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                  <text>20 - Tl)e Daily Sentinel, Middleport.-Pomeroy, 0., We-dnesday, Nov. 19, 1915

'' ' ' '' ' ' WON'T
' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' 'GIVE
' ' '' ' ' ' '' Ul'
' '' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' '' · Mason ER unit

Driver hurt when auto hits -sign
vehicle struck a parked car
1\ hi t-ski p · ~~ ~· ciden l oc- owned by Jennie G. Whil e, 28,
curred in Ga llia Co unt y "RI . 2, Cheshire. Tl1ere w•s
TueS&lt;Iay un Brick School Rd . moderate danwge .
l\\'tJ :md one. tenth miles nor th
A single car mishap ocof the Bulaville-Addison Rd. curred at 11 :45 p.m. on Rt . 7.
The patrol said un unknown two and one tenth miles south
of HI. 218 where Dennis R.
Nor Ih, 25, Rl. 3, 6allipolis,
los t control of his car after
fall ing asleep at the whee l.
The vehicle went ofllhe left
side
of the high way and
large tr~ffic sign . Snnsbury
Steve Ebli n, 89, of 382 East struck a ditch. No charges
was taken to the hospital by
the Pomeroy Emergeney Second Sl , Pomeroy, died were filed.
Tuesday evening at Veterans
Squad.
A deer was killed in an Memorial Hospital.
Mr. Eblin had made his
accidental 6:20p.m. Tuesday
on County Road 35, one and home with his dau ghte r ,
two tenths mi les north of Rt. Ed ith Barton, the past three
124. Officers said the animal years. He was born April 23,
ran into the path of a car 11186. a son or the late Samuel
operated by Ricky L. Deeter, and Mary Moore Eblin . He
o~
J h
1. 1
was also preceded in death by
o n H. ,._mes, 77, .mco n
his wife, Mary Bolin Eblin; St., Middleport, died unexone son, Steve : seven pectedly a l the Sheridan
h
brothers , and four sisters.
WILL MEET
Hospital in Sheridan, Mic .
Mr . Eblin is survived by Tuesday morning.
The Past Matrons of
.. 1.
Pomeroy OES-186 will meet five daughters. Mrs. Barton,
Mr. Seines was VISI mg a
at the home of Mrs. Geraldine Myrtle Grover, and Mary daughter, Mrs. Roy (Ruth)
Young on Tuesday, Nov. 25, Spurrier, all of Pomeroy; Housh, at Six Lakes when he
at 7:30p.m. All past matrons Madalinc Hawley, Crystal became ill and died shortly
L••ke Ill., and Louise West, after ho spitalizatio n. Mr.
are invited.
' ' Point; ' three sons, Seines was an employe of the
Powhallan
Ira , of Syracuse, and Ben- New York Central Railroad
jamin and Henry , both of as a machinist for a number
Pomeroy: 30 grandchildren, of years before his retirement
M great-grandchildren, six 15 years ago. He was a
TON IT F lhru THURS.
great -great-grandchildren, member of the Middleport
NOV. 19-lO
and several ni eces an d First Baptist Church.
NOT OPEN
nephews.
Born" Feb. 5, 1898, Mr .
Funeral
services
will
be
Sei
nes was the son of the late
FRI. lhru SUN .
held
Friday
at
2
p.m.
at
Emery
and Rose Sayre
NOV . 21 -lJ
Norman Jewlson 's
Ewing Chapel with the Rev. Seines. He was born at Leon,
" ROLLERBALL"
Cecil Wise officiatin g. Burial W.-Va . Besides his parents he
( Technlcolorl
will . be in Hock Springs was preceded in deal~ by his
Show starts at7: 00 p.m.
Cemetery , Friend s may call wife, Laura Pickens Seines,
al the fun eral home after 7 and a daughter, Mrs. Joseph
p.m. today.
t Marty) Magnotta, both in
!97:! and a brother and a
. .- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -.. sister.
Surviving
are
four
daughters, Mrs. Coradelle
Casa nova, Wall ingford,
Conn.; Mrs . Roy tR uth )
Roush of Six Lakes; Mrs.
Roberl (Mary Rosel Mitch of
Wh eeling, W. Va.; Mrs .
Myron t June ) Duffield,
Olmstead Falls, Ohio; a son ,
Charles, Alpine , Calif. ; a sonin -law , Joseph . Magnotta,
Middleport, and three sisters,
Mrs. Pearl Burns, Mrs. Mary
Burns and Mrs. Ellie
Hayman, all of East Liverpool; 11 grandsons, three
gran ddaughters, and 11
great-grandchildren.
Funeral services will be
held .at 2 p.m. Friday at the
Rawlings-Coats Funeral
Home with the R~v . Peter
Grandall officiating. Burial
wi II be in Ri verv ie w
'
Ceme
tery. Friends may call
Middleport, 0.
al the funeral home from 2 to
4 and 7 to 9 Thursday .
Roy S. Sansbury. 56.
Middlepor t, was trenled HI
Veterans Memorial Hospital
for injuries suffered in a
single car accident HI 1 p.m.
Tl!esday on Rt. 33 at County
Road 25 in Meigs Count)'.
The Gallia-Meigs Pos t
Stat e Highway Patrol said
Sansbury lost control of his
car which ran off the nght
side ot the highway striking a

17. HI. l. Ha&lt;'ine.

saving attempts today and
hiS already critlc:al condition deteriorated. But his
doctors vo10•cd to persevere
because bls brain Is stili
functioning.
At 1:30 p.m. 17:30 p.m.
EST! a medical bulletin,
the 56th of Franco's 33-day
medical ordeal, listed an
avalanche of complications
wracking the Spanish
leader in what appeared to
be his final hours.

Steve Eblin

died Tuesday

John Seines
died Tuesday
in Michigan

&gt; '

PL"ASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGES ~ Mrs.
George Dabney, Henderson;
Cheryle Biggs; Rio Grande;
Mrs.
George
Clonch,
Gallipolis; Mrs. Cecil
Pickens, New Haven; Glenn
McCoy, Leon ; Mrs. Loren
Stumbo, Patriot.
·
BIRTHS - November 18, a
son to Mr. and Mrs. Randy
Cox, Gallipolis.

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMISSIONS-Edna Stiles,
Pomeroy ; ~" arie Kennedy,
Middlepor'l;• Elola Sellers,
Pomeroy; Charles Beller,
Rutland ; William Young,
Pomeroy . .
DISCHARGES ...:. Walter
Brown, Coy Starcher, Sr., Eli
White, Raymond Hartley,
James Ahterson, Clarence
McDaniel.

The unit traveled 8,000
miles, used total man hours
of 2,928, made total ambulance service charges of
Holzer Medical &lt;.:enter
$5,300, received charges paid
I Discharges, Nov. l81
of $1,1183.80, accrued expenses
George R. Adkins, , Jr.,
.of $7,337.98, and had total Ch1·istopher Beaver, Harvey (Continued from page I)
·
f $7 365 74
Brown, John Camink, Lola
mcome
. .m·embers Crow, Roy Curtis, Mindy gi"rls' basketball clinic at .
Th ffo. ' . nd
e o tcers a ·
Ohio Slate University on Nov·

Meigs local

dgenerous
· th put ear sand ask
urmg
Y • in the
for it toe pas
continue
coming year in order to serve
even better The squad has
·
hased and eqw"pped a
pure
second
ambulance in an
effort lo answer all calls as
safely and efficiently as

.
Ewington, and several nieces
and nephews.
Funeral services will be
Saturday at 2 p.m. at the
Wilkesville Chapel of the
Walker Funeral Home with
the Rev. A. B. Maloy officiating. Burial will be in
Vinton ' Memorial Park.
Friends may call at the
funeral home from 2 p.m. on
Friday until lime of services.
The family will receive
friends from 2 to 4 and ?to 9.

Kearns, George Kotalic, Jr.,
Cynthia Langona , Louie
. ura Love tl , J osep h
Lath ey, La
McHenry, Ht"lda Meek, Albert
Neal, Lulu Newvahner,
Rodney Smith, Evelyn
Watson .
1Birth', Nov. IS•'
Mr . and Mrs . Gary
Willford , daughter, Racine.-

·
(Coptlnued from page 1)
about his department to the county grand jury.
Kreiger, in a statement, also dismissed indictments
against three members of his staff as "nothing new" and
asserted when the grand jury is done with its investigation of
his staff '1his department will continue to be walking tall and
right will out." Indicted Monday for theft in office were Maj .
Edward W. Payne, Capt. !Wnald Brown and Deputy Robert
DeSimone. In addition, Payne and Brown were accused of
intimidating the two key grand jury witnesses, fonner
deputies Philip S. Vari and Donald Campbell.
Payne, DeSimone and Brown will be arraigned Thursday
at9a.m.beforeCommonPieasJudgeBurtW.Griffin.

BAKER FURNITURE

•••••••llllllilllll!l•llll!l•••••••••••••••••..

