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20 _ The Datlv Sentmel, MaddJ~port- Pvtm'IL l~, 0 , Tu e~d:1y, Dt·c . 24, 1~174
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the d.ay after .

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By Chet Tannehill
executive editor
- Cardwlogist Dr. Weldon Walker of Wh1Le MmHJrial
Medical Center, Los Angeles, says m Hn article m the .Journ.r:tl of
the Amencan Medical AssociatiOn that the U.S spend' $11.5
b1lhon annually takmg care or cigaret lung cancer v1l'Lims On
the other hand, the lobby-domma ted federal gove rrunrnt has
Increased pnce supports to tobacco growers by 34 JX'l . durmg the
last derade.
Whom their right mind would do that? We would. How ~1bout
that, Mr. Congressman Miller ?
S. F (ROBBIE) ROBINSON OF MULBERRY AVE,
Pomeroy, retired from the laundry and dry cleanmg busmess
who likely has rontributed in his life lime as many hours to public
affa•rs as the next fellow, lhmks Gov James Rhodes will do
something about our highway needs m Me1gs County . In fact, the
"word" was sent down in Rhodes' electwn campa ign for Meigs
Countians to count on It
Doing something for Meigs County highways has been
regarded m the past as completmg the four-lane relocation from
Darwm to what soon wiU be the south end of the Athens U S 33
by-pass.
" We need something else way, way ahead of the four lanes to
Athens," said Robbie , who for several terms conducted busmesslike Pomeroy council meetings from the mayor's chair at the
head of the long table in town hall, E. Serond St.
The way Mr. Robinson sees It, the new governor w1ll be
finding soon that State Route 124 from Pomeroy to Salem Center
needs to be straight and rebUilt ahead of the Darwin-Athens
proJect.
"We're losmg milling famihes every day to Alhany ,
Wellston, Athens and pomls between ," sa1d Robbte , and he had
names to prove 1t. These folks are not about to pu t their hfe on the
line getting to and from work ; there','&gt; enough of that underground after they get on the job.
Mr. Robinson, a lifelong, loyal R~ublican who works at it,
also thinks the proposed new Ohio River brtdge from Great Bend
to Ravenswood will be buil~ in the next Rhodes admimstration.
ll seems pretty weU agreed locally that the Rt. 124 modernization should come ahead of the U.S. 33 four lanes. Tbe logic
appears unassailable : We have no business makmg il easier for
people to get out of Me1gs County to do business, which IS about
all four lanes to Athens and points north would accomplish.

50,000 more men idled
n~ Umtt·d l•rcss International

New

Helms headed the CIA from

1966 until hJS appointment as

ambassador to Iran in 1973. He
has already been recalled
twice from his post to testify
before congressional com ~
mittees on rovert CIA activities, particularly m Chile.
Kissinger is doubly involved
as Helms' boss in the Foreign
Servrce and as President
Ford's national serurity advisor and chairman of the socalled 40 Committee, which
reviews all covert intelligence
operations.
Feastmg Is an integral part or the Christmas celf'bl aThe Times saJd in a detailed
LIOn ~ymbolizin g not only r e) olcmg at tht&gt; f'Omm g of Chnst
but, also, tl1e sp tnt of shann~ and brot!wrly lov P which
dispatch that the CIA under
IS characte tlstw of t11e season Lik e so ma ny ot11er ac;p ~'c ts
Helms had set up intelligence
of Chnstmas, 1t IS a ble nd of Chn.c;tmn and prf'-ChrtstJan
flles on at least!O,OOO for antitraditions, strongly infl uenced by local cuc:tom~
In Italy the dts hes of the Chnstmn.s rea.st vary WlclPly
war and other activities since
df'pendmg on the regwn In t l1 e 1101 th. for rxa mpl t&gt; tlw
the late 1950s and 1960s.
meal may bE&gt;gm wltn cappe ll f' l li I' little hots 1 stuffed
Sen. John Sparkmam, D\\llh meat or t ortf&gt;l lim. n sor t uf ravJOII . toll ottrd by a
mam rllsh of meat. which may b ~ a nythin g from JOast
Aia ., who will take over as
turkey w1th chestnut stuffing to zampone a pork sa u sagp
chairman of the Senate
pac ked 111 a plJ(S leg Sl110thPn·d w1th le ntil s
Fore.tgn Relations Cormruttee
l n thr a1ra a1 ound RomE&gt;. thr trad1t10nal dish of Chnstin the new Congress, joined
m.as Eve IS cap1tone, ·a laJgE' ff'mnle eel. roa stPd. bflkrd.
or fnf'd follo\\tng a rPlJgiou s trndJIJon \\ hl rh presrnh€'s
Proxmire in demanding an
a mratless dmner on Chn~tmas Eve tlw V1g1lHt or Chnstmvestigation
of the CIA and
mas v1g 1l In accmda ncr \\ 1tll this tradi t ion the Roman
questioning of Helms.
ftsh markr&gt;t held t he mght uf Decern bPr 23rd, 1s a pee ulm r
ft'ature uf th e Christmas ob"erva nce
"I have been shocked by the
In the south of Italy, the fea stm g usually begms \\ith
revelations regarding CIA acm acato nl w1th meat and tomato .:: auce. followP d by ch1cken
tivities in the United States,"
01 m eat m Jelly .
·
Sparlanan said in a statement.
Par tJculaily charactenst1c ot Ch1ls tmas fea1' tm g in all
r egions are sweets fnn tca kes of vnnous types 1 pa nettone 1
"It is my intention in the new
and other sweets m wh 1r.h nuts and honey figure promiCongress
to have the Foreign
nently
Relations Committee look into
T he Christmas season rolncldPs w1th the len g th e nm ~
day and the bf'gmnmg of the New Yf'ar, and from ancient
these matters . I hope that Mr .
tunes nu ts have bPf'n a sym bol of ff'rtihty and a prom1se
Helms wbo is now ambassador
of l he n ext year's harve~t. a lso reprf'sentmg h ope for Into Iran will be available for
creas e m herds and ftocks. and the family , as \\Cll Th e
these hearings since many of
use of honey, the most cotn.mon S\\ee ten e r m anrient Rome
was a tJadJLJonal v.ay of conv&lt;.'Ylllg t h e w1.&lt;:h !h:.'lt the new
the things now being brought to
year m 1ght be as sweet as the gaft.
light occurred while he was
head of the CIA."
Other lawmakers joined in
demanding an enquiry.
Sen. Lowell Weicker, RConn., a member of the Senate
Watergate Committee, said
that legislation to create a joint
intelligence oversight committee was "long overdue."
He said he and Sen. Howard
Baker, R-Tenn ., also a
member of the Watergate
Committee, would reintroduce
legislation to create a committee to cheek on the CIA and
other intelligence bodies.
In a related development,
congressional sources said
Rep. Michael Harrington, DMass., plans a lawsuit against
Kissinger, Treasury Secretary
William E . Simon and Colby
for subversive CIA activities in
Chile.
The CIA was said to have
spent some $9 million in
brtbing Chilean politicians,
newspapers, labor Wlions and
students to prevent the election
of Marxist President Salvador

Italian Foods at Christmas
Vary Aecording to Regions

Alleode who died in a 1973
coup, m Santiago.
ColbY. met met today with top
aides, according to an agency
spokesman, but had no immediate comment on the
newspaper reporl.

mak ~n g

have been wh1ch makes l01es t [)lodueb,
!he a u craft , la id off t,400 \'vOJker s fur two

thJs rolllmck "

Gold sold m Em ope for alltnne lugh pnces of up to $195
.dumtnum, forest produel'&gt;, and wet'ks !-l f,H·tmg Monday 1n an oLm ce Monday. Dealers
manufm·tw·tng mdustnes, af· planls in Alab&lt;:anta, Mtss ass tppl, atlributed the rush to specula fectm~ more Lhdn 50, 000 wor- Arkdn sas and Okhtiluma The lwn over the liftmg of the ban
kers
cornpany ah cady fur loughed on Amencans buymg gold Jan .
US Sh•t'i. \\ihtch prevwusly 10,000 workers m the northwes t- I
amwunced tl ll average pt!CC Cl n Sla tes dUIITl g the huhdctj S ,
In tradan g on the New York
lnl'll'ase of 4 7 per ce nt , bowed " The Sm ger Co ordc1cd plant Stock Excha nge, the Dow Jones
to Wlutc House pressure 1·losmgs of up tu three weeks at mdustnal ave rage fe ll 8 84
Mond&lt;Jy cmd rolled th ~ ln ke a number or domeshc and pomts to 589.64, 1ts wot st loss
back tu an eve n 4 per cen t Two overseas facJ! JtJes, affectmg Since a drop of 9.46 to 577 60 on
ot he1 steel fu ms announted 20,000 emp loyes
Dec. 6 In the past t\',O sess ions ,
pr1ee muca scs or less than 4
The Ormet Corp , 1-111 dlllltll- the Do\oli 's 30 industn al blue
pcr cent
num produte1 , sa1 d 1t w1ll chip stocks have dropped 14 79
In F.urope, the pn ce of gold reduee productJUn .J~u1 2 by 32 p01nts
1 ccH.:hed
an all-tunc high per cent at facto nes m
Stocks fell on the New York Hanmbal, Ohw , and Burnside
Stoc k Exchange
I.::t
The natwn 's coa l mmers
U.S. Steel Corp announced Ormet to clost•
we re bac k at work m full 1ts rollbac k le:ss tha n two hours two potlin es
s trength Monday for the first after two othe r ma JDI prodUL' HANNIBAL. Oh1o r UP IJ tJme m SIX weeks. MmHlg was ers announced pnce htkcs Th~
slopped Nov 12 for a month b} nahan 's biggest stee lrnakcr The Ormel Corp says it will
a mmers' stnke, and afterw::ard sa id 1t would not JaJS(' pnces close two poth nes at 1ts local
n1any p1ts were picketed by aga m for S I X 111 0nths barri ng a lurmnwn plan t Jan .2.
m1ne construdwn workers, who "unforseen lll a JOI econom1c
The shutdown w11l result in a
accepted a new contra ct duPmg events "
32 per cent red uctwn m the
the weekend
No. 2 producer Bethlehem 250,000-ton an nual output at the
But
McDonnell-Dou g la s Steel Corp a nnoune~d a 21 2 per fcH.:1ilty
Corp , the a'natlon gnHJt , dosed cent mcrease on 1 oiled stee l
1ts Southern Cdhrorma opera- produc ts, ::~nd WheelJng-PJttshons for &lt;1 week starling burgh Steel Corp reused pnces
MAGIC OF MAGI
Monday, 1dhng 21,000 worke rs an average 01 5 1 ~ per cent on
Believed to hav e occult
w1thout pay m an effort to get steel tubmg used m the oil powers, the W1se Men were
the Umted Auto Workers and mdustry.
ca ll ed Mag1 , the root of our
the In ternatiOnal AssociatiOn of
U.S Stee l's ongmally an- words mag1c and magiCian
Maclunasts to ngrcc to a ne\'·t' noun ce d p11ce h1kc a week ago
Mag1 were held to be
contract
was mel by an unmed1ate ma g 1c1ans or soothsayers
McDonnell-Douglas sa1d 11 demand for JUShfJcallon by They were also ancient pnest.s
would pay 10.000 other workers Presiden t Ford Ford sa id who travelled far away to
Idl ed b) the s hutdown for the Monday he wa s pleased w1lh many lands in order to
week's layo ff
" the athtude of U.S . Steel m establish a following.

Helms under
Proxmire's g uns
WASHINGTON WP!l - Sen. Wilham Proxmire, D-Wis , demanded Monday that Secretary of
State Henry A. Kissinger fire Richard Helms as
ambassador to Iran for alleged illegal CIA spying
on Americans while Helms headed the controv.,rsial agency.
Proxmire also asked acting Attorney General
Laurance Silberman to have the Justice Department "take immediate legal action agamst any and
all officials" who violated the 1974 National Security
Act which established the Central Intelligence
Agency.
President Ford warned current CIA Director
William E. Colby Sunday that he would tolerate no
such spying on Americans in this country during his
administration. Proxmire has long been a foe of
various covert activities of the CIA and lost no time
in reacting to a Sunday New York Times report
detailing alleged spying on thousands of Americans
by the agency beginning in the 1950s.
Proxmire made his requests in letters to
Kissinger and Silberman Kissinger 's office
acknowledged receipt but had no immedta te
comment.

lay&lt;Jffs

W~·ye rh aeuscr C(J. o£ Te~cuma,

(lfl noun ced

111

Bomb threats
made against ·
Rom&lt;m
ROME (UP!) - The NcoFascist Black Order de~a,~d~d'
today that the Roman Catholic
ch ur ch distribute tts vast
wealth among the Italian
people. It said it would set ·off
bombs m churches throughout
the country on Christmas Day
if the church refused.
A note bearing a swastika
with a fasces in the middle:and
delivered to the ANSA news
agency threatened "carnage"
on Christmas Day.
"Black Order commands
that if the church and ils pontiff
do not distribute thetr v~st
pecuniary wealth to the Italian
populace, we will put explosives m the cathedrals or the
prmcipal cities of Italy, " the
note sa id.
..
"U the chartlable mshtutlons
do not accept the sums which
the church must g1ve, we Will
make carnage."
It satd the "slaughter will
take place on the 25th day_, of
th1s month."

MEIGS THEATRE
TONIGHT thru THURSDAY
NOT OPEN
FRI. , SAT., SUN
Dec. 27 ·28-29

LADY KUNG FU
and
OUR TIME
CTechnicolor)
Starn ng Pamela Sue Ma rtin

k4t

~t~t4Au

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From All of Us.
f~

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noon

Pomeroy

The MEIGS INN

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1

Ben Franklin I
Store
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J

POMEROY, OHIO

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At

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day's New York Tunes
The 50-page report, prepared
by CIA ch1ef W1lham E Colby,
was dispatched Wednesday by
spec1al A1r Force flight to Ford
in Va1l, Colo.
The 'f1mes charged the CIA
Illegally spied on and collected
dossiers on as many as 10,000
Americans.
Richard He!Jns, CIA director
when the alleged operations
took place m the late 1950s a nd
1960s, "categorically denied"
the charges Tuesday m a
message to Kissinger from his
present post as U.S. ambasssador m Iran .
Helms
was
reported
vacationing somewhere 1n
Europe.
Angleton told UP! Tuesday
he was resigning because of
CIA "police state" acttvities
but retracted some of his
remarks
Wednesday,
Lelephomng UPI to say he

would hke to get some thmgs
"slra1g ht ened out" from
previous talks
" My resignation was reluctant," he said. " I was not
pushed .
"The pornt I'm malting is
that the (Times) story was
highly exaggerated and as far
as I'm concerned I had no
knowledge or any activities of
such by the agency but I can't
speak for the agency."
He said he did not reraU
saymg Tuesday that he did
have knowledge of alleged
illegal CIA domestic activities.
Why, then, d1d he res1gn If he
lllSisted he wasn't ''pushed ?''
"Let's put 1t this way,"
Angleton sa1d "I was asked by
higher authorities.''
Angleton suggested contaclmg former FBI agent Sam
Paptch in New MeXIco about
domestic espionage activities
"Sa m
knows,"
said

Angleton
Pap1ch , now executiVe direc~
tor or New Mexaco's orgaruzed
cnme preventiOn commiSsion
sa1d in Albuquerque there wer~
moves afoot to destroy the FBI
and CIA.
"Wh.Ht IS lakmg place ts
leading to a comple te decay
and destruction of our intelh-

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at y

en tine

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.To All of You!

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ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
I

TRAFFIC DEATHS ON THE NATION'S lllGHWAYS today
appeared to have fallen short of National Safety Council
estimates that between 200 and 260 persons would die during the
one-day Christmas holiday period.
More than 100 persons were killed in traffic accidents before
the :JO.bour holiday ended. However, a final count was not expected until later today. Indications were the toU would fall short
of the council's predictions and dip below the 23) fatalities
rerorded during the last one-day Chcistmas holiday .count six
years ago.

Driver escapes
wrecked auto
A well-known railroader,
forred orr of Middleport HiU
and over a 25-loot embankment
Wednesday mght, was able to
crawl from hiS car to safety.
The car, which caught fire, was
demolished.
Sheriff Robert C. Hartenbach's Dept. said Charles
W. Searles, 500 Pearl St., was
treated and released from
Veterans Memorial Hospital
after suffering apparent minor
injures.
Driving north on the downhill
side. of Middleport Hill (CR 5)
at 6:15 p. m . just oulside the
town corporation hne, an on·
coming car forced Searls orr
the right side of the road. The
other car driver did not stop.
The Middleport Emergency
Squad transported Searles to
.e Pomeroy hospital and the

•

Middleport Fire Depariment
was also on the scene.
The sheriff's department
also reported an · accident on
Bownan 's Run near Syracuse
at 8:30 a. m. Tuesday when a
car driven by Everett C.
Ransom,
Letart
Falls,
traveling in fog, went off the
road and struck a bank or dirt.
The Ransom car received
medium damages .
At 9 a. m . Tuesday, Sidney
Durst, Rt . I, Portland ,
traveling on the private drive
of the Jaymar Coal Co.,
received a minor nose injury
when his car struck a ca ble
across the road. The cable was
across the drive because the
company was closed, "the
sheriff's department said.
Damages to the Durst vehicle
were moderate .

Too much liquid cheer
charged in 2 accidents
Two persons were charged
w1th OWl over the Chnslmas
holidays when the Galha-Me1gs
Post, Ohio- Highway Patrol
probed three auto accidenls
Tuesday and Wednesday
At 4:30 p.m., on TR 144 111
Me1gs County, William A.
Barnhart, 20, Rt 3, Pomeroy,
was westbound when an
eastbound vehicle, dnven by
Judy Hall, 20, Pomeroy, attempted to turn left, causing
the Barnhart veh1cle to shde
into an embankment to avOid a
collision
However , after
h1ttmg the embankment, the
Barnhart auto slid around and
hit the Hall vehiCle
Hall was cited for failure to
yield to oncommg traffic. No
mjuries were reported, and
both autos suffered slight
damage.
At 11 · 3o Chris!Jnas Eve ,
George E Bush, 28, Rt I,

Vmton, was northbound on SR
7 near the Gavm Power Plant,
v.hen he lost control of h1s
veh1cle, WJlh lhe auto going Off
the left stde of the road and
strikmg an embankment. Bush
was charged with OWl, while
hts vehicle was moderately
damaged. Bush apparently
was not injured
Al 1:30 ChriStmas mormng,
Donald E. F1sher, 21, Rt . 1,
Gallipolis, was southbound on
SR 7, one m1le south of US 35,
when h1s auto went off the right
s•de of the road and struck
three parked cars in the
Carroll Norris Dodge parking
lot. F1sher was cited for DWI ,
and was mjured and later
treated at Holzer Medical
Center.
His
auto
was
demolished, while two of the
Carroll Norl'ls cars were
severely damaged and the
th~rd moderately damaged.

Shoppers b_ought
less, paid more

WASHINGTON (UP!) This year's ChrJSimas shopping pattern was to buy fewer,
more expenSlve presents.
"What we're in basically is a
buyer's market," said Richard
Marcus , president (If the
prestigious Texas retailer N•eman-Marcus.
A UP! survey taken Christmas Eve backed up his
assessment.
Sears, Roebuck &amp; Co., the
natwn's largest retailer,
reported a record high of
holiday pertod sales, although
fewer umt.s were sold.
A Sears spokesman sa1d preChristmas price reductions
may have played a factor.
Discount stores such as F. W.
Woolworth's Woolco and S. S.
Kresge's K-Mart were attracting a shoppers wbo traditionally palromzed department
stores.
11
F'rom the way some of the
people shopping here are
dressed, you can tell they have

more money than our usual
customers," a Wool co spokesman said.
In Chevy Chase, Md., two
competmg department stores
had markedly different shoppers.
Woodward &amp; Lothrop, a
department store wh1ch offered pre-ChriStmas price culs ,
was doing a brisk busmess.
Across the street in Lord &amp;
Taylor , wh1ch had relattvely
few items "reduced for
clearance,' ' less shoppers were
VISible.
Woodward &amp; Lothrop President Edwin K. Hoffman said
his stores did a rerord $2
rrullion m business Monday and
sales were "good" again
Tuesday . "Sales have never
been higher," Hoffman said.
"But the number of transactions is down ."
WtUiam J . Lippmcott, chatrman of Lord &amp; Taylor, which
has 17 stores from Houston to
(Continued on page 10)

showers on Monday. Highs
will be In the upper 30s and In
the 40s and overnight lows
will be mostly In the 20s.
:·

gence serv1ce operations," PaP•ch sa1d
". What 1s appearmg in the
press concernmg the CIA• and
the FBI 1s a bonanza for the
Soviet mtelhgence agency/'
Pap ich said "They are licking
Lhetr chops watchmg tLS un.
dress ourselves, observ mg
whil e we destroy ourselves "

Vail makes
Ford happy

By HELEN THOMAS
VAIL, Colo. &lt;UPI l - President Ford makes no bones
about how he loves sk1m g He
gets a hghl m his eyes when he
talks about how great tl is "way up there."
Since his arnval here last
Sunday, he bas spent a total of
nine hours on the gliStening,
snow-blanketed slopes m subfreezmg temperatures .
Wearing a neon-bright
orange parka wtth a white and
Devoted To The Interests of The Meigs-Mason Area
orange striped wool hal , black
VOL.- XXVI NO . 179
slacks and red plastic ski
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OH 10
THURSDAY, DECEMBER 26, 1974
shoes,
Ford skied from the
TEN CENTS
11,000-foot Va1l Mountam
summit on Christmas Day for
21&gt; hours .
He JOkingly complained
about the pile of work Donald
ti
.
Rumsfeld , his chtef of staff,
had
laid out for him and he dug
Taxpayers 111 three of the residents in those areas paid
Here are t~e rates fo r the Galhpohs School District,
By United Press International
four former Galha County 11.60 for operation of their -.rious townships ·
:11.40, Raccoon 'fwp. Gallipolis mlo some of 11 Wednesday
YOUNGSTOWN, OlllO - A STRIKE BY SOME 450 memSchool Districts got a break schools. Since consolidation the
Add1son 1'\\p 25.00; Addisoo School District, 30.90; Raccoon afternoon. "Scrooge carne wtth
bers of the Ohio Nurses Association (DNA) continued today at
today with a reductiOn m 1974 rate In the former Kyger Creek Tv.p. Gallipolis School District, Twp. Galha Local School Santa C::laus when Rumsfeld
three Youngstown hospitals, with the total patient population cut
rates on real estate when area has been Increased to 16.5 30 50; Cheshire Twp 25.50, District, 25 40 ; R10 Grande came,"Oe satd.
by more than SOper cent because of the walkout.
Before he returns to
county treasurer Oty M. mills "'hile residents of the Chesh~re VJ!lage, 25.60; Clay VIllage, 31 00 ; Centerville
No contract talks were scheduled. Nurses struck Monday
Washington on Jan. 2, the Ch1ef
Stewart announced mathng of former North Gallia, South- 'fwp . 31 90; Gallipolis Twp. VJ!Iage, 25.50; Sprmgf1eld Twp
afl&lt;!l' negotiations with the Youngstown Hospital Association
Executive must cut through a
mvoices next Monday, Dec. 30. western and Hannan Trace 34l 20; Gallipolis City, 32 40: 25.40:
Spnngfleld
Twp .
(YHA), which began last Saturday, failed to produce a contract.
stack
of more than 100 b1lls,
Stewart said laY books w111 Districts will he paying Gree n 'fwp. 3190; Greenfield Gallipolis School D1 s tn c t,
Hospttal staffing, a code or ethics and wages were among
open Jan. 2 for collectiOn of anywhere from one and one Twp 25 40; Guyan Twp. 25 40 ; 30 90 , Walnut Twp 25.40; Including the trade measure
unresolved issues.
which prov1des most favored
f~rst half real estate taxes. half to three mills tess.
C1 ow n C1Iy VIllage, 25 .90; Walnut Twp Symmes Valley
nation treatment for the Soviet
Land owners may, tf they wLsh,
All property owners mu st Ha m son Twp 25 40 , Hamson Local, 31.90.
CLEVELAND - SOME CLEVELAND PUBlJC school
Union
.
pay the eniire amount of their pay the coun ly rate of 3 50, that Twp Gallipolis School 0Jstncl,
Taxes may be pa1d by ma1l
children are continuing to attend classes during the holiday
He was also scheduled to
taxes for 1974.
•s, .50 for the Gallla County 30 90: Huntmgton Twp. 25.40; or 10 person at the Gallia
vacation, but on a voluntary basis. Schools located in the poverty
tackle
a "voluminous" report
Stewart also announced the Health Department; 2 mlils for Hunttngto n Twp Galhpohs County Trea s urer 's Office
pockels in the city have been kept open to acrommodate first
on
charges
the Central Intellitax rates established by the the Jomt Gallta -Jackson- School Distnct, 30 90: Hun- located on the first floor of the
through six graderlfwho want to use libraries and get free hot
gence
Agency
conducted a spy
Gallia County Budget Com- Vinton Vocational School; 20 llngton Twp. Vinton County Gallia County Courthouse.
lunches.
system against American c!timission.
mills for the Galha County School Distncl, 31.90; V1nton Off1 ce hours are Monday
Paul Briggs, superintendent of the schools, said the progr"'"
The biggest increase in taxes Library ; 40 mills for the Child VIllage , 28.00, Morgan Twp through Fnday from Ba .m lo 4
was aiding disadvantaged children in their reading program and
is noted In the Addison- Welfare Board (Guiding Hand 25 40 ; OhiO Twp. 26.40; Perry p.m.
providing them with nutritional food at the same time.
Cheshire area formerly known School); .20 m11ls for the 648 Twp
25 90; Perry Twp
EXTENDED FORECAST
as the Kyger Creek Local Mental Health and Retardation
Saturday through Monday,
WS ANGELES - RfCIIARD NIXON HAS made no ob- School District.
Board
and
I
m1ll
for
the
R10
jection to moves by several trustees to dissolve the foundation
It will be mosly fair Saturday
Prior to school consolidation, Gran_de Commumty College
and Sunday with a chance of
charged with building a presidential library for him. the Los

COLUMBUS - THOMAS DUNHAM, 20, Urbana, a student
at Ohio State University, died of carbon monoxide poisoning in
his off-campus apartment, the Franklin County coroner's office
has ruled.
The coroner's office said Dunham apparently died sometime
before 9 p.m. on Chrisimas Eve and his body was disrovered
ChriStmas day . Authorities said the smoke pipe from a flue to the
furnace apparently became unattached, allowing the carbon
monoxide to leak.

THURSDAY FOR THE CHRISTMAS HOLIDAYS

Of Us

By DANIEL F. GILMORE
WASHINGTON (UP! J - The
ClA's countermtelligence chief
says he is resignmg because
"higher authorities " wanted
him to leave after allegations
were made that the agency
spied on antiwar groups.
Central Intelligence Agency
veteran James Angleton,
sounding distraught and
contradictory in several
telephone con ver sa trans,
Wednesday told UP! he did not
know of CIA work against
Americans wtthiv the Umted
Slates.
He had previOusly said
published allegations of such
activities were " mainly true."
President Ford, on a skiing
vacation in Colorado, has
asked Secretary of State Henry
A. Kissinger, who IS also his
national secunty advaser, to
forward a report on the
allegallons published in Sun-

FOOD PROVIDED - Several local organizations have worked over the holiday season to
provide baskets of food for lhe underprivileged . Among them were the Meigs County Jaycees .
Ralph Werry, left, chairman of the Jaycee Helping Program, and Rick Collins are pictured
wtth some of the food items which went into baskets distributed from Pomeroy Village Hall by
the Jaycees .

Angeles Times said Wednesday. Patricta Reilly Hitt, former
Nixon admirustration official and vice chairwoman of the board
of trustees, said Tuesday she had written the other trustees
urging that the foundation be dissolves.
In her letter, Mrs. Hitt, former assistant secretary or Health
Education and WeUare, said the foundation's purpose was "the
creation and perpetuation of a presidential library and museum
for the collecUon and study of papers and memorabilia of the 37th
President of the United Slates. "The prospects for beiug able to
carry out that mission in the foreseeable future are unfortunately
clouded at thiS time," she wrote.

WE WILL BE CLOSED WEDNESDAY AND

From All

on charges of agency's spying

.B;i;~;J
J' · Old KC district taxes hiked

and the Happie.st of New Years

riMUdol

tPGl

Show Starts at 7 p.m .

Have the Merriest of Christmases
Eat, drink, be merry
... and accept our sincere
thanks for your loyalty,
confidence and goodwill.

CIA chief pressured off job

.·. ··::;.·

zens durmg the Ntxon era.
In add!hon Ford summoned
his ch ief energy and economic
advisors to confer wrth him
Friday and Saturday on
several maJor documents he
must
s ubmit
to
the
Democratic - controlled Congress in Ja nuary.
Among them are the State of
the Umon Address, which rudes
forecast Will be 11 grim" on the
economy, energy shortages
and h1gh tariffs.
The weekend sessions were
called to bring Ford up to date
on the deepenmg recessjon
combmed wtlh inflation and
the related rismg costs and
dwindling supplie s of energy.
The first fam1ly and Salt
Lake C1Ly businessman and
cattle rancher Jun Brown and
h1s famtly, all sk1ing enthusiasts, go t together for a
Christmas mght dmner that
Included roast turkey and all
the trimmings .
Christmas morning the family exchanged g1fls around a
ceiling-high tree in the living
room of the c halet Ford
borrowed from Dallas oilman
Richard D. Bass.
Ford told reporters he fared
well, with a "raft of nice
thmgs" including a wool turtie
neck sweater with the wor&lt;b
"WIN," Ford's Whip Inflation
Now symbol, knitted aU over it.
From Mrs. Ford he rereived
a set of hrass bookends and his
son, Mike arxl daughter ~in~law,
Gayle, presented him with a
basket or cheese and sausages.
The president gave Mrs.
Ford a yellow quilted bathrobe
and their daughter, Susan,
gave her mother bedroom
slippers to complete the outfit.
The Fords gave each of their
three sons a watch and gave
Susan a long, green jersey
summer gown.

Elderly man found dead
POINT PLEASANT - Slate
P olice and Mas on County
Sheriff's Department officers
today were continumg m vesligation of the death of a
Hartford resident who was
found Chn s tmas night at h1s
home
Ru sse ll Dewey ( Peanut )
Holt, 75, Hartford, was found
dead in the pantry area of h1s
dwelling at about6 30 p.m. by
neighbors
New
Haven
Emergency squadmen , State
Trooper L. A. Akers, Shenff
Elvm E Wedge a nd Depuhes
K W. Love and D. C. Raynes
came to the scene
It was believed that Mr . Holt
d1ed sometime Wednesday
after falling and stnking hiS
head
The deceased was a re tired

employe or the State Road
Commission.
Funeral services will be at
1..10 p m Saturday at the
Fogleso ng Funeral Hom e,
Mason Rev Milton J. Bartram
will offiCiate and bunal wtll be
m the Graham Cemetery .
Fnends may ca:!l at the funeral
home after 3 p.m. Frtday.
Mr . Holt was born m Hartford, Jan !G, 1899, a son of
Thomas and Hannah May
Archer Holt. His wife , Laura
Estella Holt, d•ed Dec. 3, 1973.
Survivors includ e three
Sisters , Mrs Grace Srmth,
Ha rtford , Mrs. Florence
Priddy , J ackson, and Mrs
Mary Roush, New Haven, and
one mece, Mrs . Doris Yonker,
Letart, m addthon to other
relatiVes m the county

Utility lobbyists win fight for second oldest river
By DREW VON BERGEN
WASHINGTON (UP!) Congress has decided not to
block immediate construction
of a hydroelertric dam In Appalachia on the serond oldest
river in the world.
Power uillities and organized
labor lobbied hard for the
projert and environmentalisls
and many residenls of the area
afferted boped for a delay. But
the AFl.rCID and Appalachian
Power Company won, thanks
in large part to the blocking
power of the House Rules
Committee.
A majority of House and
Senate members that voted on
the issue favored a two-year
delay in construction while a
study could be made to
determme if the ancient New
River qualified for mclusion
under protection of the Wild
and Scenic Riv;Jrs Act.
But because the Rules Committee failed to grant a "rule"

to the bill -which clears it for
floor
consideration
proponents of the delaymg
legislation needed a two-thirds
majority Dee. 18 in the House
to win passage.
The vote was 196-181, far
short of that neeqed.
When it passed the Senate
last May, without any requirement for a two-thirds vote, il
won 49-19.
Rep. Wilmer "Vinegar
Bend" Mizell, R-N .C., a former
major league pitcher, assessed
the effect of the Rules Committee action during House
deb;lte .
" It 's a lillie like giving the
world champiOn Oakland
11
A's" a 2 to 1 headstart in a
game against the Vinegar
Bend Rinky-Dinks," he satd.
Swarmed Into Area
Mizell, a chief opponent of
the project satd power companies officials had swarmed into
the proJeCt area telling resi·
·I

dents they should not look a gift
horse m the mouth.
"But most people down
there, faced with the loss of
their homes and property and
livelihood, and having no
assurance they will reap the
slightest benefit from the
projeCt, are still convinced that
the part of the horse they are
looking at is certainly not it..
mouth ," MizeU told his colleagues.
The Federal Power CommisSIOn approved construction or
the $430 million Blue Ridge
project on June 14, but the
authorization was made effertive Jan . 2, 1975.
Thus congressional opponents of the projert, which
will consist of two dams, felt
passage of the bill was the final
effort to block a construcl!on
start
Hours before the vote, ilowe\(' r 1•P &lt; '., 1f ofNorthCarchna
f1h'd .. w ~ 111 lt_'t:e,

, {. '" •

Greeosboro asking for an injunction that would bar any
construction until Interior
Secretary Rogers C.B. Morton
rould rule on a request by
North Carolina Gov. James E.
Holshouser thaI the river be
placed under protection of the
Wild and Scemc Rivers Act.
Morton~ the administration's
chief energy advisor, had sent
a letter to Capitol Hill the day
before the crucial House vote,
asking for passage of the
delaying bill.
Morton said the goverrunent
had an obllgation to meet the
nation 's energy needs "m a
way that recognizes !be value
of other resources, and their
contributions to the quality of
our lives."
Others Favored Dams
However, others mcluding
the governors of V1rgmia and
West Virguua favored building
lhe dams .
Gov Arch Moore of West

l

Virginia, in a letter to the Rules the Watergate debacle remain
Committee, said the con. to do tis bidding, " satd the
strucllon would create em- Raleigh Regtster in a front
ployment for residents of his page editorial.
state "because the Blue Ridge
M1zell , in his floor remarks,
pumpiug energy requiremenls also alluded to the lobbying
wiU be supplied in substantial effort, saying the utilities and
part by West Virginia coal."
umons "have brought the
Rep . Ken Hechler, D-W.Va., immense pressure of tlleir
told the House , however, thaI wealth and power to bear on
the United Mine Workers union the members of this House to
supported the delay in con- Secure the bill 's defeat ."
struction, as well as other West
Virginians.
Rep. Wayne L. Hays, i).()h(o,
" Klll the New River ?" was furious at the power
Herhler shouted at his rol- companies, calling them
leagues. " In my area that's 1'arrogant np-off artists."
bke saying ' Dynamite the
"You ought not to let them
Pyramids.'"
rape this farm!Jmd for another
Editorial comment in West buck m their pock~t..," Hays
Virginia newspapers was even saJd.
stronger.
Proponents of the project,
"American Electric Power which would flood 40,1100 acres
( the parent firm of Ap- of land, argued that it would
palachian ·Power) has nmy create power for important
called m the lOU's of 1ts peak-load periods or the day,
congressional lackeys because and would employ some 1,200
it mtLSt act while remnants of workers durmg construction.

.

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�•
~.

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2- The Daily Sentine l, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tlu•rS&lt;Iay, Dl'c. 26, 1974

F eds had !J/1;::=:~::~:~ , ~~:,~;::~;! Inmates
eyes on ij!i takes Viet capital : agree to
l
give up
Fields
SAIGON\ UP!) - Communist infantry backed by tard&lt;s
:-:- and artillery captured a county capital north of Saigon
:::- today , leaving the goverrunent in control of only one town
WASH!NGTON ( UPI 1 _ The :&lt;;: in beleaguered Phuoc Long Province.
man who threatened to blow up ::::
M~litary sources sa id the Communists overran Dong
the White House and himself :::: Xoai in a two-pronged assault this morning, smashing
after driving a car up to the · · through U.e barbed wire defense perimeter and seizing
North Porti co on Christmas /
tlle town 's militia compound.
Don g Xoai , a town of 5,000 some 50 miles norlh of
morning had bee n known to the &lt;::
Secret Service, authorities sa id . } Sallilgton,thwascthe sec~nd ~aun
t ty cdapital in the province to
Mar s ~ll Hill Fields, whose
a a e ;onunumsts m wo ays.
The takeover left only one government stronghold
late father was a u.s. diplom at, &lt;::
was being held at a mental ::;: remaining in Phuoc Long Province - the encircled
hospital for observation toda y -:·: province capital of Phuoc Binh.
In a move that helped the capture of Dong Xoat·,
after holding federa l police at ',.:,',',
military sources said Communist gunners fired a barrage
bay for four hour s with what
looked like explosives tied to :l:: of 37 rockets this morning at the Bien Hoa airbase, 14
his body .
/ miles northeast of Saigon.
He surre ndered peaceably
The rockets knocked out five goverrunent warplanes
and the bombs turned out to be ) scheduled to bomb around Dong Xoai in an effort to stem
11
w·
h
·
the Communist assault, the sources said ..
h. h
tg way ares. tres angmg ::::
Reports reaching Saigon said lhe Commurus
· Is began
from his black gloves and three ·
packages he set down on the :-:· the final assau1t on Dong Xoai witll a 1,000-round. artillery

gr~~~l~:.~~s~~n;~e~ab garb,

spea ki ng Arabic and En glish
and claiming he wa s " wired to
dynamite," finally gave up
after a black r adio sta ti on
broadcast his demand to meet
with the Pakistani ambassador .
The demand was not met.
For the preceding two hours,
he negotiated face-to-face from
15 feet with Secre t Service
official George Drescher, who
said much of Fields' con versation was about Islam.
Fields' father, Marshall L.
Fields, was an official of the
Agency for International Deve·
lopment and had served in
severa l ArabiC·speaking coun·
tries, the Washington Post
reported today. The elder
Fields died of cancer in May,
and his son then began showing
an interest in Islam and
Arabic, it said .
The Fields' live in a middle
income neighborhood in Silver
Spring, Md., and Fields rece nt.
ly worked as a taxi driver in
suburban Maryland. He ide nli·
lied himself as Abdul Rahim .
Secret Service spokesman
William Hawthorne said Fields,
2~. had been "of interest" to
the agency before Wednesday,
but would not elaborate .
The Washington Post said at
least three news media had
received material from Fields
in the past, indicating he
planned to renounce his citizen· ·
ship on Dec. 25 a nd seek
political asylum in a thirdworld country .
The newspaper quoted an
unnamed Secret Service spokesman as saying " he was of
protective interest to us. He
came to our attelltion because
we thought he could be a
possible problem towards . the
people we protect."
The Service commi !led Fields
to the maxim tun security ward
of St. Elizabeth's hospital for
observation, with no charges
against him, under a legal
procedure allowing the agency
to detain persons who pose a
threat to those under its
protection.
" The Secret Service would
have U.ken a lot stronger action
if the First Family was at
home," said agent George
Cosper. "It's Christmas Day.

!:

:~~~::.~~Iva

Tanks near the town joined in llle

,...
Columns of infantry then hit the town from the south and
... west, cutting through the defense perimeter and overrun:·:: ning the militia outpost guarding county headquarters.

II!

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{
/
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::::
:·:·
:-:-

''''
:::

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.,,,.,..... ,., ,,,,,,,,,,., .. , .... ,.... ·.· .. •.•.·. ·&lt;· ... · ·· '' ''''''''''' .. ,,,,,,, '''''' ,.,,, ''''''' ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,.. .. ..

Steel production
seen normal soon
By Uolted Press International
Steel production, hard hit by
a prolonged coal strike, was
expected to return to normal
soon as coal miners return
from a Christmas holiday at
the end of a six-week walkout.
The final threat to all&lt;&gt;ut
production was postponed for
at least 60 days while the
United Mine Workers union
and the Western Pennsylvania
Coal Haulers Association work
on a contract dispute.
In a related development,
Bethlehem Steel Corp., the
nation's No. 2 steel producer,
was expected to announce
today whether it would follow
U.S. Steel's lead and roll back
price increases.
Bethlehem announced a 2.~
per cent increase in rolled steel
products shortly before U.S.
Steel -the No. 1 producer agreed to a rollback Monday

"We felt some compassion to
save the man. ''
Agents with high-powered
weapons hid in nearby bushes
and behind pillars of the portico
during the incident, but no
shots were fired.
President Ford, vacationing
with his family in Vail, Colo.,
was informed of the incident.
Wednesday's incident began
in the uncharacteristic silence
of Pennsylvania Avenue at 7
a.m. when Fields, driving west
in his two-door brown Chevrolet
sU.rted to make what While
House guards thought was a U
turn. Instead he rammed the
car through the iron northwest
gate and drove up to within 20
feet of the mansion's door_

night under

White House

pressure.
Wheeling-Pittsburgh Steel
Corp. also is planning to in·
crease pipe and plate products
by 5.5 per cent.
Bethlehem said its increase
would cover only one-third of
wage and materials cost increases which occurred during
the past five months.
The U.S. Steel cutback in·
volved approximately 20 per

cent of the annowlCed increase,
a spokesman said.
That represented a drop
from 4.7 per cent to 4 per cent
in prices calculated on the "full
product range," although the

.,)·-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Dec. 26,1974

~

LORTON, Va. (UP!)
Rebellious maximum security
iJUT1ates holding nine Lorton
Reformatory guards hostage
today reached tentative agreementon terms for ending their
12 hour siege.
The agreement hinged on a
guarantee that no reprisals
would be directed against the
inmates involved in tile uprising and that 'none would be
transferred from Lorton to
another maximum security
institution.
The inmates negotiated with
officials unaware that one of
the instigators was shot and
killed.
Marion Strickland, superintendent of Lorton, said agreement on .s everal issues of
contention was reached about 7
a.m. EST and that a courier
hah d beenb sebnt withwthehpact to
l e su ur an
as mgton
home or Norman Carlson,
director of the U.S. Bureau of
Prisons, for his signature.
ln addition to assurances
tllat no inmates would be
transferred from Lorton to

other maximum security institutions, the agreement
called for better visiting hours
and restoration of inmate
furloughs, canceled recently
by Attorney General William
B. Saxbe.
Authorities said about 90 to
95 prisoners took 10 guards
hostage after the escape attempt about 7 p.m. Christmas

I have been verY active all
my life. I live on a farm, have a
large farm house, and plenty of
work. Since I have turned 6~. I
seem to be more tired than I
u.&lt;;ed to be. I am worrying a bit
and wondering if time is
beginning to run out for me. I
was around 50 when the
problem was first diagnosed .
The specialist told me since I
was doing so well, at my age,
he wouldn't advise an
operation. Then he gave me a
list of things to be careful about
which was ,so long, I couldn't
possibly keep up with it. It
·included avoiding all infections, flu, and even to have
penicillin when I had my teeth
cleaned.
I'm just thankful I have had

'
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~~!
~:

..

