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Mo~day , Jan. 27. 197&gt;
Suville Kin&lt;'adl' tlit•tl on Sunda y •

9- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0.,
COOLVILLE - Mrs . Savilla
Kincade ,·88, formerly of here,

died Sunday at the li tlkres t Bottom: a brother, lrkard
Nursmg
Home
tn · Orland . Belpre , st:x grand ~
Fredericktown, Oh10, followmg childr en. and 10 great an extended illness.
grandchildren Her husband,
A member of the Tuppe rs

Charles B. Kmcade, dted 1n

Plains Christian Church. Mrs.

1951

Kincade ts sur vi\ ed b\ three

daughters,
Mrs . · Rav
1 M a r g u e r i I e l W a rd ..

Faneral sf!rvtces will be held
at 2 p.m. Wednesday at the
\\thi tr Funeral Home here with

Fr edertcktown : Mrs. Elm a
FHy Bailey, Coolv ille, and ;\lrs .

the !lev. Brent M. Theophelus
officia ti ng Burial wtll be in the

Wilh am 1Alma 1 Marshall ,

Cool nlle Cemetery. Fnends
mav cc:lll a t the funeral home
fr om 2 to 4 and fr om 7 to 9 p m.

·Tuesday
EXTENDED FORECAST
throu g h
Fri day, chan ce ()f rain
Wt·dncsdny and u chance of
snow £1urries ln the northcast Thursday and fair on
Friday. Turning colder with

Wt•dn t•s da y

highs Wt• dn rs day in th e

WASHI NGTON (UP!) Vt ce
Prestdent
Nelson
Rockefeller thinks the Central
Intelligence Agency probably
was involve'd in domestic
spying and it won't be too hard
to find out what happened.
The Senate votes Wday to set
up its own committee to find
out what happened, an investigation that also will look tnlo
alleged abuses of the FBI and

Veterans Memorial Hospital

the busmess session , new of.

ga thering agencies. In a broadcast interview Sunday, Rockefeller smd he was concerned
that the security of the CIA
1n1ght be Jeopardized by the
additional probes
"Th ts IS really a most mleresting and difficult prot&gt;-

T E . l .f1wrenec - Lawrence

of Ar&lt;-~b t a - at one. ttme held
more th an 90 p~tent s for
mntorcycle parts
" If you fee l tha i you ha ve

no fa ulls , go no furth er
it good or te to
sta rf w tth • "

That wa s

llF.CAME ILL
The Pomeroy E-R squad wa s

called to the sheriff's off1ce
Step up to th at next 1&lt;1 11 1ob
With
il
WER N ER

ALU M INUM

LA DD ER

fr om th e " FR I E N DLY
ONES ". F rom Utd1t y lo
Ex tension you II never lmd
fault w •th a WERNER

ALUMINUM

LADD ER

111

Pomeroy at 8:54 a .m. Monday

for Joyce Grady, there on
business, who had become 111.
She was taken to Veterans
Memorwl Hospit;,li

TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
The Middleport E-R squad
was called to 547 Mam Sl at
&gt;:4&gt;p.m. Sunday for Mrs. Nell
Dav1 s who was ill. She was
la ter tuk e n to Veterans

Memorial Hospi tal where she
was adtml led.

A

~

Mmnie Johnson, Athens ,

Pickens,

pr es ident ;

Mrs

Grella
Simpson ,
vice
president; Mrs. Dorothy
Badgley, secretary ; MISS Vera
Beegle, treasurer. Quiz games
Howard , Eugene Roush, Cora were in charge of Isabel and
Chnsty, Angle Brun ty, Larry Grella Simpson and prizes
Ftelds, Robert Dowell, Janel were awarded to Dorothy
Marcus , H1ram Pauley, Mary Badgley and Helen Simpson .
Cundiff , Gail Pierce, Teresa Mrs. Badgley served refreshments to ten members. Mrs.
Pierce, Jtmmy Gnffi lh.
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS - Ura Morns received the tray
Billy McLaughlin, Pomeroy ; prize. Miss Vera Beegle will
entertain the class at the
Paula Nonncm, Pomeroy.
SUNDAY DISCHARGES - chur ch for the Febr~~ry
Elva Barnitz, Joan Wolfe, meeting.
Mrs. Garret Circle was taken
Bessie Sellers, Joan Ward.
to Pleasant Valley Hospital as
al·medical patient.
Holzer Medical Center
Word of the death of Mr. Nett
I Births)
Wolfe , Beaver, Pa ., a former
Friday - Mr . and Mrs. Racine resident, was received
Dav id Campbell Belasco, son by relatives.
of Pl Pleasant. Mr . and Mrs
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Webb,
Bobby L. Drummond, son, Mr . and Mrs . Bert Grirrun,
Gallipolis. Mr. and Mrs. James Mrs. Grella Simpson and Mrs.
D Lockhart, son, Crown City . Isabel Simpson celebrated
Mr . and Mrs. Patrick A Mrs. Webb's birthday Sunday
Muxwell , son , Jackson .
at Holiday Inn in Gallipolis.
Mr . and Mrs. Linley Hart
Saturday - Mr . and Mrs .
and
Dale Roush spent the
George G. Connally, daughter, Syracuse
Mr. and
daughter, Syracuse. Mr. and
Bernard Hairden , Hartford ;
Nell Davts. Mtddleporl.
SATURDAY DISCHARGES
- J ose ph Stewart , Lena

Mrs

A

ADMISSIONS ftcers ele cted were Mrs. Edna

SATU RDAY

and IJJ\HI in the 30s and

NOW YOU KNOW

Racine Social Events

HOSPITAL NEWS

other government intelligence-

Earl R. N1chols , son,

Carpenter

weekend m Uniontown visiting
Mr and Mrs . John F1sher and
Henry Roush. They also called
on Mr. and Mrs Bikacsan,
paren ts of Rev. Waller
Bikacsan, at Tallmadge.
Helen Wilcoxen and Connie
Roush VlSJted friends at Ohio
Slate Univem ty m Columbus

- ·- - -

-

News, Event

Mr and Mrs Edison Brace
spent a day at South Shore,
Ky , with Mr and Mrs. Fred
Brace.
Mr. and Mrs Ronald Hart of
CooiV!lle are spending a week
at !hell' home here .
Mr. and Mrs. Blythe The1ss
spent Sunday evemng with
their son-in-law-and daughter,
Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Harrison
and children at The Plains.
Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Wolfe and
children of Ja ckson VlSJted Mr .
and Mrs. Dory Wolfe.
Mr and Mrs Elza Birch
Vlsiled Mr. and Mrs. Bert Hunt
at Letart Falls.
Mrs. V1rgil Hill and children
and Mrs Clara Powell visited
Mr and Mrs. Larry Powell

News, Notes
Mr. and Mrs. Leon Shumate
and sons of Bountytown, W.
Va ., were weekend visitors of
Mrs. Geneva Shumate and Mr
and Mrs. Larry Johnson and
family and also visited Mrs.
Paul Pierce and sons of Mason.

Mr and Mrs. Clinton Gilkey
of Albany and Mrs. Harold
Gillogly, Bruce and Vicki, of
Carpenter were Sunday
visitors of Mr . and Mrs. Lmcoln Russell.
Mrs. William Boyce and
George William Venoy of
Columbus were weekend
visitors of Mrs Howard
Russell and Mr. and Mrs.
Donald Russell.
Mr. and Mrs. James Reeves
were Saturday evening visitor
of Mr . and Mrs. Robert

CROW'S STEAK HOUSE

The Easiest Bank To Get To •• t

DBIVB·IN BANKINQ·

Farmers Bank &amp; Savings Co•.

MEIGS THEATRE

POMEROY, OHIO

,

9 ,..,L 7

Ors

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DETERMINED to con·
tlnue his support of former
Gov, Thomas Meskill of
Connec ticut who was
renominated to a federal
judgeship by President
Ford. Sen. Lowell M.
Weieker (R - Conn.)
said
he will
marshall support for Meskill
despite criticism that lbe exgovernor Is not experienced
euough.

Wolfpen

Carmel News,
By the Day

Have a Barrel of Fun•..

the answer is yes," Rockefe.ller
said.
"What we want to do is (lind
out) who were they, how extensive and who authorized it.
And was this a direct
presidential or attorney
general order and . what were
tlie reasons for it. "
He said the problem was
"oot too difficult, and I think
we'll do a good job."
He said the comrrussion has
had "no problem whatsoever in
getting people to come and
getting people to talk.
Sen . Howard Baker , RTenn ., already selected by his
party to be on the select
committee, satd he felt the
congressional group would
need subpoena powers and he
favored calling Richard Nixon.
Baker said he hoped the former
president would come forward
voluntarily, but if be did not, he
would vote for a subpoena .
Baker was interviewed on

over the weekend

McArthur . Mr. and Mrs. Grady ,
Wicker, son, Gallipolis.
Stmday - Mr. and Mrs.
Thomas
J.
Boxi cevic,
daughter, Ewinglon. Mr. and
Mrs. Terry D. Miller, son,
Willowwood . Mr and Mrs.
Robert Cordray, Westerville,
Roger E . Hill , daughter , spent Saturday and Sunday
Racine Mr. and Mrs . Denver \vilh his mother, Mrs. Beulah
Houck, son, Gallipolis, and Mr . Cordray at the home of his
artd Mrs. William R. Milstead, brother-in-law and stster, Mr.
Reeves, Bryan and Jurunie.
son , G~ l11polis
and .Mrs. Reed Jeffers.
Middleport.
The Busy Bee Society of the
Mr. and Mrs. John Downs
Carpenter Baptisl Church met were weekend visitors of his
PLEASANT VALLEY
at the home of Mrs. Lewis
DISCHARGES - Lester Smith. Bonnie Cheadle led parents, Mr. and Mrs . Downs
Hudson , Point Pleasant; devotions for the evenin g. of Glouster.
Mr. and Mrs. James W.
Clarence !hie, Mason; Mrs. Election of officers wQs held
Johnson,
Jamie Sue, Todd and
Clyde Hayes, Henderson; and Freda Smith was elected
··K..;·;tiu~lcv
Virginia Slalyon, Apple Grove; president, Vivian Gaston, Teresa, were weekend visitors
of her sister, Mr. and Mrs.
F;n.d
Wanda Sanders, Henderson ;
Ckrok...n .
secretary, and Metta Fisher, Reggan Phalin and family of
Rebecca Blackburn and son, treasurer. Those present were
You don't ha\le to spend a lot of money to
Point Pleasant; Mrs. James Emma Whittington , Ida Pickway, Ohio.
have sOJne fun . Not 1f you know the nght
McDerm1tt and daughter , Cheadle, Metta Fisher, Hester
place AI Kentucky Fned Ch tcken . we II g1ve
~
Point Pleasant; Mrs. Roger Peck, Anna Lich , Beulah
you a good meal and a good tune
Rqush and son, Pomeroy; Mrs.
At a good pnce
Perry, Vivian Gaston, Bonnie
John Baker, Gallipolis; Mrs. Cheadle and the hostess, Freda
florence Shirley, Leon; Mrs. Smith:
Ronald Searles, Middleport ;
Mr. and Mrs. Dwaine Jordan
Mr and Mrs. Douglas Circle
Crump,
Point · and Sarah Faye, accompanied
Audrey
Pleasant ; Mrs. Leslie Fooce, by Mr. and Mrs . W,all!'r Jor- Vlsited with Mr and Mrs. Glen
Apple Grove; Nora Nibert, dan , spent Sunday afternoon n Tuttle and famtly on Saturday.
Gallipolis Ferry ; Mrs . Douglas Colwnbus and called on Mr . Florence Circle called on Mr .
POMEROY, OHIO
and Mrs. Garrett Circle of
Wilt, New Have n; Gregg and Mrs. Alfred Rice.
Racine on Saturday.
Dlnguss , Mason .
Gran t Johnson, son of Mr . Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Earl
and Mrs. Gay Johnson, is al- Johnson and Sheryl LeAnn
tendmg Ohio State University called on Mr and Mrs. Douglas
Agriculture Technicallnstilute Johnson of Hactne on Saturat Wooster. Grant, who has day
been very active in 4--H In
Mr. and Mrs. Shelby Pickens
Me1gs County and in FF A m and family of Pomeroy, Mr.
Alexander High School, and Mrs. Gene Hudson of
graduated from Alexander Hacme, Mrs. Pauline Rose,
High School last spring and wtll Mrs. Edith Bickers and sons of
continue his course in the Hacine R. D. VISited Stmday
agnculture stud1es there .
with Mr and Mrs Allan
Mr. and Mrs. Reed Jeffers Taylor
vtsited with Mr. and Mrs. J1m
Mr . and Mrs. Douglas Circle
Fos ter and fam1l y, South visited Mr. and Mrs. Hayward
Vienna, and Mr. and Mrs. Btssell and family of Keno on
Willard Martin at West Jef- Sunday.
fersoa on Saturday and were in
William Carleton of Hacine
Colwnbus on Sunday to help his ·was honored on his birthday at
brother-in-law and sister, Mr. the home of his mother, Betty
and Mrs. La\\Tence Woodyard Van Meter on Tuesday
celebrate their birthdays.
evening. Other guests were
Granville 'Stout, who was Cathy Carleton , Mr. and Mrs.
mjured at his place of em- Arthur Earl Johnson; Patrick,
ployment Is convalescing at his Sheryl LeAnn Johnson and
home after being confined to
Mrs. Dean Brinker. Ice cream
O'Bieness Memonal Hospital and cake were enjoyed.
m Athens and University
Mr. and Mrs. James Circle of
Hospital in Columbus.
New Haven were at the home
of Mrs. Mary Circle on Sunday .
IN HOSPITAL
Rebecca Broder ick of
188 HOGS W~tECKED
Pomeroy
is a surgical patient
Easy does it ... no pain , no strain . You don't even have~ gel o~t
WOOSTER, Ohio (UP!) - A
at the Holzer Medical Center. truck ove rturned
of your car - and I hal ends pesky parking problems. Just pull up
after
Cards may be sent to the crossing onto the U. S. 30
and transact your bus iness. On Fridays our Drive- In Window is·
hospital.
median strip just west of here
open 9 ;un . fo 7 p.m. continuousl y to better serve you .
today , scattering 188 hogs
along the highway and
blocking one lane of traffic,
sources said. Twelve of the
TONIGHTihru THURSDAY hogs were reported killed.
JAN. 27·30
NOT OPEN
TO SET UP OFFICE
COLUMB,US (UP!)
FRI.,
SAT
..
SUN.
Robert
E. Daley, appointments
Member of Federal Reserve System
secretary to former Gov. John
Jan . 31 lhru Feb. 2
$40,000.00 Maximum Insurance for Each Depositor
THE TRIAl OF
J. Gilligan , said Sunday he and
BillY JACK
B~N ~RJDAYS
'
(Technicolorl
Gllllgan planned to · ppen an
r,
•
'Starring Tom laughlin
office here within a week to 10

deal.

commissiOn' was to find ~ut the
truth of reports, first published
in the New York Times on Dec.
22, that the CIA kept tabs on
American protesters, includmg
eavesd ropping and other
spying.
"! think we are going to find

lem," he said. "Can a large · The vice president was inbody with a big staff cope w1th terviewed on CBS' HFace the
these tliings ? IJ'his is going to Nation."
be the challenge to Congress."
He satd the first task of his

By Mrs. Francis Morris
The Booster Class of the
first Baptist Church met
fr iday evenmg, Jan 17 With
Mrs. Halph Badgley as hostess,
at her home. Mrs. Wanda
Powell was m charge of the
devotional program and
opened the meetmg With group
smgmg of "Savior, Like a
Shepherd Lead Us". The
scnpture was Psalm 90 . The
New Yea r was the title of the
program and rea dings were
presented. Mrs. Powell closed
the program with prayer . _In

uppt•r 40s a nd th e lower 50s
lo" cring by t~rlday tu highs
in lht• :10s a,nd lows in the 20s
und h.' l'ns

Comlcil orders Dairy Isle addition moved back

Rockefeller expecting proof of illegal spying

Largo. Fla , a sister. Mrs
Fred 1Hulh ) l&lt;uktns , Long

PASTORS CONVOCATION
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
three-&lt;lay 56th annual Ohio
Pastors Convocation opened
here today with the theme of
"Hurtmg, Healing, Hoping"
under the sponsorship of the
Ohio Counc1l of Churches.
Speakers include Dr . B.
Davie Napier, president,
Pacific School of Religion; Dr.
Granger E. Westberg, professor, University of Illinois
Medical School; Chirapurath I.
llty, director, World Cotmcil of

Senate Democratic Leader
Mike Mansfield has been tight·
lipped aboul whom he will
appoint, saying he could not
begin to cons1der names until
the Senate officially acts.

'

Board

Continued from yage I
to the families of the two
fnends who accompanied
Wolfe oa the plane, Dargusch
Jr., who was also the former
law partner of the new ambassador to India and former
Attorney General William
Saxbe; and Fred LeVeque .
Ford attended the aMual
dinner of the AHalfa Club, a
businessmen's organization
which lampoons politicians and
civic leaders at its yearly
function . No mention was
made of the tragedy at the
dinner.

died on Srmday

Jr., Middleport, announce the
birth of their first child a
daughter, Penny Lynne, Jan.
18, at Holzer Medical Center.
Maternal grandparents are

Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Imboden, Middleport; paternal
grandparents
are Mr. and Mrs.
Churches' CommisSion on
Robert
Lewis,
Sr., Middleport;
Church Participation in Devegreat-grandparents
are Mr.
lopment; and Dr . Charles
Spivey, executive director , and Mrs. Frank Grimm ,
Church Federation of Greater Pomeroy ; Mr. and Mrs. Ben
Batey, Middleport; and Mrs.
Chicago.
Edna Pickens, Hacine.

r~~..-..-..-· --·--.-.- ·~

VOL. XXVI

of

Pomeroy;

M1chael of Minersville; David
of Columbus, and M..Sgt.
Robert Shll of Dayton; two
sisters, Mrs. Leonard Polley,
Htmtington ; and Mrs. James
Taylor, Chicago; 18 grandchildren, and two great·
grandchildren.
Mr. Still was a member of
the Forest Rtm Baptist Church.
Ftmeral services will be held
at 2 p. m. Wednesday at. the
Ewing Ftmeral Home with the
Rev. Edward Buffington and
the Rev. Edward Peppers
officiating. Burial will be in
Minersville Hill Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home anylime after 7 p. m.
today.

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g~rl s who~

t~ame of Ike game

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Follow the dotted line to fashion success
I

with Poly Dot Knits by Queen Casuals
With compl iment s wherever you go in the freshest thing happen ing

1n coordinates nght now . Frosty wh1te dots sprinkled on
aqva in easy, breezy knits of Dacron ( r ) polyester.

Al ine skirt, dotted shtrt, sleeveless jacket,
St r ai~ht-l eg pant, sleeveless turtleneck;

work.

short sleeved shirt jacket. Sizes a to 20

SHOP WEEKDAYSP:30T05 p M
FRIDAYS AND SATUAnAvs 9 , 30 Toe P.M.

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

.

OOURT ORDERS, SERVED DURING THE MORNING
RUSH hour, ended surprise strikes by thousands of shopcraft
workers on the huge Burlington lllorthern and two smaller
r8llroad lines Monday, the day they began. Pickets were down
across the country within ball a day of the strike's.12:01 a.m.
start -not soon eoougb, however, to stop a commuter scramble
for thouSands of Olicago area residents trying to get into the city
for work.
Members of four nonoperating unions pulled down picket
. lines at dozens of points along the 1ktate Burlington Northern
system after federal judges in Olicago and St. Paul, Minn.,
issued temporary r.estraining orders to stop the strike before
dawn. The threat of court action sent 2,800 strikers back to work
on the I.Dusivllle and Nashvllle raUroads. By afternoon, elec·
lriclans, boilennakers, carmen and laborers on the Olesapeake
and Ohio line in Mldtlgan; Ohio·and Virginia, too, went back to

•'

SAIGON - THOUSANDS OF CAMBODIANS, Including
·hundreds of govennnent 110ldiers, have fled the fierce rebel .of.
fenslve along the Mekong River and blken refuge in South
Vietnam.
· Military 11011rCes said more than 5,800 war refugees arrived
MondaY at the frontier vlllage of Tan An. The refugees included
Continued

•

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'plication to fill the post vacated
by Clark. There is approximately two years left on
Clark's term.
Clark said this morning that
the Republican Central
Committee has not less than
five nor more than 15 days to
appoint someone to fill the
commission post.
In other business Bernard
Fultz and Scott Lucas met wtth
commissioners in regard to the
erection of a physicians office
building adjacent to the former
Children's Home Building. The
physicians office building wtll
be located at Veterans
Memorial Hospital. The
trustees of the hospital will
take the feasibility study.
The commissioners gave
Fultz and Lucas approval to

PASADENA, CALIF. - MORE TiiAN 1,000 mild to
moderate earthq~kes have shaken Southern California in the
past six days, mostly in a desert region near the Mexican border,
rut the latest rolled through the San Fernando Valley late
Monday night. The hundreds of tremors in tbe area of Brawley,
·Calif., in the Imperial Valley have con!'irmed the suspected
,existence of a fault there, seismologists said.
There have been no injw-les or serious damage reported
from any of the quakes. Aminor quake, registering a mild 2.8 on
the Richter Scale, shook the San Fernando Valley, a Los Angeles
suburban area, at 9:22p.m. PST Monday night. Seismologists at
Cal Tech in Pasadena said the quake had its epicenter in
Woodland Hills, toward the western end of the valley, &amp;~d
residents reported feeling it in North Hollywood and Studio City
in the east and Northridge to the north.

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POM EROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

COLUMBUS - BO'ITLE PRICES OF 147 DOMESTIC liquor
!rands will be marked up an average of 14 cenls and 341mports
an average of 23 cents at state liquor stores Moaday, State Liquor
Control Director Clifford E. Reich said wholesale prices of 139
domestic and 34imported brands would rise an average of 14 and
19 cenls, respectively,
'
Retail price increases range from 5 cenls to $1.30. Tanqueray
Imported gin will go up from $16 to $17.30 a half gallon. Only one
of the 10 best selling brands in Ohio, Kessler blended !"hiskey,
will go up, from $4.85 a fifth to $4.90. Increases have been passed
on to consumers by distillers, Reich said, because of hlgber costs
of raw materials, grain, glass and labor. Reich said the
devaluation of the American dollars was partly responsible for
the higher prices of imports.

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. ._Show
__
__
...;...;_,., days.
the office would
.
Start.
7;oop.m.
wouldbenotused
say for
what

Remaining tn State Issue I funds for the long-planned project.
Council members were asked to write Sen. Oakley ColllnB to
urge that local government money be Increased.
A letter was read from Ben Batey concerning increased utility
costs and payroll ra1ses for village employes.
Coun cil discussed the community park and Improvements
planned for there and the needs for swimming pool supplies for
the swruner .

Chief of Police J. J. Cremeans during the closing minutes of the
meetmg , appea led to coun cil to rescind its motion to make
McClure move his addition on Fourth St. back to estabUshed
property lines. ,Chief Cremeans said that council should think of
the chtldren who vis1l the Dairy Isle during the lunch period and
could be under roof, protected from bad weather, if the addition
were allowed to stand . However, council refused to rescind the
ac tion against McClure.
Also altendmg the meeting besides those mentioned was Clerk·
Treasurer Gene Grate.

Now You Know

en tine

The fir st air-conditwned
office building opened Jan. 1,
1928, m San Antonio, Tex.

Devoted To 1'h e I uteres~s· 0 1' The Meigs-M11son Areu

THE PRICE OF SUGAR ON SUPERMARKET SHELVES is
going to come down - at least temporarily. Sugar, in short
supply and at record prices just two months ago, today is
bloating warebouses. Sugar companies are cutting the price and
reducing production to unload the supply.
"We're dealing with a magnitude of change many times
greater than any time in the past," said Saul Kolodny, director of
economic research for Amster, the nation's largest sugar
refinery. Amstar and other major refiners put into effect Monday the third wbolesale price cut on . grocery sugar in three
months. In the latest cut, a pound of sugar was reduced to 49
cenlli from 57 cents.
That means a supermarket price of about 60 cents a pound by
the time retail costs are added. The price would be even lower for
five-pound bags.

QUEEN

1 CASUALS
now the
I for

at y

ews.·. in Brie-l.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

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NO. 201

Robert Clark, Meigs County
Commissioner for the past 10
yea_rs, . submitted
his
resignation today, effective
Monday, Feb .. 3, to accept the
post of supenntendent of the
~tate Deparlment of Highways
m Me1gs County.
Clark is filling the position
made vacant upon lhe
resignation of James Bailey
several months ago.
Clark was endorsed for the
superintendency at a meeting
Monday mght at
the
Republican Executive Committee. The conunittee also
endorsed Charles Russell as
timekeeper of the Meigs State
Highway Department.
Charles Legar, who was at
the meeting, announced that he
was publicly making ap-

PAGE ST . PROJECT
It was reported th.at solicitor Bernard Fultz had written to the
Buckeye Hills-Hocking Valley Regional Planrung CommiSsion to
mqw-e If federal funds m1ght be available for the balance of some
$90,000 needed for the relocation of Page St. A reply indica ted
that there are no federal funds available at this tltne. Cost of the
relocahon 1s estltnated at $190,000 and 'there is only $100,000

property. However, Councilrrian James Brewer said that
mistakes of the past could not be corrected but warned that
council should not encourage fw-ther similar errors .
Council, however, upon the recommendation of the pla!Uling

Clark takes
Highway job

Elmer Robert Still, 73, of 1519
Nye Ave. , died Stmday at
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Mr . Still was the son of the
late Henry and Amanda Howe
Shll. He was also preceded in
death by his wife, Addie Mae
Qualls.
Surviving are a daughter,
Mrs . John James, Jr.,
Pomeroy; five sons, Mark and

commission, did change the status of three lots owned by Me- .
Clure at the intersechon. Two lots which have been classified as
B-2 were chWJged to B-3 classificatiOn and an R-3 lot was also
changed to a B-3 classification. If the change had not been made
McClure could nat even h ~ve rebuilt his Dairy Isle building had it
been destroyed by fire or in some other way.
. Dw'ing the disc~ion, McClure offered to give two feet, three
111Ch space tn queshon to the village on the other s1de of the street
at Fourth, from real estate he also owns there. However, council
would not accept that plan .

It was also pomted out that other properties are on v11lage

Ram likely tonight and
Wednesday, lows tonight in the
lower 40s and highs tomorrow
in the '50s. The probability of
precipitation is 40 pet. today
and 70 per cen t tonight and
Wednesday.

Continued from page I
ces, or tbe subsequent descent
below safe altitudes may have
occurred prior to the crash of
TWA flight 515," Kapustin
said.

Lawrence ,

either Fourth or Locust, is "angled" which threw off
measuremenll! for the addition.
Some officials, however, said that the streets had been there
for many years and that the burden of proof that the addition 1s
on his property lies with McClure. McClure said thai he was not
able financially to spend the money involved in going back many
years to update a survey.
McClure told council that a number of mistakes had been made
during the entire process of his building the addihon and that all
were n?.t on his part. Mrs. Cl'aig said that she could not approve
the adrutwn, allegedly on village property, because she would not
want to start a precedent.

Weather

Ebner R. Still

DAUGHTER BORN

'thThe split vote came after council had discussed the addluon
McClure more than an hour. Cost lo McClure to move the
!~'\:nJ': to the "~tablished" property line on Fourth St.
whi
.'
oot COunting labor. Voting against the measure
ch will requtre the replacement of the addition line were
~uncil members Carl Horky and William Walters. Supporting
K ell meadsurMre were council members James Brewer Marvin
e Y an
s. Jean Craig.
'
. Kelly said that McClure had disobeyed the instructions of
buildmg mspector Harold Chase in having the addition on the
Fo:;rth St. ~uilt the way it is. The addition is allegedly two feet
an three tnches on village property. However, McClure said
that apparently there are errors and that one of the streets
WI .

tapes."

Probe seeks

Mr. and Mrs. Robert Lewis ,

Middleport Village Councll Monday night voted :J.2 that
Hershel McClure must move an addition to his Dairy Isle at the
corner of Locust and Fourth Sts. back to established property
lines on the Fourth St. side.

ABC's "Issues and Answ«U"S."
Rockefeller said he thought
his group did not need ~b­
poena power, and did oot need
access to Nixqn's White House
tapes. "l think we can lind out
what went on by talking to the
people who were involved," he
said. "We can fmd out all the
facls .. . without listening lo the

•

TUESDAY, JANUARY 28, 1975

PHONE 992-2156

Ford in
mellow
• •
spirit

WASHINGTON (UP!) President Ford, carrying on
the spirit of compromise that
emerged from hls meeting with
Republican leaders Monday,
said today he seeks a spirit of
"fellowship'' with the Democratic~ontrolled Congress that
OONSTITtiTION DRAWN - Mrs. Cindy Kratz, special
is
studying his economicROBERT CLARK
services
coordinator of the Ohio Association for Retarded
energy program.
Citizens,
Mrs. Claren~e Might and Mrs. Hugh Roush, Ito r,
Ford told a congressional
draw
.
up
the constitul!on for the new Meigs County
prayer breakfast audience
proceed w1tha fea~ibility study such meetings give him "that
Assocwtion for Retarded Children and Adults.
for the expansion. Fultz is powerful encouragement
Meigs Prosecuting Attorney which is described in the
and Lucas is administrator of familar hymn as the
Veterans Memorial Hospital. 'fellowship of kindred minds.'
Attending were Clark, Henry
"! might say, in a secular
Wells and Warden Ours
By RICHARD HUGHES
way, I am still hoping for some
commissioners and Marth~
of that spirit with the new
.
UPI Business Writer
Chambers, clerk.
Congress."
It was 10 a.m. EST on the New York Stock
Ford meets today at · the
A new organizalton - Meigs and to everyone intereste~ in Exchange, and the cork was pulled on a·weekend of
White
House
with
Associa tiOn for working with mental retar- penl-.up pressur~. Minutes later the ticker tape was
congressional leaders. A County
runmng lhre~ mmutes late, and the Big Board was
similar meeting Monday, held Retarded Children and Adults dation .
Mrs. Kratz commented that off to the bus1est volume day in its 183-year history.
shortly before governors of - was formed at a meeting at
the_
Meigs
Mental
Health
in most cases the mentally
When the exchange wearily closed its doors six
eight Northe.-.stern states filed
retarded can be trained to be hours later Monday, economists began analyzing the
suit to block Ford's increased Center Monday night.
The new group will be af- self sufficient and can work in resujl? - a record turnover of 32.1 million shares,
fees on Imported oil, brought
filiated
with the Ohio fields of employment instead of echpsmg the old mark of 31.7 million shares set Aug.
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Forty reports of compromise on the
Association
for Retarded bemg a burden on the taxsheep producers will make an President's behalf.
16, 1971, the day after President Nixon declared a
Senate Republican Leader Citizens, Columbus, and the payer.
Ohio Farm Bureau Federation
The new local group will wage-price freeze.
survey of sheep and wool Hugh Scott said Ford offered a National Association for
The Dow-Jones industrial
markets in a dozen southeast- compromise in a meeting with Retarded Citizens, Arlington, work with the present average rose 26.05 points to prodUCtivity of 2.7 per cent.
programs for the retarded and
23 Democratic and Republican Texas.
The Bureau of Labor Statisern Ohio counties this month,
692.66, e1ghth largest jump in tics said non-farm productivity
Mrs
.
Cindy
Kratz,
special
will
look
into
lhe
establishment
senators
Monday.
That
Ivan Cooper, Farm Bureau
exchange history,
feU 5.1 per cent in October,
director of livestock programs, followed several days in which services coordinator for lhe of new programs. It will infQJ:lll
The trigger apparently waa November and December for
Ohio
Assn.,
was
in
Pomeroy
Ford
used
words
such
as
i.he
community
on
the
entire
said the survey of more than
set last Friday when tbe U.S.
260 sheep producers will be j'irresponsible,'' ''nit"'f)icking,'' Monday working on the con- problem of the mentally Court of Appeals in Denver the seventh consecutive quar·
made to see if prices in the 12 and "diddling and dawdling" struction of the constitution for retarded, and hopefully be in reversed an antitrust ruling ter . It is the longest slide in
counties are comparable with to describe criticism among the new group and to help the position to help promote against lnternalional Business productivity and the first
group get organized last night. programs as well as to supply
annual rate of decline since
markets in other Ohio areas lawmakers of his program.
Machines in a suil brought by such records were begtm In
Attending
last
mght
also
was
needed
articles
for
the
"There
is
nothing
to
this
talk
and in neighboring states.
Telex Corp. That action came 1947.
A !973 general sheep survey that the President wants the new representative from retarded.
"This group will do anything after the exchange closed
Conunerce Secretary Fredeconducted by the Farm Bureau confrontation," said Scott. He the district to the General
Friday, and the pressure built rick B. Denl said the trade
Assembly,
Ron
James.
to
promote
the
well
bemg
of
the
said
Ford
was
inflexible
only
revealed producers may not be
The group is open to parents retarded, " Mrs. Kratz said. over the weekend.
deficit was "disappointing but
profiting as much from the sale on his opposition to gasoline
On
Monday,
the
Securities
of
menially
retarded
persons
Officers will be elected later
not tmexpected." He said if the
of their sheep, lambs and wool rationing.
' and Exchange Commission cost of Imported oil had not
White
House
aide,
when
A
as they could be.
lifted ils susp~nsion of trading tripled, the United States
"Sheep and wool production asked whether Ford now seeks
in
IBM stock, and the market would have ended the year with
can be. a profitable enterprise compromise after a week of
was
off and running . Of the 32.1 a trade surplus of $14 billion.
in southeastern Ohio and we verbal political warfare with
million shares traded, 9.29 And he said there were
want to help sheep producers Congress, replied: "Cooper&amp;·
million crossed the cotmter in "bright" spots on lbe trade
reach their full potential," lion, cooperation is the thing."
the
first hour alone -another picture for 1975.
. Scott said one area in which
Cooper said.
lopping by 50,000 the · In other developments:
record,
In an effort to help area Ford· might compromise was
mark set Feb. 13, 1974.
- The dollar dropped in
producers maximize their pro- the executive order he signed By United Press International
Only
45
of
the
system's
180
Another contributing factor, value to all-time lows in Zurich
last
week
hiking
oil
Import
fits, the Farm Bureau and MidNon-academic employes teachers worked Monday and said economists, was the
States Wool Growers associa- tariffs by $3 a harrel over the today continued a strike only 40 per cent of the systems cutting of the prime interest and Amsterdam and the lowest
tions have sponsored demon- next three months as a first against the Cambridge school 4,100 students at nine schools rate from 9'4 to 9\', per cent, price in Sclmdinavla since
World War 0 days. "There are
strations and tours, and step toward reducing fuel system and teachers stayed off attended classes Monday.
and predictions the ra te could only sellers and no buyers for
consumption
through
higher
distributed production and
the job in the Highland School
Teachers met at 7a.m. today drop to as low as 7 per cent the dollar," one banker said.
marketing information to area prices. Scott told newsmen District in Medina County. and voted 103-20 to remain off later this year.
- Taking a page from the
Ford might settle for $2 a Teachers in the Jaekson'School
fanners.
the job in support of the nonThe rally on Wall Street, auto companies, Fedders Corp.
Continued
on
J&gt;age
8
COOper said resulls of the
district voted Monday to strike academic employes.
always se ns1tive to news said it would make rebates of
interviews should be compiled
Feb. 7and the Columbus Board
The non-teaching employes developmenls, came in the $50 to $100 to purchasers of
by April.
of Education made a new offer are asking for a 30cent an hour face of government reports of a
in wage negotiations in that wage increase while tbe board trade deficit of $3 billion for large ali- conditioning systems.
- Even brewing companies
district.
has offered a pay hike of 25 1974, the second .hi ghest this are laying off workers. Falstaff
Dragging pauses
About 90 members, including cents an hour.
century, and of a decline in said it will idle 800 workers at
school
bus
drivers,
of
the
However,
Sam
Spear,
a
Dragging operations for
six plants for one w~ becaiuse
Cambridge local of the Ohio spokesman for the Cambridge
Michael
Fisher,
Point
of heavy inventory of beer.
Pleasant, who apparently
Actording loan entry m the Association of Public School local, said money was not the
accidently drowned in the Ohio . Me1gs County Clerk of Courts Employes, struck the Cam- main reason for the strike.
IS
Continued on page B
River Jan. 22 when he slipped Off1ce, the parsonage owned by lridge system on Monday.
An in-service legislative
and fell between two barges at the Grace Episcopal Church,
m:;~«.::?.::::::::::;:;::::~:::;:;:::;::::::-;s::s:::;:~::x·::;:::;:;::~:-«.w
.;-:•::-,.;.:·,···=·~u
. ·'-'·'·'-'•'.-.'.'·'·'·'·'•'•
.....·.·~·=·=·=·=·&gt;:·:
. _._.. . . ....
• • •' ' ' ....
,•,•~···· workshop CO-sponsored by the
the site of Richards and Son the former Theodore EbersOhio PTA and the Meigs
Inc., Sand .and Gravel Co., at bach pr~rty on Pomeroy's
Cotmty Council of Parents and
BLOUNTVILLE, TeM. (UP!)
Letart Falls, were stopped West Mam St., has been purTeachers
will
be
held
at
7:30
-Frank Spaulding of Marietta,
today. The search is expected chased by Dale E. Sh.ultz,
at
p.m. · Wednesday at the Ohio was found guilty Monday
to resume Wednesday.
Athens , for $25,000.
In other court action MarCOLUMBUS (UPI) - Gov. James A. Rhodes today ~ Pomeroy Elementary School. by a Sullivan County Criminal
Purpose of the meeting is to Cow-t jury on eight of !3 counts
~t,;:;:::~~=-~.:-;.:::::::~:::::-.:=-(.:::::::;~;;~:r:~:~::w. jorie Goett, Pomeroy, filed suit ~ propooed to legislative leaden that aa eslfmaled slate ~
for divorce against Thomas :~ smplus of $109 mUilon be dfslrlbuted to pabllc s&lt;bool 18 make the people aware of of embezzlement of Bristol
MAYBE IN SPRING
Goett, Pomeroy, charging
employeo In June, Including a $850 jump sum payment for :?.! legislahon concerning schools . United Way funds.
Jane Walton, Pomeroy gross neglect of duty and exThe total embezzlement, acOhio's 108,001 classroom teachers.
~ Mrs . Mary Hathaway ,
village clerk, announced
treme cruelty. Betty WilliarruJ,
the
district
Steubenville,
.
cording
to prosecutors, was
Republll!8n legWlilfve leaden Immediately beld a ~
taday thai the village bas
Pomeroy, filed against Wenlegislative direc tor, will about $9,0Q0.
news oonfereuce to at01onnce Rbodes' proposals. They
word
from
received
dell H. Williams, Pomeroy,
the workshop .. PTA
conduct
Sentencing for Spaulding was
said they would coDJider lbem u an alternative to school
Congressman Clarence
charging extreme cruelty.
unit
officers,
legislative
postponecl
for 30 days pending
financing,
Miller lbal there Is a
chairpersons
,
teac
hers
'
Linda Tanner Parsons was
post trial motions: The jury
Meanwhile, House•Democrats proceeded with plaDB
. pals and board of' ' reco!I'mended.
pouibWiy that the Corps of
granted a divorce from James
priDe!
three year IJI!II\.
lo push lbrougb a
mUllan sq~plemeulal appropriation
Engineers will advertise for
David· Parsons, on charges of
invited
education
members
are
ences
on
each
count.
-lnl'nllblng loeal scbool boards with a NO per pupU In·
bids In March lo repair 'the ' gross negelct of duty and exSpaulding moved·to Marietta,
creue
over the current stale subofdy, See early report ~,· to attend.
upper parking lot in
treme cruelty.
Ohio, after resigning aa dlrtcPage
2.
~
Pomeroy. H the bids are let,
Cases dismissed were Mary ~
tor of the Bristol United Way
llml8e Majority leader WUIIam L. Mallory, DWCALTEMPS · .
repair on the damaged wall
Hendricks versus Donald
Cincinnati, said lbe Democrat• feellbey have a mandate
The temperatw-e in down- two years ago. He had held the
could begin In April, Mfs.
Hendricks and Thelma Diane
to goalleadwltb theiro'IIDschool flnanciDg program since
town Pomeroy 11,t II a.m. today poetlor 14 years.
Walton Indicated.
James versus Donald C. 1. lbey control t,oth chamben of lbe General Assembly.
was 50 degrees tmder cloudy • He was formerly a rPsldent of
«se :=::: g~ggg::. :eo u.'«-'X«&lt;~~~ James.
Parkl!&lt;'!lburg, W. Va. '.
'
l&amp;t?
skies .

