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•

'

the Camden Clar k Memorial
Hos pital in Pa rkersburg
following a br ief illness.
Mr . Archer, born Sept. 24 ,
1874, near Bashan in Meigs
Coun ty. was the son of the late

A. J . and Elizabeth Roush
Archer. He was also preceded
in death by his first wife. Ora
B. Staats; a daughter , Mattie
L..ois Mineard: his second wife,
Minnie Gaston ; an infan t son,

th ree brothers, five sisters, and
one grandson.
Mr. Archer , a m ember of th e

Lo tt ridge Methodist Church,
was a re tired farmer.

He is surv ived by a son,
Russe ll Archer, Guysville; two
daughters, Mrs . Clarence Iris

•

"One of the worst tragedies
tha i can befa ll a man is to
have ulce rs and still not be
a success."
The " FRIEND L Y ONES "
take this opportunity to
w ish all their f riends and
cus tomers
A
VERY
PLEASA NT
THAN KSG IVIN G
DAY .

POMEROY CEMENT
BLOCK CO.
I
t h•'

Q.·p.•r lnwnt

H~,~dd1n.q '!t•:cl:' \~lS

Sto r e

of

Warner , Athens, and Naomi
Archer, at home; one brother,
Walter Ar c her, Racine ; a
siste r , Eva Archer, Racine: six

d '! tt'd

Middleport alumni~id roster

fr on

RF.LATIVE DIES
Th omas Clark and Mrs.
Mildred Hemsley, both of
Syracuse,

recei ved

word

recently of the death of their

Pomeroy.

s ister -in-law,

SATURDAY DISCHARGES
- Joy Vance, Harley Eblin,
Jr., Lelah Rhodes.
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS Betty Pooler , Middleport ;
Sarah Bush, Letart; Robert
Oatley, Middleport; Shantilil
Goradin, Pomeroy; Do res
Arn old, Pomeroy ; Vir gil

( Th elma ) Clark, Toronto ,
Ohio. Mr . Clark is a former
resident of Syracuse. Hi s
address is 706 F edera l St. ,

Fla., in Meigs County c ommon

One o ut of eve r y eight
Ala s kan s hol d s a fl yi ng

Briefs

URBANA - A POWERFUL ELAST, AFPARI!:NTLY caused
by ~ natural gas leak, ripped through the home of U. S. Rep.
Clarence Brown Sunday, causin g an estimated $1 million
damage. The congressman and his family, in Washington at the
time or the explosion, new here today to examine the ruins of
their 16-&lt;'oom Victorian~"yle home .
The state fire marshall and goo company personnel were at
the scene. Officials said the blast, believed caused b¥ a ~as
furnace, destroyed a room._.ize area in the center of the home
and caused extensive damage to the .rear section .
Veterans Memorial Hospital
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS
- Kathleen Shane, Racine;
Oscar Imboden, Sr., Minersvi ll e; Mary Derenberger,

pleas court on charges of gross
neglec t of duty.

Mrs.

F r ank

Toron to.

PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGES
Mrs.
Teresa Jeffers, Southside;
Lynette Sturgeon, Ashton;
Tom Burris, Bidwell; Mrs.
Earl Rollins , Leon; Mrs .
James Jeffers , Columbus;
William
Smith ,
Point
Pleasant ; Austin Johnson, Pt.
Pleasant ; Corahelle Russell,
Pomeroy ; Benjamin Hall ,
West Colwnbia; Lorena Weiss,
Mason , and Terry Durst, Point
Pleasant.

Following is the roster of the Middleport alumni
football team that wili tackle the Pomeroy and
Rutland alums Thanksgiving day in Marauder
Stadium at 2:30p.m. in the Cancer Crusade ~nefit.
Coaches for the Middleport squad ar~ Bruce
Wallace and John Blake.
Bob Mills, 255, Middleport, 49.
Bill Andrews , 250, Pomeroy, 56,
Richard Hovatter, 190, Middleport, 57.
Harlan Whitlatch, 150, Middleport, 59.
Frank Aeiker, 169, Middleport, 59.
Bob Southern, 200, Middleport, 61. •
Sandy Clonch, 168, Middleport, 62.
Richard &lt;Red) Hayes, 210, Middleport, 63.
Gene Wise, 155, Middleport, 63.
Jim Andrews, 215, Pomeroy, 64.
Bruce Wallace, 180, Middleport, 65.
Dave Ashley, 380, Middleport, 66.
John Blake, 208, Middleport, 66.
Bob Carruthers, 220, Middleport, 66.
John Hood, 140, Middleport, 66.
Bruce Harris, 175, Meigs, 67.
Ray Hindy, 170, Meigs, 67.
Clarence Mcintyre, 165, Eastern, 67.
Jerry Davenport, 170, Meigs, 68.
Mike Johnson, 170, Meigs, 68.
Dennis Ault, 185, Meigs, 69.
Richard Gilkey, 175, Meigs, 69.
Larry Grogan, 190, Meigs, 69.
John Krawsczyn, 145, Meigs, 69.
Larry Lemley, 220, Meigs, 69.
John Smith, 175, Meigs, 69.
Max Whitlatch, 198, Meigs, 69.

license. a bout s ix times the
national ave ra ge .

Gilligan's future uncertain
PRE-FINISHED

campaign designed exclusively to demolish the opposition,"
Gilligan said.
"I've been in a lot of campaigns before when I started
behind, was always behind, knew I was behind, clawing and
scratching. But this time, 1 had the feeling I was sandbagged,
that I just walked, fat ,' dwnb, and happy, down this dark alley
and got coldcocked and never even got my dukes up."
''Negative Media Biltz"
In retrospect, the governor said a "negative medis blitz" Is
almost Impossible to counter, except by ''waging the same kind
of campaign earlier, harder and louder than the other fellow ."
The unexpected defeat left Gilligan "totally shocked, surprised
and appalled."
He doesn't know what he will be doing after leaving office Jan.
13, but Gilligan has not ruled out a campaign for governor in 1978
or the U.S. Senate in 1976.
"I haven't the vaguest idea of what I'm going to do," Gilligan
said. "Obviously, I have to find a way to make a living. I would
like to find an opportunity, or work, in a setup that would give me
some time to do some reading, writing and studying."
But politics still may be in his future.
"I don't know at this point. I'm still picking up the pieces. I'm
obviously interested in politics -it's been a major part of my llfe
for 20 years," said tlie 57-year-old Gilligan.
"I still believe the political arena Is where we help change
society and improve it. I hope to be involved -but whether I'll
ever be a candidate again, I can't say," he abded . "I won't
foreclose it absolutely."

COUMBUS (UPI) - Gov. John J . &lt;;;illigan is a tittle bitter
about his apparent loss in the Nov . 5 gubernatorial election, and
still doesn't know what he will do when he when he leaves offlice
in January .
The Democratic governor, who has not yet ruled out a recount
pending fmal official results of the election, grudgingly expresses admiration for James A. Rhodes, while loathing the
tactics he used to win his way back to the governorship.
"Jim Rhodes is a fonnidable campaigner, a gut fighter who
wages a tough campaign," the defeated Gilligan said over the
weekend. He said he regarded Rhodes' comback campaign as
slick, devastatingly effective and brilliantly executed.
Charges "Uofalr" Campaign
Gilligan said Rhodes' media attack -which he considered
crucial in his defeat - was ''unfair, wholly untrue, distorted,
outrageous untruths" employing the "super.,..turatlon He."
The governor said Rhndes' approach was a "negative"
campaign conducted "not so much to elect Rhndes as to defeat

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Eleanor Miller
of Middleport
died on Monday

Two killed

MEIGS tHEATRE

Is worth 10 pet discount on any paneling purchased
our· stu•ck. This Ad must be presented to get DIBoount.
expires 12-14-74

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Gilligan charged Rhodes fabricated issues, painting a
distorted picture Implying that "thousand of jobs were leaving
Ohio and hundreds of factories were closing ... really terrifying
people. The campaign commercials divided people, generated
tear, distrust and hatred."
The governor said Rhodes' media blitz and a new generation of
campaign weaponry caught him unprepared.
"We were used to campaigns designed to puff up a candidatesell him to the populace. What we were not prepared for was a
DIVORCE GRANTED
In Meigs County Common
Pleas Court Vona K. Whitt,
Middleport, was granted a
Continued from page 1
divorce from Charles C. Whitt,
between Brezhnev and former
Iron ton, on charges of gross
President Richard Nixon in
neglect of duty and extreme
May, 1972, which expires in
~ruelty.
October, 1977. The new agreement would run from then until
December 31, 1985.
Ford appeared tired but
Tonighllhru Thursday
elated as he walked down the
November 25-28
ramp of Air Force One at
NOT OPEN
Andrews Air Force base near
here Sunday night after an 8Fri .• Sat., Sun.
day, 16,550 mile journey to
Nov. 29-30, Dec. 1
Japan, South Korea and the
JEREMIAH JOHNSON
Soviet Union, his first venture
(TechnicolorJ
Robert Redford
into global,.dlplomacy.
lPG)
His wife, Betty, aod daughtcartoons
er,
Susan, kissed and hugged
Show Starts 7 p.m.
him. Ford told about 200
welcomers ; "I believe we
accomplished what we set out
to achieve -and perhaps

10-year

When it comes to beautiful pre-fin ished paneling, we have this areas most complete stock

He referred to the nuclear
agreement with Brezhnev as
an understanding which
"established a sound basis for
a new agreement that will
constrain our military competition over the next decade."
Ford arrived In Vladivostok
Saturday, flying ·from South
Korea vis Tokyo, where Air
Force One picked up a Soviet
navigator and radio operator.
He and Brezhnev talked
during a two-hoW' train ride to
dkeanskly, a spa and sanitorium used by Soviet government
agencies.
Saturday night they met until
half past mld!llght, canceling a
banquet, ,an!l resumed on
&amp;mday. One U.S: aide sald the
two leaders "hit It off
famously ."
Brezhnev told Ford that if

$14995

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Play it oafe and- mre.
It may be time to
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( Model 1260) Power-Teem

Harrisonville
honors ·listed

Holzer Medical Center
(Births)
Nov. 22 - Mrs. Kenneth
Clemons, daughter, Radcliff.
Mrs. Burl Duncan, 1aughter,
Gallipolis Ferry. Mrs. William
S. Walters, danghter, Vinton.
Nov. 23 - Mrs. Larry
Howell, son, Gallipolis.
Nov. 24 - Mrs. Edward A.
Malone, son, Jackson . Mrs.
Carl Swaney, Jr ., son, Jackson.
Mrs .
Randel
Williams,
daughter, Oak Hill.

HOURS SET
The Meigs County bookmobile will be at Salem Center
from 9 to 11:30 a.m. Tuesday.

A Gift-A-Rama $tore

Plans to build.an addil.inn "tu

Maintenance

•

••

VOL. XXVI

...

....
...
'0.
'0•

. .,

.

guerrillas to the Palestine liberation Organization. Police
guarded the loW' air pirates and seven freed cormnaodo
prisoners in a secret hideout while Tunisian authorities decided
what to do with the guerrillas.
"Ther~ are several possibilities, one of which would be to
hand them over to the PLO," Foreign Minister Habit Chatti said.
"Thls is the most plausible one. The PLO is determined to end
this sort of operation." The 11 guerrillas surrendered Monday
morning at the eod of a four-&lt;lay air and ground drama that
began last Thursday with the hijacking of a British Airways VC!O
jetliner in the Persian Gulf.
FOW' guerrillas seized the plane, shooting a stewardess in the
back and ldlllng a passenger before winning the release of seven
commandos Imprisoned In Holland and Egypt. The Palestinian
guerrillas had demanded to be "set free without trial and without
. being turned over to the PLO,'' but Chatti said the men gave up
Monday without getting any solid guarantee.

UNITED NATIONS - U THANT, THE self-effacing
Burmese llchoolma._: who served a record 10 years as U.N.
ileeretary·general, will' be' the first person to lie in state at the
United Nations, 'l11ant, 65, died Monday at Columbia
Presbyterl8n Hotipltalln New York. He suffered from cancer and
had developed pneumonia.- .
·
The United Nationa' third secretary general, Than! held
·wlllot he onee called the ''lonely, frustrating job" from Sept. 17,
1861, to Dec. 31 1&amp;71 the longest tenure of any U.N. chief.
'r
·uec:utlve. "We have
lost one of the great mep of our age, "U.S.
Amball&amp;llor John Scall said.
.. ''We admired above all hiS hwnanity, his respect for truman
dignity and Ilia complete integrity,'' Kurt Waldheim, 'Thant's

99

I

'

Elbei1elds
In Pomeroy ·
.
_L

-·

- ---

. POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

TOKYO - PRIME MINISTER KAKUEI Tanaka, whose
rags to riches Career came back to haunt him, resigned today In
the face fl. charges i)e ulled his political power to amass a huge
fortune. "As a public figure I am solely to blame for the fact that
my personal aftalrs lnylted the people's mlswtderstandlng and I
feel pain that I cannot bear," he said In a resignation statement.
Tanaka, whose pOpularity plunged frqm euphoric high to a
I!C8ndal-marred lOw ~g his two years in power, blamed
himBelf
Ja~'s "Political chaos" and unsolved problems.
"That Is why· I have decided to submit my resignation soleiiU1!y
and aerenely," u\e 56-year-old prime miniBter said in a state~ent
read to newiltn811 by ·Noboru Takeshita, the chief cabmet
secretary.
"

(SALE LIMITED TO STOCK ON HAND)

I

.,

'

jllleceuot,sald.

.

••

.

JO~uRG - SURGEONS TRIED today to get two
beartB to beat In unison inalde a iitl-year-old engineer, the first
Continued on page' S
It

.

.- 1

Turner who pointed out that
Page St. is scheduled to he
greatly improved from State
Issue I Funds but that the work
has never m a terialized . The

was stopped by Middleport
Police between the hour s of 11
p .m. a11d 7 a .m . for no apparent
reason . Mayor Hoffman said
he doubled if police stopped
vehicles without reason, but
added that he will chec k into it.
A co mpl a in t w.as lodged
against the dumpin~ of old
motor vehicles at the lagoon
site. Chase said that about 100
such vehicles had been dumped
there to keep the wall of the
lagoon from going into the Ohio '
River . This prevents thousands
of gallons of sewage in the
lagoon fr om emptying into the
river.

CoWJcil agreed to purchase a
pickup truck from Goebel Ford
Continued on page 8

•

enttne

NEW MARAUDER LOOK - Lisa Thomas, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Dan Thomas, models one of the new Meigs
High School hand uniforms ordered by the Meigs Band
Boosters. With Mrs . Thomas is Dwight Goins, band Instructor. The boosters ordered 136 band uniforms at a cost of
$145 each, five majorette uniforms at $139 each, one field
commander's ouUit for $160, ten pair of trousers for drummers and 20 sweaters for the drummers, all at a total cost of
$20,471.65. Seven thousand dollars has been paid on the indebtedness thus far. Persons wishing to contribute are asked
to mall checks to the Uniform Fund, care of Dwight Goins at
Meigs High School , Rt. 3, Pomeroy.

-

-'

cloudiness a nd a little warmer
Wednesday with a chance of

Weather
TEN CENTS

TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1974

Fair and cold tonight. Lows
in t he 20s. Conside rable

light snow or snow possibly
mixed with rain in extreme
southern counties .

Recount assured

NEW YORK -MARGARETTA "HAPPY" Rockefeller, who
underwent two mastectomies less than six weeks apart, said she
was happy It was over and w8!')ted to sleep..Mrs. Rockefeller had
her cancerous right breast removed Monday. Her left breast had
been removed Oct. l7. Both operations were perfonned at SloanKettering Memorial Cancer Center.
Mrs. Rockefeller spent two hours and 28 minutes in surgery
Monday where the simple masteciomy was performed. After the
operation was oompleted doctors said it was a complete success
and said her chances for a full recovery were 90 per cent over 10
years.

(MODEL U4047)

'49

A request to improve the
lower end of Page St. was
received from Mrs.
Ben

SAN CLEMENTE, CALIF.- THE WATERGATE oourt's
three medical examiners, ordered to determine whether Richard
Nixon to really too sick to testify, spent almost two hours on the
fonner President's estate Monday, presUJl18biY carrying out the
examination.
They left without a word to reporters on what they found, but
planned a news conference for today just prior to boarding a
plane for Washington. They said they could give "a broad picture
of the problem," but the final determination would be kept for
their report to U.S. District Court Judge John J. Sirica, which is
due by Friday.

Save Your SalesiiP-• for
Valuable .Premiums

' '1 .

NO. 159

'

!

to make deliveries.
It was reported that there is

will be under the railroad
tracks on First St. From the
Ra wlings..Coats Funeral Home
downriver to about Hamilton
Sl. Chase recommended that
the railroad be contacted to ask
if it would dump hea vy
materials over the bank to help
hold it. Mayor Fred Hoffman
will make the contact.

By United Press lnleruatlonal
COLUMBUS -OHIO'S 88 COUNTY BOARDS of elections
have been notified to be prepared for a possible recount of the
November gubernatorial race, Secretary of State Ted W. Brown
said Monday.
Ha recount is called, boarda will have five work days -until
Dec. 9- to complete the work, Brown said.

UPRIGHT CONVERTIBLE

Sale

heating and C{"loling sys tem lies as it has in the past, the river

is not known ; however, the
welfare building will become
the property of the village
when it is paid for.
Counci l authorized Chase to
proceed with the erection of
signs limiting the weight of
vehicles on village streets to
5,000 pounds. The signs will be
placed at the three entrances of
the town . Heavier vehicles
may travel through the town
only with the permission of
Chief of Police J. J . Cremeens.
The weight limit does not affect
vehicles coming in to the town

mayor will Jo1Jk into Mrs.
Turner's reques t.
The new counci lwoman, Mrs .
Jean Craig, sa id tha t she
received a comp lai nt from a
woman who charged that she

Devoted To The Interests of The Meigs-Mason Area

for

FIREMEN CALLED
Pomeroy firemen were
called to Welshtown at 9:08
a.m. Sunday to extinguish a
· brush lire. At 9:28 a.m. the
Pomeroy ER unit went to 117
Locust St., for Earl Quivey who
was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.

half dozen authorized to purchase new

at y

TUNIS - A TOP GOVERNMENT OFFICIAL said today
Tunisia probably will turn over a group of breakaway Arab

"•'

of som e

businessmen who ccmtributed diving boards with it.
money for the construction of
Chase repor ted that if the
th e buildin g. Where the Ohio River bank continues to
responsibility of the new erode in the nex t year as much

•

NEW YORK - DRAMATIC IMPROVEMENTS was
reported today in the experimental use of an anticancer drug
(cyclophosphamide) for treating advanced cases of prostate
cancer in elderly men given only a few weeks to live. Dr. Gerald
P. Murphy, director fo the Roswell Park Memorial Institute,
Buffalo, N. Y., reported significant tumor shrinkage in 52 per
cent of 106 patients studies for up to 24 weeks. None of the successful cases has yet had a relapse although the cancer had
spread too much for a cure to be considered possible.
"They had everything. Their llfe expectancy is but a matter
of a few weeks. So the fact that you get stability and remission
and relief iB most surprising. The surprising thing is they're still

..

g roup

Supervisor

Harold Chase, who had \net
with council earlier on the
matter, said t.he room, seven
by 10 feet with an eight foot
ceiling will he constructed
under the stairway leading to
the second floor of the village
hall. The room will contain a
shower, lavatory and commode. It will also have an
emergency door which can be
opened to provide a second exit
in case of fife .
Cost of the project will be
about $2,000. Chase and his
department will do the work .
There is no definite time the
project will be started or
completed .
'
Chase alsb repOrted that a
new cooling and heating
system needed in the welfare

DOUGH FOR DOUGH for "Gifts for Yanks Who Gave"
program will get tinilerway Wednesday evening with a house
to house canvass of the Pomeroy area. Purchasing bread,
right, Is Harry Davis, cfiainnan ill the program, from Jack
Ambrose, manager of Kroger Stllre. The annual event is
sponscired by Drew Webster 39 American Legion. Residents
are asked to turn on their porch lights and to give as much as
they can as the cost of the bread has increased over last year.

• Rolls on wheels.

Cemetery. Frlenda may call. at
the Rawlings-Coats Funeral
Home anytime after 10 a. m.
Tueaday.

build1ng wilt cost $:1,165.40, suu1c rnoney le ft from a fund
excl uding insta llation . A se t aside for the new a pron at
confcr('nce will l&gt;c held with a the Middlepor t pool. Chase wa s

the Middt'eporl Jail were
completed by Middlepor t
Village Council Monday night.

alive."

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Continued from page 3 .
easily whipped UCLA for the
third straight year.
Davis, a Helsman Trophy
candidate, rushed for a season
high 195 yarda and boosted hiS
career total to 3,609 yarda as
the Trojans extended their
league unbeaten string to a
record 25 games. Davis also
scored
one
touchdown,
bringing his career total to 48.
Trojan coach John McKay
said he was looking forward to
the "rubber match" with Ohio
State on Jan. 1.
"We won one and they won
one. Now Woody and I get to
stand on the sidelines an,_
scream at each other again,','
said McKay, whose team beat
Ohio·State 4:1.-17 in 1972 then lost
42-21 last year. "Actually I
would prefer to play a lesser
team -like Ball State. Ohl9
State Is a better offensive team
than they were il year ago."
Ohio State and Southern
California weren't the only
teams to win important games
Saturday. Oklahoma, Harvard,
Baylor,
Tennessee
and
Brigham Young also turned in
key victories.
Oklahoma remained unbeaten by whipping Nebraska
23-14 to win the Big Eight
Conference, Harvard upset
previously undefeated Yale 2116 to tie for the Ivy League
title, Baylor moved a step
closer to Ita first Southwest
Conference crown In history by
downing SMU 31-14, Tennessee
nailed down a Liberty Bowl
berth by topping Kentucky 24-7
and Brigham Young won the
Western Athletic Conference
and a spot in the Fiesta Bowl
by defewoing Utah 48-20.
Steve Davis, Joe Washington
and Jim Littrell combined for
482 yards rushing In Oklahoma's victory over fifth._
ranked and Sugar Bowl-bound
Nebraska. So easily did the·
Sooners run over the Cornhuskers that Davis threw mly
three passes, none of which
were complete.

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SHOP TUESDAY 9:30 TO 5 PM

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'
"

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

DALE .C. WARNER
INS. AGENCY

INGELS FURNITURE

Rita

Williamson, Brian Willis ,
Retha Yost, Pam Althouse,
second grade ; Tina Yost,
Brenda Largent, Paula Carl,
Betty Newhouse, Eugene
Phillips, Paul Riggs, Jerry
Grounds, Christine Riggs,
Monte Chapman, Malinda
Wells, all A's; Sherry Arnold,
all A's, third grade; Robin
Barrett, Brent Finlaw, Brad
Largent, Julia Spencer, Renee
Willis, fourth grade; Mark
Cline, Vicky DeBord, all A's;
Patricia Grounds, Angela
Harmon, Brenda Williams,
fifth grade; Robert Harmon,
sixth grade. .

let's .Talk Soon

Come In For A Eureka No-Nonsense Demonstration Todalfl

Wein,

Cell added to jail .

•

Same lineup

HARRISONVILLE - The
honor roll of Harrisonville
Elementary School for the
second six weeks has heen
annoWJced. Named were :
Lisa Riggs , Amy Frye ,
Bridget Largent, Vincent King ,
Melissa Howard , Buster
Haning , Buddy Gans, Kenda
Donehue and David Reeves ,
first grade; Mike Celine ,
Katrina Donohue, all A's;
Lorena Donohue, Jimmy
Eblin, Kristin Hebner, Betty
Ann Loftis, Gloria Nelson,
Vicky Peavley, Linda Riggs,
Karen Spencer, all A's;
Kristina

,.

·~

Ron Quillen, 180, Kyger Creek, 69.
Pat Archer, 155, Mel~ts , 70.
Mick Childs, 160, Meigs, 71.
Tom Hoffner, 165, Meigs, 71.
John Th9mas, 165, Meigs, 71.
Itich Qualls, 159, Meigs, 71.
Chip Haggerty, 152, Meigs, 72.
Jon Buck, 175, Meigs, 72.
Keith Van lnwagen, 175, Meigs, 72.

PRINCETON, W. Va. (UP!)
- Two persons were shot and
killed, including one Ohioan,
here Sunday by an assailant . Mrs. Eleanor Lambert Miller
who then fatally wounded 70, Middleport, a retired school
himself with the murder teacher, died early Monday
weapon, State Police said.
morning at the Holzer Medical
Investigative troopers said Center following a lingering
the shooting apparently illness.
stemmed from a family
Mrs. Miller was born Dec. 26,
argument. Mary Moye, 51, of 1903 in Ironton, the daughter of
Princeton, and her brother, the late Edward E. and Mary
Harold D. Hatcher, 41, of North Willard Lambert. Besides her
Ridgeville, Ohio, were shot parents, she was preceded in
with a .22 caliber rifle at death by her husband, David C.
nearby Camp Creek, Mercer Miller, in 1970.
County.
Mrs. Miller was a member of
Police said the victims had Grace Episcopal Church in
been shot by Mrs. Moye's ex- Pomeroy; Return Jonathan
husband, Lonie Okes, 51.
Meigs Chapter, Daughters of
the American Revolution; Pi
Beta
Phi Sorority. She had
the nuclear agreement Is
taught
during her career in the
finally signed "You and I will
elementary
and high schools of
be thanked by aU the peoples of
the world. I think we have done Ohio and West VIrginia, her
a good job in this respect, here last years at Wahama High
School where she tanght home
In Vladivostok."
The two leaders signed their economics.
Surivlng are a daughter,
joint statement with champagne and celebrated later Mrs. Larry (Mary Carolyn)
Wiley, New Haven, teacher at
with vodka.
They also issued a joint the Pomeroy elementary
communique calling for a just school; a grandson, Arthur
and lasting peace in the Middle William Wiley, and a grandEast, efforts to control the daughter, Jennifer Caroline
spread of nuclear weapons to Wiley, all of New Haven; a
other countries and long term brother, Gordon l.A!e Lambert
of Birmingham, Ala; two .
economic cooperation.
·sisters,
Miss Marion Lambert
They returned to Vladivostok
by- train and Brezlmev gave and Miss Allee Jane Lambert,
Ford a loW' of that city, which both. of Youngstown.
Funeral services will be held
has been clooed to Americans
at 10:30 a. m. Wednesday at
for 26 years.
"Good-bye and · God bless Grace Eplsl:opal Church. with
you," Ford told Brezhnev as he the Rev. Harold Deeth ofboarded Air Force One for the ficiating. BW'Ial will be in
Olght home.
Middleport's
Riverview

llllllliilll------~~~~~!!'!!1!!'!!'-.--

ONLY
Eureka Model 1261 Power-Team

'

"

~

• • • ln

grandch ildren , and two grea tgrandchildren .
Roush, Racine; James Pape ,
Funeral services will be
Syracuse.
Tuesday at 1:30 p.m. at the
SUNDAY DISCHARGES Whi te Funeral Home in
Guy Bing, Jr ., Roland DodCoolville, with the Rev. Walter
derer .
Frost and the Rev. Robert
DIVORCE FINAL
Meece orriciating. Burial will
Donald Maurer, Racine, has
be in the Coolville Cemetery.
been granted a divorce from
Friends may ca ll at the funera l
Patricia D. Maurer , Largo,
home any time.

•

•

1Vews

John Archer. 100. Guysville,
Rt. 1. d ied S:l turday £'VC'nin~ at

.•

'

8 -- The Daily Se nt inel, Middlep&lt;JJ'l-Pomcruy. 0 .. Mon&lt;k•y. l'&gt;ov. 25. 1974

John Archer dies at age 100

---

SANTA SURROUNDED- Hundreds of youngsters crowded around Santa Claus Monday
evening on The Farmers Bank and Savings Co. lot to receive candy canes provided by the
Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce when the Christmas season was opened in Pomeroy.

2,000 greet Santa
Approximately 2,000 persons
braves the cold Monday night
to welcome llSanta Claus" who
officially opened the Chris !mas
season In Pomeroy in the
annual Christmas parade.
The parade started at the
Pomeroy Junior High School
and ended at the Farmers
Bank and Savings parking lot
where Santa distributed treats
to hundreds of children.
Approximately 20 units
moved off at 7 p.m . in the

Deer avoided,
wreck wasn't

1:1

i~

parade according to Carolyn
Thomas, chairman. Both sides
of Pomeroy's Main St. were ~~::
lined with people from the ·.·.
school to the bank.
The chamber earlier had :·'..·.'·
purchased 1,000 candy canes ..
for Santa to distribute. The ...
parade was · termed a "huge '.~·.1_!

::·.'!:~

success".

:~~1

Bands from Kyger Creek,
Meigs, Southern and Eastern ~
High Schools marched in the :W;:;:
r.::
parade.

Violations found
in Vinton County

A single car accident
.COLUMBUS (UP[) - State
reported to Sheriff Robert C.
Auditor Joseph Ferguson today
Hartenbach's Dept. Monday
reported findings for recovery
occurred Sunday at 10:30 p.m.
totaling $7,449 against 26
on Vinega~ St., Sutton Twp. on
employes of the Vinton County
the Vic Hysell property.
engineer 's office for apparent
Kenton D. Holman, 16,
violations of vacation and sick
Syracuse, was traveling up hill leave.
·
when he saw two deer on the
Ferguson said the employes
right side of the highway. He
used vacation and or sick leave
swerved to avoid hitting them,
allowances on non-worktng
skidded, and afte~. braking, his
days or the eighty-hour pay
car went over a hill and turned
period Saturday and Sunday '
over on its top;
adding extra hours to their pay
The vehicle was demolished .
which is a violation of state
There were no personal inlaw. A state examiner said 23
juries. No citation was issued .
employes misused vacation
benefits and three misused
both vacation and benefits and
ihree misused both vacation
FIREMEN CAU.ED
The Pomeroy Fire Depart- and sick leave.
ment answered a call to the
White House on East Main St.
· Veterau Memorial Hospital
at 4:27 p.m. Monday when
Admltt.d - Carl Schultz,
burning leaves blew against •
Jr., Racine; Ervin Bawngardthe back door catching It on
ner, Pomeroy; Clara Lavenfire .' Losses were set at $25.
der, Syracuse; Roy · Pooler,
Porileroy;

. LocAL TEMPS
The temperatlU'e in downtown pomeroy at lla.m . today
was 51 degrees under sunny
skies.

Constance Craig,
·
Discharged ~ Kenneth
Davis, Virginia Pennington,
Eunice Halsey, Oscar Imboden, Sr., Laura Roush.
Pome~oy.

'

.

~-

.

COLUMBUS (UP!) - Gov.
John J . Gilligan said Monday
night he definitely will ask for a
recount of the guhernatorlal
election results in which James
A. Rhodes apparently won by a
12,500-vote margin.
"We helteve the people of the
state of Ohio are entitled to an
honest and accurate count in
this election and they're going
to get it," Gilligan told
Democratic state executive
committee members here.
" If indeed it be the will of the
general electorate that this
administration change, there
wUI be no shadow of a doubt
about the accuracy and
honesty of the count."
Gillligan also encouraged
party members to not let his
apparent defeat weaken party
achievements, and he vowed to
continue his efforts to work
"for a strong and active
Democratic party long after
I'm gone" from the statehouse.
Eugene O'Grady, Gilligan's
campaign manager, said national professionals, "lawyers
and some computer experts
from the Democratic National
Committee" are ru:slsiing in
mapping the recount strategy.
The highway safety director,
on leave for campaign work

would seek to renegotiate the
Dec. 9 starting date for the
recounts set Monday by Secretary of State Ted Brown,
because it would occur at the
end of the Democratic national
mini-convention, winding up
Dec. 8.
Committee members also
pinpointed priority legislation
on three fronts they will seek to
rush through the Ohio General
Assembly before they lose
control of the governor's office
Jan . 13. The session starts Jan.

Democrats would have to ram
through any must legislation to
be certain it would become
law.
Concerning legislative prt.
orlttes, Ohio House Speaker A.
G. Lancione, 0-Bellaire, who
may be ousted in the turnover,
said Democratic Ieglslatora
would push for a bill to switch
the Income tax collection from
the state Tax Department to
the state treasurer's office,
where Mrs. Gertrude Donahey,
a Democrat, will continue to
serve.
6.
Lancione said the move
Democrats vowed to achieve
at least oongresslonal reappor- would "salvage from 300 to 500
tionment, election law reform jobs for Democrats " now
- especially in the area of working in the state Tas
voter registration, and an Department.
"That's party politics ,"
administrative reorganization ·
to preserve up to 500 state jobs Lancione s&amp;id . "They can't
blame us for that."
for Democrats.
The Bellaire party leader
The party also began a
financial retrenclunent, when also said Democrats would
their reapcommitteemen adopted a 1975 concentrate
budget of $458,000, compared po~runent efforts on drawtnc
Democratic:
with this year's expenditure of up · new
nearly $1.52 million, Including congressional districts at
a year-end deficit of $161,637. Colwnbus, Dayton and CinDemocrats will control both cinnati.
"We're going to he ready to
legislative houses and the
governor's office only between move (on the three legislative
Jan. 8 and 13 when Rhodes fronts) the day we're sworn
apparently will be sworn in. So in," he said.

30-million Americans asked . · •
to boycott sugar 10 chlys
:1

•

• •

zt zn wrztzng

WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Consumer Federation of
America, the country's largest organized couumer

::~f:,.~a1~ ':.~~ 0~n:.!";!;:~ to

boyoott sugar during
The organization, which claims lo represent 30 mlllion
Americans, rirged the public to eul down on use of augared
products permanently and to aoll the government lo tell
food processors to use Ieos ougar In loot! product..
Americans consume about 101 poundl of sugar per
person per year, about 75 per ceDI of which comes In food
they buy.
The federation made Ito appeal Monday as the
government's Co101cD on Wage and Price StabDity opened
hearings on the high price of 1ugar.

i~

.,.,

~;-?·:-~"·
.