IS

aw

e

Sgt. Gene R. Lawrence has
been awarded the Certificate
of Achievement by the 123rd
Maintenance Bn. of the First
Armored Division, Forging
Onward, for his individual
efforts in assuring that "F"
Co. would receive a commendable rating for, the fiscal
year's annual general Inspec lion.
Sgt. Lawrence and his wife,
the former Beverly Rowland
of Gallipolis, are stationed ai
Ansbach, Germany. Mrs .
a registered
. nurse, is working at the Army
hospital in Nuremburg. Sgt.
Lawrence is the. son of Mr.
and Mrs. Paul Lawrence of
Racine and Mrs. Lawrence is
the daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Herbert Rowland, Gallipolis.
Both Mr . and Mrs . ·
Lawrence and Mr. and Mrs.
Rowland visited their
children in Germany last
swnmer.

Lawr~nce,

News •• m" Bn"efs

'5800

BANQUET SET
RACINE - Southern High
School will hold its football
banquet Saturday, Nov. 22 at
S:30p.m . The banquet is open
to the public, Those attendmg,
are to bring a covered dish.

,:,

EWING TON - Russell E.
Hartley, 85, Rt. I, Ewing ton,
died this morning at Twin
Maple Nursing Hom e in
McArthur.
Mr. Hartley was born Nov.
26, 1889 in Gallia County, the
son of the late Hiram K. and
Sara Ann Dickerson Hartley.
He was also preceded in
death. by two sisters and two
brothers.
Mr. Hartley, a coal miner,
is survived by one sister,
Miss Bessie Hartle~.· Rl . 1,

PLATFORM
ROCKERS

MUSSER IN SCHOOL
Airman Jeflrey Scott
MuS$er has entered technical
school at Chanute Air For~e
Base, Illinois, where he Will
undergo training to become
an aerospace· ground '
equipment repairman. His
address is A. B. Muss~r •
Jeffrey S. FR 298-62-9732;
P.S.C. Box 2962, Chanute
A.F.B .. Ulinois, 61868. ·

: :::::::~:::::,:,:,:,:, ~inc~r~ !~~~~cbi=~,·~ci~~n~uoprtPh~~ .E~~:·b~~r.n:~~::~~o~~:~ ~~yl~e.:~~:%t ho~h F~~:

.
Certificate
di d Wedn da
Russell Hartley e
es y . · ard d

. From BAKER :S

CAMPBELL, OHIO - THE 2,200 STUDENTS in the
Campbell school system today began the longest year-e?d
vacation in Ohio public school history as the system shut tls
doors until January for lack of operating funds. The Ohio
Education Assn. says this is the earliest this has ever
nBppened to il school system In the state. ·
The closing of the scbools comes two weeks and a day after
voters defeated a 5.9inill emergency operating levy. The same
levy had been defeated In September by an even greater
margin. And when the new year comes, voters willh~ve to face
the levy again and it will be nearly doubled - 10.8 mills. At the
same time, the joy of the extra four weeks of holiday will
vanish as students, teachers and staff begin a six-&amp;y weekly
schedule that will last through mid-June to make up time lost.

ASK TO WED

Marriage licenses have
been issued 10 Robert Young,
35 , Rt. 3, Racine, and Patricia
Lou HJII, 24 , Portland, and to
John Edward Knisley, 20,
Coolville and Nives Ann
Eddy, , Reedsville.
26

prl"nct"pal, was adjusted
because his wa~ the only
.
salary which had not been
ad 1·usted by the board ear 1Ier.
The board discussed hiring
an additional instructor in the
adult . mining program and
reviewed one application for
•e job. The~e are 19 students
,.. ~olved in the adult
program. The slate has
recommended an additional
instructor whose salary will
not be paid from school
district funds. Action on the
matter was po~tponed.
The board set the dates for
high school baccalaureate
and commencement for 8
p.m . on May 23 and May 25,
respectively, at Meigs High
School. No action was taken
on a recommendation that
the mileage allowance for
Mrs. Maurita Miller, vocal
music
teacher'
for
Harrisonville, Salem Center,
Rutland and Bradbury be
increased. Supt. Dowler, ahd
boardmembersSnowdenand
Pierce were named to the
board bargaining team.
A report .was given on the
sale of excess buses but any
action was postponed until
December. The board approved!Ocenls a mile for the
travel allowance for the
superintendent, assistant
superintendent and clerk.
Asst. Supt. Dan Morris was
authorized to contact a roofer
on the repair of tbe roof at the
Middleport elementary
school. No action was taken
on tbe request of .a student to
be transferred to another
district. The closing of some
reslrooms at the high school
was discussed with high
~hool principal James Diehl.
Diehl said that there are

men 's and women's rest..
rooms open on eacb floor of
the building. He stated, .
however, that six of the 13
facilities are closed as a·
measure to control smoking.
Two of the restrooms closed~
are just off the lobby, but are:
used during public functions
at the school.
Diehl further commented ·
that the high school gym is
closed to students at noon'
time due to a lack of supervision and reported that use .
of the front lobby by students ,
is restricted due to the poor •
appearance presented to
visitors at the school with ,.
students in the front lobby.
Paul Patterson, Janet
Bolin of the Rutland ·
V ol u~teer Emergency·
Medical Service, and WendeD ~
Grate of Rutland Council, ··
discussed an earlier decision .
of the board giving the
medical service permission ,
to build a headquarters on the
Rutland
High
School ·
properly. The board agreed ·
to proceed with the transfer
of the necessary land for that
purpose
witb
the
speci fication that the
headquarters be built in five
years and the buildtng, when
no longer closed, be returned
to the board. The decision
deals with the land to be used
on reverting to the board
rather than the building,
particularly.
Bob Morris, elementary
principal, was commended
for being selected as · the
outstanding educator of
district 16 of the Ohio PI'A.
Keith Riggs and Jennifer
Sheets, elected to the board
this month , allended the
meeting.

Snow Treads &amp; Regular Treads
Discontinued Tread Designs

13" to 15" SNOW
W/5/W REDUCED TO

•20

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

EACH
OTHER SNOW TIRES-SAVE 12.50 to 15.00 OFF

"&lt;t REGULAR W/S/W
•

$600

PLAYING NITELY

OFF
REG. PRICE

FREE INSTALLATIONI

TUESDAY THRU SATURDAY

GEO. HALL
TUES .• THURS.
8: 30-1:00

SHOP

FRI.&amp;SAT.
9:30-2:00

The MEIGS INN

MOORE'S
NOW

992-3629

Best In
Live Enterta ln:nent

•

Franco, the last of the right- country's first king in «
wing dictators who rose to years. Until then a three-man
power on the eve of World Regency Council will nm the
War n. ·Some people wept govermnent.
openly on .the streets, others
Tile government
looked to the future with JX"OClaimed a 30-day period of
renewed hope.
. mourning. Franco's body lay
The final medical bulletin In state at the chapel of his.El
by Franco's 32 doctors said · Pardo palace before burial
he had suffered from &amp;mday In the Valley of tile
Parkinson's disease, acute Fallen, the monument to the
heart attacks, acute"bleeding nearly one million persons
ulcers, peritonitis of the in· who died In the Spanillh civil
testlnal lining, double war.
pnewnonla, blood clots in his
A goverrunenl spokesman
left thigh, shock from poisons said the Vice President
In his body and at 5:25 a.m. Nelson ROckefeller would
(10:4~ p.m. EST Wednesday)
represent the United States at
"an Irreversible heart Franco's funeral.
stoppage."
.
Franco's typing was crude
Spain's uncertain future · and there were many typo·
falla to the hands of Prince graphical errors but hll last
Juan Carlos de Borbon 37, testament proved that h't! was
who will be promoted as authoritarian in death as
Saturday to Captain-General, he was In life.
Spain's highest . military
It made no concession to
rank, and sworn in as the widespread demands for

Weather

democratic reform,. warned
of the threat of Communism,
declared Franco's enemies
Spain's enemies and urged·
Spaniards to rally round Juan
Carlos for God and country
following the funeral Sunday.
It left no doubt he· Wiled
Spain more of the same
policies that brought
economic prosperity but kept
remote sucll freedo018 as
those of assembly, political
clloice and the press.
Political sources said most
of the underground groupsfrom moderate Christian

ews. . . in Brief~ f"''"=~~===~'::,:n-lReagan

••••~~·::~~:;:;:?.i:?.~~::::?.:::::~8::::~:::!::::::~:::::~:'.::~x:::::::-m.;..:::-m.~