•

Big Board m

busiest day
New association
organized Monday

Markets to

·--be-·surveyed

Cambridge school
strike continued

$25,000 paid

for parsonage

Workshop set
for Wednesday

rJ

m

. . .
Manettian

formd guilty

~»X• .•.•.

Rhodes would distribute
· $109 million once -

s:
~

•1

f

i -

•

t

\

I

I

I

'

·r

I.

�Conservatives looking
toward new party Was~gton
Wmdow

Editorial comment,
opinion, features
a 1nandate for power
Inflation no rC'pr sents a grcft er th c
ownersh p of mdustr) a nd the

o aU S conorl)

~n

ere I on pr1v a eo nv!.' tor

on pet t \e market) lace than d I the severe and

r pphng

depressoon of the 1930s Tl e masso c une nploynocn l nd busoness collapse of he early a nd n od dle
30s ga\e rtse o pub 1 support for a ew ancJ ac ve role for the federa l government m the econo me
aflaors of tl e countr) 11 e problcr of uncn ployll)e nt ""' f r llv settled b Woold W II and
after the \\ar the rna ntenance of a h gh leve l of emp O)ment became a perman ent fe leral
respons bIt) VJrlue of tl&lt; E 1 ployn t i\cl of 946 In lie nearly "0 )ears sonce that t m the
rol~ of govern 1 ent n a mult tudinous rnnge of domes t c soc al se v ce programs h s I tera ll}
ex ploded fhe ma ll 1st of nfiat on has been felt sotce Uos dra oalll change n the rol e of Ihe

fede-ral go\E:"rnn ent
H stm call nfla tlon has not been a compan on of eco o Jc growth n An enca Many hings

contr buted to relot e procc sta b ill for 140 l eao s foom 1800 through 1940 Ene gy was ch ap Its
appl cat on to mdustr al production \\as be ng made on an e'oer broader scale and product v tv v..as
mcrea s ng Tl e efflctenc\1 of elecl Jc po"c ge eJat11g st&lt;1tJ.or s fo

exampl~

nc cased

e~p1dly

stze
Now !he p clure has raditally c1 anged Demand for many thongs has outrun supply for a
\arlet) of reasons Years of governmen deftc t spendmg has contr b t€d m a maJor v.ay to m

With

cr eas td 1 o

e~

su p) I e:;

~nd

pressure on p1 ces (_realer aff luence n otl er nat ons has put more

pressure on '"!able suppl es of rav. maleroals U S de nand for petroleum products f 1
ou trunn ng do nesloc supply has g ve n a sharp boost to the sea c fy and resultong hogher proces of
energ} Federal regula to v action restr ct ng U S petroleum p oduct on 10 \ anous wa) s con t nues
to aggra\ate this s luation
But the shoft n U S econom c and poht calfo tunes appears loco nc de closely \\llh ll e fedeoat
goverrunent s assumploon of responsob I ty for full enp O)menl and other socoal goa ls Full
empiovment polocy means !hat when the econon oc slo vs then federa l actwn - usually n the lorn
of budget del c Is os tr ggered to get the economoc back on an upward lr tck and reduce unen
ploymenl Now what w II the public dec ode rega oding nflaUon WII ots control also be made a
prtmaf) obi gatoon ol goverrunent JUSt as n !he 30s when t came to be accepted as a federa l dutv to
maontaon hogh levels of employment If government os to assume the burden of conlrolhng n
flatoon as a subsl tute for cotizen sell restra nt the pressure w II gradually ncrease for the most
strongent type of \\age and proce control and ra t onong
ProJectoons are now runnong toward a federa l defocot of $10 to $30 b lloon on !oscal 1976 The
subsequent effect on !he process of mflaUo n as well as on pub! c demand tha t the government do
something to correct ot would be strong and urunedoale
ln the shorter run some see the Spring of 1975 as a dangerous per od Inflatoon may st II be
romnong at 6 to 8 percent But woth lhe economy on slow bell and uncn ployment rates hogh the
congressoonal mood to oncrease federal spendmg woll be dommant and cons dered benefo coallo the
econom) If aneconom1c upturn 1s st1mulated w th nflat on runnmg at a startmg pomt of 8 percent
some predict that t could easoly reach 15 or 20 percent woth n a year or less Presodenl Food facong
a 1976 elect on m ght be hard put to avo d scuttl ng the fr ee eoonon v n favor of wage and pr ce
controls and rauon og also
As thugs now stand !he overwhelmong maJorlt) of the Amer can people are more concerned
about ordiHloon than !hey are about anyt hing else and lhal oncludes employn ent It would seem that
U ere \\Ould he a qual It) of leadersh p avaolable somwhere on the col ntry that could use the near
unarumous publ c worry about mfJation to ga m ba ckmg for a move away from the scenano

descnbed above Neother party oow has a mandate Nettheo one I as a clearly-defoned progo an
whoch the pub! c can support But by 1976 the Iones may be drawn 1 ha t year on the poll ng booths
the An1encan people may well gove a real mandate to the next Pres dent and Congress to eother
fully embrace the concept of a centrally-controlled econom) woth all ts restroct ons and
lrustratoons or gove back to the people some of both the power and the pa or of freedom
It co old go eoth er way As events f II the pages of hostory for 1975 the shape of the futu re &gt;~Ill
begon to emerge from the m sts of conjecture

DR. LAMB

•

Still no cure for stroke effects
ByLa .. renceE Lamb MD
DEAR DR LAMB - More
than a ) ea r ago I suffered a
mass I\ e stroke and hea rt at
ta ck Toda) I am sloll
paralyzed on n y lert sode Mv
left ar n and left leg reft se to
funchon so I can tot walk and
cannot bend my elbow I take
blood tho mer p lis for Ill) heart
and all man er of ' lam ns
1 h ch are to hea I n 1 JO nts
Iron the ots de o ot
Can \OU suggest any other
remed es to ttd me of

n,

paral) s s Wo old h oo noents
and salves help to I mber my
JO nts
DEAR READER - It would
certaonly be " onder! ol I there
were a \\BY to sohe the type of
problem -vou have When 1
stro ke causes parahs1s It

means that the bra n cells that
controlled the mo-ement have
been damaged or destroyed
The leg mo\cs wher \ OU
want t to move because of a
complex electr ica l circUit The
ner. e to and from the muscles
n ) our legs all plug nto a

ce ntral S\lllchboarct n the
bra n When o oI terallv b r 1

out the covnect o s on the
sw tchboa rd the c reo it no
longer work s Those con
nections m the sw tchboard are
votal bra n cells onvolved n the
mo\ ements

Bra n

cell s

ca nn ot

regenera te A cut nerve m the
arm can grow woth tome bo l

cells on the bra n cannot be
replaced There s some en
cot rag mg \\Ork demonsh atu g
U e aboh l) of olhco bra n cells
to take ovco the S\\llchboard
functoon In olher words ll e
cells that osed to handle J osl
the tnfor na t 0 1 ft om Ue a m
ma\ be able to also handle ll e
nformat on fron the left leg
In these mstances a re t trn to
f onctoon os possoble We ca n
do tlus 1 et on humans The
nearest th ng to that be ng dote
s reeducal ng people to speak
wI en the) have lost t1 eor
speech !rom a stroke The
br ng hlerall) develops a ne\1
speech center wa lh tu1e
pat ence and nlt ch pract ce
Yo u- sfon llostrales "hv
strokes n 1st be pre\ coted f
at all poss oble The san e
dtsease U ut cat ses t eart at

phance hogh h!' saod
Jacobson 51 who remern
hers when ) ou couldn t see
vour hand 10 front ol 'our fa ce
on &amp;ame mones when he
started work back on 1948
addressed the openmg sessoon
of a Unoversoty ol Cincmnati
workshop deSigned to unprove
the health and safety of coal
and ool rrune " orkers
The workshop has attracted
75 scientists from across the
country and Europe
Jacobson encouraged the
SCientists to unprove on the two
best known ways of controlling
dust on rrunes --soakmg seams
of coal woth \Hter and ven
tilation
Also he saod government
mspectors must contmue to use
clout by showong rrune owners
ot will be to thetr econormc
advantage on the long rom to
spend money on controlling
dust instead of sufferong heavy
fines for non,compliance
Jacobson saod taxpayers also
would reap the benefit of such
tight regulation
The feder al government
now pays out $53 milbon per

cans for Freedom are sponsor

ng a pol tical action co n
ference Feb 13-16 to venllheor
unhapp ness woth !he maJOr
partoes and d scuss the
possoboi ty of form ng a
nat onal Conservative pohtlcal

party
The odea ts not new bul I ke
discussoons of reahgnong the
Democrats and Republ cans
nlo deologocall) pure parties
of the r ght and left nolh ng
much has come of ot Swolchong
pol tical partoes s no problem
for ordinary cot zens but most
po l t cans seem to rega rd ll on
the same level or worse than
\\ofe-swappong
Smart conservatives on both
maJOr parties know thos but
there sl!ll ts renewed onlerest
on the odea ol settong up a lhord
party on the r ght There are
several rea sons for this not the
least of whoch s the fee long of
both
Republican
and
Democratic conserva toves that
lheor parl!es have been taken
over by hberals
Democrats on the roght have
been dosappoonled by theor
faolure to gam party control
after the hberal wong led ol to

COLUMBUS (UP! ) - The
Ohoo Genera l Assembly recon
venes on full swong today woth
the questoon ol a $40-per pupol
oncrease on state school subso
dies uppermost m the law
makers mmds
House Democrats are tryong
to push tbrough a $91 moll on
supplemental approproatoons
boll to fonance the oncrease and
th e House Fonance Commotee
woll meet to doscuss the
measure today proor to an II

am floor sesston

one wants to be dosa bled as
IOU kn ow
Varoous exercoses heat and
phys cal therap) can do a lot to
prevent f orlher loss of !unction
n son o cases after a stroke
These methods can also help
some n lea rmng to use ne"'
mt scles to Impr ove body
fton ctoon B ot these treatments
ca n l replace the damaged
bram cells
Salves and ltn ments mav
n ake yow- muscles feel better
bt t don l expect them to solve
1 our bas c pr oblem
The
votamo s n av be helplul to
o 1 nta n good nutrot on foo
vo 1 but the) \\ On t do anyth ng
fo the damaged braon cells
!hat control \Our arm and leg
e tl er
Inc odentall\ n some strokes
people ltave
ten porar)
parahs s Uat clears as the
I tiaJ S&gt;~ ellong O( the damaged
bra n cells dosa ppear and the
f mction of the rema mng I ve
cells IS rett rned So no one
sho ld despaor about a stroke
onto! after a perood of tome has
lapsed to permo! It II recover)

Democrats maontaon the
school Bid boost os needed to
help fmancoally-troubled dis
trocts but Republicans have
opposed the proposal on
gro unds ot would perpetuate
uneve n dostr buloon of the
money
Repubh cans were goven a
weekend to prepare amend
ments but Democrats oon
trolling !he coommttee may
force the legoslation through
anyway There may be an
amendmen l to base an) substdy on crease on the new school
fltundatoon formul a to be
wrotten later thos year
If approved by the coommt
lee the boll would be ready lor

noonlh for black lung beneftts
he saod Basocally black lung
comes !rom dust and by con
trollong the dust were gomg to
keep a lot of people healthoer
and save a lot of money
It s tne\1table lbat you re
go1ng to get dust when you np
coal!rom the earth he added
but 11 s not onevotable !hat this
dust must hit the rruner
It can be prevented provtded we somehow don t get to
thinkong that we need coal
more than people

WAIVERS ASKED
ARLINGTON Tex (UP! )The Texas Rangers asked
waovers Monday on Duke Sims
33 a Journeyman catcher who
spent II years on the maJor
leagues woth Cleveland Los
Angeles Detroot tbe New York
Yankees and Texas
General Manager Dan
0 Broen S81d the club had three
other catchers on the roster
oncludong Jun Sundberg Bill
Fahey and Ron Pruitt

disaster on 1972 and GOP
conservatives feel they were
betrayed by Rochard Noxon and
disregarded by Gerald Ford
especoa lly on his selection of
Nelson A Rockefeller to be
VIce presodenl
But what real!) ontrogues

other conservatives hope for a
new day are not new Public
opomon analysts have been
gettong sumlar conservative
readings for years on broad
questoons ol odeology but at the
same tome gettong liberal

many conservatn.es ts the
r esu lts of recent natwnal

problems of domesti c and
foreogn poUcy are raosed
Albert Cantrill and Charles
Roll Jr on theor 1971 book
The Hopes and Fears of the
Ameroca n People discussed
thos contradiction
Amerocan public opuuon
often operates on two levels
sunultaneously and frequently
on a rather schozophrenoc
lashion they saod They coted
a study by the Institute for
International Social Research
which showed that the Amero
can public generally demon
strates bas oc conserva ttsm
when confronted woth an
odeologocal ossue but at the
same bme res ponds more
Uberally when confronted woth
an operational lSSUe
The onstotute found for
example that while a maJoroty
ol the pubhc agreed that the
federa l government os onterfer
ong too much on state and local
matters when the questions
got down to specifocs such as
school aod and compulsory
medocal msurance the public
was overwhelmingly liberal
on favor of an activist federal
goverrunent

pubhc opuuon polls showong
!hat a ma Jor ty of Amero cans
odenlify themselves as con
servataves
Wrotmg n theY AF magazone
New Guard bolh Sen Jesse
Helms R N C and Lee Ed
wards a former rude of Sen
Barry Goldwater . note that the
Gallup Poll found last year that
Ameri cans chose a conserva

love ra ther than hberal label
for themselves b) 36 to 26 per
cent And when the 36 per cent
undecoded group was asked a
secon,d tune to choose the
conserva t veplural ty rose to a
59 per ce nt ma roroty
Helms says he beheves the
people of enough of us work
hard enough woll choose a
conservative party and Ed
wards whole raton g the
cha nces of esta bhshm g a
success lul thord party as
unpro bable does see the
possoboloty of creatong a con
servatove pohtocal for ce that
could mfluence the exiSting

parties
The possoble catch on thos os
that the same poll results that
gove Helms Edward s a nd

answers

when

spectflc

Clark's 'Frozen World'

$40 hike opening at Rio Grande
high on
agenda

tacks also ca uses strokes No

Black lung control hegins at mines
CINCINNATI UP!l - The
war agaonst black lung dosease
must be mtens1loed at ts
source -4usty coal mmes a
veteran mme mspector told an
onternatoonal workshop on
rruners health Monday
Mw-ray Jacobson ol the
lederal governnent s Monong
Enforcement and Safety Ad
muustratoon saod a total
enforcement and educatoon
effort was needed to prevent
thousands of mmers from
contractmg pneumOC&lt;lruosos black lung disease
Ja cobson co mpl aone d
compliance woth a federal Ia"
mandating no more than two
mlligrams of dust per cuboc
meter of aor had recently
slopped from 94 per cent to 92
per cent
In the past year the number
of coal mme operating sec
lions has mcreased from about
2 900 to 3 200 saod Jacobson
W1th the mcreased demand
and mcreased pr1ce of coal
we ve had a lot more momng
operations start up
'Thos makes 11 more unpera
tiv• ~'!an ever to kl!ep com--

B) ARNO'LD B SA WISLAK
WASHINGTON UP !
Amencan conservatives con
Vlnced that they are beong
shortchanged by !he maJor
pollica l partes gather on
Washongton next month to
consoder go ng onto busoness for
lhemselves
The Amer can Conservative
Umon and the Young Amero

a floor vote m tile House
Wednesday or Thursday It

would then be sent to the
Senate
The Senate Fonance Coommt
lee has been holdmg hearongs
on the same bill and should be
prepared to act once the House
clears the measw-e Senate
Prestdent Pro Tempore Olover
Ocasek D-Akron has saod he
wants the boll passed as soon as
possoble--al least by March I
To avood crotictsm the House
may onsert a proVISion makong
the funds available only if
there are suff1c1ent revenues
House Democrats have
already tnm med the $91
milloon out ol former Gov John
J Golhgan s recom mended
budget to spend early on the
schools
State revenue experts saod
Ute state-IS runnmg at least $91
mo!Uon ahead of schedule on
tax collectoons
The Senate Transpoo tation
Coommttee has set a hearmg
for today on legislation extend
mg by SIX weeks the perood for
usmg studded snow tires
The Senate Ways and Means
Coommttee will hear testunony
Wednesday mornong on
legoslatoon tmplementlng a
homestead exemptoon for
totally and permanenUy
disabled persons A simlar bill
will receove a hearmg Wednesday mornong on the House
Ways and Means Conunittee
Also Wednesday mormng
the House Energy and En
v1ronment Commottee w1ll
begmltearongs on a paor of bllls
earmarking the severance tax
on rrunerals for reclamation
and pluggmg abandoned oil
wells

RIO GRANDE - Rio Grande
College an d R o Grande
Communoly College w II offer
the 13 part Natoonal Ga llery of
Art C vohsa t on color folm
ser es on the college campus
begonnmg Wednesday
One I lm w II be shown each
Wednesday at 2 50 p m on
Ann ' ersary Hall III and at 8
p m on the Student Center The
fors t folm os ti lled The Frozen
World All showmgs are free
and open to the publoc
Kenneth Clark author and
narrator of the Covolosatoon
film seroes has been awarded
the Nat onal Gallery ol Art s
Medal for D ston guo shed
Servoce to Educahon on Art
Cnohsatoon
a 13 part
color folm se roes traces the
cultural !ole of Western man
fr om the fall ol the Roman
empore through the 20th cen
tury focusong on the arts
musoc hterature and hostory
Smce Its American premiere a t
the Nat onal Gallery n the fall
of 1969 lhe entire sen es has
been shown nearly a hundred
bmes and has drawn m ore

than 275 000 voewers
Lord Clark has had a long
and d stonguoshed career of
serv ice

to scholarsh p and

KENNETII CLARK
educatoon on art servong as
dorector of the Naloonal
Gallery London )1934 45)
Slade Professor of Fone Arts
Oxford Umversoty ( 1946-50 and
1961-62) chaorman of the Arts
Counc I of Great Bntaon
(1953 )62 ) charrman of the Arts
Counc I of Grea t Brotaon
(1953)60) and Is the author of
numerous books and lelevoswn
folms on art

Blood suh center
now in business
HUNTINGTON W Va
The formal operatoonal
operung of the Keystone Blood
Sub-Center on Parkerspurg on
January 13 opened a new era on
blood bankong for West
Vorgoma and the tro-sta le area
Tro-State Red Cross Blood
Center
Admo no s tr atove
Dorector Roy L Thomas saod
the Blood Center has long
been aware of the ncreased
need for addotional lacohties
and th s sub center os a
necess ty 10 order to best serve
the area because ot woll be
responsove to lhe local needs
Travel hme for shoppmg bloods
can be reduced greatly by
stocking the sutH:enter for
dostrobuhon
The Ke);slone Blood SubCenter 1603 Beaver St was
dona ted to the Red Cross
throug h the benevolent gift of
the Keystone Fund Inc and

Veterans Memorial Hospital
Admotted
Jaunota
Freder ck Rae one Mathe
Warner Guysville Edward
Buf!tngton Pomeroy Sybol
Greene Hartford Sharon
Covert Pomeroy Wesley
Clark Racone Worley Halev
Middleport Helen Thompson
Moddleport
Dale Queen
Albany Theresa Spencer
Pomeroy Jason Reynolds
Pomeroy
Discharged - Jayne Ritchie
Lewos Smoth Ca rl Gheen
Moldred Fowler Susan King
Esther Barker

has been operatmg as ol!oce
headquarters for the blood
program several months
However the center IS now
open lo!i:..donors Hours woll he
announced
Accordong to Thomas this
ce nt er woll also be the
dtstrobutton pomt lor blood to
hospotals on th s area For
merly all blood was distrtbuted
through the Tri-state Blood
Center on Huntington whoch
serv es approxoma tely 80
hosp tals 10 the 38 counties of
West Vorgonoa Ohio Kentucky
and Vorgonoa Dostrobutton woll
be maontamed on a Iove-da y
week basos between the hours
of 830 am to430pm

HAWAIIAN QUAUFIERS
CORONA Calif (UP! )
Pete Brown of Los Angeles
fored a f1ve-under-par 67 at
Corona National GoU Course
Monday to lead qualifiers for
Thursday s Hawauan Open
Brown led a list of 31 golfers
who qualified for t11e PGA
tournament QualifYutg was
held here and at Ontario
National Golf Course
Trailing Brown at Corona
were Marty Fleckman Rafe
Botts and Monte Kasen wtth
four-under 68s
Leading qualifiers at Ontario
were Gary Sanders Bob Risch
Bobby Walzel and Bill Rogers
With three-under-par 68s
Bobby Wadkins brother of towregular Lanny Wadkms finished next at Ontario woth a 69

Mason County

By Alma Marshall
NEW HAYEN - Mr and Mrs Tom King are the new
operators of Kings Country Kitchen on New Haven This old
established restaurant buamess os now on new hands It was
lormerly known as Goheen s Country Kitchen Mrs King ls the
fonner Pauletta Randolph daughrer of Mr and Mrs Paul
Randolph Letart and Mr King os the son of Mr and Mrs J R
King Poont Pleasant
Thursday was the forst day of business and ot reportedly was
good Many ot us like to eat out occasoonally but how handy this
place woll be Best of luck to theor venture
SPEAKING OF VENTURES - thos younger generation has
a lot of get up and go-one does not like to wrore about one s own
lam•ly but rust an illustrahon after movong to Lexmgton Ky
my youngest daughter Jayne Turner Smith decoded to go to
school and take up selling real estate It sounded great but I
dectded she would never leave her family to do thos After
reading some of the material she needed to learn before taking
an exam I fully decoded woth two children she didn t have the
tune to learn all that Well she studied the law learned the
contents of one book from cover to cover studied up on math and
a lot ol extra materoal provoded and you know what - she
passed and has a hcense to sell real estate m Kentucky One
never knows
LEXINGTON Kentucky os a beautiful City It has a lot of
recreation for young people For a small sum the children can
have swllllllllllg ballet and acrobatics lessons The City provides
party of the money to finance these wonderful projects for the
youth
MASON - The Mason Homemakers ExtensiOn Club at Its
meetmg on Tuesday at the home of Mrs Richard Gilkey at
Clifton diScussed making pillow tops for the Natoonal Convention
which will be held on Morgantown on 1976 serving an alumni
banquet and many other subjects Mrs Dorothy Queen
presodent presrded
The club year books were distributed and paid for and
lessons for thos year were discussed Mrs Cecil Snuth was m
charge of the lesson which had been taught at a lesson training
meetmg by Carl Cook Her subject matter was Household
Equopment - Its Care and Repau
At the operung of the meetmg Mrs Elmer VanMeter was m
charge of the devotoonals Her theme was Strength and Strong
Shoes Scripture Matthew 6th Chapter and 25-32 verses The
club gave the Pledge of Allegiance aoo an opeoing song
Mrs Queen appointed Mrs Roberta Young and Mrs Evelyn
Stewart as cochaorwomen of the alumm banquet A card of
thanks was read from Mrs Helen Williams for the flowers the
club sent on sympathy due to the death of Mrs Williams
husband Bill
Mrs Roberta Young and Mrs Evelyn Stewart were appointed
to see about gettmg flowers on behalf of the club tloroughout the
year and the leader remonded the group of lesson leaders
trauung meeting on January 29 Mes George Carson IS lesson
leader for February
The group also diSCUSsed theor cornmuruty project of planting shrubs at the fore station A reading by Mrs Lester Foreman
relating to her Helping Hand Club was read Mrs Landon Smith
closed the meeting with prayer
The hostesses Mrs Uoyd Wolliams Mrs Richard Gilkey and
Mrs Laurene I..ewos sei"Vl!d refreshments to Mrs Landon Smith
Mrs Dorothy Queen Mrs Elmer VanMeter Mrs Cecil Smith
Mrs Roberta Young Mrs Evelyn Stewart Mrs Matilda Noble
Mrs Lawrence Roush Mrs Sarah Willis Mrs Laura Johnson
and Mrs J Marshall
MASON - The need for SWllllllliJig lessons for all youths and
adults os emphasozed m this true story by MUiard Gress of
Bellalre Ohoo formerly of Mason
He saod he learned to swom at the age of eight and swam the
river at age 11 at the locatoon where the Pomeroy brodge now
slands Later on life hiS ablllty as a good swtmmer helped him
save three boys from drowrung
Here IS his true story which occurred many years ago m the
town of Mason
TALE OF A PAST TRAGEDY
The sun beat down excessively on the gllstemng ralls of the
B&amp;O Railroad as a doubleheader freoght tram pulled by two
engmes passed through the town of Mason the smoke from theor
stacks sworling to the ground
Mr Mumaw stood m front of the Ed Bletner store talking to
Grandpaw (Cap) Rowley his horse tied to a hitching post waiting
to deliver some groceroes to folks up on back street It s going to
ram sBid Grandpa look at that smoke crawling along the
ground
Sure os Cap my rheumatism IS acting up pretty bad
today
The town loafers were as usual under the big maple tree on
Eddoe Myers corner and-spent their time cutting up his picket
renee
While over by the depot three kids watched the tram as 1t
disappeared around the bend near Clifton Two of the klda Ira
Zerkle aoo Rex Mason started over towards Sam Roush s
deliverybarn thethirdkld Mlllard (MIII) Gress said See you
later Tex I gotta go down and help brother Carl cut wood for the
bakery
Accordong to Gress this was the last tune he saw his froend
Rex (Christy Bleiner of Mason' reports thst he made the large
brock oven where the Gress baked the goodies they sold)
Mr Roush kept a number of horses and rented them out to
anyone who needed transportation (thls was before the days of
many automobiles In fact there were only two automobiles m
the town)
Rex and Ira would help Paul Roush wash the bug111es and
they were always on noce shape That particular day they decided
to take one of the vehicles down to the river and give it a good
going over Paul smother was m the year nearby when Paul told
his mother that Rex and Ira were going to help him wash the new
buggie He reportedly told hos mother thst they were gomg to
drive down to the raver
His mother IJIIld Don t take those young colts Paul She
warned the boys to be careful
They drove off Ira sat on the seat wtth Paul Rex hung on the
back end They drove down the cobble stone revee The river was
low had 11 not been perhaps the tragedy would not have happened The water Willi muddy About 15 feet out from the water s
edge was an offset of SIX feet at the end o1 the pavement Paul
drove the horse drawn vehicle straight intending to make a
corcle He was a very good driver bit the frisky young colt&amp;
stepped off the end of the levee into the deep water They
parucked pawed the water and swam out farther into the
stream pulling the buggy over the offset The colts soon drowned
from the excess weight
Paul jumped off and swam to shore Rex and Ira could not
8WlJil and they lost their lives One hour later divers brought Ira
to the surface Rex repcrtedly drifted on down the river and one
month later a man from Clifton found his body floating near the
shore
This tragedy cast a spell of sadness on the 1ow11 for ID8IlY
days
All children said Gress should learn to sw1m
CLIFTON - The Friendship Class of Clifton United
Methodist Church is still taking orders for pocketbooks made o1
~augahyde Mrs Harrison Robinson Jr of Clifton hu many
Styles and colors to pick from Her phone nwnber is 7'13-6716 or
callMn Tom Taylor '1'13-6177 or 7'13-6781 Mn Claude FIBber

"if

PER80NAUI ME!mON

were

Rev
Mrs Rankin Roach ~ RaftiWWood
Friday
evening ano Saturday guests ~ his lrotber lnd wife Mr llid
Mrs Robert Roach and DIS in M8l1011 and tifr and Mn Robert
Roach were business vlsltm In ~ Friday

'

I

Players clear Catlett of racial charges

News Notes

CINCINNATI (UP!) - Charges of alleged racoal
discrumnation leveled agamst UruHrsoty of Conconnati
basketball coach Gale Catlett are not valid the entire II
man team declared Monday
The players some ol whom had perhaps uruntentoonally
sparked the ossue earlier this month rushed to del end theor
coach woth a statement desogned to resolve thos con
troversy
The team went on record as sayong ot had revoewed the
charges lorwarded by a black !acuity group and found
them not valid
The Umted Black Faculty Assocoation last Froday pre
sented umverSity olfoCJals and athletoc director Hondman
Wall woth a document contauung the allegations Specoltc
complamts were not publicly dosclosed
Wall surrunoned Catlett and the team ol love blacks and sox

whites to a meotong Sunday and doscussed the charges The
players then met provately and drew up a statement sogned
by all 11 players
Mtke Artis a black player who only last week was rem
stated to the team after beong suspended by Catlett read the
statement at Monday s weekly boosters club luncheon on
campus
We the II members of the 1974-75 Un ove rstty ol Cmconnati
basketba ll team have reVIewed the charges ossued by the
Uruted Black Facult) Assocoahon dated Jan 24 1975 and
have found them not valtd saod Artts
Resolving Contro\ ersy
By now reso lvmg thos controversy we would apprecoate
the support ol the faculty students alumm and the com
mum!) on achoevong our team goals added Arhs Tbe entu e
team was present except lor a couple at tendon~ classes

effort Uke that very long and
Indiana whoch led only 36-34 at
An eptdermc ol Upsetitis
that hit several hogh-rankong the half after Quonn Buckner
college basketball teams over hit a shot at the buzzer waoted
the weekend and shook up the for the mono to cool off a bot
top ten nearly clauned another The Hoosoers came out woth
\1Ctlm Monday mghl when tight pressong defense on the
lllinoos came out woth an second hall and slowly stret
aggressove forst half agamsl ched theor lead to none poonts
top-ranked Indiana But then Then Ilhnoos hopes came
crashong down when Ca r
there was the second half
We were struggling saod mochael louled out
Buckner had siX steals along
lndoana Coach Bobby Kmght
woth
hos 17 poonts for Indiana
followong a nervous 73 57
\1ctory - the Hoosiers 22 Scott May who fouled out woth
straoght regular season won about seven rrunu tes to play
They played a real aggressove held Rick Schrmdt to 10 poonts
zone and we couldn t establish and led the Hoosoers woth 19
any kind of rhythm Most poonts Nate Wolhams led
teams that have zoned up have llhnoos wtth 17 poonts
had to abandon ot early
lllinoos showed lndoana a 2-3
zone and on the forst half the
score was toed seven tunes as
the lllino shot a superb 65 per
cent from the field and Tom
Camuchael grabbed 11 re
bounds
ST LOUIS Mo (UP! ) But ot s tough to keep up an
When Bob Gibson hangs up his
glove at the end of the 1975
baseball season he won t JUst
be calling ot quots to potchmghe 11 be sayong goodbye to
baseball as well
The Dar~ Sentmel
I don t thonk I 11 stay on
DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
baseballm another capacoty
MEIGS MASON AREA
CHESTER L TANNEHILL
the man who has more career
Ex.ec Ed
\1ctoroes than any other pot
ROBERT HOEFLICH
C1ty Ed tor
cher
actove m the maror
'Pub shed da i y exce pt
leagues told a news conference
Sa urd a y by Th e Oh o Va l ey
Publ s h n g Co mpany
1
Monday I can t alford to live
Court St
Pomeroy Oh o
45769 Bus ne ss Off c e Phon e
on the salary of a coach and
992 2 56 Ed to a Phone 992
I m not interested in bemg a
2157
Second c ass p os age pa d a t
manager or executive
Pomeroy Oh o
Comong off a seroous injury
Nat o na
adver s ng
e pr ese n at v e
Bott n e
kept him out of much of
that
Ga agher n c
2 Eas. 42nd
Sf N ew Yo k N ew York
the 1973 season Gibby was 11
Subscr p on
ra es
13 on 1974 woth an ERA of 3 83
De vered by carr er whe e
ava tab e 75 cents pe week
What s worse he served up 24
By Motor Route whe e ca
er
home run balls many of them
serv ce not ava ab l e On e
month S3 25 By ma I n Oh o
damagmg
to the St Lotns
and W va One Year S22 00
S x m on h s
Sll 50
Thre e
Cardinals a club that came on
months
$7 00
El se wher e
woth
ots second consecutive
S x months
$26 00 year
S 3 50 three mon hs S7 50
second-place
diVJSoon finish
Su bsc r pt on p ce
n c udes
l'h games out of ftrst on the
Sunday T mes Sen ne
Nallonal League East

