for example ,
Such curbs are undeniably
the better part of wisdom, but
therr Implication ts ugly Ills
a short way from a
shakedown of passengers •
boordmg a plane to, say,
pohce fnsks at lntersecUons,
or at the entrance to theaters, ·
or m the checkout line at the
grocer's
All of this, at hest leaves
the Clhzen between the rock
and the hard place But ,.
perhaps there still Is an
alternahve The FBI is
begmmng what spokesmen
say IS a wtde and enthualaatic
explorahon of what may be
(Contmued on page 6)
~

-

RAY CROMlEY
New York banks
lose more than city
By Ray Cromley
wASHINGTON - It is ssld of one former Central In·
telligence Agency operative Involved In Watergate thalli you
asked him to find out for you what was prmted on the front
page of the New York Times on a given date, he would not go
down to the newsstand and buy a copy
Rather he would perch himself on the 12th story of a
building - complete with di!gul5e - and with a precillon,
high-powered camera and attachments, covertly photograph
the first page of the paper being read by aome man oc woman
m the park below
One problem the CIA Jives with Is thalli was founded, In
psrl, from remnants of the World War II Office of Strategic
Services The OSS had a nucleWI of professionals It alao attracted an unusually large number of men and women who
developed their ideas of intelligence from TV spy stories and
psperback thrillers
Unfortunately, numbers of these dilettantes had high Ivy
League connections and some Influence with the members of
the law firm of Wlld Bill Donovan, the head of OSS Inte111gence
was an exciting game
The CIA has, over the years, slowly whittled down the
roillllber and Influence of these holdovers, and their dl.sclples In
the next generation Even today, the job Is not complete
Most of the lllegal activities exposed 111 recent studies for
which the CIA stands accused, are of little value - the eaoterlc
poisons, the dart gun, the cloak and dagger Spying The payoff
Is not worth the cost
The opening of mall, the shadowing of suspects, the listing
of who attends what meetlnj!s and who parties with whom, tbe
mterviewlng of neighbors -Ia normally a waste of time The
exception Is when you have sufficient evidence to be virtually
certain of guilt and know almolll precisely what you are
looking for
Modem Intelligence, whether by the CIA or the FBI Is a
highly technical profession, similar to advanced scienUllc
research
Some 90 per cent of usable Information comes from open,
unclassified sources
By and large, spies are a vanishing breed in the American
system of inteiligence The Russians, the Chinese, the North
Koreans and other secretive socltles IIIW depend heavily on
spies The British have a sophlatlcated ll)'stem
But Americans now tend to concentrate their efforts on
satellites, on oomplicaled computer analysis of coded lftre1e.
messages picked up by sensitive listening devicea and analysis
by speclallsla of technical, scientHic, commercial arid other
publications, from which piece-by-piece and ltem-by4t~ the
capability and organization of the military and political ftl'oel
of a potenUal enemy can be calculated
The discovery and conviction - II' eviction - of aplea II a
more compUcated buslnesa But again, lhta II IICCOIIIpllsbed
in large part by what might be called sophlaticated book·
keeping All spies make rnllllakes All leave traoea
lrregulariUes fOflll patterns Sweeping !IW'Veillance bocgles
the rrund m cost and II uaUally self defeating In ,.., ttwama
the suspects, The objective of modem lnteWgenoe lllo 1l)lot the
rrregulariUes, lnvellllgate them in depth.
Ther~ has been a tendellcr to ptber 10 mud! llllfllnal
Information II has been impOIIIble to IDit the n.t frGm the
chaff The fUe tlrawera of our lntelll&amp;ence ll!endelll't fUied
with material which no me has time lo look at.
An upgrading of the profeutonalllm of the CJW wCtUld do
much to remove the legitimate discontent voiced both by the
White House and by Congreu

/ was the only way •
UPI Sports Writer
Confidence, Retter
COLUMBUS (UPI )
believes IS the key to Grif·
Archie Gtiff1,11, Ohio State's fin s success
tw&lt;Kilhe all·Amerlcan and
Arch was mcred1ble 10 a
He ism an Trophy wmner, sense, because he never
should be an lnsprrat10n to all doubted himself, Retter
overweight youngsters
sa1d, ' wh1le nobody else
Yes1 lhe compact httle beheved him because he was
Archie with the bulging so fat But, h1s we1ght turned
biceps was once a fat little kid out to be an advantage,
nicknamed 'butterball "
because he had to work so
But, throu8h hard work and hard to get rid of tt "
the "Incredible'' Gnffin
Archie's parents, Mr and
detenillnatlon, the 5-3, 182- Mrs (Margaret) James
poufld ' Griffin Tuesday Gnffln along with other
became the first player mthe fanuly members, met mth
fJ years of the awar~ to wln newsmen In thetr trophy·
the HeiSman twice
filled fam1ly room, awa1tmg
Jun Retter, who taught the offiCial announcement
Griffin and his brother, Ray, from New York
at Unmoor Jumor Htgh
The Griffins have siX other
School, was at the Griffin sons, all of whom played or
home Tuesday when the are playing football, and one
official
Heisman
an- dsughter , the youngest of the
nouncement was made and family
talked about ~ch
Ray, of course, was a
Retter, who Is writing a startmg sophomore defenstve
family biography entitled back on this year s No I
''The Remarkable Griffins,' ranked Ohto State team and
recalled the first time he met Duncan, a freshman, ts a
Arch, then an overweight strong candidate for a
seventh grader who used to starling spot m the Buckeye
chase the other kids who secondary next year
But, with a second Heisman
called him "butterball "
"He came up to me and for Arch1e safely lucked
said 'my name Is Archie away, thoughts of anotherGriffin and I'm going to thts one for Ray-are already
Musklngum College because surfacmg
'He's the next one," SB.ld a
that's where my brother
(James) went' "He must conftdent Mrs Griffin who
have thought I dldn t believe admits she always had
him,"
Retter added dreams of her sons being
"because a couple of days 'stars "
'He'll (Ray ) set them on
later he brought In a cllppmg
about James playmg football fire If they let him go back to
offense next year,' predicted
for Musklngum
"Archie was a heck of a k1d Mr Griffin
Ray, a f&gt;.IO, 185-pounder,
and student, ' Retter went on
"I've never seen a kid so swtlched to safety thlll year at
motivated But, he was just a his own request, but hopes to
flU hts brother's shoes at
product of his family
"Football was always so tailback In 1976
It was Ray who set up Ohio
much more than a game to
the Griffin boys," he said State's WIDnlng touchdown
''They all wanted to go to wrth a pass mterceptlon and
college and they knew sports return late m the Michigan

How they voted. ..
NEW YORK I UP I) - The top 10 votegetters tor Ihe 1975
Helsman Trophy points awarded on a 3 2 I basis
lSI lnd Jrd Total
Archie Griffin 0!1\o Sl
&lt;5; 167 104 1 800
Chuck Muncie Callforma
145 104 87 730
Ricky Bell Southern Cal
70 169 160 708
Tony Dorsett Plftsburgh
66 149 120
616
Joe Washington O!&lt;tahoma
29 47 69 250
Jimmy DuBose Florida
19 13 29 112
86
John Sciarra UCLA
12 15 20
Gordon Bell Michigan
2 27 24
84
79
Leroy Selmon Oklahoma
7
22 14
73
Gene Swick, Toledo
5
19 2()
The top five volegelters In each section

Eut

Griffin
Dorsett
Muncie
R Belt
Washington
Southwest

Griffin
Muncie
Washington
R Bell
Oorsell

'
'

South

Midwest

Griffin Griffin
Dorsett
R Bell
R Bell
Muncie
Muncte
Oorselt
DuBose Washington

Far West
Muncie
Griffin
R Bell
Dorsett
Sciarra

:;:ey:Sh~~~:~~~~~~~~g~~~
aw:k~
s:~~d
~~·thought
WI

IItle wm over th e o vermes
Aithough admltlmg to some
anxwus momen t s Mr
Gnff10 sa1d he had no
doubts" Archie would wm the

about the game of football,
the former hneman who
works two full tune jobs to
support his large famtly,
satd 'I wouldn't trade 11 for
anythmg "

,,

"

,
,
,

•

·,
,

,
"
,.

•
'
~

'
~

1

·•

"
'"

.•

Tuc&gt;day'

By Unttcd

~~!~?.~

Pre s~

1

Ba&gt;kotba:l

lot cr na ttona l

East
A
rmy
62 Upsala "
Boson Sl 80 Brtdg ewa tcr 61
Brande" 79 MIT 76
Colum b.a7 83 CCNY 77
N agar a a P llsburgh 68
Penn 51 93 Lch gh tS
Temple"
Wesl Chesler ss
W Va St 79 Glen vt l le 711
Sou1h

.47
rtor da 74 Eas Tenn 61

Hayes says OSU
line big factor
By JACK SAUNDERS
UPI Sports Writer
NEW YORK (UPI)- The
player and his coach were
here Tuesday as history was
made when Ohio State's
Archie Grlffm won his second
Helsman Trophy But the
other Buckeye players who
made the award poss1ble,
according to both Grlffm and
his coach, Woody Hayes,
should have been there as
well
"l lmagme the strength of
our blocking !me was a
considerable factor m getting
him here,' said Hayes at the
announcement of Griffin's re
peal victory, a feat never
before duplicated m the 41·
year history of the award
We use 11 as a selling pomt
on good backs I'll tell you
that"
"Th1s Is an award for the
whole team," S81d a sm1ling
Griffin, posmg before the
bronze Reisman statue 'My
name IS on II but l couldn 'I
have done 11 without the other
guys I wasn't shootmg for
th1s but for the national
championship "
Grlffm won the award last
year as a Junior, only the fifth
underclassman to be so
honored Then ll was
Southern Cal1forn1a
semor
Anthony
Da
VIS who was Gr1flm s ch1ef
competitor, th1s year it was
two West Coast runmng
hacks- Callft ·ma s Chuck
Munc1e and USC s Ricky
Bell- that were left far
behind m the voting Griffin's
IIKIO points were mc~e than
his two runnersup cot. bmed
Muncie garnered 730 and Bell
followed with 708
In this, the year of the
runnmg back, the top SIX
votegetters played that
pos1hon Pittsburgh s Tony
Dorsett was fourth followed
by
Oklahoma's
Joe
Washmgton and Flonda's
Jimmy DuBose Quarterback
John Sciarra, who f1111shed
seventh, was the top
votegetter among all s1gnal
callers, Oklahoma's U!roy
Selmon got the most votes of
any lineman, finishing nmth
Michigan running back

t tor da St 90 Roll ns

Jacksonv li e

Coach Cornell's squad has Carter s Kyger Creek Bob
Another b1g weekend of played a tight man-to-man cats
basketball' Is on tsp m the defense led by semor center
Soul bern, tabbed by some
Southern Valley Athletic Tim Woodyard
to be a major threal lu both
Conference begmnlng Friday
Semor guards Kevm Petrie
Hannan Trace and North
mght Three league lilts are and Kent Halley keep the Galha, played a fme first half
scheduled whtle three non defense movmg with their last Friday aga1nst the
league encounters wdl be pressmg pressure from m1d Pirales but fell apart the
played Silturday evemng
court Hannan Trace's of· second half
Friday mght league fense has been led by Dav1d
The Tornado scor1ng
matches wrll fmd Hannan Shaffer tHI semor forward , threats are M1ke Roberts,
Trace a l North Galha, Halley and 6-2 semor Charles Paul Schultz, Dan Brown,
Southern vlslhng Kyger Cremeans
and Roger Brauer However,
Creek and Southwestern at
North Galha s biggest
against North Gallla 1\ was
Symmes Valley
offensive players are Greg the httle men that moved the
Saturday night , Federal James, 6-1 sen1or guard and
ball If those players don t
Hocking v1srts Eastern, Fred Logan, &amp;-2 junior lorcome through the Bobcats
Kyger Creek goes to Fairland ward U!ndmg support on the will probably see 5-5 Er1c
and Symmes Valley 1s at boards Is btg Bruce Runyon, Dunning and 5 8 Carl
Rock Hill
6-1, 230 pound semor forward, Johnston
The b1g game Friday Mark fhelss junior forward
It will be the first gar:ne of
evening finds Coach Dan and Robert Neal, a 6-2 junior the season for the Bobcats
Cornell's unbeaten Hannan
Brett Tackett, f&gt;.IO junior Kyger Creek will be out to
Trace Wildcats playing guard, Is the team's top Improve 1ts 2 15 record of
Coach J1m Foster's un· hustler and plays a tight 1974-765
defeated North Galha defense The winner of
KC will rely on the shootmg
Pirates Hannan Trace owns Friday's game could be m the of veterans Tom Kern, 5-a
vlctones over South Pomt dr1ver s seat lor the SVAC semor guard, Tom Lucas, 5-a
and Eastern North Gallla champ10nshtp
semor guard, Bill Metzner,[&gt;.
defeated Miller and Southern
Coach
Carl
Wolfe s II senior forward, Ralph
In two outings this season, Southern Tornados w1ll at- Baylor 5 II juniOr center and
the WU&lt;tcat defense has tempt to rebound from last
Doug Sands, 5 10 JUnior
YJelded just 78 points a 39 week's 72-43 loss to North ftor" ard The Bobcats lack
pomt average per game
Gallla a~amst Coach Keith overall good hea1ght and
must rely on good qwckness,
Malone defeated by Muskies 54·51
tmproved attitude and
NEW CONCORD, Ohio
The holda, 1~, were led In aggressiveness on the
(UPIJ- With biB team ahead the point column by forward boards
by one point and julll 21 Marvin Smalley with 13 mar•
Coach Richard Hamilton's
MCOtllll left in the game, kers
Southwestern Highlanders
a1p111n [lenny Howell scored The 1·2 Pioneers, who relin- will seek their first victory of
Mtllklngum •a final two polnta quished a 32-27 halftime lead, the year against Coach Gary
on foul shots In the Fighting were paced by center WI! Salyer s Symmes Valley
Musklea' 54-51 win over Adama with IJ counters and V1ku•gs
Malone Tuesday mght
Bob Mason w1th 10
s,•uth\Hl'l tttn
I· ~oi l
In

SVAC STANDINGS
ALL GAMES
Hannan Tra ce

P

OP

1 0 116 78

1 o UB 100
0

0

0

0

Southwestern
Eastern

0
0

o

1 67
1 37
1 .fJ

87
57

0

1

82

Symmes Va l

Iowa 72 Nebraska 65
Loyola (Ill ) 98 l eW IS 67
MarQuette
87
51
Joseph s
( lnd l 60

M ch1gan 90 Vanderblll 63

M s.sour !18 Toledo 85 o l
Noire Dame 117 ValparaiSO 83

Southwest
Baylor 71 SW Teu s 45
New Mex co Sl 49 Texas E
Paso 47
SMU 75 Kansas 66

Pepperdme 8 ~6~'ane 55
Wash mglon St 78 sea l le

58

Nahonal Basketball Assoc1at.on
Standmgs
By Umted Press lnternattona'
Eastern Conference
Atlanhc DIVISIOn
W L Pet
GB
Ph adelph•a
12 6 667
Boston
10 6 625
Buffalo
9 10 J74
New Yor k
7 15 318
Central DIVISIOn
W l , Pet
GB
Atlanta
10 7 588
Houslon
9 8 5~9 1
Was hmg !on
8 8 500 1
New Orleans
8 10 -144
2
Cle veland
8 11 421 J

31

72

Edmonton
II 14 2
Toronto
6 lA
2
Tuesday s Resulh

New England 5 Hou ston 2
4 Den...,er 3 overt

Wmmpeg

24
14

me

1

43

72

TotAls
2 2 209 209
SVAC RESERVES
Tum
W L POP
Southern
1 0 so 49

Hannan Tntce

Kyger Creek

5outhwestern

1 0 42 3&lt;t

Dayton

6 2 28 74 54

lJ

10

6 6 26 80 70
Ft Wayne
8 10 3 19 Bd 72
Columbus
3 16 J 9 J7 91
Tuesday s Results
Tonight s Games
Port Huron at Fort Wayne
Muskegon at Dayton
Fl nt at Columbus
Sag naw at Kalamazoo

Thursdays Games

(No games scheduled)

North Gelha
E.:~~tern

Tatats

Baptist

Chri stian
79
Massillon Cl1rlsllan 62
Rtver VIew 62 lrl Valley Sd
New Lexington 63 New

Conco rd Glenn 45
Maysvtlle 76 Morgt~n 67
Crooksville 85 Philo S6

o

o

o

1 J9

so

o 1 Jol

12

1 2 IH 11S

Musklngum

~0

Sher i dan .tB

U I!Ct' 83 Licking Valley 16
Waterford 67 Me igs f eutNn

3J
Guc rn sev Zftn,. Trace 7J
Rtl111svtlle "8

once agam by Juntor transfer
Greg Brownmg ••lh 8 pom ls
followed by classmate Bruce
R1ffle 's 7 Riffle was also
cred1led w1lh playmg an
outstandmg defensive game
He had five of h1s teams 21
rebounds nght behmd Gary
Nelson who led h1s team w1lh
SIX caroms
The Eagles h1t on 12 21
from the chanty slnpe and
had 20 turnovers
Waterford, wh1ch th1s year
has [our starters back, was
led m scorin g by M1ke Rauch
"1th 24 po10ts, whtle teammates Simpson and D1amond
canned 12 each The Wildcats
hit 15·20 from the foul line
The reserve contest was a
different matter After
leadmg most of the way the
baby Eagles finally sue
cwnbed bowmg to a (oul shot
m the last 10 seconds, losmg
32-31 J1m Davis led the
VISitors wllh 12 pomts
Sahrrday mght the Eagles
enterta in th e Federal
Hocking Lancers
By quarters
Eastern
4 13 23 34
VVaterford
10 32 46 67

The Pirates led 43-18 at the
half and mcreased It to 57-34
gomg mto the final can to
Coach J1m Foster substllut ed freely throughout the
contest One sub Richard
Eggleton a semor forward ,
had JUSt four pomts but
blocked f1ve shots m the
seven mmutes he played m
the fourth quarter
Donme Bush 5-10 JuniOr,
led Southwestern wtth e1ght
pomts Ke1th Grate juniOr
center, had seven markers
Shootmg·\\ISe North Calha
connec ted on 34 of 82 floor
attempts for 41 pet and lust
seven of 24 free throws
South\\ estern h1 l 10 of 20 at
the chanty str ipe North
Gall1a won the reserve game,
48-43 behmd the 20 pomt effort
of Doug S1sson Mark Banks
led the little Highlanders 111th
13 pomts Larry Carter had
10
Southwestern ().2 will play
at Symmes Valley Fnday
Southweste r n
(441
Crouse 2 0 4 Bank s J 0 6
Wa lk er
2 J 7 Bush
408

Mc Neal

By Quarters
Sou t hwes t ern 2 16 16 10
N Galtla
14 28 14 18

DE

ROBERT HOEFLICH

City Editor

So~~turday by The Ohio Vall~'i

Pub li shing company
111
Court St
Pq,meroy
Ohio
.oi57~9 Business Office Phone
992 21.56 Editor i al Phone 991

21S7
second cless pos tage paid

ward

representative

In c
Botf lnalll &amp; Gall.,gher Olv
757 Th ir d Ave New York

Griffith

Company

N Y 10011

Subscript on

rates

Del ivered oy carrier where
a!Jallable 75 cents per week
By Motor Route where
carrier
service
no t
available One month SJ 15
By mall In Ohio and W V.!l

One

Year

S22 00

Six

Sll 50
Threr
S7 00 Eluwhere
00 ytar SIM monlht
13 50 1 three month s S7 50

months
onths

'6

ubscrlptlon price Includes
unday 1 lmc5

Sentmel

2J 7

7l

e .. c Ed

Published daily except

2 0 4 Grat e

Miller
1 J S Lew s
1 1l
Tofals 17 10 44
North
Gall1a (75)
Runyon 4 19 ( MtnntS I 2
4 Log a n d 'J 10 Ta ckett J 0
8 James 11 1 23 Nea t 1 1 J
R Mlnn S 6 0 12 TheiSS 1 0
2 Eggleton 1 o 4 To,als 34 7

DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS MASON AREA
CHESTER L TANNEHILL

at Pomero~ Ohio
National
adver tising

OhtO Htgh School

Mathias
Wooster defeated Oh1o WesIn Toledo's game Tuesday ley an, 10&amp;-95 Demson beat
rught MISsouri extended 1ls John
Carroll,
75-65,
home court vtctory strmg to Muskmgum edged Malone,
15 stra1gh t WI th the overtune ".... -lit, Ot ter be10 to pped Rio
Vlclory over the Rockets
Grande fi&amp;.S9, Edinboro St
It left Missouri unbeaten m ( Pa ) wallopped Baldwm1ts !1rst two starts of the Wallace 84-72, and Kenyon
season It was Toledo's f~rsl over whe I me d 0 h 1o
game of the young season
Domm1can, 83-&amp;1
M1ssour1 dommated the
At Cleveland, DeniSOn outf1rst half 41 31 but Toledo's rebounded John Carroll 411-29
zone defense slowed the and got 41 pomts from 1ts
Tigers 10 the second half as front hne of U!e Bowman and
the Rockets h1t from long Todd Harrts to down the Blue
range Ted Williams led Streaks
Toledo w1th 29 pomts
Bowman, a 6-5 semor lorToledo Jumped ahead at 69- ward had 21 pomts, and
671ate m the game but Smith Harrrs, a 6-5 )umor forward,
hit two free throws to lie 1t totaled20 Denlson,:W,helda
Then Jeff Curne hit for 33-25 halftune advantage
Mrssour1 and W11liams scored
For the Blue streaks, ().),
on a )urn per to lie 11 at 72-72 at Chuck Lytle had II pomts
the end of regulatiOn play
Elsewhere Tuesday mght

Pirates win big

w 1 pts qf qa

loledo

.

Eagles clipped
at Waterford

North Galha's Pirates
Jumped mto a 15 21ead at the
end of the first quarter, then
r1pped the nets for 28 pomts m
the second stanza enroute to a
Nattonal Hockey
lopsided
75-44 vtctory over
League Standtng
Southwestern Tuesday mght
By Un1ted Pr ess lntcrnallonat
Campbell Conferente
The victory was th e
PatriCk DIVISIOn
P1rates' th1rd stra ight
W L T Pts
Phtladetphla
16 J 6
JB without a loss
N Y ISillnders 12 8 5
29
Fnday mght North Calha
A tlanta
10 13 2
22
N Y Rangers
9 14 2
20 hosts Hannan Trace m an
Smythe OtVISIOft
earl) showdown match for
W L T Pts
Cht cago
10 4 10
JO f1rsl place m the Southern
St Louis
8 11
5
?1
Vancouver
8 11 5
21 Valley Athlehc Conference
K ansas C Jiy
6 13 4
16 The defendin g cham piOn
Mmnesola
S 16 0
10
Wildcats are 2~ overall and I
Wales Conlerence
Norr1s Dtvlston
0 m the league
W L T Pts
Tuesday mght, Pirate
1\1\ontreal
18 A J
39
Los Angeles
14 10 2
30 a veteran and unheralded
P ttsburgh
10 10 1
22
ONrctf
7 IJ 4
18 player sparked North Calha
Was hmg ton
J 18 2
8 The veteran was 6-1 semor
Adams OtVISIOn
W L T Pis guard Greg James wh1le
Buffalo
17 5 I
35 Rayford (Spoon) MIDDIS 5 II
Boston
12 6
6
JO
Toronto
9 7 7
25 sentor came off the bench m
Ca forn• a
9 16 2
70 the second penod and scored
Tuesday s Results
mght pOints dur1ng the 211N Y Islanders d 51 LOUtS I
Los Angele s 5 Allanta 3
pomt eKplos10n James
Wednesday s Gam es
flmshed w1 th 23 pomts on the
Mon treal at Kansas C1ty
Buffalo at Washington
mghl 16 rebounds and fl\ e
Ptttsburgh at Chicago
Det ro I at Vancouver
blocked shots Mmms had 12
Toronto at Minnesota
pom Is
Lo'S Angeles at Cal to rn a
Fred Logan a Junior, wa s
the only other Pirate m
International Hock ey
League StJnd1ngs
double !1gures w1th 10 pomts
Un1ted Press International
North
North Galha usmg a man to
w 1 ph gt ga man defense JUMped ahead
PI Huron
12 Y 1 25 78 68
Sagtnaw
9 7 J 22 16 68
15 2 when Southwestern
F l 1nt
9 9 J 21 6A 62
f81led
to get untracked In the
Muskegon
8 8 .4 ';10 51 57
Kalamazoo
8 9 A 20 78 90
f1rst e1ght mmutes
South
.,..-.,.--,...---,

0 o o 0 w
0 0 0 0

Symmts Valley o o

Umtcd Press International
Toledo stung w1th an 88-85
defeat m overtime by
M1ssour1 Tuesday mght,
moves mto Col urn bIa, S C
tomght for contest With a
tough South Csrol10a Squad
The Toledo.SOuth Carolina
game highlights a schedule of
16 contests mvolvmg Ohio
teams tomght
South Carohna wtll be
Without 1ts startmg center
and one of Its key reserves
when the teams meet
BobMath1as a 6-7 semor IS
bedrtdden with a leg InJury
and tHI guard Jack G11loon IS
under
an
mdeftmte
suspensiOn for v10latmg
tratmng rules
Chuck Sherwood, a 6-10
JUnior who saw lltDited action
last year, probably wtll start
against Toledo 1n place of

Quebec 9 Cleveland 2
Edmonton 7 Toronto 2
Wedn esdays Games
Cmc nnat at Cleveland
Toronto at Calgary

Basketball Results
Kyger Creek
o o o o Un1ted
lnternatloul
Southwestern
0 0 0 0 Cte John Press
Symmes Valley o o o o Hay 54 Adams 75 Cte .J ohn
Eastern
0 1 37 37
o

Igers'

BY GREG BAILEY
WATERFORD
- The
MidWest DIVISIOn
W L Pel
GB hometown Wildcats Tuesday
Oetrott
10 S 661
mght pounced on the Eastern
Kansas c tv
7 9 439
Mtlwaukee
7 11 389 4 1 Eagles from Meigs County
Chi cago
4 IJ 235 7
and never let go
Pactf•c Dwtston
W L Pet GB The Eagles now ().2, one m
Golden State
17 6 667 the SVAC and one out of 1l,
Los Angeles
l A 8 636
never
were m the game
PhoentK
8 7 5JJ 2
Seattle
II 10 52A 2 1 tralimg 4-10 al the end of the
Portland
8 12 400 5
first quarter New head coach
Tuesday s Results
Was htng ton \07 Los Angeles 104 Duane Wolfe watched his
New Orleans 108 Buffa lo 96
boys f1re a11ay at the basket
Boston 103 New York 100
Cleveland 91 Por tland 80
all but helplessly hllhng only
Houston 9l Chtcago 77
II of 66 attempts (16 pet )
Seattle 101 Ka nsas Ctty 90
PhoemK 115 Golden State 98
Waterford canned 26 of 53
Wednesday s Games
shots from the f1eld
Ch icago at Boston
New Orleans at Phlladelph a
That 16 pet shootmg
Seal!le at Hous ton
stalislic pretty much tells the
Los Ange les at Detro t
Portland iii Mtlwaukee
story as Coach Wolfe s
World H 0 C k e Y ASSOCiilfiOn Eagles are a young IOexStandings
penenced team a fact he
By Umted PreH lnternalional
beheves contnbutes to h1s
East
W L T Pis
boys 1ncons1slent shoohng
10 12
1
21
New England
The Wild cats were a much
Gleveland
9&lt;0 2
20
9 12 0
18 btgger team and thrs made
lndlanapolts
Cmc n nctt
9 12 0
18
the young Eagles edgy and
west
W l T Pts
they took some very poor
Hou!.ton
14 8 0 28 shots Coach Wolfe smd shot
10 9
I
11
Mmnesota
San Otego
9 10 2
20 selechon IS the big thmg lh1s
Phoen K
7 1 1 3 1 7 team will have to tmprove
Denver
8 1J
1
17
upon 1f they re to be comCanadtan
W l T PI'
W•nntpeg
18 7 o
J6 pehhve lh1s season
Quebec
17 a 1
35
Eastern was led m scormg
Calgarv
12 9 I
25

SVACDNLY
Tum
W L
POP
Norlh G&amp;llta
I 0 72 43
Hann&amp;n Trace
1 0 57 37

Southern

t to

t

Western Conference

&lt;No games sct1edu led &gt;

Norft1 Gal11a
Kyger Creek

southern

Tcnn

Midwest

Ironton St Joe 87~7 and to
North Gallla 75-44
Leading the Highlander
attack are four returnmg
lettermen apd a junwr trans
fer from Gallipolis The
lettermen arc Rtck Crouse f&gt;.
10 sentor guard Jack
Walker 6·0 senior, Kip
l.ewts 6~ junior forward and
tHI JuniOr center Ketth Grate
Donn1e Bush, 5-10 jumor
transfer, has helped !he
Southwestern offensive at
tack
Olhers e•pected to see
plenty of action are Jeff
Banks f&gt;.l 0 senior and Doug
M11ler, f&gt;.IO jun10r
Kevm Schaeffer, 6-2 semor
IS lhe Vlk10gs b1g offens1ve
threat Symmes Valley lost to
Chesapeake tn 1ls only outing
thus far lh1s season
W L

93

Ch cago 71 Tr n 1y Chnsl an &lt;19

Gordon Bell, eighth, and
Toledo quarterback Gene
Sw1ck rounded out the top
10
Gn!!m pulled the most
votes m four of the ftve
geographic secttons, losmg
only the West honors to
Munc1e
Ooak Walker, who won as a
JUntor m 1948 and was thtrd m
1949, was the closest to
repeatmg before Gnffm
broke the jmx "
"Thts should make other
Junior winners try more as
semors," stressed Gnffm
Don't quit Don~ let up on
your mtens1ty "
Grlffm 's slats weren't as
unpress1ve thiS year as m
1974 but were far from
paltry The 21-year-old
Columbus, Ohio native led the
11·0 and No !-ranked
Buckeyes by gaining 1,357
yards this season for a 5,177
four-year total - an NCAA
career record Every t1me he
rushed he averaged 5 5 yards
and each game amassed an
average 123 4 yards
He kept his NCAA record
streak of rushmg for at least
100 yards alive through 31
games, stopped only agamst
Michigan m h1s fmal regular
season game
Hayes gave h1s explanation
for why Griffm didn't equal
his 1974 performance, when
he rushed for 1,620 yards
"He defm1tely was more of
a target this season ' Hayes
S81d "The other teams liked
to tackle him more than
anyone else The fact that he
could do 11 agam With all the
pressure on hun IS JUSt unbelievable "
Grlffm 's slze..-Ji.loot-9, 184
pounds~s been mentioned
as a possible deterrent to
success mthe pros, but Hayes
brushed off any doubts that
Griffin would not do well as a
professtonal
• Two HelSIDans-lhat puts
him tn a class all by himself,"
said the venerable Buckeye
mentor II means he's an
extremely unusual person,
able to handle the pressure
look at Greg Pru1tt (the f&gt;.IO,
190-pound Cleveland Browns'
back ) His size didn't hurt
him He's great

Team

St

Temple se

SVAC quintets resume
action Friday night

~

1

44

75

Selmon
I

IS

top

lineman
OKLAHOMA CITY (UPI)
- The Football Wnters
Assoc1aUon of America today
named Oklahoma defensive
tackle Leroy Selmon winner
of the Outland Trophy as the
natiOn's outstanding lntertor
lineman
Selmon, a cat.qutck, :/.56pounder, also led a list of 26
All-Amer~ca honorees
selected by the writers Notre
Dame's Steve N1ehaus was
runnerup for the Outland
Selmon sa1d 11 was "a btg
surprise, a pleasant surprise,
l just feel really, really great
about 11 II tickled me to
death
If l didn't have classes I
probably wouldn't be here,"
he sa1d from his donn room
" But just winning It ts
celebration enough I can't be
any happier "
The team was ch011en by a
committee meeting In
Chicago
following
a
preliminary vote by the
associBtlon 's I 060 members
and announced m Oklahoma
City by Volney Meece of the
Oklahoma C1ty Times, secretary-treasurer of the writers
assoctatlon
The writers p1cked four
running backs- two-time
Heisman Trophy winner
Archie Griffin of Oh1o State,
Rtcky Bell of Southern
Calllomla, Tony Dorsett of
Pittsburgh and Chuck Muncie
of California
Marty Akins of Texas was
selected at quarterback
Oklahoma running back
Joe Washmgton made the
team as a k1ck return
specialist Other specialists
were
New
Mexico
placekicker Bob Berg and
Oh10 State punter Tom
Skladany
Griffin, Washington,
Skladany and Alabama
defensive lineman Leroy
Cook were the only repeaters
from 1974
Top ranked Ohio Slate
placed four players on the
team w1th offensive lineman
Ted Smith and defensive
back Tim Fox Jolnmg Grlffm
and Skladony
Besides Oklahoma, schools
havmg two honorees were
Nebraska mth center Rlk
BoMess and defensive back
Wonder Monds and PeM
State w1th offensive lineman
Tom Rafferty and linebacker
Greg Buttle
The 28 players represented
19 schools
The OuUand Trophy winner
Ill decided prunarily by a vote
of the membership and
fmahzed by the All-America
committee

IS TRY

DR RONALD F RIVIERE

(/) DR

LLI

a:
:J
.....

z

A J STAEHU

OR fREEMAN MALTZ
11001!

OR CHRIS A

CII.LL C:OLLECT AREA CODE (614)

PHONE.

252·3181 252-8445
One or Two Day Full Denture
Service, Partials Extractions
x Rays Cleantng

LLI

c

E
COLUMBUS ()-t 10 43205
Smde Tomorrou /{Yo u Tait e Core OJ Your 1 tf' lh 1oduv

MOIIOAY THROUGH FRIDAY
830AM T0630PM

�2- The Dally Sentinel , Middleport Pomeroy 0 , Wednesday Dec. ~3~19...75~.......?..::&gt;-&lt;::&gt;&lt;::&gt;&lt;::&gt;&lt;:&gt;&lt;-:k.X&gt;&lt;~&gt;&lt;::"G"G"G"G"&lt;:&gt;'-d'o-o-b-o-..o~tat

Berrys World

3- The Datly Sentmei,Middleport-Pomeroy 0, Wednesday, Dec 3 1975

"Maybe if we don't look, it won't hurt!"

Editorial comment,
opinion, features

f---p~---l Rockets drop overtime
Archie: An inspiration .Standmgs
il
T•
88 85

'

By GENE CADDES

J

Driving habitual offenders off road

1m
·Let me put It this way You're not stable I'm
not stable Why should we expect our
GOVERNMENT to bfl stablt?

The day after.

I

I

I
I

I

I

l

••

By Chet T111nehlll
There will be several public-oriented jobs left undone for a
liine after John Reece, Garfield St , Middleport leaves town m
a week or ao
rn the Pomeroy Middleport area since July, 1971, John and
Wilma Reece and thelt two daughters, Ann, 8, and Damelie, 7
wm be returning to Canton to live John 1s taking a position m
Ohio Power Company's Purchasing and Stores Dept , after
having functioned as public affairs coordinator at OPCO s
Gavin Power Plant the past 4'h years
These undone jobs around the community ore suggested
by the roles John served or is serving in, to whit
- Served on the church board of the Middleport Church of
Chrlsl
- Was co-ehalrman in 1972 of the Meigs Chapter Cancer
Society with Paul Cascl, masterminding with Case! the most
succeasful crusade In hiitory locally, he 111111 serves on the
society's board, doing much of the public Information work. on
the recent alwnni football game
- Represents the Ohio Power Company to the
Southeastern Ohio Regional Council
- Made iMumerable talks to groups of all kinds m the
MeigKlallla area explaming the Gavin Plant project as a
marvel of engineering, Its economic Impact and 1ts effect on
the envirllnment
- Wrote a column from time to time m this newspaper
called "Scouting armmd the M.{l-M" and designed the attractive heading for II uaed by local news media
-Ia IIICond vice president of the Oh Kan Coin Club
- And when my department was desperate for a sports·
writer In Sept~ber, just gelling Into the football ae&amp;llllll, John
followed the Marauders through their creditable 5.$ season,
himself dolnj! a better than ordinary job
Neither John nor Wtlrna Is keeping it a secret that if they
had their druthers they'd like to stay m this area
Two things, however, about John I don't like
~e Ia be pad-mouths the ClnciMall Reds, calls Pete Rose
a hot dog, Sparky Anderaon the one thing that kept the Reds
from winning 130 games last summer and the World ,ser1es In
four straight
The other Is he's for any team Ohio State is playmg Wilma
could make 100 yards a game with the blocking Archie Griffin
gets 'l'heBucka' ll~record this year is pure luck He can't yet
understand how Michigan had only 14 poinl:l at the e(l(i of 60
minutes of playing time, and Ohio State 21, Inasmuch as
Michigan played so much better a game
Both of these smgularly undesirable tra11B are understandable bavmg been nurtured In the Canton area for 10
years or thereabouts before coming down to the Ohio River
wuntry, Reece, as do many citizens of northeast Oh10,
downgrades all achtevement In sports or whatever by anyone
west, east and south of a circle so or so miles in diameter that
has Cleveland In its center
What, of course makes these poople ao funny these days ts
what bas been happening to the Cleveland Indians for the last
20 or so years, and to the Cleveland Browns the past couple of
years ~ly Cleveland lnd1an or Cleveland Brown fans show
frustration of such heat that II must blow off as Hayes Hatmg
and Red!' Ranting
It's all very amusing, and considerable fun We even laugh
abo11t his favorite quarterback, the famous Sonny Sixklller of
the Washington Huslues (Unlv of Wa!!hlngton, Seattle) who
threw Ilia Iaiii pass In college 111 the autumn of 1971 and has not
been heard of since except In the cut lists of the NFL and mor~
lately the WFL There was a brief revival of excitement for
Reece this Fall when Sixktller's name appeared in the scoring
line of the Hawaii entry of the WFL But the WFL folded up •Is
tent, and unfortunately, so apparenUy did Sjxluller his tepee
John Reece being here the past few years bas had a speCial
poignancy for me
His father, Hugh, (deceased) and I were next-door naghbors In I.oogvlew, Washington (1929-1930) when Hugh was a
lith and 12th grader and I was in the 9th and lOth grades at
Robert A l.oog H1gh School My father and John's grandfather
Reece for many years were the closest frtends H1s grand·
mother Reece was one of the f1nest ladles the Tannehills knew
That, my friends Is how small the world REAU.Yis

Frank Nuskey and Mrs Roy
MONITORS LISTED
Grose
3 lo 5 p m Sundays
R1verby momtors for this
momtors
are Mrs W1ll1am
weekend have been an·
Eachus
and
Mrs Phillip
nounced
Saturday s
f110nllors are Mrs John Ba1ley, l lo 3 p m, Mrs
Knepper and Mrs T1m Betsy S1mpson and Mrs
Cocnell, I to 3 p m , Mrs Donald Warehime 3 to 5 p m

lltttrn &amp;o lltu
'WITHOUT REALIZIN6 IT, •
PETER AND PENNY
-:-:~
PEN6UIN HAD WANDERED
INLAND !=ROM THE ANTARC.TIG
SEA 1 AND AWAY I=ROM Tl-lEIR

FAMILY

I

More than half of those killed and matmed on Amenca s highways each year - and there
were 46,200 In the first category m 1974 - are VIctims of the HOD the Hab1tual Offender
Dr1ver, says the National Association of Insurance Agents (NAIA)
Statistically, the number of HODs 1s few, only about 5 per cent of the drtvmg populatiOn
but the wake of destructton they leave 1s enormous
The Hab1tual Offender Dnver drtves too fast, and the number one cause of all fatal ac
cldents on rural roads m 1974 was speedmg
The HOD dr1ves left of center, and that was the number two cause cf 1974 fatal accidents
Then comes failure to YJeld nght of way, improper overtakmg, makmg Improper turns and
followmg too closely - and the arrogant and trrespons1ble HOD 1s gu11ty of all these
Pollee flies m one state show a HOD who In II years was arrested 25 tunes for traffic
VIolations - 10 arrests for drunk dr1vmg, 10 for dr1vmg under suspenSion, and ftve for
speedmg reckless drlvmg and runnmg a red hght He has been arrested an average of 2 3
t1mes a year has held h1s license legally for only three months durmg the 11 years, yet he
contmues to drive, says the NAJA
Records from another stale show 1,365 conv1ct10ns for 100 habitual offenders Still another
state shows one man with 32 convictions that have cost him over $5 000 Desprte h1s revoked
dnver's license, he ts still drivmg
The NAIA, which represents tndependent msurance agents m each state has long cam
pstgned for laws to get the HODs off the road and keep them off, which means puttmg them 1n
)atl 1f necessary
In 1968, Virginia became the f1rst state to psss hab1tual offender legtslallon Its law stated
that any driver With three major or 12 mmor traffic conVIctions wrthm a J().year period was to
be certified as a Habitual Offender Dr1ver, lose h1s drtver's license for 10 years and go to prtson
for one to live years 1f caught driVIng after losmg hiS hcense
When the law went mto effect m V1rgm1a, 36 HODs dtdn't beheve 11 They d1d after they
started servmg tune m the state pemtenllary
The law was credited w1th a drop m V1rg1ma's highway death rate of some 20 per cent
wlthm two years By contrast, states which lacked anti-HOD laws contmued to record m
creases m trafltc fatahlles
Other legtslatures began lookmg at the NAJA's model law, whtch reqwres no outlay of
state funds, requtres no additional manpower, keeps licensing at the state level and makes lor
uniform deflnlmtlons, enfor\j!llent and penalties
Since VIrginia m 1968, 20 other states have passed habitual offender legislation North
Carolina, New Hampshire RThode Island Vermont, Mame, Massachusetts, Washmgton
Indiana, Georgl8 Flor1da, Kansas, Oh10, Delaware, l..ou1s1ana, South Carolina Oregon
By Tom Tiede
Colorado Tennessee, Iowa and Montana
WASHINGTON - From
But m29 states the HOD 1s still allowed at large
the ltme P1lgr1m offtcers
Until aU the states jom the f1ght to get the Habitual Offender DriVer off the road, says M ISSued shoet-to-klll orders as
Jay Wanamaker, president of the NAJA, the natton 's auto fataltty and m)ury toll wrll continue a means of defendmg set
to be tragJcally and needlessly high
tlement larders from
thtevery, Amencans have
waged a VIgorous and at the
same lime meffect1ve
campaign
agamst cnme
One of the most disturbmg things about the recent vole m the Umted Nat tons condemmng
Harsh
pumshmenls
have not
Z1omsm as a form of • rac1sm and raCial d1scrunlnallon' rs that so many countr~es refused to
11 or ked, dreadful penal
take a stand on this tssue
The vote mthe General Assembly was 73 for the resolutiOn and 35 agamst, and among the condtltons have been no
majority, as expected were aU the Arab states and the Commurust bloc A httle more sur· deterrence, and more recent
prlsmg Is the fact that they were jomed by such ostensibly' free world" countries as Braz1l and mvestments 10 a humane
approach have failed as well
Mexico
Today the Umted States
But fully 32 other delegations elected to abstam from votu1g Among them were nme other
Latin American countnes - Argentina, Bolivia Chile, Colombia, Ecuador, Guatemala employs many of the most
Paraguay, Peru and Venezuela - and even such countries as Japarl, Greece and the Phlltp brutal law enforcement
acltvtltes 10 the world and
pmes
Even if all the abstainers had joined with the 35 in opposition •thts invtdJous resolution also many of the most
would still have earned the day BulliS VIctory would have been a narrow one and the Umted philosoph•ca11y enhght.!ned,
yet accordmg to poll
Nat1ons would not be mquite the moral shambles It IS now
One ts reminded of the words of Martin NiemoUer, the German theologian who belatedly measurements perhaps one
of four adult Amencans IS
opposed Nazism m the 1930s
'In Germany they first came for the Communists, and I didn't speak up because I wasn't a attacked by thuggery 10 any
Communist Then they came for the Jews, and I didn't speak up because I wasn't a Jew Then g1ven annum
So baffling has the
they came for the trade uniOnists, and I didn't speak up because I wasn't a trade un1on1st
dilemma become, acluaUy,
Then they came for the Catholics, and I dldn t speak up because I was a Protestant
that 10creas10g numbers of
Then they came for me - and by that tune no one was left to speak up"
c1llzens and authonlles are
trendmg toward an accommodatiOn wllh rather
than an ulllmate solulton to
Two factors keepmg the electric automobtle all httle more than an experimental curiosity cr1me
are the great weight of the huge banks of batteries reqwred and therr long rechargmg times
Notmg that law enThat may be changmg Two Japsnese compsmes claun to have developed a rap1d-eharge forcement agencies now
process for storage batter1es that cuts rechargmg tlffie to one-e1ghth of normal The new clear by arrest only about 20
technology mvolved the remodelmg of conventional lead-ac1d batteries and battery chargers per cent of known cnmes,
Batteries that usually take around four hours for each round of chargmg up to 60 per cent of and perhaps less than 5 per
the1r capacttles can now be charged m 30 mmutes, say Daihatsu Kogyo Co , a maker of In
dustrlal vehicles, and Yuasa Battery Co
large enough electncal
The greater efftclency of the batteries makes It possible to reduce the number of battenes
discharge
occurs to cause
Thill permits more loading and, say,the companies prom1ses easier startmg and stoppmg of
muscles to contract, and wtth
the electric motor and better accelerallon
One battery-powered pickup truck has been tned out for 15,000 kilometers of durabllrty a senes of discharges, 10 no
testmg and was found to cover a distance of 60 kilometers, or about 37 miles w1th each 3(). orgamzed fashton , the
UTegular contractions of the
minute charging
convulsion
may occur
Thts Is st1ll far short of the performance of theconvenltonal mternal combus10n engme, but
The
simple
JOlt reactiOn
the electric car Is getting there
you
have
11
not
a
convulston
Daihatsu wm shortly start marketing a new midget commercial vehicle ulllizmg the new
and tl does not mean you have
system
anythng wrong wtth your
brain It IS a normal
discharge of a bwld up of
perfectly notmaJ and even cond1t10ns w1thm a muscle
common The sudden In· Itself that leads to contractwn
voluntary contraction of a and then relaxatiOn In the
muscle or set of muscles will process the factors leadmg to
do Ibis
con traction are diSSipated,
In some ways they are hke and the muscle returns to a
a hm1led momentary con normal restmg state
vuls1on Every voluntary
Why do you feel better'
By La"rence E. Lamb, M D are so strong that they have muscle In your body 1s
DEAR DR I AMB - I have shaken my entire frame as related to a spec1f1c set of People often feel more
a puzzhng cond1t10n that I wen as the bedstead Other cells 10 your bram You can relaxed after dissipation of
have been unable to get an than the JOlt there 1s no effect map out the area tn the bra10 chemicals related to muscle
ans,.er to It ts what l call or result, although I tend to for the hand, foot, knee, contractwn Th1s may be one
JOlts " I "\II be lymg prone seem to feel better af· elbow and all movmg parts factor why a person feels
- on m~ back - usually ter,.ards - the same kmd of When these cells are better alter exercise When a
asleep or ~ ~ rest, and a good feehng that you get after destroyed , as 10 a strike the convulsion occurs lhe person
may be relaxed afterward, as
portion of my body w11l feel as a sneeze I would appreciate part becomes paralyzed
after
a hard day's physical
tf the muscle 1s Jwnpmg fh1s your comments regard10g
You
can
stimulate
any
of
work
Agood example here ts
has occurred at my foot, at thiS
these
cells
and
cause
the
eleclncal
shock treatment
DEAR READER - This
1nany points along each limb,
appropnate
muscle
to
move
The pallent tends to sleep
at the heart, and, as l recall, may g1ve you another jolt,
In the laboratory we can do after treatment and Is much
but
those
reacttons
are
even at the head The JOlts
tins m ammals w1th an calmer The electrtc shock
eleclncal probe to the ceU causes widespread muscle
The neurosurgeon uses such contractions or In essence, a
Information to tell where he Is convulsion
cutling 10 some mstances He
For
Informs lion
on
can ask the patient to move a psychological factor~m heart
hand or a foot or g1ve other disease, send 60 cents for The
responses or st•mulate an Health U!tler number 4-1,
area and observe the Behavior
Pattern,
response
Psychological Factors,
When an electrical charge Stress, and Heart Disease
builds up in the cell 11 can Address your request to Dr
discharge and stimulate the Lamb, In care of this news
muscle to contract forcefully, paper, P 0 Box 1551, Rad1o
causing the sensation of a C1ty Station New York, NY
JOlt Th1s ts really what 10019 Send a long, stamped,
happens m the more senous sell-addressed envelope for
cond11t0n of a convulsiOn A ma1bng

TOM TIEDE

No more cowboys,
Indians and trees

Abstaining is no answer

Battery sparks interest

DR. LAMB

Reader's 'iolts'
are quite norntal

•

•

cent of actual cnmes, Boston
Pohce Comm1sstoner Robert
D1Graz1a says flatly that cops
cannot ebmmate or reduce
enme tn at's somethmg
beyond our capabilities "
Pohce m1ght do 11, DIGraZia
allows, but only under cond•hons clearly unacceptable
m a democracy Pollee state
authonty
Ommously, even though
unacceptable the pohce state
cond1t1on IS not altogether an
unposslbtllty Conceding to
necessity that 1s m the me of
personal safety cnme·
buffeted Amencans have
already accepted numerous
hm1ts on their pubhc

freedoms Surveys mdlcate
nearly half the people in the
nat10n are afraid to walk In
the1r neighborhoods at night
Most communities statutorily
forbid achvl hes once constdered routme leaving keys
m automobiles, for example ,
Such curbs are undeniably
the better part of wisdom, but
therr Implication ts ugly Ills
a short way from a
shakedown of passengers •
boordmg a plane to, say,
pohce fnsks at lntersecUons,
or at the entrance to theaters, ·
or m the checkout line at the
grocer's
All of this, at hest leaves
the Clhzen between the rock
and the hard place But ,.
perhaps there still Is an
alternahve The FBI is
begmmng what spokesmen
say IS a wtde and enthualaatic
explorahon of what may be
(Contmued on page 6)
~

-

RAY CROMlEY
New York banks
lose more than city
By Ray Cromley
wASHINGTON - It is ssld of one former Central In·
telligence Agency operative Involved In Watergate thalli you
asked him to find out for you what was prmted on the front
page of the New York Times on a given date, he would not go
down to the newsstand and buy a copy
Rather he would perch himself on the 12th story of a
building - complete with di!gul5e - and with a precillon,
high-powered camera and attachments, covertly photograph
the first page of the paper being read by aome man oc woman
m the park below
One problem the CIA Jives with Is thalli was founded, In
psrl, from remnants of the World War II Office of Strategic
Services The OSS had a nucleWI of professionals It alao attracted an unusually large number of men and women who
developed their ideas of intelligence from TV spy stories and
psperback thrillers
Unfortunately, numbers of these dilettantes had high Ivy
League connections and some Influence with the members of
the law firm of Wlld Bill Donovan, the head of OSS Inte111gence
was an exciting game
The CIA has, over the years, slowly whittled down the
roillllber and Influence of these holdovers, and their dl.sclples In
the next generation Even today, the job Is not complete
Most of the lllegal activities exposed 111 recent studies for
which the CIA stands accused, are of little value - the eaoterlc
poisons, the dart gun, the cloak and dagger Spying The payoff
Is not worth the cost
The opening of mall, the shadowing of suspects, the listing
of who attends what meetlnj!s and who parties with whom, tbe
mterviewlng of neighbors -Ia normally a waste of time The
exception Is when you have sufficient evidence to be virtually
certain of guilt and know almolll precisely what you are
looking for
Modem Intelligence, whether by the CIA or the FBI Is a
highly technical profession, similar to advanced scienUllc
research
Some 90 per cent of usable Information comes from open,
unclassified sources
By and large, spies are a vanishing breed in the American
system of inteiligence The Russians, the Chinese, the North
Koreans and other secretive socltles IIIW depend heavily on
spies The British have a sophlatlcated ll)'stem
But Americans now tend to concentrate their efforts on
satellites, on oomplicaled computer analysis of coded lftre1e.
messages picked up by sensitive listening devicea and analysis
by speclallsla of technical, scientHic, commercial arid other
publications, from which piece-by-piece and ltem-by4t~ the
capability and organization of the military and political ftl'oel
of a potenUal enemy can be calculated
The discovery and conviction - II' eviction - of aplea II a
more compUcated buslnesa But again, lhta II IICCOIIIpllsbed
in large part by what might be called sophlaticated book·
keeping All spies make rnllllakes All leave traoea
lrregulariUes fOflll patterns Sweeping !IW'Veillance bocgles
the rrund m cost and II uaUally self defeating In ,.., ttwama
the suspects, The objective of modem lnteWgenoe lllo 1l)lot the
rrregulariUes, lnvellllgate them in depth.
Ther~ has been a tendellcr to ptber 10 mud! llllfllnal
Information II has been impOIIIble to IDit the n.t frGm the
chaff The fUe tlrawera of our lntelll&amp;ence ll!endelll't fUied
with material which no me has time lo look at.
An upgrading of the profeutonalllm of the CJW wCtUld do
much to remove the legitimate discontent voiced both by the
White House and by Congreu

/ was the only way •
UPI Sports Writer
Confidence, Retter
COLUMBUS (UPI )
believes IS the key to Grif·
Archie Gtiff1,11, Ohio State's fin s success
tw&lt;Kilhe all·Amerlcan and
Arch was mcred1ble 10 a
He ism an Trophy wmner, sense, because he never
should be an lnsprrat10n to all doubted himself, Retter
overweight youngsters
sa1d, ' wh1le nobody else
Yes1 lhe compact httle beheved him because he was
Archie with the bulging so fat But, h1s we1ght turned
biceps was once a fat little kid out to be an advantage,
nicknamed 'butterball "
because he had to work so
But, throu8h hard work and hard to get rid of tt "
the "Incredible'' Gnffin
Archie's parents, Mr and
detenillnatlon, the 5-3, 182- Mrs (Margaret) James
poufld ' Griffin Tuesday Gnffln along with other
became the first player mthe fanuly members, met mth
fJ years of the awar~ to wln newsmen In thetr trophy·
the HeiSman twice
filled fam1ly room, awa1tmg
Jun Retter, who taught the offiCial announcement
Griffin and his brother, Ray, from New York
at Unmoor Jumor Htgh
The Griffins have siX other
School, was at the Griffin sons, all of whom played or
home Tuesday when the are playing football, and one
official
Heisman
an- dsughter , the youngest of the
nouncement was made and family
talked about ~ch
Ray, of course, was a
Retter, who Is writing a startmg sophomore defenstve
family biography entitled back on this year s No I
''The Remarkable Griffins,' ranked Ohto State team and
recalled the first time he met Duncan, a freshman, ts a
Arch, then an overweight strong candidate for a
seventh grader who used to starling spot m the Buckeye
chase the other kids who secondary next year
But, with a second Heisman
called him "butterball "
"He came up to me and for Arch1e safely lucked
said 'my name Is Archie away, thoughts of anotherGriffin and I'm going to thts one for Ray-are already
Musklngum College because surfacmg
'He's the next one," SB.ld a
that's where my brother
(James) went' "He must conftdent Mrs Griffin who
have thought I dldn t believe admits she always had
him,"
Retter added dreams of her sons being
"because a couple of days 'stars "
'He'll (Ray ) set them on
later he brought In a cllppmg
about James playmg football fire If they let him go back to
offense next year,' predicted
for Musklngum
"Archie was a heck of a k1d Mr Griffin
Ray, a f&gt;.IO, 185-pounder,
and student, ' Retter went on
"I've never seen a kid so swtlched to safety thlll year at
motivated But, he was just a his own request, but hopes to
flU hts brother's shoes at
product of his family
"Football was always so tailback In 1976
It was Ray who set up Ohio
much more than a game to
the Griffin boys," he said State's WIDnlng touchdown
''They all wanted to go to wrth a pass mterceptlon and
college and they knew sports return late m the Michigan

How they voted. ..
NEW YORK I UP I) - The top 10 votegetters tor Ihe 1975
Helsman Trophy points awarded on a 3 2 I basis
lSI lnd Jrd Total
Archie Griffin 0!1\o Sl
&lt;5; 167 104 1 800
Chuck Muncie Callforma
145 104 87 730
Ricky Bell Southern Cal
70 169 160 708
Tony Dorsett Plftsburgh
66 149 120
616
Joe Washington O!&lt;tahoma
29 47 69 250
Jimmy DuBose Florida
19 13 29 112
86
John Sciarra UCLA
12 15 20
Gordon Bell Michigan
2 27 24
84
79
Leroy Selmon Oklahoma
7
22 14
73
Gene Swick, Toledo
5
19 2()
The top five volegelters In each section

Eut

Griffin
Dorsett
Muncie
R Belt
Washington
Southwest

Griffin
Muncie
Washington
R Bell
Oorsell

'
'

South

Midwest

Griffin Griffin
Dorsett
R Bell
R Bell
Muncie
Muncte
Oorselt
DuBose Washington

Far West
Muncie
Griffin
R Bell
Dorsett
Sciarra

:;:ey:Sh~~~:~~~~~~~~g~~~
aw:k~
s:~~d
~~·thought
WI

IItle wm over th e o vermes
Aithough admltlmg to some
anxwus momen t s Mr
Gnff10 sa1d he had no
doubts" Archie would wm the

about the game of football,
the former hneman who
works two full tune jobs to
support his large famtly,
satd 'I wouldn't trade 11 for
anythmg "

,,

"

,
,
,

•

·,
,

,
"
,.