By United Presslnlel'llllllooal
OOLUMBUS - STATE LAW WlUCH REQUIRES a
mWJicipaHty to fluoridate Its water "Ia a vaUd e1terclse of the
pollee power" of a state and aupersedes any local law, the
&amp;lpreme Court of Ohio hBB ruled.
The ruling was handed down Wednesday In a case In·
volving Canton. The court alao upheld an order by the Ohio
director of envlrmmental protection to the city of Cincinnati to
fluoridate lta .w-..
·

iiii

w~:N~:: ~P~et:r a:~:sv:fdla~ :i~i

!~~~ lobbying, the Senate _haB approved legislation to l~t !!~
:;:; constructloo union pickets close down an entire job site m :;:;
'!!! a dispute with only one subcontractor.
::::
The bill paued 5~ Wednesday. It includes La~ ::;:
!:!: Secretary John Dunlop's propoaal to eatablilh a collective :!:!
!)j bargaining mediation. C&lt;llllflliltee to -~-- in mediating !!'!
:;:; construction 'Industry labor disputes.
}
r
!!!!
The measure, known as the conunon situs picketing :!~!
OOLUMBUS - UEUTENANT GOV. RICHARD Celeste :;:; bill, will enhance the power of the bul1dlng tradee unions :;:;
has endorlied a JX"Oposal of·Gov, James A. Rhodes which would
':': by allowing picketing against ooe subcontractor on a :;:;
freeze ullllty rates for senior cltizena. "I welcome the
!!~!
building site to apply to the entire. project - thus ef·
governor's action on behalf of the senior citizens to seek relief
!;'
;
fecllvely slluttlng down the entire site In a labor dispute. :;:;
oo their utility rates," Celeste !laid Wedneaday.
:;:;
Sought by organized labor since 1961, the bill has been :;:;
"I am not sure that the PubHc UIIUty CommiJslon has the
before Congrea In one form or another repeatedly but ~!~!
authority pre~~e~~Uy to undertake a freeze as . the governor :::; never adopted by both houses.
;::;
suggested, but I certainly think some action Ia necessary to !:!:
In voting, Sen. &amp;bert Taft Jr., R-Ohlo, Wednesday
insure that older citizens have some relief from rising utility
:!:!
joined 10 other Republicans In helping the Senate pasa 52 t
rates," lie said,
.
!;'; to 45leglslallon eiJ)IInding the union picketing powers In !:!:
Celeste Jredicted the question of ullUty regulation would :;:; the construction industry.
:;:;
be a top priority Item on the agenda for the legislature when II
Sen. John Glenn, i).{)hio, and 19 other Democrats voted :g
returns In January. "I think we will see real action on utility·
~ ~~the~.
~
rates, Including a lifeline rate," he said.
~
~

t

t

COL index up
I

Be sure to see all the other excellent styles of s~eaters
for men· and bOys - shawl s~eaters · cardigans slipovers and sleeveless styles.
Ideal Christmas gift" for men and boys.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
•'

enttne

Dueling is legal m Uruguay
as long as both parties in the
dispute are registered blood
donors.

~VO~L.~X~XV~II~N~O~.~l5~5~----~PO=M=ER~O~
Y-M~I~
DD~LE~PO~R~
T, ~OH~IO_________________TH~UR_S~
OA~Y,_N~OV_EM_B~ER_2~0,_1_97__
5 ~----------------------~PR_IC_E~l~

stranded motorists and foiled a jailbreak.
Authorities were searching for two children feared lost In
Wednesday's blustery storm on the Rosebud Indian IIese~·
vallon in &amp;luth Dakota. Reservation oWcials said 8-year-j)ld 1
Marcus Begay and hll 6-year-j)ld listell, Sanda, were to have
boarded a school bus Wednesday but were unaccounted for.

Carefree good looks p,o hand in
hand with the comfort you · will
enjoy from this favorite cardigan sweater from Campus Sportswear. Campus knits 100% dupont
orlon into lihks arid li nks stitch
to g.ive you that perfect answer
for cool weather fashion , available in your favorite Fall colors .

Now You Knmv

Devoted To The Interests of The Meigs-Mason Area

INDIAN SUMMER IS OVER In the Great Plains, burled In

j

•

at y

a blizzard that plied up eight-foot ilnow drifts, closed schools,

CA~1PUS MEN' S CARDIGAN SI&lt;FAT[R

munlsts and Maoists - were
holding meetings to size up
the situation.
The first of the un·
dergroiDld groups with a
statement on Franco's death
was the oullawed Socialist
Workers ' Party of Spain
which, according to opinion
polls, has great popular
appeal.
"A black chapter In
Spanish history is closed,"
the party's First Secretary
Felipe Go028lez said in note
telephoned to Spanlsb and
foreign
, news media.

•

Showers likely tonight ,
turning colder to the lower
40s. Cloud"y, windy, cold
Friday, chance of showers,
possibly even snow. Highs
Friday in upper 40s.
Probability of precipitation
50 per cent today, 10 per cent
tonight, 40 per cent Friday.

ALBANY, N. Y. - GOV. HUGH CAREY and state
legislators, stWigby President Ford'sdecislon to delay federal
help for New York City, will work on $872 million In new. state
taxes to avert default and balance the budget.
AnnoWICing hill decision Wednesday to withhold ~f~~pport
for a New York rescue plan IDIW at least next week, Ford
called for "concrete action" oo city tans. But for the first lime
he held out the proapect he later might find federal help
"appropriate".
Carey, who returned from a two-day Washington lobbying
trip, said he would press for actloo 011 the 1a1t package, conceived as a plan to rescue New York aty. "I want to clean up
gimmickry in New York State on~ and for all," he said. "Let's
remember the health of the lllate of New York Ia tied to that of
the city of New York."

and

'22

By PE;TER UEBERSAX
MADRID (UP! )
Generalissimo Francisco
Franco ~~eel today, ~d In a
polillcal.~st testament he
typed out on his deathbed
. warned. the nation that the
enemies of Spain were on the
alert and · that
the
authoritarian policies of his
· 38.year rule must continue .
There were Immediate stirrings from the outlawed
Communist and Socialist
parties expreulng hope for
polillca~ reforms and angulsh
that violence will follow the
death of the 82-year-j)ld ·
Franco. Basques who seek
their own Independent slate
in western Spain toasted his
death and honked their horns
to celebrate.
There
were
mixed
emotions In Madrid where for
four decades many had
known no other ruler but

t

MARlETT A, OHIO - THE FIRST EDITION of a directory of amateur and professional artists and craftsperson&amp;
working throughout the United States, pll together with an
$8,000 National Endowment for ·the Arts grant, will be off the
presses in January.
·
·
"As far as we koow, when this directory is completed, II
will be the only one of its kind In the United States," Susan
Mitchem executive director of the program behind the
"MarietU. College Crafts Directory USA," said Tuesday.
Earlier directories have been local, state or regional in scope,
said Ms. Mitchem.
The first edition Is expected to llst"about 5,000 names. The
second edition, scheduled for compleUon next JlDJe or July, is
to include a listing of at least 10,000 persons.
CHARLESTON, W.VA.- JOINT HEARINGS by the Uni~ed
· Mine Workers and the Bituminous Coal Operators Association
will reswne Wednesday with more testimony Into the causes of
a wildcat strike in District 17 that crippled the coal industry.
The hearings, whlcll are closed to the public, were adjourned Friday. The UMW held open hearings early last week
with the joint hearings Thursday and Friday.
·

Franco's death brings
.
.
s
.
tears, cheers m · pain

t

CLEVELAND - A PRELIMINARY SONAR REPORT
Indicating that the giant Great Lakes freighter Edmund Fitzgerald broke In two when it sank In Lake Superior last week
was released Tuesday by the U, S. Coast Guard.
An examination of a sonar scan of the suspected position of
the ship Indicated "two large shlp,like objects lying in close
proximity to eacll other on the lake floor ," said Dr. lloyd
Breslau of the Coast Guard's Researcll and Development
Center in Groton, Conn. "Initial estimates show them to be in
the neighborhood of 300 feet long each," Breslau added.
The 729-foot Fitzgerald, flagship of the 2G-vessel fleet
oeprated by Oglebay Norton Co ., went down with its 29-man
crew in a violent storm Nov. 10.

COOPER

13" to 15"

:J66.

possible.

Another Good Buy

•

MASON - The Mason
Hescue Squad annual report
for-October I, 1974 to October
1, 1975 showed total runs were

WASHINGTON iUPI) The National Cancer Institute
announced Tuesday a stu dy
has 1urne d up no re1a tl onsh"lp
between cancer death patterns and the natural or
artificial fluoridation of
. dnn
. k"mg water
commumty
supplies.

MEIGS lltEATRE

~t

made 366
·
7.4 5
runs
in ' -7

MAUHm, S113h1 tllrli
- fil•ncralissimn Franrisen Franco failed In
respond to dcspt•rate life-

HOSPITAL NEWS

WASHINGTON (UPI)
The cost of Uvlng climbed Q.7
per cent In October, the third
largest monthly Increase thiB
ye.,, the Labor Depllrtment
said today.
Higher prices for new cars,
fuel oil, dairy products,
coffee, clothlnl!, mortgage
rates and auto Insurances
caused ·the 1veraU Increase,
which was alighlly .higher
than most economists expected.
.
The Increase, which translates Into an annual rate of 8.4
per cent, was .0.2 per cent ·
larger than September but
far below the 1975 In·
Datlonary peak set In July
when Cllllsumer prices rose
1.2 per cent. l
Price. for 1978 model cars
1'01112.7 per cent, but lle&amp;IIOIIal
lllljuameut caused the Index
lor new cars to decline 0.1 per
~t'wl the department said.
1'1161 oU and coal prices

rose 1.8 pe'r · cent after
seasonal adjustment - the
biggest Increase this year,
Gasoline prices declined, but
less than they 118UaUy do In
October.

Candidates must
show all expen~e
Ail candidates in the Nov. 4
election are reqUired to file
an expense report )Vith the
Maigs County Board of
ElecUons. If they had no
expen~e they are still
reqUired to file a report of
that fact.
The Meigs County Board of
Elections office, located in
the Masonic Temple building,
Pomeroy, Is open from I to 4
p. m. each day, Monday
through Friday for the
convenience of candid~~~
wishing to file these r~s.