Elsewhere
second-ranked
North Carolma State wh pped
Duke 95 71 soxth ranked
Alabama beat Flonda 7U7
seventhranked Kentucky
edged Vanderbolt 91 90
Mochogan State clopped Nor
thw es tern 54 50 Houston
dumped Stanford 74-68 Ohoo
State defeated Purdue 93-a7
Mochogan mpped Wosconson 7573 on overtome Tennessee
ropped LouiSiana State 99-79
Aubw-n edged Georgoa ~
Furman whopped Davodson 9976 Carusms tnpped Buffalo
State 100 99 m overtome
Noagara heat JacksonVIlle 7876 on overtime Oregon romped
over Air Force 77-47 and New

puts an end to lhe contrO\ ersy

Uruted Black Faculty Assocoahon pres dent Mel\1n Posey
af ter learnong of the players statem~nt poonted out that hos
group was not necessarol) charg ng discronmoation JUSt
onvestogati ng whether there s val di ly ol such charges
Confuston over Ulterpreta t on of a meetmg between
Posey s group and four black players two weeks ago was
apparent
Posey saod player gr oevances came out of the sess on but
black player M ke Franklon saod l was JUSt a rap sessoon I
dido l th nk we ta lked about ra e al disc ron matoon

fomght

Indiana survives scare
By United Press International

Arhs "dded that the players d dn t wan t to be quozzed
furU er b) reporters on the matter Catlett also declt ned
comn ent referrmg quest ons to Wall
Thos os closed as lao as I m concerned sa od Wall Ac
cordong to the players !here os no val dot) to ol I hope thos

~

g.unes

Bucks take in coach's
message, dump Purdue

Th e Meigs Marauders
travel to Wellston and the
host
Eagern
Eag les
\\ aterford in area scholastic

Mexoco State beat Tulsa 7JH;4
Woth All Ameroca Davod
Thompson hot! ng 22 poonts and
freshman Kenny Carr notchong
21 North Ca rohna State easoly
beat Duke to gam a share of the
lead on the Atlantic Coast
Conference standings
Duke was paced by Bob
Fleoscher s 19 poonts
Thompson scored 15 of his 22
poonts on the second half as the
Wolfpack padded a 49-37 on
termissoon edge Carr s 21
poonts matched hos ca re er
high Other Wolfpack players
m double fogures oncluded Moe
Rovers woth 20 Monte Towe
wtth 16 and Phol Spence woth 10

Hod Been Concerned
However Franklon adrmtted there had been concern over
Jommy Webb a black player who was ondefonorely suspended
by Catlett ea rher lhos month fo r dlscophnary reasons
Wall sa d he had called the Sunday team meeting because
we needed to decode whether we had a problem or not
He saod Webb was not mentooned at !he meeting and there
were no complaonts !rom players about Catlett
Wall saod he had no hand on the players statement empha
s zed ot was drawn up by the players themselves and said
Arlos had requested to read tt pubUcly
Thos os a very seroous Sltuatoon added Wall Its bad to
have a s tuatoon hke thos on the midst of the basketball
season
Cinconnalo look a 1().5 record onto ots game agamst Loyola
of Chocago here Monday noght

basketball actoon tonight
The Marauders "ill be
gunning lor their second won
of the season \\hlle the
Eagles go f 1r win no three
Meogs only win of the

By UullL'Il Press International disputed last-second basket by
The coac h talked to the sophomore Larry Bolden
Buckeves and the Bucke) es Almost Unstoppable
Andreas was almost un
season " as a 79-60 \ erdt ct
got the message
over th e Rockets in the third
fhe coach was of course stoppable on the onsode as the 6ga me of the cam paig n
Fred Taylor And seruor for 7 225-pounder muscled his way
Eastern lost its Initial enward Boll Andreas saod the on for easy baskets He hot 12 of
counter to the Wild cats 57
message was
We d better 14 shots from the floor and was
also sox of sox from the free
come
to
pia)
51
In other action tonight the
And play !he Bucks dod aU throw !me
Bruce Parkonson Ge rald
Meags Ma raudu \ucstlers
the way to a 93-67 voctory over
Purdue to put Ohoo State team Thomas and Eugene Parker
go after their second win of
the season trav eling to
on a four way tie lor second each scored 12 poonts for the
place on The Bog Ten along Boolermakers now 5-3 m the
Nelsonville-York for a match
\\O lh Purdue M chogan and conference and I~ overall
"oth the Buckeyes
Bolden had 14 and Mark
M nnesota
Bayless
and Steve Wenner 12
Andreas scored a caree r hogh
each
for
the Buckeyes whose
30 pomts to spark Ohoo State to
!he voctory and make !he boggest lead woth 88-81 woth
Bucks 11 7overall and 5-3 on the 1 52 to go
Fred buolt a fore under us
loop
Purdue paced by semor saod Andreas I was late for
John Garrett woth 22 pomts and the pre-game meal and he
lreshman Walter Jordan woth chewed a bot
Junoor pivot Craig Taylor
21 led most of the lorst half the
added
We had a lottie
durmg !he Natoonal League boggest spread beong 3().23 with
meetmg at noon and the coach
playoffs
6 05 left
This year he would like to go
But Ohoo State scored the JUS! laod it on the !me
Coach Taylor saod he was
out a wonner both personally next seven poonts to tie the
and for the team Then saod game and ot was close the rest primarily concerned during
the man almost sure to be a of the half the Buckeyes takmg the meetings woth talkong
Hall of Farner I m ready to a 48 44 intermiss oon on a about team members helping
one another It s the easiest
qmt
thong on the world to ptgeon
hole rmstakes place the blame
and say somebody s error was
more of a cause for the loss but
N BA Slandmg s
that wasn t our idea
,
Bv Un ted Press Internal ona
Easte n Co nfer ence
We
looked
at
Saturday
s
At lant e D v i s on
films
agam
rust
a
littl•
and
w I pet g b
Bos on
33
4 702
pointed out what lack ol
Bu ff a o
3
7 646
2
movement can do to a ball
New Yo k
24 22 522
8
Ph a de ph a
19 29 396 14
club
Cent at D v s on
The Buckeyes will face In
w
pet g b
Wash ng on
35 3 729
diana leading the pack with an
C eve and
2'1 2:1 489
1
22 25 468
2 h 8-0 record Saturday mght m
all made lmpresSive advances Hous on
A I an a
2 29 420
s
St Johns Arena
tho s week The Wolfpack New 0 ec1n s 5 40 I
2B
Get Ninth Wtn
Western Conference
defendmg national champoons
M dw es t D v s on
In Wilmington Monday ntght
and No I on the early season
w 1 pet g b Fletcher Yates poured In 30
De r o
9 20 592
ratmgs clunhed back from Ch
cago
26 21 553
'1.
poonts oncludong 18 on the
fofth to second place the M lwau kee
'1.3 23 500
&lt;l
deciSive
forst half to spark
24 26 480 5
TroJans although odle last KC Omaha
Pac f e D v s on
Wolmmgton to a 77-62 win over
week moved up two notches to
w
pet g b
Urbana
for !he Quakers nonth
fifth and Kentucky climbed Go d en Sla e 30 7 638
Sea e
'l
26 44
9
won
on
18
starts
from loth to seventh
Po and
2 1 26 447
9
Yates
dropped on three
9 25 432
9
Alabama remaoned on sixth Phoen x
8 27 400
consecutive
field goals and a
L osAn ge les
place Arozona State fell one
Mondays Re sults
notch to nonth and LaSalle M waukee 1 7 New 0 eans OS
Tu es dav s Games
moved onto lOth place
A f anla a New Yo k

Gibson to say farewell

1975 turkey hunting
permits are available
Apphcatoons postmarked
ATHENS - The Dovosoon of before Marc h I 1975 woll not
Wildlife has announced that be accepted
2 000 pennots will be ossued lor
Addresses of the d!Sincl
the 1975 wold turkey huntong woldhfe offoces are Dostrocl
season Dates for th1s year s One 1500 Dublin Road
bearded turkey hunt are Aprol Columbus 43215 D stroct Two
28 through May 3 and May 5 952 Lima Avenue Fmdlay
through May 10 1975 A total ol 45840 Dos tnct Three 912
I 000 pennots woll be ossued Portage Lakes Drove Akron
each perood
44319 Dostroct Fourth 360 E
Dan C Armbruster Choel ol State Street Athens 45701
the Dovosoon of Woldhfe sa d Dostnct Fove 1076 Old
applicattons for pennots are Sprongfoeld Pike Xema 45385
now avaolable and may be The Columbus Headquarters
obtaoned from the DIVISion s address os Dovosoon of WoldUfe
Columbus headquarters and all Fountam Square Columbus
dostrict woldlife offtces
43224
Applications must be maoled
The 1975 turkey hunt area
and must be accompamed by a oncludes Adams Athens
check or money order for Galha Hockong Jackson
$10 50 Each hunter must Lawrence Meogs Monroe
subrmt hts own application Perry Poke Ross Scwto
and penno ts will he ossued on a Vonton
and Washon gton
forst-come forst-served basos Countoes
A vabd Ohoo hunting and
trappong license os requored on
addolion to a turkey huntong
Ttus Week s Speclol
pennot The bag lumt os one per
~

season

The two t1me Cy Young
Award Winner says he hopes
thmgs woll be better m 1975
when he woll toil for a slightly
smaller salary-an estunated
$140 000
It s not that 1974 was a total
loss G1bson dod become the
first National Leaguer ever to
strike out 3 000 hitters and he
established a maJOr league
record of 293 consecullve
slarting aSSignments gomg
back to Aug 31 1965 and still
on tact
But the man wtth the No ~
on his back who trudged out "'
the mound last year was not
the man who set a maror
league record tn 1968 woth an
ERA of I 12 or the man who set
World Seroes records woth 17
strikeouts on one game or the
man who ]lltched what he calls
his best game-an 11-0 no-lut
performance agamst Pott
sburgh on Aug 14 1971
Gobson s 1974 mark was ])is
forst under 500 sonce he began
potchong regularly for the
Cardinals m the early 1960s
He says he now IS ready to go
back to hos home town of

Fresh men
triumph
The Meogs Marauder fresh
men pullmg away from a 10-10
forst perood tie rolled to a 48-39
vtctor y over the Wellston
Rocket frosh at Morro~on
Gymnastum
The Marauders paced by
Chuck Follrod and Brent Ar
nold with 11 pomts each led at
mlermossoon 26-17 and 35-21
goong onto the !mal stanza as
coach John Arnott substituted
freely most of the game
The Marauders used a full
court press and fast break
offense to pull away on the thord
perood as the Meogs front-loners
shut out the vosotors until the
substitutes entered the contest
Rick Rapp and Tom Baker
led the Wellston attack wolh 12
and II pomts respectively
Thursday the Marauders
travel to Ironton for a battle
wolh the Tiger !rash
10 7 4 18--39
10 16 9 13-48

USED CARS .

*ellston
Meogs

70 CAMARO

WELLSTON (39
Bake 3
C.Ox I 1 3 W IS 2 2 6
Rapp 4~ 12 Ba rne tt 3 1 7
ME GS (48 W tte 2 I 5
Fol rod 3 5
Stanley 1 4 6

.5 11

Gum

V 8 auto

PS

2 o 4

Ha

bucket

seats console V roof and
sports m rJIIbrs

rou,l L keO\JrQuality

Po nts

400

293

28

270

ISO
60
45

8

86
8
72

3

8
0
0
9
7
4

00

N£W HAYIN W VA

U2 2525

CHESTER

N H L Stand ng s
By Unfed P ess nter nat ona
D v s on
w
t pts gf ga
Ph ad ph a 30 10 7 6 168 00
NY Ran ges 25 13 9 59 196 49
A l an a
2
9 9 5 1 36 38
NY s an de s 8
2 48 57 32
0 v s on 2
w I pi s gf ga
Van couve r
25 19 5 55 68 54
Ch cago
24 20 4 52 6
37
S Lou 5
8 22 7 43 49 69
M n neso a
? 27 6 30 22 96
Kansas( l y 032 5 25
7 20 I
o v s on J
w I J pts gf ga
LO S Ange les 27 a 3 67 64 10
Mon ea
'J7 9 3 67 227 140
P sbu gh
9 8 o &lt;iB 92 180
De o
2 26 8 32 33 163
wa sh ng on
4 .10 5 13 02 254
o v s on 4
w I I pi s gf ga
Buffa o
3 0 7 69 2
147
Boson
25 J 0 60 2 9 147
To on o
17 21. 7 4
62 93
Ca fo n a
2 30 9 33 38 99

Monday s Re sult s

SEO frosh
standings
SEOAl FRESHMEN
Team
W L
P
Gal po s
8 2 46 3
Loga n
8 2 460
A th ens
7 3 395
Waver y
7 3 402
Me gs
4 6 397
on on
3 7 325
ackson
3 7 324
We Is ton
0 10 253
TOTALS
40 40 301 9
Monday s resu ts
Ja ck son 42 Ga po l s 40
Me gs 48 Wellston 39
Logan 61 Athens 39
Wave ly 44
onton 26
Thursda y s games
L ogan a Ga l po s
Wave l y a A h ens
Me gs a f on ton
Jackson at Wei s on

OP
370
305
358
327

40
362
445
45
3019

LINE COACH
GREEN BAY Wos (UP!)Leon McLaughlon an assostant
coach woth the Detrool Lions
the past two years was named
olfensove lone coach of the
Green Bay Packers Monday
McLaughlin 49 IS the sev
enth assistant named by new
Head Coach Bart Starr Starr
srud one more offensive coach
would be named shortly

Bos on 3 K an C y 3 e
Tuesdays Gam es
M nn eso l a a NY sa n de s.
Del o a Sl L ou s
NY Ran ges a L os Ange es
Mon ea l a Van couver
WHA Stand1ngs
By Un l ed Pre ss lnt ernat onal
East
w
t pts gf ga
New Eng lnd 25 19 2 52 157 63
c eve and
924 2 40 26 47
Ch cage
727
35 152 78
nd anapo s 10 33 3 23 104 9
West
w I t pts gf ga
Houston
29 14 0 58 20
30

Phoen x
San 0 ego

23 18 6 52 163
23 9
1.7 49

a '13 '10 0
x Ba l more 3 29 3
Can ad an
w I I
Qu ebe c
29 6 0
24 9 2
To on o
22 6 2
Edmon on
Va n couve
2 21 2
M nneso

52
42

46 77 46
29 09 183

pfs
58
50
46

gf
92
93
51
4 36

ga
146
17
135
4

W nn p eg
8 2 2 36 56 14
x F a ne ll se t ansferred I om
M eh gan
Monday s Results
N e w E ng and 2 Cleve and 0
Tu esday s Games
M nneso fa a Ba l mo e
Phoen x a nd anapo s
Quebec a To on o
C eve and a t Ch cago
Hous ton a Edmon on
W nn peg a San D ego

Not all
home

insurance
policies
are aljke.
ou'll find out when
you have a claim.
No two Insurance pollc es
va r ous

nsurance companies

toward payment of eta ms are
also quoted tterent
So don t make the costly m s
ta ke of discover ng such facts
about your home coverage too

ta te Consult an rndependent
agenl We help you p an the
coverage thai proJects you
best We place ot w th one of
lhe several compan es we
represent And of ot comes to a
eta rn we ~e on your sode
We have a free booklet How
To Avoid Costly Mostakea In
Home Insurance
that you
may fond very helpful Just
come on call or drop us a tone
for your copy

~f0

--~z.

Wolham D Cholds

DOWNING-CHILDS
AGENCY, INC.
Middleport Oh10

Henry Block has
17 reasons why )UU
should come to us
for income tax help.
Reason 12 Our people have been
spectally tramed
and keep
abreast of all the latest tax laws We
will do our best tn prepanng your
return And then we'll carefully
check It for accuracy

ZENITH
COLOP TV

•

WHITE 'IV
eSfFREO
THE INCOM! TAX I'IOPL!

OHIO

Easy Terms 1
Free Delivery'

a~e

the same And th$ att tudes of

eBLACK &amp;

NEWELL'S SERVICE STATION

GMAC FINANCING
Pomeroy
T1U!,M ~

C e elan d a Ch ca go
Los Ange es a Hous on
Phoen x a Po and

All tires In stock
at catalog cost pnces.
Most sizes 1R stock.

way of Dong Business
Tll6

NEW YORK (UP!)
In
diana the last of the un
be atens stood out even lurther
among the college crowd today
when ot receoved unarumous
acclamation as the No I learn
m the nation
The HooSiers stretched theor
record to 18-0 woth a paor of
easy v1ctoroes last week and on
Monday the 40 votmg mem
hers of the Unoted Press In
ternational Board of Coaches
showed theor approval by
awardmg lndoana aU 40 lorst
Un
place nomuoations
Makmg the task of the
selectors even easter was the
fact that the next lhree teams
on last week s ratongs all got
heat last Saturday
UCLA which was second
lost to Notre Dame 84-78 on
na !tonal televoswn and dropped
to fourth place m the latest
rankings Loo!Sville remaoned
thord after suf!erong ots forst
defeat of the season 65-59 to 2
Bradley and Maryland fell 3
four notches to eoghth after '
losong two games by a total of 16'
four pomts the last one a 6!kl6 7
decosion to North Carolina
;
North Carolma State South 20
ern Callfornoa and Kentucky

TIRE SALE

Karr &amp; Van l.irutt
Open Evenu~gs

o 2

Pro Standings

Hoosiers
•
unanimous

~

•1995

m 5)42

ev

W n eb renner 1 3 5 Raw ngs
0 2 Arnold 4 3 1 m M ch 1 o 2

Omaha Neb and work as a
representative lor the black
owned Commumty Bank of
Nebraska whoch he helped
organoze He also saod he would
like to do some work on
broadcastong whoch he has
handled for the last few years

lree throw to push Wilmington
to a 31 18 lead and the Quakers
were well on front the rest of
the way
Urbana now 6-10 was paced
by Broan Boysel with 18 poonts
And on the Queen City Five
men scored on double fogures to
spark Cinclnnato on the last half
to a 76-65 won over Loyola
despote the 20 poonts and 10
rebounds credited to the Chlca
goans Ralph Vallot
The host Bearcats headed by
Broan Wolhams woth 14 points
led 37-35 at the end of the close
first half and then s]liii"Wd
away to a 64-57 lead with 4 26
and again jumped to a 74-59
margin woth I 36left to assw-e
their 11th wiri in 16 starts
Loyola now os 8-7 overall

MASON FURNITURE

27 Sycamore St. Gallipolis
Ph. 446.0303

HERMAN GRATE
773 5592
MAS'lN W VA

Open 91o 6 Weekdays. 9 5 S.turday
No AppoJntment Necessary

�Conservatives looking
toward new party Was~gton
Wmdow

Editorial comment,
opinion, features
a 1nandate for power
Inflation no rC'pr sents a grcft er th c
ownersh p of mdustr) a nd the

o aU S conorl)

~n

ere I on pr1v a eo nv!.' tor

on pet t \e market) lace than d I the severe and

r pphng

depressoon of the 1930s Tl e masso c une nploynocn l nd busoness collapse of he early a nd n od dle
30s ga\e rtse o pub 1 support for a ew ancJ ac ve role for the federa l government m the econo me
aflaors of tl e countr) 11 e problcr of uncn ployll)e nt ""' f r llv settled b Woold W II and
after the \\ar the rna ntenance of a h gh leve l of emp O)ment became a perman ent fe leral
respons bIt) VJrlue of tl&lt; E 1 ployn t i\cl of 946 In lie nearly "0 )ears sonce that t m the
rol~ of govern 1 ent n a mult tudinous rnnge of domes t c soc al se v ce programs h s I tera ll}
ex ploded fhe ma ll 1st of nfiat on has been felt sotce Uos dra oalll change n the rol e of Ihe

fede-ral go\E:"rnn ent
H stm call nfla tlon has not been a compan on of eco o Jc growth n An enca Many hings

contr buted to relot e procc sta b ill for 140 l eao s foom 1800 through 1940 Ene gy was ch ap Its
appl cat on to mdustr al production \\as be ng made on an e'oer broader scale and product v tv v..as
mcrea s ng Tl e efflctenc\1 of elecl Jc po"c ge eJat11g st&lt;1tJ.or s fo

exampl~

nc cased

e~p1dly

stze
Now !he p clure has raditally c1 anged Demand for many thongs has outrun supply for a
\arlet) of reasons Years of governmen deftc t spendmg has contr b t€d m a maJor v.ay to m

With

cr eas td 1 o

e~

su p) I e:;

~nd

pressure on p1 ces (_realer aff luence n otl er nat ons has put more

pressure on '"!able suppl es of rav. maleroals U S de nand for petroleum products f 1
ou trunn ng do nesloc supply has g ve n a sharp boost to the sea c fy and resultong hogher proces of
energ} Federal regula to v action restr ct ng U S petroleum p oduct on 10 \ anous wa) s con t nues
to aggra\ate this s luation
But the shoft n U S econom c and poht calfo tunes appears loco nc de closely \\llh ll e fedeoat
goverrunent s assumploon of responsob I ty for full enp O)menl and other socoal goa ls Full
empiovment polocy means !hat when the econon oc slo vs then federa l actwn - usually n the lorn
of budget del c Is os tr ggered to get the economoc back on an upward lr tck and reduce unen
ploymenl Now what w II the public dec ode rega oding nflaUon WII ots control also be made a
prtmaf) obi gatoon ol goverrunent JUSt as n !he 30s when t came to be accepted as a federa l dutv to
maontaon hogh levels of employment If government os to assume the burden of conlrolhng n
flatoon as a subsl tute for cotizen sell restra nt the pressure w II gradually ncrease for the most
strongent type of \\age and proce control and ra t onong
ProJectoons are now runnong toward a federa l defocot of $10 to $30 b lloon on !oscal 1976 The
subsequent effect on !he process of mflaUo n as well as on pub! c demand tha t the government do
something to correct ot would be strong and urunedoale
ln the shorter run some see the Spring of 1975 as a dangerous per od Inflatoon may st II be
romnong at 6 to 8 percent But woth lhe economy on slow bell and uncn ployment rates hogh the
congressoonal mood to oncrease federal spendmg woll be dommant and cons dered benefo coallo the
econom) If aneconom1c upturn 1s st1mulated w th nflat on runnmg at a startmg pomt of 8 percent
some predict that t could easoly reach 15 or 20 percent woth n a year or less Presodenl Food facong
a 1976 elect on m ght be hard put to avo d scuttl ng the fr ee eoonon v n favor of wage and pr ce
controls and rauon og also
As thugs now stand !he overwhelmong maJorlt) of the Amer can people are more concerned
about ordiHloon than !hey are about anyt hing else and lhal oncludes employn ent It would seem that
U ere \\Ould he a qual It) of leadersh p avaolable somwhere on the col ntry that could use the near
unarumous publ c worry about mfJation to ga m ba ckmg for a move away from the scenano

descnbed above Neother party oow has a mandate Nettheo one I as a clearly-defoned progo an
whoch the pub! c can support But by 1976 the Iones may be drawn 1 ha t year on the poll ng booths
the An1encan people may well gove a real mandate to the next Pres dent and Congress to eother
fully embrace the concept of a centrally-controlled econom) woth all ts restroct ons and
lrustratoons or gove back to the people some of both the power and the pa or of freedom
It co old go eoth er way As events f II the pages of hostory for 1975 the shape of the futu re &gt;~Ill
begon to emerge from the m sts of conjecture

DR. LAMB

•

Still no cure for stroke effects
ByLa .. renceE Lamb MD
DEAR DR LAMB - More
than a ) ea r ago I suffered a
mass I\ e stroke and hea rt at
ta ck Toda) I am sloll
paralyzed on n y lert sode Mv
left ar n and left leg reft se to
funchon so I can tot walk and
cannot bend my elbow I take
blood tho mer p lis for Ill) heart
and all man er of ' lam ns
1 h ch are to hea I n 1 JO nts
Iron the ots de o ot
Can \OU suggest any other
remed es to ttd me of

n,

paral) s s Wo old h oo noents
and salves help to I mber my
JO nts
DEAR READER - It would
certaonly be " onder! ol I there
were a \\BY to sohe the type of
problem -vou have When 1
stro ke causes parahs1s It

means that the bra n cells that
controlled the mo-ement have
been damaged or destroyed
The leg mo\cs wher \ OU
want t to move because of a
complex electr ica l circUit The
ner. e to and from the muscles
n ) our legs all plug nto a

ce ntral S\lllchboarct n the
bra n When o oI terallv b r 1

out the covnect o s on the
sw tchboa rd the c reo it no
longer work s Those con
nections m the sw tchboard are
votal bra n cells onvolved n the
mo\ ements

Bra n

cell s

ca nn ot

regenera te A cut nerve m the
arm can grow woth tome bo l

cells on the bra n cannot be
replaced There s some en
cot rag mg \\Ork demonsh atu g
U e aboh l) of olhco bra n cells
to take ovco the S\\llchboard
functoon In olher words ll e
cells that osed to handle J osl
the tnfor na t 0 1 ft om Ue a m
ma\ be able to also handle ll e
nformat on fron the left leg
In these mstances a re t trn to
f onctoon os possoble We ca n
do tlus 1 et on humans The
nearest th ng to that be ng dote
s reeducal ng people to speak
wI en the) have lost t1 eor
speech !rom a stroke The
br ng hlerall) develops a ne\1
speech center wa lh tu1e
pat ence and nlt ch pract ce
Yo u- sfon llostrales "hv
strokes n 1st be pre\ coted f
at all poss oble The san e
dtsease U ut cat ses t eart at

phance hogh h!' saod
Jacobson 51 who remern
hers when ) ou couldn t see
vour hand 10 front ol 'our fa ce
on &amp;ame mones when he
started work back on 1948
addressed the openmg sessoon
of a Unoversoty ol Cincmnati
workshop deSigned to unprove
the health and safety of coal
and ool rrune " orkers
The workshop has attracted
75 scientists from across the
country and Europe
Jacobson encouraged the
SCientists to unprove on the two
best known ways of controlling
dust on rrunes --soakmg seams
of coal woth \Hter and ven
tilation
Also he saod government
mspectors must contmue to use
clout by showong rrune owners
ot will be to thetr econormc
advantage on the long rom to
spend money on controlling
dust instead of sufferong heavy
fines for non,compliance
Jacobson saod taxpayers also
would reap the benefit of such
tight regulation
The feder al government
now pays out $53 milbon per

cans for Freedom are sponsor

ng a pol tical action co n
ference Feb 13-16 to venllheor
unhapp ness woth !he maJOr
partoes and d scuss the
possoboi ty of form ng a
nat onal Conservative pohtlcal

party
The odea ts not new bul I ke
discussoons of reahgnong the
Democrats and Republ cans
nlo deologocall) pure parties
of the r ght and left nolh ng
much has come of ot Swolchong
pol tical partoes s no problem
for ordinary cot zens but most
po l t cans seem to rega rd ll on
the same level or worse than
\\ofe-swappong
Smart conservatives on both
maJOr parties know thos but
there sl!ll ts renewed onlerest
on the odea ol settong up a lhord
party on the r ght There are
several rea sons for this not the
least of whoch s the fee long of
both
Republican
and
Democratic conserva toves that
lheor parl!es have been taken
over by hberals
Democrats on the roght have
been dosappoonled by theor
faolure to gam party control
after the hberal wong led ol to

COLUMBUS (UP! ) - The
Ohoo Genera l Assembly recon
venes on full swong today woth
the questoon ol a $40-per pupol
oncrease on state school subso
dies uppermost m the law
makers mmds
House Democrats are tryong
to push tbrough a $91 moll on
supplemental approproatoons
boll to fonance the oncrease and
th e House Fonance Commotee
woll meet to doscuss the
measure today proor to an II

am floor sesston

one wants to be dosa bled as
IOU kn ow
Varoous exercoses heat and
phys cal therap) can do a lot to
prevent f orlher loss of !unction
n son o cases after a stroke
These methods can also help
some n lea rmng to use ne"'
mt scles to Impr ove body
fton ctoon B ot these treatments
ca n l replace the damaged
bram cells
Salves and ltn ments mav
n ake yow- muscles feel better
bt t don l expect them to solve
1 our bas c pr oblem
The
votamo s n av be helplul to
o 1 nta n good nutrot on foo
vo 1 but the) \\ On t do anyth ng
fo the damaged braon cells
!hat control \Our arm and leg
e tl er
Inc odentall\ n some strokes
people ltave
ten porar)
parahs s Uat clears as the
I tiaJ S&gt;~ ellong O( the damaged
bra n cells dosa ppear and the
f mction of the rema mng I ve
cells IS rett rned So no one
sho ld despaor about a stroke
onto! after a perood of tome has
lapsed to permo! It II recover)

Democrats maontaon the
school Bid boost os needed to
help fmancoally-troubled dis
trocts but Republicans have
opposed the proposal on
gro unds ot would perpetuate
uneve n dostr buloon of the
money
Repubh cans were goven a
weekend to prepare amend
ments but Democrats oon
trolling !he coommttee may
force the legoslation through
anyway There may be an
amendmen l to base an) substdy on crease on the new school
fltundatoon formul a to be
wrotten later thos year
If approved by the coommt
lee the boll would be ready lor

noonlh for black lung beneftts
he saod Basocally black lung
comes !rom dust and by con
trollong the dust were gomg to
keep a lot of people healthoer
and save a lot of money
It s tne\1table lbat you re
go1ng to get dust when you np
coal!rom the earth he added
but 11 s not onevotable !hat this
dust must hit the rruner
It can be prevented provtded we somehow don t get to
thinkong that we need coal
more than people

WAIVERS ASKED
ARLINGTON Tex (UP! )The Texas Rangers asked
waovers Monday on Duke Sims
33 a Journeyman catcher who
spent II years on the maJor
leagues woth Cleveland Los
Angeles Detroot tbe New York
Yankees and Texas
General Manager Dan
0 Broen S81d the club had three
other catchers on the roster
oncludong Jun Sundberg Bill
Fahey and Ron Pruitt

disaster on 1972 and GOP
conservatives feel they were
betrayed by Rochard Noxon and
disregarded by Gerald Ford
especoa lly on his selection of
Nelson A Rockefeller to be
VIce presodenl
But what real!) ontrogues

other conservatives hope for a
new day are not new Public
opomon analysts have been
gettong sumlar conservative
readings for years on broad
questoons ol odeology but at the
same tome gettong liberal

many conservatn.es ts the
r esu lts of recent natwnal

problems of domesti c and
foreogn poUcy are raosed
Albert Cantrill and Charles
Roll Jr on theor 1971 book
The Hopes and Fears of the
Ameroca n People discussed
thos contradiction
Amerocan public opuuon
often operates on two levels
sunultaneously and frequently
on a rather schozophrenoc
lashion they saod They coted
a study by the Institute for
International Social Research
which showed that the Amero
can public generally demon
strates bas oc conserva ttsm
when confronted woth an
odeologocal ossue but at the
same bme res ponds more
Uberally when confronted woth
an operational lSSUe
The onstotute found for
example that while a maJoroty
ol the pubhc agreed that the
federa l government os onterfer
ong too much on state and local
matters when the questions
got down to specifocs such as
school aod and compulsory
medocal msurance the public
was overwhelmingly liberal
on favor of an activist federal
goverrunent

pubhc opuuon polls showong
!hat a ma Jor ty of Amero cans
odenlify themselves as con
servataves
Wrotmg n theY AF magazone
New Guard bolh Sen Jesse
Helms R N C and Lee Ed
wards a former rude of Sen
Barry Goldwater . note that the
Gallup Poll found last year that
Ameri cans chose a conserva

love ra ther than hberal label
for themselves b) 36 to 26 per
cent And when the 36 per cent
undecoded group was asked a
secon,d tune to choose the
conserva t veplural ty rose to a
59 per ce nt ma roroty
Helms says he beheves the
people of enough of us work
hard enough woll choose a
conservative party and Ed
wards whole raton g the
cha nces of esta bhshm g a
success lul thord party as
unpro bable does see the
possoboloty of creatong a con
servatove pohtocal for ce that
could mfluence the exiSting

parties
The possoble catch on thos os
that the same poll results that
gove Helms Edward s a nd

answers

when

spectflc

Clark's 'Frozen World'

$40 hike opening at Rio Grande
high on
agenda

tacks also ca uses strokes No

Black lung control hegins at mines
CINCINNATI UP!l - The
war agaonst black lung dosease
must be mtens1loed at ts
source -4usty coal mmes a
veteran mme mspector told an
onternatoonal workshop on
rruners health Monday
Mw-ray Jacobson ol the
lederal governnent s Monong
Enforcement and Safety Ad
muustratoon saod a total
enforcement and educatoon
effort was needed to prevent
thousands of mmers from
contractmg pneumOC&lt;lruosos black lung disease
Ja cobson co mpl aone d
compliance woth a federal Ia"
mandating no more than two
mlligrams of dust per cuboc
meter of aor had recently
slopped from 94 per cent to 92
per cent
In the past year the number
of coal mme operating sec
lions has mcreased from about
2 900 to 3 200 saod Jacobson
W1th the mcreased demand
and mcreased pr1ce of coal
we ve had a lot more momng
operations start up
'Thos makes 11 more unpera
tiv• ~'!an ever to kl!ep com--

B) ARNO'LD B SA WISLAK
WASHINGTON UP !
Amencan conservatives con
Vlnced that they are beong
shortchanged by !he maJor
pollica l partes gather on
Washongton next month to
consoder go ng onto busoness for
lhemselves
The Amer can Conservative
Umon and the Young Amero

a floor vote m tile House
Wednesday or Thursday It

would then be sent to the
Senate
The Senate Fonance Coommt
lee has been holdmg hearongs
on the same bill and should be
prepared to act once the House
clears the measw-e Senate
Prestdent Pro Tempore Olover
Ocasek D-Akron has saod he
wants the boll passed as soon as
possoble--al least by March I
To avood crotictsm the House
may onsert a proVISion makong
the funds available only if
there are suff1c1ent revenues
House Democrats have
already tnm med the $91
milloon out ol former Gov John
J Golhgan s recom mended
budget to spend early on the
schools
State revenue experts saod
Ute state-IS runnmg at least $91
mo!Uon ahead of schedule on
tax collectoons
The Senate Transpoo tation
Coommttee has set a hearmg
for today on legislation extend
mg by SIX weeks the perood for
usmg studded snow tires
The Senate Ways and Means
Coommttee will hear testunony
Wednesday mornong on
legoslatoon tmplementlng a
homestead exemptoon for
totally and permanenUy
disabled persons A simlar bill
will receove a hearmg Wednesday mornong on the House
Ways and Means Conunittee
Also Wednesday mormng
the House Energy and En
v1ronment Commottee w1ll
begmltearongs on a paor of bllls
earmarking the severance tax
on rrunerals for reclamation
and pluggmg abandoned oil
wells