•
'
~

'
~

1

·•

"
'"

.•

Tuc&gt;day'

By Unttcd

~~!~?.~

Pre s~

1

Ba&gt;kotba:l

lot cr na ttona l

East
A
rmy
62 Upsala "
Boson Sl 80 Brtdg ewa tcr 61
Brande" 79 MIT 76
Colum b.a7 83 CCNY 77
N agar a a P llsburgh 68
Penn 51 93 Lch gh tS
Temple"
Wesl Chesler ss
W Va St 79 Glen vt l le 711
Sou1h

.47
rtor da 74 Eas Tenn 61

Hayes says OSU
line big factor
By JACK SAUNDERS
UPI Sports Writer
NEW YORK (UPI)- The
player and his coach were
here Tuesday as history was
made when Ohio State's
Archie Grlffm won his second
Helsman Trophy But the
other Buckeye players who
made the award poss1ble,
according to both Grlffm and
his coach, Woody Hayes,
should have been there as
well
"l lmagme the strength of
our blocking !me was a
considerable factor m getting
him here,' said Hayes at the
announcement of Griffin's re
peal victory, a feat never
before duplicated m the 41·
year history of the award
We use 11 as a selling pomt
on good backs I'll tell you
that"
"Th1s Is an award for the
whole team," S81d a sm1ling
Griffin, posmg before the
bronze Reisman statue 'My
name IS on II but l couldn 'I
have done 11 without the other
guys I wasn't shootmg for
th1s but for the national
championship "
Grlffm won the award last
year as a Junior, only the fifth
underclassman to be so
honored Then ll was
Southern Cal1forn1a
semor
Anthony
Da
VIS who was Gr1flm s ch1ef
competitor, th1s year it was
two West Coast runmng
hacks- Callft ·ma s Chuck
Munc1e and USC s Ricky
Bell- that were left far
behind m the voting Griffin's
IIKIO points were mc~e than
his two runnersup cot. bmed
Muncie garnered 730 and Bell
followed with 708
In this, the year of the
runnmg back, the top SIX
votegetters played that
pos1hon Pittsburgh s Tony
Dorsett was fourth followed
by
Oklahoma's
Joe
Washmgton and Flonda's
Jimmy DuBose Quarterback
John Sciarra, who f1111shed
seventh, was the top
votegetter among all s1gnal
callers, Oklahoma's U!roy
Selmon got the most votes of
any lineman, finishing nmth
Michigan running back

t tor da St 90 Roll ns

Jacksonv li e

Coach Cornell's squad has Carter s Kyger Creek Bob
Another b1g weekend of played a tight man-to-man cats
basketball' Is on tsp m the defense led by semor center
Soul bern, tabbed by some
Southern Valley Athletic Tim Woodyard
to be a major threal lu both
Conference begmnlng Friday
Semor guards Kevm Petrie
Hannan Trace and North
mght Three league lilts are and Kent Halley keep the Galha, played a fme first half
scheduled whtle three non defense movmg with their last Friday aga1nst the
league encounters wdl be pressmg pressure from m1d Pirales but fell apart the
played Silturday evemng
court Hannan Trace's of· second half
Friday mght league fense has been led by Dav1d
The Tornado scor1ng
matches wrll fmd Hannan Shaffer tHI semor forward , threats are M1ke Roberts,
Trace a l North Galha, Halley and 6-2 semor Charles Paul Schultz, Dan Brown,
Southern vlslhng Kyger Cremeans
and Roger Brauer However,
Creek and Southwestern at
North Galha s biggest
against North Gallla 1\ was
Symmes Valley
offensive players are Greg the httle men that moved the
Saturday night , Federal James, 6-1 sen1or guard and
ball If those players don t
Hocking v1srts Eastern, Fred Logan, &amp;-2 junior lorcome through the Bobcats
Kyger Creek goes to Fairland ward U!ndmg support on the will probably see 5-5 Er1c
and Symmes Valley 1s at boards Is btg Bruce Runyon, Dunning and 5 8 Carl
Rock Hill
6-1, 230 pound semor forward, Johnston
The b1g game Friday Mark fhelss junior forward
It will be the first gar:ne of
evening finds Coach Dan and Robert Neal, a 6-2 junior the season for the Bobcats
Cornell's unbeaten Hannan
Brett Tackett, f&gt;.IO junior Kyger Creek will be out to
Trace Wildcats playing guard, Is the team's top Improve 1ts 2 15 record of
Coach J1m Foster's un· hustler and plays a tight 1974-765
defeated North Galha defense The winner of
KC will rely on the shootmg
Pirates Hannan Trace owns Friday's game could be m the of veterans Tom Kern, 5-a
vlctones over South Pomt dr1ver s seat lor the SVAC semor guard, Tom Lucas, 5-a
and Eastern North Gallla champ10nshtp
semor guard, Bill Metzner,[&gt;.
defeated Miller and Southern
Coach
Carl
Wolfe s II senior forward, Ralph
In two outings this season, Southern Tornados w1ll at- Baylor 5 II juniOr center and
the WU&lt;tcat defense has tempt to rebound from last
Doug Sands, 5 10 JUnior
YJelded just 78 points a 39 week's 72-43 loss to North ftor" ard The Bobcats lack
pomt average per game
Gallla a~amst Coach Keith overall good hea1ght and
must rely on good qwckness,
Malone defeated by Muskies 54·51
tmproved attitude and
NEW CONCORD, Ohio
The holda, 1~, were led In aggressiveness on the
(UPIJ- With biB team ahead the point column by forward boards
by one point and julll 21 Marvin Smalley with 13 mar•
Coach Richard Hamilton's
MCOtllll left in the game, kers
Southwestern Highlanders
a1p111n [lenny Howell scored The 1·2 Pioneers, who relin- will seek their first victory of
Mtllklngum •a final two polnta quished a 32-27 halftime lead, the year against Coach Gary
on foul shots In the Fighting were paced by center WI! Salyer s Symmes Valley
Musklea' 54-51 win over Adama with IJ counters and V1ku•gs
Malone Tuesday mght
Bob Mason w1th 10
s,•uth\Hl'l tttn
I· ~oi l
In

SVAC STANDINGS
ALL GAMES
Hannan Tra ce

P

OP

1 0 116 78

1 o UB 100
0

0

0

0

Southwestern
Eastern

0
0

o

1 67
1 37
1 .fJ

87
57

0

1

82

Symmes Va l

Iowa 72 Nebraska 65
Loyola (Ill ) 98 l eW IS 67
MarQuette
87
51
Joseph s
( lnd l 60

M ch1gan 90 Vanderblll 63

M s.sour !18 Toledo 85 o l
Noire Dame 117 ValparaiSO 83

Southwest
Baylor 71 SW Teu s 45
New Mex co Sl 49 Texas E
Paso 47
SMU 75 Kansas 66

Pepperdme 8 ~6~'ane 55
Wash mglon St 78 sea l le

58

Nahonal Basketball Assoc1at.on
Standmgs
By Umted Press lnternattona'
Eastern Conference
Atlanhc DIVISIOn
W L Pet
GB
Ph adelph•a
12 6 667
Boston
10 6 625
Buffalo
9 10 J74
New Yor k
7 15 318
Central DIVISIOn
W l , Pet
GB
Atlanta
10 7 588
Houslon
9 8 5~9 1
Was hmg !on
8 8 500 1
New Orleans
8 10 -144
2
Cle veland
8 11 421 J

31

72

Edmonton
II 14 2
Toronto
6 lA
2
Tuesday s Resulh

New England 5 Hou ston 2
4 Den...,er 3 overt

Wmmpeg

24
14

me

1

43

72

TotAls
2 2 209 209
SVAC RESERVES
Tum
W L POP
Southern
1 0 so 49

Hannan Tntce

Kyger Creek

5outhwestern

1 0 42 3&lt;t

Dayton

6 2 28 74 54

lJ

10

6 6 26 80 70
Ft Wayne
8 10 3 19 Bd 72
Columbus
3 16 J 9 J7 91
Tuesday s Results
Tonight s Games
Port Huron at Fort Wayne
Muskegon at Dayton
Fl nt at Columbus
Sag naw at Kalamazoo

Thursdays Games

(No games scheduled)

North Gelha
E.:~~tern

Tatats

Baptist

Chri stian
79
Massillon Cl1rlsllan 62
Rtver VIew 62 lrl Valley Sd
New Lexington 63 New

Conco rd Glenn 45
Maysvtlle 76 Morgt~n 67
Crooksville 85 Philo S6

o

o

o

1 J9

so

o 1 Jol

12

1 2 IH 11S

Musklngum

~0

Sher i dan .tB

U I!Ct' 83 Licking Valley 16
Waterford 67 Me igs f eutNn

3J
Guc rn sev Zftn,. Trace 7J
Rtl111svtlle "8

once agam by Juntor transfer
Greg Brownmg ••lh 8 pom ls
followed by classmate Bruce
R1ffle 's 7 Riffle was also
cred1led w1lh playmg an
outstandmg defensive game
He had five of h1s teams 21
rebounds nght behmd Gary
Nelson who led h1s team w1lh
SIX caroms
The Eagles h1t on 12 21
from the chanty slnpe and
had 20 turnovers
Waterford, wh1ch th1s year
has [our starters back, was
led m scorin g by M1ke Rauch
"1th 24 po10ts, whtle teammates Simpson and D1amond
canned 12 each The Wildcats
hit 15·20 from the foul line
The reserve contest was a
different matter After
leadmg most of the way the
baby Eagles finally sue
cwnbed bowmg to a (oul shot
m the last 10 seconds, losmg
32-31 J1m Davis led the
VISitors wllh 12 pomts
Sahrrday mght the Eagles
enterta in th e Federal
Hocking Lancers
By quarters
Eastern
4 13 23 34
VVaterford
10 32 46 67

The Pirates led 43-18 at the
half and mcreased It to 57-34
gomg mto the final can to
Coach J1m Foster substllut ed freely throughout the
contest One sub Richard
Eggleton a semor forward ,
had JUSt four pomts but
blocked f1ve shots m the
seven mmutes he played m
the fourth quarter
Donme Bush 5-10 JuniOr,
led Southwestern wtth e1ght
pomts Ke1th Grate juniOr
center, had seven markers
Shootmg·\\ISe North Calha
connec ted on 34 of 82 floor
attempts for 41 pet and lust
seven of 24 free throws
South\\ estern h1 l 10 of 20 at
the chanty str ipe North
Gall1a won the reserve game,
48-43 behmd the 20 pomt effort
of Doug S1sson Mark Banks
led the little Highlanders 111th
13 pomts Larry Carter had
10
Southwestern ().2 will play
at Symmes Valley Fnday
Southweste r n
(441
Crouse 2 0 4 Bank s J 0 6
Wa lk er
2 J 7 Bush
408

Mc Neal

By Quarters
Sou t hwes t ern 2 16 16 10
N Galtla
14 28 14 18

DE

ROBERT HOEFLICH

City Editor

So~~turday by The Ohio Vall~'i

Pub li shing company
111
Court St
Pq,meroy
Ohio
.oi57~9 Business Office Phone
992 21.56 Editor i al Phone 991

21S7
second cless pos tage paid

ward

representative

In c
Botf lnalll &amp; Gall.,gher Olv
757 Th ir d Ave New York

Griffith

Company

N Y 10011

Subscript on

rates

Del ivered oy carrier where
a!Jallable 75 cents per week
By Motor Route where
carrier
service
no t
available One month SJ 15
By mall In Ohio and W V.!l

One

Year

S22 00

Six

Sll 50
Threr
S7 00 Eluwhere
00 ytar SIM monlht
13 50 1 three month s S7 50

months
onths

'6

ubscrlptlon price Includes
unday 1 lmc5

Sentmel

2J 7

7l

e .. c Ed

Published daily except

2 0 4 Grat e

Miller
1 J S Lew s
1 1l
Tofals 17 10 44
North
Gall1a (75)
Runyon 4 19 ( MtnntS I 2
4 Log a n d 'J 10 Ta ckett J 0
8 James 11 1 23 Nea t 1 1 J
R Mlnn S 6 0 12 TheiSS 1 0
2 Eggleton 1 o 4 To,als 34 7

DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS MASON AREA
CHESTER L TANNEHILL

at Pomero~ Ohio
National
adver tising

OhtO Htgh School

Mathias
Wooster defeated Oh1o WesIn Toledo's game Tuesday ley an, 10&amp;-95 Demson beat
rught MISsouri extended 1ls John
Carroll,
75-65,
home court vtctory strmg to Muskmgum edged Malone,
15 stra1gh t WI th the overtune ".... -lit, Ot ter be10 to pped Rio
Vlclory over the Rockets
Grande fi&amp;.S9, Edinboro St
It left Missouri unbeaten m ( Pa ) wallopped Baldwm1ts !1rst two starts of the Wallace 84-72, and Kenyon
season It was Toledo's f~rsl over whe I me d 0 h 1o
game of the young season
Domm1can, 83-&amp;1
M1ssour1 dommated the
At Cleveland, DeniSOn outf1rst half 41 31 but Toledo's rebounded John Carroll 411-29
zone defense slowed the and got 41 pomts from 1ts
Tigers 10 the second half as front hne of U!e Bowman and
the Rockets h1t from long Todd Harrts to down the Blue
range Ted Williams led Streaks
Toledo w1th 29 pomts
Bowman, a 6-5 semor lorToledo Jumped ahead at 69- ward had 21 pomts, and
671ate m the game but Smith Harrrs, a 6-5 )umor forward,
hit two free throws to lie 1t totaled20 Denlson,:W,helda
Then Jeff Curne hit for 33-25 halftune advantage
Mrssour1 and W11liams scored
For the Blue streaks, ().),
on a )urn per to lie 11 at 72-72 at Chuck Lytle had II pomts
the end of regulatiOn play
Elsewhere Tuesday mght

Pirates win big

w 1 pts qf qa

loledo

.

Eagles clipped
at Waterford

North Galha's Pirates
Jumped mto a 15 21ead at the
end of the first quarter, then
r1pped the nets for 28 pomts m
the second stanza enroute to a
Nattonal Hockey
lopsided
75-44 vtctory over
League Standtng
Southwestern Tuesday mght
By Un1ted Pr ess lntcrnallonat
Campbell Conferente
The victory was th e
PatriCk DIVISIOn
P1rates' th1rd stra ight
W L T Pts
Phtladetphla
16 J 6
JB without a loss
N Y ISillnders 12 8 5
29
Fnday mght North Calha
A tlanta
10 13 2
22
N Y Rangers
9 14 2
20 hosts Hannan Trace m an
Smythe OtVISIOft
earl) showdown match for
W L T Pts
Cht cago
10 4 10
JO f1rsl place m the Southern
St Louis
8 11
5
?1
Vancouver
8 11 5
21 Valley Athlehc Conference
K ansas C Jiy
6 13 4
16 The defendin g cham piOn
Mmnesola
S 16 0
10
Wildcats are 2~ overall and I
Wales Conlerence
Norr1s Dtvlston
0 m the league
W L T Pts
Tuesday mght, Pirate
1\1\ontreal
18 A J
39
Los Angeles
14 10 2
30 a veteran and unheralded
P ttsburgh
10 10 1
22
ONrctf
7 IJ 4
18 player sparked North Calha
Was hmg ton
J 18 2
8 The veteran was 6-1 semor
Adams OtVISIOn
W L T Pis guard Greg James wh1le
Buffalo
17 5 I
35 Rayford (Spoon) MIDDIS 5 II
Boston
12 6
6
JO
Toronto
9 7 7
25 sentor came off the bench m
Ca forn• a
9 16 2
70 the second penod and scored
Tuesday s Results
mght pOints dur1ng the 211N Y Islanders d 51 LOUtS I
Los Angele s 5 Allanta 3
pomt eKplos10n James
Wednesday s Gam es
flmshed w1 th 23 pomts on the
Mon treal at Kansas C1ty
Buffalo at Washington
mghl 16 rebounds and fl\ e
Ptttsburgh at Chicago
Det ro I at Vancouver
blocked shots Mmms had 12
Toronto at Minnesota
pom Is
Lo'S Angeles at Cal to rn a
Fred Logan a Junior, wa s
the only other Pirate m
International Hock ey
League StJnd1ngs
double !1gures w1th 10 pomts
Un1ted Press International
North
North Galha usmg a man to
w 1 ph gt ga man defense JUMped ahead
PI Huron
12 Y 1 25 78 68
Sagtnaw
9 7 J 22 16 68
15 2 when Southwestern
F l 1nt
9 9 J 21 6A 62
f81led
to get untracked In the
Muskegon
8 8 .4 ';10 51 57
Kalamazoo
8 9 A 20 78 90
f1rst e1ght mmutes
South
.,..-.,.--,...---,

0 o o 0 w
0 0 0 0

Symmts Valley o o

Umtcd Press International
Toledo stung w1th an 88-85
defeat m overtime by
M1ssour1 Tuesday mght,
moves mto Col urn bIa, S C
tomght for contest With a
tough South Csrol10a Squad
The Toledo.SOuth Carolina
game highlights a schedule of
16 contests mvolvmg Ohio
teams tomght
South Carohna wtll be
Without 1ts startmg center
and one of Its key reserves
when the teams meet
BobMath1as a 6-7 semor IS
bedrtdden with a leg InJury
and tHI guard Jack G11loon IS
under
an
mdeftmte
suspensiOn for v10latmg
tratmng rules
Chuck Sherwood, a 6-10
JUnior who saw lltDited action
last year, probably wtll start
against Toledo 1n place of

Quebec 9 Cleveland 2
Edmonton 7 Toronto 2
Wedn esdays Games
Cmc nnat at Cleveland
Toronto at Calgary

Basketball Results
Kyger Creek
o o o o Un1ted
lnternatloul
Southwestern
0 0 0 0 Cte John Press
Symmes Valley o o o o Hay 54 Adams 75 Cte .J ohn
Eastern
0 1 37 37
o

Igers'

BY GREG BAILEY
WATERFORD
- The
MidWest DIVISIOn
W L Pel
GB hometown Wildcats Tuesday
Oetrott
10 S 661
mght pounced on the Eastern
Kansas c tv
7 9 439
Mtlwaukee
7 11 389 4 1 Eagles from Meigs County
Chi cago
4 IJ 235 7
and never let go
Pactf•c Dwtston
W L Pet GB The Eagles now ().2, one m
Golden State
17 6 667 the SVAC and one out of 1l,
Los Angeles
l A 8 636
never
were m the game
PhoentK
8 7 5JJ 2
Seattle
II 10 52A 2 1 tralimg 4-10 al the end of the
Portland
8 12 400 5
first quarter New head coach
Tuesday s Results
Was htng ton \07 Los Angeles 104 Duane Wolfe watched his
New Orleans 108 Buffa lo 96
boys f1re a11ay at the basket
Boston 103 New York 100
Cleveland 91 Por tland 80
all but helplessly hllhng only
Houston 9l Chtcago 77
II of 66 attempts (16 pet )
Seattle 101 Ka nsas Ctty 90
PhoemK 115 Golden State 98
Waterford canned 26 of 53
Wednesday s Games
shots from the f1eld
Ch icago at Boston
New Orleans at Phlladelph a
That 16 pet shootmg
Seal!le at Hous ton
stalislic pretty much tells the
Los Ange les at Detro t
Portland iii Mtlwaukee
story as Coach Wolfe s
World H 0 C k e Y ASSOCiilfiOn Eagles are a young IOexStandings
penenced team a fact he
By Umted PreH lnternalional
beheves contnbutes to h1s
East
W L T Pis
boys 1ncons1slent shoohng
10 12
1
21
New England
The Wild cats were a much
Gleveland
9&lt;0 2
20
9 12 0
18 btgger team and thrs made
lndlanapolts
Cmc n nctt
9 12 0
18
the young Eagles edgy and
west
W l T Pts
they took some very poor
Hou!.ton
14 8 0 28 shots Coach Wolfe smd shot
10 9
I
11
Mmnesota
San Otego
9 10 2
20 selechon IS the big thmg lh1s
Phoen K
7 1 1 3 1 7 team will have to tmprove
Denver
8 1J
1
17
upon 1f they re to be comCanadtan
W l T PI'
W•nntpeg
18 7 o
J6 pehhve lh1s season
Quebec
17 a 1
35
Eastern was led m scormg
Calgarv
12 9 I
25

SVACDNLY
Tum
W L
POP
Norlh G&amp;llta
I 0 72 43
Hann&amp;n Trace
1 0 57 37

Southern

t to

t

Western Conference

&lt;No games sct1edu led &gt;

Norft1 Gal11a
Kyger Creek

southern

Tcnn

Midwest

Ironton St Joe 87~7 and to
North Gallla 75-44
Leading the Highlander
attack are four returnmg
lettermen apd a junwr trans
fer from Gallipolis The
lettermen arc Rtck Crouse f&gt;.
10 sentor guard Jack
Walker 6·0 senior, Kip
l.ewts 6~ junior forward and
tHI JuniOr center Ketth Grate
Donn1e Bush, 5-10 jumor
transfer, has helped !he
Southwestern offensive at
tack
Olhers e•pected to see
plenty of action are Jeff
Banks f&gt;.l 0 senior and Doug
M11ler, f&gt;.IO jun10r
Kevm Schaeffer, 6-2 semor
IS lhe Vlk10gs b1g offens1ve
threat Symmes Valley lost to
Chesapeake tn 1ls only outing
thus far lh1s season
W L

93

Ch cago 71 Tr n 1y Chnsl an &lt;19

Gordon Bell, eighth, and
Toledo quarterback Gene
Sw1ck rounded out the top
10
Gn!!m pulled the most
votes m four of the ftve
geographic secttons, losmg
only the West honors to
Munc1e
Ooak Walker, who won as a
JUntor m 1948 and was thtrd m
1949, was the closest to
repeatmg before Gnffm
broke the jmx "
"Thts should make other
Junior winners try more as
semors," stressed Gnffm
Don't quit Don~ let up on
your mtens1ty "
Grlffm 's slats weren't as
unpress1ve thiS year as m
1974 but were far from
paltry The 21-year-old
Columbus, Ohio native led the
11·0 and No !-ranked
Buckeyes by gaining 1,357
yards this season for a 5,177
four-year total - an NCAA
career record Every t1me he
rushed he averaged 5 5 yards
and each game amassed an
average 123 4 yards
He kept his NCAA record
streak of rushmg for at least
100 yards alive through 31
games, stopped only agamst
Michigan m h1s fmal regular
season game
Hayes gave h1s explanation
for why Griffm didn't equal
his 1974 performance, when
he rushed for 1,620 yards
"He defm1tely was more of
a target this season ' Hayes
S81d "The other teams liked
to tackle him more than
anyone else The fact that he
could do 11 agam With all the
pressure on hun IS JUSt unbelievable "
Grlffm 's slze..-Ji.loot-9, 184
pounds~s been mentioned
as a possible deterrent to
success mthe pros, but Hayes
brushed off any doubts that
Griffin would not do well as a
professtonal
• Two HelSIDans-lhat puts
him tn a class all by himself,"
said the venerable Buckeye
mentor II means he's an
extremely unusual person,
able to handle the pressure
look at Greg Pru1tt (the f&gt;.IO,
190-pound Cleveland Browns'
back ) His size didn't hurt
him He's great

Team

St

Temple se

SVAC quintets resume
action Friday night

~

1

44

75

Selmon
I

IS

top

lineman
OKLAHOMA CITY (UPI)
- The Football Wnters
Assoc1aUon of America today
named Oklahoma defensive
tackle Leroy Selmon winner
of the Outland Trophy as the
natiOn's outstanding lntertor
lineman
Selmon, a cat.qutck, :/.56pounder, also led a list of 26
All-Amer~ca honorees
selected by the writers Notre
Dame's Steve N1ehaus was
runnerup for the Outland
Selmon sa1d 11 was "a btg
surprise, a pleasant surprise,
l just feel really, really great
about 11 II tickled me to
death
If l didn't have classes I
probably wouldn't be here,"
he sa1d from his donn room
" But just winning It ts
celebration enough I can't be
any happier "
The team was ch011en by a
committee meeting In
Chicago
following
a
preliminary vote by the
associBtlon 's I 060 members
and announced m Oklahoma
City by Volney Meece of the
Oklahoma C1ty Times, secretary-treasurer of the writers
assoctatlon
The writers p1cked four
running backs- two-time
Heisman Trophy winner
Archie Griffin of Oh1o State,
Rtcky Bell of Southern
Calllomla, Tony Dorsett of
Pittsburgh and Chuck Muncie
of California
Marty Akins of Texas was
selected at quarterback
Oklahoma running back
Joe Washmgton made the
team as a k1ck return
specialist Other specialists
were
New
Mexico
placekicker Bob Berg and
Oh10 State punter Tom
Skladany
Griffin, Washington,
Skladany and Alabama
defensive lineman Leroy
Cook were the only repeaters
from 1974
Top ranked Ohio Slate
placed four players on the
team w1th offensive lineman
Ted Smith and defensive
back Tim Fox Jolnmg Grlffm
and Skladony
Besides Oklahoma, schools
havmg two honorees were
Nebraska mth center Rlk
BoMess and defensive back
Wonder Monds and PeM
State w1th offensive lineman
Tom Rafferty and linebacker
Greg Buttle
The 28 players represented
19 schools
The OuUand Trophy winner
Ill decided prunarily by a vote
of the membership and
fmahzed by the All-America
committee

IS TRY

DR RONALD F RIVIERE

(/) DR

LLI

a:
:J
.....

z

A J STAEHU

OR fREEMAN MALTZ
11001!

OR CHRIS A

CII.LL C:OLLECT AREA CODE (614)

PHONE.

252·3181 252-8445
One or Two Day Full Denture
Service, Partials Extractions
x Rays Cleantng

LLI

c

E
COLUMBUS ()-t 10 43205
Smde Tomorrou /{Yo u Tait e Core OJ Your 1 tf' lh 1oduv

MOIIOAY THROUGH FRIDAY
830AM T0630PM

�irl~;;;neun~:S;&amp;'eli~====~w=ed=n=e~sda~y=,oec~=-3=,1=97~&gt;::~~::;:::~====~~ ~~

clinc~ed

points and Seattle

..

Braves d rop 108-96 tilt::g:~t:~u~;:~r~~
for 30 hours
MASON , W. Va . ~ Mason
town council, meeting in
regular session Monday
evening , voted to keep
Mason 's new library open a
minimwn of 30 hours per
week.
Council clarified the action
by slipulating that the library
does not have to meet the
minimum number of Hours in
;.eeks in which there are
holldays. The council had to
revise the minlmwn because
prior to Its opening, the bookmobile unit had ·a shorter
minimum of hours.
In other action, council
directed town 's attorney
Michael Shaw to study the
business code, tu see if It
needs updating. Council
rejected a molion to purchase
a backhoe for the water
department.
Present· were Mayor Fred
Taylor, recorder Carl Cline
and copncil members
Charlotte Jenkins, Catherine
Smith and Bernard White.
CLEVELANDER ELECTED
BOSTON (UPI) - Dr.
Joseph Solomon of Cleveland,
Ohio, vice !ll'esldent, was
elected president~lect &amp;nd
IJI'Ogram chairman Tuesday
of the American Association
of Equine Practitioners.
Dr. James T. O'Connor Jr.
of Epping, N.H., was elected
IJI'esident to succeed Dr. G.
Marvin Beemsn of Uttleton,
Colo.
ON HONOR ROLL
Elaine Barnhart made the
honor roll for the second six
weeks' grading period at
Meigs High School. Her name
was not included on the list
released by the school.

I

I

i

Poinsettias
Choose From
1,000 Pots ...

•2.50 to

Over

•s.oo

Lay-Away Now!
Ph. 992·5776

Hubbard
Gr. .nhouse
Syracuse. o.

Sport Parade
By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sporlll Editor
NEW YORK (UPI) - The old King of the Milers looked like
a million bucks.
Looks can fool you sometimes though.
The only reason Glenn Cunningham was in the swank 21 Club
to begin with was because he had been invited to participate in
the unveiling of an art collection depicting some of the great
moments in United States Olympic history.
He had been asked to attend along with such other Olympians like Jesse Owens, Bob Mathias, and Wilma Rudolph.
Standing by himself in the room where the art collection was
being shown, Gleflll Cwmingham resembled some successful
business tycoon. Most of those entering the room readily
recognized the fashionably tailored Owens, the husky, outgoing Mathias and the friendly, vivacious Rudolph, but nobody
recognized the 66-yearoQid Cunningham.
, Maybe that was because he didn't look like his old pictures.
He looked even better !
There were those sharp blue eyes behind the silver-rimmed
eye glasses that looked straight at you when he talked and
there was that same !lne erect posture he developed as a boy
after surviving a gasoline explosion which left his legs scarred
for life and killed his brother, Floyd.
Glenn Cunningham helped himself to one of the hors
d'oeuvres being offered around by the waiters at the 21
Tuesday and when someone spotted htm and told him how
affluent he looked, the old Kansas Flyer smiled.
The guy who told him how rich and successful he looked
didn't realize Cunningham was carrying his life savings in his'
pocket ~IB dollars and some small change. CuMingham has
nothing and is·heavily in debt because he and his wife, Ruth,
. have spent all their money caring for more than 9,000
youngsters from troubled homes the past 28 years. Glenn
Cunningham, his wife and their own 12 children, still are
taking care of these kids on a place they have in Plainview,
Ark .The place is called the Hidden Valley Ranch, and from the
standpoint of money, hasn't been doing so well lately.
"Right now we're up against lt financially, but I think my
wife and I are the richest people in the world," said Cunningham, the world's fastest miler in 1938 when he set the
record at 4:04.4on the Dartmouth track In Hanover, N.H.
"She does all the work &amp;nd I get the credit," he smiled.
"Once in awhile I do some speaking and that helps us with
some money to take care of the, youngsters. We've had kids
from a year-and-a-half old and some liked the place so much
they stayed past 21. We don't p~yone out. We provide food,
clothing and shelter, and what we try to do Is get them through
hlgh school or get them into a job." ·,
Children have been sent to the CuMingh,ams from schools,
churches, civic groups, social workers ana .juvenile courts.
The Cunninghams' own investment in terms of.dollars has
been enormous and their outlay in humanitarian terms is
incalculable. Never once has Glenn Cunningham or his wife
, ever imposed any fee for taking care of a kid.
What worries the Kansas-born ex-miler now is that his ranch
is in a poor stale of repair. He'd like to enlarge It so as to be
able to accominOdate more youngsters.
Glenn Cunningham isn't going around with his hal in his
hand. He isn't asking for any funds or h&amp;ndouts because he 's
too proud for that. All he asks is if anyone needs a speaker for a
sports occasion or any other occasion, he wishes to be
remembered so Utat any money he earns could be channeled
back for looking after the youngsters.

By l)niled Press In·
tcrnatlonal
Coach Jack Ramsay says
his Buffalo Braves are "good
enough to win enough games
to make th e National
Basketball Association
playoffs, " even though
they're struggling now.
Ramsay says the Braves
were ''pressing too hard" for
a win as they dropped their
sixth straight game Tuesday,
losing to New Orleans 108-96.
"Basketball games are won
by the accumulation of good
performances in a number of
areas and our performance in
those areas is shy of what it
should be. When we start
making those adjustments,

Kraft Blackberry Jelly •••••••••••••~ .~!·.•. 69

SUPER

MEAL DEAL

~-.$

1~

Team
Waver l y
Whee ler sburg
Gallipo l is
Ironton
Porlsmouth
Jackson
Wellston
Logan
M ei gs
South Po int
Ath ens

1
2
1
1
1
o
0

o

68

0

1
1
1
2
1
1
3

51

--~·~''
~~-::::.;::&lt;~. . .

\

'~

138
I 13

165
43
41
152

200
111
118
189
58
59
177

MAINE POTATOEt ••••••••••••••••l.~.l~:........ 95'
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t.r ~

~

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89~

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Jl 1975

a del tcrous

~

bun Wtth \elluce . tomato . swee t
on ton and melted cheese

2FOR

~...

-

$ 39
r

~

Goodonty at patttCtpa1111g BuuJcr Ctrl.'t
rc st uurnnte Votd where proh1b1led l,l lltJCI
Qf t l!!!lnc ted by law Local &lt;tnd s lattJ I. t•

paya ble by bearer. Otter exp11es
/hi S cou pon December 31 1975

. Ironton at Wellston
Logan

Wheelersburg at Minford
South Point at Ironton St. Joe

BIG SHEF®

Saturday's games :
Wheeler sburg at Waver ly
Col . West at Portsmouth

Our BanQuet on a Bun'

Two beefburgers topped w1lh

melted cheese . our spe ct al

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sau ce and c h opped letluce

-

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~w

Loc al ;md s til t ~

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l it ~

pilyl ibiO liy beBr Of Qltor OX PilUS

wrth /hrS coupon December 31, 1975

CHEESEBURGER

An afl . trme favorite• 100•1.
ground beef. l ooped wtth
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2 FOR

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m rus trrctud by ~tw LocAl nnd stiiiHt;u.
Jll1y tdllll by hOiliOt Qtl(!r P.~pims
Doccmt&gt;or :.n .19 f!l

wiltt this co vpon

.rl tUT~ Ot " ~ ~~ Clld ~h 1 to ·m ~ ~"

011r I lo111•111• •I • •11 , llqr, ' I ;, ,.
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OooLI only &lt;II Jlitri i(J•p;t trnu B!lf'JW C l1t!l
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ft}

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United Press In·
ternatlonal
There were four of the
lllllion's top 20 college basket·
ball teams in action Tuesday
night~nd they looked the

Good only 111P&lt;lrl rcroa!lno Burger Chf'l
restaurants Voro wnere or on,b,ted t.t• ••rt
or ri'S ioc lcd by li!w Local rrnd s tate t. tll
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SAUSAGE •••••••••••••• .'~:.

9
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PORK CHOPS ••••••••.••• !b~ •••

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;: in victory

with this covoon

Pt , Pl e ~sant
0 0 0 0
Saturday's r es ult :
Waver ly 58 Portsmou th Wesl
55
Tuesday's result :

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wrlh 11'115 ccuvon [)(&gt;ct"mt&gt;er 31 \9 75

Glad Large Garbage Bags••••••••••~;.~~~. 79
Whitney's Tuna •••••••••••••••••• !~!.o:~. 2/994
Aunt Jane's Mini Iceberg Pickles~:.o.z;4~
Checker Pop••••••••••••••••••••••• ~!.0•1;. 6/754

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ge t our trr pte -deck 8rg Shef&lt;~ .
o1.1r tender . reg ular t rench lr res
and a regu )ar salt drtnk

or resfrrc ted by law Local and stat('
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12 18- 66

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-·
oe
1';7

MEAL DEAL

14 ; Ne lson , 7-2 16 ; Pe ll y , 9-1
19 ; How e ll. 1-0-2; O.del. 5-0-10.
TOTALS 30-6-66 .
LOGAN I 4!l -- Mye rs . 2·1·
5: Ha wk , 4-0 -8 ; See l. 8 -2-18 ;
McBroom , 6-2-14; Cla rk , 0·2·
2; Lanning , 1 0·2. TOTALS 21 ·
7-49 .
Score by quarrers :

20

-

,.. by

Good o nly at p&lt;uliCIP.11•ng Buryer Ch~ l
reSI11ur:mts Vora wnere pr oMlrteci. lin et1
o r rt!Sir! cled by law Local and state tall

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Fr iday's games :

Miracle Whip Salad Dressing •••. !~.o.z~ •.79
Parkay Oleo ••••••••••••••••.•••••..•• ~-!~·... 594
Pops Rite Pop Com••....••••...... ~.~b; ••• 59c

COLUMBUS (UPI) - Ohio
hunters killed a record 2,9M
deer the first day of the gun
' season this year, the Depart·
ment of Natural Resources
' ' said Tuesday.
"' ' Field repOrts show Monday's harVest was 51 per cent
higher tQan the opentng-&lt;iay
take in 1974.
" It's evident there are
more deer hunters In the field
this year," said Dale Haney,
chief of the department's
Wildlife Division. "Hunters
are aware ,the Ohio deer herd
is at an all-lime high
of
80,000 and
this,
coupled with the clear
weather cndilions, creal·
•' ed an ideal situation for
hunting:"
Hu.nters In Ashtabula
·, County led tbe first-day with
251 deer
taken , In
Musklngum County there
were 241 harvested, In
•. Trumbull County 217, in
Athens County 203, In
Washington County 166, In
Morgan County 150, in Vinton
County 129, in Meigs County
127, in Williams County 103
and in Perry County 96.
The eastern portions of
Trt~mbull and Ashtabula
counties, Harrison, Noble and
·" Monroe
and
.,, Wayne
junction of the Hocking,
Vinton and Perry county lines
were recommended as
• • having good deer populations
' · blit being generally ignored

p:ryatlle oy oearer Qtle• c •pwes

Lancaster 66 L ogan 49

4

SHEF~'

Adams , 2-l -5; Swinehart. 6-2-

ALL GAMES

8

· tlmg
•
"· se
records

~~~·

(66)

Cage standings

4

!N'...a:::l.l

Logan box
LANCASTER

~::::::::::::::

......

.

Ramsay said rebounds
were the biggest factor in the
game, even though the final
statistics showed the Jazz
outrebounding Buffalo by
only three, 52-49.
"It doesn 't show in the
statistics so much," ·said
Ramsay, "but when we .
needed a rebound, we just
didn't get it."
Veterans Ron Behagen and
Otto Moore pulled down more
than half of the Jazz '
rebounds, combining for 27.
Washington defeated Los
Angeles 107-104, Cleveland
beat Portland 91-80, Houston
topped Chicago 91-77, Boston
dowred the New York Knicks
103-100, Phoenix drubbed
Golden State 115-98 and
Seattle won 101-90 over
KBRsas City.
St. Louis defeated Kentucky 122-112 and San Antonio
beat Virginia 119-101 in
American Basketball
Association games.
Cavs 91 Trail Blazers 80
Jim Olones had 19 points as
nine players contributed to
Cleveland's attack. The Cavs'
tight defense held Portland to
only four !ield goals in the
final 81h minutes . Lionel
Hollins scored 20 points for
Portland.
Rockets .91, Bulls 77
Houston won its fourth
straight game, with Rudy
Tomjanovich scoring 21
points against Chicago. Ed
Ratleff put the Rockets ahead
to stay with I :32 left in the

Logan
R eserves Logan J 1.

Tide Detergent. •••••••••••••••••••••

lead . Spence_r Haywood
scored 22 pomts · for the
Knicks.
Suns 115, Warriors 98
Alvan Adams scored ~
points to lead seven PhoeniX
players in d~uble ligures.
Olarles Jolmson scored 18
points for Golden State.
Sonlcs 101, Klogs 90
Fred Brown scored 31

~

. . . . . . . . . . . .: :. . . . . .

Prices

fourth pertod: Larry McNe1ll
had 24 points for KBRs~s City.
Spirits 122, Colonels 112
Marvin Barnes and
Maurice Lucas score? 29
points each for the Sp1r1ts. It
was Barnes' first game after
missing nine while on trial in
Providence, R.I., for
allegedly assaulting a teammate while at Providence
College,

we'll win again/' he said.

La n caster

~6.~!~$1.19

third period .
Ccltlcs 103 Knicks 100
Dave Co~ens scored 25
points a nd grabbed 21
rebounds to lead Boston. The
Celtics took an ll-0 lead and
appeared to have an easy
game but New York rallied to
within one before Walt
Frazier missed an !Mooter
which would have meant the

~

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

Marquette ( 3rd ), Notre
Dame (II), San Francisco
(13) and Michigan (15) all
coasted to easy one-elded
victories in more of those
early-,eason tWJeup games
that usually precede the
Christmas tournaments.
Marquette allowed St. Jo·
' seph's of Indiana to cut an
early ISiJoint lead down to
five early in the second half
before going on to trounce the
, helpless Pumas 87-liO. Five
Marquette players finished In
double figures, topped by
Uoyd Walton's 19 points.
No!l'e Dame similarly
never trailed, shooting 53 per
cent from the field in a 117-83
rout of Valparaiso . All
America Adrian Dantley led
the Irish with 39 JMilnts-20 in
half.
',. . theSanfirstFrancisco
was having
' 'just as easy a time with Its
; crosstown neighbor San
Francisco Stale, tbe youthful
, Dons winning 109-84 over the
: outclassed Gators.
, , Michigan, which already
had a comfortable 37-26
lialftlme lead, ran off seven
quick points in 28 seconds as
the second half and then
gradually built up Its onesided 90-83 triumph over
Vanderbilt. Junior John
Robinson led the second half
Michigan blitz with a three·
point play on a tectmical foul
&amp;nd a later fast break bucket.
Robinson and freslunan Phil'.
Hubbard led the Wolverine
scoring with 17 points
apiece.
South Carolina, a "fringe"
top 20, team, didn't play
Tuesday night but suffered a
loas jllll the same. Coach
Frank McGuire announced
that soph guard Jackie
Gllloon from West New York,
N.J ., hia No. I recruit a year
ago, has been suspendeq
from the team.
Gilioon 's
suspension
sterruned from a Incident In
which a car be was driving
collided with three parked
cars and ran into some
lhrubbery on campua. He
was charged by pollee with
driving without a license.
The "early-eeason IWieup"
pattern was IJI'evalent In
other college games Tuesday.
Penn State routed Lehigh 9345, Florida State ripped
RoUills IJ0.-47,

3 lbs. or more

8
9
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Kraft Macaroni
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for

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Ravorite 20 oz.

BREAD ........•...•...

$
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clinc~ed

points and Seattle

..

Braves d rop 108-96 tilt::g:~t:~u~;:~r~~
for 30 hours
MASON , W. Va . ~ Mason
town council, meeting in
regular session Monday
evening , voted to keep
Mason 's new library open a
minimwn of 30 hours per
week.
Council clarified the action
by slipulating that the library
does not have to meet the
minimum number of Hours in
;.eeks in which there are
holldays. The council had to
revise the minlmwn because
prior to Its opening, the bookmobile unit had ·a shorter
minimum of hours.
In other action, council
directed town 's attorney
Michael Shaw to study the
business code, tu see if It
needs updating. Council
rejected a molion to purchase
a backhoe for the water
department.
Present· were Mayor Fred
Taylor, recorder Carl Cline
and copncil members
Charlotte Jenkins, Catherine
Smith and Bernard White.
CLEVELANDER ELECTED
BOSTON (UPI) - Dr.
Joseph Solomon of Cleveland,
Ohio, vice !ll'esldent, was
elected president~lect &amp;nd
IJI'Ogram chairman Tuesday
of the American Association
of Equine Practitioners.
Dr. James T. O'Connor Jr.
of Epping, N.H., was elected
IJI'esident to succeed Dr. G.
Marvin Beemsn of Uttleton,
Colo.
ON HONOR ROLL
Elaine Barnhart made the
honor roll for the second six
weeks' grading period at
Meigs High School. Her name
was not included on the list
released by the school.

I

I

i

Poinsettias
Choose From
1,000 Pots ...

•2.50 to

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Ph. 992·5776

Hubbard
Gr. .nhouse
Syracuse. o.

Sport Parade
By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sporlll Editor
NEW YORK (UPI) - The old King of the Milers looked like
a million bucks.
Looks can fool you sometimes though.
The only reason Glenn Cunningham was in the swank 21 Club
to begin with was because he had been invited to participate in
the unveiling of an art collection depicting some of the great
moments in United States Olympic history.
He had been asked to attend along with such other Olympians like Jesse Owens, Bob Mathias, and Wilma Rudolph.
Standing by himself in the room where the art collection was
being shown, Gleflll Cwmingham resembled some successful
business tycoon. Most of those entering the room readily
recognized the fashionably tailored Owens, the husky, outgoing Mathias and the friendly, vivacious Rudolph, but nobody
recognized the 66-yearoQid Cunningham.
, Maybe that was because he didn't look like his old pictures.
He looked even better !
There were those sharp blue eyes behind the silver-rimmed
eye glasses that looked straight at you when he talked and
there was that same !lne erect posture he developed as a boy
after surviving a gasoline explosion which left his legs scarred
for life and killed his brother, Floyd.
Glenn Cunningham helped himself to one of the hors
d'oeuvres being offered around by the waiters at the 21
Tuesday and when someone spotted htm and told him how
affluent he looked, the old Kansas Flyer smiled.
The guy who told him how rich and successful he looked
didn't realize Cunningham was carrying his life savings in his'
pocket ~IB dollars and some small change. CuMingham has
nothing and is·heavily in debt because he and his wife, Ruth,
. have spent all their money caring for more than 9,000
youngsters from troubled homes the past 28 years. Glenn
Cunningham, his wife and their own 12 children, still are
taking care of these kids on a place they have in Plainview,
Ark .The place is called the Hidden Valley Ranch, and from the
standpoint of money, hasn't been doing so well lately.
"Right now we're up against lt financially, but I think my
wife and I are the richest people in the world," said Cunningham, the world's fastest miler in 1938 when he set the
record at 4:04.4on the Dartmouth track In Hanover, N.H.
"She does all the work &amp;nd I get the credit," he smiled.
"Once in awhile I do some speaking and that helps us with
some money to take care of the, youngsters. We've had kids
from a year-and-a-half old and some liked the place so much
they stayed past 21. We don't p~yone out. We provide food,
clothing and shelter, and what we try to do Is get them through
hlgh school or get them into a job." ·,
Children have been sent to the CuMingh,ams from schools,
churches, civic groups, social workers ana .juvenile courts.
The Cunninghams' own investment in terms of.dollars has
been enormous and their outlay in humanitarian terms is
incalculable. Never once has Glenn Cunningham or his wife
, ever imposed any fee for taking care of a kid.
What worries the Kansas-born ex-miler now is that his ranch
is in a poor stale of repair. He'd like to enlarge It so as to be
able to accominOdate more youngsters.
Glenn Cunningham isn't going around with his hal in his
hand. He isn't asking for any funds or h&amp;ndouts because he 's
too proud for that. All he asks is if anyone needs a speaker for a
sports occasion or any other occasion, he wishes to be
remembered so Utat any money he earns could be channeled
back for looking after the youngsters.

By l)niled Press In·
tcrnatlonal
Coach Jack Ramsay says
his Buffalo Braves are "good
enough to win enough games
to make th e National
Basketball Association
playoffs, " even though
they're struggling now.
Ramsay says the Braves
were ''pressing too hard" for
a win as they dropped their
sixth straight game Tuesday,
losing to New Orleans 108-96.
"Basketball games are won
by the accumulation of good
performances in a number of
areas and our performance in
those areas is shy of what it
should be. When we start
making those adjustments,

Kraft Blackberry Jelly •••••••••••••~ .~!·.•. 69

SUPER

MEAL DEAL

~-.$

1~

Team
Waver l y
Whee ler sburg
Gallipo l is
Ironton
Porlsmouth
Jackson
Wellston
Logan
M ei gs
South Po int
Ath ens

1
2
1
1
1
o
0

o

68

0

1
1
1
2
1
1
3

51

--~·~''
~~-::::.;::&lt;~. . .

\

'~

138
I 13

165
43
41
152

200
111
118
189
58
59
177

MAINE POTATOEt ••••••••••••••••l.~.l~:........ 95'
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Jl 1975

a del tcrous

~

bun Wtth \elluce . tomato . swee t
on ton and melted cheese

2FOR

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$ 39
r

~

Goodonty at patttCtpa1111g BuuJcr Ctrl.'t
rc st uurnnte Votd where proh1b1led l,l lltJCI
Qf t l!!!lnc ted by law Local &lt;tnd s lattJ I. t•

paya ble by bearer. Otter exp11es
/hi S cou pon December 31 1975

. Ironton at Wellston
Logan

Wheelersburg at Minford
South Point at Ironton St. Joe

BIG SHEF®

Saturday's games :
Wheeler sburg at Waver ly
Col . West at Portsmouth

Our BanQuet on a Bun'

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melted cheese . our spe ct al

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sau ce and c h opped letluce

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~w

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l it ~

pilyl ibiO liy beBr Of Qltor OX PilUS

wrth /hrS coupon December 31, 1975

CHEESEBURGER

An afl . trme favorite• 100•1.
ground beef. l ooped wtth
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2 FOR

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m rus trrctud by ~tw LocAl nnd stiiiHt;u.
Jll1y tdllll by hOiliOt Qtl(!r P.~pims
Doccmt&gt;or :.n .19 f!l

wiltt this co vpon

.rl tUT~ Ot " ~ ~~ Clld ~h 1 to ·m ~ ~"

011r I lo111•111• •I • •11 , llqr, ' I ;, ,.
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OooLI only &lt;II Jlitri i(J•p;t trnu B!lf'JW C l1t!l
ruslimrants Vord whcra oroh1brtL•tl lrt" 'll
01 rt•!llt iChJ&lt;I by ~ tW LOC al And $!. ti P l.r ~
OllyOhiQ hy bemer Oil or OJ: aun•..,
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ft}

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PINK AND WHITE GRAPEFRUIT•••• J.IJl.••••••••• 75'

United Press In·
ternatlonal
There were four of the
lllllion's top 20 college basket·
ball teams in action Tuesday
night~nd they looked the

Good only 111P&lt;lrl rcroa!lno Burger Chf'l
restaurants Voro wnere or on,b,ted t.t• ••rt
or ri'S ioc lcd by li!w Local rrnd s tate t. tll
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SAUSAGE •••••••••••••• .'~:.

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PORK CHOPS ••••••••.••• !b~ •••

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;: in victory

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Saturday's r es ult :
Waver ly 58 Portsmou th Wesl
55
Tuesday's result :

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Glad Large Garbage Bags••••••••••~;.~~~. 79
Whitney's Tuna •••••••••••••••••• !~!.o:~. 2/994
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o1.1r tender . reg ular t rench lr res
and a regu )ar salt drtnk

or resfrrc ted by law Local and stat('
p&lt;~y at&gt;l e by bearer Ot ter exp11es

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TOTALS 30-6-66 .
LOGAN I 4!l -- Mye rs . 2·1·
5: Ha wk , 4-0 -8 ; See l. 8 -2-18 ;
McBroom , 6-2-14; Cla rk , 0·2·
2; Lanning , 1 0·2. TOTALS 21 ·
7-49 .
Score by quarrers :

20

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Good o nly at p&lt;uliCIP.11•ng Buryer Ch~ l
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Fr iday's games :

Miracle Whip Salad Dressing •••. !~.o.z~ •.79
Parkay Oleo ••••••••••••••••.•••••..•• ~-!~·... 594
Pops Rite Pop Com••....••••...... ~.~b; ••• 59c

COLUMBUS (UPI) - Ohio
hunters killed a record 2,9M
deer the first day of the gun
' season this year, the Depart·
ment of Natural Resources
' ' said Tuesday.
"' ' Field repOrts show Monday's harVest was 51 per cent
higher tQan the opentng-&lt;iay
take in 1974.
" It's evident there are
more deer hunters In the field
this year," said Dale Haney,
chief of the department's
Wildlife Division. "Hunters
are aware ,the Ohio deer herd
is at an all-lime high
of
80,000 and
this,
coupled with the clear
weather cndilions, creal·
•' ed an ideal situation for
hunting:"
Hu.nters In Ashtabula
·, County led tbe first-day with
251 deer
taken , In
Musklngum County there
were 241 harvested, In
•. Trumbull County 217, in
Athens County 203, In
Washington County 166, In
Morgan County 150, in Vinton
County 129, in Meigs County
127, in Williams County 103
and in Perry County 96.
The eastern portions of
Trt~mbull and Ashtabula
counties, Harrison, Noble and
·" Monroe
and
.,, Wayne
junction of the Hocking,
Vinton and Perry county lines
were recommended as
• • having good deer populations
' · blit being generally ignored

p:ryatlle oy oearer Qtle• c •pwes

Lancaster 66 L ogan 49

4

SHEF~'

Adams , 2-l -5; Swinehart. 6-2-

ALL GAMES

8

· tlmg
•
"· se
records

~~~·

(66)

Cage standings

4

!N'...a:::l.l

Logan box
LANCASTER

~::::::::::::::

......

.

Ramsay said rebounds
were the biggest factor in the
game, even though the final
statistics showed the Jazz
outrebounding Buffalo by
only three, 52-49.
"It doesn 't show in the
statistics so much," ·said
Ramsay, "but when we .
needed a rebound, we just
didn't get it."
Veterans Ron Behagen and
Otto Moore pulled down more
than half of the Jazz '
rebounds, combining for 27.
Washington defeated Los
Angeles 107-104, Cleveland
beat Portland 91-80, Houston
topped Chicago 91-77, Boston
dowred the New York Knicks
103-100, Phoenix drubbed
Golden State 115-98 and
Seattle won 101-90 over
KBRsas City.
St. Louis defeated Kentucky 122-112 and San Antonio
beat Virginia 119-101 in
American Basketball
Association games.
Cavs 91 Trail Blazers 80
Jim Olones had 19 points as
nine players contributed to
Cleveland's attack. The Cavs'
tight defense held Portland to
only four !ield goals in the
final 81h minutes . Lionel
Hollins scored 20 points for
Portland.
Rockets .91, Bulls 77
Houston won its fourth
straight game, with Rudy
Tomjanovich scoring 21
points against Chicago. Ed
Ratleff put the Rockets ahead
to stay with I :32 left in the

Logan
R eserves Logan J 1.

Tide Detergent. •••••••••••••••••••••

lead . Spence_r Haywood
scored 22 pomts · for the
Knicks.
Suns 115, Warriors 98
Alvan Adams scored ~
points to lead seven PhoeniX
players in d~uble ligures.
Olarles Jolmson scored 18
points for Golden State.
Sonlcs 101, Klogs 90
Fred Brown scored 31

~

. . . . . . . . . . . .: :. . . . . .

Prices

fourth pertod: Larry McNe1ll
had 24 points for KBRs~s City.
Spirits 122, Colonels 112
Marvin Barnes and
Maurice Lucas score? 29
points each for the Sp1r1ts. It
was Barnes' first game after
missing nine while on trial in
Providence, R.I., for
allegedly assaulting a teammate while at Providence
College,

we'll win again/' he said.

La n caster

~6.~!~$1.19

third period .
Ccltlcs 103 Knicks 100
Dave Co~ens scored 25
points a nd grabbed 21
rebounds to lead Boston. The
Celtics took an ll-0 lead and
appeared to have an easy
game but New York rallied to
within one before Walt
Frazier missed an !Mooter
which would have meant the

~

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

Marquette ( 3rd ), Notre
Dame (II), San Francisco
(13) and Michigan (15) all
coasted to easy one-elded
victories in more of those
early-,eason tWJeup games
that usually precede the
Christmas tournaments.
Marquette allowed St. Jo·
' seph's of Indiana to cut an
early ISiJoint lead down to
five early in the second half
before going on to trounce the
, helpless Pumas 87-liO. Five
Marquette players finished In
double figures, topped by
Uoyd Walton's 19 points.
No!l'e Dame similarly
never trailed, shooting 53 per
cent from the field in a 117-83
rout of Valparaiso . All
America Adrian Dantley led
the Irish with 39 JMilnts-20 in
half.
',. . theSanfirstFrancisco
was having
' 'just as easy a time with Its
; crosstown neighbor San
Francisco Stale, tbe youthful
, Dons winning 109-84 over the
: outclassed Gators.
, , Michigan, which already
had a comfortable 37-26
lialftlme lead, ran off seven
quick points in 28 seconds as
the second half and then
gradually built up Its onesided 90-83 triumph over
Vanderbilt. Junior John
Robinson led the second half
Michigan blitz with a three·
point play on a tectmical foul
&amp;nd a later fast break bucket.
Robinson and freslunan Phil'.
Hubbard led the Wolverine
scoring with 17 points
apiece.
South Carolina, a "fringe"
top 20, team, didn't play
Tuesday night but suffered a
loas jllll the same. Coach
Frank McGuire announced
that soph guard Jackie
Gllloon from West New York,
N.J ., hia No. I recruit a year
ago, has been suspendeq
from the team.
Gilioon 's
suspension
sterruned from a Incident In
which a car be was driving
collided with three parked
cars and ran into some
lhrubbery on campua. He
was charged by pollee with
driving without a license.
The "early-eeason IWieup"
pattern was IJI'evalent In
other college games Tuesday.
Penn State routed Lehigh 9345, Florida State ripped
RoUills IJ0.-47,

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�. 6- The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Dec. 3, 1975

Redmen drop

Two driversPhipps' coming into own
CLEVELAND I UP! I - "For the first' tiine since he 's
"Tryihg to prove myself
charged by Remember
when
the been here, Mike · has con- has been difficult untlli\Qw,"

first contest
..