298 ·sECOND ST. .
POMEROY,
OHIO
,,
QUANTITY RIGHTS ARE RESERVED
NO SALES TO DEALERS

THRU DEC. 28th

OPEN 8 AM • 10 PM MON.-SAT.
10 AM • 10 PM SUNDAYS

FRYING
•
CHICKEN
BEST PARTS

lb.

Fresh and Lean

GROUND BEEF
3 lb.
or
more

lb.

·,

' ..

'·

"Christmas is a very lonelY
John McKay's Trojans, most
'Tis the season to be jollyNEW YORK (UP!) - Frankl.ane wrinkled his brow.
of whom live in California, had day for boys who are away
especially
if you're a college
He was unhappy over something he had just read in the paper.
no workouts Tuesday or Christ- from family and friends,"
basketball fan.
He was more than unbappy. He was upset.
.
mas Day. Woody Hayes took Hayes explained as the reason
Starting today or Friday, 26
As one of baseball's elder statesmen, Frank Lane knows more
most of his 60 Buckeyes to the for the outing.
about what's happening in every section of the country, all over major tournaments with a
Santa Claus, loaded with
Balboa Bay Club Wednesday
U1e world, in fact, than most of our senators and congressmen. duration of between two to five
for a day of tennis, pool, sauna P.f'esents, visited the Buckeye The way he manages this is by traveling ahnost continuously for
days will get under way around
baths and strolls along the delegation Tuesday night folthe ball club he's with at the time (now it's the Texas Rangers), the land . Enough college hoop
lowing a special appreciation by spending hours on the telephone and by reading every action for anybody.
beach.
party dinner from the OSU newspaper he can possibly get his two hands on . He doesn ' t
Eight of these classics begin
I'!
•
athletic department. Then the merely scan the papers, he reads every single item. When Frank play
today,
the
most
players were allowed to stay up Lane reads a newspaper, he gets his money's worth. He reads the glamorous of them perhaps the
or out Wltil 2 a.m.
five-day Rainbow Classic in
print off it.
The Buckeyes were slated
The story getting him so worked up right now had to do with Honolulu. Among the eight
for a trip to Catalina Island Sptro Agnew, who used to be vice president until he resigned learns participating will be
Ask to check our
today. The squad was to return following his conviction on a tax evasion charge.
secon d ranked
Indiana,
"MERCK VEnRINARY
to Citrus College by late afSpiro Agnew is doing well in real estate, making $100,000 a bringing an 8-0 record into the
MANUAL"
ternoon for a workout. Friday year, the newspaper story said. That was perfecUy all right with event.
: l.IJS ANGELES (UP!) during the regular season and
the Buckeyes will take a trip to Lane, but what burned him up was what Agnew had to say about
Other teams entered are
Reisman Trophy winner Ar· switched positions willl Dick view the broadcast of the
Florida,
Hawaii, Ohio State,
.
ilhle Griffin has gained more Mack because he couldn't snap "Tonight" program. From the press.
San Jose State,
Pennsylvania,
" I'm bitter," Agnew was quoted as saying. "I'll never get over
lltan 100 yards in 22 straight the ball. In Ohio State's first lllen on, Hayes will drUl OSU
Tulsa
and
Villanova
, with the
(llmes.
practice at Columbus for the five consecutive days in the distortions and inaccuracies in the press. I don't like 90 per
lith-ranked Quakers, IHl, ex:: That should make him tile Rose Bowl, he fracl\ll'ed his prepping for the yearend cent of the press. I don'tneed the press. What more can they do to
peeled to provide the Hoosiers
me?
I
am
not
a
public
figure
anymore
.
You
people
in
the
press
mosi consistent player on the hand again.
college football classic on New are always argulng for the right to privacy. How about letting me with their toughest comClhio State football team,
"Steve is such a valuable
Year's day.
petition.
have mine? 11
i11ght?
individual to our team that we
Hayes said he was not
No. I North Carolina State is
Frank
J.ane
refused
to
let
that
go
unchallenged.
: wrong!
had to have him somewhere," pleased with the Tuesday drill
one of the few ranked teams
"!think
Spiro
Agnew
is
all
wet,"
he
barked.
: At least that's the way Joe Bugel explained. "He's one guy
results.
"I don'tgoalongwith hbn at all. I like the media. Where would not involved in tourney action;
l!ugel sees it. Of course, Bugel we can't do without. That's
11 1t
was no better than this country be if it wasn't for the dedication of newspapermen ? the Wolfpack, IHl, takes on
May be prejudiced. He's · why we just didn't put Steve on satisfctory,'' he added, indicatMaybe we're in bad shape now, but we'd be in worse shape Kent State Friday and Pittsil'oody Hayes' assistant coach the bench and move the backup ing the team was fatigued.
without newspapers . Nobody would have the slightest idea of burgh Sal'!"day.
~ charge of centers and guy into his starting spot."
"The kids are tired, real what's going on.
Fourth-rated Louisville is the
~lards.
Myers, a S-2, 243-pounder, is tired, but if we don't get their
as the host in the twofavorite
"Certainly, now and then some newspaperman may have an
: Bugel thinks All-America an articulate and personable legs used to sod now, there'sno
day
Fidelity
Holiday Classic,
eenter Steve Myers, a talented 21-year&lt;&gt;ld who has aspirations use trying next week," he said, ax to grind. He may take advantage of the fact the pen is but they're likely to have to
mightier than the sword, but from my experience, the great
;eruor from Kent, Ohio, is No. I of playing professional foot- noting the Buckeyes have been
majority of all newspapermen are dedicated to telling the truth, beaten No. 13 Purdue en route.
lmong the Ohio State football- ball. He's particularly grateful playing on artificial turf all
Florida State and Western
tlts in consistency.
for Mack, the brother of llle season. "Actually, we'll start and if you can't stand the truth, then you're in a bad way. Mr.
Agnew should remember this : Our sy~tem of goverrunenl is no Kentucky are also entered.
: "Really, Steve has been the Los Angeles Rams' Tom Mack, easing up in practice now.''
In a reduced field , fifthgreater Ulan those people disseminating the news, and these are
most reliable player on llle an All-Pro guard, for switching
Hayes has had several the very people he's Ulrowing rocks at."
ranked Southern . California
team," said Bugel. "He didn't positions with him.
players injured, which causes
During the tbne he was general manager with the While Sox, looms as the choice against St.
lilve a bad game during the
"The biggest adjustment l
him some concern about Cardinals, Indians, A's and Brewers, Lane generally could be Joseph's (Pa.) and four local
tf&gt;tire season. There are All- had to make was learning how working too hard from here on
depended upon to fill in waiting newsmen on what went on in teams in New York's five-day
.&lt;£mericas and All-Americas. to pull out," Myers said. "I
in.
many of those "secret" meetings behind closed doors between Holiday Festival. Rutgers, No.
'eve is a real All-America." found it bard to keep track of
Hayes' holidays were some- baseball officials.
20, figures as the likely final
• Myers played six games at the linebackers on the other
what dampened by the condi·
"Del Webb once said to me 'I thought we agreed we were not opponent for the Trojans in the
SALE BEGINS FRIDAY
~nter and five at guard this team."
lion of lour injured players six-learn tow-ney - reduced
gci.nt..
to
give
out
any
news,"'
Lane
recalled.
An All-Big Ten guard selec- regular split end Dave Hazel,
"-son. In the Rose Bowl, he'll
' 1 dilli. '•\1 them the result, I told them what we discussed,"- from last year's 16-but Man·
II! a guard in the Buckeyes' tion, Mack also admitted he regular offensive right tackle Lane
said to webb. "!thought we looked pretty stupid saying we hattan, Fordham and Seton
had "a considerable amount of
&lt;f!ensive line.
Hall, because of their local
Scott Dannelly, second team met for four hours and didn '!discuss anything bnportant."
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
• There were medical reasons. difficulties adjusting" to the offensive tackle Lou Pietrini,
Whenever Lane visits a city, he generally makes a trip to the backers, cannot be ruled out.
: He suffered a broken hand center spot.
and second team defensive out&lt;&gt;f-town newsstand and buys as many papers as he can carry.
•
•
tackle Tyrone Harris.
"I'd get sixty papers a day when I was general manager of the
•
Dannelly, 6-3,240, and Hazel, Cardinals," he said, "and I remember some detractors saying
S-1, 192, both suffered sprained 'the only reason Lane is doing that is because he wants to see if
ankles in practice prior to the they're saying something nice about him.'
•
Buckeyes arrival in California .
" Remarks like that used to . make me laugh. I never kept a
Hayes has kept both out of clipping in my life. But I know the value of newspapers. They're
contact drills to date here.
the cheapest form of education you can buy . Once, when I was
It appears as if Pietrini and with the Cardinals, I had abnost closed a deal with the Phillies
Harris will be sidelined for for Richie Ashburn. We were going to give them Rip Repulski .
SAN FRANCISCO (UP!)- l'r'1C1nauy, Harvard; quar- New Year's Day with their
"I picked up a Philadelphia paper one day and saw this picture
The East-West squada • today terback, Dennis Franklin, injwies. Pietrini, 6--3, 242, who
Or Ashburn having his back rubbed by the trainer . This was in
dlmounced llleir starting line- Michigan; running backs, backs up Kurt Schumacher at
January. I called up Roy Harney, then the Phillies' general
Brad
Davis,
Louisiana
State
ups for llle annual Shrine game
left Uickle, suffered a con- manager, and asked hbn, 'do I get the rubbing table and the
and
Waller
Payton,
Jackson
at Stanford Stadium Saturday
Inc lud es acid and
cussion in scrimmage Monday. trainer, too?'
State.
afternoon.
no rma l in stallation .
"He said, 'whaddya mean, there's nothing wrong with Ash·
East: Defense- Right end, Harris, 6-3, 242, strained his
on any size Ex tra Life battery .
: Both teams scheduled a short
right
knee
Saturday
during
burn.' I told him, so long as there was nothing wrong with Ash·
morning practice and then the Mark Petersen, Dlinois; right practice and has been forced to
Offer Ends
You pay as tow as '26.05
burn, he could stay in Philadelphia, but I wanted another outplayers took time off to be tackle, Gary Burley, Pitts- use a cane.
Jan. 15
fielder.
That's
how
we
got
Del
Ennis.
He
drove
in
100
runs,
hit
24
~ests at Marine World in burgh; left tackle, Charles
A Buckeye spokesman also homers and balled .286 lor us that year. Hell, he all but won the
Hall, Tulane; left end, Randy
Redwood City.
said
James O'Rourke, 6-3, 252,
: On Christmas Day, East White, Maryland; outside who played back of Harris, permant for us!"
ABA Standings
utah
17 19 .472 12
Coach Bo Schembechler put his linebacker, Terry McClowry,
suffered such a severe
By United Press International
In diana
13 16 448 12 112
Michigan
State;
middle
squad through some kicking
sprained
ankle
in
Columbus
East
San Diego
II 20 .355 15 112
w . I. pet. g.b.
• Wednesday's Result
and offensive maneuvers. He linebacker, Steve Strinko, workouts that he was 1e f t Kentucky
21
9 .700
utah 112 sa n Diego 100
_
Michigan;
outside
linebacker,
ooted the West had the day off
home.
New York
22 10 .688
Thursday's Games
·
St. Louis
lJ 21 . 382 10
' Kentucky at Indi a na
and said, "We thought about Robert Brazile, Jackson Stale;
He was replaced on the Memphis
9 22 .290 l 2 1h N ew York vs . Virginia
going by their botel and singing cornerback, John Provost,
traveling squad by Larry Virginia
a 23 .258 131 ' '
at Norfolk
Holy
Cross
and
Mike
Williams,
West
. sa n Diego at MemphiS
some Christmas carols."
O'Rourke, no relation, a 6-2,
w. 1. pet . g . b. San Anton io at St . Louis
The starting lineups were: Louisiana State; strong safety,
246-poWld
defensive
tackle.
Denver
27
5 . B·U ~
Utah at Denver
San Anto11io
19 15 'i~Q
9
.
East: Offense-Tight end, John Washington, Tulane; and
free
safety,
David
Brown,
OYEAR END SALE- YEAR END SALE- YEAR END SALE- YEAR END SALE- YEAR END SALE- YEAR END SALE- YEAR END SALE- YEA~
Jack Novak, Wisconsin; right .
Michigan.
U.ckle, AI Krevls, Boston
West: Offense-tight end,
College; right guard Ralph
Perretta, Purdue; center, Rick Oscar Roan, SMU; right
Nuzum, Kentucky; left guard, tackle, Jeff Hart, Oregon
Joe Hatfield, Illinois; left State; right guard, Chris
U.ckle,
Darryl
Carlton, Mackie, California; center,
\.
wI
).T ,
~
WE WILL MOUNT TIRES THAT ARE SOLD DU'ING THIS SALE AT NO CHARGE TO YOU!
"
-&lt;I
Tampa; wide receiver, Larry Geoff Reece, Washington
~
m
Burton, Purdue and Pat State; left guard, Harvey
Goodman, Colorado; left
~
]&gt;
0
~
U.ckle, AI Simpson, Colorado
State; wide receive~, Bob
Farr, Air Force and Morris
Goodyear
Owens, Arizona State; quarterback, Steve Bartkowski,
California; running backs,
INDIANAPOUS (UP!)
Mike Thomas, .Nevacia-Las
The Indianapolis Indians of the . Vegas, and Andrew Jmnes,
special
American Association have Washington State.
~
~\'i
,.~
~
"N "
m
traded a catcher for a
West: Defense-left end, Pat
ew
Cleveland I,.U,ns outfielder.
Donovan, Stanford; left tackle,
The Indians have obtained Dave Pear, Washington; right
1
the contract of outfielder Jbn tackle, Gary .Johnson, Gram:
Hoppe from the Cleveland bling; right end, Dave Wasick, ·
Extra special on Daytona Sport 60 Series • The White Letter Tires.
.,.l&gt;
Indians for catcher Gene San Jose Stale; left linebacker,
Fred Dean, Louisiana Tech;
Dusan.
~
"Rea. Tread" Extra wide look •23.95. That's rlghtl Only '23.95 • What a buy
All service
:;;
Hoppe, 28, split the 1974 middle linebacker, Bob Breu1
Meigs Extra Special Sale on small rtres any ANY DAYTONA PASSENGER TIRE IN STOCK
I
season between .Oklahoma City nig, Arizona State; right
w
size. Listed A7Bx'l3, D78x14, E78x14, 695x14, EX
.
CEPT
ALl
RADIAL
TIRES
tread
-&lt;
and Omaha. He batted .270.
linebacker, Gordon Riegel,
~
735x14. Black or white walls. all now Goodyear
... . .
m
Duson a switch-hitting Stanford; left cornerback,
calcber, 'came to the Indians Louie Wright, San Jose State;
SIZE
OR
Only
frolil Tul8a in 1973 and during , right cornerback, Monte Jackz
SPECIAL PRICE
' 24•95
the past season appeared in 81 son, San Diego State; strong
games, occasionally also play- safety,
INCLUDES ONLY
Tony
Peters,
ing first base. He had a .283 · Oklahoma; free safety, Barry
TIRES IN
batting average.
Hill, Iowa State.

Saturday's Shrine
starters released

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~$"
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Indians trade
with Indians

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. INTEREST OF

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Exec . Ed.
ROBERT HOEFLICH
City Editor

Publi she d da i ly exc-ept
Sat 1.1rday by The Ohio Valley
P.ubli&lt;:hin g Company , 111

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Court

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For Your Dining and Listening

Pleasure......

~
~

45769 . Business Office Phone

... ;LT

.
..! TONIGHT 9:30 TO 2:00
i· The MEIGS INN

992 -2156 . Editor ial Phone 992-

~·

2157 .

Secon d class postage paid Cit
Pomeroy, Ohio .
·
National
advertisin_g
representative.
Bott l nell1

GEO. HALL

~

Ga-llagh er , Inc .; 12 Ea st 42nd

St ., New York , New York.
S ubscription
rates:
Delivered by ca rrier where
available 60 cents per week ;

AND THE HALLMARKS

~

By Motor Route where ca rrier

service not available . One
month, S2 .60 . By mail' ii"l Ohio .
and W.Va ., One Year , S18 ; Six
months . S9 .50 : Three mo nths ,

S6 . Elsewhere $22 .00 year ; six

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,f,~1-~~ea( o SALE POSITIVELY STARTS AT 8:00 AM .r/.~~.,')~o~
~~~(.~~'
THURSDAY DEC. 26 AND ENDS
'%.,;~ ".o% ~~:~"
~,q_qs~.,(es

~e-ll

Ill

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'2195

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mud and snows

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For example G78x15 or H78x15 • Poly'ester Cord.

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MEED FARM TIRES-YES, SIRI THEY'RE ON SALE, TOOl

ME.IG·s .TIR'E
. CENTER

700 E. Main
.

Pomeroy, Ohio
Phon 992-2101

.

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YEAR E-ND SALE- YEAR END SALE- YEAR END SALE- YEAR END SALE- YEAR, END SALE- YEAR' END SALE-SALE - .YEAR
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Fec.ExciseTaxfrom1.73-3.57pertire
No charge for mounting
Special on balancing with weights $1.50 per tire

0

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$2 295

Check our other sale prices on Goodyear tires.

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TUESDAY AT 4:00PM. DEC. 31, 1974
SALE • CASH ONLY

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! Ph. 992-3629
. · omeroy !
*********************************
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HUGE SAVINGS FROM OUR POCKETS TO YOURS~1-:~+'s

Tf~~

: F
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z

Meigs Tire Center

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S t . . Pomeroy , Ohio

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0
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.J**********-*******"'***********l

MEIGS·MASON AREA
CHESTER L. T~NNEHILL

months S1 1. 50. three months,
SI&gt;SO S ubscr iption pri ce in .
c lu d!"'S
&lt;; und3'r'
Times
St-mtinel

All KINDS OF
MEDICAL ·
SUPPLIES &amp;
ANTIBIOTICS
FOR ANIMALS

THE SHOE BOX

n

DEVOTED TO THE

N1'nth-ranked Ar1'zona S'·te
~
meets seven foes in the fiveday Far West Classic, with No .
14 Oregon its chief opponent.
Boston College, Creigh ton,
Iowa, Oregon State, Wake
Forest and Washington State
are the others.
No. 17 Oklahoma is the other
Top 20 team in action today,
visiting Kansas City, Mo. for
the five-day Big Eight Classic.
Colorado, Iowa State, Kansas
State, Kansas, Missouri, Nebraska and Oklahoma SUite
oppose the Sooners.
The other tourneys starting
today are the two-day Gator
Bowl in Jacksonville, Fla., lhe
Poinsettia Classic in Greenville, S.C., and the four-day ·
All-College
to urn ey
in
Okiahoma City, Okla .
At Jacksonville, Memphis
State is favored against Jacksonville, Penn Stale and Temple; Furman is the choice at
Greenville versus. Baylor, Lafayette and Washington and
host Oklahoma City should
prevail over Centenary, Niagara, North Texas State, Pacific,
UNC Charlotte, Wyoming and
Xavier.

Boots, One Group Childs
House Slippers $100

••

The Dai~ Sentinel

~~~ By Uolted Press International

UP! Sports Editor

20% Discount On All Angel
Treads, Cowboy Boots, Mens

u

a good life for 65 years, and just saw for another reason. l found
wondered what your comments that he had this problem,
completely unrecognized
might be.
annual
flying
DEAR READER- You are despite
unusual, all right. The birth examinations by many docdefect you have is really an tors.
If the shunt is very small, so
artery connecting two others:
it
dosn't affect the heart's
the main artery that carries
blood I&lt;&gt; the lungs I&lt;&gt; get oxygen action to any significant
and the main artery that degree, lllen the other p•oblem
carries oxy!fenated blood out of is the danger of bacterial en·
the left side of the heart to the docarditis, an infection of the
heart. That is why your doctor
rest of the body (aorta).
wanted
you to take penicillin if
While llle baby is in the
you
had
any infection or even
uterus, this artery is open and
you
had your teeth
when
shunts blood through the
cleaned.
baby's body willlout sending it
In general, even small shtmts
to the lungs. Only after birth,
of
this type should be closed
when the lungs open is it
when
diagnosed In early
necessary for the blood to go to
childhood. I must agree,
the lungs to get oxygen. At
!bat in a healthy
however,
birth or very soon after, this
persiln
past
50, I would think in
small artery shunt usually
it coUld be left
most
instances
closes so you have a normal
alone.
circulation.
All of this also means that
your defect will probably not
lf a doctor was seeing ·have any serious effects on
nothing but congenital heart your heart or your health, I do
defects this would be one of the third&lt;, though, that you should
more common conditions. lt is have antibiotics when you have
not as dangerous as you think . any respiratory illriess or even
How much trouble It causes dental procedures.
depends on how large the shunt
Send your questions to Dr.
really is. If it is a small arterial Lamb, in care of this
connection and not much blood newspaper, P. 0 . Box 1551,
is shunted through it, about the Radio City Station, New York,
only probleM it will cause is to N.Y . 10019 . .For a copy of Dr.
create a loud noise or the Lamb's booklet on cholesterol,
murmur that caused all the send 50 cents to the same adcOncern. I recall one very good dress and ask for .t he
, 41).year&lt;&gt;ld Air Force pilot I ' 'Cholesterol' ' "booklet.

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i:l~1l

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SUPPliES 0•
for lar~e &amp; Small Animals

Our Holiday Specials ...

hostages was released as a
"good faith gesture," prison
spokesman Bill Plaut said.

INJURED SINGING
CANTON, Ohio (UP!)
Officials at Aultman Hospital
here Wednesday listed Judith
Lombardi, 10, Canton, Ohio, as
satisfactory after treatment
for a gunshot wound received
while singing Christmas carols
with friends in front of a local
residence.
The children were delivering
cookies to an elderly couple
· Monday night and ·decided to
sing in front of their home. The
couple, asleep at the time,
woke up and thought there
were prowlers ·at the front
door. Judith was hit in the
chest by rifle fire through the
door.

By Ml" 'TON RICHMAN

..
~yers' consi~tency
.
tivals
that of Arch
..

PRICES GOOD

STORE HOURS

.

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'lr'TI'DIIUADV ,

; PASADENA, Calif. (UP!) lioth Ohio State University and
lis New Year's Day Rose Bowl
Z!lponent, the University of
Z.,uthern California, were slat~ to resume practice this
'llfternoon following brief train! %ng breaks for the Christmas
:Z.,Udays.

night when about a dozen inmates rushed the prison wall.
Lorton spokesmen said at least
two men and possibly four
made it through a guard tower,
drawing one shot from a guard.
· That shot killed one of the
men, whose body was found
about six hours later in a stolen
getaway several miles from
the prison, according to local
police and prison spokesmen.
At about the same time the
body was found, one of the

DR. LAMB

By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - I am a
65-year-old woman. For many
years, whenever I went for a
checkup, the doctors were very
concerned ,about a heart
murmur that I have. They
didn 't seem to know what it
wa!', so, finally they sent me to
a nationally known medical
center for an ~xamination . The
heart specialist found I had a
patent ductus. As yolt know,
this is something a baby is born
with. According to medical
knowledge, a child does not live
very long with this, so I guess 1
am an exception. .

Sport Parade

m=

initial increase affected only
two-thirds of the firm's proThe jail, operated by the
ducts and was believed to be District of Columbia is in
closer to 8 per cent.
suburban Virginia, about 30
About 550 UMW coal-hauling miles south of Washington.
truck drivers in western PennAs tt.lks went on through the
sylvania agreed Tuesday to a night in the mess hall, where
IW-&lt;lay "cooling off" period about 15 inmate negotiators
while their union leaders try to and four prison officials sat
convince their employers to aroW1d a table, there was no
sign the national Bituminous mention of the killing.
Coal Operators Association
Seven reporters and about 15
contract.
members of inmates' families
That pact was ra tilled by watched, including a prisoner's
120,000 UMW members alter a sister who took part in the
month-long strike, but UMW discussions.
construction workers kept alDuring the negotiations, llle
most hall the nation's mines hostages were held by the
idled lor two more weeks until remaining 711 to 75 inmates in a
basement.
tbey got a contract.
The coal haulers refused to
Demands included longer
sign the agreement on grounds visiting hours, more visiting
it does not cover problems of days, the removal of the
the trucking industry.
maximum security superinThey want a separate con- tendent accused of racism,
tract with an exemption from better medical care and better
royalty payments such as th~e facilities at the prison expaid into the UMW Welfare and change and a promise that the
Retirement fund on a per-ton inmates would not be transbasis by coal operators.
ferred in reprisal to a federal
maximum security prison such
as Leavenworth.

Hearl murmur late in life

Holiday
·
classics
.R
ill1 un d erway
•
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i

l.~::~~llmi@~:W.f®HK®~w~~1,~

ISunny Christmas w
:s: .
.
W.~
Jor Woody's boys

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2- The Daily Sentine l, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tlu•rS&lt;Iay, Dl'c. 26, 1974

F eds had !J/1;::=:~::~:~ , ~~:,~;::~;! Inmates
eyes on ij!i takes Viet capital : agree to
l
give up
Fields
SAIGON\ UP!) - Communist infantry backed by tard&lt;s
:-:- and artillery captured a county capital north of Saigon
:::- today , leaving the goverrunent in control of only one town
WASH!NGTON ( UPI 1 _ The :&lt;;: in beleaguered Phuoc Long Province.
man who threatened to blow up ::::
M~litary sources sa id the Communists overran Dong
the White House and himself :::: Xoai in a two-pronged assault this morning, smashing
after driving a car up to the · · through U.e barbed wire defense perimeter and seizing
North Porti co on Christmas /
tlle town 's militia compound.
Don g Xoai , a town of 5,000 some 50 miles norlh of
morning had bee n known to the &lt;::
Secret Service, authorities sa id . } Sallilgton,thwascthe sec~nd ~aun
t ty cdapital in the province to
Mar s ~ll Hill Fields, whose
a a e ;onunumsts m wo ays.
The takeover left only one government stronghold
late father was a u.s. diplom at, &lt;::
was being held at a mental ::;: remaining in Phuoc Long Province - the encircled
hospital for observation toda y -:·: province capital of Phuoc Binh.
In a move that helped the capture of Dong Xoat·,
after holding federa l police at ',.:,',',
military sources said Communist gunners fired a barrage
bay for four hour s with what
looked like explosives tied to :l:: of 37 rockets this morning at the Bien Hoa airbase, 14
his body .
/ miles northeast of Saigon.
He surre ndered peaceably
The rockets knocked out five goverrunent warplanes
and the bombs turned out to be ) scheduled to bomb around Dong Xoai in an effort to stem
11
w·
h
·
the Communist assault, the sources said ..
h. h
tg way ares. tres angmg ::::
Reports reaching Saigon said lhe Commurus
· Is began
from his black gloves and three ·
packages he set down on the :-:· the final assau1t on Dong Xoai witll a 1,000-round. artillery

gr~~~l~:.~~s~~n;~e~ab garb,

spea ki ng Arabic and En glish
and claiming he wa s " wired to
dynamite," finally gave up
after a black r adio sta ti on
broadcast his demand to meet
with the Pakistani ambassador .
The demand was not met.
For the preceding two hours,
he negotiated face-to-face from
15 feet with Secre t Service
official George Drescher, who
said much of Fields' con versation was about Islam.
Fields' father, Marshall L.
Fields, was an official of the
Agency for International Deve·
lopment and had served in
severa l ArabiC·speaking coun·
tries, the Washington Post
reported today. The elder
Fields died of cancer in May,
and his son then began showing
an interest in Islam and
Arabic, it said .
The Fields' live in a middle
income neighborhood in Silver
Spring, Md., and Fields rece nt.
ly worked as a taxi driver in
suburban Maryland. He ide nli·
lied himself as Abdul Rahim .
Secret Service spokesman
William Hawthorne said Fields,
2~. had been "of interest" to
the agency before Wednesday,
but would not elaborate .
The Washington Post said at
least three news media had
received material from Fields
in the past, indicating he
planned to renounce his citizen· ·
ship on Dec. 25 a nd seek
political asylum in a thirdworld country .
The newspaper quoted an
unnamed Secret Service spokesman as saying " he was of
protective interest to us. He
came to our attelltion because
we thought he could be a
possible problem towards . the
people we protect."
The Service commi !led Fields
to the maxim tun security ward
of St. Elizabeth's hospital for
observation, with no charges
against him, under a legal
procedure allowing the agency
to detain persons who pose a
threat to those under its
protection.
" The Secret Service would
have U.ken a lot stronger action
if the First Family was at
home," said agent George
Cosper. "It's Christmas Day.

!:

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Tanks near the town joined in llle

,...
Columns of infantry then hit the town from the south and
... west, cutting through the defense perimeter and overrun:·:: ning the militia outpost guarding county headquarters.

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.,,,.,..... ,., ,,,,,,,,,,., .. , .... ,.... ·.· .. •.•.·. ·&lt;· ... · ·· '' ''''''''''' .. ,,,,,,, '''''' ,.,,, ''''''' ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,.. .. ..

Steel production
seen normal soon
By Uolted Press International
Steel production, hard hit by
a prolonged coal strike, was
expected to return to normal
soon as coal miners return
from a Christmas holiday at
the end of a six-week walkout.
The final threat to all&lt;&gt;ut
production was postponed for
at least 60 days while the
United Mine Workers union
and the Western Pennsylvania
Coal Haulers Association work
on a contract dispute.
In a related development,
Bethlehem Steel Corp., the
nation's No. 2 steel producer,
was expected to announce
today whether it would follow
U.S. Steel's lead and roll back
price increases.
Bethlehem announced a 2.~
per cent increase in rolled steel
products shortly before U.S.
Steel -the No. 1 producer agreed to a rollback Monday

"We felt some compassion to
save the man. ''
Agents with high-powered
weapons hid in nearby bushes
and behind pillars of the portico
during the incident, but no
shots were fired.
President Ford, vacationing
with his family in Vail, Colo.,
was informed of the incident.
Wednesday's incident began
in the uncharacteristic silence
of Pennsylvania Avenue at 7
a.m. when Fields, driving west
in his two-door brown Chevrolet
sU.rted to make what While
House guards thought was a U
turn. Instead he rammed the
car through the iron northwest
gate and drove up to within 20
feet of the mansion's door_

night under

White House

pressure.
Wheeling-Pittsburgh Steel
Corp. also is planning to in·
crease pipe and plate products
by 5.5 per cent.
Bethlehem said its increase
would cover only one-third of
wage and materials cost increases which occurred during
the past five months.
The U.S. Steel cutback in·
volved approximately 20 per

cent of the annowlCed increase,
a spokesman said.
That represented a drop
from 4.7 per cent to 4 per cent
in prices calculated on the "full
product range," although the

.,)·-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Dec. 26,1974

~

LORTON, Va. (UP!)
Rebellious maximum security
iJUT1ates holding nine Lorton
Reformatory guards hostage
today reached tentative agreementon terms for ending their
12 hour siege.
The agreement hinged on a
guarantee that no reprisals
would be directed against the
inmates involved in tile uprising and that 'none would be
transferred from Lorton to
another maximum security
institution.
The inmates negotiated with
officials unaware that one of
the instigators was shot and
killed.
Marion Strickland, superintendent of Lorton, said agreement on .s everal issues of
contention was reached about 7
a.m. EST and that a courier
hah d beenb sebnt withwthehpact to
l e su ur an
as mgton
home or Norman Carlson,
director of the U.S. Bureau of
Prisons, for his signature.
ln addition to assurances
tllat no inmates would be
transferred from Lorton to

other maximum security institutions, the agreement
called for better visiting hours
and restoration of inmate
furloughs, canceled recently
by Attorney General William
B. Saxbe.
Authorities said about 90 to
95 prisoners took 10 guards
hostage after the escape attempt about 7 p.m. Christmas

I have been verY active all
my life. I live on a farm, have a
large farm house, and plenty of
work. Since I have turned 6~. I
seem to be more tired than I
u.&lt;;ed to be. I am worrying a bit
and wondering if time is
beginning to run out for me. I
was around 50 when the
problem was first diagnosed .
The specialist told me since I
was doing so well, at my age,
he wouldn't advise an
operation. Then he gave me a
list of things to be careful about
which was ,so long, I couldn't
possibly keep up with it. It
·included avoiding all infections, flu, and even to have
penicillin when I had my teeth
cleaned.
I'm just thankful I have had

'
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298 ·sECOND ST. .
POMEROY,
OHIO
,,
QUANTITY RIGHTS ARE RESERVED
NO SALES TO DEALERS

THRU DEC. 28th

OPEN 8 AM • 10 PM MON.-SAT.
10 AM • 10 PM SUNDAYS

FRYING
•
CHICKEN
BEST PARTS

lb.

Fresh and Lean

GROUND BEEF
3 lb.
or
more

lb.

·,

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"Christmas is a very lonelY
John McKay's Trojans, most
'Tis the season to be jollyNEW YORK (UP!) - Frankl.ane wrinkled his brow.
of whom live in California, had day for boys who are away
especially
if you're a college
He was unhappy over something he had just read in the paper.
no workouts Tuesday or Christ- from family and friends,"
basketball fan.
He was more than unbappy. He was upset.
.
mas Day. Woody Hayes took Hayes explained as the reason
Starting today or Friday, 26
As one of baseball's elder statesmen, Frank Lane knows more
most of his 60 Buckeyes to the for the outing.
about what's happening in every section of the country, all over major tournaments with a
Santa Claus, loaded with
Balboa Bay Club Wednesday
U1e world, in fact, than most of our senators and congressmen. duration of between two to five
for a day of tennis, pool, sauna P.f'esents, visited the Buckeye The way he manages this is by traveling ahnost continuously for
days will get under way around
baths and strolls along the delegation Tuesday night folthe ball club he's with at the time (now it's the Texas Rangers), the land . Enough college hoop
lowing a special appreciation by spending hours on the telephone and by reading every action for anybody.
beach.
party dinner from the OSU newspaper he can possibly get his two hands on . He doesn ' t
Eight of these classics begin
I'!
•
athletic department. Then the merely scan the papers, he reads every single item. When Frank play
today,
the
most
players were allowed to stay up Lane reads a newspaper, he gets his money's worth. He reads the glamorous of them perhaps the
or out Wltil 2 a.m.
five-day Rainbow Classic in
print off it.
The Buckeyes were slated
The story getting him so worked up right now had to do with Honolulu. Among the eight
for a trip to Catalina Island Sptro Agnew, who used to be vice president until he resigned learns participating will be
Ask to check our
today. The squad was to return following his conviction on a tax evasion charge.
secon d ranked
Indiana,
"MERCK VEnRINARY
to Citrus College by late afSpiro Agnew is doing well in real estate, making $100,000 a bringing an 8-0 record into the
MANUAL"
ternoon for a workout. Friday year, the newspaper story said. That was perfecUy all right with event.
: l.IJS ANGELES (UP!) during the regular season and
the Buckeyes will take a trip to Lane, but what burned him up was what Agnew had to say about
Other teams entered are
Reisman Trophy winner Ar· switched positions willl Dick view the broadcast of the
Florida,
Hawaii, Ohio State,
.
ilhle Griffin has gained more Mack because he couldn't snap "Tonight" program. From the press.
San Jose State,
Pennsylvania,
" I'm bitter," Agnew was quoted as saying. "I'll never get over
lltan 100 yards in 22 straight the ball. In Ohio State's first lllen on, Hayes will drUl OSU
Tulsa
and
Villanova
, with the
(llmes.
practice at Columbus for the five consecutive days in the distortions and inaccuracies in the press. I don't like 90 per
lith-ranked Quakers, IHl, ex:: That should make him tile Rose Bowl, he fracl\ll'ed his prepping for the yearend cent of the press. I don'tneed the press. What more can they do to
peeled to provide the Hoosiers
me?
I
am
not
a
public
figure
anymore
.
You
people
in
the
press
mosi consistent player on the hand again.
college football classic on New are always argulng for the right to privacy. How about letting me with their toughest comClhio State football team,
"Steve is such a valuable
Year's day.
petition.
have mine? 11
i11ght?
individual to our team that we
Hayes said he was not
No. I North Carolina State is
Frank
J.ane
refused
to
let
that
go
unchallenged.
: wrong!
had to have him somewhere," pleased with the Tuesday drill
one of the few ranked teams
"!think
Spiro
Agnew
is
all
wet,"
he
barked.
: At least that's the way Joe Bugel explained. "He's one guy
results.
"I don'tgoalongwith hbn at all. I like the media. Where would not involved in tourney action;
l!ugel sees it. Of course, Bugel we can't do without. That's
11 1t
was no better than this country be if it wasn't for the dedication of newspapermen ? the Wolfpack, IHl, takes on
May be prejudiced. He's · why we just didn't put Steve on satisfctory,'' he added, indicatMaybe we're in bad shape now, but we'd be in worse shape Kent State Friday and Pittsil'oody Hayes' assistant coach the bench and move the backup ing the team was fatigued.
without newspapers . Nobody would have the slightest idea of burgh Sal'!"day.
~ charge of centers and guy into his starting spot."
"The kids are tired, real what's going on.
Fourth-rated Louisville is the
~lards.
Myers, a S-2, 243-pounder, is tired, but if we don't get their
as the host in the twofavorite
"Certainly, now and then some newspaperman may have an
: Bugel thinks All-America an articulate and personable legs used to sod now, there'sno
day
Fidelity
Holiday Classic,
eenter Steve Myers, a talented 21-year&lt;&gt;ld who has aspirations use trying next week," he said, ax to grind. He may take advantage of the fact the pen is but they're likely to have to
mightier than the sword, but from my experience, the great
;eruor from Kent, Ohio, is No. I of playing professional foot- noting the Buckeyes have been
majority of all newspapermen are dedicated to telling the truth, beaten No. 13 Purdue en route.
lmong the Ohio State football- ball. He's particularly grateful playing on artificial turf all
Florida State and Western
tlts in consistency.
for Mack, the brother of llle season. "Actually, we'll start and if you can't stand the truth, then you're in a bad way. Mr.
Agnew should remember this : Our sy~tem of goverrunenl is no Kentucky are also entered.
: "Really, Steve has been the Los Angeles Rams' Tom Mack, easing up in practice now.''
In a reduced field , fifthgreater Ulan those people disseminating the news, and these are
most reliable player on llle an All-Pro guard, for switching
Hayes has had several the very people he's Ulrowing rocks at."
ranked Southern . California
team," said Bugel. "He didn't positions with him.
players injured, which causes
During the tbne he was general manager with the While Sox, looms as the choice against St.
lilve a bad game during the
"The biggest adjustment l
him some concern about Cardinals, Indians, A's and Brewers, Lane generally could be Joseph's (Pa.) and four local
tf&gt;tire season. There are All- had to make was learning how working too hard from here on
depended upon to fill in waiting newsmen on what went on in teams in New York's five-day
.&lt;£mericas and All-Americas. to pull out," Myers said. "I
in.
many of those "secret" meetings behind closed doors between Holiday Festival. Rutgers, No.
'eve is a real All-America." found it bard to keep track of
Hayes' holidays were some- baseball officials.
20, figures as the likely final
• Myers played six games at the linebackers on the other
what dampened by the condi·
"Del Webb once said to me 'I thought we agreed we were not opponent for the Trojans in the
SALE BEGINS FRIDAY
~nter and five at guard this team."
lion of lour injured players six-learn tow-ney - reduced
gci.nt..
to
give
out
any
news,"'
Lane
recalled.
An All-Big Ten guard selec- regular split end Dave Hazel,
"-son. In the Rose Bowl, he'll
' 1 dilli. '•\1 them the result, I told them what we discussed,"- from last year's 16-but Man·
II! a guard in the Buckeyes' tion, Mack also admitted he regular offensive right tackle Lane
said to webb. "!thought we looked pretty stupid saying we hattan, Fordham and Seton
had "a considerable amount of
&lt;f!ensive line.
Hall, because of their local
Scott Dannelly, second team met for four hours and didn '!discuss anything bnportant."
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
• There were medical reasons. difficulties adjusting" to the offensive tackle Lou Pietrini,
Whenever Lane visits a city, he generally makes a trip to the backers, cannot be ruled out.
: He suffered a broken hand center spot.
and second team defensive out&lt;&gt;f-town newsstand and buys as many papers as he can carry.
•
•
tackle Tyrone Harris.
"I'd get sixty papers a day when I was general manager of the
•
Dannelly, 6-3,240, and Hazel, Cardinals," he said, "and I remember some detractors saying
S-1, 192, both suffered sprained 'the only reason Lane is doing that is because he wants to see if
ankles in practice prior to the they're saying something nice about him.'
•
Buckeyes arrival in California .
" Remarks like that used to . make me laugh. I never kept a
Hayes has kept both out of clipping in my life. But I know the value of newspapers. They're
contact drills to date here.
the cheapest form of education you can buy . Once, when I was
It appears as if Pietrini and with the Cardinals, I had abnost closed a deal with the Phillies
Harris will be sidelined for for Richie Ashburn. We were going to give them Rip Repulski .
SAN FRANCISCO (UP!)- l'r'1C1nauy, Harvard; quar- New Year's Day with their
"I picked up a Philadelphia paper one day and saw this picture
The East-West squada • today terback, Dennis Franklin, injwies. Pietrini, 6--3, 242, who
Or Ashburn having his back rubbed by the trainer . This was in
dlmounced llleir starting line- Michigan; running backs, backs up Kurt Schumacher at
January. I called up Roy Harney, then the Phillies' general
Brad
Davis,
Louisiana
State
ups for llle annual Shrine game
left Uickle, suffered a con- manager, and asked hbn, 'do I get the rubbing table and the
and
Waller
Payton,
Jackson
at Stanford Stadium Saturday
Inc lud es acid and
cussion in scrimmage Monday. trainer, too?'
State.
afternoon.
no rma l in stallation .
"He said, 'whaddya mean, there's nothing wrong with Ash·
East: Defense- Right end, Harris, 6-3, 242, strained his
on any size Ex tra Life battery .
: Both teams scheduled a short
right
knee
Saturday
during
burn.' I told him, so long as there was nothing wrong with Ash·
morning practice and then the Mark Petersen, Dlinois; right practice and has been forced to
Offer Ends
You pay as tow as '26.05
burn, he could stay in Philadelphia, but I wanted another outplayers took time off to be tackle, Gary Burley, Pitts- use a cane.
Jan. 15
fielder.
That's
how
we
got
Del
Ennis.
He
drove
in
100
runs,
hit
24
~ests at Marine World in burgh; left tackle, Charles
A Buckeye spokesman also homers and balled .286 lor us that year. Hell, he all but won the
Hall, Tulane; left end, Randy
Redwood City.
said
James O'Rourke, 6-3, 252,
: On Christmas Day, East White, Maryland; outside who played back of Harris, permant for us!"
ABA Standings
utah
17 19 .472 12
Coach Bo Schembechler put his linebacker, Terry McClowry,
suffered such a severe
By United Press International
In diana
13 16 448 12 112
Michigan
State;
middle
squad through some kicking
sprained
ankle
in
Columbus
East
San Diego
II 20 .355 15 112
w . I. pet. g.b.
• Wednesday's Result
and offensive maneuvers. He linebacker, Steve Strinko, workouts that he was 1e f t Kentucky
21
9 .700
utah 112 sa n Diego 100
_
Michigan;
outside
linebacker,
ooted the West had the day off
home.
New York
22 10 .688
Thursday's Games
·
St. Louis
lJ 21 . 382 10
' Kentucky at Indi a na
and said, "We thought about Robert Brazile, Jackson Stale;
He was replaced on the Memphis
9 22 .290 l 2 1h N ew York vs . Virginia
going by their botel and singing cornerback, John Provost,
traveling squad by Larry Virginia
a 23 .258 131 ' '
at Norfolk
Holy
Cross
and
Mike
Williams,
West
. sa n Diego at MemphiS
some Christmas carols."
O'Rourke, no relation, a 6-2,
w. 1. pet . g . b. San Anton io at St . Louis
The starting lineups were: Louisiana State; strong safety,
246-poWld
defensive
tackle.
Denver
27
5 . B·U ~
Utah at Denver
San Anto11io
19 15 'i~Q
9
.
East: Offense-Tight end, John Washington, Tulane; and
free
safety,
David
Brown,
OYEAR END SALE- YEAR END SALE- YEAR END SALE- YEAR END SALE- YEAR END SALE- YEAR END SALE- YEAR END SALE- YEA~
Jack Novak, Wisconsin; right .
Michigan.
U.ckle, AI Krevls, Boston
West: Offense-tight end,
College; right guard Ralph
Perretta, Purdue; center, Rick Oscar Roan, SMU; right
Nuzum, Kentucky; left guard, tackle, Jeff Hart, Oregon
Joe Hatfield, Illinois; left State; right guard, Chris
U.ckle,
Darryl
Carlton, Mackie, California; center,
\.
wI
).T ,
~
WE WILL MOUNT TIRES THAT ARE SOLD DU'ING THIS SALE AT NO CHARGE TO YOU!
"
-&lt;I
Tampa; wide receiver, Larry Geoff Reece, Washington
~
m
Burton, Purdue and Pat State; left guard, Harvey
Goodman, Colorado; left
~
]&gt;
0
~
U.ckle, AI Simpson, Colorado
State; wide receive~, Bob
Farr, Air Force and Morris
Goodyear
Owens, Arizona State; quarterback, Steve Bartkowski,
California; running backs,
INDIANAPOUS (UP!)
Mike Thomas, .Nevacia-Las
The Indianapolis Indians of the . Vegas, and Andrew Jmnes,
special
American Association have Washington State.
~
~\'i
,.~
~
"N "
m
traded a catcher for a
West: Defense-left end, Pat
ew
Cleveland I,.U,ns outfielder.
Donovan, Stanford; left tackle,
The Indians have obtained Dave Pear, Washington; right
1
the contract of outfielder Jbn tackle, Gary .Johnson, Gram:
Hoppe from the Cleveland bling; right end, Dave Wasick, ·
Extra special on Daytona Sport 60 Series • The White Letter Tires.
.,.l&gt;
Indians for catcher Gene San Jose Stale; left linebacker,
Fred Dean, Louisiana Tech;
Dusan.
~
"Rea. Tread" Extra wide look •23.95. That's rlghtl Only '23.95 • What a buy
All service
:;;
Hoppe, 28, split the 1974 middle linebacker, Bob Breu1
Meigs Extra Special Sale on small rtres any ANY DAYTONA PASSENGER TIRE IN STOCK
I
season between .Oklahoma City nig, Arizona State; right
w
size. Listed A7Bx'l3, D78x14, E78x14, 695x14, EX
.
CEPT
ALl
RADIAL
TIRES
tread
-&lt;
and Omaha. He batted .270.
linebacker, Gordon Riegel,
~
735x14. Black or white walls. all now Goodyear
... . .
m
Duson a switch-hitting Stanford; left cornerback,
calcber, 'came to the Indians Louie Wright, San Jose State;
SIZE
OR
Only
frolil Tul8a in 1973 and during , right cornerback, Monte Jackz
SPECIAL PRICE
' 24•95
the past season appeared in 81 son, San Diego State; strong
games, occasionally also play- safety,
INCLUDES ONLY
Tony
Peters,
ing first base. He had a .283 · Oklahoma; free safety, Barry
TIRES IN
batting average.
Hill, Iowa State.