RIO GRANDE - Rio Grande
College an d R o Grande
Communoly College w II offer
the 13 part Natoonal Ga llery of
Art C vohsa t on color folm
ser es on the college campus
begonnmg Wednesday
One I lm w II be shown each
Wednesday at 2 50 p m on
Ann ' ersary Hall III and at 8
p m on the Student Center The
fors t folm os ti lled The Frozen
World All showmgs are free
and open to the publoc
Kenneth Clark author and
narrator of the Covolosatoon
film seroes has been awarded
the Nat onal Gallery ol Art s
Medal for D ston guo shed
Servoce to Educahon on Art
Cnohsatoon
a 13 part
color folm se roes traces the
cultural !ole of Western man
fr om the fall ol the Roman
empore through the 20th cen
tury focusong on the arts
musoc hterature and hostory
Smce Its American premiere a t
the Nat onal Gallery n the fall
of 1969 lhe entire sen es has
been shown nearly a hundred
bmes and has drawn m ore

than 275 000 voewers
Lord Clark has had a long
and d stonguoshed career of
serv ice

to scholarsh p and

KENNETII CLARK
educatoon on art servong as
dorector of the Naloonal
Gallery London )1934 45)
Slade Professor of Fone Arts
Oxford Umversoty ( 1946-50 and
1961-62) chaorman of the Arts
Counc I of Great Bntaon
(1953 )62 ) charrman of the Arts
Counc I of Grea t Brotaon
(1953)60) and Is the author of
numerous books and lelevoswn
folms on art

Blood suh center
now in business
HUNTINGTON W Va
The formal operatoonal
operung of the Keystone Blood
Sub-Center on Parkerspurg on
January 13 opened a new era on
blood bankong for West
Vorgoma and the tro-sta le area
Tro-State Red Cross Blood
Center
Admo no s tr atove
Dorector Roy L Thomas saod
the Blood Center has long
been aware of the ncreased
need for addotional lacohties
and th s sub center os a
necess ty 10 order to best serve
the area because ot woll be
responsove to lhe local needs
Travel hme for shoppmg bloods
can be reduced greatly by
stocking the sutH:enter for
dostrobuhon
The Ke);slone Blood SubCenter 1603 Beaver St was
dona ted to the Red Cross
throug h the benevolent gift of
the Keystone Fund Inc and

Veterans Memorial Hospital
Admotted
Jaunota
Freder ck Rae one Mathe
Warner Guysville Edward
Buf!tngton Pomeroy Sybol
Greene Hartford Sharon
Covert Pomeroy Wesley
Clark Racone Worley Halev
Middleport Helen Thompson
Moddleport
Dale Queen
Albany Theresa Spencer
Pomeroy Jason Reynolds
Pomeroy
Discharged - Jayne Ritchie
Lewos Smoth Ca rl Gheen
Moldred Fowler Susan King
Esther Barker

has been operatmg as ol!oce
headquarters for the blood
program several months
However the center IS now
open lo!i:..donors Hours woll he
announced
Accordong to Thomas this
ce nt er woll also be the
dtstrobutton pomt lor blood to
hospotals on th s area For
merly all blood was distrtbuted
through the Tri-state Blood
Center on Huntington whoch
serv es approxoma tely 80
hosp tals 10 the 38 counties of
West Vorgonoa Ohio Kentucky
and Vorgonoa Dostrobutton woll
be maontamed on a Iove-da y
week basos between the hours
of 830 am to430pm

HAWAIIAN QUAUFIERS
CORONA Calif (UP! )
Pete Brown of Los Angeles
fored a f1ve-under-par 67 at
Corona National GoU Course
Monday to lead qualifiers for
Thursday s Hawauan Open
Brown led a list of 31 golfers
who qualified for t11e PGA
tournament QualifYutg was
held here and at Ontario
National Golf Course
Trailing Brown at Corona
were Marty Fleckman Rafe
Botts and Monte Kasen wtth
four-under 68s
Leading qualifiers at Ontario
were Gary Sanders Bob Risch
Bobby Walzel and Bill Rogers
With three-under-par 68s
Bobby Wadkins brother of towregular Lanny Wadkms finished next at Ontario woth a 69

Mason County

By Alma Marshall
NEW HAYEN - Mr and Mrs Tom King are the new
operators of Kings Country Kitchen on New Haven This old
established restaurant buamess os now on new hands It was
lormerly known as Goheen s Country Kitchen Mrs King ls the
fonner Pauletta Randolph daughrer of Mr and Mrs Paul
Randolph Letart and Mr King os the son of Mr and Mrs J R
King Poont Pleasant
Thursday was the forst day of business and ot reportedly was
good Many ot us like to eat out occasoonally but how handy this
place woll be Best of luck to theor venture
SPEAKING OF VENTURES - thos younger generation has
a lot of get up and go-one does not like to wrore about one s own
lam•ly but rust an illustrahon after movong to Lexmgton Ky
my youngest daughter Jayne Turner Smith decoded to go to
school and take up selling real estate It sounded great but I
dectded she would never leave her family to do thos After
reading some of the material she needed to learn before taking
an exam I fully decoded woth two children she didn t have the
tune to learn all that Well she studied the law learned the
contents of one book from cover to cover studied up on math and
a lot ol extra materoal provoded and you know what - she
passed and has a hcense to sell real estate m Kentucky One
never knows
LEXINGTON Kentucky os a beautiful City It has a lot of
recreation for young people For a small sum the children can
have swllllllllllg ballet and acrobatics lessons The City provides
party of the money to finance these wonderful projects for the
youth
MASON - The Mason Homemakers ExtensiOn Club at Its
meetmg on Tuesday at the home of Mrs Richard Gilkey at
Clifton diScussed making pillow tops for the Natoonal Convention
which will be held on Morgantown on 1976 serving an alumni
banquet and many other subjects Mrs Dorothy Queen
presodent presrded
The club year books were distributed and paid for and
lessons for thos year were discussed Mrs Cecil Snuth was m
charge of the lesson which had been taught at a lesson training
meetmg by Carl Cook Her subject matter was Household
Equopment - Its Care and Repau
At the operung of the meetmg Mrs Elmer VanMeter was m
charge of the devotoonals Her theme was Strength and Strong
Shoes Scripture Matthew 6th Chapter and 25-32 verses The
club gave the Pledge of Allegiance aoo an opeoing song
Mrs Queen appointed Mrs Roberta Young and Mrs Evelyn
Stewart as cochaorwomen of the alumm banquet A card of
thanks was read from Mrs Helen Williams for the flowers the
club sent on sympathy due to the death of Mrs Williams
husband Bill
Mrs Roberta Young and Mrs Evelyn Stewart were appointed
to see about gettmg flowers on behalf of the club tloroughout the
year and the leader remonded the group of lesson leaders
trauung meeting on January 29 Mes George Carson IS lesson
leader for February
The group also diSCUSsed theor cornmuruty project of planting shrubs at the fore station A reading by Mrs Lester Foreman
relating to her Helping Hand Club was read Mrs Landon Smith
closed the meeting with prayer
The hostesses Mrs Uoyd Wolliams Mrs Richard Gilkey and
Mrs Laurene I..ewos sei"Vl!d refreshments to Mrs Landon Smith
Mrs Dorothy Queen Mrs Elmer VanMeter Mrs Cecil Smith
Mrs Roberta Young Mrs Evelyn Stewart Mrs Matilda Noble
Mrs Lawrence Roush Mrs Sarah Willis Mrs Laura Johnson
and Mrs J Marshall
MASON - The need for SWllllllliJig lessons for all youths and
adults os emphasozed m this true story by MUiard Gress of
Bellalre Ohoo formerly of Mason
He saod he learned to swom at the age of eight and swam the
river at age 11 at the locatoon where the Pomeroy brodge now
slands Later on life hiS ablllty as a good swtmmer helped him
save three boys from drowrung
Here IS his true story which occurred many years ago m the
town of Mason
TALE OF A PAST TRAGEDY
The sun beat down excessively on the gllstemng ralls of the
B&amp;O Railroad as a doubleheader freoght tram pulled by two
engmes passed through the town of Mason the smoke from theor
stacks sworling to the ground
Mr Mumaw stood m front of the Ed Bletner store talking to
Grandpaw (Cap) Rowley his horse tied to a hitching post waiting
to deliver some groceroes to folks up on back street It s going to
ram sBid Grandpa look at that smoke crawling along the
ground
Sure os Cap my rheumatism IS acting up pretty bad
today
The town loafers were as usual under the big maple tree on
Eddoe Myers corner and-spent their time cutting up his picket
renee
While over by the depot three kids watched the tram as 1t
disappeared around the bend near Clifton Two of the klda Ira
Zerkle aoo Rex Mason started over towards Sam Roush s
deliverybarn thethirdkld Mlllard (MIII) Gress said See you
later Tex I gotta go down and help brother Carl cut wood for the
bakery
Accordong to Gress this was the last tune he saw his froend
Rex (Christy Bleiner of Mason' reports thst he made the large
brock oven where the Gress baked the goodies they sold)
Mr Roush kept a number of horses and rented them out to
anyone who needed transportation (thls was before the days of
many automobiles In fact there were only two automobiles m
the town)
Rex and Ira would help Paul Roush wash the bug111es and
they were always on noce shape That particular day they decided
to take one of the vehicles down to the river and give it a good
going over Paul smother was m the year nearby when Paul told
his mother that Rex and Ira were going to help him wash the new
buggie He reportedly told hos mother thst they were gomg to
drive down to the raver
His mother IJIIld Don t take those young colts Paul She
warned the boys to be careful
They drove off Ira sat on the seat wtth Paul Rex hung on the
back end They drove down the cobble stone revee The river was
low had 11 not been perhaps the tragedy would not have happened The water Willi muddy About 15 feet out from the water s
edge was an offset of SIX feet at the end o1 the pavement Paul
drove the horse drawn vehicle straight intending to make a
corcle He was a very good driver bit the frisky young colt&amp;
stepped off the end of the levee into the deep water They
parucked pawed the water and swam out farther into the
stream pulling the buggy over the offset The colts soon drowned
from the excess weight
Paul jumped off and swam to shore Rex and Ira could not
8WlJil and they lost their lives One hour later divers brought Ira
to the surface Rex repcrtedly drifted on down the river and one
month later a man from Clifton found his body floating near the
shore
This tragedy cast a spell of sadness on the 1ow11 for ID8IlY
days
All children said Gress should learn to sw1m
CLIFTON - The Friendship Class of Clifton United
Methodist Church is still taking orders for pocketbooks made o1
~augahyde Mrs Harrison Robinson Jr of Clifton hu many
Styles and colors to pick from Her phone nwnber is 7'13-6716 or
callMn Tom Taylor '1'13-6177 or 7'13-6781 Mn Claude FIBber

"if

PER80NAUI ME!mON

were

Rev
Mrs Rankin Roach ~ RaftiWWood
Friday
evening ano Saturday guests ~ his lrotber lnd wife Mr llid
Mrs Robert Roach and DIS in M8l1011 and tifr and Mn Robert
Roach were business vlsltm In ~ Friday

'

I

Players clear Catlett of racial charges

News Notes

CINCINNATI (UP!) - Charges of alleged racoal
discrumnation leveled agamst UruHrsoty of Conconnati
basketball coach Gale Catlett are not valid the entire II
man team declared Monday
The players some ol whom had perhaps uruntentoonally
sparked the ossue earlier this month rushed to del end theor
coach woth a statement desogned to resolve thos con
troversy
The team went on record as sayong ot had revoewed the
charges lorwarded by a black !acuity group and found
them not valid
The Umted Black Faculty Assocoation last Froday pre
sented umverSity olfoCJals and athletoc director Hondman
Wall woth a document contauung the allegations Specoltc
complamts were not publicly dosclosed
Wall surrunoned Catlett and the team ol love blacks and sox

whites to a meotong Sunday and doscussed the charges The
players then met provately and drew up a statement sogned
by all 11 players
Mtke Artis a black player who only last week was rem
stated to the team after beong suspended by Catlett read the
statement at Monday s weekly boosters club luncheon on
campus
We the II members of the 1974-75 Un ove rstty ol Cmconnati
basketba ll team have reVIewed the charges ossued by the
Uruted Black Facult) Assocoahon dated Jan 24 1975 and
have found them not valtd saod Artts
Resolving Contro\ ersy
By now reso lvmg thos controversy we would apprecoate
the support ol the faculty students alumm and the com
mum!) on achoevong our team goals added Arhs Tbe entu e
team was present except lor a couple at tendon~ classes

effort Uke that very long and
Indiana whoch led only 36-34 at
An eptdermc ol Upsetitis
that hit several hogh-rankong the half after Quonn Buckner
college basketball teams over hit a shot at the buzzer waoted
the weekend and shook up the for the mono to cool off a bot
top ten nearly clauned another The Hoosoers came out woth
\1Ctlm Monday mghl when tight pressong defense on the
lllinoos came out woth an second hall and slowly stret
aggressove forst half agamsl ched theor lead to none poonts
top-ranked Indiana But then Then Ilhnoos hopes came
crashong down when Ca r
there was the second half
We were struggling saod mochael louled out
Buckner had siX steals along
lndoana Coach Bobby Kmght
woth
hos 17 poonts for Indiana
followong a nervous 73 57
\1ctory - the Hoosiers 22 Scott May who fouled out woth
straoght regular season won about seven rrunu tes to play
They played a real aggressove held Rick Schrmdt to 10 poonts
zone and we couldn t establish and led the Hoosoers woth 19
any kind of rhythm Most poonts Nate Wolhams led
teams that have zoned up have llhnoos wtth 17 poonts
had to abandon ot early
lllinoos showed lndoana a 2-3
zone and on the forst half the
score was toed seven tunes as
the lllino shot a superb 65 per
cent from the field and Tom
Camuchael grabbed 11 re
bounds
ST LOUIS Mo (UP! ) But ot s tough to keep up an
When Bob Gibson hangs up his
glove at the end of the 1975
baseball season he won t JUst
be calling ot quots to potchmghe 11 be sayong goodbye to
baseball as well
The Dar~ Sentmel
I don t thonk I 11 stay on
DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
baseballm another capacoty
MEIGS MASON AREA
CHESTER L TANNEHILL
the man who has more career
Ex.ec Ed
\1ctoroes than any other pot
ROBERT HOEFLICH
C1ty Ed tor
cher
actove m the maror
'Pub shed da i y exce pt
leagues told a news conference
Sa urd a y by Th e Oh o Va l ey
Publ s h n g Co mpany
1
Monday I can t alford to live
Court St
Pomeroy Oh o
45769 Bus ne ss Off c e Phon e
on the salary of a coach and
992 2 56 Ed to a Phone 992
I m not interested in bemg a
2157
Second c ass p os age pa d a t
manager or executive
Pomeroy Oh o
Comong off a seroous injury
Nat o na
adver s ng
e pr ese n at v e
Bott n e
kept him out of much of
that
Ga agher n c
2 Eas. 42nd
Sf N ew Yo k N ew York
the 1973 season Gibby was 11
Subscr p on
ra es
13 on 1974 woth an ERA of 3 83
De vered by carr er whe e
ava tab e 75 cents pe week
What s worse he served up 24
By Motor Route whe e ca
er
home run balls many of them
serv ce not ava ab l e On e
month S3 25 By ma I n Oh o
damagmg
to the St Lotns
and W va One Year S22 00
S x m on h s
Sll 50
Thre e
Cardinals a club that came on
months
$7 00
El se wher e
woth
ots second consecutive
S x months
$26 00 year
S 3 50 three mon hs S7 50
second-place
diVJSoon finish
Su bsc r pt on p ce
n c udes
l'h games out of ftrst on the
Sunday T mes Sen ne
Nallonal League East

Elsewhere
second-ranked
North Carolma State wh pped
Duke 95 71 soxth ranked
Alabama beat Flonda 7U7
seventhranked Kentucky
edged Vanderbolt 91 90
Mochogan State clopped Nor
thw es tern 54 50 Houston
dumped Stanford 74-68 Ohoo
State defeated Purdue 93-a7
Mochogan mpped Wosconson 7573 on overtome Tennessee
ropped LouiSiana State 99-79
Aubw-n edged Georgoa ~
Furman whopped Davodson 9976 Carusms tnpped Buffalo
State 100 99 m overtome
Noagara heat JacksonVIlle 7876 on overtime Oregon romped
over Air Force 77-47 and New

puts an end to lhe contrO\ ersy

Uruted Black Faculty Assocoahon pres dent Mel\1n Posey
af ter learnong of the players statem~nt poonted out that hos
group was not necessarol) charg ng discronmoation JUSt
onvestogati ng whether there s val di ly ol such charges
Confuston over Ulterpreta t on of a meetmg between
Posey s group and four black players two weeks ago was
apparent
Posey saod player gr oevances came out of the sess on but
black player M ke Franklon saod l was JUSt a rap sessoon I
dido l th nk we ta lked about ra e al disc ron matoon

fomght

Indiana survives scare
By United Press International

Arhs "dded that the players d dn t wan t to be quozzed
furU er b) reporters on the matter Catlett also declt ned
comn ent referrmg quest ons to Wall
Thos os closed as lao as I m concerned sa od Wall Ac
cordong to the players !here os no val dot) to ol I hope thos

~

g.unes

Bucks take in coach's
message, dump Purdue

Th e Meigs Marauders
travel to Wellston and the
host
Eagern
Eag les
\\ aterford in area scholastic

Mexoco State beat Tulsa 7JH;4
Woth All Ameroca Davod
Thompson hot! ng 22 poonts and
freshman Kenny Carr notchong
21 North Ca rohna State easoly
beat Duke to gam a share of the
lead on the Atlantic Coast
Conference standings
Duke was paced by Bob
Fleoscher s 19 poonts
Thompson scored 15 of his 22
poonts on the second half as the
Wolfpack padded a 49-37 on
termissoon edge Carr s 21
poonts matched hos ca re er
high Other Wolfpack players
m double fogures oncluded Moe
Rovers woth 20 Monte Towe
wtth 16 and Phol Spence woth 10

Hod Been Concerned
However Franklon adrmtted there had been concern over
Jommy Webb a black player who was ondefonorely suspended
by Catlett ea rher lhos month fo r dlscophnary reasons
Wall sa d he had called the Sunday team meeting because
we needed to decode whether we had a problem or not
He saod Webb was not mentooned at !he meeting and there
were no complaonts !rom players about Catlett
Wall saod he had no hand on the players statement empha
s zed ot was drawn up by the players themselves and said
Arlos had requested to read tt pubUcly
Thos os a very seroous Sltuatoon added Wall Its bad to
have a s tuatoon hke thos on the midst of the basketball
season
Cinconnalo look a 1().5 record onto ots game agamst Loyola
of Chocago here Monday noght

basketball actoon tonight
The Marauders "ill be
gunning lor their second won
of the season \\hlle the
Eagles go f 1r win no three
Meogs only win of the

By UullL'Il Press International disputed last-second basket by
The coac h talked to the sophomore Larry Bolden
Buckeves and the Bucke) es Almost Unstoppable
Andreas was almost un
season " as a 79-60 \ erdt ct
got the message
over th e Rockets in the third
fhe coach was of course stoppable on the onsode as the 6ga me of the cam paig n
Fred Taylor And seruor for 7 225-pounder muscled his way
Eastern lost its Initial enward Boll Andreas saod the on for easy baskets He hot 12 of
counter to the Wild cats 57
message was
We d better 14 shots from the floor and was
also sox of sox from the free
come
to
pia)
51
In other action tonight the
And play !he Bucks dod aU throw !me
Bruce Parkonson Ge rald
Meags Ma raudu \ucstlers
the way to a 93-67 voctory over
Purdue to put Ohoo State team Thomas and Eugene Parker
go after their second win of
the season trav eling to
on a four way tie lor second each scored 12 poonts for the
place on The Bog Ten along Boolermakers now 5-3 m the
Nelsonville-York for a match
\\O lh Purdue M chogan and conference and I~ overall
"oth the Buckeyes
Bolden had 14 and Mark
M nnesota
Bayless
and Steve Wenner 12
Andreas scored a caree r hogh
each
for
the Buckeyes whose
30 pomts to spark Ohoo State to
!he voctory and make !he boggest lead woth 88-81 woth
Bucks 11 7overall and 5-3 on the 1 52 to go
Fred buolt a fore under us
loop
Purdue paced by semor saod Andreas I was late for
John Garrett woth 22 pomts and the pre-game meal and he
lreshman Walter Jordan woth chewed a bot
Junoor pivot Craig Taylor
21 led most of the lorst half the
added
We had a lottie
durmg !he Natoonal League boggest spread beong 3().23 with
meetmg at noon and the coach
playoffs
6 05 left
This year he would like to go
But Ohoo State scored the JUS! laod it on the !me
Coach Taylor saod he was
out a wonner both personally next seven poonts to tie the
and for the team Then saod game and ot was close the rest primarily concerned during
the man almost sure to be a of the half the Buckeyes takmg the meetings woth talkong
Hall of Farner I m ready to a 48 44 intermiss oon on a about team members helping
one another It s the easiest
qmt
thong on the world to ptgeon
hole rmstakes place the blame
and say somebody s error was
more of a cause for the loss but
N BA Slandmg s
that wasn t our idea
,
Bv Un ted Press Internal ona
Easte n Co nfer ence
We
looked
at
Saturday
s
At lant e D v i s on
films
agam
rust
a
littl•
and
w I pet g b
Bos on
33
4 702
pointed out what lack ol
Bu ff a o
3
7 646
2
movement can do to a ball
New Yo k
24 22 522
8
Ph a de ph a
19 29 396 14
club
Cent at D v s on
The Buckeyes will face In
w
pet g b
Wash ng on
35 3 729
diana leading the pack with an
C eve and
2'1 2:1 489
1
22 25 468
2 h 8-0 record Saturday mght m
all made lmpresSive advances Hous on
A I an a
2 29 420
s
St Johns Arena
tho s week The Wolfpack New 0 ec1n s 5 40 I
2B
Get Ninth Wtn
Western Conference
defendmg national champoons
M dw es t D v s on
In Wilmington Monday ntght
and No I on the early season
w 1 pet g b Fletcher Yates poured In 30
De r o
9 20 592
ratmgs clunhed back from Ch
cago
26 21 553
'1.
poonts oncludong 18 on the
fofth to second place the M lwau kee
'1.3 23 500
&lt;l
deciSive
forst half to spark
24 26 480 5
TroJans although odle last KC Omaha
Pac f e D v s on
Wolmmgton to a 77-62 win over
week moved up two notches to
w
pet g b
Urbana
for !he Quakers nonth
fifth and Kentucky climbed Go d en Sla e 30 7 638
Sea e
'l
26 44
9
won
on
18
starts
from loth to seventh
Po and
2 1 26 447
9
Yates
dropped on three
9 25 432
9
Alabama remaoned on sixth Phoen x
8 27 400
consecutive
field goals and a
L osAn ge les
place Arozona State fell one
Mondays Re sults
notch to nonth and LaSalle M waukee 1 7 New 0 eans OS
Tu es dav s Games
moved onto lOth place
A f anla a New Yo k

Gibson to say farewell

1975 turkey hunting
permits are available
Apphcatoons postmarked
ATHENS - The Dovosoon of before Marc h I 1975 woll not
Wildlife has announced that be accepted
2 000 pennots will be ossued lor
Addresses of the d!Sincl
the 1975 wold turkey huntong woldhfe offoces are Dostrocl
season Dates for th1s year s One 1500 Dublin Road
bearded turkey hunt are Aprol Columbus 43215 D stroct Two
28 through May 3 and May 5 952 Lima Avenue Fmdlay
through May 10 1975 A total ol 45840 Dos tnct Three 912
I 000 pennots woll be ossued Portage Lakes Drove Akron
each perood
44319 Dostroct Fourth 360 E
Dan C Armbruster Choel ol State Street Athens 45701
the Dovosoon of Woldhfe sa d Dostnct Fove 1076 Old
applicattons for pennots are Sprongfoeld Pike Xema 45385
now avaolable and may be The Columbus Headquarters
obtaoned from the DIVISion s address os Dovosoon of WoldUfe
Columbus headquarters and all Fountam Square Columbus
dostrict woldlife offtces
43224
Applications must be maoled
The 1975 turkey hunt area
and must be accompamed by a oncludes Adams Athens
check or money order for Galha Hockong Jackson
$10 50 Each hunter must Lawrence Meogs Monroe
subrmt hts own application Perry Poke Ross Scwto
and penno ts will he ossued on a Vonton
and Washon gton
forst-come forst-served basos Countoes
A vabd Ohoo hunting and
trappong license os requored on
addolion to a turkey huntong
Ttus Week s Speclol
pennot The bag lumt os one per
~

season

The two t1me Cy Young
Award Winner says he hopes
thmgs woll be better m 1975
when he woll toil for a slightly
smaller salary-an estunated
$140 000
It s not that 1974 was a total
loss G1bson dod become the
first National Leaguer ever to
strike out 3 000 hitters and he
established a maJOr league
record of 293 consecullve
slarting aSSignments gomg
back to Aug 31 1965 and still
on tact
But the man wtth the No ~
on his back who trudged out "'
the mound last year was not
the man who set a maror
league record tn 1968 woth an
ERA of I 12 or the man who set
World Seroes records woth 17
strikeouts on one game or the
man who ]lltched what he calls
his best game-an 11-0 no-lut
performance agamst Pott
sburgh on Aug 14 1971
Gobson s 1974 mark was ])is
forst under 500 sonce he began
potchong regularly for the
Cardinals m the early 1960s
He says he now IS ready to go
back to hos home town of

Fresh men
triumph
The Meogs Marauder fresh
men pullmg away from a 10-10
forst perood tie rolled to a 48-39
vtctor y over the Wellston
Rocket frosh at Morro~on
Gymnastum
The Marauders paced by
Chuck Follrod and Brent Ar
nold with 11 pomts each led at
mlermossoon 26-17 and 35-21
goong onto the !mal stanza as
coach John Arnott substituted
freely most of the game
The Marauders used a full
court press and fast break
offense to pull away on the thord
perood as the Meogs front-loners
shut out the vosotors until the
substitutes entered the contest
Rick Rapp and Tom Baker
led the Wellston attack wolh 12
and II pomts respectively
Thursday the Marauders
travel to Ironton for a battle
wolh the Tiger !rash
10 7 4 18--39
10 16 9 13-48

USED CARS .

*ellston
Meogs

70 CAMARO

WELLSTON (39
Bake 3
C.Ox I 1 3 W IS 2 2 6
Rapp 4~ 12 Ba rne tt 3 1 7
ME GS (48 W tte 2 I 5
Fol rod 3 5
Stanley 1 4 6

.5 11

Gum

V 8 auto

PS

2 o 4

Ha

bucket

seats console V roof and
sports m rJIIbrs

rou,l L keO\JrQuality

Po nts

400

293

28

270

ISO
60
45

8

86
8
72

3

8
0
0
9
7
4

00

N£W HAYIN W VA

U2 2525

CHESTER

N H L Stand ng s
By Unfed P ess nter nat ona
D v s on
w
t pts gf ga
Ph ad ph a 30 10 7 6 168 00
NY Ran ges 25 13 9 59 196 49
A l an a
2
9 9 5 1 36 38
NY s an de s 8
2 48 57 32
0 v s on 2
w I pi s gf ga
Van couve r
25 19 5 55 68 54
Ch cago
24 20 4 52 6
37
S Lou 5
8 22 7 43 49 69
M n neso a
? 27 6 30 22 96
Kansas( l y 032 5 25
7 20 I
o v s on J
w I J pts gf ga
LO S Ange les 27 a 3 67 64 10
Mon ea
'J7 9 3 67 227 140
P sbu gh
9 8 o &lt;iB 92 180
De o
2 26 8 32 33 163
wa sh ng on
4 .10 5 13 02 254
o v s on 4
w I I pi s gf ga
Buffa o
3 0 7 69 2
147
Boson
25 J 0 60 2 9 147
To on o
17 21. 7 4
62 93
Ca fo n a
2 30 9 33 38 99

Monday s Re sult s

SEO frosh
standings
SEOAl FRESHMEN
Team
W L
P
Gal po s
8 2 46 3
Loga n
8 2 460
A th ens
7 3 395
Waver y
7 3 402
Me gs
4 6 397
on on
3 7 325
ackson
3 7 324
We Is ton
0 10 253
TOTALS
40 40 301 9
Monday s resu ts
Ja ck son 42 Ga po l s 40
Me gs 48 Wellston 39
Logan 61 Athens 39
Wave ly 44
onton 26
Thursda y s games
L ogan a Ga l po s
Wave l y a A h ens
Me gs a f on ton
Jackson at Wei s on

OP
370
305
358
327

40
362
445
45
3019

LINE COACH
GREEN BAY Wos (UP!)Leon McLaughlon an assostant
coach woth the Detrool Lions
the past two years was named
olfensove lone coach of the
Green Bay Packers Monday
McLaughlin 49 IS the sev
enth assistant named by new
Head Coach Bart Starr Starr
srud one more offensive coach
would be named shortly

Bos on 3 K an C y 3 e
Tuesdays Gam es
M nn eso l a a NY sa n de s.
Del o a Sl L ou s
NY Ran ges a L os Ange es
Mon ea l a Van couver
WHA Stand1ngs
By Un l ed Pre ss lnt ernat onal
East
w
t pts gf ga
New Eng lnd 25 19 2 52 157 63
c eve and
924 2 40 26 47
Ch cage
727
35 152 78
nd anapo s 10 33 3 23 104 9
West
w I t pts gf ga
Houston
29 14 0 58 20
30

Phoen x
San 0 ego

23 18 6 52 163
23 9
1.7 49

a '13 '10 0
x Ba l more 3 29 3
Can ad an
w I I
Qu ebe c
29 6 0
24 9 2
To on o
22 6 2
Edmon on
Va n couve
2 21 2
M nneso

52
42

46 77 46
29 09 183

pfs
58
50
46

gf
92
93
51
4 36

ga
146
17
135
4

W nn p eg
8 2 2 36 56 14
x F a ne ll se t ansferred I om
M eh gan
Monday s Results
N e w E ng and 2 Cleve and 0
Tu esday s Games
M nneso fa a Ba l mo e
Phoen x a nd anapo s
Quebec a To on o
C eve and a t Ch cago
Hous ton a Edmon on
W nn peg a San D ego

Not all
home

insurance
policies
are aljke.
ou'll find out when
you have a claim.
No two Insurance pollc es
va r ous

nsurance companies

toward payment of eta ms are
also quoted tterent
So don t make the costly m s
ta ke of discover ng such facts
about your home coverage too

ta te Consult an rndependent
agenl We help you p an the
coverage thai proJects you
best We place ot w th one of
lhe several compan es we
represent And of ot comes to a
eta rn we ~e on your sode
We have a free booklet How
To Avoid Costly Mostakea In
Home Insurance
that you
may fond very helpful Just
come on call or drop us a tone
for your copy

~f0

--~z.

Wolham D Cholds

DOWNING-CHILDS
AGENCY, INC.
Middleport Oh10

Henry Block has
17 reasons why )UU
should come to us
for income tax help.
Reason 12 Our people have been
spectally tramed
and keep
abreast of all the latest tax laws We
will do our best tn prepanng your
return And then we'll carefully
check It for accuracy

ZENITH
COLOP TV

•

WHITE 'IV
eSfFREO
THE INCOM! TAX I'IOPL!

OHIO

Easy Terms 1
Free Delivery'

a~e

the same And th$ att tudes of

eBLACK &amp;

NEWELL'S SERVICE STATION

GMAC FINANCING
Pomeroy
T1U!,M ~

C e elan d a Ch ca go
Los Ange es a Hous on
Phoen x a Po and

All tires In stock
at catalog cost pnces.
Most sizes 1R stock.

way of Dong Business
Tll6

NEW YORK (UP!)
In
diana the last of the un
be atens stood out even lurther
among the college crowd today
when ot receoved unarumous
acclamation as the No I learn
m the nation
The HooSiers stretched theor
record to 18-0 woth a paor of
easy v1ctoroes last week and on
Monday the 40 votmg mem
hers of the Unoted Press In
ternational Board of Coaches
showed theor approval by
awardmg lndoana aU 40 lorst
Un
place nomuoations
Makmg the task of the
selectors even easter was the
fact that the next lhree teams
on last week s ratongs all got
heat last Saturday
UCLA which was second
lost to Notre Dame 84-78 on
na !tonal televoswn and dropped
to fourth place m the latest
rankings Loo!Sville remaoned
thord after suf!erong ots forst
defeat of the season 65-59 to 2
Bradley and Maryland fell 3
four notches to eoghth after '
losong two games by a total of 16'
four pomts the last one a 6!kl6 7
decosion to North Carolina
;
North Carolma State South 20
ern Callfornoa and Kentucky

TIRE SALE

Karr &amp; Van l.irutt
Open Evenu~gs

o 2

Pro Standings

Hoosiers
•
unanimous

~

•1995

m 5)42

ev

W n eb renner 1 3 5 Raw ngs
0 2 Arnold 4 3 1 m M ch 1 o 2

Omaha Neb and work as a
representative lor the black
owned Commumty Bank of
Nebraska whoch he helped
organoze He also saod he would
like to do some work on
broadcastong whoch he has
handled for the last few years

lree throw to push Wilmington
to a 31 18 lead and the Quakers
were well on front the rest of
the way
Urbana now 6-10 was paced
by Broan Boysel with 18 poonts
And on the Queen City Five
men scored on double fogures to
spark Cinclnnato on the last half
to a 76-65 won over Loyola
despote the 20 poonts and 10
rebounds credited to the Chlca
goans Ralph Vallot
The host Bearcats headed by
Broan Wolhams woth 14 points
led 37-35 at the end of the close
first half and then s]liii"Wd
away to a 64-57 lead with 4 26
and again jumped to a 74-59
margin woth I 36left to assw-e
their 11th wiri in 16 starts
Loyola now os 8-7 overall

MASON FURNITURE

27 Sycamore St. Gallipolis
Ph. 446.0303

HERMAN GRATE
773 5592
MAS'lN W VA

Open 91o 6 Weekdays. 9 5 S.turday
No AppoJntment Necessary

�•
'

.

r

•
4- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday. Jan. 28, 197~

Church holds
youth service

Generation Rap
By Helen and

~ue

Hottel

Youth night was observed
Sunday at the Laurel Cli!f Free
Methodist Church with Rev.
Morris Wolfe. Racine, as the
guest speaker.
Special music was prese nted
by a vocal trio fr om Point
Pleasant,
Brenda
and
Margaret Puttney and Addie
Wooten. They were joined by
Ricky Friend for a number .
Belinda Friend was announcer for the program with
Sharon Folmer as the song •
leader. Mrs . Wanda Eblin had

Parents Make Her Wheeze
Dear Rap :
My girl is okay until she goes home tQ see her folks , or her
mother gels on her case about something. Whenever she's
around her parents very long, Nancy gets a bad asth!Tlll attack.
Even when Ulere are no hard words, she's up tight. Next day, she
fighting for breath .
She's learned not to fight with them, as the docoor oold her
that nerves brought on wheezing . But I can tell every time her
mother has called her up to nag or "warn" about something. It's
a vicious cycle: her parents worry because she has asth!Tlll and
their worry aggravates it. They won't, or can't cluinge'
'
What would you suggest' - HARRY
·
Dear Harry :
If your girl can "learn not to fight with her parents," she ca n
learn more subtle turn-&lt;Jffs. In a few easy sessions, a counselor
may show her the art of "nonresponse," which is another term'
for my old stand-by: "Smile, nod, and do as you please." HELEN
Dear Harry :
Now that she is trying to break away from Mama, she may
feel guilty - and guilt, combined with resentment could bring on
the wheezing.
When she realizes, she is in charge of her own life, her
parents' overprotectiveness will no longer, affect her . (At least
tQ the point of asthma. ) - Sue
Dear Helen and Sue :
I just may try getting a gasoline credit card the way Sue did
- by signing my initials rather than my "feminine" first name .
For four years, I've been using my father's card and paying
the bills each month with MY checks. I'm 23 now, and I've a(&gt;plied for my own card from this gas company three times. I've
never even received the cow-tesy of a rejection letter!
I've been tempted to send them a photostatic copy of every
check I've paid them for the last four years, but it probably
wouldn't help. Never has a.check bounced or have I had a pastdue notice from other creditors, but I'm still - A FEMALE
WITHOUT A GASOUNE CREDIT CARD
Dear Credit-Cordless Females Everywhere:
We've heard from many of you, and the consensus is :
gasoline and oil companies are hard to crack, unless you're
married, or male, or well over 21.
Funny ... we haven't heard from ONE oil company executive
yet, defending or refuting these claims. We'd like proof that they
don 't discriminate against young, unmarried women, but so far
... well, silence condemns, doesn 't it? - HELEN AND SUE
Rap:
I'm disgusted with people like M.R.T. who wants a hymenrestoration for her daughter so she can "prove" virginity on her
wedding night. This new operation won't catch on, as you say,
Helen. Virginity doesn't auoomatically insure a successful
marriage. Loving, trusting, pulling !Qgether, accepting each
other's faults, these are so much more important than what
happens.pn the first night. Who cares whether she is or she isn't ·r
This mother is as phony as the operation . - NO PRUDE IN
FAIRFAX
Dear No:
Right on !
. This operation is far from "new ." It was quite popular back
mthe 1700. when Ew-eopean men placed high value on virginity;
but women, even then, didn't always conform. - HELEN AND
SUE

prayer, and the ushers were

Tom Souisby, Jim Le wis.
Wayne Leifheit and Ricky
Friend. Jeff Hillery gave
scripture from Psalm 41.
Singing "Love is Like a
Rolling River" were Rev.
Floyd Shook, Shirley Friend,
Diane Lewis, and Belinda
Friend. A guitar and harp
nwnber was played by Steve
Eblin, and there was music bv
the chu rch ch01r and th~
congregation.
Holzer Medical Center
Jolene Armbrister, Mrs .
Benny Baley and daughter,
Karolyn Brillhar t. Ruby
Bw-ton, Noah Clark, Rachael
Day , Jane Dheen, Reba
Hanson, Nolene Hatfield, Fred
Hulshorst, Lydia Hysell, Betty
Jewett, Kathleen Long, Okey
Longfellow, Donna Russell,
Winnie Shotts, Barbara Sllllth,
Eva Slllith, Gladys Smith, Mrs.
Daniel V·ance and son,
Christopher Wallace, Howard
Wells, Ronald Wilkinson,
Wanda Williams, Maude
Young.
(Births)
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Ed·
ward . Cornelius, a son,
Gallipolis; Mr. and Mrs.
Gerald Lee Williams, a
daughter, Wellston .