• . p al ro}
Oh10

Jack Quimby, 18, Rt. 2,
Gallipolis, was charged with
failure to yield the right of
way following a traffic accident at 8:10 a.m. Tuesday
on Rt. :i88 at the FairfieldMorrison scored 15 points
OTTERBEIN
t681
for the entire game. The 2~ Bromlev . J 1 7. Morrison , .I 1 Centenary Rd,
IS ; Bu chan , J 6 11 ; Downing ,
The Gallia-Meigs Post
Cardinals also got double- 4 1 9 ; Williams , d ] - 11;
State
Highway Patrol said
fi gure scoring fr om Bob Wot\lhe!er . 1 0 2; Brough , 'J o
J ; Sanders . 2 2 6 : Jones . 1 0 -1.
the Quimby car pulled into
Buchan with 12 tallies and TOTAL$ 14 -20· 68 .
the path of an auto operated
Haltfime
R
io
35
01
Larry Downing and Ed lerbe in 32
by
David Owens, 18, of Rio
Williams with 10 each.
Grande.
There was moderate
The Redmen, who went
damage
to both vehicles. No
down to their first loss in four
one
was
injured.
CLIFTON PERSONALS
outings after dropping a ~32
Le land Harris, 23, of
Thanksgiving guests of Mr.
halftime advantage, were led
Rodney,
was charged with
and
Mrs.
Uoyd
Williams
and
by forward Jim Noe's 21
driving
lefl of center
family
were
Betty
Lyons,
markers.
following
an
accident at 4: 15
Clifton
;
Ora
Higgins,
Pt.
The Cardinals picked off 40
p.m
.
Tuesday
on the Rodneyreoounds compared to Rio 's Pleasant ; Reece Williams,
36. In the turnover depart- Sarah Willis, both of Cora Rd. Officers said cars
ment, Rio Grande lost the Pomeroy; and Frank Mc- driven by Harris an d
Gera ldine Ennis, 28, of
ball 24 Urnes while Otterbein Dermitt .
Rodney, collided headon in a
Tha
nksgiving
gues
ts
of
committed 16 errors.
curve.
There was moderate
Mrs.
Laurene
Lewis
were
the
Thursday, the Redmen
damage;
no one was in jured.
play at West Virginia Tech. foll owing : Mr . and Mrs .
A
deer
was killed at 6:45
Saturday, Rio returns home Charles Cartwright, Mr. and
for a non-league contest Mrs . Donald Smith and a.m. Tuesday on Rl. 7 at
against Dyke College at Lyne family, Mr. and Mrs. Larry Little Kyger Rd . The animal
Grogan and son, and Mrs. ran into the path of a car
Cen~r .
operated by Mark Waller, 18,
Olga Lewis.
RIO GRANDE 1m - Noe ,
Holiday guests of Mrs. Rt. 2, Pomeroy. There was
8-S-21; Price . 4-0-8: Swain , o.
0-0; Stewart , 5-l -11; Ba rb ee , Belly Call and Jack were
minor damage to his car.
1·0 ·2;
Al banese . J .0. 6 ;
Mrs . John Miller and Another deer was killed in an
CaldwelL 1-S-71 Robinson , 1·0
1; Blse , 1·0·2. TOTALS 24- 11 · daughter, . Melissa of Long
accident at 6:20p.m. Tuesday
lt.
on Rt. 554. The deer ran in to
the path of a vehicle driven
by Roger Glassburn, 31, Rt. I,
Bidwell.
WESTERVILLE - Senior co-captain Terry
Morrison Tuesday night led a second-half Otterbein co.meback that produced a 68-59 victory
over previOusly unbeaten Rio Grande.

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Dale Rollins and family of
Chesapeake, Ohio; Mr . and
Mrs. Ross King and family,
Mr. Jimmy Ohlinger, Mrs.
Evelyn Ohlinger, Mr. and
Mrs. John Call and family of
Hurricane, Mr. and Mrs.
Lester Johnson .
A Thanksgiving dinner was
taken to Oscar Johnson who
is ill at his home In Clifton by
his granddaughter, Mrs.
Betty Call.
Recent holiday dinner
guests of Mr . and Mrs.
Harold Rickard, Sr . were Mr.
and Mrs. William Holmes of
Norfolk, Va., Mr. and Mrs.
Harold Rickard , Jr. and
Nicky, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Rickard and family, Mr. and
Mrs. Danny Rickard and
family of New Haven.
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph &amp;ites
and infant son, Dean, were
Thanksgiving dinner guests
of her mother, Mrs .. Helen
Williams, Clifton.
Mrs. WUma Blake is a
patient at Pleasant Valley
Hospital and Mrs. Ted Riley
is a patient at Holzer Medical
Center where she is in in~nsive care. Both ladies are
from Clifton.
Mrs. Helen Barker and
Mrs. Jessie Cartwright spent
the Thanksgiving weekend
with Mr. and Mrs. Glen Cart-·
wright at Glendale, W. Va.

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Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, J)e('. 3, 1975

Cleveland Browns traded
wide receiver Paul Warfield
to the Miami Dolphins so th~y
· could draft quarterback Mike
Phipps of Purdue?
Phipps does. He 's been
trying to unload the monkey
ever since. And his performance the past two weeks,
engineering victories over
Cincinnati and New Orleans,
exemplifies it.
"Mike is beginning to come
into his own,'' said Browns
Coach Forrest Gregg, who
has watched Phipps connect
on 40-;lf~ passes for 460
yards and three touchdowns
on back·toback weekends .

TOM TIEDE
(Continued from page 2
the last opportunity for
citizens who want neither to
tive in a police or a criminal
stale. That opportunity is
personal involvement. Police
alone can 'I democratically
defea t crime, says FBI
Director Clarence Kelley , but
a cop-citizen alliance may :
"We are asking citizens to
stop laking the easy way ou(,
to . stop tol erating crime
because to resist it involves
personal sacrifice. Every
American must resist crime
as we resist other perils
common to mankind."
The Bureau's hopes to this
end are. apparen Uy high.
They also are somewhat
revolutionary, admitiing as
they do the long-neglected
truth that citizens not only
have a responsibilty toward
domestic peace but a right to
that r esponsi bili ty.
Americans have not taken
1he easy way out" of crime
by choice, but because police
have elbowed them out. Woe
be the bystander who involves himself in law enforcement; neither the cops
)lOr lhe courts have appreciated his good citizenship.
Now, says the FBI, the
citizen 's worth is being
recognized anew. And the
Bureau will co urt his
assistance through
a
massive" education
,program called "Crime
Resistance." Says a spokesman : "Our purpose is to
teach people something about
crime
besides
fear."
Essentially the idea is to
eillist from ·· the population
millions of part-time police,
legions of a kind of home
guard. "For too long crime
has been a game of cowboys
and Indians, with people
playing th~ part of the trees.''
What does the FBI expect
from us? Cooperation and
common sense mostly. Who
has the responsibility · for
closing the garage door in
your home? But beyond this,
the Bureau wants America
thinking about crime in terms
of initiative - cringing helps
no one but the thug.
Some years ago during a
hotel fire in Atlanta, a
trapped man decided he
could not open his door
because poisonous gas was in
the hall, and he could not
jump out the window because
he was up too high. He did
nothing, and died when gas
fumes came in under the
door. Another trapped man,
however, simply stuffed
towels in his door to keep out
the gas and waited for the
fireman 's ladder. There are,
you see, alternatives.
11

vinced himself he's capable
of the task of leading a
football club.
"That was his biggest problem, convincing himself,
especially with all that talk
about the Warfield trade and
the fans never letting him
forget it. He has shown in the
past two weeks when you get
good pass protection from the
offensive line and a good pass
rush from U!e defense a
quarterback with · his
qualities can be a success In
professional football. And he
knows it."
Phipps, a six-year veteran
drafted No. I in 1970, has
become aroused in recent
contests. Instead of taking a
loss casually or getting
ripped apart on the field,
Phipps has openly displayed
his anger- something that
had never before surfacedand this has helped him
become a more poised field
genera).
"Phipps looks a lot more·
poised than I remember
him," said New Orleans
linebacker Rick Kingrea, a
former Brown who faced
Mike last Sunday in
Cleveland's 17-16, comefrombehind victory over tbe
Saints, "He took 'em the 97
(yards for the · Browns'
longest TD drive of ihe
season) when they were
behind and that's'wbat It's all
about. 11
Phipps, once called "a
sleeping giant" by Paul
Wiggin, former Cleveland
defensive end and now head
coach at Kansas City, has
overcome the most difficult
phase of becoming a premier
quarterliack. He has finally
convinced him!ielf he can be a
winner, even if it's with a
losing team.

Phipps says, "That's because
I'Jll finally getting the
blocking I need from the line
when I go back to paas.
"That's a big consideration. I know I can do
the job and so does the
organization. That's one
thing I have to say about the
organization. They've had
faith in me from day one and
they stU! do. I'm sorry it took
" lio lo~g for me to prove It to
them and tlte fans in
Cleveland because they're
\ISl!d to winners and that's
what we're going to be agaul
soon. I think they believe I
can handle it now."
The ·Browns will try to
make it three victories in a
row Sunday when they battle
the World Champion Steelers
at Pittsburgh's Three Rivers
Stadium. The Browns, as
expected, are the underdog to
coach Chuck Noll's men, now
111-1 for the season after last
week's sin)pie 20-7 win over
the New York Jets.
Phipps knows he and liis
teammates will have to do all
in their power to just hang in
there and not get blown away
by the Steelers, virtually
assured of a playoff spot, Yet
the maturing Browns, now 2&lt;
9, must remember not to
panic.
"Everyone was new this
year, new coaches and new
players," Phipps celates. "It
takes a while to make ad·
justments.
"The coaching staff is learning, too. They have finally
coordinated their thinking.
I'm glad they have enough
confidence In me to let me
call my own plays. I do need
help sometimes, but as a
quarterback, you need
patience . You can't get
panicky,"

Washington
By Clarence
.Report Miller

Open Evenings til 8

now lllaelr &amp; white h~~ ·

eomes In 6 «Mrs! :~... ·

A sub•tantlat penolty Is
lnvoi&lt;ed on all certificate
accounts withdrawn prior
to the date of maturity .

Meigs Co. Blanch.

~

Tile Atlltftt COunty
Savlflll a Lo111 Co.
2M SICOIHI St.
PomtrtY, Otllo

·COLUMBUS (UP!) - Ohi~ determine depreciation that
Bell, in preparing Its current had occurred in its telephone
f.!16 million annual rate in- facilities without Inspecting
crease application, reduced millions of individual items.
Applying a formula to
downturn in the illegal aliens in the United the value of its facUitiea by 11
per
cent
to
account
for
~
results
of the company 's
kruwn~y and rising unem-&lt; States is the ·effect on ·
have prompted unemploymen t among "mechanical" Jl(ll'tion of its inspection of designated
11ennbers Of Congress and .A:merican citizens. With total existing depreciation, a items, Whitney said the
to take' a closer look unemployment running at statistical consultant said ,. amount of depreciation due to
'mechanical deterioration
·ece1ntly at the . problem of around 8 million individuals, today.
Dr. D. Ransom Whitney, was between 10.63 and 11.15
aliens working in the the jobs held by illegal aliens
Slates. Support for become very crucial. While chairman of the Division of per cent.
at Ohio State
Whitney said BeD inspected
'~~~;~':;:i~ which would , these aliens tend to compete Statistics
University,
in
remarks
467
of its 7,566 vehicles and
r•
flow of aliens has for jobs mostly in the unprepared for delivery to a 586 of its 21,617 manholes to
rapidly on Capitol skilled, low-wage
ocPublic UWitles Commission determine the overall
cupations1 they occupy a
~ Ohio hearing, said he deprecl!ltion.
fact , the House of · sufficient
of
number
At
hearing Tuesday,
iRe1pie·se~1tat:ives has acted on adequate jobs as to constitute dey eloped a . scientific
IIBIIipllng
procedure
to
help
Frederick
J. Cofer, director
alien problem in the an tmportant factor in putting
Ohio
Bell
accurately
of
corporate
analysis at tbe
past. During the 92nd Americans out of work. For
I'Corl"re:ss the House paased a example, in 1974 the New
which died In the Senate. York office of the INS apThe bill was reintroduced and prehended•1S,900 aliens who
Lellen of opinion are welcomed. They should be
passed in the 93rd Congress, were employed. The average
leu lball300 words long' (or be subject to reduction by
but again failed to be con- salary per week was about
lbt editor) and m1111t be signed with the signee's adsidered in the Senate. On both $150, with many earning $200
dreu. Names may be withheld upon publication.
occasions I supported the bill. and some earning as high as
However, on request, names will be disclllfied. LeUera
Now pending in this Congress $260 per week. These figures
abould be In good task, addressing ·issues, not peris a bill which would impose a would seem to refute the
sonaUtles.
· series of graduated penalties claims of those who say that
on empioyers' who lmowingly iUegal aliens always lake
employ Illegal aliens. At first jobs that American workers
111 employer would be subject
would not take. ·
to a. citation . After a first
A second burden which
offense any subsequent illegal aliens impose in on the
violations would impose flnes American taxpayer. By
up to $1,000 per Illegal alien displacing American workers Boosters appreciative
employed plus the possibility from jobs, illegal aliens put
of• imprisonment for the these workers on public Dear Sir :
employer. It is this type of . assistance and unemOn behalf of the Meigs Athletic Boosters we take this
tough law that is needed if a ployment compensation . It is opportunity to extend our silicere thanks to those who helped
solution to the problem is to ·the American taxpayer who make the recent presentation of the Big Bend Minstrel
be: found.
ultimately picks up this tab. Association's FaU Follies a success.
The dimensions of the In addition, there is some
First we are grateful for the very receptive and apillegal alien problem are evidence that illegal aliens preciative audience so necessary to .any production of this
sllp'tling. The Immigration are havin g significant nature, and to those businessmen and individuals who supan~ Naturalization Service amounts of social services ported our efforts by purchaa~ space is in our programs.
(INS) estimates that th e paid for by taxpayers. New
Thanka to Messrs. Dowler, Dan Morris, Diehl and Bob
nuinber of ille8alaliens in the York and Los Angeles have Morris for their cooperation in providing the bulldinga and
Uriited Statea Is anyy;here be- both estimated that there are equipment necessary for reheanala and lllaging the show ; to
tween 4 and 12 million. Last 60,000 children of illegal Lloyd Moore and Russ Escbelman for custodial services; to
ye$r alone, 800,000 illegal aliens in their city school Coaches Chancey, Taylor, Logan, Oliver and the Meigs
ali~ns were apprehended by
systems. Even the costs of Basketball Squad (plus a few other students and booster
lh~ INS, but ·it is estimated
detaining and deporting members ) for their help hi placing chairs and preparing the
th~t from three to five make
aliens constitute a heavy · gym; to Gene Mitch, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Williamson, Mrs.
their way bito the country for expense on the treasury - Stewart, Mick Childa, Bill Perrin, Fred Stanley and Roger
Abbott for selling program ads; to ticket chairperson Lila
every one that is caught. In and taxpayer's pockets.
Mitch;
to Quality Print Shop for advanCj! tickets, and Millers
addition to the allen problem
Clearly some ccrrective
itself, their attempts at legislation is needed - and Grocery, Dutton Drugs, Bahr Clothiers, New York Clothing
entry allow a criminal soon . :rhe jobs held In the House, Nelson's Drugs and Swisher &amp; Lohse Drugs for han311lu!;try
to
flourish , United States by illegal aliens dling advance tickets; to Mr. Diehl who sold tickets at the
fake docwnents, drain our economy. It would door, and Bill WUf91'd, Charlie Hamilton and Joe Magnotta for
~Jr· audullent marriages and be a large step on the road to handling the ticket taking chores,
Hats off again to Bob Hoeflich who put together another
ti!llll~ll!gUinR operations.
recovery from recession if
greatest harm that these jobs could be turned fine production (In record time ,.. less than a mooth) assisted
res1o. L• from the pr.esence of over to American workers. by Charlene Hoeflich, Susie Soulsby, Lila Mitch, Debbie·and
Bob Buck, Bill Young and Roger and Susie Abbott. Joe Struble
was once again acellent aa Emcee and accompalllment was
provided by Olive Ingraham Weber (plano) and Tim Glaze

a

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11

7Ya Pet. per year on 1
4 ye1r certlfh:ate ·of
deposit.
Sl,ooo.oo minimum
deposit. interest Plid
quarterly.

Bell took· 11% depreciation

.

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'

SElLEN, T)le Netherlanda

Like Humpty Dumpty, o ur natural gas supplies are falling. fa st. But, unlike that fabled
character. these supplies can be put back
together.
·
Continuing to argue about the natural gas
shortage while our nation teeters on the
brink of deep economic problems is inviting
di saster. This critical shortage will touch
everyone's life. Natural gas supplies one·
third of the nation's energy. Over half of
the energy American industry need s is
natural gas. And. for the next several years.
there will not be enough domestic supply
of anything else to replace it.
Even with dramatic conservation efforts.
many industries already have been slowed '
down by cutbacks in their supplies of natural gas. Unless supplies are increased, there
will be less gas for industry thi s year and
even more drastic curtailments over the
next five years. This could create massive
unemployment.
Yet, the amount of natural gas still to be
discovered here at home is estimated to be
up to fifty times the quantity of gas used
last year. It's not being di scovered because
government price controls make it uneconomical to search for it. A more rational
price policy - an orderly deco ntrol of
producers' prices -. would encourage
dtscovery and producuon of new gas that's
waiting to be found.
For the sake of our nation's economy,
natural gas ts worth whatever it takes to get
it. And we must get it, now.

.. 1::
•••f

"'

'

- Five heavUy anned
IA!rt·oriJruo holdillg scores of
hostages aboard a hijacked
train opened fire on a
mediator today' then
released a captive bearing
liemands for food, medicine
)lnd a new e1111neer.
The hijackers, wbo have
illr•!adv kUied two men, in·
o:ludlng the original engineer'
fired
shots at the
jmidentlfled mediator when
tried to hall them on a
bullhorn from a car ~ yarda

and transport out of tbe
country.
Ms. Faber said the number
,of hostages on the train was
estimated at 75 "based on
informa ti on (from)
relatives."

Western Electric Co., told
commissioners earnings of
the firm on its sales to Ohio
Bell have been."reasonable."
Cofer said Western's profit
margin and return from 1946
through 1974 were below
those of tbe country's 50
largest manufactures and
Moody's 125 Industrials.
"Western's average profit
margin per dollar of sales is
5.1 cents-considerably lower
than the 5.8 cents averaged
by the 50 largest manufacturing companies, and the 6.2
cents for Moody's 125 industrials," Cofer said.
"Western's return on net
investment applicable to its
Bell business has averaged
9.3 per cent, compared with

Edinboro

Wa lla ce 72

51.

a·4

Ba ld win ·

Wooste r 106 Ohio wes leya n 95
Denison 75 Joh n Ca r ro ll 65
Musklngum 54 Malone 51
Otterbein 68 Rio Grande 59

A Chronicle of America

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Benjamin Franklin of
Philadelphia: "They that
can give up essential liberty
to obtain a little temporary
'safety deserve nei ther liberty nor safety."
03381

- By Ron Mackenzie &amp;r; Jetf Mac Nelly! CJl97!i, United Feature Syndicate.

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Finally our thanks to cast members ; they put forth a lot of
effort to attend rehearsals, and are to be congratulated on
their performance,
'·
With such cooperation and effort from so many nice people
we were assured of success from the start.- Rich Jones,
President, Meigs Athletic Boosters, and Jim Soulsby, Project
Olairman.

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Lay AWIJ

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Ohio

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6 Ft,. ..... (~.e.g;,!!J;B,BJ, '9.61

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mediator's first call

I •!·drew a slight stir from the

: tralln. stcJpped in flat, ope11
farmland about 75
from' northeast of
A second haU
three shots, on~
the car by only ten

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-$TOilfUL 0' TOY$Re9. 2. 99 Milton Bradley Pa ssw ord

14 .9(
Reg . 15.99 evel Knitvet Dragster 1
Rev. 7.99 Empire Mini Motorcrcin Cycle
6.97
1
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Reg. 4.99 Mittel Big Jim S PICk
Reg. 1.97 Snoopy On Do~ House AM Radio 1.97
9.9(
Reg. U .ll Mittel! 81rb e's Dn•m But
2.9(
Reg. 3.99 Marx TV Action Figures
Reg. 1.49 Marx Costumes for Archie' s Friend s
1.'37
Special! Mux Archie's 12 Inch Jalopy
4.91
Special! Man Archie's Vinyl Case

i

and
Infor drugs,
a diabetic
and medlcatlcn for
epileptic.
Ms. Faber said the
;tenrorlllll allo demanded a
engineer to replace the
man, llhot when the
wu seized at mldPorninl Tueaday.
"We are not pointblank
111 ....we are leaving
matter open," MI. Faber
9le aald the engineer
haW to be a volunteer
the JjjllCkel'l would haVI!
make clelc wily they
"lilted the new driver.
"When to and how far they
to move is not known,"
laid. "But they want to

2.17

4.11
1.!7
3.97
2.97
4.97
2.97

Reg . 6.49 Milton B radlev Stratego
.!~· 19 Mllltilry _Vehicle Sets
Reg . 4.49 Hopping 6· 1n. Puppy
Reg . 3.&lt;49 John Player Racer Special
Spe cial ! Freight Train Set

Reg . J..llt Police &amp; Fire cars
Reg . 3.19 Cham~ion Chopper. Dragster
Reg . 11 .11 Emp re American a '76 Hot .
Cycl e

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Reg . to 3.39 Tonka Tin y· Tonka Ve hicles
Reg. 11.99 HaSbro Rlchout Rac ers
Reg. 2.tf Snoo~y Friction Rac ers
Reg. 3.99 Ertl arm Equipment
Reg. 4.0 Double Barrel Target Set
Reg. l .-49 Disney Mus lca ttnlfruments
Reg. 11.99 A ~ nger Solid St . Walki e TAlki es
Reg . 4.49 Push Button Cash Re ylste r
Reg . 2.99 Carn iva l Shooting Ga lery
Reg . 4. 59 Marx Sprakllng Tractor
Reg . 3.49"Gay" Loader -Drump Truck
Reg . 1.1'9 Set of 10 Ll~uld Crayon s
Reg. 8.99 Kenner TT , The Wild Rid ers
'Reg . S.49 Molle! Speed Stunter
Reg . 99c Mattei Hot Whe e ls Cars
Reg . S.99 Tarco Pintle Dump Truck
Reo . 14 .99 Malltl Knit Mag ic Machi no
Reg . " ·"
Man 32 Kev Tvpew rller
Reg . 3.•9 " Toohietoy " Vehicle G lit Sets
Reg.17 .99 Clairol's Cruv curl

- TOYS FOR GROW UP PLAYReg . 9.9t " M1m11" Voice Baby Buttons
8.91
Reg. 7.99 " Pouty" lat»v Stork lint
6.97
Reg . 13 .77 Mattei' s Sunshine Van
9.97
Ret . 8.99 lattery Operated Sewing
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1.91
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Sp~Cllll M\ISICII Jewelrr IOICIS
6.97
Reg . 7 .9t lS'h " fill Cuddy Animals
3.97
Reg . 4.19 Chilton 11 pc . Cookware Set
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Reg. il .19 Ch ilton 41 · plece Tea Set
Reg . 10.99
Fisher· Price Music Box Record Player
1.,7
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Reg. S.95 Playmore Chi dr e n's Story Book s 2.97
- PRE· SCHOOL TOYS2.17
Reg . 3.4, Adorableleanle Pets
Ne g. 3 .., Ortg , Bu ild· A Bull Go me, cootie 2.1 1
2.91
Reg. 3.99 Fisher-Price Storvbook Rad ios
3.97
Reg . 3.9f Prtll"'l" Deluxe Peg Chest
Reg . 9.99 ATF Pog Tobie, Cholk Boord
1.17
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Reg. 3.99 Orlt . Tlnkertoy Set
2. 97
Reg. ' ·" Playsttool Colored wood Blocks •. 97
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Ree . 3.tt Cadaco laird Games
3.97
Reg . •·" Milton Bradley Board Gam es
ReG . S.tt Dtluxt lowllng Set
Req . 5.9t Parker lras •. Probe
4.77

- WRAPS, TREES AND TRIMS Special! Garland Tr im•, 20' long
Special! Candy C1nu, box of 12
Kiddie Canes, box of 40
Spec1111 Chrl•tmu Gill wrap s
Req . 57c-2S Crystal Bow s, pkg . 25

'·"

H 1lwo

: MI. Faber aald the govern·
wu aalilfled with the
developnenll. "In any
lffalr I tiWtk tbat

"'"'==:·.
t•!
(Yffythong y«~ nlltd
tO mt\t do/trot of

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that eontllCt be
"lhe 18ld.
orlglnaUy de·
a bul to the airport

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it just seems like they'll
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College Ba s ke tball Resu lts

We Hold These Truths ...

(drums).

!

· The gunmen, believed to be
Molucca111 born In
·IJ!ctllartd, ldlled at least two
they seiJed the
Tu!lday. The mediator
described onl)' as a
~Je81der In Holland's South
=Moluccan community,
Justice
Ministry
h~1ok·enrom1an Toos Faber
the. hijackers later
;~::;: a ho1tage with
~~
for a megaphone,

USl

an average return of. 12.1 per
cent realiZed by the 50 largest
mapufacturers and 12.1 per
cent by Moody's 125 Industrials," he added.
Cofer said during the last 25
years Bell operating companies have accounted for 98
per cent of Western's nongovernment sales. He said
sales to Ohio Bell provide a
fair cross-5eetion of the total
sales to all Bell companies.

'*" Att• 1&amp;

REG .

"'

12.2t

2.91

Reg . 19c6 Spools of Ribbon

Reg.79c Seah, Tags, Cards, mo re
Special! Wall Placques , Door Trim s
Reg. 43c Giant Mint Candy Sticks
Special! so Miniatur e Lite Set
Special! ll · Lite Tree Top Star

Reg . 2.8S Setof3 Ex te ns ion Cords

Special! Santa 's Book of Candy

57c
S7t
nc
33c
1.61

L77

1.77
77c

1S .97

SPECIAL

2.47
9.91
2.11
3.77
3.97

VH

9.91
3.97
2.47
3.97

2.91
11&lt;
7.97
-4 .•17
He
4.97
10 .91
12 .97

2.91

14.97
1.77
11t
S1c
1.&lt;1
43

.

'1.00 GIFTS
Re9 . 1.49 Corn Husk Do lh
Reg . 1.25 Cal endar Towels
Reg . 1.49 Dinne r Bell s
Reg. 1.1S 1-Year Diary
Spe cial! '22-ot. Bubbl e Bath
Spe~i11! Women's Bik inis
Spec ial! Smart Set J ewelry
Reg. 1.29 Ceramic Ta bl eware
Reg . 1.2S Dusting Powder
Spec ial! British Sterling
Reg . 1.25 Salt, P e~ p er Shaker s
Mennen Gltt Set or Men
Reg . 1.49 F lock ed An im a ls
0'1a l Paper Wei gh h
Reg. l.SO Boy s' Billfold S
Reg . 1.49 Wure ver Pen &amp; Penci l Set
Reg . 1.39 Anshel Bubble Bath
Reg . Handy Index ed Address Book
Reg. 1. 59 Ruth Barr y Panty Hose
Two P c. Cosmelic Bag Sets
Special! cast Iron Assortments. , ca .
Reg . 1.252 pc. Gift Se ts
MOnkey Pod serv ing Trays

1.00
1.00
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1.00
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1.00
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1.00
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1.00
2 for 1.00
1.00
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1.00
1.00
1.00
1.00
1.00
1.00

SPIROORAPII.

1.00

tllll-t..IOU

'

ttelo T_,.

l'fii1CIU dill ~·
Dot!, pu1n • button . 1
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b&lt;u.h, cernb, (W&lt;!ef,
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�. 6- The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Dec. 3, 1975

Redmen drop

Two driversPhipps' coming into own
CLEVELAND I UP! I - "For the first' tiine since he 's
"Tryihg to prove myself
charged by Remember
when
the been here, Mike · has con- has been difficult untlli\Qw,"

first contest
..

• . p al ro}
Oh10

Jack Quimby, 18, Rt. 2,
Gallipolis, was charged with
failure to yield the right of
way following a traffic accident at 8:10 a.m. Tuesday
on Rt. :i88 at the FairfieldMorrison scored 15 points
OTTERBEIN
t681
for the entire game. The 2~ Bromlev . J 1 7. Morrison , .I 1 Centenary Rd,
IS ; Bu chan , J 6 11 ; Downing ,
The Gallia-Meigs Post
Cardinals also got double- 4 1 9 ; Williams , d ] - 11;
State
Highway Patrol said
fi gure scoring fr om Bob Wot\lhe!er . 1 0 2; Brough , 'J o
J ; Sanders . 2 2 6 : Jones . 1 0 -1.
the Quimby car pulled into
Buchan with 12 tallies and TOTAL$ 14 -20· 68 .
the path of an auto operated
Haltfime
R
io
35
01
Larry Downing and Ed lerbe in 32
by
David Owens, 18, of Rio
Williams with 10 each.
Grande.
There was moderate
The Redmen, who went
damage
to both vehicles. No
down to their first loss in four
one
was
injured.
CLIFTON PERSONALS
outings after dropping a ~32
Le land Harris, 23, of
Thanksgiving guests of Mr.
halftime advantage, were led
Rodney,
was charged with
and
Mrs.
Uoyd
Williams
and
by forward Jim Noe's 21
driving
lefl of center
family
were
Betty
Lyons,
markers.
following
an
accident at 4: 15
Clifton
;
Ora
Higgins,
Pt.
The Cardinals picked off 40
p.m
.
Tuesday
on the Rodneyreoounds compared to Rio 's Pleasant ; Reece Williams,
36. In the turnover depart- Sarah Willis, both of Cora Rd. Officers said cars
ment, Rio Grande lost the Pomeroy; and Frank Mc- driven by Harris an d
Gera ldine Ennis, 28, of
ball 24 Urnes while Otterbein Dermitt .
Rodney, collided headon in a
Tha
nksgiving
gues
ts
of
committed 16 errors.
curve.
There was moderate
Mrs.
Laurene
Lewis
were
the
Thursday, the Redmen
damage;
no one was in jured.
play at West Virginia Tech. foll owing : Mr . and Mrs .
A
deer
was killed at 6:45
Saturday, Rio returns home Charles Cartwright, Mr. and
for a non-league contest Mrs . Donald Smith and a.m. Tuesday on Rl. 7 at
against Dyke College at Lyne family, Mr. and Mrs. Larry Little Kyger Rd . The animal
Grogan and son, and Mrs. ran into the path of a car
Cen~r .
operated by Mark Waller, 18,
Olga Lewis.
RIO GRANDE 1m - Noe ,
Holiday guests of Mrs. Rt. 2, Pomeroy. There was
8-S-21; Price . 4-0-8: Swain , o.
0-0; Stewart , 5-l -11; Ba rb ee , Belly Call and Jack were
minor damage to his car.
1·0 ·2;
Al banese . J .0. 6 ;
Mrs . John Miller and Another deer was killed in an
CaldwelL 1-S-71 Robinson , 1·0
1; Blse , 1·0·2. TOTALS 24- 11 · daughter, . Melissa of Long
accident at 6:20p.m. Tuesday
lt.
on Rt. 554. The deer ran in to
the path of a vehicle driven
by Roger Glassburn, 31, Rt. I,
Bidwell.
WESTERVILLE - Senior co-captain Terry
Morrison Tuesday night led a second-half Otterbein co.meback that produced a 68-59 victory
over previOusly unbeaten Rio Grande.

ASinger Gl•ft
$11995
For 0nIY

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Lay Away Her Singer Now! ·

M•,•o,·lD I "' Olii OI•U~

' A frltllr'!'ll rk Ol THE S I N GE ~ COMPANV

The Fabric Shop
McCall's,

ICwick-S.w, Simplicity Pottorno

SINGER SALES&amp; SERVICE
115 W. Second

tn-2114

........_,_..,...,..
'Pomtl'oy, Ohio

,._,_..,..,.,.,.,..~""'J-4~

~

Bouom , Ohio : Mr. and Mrs.
Dale Rollins and family of
Chesapeake, Ohio; Mr . and
Mrs. Ross King and family,
Mr. Jimmy Ohlinger, Mrs.
Evelyn Ohlinger, Mr. and
Mrs. John Call and family of
Hurricane, Mr. and Mrs.
Lester Johnson .
A Thanksgiving dinner was
taken to Oscar Johnson who
is ill at his home In Clifton by
his granddaughter, Mrs.
Betty Call.
Recent holiday dinner
guests of Mr . and Mrs.
Harold Rickard, Sr . were Mr.
and Mrs. William Holmes of
Norfolk, Va., Mr. and Mrs.
Harold Rickard , Jr. and
Nicky, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Rickard and family, Mr. and
Mrs. Danny Rickard and
family of New Haven.
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph &amp;ites
and infant son, Dean, were
Thanksgiving dinner guests
of her mother, Mrs .. Helen
Williams, Clifton.
Mrs. WUma Blake is a
patient at Pleasant Valley
Hospital and Mrs. Ted Riley
is a patient at Holzer Medical
Center where she is in in~nsive care. Both ladies are
from Clifton.
Mrs. Helen Barker and
Mrs. Jessie Cartwright spent
the Thanksgiving weekend
with Mr. and Mrs. Glen Cart-·
wright at Glendale, W. Va.

D&amp;D MEATS
TAKING ORDERS FOR FRESH,
JUICY atRISTMAS TURKEYS.
NOWTHRU

DECEMBER 20
This Week$ Special
3 lb. Rib Steak
4 lb. Beef Roast
3 lb. Ground Beef
3 lb. Pork Chops
2 lb. Rath Wieners

•20
HAMBURGER PArnES
Wlllt
SOY

10 LB. BOX

=~~~. . . . ~~:!1 09
~~~:.~~--~~:~139
~I~. . . . . .~·-~ 112
GROUND BEEF ·
PAniES
JOUR OWN)

'690 ~~~· '890
----------~--~~
D&amp;D
MEATS
830 E. MAIN
POMEROY
ADDITIVE

PH. 992-3502
f

Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, J)e('. 3, 1975

Cleveland Browns traded
wide receiver Paul Warfield
to the Miami Dolphins so th~y
· could draft quarterback Mike
Phipps of Purdue?
Phipps does. He 's been
trying to unload the monkey
ever since. And his performance the past two weeks,
engineering victories over
Cincinnati and New Orleans,
exemplifies it.
"Mike is beginning to come
into his own,'' said Browns
Coach Forrest Gregg, who
has watched Phipps connect
on 40-;lf~ passes for 460
yards and three touchdowns
on back·toback weekends .

TOM TIEDE
(Continued from page 2
the last opportunity for
citizens who want neither to
tive in a police or a criminal
stale. That opportunity is
personal involvement. Police
alone can 'I democratically
defea t crime, says FBI
Director Clarence Kelley , but
a cop-citizen alliance may :
"We are asking citizens to
stop laking the easy way ou(,
to . stop tol erating crime
because to resist it involves
personal sacrifice. Every
American must resist crime
as we resist other perils
common to mankind."
The Bureau's hopes to this
end are. apparen Uy high.
They also are somewhat
revolutionary, admitiing as
they do the long-neglected
truth that citizens not only
have a responsibilty toward
domestic peace but a right to
that r esponsi bili ty.
Americans have not taken
1he easy way out" of crime
by choice, but because police
have elbowed them out. Woe
be the bystander who involves himself in law enforcement; neither the cops
)lOr lhe courts have appreciated his good citizenship.
Now, says the FBI, the
citizen 's worth is being
recognized anew. And the
Bureau will co urt his
assistance through
a
massive" education
,program called "Crime
Resistance." Says a spokesman : "Our purpose is to
teach people something about
crime
besides
fear."
Essentially the idea is to
eillist from ·· the population
millions of part-time police,
legions of a kind of home
guard. "For too long crime
has been a game of cowboys
and Indians, with people
playing th~ part of the trees.''
What does the FBI expect
from us? Cooperation and
common sense mostly. Who
has the responsibility · for
closing the garage door in
your home? But beyond this,
the Bureau wants America
thinking about crime in terms
of initiative - cringing helps
no one but the thug.
Some years ago during a
hotel fire in Atlanta, a
trapped man decided he
could not open his door
because poisonous gas was in
the hall, and he could not
jump out the window because
he was up too high. He did
nothing, and died when gas
fumes came in under the
door. Another trapped man,
however, simply stuffed
towels in his door to keep out
the gas and waited for the
fireman 's ladder. There are,
you see, alternatives.
11

vinced himself he's capable
of the task of leading a
football club.
"That was his biggest problem, convincing himself,
especially with all that talk
about the Warfield trade and
the fans never letting him
forget it. He has shown in the
past two weeks when you get
good pass protection from the
offensive line and a good pass
rush from U!e defense a
quarterback with · his
qualities can be a success In
professional football. And he
knows it."
Phipps, a six-year veteran
drafted No. I in 1970, has
become aroused in recent
contests. Instead of taking a
loss casually or getting
ripped apart on the field,
Phipps has openly displayed
his anger- something that
had never before surfacedand this has helped him
become a more poised field
genera).
"Phipps looks a lot more·
poised than I remember
him," said New Orleans
linebacker Rick Kingrea, a
former Brown who faced
Mike last Sunday in
Cleveland's 17-16, comefrombehind victory over tbe
Saints, "He took 'em the 97
(yards for the · Browns'
longest TD drive of ihe
season) when they were
behind and that's'wbat It's all
about. 11
Phipps, once called "a
sleeping giant" by Paul
Wiggin, former Cleveland
defensive end and now head
coach at Kansas City, has
overcome the most difficult
phase of becoming a premier
quarterliack. He has finally
convinced him!ielf he can be a
winner, even if it's with a
losing team.

Phipps says, "That's because
I'Jll finally getting the
blocking I need from the line
when I go back to paas.
"That's a big consideration. I know I can do
the job and so does the
organization. That's one
thing I have to say about the
organization. They've had
faith in me from day one and
they stU! do. I'm sorry it took
" lio lo~g for me to prove It to
them and tlte fans in
Cleveland because they're
\ISl!d to winners and that's
what we're going to be agaul
soon. I think they believe I
can handle it now."
The ·Browns will try to
make it three victories in a
row Sunday when they battle
the World Champion Steelers
at Pittsburgh's Three Rivers
Stadium. The Browns, as
expected, are the underdog to
coach Chuck Noll's men, now
111-1 for the season after last
week's sin)pie 20-7 win over
the New York Jets.
Phipps knows he and liis
teammates will have to do all
in their power to just hang in
there and not get blown away
by the Steelers, virtually
assured of a playoff spot, Yet
the maturing Browns, now 2&lt;
9, must remember not to
panic.
"Everyone was new this
year, new coaches and new
players," Phipps celates. "It
takes a while to make ad·
justments.
"The coaching staff is learning, too. They have finally
coordinated their thinking.
I'm glad they have enough
confidence In me to let me
call my own plays. I do need
help sometimes, but as a
quarterback, you need
patience . You can't get
panicky,"

Washington
By Clarence
.Report Miller

Open Evenings til 8

now lllaelr &amp; white h~~ ·

eomes In 6 «Mrs! :~... ·

A sub•tantlat penolty Is
lnvoi&lt;ed on all certificate
accounts withdrawn prior
to the date of maturity .

Meigs Co. Blanch.

~

Tile Atlltftt COunty
Savlflll a Lo111 Co.
2M SICOIHI St.
PomtrtY, Otllo

·COLUMBUS (UP!) - Ohi~ determine depreciation that
Bell, in preparing Its current had occurred in its telephone
f.!16 million annual rate in- facilities without Inspecting
crease application, reduced millions of individual items.
Applying a formula to
downturn in the illegal aliens in the United the value of its facUitiea by 11
per
cent
to
account
for
~
results
of the company 's
kruwn~y and rising unem-&lt; States is the ·effect on ·
have prompted unemploymen t among "mechanical" Jl(ll'tion of its inspection of designated
11ennbers Of Congress and .A:merican citizens. With total existing depreciation, a items, Whitney said the
to take' a closer look unemployment running at statistical consultant said ,. amount of depreciation due to
'mechanical deterioration
·ece1ntly at the . problem of around 8 million individuals, today.
Dr. D. Ransom Whitney, was between 10.63 and 11.15
aliens working in the the jobs held by illegal aliens
Slates. Support for become very crucial. While chairman of the Division of per cent.
at Ohio State
Whitney said BeD inspected
'~~~;~':;:i~ which would , these aliens tend to compete Statistics
University,
in
remarks
467
of its 7,566 vehicles and
r•
flow of aliens has for jobs mostly in the unprepared for delivery to a 586 of its 21,617 manholes to
rapidly on Capitol skilled, low-wage
ocPublic UWitles Commission determine the overall
cupations1 they occupy a
~ Ohio hearing, said he deprecl!ltion.
fact , the House of · sufficient
of
number
At
hearing Tuesday,
iRe1pie·se~1tat:ives has acted on adequate jobs as to constitute dey eloped a . scientific
IIBIIipllng
procedure
to
help
Frederick
J. Cofer, director
alien problem in the an tmportant factor in putting
Ohio
Bell
accurately
of
corporate
analysis at tbe
past. During the 92nd Americans out of work. For
I'Corl"re:ss the House paased a example, in 1974 the New
which died In the Senate. York office of the INS apThe bill was reintroduced and prehended•1S,900 aliens who
Lellen of opinion are welcomed. They should be
passed in the 93rd Congress, were employed. The average
leu lball300 words long' (or be subject to reduction by
but again failed to be con- salary per week was about
lbt editor) and m1111t be signed with the signee's adsidered in the Senate. On both $150, with many earning $200
dreu. Names may be withheld upon publication.
occasions I supported the bill. and some earning as high as
However, on request, names will be disclllfied. LeUera
Now pending in this Congress $260 per week. These figures
abould be In good task, addressing ·issues, not peris a bill which would impose a would seem to refute the
sonaUtles.
· series of graduated penalties claims of those who say that
on empioyers' who lmowingly iUegal aliens always lake
employ Illegal aliens. At first jobs that American workers
111 employer would be subject
would not take. ·
to a. citation . After a first
A second burden which
offense any subsequent illegal aliens impose in on the
violations would impose flnes American taxpayer. By
up to $1,000 per Illegal alien displacing American workers Boosters appreciative
employed plus the possibility from jobs, illegal aliens put
of• imprisonment for the these workers on public Dear Sir :
employer. It is this type of . assistance and unemOn behalf of the Meigs Athletic Boosters we take this
tough law that is needed if a ployment compensation . It is opportunity to extend our silicere thanks to those who helped
solution to the problem is to ·the American taxpayer who make the recent presentation of the Big Bend Minstrel
be: found.
ultimately picks up this tab. Association's FaU Follies a success.
The dimensions of the In addition, there is some
First we are grateful for the very receptive and apillegal alien problem are evidence that illegal aliens preciative audience so necessary to .any production of this
sllp'tling. The Immigration are havin g significant nature, and to those businessmen and individuals who supan~ Naturalization Service amounts of social services ported our efforts by purchaa~ space is in our programs.
(INS) estimates that th e paid for by taxpayers. New
Thanka to Messrs. Dowler, Dan Morris, Diehl and Bob
nuinber of ille8alaliens in the York and Los Angeles have Morris for their cooperation in providing the bulldinga and
Uriited Statea Is anyy;here be- both estimated that there are equipment necessary for reheanala and lllaging the show ; to
tween 4 and 12 million. Last 60,000 children of illegal Lloyd Moore and Russ Escbelman for custodial services; to
ye$r alone, 800,000 illegal aliens in their city school Coaches Chancey, Taylor, Logan, Oliver and the Meigs
ali~ns were apprehended by
systems. Even the costs of Basketball Squad (plus a few other students and booster
lh~ INS, but ·it is estimated
detaining and deporting members ) for their help hi placing chairs and preparing the
th~t from three to five make
aliens constitute a heavy · gym; to Gene Mitch, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Williamson, Mrs.
their way bito the country for expense on the treasury - Stewart, Mick Childa, Bill Perrin, Fred Stanley and Roger
Abbott for selling program ads; to ticket chairperson Lila
every one that is caught. In and taxpayer's pockets.
Mitch;
to Quality Print Shop for advanCj! tickets, and Millers
addition to the allen problem
Clearly some ccrrective
itself, their attempts at legislation is needed - and Grocery, Dutton Drugs, Bahr Clothiers, New York Clothing
entry allow a criminal soon . :rhe jobs held In the House, Nelson's Drugs and Swisher &amp; Lohse Drugs for han311lu!;try
to
flourish , United States by illegal aliens dling advance tickets; to Mr. Diehl who sold tickets at the
fake docwnents, drain our economy. It would door, and Bill WUf91'd, Charlie Hamilton and Joe Magnotta for
~Jr· audullent marriages and be a large step on the road to handling the ticket taking chores,
Hats off again to Bob Hoeflich who put together another
ti!llll~ll!gUinR operations.
recovery from recession if
greatest harm that these jobs could be turned fine production (In record time ,.. less than a mooth) assisted
res1o. L• from the pr.esence of over to American workers. by Charlene Hoeflich, Susie Soulsby, Lila Mitch, Debbie·and
Bob Buck, Bill Young and Roger and Susie Abbott. Joe Struble
was once again acellent aa Emcee and accompalllment was
provided by Olive Ingraham Weber (plano) and Tim Glaze

a

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

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,.,, I

11

7Ya Pet. per year on 1
4 ye1r certlfh:ate ·of
deposit.
Sl,ooo.oo minimum
deposit. interest Plid
quarterly.

Bell took· 11% depreciation

.

'

.••
~

'
_,

ediator shot at

'

SElLEN, T)le Netherlanda

Like Humpty Dumpty, o ur natural gas supplies are falling. fa st. But, unlike that fabled
character. these supplies can be put back
together.
·
Continuing to argue about the natural gas
shortage while our nation teeters on the
brink of deep economic problems is inviting
di saster. This critical shortage will touch
everyone's life. Natural gas supplies one·
third of the nation's energy. Over half of
the energy American industry need s is
natural gas. And. for the next several years.
there will not be enough domestic supply
of anything else to replace it.
Even with dramatic conservation efforts.
many industries already have been slowed '
down by cutbacks in their supplies of natural gas. Unless supplies are increased, there
will be less gas for industry thi s year and
even more drastic curtailments over the
next five years. This could create massive
unemployment.
Yet, the amount of natural gas still to be
discovered here at home is estimated to be
up to fifty times the quantity of gas used
last year. It's not being di scovered because
government price controls make it uneconomical to search for it. A more rational
price policy - an orderly deco ntrol of
producers' prices -. would encourage
dtscovery and producuon of new gas that's
waiting to be found.
For the sake of our nation's economy,
natural gas ts worth whatever it takes to get
it. And we must get it, now.

.. 1::
•••f

"'

'

- Five heavUy anned
IA!rt·oriJruo holdillg scores of
hostages aboard a hijacked
train opened fire on a
mediator today' then
released a captive bearing
liemands for food, medicine
)lnd a new e1111neer.
The hijackers, wbo have
illr•!adv kUied two men, in·
o:ludlng the original engineer'
fired
shots at the
jmidentlfled mediator when
tried to hall them on a
bullhorn from a car ~ yarda

and transport out of tbe
country.
Ms. Faber said the number
,of hostages on the train was
estimated at 75 "based on
informa ti on (from)
relatives."

Western Electric Co., told
commissioners earnings of
the firm on its sales to Ohio
Bell have been."reasonable."
Cofer said Western's profit
margin and return from 1946
through 1974 were below
those of tbe country's 50
largest manufactures and
Moody's 125 Industrials.
"Western's average profit
margin per dollar of sales is
5.1 cents-considerably lower
than the 5.8 cents averaged
by the 50 largest manufacturing companies, and the 6.2
cents for Moody's 125 industrials," Cofer said.
"Western's return on net
investment applicable to its
Bell business has averaged
9.3 per cent, compared with

Edinboro

Wa lla ce 72

51.

a·4

Ba ld win ·

Wooste r 106 Ohio wes leya n 95
Denison 75 Joh n Ca r ro ll 65
Musklngum 54 Malone 51
Otterbein 68 Rio Grande 59

A Chronicle of America

selection
of Oxfords,

shoes

On Liberty:

and boots.

Benjamin Franklin of
Philadelphia: "They that
can give up essential liberty
to obtain a little temporary
'safety deserve nei ther liberty nor safety."
03381

- By Ron Mackenzie &amp;r; Jetf Mac Nelly! CJl97!i, United Feature Syndicate.

• redwood mustang
leather 8-inch moe toe
work boot
otexon insole
•leather lined
• steel shank
• non -slip, oil proof Durables
sole and heel

PPP1/P

~
~
~
~
~
~
~

FOR
YOUR
LITTLE
ANGELS

'$21.95
. TO

$47.95

BILLY-lHE·KID SLACKS
Sizes: 8·14 ............ ...... 20% off

Girts rtghts.....................Yz price
~ Bcr1s &amp;Grils Slippers ......... %off
~

Finally our thanks to cast members ; they put forth a lot of
effort to attend rehearsals, and are to be congratulated on
their performance,
'·
With such cooperation and effort from so many nice people
we were assured of success from the start.- Rich Jones,
President, Meigs Athletic Boosters, and Jim Soulsby, Project
Olairman.

~

Girls

~ lq's
~

l•
f.

Middle of Upper IS lock. Po"*oy
DJ'y Thundlys-Fridrf Til

Shirts....................... %off

-

Sizes 2-4

~All

.

. ..- p

• • - .t -47¥4
--,.

UUU¥

Lay AWIJ

MANY GIFT ITEMS

~

~

The Kiddie Shope

~
~

Middleport
Ohio

f.

•

FRANKLIIN
•
POMEROY, OHIO

MAKE POMEROY YOUR SHOPPING CENTER

SHOP

ARTIFICIAL TREES

EARLY

2 Ft.. .................. 12.77
4 Ft•........••....•... '9J8
4 Ft... ....~.~:?:.~~·7?! .. '7.97
4% Ft... .............. 15.76
6 Ft,. ..... (~.e.g;,!!J;B,BJ, '9.61

Use Our

Convenient
· t.ay-Away
Plan

mediator's first call

I •!·drew a slight stir from the

: tralln. stcJpped in flat, ope11
farmland about 75
from' northeast of
A second haU
three shots, on~
the car by only ten

7 Ft. .................. 114.88
SUPER SPECIAL

Give A
Ben Franklin
Gift
Certificate

SALE NOW IN PROGRESS

4¥2 Ft. ....1 .~~?; .•.1•6;~~~ '9.61
..

QUANTITIES LIMITED
WHILE THEY LAST

For Any
Amount

Specials Throughout The Store

M-~'' ·

..

-.

St olilllllll• .

..... .~ 41 ........ · -·

... , ...

....

COf!'ICIIII·~t·

~~'~~\'

(tO_,II ell M¥111 lii Mif"

OPEN THURSDAY AFTERNOON UJIITIL CHRISTMAS

THESE SPECIALS WHILE QUANTITIES LAST

-$TOilfUL 0' TOY$Re9. 2. 99 Milton Bradley Pa ssw ord

14 .9(
Reg . 15.99 evel Knitvet Dragster 1
Rev. 7.99 Empire Mini Motorcrcin Cycle
6.97
1
3.t1
Reg. 4.99 Mittel Big Jim S PICk
Reg. 1.97 Snoopy On Do~ House AM Radio 1.97
9.9(
Reg. U .ll Mittel! 81rb e's Dn•m But
2.9(
Reg. 3.99 Marx TV Action Figures
Reg. 1.49 Marx Costumes for Archie' s Friend s
1.'37
Special! Mux Archie's 12 Inch Jalopy
4.91
Special! Man Archie's Vinyl Case

i

and
Infor drugs,
a diabetic
and medlcatlcn for
epileptic.
Ms. Faber said the
;tenrorlllll allo demanded a
engineer to replace the
man, llhot when the
wu seized at mldPorninl Tueaday.
"We are not pointblank
111 ....we are leaving
matter open," MI. Faber
9le aald the engineer
haW to be a volunteer
the JjjllCkel'l would haVI!
make clelc wily they
"lilted the new driver.
"When to and how far they
to move is not known,"
laid. "But they want to

2.17

4.11
1.!7
3.97
2.97
4.97
2.97

Reg . 6.49 Milton B radlev Stratego
.!~· 19 Mllltilry _Vehicle Sets
Reg . 4.49 Hopping 6· 1n. Puppy
Reg . 3.&lt;49 John Player Racer Special
Spe cial ! Freight Train Set

Reg . J..llt Police &amp; Fire cars
Reg . 3.19 Cham~ion Chopper. Dragster
Reg . 11 .11 Emp re American a '76 Hot .
Cycl e

'·"

:=:drinkInsulin

Reg . to 3.39 Tonka Tin y· Tonka Ve hicles
Reg. 11.99 HaSbro Rlchout Rac ers
Reg. 2.tf Snoo~y Friction Rac ers
Reg. 3.99 Ertl arm Equipment
Reg. 4.0 Double Barrel Target Set
Reg. l .-49 Disney Mus lca ttnlfruments
Reg. 11.99 A ~ nger Solid St . Walki e TAlki es
Reg . 4.49 Push Button Cash Re ylste r
Reg . 2.99 Carn iva l Shooting Ga lery
Reg . 4. 59 Marx Sprakllng Tractor
Reg . 3.49"Gay" Loader -Drump Truck
Reg . 1.1'9 Set of 10 Ll~uld Crayon s
Reg. 8.99 Kenner TT , The Wild Rid ers
'Reg . S.49 Molle! Speed Stunter
Reg . 99c Mattei Hot Whe e ls Cars
Reg . S.99 Tarco Pintle Dump Truck
Reo . 14 .99 Malltl Knit Mag ic Machi no
Reg . " ·"
Man 32 Kev Tvpew rller
Reg . 3.•9 " Toohietoy " Vehicle G lit Sets
Reg.17 .99 Clairol's Cruv curl

- TOYS FOR GROW UP PLAYReg . 9.9t " M1m11" Voice Baby Buttons
8.91
Reg. 7.99 " Pouty" lat»v Stork lint
6.97
Reg . 13 .77 Mattei' s Sunshine Van
9.97
Ret . 8.99 lattery Operated Sewing
Muhlne
1.91
• 3.97
Sp~Cllll M\ISICII Jewelrr IOICIS
6.97
Reg . 7 .9t lS'h " fill Cuddy Animals
3.97
Reg . 4.19 Chilton 11 pc . Cookware Set
3.97
Reg. il .19 Ch ilton 41 · plece Tea Set
Reg . 10.99
Fisher· Price Music Box Record Player
1.,7
Reg. 1.99 Kenner " SnooCy" Movi e Viewer ' ·"
Reg. S.95 Playmore Chi dr e n's Story Book s 2.97
- PRE· SCHOOL TOYS2.17
Reg . 3.4, Adorableleanle Pets
Ne g. 3 .., Ortg , Bu ild· A Bull Go me, cootie 2.1 1
2.91
Reg. 3.99 Fisher-Price Storvbook Rad ios
3.97
Reg . 3.9f Prtll"'l" Deluxe Peg Chest
Reg . 9.99 ATF Pog Tobie, Cholk Boord
1.17
2.91
Re!l . ' ·" Fllhlr· Prlct thllltr PUll To y
Reg. 3.99 Orlt . Tlnkertoy Set
2. 97
Reg. ' ·" Playsttool Colored wood Blocks •. 97
- EXCITING GAMES &amp; TOYS 2.91
Ree . 3.tt Cadaco laird Games
3.97
Reg . •·" Milton Bradley Board Gam es
ReG . S.tt Dtluxt lowllng Set
Req . 5.9t Parker lras •. Probe
4.77

- WRAPS, TREES AND TRIMS Special! Garland Tr im•, 20' long
Special! Candy C1nu, box of 12
Kiddie Canes, box of 40
Spec1111 Chrl•tmu Gill wrap s
Req . 57c-2S Crystal Bow s, pkg . 25

'·"

H 1lwo

: MI. Faber aald the govern·
wu aalilfled with the
developnenll. "In any
lffalr I tiWtk tbat

"'"'==:·.
t•!
(Yffythong y«~ nlltd
tO mt\t do/trot of

~~~

II -

prtdGmlnllll
that eontllCt be
"lhe 18ld.
orlglnaUy de·
a bul to the airport

WithWolverine• Durables
it just seems like they'll
wear forever. The rugged
sole and heel bonded
right to the uppers makes
Durabies different. Oil
proof. A super-wear boot.
Comfortable. lightweight
?nd extremely water:
repellent Durables.
They're here in your
size.
Excellent

College Ba s ke tball Resu lts

We Hold These Truths ...

(drums).

!