By STEV:O: GERSTEL
WASHINGI'ON (UPI)
Ron8Id Reagan· today an·
noiDlced his candidacy for the
Republican · presidential
nomination In lhe strongest
conservative challenge for
the White.House Iince 1~.
The 64-year-old former
twoterm California governor
made his long-anticipated
formal announcement at a
Washingtoo news conference.
Then he headed for Florida
and New Hampahlre, two
states with early primaries
where Reagan hopes to
damage and possibly cripple
President Ford 'a quest for a
Jresidentlal term In his own

t

right.

:::;;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::}:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:;:;::::::

most serious contender from

Reagan is COIIIIidered the

the GOP's conservative wing
. since Sen. BBrry Goldwater
of Arizona won the

Board toughens no~lna~~=
up bus riding
New regulations of student
conduct on school buses
adopted by the Meigs Local
School District Board of
Education will be invoked
soon .
Dan Morris, assistant
superintendent, said today he
will meet with all bus drivers
of the district to make the
new regulations clear before
they are put into effect.
Under the new regulations
any student whose bus riding
privileges have
been
suspended Is also suspended
from riding any other Meigs
Local bus for the duration or
the suspension . Morris
pointed out that · some
students ride several buses to
reach school. The regulation
means that a ·student
suspended from one bus is
automatically suspended
from riding any of the buses
AAt~nnr
Seoond m..,._,~.oe;
oommg' Friday

Middleport residents are
reminded that a second
public meeting on the
proposed application for
flD1ds Wider the Housing and
CommWIIty Developmellt Act
wih be helti Friday, Nov . 21 at
1 p. m. in the old Council
Chambers at VIllage Hall.
At the flrat meeting last
Friday top priority was given
to an additional water
storase tank for the vilh1ge.
The public is Invited to at-

lend.

~:ien

In
an:
nouncement, Reagan called
for the beginning of
"responsible, responsive
govenunent."
He added, "I am running
because I have become In·
a-easingly concerned about
the course of events In the
United States and In the
world."
He cited economic decay,
lack of cheap and abundant
energy and weakening of
military" superiority aniong
the nation 's problems. He
said he favors continued
detente but only If the United
States makes "it plain that
we expect a stronger Indlcatlon that they also seek a
lasting peace with WI."
Reagan said, "Our nation
has become the seat of a
'buddy' system that functions,

that transport him to school.
The board also has ruled
that all students transported
by Meigs ·Local buses must
ride the complete route on
their assigned buses. Any
exception must be by written
request from the parent or
guardian, or as a school
emergency situation might
necessitate.
Also, the board has decided
thai all pupils will ride in
assigned seats on the buses.
Morris pointed out that a
student suspended from
riding buses of the district is
still required to attend
classes an~ the problem of his .::::::::::::::::::;;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
transportation to and from
school
becomes
the Bengals' L.eCiair
responsibility of the parents
or guardians.
to speak here
The new rules also provide
REEDSVILLE - Jim
tbat drivers are to hold all
LeClair,
middle linebacker
students on buses at transfer
for
the
Cloclooall·
Beogala,
points until all transfer buses
will
be
speaker
at tbe
arrive, and transfers are to
be made at the same time . aonual athletic banquet to
Students not completing thei. be held at I ::Je p. m.
Monday by the Eastern
assigned . routes ~lthout
written exception requests High School Athletic
will be considered to be Boosters at the school.
breaking the rules on bus · Admission lieketa at $2
discipline .and will be subject each are still available at
to warning and.(Jr suspen· the Meigs Iun, Kro1er's,
New York Clothing House,
sion.
Powell's Super Valu,
Vllla1e Pharmacy, Klag
ASK TOWED
Builders' Supply, Dutton
Marriage licenses have Drug Store and tbe
been Issued to Gary Lee Fife, Pomeroy National IIIDk.
16, Pomeroy, and Kathy Jo Foothill teams ,
DemOM, 17, Pomeroy, and cheerleaders and the
James David Glaze, 23, and volleyball team will be
Deborah Kay Taylolt, .18, both honort:d at the event.
of Pomeroy.

challenges Ford

for its own benefit - In- bureaucracy, the lobbyists,
creasingly insensitive to the ' big business and big labor."
needs of the American
Reagan, who spent almost
worker who supports It with three decades as a movie and
his taxes.
televlaion actor before ser·
"Today." he said, "it is Yin&amp; el&amp;ht year• aa Callfqrnia
cHfflcult to· find leaders wbo governor, has been under
are independent of the forces heavy preuure frOOI GOP
that have brought us our conservatives to challenge
JX"Obie018 - the Congress, the Ford.

He delayed a decision untU
soundings around the country
convinced him he could take
the nomination from Ford
and then beat the Democrptic
nominee. A .campaign
organization wBB assembled
during the sununer, headed
by John Sears, a key figure in
Richard Nixon 's 1968 victory.

r=n~;R;;g;;"~ti~k;?~l
By United Prest Ia·
temallooal
Ronald Reagan first caught
the political bug In 1966 at the
age of ~. after 29 years in
Hollywood movies and on
television.
On his first time out, he
went for California's lop job
- the governorship - and
won by a landslide plurality
of more than one million
votes.
Two years later, in 1968, he
caught Jresidential fever and

Autos collide .
near nile chili
The Meigs County Sheriff's
Dept. Investigated a two car
accident Wednesday at 10:20
p.m. on SR 7 in Salisbury
Twp. near the Tall Timbers
Nite Club.
Patricia A. Thomas, 42, Rt.
1, Long Bottom, traveling
riorth, was behind a car
driven by Daniel R. Slone, 19,
Pomeroy, who slowed down
lo pick up a hitch hiker. The
Thomas car, traveling at an
apparent high rate of speed, •
hit Stone's car In the rear.
Mrs : Thomas was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
by the Pomeroy E-R Squad
where she was treated and
released. There was heavy
properly damage. No citation
was issued.

challenged Richard Nixon for
the ·Republican nomination.
There he had less luck. Nixon
swamped both Reagan and
Nelson Rockefeller at the
convention. Political pros

Band will parade
The Meigs High School
Marching Band will participate in the Pomeroy
: hrislmas Parade Nov. 25
and the Middleport Christ,.
mas Parade on Dec. I,
Director Dwight Goins told
the Band Boosters at a
meeting earlier this week.
Goins said that the band
also will perform as part of
the Junior Miss Pageant.
It was reported that the
Meigs County Fair Board has
granted permission to the
boosters to have a food stand
at the county fair next
summer.
The Junior High Band
concert will be given Dec. 16
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Saturday through
.Monday, chance of snow
flurries Saturday, mainly
In the northern sections of
the stale. ~lostly fair
Sunday liod Monday. Highs
will be in the 40s and lows
will be lo tbe ZOs.

Voc center open house SWiday
RIO GRANDE - The
Buckeye Hills Career Center
near here will be open to the
public for a tour of the
facilities on Nov . 23 from 1 to
5p. m.
The buildings are equipped
with demountable wall
partitions which are used to
separate all laboratories,
classrooms, and office areas.
These prefinlshed walls allow
for flexibility in future
building usage. The buildings
are electrically heated and
except for the Agriculture
and Jndustr.iJII Building, Is air
conditione~
throughout.

said then that Reagan started
his campaign far too late.
The same word was heard
this year - that Reagan
hesitated too long in maklng_a
-(Cootinued on page 2)

Programs can be operated
during the summer months.
(Continued on page 12)
HARRIS INJURED
Bruce Harris, 23, Middleport, was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
by the Pomeroy E-R squad at
3:40 p. m. Wednesday where
he was treated for minor
Injuries suffered in a tw~ar
accident on West Main St.
near the upper Monkey Run
junction. Harris was released
followin g treatment.
Pomeroy pollc\ are inlvesligating the accident.

and the high school band and
chorus concert will be on Dec.
19.
Pat Woods , president,
when
the
presided
treasurer's report was approved with all bills paid
following the football season,
II was noted that receipts
were down from previous
years because of poor
weather conditions affecting
attendance at games .
Money-making projects
were discussed to complete
paying on the new band
uniforms. Members of the
band are selling fruit baskets
to be delivered tbe week of
Dec. 15 and a jitney supper
will be held before the
basketball game on Jan. 9.
Advance tickets

will be pulled
Advance admission tickets
for the Fall Follies of the Big
Bend Minstrel Assn. spon·
sored by the Meigs High
School Athletic Boosters will
be removed from several
loca tions at 1 p. m. Friday,
Nov . 28.
Only 6011 advance tickets
will be available for the show
to be staged at 8:10 p. m. at
the Meigs High School on
Saturday, Nov. 29. The
tickets may be purchased
now at the New York Clothing
House, Nelson's Pharmacy,
Swisher and Lohse Drug
Store, Pomeroy ; Bahr
Clothiers and Dutton's Drug
Store in Middleport, and the
Millers Brothers Grocery in
RuilaQd. Unsold advance
tickets will not be available
aner the Nov. 28 deadline.
Tickets at 25 cents each igher
than the advance tickets, will
be availabi£ at the doo~ on
show night.