PTA discusses projects
Does your current auto in ·

surance provide you with

adequate protection? Are
you paying 'too much? Are

you over·lnsured? Are there
ways you could save money

on your Insurance? Bring

your pollcy to us today and
we'll answer these nuestlons
for you .

.......,=--

~
"'

REUTER·
BROGAN
INSURANCE
PH. 992·5130
107 Sycamore

Pomeroy

CHESTER - The purchase
of additional playground
equipment and a back curtain
for the stage area was
discussed when the Chesler
PTA met recently at the
Chester Elementary School.
The unit voted to pw-chase
disposable sheets for the sick
room. A report was given on
the membership contest with
the third grade winning first
place and the second grade
laking second place with the

most members.
Letters frotn the third and
fourth graders were read
thanking the PTA for carpeting.
John Reibel showed slides of
his recent trip to the Holy
Land . The pledge to the flag
and the teacher-parent prayer
opened the meeting. The room
count award went to the second
grade with the fow-th grade
laking second.

Miss Arlene Spurlock,
missionary of over 20 years in
Niger. Africa. was guest
speaker at a meeting of the
Loyal Women 's Class of the
Middleport Church of Christ
Thursday night.
Introduced by Miss Frances
Roush, class president, Miss
Spw-lock told of ·her life in
Africa as a missionary nurse .
She discussed the Moslem
religion which is predominant
there and related the experiences of three recent
converts to Christianity.
Miss .Spurlock wore a
costume which she brought
back when she returned on
fw-lough, a headdress of silver
coins, and a silver coin
ne ckla ce. She displayed a
leather bag and two dolls whicl&gt;
had been made by women in
the mission field she serves.
She was presented a personal
gift from the class.
Acco mpanying Miss
.Spurlock to the meeting was
her sister, Mrs . Ellen
DeWeese, Point Pleasant.
During the business meeting
officers for the year were in·

stalled. ln her ins tallation
ceremony, Mrs . Rose Reynolds
read a poem by Robert
Browning, gave each officer a
charge, and then presented
each one with a mini.quolable
plaque .
·
Installed were Miss Mildred
Hawley, president; Mrs.
Beulah Roush, vice president;
Mrs . Margaret Laliance,
secretary; and Mrs . Ida
Childs, treasurer.
Mrs. Reynolds recognized
Mrs. Martha Childs, teacher of
the class, thanking her for her
work in the church, and
presented her with a red velvet
rose.
Committees appointed were.
Mrs . Grace Prall, Mrs . Audrey
Swett, Mrs. Lula Mae Lynch,
dinners for bereaved families ;
Mrs. Pearl Reynolds, Miss
Roush, cards and flowers;
Mrs. Beulah Roush , Miss
Roush, Mrs. Swett, and Mrs.
Donna Russell, quilt sale; and
Mrs. Eleanor Lohse, shut-in
boxes.
Reported ill were Mr. and
Mrs. Walter (:rooks, Mrs.
Mary Meinhart and Mrs.
Russell.
Plans were made for a
covered dish dinner at the
February meeting with Mrs.
Pearl Reynolds tQ have the
program . Devotions to open the
meeting were given by Miss
Hawley who read poems from
a book of poetry by Helen
Steiner Rice and gave a prayer
for the New Year.
Refreshments were served
by the hostesses.

i;~· ~:;~-;;;;~::~

dstl~~:,~~:~.

F-LRo!Rryb LatB
. kn'
:-::
ev. o er uc ey, pas or
~
::~ of the Mayfield Heights
~
. By Charlene Hoeflich
:~l Chw-chin Cleveland, presented
· · slides of his trip 00 the Holy
"How to Get the Most for Your Food Money."
Land at the Friday night youth
That's the name of a booklet available from the Meigs
service at the Law-el Cliff Free
County Extension Office - free - and it's really an invaluable M thod. t Ch h
IS
urc .
e
guide for the homemaker.
To open . the service Miss
So pick up a copy soon.
Susan Fleshman had ~rayer,
The booklet prepared by the extension economists at Ohio there was a duet by Steve and
State University, begins by slating "the health, happiness and Beck , Eblin and the Free
·comfort of a family often depend on a food shopper's ability to
)
'
spend food money wisely."
So, happy homemaker, that puts the responsibility of stretchON DEAN'S LIST
ing food dollars while ITlllintaining high nutritional quality right
Edie Mees, daughter of Mr.
in your lap.
and Mrs . Malcolm Mees,
Making good food choices is not easy.
Pomeroy, made the dean's list
W1tat a family likes is important. If food is thrown in the for the winter quarter at
garbage because no one likes it, it isn't much of a bargain, now is Capital University, Columbus.
it? So cost alone doesn't always mean a good buy or a good diet. A chemistry major, she
Then convenience gets lots of attention these days, too. With received a 4. average. Miss
40 pet . of all homemakers working at jobs outside the home, and Mees is a sophomore.
caring for their homes as well, the ease with which food can be
prepared needs to be considered.
So, as you can see, there are things besides price which need .
SALE PLANNED
to be considered in determining whether an item is a good buy
A
rummage
sale will be held
and each homemaker mtlst decide for herself what is the mast
Monday, Feb. 3 at the Sacred
important and then guide her buying accordingly.
.
Heart
Chw-ch, Pomeroy, by the
Certainly nutritional value has to be considered, and a
Catholi
c Women's . .club
homemaker should learn some basic nutritional facts before
beginning at 9 a.m.
planning her family's meals.
There's the 2-2-4-4 rule ... Iwo or more serving of milk, two or
more of meat, four or more of fruits and vegetables, and four or
more of bread and cereal.
Tips from the "How to Get the Most from Your Food Money"
Include - Planning meals around grocery store specials,
stocking up on specials that can be used later, eliminating waste
by making leftov~rs into "planned overs," shopping alone, and
limiting impulse buying.

WORK SHOES
AND BOOTS
by Sheboygan

5" . 8" . 10''
heritage house
Your Thom MeAn Store

Middleport, Ohio

FROM BAKER'S BUDGET
SHOP .••
e3 'PC. BEDROOM SUITE. :........~ 138
e5 PC. DINETTE SET.................•58
e4 DRAWER CHESTS .................'38
eSOFA BEDS •••••.•••••••••••••• ;.....'88

DID YOU know that dry beans and dry peas are two proteinrich vegetables which are plentiful now and are way down in
cost?

But, reports the Ohio Food Market "outlook," dry beans and
peas need a little special treatment for storage. Once the
package is opened, keep the beans or peas in a tightly covered
glass, metal or plastic container that will shut out dust and insects. The storage area should be cool and dry.

Beaut iful fabrics. good coil spring construction.

HAVE A receipt you would like to share with ow- readers'
Send it to "Fun with Foods," The Daily Sentinel.

SONS VISIT
Weekend guest of Mrs.
Sylvia Carman and sons, Bruce
and Dannie, Longhollow Road,
were her two oldest sons
Ronald Carman and Gary
Carman and his two sons,
Donald and David, Columbus.

.
Belinda Frl nd
Introduced e. ,
presldent; Tom Soulsby, v1ce
prestdent; Becky . Eblin,
treasw-er; and Sherrie Clark,
secretary:
Followrng
his
slide
t f
R
B kl
presen a ton, ev. uc ey
presented. Rev. Robert Shook,
pastor: wtth a ptcture and a
w1dow s m1te brought back
from the Holy Land. Ushers for
the service were Jim Lewis,
Tom Soulsby and Wayne
Leifheit.

•ADMIRAL REFRIGERATORS •••••••~.199
SPECI.AL VALUES ON MATTRESS&amp;
BOX SPRINGs-ALL SIZES.

CLOTHING OFFERED
Free clothing day will be
held Thw-sday at the Salvation
Army headquarters, 115
Butternut Ave. , Pomeroy,
from 10 a.m. until noon. All
area residents are wel~ome.

BAKER FURNITURE

Miss Sandra Kay 1\uschel,
·bride - elect of Airman I.e

88~,

FEB.
14

IN A VERY SPECIAL WAY!

Michael Eugene McDaniel,
was honored recenUy with a
bridal shower at the Middleport Church of the Nazarene
parsonage.
Games were played with
prizes being awarded to Mrs.
J ohn McDaniel and Miss
Phyllis Davis. Mrs. Mary
Walburn won the door prize.
Cake, coffee and punch were
served with Mrs. Don Cole,
Mrs. John Nash and Mrs . John
Harrison presiding at the
refreshment table .

Select from· our
~eautiful

collection

You'll love
our other
many

House Plant
SALE

gift ideas.

50,-o/ooff

Goessler's
Jewelry ·Store
Pomeroy

Sal-: Ends Jan. 31
Cash
..,,..
- -&amp; Carr",

-~-

MIDDLEPORf, OHIO

Officers ·
selected

Others attending were Mrs.
Lewis Ellis and Teresa, Mrs.
Joe Posey, Miss Sherri Jeffrey,
Mrs. Gertrude Kloes, Paula
Kloes, Mrs. Randall Davis,
Mrs. Eula Francis, Mrs. Bessie
Baughman, Mrs. Gene McDaniel,
Mrs.
Lorraine
McElhaney, Lisa Nash, Mrs.
Darrell McKinney, Mrs. Grace
Rusche! and daughters, Mary
and Nita, Mrs. Hazel Hayes .
Sending gifts were Mrs.
Russell Carson and Mrs.
Donna Taylor.

New officers for the Junior
Mlssionary Society were
elected during a meeting of the
children, first through sixth
grades, in the Law-el CWf Free
Methodist Chw-ch basement
Sunday.
'Miss Susan Fleshman,
d~ugh!Air of missionaries in
Africa, gave the object lesson
on the meaing of the ward,
"inissionary." She also taught
tlie children a chorus in
Rllodesian, and told them of
sdtrle' of the unusual customs of
that area.' Mrs . Doris Shook led
the children in several
c~oruses and presented a
s'Uiry. Also assisting with the
program was Mrs. Donna
Gilmore . .
The new . officers elected
were Law-a Smith, president;
Eugene Jefiers, secretary, and
John Smith, treasurer.

•

See Special Dollar Days
Ads In Thursday's
Daily Sentinel ,.

•

secretary and news reporter.
Candlelight services were
held for the new officers, and
Betty Kern sang "He Touched
Me."
The business meeting was
opened by Ruby Rife. The
secrela(y's report was road by
Kathryn Evans and Catherine
Russell gave the treasurer's
report.
A planning committee was
chosen tQ plan programs for
the monthly meetings. One
perspn from each church was
placed on the committee. The
meeting cPilcluded by singing
"How Great Thou Art," and
Sharon Groniger giving the
cl~lng prayer. Refreshments
were served in the social room .
- Jane Hazelton .

The Almanac
By Uniled Press International
Today is' Tuesday, Jan. 28,
the 28th day of 1975 with 337 to
follow.
The moon is between its lull
pliiise and ills I. quarter .
Tbe morning star is Mars.
evening stars are Merci!o', Venus, 'Jupiter and

nte

Tbose born on this date are
under the sign of Aquarius.
Concert pianist Artur RubiJ1stein was born Jan. 28, 1889.
Ori this day in history :
In 1878, the ftrSt commercial
teiephOne switchboard was. put
in operalloo in New Haven,
COiui. It iterved 12 subscribers.
In 1915, the U.S. Coast G~ard
w~~a estallJi.slled under legtsla· .
tim passeit6y Congress.
In 1932, a song symboi.Wng
lht pUg~t of millions or
dePressJon,hlt A!llericans· was
s&gt;feeplng the United States. Its
title: "Brother, Can You SPar•
_a pime?" .

JANUARY 31
Pleaii.BIIt Valley Hospital
DISCHAR('ES - Mrs. Orin
Sheets, Crown City; Mrs.
Norris Ellawood, and son,
Point Pleasant; Kimberly
Pickens, Letart; ·Danny Black;
PorUand; Michael SmlU!, West
Colwnbia; ' Barbara Gibsoo,
Masoo; MrS. Andrew Lemley,
Middleport; Mrs . Bernard
Lamp, Point Pleasant; Randall Simpsoo,, Jr., Gallipolis.

SATURDAY,•FEB. 1

Space Contributed by

The Daily ~el

.

.

'

' '
"-·

'. '

SUPERIORS USDA CHOICE

Stamp.~

SIRLOIN STEAK

MIDOLEPORT (l '

fo Limit

Reserve The

U. S. Government
Inspected

USDA Choice Ground Beef Sale!!
..

lb.

FRESH, EXTRA LOEAN

FRESH AND LEAN

FRESH AND LEAN

GROUND

GROUND

ROUND .

CHUCK

GROUND
BEEF

USDR

CHOICE

lb.

SUPERIORS

All MEAT
BOLOGNA

79¢

lb.

USDA CHOICE

USDA CHOICE

T-BONE
STEAK

DELMONICO

lb.

STEAK

$J .69

lb.

$J .99

•

FROZEN FOODS

Banq~~~

GORTON'S
SCOT PRIDE

FROZEN

FISH &amp; FRIES
2 lb.
box

OCEAN
PERCH

$J.59

l-Ib.

pkg.

SUNSHINE

69¢

gallon

crt.

SUPERIORS DR
SWIFT'S PREMIUM

SUPERIORS OR
SWIFT'S PREMIUM

ALL BEEF

WIENERS
12

OZ. •

pkg.

WIENERS

69(:

12 oz.

79&lt;:

PkR-

GRADE AMEDIUM

EGGS

ICE
10

~~~ · 39~

8 1:•129
Everyday Price -8 Pall, •1.59

$1.99

DAD'S ROOT BEER
OR NEI'I DIET RITE COLA (SliGAR FREE)

MAXWELL HOUSE

INSTANT COFFEE
10

DIET RI.TE

$1.99

01.

GLAD

quarts
for

·Trash Bags
box

99¢

SUPER OR REGULAR

40 Count
Box

HOMO MILK
1 i!~llon

twin pack

COCA-CQLA
16 oz. bottles

Large

MODERN DAIRY

PARTY

RC COLA '"

ALL WEEI&lt; PRICE

box

12 ounce can

THURSDAY ONLY

CHICKEN
2 lb.
box

l~b.

ARMOUR'S TREET OR
SWIFT'S PREMIUM
LUNCHEON MEAT

doz.

FRIED

$J59

HI-HO
Saltine
CRACKERS CRACKERS
l-Ib.
box

FROZEN

ICE CREAM

SCOT LAD

Sa~.

FRIDAY,

-·

We Accept FederBl Food
PHONE 992 3480

THURSDAY
' PRECEPTOR Beta Beta
Sorority, meets at 7:45 p,m. at
th~ home of Mrs. Mary
Pickens,
FRIDAY
SOUP Supper 3:30 to 6:30
p.m. at Southern High School
sponsored by the Racine ER
Squa(!.

Brighten Your Home
At A Savings
25.%to

SUPER MARKET • Open Daily 9 to 10 • Sui1. 10 to 10

-

AT LOCAL STORES THIS WEEK!

Women 's fellowship meets
The monthly meeting of
Meigs County Women's
fellowship was held on Jan . 23
at t!Je Pomeroy Chw-ch of
Chris t with the program
opening by singing, .. I Know
Who Holds Tomorrow ...
Jeanette Ranson from Bradbw-y Chw-ch of Christ gave
devotions using Hebrews 10:25
as her scripture.
Installation ·of officers was
held for Ruiey Rife. president ;
Elenor Hoover, vice president ;
Laura Hoover, secretary;
Catherine Russell, treasw-er,
and Jane Hazelton, assistant

TUESDAY
BEAN . dinner and ~pecial
meeting of Meigs Muzzle
Loaders, 6:30 p.m., at Izaak
Walton League Farm. Guests
welcome.
fi.ACINE American Legion
Auxiliary, Post 602, 7 p.m. at
the ,hall.
MIDDLEPORT - Pomeroy
Area Branch, American
Association of University
Women, 7:30p.m., Meigs High
School Library. Program by
John Redovian, coordinator of ·
Meigs Teacher Corps.
OHIO ETA PHI Chapter,
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, 7:30
Tuesday, at home of Mrs. Judy
Werry for pizza . party. Miss
Sarah Bechtle and Mrs. Phyllis
Bennett have cultural program
on "Easy and Informal.~·
BI-CENTENNIAL Commission, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday,
Common Pleas court room ;
organizations asked to send
representatives for review of
slate and federal programs as
they apply to local projects.
Thomas Slllith, director of the
Ohio Musewn and member of
the Ohio Bi-Centennial Commission, speaker.
FRIENDLY Neighbors, Mrs.
Willard Hines, 7:30p.m.
AMERICAN
Legion
Auxiliary, Drew Webster Post
39, 7:30 p.m ., at the hall.
Program on legislation and
national secw-ity.
HARRISONVILLE Golden
Circle Senior Citizens Club, 7
p.m., Harrisonville School.
Refreshments.
WEDNESDAY
RACINE E-R Squad sponsoring an emergency medical
training and rescue class .
Those interested be at Racine
Fire Station, 7 p.m.
WILDWOOD Garden Club,
7:30 p.n\., home of Mrs. Karl
Grueser.
ANNUAL meeting Meigs
Regional Planning Commission, 3 p.m. Wednesday in
courtroom of Meigs Cow-lhouse. Election of officers,
annual report, electing three
members to executive committee, tour of remodeled
courthouse and jail.

Shower honors Sandra Rusche/

Diamonds

court St.

Loyal women
hear speaker

$149

8
pak

ONIONS

'

•1.39

! ·•

..
'
t.;.'
I

I

'

I

.

CHOICE .YELLOW FOR OOOKING.

'.

'.

�•
'

.

r

•
4- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday. Jan. 28, 197~

Church holds
youth service

Generation Rap
By Helen and

~ue

Hottel

Youth night was observed
Sunday at the Laurel Cli!f Free
Methodist Church with Rev.
Morris Wolfe. Racine, as the
guest speaker.
Special music was prese nted
by a vocal trio fr om Point
Pleasant,
Brenda
and
Margaret Puttney and Addie
Wooten. They were joined by
Ricky Friend for a number .
Belinda Friend was announcer for the program with
Sharon Folmer as the song •
leader. Mrs . Wanda Eblin had

Parents Make Her Wheeze
Dear Rap :
My girl is okay until she goes home tQ see her folks , or her
mother gels on her case about something. Whenever she's
around her parents very long, Nancy gets a bad asth!Tlll attack.
Even when Ulere are no hard words, she's up tight. Next day, she
fighting for breath .
She's learned not to fight with them, as the docoor oold her
that nerves brought on wheezing . But I can tell every time her
mother has called her up to nag or "warn" about something. It's
a vicious cycle: her parents worry because she has asth!Tlll and
their worry aggravates it. They won't, or can't cluinge'
'
What would you suggest' - HARRY
·
Dear Harry :
If your girl can "learn not to fight with her parents," she ca n
learn more subtle turn-&lt;Jffs. In a few easy sessions, a counselor
may show her the art of "nonresponse," which is another term'
for my old stand-by: "Smile, nod, and do as you please." HELEN
Dear Harry :
Now that she is trying to break away from Mama, she may
feel guilty - and guilt, combined with resentment could bring on
the wheezing.
When she realizes, she is in charge of her own life, her
parents' overprotectiveness will no longer, affect her . (At least
tQ the point of asthma. ) - Sue
Dear Helen and Sue :
I just may try getting a gasoline credit card the way Sue did
- by signing my initials rather than my "feminine" first name .
For four years, I've been using my father's card and paying
the bills each month with MY checks. I'm 23 now, and I've a(&gt;plied for my own card from this gas company three times. I've
never even received the cow-tesy of a rejection letter!
I've been tempted to send them a photostatic copy of every
check I've paid them for the last four years, but it probably
wouldn't help. Never has a.check bounced or have I had a pastdue notice from other creditors, but I'm still - A FEMALE
WITHOUT A GASOUNE CREDIT CARD
Dear Credit-Cordless Females Everywhere:
We've heard from many of you, and the consensus is :
gasoline and oil companies are hard to crack, unless you're
married, or male, or well over 21.
Funny ... we haven't heard from ONE oil company executive
yet, defending or refuting these claims. We'd like proof that they
don 't discriminate against young, unmarried women, but so far
... well, silence condemns, doesn 't it? - HELEN AND SUE
Rap:
I'm disgusted with people like M.R.T. who wants a hymenrestoration for her daughter so she can "prove" virginity on her
wedding night. This new operation won't catch on, as you say,
Helen. Virginity doesn't auoomatically insure a successful
marriage. Loving, trusting, pulling !Qgether, accepting each
other's faults, these are so much more important than what
happens.pn the first night. Who cares whether she is or she isn't ·r
This mother is as phony as the operation . - NO PRUDE IN
FAIRFAX
Dear No:
Right on !
. This operation is far from "new ." It was quite popular back
mthe 1700. when Ew-eopean men placed high value on virginity;
but women, even then, didn't always conform. - HELEN AND
SUE

prayer, and the ushers were

Tom Souisby, Jim Le wis.
Wayne Leifheit and Ricky
Friend. Jeff Hillery gave
scripture from Psalm 41.
Singing "Love is Like a
Rolling River" were Rev.
Floyd Shook, Shirley Friend,
Diane Lewis, and Belinda
Friend. A guitar and harp
nwnber was played by Steve
Eblin, and there was music bv
the chu rch ch01r and th~
congregation.
Holzer Medical Center
Jolene Armbrister, Mrs .
Benny Baley and daughter,
Karolyn Brillhar t. Ruby
Bw-ton, Noah Clark, Rachael
Day , Jane Dheen, Reba
Hanson, Nolene Hatfield, Fred
Hulshorst, Lydia Hysell, Betty
Jewett, Kathleen Long, Okey
Longfellow, Donna Russell,
Winnie Shotts, Barbara Sllllth,
Eva Slllith, Gladys Smith, Mrs.
Daniel V·ance and son,
Christopher Wallace, Howard
Wells, Ronald Wilkinson,
Wanda Williams, Maude
Young.
(Births)
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Ed·
ward . Cornelius, a son,
Gallipolis; Mr. and Mrs.
Gerald Lee Williams, a
daughter, Wellston .

PTA discusses projects
Does your current auto in ·

surance provide you with

adequate protection? Are
you paying 'too much? Are

you over·lnsured? Are there
ways you could save money

on your Insurance? Bring

your pollcy to us today and
we'll answer these nuestlons
for you .

.......,=--

~
"'

REUTER·
BROGAN
INSURANCE
PH. 992·5130
107 Sycamore

Pomeroy

CHESTER - The purchase
of additional playground
equipment and a back curtain
for the stage area was
discussed when the Chesler
PTA met recently at the
Chester Elementary School.
The unit voted to pw-chase
disposable sheets for the sick
room. A report was given on
the membership contest with
the third grade winning first
place and the second grade
laking second place with the

most members.
Letters frotn the third and
fourth graders were read
thanking the PTA for carpeting.
John Reibel showed slides of
his recent trip to the Holy
Land . The pledge to the flag
and the teacher-parent prayer
opened the meeting. The room
count award went to the second
grade with the fow-th grade
laking second.

Miss Arlene Spurlock,
missionary of over 20 years in
Niger. Africa. was guest
speaker at a meeting of the
Loyal Women 's Class of the
Middleport Church of Christ
Thursday night.
Introduced by Miss Frances
Roush, class president, Miss
Spw-lock told of ·her life in
Africa as a missionary nurse .
She discussed the Moslem
religion which is predominant
there and related the experiences of three recent
converts to Christianity.
Miss .Spurlock wore a
costume which she brought
back when she returned on
fw-lough, a headdress of silver
coins, and a silver coin
ne ckla ce. She displayed a
leather bag and two dolls whicl&gt;
had been made by women in
the mission field she serves.
She was presented a personal
gift from the class.
Acco mpanying Miss
.Spurlock to the meeting was
her sister, Mrs . Ellen
DeWeese, Point Pleasant.
During the business meeting
officers for the year were in·

stalled. ln her ins tallation
ceremony, Mrs . Rose Reynolds
read a poem by Robert
Browning, gave each officer a
charge, and then presented
each one with a mini.quolable
plaque .
·
Installed were Miss Mildred
Hawley, president; Mrs.
Beulah Roush, vice president;
Mrs . Margaret Laliance,
secretary; and Mrs . Ida
Childs, treasurer.
Mrs. Reynolds recognized
Mrs. Martha Childs, teacher of
the class, thanking her for her
work in the church, and
presented her with a red velvet
rose.
Committees appointed were.
Mrs . Grace Prall, Mrs . Audrey
Swett, Mrs. Lula Mae Lynch,
dinners for bereaved families ;
Mrs. Pearl Reynolds, Miss
Roush, cards and flowers;
Mrs. Beulah Roush , Miss
Roush, Mrs. Swett, and Mrs.
Donna Russell, quilt sale; and
Mrs. Eleanor Lohse, shut-in
boxes.
Reported ill were Mr. and
Mrs. Walter (:rooks, Mrs.
Mary Meinhart and Mrs.
Russell.
Plans were made for a
covered dish dinner at the
February meeting with Mrs.
Pearl Reynolds tQ have the
program . Devotions to open the
meeting were given by Miss
Hawley who read poems from
a book of poetry by Helen
Steiner Rice and gave a prayer
for the New Year.
Refreshments were served
by the hostesses.

i;~· ~:;~-;;;;~::~

dstl~~:,~~:~.

F-LRo!Rryb LatB
. kn'
:-::
ev. o er uc ey, pas or
~
::~ of the Mayfield Heights
~
. By Charlene Hoeflich
:~l Chw-chin Cleveland, presented
· · slides of his trip 00 the Holy
"How to Get the Most for Your Food Money."
Land at the Friday night youth
That's the name of a booklet available from the Meigs
service at the Law-el Cliff Free
County Extension Office - free - and it's really an invaluable M thod. t Ch h
IS
urc .
e
guide for the homemaker.
To open . the service Miss
So pick up a copy soon.
Susan Fleshman had ~rayer,
The booklet prepared by the extension economists at Ohio there was a duet by Steve and
State University, begins by slating "the health, happiness and Beck , Eblin and the Free
·comfort of a family often depend on a food shopper's ability to
)
'
spend food money wisely."
So, happy homemaker, that puts the responsibility of stretchON DEAN'S LIST
ing food dollars while ITlllintaining high nutritional quality right
Edie Mees, daughter of Mr.
in your lap.
and Mrs . Malcolm Mees,
Making good food choices is not easy.
Pomeroy, made the dean's list
W1tat a family likes is important. If food is thrown in the for the winter quarter at
garbage because no one likes it, it isn't much of a bargain, now is Capital University, Columbus.
it? So cost alone doesn't always mean a good buy or a good diet. A chemistry major, she
Then convenience gets lots of attention these days, too. With received a 4. average. Miss
40 pet . of all homemakers working at jobs outside the home, and Mees is a sophomore.
caring for their homes as well, the ease with which food can be
prepared needs to be considered.
So, as you can see, there are things besides price which need .
SALE PLANNED
to be considered in determining whether an item is a good buy
A
rummage
sale will be held
and each homemaker mtlst decide for herself what is the mast
Monday, Feb. 3 at the Sacred
important and then guide her buying accordingly.
.
Heart
Chw-ch, Pomeroy, by the
Certainly nutritional value has to be considered, and a
Catholi
c Women's . .club
homemaker should learn some basic nutritional facts before
beginning at 9 a.m.
planning her family's meals.
There's the 2-2-4-4 rule ... Iwo or more serving of milk, two or
more of meat, four or more of fruits and vegetables, and four or
more of bread and cereal.
Tips from the "How to Get the Most from Your Food Money"
Include - Planning meals around grocery store specials,
stocking up on specials that can be used later, eliminating waste
by making leftov~rs into "planned overs," shopping alone, and
limiting impulse buying.

WORK SHOES
AND BOOTS
by Sheboygan

5" . 8" . 10''
heritage house
Your Thom MeAn Store

Middleport, Ohio

FROM BAKER'S BUDGET
SHOP .••
e3 'PC. BEDROOM SUITE. :........~ 138
e5 PC. DINETTE SET.................•58
e4 DRAWER CHESTS .................'38
eSOFA BEDS •••••.•••••••••••••• ;.....'88

DID YOU know that dry beans and dry peas are two proteinrich vegetables which are plentiful now and are way down in
cost?

But, reports the Ohio Food Market "outlook," dry beans and
peas need a little special treatment for storage. Once the
package is opened, keep the beans or peas in a tightly covered
glass, metal or plastic container that will shut out dust and insects. The storage area should be cool and dry.

Beaut iful fabrics. good coil spring construction.

HAVE A receipt you would like to share with ow- readers'
Send it to "Fun with Foods," The Daily Sentinel.

SONS VISIT
Weekend guest of Mrs.
Sylvia Carman and sons, Bruce
and Dannie, Longhollow Road,
were her two oldest sons
Ronald Carman and Gary
Carman and his two sons,
Donald and David, Columbus.

.
Belinda Frl nd
Introduced e. ,
presldent; Tom Soulsby, v1ce
prestdent; Becky . Eblin,
treasw-er; and Sherrie Clark,
secretary:
Followrng
his
slide
t f
R
B kl
presen a ton, ev. uc ey
presented. Rev. Robert Shook,
pastor: wtth a ptcture and a
w1dow s m1te brought back
from the Holy Land. Ushers for
the service were Jim Lewis,
Tom Soulsby and Wayne
Leifheit.

•ADMIRAL REFRIGERATORS •••••••~.199
SPECI.AL VALUES ON MATTRESS&amp;
BOX SPRINGs-ALL SIZES.

CLOTHING OFFERED
Free clothing day will be
held Thw-sday at the Salvation
Army headquarters, 115
Butternut Ave. , Pomeroy,
from 10 a.m. until noon. All
area residents are wel~ome.

BAKER FURNITURE

Miss Sandra Kay 1\uschel,
·bride - elect of Airman I.e

88~,

FEB.
14

IN A VERY SPECIAL WAY!

Michael Eugene McDaniel,
was honored recenUy with a
bridal shower at the Middleport Church of the Nazarene
parsonage.
Games were played with
prizes being awarded to Mrs.
J ohn McDaniel and Miss
Phyllis Davis. Mrs. Mary
Walburn won the door prize.
Cake, coffee and punch were
served with Mrs. Don Cole,
Mrs. John Nash and Mrs . John
Harrison presiding at the
refreshment table .

Select from· our
~eautiful

collection

You'll love
our other
many

House Plant
SALE

gift ideas.

50,-o/ooff

Goessler's
Jewelry ·Store
Pomeroy

Sal-: Ends Jan. 31
Cash
..,,..
- -&amp; Carr",

-~-

MIDDLEPORf, OHIO

Officers ·
selected

Others attending were Mrs.
Lewis Ellis and Teresa, Mrs.
Joe Posey, Miss Sherri Jeffrey,
Mrs. Gertrude Kloes, Paula
Kloes, Mrs. Randall Davis,
Mrs. Eula Francis, Mrs. Bessie
Baughman, Mrs. Gene McDaniel,
Mrs.
Lorraine
McElhaney, Lisa Nash, Mrs.
Darrell McKinney, Mrs. Grace
Rusche! and daughters, Mary
and Nita, Mrs. Hazel Hayes .
Sending gifts were Mrs.
Russell Carson and Mrs.
Donna Taylor.

New officers for the Junior
Mlssionary Society were
elected during a meeting of the
children, first through sixth
grades, in the Law-el CWf Free
Methodist Chw-ch basement
Sunday.
'Miss Susan Fleshman,
d~ugh!Air of missionaries in
Africa, gave the object lesson
on the meaing of the ward,
"inissionary." She also taught
tlie children a chorus in
Rllodesian, and told them of
sdtrle' of the unusual customs of
that area.' Mrs . Doris Shook led
the children in several
c~oruses and presented a
s'Uiry. Also assisting with the
program was Mrs. Donna
Gilmore . .
The new . officers elected
were Law-a Smith, president;
Eugene Jefiers, secretary, and
John Smith, treasurer.

•

See Special Dollar Days
Ads In Thursday's
Daily Sentinel ,.

•

secretary and news reporter.
Candlelight services were
held for the new officers, and
Betty Kern sang "He Touched
Me."
The business meeting was
opened by Ruby Rife. The
secrela(y's report was road by
Kathryn Evans and Catherine
Russell gave the treasurer's
report.
A planning committee was
chosen tQ plan programs for
the monthly meetings. One
perspn from each church was
placed on the committee. The
meeting cPilcluded by singing
"How Great Thou Art," and
Sharon Groniger giving the
cl~lng prayer. Refreshments
were served in the social room .
- Jane Hazelton .

The Almanac
By Uniled Press International
Today is' Tuesday, Jan. 28,
the 28th day of 1975 with 337 to
follow.
The moon is between its lull
pliiise and ills I. quarter .
Tbe morning star is Mars.
evening stars are Merci!o', Venus, 'Jupiter and

nte

Tbose born on this date are
under the sign of Aquarius.
Concert pianist Artur RubiJ1stein was born Jan. 28, 1889.
Ori this day in history :
In 1878, the ftrSt commercial
teiephOne switchboard was. put
in operalloo in New Haven,
COiui. It iterved 12 subscribers.
In 1915, the U.S. Coast G~ard
w~~a estallJi.slled under legtsla· .
tim passeit6y Congress.
In 1932, a song symboi.Wng
lht pUg~t of millions or
dePressJon,hlt A!llericans· was
s&gt;feeplng the United States. Its
title: "Brother, Can You SPar•
_a pime?" .

JANUARY 31
Pleaii.BIIt Valley Hospital
DISCHAR('ES - Mrs. Orin
Sheets, Crown City; Mrs.
Norris Ellawood, and son,
Point Pleasant; Kimberly
Pickens, Letart; ·Danny Black;
PorUand; Michael SmlU!, West
Colwnbia; ' Barbara Gibsoo,
Masoo; MrS. Andrew Lemley,
Middleport; Mrs . Bernard
Lamp, Point Pleasant; Randall Simpsoo,, Jr., Gallipolis.

SATURDAY,•FEB. 1

Space Contributed by

The Daily ~el

.

.

'

' '
"-·

'. '

SUPERIORS USDA CHOICE

Stamp.~

SIRLOIN STEAK

MIDOLEPORT (l '

fo Limit

Reserve The

U. S. Government
Inspected

USDA Choice Ground Beef Sale!!
..

lb.

FRESH, EXTRA LOEAN

FRESH AND LEAN

FRESH AND LEAN

GROUND

GROUND

ROUND .

CHUCK

GROUND
BEEF

USDR

CHOICE

lb.

SUPERIORS

All MEAT
BOLOGNA

79¢

lb.

USDA CHOICE

USDA CHOICE

T-BONE
STEAK

DELMONICO

lb.

STEAK

$J .69

lb.

$J .99

•

FROZEN FOODS

Banq~~~

GORTON'S
SCOT PRIDE

FROZEN

FISH &amp; FRIES
2 lb.
box

OCEAN
PERCH

$J.59

l-Ib.

pkg.

SUNSHINE

69¢

gallon

crt.

SUPERIORS DR
SWIFT'S PREMIUM

SUPERIORS OR
SWIFT'S PREMIUM

ALL BEEF

WIENERS
12

OZ. •

pkg.

WIENERS

69(:

12 oz.

79&lt;:

PkR-

GRADE AMEDIUM

EGGS

ICE
10

~~~ · 39~

8 1:•129
Everyday Price -8 Pall, •1.59

$1.99

DAD'S ROOT BEER
OR NEI'I DIET RITE COLA (SliGAR FREE)

MAXWELL HOUSE

INSTANT COFFEE
10

DIET RI.TE

$1.99

01.