.®

WASHINGTON (UPI ) President Ford briefed congressional leaders today on his

York Times said today the two
leaders agreed to limit their

nuclear arms agreement with
the Russia"""~s. Hi s severest
arms control critic, Sen. Henry

less than 2,500 long-range
missiles and bomhers each.
House and Senate leaders and
the ranking Democratic and
Republican members of the
committees on appropriatlo111,
foreign affairs and annecl
services were invited to the ·
briefing.
Jackson , who does not fit In
any of those categories but
heads the Senate Arms Control
subcommittee and has Ions
been considered an expert on
the subject, said today that the
Vladivostok swnmit was "aU

• M. Jackson, D-Wash., who was
not invited, said ford should

~~l

1:11 have

gotten

something

in

:&gt;.i
writing.
N
::;:
Ford and Soviet Communist
§l
:1l leader Leonid I. Brezhnev
~~!
~ reached the agreement during
»
N
~==~=!Z~»"-?..W-«&amp;:*».:i8m?.i:!8!-~J1T j: }J».r@"..«»-:~::?~-os~S:::8W/4 the weekend at their meeting in
Vladivostok. They issued a
general statement agreeing to
limit numbers of missiles and
numbers of multiple-w"!'head
missiles- known as MIRVsNo charges were filed In lost control. In a curve. His through 1985.
three traffic accidents in- vehicle ran off the left side of
Specifics of the agreement
vestigated Monday by the the highway striking a tree and were not released but The New
Gallia-Meigs Post State High- fence. There was moderate
way Patrol.
damage.
The first occurred on County
Meanwhile, in reference to
Road 20, seven tenths of a mile the Patrol 's report of a Friday
north of Rt. iJ3 in Meigs County accident, Joseph M. Salyers,
where an auto driven by 25, Patriot Star Rt., Galllpolis,
William D. Justice , 19, said he did not lose control of
Pomeroy, went out of control, his car In an accident Friday
ran off the right side of the on Rt. 35, one tenth of a mile
LANCASTER, Ohio (UP! )highway striking a dllch and south of the Silver Memorial
All
59 of the city's firefighters
mailbox. There was · min"" Bridge as reported.
damage.
Salyers said his car struck a walked off their jobs here l~te '
Phyllis Marie Larkins, 41, sign post which had been Mond~~ In protest of c1ty
Long Bottom, escaped injury in knocked down earlier by an coWJcr!s failure to enact a
a single car mishap on Rt. 7, Wlknown vehicle. The sign's wage hike.
four tenths of a mile north of post, Salyers said, remained In
Chief Wallace Kerns and an
the Meigs County line in Athens place, broken off three Inches assistant chief were the only
County.
above the ground, ruining one fireme~ on duty at the city's
The patrol said Mrs. Larkins of his front tires.
three firehouses early today·
Kerns said he and the other fire
'reached for her purse which
officer would attempt to handle
feU off the seat, lost control of
any calls and · would rely on
her car which ran off the highINTEREST DOWN
assistance from nearby
way striking an embankment.
DETROIT
(UP!)
The
volunteer fire depattments.
There was minor damage.
The walkout came after
A Gallla County accident Michigan National Bank of
occurred at 8:15 a .m. on the Detroit the state's fifth largest council; in Its regUlar Monday
Vanco-Falrfield Rd. one mile bank ~td today it will cut its night session, failed to act on a
west of Rt. 588. According to prim~ interest rate effective payhlkeordinancewhichlthas
the report, James A. Bennett, Monday to 93(, per cent - the had under study for several
monllls, ,officials ;:std.
34, Rt. I, Vinton, traveling west nation 's lowest.

3 mishaps .logged

Firemen walk
.· off their jobs
at Lancaster

s

offensive nuclear arsenals

to

verbal."

"Apparently there's nothilll
in writing," Jackson said . "I
think it is so important In
negotiating with the Russians to
get it all in writing. We can't
mislead the!Q, they can't
mislead us." ·
Interviewed on the CBS
Morning News, Jackson also
was suspicious of any secret
agreements reached with the
Russians .
"I hope we get all the facti
on the table," he said. "The
last agreement we learned of a
couple 'years later that there
were secret agreement. between the secretary (of state)'
and the Russians and betweell
Mr. Nixon and the Russians. SO
until all the facts are out on the
table we will not know what the
si tuatlon is."
Jackson, who is expected lit
announce shlli'Uy that he will be
a candidate for tile Democratle
presidential nomination In 1971,
said his main preoccupation re
lated to the number of misaUel
or delivery systems and 1thelr
size
~tipulaled
tn
the
agreemel\1.
.•

�'.
2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tu esday, Nov. 26, 1974

Nation_'s water probed
By RICK VANSANT
inicc has developed live tumors ,abSorbents like . granular-acCIN('INNATI \UP!l - Qmel- in a high percentage of the tivr~led carbon and other forms
ly but quickly , a nationwide anima1s ."
of dis infectants such as chlorine
dioxide.''
Cancer In Humans
test of public drinking water
The important question has
sources ha s been started in the
Wants To Be Careful
become
just
how
much
ehloroRobeck,
recogni~ing, tha t a
wake of recent revelations
linking chlorine -:-lhe popular form is produced by chlorinated huge water trea tm ent industry
water . It is enough to produce has grown up around the use of
water pw-ifier - to cancer.
chlorine, says he wants to be
The study has bec ome the cancer in a human?
Robeck is testing water careful '"not to put the monkey
highest priority of the Em·ironmenlal Protection Agenc)•'s tOO- sources around the country - directly on chlorine ."
person "'National Envirunmen~ which have varying types and
" It 's just too early to say for
mtensities of pollution - to sure because there could be
tal Researc h Cen ter " here.
"We hope to ha ve some determine what pollutants, other e lements in Ule water,·"
signiricant findings to report in when mixed with chlorine, he says. " We need to dewrmine
1975," says Gurdon Robeck, produce the most chloroform . a 'margin of safety' too
director of the ce nter 's water
Then, says Robeck, work can bee a use there has to be a
begin to negate those pol- system of purifying water .on a
supply research labor a tory .
large scale for public consumpIt was Robeck's studies of lu tant.
tion ."
"
We
want
to
get
a
fair
Cincinnati and New Orleans
Robeck, by the way, S:,ys he
drinking wa ter -{;hloronized representation of water sources
Ohio and Mississippi River around the country and make a is s till drinking local water water - that triggered the full complete study," he says. " In the chlorinated Ohio River
the meantime, we're also water - that spawned the
scale survey.
Basically, Robeck found that working with Ohio River water nationwide testing.
"So far as I can assess the
when chlorine reacted with to determine what can be done
natural and industrial organic to minimize formation of the personal danger ," he explains.
material in the water it by-products we've found so "There are so many factors
that we need to study and
produced chloroform and other fa r ."
He says that research in- explain. But I think they should
similar by-products.
"Chloroform is ~re lation­ cludes " trying to rid the water be studied as quic kly as
.
ship to cancer," savs Robeck . of indus trial wastes by using possible ."
"Chloroform administered to

Bradshaw wins starting spot
By M. GENE MEARNS
Nf:W ORLEANS (UP!)
Terry Bradshaw passed for
two touchdowns and ran for a
third, but said even though
Pittsburgh beat New Orleans,
23-7, Monday night he didn't
feel he played well enough.
However, Steelers head
coach Chuck Noll thought he
did and said he would start
Bradshaw next week against
Houston, ending for one week,
anyway, Noll's game of
quarterback roulette.
Bradshaw's statistics were
not all that startling . He
completed eight of 19 passes
for 80 yards and two touchdowns and rushed nine times
for 99 yards and another touchdown.
Asked if Bradshaw 's play
resolved the question of who's
No.
I
in PittsburghBradshaw, Joe Gilliam or
Terry Hanratty -Noll said it
did .
~"Yes,

it does for a while,"

er of sugar into her purse," he
said. As if that wasn 't enough,

it happened a second time and
Germanovich said, that's it.
He said his waitresses don't
mind toting the bags of sugar
on their hips. "Some restaurants make the girls g to a
central station to pickup sugar
requests, " he explained.
The owner of the brightly
decorated cafe added he didn't
want to penalize coffee drinkers
who don't use sugar by raising
the price of a cup of coffee.
"There's no limit to the
amount of sugar you get for

" The sugar situC:~lion in the
restaurant business is gettin g

really, really bad,'" he said,
explaining tha t some of his
delicacies have been stricken
m~Jlu

from the

because they

need too much sugar.

Devll's Food Jumps
For example, devil's food
ca ke has jumped from 35 cents
to 50-eents in six months . And,
he added, it could go to 55&lt;ents
or 60-eents .

without sugar, which
themslayslim."

~~ vou

he sa id .

know, lemon,

banana, cocoanut, but just the
meringue uses about four
ounces of sugar," he said, " that

doesn't include the sugar in the
filling ."
So, his lemon, cocoanut, and
banana cream meringue pies

have been saved for the
holidays when he knows people
will be buying them.
Of course , as he added, for
the customer, the high price of
sugar has produced one good
effect. ·
"We're making most of our
pastries from scratch now," he

said. "That's because we were
paying ivr labor as well as the
high cost of prepared products.
Now customers are really
getting homemade cakes, pies
and rolls ."

Soft Drinks Jump
There's one more product in

Germanovich's restaurant that
has been hurt by the sugar
price hikes. The price of
carbonated beverages has
jumped sky high, according to
Germanovich.
He used to sell Pepsi at 20
cents ·for a 12-ounce glass one
year ago. Today a glass costs
the customer 35&lt;ents.
"That's like a night club
price, "

Germanovich said.

"People just don't want to pay
it.''

This Week's
Ohio College
Basketball Schedule
By United Press International
·
Tuesday
Walsh at Findlay
Urbana at Tiffin
Wednesday
Cedarville at Grace (Ind.)
Thursday
No games scheduled
Frldny
Mt. Union at Kent State
Muskingum at St. Xavier (ill.)
Tiffin at Kenyon
Dyke at Steubenville
Wilberforce at Detroit Tech
Bluffton at Mennonite Classic
(Tabor, Kan.)
Saturday
Ball St. at Ohio St.
Steubenville at Kent St.
Toledo at Michigan
Ohio University at Wisconsin
Bowling Green at Eastern
Michigan
Wabash (Ind.) at Miami
Old Dominion at Dayton
Wright St. at Cincinnati
Cleveland Slate at Butler
Kenyon at Youngstown St.
otterbein at Ashland
Ohio Wesleyan at Hiram
Heidelberg at Defiance
Oakland (Ind.) at Wooster
Capital at Marshall
Westminster (Pa.) at Denison
Earlham (Ind.) at Wittenberg
Muskingum at Chicago St.
Findlay at Baldwin-Wallace
Ohio Northern at Pittsburgh
Wilmington at Urbana
Walsh at Gannon (Pa.)
Berea (Ky.) at Xavier
Malone at Grove City (Pa.)
Wilberforce at Shaw (Mich.)
Bluffton at Mennonite Classic

Diet will help ·cut cholesterol

IThe reversibility of fatty
0\leposits in the arteries · has
, been demonstrated in animals
under strick experimental
control. The monkey was used

..
-.

Lynn Swann started the
Steelers off in that second ·half
by returning a Saints punt 64
yards for a tnuchdown with
I: 27 elapsed in the third
quarter .
"I had super key blocks," the
rookie
from
Southern
California said. "I saw only
three Saints jerseys. Glen
Edwards threw a good block."
Pittsburgh running back
Franco Harris finished with 114
yards in ·19 carries as the
Steelers improved their record
to 11-2-1 and kept a I ¥..ilame
lead over Cincinnati in the

e

" We used to make cream

DR. LAMB

cilol~sterol.

better."

H argrove
B
d
c ri e

helpsM
'

pies piled high with meringue, "

He said they're drinking
more ice coffee, ice tea and
milkshakes now, In the summer, they shift their drinking
habits over to lemonade and
three cents," he said, 11 but I orangeade.
didn't want to raise the price of
None of Germanovich's cuscoffee because , it hasn't gone tomers have complained about
up.
the absence of sugar on the

By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. ' LAMB - You
mentioned in your column that
fatty accumulations in the
arteries are reversible . Could
you please tell me how this is
possible?
DEAR READER- The fatty
particles in the bloodstream
wilh cholesterol literally move
through the artery wall. They
stic\t in the wall and cause the
~eposits . Part or all of the
. dep~sits will be removed, in
marty cases, if the amount of
(atty particles and cholesterol
(n the bloodstream is sufficiently low.
To lower the fa tty
cholesterol particles in the
blood you need to be on a diet
thai does not contain excess
calories and either prevents or
eliminates obesity. The diet
should be low in fat, low in
satw;ated fat, and low in

Steelers offense well, Bradshaw said.
"You've got to give that New
Orleans defense credit," sald
Bradshaw, who played his
college ball at the other end of
the state at Louisiana Tech.
"They really came after us.
But after I threw that first
touchdown pass ( 31 yards to
Frank Lewis) I felt better."
Sizing up the Sleelers play,
Bradshaw said "We had good
variety-run, pass, run. Our
mistakes hurt us- fumbles
(two lost) and penalties (10 for
115 yards). But in the second
half .our backs ran much

the coach said.
Bradshaw said, "Any win
feels good. But I should have
played better. The passing
attack was not good enough."
The Saints, who decided to
bench quarterback Archie
Manning just before the half AFC's Central Division .
because he was only two of 10
Coach John North, who saw
table. Nor have they balked at for nine yards; scou\ed the his Sainis drop tAl 4-7 in the
paying the extra three cents.
"Now there's an effort to
drop sugar from drinks all
together," Germanovich said:
"The girls figure they don' t
really need it, so they've
'
learned to drink their coffee ·

Coffee 25c; sugar 3c more
By NANCY KERCHEVAL
SHAKER HEIGHTS, Ohio
I UP!) - Coffee costs a quarter
a cup at the Red Rooster
Restaurant. Sugar is three
cents extra.
Mel Germanovich, owner of
the Red Roosf&lt;!r Coffee Shop,
has taken sugar off the tables
and put the packets in orange
golf ball bags, called sugar
holsters . The waitresses wear
the bags, strapped to their
waits, so the sugar is right
there when the customer
requests it.
Germanovich figures he used
to use about 20 cases of sugar
packets per month. That's
about 40,000 packages of sugar
or $400 worth of the sweetener.
But now that the waitresses
are carrying the sugar packets
about in their little orange
bags, he figures he 'll cut the
use of sugar by 20 per cent or
10,000 packs.
Gernnanovich has been forced
to pay $17 per box which
contains 2,000 packages. One
year ago he paid only $4.25 per
box. That's when he kept the
sugar bn the tables and allowed
coffee and tea drinkers to use it
freely .
But after what he saw last
week, he decided it was time to
do something.
Dumped Sugar
''Four girls came in and
ordered Pepsi's last week and
one dumped the whole contain-

for one of the best experiments pack of gwn a day anti each
because he is more like the time I chew a piece I'm lucky if
human .
The
monk.e ys , it lasts more than 10 minutes.
developed latty-cholesterol'
My problem is I ·have this
deposits in the arteries wh~n habit of swallowing my gum,
they were on a rich diet, and sometimes bit by bit and
the fatty deposits were not sollll!times the whole piece at
present aff&lt;!r monkeys were once. It isn't accidental - it's
put back on a less rich monkey just a habit.
diet.
Some of my friends told me it
The same thing has been takes seven years to digest. My
demons trated in people. The mom thinks it might be an
problems associated with unhealthy thing to do, and now
fatty-cholesterol deposits in the ll's got me worried. Any advice
a~leries, specifically' clieart or' help would be- much apdisease, decreased or almost preciated.
disappeared from European
DEAR READER If
populations of World War II. swallowing flUIIl is the worst
There are unnemerable studi~s thing you ever swallow, you
showing this relationship.
will be lucky Indeed.
,
For more information about
No, it will not take seven
cholesterol, triglycerides, and years todlge5t. It wiD not harm
blood fats as related to artery you - even though I must
and heart disease, write to me admit that I don't really think
at P. 0 . Box 1551,. Radio City it is a good idea.
Station, New York,
Y. 10019
All undigested material
and ask · for the booklet on passes through the digestiye
cholesf&lt;!rol. Send 50 cents to system and is usually
cover costs.
eliminated in 48 hours.
DEAR DR. LAMB - I've
I'm more concerned about
had this problem for a while, so the effects of constant gum
I'm telling you about it.
chewing on your teeth. You
Since school started in 1973 ·might ask your dentist whal he
I've been cllewing· more than a thinks abOut it.

N:

&lt;

I

Archie most va.luable Buckeye

top ro·o kies
NEW YORK (UPI) - Mike
Hargrove of the Texas Rangers
and Bake McBride of the St.
Louis Cardinals were named
United Press International's
major league Rookies of the
Year today by overwhelming
margins.
Hargrove, the Rangers' 25year-old first baseman-&lt;lesignated hitter, won the American
League award by receiving 15
of the 17 votes cast by UPI
baseball correspondents
around the country. Bucky
Dent of the Chicago White Sox
and George Brett of the Kansas
City Royals received one vote
each.
McBride, also 25, received 16
of the 17 votes cast by the
writers with Greg Gross of the
Houston Astros getting one
vote.
A native of Perryton, Tex.,
Hargrove wasn't even on the
Texas roster last spring although he had batted .351 with
12 home runs and 82 runs
batted for Gastonia in the

Western Carolinas League in
1973.
"Frankly, we thought he
might be a year away," explains Texas manager Billy
Martin . "But he showed
enough to keep him as a
designated hitter and then he
began to get into the lineup."
The six-foot, 19SiJomd Hargrove wound up his first season
in the majors with a .323 batting average, four hoiners and
66 runs batted ln.
A native of Fulton, Mo.,
McBride won the opportunity
to play center field for the
Cardinals this year with a fine
performance late in the 1973
season. The &amp;-foot, 2-inch, 100poWlder played in !50 games
and had a .~ offensive
performance in addition to
stealing 30 bases. He is considered a faster rwmer than
teammate Lou Brock, whose
118 stolen bases establiahed an
all-time single-reason record
last season.

Umps plan
retaliation
CHICAGO (UPI) - Major
league baseball umpires say
they are tired of being belittled, denounced, secondguessed and made into "hate
objects" by players, managers
and club officials. Now they're
going to retaliate.
The Major League Umpires
Association announced
'Monday that in the future
_u mpires will gladly "analyze
... and discuss.player miscues,
coaching
errors
and
managerial mistakes that
affected the outcome Of the

game."

that has so long been suppressed."
National League president
Chub Feeney, when asked
about the umpires' action, said
it has always been · league
policy that on any controversial play, ''umpires have
been instructed to be available
to the media outside their
dressing room."
The umpires also adopted a
new ',' get to11l!h" policy o!' the
attitudes of players, and asked
for froot office support for a
schedule of mlnlmum fines and ·
penalties.
They also said that if players
have any criticism of an umpire or umpires, "they should
present it to the league
presidents and the umpires

The umpires said league
poliCies have long prevented
them. from commenting or
analyzing plays or players,
while players, coaches,
managers and club officials association."
"constantly second-guess,
belittle, denounce and..rldlcule__ ~ . · ..- ·Jhe-n.a.
~e performances of the urn- 1
•. ,
p.u-es. .
.'I'!,!OIWTO'l'IIE
· 1
"This policy bas gotten out of
· · llft'BIUt:ft or
I'
"
th
lr
"d
.
MRII'-AtMIUIIEA
hand ,
e ump es S81 , adCIIII'SI'QIL.TANifiBIL '
ding that they have been made
.!!:'"·Jill·
008
into "hate objects,"
'
~~
The statement said starting ·j ,__._~~n.,; i
next season, besides analyzing Wd vo~~or ..,.._. ::;:;"'· 111 t
CoortSI.,
players' and coaches' Pt"rfor- omc.
....... tn-me. Edllojrioll'booe• ·
mances umpires "shall be free :Ia?.
'
i .
~I
to discuss all league policies QOo.
·. : i
and iristrucUons which J'ustify ' #iauoul ad...e~w.-. reprettataUwc !
•
•
IMthw!J!.Ge.!!ellhil' ~ ' UEutGMIBt.
their actions on the field, such &lt; NewYorl., NnY..t. ·•
,
'
as illegal pitch directives,
Solllkjlpttoo•m.,Diil_bf...,...
balks half swings . and rain ""- ......,. 10 "!"'" ,.. ...,.; 111.
I
I
Motor Relate wlwt ~ M'Wle DOl
situations which are so often . ...u.ble.
IUD. Br. ~. Jo·
the source of unjustified critl- 11M- w. vo., Qno ·Y"!f, fil;flb
·
d b
montba, f:l .50; n,tte monlha, ... ·

strline( · &lt;

""""""·Oblo, ,- ,

.'

I ............ _ ......
One""""·

ClSIIl

an a use.

"Umpires will become a
·valuable ~urce of ihformation

I

NFC 's West, allowing Los
Angeles to clinch the division
title, seemed to be at the end of
his patience with his young ball
club.

"We didn't play well," North
said. :••rm tired 01 making
excuses for professional
football players. One week we

-

way."

"from what I could see, Ed was ing three games are oo
carrying the tacklers two and road -at Miami ne:rt MorKiay
three yards,"
Ed's effort helped the Bengals amass 28 first downs, just
one short of the team record.
The win over Kansas City
pushed Clncy's record to 7-4
and kept playoff hopes alive.
However, two of the remain-

..

· ·

night and the finale at
sburgh Dec. 14. In be!10'een,
Clncy hosts Detroit Dec. 8.
''This one (the Kansas
game) was a must win for
said defensive tackle
Carpenter. "Now we've got to

~

.......
..

-

...

·~

NEW YORK (UPI) - The
only obstacles between Alabama and the national football
championship are Auburn and
Notre Dame.
Alabama was an overwhelming choice fot No. 1 by United
Press International Board of
Coaches after Ohio State
defeated Michigan, 12-10,
Saturday. The Wolverines loss,
plus Harvard's victory over
Yale, left Alabama the only
Wldefeated and untied team
eligible for the national
champlooahip.
But the Crimson Tide must
first defeat SEC arch-rival
Auburn Friday and then Notre
Dame in the Orange Bowl.
Alabama received 31 of the
34 first-place votes cast, while
second-ranked Ohio Stat&lt;! captured the other thre&lt;!.
Michigan slipped to third and
Southern California climbed to
fourth after earning the right to
meet Ohio Stille in the Rose
Bowl with a ~ , victory over

UCLA.

Ed "bent" a lot of tacklers
Notre Dame, which fac.S the
primarily because he chose to
Trojans Saturday, dropped, a
run over them Instead of
notch to fifth and Auburn
aroWld them.
remained sixth.
"You can't dance too much
Texas A&amp;M climbed ooe spot
out there/' was the way Ed
of seventh and Nebraska feU to
described It, "I had to make up eighth after Saturday's 2$.14
my mind and run."
loss to Oklahoma. No. 9 la Penn
Said center Howard Fest, State and No. 10 North Carolina

State.
NEW YORK (UPI)
1974 United Press Inl&lt;•rnattiorta:
Board of Coaches ;,top~~~2()~;u:J;';;
college football
won-lost records and fir!il-j:lla&lt;~
votes in parentheses :
Team
1. Alabama (31) (10-0)
2. Ohio St. (10-1)
3. Michigan (10-1)
4. Southern Cal (11-1-1)
5, Notre Dame (9-1)
6. Auburn (9-1)
7. Texas A&amp;M ( 11-2)
8. Nebraska (11-3)
9. Penn St. (11-2)
10. N.C. St. (9-2)
·11. Mary land ( 11-3 )
12. Miami (Ohio) (9-0-1)
13. Baylor (7-3)
14. Mich. St. (7-3-1)
13
15. Houston (11-2)
8
16. (Tie) Pitt (7-3)
5
16, (Tie) Ariz (11-2)
5
18. (Tie) Texas (7-3)
4
18. (Tie) BYU (7-3-1)
4
20. Florida (7-3)
3
Note: By agreement wllb lbe
Ameriean Football Coaehes,
teams on probation by lbe
NCAA are lnellglble lor top 20
and national ebamplonshlp consideration by the UPI Board of
Coaches. Those teams currently
011 probation are: Oklabonia,
SMU, California, Long Beach
State and Southwestern Louisiana.

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3:00 PM TO 6:00 PM

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••

..

:&gt;• w

·'··
.........
,,..._.

THE EASTERN EAGLE cage team opens the season
Friday night hosting defending league champion Hannan
Trace. Team members pictured above are, front row, l·r,
Brian Conde, Dana Fick, Greg Balley, Randy ·Blake, Mike

••
•

•.

~

.•.
-.......

By DENNY FOBES
Speed and quickness, and
plenty of it, will be the deter-

~~

mining factors for the Eastern

fast break offense since it
would nullify the quick release
so necessary for a s uccessful
fas t break.

Eagles this season.
Bill Phillips, in his fifth
season at the bird helm, has his
smallest team ever at Eastern ,
with only three players topping
the 6 foot mark, the tallest at 6·
I. With that lack of size may go
Phillips' four year record of
never finishing lower than
second place in the SVAC

boardman," Phillips said in
reference to the height
problem.
" We 'II difinitely be a running
ball club, but because of our
lack of heigh t we may not be
able to run as much as we want
to because the fast break is so
dependant on rebounding and

standings.

board work.''

'" '
""

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

"
~·
:

That lack of height has more
,
than the expected poor
rebounding ramifications lor
'_ the Eagle head coach. Phillips
",. also fears that the small front
~::. : line he will send out will also
~~~· hurt his cagers' chances of a
IW. II

" We have no dominating

One of the tallest Eagles, and
probably the player most to be
counted on to relieve the board
pressure, is the lone returning
starter from last season's ball

club, 6-1 se nior Tim Spencer.
Spencer, who Phillips thinks
could be one of his best in quite
a while, will be starting in one
of lhe corners when the birds
open the fall-winter season
Friday night at home against
defending league champion

"""" CAREER OPTION
: ~ ~ KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (UP!)
·;~: c - Tennessee quarterback Con- ~~ &lt;!~:edge Hollqway has another
no~R·Career option in hand, a
Hannan Trace .
:~,_,coaching job with the UniversiSpencer will be joined by 6-1
ty of Termessee if he wanis it.
junior Phil Bowen in the other
"I've talked to Holloway
corner of t~e three guard of-. about it," said Vol Coach Bill
fense Phillips will be using.
Battle during tlie weekend.
" We'll try to keep the middle
"I'd sure like to have him. We
open so Blake and Harris can
! think he'd be a fine coach."
drive ," Phillips said in
Holloway has one more
reference to two of his three
season of eligibility in college
baseball, and then will decide if remaining starters, seniors
'
he wants to try for a shot at Randy Blake and Mike Harris .
• ,professional baseball or fool·
Blake saw much action late
: : ball.
in the season and quickly
, ,
became one of the catalysts of
' • FATHER IMPROVES
the Eastern stretch drive for
', BEAVER FALLS, Pa. (UP!) second place in 1973-74.
• ' - The condition of John
Harris is coming up from the
,Namath, 65-year-old father of reserve squad that finished in a
,' New York Jets quarterback three-way tie for first place in
,' •Joe Namath, improved slightly the junior varsity standings
' Monday but he still was listed last winter.
\ "in serious condition with
The other guard will be
'various ailments at the senior Greg Bailey, a crafty
. . Medical Center of Beaver lefthander with a soft jump
,' County.
shot that could provide much of
• '
Joe Namath flew here the Eagle scoring punch from
:· : Sunday to be with his father anywhere on the court.
~ ',:.oafter quarterbacking the Jeis
Birds counted on heavily
: ':to a 17-14 upset of the world besides the previously men: champion Miami Dolphins.
tioned starters will be Dan
: ' "Mr.(John)Namathisbeing Good, a 5-10 junior, and Steve
~
treated for an acutely Inflamed Nelson, a 6-0 sen lor, un: gall bladder, acute pan- derneath , with junior guards
, · creatitis, a blood stream in- Don Eichinger and Brian
: ,'fection and chronic lung Conde also expected to see
! ; disease," said the hospital much action . Don Jackson , a
: ', spokesman. "This morning, his transfer from Federal Hocking
:. •condition showed a_ .slight who playell.iast season for the
• 'Improvement... ."
.::. Lancers, ..Jj.-also expected to
:
Natural Cure
"iitay quite a bit, as are Jeff
:
For centuries, resins and Holter,· a ~11 J·unior, and 5-8
, j"uices from the bark and
·
l eaves of willow trees were junior Dana Fick.
, used ·to ease the pain of
Defensively, the full court
l rheumatism and neuralgia. press, and many variations of
• The willow's actiVJ! .. ingre- it, will be the forte of the bird
: · dienl, salicin, was,'!4iJ~:!).}!ered defenders, as Phillips tries to
in the 1820s. T\t.!f'tM~r. was
·1·
11
, improved upon witlr'tlll! de- ult 1ze what he hopes wi be an
• velopmeQt of a:',t~(ed syn- exceptionally quick U!am to its
advantage . That
: !het1c p_roduct ca,I.)eo:t;,acetyl· fullest
' salicylic ac1d, t!'lii'iimonly pressing defense, and its
I ca !led aspirin. ·

'•'•
•'

.'

'
'

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Fast

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It's friendly and economical; quick
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everybody's mood and appe.flte. See
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SUnday-10 A.M. tot I P.M.
Mon . thru Thurs.-9 A.M. to 11 P.M.
Fri . &amp; Sat-9 A.M. to 1 A.M.

•
'

I

•,

1974-75 Eagle Schedule
Hannan Trace

Nov . 29
Nov . 30
Dec 7
Dec 10
Dec. 13
Dec. 17
Dec . 20
Jan. 3
Jan . 10
Jan. 11
Jan . 16
Jan 24
Jan . 25
Jan. 2B
Jan. 31
Feb. 4
Feb. 7
Fe b . 15

197 4.75 Ea stern Ro ster
Player , Po s.
HI . Yr .
Tim Spenc e r , F

6 1

M ik e Har r is, G
Greg Baile y. G
Randy Blake, G
Don Eich inge r . G
Phil Bowen. F

5·8
5·0
5-10
5·8
6 1
58
5 10

DanaFick ,G

Don Ja&lt;:kson, F
Steve Nelson. F
Dan Wood, F
JeffHolter,F
Brian Cond e. G

12
12
12

12
11

12
11

12
6 o 12
S 11 11
5- 1 11

5 8 11

at Waterford
at Federal Hoc king

Fairland
at North Ga lli a
at Southern
at Kyger Creek.
at Hannan Trace
North Gal lia
Sou thwestern
Sym mes Valley
at Fairland
Fe deral Hocking
Waterford
Kyger Creek.
Sou th ern
at Southwestern
at Symmes Vall ey

Black
&amp;OeckeP®

r tool

Once

Phillips

in

forecourt ,

the

expects

mainlywith

a

to

go

man-to-man

defense .
Phillips, who went overboard
in his pre-season praise of last

year 's squad in an attempt to
give the sq uad high goals to
shoot for and some added
motivation, isn't forecasting
much roses for his team this
season.
"If we go 12-6, in my ex-

pectations, that would be a

strong contenders. The Southwestern Highlanders will be a
definite dark horse candidate,
according to Phillips, especially co nsid erin g their
showing in Fnday's SV AC
preview tie with the Eagles at
Rio Grande .
Phillips expects his Eag les to
finish near fifth place, with
Southern sixt h and Ky ger
Creek seventh.

imporatance of those traveling

dales when he says, "Our
record by Christmas should
make or break us."

The Eagles have been fairly
impressive

in

prC-season

scrimmages, losing to Fr ontier
74-47, before defeating the
Meigs reserves 67-44 and
Wahama 65-46.
"Based on material coming
back and experience and
height, we're lucky to be
picked fourth," Phillips stated
concerning the Eagles' expected finish as predicted by
the league coaches recently.
He sees Hanr•n Trace, led
by All-Slater Mark Swain, as
again the top team, with North
Gallia and Symmes Valley also

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However , all speculat ion

tremendous year," he said .
''We're shooting for a wlnner.''

Phillips cites the opener with
Hannan Trace as porbably the
biggest game of the season.
Following that encounter, 6 of
the next 7 games are on the
road, and Phillips signifies the

e

aside, it's what happens on th e
roundball court that counts,
and Eagle fans will get an
early idea of what's in store for
them this campaign when the
Wildcats come to town Friday

Difference in insurance-our continuinlil. oersonal ancn tio o.
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••

POMEROY, OHIO

I

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••

'

·

Tum Skt"adany , who led the
nation with an average 45.4
yards, ~nd the defensi ve award
to tackle Nick Buonamici.
Coac h Woody Hayes sa luted
hi::; 27 se niors a nd noted that
among the award winners were ·
13 freshman players, saying,
"Yo u're the ones whu must
in sure tha t we continue to
win''

&gt;t'""

•

_New York .Clotbin·gl House

KLU·t Schumacher.
The SIJJlht!nlOre of the year
offensive £ward went to punter

" ,,,,

•
•
•...
••·
•••
••
•i
••
•

SHOWN AT KERM 'S KORNER

Pew C'usik, both ta ckles, while
the out s tandin g offe nsive
linema n troptly went to tac kle

. Eagle success depends
::: :on speed and quickness

•'•

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Harris, Don Eichinger, and back row, 1-r, assistant coach
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*
Orders Taken For

Hayes said he had "tentative
Rose Bowl plans mapped," but
refused to revea l the details.
The Buckeye mentor said the
squ a d would leave for
California Dec . · 20, sl&lt;ly and
prac tice at the same p la ces as

*

..••'

-Refreshments-Servedf -.

linenwn trophy wa s shared by
co --car t..~i ns Arnie Jones and

EXPECTS TRADE
OAKLAND
(UP!)
Oakland A's outfielder Reggie
Jackson says he expecis to be
traded "within three weeks"
and adds that he has already
been contacted by the
Baltimore Orioles .

win the next three."

Crimson Tide still
leads UPI ratings·

IIIOII!hl, ~ ,....

"';''

\' .\tJI

unknown running back

_E llnrhln PZ.aa ,....; • mtl'l.lhl •n.SO;

L1"'"~ •

beat I.D~ Angeles and
Pittsburgh beal the hell
us- offensively, defolllll•ve
and on speclal teams. What
you say? You teU me."

Ed Williams no longer
CINCINNATI (UP[) - Ed
who?
·
That's the question being
asked about the leading rusher
and pass receiver in the Cincinnati Bengals' ~ pounding
of Kansas City.
Ed who turns out to be Ed
Williams,
But you can be forgiven for
asking Ed who?
. Williams, who rushed 20
times for 96 yards and caught
five passes for another 53 yards
and a touchdown Sunday,
admittedly only had one big
thing going for hlm before the
game. He was available.
Big Ed ( &amp;-2, 250 pounds
was lone of only three
healthy Clncy running backs
and the only fullback ,
The product of Tiny
Langston (Okla.) College has
usually been available, but not
necessarily wanted,
Two years ago his career
amounted tAl earning ~5 a
game .for the Oklahoma City
Wrangler semi-pro team. He
spent last season bidding his
time oo the Bengals taxi squad.
But injuries to regular Cincy
fullback Boobie Clark and
backup man Doug Dressler
suddenly made Ed's biggest
asset -availability -Important.
He wasn't so much a star
Sunday as he was a workhorse
-giving the Benga~ a much·
needed running threat to make
quarterback Ken Anderson's
passing more effective.
"Ed's a good load," decided
head coach Paul Brown. "He
bends them (tacklers) the right

~

COLUMBUS. Ohio I UPI )

Ohio Stale's a ll -Amcri.c.an
tailback Archie Griffin Monday wa:; vntt·ll the Rose Bowlbound team 's most valuable
player uncJ. also winner of the
SAE tr ophy for being the
outstanding play e r in the
homec omin g game.
The outstanding defensive

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2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tu esday, Nov. 26, 1974

Nation_'s water probed
By RICK VANSANT
inicc has developed live tumors ,abSorbents like . granular-acCIN('INNATI \UP!l - Qmel- in a high percentage of the tivr~led carbon and other forms
ly but quickly , a nationwide anima1s ."
of dis infectants such as chlorine
dioxide.''
Cancer In Humans
test of public drinking water
The important question has
sources ha s been started in the
Wants To Be Careful
become
just
how
much
ehloroRobeck,
recogni~ing, tha t a
wake of recent revelations
linking chlorine -:-lhe popular form is produced by chlorinated huge water trea tm ent industry
water . It is enough to produce has grown up around the use of
water pw-ifier - to cancer.
chlorine, says he wants to be
The study has bec ome the cancer in a human?
Robeck is testing water careful '"not to put the monkey
highest priority of the Em·ironmenlal Protection Agenc)•'s tOO- sources around the country - directly on chlorine ."
person "'National Envirunmen~ which have varying types and
" It 's just too early to say for
mtensities of pollution - to sure because there could be
tal Researc h Cen ter " here.
"We hope to ha ve some determine what pollutants, other e lements in Ule water,·"
signiricant findings to report in when mixed with chlorine, he says. " We need to dewrmine
1975," says Gurdon Robeck, produce the most chloroform . a 'margin of safety' too
director of the ce nter 's water
Then, says Robeck, work can bee a use there has to be a
begin to negate those pol- system of purifying water .on a
supply research labor a tory .
large scale for public consumpIt was Robeck's studies of lu tant.
tion ."
"
We
want
to
get
a
fair
Cincinnati and New Orleans
Robeck, by the way, S:,ys he
drinking wa ter -{;hloronized representation of water sources
Ohio and Mississippi River around the country and make a is s till drinking local water water - that triggered the full complete study," he says. " In the chlorinated Ohio River
the meantime, we're also water - that spawned the
scale survey.
Basically, Robeck found that working with Ohio River water nationwide testing.
"So far as I can assess the
when chlorine reacted with to determine what can be done
natural and industrial organic to minimize formation of the personal danger ," he explains.
material in the water it by-products we've found so "There are so many factors
that we need to study and
produced chloroform and other fa r ."
He says that research in- explain. But I think they should
similar by-products.
"Chloroform is ~re lation­ cludes " trying to rid the water be studied as quic kly as
.
ship to cancer," savs Robeck . of indus trial wastes by using possible ."
"Chloroform administered to

Bradshaw wins starting spot
By M. GENE MEARNS
Nf:W ORLEANS (UP!)
Terry Bradshaw passed for
two touchdowns and ran for a
third, but said even though
Pittsburgh beat New Orleans,
23-7, Monday night he didn't
feel he played well enough.
However, Steelers head
coach Chuck Noll thought he
did and said he would start
Bradshaw next week against
Houston, ending for one week,
anyway, Noll's game of
quarterback roulette.
Bradshaw's statistics were
not all that startling . He
completed eight of 19 passes
for 80 yards and two touchdowns and rushed nine times
for 99 yards and another touchdown.
Asked if Bradshaw 's play
resolved the question of who's
No.
I
in PittsburghBradshaw, Joe Gilliam or
Terry Hanratty -Noll said it
did .
~"Yes,

it does for a while,"

er of sugar into her purse," he
said. As if that wasn 't enough,

it happened a second time and
Germanovich said, that's it.
He said his waitresses don't
mind toting the bags of sugar
on their hips. "Some restaurants make the girls g to a
central station to pickup sugar
requests, " he explained.
The owner of the brightly
decorated cafe added he didn't
want to penalize coffee drinkers
who don't use sugar by raising
the price of a cup of coffee.
"There's no limit to the
amount of sugar you get for

" The sugar situC:~lion in the
restaurant business is gettin g

really, really bad,'" he said,
explaining tha t some of his
delicacies have been stricken
m~Jlu

from the

because they

need too much sugar.

Devll's Food Jumps
For example, devil's food
ca ke has jumped from 35 cents
to 50-eents in six months . And,
he added, it could go to 55&lt;ents
or 60-eents .

without sugar, which
themslayslim."

~~ vou

he sa id .

know, lemon,

banana, cocoanut, but just the
meringue uses about four
ounces of sugar," he said, " that

doesn't include the sugar in the
filling ."
So, his lemon, cocoanut, and
banana cream meringue pies

have been saved for the
holidays when he knows people
will be buying them.
Of course , as he added, for
the customer, the high price of
sugar has produced one good
effect. ·
"We're making most of our
pastries from scratch now," he

said. "That's because we were
paying ivr labor as well as the
high cost of prepared products.
Now customers are really
getting homemade cakes, pies
and rolls ."

Soft Drinks Jump
There's one more product in

Germanovich's restaurant that
has been hurt by the sugar
price hikes. The price of
carbonated beverages has
jumped sky high, according to
Germanovich.
He used to sell Pepsi at 20
cents ·for a 12-ounce glass one
year ago. Today a glass costs
the customer 35&lt;ents.
"That's like a night club
price, "

Germanovich said.

"People just don't want to pay
it.''

This Week's
Ohio College
Basketball Schedule
By United Press International
·
Tuesday
Walsh at Findlay
Urbana at Tiffin
Wednesday
Cedarville at Grace (Ind.)
Thursday
No games scheduled
Frldny
Mt. Union at Kent State
Muskingum at St. Xavier (ill.)
Tiffin at Kenyon
Dyke at Steubenville
Wilberforce at Detroit Tech
Bluffton at Mennonite Classic
(Tabor, Kan.)
Saturday
Ball St. at Ohio St.
Steubenville at Kent St.
Toledo at Michigan
Ohio University at Wisconsin
Bowling Green at Eastern
Michigan
Wabash (Ind.) at Miami
Old Dominion at Dayton
Wright St. at Cincinnati
Cleveland Slate at Butler
Kenyon at Youngstown St.
otterbein at Ashland
Ohio Wesleyan at Hiram
Heidelberg at Defiance
Oakland (Ind.) at Wooster
Capital at Marshall
Westminster (Pa.) at Denison
Earlham (Ind.) at Wittenberg
Muskingum at Chicago St.
Findlay at Baldwin-Wallace
Ohio Northern at Pittsburgh
Wilmington at Urbana
Walsh at Gannon (Pa.)
Berea (Ky.) at Xavier
Malone at Grove City (Pa.)
Wilberforce at Shaw (Mich.)
Bluffton at Mennonite Classic

Diet will help ·cut cholesterol

IThe reversibility of fatty
0\leposits in the arteries · has
, been demonstrated in animals
under strick experimental
control. The monkey was used

..
-.

Lynn Swann started the
Steelers off in that second ·half
by returning a Saints punt 64
yards for a tnuchdown with
I: 27 elapsed in the third
quarter .
"I had super key blocks," the
rookie
from
Southern
California said. "I saw only
three Saints jerseys. Glen
Edwards threw a good block."
Pittsburgh running back
Franco Harris finished with 114
yards in ·19 carries as the
Steelers improved their record
to 11-2-1 and kept a I ¥..ilame
lead over Cincinnati in the

e

" We used to make cream

DR. LAMB

cilol~sterol.

better."

H argrove
B
d
c ri e

helpsM
'

pies piled high with meringue, "

He said they're drinking
more ice coffee, ice tea and
milkshakes now, In the summer, they shift their drinking
habits over to lemonade and
three cents," he said, 11 but I orangeade.
didn't want to raise the price of
None of Germanovich's cuscoffee because , it hasn't gone tomers have complained about
up.
the absence of sugar on the

By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. ' LAMB - You
mentioned in your column that
fatty accumulations in the
arteries are reversible . Could
you please tell me how this is
possible?
DEAR READER- The fatty
particles in the bloodstream
wilh cholesterol literally move
through the artery wall. They
stic\t in the wall and cause the
~eposits . Part or all of the
. dep~sits will be removed, in
marty cases, if the amount of
(atty particles and cholesterol
(n the bloodstream is sufficiently low.
To lower the fa tty
cholesterol particles in the
blood you need to be on a diet
thai does not contain excess
calories and either prevents or
eliminates obesity. The diet
should be low in fat, low in
satw;ated fat, and low in

Steelers offense well, Bradshaw said.
"You've got to give that New
Orleans defense credit," sald
Bradshaw, who played his
college ball at the other end of
the state at Louisiana Tech.
"They really came after us.
But after I threw that first
touchdown pass ( 31 yards to
Frank Lewis) I felt better."
Sizing up the Sleelers play,
Bradshaw said "We had good
variety-run, pass, run. Our
mistakes hurt us- fumbles
(two lost) and penalties (10 for
115 yards). But in the second
half .our backs ran much

the coach said.
Bradshaw said, "Any win
feels good. But I should have
played better. The passing
attack was not good enough."
The Saints, who decided to
bench quarterback Archie
Manning just before the half AFC's Central Division .
because he was only two of 10
Coach John North, who saw
table. Nor have they balked at for nine yards; scou\ed the his Sainis drop tAl 4-7 in the
paying the extra three cents.
"Now there's an effort to
drop sugar from drinks all
together," Germanovich said:
"The girls figure they don' t
really need it, so they've
'
learned to drink their coffee ·

Coffee 25c; sugar 3c more
By NANCY KERCHEVAL
SHAKER HEIGHTS, Ohio
I UP!) - Coffee costs a quarter
a cup at the Red Rooster
Restaurant. Sugar is three
cents extra.
Mel Germanovich, owner of
the Red Roosf&lt;!r Coffee Shop,
has taken sugar off the tables
and put the packets in orange
golf ball bags, called sugar
holsters . The waitresses wear
the bags, strapped to their
waits, so the sugar is right
there when the customer
requests it.
Germanovich figures he used
to use about 20 cases of sugar
packets per month. That's
about 40,000 packages of sugar
or $400 worth of the sweetener.
But now that the waitresses
are carrying the sugar packets
about in their little orange
bags, he figures he 'll cut the
use of sugar by 20 per cent or
10,000 packs.
Gernnanovich has been forced
to pay $17 per box which
contains 2,000 packages. One
year ago he paid only $4.25 per
box. That's when he kept the
sugar bn the tables and allowed
coffee and tea drinkers to use it
freely .
But after what he saw last
week, he decided it was time to
do something.
Dumped Sugar
''Four girls came in and
ordered Pepsi's last week and
one dumped the whole contain-

for one of the best experiments pack of gwn a day anti each
because he is more like the time I chew a piece I'm lucky if
human .
The
monk.e ys , it lasts more than 10 minutes.
developed latty-cholesterol'
My problem is I ·have this
deposits in the arteries wh~n habit of swallowing my gum,
they were on a rich diet, and sometimes bit by bit and
the fatty deposits were not sollll!times the whole piece at
present aff&lt;!r monkeys were once. It isn't accidental - it's
put back on a less rich monkey just a habit.
diet.
Some of my friends told me it
The same thing has been takes seven years to digest. My
demons trated in people. The mom thinks it might be an
problems associated with unhealthy thing to do, and now
fatty-cholesterol deposits in the ll's got me worried. Any advice
a~leries, specifically' clieart or' help would be- much apdisease, decreased or almost preciated.
disappeared from European
DEAR READER If
populations of World War II. swallowing flUIIl is the worst
There are unnemerable studi~s thing you ever swallow, you
showing this relationship.
will be lucky Indeed.
,
For more information about
No, it will not take seven
cholesterol, triglycerides, and years todlge5t. It wiD not harm
blood fats as related to artery you - even though I must
and heart disease, write to me admit that I don't really think
at P. 0 . Box 1551,. Radio City it is a good idea.
Station, New York,
Y. 10019
All undigested material
and ask · for the booklet on passes through the digestiye
cholesf&lt;!rol. Send 50 cents to system and is usually
cover costs.
eliminated in 48 hours.
DEAR DR. LAMB - I've
I'm more concerned about
had this problem for a while, so the effects of constant gum
I'm telling you about it.
chewing on your teeth. You
Since school started in 1973 ·might ask your dentist whal he
I've been cllewing· more than a thinks abOut it.

N:

&lt;

I

Archie most va.luable Buckeye

top ro·o kies
NEW YORK (UPI) - Mike
Hargrove of the Texas Rangers
and Bake McBride of the St.
Louis Cardinals were named
United Press International's
major league Rookies of the
Year today by overwhelming
margins.
Hargrove, the Rangers' 25year-old first baseman-&lt;lesignated hitter, won the American
League award by receiving 15
of the 17 votes cast by UPI
baseball correspondents
around the country. Bucky
Dent of the Chicago White Sox
and George Brett of the Kansas
City Royals received one vote
each.
McBride, also 25, received 16
of the 17 votes cast by the
writers with Greg Gross of the
Houston Astros getting one
vote.
A native of Perryton, Tex.,
Hargrove wasn't even on the
Texas roster last spring although he had batted .351 with
12 home runs and 82 runs
batted for Gastonia in the

Western Carolinas League in
1973.
"Frankly, we thought he
might be a year away," explains Texas manager Billy
Martin . "But he showed
enough to keep him as a
designated hitter and then he
began to get into the lineup."
The six-foot, 19SiJomd Hargrove wound up his first season
in the majors with a .323 batting average, four hoiners and
66 runs batted ln.
A native of Fulton, Mo.,
McBride won the opportunity
to play center field for the
Cardinals this year with a fine
performance late in the 1973
season. The &amp;-foot, 2-inch, 100poWlder played in !50 games
and had a .~ offensive
performance in addition to
stealing 30 bases. He is considered a faster rwmer than
teammate Lou Brock, whose
118 stolen bases establiahed an
all-time single-reason record
last season.

Umps plan
retaliation
CHICAGO (UPI) - Major
league baseball umpires say
they are tired of being belittled, denounced, secondguessed and made into "hate
objects" by players, managers
and club officials. Now they're
going to retaliate.
The Major League Umpires
Association announced
'Monday that in the future
_u mpires will gladly "analyze
... and discuss.player miscues,
coaching
errors
and
managerial mistakes that
affected the outcome Of the

game."

that has so long been suppressed."
National League president
Chub Feeney, when asked
about the umpires' action, said
it has always been · league
policy that on any controversial play, ''umpires have
been instructed to be available
to the media outside their
dressing room."
The umpires also adopted a
new ',' get to11l!h" policy o!' the
attitudes of players, and asked
for froot office support for a
schedule of mlnlmum fines and ·
penalties.
They also said that if players
have any criticism of an umpire or umpires, "they should
present it to the league
presidents and the umpires

The umpires said league
poliCies have long prevented
them. from commenting or
analyzing plays or players,
while players, coaches,
managers and club officials association."
"constantly second-guess,
belittle, denounce and..rldlcule__ ~ . · ..- ·Jhe-n.a.
~e performances of the urn- 1
•. ,
p.u-es. .
.'I'!,!OIWTO'l'IIE
· 1
"This policy bas gotten out of
· · llft'BIUt:ft or
I'
"
th
lr
"d
.
MRII'-AtMIUIIEA
hand ,
e ump es S81 , adCIIII'SI'QIL.TANifiBIL '
ding that they have been made
.!!:'"·Jill·
008
into "hate objects,"
'
~~
The statement said starting ·j ,__._~~n.,; i
next season, besides analyzing Wd vo~~or ..,.._. ::;:;"'· 111 t
CoortSI.,
players' and coaches' Pt"rfor- omc.
....... tn-me. Edllojrioll'booe• ·
mances umpires "shall be free :Ia?.
'
i .
~I
to discuss all league policies QOo.
·. : i
and iristrucUons which J'ustify ' #iauoul ad...e~w.-. reprettataUwc !
•
•
IMthw!J!.Ge.!!ellhil' ~ ' UEutGMIBt.
their actions on the field, such &lt; NewYorl., NnY..t. ·•
,
'
as illegal pitch directives,
Solllkjlpttoo•m.,Diil_bf...,...
balks half swings . and rain ""- ......,. 10 "!"'" ,.. ...,.; 111.
I
I
Motor Relate wlwt ~ M'Wle DOl
situations which are so often . ...u.ble.
IUD. Br. ~. Jo·
the source of unjustified critl- 11M- w. vo., Qno ·Y"!f, fil;flb
·
d b
montba, f:l .50; n,tte monlha, ... ·

strline( · &lt;

""""""·Oblo, ,- ,

.'

I ............ _ ......
One""""·

ClSIIl

an a use.

"Umpires will become a
·valuable ~urce of ihformation

I

NFC 's West, allowing Los
Angeles to clinch the division
title, seemed to be at the end of
his patience with his young ball
club.

"We didn't play well," North
said. :••rm tired 01 making
excuses for professional
football players. One week we

-

way."

"from what I could see, Ed was ing three games are oo
carrying the tacklers two and road -at Miami ne:rt MorKiay
three yards,"
Ed's effort helped the Bengals amass 28 first downs, just
one short of the team record.
The win over Kansas City
pushed Clncy's record to 7-4
and kept playoff hopes alive.
However, two of the remain-

..

· ·

night and the finale at
sburgh Dec. 14. In be!10'een,
Clncy hosts Detroit Dec. 8.
''This one (the Kansas
game) was a must win for
said defensive tackle
Carpenter. "Now we've got to

~

.......
..

-

...

·~

NEW YORK (UPI) - The
only obstacles between Alabama and the national football
championship are Auburn and
Notre Dame.
Alabama was an overwhelming choice fot No. 1 by United
Press International Board of
Coaches after Ohio State
defeated Michigan, 12-10,
Saturday. The Wolverines loss,
plus Harvard's victory over
Yale, left Alabama the only
Wldefeated and untied team
eligible for the national
champlooahip.
But the Crimson Tide must
first defeat SEC arch-rival
Auburn Friday and then Notre
Dame in the Orange Bowl.
Alabama received 31 of the
34 first-place votes cast, while
second-ranked Ohio Stat&lt;! captured the other thre&lt;!.
Michigan slipped to third and
Southern California climbed to
fourth after earning the right to
meet Ohio Stille in the Rose
Bowl with a ~ , victory over

UCLA.

Ed "bent" a lot of tacklers
Notre Dame, which fac.S the
primarily because he chose to
Trojans Saturday, dropped, a
run over them Instead of
notch to fifth and Auburn
aroWld them.
remained sixth.
"You can't dance too much
Texas A&amp;M climbed ooe spot
out there/' was the way Ed
of seventh and Nebraska feU to
described It, "I had to make up eighth after Saturday's 2$.14
my mind and run."
loss to Oklahoma. No. 9 la Penn
Said center Howard Fest, State and No. 10 North Carolina

State.
NEW YORK (UPI)
1974 United Press Inl&lt;•rnattiorta:
Board of Coaches ;,top~~~2()~;u:J;';;
college football
won-lost records and fir!il-j:lla&lt;~
votes in parentheses :
Team
1. Alabama (31) (10-0)
2. Ohio St. (10-1)
3. Michigan (10-1)
4. Southern Cal (11-1-1)
5, Notre Dame (9-1)
6. Auburn (9-1)
7. Texas A&amp;M ( 11-2)
8. Nebraska (11-3)
9. Penn St. (11-2)
10. N.C. St. (9-2)
·11. Mary land ( 11-3 )
12. Miami (Ohio) (9-0-1)
13. Baylor (7-3)
14. Mich. St. (7-3-1)
13
15. Houston (11-2)
8
16. (Tie) Pitt (7-3)
5
16, (Tie) Ariz (11-2)
5
18. (Tie) Texas (7-3)
4
18. (Tie) BYU (7-3-1)
4
20. Florida (7-3)
3
Note: By agreement wllb lbe
Ameriean Football Coaehes,
teams on probation by lbe
NCAA are lnellglble lor top 20
and national ebamplonshlp consideration by the UPI Board of
Coaches. Those teams currently
011 probation are: Oklabonia,
SMU, California, Long Beach
State and Southwestern Louisiana.

Look! Ladies!
WELCOME TO THE

Special Holiday Showing

FRIDAY, NOV. 29
3:00 PM TO 6:00 PM

. CUSTOM MADE

NKM ORIGINALS
Live Models For This Showing

DRESSES
PANTS SUITS
EVENING WEAR
One of A .Kind Ori~inals
No Two Alike

••

..

:&gt;• w

·'··
.........
,,..._.

THE EASTERN EAGLE cage team opens the season
Friday night hosting defending league champion Hannan
Trace. Team members pictured above are, front row, l·r,
Brian Conde, Dana Fick, Greg Balley, Randy ·Blake, Mike

••
•

•.

~

.•.
-.......

By DENNY FOBES
Speed and quickness, and
plenty of it, will be the deter-

~~

mining factors for the Eastern

fast break offense since it
would nullify the quick release
so necessary for a s uccessful
fas t break.

Eagles this season.
Bill Phillips, in his fifth
season at the bird helm, has his
smallest team ever at Eastern ,
with only three players topping
the 6 foot mark, the tallest at 6·
I. With that lack of size may go
Phillips' four year record of
never finishing lower than
second place in the SVAC

boardman," Phillips said in
reference to the height
problem.
" We 'II difinitely be a running
ball club, but because of our
lack of heigh t we may not be
able to run as much as we want
to because the fast break is so
dependant on rebounding and

standings.

board work.''

'" '
""

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

"
~·
:

That lack of height has more
,
than the expected poor
rebounding ramifications lor
'_ the Eagle head coach. Phillips
",. also fears that the small front
~::. : line he will send out will also
~~~· hurt his cagers' chances of a
IW. II

" We have no dominating

One of the tallest Eagles, and
probably the player most to be
counted on to relieve the board
pressure, is the lone returning
starter from last season's ball

club, 6-1 se nior Tim Spencer.
Spencer, who Phillips thinks
could be one of his best in quite
a while, will be starting in one
of lhe corners when the birds
open the fall-winter season
Friday night at home against
defending league champion

"""" CAREER OPTION
: ~ ~ KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (UP!)
·;~: c - Tennessee quarterback Con- ~~ &lt;!~:edge Hollqway has another
no~R·Career option in hand, a
Hannan Trace .
:~,_,coaching job with the UniversiSpencer will be joined by 6-1
ty of Termessee if he wanis it.
junior Phil Bowen in the other
"I've talked to Holloway
corner of t~e three guard of-. about it," said Vol Coach Bill
fense Phillips will be using.
Battle during tlie weekend.
" We'll try to keep the middle
"I'd sure like to have him. We
open so Blake and Harris can
! think he'd be a fine coach."
drive ," Phillips said in
Holloway has one more
reference to two of his three
season of eligibility in college
baseball, and then will decide if remaining starters, seniors
'
he wants to try for a shot at Randy Blake and Mike Harris .
• ,professional baseball or fool·
Blake saw much action late
: : ball.
in the season and quickly
, ,
became one of the catalysts of
' • FATHER IMPROVES
the Eastern stretch drive for
', BEAVER FALLS, Pa. (UP!) second place in 1973-74.
• ' - The condition of John
Harris is coming up from the
,Namath, 65-year-old father of reserve squad that finished in a
,' New York Jets quarterback three-way tie for first place in
,' •Joe Namath, improved slightly the junior varsity standings
' Monday but he still was listed last winter.
\ "in serious condition with
The other guard will be
'various ailments at the senior Greg Bailey, a crafty
. . Medical Center of Beaver lefthander with a soft jump
,' County.
shot that could provide much of
• '
Joe Namath flew here the Eagle scoring punch from
:· : Sunday to be with his father anywhere on the court.
~ ',:.oafter quarterbacking the Jeis
Birds counted on heavily
: ':to a 17-14 upset of the world besides the previously men: champion Miami Dolphins.
tioned starters will be Dan
: ' "Mr.(John)Namathisbeing Good, a 5-10 junior, and Steve
~
treated for an acutely Inflamed Nelson, a 6-0 sen lor, un: gall bladder, acute pan- derneath , with junior guards
, · creatitis, a blood stream in- Don Eichinger and Brian
: ,'fection and chronic lung Conde also expected to see
! ; disease," said the hospital much action . Don Jackson , a
: ', spokesman. "This morning, his transfer from Federal Hocking
:. •condition showed a_ .slight who playell.iast season for the
• 'Improvement... ."
.::. Lancers, ..Jj.-also expected to
:
Natural Cure
"iitay quite a bit, as are Jeff
:
For centuries, resins and Holter,· a ~11 J·unior, and 5-8
, j"uices from the bark and
·
l eaves of willow trees were junior Dana Fick.
, used ·to ease the pain of
Defensively, the full court
l rheumatism and neuralgia. press, and many variations of
• The willow's actiVJ! .. ingre- it, will be the forte of the bird
: · dienl, salicin, was,'!4iJ~:!).}!ered defenders, as Phillips tries to
in the 1820s. T\t.!f'tM~r. was
·1·
11
, improved upon witlr'tlll! de- ult 1ze what he hopes wi be an
• velopmeQt of a:',t~(ed syn- exceptionally quick U!am to its
advantage . That
: !het1c p_roduct ca,I.)eo:t;,acetyl· fullest
' salicylic ac1d, t!'lii'iimonly pressing defense, and its
I ca !led aspirin. ·

'•'•
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.' Don't Argue

Fast

Fami~

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It's friendly and economical; quick
end dlver-c;lfled- enough to satisfy
everybody's mood and appe.flte. See
.oor olorlovs menu .

SUnday-10 A.M. tot I P.M.
Mon . thru Thurs.-9 A.M. to 11 P.M.
Fri . &amp; Sat-9 A.M. to 1 A.M.

•
'

I

•,

1974-75 Eagle Schedule
Hannan Trace

Nov . 29
Nov . 30
Dec 7
Dec 10
Dec. 13
Dec. 17
Dec . 20
Jan. 3
Jan . 10
Jan. 11
Jan . 16
Jan 24
Jan . 25
Jan. 2B
Jan. 31
Feb. 4
Feb. 7
Fe b . 15

197 4.75 Ea stern Ro ster
Player , Po s.
HI . Yr .
Tim Spenc e r , F

6 1

M ik e Har r is, G
Greg Baile y. G
Randy Blake, G
Don Eich inge r . G
Phil Bowen. F

5·8
5·0
5-10
5·8
6 1
58
5 10

DanaFick ,G

Don Ja&lt;:kson, F
Steve Nelson. F
Dan Wood, F
JeffHolter,F
Brian Cond e. G

12
12
12

12
11

12
11

12
6 o 12
S 11 11
5- 1 11

5 8 11

at Waterford
at Federal Hoc king

Fairland
at North Ga lli a
at Southern
at Kyger Creek.
at Hannan Trace
North Gal lia
Sou thwestern
Sym mes Valley
at Fairland
Fe deral Hocking
Waterford
Kyger Creek.
Sou th ern
at Southwestern
at Symmes Vall ey

Black
&amp;OeckeP®

r tool

Once

Phillips

in

forecourt ,

the

expects

mainlywith

a

to

go

man-to-man

defense .
Phillips, who went overboard
in his pre-season praise of last

year 's squad in an attempt to
give the sq uad high goals to
shoot for and some added
motivation, isn't forecasting
much roses for his team this
season.
"If we go 12-6, in my ex-

pectations, that would be a

strong contenders. The Southwestern Highlanders will be a
definite dark horse candidate,
according to Phillips, especially co nsid erin g their
showing in Fnday's SV AC
preview tie with the Eagles at
Rio Grande .
Phillips expects his Eag les to
finish near fifth place, with
Southern sixt h and Ky ger
Creek seventh.

imporatance of those traveling

dales when he says, "Our
record by Christmas should
make or break us."

The Eagles have been fairly
impressive

in

prC-season

scrimmages, losing to Fr ontier
74-47, before defeating the
Meigs reserves 67-44 and
Wahama 65-46.
"Based on material coming
back and experience and
height, we're lucky to be
picked fourth," Phillips stated
concerning the Eagles' expected finish as predicted by
the league coaches recently.
He sees Hanr•n Trace, led
by All-Slater Mark Swain, as
again the top team, with North
Gallia and Symmes Valley also

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However , all speculat ion

tremendous year," he said .
''We're shooting for a wlnner.''

Phillips cites the opener with
Hannan Trace as porbably the
biggest game of the season.
Following that encounter, 6 of
the next 7 games are on the
road, and Phillips signifies the

e

aside, it's what happens on th e
roundball court that counts,
and Eagle fans will get an
early idea of what's in store for
them this campaign when the
Wildcats come to town Friday

Difference in insurance-our continuinlil. oersonal ancn tio o.
t:1lll us.
. , • • Wll,lia m D. Childs ,

Adolph's Dairy .Valley
W. MAIN

ability to take the ball away,
should be the key to Eastern
hopes this season, especially if
the Eagles, in the process, can
slay out of foul trouble.

Inc~

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·

Tum Skt"adany , who led the
nation with an average 45.4
yards, ~nd the defensi ve award
to tackle Nick Buonamici.
Coac h Woody Hayes sa luted
hi::; 27 se niors a nd noted that
among the award winners were ·
13 freshman players, saying,
"Yo u're the ones whu must
in sure tha t we continue to
win''

&gt;t'""

•

_New York .Clotbin·gl House

KLU·t Schumacher.
The SIJJlht!nlOre of the year
offensive £ward went to punter

" ,,,,

•
•
•...
••·
•••
••
•i
••
•

SHOWN AT KERM 'S KORNER

Pew C'usik, both ta ckles, while
the out s tandin g offe nsive
linema n troptly went to tac kle

. Eagle success depends
::: :on speed and quickness

•'•

Custom Made Garments
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Harris, Don Eichinger, and back row, 1-r, assistant coach
Duane Wolfe, Jeff Holter, Dan Good, Phil Bowen, Tim
Spencer, Don Jackson and head coach Bill Phillips.

,

~®~~w~w~ww::~~~~~ws=~&lt;~m:«:~~'

*
Orders Taken For

Hayes said he had "tentative
Rose Bowl plans mapped," but
refused to revea l the details.
The Buckeye mentor said the
squ a d would leave for
California Dec . · 20, sl&lt;ly and
prac tice at the same p la ces as

*

..••'

-Refreshments-Servedf -.

linenwn trophy wa s shared by
co --car t..~i ns Arnie Jones and

EXPECTS TRADE
OAKLAND
(UP!)
Oakland A's outfielder Reggie
Jackson says he expecis to be
traded "within three weeks"
and adds that he has already
been contacted by the
Baltimore Orioles .

win the next three."

Crimson Tide still
leads UPI ratings·

IIIOII!hl, ~ ,....

"';''

\' .\tJI

unknown running back

_E llnrhln PZ.aa ,....; • mtl'l.lhl •n.SO;

L1"'"~ •

beat I.D~ Angeles and
Pittsburgh beal the hell
us- offensively, defolllll•ve
and on speclal teams. What
you say? You teU me."

Ed Williams no longer
CINCINNATI (UP[) - Ed
who?
·
That's the question being
asked about the leading rusher
and pass receiver in the Cincinnati Bengals' ~ pounding
of Kansas City.
Ed who turns out to be Ed
Williams,
But you can be forgiven for
asking Ed who?
. Williams, who rushed 20
times for 96 yards and caught
five passes for another 53 yards
and a touchdown Sunday,
admittedly only had one big
thing going for hlm before the
game. He was available.
Big Ed ( &amp;-2, 250 pounds
was lone of only three
healthy Clncy running backs
and the only fullback ,
The product of Tiny
Langston (Okla.) College has
usually been available, but not
necessarily wanted,
Two years ago his career
amounted tAl earning ~5 a
game .for the Oklahoma City
Wrangler semi-pro team. He
spent last season bidding his
time oo the Bengals taxi squad.
But injuries to regular Cincy
fullback Boobie Clark and
backup man Doug Dressler
suddenly made Ed's biggest
asset -availability -Important.
He wasn't so much a star
Sunday as he was a workhorse
-giving the Benga~ a much·
needed running threat to make
quarterback Ken Anderson's
passing more effective.
"Ed's a good load," decided
head coach Paul Brown. "He
bends them (tacklers) the right

~

COLUMBUS. Ohio I UPI )

Ohio Stale's a ll -Amcri.c.an
tailback Archie Griffin Monday wa:; vntt·ll the Rose Bowlbound team 's most valuable
player uncJ. also winner of the
SAE tr ophy for being the
outstanding play e r in the
homec omin g game.
The outstanding defensive

t'

e

locking bullon

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SING SCHEDULED
A hymn si ng will be held at
the Ml. Union Baptist Church
at 7:10p .m. SWlday featuring
the Uhrig Brothers . A revival
will beg in at the church on
Monday, Dec . 2, continuing
through Dec. 8 with services to

be held at 1:30 each evening .
The Rev . Okcy Car t will be

Thrifty Santas LAY-AWAY N.OW!
DEAR POLLY -

Bring in a bicycle. Buy a Honda.

DIAMOND ENGAGEMENT RINGS

From

Your
engagement
is fu ll of \aye
and beauty. So
are these clusters
ol brilliant diamonds

A gathering ot five stones. set
tog ethe r, and appearing as a large
tingle diamond - at a frac tion
ot the cost.

It 's an exciting engagement ring idea .

. Total weight .25 ct. with
B. Total wt .. so ct . with the
look of a 1 ct. diamond. · look of a H 4 ct. diamond.

•187.50

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of a new Honda .

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ks: Bring in any
regular
bicycle or tricycle in
ridable condition and your Honda
dealer wi ll pay you S20 for it when
you purchase orle' of these smaller
Honda s ~ a QA-SO, Z-SOA, MR: -SO,

ATC 70, CT -70. T_hen, pe will give
the
bicycle
or
tr1cycte m your name
, ,. lhe Mari ne Corps
eserve
Toys-For -

•

Total weight 1 ct. with 1

Program

or

another
charitable
organ iza 1ion
It all
adds up to a better

,

C h ristmas

for

· · everyone. -See youidealer for all
excit ina dett~il~

POMEROY LANDMARII'

•650

the

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THE KING SISTERS AND ART oUNKLETTER- Three of Mr. and Mrs. Virgil King's
dau~ters had the privilege of meeting and talking with Art Linkletter when he spoke on drugs
at Ollvet Nazarene College at Kank ~ kee, Ill., recently. Shown with Linkletter are, 1-r, Judy
King, who IS employed at the college as food service manager for the Sa fa Food Co.· Unkletter; Mary King, a senior at the school, who is student manager of the cafeteria and s~rves also
as a hostess, and Geneva King, who is a freshman a nd works as Judy's secretary. Unkletter in
his speech said that drugs were not the biggest problem in our society but caring for each other.
Parents and chtldren do not take.enough time to really enjoy and listen to each other he said .
He allto stated that he had seen many yoWlgsters try to stop the drug habit but the only ones
who were successful were the ones who found Christ.

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Social Ill!
Fun With Food
By Charlene Hoeflich
:::,Calendar::::

Ohio

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Well, here it is turkey time,and if you haven't picked up your
bird yet, remember if it's frozen it will take about two days in the
refrigerator to thaw, and four lo six hours if you place it under
cool running water.
What with the price of water here in the Bend, it would seem
purchasing the turkey early is the best and most economical,
wouldn't you say• Anyway, leave the moisture-proof wrapping
on the frozen turkey while it thaws. This preserves the moisture
in the meat.
Another thing-don 'l stuff the turkey WJtil you are ready lo
put it inlo the oven. This is the word from home economics who
!mow. They talk of the danger of bacterial growth if the bird is
stuffed the day before.
Now, about dessert.
There are some, we're sure, who do not include pumpkin pie·l
on their list of favorites. But what would Thanksgiving dinner be
without pumpkin pie! So ... from a friend comes this recipe for a
Butterscotch-Pumpkin Pie which perhaps you'd like to try.
BUTIERSCOTCH·PUMPKIN PIE
Have ready one unbaked nine inch pie shell. Preheat over to
375 degrees.
Combine in heavy saucepan and stir over moderate heat til
butterscotch melts and mixture is smooth, one six oWJce package
butterscotch morsels and one cup of milk . Mix together and
blend in 2c. canned pwnpkin; 'h c. sugar; llsp. cinnamon; Y.t
tsp . salt; Y.t tsp. ginger, ¥• tsp. nubne g.
Blend in three slightly beaten eggs and stir vigorously.
Pour into the prepared pie shell and bake for 45 minutes.
Top with whipped cream and serve.
Pumpkin bread'l, cakes and cookies are a favorite this lime
of year with many families. But have you tried pumpkin b ar~•
Martha Guilkey passed a recipe along to us which she had
received from Ruth Fulks, a friend in Lawrence County. We
share it with you.
PUMPKIN BARS
c . sifted flour; % tsp. salt; 'h tsp. baking soda; Y.t tsp.
nutmeg· 'h tsp. ginger; two-thirds c, carmed pumpkin; 'h tsp.
cinnam~n; 2eggs; !c. brown sugar; ¥• c. salad oil; Y.t c . minced
dates ; 'h c. chopped nuts .
Mix and sift flour, salt, soda and spices. Beat eggs, add sugar
gradually and beat well. Add oil, dates, nuts a ~d mix. Ad? si~ted
ingredients alternately with pumpkin lo egg mlXlure, mlXlng JUst
enough to keep the batter smooth. Pour into a greased pan
(9x9x2) . Bake in a preheated oven at 350 degrees for 30 _mmutes.
Cool five minutes. Remove from pan and cool on coohng rack.
Yield: about three dozen .
And now, of! to the kitchen, and a Happy Thanksgiving 1o

'I•

SILVER AND GOLD WITH PURSES
TO MATCH

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POTLUCK SET
The 1 p.m. potluck at the
Grange officer's con£erence
Friday at the Rock Spring
Grange Hall, will be followed
by a meeting at 8 p.m. Those
attending the potluck are to
take their own table service.
BAZAAR SLATED
Annual Chrisbnas bazaar of
Ohio Eta . Phi Chapter, Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority, will be
Saturday al9 a.m. at Warner 's
Insurance Agency, Pomeroy.