· The gunmen, believed to be
Molucca111 born In
·IJ!ctllartd, ldlled at least two
they seiJed the
Tu!lday. The mediator
described onl)' as a
~Je81der In Holland's South
=Moluccan community,
Justice
Ministry
h~1ok·enrom1an Toos Faber
the. hijackers later
;~::;: a ho1tage with
~~
for a megaphone,

USl

an average return of. 12.1 per
cent realiZed by the 50 largest
mapufacturers and 12.1 per
cent by Moody's 125 Industrials," he added.
Cofer said during the last 25
years Bell operating companies have accounted for 98
per cent of Western's nongovernment sales. He said
sales to Ohio Bell provide a
fair cross-5eetion of the total
sales to all Bell companies.

'*" Att• 1&amp;

REG .

"'

12.2t

2.91

Reg . 19c6 Spools of Ribbon

Reg.79c Seah, Tags, Cards, mo re
Special! Wall Placques , Door Trim s
Reg. 43c Giant Mint Candy Sticks
Special! so Miniatur e Lite Set
Special! ll · Lite Tree Top Star

Reg . 2.8S Setof3 Ex te ns ion Cords

Special! Santa 's Book of Candy

57c
S7t
nc
33c
1.61

L77

1.77
77c

1S .97

SPECIAL

2.47
9.91
2.11
3.77
3.97

VH

9.91
3.97
2.47
3.97

2.91
11&lt;
7.97
-4 .•17
He
4.97
10 .91
12 .97

2.91

14.97
1.77
11t
S1c
1.&lt;1
43

.

'1.00 GIFTS
Re9 . 1.49 Corn Husk Do lh
Reg . 1.25 Cal endar Towels
Reg . 1.49 Dinne r Bell s
Reg. 1.1S 1-Year Diary
Spe cial! '22-ot. Bubbl e Bath
Spe~i11! Women's Bik inis
Spec ial! Smart Set J ewelry
Reg. 1.29 Ceramic Ta bl eware
Reg . 1.2S Dusting Powder
Spec ial! British Sterling
Reg . 1.25 Salt, P e~ p er Shaker s
Mennen Gltt Set or Men
Reg . 1.49 F lock ed An im a ls
0'1a l Paper Wei gh h
Reg. l.SO Boy s' Billfold S
Reg . 1.49 Wure ver Pen &amp; Penci l Set
Reg . 1.39 Anshel Bubble Bath
Reg . Handy Index ed Address Book
Reg. 1. 59 Ruth Barr y Panty Hose
Two P c. Cosmelic Bag Sets
Special! cast Iron Assortments. , ca .
Reg . 1.252 pc. Gift Se ts
MOnkey Pod serv ing Trays

1.00
1.00
1.00
1.00
1.00
1.00

1.00
1.00
1.00
1.00
!.CO
1.00
1.00
2 for 1.00
1.00
1.00
1.00
1.00
1.00
1.00
1.00
1.00

SPIROORAPII.

1.00

tllll-t..IOU

'

ttelo T_,.

l'fii1CIU dill ~·
Dot!, pu1n • button . 1
~(MI;IIIINll l

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~

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1111 li Nd lnc~H•
b&lt;u.h, cernb, (W&lt;!ef,
........ uptndi!IOII•

�8 - The Daily Sentinel , Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday , Dec . 3,1975

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

r'"*~,,,,,&lt;,:=:=:=:=:~.,,,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,,,,

,.,,,,,.,,,,,,,,,.,,,.,.,.,.,.,,,.,.,.,.,~

~ Helen Help
*~ . s. . . lh "··"··~ uou..J
l&lt;

u

I:
::iiij:
::::

The Readers Always Write
Dear Helen :
Uked your mini "'urvey on marriage. I agree with many of
your correspondents : an affair CAN help a marriage, either by
bringing lhe couple to their senses, or making them realize
they should split.
'Ibis doesn't mean I advise everyone with a maf!tal
problem to pop out and have an affair. Bul it certainly hurries
along a decision.
I was one of those foolish girls who didn't have the patience
wwait lor .lhe r[ghl guy. When you see all your friends pairing
off, you get a little desperate. My first marriage was a
disaster. Apsychotherapist finally made me face up to things
and she changed my whole life. (No, counselors don'l always
patch up 'rifts - she gave me the courage to leave.)
You probably know there 's no such thing as a LEGAL
separation in indiana, so my affair wasaclually extra-marital.
Bart too was separated at the time , but we were both drifting,
wondering if we should go back and try again .
Instead, our Jove made up our minds. Within six months
we had our. divorces and were married lnunediately.
This time it's Rlt;;HT .
Which brings me to another thought : In our crowd (and I
hear elsewhere), second marriages seem to be happier than
"firsts." Maybe it takes a mistake to make you choose wisely.
- THE SECOND TJME AROUND
Dear STA i
Often true.
But - never let it be said that my partial agreement with
your letter means I favor indiscriminate divorce and extramarital affairs as a "cure" for faltering marriages. The best
remedy here is : "Try harder.'' If this doesn 't work, "Try
counseling." And only after all else fails, '.'Try divorce..'' - H.

+++

Dear Helen:
This is for the woman who worried because her athletic
fiance shaved his legs. (You suggested he might be a member
of a competitive swimming team, and shaves to cut down
friction .)
My husband has shaved his chest and legs f&lt;X: years. He
singes hair fro111 his knuckles and arms. He gets a smooth,
even tan and is always clean looking - after 34 years of
marriage and five children, I can assure you he's all man!
My advice: stop worrying. A man has as much right to
remove unwanted hair as does a womll!l. - HAPPY STILL
Dear Helen:
I jokingly dared my husband to wear a pair of my panties.
Ever since then he clairns they are more comfortable than his
shorts, and wears them when he 's home from work.
He's afraj_d to wear them lo lhe office for fear of the fellows
finding out.
I really can't see anything disgraceful in wearing the
clothes you find comfortable. I often wear my husband 's socks
Md T-Mirts, not to speak of his pajama tops, shirts, and I
might borrow his shorts lfthey'd fit me. So why do people gasp
at the lhought of men in women's clothes? - CURIOUS BUT
CONTENT
\

Dear C But C:
Seems unfair, doesn't it? A woman can borrow her
husband's clothes and start a new style trend, but If a man
reciprocates, he's whispered about.
H you're content, C.B.C., then others shouldn't be curious,
- H.
,.
.• ~
·~·

·~

.

~$1.4

,~,=~!-,.~"!':::::::&gt;.':*=:=:=:=:=:=:·&gt;:=:=:·:=:,:,:-:,:·

.

Social

Calend·ar

&amp;R Shoppin Center·-Middlepo

WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT Firemen's
Auxiliary, 6:30 p.m. at the
fire station. Potluck covered
dish dinner, $2 gift exchange.
POMEROY Lodge 184, F.
and A.M., 7:30 p.m.,
Pomeroy Masonic Temple.
MIDDLEPORT Literary
Club, 2 p.m. at the home of
Mrs. Charles McDaniel. Mrs.
Sibley Slack to review the
bouk, "Daughters of the
1
Promised Land" by Page
Ernlth. Roll call, a woman
famous In her own rl~ht .
EARL STARKEY will
Radios, Tape Recorders,
conducl a pra yer meeting
Cookware, Nc;~tivity ~canes,
and Bible study al 7:30p.m.
Wednesday al lhe Freewill
Lamps, Boys Clothing, Boots,
Baplist Church, Rolland. The
public is invited.
Shoes, Fishing, Golf Clubs, Bags,
'
PRACTICE for inslallalion
of officers, Evangeline
Carts, Indoor and Outdoor
Chapler 112, OES, 7 p.m. at
Chr~stmas Lights, Folding Cots,
the Middleport Masonic
Temple. MEETING at
Whit~ Cast Iron Furniture,
·Salisbury
Elementary
School, 6:30 p.m. for all
Many Odds &amp; Ends.
Jlersons inlerested In
Everything Priced To Sell.
assisling in the Meigs Local
. I
inlr am ur al
basketball
I
program.
All Sales Final, No Returns, No Lay-Aways, No ExSOCIAL SECURITY
changes, No Refunds. SAVE NOW.
represen talive will begin
dulles in a new localion, 9:30
a.m. lo3:30p.m.attheSenior
STORE HOURS: Friday 4 PM to 8 PM- Saturday t4 PM
Citizens Center in Pomeroy.
1
to9PM11AM1o5PM. ·
For informalion or to file a
claim, call Social Securify,
station lo station, collect, 592·
4440. Middl eport council r---------..-----------~--------..;..------..;;,---------chambers no longer location
·
I
for visil by representative.
DOMINO
·
THURSDAY
REGULAR MEETING of
Meigs County ASC ComOR
mittee scheduled for today at
&amp;40Z
9 a.m. instead of Wednesday,
NO D£POSJT IIOlTW
Dec. 3, due to work load at
office. Public invited.
ARMOUR STAR
AR~~OI.IR STAR
CATHOLIC WOMEN'S
Chur Christmas party, 8 p.m.
BONELESS
at Sacred Heart Church
auditorium with Dorothy
Rife, Yvonne Scally, Kathy
Chadwell, Jane Beegle and
Sharon Michael as hostesses;
$2 gift exchange.
MEIGS COUNTY Women's
Fellowship of the Churches of
Christ, 78 :30 p.m. at the Zion
Church of Christ. Election of
officers to be held.
HOLIDAY Bazaar at Heath ·
United MelhOdlst Church, 9
a.m. to 14 pm. in the church
basemeht. Luncheon to be
served beginning at 11 a.m.
EV ANGEI.:!NE Chapter
172, O.E.S. 7:30 p.m. at the
Middleport Masonic Temple.
Installation of officers to be
held.
JOAN OF ARC
GALLIA COUNTY Salon
612 of Eight and Forty, annual Christmas party at the
home of Miss Erma Smith;
6:30p.m. dinner followed by
Christmas party and gilt
exchange.
WOMEN'S Association,
. FROllh
Middleport First United
I
Presbyterian Church, 1:30
p.m. at the church. Mrs.
Waller Waddell to give
devoti ons . Program on
making Chrismons or
i
Christian symbols. Group I
I
members to be hostesses,
MEIGS Band Boosters
a':G
taking order for fruit baskets
w be delivered week before
Christmas, Baskets are $51or
haH.peck, fl a pede. Orders
must be placed by Dec. 12.
Contact any band member or
call 992-7600, 742-:me5, 9922281, 992-3938.
FlUDAY
· u~s
COU NTRY
AND
WESTERN SHOW featuring
Tom T. Hall and The Storytellers with Gary Sergeants,
7:30p.m. in gym at Wahama
High School. Event is
sponsored by Wahama Band
Boosters. Tickets may be
purchased in advance from
Sll. IIMl
local merchants in Bend area
or at bandroom at high school
GRAPEFRUIT
during school hours.

::t

PORK ROAST

(

•

u

ORA~GES

69C

'•'•

~;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::'::::::'::::;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;·

palachia is to share fully i~
the progress of America,
Jones said.

will be a meeting this evening 1 will be made on whether
be combined with a senior at Pomeroy VIllage Hall, the Pomeroy will make apcitizens' building if Pomeroy second one to receive public plication for a community
'
Village applies for and suggestions, when a decision center.
received a federal granl.
This was revealed Tuesday
~ !~
when newly..,lected Pomeroy
Mayor Clarence Andrews,
Eleanor Thomas, executive
director of the Council on
In these days of so many car bumper stickers,
Aging, and Henry Wells, a
county commissioner, mel I believe the world should have one of Its very
with a representative of t~~ .Ciwn, At ,its present stage, I think the mo~t ap·
llou~lng
and
Urban propriate one is :
Development (HUD) and the
ALMOST HEAVEN: BUT TOO NEAR HJ!:LL
attorney lor HUD, in
'
Columbus.
Seth
F.
Nicholson,
Rutland
,
Ohio,
R.D;
I.
The grant of $160,000 to
build a senior c!Uzen center
has been approved. There

!i

a suggestion

•

at y

e

I.

Pomeroy·¥iddlepol1, Ohio
Thursday .,December 4, 1975

U you didn 't get yoUr deer th~ week, Gary Reed of the Reedsville area may have a

suggestion. Call·it luck !I you like, but when a young man kills three deer in a month there
has to be at least a little skill involved.
While hunting in the Forked Run area a mounth ago (I told you in my column it was a
good.area) Gary bagged a fine six-pointer with his bow and arrow. On Nov. 22 (two days
belo~e the West Virginia rifle season) he shot another six-pointer, l$o With his bow. Then he
got a chance wgo b&amp;ck a week later, only this time with his gun, and downed a fine eight
poinl whitetail.
.
, Abo've, Gary Is shown with one of his bow kills. Not wo.many people even get a chance at
three bucks, let alone actually kill tbem. Perhaps Gary's deer hunting is over for 1975, and
why·shouldn't it' He's earned the right to sit by the fire and relax .
Some guys have aU the luck. - Greg Bailey.

en tine

Fifteen Cents

Vol. 27, No. 164

.,
1

,,

•

•

I

Ina trip en s, wit
I

.

,

leul4.

ume,"

Wllh f.a,d th1l mornlnc. '"lbat II, we don't think
'!fe .r.·etmpllled to l.uue a communique."
~ .11 Stile Henry A. Klaslnger backed up their
1!'1'"1!'"111111, !18)'1ng Ford 'a long ~ with Mao Tselwlg
f~'talb

''mud! more 'detaUed and mud! warmer' ~ than the one
·l'resldent Richard M. Nixon had In 1972.
1
.
'WM

......

'

\

' .PEKING (UP!) - President Ford and his hosts set aside
·l!llfi!IOlved policy disputes today and prMounced U.S.Chinese
telationa10und, healthy and, in acting Premier Teng HsiaoPini'a J)hrue, ''full of vitality,"
·
~ 1n farewell champagne touts and out In public, Ford and
Teng doaed ranb on the Presldent'slast full day in China and
ealled biB visit a diplomatic IUCCHI that llnlnlthens ties and
lltl '~ble "new style" ol dilcreel secrecy,
. "We ~··flir.=Pt ;. _,.,..ftlct'1111t'bolll slclee.,...
bi;fll)'li. '
Tenc ll8ld at tl!e start 1/. hlllast

He said relations clearly have !mpr:ovecl, regardlei!S of
skepticism prompted by the lack of reportable progress on
concrete l.uueil.
Diplomats said the ·faUure to &amp;g~:ee upon a conununique
shows the two aides made no real advances in resolving
disagreements over U.S ..SOviet detente or Amerlcll' Taiwan
policy.
.
.
But Ford and Telll! declared that acti001 ~k louder than
_..: ftty•ld ·no ·olflCiil tiny .ru;i-lio ".upeifici8I"...
commpnlque-w• needed to prove the value ol~~:s vjait.
Hollt!nrl a slaA ol California champa~ at a fareWell ·
banquet hoeted by Ford In 'lbe Great HaU of the People, Tenlj
said effort's like Fords "belp to increase mutual un·
deratanding .. :"
He 118ld the United States and China have all lhe com·
munlque they need in the 1972 Shanghai document that

established guidelines lor relatiori:l at the end of Nil:o~'s
hist~i~ visit l)tat broke through 125 years of Cold War
hostilities:
I
,
"'lbe ShanRiiai Conununique ... ljemains lull of vitality,"
Teng sal~. - I
1
Teng made 'Jl mention whatever r# the detente issue that Sll
angers the Chlheae, and U.S. diplo~ts noted with delight it
was the first lime in one year that·any Chinese official had
-~haptc~lasttheSovie~adlnnert~. . , ·
·t"ordmadecleartheildmlrJtlonwasmutualand
,
-a word th~United Stales and China
have
repeated to descr be their meetings without
about the sub , nee of discussions.
talks which I have held with Chairman
Teng haVe been friendly, caooid,
concrete," Ford ~d.

'
. .,;;:;~:;;;::;;;;;;:~:~::~:·:·:!:~:::·:~:::::~:::~:::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::::::::~::::::::

· a, ua11ett rr.&amp;ateraatiaul

.

·
,
..~, OOLUMBtiS- 'niE PUBUC UTll.ITIES COMMISSION
·&lt;:1 Ohio hal approwd a requeet by Ohio EdiiOn Co. to increase
. tlectrie ralel for .lndllltrlal Cll8torners and residential and
COIIIIIH!rclal customer• In rural areas. 'lbe approval an•
.JIQunced Wednelday co111011dated three rate increase apjllcatkllll fUed by the uUllty In 1973.
' L8llt February, PUOO granted Ohio Edlaon an interim
:~sency Increase on these appUcaUons which provided for
.pu million more revenue ann1111ly. The final order added
iabout $30.4 mi1U&lt;11 to the interim Increase. PUCO, In allowinc
. the full amount Ohio Edison requested, said Ill Ita!I deler·
mined that the Utper cent rate of return 10ught by the utility
.was not .unreaaonable.
• WASHINGTON- THE HOUSE HAS TAKEN the finlt step
toward pas~~ge of a bW to revile taxe1 and mend 1975's
'nceul&lt;ll - fighting tax cuts through 19'16, effectively daring
Preaident Ford to veto the bill.
:, A poii-CIIiatmu COilllreesioJIIlllelsionlnay be nece81111ry
if theA II a veto. In the absence ol10me action, taxea for the
• :Inure than 80 mJlUon Individual Aineriean taljl8yers would
iJ'1Ie by abOut $13 billion next year. However, the Senate may
.Jail tilly allimple threHiioath m.enslon of tax cuts, a com.I"JIIIIe that poasibly could allow Ford a face-l!llvlnB way to
lign the 11111.
·
~

;:

WABHINGTON - A NATIONWIDE RAILROAD strike
'11'11 JIOIIponed early today and negotiators for the raUroad.l
ind 70,000 llhopcrafl employes edged toward a contract. Union
· . negotlalln agreed to pat off a IICheduled 8 a.m. EST strike
· 'after indicating they would accept minagement propoillls on
t'll'o &lt;:1 tile five critical technical work rule llluea that brought
themtothevqeolastiike. Wagesw.-.notan iasue.
. , ' "Two tlownllld lllree to go," aald ..
Jake Jacobaon, an of·
. · 8claloflbeBrothtlrboodofCIIrmen,aUiie conclusion of a face·
Wace ~;~~eellil1 with the railroad ma!ll£ement negotiators.
·~we are .,..,., with the progrees up to thla minute," said
Jamea YCIIt, h111d of the AFL-CIO railway employe department ttpnn11tlng four shop craft unlone.

POTATOES
J

toasts
Ford tossed the Chinese a small diplomatic bouquet by
reaffirming U.S. opposition to any "others" who might try to
establish milltary domination over "any part of the world"meaning the Soviets, in Asia.
But he also made clear, gently, that the United Stalell willl!ll
its own way and pursue agreements on peaceful relations with
the Soviets despite personal statements &lt;:1 disapproval from
Mao and Teng.
Ford, wbo departs ~rlday morning for IndooR~ Ulan to
the Phillpplpes, closed tDut hill=visit hosting ~
banquet for 700 guests in the Great HaU of the People.
Betty Ford d&lt;mled a formal, royal blue Chinese pajama suit
and Susan·Ford a full-length blue and white evening gown for
the banquet, a splashy thank-you affair In which Ford loallted
the health of Mao and the hospitalized Premier Chou E!Haithe only major Chinese leader he did not see,

a

Simon prefers
just basic tax

ews.
.
..
in
Brief~\
'

U. S. NO. 1 MAINE

I

VETERANS PARTY - Today at the Athens Mental
Health Center a Olrlstmas party Is being beld for the six
Meiga veterans there. Some of the things provided for the
veterana by the American Legion Auxiliary Juniors are

displayed above by three active members, left to right,
!leggy Girolami, vice president:•Pam Powers, District 8
president, and Paula Kloes, local unit president, who
joined Mrs. Veda Davis, Mrs. Florence Richards and
Cheryl Lehew for lhe party at Athe..,.
I

,,,,:z~;?~~~~::~~;~;;,,, V~terans/ given a, party

WASHINGTON (UP)) Treasury Secretary William
E. Simon says government
should consider going back to
basics, drafting a progressive
In on everybody and
Lliminating aU incentives and
e~emptions .
Simon said he had a plan
that would bring in an additional $50 billion annually.
''U we truly want tax
reform, I say that here's a
place to start," Simon wld an
annual conference of the Tax
Foundation in New York City
Wednesday night.
Simon said the government
should begin to lhink about ,
"wiping the slate clean of
personal tax preferences,
special deductions and
credits, exclusions from
income, and the like ."
Instead , he said there
should be a "single,

2

'

DAYS TO
CHRISTMAS

·-·

I~

'

progressive tax on aU in·
di viduals."
"I am. increasingly at·
tracted to the Idea because &lt;:1
its simple elegance and Ita
basic equity toward all
taxpayers," Slrnon said.
Under the plan, Simon said
individuals on the low end of
the tax scale would be taxed
10 to 12 per cent, those on the
high end 35 to ~ per cent.
Familles with poverty level
incomes would stlll be
exempt from aay tax.
Simon said those earning
over .$100,000 would be bar·
dest hit by the proposal, but
that familles making between
$10,000 to $20,000 would
benefit substantially,
With the sharply higher
revenues from taxes on Individuals, part of the large
federal deficit could be
retired, he said.

Prices standing

By LEONARD CURRY
WASHINGTON (UPI)
The Wholesale Price Index
baskets of food ~urtlig the
A holiday parly .for lhe
h
holiday aeaaoa ...., wlll be
eac box contained a pair of , Cigarettes for the veterans for November remained at
dlacontluuecl thia year by
Meigs County veterans at lhe lealher gloves, ~ose , handJ were provided by American lhe same level as October
the Middleport Volunteer
Athens Mental Health Center ~erchlef, tie, cigaretles, Legion; Department of Ohio , because of a drop in food
BANOKOK, THAILAND-THE PAT!iET LAO appointed Fire Dept. 'lbe department
is being held today by the pencil and pad, a deck of trdm the "Yanks Who Gave " prices, lhe Labor DeparttWo rl ill ""oflklala 811 preeid..t and prime minister &lt;:1 Laos diatrlbuted from 80 to IIJO juniors of the American playing cards, soap and fw)d. The party included ment said today.
The zero change in
today, lbe flnllllnk iD the Ccmmuniat takeover ollndochlna.
baskets each year. No
Legion Auxiliary of Drew washcloth candle , a new ga1nes with prizes ol candy
wholesale
prices was the best
1n a broldalt lllO!itcnd h.-., lbe Pathet Lao Aid In Vien- reason was given.
Webster Post 39, Pomeroy. Christmas card and stamp. bars , gum, mints , fruit ,
tiane ibat Prince So-wvona, the nominal Pathet Lao :;::::::::::::::::;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: ne!::y ~r~·t a~~~~n~om~~i . .- - ·
tobacco and potalo chips inflation news in six monlhs.
Wholesale prices declined 0.1
ddlf, 1JIIUid ""' 11 prelident of the new Peoples'
being awarded.
'per
cent in June, but surged
Dllllocratle Repablle rl Laoe.
.
Mrs. Harry Davis, completed
' Refreshments were ice
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
preparations
for
the
party
up
steadily
until peaking at
XWione Pbomvthan, a Pathet Lao politburo member and Saturday through
cream snowmen, cake, mint
lllday
lor
the
lwo
women
,
1.8
per
cent
In October.
Mlnllt. lllrdllner .elote to North Vletnamelle leaders, was Monday, c~ance of showers
cups, favors , Kool Aid ,
veterans
there,
boxes
conPrices received by farmers
• iiamfldJiime!'Dinilter. Thedouble~~Wiltha~ll in Saturday, c~anglng to
1
or~nges served on Santa
taining silk hose , ankle socks, 1
had
dropped for three
....... of lftrobl .formally ctmentln8 the Communllt en- •n•w flurrlel Suaday and
p,tes and na'pkins.
straight months. But
head scarf, Christmas,
• · tenel!n*t bt ta01, the mountalnoul, landlocked nation Monday. Hlchs Saturday
wholesale prices continued to
handkerchief, lingerie
)lllown • ~ "~ ol one mllllon elephanll."
will be Ia the lOa, dropping
rise. In November, they
cosmetics.• jewelry, a comb1
. , MRS. MCDANIEL ILL
to the ilta Sunday and
dropped
1.2 per cent.
instant
coffee,
penoll
allQ
hilSBURGH :... SENATE REPUBUCAN leader · HUgh Moaday. Lowa will he In
Mrs. Everett McDaniel Is
The Sureau of Labor
pad, soap and washclot~
in cri'tlcal condition at lhe
lcGtt plam to IDIIOIIII:e tonJ&amp;bt he will ~ - I'Hlect!on, tbe 401 Saturday mor:nlng,
candle replica, and a new
Holzer Medical Center in Statistics said that unusually
enc1111a a M-yur meer In pongreu and aa a leader rl the · coolhq to lite ZOs Suaday
Christmas card and StaiiJP
Gallipolis where she is a large declines in prices for
OOP't llberal-model'llte wing.
aad Moaday.
were
packed
.
·
surgical
patient. Her room vegetables, oil seeds and hogs
11catt..,.. trpectel\ 1.1\ tile .'!Ia age, 7$, aa the reum for not
Jed lhe drop. Grain prices,
::::::::::::t.:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::&gt;::,:;:::::::·
For
the
four
male
patients,
(Continued on page B)
number Is 23D.

1

•

, Reedsville hunter has three successes

~

2~79

MON. lHRU
FRIDAY

f

•jo.

SYRUP

4

.

f... . A·community center could

.

wottb

SUNDAY

Ohio humanities scholars and
other experts will · address
lopics I hal include the human
encounter, women, American
foreign policy, religion and
the sc hools, labor history ,
land use planning, Ap·
palachlan culture and the
American issues forun1.
Dr . I.ungev in also announccd the appointment of
Dr. Larry M. Maupin as the
new as.socialc dlreclor of the
Ohio Program in tbe
ljumanlties . Dr. Maupin,
formerly an assislanl
professor of En glish at
Mississippi Slate Univer·sity
will assume his new position
i~ Deccrnbel'.
Since 1972 lhe Ohio
Program in lhe Humanities
lias granteo almost $855,000

Wedllelday, the Nle'l carrent formula for llettlug uiWty :;::
• the ''liDcle, molli UDfalr provltioa" Ill the atat.e

Eeklulrt'telllfled before a Bo- aubcommlttee lu
to rtpel) the RepnMklctloa C01t New ;:;:
!!! (RCN) formula IUid ludlutu aew ertpl colllormull. !,!~
~!;
1be RCN formula aDOWI aUllllel to \'lllae their j;!;
,~: l!ull.tllap aad equlpmeat at wbat It woald eoll to replace :;:;
?-' tbem at today'1 .prket1' An•ll'lglul coli f8l'11111la wollld :;;:
·~ require them to set tbe
ol their -~~ at the lime !:!:
!;; they were fli11 put IDto pebllc aen1ee. · ·
::::
!!~
''l'hullllties of Ohio have lleea reaplul excetalve i!!
:;:; pnflll from Olllo l8llpeyen fbr a lOIII time," 1181d ;:;:
~!: Eckbart. '"nlll biD II dealllled to redl'eiiiiOIDe of thole ::;i
t1 illequltie1.
!!!!
~i
"Ohio ralepayen eaDDOI .tfonl aad ma•l Dol be ::;:
~!i iubjectedtolhlluafltrlawuylqer,"Eekllartlllld.
· ::::
if:
Ec:ldulrtaddeduerlglllalcoll f-.II"coald result :;::
:!;~ Ia 10me rate deereues for 10me Oblo aliWIH IUid it Wlil ::::
:;:; 111011 eerlllaly dlmJ•Iab the IDIOIIDiaad probebly the :!:!
i~ lrequeacy of future rate lacreMH for m01t Oblo uUlltlel." ::::

OPEN

The Ohio Committee for
Public Programs In the
Humanities met in Coluinbus
on Nov. 18 and 19 and granted
$8!,9tll to 15 proposers in t2
Ohio communities to assist
those organizatio ns In
developing prog rams which
involve
adull,
public
audiences In discussions of
public policy iss ues tha t
relate l.o its 1975-76 theme
" Human Valu es in a
Changing Society." ·
Dr. Thomas H. Langevin,
Chairman of the Ohio
Committee, staled that since
the commillee requires
proposers to provide at least
equal cost-sharing services
and facilities, the total value
Of lhe projects funded will be
over $200,000. Distinguished

~!~!

~; 1upport of a bill

GOLDEN GRIDDLE

FRIES

to 136 projects In over 47 Ohio
cities and towns. Project
formats have included
conferences, multi-media
presentations, seminars,
lown meetings, radio and
television prqgrams, lectures
and discussions. The Ohio
program is governed by a
commillee of l7 individuals
who are scholars in lhe
humanities,
institutional
admlnistral ors, and public
cilizens.
The Ohio committee will
meet again In March to
consider proposals received
prior lo its Jan. 16, 1976 deadline. Persons wishing more
informal ion should contact H.
Richard Wood, executive
direlor, The Ohio Program in
the Hwnanities, 880 College
Ave., Columbus, Ohio 43209;
6H 2:1G.Q379.

in Ohio cited as 'unfair'

said outmlgration from Ap.
palachla had been reversed
m the past five years of the
pr~gram .
.
. Employme~t 1s on the
nse, educat10n, health,
recreation and other socllll
s~rv!ces have improved
~=~a~l~ :!te J"~c!

energy, health, education,
House Public. Works Chair·
:;~ hOusing, pollution control and man Robert E. Jones, 0-Ala.,

·

i!

Pork Sall$age

FRENCH

·Funds to help
the humanities

i

· • '

~l~;· rate
rate~MltiDI code.

COUNTRY~

SAT.
g.g

!~

X:

PORK STEAK

NGERINES

'IJIREE-PIECE outfits make fashion news this
seaSon. This one is worked In pretty shades of pink and
raisin in a chemisy jacket over wide-pants with little scarf
shirt. Designed by Aileen in washable polyester.

UtiJfty,rate setting code

the legislation.
·
Boll\ .hoiiMs of C(llgress
m~ vote (II the agreement
before It goea to the Wl)lte
House.
Under the •greement an·
nounced Wednes(\ay , S~O
m1llion was earmarked for

li ..~t~;!:t~~~:~~~:o~:rd lli Public m~eting ·is toniuht
'"'e '

COLA

2: 39

~~

·~:

ROYAL CROWN

BROWN SUGAR

the document alio ex~d.l
for 15 months the Uvea ·of
seven other
regional
development cornm18Bions
throughout !lie country.
'lbe package would funnel
SU biWm in the 13 Appalacllia states covered by

timber development.
The region, created by
Congress in 196ii, includes all
of West Virginia, and parts of
.1fevelopment programe to
Kentucky, Virginia, Ohio ,
·~cilia·, along· with hl&amp;h·
Pennsylvania, New York,
·:.,ay construction thrn·Jgh
Maryland, Norlh Carolina,
11181. ·. ' . •
' ,
South Carolina, Tennessee,
.p=:=:i&gt;.=:::~m:::::~:~:::=:=:=:=:::::::::::::::;:::::::::::~:::~:::::~:;;;::::::::::::::::::;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;'ti =~~~~:::ns"::,~ ~:~~wi. Alabama and

UP

lOX SUGAR

WASHINGTON (UPI) -

:JIOUie&amp;na!f! conferees have
'""ounced agreement 1~ a
.four-year•tenalon of federal

Toys-Decorations ·

2 LB.)PKG,
'

billio;n for Appalachia

reflecting a record harvest,
. also continued to decrellll!.
There also was good news
in the more Important Index
that measures Industrial
commodities, Including
metals, petroleum and raw
materials for Industry,
The Industrial coomiodlt!es
Index increased 0.6 per cent,
exactly one half the rate in
October.
BLS said "sharp in·
creases" in prices lor cars,
steel, lumber and wood whldl
drove up the October ~tlon
rate were virtually unchanged in November.
Primary. upward presaure
on Industrial prlct!o' · came
from textiles, machinery and
equipment.
There were also higher
prices for relined petroleum
product~ aod electric power,
rContinued on page 8)

�-

....
,'"..
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l !IJ

•

12- The Daily Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Dec. 2, 1975

'Training prospects studied
Plans for took 1ng in ln were rnctcle lo move equippruvid ing training for eig ht

residents who rcportrdly arc
nnl I'Cl'ch·ing training a t the
pr esent fi zn c were made
Mond"Y night by lhc Meigs
C'ouniJ• Board of Helll rda li on
oil
the cuur th ousr
in
Pomeroy .
II was rl'porh.•d thn I the

eig ht retarded pt•rsuns are
home -bound pcrsu ns who
cannot go to tt school. An

effort w1ll be made to sec if
home

train ing

can

be

SCCU I'l'd .

Judge Manning Webster,
chairman, r eport ed on an

admi nistrators ' meeting he
attended recently at Ohio
Univcrsi ly in Alhcns . Plans

eounty highway department.
men! of the rorm er comThe group discussed ap·munity schoo l fro m the plying for state funds to help
Chamhers properly where it with construction of the new
hns been :; lon~ d lo the former sc hool and bills were apehildren's hoi11e building un proved fur payment . AtMulberry Heights . Richard tending were Judge Webster,
Chambers , board member, Chambers , Mrs. Wilma
will IIITnnge the move; a Parker and Rick Crow.
truck will he provided b)· the

EXTENDED OUTI.OOK
Fajr Thurs day and
Friday and a chance of
showers Saturday. Highs
mostly will be In the 40s ·
Thursday, warming to the
upper 40s to mid 50s by
Saturday. Lows will be In
the 20s through tile forecast
period.

Police elect lodge officers

Local news
in ·hrie'fs

DR. LAMB

Diabetic needs
to lose weight

Jones , Da nny Riggs , Brenda
W illiam s, Troy Wil lis.