GLAD

quarts
for

·Trash Bags
box

99¢

SUPER OR REGULAR

40 Count
Box

HOMO MILK
1 i!~llon

twin pack

COCA-CQLA
16 oz. bottles

Large

MODERN DAIRY

PARTY

RC COLA '"

ALL WEEI&lt; PRICE

box

12 ounce can

THURSDAY ONLY

CHICKEN
2 lb.
box

l~b.

ARMOUR'S TREET OR
SWIFT'S PREMIUM
LUNCHEON MEAT

doz.

FRIED

$J59

HI-HO
Saltine
CRACKERS CRACKERS
l-Ib.
box

FROZEN

ICE CREAM

SCOT LAD

Sa~.

FRIDAY,

-·

We Accept FederBl Food
PHONE 992 3480

THURSDAY
' PRECEPTOR Beta Beta
Sorority, meets at 7:45 p,m. at
th~ home of Mrs. Mary
Pickens,
FRIDAY
SOUP Supper 3:30 to 6:30
p.m. at Southern High School
sponsored by the Racine ER
Squa(!.

Brighten Your Home
At A Savings
25.%to

SUPER MARKET • Open Daily 9 to 10 • Sui1. 10 to 10

-

AT LOCAL STORES THIS WEEK!

Women 's fellowship meets
The monthly meeting of
Meigs County Women's
fellowship was held on Jan . 23
at t!Je Pomeroy Chw-ch of
Chris t with the program
opening by singing, .. I Know
Who Holds Tomorrow ...
Jeanette Ranson from Bradbw-y Chw-ch of Christ gave
devotions using Hebrews 10:25
as her scripture.
Installation ·of officers was
held for Ruiey Rife. president ;
Elenor Hoover, vice president ;
Laura Hoover, secretary;
Catherine Russell, treasw-er,
and Jane Hazelton, assistant

TUESDAY
BEAN . dinner and ~pecial
meeting of Meigs Muzzle
Loaders, 6:30 p.m., at Izaak
Walton League Farm. Guests
welcome.
fi.ACINE American Legion
Auxiliary, Post 602, 7 p.m. at
the ,hall.
MIDDLEPORT - Pomeroy
Area Branch, American
Association of University
Women, 7:30p.m., Meigs High
School Library. Program by
John Redovian, coordinator of ·
Meigs Teacher Corps.
OHIO ETA PHI Chapter,
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, 7:30
Tuesday, at home of Mrs. Judy
Werry for pizza . party. Miss
Sarah Bechtle and Mrs. Phyllis
Bennett have cultural program
on "Easy and Informal.~·
BI-CENTENNIAL Commission, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday,
Common Pleas court room ;
organizations asked to send
representatives for review of
slate and federal programs as
they apply to local projects.
Thomas Slllith, director of the
Ohio Musewn and member of
the Ohio Bi-Centennial Commission, speaker.
FRIENDLY Neighbors, Mrs.
Willard Hines, 7:30p.m.
AMERICAN
Legion
Auxiliary, Drew Webster Post
39, 7:30 p.m ., at the hall.
Program on legislation and
national secw-ity.
HARRISONVILLE Golden
Circle Senior Citizens Club, 7
p.m., Harrisonville School.
Refreshments.
WEDNESDAY
RACINE E-R Squad sponsoring an emergency medical
training and rescue class .
Those interested be at Racine
Fire Station, 7 p.m.
WILDWOOD Garden Club,
7:30 p.n\., home of Mrs. Karl
Grueser.
ANNUAL meeting Meigs
Regional Planning Commission, 3 p.m. Wednesday in
courtroom of Meigs Cow-lhouse. Election of officers,
annual report, electing three
members to executive committee, tour of remodeled
courthouse and jail.

Shower honors Sandra Rusche/

Diamonds

court St.

Loyal women
hear speaker

$149

8
pak

ONIONS

'

•1.39

! ·•

..
'
t.;.'
I

I

'

I

.

CHOICE .YELLOW FOR OOOKING.

'.

'.

�'

6- The Dally Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Tuesday, Jan 28 1975

~ l i~

~

POLLY'S POINTERS

I
I

BY POLLY CRj\MER

Painted marble
proves challenge

For Fast Results Use Sentinel Classifieds . _ Business Services
2 SIGNS Pomeroy I
Auto Sales

NEW HAVE N - A donatwn
of So4 to the McCundy School

OF
QUALITY

manners C\ r r so oftc11
POLLY
DEA R PO lLY - Mr s
M D ca n r1d her natura l bnstle
'ha n brush of the bad smell by
soakm g tt for 15 to 20 nunutes
m a sol u t ton or warm " ater and
a commet cut l enzvme p1 esuak
poY.d er rhe same trea tment
makes a sour sponge smell like
ne w - MRS L N
DF'AR POlLY - MRS M
D should make a solutwn of
t" o tablespoons bakmg soda
and 10 to 12 oun ces hot water
and soa k her brush for about lo
mmut es Th1 s sh ould remove
the lmp leasa nt odor and &lt;.lea n
the brush - LAURA
DEAR MilS M D .!.. Rc
sure to stand tht• rmscd brush
propped agalust somet hin g
else so the \Httrr drains ofl

pam fed I now want to use Jl as

a desk top Hoi\ canT clean II '
Is 11 possible to l1ave marble
polished ' - ANNE
DEAR ANNE - You haV&lt;•
a tricky Job ahead Doubtless
the paint hos sunk Into the
marble All I can suggest Is to
try a non-oil) paint remo\ er
This also will remnve a ny

flol&amp;h that \\as on the marble
II will then ha\ e to be polished
Stains can usuully be removed
by a gentle rubbing with a
mixture of hydrogen peroxide
and ammonia, rinse

~lth

(')car

water and dry
Rad stains rna) require
this

mixture

on

overnight after being covered
wfth plastic wrap to keep the
mixture damp Perhaps there
Is a monument com pany in
your city that will do the
marble polishing It mi ght be
well to consult them before
rven trying to re mO\ e the
paint - POLLY.
DEAR POLLY - My Pet
Peeve IS w1th those people who
d1al my phone number and
then hang up abruptly w1thout
saymg a word It seems they
could have the cour tesy to sa~.
"I am sorry but I must ha"''
the wrong numper · - MRS
HWM
DEAR MRS. H W M. - It
Is good for us all to be
reminded of our telephone

agreed a t the January mcetmg

of the Uru ted Methodis t Women
of Ne" Have n at the home of
Ma rlene C.a mpbell w1H, 14
members prese nt
The devottonal program was
prese nted by Marlene Camp
bell and Janet Bwngardner
the message of te lhng wha t tt
means to love and trust a hltle
Child
Due to the 1ll ness of the
p res tden t
Mr s
Naom1
Bumga rdn er the bus tne ss
meetmg \\ as conducted by
\ ICC pres tde nt Mrs Clara
Bunt s, and prayer was led by
Mrs A M1ll er Dunng the
bustness sessiOn tt was ag rceP
to donate the mone} to the Nev..
Mextco Mtss10n Also severa l
nev. subsc rtptwns Y. ere or
dere d for th e Re sponse
l\1agcmne Mrs Mary ltevmg
gdve the ti easurer s report
Refreshments wet e se1ved to
the fullowmg members by the
hos tess Janet Bumgardner,
Margte Hoffm an Jean ~ Henderson lelara Burris, Mary
Ue\lng Ara Jewell, Carolyn
Throne , .Ioyce Moxley. Edna
Rou s h, Marlen e Campbell,
Achsah Miller Ruth Baley,
Thelma Capehart, and Evelyn
Dan burn
The next meeting will be held
at the home of Evelyn Dan.
t&gt;ufy: ·s~cretary on February

le ~J\Ing

the bnstlt•s sta ndmg
cre&lt;·t - POLl. Y

Dart Custom 4 door loca l 1 owner c ar 318 V 8 e ng tn e

a utom a t c tra nsm• ss ton and p owe r sleenng arr con
d •ll on •ng \nn y l tnm vm yl to p ra d to wh• te wall l1re s
1970

ahead of all

I•

By Goldie Clendenin
PORTLAND - We ve JUSt
celebrated the birthday of our
Savior; now comes the sad
event of H1s cruc1flxwn Our
minds center on Him, and all
that He means to us
In retrospection, we hvc
agam the many happy and s.1d
times, and that there are man;
wonderful people who pattc1 n
their hves after H1m
Last year I spent Chn s tmas
eve and ThanksgiVIng Day
wtth my daughter , Georgia and
family , the Sm1ths and
Taylors, at Chester
We had ThanksglVlng dmner
at Gary Smith's and Chnstmas
eve at Georgta's and Larry's
Ruth, the mother, and Gary
and w1fe, Marvin and w1fe,
Anna and V1rgll came there to
open presents After refreshments there we all walked
across the road to Gary's
trader, then to Marvm 's and
back across the road to Ruth's
lraller home, all the wh!le
seemg tile happm ess of
togetherneSs, openmg g1fts and
eatmg goodies Tins was one of
the happiest expenences of my
lUe
Ruth Smith Taylor has two
new daughters-m-law, and I
had never met Charlotte,
Gary's wile, but had me t
Shells, Marvm 's w1fe before I
was a stranger, and they
welcomed me, however
On Chnstmas day I \\as
1nvlted to d1nner at the
Hayward BlSSells on BashanKeno Rd That was a happy
occaSion, too, havmg known
them, their par ents, and
grandparents man y year s
Altogether , w1th my fam1ly
8WBY except for Georgia , It
was a really mce lime for th1s
ole Widder who \\ Ould otherWISe have been alone
[I was so mce to all of them
especially Sheba and Charlo tte
whom I had not known And I
hope and pray for these young
folk a long happy lUe together
I want to share w1th you thiS
reading " Tidings of Great Joy "
- by Eula Proffl tl
"AI this time of year the
birth of Jesus 1s "so closely
associated with such great joy
Let us remember there are
different kinds of joy The joy
of many gifts and earthly
pleasures, and the true JOY of
the birth of Jesus, as our
SaVIor.
"We~ as mother, can know of
some of the thought. and
quest10ns that must have
troubled Mary. The Scnplures
tell us, "She pondered these
things m her heart " The
feeling of a mother's love for a
sort, cuddly baby is almost
~ble to descnbe but

unforgettable.
"You can care for your baby,
bathe, feed, love and hold him
close lo your body. Tbe soft,
WarrD teeliilg IS great gift.
"Mary kl!.ew belorl!.~n&lt;! @e

a

•"

•

•

Cf.lrtS tta ns

would only have her son for
a\\hlle, because H was also the
Son of God How would WE, as
mothers, feel · would we be
able to go about our dulles
under such condthons?

"We want,

by

mstmct to

pro tect our children from all
hm m, )Uirt and an' thtng un ·
pleusqnt because of our gt ed l
love for them God loved H1s
son u!so Could we fmd such• JO\
as Mary dul , knuwmg as she
must have, some of the things
Jesus must face'
"We fllld such roy a nd
comfort m our children's ea rl v
years, yet al the age of 12 Jesus
was already, ' About H1 s
Father's busmess · No JOY
could be felt from such as fate
as Jesus f aced, 1f 1t were not for
the
greatnes s of
H1 s
resurrection
'He had all the physical
needs, rust as we, ye t H was
never too concerned or let
such thmgs mterfere With HIS
great Comm:ss10n Baby Jesus
must have been a beautiful
baby. let m a short tune Mar 1
watched l-hm bemg natled to
tilt' cross
s, a mother the lo\ e c~nd
S\\ eeu1ess of th1s baby could be
so 'r\ Cil remembered We must
fmd the great ~oy m th is ,
season m the fa ct w:e worship a ,
hvmg Jesus today , and '
assoc1ate Christmas with this
Jesus we have learned to love
We can see H1m , feel HIS
presence, hear H1s vmce and
knows He IS w1th us 1f _ This
Tidmg of great JOY has reall)
reached our hearts
• Our children grow up and
we must remember they too
belong to God We are only
stewards over them, to brmg
them up tn such a way they
mav return to God m celestial
glor} as pure as "hen ttle't
Y.ere gtven to us
Just as angels appeared to
Mar) . t11ey \Hitch over us and
our children are one of God :s
greatest gifts to us Through
God's g1ft of His Son , the gospel
and teachings and example
Jesus set for us \\ e can truly
make this a season of 'Tidmgs
of Great Joy • "
A new year IS always a
challenge May we all meet 1t
bead-on as we ask God to help
and bless us m the commg
days

Glenn wants
•

moratonum
on Ford tax
WASHING"ION (UP! ) Sen John Glenn, D.Oh10, sa1d
Monday a moratonum on
Pres1dent Fords 011 1mport
taxa t10n program was needed
tu avotd a severe rtpple cffee t on the 'ost of hvmg
Glenn tn remctrks p1 cpared
for a lll('e\ing of the Wom.m's
N t~tJOnd l De moc.:1 dlt c Club
smd a hO to 90-da) delay would
~ ! C elt!~ enhance prospects that
an econom1c puckage could be
Jl~tt loge th~r

S169l

FORD

1969

PO N T I A C Grand Prtx
QOO d conOdiOrl '!. 1 250 Pt10nc
992 .'i46S
1 26 li P

19 7] FORD Cou nlr y 5 (JU rc
waqon
20 000 m Irs
a ll
equ,p mcn t 'S J 500 P hom 99'1.
3493 or 992 7720

and Jimmy Ellis scheduled for
March 2 In Melbourne, AusPICKETS SHOW UP
traha were formally anHUNTINGTON, W Va
~
here Monday.
(UP!) - Pickets appeared a t OOUi1ced
The announcement also satd
Chesapeake &amp; Oh10 fac1hl1eo negotiations w e re " trP the
Monday as part of a spreadmg pro cess " for heavyweight
nal!onw1de rail str1ke Tom champ1011 Muhammad All to
ohnson, an offlclal of C&amp;O, defend his crown against the
sa1d about 3,000 workers m wmner, also In Australla
West Vll'gmm were affected by
FraZier,' 31, wi.l.1 rece~ve a
the walkout 1n Charleston, guarantee of $250,000, and the
Huntington and other Cities
35-year-old Ellis, former WBA
Tr8Jns were bemg operated by heavyweight champion, Wlll
superviSors
get $75,000.

6 c ylind er
Pho ne 985

l 24 6tp
--~------ - - - - ------HO US EHOLD
survey
tn
FA B RIC SA LE
F •r s t qualtfY
t e rv tew er s needed f ora6toB
do ub l e and stng le k n tt s Sl 98
w ee k per od n th e Southeast

A ll l abr c

n s hop

r edu ce d n ct ud ng n e w sprtn g
pa lt e rn s O n e w ee k on l y
Monday Jan 27 t hru Sa t
F eb l O p en 9 am to 7 p m
Caro l tna F= a br• c Ro ute 7 on e
h a lf mtle nort h o f Ch es t er
Oh o
H enry
a nd
Mary
Hunt er ov..ners
I 26 61p

A N YO N E Int er este d tn s tar l tng
a fund am ental
nd epende nt
Bapt i st Chur ch wrtte Re v
James Gan t Box 243 Alb an y
Ohto or c al l {I) 698 3034
I 26 7tp

Oh o

Prog r am tS assoctaled

Wtltl an advanc ed eme r gen cy

m e d tc a l

s e rvtce

d e mon

s t r a tt on protec t Htgh Scnoo l
gradua t e Wtlh some ex
p e r ten ce pr eferred
Must
h ave own car Send resum e to
BoK 1076 Ath e n s OhtO 4570 1

__ _

MEIG S County F tSh and Game
As soc1alton w I f have a
meet mg Wednesday Jan 29
at 7 30 p m Syr ac1.1se Cl1.1b
Room
I 26 4tc

Wanted To Buy '
WA NT to buy 50 to 65 H P
out board motor Call 992 71 06
1 26 Jtc

- ------------TRA ILE R SPACE
mile
J4

nor th of Metgs H gh Schoo l on
ol d R t 33 Phone 991 294 1
1 23 tr c
CO UNTRY M ob1 le Home Park
R t 33 ten m des north of
Pomeroy
Large lots wtlh
con c rete patios
st dewalks
runner s and off
st r eet
parktng Phone 992 7~79
12 31 tt c

USED 4 dr au to 4 cyltnder TRAI L ER space 2m l es from
( Not VW or Veg a ) Ph one
Pomeroy Rt 143 Phone 992
992 2082
5858
I 24 4t c
10 21 tfc
CAS H SSU

FOR

J UN K CARS

3 and 4 ROOM !u r n shed and
u nturn shed
apartments
Phone 99 2 5434
4 12 tt c
PR I VATE me etmg room fo r
any organ1zatton phone 992
397S

3 11 tfc

F U RN I SHED apt Adults only
Mtddleport Phone 992 3874
1114tfc
FU RNISHED
apartment
ut tllt es lurn 1shed
suttab te
for two worktng men or
r el!r ed couple L tvmg room
k tchen shower and ba th On
m am h•ghway Mason W Va
Phone 773 51&lt;4 7
10 27 lf c

Employment Wanted
REMODE L IN G
plumb 1ng
heat tng
and al l types of
g enera l
repatr
Work
guaranteed 20 years ex
per tence Phone 992 2409
1 19 lfc
WILL do wa l l papenng or m
te r tor w ork at r ed uced rat es
Phon e 949 3832
1 24 6tp
_.___
.......

_____ ___ ____ _
Lost

55X 10V I NOALE mob 1le hom e A
r m s , new ly car pelt'd good ORANGE &amp; Wht te Po 1nter e 1rd
condtt ton. Very cl ean $3 500
Oog tn VtC ntty of near Hut
Call 985 3373 evenm g s or
t oo s backofApp leGrove on
weekends
collar tS pmk sleeve a lso
1 26 6t p
na m e Don Cross 1215 East
- - - - -NOT-;(;EOF - -6~f~~rs~~ f~und~~ac~l~bu;~;
APPOINTMENT
Sk tnner
99 2 2500
Reward

Estate ol JOHN ~·•zNEoR~~·: ------ ------~ ~-J.'c
Deceased
r
Sale
Not •ce &lt;S hereby o•ven lhal rOf

• Lll l 1an G Zerk l e of 289 Nol!h
Th trd St , M i ddleport, Oh lO nas
been dul y appo tnled E xecutr ix
of lh e E sta te of John w Zerkle
deceased tate of M idd lepor t.
Me1gS Coun ty , Oh iO
cred 1tor s are reQu.red 10 f de
thetr cla1ms w•th sa td ftduc1arv
w1ttlln fOur months
Dated th 1s 24th dl!ly of
January l'n5

(I)

29

USED par t s Frye' s Truc k and
Auto Paris, Rutland , Oh10
Phone ( 614 1 742 6094
~~- --------~__:.:_7 etp
US ED cha tn saws
3092

!='hone 992

1 22 6tc
- - - - - - - - - - -- - - 1957 CHEVY parts
NEW
Lak.ewpod trac1 1on bars h•
Mann 1ng D Webs t er
ta cker a 1r shocks, hooker
Judge
headers . w 1th 3" collec:tors tor
Court ot Common Pleas
small bloc k
Call 992 3•9 t
Pro bate 0 1v tS10n
after 6 p m BEST OFFER
- 10 -H~ fc

[2)

&lt;. 11 3t C

2

DUTY automattc washer
s tngle bed wtth matt ress
Stamese cat Phone 992 7201
1 24 4tC

1 72 ACRE S and locust posts
Phone 742 3656
1 19 12 tp
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ "T _ _ _ _ _ _
F l R EWOOD t or sale S15 per
load Phone 742 4831
1 19 12t c

USED FUEL OIL

HEATER,

Reftmsh•ng

Repa~rtng

Burntsh1ng

Can10g

Upholstering
We Al so Buy Antiques
P1ck up Servtce Available

Pomeroy

w I L L tr m or cut trees or
sh r ubb ery
c l ean
ou t
baseme11ts alttCS etc Phone
949 J221 or 742 4441
1 26 26t c

HO US E f or sa te tn Port land 6
rooms and bath good we l l 2
acres $6 700 Ca ll 843 2292
1 28 6tc
NEW HOM ES No Money Down
- Payments accordmg to
tnco me on Fa rm ers Home
Adm tn• s tratlon loan Con
ven t 1ona l flnancmg
a l so
ava il ab le w1th m 1n 1mum
down Love ly homes tn three
lo catiO ns n Metgs County
Some homes With wooded
Ca l l f or more '"
lo ts
format ton 992 5976
1 15 26tc

~so

HEATER----- -S239 95
Deluxe model wtth cabmef

Wall hned
POMEROY LANDMARK

Ja ck W C.arsey, Mgr
PtiDne 992 218 1

608 E
MAIN
POMEROY~Q,

CHESTER - 80 ACRES Renovated

home

2 large

BR bath lovely kitchen has
GROCERY bus ness for sale
Bu1 ldmg tor sa l e or lease
Phone 773 56 18 fr om 8 30 p m
l o 10 p m for appomtment
3 10tfc
------~- -- -----

CL O SE OU T on new Z1g Zag
sew mg machtnes For sew tng
str etch fabr tcs buttonholes
fan cy des 1gns etc
P a1n t
slight ly blem tshed Cho1ce o f
carrytng case or sew tng
stand $49 ao cash or term s
avat labl e Phone 992 7755
12 18 lf c

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

ELECTROLUX Sweep er • .:'1 l.. e
model
Comp lete Wtfh al!
c l eanmg atfa c hm ents and
uses paper bags Slightly used
but c l ea n s and looks l1ke new
Wil l se ll for $37 25 cash or
terms ava ,fabl e Phone 992
ns5
12 18 t f c

-------------EA R corn $3 per bushe l 3

reg1sterect polled Here fo rd
bulls 12 to 16 months old 9
ye arltng he1fers Call 985 3538
after 5 p m
Paul Ka rr
Chester Oh to
1 26 Jtp
FO LEY
saw
sharpening
equtp m ent (3 pc hand sa w
c •rcular saw
sh arpener)
sharpener
a nd
ca rbtde
grtnder Alll 1k e new 992 2386
1 27 4tp

over 20 cabmets , range &amp;
oven basement, natural gas

FA heal over 5 000 sq II
under roof, excellent hun
hng f 1sh rng about 25 acres
under fence S29.900

POMEROY -

75 II fron

tage 1 or 2 bedrooms, bath
three fourths
basement
natural gas heat, porches
good r enta l
Askrng lUSt

$3 800
RUTLAND - 45 ACRES all f ence d , n1 ce lake or pond,
good spnng lot s of bu1ldtng
sites m1nera ls JUST $9,000

NEAR POMEROY - About
2 years old, 4 BR, 2 baths,
l 1vrng
R ha s el ectr i C
ftreplace , lovely ktfchen and
dmtng area n1ce workshop
rn the rear, abouf 1 acre

BRICK &amp; FRAME Going at
lOSt $26 000
ALL CASH FOR YOUR
PROPERTY - LET US
SELL IT - WE NEED
HOMES VERY BADLY
,•2·2259 or 91&gt;2·2568

949

NEW LISTlNG - 2 bedrooms ,
of river MIDDLEPORT
RAClNE - 8 rooms w•th 2

Real Estate For Sale

baths, carpetmg and some n1ce
paneling And a 4 room rental

NEW HOME 3 bed r ooms
drapes wall to wall ca r pet
take on Wtppte Road Route
7 $39 500 Phone 992 3493 or
992 2720
1 24 3tc

33 ACRES - 3 bedrooms, all

HCUSE S5 000 Phone 992 5871
1 12 H!tc

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

BUILD I NG lot 80 fl f r ontage
by 165ft The second lot on left
on R1vervtew Dr tve Lincoln
Hill , Pomeroy OhtO If m
tereste'd ca ll 992 3230 after 5 p

m

10 17 ttc
-- ----------~--

NICE 2 bedroom home 31f2
acres r edu ced to $16 900 Rt 7
near Eastern H tgh Sc hool
Phone 985 &lt;4264
1 '26 3tp

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

Strout Realty
14 Acre
Farntette
House w1th 3 bedrooms ,
45x.-A5 pole barn , large fenced

paper

hanging .

cab1nets ,

lawn , lots of shrubbery ,
excellent locatton for sub
d1vts1on $26,500 00

- If you have a farm or
acreage of any 5tze to sell,

2298

307 Spring Avenue
992-2298
Pomeroy
CONTACT
LoiS Pau k!y
Branch Manilger

8, 10, Zoom 20, Your Future ls Now 33

7 oo-Truth or Cons 3,4, Bowling for Dollars 6. What s My Lme
8 News 10, Name That Tune 13, High School TV Honor
Soc•ely IS Antiques 20, Lilias Yoga &amp; You 33
7 3o-Hollywood Squa res 3,4, WTVN Forum 6 Bock Owens 8,
New Price " Right 10 To Tell the Troth 13, To Be An
nounced t 5 RF0 20, Marco Sporlllle 33
9 oo-Adam 12 3.4,15 Happy Days 13, Peanuts Special B,to,
America 20,33
'Shadow 10

8 30- Movle

&amp; LAZE$~

~

A'-1 ARA ~

RE R GHT
CA R R ~

HER PO~ I TtON&lt; l DID N' T
KNOW THEY WERE THAT
WELL EQUIPPED '

klt&lt;hen'

A

I DOUBT IF
~E &gt;&lt;TA'-JT OR

electnc bath, n1ce kitchen,
basement near town w1th c tty
w ater

70 ACRES - On Rt 33 near
wa ter l 1ne
dtvlston

N 1ce

for

sub

DBL HOME - Good for large
fa m1l y for a start m busmess
On Rt 143 near Albany ,

S12 500 00
COUNTRY

HOME
4
bedrooms bath vast ltvmg ,
carport, and large garden

516,500 00

3 4 15

Street'

M ovie " The

R'AO 0 BUT Tl· l/5
O~E ~E EM5 TO-

81smarckt ' '6 , Hawall Flve0 8,1 0 Ascen t ofMan2033

r.JO T .J UST

SMOKING S HE S

9

ON FIRE!

3o-Ben1am ln Franklin The Statesman Special 8 10

Wom ~n

20 Witn ess to Yesterday 33

10 oo- Pollce Story 3,4,15 Marcus Welby M D 6,13 News 20,
Soundstage 33
tO 30- Your Future IS Now ZU
11 oo-News 3 4 6 8,10 13 15, ABC News 33
11 3o-Johnny Carson 3.4. 15 Wide World Mystery 13, FBI 6

expert carpehng,

etc

M adigan 8, M ov1e 'Time Runnmg Out ' 10, JanakiJJ

1 ()()-Tom orr o"''

·-

M~ ~TCH H/6&lt;?t!PFrn

WI1AT TIME IS rrz

.

OO,Ifvi.N,PH8R 12

?rN&lt;r OJeR ,16\JIJ!

ROGER HYSELL'S
GARAGE
by-pass

towards
:

EXCAVATING
dozer
ba ck hoe ,
and
d.tther,
waterline, footers dr)l ms
roads and br ush cl eantng no
10b too small no weather too·
bad Char les R Hatf ield, Rt 1
Rutland , 0 Phon e 742 6092
l 1 26tc

READY MIX CO NCR Ef~ de
livered nght to your prefect
F ast
and
easy
Free
esttmates: Phone 992 32&amp;4
Goeg l e•n Re ady M 1X ,.co
Mtddleport Ohto
' •
6......
XI tfc

OH, MY GOO'NESS1 LOOK' RELA'&gt;&lt;, GIRLS 1 AS SOON
"THEY GOT OOOLA 1
AS WE ALL GET SOMHHING
10 EAT, WE'RE LEAVING ,-o:J
"THIS PI.ACE I

II

n

~

SPITTY

'

I

t)I

~e

tX J

I-=~

r..;;.;;..;;.;;.:.,;;.p;;.:.;..;.;.;,

Y.. •t rrd•y's

, ·.{iASOlJNE ALLEY

She
put a
potato
mthe

Main St , Pomeroy A ll ktnds
of salt water pellets, wat er
nuggets, block salt and own
Oh 10 R1ver Salt Phone 992

lumbl-.

FRIAR GRIME ANYWAY NEARLY

An•w""

'\mmd11 mt If thl I. fill/ jj IJ rt f/1( Uu 111/( II Hl:.lttmd(,J\ - AAIN·ING

l

16 Small-

PIP€

as an

excuse
to
meet

S tfc

ljOU?

1 9 301&lt;
-FURNITURE
- - ---- -------+-Upholstert_!!J
Reasonable
rates,
fr' e
es t. mates,
p tc kup
an.d
delivery prompt servuH!
M owrey s Uphol stery Pol~t
Pleasan t w Va Phone 6Jii
4154
...... .

12 31 261p

o.JUDe&amp;"RY
lbl..I&lt;SELF BUT"

STILL- WHO
O.N T~LL.

HURRY THI S
A INT t:=XOCTL.Y'

WHAT THOSE'
DUMB

I

HO C I\.INI..Jo Valley E lect.r.Jl:
res1dent1a l and c ommeriJ;J
w1rmg B1g and little 101:16
Call 593 8078 A th ens Frte
est1mates
1

MIAMI "'"''"·"-·

1 19 IOic

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

CREMEANS CONCRETE de

l tv ered Monday t hroyQ),
Saturday
and
eventn.Q.$.
Phone 446 1142
,.-,

613"ffR PET~n s ta tl ati;;-SI2sl;ir
y acd Phone Rrchard Wtst
843 2667
•
12 2H~p
I

::tEPTIC
TANK S clean.._}~
Modern San 1tation , 992 3954 er
992 7349
1
9 18 Jtfc

JOEY, YOU DON'T HAVE
10 TELL UB ANYMORE
1MPER50NAT1NG YOU PAlO YOJR DEI3T
AN OFFICER.
TO SOCIETY I

I'M AFRAID &gt;OI.J SEE
IT IS, MISB
WINKLE

- --------- -- - .:L.•

C BRADFORD, Aucttonee r:_,;

~

WAS

IN PRIBON FOR

' THE WHOLE lUINT OF WHAT
t:.SCAPcO FROM
IPRiilDN I 1m-" CRIMINAL r--&lt;r

Complete Servrce
,_ ,
Phone 9-49 38 21 or 9-4 9 J16l - ,
- -+
Ra c tne Oh to
Crltt Bradford
--;

GASP!!!

s 1J}t

r

17 Eterruty
18 With
nnpartiallty
20 Greeting or
library
21 Biblical
spelling of
Noah
22 Extent
23 D!Bpute
25 In subjection
26 Candle
27 Hooray!
28 Shelley's
school
Z9 Formed mto
a nimbus
32 Jolson and
others
33 European
country
(abbr.)
34 Prefix
for press
or moist
35 Nun
:r1 Name
dropper
38 Habituated
39 Italian nver
40 Rousseau
work

1111 WI {I

11

Summer and Smoke" 10, Janakl

2 Wrtter
St. John
3 Pretending
(2 wds.)
4 Chalice veil
5 Noah or
Wallace
6 Host
7 Three, m
Taranto
8 Children's
game
(3 wds.)
9 Overeat

DZST

••'

"•' I

,.::
:;

--r

•

I

28

4 A 63

tK87 S2
&lt;!&gt;86

WEST

EAST

A7S4
.K tO
tQ1061
&lt;!&gt;K 10 9 4

.a

•QB7 S2

tJ9 3
&lt;loAQS2

SOUTH tD)
4 K Q J tO 9 2
• J 64
tA
&lt;~oJ 7 3
East Wes t vulnerable
Wesl

North

Ea1t

Soutb

1.

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGJ'BLLOW

YW

DZ WT

QYM

DZST,

QYM

I

~:

One you U daal w1th today Will

NORTH

,z C
KMR

HYR
RY

LY .-C YMFGT

loeJ

KNOW li'EI( HAVE,

MMCIE! HELF ME i£1'
OFF lHIS gJ/(fE~B£0 !!!

':":

GEMtNt (Mty 21 -Juno 20)
There are a few domesti c

~o Implement
but it will ch art your most
logical cou rse for now

AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Fob 19)
treat you with consid eration
and unself ishness though tl s
Inconvenient for her to do so

PISCES (Ftb. 20-Morch 20) A
decision you make today will
be well thought out You I!
realistically evaluate ti s pros
and cons Act on It

Jtn. 29, 1975
Events w111 awaken your am
bltlon s th1 s year You II se t
some lofly goals for yourself
They can be attained 1f you II
pay the price Atm high
(NEWSPAPER I::NTERPRISE ASSN 1

Trump lead changes plan

(CJ U7&amp; KiD&amp; F•tures SrDdleate

WMPO AM-FM:1

may be painful

Yesterday's AD11we'r' ..
VIRGO (Aug. 23 -Sopt. 22) Its
to your advantage to be a httle
12 Com·
Z4 Ship's
more assertive now tn further
passionate
rope
lng self-Interests T1me Is an
16 Scoff
Z9 Multitude
unreliable ally
19 French c1ty 30 Deteriorate
LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct. 23) II
20 Venetian
31 Exclude
you 're in need of a favor pulln
feature
33 Rind
22 Bucolic
36 Threefold
WIN AT BRIDGE
23 Military
(comb.
command
form)
(2 wds .)
:r1 State

MHSHYOH
Yesterday's Cryptoquole: THE. SECRET OF EDUCATION
UES IN RESPECtiNG THE PUPIL. - EMERSON

--·
..•

111, A conclusion you II arrive at

• A 93

0 IE R

CAPRICORN (Doc 22· Jon

social activity you It be 1nvotved
tn will take on senous overt ones Something worthwhile
res ults l rom a tnvotous start

t;n+-t-f--

OIER

SAGlTTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec
21) Important str1des can be
made today toward a goal Important to you personally Pull
out all the stops

better day for your flnanc1al
dealmgs thar\ tomorrow will be
Stay on top ot sltuattorls calling
for your best business acumen

One letter simply stands for another In thla sample A II
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words ore 111
h1nts Each day the code letters are dllrerent

LY

When you notice those you 're

associating with are unsure of
their moves it will be your cue

LEO (July 23-Aug 22) ThiS Is a

dish

CTGF TR

SCORPIO (Ocl 24-Nov 22)

TAURUS (April 20-M•r 20) A

today You, can get others to
move In 1ine with your plans If
you prod them a bit

DOWN
1 Ortental

II

RY

rt •

You are far more ambitious today than you II be tomorrow
Get as much accomplished as
possible Leave no loose ends

CANCER (JUM 21 -July 22)
Your ldeas carry a lot ot welgtll

river

your request today It s likely to

get a considerate resp on se II
won I later

to supply the leadersh ip

For Wodnooday, Jon 21, 1t75
ARt!S (Morch 21·Aprll It)

matters needing your prompt
" attention Don't let them t:;o unattended They won I be completed later

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:

RIT

--------------&gt;.~.a.t o·

ABC National News on the hall-boar.
State and local news on the hour.
The Noori Report with Bill Prne and Melissa
Corise.
Paul Harvey News 8:30 a.m . and 12:30 p.m.
WMPO AM
6:00a.m. til 5:30p.m. Dally

1n1wer, u

CRYPI'OQUOTE

121M

News First On

J to form the aurpriee

I A 'T 1 I I}(I 1 I I IT"

1 Family
member
5 Use the pool
10 Counting
one's thwnbs
11 Wandermg
13 Trag1c king
14 Appear
15 Smacking
of malt

II ~ ""

-EXCEL
-------------SIOR Sa lt Works , East

Hear Local, State, and National

GREAT EMPHA515

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
U Belgian

2 11 tf c

EXPER'T tree serv1ce. tfge
eStimates, 20 years ~~ ·
per,ence Call (1) 667 30-41-ar
992 3057
.-'. I

Bernice Bede Oaol

~tN,."el"

12 191fc

---- ---- - ------ ,

Tf.IE WORI75 WIT!-(

(AD•wen lolnorrow)

5232

a, Movie

OUT

;s;ELT~

~~-~·~~~~L'Jt::-:~f.._~~*=:;;~•;u~neatod by the~· cartoon.