The

TRANSFERRED
Mrs. Helen Lewis , Mid·
dleporl, a patient al the Elm·
wood Rest Home near Tuppers
Plains for several weeks, was

transferred Monday to the
Angel of Mercy Home, Albany.

VISIT FRIENDS
Mrs. Doris Spencer, Mrs .
David Brickles and children ,
Rl. 2, Pomeroy, visited SWlday
with Mrs . Lucy Gaul, Sumner,
and Mrs. Paul Hoffman ,
Chester.

SERVICE BULLETIN

S u rprisi ng
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IMPORTANT NOTICE
OHIO

TO HARD OF HEARING

•.

.

TUESDAY
PAST MATRONS, Pomeroy
Chapter OES, 7:30 p.m. at
lwme of Mrs. Nellie Tracy.
JUNIOR American Legion
Auxiliary, 6 p.m. al Feeney •
Bennelt Post 128 hall in Middleport.
DREW Webster Unit 39,
American Legion Auxiliary,
7:30p.m. at the hall. Initiation
of new member by Mrs. Mary
Martin.
AMERICAN
LEGION
Auxiliary, Racine Post 602,
7:30p.m. Tuesday at the hall .
MIDDLEPORT Masonic
Lodge, 7:30 p .m. Tuesday at
the Tem pl e. Work in the
Maste r Mason degree with all
Master Masons inv ited.
WEDNESDAY
AMERICAN
Le g ion
Auxi liary and Ame·r ican
Legion, Feeney . Bennett Post
128, Middleport, potluck dinner
at 6:30p .m. with both groups
having meetings at 7:30p.m.
POMEROY • Middleport
Lions Club, noon, at the Meigs
Inn.
OHIO Valley Commandry 24,
Knights Templar, s lated
conclave, 7:30 p.m.

at

the

Pomeroy Masonic Temple. All
knights templar urged to attend .
FRIDAY
MEIGS County Granges,
officers

conference,

R oc k

Springs grange hall, 7 p.m. ,
potluck dinner. All office rs
urged to attend.

of the hair that touches the pillow. The tissue also absorbs per·
spiralion as you sleep. The first lime I did this my husband took
one look and in amazement said, "Where do you think you are
going?" Now he is used lo it. I have been doing this over 20 years
and my hair stays in great shape from one set to another. Tell
Mrs. B.G. the tissue works better when doubled. - M.E .G.
DEAR POLLY - and Mrs. B. G. - To wrap one's head in
loilettissue to hold the set I use at least! I; to two yards of tissue
put on turban style . Start at the hairline and wrap towa rd the
crown, pin in place with bobby pins and then put ~ night net over
all. Waves should be pinned before putting on the tissue and one
should be gentle with a boufrant style. I have heard that a satin
pillowcase helps keep one's hair style but have never tried it. LILLIAN.
DEAR READERS - I find a rayon sa tin pillow case alone
works beautifully and keeps one's hairdo (at least mine) for a full
week. One or two clips placed at strategic places help, too. Wben
on a trip and I have forgotten to pack such a pillowcase a satin or
nylon tricot half slip pulled over the ptllow works just as well. POLLY.
DEAR POLLY - My Pointer is a way to have a smart new
rug at little cost. Usually carpe l dealers have old display sam·
pies of carpel for sale and often for as little as 151o 20 cents each.
Select coordinating colors alllhe same size and buy carpet tape
at the hardware store. On your floor arrange the squares to your
sa Usfaction , turn squares over and tape wrong sides together .
You will have an individual rug of quality that has no relation lo
the price paid for the samples.- J. S.

I

)

INSTALLED worthy matron of Evangeline C.'hapler -172,
Order of the Eastern Star in installation of ceremonies last
Wednesday night was Mrs. Farie Kennedy . She is pictured
. here with the new worthy patron, Ha rry Chesl1er. Mrs .
Naomi King was the installing officer.

CELEBRATE
MlNERSVILLF. - Mr . and

Salisbury has
44 pupils on
honors list

Mrs. Edison Holl on, Rt. I ,
Minersville, ce lebrated their
25th wedding anniversary Nov .

20. Their children, Mr . a11d
Mrs . Larry Hollon and Mr . and
Mrs . Thomas Hamm,

Salisbury
Elementary
Sc hool's honor roll for the
second six week grading

We !ravt" beautiful Thanksgi ving
sutumn Dowers.
Uwq uc , rh nughtful~Jift s for your

lwuqu~t~ uf lovely

fam i ly. fri,.,nds , b u .~1ness 41S50Ciafes.
A nd 1-'.'t.' c an send them

11lmos r anywhere,
rhe FTD wo~~y So. c all
01 VJSJ/ US today

were

DU
FLORIST
59. N. Second St.

hosts for a dtnner party at the
Daniel

period :

Boone

Re sta urant ,

Ripley, W. Va. Gifts were
presented to the coupl e.

First Grade - Rose Ellen
Barnhouse , Shawn Goeg lein,
Jodi Ann Har r iso n. Barba r a
Hatfield. Scott Pul l ins, Cindy
Sauters, Ani ta Smi t h, Tame la
Terry .
Second Grade ~ Ruth Ann
Fry. Greg Murray , Sandra
John son , Timmy LeMaster,
Jack i e Welker, Sandra Hoyt ,

t, Q ,

SEE THE NEWEST
FRIGIDAIRES AT···

Cynt hia Hazelton .

Third Grade - Billy Cars.
wel l , Rhonda Jeffers , Mike
You will receive a dollar if Polly uses your favorite home· Kennedy, Chri st ina Quivey ,
making idea , Pet Peeve, Polly's Problem or solution to a Craig Sinclair, Paula Swinde ll
Fourth Grade Ang ela
problem. Write Polly in care of this newspaper.
Hatf ield , John Sm i th, Scott
Harrison. Lori Picke tt , Natalie
Lambert, Sherr I Marshall, BHI
Holcomb .
Fifth Gra de - Robin HCJwk,
Steven Hood, Eric Lipscomb,
Kathleen Parker , Laura Smi t h,
Fredric Young .
year..Qid
tr
iplet
grandchildren,
Aaron Zah l, a patient at the
Six th Grade - Becky Dorst,
Holzer Medical Center fo r the Barbara , Belly and Sam, Dav id Kennedy, Brian King,
past month. observed his 7!st chi ldren of Mr . and Mrs . Leo Ca r ol Morris. Laura Ohlinger,
Steve Oh llnger. Ange la Si nbirthday SWlday. He is con. Smith, Berian Springs, Mich., clair , Ca mille Sw indell , Jena
rincd lo room 434. In ob- telephoned to sing " Happy · Welker. linda Wi ll iam s.

BAKER

FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT

Zahl marks 71st year
Birthday."
Mrs. Smi th recently spent a
week here with her parents,
RETURNS HOME
and was joined by her husband
Alice E. Johnston has for a couple of days. Other
returned to her Bradbury home recent visitors have been Mr.
after being a . patient at and Mrs . Bill Za hl and
Veterans Memorial Hospital. daughter, Midgie, and Mrs.
Although she is home it is still Steve Sluts, Groveport.

servance or his bir thday, his Ill-

necessar y for her to wear a

brace. While a patient at the
hospita l she received many
lovely flowers and card5. She
was honored on her birthday,
Nov. 22, with gifts, ice cream
and cake by Mrs . Sharon DosS,
Mr s. Bernice Jeffers and
g ran ddaugh ters, Missy and
Mandy Hubbard .

King Solomon 's T emple
stoo d ror fuur ce nturi es
bl.:!furc it was destro yed by

Nebuc hadne·aar . Th e Wail -

ing Wall in J er u.sa!e m is no I a
rem nant of Solomon's Tem -

ple but ol' one buil t later 011
th e same site by Ki11g He rocl.

SAVE • SAVE-:

-

UPDATE YOUR

MR. SLEIGHT DIES
Mrs. Sidney Russell, Mid·
dleporl, received word of the
death of HowardS. Sleight, 72,
Nyack, N. Y., a former
resident of Rutland. While here
he was lieutenan t or the Fire
Department at the TNT plant
during the war. Later he was
fire chief at Nyack. Mr. Sleight
died Wednesday at the Nyack
Comm uni ty Hospita l and
fWleral services were held in
Nyack Saturday. Contributions
in his memory may be made to
the Nyack CommWJily Am·
bulance Corps.

ILLNESS LEARNED
Mrs. Shirley Roush, Mid·
dleporl, received word SWlday
or the illness or her grandmother, Mrs. Mattie Chasteen,
r.ormerly of Vinton. Mrs.
Chasteen sufrered a 'stroke and
, is confined to St. J ohn 's
HospiU.l at Steubenville. She is
the mother of Mrs. Howard
Pinnell, formerly of Middleport .

~.~tm

A DISCOUNT
DfPARTMf.NT STOQf

I

I

ONE DAY WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 27

Does your current auto in surance provide you with
adequa t e protection? Are
you paying too much? Are
you over-i nsured? Are ther e
ways you cou ld save money
on your insurance ? Bring
your policy to us today and
we'l l answer these questions
for you.
·

REUTER·
BROGAN
· INSURANCE
PH. 992·5130
107 Sycamore

Pomeroy

'

Ill PEOPLE WIO Willi TO 1111 Ul IUUSTUD! .

STIHL

Sudbeam Appliances
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MIDDLEPORT

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back a round aga in pinning when necessary. This covers a ny part

:~~~~:w.?:sr,.;:w~~~~~=:::::::::~:::::::::.~~

SERVING MEIGS, GALL/A &amp; MASON COUNTIE

INSULATE NOW
FOR WINTER

DEAR POLLY - My Pet Peeve is with those newspapers
that put crossword puzzles in the fold of the paper instead of at
the top or bottom or a page. - A. S.
DEAR POLLY - Mrs. B . G. who wants to wrap her head in
lniletlissue wsave her hairdo has on ly to lea r off enough tissue
to go oround her head twice. Pin tissue to the side oi the head
with a bobby pin, take it around w the back and pin to the oth er
side of the head and then raise the paper a bit higher and lake

ift .giving ideas ever . It
youngsters get the·
for Christmas. And
you to give your

rots

GOESSLER'S JEWELRY

I·

now until Chris tma s, your
Honda dealer is of of the most unique

the look of a 3 ct. diamond.

•400

BUY YOUR WIFE
ALADY
KENMORE
FOR
CHRISTMAS

removing some paint spots from the refrigerator with a scouring
pad . The cleaners and waxes I have used seem to make the
·
scratches show even more. - BE'ITY.

carnc,;cating

XL CHAIN
SAW

POLLY'S PROBLEM
Does any reader know how to remove

scratches from a coppertone refrigerator ? I made the mistake of

Help others. Help yourself.

AND BRIDAL
SETS

evangelist for the c hurch which
is located near Carpenter. The
public is invited.

roc ,.cpl; wllo h:..,, b" " told tnn tilt)' cann ot wur hudna tidl
or tbu .m •1• vUl nit halp. 1M ~rae )IOU to ny • &lt;ii..,Mtrnlon el o~r
S16 aad t l-,. h B!V DlU.C'rlOMAL ACOUSTICOt!, nO'o' IV&amp;llable lllth
!IaLli! claar . .r - ""' up to SlOO.OO per , e u oe !atteriu!

TRUST US

'"P'"''·

THE REAL NUMBER 1
VALUE INAN

101 IIIPll WID UiE IIIIIIC

lltsl

YOUl JlUJllNG AlO WILL R Ct.UJI£11 AND Cli!CU:D, tub11l&amp; replaced. eanool dt
datu4 .a4 till 114 vlll be ahen an o¥11'" '1U dlttk for t o!lal quaLity , TM I
h in Uepina with o~r poll cy of pra¥14h&amp; ..7"" \rl'tfi the ftnen terv1ee.
ftde 11ntce will be nt•nd•4 t o a ny .alta or .0011 of hau ln&amp; dd on I
D.o ~"et\na• bula.
'".t• ~

~AUTOMATIC MINI-SIZE. SAW

i

•AUTOMATIC OILING
e"ALL·BEARING" ENGINE
•EXTRA QUIET MUFFLER
•AND MANY OTHER
TOP QUALITY FEATURES.

AllDlTIOII AJ. SAVUIGS - All re1ultr hltl'"i.AI dd beturiu vii i be told
1 t 1/~ prtc• e t t h• •n·d u s•p!frt !)!!lr vith no Haiti Stvl 11oney and etock up.

TO HANDLE
A LOAN OF
$1500.
People trust us to handle the ir savings.

COME 1• · · 11:111. • · It 7:01 ' · • ·

POMEROY HOME &amp; AUTO
YOUR tOMPLETE TIRE CENTER

..

II,AP.UTTA
CI\LLlPOLIS

UK,I,lU. IH!I

NOVDIIII 26 ,
MOY'IKill 16 .

ATII!NS

JACI.St'ff

01110 liiiVERSITY I~
~OLLY HILL tt:ITI.L

NOY!KII£1 U,
NOV00£1. 21 .

POIC!lOl
PORTSI"'I1Tll

!G:IGGS lllll
HOLIDAY 1/01

-ll.l.t

IIOVIHUI. 25,

IOIW.t

IIOVIKIU

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TUISD.\1
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n.

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makes us a better kind of
loan company.

!LUI FOllliTAUI MJTl!L

Iutter f.earing anJ unJerJlanJing
•

~~~~
ES'f.I9L!

125 E. Main St • 992·2171

STOREWIDE SAVINGS OFF

l,

•

'

OUR EVERYDAY DISCOUNT PRICES
SHOPPERS MART

SHOPPERS MART

SHOPPERS MART

POINT PLEASANT

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

MASON, W. VA.

HURRY ON IN WEDNESDAY AJ THE LOCATIONS
LISTED FOR SAVINGS!
DON'T MISS IT ' .
.,

'

·,

'

.7

I'

i

�..
'·

SING SCHEDULED
A hymn si ng will be held at
the Ml. Union Baptist Church
at 7:10p .m. SWlday featuring
the Uhrig Brothers . A revival
will beg in at the church on
Monday, Dec . 2, continuing
through Dec. 8 with services to

be held at 1:30 each evening .
The Rev . Okcy Car t will be

Thrifty Santas LAY-AWAY N.OW!
DEAR POLLY -

Bring in a bicycle. Buy a Honda.

DIAMOND ENGAGEMENT RINGS

From

Your
engagement
is fu ll of \aye
and beauty. So
are these clusters
ol brilliant diamonds

A gathering ot five stones. set
tog ethe r, and appearing as a large
tingle diamond - at a frac tion
ot the cost.

It 's an exciting engagement ring idea .

. Total weight .25 ct. with
B. Total wt .. so ct . with the
look of a 1 ct. diamond. · look of a H 4 ct. diamond.

•187.50

c.

•

of a new Honda .

,

ks: Bring in any
regular
bicycle or tricycle in
ridable condition and your Honda
dealer wi ll pay you S20 for it when
you purchase orle' of these smaller
Honda s ~ a QA-SO, Z-SOA, MR: -SO,

ATC 70, CT -70. T_hen, pe will give
the
bicycle
or
tr1cycte m your name
, ,. lhe Mari ne Corps
eserve
Toys-For -

•

Total weight 1 ct. with 1

Program

or

another
charitable
organ iza 1ion
It all
adds up to a better

,

C h ristmas

for

· · everyone. -See youidealer for all
excit ina dett~il~

POMEROY LANDMARII'

•650

the

.

THE KING SISTERS AND ART oUNKLETTER- Three of Mr. and Mrs. Virgil King's
dau~ters had the privilege of meeting and talking with Art Linkletter when he spoke on drugs
at Ollvet Nazarene College at Kank ~ kee, Ill., recently. Shown with Linkletter are, 1-r, Judy
King, who IS employed at the college as food service manager for the Sa fa Food Co.· Unkletter; Mary King, a senior at the school, who is student manager of the cafeteria and s~rves also
as a hostess, and Geneva King, who is a freshman a nd works as Judy's secretary. Unkletter in
his speech said that drugs were not the biggest problem in our society but caring for each other.
Parents and chtldren do not take.enough time to really enjoy and listen to each other he said .
He allto stated that he had seen many yoWlgsters try to stop the drug habit but the only ones
who were successful were the ones who found Christ.

Kana

MOORE'S

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3'-h''. 6"

HUFFY

THICK
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I

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PICKENS HARDWARE CO.

KING BUILDERS SUPPLY CO.
PRE-CHRISTMAS SALE

CONTINUOUS
FEED
STAINLESS
STEEL
DISPOSALL
FOOD
i!1/A.STE DISPOSER
Just toss in scraps, turn on

cushioned

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conn1e

=
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ve your favonte =

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youngster the gift of ·year fun with a
Voit
basketba.ll,
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volleyball,
football.
kickball. tetherball,
baseball. or softball. Used by more than
100,000 schools and
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Famous for
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durab ili ty ,
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nllnn&lt;t&lt;&gt;rs learn to
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ight equipment.

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SEWING MACHINES

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MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

300 E. MAIN

Social Ill!
Fun With Food
By Charlene Hoeflich
:::,Calendar::::

Ohio

water , ll ip the switch. The

MEN'S &amp; WOMEN'S
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HEAT TAPES WITH
AUTOMATIC THERMOSTATS
FOIL FACED FOR VAPOR BARRitK
STYROFOAM FOR MASONRY WALLS
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Well, here it is turkey time,and if you haven't picked up your
bird yet, remember if it's frozen it will take about two days in the
refrigerator to thaw, and four lo six hours if you place it under
cool running water.
What with the price of water here in the Bend, it would seem
purchasing the turkey early is the best and most economical,
wouldn't you say• Anyway, leave the moisture-proof wrapping
on the frozen turkey while it thaws. This preserves the moisture
in the meat.
Another thing-don 'l stuff the turkey WJtil you are ready lo
put it inlo the oven. This is the word from home economics who
!mow. They talk of the danger of bacterial growth if the bird is
stuffed the day before.
Now, about dessert.
There are some, we're sure, who do not include pumpkin pie·l
on their list of favorites. But what would Thanksgiving dinner be
without pumpkin pie! So ... from a friend comes this recipe for a
Butterscotch-Pumpkin Pie which perhaps you'd like to try.
BUTIERSCOTCH·PUMPKIN PIE
Have ready one unbaked nine inch pie shell. Preheat over to
375 degrees.
Combine in heavy saucepan and stir over moderate heat til
butterscotch melts and mixture is smooth, one six oWJce package
butterscotch morsels and one cup of milk . Mix together and
blend in 2c. canned pwnpkin; 'h c. sugar; llsp. cinnamon; Y.t
tsp . salt; Y.t tsp. ginger, ¥• tsp. nubne g.
Blend in three slightly beaten eggs and stir vigorously.
Pour into the prepared pie shell and bake for 45 minutes.
Top with whipped cream and serve.
Pumpkin bread'l, cakes and cookies are a favorite this lime
of year with many families. But have you tried pumpkin b ar~•
Martha Guilkey passed a recipe along to us which she had
received from Ruth Fulks, a friend in Lawrence County. We
share it with you.
PUMPKIN BARS
c . sifted flour; % tsp. salt; 'h tsp. baking soda; Y.t tsp.
nutmeg· 'h tsp. ginger; two-thirds c, carmed pumpkin; 'h tsp.
cinnam~n; 2eggs; !c. brown sugar; ¥• c. salad oil; Y.t c . minced
dates ; 'h c. chopped nuts .
Mix and sift flour, salt, soda and spices. Beat eggs, add sugar
gradually and beat well. Add oil, dates, nuts a ~d mix. Ad? si~ted
ingredients alternately with pumpkin lo egg mlXlure, mlXlng JUst
enough to keep the batter smooth. Pour into a greased pan
(9x9x2) . Bake in a preheated oven at 350 degrees for 30 _mmutes.
Cool five minutes. Remove from pan and cool on coohng rack.
Yield: about three dozen .
And now, of! to the kitchen, and a Happy Thanksgiving 1o

'I•

SILVER AND GOLD WITH PURSES
TO MATCH

heritage house

N&amp;N SPORTSHOP
992·8051

POMEROY

MIDDLEPORT

vou.
The LABELLE • Model
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MEASURES 24 1!8 IN.
WIDE, 2674 IN. DEEP
'
56 IN . HIGH AT
FRONT, 38 IN. AT
BACK. CAN BE
CONVERTED TO
UNDER COUNTER.

output. FM·AM,tp,·pn

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COLORED MODELS '5 MORE

POTLUCK SET
The 1 p.m. potluck at the
Grange officer's con£erence
Friday at the Rock Spring
Grange Hall, will be followed
by a meeting at 8 p.m. Those
attending the potluck are to
take their own table service.
BAZAAR SLATED
Annual Chrisbnas bazaar of
Ohio Eta . Phi Chapter, Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority, will be
Saturday al9 a.m. at Warner 's
Insurance Agency, Pomeroy.

The

TRANSFERRED
Mrs. Helen Lewis , Mid·
dleporl, a patient al the Elm·
wood Rest Home near Tuppers
Plains for several weeks, was

transferred Monday to the
Angel of Mercy Home, Albany.

VISIT FRIENDS
Mrs. Doris Spencer, Mrs .
David Brickles and children ,
Rl. 2, Pomeroy, visited SWlday
with Mrs . Lucy Gaul, Sumner,
and Mrs. Paul Hoffman ,
Chester.

SERVICE BULLETIN

S u rprisi ng
':13~

Sound

Sears Catalog Merchant Store

JEWELERS

See our fine
selection of
Otristmas and
.occasional
greeting cards
from .

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..
,}

.

IMPORTANT NOTICE
OHIO

TO HARD OF HEARING

•.

.

TUESDAY
PAST MATRONS, Pomeroy
Chapter OES, 7:30 p.m. at
lwme of Mrs. Nellie Tracy.
JUNIOR American Legion
Auxiliary, 6 p.m. al Feeney •
Bennelt Post 128 hall in Middleport.
DREW Webster Unit 39,
American Legion Auxiliary,
7:30p.m. at the hall. Initiation
of new member by Mrs. Mary
Martin.
AMERICAN
LEGION
Auxiliary, Racine Post 602,
7:30p.m. Tuesday at the hall .
MIDDLEPORT Masonic
Lodge, 7:30 p .m. Tuesday at
the Tem pl e. Work in the
Maste r Mason degree with all
Master Masons inv ited.
WEDNESDAY
AMERICAN
Le g ion
Auxi liary and Ame·r ican
Legion, Feeney . Bennett Post
128, Middleport, potluck dinner
at 6:30p .m. with both groups
having meetings at 7:30p.m.
POMEROY • Middleport
Lions Club, noon, at the Meigs
Inn.
OHIO Valley Commandry 24,
Knights Templar, s lated
conclave, 7:30 p.m.

at

the

Pomeroy Masonic Temple. All
knights templar urged to attend .
FRIDAY
MEIGS County Granges,
officers

conference,

R oc k

Springs grange hall, 7 p.m. ,
potluck dinner. All office rs
urged to attend.

of the hair that touches the pillow. The tissue also absorbs per·
spiralion as you sleep. The first lime I did this my husband took
one look and in amazement said, "Where do you think you are
going?" Now he is used lo it. I have been doing this over 20 years
and my hair stays in great shape from one set to another. Tell
Mrs. B.G. the tissue works better when doubled. - M.E .G.
DEAR POLLY - and Mrs. B. G. - To wrap one's head in
loilettissue to hold the set I use at least! I; to two yards of tissue
put on turban style . Start at the hairline and wrap towa rd the
crown, pin in place with bobby pins and then put ~ night net over
all. Waves should be pinned before putting on the tissue and one
should be gentle with a boufrant style. I have heard that a satin
pillowcase helps keep one's hair style but have never tried it. LILLIAN.
DEAR READERS - I find a rayon sa tin pillow case alone
works beautifully and keeps one's hairdo (at least mine) for a full
week. One or two clips placed at strategic places help, too. Wben
on a trip and I have forgotten to pack such a pillowcase a satin or
nylon tricot half slip pulled over the ptllow works just as well. POLLY.
DEAR POLLY - My Pointer is a way to have a smart new
rug at little cost. Usually carpe l dealers have old display sam·
pies of carpel for sale and often for as little as 151o 20 cents each.
Select coordinating colors alllhe same size and buy carpet tape
at the hardware store. On your floor arrange the squares to your
sa Usfaction , turn squares over and tape wrong sides together .
You will have an individual rug of quality that has no relation lo
the price paid for the samples.- J. S.

I

)

INSTALLED worthy matron of Evangeline C.'hapler -172,
Order of the Eastern Star in installation of ceremonies last
Wednesday night was Mrs. Farie Kennedy . She is pictured
. here with the new worthy patron, Ha rry Chesl1er. Mrs .
Naomi King was the installing officer.

CELEBRATE
MlNERSVILLF. - Mr . and

Salisbury has
44 pupils on
honors list

Mrs. Edison Holl on, Rt. I ,
Minersville, ce lebrated their
25th wedding anniversary Nov .

20. Their children, Mr . a11d
Mrs . Larry Hollon and Mr . and
Mrs . Thomas Hamm,

Salisbury
Elementary
Sc hool's honor roll for the
second six week grading

We !ravt" beautiful Thanksgi ving
sutumn Dowers.
Uwq uc , rh nughtful~Jift s for your

lwuqu~t~ uf lovely

fam i ly. fri,.,nds , b u .~1ness 41S50Ciafes.
A nd 1-'.'t.' c an send them

11lmos r anywhere,
rhe FTD wo~~y So. c all
01 VJSJ/ US today

were

DU
FLORIST
59. N. Second St.

hosts for a dtnner party at the
Daniel

period :

Boone

Re sta urant ,

Ripley, W. Va. Gifts were
presented to the coupl e.

First Grade - Rose Ellen
Barnhouse , Shawn Goeg lein,
Jodi Ann Har r iso n. Barba r a
Hatfield. Scott Pul l ins, Cindy
Sauters, Ani ta Smi t h, Tame la
Terry .
Second Grade ~ Ruth Ann
Fry. Greg Murray , Sandra
John son , Timmy LeMaster,
Jack i e Welker, Sandra Hoyt ,

t, Q ,

SEE THE NEWEST
FRIGIDAIRES AT···

Cynt hia Hazelton .

Third Grade - Billy Cars.
wel l , Rhonda Jeffers , Mike
You will receive a dollar if Polly uses your favorite home· Kennedy, Chri st ina Quivey ,
making idea , Pet Peeve, Polly's Problem or solution to a Craig Sinclair, Paula Swinde ll
Fourth Grade Ang ela
problem. Write Polly in care of this newspaper.
Hatf ield , John Sm i th, Scott
Harrison. Lori Picke tt , Natalie
Lambert, Sherr I Marshall, BHI
Holcomb .
Fifth Gra de - Robin HCJwk,
Steven Hood, Eric Lipscomb,
Kathleen Parker , Laura Smi t h,
Fredric Young .
year..Qid
tr
iplet
grandchildren,
Aaron Zah l, a patient at the
Six th Grade - Becky Dorst,
Holzer Medical Center fo r the Barbara , Belly and Sam, Dav id Kennedy, Brian King,
past month. observed his 7!st chi ldren of Mr . and Mrs . Leo Ca r ol Morris. Laura Ohlinger,
Steve Oh llnger. Ange la Si nbirthday SWlday. He is con. Smith, Berian Springs, Mich., clair , Ca mille Sw indell , Jena
rincd lo room 434. In ob- telephoned to sing " Happy · Welker. linda Wi ll iam s.

BAKER

FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT

Zahl marks 71st year
Birthday."
Mrs. Smi th recently spent a
week here with her parents,
RETURNS HOME
and was joined by her husband
Alice E. Johnston has for a couple of days. Other
returned to her Bradbury home recent visitors have been Mr.
after being a . patient at and Mrs . Bill Za hl and
Veterans Memorial Hospital. daughter, Midgie, and Mrs.
Although she is home it is still Steve Sluts, Groveport.

servance or his bir thday, his Ill-

necessar y for her to wear a

brace. While a patient at the
hospita l she received many
lovely flowers and card5. She
was honored on her birthday,
Nov. 22, with gifts, ice cream
and cake by Mrs . Sharon DosS,
Mr s. Bernice Jeffers and
g ran ddaugh ters, Missy and
Mandy Hubbard .

King Solomon 's T emple
stoo d ror fuur ce nturi es
bl.:!furc it was destro yed by

Nebuc hadne·aar . Th e Wail -

ing Wall in J er u.sa!e m is no I a
rem nant of Solomon's Tem -

ple but ol' one buil t later 011
th e same site by Ki11g He rocl.

SAVE • SAVE-:

-

UPDATE YOUR

MR. SLEIGHT DIES
Mrs. Sidney Russell, Mid·
dleporl, received word of the
death of HowardS. Sleight, 72,
Nyack, N. Y., a former
resident of Rutland. While here
he was lieutenan t or the Fire
Department at the TNT plant
during the war. Later he was
fire chief at Nyack. Mr. Sleight
died Wednesday at the Nyack
Comm uni ty Hospita l and
fWleral services were held in
Nyack Saturday. Contributions
in his memory may be made to
the Nyack CommWJily Am·
bulance Corps.

ILLNESS LEARNED
Mrs. Shirley Roush, Mid·
dleporl, received word SWlday
or the illness or her grandmother, Mrs. Mattie Chasteen,
r.ormerly of Vinton. Mrs.
Chasteen sufrered a 'stroke and
, is confined to St. J ohn 's
HospiU.l at Steubenville. She is
the mother of Mrs. Howard
Pinnell, formerly of Middleport .

~.~tm

A DISCOUNT
DfPARTMf.NT STOQf

I

I

ONE DAY WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 27

Does your current auto in surance provide you with
adequa t e protection? Are
you paying too much? Are
you over-i nsured? Are ther e
ways you cou ld save money
on your insurance ? Bring
your policy to us today and
we'l l answer these questions
for you.
·

REUTER·
BROGAN
· INSURANCE
PH. 992·5130
107 Sycamore

Pomeroy

'

Ill PEOPLE WIO Willi TO 1111 Ul IUUSTUD! .

STIHL

Sudbeam Appliances
1 GAL
COOKER-FRYER

.· ~

INGELS FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT

••.••

~@1 FIDELITY

of Zenith

POMEROY

back a round aga in pinning when necessary. This covers a ny part

:~~~~:w.?:sr,.;:w~~~~~=:::::::::~:::::::::.~~

SERVING MEIGS, GALL/A &amp; MASON COUNTIE

INSULATE NOW
FOR WINTER

DEAR POLLY - My Pet Peeve is with those newspapers
that put crossword puzzles in the fold of the paper instead of at
the top or bottom or a page. - A. S.
DEAR POLLY - Mrs. B . G. who wants to wrap her head in
lniletlissue wsave her hairdo has on ly to lea r off enough tissue
to go oround her head twice. Pin tissue to the side oi the head
with a bobby pin, take it around w the back and pin to the oth er
side of the head and then raise the paper a bit higher and lake

ift .giving ideas ever . It
youngsters get the·
for Christmas. And
you to give your

rots

GOESSLER'S JEWELRY

I·

now until Chris tma s, your
Honda dealer is of of the most unique

the look of a 3 ct. diamond.

•400

BUY YOUR WIFE
ALADY
KENMORE
FOR
CHRISTMAS

removing some paint spots from the refrigerator with a scouring
pad . The cleaners and waxes I have used seem to make the
·
scratches show even more. - BE'ITY.

carnc,;cating

XL CHAIN
SAW

POLLY'S PROBLEM
Does any reader know how to remove

scratches from a coppertone refrigerator ? I made the mistake of

Help others. Help yourself.

AND BRIDAL
SETS

evangelist for the c hurch which
is located near Carpenter. The
public is invited.

roc ,.cpl; wllo h:..,, b" " told tnn tilt)' cann ot wur hudna tidl
or tbu .m •1• vUl nit halp. 1M ~rae )IOU to ny • &lt;ii..,Mtrnlon el o~r
S16 aad t l-,. h B!V DlU.C'rlOMAL ACOUSTICOt!, nO'o' IV&amp;llable lllth
!IaLli! claar . .r - ""' up to SlOO.OO per , e u oe !atteriu!

TRUST US

'"P'"''·

THE REAL NUMBER 1
VALUE INAN

101 IIIPll WID UiE IIIIIIC

lltsl

YOUl JlUJllNG AlO WILL R Ct.UJI£11 AND Cli!CU:D, tub11l&amp; replaced. eanool dt
datu4 .a4 till 114 vlll be ahen an o¥11'" '1U dlttk for t o!lal quaLity , TM I
h in Uepina with o~r poll cy of pra¥14h&amp; ..7"" \rl'tfi the ftnen terv1ee.
ftde 11ntce will be nt•nd•4 t o a ny .alta or .0011 of hau ln&amp; dd on I
D.o ~"et\na• bula.
'".t• ~

~AUTOMATIC MINI-SIZE. SAW

i

•AUTOMATIC OILING
e"ALL·BEARING" ENGINE
•EXTRA QUIET MUFFLER
•AND MANY OTHER
TOP QUALITY FEATURES.

AllDlTIOII AJ. SAVUIGS - All re1ultr hltl'"i.AI dd beturiu vii i be told
1 t 1/~ prtc• e t t h• •n·d u s•p!frt !)!!lr vith no Haiti Stvl 11oney and etock up.

TO HANDLE
A LOAN OF
$1500.
People trust us to handle the ir savings.

COME 1• · · 11:111. • · It 7:01 ' · • ·

POMEROY HOME &amp; AUTO
YOUR tOMPLETE TIRE CENTER

..

II,AP.UTTA
CI\LLlPOLIS

UK,I,lU. IH!I

NOVDIIII 26 ,
MOY'IKill 16 .

ATII!NS

JACI.St'ff

01110 liiiVERSITY I~
~OLLY HILL tt:ITI.L

NOY!KII£1 U,
NOV00£1. 21 .

POIC!lOl
PORTSI"'I1Tll

!G:IGGS lllll
HOLIDAY 1/01

-ll.l.t

IIOVIHUI. 25,

IOIW.t

IIOVIKIU

TUI:Sil.l.1
TUISD.\1
IIBIIIISDA1
llll*ISIIA1

J/ ~ur.i /or

n.

What make s us a different
. kind of loari company
makes us a better kind of
loan company.

!LUI FOllliTAUI MJTl!L

Iutter f.earing anJ unJerJlanJing
•

~~~~
ES'f.I9L!