Gifts

· t:W'l'ile.,..,lribwl,~y,O.,Wednndlly,Dec. ,3,1t76

~..

~~~~~~

Gifts for the 16 Meigs ~
County women and the 13 ;
county men confined to the
Athens State Hospital are ;
being accepted al the Davis.! ·
Insurance 1Agency on the !
corner of Court and Second •
Sis. in Pomeroy.
·•
The iterns are to be left ~
unwrapped but conlributors ,
may supply the paper and·::
ribbon if they wish. Suitable.·
items include candy, gum, ·:
stationery, gowns, pajamaS', ;
slippers, billfolds, perfume, :
cologne, after shave, purses ··
and combs. The deadline for ·:
leaving items in"preparation
for the Christmas observance
is Dec. 12.

.

NOW YOU KNOW
.,
The principal non.parasite
disease suffered by killer.
whales is abscessed jaws,
caused by the wearing away
of teeth due to chewing other
sea crea lures.

BLUE TAG

News .. in Briefs
(Continued from page I)
unreasonable risk of injury and rules will be drawn up to mak~
them safer.
It also announced Monday thai three major distributors
marketing lights this year - mostly the Imported, miniature
variety..:. are voluntarily making corrections on an unknown
number of lights to eliminate potential shock and lire hazards.
MEXICO CITY- WARNING: SMOKING marijuana is,
dangerous to the health," !sa label that may be required on all
packs if marijuana is ever legallzed. Dr. Milos Novotny,
associate profeB!Or of chemistry at Indiana University, says
marijuana smoke contains higher concentrations of 'cancer- .
causing substances than tobacco smoke.
In a paper delivered today at lhe First Chemical Congress~
of the North American Continent, Novollly said the more'
potent the mar!juan~, the more dangerous II is. Novotny said,
benzopyrene, a well'known cancer causing agent, is 70 percen(
more )l'evalent in "!Brijuana smoke than in tobacco smoke;

PRICES

EFFECT THESE DATES

y:

•

By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.

Wouldn 't it be
nice to think of
Christmas for a
change, instead
of the money
problems that go
I

WI"th J"t'',

Plan For
Christmas '76 Now!
It's Time To Join
Christmas Club 1976
Now I
\ ll ill
'&gt;I r~vrc 1

1\1\NK

"THE
FRIEN/Jl,Y
RANK"

CITIZENS NATIONAL ·BANK

your doctor, and be sure he
DEAH DR. LAMB - I am agrees that you can be on it.
borderline diabetic, 52 years
I would like to add a word of
old, 5 feet 4 inches tall, and caution, Diabetics should
weigh about 134 pounds. The never go on a diet without
doctor wants me to get down their doctor's permission .
lo 130. The latest glucose That Is especially true if the
reading, without medication, diabetic is laking insulin or
on a restricted diet in the medicine to ·lower the blood
·hospi~l was 143. Now I am on glucose . · The
insulin
a 2000 calorie diet and find requirements are balanced
that I am so stuffed. I got against the amount of food
permission to cut down but to you eat. If you cut down on
keep the diet balanced. With your food you usually need to
an underactive thyroid · cut down on your insulin.
wouldn'l this be one reason 1 Aborderiinediabeticnoton
find losing weight so hard? f medicine does not have this
take I mg of Synlhyroid daily. problem.
DEAR READER - Your
A similar situation exists
doctor is very wise in helping regarding exercise, but is
you to lose weight. Many mild more . often
neglected.
diabetics can be con trolled by Exercise bw-ns up calories
diet alone, and that usually and lowers blood sugar .
means eliminating any ex- Unusual exercise may
cess obesity and keeping the decrease
the
insulin
fat off thereafter.
requirements or increase the
Unfortunately, 2000 foodrequirementstoavoidan
calories a day is too much for insulin reaction . A diabetic
many women. Youcanhavea needs to live a fairly
balanced diet and gel down to regulated life if he is to use a
1200 calories a day, If you regular, constant amount of
need to, in order to lose medicine for his blood sugar.
weight. Send. in 50 cents for
A regular
exercise
The Health Letter number 4- program will help you with
7, Weight Losing Diet. Just your diet program . The whole
send your request to me in idea is to have a daily
care of this newspaper, P. 0. negative balance of calories,
Box 1561, Rlldio aty Station, in other words to spend more ,
New York, NY 10019. Include than you take in - deficit
a long, stamped envelope for spending, if you will. There
mailing. Then ~ke the diet to are two sides to the coin on
- doing that. One Is to limit
your calorie intake, and the
other Is to increase your
calorie use, and exercise
helps with the latter.
(Continued from page 1) ' A low thyroid fWJetion will
decrease the amount of
were Mayor calories that your body will
Smith, Ralph Werry, Harry use at rest. This will make
Davis, William Snouffer, losing weight more difficult.
Globokar, Mrs. Walton , For other readers I hasten to
Phyllis Hennessy, treasurer ; add that many people who
Police Chief Jed Webater, are overweight have normal
newly
elected
Mayor thyroids and that is usually
Clare nce Andrews, and not the problem.
Harold Brown, newly elected
When you take thyroid
councilman.
medicine it will supplement
the amount of thyroid hormone formed by yow- own
gland . If you are taking
enough lhen you should really
have normal thyroid function. Incidentally, excess
thyroid hormone can lead to
elevated blood sugar levels,
so can a variety of medicines,
including diw-etics used to
eliminate fluid before
menstrual periods and in
treatmen t of high blood
pressure or for any fluid
retention problems.

Harrisonville
honors listed

Veteran• Mcmurlal Hospital
and Mrs. Larry Leport,
/IDMITTED
Vicki Henderson; Dec. 2, a son to
HARRI SO NVILLE _. Th e
Branham, Pomeroy; Melvina Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Ams- Harr iso nville Elementary
Rarnhart, Middlep or t ; bary, Gallipolis; a daughter Sc hool honor roll for lh e
se cond six weeks gra~ing
Michael Woolard , Pomeroy ; · lu Mr. and Mrs. Mark Mayes, p eriod is announced . N~Jmed
ro !he roll with those making
Lorelta Holsinger, Racine;
Point Pleasant, and a all
A in capital letters were :
David Davis, Pomeroy; daughter to Mr. and Mrs.
First gre de: J EFF AR .
NOLO , SU SA N ARNOLD,
Ruland Morris , Rutland ; Sieve Hulter,- Long Bottom. EVA
BARRETT , MARTY
George Christy, Middleport.
CL IN E , Lois ·Eblin , Terry
Gilliam, Bobby Hall. CHR I S
DISCHARGED - Emma
HANING . Gary Haning ,
Holzer Medical Center
Hayman .
Jason. Morman. Jason Riggs,
I Discharges, Dec.1J
Tommy Stov er ,. Garv T ill is,
Patrick Akers, Donald Clara Whittington, JOOY ·
LL S. Jay Pe&amp;v le y .
PLEASANT VALLEY
Ange l, Kimberly Brown, WE
Seco nd
grade :
K end a
DISCHARGED - Roy I,essie Clary, Tera Clegg, Donohue , Clyde (B udd'( )
, MELI SSA HOWARD .
Ellis, Mrs. Robert Agate, Charles· Hern, Deborah Gaus
Br idget Largent , Lisa Riggs,
Sheldon Hill, James Baisden, Holter, William Jacobs, Mrs; Riche lte White.
Third
grl!ide :
De bra
Minnie Burdette, Mrs. Harold David Johnson and son, Betty BOring
, Mike Cl ine , Katrina
Whittington, all of Point McGinness, Richard Mills, Donohue , Lo rena Donohue ,
tin Hebn er. Cathy Jones .
Pleasant ; Sharon Durst, Laura Montgo mery, Mrs. Kris
Betty Ann Loftis, linda
Henderson ; Roy Flint, Charles Moody and daughter, Rig g s, R i t,a . Willia mson ,
Peave ly .
Gallipolis Ferry; Charles Ruth Patrick, Ernest Riley, Vicky
Fourth
grade :
Sherry
Carr, Tuppers Plains; Elizabeth Ryan , Pearl Ar nold , Monte Cha pman .
Fi lfh grade : Robin BarrelL
Sabrina Carpenter, Vintqn; Searles, Ada Slone, Maude Brent
Finlaw, Brad Largen1,
Mrs. Curtis Bowling, Leon; Waller and Henry Willis.
Darlene
Nelson,
JU lie
Spencer . Renee WiU is.
James Toles, Columbus;
I Birth, Dec.l)
Sixth
grade :
MARK
Mrs. Claude Staats , Marietla.
Mr . and Mrs . Donald CLINE, VICKY DEBORD,
'
PATRICIA
GROUNDS.
Bandy, son, Bidwell.
Births,. Nov . 30, a son to Jl,fr.
ANGE L A H ARMON, Duane

DAMAGE MINOR
The Meigs County Sheriff's
,
Dept, investigated an ac·
ciden1Mondayat5:15p.m.in
.
,
-Salisbury
Township at the
Officers were elected by
Shaw,
GaUJa
Counly
Deputy,
intersection
of county road 26
th e Fraternal Order of
Pol ice, Gallia-Meigs Lodge vtre president ; Ray Manley, and SR 7 at the Vista Service
No. 95 mee ting recently in Meigs County Deputy, Station . Ronnie Staats,
secretary
treasurer; Pomeroy, pulled Into the
Middleporl .
Thomas
Werry.
Pomeroy slation and struck the left
F:leclcd were Robert
police
dept.
chaplain;
Randy quarter panel of a vehicle
Varian, Syracuse police
~arpenler,
Me1gs
County
parked and owned by William
chief, preside nt ; Robert
deputy , c~nductor ; Ralph w. Russell, Pomeroy. There
Waugh, Rio Grande Mar- was minor damage. No
shall , mner guard; Herbert cilalion was issued.
Gilkey , retired chief of
Middleport, one year term
lruslee; Robert Hartenbach,
s lituti on and br oke laws Meigs County Sheriff, two N at ion a I Football League
Standings
al)empling to entrap innocent year lerm trustee, and J. J.
By United Press International
citizens and, in fact, world Cremeans, chief of MidAmerican Conference
East
leaders ." He referred, among diepor.t, three year term
W. t . T. Pet. PF. PA Kansl!ls Ci ty
trustee
.II
was
also
decided
to
other lhings, lo allegations
Miami 8 J 0 .7'11 305 178
5 6 0 .455 218 245
Baltmr 7 -1 0 .636 330 141 Denv er 5 6 0 ' 455 206 166
I
Hoover had civilrlghts leader have a Christmas party for
Bu
ffalo
7
..t
0
.636
352
175
San D ig 0 II 0 .000 120 262
Marlin Luther King Jr . all members.
New England
National conference
J 8 0 .273 195 260
watched and hoped to
East
N. Y. Jts 2 9 0 .182 191 350
W. L. T . Pet. PF ~A
discredit him.
Central
Th e Pomeroy Volunteer
Dallas 8 J 0 . 717 1ll 206
W. L· T. Pet. PF . PA St. Louis 9 J 0 . 727 267 226 Fire Dept. wi ll hold a fish fry
"I really do not think
Pillsbur gh
DIVORCE WON
Washington
Saturday, Dec. 6 al lhe
Americans would like to
10 I 0 .909 J04 121
7
0 .6J6 182 192 Pomeroy Fire Station from 11
J
oyce
Melany
Hall
has
been
'
Cncnnt
9
1
0
.818
248
194
remember the lhings that had
Philadelphia
a.m. to 6 p.m. Sandwiches
Houstn 7
.636 218 177
J
been done during Hoover's gra nted a divorce from Ralph Clvlnd 2 9d 00 .182
151 J06 N.Y. Giant s I 0 .273 189 24J and dinners will be delivered
West
administration at the FBI by Eugene Hall on charges of
J e 0 .273 162 248 in Pomeroy .
W L T. Pel. PF . PA
gross
neglect
of
duty
and
Cen1ral
putting his name on the
x Oakland
Earl Starkey will conduct a
W. L· T . Pet. PF . PA
extreme
cruelty
.
9 2 a .916 J04 19B .: .Minnesota
building," Rangel said. Rep.
praJ,er meeting and Bible
10 I 0 .909 JOS 147 stu rat 7:30p.m. Wednesday
Gilbert Gude, R-Md ., inDetroit 6 5 0 .545 194 20J at he Freewill Baptist
troduced a similar bill,
Gren By 3 8 0 .273 196
Chi c:ag 2 9 0 . 182 104 ;~~ ,_ Ch urch In Rutland. The
saying Hoover 's actions
public Is invited .
,
West
aga in s t dissidents
W. L T . Pet. PF . PA
x Los Angel es
The Pomeroy E-R sq uad
"represents a low point in
9 2 0 .B18 266 120 answered ~ ca I to the Dares
FBI activities and an affron t
San Francisco
Arnold residence on old
5 6 . o . 455 210 202 Route3Jat6:06a .m. Tuesday
to the nation 's values. This
Atlanta J 8 0 . 273 169 m
for Mildred Arnold. She was
abuse should not be
New Or lean s
taken to Veterans Memorial
2
9
.
182
0
1
27
276
memorialized."
Hospital.
v.rtin r hed div ision ti tl e

Hoover's name now called
disgrace on FBI building
United Press lntcrnntlonnl
WASHINGTON I UP! l Three members of Congress
have introduced legislati on to
remove . J . Edgar Hoover 's
name from the mammoth
new FBI hea dquarlers.
" The disclosures la s!
month lo the Senate Inte lli gence Commitlee in dicale that Mr . Hoover was a
sick individual , a bigot, who
had no more respect for the
law !han the criminals he was
supposed to be in charge of
apprehending, " said Rep.
Patricia SehrQillier, D-Coio.,
in inlroducin g her bill to
rename the $120 million
struclure on Pennsylvania
Avenu e · simply The FBI
Building. •
Rep . Charles B. Rangel , DN.Y., who sponsored a
simi lar bill, said : " Mr .
Hoover violated the Con-

HOSPITAL NEWS

•
accepted· -~
,r •

....

Cost of

YOUR ,CHRISTMAS GIFT HEADQUARTERS

.

* ANY ITEM THAT SELLS FOR.
0

*ANY ITEM THAT SELLS FOR .... $1°1 TO$~

Gifts of

Accessortes
.

'

DEPOSITS
INSURED TO $40,000

lltlla fU LA IENIII' Ml llllCIOifOMJIOII

HANDBAGS
Choose from a big
selection in Ieath.
ers and vinyls ...
Including dressy
ond sporty styles.

French Fries or Mashed Potatoes and Gravy. Baked Beans
or Slaw, Roll With Honey

Good Thru Sun. Dec. 7

'1.79

McCLURE'S DAIRY ISLE
PH. 992-5248

0--

1

GLOVES
' Smart, warm styles

in papular colors
and lengths. Some
in real leather .

*ANY ITEM THAT SELlS FOR ... S35°1ro$---....
JEWELRY

TONtTE
, TUES. DEC. 2

Show,startsat 7:00p.m.

*
*
* ANY ITEM THAT SELLS FOR. .. Sl()O\ll
* ANY. ITEM THAT SELLS FOR... Sl5°\
* ANY ITEM THAT SELLS FOR... S20°lo525
* ANY. ITEM THA.TSELLS FOR... 525°\
* ANY ITEM THAT SELLS FOR... S30° ToS35
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Pendants, chokers, bracelets,
earrings and more. All gift
bo•ed free .

MIDDLEPORT

*ANY ITEM THAT SELLS FOR .... s3°1 Tossoo
ANY ITEM ·THAT SELLS FOR .... ssol TO $700
ANY ITEM THAT SELLS FOR... $7°1 TO Sl

.

MEIGS THEATRE
THE RETURN OF
THE PINK PANTHER
Starring : Peter Sellers.
and Christopher Plummer.

1
5
FOR .... 2D Tos3oo

'

OPEN EVERY SHOPPING DAY
UNTIL CHRISTMAS

3 Piece "Chlck'n-Out"
.

.

~·.~~

McCLURE'S DAIRY ISLE
THIS WEEK'S SPECIAL!

* ANY ITEM THAT SELLS

0~~·~·.·.-. :~

ha~itending

IO oloOI, l"!))lll

••

.

MAIN STORE, ANNEX AND WAREHOUSE!TOYLMD OPEN
WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY 9:30 TO 5, FRIDAY AND SATURDAY UNnL 9 PM

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

FF
7.00 OFF
8.00 OFF

�Pomeroy Elementary choir
to.present 'Peace on Earth-\
E~rth,"

"Pea&lt;;e on

a Mike Miller, Randy Murray

musical renditio'n of the
na tivity , will be presented by
the Pomeroy Elementary
Sc hool Mixed ·Choir at 7:30
p.m. Monday at the Pomeroy
PTA meeting.
Directed by Mrs. Gladys
Foley, vocal music teacher,
the program will feature
· music and words written by
American composers and
P!lCts in celebration of the
Bicentennial year. Among
the selections will be "0
Utile Town of Bethlehem,"
"It Came Upon the Midnight
Clear, " "Rise Up Shepherds
and Follow," "Indian Carol,"
11

"PEACE ON EARTII" DIRECTED by Mrs. Gladys Foley, vocal
music U.truct.or, w!IJ be presented by the Pomeroy Elementary School
Mixed Ololr at 7:30 Monday night at a meeUng of the Pomeroy PTA.
ChUclren having roles pictured here are Tammy Eichinger as Mary,
kneellnc at the crib, with Greg Tholll8!, as Joseph standing beside her,
who wiU take the roles In the afternoon student performance. Animal•
'

pictured left to right are Charles Knopp, a cow; Debbie Werry, Kim Eblin
and Gayla Haning, the sheep, Trina Reeves, a donkey, and Suian Thoma,
' a camel. The front r~JV, left to right, angels are Priscilla Herdman,
Connie Smith, Cindy Curtis and Di1:ie Eblin, with Melanie Dillard and
Sandy Reed, back row.

~nd

Jimmy Sheets, and in the
part of angels are Cindy
Curtis, Melanie l:lillar, Dixie
Eblin , Priscilla Herdman,
Sandy Reed and Connie
Smith. ·
Mark and Mike Goeglein
and Malt Van Vranken take
to· wise men roles, while
Charles Knopp takes the part
of a cow, 'I)'lna Reeves, a
donkey; Suza n Thoma, .a

Dinner is

'

There's a Song in the Air,"

"Appalachian Carol" and
"Birthday of a King. "
The program will be
presented at a later date to
the students at the school.
Cast in the roles of Mary and
Joseph for the evening
presentation are Jeff Nash
and Belinda Grimm. The
roles will be taken by Greg
Thomas
and
Tammy
Eichinger for the afternoon
presentation.
The shepherds are Billy
Anderson, Shawn Gilmore,

'
HOLIDAY
BAZAAR - Xi Gamma Mu Olapter of
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority will have a holiday bazaar

"·••
•
•
•'

•
••
.r

.-

'

•

..

Whdll pay you the

''

t
' u.

"
"•

..' Vranldn,

the three wlseinen; Belinda Grinun, kneeling, cast as Mary the

.'·

Mother of Jesus, for the evening performance, and Jeff Nash as Joseph,
also to appear in the evening program, and the shepherds, Bill Anderson,
Mike Miller and Randy Murray, standing, and Shawn Gilmore, kneeling.

..
J

Weekend flower show has something for all
The weekend Christmas
flower show of the Meigs
County Garden Clubs,
"Visions of Christmas," will
offer something for everyone,
be it ex~iblting, demon strating or just viewing the
wide-ranged
holiday
displays.
To be staged Saturday and
Sunday at the Pomeroy
Elementary School, the show
wllllntroduce sand paintings
with a commercial display
being provided by Francis
Florist. Not only wiU-there be
a display of sand paintings,
but boots giving step-by-6tep
instructions on the new art as
well as the bags of sand
needed to create the paintings .
'
•'or junior gardeners, 4-H
club members and scouts
there are two classes in the
artistic
arrangements
division. They are "Visions of
Sugarplums" for those !Oand
under , and "The Stockings
Were Hung by the Chimney
with Care,' ' a hanging
arrangement for those 11·
years-old and over. For the
second class a suitable
background will be provided
by the show committee.
For the juniors there are
also three horticulture
classes - one for broadleaf
evergreens, and the third for
berried branches, all calling
for one branch 12 to 24 inches
in length.
Senior citizens also have a
speCial place in the show
schedule. For those 60 years
of age and over, there are
horticulture classes for
hanginc planters, containing
one or more plants; nowering
hou~tplanta, foliage plants
and evergreen displays which
calls for three or more
varieties 12 to 24 inches in
length.
While the invitational
classes are open to anyone

wilhlnc to uhlblt, thole
entries made by aenlor
citizens wiU be given special
tags of recognition.
The Invitation classes are
"Bringing Home Christmas,"

'

•

interpretive design, and "Out
with the Old," suggesting
New Year.
Open for entry by anyone in
the horticulture division are
the classes in the dried or
treated plant material - fan
tail willow, cork screw
willow , glycerlned foliage
and a display of six or more
varieties of dried or treated
plant materials .
Also ppen for public exhibit
are houseplants in the classes
of Chri stmas cactus, one
specimen; hanging planter,
containing one or more
plants; flowering houseplant,
one specimen; and foliage
plant, one specimen; along
with Christmas greens all 12
to 2f inches In length in the
classes
of
broadleaf
evergreens, narrowleaf
evergreens and berried
branches.
One section of the schedule
is restricted for exhibits by
garden club members only.
This included II cla55es in the
artistic
arrangements
division , Cla55es 19 through
29, They are as follows : _.
" Behold! The Handma id of
the Lord," a design wl th
Madonna, but without child.
" Bicentennial - The Way
It

Wa s,"

using

two

con.

talners .
"Hans Brinker and the
Sliver Ska tes." showing
motion, Including white and
silver.
" Under the Mi stle toe ,"
Includ ing mistletoe, a class

including plant materials ;
"Chri stma s Is a Lot of
Th ings," gift wrappings
which include plant maferlal.
and '" Entertaining Ways for
the Holidays," an exhlbillon
table "picture" using the
maximum space ol 30 Inches

YOUTH RALLY SET
MORGAN CENTER - A
wi de. 36 inches tall and 2&lt; youth rally will be held
in ches deep. While the
staging backgrounds wlfl be Thursday ni ght at 7:30 p.m.
furn ished by the committee, al the .Morgan Center
if a tablecloth is used the
maxi mum drop will be 10 Wesleyan Methodist Church
inches . Silverware Is not to be in Gallia County pastored by
Included.
the Rev. 0. H. Cart.

fashioned aura .
' ' He is Born," traditional

with Madonna with child.
"Angelology" an assem blage with background.
' ' Peace, " Including
re ligious symbols, no .
madonnas ,
may
use
spofllglit.
"Sneak
Preview
of
Chrlatmu." abstract using

black light.

" Ring In 1M New," modern

with Interpretive card
suggesllng New Year 's.
The competitive displayS' of
the educational division are
"Christmas Wall Hanging "

n

no ·matteiwhat you'telookjpg _ ·.
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certificates...
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for exhibitors who have never

won a blue ribbon .
" Holiday Hospitality," a
floor arrangement wi th
minimum height of four feet
and a card lndlcailng sui table
placement.
"VIsions of Christmas
Past." portray ing an old-

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)Vant a fair return, the highest legally possible, with p guarantee of
safety lor your funds, and ac·

By Jean Barnes
The arl of Alexander
Calder
expressed
by
Aubusson weavers is a
meiding of past and present
to create a lively, colorful and
completely delightful interpretati(&gt;n or i).merlca's
Bicentennial celebration .
Calder, now in his· 70s, is
ooe of lhe American grea Is
with a re'putati9n for making
things that are fun to look at.
Whether they' are mobiles,
stabiles, tapestries or paint.
lngs they embody the
American !IPlrit - acti"'e,
inventi ve, sometimes
hum orous, sometimes
Irreverent.
Three years ago he was
commissioned by Celement
M. Brown Jr., an A!nerican
living in Paris , to do
something for the Bicen·
tennlal, They decided upon a
set of six tapestries which
would be woven by Pinion
Freres, highly respected
atelier of Aubusson, France.
Aubusson is a name
renowned for the art of
tapestries and not without
reason. It Is believed that this
region of medieval hamlets
has been weaving tapestry
continuously for 700 years
and that the arl perhaps
dates as far back as 732 A.D.
AI the start Calder made
about 50 designs in gouache.
From these, six were selected

and 11 Cartoons" were made
as patterns far the weavers.
Using three dye pots of the
primary colors, red, yellow
and blue, the workers
preclaely match the artist's
colors. They must consider
the effect' of •'fade," texture
and shadow to achieve the
exact shade or hue of the
mas~r plan.
·
It Is such an exacting art
that a weaver will complete

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Plus Old Tire Off Your Car
A78x13

SALE ENDS

B78x13
C78x13

DEC. 6, '75

SYRACUSE - The family
of Mrs. Elizabeth Slaven
gathered for Thanksgiving
dinner at the Syracuse home
of a son. All seven of her
children and their families
were prese nt for the
celebration .
Attending were Mr. and
Mrs. Marvin Slaven, Tina
and Tim, St. Albans, W. Va.;
Gene Slaven and daughter
Gia, Indianapolis, Ind .; Mr.
and Mrs. Maynard Slaven
and sons Mike and Chip,
Grafton, W. Va.; Mr. and
Mrs. H. M. Slaven, Keith and
Verne, Gallipolis; Mrs.
Samuel
McClung
and
daughters Terry , Tammy
and Kay, Elkins, W.Va.; Mr.
and Mrs . L. J . Slaven
and son Bob Yates, Mid·
dleport; Mr. and Mrs. Jack
Slaven and daughters Mary
Beth and Shannon, Syracuse ;
Mr . and Mrs. William Thurik,
Columbus; Mrs. Norman
Manley and children, Tracy,
Ryan and Patrick, Colum·
bus; Mr. and Mrs. Douglas
Reineke and Re becca.
Sumberland, Md., and Mr.
and Mrs. Gary Slaven,
Syracuse.

MEIGS TIRE CENTER
Pomeroy

6

-~ 1 ~

LOBSTER TAILS

LB.

$}98

10 08.

•475

Ground .dally for Freshness ond Flavor

GROUND CHUCK..................... ~~: ..
P

Ohio

992-2101
John F. Fultz,_Owner_

USDA CHOICE
TAl LESS

T-BONES

D78x 14
E78x14
560x15

600x15

SIRLOIN STEAK ....................

gathering

994

l lB. ,

D. Q. LARGE 21/25 SIZE

t5

SHRIMP.:..............................................16
.

7
0
-UP

~16~~~rrus ........ .. .~.. ~~........... 99~

Bulk Christmas Candy Now on Display
«1:¢¥~. . . . . . .
~

Plac:e your order now for Christmas
Fruit laskets (Any SlzeJ.

--::=.:..- -·

GIVEN AWAY
DEC. 23::·4. PM

.....

*

\

~EARL

srs., RACINE

"The Store With AHeart
. You, WE Ll KE"

on reallOnable notice of withdraw~!.
This is exactly ~hat Ohio Valley
Hank wants and promises their de-

Reserwd to Limn Quantfties
We ·G~ Accept ted. Food Stamps
~ight

positors. No wonder savings 'de·.
posits continue to be at an
all-.tiJ'1le high.

'

Mandly Thru Flidlf

9:00 to ' 7~

' Sllurdlf 9 ID 9

•

U.OSED SUNIMYS

MABALICO.

a. December 24
.t 5:00p.m.

MASON, W.VA.

•

.,

joLLY GOOD

PEAS &amp; W.K. CORN

3

303

Cans

ORANGE DRINK

PORK atoPS
!A Loin

ioo ct.
Box

DUBUQUE

SLICED BACON

89~

.

TASTEE CHUNK

Extra!
10 oz:
Jar

CLOTJiES DETERGENT

Giant
32 oz.

LIQUID ERA

BOLOGNA

CRISCO
3 lb.
Can

., ••

FRESH SliCED

BEEF LIVER

With

NEW FLORIDA

O~NGES 69~
5 lb. bag

$10.00 or More

YELLOW
I

ONIONS
3 lb. bag

'"MISS IOWA"

49~

gg~

Gal.

FOLGER'S COFFEE

"

Pack

9 to 12 Chops

RICH 'N READY

INSTANT COFFEE

PriceS Eff1Etite Dec. 3-10

Cans

PUFFS

FACIAL TISSUES

'

Fami~

J29
PEANUT BUTTER ~~~~· $

••

5th and

5 $J
3· 01 .

JIF

~

I

Pkg .

POTTED MEATS

Reglsler when
vou shop . No.
purchase
necessary

....
•

'

59~

2-tb.

BRYAN

s25 • s15 • s10

..
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Will ,"""""
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POPCORN

BASKnS

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'*""Y IMII'MI .. . . . . . . . - . . ..
tow. (It til ,.., 011'11!1c11M. ,.... ..,.

..

Cheesebrew . .
Wednesday Mrs. Knapp,
Mrs. Walker and Mrs. Martin
will leave for St. Charles, Mo.
for the Area D Children and
Youth Conference of the
Ameri can Legion, the
Auxiliary and the Eight and
Forty.

USDA CHOICE
TRIMMED

Slavens hold

POPSRITE

GROCERY

••

...""""' ,... ,......

Super solution
for sticky chairs

. only a square yard of
tapestry in a month.
The first public showing of
these tapestries was at the
Republican Governor's , By Polly &lt;-r••m&lt;r
Conference in Wichita, 'Kan .
POLLY'S PROBLEM
who are having. first babies
in November. Two sets of the
DEAR POLLY - My should keep such cards to
tapes tries were hung between dining room chairs are have when the second one
slanding panels so that both varnished wood with plastic comes along. - JO .
the front and the back coulrl sea ts and backs and are
DEAR READERS - This
be studied by viewers.
sticky lo the touch. Washing reminds me of something I
Sondra ·Goldman, director them has not helped. Do you passed on to readers many
of Gallery G, Wichita, was in have an answer to my years ago. When a daughtercharge of the showing and problem ? - MRS. J. 0.
In-law was ready to come
had exclusive marketing
DEAR MRS. J. 0. - The home from the hospital with
rights for the 200 seiS which
following wash wtll remove a her new baby son she was
were made in honor of sticky 111m of dirt from wood. "'orrled for fear his lillie
America 's 200th birthday.
Mlxlhree tablespoons linseed sister would be jealous. The
At lhe close of the Wichila oil, one tablespoon lurpentloe mother look a new baby doll
showing, the tapestries were and quart of bot water and to the hospital to be brought
sent on tour throughout the then let cool. Wring ·a soft home along with baby
United States to Houston, cloth out of this and wash a brother. The little sister then
Dallas, Los Angeles, San small uea at a lime. Dry had her own new baby and
Francisco, Chicago,m New IMMEDIATELY with forgollo be jealous. I though!
York and Washington, D. C. another soli dry cloth and this a very clever Idea. As for the marketing, Mrs. continue unlll all Is washed. POLLY.
Goldman explained, "In the Polish by rubbing with the
DEAR POLLY - I would
beginning we thought they grain of the wood. - POLLY. like to te ll others how to mak~
would sell as sets, but inold·fashioned pol holders
dividuals have become so
DEAR POLLY - My Pet such as many of us have
excited about them that they Peeve is that we can no always used. Cut five.inch
were offered as· seta or in- longer buy soles to apply to squares from outing flannel,
divldually. They were a very . the bottoms of shoes. We corduroy or other scraps of
adequate size (f0x60inches ) surely need these as never heavy material. Pad with any
lor hanging in a home , a before. Long ago there were sar i of soft material. Pieces
business or a museum."
· two or three brands of soles from a wornout bed pad are
Sondra and her husband that one could easily apply to grea t for this. Machine stitch
Lou and project director Jo' wornout soles when the shoe from corner to corner or
Ann Harned are also con- lops were stili . good. - around it several times. Use
cerned about a spread for the GLADYS.
scraps of bias tape to bind lhe
tapestries. They would like to
DEAR POLLY - My three· ed~es. Stitch on one side, turn
see a fairly even distribution year-old showed some signs over and hand whip tape to
of the tapestries throughout of jealousy when his new other side so II has a firm
the country so that all baby sister arrived and I hold. Sew a plastic ring to one
Americans will be able to received so many cards in the corner and you have it . enjoy them.
mail. I got out the cards I had FRANCES.
Fifty sets have been set kept from the lime of his
DEAR POLLY - An old
aside for marketing abroad arrival, showed them to him television screen with its
and each set was Individually and he spent many happy frame can make a novel
signed and numbered. The hours looking at "his " cards. shadow box. Paint plywood
model set was donated to the He realired that he too had that fits in the back and four
Pennsylvania Academy of been remembered 'whe~ he sides to make an open face
Fine Arts in Philadelphia was born and my jealousy box. Nice for holding orthe birthplace of both our problem was solved. Those naments . - ILA.
country and Calder.

.,
"·
·:1
.."•.,•'•

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN
We Deliver

Polly's Pointers

Look! Starting Our Christmas
Give·Away This Week

OhioValley Bank
Why settle for less than the best?
When it comes to your savings, you

J

..

·Calder designs
for Bicentennial ·

Pearl Knapp played Santa for
Sherry Marshall.
Others allending were Mrs.
Ved a Dav is, Mrs. F.unie
Brinker ,
Mrs . Rhoda
Hackett. Mrs. Iva Powell,
Mr s. Julia Hysell, Mr s.
Eileen Searls, Mrs. Mary
Martin and Mrs. Fern

•

• Pn*it 0Nrt1Fif • Millla.. u .• .•

you11 find it at

cessibility to these funds

TODAY'S
TREASURB

••.•

•,
'

OTHER ROLES IN THE "PEACE ON EARTH" musical rendition of
the nativitY, are, left to right, Mark and Mike Goeglein, and Matt .Van

Saturday from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. in the Columbia Gas Co.
office. Featured at the bazaar will be good used toys and
games, and odds and ends of books, jewelry, puzzles,
ceramic figures and handmade Items. Janet Pickens, left,
and Kathy King are among the members who will be
handling the bazaar.

..

•

Th e annual Christma s
dinner party of the Eight and
Forty Mei gs County Salon
710. was held Monday night at
the Meigs Inn.
LETART, W. Va. - A
Special guests for lhe party
Christmas dinner on Dec. 12 were Sherry Marshall, a
at 6:30 p.m. at the Kera cystic fibrosis child , and her
House will be the Letart sister, Denise, children of Mr .
Homemakers' Club's main and Mrs. Charles Marshall .
eve nt for the Chr is tma s
Giving grace was Mrs.
season, lhe dub furnishing
ham and turkey and each Florence Richards with Mrs. ·
member a covered di.sh . l.ula Hampton, chap eau ,
wi th a welcome to
Mrs.
Lois Hoffma n, presiding
lhe members and guests.
president, presided over the Denise read twv poems, H'fhe
meeting on .Nov. 4 at the
Lamb" and '"the Little
home of Mrs. Lewis Sayre . Little
Donkey." Names for secret
The lesson for the month was,
were exchanged. An
"The Art of Making Do," sisters
afghan and cushion wa s
given by Sue Sayre. Mrs.
to Mrs. Opal
Shirley VanFossin led awarded
Drummer of Custer.
devo tions.
Games were played with
Members will meet at prizes going to Mrs. Pearl
Lakin Hospital on Dec. 21 to Knapp and Mrs. Iva Powell .
visit adopted patients. A gift Mr s. Ca therine Wel sh
will be given to the patients received
the
nurses
by the club and other gifts by sc holarship prize, and Mrs.
each member to a patient.
Marie Boyd displayed a set of
Edwin Winter auctioned off Mr. and Mrs. Santa Claus
items . dona ted by the fig ures made out of Readers
members the money received Digests which she sells for $15
going to the club .
a pair, and a doll lamp and
Hostesses for the month of noted that she will donate one
November were Pat Friend of each for cystic fibrosis and
and Sue Sayre. Members nurses scholarship fund
attending the meeting were raising.
Dorothy Click, Lois Durst,
It was reported that Mrs.
Betty Fisher, Opal Friend, Myrtle Walker and Mrs .
Pat Friend, Linda Grimm, Mary Roush have written a
Audrey Hoffman , Lois ' parody for the salon. Mrs.
Hoffman, Judy Hunt, Sharon Ruby Marshall had charge of
McClellan, Mildred Morgan, decorations for the party with
Maxine Morrison, Ruth favors being drummer boy
Pickens, Sue Sayre, Shirley nutcups. Gifts were exVanFossin and Barbara changed around a tree. Mrs.
Winter and a special guest,
Edwin Winter.

main event

camel, and Gayla Curtis,
Kim Eblin and Debbie Werry,
sheep.
.'
·Soloists for the presen. tation are Kristen Anderson,
Billy Colmer, Ange~a Curtis,
·Roxanne McDaniel, J·ohn
McKinney,
Mati 'Van
Vranken, IC;rle Woods and ·
Kelly Whitlatch. The ensemble is composed of Karla
DeMoss, Tammy Elc!linaer,
Coollnued on Pace 1~ ·
\

Meigs Salon enjoys dinner

49~

Purthase

LONGHORN
CHEESE
"

'•

LB.

''

�Pomeroy Elementary choir
to.present 'Peace on Earth-\
E~rth,"

"Pea&lt;;e on

a Mike Miller, Randy Murray

musical renditio'n of the
na tivity , will be presented by
the Pomeroy Elementary
Sc hool Mixed ·Choir at 7:30
p.m. Monday at the Pomeroy
PTA meeting.
Directed by Mrs. Gladys
Foley, vocal music teacher,
the program will feature
· music and words written by
American composers and
P!lCts in celebration of the
Bicentennial year. Among
the selections will be "0
Utile Town of Bethlehem,"
"It Came Upon the Midnight
Clear, " "Rise Up Shepherds
and Follow," "Indian Carol,"
11

"PEACE ON EARTII" DIRECTED by Mrs. Gladys Foley, vocal
music U.truct.or, w!IJ be presented by the Pomeroy Elementary School
Mixed Ololr at 7:30 Monday night at a meeUng of the Pomeroy PTA.
ChUclren having roles pictured here are Tammy Eichinger as Mary,
kneellnc at the crib, with Greg Tholll8!, as Joseph standing beside her,
who wiU take the roles In the afternoon student performance. Animal•
'

pictured left to right are Charles Knopp, a cow; Debbie Werry, Kim Eblin
and Gayla Haning, the sheep, Trina Reeves, a donkey, and Suian Thoma,
' a camel. The front r~JV, left to right, angels are Priscilla Herdman,
Connie Smith, Cindy Curtis and Di1:ie Eblin, with Melanie Dillard and
Sandy Reed, back row.

~nd

Jimmy Sheets, and in the
part of angels are Cindy
Curtis, Melanie l:lillar, Dixie
Eblin , Priscilla Herdman,
Sandy Reed and Connie
Smith. ·
Mark and Mike Goeglein
and Malt Van Vranken take
to· wise men roles, while
Charles Knopp takes the part
of a cow, 'I)'lna Reeves, a
donkey; Suza n Thoma, .a

Dinner is

'

There's a Song in the Air,"

"Appalachian Carol" and
"Birthday of a King. "
The program will be
presented at a later date to
the students at the school.
Cast in the roles of Mary and
Joseph for the evening
presentation are Jeff Nash
and Belinda Grimm. The
roles will be taken by Greg
Thomas
and
Tammy
Eichinger for the afternoon
presentation.
The shepherds are Billy
Anderson, Shawn Gilmore,

'
HOLIDAY
BAZAAR - Xi Gamma Mu Olapter of
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority will have a holiday bazaar

"·••
•
•
•'

•
••
.r

.-

'

•

..

Whdll pay you the

''

t
' u.

"
"•

..' Vranldn,

the three wlseinen; Belinda Grinun, kneeling, cast as Mary the

.'·

Mother of Jesus, for the evening performance, and Jeff Nash as Joseph,
also to appear in the evening program, and the shepherds, Bill Anderson,
Mike Miller and Randy Murray, standing, and Shawn Gilmore, kneeling.

..
J

Weekend flower show has something for all
The weekend Christmas
flower show of the Meigs
County Garden Clubs,
"Visions of Christmas," will
offer something for everyone,
be it ex~iblting, demon strating or just viewing the
wide-ranged
holiday
displays.
To be staged Saturday and
Sunday at the Pomeroy
Elementary School, the show
wllllntroduce sand paintings
with a commercial display
being provided by Francis
Florist. Not only wiU-there be
a display of sand paintings,
but boots giving step-by-6tep
instructions on the new art as
well as the bags of sand
needed to create the paintings .
'
•'or junior gardeners, 4-H
club members and scouts
there are two classes in the
artistic
arrangements
division. They are "Visions of
Sugarplums" for those !Oand
under , and "The Stockings
Were Hung by the Chimney
with Care,' ' a hanging
arrangement for those 11·
years-old and over. For the
second class a suitable
background will be provided
by the show committee.
For the juniors there are
also three horticulture
classes - one for broadleaf
evergreens, and the third for
berried branches, all calling
for one branch 12 to 24 inches
in length.
Senior citizens also have a
speCial place in the show
schedule. For those 60 years
of age and over, there are
horticulture classes for
hanginc planters, containing
one or more plants; nowering
hou~tplanta, foliage plants
and evergreen displays which
calls for three or more
varieties 12 to 24 inches in
length.
While the invitational
classes are open to anyone

wilhlnc to uhlblt, thole
entries made by aenlor
citizens wiU be given special
tags of recognition.
The Invitation classes are
"Bringing Home Christmas,"

'

•

interpretive design, and "Out
with the Old," suggesting
New Year.
Open for entry by anyone in
the horticulture division are
the classes in the dried or
treated plant material - fan
tail willow, cork screw
willow , glycerlned foliage
and a display of six or more
varieties of dried or treated
plant materials .
Also ppen for public exhibit
are houseplants in the classes
of Chri stmas cactus, one
specimen; hanging planter,
containing one or more
plants; flowering houseplant,
one specimen; and foliage
plant, one specimen; along
with Christmas greens all 12
to 2f inches In length in the
classes
of
broadleaf
evergreens, narrowleaf
evergreens and berried
branches.
One section of the schedule
is restricted for exhibits by
garden club members only.
This included II cla55es in the
artistic
arrangements
division , Cla55es 19 through
29, They are as follows : _.
" Behold! The Handma id of
the Lord," a design wl th
Madonna, but without child.
" Bicentennial - The Way
It

Wa s,"

using

two

con.

talners .
"Hans Brinker and the
Sliver Ska tes." showing
motion, Including white and
silver.
" Under the Mi stle toe ,"
Includ ing mistletoe, a class

including plant materials ;
"Chri stma s Is a Lot of
Th ings," gift wrappings
which include plant maferlal.
and '" Entertaining Ways for
the Holidays," an exhlbillon
table "picture" using the
maximum space ol 30 Inches

YOUTH RALLY SET
MORGAN CENTER - A
wi de. 36 inches tall and 2&lt; youth rally will be held
in ches deep. While the
staging backgrounds wlfl be Thursday ni ght at 7:30 p.m.
furn ished by the committee, al the .Morgan Center
if a tablecloth is used the
maxi mum drop will be 10 Wesleyan Methodist Church
inches . Silverware Is not to be in Gallia County pastored by
Included.
the Rev. 0. H. Cart.

fashioned aura .
' ' He is Born," traditional

with Madonna with child.
"Angelology" an assem blage with background.
' ' Peace, " Including
re ligious symbols, no .
madonnas ,
may
use
spofllglit.
"Sneak
Preview
of
Chrlatmu." abstract using

black light.

" Ring In 1M New," modern

with Interpretive card
suggesllng New Year 's.
The competitive displayS' of
the educational division are
"Christmas Wall Hanging "

n

no ·matteiwhat you'telookjpg _ ·.
'',
for in savings or investment
certificates...
'

PASSBOOK SAVING,$

GOLDEN PASSBOOK

3-MONTH tERTIFICATE

5~. 5~J.~%

5~.%

s;q..%

• CM,_..t. Dlilf l

• PtJHII Quntrtt • lltitlll•• 11.110.11

, ,.,,...'""HI' , ...... "·• ·•

1-YEAR CERTIFICATE

HEAR CERTIFICATE

3·YEAR CERTIFICATE

6~.

6~.

6~~.%

UTI

'

Foil Face

1

Insulation

,.,..It

fllll

(

70 sq. ft.
to the roll

Comfort
Is Yours
YearRoand

.70

1nsulation helps tut heating tost

by keeping out the Winter cold
... adds to Summer comfort by
keeping in the cool. Plus it's water·
proof, flre retarding.

Ull

Qlllrltrl- • Mi11111nn $1 .000.00

•

l'tU~IQUIIIIIIY

•

ll!l lil~•~~~$1 ,000tl

• ·YEAR CERTIFICATE

6-VEAR CERTIFICATE

7~.%

7~~.%

,.._,

rttrl)' •

3W'x15" wide

Uft

Ull

.• '''*' a..

for exhibitors who have never

won a blue ribbon .
" Holiday Hospitality," a
floor arrangement wi th
minimum height of four feet
and a card lndlcailng sui table
placement.
"VIsions of Christmas
Past." portray ing an old-

-·'
"·

LAnON!

llllllllll••u.• ...

• ''''"lllut1111y • 111M• .. $1 .. ...

)Vant a fair return, the highest legally possible, with p guarantee of
safety lor your funds, and ac·

By Jean Barnes
The arl of Alexander
Calder
expressed
by
Aubusson weavers is a
meiding of past and present
to create a lively, colorful and
completely delightful interpretati(&gt;n or i).merlca's
Bicentennial celebration .
Calder, now in his· 70s, is
ooe of lhe American grea Is
with a re'putati9n for making
things that are fun to look at.
Whether they' are mobiles,
stabiles, tapestries or paint.
lngs they embody the
American !IPlrit - acti"'e,
inventi ve, sometimes
hum orous, sometimes
Irreverent.
Three years ago he was
commissioned by Celement
M. Brown Jr., an A!nerican
living in Paris , to do
something for the Bicen·
tennlal, They decided upon a
set of six tapestries which
would be woven by Pinion
Freres, highly respected
atelier of Aubusson, France.
Aubusson is a name
renowned for the art of
tapestries and not without
reason. It Is believed that this
region of medieval hamlets
has been weaving tapestry
continuously for 700 years
and that the arl perhaps
dates as far back as 732 A.D.
AI the start Calder made
about 50 designs in gouache.
From these, six were selected

and 11 Cartoons" were made
as patterns far the weavers.
Using three dye pots of the
primary colors, red, yellow
and blue, the workers
preclaely match the artist's
colors. They must consider
the effect' of •'fade," texture
and shadow to achieve the
exact shade or hue of the
mas~r plan.
·
It Is such an exacting art
that a weaver will complete

~

FREE

'

.-----~-------------,

GOOD~'£:4.11
..
SALE-SALE-SALE-SALE

REGUlAR OR
MUD &amp; SNOW RETREADS

$10~
Size

Listed

Plus Old Tire Off Your Car
A78x13

SALE ENDS

B78x13
C78x13

DEC. 6, '75

SYRACUSE - The family
of Mrs. Elizabeth Slaven
gathered for Thanksgiving
dinner at the Syracuse home
of a son. All seven of her
children and their families
were prese nt for the
celebration .
Attending were Mr. and
Mrs. Marvin Slaven, Tina
and Tim, St. Albans, W. Va.;
Gene Slaven and daughter
Gia, Indianapolis, Ind .; Mr.
and Mrs. Maynard Slaven
and sons Mike and Chip,
Grafton, W. Va.; Mr. and
Mrs. H. M. Slaven, Keith and
Verne, Gallipolis; Mrs.
Samuel
McClung
and
daughters Terry , Tammy
and Kay, Elkins, W.Va.; Mr.
and Mrs . L. J . Slaven
and son Bob Yates, Mid·
dleport; Mr. and Mrs. Jack
Slaven and daughters Mary
Beth and Shannon, Syracuse ;
Mr . and Mrs. William Thurik,
Columbus; Mrs. Norman
Manley and children, Tracy,
Ryan and Patrick, Colum·
bus; Mr. and Mrs. Douglas
Reineke and Re becca.
Sumberland, Md., and Mr.
and Mrs. Gary Slaven,
Syracuse.

MEIGS TIRE CENTER
Pomeroy

6

-~ 1 ~

LOBSTER TAILS

LB.

$}98

10 08.

•475

Ground .dally for Freshness ond Flavor

GROUND CHUCK..................... ~~: ..
P

Ohio

992-2101
John F. Fultz,_Owner_

USDA CHOICE
TAl LESS

T-BONES

D78x 14
E78x14
560x15

600x15

SIRLOIN STEAK ....................

gathering

994

l lB. ,

D. Q. LARGE 21/25 SIZE

t5

SHRIMP.:..............................................16
.

7
0
-UP

~16~~~rrus ........ .. .~.. ~~........... 99~

Bulk Christmas Candy Now on Display
«1:¢¥~. . . . . . .
~

Plac:e your order now for Christmas
Fruit laskets (Any SlzeJ.

--::=.:..- -·

GIVEN AWAY
DEC. 23::·4. PM

.....

*

\

~EARL

srs., RACINE

"The Store With AHeart
. You, WE Ll KE"

on reallOnable notice of withdraw~!.
This is exactly ~hat Ohio Valley
Hank wants and promises their de-

Reserwd to Limn Quantfties
We ·G~ Accept ted. Food Stamps
~ight

positors. No wonder savings 'de·.
posits continue to be at an
all-.tiJ'1le high.

'

Mandly Thru Flidlf

9:00 to ' 7~

' Sllurdlf 9 ID 9

•

U.OSED SUNIMYS

MABALICO.

a. December 24
.t 5:00p.m.

MASON, W.VA.

•

.,

joLLY GOOD

PEAS &amp; W.K. CORN

3

303

Cans

ORANGE DRINK

PORK atoPS
!A Loin

ioo ct.
Box

DUBUQUE

SLICED BACON

89~

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TASTEE CHUNK

Extra!
10 oz:
Jar

CLOTJiES DETERGENT

Giant
32 oz.

LIQUID ERA

BOLOGNA

CRISCO
3 lb.
Can

., ••

FRESH SliCED

BEEF LIVER

With

NEW FLORIDA

O~NGES 69~
5 lb. bag

$10.00 or More

YELLOW
I

ONIONS
3 lb. bag

'"MISS IOWA"

49~

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Gal.

FOLGER'S COFFEE

"

Pack

9 to 12 Chops

RICH 'N READY

INSTANT COFFEE

PriceS Eff1Etite Dec. 3-10

Cans

PUFFS

FACIAL TISSUES

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5 $J
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POTTED MEATS

Reglsler when
vou shop . No.
purchase
necessary

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tow. (It til ,.., 011'11!1c11M. ,.... ..,.

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Cheesebrew . .
Wednesday Mrs. Knapp,
Mrs. Walker and Mrs. Martin
will leave for St. Charles, Mo.
for the Area D Children and
Youth Conference of the
Ameri can Legion, the
Auxiliary and the Eight and
Forty.

USDA CHOICE
TRIMMED

Slavens hold

POPSRITE

GROCERY

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Super solution
for sticky chairs

. only a square yard of
tapestry in a month.
The first public showing of
these tapestries was at the
Republican Governor's , By Polly &lt;-r••m&lt;r
Conference in Wichita, 'Kan .
POLLY'S PROBLEM
who are having. first babies
in November. Two sets of the
DEAR POLLY - My should keep such cards to
tapes tries were hung between dining room chairs are have when the second one
slanding panels so that both varnished wood with plastic comes along. - JO .
the front and the back coulrl sea ts and backs and are
DEAR READERS - This
be studied by viewers.
sticky lo the touch. Washing reminds me of something I
Sondra ·Goldman, director them has not helped. Do you passed on to readers many
of Gallery G, Wichita, was in have an answer to my years ago. When a daughtercharge of the showing and problem ? - MRS. J. 0.
In-law was ready to come
had exclusive marketing
DEAR MRS. J. 0. - The home from the hospital with
rights for the 200 seiS which
following wash wtll remove a her new baby son she was
were made in honor of sticky 111m of dirt from wood. "'orrled for fear his lillie
America 's 200th birthday.
Mlxlhree tablespoons linseed sister would be jealous. The
At lhe close of the Wichila oil, one tablespoon lurpentloe mother look a new baby doll
showing, the tapestries were and quart of bot water and to the hospital to be brought
sent on tour throughout the then let cool. Wring ·a soft home along with baby
United States to Houston, cloth out of this and wash a brother. The little sister then
Dallas, Los Angeles, San small uea at a lime. Dry had her own new baby and
Francisco, Chicago,m New IMMEDIATELY with forgollo be jealous. I though!
York and Washington, D. C. another soli dry cloth and this a very clever Idea. As for the marketing, Mrs. continue unlll all Is washed. POLLY.
Goldman explained, "In the Polish by rubbing with the
DEAR POLLY - I would
beginning we thought they grain of the wood. - POLLY. like to te ll others how to mak~
would sell as sets, but inold·fashioned pol holders
dividuals have become so
DEAR POLLY - My Pet such as many of us have
excited about them that they Peeve is that we can no always used. Cut five.inch
were offered as· seta or in- longer buy soles to apply to squares from outing flannel,
divldually. They were a very . the bottoms of shoes. We corduroy or other scraps of
adequate size (f0x60inches ) surely need these as never heavy material. Pad with any
lor hanging in a home , a before. Long ago there were sar i of soft material. Pieces
business or a museum."
· two or three brands of soles from a wornout bed pad are
Sondra and her husband that one could easily apply to grea t for this. Machine stitch
Lou and project director Jo' wornout soles when the shoe from corner to corner or
Ann Harned are also con- lops were stili . good. - around it several times. Use
cerned about a spread for the GLADYS.
scraps of bias tape to bind lhe
tapestries. They would like to
DEAR POLLY - My three· ed~es. Stitch on one side, turn
see a fairly even distribution year-old showed some signs over and hand whip tape to
of the tapestries throughout of jealousy when his new other side so II has a firm
the country so that all baby sister arrived and I hold. Sew a plastic ring to one
Americans will be able to received so many cards in the corner and you have it . enjoy them.
mail. I got out the cards I had FRANCES.
Fifty sets have been set kept from the lime of his
DEAR POLLY - An old
aside for marketing abroad arrival, showed them to him television screen with its
and each set was Individually and he spent many happy frame can make a novel
signed and numbered. The hours looking at "his " cards. shadow box. Paint plywood
model set was donated to the He realired that he too had that fits in the back and four
Pennsylvania Academy of been remembered 'whe~ he sides to make an open face
Fine Arts in Philadelphia was born and my jealousy box. Nice for holding orthe birthplace of both our problem was solved. Those naments . - ILA.
country and Calder.

.,
"·
·:1
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HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN
We Deliver

Polly's Pointers

Look! Starting Our Christmas
Give·Away This Week

OhioValley Bank
Why settle for less than the best?
When it comes to your savings, you

J

..

·Calder designs
for Bicentennial ·

Pearl Knapp played Santa for
Sherry Marshall.
Others allending were Mrs.
Ved a Dav is, Mrs. F.unie
Brinker ,
Mrs . Rhoda
Hackett. Mrs. Iva Powell,
Mr s. Julia Hysell, Mr s.
Eileen Searls, Mrs. Mary
Martin and Mrs. Fern

•

• Pn*it 0Nrt1Fif • Millla.. u .• .•

you11 find it at

cessibility to these funds

TODAY'S
TREASURB

••.•

•,
'

OTHER ROLES IN THE "PEACE ON EARTH" musical rendition of
the nativitY, are, left to right, Mark and Mike Goeglein, and Matt .Van

Saturday from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. in the Columbia Gas Co.
office. Featured at the bazaar will be good used toys and
games, and odds and ends of books, jewelry, puzzles,
ceramic figures and handmade Items. Janet Pickens, left,
and Kathy King are among the members who will be
handling the bazaar.

..

•

Th e annual Christma s
dinner party of the Eight and
Forty Mei gs County Salon
710. was held Monday night at
the Meigs Inn.
LETART, W. Va. - A
Special guests for lhe party
Christmas dinner on Dec. 12 were Sherry Marshall, a
at 6:30 p.m. at the Kera cystic fibrosis child , and her
House will be the Letart sister, Denise, children of Mr .
Homemakers' Club's main and Mrs. Charles Marshall .
eve nt for the Chr is tma s
Giving grace was Mrs.
season, lhe dub furnishing
ham and turkey and each Florence Richards with Mrs. ·
member a covered di.sh . l.ula Hampton, chap eau ,
wi th a welcome to
Mrs.
Lois Hoffma n, presiding
lhe members and guests.
president, presided over the Denise read twv poems, H'fhe
meeting on .Nov. 4 at the
Lamb" and '"the Little
home of Mrs. Lewis Sayre . Little
Donkey." Names for secret
The lesson for the month was,
were exchanged. An
"The Art of Making Do," sisters
afghan and cushion wa s
given by Sue Sayre. Mrs.
to Mrs. Opal
Shirley VanFossin led awarded
Drummer of Custer.
devo tions.
Games were played with
Members will meet at prizes going to Mrs. Pearl
Lakin Hospital on Dec. 21 to Knapp and Mrs. Iva Powell .
visit adopted patients. A gift Mr s. Ca therine Wel sh
will be given to the patients received
the
nurses
by the club and other gifts by sc holarship prize, and Mrs.
each member to a patient.
Marie Boyd displayed a set of
Edwin Winter auctioned off Mr. and Mrs. Santa Claus
items . dona ted by the fig ures made out of Readers
members the money received Digests which she sells for $15
going to the club .
a pair, and a doll lamp and
Hostesses for the month of noted that she will donate one
November were Pat Friend of each for cystic fibrosis and
and Sue Sayre. Members nurses scholarship fund
attending the meeting were raising.
Dorothy Click, Lois Durst,
It was reported that Mrs.
Betty Fisher, Opal Friend, Myrtle Walker and Mrs .
Pat Friend, Linda Grimm, Mary Roush have written a
Audrey Hoffman , Lois ' parody for the salon. Mrs.
Hoffman, Judy Hunt, Sharon Ruby Marshall had charge of
McClellan, Mildred Morgan, decorations for the party with
Maxine Morrison, Ruth favors being drummer boy
Pickens, Sue Sayre, Shirley nutcups. Gifts were exVanFossin and Barbara changed around a tree. Mrs.
Winter and a special guest,
Edwin Winter.

main event

camel, and Gayla Curtis,
Kim Eblin and Debbie Werry,
sheep.
.'
·Soloists for the presen. tation are Kristen Anderson,
Billy Colmer, Ange~a Curtis,
·Roxanne McDaniel, J·ohn
McKinney,
Mati 'Van
Vranken, IC;rle Woods and ·
Kelly Whitlatch. The ensemble is composed of Karla
DeMoss, Tammy Elc!linaer,
Coollnued on Pace 1~ ·
\

Meigs Salon enjoys dinner

49~

Purthase

LONGHORN
CHEESE
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_u - The Da_lly Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Dec. 3, 1975

12 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday,

The Ohio Department of
Health, which has dire ct
responsibility for the food and
vending licensing in Meigs
County, today reminded
business communities that
Dec. 16 is the deadline for
applying for 1976 licenses,
The 1976 food service
operation licenses and food
vending machine licenses
will be issued by the
Southeast District Office of
the Ohio D~oartment of
Health, Logan:
Cash payment for the
Ucense cannot be accepted by
the Southeast District Office,
however. Checks or money
crders are payable to the
Treasurer of the State of Ohio
and must he made that way.
Meigs residents are to
complete the application and
return it to the 1 Ohio
Drpartment of Health,
Logan, wilh remitf&lt;lnce no
later than Dec. 16. It is im·
perative that the application
and remittance be returned
to the Logan office by the
deadline to facilitate the
processing of the application.
All food service operations
must obtain their foOd service
iicetllle before Jan . I, 1976, if
they wish to operate after
Dec. 31, this year.
The license fees for commel'cial
food
service
o~rations are based on
seating capacities including:

i •

.
'•

I

By LEE LEONAIID
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS I UP! ) - An
assistant secretary of the
U.S .
Department
of
0.59, $15 ; 60-99, $20; 100-149,
Agriculture said Tuesday a
$25 ; !50 and over, $30.
"hands-of£" government
farm policy during the last
Purchasers can del&lt;!rrnine
five years has freed
their license fee by simply
American farmer~ to make
counting every available seat
their own decisions, resulting
in their operation. Boblhs are
in
markedly
higher
counted as four seats and
production levels and returns
outside parking spaces
to the farmer.
provided for in-car dining are
Richard E. Bell, assistant
counted as three seats.
secretary for international
Operations which are strictly
affairs and commodity
carry carried oul are conprograms, told the 57th ansidered to have a seating
TOMT. HAU..
nual meeting of the Ohio
capacity of 59 or Jess and
Farm Bureau Federation
require a $15 license fee.
Tickets
Still
that American taxpayers
The license fee for schools,
$3.8 billion for artifi.
churches , hospitals and
Available For supplied
cial farm price supports in
governmental institutions is
1969, but that this was
$1 ,000. Owners also may
reduced to $500 miiliion by
consult their 1975 food service
Tickets are still available • last year.
operation license if they are
lor
this Fridav ni2ht's aoIn Ohio, Bell said, the
unsure for their license fees .
pearance
of
Tom
T.
Hail
and
percentage
decrease in direct
Vending operations are
the
Stoll:lellers,
along
with
payments
to
limit production
licensed by location and
Gary
Seargeants,
at
the
was
even
greaterfrom $103
require a $5 fee per location.
School million in 1969 to $7.4 ·million
If the check or money or. Wahama High
gymnasium.
in 1974.
der, payable to Treasurer,
Tickets
may
be
purchased
Yet farmers now receive
Slate of Ohio, and the comin
advance
from
local
$2.95
per bushel .of corn
pleted application are not
merchants
in
the
Bend
Area
compared
with $1.16 per
received by Dec. 16, 1976, il
or
at
the
Band
Room
of
the
bushel
in
1969-70,
and $4.04
will be impossible for the
district office to process the high school during school per bushel of wheat compared with $1.97 in 1969-70,
applica tion prior to Jan . 1, hours.
The
one-performance
according
to Bell .
1976.
show,
set
to
begin
at
7:30
The
USDA
official told the
Anyone having any
p.m.
on
December
5,
is
being
statewide
farm
group less
question may contact the
sponsored
by
the
Wahama
government
intervention
has
Logan office , Arthur C.
brought greater freeqom to
Gibson, Jr., telephone 385. Band Boosters.
Hail
was
featured
as
host
the farmer in nlaking
6851, Southeast District Office,_ P.O. Box 976, Logan , and guest in the NBC·TV decisions on what and how
Country Music Shows,
Ohio, 43138.
starred on two Midnig)lt
Specials (NBC), featured on
Today on NBC-TV, speCial
guest on ABC·TV's "Mid·
Train To Georgia", and most
recently completed a series
of national TV commercials
for General Motors on
Chevrolet Trucks, and a
Ulegal aliens in the United . brand new commercial for
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
States is the effect on unem- McDonalds, In addition to a Ohio Oil &amp; Gas Association
ployment among American number of special syn- said Tuesday the state of Ohio
could esse the effects of the
citizellll," he said, noting the dicated TV features.
I m mI g r a t I o n a nd
His recording successes energy crisis by creating a
Naturalization Service have seen No. I chart action favorable citmate for oil and
estimated between four and for such hits as "I Love", gas development.
The association suggested
12 million illegal aliens are in Country Is, Sneaky Snake,
the United States. "With ' That Song is Drivbtg Me the State of Ohio exert
unemployment running Crazy, and others. As Tom T. pressure to prevent Congress
around eight million in- puts it, "! write and sing from enacting new laws
. dividuals, the jobs held by songs about the people I've which will put crude oil under
the same restrictions which
Ulegal aliens become very met, the things I've done,
crucial.
the places I've been.
have created the natural gas
shortage and continue to
"A second burden which
press lor deregulation of
· illegal aliens impose is on the
SEVEN BURIED
American taxpayer," the
PEREIRA, Colombia natural gas prices .
The association also
lOth district congressman ( UPI) - A mudsiide buried
"By displacing an Andes mountainside hut recommended state officials
said.
American workers from jobs, Tuesday, killing a peasant consult with industrial of·
illegal aliens put these family of seven. Police said ficials to maintain the tax
workers on public assistance the slide, loosened by climate on federal and state
and unemployment com- torrential rain occurred levels and work toward lifting
pensation. It is the American while the family - a man, his the ban on drilling in Lake
taxpayer who ultimately wife and their five children Erie so it can be placed back
under the Department of
picks up this tab."
was asleep.
Natural Resources.
The association said if the
state drilled more than 3,000
wells per year over the next
five years, it could double the
"Those broads gotta be put in getting divorced. "They don't state's annual production of
their place."
want to do housework natural gas to approximately
Handing leaflets to auto anymore . I don't mind 200 blllion cubic feet per year.
drivers, the demonstrators women having jobs, but, we This, the report said, would
carried signs reading, (men) should have the final reverse the loss of Ohio in"Reunite the Family" and say."
dustry caused by the shor"Be Proud You Were Born a
tage of natural gas.
Man."
"I don't want a test tube , I
want a husband," said Lee
Arittnarelll, Tl, a divorcee
handing out application
blanks which urged sym.
pathlzers to join the group.
"A lot of women today aren't
willing to take care of their

I

Tom T. Hall

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WASHINGTON (UPi)
Rep. Clarence E. Miller, ROhio, said today the illegal