" LlTILE ORPHAN ANNIE

DOZER work land cl ettnng by
the acre , hourly or contr'ac t
Farm ponds roads, l!t-c
Large dozer and oper)tor
With over 20 years • e x.
per1ence Pullms Excava"mg,
Pomeroy , Oh10 Phone ..:992
2478
-:

~-""-'- - - - - -- - -- --

Elec Co 20 !TV
Utlllzat!Ofl 33
6 30-NBC News 3,4 15, ABC News t3 Bewitched 6 CBS News
8,10 Zoom 20, Your Future Is Now 33
7 oo-Truth or Cons 3,4, Bowling for Dol lars 6. What's My
Line 8, News 10. Country Music Jubt lee 13, I Spy 15, Behind
the Lines 20 Knoow Your Schools 33
7 30-Pollce Surgeon 3, Name That Tone 4 Let's Make a Deal
6, Wilburn Brothers 8, The Judge 10 To Tell the Tr oth 13,
Book Beat 20, Eplscode Acllon 33
8 oo-LIItle House on lhe Prairie 3,4, 15 That's My Mama 6,13,
Tony Orlando &amp; Da1!f18,10, Feeling Good 20 Sinners 33
8 »-Comedy Awards '1&gt;, 13
9 oo-Lucos Tanner 3 4, 15, Cannon 8,10, Bonnie Ralll &amp; Paul
Bollerftetd 20, Masterpiece Theatre 33
10 oo-Pelrocelll 3,4, IS, Get Christie Love 6,13 Man honter 8 10
Family at War 33
10 30-Your Future ts Now 20
11 oo-News 3,4,8,t0,t3,15. ABC News 33

AstroGrapM

Now arran1e the ctrclod Jetton

v- 'J

~~

2f

-

Trails West 15 Elec Co 33

6 oo-News3,4.Q,10,13,t5, ABC News 6

Movie "Gunn"

6HE

(;QRNTSl

1.1 T T I. E

3, Andy Griffith 8. tronslde 13

5 30-New• 6, Beverly Hillbillies 9, Hodgepodge Lodge 20

11 3[)-Johnny CorsOfl 3,15, Wide World s'peclal 13, FBI 6,

WHERE ARE
YOU lAKING
us?

- - --- --- -----.•

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

s oo-FBt

33
12 3o-Wide World Special 6
1 oo-Tomorrow M , News 13

SE WIN'G MACHINE Repl!irs
serv 1ce all makes 992 3284
The Fabnc Shop, Pomaroy ,
Author 1zed Smger Sales ' and
Serv 1ce We sharpen Scts!lors
3
!fc

EXCAV ..... TlNG , dozer , load~r
and ba ckhoe work
seopt1c
tan ks mstalled dump trucks
and lo boys for htre w111 haul
f!ll dtrl, top soil l tmes tone &amp;
grav el Call Bob or Rooer
Jeffer!S day ptlone 992 7089
n1ght phone 992 3525 or 1,92

Gilligan's Is 6, Tattletales a, Sesame Sl 20 33, Movie "The
Glory Brigade" 10, Mike Douglas 13
30-Bewllched 3 Merv Grtffln 4 Mod Squad 6 Lucy Show B.

n•

_

3991

U.tam"J .-1 ,.._

Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one letter to each square, to
form rour ordmary wo rd s

ALLEYOOP

Open Mon .sat
BAM 6PM

8, 10, To Be An novnced JJ

Bonanza 15

School Scene 10 The Story 13
6 35- Co lombos Today 4
6 45- Morn lng Report 3 Farmllme 10
7 oo-Today 3 4, 1S, A M America 6,13 CBS News 8 10
8 oo-Lassle 6 Capt Kangaroo B. Popeye 10. Sesame Sf
33
a 25-Capl Kangaroo tO
8 3o-Btg Vall ey 6
9 oo-A M 3, Phil Donahue 4 Phil Donahue 15, Bullwlnkle 8,
Morning with D J 13
9 25-Chuck While Reports 10
9 3o-Nol For Women Only 3 Dinah 6, Galloping Gourmet 8,
Tattletales 10 · New Zoo Revue 13

Jl&amp;Mill!1LE® u...J

Ph . 992-5682 or 992-7121
All Mechanica I Work

_____________

4

6 ~Sunr ise Sem 1nar 4, Sunrise Semester 10
6 15-E ngllsh 505 3
6 25-Far m Report 13
6 Jo-F1ve Minut es to Uve By 4, News 6 Bible Answers !),

BORN LOSER

Tomorrow

12 45-E lec Co 33
12 55-NBC News 3,15
1 oo-News 3 All My Children 613 Phll Donahoe 8, Young &amp;
the Restless 10. Not For Women On ly 15
I 30-How To Survive a Marriage 3,4 15. Let's Make A Deal
&amp; 13 As lhe World Turns 8,10
2 oo-Days of Our Lives 3,4, 15, 510,000 Pyram id 6, 13, Gol ding
Lig ht 8,10
2 3o-Doctors 3 4 15 Big Showdown 6 13, Edge of Nlghf 8, 10
J oo-Another World 3 4, 15, General Hospit al &amp;, 13 Pri ce Is
Right 8,10, RFO 20
3 3D-One Life to Live 13 Lucy Show &amp; Match Game 8 10
Aging 20

News l3

1 .I

WEDN ESDAY JANUARY 29 1975

heating serv1ce and
general sheet metal
works .
Free
Estimates.
Phone 949·5961
Emergency 992-3995
or 992·57Q'

10 oo-Celebrlly Sweepstakes 3,4, 15, Joker's Wild 8, 10, Movie
·on the Double" 13
10 Jl)....Wheel of Fortune 3,4, 15, Gambit 8,10
11 oo-Hlgh Rollers 3,4, 15, One Life to Live 6, Magazine 8,10
t 1 3o-Hollywood Squares 3, 15, Brady Bunch 6, News 4,
Sesame St 33
11 55-Take Kerr 8, Dan Imel' s World 10, News 13
12 [)()-Jackpot 3, 15, Password All Stars 6, 13, Bob Braun's 50 50
Club 4, News 8,10
t2 3o-Blank Check 3,15. Split Second 6,13, Search for

4 oo-Mr Cartoon J , I Dream of Jeannie 4 Somerset 15

12 3o-Wide World Mystery 6

RACINE PLUMB(NG
&amp;HEATING :
Complete plumbing &amp;

Route 1
Rutland

the

Daughters of Josh ua Caba Return ' 13 Movie "Si nk the

DHOW 8ROADCA 5 TI'-IG

Pamtlng , s1dtng, roofing,

pond, T P C water, large

m

HOW
MANY
VICTIMS
?
•

heat1ng
coo11ng
refrrg ,
plumbtng
elec tr i ca l ap
pl1an ces We serv 1ce -and
repatr anvt 1ng m the horne or
bus 1ness
215 N Sec-ond,
Middleport Phone 992 3.509

2 ba ths gas furnaces and v 1ew

I 28 ltc

please call

TRACY.

CAPr AIN EASY

From a shelf to a house

6

NICE stee r s wetghs between
450 and 500 lbs dressed w tll NEW LlSTING - 3 bedrooms
b e r ea dy la st week of wtth bath, gas furnace porch ,
February Who le 85c lb
lh bake and cook un1ts Needs
stee r
87c
lb
tncludes frn1shed
Make no m1stake
dr ess tng ,
cu ttt ng
and
have
a
look
Only $7500 00
wrapptng 1ust 2 steers l ef t
Call 742 3123 wrapped tor a RUTLAND - 3 bedroom block
fam tl y StlC
home, bath, gas heal and 2
1 28 3tc acres of land $ 16,000 00
Phone

JOB,

-P&amp;J
--- Home
- --------........-.-Mamtenahce

TABLE saw and tolnter to r
sale Phone 8A3 2292
1 28 6tc

STRAW for sa le
2175

PHONE
949 3832 or 843 2667
All Types of
BUILDING
and REMODELING

-lOME
Improvement
and
Repa 1r Serv1 ce Anythtng
ft xed arovnd the hom e from
roof to basemen t You W1ll
111&lt;e our work and r ates
Phone 7.42 5081
'
12 29 tfc

New Wood Burnrng

"'·~
p!all

CONSTRUCTION

TUESDAY, JANUARY 28,1975
6 oo- News 3,4,9,10,l315, ABC 'News 6, Elec Co 20 lTV
Util ization 33
6 3o-NB C News 3 4 15. ABC News 13, Be .....llche&lt;l6, CBS News

BASKET

On State Rl 124, 112 m1 lrom

Real Estate Fof 5ale

All New Heaters
Now
DtsG:Gunted!

For Rent

WI L L c lettn barns for manur e A P T 3 ro oms dll elec tr tc has
tab le top range waH oven
Phon e 992 7201
re al n tce and clean modern
1 24 4t c
Lo c at ed
tn
Pomeroy
ov erlooktng the Oh to R1ver
N OW sel l 1ng F ul l er Br us h
Phone GalltpO IIS day 446
Produ c ts ph one 99 2 341 0
; 699 ev entngs 446 95 39
1 24 tfc
1 26 lfn
SHOO TI N G m at ch Ra c tne Gun
Club Sunday I p m Assorted F URNIS H ED
apar tm ent
meat s and f ac tory choke gun s
Phone 992 7556
on ly
l 13 6ti:
..._ 12 n tf c
B EDRO OM mob l e horn!,
NC OME Ti!x P re pared both 2 ut!ltl1es
pad nea r Pomeroy
r cder al an d ~ tat e Ta)(e s will
Off Rt 7 Ca ll 992 70 17 or 992
be clo n e b y appo •ntmenls
7666
only Ple ase phon e 99'1 2272 or
I 28 3tc
see M rs Wand&lt;~ Ebl n Lau r el
Cl If Rd Pom eroy Ohto
~U RN I SHED
1
bedroom
I 3 JOt c
trader
all ut l tltes
493
Broadway Street M1ddleport
FO R you r
0 1 of Mtn k
I 28 tfc
Cos m ett cs Ph one BR OW N S
--------------99?5 113
FURN I SH ED apt J rooms and
1 7 tfc
bath new l y decor ated Phone
99 2 293 7
A U1... T ION
T hu rsday
and
1 26 6tp
Saturday n gh t 7 p m at
Mason A uctton Horton St n --------------Mason W Va Consignmen t s ~ URNI S HED mobt le home for
r ent Phone 949 226 1 A lber t
we l com e Phone (30 4l 773
Ht ll Ra c me OhtO 4577 1
547 I
1 26 6tc
10 3 tfc

___

STEREO RADIO 8 t ra ck tape
combmat 1on am fm radto 4
way speaker so und syst em
Balance $108 7tJ or use our
budge t t erm s call 992 3965
1 21 tf c

W AI TRE SSES needed app ly tn
p er son Cr ow s Steak Hous e
Pom eroy
1 7 ttc

1 22 61 c

STRIPPtNG FINISHES
FURNlTURE METALS.ETC
MODERN &amp; ANTtQUE

Ph 992 2174

For Sale

1 26 Jt c

OPENIN G for p ano student s 1 HO US:: u durnt shed 7 rooms
still a va ilabl e Phon e 949 4811
and b at h ntce Phone 992 2780
Mr s W tll 1am Bartho l om ew
or 992 3432
Thtrd St R ac tn e Oh o 45771
1 9 lf c

Phon e(614) 992·2'798

SMITH NELSO'N
MOTORS, INC.

Phone 992.3993
Da1ly After 5 00

1 20 51c

Help Wanted

Mobile Homes For Sale

Weight champton Joe FraZler

M AVER IC K
good cond tl on
3826

Pomeroy , Oh19

From the largest Truc k or
Bulldozer Rad1ator t o th e
smallest Heater Cor e
Nathan Btggs
Rad1ator Spec1alstt

Larry Lavender

1 22 61 p

FOR RENT
Tobacco base
2 300 lb s
on sh ar es or
oth er w• se Phon e 142 5761
1 '16 5t c POS ITION
Wtth
Wel come
Wagon ava il able
Plea sant
N ON
denommat on a l Gospel
c a re er fl extble hours car
Se r v1ces w tll be held at Jr
neces sary For tn terv tew ca ll
0 U A M
Hall 20 1 ll h 5 1
or w r .te Shir l ey ~ton area
f'.. e w Ha v en Ea c h Tu es
cod e ( 014 ) 592 1214 56 Avon
We d
Fr tda y an d Sundav
P lac e Ath ens Ohto 45701 An
7 30 p m
All ar e cord tally
E qua l Oppor tu nt l y Employer
mv ted
I 26 3tc

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

PffiLADELPHIA (UPI)
Plans for 8 lkound bout
between fonner world heavy-

76 17

1970

100 Kerr Street

Television log for easy viewing

HEll

Blown Into Walls
and Atttcs
Free Esttmates

1909 IMP AL A Cu stom
good
cond1tton Fac tory a1 r p s
p b pr ced to se l l Ph one 992

D&amp;D

Modem "Chemicals

Fire Retardant
Insulation

Notice

Co mpl et e F RYE S TRUC K
The $Ia barrel first phase of
A ND A UTO PART S Ru t la nd
the 1mport tax l&lt;!kes . effect
Pt1on e 742 609-t
1 22 26tp
Saturday
Glenn, a recenUy • named W A NTED t o buy it used
member of the Senate In teriOr
Grave1 y Tra c tor Wtth Mower
and r td tng sulky and plow
Conumttee, sold the umlateral
att ac hments Phone (3 04 ) 88 2
lmposlllon of the l&lt;!x, w1thout
2525 or even 1ngs 88 2 2344
1 26 12tc
congr ess tonal revtcw,
ts
closmg oph ons to other O L D f urn tture 1ce boxes brass
beds or com p let e hou seholds
proposals that could reduce
Wr 1te M D Miller Rt 4
conslUnphon without all of the
Po m ero y , Ohto Call 99 2 7760
10 7 7 4
dangerous s1de effects "
• President Ford 's Impo r t JU N K autos comple te and
delivered to our y ard We p tc k
l&lt;!x as well as the deregulatiOn
up auto bod1 es and buy all
of old domestic crude ml
k tnds of scr ap metals and
•ron R tder s Sal v ag e St Rt
pn ces \\Ill ha \ e a severe
12 4 Rt 4 Pomeroy Ohto
npple effec t throughout our
Call 992 5468
10 17 tf c
rcon onn, t1ffec tmg the cost of
ltvm g of C\'ery Amen can m CAS H pa td for al l makes and
mo d el s o f mob le hOmes
ll a) s that hav e not even been
Ph on e ar ea code 61 4 423 953 1
contam plated ) el,· Glenn sa 1d
.t 13 lf c
He sa1d the cos t of livmg h1ke --------------CO N SIG NMENT S w elcome at
would
be
parl!cuiarly
P&amp; J Au cfton
2 15 N orth
Second M tdd le por t
devastatmg to those on Soc1ai
c
Securty, pnvate pens10ns and ------------ l -9 JOt
other low mcome people

BOtrr SCHEDULED

Free P1 ckup and De livery

1 T P1 ckup 8 w 1d e body V 8 eng ne automat c tran s
&amp;
power st eenng rad to sp ort c ust om ca b good l tr es green
&amp; w h tf e f m tsh

before game

'J~

REPAIR-Broken
Parts Mended
STRIPPING-By
Hand
NO DIP TANKS
Supplies Stnppers
Stams . Fms1hes

$2495

1972 DODGE

Supper planned

RACINE - The Racme E·R
Squad Will sponsor a soup
supper Fnday at Southern
Hlgh School begliUlmg at 3 30
pm to630pm
The menu w1ll mclude bean
chth,
soup,
cornbread ,
vegetable soup, hot dogs, other
sandwiches, and p1e. Those
wishing to donate may contact
Helen Pickens at 949-4951, Joan
Tuttle at 949-5491, Beverly
Cum nuns at 949·4573 or
Jeanette Lawrence at 949-4161
t'o liow mg supper Southern w11l
host North Gallia m a Southern
Confe1ence ba&gt;ketball game
TIJC public " mv1ted

843 2824 or 843 2293
Portland, Oh1o

V a 4 doo r automattc tran smt ssmn po wer steenng and
power br akes v•nyl mten or v n y l roof r ed f1n1sh good
wh t e wall It r es rad to fac t or y a1r

p e r y a rd

on Friday night

The .furniture Fixer

11595

1971 MATADOR

DEA B POI I Y - l 1vmg m
a small apartment w1th tw o
little gtrls leaves U!) cramped
f or space We ha ..e learned to
make lll iln) thmgs do two JObs
One IS the g1rls ' rockmg horse
th,!l IS a favonte play thmg by
day but at nlght turns mlo a
olothes horse The spokes on
each s1de of the head ma ke
handy hooks for sk1rts and
dresses , the saddle holds folded
Jerseys and slacks The hm·se
IS low enoug h for them to reach
and they have learned to put '%1
their clothmg neatly m one
place when they undress MARIE

Weeks of dedication

Motor Co.

197o

A
- ITS
REAL

'

M1ss10n m New M exico was

POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - I have a
piece of marble that has been

le a\'ing

Contnbutton to
mLSSton tn
Southwest made

7- The ~aily Sentinel, Mfddleport·Pomero), G
DICK TRACY
_,

Pass 2 ¥
Pass
Pass 4 •
Pass
Pass
Opening lead - 4 A

2 .t.
Pass

By Oswald &amp; J ames Jacoby
Here IS another fa~rly s1mple
Collm hand South finds himself
m a sound four·spade contract
II all goes well he can discard
one potential losmg heart dn
dummy's king of diamonds and
ruff h1s third club to wind up
w1th enough tr1cks for h1s con·
tract But West has been un·
pleasant enough to open a
trump Now 1f West started
w1th three trumps and can win
the f1rst two club leads, he w11l
lead two more trumps and up·
set South's applecart
South sees a way to prevent
this If diamonds break 4-3 He
starts by cash1ng hiS ace of
diamonds to get out of dummy's

way Then he leads a low club
West puts up the mne of clubs m
order to wm th e tr1 ck and leads
back a trump
t
If he leads back the seven
South must wm w1th dummy s
ace and follow 1n hiS hand w1th
one of h1s h1gh trumps ThiS will
make 1t possible to get to dum·
my w1th the s1x spot later If he
leads lov. , dummy must w1n
With the SIX
E1ther way , South leads and
ruffs a d1amond , enters dummy
With the last trump , ruffs
another d1amond and eventual
ly gets two diScards on tire kmg
and e1ght
IN~W S I

AI tH ENTJo iC I' HI SJo 1\ SSI\

,,z:a;t :1~~&amp;~":1 n
The b1ddmg has been
Wesl

North

East

Pass
Pass

1¥
2¥

Pass
Pass

28

South

I t

I•
?

Yoy South hold
AAQ7 6 .2 tKJ 54&lt;1oAQ82
What do you do now?
A - Pass The hand appean to be
a misfh. Quil before yo11 gel too

blgb
TODAV'S QUESTION
Instead of b1ddmg two hearts
your partner has rebid one notrump
over your one spade What do you
do now'
Ssnd $1 tor JACOBY MODERN
book to Wm at Bndge rc/ o
th1s newspaper) P 0 Bo• 489
RadiO C1ty Stat1on New York
NY 10019

�'

6- The Dally Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Tuesday, Jan 28 1975

~ l i~

~

POLLY'S POINTERS

I
I

BY POLLY CRj\MER

Painted marble
proves challenge

For Fast Results Use Sentinel Classifieds . _ Business Services
2 SIGNS Pomeroy I
Auto Sales

NEW HAVE N - A donatwn
of So4 to the McCundy School

OF
QUALITY

manners C\ r r so oftc11
POLLY
DEA R PO lLY - Mr s
M D ca n r1d her natura l bnstle
'ha n brush of the bad smell by
soakm g tt for 15 to 20 nunutes
m a sol u t ton or warm " ater and
a commet cut l enzvme p1 esuak
poY.d er rhe same trea tment
makes a sour sponge smell like
ne w - MRS L N
DF'AR POlLY - MRS M
D should make a solutwn of
t" o tablespoons bakmg soda
and 10 to 12 oun ces hot water
and soa k her brush for about lo
mmut es Th1 s sh ould remove
the lmp leasa nt odor and &lt;.lea n
the brush - LAURA
DEAR MilS M D .!.. Rc
sure to stand tht• rmscd brush
propped agalust somet hin g
else so the \Httrr drains ofl

pam fed I now want to use Jl as

a desk top Hoi\ canT clean II '
Is 11 possible to l1ave marble
polished ' - ANNE
DEAR ANNE - You haV&lt;•
a tricky Job ahead Doubtless
the paint hos sunk Into the
marble All I can suggest Is to
try a non-oil) paint remo\ er
This also will remnve a ny

flol&amp;h that \\as on the marble
II will then ha\ e to be polished
Stains can usuully be removed
by a gentle rubbing with a
mixture of hydrogen peroxide
and ammonia, rinse

~lth

(')car

water and dry
Rad stains rna) require
this

mixture

on

overnight after being covered
wfth plastic wrap to keep the
mixture damp Perhaps there
Is a monument com pany in
your city that will do the
marble polishing It mi ght be
well to consult them before
rven trying to re mO\ e the
paint - POLLY.
DEAR POLLY - My Pet
Peeve IS w1th those people who
d1al my phone number and
then hang up abruptly w1thout
saymg a word It seems they
could have the cour tesy to sa~.
"I am sorry but I must ha"''
the wrong numper · - MRS
HWM
DEAR MRS. H W M. - It
Is good for us all to be
reminded of our telephone

agreed a t the January mcetmg

of the Uru ted Methodis t Women
of Ne" Have n at the home of
Ma rlene C.a mpbell w1H, 14
members prese nt
The devottonal program was
prese nted by Marlene Camp
bell and Janet Bwngardner
the message of te lhng wha t tt
means to love and trust a hltle
Child
Due to the 1ll ness of the
p res tden t
Mr s
Naom1
Bumga rdn er the bus tne ss
meetmg \\ as conducted by
\ ICC pres tde nt Mrs Clara
Bunt s, and prayer was led by
Mrs A M1ll er Dunng the
bustness sessiOn tt was ag rceP
to donate the mone} to the Nev..
Mextco Mtss10n Also severa l
nev. subsc rtptwns Y. ere or
dere d for th e Re sponse
l\1agcmne Mrs Mary ltevmg
gdve the ti easurer s report
Refreshments wet e se1ved to
the fullowmg members by the
hos tess Janet Bumgardner,
Margte Hoffm an Jean ~ Henderson lelara Burris, Mary
Ue\lng Ara Jewell, Carolyn
Throne , .Ioyce Moxley. Edna
Rou s h, Marlen e Campbell,
Achsah Miller Ruth Baley,
Thelma Capehart, and Evelyn
Dan burn
The next meeting will be held
at the home of Evelyn Dan.
t&gt;ufy: ·s~cretary on February

le ~J\Ing

the bnstlt•s sta ndmg
cre&lt;·t - POLl. Y

Dart Custom 4 door loca l 1 owner c ar 318 V 8 e ng tn e

a utom a t c tra nsm• ss ton and p owe r sleenng arr con
d •ll on •ng \nn y l tnm vm yl to p ra d to wh• te wall l1re s
1970

ahead of all

I•

By Goldie Clendenin
PORTLAND - We ve JUSt
celebrated the birthday of our
Savior; now comes the sad
event of H1s cruc1flxwn Our
minds center on Him, and all
that He means to us
In retrospection, we hvc
agam the many happy and s.1d
times, and that there are man;
wonderful people who pattc1 n
their hves after H1m
Last year I spent Chn s tmas
eve and ThanksgiVIng Day
wtth my daughter , Georgia and
family , the Sm1ths and
Taylors, at Chester
We had ThanksglVlng dmner
at Gary Smith's and Chnstmas
eve at Georgta's and Larry's
Ruth, the mother, and Gary
and w1fe, Marvin and w1fe,
Anna and V1rgll came there to
open presents After refreshments there we all walked
across the road to Gary's
trader, then to Marvm 's and
back across the road to Ruth's
lraller home, all the wh!le
seemg tile happm ess of
togetherneSs, openmg g1fts and
eatmg goodies Tins was one of
the happiest expenences of my
lUe
Ruth Smith Taylor has two
new daughters-m-law, and I
had never met Charlotte,
Gary's wile, but had me t
Shells, Marvm 's w1fe before I
was a stranger, and they
welcomed me, however
On Chnstmas day I \\as
1nvlted to d1nner at the
Hayward BlSSells on BashanKeno Rd That was a happy
occaSion, too, havmg known
them, their par ents, and
grandparents man y year s
Altogether , w1th my fam1ly
8WBY except for Georgia , It
was a really mce lime for th1s
ole Widder who \\ Ould otherWISe have been alone
[I was so mce to all of them
especially Sheba and Charlo tte
whom I had not known And I
hope and pray for these young
folk a long happy lUe together
I want to share w1th you thiS
reading " Tidings of Great Joy "
- by Eula Proffl tl
"AI this time of year the
birth of Jesus 1s "so closely
associated with such great joy
Let us remember there are
different kinds of joy The joy
of many gifts and earthly
pleasures, and the true JOY of
the birth of Jesus, as our
SaVIor.
"We~ as mother, can know of
some of the thought. and
quest10ns that must have
troubled Mary. The Scnplures
tell us, "She pondered these
things m her heart " The
feeling of a mother's love for a
sort, cuddly baby is almost
~ble to descnbe but

unforgettable.
"You can care for your baby,
bathe, feed, love and hold him
close lo your body. Tbe soft,
WarrD teeliilg IS great gift.
"Mary kl!.ew belorl!.~n&lt;! @e

a

•"

•

•

Cf.lrtS tta ns

would only have her son for
a\\hlle, because H was also the
Son of God How would WE, as
mothers, feel · would we be
able to go about our dulles
under such condthons?

"We want,

by

mstmct to

pro tect our children from all
hm m, )Uirt and an' thtng un ·
pleusqnt because of our gt ed l
love for them God loved H1s
son u!so Could we fmd such• JO\
as Mary dul , knuwmg as she
must have, some of the things
Jesus must face'
"We fllld such roy a nd
comfort m our children's ea rl v
years, yet al the age of 12 Jesus
was already, ' About H1 s
Father's busmess · No JOY
could be felt from such as fate
as Jesus f aced, 1f 1t were not for
the
greatnes s of
H1 s
resurrection
'He had all the physical
needs, rust as we, ye t H was
never too concerned or let
such thmgs mterfere With HIS
great Comm:ss10n Baby Jesus
must have been a beautiful
baby. let m a short tune Mar 1
watched l-hm bemg natled to
tilt' cross
s, a mother the lo\ e c~nd
S\\ eeu1ess of th1s baby could be
so 'r\ Cil remembered We must
fmd the great ~oy m th is ,
season m the fa ct w:e worship a ,
hvmg Jesus today , and '
assoc1ate Christmas with this
Jesus we have learned to love
We can see H1m , feel HIS
presence, hear H1s vmce and
knows He IS w1th us 1f _ This
Tidmg of great JOY has reall)
reached our hearts
• Our children grow up and
we must remember they too
belong to God We are only
stewards over them, to brmg
them up tn such a way they
mav return to God m celestial
glor} as pure as "hen ttle't
Y.ere gtven to us
Just as angels appeared to
Mar) . t11ey \Hitch over us and
our children are one of God :s
greatest gifts to us Through
God's g1ft of His Son , the gospel
and teachings and example
Jesus set for us \\ e can truly
make this a season of 'Tidmgs
of Great Joy • "
A new year IS always a
challenge May we all meet 1t
bead-on as we ask God to help
and bless us m the commg
days

Glenn wants
•

moratonum
on Ford tax
WASHING"ION (UP! ) Sen John Glenn, D.Oh10, sa1d
Monday a moratonum on
Pres1dent Fords 011 1mport
taxa t10n program was needed
tu avotd a severe rtpple cffee t on the 'ost of hvmg
Glenn tn remctrks p1 cpared
for a lll('e\ing of the Wom.m's
N t~tJOnd l De moc.:1 dlt c Club
smd a hO to 90-da) delay would
~ ! C elt!~ enhance prospects that
an econom1c puckage could be
Jl~tt loge th~r

S169l

FORD

1969

PO N T I A C Grand Prtx
QOO d conOdiOrl '!. 1 250 Pt10nc
992 .'i46S
1 26 li P

19 7] FORD Cou nlr y 5 (JU rc
waqon
20 000 m Irs
a ll
equ,p mcn t 'S J 500 P hom 99'1.
3493 or 992 7720

and Jimmy Ellis scheduled for
March 2 In Melbourne, AusPICKETS SHOW UP
traha were formally anHUNTINGTON, W Va
~
here Monday.
(UP!) - Pickets appeared a t OOUi1ced
The announcement also satd
Chesapeake &amp; Oh10 fac1hl1eo negotiations w e re " trP the
Monday as part of a spreadmg pro cess " for heavyweight
nal!onw1de rail str1ke Tom champ1011 Muhammad All to
ohnson, an offlclal of C&amp;O, defend his crown against the
sa1d about 3,000 workers m wmner, also In Australla
West Vll'gmm were affected by
FraZier,' 31, wi.l.1 rece~ve a
the walkout 1n Charleston, guarantee of $250,000, and the
Huntington and other Cities
35-year-old Ellis, former WBA
Tr8Jns were bemg operated by heavyweight champion, Wlll
superviSors
get $75,000.

6 c ylind er
Pho ne 985

l 24 6tp
--~------ - - - - ------HO US EHOLD
survey
tn
FA B RIC SA LE
F •r s t qualtfY
t e rv tew er s needed f ora6toB
do ub l e and stng le k n tt s Sl 98
w ee k per od n th e Southeast

A ll l abr c

n s hop

r edu ce d n ct ud ng n e w sprtn g
pa lt e rn s O n e w ee k on l y
Monday Jan 27 t hru Sa t
F eb l O p en 9 am to 7 p m
Caro l tna F= a br• c Ro ute 7 on e
h a lf mtle nort h o f Ch es t er
Oh o
H enry
a nd
Mary
Hunt er ov..ners
I 26 61p

A N YO N E Int er este d tn s tar l tng
a fund am ental
nd epende nt
Bapt i st Chur ch wrtte Re v
James Gan t Box 243 Alb an y
Ohto or c al l {I) 698 3034
I 26 7tp

Oh o

Prog r am tS assoctaled

Wtltl an advanc ed eme r gen cy

m e d tc a l

s e rvtce

d e mon

s t r a tt on protec t Htgh Scnoo l
gradua t e Wtlh some ex
p e r ten ce pr eferred
Must
h ave own car Send resum e to
BoK 1076 Ath e n s OhtO 4570 1

__ _

MEIG S County F tSh and Game
As soc1alton w I f have a
meet mg Wednesday Jan 29
at 7 30 p m Syr ac1.1se Cl1.1b
Room
I 26 4tc

Wanted To Buy '
WA NT to buy 50 to 65 H P
out board motor Call 992 71 06
1 26 Jtc

- ------------TRA ILE R SPACE
mile
J4

nor th of Metgs H gh Schoo l on
ol d R t 33 Phone 991 294 1
1 23 tr c
CO UNTRY M ob1 le Home Park
R t 33 ten m des north of
Pomeroy
Large lots wtlh
con c rete patios
st dewalks
runner s and off
st r eet
parktng Phone 992 7~79
12 31 tt c

USED 4 dr au to 4 cyltnder TRAI L ER space 2m l es from
( Not VW or Veg a ) Ph one
Pomeroy Rt 143 Phone 992
992 2082
5858
I 24 4t c
10 21 tfc
CAS H SSU

FOR

J UN K CARS

3 and 4 ROOM !u r n shed and
u nturn shed
apartments
Phone 99 2 5434
4 12 tt c
PR I VATE me etmg room fo r
any organ1zatton phone 992
397S

3 11 tfc

F U RN I SHED apt Adults only
Mtddleport Phone 992 3874
1114tfc
FU RNISHED
apartment
ut tllt es lurn 1shed
suttab te
for two worktng men or
r el!r ed couple L tvmg room
k tchen shower and ba th On
m am h•ghway Mason W Va
Phone 773 51&lt;4 7
10 27 lf c

Employment Wanted
REMODE L IN G
plumb 1ng
heat tng
and al l types of
g enera l
repatr
Work
guaranteed 20 years ex
per tence Phone 992 2409
1 19 lfc
WILL do wa l l papenng or m
te r tor w ork at r ed uced rat es
Phon e 949 3832
1 24 6tp
_.___
.......