125 E. Main St • 992·2171

STOREWIDE SAVINGS OFF

l,

•

'

OUR EVERYDAY DISCOUNT PRICES
SHOPPERS MART

SHOPPERS MART

SHOPPERS MART

POINT PLEASANT

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

MASON, W. VA.

HURRY ON IN WEDNESDAY AJ THE LOCATIONS
LISTED FOR SAVINGS!
DON'T MISS IT ' .
.,

'

·,

'

.7

I'

i

�)
6 - The Dauy Sentmel, Middleporl-l'omero;, 0 , Tuesday, Nov. 26, 1974

Sen t rne
• / Classifieds Get Results!

Pro Standings

.'

National Basketball A ssoct&lt;Hton
Standmgs
By Untted Press lnter n at• on al
Eastern Confer en ce
Atlant1c DtYISIOn
w 1 pet g b
Buffalo
15 J
789
NewYork
11 7
6 11 3
Boston
10 9
526 5
Ph1lad elph ra
7 10
412 7
Central Olvt ston
w I pet q b
Wash m gton
lJ 5
rn
H ous ton
11 6
529 I ' 1
Cle ve land
9 8
529 3' 1
Atlanta
7 11
389 6
N ew O rlea ns
2 17
10 7 l l 1 1
We st ern Conferenc e
MtdWeSt D IVIS IO n
w l pet g 1&gt;
Chi cag o
10 9
5:?6
KC Omah a
10 9
526
1 ?
De tr o tt
10 10
500
Mtlwaukee
4 13
235 5
Paclfrc Ot v tston
w I pet g b
Go lden Sta te
13 6
681
Sea ttl e
10 9
52 6 3
Port land
9 10
474 1
Phoen tx
7 11 389 51 ~
Los Angeles
6 10
375 s 7
Monday s Result s
( N .) games schedu l ed)
Tontglll s Ga m es
Detrott at New York
Seattle at Cleveland
Buffal o at P h ladelph u
Wa sh rng ton at A t l anta
KC Omaha at Chr cago
Lo s Angeles a t Milwaukee
New Or lean s at Phoen x
Houston at Golden State

NHL Stand1ng s
By Un1fe d Pr ess lnt er nal~anal
01\115100 1

Phlla

w 1 1 pi s gf ga
13 6 J 29 75 53

A tlan ta
NY l slndrs
N YRangrs

11 7 5 27
q 7 5 23
9 7 412

65
76

77

DI VIS IO O 2

w 1 t pt s
Vancuvr

gt

5 4 30 82

13

Ch1 cago

9 7 3 2 1 69

S t LOUIS
M nne sota

1

7 9 4 18 65

KanC1ty

10 4 1a sa

J 15

1

D IV ISI O O

J

w I t pts
11 2 8 30
10 6 7 27
8 9 3 19

Lo s A n g
Mon treal
P1ti Sbgh

Det ro•t

6 11

Washngtn
Buffalo
Bost on

Tor on to
Cal f

7 49

2

gf

65

99
85

14

56
47

60
59
62

In Memory

Auto Sales

I N LOV IN G 1nCm01Y o t Dcn n1 i'
cmd Ll'lcJh Karr v..l10 p&lt;tssf'd
away N ov 76 190'i 1nd Nov 7
Th e Family

11 26 Ir e

Notice
ME IGS County Hurnanc Soc rely
wil l have annual ho l1 day
ba1c1 ar e nt li ed CHRISTMAS
HOU SE loc c11ed across f rom
Pomeroy
Post
Off•ce
De c emb er 7 Carry ou r lunch
w il l bP ser ved
11 2J3 t c
NO DEER huntrng on farm s of
(h&lt;tr i CS Yost
NC'a se Set
tlement lnd Ivan We'fi F tvC
Pornts
11 2 1 61p
WIL L SHOOT to kil l anyone
'AhO en t ers the Cen tury Bar
a ft er c lo s rng hours wrthout
my permrS Sron
L e&gt; onard { Roo ) Hess
I I 12 Jlp
PI A N O mstruct on by Sfhooled
and experr enced teacher
Beqrnne r •ntermcdtatc an d
advan ce d student welcomed
Mrs
Wm
Bartholomew
Thtrd 5 1 Racrn e Phone 9J9
2S S1
11 22 Me
KOSCOT
KOS METIC S
R emembe r
Chr tslmas
rs
com rng We have many new
pr oducts th a t w II rnake nrce
g ll s Phon e BROWNS 992
51 13
11 J tfc

A U C TION
Thursday
r:~nn
ga
Sarurdil y ntght
7 p m
at
61
Mason Auc t ron Hor ton St n
Mason W Va Cons .gn men ts
45
we l&lt;-omc
Pllone ( JOJ I 773
SJ71
70
ao
10 3 ffc
86
A REVIVAL W1ll beg n Dec 1
ga
through Dec 7 at the Chur ch
35
of
God
Chester
Ohto
76
Evang elr st wil l be Rev Jo e
74
Beasley f rorh Alexandra va
83
Se rvr ces w II bE'g1n each
106
eventng 7 30 p m and specral
S1ng ng
each
eve nrng
ga
Ev er yone we l c ome Pastor
74
R ev Dan L 1\yers
66
11 26 12tc

2 16 3
7
01\IISion 4
w I t pt s gl
15 4 3 33 102
11 5 5 27 96
5114146890

3 15 4 10 49 I OJ
Monday's Resu l ts

St LOUIS 2 Toronto 2

Lost
LOST strayed or sto len Large
wt-~rte co l lie at Long Bottom
Ca) l 985 3929 P M Cowdery
11243 tp

Tu e sday's Gam es
Vancouver atKan C1fy

2 SIGNS
OF
QUALITY

191!(.

1970 CHEV MONTE CARLO

~ pt Cpe, red fm1 sh , b lk v myl top. spotl ess 1nter~or good
t 1res rad 1o. automa l 1c tra n s, V
power st eenng

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

a

3 o 727 23-4 2os
7 -4 0 636 278 19 3
4 7 0 364 187 23S
2 9 0 182 136 261
Central
w 1 t pet pf
pa
a 2 1 773 247 156

Ptttsbgh
Cin CI
Houston

7 4 0 636 25S

s

Cle ve l nd

6

o

ISS
1a 1 211

455

3 8 0 273
We st

203

w I f pet
9 2 0 818

x Oaklnd

pf
280

275
pa
173

D env er
5 5 1 500 234 236
Ka n Ctty
4 7 0 364 195 238
San Diego 3 8 0 273 153 237
Nat10nal Conference
East
w 1 t pet pf
pa
St LOUI S
9 2 0 818 246 173

a

o

Washngtn
3
727
Dallas
6 5 0 545
Phtla
4 7 0 364
NYG tant s 2 9 0 182
Central
w I t pet
M 1nnesota 7 ' 0 636

223

Green B ay 6 5 0 545
Detro1t
6 5 o 545

18 7 153
189 192

Ch• c ago

115

3 8 0 273
West

232
209
158
161

ISS
168
179
237

pf

pa
161

w I t pet . pf
8 3 0 727 197

x Los Ang

196
pa
137

San Fran
4 7 0 364 184 202
NewOrlens4 7 o 364 122 199
Atlanta
2 9 0 182
84 215
X ClinChed diVISIOn fttle
Monday's Result
P1ttsburgh 28 New Orleans 7
Thursday ' s Game s
Denver at Detro it
Wa s hington at Dallas
Sunday 's Game s
Baltimore at Buffalo
Green Bay at Ph tla
Houston at Prttsburgh
Kansas C tty a t St LOUt S
Los Angeles at Atlanta
New England at Oakland
New Orleans at M 1nneso ta
NY Giants at ChiCago
San Otego at NY Jet s
San Fran a t Cleve land
Monday ' s Game
Cmcl at Mtam1 ntght

lnternat1ona1 Hockey League
Standings
By Untted Press lnternat•onal
North
w
I t pts gf ga
Flmt
14
3
2
30 75 40
Muskgn 14 5
1
29 92 -47
Sagrnw 12 7
1
25 71 56
Port Hurn 7 1t
2
16 67 73
Lensing 5 10
,
11 58 89
K alamaz 1 13
2
4 33 67
South
w I t pts gl ga
Dayton 13
4
1
27 83 63
Des Mo rns9 10
1
19 60 67
Co lumbs 8
9
1
17 11 68
FortWyn 6
9
2

"

Toledo

s• 66

6 14
1
13 63
Monday 's Results
(No games sc hedul ed J
Tonight ' s Gam es
( No games schedu l ed)

World

H

oc

71

Assoctaf•on
Standmgs
By Un•ted Press lnternat1ona1
Ea&amp;t
w I. t. pts gf ga
New England
26 73 47
13 '6 0
Clevelncl 6
I
13 36, 39
Ch1 ca go
lndinpls

k e y

4 13
4

15

o

Wnt

w
Houston
San Oteg
Phoenix
Mlnnesot
Mlchlgn

0

I

13

6

10
6

6
8
10

5

s

t

o

J

1

0

19 74 CHEVROLET
P c kup
custom de lu )te
lake over
payments Phone 992 7876
11 266t p
1968 FORD sta t on wagon 5300
Phone 992 5301
1122Stc
Phon e 992 38 14
11243tp

1972 vw Su p er Bee tle good
co nd• t•on Phon e 992 3981
11 21 6tc

11 24 26t p

au t os
co mplet e and
del vered to our yard We
p ck up auto bodtes and buy
all k rnds of scrap metals and
ro n R der s Sal vage St Rt
124 Rt 4, Pomeroy Oh ro
Cal l 99 2 5468
10 17 tfc

JU NK

8 49

72

8 38
pts
26 ~~
20 53
13
10 ;~
10 "

86

13
0
Canad1an
w. I t ph gl
Toronto 14
6 0
28 100

'~

sa

~~

79
ga better every week,'' he smd 'jl
68 probably won't have to use the
Quebec 11
6
0
22 69 58 brace any more. ll should he
Wlnnlpg 9
s I 19 68 40 100 per cent by the Rose Bowl "
Moved Ball We II
Edmnln 8
4
0
16 -4 7 37
Vanco'w'r "' 10
1
9 40 58
Mich1gan, Wlth Franklin and
Monday's ~esults
lallback Gordon Bell executing
(No games scheduled)
Tonight'&amp; Gemes
the option play, moved the ball
Winnipeg at Indianapolis
well
In the opening quarter,
M i nnesota at Toronto
New Eogland at Quebec
taking a 1~ lead But a few
Phoen lx at Houslon
adjustments on the part of the
V ancouver al Mtch tgan
Buckeye defense s hut them off
Edmonton at San O tego

the rest of the game Bell got 92
of his 108 yards m the openmg
half
" The coaches dee1ded we
were absorbmg them too
much," sa1d Cus1ck , uand that
we
should
play
more
aggres&amp;ve and make them
react to us "
Was he bred up for Mlchlgan•
"Deflnllely, JUst playmg MIChigan IS enough to get your
fired up," he said "When we
play them 1ts ahnost like
playmg ourselves. We don't try
to fool each other The team
that plays toughest 1s gomg to

wm''
He had kmd words for Bell,
the Wolverines' 5-9, 175-pound
JUruor from Troy, Ohio
uHe's a great back," CUSlck
said "He's not as strong as
Arch (Griffin) , but he's as
qmck, no doubt about 1t"

TWO OPERATIONS
HOUSTON (UPI) - Rice
Owl quarterback Tommy
Kramer, preparing to direct
his team Saturday agamst
Baylor,
will
undergo
operallons on both shoulders
after the season, R1ce officials
srud.
Kramer, a h~ghly touted San
Antonio Lee star m his seeond
year at Rice, has separat.:d
both shoulders playmg in
college.
R1ce tramer Allen Eggert
explamed the situation Monday
"It's a congemtal thing that
seems to run In the family," he
srud. "His brother, Mike, had
the same problem here. We
operated on him, too. Hopefully
an operation will cure Tommy's condttion."

19;1-0 1 T ON Chevrol ef t ru ck
dual wh eel s VB
4 sp eed
Looks and runs good Harold
Brewer Long Bottom 0 1110
Phon e 985 3S5d
11 17 tf c
WA LNU T st er eo rad to am fm
a tra c k ta pe co mb1n at1 on
Ba l ance $107 45 or t erms Ca ll
992 3965
11 19 lfc
SEWING Machmes b r and new
Z g Zag tn ntce walnut ta bl e
In or.g rna l car ton s
N ever
used
C l ea r a n ce
on
'7.:1
Models
(Only
a
few
availab l e I
$.4 3 40 cash or
\..erms availab le Phone 992
f75S
10 15 tf c

PICk up dally tn Pomeroy &amp;
Middleport
All
work
guaranteed Phone 949 3611 ,

RACINE GARAGE
Slh 51

For Rent
5 RM downsla trs unfurn tshed
a partment W1th laund r y 751
Brownell Ave
M ddl eport
Ca ll 985 3974
11 266tp

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

DU P LEX apt
tn Mtddleport
Ca ll (3041 B82 70 50 after 5 p m
11 26 lfc

J ROOM and bath com pletely
f ur nrshed r ea l nt ce L oca t e d
near Jo n es Boys Ph one 992
7022 a fl er 5 p m
11263tc

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

3 BEDROOM home

tu rn tShed
or un furn tShe d On U S R 1
33 Phone 992 7022 after 5 p m
11 263tc

TRA IL ER s p ace
Ph on e&gt; 367 7743

fo r

r en t

11 26 12tp

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

J AND 4 ROOM furnt sh ed and
unfurnt s hed
apartments
Phone 992 543-4
-4 12 tf c

-------------PRIVATE meetmg room for
an y organtzat ron
3975

phone 992
311tfc

c------------ -HOU SE and tra 11er fo r r ent rn
tow n 2 bedroom s Phone 992
3975 and 99 2 257 1
11 6 tfc

------------TR AILE R space 2 m11es from
Pom eroy
5858

Rt

143 Phone 992
10 27 tf c

. :::-------- - - -----

LOSE wetght wr th N ew Shape
Tablets and Hydn' )t Water
Ptlls at Du tt on Drug M rd
dl eport and N elson D rug
11 26 3t p

Racme , 0 .

Route 7
Rutland

by pa ss

toward s

949-3295
Racine, 0.

Interior &amp;
Exterior Work

Mob de Homes For SaiP

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

--- -- --------DISHWASHER
773 5332

Phone

(3 04 )

NO DOWN PAYMENT
TO VETERANS

11 226tc

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

SAVE on yo ur hea t1ng bill and
beauttfy your mobile hom e
Wtlh
ltfet.m e
alumtnum
Skt r lmg or underprnnmg S
Lo ck connecttons rn baked on
t tntsh to mat ch the colo r of
m any h omes S200 comp lete
package m stall ed for the f trSI
5 custom er s Ca ll 992 7034
evenmgs 949 3655

KINGSBURY
MOBILE HOMES
1100 E Mam

Pomeroy,

0

Call992 7034
Open Daoly 11 to 7

----- - ------ --John

TRAILER 2 bedroom Brown's
T r ailer P a rk Phone 992 3324 POTATOE S a11d co rn
Hill
Letart Falls,
11 a tfc
Phone 247 2642

O hro

Real Estate For Sale

11 21 6tp

NO MONEY DOWN Month l y
COUNTRY Mobtll!- Hom e Park ,
payments accordmg t o tn
Rt 33 t en miles nor t h of
come N ew 3 bedroom home
Pom eroy
Large lo ts w tth FIREWOOD for sa l e Call 742
w th wal l to wall carp etrng on
concrete pattos
Sidewalks ,
-4 83 1
2 acre l and scap ed lots
Ca l l
a nd
off
street ,
• unner s
10 19 26tc
today for mor e mformat ton
parktng
A l so
spa c es for
992 5976
small tratlers Phone 992 7479
GROC ERY bu s rn ess f or sa le
11 2611c
7 21 tfc
Bulldtng for sa le or lease - - - - - - - ----PhOne 773 5618 f r om 8 30 p m
WILL TRADE - FI N ANC IN G
-4 RM tu r n tshed ap t c l ose to
to rO p m t or appotnlment
AR RANGED
WITH
Powe lls Supe r V alu phone
3 20 lfc
MINIMUM
OOWN
Will
99 2 3658
cons tder trade for older
11 20 He
home t ra il er or land on lh1S
FIRE WO OD f or t.r ep lace or
new 3 bedroo m 2 bath hom e
2 BED ROOM turn co ttag e at
stove Cu t to l ength Phone
wrth 2 car garage , larg e
992 7644
Rock Spr mg s rdeal for school
ta
m tly room atr cond1t10ntng
personn e l ,
adults
on l y
11 326t c
Move m 1m med ately Call
referen ce destred Phone 992
now 992 5976
2789
CONN trump et good cond Iron
11 26 li e
11 3 tfc
S75 Phone 99 2 3606
11 22 ot c
FURNI SHED apt Adults only - - - - - -- - - - -- HOU SE for sa l e 249 Un ton
Mtddleport
Phon e 992 387 4 1957 CHEVY parts
NE W
Ave
A ll newly d ecora t e d
11 14 tfc
Lakewood tra c t1on bar s h
ns de May be seen by ap
tacker at r sh ocks
hook er
po rnt ment
Ph one 992 5617
UNFURN I SHED
house
4
headers w rth 3 'colle ctors tor
11 15 12 t c
room s and bath 1650 Lrn c oln
small block
Ca ll 992 3496
------- ---He1ghts Phone 992 3874
alter 6 p m BEST OF F ER
11 14 tfc
NEW
b t level
home
3
10 17 ttc
bedroom s
buil t m k rtchen
F U R N I SH ED
apartment,
ba se ment
wrth o n e car
uttllt res turntshed
sur ta bl e 1961l DELTA 88 O ldsmobile 1965
ga rage Phone 742 36 15 or see
Electra 25 BuiCk both m good
Mt iO HUt ChiSOn
for tw o working men or
condlf ton Also 4 room house
ret.red couple L rv mg roo m ,
1 1 1 tfc
and
2
lots
m
Le
t
art
Village
kttchen , shower and bath On
See
Thoma
s
Haym
a
n
,
mam htghway , Ma son w Va
5 ROOM house W1fh bath and
Syracu se Oh10
Phone 773 5147
lot Dr rll ed well Call after 4
11
21
6t
c
10 27 tf c
pm ,2-4725 81
--------- - - -- -~
11 24 6tp
YAMAHA 17 5 Enduro
2
BEDROOM
hctu er
tn 1973
Phone 949 2762 after 6 p m
Syracuse, c lose to school No
1121 51c
ch ildr en or pet s Depos1t
requfred Phone 992 2441 after
APPLES F 1tzpa trrck Or c hard
6 30 p m
St ate Rout e 689
Phone
10 18ffc
Wtlke sv tll e 669 3785

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

CA RPET ms t allat to n $1 25 per
yard Phone R rc ha r d West
843 2667
11 13 26 tp

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

EXCELSIOR Sa lt Works
E
Mam Sl Pomeroy All k md s
of sa l t water pellets water
nuggets block salt a nd own
Ohto Rrver Salt Phone 992
3891
SE P IlL
1 AN KSCTea n ed,
reasonab l e r a t es
Ph
4-4 6
478 2 Galltpolts John Russe ll ,
owner and operator
5 12 tf c
!:I EPTIC
TANKS
c l ea n ed
Mod ern Sanrta t10n 992 39 54 or
992 ]j49
9 18 tf c
CAT TLE A I Ser v1ce Phone
L Park er 992 226.4 P ome r oy
or 667 3251 Coolv rlle st allon
11 17 13tc

Real Estate For Sale

pm
lO 17 tfc

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

CHA IN OPERA T ION lookmg
for c areer m mded p eop le to
hll htgh
p a1d POSifiOnS
Manag e men t
and
sates
opentngs available Complete
tratnmg pro vt ded Salary p lus
commi ssion Call 992 7440 9
a m to 5 p m for mter v1ew
11 24 Ate

FOR

SIEGLER and
MONOGRAM

RIEL OIL
HEATERS

Wantell To Buy
CAS HSUS SS$

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

JU N K

CARS
Comp
FRYE S
TRUC K and AUTO P A RT S
Rutl and phon e 742 6094
11 2626tc

Priced For Quick

1112 ACRES -

&lt;'UMERDY LANDMARK

tl'.:
Jack W Carsey , Mgr
~
Phone 992·2181

I

i',ll·l

Severa l fruit

trees , garage , and 5 room
house Want on ly S8SOO 00

33 ACRES - Good huntong
area 3 bedroom home, bath,
e l ectnc heat, c1ty water and
minerals

3 ACRES - All clean farm
land 2 bedroom home , bath ,
furnace. and dr~lled well

SIO,OOO 00
1 ACRE -

Just

Nearly new 3

bedroom home. n1ce bath w1th
shower
Compact kitchen ,
stove , refrigerator , lot s of

cab1nets,
and
$17,500 00
LARGE GARDEN

SEE US FOR YOUR
UPHOLSTERING NEEDS
FREE ESTIMATE
Pickup and Delivery

SYLVIA'S
UPHOLSTERING

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

dJnlng

Comp le t e Serv1ce
Phone 949 382 1 or 949 3161
Racme, OhJO
Cr t It Bradford
5 1 ft c.

-------CR M' E- AN S -CD&gt;ICRETI!
del 1vered Mond ay through
Sa turda y
and
eventngs
Phon e 446 1142
6 13 ff c

C HARZEs_R_ H ;;-t~id:-~~ ~
bac khoe and do zer
wa te r
l mes dra1ns. foot er s brush
c lean 1g Rt 1 Ru tland , Ohto
Phone 742 6092
11 3 25tc

- - - --- ----

7 room

We. bik

lot 516,500 00
WE HAVE THE TIME IF YOU
HAVE THE FINANCING AND
WANT TO START SAVING
YOUR MONEY

to YOU

like.1 person.

fenced,

3

ON YOUR DIAL"

(;lose to
level

B R..

lot,

bath,

basement, porches, N G
forced air furnace, priced

right
POMEROY -

I 1

ZENITH

Downtown

COLOR TV

business room and nice
apartment over Excellent
for any type business

•

Asking only 518,000 00
REEDSVILLE - 9 acres
:J!'out all tillable , lovely
t;jjjlqlng site, T P water ,
located
on
Rt
124
overlooking river 55.800
MINERSVILLE - I story
frame, 3 BR. bath , nice

•BLACK &amp;

WHITE TV
•STEREO

gas, TP water, lots of
ground S7 ,900
WE HAVE BUYERS - WE
NEED HOMES TO SELL LET US KNOW WHAT YOU
HAVE

Easy Terms!
Free ~livery!

992 2259 ,"'r 99212568

'

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

Dear Helen and Sue
ThiS letter tS aimed at th1eves.
Last night, people broke mto our house and stole almost
everythmg They must have known we'd be away for the
weekend, and we don 't have close neighbors so they had plenty of
time to strip the house .
We don't have msurance and we're too poor to buy
replacements. In fact, what w1th big doctor btU. and Dad's rrull
closmg down , we don't even eat well. The furruture (from better
times) was about all we had left
My folks are too proud for Welfare or food stamps. We're
trying to get along on Dad's unemployment check. It doesn't
stretch . And now we're s1tting on the floor and sleeping on
borrowed pads'·
I'm not begg1ng, I'm JUSl askmg thieves to check out the
people they r1p off and not p1ck on us who are already down. If
there's any "honor" among them, they'll return our furruture 1IN NEED BUT NOT BEGGING
Dear In Need:
Don't count on ' 'honor" among thieves . It's as scarce as fleas
on a bald man's head.
Let's hope the local police find your furmtnre, and that

Yo u II be fo rtuna te 1n srtuat1ons
where maJOr rss ues are a t
espec 1a ll y
11 a
s tak e
prestiQIOUS lnend IS somehow
tnvolved
GEMINI (May 21 -Juno 20) A
k 1ndness that you ye done for
someone 111 the past wtll be
repaid 1n a larger measure t han
you gave

8
9
9

10 00 - Petrocelli 3, 4, 15 , Anme and the Hoods 6, 13, Burglar
Proofmg 33

10 3C - Legacy 33
11 00 - News 3, &lt;. 6, 8, 10, 13, 15, ABC News 33
11 30 -

Johnny Car son 3, Mt ss ton lmposs1ble 6, Jnak1 33 , W1de
World Event Callforn 1a Jam 13 , Mov1e " Iva nhoe" 8 , Movie
" The Great Caruso" 10

12 30 -

Wold Wold West 6

1 00 2 00 -

Tomorrow 3, 4

News 4

23)

by THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS
I PrefiX for
chute
5 Beer
IO The sa me
I Lalm )
11 ''Scarface"
12 Gallop
13 Inexpressible
14 Muung fl!ld
JS Cll'cle

w 111 co me
ttley w1 ll
work that
n o w get

CAPRICORN (Dec 22 -Jan
19) A good d ay to get •n touch
w1th persons whose help you
need w 1th present p lans It s to

segment

townspeople are made aware of your plight Thell' generos1ly w1ll

see you through - count on 11.
And perhaps some of these people can persuade your parents
that temporary Welfare &amp;d tS no disgrace After all, thell' taxes
paid for the food stamps they're too proud to accept 1 - HELEN
AND SUE

Rap
When we go out to eat, Mom asks for a dogg1e bag. This
embarrasses me . We aren't THAT hard up ' - DOG LESS
Dog less
Correction 1t's "people bags" nowadays, and the best
people ask for one Why be embarrassed about lakmg home food
you've rightfully bought• - HELEN

+++
Dogless
Almost anything parents do embarrasses thell' kids But if
you'll look around and see how many other fa m1lies lake home
"dogg1e bags," you'll slop feeling consptcuous. - SUE

~WJ)OOID~®Ikal ~~&gt;•••"J -.1 , _
Unscramble lhese four Jumbles.
one Jetter to each square, to
form four ordinary words.

t
I I J

CABLE CHANNEL FIVE
Country and Western U S A
8 30 p m - Superstar Theatre

a•

Pass
Pass &gt;+
Pass Pass
Openmg lead -

39 Waste
allowance
DOWN
1 Helmsman
2 ldohze
3 Be r edundanl
(2 wds)
4 Wooden

core

24 Bastmado
25 'Septem ber

1-:-;--t-t--+-

"
26 Funclwn
27 One of
Charle -

magne1s
knights
30 Matter (law)
31 Btbbcal
man's
name
32 Gold (Sp )
33 German
Cliy
35 Kiln
36 Twme
37 - Coly
38 Moll
F landers'
creator

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

Is

One letter &amp;Imply stands f or another In th1s sample A ts
for the three L s, X for th e two O's etc Sin gle l e tt er s
apostrophes the l en g th and formation of the words are all
htnts Each da} the code letters are different
used

J KJ

CRYPTOQUOTE
V ZSGAUFELEGF

I
t~~.A==~~~~~~~~~~=·u=r=r~eoUdbylhoabovocartoon.
DJSTEW ~

Now arranro tho circled !olton
to form the aurpriae anawer, as

"J

Pliil• •llSIIIISWift 11n

EGF

I tIn I I J

Jumbl•" CUBIC GRAIN DEMISE EMBARK
\ AM•er~ You can't write thl8

w1fhout nolt.!II- MUSIC

Superstar Theatrf!

FNB

JELEGF

MNO
EV

HEJMXOB

XSQZ

VN

Pass

2&lt;1o

GXH

vzx

VZSGABSR

M IJ JXUV . -

Yest erday 's Cryptoquote. THERE 'S SOMEBODY AT
EVERY DINNER PARTY WHO EATS ALL THE CELERYKIN HUBBARD

DICK TRACY

A TOW., THAT S

1'----,

GASOLINE ALLEY

CAPTAIN EASY
ALVA!l:EOO, CIAilL.I~6 1 CAN VQLJ H E'A~
ME~ IT"'S&lt; !FFIE' lVe COM E- BACK
1"0 NUR:SE MY POOR:, S Wt:f;f, &lt;SICK
-------~ HUi5!Y wusav.

LIL ABNER
THIS Y~ R TH ' RACS 15 8ETWGEN

IT
IS
IDE'ALSADIE'
HAWKINS
DAY

n-t' PRIDS 0' TH' UNDE:RGROUNDe'R.S
- TH' HAWK- WHO 15 50 Fl'&gt;ST'
NO ~R QAST RUN
AGIN H~R rr-

Tl-f' 5URF.AC6'R6 15 PUrnN' THAR Rt.Tiii IN
~- T&gt;&lt;' ONe·""""
POSPATCH 6UN
rr- HE: KIN
OUTRI.W ANY

TH' Ff'ET 0' PGAOSFLIL

v.E'ATI-IeRGRIM
AND
THR&amp;Aii;!NING-

ALLEY OOP
'IOU SAID '&lt;Oil
COULD GET US
SOME lviORE

PEOPLE?

'VES OOP 1

HOW

MANY

WILL 'IOU

A

'-'Al~

DOZEN

SHOULD DO IT!

NEeD?

26

South
Dble.
2•
•

Pass
Pass
3'
Pass
•
You. South, hold·
.43 ,_... Q 10 8 &amp; •K J4 +A Q 3
What do you do now?
A. -Bid roar heart&amp;. Games are
worth h1ddltt~.
TODAY'S QUESTION
Instead of respondang twn
clubs, your partner has bad two
hearts after your double What do
;rou do now•

8_RR/l-MY

DADBURN IIIOSE
15 COLDER'N

A DAOBURN
ICE-5UCKLE!!

CR

WXVXOUNG

: LZ:Bn:H!@f.#D

1•

E U

EV

MINO•R CHARGE! JUST
NE AND THE COST

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
The famous playwr1ght and
w1t George Kaufman once
sa1d that there were two
ways to tell when a certain
player held a good hand
First, h1s face would light up,
then he'd misplay 1l
South's face ht up hke a
Christmas tree and 1l d1dn't
take h1m 10 seconds to boom
out htS seven-spade b1d.
It took him even less tune to
misplay 1t and go one down
At tricks two and three he
cashed the ace and kmg of
hearts. Then he ruffed a
heart, returned to h1s hand
w1th a second club and tned
to ruff another heart Unfortunately for h1m, that mean
old East overruffed and the
grand slam had left permanently for never-never land.
How d1d South m1splay the
hand?
He was r1ght m trymg to
ruff two hearts, he was wrong
in how he went about domg 1t
South should cash JUSt one
h1gh heart and ruff the second one Then back to hiS
hand to ruff another. Then he
would cash dummy's &lt;~,ueen of
trumps; get back to h1s hand
• by ruffml! a club or d1amond
Either sUlt would go through.
: Then he could draw trumps
: and cla1m.