Saturday's Shrine
starters released

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~$"
/
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Indians trade
with Indians

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Olo!

••
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. INTEREST OF

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Exec . Ed.
ROBERT HOEFLICH
City Editor

Publi she d da i ly exc-ept
Sat 1.1rday by The Ohio Valley
P.ubli&lt;:hin g Company , 111

~

Court

~

For Your Dining and Listening

Pleasure......

~
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45769 . Business Office Phone

... ;LT

.
..! TONIGHT 9:30 TO 2:00
i· The MEIGS INN

992 -2156 . Editor ial Phone 992-

~·

2157 .

Secon d class postage paid Cit
Pomeroy, Ohio .
·
National
advertisin_g
representative.
Bott l nell1

GEO. HALL

~

Ga-llagh er , Inc .; 12 Ea st 42nd

St ., New York , New York.
S ubscription
rates:
Delivered by ca rrier where
available 60 cents per week ;

AND THE HALLMARKS

~

By Motor Route where ca rrier

service not available . One
month, S2 .60 . By mail' ii"l Ohio .
and W.Va ., One Year , S18 ; Six
months . S9 .50 : Three mo nths ,

S6 . Elsewhere $22 .00 year ; six

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,f,~1-~~ea( o SALE POSITIVELY STARTS AT 8:00 AM .r/.~~.,')~o~
~~~(.~~'
THURSDAY DEC. 26 AND ENDS
'%.,;~ ".o% ~~:~"
~,q_qs~.,(es

~e-ll

Ill

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For example G78x15 or H78x15 • Poly'ester Cord.

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MEED FARM TIRES-YES, SIRI THEY'RE ON SALE, TOOl

ME.IG·s .TIR'E
. CENTER

700 E. Main
.

Pomeroy, Ohio
Phon 992-2101

.

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YEAR E-ND SALE- YEAR END SALE- YEAR END SALE- YEAR END SALE- YEAR, END SALE- YEAR' END SALE-SALE - .YEAR
I

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Fec.ExciseTaxfrom1.73-3.57pertire
No charge for mounting
Special on balancing with weights $1.50 per tire

0

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$2 295

Check our other sale prices on Goodyear tires.

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TUESDAY AT 4:00PM. DEC. 31, 1974
SALE • CASH ONLY

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! Ph. 992-3629
. · omeroy !
*********************************
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HUGE SAVINGS FROM OUR POCKETS TO YOURS~1-:~+'s

Tf~~

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Meigs Tire Center

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S t . . Pomeroy , Ohio

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MEIGS·MASON AREA
CHESTER L. T~NNEHILL

months S1 1. 50. three months,
SI&gt;SO S ubscr iption pri ce in .
c lu d!"'S
&lt;; und3'r'
Times
St-mtinel

All KINDS OF
MEDICAL ·
SUPPLIES &amp;
ANTIBIOTICS
FOR ANIMALS

THE SHOE BOX

n

DEVOTED TO THE

N1'nth-ranked Ar1'zona S'·te
~
meets seven foes in the fiveday Far West Classic, with No .
14 Oregon its chief opponent.
Boston College, Creigh ton,
Iowa, Oregon State, Wake
Forest and Washington State
are the others.
No. 17 Oklahoma is the other
Top 20 team in action today,
visiting Kansas City, Mo. for
the five-day Big Eight Classic.
Colorado, Iowa State, Kansas
State, Kansas, Missouri, Nebraska and Oklahoma SUite
oppose the Sooners.
The other tourneys starting
today are the two-day Gator
Bowl in Jacksonville, Fla., lhe
Poinsettia Classic in Greenville, S.C., and the four-day ·
All-College
to urn ey
in
Okiahoma City, Okla .
At Jacksonville, Memphis
State is favored against Jacksonville, Penn Stale and Temple; Furman is the choice at
Greenville versus. Baylor, Lafayette and Washington and
host Oklahoma City should
prevail over Centenary, Niagara, North Texas State, Pacific,
UNC Charlotte, Wyoming and
Xavier.

Boots, One Group Childs
House Slippers $100

••

The Dai~ Sentinel

~~~ By Uolted Press International

UP! Sports Editor

20% Discount On All Angel
Treads, Cowboy Boots, Mens

u

a good life for 65 years, and just saw for another reason. l found
wondered what your comments that he had this problem,
completely unrecognized
might be.
annual
flying
DEAR READER- You are despite
unusual, all right. The birth examinations by many docdefect you have is really an tors.
If the shunt is very small, so
artery connecting two others:
it
dosn't affect the heart's
the main artery that carries
blood I&lt;&gt; the lungs I&lt;&gt; get oxygen action to any significant
and the main artery that degree, lllen the other p•oblem
carries oxy!fenated blood out of is the danger of bacterial en·
the left side of the heart to the docarditis, an infection of the
heart. That is why your doctor
rest of the body (aorta).
wanted
you to take penicillin if
While llle baby is in the
you
had
any infection or even
uterus, this artery is open and
you
had your teeth
when
shunts blood through the
cleaned.
baby's body willlout sending it
In general, even small shtmts
to the lungs. Only after birth,
of
this type should be closed
when the lungs open is it
when
diagnosed In early
necessary for the blood to go to
childhood. I must agree,
the lungs to get oxygen. At
!bat in a healthy
however,
birth or very soon after, this
persiln
past
50, I would think in
small artery shunt usually
it coUld be left
most
instances
closes so you have a normal
alone.
circulation.
All of this also means that
your defect will probably not
lf a doctor was seeing ·have any serious effects on
nothing but congenital heart your heart or your health, I do
defects this would be one of the third&lt;, though, that you should
more common conditions. lt is have antibiotics when you have
not as dangerous as you think . any respiratory illriess or even
How much trouble It causes dental procedures.
depends on how large the shunt
Send your questions to Dr.
really is. If it is a small arterial Lamb, in care of this
connection and not much blood newspaper, P. 0 . Box 1551,
is shunted through it, about the Radio City Station, New York,
only probleM it will cause is to N.Y . 10019 . .For a copy of Dr.
create a loud noise or the Lamb's booklet on cholesterol,
murmur that caused all the send 50 cents to the same adcOncern. I recall one very good dress and ask for .t he
, 41).year&lt;&gt;ld Air Force pilot I ' 'Cholesterol' ' "booklet.

~

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SUPPliES 0•
for lar~e &amp; Small Animals

Our Holiday Specials ...

hostages was released as a
"good faith gesture," prison
spokesman Bill Plaut said.

INJURED SINGING
CANTON, Ohio (UP!)
Officials at Aultman Hospital
here Wednesday listed Judith
Lombardi, 10, Canton, Ohio, as
satisfactory after treatment
for a gunshot wound received
while singing Christmas carols
with friends in front of a local
residence.
The children were delivering
cookies to an elderly couple
· Monday night and ·decided to
sing in front of their home. The
couple, asleep at the time,
woke up and thought there
were prowlers ·at the front
door. Judith was hit in the
chest by rifle fire through the
door.

By Ml" 'TON RICHMAN

..
~yers' consi~tency
.
tivals
that of Arch
..

PRICES GOOD

STORE HOURS

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'lr'TI'DIIUADV ,

; PASADENA, Calif. (UP!) lioth Ohio State University and
lis New Year's Day Rose Bowl
Z!lponent, the University of
Z.,uthern California, were slat~ to resume practice this
'llfternoon following brief train! %ng breaks for the Christmas
:Z.,Udays.

night when about a dozen inmates rushed the prison wall.
Lorton spokesmen said at least
two men and possibly four
made it through a guard tower,
drawing one shot from a guard.
· That shot killed one of the
men, whose body was found
about six hours later in a stolen
getaway several miles from
the prison, according to local
police and prison spokesmen.
At about the same time the
body was found, one of the

DR. LAMB

By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - I am a
65-year-old woman. For many
years, whenever I went for a
checkup, the doctors were very
concerned ,about a heart
murmur that I have. They
didn 't seem to know what it
wa!', so, finally they sent me to
a nationally known medical
center for an ~xamination . The
heart specialist found I had a
patent ductus. As yolt know,
this is something a baby is born
with. According to medical
knowledge, a child does not live
very long with this, so I guess 1
am an exception. .

Sport Parade

m=

initial increase affected only
two-thirds of the firm's proThe jail, operated by the
ducts and was believed to be District of Columbia is in
closer to 8 per cent.
suburban Virginia, about 30
About 550 UMW coal-hauling miles south of Washington.
truck drivers in western PennAs tt.lks went on through the
sylvania agreed Tuesday to a night in the mess hall, where
IW-&lt;lay "cooling off" period about 15 inmate negotiators
while their union leaders try to and four prison officials sat
convince their employers to aroW1d a table, there was no
sign the national Bituminous mention of the killing.
Coal Operators Association
Seven reporters and about 15
contract.
members of inmates' families
That pact was ra tilled by watched, including a prisoner's
120,000 UMW members alter a sister who took part in the
month-long strike, but UMW discussions.
construction workers kept alDuring the negotiations, llle
most hall the nation's mines hostages were held by the
idled lor two more weeks until remaining 711 to 75 inmates in a
basement.
tbey got a contract.
The coal haulers refused to
Demands included longer
sign the agreement on grounds visiting hours, more visiting
it does not cover problems of days, the removal of the
the trucking industry.
maximum security superinThey want a separate con- tendent accused of racism,
tract with an exemption from better medical care and better
royalty payments such as th~e facilities at the prison expaid into the UMW Welfare and change and a promise that the
Retirement fund on a per-ton inmates would not be transbasis by coal operators.
ferred in reprisal to a federal
maximum security prison such
as Leavenworth.

Hearl murmur late in life

Holiday
·
classics
.R
ill1 un d erway
•
.,/.
i

l.~::~~llmi@~:W.f®HK®~w~~1,~

ISunny Christmas w
:s: .
.
W.~
Jor Woody's boys

'

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Of:l,

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~

EN~ SALE
y

.
.

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�•

.

4 - The Dailv Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., 'I'hursdav, Dec. 26, 1974

Pro Standings

Harsha
demands

Buffalo
Boston

Atlant ic Division
w . I. pet. ·g. b.
21 - 11
19 13

.656
.594

2

N e w York

18

13

.581

21Jl

Phil ad el phia

14

20

.412

8

Ce ntral Divi s ion

industry ."
Harsha said the producers
were curtalling production of
reserves "under the specious
argument it would not be
profitable as long as interstate
price regulations are in ef-

fect."
"I shudder to think what
would happen to the economy
of the country if natural gas is
deregulated under such cir-

added.

"Decontrolled prices could
triple the consumer cost, adding as much as $700 extra on
each user's yearly bill.
"Considering this and the
fact there has been no new
natural gas exploration for
three to four years, I want the
Federal Power Commission to
conduct a fuil invgestigation of
natural gas producers and
their marketing policies before
the American consumer is
bilked once more by the profit
laden energy industry."
Harsha said in a statement
that even higher costs are in
prospect next year .
"The plight of the consumer
is heading for another nosedive
in this year's version of the
energy crisis as the wellhead
producers of nalllral gas set
the
scene
for
price
deregulation," Harsha said.
''If there is a real shortage of
natural gas, why are these
companies selling the product
hand over fist in their own
siates where the price Is not
restricted and cutting back
interstate customers who must
pay the lower regulated price?
If that isn't monopolizing the
market, I don't know what Is."

Onassis to
d
UJVe
rewar
~~
0

for proof
ATHENS, Greece (UP!) Greek shipowner Aristotle
Onassis has offered an $830,000
reward for proof the light plane
crash that klned his ' only son,
Alexander, 24, on takeoff from
the Athens Airport two years
ago was caused by sabotage.
The pilot, Donald McCusker,
50, Columbus, Ohio, and copilot Donald McGregor, of
Canada, were injured, but
recovered and left the country.
They and five Greek ground
mechanics were indicted in
connection with the accident.
The trlal was indefinitely
postponed in October after
McCusker and the elder Onassls failed to show up in court.
Front-page advertisements
in Athens newspapers Tuesday
said, ~ "Because foreign and
Greek experts say sabotage
rather than negligence in the
airplane crash of Jan. 22, 1973
caused the death of Alexander
Onassls and the injury of other
persons as well as the loss of
the aircraft, anyone who has
proof or evidence showing that
the accident was premeditated
should come forward to be
rewarded with the sum of 15
million drachmas ($500,000) in
Greek or foreign currency.
"In addition the sum of io
million drachmas ($330,000)
will be given to charity on the
reconunendatlon of the successful applicant."
The advertisement said th~

Washing to n
Cl eveland
Ho ust on
A t la nt a
New Orleans

w . I. pet . g .b.
25
9 .735
17 12 .586
51 z
16 15 .5 16
711z
14 19 .424 I Oh
3 29 . 094 21

Western Conference

M idw es t Divi sion
w . I. pet . g.b.
Chi ca g o
16 14 . 533
KC : Om ah a
HI 17 .514
•12

D etroit
16 11 485
l'h
Milwauke 12 19 387
4 11 -2
Pacific Divi sion
w. 1. pet . g.b.
Go lden Stat e
21 II 656
Sea ttl e
16 17 .485
5111

Portlan d
Phoen ix
LosAngeles

15
15
13

11
17
19

.469
.469
.406

6
6
a

Wednesday' s Results
Phi ladelphia 104 New York 97
Washing ton 110 A llan fa 92
P hoenix 110 Boston 96
Thur sday's Game s
New York at De tro it
Los Ang at Cleveland
Ph i ladelphia at Chicago
A tl a nt a at Houston
Portland at Gol d en Sla te

Innovative

C. A. R. E.
announced
ATHENS Preschool,
kindergarten and elementary
school personnel of southeastern Ohio soon will have an
exceptional opportunity to earn
up to 10 graduate or undergraduate quarter hours of
credit in the identification,
diagnosis and teaching of
handicapped childre n. One
section will be given at Meigs
High School.
The Ohio University College
of Education is sponsoring a
new and innovative program
entitled, "C. A.R. E ." , an
acronym for computer assisted
renewal education. C.A.R.E.
consists or four computermediated courses houses in an
air conditioned 4().foot van. The
program is specially designed
for educators who cannot spare
the time away from their jobs
and families to enroll in oncampus courses dw-ing normal
working hours .
Flexible scheduling, individualized instruction and
self-paced studies are key
concepts
around
which
C.A.R.E. was developed.
This unique program will be
offered durjng the Ohio
University Winter and Spring
Academic Quarters . For the
convenier:-ce of a greater
number of southeastern Ohio
and nearby Western Virginia
educators, C.A.R.E. wiU be
offered at two different sitesdates : Ohio University, Athens
Campus, February 10 to March
21, 1975, and Meigs High School
near Pomeroy, March 24 to
May 2.
· Persons interested in additional information concerning the C.A.R.E. Program
and-&lt;Jr enrollment materials
are urged to contact the CARE
Coordinator, Continuing
Education
Office,
Ohio
University, 309 Tupper Hall,
Athens, Ohio 45701 ; telephone
1614) 594-2263 or 3361.

NEW YORK (UP!) - Offen- wide bailoting of 39 sports fault of the &amp;.foot-2, 260 pound
sive guard John Hicks, whose writers, three from each NFC Hicks who, along with fellow
crunching blocking and pass · city.
rookie guard Tom Mullen of
protecting provided some of
Hi cks received 13 votes Southwest Missouri Slate, gave
the few bright spots in an compared to 12 for Jackson the Giants one of the better
otherwise dismal season for who , after a brilliant collegiate offensive lines in the league.
the New York Glsnts, today ca reer at Alabama, ranked _ " You really can't measure
was named the United Press eighth in rushing in the NFC an individual performance
International's 1974 National with 700 yards on the ground such as mine in view or the
Footbail Conference Rookie of despite missing a couple o£ team 's poor record, " sa id
the Year.
games because of injuries. The Hicks, who, along with an All
Hicks, a No. 1 draft choice only other rookie to get more America selection, also won
out of Ohio Slate who proved to than two votes was linebacker both the Outland Trophy and
. be a real "blue chipper," Waymond Bryant of the Chica- Lombardi Trophy during his
became the first offensive go Bea rs who was named on senior year at Ohio State. " I
lineman, other than an end, to four ballots.
really didn't expect to start this
gain the honor in the 2().year
The Giants finished the 1973 year and l had a lot of learning
history of the award. He won season with a 2-12 record, tied to do. I tried to reac h a point of
by a slim one vote over ruming with Baltimore for the worst consistencY."
back Wilbur Jackson of the San mark in the National Football
Asked if he had any trouble
Francisco 49ers in the na lion- League, but it was hardly the mastering the art of pass

Position change doesn't
bother 76ers' Bristow
By United Press International

Allan Bristow, &amp;.foot-7, who
was a center in college and
never even practiced at guard,
was informed by coach Gene
Shue just before the game that
he "should be prepared to play
some backcourt. ''
Bristow proceeded to score a
career-high 23 points and pace
the Philadelphia 76ers to a 19497 upset victory over the
slumping New York Knicks at
Madison Square Garden.
Bristow and Billy Cunningham scored 14 points apiece in
the second half to bring
Phtladelphia back from a 10.
point halftime deficit. At one
point in the second quarter , the
Knicks led by 16.
Philadelphia took the lead
for the first time, 89-88, on a
layup by Steve Mix with 3:50
remaining in the game. The
game was then tied three times
before New York center John
Gianelli fouled out trying to
S\Op Fred Carter. Carter hit the
two free throws and gave
Phtladelphia a 95-93 lead it
never lost. Bristow and Cunningham combined to give the
76ers some lively offensive
rebounding down the stretch to
secure the victory.
In the only other NBA action,
Phoenix whipped Boston, 110.
96, and Washington ripped

Game Friday
Coach Carl
Wolle's
Southern Tornados wHI play
Richard Hamilton's Southwestern Highlanders Friday
evening beglonlng with the
reserv~ game at 6:30 a. m.
on the Highlander planks.
Southwestern is 2-2 in the
league whlle Southern has a
1-2 record.
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Tuesday Admissions - Sybil
Greene, Hartford; Fred Lewis,
Clifton; Charles Landers,
Minersville ; Sandra Peyton,
Pomeroy; Charles Hawk,
Pomeroy.
Tuesday Discharges Florine Ginther, Carol Dailey,
Kathy Pierce, Calvin Imboden,
Geneva Clark, Florence
Thornton, Edith McCoy.
Wednesday Admission Kathryn Werry, Morgantown,
W.Va.
Wednesday Discharges Rhonda Jeffers, Sybil Greene.

Atlanta, 110.92.
Charlie Scott scored 30 points
and Keith Erickson 25 as
Phoenix survived a fourth. quarter scare to beat Boston.
Scott and Erickson's performances offset a season-high 33
points by Boston's Jo Jo White .
White, Dave Cowens with 23
and John Havlicek with 15 were

Past winners
NEW YORK (UP!)
Winners of the Rookie of the
Year Award in the National
Football League and , starting
in 1970, the National Footbail
Conference:
1955 - Aian Ameche,
Baltimore
1956 - Lenny
Moore,
Baltimore
1957--.Jim Brown, Cleveland
1958- Jimmy Orr, Pittsburgh
. 1959- Boyd Dowler, Green
Bay
1960--Gail Cogdill, Detroit
1961- Mlke Ditka, Chicago ·
1962-Ron Bull, Chicago
1963-Paul Flatley, Min-

~~&lt;)sola

1964-Charley
Taylor ,
Washington
1965--Gale Sayers, Chicago
1966--.Johnny Roland, St.
Louis
1967-Mel Farr, Detroit
1968-Earl
McCullouch,
Detroit
196!1--Calvin Hill, Dallas
1970-Bruce Taylor, San
Francisco
1971--.John Brockington,
Green Bay
1972-Chester Marco!, Green
Bay
1973-Charl es Young,
Philadelphia
1974-John Hicks, New York
Giants

...

,'

·.·

'

'/ .

. .·

"

SPRAY COLOGNE
4 fabulous fragrances
in elegant spray
flacons • .• on ly

ARMOUR STAR

$2.25 EACH
LIMITED TIME ON lY

TABU • AMBUSH· 20 CARATS· EMIR

On Certificates
Of Deposit

lEAN
&amp;
TENDER

1h Price
Table Sale!

s1,ot10 Minimum
30 Mo. Tmn
Nin ety dav int~rest p•natty
if
withdrawn
before

matvrity date .

Meigs Co. Brandl

SWISHER LOHSE

an

~

S.MOKED
POLISH

The Athen!li county

koRMIII M&lt;C•llo ~· R.

I'll. 0 I lw lllflll. R. iNL
.,... a.l ,, ...............
u ............._
PRESCRIPTIONS
Pti. fh4KI'
Friendly IInke
112 E. MAIN
. ~EROY, 0.

Pomeroy, Ohio

..,_,lt,...

....,.

0-- .··
,

.... •.:::·::.· \
'1....
: .~ .••.
..., ,...

SLICED
BACON

school ROTC unit, and th_e
choir members began cal1lng
each · other names just before
the midnight Christmas mass
at the church.
Most of the church members
were in the church's assembly
hall, Delores Monreal said,
·when Coleman staggered into
. the r00111 and i!Ollapsed.
"I was pouring the cocoa
when . I turned aro1111d. I saw
Wesley on the floor. It's just
like a nightmare. Nobody
knows what happened," she
said .

GROUND
BEEF

%

;,I

FOIL

•
•
••

COMPLETE
INVENTORY

'

PANCAKE
2 lb.
MIX

•

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FULL, HOUSE OF CARDS
.w

SILVER

~)RIDGE

PLAZA

I.GA

•

·-

CORN 18 oz.
FLAKES

••
nn-.; t~

ONIONS

¢

ONlY

KING SIZE

COLD
POWER

18"

&gt;

~-

U.S. NO. 1
YEllOW

LB.

I.GA

•

•

-

oz.

· r lldrqt
;

40
CAN

SUPER SIZE

•
•
•
"
',,

I

¢

1 lb.

•

2Q%OFF

Green Beans

ALUMINUM

Plaids, plains
·and prints

POMEROY, OHIO

~

HANOVER

LB.

I.GA

ALL
CHRISTMAS,
ITEMS

OFF

$39!.

Ph. 992-2284

YOUR CHOICE

12 oz.

I.G.A.
CRACKERS

CLEARANCE

ON SALE

115 W. 2nd

303 CANS

LB.

R

GRAPEFRUIT
JUICE 46 oz.

STOREWIDE

' Reg. $4.98,
$5.98 &amp; $6.98

,.

ROAST

Kidney Beans

0

I.G.A.

DECEMBER 26th thru 31 sf

100% Polyester
60" Wide

The Fabric Shop

•

JOAN OF ARC

WHITE POTATOES.

ONlY

THURSDAY thru TUESDAY

Better
Knits

OTHER MARKDOWNS
THROUGHOUT THE STORE

(

or

U.S. NO. 1 OHIO GROWN

OOLUMBIA

6 DAYS ONLY

Our

reward would be paid only if
the infonnatlon resulted in
conviction of the alleged
culprits.
The ad gave tbe Piraeus
telephone number, 426-213, of
two Onassls shipping companies, Olympic Maritime and
Springfield Shipping.

ARMor
ENGLISH

SUPERIOR

Pharmacy

Sav ings &amp; L.oan Co .
296 Second St .

303 CANS

lB.

~
''I'll bet when you were a kid
you didn't have to share a hair .
dryer with your sister."

HARTS
PEAS

Don't Forget Our Annual

INTEREST

Extra Lean

~o:embrr 31.,)9/l: Admtlled assets. fi'JI!.l!i€.421 .91
Liabi hllt&gt;,_ . ...-w.!iOJ.5:19.36: Net isseis, "1 .6!l4.871 .Gi

0

/,.·

/

;

DON'T MISS OUR

lhl~ of llnio. Oe~mert ol lmouraiU, Celli ftcate ~
&lt;Dnpll!rr;e- T'riP unders.cned. Supeunl!nde rt d ln';lllal'la! d
lM Sl~ l~ Ill Ohio, heota, centlt! i that TRAJIUWERICAN
NISUIAIICE COWPAIIY, o1 LD! An!i!tltl, ~ble of Calilmtl , hai
00"1lplied With_1M law1 ol lhii ~ile applic.Jble to it 1nd ''
autto.:Jm~d dm" 1111! CUn'!rtl ,e1r to lr.Jnsad '" lhTS state II&gt;
apP!Op'late busrftl! ss of '~SI.J~noct . lh f"onaoo.t &lt;.mdilll&gt;'l ''
shlorn !l'j' 11 s !r.IU.!I stai!ITll!rl to !law ll!o!n •s loi 1C1&lt;1 s 01'1

C.till , ~.000 .00000. ~~pl us. $89,6~.m 61. lf'ICOille
1202,134J!S.68. bclendilurtl. Sl 83. 11 ~. 892 . ~
IN WI1 Nt!&gt;S 'MlmE&lt;J. I hM ht~tunlo sutwirect m~ name
in! c.~used my 1eal to 1M! lifted at Q)[umtJuoi. Cl1io, Ills day
,nj dal! , Ady 1. 1974. ll!nni!th E. OeSletler, Si.tpl of IT~Surilla
r1 illiD
MOOt

blo cking since he came from
Ohio State where head coach
Woody Hayes' teams are noted
mainly for their learsome
nuining attacks, Hicks replied:
"Even though it always
seemed we ran a lot at Ohio
State, I still worked a lot on
pass protection. "! had a good
fundamental ba ckground
thanks to my coach thereRalph Staub."
Despite the Giants' poor
record this year, Hicks
foresees a bright future for the
club.
" We never really got blown
out in any of our games and
(Bill) Arnsparger Is a great
coach," Hayes said. "It's only
a matter of time until we improve. We now have a set
quarterback in Craig Morton
and we believe in him and he
believes in us."
Hicks named defensive tackles Joe Greene of Pittsburgh
and Jethro Pugh of Dallas as
the two toughest opponents he
had to handle in his first year in
the pros.
" We played Pittsburgh
during the pre.,season and that

••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

( Se~ 8)

ot i)tto.

CHICAGO (UP!) - A argu- members of a nearby high

••

the only Celtics in double
fi gure s.
Each team had 40 field goals,
but the Suns converted 30 of 33
free throws while Boston was
making 16 of 23. The Celtics
moved to within three , 96-93,
with five minute s left, but two
free throws by Scott and a
layup by Erickson with an
assist from Scott put the Suns
out of reach.
Bullets 110, Hawks 92:
Paced by Mike Riordan's
scoring and Kevin Porter's
stealing, Washington Bullets
outscored Atlanta, 32-11, in the
second period and rolled to an
easy vic tory . The Bullets
converted six steals by Porter
and 14 Atlanta turnovers into
easy second-period baskets in
moving to their 25th win in 34
games, best in the NBA.
Riordan finished with a gamehigh 24 points while teammates
Elvin Hayes and Phil O!enier
scored 19 points each. Porter
had 14. Wes Unseld grabbed 21
rebounds and Hayes 12 as
Washington outrebounded Atlanta, 63-43.
John Brown, who scored 13
points in the third period,
finished with a career-high 28
points for Atlanta .
'

931! ~ ~ Ohto. ~oartll'!lll1 ul lri'l!nra , Certiti~te of
O:impliJII(e - Tlwl lllden.ii!M d, Suf)l'rinl~ndiHII d tnSI.Jr!ll!:t ~
1111! Slilt ot Clll4o. ht!lby r.ertdi~ s tlii!l .I.HM LirE I"SI.IUIICE
COM,UY , olliartl"'d. 9ilte ol lilnneditiJ!, h.l;complled ,.,_,th
till! la..s IJI thi s !late appltC.Jble to ot •Ill os ~hort ted dltnnj
lhe tufltrll )'tlr kti131W 1n lhts sl•te 11s ap,:r!Jpl!ll! busiM~
ol lri$-Ut~~ - ill rinanoal Clllldihl&gt;'l is !loom by liS .JnRU.31
sla!etnellt to ha~~e been .15 loii&lt;Ms (JI D!o:ember ll . 1973
Admilled ~ ue ls . S 8933 . ~8&amp;.9J3 . 02 . lubtl ot1 es.
$8.t32.J6UJJ.J I. Ntl aW!ts, $50\,624595.71: C4Dit~ .
$62,765.460 00. Surplu s, 14 38,859,135.1\ , Income .
$2,812.179.782.69, loperxlllul!'s, $2 . 111.719,~ 16IN 'Mrrt[SS 'Ml£REUf. I hawr hel!'lllto subscriblid my ~me
and uused my se~ lobe ,n ,~d a1 Columbus, Ohio. tlls day
and d.llt. ~ly I. 1 91~ Mr:nnrth [. DI!Sh!!tl e•. ~ - or l~lill!:t

Choir director stabbed
ment between cholj' members
and ushers after Christmas
mor:nlng church services here
ended in the siabblng death of
the church's choir director.
Authorities said Wesley
Coleman, 19, tried to intervene
in an argument on the steps of
the Precious IDood O!urch and
was stabbed after he bwnped
into a 1!1-year~ld youth in an
ROTC uniform. The youth was
later charged with volunq,ry
manslaughter.
The arguing apparently
started when the ushers,

in the NFL, unllke colle(e, ;
. everybody is good."
•

· Eas tern Conference

WASHINGTON (UP!) Rep. William H. Harsha, RObia, has aceused natural gas
producers of understating
reserves by one trillion cubic
feet.
He cailed for an invesgiation
by the Federal Power Commission into "natural gas producers and their marketing
policies before the American
consumer is bilked once more
by the profit laden energy

he

Greene
was
just
unbelievable," Hicks said. "But

Hicks named NFC's top rookie

NBA Standings
By United Press International

probe

cumstances,"

•

•
••
•

.•

.•.
'

.

I.G.A.

Toilet Tissue

4 Roll
Pkg.

ZEST
SOAP

I

,
0

R

"

I.G.A. FOODLINER
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
THUR., FRI., SAT•

. Right Reserved

To Limit
Quantities

'•

�•

.

4 - The Dailv Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., 'I'hursdav, Dec. 26, 1974

Pro Standings

Harsha
demands

Buffalo
Boston

Atlant ic Division
w . I. pet. ·g. b.
21 - 11
19 13

.656
.594

2

N e w York

18

13

.581

21Jl

Phil ad el phia

14

20

.412

8

Ce ntral Divi s ion

industry ."
Harsha said the producers
were curtalling production of
reserves "under the specious
argument it would not be
profitable as long as interstate
price regulations are in ef-

fect."
"I shudder to think what
would happen to the economy
of the country if natural gas is
deregulated under such cir-

added.

"Decontrolled prices could
triple the consumer cost, adding as much as $700 extra on
each user's yearly bill.
"Considering this and the
fact there has been no new
natural gas exploration for
three to four years, I want the
Federal Power Commission to
conduct a fuil invgestigation of
natural gas producers and
their marketing policies before
the American consumer is
bilked once more by the profit
laden energy industry."
Harsha said in a statement
that even higher costs are in
prospect next year .
"The plight of the consumer
is heading for another nosedive
in this year's version of the
energy crisis as the wellhead
producers of nalllral gas set
the
scene
for
price
deregulation," Harsha said.
''If there is a real shortage of
natural gas, why are these
companies selling the product
hand over fist in their own
siates where the price Is not
restricted and cutting back
interstate customers who must
pay the lower regulated price?
If that isn't monopolizing the
market, I don't know what Is."

Onassis to
d
UJVe
rewar
~~
0

for proof
ATHENS, Greece (UP!) Greek shipowner Aristotle
Onassis has offered an $830,000
reward for proof the light plane
crash that klned his ' only son,
Alexander, 24, on takeoff from
the Athens Airport two years
ago was caused by sabotage.
The pilot, Donald McCusker,
50, Columbus, Ohio, and copilot Donald McGregor, of
Canada, were injured, but
recovered and left the country.
They and five Greek ground
mechanics were indicted in
connection with the accident.
The trlal was indefinitely
postponed in October after
McCusker and the elder Onassls failed to show up in court.
Front-page advertisements
in Athens newspapers Tuesday
said, ~ "Because foreign and
Greek experts say sabotage
rather than negligence in the
airplane crash of Jan. 22, 1973
caused the death of Alexander
Onassls and the injury of other
persons as well as the loss of
the aircraft, anyone who has
proof or evidence showing that
the accident was premeditated
should come forward to be
rewarded with the sum of 15
million drachmas ($500,000) in
Greek or foreign currency.
"In addition the sum of io
million drachmas ($330,000)
will be given to charity on the
reconunendatlon of the successful applicant."
The advertisement said th~

Washing to n
Cl eveland
Ho ust on
A t la nt a
New Orleans

w . I. pet . g .b.
25
9 .735
17 12 .586
51 z
16 15 .5 16
711z
14 19 .424 I Oh
3 29 . 094 21

Western Conference

M idw es t Divi sion
w . I. pet . g.b.
Chi ca g o
16 14 . 533
KC : Om ah a
HI 17 .514
•12

D etroit
16 11 485
l'h
Milwauke 12 19 387
4 11 -2
Pacific Divi sion
w. 1. pet . g.b.
Go lden Stat e
21 II 656
Sea ttl e
16 17 .485
5111

Portlan d
Phoen ix
LosAngeles

15
15
13

11
17
19

.469
.469
.406

6
6
a

Wednesday' s Results
Phi ladelphia 104 New York 97
Washing ton 110 A llan fa 92
P hoenix 110 Boston 96
Thur sday's Game s
New York at De tro it
Los Ang at Cleveland
Ph i ladelphia at Chicago
A tl a nt a at Houston
Portland at Gol d en Sla te

Innovative

C. A. R. E.
announced
ATHENS Preschool,
kindergarten and elementary
school personnel of southeastern Ohio soon will have an
exceptional opportunity to earn
up to 10 graduate or undergraduate quarter hours of
credit in the identification,
diagnosis and teaching of
handicapped childre n. One
section will be given at Meigs
High School.
The Ohio University College
of Education is sponsoring a
new and innovative program
entitled, "C. A.R. E ." , an
acronym for computer assisted
renewal education. C.A.R.E.
consists or four computermediated courses houses in an
air conditioned 4().foot van. The
program is specially designed
for educators who cannot spare
the time away from their jobs
and families to enroll in oncampus courses dw-ing normal
working hours .
Flexible scheduling, individualized instruction and
self-paced studies are key
concepts
around
which
C.A.R.E. was developed.
This unique program will be
offered durjng the Ohio
University Winter and Spring
Academic Quarters . For the
convenier:-ce of a greater
number of southeastern Ohio
and nearby Western Virginia
educators, C.A.R.E. wiU be
offered at two different sitesdates : Ohio University, Athens
Campus, February 10 to March
21, 1975, and Meigs High School
near Pomeroy, March 24 to
May 2.
· Persons interested in additional information concerning the C.A.R.E. Program
and-&lt;Jr enrollment materials
are urged to contact the CARE
Coordinator, Continuing
Education
Office,
Ohio
University, 309 Tupper Hall,
Athens, Ohio 45701 ; telephone
1614) 594-2263 or 3361.