�3- The Deily Sentmel, Middleport Pomeroy 0, Thursdav Nov 20 197'
2- The Da•lySentmel, Middleport Pomeroy, 0, l'hursday, Nov 20 1975_
L t:~a 9u(

N01 1 onal Hockey

Pacesetter school working
RICHARDSON Tex (UP!)
- Three monflls ago school
officials m fll1s Dallas suburb
put mto acUon a plan to
achiev e deseg regatiOn
wifllout court-ordered busing
- and 11 Is workmg
The plan mvolved making a
'pacesetter school" of allblack Hamllton Park
Elementary, fllen inviting an
egual number of white
students from fllc dlstnct to
attend
" We don 't have any
statistiCal data from the
program yet, It's sllll too
early but all I hear from
parents, teachers and
students
1s
entirely
favorable," se1d Dr John

Rob e rts, assistant
supermtendent for mstructlon for the Richardson
School District
"We have had ohly one
child accepted for the
program who requested to
transfer to another school "
As ol this week, 267 white
students attend Hamilton
Park with 250 blacks students
In grades one fllrough six
Classes at Hamilton Park
average 20 pupils The
tcacherpupll ratio Is 1·16
Both are well helow average
In a district already
recognized as excellent
All that manpower means
extra attention and dlverse
course offerings In addition

to the usual elementary
school fare, a student at
Hamilton can study orchestra, band, gymnastics,
mus1c, art and a fore~gn
language
Counselor JIJD Smith says
flle pacesetter program also
has promoted lmndsh1ps
between black and wh1te
students
Our first grade IS flle most
beautifully mixed class you
could ilriagme," he said
There have been several
UIStances of birthday parties
where whites went to black
homes and blacks went to
white, mostly at the s1xth
grade level, and I know these
people were not friends

before the year started " he
says
One fr1endsh1p 1s that between SIXth graders Thomas
Jellerson
and
Tony
Witkowski
&amp;mth says he thmks both
boys recogmzed s1mllar
personaltty tra1ts and
became lnends Thomas
Iailier, Thomas Jefferson Jr ,
sees it a ltttle differently
Thomas and Tony got real
light real qu1ck for some
reason, maybe their s1ze,
flley are both small lor their
age," he saJd Then, of
course Tony wanted to know
If Thomas could come over to
his house and Thomas wanted
Tony to come over here "

By un.ted pr'.".~',nwnal onal
Patnck

(ConUnued !rom page I)
formal declaration whlle
Ford nalled down commitments among GOP
leaders
But Reagan has been far
from Idle smce he left the
governor 's mansion in
January He has made
hundreds of speeches across
tlle notion In the past 10
monflls
He has a dally radio
program, earned by more
Ulan 300 station, on which to
glve his views on everything
from gun control to the
Russian economy He also
has written a weekly colwnn
for
more
than
200
newspapers
Reagan has been acknowl·
edged one of the most
polished speakers among
modern American
politicians, going back to the
days when he first supported
Barry
Goldwater
lor
president and lambasted big
government
Today, he laces his conservative viewpoints w1th
generous dollops or humor
"Federal researchers have
learned what makes people
happy," he said recently
"They learned fllat yoWJg
people are happier than old
people People witll money
arc happier than people
wifllout and people who are
11ell are happier than people
who are sick - a $249,000
grant to learn that it's better
to be young, rlctl and heal Illy
Ulan old , poor and sick '
During hi~ acting career,
Reagan appeared In more
than 50 movies Many were
Grade B aflalrs, but he was
praised for his performance
In Dark Victory " with Bette
Davis and his role as a yoWig
man whose legs were am
pulated m King 's Row "
In Ius early years Reagan
was a frank lin Roosevelt
Democrat and tmlltant Wllon
worker fur flle Screen Actors
Guild In the early 1900s he
changed parties and went on
lo berume a favorlle of the
GOP'u tonservahve wing
Reagan marned actress
Jane W)•man u1 1940 They
1 were divorced e1gl1t years
tater They had two children,
Maureen and Michael
In 1952 he married Nancy
Davis, an aspiring actress
and daughter of a wealthy
Oncagu surgeon They have
two chiltlren, Patricia and
Ronald ll

Sickness hits farmers
By JEFFERY L SHELER
GRAND RAPIDS, Mlch
(UP!) - Last week, Alvin
Green or nearby Chaae shot
and burled his dairy herd It
was contaminated with PBB,
a toxic lire retardant accidentally mixed witll tons of
livestock leed at a leed plant
Now Green hlmsell Is
showing symptoms or PBB
contamination
"It's not h1gh, but It's
fllere, ' his wile, Hilda, said
"The doctora said they
couldn't tell whefller PBB
was the cause ol his
problems, but flley're still
working on it '
Green was one of many
Michigan cattle and dairy
producers who suffered
financially from
polybromlnated biphenyl
contamination of tlleir herds
two years ago Hundreds
since have reported suffering
phySically as well
qreen started suffering
from hypertension and sores
on his legs
"We're assuming he got it
while standing In the con-

tammated grain, shoveling It
Into the Ieeder," said Mrs
Green
Sle said her grandson, who
does chores at the farm, has
similar leg sores
The meat and milk from
contaminated aniJD81s were
consumed by tlle family until
recently, when tests showed
flle PBB levels at I 47 parts
per million
'By then we'd eaten a
whole cow," she sa1d "Now
we won 'I eat the meat and we
won 'I drink the milk
"H flle state had been domg
1ts job, we wouldn't have had
to fmd out about PBB this
way"

Farmers had to destroy
thousands of farm anhnals
alter they learned tlle fireretardant accidentally had
been mixed With livestock
feed Lawswts are pending
Green 1s one of many
farmers caught between
state agriculture offic18ls and
health authorities The state
says contammallon levels
below 3parts per million are
acceptable lor marketing
meat and milk
But Dr Walter Meester,
dlreclor of PBB research at
Blodgett Memorial Hospital
dlsputed state claims that
low4evel contarnmatlon IS
harmless

FBI believ
algn of illegal
WASHINGTON (UPI) - A six-year c
harassment an surveillance
by tlle FBI against Martin
Luther King was conducted
Wider the mtslaken suspicion
he was under ' communist
hairy mammal on numeroWI Influence," according to a
OCC88Jons over the the past ranking FBI official
Elsewhere, FBI Director
two summers
Sle described flle creature Clarence Kelley told a Senate
as covered with short black subcommittee Wednesday
hatr, except for the face, ~rrorlst bombmgs were
hands and feet, which she Increasing m America at an
said were dark brown and alarming rate - 46m flle first
'weather-beaten " It also haH of 1975 compared to 45 for
had high cheek bones, a llat all of 1974 Kelley said 'new
nose and hands like a human left revolut10nar1es" were
being, except that the thumb responsible
James Adams, FBI
was the same length as the
assistant
deputy for infingers
"He could have killed us teiUgence who testified on the
many, many times over the King matter, told a Senate
past two summers 1f he so Investigative panel '!here
desired," she said "He's so was no statutory basis lor
huge he could have done JUSllfJcatlon" ol some 25
almost anytlllng he wanted separate actions carried out
against King before he was
to"
Her son, Danny, 15, said he assassinated In 1968
The campaign Included an
once saw siX ol the Sasquatch
"let5urely walking across the anonymoWI letter written by
road morder, the tallest first, the FBI to King m late 1964,
just before he was to receive
down to the smallest"
the
Nobel Peace Prize,
Danny said h1s school
chums have ridiculed ht5 saying, ' You are done There
sightlngs as tall tales For IS only one way out for you "
Although not mentioned at
that reason he disagrees with
his mother, who IS against the tlle hearing, tlle letter was
said to have been accapture of the creatures
'I'd like to see somebody comparued by a recording or
lrmg one In so It could be transcript of matmal
proven once and lor all," he allegedly compromising
King's character
satd

Bigfoot shielded
ROSEBURG,Ore (UP!) When Jean Fitzgerald sees
monster~lke lootprlnts, she
quickly rubs them out
"We destroy them so some
Bigfoot hunter won'!
stumble across them," said
Mrs Fitzgerald
She is crusading lor legislation to protect the legendary
Sosq11.11tch - Ill~ monster
known as "Bigfoot," a sort of
lowland North Amer1can version ol the Himalayan
'abominable snowman "
Mrs Fitzgerald said she
and her family have seen the
apellke creatures often and
once spotted nine of them
together
"They proved to us tlley
don't mean any harm," she
said Wednesday ' Each thne
we saw them, flley were as
curious about us as we were
about fllem '
Her husband, Steve said he
once left a candy bar lor a
Sasquatch, hid nearby, and
watched the creature devour
flle treat - wrapper and
all
Bigfoot's existence has
been debated lor decades but
Mrs Fitzgerald says the
family has seen the nlne.{oot