llllens employed in the United
States
are
hutting
Americans' pocketbooks.
Miller, who said he backed
~ prapo11la which failed bt
lhe U.S. Serate, said another
proposal is pending , In
Congreu would bnpose a
serlee of penalties on employel'll who knowingly hire
Illegal allens. He said they
would be cited 11t their first
offense.
For
further
vlolatllltl, they would face
fines up to SI,OOO per illegal
allen employed and possible
bn!l'iaonment.
"It ill this type of tough law
that Ia needed if a solution to
the problem is to be foWtd,"
Miller said.
"The greatest harm that
results from the presence of

Manhood said threatened

'

•'!

I',. .•
,.

BOSTON (UPI) - With a
i
rearlntl, red-maned, white
.,
stallion as their symbol,
members of MS say they
'r
want spenn banks ellmlnated
'T
't
because lhey threaten
!! . manhood.
MS - bt this case - stands
I' . '
for Male &amp;lpremacy.
1:'
About 30 persons demonI,
strated
outside
the
Massachusetts General
I;
Hospital sperm bank
••
Tuesday, calllng for male
••
supremacy and elimination
of the depoeltorieli,
''There . are a group of
radical women who want to
I~ •:. control everything and
1•.: l·I • eliminate men," said Dick
,.
• Miano, 40, who organited the
0
I
• group.
"U they got control of
'I
sperm banks, they could do
;
both," he said.
"Hey, don't you support
male supremacy?" Charlie
Perrotta yelled at passersby
as he marclled bt the cold
outaide the spenn bank.
"Yeah. Right on," called
back construction workers,
whistling and clapping.
{« •

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CHESHIRE - The GaiiiaMeigs Community Action
Agency Executive Board will
hold its annual meeting at 8
p.m. this Thursday in the
Cheshire Central Office. The
Personnel and Budget and
Finance Committees will
meet at 7 p.m. County
meetings will be held at 7:30
p.m. followed by the monthly
board meeting at 8 p.m.
All board members are
urged to attend this im·
portant meeting. The public
is welcomed ..

"The President has aSked
him to stay on," said Bell.
"He has the confidence of the
President. He has been one of
the most active members of

Dr. Charles Huggins, head
of the sperm bank, told tbe
group the b8nk is not commercial and is used only by
consenting husbands and
wives.
Miano said he Is !l'imarlly
against commericial sperm
banks. He added, "Ua man is
sterile, the couple should ·
adopt."
His wife, Sandra, who said
llhe reads the feminist MS
Magazine - ''but only to keep
up"
supports her
husband's cause. She said
"some women not only want
· to dominate men, they want
to eliminate tliem."
"Women are getting out of
hand," added Perrotta, who
said he is in the process of
COMPLAINT FU.ED
YOUNGSTOWN (UPI)
Judge Clyde Osborne wiU
hear a complaint of contempt
of court Dec. 22 which was
filed against Mahoning
County Sheriff Ray Davis by
County Ptosecutor Vincent
Gilmartin.
The complaint of contempt
of court rii!IUited from a
special Mahonlng County
Grand Jury report which said
the sheriff's operation of the
county jail bordered on
dereliction of duty.

the cabinet and has probably
been the most able
spokesman the farmers have
ever had · in the administration."

BULOVA
FOR CHRISTMAS
I ;

(Continued from page 10)

STEAK

'149LB.
BONELESS

BEEF STEW
LB.

$} 09

~···,.,,~

NEW

PINK
SALMON

8 oz.
CAN

89~

•
•

•

CABBAGE
WHITE

GRAPEFRUIT

59~
l1JtM111

CORONET

BATHROOM
TISSUE

robbery.
Johnson said Miss Hearst
was encoWJtering ' 'emotional
difficulties" despite a ruling
by federal Judge Oliver
Carter that she was competent to stand trial.
On Monday, Johnson ruled
out an insanity defense for
the daughter of San Franciscn Examiner publisher
Randolph Hearst. But he left
open the possibility of a
defense based on brainwashing by the group that
kidnaped Miss Hearst from
her Berkeley, Calif., apartment 21 months ago.
Dr. Richards, a native of
Park Ridge, Dl., a Chicago
suburb, is the first
Jl'lychiatrist to treat Miss
Hearst since her capture
Sept. 18 in a San Francisco
apartment.
Defense attorneys had
asked the court to allow Miss
Hearst to be treated in a
private institution, but the
judge refused.
Three court-appointed psychiatrists
and
one
psychologist had examined
Miss Hearst in jail and
submitted their reports to
Carter, who last month ruled
she was mentally competent
to stand trial.

Pomeroy

ROUND

MEAT

,

By RICK DU BROW
REDWOOD CITY, Calif.
(UPI) ;.... Patricia Hearst,
whom defense attorneys say
was brainwashed into joining
the terrorist Symbionese
Liberation Army, has begun
psychiatric treatment in San
Mateo CoWJty jail.
The 21-year-old newspaper
heiress began treatment
Tuesday night' ivith Dr.
EliZabeth Richards, a San
Jose, Calif., psychiatrist.
Defense attorney Albert
Johnson said Dr. Richards
was the first psychiatrist the
defense was able to persuade
to treat Miss Hearst "in a jail
complex for neuroses
produced by captivity."
Dr. Richards met with Miss
Hearst in a conference room
at the jail to begin helping the
young woman prepare
mentally for her Jan . 26 trial
on charges ot armed bank

MANAGER NAMED
TOLEDO, Ohio (UP!)
Joe Sparks, 38, Tuesday was
named manager of the Toledo
Mud Hens of the International League.

men."

. Annual meeting
Th--.]_
~
unK.UtY
cu. .

The report also said the
state could stimulate old
wells to prevent premature ,
abandonment and examine
new techniques to extract gas
from shale formations.
The report added, however,
the goals could be reached
only by creating certain
conditions which must exist
at the state and federal
levels .
The association said a free
market for energy must be
developed, but at the same
time, the danger "Of price
controls on crude oi1 prices
must be avoided so Ohio
independent producers are
not forced out of business by
the major 011 companies and
foreign oil cartels.
The report called for
controls on local governments to prevent interference
in the industry.
"The industry has been
harassed repeatedly by discriminatory and sometimes
illegal rules and regula1ions,
fees and policies of local
governments ... ," the report
stated. "The regulation of the
oil and gas industry should be
left to the Ohio Department of
Natural Resources and its Oil
and Gas Division."

the exports stepped up and
· consumers who don't.
Bell said American 'farmers have been "hard to
'convince" that a drop in
grain prices has not been
caused by a moratorium on
overseas sales. "It's been.the
harvest that caused the price
drop," he said, adding be .
does not expect · feed grain
prices to improve for at least
a year.
At the same time, Bell said,
American consumers must
be educated that participation in foreign trade is
"essential to ~ewell-being of
our total economy."
He said sales to Russia
account lor only 15 to 20 per
cent of U.S. grain sales
abroad. ''There's been way
too much attention paid to the
Soviet Union," said Bell,
pointing out that India buys
100 million tons of U.S. grain
per week, the largest amount
of any country.
"I look upon the Soviet
Union as being a permanent
market for U.S. grain, cet·
tainly. for the next five or six
years," said Bell.
The USDA official said his
boss, Agriculture Secretary
Earl Butz, is "completely
secure" in his.job despite the
controversy surrounding him
and pressure from consumer
groups against him.

-

FOR FABULOUS, DISCRETE 4-CHANNEL
SOUND FROM S-TRACK TAPES.

,.,.

..,..

much to plant, resulting in
the greater prOduction and
higher prices for the farmer.
Bell also said the "marketoriented "
policy
has
eliminated the concept that
"U.S. farmers have to drink
at the public trough and do
not have the capacity to make
their own management
decisions.''
However, he said, the
American public sliD has to
he educated about the role of
the Iarmer in today's
economy, particularly with
respect to the use of
American agricultural
products in foreign trade.
Bell said he does not envision the United States using
its grain producing abilities
in an international "cartel"
to
dominate
world
agricultural trade in the
manner of Middle East oil
exporting countries.
"! don't think agri-power
and petro power are comparable," Bell told a news
conference after addressing
the Farm Bureau Federation
meeting. "It's not to our
advantage to manipulate
world trade like the OPEC
countries, and we couldn't do
it anyway."
Bell was questiOned closely
about the Ford administration's posture on
American grain sales to the
Soviet Union and other
countries. He indicated the
administration is caught
between farmers who want

Ohio urged to
ease oil ·cris.is

. ' Illegal aliens
..~ :..~ hurting ·citizens
.. ..
••

Shrinks b.e gin
treating .patty

Farmers better off Farm Bureau told

Food, vending
licenses due

VALLEY BELL
2% MILK .

Belinda Grimm, Edie
Grimm, Julie Hayes, Angeiia
Triplett, Barbara Whitlatch
and Rochelle McDaniel.
Narrators are Tammy
Eichinger, Kristen Anderson,
Mary Beth Hawley, Roxanne
McDaniel, Jon Perrin, Nick
Riggs, Angelia Curtis, Greg
Thomas and the in·
strumentalists are Nick
Riggs, piano; Priscilla Herd·
man and Kim Morrow, finger
cymbals, and Vicki Morrison,
tambourine. The electricians
are Ricky Smith and J . R.
Wamsley.
Singing in the lower choir
(fourth graders) are Bryan
Betzing, Anita Campbell,
Barbara Chappelear, Patty
Duffy, Shilpa GoradiahKeith
Kinzel, Andrea Jo nson,
Ricky Little, Megan Long,
Jon
Perrin,
Alberta
Richards, Nick Riggs, Amy
Sisson, Sharlene Watson,
Kelly Whitlatch, Kyle WoOds,
Bryan Zirkle and Kim
Pauley.
Upper choir members
(fifth and sixth graders )
taking part are Brenda Fry,
Belinda Grimm, JUiia Hayes,
Rochelle McDaniel, Connie
Smith, Greg Thomas,
Melinda Thomas, Angela
'J'f'iplett, Barbara Whitlatch,
Anna M. Baxter, Robin
Buffington, Karia DeMoss,
Dixie Eblin , Barbara
Grueser, Todd Grover, Edie
Grimm, Beth Gloeckner ,
Priscilla Herdman, Becky
Handley, Gina Thomas, John
McKinney, Kim Morrow.
Roxanne McDaniel,
Mickey
Reed,
Vicki
Morrison, Jeanna Pauley,
Lois A. Roush, Sandy Reed,
Brian Spencer, Angela Van
Cooney, Deanna Van Meter,
Matt Van Vranken, Jimmie
Wilson, Kristine Anderson ,
Billy Colmer, .Melanie
Diiiard, Tammy Eichinger,
Shawn Gibnore, Mary Beth
Hawley, Mary, Klein, Ktm
Mulford, Jeff Nash, Kim
Patterson, Donna Rowe, J. R.
Wamsley, Angela Curtis,
Randy Murray, Mike Miller
and Mark Mattox .
.

Social
SATURDAY
MARTHA CLASS of the
Bradbury Church of Christ
will sponsor a family Christmas potluck, 6:30 p.m .
Saturday at the church .
Everyone is to take a covered
dis!l, their own table service,
and a $2 gift for exchange.

ENJOY HOLIDAY
Thanksgiving guests of
Mrs. Sylvia Carman and sons
Bruce and Danny, Rock
Springs, were Mr. and Mrs.
Gary· Carman and children
Rhonda, Donald, David and
Gary, Jr. of Pataskala, and
Edna Carman and Sally
Byers, local.
!

:

Tilt

Ar..,_

Kllle3

Admlrlll'• finest In home sound syst.ms

REG. 549.95
1

SALE

• C6eerell 4.CM-.I kund. Prt-rtcordld 4-cttannet
• .... lllltCir1Jidgn110 ~ 111rough I . .....~

IIOIIdatltl.,...,anct lourMp~Jalttpelktfayat~tiO
bring
you the amazing dtpth and dimtnslon of true

.__,Ill_.

• IQ- 4~1\o- lye...., tor fll

I

""" Allcllo.

-80MIItio 1Yt-CifCOo!tl2..no~ FM llorto

mlllril: broi~CIItl fof dflmeeic •-chlnnlltffiCt
o 10-.rc.c_.,_,.,
_ _,.._. '

---In""

s - ...... ~- ... -~.-.
~
~nll-if'9. so Mllrit!
- - lht lwO cht!NIIO givo you !flo lffoci of.

48

DELTA

PAPER
TOWELS

8-16 OZ. RETURNABLES

Income .

Spoclfl~

·:

econonllt

t~omtned

~

oble&lt;llvos to bt
~ro : Ellmln~llon of

611ght 1nd prtvenllon

deterioration

communttv

of

of
propertY and
facilities ;

E!lmlnotlon ol cond lllons
to heollh, solely ,

Jumbo

'"" •-cNnne~

e•p~ndlno

dttrtmenl~l

• .,d public welfare ; ccin :
sf"rvaflon and tkpanslon . ~f

Size

[Oductlon of l~e lsolll,lon -llf
Income groups Wllhln &lt;Ofll ·

Enjoy a New World o£ Listening
l&gt;Ieasure - Luxurious 4-0aannel Sound •

BAKER
FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

nCKETS ON SALE
HERE

NOW

Open
9 til 7

MOORE'S

Mon.·Sat.
Sun. 10 to 5
Prlceullleltie
Thursday tllru S.twdar

rtsourc 't t

munltlts end · promotion of .'•~

tncrtllt In dhltrtiiV aftl
ylfiii!Y of ntiOhborhoodll ~~~
tistorttlon arid preurvltton
of proper lin of spoclol vlluc.
This mtollno 11 open to 111
ltlldtnll of Pomeroy, Oftlo
ond
en y
otrton
. or
orgoniZIUon dtslrlng IO lpNk
On 'lht metltr will bt ~tfordtcl
~h. opporlunlty 10 be hotrd
o aY
ORDER OF THI

VILLAGE

COUNCI~

I'OMEROY, OHIO

Of!

Jontw~1"

ff2l 3, ltc

"·

excepting Items prohibited by low.

Copyright t975, The KrDUtr Co. llenisand prim good lhru Salurday.Oetember6.
t975 In Gallipolis and Pommy. Ohio. We mme the rlghllo limit ouantllles.
NONE SOLli TO DEALERS.

Strained, Except Meats

(I 11 I I ) At Kroger...
LAWFUL

m."

tu frigll/1'11
\ An•'lflot'rt li4 '1fl'mi!JI•, a 111(11/ l1irdx- A SCARECROW

you don't pay MORE
- you get MORE!

HERE LAST WEEK
Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Smith
and children Ralph and
Denean returned home
Sunda y to Lincoln Park,
Mich . after spending Thanks·
giving week here with !heir
parents, Mr. and Mrs. John
Beaver, Nye Ave., and Mr.
and Mrs. Wetzel Fields, New
Haven, W. Va .

WEEKEND ENJOYED
Miss Barbara White of
Columbus spent the holiday
weekend here with her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Dan
White . they were joined for
Thanksgiving dinner by Mrs.
H. E. Cooper and Mrs. Mabel
Ma rs hall . Miss White
recenily joined lhe staff at St.
Vincent Children's Center.
She is a behavior therapist in
th e res idential unit. Sl.
Vincent is a school and
HOLIDAY VISITORS
. treatmen t fa cility for
Thanksgiving guests of Mr. children with em oti onal
and Mrs. Dale Kesterson problems and se rves a ninewere their son-in-law and county area.
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Dan
Turner of Naples, Fla . and
LODGE TO MEET
Mr. and Mrs, Earl Kesterson
CHESTER - Shade River
and fanliy , Kevin and Dale,
Hamil to n. Th e Turners Lodge 453 of here will meet
visited here three weeks. The Dec.6,at 7:30p.m. a! thehali
Kesl&lt;!rsons returned home for the annual installatin of
officers. The meeting is open
Monday.
by invitat ion.

U.S.D.A. Choice,
People's Choice, Center Blade

Bone-in

---------

Chuck Roast

Assorted Varieties Layer

Betty Crocker

Cake Mix
. 1lb.

2'/z Oz.
Pkgs.

:

((~~

:

\'•'-'t,f
· '"'&lt;""

1·

$1
(with coupon)

Limit 1 coupon with $10.00 or more purchaee •
Void oller Sllurdoy, Dectmbo• 6, 1975. Subjecllo
oppllcoble Stole &amp; Local Tun.

1111111111111111111111111111111

Holly Farms
U.S.O.A. Inspected
Family Pak, Frying

~Chicken Parts

-----

Banquet Frozen

Fried Chicken

~

VISITO.RS
REHEARSAL SET .
Mr. and Mrs. Perry Mitch
M
ary
Shrine No. 37 will
of Middleport had as their
hold
a
rehearsal for a
Thanksgiving guests, Mr. and
cercn,onial
al lhe Pomeroy
Mrs. William Houck and
daughters Beth , Carol and Masonic Temple Sunday ,
Lynn of Marion; Mr. and Dec. 7 at 2 p.m. All officers
are asked Io allend.
Mrs. Norman Foss' of Point
Pleasant, and Mr. and Mrs.
Larry Mitch and son, L. J.,
Lay-Away
Middleport.

5
' Pkg

:

J79

·
(with coupon)
:limit 1 coupon with $10.00 or more purchase.
Void ollor Slturdoy, December 6, 1975. Subject to
1ppllcable State &amp; locel Tn11.

.I
---- FREE
-i--- Top100
Extra
Value Stamps
1111111111111111111111111111

Selection Is Good.
-Gift Certificates- FREE GIFT WRAPStore Hours :
~to 5 Mon .. Fri.
~1o8Sal.

---------

/

heritage house

:
:

Middleport, Ohio

Cans

r

Yellow Cling

Slice&amp; or Halvu

Table &amp;Chair Sets
Race Car Sets
Paint by Number Sets
Dish Sets

With this coupon &amp; purchase of
3 Lbs. or more any variety

§ Kroger Ground B_eef
~llll;;;l~;;;;t;~-;;.~;;;;;~~~~7;illl

6'/o Oz .

··

Tonka, Fisher-Price, Plc;~.yskool,
· Marx, .Aurora,
Milton Bradley, Parker, etc.

SHOP

rtaourc,es.

to form the surpri&amp;e ans..,er, as

(Anuu•n lomorrowl

HOSPITALIZED
Mrs. Ge orge (Alic e)
Freeland of Syracuse is a
patient at the Camden Clark
Hospital in Parkersburg,' W.
Va . She was admitted there
Sunday for medical treatmen t. Her room number is
313 N.

Void alter Saturday, December 6, 1975.

L!!Jmmma_ ~~~!'-~ ~~!_.~!'! _

Now arrance the cirtled leiters

Jumlilr•: CATCH OPERA SPRUCE
l'rlllrrd•y'•

-

Q

M IG&gt;HT HOI.D T HE
DOO~ OPEt-.1 OR
SHUT .

L,_~Prilt'.:.:~-'-"MPRISE==ANSWIR:.::ben:.:___jl

:

With this coupon &amp; $10
or more purchase. 324180

·

Tomalo Rich

Del Monte 131Oz.Lb.
PeaC heS........ Can
·1 Lb.

sJ

C1n1 ·

R C Cola

Hunt's
2
Ketchup
.......
~ Ck
15 c Oft Label

· Dlshwashlng Detergenl

Palmolive
l .IQUI'd ........... 1SizeQt

Russet
Baking Potatoes

And Many More By • • •

ouslnt 1tock, upantlon iftl(l
mproveinent of communttr
ervlus .
,
·
•·
(&gt;lore rollonol ulllizollon 61
land end other naruraJ

~

.

~=-===·=~~~~~_::":::"':';
ested by the above cartoon.

Electric Trains
Tonka Trucks
Games
Dolls

Act which Is the developmtn,t ,

ond

r
I )
I I

GATHIL

~

16 Oz.

an~

ij~portunll l es. ·pr incipally fGl'.
p•rsons of low .anct moder'\!t

I K) I I I

1.'

Returnable Bottle

carrv out the purpose at u;,

R. C. OOLA .

SWOON r
1

-

I I

Stokely
Applesauce ....

.

of ,\l'lable urban communlll~~
Including decent housing •nd
a suitable living environment

II

i

;

Community Development AC1
Of 1~7&lt; .
These funds will be u•ed to

SPECIAL

OYSAN

Delicious

Grant

County under the Houslhg

~Top

'

or dlscrollonary ·communlly

8PAK

---Value Stamps ----

form four ordinary word•.

~( ·

Tbe purpose of the hearing
Is to discUss the possible uses

lor by lht ·

----

to e;u·h square, tQ

. OPEN EVERY NIGHT UNTIL 8

Second St. . Pomeroy, Ohio.

~pplled

lett~r

~. .-!&gt;&amp;...- -. .-~...~~-- ---~~-----"-"""'··-!o,jo.--1&gt;&amp;~-l'"

, I'UILICHEARING
Notice Is hertby given lh'l!
the' Pomeroy Vl1l1ge council
wilt hold a public hear Ino on
November 20, 1975 In lhe
chembers of the Village Hell,

Oe.v etopment Block

one

Early While

NOTICE OF

funds btlng

~c~~~~®~~-J~

NOW

MOORE'S
AMERICAN HARDWARE
992-284H

All Kroger Stores

. Now Open
24 Hours A Day*
*(Except Saturday Midnight 'til9 a.m. Sunday)
(Except Ashland (Winchester Avt.), Gassaway, Hinton, Ironton (514 S. 3rd),
j)lkevll Ralnelle, Summersville and White Sulphur.)

Pomeroy
TOTAL SATISFACTION GUARANTEED
ON IVIRYTHING Wt SELL•• ,
WI 1110 ;ll llf~I U lltl l •t 111'111 do tv c r yl llr~O ~~Our POfl tf 10 h' YII mQII
Ml ~ ll ll ~ ~ l ll adwtrlrud spttll h on 0111 sfl ctm wht n •aw I hOD ltr
l ~t m tl dUf lo [andh1on1 bl11nd ou r t onlrll •• 1Mft twl tl 1n
lhi !II U~ IDtml , •• llr lil l ~ bl lllul t 1~ 1 111111 11 1111 1n 1 tar. wab lt
"' ~ ~~- ~ t n lw dl tn 111 111 11 UIII Uit t r t 11ttlln t l ~t lllllf 11V IIIII I! 11
Jou pr tlar 91d •ou 1 ""RAIN CHaCM '' •h1C IIt nlrtl u flU ltlht
u mt 1dv t rl111 d I Qtul l t llhl l l l!lt sptt 11! prrtt 1n1 llmt w l1~1n lO
dlfl

Krog•r W•lcomea
Your Federal
Food Stamps

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_u - The Da_lly Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Dec. 3, 1975

12 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday,

The Ohio Department of
Health, which has dire ct
responsibility for the food and
vending licensing in Meigs
County, today reminded
business communities that
Dec. 16 is the deadline for
applying for 1976 licenses,
The 1976 food service
operation licenses and food
vending machine licenses
will be issued by the
Southeast District Office of
the Ohio D~oartment of
Health, Logan:
Cash payment for the
Ucense cannot be accepted by
the Southeast District Office,
however. Checks or money
crders are payable to the
Treasurer of the State of Ohio
and must he made that way.
Meigs residents are to
complete the application and
return it to the 1 Ohio
Drpartment of Health,
Logan, wilh remitf&lt;lnce no
later than Dec. 16. It is im·
perative that the application
and remittance be returned
to the Logan office by the
deadline to facilitate the
processing of the application.
All food service operations
must obtain their foOd service
iicetllle before Jan . I, 1976, if
they wish to operate after
Dec. 31, this year.
The license fees for commel'cial
food
service
o~rations are based on
seating capacities including:

i •

.
'•

I

By LEE LEONAIID
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS I UP! ) - An
assistant secretary of the
U.S .
Department
of
0.59, $15 ; 60-99, $20; 100-149,
Agriculture said Tuesday a
$25 ; !50 and over, $30.
"hands-of£" government
farm policy during the last
Purchasers can del&lt;!rrnine
five years has freed
their license fee by simply
American farmer~ to make
counting every available seat
their own decisions, resulting
in their operation. Boblhs are
in
markedly
higher
counted as four seats and
production levels and returns
outside parking spaces
to the farmer.
provided for in-car dining are
Richard E. Bell, assistant
counted as three seats.
secretary for international
Operations which are strictly
affairs and commodity
carry carried oul are conprograms, told the 57th ansidered to have a seating
TOMT. HAU..
nual meeting of the Ohio
capacity of 59 or Jess and
Farm Bureau Federation
require a $15 license fee.
Tickets
Still
that American taxpayers
The license fee for schools,
$3.8 billion for artifi.
churches , hospitals and
Available For supplied
cial farm price supports in
governmental institutions is
1969, but that this was
$1 ,000. Owners also may
reduced to $500 miiliion by
consult their 1975 food service
Tickets are still available • last year.
operation license if they are
lor
this Fridav ni2ht's aoIn Ohio, Bell said, the
unsure for their license fees .
pearance
of
Tom
T.
Hail
and
percentage
decrease in direct
Vending operations are
the
Stoll:lellers,
along
with
payments
to
limit production
licensed by location and
Gary
Seargeants,
at
the
was
even
greaterfrom $103
require a $5 fee per location.
School million in 1969 to $7.4 ·million
If the check or money or. Wahama High
gymnasium.
in 1974.
der, payable to Treasurer,
Tickets
may
be
purchased
Yet farmers now receive
Slate of Ohio, and the comin
advance
from
local
$2.95
per bushel .of corn
pleted application are not
merchants
in
the
Bend
Area
compared
with $1.16 per
received by Dec. 16, 1976, il
or
at
the
Band
Room
of
the
bushel
in
1969-70,
and $4.04
will be impossible for the
district office to process the high school during school per bushel of wheat compared with $1.97 in 1969-70,
applica tion prior to Jan . 1, hours.
The
one-performance
according
to Bell .
1976.
show,
set
to
begin
at
7:30
The
USDA
official told the
Anyone having any
p.m.
on
December
5,
is
being
statewide
farm
group less
question may contact the
sponsored
by
the
Wahama
government
intervention
has
Logan office , Arthur C.
brought greater freeqom to
Gibson, Jr., telephone 385. Band Boosters.
Hail
was
featured
as
host
the farmer in nlaking
6851, Southeast District Office,_ P.O. Box 976, Logan , and guest in the NBC·TV decisions on what and how
Country Music Shows,
Ohio, 43138.
starred on two Midnig)lt
Specials (NBC), featured on
Today on NBC-TV, speCial
guest on ABC·TV's "Mid·
Train To Georgia", and most
recently completed a series
of national TV commercials
for General Motors on
Chevrolet Trucks, and a
Ulegal aliens in the United . brand new commercial for
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
States is the effect on unem- McDonalds, In addition to a Ohio Oil &amp; Gas Association
ployment among American number of special syn- said Tuesday the state of Ohio
could esse the effects of the
citizellll," he said, noting the dicated TV features.
I m mI g r a t I o n a nd
His recording successes energy crisis by creating a
Naturalization Service have seen No. I chart action favorable citmate for oil and
estimated between four and for such hits as "I Love", gas development.
The association suggested
12 million illegal aliens are in Country Is, Sneaky Snake,
the United States. "With ' That Song is Drivbtg Me the State of Ohio exert
unemployment running Crazy, and others. As Tom T. pressure to prevent Congress
around eight million in- puts it, "! write and sing from enacting new laws
. dividuals, the jobs held by songs about the people I've which will put crude oil under
the same restrictions which
Ulegal aliens become very met, the things I've done,
crucial.
the places I've been.
have created the natural gas
shortage and continue to
"A second burden which
press lor deregulation of
· illegal aliens impose is on the
SEVEN BURIED
American taxpayer," the
PEREIRA, Colombia natural gas prices .
The association also
lOth district congressman ( UPI) - A mudsiide buried
"By displacing an Andes mountainside hut recommended state officials
said.
American workers from jobs, Tuesday, killing a peasant consult with industrial of·
illegal aliens put these family of seven. Police said ficials to maintain the tax
workers on public assistance the slide, loosened by climate on federal and state
and unemployment com- torrential rain occurred levels and work toward lifting
pensation. It is the American while the family - a man, his the ban on drilling in Lake
taxpayer who ultimately wife and their five children Erie so it can be placed back
under the Department of
picks up this tab."
was asleep.
Natural Resources.
The association said if the
state drilled more than 3,000
wells per year over the next
five years, it could double the
"Those broads gotta be put in getting divorced. "They don't state's annual production of
their place."
want to do housework natural gas to approximately
Handing leaflets to auto anymore . I don't mind 200 blllion cubic feet per year.
drivers, the demonstrators women having jobs, but, we This, the report said, would
carried signs reading, (men) should have the final reverse the loss of Ohio in"Reunite the Family" and say."
dustry caused by the shor"Be Proud You Were Born a
tage of natural gas.
Man."
"I don't want a test tube , I
want a husband," said Lee
Arittnarelll, Tl, a divorcee
handing out application
blanks which urged sym.
pathlzers to join the group.
"A lot of women today aren't
willing to take care of their

I

Tom T. Hall

•
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I ' '

WASHINGTON (UPi)
Rep. Clarence E. Miller, ROhio, said today the illegal
llllens employed in the United
States
are
hutting
Americans' pocketbooks.
Miller, who said he backed
~ prapo11la which failed bt
lhe U.S. Serate, said another
proposal is pending , In
Congreu would bnpose a
serlee of penalties on employel'll who knowingly hire
Illegal allens. He said they
would be cited 11t their first
offense.
For
further
vlolatllltl, they would face
fines up to SI,OOO per illegal
allen employed and possible
bn!l'iaonment.
"It ill this type of tough law
that Ia needed if a solution to
the problem is to be foWtd,"
Miller said.
"The greatest harm that
results from the presence of

Manhood said threatened

'

•'!

I',. .•
,.

BOSTON (UPI) - With a
i
rearlntl, red-maned, white
.,
stallion as their symbol,
members of MS say they
'r
want spenn banks ellmlnated
'T
't
because lhey threaten
!! . manhood.
MS - bt this case - stands
I' . '
for Male &amp;lpremacy.
1:'
About 30 persons demonI,
strated
outside
the
Massachusetts General
I;
Hospital sperm bank
••
Tuesday, calllng for male
••
supremacy and elimination
of the depoeltorieli,
''There . are a group of
radical women who want to
I~ •:. control everything and
1•.: l·I • eliminate men," said Dick
,.
• Miano, 40, who organited the
0
I
• group.
"U they got control of
'I
sperm banks, they could do
;
both," he said.
"Hey, don't you support
male supremacy?" Charlie
Perrotta yelled at passersby
as he marclled bt the cold
outaide the spenn bank.
"Yeah. Right on," called
back construction workers,
whistling and clapping.
{« •

i;

'''' .

,,
,,

.

f;

,. :

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l

t,:•
•••
I·
I

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.

CHESHIRE - The GaiiiaMeigs Community Action
Agency Executive Board will
hold its annual meeting at 8
p.m. this Thursday in the
Cheshire Central Office. The
Personnel and Budget and
Finance Committees will
meet at 7 p.m. County
meetings will be held at 7:30
p.m. followed by the monthly
board meeting at 8 p.m.
All board members are
urged to attend this im·
portant meeting. The public
is welcomed ..

"The President has aSked
him to stay on," said Bell.
"He has the confidence of the
President. He has been one of
the most active members of

Dr. Charles Huggins, head
of the sperm bank, told tbe
group the b8nk is not commercial and is used only by
consenting husbands and
wives.
Miano said he Is !l'imarlly
against commericial sperm
banks. He added, "Ua man is
sterile, the couple should ·
adopt."
His wife, Sandra, who said
llhe reads the feminist MS
Magazine - ''but only to keep
up"
supports her
husband's cause. She said
"some women not only want
· to dominate men, they want
to eliminate tliem."
"Women are getting out of
hand," added Perrotta, who
said he is in the process of
COMPLAINT FU.ED
YOUNGSTOWN (UPI)
Judge Clyde Osborne wiU
hear a complaint of contempt
of court Dec. 22 which was
filed against Mahoning
County Sheriff Ray Davis by
County Ptosecutor Vincent
Gilmartin.
The complaint of contempt
of court rii!IUited from a
special Mahonlng County
Grand Jury report which said
the sheriff's operation of the
county jail bordered on
dereliction of duty.

the cabinet and has probably
been the most able
spokesman the farmers have
ever had · in the administration."

BULOVA
FOR CHRISTMAS
I ;

(Continued from page 10)

STEAK

'149LB.
BONELESS

BEEF STEW
LB.

$} 09

~···,.,,~

NEW

PINK
SALMON

8 oz.
CAN

89~

•
•

•

CABBAGE
WHITE

GRAPEFRUIT

59~
l1JtM111

CORONET

BATHROOM
TISSUE

robbery.
Johnson said Miss Hearst
was encoWJtering ' 'emotional
difficulties" despite a ruling
by federal Judge Oliver
Carter that she was competent to stand trial.
On Monday, Johnson ruled
out an insanity defense for
the daughter of San Franciscn Examiner publisher
Randolph Hearst. But he left
open the possibility of a
defense based on brainwashing by the group that
kidnaped Miss Hearst from
her Berkeley, Calif., apartment 21 months ago.
Dr. Richards, a native of
Park Ridge, Dl., a Chicago
suburb, is the first
Jl'lychiatrist to treat Miss
Hearst since her capture
Sept. 18 in a San Francisco
apartment.
Defense attorneys had
asked the court to allow Miss
Hearst to be treated in a
private institution, but the
judge refused.
Three court-appointed psychiatrists
and
one
psychologist had examined
Miss Hearst in jail and
submitted their reports to
Carter, who last month ruled
she was mentally competent
to stand trial.

Pomeroy

ROUND

MEAT

,

By RICK DU BROW
REDWOOD CITY, Calif.
(UPI) ;.... Patricia Hearst,
whom defense attorneys say
was brainwashed into joining
the terrorist Symbionese
Liberation Army, has begun
psychiatric treatment in San
Mateo CoWJty jail.
The 21-year-old newspaper
heiress began treatment
Tuesday night' ivith Dr.
EliZabeth Richards, a San
Jose, Calif., psychiatrist.
Defense attorney Albert
Johnson said Dr. Richards
was the first psychiatrist the
defense was able to persuade
to treat Miss Hearst "in a jail
complex for neuroses
produced by captivity."
Dr. Richards met with Miss
Hearst in a conference room
at the jail to begin helping the
young woman prepare
mentally for her Jan . 26 trial
on charges ot armed bank

MANAGER NAMED
TOLEDO, Ohio (UP!)
Joe Sparks, 38, Tuesday was
named manager of the Toledo
Mud Hens of the International League.

men."

. Annual meeting
Th--.]_
~
unK.UtY
cu. .

The report also said the
state could stimulate old
wells to prevent premature ,
abandonment and examine
new techniques to extract gas
from shale formations.
The report added, however,
the goals could be reached
only by creating certain
conditions which must exist
at the state and federal
levels .
The association said a free
market for energy must be
developed, but at the same
time, the danger "Of price
controls on crude oi1 prices
must be avoided so Ohio
independent producers are
not forced out of business by
the major 011 companies and
foreign oil cartels.
The report called for
controls on local governments to prevent interference
in the industry.
"The industry has been
harassed repeatedly by discriminatory and sometimes
illegal rules and regula1ions,
fees and policies of local
governments ... ," the report
stated. "The regulation of the
oil and gas industry should be
left to the Ohio Department of
Natural Resources and its Oil
and Gas Division."

the exports stepped up and
· consumers who don't.
Bell said American 'farmers have been "hard to
'convince" that a drop in
grain prices has not been
caused by a moratorium on
overseas sales. "It's been.the
harvest that caused the price
drop," he said, adding be .
does not expect · feed grain
prices to improve for at least
a year.
At the same time, Bell said,
American consumers must
be educated that participation in foreign trade is
"essential to ~ewell-being of
our total economy."
He said sales to Russia
account lor only 15 to 20 per
cent of U.S. grain sales
abroad. ''There's been way
too much attention paid to the
Soviet Union," said Bell,
pointing out that India buys
100 million tons of U.S. grain
per week, the largest amount
of any country.
"I look upon the Soviet
Union as being a permanent
market for U.S. grain, cet·
tainly. for the next five or six
years," said Bell.
The USDA official said his
boss, Agriculture Secretary
Earl Butz, is "completely
secure" in his.job despite the
controversy surrounding him
and pressure from consumer
groups against him.

-

FOR FABULOUS, DISCRETE 4-CHANNEL
SOUND FROM S-TRACK TAPES.

,.,.

..,..

much to plant, resulting in
the greater prOduction and
higher prices for the farmer.
Bell also said the "marketoriented "
policy
has
eliminated the concept that
"U.S. farmers have to drink
at the public trough and do
not have the capacity to make
their own management
decisions.''
However, he said, the
American public sliD has to
he educated about the role of
the Iarmer in today's
economy, particularly with
respect to the use of
American agricultural
products in foreign trade.
Bell said he does not envision the United States using
its grain producing abilities
in an international "cartel"
to
dominate
world
agricultural trade in the
manner of Middle East oil
exporting countries.
"! don't think agri-power
and petro power are comparable," Bell told a news
conference after addressing
the Farm Bureau Federation
meeting. "It's not to our
advantage to manipulate
world trade like the OPEC
countries, and we couldn't do
it anyway."
Bell was questiOned closely
about the Ford administration's posture on
American grain sales to the
Soviet Union and other
countries. He indicated the
administration is caught
between farmers who want

Ohio urged to
ease oil ·cris.is

. ' Illegal aliens
..~ :..~ hurting ·citizens
.. ..
••

Shrinks b.e gin
treating .patty

Farmers better off Farm Bureau told

Food, vending
licenses due

VALLEY BELL
2% MILK .

Belinda Grimm, Edie
Grimm, Julie Hayes, Angeiia
Triplett, Barbara Whitlatch
and Rochelle McDaniel.
Narrators are Tammy
Eichinger, Kristen Anderson,
Mary Beth Hawley, Roxanne
McDaniel, Jon Perrin, Nick
Riggs, Angelia Curtis, Greg
Thomas and the in·
strumentalists are Nick
Riggs, piano; Priscilla Herd·
man and Kim Morrow, finger
cymbals, and Vicki Morrison,
tambourine. The electricians
are Ricky Smith and J . R.
Wamsley.
Singing in the lower choir
(fourth graders) are Bryan
Betzing, Anita Campbell,
Barbara Chappelear, Patty
Duffy, Shilpa GoradiahKeith
Kinzel, Andrea Jo nson,
Ricky Little, Megan Long,
Jon
Perrin,
Alberta
Richards, Nick Riggs, Amy
Sisson, Sharlene Watson,
Kelly Whitlatch, Kyle WoOds,
Bryan Zirkle and Kim
Pauley.
Upper choir members
(fifth and sixth graders )
taking part are Brenda Fry,
Belinda Grimm, JUiia Hayes,
Rochelle McDaniel, Connie
Smith, Greg Thomas,
Melinda Thomas, Angela
'J'f'iplett, Barbara Whitlatch,
Anna M. Baxter, Robin
Buffington, Karia DeMoss,
Dixie Eblin , Barbara
Grueser, Todd Grover, Edie
Grimm, Beth Gloeckner ,
Priscilla Herdman, Becky
Handley, Gina Thomas, John
McKinney, Kim Morrow.
Roxanne McDaniel,
Mickey
Reed,
Vicki
Morrison, Jeanna Pauley,
Lois A. Roush, Sandy Reed,
Brian Spencer, Angela Van
Cooney, Deanna Van Meter,
Matt Van Vranken, Jimmie
Wilson, Kristine Anderson ,
Billy Colmer, .Melanie
Diiiard, Tammy Eichinger,
Shawn Gibnore, Mary Beth
Hawley, Mary, Klein, Ktm
Mulford, Jeff Nash, Kim
Patterson, Donna Rowe, J. R.
Wamsley, Angela Curtis,
Randy Murray, Mike Miller
and Mark Mattox .
.

Social
SATURDAY
MARTHA CLASS of the
Bradbury Church of Christ
will sponsor a family Christmas potluck, 6:30 p.m .
Saturday at the church .
Everyone is to take a covered
dis!l, their own table service,
and a $2 gift for exchange.

ENJOY HOLIDAY
Thanksgiving guests of
Mrs. Sylvia Carman and sons
Bruce and Danny, Rock
Springs, were Mr. and Mrs.
Gary· Carman and children
Rhonda, Donald, David and
Gary, Jr. of Pataskala, and
Edna Carman and Sally
Byers, local.
!

:

Tilt

Ar..,_

Kllle3

Admlrlll'• finest In home sound syst.ms

REG. 549.95
1

SALE

• C6eerell 4.CM-.I kund. Prt-rtcordld 4-cttannet
• .... lllltCir1Jidgn110 ~ 111rough I . .....~

IIOIIdatltl.,...,anct lourMp~Jalttpelktfayat~tiO
bring
you the amazing dtpth and dimtnslon of true

.__,Ill_.

• IQ- 4~1\o- lye...., tor fll

I

""" Allcllo.

-80MIItio 1Yt-CifCOo!tl2..no~ FM llorto

mlllril: broi~CIItl fof dflmeeic •-chlnnlltffiCt
o 10-.rc.c_.,_,.,
_ _,.._. '

---In""

s - ...... ~- ... -~.-.
~
~nll-if'9. so Mllrit!
- - lht lwO cht!NIIO givo you !flo lffoci of.

48

DELTA

PAPER
TOWELS

8-16 OZ. RETURNABLES

Income .

Spoclfl~

·:

econonllt

t~omtned

~

oble&lt;llvos to bt
~ro : Ellmln~llon of

611ght 1nd prtvenllon

deterioration

communttv

of

of
propertY and
facilities ;

E!lmlnotlon ol cond lllons
to heollh, solely ,

Jumbo

'"" •-cNnne~

e•p~ndlno

dttrtmenl~l

• .,d public welfare ; ccin :
sf"rvaflon and tkpanslon . ~f

Size

[Oductlon of l~e lsolll,lon -llf
Income groups Wllhln &lt;Ofll ·

Enjoy a New World o£ Listening
l&gt;Ieasure - Luxurious 4-0aannel Sound •

BAKER
FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

nCKETS ON SALE
HERE

NOW

Open
9 til 7

MOORE'S

Mon.·Sat.
Sun. 10 to 5
Prlceullleltie
Thursday tllru S.twdar

rtsourc 't t

munltlts end · promotion of .'•~

tncrtllt In dhltrtiiV aftl
ylfiii!Y of ntiOhborhoodll ~~~
tistorttlon arid preurvltton
of proper lin of spoclol vlluc.
This mtollno 11 open to 111
ltlldtnll of Pomeroy, Oftlo
ond
en y
otrton
. or
orgoniZIUon dtslrlng IO lpNk
On 'lht metltr will bt ~tfordtcl
~h. opporlunlty 10 be hotrd
o aY
ORDER OF THI

VILLAGE

COUNCI~

I'OMEROY, OHIO

Of!

Jontw~1"

ff2l 3, ltc

"·

excepting Items prohibited by low.

Copyright t975, The KrDUtr Co. llenisand prim good lhru Salurday.Oetember6.
t975 In Gallipolis and Pommy. Ohio. We mme the rlghllo limit ouantllles.
NONE SOLli TO DEALERS.

Strained, Except Meats

(I 11 I I ) At Kroger...
LAWFUL

m."

tu frigll/1'11
\ An•'lflot'rt li4 '1fl'mi!JI•, a 111(11/ l1irdx- A SCARECROW

you don't pay MORE
- you get MORE!

HERE LAST WEEK
Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Smith
and children Ralph and
Denean returned home
Sunda y to Lincoln Park,
Mich . after spending Thanks·
giving week here with !heir
parents, Mr. and Mrs. John
Beaver, Nye Ave., and Mr.
and Mrs. Wetzel Fields, New
Haven, W. Va .

WEEKEND ENJOYED
Miss Barbara White of
Columbus spent the holiday
weekend here with her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Dan
White . they were joined for
Thanksgiving dinner by Mrs.
H. E. Cooper and Mrs. Mabel
Ma rs hall . Miss White
recenily joined lhe staff at St.
Vincent Children's Center.
She is a behavior therapist in
th e res idential unit. Sl.
Vincent is a school and
HOLIDAY VISITORS
. treatmen t fa cility for
Thanksgiving guests of Mr. children with em oti onal
and Mrs. Dale Kesterson problems and se rves a ninewere their son-in-law and county area.
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Dan
Turner of Naples, Fla . and
LODGE TO MEET
Mr. and Mrs, Earl Kesterson
CHESTER - Shade River
and fanliy , Kevin and Dale,
Hamil to n. Th e Turners Lodge 453 of here will meet
visited here three weeks. The Dec.6,at 7:30p.m. a! thehali
Kesl&lt;!rsons returned home for the annual installatin of
officers. The meeting is open
Monday.
by invitat ion.

U.S.D.A. Choice,
People's Choice, Center Blade

Bone-in

---------

Chuck Roast

Assorted Varieties Layer

Betty Crocker

Cake Mix
. 1lb.

2'/z Oz.
Pkgs.

:

((~~

:

\'•'-'t,f
· '"'&lt;""

1·

$1
(with coupon)

Limit 1 coupon with $10.00 or more purchaee •
Void oller Sllurdoy, Dectmbo• 6, 1975. Subjecllo
oppllcoble Stole &amp; Local Tun.

1111111111111111111111111111111

Holly Farms
U.S.O.A. Inspected
Family Pak, Frying

~Chicken Parts

-----

Banquet Frozen

Fried Chicken

~

VISITO.RS
REHEARSAL SET .
Mr. and Mrs. Perry Mitch
M
ary
Shrine No. 37 will
of Middleport had as their
hold
a
rehearsal for a
Thanksgiving guests, Mr. and
cercn,onial
al lhe Pomeroy
Mrs. William Houck and
daughters Beth , Carol and Masonic Temple Sunday ,
Lynn of Marion; Mr. and Dec. 7 at 2 p.m. All officers
are asked Io allend.
Mrs. Norman Foss' of Point
Pleasant, and Mr. and Mrs.
Larry Mitch and son, L. J.,
Lay-Away
Middleport.

5
' Pkg

:

J79

·
(with coupon)
:limit 1 coupon with $10.00 or more purchase.
Void ollor Slturdoy, December 6, 1975. Subject to
1ppllcable State &amp; locel Tn11.

.I
---- FREE
-i--- Top100
Extra
Value Stamps
1111111111111111111111111111

Selection Is Good.
-Gift Certificates- FREE GIFT WRAPStore Hours :
~to 5 Mon .. Fri.
~1o8Sal.

---------

/

heritage house

:
:

Middleport, Ohio

Cans

r

Yellow Cling

Slice&amp; or Halvu

Table &amp;Chair Sets
Race Car Sets
Paint by Number Sets
Dish Sets

With this coupon &amp; purchase of
3 Lbs. or more any variety

§ Kroger Ground B_eef
~llll;;;l~;;;;t;~-;;.~;;;;;~~~~7;illl

6'/o Oz .

··

Tonka, Fisher-Price, Plc;~.yskool,
· Marx, .Aurora,
Milton Bradley, Parker, etc.

SHOP

rtaourc,es.

to form the surpri&amp;e ans..,er, as

(Anuu•n lomorrowl

HOSPITALIZED
Mrs. Ge orge (Alic e)
Freeland of Syracuse is a
patient at the Camden Clark
Hospital in Parkersburg,' W.
Va . She was admitted there
Sunday for medical treatmen t. Her room number is
313 N.

Void alter Saturday, December 6, 1975.

L!!Jmmma_ ~~~!'-~ ~~!_.~!'! _

Now arrance the cirtled leiters

Jumlilr•: CATCH OPERA SPRUCE
l'rlllrrd•y'•

-

Q

M IG&gt;HT HOI.D T HE
DOO~ OPEt-.1 OR
SHUT .

L,_~Prilt'.:.:~-'-"MPRISE==ANSWIR:.::ben:.:___jl

:

With this coupon &amp; $10
or more purchase. 324180

·

Tomalo Rich

Del Monte 131Oz.Lb.
PeaC heS........ Can
·1 Lb.

sJ

C1n1 ·

R C Cola

Hunt's
2
Ketchup
.......
~ Ck
15 c Oft Label

· Dlshwashlng Detergenl

Palmolive
l .IQUI'd ........... 1SizeQt

Russet
Baking Potatoes

And Many More By • • •

ouslnt 1tock, upantlon iftl(l
mproveinent of communttr
ervlus .
,
·
•·
(&gt;lore rollonol ulllizollon 61
land end other naruraJ

~

.

~=-===·=~~~~~_::":::"':';
ested by the above cartoon.

Electric Trains
Tonka Trucks
Games
Dolls

Act which Is the developmtn,t ,

ond

r
I )
I I

GATHIL

~

16 Oz.

an~

ij~portunll l es. ·pr incipally fGl'.
p•rsons of low .anct moder'\!t

I K) I I I

1.'

Returnable Bottle

carrv out the purpose at u;,

R. C. OOLA .

SWOON r
1

-

I I

Stokely
Applesauce ....

.

of ,\l'lable urban communlll~~
Including decent housing •nd
a suitable living environment

II

i

;

Community Development AC1
Of 1~7&lt; .
These funds will be u•ed to

SPECIAL

OYSAN

Delicious

Grant

County under the Houslhg

~Top

'

or dlscrollonary ·communlly

8PAK

---Value Stamps ----

form four ordinary word•.

~( ·

Tbe purpose of the hearing
Is to discUss the possible uses

lor by lht ·

----

to e;u·h square, tQ

. OPEN EVERY NIGHT UNTIL 8

Second St. . Pomeroy, Ohio.

~pplled

lett~r

~. .-!&gt;&amp;...- -. .-~...~~-- ---~~-----"-"""'··-!o,jo.--1&gt;&amp;~-l'"

, I'UILICHEARING
Notice Is hertby given lh'l!
the' Pomeroy Vl1l1ge council
wilt hold a public hear Ino on
November 20, 1975 In lhe
chembers of the Village Hell,

Oe.v etopment Block

one

Early While

NOTICE OF

funds btlng

~c~~~~®~~-J~

NOW

MOORE'S
AMERICAN HARDWARE
992-284H

All Kroger Stores

. Now Open
24 Hours A Day*
*(Except Saturday Midnight 'til9 a.m. Sunday)
(Except Ashland (Winchester Avt.), Gassaway, Hinton, Ironton (514 S. 3rd),
j)lkevll Ralnelle, Summersville and White Sulphur.)

Pomeroy
TOTAL SATISFACTION GUARANTEED
ON IVIRYTHING Wt SELL•• ,
WI 1110 ;ll llf~I U lltl l •t 111'111 do tv c r yl llr~O ~~Our POfl tf 10 h' YII mQII
Ml ~ ll ll ~ ~ l ll adwtrlrud spttll h on 0111 sfl ctm wht n •aw I hOD ltr
l ~t m tl dUf lo [andh1on1 bl11nd ou r t onlrll •• 1Mft twl tl 1n
lhi !II U~ IDtml , •• llr lil l ~ bl lllul t 1~ 1 111111 11 1111 1n 1 tar. wab lt
"' ~ ~~- ~ t n lw dl tn 111 111 11 UIII Uit t r t 11ttlln t l ~t lllllf 11V IIIII I! 11
Jou pr tlar 91d •ou 1 ""RAIN CHaCM '' •h1C IIt nlrtl u flU ltlht
u mt 1dv t rl111 d I Qtul l t llhl l l l!lt sptt 11! prrtt 1n1 llmt w l1~1n lO
dlfl

Krog•r W•lcomea
Your Federal
Food Stamps

�It -

The IJI!Uy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Dec. ~1 19~

~Ubll~ ~~~ig~\\.,o,.'o~~~~;6f~~;c;:;) 9fff:}Js For Fast Results Use The Sfntinel .f;lassifieds

• Monday Deadline 9 a . fl1 ,

Can cell at ion -

Corre cti on s

will b e acctpted until 9 e

for

oav

Polyester dQuble kn i ts , Sl 39

yd .

m

Redu ce d

l hrou9110Lit

prices

I he

Houu.•

Closed Dec n through Ja n .

of P ublicat ion .

REGULATIONS

2

11 J O 61C
The Publl&amp;htr reserves the
r loht to edit or relect anv ads
deem eo objecti o na l . The AN YONE wanti ng ride to
publisher
will
not
be
I lorida to help dri11e and
responsi bl e l or more than on~
shar e expe-nses . phone (614)
Incorrect insertion .
98 5 4 1 4J
Ti mol~y
RATES
Skl orenko Will leave Dec . 4
For Want Ad Service
or s.

5 cents per word one insertion

M in imum cnargell.OO
14 cents per word three

consecu!lve rnser lions .

26 cents per word six con
secut i ve insertions
25 Per Cent D isc ount on pa id
ads and ads pa ld w i thin 10

day •.
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY

Employment Wanted
1

WILL do babysitting in you r
home or mine . everilng and
weekends Phone 9.49 2609
12 2 6tc

Miscellaneous Sales

$2 ,00 for 50 word minimum
E ac n addl11onat word J GARAGE Sale . We dn esday ,

cen ts.

Thursday ,
~ rlday
and
Satur day at 701 Beech St . in
Middleport
12 2· 3tc

BLIND ADS

Add itio nal '25c CMrge per
Adve r tisement.

OFFICE HOURS

8 :30 a . m. to S:OO p . m .
O,ally , 8 : 3Da . m . to 12 00 Noon
Saturday .

In MemOIJ

IN MEMOR Y Of MorriS
Harden

who

vears. ago ,

N.

left

us lour
Dec . J. 1971.

The hou se 1S sa d and ton etv

now ,

Your vo ic e w'e loved is st i ll.
We mIn vou more and more

each ctav .

But must accept God's w i lL
Sa d ly .mi ss ed by wife ,
Doro thy &amp;nd Sons , Bob an d

Ooa n and Fa mil ies .

IJ 3 lip

Card of Thanks

WA LTER

Cle land

f am i ly

wis hes to ex p ress their
ki ndne ss of the many

Lost
EYEGLAS SES IOSI on road
betw een
Pomeroy
and
Midd l eport in brown lea ther
case . Phone 992 2574
12 '] l i p

Help Wanted
WAIT R ESS wanted on F rida y
and Saturday night s. Phon e
992 99&lt;13 .
12 2 6t c
SOMEO NE IO COOk in priv at e
hom e for the age d Good
wages . 308 Page st . • Mid
dlepor I.
11 16 1tc
EXPER I E N CED drumm er , r
&amp; r needed . Ph one (304) 61S.

2713 .

flow ers , food , kind words of
all who helped In an v way at
the flme o f d ea th . For the

many tokens ot money
gratefully
ap pr eciated .
Sp ecial thanks to Rev .

Wanied
~AS'H pBid tor a ll ma kes arid.

m ode ls of mobile homes.
Phon e area co de 61 4.423 ·

Perrin of Tr inity Chur ch for

consoling words .

~acin e

9531.

Emergency Squad and all
surrou nding
area
f ire
departments . Pallb ear er s of
Rac ine Squad , Kin dness w i ll
never be forg otte n bv

... u

turn ltu re, ' Ice· b01u!s ,
brass bed s, or cornpl ete
house holds . Write M
[)
M i ll e r , Rt . 4 , Pom e roy

Mae
Cleland .
W i fe,
Children
and
Grand
chi ldren .
12-3 II C

F I SH and Game Associ ation
will meet on Snow Ball H il L
Coon Shantv . Dec . 5. 19 75 . 1
p.m . Refreshm ent s.

12 3 31 p

P AUL'S Sarber Shop , Raci ne
will be closed un tll Dec e.

12 3-3tc

W ITHOUT my pe rmi ssio n .
th ere will be no hunting or
tresp assing on m~ prop erty .
Bob M c Gre~w , Meagan
Farm . off lower Bowman 's
Run .
11 ·4·26 tc
HAVE your deer trophies
mounted
B1r c: ht le ld s
Taxidermy . St. Rl. 1'24 , East
of Rutland . Phon e (614) H2

2118.

a 13 tf c

Wanted To Buy

Family .

Notice

11 .30 6tp

Ohio . Ca ll 992 7760.
.

10-7.7

Mobile Homes For Sale
8

K 46 LIBERTY , ex
ce ptlonally clea n . furnished
A lso , 10 K SO Peer less , new
ga s furn ace , 2 bedrm eye
level oven and surfa ce unll .
Ca n be seen at Kl ng s bur~
Hom e Sales , 1100 E . Main
St .. Pom eroy , Ohio .
12·3·4tc

19 75 14X70 TRA I LER , ex
cell ent condllion , especia ll y
buill to r offices . Low price
for quick sa l e Phone (3 04)
675 19 21 or 675 5829.
10 30 li e

-3-~
Rent
~OOM S and
2937 .

11 30 6t c

ONE bedrm . mobile home ,
ad ults only . Phone 992 5515. '
li JO !I c
LA RGE bus in ess building in
Mason . large gl ass front ,
d ri ve in rear doors , will r ent
1
• or all of g roun d fl oor , 3200
square feet. good location .
Phone (3041 882 3356 or 773
5611
II 13 tfc

RM . HOUSE in Sy ra cuse .
Ohio s.,se m ent. ga ra ge.
!'eat n ice home , mus t have
re ferences d in teres ted Ca ll
day (6 14 ) 446 7699 , e11enlng s,

(614) 446 9539.

1 t .s tf c

£bUNTRY Mobi le Hom e
Park , Rt J l . l enmilc~ not th
of Pom eroy . Larg r lOI S with
concrete patio~ . si dewalks
runners a n d a ll st rce
pnrlo. ing 'Phone 99 ? 7.J79 .'
t ? J l tf c

FREE RENT AT VILL AG E

MA NO R
IN
MID
DLEPOR T ! We are so sur e
rhat yo u will love our apart
m ents that w e give you two
weeks RENT F- REE Ju st
pay you r security deposit
and sl ay si )( month s and 1h e
fir s! 2 weeks 1S tr ee . You Wi ll
en joy monthly leases. all
.el ec tr ic living, ca rpeting ,
r ange and refr igerat or , tr ee
trash pick u p , cab l e TV
(o plional l and lau n dr y
t acilities . Conve n ient to
shop pi ng bn Th ird and M ill
in Middleport . VILL AG E
MANOR is yours for one
bedroom
apartmen ts
sta rt ing at SI04 month ly p lus
.! tee . we pay for ev erything
else Se e the Manag er at
Rive r side Apartm ents or
cal l 99 2 3273 . This offer wi l l
end soon , so move in now
and save SSU
10 23 tfc

~or

Sale

MODt:t&lt; N Walnut Console,
am . fm r ad io, J speed
chang er . Balance S102 .57 or

terms . Call 653 -7S73 .

12 J.tf c

A I WA tin reel to reel Jape
record er . ster eo. upr ight ,
man 's bicyc l e, S22.50. Phon e

992 -7551.

.®

197S CHEVROLET IMPALA 4 DR .
. $4495
· 4 door, bronze finish, sandstone, vinyl trim, less than
10,500 miles by original owner, 350 V-8 engine, turbo
hydromallc, power sleerlng &amp; brakes, factory air ,
radial tires.
1975 CHEVROLET CHEV ELLE
$4995
Classic 4 door. c9 . demo with low mileage, light green
with green vinyl roof. power door locks. windows,
brakes. factory air, tint glass. comfortill, cruise
control, AM radio &amp; tape, It's loaded and it's nice.

nice.

POMEROY
M~TQ~ . CO
OPEN EVEU . OO.,
POMEROY, OHIO'
•

-

- - ·

197a MALIBU 20.000 miles . 6
cyl . exce ll en t cond i tion
Phone 997 5646 i'lfl er 6 p m
12 3 JI C
1969 F ORO 1~ t o n pickup ,$950.
Phon e 99 2-7348 .
12 J 6tp

---- -----·- - - - -

1967 F ORD 2 dr . hardtop ,
F airlan e, automatic tran s
mi ss ion , conso le , buck et
sea t s, 289 motor and chtome
wheel s. Can be seen al
K ingsbur y Home Sales. 1100
E Mam St. , Pomeroy .
1973 TRUCK . 1 ton Ford , F
350 . Heavy duty LWB . e)( .
ce ll ent condit ion . · Call 304

773 5308 afler 5 p.m.

11 16 tf

11 28 tfc 1\ K C Sa moyed puppy, had all
PUPPY shot s. Phon e 949 2-l42.
----~----. 6,
CONSIGNMEN T sale , Dec
11 28 61c
10 : 30. lunch served.. 1968
' .
Mercury , Su pe r Farmall REG
. Samoyed puppies , 6
tracto r and 2 farm wagons, 2
weel&lt;.s old 7 Wi ll hold for
elec . stoves . washer e nd
Christmas Ca ll 992·522 4.
ctrver , bench uw , gas
11 -30-61C
range , wringer washer , 8 It .
pool table \ 2 TV s, elec . fan , POODLE Groom ing done for
la wn mower , 2 toa ste r s.
SS . W~ th bath , $6 . Do most
toys , some ent l ques . T win
bree ds
at dogs . Ca ll
City Shr lners Club , Racine.
Coolvllle , (6 14) 661 .3915 .
OhiO .
12 3 3tc
11 .30 -3tc
FE M A L E
Ch ihuahua
ROOM ~nd boi!lrd fo r Sr . 1
puppies , Wi ll se ll for s1o
Ci tizens with low Incom e.
each . Car l Nelson . 655
very n ice . Phone 992 3509 .
Syc amor e St .. Middleport ,
11-JO .tfc
Ohio .
ll -2·31p
TATTING c la sses at m~
plac e. One do ll ar tor one
AKC Codl.er Sp aniel Puppies.
lesson . Phone 997 32a9 .
S75 .
Phone
992 7264.
II 28 6tp
Pom erov .

12 2-61p

~\1TICE

12·2·41P

12 1 Jtc

Dated this

Uth aay

TINGLEY

(614 ) 378 -6307 .

FIRE WOOD . Phon e Edward

Ba ll . 992-1580.

November 197 S.

7 RM . UN FU RN IS HED apt . in
Rutland , $95 and utiliti es .
L imi t . 1 chil d. Inquire at
Sa l em Sl , Markel , or ca ll
7ol2 242d or 7oi2 -3l .. l.

12-2-61c

WI til Strut ..., Set Above the Rest.
Thirty-Fifth in a series of money·saving
coupons.

'2.00

614 388 -8369 .

Manning D. Web!iter
Ju dge

(11 ) 19, 26 1121 3, 31C

-----

SMI1H NEli)l SAtES·AGAIN ·

L ARGE • bedroom hom e,
ca rpet ed , fenced lot , pr iv at e
garage . on large corner lo t,
10 m lies tro m Ath ehs . Call
12 2·41 C
... _ - - - - - - - - - - __ _
2 BEORM . Traiter , r eal n ice.
Ph one 99'2 3324 .
12· 2-lfc

. On 011( "OniCik..,. !lpec:ill"

FIONT END ALIGNMENT
.

OFFICE WILL BE
CLOSED
THURSDAY, FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY
DEC. 4-5-6'

•Moving to
NEW LOCATION AT
VETERANS MEMORIAL DUPLEX
Open For Regular Hours
Monday, December 8

DR. JOHN H. RIDGWAY

Television log for easy viewing

~

'!~

I mile on Slate Route 124
Toward Rutland

NELSON
MOTORS, INC,

Ph. 992-2174

11 -2! -1 mo.

Pomeroy
•. J

Real Estate For Sale

TWO story fram e 3 hedrm .,
hot air furnace , modern
~lichen , a l l ut ilities, L.inco tn
Hill . Sh own by appl. only .

D &amp; D 1 H:EE Trim111lng, 20
years eKperience. Insured,
fr ee estimates . Call 992-3051
or ( l l 667 .3041 , Coolville . ~

10 -15-llc

992-3731.

WILL
OU
OU IIOI0\1
eutu
remodeling , roof i ng ,
plumbing . furnace repair
gas or orl , a nd general
HOU SE for sale In Por tland .
repair . Free estimates and
Tak e over pavments 5
reasonable rates . Phone
rooms and bath , good well ,
Charles Si nclair, (614 ) 985and 2 acres of ground .
4121 or 992-2221.
Phone 843 ·2292 .

11 -30-121c

.

lnlenecllon of Rl. Jl &amp; 7
Pomeroy
I D·D·DUN'-IO!.,.l'M AFRAID
TO OPEN W\·M·M'I EVE~!

,.,

Call today lor
Service Tomorrow
Business Phone: H2-5810
Residence: 992-331 J
11-18-1 mo.

-·.....
....
,..,.

Jim wins, then loses

,..
•'

• A J 94
• 63

Coins, Cunency ....." .
and.Supplies · '"'

WEST
• 72

EAST
• 5

Buy, Sell or Trade

• K9 2

• 10 7 5

tK 53

t AJ874
"'K Q 9 4

• Q 10 9 6

.J 7 5

\

I'AMING.IIt CAliS&amp; LIGHT DUT-Y TRUCKS
eAifll~~tf Clthr
•Adjust Toe-IR
•AII!nt C.llllllr
. •tnspoct Shwlng C.m-nll
• lftspect Front ~ilon
a..lllir l'rtctt ICirsl ...ll~.M SI'ICIAL I' RitE Slt.M
.1111•r l'rtctt (Tnodls ...SIUtSt'lCIAL PRICE SIUO

o!a~,~~a~~-t00\11! w"~r i.

.

',_....' ,'

L.-------------------W

·~' 1·

+2

~HWK'tL-..-

•"-

~MJ.lf,

Both vulnerab le

oI

DA IRY and Beet A. I. Se rvlc.e ' 1: .
of all breedt at variable ~ ,
prlc,es in Me igs or edlo lnlnv 1 •
counties . Prefer forenoon • .
mess&amp;ge fer evening !lervlce__!.
from Leland Parker , 992: 1 •
2264 . or answering 667·3251.· • ·
Coolville .
1 ••
12·2·61p ., j ;
. - - - - - - - - ; - -- - - -

II ~ bath , disposal, central
air . cent ral heal , water
purifi ca ti on !iYStem , fullv
e,a rpet ed , wired throughout
for TV a. telephone. Vinyl
siding . double g lass win .
dows , excess s1oraoe space
in closets , Il K 11 metal lawn
building . Caii992 .Jl29 or 992 ·

5914 .

Hoe Service , Rutland , Oh io.'

Phone 742 -2008 .

11 -30-781 c

ReaHswefOi.-Sale-3

~~

..
~ cWINU
M,{I..CHINE .
BEORM . nome.
j ust'
Repairs, service, all m"kes .
finished , remodeling , Salem
992 2284. The Fabr ic Shol), '
St., Rutland . Phone 7~2-.~.0.6 ' Pomeroy Autho't ized'slnter'
after 4 p .m . or see Mfio B. • sates and se rv ic e . we
Hutchison .
; sherpen Sc issors .
·
,· ~
' -23 .tfc
J . '29 tfC 1 ~

.....,.

i

- · -~-----------

11 -30 -261c

BRADFORD.

Complete
9•~ · 2•87

HOU SE- on L incoln He lghts , 2
bedrm , large kitchen, full
basement , n ice ba ck yard ,
only S8,900 , W ith new fur n iture . only $10 ,300. Phone

HOPlNcS ~

C()JI.D GET A
&amp;TURFlX,
11-lAN -rwtr .

~

Phont

or 9•9 -2000. Roclne,

Ohio , Crill Bradford .

10·9-lfc
POMEROY - 1.arg.: nome
tXCAVATtNG': doz..er , tuafJer
overlooking the river, In
anct backhoe wO'f'll. ; sepr1e •
992-7648 .
excellent condition. NEW
tanks
Ins talled ;
dump
11 -6-261c
siding, carpeting , tile,
trucks and to boys fer hire ;
will haul f ill dirt. lop s.oil,
furnace, 3 BR , 1'h balhs,
l lmeS1one and grave~ Call
garage . Sl8,500.
TEAFORD REALTY · HYSELL RUN - Lovely
~~~"~r4)9~?1~~~~ Jn~~~f Pr.:~:~~
home. 2.77 acres. 3 BR,
PHONE 992-3325
992 3525 or 992.5:232.
"•
2 11 -ttc l u·~
IOMechanlc
Pomeroy , 0 ! bath, nice kitchen wllh
... . - -·extras, ba•ement. garage
. ... ~,.·
RACINE - Renovoted J
.,-t.WOOD BOWER &gt; "'oPAl!! { &gt;'
&amp; carport. $28,000 .
B.R. home. Large new
· Sw ee pers , toasters. Irons,
:
TUPPERS PLAINS - '-'
all small appliances . Lflwf', , ~
balh . N. ga• furnace, 7
acre . Home 5 yrs. old. 3
mower , ne xt to State Hlol\.
large closets, garage &amp;
BR , bath; full basement,
Way Garage on Routf 1t
gordon.
.HW floors , dining R. Nice
Phone 98S 3825 .
·,.
COOLVILLE - 5 or 68
.•
.t -16-tt.L ;
view. $19,500.
Acres, good older 4 B.R.
-POMEROY - 4 BR, 2
'
- C TANKS cleanep.,
. ....• •'
home. Hot water heat .
baths, N. g•• hot water
SE PTI
1 •
Mod . kit. .
Modern
Sanitation
.
99~
-39~
,.
t
·
heal, rec . R. , large en,, r l 1 •
RT. 33 - 2 B.R.'s, bath,
closed porch, go·rage . · or '·992 1349.
9·18·tk "' '
T.P. water . Only USOO. Will
$30,000.
'
.._ .,. --I
2 Sportspal Carlopper
trade .
TO
BUY
OR
SELL
LET
·wouL·D ·vou ·u :LIEVe·i · •
boats, 1-12ft. &amp; 1-14 fl. SJOO
RT.
33
Renovated
2
B.R.
US HELP YOU - CALL
ea .
'Bullct an all stetl building al ·
poneled home, bath, T.P.
NOW.
Pole Barn prices? Golden
Amba..adeur rod &amp; sooo
water. Large garden.
Giant All -Stee l Building!,
992-2259 or 992-2568
reel combination
549.95
Rt~ 4, Box U8, Waverly ,
RACINE - Good 4 B.R.'s,
2 Only Fenwick Gr•phile
Ohio . Phone 947 -2296 .
Iorge bath , hot water heal.
rod! II!IS 111.
$70.00
7-24.tfc t
Basement &amp; garage ,
•
----~---- -~ ---......:- \
Sportsman Space
POMEROY - LOOt; - 3
o·oe Ll . Allhement tociied ~ •
Blanket
S! ,OO
B.R.'s, bath, large family
behln~
R·utlana Grldt.' •
All fishing lure• 20 Pet. Off
School. Tuneup ; brakes :
or hobby room . A!klng only
wheel balencing , afineff1tnl.
$8500.
INCOlPOUTID
Phone 742-2004 .
. --"
POMEROY Nicely
1 1 · 16 - lf c~~ ;
designed 3 B. R. home. Gas
NO. lol4 - 3 BR all elec.,
.
I
F.A. furnace, mod. kit ..
full base ., 2 yrs . old, 2.39 a.,
dining &amp; full basement.
lois of road frontage, on 1-~------------~ ~ .
LET US DO IT II ..
MIDDLEPORT - WoodPomeroy, Ohio
paved road, lge. garden
burning fireplaces, 2 nice
I •
plot , good buy at $26,500.00.
Winter hours- Mon., Tut.,
,.- .
baths, 5 B.R.'•. • closets,
Wed ., Fri. 9 to' S, Thur. &amp;
I '
mod. kit ., family room &amp; 2
I '
Sat. 9 to noon.
·
lois.
I '
NO. 141 - 9• a .• more or
I '
SYRACUSE - Otd house
less,
close
to
new
mine
..
,.
M~ level lot. Ju•l $3,000.
Real Estate
area. 2 a, stocked lake,
NEW LISTING - Lovely
barn. chicken house,
older
home
.
11
rms
.
with
2
3 BR HOME , iusl f in ished
garage
with loll. Main
halhs,
mod.
kit
.,
2
woodremodeling . Slllem St . ,
house has been completely
Rvlland . Phone 742 -2306 burning fireplaces , gas
alt er 4 p. m , or see Milo B. furnace, city water. 2 car
stripped ln•lde, with
Squirt il :
Hut ch inson .
garage &amp; 2 large lois.
partial Insulation &amp; new
·
Y1rd ' . -i·: ~,
Syracuse .
walls. owner 11 still
working on It weekends .
I '
RUBBER BACK
Has new root, new outside
'
paint job. !lorm window! &amp;
we have hundreds of '"
city water. Good chence lo
carpet values . 'f'our lob can ·.;.
be completed In 1 to 2· '
try your carpentry &amp;
weeks . No long wellinG ,.. 1 1
CIH\YSlt:R
decorating skill. Inside
1
per iod . Our Installer hll ~•
needs to be finished . On
years txperlence ... E)(pert ,... :
l nSJellatlon . You ' ll l l kt _, 1
paved road, Ul,OOO.OO.
whal you gel.
:1
804W. Miln
CAl. I. 742-2211
.o ·•
1975 Plymouth Duster 6 cyl, Coupe, auto. trans., AM
TALK TO WENDELL
, :.
Pomeroy
992·2298
GRATE
radio, P.S., air cond .. dark blue, 6,000 miles and full
CAR PET CONSUl. TANT
'o
After Hours Ca II
fa ctory warranty._Tom Rue Sale Price