NEW YORK (UP!) - Offen- wide bailoting of 39 sports fault of the &amp;.foot-2, 260 pound
sive guard John Hicks, whose writers, three from each NFC Hicks who, along with fellow
crunching blocking and pass · city.
rookie guard Tom Mullen of
protecting provided some of
Hi cks received 13 votes Southwest Missouri Slate, gave
the few bright spots in an compared to 12 for Jackson the Giants one of the better
otherwise dismal season for who , after a brilliant collegiate offensive lines in the league.
the New York Glsnts, today ca reer at Alabama, ranked _ " You really can't measure
was named the United Press eighth in rushing in the NFC an individual performance
International's 1974 National with 700 yards on the ground such as mine in view or the
Footbail Conference Rookie of despite missing a couple o£ team 's poor record, " sa id
the Year.
games because of injuries. The Hicks, who, along with an All
Hicks, a No. 1 draft choice only other rookie to get more America selection, also won
out of Ohio Slate who proved to than two votes was linebacker both the Outland Trophy and
. be a real "blue chipper," Waymond Bryant of the Chica- Lombardi Trophy during his
became the first offensive go Bea rs who was named on senior year at Ohio State. " I
lineman, other than an end, to four ballots.
really didn't expect to start this
gain the honor in the 2().year
The Giants finished the 1973 year and l had a lot of learning
history of the award. He won season with a 2-12 record, tied to do. I tried to reac h a point of
by a slim one vote over ruming with Baltimore for the worst consistencY."
back Wilbur Jackson of the San mark in the National Football
Asked if he had any trouble
Francisco 49ers in the na lion- League, but it was hardly the mastering the art of pass

Position change doesn't
bother 76ers' Bristow
By United Press International

Allan Bristow, &amp;.foot-7, who
was a center in college and
never even practiced at guard,
was informed by coach Gene
Shue just before the game that
he "should be prepared to play
some backcourt. ''
Bristow proceeded to score a
career-high 23 points and pace
the Philadelphia 76ers to a 19497 upset victory over the
slumping New York Knicks at
Madison Square Garden.
Bristow and Billy Cunningham scored 14 points apiece in
the second half to bring
Phtladelphia back from a 10.
point halftime deficit. At one
point in the second quarter , the
Knicks led by 16.
Philadelphia took the lead
for the first time, 89-88, on a
layup by Steve Mix with 3:50
remaining in the game. The
game was then tied three times
before New York center John
Gianelli fouled out trying to
S\Op Fred Carter. Carter hit the
two free throws and gave
Phtladelphia a 95-93 lead it
never lost. Bristow and Cunningham combined to give the
76ers some lively offensive
rebounding down the stretch to
secure the victory.
In the only other NBA action,
Phoenix whipped Boston, 110.
96, and Washington ripped

Game Friday
Coach Carl
Wolle's
Southern Tornados wHI play
Richard Hamilton's Southwestern Highlanders Friday
evening beglonlng with the
reserv~ game at 6:30 a. m.
on the Highlander planks.
Southwestern is 2-2 in the
league whlle Southern has a
1-2 record.
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Tuesday Admissions - Sybil
Greene, Hartford; Fred Lewis,
Clifton; Charles Landers,
Minersville ; Sandra Peyton,
Pomeroy; Charles Hawk,
Pomeroy.
Tuesday Discharges Florine Ginther, Carol Dailey,
Kathy Pierce, Calvin Imboden,
Geneva Clark, Florence
Thornton, Edith McCoy.
Wednesday Admission Kathryn Werry, Morgantown,
W.Va.
Wednesday Discharges Rhonda Jeffers, Sybil Greene.

Atlanta, 110.92.
Charlie Scott scored 30 points
and Keith Erickson 25 as
Phoenix survived a fourth. quarter scare to beat Boston.
Scott and Erickson's performances offset a season-high 33
points by Boston's Jo Jo White .
White, Dave Cowens with 23
and John Havlicek with 15 were

Past winners
NEW YORK (UP!)
Winners of the Rookie of the
Year Award in the National
Football League and , starting
in 1970, the National Footbail
Conference:
1955 - Aian Ameche,
Baltimore
1956 - Lenny
Moore,
Baltimore
1957--.Jim Brown, Cleveland
1958- Jimmy Orr, Pittsburgh
. 1959- Boyd Dowler, Green
Bay
1960--Gail Cogdill, Detroit
1961- Mlke Ditka, Chicago ·
1962-Ron Bull, Chicago
1963-Paul Flatley, Min-

~~&lt;)sola

1964-Charley
Taylor ,
Washington
1965--Gale Sayers, Chicago
1966--.Johnny Roland, St.
Louis
1967-Mel Farr, Detroit
1968-Earl
McCullouch,
Detroit
196!1--Calvin Hill, Dallas
1970-Bruce Taylor, San
Francisco
1971--.John Brockington,
Green Bay
1972-Chester Marco!, Green
Bay
1973-Charl es Young,
Philadelphia
1974-John Hicks, New York
Giants

...

,'

·.·

'

'/ .

. .·

"

SPRAY COLOGNE
4 fabulous fragrances
in elegant spray
flacons • .• on ly

ARMOUR STAR

$2.25 EACH
LIMITED TIME ON lY

TABU • AMBUSH· 20 CARATS· EMIR

On Certificates
Of Deposit

lEAN
&amp;
TENDER

1h Price
Table Sale!

s1,ot10 Minimum
30 Mo. Tmn
Nin ety dav int~rest p•natty
if
withdrawn
before

matvrity date .

Meigs Co. Brandl

SWISHER LOHSE

an

~

S.MOKED
POLISH

The Athen!li county

koRMIII M&lt;C•llo ~· R.

I'll. 0 I lw lllflll. R. iNL
.,... a.l ,, ...............
u ............._
PRESCRIPTIONS
Pti. fh4KI'
Friendly IInke
112 E. MAIN
. ~EROY, 0.

Pomeroy, Ohio

..,_,lt,...

....,.

0-- .··
,

.... •.:::·::.· \
'1....
: .~ .••.
..., ,...

SLICED
BACON

school ROTC unit, and th_e
choir members began cal1lng
each · other names just before
the midnight Christmas mass
at the church.
Most of the church members
were in the church's assembly
hall, Delores Monreal said,
·when Coleman staggered into
. the r00111 and i!Ollapsed.
"I was pouring the cocoa
when . I turned aro1111d. I saw
Wesley on the floor. It's just
like a nightmare. Nobody
knows what happened," she
said .

GROUND
BEEF

%

;,I

FOIL

•
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COMPLETE
INVENTORY

'

PANCAKE
2 lb.
MIX

•

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FULL, HOUSE OF CARDS
.w

SILVER

~)RIDGE

PLAZA

I.GA

•

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CORN 18 oz.
FLAKES

••
nn-.; t~

ONIONS

¢

ONlY

KING SIZE

COLD
POWER

18"

&gt;

~-

U.S. NO. 1
YEllOW

LB.

I.GA

•

•

-

oz.

· r lldrqt
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40
CAN

SUPER SIZE

•
•
•
"
',,

I

¢

1 lb.

•

2Q%OFF

Green Beans

ALUMINUM

Plaids, plains
·and prints

POMEROY, OHIO

~

HANOVER

LB.

I.GA

ALL
CHRISTMAS,
ITEMS

OFF

$39!.

Ph. 992-2284

YOUR CHOICE

12 oz.

I.G.A.
CRACKERS

CLEARANCE

ON SALE

115 W. 2nd

303 CANS

LB.

R

GRAPEFRUIT
JUICE 46 oz.

STOREWIDE

' Reg. $4.98,
$5.98 &amp; $6.98

,.

ROAST

Kidney Beans

0

I.G.A.

DECEMBER 26th thru 31 sf

100% Polyester
60" Wide

The Fabric Shop

•

JOAN OF ARC

WHITE POTATOES.

ONlY

THURSDAY thru TUESDAY

Better
Knits

OTHER MARKDOWNS
THROUGHOUT THE STORE

(

or

U.S. NO. 1 OHIO GROWN

OOLUMBIA

6 DAYS ONLY

Our

reward would be paid only if
the infonnatlon resulted in
conviction of the alleged
culprits.
The ad gave tbe Piraeus
telephone number, 426-213, of
two Onassls shipping companies, Olympic Maritime and
Springfield Shipping.

ARMor
ENGLISH

SUPERIOR

Pharmacy

Sav ings &amp; L.oan Co .
296 Second St .

303 CANS

lB.

~
''I'll bet when you were a kid
you didn't have to share a hair .
dryer with your sister."

HARTS
PEAS

Don't Forget Our Annual

INTEREST

Extra Lean

~o:embrr 31.,)9/l: Admtlled assets. fi'JI!.l!i€.421 .91
Liabi hllt&gt;,_ . ...-w.!iOJ.5:19.36: Net isseis, "1 .6!l4.871 .Gi

0

/,.·

/

;

DON'T MISS OUR

lhl~ of llnio. Oe~mert ol lmouraiU, Celli ftcate ~
&lt;Dnpll!rr;e- T'riP unders.cned. Supeunl!nde rt d ln';lllal'la! d
lM Sl~ l~ Ill Ohio, heota, centlt! i that TRAJIUWERICAN
NISUIAIICE COWPAIIY, o1 LD! An!i!tltl, ~ble of Calilmtl , hai
00"1lplied With_1M law1 ol lhii ~ile applic.Jble to it 1nd ''
autto.:Jm~d dm" 1111! CUn'!rtl ,e1r to lr.Jnsad '" lhTS state II&gt;
apP!Op'late busrftl! ss of '~SI.J~noct . lh f"onaoo.t &lt;.mdilll&gt;'l ''
shlorn !l'j' 11 s !r.IU.!I stai!ITll!rl to !law ll!o!n •s loi 1C1&lt;1 s 01'1

C.till , ~.000 .00000. ~~pl us. $89,6~.m 61. lf'ICOille
1202,134J!S.68. bclendilurtl. Sl 83. 11 ~. 892 . ~
IN WI1 Nt!&gt;S 'MlmE&lt;J. I hM ht~tunlo sutwirect m~ name
in! c.~used my 1eal to 1M! lifted at Q)[umtJuoi. Cl1io, Ills day
,nj dal! , Ady 1. 1974. ll!nni!th E. OeSletler, Si.tpl of IT~Surilla
r1 illiD
MOOt

blo cking since he came from
Ohio State where head coach
Woody Hayes' teams are noted
mainly for their learsome
nuining attacks, Hicks replied:
"Even though it always
seemed we ran a lot at Ohio
State, I still worked a lot on
pass protection. "! had a good
fundamental ba ckground
thanks to my coach thereRalph Staub."
Despite the Giants' poor
record this year, Hicks
foresees a bright future for the
club.
" We never really got blown
out in any of our games and
(Bill) Arnsparger Is a great
coach," Hayes said. "It's only
a matter of time until we improve. We now have a set
quarterback in Craig Morton
and we believe in him and he
believes in us."
Hicks named defensive tackles Joe Greene of Pittsburgh
and Jethro Pugh of Dallas as
the two toughest opponents he
had to handle in his first year in
the pros.
" We played Pittsburgh
during the pre.,season and that

••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

( Se~ 8)

ot i)tto.

CHICAGO (UP!) - A argu- members of a nearby high

••

the only Celtics in double
fi gure s.
Each team had 40 field goals,
but the Suns converted 30 of 33
free throws while Boston was
making 16 of 23. The Celtics
moved to within three , 96-93,
with five minute s left, but two
free throws by Scott and a
layup by Erickson with an
assist from Scott put the Suns
out of reach.
Bullets 110, Hawks 92:
Paced by Mike Riordan's
scoring and Kevin Porter's
stealing, Washington Bullets
outscored Atlanta, 32-11, in the
second period and rolled to an
easy vic tory . The Bullets
converted six steals by Porter
and 14 Atlanta turnovers into
easy second-period baskets in
moving to their 25th win in 34
games, best in the NBA.
Riordan finished with a gamehigh 24 points while teammates
Elvin Hayes and Phil O!enier
scored 19 points each. Porter
had 14. Wes Unseld grabbed 21
rebounds and Hayes 12 as
Washington outrebounded Atlanta, 63-43.
John Brown, who scored 13
points in the third period,
finished with a career-high 28
points for Atlanta .
'

931! ~ ~ Ohto. ~oartll'!lll1 ul lri'l!nra , Certiti~te of
O:impliJII(e - Tlwl lllden.ii!M d, Suf)l'rinl~ndiHII d tnSI.Jr!ll!:t ~
1111! Slilt ot Clll4o. ht!lby r.ertdi~ s tlii!l .I.HM LirE I"SI.IUIICE
COM,UY , olliartl"'d. 9ilte ol lilnneditiJ!, h.l;complled ,.,_,th
till! la..s IJI thi s !late appltC.Jble to ot •Ill os ~hort ted dltnnj
lhe tufltrll )'tlr kti131W 1n lhts sl•te 11s ap,:r!Jpl!ll! busiM~
ol lri$-Ut~~ - ill rinanoal Clllldihl&gt;'l is !loom by liS .JnRU.31
sla!etnellt to ha~~e been .15 loii&lt;Ms (JI D!o:ember ll . 1973
Admilled ~ ue ls . S 8933 . ~8&amp;.9J3 . 02 . lubtl ot1 es.
$8.t32.J6UJJ.J I. Ntl aW!ts, $50\,624595.71: C4Dit~ .
$62,765.460 00. Surplu s, 14 38,859,135.1\ , Income .
$2,812.179.782.69, loperxlllul!'s, $2 . 111.719,~ 16IN 'Mrrt[SS 'Ml£REUf. I hawr hel!'lllto subscriblid my ~me
and uused my se~ lobe ,n ,~d a1 Columbus, Ohio. tlls day
and d.llt. ~ly I. 1 91~ Mr:nnrth [. DI!Sh!!tl e•. ~ - or l~lill!:t

Choir director stabbed
ment between cholj' members
and ushers after Christmas
mor:nlng church services here
ended in the siabblng death of
the church's choir director.
Authorities said Wesley
Coleman, 19, tried to intervene
in an argument on the steps of
the Precious IDood O!urch and
was stabbed after he bwnped
into a 1!1-year~ld youth in an
ROTC uniform. The youth was
later charged with volunq,ry
manslaughter.
The arguing apparently
started when the ushers,

in the NFL, unllke colle(e, ;
. everybody is good."
•

· Eas tern Conference

WASHINGTON (UP!) Rep. William H. Harsha, RObia, has aceused natural gas
producers of understating
reserves by one trillion cubic
feet.
He cailed for an invesgiation
by the Federal Power Commission into "natural gas producers and their marketing
policies before the American
consumer is bilked once more
by the profit laden energy

he

Greene
was
just
unbelievable," Hicks said. "But

Hicks named NFC's top rookie

NBA Standings
By United Press International

probe

cumstances,"

•

•
••
•

.•

.•.
'

.

I.G.A.

Toilet Tissue

4 Roll
Pkg.

ZEST
SOAP

I

,
0

R

"

I.G.A. FOODLINER
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
THUR., FRI., SAT•

. Right Reserved

To Limit
Quantities

'•

�.. ,
'

,

6 - The Daily Sentine l, M idcllep0rt~Punleroy. 0 ., Thursday, Dt'(' 2ti. 1!174

r:=;.~;.:=:::::=:=:=:::=:::--:=~=:================~===::=============:::::=:=:=====:=::.'*"~====:=====:===================:::::=:=::;:;::~t

I

Mason County

ili

By Alma Marshall

@

•

News Notes

~

TV series importa.1:-t

n n '.}. .T)o,:nters
- "
rouy
1

!i::

1

MASON - The Mason Homemakers Extension Club he ld
their Christmas di nner at the Me igs II'Ul recent ly wnh thirteen
club members a nd one guest attendmg. Gifts from their sec ret
sisters· were placed beneath th e Ch ristmas tret'.
The devotional leader, Mrs . E lmer VanMeter, i ,jed I.ukc 2nd
chapter fo r the&amp;ripture a nd closed wtth prayer. T ~~ group sa ng
Silent Night and Christmas readings Wl're give n by Mrs.
Albur lice Young, Mrs. Dorothy Queen, Mrs . Cec1l Smith, Mrs. J.
Marsha ll , Mrs. Evelyn Stewart nd Mrs . Landon Smith.
The outgoing prfsident , Mrs. Landon Sm ith , installed these
::1ew officers for the comming year, president, Mrs. Dorothy
Queen ; vice pres ident, Mrs. Alburtice (Roberta) Young;
trea surer, Mrs. Cecil Smith ; secretary~ Mrs. I.aura Johnson, a nd
devotiona l leader, Mrs. Elmer Va nMeter.
Gifts were presented to the outgoing officers, Mrs. La wrence
Roush and Mrs. Laurene Lewis. A gift was presented to both of
the scr apbook co-chairv.·omcn , Mrs . Lloy d Williams and Mrs.

" The .Ascen t of Man ," a
series to be seen in Gallipolis
anrl Ja cks&lt;m on Cablevision 's
PBS Cha nne l, Jan. 7th a t 8 p.
111. is an 'importa nt tes tam ent
!o a ma n wh o beli('ved th&lt;:i t
tele vis ion m ay be c om e as
in t€ llec tually meaning fu l as
the pn nted word .
J acob Bronows ki, who
prepared the series and is
na rra tor on the film , was a n
internationa lly-kn own scientist
famous fo r his ab ility to
" populari ze" sc ience. An
lmusua l m an of many talents ,
Uronows k i ac hi e v e d
recogniti on tn the ri elds of
mat hemat ics awi literature. A
sen ior fe ll ow of the Sa lk Institu te for Biologica l Studies in
San Diego a t the time of his
death Aug. 22 , 1974, Dr.
Br onow ski devoted his las t
years to " The Ascent of Man ."
Expressing his thoughts in a
forew ard to the book basked on
the series he wrote: " There
ca nnot be a philosophy , there
can no t even be a decent
science , without huma nity. 1
hO!Jc tha t sense of affirmation

By Pnlly Cramu

A little thought
makes saving fun
POLL\' 'S PROB LEM
DEAR P OLLY - I hope someone will tell me how to c le;m
my gold satin lamp shades that a re lri mmerl' with bro wn wnl
edged with go ld braid.
Now tha t we ::t re a ll con scious of saving money, food stuffs
and most anything you can na me I cut off celery sta lk leaves. I
wash and dr y them in the s un and put lhem in a jar with a Lop to
save for seasoniu g. Also I save the em pty, c lean bags tha t come
in boxes ot mslcl nt potatoes, cake mixes, etc., to use for san d~
wich bags. - AN NIE.

DE AR ANNI E - Regular cleanin g with a soft brush or th e
soft brush attachment on your vacuum should keep lamp shades
dust fr ee. When they need more rayon and silk shades and
stitched on (not glues) trim r an usually be washed safely by
hand. Since yours are satin they should doubtless go to a dry
clea ner . - POU...Y.
DEAR POLLY - My Pet Peeve is that so many motorists
forget that they, too, are pedestr ians and vice ve rsa. If we would
all remember this there would be more consider ation each for
the other and doubtless fewer accidenl'\.
I did like Judi's P oin ter for pu tting vitamin pills a nd
prescr iptions bottles on her spice ra ck out of the c hildren 's wav. I
do not think hang ing it a bove the stove is such a good idea. So.me
medication does not take we ll to heat but needs a dry~ cool 1 dark
place. Over the stove might not be the best place. - TERRY .
DEAR POLLY - I reverse the more usual procedure of
mending a fter laundering a nd do 1t befor e clothes and household
items a re washed. This not only saves sorting time bu t keeps rips
a nd tear s from becomin g la rger fr om washing and dry ing. MARY T.
DE AR POLLY - Dr ipless candles a re expensive and not
a lways available in all colors. I use the ot he rs but go t sick of
scraping candle wax off my silver r a ndlehold er s a nd ta blecloths .
Now I cut 31', inch (lar ger or sma ller to suit the candle size )
mcles fr om lightweight a luminum foil, using a tumbler for
tra cing a perfec t c ircle. A candle is placed in the c enter of a foil
circle a nd then firmely pushed into the candle holder a llowing
the edges to nareout so they ca tch the drip . - MRS. R.R .A.

La urene Lewis.

Attending we re Mrs. Sara h Willis, Mrs . Laura J ohnson , Mrs.
Land on Smilh, Mrs. George Carson , Mrs. ~ve lyn Stewart, Mrs.
Alburtice Young, Mrs. Cecil Smith , Mrs. Lawr ence Roush, Mrs .
Uoyd Willia ms, Mrs. Elmer VanMeter , Mr s. Robert Roach, Mrs.
J . Marshall and Mrs . Matilda Noble.
MASON - THE MASON MOTHERS CLUB Christmas party
was held recently a t the home of Mrs . Edwa rd Rya n with Mrs.
Charles Yeager and Mrs. Roy Test assisting as hostesses. GuesL&lt;&gt;
for the e vening wer e the ladies' husba nds . Gifts wer e exc hanged.
The home was beautifully decorated for the holidays .
Attending we re Mr . an d Mrs . Nola n Swackham er , Mr. and
Mrs . Charles Yeager , Mr . and Mrs. Roy T est, Mr. a nd Mrs.
George Mc Far la nd, Mr. and Mrs. J ames Proffitt, Mrs. Mar y
Berry, Mr. and Mrs. J c3eph Lish, Mr . an d Mrs. Larr y Noble, Mr.
and Mr: :1omer Noble. Mr. and Mrs. Richard Fowler, Mr . and
Mrs . La rry Bumgardner ' "d Mr. and Mrs. Edward Rya n.
MASON - MA~QN ' S SE NIOR CITI ZENS dined December
19 at the Rerl Carpet Inn, exchanging gifts and singing Christmas
carols. They sent Christmas cards to Wilda Colem a n, Hele n
Barton and l&lt;atherine Raynes.
Attendin!, the dinner were Edna Burris, Laura Dunbar, Clara
Smith, Maude Young, Mildred Tripp, Helen Elias , Zelma Hunter,
Rhoda Yeager , Marie Goodwin, Bertha P rin ce, Pear l Roush,
Mary Harris, Jean Lyons , Clara Roush, Bertha Ha ll , Erma
Turnbull, Ruth E . Wallace, J osie E lias, Ma ry Aumiller, Frances
Stewart, Barbara McDaniel, Ella Ford , Blanche J ones , Ma tilda
Noble, Mary Phillips, Goldie Smith and Maxine Arnold , Seni or
Citizens Aid,

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INGELS FURNITURE

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on

human behavior and attitudes.
Meeting at the Holiday Inn
here were Dorothy Casey,
Manager for Gallia County
Senior Nutrition Center, and
Dorline Phillips, manager,
Meigs County Senior Nutrition
Center:

VANISH
TOILET

BOWL
.CLEANER

. 59t

PRJiEWON
Mrs . Denver Well, Route 3,
Pomeroy, was the winner of
the colored television given
away in the Pomeroy Chamber .
of Commerce Christma s
promotion. The dra wing took ·
place Tuesday afternoon .
.

. i
!··~,

Throat Lozenges

$1.50 Value

EASTERN - The Eastern
Homemakers, following a brief
busniess meeting, enjoyed a
Christmas banquet at Napoli's
Village Inn in Belpre Dec. 16
featuring steak, shrimp and
c hicken. The group received
gifts from a grab ba g and from
their secret sisters.
Present were Mrs. Judith
, Starcher, Mrs. Pam Hager,
Mrs. Sue Dye, Mrs. Lois Deem,
Mrs . Joan Smith and Mrs.
Barbara Hensley.
A charm was given to Mrs.
Pam Hager, president of the
Club for the year 1974 . The next
meeting will be at the home of
Sue Dye, Coolville, on Jan . 30,
at 7:30p.m.

..

I

ISODETTES
MDM

8 oz.

3.4 oz .
No. 155

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$2.07 Value

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lady Esther

MAGNESIA

ATCOADSEMINAR
ZANESVILLE - Two pe rsons frorn the Meigs-Gallia
area attended a two-day
training seminar for the
Corpora lion
for
Ohio
Development (GOAD ) staff of
the Senior Nutrition, Foster
Grandparent, and Senior

. ' ,, I

SPfCIAl SfUCTION

Roll On
Deodorant
1.5 oz.
$1.25 Value

JO .·

HUNDREDS

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CLEANSER
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Worm kriit gloves in many solid
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Cotton/stretch nylon
socks . Men's sizes 9-15.

,. '

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ASPIRIN

Homemakers
dine in Belpre

OUR

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39

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8.75 oz.
CREST

LOW

Johnson's

PARKERSBURG - Eight
students from the Meigs area
were named to the dean's list
for the fall quarter at Mountain
State College in Parkersburg.
Two of them , Deborah Carder,
daughter of Mrs. Doris Carder ,
Lincoln Heights, Pomeroy' and
Nancy Sexson, daughter of
Mrs. Demaree Sexson, Route 1,
Pomeroy, maintained a perfect
4 average .
·Others named to the list were
Cris Bailey' daughter of Mr .
and Mrs . Robert Bailey, Route
4, Pomeroy, and Paul Cunningham , son of Mr . and Mrs .
Raymond Cunningham,
Syracuse (both 3.8) ; Kerry
Chesser ~ son of Mrs. Hazel
Chesser of Shade, and Jenell
Cumings, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. David Cumings of
Pomeroy (3.6) and Roxanna
Patterson, daughter of Mr . and
Mrs. Paul Patterson, Rutland ,
and Sonya Ohlinger, daughter
of Mr . and Mrs . David
Ohlinger, Middleport (3.4).

99

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WASHABILITY OF WINTUK
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w oo l ma kes fine knit fa shions
that are ma chin e washable and
dry ob le. 4 oz., 4-ply skeins.
Fabu lous 38 -color assortme nt.

DINNER GUESTS
Chri s tmas dinner guests of
Mr. an d Mrs. Patrick Loc ha ry
wt' re Mrs. E lizabeth Ch&lt;:tse,
Jack Chase, Dayton; Miss
He le n Loc luiry , Pomeroy, and
Mr . and Mrs. Ha r ry Henr y,
Amesv ille.

The Meigs County Holiness
Associalinn is sponsori ng ~
Wa lch Nig ht Service whit·h will
be he ld at the Middleport
Chu rch of tile NCJzt.trene
Tuesday, Decem ber :n. at 9::30
p . m . The Rev. Howard Black,
pastor of the Syracuse Church
of the Nazar ene will s pc~k.
Spee iat musica l n umbe rs
will be prese nled by each of the
par ticipat ing chu rches . The

at Parkersburg

Just Recieved
A New Shipment

GARD

PERFECTA
YARN

POLYESTER
AREA RUGS

Relics a11d Bea us Cluh will
ht•f.!in on Thursday, Jan. 9, in
tht· •, r e&lt;~ rt·ation building at
Royal Oak Pa rk. The lessons
will be given each Thursd~:~ y
ni~ ht ow r a several · week
pe riod with t:ecil Sayr e of
Letart, W. Va. a s the ca ller .
Further information may be
obtai ned from Mrs. Wya tt
Chadwell, 992·7477 , or by
telephoning 304-773·5910.
:::::::;:::::;:;:;:::::::::::::::::;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::;:::::::::::::;::

Eight earn honors

(Limited Quantities!

26 X 45"

1

eBLACK &amp;

·'

'

3DAYSONLYI
DEC. 26·27·28

NON-SKID
WAFFLE
BACKING

Tire Prices

•

MIDDLEPORT

992-2635

Winter Ant~Freeze
and
Summer Coolant

F;th~~~

ZENITH
COLOR TV

~ ~TEPHANIE WALKER
,Stephanie Lyn Walker was
hpnored with a party in
observance of her second
birthday, Dec. 23, at the
home of her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Mike Walker, Bailey
~un Road. Allending were
her parents, her great·
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Leland Haley, Rutland, her
gt andparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Willard Walker, Salem
qnter; Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Miller, Rutland; Mr. and
Mrs. Joe Miller and Tammy
Jo, West Columbia, Jeff
Miller, Brenda Mnter,
Rptland; Ruth Anne and
Atlsa Walker, Salem Center;
Jqhn Miller and Georgene
Grate, Rutland. Sending a
gift but unable to attend was
Stephani e 's greatgt,jmdmother, Mrs. Bonnie
Miller.

18 cu. ft.

Middleport, Ohio

d:. nr·l· J ~ssn n s
throug h tlw Shadt• l{i vc r

Mrs. Elht Sm rth , and Mrs.
Geraldi ne Youn g with M1ss
M y~ tis Pa rker , a gues t.

r ailed ''Chris tmas I .eft -over'' .
The door pri ze, a poinse ttia
ths h made by Miss Parker, was
w 1H1 by Mrs. Marie Curt.
1\ fruit sal a d, coff ee,
i-l SSOI'IPd crackers a nd nuts
\H' I' C ~c rved . On ea ch tra y was
a ce r&lt;.~ruit· San ta , a girt to Pach
of the g u es~. Other s a tl.cnding
were Mrs. Dorothy Woodard ,
Mrs. Edna Schoenle b, Mrs.
Evelyn Lanning, Mrs. Sylvia
Midkiff, Mrs. Marjorie Crow ,

Watch Night service planned .

S q~:~an·

Rev . Dun1:llcl Co le is host
pa stur . The public i~ invited.

A thought fo r the day :
Pres1 dent Ha rry Truman said,
" If you can't stan d the heat,
get out of the kitchen." He also
said· "Being presiJient is li ke
ndmg a tiger. A man has to
hep on rid mg or be swallowed .

.;,. ~X"''

15 cu. ft.

heritage house

The hnrne w:1&lt;:: PXI P ns h•Pl ~·
deeoraled with cerami cs made
by Mi ss Myrti s Kay Pa rke r
and gifts for an exchange wr re
placed benea th a lig hted tree.
Mrs. The lm a Mc Murray
presided at the mee ting wi th
Mrs. ·Pa rker g iving devoti ons
ltsing scripture fr om J ohn :J: 16~n. rmd :.:1 ::u·•idc from !he
Uppe r
Room
. entitl e d
"Chris tmas Da y Medica tion ".
Mrs . McMurray rea d &lt;:1 storv

.. . ,.,.; '"'

'i . '
.~ W(f,Jr
•.

ear En

HENDERSON -MR. AND MRS: JAMES W. DUNN of
Henderson, W. Va., are annoWlcing the birth of a da ughter, Lora
Elizabeth, on December lllh, at Holzer Medical Cente r Hospital.
The infant weighed 6 pounds and 5 ounces. The Dunns have two
other children, Stephanie and Peter. Grandparents are Mr . and
Mrs. Clifford Dunn, Point Pleasant ; Mr. and Mrs. Bliss Wilson,
Mason.

Mason·, W. Va .

•

Just Arrived!

BANKAMERICARD
or MASTER CHARGE

MASON - THE SUNSHINE CLASS of Mason United
Methodist Church held its Ch ristmas pa rty at the church parsonage with Mrs. Clarence (Myrtle) McCloud and Mrs. William
(Lilah) Zerkle, co-hostesses .
Mrs. Zerkle presented the devotionals which included the
Christmas story from Isa iah ; a poem pertaining to Chrislmas in
the Heart, Thinking About Christmas a nd Reflections of
Christmas Past. The devotionals wer e closed with pra yer by
Mrs. McCloud.
Thank you notes from recipients of th e Thanksgiving trea ts
were read .
A getwell card was signed by the class members a nd was
sent to Miss Lorena Weiss who was hospitalized at Pleasant
Valley Hospital. The class members agreed that its goal for the
coming year is to fix up the Sunshine Class room .
The group. enjoyed singing carols around the lighted
Christmas Tree. They were accompanied by Mrs . Ray Proffitt a t
the piano.
The hostesses invited the guests to the dining room whic h
was beautifully decorated for the holidays. Mrs . Willia m Zerkle
served punch and the other refreshments included cookies, a nd
sandwiches.
Attending were Mrs. William Fry , Mrs. Maxine Arnold , Mr s.
George Carson, Mrs. Frances Stewart, Mrs . Peari .Roush, Mrs.
Matilda Noble, Mrs. Ray Proffitt, Miss Mary Dudding , Mrs.
Landon Snnith, Mrs. Marie Goodwin , Mrs. Cecil Smith, Mrs. Fre d
Tripp and the hostesses .
·
On Sunday, a gift wa s present ed by the Sushine Class to their
Sunday School teacher, Mrs. Maxine Arno ld, as a tok en of appreciation.

772-5881

•

•

Sarah Spencer. At the open ing of the p rogram the group sang,
"Oh Come All Ye Faithful". The preside nt , Mrs. Test, closed the
program with prayer.
During a brief business meeting, Mrs. Tes t appoin ted a
nominating committee and announced that fu tur e meetings will
be held at 7 p.m. the second Monday of ea ch month .
The hostesses, Mrs. Test and Mrs. Ray Proffit t, invited
guests to the dining area wher e Christmas breads and cookies
were served. The table·was centered with a mini ature Christmas
tree. Other Christmas decora ti ons wer e a lso used.

· BEND TIRE CENTER

..-

"

At

Cloud ; Business, Margaret Pickens ; Questions, Fra nces
Stewart; Sorry, Maxine Arnold ; Words , UJis Test; Easter,

IN AKRON
Mrs . Pearl Reyn olds was the
.Chris tmas guest of Mr. and
Mrs. Bill Bland and other
relatives in Akron.

A rrt-~ n ge m e n ts to pr ov ide
holid ay r cme mbn w ees for
s hut ~ in s a nd those of the Me igs
Coun ty Infirmary were ma de
dw·in g a rece nt meeting of the
. Pas t Matrons Club of Pomeroy
Cha pter 1118, Orde r of the
.Ea s tern Sta r , he ld Ht the home
of Mrs. Norma Pa rker.

seri es, as in his other works,
was to create a philosophy for "•
the twentieth century. " ... this ..~
(Continued on page 10)

LOOK! ••• CHEST

fami~.

theme: Great Expectations, Sara h Spencer ; J oy, Myrtle Mc-

It 's

huma n nature, and of the
hum a n
conditi on
within
nature. 10
His aim in this television

dk~NS SET

Remembrances arranged fot shut-ins,infirmar.J; residents

r-----------------------~;

For the entire

mas ?" Each guest gave readings as follows, ca rrying out the

in·the Area

testa.m~nt~-Bronowski

is m a nifes t in thi s book
f te levis ion series) . F or me, the
und e r sta r~ding of nature has as
ils goa l the underslandirg of

SHOES

MASON - MRS. ROY TEST WAS in charge of the recent
meeting of the Women's Socie ty of the Mason United Methodist
Church and used for the theme, "What do you Bring to Christ-

VISIT AWAY
Mr. and , Mr s. E dga r
Reynolds~ Middleport, are in
Morgantown , W. Va . for the
holidays with their s on and
daughter-in-law, Mr . and Mrs .
Val Reynolds, Gwynn , Lynn,
and Val , Jr.

..
..•

·~

LIQUID
DRANO
POLISH
7 oz .

69c

LYSOL
SPRAY

OPENER
32 oz .

No. 116

5 oz .

76c Va.lue

BRECK
SHAMPOO
11 oz .
Normal, Dry
or Oily
$2 .05 Value

�.. ,
'

,

6 - The Daily Sentine l, M idcllep0rt~Punleroy. 0 ., Thursday, Dt'(' 2ti. 1!174

r:=;.~;.:=:::::=:=:=:::=:::--:=~=:================~===::=============:::::=:=:=====:=::.'*"~====:=====:===================:::::=:=::;:;::~t

I

Mason County

ili

By Alma Marshall

@

•

News Notes

~

TV series importa.1:-t

n n '.}. .T)o,:nters
- "
rouy
1

!i::

1

MASON - The Mason Homemakers Extension Club he ld
their Christmas di nner at the Me igs II'Ul recent ly wnh thirteen
club members a nd one guest attendmg. Gifts from their sec ret
sisters· were placed beneath th e Ch ristmas tret'.
The devotional leader, Mrs . E lmer VanMeter, i ,jed I.ukc 2nd
chapter fo r the&amp;ripture a nd closed wtth prayer. T ~~ group sa ng
Silent Night and Christmas readings Wl're give n by Mrs.
Albur lice Young, Mrs. Dorothy Queen, Mrs . Cec1l Smith, Mrs. J.
Marsha ll , Mrs. Evelyn Stewart nd Mrs . Landon Smith.
The outgoing prfsident , Mrs. Landon Sm ith , installed these
::1ew officers for the comming year, president, Mrs. Dorothy
Queen ; vice pres ident, Mrs. Alburtice (Roberta) Young;
trea surer, Mrs. Cecil Smith ; secretary~ Mrs. I.aura Johnson, a nd
devotiona l leader, Mrs. Elmer Va nMeter.
Gifts were presented to the outgoing officers, Mrs. La wrence
Roush and Mrs. Laurene Lewis. A gift was presented to both of
the scr apbook co-chairv.·omcn , Mrs . Lloy d Williams and Mrs.

" The .Ascen t of Man ," a
series to be seen in Gallipolis
anrl Ja cks&lt;m on Cablevision 's
PBS Cha nne l, Jan. 7th a t 8 p.
111. is an 'importa nt tes tam ent
!o a ma n wh o beli('ved th&lt;:i t
tele vis ion m ay be c om e as
in t€ llec tually meaning fu l as
the pn nted word .
J acob Bronows ki, who
prepared the series and is
na rra tor on the film , was a n
internationa lly-kn own scientist
famous fo r his ab ility to
" populari ze" sc ience. An
lmusua l m an of many talents ,
Uronows k i ac hi e v e d
recogniti on tn the ri elds of
mat hemat ics awi literature. A
sen ior fe ll ow of the Sa lk Institu te for Biologica l Studies in
San Diego a t the time of his
death Aug. 22 , 1974, Dr.
Br onow ski devoted his las t
years to " The Ascent of Man ."
Expressing his thoughts in a
forew ard to the book basked on
the series he wrote: " There
ca nnot be a philosophy , there
can no t even be a decent
science , without huma nity. 1
hO!Jc tha t sense of affirmation

By Pnlly Cramu

A little thought
makes saving fun
POLL\' 'S PROB LEM
DEAR P OLLY - I hope someone will tell me how to c le;m
my gold satin lamp shades that a re lri mmerl' with bro wn wnl
edged with go ld braid.
Now tha t we ::t re a ll con scious of saving money, food stuffs
and most anything you can na me I cut off celery sta lk leaves. I
wash and dr y them in the s un and put lhem in a jar with a Lop to
save for seasoniu g. Also I save the em pty, c lean bags tha t come
in boxes ot mslcl nt potatoes, cake mixes, etc., to use for san d~
wich bags. - AN NIE.

DE AR ANNI E - Regular cleanin g with a soft brush or th e
soft brush attachment on your vacuum should keep lamp shades
dust fr ee. When they need more rayon and silk shades and
stitched on (not glues) trim r an usually be washed safely by
hand. Since yours are satin they should doubtless go to a dry
clea ner . - POU...Y.
DEAR POLLY - My Pet Peeve is that so many motorists
forget that they, too, are pedestr ians and vice ve rsa. If we would
all remember this there would be more consider ation each for
the other and doubtless fewer accidenl'\.
I did like Judi's P oin ter for pu tting vitamin pills a nd
prescr iptions bottles on her spice ra ck out of the c hildren 's wav. I
do not think hang ing it a bove the stove is such a good idea. So.me
medication does not take we ll to heat but needs a dry~ cool 1 dark
place. Over the stove might not be the best place. - TERRY .
DEAR POLLY - I reverse the more usual procedure of
mending a fter laundering a nd do 1t befor e clothes and household
items a re washed. This not only saves sorting time bu t keeps rips
a nd tear s from becomin g la rger fr om washing and dry ing. MARY T.
DE AR POLLY - Dr ipless candles a re expensive and not
a lways available in all colors. I use the ot he rs but go t sick of
scraping candle wax off my silver r a ndlehold er s a nd ta blecloths .
Now I cut 31', inch (lar ger or sma ller to suit the candle size )
mcles fr om lightweight a luminum foil, using a tumbler for
tra cing a perfec t c ircle. A candle is placed in the c enter of a foil
circle a nd then firmely pushed into the candle holder a llowing
the edges to nareout so they ca tch the drip . - MRS. R.R .A.

La urene Lewis.

Attending we re Mrs. Sara h Willis, Mrs . Laura J ohnson , Mrs.
Land on Smilh, Mrs. George Carson , Mrs. ~ve lyn Stewart, Mrs.
Alburtice Young, Mrs. Cecil Smith , Mrs. Lawr ence Roush, Mrs .
Uoyd Willia ms, Mrs. Elmer VanMeter , Mr s. Robert Roach, Mrs.
J . Marshall and Mrs . Matilda Noble.
MASON - THE MASON MOTHERS CLUB Christmas party
was held recently a t the home of Mrs . Edwa rd Rya n with Mrs.
Charles Yeager and Mrs. Roy Test assisting as hostesses. GuesL&lt;&gt;
for the e vening wer e the ladies' husba nds . Gifts wer e exc hanged.
The home was beautifully decorated for the holidays .
Attending we re Mr . an d Mrs . Nola n Swackham er , Mr. and
Mrs . Charles Yeager , Mr . and Mrs. Roy T est, Mr. a nd Mrs.
George Mc Far la nd, Mr. and Mrs. J ames Proffitt, Mrs. Mar y
Berry, Mr. and Mrs. J c3eph Lish, Mr . an d Mrs. Larr y Noble, Mr.
and Mr: :1omer Noble. Mr. and Mrs. Richard Fowler, Mr . and
Mrs . La rry Bumgardner ' "d Mr. and Mrs. Edward Rya n.
MASON - MA~QN ' S SE NIOR CITI ZENS dined December
19 at the Rerl Carpet Inn, exchanging gifts and singing Christmas
carols. They sent Christmas cards to Wilda Colem a n, Hele n
Barton and l&lt;atherine Raynes.
Attendin!, the dinner were Edna Burris, Laura Dunbar, Clara
Smith, Maude Young, Mildred Tripp, Helen Elias , Zelma Hunter,
Rhoda Yeager , Marie Goodwin, Bertha P rin ce, Pear l Roush,
Mary Harris, Jean Lyons , Clara Roush, Bertha Ha ll , Erma
Turnbull, Ruth E . Wallace, J osie E lias, Ma ry Aumiller, Frances
Stewart, Barbara McDaniel, Ella Ford , Blanche J ones , Ma tilda
Noble, Mary Phillips, Goldie Smith and Maxine Arnold , Seni or
Citizens Aid,

20 cu. ft.
First Come! First Served!

INGELS FURNITURE

FIRST TIME EVER
AYARN WITH

3~c~
SPECIAL VALUE!
Lorge a ccent throw
rugs com e i n a n arrd'9 o f
so lid col o rs, two -tones

INTRODUCTORY
PRIC£

After Sale Price .. 1

I

I'

I

PR. '1.50

BUY 2 SAVE 50•

. Tooll paste
Your

Choice

$
17
PRICE

21
SHAMPOO

SPECIAl8UYI

4 oz. Size

WEAR EYER®

87C

STICK PENs·

.