DR. LAMB

Diabetes can: affect vision
8) La\1 renrc E Lamb, M 0
DEAR DR lAMB - I have

a f1ve-hour sugar tolerance
lest and was t~ld 1 am a rmld
dlahei JC l m 58 and 5 feet 2
l've lost l4 pounds and have
be~n able to mamlam a
w••~ hl of 120 for II\ e months
Without a r1g1d d1et
I don'I take msuhn or prlls
and wa• told l need not return
to the doctor unless I got mto
trouble I'm ma1n iy In·
tereslrd In how eyes are
affer trd by dl3betes and why
W11en l go ou1 10 eat or
travel 11 s hard to stay on a
sugar free d1et If I have any
rea cti on it IS blurring and
ch ang~ ln mv VISI On, also
occasiOnal severe headaches
about 5 a m and restless
ltchmg all over
What spetlf1c symptoms
mean •rouble that mdicates
more tests, and how severe
doe~ d1abetes have to be tD
cause blmdness' I know of
two cases of very sudden
lllindnt ss whet! d1abelA!s was
the cause Can milk adult

d1abeles cause thJs? Would
one teaspoon pi sugar on
cereal m the morning be
harmful' The subslllutes
leave a ternble taste, and I
need the cereal for regular1ty
I have found
DEAR READER - No
doubt your doctor thought
your fmdmgs ere mUd enough
Ihat he didn't have to give you
a deflmte return date That IS
good news You should ,
however have a check up
eve!") year, and the status of
your diabetes, 1f you have
d1abetes at all, can be
reevaluated You may not
need another glucose test for
a general screening
Depend g on the tyupe
of response, one glucose
tolerance lest Is often
not sufficient basis to make a
d~&amp;gnosls of diabetes II you
want a better understanding
of the glucose tolerance, send
In 50 cents IQr The Health
Letter
number
3 11
D1abefes
D1agnosls ,
P reventio n
an d

Management Just send your
request to me m care or th1s
newspaper, P 0 Box 1551,
Radio City Stahon, New
York, NY 10019 Include a
long,
stamped,
sell·
addressed envelope for
mallmg You w1ll have a
better 1dea of what your
doctor meant by a mild
diabehc, and flle problems of
the glucose tolerance test
The Health Letter w1ll also
g1ve you lips on how to
manage your prpblem One of
the most Important steps IS
conlrolhng or ellmmahng
any excess body fat
Diabetes affects tlle blood
vessels m the back of the eye
They become diseased and
may break, causing a
hemorrhage mto the eye
This will cloud the eye and
not allow 1mages to be
transmitted through the
normally clear mater~al
1ns1de the eyeball causing
sudden bltndness
Also dlabetls may cause
other retmal d1sease al the

back of the eye where the
•mage is projected to enable
Sight
Diabetes tncreases the
chances of developmg
cataracts Although the
method of cataract formation
IS not completely understood
the h1gh blood sugar levels
seem to be the hnportant
foetor here
ll1s hard to say If you will
have eye damage with m1id
diabetes or not You can have
h1gh cholesterol levels and
fatly-cholesterol deposits m
the arteries with m1ld
d1abetes In general, though,
the person who IS controlled
well without h1gh blood sugar
levels and IS on a d1et that
helps to prevent vascular
disease will do better tllan the
person not so well managed
Try one of the m1lk substitutes for babies who cannot
tolerate milk These canned
milk substitutes on cereal
g1ve a slightly sweet taste
and may solve your sugar
problem lor cereal

DIVI S IOn

12 3 5 29
8 6 t1 ?0
79 "1. 16
7 I I 2 16

Alanra
N Y Rangers

Smvthc Dr v•sron
w
10
7
7

Chi cago
Sl LOUIS
Vancouv er
Kan sas C ty
Mrnneso1a

I I pts

4 6 26
7 4 18
8 4 18

s 10 2 12
4 1&lt;1
8

Norn s

o

DI VIS IOn

wltph
Montrea l
Los Anqeles
PITtsburgh

13

4 3 29

12 6
6 9
De tro t
5 11
wash rn gton
2 16
Adams DIVI SIOn
w I
Buffalo
14 3
Toronto
9 5
Boston
9 6
Cat lor n a
l 12

2 26
'l 14
1 14
2 61
t ph
t 29
4 22

3 21
2 16

Wednesday s Res ults
Kansas Cit y 6 NY Ranger s
Montreal 6 M1nneso1a o
Vancouver 5 Wash ngton 2
Boston J De1 ro11 J

&lt;1

Ch cago .4 Los Ang eles 2
Thursday s Games
NY Islanders at Boston
Cal lorn a at Ph•ladelph a
1 D elrolt at Buffalo
H 0 Ck e V

ASSOCiilfiOO

Stand1ngs

By Un ited Press lnternattonal
East

C1ncmnat I

wltpts
9 6 0 18
7 8 I 15

New England
Cleveland

6

7

6 10

lnd anapoll s

2

14

12

0

West

wltpts
9 1 0 18

Houston

1 1 1 15

Mmnesota

San D1 ego

6 7 2 111
6 8 2 lA
5 9 1 11

Phoem x
Denver

Canadlan wltpts
Quebec
14 5 o 28
wonnopeg
12 5 o 24
Edmonton
8 10 2 lB
Calgary
8 8 1 11
Toronlo
4 10 2 10
Wednesday s Resulh
Cleveland 4 Monnesola 3
overl&gt;me
lnd lanapoi1S 3 New England 1
Thuriday s Games
Wlnn•peg al Quebec
Edmon ton at Phoen x
Denver at San Diego
Mlnnesota al New England
International Hockey

League Stand.ngs
Un•ted Press lnternattonal

Northt

w
Sagmaw
Port Huron
Muskegon
Fhn1
Ka l amazoo

6
8
6
6

Broncos

w I I ph

Ph tadelpll a
NY Islanders

World

Reagan

St and

3
7
5
7

tl

0
3
2

473

pts 91
16 52
16
15
14 46
11 43

pa
39

l; li

50
59

South
w 1 t pts

gf
Dayton
10 tl 1 2 1 51 ~~
Toledo
7 11 4 18 51 50
Fort Wayne 6 9 2 14 6~
Co lumbus 3 10 3
9 3S i~
Wednesdays Results
Da t yo n 2 Muskegon 2
Fort Wayne 8 Kalama zoo 4
Toledo 3 Columbus J
Ton1ght s Games
No games scheduled
Fridays Games
Dayton at Fl nt
Sag naw at K alamazoo
Mu skegon at Toledo
~orl Huron at Columbus

UPI film
confiscated
by police
ANN ARBOR, Mich (UP!)

- Michigan Coach Bo
Schembechler Wednesday
ordered a camera and llhn
confiscated from Andy Sacks,
a part-thne photographer lor
Umted Press InternatiOnal,
who was taking pictures of
the Wolvermes "closed'
pracllces from a nearby
apartment buildmg
The pictures were taken on
pnvate property directly
across the street from the
enclosed practice l1eld
Socks was shooting pic
lures !rom the same apartment used by another
photographer two years ago
Schembechler sa1d assiStant
coaches spotted Sacks and
rushed Into the apartment
buJdmg
Socks refused to open the
door and called pollee Pollee
confiscated his camera and
film but returned his camera
"I don't want any pictures
of our fonnations to' get back
so Ohio State can use them,"
said Schembechler m a
telephone call to flle Detroit
UP! bureau ' I don't want
them to see any of our formations That's why the
practices are closed

favored
•
zn
MAC

their offense

By Dale Rothgeb, Jr

BOWIJNG GREEN Ohio
(UP! ) - M1d Amen can
Conference basketball
coaches and represenlallves
of the news media have
p1cked Western M1ch1gan as
flle team to beat m flle battle
for MAC cage supremacy fll1s
season
Coach Eldon Miller s
Broncos were g1ven seven
f1rst-place votes and 91 pomts
by flle 10 league coaches at
tlle annual MAC preseason
cage gathermg Wednesday
Western rece1ved 50 lrrstplace votes and 607 pomts on
flle 60 ballots cast m the
med1a poll
Second on both ballots, w11ll
two first-place votes from the
coaches and mne from the
med1a, was M1am1 Kent
Stale got flle other first-place
vote m buth polls
In order , the coaches
selected Toledo, Kent
Central MIChigan, Eastern
M1ch1gan Bowlmg Green,
Ohio Umvers1ty, Northern
llhnotS and Ball Stale behind
the Broncos and Redskms
Central M1ch1gan was
picked fll1rd by the scribeS,
followed by Toledo, Kent,
Bowhng Green, Eastern
Michigan, Oh10, Ball State
and Northern llllnot5
M1ller has all five starters
and seven ol h1s top e1ght
players mcludmg standouts
Paul Grilfm 6-9, Tom Cutter,
6-8, and Jeff Tyson, 6-3, back
from last season's team
1
Seven lettermen, mcluding
two starters, 6-5 Chuck Good
year and 6-6 Randy Ayers,
are back for M1am1
Defendmg MAC champiOn
Central Michigan lost 1ts top
three scorers, Dan Round
lJeld, James McElroy and
J1m Hehnmk Also Dirk
Dunbar, who averaged 18 1
BY JOE CARNICEW
points per game m 1973-74
has remJured a knee and may UPI Sports Writer
HEMPSTEAD N Y (UP!)
IDISS the commg season lor
Charley Winner had not
tlle Chippewas
left
flle New York Jets'
Dunbar mtssed the last
tra1nmg
site Wednesday
campa1gn w11ll an inJured
when
speculation
about hiS
knee
replacement began and 11
read like a Who's Who" of
coaches
Wmner, who took over
In 1945 24 German leaders under less than 1deal cirwent on trial at Nuremberg cumstances two years ago
before the InternatiOnal War when he succeeded his fatherCrhnes Tribunal
m-law, Weeb Ewbank, as