-

You have

a nice comfl.l
spot here.

Skeezix!

TRACJOR SALES

q.

Carpeting
501 NYLON -··
,f
$499- -:~

'3695
1973 Dodge Charger S. E. 2 dr ., P. S., P. B.,
P.W., Cruise Control, fadory official car
Nith new car warranty.

CONTACT:
Loll PIUiey

PURN···
II U

..-........,

LET ME TA LK 10
MY~ER,

PERHAP-5 I CAN
REASON WITH
HIM.

iTS r&lt;O U:7E,WINNIE
Hl5 MlND 15 MADE
UP. HE WANTS ME
TO QUIT BONNAZ,
AND 1HA1'5 1HAT-'

the Jacobys " ca re or this
newspaper. Th e Jacobys will
answer individual questions
ir stamped, se/1-adrJresse d
envelopes are enclosed. The
most interesting questions
wit/ be used in th is column
end will receive copies or

JACOBY MODERN.)

Yesterday's ADswer
12 Squirrel
monkey
16 Gust
19 Shepherd
22 Nessen a nd
Ziegler
23 Brittany
native
24 Emissaries

25 Zola work
27 Wildraw
29 Perplexing
problem
30 Smyrna fig
31 Electronic
device
36 Sioux
37 Pot au -

ll :Oil--News 3,4,6,8,10,13,15.
11 :30-Johnny Carson 3,4, 15; Mannix 13; FBI6; Movie
" Where Love Has Gone" 8; Movie" A Raisin In lhe
Sun" 10; Janak) 33.
12 :30-Longstreet 13; Mannix 6.
I:OQ-Tomorrow 3,4.
I :30-Longslreet 6; News 13.
buy it. Hesilot1on could be
costly.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Now. 22)
As long as you know the
motives behind your actions
today, do n't be too co ncerned
about whal others may lhink.
You can explain later.

az Playing

For Thurodoy, Dec. •· 1175
ARIES (Mtrc1121-Aprll111 Be

marble
33Wood
sorrel
34 Guido's
note
35 Lazy
37 Actor, Gwynne
38 Cleared,
as profit

careful today lest you alienate

one who·s been helpful. When
this person agreed to come
aboard . tle tho ught hls intere sts would be protected.
too.

TAURUS (April 20-MIY 20)
Don ·l be upset today If

.MEAN- WHATDOYOU OOPP::l5E 15
WHILE... 13l.IGGING MR . ADAM5 ? HE(:;
AWFULLY GROUCHY LATELY.
OH,&gt;OU KI\ON

II

AXYDLBAAXB
LONGFI!LLOW

One letter simply olands for another. In lhls sample A Is
used for the three L's, X lor the lwo O's, elc. Single letters.
apostrophe•, the len gth and formation of lhe words are all
hlnls. Each dny Ihe code !etten are dlft'erenl.

HON

CRYPTOQUOTES
BQ

'

QIW

FB

PFI

BMRG -X MIMAFR

,'o'•. '

,,
~---~--•_nc_h_~
__M
__
•~----- '~''•'•·1~21•1--~.-.-•••'~~.f

LB
NM

HFDFZRM
LB

Z M L I W. - G X M J M XL H

F

QG

R LOLl W .

FPLMR

Yesterday 's Cryploquote : A WIFE IS A GIFT BESTOWED
UPON MAN TO . RECONCILE HIM TO THE LOSS OF
PARADISE. - GOETHE '
(C) 197&amp; Kin&amp; Yta\t.Wft Synditatt, In~ . )

•

PAW··

1968 Chevy 9 Piss. Sta. Wagon. air &lt;:and.,

P.S.,_P. B., real sharp wagon.

'OEAR LIFE!~ ~~· ·C!'

GREAT
BALLS
q· FIRE!!

I'VE BEEN WONDE~ING IF
'IOU EVER MET THAT CUTE
LITTLE CO't'OTE THAT
SPIKE TOLD c(Ot) ABOUT .

'995

Pomeroy, Ohio

39 Jane
Austen
novel
40 Coastline
41 Addict
DOWN
I Contour
2 Of the ear
3 Hits it off
( 3 wds. )
t Harem
chamber
S Mourn
6 French
annuity
7 Building
extension
8 Hit it off
I~ wds.)
9 Covetous

AT

IN SALES
IN11,RVICl
. IN ·f.IIINDSHIP

soo Main St.
Phone ftl -1174
Serving Hours: Mon. -Fri. I a .m. Ia 4:30.

question

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:

URIFIH TH' MFIILMAN
.JEST SLIPPED OFFTH '
f.OOTLOG AN ' HE'S
~ANGIN'ON FER

.Smith. Nelson Motors Int.

a

:~r

AH YE:ARNS FO' !! - WHUI
r~--.-: -----==--~7?.:;--'IJ;tJ
IT I3E' ?

'3895
1974 Mere. Comet 4 Dr., 6cyl., auto., P.s:.

WeAIIat•Ad,IR

(Do you have

lor the experts? Write "Ask

6:01l--Columbvs Today 4; Sunrise Semester 10.
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6:3(}-New Zoo Revue 4; News 6; Bible Answers 8;
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8:01l--Lucy Show 6 ; Cap\. Kangaroo 8,10; Sesame St .
33.
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11:0(}-1 Dream of Jeannle4; GambitS, 10; Elec. Co . 20.
11 :3(}-Hollywood Squares 3, 15; Happy Days 13;
Mldday4 : LoveofLlfe8.10; SesameSt. 20.
11:55-Take Kerr 8: Dan Imel 's World 10.
12:01l--High Rollers 3,15; Showolts 13; Bob Braun's 5050 Club 4; News 6,8,10.
12:3(}-Magnlflcenl Marble Machine 3,15 ; Ail My
Chtldren 6, 13; Search for Tomorrow 8, lO.
12:45--Eiec. Co. 33.
12:55--NBC News 3.15.
.
1:Oil--News 3; Ryan's Hope 6,13; Phil Donahue B;
Younq &amp; lhe Reslless 10; Not For Women Onlv IS.
1:3(}- Days Of Our Lives 3,4,15; Let's Make A Deal
6.13; As The World Turns 8,10.
2:3(}-Doctori 3,4,15; Rhyme &amp; Reason 6,13; Guiding
Light 8, 10.
3:01l--Another World 3,4,)5; General Hospital6.13; All
In The Fa mily 8, 10; Lilias Yoga&amp; You 20.
3:30--&lt;lne Life to Live 13; Bew llch~d 6; Andy Griffith
B; Match Game I 0; Lowell Thomas Remembers 20.
&lt;:Oil--Mr. Cartoon 3; Merv Griffin 4; Somerset 15;
Mickey Mouse C lub 6,8 ; Mister Rogers 20,33;
Movie " Bengal Tiger" 10; Dinah 13 .
4:3(}-Bewllched 3; Mod Squad 6; Partridge Family 8:
Sesame St. 20,33 ; Get Smart 15.
S:Oil--Bonahza , 3; Family Affair 8; Star Trek 15.
5:30-Adam -12 4; News 6; Beverly Htllblllles 8; Elec.
Co . 20,33; Adam -12 13.
6:01l--News 3.4,8, 10. 13,15; ABC News 6; Hodgepodge
Lodge 20; Jody's Body Shop JJ.
6:3(}-NBC News 3,4,15; ABC Newsl3 ; Andy Grittlth 6;
CBS News 8, 10; Your Future Is Now 33; Classic
Theatre Preview 10.
7:Oil--Truth or Cons. 3; To Tell the Truth 4; Bowling for
Dollars 6; Space: 1999 8; News 10; Let's Make a
Deal 13; Family Affair 15; Romagnolls' Table 20;
Famllly at War JJ.
7:30-Hollywood Squares3 ; WHA Hockey 4; Ohio State
Lottery 6; Evening Edition with Marlin AGron•ky
20; W lid Kingdom 10; To Tell the Truth 13; Music
City U.S.A. 15.
B:OQ-Grady 3,15; Barney Miller 6, 13; Walton• 8, 10;
Romanik Rebellion 33; Classic Theatre 20.
8:3Q-Cop &amp;.lhe Kid 3,15; On the Rocks 6,13; Classic
Theatre Preview 33
9:0Q-EIIery ueen 3,15; Streets of San Francisco 6,13;
Hawaii Flve -0 8; Classic Theatre 33; Movie "The
Quil ler Memorandum" 10.
IO :Oil--Medlcal Story 3,4,15; Harry 0 6, l3; Barnaby
Jones 8; News 20.

[:;~:===::~~~~~(j~~U3~~lC~:IIB~~}i~~/;~~1}~~~:5~'\----l
Bl§ THAR'S sow::=THIN' t:LSE
Z11 inu~ent
Incite
29

TOM RUE
MOTORS

,_

A Pennsylvania reader
wants to know if the two
spades bid in the sequence one
nolrump by declarer , two
hearts by second hand and two
spades by partner is a forcing
bid .
This is a mighty good question and the answer is that
most experts play it as nonforci ng and most other players as
forcing. The important thing
is to get a partnership agreement on the maller.

everyone falls to agree with
you r tdeas. Dissent and d is cus ~
sion forge bette r conclusions.

GEMINI (Moy21 ·Juno 20) Vou

.

SAGITT AiiiUS (NOY. 23-Doc.

21) 11 you 're prudent in manag mg your resources today, you 'll
c ome out in the b lack .
However , be alert You have an
urge 10 ov~rspend .

CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-Jon.
191 If's lmporlanl lhal you
negoliate business deals early
in the day. Later. people will be
wrapped up In their own
probl ems .

AQUARIUS (Jtn, 20-Fob, 1t)
Don·! dilly-dally around the of-

can expect El reasona ble return
today from thai which you've
earned the hard way. Ignore
the get -r ic h-quick schemes.

fice toda'i. The bC'ss has some
chores to kee p you busy lor
hours il you hang around .

CANCER (Junt 21-July 22)
Try 10 be undersland lng lodey

Keep demands. on friends and

with the Immediate family as
yo u are wllh ' persons who
mean t ar less 10 yo u.

re asona ble l i mit s . The ir
tolerance goes only so far .

LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) You 're
ve ry effective today so long as
you 're wo rki ng on a labor of
love. If it's an obligat ion . you 're

l;kely to fry lo palm il ofl.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22) Today you 're somewhat prone to
take financ1a l risks . Steel clear
of sharp strangers .

LIBR,\ (Stpl. 23-0cl. 23) If
you're lookmg for somethmg
for th e home 01 I amity loday.

I

MET HER

ALL RIGHT,

AND SHE WAS THE CUTEST
LITTLE THING I'VE EVER
SEEN ...BUT WE HAD STRONG
RELIGIOUS DIFFERENCES...

PISCES (Fob. 20-Mirch 20)
lov ed ones loday within

A

Your

~Birthday
Doc. •· 1t75
This comi ng yea r you will have
se'ierat good opportun ities to
enhance your financial base.
One windfall can co me from
somethmg you've been work Ing on tor a 1ong time.
I i\t: \\ ~ l ' ,\1 ' 1-: ll

Et\i t-:ll! 'll iSt: Mi.'iN 1

.,

••
••
'&lt;.

II

{!
fi

• •

&gt;

See: Tom Rut; R1y DDutlu • 'Tuppers
Plains'; or G. ( P1tl Williamson · 'New
Haven'.

"

)
ll · J

Ph . 992-2594
\

,,

..
,.

THURSDAY, DECEMBER 4, 197S

Z2 Libertine
Z3 Flaxen
Z5 Snare
Zi Tear
apart
~s= 27 Hourglass

,.

RUTLAND

6•

'

7:01l--Good News for Today lei
7'3(}-Mason County Jr. Miss
8·3(}-Muslc Connection lcl
9,Oil--Movie 'Stage Ooor Canteen"

21~~~~~~1edt~~4-~-consonant

'2995

our· Ids

ACROSS.
I Palm;
starch
5 Diving
bird
10 Tinted
11 Grow
lenient
13 Greek
river
14 Heartsmitten
12 wds .)
15 - de
deux
16 Damp
17 Never
(Ger .)
18 Causing joy
(rare )
20 Understood

--- - ----

GRAV£1Y

992-7133

5t
Pass

~~~~

by THOMAS JOSEPH

Strout.,
Realty

For Sale

3•
4 N.T

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pa ss

~VH:d'

HM...- 1 I WAS

&lt;I

AUCtiU111.1:1 . ~ ...

Service .

2•
I•

&amp; James Jacoby
Today 's column is written in
the fir st perso n by Jim
Jacoby.
Unlike my father , who has
been pla ying bridge si nce
before the flood . I have only
about 25 years experience . I
musl ha ve played more good
hands than bad ones . Th e
record is pretty good , but I
sure have had some real
doozies on the wrong side .
Here is a hand !hal l overbid
a trifle . The final slam conlract wasn 't a bad one. Apparentl y it depend ed on a
heart fi;,esse. but if you look
a t all the cards you will see

estimafes . Phone 992 3284, .' 1 ,, .
Goeglein Ready M ix Co .. ......../
Middleport, Ohio,.
..
•.
6·30,tfr

c.

Pass

B~_Oswald

FARM for sa le by owner. 4 f'"'======;.;;;;;;;;;;;;.~..EXCAVATIN&lt;;, dACKHIJE&gt; ..._;:
miles west of Rutland on
AN'D DOZER, LA.RGE AND· ' •
New Lima Road , 141 acres .
SMALL . SEPT•IC TANKS '•,
large barn, house , other
INSTALLED . . Bll.l. • ~
buildings . All
mineral
PULLINS , PHONE 992 -2&lt;18, ·,
rights , 60 acres tillable, rest
·OAV OR NIGHT .
-'
i n pasture . also pond .
11 -11-781p
S4 4,500. Phon e (419) 865·

3291

South

........ I

ROOFI.NG and gutter of all
kin d, hot asphalt . We fiK the •
tlal ones . Phone 367 -0591 ,
Cheshire . Paul Walker .

.

North East

Opening lead -- 9 •

I

A N Tl QUE S, reauced for quick
sa le . Nice gltts . Lamp
Shades , ch i fnneys , tamp
parts . Beaulitul Table and
floor lamp , Lamps el ec .
tr ifi ed . Lee Rudlsell , Leg ion
Terr ac e, P omeroy .
11 ·26 6tp

,.

Wt'sl

Pass
Pass
Pass

lor more nlontY·Mvlng
wvlce t~ils. coming your w•Y wtekly.
IHtdlillll

• AQ J84

11-25-261p . ..
--~ -----------'\J~
EXCAVATING
.
dozer
,
'READY·· MIX CONCRETE' Wi u'
HOUSE .
M;ddleporl,
3
backhoe
and . d ilc her .
e ii.Ye r ed r i ght to your : · ~ ·
bedr'oom , larg e kitchen .
Charles R. Hell leld Back pd roject,
Fast and easy . Free lU 1 1 •
l iving room . dining room ,
11 ·18 -121c

AM radio, low mileage, local owner.

KIIP

"' 10 8 6 3 2
SOUTH IDI
•KQI08 63

BORN WSER

Phone 742-1331
Roger Wamsley, Rutland
11-28-75

the finesse was wrong and I
wa s going down .
Then , West handed me my
contract on a silver pl atter.
He led the nine of hearts right
into me. I took the trick with
my queen , played two rounds
of trumps and led dummy's
last heart. East followed low
a nd I sta rted to think.
I could only trump tw o
hea rts in dummy . If West had
led a stngleton heart I needed
to finesse my jack. The more I
thought. the more sure I
became that he had done just
!hal. I played my jack of
hearts and had given the contract back.

NORTil

~---------1-~
'

R&amp;J OOINS

formances 20,33 .

9:3(}-Movle "The Art of Crime" 3.4.15 .
10 :01l--Starsky &amp; Hutch 6,13; Lu clll• Ball 8,10; News
20; Say Brother 33.
10 :3()-.Jim Set 33 .
11 :Oil--News 3,4,6,8,10,13,15: ABC News 33.
11 : 3()-.Johnny Carson 3.4.15; Movie "Qulller : Prlce of
Violence"l3; F Bl6; Movle " The Savage" 8; Movie
"The Reluctant Debutante" 10; Janak! 33.
12:30--Movle "Qulller : Pr ice ot Violence" 6.
!.Oil--Tomorrow 3,4; News lJ..
CHANNEL FIVE

WIN AT BRIDGE

L- - -- - - - - - ' •.,

Apprais-al service on
estates and collections.

6,13; Rudolph the Red -Nosed Reindeer 8,10;
lnherilance 20,33.
8:3(}-That's My Mama 6,13.
9:01l--Barella 6. 13: Bing Crosby 8,1 0; Gr.eat Per-

WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 3,1975
6 3(}-NBC News 3,4,4,15 ; ABC-News 13 ; Andy Griffith
6; CBS New s 8,10; Making II Count 20; Book Beat
33.
7: ()1)-.. Trulhor Cons. 3; To Tell the Trut h 4; Bowling for
Collars 6; Pop Goes the Country 8; News 10;
Counlry Music Jubilee 13 ; Fam Hy Affair 15; Book
Beat 20; Know Your School 33.
7: 3(}-Lasl of the WHd 3; Name Thai Tune 4 ; Wild Wild
World of Anlmmals 6; Wild Kingdom 15; Match
Game PM 8; Evening Edition with Marlin
Agronsky 20; The Judge 10; To Tell the Truth 13;
Episode Action 33.
·
8:01l--Hail of Fame 3,4,15; When Thi ngs Were Rotten
- .
·-- .
..

"'!-

FISHERMAN'S
GIFT SALE

11 -30-31c

Phone 992 -3494.

of

Plumbing',
hea ting and all types of
general
repair
Work
guar anteed . 20 yea r s hJ
per ience
Phon e 992 2409

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

_____

6 RM . HOUSE and bath tor
rent in P ome ro~ . Call 992
57 41 .
12-2-26/c

~"EM Oo EltNG ,

PH. 992·5682

SM~TH

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

on .

of William Cl~de
Andrews , Deceased .
No f lce Is her eby given that
Clarence Andrews , of Ill
Ebenezer Stree t . Pome r oy ,
Ohio. has been duly appoin ted
Eucutor of the Last Will and
Testament of Will iam Clyde
Andrews , , dece ased , lat e of
Meigs County , Oh io.
Cr editors li r e r equi red lo
file the ir c la i m s with said
fiduc i ary with In tour months .

11 -26 -61p

TWO v erv go od Goodrich
POT ATO E S fo r sa le 50 and 100
stud ded snow tires , G -78x 15
lb , bags . Ac ros s from
bel ted . One moun te d on
Sham ro c ~ In Henderson . W
that til Olds cutlass . -·
va . Donald Wal hu . ~1 . JS. wheels
Electri c fen ce r , one gas KOSCO T COSMETIC S, Ann
Sauvage ,
Ind epend ent
Henderson , W . Va .
burn er hot plat e. Phone 742
Distributo r , Syracuse .
11 ·18·26 tc
2012.
llhone 992·3272 .
12 3 Jtc
11 -26 -61p
MODERN Walnut Console,
A M ·FM radio , 4 s p eed COLEM A N gas furna ce, 5135
. - -·Can be seen at Kin gsb u r~ WE ARE PICking up a p iano In
chang er . Bal!!lnce S101 .80 or
yo ur area and looki ng for a
Hom e Sa les, 1100 E . Mai n ,
terms . Call 992 ·3965 ,
r es ponsible party to assum e
Pom eroy
11 .20 ttc
net balltn ce. Call credit
12 J ate
manager . area code , (6 14)
TR,..,ILER and lot In Rutla nd
112 ·5669 or 712 ·1611. Or write
JOHN DEERE 1010 Dozer ,
Wi ll conside r land contract .
26 0
Eas t
Main
St . ,
53 ,00() Jag er Industr ial end
.Phone 992 ·3960.
Chi l lico th e. Oh io 45601.
loader yard and 1 1 bu ck et,
11 -21 · 121C
11 ·30.7tc
Sl.lOO . Phone 13 04 ) 773 5238.
1'2 .J.Jt c
TW O 1 yr . ol d Blueticl&lt;.
HAN D PA t N ft:D red andco onhound s, S50
e ach .
w h i le
apple
plaq ues!
Phone 161 4) 667 ·6165 .
Pa i nted on aged wood , lhese 1968 TRUCK C"mper with
s to ve. oven , sink , iceboK ,
. 11 -30 -&lt;lp
plaQues , make an un usu al
sleeps 4, S495 . No S unda~
item for I ha t c lub Christma s
calls . Phone 742 .2460.
1975 CHAMP ION motor home,
g ift s nc hange . $2.50 eac h .
J1 .J0.6tc
full y self .conta ined , roof air
View w i thout ob li ga t ion
condi t ioni ng , automa tic,
Jay ne Hoeflich , 992 S292.
w i th p .S.1 and p b . More
11 28 61p
e~e: lras , Phone 992 -3253 .
11 -30 -6tc
GIRL'S 24 In bicyc le, ex ce l lent cond ition , S20 . Phone
992-5261.
MUNTZ car tap e deck wilh
11-30 -31p
speak ers . excell ent con dition . 590 . Phone (614) 985 ·
14' GLAST RON outboard - 35
3B2J , Chester .
12.1.01c
hp Ev inrude (elec . star t ),
trailer , all access . S750 t irm .
Old
walnu t
buffet.
re f inished, beautifu l, 52 00
firm . Boxer dog , 21 2 yrs .•
fema le, AKC , good with
children S 150 firm . Phon e

For Rent

Eltlte

t969 396 CHEVY Super Sport,
real good condit ion . Be$t
ree~so nab le offer . Phon e 742 ·
3016 .

All Meehan Ia I Work

Nathan BlgtJ,
Radiator Specialist

11.26 61p

A IR CO welding ma c hine ,
new. elec all accessories
ihc luded . Phone 992 34 10.
10.2B .Ifc

2

4 10·1 mo.

From the large·st Truck or
Bulldozer Radietor to the
,
small est Heater Core.

2018

NOW selling Fu l ler Brush
Products . Phone 992 ·3410.
10 6 !fc

1614 ) 985 -3855 . Also

Syracuse, Ohio
Ph , 991_:,1993..

ROGER HYSELL'S
GARAGE

1969 CHEVRO LET lor sa le or
trad e for pickup Phone 949 -

For Sale

Hols tei n bull ca lv es .

LARRY lAVENDfR

11 -12-1 mo.

11 -30-41p

For Sale

12-Hi c
I w ill ott er to r sal e at the
Ottlce of Fu ltz &amp; Knight.
REGISTERED HOI Sieln Bull ,
Attorneys. Pomeroy Nalional
1 year old Dec . 12, Sir ed by
Senk Bu i ld i ng . Pomcrov . ~ (l R N.l SHE o· · opor tmenl
Maior
Royal
Design .
Ohio , on Friday . becemb er
adults ontv In Middleport
Con tac t Earl Dean or call
5, 197 S, at 1(1 O'C lOCk f\ ,M . , I he
Ph one 992 -3874 .
161&lt;) 985 3855 , Also, 2
rea l es tat e form er l y ow tH~ d by __ ______ __ _ _l 25 ·1J!=
Holstein bull calv es .
Wes l eY G. Gi llilan . $iluated in
12 2-41p
Letar l
To wnsh ip , Meigs ·TR A IL E R tot off KI OgsbUi'y
Counly , Ohio , con sisll ng of
Road neer Harr ison ville .
FIREWOOD . Phone 992 -5702.
apprOKima te ly 2A Acres ,
clly
f r ee na tura l
Will haul local . Sl S
Se aled bids may be sub
water . Phone 7_.2 2577 .
12 2-31p
milled in writ ing , in advance ,
11 -18-1
__...._ 31c
and Interested par lics sha ll
8 MONTH o l d Registered
also have th e nght to com
A N o 4 rm . furnished and
Nubian goat. Phone 7.42. 10'' Baal.
pei!H ve bidding in person , ai
nished
a
pt
s.
Phon
e
992
unfur
Deep Iough Iread.
2292.
the t im~ of sa l e.
5434 ,
12-2-61p Exclu~lve
Knee High
The
1\ dm l n lstratriK
11 -9-llc
reserves the r ight to reje ct
bullon closure. Deep Iough
99 H A USTIN Western grader
anv or all b id s, and su ch bids
lread. Exc lusive
u . o. No . 14 engine. a l l
are sub lect to approval of J RM . and ba th furntsh ed apt . ·
bullon closure.
in Middleport . Inq ui re at
hydra ulic, good condit ion .
co urt .
Kay 's Bea uty Salon , 169 N.
Phone 99 2 3494 .
Second, Middleport .
12-2-61c
Mil dred Gillilan
11 2 4tC
Ad m inist ratr ix o f
PoMEROY LANDMARK
Estate of
TWO
F
IRE
STONE
Town
and
':..~·~k W. Corsoy, M;Or.
Wes l ey G . Gi llilan . TRAILER tot for rent. Phone
Country fires . 800 x 16.5. 10 ··,.;. Phone "2-2111
dec:;oased .
992 5535 .
p i~ with rims . Like new . S9S.
12.3 lfc
111 )28. 301121 1, 2, 3. 4, 6tc
cue No . :ZUSI

homes . Now under con -

sltuctlon with carpet ,
ceramic Ill~, garage, large
lot. Buy now and pick your
colors. FHA .financing
available. Price: $21.500.
Phone: 667-6JIM

1966 FORD Fa lcon . 289 moto • •
1964 Chevy Bela ir 283 motor ,
both in good running con ·
difi on Call 992 51a6

_5

REGI ST ERED HOlstei n Bull ,
1 yr . old Dec . 12, sired b~
Maior Royal Des ig n . Call

new · 3-bedroom

·

12-3-41c

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

Pets .

Five

.®..

.

t

Blown into Walls &amp; Allie•'
STORM
WINDOWS&amp; POORS
REPLACEMENT
WiNDOWS
ALUMINUM
SIDING-SOFF ITT
GUTTERS-AWNINGS

Tuppers Plains, Ohio

1969 CHEVROLET 1f2 TON
$1095
8' Fleelslde, V-8, automatic, good tires, deluxe

.

~

Business Services

!Po~eroy

.QUALITY'

moldings, radio, real

.

' "'.
'\ ~ I I

I

.OF
.

&lt; I.J I '
1• • '
f"l .t '
• J. ... : '
,11, 1

~--------~--------------~----~--~--~----------1
J.
.
•''.
',..
'
,.
.,''.
, ~ ,,
·.
•·
FREE ESTIMATES _
MORlAN
o&amp;M~ 1\
Blown
i:
•
Insulation Services
Construction Co.
Sales and Se1wice

Auto Sales

b.;tth , tvrnish cd
and ul Ililies pa1d . Phon e 992

.;1.

15 - The DaUy Sentinel, MidcUeport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Wednesday, Dec. 3, 1975
DICK TRACY
.
.

Ill

�It -

The IJI!Uy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Dec. ~1 19~

~Ubll~ ~~~ig~\\.,o,.'o~~~~;6f~~;c;:;) 9fff:}Js For Fast Results Use The Sfntinel .f;lassifieds

• Monday Deadline 9 a . fl1 ,

Can cell at ion -

Corre cti on s

will b e acctpted until 9 e

for

oav

Polyester dQuble kn i ts , Sl 39

yd .

m

Redu ce d

l hrou9110Lit

prices

I he

Houu.•

Closed Dec n through Ja n .

of P ublicat ion .

REGULATIONS

2

11 J O 61C
The Publl&amp;htr reserves the
r loht to edit or relect anv ads
deem eo objecti o na l . The AN YONE wanti ng ride to
publisher
will
not
be
I lorida to help dri11e and
responsi bl e l or more than on~
shar e expe-nses . phone (614)
Incorrect insertion .
98 5 4 1 4J
Ti mol~y
RATES
Skl orenko Will leave Dec . 4
For Want Ad Service
or s.

5 cents per word one insertion

M in imum cnargell.OO
14 cents per word three

consecu!lve rnser lions .

26 cents per word six con
secut i ve insertions
25 Per Cent D isc ount on pa id
ads and ads pa ld w i thin 10

day •.
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY

Employment Wanted
1

WILL do babysitting in you r
home or mine . everilng and
weekends Phone 9.49 2609
12 2 6tc

Miscellaneous Sales

$2 ,00 for 50 word minimum
E ac n addl11onat word J GARAGE Sale . We dn esday ,

cen ts.

Thursday ,
~ rlday
and
Satur day at 701 Beech St . in
Middleport
12 2· 3tc

BLIND ADS

Add itio nal '25c CMrge per
Adve r tisement.

OFFICE HOURS

8 :30 a . m. to S:OO p . m .
O,ally , 8 : 3Da . m . to 12 00 Noon
Saturday .

In MemOIJ

IN MEMOR Y Of MorriS
Harden

who

vears. ago ,

N.

left

us lour
Dec . J. 1971.

The hou se 1S sa d and ton etv

now ,

Your vo ic e w'e loved is st i ll.
We mIn vou more and more

each ctav .

But must accept God's w i lL
Sa d ly .mi ss ed by wife ,
Doro thy &amp;nd Sons , Bob an d

Ooa n and Fa mil ies .

IJ 3 lip

Card of Thanks

WA LTER

Cle land

f am i ly

wis hes to ex p ress their
ki ndne ss of the many

Lost
EYEGLAS SES IOSI on road
betw een
Pomeroy
and
Midd l eport in brown lea ther
case . Phone 992 2574
12 '] l i p

Help Wanted
WAIT R ESS wanted on F rida y
and Saturday night s. Phon e
992 99&lt;13 .
12 2 6t c
SOMEO NE IO COOk in priv at e
hom e for the age d Good
wages . 308 Page st . • Mid
dlepor I.
11 16 1tc
EXPER I E N CED drumm er , r
&amp; r needed . Ph one (304) 61S.

2713 .

flow ers , food , kind words of
all who helped In an v way at
the flme o f d ea th . For the

many tokens ot money
gratefully
ap pr eciated .
Sp ecial thanks to Rev .

Wanied
~AS'H pBid tor a ll ma kes arid.

m ode ls of mobile homes.
Phon e area co de 61 4.423 ·

Perrin of Tr inity Chur ch for

consoling words .

~acin e

9531.

Emergency Squad and all
surrou nding
area
f ire
departments . Pallb ear er s of
Rac ine Squad , Kin dness w i ll
never be forg otte n bv

... u

turn ltu re, ' Ice· b01u!s ,
brass bed s, or cornpl ete
house holds . Write M
[)
M i ll e r , Rt . 4 , Pom e roy

Mae
Cleland .
W i fe,
Children
and
Grand
chi ldren .
12-3 II C

F I SH and Game Associ ation
will meet on Snow Ball H il L
Coon Shantv . Dec . 5. 19 75 . 1
p.m . Refreshm ent s.

12 3 31 p

P AUL'S Sarber Shop , Raci ne
will be closed un tll Dec e.

12 3-3tc

W ITHOUT my pe rmi ssio n .
th ere will be no hunting or
tresp assing on m~ prop erty .
Bob M c Gre~w , Meagan
Farm . off lower Bowman 's
Run .
11 ·4·26 tc
HAVE your deer trophies
mounted
B1r c: ht le ld s
Taxidermy . St. Rl. 1'24 , East
of Rutland . Phon e (614) H2

2118.

a 13 tf c

Wanted To Buy

Family .

Notice

11 .30 6tp

Ohio . Ca ll 992 7760.
.

10-7.7

Mobile Homes For Sale
8

K 46 LIBERTY , ex
ce ptlonally clea n . furnished
A lso , 10 K SO Peer less , new
ga s furn ace , 2 bedrm eye
level oven and surfa ce unll .
Ca n be seen at Kl ng s bur~
Hom e Sales , 1100 E . Main
St .. Pom eroy , Ohio .
12·3·4tc

19 75 14X70 TRA I LER , ex
cell ent condllion , especia ll y
buill to r offices . Low price
for quick sa l e Phone (3 04)
675 19 21 or 675 5829.
10 30 li e

-3-~
Rent
~OOM S and
2937 .

11 30 6t c

ONE bedrm . mobile home ,
ad ults only . Phone 992 5515. '
li JO !I c
LA RGE bus in ess building in
Mason . large gl ass front ,
d ri ve in rear doors , will r ent
1
• or all of g roun d fl oor , 3200
square feet. good location .
Phone (3041 882 3356 or 773
5611
II 13 tfc

RM . HOUSE in Sy ra cuse .
Ohio s.,se m ent. ga ra ge.
!'eat n ice home , mus t have
re ferences d in teres ted Ca ll
day (6 14 ) 446 7699 , e11enlng s,

(614) 446 9539.

1 t .s tf c

£bUNTRY Mobi le Hom e
Park , Rt J l . l enmilc~ not th
of Pom eroy . Larg r lOI S with
concrete patio~ . si dewalks
runners a n d a ll st rce
pnrlo. ing 'Phone 99 ? 7.J79 .'
t ? J l tf c

FREE RENT AT VILL AG E

MA NO R
IN
MID
DLEPOR T ! We are so sur e
rhat yo u will love our apart
m ents that w e give you two
weeks RENT F- REE Ju st
pay you r security deposit
and sl ay si )( month s and 1h e
fir s! 2 weeks 1S tr ee . You Wi ll
en joy monthly leases. all
.el ec tr ic living, ca rpeting ,
r ange and refr igerat or , tr ee
trash pick u p , cab l e TV
(o plional l and lau n dr y
t acilities . Conve n ient to
shop pi ng bn Th ird and M ill
in Middleport . VILL AG E
MANOR is yours for one
bedroom
apartmen ts
sta rt ing at SI04 month ly p lus
.! tee . we pay for ev erything
else Se e the Manag er at
Rive r side Apartm ents or
cal l 99 2 3273 . This offer wi l l
end soon , so move in now
and save SSU
10 23 tfc

~or

Sale

MODt:t&lt; N Walnut Console,
am . fm r ad io, J speed
chang er . Balance S102 .57 or

terms . Call 653 -7S73 .

12 J.tf c

A I WA tin reel to reel Jape
record er . ster eo. upr ight ,
man 's bicyc l e, S22.50. Phon e

992 -7551.

.®

197S CHEVROLET IMPALA 4 DR .
. $4495
· 4 door, bronze finish, sandstone, vinyl trim, less than
10,500 miles by original owner, 350 V-8 engine, turbo
hydromallc, power sleerlng &amp; brakes, factory air ,
radial tires.
1975 CHEVROLET CHEV ELLE
$4995
Classic 4 door. c9 . demo with low mileage, light green
with green vinyl roof. power door locks. windows,
brakes. factory air, tint glass. comfortill, cruise
control, AM radio &amp; tape, It's loaded and it's nice.

nice.

POMEROY
M~TQ~ . CO
OPEN EVEU . OO.,
POMEROY, OHIO'
•

-

- - ·

197a MALIBU 20.000 miles . 6
cyl . exce ll en t cond i tion
Phone 997 5646 i'lfl er 6 p m
12 3 JI C
1969 F ORO 1~ t o n pickup ,$950.
Phon e 99 2-7348 .
12 J 6tp

---- -----·- - - - -

1967 F ORD 2 dr . hardtop ,
F airlan e, automatic tran s
mi ss ion , conso le , buck et
sea t s, 289 motor and chtome
wheel s. Can be seen al
K ingsbur y Home Sales. 1100
E Mam St. , Pomeroy .
1973 TRUCK . 1 ton Ford , F
350 . Heavy duty LWB . e)( .
ce ll ent condit ion . · Call 304

773 5308 afler 5 p.m.

11 16 tf

11 28 tfc 1\ K C Sa moyed puppy, had all
PUPPY shot s. Phon e 949 2-l42.
----~----. 6,
CONSIGNMEN T sale , Dec
11 28 61c
10 : 30. lunch served.. 1968
' .
Mercury , Su pe r Farmall REG
. Samoyed puppies , 6
tracto r and 2 farm wagons, 2
weel&lt;.s old 7 Wi ll hold for
elec . stoves . washer e nd
Christmas Ca ll 992·522 4.
ctrver , bench uw , gas
11 -30-61C
range , wringer washer , 8 It .
pool table \ 2 TV s, elec . fan , POODLE Groom ing done for
la wn mower , 2 toa ste r s.
SS . W~ th bath , $6 . Do most
toys , some ent l ques . T win
bree ds
at dogs . Ca ll
City Shr lners Club , Racine.
Coolvllle , (6 14) 661 .3915 .
OhiO .
12 3 3tc
11 .30 -3tc
FE M A L E
Ch ihuahua
ROOM ~nd boi!lrd fo r Sr . 1
puppies , Wi ll se ll for s1o
Ci tizens with low Incom e.
each . Car l Nelson . 655
very n ice . Phone 992 3509 .
Syc amor e St .. Middleport ,
11-JO .tfc
Ohio .
ll -2·31p
TATTING c la sses at m~
plac e. One do ll ar tor one
AKC Codl.er Sp aniel Puppies.
lesson . Phone 997 32a9 .
S75 .
Phone
992 7264.
II 28 6tp
Pom erov .

12 2-61p

~\1TICE

12·2·41P

12 1 Jtc

Dated this

Uth aay

TINGLEY

(614 ) 378 -6307 .

FIRE WOOD . Phon e Edward

Ba ll . 992-1580.

November 197 S.

7 RM . UN FU RN IS HED apt . in
Rutland , $95 and utiliti es .
L imi t . 1 chil d. Inquire at
Sa l em Sl , Markel , or ca ll
7ol2 242d or 7oi2 -3l .. l.

12-2-61c

WI til Strut ..., Set Above the Rest.
Thirty-Fifth in a series of money·saving
coupons.

'2.00

614 388 -8369 .

Manning D. Web!iter
Ju dge

(11 ) 19, 26 1121 3, 31C

-----

SMI1H NEli)l SAtES·AGAIN ·

L ARGE • bedroom hom e,
ca rpet ed , fenced lot , pr iv at e
garage . on large corner lo t,
10 m lies tro m Ath ehs . Call
12 2·41 C
... _ - - - - - - - - - - __ _
2 BEORM . Traiter , r eal n ice.
Ph one 99'2 3324 .
12· 2-lfc

. On 011( "OniCik..,. !lpec:ill"

FIONT END ALIGNMENT
.

OFFICE WILL BE
CLOSED
THURSDAY, FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY
DEC. 4-5-6'

•Moving to
NEW LOCATION AT
VETERANS MEMORIAL DUPLEX
Open For Regular Hours
Monday, December 8

DR. JOHN H. RIDGWAY

Television log for easy viewing

~

'!~

I mile on Slate Route 124
Toward Rutland

NELSON
MOTORS, INC,

Ph. 992-2174

11 -2! -1 mo.

Pomeroy
•. J

Real Estate For Sale

TWO story fram e 3 hedrm .,
hot air furnace , modern
~lichen , a l l ut ilities, L.inco tn
Hill . Sh own by appl. only .

D &amp; D 1 H:EE Trim111lng, 20
years eKperience. Insured,
fr ee estimates . Call 992-3051
or ( l l 667 .3041 , Coolville . ~

10 -15-llc

992-3731.

WILL
OU
OU IIOI0\1
eutu
remodeling , roof i ng ,
plumbing . furnace repair
gas or orl , a nd general
HOU SE for sale In Por tland .
repair . Free estimates and
Tak e over pavments 5
reasonable rates . Phone
rooms and bath , good well ,
Charles Si nclair, (614 ) 985and 2 acres of ground .
4121 or 992-2221.
Phone 843 ·2292 .

11 -30-121c

.

lnlenecllon of Rl. Jl &amp; 7
Pomeroy
I D·D·DUN'-IO!.,.l'M AFRAID
TO OPEN W\·M·M'I EVE~!

,.,

Call today lor
Service Tomorrow
Business Phone: H2-5810
Residence: 992-331 J
11-18-1 mo.

-·.....
....
,..,.

Jim wins, then loses

,..
•'

• A J 94
• 63

Coins, Cunency ....." .
and.Supplies · '"'

WEST
• 72

EAST
• 5

Buy, Sell or Trade

• K9 2

• 10 7 5

tK 53

t AJ874
"'K Q 9 4

• Q 10 9 6

.J 7 5

\

I'AMING.IIt CAliS&amp; LIGHT DUT-Y TRUCKS
eAifll~~tf Clthr
•Adjust Toe-IR
•AII!nt C.llllllr
. •tnspoct Shwlng C.m-nll
• lftspect Front ~ilon
a..lllir l'rtctt ICirsl ...ll~.M SI'ICIAL I' RitE Slt.M
.1111•r l'rtctt (Tnodls ...SIUtSt'lCIAL PRICE SIUO

o!a~,~~a~~-t00\11! w"~r i.

.

',_....' ,'

L.-------------------W

·~' 1·

+2

~HWK'tL-..-

•"-

~MJ.lf,

Both vulnerab le

oI

DA IRY and Beet A. I. Se rvlc.e ' 1: .
of all breedt at variable ~ ,
prlc,es in Me igs or edlo lnlnv 1 •
counties . Prefer forenoon • .
mess&amp;ge fer evening !lervlce__!.
from Leland Parker , 992: 1 •
2264 . or answering 667·3251.· • ·
Coolville .
1 ••
12·2·61p ., j ;
. - - - - - - - - ; - -- - - -

II ~ bath , disposal, central
air . cent ral heal , water
purifi ca ti on !iYStem , fullv
e,a rpet ed , wired throughout
for TV a. telephone. Vinyl
siding . double g lass win .
dows , excess s1oraoe space
in closets , Il K 11 metal lawn
building . Caii992 .Jl29 or 992 ·

5914 .

Hoe Service , Rutland , Oh io.'

Phone 742 -2008 .

11 -30-781 c

ReaHswefOi.-Sale-3

~~

..
~ cWINU
M,{I..CHINE .
BEORM . nome.
j ust'
Repairs, service, all m"kes .
finished , remodeling , Salem
992 2284. The Fabr ic Shol), '
St., Rutland . Phone 7~2-.~.0.6 ' Pomeroy Autho't ized'slnter'
after 4 p .m . or see Mfio B. • sates and se rv ic e . we
Hutchison .
; sherpen Sc issors .
·
,· ~
' -23 .tfc
J . '29 tfC 1 ~

.....,.

i

- · -~-----------

11 -30 -261c

BRADFORD.

Complete
9•~ · 2•87

HOU SE- on L incoln He lghts , 2
bedrm , large kitchen, full
basement , n ice ba ck yard ,
only S8,900 , W ith new fur n iture . only $10 ,300. Phone

HOPlNcS ~

C()JI.D GET A
&amp;TURFlX,
11-lAN -rwtr .

~

Phont

or 9•9 -2000. Roclne,

Ohio , Crill Bradford .

10·9-lfc
POMEROY - 1.arg.: nome
tXCAVATtNG': doz..er , tuafJer
overlooking the river, In
anct backhoe wO'f'll. ; sepr1e •
992-7648 .
excellent condition. NEW
tanks
Ins talled ;
dump
11 -6-261c
siding, carpeting , tile,
trucks and to boys fer hire ;
will haul f ill dirt. lop s.oil,
furnace, 3 BR , 1'h balhs,
l lmeS1one and grave~ Call
garage . Sl8,500.
TEAFORD REALTY · HYSELL RUN - Lovely
~~~"~r4)9~?1~~~~ Jn~~~f Pr.:~:~~
home. 2.77 acres. 3 BR,
PHONE 992-3325
992 3525 or 992.5:232.
"•
2 11 -ttc l u·~
IOMechanlc
Pomeroy , 0 ! bath, nice kitchen wllh
... . - -·extras, ba•ement. garage
. ... ~,.·
RACINE - Renovoted J
.,-t.WOOD BOWER &gt; "'oPAl!! { &gt;'
&amp; carport. $28,000 .
B.R. home. Large new
· Sw ee pers , toasters. Irons,
:
TUPPERS PLAINS - '-'
all small appliances . Lflwf', , ~
balh . N. ga• furnace, 7
acre . Home 5 yrs. old. 3
mower , ne xt to State Hlol\.
large closets, garage &amp;
BR , bath; full basement,
Way Garage on Routf 1t
gordon.
.HW floors , dining R. Nice
Phone 98S 3825 .
·,.
COOLVILLE - 5 or 68
.•
.t -16-tt.L ;
view. $19,500.
Acres, good older 4 B.R.
-POMEROY - 4 BR, 2
'
- C TANKS cleanep.,
. ....• •'
home. Hot water heat .
baths, N. g•• hot water
SE PTI
1 •
Mod . kit. .
Modern
Sanitation
.
99~
-39~
,.
t
·
heal, rec . R. , large en,, r l 1 •
RT. 33 - 2 B.R.'s, bath,
closed porch, go·rage . · or '·992 1349.
9·18·tk "' '
T.P. water . Only USOO. Will
$30,000.
'
.._ .,. --I
2 Sportspal Carlopper
trade .
TO
BUY
OR
SELL
LET
·wouL·D ·vou ·u :LIEVe·i · •
boats, 1-12ft. &amp; 1-14 fl. SJOO
RT.
33
Renovated
2
B.R.
US HELP YOU - CALL
ea .
'Bullct an all stetl building al ·
poneled home, bath, T.P.
NOW.
Pole Barn prices? Golden
Amba..adeur rod &amp; sooo
water. Large garden.
Giant All -Stee l Building!,
992-2259 or 992-2568
reel combination
549.95
Rt~ 4, Box U8, Waverly ,
RACINE - Good 4 B.R.'s,
2 Only Fenwick Gr•phile
Ohio . Phone 947 -2296 .
Iorge bath , hot water heal.
rod! II!IS 111.
$70.00
7-24.tfc t
Basement &amp; garage ,
•
----~---- -~ ---......:- \
Sportsman Space
POMEROY - LOOt; - 3
o·oe Ll . Allhement tociied ~ •
Blanket
S! ,OO
B.R.'s, bath, large family
behln~
R·utlana Grldt.' •
All fishing lure• 20 Pet. Off
School. Tuneup ; brakes :
or hobby room . A!klng only
wheel balencing , afineff1tnl.
$8500.
INCOlPOUTID
Phone 742-2004 .
. --"
POMEROY Nicely
1 1 · 16 - lf c~~ ;
designed 3 B. R. home. Gas
NO. lol4 - 3 BR all elec.,
.
I
F.A. furnace, mod. kit ..
full base ., 2 yrs . old, 2.39 a.,
dining &amp; full basement.
lois of road frontage, on 1-~------------~ ~ .
LET US DO IT II ..
MIDDLEPORT - WoodPomeroy, Ohio
paved road, lge. garden
burning fireplaces, 2 nice
I •
plot , good buy at $26,500.00.
Winter hours- Mon., Tut.,
,.- .
baths, 5 B.R.'•. • closets,
Wed ., Fri. 9 to' S, Thur. &amp;
I '
mod. kit ., family room &amp; 2
I '
Sat. 9 to noon.
·
lois.
I '
NO. 141 - 9• a .• more or
I '
SYRACUSE - Otd house
less,
close
to
new
mine
..
,.
M~ level lot. Ju•l $3,000.
Real Estate
area. 2 a, stocked lake,
NEW LISTING - Lovely
barn. chicken house,
older
home
.
11
rms
.
with
2
3 BR HOME , iusl f in ished
garage
with loll. Main
halhs,
mod.
kit
.,
2
woodremodeling . Slllem St . ,
house has been completely
Rvlland . Phone 742 -2306 burning fireplaces , gas
alt er 4 p. m , or see Milo B. furnace, city water. 2 car
stripped ln•lde, with
Squirt il :
Hut ch inson .
garage &amp; 2 large lois.
partial Insulation &amp; new
·
Y1rd ' . -i·: ~,
Syracuse .
walls. owner 11 still
working on It weekends .
I '
RUBBER BACK
Has new root, new outside
'
paint job. !lorm window! &amp;
we have hundreds of '"
city water. Good chence lo
carpet values . 'f'our lob can ·.;.
be completed In 1 to 2· '
try your carpentry &amp;
weeks . No long wellinG ,.. 1 1
CIH\YSlt:R
decorating skill. Inside
1
per iod . Our Installer hll ~•
needs to be finished . On
years txperlence ... E)(pert ,... :
l nSJellatlon . You ' ll l l kt _, 1
paved road, Ul,OOO.OO.
whal you gel.
:1
804W. Miln
CAl. I. 742-2211
.o ·•
1975 Plymouth Duster 6 cyl, Coupe, auto. trans., AM
TALK TO WENDELL
, :.
Pomeroy
992·2298
GRATE
radio, P.S., air cond .. dark blue, 6,000 miles and full
CAR PET CONSUl. TANT
'o
After Hours Ca II
fa ctory warranty._Tom Rue Sale Price

-

You have

a nice comfl.l
spot here.

Skeezix!

TRACJOR SALES

q.

Carpeting
501 NYLON -··
,f
$499- -:~

'3695
1973 Dodge Charger S. E. 2 dr ., P. S., P. B.,
P.W., Cruise Control, fadory official car
Nith new car warranty.

CONTACT:
Loll PIUiey

PURN···
II U

..-........,

LET ME TA LK 10
MY~ER,

PERHAP-5 I CAN
REASON WITH
HIM.

iTS r&lt;O U:7E,WINNIE
Hl5 MlND 15 MADE
UP. HE WANTS ME
TO QUIT BONNAZ,
AND 1HA1'5 1HAT-'

the Jacobys " ca re or this
newspaper. Th e Jacobys will
answer individual questions
ir stamped, se/1-adrJresse d
envelopes are enclosed. The
most interesting questions
wit/ be used in th is column
end will receive copies or

JACOBY MODERN.)

Yesterday's ADswer
12 Squirrel
monkey
16 Gust
19 Shepherd
22 Nessen a nd
Ziegler
23 Brittany
native
24 Emissaries

25 Zola work
27 Wildraw
29 Perplexing
problem
30 Smyrna fig
31 Electronic
device
36 Sioux
37 Pot au -

ll :Oil--News 3,4,6,8,10,13,15.
11 :30-Johnny Carson 3,4, 15; Mannix 13; FBI6; Movie
" Where Love Has Gone" 8; Movie" A Raisin In lhe
Sun" 10; Janak) 33.
12 :30-Longstreet 13; Mannix 6.
I:OQ-Tomorrow 3,4.
I :30-Longslreet 6; News 13.
buy it. Hesilot1on could be
costly.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Now. 22)
As long as you know the
motives behind your actions
today, do n't be too co ncerned
about whal others may lhink.
You can explain later.

az Playing

For Thurodoy, Dec. •· 1175
ARIES (Mtrc1121-Aprll111 Be

marble
33Wood
sorrel
34 Guido's
note
35 Lazy
37 Actor, Gwynne
38 Cleared,
as profit

careful today lest you alienate

one who·s been helpful. When
this person agreed to come
aboard . tle tho ught hls intere sts would be protected.
too.

TAURUS (April 20-MIY 20)
Don ·l be upset today If

.MEAN- WHATDOYOU OOPP::l5E 15
WHILE... 13l.IGGING MR . ADAM5 ? HE(:;
AWFULLY GROUCHY LATELY.
OH,&gt;OU KI\ON

II

AXYDLBAAXB
LONGFI!LLOW

One letter simply olands for another. In lhls sample A Is
used for the three L's, X lor the lwo O's, elc. Single letters.
apostrophe•, the len gth and formation of lhe words are all
hlnls. Each dny Ihe code !etten are dlft'erenl.

HON

CRYPTOQUOTES
BQ

'

QIW

FB

PFI

BMRG -X MIMAFR

,'o'•. '

,,
~---~--•_nc_h_~
__M
__
•~----- '~''•'•·1~21•1--~.-.-•••'~~.f

LB
NM

HFDFZRM
LB

Z M L I W. - G X M J M XL H

F

QG

R LOLl W .

FPLMR

Yesterday 's Cryploquote : A WIFE IS A GIFT BESTOWED
UPON MAN TO . RECONCILE HIM TO THE LOSS OF
PARADISE. - GOETHE '
(C) 197&amp; Kin&amp; Yta\t.Wft Synditatt, In~ . )

•

PAW··

1968 Chevy 9 Piss. Sta. Wagon. air &lt;:and.,

P.S.,_P. B., real sharp wagon.

'OEAR LIFE!~ ~~· ·C!'

GREAT
BALLS
q· FIRE!!

I'VE BEEN WONDE~ING IF
'IOU EVER MET THAT CUTE
LITTLE CO't'OTE THAT
SPIKE TOLD c(Ot) ABOUT .

'995

Pomeroy, Ohio

39 Jane
Austen
novel
40 Coastline
41 Addict
DOWN
I Contour
2 Of the ear
3 Hits it off
( 3 wds. )
t Harem
chamber
S Mourn
6 French
annuity
7 Building
extension
8 Hit it off
I~ wds.)
9 Covetous

AT

IN SALES
IN11,RVICl
. IN ·f.IIINDSHIP

soo Main St.
Phone ftl -1174
Serving Hours: Mon. -Fri. I a .m. Ia 4:30.

question

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:

URIFIH TH' MFIILMAN
.JEST SLIPPED OFFTH '
f.OOTLOG AN ' HE'S
~ANGIN'ON FER

.Smith. Nelson Motors Int.

a

:~r

AH YE:ARNS FO' !! - WHUI
r~--.-: -----==--~7?.:;--'IJ;tJ
IT I3E' ?

'3895
1974 Mere. Comet 4 Dr., 6cyl., auto., P.s:.

WeAIIat•Ad,IR

(Do you have

lor the experts? Write "Ask

6:01l--Columbvs Today 4; Sunrise Semester 10.
6:25--Farm Report 13.
6:3(}-New Zoo Revue 4; News 6; Bible Answers 8;
Urban League 10; Pallerns for Living 13.
6:45--Mornlng Report 3.
6:5&gt;--Chuck WhUe Reports 10; Good Morning , Trl
Slate 13.
7:()1)-.. Today 3,4,15; Good Morning, America 6,13; CBS
News 8: Bugs Bunny &amp; Friends 10.
7:3(}-Schoolles 10.
8:01l--Lucy Show 6 ; Cap\. Kangaroo 8,10; Sesame St .
33.
8:3(}-Big Valley 6.
9:01l--A.M. 3; Phil Donahue 4,15; Lucy Show 8; Mike
Douglas lO; Morn ing with D.J . 13.
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lO :Oil--Celebrlly Sweepstakes 3,4,15; Dinah 6; Price Is
Right 8;,10; M ike Douglas 13.
10 :3(}-Wheel of Fortune 3,15; To Be Announced 4.
11:0(}-1 Dream of Jeannle4; GambitS, 10; Elec. Co . 20.
11 :3(}-Hollywood Squares 3, 15; Happy Days 13;
Mldday4 : LoveofLlfe8.10; SesameSt. 20.
11:55-Take Kerr 8: Dan Imel 's World 10.
12:01l--High Rollers 3,15; Showolts 13; Bob Braun's 5050 Club 4; News 6,8,10.
12:3(}-Magnlflcenl Marble Machine 3,15 ; Ail My
Chtldren 6, 13; Search for Tomorrow 8, lO.
12:45--Eiec. Co. 33.
12:55--NBC News 3.15.
.
1:Oil--News 3; Ryan's Hope 6,13; Phil Donahue B;
Younq &amp; lhe Reslless 10; Not For Women Onlv IS.
1:3(}- Days Of Our Lives 3,4,15; Let's Make A Deal
6.13; As The World Turns 8,10.
2:3(}-Doctori 3,4,15; Rhyme &amp; Reason 6,13; Guiding
Light 8, 10.
3:01l--Another World 3,4,)5; General Hospital6.13; All
In The Fa mily 8, 10; Lilias Yoga&amp; You 20.
3:30--&lt;lne Life to Live 13; Bew llch~d 6; Andy Griffith
B; Match Game I 0; Lowell Thomas Remembers 20.
&lt;:Oil--Mr. Cartoon 3; Merv Griffin 4; Somerset 15;
Mickey Mouse C lub 6,8 ; Mister Rogers 20,33;
Movie " Bengal Tiger" 10; Dinah 13 .
4:3(}-Bewllched 3; Mod Squad 6; Partridge Family 8:
Sesame St. 20,33 ; Get Smart 15.
S:Oil--Bonahza , 3; Family Affair 8; Star Trek 15.
5:30-Adam -12 4; News 6; Beverly Htllblllles 8; Elec.
Co . 20,33; Adam -12 13.
6:01l--News 3.4,8, 10. 13,15; ABC News 6; Hodgepodge
Lodge 20; Jody's Body Shop JJ.
6:3(}-NBC News 3,4,15; ABC Newsl3 ; Andy Grittlth 6;
CBS News 8, 10; Your Future Is Now 33; Classic
Theatre Preview 10.
7:Oil--Truth or Cons. 3; To Tell the Truth 4; Bowling for
Dollars 6; Space: 1999 8; News 10; Let's Make a
Deal 13; Family Affair 15; Romagnolls' Table 20;
Famllly at War JJ.
7:30-Hollywood Squares3 ; WHA Hockey 4; Ohio State
Lottery 6; Evening Edition with Marlin AGron•ky
20; W lid Kingdom 10; To Tell the Truth 13; Music
City U.S.A. 15.
B:OQ-Grady 3,15; Barney Miller 6, 13; Walton• 8, 10;
Romanik Rebellion 33; Classic Theatre 20.
8:3Q-Cop &amp;.lhe Kid 3,15; On the Rocks 6,13; Classic
Theatre Preview 33
9:0Q-EIIery ueen 3,15; Streets of San Francisco 6,13;
Hawaii Flve -0 8; Classic Theatre 33; Movie "The
Quil ler Memorandum" 10.
IO :Oil--Medlcal Story 3,4,15; Harry 0 6, l3; Barnaby
Jones 8; News 20.