• MINT

.~

j

'

1 111

OF

TREE TRIMS

50% .

OFF

84~ '

.
.
.
. 100% cotton dresser
scarfs. Nr:Jny poltems-

AT GREATLY
REDUCED
PRICES

' )

H I. I

"J

....'

••

., ... n
l.' IVr

,, ,..,. . .

... . ...
~.

..... ..,
\

.

,

•. ,. • ,."ff

..•

··~

12's

$1 .49 Value

99~

CHRISTMAS CLEARANCE SPECIALS
ALL CHRISTMAS DECORATIONS

50%

ALL BOXED HALLMARK
XMAS CARDS

OFF

AND
SPECIALLY SELECTED GIFT ITEMS

MANUFACTURER'S PRICE

ELIMINATE
EXCESS
WATER
WEIGHT

rJ
y

BUFFER IN
TABLETS
$1.92 Value

lOO's

AQUA-BAN

fROM VOUO KOOACIJ(OO
NEGATIVE llR ORIGINAL SliOE
' l iM I! fD !IME
N HM

Two

$219

NOW ONJ. Y. .•
ENLA RGEMENTS
FOR ONLY .

$425

COMET

The full strength
water pill, No
prescription
needed.
80 tablets
$2 ,98 Value

SUPER ISODEnES
Anesthetic
throat Lozenges

•2.49

lO's

Money Back
Guarantee

WET ONES
Moist ·
Towelettes

Programs

"

"'''

..

70 Count

Family Size

$1.43 Value

$1.09 Value

)

\ '"

.

• ',

-','r'l '~"'·' \

~,.,_,,.-

..... . .

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

ggt

3/63'

I

I ·.. ,. "IQ"'"''
·
ol
..,~ , o dt ~nreh

- -•·

SINUTAB
SINUS TABLETS
30's
$2.50 Value

29

PYRINATE
Lice Killing

SHAMPOO
Liquid
$1.98 Value

$119

on

human behavior and attitudes.
Meeting at the Holiday Inn
here were Dorothy Casey,
Manager for Gallia County
Senior Nutrition Center, and
Dorline Phillips, manager,
Meigs County Senior Nutrition
Center:

VANISH
TOILET

BOWL
.CLEANER

. 59t

PRJiEWON
Mrs . Denver Well, Route 3,
Pomeroy, was the winner of
the colored television given
away in the Pomeroy Chamber .
of Commerce Christma s
promotion. The dra wing took ·
place Tuesday afternoon .
.

. i
!··~,

Throat Lozenges

$1.50 Value

EASTERN - The Eastern
Homemakers, following a brief
busniess meeting, enjoyed a
Christmas banquet at Napoli's
Village Inn in Belpre Dec. 16
featuring steak, shrimp and
c hicken. The group received
gifts from a grab ba g and from
their secret sisters.
Present were Mrs. Judith
, Starcher, Mrs. Pam Hager,
Mrs. Sue Dye, Mrs. Lois Deem,
Mrs . Joan Smith and Mrs.
Barbara Hensley.
A charm was given to Mrs.
Pam Hager, president of the
Club for the year 1974 . The next
meeting will be at the home of
Sue Dye, Coolville, on Jan . 30,
at 7:30p.m.

..

I

ISODETTES
MDM

8 oz.

3.4 oz .
No. 155

'"

• • ----J..-o.•

4-PURPOSE
FACE CREAM

'"'"~

Companion

.

'

•

Extra Strength

BID
,.,.,m

.

.,

CHRISTMAS

TOYS

JO' s

MILl&lt; Of

. ,, ,

...

OF
SCARFS TO
EMBIOIIEI '

1oo Tablets
or
12 oz. Liquid
$2.07 Value

STAYFREE
MINI
PADS

lady Esther

MAGNESIA

ATCOADSEMINAR
ZANESVILLE - Two pe rsons frorn the Meigs-Gallia
area attended a two-day
training seminar for the
Corpora lion
for
Ohio
Development (GOAD ) staff of
the Senior Nutrition, Foster
Grandparent, and Senior

. ' ,, I

SPfCIAl SfUCTION

Roll On
Deodorant
1.5 oz.
$1.25 Value

JO .·

HUNDREDS

STOCK

MYLANTA
ANTACID

89c Value

CLEANSER
, '" "'

REMAINING

eSTFREO

..
'

.,.

OUR
ENTIRE

ForToday's
Driest·
Babies

ULTRA
BAN

50 Tablets

• All blve in k
• Medium points
• Write smoother,
easier

Worm kriit gloves in many solid
colors, some w/novelty c!Psigns,

• REGULAR

l

p?f"99c

SPECIAL
BUY I

Cotton/stretch nylon
socks . Men's sizes 9-15.

,. '

LOW

___fROTEIN

BAYER
ASPIRIN

Homemakers
dine in Belpre

OUR

BUY! · · ·

. , ( 2FDR

VASELINE
INTENSIVE
CARE
LOTION
15 OZ. SIZE

SUPER

-

WHITE TV

39

and bea uti ful co lor
designs. fv\ach inc
wa shabl e.

8.75 oz.
CREST

LOW

Johnson's

PARKERSBURG - Eight
students from the Meigs area
were named to the dean's list
for the fall quarter at Mountain
State College in Parkersburg.
Two of them , Deborah Carder,
daughter of Mrs. Doris Carder ,
Lincoln Heights, Pomeroy' and
Nancy Sexson, daughter of
Mrs. Demaree Sexson, Route 1,
Pomeroy, maintained a perfect
4 average .
·Others named to the list were
Cris Bailey' daughter of Mr .
and Mrs . Robert Bailey, Route
4, Pomeroy, and Paul Cunningham , son of Mr . and Mrs .
Raymond Cunningham,
Syracuse (both 3.8) ; Kerry
Chesser ~ son of Mrs. Hazel
Chesser of Shade, and Jenell
Cumings, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. David Cumings of
Pomeroy (3.6) and Roxanna
Patterson, daughter of Mr . and
Mrs. Paul Patterson, Rutland ,
and Sonya Ohlinger, daughter
of Mr . and Mrs . David
Ohlinger, Middleport (3.4).

99

OUR$
PRICE

WASHABILITY OF WINTUK
PLUS WARMTH OF WOOL
A perfect marri age of natural
and man made f ibers... non-al l e rgen iC, mothproof blend of
70% Or ion® acryli c/30"/Q vi rain
w oo l ma kes fine knit fa shions
that are ma chin e washable and
dry ob le. 4 oz., 4-ply skeins.
Fabu lous 38 -color assortme nt.

DINNER GUESTS
Chri s tmas dinner guests of
Mr. an d Mrs. Patrick Loc ha ry
wt' re Mrs. E lizabeth Ch&lt;:tse,
Jack Chase, Dayton; Miss
He le n Loc luiry , Pomeroy, and
Mr . and Mrs. Ha r ry Henr y,
Amesv ille.

The Meigs County Holiness
Associalinn is sponsori ng ~
Wa lch Nig ht Service whit·h will
be he ld at the Middleport
Chu rch of tile NCJzt.trene
Tuesday, Decem ber :n. at 9::30
p . m . The Rev. Howard Black,
pastor of the Syracuse Church
of the Nazar ene will s pc~k.
Spee iat musica l n umbe rs
will be prese nled by each of the
par ticipat ing chu rches . The

at Parkersburg

Just Recieved
A New Shipment

GARD

PERFECTA
YARN

POLYESTER
AREA RUGS

Relics a11d Bea us Cluh will
ht•f.!in on Thursday, Jan. 9, in
tht· •, r e&lt;~ rt·ation building at
Royal Oak Pa rk. The lessons
will be given each Thursd~:~ y
ni~ ht ow r a several · week
pe riod with t:ecil Sayr e of
Letart, W. Va. a s the ca ller .
Further information may be
obtai ned from Mrs. Wya tt
Chadwell, 992·7477 , or by
telephoning 304-773·5910.
:::::::;:::::;:;:;:::::::::::::::::;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::;:::::::::::::;::

Eight earn honors

(Limited Quantities!

26 X 45"

1

eBLACK &amp;

·'

'

3DAYSONLYI
DEC. 26·27·28

NON-SKID
WAFFLE
BACKING

Tire Prices

•

MIDDLEPORT

992-2635

Winter Ant~Freeze
and
Summer Coolant

F;th~~~

ZENITH
COLOR TV

~ ~TEPHANIE WALKER
,Stephanie Lyn Walker was
hpnored with a party in
observance of her second
birthday, Dec. 23, at the
home of her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Mike Walker, Bailey
~un Road. Allending were
her parents, her great·
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Leland Haley, Rutland, her
gt andparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Willard Walker, Salem
qnter; Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Miller, Rutland; Mr. and
Mrs. Joe Miller and Tammy
Jo, West Columbia, Jeff
Miller, Brenda Mnter,
Rptland; Ruth Anne and
Atlsa Walker, Salem Center;
Jqhn Miller and Georgene
Grate, Rutland. Sending a
gift but unable to attend was
Stephani e 's greatgt,jmdmother, Mrs. Bonnie
Miller.

18 cu. ft.

Middleport, Ohio

d:. nr·l· J ~ssn n s
throug h tlw Shadt• l{i vc r

Mrs. Elht Sm rth , and Mrs.
Geraldi ne Youn g with M1ss
M y~ tis Pa rker , a gues t.

r ailed ''Chris tmas I .eft -over'' .
The door pri ze, a poinse ttia
ths h made by Miss Parker, was
w 1H1 by Mrs. Marie Curt.
1\ fruit sal a d, coff ee,
i-l SSOI'IPd crackers a nd nuts
\H' I' C ~c rved . On ea ch tra y was
a ce r&lt;.~ruit· San ta , a girt to Pach
of the g u es~. Other s a tl.cnding
were Mrs. Dorothy Woodard ,
Mrs. Edna Schoenle b, Mrs.
Evelyn Lanning, Mrs. Sylvia
Midkiff, Mrs. Marjorie Crow ,

Watch Night service planned .

S q~:~an·

Rev . Dun1:llcl Co le is host
pa stur . The public i~ invited.

A thought fo r the day :
Pres1 dent Ha rry Truman said,
" If you can't stan d the heat,
get out of the kitchen." He also
said· "Being presiJient is li ke
ndmg a tiger. A man has to
hep on rid mg or be swallowed .

.;,. ~X"''

15 cu. ft.

heritage house

The hnrne w:1&lt;:: PXI P ns h•Pl ~·
deeoraled with cerami cs made
by Mi ss Myrti s Kay Pa rke r
and gifts for an exchange wr re
placed benea th a lig hted tree.
Mrs. The lm a Mc Murray
presided at the mee ting wi th
Mrs. ·Pa rker g iving devoti ons
ltsing scripture fr om J ohn :J: 16~n. rmd :.:1 ::u·•idc from !he
Uppe r
Room
. entitl e d
"Chris tmas Da y Medica tion ".
Mrs . McMurray rea d &lt;:1 storv

.. . ,.,.; '"'

'i . '
.~ W(f,Jr
•.

ear En

HENDERSON -MR. AND MRS: JAMES W. DUNN of
Henderson, W. Va., are annoWlcing the birth of a da ughter, Lora
Elizabeth, on December lllh, at Holzer Medical Cente r Hospital.
The infant weighed 6 pounds and 5 ounces. The Dunns have two
other children, Stephanie and Peter. Grandparents are Mr . and
Mrs. Clifford Dunn, Point Pleasant ; Mr. and Mrs. Bliss Wilson,
Mason.

Mason·, W. Va .

•

Just Arrived!

BANKAMERICARD
or MASTER CHARGE

MASON - THE SUNSHINE CLASS of Mason United
Methodist Church held its Ch ristmas pa rty at the church parsonage with Mrs. Clarence (Myrtle) McCloud and Mrs. William
(Lilah) Zerkle, co-hostesses .
Mrs. Zerkle presented the devotionals which included the
Christmas story from Isa iah ; a poem pertaining to Chrislmas in
the Heart, Thinking About Christmas a nd Reflections of
Christmas Past. The devotionals wer e closed with pra yer by
Mrs. McCloud.
Thank you notes from recipients of th e Thanksgiving trea ts
were read .
A getwell card was signed by the class members a nd was
sent to Miss Lorena Weiss who was hospitalized at Pleasant
Valley Hospital. The class members agreed that its goal for the
coming year is to fix up the Sunshine Class room .
The group. enjoyed singing carols around the lighted
Christmas Tree. They were accompanied by Mrs . Ray Proffitt a t
the piano.
The hostesses invited the guests to the dining room whic h
was beautifully decorated for the holidays. Mrs . Willia m Zerkle
served punch and the other refreshments included cookies, a nd
sandwiches.
Attending were Mrs. William Fry , Mrs. Maxine Arnold , Mr s.
George Carson, Mrs. Frances Stewart, Mrs . Peari .Roush, Mrs.
Matilda Noble, Mrs. Ray Proffitt, Miss Mary Dudding , Mrs.
Landon Snnith, Mrs. Marie Goodwin , Mrs. Cecil Smith, Mrs. Fre d
Tripp and the hostesses .
·
On Sunday, a gift wa s present ed by the Sushine Class to their
Sunday School teacher, Mrs. Maxine Arno ld, as a tok en of appreciation.

772-5881

•

•

Sarah Spencer. At the open ing of the p rogram the group sang,
"Oh Come All Ye Faithful". The preside nt , Mrs. Test, closed the
program with prayer.
During a brief business meeting, Mrs. Tes t appoin ted a
nominating committee and announced that fu tur e meetings will
be held at 7 p.m. the second Monday of ea ch month .
The hostesses, Mrs. Test and Mrs. Ray Proffit t, invited
guests to the dining area wher e Christmas breads and cookies
were served. The table·was centered with a mini ature Christmas
tree. Other Christmas decora ti ons wer e a lso used.

· BEND TIRE CENTER

..-

"

At

Cloud ; Business, Margaret Pickens ; Questions, Fra nces
Stewart; Sorry, Maxine Arnold ; Words , UJis Test; Easter,

IN AKRON
Mrs . Pearl Reyn olds was the
.Chris tmas guest of Mr. and
Mrs. Bill Bland and other
relatives in Akron.

A rrt-~ n ge m e n ts to pr ov ide
holid ay r cme mbn w ees for
s hut ~ in s a nd those of the Me igs
Coun ty Infirmary were ma de
dw·in g a rece nt meeting of the
. Pas t Matrons Club of Pomeroy
Cha pter 1118, Orde r of the
.Ea s tern Sta r , he ld Ht the home
of Mrs. Norma Pa rker.

seri es, as in his other works,
was to create a philosophy for "•
the twentieth century. " ... this ..~
(Continued on page 10)

LOOK! ••• CHEST

fami~.

theme: Great Expectations, Sara h Spencer ; J oy, Myrtle Mc-

It 's

huma n nature, and of the
hum a n
conditi on
within
nature. 10
His aim in this television

dk~NS SET

Remembrances arranged fot shut-ins,infirmar.J; residents

r-----------------------~;

For the entire

mas ?" Each guest gave readings as follows, ca rrying out the

in·the Area

testa.m~nt~-Bronowski

is m a nifes t in thi s book
f te levis ion series) . F or me, the
und e r sta r~ding of nature has as
ils goa l the underslandirg of

SHOES

MASON - MRS. ROY TEST WAS in charge of the recent
meeting of the Women's Socie ty of the Mason United Methodist
Church and used for the theme, "What do you Bring to Christ-

VISIT AWAY
Mr. and , Mr s. E dga r
Reynolds~ Middleport, are in
Morgantown , W. Va . for the
holidays with their s on and
daughter-in-law, Mr . and Mrs .
Val Reynolds, Gwynn , Lynn,
and Val , Jr.

..
..•

·~

LIQUID
DRANO
POLISH
7 oz .

69c

LYSOL
SPRAY

OPENER
32 oz .

No. 116

5 oz .

76c Va.lue

BRECK
SHAMPOO
11 oz .
Normal, Dry
or Oily
$2 .05 Value

�•
9- The DaUv /;entinol Mlrltllonnrt.PnmPrnv 0 Thursdav. Dec 26. 1974

.
8 - 1 he O.ll h St•t•lmt.•l Mtdr\lt• pvz I

Pollll l Ll\

n

1 1 I ll ..., !

1b

Politics as usual gone
from Washington scene
system to cttlzen.r:; who hnv t&gt;

WASHINGTON iUPI ) - TI1e
roof ca ved m on pohtlcs..as- never 1akr n p.u t
usual m Amenca m 1974
The two-pa rty syst em was
rescued from the debns but 11

Wlderwent surgery th at could

have profound eff ects on how
the countr) selects Its pohtwa l
leaders and gove1 n.s 1tself fm

years to come
Watergate and the resigna-

tion of President R1chard M
NIXon obvwusly msp1red much

FOCUS '75
of t he reforms tha t are
chang1ng the face of ArnerlCan
pohtlCS
But the roots of "postWatergate morahty " took hold
m the nch so1! of socoal fermen t
and legal mnovalion that has
been transformm g broad
segments of Amencan hfe for

the past t"o decades
What os happerung, then , 1s
not sun ply a "qwck f1x " after a
routme pohtical scandal It 1s a
fundam ental set of reforms,
shaped 1n Congress , s tate
legislatures and both maJor
pohtlcal partles and portendmg a truly new era m the
pohtical hfe of the Umted
States
The new reforms are centered on the way pohtlcs 1s
pracllced, rather than what it
produces But these changes,
by servmg to open the poht1cal

L1 t , t ,

to c x ~. r t "
substa nce
of government policies ~w d
programs m the future
How the poh taca l parltes use
these refor.m s could a l so affect
thetr t~ b!ltly to r eLapture the
attention a nd loyalties of the
mdependent voter , wh ose
growmg numbers wtthm the
Amenca electorate as perha ps

pro nust' n ont'thel ess
stro ng Impa ct on the

the most stgmftca nt U S
political phenomenon of recen t

years
As the Watergate scandal h1 t
ots peak, national pubhc
opuuon polls showed more and
more Americans were losmg
confidence m thetr gove rn ment 's
problem -solv m g
capacity, and were abandomng
personal tdenl!fl cal!On w1 th
etther the Democra tic or
Repubhcan partoes
In additiOn, the turnout for
the 1974 congressiOna l and
state clcctwns was only 38 per
cent of ehg1ble voters , the
lowest mid term showmg smce
1946 and the second lowest m
modern

history

Although Democrats usuall)
wm btg when voter turnout IS
high , and hght ballotmg tradi·
twnally favors Repubhcans,
the Democrats mcreased the1r
sobd majonlles m the House
and Senate m 1974 and reduced
the Republicans to 13 of the
nation's 50 governorships

Airlift to move
10,000 from city
DARWIN, Austral1a (UP!)
- The government hegan a
massiVe a~rlift from cyclonedevastated D&gt;trwm today , saymg "1! would be mtolerable for
women and children" to
remam.m the demolished coty
Ten thousand persons were
to be flown out In one of the
f1rst flights, an a1r force
Hercules transport rushed 18
InJured survovors, mcludmg
chlldren m critical condition, to
Sydney
for
emergency
operations
"Darwm ts devastated ," one
of the surVIvors satd "lt 1S
gone There os nothmg but
rubble and a few half.
demolished buddings."
Rex Patterson, mmtster for
northern development, announced the evacuation today
m the forst radio broadcast
from Darwm since the Chnstrnas day cyclone smashed mto
the northern port of 41,000
"Top pnorlty for evacuation
w1ll go to the pregnant and 1ll,"
he sa1d "It would he mtolerable for women and children to
stay m D&gt;trwm for the wet
season when thousands of
homes will have to be rebmlt "
A fleet of 20 aor force Hercules transports and dozens of
commercial and amateur
arrcraft JOined m the evacua·
lion Seven navy warships
brought rehef supplies to able·
bodied men staymg behmd to
rebuild the city
Government offictals said
Cyclone Tracy destroyed or
damaged 90 per cent of Darwm, 2,000 miles north of
Sydney Ofllc13ls reported at
least 44 persons dead and sa1d
the toll could riSe as h1gh as 80
The government reported
hundreds of persons injured
and about 20,000 homes destroyed by the erratic cyclone,

which changed course sud·
denly and smashed mto the Clly
before off1c1als could make
preparations
Actmg Pnme Mm1ster
James Cairns flew to Darwm
today to dtrect rescue
operations for the survtvors of
the worst storm in Australian
history
"I have heen informed tha t
almost the whole of the c1ty has
been devastated," he sa1d
before Acting Pr1me Mom ster
James Crurns Oew to Darwm
today to dtrecl rescue
operattons for the survtvors of
the worst storm m Australian
history

International Hockey League
By Untied Pre ss International
North
w
I
I
pts gf ga
Flmt
21 10 3 45 129 89
Mu skegon 21 12 1 43 143 92
Sagmaw
21 13 1 43 13 1 112
Port Huron
11 19 2 24 102 11 3
L an s mg
8 20 1 17 109 165
Kalamazoo 1 20 2 16 77 112
South
w I t pts gf ga
Dayton
22 8 2 46 133 110
Columbus
17 15
JS 127 11 7
Des Mo nes
16 17
33116126
To led o
15 18
31 128 123
F ort Wa yn e
12 19 1 25 114 lJO
Wednesdays Result s
Fort Wayn e 8 K a l amazoo 2
Mus k egon 7 To l edo 2
F l m t 7 Pori Huro n 4
Columbus 4 La n s m g 2
Sag maw 2 Dayton I
Tongtht s Games
No games sc heduled

Islam revolves around the
Koran, whtch means "recttmg" m Arable and accordmg
to tradotion, was d1ctated to
Mohammed by the Angel
Gabroel

The sn.1p &lt;un1 lli "'IOil \\ mild
I,; h. tt l.tt :O:I. num bt• t "' uf ( TOf '
' ,d \\ ,u h

had dl stil pcl •o

De tuocr t u Sl{lt' Po ii ' H_.Ii
st';ll ch er s fo11 nd ulht n ' tse

Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!
2 SIGNS

1

I

OF
QUALITY

Ju

t h c~ L R e publ u.: ans ge n{'1 ,1lh r t•

{ fd l lt.:

1972 NOVA
'!225 0
? dnor
8 r"l u tom at c p ower st eerm g blac k v m y l top
"' d h r pd 1 •H&lt;:. h g ood w hil e w n ll t 1rl.! s r n d1 0 loca l 1 ow n er
(lr 11 d ,(r v rcC&gt;d r egul&lt;rly h y us

Brown's Fire &amp;
Safety Equipment

REMODELING &amp; CONST.

$ 1995
1q7 0 CHEVROLET
Mon te Cnrlo 3SO V 8 auto mat1 c p owe r steermg power
br&lt;"' k es d r1r k b l ue fm tsh bl ue nten o r bl ue vm y l r oo f
fa ctory a r condttl on tn g ltke new w hrte wall t tr es r ad 1o
M n n y other ex tr as

Sales &amp; Servoce

1969 CHEVROLET IMPALA
d oor c lea n mter1 or aq ua f 1n1 sh g ood hrts
a uto m ah c P steen n g n1r ron d 1 t1 on~
4

the outdoors

-

J
\

F1re Extmgu1 shers, Home
Ftre Alarm s
Te s l1ng &amp;
R efilling
Phone 742 4673 or 742 5595
Btll Brown Owner
Rutland , Oh1o

$129S

va

Alum1num stdmg , rootmg
compl e t e r es 1d e nt1 a l c on
struc t10n Wmng plumbmg
elec
heating ,
k11 c hen
cabmets elc
27 Yrs e xpenen ce 1n c on sl
trade

ROGER HYSELL'S
•
GARAGE
On St a t e Rt 124 112
Route 7 by pa ss
Rutl a nd

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

For Sale

OPEN EVES. 8. 00 PM
POMEROY. OHIO

.

1961 CJ\ D tL L

''

~C

P h on e

I t 7 61 S t

tN M E M O RY of our b eloved
mo t h er
A nna 51t l e"
who
o a ssed n w .-~y D ec 26 1971
No o n e k nows t h£&gt; s le n t
hC c1 rtn c hc l or the on e we
ov en so w e lt
Onl y t h os e wh o los t .9 d ear one
wdl t ver r ea lly kn ow
'-. ,1 d l y rn ssecl b y Ro lt rn
~ r &lt;t n ces an d Hc l ~: n e
1116 1tc
I N MEMORY o f M au d K o hl
wh o pass ed away 9 years ago
tod a y D ec 16 Sadl y m ssed
toy dau g ht er L K Koh l
12 26 1t c

''

196 0 JEEP n ew m ot or t1r es
1o p
e xcc tt en t c ond1 t on
Phon e 667 37 5c;1
12 20 Si c
19 73 COM E 1 6 c yt a ul o trans
P W
18 500 m il es L 1k e new
Cal l 667 3 &lt;~ 41 any 1 me
12 2') 6t p
65 CH EV Van V 8 s tan da r d
transm1SS ton ~ 37 5 Phon e 99 2
700 I
12 22 6t c

A U CT ION
Th ur s dav
nnrl
Sa tu rday n g ht 7 p m
at
Mason Au c t1on ~ o rton Sf 1n
Ma son w Va Cons Qnments
w elc ome
Phon e { 304 ) 773
54 7 1
10 3 tfc
P L EASE p la c e your orders an d
1nqu1 r 1es a s t o th e fa m ou s
0 11 of M1n k cos m e t 1cS wtlh
B ROWN S
In de p e nd en t
D1 5l r1 bu to r s
A l so d oor to
door serv ce s Matu r e a nd
d ependabl e per sonn e l a lw a y s
n eed ed
P h one
q92 5 113
M1 ddl eport Oh 10
12 22 tf c
SH OOT IN G mat c h Rae n e Gun
Clu b Sun da y 1 p m Ass ort ed
m ea t s an d fa r to r y c n ok e g un s
on l y
12 12 tf c

CA SH $$$$$ $$
FOR
JU N K
CAR S
Camp
F RYE S
T RUCK and A U TO P AR T S
R u t l and ph on e 7J2 609&lt;1
11 26 26t c
WA N T ED o ld up r 1ght p1 a n os
any con d ton
Pay n g 510
eac h F rst fl oor on l y Wr ll e to
an d g rve d 1r ect 1on s to W 11ten
P1a n o Co
Box 18!l Sar d1s
Oh o .t 39 d6
12 24 6tp
V LD f urnitur e 1ce boxes b rass
be ds or c omp le t e h ou seh o ld s
W r1t e M
0 Mill er R t 4
P o m er o y Oh 10 Ca ll 992 7760
10 7 74
JU N K au to s
com pl e te an d
de t1ver ed to our y ar d
we
p c k u p au t o bod res and buy
all K1 n ds o f sc rap m et al s an d
tr on R 1d er s Sa l vag e St Rt
124 R t 4 Pom eroy
Oh 1o
Ca ll ll92 5468
10 17 tf c

CA .:. H pa 1d for all m ak es a nd
m od e l s of mo b il e h om es
Pho n e ar e a cod e 61 4 42 3 9531
4 13 tf c

Pets For Sale

No t ce 1S hereby g1ven t h a t
th e ann u al mee h ng of the L O SE we 1ghl Wt lh N ew Shape
Tablets a n d H ydr e,.; Water
stockh olde r s of Th e F ar m er s
R.iUs at Du l1on Drug
M 1d
Bank an d Sa vmg s Co m pan y o f
dlep ort and N el son D ru g
211
Wes t
Seco n d
Slr eet
12 24 31p
Pomer o y Oh 10 wil l be h e ld at
n1e o ff1 c e o f sad b ank
n
Pom er oy Oh o ac cord 1n g to ts
b y la w s
on t he lh r d W ed
n.esd a y o f J anuar y 19 75 a t 4 p
CON T ACT us now sec u re yo ur
m for th e p urp ose of el ect m g
tu t ur e ~ wh1l e open 1ngs ar e
d 1r er t or s and l he t r an sac t on ot
s t 11 ava1 l abl e l as sa l es lad y
sucn ot h e r b us ,ness a s m a y
beau ty ad v 1so r for fa bul ous
pr op erly co rr~ e bP i o r e sad
0 t o f M nk
Cos m et rcs
m ee t n g
Sau ... ag e s Box 4 Sy r. acuse
Pau l E K toes
Oh ro 45779
Sec r et ary
12 17 10t p
Dec 19 26 J an 2 9
- - -

Help Wanted

Carrier Wanted
In

an Engl ewood ,

Colo , busmessman, who did not

-

NEW HAVEN

want to be odenbhed, put up
$577 for the round tnp a1r fare
Age 8 or Older
for the three , a local motel
provoded them rooms for four
days and the hosp1tal staff took
up a collecbon for the1r meals
"When we woke up Chnslmas 111 Court St., Pomeroy
Phone 992 2156
morntng we had no 1dea all th1s
was gomg to happen ," sa1d . ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

The Daily Sentinel

Mrs

Cox "Th1s

mcest
we ever

IS the

Chnstma s present
had "
The Cox fam1ly, wh1ch
arnved m Denver late Chrtst.
ma s Day, also brought a trunk
loaded w1 th Marty's presents
rrom last year and th1s year
He had asked us to keep
them un hl he could come home
for a Chnslmas and open
them," said Mrs Cox, whose
son had the hver operation m
1969 and has smce undergone
more than a dozen operabons
"But we decoded not to walt
any longer When we heard
about commg here. we packed
them aII up "

eastabhshes temtory
Grouse m Oh1o average 25
ounces among 'cocks and about
20 ounces for hens Most Oh10
b1rds are m what lS called the
"red phase" of feathere
coloratwn Birds found to the
north and west of Ohoo most
often wear gray plumage Both
color phases have feathers
camouflaged with gray and
black bars and blotches.
Regardless of how heav!ly
Oh10 grouse are hunted, Stoll
sa1d,
about the same
populatiOn lS present in any
undisturbed cover year after
year. Natural attntlon predators, d1sease, etc remove about 5o.li5 per cent of
the grouse population annually This loss 1s replaced
er~ch sprmg when hens lay an
average clu•ch of 11 eggs
ap1ece, not all of wh1ch develop
mto mature birds
,,1 r'hR t all this means ts that
th e l tu" , ..,loud, sudden and
unnervtng, 1\ l trh you found
last year should occu m about
the satne spots th1s \~ , ( ..
which you venture mto OhiO !'&gt;
hard" oods after Old Ruff. And
' ""ha ve unttl Feb 22 10 do 1t

I

FUEL OIL

------- ----'--

For Rent

POMEROY LANDMARK !
Jack W Car se y M gr
Phone 992 2 1 8 1
CL OS _ OUT o n new Z ig Za g
Se wm g m ach1n es Fo r S£' W1n g
st r etch f abr1 c s bu t1 on ho es
f a n cy d e5 1gn s e t c
Pa1nl
sl rg htt y b l em1 sh ed Ch o1 ce ot
ca r ry nq c as-e o r se w1 n g
st and $.:1 9 80 ca sh or t er m s
ava il ab le Ph one 992 7755
12 18 lf c
P L A NT AT IO N g r own Ch r s l
ma s t r e es
Sc o tc h P1n e
No rway Spr uc e Blu e Spru ce
an d Do ug la s F1r R easonab l e
pr~ces
Shop ea rl y for bes t
se l ect1on s B obs V!a rk e t
Mason w va 773 572 t
17 t I If
W A L N UT ste r eoradto am fm
8 tr ack ta pe co rn b 1n a1 10 n
Bal anc e $ 11 0 69 o r terms Call
992 396 5
17 3 t fc
G ROCERY bu stn ess for sal e
Bu ld1ng fo r sa le or l ease
Phone 77 3 561 8 f r om 8 JO p m
to 10 p m f or app o1 ntm en t
3 LO tfc

H OU SE 4 room s a nd bath n 1c e
yard and dnv ew av
A lso
f urn sh ed a p t Ca ll 992 278 0 or
99 2 3&lt;1 32
12 12 tfc
f\tt C E 3 b ed r oom ho u se l 1v 1ng
r oo m and ha l ls c arp e ted
l ar ge pan eled famil y roo m
Wi t h c onnec t n g sun d ec k
Water softner an d fe n ce d
!.145 month
New
y ard
Haven 88 2 2219
12 20 5tc
4 RM fu1n1 shed apt c los e to
Powel ls Super V a1u phon e
992 3658
11 20 tf c
COUNTRY Mobil~ Home Park
R.t 33 ten miles north of
Pomero y
Large lots W1fh
c oncret e pat1os
stdewatks
1 unne r s
and
off
str ee t
p arkmg
A lso
spaces for
small traders Phone 99 2 7479
7 21 tf c

3 BEDRO OM hous e P ho ne 992
3975 or 992 257 1
12 3 tf c

For Sale

- -- - ---,

REALTY

on about 1 beautiful a cr e old
Rt 33 4 yr s old
12x65
c arpet e d
a•r co nd
a ll
elec tnc expando l tvrng R
landscape d
A S KIN G
$11 000 Mak e an off er
PORTLAND - 4 nt ce l eve l
good
lots c l ose to nver
dnlled we ll ga r a ge &amp; ou t
bu ll dmg d B R ho m e Sd 700

Complete plumbmg &amp;
heatong servoce and
general sheet metal
works
Free
Estimates .
Phone 949 5961
Emergency 992 3995
or 992 5700

TUPPERS PLAINS
LOVELY
RE TIR EMENT

21

H OME 1 story f ram e
BR bath d tn1n g R ut il tt y
R ba sem ent ce nt r al hea t
l oca t ed on level acre $ 13 500
CLOSE IN - 27 ac r es ba rn
s ilo mil k house sh ed s hom e
ha s 3 BR bath TV r oom
dtnrng R ba sem ent centr a l
heat clfy water A SKING

$30 000 MAKE AN OFFER
992 2259 or 992 2568

TEAFORD

fr .· .rlo1d S1
Brr)krr
:0 ."'if'rh&lt;llll( ~II I'd
Pomeroy. Oh to l'&gt;!f&gt;I.J

$16 000 00
70 ACRES - On n ew Rt 33
near Darwrn
Some t1mber
some c lear ed
so me n tce
bulldmg s1tes
GROCERY - On State Route
m village All stock and some
equipment A real bustness for
a couple Asking sa 000

.t year old tn sh Se tter
pet S60 Howard
B1r c hf eld
Phone 742 5932
12 24 tfc

BUY your beef Qn the hoof W e
have
purebr e d H e r e ford
steers 16 to 18 mo Ol d , 6 ~u to
800 l b The one s t hat h a v e
be en dr ess ed ha ve turn ed o ut
SO p el
F 1rs t come
f rr sl
se r v~d w e w1l l d elt ver E A
W mg elf Ph on e 949 244 1
12 2 1 Jt c
EAR c orn for sal e Phon e 367
7481 or 388 9991
12 20 71c
ELECTR O LU X Sw ee per deluxemodel
Comple te w 1th all
clean1ng al t achments and
uses paper bags Slightly used
but c leans and tooks l 1k e n ew
Will se ll for S37 25 ca sh or
te r m s av ail a bl e P hon e 99 2
7755
12 18 tf c
~----.J-

$2aOO 00

NEW LISTING -

5

room

home bath nat gas heat
c1ty water 011y 57 000 00
Owner wtll hold m ortgag e
SS ACRES - 2. b edroo m house ,
good well , so m e
fe n c es ,
mmerals, and ba rn Owne r will
help fmance $15 000 00

J4

N ew s 13

6 2s-Farm

oo-Today

3,4,15 , Goober 6, C BS News 8 10 A rt of Ra ts1 n g

+++

Dear Imp
And if you can't chsnge h1s warped 1deas, tell him to JOg off.
He'd perfonn better m a Mr Arnencan contest than In a
marnage - HELEN

8 25-Capt~ln Kangaroo 10 Jack L ala nn e 13

8 30--Brady Bunch 6 a 55- News 13

READY MIX
CO N C RET E'
d e li v ered r ght to
y our
pr o tec t Fa st an d easy Free
es11ma t es Pho n e 992 32 84
Goeg l e n Ready M x Co
Mtddl epor t Oht o
6 30 tfc
SE WIN G MA CHIN ES R epa 1r
ser vtee a l l m akes 992 228 4
T he Fabr c Sho p Po m eroy
Author zed s n ger Sa l es an d
Se rv ce We sh a r pen SC ISS or s
3 29 1f c

9 CIO-A M J , Paul D1 x on 4 W1 ld Wil d W est 6 P h1l Donahue 15 ,
Bullwlnk.le e. Mov1e " The Kmg and I' 13 M tster Roger s 33
9 25-Chuck White Reports 10
9 30--Not For Women On ly 3 Hazel a Ta ttlet ales 10 Bea uty &amp;
the Beast 33

Dear Helen and Sue
What do you thmk about a history teacher who rips up your
theme you'd worked on two weeks, JUS! hecause the margins are

10 oo---Name That Tune 3 IS Co m pan y 6 Jok er's W dd a Nova
33
10 30-W Inning Streak 3, Ph1l Dona hue 4

Gamb it ll, 10 , 1
Dream of Jeanme 13
11 00-Hfgh Rollers 3,4, 15, To Be Announ ced 6 N o w Y ou See It
8,10,, PaswordAII Stars 13, EveoftheArt1stJJ
11 30-Hoi!ywood Squares 3,4, 15, Brady Bunc h 13 Lucy Show

4 30-Bewttched 3. /&gt;kd Squad 6, Lucy Show 8, Bonanza IS

5 oo-FBI 3, ~. Andy Griffith 8, MISter Rogers' Neighborhood
20,33, Raymond Burr 12, Raymond Burr 13

5 30-News 6, Beverly Hillbillies 8, Hodgepodge Lodge 20.
Trails West 15, Elec Co 33
6 oo-News 3.4, a, 10, 13,15 , ABC News 6, Elec Co 20 Unto the
Hills 33
'
6 30-NBC News 3,4,15 , ABC News 13, Bewitched 6, CBS News

6; Love of Life a, 10, SEsam e St 33
11 55-CBS News 8, Dan Imel's World 10
12 00-Jackpot 3, 15, Password All Stars 6 Bo b Braun's 50

Club 4, News 8,10, 13, V1deoscope 12

so

B, 10, Zoom 20, Mountain Scene 33

12.»---Celebrlty Sweepstakes 3, 1S , Split Se con d 6 Searc h for
Tomorrow 8, 10 Afternoon w •th D J 13 T oe A n noun ced 33

D OZ E R w o r k l an d ctear 1n g b y
t h e acre ho u r ly or contra c t
fa r m ponds r oads e tc Lar ge
do zer and operato r w1 t h o ver
20 ye ar s e xp ene n ce Pu ll 1n s
Ex ca va t 1n g Pom eroy Oh 10
Phon e 992 247 8
12 19 tfc

Ltght a, 10
2 30-Doctors 3,4, 15, B1g Showdown 6, 13, Edg e of Ntghl a 10,

Van Cliburn International 33
3 DO-Another World J 4, 15 Gen era l H osp1tal 6 13
Right 8, 10, Book Beat 20 ,, G r ea t Perf orman ces 33

P ric e I S

3 ~How to Surv1ve a Marnag e 3,4 , 15, One Life to L1 ve 13,
Lassie 6 , Match Game 8, 10 , W om a n 20
4 OD-Mr Cartoon 3, Bonan za 4 G illigan 's Is 6
Somer set l S,
Tattletales 8, Sesame St 20, 33, M ov te A f f a1r m Tr tn 1da d

10, Mike Douglas 13

Bid and lead
can tip play pla1

--~

EXCE L SI OR Salt WOr KS, 1:: (
M a1 n St Pom er o y A fl k1nds
at sa lt wat e r pe ll et s water
nu g g et s bl oc k salt and own
OhtO R 1v er Sa lt Phone 992
3891
6 5 tfC

NORTH

26

+ AKJ10 5 4

TANKS
cle a ne d
Modern San 1ta t 10 n 992 3954 or
992 734 9
9 18 ftc

46

WEST

• Q96
.Q9542
• Qa3
495

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

NE tG LER - BU I L D I N '-" SUP
P L Y FO R REM ODELIN G
A N D K ITCHEN CABINET S
CAL L
GUY
NE I GLER
R A C INE OHIO PHONE 949
36011
12 19 26t c

I&gt;I.W"'I'S

T~E

a

Washington Week In Review 20,33, Channel 10 Reports 10
30-Chlco &amp; the Man 3. ~.15 , Wall Street Week 20,33, Columbus
Churches 10

9 oo-Rockford Ftles 3,4, 15 6 Million Dollar Man 6 13 f&gt;kvle
The Last Run " 8, Masterpiece Theatre
'Movie

iJ,

' Wuthenng Heights" 10, Evening at 'ymphony 33
10 IXI-'-Poltce Woman 3,4, 15. Night Stalker 6,13. News 20
10 3Q--Paul Nuchlms 33

II oo-News 3,4,6,a, IO,I3,1S
11 JO-Johnny Carson 3,4,15, Wtde World Special 13, Movie
'Corruption" 6, Movie "The Shoes of the Fisherman" 8
Mov1e " Creature with the Blue Hand" 10, Janak1 33

SAME
Tl-1£

f)IG JQ8S ..... C&gt;

!)(IECUT

Ti"IE §.jlt,M£

.2

EAST &lt;DO

S"' U rFL~ OF

bad behavi or of those tn your
charge II your discip line Is too
Ia,.; the same olfense will be
rep eated ag am

btl too an x1o us to tm

too narrow, and your name was In the right-hand corner rather
than the left?
'
It was typed and leg1ble. He says this will teach me to listen
to directions Do I deserve an 11 F" when I wrote an 11 A" paper?
(Well, anyway a "B"') -- BURNING

I mu!l lliO~e

:J

(2 wda.)
II Castor's
mother

II

[j

IDEHEAB!
]
I
I
r
X
=~~~iiiii~;;~~~~~

-'-Prill=-=•:.::s•=·l=liSI:.::AIISWIII==-~1

HA~

NO TIME
AT Nte,HT.

ROI
Now &amp;rr&amp;nJ'e the clre:led letten
to rorm the 1urprl1e &amp;niWtr • U
sueceated.