•

27 - of
e1ght
28 "Goodmght '
grrl
29 Nmo-part
composJtion
34 Chou's
assoctale
35 Table scrap

tr~nsac tlon

Pass
Pass
Pass
•Q

The biddmg has been
WHI
North
Eaot

18 Ill-mannered
21 Adllattc
wmd
22 Mll1tary
barracks
23 Smger
Falana
24 Restramed
25 French
nver

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how l o work it:

rWPEMI

Yeelerd•y'•

Yeste r day's Answer

5 Old weapon
6 L1kely
7 Reiterate
( 4 wds )
8 Ene1 g1ze
9 Frrsl

16 Get up
a nd go
11 Fragrant
bloom
( 2 \IdS )
Ame r1cans
19 N1ght before
(2 wds 1
20 Melody
II Ma led1clwn
21 Kmd of gun IS Top-&lt;lrawer
22 Z1p or Morse r:-""T~"r."""T::23 Bank

YAS1T

l

27 1 1974

~

(.t....wc" lomorro•)

7 30 p m -

9 30 p m -

today to those who are deserv
tng Your k tnd words w dl have
a benef1 c 1a l
b oom er ang
e rrect

SAGITTARIUS (Nov . 23-

Your presence w1 \l have an
uplifting e ff ect upon those you
come tn contac t w1th thou gh
you mav not be aware of 11

No~

S1 tuatton s wher e you ~e tak en
t1me to bw ld a f1rm foundatton
w111 beg1n to y1eld re ward s thr s
year Expect good tt1tngs c on
ce rmng your ca reer

Be sure to be compl imentary

You r bes t breaks today will
come through partnershtp
S1t uat 1ons or I rom contacts es
tabl1shed SOCially

Dec. 21) Tasks
eas1er today Y:'an
late r so don ( let
s hould be Qone
s ide tracked

20-Feb

PISCES (Feb 20 -March 20)

SCORPIO (Oct 24 - Nov 22)

CANCER (June 21-July 22)

7 30 -

8

23 -0ct

ac t

th e house w11t turn ou t l o be
budget - stretch tng Put you r
handt c rafl ta lent to work

You I! be su rpn sed when you
diScover how w tlling others are
to share thmgs wtlh you La ter
be as generous tn retum

TAURUS (April 20- May 201

Sweepstakes 3, Zoom 33 I Spy 15 , Elec Co 20 , Bowling tor
Dollars 6 , B1g Red Machme 4

Let' s Make A Deal 6 Mel Tillis 8, Pol1ce Surgeon 3.
Name That Tune 4. Anl oques 20. Episode Action 33
oo - Unlo the Hills 33. Little House on Pra~rle 3, 4, IS, That's
My Mama 6. 13 Robinson Crusoe 3. &lt; 15. Movie " Godspell6,
13. Feeling Good 20. Thanksgiving Treasure 8. 10 Jack The
Ropper 33.
30 - Great Amer1can Dream Machine 33
oo - Life of Leonardo Da V~n c l 20. Masterpiece Theatre 33
30 - G E Theatre 8, 10

LIBRA (Sept

AQUARIUS (Jan

+

READY MIX
CONCRETE
del rv ered r1ght to
your
pro 1ec t F ast and easy Free
est1mates Phon e 992 3284
Goegle tn Ready MI X Co,
Mtddleport Ohto
6 30 tfc

-----------c -oi&lt;ALii='vi'C u Auct ioneer

Dear TBNL ·
Trouble w1th new leaves tS that too often they wither. If a
man treats you well only when he's afra1d of losing you, life
together would be a study m one-upmanship, and that's no way to
live' - HELEN

T ry to lmal 1ze any 1mportant
bus tness or commerc ial deal
1ngs 1mmedtal ely You II do
better no w than you w1ll 1f you
le t them drag on

26

AQ86&gt;3
.. 862
WEST
EAST
.J4
.1096
¥ Q1083
¥ J7S
+102
+KJ97
.. QJ1073
.. 9&gt;4
SOUnt&lt;D&gt;
.AK7&gt;2
¥ AK964
+4
.. AK
East-West vulnerable
West North
East

DOZER work , l and clf!' armg by
lh e acre hourly or c ontract,
farm pon ds, roads e t c Larg e
dozer and operator Wtth over
20 ye ars ex pertence Pul l ms
Excava tmg Pomeroy Oh 1o
Phone 99 2 2478
12 19 tfc

an d ba ckhoe work
sep tt c
tanks rn s talled dump t ructl: s
and lo bo ys for htre , wrll haul
ftll dtrl , top so i l, l i m es tone &amp;
graver Call Bob or Roger
Jeffers , da y phon e 992 7089 1
ntght ph one 992 3525 or 992
5232
2 11 tf c

Dear Tempted:
Everybody deserves a second chance ( they say) H you still
care about Ron, I'd say: lake that chance But remember the
lesson you've learned and if he starts reverting to the old self,
make 1t a permanent split - SUE

1974
ARIES (March 21-Aprll 191

to

19) Crea t 1ve efforts around

Conclustons you draw now are
apt to be the r ight ones Your
JUdgment 1s far see1ng It s not
lik ely y ou II overlook baste
factors

For Wednesday, Nov 27 ,

your advantage
promp tl y

¥2

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

•I

double

NORTH
• Q83

SEW IN G M AC HINE S Repa 1r ~
serv 1ce all makes , 992 2284
The Fabnc Shop, Pomeroy
Author~zed Smger Sa les and
ServiCe We sha rpen Sc u;sor s
3 29 ffc

II

SYRACUSE -

Trumping late makes it ruff

-

WMP6f.l390
river,

WIN AT·BRIDGE

992-5162
Syracuse, Ohio

house, bath n1ce large liv1ng ,
front porch, ca rport , on level

kitchen , por c hes , natural

5a le

r------'"-=----",·

-------------r::::ALAVtl-\ 1 t i\IG dozer , loader

T• ,tlr·r :t •,
J\ Ink ! 'I

',t, ,,,

d

-Free Est1mates, M1ddleport, 0

6 5 He

Ohto

Sweepstakes 3, 15 , Afternoon wtfh OJ 13, Elec Co 33

12 55- NBC News 3, 15
1.00- News 3, All My Children 6, 13 . Not For Women On ly 15
Phil Donahue 8, Young and Restless 10
l·JO-AstheWorldTurns8, 10 Jeopardy3.&lt;.1S. Let's Make A
Deal 6, 13
2. 00- Days of Our Llves3, 4, 15. Guiding Light 8. 10 . Newlywed
Game 6, 13
2. 30- Doctors 3, 4. 15 . Edge of Night 8, 10, Girl In My L1fe 6, 13
3:00- Another World 3, 4, 15, General Hosp1tal 6, 13 , Proce Is
Right 8, 10
3. 30- One Life to Live 13. Match Game 8, 10 , La ssoe 6, Ho w to
Survive a Marriage 3. 4, 15
4·00 - Nor Cartoon 3; Sesome St 33, Tattletales 8, Somerset
15; Gilli?.an's Is 6i Bonanza .4 , Movte "Love That Brute" 10,
G11ilgan s Island 13
4 30 - Bonanza IS . Bewitched 3, Lu cy Show 8 ABC Afterschool
Special 6, 13
5 00 - Mr Rogers 20, 33, Merv Griffin 4 , F Bl 3. Andy Grolfolh 8
5 30 - Elec Co 33, Hodgepodge Lodge 20, News 6 Tra1ls West
15 ; Family Classics 13
6 00- News3, A, 8, 10, 15, ABC News13. Sesame St 20 . News 6,
Diagnostic &amp; Prescriptive Teach1ng ol Reading 33
6 30- News 3, 4, 18, 10, 15 , Journey to Japan 33 Bew 1tched 6 ,
Gomer Pyle 13
7 00- News 10. What's Mv Line 8 Truth or Cons 3, Celebroty

IINYL SIDING
PH. 992 -7454 or
992 -7129

----_-'

\11 q•l B

I loved Ron for a year before 1 reahzed what others Sllld
about him was true he treated me like dirt, bossmg me around,
gomg out on me, expecting me to he htS httle slave
1 fmally got up nerve enough to break up w1th him - and how
he' s treating me like he did when we fll'st met Great, I mean 1 He
sends flowers, calls to ask how I'm getting along, pract1cally
kneels down and worships me
When we go out on occasiOnal " Jus t frtends" dates, nothmg's
too good for me.
Should I believe he's really changed and lake another
chance•- TEMPTED BY NEW LEAF

+++

12 30- Search for Tomorrow 8, 10 , Split Second 6 , Celebnty

Interior, Exterior

DOZE R or ba ck ho e wo rk
Phone 4d6 3981 or -446 3459
9 8 tf c

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

GOLF CARTS g as and elec tr tc,
for
farm
home
and
warehouse
S100 and up
HOW TO E A RN MONE Y AT
Phone I 875 2362
HOME
MA ILIN G
COM
11 21 6tc
MI S SION
CIRCULARS '
EXCELLENT
PROFIT
POTENTIAL
OFFER
PUREBRED Hereford bull , 26
DETAILS 25c &amp; STAMPED
months old
1953 model
ADDRESSEO , ENVELOPE
Ferguson
rraclor
John
ANN CLARK, 1223 LACLAIR .
Sheets, 3 m ties south of
PGH PA 15 218
Middleport on Rt 7
11 10 26tp
11 24 6tp

THE DEPENDABLE
CONTRACTING CO.
tl

WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 27 , 1~74
Sunrise Semmar 4, Summer Semester lO

Sesame St 33 Popeye 10
8· 25 - Jack La La nne 13 Capt Kangaroo 10
8· 30 - Brady Bunch 6
8 55 - News 13
9 00 - Paul D1xon &lt; AM 3 Phil Donahue IS Wold Wold West 6
Bullw~nkle 8. Movie " Rapture" 13
9 30 - Not For Women Only 3. HazelS . Tattletales 10
10 00 - Joker's Wild 8, 10. Company 6. Name That Tune 3. 15
10 30 - GambitS , 10 ; Winning Streak 3, 4, 15 Phil Donahue'
11 00 - Password 13 , H1gh Rollers 3, 15 , Nw You See It 8, 10 ,
510,000 Pyram1d 6
11 JO - HollywoodSquares3, 4,15 , BradyBunchl3 Love of L•fe
8, 10
11 55 - CBSNewse , Danlmel' sWorld10
12 00 - Jackpot 3, 15 , Password 6, Bob Braun's 50 SO Club 6 ,
N~ws 8, 10, Mr Rogers 33, News 13

Phone (304) 773-5503

ecora ng an
Remodeling

The Corruptors

mer's Daughter 13
7· 30 - New Zoo Revue 6 L1dsvllle 13
8· 00 - New Zoo Revue 13 Capt Kangaroo B Jeff's Collte 6

Alummum s1d1ng, rooftng,
complete res1denttal con.
st .. uctton Wrrmg , plumbmg,
elec
heatrng ,
k i tchen
cabmets etc
27 Yrs experience tn canst
trade

D

Underworld 'Target

6: 25- Farm Report 13
6.30 - F ive Minutes to Live By .4, News 6 Btble Answers 8 The
Story 13. School Scene 10
6. 35- Columbus Today 4
6: 45 - Morning Report 3
7·00 - Today 3. 4, 15, CBS New s 8, 10 H R Pufn stuf 6 Far

REMODELING &amp; CONST.

Phone 949-5961
Emergency 992-399 5
or 992-5700

i I I M&lt; '( h.1111(

6. 00 -

or 742-4902 after 5 p . m

HElL
RACINE PWMBING
&amp; HEATING

11 21 261C
FURNISHED ap-artm e nt, .J
rooms and ba th, 1dea1 for
worktng coup l e Phone 992 BEAUTIF UL art work for ~a l e,
2937
wood
marbe and or~g t nal
pamt1ngs e tc Phon e 99 2 7648
11 24 6tc
l1 21 5tc

Help Wanted

Ph 992-7608 berore 5 p m.

Next to Highway
Garage on Route 7
Pomeroy Route 3

-------------AWARD WINNER
PIITSBURGH ( UP!) - AI
Oliver, the Pittsburgh Pirate
outfielder who batted .321 last
season as the second best hitter
1n the National League, today
was named the winner of the
secoild annual Roberto Clemente Memorial Award.
The award Is presented by
the Pittsburgh Chapter of the
Baseball Writers AssoClation
to the P1rate who most
exemplifies the standards of
exceUence set by the late
elemente. Willie Stargell won
the first award last year.
Oliver drew 65 points, far
ahead of seven teammates.
Stargell rece1ved two votes and
R1ch1e Zisk , Rennie Stennett
"'jd Jim Rooker each one.

medi ca l tratntng

Lawn Mowers

Pr&gt;tll&lt; ' r O'i

Theatre "
9 30 p m - The

You re luck ie r today th an you II
be t omorrow 1n s1 tu at1ons
where you e;.cerc1 se conlrol or
authon ty Ge t your message
across now

Will New Leal Wither?

Rap

+++

- Washtngton Debates For t h e Seven t tes The
Parttes and the I ssues '
8 30 p m - The Gunsltnger s ' The Westerners .' ' ' Za ne Grey

JOHNSON'S

TEAFORD

News 4 13
CABLE CHANNEL FIVE

By day or hour, rea sonab le
rates. reliable people woth

All Small Appliances

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

Tomorrow l, 4

1 30 P m

BUILDING lot 80ft frontag e x
165ft The second lot on l eft on
Rtvervrew Drive
L tncoln
Hill Pomeroy. Ohto If n
te r es ted , ca ll 992 3230 after 5

11 22 SI C

MCJVIe ' The Angry Breed" 10

1· 00 2 IX' -

8-6 P.M.
ANY AGE CHILD

BOWERS
REPAIR

L - - - -- - - -

11 . 30 - Johnny Carson 3 4 15. MISSIOn Impossible 6 Janakt 33
Wide World Callfornta Jam 13 Mov1e " The Llqu tdator' 8

DAY NURSERY

Estimates.

ELECTROLUX
Va c uum
Fully Insured
Clean er comple t e wrt h at
ta c hmenls cordwr nd er and
patnt spray U sed but tn l tke
new co nd •t•on
Pay $34 45
cas h or budget plan ava tl a bl e
1970VALIANT 65x 12, 3bed r oom
Phone 992 7755
fu lly carpeted LP gas hea t
1 I 26 tfc
P hon e 992 775 1
8 25 tfc
SEWIN G Mac hmes brand new
Z tg Zag •n n ce wa lnut t able
I n Or gmal car tons
N eve r
u sed
C le arance on
74
Live m the rolling h1lls of
models
(Only
a
few
availabl e I
$43 40 cash or
Southern Ohto m your own
term s avat l able Phone 992
3 BR, all electnc mob1le
7755
home •n Southern Oh1o's
11 26 tt c
newest mobile home park
15 mtn from Athens or
STERE O radto com brnat10n B
track t ape am fm radro 4
Pomeroy Pnce reduced to
spea k e r
so und
sys t e m
get th1s mobile home park
Balance $106 84 or t erm s Ca ll
started Set up &amp; ready to
992 3965
move
mto
For further
1 1 26 ttc
detatls contact •

$25 ,000 Pyram id 8, Price " Roght 10 To Tell The Tru th 13
TBA 15 , Ohoo Elecloon 20. Marco Sportllte 33
8:00- Happy Days 13 Good T 1m es 10 America 33. Wtnn1e the
Pooh and The Blustery Day 3 &lt;, 15 , New World Com~ng 6. B
C Cartoon 8
8: 30- .' flASH 10, Evening at Symphony 33 , Movo e " Death
Stalk 3, 4, 15 , Movie " The Godchtld" 13 , Mov1e "The House
That Wouldn't Die" 6, New World Com~ng 8
9·00 - Hawaii Five 0 e. 10
9· 30 - Woman 20 , Barenbo1m On Beethoven 33
10·00 - Pollee Story 3, 4 15, Ma rc us Welbv 6, 13. Barnaby Jones
8; News 20. Englebert Humperdmck 10 Soundstage 33
11 00 - News 3, 4, 6, 8, 10. 13 15,33

Complete plumbing &amp;
heating service. Free

FREE ESTIMATE

Hollywood Squares 3, 4, Wtld , Wi l d World of Ammal s 6

22)

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept 22)

10· 30 - Your Future Is Now20 Mele Hawal l 33

Pamtmg , s1d10g , rooftng ,
paper h a ngmg , k1tch e n
cabmets, etc

8A.M. 6 PM

GHEEN'S PAINTING

7 30 -

777 Pearl Street
Middleport, Oh10
Phone 9~2 5367 or 992-3861

PHONE
949 3832 or 843 2667
All Types of
BUILDING
and REMODELING
From a shelf to a house

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

s My

Bowlmg for Dollars 6
Line ' 8 , News 10 Wtld Kingdom 15 Anttques 20

Art of Football 33

8-K EXCAVATING
COMPANY

D&amp;D
·
CONSTRUCTION

ROGER. HYSELL'S
GARAGE
On State Rt 124, 112 m1 . from

What

LEO (July 23 - Aug

By Helen and Sue Bottel

\I&lt;
,...

'

1 00 - ,Truth or Consequences 3, 4

"

Open Mon • Sat

1973 CUTLASS
S
Power
s teerrng
brakes
w mdows
AM FM sterfO t ape play er
c r utse con trol till wheel
FIREWOO D any length Ca ll
r adra l s
n ew bra k es and
992 5422 or 992 3312
s hoc k s $3 200 Phone 992 33al
II 10 26tp
or 992 3453
11 21 6tp LOWERY o r gan wrth ac
cessortes A beau tt f ul Ch n st
mas g, ft mu st be seen to
1973 GMC panel van truck
Rad tal ttres ltke new C P
appr enate May be see n at
249 Un•on Avenue or call 992
Williams 592 B r oadway St
5617
Mrddleport
1115 1'1tc
I 1 21 Ole

k tackles
challenge

COLUMBUS, Oh1o ( UP!) Pete Cusick, Oh10 Sla te's
muscular defe ns1 ve tackle,
look up the challenge thrown at
him at halflune of Saturday 's
M1ch1gan gam e by Buckeye
coach Woody Hayes.
"!want you to be able to tell
me after the game that 1t was
the greatest you have ever
played," Hayes told the 6-foot2, 252-pound Cus1ck, who has
been hobbled by a torn muscle
in h1s knee most of the year .
Followmg the Buckeyes' 1210wm, wh1ch earned them a lle
for the B1g Ten lltle and their
thll'd straight tnp to the Rose
Bowl, CusiCk went up to Hayes
and told h1m JUSt that
He was a one man gang '" the
second half, twiCe throwmg
M1ch1gan quarterback Dennis
Franklln for losses totaling 13
yards and pultmg pressure on
him when he tr1ed to pass ,
forcmg hun to throw off-target
For the gam e, Cusick was
credited wllh 13 tackles , SlX of
them solos, and his performance earned him the honor of
Umted Press Inlernat10na l
Midwest Defens1ve Player of
the Week
Best Thi s Year
"It was the best game I've
played th1s year," sa1d the
Lakewood. Ohw semor "and
the second ha lf was the bes t
I've ever played "
Cus1ck, who came to Oh10
State as a 225-pound h1gh
school fullback-hnebacker ,
worked his we1ght up to 252
w1lh a dediCated we1ghl
program wh1ch sees h1m lifting
four days a week durmg the
season and flVe m the offseason He 1s the strongest man
on the Buckeye team, bench
press1ng 500 pounds.
A second team All-Arnencan
selection as a Junior, Cns1ck
mjured his knee early m the
season. He tried to play on 1l,
but finally had to give 1t a rest.
"! probably shouldn't have
tr1ed to play at Washmgton
State," he sa1d, "but m my
mmd I thought 'this is your last
go-round ' and I didn't want to
end up sitting on the bench the
better part of the year."
He has been wearmg a brace
the last several games but sa1d
it had been restricting his
mobility, so he loosened :t for
the M1ch1gan game.
"My knee has been feeling

sell

Pyle 13

Smtle a lot

S!
Adlerian

6 30 - NBC News 3, ' ·IS. CBS News 8 10 Bewotched 6 Gomer

Limestone &amp; Fill Dirt
Com mercra I· Restdentia I
Construction &amp; Remodel

Phone 992 -3684

COMPLETE
RADIATOR
SERVICE &amp; REPAIR

GRAVE L sand Mason san d
1 m esto ne Pt t Run by th e tnn
De l 1vered Phon e 446 114 2
10 18 lf c

CA;, H p.a td fo r all makes and
models of mob il e homes
Phone area code 614 42 3 9531
4 13 tfc

M~:~~·:~~:~N~:;;~~on~~Buc
Buffalo
New Eng
NY Je ts
Ballrmre

1970 CHEVROLET Caprr p s
p b
atr cond 1tronrn g
350
aul om at rc m good cond Iron
Wtll sell r easonab l e Phon e
257 2679
11 26 6tc

1969 VW

or

I

KNAPP SHOES

318 N. 2nd Street
Middleport, Oh10

HU L L ED hrckory nu ts wood m
t rees Phon e 9&lt;19 )7 18
11'153tc

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

$ 15
au t o

TUESDAY. P '""~MBER 26,1974
News
3,
' 6 8. 10 ~ 15 Sesame Sl 20
Counseling Techn1ques 33

guaranteed .
,l
Dorer. Backhoe, Trucks

OrthopediC &amp; Correctional Work

Phone 992-7320

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

NFL Standtngs

Will build
separately .

a

$10 FOR
1unk.
cars
del•vered
$7
1unk.ed
bod 1es Phone 9&lt;~9 4484

=

On College Road

5895

DAN ARNOLD

r~~=~G;~;;ti;;·,ii;;

Television Log

Water,- Electr~c, Gas. Sewer
L1nes,
Installed. Work

g~-:· . "DAN'S SHOE REPAIR"

CHOICE BUILDING
SITES FOR SALE
IN SYRACUSE

Loca l 1 owner good w s w ttres d e lu xe tnt tr1m , w hee l
covers , r a dto, 6 c yl , real economy w1th std tran s blue
f1n n1ce

1968 CHEVROLET IMPALA

J~f':.

I

BUILDING SITES

51295

Jtneroy, 0 .. Tuesdav Nov 26, 1974

6 00 -

For Sale

51995

1970 FORD MAVERICK

TRAILER
2 to 3 bedrooms
want to take over paym en ts
Phone 985 3978
11 20 6tc

7 -The Daily 8entmel,Middlep

Business Services

WIL L keep preschoo l ctHi dren
m my home '1 to 6 years o l d 5
day s p er week Phone 99 2
5098
I I :i'O 6t c

350 V B au tom atiC. P st een ng &amp; brakes, dark blue f1n1 sh
blue mtenor, blue vmy l roo f , fa c tory a tr con dtt1oned , ltk: e
new w w t1res, rad 10 Man y other extras

OLD lurnrtur e •ce boxe s brass
beds or com plete households
Wnte M
D
Mrll er
Rt
I
Por11 eroy Oh 10 Ca ll 997 POO
10 7 74

.

Employment Wanted

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

Wanted To Buy

.

MA't'llE l SHOULD 60 OI'E~
10 Sf£ C.WCK S DAD HE 5 A
W!!E~ At;P *£1N6 AS HOW
I'M C~VCK'~ FRIENO. MA'i!!E
04E Ll 61V£ ME A DI5CO~NT

IF 1 HAD ~EEN 60RN
6EAIITIFUL, I WOL.I.DN'T HAI'e

TO 60 ~KDV6H ALL ~IS

�)
6 - The Dauy Sentmel, Middleporl-l'omero;, 0 , Tuesday, Nov. 26, 1974

Sen t rne
• / Classifieds Get Results!

Pro Standings

.'

National Basketball A ssoct&lt;Hton
Standmgs
By Untted Press lnter n at• on al
Eastern Confer en ce
Atlant1c DtYISIOn
w 1 pet g b
Buffalo
15 J
789
NewYork
11 7
6 11 3
Boston
10 9
526 5
Ph1lad elph ra
7 10
412 7
Central Olvt ston
w I pet q b
Wash m gton
lJ 5
rn
H ous ton
11 6
529 I ' 1
Cle ve land
9 8
529 3' 1
Atlanta
7 11
389 6
N ew O rlea ns
2 17
10 7 l l 1 1
We st ern Conferenc e
MtdWeSt D IVIS IO n
w l pet g 1&gt;
Chi cag o
10 9
5:?6
KC Omah a
10 9
526
1 ?
De tr o tt
10 10
500
Mtlwaukee
4 13
235 5
Paclfrc Ot v tston
w I pet g b
Go lden Sta te
13 6
681
Sea ttl e
10 9
52 6 3
Port land
9 10
474 1
Phoen tx
7 11 389 51 ~
Los Angeles
6 10
375 s 7
Monday s Result s
( N .) games schedu l ed)
Tontglll s Ga m es
Detrott at New York
Seattle at Cleveland
Buffal o at P h ladelph u
Wa sh rng ton at A t l anta
KC Omaha at Chr cago
Lo s Angeles a t Milwaukee
New Or lean s at Phoen x
Houston at Golden State

NHL Stand1ng s
By Un1fe d Pr ess lnt er nal~anal
01\115100 1

Phlla

w 1 1 pi s gf ga
13 6 J 29 75 53

A tlan ta
NY l slndrs
N YRangrs

11 7 5 27
q 7 5 23
9 7 412

65
76

77

DI VIS IO O 2

w 1 t pt s
Vancuvr

gt

5 4 30 82

13

Ch1 cago

9 7 3 2 1 69

S t LOUIS
M nne sota

1

7 9 4 18 65

KanC1ty

10 4 1a sa

J 15

1

D IV ISI O O

J

w I t pts
11 2 8 30
10 6 7 27
8 9 3 19

Lo s A n g
Mon treal
P1ti Sbgh

Det ro•t

6 11

Washngtn
Buffalo
Bost on

Tor on to
Cal f

7 49

2

gf

65

99
85

14

56
47

60
59
62

In Memory

Auto Sales

I N LOV IN G 1nCm01Y o t Dcn n1 i'
cmd Ll'lcJh Karr v..l10 p&lt;tssf'd
away N ov 76 190'i 1nd Nov 7
Th e Family

11 26 Ir e

Notice
ME IGS County Hurnanc Soc rely
wil l have annual ho l1 day
ba1c1 ar e nt li ed CHRISTMAS
HOU SE loc c11ed across f rom
Pomeroy
Post
Off•ce
De c emb er 7 Carry ou r lunch
w il l bP ser ved
11 2J3 t c
NO DEER huntrng on farm s of
(h&lt;tr i CS Yost
NC'a se Set
tlement lnd Ivan We'fi F tvC
Pornts
11 2 1 61p
WIL L SHOOT to kil l anyone
'AhO en t ers the Cen tury Bar
a ft er c lo s rng hours wrthout
my permrS Sron
L e&gt; onard { Roo ) Hess
I I 12 Jlp
PI A N O mstruct on by Sfhooled
and experr enced teacher
Beqrnne r •ntermcdtatc an d
advan ce d student welcomed
Mrs
Wm
Bartholomew
Thtrd 5 1 Racrn e Phone 9J9
2S S1
11 22 Me
KOSCOT
KOS METIC S
R emembe r
Chr tslmas
rs
com rng We have many new
pr oducts th a t w II rnake nrce
g ll s Phon e BROWNS 992
51 13
11 J tfc

A U C TION
Thursday
r:~nn
ga
Sarurdil y ntght
7 p m
at
61
Mason Auc t ron Hor ton St n
Mason W Va Cons .gn men ts
45
we l&lt;-omc
Pllone ( JOJ I 773
SJ71
70
ao
10 3 ffc
86
A REVIVAL W1ll beg n Dec 1
ga
through Dec 7 at the Chur ch
35
of
God
Chester
Ohto
76
Evang elr st wil l be Rev Jo e
74
Beasley f rorh Alexandra va
83
Se rvr ces w II bE'g1n each
106
eventng 7 30 p m and specral
S1ng ng
each
eve nrng
ga
Ev er yone we l c ome Pastor
74
R ev Dan L 1\yers
66
11 26 12tc

2 16 3
7
01\IISion 4
w I t pt s gl
15 4 3 33 102
11 5 5 27 96
5114146890

3 15 4 10 49 I OJ
Monday's Resu l ts

St LOUIS 2 Toronto 2

Lost
LOST strayed or sto len Large
wt-~rte co l lie at Long Bottom
Ca) l 985 3929 P M Cowdery
11243 tp

Tu e sday's Gam es
Vancouver atKan C1fy

2 SIGNS
OF
QUALITY

191!(.

1970 CHEV MONTE CARLO

~ pt Cpe, red fm1 sh , b lk v myl top. spotl ess 1nter~or good
t 1res rad 1o. automa l 1c tra n s, V
power st eenng

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

a

3 o 727 23-4 2os
7 -4 0 636 278 19 3
4 7 0 364 187 23S
2 9 0 182 136 261
Central
w 1 t pet pf
pa
a 2 1 773 247 156

Ptttsbgh
Cin CI
Houston

7 4 0 636 25S

s

Cle ve l nd

6

o

ISS
1a 1 211

455

3 8 0 273
We st

203

w I f pet
9 2 0 818

x Oaklnd

pf
280

275
pa
173

D env er
5 5 1 500 234 236
Ka n Ctty
4 7 0 364 195 238
San Diego 3 8 0 273 153 237
Nat10nal Conference
East
w 1 t pet pf
pa
St LOUI S
9 2 0 818 246 173

a

o

Washngtn
3
727
Dallas
6 5 0 545
Phtla
4 7 0 364
NYG tant s 2 9 0 182
Central
w I t pet
M 1nnesota 7 ' 0 636

223

Green B ay 6 5 0 545
Detro1t
6 5 o 545

18 7 153
189 192

Ch• c ago

115

3 8 0 273
West

232
209
158
161

ISS
168
179
237

pf

pa
161

w I t pet . pf
8 3 0 727 197

x Los Ang

196
pa
137

San Fran
4 7 0 364 184 202
NewOrlens4 7 o 364 122 199
Atlanta
2 9 0 182
84 215
X ClinChed diVISIOn fttle
Monday's Result
P1ttsburgh 28 New Orleans 7
Thursday ' s Game s
Denver at Detro it
Wa s hington at Dallas
Sunday 's Game s
Baltimore at Buffalo
Green Bay at Ph tla
Houston at Prttsburgh
Kansas C tty a t St LOUt S
Los Angeles at Atlanta
New England at Oakland
New Orleans at M 1nneso ta
NY Giants at ChiCago
San Otego at NY Jet s
San Fran a t Cleve land
Monday ' s Game
Cmcl at Mtam1 ntght

lnternat1ona1 Hockey League
Standings
By Untted Press lnternat•onal
North
w
I t pts gf ga
Flmt
14
3
2
30 75 40
Muskgn 14 5
1
29 92 -47
Sagrnw 12 7
1
25 71 56
Port Hurn 7 1t
2
16 67 73
Lensing 5 10
,
11 58 89
K alamaz 1 13
2
4 33 67
South
w I t pts gl ga
Dayton 13
4
1
27 83 63
Des Mo rns9 10
1
19 60 67
Co lumbs 8
9
1
17 11 68
FortWyn 6
9
2

"

Toledo

s• 66

6 14
1
13 63
Monday 's Results
(No games sc hedul ed J
Tonight ' s Gam es
( No games schedu l ed)

World

H

oc

71

Assoctaf•on
Standmgs
By Un•ted Press lnternat1ona1
Ea&amp;t
w I. t. pts gf ga
New England
26 73 47
13 '6 0
Clevelncl 6
I
13 36, 39
Ch1 ca go
lndinpls

k e y

4 13
4

15

o

Wnt

w
Houston
San Oteg
Phoenix
Mlnnesot
Mlchlgn

0

I

13

6

10
6

6
8
10

5

s

t

o

J

1

0

19 74 CHEVROLET
P c kup
custom de lu )te
lake over
payments Phone 992 7876
11 266t p
1968 FORD sta t on wagon 5300
Phone 992 5301
1122Stc
Phon e 992 38 14
11243tp

1972 vw Su p er Bee tle good
co nd• t•on Phon e 992 3981
11 21 6tc

11 24 26t p

au t os
co mplet e and
del vered to our yard We
p ck up auto bodtes and buy
all k rnds of scrap metals and
ro n R der s Sal vage St Rt
124 Rt 4, Pomeroy Oh ro
Cal l 99 2 5468
10 17 tfc

JU NK

8 49

72

8 38
pts
26 ~~
20 53
13
10 ;~
10 "

86

13
0
Canad1an
w. I t ph gl
Toronto 14
6 0
28 100

'~

sa

~~

79
ga better every week,'' he smd 'jl
68 probably won't have to use the
Quebec 11
6
0
22 69 58 brace any more. ll should he
Wlnnlpg 9
s I 19 68 40 100 per cent by the Rose Bowl "
Moved Ball We II
Edmnln 8
4
0
16 -4 7 37
Vanco'w'r "' 10
1
9 40 58
Mich1gan, Wlth Franklin and
Monday's ~esults
lallback Gordon Bell executing
(No games scheduled)
Tonight'&amp; Gemes
the option play, moved the ball
Winnipeg at Indianapolis
well
In the opening quarter,
M i nnesota at Toronto
New Eogland at Quebec
taking a 1~ lead But a few
Phoen lx at Houslon
adjustments on the part of the
V ancouver al Mtch tgan
Buckeye defense s hut them off
Edmonton at San O tego

the rest of the game Bell got 92
of his 108 yards m the openmg
half
" The coaches dee1ded we
were absorbmg them too
much," sa1d Cus1ck , uand that
we
should
play
more
aggres&amp;ve and make them
react to us "
Was he bred up for Mlchlgan•
"Deflnllely, JUst playmg MIChigan IS enough to get your
fired up," he said "When we
play them 1ts ahnost like
playmg ourselves. We don't try
to fool each other The team
that plays toughest 1s gomg to

wm''
He had kmd words for Bell,
the Wolverines' 5-9, 175-pound
JUruor from Troy, Ohio
uHe's a great back," CUSlck
said "He's not as strong as
Arch (Griffin) , but he's as
qmck, no doubt about 1t"

TWO OPERATIONS
HOUSTON (UPI) - Rice
Owl quarterback Tommy
Kramer, preparing to direct
his team Saturday agamst
Baylor,
will
undergo
operallons on both shoulders
after the season, R1ce officials
srud.
Kramer, a h~ghly touted San
Antonio Lee star m his seeond
year at Rice, has separat.:d
both shoulders playmg in
college.
R1ce tramer Allen Eggert
explamed the situation Monday
"It's a congemtal thing that
seems to run In the family," he
srud. "His brother, Mike, had
the same problem here. We
operated on him, too. Hopefully
an operation will cure Tommy's condttion."

19;1-0 1 T ON Chevrol ef t ru ck
dual wh eel s VB
4 sp eed
Looks and runs good Harold
Brewer Long Bottom 0 1110
Phon e 985 3S5d
11 17 tf c
WA LNU T st er eo rad to am fm
a tra c k ta pe co mb1n at1 on
Ba l ance $107 45 or t erms Ca ll
992 3965
11 19 lfc
SEWING Machmes b r and new
Z g Zag tn ntce walnut ta bl e
In or.g rna l car ton s
N ever
used
C l ea r a n ce
on
'7.:1
Models
(Only
a
few
availab l e I
$.4 3 40 cash or
\..erms availab le Phone 992
f75S
10 15 tf c

PICk up dally tn Pomeroy &amp;
Middleport
All
work
guaranteed Phone 949 3611 ,

RACINE GARAGE
Slh 51

For Rent
5 RM downsla trs unfurn tshed
a partment W1th laund r y 751
Brownell Ave
M ddl eport
Ca ll 985 3974
11 266tp

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

DU P LEX apt
tn Mtddleport
Ca ll (3041 B82 70 50 after 5 p m
11 26 lfc

J ROOM and bath com pletely
f ur nrshed r ea l nt ce L oca t e d
near Jo n es Boys Ph one 992
7022 a fl er 5 p m
11263tc

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

3 BEDROOM home

tu rn tShed
or un furn tShe d On U S R 1
33 Phone 992 7022 after 5 p m
11 263tc

TRA IL ER s p ace
Ph on e&gt; 367 7743

fo r

r en t

11 26 12tp

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

J AND 4 ROOM furnt sh ed and
unfurnt s hed
apartments
Phone 992 543-4
-4 12 tf c

-------------PRIVATE meetmg room for
an y organtzat ron
3975

phone 992
311tfc

c------------ -HOU SE and tra 11er fo r r ent rn
tow n 2 bedroom s Phone 992
3975 and 99 2 257 1
11 6 tfc

------------TR AILE R space 2 m11es from
Pom eroy
5858

Rt

143 Phone 992
10 27 tf c

. :::-------- - - -----

LOSE wetght wr th N ew Shape
Tablets and Hydn' )t Water
Ptlls at Du tt on Drug M rd
dl eport and N elson D rug
11 26 3t p

Racme , 0 .

Route 7
Rutland

by pa ss

toward s

949-3295
Racine, 0.