_____ ___ ____ _
Lost

55X 10V I NOALE mob 1le hom e A
r m s , new ly car pelt'd good ORANGE &amp; Wht te Po 1nter e 1rd
condtt ton. Very cl ean $3 500
Oog tn VtC ntty of near Hut
Call 985 3373 evenm g s or
t oo s backofApp leGrove on
weekends
collar tS pmk sleeve a lso
1 26 6t p
na m e Don Cross 1215 East
- - - - -NOT-;(;EOF - -6~f~~rs~~ f~und~~ac~l~bu;~;
APPOINTMENT
Sk tnner
99 2 2500
Reward

Estate ol JOHN ~·•zNEoR~~·: ------ ------~ ~-J.'c
Deceased
r
Sale
Not •ce &lt;S hereby o•ven lhal rOf

• Lll l 1an G Zerk l e of 289 Nol!h
Th trd St , M i ddleport, Oh lO nas
been dul y appo tnled E xecutr ix
of lh e E sta te of John w Zerkle
deceased tate of M idd lepor t.
Me1gS Coun ty , Oh iO
cred 1tor s are reQu.red 10 f de
thetr cla1ms w•th sa td ftduc1arv
w1ttlln fOur months
Dated th 1s 24th dl!ly of
January l'n5

(I)

29

USED par t s Frye' s Truc k and
Auto Paris, Rutland , Oh10
Phone ( 614 1 742 6094
~~- --------~__:.:_7 etp
US ED cha tn saws
3092

!='hone 992

1 22 6tc
- - - - - - - - - - -- - - 1957 CHEVY parts
NEW
Lak.ewpod trac1 1on bars h•
Mann 1ng D Webs t er
ta cker a 1r shocks, hooker
Judge
headers . w 1th 3" collec:tors tor
Court ot Common Pleas
small bloc k
Call 992 3•9 t
Pro bate 0 1v tS10n
after 6 p m BEST OFFER
- 10 -H~ fc

[2)

&lt;. 11 3t C

2

DUTY automattc washer
s tngle bed wtth matt ress
Stamese cat Phone 992 7201
1 24 4tC

1 72 ACRE S and locust posts
Phone 742 3656
1 19 12 tp
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ "T _ _ _ _ _ _
F l R EWOOD t or sale S15 per
load Phone 742 4831
1 19 12t c

USED FUEL OIL

HEATER,

Reftmsh•ng

Repa~rtng

Burntsh1ng

Can10g

Upholstering
We Al so Buy Antiques
P1ck up Servtce Available

Pomeroy

w I L L tr m or cut trees or
sh r ubb ery
c l ean
ou t
baseme11ts alttCS etc Phone
949 J221 or 742 4441
1 26 26t c

HO US E f or sa te tn Port land 6
rooms and bath good we l l 2
acres $6 700 Ca ll 843 2292
1 28 6tc
NEW HOM ES No Money Down
- Payments accordmg to
tnco me on Fa rm ers Home
Adm tn• s tratlon loan Con
ven t 1ona l flnancmg
a l so
ava il ab le w1th m 1n 1mum
down Love ly homes tn three
lo catiO ns n Metgs County
Some homes With wooded
Ca l l f or more '"
lo ts
format ton 992 5976
1 15 26tc

~so

HEATER----- -S239 95
Deluxe model wtth cabmef

Wall hned
POMEROY LANDMARK

Ja ck W C.arsey, Mgr
PtiDne 992 218 1

608 E
MAIN
POMEROY~Q,

CHESTER - 80 ACRES Renovated

home

2 large

BR bath lovely kitchen has
GROCERY bus ness for sale
Bu1 ldmg tor sa l e or lease
Phone 773 56 18 fr om 8 30 p m
l o 10 p m for appomtment
3 10tfc
------~- -- -----

CL O SE OU T on new Z1g Zag
sew mg machtnes For sew tng
str etch fabr tcs buttonholes
fan cy des 1gns etc
P a1n t
slight ly blem tshed Cho1ce o f
carrytng case or sew tng
stand $49 ao cash or term s
avat labl e Phone 992 7755
12 18 lf c

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

ELECTROLUX Sweep er • .:'1 l.. e
model
Comp lete Wtfh al!
c l eanmg atfa c hm ents and
uses paper bags Slightly used
but c l ea n s and looks l1ke new
Wil l se ll for $37 25 cash or
terms ava ,fabl e Phone 992
ns5
12 18 t f c

-------------EA R corn $3 per bushe l 3

reg1sterect polled Here fo rd
bulls 12 to 16 months old 9
ye arltng he1fers Call 985 3538
after 5 p m
Paul Ka rr
Chester Oh to
1 26 Jtp
FO LEY
saw
sharpening
equtp m ent (3 pc hand sa w
c •rcular saw
sh arpener)
sharpener
a nd
ca rbtde
grtnder Alll 1k e new 992 2386
1 27 4tp

over 20 cabmets , range &amp;
oven basement, natural gas

FA heal over 5 000 sq II
under roof, excellent hun
hng f 1sh rng about 25 acres
under fence S29.900

POMEROY -

75 II fron

tage 1 or 2 bedrooms, bath
three fourths
basement
natural gas heat, porches
good r enta l
Askrng lUSt

$3 800
RUTLAND - 45 ACRES all f ence d , n1 ce lake or pond,
good spnng lot s of bu1ldtng
sites m1nera ls JUST $9,000

NEAR POMEROY - About
2 years old, 4 BR, 2 baths,
l 1vrng
R ha s el ectr i C
ftreplace , lovely ktfchen and
dmtng area n1ce workshop
rn the rear, abouf 1 acre

BRICK &amp; FRAME Going at
lOSt $26 000
ALL CASH FOR YOUR
PROPERTY - LET US
SELL IT - WE NEED
HOMES VERY BADLY
,•2·2259 or 91&gt;2·2568

949

NEW LISTlNG - 2 bedrooms ,
of river MIDDLEPORT
RAClNE - 8 rooms w•th 2

Real Estate For Sale

baths, carpetmg and some n1ce
paneling And a 4 room rental

NEW HOME 3 bed r ooms
drapes wall to wall ca r pet
take on Wtppte Road Route
7 $39 500 Phone 992 3493 or
992 2720
1 24 3tc

33 ACRES - 3 bedrooms, all

HCUSE S5 000 Phone 992 5871
1 12 H!tc

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

BUILD I NG lot 80 fl f r ontage
by 165ft The second lot on left
on R1vervtew Dr tve Lincoln
Hill , Pomeroy OhtO If m
tereste'd ca ll 992 3230 after 5 p

m

10 17 ttc
-- ----------~--

NICE 2 bedroom home 31f2
acres r edu ced to $16 900 Rt 7
near Eastern H tgh Sc hool
Phone 985 &lt;4264
1 '26 3tp

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

Strout Realty
14 Acre
Farntette
House w1th 3 bedrooms ,
45x.-A5 pole barn , large fenced

paper

hanging .

cab1nets ,

lawn , lots of shrubbery ,
excellent locatton for sub
d1vts1on $26,500 00

- If you have a farm or
acreage of any 5tze to sell,

2298

307 Spring Avenue
992-2298
Pomeroy
CONTACT
LoiS Pau k!y
Branch Manilger

8, 10, Zoom 20, Your Future ls Now 33

7 oo-Truth or Cons 3,4, Bowling for Dollars 6. What s My Lme
8 News 10, Name That Tune 13, High School TV Honor
Soc•ely IS Antiques 20, Lilias Yoga &amp; You 33
7 3o-Hollywood Squa res 3,4, WTVN Forum 6 Bock Owens 8,
New Price " Right 10 To Tell the Troth 13, To Be An
nounced t 5 RF0 20, Marco Sporlllle 33
9 oo-Adam 12 3.4,15 Happy Days 13, Peanuts Special B,to,
America 20,33
'Shadow 10

8 30- Movle

&amp; LAZE$~

~

A'-1 ARA ~

RE R GHT
CA R R ~

HER PO~ I TtON&lt; l DID N' T
KNOW THEY WERE THAT
WELL EQUIPPED '

klt&lt;hen'

A

I DOUBT IF
~E &gt;&lt;TA'-JT OR

electnc bath, n1ce kitchen,
basement near town w1th c tty
w ater

70 ACRES - On Rt 33 near
wa ter l 1ne
dtvlston

N 1ce

for

sub

DBL HOME - Good for large
fa m1l y for a start m busmess
On Rt 143 near Albany ,

S12 500 00
COUNTRY

HOME
4
bedrooms bath vast ltvmg ,
carport, and large garden

516,500 00

3 4 15

Street'

M ovie " The

R'AO 0 BUT Tl· l/5
O~E ~E EM5 TO-

81smarckt ' '6 , Hawall Flve0 8,1 0 Ascen t ofMan2033

r.JO T .J UST

SMOKING S HE S

9

ON FIRE!

3o-Ben1am ln Franklin The Statesman Special 8 10

Wom ~n

20 Witn ess to Yesterday 33

10 oo- Pollce Story 3,4,15 Marcus Welby M D 6,13 News 20,
Soundstage 33
tO 30- Your Future IS Now ZU
11 oo-News 3 4 6 8,10 13 15, ABC News 33
11 3o-Johnny Carson 3.4. 15 Wide World Mystery 13, FBI 6

expert carpehng,

etc

M adigan 8, M ov1e 'Time Runnmg Out ' 10, JanakiJJ

1 ()()-Tom orr o"''

·-

M~ ~TCH H/6&lt;?t!PFrn

WI1AT TIME IS rrz

.

OO,Ifvi.N,PH8R 12

?rN&lt;r OJeR ,16\JIJ!

ROGER HYSELL'S
GARAGE
by-pass

towards
:

EXCAVATING
dozer
ba ck hoe ,
and
d.tther,
waterline, footers dr)l ms
roads and br ush cl eantng no
10b too small no weather too·
bad Char les R Hatf ield, Rt 1
Rutland , 0 Phon e 742 6092
l 1 26tc

READY MIX CO NCR Ef~ de
livered nght to your prefect
F ast
and
easy
Free
esttmates: Phone 992 32&amp;4
Goeg l e•n Re ady M 1X ,.co
Mtddleport Ohto
' •
6......
XI tfc

OH, MY GOO'NESS1 LOOK' RELA'&gt;&lt;, GIRLS 1 AS SOON
"THEY GOT OOOLA 1
AS WE ALL GET SOMHHING
10 EAT, WE'RE LEAVING ,-o:J
"THIS PI.ACE I

II

n

~

SPITTY

'

I

t)I

~e

tX J

I-=~

r..;;.;;..;;.;;.:.,;;.p;;.:.;..;.;.;,

Y.. •t rrd•y's

, ·.{iASOlJNE ALLEY

She
put a
potato
mthe

Main St , Pomeroy A ll ktnds
of salt water pellets, wat er
nuggets, block salt and own
Oh 10 R1ver Salt Phone 992

lumbl-.

FRIAR GRIME ANYWAY NEARLY

An•w""

'\mmd11 mt If thl I. fill/ jj IJ rt f/1( Uu 111/( II Hl:.lttmd(,J\ - AAIN·ING

l

16 Small-

PIP€

as an

excuse
to
meet

S tfc

ljOU?

1 9 301&lt;
-FURNITURE
- - ---- -------+-Upholstert_!!J
Reasonable
rates,
fr' e
es t. mates,
p tc kup
an.d
delivery prompt servuH!
M owrey s Uphol stery Pol~t
Pleasan t w Va Phone 6Jii
4154
...... .

12 31 261p

o.JUDe&amp;"RY
lbl..I&lt;SELF BUT"

STILL- WHO
O.N T~LL.

HURRY THI S
A INT t:=XOCTL.Y'

WHAT THOSE'
DUMB

I

HO C I\.INI..Jo Valley E lect.r.Jl:
res1dent1a l and c ommeriJ;J
w1rmg B1g and little 101:16
Call 593 8078 A th ens Frte
est1mates
1

MIAMI "'"''"·"-·

1 19 IOic

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

CREMEANS CONCRETE de

l tv ered Monday t hroyQ),
Saturday
and
eventn.Q.$.
Phone 446 1142
,.-,

613"ffR PET~n s ta tl ati;;-SI2sl;ir
y acd Phone Rrchard Wtst
843 2667
•
12 2H~p
I

::tEPTIC
TANK S clean.._}~
Modern San 1tation , 992 3954 er
992 7349
1
9 18 Jtfc

JOEY, YOU DON'T HAVE
10 TELL UB ANYMORE
1MPER50NAT1NG YOU PAlO YOJR DEI3T
AN OFFICER.
TO SOCIETY I

I'M AFRAID &gt;OI.J SEE
IT IS, MISB
WINKLE

- --------- -- - .:L.•

C BRADFORD, Aucttonee r:_,;

~

WAS

IN PRIBON FOR

' THE WHOLE lUINT OF WHAT
t:.SCAPcO FROM
IPRiilDN I 1m-" CRIMINAL r--&lt;r

Complete Servrce
,_ ,
Phone 9-49 38 21 or 9-4 9 J16l - ,
- -+
Ra c tne Oh to
Crltt Bradford
--;

GASP!!!

s 1J}t

r

17 Eterruty
18 With
nnpartiallty
20 Greeting or
library
21 Biblical
spelling of
Noah
22 Extent
23 D!Bpute
25 In subjection
26 Candle
27 Hooray!
28 Shelley's
school
Z9 Formed mto
a nimbus
32 Jolson and
others
33 European
country
(abbr.)
34 Prefix
for press
or moist
35 Nun
:r1 Name
dropper
38 Habituated
39 Italian nver
40 Rousseau
work

1111 WI {I

11

Summer and Smoke" 10, Janakl

2 Wrtter
St. John
3 Pretending
(2 wds.)
4 Chalice veil
5 Noah or
Wallace
6 Host
7 Three, m
Taranto
8 Children's
game
(3 wds.)
9 Overeat

DZST

••'

"•' I

,.::
:;

--r

•

I

28

4 A 63

tK87 S2
&lt;!&gt;86

WEST

EAST

A7S4
.K tO
tQ1061
&lt;!&gt;K 10 9 4

.a

•QB7 S2

tJ9 3
&lt;loAQS2

SOUTH tD)
4 K Q J tO 9 2
• J 64
tA
&lt;~oJ 7 3
East Wes t vulnerable
Wesl

North

Ea1t

Soutb

1.

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGJ'BLLOW

YW

DZ WT

QYM

DZST,

QYM

I

~:

One you U daal w1th today Will

NORTH

,z C
KMR

HYR
RY

LY .-C YMFGT

loeJ

KNOW li'EI( HAVE,

MMCIE! HELF ME i£1'
OFF lHIS gJ/(fE~B£0 !!!

':":

GEMtNt (Mty 21 -Juno 20)
There are a few domesti c

~o Implement
but it will ch art your most
logical cou rse for now

AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Fob 19)
treat you with consid eration
and unself ishness though tl s
Inconvenient for her to do so

PISCES (Ftb. 20-Morch 20) A
decision you make today will
be well thought out You I!
realistically evaluate ti s pros
and cons Act on It

Jtn. 29, 1975
Events w111 awaken your am
bltlon s th1 s year You II se t
some lofly goals for yourself
They can be attained 1f you II
pay the price Atm high
(NEWSPAPER I::NTERPRISE ASSN 1

Trump lead changes plan

(CJ U7&amp; KiD&amp; F•tures SrDdleate

WMPO AM-FM:1

may be painful

Yesterday's AD11we'r' ..
VIRGO (Aug. 23 -Sopt. 22) Its
to your advantage to be a httle
12 Com·
Z4 Ship's
more assertive now tn further
passionate
rope
lng self-Interests T1me Is an
16 Scoff
Z9 Multitude
unreliable ally
19 French c1ty 30 Deteriorate
LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct. 23) II
20 Venetian
31 Exclude
you 're in need of a favor pulln
feature
33 Rind
22 Bucolic
36 Threefold
WIN AT BRIDGE
23 Military
(comb.
command
form)
(2 wds .)
:r1 State

MHSHYOH
Yesterday's Cryptoquole: THE. SECRET OF EDUCATION
UES IN RESPECtiNG THE PUPIL. - EMERSON

--·
..•

111, A conclusion you II arrive at

• A 93

0 IE R

CAPRICORN (Doc 22· Jon

social activity you It be 1nvotved
tn will take on senous overt ones Something worthwhile
res ults l rom a tnvotous start

t;n+-t-f--

OIER

SAGlTTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec
21) Important str1des can be
made today toward a goal Important to you personally Pull
out all the stops

better day for your flnanc1al
dealmgs thar\ tomorrow will be
Stay on top ot sltuattorls calling
for your best business acumen

One letter simply stands for another In thla sample A II
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words ore 111
h1nts Each day the code letters are dllrerent

LY

When you notice those you 're

associating with are unsure of
their moves it will be your cue

LEO (July 23-Aug 22) ThiS Is a

dish

CTGF TR

SCORPIO (Ocl 24-Nov 22)

TAURUS (April 20-M•r 20) A

today You, can get others to
move In 1ine with your plans If
you prod them a bit

DOWN
1 Ortental

II

RY

rt •

You are far more ambitious today than you II be tomorrow
Get as much accomplished as
possible Leave no loose ends

CANCER (JUM 21 -July 22)
Your ldeas carry a lot ot welgtll

river

your request today It s likely to

get a considerate resp on se II
won I later

to supply the leadersh ip

For Wodnooday, Jon 21, 1t75
ARt!S (Morch 21·Aprll It)

matters needing your prompt
" attention Don't let them t:;o unattended They won I be completed later

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:

RIT

--------------&gt;.~.a.t o·

ABC National News on the hall-boar.
State and local news on the hour.
The Noori Report with Bill Prne and Melissa
Corise.
Paul Harvey News 8:30 a.m . and 12:30 p.m.
WMPO AM
6:00a.m. til 5:30p.m. Dally

1n1wer, u

CRYPI'OQUOTE

121M

News First On

J to form the aurpriee

I A 'T 1 I I}(I 1 I I IT"

1 Family
member
5 Use the pool
10 Counting
one's thwnbs
11 Wandermg
13 Trag1c king
14 Appear
15 Smacking
of malt

II ~ ""

-EXCEL
-------------SIOR Sa lt Works , East

Hear Local, State, and National

GREAT EMPHA515

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
U Belgian

2 11 tf c

EXPER'T tree serv1ce. tfge
eStimates, 20 years ~~ ·
per,ence Call (1) 667 30-41-ar
992 3057
.-'. I

Bernice Bede Oaol

~tN,."el"

12 191fc

---- ---- - ------ ,

Tf.IE WORI75 WIT!-(

(AD•wen lolnorrow)

5232

a, Movie

OUT

;s;ELT~

~~-~·~~~~L'Jt::-:~f.._~~*=:;;~•;u~neatod by the~· cartoon.

" LlTILE ORPHAN ANNIE

DOZER work land cl ettnng by
the acre , hourly or contr'ac t
Farm ponds roads, l!t-c
Large dozer and oper)tor
With over 20 years • e x.
per1ence Pullms Excava"mg,
Pomeroy , Oh10 Phone ..:992
2478
-:

~-""-'- - - - - -- - -- --

Elec Co 20 !TV
Utlllzat!Ofl 33
6 30-NBC News 3,4 15, ABC News t3 Bewitched 6 CBS News
8,10 Zoom 20, Your Future Is Now 33
7 oo-Truth or Cons 3,4, Bowling for Dol lars 6. What's My
Line 8, News 10. Country Music Jubt lee 13, I Spy 15, Behind
the Lines 20 Knoow Your Schools 33
7 30-Pollce Surgeon 3, Name That Tone 4 Let's Make a Deal
6, Wilburn Brothers 8, The Judge 10 To Tell the Tr oth 13,
Book Beat 20, Eplscode Acllon 33
8 oo-LIItle House on lhe Prairie 3,4, 15 That's My Mama 6,13,
Tony Orlando &amp; Da1!f18,10, Feeling Good 20 Sinners 33
8 »-Comedy Awards '1&gt;, 13
9 oo-Lucos Tanner 3 4, 15, Cannon 8,10, Bonnie Ralll &amp; Paul
Bollerftetd 20, Masterpiece Theatre 33
10 oo-Pelrocelll 3,4, IS, Get Christie Love 6,13 Man honter 8 10
Family at War 33
10 30-Your Future ts Now 20
11 oo-News 3,4,8,t0,t3,15. ABC News 33

AstroGrapM

Now arran1e the ctrclod Jetton

v- 'J

~~

2f

-

Trails West 15 Elec Co 33

6 oo-News3,4.Q,10,13,t5, ABC News 6

Movie "Gunn"

6HE

(;QRNTSl

1.1 T T I. E

3, Andy Griffith 8. tronslde 13

5 30-New• 6, Beverly Hillbillies 9, Hodgepodge Lodge 20

11 3[)-Johnny CorsOfl 3,15, Wide World s'peclal 13, FBI 6,

WHERE ARE
YOU lAKING
us?

- - --- --- -----.•

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

s oo-FBt

33
12 3o-Wide World Special 6
1 oo-Tomorrow M , News 13

SE WIN'G MACHINE Repl!irs
serv 1ce all makes 992 3284
The Fabnc Shop, Pomaroy ,
Author 1zed Smger Sales ' and
Serv 1ce We sharpen Scts!lors
3
!fc

EXCAV ..... TlNG , dozer , load~r
and ba ckhoe work
seopt1c
tan ks mstalled dump trucks
and lo boys for htre w111 haul
f!ll dtrl, top soil l tmes tone &amp;
grav el Call Bob or Rooer
Jeffer!S day ptlone 992 7089
n1ght phone 992 3525 or 1,92

Gilligan's Is 6, Tattletales a, Sesame Sl 20 33, Movie "The
Glory Brigade" 10, Mike Douglas 13
30-Bewllched 3 Merv Grtffln 4 Mod Squad 6 Lucy Show B.

n•

_

3991

U.tam"J .-1 ,.._

Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one letter to each square, to
form rour ordmary wo rd s

ALLEYOOP

Open Mon .sat
BAM 6PM

8, 10, To Be An novnced JJ

Bonanza 15

School Scene 10 The Story 13
6 35- Co lombos Today 4
6 45- Morn lng Report 3 Farmllme 10
7 oo-Today 3 4, 1S, A M America 6,13 CBS News 8 10
8 oo-Lassle 6 Capt Kangaroo B. Popeye 10. Sesame Sf
33
a 25-Capl Kangaroo tO
8 3o-Btg Vall ey 6
9 oo-A M 3, Phil Donahue 4 Phil Donahue 15, Bullwlnkle 8,
Morning with D J 13
9 25-Chuck While Reports 10
9 3o-Nol For Women Only 3 Dinah 6, Galloping Gourmet 8,
Tattletales 10 · New Zoo Revue 13

Jl&amp;Mill!1LE® u...J

Ph . 992-5682 or 992-7121
All Mechanica I Work

_____________

4

6 ~Sunr ise Sem 1nar 4, Sunrise Semester 10
6 15-E ngllsh 505 3
6 25-Far m Report 13
6 Jo-F1ve Minut es to Uve By 4, News 6 Bible Answers !),

BORN LOSER

Tomorrow

12 45-E lec Co 33
12 55-NBC News 3,15
1 oo-News 3 All My Children 613 Phll Donahoe 8, Young &amp;
the Restless 10. Not For Women On ly 15
I 30-How To Survive a Marriage 3,4 15. Let's Make A Deal
&amp; 13 As lhe World Turns 8,10
2 oo-Days of Our Lives 3,4, 15, 510,000 Pyram id 6, 13, Gol ding
Lig ht 8,10
2 3o-Doctors 3 4 15 Big Showdown 6 13, Edge of Nlghf 8, 10
J oo-Another World 3 4, 15, General Hospit al &amp;, 13 Pri ce Is
Right 8,10, RFO 20
3 3D-One Life to Live 13 Lucy Show &amp; Match Game 8 10
Aging 20

News l3

1 .I

WEDN ESDAY JANUARY 29 1975

heating serv1ce and
general sheet metal
works .
Free
Estimates.
Phone 949·5961
Emergency 992-3995
or 992·57Q'

10 oo-Celebrlly Sweepstakes 3,4, 15, Joker's Wild 8, 10, Movie
·on the Double" 13
10 Jl)....Wheel of Fortune 3,4, 15, Gambit 8,10
11 oo-Hlgh Rollers 3,4, 15, One Life to Live 6, Magazine 8,10
t 1 3o-Hollywood Squares 3, 15, Brady Bunch 6, News 4,
Sesame St 33
11 55-Take Kerr 8, Dan Imel' s World 10, News 13
12 [)()-Jackpot 3, 15, Password All Stars 6, 13, Bob Braun's 50 50
Club 4, News 8,10
t2 3o-Blank Check 3,15. Split Second 6,13, Search for

4 oo-Mr Cartoon J , I Dream of Jeannie 4 Somerset 15

12 3o-Wide World Mystery 6

RACINE PLUMB(NG
&amp;HEATING :
Complete plumbing &amp;

Route 1
Rutland

the

Daughters of Josh ua Caba Return ' 13 Movie "Si nk the

DHOW 8ROADCA 5 TI'-IG

Pamtlng , s1dtng, roofing,

pond, T P C water, large

m

HOW
MANY
VICTIMS
?
•

heat1ng
coo11ng
refrrg ,
plumbtng
elec tr i ca l ap
pl1an ces We serv 1ce -and
repatr anvt 1ng m the horne or
bus 1ness
215 N Sec-ond,
Middleport Phone 992 3.509

2 ba ths gas furnaces and v 1ew

I 28 ltc

please call

TRACY.

CAPr AIN EASY

From a shelf to a house

6

NICE stee r s wetghs between
450 and 500 lbs dressed w tll NEW LlSTING - 3 bedrooms
b e r ea dy la st week of wtth bath, gas furnace porch ,
February Who le 85c lb
lh bake and cook un1ts Needs
stee r
87c
lb
tncludes frn1shed
Make no m1stake
dr ess tng ,
cu ttt ng
and
have
a
look
Only $7500 00
wrapptng 1ust 2 steers l ef t
Call 742 3123 wrapped tor a RUTLAND - 3 bedroom block
fam tl y StlC
home, bath, gas heal and 2
1 28 3tc acres of land $ 16,000 00
Phone

JOB,

-P&amp;J
--- Home
- --------........-.-Mamtenahce

TABLE saw and tolnter to r
sale Phone 8A3 2292
1 28 6tc

STRAW for sa le
2175

PHONE
949 3832 or 843 2667
All Types of
BUILDING
and REMODELING

-lOME
Improvement
and
Repa 1r Serv1 ce Anythtng
ft xed arovnd the hom e from
roof to basemen t You W1ll
111&lt;e our work and r ates
Phone 7.42 5081
'
12 29 tfc

New Wood Burnrng

"'·~
p!all

CONSTRUCTION

TUESDAY, JANUARY 28,1975
6 oo- News 3,4,9,10,l315, ABC 'News 6, Elec Co 20 lTV
Util ization 33
6 3o-NB C News 3 4 15. ABC News 13, Be .....llche&lt;l6, CBS News

BASKET

On State Rl 124, 112 m1 lrom

Real Estate Fof 5ale

All New Heaters
Now
DtsG:Gunted!

For Rent

WI L L c lettn barns for manur e A P T 3 ro oms dll elec tr tc has
tab le top range waH oven
Phon e 992 7201
re al n tce and clean modern
1 24 4t c
Lo c at ed
tn
Pomeroy
ov erlooktng the Oh to R1ver
N OW sel l 1ng F ul l er Br us h
Phone GalltpO IIS day 446
Produ c ts ph one 99 2 341 0
; 699 ev entngs 446 95 39
1 24 tfc
1 26 lfn
SHOO TI N G m at ch Ra c tne Gun
Club Sunday I p m Assorted F URNIS H ED
apar tm ent
meat s and f ac tory choke gun s
Phone 992 7556
on ly
l 13 6ti:
..._ 12 n tf c
B EDRO OM mob l e horn!,
NC OME Ti!x P re pared both 2 ut!ltl1es
pad nea r Pomeroy
r cder al an d ~ tat e Ta)(e s will
Off Rt 7 Ca ll 992 70 17 or 992
be clo n e b y appo •ntmenls
7666
only Ple ase phon e 99'1 2272 or
I 28 3tc
see M rs Wand&lt;~ Ebl n Lau r el
Cl If Rd Pom eroy Ohto
~U RN I SHED
1
bedroom
I 3 JOt c
trader
all ut l tltes
493
Broadway Street M1ddleport
FO R you r
0 1 of Mtn k
I 28 tfc
Cos m ett cs Ph one BR OW N S
--------------99?5 113
FURN I SH ED apt J rooms and
1 7 tfc
bath new l y decor ated Phone
99 2 293 7
A U1... T ION
T hu rsday
and
1 26 6tp
Saturday n gh t 7 p m at
Mason A uctton Horton St n --------------Mason W Va Consignmen t s ~ URNI S HED mobt le home for
r ent Phone 949 226 1 A lber t
we l com e Phone (30 4l 773
Ht ll Ra c me OhtO 4577 1
547 I
1 26 6tc
10 3 tfc

___

STEREO RADIO 8 t ra ck tape
combmat 1on am fm radto 4
way speaker so und syst em
Balance $108 7tJ or use our
budge t t erm s call 992 3965
1 21 tf c

W AI TRE SSES needed app ly tn
p er son Cr ow s Steak Hous e
Pom eroy
1 7 ttc

1 22 61 c

STRIPPtNG FINISHES
FURNlTURE METALS.ETC
MODERN &amp; ANTtQUE

Ph 992 2174

For Sale

1 26 Jt c

OPENIN G for p ano student s 1 HO US:: u durnt shed 7 rooms
still a va ilabl e Phon e 949 4811
and b at h ntce Phone 992 2780
Mr s W tll 1am Bartho l om ew
or 992 3432
Thtrd St R ac tn e Oh o 45771
1 9 lf c

Phon e(614) 992·2'798

SMITH NELSO'N
MOTORS, INC.

Phone 992.3993
Da1ly After 5 00

1 20 51c

Help Wanted

Mobile Homes For Sale

Weight champton Joe FraZler

M AVER IC K
good cond tl on
3826

Pomeroy , Oh19

From the largest Truc k or
Bulldozer Rad1ator t o th e
smallest Heater Cor e
Nathan Btggs
Rad1ator Spec1alstt

Larry Lavender

1 22 61 p

FOR RENT
Tobacco base
2 300 lb s
on sh ar es or
oth er w• se Phon e 142 5761
1 '16 5t c POS ITION
Wtth
Wel come
Wagon ava il able
Plea sant
N ON
denommat on a l Gospel
c a re er fl extble hours car
Se r v1ces w tll be held at Jr
neces sary For tn terv tew ca ll
0 U A M
Hall 20 1 ll h 5 1
or w r .te Shir l ey ~ton area
f'.. e w Ha v en Ea c h Tu es
cod e ( 014 ) 592 1214 56 Avon
We d
Fr tda y an d Sundav
P lac e Ath ens Ohto 45701 An
7 30 p m
All ar e cord tally
E qua l Oppor tu nt l y Employer
mv ted
I 26 3tc

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

PffiLADELPHIA (UPI)
Plans for 8 lkound bout
between fonner world heavy-

76 17

1970

100 Kerr Street

Television log for easy viewing

HEll

Blown Into Walls
and Atttcs
Free Esttmates

1909 IMP AL A Cu stom
good
cond1tton Fac tory a1 r p s
p b pr ced to se l l Ph one 992

D&amp;D

Modem "Chemicals

Fire Retardant
Insulation

Notice

Co mpl et e F RYE S TRUC K
The $Ia barrel first phase of
A ND A UTO PART S Ru t la nd
the 1mport tax l&lt;!kes . effect
Pt1on e 742 609-t
1 22 26tp
Saturday
Glenn, a recenUy • named W A NTED t o buy it used
member of the Senate In teriOr
Grave1 y Tra c tor Wtth Mower
and r td tng sulky and plow
Conumttee, sold the umlateral
att ac hments Phone (3 04 ) 88 2
lmposlllon of the l&lt;!x, w1thout
2525 or even 1ngs 88 2 2344
1 26 12tc
congr ess tonal revtcw,
ts
closmg oph ons to other O L D f urn tture 1ce boxes brass
beds or com p let e hou seholds
proposals that could reduce
Wr 1te M D Miller Rt 4
conslUnphon without all of the
Po m ero y , Ohto Call 99 2 7760
10 7 7 4
dangerous s1de effects "
• President Ford 's Impo r t JU N K autos comple te and
delivered to our y ard We p tc k
l&lt;!x as well as the deregulatiOn
up auto bod1 es and buy all
of old domestic crude ml
k tnds of scr ap metals and
•ron R tder s Sal v ag e St Rt
pn ces \\Ill ha \ e a severe
12 4 Rt 4 Pomeroy Ohto
npple effec t throughout our
Call 992 5468
10 17 tf c
rcon onn, t1ffec tmg the cost of
ltvm g of C\'ery Amen can m CAS H pa td for al l makes and
mo d el s o f mob le hOmes
ll a) s that hav e not even been
Ph on e ar ea code 61 4 423 953 1
contam plated ) el,· Glenn sa 1d
.t 13 lf c
He sa1d the cos t of livmg h1ke --------------CO N SIG NMENT S w elcome at
would
be
parl!cuiarly
P&amp; J Au cfton
2 15 N orth
Second M tdd le por t
devastatmg to those on Soc1ai
c
Securty, pnvate pens10ns and ------------ l -9 JOt
other low mcome people

BOtrr SCHEDULED

Free P1 ckup and De livery

1 T P1 ckup 8 w 1d e body V 8 eng ne automat c tran s
&amp;
power st eenng rad to sp ort c ust om ca b good l tr es green
&amp; w h tf e f m tsh

before game

'J~

REPAIR-Broken
Parts Mended
STRIPPING-By
Hand
NO DIP TANKS
Supplies Stnppers
Stams . Fms1hes

$2495

1972 DODGE

Supper planned

RACINE - The Racme E·R
Squad Will sponsor a soup
supper Fnday at Southern
Hlgh School begliUlmg at 3 30
pm to630pm
The menu w1ll mclude bean
chth,
soup,
cornbread ,
vegetable soup, hot dogs, other
sandwiches, and p1e. Those
wishing to donate may contact
Helen Pickens at 949-4951, Joan
Tuttle at 949-5491, Beverly
Cum nuns at 949·4573 or
Jeanette Lawrence at 949-4161
t'o liow mg supper Southern w11l
host North Gallia m a Southern
Confe1ence ba&gt;ketball game
TIJC public " mv1ted

843 2824 or 843 2293
Portland, Oh1o

V a 4 doo r automattc tran smt ssmn po wer steenng and
power br akes v•nyl mten or v n y l roof r ed f1n1sh good
wh t e wall It r es rad to fac t or y a1r

p e r y a rd

on Friday night

The .furniture Fixer

11595

1971 MATADOR

DEA B POI I Y - l 1vmg m
a small apartment w1th tw o
little gtrls leaves U!) cramped
f or space We ha ..e learned to
make lll iln) thmgs do two JObs
One IS the g1rls ' rockmg horse
th,!l IS a favonte play thmg by
day but at nlght turns mlo a
olothes horse The spokes on
each s1de of the head ma ke
handy hooks for sk1rts and
dresses , the saddle holds folded
Jerseys and slacks The hm·se
IS low enoug h for them to reach
and they have learned to put '%1
their clothmg neatly m one
place when they undress MARIE

Weeks of dedication

Motor Co.

197o

A
- ITS
REAL

'

M1ss10n m New M exico was

POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - I have a
piece of marble that has been

le a\'ing

Contnbutton to
mLSSton tn
Southwest made

7- The ~aily Sentinel, Mfddleport·Pomero), G
DICK TRACY
_,

Pass 2 ¥
Pass
Pass 4 •
Pass
Pass
Opening lead - 4 A

2 .t.
Pass

By Oswald &amp; J ames Jacoby
Here IS another fa~rly s1mple
Collm hand South finds himself
m a sound four·spade contract
II all goes well he can discard
one potential losmg heart dn
dummy's king of diamonds and
ruff h1s third club to wind up
w1th enough tr1cks for h1s con·
tract But West has been un·
pleasant enough to open a
trump Now 1f West started
w1th three trumps and can win
the f1rst two club leads, he w11l
lead two more trumps and up·
set South's applecart
South sees a way to prevent
this If diamonds break 4-3 He
starts by cash1ng hiS ace of
diamonds to get out of dummy's

way Then he leads a low club
West puts up the mne of clubs m
order to wm th e tr1 ck and leads
back a trump
t
If he leads back the seven
South must wm w1th dummy s
ace and follow 1n hiS hand w1th
one of h1s h1gh trumps ThiS will
make 1t possible to get to dum·
my w1th the s1x spot later If he
leads lov. , dummy must w1n
With the SIX
E1ther way , South leads and
ruffs a d1amond , enters dummy
With the last trump , ruffs
another d1amond and eventual
ly gets two diScards on tire kmg
and e1ght
IN~W S I

AI tH ENTJo iC I' HI SJo 1\ SSI\

,,z:a;t :1~~&amp;~":1 n
The b1ddmg has been
Wesl

North

East

Pass
Pass

1¥
2¥

Pass
Pass

28

South

I t

I•
?

Yoy South hold
AAQ7 6 .2 tKJ 54&lt;1oAQ82
What do you do now?
A - Pass The hand appean to be
a misfh. Quil before yo11 gel too

blgb
TODAV'S QUESTION
Instead of b1ddmg two hearts
your partner has rebid one notrump
over your one spade What do you
do now'
Ssnd $1 tor JACOBY MODERN
book to Wm at Bndge rc/ o
th1s newspaper) P 0 Bo• 489
RadiO C1ty Stat1on New York
NY 10019

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