A

UA

OR

FRYJ

Uli'XYIAAUROA

FKAQIY
QWKO

RG
RG

WUA
W UA

by the abon cartoon.

r xx:r I I x)

BRSNWUON

RY

AOIIHUON

FKJKFI
JS
JIGGIOJ
Yealerday'o Cryptoquole: LET '!'HE SPIRIT THAT FIW
THIS HOUDAY SEASON STAY WITH YOU ALL OF YOUF

Jumble• KNIFE OUTDO BUSHEL BELONG

I"••f'rl

AXYDLIIAAXIl
LONGFELLOW

One letter simply alondl for another In this sample A II
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc Smgle (etten,
apoolrophea, the length and fonnatlon of th• worda are all
hlnu Each day the code letters are dllerenl
CRYPOTOQUOTE

(Aalwen tomo...-ow)

Yf'aluday •

Mining

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to wo rk It:

,'-1

'

8 Hoist
9 Cheap
whiskey
(hyph wd)
11 Demean
15 Cordeal
package
18 Ireland

song

II I

II

medicine
herb

find
S5 Exempted
fl Grand·
parental
S8 Jewish

form four ordmary words .

ISENCHOt

%1 Neighbor
Zl! Comrnemof Maun tarun oratlve
%2 Part of
pillar
a Roman
29 Literary
legion
work
23 Board a
30 Plowed
sleeper
land
24 TIUe for
31 Type o1
Sybil
race
Thorndike
36 Matter
Z5
(law)
Z6
37 Lofty
film
mountain

sorrel
7 Folk

Z6 Actor
Holbrook
r7 Ending for
buoy
28 Study
group
32 Baronet's
tiUe
33 Affinity

u

311JJMJ]3~;-!':i:;::!.(:! -:!.c

0

6 Wood

tresses

+++

YONIR

Yesterday's Answer

crest

ZZ Bare

Dear Burnmg
Let's hope the prmc1pa~rules m favor of OONT&amp;'NT 1
(Mayheyour teacher had a mother who ptlt paper panties on
the turkey legs?) - HELEN

h 1 ge!trng do rk

season
5 Mountain

24 Squire
25 Dobbin's

Dear Burning
l think this kind of rut-p1cldng should he discussed woth yourprinCipal Your teacher should stay W11h hiStory and leave
"fonn" to typmg classes

Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one letter to each square, to

boards
DOWN
I Provide
what's
needed
Z OVer
3 Corrupt
4 French

Khat page• aerve for - BOOKS

DAYS. - CRYPTOQUOTE EDI'l'ORS

VIES

SloU.LI.·

SOME 11\fN

WQ!i(f~ 11\IU.IOMS SHOP 01~­
ClER.K.S ~INI5l'S 8oOf

BI..H:I'IS """D 8ROI'&lt;2ftS RICH
-'N D PoOit THE SUet~
lo.HO ~E lo\EDIOCI:tf: ~ c T\«1
I&gt;.L!K E YOU 11\! GKT Sol&gt;'&gt;' •

'Tk£ SAM£ I'WI&gt;.R IO.ND

TliE SoloJolt;

PISCES (Fob 20-Morch 20)
Don t make excuses for the

C4l Compact
U Strut tbe

DICK TRACY

LoloJo\P POSTS AND 6L .lo.NC
DUST At.ID Pot.Pt;~ &amp;LOW N&lt;i
CIU&gt;SJ\

You

VIRGO (Aug 23 · Sopl 22)

a oo-sanford &amp; Son 3.~. 15, Kung Fu 6, 13, Planet of the Apes 8.

'S TIU-ET lt-.1 ONE Wlo.'/

S -'MIE B R IC~&lt;S

AOUARlUS (Jon 20·Fib 19)
Yo u re too apt to take chances
that yo u shouldn t The returns
you re looking for wont be
found tn high- risk areas

could ea s1ly be pressured 1nto
something speculative by a
friend Your better JUdgment
s hould warn you not to gamb le
w1th 1t now

Rose Bowl Bound 4

II II E ORPHAN A N~JF.
LITTLE ORPHAN
ITS

• 876

Your powers of conc entration
where your work Is concerned
aren t all they should be Thtnk
only of th e I as k at hand

CANCER (June 21-July 22)

6, Pop Goes the Country 8, Black Perspective on the
News :W.JJ. Treasure Hunt 10, To Teltthe Truth 13, 7 55--

Movte "The Gamma People" 10, News 13
2 JO-Mov1e "Carefree" 4
4 01}-Movie "Damsel In Distress" .d
5 30-/&gt;kvle "The ~ky's the Limit" 4

• 8 54

Diavolo"
composer
10 Encourage
11 Napoleonic
battle
Site
1% Sonority
13 Hit on
the head
14 Zsa Zsa's
relative
15 Dracula
pet
16 Night
before
17 Emancipate
Ill Declare
ZO Ending
for miss
or host
h Measure
out

CAPRICORN (Doc 22·Jin 19)

Something that you promis ed
a nother you would take care of
c an n o long er be avotded Gltb
excuses wont get you by

a

gist's rnl1ie!J
5 "Fra

21) Your atti tude IS a bit too Independent and 1mpuls1ve to fit
comfortably into partnerships
o r teamwor k situ ations today

You re rely1ng to heavtly o n the
wrong people to do things for
yo u Ltttle w11l be ac c ompl ished
w1th your prese nt cohons

You re

ACROSS
1 Speleolo-

SAGITTARIUS (Nov 23-Dec

GEMINI (May 21 -Juno 20)

Camera

1 oo-Modntght Special 3 4, 15, Don Kirshner's Rock Concert 6

WIN AT BRIDGE

You re not apt to hand le your
resour c es as w tse as yo u
sh o uld today An 1mpuls1ve
move now Will p r ove v ery c ostly
l ater

7 30-Porter Wagoner 3, Masquerade Party 4, New Candid

Turns 8.10, Feeling Good 33

2 00-Days of Our L1ves 3, 4, 15 $1 0,000 Pyra m1 d 6.1 3 Gu 1dlng

SCORPIO (Ocl 24-Nov 22)
Co ntinue to move cautiously In
bu smess and financ1 al matters
A conservative and prudent
o utlook Is a m ust for you at
present

TAURUS (April 20-May 20)

!.EO (July 23-Aug 22)

~"
. .r
by THOMAS JOSEPH

Report 8. Av1atlon Weather 20,33, News 10, J1mmy Dean 13
I Spy IS
'

Ph tl D o na h ue 8, Y oung &amp;
the Restless 10 , Not For W o m en Only 15, 1 1 5~ To Be An
nounced 33
1 30-Jeopardy 3,4, 15, Let's Make a Deal 6, 13 , As the W o rl c

N IL L t r 1m or cu t tre es or
s h rubbe r y
cle an
ou t
base mf&gt;nls attr cs e t c 949
322 1 or 742 44 41
12 15 261 c

ARIES (March 2t·Aprll 11)
You have no pattence w1th peo ple who d o n t grasp your Ideas
fast Part ot the reason 1s that
y ou re not explaln1ng cl early

Blr1hdtly- Dec. 27, 1174

Opportunities worth e xptorlng
will come to you thl!l coming
year through a c lose contact
You may tall to recog nize the+r
merit If you are not very dlscer~
nl nn

23) Don"t

7 oo-Truth or Cons 3.4, Bowling lor Dollars 6, WCHS TV

12.45-Eiec Co 33
12 55--NBC News 3,15
1 OD-News 3, All My Children 6, 13 ,

CE,Io&amp;l£SS

I'"E E T A t.IQ

&amp;!I.e&amp;.( Of: \10 CE S

• AKJ

+76

4KQ J 108 3 2

,
'

SOUTH
.AKJ107 3

.103

+92

P I A NO t un rn g an d r e pa1r
Ch a r es Sco tt 992 3718
12 13 32 tp
I:H&lt; A D~ U RD

Au c t ioneer
Complete Se rv1c e
P hon e 9 4q 3!!21 or 949 31 61
R ac 1n e, Oh 10
Cr II Brad for d
5 I I

4A 74

East West vulnerabl e
Wesl North East South
14

,.

Pass

2+

34

3.

Pass

4•

P ass

Pass

, ASOI INE AI LE Y

SE PTI C t ank s exc a va t1 ng
d ump tr uck Phon e 742 3742
12 20 26 f t

Real Estate For Sale
8 R OOMS a n d bat h ga s furna CE
an d cen t r al a 1r Phon e 992
700 1
12 22 6t o
BUIL DIN G lo t 80 ft fronta g-e X
165 ft Th e se cond lot on l eft on
L 1nc o tn
R 1v e r v te w Dr ve
Hill Pom e roy Oh10 If 1n
teres ted • call 991 3230 afte r 5
p m
10 17 tfc

like a person.

WMP0/1390
ON YOUR DIAL

'•

•

..

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Hard Luck Joe took h1s ace
or clubs, ruffed a club re·
turned to h1s hand w1th a h•gh
trump and tned to ruff h1s
last club, but West fm!ed that
plan by ruffmg ftrst w1th the
nme spot Then West led the
four of hearts East took hos
kmg and ace, noted that West
follo\\'W w1th the deuce to
show fove hearts and pro·
ceeded to lead a fourth club
Joe could not shut out West's
queen of trumps and wound
up one trock short
" Deleted, deleted ," swore
Joe "Clubs break · 7·2 and
West holds both the queen
and none of trumps '
We aren' t sure JUSt how Joe
should have played the ha nd,
but he shoUld nave made It
Had hP Analyzed the lead
and Revtewed the b1ddmg he
could have assumed the 7· 2
~lub break
After that analySIS Joe
could have played the hand
very s1mp!y He could cas~
h1s ace·kmg of trumps I&lt;
leave West woth the queen
Then three rounds or doa
monds w1th the thord bemg
ruffed Now a low club would
be ruffed and a club or heart
du1carded on a good d1a·
mond West woula ruff and
the defense would he held to
just three tricks

The bidding has been
Easl
North
w..t

THE l OCAL

C UoSTOM ~

t&gt;, NO HE L P M E
F IO U~E OUT
H ll, MEr.JU

TO McKEE tNDUSTIZ!£.::.

IL AHNER

HoWE '/OJ BI:€1J lN'-IIJ/o

1

FOJND lol'i'SaF BfitNb ~E
10 FI';Of'l.B I
i'-"/n,
"'~-

~IUZERSl

ffi&amp;Rif?WZ

ALLEY OOP

WlNN IE
OF COU RS E TI1E

SEE 1--lCW Eo\SY

SALON !O ON
THE THI RD

tT IS WHEN
Y()J ACT WtJ'H

FlOOR'

NOW SUPI'OSE 'lOU TEU. US
'f'M,A.T ~IS IS A.ll- ABOUT,
GU'Z 1 WHY 010,'tOUR. MI!N
JUMP US .

AVTHORITY

"1liEY JUST MISTOOK

'tlU FOR SOMEBOOV
ElSE, OSCAA •

26

,ua&amp;~on.

V•

CA~ $ PA t::'E WAoS H
HI-5FOR A FEW DA'/5 CAROL
M ISoS rO'-J w TH EA? Y 15 VITAL

Ll¢8;1 :~ 1!@f.titU

.K 7 6 4 3 \'A 2 +9 4A K 7 3 2
What do you do now?
A-Pall. Game Is out of the

.•

STOP 5TU DY I~ 6

I HOPG 'IOU

up I

Pass
Pass
1•
Pass
Pass
lNT
Pass
Pass
34
Yau, South, hold

WHERE WOULD YOU LIKE
YOUR NEXT HOME OR
INVESTMENT WE -1'1 E ED
AN AIR STRIP,
YOU

CAPTAI N EASY

McJ ,Jud4, How old are
how t hat hod 40u,Gabroel?
•S shootonq

Pass
Opemng tead- 9.--

- - --------

11

on good street near school w1th
utlllt1es
avatlable
Only

Dear Rap
My husband ms!Sted we should ''walt for marrlage," but
we've been married three weeks and I'm still waiting
When I'm ready for hed, he's sillfexerclsing in the home
gym" he put m ollr second hedroom I think he's so mterested in
preservmg hiS beautiful body (otIS beautiful') that he doesn't
want to risk ruinmg 11 He says he must conserve his energy and
"sex debilitates a man "
He's aiso got a very bad unage of sex He thinks ot's
shameful, and gets very upset when I try to talk about 11 Says
JOggmg IS healthier.
Is an annulment the answer? - I'm weary of t.emg put down
as 1'overeager " - IMPATIENT VIRGIN
Dear lmpahent
U counseling lSll't the answer, an annulment may he. Talk 1&lt;
your doctor about th1s - SUE

Sesaeme St 33

We talk to you

APARTMENT SITE - Over 2

+++

Parents &amp; Children 13
7 30--New Zoo Revue 6 Tennes see T uxedo 13
8 oc&gt;--:Captaln Kangar oo 8 Jeff's Co llie 6 N ew Zoo Revue 13

~

acres 1n Pomeroy on litt le
traveled street
RUTLAND - 3 bedroom b lock
home bath nat gas 3 o ut
buildings and 2 ac re s Wa nt

+++

CYNTHIA
How about a potted plant mstead' W1th perhsps a note
"Somethmg you can talk to when you're lonely .." -HELEN

10

7

CARP E T ns ta la t1 on $ 1 25 p er
ya r d P ho ne R1 ch ar d W es t
843 2667
12 :14 261 p

L

P S He likes flowers.
CYN·
Frankly, I've never heard of a girl sending flowers to her
guy, but if she thmkshe 'dapprectate them . whatever turns birr
on - SUE

2 00-Nflws 4

~E Pli C

608 E.
MAIN
POM,J: ROY~ 0. ,
MOBILE HOME - Located

THIA

6 JO--F1ve Minutes t o L tve By .4 New s 6 B tbl e Answers a
Public Affairs 10 Publi c Affa 1r s 10 , Blue R1dg e Quarte t 13
6 35-Columbus Today 4 6 45- M or nmg Report
Fa rmtrm e

EX CAv-A 1"" "" doz er
loader
an d b ac khoe w ork
sept1c
t ank s m sta ll ed dump t ruck s
and l o boys for htr e will hau l
f !l d 1rt top so 1 l 1m es ton e &amp;
g r ave l
Call Bo b or Roger
Jeffe r s d ay p ho n e 992 7089
nt ght r h one 992 3525 or 992
5232
2 11 u c

FLEA MARKET SITE -

e~~: cell e nt

oo-Tomorrow

Report 13

STEREO RADIO 8 tr a c k tap e rooms, large store room , and 2
c om b tnatlon
am fm rad 10
Balan c e Sl09 sa or t erm s 1Ca l1 apartments w1th baths and
992 3965
wood burntng grates
12 24 lfc NEW LISTING - Butldtng lot
A K C

Dollars 6, What's My Line 8, News 10, Let's Make a Deal 13,
Sports Desk 15; Two-Way Street 20, Nova 33
7·~Hotiywood Squares 3. Hollywood Squares 4., Fred
Taylor Basketball 6, New Pn ce IS Right a, Wtld Kingdom
10, To Tetithe Truth 13 , Get Smar t 15 Ag ing 20
.~55-Rose Bo)llt Bound 4
8 oo-Mac Davis 3,4, 15 Odd Couple 6 13 The Waltons, a, IO ~
The Way tt Was 20, Sundstage 33

~RtDAY, DEI.tM,.ER2), 1974
S oo-Sunrlse Sem1nar 4 , Sunrtse Semest er 10

195 1 CHEVY p art s
NEW
La k ewood trac l ton b ar s h1
ta c ke r a tr Shoc k s
hoo ke r
h ead er s w rt h 3 co llec tor s for
small b l oc k
Ca l l 992 3l 96
a ft er 6 p m BE ST O F F E R
10 17 1t c

V'1qrl

1 00-Truth or Cons 3,4, Bowl i ng for Dollars 6 , Bowling for

Your

otter advice unless It Is explic itly requested If asked be sure
yo u know what you re talking
about or you II lead the Inquirer
astray

Friday-Doc 27, 1874

Is 1t okay to WU'e flowers to a guy for his birthday' He's 500
miles away, and the girl can't think of anything else - CYN-

10, Janakt 33
12 30-Wild Wild West 6

CONCRETE'
C R- E MEAN S
d e l1v ere d Mond a y thro ug h
Sa tur d .:~ y
and
ev e nm gs
Phon e Jd 6 114 2
6 13 tf c

CLELAND

Flowers for "My Man"
Rap

Movie "Plymouth Adventur e' 8 M ovi e ' Born Yesterd a y'

W A LNUT ste reo r a d1 0 a m fm
8 t r ac k
t ap e com bm at 1on
Ba lan ce $ 107 45 or terms Ca ll
992 3965
11 19 lf c

Real Estate For Sale

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

'

Pncea For \o/Uock Sale

FU RNI S HED
a p a rt ment
ut l1t 1es f urn sh ed
su 1t a bl e
f or two wo r k1 n g men or
r e t1r ed c oup le L1 v1 ng roo m
k t tc h en Sh ow er and bat h On
m a m ll lghwa y M a so n W Va
P h on e 77 3 5 ld 7
10 27 ti C 2 B E DRO OM ho u se for sa l e
5500 dow n $70 p er mo n th
P hone 99 7 397 5 or 992 2S 71
B AC H E LOR typ e ap arlment
F ur n s h ed
P hon e 992 5131
12 3 tt c
12 24 3t c

Not1 c e on Fllmg of Inventory
and Appra1 sement
Thl' State of Ohto, Me1gs
AND 4 ROOM furn iSh ed and
County Court of Common Plea s 3 u
n furni Shed
apartm e n ts
Probate DIVISIOn
Ph on e 992 5434
To the Adm 1n1 strator at t he
4 12 tf c
es tate t o su c h of lhe follow1ng
as are r esr d ents of the State of
meeting room f or
Oh10
v z - Th e s urv1v1n g PRIVATE
any organ 1Zat 1on phon e 992
spous e th e n e xt of k 1n
th e
3975
b ene t c 1an es under the will
3 11 tfc
And th e a ttorn ey or atlorn ey s
repre s en tmg
any
of
the
FURNISHED apt Adults only ,
afor emen t oned p er sons
Middleport Phone 992 3874
No 21294 Marv1n W Dawson
D ec eas ed
Pom eroy
Oh 10
11 14 tf c
Che ster Town shtp
house
4
You ar e hereby notlf ted that UNFURNISHED
rooms and bath 1650 Lm coln
lhe
Inv e n t ory
and
Ap
He1ghts Phon e 992 387-4
pra1sem ent of fhe est ale o f th e
afor em entioned deceas ed late
1114tfc
or sad County was f1led 1n th1S
Co u rt
Send Inve nto ry and
Appra1sement w il l b e for TR A ILER spa ce 2 miles from
Po me r oy Rt 143 Phon e 992
h ear 1n g b efor e th •s Court on th e
5!! 58
J i s t day of D ecember 1974 at
10 27 tf c
10 00 o c loc k AM
Any p er so n des 1nn g t o t l e
ex: ce piJ on s !h er eto mu st f te 2 B EDR OOM tr a 11 er a t co r ner
t hem at ea st f 1v e da ys pnor to
of
Bro ad way and
Elm
th e dat e se t tor heanng
M dd l epo rl
N o p ets or
G 1ven und er my hand and se a
c h !ldren Call 992 2580 a fter 6
of sa1d Court th1s 16th day of
p m
Dece mb er 1974
12 5 tfc
Ma n n1n g D W ebster
J udge
2 B E DROOM tr a il er
adults
B y Ann B W atson
onl y Ph on e 99 2 332 4
D eputy Clerk
12 17 tf c
( 12) 19 26 2tc

PUBLIC NOTICE
B d s will be re ce tv ed 1n the
CommiSS IOners Off 1cefor a 1975
Sher1ff s car until 9 00 a m
o clocl on Tuesday J an 7 1975
Spec!lt ca t •ons are as follows
Color - Wh1le or bla c k
4 door sedan
60
A MP
A lt e rnato r ~
M n1m l 11
Heav y duty battery
Undercoating
Vtny l upholst ery
400 cubtc m c h V8 eng 1ne
Automel! c
h ea vy
duty
f ran sm 1S S1on
N on Sl1p d1fter ent1al
Foam seat
M1n1mum wh ee l b ase 120
or fu l l s1ze c ar
A r con d 1t1 0n1n g
Po l c.: e Ch aSS IS p ackage
P o l 1c e bod y p ac k age
H 78 x 15 b la c k l ir e
Ra d a l t 1r es
S pot~1ghl l ett s1d e (Whit e an d
r ed lens )
Will trade - 1973 Pl~o~m o u th
De11very l n 60 days
The Comm1 SStoners r ese rve
the right to re1ect an~ ot all
bid S
Me1gs r VIJI) ty
Co mm !S5 I
rr
Marl h t~ Chamber s C ' k
r 17 1 ?t. ~ 1 t ., 2t c

HEATERS

WantP.rt To Buy

LO ST
On e mae Br1 ndl e Pl o tf
~ ------ -- -----h ou n d near F1v e Po 1nts W1fh
n ame p l ate on co llar
$10
Ca ll G lJ N sh oo t Sa tur day Jan 4 7
r e wa r d for fh rs dog
coll ect 4&lt;1 6 1063
p m M le Hill Rd Ass ort ed
meats r ac l or y ch ok ed gun s RE G I STERED En gl sh mal e
12 23 Jt p
SeH er 19 m as old W ill tak e
onl y
Spon sored b y R ac1n e
hr g hes t o ffer Phon e 9 .:1 9 5 185
r rre De pt
1222 4tc
12 24 Jtc
LEGAL NOTICE

new s paper,

SIEGLER and
MONOGRAM

MOBILE HOMES FOR SAL !=:
J B ED R OOM 10x 55 mobil e
home
n ew
c arp el
an d
wa sh er f urni Shed
S3500 00
P hon e 99 2 7&lt;1 39
17 76 3t c

17 l l 6lp

Not r •
WE W I SH to th an k a l l our
fr1 en ds n etg hbor s Rev E
G r lf lilh
Ewm g
Fu n er a l
H o n1 e
Fr ee dom
Gos p e l
s ng e r s o n es w ho sent
f lo wers
c ard s
fo od a nd
anyo n e e t~ e w ho h elped •n
anyway Our p rayer s ar e w1 t h
you Yo u r k nd n ess Wil t n e ver
be l orgott en
Ch td r en of
N e tl1 e Gt u ese n c a rn p Rev
L awr ence Gl uesen camp Sr
M r s Eugen e fl n 1e l Ca r
p ent er
M rs
John fOiovel
Law son
11 26 He

c

In Recital 33.
•v·
6 30-NBC News 3,4,15, AB C News 13, Bewitched 6, CBS News
, 8,10, 12 O'Clock High 9, Zoom :ro, What Now, America 33

1

LIBRA (S.pl 23-0ct

By Helen and Sue Bottel

10 30-Your Future Is Now :ro Caught In the Act 33
II oo-News 3,4,6,8,10, 13,15, ABC News 33
11·30-Johnny Carson 3,4 IS Wide World Spec tal 13 . FBI 6

HElL
RACINE PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING

' :-~In
(

from
towards

Open Mon Sat
SAM 6PM

Phone ( 304) 773 5503

" ... "C"MBER26, 1974
o, News B, lO,I l,IJ,I&gt; , Etec C0 ~

&amp;·~Paper Moon 6,13, What Now, Amenca 20
9 ()()-.:.Ironside 3,4,15, Str ee ts of Sa n Franc1sco 6 lJ M ov 1e
"Hess Is for Heroes" 8, M ov1e " W i ld l&amp;vers', Sou l 20
Family Theater 33
10 QO-Movln' On 3 4, 15, Harry 06, 13, Ne ws 20 , Woman 33

m•

Ph 992 5682 or 992 7121
All Mechanocal Work

-

Greatest Otristmas ever

cordmg to numbers of b1rda m
In Oh1o's northeastern coun~
each, would mclude Ashtabula, ties, grouse m fall and winter
Tuscarawas,
Guernsey, feed on leafy avens, cmquefml,
Muskmgum, Noble, Jackson, Po'ison Ivy, aspen buds, hawAthens, Morgan, Washington thorn, plums, cherries and
and Me1gs He sa1d several grapes
others
contam
locally
In
southeas tern
Ohoo
numerous b1rds, and "the counties, the birds, durmg
d1hgent hunter can fmd good hunting season, eat greenbriar
shootmg elsewhere "
leaves and frwt, cinquefoil,
Unlike the ruffed grouse m fern leaves, sumac and
other, northerly states, Ohw's dogwood fruots, bedstraw,
population lS far less cychc grapes and honeysuckle Only
than generally thought
m Septemher and early October do the b~rds seem to eat
Cycles Are Masked
HThe bwlogtsts aren't en- the plentiful acorns, accordmg
tirely certain what causes to the crop checks made by
grouse cycles they thmk 11 may game bwlog!Sts
Donahoe Donahoe heada up be
chmatic cond1hons,
As elsewhere, Ohio's cock
the Waterloo Wildlife Research
predators and sunspots- but (male) ruffed grouse drwn
Statton here
Oh10's cycles are masked the1r wmgs whde perched on
" The mam threat to Oh10 somewhat by rmld wmters ," fallen logs m early fall, and
grouse 1s the reduction of Stoll sa1d " It appears that our a gam from late February
prune habitat," Stoll sa1d population lS about the same throug May
" BaCk m the early 1930's, from year to year ''
Estabhshes Terntor)
farms were abandoned m the
In grouse states north and
Stoll sa1d fall drurnmmg
eastern half of the state, and east of Oh1o, populations of the (caused by unp!oswqs of a1r
these areas grew up m brush b~rds vary m dens1ty accordmg rushmg m\Q ti)e cav1ty of the
and trees. Today this lS prune to cycles which last as tew as b1rd's fast be a tong wmgs)
grouse cover."
seven years or as many as 10 estabhshes temtory agamst
OVerall, some 36 of Ohio's 88 years Areas below 48 degrees mvasjon by other cocks, espe.
counties contam huntable Lat1tude, such as Ohw, expen· c13lly the yearling males
populations of grouse Stoll ence less pronounced flu ctuasprmg drummtng .J ttr:-:~t l"
said the top counlles, ac- Uons m the birds' t.wt.hers
hens ready to 1 l &lt;~ t' u l d

[_ __B_u_ s_
i n_e_s_.s_ S_e_r_--cv=-i=-c- :- : e- - - "s-'---:-'
JOHNSON'S

v

mc~m&lt;'d f.tlthful to thr1r pr~r t'
bu t m&lt;lt&gt;pendt"nts v o t('O Demo

DENVER (UPI ) - It was
Chnstmas mght, but for 17·
year-old Marty Cox ot was JUst
another lonely mght m h1s
Colorado General Hospotal
room
Everythmg was set for me
to go home," saod Marty, one of
the world 's longest surv1vmg
hver transplants But then thos
fever came up and everythmg
had to be canceled '
F or the second straight year,
Marty wa s unable to go home
to Nova, Ohw for Chrtstmas
And h1s famtly - h•s father 1s
an automobile assembly lme
worker --couldn t afford to
come see Marty
Then , shortly after 8 p m ,
the nurse came mto Marty's
room, put him m a wheelchair
and wheeled hom mto the
VISitors room
"Good gnef," Marty shouted,
sm1hng as he saw h1s mother
father and s1ster
After readmg about the pbght
of the Cox fam!ly 1n a Denver

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

Protect Your Home
Or Busoness

I t

Th os pom!Pd up a !rend tha t
pm tlv explams "hy all pohll·
c1ans are r eceplive to reformers wh o urge them to broa den
the partv bases wtth active
recrUihng programs
A recent Gallup Poll ind1cat
ed the Repubhcan part) aC·
tually ranks third m voter
1dentiflcatwn at 23 per cent,
behind the Democra Ls' 44 per
cent and 33 per cent for m
dependents
Most of the m c r ease an In·
depende nt 1dent1h catwn '"
reeent years has come from
Repubhcan ranks The Democrals have remamed near the
same level
The md ependent mmonty"
1s gr o wm g, and no one seems to
know how to deal w1th 1l
L) ndon Johnson tr1ed to channel mdependen t loyalty to
himself and the Democratic
party with h1s consen sus
poht1cs of the mod-19605 , and
Nrxon sought to lure the same
group mto h1s lli-fated " new
Republican maJonty" of !972
Both got the votes they
wanted for themselves , but
netther stermned the growth of
the mdependents
Some observers heheve the
mdependents are a poht1cal
party already, lackmg only a
name and a lender to assume
le g1t omacy
There
1s
speculatiOn that a cha nsmatic
newcomer to the pohllcal scene
w11l he able to galvamze ln·
dependents mto a force that
would dnve the Repubhcans and perhaps even Democrats
- to the wall
Others beheve the nse of
poht1cal mdependence lS a
passmg phase that w1ll end
when the two maJor partles
once agam fmd some VItal
Issues and g1ve voters a
Goldwateresque "chmce, not
an echo."
U both parlles actually carry
out plans to throw open the1r
doors to full rank-and-f!le
parttctpatwn, some say, the
turned-off moddle of the
electorate m1ght se1ze the
opporturuty and once agam
choose up s1des

6 ()0.-l"n~ws J,4, ABC New ::.

press those you have dealings
wi th Thts will lead you to exaggerate In order to hide your
shortcomings

Generat!-on Rap

T..,U~!C;nAv

_

Auto Sales

•
Ruffed grouse are safe zn
SE Ohio
By DAVE BOWRING
Wr1tten for UPI
NEW MARSHFIELD, Ohw
- To hear Bob Stoll tell!!, ot's
as 1f the Ohio ruffed grouse
population lived m a natural
and unpregnable fortress
"Our b~rds, espec1ally those
m the souUteastem counties,
Uve in such hilly country that 11
ISn't likely to be overrun w1th
c1v1hzatlon," said Stoll, a
Wildlife b10log1St ass!Stmg Bob

Television Log

I

TODAY'S QUESTION
Instead of b1dd1ng three cluba
your partner has bid two nolr~p
over yow:: two spades. What do
you do now'

BA RNEY

DADBURN
LOWEEZV''
S HE TRAI PSED
OFF l'H IS MORI\IIN
AI\/ DIDI\I TCHOP
RR¥ STICK OF
KINDLIN

WO OD

DADBURI\J
Lf\ZV- BON ED

(.·~

Htie:E ._0.\\C S
.OOOD5TOC'
ON HIS NElli
6 1 C~CLE

y
s;·.,

-t.

~II

'

..

r

HATE 1T WHE"' 1-~E

5A"1'5 LOOK NO IJJIN65 1

�•
9- The DaUv /;entinol Mlrltllonnrt.PnmPrnv 0 Thursdav. Dec 26. 1974

.
8 - 1 he O.ll h St•t•lmt.•l Mtdr\lt• pvz I

Pollll l Ll\

n

1 1 I ll ..., !

1b

Politics as usual gone
from Washington scene
system to cttlzen.r:; who hnv t&gt;

WASHINGTON iUPI ) - TI1e
roof ca ved m on pohtlcs..as- never 1akr n p.u t
usual m Amenca m 1974
The two-pa rty syst em was
rescued from the debns but 11

Wlderwent surgery th at could

have profound eff ects on how
the countr) selects Its pohtwa l
leaders and gove1 n.s 1tself fm

years to come
Watergate and the resigna-

tion of President R1chard M
NIXon obvwusly msp1red much

FOCUS '75
of t he reforms tha t are
chang1ng the face of ArnerlCan
pohtlCS
But the roots of "postWatergate morahty " took hold
m the nch so1! of socoal fermen t
and legal mnovalion that has
been transformm g broad
segments of Amencan hfe for

the past t"o decades
What os happerung, then , 1s
not sun ply a "qwck f1x " after a
routme pohtical scandal It 1s a
fundam ental set of reforms,
shaped 1n Congress , s tate
legislatures and both maJor
pohtlcal partles and portendmg a truly new era m the
pohtical hfe of the Umted
States
The new reforms are centered on the way pohtlcs 1s
pracllced, rather than what it
produces But these changes,
by servmg to open the poht1cal

L1 t , t ,

to c x ~. r t "
substa nce
of government policies ~w d
programs m the future
How the poh taca l parltes use
these refor.m s could a l so affect
thetr t~ b!ltly to r eLapture the
attention a nd loyalties of the
mdependent voter , wh ose
growmg numbers wtthm the
Amenca electorate as perha ps

pro nust' n ont'thel ess
stro ng Impa ct on the

the most stgmftca nt U S
political phenomenon of recen t

years
As the Watergate scandal h1 t
ots peak, national pubhc
opuuon polls showed more and
more Americans were losmg
confidence m thetr gove rn ment 's
problem -solv m g
capacity, and were abandomng
personal tdenl!fl cal!On w1 th
etther the Democra tic or
Repubhcan partoes
In additiOn, the turnout for
the 1974 congressiOna l and
state clcctwns was only 38 per
cent of ehg1ble voters , the
lowest mid term showmg smce
1946 and the second lowest m
modern

history

Although Democrats usuall)
wm btg when voter turnout IS
high , and hght ballotmg tradi·
twnally favors Repubhcans,
the Democrats mcreased the1r
sobd majonlles m the House
and Senate m 1974 and reduced
the Republicans to 13 of the
nation's 50 governorships

Airlift to move
10,000 from city
DARWIN, Austral1a (UP!)
- The government hegan a
massiVe a~rlift from cyclonedevastated D&gt;trwm today , saymg "1! would be mtolerable for
women and children" to
remam.m the demolished coty
Ten thousand persons were
to be flown out In one of the
f1rst flights, an a1r force
Hercules transport rushed 18
InJured survovors, mcludmg
chlldren m critical condition, to
Sydney
for
emergency
operations
"Darwm ts devastated ," one
of the surVIvors satd "lt 1S
gone There os nothmg but
rubble and a few half.
demolished buddings."
Rex Patterson, mmtster for
northern development, announced the evacuation today
m the forst radio broadcast
from Darwm since the Chnstrnas day cyclone smashed mto
the northern port of 41,000
"Top pnorlty for evacuation
w1ll go to the pregnant and 1ll,"
he sa1d "It would he mtolerable for women and children to
stay m D&gt;trwm for the wet
season when thousands of
homes will have to be rebmlt "
A fleet of 20 aor force Hercules transports and dozens of
commercial and amateur
arrcraft JOined m the evacua·
lion Seven navy warships
brought rehef supplies to able·
bodied men staymg behmd to
rebuild the city
Government offictals said
Cyclone Tracy destroyed or
damaged 90 per cent of Darwm, 2,000 miles north of
Sydney Ofllc13ls reported at
least 44 persons dead and sa1d
the toll could riSe as h1gh as 80
The government reported
hundreds of persons injured
and about 20,000 homes destroyed by the erratic cyclone,

which changed course sud·
denly and smashed mto the Clly
before off1c1als could make
preparations
Actmg Pnme Mm1ster
James Cairns flew to Darwm
today to dtrect rescue
operations for the survtvors of
the worst storm in Australian
history
"I have heen informed tha t
almost the whole of the c1ty has
been devastated," he sa1d
before Acting Pr1me Mom ster
James Crurns Oew to Darwm
today to dtrecl rescue
operattons for the survtvors of
the worst storm m Australian
history

International Hockey League
By Untied Pre ss International
North
w
I
I
pts gf ga
Flmt
21 10 3 45 129 89
Mu skegon 21 12 1 43 143 92
Sagmaw
21 13 1 43 13 1 112
Port Huron
11 19 2 24 102 11 3
L an s mg
8 20 1 17 109 165
Kalamazoo 1 20 2 16 77 112
South
w I t pts gf ga
Dayton
22 8 2 46 133 110
Columbus
17 15
JS 127 11 7
Des Mo nes
16 17
33116126
To led o
15 18
31 128 123
F ort Wa yn e
12 19 1 25 114 lJO
Wednesdays Result s
Fort Wayn e 8 K a l amazoo 2
Mus k egon 7 To l edo 2
F l m t 7 Pori Huro n 4
Columbus 4 La n s m g 2
Sag maw 2 Dayton I
Tongtht s Games
No games sc heduled

Islam revolves around the
Koran, whtch means "recttmg" m Arable and accordmg
to tradotion, was d1ctated to
Mohammed by the Angel
Gabroel

The sn.1p &lt;un1 lli "'IOil \\ mild
I,; h. tt l.tt :O:I. num bt• t "' uf ( TOf '
' ,d \\ ,u h

had dl stil pcl •o

De tuocr t u Sl{lt' Po ii ' H_.Ii
st';ll ch er s fo11 nd ulht n ' tse

Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!
2 SIGNS

1

I

OF
QUALITY

Ju

t h c~ L R e publ u.: ans ge n{'1 ,1lh r t•

{ fd l lt.:

1972 NOVA
'!225 0
? dnor
8 r"l u tom at c p ower st eerm g blac k v m y l top
"' d h r pd 1 •H&lt;:. h g ood w hil e w n ll t 1rl.! s r n d1 0 loca l 1 ow n er
(lr 11 d ,(r v rcC&gt;d r egul&lt;rly h y us

Brown's Fire &amp;
Safety Equipment

REMODELING &amp; CONST.

$ 1995
1q7 0 CHEVROLET
Mon te Cnrlo 3SO V 8 auto mat1 c p owe r steermg power
br&lt;"' k es d r1r k b l ue fm tsh bl ue nten o r bl ue vm y l r oo f
fa ctory a r condttl on tn g ltke new w hrte wall t tr es r ad 1o
M n n y other ex tr as

Sales &amp; Servoce

1969 CHEVROLET IMPALA
d oor c lea n mter1 or aq ua f 1n1 sh g ood hrts
a uto m ah c P steen n g n1r ron d 1 t1 on~
4

the outdoors

-

J
\

F1re Extmgu1 shers, Home
Ftre Alarm s
Te s l1ng &amp;
R efilling
Phone 742 4673 or 742 5595
Btll Brown Owner
Rutland , Oh1o

$129S

va

Alum1num stdmg , rootmg
compl e t e r es 1d e nt1 a l c on
struc t10n Wmng plumbmg
elec
heating ,
k11 c hen
cabmets elc
27 Yrs e xpenen ce 1n c on sl
trade

ROGER HYSELL'S
•
GARAGE
On St a t e Rt 124 112
Route 7 by pa ss
Rutl a nd

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

For Sale

OPEN EVES. 8. 00 PM
POMEROY. OHIO

.