Interior &amp;
Exterior Work

Mob de Homes For SaiP

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

--- -- --------DISHWASHER
773 5332

Phone

(3 04 )

NO DOWN PAYMENT
TO VETERANS

11 226tc

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

SAVE on yo ur hea t1ng bill and
beauttfy your mobile hom e
Wtlh
ltfet.m e
alumtnum
Skt r lmg or underprnnmg S
Lo ck connecttons rn baked on
t tntsh to mat ch the colo r of
m any h omes S200 comp lete
package m stall ed for the f trSI
5 custom er s Ca ll 992 7034
evenmgs 949 3655

KINGSBURY
MOBILE HOMES
1100 E Mam

Pomeroy,

0

Call992 7034
Open Daoly 11 to 7

----- - ------ --John

TRAILER 2 bedroom Brown's
T r ailer P a rk Phone 992 3324 POTATOE S a11d co rn
Hill
Letart Falls,
11 a tfc
Phone 247 2642

O hro

Real Estate For Sale

11 21 6tp

NO MONEY DOWN Month l y
COUNTRY Mobtll!- Hom e Park ,
payments accordmg t o tn
Rt 33 t en miles nor t h of
come N ew 3 bedroom home
Pom eroy
Large lo ts w tth FIREWOOD for sa l e Call 742
w th wal l to wall carp etrng on
concrete pattos
Sidewalks ,
-4 83 1
2 acre l and scap ed lots
Ca l l
a nd
off
street ,
• unner s
10 19 26tc
today for mor e mformat ton
parktng
A l so
spa c es for
992 5976
small tratlers Phone 992 7479
GROC ERY bu s rn ess f or sa le
11 2611c
7 21 tfc
Bulldtng for sa le or lease - - - - - - - ----PhOne 773 5618 f r om 8 30 p m
WILL TRADE - FI N ANC IN G
-4 RM tu r n tshed ap t c l ose to
to rO p m t or appotnlment
AR RANGED
WITH
Powe lls Supe r V alu phone
3 20 lfc
MINIMUM
OOWN
Will
99 2 3658
cons tder trade for older
11 20 He
home t ra il er or land on lh1S
FIRE WO OD f or t.r ep lace or
new 3 bedroo m 2 bath hom e
2 BED ROOM turn co ttag e at
stove Cu t to l ength Phone
wrth 2 car garage , larg e
992 7644
Rock Spr mg s rdeal for school
ta
m tly room atr cond1t10ntng
personn e l ,
adults
on l y
11 326t c
Move m 1m med ately Call
referen ce destred Phone 992
now 992 5976
2789
CONN trump et good cond Iron
11 26 li e
11 3 tfc
S75 Phone 99 2 3606
11 22 ot c
FURNI SHED apt Adults only - - - - - -- - - - -- HOU SE for sa l e 249 Un ton
Mtddleport
Phon e 992 387 4 1957 CHEVY parts
NE W
Ave
A ll newly d ecora t e d
11 14 tfc
Lakewood tra c t1on bar s h
ns de May be seen by ap
tacker at r sh ocks
hook er
po rnt ment
Ph one 992 5617
UNFURN I SHED
house
4
headers w rth 3 'colle ctors tor
11 15 12 t c
room s and bath 1650 Lrn c oln
small block
Ca ll 992 3496
------- ---He1ghts Phone 992 3874
alter 6 p m BEST OF F ER
11 14 tfc
NEW
b t level
home
3
10 17 ttc
bedroom s
buil t m k rtchen
F U R N I SH ED
apartment,
ba se ment
wrth o n e car
uttllt res turntshed
sur ta bl e 1961l DELTA 88 O ldsmobile 1965
ga rage Phone 742 36 15 or see
Electra 25 BuiCk both m good
Mt iO HUt ChiSOn
for tw o working men or
condlf ton Also 4 room house
ret.red couple L rv mg roo m ,
1 1 1 tfc
and
2
lots
m
Le
t
art
Village
kttchen , shower and bath On
See
Thoma
s
Haym
a
n
,
mam htghway , Ma son w Va
5 ROOM house W1fh bath and
Syracu se Oh10
Phone 773 5147
lot Dr rll ed well Call after 4
11
21
6t
c
10 27 tf c
pm ,2-4725 81
--------- - - -- -~
11 24 6tp
YAMAHA 17 5 Enduro
2
BEDROOM
hctu er
tn 1973
Phone 949 2762 after 6 p m
Syracuse, c lose to school No
1121 51c
ch ildr en or pet s Depos1t
requfred Phone 992 2441 after
APPLES F 1tzpa trrck Or c hard
6 30 p m
St ate Rout e 689
Phone
10 18ffc
Wtlke sv tll e 669 3785

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

CA RPET ms t allat to n $1 25 per
yard Phone R rc ha r d West
843 2667
11 13 26 tp

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

EXCELSIOR Sa lt Works
E
Mam Sl Pomeroy All k md s
of sa l t water pellets water
nuggets block salt a nd own
Ohto Rrver Salt Phone 992
3891
SE P IlL
1 AN KSCTea n ed,
reasonab l e r a t es
Ph
4-4 6
478 2 Galltpolts John Russe ll ,
owner and operator
5 12 tf c
!:I EPTIC
TANKS
c l ea n ed
Mod ern Sanrta t10n 992 39 54 or
992 ]j49
9 18 tf c
CAT TLE A I Ser v1ce Phone
L Park er 992 226.4 P ome r oy
or 667 3251 Coolv rlle st allon
11 17 13tc

Real Estate For Sale

pm
lO 17 tfc

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

CHA IN OPERA T ION lookmg
for c areer m mded p eop le to
hll htgh
p a1d POSifiOnS
Manag e men t
and
sates
opentngs available Complete
tratnmg pro vt ded Salary p lus
commi ssion Call 992 7440 9
a m to 5 p m for mter v1ew
11 24 Ate

FOR

SIEGLER and
MONOGRAM

RIEL OIL
HEATERS

Wantell To Buy
CAS HSUS SS$

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

JU N K

CARS
Comp
FRYE S
TRUC K and AUTO P A RT S
Rutl and phon e 742 6094
11 2626tc

Priced For Quick

1112 ACRES -

&lt;'UMERDY LANDMARK

tl'.:
Jack W Carsey , Mgr
~
Phone 992·2181

I

i',ll·l

Severa l fruit

trees , garage , and 5 room
house Want on ly S8SOO 00

33 ACRES - Good huntong
area 3 bedroom home, bath,
e l ectnc heat, c1ty water and
minerals

3 ACRES - All clean farm
land 2 bedroom home , bath ,
furnace. and dr~lled well

SIO,OOO 00
1 ACRE -

Just

Nearly new 3

bedroom home. n1ce bath w1th
shower
Compact kitchen ,
stove , refrigerator , lot s of

cab1nets,
and
$17,500 00
LARGE GARDEN

SEE US FOR YOUR
UPHOLSTERING NEEDS
FREE ESTIMATE
Pickup and Delivery

SYLVIA'S
UPHOLSTERING

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

dJnlng

Comp le t e Serv1ce
Phone 949 382 1 or 949 3161
Racme, OhJO
Cr t It Bradford
5 1 ft c.

-------CR M' E- AN S -CD&gt;ICRETI!
del 1vered Mond ay through
Sa turda y
and
eventngs
Phon e 446 1142
6 13 ff c

C HARZEs_R_ H ;;-t~id:-~~ ~
bac khoe and do zer
wa te r
l mes dra1ns. foot er s brush
c lean 1g Rt 1 Ru tland , Ohto
Phone 742 6092
11 3 25tc

- - - --- ----

7 room

We. bik

lot 516,500 00
WE HAVE THE TIME IF YOU
HAVE THE FINANCING AND
WANT TO START SAVING
YOUR MONEY

to YOU

like.1 person.

fenced,

3

ON YOUR DIAL"

(;lose to
level

B R..

lot,

bath,

basement, porches, N G
forced air furnace, priced

right
POMEROY -

I 1

ZENITH

Downtown

COLOR TV

business room and nice
apartment over Excellent
for any type business

•

Asking only 518,000 00
REEDSVILLE - 9 acres
:J!'out all tillable , lovely
t;jjjlqlng site, T P water ,
located
on
Rt
124
overlooking river 55.800
MINERSVILLE - I story
frame, 3 BR. bath , nice

•BLACK &amp;

WHITE TV
•STEREO

gas, TP water, lots of
ground S7 ,900
WE HAVE BUYERS - WE
NEED HOMES TO SELL LET US KNOW WHAT YOU
HAVE

Easy Terms!
Free ~livery!

992 2259 ,"'r 99212568

'

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

Dear Helen and Sue
ThiS letter tS aimed at th1eves.
Last night, people broke mto our house and stole almost
everythmg They must have known we'd be away for the
weekend, and we don 't have close neighbors so they had plenty of
time to strip the house .
We don't have msurance and we're too poor to buy
replacements. In fact, what w1th big doctor btU. and Dad's rrull
closmg down , we don't even eat well. The furruture (from better
times) was about all we had left
My folks are too proud for Welfare or food stamps. We're
trying to get along on Dad's unemployment check. It doesn't
stretch . And now we're s1tting on the floor and sleeping on
borrowed pads'·
I'm not begg1ng, I'm JUSl askmg thieves to check out the
people they r1p off and not p1ck on us who are already down. If
there's any "honor" among them, they'll return our furruture 1IN NEED BUT NOT BEGGING
Dear In Need:
Don't count on ' 'honor" among thieves . It's as scarce as fleas
on a bald man's head.
Let's hope the local police find your furmtnre, and that

Yo u II be fo rtuna te 1n srtuat1ons
where maJOr rss ues are a t
espec 1a ll y
11 a
s tak e
prestiQIOUS lnend IS somehow
tnvolved
GEMINI (May 21 -Juno 20) A
k 1ndness that you ye done for
someone 111 the past wtll be
repaid 1n a larger measure t han
you gave

8
9
9

10 00 - Petrocelli 3, 4, 15 , Anme and the Hoods 6, 13, Burglar
Proofmg 33

10 3C - Legacy 33
11 00 - News 3, &lt;. 6, 8, 10, 13, 15, ABC News 33
11 30 -

Johnny Car son 3, Mt ss ton lmposs1ble 6, Jnak1 33 , W1de
World Event Callforn 1a Jam 13 , Mov1e " Iva nhoe" 8 , Movie
" The Great Caruso" 10

12 30 -

Wold Wold West 6

1 00 2 00 -

Tomorrow 3, 4

News 4

23)

by THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS
I PrefiX for
chute
5 Beer
IO The sa me
I Lalm )
11 ''Scarface"
12 Gallop
13 Inexpressible
14 Muung fl!ld
JS Cll'cle

w 111 co me
ttley w1 ll
work that
n o w get

CAPRICORN (Dec 22 -Jan
19) A good d ay to get •n touch
w1th persons whose help you
need w 1th present p lans It s to

segment

townspeople are made aware of your plight Thell' generos1ly w1ll

see you through - count on 11.
And perhaps some of these people can persuade your parents
that temporary Welfare &amp;d tS no disgrace After all, thell' taxes
paid for the food stamps they're too proud to accept 1 - HELEN
AND SUE

Rap
When we go out to eat, Mom asks for a dogg1e bag. This
embarrasses me . We aren't THAT hard up ' - DOG LESS
Dog less
Correction 1t's "people bags" nowadays, and the best
people ask for one Why be embarrassed about lakmg home food
you've rightfully bought• - HELEN

+++
Dogless
Almost anything parents do embarrasses thell' kids But if
you'll look around and see how many other fa m1lies lake home
"dogg1e bags," you'll slop feeling consptcuous. - SUE

~WJ)OOID~®Ikal ~~&gt;•••"J -.1 , _
Unscramble lhese four Jumbles.
one Jetter to each square, to
form four ordinary words.

t
I I J

CABLE CHANNEL FIVE
Country and Western U S A
8 30 p m - Superstar Theatre

a•

Pass
Pass &gt;+
Pass Pass
Openmg lead -

39 Waste
allowance
DOWN
1 Helmsman
2 ldohze
3 Be r edundanl
(2 wds)
4 Wooden

core

24 Bastmado
25 'Septem ber

1-:-;--t-t--+-

"
26 Funclwn
27 One of
Charle -

magne1s
knights
30 Matter (law)
31 Btbbcal
man's
name
32 Gold (Sp )
33 German
Cliy
35 Kiln
36 Twme
37 - Coly
38 Moll
F landers'
creator

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

Is

One letter &amp;Imply stands f or another In th1s sample A ts
for the three L s, X for th e two O's etc Sin gle l e tt er s
apostrophes the l en g th and formation of the words are all
htnts Each da} the code letters are different
used

J KJ

CRYPTOQUOTE
V ZSGAUFELEGF

I
t~~.A==~~~~~~~~~~=·u=r=r~eoUdbylhoabovocartoon.
DJSTEW ~

Now arranro tho circled !olton
to form the aurpriae anawer, as

"J

Pliil• •llSIIIISWift 11n

EGF

I tIn I I J

Jumbl•" CUBIC GRAIN DEMISE EMBARK
\ AM•er~ You can't write thl8

w1fhout nolt.!II- MUSIC

Superstar Theatrf!

FNB

JELEGF

MNO
EV

HEJMXOB

XSQZ

VN

Pass

2&lt;1o

GXH

vzx

VZSGABSR

M IJ JXUV . -

Yest erday 's Cryptoquote. THERE 'S SOMEBODY AT
EVERY DINNER PARTY WHO EATS ALL THE CELERYKIN HUBBARD

DICK TRACY

A TOW., THAT S

1'----,

GASOLINE ALLEY

CAPTAIN EASY
ALVA!l:EOO, CIAilL.I~6 1 CAN VQLJ H E'A~
ME~ IT"'S&lt; !FFIE' lVe COM E- BACK
1"0 NUR:SE MY POOR:, S Wt:f;f, &lt;SICK
-------~ HUi5!Y wusav.

LIL ABNER
THIS Y~ R TH ' RACS 15 8ETWGEN

IT
IS
IDE'ALSADIE'
HAWKINS
DAY

n-t' PRIDS 0' TH' UNDE:RGROUNDe'R.S
- TH' HAWK- WHO 15 50 Fl'&gt;ST'
NO ~R QAST RUN
AGIN H~R rr-

Tl-f' 5URF.AC6'R6 15 PUrnN' THAR Rt.Tiii IN
~- T&gt;&lt;' ONe·""""
POSPATCH 6UN
rr- HE: KIN
OUTRI.W ANY

TH' Ff'ET 0' PGAOSFLIL

v.E'ATI-IeRGRIM
AND
THR&amp;Aii;!NING-

ALLEY OOP
'IOU SAID '&lt;Oil
COULD GET US
SOME lviORE

PEOPLE?

'VES OOP 1

HOW

MANY

WILL 'IOU

A

'-'Al~

DOZEN

SHOULD DO IT!

NEeD?

26

South
Dble.
2•
•

Pass
Pass
3'
Pass
•
You. South, hold·
.43 ,_... Q 10 8 &amp; •K J4 +A Q 3
What do you do now?
A. -Bid roar heart&amp;. Games are
worth h1ddltt~.
TODAY'S QUESTION
Instead of respondang twn
clubs, your partner has bad two
hearts after your double What do
;rou do now•

8_RR/l-MY

DADBURN IIIOSE
15 COLDER'N

A DAOBURN
ICE-5UCKLE!!

CR

WXVXOUNG

: LZ:Bn:H!@f.#D

1•

E U

EV

MINO•R CHARGE! JUST
NE AND THE COST

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
The famous playwr1ght and
w1t George Kaufman once
sa1d that there were two
ways to tell when a certain
player held a good hand
First, h1s face would light up,
then he'd misplay 1l
South's face ht up hke a
Christmas tree and 1l d1dn't
take h1m 10 seconds to boom
out htS seven-spade b1d.
It took him even less tune to
misplay 1t and go one down
At tricks two and three he
cashed the ace and kmg of
hearts. Then he ruffed a
heart, returned to h1s hand
w1th a second club and tned
to ruff another heart Unfortunately for h1m, that mean
old East overruffed and the
grand slam had left permanently for never-never land.
How d1d South m1splay the
hand?
He was r1ght m trymg to
ruff two hearts, he was wrong
in how he went about domg 1t
South should cash JUSt one
h1gh heart and ruff the second one Then back to hiS
hand to ruff another. Then he
would cash dummy's &lt;~,ueen of
trumps; get back to h1s hand
• by ruffml! a club or d1amond
Either sUlt would go through.
: Then he could draw trumps
: and cla1m.

•

27 - of
e1ght
28 "Goodmght '
grrl
29 Nmo-part
composJtion
34 Chou's
assoctale
35 Table scrap

tr~nsac tlon

Pass
Pass
Pass
•Q

The biddmg has been
WHI
North
Eaot

18 Ill-mannered
21 Adllattc
wmd
22 Mll1tary
barracks
23 Smger
Falana
24 Restramed
25 French
nver

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how l o work it:

rWPEMI

Yeelerd•y'•

Yeste r day's Answer

5 Old weapon
6 L1kely
7 Reiterate
( 4 wds )
8 Ene1 g1ze
9 Frrsl

16 Get up
a nd go
11 Fragrant
bloom
( 2 \IdS )
Ame r1cans
19 N1ght before
(2 wds 1
20 Melody
II Ma led1clwn
21 Kmd of gun IS Top-&lt;lrawer
22 Z1p or Morse r:-""T~"r."""T::23 Bank

YAS1T

l

27 1 1974

~

(.t....wc" lomorro•)

7 30 p m -

9 30 p m -

today to those who are deserv
tng Your k tnd words w dl have
a benef1 c 1a l
b oom er ang
e rrect

SAGITTARIUS (Nov . 23-

Your presence w1 \l have an
uplifting e ff ect upon those you
come tn contac t w1th thou gh
you mav not be aware of 11

No~

S1 tuatton s wher e you ~e tak en
t1me to bw ld a f1rm foundatton
w111 beg1n to y1eld re ward s thr s
year Expect good tt1tngs c on
ce rmng your ca reer

Be sure to be compl imentary

You r bes t breaks today will
come through partnershtp
S1t uat 1ons or I rom contacts es
tabl1shed SOCially

Dec. 21) Tasks
eas1er today Y:'an
late r so don ( let
s hould be Qone
s ide tracked

20-Feb

PISCES (Feb 20 -March 20)

SCORPIO (Oct 24 - Nov 22)

CANCER (June 21-July 22)

7 30 -

8

23 -0ct

ac t

th e house w11t turn ou t l o be
budget - stretch tng Put you r
handt c rafl ta lent to work

You I! be su rpn sed when you
diScover how w tlling others are
to share thmgs wtlh you La ter
be as generous tn retum

TAURUS (April 20- May 201

Sweepstakes 3, Zoom 33 I Spy 15 , Elec Co 20 , Bowling tor
Dollars 6 , B1g Red Machme 4

Let' s Make A Deal 6 Mel Tillis 8, Pol1ce Surgeon 3.
Name That Tune 4. Anl oques 20. Episode Action 33
oo - Unlo the Hills 33. Little House on Pra~rle 3, 4, IS, That's
My Mama 6. 13 Robinson Crusoe 3. &lt; 15. Movie " Godspell6,
13. Feeling Good 20. Thanksgiving Treasure 8. 10 Jack The
Ropper 33.
30 - Great Amer1can Dream Machine 33
oo - Life of Leonardo Da V~n c l 20. Masterpiece Theatre 33
30 - G E Theatre 8, 10

LIBRA (Sept

AQUARIUS (Jan

+

READY MIX
CONCRETE
del rv ered r1ght to
your
pro 1ec t F ast and easy Free
est1mates Phon e 992 3284
Goegle tn Ready MI X Co,
Mtddleport Ohto
6 30 tfc

-----------c -oi&lt;ALii='vi'C u Auct ioneer

Dear TBNL ·
Trouble w1th new leaves tS that too often they wither. If a
man treats you well only when he's afra1d of losing you, life
together would be a study m one-upmanship, and that's no way to
live' - HELEN

T ry to lmal 1ze any 1mportant
bus tness or commerc ial deal
1ngs 1mmedtal ely You II do
better no w than you w1ll 1f you
le t them drag on

26

AQ86&gt;3
.. 862
WEST
EAST
.J4
.1096
¥ Q1083
¥ J7S
+102
+KJ97
.. QJ1073
.. 9&gt;4
SOUnt&lt;D&gt;
.AK7&gt;2
¥ AK964
+4
.. AK
East-West vulnerable
West North
East

DOZER work , l and clf!' armg by
lh e acre hourly or c ontract,
farm pon ds, roads e t c Larg e
dozer and operator Wtth over
20 ye ars ex pertence Pul l ms
Excava tmg Pomeroy Oh 1o
Phone 99 2 2478
12 19 tfc

an d ba ckhoe work
sep tt c
tanks rn s talled dump t ructl: s
and lo bo ys for htre , wrll haul
ftll dtrl , top so i l, l i m es tone &amp;
graver Call Bob or Roger
Jeffers , da y phon e 992 7089 1
ntght ph one 992 3525 or 992
5232
2 11 tf c

Dear Tempted:
Everybody deserves a second chance ( they say) H you still
care about Ron, I'd say: lake that chance But remember the
lesson you've learned and if he starts reverting to the old self,
make 1t a permanent split - SUE

1974
ARIES (March 21-Aprll 191

to

19) Crea t 1ve efforts around

Conclustons you draw now are
apt to be the r ight ones Your
JUdgment 1s far see1ng It s not
lik ely y ou II overlook baste
factors

For Wednesday, Nov 27 ,

your advantage
promp tl y

¥2

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

•I

double

NORTH
• Q83

SEW IN G M AC HINE S Repa 1r ~
serv 1ce all makes , 992 2284
The Fabnc Shop, Pomeroy
Author~zed Smger Sa les and
ServiCe We sha rpen Sc u;sor s
3 29 ffc

II

SYRACUSE -

Trumping late makes it ruff

-

WMP6f.l390
river,

WIN AT·BRIDGE

992-5162
Syracuse, Ohio

house, bath n1ce large liv1ng ,
front porch, ca rport , on level

kitchen , por c hes , natural

5a le

r------'"-=----",·

-------------r::::ALAVtl-\ 1 t i\IG dozer , loader

T• ,tlr·r :t •,
J\ Ink ! 'I

',t, ,,,

d

-Free Est1mates, M1ddleport, 0

6 5 He

Ohto

Sweepstakes 3, 15 , Afternoon wtfh OJ 13, Elec Co 33

12 55- NBC News 3, 15
1.00- News 3, All My Children 6, 13 . Not For Women On ly 15
Phil Donahue 8, Young and Restless 10
l·JO-AstheWorldTurns8, 10 Jeopardy3.&lt;.1S. Let's Make A
Deal 6, 13
2. 00- Days of Our Llves3, 4, 15. Guiding Light 8. 10 . Newlywed
Game 6, 13
2. 30- Doctors 3, 4. 15 . Edge of Night 8, 10, Girl In My L1fe 6, 13
3:00- Another World 3, 4, 15, General Hosp1tal 6, 13 , Proce Is
Right 8, 10
3. 30- One Life to Live 13. Match Game 8, 10 , La ssoe 6, Ho w to
Survive a Marriage 3. 4, 15
4·00 - Nor Cartoon 3; Sesome St 33, Tattletales 8, Somerset
15; Gilli?.an's Is 6i Bonanza .4 , Movte "Love That Brute" 10,
G11ilgan s Island 13
4 30 - Bonanza IS . Bewitched 3, Lu cy Show 8 ABC Afterschool
Special 6, 13
5 00 - Mr Rogers 20, 33, Merv Griffin 4 , F Bl 3. Andy Grolfolh 8
5 30 - Elec Co 33, Hodgepodge Lodge 20, News 6 Tra1ls West
15 ; Family Classics 13
6 00- News3, A, 8, 10, 15, ABC News13. Sesame St 20 . News 6,
Diagnostic &amp; Prescriptive Teach1ng ol Reading 33
6 30- News 3, 4, 18, 10, 15 , Journey to Japan 33 Bew 1tched 6 ,
Gomer Pyle 13
7 00- News 10. What's Mv Line 8 Truth or Cons 3, Celebroty

IINYL SIDING
PH. 992 -7454 or
992 -7129

----_-'

\11 q•l B

I loved Ron for a year before 1 reahzed what others Sllld
about him was true he treated me like dirt, bossmg me around,
gomg out on me, expecting me to he htS httle slave
1 fmally got up nerve enough to break up w1th him - and how
he' s treating me like he did when we fll'st met Great, I mean 1 He
sends flowers, calls to ask how I'm getting along, pract1cally
kneels down and worships me
When we go out on occasiOnal " Jus t frtends" dates, nothmg's
too good for me.
Should I believe he's really changed and lake another
chance•- TEMPTED BY NEW LEAF

+++

12 30- Search for Tomorrow 8, 10 , Split Second 6 , Celebnty

Interior, Exterior

DOZE R or ba ck ho e wo rk
Phone 4d6 3981 or -446 3459
9 8 tf c

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

GOLF CARTS g as and elec tr tc,
for
farm
home
and
warehouse
S100 and up
HOW TO E A RN MONE Y AT
Phone I 875 2362
HOME
MA ILIN G
COM
11 21 6tc
MI S SION
CIRCULARS '
EXCELLENT
PROFIT
POTENTIAL
OFFER
PUREBRED Hereford bull , 26
DETAILS 25c &amp; STAMPED
months old
1953 model
ADDRESSEO , ENVELOPE
Ferguson
rraclor
John
ANN CLARK, 1223 LACLAIR .
Sheets, 3 m ties south of
PGH PA 15 218
Middleport on Rt 7
11 10 26tp
11 24 6tp

THE DEPENDABLE
CONTRACTING CO.
tl

WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 27 , 1~74
Sunrise Semmar 4, Summer Semester lO

Sesame St 33 Popeye 10
8· 25 - Jack La La nne 13 Capt Kangaroo 10
8· 30 - Brady Bunch 6
8 55 - News 13
9 00 - Paul D1xon &lt; AM 3 Phil Donahue IS Wold Wold West 6
Bullw~nkle 8. Movie " Rapture" 13
9 30 - Not For Women Only 3. HazelS . Tattletales 10
10 00 - Joker's Wild 8, 10. Company 6. Name That Tune 3. 15
10 30 - GambitS , 10 ; Winning Streak 3, 4, 15 Phil Donahue'
11 00 - Password 13 , H1gh Rollers 3, 15 , Nw You See It 8, 10 ,
510,000 Pyram1d 6
11 JO - HollywoodSquares3, 4,15 , BradyBunchl3 Love of L•fe
8, 10
11 55 - CBSNewse , Danlmel' sWorld10
12 00 - Jackpot 3, 15 , Password 6, Bob Braun's 50 SO Club 6 ,
N~ws 8, 10, Mr Rogers 33, News 13

Phone (304) 773-5503

ecora ng an
Remodeling

The Corruptors

mer's Daughter 13
7· 30 - New Zoo Revue 6 L1dsvllle 13
8· 00 - New Zoo Revue 13 Capt Kangaroo B Jeff's Collte 6

Alummum s1d1ng, rooftng,
complete res1denttal con.
st .. uctton Wrrmg , plumbmg,
elec
heatrng ,
k i tchen
cabmets etc
27 Yrs experience tn canst
trade

D

Underworld 'Target

6: 25- Farm Report 13
6.30 - F ive Minutes to Live By .4, News 6 Btble Answers 8 The
Story 13. School Scene 10
6. 35- Columbus Today 4
6: 45 - Morning Report 3
7·00 - Today 3. 4, 15, CBS New s 8, 10 H R Pufn stuf 6 Far

REMODELING &amp; CONST.

Phone 949-5961
Emergency 992-399 5
or 992-5700

i I I M&lt; '( h.1111(

6. 00 -

or 742-4902 after 5 p . m

HElL
RACINE PWMBING
&amp; HEATING

11 21 261C
FURNISHED ap-artm e nt, .J
rooms and ba th, 1dea1 for
worktng coup l e Phone 992 BEAUTIF UL art work for ~a l e,
2937
wood
marbe and or~g t nal
pamt1ngs e tc Phon e 99 2 7648
11 24 6tc
l1 21 5tc

Help Wanted

Ph 992-7608 berore 5 p m.

Next to Highway
Garage on Route 7
Pomeroy Route 3

-------------AWARD WINNER
PIITSBURGH ( UP!) - AI
Oliver, the Pittsburgh Pirate
outfielder who batted .321 last
season as the second best hitter
1n the National League, today
was named the winner of the
secoild annual Roberto Clemente Memorial Award.
The award Is presented by
the Pittsburgh Chapter of the
Baseball Writers AssoClation
to the P1rate who most
exemplifies the standards of
exceUence set by the late
elemente. Willie Stargell won
the first award last year.
Oliver drew 65 points, far
ahead of seven teammates.
Stargell rece1ved two votes and
R1ch1e Zisk , Rennie Stennett
"'jd Jim Rooker each one.

medi ca l tratntng

Lawn Mowers

Pr&gt;tll&lt; ' r O'i

Theatre "
9 30 p m - The

You re luck ie r today th an you II
be t omorrow 1n s1 tu at1ons
where you e;.cerc1 se conlrol or
authon ty Ge t your message
across now

Will New Leal Wither?

Rap

+++

- Washtngton Debates For t h e Seven t tes The
Parttes and the I ssues '
8 30 p m - The Gunsltnger s ' The Westerners .' ' ' Za ne Grey

JOHNSON'S

TEAFORD

News 4 13
CABLE CHANNEL FIVE

By day or hour, rea sonab le
rates. reliable people woth

All Small Appliances

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

Tomorrow l, 4

1 30 P m

BUILDING lot 80ft frontag e x
165ft The second lot on l eft on
Rtvervrew Drive
L tncoln
Hill Pomeroy. Ohto If n
te r es ted , ca ll 992 3230 after 5

11 22 SI C

MCJVIe ' The Angry Breed" 10

1· 00 2 IX' -

8-6 P.M.
ANY AGE CHILD

BOWERS
REPAIR

L - - - -- - - -

11 . 30 - Johnny Carson 3 4 15. MISSIOn Impossible 6 Janakt 33
Wide World Callfornta Jam 13 Mov1e " The Llqu tdator' 8

DAY NURSERY

Estimates.

ELECTROLUX
Va c uum
Fully Insured
Clean er comple t e wrt h at
ta c hmenls cordwr nd er and
patnt spray U sed but tn l tke
new co nd •t•on
Pay $34 45
cas h or budget plan ava tl a bl e
1970VALIANT 65x 12, 3bed r oom
Phone 992 7755
fu lly carpeted LP gas hea t
1 I 26 tfc
P hon e 992 775 1
8 25 tfc
SEWIN G Mac hmes brand new
Z tg Zag •n n ce wa lnut t able
I n Or gmal car tons
N eve r
u sed
C le arance on
74
Live m the rolling h1lls of
models
(Only
a
few
availabl e I
$43 40 cash or
Southern Ohto m your own
term s avat l able Phone 992
3 BR, all electnc mob1le
7755
home •n Southern Oh1o's
11 26 tt c
newest mobile home park
15 mtn from Athens or
STERE O radto com brnat10n B
track t ape am fm radro 4
Pomeroy Pnce reduced to
spea k e r
so und
sys t e m
get th1s mobile home park
Balance $106 84 or t erm s Ca ll
started Set up &amp; ready to
992 3965
move
mto
For further
1 1 26 ttc
detatls contact •

$25 ,000 Pyram id 8, Price " Roght 10 To Tell The Tru th 13
TBA 15 , Ohoo Elecloon 20. Marco Sportllte 33
8:00- Happy Days 13 Good T 1m es 10 America 33. Wtnn1e the
Pooh and The Blustery Day 3 &lt;, 15 , New World Com~ng 6. B
C Cartoon 8
8: 30- .' flASH 10, Evening at Symphony 33 , Movo e " Death
Stalk 3, 4, 15 , Movie " The Godchtld" 13 , Mov1e "The House
That Wouldn't Die" 6, New World Com~ng 8
9·00 - Hawaii Five 0 e. 10
9· 30 - Woman 20 , Barenbo1m On Beethoven 33
10·00 - Pollee Story 3, 4 15, Ma rc us Welbv 6, 13. Barnaby Jones
8; News 20. Englebert Humperdmck 10 Soundstage 33
11 00 - News 3, 4, 6, 8, 10. 13 15,33

Complete plumbing &amp;
heating service. Free

FREE ESTIMATE

Hollywood Squares 3, 4, Wtld , Wi l d World of Ammal s 6

22)

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept 22)

10· 30 - Your Future Is Now20 Mele Hawal l 33

Pamtmg , s1d10g , rooftng ,
paper h a ngmg , k1tch e n
cabmets, etc

8A.M. 6 PM

GHEEN'S PAINTING

7 30 -

777 Pearl Street
Middleport, Oh10
Phone 9~2 5367 or 992-3861

PHONE
949 3832 or 843 2667
All Types of
BUILDING
and REMODELING
From a shelf to a house

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

s My

Bowlmg for Dollars 6
Line ' 8 , News 10 Wtld Kingdom 15 Anttques 20

Art of Football 33

8-K EXCAVATING
COMPANY

D&amp;D
·
CONSTRUCTION

ROGER. HYSELL'S
GARAGE
On State Rt 124, 112 m1 . from

What

LEO (July 23 - Aug

By Helen and Sue Bottel

\I&lt;
,...

'

1 00 - ,Truth or Consequences 3, 4

"

Open Mon • Sat

1973 CUTLASS
S
Power
s teerrng
brakes
w mdows
AM FM sterfO t ape play er
c r utse con trol till wheel
FIREWOO D any length Ca ll
r adra l s
n ew bra k es and
992 5422 or 992 3312
s hoc k s $3 200 Phone 992 33al
II 10 26tp
or 992 3453
11 21 6tp LOWERY o r gan wrth ac
cessortes A beau tt f ul Ch n st
mas g, ft mu st be seen to
1973 GMC panel van truck
Rad tal ttres ltke new C P
appr enate May be see n at
249 Un•on Avenue or call 992
Williams 592 B r oadway St
5617
Mrddleport
1115 1'1tc
I 1 21 Ole

k tackles
challenge

COLUMBUS, Oh1o ( UP!) Pete Cusick, Oh10 Sla te's
muscular defe ns1 ve tackle,
look up the challenge thrown at
him at halflune of Saturday 's
M1ch1gan gam e by Buckeye
coach Woody Hayes.
"!want you to be able to tell
me after the game that 1t was
the greatest you have ever
played," Hayes told the 6-foot2, 252-pound Cus1ck, who has
been hobbled by a torn muscle
in h1s knee most of the year .
Followmg the Buckeyes' 1210wm, wh1ch earned them a lle
for the B1g Ten lltle and their
thll'd straight tnp to the Rose
Bowl, CusiCk went up to Hayes
and told h1m JUSt that
He was a one man gang '" the
second half, twiCe throwmg
M1ch1gan quarterback Dennis
Franklln for losses totaling 13
yards and pultmg pressure on
him when he tr1ed to pass ,
forcmg hun to throw off-target
For the gam e, Cusick was
credited wllh 13 tackles , SlX of
them solos, and his performance earned him the honor of
Umted Press Inlernat10na l
Midwest Defens1ve Player of
the Week
Best Thi s Year
"It was the best game I've
played th1s year," sa1d the
Lakewood. Ohw semor "and
the second ha lf was the bes t
I've ever played "
Cus1ck, who came to Oh10
State as a 225-pound h1gh
school fullback-hnebacker ,
worked his we1ght up to 252
w1lh a dediCated we1ghl
program wh1ch sees h1m lifting
four days a week durmg the
season and flVe m the offseason He 1s the strongest man
on the Buckeye team, bench
press1ng 500 pounds.
A second team All-Arnencan
selection as a Junior, Cns1ck
mjured his knee early m the
season. He tried to play on 1l,
but finally had to give 1t a rest.
"! probably shouldn't have
tr1ed to play at Washmgton
State," he sa1d, "but m my
mmd I thought 'this is your last
go-round ' and I didn't want to
end up sitting on the bench the
better part of the year."
He has been wearmg a brace
the last several games but sa1d
it had been restricting his
mobility, so he loosened :t for
the M1ch1gan game.
"My knee has been feeling

sell

Pyle 13

Smtle a lot

S!
Adlerian

6 30 - NBC News 3, ' ·IS. CBS News 8 10 Bewotched 6 Gomer

Limestone &amp; Fill Dirt
Com mercra I· Restdentia I
Construction &amp; Remodel

Phone 992 -3684

COMPLETE
RADIATOR
SERVICE &amp; REPAIR

GRAVE L sand Mason san d
1 m esto ne Pt t Run by th e tnn
De l 1vered Phon e 446 114 2
10 18 lf c

CA;, H p.a td fo r all makes and
models of mob il e homes
Phone area code 614 42 3 9531
4 13 tfc

M~:~~·:~~:~N~:;;~~on~~Buc
Buffalo
New Eng
NY Je ts
Ballrmre

1970 CHEVROLET Caprr p s
p b
atr cond 1tronrn g
350
aul om at rc m good cond Iron
Wtll sell r easonab l e Phon e
257 2679
11 26 6tc

1969 VW

or

I

KNAPP SHOES

318 N. 2nd Street
Middleport, Oh10

HU L L ED hrckory nu ts wood m
t rees Phon e 9&lt;19 )7 18
11'153tc

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

$ 15
au t o

TUESDAY. P '""~MBER 26,1974
News
3,
' 6 8. 10 ~ 15 Sesame Sl 20
Counseling Techn1ques 33

guaranteed .
,l
Dorer. Backhoe, Trucks

OrthopediC &amp; Correctional Work

Phone 992-7320

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

NFL Standtngs

Will build
separately .

a

$10 FOR
1unk.
cars
del•vered
$7
1unk.ed
bod 1es Phone 9&lt;~9 4484

=

On College Road

5895

DAN ARNOLD

r~~=~G;~;;ti;;·,ii;;

Television Log

Water,- Electr~c, Gas. Sewer
L1nes,
Installed. Work

g~-:· . "DAN'S SHOE REPAIR"

CHOICE BUILDING
SITES FOR SALE
IN SYRACUSE

Loca l 1 owner good w s w ttres d e lu xe tnt tr1m , w hee l
covers , r a dto, 6 c yl , real economy w1th std tran s blue
f1n n1ce

1968 CHEVROLET IMPALA

J~f':.