[:;~:===::~~~~~(j~~U3~~lC~:IIB~~}i~~/;~~1}~~~:5~'\----l
Bl§ THAR'S sow::=THIN' t:LSE
Z11 inu~ent
Incite
29

TOM RUE
MOTORS

,_

A Pennsylvania reader
wants to know if the two
spades bid in the sequence one
nolrump by declarer , two
hearts by second hand and two
spades by partner is a forcing
bid .
This is a mighty good question and the answer is that
most experts play it as nonforci ng and most other players as
forcing. The important thing
is to get a partnership agreement on the maller.

everyone falls to agree with
you r tdeas. Dissent and d is cus ~
sion forge bette r conclusions.

GEMINI (Moy21 ·Juno 20) Vou

.

SAGITT AiiiUS (NOY. 23-Doc.

21) 11 you 're prudent in manag mg your resources today, you 'll
c ome out in the b lack .
However , be alert You have an
urge 10 ov~rspend .

CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-Jon.
191 If's lmporlanl lhal you
negoliate business deals early
in the day. Later. people will be
wrapped up In their own
probl ems .

AQUARIUS (Jtn, 20-Fob, 1t)
Don·! dilly-dally around the of-

can expect El reasona ble return
today from thai which you've
earned the hard way. Ignore
the get -r ic h-quick schemes.

fice toda'i. The bC'ss has some
chores to kee p you busy lor
hours il you hang around .

CANCER (Junt 21-July 22)
Try 10 be undersland lng lodey

Keep demands. on friends and

with the Immediate family as
yo u are wllh ' persons who
mean t ar less 10 yo u.

re asona ble l i mit s . The ir
tolerance goes only so far .

LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) You 're
ve ry effective today so long as
you 're wo rki ng on a labor of
love. If it's an obligat ion . you 're

l;kely to fry lo palm il ofl.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22) Today you 're somewhat prone to
take financ1a l risks . Steel clear
of sharp strangers .

LIBR,\ (Stpl. 23-0cl. 23) If
you're lookmg for somethmg
for th e home 01 I amity loday.

I

MET HER

ALL RIGHT,

AND SHE WAS THE CUTEST
LITTLE THING I'VE EVER
SEEN ...BUT WE HAD STRONG
RELIGIOUS DIFFERENCES...

PISCES (Fob. 20-Mirch 20)
lov ed ones loday within

A

Your

~Birthday
Doc. •· 1t75
This comi ng yea r you will have
se'ierat good opportun ities to
enhance your financial base.
One windfall can co me from
somethmg you've been work Ing on tor a 1ong time.
I i\t: \\ ~ l ' ,\1 ' 1-: ll

Et\i t-:ll! 'll iSt: Mi.'iN 1

.,

••
••
'&lt;.

II

{!
fi

• •

&gt;

See: Tom Rut; R1y DDutlu • 'Tuppers
Plains'; or G. ( P1tl Williamson · 'New
Haven'.

"

)
ll · J

Ph . 992-2594
\

,,

..
,.

THURSDAY, DECEMBER 4, 197S

Z2 Libertine
Z3 Flaxen
Z5 Snare
Zi Tear
apart
~s= 27 Hourglass

,.

RUTLAND

6•

'

7:01l--Good News for Today lei
7'3(}-Mason County Jr. Miss
8·3(}-Muslc Connection lcl
9,Oil--Movie 'Stage Ooor Canteen"

21~~~~~~1edt~~4-~-consonant

'2995

our· Ids

ACROSS.
I Palm;
starch
5 Diving
bird
10 Tinted
11 Grow
lenient
13 Greek
river
14 Heartsmitten
12 wds .)
15 - de
deux
16 Damp
17 Never
(Ger .)
18 Causing joy
(rare )
20 Understood

--- - ----

GRAV£1Y

992-7133

5t
Pass

~~~~

by THOMAS JOSEPH

Strout.,
Realty

For Sale

3•
4 N.T

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pa ss

~VH:d'

HM...- 1 I WAS

&lt;I

AUCtiU111.1:1 . ~ ...

Service .

2•
I•

&amp; James Jacoby
Today 's column is written in
the fir st perso n by Jim
Jacoby.
Unlike my father , who has
been pla ying bridge si nce
before the flood . I have only
about 25 years experience . I
musl ha ve played more good
hands than bad ones . Th e
record is pretty good , but I
sure have had some real
doozies on the wrong side .
Here is a hand !hal l overbid
a trifle . The final slam conlract wasn 't a bad one. Apparentl y it depend ed on a
heart fi;,esse. but if you look
a t all the cards you will see

estimafes . Phone 992 3284, .' 1 ,, .
Goeglein Ready M ix Co .. ......../
Middleport, Ohio,.
..
•.
6·30,tfr

c.

Pass

B~_Oswald

FARM for sa le by owner. 4 f'"'======;.;;;;;;;;;;;;.~..EXCAVATIN&lt;;, dACKHIJE&gt; ..._;:
miles west of Rutland on
AN'D DOZER, LA.RGE AND· ' •
New Lima Road , 141 acres .
SMALL . SEPT•IC TANKS '•,
large barn, house , other
INSTALLED . . Bll.l. • ~
buildings . All
mineral
PULLINS , PHONE 992 -2&lt;18, ·,
rights , 60 acres tillable, rest
·OAV OR NIGHT .
-'
i n pasture . also pond .
11 -11-781p
S4 4,500. Phon e (419) 865·

3291

South

........ I

ROOFI.NG and gutter of all
kin d, hot asphalt . We fiK the •
tlal ones . Phone 367 -0591 ,
Cheshire . Paul Walker .

.

North East

Opening lead -- 9 •

I

A N Tl QUE S, reauced for quick
sa le . Nice gltts . Lamp
Shades , ch i fnneys , tamp
parts . Beaulitul Table and
floor lamp , Lamps el ec .
tr ifi ed . Lee Rudlsell , Leg ion
Terr ac e, P omeroy .
11 ·26 6tp

,.

Wt'sl

Pass
Pass
Pass

lor more nlontY·Mvlng
wvlce t~ils. coming your w•Y wtekly.
IHtdlillll

• AQ J84

11-25-261p . ..
--~ -----------'\J~
EXCAVATING
.
dozer
,
'READY·· MIX CONCRETE' Wi u'
HOUSE .
M;ddleporl,
3
backhoe
and . d ilc her .
e ii.Ye r ed r i ght to your : · ~ ·
bedr'oom , larg e kitchen .
Charles R. Hell leld Back pd roject,
Fast and easy . Free lU 1 1 •
l iving room . dining room ,
11 ·18 -121c

AM radio, low mileage, local owner.

KIIP

"' 10 8 6 3 2
SOUTH IDI
•KQI08 63

BORN WSER

Phone 742-1331
Roger Wamsley, Rutland
11-28-75

the finesse was wrong and I
wa s going down .
Then , West handed me my
contract on a silver pl atter.
He led the nine of hearts right
into me. I took the trick with
my queen , played two rounds
of trumps and led dummy's
last heart. East followed low
a nd I sta rted to think.
I could only trump tw o
hea rts in dummy . If West had
led a stngleton heart I needed
to finesse my jack. The more I
thought. the more sure I
became that he had done just
!hal. I played my jack of
hearts and had given the contract back.

NORTil

~---------1-~
'

R&amp;J OOINS

formances 20,33 .

9:3(}-Movle "The Art of Crime" 3.4.15 .
10 :01l--Starsky &amp; Hutch 6,13; Lu clll• Ball 8,10; News
20; Say Brother 33.
10 :3()-.Jim Set 33 .
11 :Oil--News 3,4,6,8,10,13,15: ABC News 33.
11 : 3()-.Johnny Carson 3.4.15; Movie "Qulller : Prlce of
Violence"l3; F Bl6; Movle " The Savage" 8; Movie
"The Reluctant Debutante" 10; Janak! 33.
12:30--Movle "Qulller : Pr ice ot Violence" 6.
!.Oil--Tomorrow 3,4; News lJ..
CHANNEL FIVE

WIN AT BRIDGE

L- - -- - - - - - ' •.,

Apprais-al service on
estates and collections.

6,13; Rudolph the Red -Nosed Reindeer 8,10;
lnherilance 20,33.
8:3(}-That's My Mama 6,13.
9:01l--Barella 6. 13: Bing Crosby 8,1 0; Gr.eat Per-

WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 3,1975
6 3(}-NBC News 3,4,4,15 ; ABC-News 13 ; Andy Griffith
6; CBS New s 8,10; Making II Count 20; Book Beat
33.
7: ()1)-.. Trulhor Cons. 3; To Tell the Trut h 4; Bowling for
Collars 6; Pop Goes the Country 8; News 10;
Counlry Music Jubilee 13 ; Fam Hy Affair 15; Book
Beat 20; Know Your School 33.
7: 3(}-Lasl of the WHd 3; Name Thai Tune 4 ; Wild Wild
World of Anlmmals 6; Wild Kingdom 15; Match
Game PM 8; Evening Edition with Marlin
Agronsky 20; The Judge 10; To Tell the Truth 13;
Episode Action 33.
·
8:01l--Hail of Fame 3,4,15; When Thi ngs Were Rotten
- .
·-- .
..

"'!-

FISHERMAN'S
GIFT SALE

11 -30-31c

Phone 992 -3494.

of

Plumbing',
hea ting and all types of
general
repair
Work
guar anteed . 20 yea r s hJ
per ience
Phon e 992 2409

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

_____

6 RM . HOUSE and bath tor
rent in P ome ro~ . Call 992
57 41 .
12-2-26/c

~"EM Oo EltNG ,

PH. 992·5682

SM~TH

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

on .

of William Cl~de
Andrews , Deceased .
No f lce Is her eby given that
Clarence Andrews , of Ill
Ebenezer Stree t . Pome r oy ,
Ohio. has been duly appoin ted
Eucutor of the Last Will and
Testament of Will iam Clyde
Andrews , , dece ased , lat e of
Meigs County , Oh io.
Cr editors li r e r equi red lo
file the ir c la i m s with said
fiduc i ary with In tour months .

11 -26 -61p

TWO v erv go od Goodrich
POT ATO E S fo r sa le 50 and 100
stud ded snow tires , G -78x 15
lb , bags . Ac ros s from
bel ted . One moun te d on
Sham ro c ~ In Henderson . W
that til Olds cutlass . -·
va . Donald Wal hu . ~1 . JS. wheels
Electri c fen ce r , one gas KOSCO T COSMETIC S, Ann
Sauvage ,
Ind epend ent
Henderson , W . Va .
burn er hot plat e. Phone 742
Distributo r , Syracuse .
11 ·18·26 tc
2012.
llhone 992·3272 .
12 3 Jtc
11 -26 -61p
MODERN Walnut Console,
A M ·FM radio , 4 s p eed COLEM A N gas furna ce, 5135
. - -·Can be seen at Kin gsb u r~ WE ARE PICking up a p iano In
chang er . Bal!!lnce S101 .80 or
yo ur area and looki ng for a
Hom e Sa les, 1100 E . Mai n ,
terms . Call 992 ·3965 ,
r es ponsible party to assum e
Pom eroy
11 .20 ttc
net balltn ce. Call credit
12 J ate
manager . area code , (6 14)
TR,..,ILER and lot In Rutla nd
112 ·5669 or 712 ·1611. Or write
JOHN DEERE 1010 Dozer ,
Wi ll conside r land contract .
26 0
Eas t
Main
St . ,
53 ,00() Jag er Industr ial end
.Phone 992 ·3960.
Chi l lico th e. Oh io 45601.
loader yard and 1 1 bu ck et,
11 -21 · 121C
11 ·30.7tc
Sl.lOO . Phone 13 04 ) 773 5238.
1'2 .J.Jt c
TW O 1 yr . ol d Blueticl&lt;.
HAN D PA t N ft:D red andco onhound s, S50
e ach .
w h i le
apple
plaq ues!
Phone 161 4) 667 ·6165 .
Pa i nted on aged wood , lhese 1968 TRUCK C"mper with
s to ve. oven , sink , iceboK ,
. 11 -30 -&lt;lp
plaQues , make an un usu al
sleeps 4, S495 . No S unda~
item for I ha t c lub Christma s
calls . Phone 742 .2460.
1975 CHAMP ION motor home,
g ift s nc hange . $2.50 eac h .
J1 .J0.6tc
full y self .conta ined , roof air
View w i thout ob li ga t ion
condi t ioni ng , automa tic,
Jay ne Hoeflich , 992 S292.
w i th p .S.1 and p b . More
11 28 61p
e~e: lras , Phone 992 -3253 .
11 -30 -6tc
GIRL'S 24 In bicyc le, ex ce l lent cond ition , S20 . Phone
992-5261.
MUNTZ car tap e deck wilh
11-30 -31p
speak ers . excell ent con dition . 590 . Phone (614) 985 ·
14' GLAST RON outboard - 35
3B2J , Chester .
12.1.01c
hp Ev inrude (elec . star t ),
trailer , all access . S750 t irm .
Old
walnu t
buffet.
re f inished, beautifu l, 52 00
firm . Boxer dog , 21 2 yrs .•
fema le, AKC , good with
children S 150 firm . Phon e

For Rent

Eltlte

t969 396 CHEVY Super Sport,
real good condit ion . Be$t
ree~so nab le offer . Phon e 742 ·
3016 .

All Meehan Ia I Work

Nathan BlgtJ,
Radiator Specialist

11.26 61p

A IR CO welding ma c hine ,
new. elec all accessories
ihc luded . Phone 992 34 10.
10.2B .Ifc

2

4 10·1 mo.

From the large·st Truck or
Bulldozer Radietor to the
,
small est Heater Core.

2018

NOW selling Fu l ler Brush
Products . Phone 992 ·3410.
10 6 !fc

1614 ) 985 -3855 . Also

Syracuse, Ohio
Ph , 991_:,1993..

ROGER HYSELL'S
GARAGE

1969 CHEVRO LET lor sa le or
trad e for pickup Phone 949 -

For Sale

Hols tei n bull ca lv es .

LARRY lAVENDfR

11 -12-1 mo.

11 -30-41p

For Sale

12-Hi c
I w ill ott er to r sal e at the
Ottlce of Fu ltz &amp; Knight.
REGISTERED HOI Sieln Bull ,
Attorneys. Pomeroy Nalional
1 year old Dec . 12, Sir ed by
Senk Bu i ld i ng . Pomcrov . ~ (l R N.l SHE o· · opor tmenl
Maior
Royal
Design .
Ohio , on Friday . becemb er
adults ontv In Middleport
Con tac t Earl Dean or call
5, 197 S, at 1(1 O'C lOCk f\ ,M . , I he
Ph one 992 -3874 .
161&lt;) 985 3855 , Also, 2
rea l es tat e form er l y ow tH~ d by __ ______ __ _ _l 25 ·1J!=
Holstein bull calv es .
Wes l eY G. Gi llilan . $iluated in
12 2-41p
Letar l
To wnsh ip , Meigs ·TR A IL E R tot off KI OgsbUi'y
Counly , Ohio , con sisll ng of
Road neer Harr ison ville .
FIREWOOD . Phone 992 -5702.
apprOKima te ly 2A Acres ,
clly
f r ee na tura l
Will haul local . Sl S
Se aled bids may be sub
water . Phone 7_.2 2577 .
12 2-31p
milled in writ ing , in advance ,
11 -18-1
__...._ 31c
and Interested par lics sha ll
8 MONTH o l d Registered
also have th e nght to com
A N o 4 rm . furnished and
Nubian goat. Phone 7.42. 10'' Baal.
pei!H ve bidding in person , ai
nished
a
pt
s.
Phon
e
992
unfur
Deep Iough Iread.
2292.
the t im~ of sa l e.
5434 ,
12-2-61p Exclu~lve
Knee High
The
1\ dm l n lstratriK
11 -9-llc
reserves the r ight to reje ct
bullon closure. Deep Iough
99 H A USTIN Western grader
anv or all b id s, and su ch bids
lread. Exc lusive
u . o. No . 14 engine. a l l
are sub lect to approval of J RM . and ba th furntsh ed apt . ·
bullon closure.
in Middleport . Inq ui re at
hydra ulic, good condit ion .
co urt .
Kay 's Bea uty Salon , 169 N.
Phone 99 2 3494 .
Second, Middleport .
12-2-61c
Mil dred Gillilan
11 2 4tC
Ad m inist ratr ix o f
PoMEROY LANDMARK
Estate of
TWO
F
IRE
STONE
Town
and
':..~·~k W. Corsoy, M;Or.
Wes l ey G . Gi llilan . TRAILER tot for rent. Phone
Country fires . 800 x 16.5. 10 ··,.;. Phone "2-2111
dec:;oased .
992 5535 .
p i~ with rims . Like new . S9S.
12.3 lfc
111 )28. 301121 1, 2, 3. 4, 6tc
cue No . :ZUSI

homes . Now under con -

sltuctlon with carpet ,
ceramic Ill~, garage, large
lot. Buy now and pick your
colors. FHA .financing
available. Price: $21.500.
Phone: 667-6JIM

1966 FORD Fa lcon . 289 moto • •
1964 Chevy Bela ir 283 motor ,
both in good running con ·
difi on Call 992 51a6

_5

REGI ST ERED HOlstei n Bull ,
1 yr . old Dec . 12, sired b~
Maior Royal Des ig n . Call

new · 3-bedroom

·

12-3-41c

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

Pets .

Five

.®..

.

t

Blown into Walls &amp; Allie•'
STORM
WINDOWS&amp; POORS
REPLACEMENT
WiNDOWS
ALUMINUM
SIDING-SOFF ITT
GUTTERS-AWNINGS

Tuppers Plains, Ohio

1969 CHEVROLET 1f2 TON
$1095
8' Fleelslde, V-8, automatic, good tires, deluxe

.

~

Business Services

!Po~eroy

.QUALITY'

moldings, radio, real

.

' "'.
'\ ~ I I

I

.OF
.

&lt; I.J I '
1• • '
f"l .t '
• J. ... : '
,11, 1

~--------~--------------~----~--~--~----------1
J.
.
•''.
',..
'
,.
.,''.
, ~ ,,
·.
•·
FREE ESTIMATES _
MORlAN
o&amp;M~ 1\
Blown
i:
•
Insulation Services
Construction Co.
Sales and Se1wice

Auto Sales

b.;tth , tvrnish cd
and ul Ililies pa1d . Phon e 992

.;1.

15 - The DaUy Sentinel, MidcUeport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Wednesday, Dec. 3, 1975
DICK TRACY
.
.

Ill

�.... ,
......
••
rt'r•

16 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Dec. 3, 1975

Strike not over
Gallipolis State Institute
Superintenden t Dr . flernard
Niehm said today that until
legal problems are clarified,
none of the empl oyees let go
following the recent strike by
the Communications Workers
of America will be rehired or
reinstated.
The superintend en! sa id he
was surprised a I Ihe Judge
Rona ld R. Calhoun's decision
Monday afternoon when the
judge ordered the state to
rehire approx imaii'IJ' :t:t fir ed
employees.
"Our pos ition now is that
we're still tryi ng to determine what Is lega l and what
is not legal," Niehm said . The
superintendent sa id none of
U1c individuals let go earlier
las t month have been reinstated or rehired.
Niehm added individuals
arc bt ing told they will be
called later on whether or not
they should or should not
report back to work .
" If we rebire them now,
wh&amp;t would this do to theii'

MEIGS lHEATRE
TONITE THRU THURS.
DEC . 3-4
NOT OPEN
FRI., SAT. &amp; SUN.
DEC. 5-6-7
BRANIGAN
( Technicolor)

Starring John Wayne and
Ri chord Attenborough.
Show •tart• at 7:00p.m .

appea ls which have been
filed,'' Niehm continued.
The superin tendent said ,
" If the stat a ree ls Judge
Ca lhoun's order is correct,
then we'll abide by his order ."

Mea nwh il e. th e Ohio
Ocpartmeiil or Mental Health
and Mental Hel&lt;!rdation has
refused to comply with Judg e ,
Calhoun's order to rehire the
fired workers sayin g th e
.Judge does not hav e
jurisrlicli on in the ma tter.
"We don't think the judge
has the authori ty to tell us to
put these pe ople back to
work , even on a tEmporary
basis," said AI Dopkln g,
communications director or
the meni&lt;ll health departme nt. " We're going to
challenge his decision."
Gallia County Co mmon
Pleas Court Judge Ronald R.
Ca lhoun issued a preliminary
injunction Monday ordering
lite fired employes to return
to work pending the outcome
of their appeals to the Ohio
Board of Personnel Review.
Dopkin g said department
att orneys would Uilk to the
judge some lime this week to
"explain our position ."
'!'he court order stemmed
from a motion filed by Local
1790 of ·the Communications
Workers of America (CWA )
asking that 33 of Its fired
members be rehired until the
Ohio Board of Personnel
Review aclll on their appeals ,
Contacted
at
CW A

PLAYING NITELY

nJESDAY THRU SATURDAY

GEO. HALL
TU ES.-THURS.

FRL&amp; SAT

8: 30-1: 00

9:30-2: 00

· The MEIGS INN
Pomeroy

992-3629

Best In
Live Entertainment

Weather

Car sales up in Novembe~
By EDWARDS. LECHTZIN
UPI Au!o Writer
DETROIT (UPI) - Paced
by their ~t llklay sales
period in over a year ,
automal!ers
sold
an
estimated 672,000 cars in
November to give them a 38
per cent jump over last
year's recession levels, industry analysts said today .
Reports scheduled today
were expected to show sharp
gains for each of the four U.S.
companies . which
in
Novembed974 had the worst
non-strike sales In 15 years.
On a seasonally adjusted
basis, the way automakers
themselves judge their
success or failure , this
November's sales were at an
eight million-a-year ra lethe best sliowlng since
September, 1974.
Imports, with an estimated
110,000 sales, were up about
18 per cent over a year ago,
although their share of the
U.S. market was 14 per cent
of total sales. For the first
eight months of the year,
imports had been taking a
record 20 per cent of total
sales.
Four importers - Datsun,
Fiat, Alia-Romeo and
Peugeot - reported their
November sales results·
Tuesday.
In the finalllklay period of .
the month, sales of U.S.-built
cars were an estlma ted
220,000 cars, a 41 per cent
headquarters in Columbus,
union spokesman Bill O'Neill
said the union would file a
motion to hold the state in
· conU,mpt ol the court order.
"The Injunction was rather
clear," O'Neill said. "I don 't
see any room for movement
on our side.''

BAZAAR SET
The Ladles Auxiliary of ·
the United Pentecostal
Church, South Third Ave.,
Middle~ort, will h~ld. a
· Christmas bazaar begmmng
at 10 a.m. Friday and
Saturday In the small
building next to the church.

month of the year, is :g per
jump from last year.
Analysts . said November cent.
sales were down about 2 per
Even with the str'onger
cent from tbe October level sales, auto factories · were
when the 1976 models were working at only 70 per cent of
introduced . The normal capacity and 68,000 wdrkers
dropolf from October, were still listed on long.term
traditionally the strongest layoffs.
·
1
------------------------~--)

!
I

Area Deaths

Mrs. Holmes dies at Newark
•

Mrs. E. May Holmes, 91, a
native of Meigs County, died
Monday in Ucklng County
Memorial Hospital at
Newark.
Mrs . Holmes was the
daughter of the late Alvin W.
Vale and Mattie Wilcox Vale
ol this county. She was
preceded in death by her
parents, a sister, Nora , two

brothers, Clair and Alton and
her husband, J. J. Holmes.
Mrs. Holmes was a member
of the Order of Eastern Star
for 73 years.

Surviving are a daughter ,
Mrs . Leverett (Pauline I
Roush, Middleport; a :son, '
James of Buckeye Lake i two
brothers, Fern, Columbus,
and Ralston of Florida ;: two
gr~ndsons , Paul R. Rqush,
Route I, Reedsville , .and
William L. Roush, El ~aso,
Texas, and three grea tgranddaughters.
Funeral services will be
held at 10 a.m. Thursday at
the Boring Funeral Home in
Hebron with burial to be in
Carroll.

ASK ACTION
MIAMI BEACH (UPI)
The nation's Republican
mayors have urged their
Democratic colleagues 19 join
them in persuading Congress
to grant their req~est for a
continuation of federal
revenue sharing gunds.

Mrs. Perry died Monday

PORTSMOUTH - Mrs .
Lydia Bruch Hysell, BS ,
formerly of Middleport. died
Saturday at the Elmwood
VIllage convalesce~! center
In Port•mouth. ·
Mr~ . Hysell was born In
Pomeroy on Nov. 15, 1890,
the daughter of the late
Phillip and Kathryn Hellman
Bruch. She was preceded also
In death by her husband, Leo
M. Hy•ell In 1971, and. five
sister..
Surviving ore a daughter,
Miss Kathryn Hysell, Mid·
dleport; three sisters, Mrs.
Helen Blake and Mrs. Emma
Berry, both of Erie, Pa., and
Mrs. Frieda Devol, Oregon,
Ohio. ond two brothers,
Delbert Bruch, Pomeroy, and
Albert ·Bruch , Sonnyvllle,
Ohio.
Mrs. 'Hysell wa• a member·
of Heath United Method ist ,
Church, Middleport.
Funeral services will be
held at 10 a.m·. Friday at the
Rawlings-Coats Funeral
Home wllh the Rev . Robert
Bumgarner officiating .
Burial will be In lhe Gravel
Hill Cemetery at Cheshire.
Friends may call at the
funeral home from 2 to 4 and
from 7 to 9 p.m. Thursday.

I'MTlCIPATING &amp;TORE!"

&lt;

DIVORCE ASKED
A suit for divorce has been
liled and a dis5olution of
marriage entered in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court.
Marcia Gall McEwen,
Albany, asks divorce from
David Myron McEwen, Rt. 2,
Pomeroy, on charges of gross
negiect or duty and extreme
cruelty. Patricia A. Imboden,
Rt. 4, Pomeroy and Robert L.
Imboden, Rt. i, Rutland, filed
to dissolve their, marriage.

HALT CALLED
TOKYO (UP[) - Government workers today called a
halt to a wildcat strike that
. a. li·f:; two step-sons, shut down rail transportation
ATHENS - Mrs . Rosa Lee C
Cross Per ry ' 80 ' Rt · 1' Woodrow Perry. Beckley, and d1'srupted mail and
Athens. died at 11 : 20 p.m. and Etmer Perry, Detroit) 29
Monday in Pleasant Valley grandchildren and 31 great. communication and comHospital following a long grandchildren . .
munication services for eight
1
illness.
She
was
the
mother
of
d
Mrs. Myrldeen Litchfield, of
ays.
Point Pleasant, and had Samuel]. Nixon 1
relatives In Gallia and Meigs
1
Counties.
NEW STRAITSVILLE OHIOANS VOTE
Funeral services will be Samuel J. Nixon, 85, Rt . ' l.
WASHINGTON (UP!) conducted Thursday at 1: 30 Rutland, formerly of New
p,m. from the Wilcoxen Straitsville, died Monday Ohio delegation balloting in
Funeral Home with the Rev . afternoon at Hocking Yalley the vote by which the House
Gerald Sayre officiating . Community Hospital .
!
Tuesday passed and sent to
Burial will follow In the
Mr. Nixon was born ,tn
'd
su ncr est c em e t e r y . Perry County, the son ot t~e the Senate a bill to provt e
Visitation hours at the late James H. and ·cta(a aid to New York.
funera l home will be after 4 Davis Nixon . A retired oil
Voting for were 175 Demo·
p.m.
Wednesday.
field
worker
,
he
had
worked
crats
and 38 Republicans.
Mrs . Perry was born for the Fairfield School for
March 10. 1895. at Clarks· Boys. His first wife, lcley and
Voting against .were 103
burg, W. Va ., and was a a son, Don, preceded him in Democrats and 100 Repubmember of the Bellemead U. death.
.
!leans.
M. Church . Her first
Mr . Nixon is survived by
husband, Harley Cross, died his wife, Anna Pearl Nixon , Ohio, 8 Democrat!, 15
in 1949.
Rl. 1, Rutland : two Republicans
She is survived by . her daughters ,
Mrs .
Tim
Democrats for : Ashley,
second husband , Chesler (Elaine) Blankenship, Sah
Perry, Rl. s, Athens; five Diego, Cat it. , and Mrs . Carney, Hays, Seiberling,
daughters . Mrs . Julia Warren tConsuella) Dunkt~, James Stanton, Vanik.
Palmer, Penn Springs, W. New Straitsville; three sons,
Democrats against: Mott.
Va .; Mrs. Ora Logue, Bid· Loren E., New Stralfsvllhi;
Democrats not voting :
well ; Mrs. Litchfield, Point w. William , of Columbus, and
Mrs . Ruth Harold M- of Kingston ; a Stokes.
Pleasant ;
Thomas, Martinsville, Va .; daughter-in-taw. Mrs . Don
Republicans lor : Brown,
Mrs. Paul Sullivan, Ashland, (Georgia) Nixon, New Mosher, J. William Stanton,
Ky .; three sons, Leroy Straitsville ; seven grand·
I Dickie! Cross, Athens; children, and eight greal- Wylie.
Melvin Cross, Langsville ; grandchildren.
Republicans against: Ashand Arley Cross, Findlay ;
Funeral services will bf brook, Clancy, Devine,
tour step-daughters . Mrs. held Thursday ot 2p.m. at the Gradlson, Guyer, Harsha,
Virginia Whitlock , Hunt. Humphrey Funeral Home
lngton ; Mrs . Maxine Wood, with the Rev. Frank Cheese- Kindness, Latta, Miller,
Mrs. Viola Koenig, both · brew officiating. Burial wiiJ Regula ,
Detroit, Mich.; and Mrs. be in Gore Cemetery . Friends
Republicans not voting:
F•ve Peterson, Los Angeles. may call at the funeral home
any time.
, Whalen.
.

Lydia B. Hysell

" OPTIONAL WIIH

Cloudy tonight an~ Thurs- .
day, lows tonight low 30s.
Highs Thursday in the, low
50s .
Probability
of
precipitalion 20 per cent
today, 10 per eent tonight and
Thurs_day.

HOSPITAL NEWS
Haven . Robert Crawford, '
'
Na~cy '
ADMITTED - Mildred Apple Grove;
Arnold, Pomeroy; Alva Will, Chapman, Patriot; Mrs . •
Pomeroy; Hugh Bush , Elmer Newberry , Letart; ·
Racine; Clifford Holter, Mrs Ralph Frutl), Mason;
Racine; Dixie Flowers, Fulton Spears, Henderson;
Letart, W. Va.; Mildred Janel White, Mrs. Conrad
Sisson, Middleport; Annette Berkley, Mrs. Melvin Wears,
Lambert, Pomeroy; all Point Pleasant.
Charlene McDaniel, Jr.,
Rutland; Thurston Stone,
Pomeroy; Joyce Bing,
(Continued from page I!
Middleport.
Susan.
DISCHARGED - Joy Rife,
Ford · appears tired and
Illary Turley, Rosalee
9omewhat somber - not hla
Clarke, Clarence Longstreth.
usual sunny self. When he
Holzer Medical Center
grabbed a 25-minute cat nap
(Dilebarges, Qec. Z)
during the day, press
Herman Borland, Allee ilecretary Ron Nessen said:
Bowyer, Addie Brown, Mrs . . "He needed it."
Larry . Burnette and son,
And Susan, 18, bowed out of
Ullian Burt, Jean Castor, the dinner and sports events
Thomas Cummons, Mindy in the evening. "Susan is just
Frazier, Shannon Halfhill, tired," Nessen said.
Margie Hammond, Teresa
At this point In their llklay
McCarty,GeorgeMenshouse, Far East tour, In fact, the
Robert Sanders n, Ruby buoyant Ford was Betty. She
f ··unders, Charles Scott, Carl took a solo tour of the old
~ wart, Sheila Taylor, imperial Forbidden City, JX'O·
Evelyn Trivett, Morgan nounced the gold-roofed
Turner, Mrs. Jerry Van pagodas and prlcelesa jades
Inwagen and son, Lana "fascinating," and join the
Watson, Alta Wray.
fun at a Peking dancing
~Births, Dec. Z)
school.
Mr. and Mrs. Roller!
The First Lady, once a
· J ackso n; ·M.r. profess1ona
· !dancer • kicked
Brisker, son,
--" joined 8
and Mrs. William Johnson, off her shoes a...
f
I
daughter, Gallipolis; Mr. and · troupe of young erna e .
Mrs. John Smith, son Langs- dancers at the Central May 7
ville·, Mr. and Mrs. Francis Art College rth
and swayed
,..._, __
Smlthson,son,Letart,W. Va. through a No ern.,,......,
folk dance. She was a Uttle
PLEASANT VALLEY
out of step and, laughing,
DISCHARGED - Mrs. asked reporters, "You won't
,.,
W t
George
rayne,
es send this home, wlll you?"
Columbia ; Floyd Bush, New
The Chinese media played
Ford's trip prominently. A
picture of Ford and Mao .was
splashed on the front page of
the Peking People's Dally,
(Continued from page I)
and Chinese televl•lon
•
would strengthen curbs on showed film of the two
real estate tax shelters, leaders greeting one another
th th minimum tax arm1 t Mao' --'den
Streng en e
w
ya
s ,...,. ce.
on the wealthy, continue
Rumors that recent strokes
withholding taxes on tbe U.S. have left the 81-year-old Mao ·
vestments of foreigners, allb ta~lpplelargelywere
u ~
eliminate a thre'*'ear dispelled by Ford's visit.
carryback for capital losses
"MaoTse-tungwaarlghton
in excess of $30,000 and speed top of It-there Ia no question
the effect of curbs on special bo tIt" Geor B"-L bead
a U ,
ge ""''•
tax breaks for exporters.
of the U.S.llalson office, said
today. "Mao was right In
tbere."
TO HOLZER
ThesiteofFord'atalkawlth
The Pomeroy E·R squad Teng today was the
answered a call to the George President's own residence,
Young home at Dark Hollow 'G
H
N a" .._
sd y
' ues1 01181! 0. 1 , w•..,.~
at 5:50p.m. Tue ay. oung, the Fords live surTounded by
having difficulty breathing, landacaped ~. Chlneee
was taken to the Holzer Army ~··""· and electric
Medical Center.
e-.
fences.
Veteran~ Memorial Hospital

·"""~·""""""""""----"""-------

rJ

-----~lfHII
'

Ford talk

Tax biJl

m·

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

... IfHIIt•... lfHI t:OO,..........__... __,.............

I!Iil'llilt'lliltlJiilo!ll

'

2.14

I

h tESI! AilE SOOOfSf€0 t.O

VILLAGE PHARMACY
MIDDUPORT, OHIO
992-5759

I.

~
'1,1,

"

'

(

~

t:·
,~ ·
·~

.

u
p rd
Lr~rs. ~· o

fi n ds paU1Ce
•-

~- museum sights fascinating
~
~
'i.:~

~ UP! White Houae Reporter

~

PEKING
(UP!)
{'·:·: President Ford and Mao Tse0

f

0.~

By HELEN THOr.fAS
;;:;
i~!; UPI White Roue Reporter
,
.
:;:
~[~ PEKING (UP!) - Betty Ford loday toured the fabled !!:'
~~ Forbidden City and called Its ancient art treasures ·and ;:;:
;1l: pagoda-roofed architecture "fasclna\itlg ... un· :!;!
»
r.:~"' bel!evable. ''
::::
;~;·, Mrs. Ford, sporting a new belted brown mink coat (
iii: which was a ,gift from her husband, toured the palace :;;:
rnusuem in tbe Forbidden City and shook her head in awe ;:;:
q:; at the priceleas jade relics that were tbe imperial jewels :;:;
i*'. of the Oling and Mlng dynasty empresses.
':!:
Among tbe 20,000artobj~ts In the museum is a five-ton ;:;:
piece of blue jade encased in glass that took artisans six !:!:
years to carve. She learned from her white-llaired Chinese ;:;:
$Ulde that blue jade israres~ and therefore most valuable, :!:!
:::-; followed by yellow and white Jade.
:::;
.it:~ "Absolutely el(quisite," she said. "It's so much of a ::::
§f. temptation - I tbink I'm going to have to go shopping this :!:!
~ alternoon."
!:!:
;a. ' Construction of the Forbidden City began in the third :;:;
Mlng Dynasty in 1400. Once the official .residence of
j emperors, the palace was off limits to all but the highest !!!:
~ officials for centuries. Now It is open to the public.
:;::

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By UDlled Press Internallooal
~ COLUMBUS ~ THE OHIO PUBLIC Expenditures Council
'reported today that nearly ~ billion worth of real estate in
bbio was tax exempt In 1975, The council said this represents
ill Increase of 68.2 per/ cent In the amount of tax exempt
P,:operty in Ohio over me past 10 years.
· • The council, a non-partisan research organization, reports
lhat $3.8 billion In tax exempt real estate represents governIncluding state and federal property, school
munic1ipal property and parks. Churches In Ohio
about
million In tax exemptions and another
represents charitable institutions, private colleges and
~

The council said It supports a resolution now in the Ohio
~!!!nate which asks the Legislative Service Commission to
the poaalbillty of the state paying local governments for
JI'Operly taxes lost due to the tax exemption of state-owned
p-operty.

*!ldY

-..

ST. CLAIRsVILLE, OHIO - \JNITED MINE Workers
. Union president Arnold Miller Is going to write a book telling of
tile "deplorable" condition which now-imprisoned former
· IJMW (ll'lllident Tony Boyle left the union, it was reported

"today.

i .. . .

• ..

!

•

-::•• Coal Monthly, a monthly newspaper dealing with energy
')!_Oblemawhlchlspublished here,saidMiller claimed his book
;Would allow how he had "turned the union around" from onefmllll dmllnatlon to rule "by the rank and file." When I write
~ book telUng how It was, It will be In the hope that young
~rs comins up In tbe union will read It and never let it
:l:*ppen again," Miller said.

-

.....-

! ,f.,.

....''

' \4

:;.~ BEIRUT, LEBANON - THE LEBANESE goverrunent,

'.

Head{Iuarters For Mens Van Heusen
SI?ORT and DRESS SHIRTS

'.

'·
,

.ilililble to control new outlreaks of fighting, has passed a law
:!Biting thousands of men into the army In a desperate at)141!1Pt to break up waiTing Christian and Moslem militias.
~ernment leaders said they hoped at least 15,000 men would
~ dralted into the 18,001h9trong anny by the end of thts'month.
.;., The biD, paaaed Tuesday, is a last ditch effort to end eight
:montha of bloody civil war by breaking up the various armies
illl.ached to tbe battling political and religious factions. The
'w Ql'dera Lebanese males between the ages of 18 and 40 to
18 months In tbe armed forces.

...«ve
.
1flo,."!

4

'':' ISRAELI WARPLANES FLASHED ACROSS the
·f,ebanese border 'today and flew over Palestinian refugee
.~Jltl for tbe second day, touching off air raid alerts
.J!Irouchout the ciluntry, military sources In Beirut said. The
,planes made no attempt to attack and apparently were on a
·r'«onhalaslnce mission ·to phptograph damage done In
.tuesday's heavy raids, the sources said.
:,;; The alia-aft Dew over Palestinian refuliee camps In
Jqablltlyeh In the south and near Tripoli In the north - the
,argeta of I.araell bombing raids Tuesday. In Israel, troops
:,tent on alert In tbe north In the face of a Palestinian threat to
:~:-k velljjeance with all avallable methods" for the air raids
tbat kllled and wounded more than 200 'persons In Lebanese
ftfugee cam)lll.

'

WALLACE SKIPS SPEECH
WASHINGTON (UP!) George Wallace was the
governor who came to lunch
and the presidential candidate whb didn't show up at
the winter meeting of the
nation's
Democratic
governors Tuesday.
'Wallace, who accepted an
.invitation to appear before
the governors with nine other
announced candidates for the
Democratic presidential
nomination, showed up for a · '
luncheon at midday, but then
left the meeting.
He sent word he was too
"preoccupied" with Alabama
business to appear as a
candidate.
Gov. Philip Noel of Rhode
Island, conlerence chairm4n,,
irled to dissuade Wallace at
the luncheon from canceling
his appearance.
"He
Indicated
that
everyone here knew his vlelra
and that be had other tlangs
to do. He said If he got them
done he'd come back, but hla
aide caUed during the break
and said he was tied up,"
Noel told reporters.

..." .
·~

,.yAN H

!EUSEN:J

So soft , silky and sensuous.

l.t's Van Heusen 's touch of
IU)(urv every man Ob ·

$ervu Euv care elegance

because they 're 100 pet . .
Qlana nylon and com .
pletely machine washable
and dryable .' A Van Q Shirt
has • great sensual feel
and It's lust as remarkably

comfort•ble . Styled as onty

Van H ..•usen can tor pertect
drape and smooth fiiWitSS

tiL Lett. sport shlrl m .oo.
R lghl dren shirt llj.OO,
And available with short
looves $15 .00. All In

distinguished collect ion

olld colors . So

and lllke the Van Q
lest ' end you ' ll BELl

I

•

Open lJiis Fri~ and Saturday Night Tl

g pM

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

,.,

By HELEN THOMAS

~!~-::;::::~:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;: ;:;:;:;:;:;: ;:;:;:;:;:;:;::::: ::::::;:; : ; :;: ;:;:;:;:;::::::::: :::::: :::::::: ::::::::::::: :::::;:;:

::_ WASHINGTON - FRESH SNOWS and rains have
lflchtened the outlook for 1976 grain production in both tbe
~ted States and the Soviet Union, Agriculture Department
~iclala said today In two separate reports.
~ There had been warnings that drought conditions
:fllfeatened the 1976 Soviet winter grain crop after an already
~ilaastrollll 1975 harvest. The poor 1975 harvest led to heavy
lWssian grain purchases from the United States.

.r

8

·Ford's talk with Mao
~said 'very important'
.
tung discussed the touchy
issue of U.S.Sovlet detente in
their long private chat, Wblte
House officials said today,
declaring it would be "a
terrible mistake" to underestimate the value of
Ford's Peking mission.
White
House
Press
Secretary Ron Nessen also
confirmed there would be no
communique to mark any
new breakthroughs in u.s.Chlnese relations at tbe close
of Ford's visit, but he insisted
the mission produced many
"good signs" that · should
offset skeptical questioning of
this development.
"Every public sign has
been a good sign" Nessen told
reporters at the end of the
third of Ford's four days in
Peking. "There have been no
had signs."
In response to questions, he
confirmed Ford and Mao
indeed had discussed
detente- which China has
blasted publicly during
Ford's stay-and agreed with
a reporter's suggestion they
had achieved "a better understanding" as a result of

-

warned :
"You are making a terrible
mistake to believe the
meetings are not going well."
Ford put in another full day
of diplomacy and protocol at
a pace that seemed to be
fatiguing him, starting with
the morning meeting with
Teng,
·
Uttle information has been
disclosed on the substance or
tone of these talks-perhaps
because there is little room
for agreement on such major
issues as U.S.-&amp;lvlet detente
and America's Taiwan
· policy . The White House
merely described this round
as "a continuation of
silinificant discussions on a
wide range of issues."
Then, in rapid succession,
Ford conferred for two hours
on U.S. budgetary problems
with an aide; tramped
through the stuffed animal
and communal farm of an
agriculture exhibit; attended
an informal dinner thrown in
his honor; and watched an
exhibition of ping pong and
gymnastics · in Peking's
sports arena.
All this activity seemed to
be taking ita toll on the
President and on daughter
(Continuo&lt;~ on page 16)

•

VOL. XXVII NO. 163

TWO

POMEROY ·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Conversion to
single slot
'
phones begun

•

ent1ne
PRICE 15'

WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1975

;:;:::;:::;:::::::::::::::::::::;:::;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:::;:::::::::::

charged in
armed robbery
and abduction

POINT PLEASANT Alert area law enforcement
agents were credited today
lor the quick arrest of two
men accused of robbing the
Kom Pak Store on Jackson
Ave. and abduction of its
clerk.
Taken into custody within a
rna Iter of minutes and
charged with armed robbery
and abduction - were Gerald
Lee Loper, 18, and Jack Lee
Young, 18, both of Mason.
The pair was arraigned this
morning before justice of the
peace Charles (Sonny) Smith
who set bond at $10,000 for
each.
The teenagers were
charged early this morning
by Point Pleasant Police
Officer Raymond Cox after
they had been escorted from
Pomeroy to Point Pleasant
by Mason County Sheriff's
Deputies K. W. Love and
Detner Roush III.
In addition to armed
robbery, the two are charged
with the abduction of store
clerk Sharon N. Devault, 25,
502 Second St., Point
Pleasant.
According
to
Potnt
Pleasant Police Chief Jim
Gaskins, his department
received a call at II :40 p.m.

SIMOti, THE CHIMP, and Riccaro will be among the lea tured performers at a ''Magic
Holiday Fantasy" show to be held at 7:30p.m. Thursday at the Meigs Junior Righ School,
Middleport, under the sponsorship of the Middleport Fire Dept. A major circus
review, the magic show includes acts by Riccaro, world famous magician ; Simon, the
almost human chimp; the Gunga Family who table balance, juggle and roll globes; and
Mike, the magic clown. Aspecial visit from Santa Claus will be featured with a free gift for
every child under 12. The show will last an hour and a half. Advance ticketa are being sold
by members of the fire department.

a1 y

e

~; BEILEN, THE NETHI!:RLANDS - FIVE Hl!:AVILY
ctmeci teri'orlsts holding scores of hostages aboard a hijacked
:t!'lln ppened fired on a mediator loday, then released two
~ptives with a new list of demands. The hijackers, who have ' Kenley Krinn, customer
weady killed two men and thrown their bodies on tbe iracks, service manager,. said ef:nred three allots at the unidentified mediator when he tried to fective today . General
Telephone Company of Ohio
litin them ori a bullhorn from a car 350 yards away.
" The mediator's ltrst call drew a slight stir from the iraln, will start conversion to the
)lopped In Oat, open DUtch farmland about 75 miles from new single slot ~oin
telephones in the Pomeroy
~ of Amaterdam. A aecond hall brought three shots,
Cille rnilllnB the car by only ten yards. The gunmen, beUeved to area.
· )ia Soutb Moluccana born in Holland, killed at least two men
The dilference of this type
instrument
is that It will no
When they selud the train Tuesday. The mediator was
llilcrtbed only as a leader In ijolland's South Moluccan longer be necessary to
ilammunlty.
deposi I coins until a party has
,jo.
answered . Also, nickels ,
dimes
and quarters are
""'
,1::; WASHINGTON ~ OONGRESS HAS VOTED to strike deposited in the same slolln
I!Olm state ''fair trade" laWB that allow manufactlirers to set an emergency the operator
,lhi! price retallers can charge for their producta.
may be contacted by dialing
; The biD wu •PFoved by voice vote In the Senate Tuesday ' '0" (no coin deposit
IIlii 11e11t to the White House. President Ford Ia expected to sign necessary ).
It:The legislatl911 repeals the elfemptlon from antitrust laws The manager asks patrons
dlit allowed llates to Impose "fair trade" Jaws. The exemp- to read Ihe Instructions on the
.Ulil bad been granted twice by Congress after tbe Supreme lace of the instrument before
CGUrt ruled the llate laWB illegal.
plnring a call.

..

their talk.
Ford and Mao met Tuesday
for one hour and 50 minutesa remarkably long audience
for the alllng '81-year-old·
Chinese Communist party
chairman. Ford today called
It "a significant conversation."
Ford, beginning to show
signs of fatigue from his
grueling schedule of summitry 'aod sightseeing, made
his comment at the start of
another 2* hours of formal
talks this morning with
Acting Premier Teng Hsiaoping in Ford's Peking
residence.
Nessen took pains to
squelch speculation Ford's
visit might be interpreted as
a !allure because of the lack
of visible progress In improving
U .S.Chinese
relations.
"You should not take the
absence of a communique as
a negative factor," he said.
''The accompllahments and
purposes of this meeting have
nothing to do with a signed
document."
When a reporter suggested
Ford and Mao might have
had a diplomatic battle over
the question of U.S. relalipns
with the Soviet Union, Nessen

ol a possible robbery in
)X'Ogress at Kom Pak Store.
Gaskins said officer Cox, who
was working In plain clotehs
in the nearby area at the
lime, responded to the call
within 60 seconds.
However, wh en Cox
arrived at the scene the
·suspeclS had fled the scene.
Several witnesses told Cox
lhe clerk appeared to have
been forced to go with the
youths, and gave a
description of the suspects
and their car. The witnesses
said a knife was used in the
hold-up.
Cox immediately put out an
"all points bulletin.' 1
Shortly !hereafter, according to Gaskins, Mason
County authorities received
a call from Middleport Pollee
lhey had detailed a car with
two men fitting the
description.
Apparently before they had

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Friday through Sunday,
chance of showers and mild
Friday and Saturday. Fair
and cooler Sunday. Highs
will be lq the 60s Friday,
lowering to tile 40s by
Sunday. Lows will be In the
30s to the luw ~. )i'riday
1110mfng, lowering to the
lower 30s by Sunday.

driven to the Ohio side of the
river, and were detained near
the Jones Boys Store, the two
had let the Devault woman
out in the vicinity of her
home on Second St. In Point
Pleasant. She immediately
called police, Gaskins said .
Uni ts fr om the Mason
County sherilf's Dept. were
dispatched to Pomeroy where
the teenagers were being
detained by P.ll. Smith and
Ward. The suspects agreed to
return to Point Pleasant
under
their
own
recognizance , with the
sherifl's Dept. escorL
Miss Devault later picked
the two out of a police line-up,
it was revealed.
Chief Gaskins this morning
ollered praise for the quick,
elficient cooperation ol the
Mason Sheriff's Dept. , Mason
Police, and Middleport and
Pomeroy p~llce .

Tax bill faces
2 big hurdles
By DON PHIU.IPS
WASHINGTON (UP!)
The legislation necessary to
prevent everyone 's taxes
from spurting upward In
January faces two major
battles on tbe House Door,
with Republicans trying to
attach a celllng on federal
spending and liberals trying
to strengthen lts tax reform
proviBions.
Debate was scheduled to
begin In the House today on
the 674-p~~Be tax revision bill.
Final votes on amendments
and the bill are expected
Thursday or Frldlly.
Before the debate, Republi·
calli were trying to overturn
a Houae Rules Committee
decision that denied them tbe
right to offer President
Ford's proposed $395 billion
spending celllng as an
amendment to the tax bill.
Ford h11aald he would veto
the bill If It does not contain
the ceiling on fiscal 1977
spending.
U no blllls passed, 1975 tax
culS will expire Dec. 31 and

all income tax withholding
rates will rise.
Internal Revenue Commissioner Donald Alexander said
Tuesday Congress already
has waited so late that employers will find it impossible
to calculate the correct
withholding rates for the first
six months of the year.
It Is a foregone conclusion
the Senate will spilt tbe bill
into two ~rts, sending the
$15.5 billion tax cut section to
Ford right away and saving
the tax revision -reform
portion until next year.
The cuts essentially will
continue tax rates for both
individuals and business at
about their current rate.
But liberal Democrats lee!
that no matter what the
Senate does, It is necessary
for the House pass a reform
bill this year , If House
passage Is delayed until next
year, Senate opponentll of
reform could stall the bill to
death, they feel.
The liberals' amendments
(Contlnioed on page 161

Red takeover of
Laos completed
~BANGKOK, Thailand (UP!) -

King Savang Vatthana of

Lilli!! abdicated today and the nation's coalition government
was disbanded, completing tbe Communist takeover of the
country, the Laotian national radio reported.
The broadcast, monitored In Bangkkok, said the coalition
gove!'nment ·led by Prime Minister Souvanna Pbouma was
abolished in "response to the demand of the people." The
broadcast said the country would now be known as "the
Democratic Peoples Republic of Laos."
Several demonstrations
were. recen~y held. in. the
Laotian capital of VIentiane
demanding the ouster of the
19-rnonth-old government.
At least 1,000 people
gathered outside the office
and home of Souvanna
Pbouma, demanding that he
be removed from office.
Souvanna, 74, is a
A letU,r from the Meigs neutralist and has been a
Count y Ministerial Assn . sy ,·~bol of the country's
protesting rafnes and games fa ' ·ring stance against
or chance in the county's swelling Communist inschools was read into the fluence.
record when the Meigs
The Laotian throne was
County Board of Education established 600 years ago.
met in regular session
The Communists began
Tuesday night.
consolidating their power in
It was the consensus that the landlocked country last
lhe county board does not May.
have jurisdiction in such
The broadcast said the
rna tters , and so copies of the king 's offer to abdicate was
letter will be sent to each or reviewed by the Central
the three local school Committee of the Peoples
districts.
Patriotic Committee In
The board agreed to con- Vientiane Dec. 1·2 and
tinue Its membership on the "representatives of the entire
Ohio School Bo~rds Assn. and people of Laos accepted the
se t Tuesday, J~n . 6, at 7:30 abdication.
p.m. for its annual
"By accepting the notes on
organizational session. A dissolution of the temporary
temporary budge t for 1976 coalition government, we
was adopted.
unanimously agreed that we
Attending were Supt. will abolish the monarchy
Robert Bowen and board and replace it with the
members George Perry , People ' s Democrati c
Harold Lohse, Harold Roush, Republic of Laos," the radio
Gordon Collins and Robert said.
·BurdQtte .
The four-minute broadast

Games Of
chance
opposed

did not specUy ~~ authority
for the announcement nor did
it mention the fate of the 68year old king , who has
reigned ·since 1959.
The radio said further
details would be given at a
news conlerence in Vientiane
tonight.
REPORT ERRED
In a wreck reported by the
Meigs County Sheriff's Dept.,
in which tw·o vehicles were
involved, it was stated one of
the vehi cles was parked
which was incorrect. A car
driven by William W. Russell,
Pomeroy, was backing out of
a parking place at the Vista
Service Station at the intersec tion of county road 25
and SR 7when struck by a car
driven by Ronnie Staats,
Pomeroy, as he pulled into
the station.

TWO ARE FINED
Two dfendants were lined
$10 and costs each and a third
forfei ted his $30 bond in the
court ot Middleport Mayor
Fred Hoffman Tuesday night.
Fined were George A. McDaniel, 48, charged with
disorderly manner, and
Melani e W. Pullin , Middl eport, charged with
loitering. Forfeiting.bon&lt;l was
Dav id
D.
Campbell,
Pomeroy, for disturbing the
peace .
NOW YOU KNOW
Lake Ba ikal In Siberia
contains one fifth of all the.
li quid fr esh water on earth.

Utility fonnula may he changed
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Rep . Tuesday a bill to repeal
Dennis L. Wojtanowskl, D- Ohio's formula for setting
Willoughby Hills, predicted utility rates would pass the
Ohio House of Representatlves by February.
The House Committee on
Insurance, Utilities and
Financial Institutions today ·
began hearings on the rormula which allows utlities to
price their lands, buildings
and equipment at what it
would cost to reproduce them
at today's inflated prices.
· The total value of the assets
forms the rate base, which
determines the rates that
need to be charge d to
customers.

DAYS TO
CHRISTMAS

An original cost fonnula
would require the utilities to
list the price of their holdings
at the time they were first put
into public service.
"I am absolutely conlident
that we wtll have a bill to
repeal the ... formula by late
January or early February
and it will pass the House,"
sa~? Wojtanowskl.
We have the support of tbe
(Democratic) leadership. We
can show the leadership we
can write a strong consumer
bill that can be fair to utilties
and that we're not out to get
them," he said .

·•

'

t

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