1961 CJ\ D tL L

''

~C

P h on e

I t 7 61 S t

tN M E M O RY of our b eloved
mo t h er
A nna 51t l e"
who
o a ssed n w .-~y D ec 26 1971
No o n e k nows t h£&gt; s le n t
hC c1 rtn c hc l or the on e we
ov en so w e lt
Onl y t h os e wh o los t .9 d ear one
wdl t ver r ea lly kn ow
'-. ,1 d l y rn ssecl b y Ro lt rn
~ r &lt;t n ces an d Hc l ~: n e
1116 1tc
I N MEMORY o f M au d K o hl
wh o pass ed away 9 years ago
tod a y D ec 16 Sadl y m ssed
toy dau g ht er L K Koh l
12 26 1t c

''

196 0 JEEP n ew m ot or t1r es
1o p
e xcc tt en t c ond1 t on
Phon e 667 37 5c;1
12 20 Si c
19 73 COM E 1 6 c yt a ul o trans
P W
18 500 m il es L 1k e new
Cal l 667 3 &lt;~ 41 any 1 me
12 2') 6t p
65 CH EV Van V 8 s tan da r d
transm1SS ton ~ 37 5 Phon e 99 2
700 I
12 22 6t c

A U CT ION
Th ur s dav
nnrl
Sa tu rday n g ht 7 p m
at
Mason Au c t1on ~ o rton Sf 1n
Ma son w Va Cons Qnments
w elc ome
Phon e { 304 ) 773
54 7 1
10 3 tfc
P L EASE p la c e your orders an d
1nqu1 r 1es a s t o th e fa m ou s
0 11 of M1n k cos m e t 1cS wtlh
B ROWN S
In de p e nd en t
D1 5l r1 bu to r s
A l so d oor to
door serv ce s Matu r e a nd
d ependabl e per sonn e l a lw a y s
n eed ed
P h one
q92 5 113
M1 ddl eport Oh 10
12 22 tf c
SH OOT IN G mat c h Rae n e Gun
Clu b Sun da y 1 p m Ass ort ed
m ea t s an d fa r to r y c n ok e g un s
on l y
12 12 tf c

CA SH $$$$$ $$
FOR
JU N K
CAR S
Camp
F RYE S
T RUCK and A U TO P AR T S
R u t l and ph on e 7J2 609&lt;1
11 26 26t c
WA N T ED o ld up r 1ght p1 a n os
any con d ton
Pay n g 510
eac h F rst fl oor on l y Wr ll e to
an d g rve d 1r ect 1on s to W 11ten
P1a n o Co
Box 18!l Sar d1s
Oh o .t 39 d6
12 24 6tp
V LD f urnitur e 1ce boxes b rass
be ds or c omp le t e h ou seh o ld s
W r1t e M
0 Mill er R t 4
P o m er o y Oh 10 Ca ll 992 7760
10 7 74
JU N K au to s
com pl e te an d
de t1ver ed to our y ar d
we
p c k u p au t o bod res and buy
all K1 n ds o f sc rap m et al s an d
tr on R 1d er s Sa l vag e St Rt
124 R t 4 Pom eroy
Oh 1o
Ca ll ll92 5468
10 17 tf c

CA .:. H pa 1d for all m ak es a nd
m od e l s of mo b il e h om es
Pho n e ar e a cod e 61 4 42 3 9531
4 13 tf c

Pets For Sale

No t ce 1S hereby g1ven t h a t
th e ann u al mee h ng of the L O SE we 1ghl Wt lh N ew Shape
Tablets a n d H ydr e,.; Water
stockh olde r s of Th e F ar m er s
R.iUs at Du l1on Drug
M 1d
Bank an d Sa vmg s Co m pan y o f
dlep ort and N el son D ru g
211
Wes t
Seco n d
Slr eet
12 24 31p
Pomer o y Oh 10 wil l be h e ld at
n1e o ff1 c e o f sad b ank
n
Pom er oy Oh o ac cord 1n g to ts
b y la w s
on t he lh r d W ed
n.esd a y o f J anuar y 19 75 a t 4 p
CON T ACT us now sec u re yo ur
m for th e p urp ose of el ect m g
tu t ur e ~ wh1l e open 1ngs ar e
d 1r er t or s and l he t r an sac t on ot
s t 11 ava1 l abl e l as sa l es lad y
sucn ot h e r b us ,ness a s m a y
beau ty ad v 1so r for fa bul ous
pr op erly co rr~ e bP i o r e sad
0 t o f M nk
Cos m et rcs
m ee t n g
Sau ... ag e s Box 4 Sy r. acuse
Pau l E K toes
Oh ro 45779
Sec r et ary
12 17 10t p
Dec 19 26 J an 2 9
- - -

Help Wanted

Carrier Wanted
In

an Engl ewood ,

Colo , busmessman, who did not

-

NEW HAVEN

want to be odenbhed, put up
$577 for the round tnp a1r fare
Age 8 or Older
for the three , a local motel
provoded them rooms for four
days and the hosp1tal staff took
up a collecbon for the1r meals
"When we woke up Chnslmas 111 Court St., Pomeroy
Phone 992 2156
morntng we had no 1dea all th1s
was gomg to happen ," sa1d . ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

The Daily Sentinel

Mrs

Cox "Th1s

mcest
we ever

IS the

Chnstma s present
had "
The Cox fam1ly, wh1ch
arnved m Denver late Chrtst.
ma s Day, also brought a trunk
loaded w1 th Marty's presents
rrom last year and th1s year
He had asked us to keep
them un hl he could come home
for a Chnslmas and open
them," said Mrs Cox, whose
son had the hver operation m
1969 and has smce undergone
more than a dozen operabons
"But we decoded not to walt
any longer When we heard
about commg here. we packed
them aII up "

eastabhshes temtory
Grouse m Oh1o average 25
ounces among 'cocks and about
20 ounces for hens Most Oh10
b1rds are m what lS called the
"red phase" of feathere
coloratwn Birds found to the
north and west of Ohoo most
often wear gray plumage Both
color phases have feathers
camouflaged with gray and
black bars and blotches.
Regardless of how heav!ly
Oh10 grouse are hunted, Stoll
sa1d,
about the same
populatiOn lS present in any
undisturbed cover year after
year. Natural attntlon predators, d1sease, etc remove about 5o.li5 per cent of
the grouse population annually This loss 1s replaced
er~ch sprmg when hens lay an
average clu•ch of 11 eggs
ap1ece, not all of wh1ch develop
mto mature birds
,,1 r'hR t all this means ts that
th e l tu" , ..,loud, sudden and
unnervtng, 1\ l trh you found
last year should occu m about
the satne spots th1s \~ , ( ..
which you venture mto OhiO !'&gt;
hard" oods after Old Ruff. And
' ""ha ve unttl Feb 22 10 do 1t

I

FUEL OIL

------- ----'--

For Rent

POMEROY LANDMARK !
Jack W Car se y M gr
Phone 992 2 1 8 1
CL OS _ OUT o n new Z ig Za g
Se wm g m ach1n es Fo r S£' W1n g
st r etch f abr1 c s bu t1 on ho es
f a n cy d e5 1gn s e t c
Pa1nl
sl rg htt y b l em1 sh ed Ch o1 ce ot
ca r ry nq c as-e o r se w1 n g
st and $.:1 9 80 ca sh or t er m s
ava il ab le Ph one 992 7755
12 18 lf c
P L A NT AT IO N g r own Ch r s l
ma s t r e es
Sc o tc h P1n e
No rway Spr uc e Blu e Spru ce
an d Do ug la s F1r R easonab l e
pr~ces
Shop ea rl y for bes t
se l ect1on s B obs V!a rk e t
Mason w va 773 572 t
17 t I If
W A L N UT ste r eoradto am fm
8 tr ack ta pe co rn b 1n a1 10 n
Bal anc e $ 11 0 69 o r terms Call
992 396 5
17 3 t fc
G ROCERY bu stn ess for sal e
Bu ld1ng fo r sa le or l ease
Phone 77 3 561 8 f r om 8 JO p m
to 10 p m f or app o1 ntm en t
3 LO tfc

H OU SE 4 room s a nd bath n 1c e
yard and dnv ew av
A lso
f urn sh ed a p t Ca ll 992 278 0 or
99 2 3&lt;1 32
12 12 tfc
f\tt C E 3 b ed r oom ho u se l 1v 1ng
r oo m and ha l ls c arp e ted
l ar ge pan eled famil y roo m
Wi t h c onnec t n g sun d ec k
Water softner an d fe n ce d
!.145 month
New
y ard
Haven 88 2 2219
12 20 5tc
4 RM fu1n1 shed apt c los e to
Powel ls Super V a1u phon e
992 3658
11 20 tf c
COUNTRY Mobil~ Home Park
R.t 33 ten miles north of
Pomero y
Large lots W1fh
c oncret e pat1os
stdewatks
1 unne r s
and
off
str ee t
p arkmg
A lso
spaces for
small traders Phone 99 2 7479
7 21 tf c

3 BEDRO OM hous e P ho ne 992
3975 or 992 257 1
12 3 tf c

For Sale

- -- - ---,

REALTY

on about 1 beautiful a cr e old
Rt 33 4 yr s old
12x65
c arpet e d
a•r co nd
a ll
elec tnc expando l tvrng R
landscape d
A S KIN G
$11 000 Mak e an off er
PORTLAND - 4 nt ce l eve l
good
lots c l ose to nver
dnlled we ll ga r a ge &amp; ou t
bu ll dmg d B R ho m e Sd 700

Complete plumbmg &amp;
heatong servoce and
general sheet metal
works
Free
Estimates .
Phone 949 5961
Emergency 992 3995
or 992 5700

TUPPERS PLAINS
LOVELY
RE TIR EMENT

21

H OME 1 story f ram e
BR bath d tn1n g R ut il tt y
R ba sem ent ce nt r al hea t
l oca t ed on level acre $ 13 500
CLOSE IN - 27 ac r es ba rn
s ilo mil k house sh ed s hom e
ha s 3 BR bath TV r oom
dtnrng R ba sem ent centr a l
heat clfy water A SKING

$30 000 MAKE AN OFFER
992 2259 or 992 2568

TEAFORD

fr .· .rlo1d S1
Brr)krr
:0 ."'if'rh&lt;llll( ~II I'd
Pomeroy. Oh to l'&gt;!f&gt;I.J

$16 000 00
70 ACRES - On n ew Rt 33
near Darwrn
Some t1mber
some c lear ed
so me n tce
bulldmg s1tes
GROCERY - On State Route
m village All stock and some
equipment A real bustness for
a couple Asking sa 000

.t year old tn sh Se tter
pet S60 Howard
B1r c hf eld
Phone 742 5932
12 24 tfc

BUY your beef Qn the hoof W e
have
purebr e d H e r e ford
steers 16 to 18 mo Ol d , 6 ~u to
800 l b The one s t hat h a v e
be en dr ess ed ha ve turn ed o ut
SO p el
F 1rs t come
f rr sl
se r v~d w e w1l l d elt ver E A
W mg elf Ph on e 949 244 1
12 2 1 Jt c
EAR c orn for sal e Phon e 367
7481 or 388 9991
12 20 71c
ELECTR O LU X Sw ee per deluxemodel
Comple te w 1th all
clean1ng al t achments and
uses paper bags Slightly used
but c leans and tooks l 1k e n ew
Will se ll for S37 25 ca sh or
te r m s av ail a bl e P hon e 99 2
7755
12 18 tf c
~----.J-

$2aOO 00

NEW LISTING -

5

room

home bath nat gas heat
c1ty water 011y 57 000 00
Owner wtll hold m ortgag e
SS ACRES - 2. b edroo m house ,
good well , so m e
fe n c es ,
mmerals, and ba rn Owne r will
help fmance $15 000 00

J4

N ew s 13

6 2s-Farm

oo-Today

3,4,15 , Goober 6, C BS News 8 10 A rt of Ra ts1 n g

+++

Dear Imp
And if you can't chsnge h1s warped 1deas, tell him to JOg off.
He'd perfonn better m a Mr Arnencan contest than In a
marnage - HELEN

8 25-Capt~ln Kangaroo 10 Jack L ala nn e 13

8 30--Brady Bunch 6 a 55- News 13

READY MIX
CO N C RET E'
d e li v ered r ght to
y our
pr o tec t Fa st an d easy Free
es11ma t es Pho n e 992 32 84
Goeg l e n Ready M x Co
Mtddl epor t Oht o
6 30 tfc
SE WIN G MA CHIN ES R epa 1r
ser vtee a l l m akes 992 228 4
T he Fabr c Sho p Po m eroy
Author zed s n ger Sa l es an d
Se rv ce We sh a r pen SC ISS or s
3 29 1f c

9 CIO-A M J , Paul D1 x on 4 W1 ld Wil d W est 6 P h1l Donahue 15 ,
Bullwlnk.le e. Mov1e " The Kmg and I' 13 M tster Roger s 33
9 25-Chuck White Reports 10
9 30--Not For Women On ly 3 Hazel a Ta ttlet ales 10 Bea uty &amp;
the Beast 33

Dear Helen and Sue
What do you thmk about a history teacher who rips up your
theme you'd worked on two weeks, JUS! hecause the margins are

10 oo---Name That Tune 3 IS Co m pan y 6 Jok er's W dd a Nova
33
10 30-W Inning Streak 3, Ph1l Dona hue 4

Gamb it ll, 10 , 1
Dream of Jeanme 13
11 00-Hfgh Rollers 3,4, 15, To Be Announ ced 6 N o w Y ou See It
8,10,, PaswordAII Stars 13, EveoftheArt1stJJ
11 30-Hoi!ywood Squares 3,4, 15, Brady Bunc h 13 Lucy Show

4 30-Bewttched 3. /&gt;kd Squad 6, Lucy Show 8, Bonanza IS

5 oo-FBI 3, ~. Andy Griffith 8, MISter Rogers' Neighborhood
20,33, Raymond Burr 12, Raymond Burr 13

5 30-News 6, Beverly Hillbillies 8, Hodgepodge Lodge 20.
Trails West 15, Elec Co 33
6 oo-News 3.4, a, 10, 13,15 , ABC News 6, Elec Co 20 Unto the
Hills 33
'
6 30-NBC News 3,4,15 , ABC News 13, Bewitched 6, CBS News

6; Love of Life a, 10, SEsam e St 33
11 55-CBS News 8, Dan Imel's World 10
12 00-Jackpot 3, 15, Password All Stars 6 Bo b Braun's 50

Club 4, News 8,10, 13, V1deoscope 12

so

B, 10, Zoom 20, Mountain Scene 33

12.»---Celebrlty Sweepstakes 3, 1S , Split Se con d 6 Searc h for
Tomorrow 8, 10 Afternoon w •th D J 13 T oe A n noun ced 33

D OZ E R w o r k l an d ctear 1n g b y
t h e acre ho u r ly or contra c t
fa r m ponds r oads e tc Lar ge
do zer and operato r w1 t h o ver
20 ye ar s e xp ene n ce Pu ll 1n s
Ex ca va t 1n g Pom eroy Oh 10
Phon e 992 247 8
12 19 tfc

Ltght a, 10
2 30-Doctors 3,4, 15, B1g Showdown 6, 13, Edg e of Ntghl a 10,

Van Cliburn International 33
3 DO-Another World J 4, 15 Gen era l H osp1tal 6 13
Right 8, 10, Book Beat 20 ,, G r ea t Perf orman ces 33

P ric e I S

3 ~How to Surv1ve a Marnag e 3,4 , 15, One Life to L1 ve 13,
Lassie 6 , Match Game 8, 10 , W om a n 20
4 OD-Mr Cartoon 3, Bonan za 4 G illigan 's Is 6
Somer set l S,
Tattletales 8, Sesame St 20, 33, M ov te A f f a1r m Tr tn 1da d

10, Mike Douglas 13

Bid and lead
can tip play pla1

--~

EXCE L SI OR Salt WOr KS, 1:: (
M a1 n St Pom er o y A fl k1nds
at sa lt wat e r pe ll et s water
nu g g et s bl oc k salt and own
OhtO R 1v er Sa lt Phone 992
3891
6 5 tfC

NORTH

26

+ AKJ10 5 4

TANKS
cle a ne d
Modern San 1ta t 10 n 992 3954 or
992 734 9
9 18 ftc

46

WEST

• Q96
.Q9542
• Qa3
495

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

NE tG LER - BU I L D I N '-" SUP
P L Y FO R REM ODELIN G
A N D K ITCHEN CABINET S
CAL L
GUY
NE I GLER
R A C INE OHIO PHONE 949
36011
12 19 26t c

I&gt;I.W"'I'S

T~E

a

Washington Week In Review 20,33, Channel 10 Reports 10
30-Chlco &amp; the Man 3. ~.15 , Wall Street Week 20,33, Columbus
Churches 10

9 oo-Rockford Ftles 3,4, 15 6 Million Dollar Man 6 13 f&gt;kvle
The Last Run " 8, Masterpiece Theatre
'Movie

iJ,

' Wuthenng Heights" 10, Evening at 'ymphony 33
10 IXI-'-Poltce Woman 3,4, 15. Night Stalker 6,13. News 20
10 3Q--Paul Nuchlms 33

II oo-News 3,4,6,a, IO,I3,1S
11 JO-Johnny Carson 3,4,15, Wtde World Special 13, Movie
'Corruption" 6, Movie "The Shoes of the Fisherman" 8
Mov1e " Creature with the Blue Hand" 10, Janak1 33

SAME
Tl-1£

f)IG JQ8S ..... C&gt;

!)(IECUT

Ti"IE §.jlt,M£

.2

EAST &lt;DO

S"' U rFL~ OF

bad behavi or of those tn your
charge II your discip line Is too
Ia,.; the same olfense will be
rep eated ag am

btl too an x1o us to tm

too narrow, and your name was In the right-hand corner rather
than the left?
'
It was typed and leg1ble. He says this will teach me to listen
to directions Do I deserve an 11 F" when I wrote an 11 A" paper?
(Well, anyway a "B"') -- BURNING

I mu!l lliO~e

:J

(2 wda.)
II Castor's
mother

II

[j

IDEHEAB!
]
I
I
r
X
=~~~iiiii~;;~~~~~

-'-Prill=-=•:.::s•=·l=liSI:.::AIISWIII==-~1

HA~

NO TIME
AT Nte,HT.

ROI
Now &amp;rr&amp;nJ'e the clre:led letten
to rorm the 1urprl1e &amp;niWtr • U
sueceated.

A

UA

OR

FRYJ

Uli'XYIAAUROA

FKAQIY
QWKO

RG
RG

WUA
W UA

by the abon cartoon.

r xx:r I I x)

BRSNWUON

RY

AOIIHUON

FKJKFI
JS
JIGGIOJ
Yealerday'o Cryptoquole: LET '!'HE SPIRIT THAT FIW
THIS HOUDAY SEASON STAY WITH YOU ALL OF YOUF

Jumble• KNIFE OUTDO BUSHEL BELONG

I"••f'rl

AXYDLIIAAXIl
LONGFELLOW

One letter simply alondl for another In this sample A II
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc Smgle (etten,
apoolrophea, the length and fonnatlon of th• worda are all
hlnu Each day the code letters are dllerenl
CRYPOTOQUOTE

(Aalwen tomo...-ow)

Yf'aluday •

Mining

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to wo rk It:

,'-1

'

8 Hoist
9 Cheap
whiskey
(hyph wd)
11 Demean
15 Cordeal
package
18 Ireland

song

II I

II

medicine
herb

find
S5 Exempted
fl Grand·
parental
S8 Jewish

form four ordmary words .

ISENCHOt

%1 Neighbor
Zl! Comrnemof Maun tarun oratlve
%2 Part of
pillar
a Roman
29 Literary
legion
work
23 Board a
30 Plowed
sleeper
land
24 TIUe for
31 Type o1
Sybil
race
Thorndike
36 Matter
Z5
(law)
Z6
37 Lofty
film
mountain

sorrel
7 Folk

Z6 Actor
Holbrook
r7 Ending for
buoy
28 Study
group
32 Baronet's
tiUe
33 Affinity

u

311JJMJ]3~;-!':i:;::!.(:! -:!.c

0

6 Wood

tresses

+++

YONIR

Yesterday's Answer

crest

ZZ Bare

Dear Burnmg
Let's hope the prmc1pa~rules m favor of OONT&amp;'NT 1
(Mayheyour teacher had a mother who ptlt paper panties on
the turkey legs?) - HELEN

h 1 ge!trng do rk

season
5 Mountain

24 Squire
25 Dobbin's

Dear Burning
l think this kind of rut-p1cldng should he discussed woth yourprinCipal Your teacher should stay W11h hiStory and leave
"fonn" to typmg classes

Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one letter to each square, to

boards
DOWN
I Provide
what's
needed
Z OVer
3 Corrupt
4 French

Khat page• aerve for - BOOKS

DAYS. - CRYPTOQUOTE EDI'l'ORS

VIES

SloU.LI.·

SOME 11\fN

WQ!i(f~ 11\IU.IOMS SHOP 01~­
ClER.K.S ~INI5l'S 8oOf

BI..H:I'IS """D 8ROI'&lt;2ftS RICH
-'N D PoOit THE SUet~
lo.HO ~E lo\EDIOCI:tf: ~ c T\«1
I&gt;.L!K E YOU 11\! GKT Sol&gt;'&gt;' •

'Tk£ SAM£ I'WI&gt;.R IO.ND

TliE SoloJolt;

PISCES (Fob 20-Morch 20)
Don t make excuses for the

C4l Compact
U Strut tbe

DICK TRACY

LoloJo\P POSTS AND 6L .lo.NC
DUST At.ID Pot.Pt;~ &amp;LOW N&lt;i
CIU&gt;SJ\

You

VIRGO (Aug 23 · Sopl 22)

a oo-sanford &amp; Son 3.~. 15, Kung Fu 6, 13, Planet of the Apes 8.

'S TIU-ET lt-.1 ONE Wlo.'/

S -'MIE B R IC~&lt;S

AOUARlUS (Jon 20·Fib 19)
Yo u re too apt to take chances
that yo u shouldn t The returns
you re looking for wont be
found tn high- risk areas

could ea s1ly be pressured 1nto
something speculative by a
friend Your better JUdgment
s hould warn you not to gamb le
w1th 1t now

Rose Bowl Bound 4

II II E ORPHAN A N~JF.
LITTLE ORPHAN
ITS

• 876

Your powers of conc entration
where your work Is concerned
aren t all they should be Thtnk
only of th e I as k at hand

CANCER (June 21-July 22)

6, Pop Goes the Country 8, Black Perspective on the
News :W.JJ. Treasure Hunt 10, To Teltthe Truth 13, 7 55--

Movte "The Gamma People" 10, News 13
2 JO-Mov1e "Carefree" 4
4 01}-Movie "Damsel In Distress" .d
5 30-/&gt;kvle "The ~ky's the Limit" 4

• 8 54

Diavolo"
composer
10 Encourage
11 Napoleonic
battle
Site
1% Sonority
13 Hit on
the head
14 Zsa Zsa's
relative
15 Dracula
pet
16 Night
before
17 Emancipate
Ill Declare
ZO Ending
for miss
or host
h Measure
out

CAPRICORN (Doc 22·Jin 19)

Something that you promis ed
a nother you would take care of
c an n o long er be avotded Gltb
excuses wont get you by

a

gist's rnl1ie!J
5 "Fra

21) Your atti tude IS a bit too Independent and 1mpuls1ve to fit
comfortably into partnerships
o r teamwor k situ ations today

You re rely1ng to heavtly o n the
wrong people to do things for
yo u Ltttle w11l be ac c ompl ished
w1th your prese nt cohons

You re

ACROSS
1 Speleolo-

SAGITTARIUS (Nov 23-Dec

GEMINI (May 21 -Juno 20)

Camera

1 oo-Modntght Special 3 4, 15, Don Kirshner's Rock Concert 6

WIN AT BRIDGE

You re not apt to hand le your
resour c es as w tse as yo u
sh o uld today An 1mpuls1ve
move now Will p r ove v ery c ostly
l ater

7 30-Porter Wagoner 3, Masquerade Party 4, New Candid

Turns 8.10, Feeling Good 33

2 00-Days of Our L1ves 3, 4, 15 $1 0,000 Pyra m1 d 6.1 3 Gu 1dlng

SCORPIO (Ocl 24-Nov 22)
Co ntinue to move cautiously In
bu smess and financ1 al matters
A conservative and prudent
o utlook Is a m ust for you at
present

TAURUS (April 20-May 20)

!.EO (July 23-Aug 22)

~"
. .r
by THOMAS JOSEPH

Report 8. Av1atlon Weather 20,33, News 10, J1mmy Dean 13
I Spy IS
'

Ph tl D o na h ue 8, Y oung &amp;
the Restless 10 , Not For W o m en Only 15, 1 1 5~ To Be An
nounced 33
1 30-Jeopardy 3,4, 15, Let's Make a Deal 6, 13 , As the W o rl c

N IL L t r 1m or cu t tre es or
s h rubbe r y
cle an
ou t
base mf&gt;nls attr cs e t c 949
322 1 or 742 44 41
12 15 261 c

ARIES (March 2t·Aprll 11)
You have no pattence w1th peo ple who d o n t grasp your Ideas
fast Part ot the reason 1s that
y ou re not explaln1ng cl early

Blr1hdtly- Dec. 27, 1174

Opportunities worth e xptorlng
will come to you thl!l coming
year through a c lose contact
You may tall to recog nize the+r
merit If you are not very dlscer~
nl nn

23) Don"t

7 oo-Truth or Cons 3.4, Bowling lor Dollars 6, WCHS TV

12.45-Eiec Co 33
12 55--NBC News 3,15
1 OD-News 3, All My Children 6, 13 ,

CE,Io&amp;l£SS

I'"E E T A t.IQ

&amp;!I.e&amp;.( Of: \10 CE S

• AKJ

+76

4KQ J 108 3 2

,
'

SOUTH
.AKJ107 3

.103

+92

P I A NO t un rn g an d r e pa1r
Ch a r es Sco tt 992 3718
12 13 32 tp
I:H&lt; A D~ U RD

Au c t ioneer
Complete Se rv1c e
P hon e 9 4q 3!!21 or 949 31 61
R ac 1n e, Oh 10
Cr II Brad for d
5 I I

4A 74

East West vulnerabl e
Wesl North East South
14

,.

Pass

2+

34

3.

Pass

4•

P ass

Pass

, ASOI INE AI LE Y

SE PTI C t ank s exc a va t1 ng
d ump tr uck Phon e 742 3742
12 20 26 f t

Real Estate For Sale
8 R OOMS a n d bat h ga s furna CE
an d cen t r al a 1r Phon e 992
700 1
12 22 6t o
BUIL DIN G lo t 80 ft fronta g-e X
165 ft Th e se cond lot on l eft on
L 1nc o tn
R 1v e r v te w Dr ve
Hill Pom e roy Oh10 If 1n
teres ted • call 991 3230 afte r 5
p m
10 17 tfc

like a person.

WMP0/1390
ON YOUR DIAL

'•

•

..

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Hard Luck Joe took h1s ace
or clubs, ruffed a club re·
turned to h1s hand w1th a h•gh
trump and tned to ruff h1s
last club, but West fm!ed that
plan by ruffmg ftrst w1th the
nme spot Then West led the
four of hearts East took hos
kmg and ace, noted that West
follo\\'W w1th the deuce to
show fove hearts and pro·
ceeded to lead a fourth club
Joe could not shut out West's
queen of trumps and wound
up one trock short
" Deleted, deleted ," swore
Joe "Clubs break · 7·2 and
West holds both the queen
and none of trumps '
We aren' t sure JUSt how Joe
should have played the ha nd,
but he shoUld nave made It
Had hP Analyzed the lead
and Revtewed the b1ddmg he
could have assumed the 7· 2
~lub break
After that analySIS Joe
could have played the hand
very s1mp!y He could cas~
h1s ace·kmg of trumps I&lt;
leave West woth the queen
Then three rounds or doa
monds w1th the thord bemg
ruffed Now a low club would
be ruffed and a club or heart
du1carded on a good d1a·
mond West woula ruff and
the defense would he held to
just three tricks

The bidding has been
Easl
North
w..t

THE l OCAL

C UoSTOM ~

t&gt;, NO HE L P M E
F IO U~E OUT
H ll, MEr.JU

TO McKEE tNDUSTIZ!£.::.

IL AHNER

HoWE '/OJ BI:€1J lN'-IIJ/o

1

FOJND lol'i'SaF BfitNb ~E
10 FI';Of'l.B I
i'-"/n,
"'~-

~IUZERSl

ffi&amp;Rif?WZ

ALLEY OOP

WlNN IE
OF COU RS E TI1E

SEE 1--lCW Eo\SY

SALON !O ON
THE THI RD

tT IS WHEN
Y()J ACT WtJ'H

FlOOR'

NOW SUPI'OSE 'lOU TEU. US
'f'M,A.T ~IS IS A.ll- ABOUT,
GU'Z 1 WHY 010,'tOUR. MI!N
JUMP US .

AVTHORITY

"1liEY JUST MISTOOK

'tlU FOR SOMEBOOV
ElSE, OSCAA •

26

,ua&amp;~on.

V•

CA~ $ PA t::'E WAoS H
HI-5FOR A FEW DA'/5 CAROL
M ISoS rO'-J w TH EA? Y 15 VITAL

Ll¢8;1 :~ 1!@f.titU

.K 7 6 4 3 \'A 2 +9 4A K 7 3 2
What do you do now?
A-Pall. Game Is out of the

.•

STOP 5TU DY I~ 6

I HOPG 'IOU

up I

Pass
Pass
1•
Pass
Pass
lNT
Pass
Pass
34
Yau, South, hold

WHERE WOULD YOU LIKE
YOUR NEXT HOME OR
INVESTMENT WE -1'1 E ED
AN AIR STRIP,
YOU

CAPTAI N EASY

McJ ,Jud4, How old are
how t hat hod 40u,Gabroel?
•S shootonq

Pass
Opemng tead- 9.--

- - --------

11

on good street near school w1th
utlllt1es
avatlable
Only

Dear Rap
My husband ms!Sted we should ''walt for marrlage," but
we've been married three weeks and I'm still waiting
When I'm ready for hed, he's sillfexerclsing in the home
gym" he put m ollr second hedroom I think he's so mterested in
preservmg hiS beautiful body (otIS beautiful') that he doesn't
want to risk ruinmg 11 He says he must conserve his energy and
"sex debilitates a man "
He's aiso got a very bad unage of sex He thinks ot's
shameful, and gets very upset when I try to talk about 11 Says
JOggmg IS healthier.
Is an annulment the answer? - I'm weary of t.emg put down
as 1'overeager " - IMPATIENT VIRGIN
Dear lmpahent
U counseling lSll't the answer, an annulment may he. Talk 1&lt;
your doctor about th1s - SUE

Sesaeme St 33

We talk to you

APARTMENT SITE - Over 2

+++

Parents &amp; Children 13
7 30--New Zoo Revue 6 Tennes see T uxedo 13
8 oc&gt;--:Captaln Kangar oo 8 Jeff's Co llie 6 N ew Zoo Revue 13

~

acres 1n Pomeroy on litt le
traveled street
RUTLAND - 3 bedroom b lock
home bath nat gas 3 o ut
buildings and 2 ac re s Wa nt

+++

CYNTHIA
How about a potted plant mstead' W1th perhsps a note
"Somethmg you can talk to when you're lonely .." -HELEN

10

7

CARP E T ns ta la t1 on $ 1 25 p er
ya r d P ho ne R1 ch ar d W es t
843 2667
12 :14 261 p

L

P S He likes flowers.
CYN·
Frankly, I've never heard of a girl sending flowers to her
guy, but if she thmkshe 'dapprectate them . whatever turns birr
on - SUE

2 00-Nflws 4

~E Pli C

608 E.
MAIN
POM,J: ROY~ 0. ,
MOBILE HOME - Located

THIA

6 JO--F1ve Minutes t o L tve By .4 New s 6 B tbl e Answers a
Public Affairs 10 Publi c Affa 1r s 10 , Blue R1dg e Quarte t 13
6 35-Columbus Today 4 6 45- M or nmg Report
Fa rmtrm e

EX CAv-A 1"" "" doz er
loader
an d b ac khoe w ork
sept1c
t ank s m sta ll ed dump t ruck s
and l o boys for htr e will hau l
f !l d 1rt top so 1 l 1m es ton e &amp;
g r ave l
Call Bo b or Roger
Jeffe r s d ay p ho n e 992 7089
nt ght r h one 992 3525 or 992
5232
2 11 u c

FLEA MARKET SITE -

e~~: cell e nt

oo-Tomorrow

Report 13

STEREO RADIO 8 tr a c k tap e rooms, large store room , and 2
c om b tnatlon
am fm rad 10
Balan c e Sl09 sa or t erm s 1Ca l1 apartments w1th baths and
992 3965
wood burntng grates
12 24 lfc NEW LISTING - Butldtng lot
A K C

Dollars 6, What's My Line 8, News 10, Let's Make a Deal 13,
Sports Desk 15; Two-Way Street 20, Nova 33
7·~Hotiywood Squares 3. Hollywood Squares 4., Fred
Taylor Basketball 6, New Pn ce IS Right a, Wtld Kingdom
10, To Tetithe Truth 13 , Get Smar t 15 Ag ing 20
.~55-Rose Bo)llt Bound 4
8 oo-Mac Davis 3,4, 15 Odd Couple 6 13 The Waltons, a, IO ~
The Way tt Was 20, Sundstage 33

~RtDAY, DEI.tM,.ER2), 1974
S oo-Sunrlse Sem1nar 4 , Sunrtse Semest er 10

195 1 CHEVY p art s
NEW
La k ewood trac l ton b ar s h1
ta c ke r a tr Shoc k s
hoo ke r
h ead er s w rt h 3 co llec tor s for
small b l oc k
Ca l l 992 3l 96
a ft er 6 p m BE ST O F F E R
10 17 1t c

V'1qrl

1 00-Truth or Cons 3,4, Bowl i ng for Dollars 6 , Bowling for

Your

otter advice unless It Is explic itly requested If asked be sure
yo u know what you re talking
about or you II lead the Inquirer
astray

Friday-Doc 27, 1874

Is 1t okay to WU'e flowers to a guy for his birthday' He's 500
miles away, and the girl can't think of anything else - CYN-

10, Janakt 33
12 30-Wild Wild West 6

CONCRETE'
C R- E MEAN S
d e l1v ere d Mond a y thro ug h
Sa tur d .:~ y
and
ev e nm gs
Phon e Jd 6 114 2
6 13 tf c

CLELAND

Flowers for "My Man"
Rap

Movie "Plymouth Adventur e' 8 M ovi e ' Born Yesterd a y'

W A LNUT ste reo r a d1 0 a m fm
8 t r ac k
t ap e com bm at 1on
Ba lan ce $ 107 45 or terms Ca ll
992 3965
11 19 lf c

Real Estate For Sale

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

'

Pncea For \o/Uock Sale

FU RNI S HED
a p a rt ment
ut l1t 1es f urn sh ed
su 1t a bl e
f or two wo r k1 n g men or
r e t1r ed c oup le L1 v1 ng roo m
k t tc h en Sh ow er and bat h On
m a m ll lghwa y M a so n W Va
P h on e 77 3 5 ld 7
10 27 ti C 2 B E DRO OM ho u se for sa l e
5500 dow n $70 p er mo n th
P hone 99 7 397 5 or 992 2S 71
B AC H E LOR typ e ap arlment
F ur n s h ed
P hon e 992 5131
12 3 tt c
12 24 3t c

Not1 c e on Fllmg of Inventory
and Appra1 sement
Thl' State of Ohto, Me1gs
AND 4 ROOM furn iSh ed and
County Court of Common Plea s 3 u
n furni Shed
apartm e n ts
Probate DIVISIOn
Ph on e 992 5434
To the Adm 1n1 strator at t he
4 12 tf c
es tate t o su c h of lhe follow1ng
as are r esr d ents of the State of
meeting room f or
Oh10
v z - Th e s urv1v1n g PRIVATE
any organ 1Zat 1on phon e 992
spous e th e n e xt of k 1n
th e
3975
b ene t c 1an es under the will
3 11 tfc
And th e a ttorn ey or atlorn ey s
repre s en tmg
any
of
the
FURNISHED apt Adults only ,
afor emen t oned p er sons
Middleport Phone 992 3874
No 21294 Marv1n W Dawson
D ec eas ed
Pom eroy
Oh 10
11 14 tf c
Che ster Town shtp
house
4
You ar e hereby notlf ted that UNFURNISHED
rooms and bath 1650 Lm coln
lhe
Inv e n t ory
and
Ap
He1ghts Phon e 992 387-4
pra1sem ent of fhe est ale o f th e
afor em entioned deceas ed late
1114tfc
or sad County was f1led 1n th1S
Co u rt
Send Inve nto ry and
Appra1sement w il l b e for TR A ILER spa ce 2 miles from
Po me r oy Rt 143 Phon e 992
h ear 1n g b efor e th •s Court on th e
5!! 58
J i s t day of D ecember 1974 at
10 27 tf c
10 00 o c loc k AM
Any p er so n des 1nn g t o t l e
ex: ce piJ on s !h er eto mu st f te 2 B EDR OOM tr a 11 er a t co r ner
t hem at ea st f 1v e da ys pnor to
of
Bro ad way and
Elm
th e dat e se t tor heanng
M dd l epo rl
N o p ets or
G 1ven und er my hand and se a
c h !ldren Call 992 2580 a fter 6
of sa1d Court th1s 16th day of
p m
Dece mb er 1974
12 5 tfc
Ma n n1n g D W ebster
J udge
2 B E DROOM tr a il er
adults
B y Ann B W atson
onl y Ph on e 99 2 332 4
D eputy Clerk
12 17 tf c
( 12) 19 26 2tc

PUBLIC NOTICE
B d s will be re ce tv ed 1n the
CommiSS IOners Off 1cefor a 1975
Sher1ff s car until 9 00 a m
o clocl on Tuesday J an 7 1975
Spec!lt ca t •ons are as follows
Color - Wh1le or bla c k
4 door sedan
60
A MP
A lt e rnato r ~
M n1m l 11
Heav y duty battery
Undercoating
Vtny l upholst ery
400 cubtc m c h V8 eng 1ne
Automel! c
h ea vy
duty
f ran sm 1S S1on
N on Sl1p d1fter ent1al
Foam seat
M1n1mum wh ee l b ase 120
or fu l l s1ze c ar
A r con d 1t1 0n1n g
Po l c.: e Ch aSS IS p ackage
P o l 1c e bod y p ac k age
H 78 x 15 b la c k l ir e
Ra d a l t 1r es
S pot~1ghl l ett s1d e (Whit e an d
r ed lens )
Will trade - 1973 Pl~o~m o u th
De11very l n 60 days
The Comm1 SStoners r ese rve
the right to re1ect an~ ot all
bid S
Me1gs r VIJI) ty
Co mm !S5 I
rr
Marl h t~ Chamber s C ' k
r 17 1 ?t. ~ 1 t ., 2t c

HEATERS

WantP.rt To Buy

LO ST
On e mae Br1 ndl e Pl o tf
~ ------ -- -----h ou n d near F1v e Po 1nts W1fh
n ame p l ate on co llar
$10
Ca ll G lJ N sh oo t Sa tur day Jan 4 7
r e wa r d for fh rs dog
coll ect 4&lt;1 6 1063
p m M le Hill Rd Ass ort ed
meats r ac l or y ch ok ed gun s RE G I STERED En gl sh mal e
12 23 Jt p
SeH er 19 m as old W ill tak e
onl y
Spon sored b y R ac1n e
hr g hes t o ffer Phon e 9 .:1 9 5 185
r rre De pt
1222 4tc
12 24 Jtc
LEGAL NOTICE

new s paper,

SIEGLER and
MONOGRAM

MOBILE HOMES FOR SAL !=:
J B ED R OOM 10x 55 mobil e
home
n ew
c arp el
an d
wa sh er f urni Shed
S3500 00
P hon e 99 2 7&lt;1 39
17 76 3t c

17 l l 6lp

Not r •
WE W I SH to th an k a l l our
fr1 en ds n etg hbor s Rev E
G r lf lilh
Ewm g
Fu n er a l
H o n1 e
Fr ee dom
Gos p e l
s ng e r s o n es w ho sent
f lo wers
c ard s
fo od a nd
anyo n e e t~ e w ho h elped •n
anyway Our p rayer s ar e w1 t h
you Yo u r k nd n ess Wil t n e ver
be l orgott en
Ch td r en of
N e tl1 e Gt u ese n c a rn p Rev
L awr ence Gl uesen camp Sr
M r s Eugen e fl n 1e l Ca r
p ent er
M rs
John fOiovel
Law son
11 26 He

c

In Recital 33.
•v·
6 30-NBC News 3,4,15, AB C News 13, Bewitched 6, CBS News
, 8,10, 12 O'Clock High 9, Zoom :ro, What Now, America 33

1

LIBRA (S.pl 23-0ct

By Helen and Sue Bottel

10 30-Your Future Is Now :ro Caught In the Act 33
II oo-News 3,4,6,8,10, 13,15, ABC News 33
11·30-Johnny Carson 3,4 IS Wide World Spec tal 13 . FBI 6

HElL
RACINE PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING

' :-~In
(

from
towards

Open Mon Sat
SAM 6PM

Phone ( 304) 773 5503

" ... "C"MBER26, 1974
o, News B, lO,I l,IJ,I&gt; , Etec C0 ~

&amp;·~Paper Moon 6,13, What Now, Amenca 20
9 ()()-.:.Ironside 3,4,15, Str ee ts of Sa n Franc1sco 6 lJ M ov 1e
"Hess Is for Heroes" 8, M ov1e " W i ld l&amp;vers', Sou l 20
Family Theater 33
10 QO-Movln' On 3 4, 15, Harry 06, 13, Ne ws 20 , Woman 33

m•

Ph 992 5682 or 992 7121
All Mechanocal Work

-

Greatest Otristmas ever

cordmg to numbers of b1rda m
In Oh1o's northeastern coun~
each, would mclude Ashtabula, ties, grouse m fall and winter
Tuscarawas,
Guernsey, feed on leafy avens, cmquefml,
Muskmgum, Noble, Jackson, Po'ison Ivy, aspen buds, hawAthens, Morgan, Washington thorn, plums, cherries and
and Me1gs He sa1d several grapes
others
contam
locally
In
southeas tern
Ohoo
numerous b1rds, and "the counties, the birds, durmg
d1hgent hunter can fmd good hunting season, eat greenbriar
shootmg elsewhere "
leaves and frwt, cinquefoil,
Unlike the ruffed grouse m fern leaves, sumac and
other, northerly states, Ohw's dogwood fruots, bedstraw,
population lS far less cychc grapes and honeysuckle Only
than generally thought
m Septemher and early October do the b~rds seem to eat
Cycles Are Masked
HThe bwlogtsts aren't en- the plentiful acorns, accordmg
tirely certain what causes to the crop checks made by
grouse cycles they thmk 11 may game bwlog!Sts
Donahoe Donahoe heada up be
chmatic cond1hons,
As elsewhere, Ohio's cock
the Waterloo Wildlife Research
predators and sunspots- but (male) ruffed grouse drwn
Statton here
Oh10's cycles are masked the1r wmgs whde perched on
" The mam threat to Oh10 somewhat by rmld wmters ," fallen logs m early fall, and
grouse 1s the reduction of Stoll sa1d " It appears that our a gam from late February
prune habitat," Stoll sa1d population lS about the same throug May
" BaCk m the early 1930's, from year to year ''
Estabhshes Terntor)
farms were abandoned m the
In grouse states north and
Stoll sa1d fall drurnmmg
eastern half of the state, and east of Oh1o, populations of the (caused by unp!oswqs of a1r
these areas grew up m brush b~rds vary m dens1ty accordmg rushmg m\Q ti)e cav1ty of the
and trees. Today this lS prune to cycles which last as tew as b1rd's fast be a tong wmgs)
grouse cover."
seven years or as many as 10 estabhshes temtory agamst
OVerall, some 36 of Ohio's 88 years Areas below 48 degrees mvasjon by other cocks, espe.
counties contam huntable Lat1tude, such as Ohw, expen· c13lly the yearling males
populations of grouse Stoll ence less pronounced flu ctuasprmg drummtng .J ttr:-:~t l"
said the top counlles, ac- Uons m the birds' t.wt.hers
hens ready to 1 l &lt;~ t' u l d

[_ __B_u_ s_
i n_e_s_.s_ S_e_r_--cv=-i=-c- :- : e- - - "s-'---:-'
JOHNSON'S

v

mc~m&lt;'d f.tlthful to thr1r pr~r t'
bu t m&lt;lt&gt;pendt"nts v o t('O Demo

DENVER (UPI ) - It was
Chnstmas mght, but for 17·
year-old Marty Cox ot was JUst
another lonely mght m h1s
Colorado General Hospotal
room
Everythmg was set for me
to go home," saod Marty, one of
the world 's longest surv1vmg
hver transplants But then thos
fever came up and everythmg
had to be canceled '
F or the second straight year,
Marty wa s unable to go home
to Nova, Ohw for Chrtstmas
And h1s famtly - h•s father 1s
an automobile assembly lme
worker --couldn t afford to
come see Marty
Then , shortly after 8 p m ,
the nurse came mto Marty's
room, put him m a wheelchair
and wheeled hom mto the
VISitors room
"Good gnef," Marty shouted,
sm1hng as he saw h1s mother
father and s1ster
After readmg about the pbght
of the Cox fam!ly 1n a Denver

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

Protect Your Home
Or Busoness

I t

Th os pom!Pd up a !rend tha t
pm tlv explams "hy all pohll·
c1ans are r eceplive to reformers wh o urge them to broa den
the partv bases wtth active
recrUihng programs
A recent Gallup Poll ind1cat
ed the Repubhcan part) aC·
tually ranks third m voter
1dentiflcatwn at 23 per cent,
behind the Democra Ls' 44 per
cent and 33 per cent for m
dependents
Most of the m c r ease an In·
depende nt 1dent1h catwn '"
reeent years has come from
Repubhcan ranks The Democrals have remamed near the
same level
The md ependent mmonty"
1s gr o wm g, and no one seems to
know how to deal w1th 1l
L) ndon Johnson tr1ed to channel mdependen t loyalty to
himself and the Democratic
party with h1s consen sus
poht1cs of the mod-19605 , and
Nrxon sought to lure the same
group mto h1s lli-fated " new
Republican maJonty" of !972
Both got the votes they
wanted for themselves , but
netther stermned the growth of
the mdependents
Some observers heheve the
mdependents are a poht1cal
party already, lackmg only a
name and a lender to assume
le g1t omacy
There
1s
speculatiOn that a cha nsmatic
newcomer to the pohllcal scene
w11l he able to galvamze ln·
dependents mto a force that
would dnve the Repubhcans and perhaps even Democrats
- to the wall
Others beheve the nse of
poht1cal mdependence lS a
passmg phase that w1ll end
when the two maJor partles
once agam fmd some VItal
Issues and g1ve voters a
Goldwateresque "chmce, not
an echo."
U both parlles actually carry
out plans to throw open the1r
doors to full rank-and-f!le
parttctpatwn, some say, the
turned-off moddle of the
electorate m1ght se1ze the
opporturuty and once agam
choose up s1des

6 ()0.-l"n~ws J,4, ABC New ::.

press those you have dealings
wi th Thts will lead you to exaggerate In order to hide your
shortcomings

Generat!-on Rap

T..,U~!C;nAv

_

Auto Sales

•
Ruffed grouse are safe zn
SE Ohio
By DAVE BOWRING
Wr1tten for UPI
NEW MARSHFIELD, Ohw
- To hear Bob Stoll tell!!, ot's
as 1f the Ohio ruffed grouse
population lived m a natural
and unpregnable fortress
"Our b~rds, espec1ally those
m the souUteastem counties,
Uve in such hilly country that 11
ISn't likely to be overrun w1th
c1v1hzatlon," said Stoll, a
Wildlife b10log1St ass!Stmg Bob

Television Log

I

TODAY'S QUESTION
Instead of b1dd1ng three cluba
your partner has bid two nolr~p
over yow:: two spades. What do
you do now'

BA RNEY

DADBURN
LOWEEZV''
S HE TRAI PSED
OFF l'H IS MORI\IIN
AI\/ DIDI\I TCHOP
RR¥ STICK OF
KINDLIN

WO OD

DADBURI\J
Lf\ZV- BON ED

(.·~

Htie:E ._0.\\C S
.OOOD5TOC'
ON HIS NElli
6 1 C~CLE

y
s;·.,

-t.