I

BUILDING SITES

51295

Jtneroy, 0 .. Tuesdav Nov 26, 1974

6 00 -

For Sale

51995

1970 FORD MAVERICK

TRAILER
2 to 3 bedrooms
want to take over paym en ts
Phone 985 3978
11 20 6tc

7 -The Daily 8entmel,Middlep

Business Services

WIL L keep preschoo l ctHi dren
m my home '1 to 6 years o l d 5
day s p er week Phone 99 2
5098
I I :i'O 6t c

350 V B au tom atiC. P st een ng &amp; brakes, dark blue f1n1 sh
blue mtenor, blue vmy l roo f , fa c tory a tr con dtt1oned , ltk: e
new w w t1res, rad 10 Man y other extras

OLD lurnrtur e •ce boxe s brass
beds or com plete households
Wnte M
D
Mrll er
Rt
I
Por11 eroy Oh 10 Ca ll 997 POO
10 7 74

.

Employment Wanted

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

Wanted To Buy

.

MA't'llE l SHOULD 60 OI'E~
10 Sf£ C.WCK S DAD HE 5 A
W!!E~ At;P *£1N6 AS HOW
I'M C~VCK'~ FRIENO. MA'i!!E
04E Ll 61V£ ME A DI5CO~NT

IF 1 HAD ~EEN 60RN
6EAIITIFUL, I WOL.I.DN'T HAI'e

TO 60 ~KDV6H ALL ~IS

�• '• ,
•'

Mrs. Mabel W. R idwrd.-.on die.-.
Mrs. Mabel W Richardsun,
84, Toronto , Ohio, formerly ,,f
Mei gs County. died Monday at
the Ohw Valley Hospital 111
Sleubenv1llt· fulluwiug a shor!
illness .
She wa s born ;~i Waxahmdt•,

Cell added
('l)ntinued from page 1
if the \'chicle, which was
turned into the company by a
customer who couldn't continue paying for it, passes a
trial test. The used half-ton
1971 mOdel is for sale for about
$1,100 to the village. It will be
used by the street department
if purchased.
Attending the meeting were
Mayor Hoffman, Chase, ClerkTreasurer Gene Grate and
coupcil members, Mrs. Craig,
William Walters, Allen Lee
King. Marvin Kelly and Carl
Horky.

Auto man Ford exp.e cts harder·times

Tl'X , !hl' d ~wghfl'r uf lllf' la ll'

K :.and Anna Sw(•aringen
Woodyard . A reti n·d st'hllol
tea cher who r es1llcd in Meigs
Cuunly the greater part o£ her
lifl' . she was a member of lhe
Tupper s P l ain s Chr is tian
Church, and formerly a
member of the Ros.:: Garden
Club and the Grange.
Survivmg ar{l&gt; a son, Paul B.
Ri cha rdson, Brooksville: a
daughter, Mrs. Connie Undsta mer,
Toronto;
eight
grandchildren and one greatgrandchild . She was preceded
in death in 1969 by her husband.
Okey, and by a sister .
Fur1eral services will be held
at 2 p.m. Wednesday at the
White Funeral Hom e in
Coo lvill e with John Wyatt
officiating. Burial will be in the
Oran ge Cemelery. Friends
may ca ll at the funeral home
from 2 to 4 a nd 7 to 9 th1s
evening.
o~w:w

Turkey Day game gifts

Pope condemns
abortion as

N. Mitchell, saying he was " not
satisfied with the evidence that
has been offered to prove those
two counts."
Sirica ruled the government's
case, which concluded Monday ,
was not strong enough on the
FBI perjury count to warrant
jury considerat ion and sa id the
sequestered jW'ors, who did not
hear the decision, will be
informed "at the proper time ."
The judge rejected routine
motions by four of the
defendants - Mitchell, Ehrlich~----. ~ man , Kenneth W. Parkinson
and Robert C. Mardian - for
dismissal of all charges against
them.
Sirica 's decision allows the

By CHERYL ARVIDSON
WASHINGTON ( UP!) - U.S .
District Court Judge John J.
Sirica has decided the government's case is strong enough to
allow the Watergate cover-up
trial to go forward on the
major charge against all five
defendants, obstruction of justice .
Sirica dismissed a lesser
charge of lying to the FBI,
which had been included in the
grand jury indictments of both
John D. Ehrlichman and-JOOn

Sixteen business establish·

Crow's Steak House, a bucket
ments have donated mer- of chicken; Adolph's Dairy
chandise to be given away at Bar, $3 in food: McClure's
the
Thanksgiving
Day Dairy Isle , half-gallon soft ice
alumni fo otba ll game at cream;· Kiddie Shoppe, $5 gift
Marauder Stadimn, Pomeroy. certificate : Chapman's Shoes,
The event is a benefit for the girt certificte for Dear Foams;
Meigs Cour1ty Unit of the Dutton Drugs, bottle Vaseline
Amencan Can.cei Society.
Intensive Care Lotion; Village
Tickets for the contest, which Pharmacy, man's Tim ex
begins at 2:30 Thursday af- watch; Robinson Cleaners,
ternoon, may be purchased in clean uniform; Moores, a hand
advance at Krogers, New York lantern, and N&amp;N Sports Shop ,
Clothing House, Columbia Gas, which ordered the footballs.
Cash Bahr Clothier. and the
Beacon Station. Advance ticket
price is $1 for adults and 50
cents for c hildren , wh ile at the
gate the price for adults will be
$1.25.
Head cac hes of the Middleport squad are Bruce
Wallace and John Blake, while
George Nesselroad and Bub
VATICAN CITY (UPI )
Stivers are heading the Pope Paul VI said Monday that
Pomeroy squad.
abortion is murder and cannot
Contributors are M&amp;R, a be justified by poverty,
turkey; Elberfelds, a steam ille git imacy or the world
iron; Pomeroy Bowling Lanes , population problem.
three games ; R. ·C. Bottling
The 3,500 - word declaration
Co., a case of pop; Heritage cited God's commandment:
House , shoe shirie kit; Western "Thou shalt not kill" and said
Auto , ladies' Timex watch; the problem of overpopulation
can be solved through sexual
abstinence or the rh ythm
system, but never through
abortion.
"We proclaim that none of
these reasons can ever ob·
jectively confer the right to
dispose of another's life, even
when that life is only at the
beginning," the Pope said in a
docwnent released on the eve
o£ a French parliamentary
debate on a free abortion bill.

Welfare
bilking

· probed

SPRINGFIELD, Ill. (UP! )
- Investigators probing a
Chicago welfare fraud case
have uncovered evidence of
what they say could be the
most massive public aidbilking scheme In the nation's
history.
· Joel Edelman, executive director
of
the
Illinois
Legislative Advisory Committee on Public Ald, told the
committee it may take montbs
to finish the Investigation of
charges against Lynda Taylor,
47, of Chicago.
Mrs. Taylor was scheduled
for arraignment today in Cook
County Circuit Court on a 31·
counHra)ld indictment involving her alleged receipt of
illegal welfare benefits,
medical assistance, food
stamps, Social Security and
veterans benefits.
''When the entire story is
told, I believe this will prove to
be the most massive case of
welfare fraud that has ever
been perpetrated in the 50
states," Edelman said. "It
baffles the Imagination."
Pleasant Valley Hospital
Edelman said evidence unDischarges
_
Mattie
covered by the Chicago police
Whittington , Buffalo; Jonathan
and state and federal inLilly, Point Pleasant; Mrs. ·
vestigators Indicates Mrs .
Jam..?s Smith and son
Taylor masterminded a
Ga!Hpolis Ferry ; Macil Glenn:
sophisticated, interstate
Lakin; Mrs . Clyde VanSickle
scheme In which she used 80
Southside; Mrs . Isabell~
different names, 30 addresses
Rainey, West Columbia.
Only $595
and
15 telephone numbers.
cash &amp; carry
Nannie Lee, Henderson; Alv~
She
is accused of receiving
Reed , Pomeroy.
on behalf of three
benefits
1
7.50 DELIVERED
deceased husbands and 27
children - some of them
NOW YOU KNOW
supposedly
born after Mrs.
On Sept. 6, 1949, Japan
Taylor
allegedly
underwent a
dropped the custom of counting
Florlcta
.
.
hysterectomy
in
all persons' births from Jan. 1
Sen. Don A. Moore, R59 N. Second St.
of the year of birth and adopted
Midlothlan,
chairman of the
Middleport, 0.
the Western system of birthcommittee, said new evidence
dales.
Indicates Mrs. Taylor may also
have posed as a physician in
Chicago and Michigan in a plot
For Your Dining and Listening
: to illegaUy obtain Medicaid
&gt;t payments.
P tl~S ure.. .. . .
,._ "We know for a fact she is
not licensed to jractlce anywhere," Moore said.

FOR

THANKSGIVING

COLORFUL
POM-PONS
WITH
CANDLE

Dudley's

...~ ********************************

&gt;t
&gt;t
&gt;t

*
!Jt
t

GEO-. HALL

*
*
t,.
:

AND THE
HALLMARKS
~

!*

TONIGHT 8:00 TO 12:30

i

The MElGs' INN

**
lt

*

,,*..

,..

*t~
**:
*
lt
11-

Thursday
through
Saturday, near ·'seasonable
temperatures
Thursday
through Saturday with a
chance of showers about
Saturday. Highs will be In
the low to middle 40s on
Thursday and In the middle
or upper 40s Saturday. Lows
generally will be In the lower
30s.
::::::;;:;;::;:;:;:.:::::m::::-w..-*m::::?.{-u».~

CCL plans
,yule party
Holiday dinner party plans
were made during a meetin g of
the Middleport Child Conservation League Thursda y
night at the Columbia Gas Co.
office.
The dinner will be Dec . 19 at
7 p.m. at Oscar's in Gallipolis.
There will be a gilt exchange
with wrappings on the
packages to be judged and
prizes awarded. Spring conference plans were discussed
at the meeting along with
money making projects.
Houseware orders were taken
and the group is now selling
two year calendar books.
A commlUlication was read
from Mrs . Lloyd Danner,
district
director.
The
resignation of Mrs . Charles
Cobb as treasurer of the
Middleport League and as a
member of the club was accepted. Mrs. John Blaker was
..:elected treasurer .
The meeting .was preceded
by a demonstration by Betty
Newton on foreign foods.
Guests were Mrs. Jack Welker ,
Miss Janice Schmoll and Miss
Jean Parsons.

The bonus game will run
from Dec. 3 through Dee. 31
and the numbers on the holiday
tickets will be in red. On the
left side of the ticket the figure
$1,000willappear with a double
number beneath it. On the right
side, the figure $2,000 will
appear with a double number
beneath.
When the regular weekly
lottery drawing is held, if the
double number drawn corresponds with either the $1,000 or
$2,000 special holiday bonus
number, the holder wins that
amount of money in addition to
the regular winnings.
"The reason for going to this
plan is because ticket sales
slump during the holiday
periods," said Dave Pelunis,
assistant director of public
relations for the Ohio Lottery.
"So we have gone to an additional way of winning."

Cage tourney

Ph 992 3629

•

Pomeroy

-

4

Have A Nice Thanksgiving

oay With Your Family.

WE'Ll BE CLOSED

·

•

A
T H N K S G l VI N G DAY!

,..

,..

,..

Jt

t*
Jt
!
!
!,..*

l1r*** W***'fr***********************
\

Moore said siate welfare
officials cannot estimate how
much Mrs. Taylor may have
received megally thro~out
the entire scheme, part of
which he said dateo to 1946.

,.,?;·~~=~n~~ve:.::

the state In cash assistance
alone.
,Edelman said state Investigators will put together a
report Including recommendations to the Illinois
Department of Public Aid on
how to avoid similar massive
claims In the future.
·
We believe there ·are loopbolea In the· preaent system,"
Edelman said. "Had they nol
been there this would .not have
happened."

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Desert Delicacy
Many cacti bear edible
fTuit and shelter or otherwise
help sustain creatures of the
desert community, including
man. The giant saguaro which ·sometimes towers 50
feet - niay house white-·
throated wood rats at its
base.

The Royal Crown Cola softball team of Middleport will
sponsor an
independent
basketball
t ournament
beginning Dec. 3 in the Rutland
gym, Rutland, Ohio.
Sixteen teams will be accepted for the doubleelimination event. Entry fee
will be $35. The sponsors will
award trophies to first and
second place teams plus 12
individual trophies to those
making the all-tournament
team .
Independent cage managers
interested in entering teams in
the tournament should contact
Jerry Davenport, Middleport,
992-3675 or David Lyons
Gallipolis, 446-4123.
'

r---------..
Just a Short Drive
To downtown Athens, Ohio

blame and a constnncr organization called ror a nationwide
sugar boycott.
On the New York Coffee and
Sugar Exchange Monday, the
price of raw sugar dropped 2
cents a pound, but at 59 cents a
pound it still threatens to push
the retail price to around 90
cents a pound when refiners,
packagers and retailers add
their costs and profits.
Sugar is not the only food
item hitting record prices. The
Agriculture Department said
the cost of feeding a hypothetica l family of 3.2 persons rose to
$1,779a year in October, nearly
10 per cent higher than last
November.
Department economists predicted that by the end of the
year food prices will be 20 per
cent higher than in 1973, the
biggest yearly jump ever.
U.S. automakers reported

Mitchell the way you heard him
judged on those White House
tapes by that White House
jury," Hundley pleaded, referring to the efforts by Nixon and
his top aides to get Mitcheil to
lake the blame for Watergate
•
to draw attention away from
'•
the White House.
Although admitting Mitchell
made a "conscious decision"
not to volunteer his "suspi.
Continued from page 1
~
cions" of high White House
involvement in the Watergate person to bave a new heart Implanted Inside him without havlni!
bugging, Hundley said the the old one removed. Groote Schuur Hospital in Cape Town sail!
decision was made "out· of a the two hearts In engineer lvor Taylor were out of step. A
complete sense of loyalty to his man said this caused no problems now, but the aim was to have: ··
President and former law them beating together.
Heart transplant surgeon ChrisUaan Barnard made medical ··
partner."
He added Mitchell believed at history Sunday night when he departed from the conventloniil
the time Nixon had no transplants he pioneered at the same hospital seven yeara ago 1o ·
tnsert a new heart next to the existing one. At a news conference
kn owledge of Watergate .
later,
Barnard said the operation has several advantages over
A three-member panel docthe
nonnal
operation.
.;
tors ap pointed by the court
IT_the new heart failed, It could be removed, and even replaced
exam ined the former Presiagatn:
In conventional transplant surgery this was lmpossibllf, .
dent's medical and hospital
he
sa1d.
records Monday and decided he
could bear the stress of a
PEKING-- SECRETARY OF STATE Henry A. Kissinger physical examination to see if
held
his fourth meeting with Chinese leaders In 24 houra today
he is well enough to offer
amid
diplomatic signs that he will Invite one of Mao Tse-tung's
testimony in some form at the
top lieutenants to Washington for the first Ume, Kissinger ·spent
cover-up trial.
30
minutes with ailing Premier Chou En.Jal upon arrival Monday •
Sirica's ruling leaves Mitchell
and then plunged Into sessions with Deputy Premier
evenmg
and H. R. Haldeman facing five
Teng
Hslao-ping
and Foreign Minister Chiao Kuan-hua sandcounts each, with a maximum
sentence of 25 years in prison wiching in sightseeing with his wife and two teen-age chudren.
At the opening. of this morning's session, Teng said, "I hope
and a $32,000 fine if convicted.
can
soon exchange views In Washington." Picking up the
we
Ehrlichman now is charged
with four counts carrying a diplomatic hint, Kissinger nodded across the table and said, "I
.
total sentence of 20 years in hype we can do that very soon."
''That
seems
to
be
our
common
desire,''
Teng
said. Kissinger
prison and a $30,000 fine , while
and
hiS
a1des
declined
to
spell
out
what
then
happened
In the
Parkinson is named in two
count,; and Mardian in only talks. Th~ ~ecretary has described this visit as having the aim of '
simply giVlng Peking an up-to.4ite view of American poUcy and '
one.
thinking.

News ... in Brief$

spok*

'

SHOP WEDNESDAY 9:30 TO 5 PM

It takes up where

Clearing ton ight and cold
with lows in the mid to upper
20s. Mostly sunny and cold
Thursday wiih highs in the mid
to upper 30s.

LLV.JACK left

Share misery
By Unlted Press International
WASHINGTON - PRESIDENT FORD PLANS to start
shaking up his Cabinet in January. A White House aide said two ·
Cabinet members who will depart early in the new year are
Labor Secretary Peter J. Brennan and Secretary of the Interior
Rogers C. B. Morton . Secretary of Health, Education and
Welfare Caspar Weinberger is expected to go also, along with
some other holdovers from the Nixon administration.
The only three Cabinet members who appear to have tenure,
according to the aide, are Secretary of Defense James
Schlesinger, Secretary of State Henry Kissinger and Treasury
Secretary William Simon. Ford was devoting Thanksgiving Eve
to a review of the status of the economic package which is now
before the lame duck Congress. There were increasing signs tbat
a deepening recession may cause him to switch to a more
stringent economic program, possibly with mandatory controls.

LOS ANGELES - NOT EVEN RICHARD NIXON will know
the verdict of the Watergate court's medical examiners until the
doctors report their unanimous conclusion to federal court Judge
John Slrica Friday. The three distinguished physiciaris flew back
to Washington Tuesday after examining the 61-year-old former
president at his estate in San Clemente to determine whether he
is too sick to testify at the Watergate cover-up trial.
11
The conclusion was absolutely unanimous," said Dr.
Richard Starr Ross of John Hopkins University. But the doctors
refused to say what the conclusion was . The head of the team, Dr.
Charles A. Hufnagel of Georgetown University Hospital, said
they were under strict orders from the judge not to discuss their
findings with anyone.
PARIS- PRESIDENT VALERY GISCARD D'ESTAING,
beset by plunging popularity, has promised worried Frenchmen
to do "all that is necessary" to bring infla lion and unemployment
under control. Giscard d'Estalng, a former finance minister,
said he doubts France's serious economic troubles would develop
into "gi-eat crises or great depressions ."
"I will tell you this - the government will do all that is
necessary on time to protect you from unemployment," he said
Tuesday night in a nationwide television address . "It has the will
and it has the means."
SAIGON - HUNDREDS OF RIOT POLICE carrying rilles,
ahielda and nightsticks took up positions In Saigon today on the
eve of a mass anti-government march ba!Uled by authorities. The
govenunent of President Nguyen Van Thieu announced a virtual
24-hour curlew over 150 blocks of downtown Saigon in an attempt
to block Thursday's protest.
Riot police wearing flak jackets patrolled the streets near
two suburban Roman Catholic churches sponsoring the planned
demonstration, the latest In a series of protests against the
govenunent. Organizers predicted more than 10,000 persons
would march from the churches to downtown Saigon to call for
freedom of the press and to denounce govenunent corruption.

'

...

NEW YORK - A DETAILED PATHOLOGY report showed
that no cancer penetrated beyond Margaretta "Happy"
Rockefeller's right breast, removed Monday in her second
mastectomy.
Mrs. Rockefeller's chief surgeon, Dr. Jerome A. Urban, said
Tuesday In releasmg the test results that a number of precancerous lesions were found in the breast tissue Itself.
Prospects for the complete recovery of Vice-President Nelson A.
Rockefeller's 4S-year-old wife were deemed "excellent. "

Sale Prices On Womens and

DETROIT - CHRYSLER CORP.'S ASSEMBLY plant
payroll will be slashed in half and output cut by 35 per cent when
11 begins building ears again alter a virtual shutdown between
Thanksgiving and Jan. 6. The firm's six U.S. plants will turn out
3,680 cars a day with 17,200 workers on Jan. 6, compared with
5,680 cars a day with 33,000 workejs when 197~odel car
production was at its peak in September.
More than 75,000 U.S. auto workers leaving their jobs after
today's work shifts won't return after the TbankSglvlng holiday
on Monday. Another 70,000 workers already are on long-term
layoffs that began as far back as last winter. About 55;000 of the
new layoffs wiD be at Chrysler In addition to 20,000 Chrysler
workers already on Indefinite layoffs. GM will have almost 54,000
workers off the job Monday. Ford already lists 14,925 on indefinite layoff.

Girls Coats • Childrens Wear •
Long Dresses- Mens and Boys

aria·
.. .

Home Furnishines,.

WE WILL BE CLOSED THURSDAY
FOR THANKSGIVING
TOM LAUGHLIN

Nov. 29-30, Dec. 1

DELORES TAYLOR

TheTrlalof

Jack

•

Etberfelds In Po~eroy
.

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Now You Know

enttne

Hiram R. Revels w~:~ s the
first black U. S. se nator . He
was elected from Mississippi
and served from 1870-1871

Devoted To 'Fhe Interests Uf 'fhe Meig.~-Mason Area
VOL. XXVI NO . 160
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 27. 1974
PHONE 992-2156
------------------------------------------------------

FINAL DAY OF OUR HOLIDAY SALE

Towels "' Toys • Furniture and

•

Weather

Elberfelds In Pomeroyi

Night Gowns- Sheets

NOT OPEN

(Technlcolorl
Rober! RedfO!'d
(PG!
tarloons
Show Star+s 7 p.m.

miiiioo.

,.

Tonight thru Thursday
November 26-28

JEREMIAH JOHNSON

that mid-November sales were tion and lay off workers ,
down 35 per cent from the bring balance between til
depressed period a year ago, ventorles and sales.
...
when the Arab oil embargo cut
In other economic devel.!!"'iiOIA
sharply into car sales.
ments:
-Prices on the stock ma~t
The first nine selling days in
November were the worst dropped slightly. The D91"
since 1970 in an Industry Jones Industrial average of-30
already scheduled to lay off blue chip stocks dropped 3:38
200,000
workers
before polnta to 611.M. The New York
Christmas.
Stock Exchange said mem[jer
Henry Ford II, chairman of firms lost SM.! mUllon In !l)'e
Ford Motor Co., said the auto third quarter of 1974, bringing
industry has not yet hit bottom, the loss for the first nliie
and he was critical of the months to nearly $92
goverrunent for falling tO: take
-U.S. reserve IIIISI!Ia sllpgtd
action.
'
$3 million to $15.89 billion ;;In
" We're in the middle of a October but the U.S. g!ld
recession and we just can't sit stockpile held steac:IY at $11-.66
there," said Henry Ford II. "I bi!Uon, .the Treasury Dep&amp;ft.
don't see anything specific ment said. Convertible foreliiil
currenCies held' by t}je
being done in Washington."
Workers in the appliance and Trea#lir.Y and the Feder.al
electronic industries also are . Reserve s)oS!em declined t63
hard-hit by production cut- million to $193 million.
backs.
-The dollar continued ~· a
General Electric announced general decline on all w&lt;Jt!d
the idling of ,6,800 work~s money markets Monday, IV!:th
nearly half of the work force the exception of Italy and
at a major appliance facility at Japan. The price of gold InLouisville, Ky. The workers creased.
,;.
will be idled for at least a week,
-More major banks lowl!l1d
GE said.
their prime Interest rates "10
The Commerce Department between 10 and 10~ per cent,
reported that the backlog of and an economist with tlie
unsold gooda held in inventory First National Bank of Chlc&amp;ko
continued in October to out- predicted he prime Inter.~
strip sales, a certain sign tbat rate could drop to 8 per cent :by
businesses will reduce produc- mld-1975.
~

Jackets- Handbags- Womens

MEIGS THEATRE
Fri., Sat., Sun.

...
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opens Dec. 3

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CLEVELAND (UPI) - A
bonus lottery with additional
weekly winnings of $1,000 and
$2,000 will be held during the
holidays, the Ohio Lottery
Commission announced Monday.

By JEFFERY L. SHELER

SPECIAL
CENTERPIECE

·:

trial to move into its second
major phase -defen se presentations by each of the aides and
associates of former President
Richard Nixon on trial for the
cover-up of the bugging scandal.
Mitchell will be the first to
offer his defense and was
expected to ta ke the stand
today .
In an open ing statement to
the jury Monday afternoon,
Mitchell's lawyer, William G.
Hundley , said his evidence will
show that Mitchell not on ly had
no motive to cover
up
Watergate but was himself a
victim of the plot.
" Don 't you iu&lt;h!e John

Bonus lottery is announced

pure murder

~

~~

·~ ·

By RICHARD HUGHE'l
UPI Business Writer
Aml'rican s got warnings
Monday of higher food prices
und more unemployment, and
the chairman of Ford Motor
Co. accused Washinglon of
inaction in the middle of a
recession.
There was an encouraging
note for home-buyers. The
Federal Home Loan Bank
Board said mortgage iriterest
rates on new homes dropped to
9.17 per cent in October for the
first decline in 17 months.
"Interest rates might flatten
out over the next three months," a board spokesman said.
In the wake of a 400 per cent
increase in sugar prices, the
Ford administration was told
15,000 independent bakeries
could go out of business unless
sugar prices declined. Sugar
refineries said they were not to

Trial goes on for Nixon men

16 merchants providing

•I •I
!,

•

8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday;•Nov. 26. 1~74 '

TURKEY PREPARATION- One of the members of the
Pomeroy alumni squad that will tackle the Middleport alums
Thursday, Mike Werry, is shown here attempting a pass
during drills on the Middleport field last week. Chairman of
the game, Wallace Hatfield, expresses his thanks to Meigs
High School Athletic Director and head football coach
Charley Chancey for his assistance in providing equipment
and the game site, Pomeroy Stadium, for the first annual
alumni game.

I
I

Annexation is approved
··~

The Meigs County Com· . In other business, ~!em
missioners Tuesday approved Twp. Trustees asked the
a petition for annexation to the commissio ners about imVillage of 1.\acine submitted by provements to Red Hill Road
Frank W. Porter, attorney, and near the mine complex. Attending were Robert Clark,
Tom Wolfe , agent.
The annexed area will go Henry Wells, Warden Ours,
south to · the centerline of Commissioners, and Mary
Yellow Bush Creek, east to Hobstetter, acting clerk.
Meigs County Road 28 and
Hogg Hollow Road, then
Veterans Memorial Hospital
westerly to the Ohio River,
Admitted
Walter
then south to the corporatiOn
Shasteen, Pomeroy; Orba
limits of Racine.
Stout,
Pomeroy;
Doris
Halfhill, Middleport; Charles
Hawk, Pomeroy.
LOCAL TEMPS
Discharged- Barbara Baer,
The temperature in downKathleen
Shaine, Pauline
town Pomeroy at 11 a.m. today
was 55 degrees under sunny Derenberger, Eunice Christy,
May Bissell, Wilma Anderson ..
skies.

By United Pr..s International ·
President Ford has submitted a $302.2 billion federal
budget th~! one administration
official said would throw 50,000
people out of work and push the
jobless rate as high as 6.7 per
cent.
1
'The President's aim is a
sharing of the burden and
dividing up the misery," White
House Press Secretary Ron
Nessen said Tuesday.
Federal Budget Director Roy
Ash, who predicted the 50,000
unemployed, said the jobless
would include 3,000 federal
employes.
In other economic developments, the Commerce Department reported the United
States registered a surprising

Budget of $302.2
billion may put
50,000 on relief
surplus in its balance of
payments in October.
The trade surplus of $29.4
billion was the first since the
$92.8 billion figure in April and
only the second since the end of
the Arab oil embargo, the
department said.
In Washington , United Mine
Workers officials rejected ,
then accepted a proposed
settlement of the national coal
strike.
In an interview with the
Detroit News, Henry Ford,
chairman of the Ford Motor

Radar on duty now
The Pomeroy Police Dept.
has put radar to work this
week . The result is selfevident:
Nine defendants forfeited
bonds on speeding charges in
the court of Mayor Dale E.
Smith Tuesday night. They
were Reed J. Woodford,
Ashland , Ky., $27.70; Joseph
Halfhill, Cheshire, $20.70;
Donald
Wilhelm,
Point
Pleasant, $18. 70; Johnny
Miller, Middleport, $16. 70;
Edwin Sigler, Rutland, $21.70;

John Pierotti, Cheshire, $22.70;
Diane Bachtel, Pomer oy,
$20. 70 ;
Edward
Haye s,
Pomeroy, $23.70, and Paul
Forbes, Minersville, $18.70.
Terrence Carson, Reedsville,
was fined $20 and cosl.'l and
James Ables, Minersville, $12
and costs, both for speeding.
David Grindstaff, 21, Racine,
was fined $5 and cosl.'l for
passing on a yellow line and $10
and costs for reckless
operation.

Co., said there will be more
layoffs in the auto industry
unless the governments acts.
"There's no question we are
heading for a depression," he
said.
In other developmenl.'l :
- Michigan National Bank of
Detroit, the state's fifth largest
bank, said it will lower its
prime interest rate for
business loans beginning
Monday to 9'1• per cent, the
nation's lowest.
- The stock market gained.
One New York analyst, who
said the rally had the potential
for a 40 to 60-point gain, said a
" high degree of investor
panic" was responsible for its
losses in the recent weeks.
- The U.S. dollar fell further
on most world money markets.
The price of gold increased.
- The soft drink industry told
a Washington hearing the
whol..ale price for a case of
soda pop could jump from the
present $2.60 to as high as $4.80
if the wholesale prices of sugar
reaches $1 per pound as
predicted.
-In Knoxville, Tenn., the
Tennessee Valley Auth~ority
(Continued on page 11 )

Ohioans ignore request
to conserve on energy
COLUMBUS \ UPI) - Ohi·
oans
have not voluntarily
1
curbed their use of energy,
which has hurt the state's
economy, according to David
Sweet, director of the Ohio
Department of Development.
Sweet, who also heads the
Ohio Energy Emergency Commission, said the only conservation taking place is the
· rationing of natural gas suppiles to industries by utilities,
which results In layoffs and

TEN CENTS

further damages the state's
economy.
" Ohio citizens can help
prevent further layoffs due to
natural gas and coal shortages," Sweet said. "I urge
every Ohioan to cooperate and
help save jobs."
The commission has recommended a number of ways to
save energy, Including:
- Use diswashers only when
they are full.
- Wash a full load of clothes
or use the load selector for

~

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. ....... '•

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THERE WAS FRUSTRATION in downto)VII Pomeroy Tuesday when eastbound traffic off
Butternut St. was blocked at Court St. by the Boone Coleman Construction Co. water line
project on Second St. The only other access to the east uptown is on Main St. along the river,
However, traffic off Butternut onto Main can turn ~nly west. The result was, lacking police to'
direct drivers at Butternut and Main, drivers either ignored the "no left turn" or had to go.
right, downriver, and turn around later to move through town upriver to the east.

Miners to vote Monday
WASHINGTON (UPI) - If
striking coal miners approve a
proposed contract finally
okayed by their union leadership Tueaday they could be
back at work next week with a
64 per cent Increase in pay and
benefits.
United Mine Workers President Arnold Miller said the
miners wlll vote next Monday
by secret ballot on the threeyear pact and the results will
be known within 24 hours, far
less time than the 10 days to
two weeks previously thought
necessary.
" We're going to do everything we can to expedite" the
complicated ratification

smaller loads.
-Repair all leaking faucets.
- Insulate hot water pipes In
unheated areas.
- Turn off hot water heaters
when leaving for one week or
more.
-&amp;t furnaces four degrees
below normal temperature.
- Reduce the thermostat
another four degrees at night.
-Make sure all filters are
clean.
- Use lights only when
necessary.

'

.

'

procedure, Mlller said.
The 120,000 striking miners
got the chance to vote on the
contract proposal to end the
strike, now In il.'l16th day, only
after the 31knem her UMWA
bargaining council reconsidered two previous rejections . Council approval Is
necessary before a rank-andfile vote.
W.J. Usery Jr., assistant to
the president for labor relations, said alter the council's
decision: "We have just talked
to the President and he 's
delighted. I told him the
bargaining council had ratified
and he said he hoped the
miners could soon be back to
work in the coal fields."
Miller said "We raised the
total contract package for
UMWA miners to a 64 per cent
increase in wages and benefits.
That's the fattest labor settlement in this decade ."
He was also angry with the
bargaining
council
for
rejecting the revised pact
twice earlier, once just after
the strike began and again
earlier Tuesday.
HJ thought they were sincere.
But after today's vote, I have to
wonder," he said.

Tne oargammg council, he
said, should "accept its
responsibility and allow the
membership of this union to
vote on their contract. I believe
that the membership of this
union should have the right to
express its wlll. "
Miller introduced the lengthy
ratification procedure as one of
his reforms after he was
elected president . But he
nearly got bowled over by it.
Coal negotia tions be ga n
Sept . 3 and a tentat1ve
agreement was set tled upon
N9v. 13, the day after the old
contract expired. But th e
council sent Miller back to the
negotiations for adjustments.
Three days ago, another
tentative agreement with the
Bituminous Coal Operators
Association was worked out
under auspices of Usery and
Treasury Secretary William E.
Simon.
The contract prov ides for
substantial pay increases,
large pension increases, an
extra holiday, more vaca tion
time and paid sick leave,
several safety features, more
jobs for union mines, and
extended health coverage,
particularly for widows.

Congress stirring

Enough and some to share

\
JOHNNY NASH
Nash, elec ted
worshlplul master of Middleport Masonic Lodge 363,
F&amp;AM, will be Installed at
7:30 p.m. on Dec. 21 at the
Middleport Masonic Temple.
Members of the Masonic
orders,
Eastern Star,
DeMolay
and
Jobs
-Daughters are welcome.
Robert King will be the Installing officer. Nash lives
with his wife, Mildred, and
two ch ildren, Lisa and Tren~
at 723 Grant Sl, Middleport.
Outgoing master Is Darrell
Bechtel.
Johnny

WASHINGTON (UPI) President Ford's veto of an
increase in veterans benerits
and deep concern over his
handling of the economy have
stirred the strongest protest
yet within the ranks of
congressional Republicans.
The simmering discontent
exploded on both issues at a
meeting of Senate Republicans
Tuesday.
The result: Republicans will
abandon Ford on the veterans
veto and help try to override It
and will meet next week to
explore new economic initiatives.
Although Ford has come in
for some criticism from
Republicans on the Nixon
pardon, amnesty for draft
evaders and a few other issues,
it was the first Ume the
disenchantment has become so
widespread .

Christmas shopping guide
Readers are invited to use Ibis Nov. 27lBoue of Tbe Dally
Sentinel as Its Shopping Gulde during the upcoming
Christmas Season.
• Hometown merchants, ao their nollces obow, have made
every effort to bave on band a wide selecUon of merchandlse.
Tomorrow, Thanbglvlng Day, will be a holiday for DaUy
Sentinel employes, Publlcatlon will resume with the Friday,
Nov. 29 Issue.

I

I

•.

';.~.(, --

I

The GOP criticism came as
Cong re ss adj ourned for a
Thanksgiving break. The Senate returns Monday and the
House Tuesday .
In rapid order Tuesday,
Congress passed a nd sent to
the White House a $33 billion
appropriations bill for labor,
health, education and welfare
and an $851.5 million
vocational rehabilitation bill
that Ford insisted he had
irrevocably pocket vetoed.
The House also approved • $3
billion military construction
authorization bill a nd the
Senate a $156 million, threeyear program to establish safe
standards
fo r
drinking
water.
Congressional leaders se t
Jan. 14 as the orening day of
the 94th Congress.
Senate Democratic leader
Mike Mansfield announced
Congress wo~ld complete
action on appropriations bills,
the Rockefeller nomination,
strip mining legislation, and
consider a trade bill and
"sundry odds and ends" before
quitting around Dec. 20 .
.Sen. John G. Tower, R-Tex.,
chairman of the Senate GOP
Policy Conunittee, said Republicans planned to meet next
Tuesday for an "exploratory
session and debate" on the
economy.

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            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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                <text>11. November</text>
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    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="39093">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
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    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
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        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="39092">
              <text>November 26, 1974</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
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</item>