Search begun
for new coach ·~

Sport Parade
By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sports Editor

maybe make the 1ssue just a

Can Hannan Trace repeat little more cloudy Fr1day

'
addmg "we've been In control
By GENE CADDES
m most of our games " '
UP! Sports Writer
He labeled Moeller "a re'al
Cincmnall Moeller Coach
good
team which seems to lie
Gerry Faust hasn't gone mto
many games as the un gettmg better every game "
The tenms have played \Wp
derdog, but adm1ts No I
common
opponents, Pri.Jlrated Lakewood St Edward
ceton
and
Cleveland St
has to be g1ven the edge m
Joseph
Moeller
beat PrihFriday mght's Class MA
ceton
14-12
and
St
Joseph 12state h1gh school cham7,
while
St
Edward
downell
piOnship game at flle Rubber
Prmceton 2U and St Joe 35Bowl m Akron
~
"We're gomg to have to 14
Currence
called
flle
Ea81$s'
play a perfect lootball game
to beat Ill em " satd tlle coach 56-28 wm over Warren
of the No 2 rated Crusaders Western Reserve early In the
We haven 'I played one yet, season our best game," but
but there's always a fJrSt ss1d the 19-7 wm over Newarll:
was possibly the be~
liJDe
~·
Both St Edward coached defensive effort
The
A
game
matches
NoJ'2
by Mike Currence and
Moeller take 11-11 records mto Newark Catholic (11•01
flle championship game, St ,.galnst No 5 Carey (9-1) '
Newark Catllollc advanced
Ed advancing w1th a 19-7
to
the title game Willi an ll'.:G
seiDifinal wm over Newark
wm
over defendmg champl011
and Moeller beatmg Fmdlay
28 16 m the other AAA Middletown Fenwick last
Fr1day rught, while Carey
semi! mal
outlasted
previously un•
The AM !mal kicks off a
beaten
Burton
Berkshrre !181weekend of champiOnShip
tilts at flle Rubber Bowl, w1fll 24
''
two games Saturday, flle A Newark Catholic, coachii!
game between Newark by J D Graham, has given up
Cafllohc and Carey on tap lor only tllree touchdowns all
11 am and the AA contest year, two coming on klckoU
matchmg Cleveland Holy returns and flle oilier on II
Name and Wyommg at 7 30 blocked punt
The M fmals match a parr
pm
"They (St Edward) of unbeaten teams, Ho}y
probably have the best ol- , Name at 9·0, again!t
fense m the state," sa1d Wyoming, 11-11
Faust, "and I think their
Wyommg, flle No 1 ranked
defense JS just as good They M team m the state, bestM
defm1tely deserve to be No Ironton 26-7m the semlflnal.t';
1"
while No 3 Holy Name roll~
Currence admits •'we over Oregon Cardinal Strltcli';
m1ght have been a little more 35-0
"~
consistent than Moeller "
"'

NEW YORK (UP!) - Upset over flle way he was used, Don
Sulton has asked the Los Angeles Dodgers to deal hhn They're
doing fllerr best to obhge
Sutton, a !i-and-10 player Willi tlle r1ght of saying yes or no to
any deal because he has 10 years m tlle majors and flle last five
With the same club, became unhappy fllls sununer when he
was removed from some games by Walt Alston he felt he ptill
had a good chance of wmnmg
He walked into the office of AI Campams, v1ce president m
charge of player personnel witll flle Dodgers, alter one such
game and told him he wanted to go wifll an American League
club Why not ' Look what that had done for Fergie Jenkins
Sutton said he d like to be traded to the New York Yankees or
Boston Red Sox Campanls tried to talk hhn out of It, but saw
flle JG.year-old nght-llander had hiS mind made up More
recently Sutton who had a 16-13 record this year along wlfll a
2 87 earned rWJ average, sixth best m the National League,
tllrew m a third club he'd agree to go to- Kansas City
Campanls never gave Sutton any flat-out guarantee he'd
trade him, but he has been trymg ever since the World Senes
and still IS now after having swung that b1g six player deal wifll
Atlanta Durmg that portion of flle Senes played In Cincinnati,
Campanls talked to Boston v1ce president Haywood Sulllvan
about Sutton
"Who would you want ?" Sulltvan asked
"What about Fred lynn' "
' Next case," sa1d Sulllvan
Well, then , how about Carlton FJSk'" CampaniB tried
BEREA, Ohio (UPI) - The agam
Cleveland Browns' workout
Case closed," Sullivan sa1d, and thai ended tllat converse
today dealt with lmprovmg lion
the offense lor Sunday's
Campams also has talked wifll Yankees' president Gabe
game against tbe Clnc,lnnah Paul about Sutton Paullold Campanls he'd get back wilh hiiD
Bengals at Municipal again and fllat's where that one stands now It s also one Qf tbe
Stadium 1n Cleveland
reasons he 's here now Another reason Is Andy Messersmlfll,
Coach Forrest Gngg put who won 19 with the Dodgers flits year
his men tllrough a twM!ourMessersmith never s1gned his 1975 contract with lhe
llknlnute defens1ve strategy Dodgers What he IS doing IS testing tlle reserve clause, hoping
session Wednesday m wh1ch he winds up a free agent who can seD his ~~erv1ces to flle highest
recently..acqulred defensive bidder the same way Catfish Hunter did a year ago Mesaerend Joe Jones showed he still smitllJS due to appear before arbitrator Peter M Seltz today
Is quick off tlle ball when
Losing Messersmltll would hlD"t the Dodgers almost as much
rushing the quarterback as liiSing HWiter hurt the A's, but With Burt Hooton pitching the
Jones and rookie Mack way he d1d alter corning from the Cubs and Tommy John
MltdleU an eJpeCied to start apparently back In shape to go again, the Dodgers aren't
overly concerned about fllelr p1tchlng Not when they have
B~~aiml tlle powerful Bengals
Brolllll' offlclall expect a such others around like 15-game winner Doug Rau, Rick
crowd of about 60,000 lor tbe Rhoden, a good~ookmg 22-year-old righthander, and Mike
game, meaning more than Marshall in flle bullpen
25,000 Uckets remain to he
Although the Dodgers got~ Baker In tllelr deal with tbe
sold. So there's no chance the Braves, Campanls would take another top lllght outfielder for
contelll will be televised Sutton Falling that, he'd want a~1tcher he con!lldered at least
on a par wifll Sutton
locally

Browns polish

Sixth SVAC preview at Lyne Center Friday

Lakewood is
AAA favorite

head coach, was !Ired
Wednesday after tlle Jets Ii!St
their sixth straight game aM
seventh m nine games thj$,
season Ken Shipp, the Jets
&lt;!&amp;-year-old offensive coordmator , was named ri/
replace hiiD, strictly on lin'
interhn baSIS
General Manager AI Wald'
IS the man who mlllt
recommend a new coach to
the Jets' Board of Directors
and he 'll begm looking lor a
replacement Immediately1
I m looking lor someollt\"
Wllh flle ability to lead,•:'
Ward sa1d ' I have a co!!ii:
pletely open mind, whether,it,
be a college coach or a P.rn
""'
coach I have no prejudices~
Kenny understands he It
coachmg on purely an In''
terun basis I don't knO'W '
where Charley went wrong';
There
was
just lilt

movement"

The names include some ii{,
the best known coacbes The
big handicap Is the Jet:J
looking ohly for a coach an/!
many coaches also want to bel'
general manager also Soniewant an option to purchase ~~
percentage of the club, which"
the Jet ownership refuses tOo
conSider
"'
The names Include Doli'
~ula of flle MlamiDolphlris~'
George Allen of the '
Washington Redsldns, Atll"
Parsegh1an, former NotrlY,
Dame coach, Penn Sta~
Coach Joe Paterno and Hank"
Stram, former coach of tnt'
Kansas City Chiefs The
leading assistants under
consideration are Monfl"
Clark of Miami, Ernll!
Stautner ol Dallas and Walt
M1chae18 or Philadelphia •
Shula has feuded with Dol&lt; •
plnns owner Joe Robbie In the '
past and would also ask lOt~
the general managership an£
a piece of tlle club
"

are

as I "ampions or lhe Southern
, Vat•• Athlehc Conference?
Will North Galha 's Greg
, James lead the Pirates to the
, SV AC UUe ? Is Southern's
.aenlor-studded hne up
enough to overcome both
llannan Trace and North
~allia lor flle SVAC cham
plonship'
• Fans m flle trJ-coWJty area
~~ill get a chance to answer
.some ol those queshons or

~Pirates

mght as the annual SVAC
Preview will be held at Paul
R Lyne Center on the
campus of Rio Grande
College
Agam, a w1de~pen race 1s
forecast this lallln the Class
A Southern Valley Afllletlc
Conference but Norfll Gallla
and Southern have been
tabbed as the team's most
bkely to overtake Hannan