~II

'

..

r

HATE 1T WHE"' 1-~E

5A"1'5 LOOK NO IJJIN65 1

�L, ., . .11.

Price of a steak is smile
By United Press International
A South Dakota restaurant

owner who didn't want to spend
Christmas alone opened the
doors to his steak house and
invited all lonely people to join
him £or dinner. The price was a
smile.

. More than 75 persons showed
up during the first hour in

response to the invitation by

Holzer Mrdica l Cenlrr
1Discharged, Dee. 24)
Richard Alvin Black , Sandra
Kay Bradbury, Johann a E
Baldndge, Charles H. Burl ,
Edward S. Coffey, .Jom1 V
Coif'. CarriP L Deem, Larr)
W. Elkins, Jr. , Aunc1bel 1..
Harper, t\rno t J. .Jeff e r s ,
Kathy A. Jenkms . Gladys Mm:&gt;
Jones, Charles E . Jon es.
Lucille Lamber t, David L.
Massey , Judith E. Mar tin.
Millard E. McCoy, Alma Ka te
Morris , Lola Napier, Cen&lt;-1
Parsons, Larry S. Pickens ,
Cynthia S. Sisson, Pamela J.
Tha ler, Hobart IV . Vaughan ,
Bobby Gcr;~ l d Wa tson, Ga rnet
H. Welker, Mac F arren Youn g.
t Bi rth s 1
Mr . and :vtrs. Sam ut"l
Franklin Roush, II. a s on. P t.
P leasctn t ; Mr. and Mrs
Richard Walker Pn cc , a s on.
Gallipolis.
I Discharged, Dec. 25)
Ricky Lee Clary, Lorena K .
Graves, Mrs. John Kline and
son.
I Birth I
Mr. a nd Mrs . Ronmc L.
Allen, a daughter, Jackson.

Loury Dethury, Brandon. S.D.,
a native of Hungary whu lived
in C;llifornw for 14 ~l'ms

\/

EXCLUSIV~ AnMIRAt SOLARCOLOll.

" '' , .

rh.t~

tht• nr w :-;1&lt;-1temrnt arnved : lu~

Ad111iraL

10\1 " ..

S~LARCOLOR TV

bn ~ ht r r thJn .mv pre&lt; r~llt ~ ·\d m tn l p onurt• A. fl ,tr Hl,u-k
M.1rn x &lt; u r rn und ~ each r_. in l' iJ h&lt;\r d&lt;J I. ,, ~;-,, , iJ , rl &gt;.: r ,,,.,.,,, ·
.J illbr(' n l hghL .:J SS WH! ).! thJ I t'ol \ h co lo r dD I " h olly ,m d
M Cl!rJ !Ph ll lun11 n ,tlcd ! he Ad rmr.t l Soi.H((""' p or rwe
i ~ thl' hnght e'l , deJre ~t t\dnur.d pinure Cl. l• •

•

ADM IRAL ctNESCREFN 2S CO LOR PICTU ~f TUllE Add,

br .c,rl h!&lt;ikm~; d rml'n&lt; •on 10 ~ olen t dt'\'1'10/1 'i 1; " I
I('Cl.m gul.r r pJ no rJm •c &lt;cr('e n 11rl lo ·,q lMrt•r' cflf ner&lt;

25"

25" DtJgOnJ! Mea~u re !31 5 sq in . rectangular pictu re!
•

~!.&lt; )

lt' n 1 r.o l ' n&gt; l. &gt;n l

.&lt;nd w.orul

""""'d t.ot o (l &gt;r l urr

'l&lt;i r&gt;m~l ~~'"' o\gr So:,d 'Jr.ne Comront·nl ,

• Ad m~r.&gt;l Rnl, ~ b&lt;&gt;u l ca· rr·" ):!V{' ) "" rut~l

orr

Cmull•

Lawrm&gt;n :~ life threateTJed

of B utlautl dit·'

week he fo w1d thl' lmlcnlct" h;1d
been cancC' IIed.
before settl in g i n Sou1l1
The doctor had written
Dnkota.
across the btU , "This is the
Oethury, who told one time of year to give itl.'itead of
elderly customer ·•your smiles receive ."
are more than enough .. ." \\.'~IS
At Kctnsas Ctty, Mo., a
Just one examp le of the charity drive by radio sta tion
Chnstmas spirit.
·
WDAF' helped 5,000 families to
Even 14 mi llion blackbirilii 11 merrier holiday . The charity
siHled for execution by the dnve resulted in 100,000 pounds
Army at Milan, Tenn., were of food, two warehouses full of
given a Christmas reprieve . g1fts and $20,000 in cash.
Army officwls had planned
A Vestavia Hills, Ala., man
to kill the birds as pests. kept dialing the wrong nwnber
However, the eradication was whi le trying lo ca ll the Hoover,
delayed due to " the divergency Ala ., Fire Department to
of opinion expressed by various locate a fam ily with small
individuals and organizations children to help them have a
on this proposed action," a merrier holiday.
spokesman said.
Mrs. L.F . Pierce Jr., the
Rut even the Christmas spir~t "wrong number," helped him
could not overcome personal instectd and gave the man the
tragedy. In Denver, 17·year-old address of three young boys
Marty Cox -one of the world 's facing a bleak holiday.
.longest surviving hver transMrs. Mary Meeks and her
phwt patients -spent his three childr en received a
second Christmas in a room at special glft . Fire deslroyed
Colorado General Hospi\&lt;11.
their new home in Bakersfield,
Cox has been too Ill to travel Caltf., Monday night. But
since November 1973, and his neighbors raised money to he lp
parents s&lt;:~y they cannot afford the fam ily replace destroyed
the plane fare from Novct, gifL' and the Bakersfi eld Police
Ohio, to visit him.
Benevolent Association located
However, the Cox family a vacant home.
suid t hey would keep their
Christmas tree up until it turns
br·u wn in hopes Marty will be
able to come home and open his
presents.
SQUAD RUNS
In Oklahoma City, Timothy
The Pomeroy Emergency
O'Neal, who underwent leg Squad was called to old Route
surgery last sununer, got an :13 at 11 :39 Tuesday night for
unexpected Christmas present
Roy Smith who was having
from his doctor . O'Neal still chest pains. He was taken to
owed $45 on his bill, but when the Hnlzer Medical Ce nter .

ENJOY COLOR T.V.
AT IT'S FINEST••••

i'i.

Cuno ~""''" p

NEW ADMIRA L AFC/ CM CONTitOl- Ad rw r.J I m lt•gr.&gt;tl·~
Au l,un,oiiC f rru• l u nrng l Af Cr Jn U Colur o\.l&lt;m rlur lrr luck
" ' lh(' uii 1! 'LI &gt;t~n &lt;&gt; l rrequencT J nd p refl' rred r le~ h r o n~· '
1\l ll r .r '111r,le con l ro•l

HUTLAND - Lee M. H.
Combs. GJ, died Wednesday
morni ng at Ins residence on the
Nc\o\ Lima Ructd, Hutland
Mr . Combs wets born Sept. :J,
1911 , in Natural Bridge, Va. He
\\&lt;l S preceded in death by hts
ta l he r. John Combs, and a son .
A coal miner and construc tiun worker , Mr. Combs IS
survived by his mother , E liza
Combs Hughes . Rutland; h1s
wife, the for mer Helen Wanzu.
~r
whom he marned m 1939; a )_. ~ \1-,, - '"""',,.,.
IN THE drive r 's sea t, Rep.
son, Lee, Jr ., Rutland; a
t\l
Ullm an j D-Ore. ) is serdaughter,
Mrs .
Dewey
ving as acting chairm an of
1Dorothy) Gore , Rutland; an
the House Ways and Means
aun t , Mrs Nctncy Scott, t:o mmittee. a post long held
Hun tington, W. Va ., and five hy Rep. Wilbur Mills Ing r &lt;~n~chi ldren.
Ark . I, until relinquished
Funeral serv ices wtll be at ea rlier thi s month. Ullman
the Rutland First Baptist 1s expected to be e lec ted
Church at 2 p. m. Saturday c hairman of the co mmittee
w1th Rev. Eddie Buffington when the ne w Con gress con offi ciHt ing. Buria l wi ll be m the venes next month.
Miles Ce metery Friends nu1y
ca ll at the Walker Fun eral
Home m Rutland after 2 p. m .
Friday until noon Saturday
when the body will be taken to
the church . The fa mily will
receive fri ends at the funeral
(Continued from page 6)
home Friday from 2 lo 4 and 7
sene s prese nts a ph ilosophy
to 9 p . 111.
rather than a history, a nd H
ph1losophy of nature rat her
than of science. Its subject is a
Pleasant Valley Hospital
Disc harges - Guy Minturn , ('Onlempora ry version 0( What
Leon; Mrs . Grover Long, used to be ca lled Na tura l
Gallipolis : James Warner, Phil osophy . In my view, we are
Pomeroy; Mrs. Raymond in a better frame of mi nd today
Parsons, Letart; Nex Car- to
co nceive
a
natural
penter, Albany; Gary Stanley, philosophy than at any time in
Mason ; Roland Holly , Apple the las! 300 years. This is
Grove; Betty Hewett, Ironton; because the recent findings in
Mrs. Frederick Wilson and human biology ha ve given a
daug hter, Point Pleasant; Mrs . n ew direction to scient ifi c
Cha rles Roush, Sr., Gallipolis ; though t, a shift fro m the
Jim Snod g ra ss, Racine; general to the mdividual, for
Howard Lee Birchfield, Point the firs t time since the
Pleasant ; Clarence Taylor, Renaissance opened the door
Northup; Laban McClure , mto the natura l world."
Cottageville ; Sibley Lenore
Telev ision, as seen by Dr .
Staats, Middleport; Mrs. Br onows ki ,
hcts
g r eat
Stanley Chapman, Point educational potentia l: " Unlike
Pleasant; Rol;!ert Antho ny, a lecture or a cinema s how,
Point Pleasant; Hazel Bissell, television is not directed to
Point P leasa nt; Mrs. Bill crowd s. It is addressed to two
McCoy, E leanore; Michael or three people in a room as a
Marks, New Haven; Russell conversa ti on fa ce to face - a
Gibson, Mason, and Robert one-sided conversation for the
Wa rre n, Gallipolis .
most part , as the book is, but
homely and Socratic nevertheless. To me, absorbed in the
DAMAGE MINOR
philosophic undercurrents of
Damages were set at be- knowledge, th is is the most
tween $50 and $75 as result attrac-tive gift of television, by
of a fire at the Simon Johnson which it may yet become as
Hom e at about 10 a. m. per su asive an inte ll ectual
Tuesday. Pomeroy Fire Chief force as the book."
Charles Legar said t~e Hill St.
The course ,'presented by Rio
home fire started around a Grand e Community College,
rusty pipe near the gas water will meet at Lick Elementary
heater. The Pomeroy Fire School in Jackson and
Department answered the call. Washin g ton Elemen t ary
School in Gallipolis a t 8:10 p,
m. eac h Tuesday, beginning
LOCAL TEMPS
Jan.
7 and continuing for 13
The temperature in downweeks.
Regis tration for the
town Pomeroy at 11 a. m.
Thursday was 32 degrees under course wi ll be all day Monday,
Jan. 6 at the R10 Grande
cloudy skies.
Campus and from 6:30 p. m.
un Iii class time at the two
locations on J an. 7. Cost of the
course for 3 hours credit will be
THURS ., DEC. 26
$39 and for continuin g
NOT OPEN
education with no credit, $15.
Instructors for the 13-week
FRI., SAT., SUN.
cour
se will be Dr. Lawrence
Dec. 27 -28-29
Buter in Gallipolis and Dr.
LADY KUNG FU
and
Charlotte Carver, Mr. Paul
OUR TIME
Lloyd and Ms. Linda Bauer, in
(Technicolor)
Ja ckson. For fur t he r inStarring Pamela Sue Martin
for
mat ion, contact the Rio
(PG J
Grande
College Office of AdShow Starts at 7 p.m .

TV series

f::·:::::::·:· .· .·:·:::::::-:-:-:-:-.-:·:·:·:·:·:::::::::·: ::::::~::::-:-:~:::

18-year-old arrested on three charges
Edward I.. Harrin gton , 18,
1495 Easl&lt;&gt;rn Ave. Gallipolis,
was charged with intoxication
and
disorderly conduct ,
res1stm t::: arrest and assa ulting
a police officer with a deadly
weapon
Chris tmas
eve
foll owmg the alleged attempted sta bbin g of Ptl. Ray
Hall of the Gall ipolis Poli ce
Department.
Ac~..:ordin g to the report, Ptl.
Hall a nd Ptl. Lonnie McGuire
we re driving south in the 300
block of Second Ave. I in fr on t
of Clark's Jewelry Store) when
a man signaled for them to
stop. The ma n sa id that
Harrin gton had jwnped him
and was beating him .
The office rs proceeded to
place Hctrringtun under arr est
when
someone
gave
Ha rri ngton a corn knife.
Harrington tried to use it on Pt.
Hall.
McGuire
grabbed

arm while Hall
di sar med Harringto n. Ha ll
suffe red a cut on the hand.
Harrin gton apparently had
previously suffered a cut on the
rig ht arm . They were taken to
the Holzer Medical Center for
treatment.
The police also investigated
a complaint a t the Gra nd e Cafe

HOPES TO CLEAR NAME
LOS ANGELES (UPI) Sirhan Sirhan says he hopes a
call for a new investigation into
the Robert Kennedy assassination will clear his name and
!ree him from a life sentence
for the 1968 killing .
In a Christmas message
issued from San Quentin prison
through his lawyer, Sirhan
expresssed gratitude for recent
calls for a new look into the
shooting, based on a "second
gun" theory.
" H I had any consciousness
INCORRECT TURN
of the events of June 1968, it
MIAMI, Fla. (UP!) - A would not have taken this long
United Airlines Boeing 747 jet to develop evidence pointing
from Cleveland, Ohio, carrying toward my innocence of killing
about 180 holida y travelers, Sena tOr Kennedy," Sirhan
ran off a taxiway at Miami said. "! am filled with feelings
International Airport after a of hope and hwnility that I may
success ful land ing Tues day some day soon have my
afternoon . There weFe no in- freedom ."
juries.
"At this season I wish peace
Airport officials said the for the entire world ."
plane made an incorrecl turn
on the taxi strip and the right
wheel assembly went off the
STORES CLOSED
concrete, miring down in the
CO!,.UMBUS
- Director
sand.
Richard E. Guggenheim of the
Passengers were taken off
Ohio Department of Liquor
the plane a nd hauled by bus a
Control announced today athat
quarter of a mile to the terall state liquor stores, agencies
minal. The plane, which was
and departmental offices will
undamaged, took off on a
be closed New Year's Day.
return fli ght after being pulled
Mr. Guggenheim added that
back onto the runway.
all state liquor stores , including those which now have
late hours, will close at 5 p. m.
Cloudy tonight, lows in the on New Year's Eve. The early
upper 20s. Cloudy Friday, closing is being provided to
chance of showers; highs in the give state store employees
mi ddl e 40s. Probability of sufficient time to be with their
precipi tation 40 pet. Friday. famili es.

Weather

BAKER FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

COLUMBUS - The Ohio
Commission on Aging awarded
$539,742 in federal and state
funds for administrative costs
of nine area agencies on aging
a t its December meeting.
David C. crowley, executive
direc tor , reported that these
grants will cover operatiOns of
the area offices set up to plan
and coordinate programs for
older people. Funds for direc t
se rvic e progr a m s for t he
elderly
are
allocated
sepa rately at other times of the
year, Crowley explained. One
of the federal grants approved
by the Commission went to the
Buckeye Hills-Hocking Valley
Regional Development
District, Marietta, a one-year
grant of $38,965 from a special
state subsidy fund . This agency
covers Athens , Hocking,
Meigs, Monroe, Morgan,
Noble , Perry and Washington
Counties.

Shoppers
( Cllnllnued from page 1)
Boston, said 11We're nicely in
tbe black, store for store."
" It wasn't an emotional
Christmas. People did not buy
frivolously. They are not
trading far down and they are
very value conscious."
Marcus of Nleman-Marcus
said sales in dollar terms were
up, although the rate of increase was not so high as in
earlier Christmas seasons.
"We will reach our objectives , which were relatively
modest ones,'' Marcus said,
with the help of "a late buying
flurry" and sales of such high
priced articles as furs and
jewelry.

IF IT'S TOO SMALL •••
IF THE COLOR DOESN'T SUIT YOU

• ••

•••

Let Our Courteous Salespeople Help
You With Your Exchanges ... Wrth ASmile

MAIN STORE-TOY STORE-WAREHOUSE OPEN
FRIDAY AND SATURDAY 9:30 TO 8 PM

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Fresh Pork For New Years!
,.

FRESH BOSTON BUTT

''\,

5th and PEARL STS.I RACINE
"The Store With A Heart
You, WE L_l KE"
Right Reserved to Limit Quantities
We Glad~ Accept Fed. Food Starn ps

Prices Effective Dec. ·26-31
Monday Thru Friday
9:00 to 7:00

16 oz.
(ar

$} 09

CLOSED SUNDAYS

PILLSBURY BISCUITS
Buttermilk &amp; Country Style

8 cans '1.00
Valley Bell

CHOC. MILK ______ quart 45'
'

3

Whole
Kernel

CO_KE
89¢

THROW-AWAY BOTTLES

12 oz.

cans

BONELESS
USDA

$}00

CHOICE

FRESH &amp; LEAN

8

SLICED .

pkg.

JUMBO SIZE

CELERY and
LEITUCE

bots.

PAK

EA.

35¢
(

I

J

J

9
1
WIENERS---------~!·__
2lb.
$
139
BOLOGNA . . ______

Salt Fish, lb. $1 19

PEPSI-COLA
and 7-UP

~

9

. 2oct_$

. FRENCHCITY

Package

OL

.

PORK STEAK. _______Ib._ 9 .
FRENCH CITY
. $
BACON ____________ ~~-~ 29

3 ounce

16

lb.

lb. 89'

WYLER'S COLA
and punch mix

64 oz.
Size

Saturday 9 to 9

PORK ROAST

GREEN GIANT
VAC PAK CORN

VAIL, Co lo . 1UP! l
President Ford personally
te lephoned Richard M. Nixon
to wish hi m a "merry Christmas" and round the aili ng
former President "sounded
better" than when the two men
last saw each other in the fa ll , a
White House spokesman said
Thursday .
Press Secretary Ron Nesse n
told reporters that Ford
telephoned Nixon a t 4:35p .m.
Chnstmas Day from his Vail
cha let and asked Nixon to pass
"his best wishes '-' along to Mrs .
Nixon a nd other members of
the family .
" The President indicated the
forme r President soun ded
better tha n he did the last time
he talked to him in the hospita l
at Long Beach ,'' said Nessen.

YEU.OW .

ONIONS
3'
lb.

35

N0. 1 GRADED
HOMEGROWN

·WHITE

¢ .· POTATOES

.

l0

lb .

89~
i

Contract let for
$60 million dust
control at Sporn
NEW HAVEN , W Va. Construction wor k is scheduled
to begin March 1 on a major
env ironmental inst.allcttion at
the Ph ili p Sporn Plant here
that will bring the 1,050,0()().
kilowatt generating station into
full com pliance with We~t
Virgm1a's tough a ir-pollution control standards.
The pr ojec t, whi c h will
represent an invesbnent of
more than $60 mil lion for the
plant's two owner s, IS pa rt of
the Am eri can E lec tric Power
System's on-going $500-milli on

•

By VERNON SCOTT
!...OS ANGELES &lt;UPI) - Jack Benny, the
master comedian who won America's laughter for 50
years by portraying himself as a violin-playing
miser, died at 2:32a.m. today of a swift, surprise
,
cancer attack at the age of 80.
The most famous names in show business had VOL. XXVI NO. 180
gathered at Benny's home Thursday when word
spread that the great comic was dying. "Perhaps
it's the beginning of the end for those who began in
vaudeville," said Bob Hope, who me&lt; Benny on
Broadway 52 years ago.
"This is a very sad occasion," said Gov. Ronald
Reagan, a former actor, whose limousine was
i
By
HELEN
THOMAS
among the dozens thronging the driveway of Ben;
UP! White House Reporler
ny's Holmby Hills mansion.

program of upgrading part iculate · em tss ion-con trol
fac1hties at -14 existing, large,
coal-burning power planl'i m
four states. The Sporn Plant is
jointly owned by Appalachian
Power Company , Roanoke,
Va., and Ohio Power Company,
Canton, Oh10, AEP 's two
largest operating u tihh~s .
Not mcluded in the $500
mtlli on tota l a re the costs of
sim ila r equipment, as well as
other environmental facilities,
insta lled new at AEP System
pla nts recently co mpl~ted or

currently under construction
or planned .
As part of the Sporn project,
a contract has been awarded
Eleme nts
Environm enta l
Corporation , a subsidiary of
Koppers Company, Pittsburgh,
to supply five electrostatic
pre c ipita to r units for the
plant's fiv e generating un its. The company had asked
imtlally fo r bids on the Sporn
precip itators on June 8, 1973.
After modihcation of the
specifications an d negotiattons
(Cilntinued on page 8)

•

at

en tine

Devotee/ To The Interests of The Meigs-Mason Area
POM EROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
FRIDAY, DECEMBER 27, 1974

TEN CENTS

Skiing stopped for talks on energy
eavesdropped, opened the mail
and kept files on 10,000
dissidents in the antiwar and
other movements.
Ford illf'icated to reporters
that he may make t he
document public. "It depends

on the contents, " he said.
" We'll see later."

VAIL, Cillo. ~ Ufl) - PresiFederal Re se rve Board
Despiie hiS age--80--Benny
dent Ford encounters a "bunch
chairman Arthur Burns,
had been considered in excelbeneath his home, and daunt.. of high powered moguls"
Chairman Alan Greenspan of
lent health and was active to
less conceit over his aged today. This time they are his
the Clluncil of Economic Adthe last, getting ready to apMaxwell auto, his big blue energy experts.
visers
and other experts were
pear in his first movie In years.
Ford was pwining Thursday
eyes, his starring role in the
The cancer of the pancreas
movie 11The Horn Blows at . in announcing that Treasury
was • discovered only last
Midnight," and above all, his Secretary Wllllam Simon, InFriday, when Benny compainfully inept, shrieking, terior Secretary Rogers C. B.
plained that a recurrent stoMorton and · energy adviolin playing.
mach pain had returned. It
The alter ego was not the real ministrator Frank Zarb would
rapidly overcame him .
be coming to his playgound in
Benny.
His family said doctors told
In real life his friends knew the Rockies fdr a strategy
them there was no hope, and
session on energy. A mogul can
Benny decided to die at home him as generous, a comparatively accomplished violin be either a hump of snow or ice
rather than enter a hospital .
By United Press lnlernallooal circuJation.
player - he played with on a ski slope or an important,
"He died quieUy at 11 :32 this
More layoffs were anThe November jump in oil
symphonies and was making influential pers'lll.
evening," his manager, Irving
nounced
In
several
parts
of
the
imports
was shown by data
"We'U have a 1bunch of high
violin benefit perfonnancec in
Fein, told reporters .
nation Thursday, and new gathered by the Federal Enerpowered moguls," he said, "so
By then Benny was unconsci- his late 70s - and he joked
staUstics show the amount of gy Administration and two
himself that " The Horn Blows I won 'I be able to ski."
ous, kept under heavy sedation
oil the United States imported indu.stry groups, the American
Ford also is studying a 50at Midnight" may have been
because of pain . He was exin November jwnped by 8 per Petroleum Instity~ and the
the corni..t movie ever filmed.- . page.. report -o on' the Central
pected to remain unconscious
cent,
indicating an unfavorable Independent Petro leum Asln his radio show, popular Intelligence Agency and balance of trade.
until death .
sociation.
whether it spied in the United
WI til Benny turned to television
Among the first to arrive at
But
retail
merchants
said
A spot survey of stores in the
in 1951, he was inevitably . states -a violation of its
Benny's mansion was Frank
there was a last-minute surge nation's biggest Cities showed
outwitted or foiled by his wife charter --in recent years. The
Sinatra. Next came George
of Christmas shopping, and a there was the usual last-minute
Mary , playing herself, aoo his New York Times reported
Burns, Benny's closest friend.
Christmas day crowd at Dis- rush of Christmas shopping in
faithful servant, the gravel- Sunday that the CIA foDowed,
neyland hroke the one-day spite of a disappointing season.
They had ribbed each other on
voiced "Rochester."
attendance record at the Many . store managers said
stage, radio and television for
. He kidded his home town of
amusement park.
almost half a century.
there wa s a trend to fewer but
Waukegan, Ill., and ribbed his
In
Indiana,
a
federal
judge
Hope,
Reagan ,
Merle
more expensive gifts.
wife about being a department
said U.S. Steel must either shut
Oberon, Danny Thomas,
In Anaheim, Calif., more
store clerk when he met her,
down a polluting open-hearth than 34,500 persons flocked to
Milton Berle, Johnny Carson I
threatening to send her back
!ut nace in Gary or pay $2,300 a Disneyland Christmas day , the
who frequently paid tribute to
there. In real life, they had one
day
in fines. The company largest daily attendance in the
Benny as a master of the
of the longest marriages in
delayed an immediate decision 19-yea r history of the amusecomedian's art - Danny Kaye Hollywood history .
A Colwnbus woman, Lorna but said if it shut down it would ment park, 12 per cent above
and others gathered at the
A mllllonalre many · times Bell, 19, escaped serious injury
lay off 2,500 workers. Gary the previous record set in 1969.
home to console Benny's wife
over, Benny kept busy in Thursday morning when hei
Mayor
Richard Hatcher and
of 47 years, Mary Livingston.
In other economic developrecent years with television car overturned on US 33, one
Indiana Gov. Oils Bowen said ments:
"We're losing one of the specials, including uJack
tenth of a mile north of Rt. 7 in the loss of that many jobs
greatest performers who ever Benny's First
- Truck drivers who haul
Farewell Meigs County.
would
be
an
economic
disaster
.
coal
agreed to return to work
lived," said Rosallnd Russell,
Special" and 11Jack Benny's
According
to
the
GalliaDetr
oit
Mayor
Coleman
during contract negotiations,
close to tears. ••rm sure going Second Farewell Special," and
Meigs Post State Highway Young announced at least 1,500 averting for at least 60 days a
to miss him.''
violin benefits for the Patrol, Mrs. Bell lost control of
of the city's 26,000 workers face strike in an industry that was
"Jack brought joy to the musicians union pension fund.
her car which ran off the right layof(s early in the new year crippled from Nov. 12 until just
world. He has the most
He was preparing to costar in side of the highway, came back
because
of
budgetary before Christmas by two
charitable heart in .. show
a film version or-the Broadway across the road and turned problems.
consecutive strikes.
business," Hope said.
hit "The Sunshine Boys,"
11
over on its top.
Corp.
of
Howmet
- McGraw-HiD economists
He is a world institution," about a pair of aged enMrs. Bell suffered apparent Philadelphia said it wiD shut reported American industry's
said Reagan, recalling that he tertainers.
visible injuries but was not down one of its aluminum operating rate in November
met Benny in the 1920s when
He and his wife adopted a immediately treated.
extrusion plants at the cost of fell three points from October
the governor was a radio andaughter, Joan, in 1934. Sle
An unusual accident oc- 110 jobs permanently. aoo in and 10 points from a year
noWlcer in Iowa.
rushed home from a skiing
curred at 6: 15 pm. Thursday Greenwood, S.C., Monsanto Cll. earlier to 77 per cent of
Benny was schooled from the
vacation Thursday nigbt .
on Rt. 218, one and three tenths said it will furlough 550, or one capacity.
age of 15 on the vandeville
"He's had a good life, " she
fourth the working force, in its
miles north of Rt. 790.
- The Insurance Information
circuit that produced a genera- said.
Institute said the property and
Officers said Irvin Betz, 46, textile plant next week.
tion of America's most popular
Funeral services were Eureka Star Rt., while walking
An 8 per cent surge in casualty insurance indUBtry
comics.
scheduled for noon Sunday at
petroleum
imports, after two has had the worst year in its
beside
the
highway,
put
up
his
He turned to tbe relatively the
Hillside
Memoria.!
months
of
decline,
should send his tory with an underwriting
left hand to wav~ at a driver in
new medium of radio early in
Cemetery in CUlver City, Calif.
a car traveli,ng· south. His hand the balance of merchandise loss ' of $1.12 bllllon and a
the 1930s and was an instant
olohnny Carson, a close
was struck by a car going .trade into deficit for Novem- shrinkage of about $6.6 billion
hit His humor mocked an
friend who considered Benny's
north
. Betz was taken to the ber. A weakened balance of in the po!icybolders' surplus
tmaglnary version of his own
comic style an important inhospital for tre&amp;tment of a merchandise trade contributes from which the companies
personality.
fluence on his own, said his
minor injury. The driver did to domestic inflation by have to pay claims.
He played an egoceQtric
"Tonight Show" Tuesday
removing currency from
(Cllntinued on page 8)
not s top .
miser, an exasperated but
would be a tribute to Benny·unlearning loser, forever
''Everyone who lr.new 'him J•:•::;.;::·:·:::~·:·::;::::·:;:·::;:;:;:;.;:;.;:;:;:;:;.;.;.;:;.;.;.; :::;:;:;.;:;:;.;.;.;.;:;.;.;:;:;::·:·:=:·:::·:·:·:·:·:·:·:=:·:·:·:·:=:·:·:::::::·:·:·:·:::::·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·: ·:·:·:·:·:·:::::::·::t
maintaining he was only 39, a
loved him," Carson said. "I
master of the slow burn.
never heard him say an unkind
His trademarks included the
word about anyone and I feel
creaking stairs leading to a fortunate· in having my life '1/
I\\
suppos•d vault of money touched by him."
WASHINGTON (UPI) - An These were classed as
The study also showed that
alannlng number of teen-agers drinkers.
neither scare tactics nor legal
have either driver! while drunk · Of these drinkers:
threats discourage teen-age
or ridden In cars1with heavy--One-fourth ·saJd they had drinking and driving; drinking
drinking drivers,- and neither driven three or more times
teens do not vlew the legal
scare
tactics nor legal threats wben they were " reaDy pretty
By United Pre111D1erna .....
consequences of being stopped
dn much to discourage them, drunk. "
DARWIN AUSTRAIJA -HUNGRY LOOTERS ra11B8cked
by police as serious and do not
according to a new study.
food stores ~ecked by a devastating cyclone and officials in
- Another fourth said they consider death or crippling
In the study, refeased Thurs- had driven once or twice when injury a likely consequence.
Darwin tried today to prevent typhoid and cholera epidemics
day by the Natioiull Highway "reaDy pretty drunk."
that could kill hundreds who survived the storm. Australian,
It said teen-age drinkers are
Traffic
Safety Ac*nlnistration,
American and British planes ferried in tons of food and ~arried
- Thirty-two per cent report.. not a fringe group, qot school
397 students in the 9th through ed being a passenger at least drop.outs or under-achiever
out thousands of homeless in .the wake of the Christmas Day
12th grades were selected at once a month in a car operated
cyclone that wiped out the once-busUing port city.
types but represent the same
random ·in 2:i parts of the by a heavily drinking driver . achievement levels in school
The Minister for Northern Development, Dr. Rex Patterson,
country. They · were in~"unless you saw. Darwin, it is Impossible to describe . Three
" The. study ... reveals that work, sports and other activi- '
terviewed outside their homes there is an alanning amount of
quarters of the people are living oul.slde houses in shelters. '11le
ties
as
non-drinking
on a confidential basis.
problem at present for !bose in the city is one of survival. There
drinking Boo driving taking youngsters .
.
Half said that at least once a place among a large, main" Is no sewerage, no water and no pow~.~~
"J don't know whether you'd
month during llle previous stream group of U.S. youth," call it surprising, alanning or
'
three
months they had been in the report said. "In fact , high
WASHINGTON - TONY DECHANT, PRESIDENT of the
frightening," said NHTSA Adsocial situations with other school students are In contact ministrator James B. Gregory,
National Farmers Union , today urged President Ford to slgn a
teen-agers, when ' adults were with · alcohol-&lt;elated situations who presented the findings at a
bill to raise the govenunent support price for manufacturing
oot
present, at which alcoholic almost as often as adults are briefing.
grade milk.
beverages
were consumed. today."
(~ntinued on page 8)

Economy signs
show up mixed

on its ·side

1.----------------------------------J
·············~·······················································
COFFEE-MATE
AND CREMORA

Death swift
for Benny

WHERE HAVE AU.. 1'fiE . 'PEOPLE GONE? Pomeroy's Main St. was practically without traffic at midafternoon Thursday. Earlier this week, however, it was
different - extremely heavy ·- as shoppers searched for
parking spots. Thursday , most stores, the courthouse and
some offices were close~, leaving the town all but deserted .

.;::

Auto £lips

missions .

}_

·:::

Grants made
•
area agencies

IF IT'S TOO LARGE • • •

WHATEVER THE REASON

seemed better \ '
;: .at phone call .:

!!\

on Second Ave. where someone
broke the panel out of a TV
hockey game.

Harrin~ton 's

MEIGS THEATRE

the Caballero/model SL 1188

f Ex-president f

Te~n-agers boozing it up

fN~ws.~i~_ Bfl~~ej~

summoned to confer with Ford
Saturday on ways to reverse
the recession.
Nessen said Ford is seeking
further expla na tion for some
recommendations the energy
planners submitted be'!ore he
left Washington. He said the
President has ruled out the
constantly recurring proposal
that he increase gasoline taxes
to curb consumption, considering it inequitable to some
segments of society .
There were indicatioris that
Ford may mandatorily restrict
oil imports by I million barrels
a day by tate 1975. Gasoline
rationing apparently has been
pot on the back burner·.
Ford signed 11 biDs Thursday . He has 125 more left by
Cllngress when it adjourned.
Among the ones signed Thursday officially allow girls to
play Little League baseball,
ending a 35-year boys.only
policy.
Ford still must act on the biD
to give the Soviet Union " most
favored nation" trade treatment. Cllngress accepted it
with the understanding that
Mo scow would ease immigration r estrictions for
Soviet Jews.
Ford skied for 21&gt; hours
Thursday . " I fell down a couple

Baby Derby
announced
Plans are ongoing for the
197&gt; First Baby of the Year
Derby sponsored by The Daily
Sentinel in cooperation with
area merchants.
Paren~ and the fir st arrival
of 1975 in Meigs County will
rece ive a nwnber of free gifts
from area merchants as a part
of the derby. Acc ording to the
rules of the contest, the parents
of 1975's first arrival must be
legal residents of Meigs County
although the father may be in
the armed forces and the
fam ily stationed at a distant
point.
The exact time of birth must
be s pec ifi ed in a written
statement signed by th~ attending
physician.
The
statement of the birth must be
received at The Daily Sentinel
office, Ill Court St., Pomeroy,
no la ter than Jan . 10.

Sales tax take
up from 1973
General sales tax receipts in
Meigs County for November,
1974, were up compared to
November, 1973 and motor
vehicles sales tax in creased by
25 percent this November
compared to last year, accordiiig to State Treasurer
Gertrude Donahey.
Motor vehicle sales tax
receipts for November, 1973,
totaled $14,146.08 with receipts
for November, 1974, totaling
'$17,818.16, an increase of 25.95
percent. General reta il sales
tax was up only 3.93 pe&lt;eent
with reee ipts for 1974,
November, totali ng ~9,832.70
compared to receipts of
$67,185.79 for November, 1973. ,
· ~

•'

.' .

of times," he confessed to
reporters, "but it got better
toward the e nd ."
The President also has been
taking a daily swim in the
hea ted pool ad joining his
chalet, leased from Dallas
oilman Richard D. Bass. He
shares the pool with his Vail
neighbors.
·
Mike Ford, the President's
24-year.old son and his wife
Gayle will !eave Co lorado
today to spend the remainder

of the holidays with her family
at Catonsville, Md.
There was a new addition to
the clan with the arrival of
Susan Ford's boyfriend, Gardner Britt of Alexandria, Va .
The Fords continued an
almost nightly party schedule
by going to dinner next door at
the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Fltzhue Scott, a Milwaukee,
Wis., architect who has designed many homes in Vail.

Mother, daughter
killed by escapee
-MICHIGAN CITY, Ind. (UP! ) never made any threats
- A farm wife and her 19-year- agaill5t the hostages during the
old daughter were killed ordeal and repeated his inThursday night just minutes tention to surrender after he
before an escaped convict who was allowed to talk with his
held them hostage for six hours father, who ll ves in In dianapolis.
surrendered, pollee said.
Authorities said the only
A second daughter was
threat he had made was a
released unhurt.
The convict, Riley Mosley suicide threat.
Jr. , 20, walked away from the - "All of us involved felt he
minimum security farm at the was eventually going to come
Indiana State Prison here and out without anybody being
stole a gun from the prison hurt," said State Police Capt.
Roy Sheets.
foreman's home, police said.
"That was the last thing in
Officers said he held Mrs.
Marian Napierala, 54, and her our minds tha t he was going to
daughters Gay le, 19, and harm anybody . We felt that if
Cindy, 17, at gunpoint, he was going to harm anybody,
negotiating with a represen- it would be himself."
Police said they had talked
ta tive of a prison inmates
with Mosley and the hostages
group for about six hours.
Mrs. Na piera la and Gayle up to 15 minutes before
were killed just before the Mosley's surrender and that
convict gave up . Cindy was the hostages had said they
hospitalized
for
severe were unharmed .
The shootings a pparently
shock.
Authorities said pollee sur- occurred within Ute next few
rounded the home after Mrs. minutes -shortly before Mosc
Napierala's 11-year.old son, ley walked out of the house and
Mark , told them the man had surrendered.
As he strode from the house,
broken in. Officers said the boy
managed to escape through a he said only : " I cut my hand."
Police said the convict, who
base m ent window
wh ile
Mosley broke into the house. had been armed with a rifle
The shootings caught police and a pistol, apparently injured the hand while breaking
completely by surprise.
(Cilntinueo on page 8)
Police said that Mosley

Top Ohio labor leaders
to protest gas cutbacks
and are attempting to raise
CLE VEl-AND (UP!)
Local iabor leaders have been that to 55 per cent.
The labor leaders contend
urged to protest gas company
that
shortening the natural gas
requests tv cut back industrial
supply
may cause a loss of jobs
and home natural gas usage,
according to Frank Valenta, in industrial factories aoo the
outgoing president of the construction business if there
Cleveland Federation of Labor is a ban on home connections.
" West Ohio serves 16,000
AFL-CIO.
customers
and River serves
Valenta aiso has asked the
Public UtiUties Cllmmission of 50,000 in a rural area, but East
Ohio to conduct an in- Ohio has 900,000 customers in a
vestigation Into the gas highly industrialized region,"
companies' allegations that Valenta said, "I don't think
there is a shortage of natural they have any right to ask for
· an equality of sacrifice unless
gas.
The PUCO has scheduled a they can prove a uniform
meeting here Jan . 14 a t which · shortage all over ."
Valenta played a key role in
time East Ohlo Gas Cll. will
request a ban on new h;,rne the PUCO decision to meet
connections. The PUCO aiso with East Ohio officials
will hear requests by East Ohio to' -examine the finn's gas
River Gas Co. aoo West Ohio curtailme nt request here
Gas Co. to cut back gas use in following the D.!c. 16 meeting
in Clllwnbus.
industry by 18 per cent.
He said East Ohio's
The three companies have
problems
should be brought
already annoul}!'ed 35 per cent
here
where
most of its
cutbacks to industrial users
cuStomers are locatOO. -

•

•

•

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