Trace
New coaches lh1s fall are
The Wildcats, wmners the Duane Wolfe, Eas~rn Dan
past two seasons, lost three ol Cornell, Hannan Trace, and
their starters from last year's Gary Salyer, Symmes Valley
DJstrJcl team wh1ch f1mshed
W1th the ret~rement from
w1th a 111-3 season
the coachmg ranks of Paul
Action lleilms at 6 30 p m D11lon, J1m Fosler, entenng
w1th Symmt!s Valley playmg h1s f1flh year at North Galba
Southern At 7 30 p m IS the dean of the SVAC
Eastern meets Hannan coaches Other returmng
Trace, Southwestern battles mentors are Carl Wolfe
North Gallla at 8 30 p m Southern, Richard Hamilton,
while Kyger Creek colbdes Southwestern and Ke1th
w1th VInton County In flle Carter, Kyger Creek
Preview's !male AI 9 ~0 nm

have good height this year

'" Led by Greg James, a 6-3
~nlor guard, Coach J1m
.I:"oster begms h1s l11lh year at
the helm of the North Galha
&gt;Pirates wllh h1gh hopes and
probably the best overall
he1ght m the sVAC
, James has been an All
'SVAC player lor the past two
xears Last season, James
was on the Ali.Oh10 Special
mention team as a ]Wiior
alter averagmg 20 3 pomts
per game He has been flle
Pirates' Most Valuable
Jllayer the last two years
Although James mostly plays
lhe guard pos1tion, he has
great reboundmg ab1hty
based on stallstics of 16 6

rebounds a game
North Galha finiShed the
1974 75 season w1fll a 14-5
record and 10-2 slate m flle
SVAC
Other probable starters are
Fred Logan, 6-2 jun1or for
ward Logan averaged 13 5
pom ts per game last year and
was on the honorable menhon
hst All.SV AC
B1g Bruce Runyon, 6-1
semor, a powerful rebounder
at 235 pounds may be an oilier
Pirate forward They are the
fllree returning lettermen
Others working lor a
startmg nod are Robert Neal,
6-2 Junior who according to
Coach Foster has shown good

Reserve players are Ron
IIDprovement Cisco Mmms
a 6-0 sophomore, Mark Plants 6-0 Junwr , Doug
TheiSS 6-0 Junior w1th good S1sson, 6-1 Jumor, Mark
Wheeler, 5·8 JUnJOr Rod
prom1se and a real hustler
Brett Tackett, 5-10 junior and Wellmgton 6-1Junlor, Marty
Rayford' Muck" Minms, 5-11 Hash, 5-11 JUniOr Steve
semor, who has Improved Mundell, 5-10 1un1or Tom
greatly, are all working hard Butterfield 5~ juniOr, Mike
to crack the starting lineup Casey, iHi sophomore Tom
Other candidates are Metchum 5-7 sophomore,
Sturgeon
5-10
Richard Eggleton, 6-0 semor John
Gene Welch, 5-9 senior, Rex sophomore and Dave Shaw 5Justice, 5-11 sophomore and 9 sophomore
GraduatiOn losses mcluded
Terry Payne, iHi junior The
All
SVAC center M1ke
Pirates w11l again play a fastbreaking offense and a man- Camden and Gene Payne, a
starling guard Coach Foster
to-man defense
Coach M1ke Mulford's picked Southern and Hannan
reserve squad will attempt to Trace as the teams to beat
unprove Its 7-5 second place th1s ran
record of last year

reel tall They are Randy
Brown, 6-0 center, forward, a
junior who d1d not play
basketball last year, Fred
Helms, 6-3 sophomore center,
Jon Thompson, 6-5 freshman
center and Yancey Halley, 60 sophomore, all members of
flle Bobcat reserve squad
What the Bobcat players lack
m height must be made up m
speed and hustle
Coach Carter Is planning to
use a man-to-man defense
this fall Last year, Kyger's
mam defense was a zone
Ill two pre-season scrimmages Ibis year, Kyger
Creek used controlled of·
fenaes, taking lht bell oboll
agalDit Federal Hocking and
Waterford. The Bobeats hit

over 50 ~L from lbe field In
both games
Probable Bobcat starters
wUI be returning lettermen
Bill Metzner 5-11 semor
Tom Kern, ~ semor guard
and Tim Lucas, 5-8 semor
guard
Ralph Baylor, 5-11 junior •s
expected to play the pivot
pos1 l1on Baylor should
prov1de additional scormg
punch inside
Two ofllers battlmg hard
for the lllfll.startmg postl1on
are J1m Armbruster, 5-9
semor and Doug Sands, 5-10
)Wilor
Other varsity players are
Handy Brown 6-0 junior, Ed
Mollohan, f&gt;-10 jW11or, Steve
Baird, 5·10 junior, Andy

F1sher, 5-10 1un1or and M1tch
Salem iHi juniOr guard
Bobcat reserve players,
coached by Gary Mmton,
school gUidance counselor
and fanner head cage coach
at North Galha are Jam1e
Westfall 5-9 junior Fred
Helms, 6-3 sophomore,
Yancey
Halley,
60
sophomore Jeff Abshire 5-8
sophomore T1m Lasseter, 5
8sophomore Andy Polcyn, 5
7 sophomore and Jon
Thompson 6-5 freshman
Coach Carter hsts South
ern Hannan Trace and North
Galba as flle teams to beat
fllls year m the SVAC
GraduaiJon losses were
Dave W1se Doug Cottrell,
Joe Sltdham and Terry
Lucas

Tornadoes hoping to cause a storm
By Gng Bailey
By Christmas our fans
will know what kind of a ball
club we'll have " Those were
tlle words of Coach Carl
Wolfe of Southern High
School when asked to com.
ment on the upcoming
basketball season lor his 197f&gt;.
76 Purple Tornadoes He was
referring to flle fact Ilia I from
N'ovember 28 to Christmas
his team plays North Gallla,
Kyger Creek, Hannan Trace
11,11d Eastern, all formidable
opponents Except for flle
opener aga1nst North Gallla,
all these games are on lhe
road
Coach Wolfe expects Norfll
Guilla and Hannan Trace to
ij~ top contenders, but
P,Braphrasing an old sports
adage "Any team on a given
n,ight can come out a win
ner " The third year head
coach continued and pointed
out tllat he e~~PCcts tough
cinnpetitlon tllroughout tlie
~.\!ague this year Hannan
'l)"ace and Nortll Gallia bolll
hpve fllree returning let-

termen He believes the
SV AC Previews are a good
flllng because not only do
they g1ve the fans a chance tD
see the1r teams but also flle
boys get a tasll! of game
condihons before a cheering
crowd
The Tornadoes will be led
by four retlD"nlng lettermenPaul Schultz, Danny Brown,
Mike Roberts, and Greg
Dunning However, Dunning
won't see action until
January because of a broken
leg suffered during football
season Chip Brauer, a
transfer from Meigs High
School, Is expected to pick
up some of the slack caused
by tlle loss of Dunning Up
from last year's reserve
squad will be guards Carl
Johnston, Eric Dunning, Rick
Findley, Dave Roush and
forward Joe Brown Wolle
has one of those rare pleasant
problems - alll2 men on flle
squad are capable of
breaking Into the starling
lineup, and he believes fllal
this deptll will be one of his

team'sstrong pomts Anofller
asset lor the Tornadoes will
be the lac I lha I s1x of the
twelve players are over 6'0"
and Coach Wolfe feels that hiS
learn w1ll dellnilely be strong
on the boards
Schultz is a semor 6-0
forward, Danny Brown a
senior 6-1 center, Roberts a
senior guard and Greg
Dunning a senior 5-11 forward
Brauer, at 11-3, a Junior
lettered two years Wider his
father, Roger Brauer, coach
at Me1gs Local High School,
and Johnston, jumor at 5-8,
Eric Dunning, junior at 5-8,
Findley, jun1or at f&gt;-9, Dave
Roush, junior at 5-11, Joe
Brown, junior forward at 510 Brady Hulfman, senior
forward at 6-0 and Paul
Cross, 6·4 senior center,
round out the squad
The Tornadoes will be
trying to Improve on last
year's 1:1-9 record Wolfe said
that one big weakness last
year was flle lack of senior
leadership, but fllls malady

has been corrected If there
are any weaknesses m lh15
y~ar's team, they may be
lack of speed and mconslsten l
shooting But, of course team
members are working hard to
correct those faults
W1th a lack of speed, the
Tornadoes expect to play a
deliberate type of game,
stressmg strong defense and
ball control Helping Wolfe to
prepare lor the upcoming
season Is AssiStant Coach
Howard Caldwell, a recent
graduate of Rio Grande
College, who also w1ll be
headmg the Freshman squad
Jumor H1gh coaching 1s
handled by James Lawrence
and B1ll Baer
Willi talent height and
expenence the Tornadoes
could have a br~ght season,
and their opponents might
have a glum one But 1n
reference to Coach Wolfe 's
opening
remark
by
Christmas fans m the area
will know what kind of a
storm the 1975-76 Southern
Tornadoes are gmng to be

returnmg lettermen but lack
lor the Symmes Valley overall size and experience
V~klngs under new head
Coach Salyer feels flle team
c9ach Gary Salyer A has a good attitude and lots of
IIJ;~duate
of Marshall desire bul It Is still learning
University and assistant his system
coach for four years at
Returning lettermen InFairland, Salyer will use an elude Kevin Shaeffer, 6-2
aggressive fast-breaking senior, Gene Nance, 5-10
Qllense In an ellort to lm· senior; Randy Stumbo, 6-1
prove last year's 3-15 record senior, Mark Wilson, 6·0
The Vikings have six

'

~Jiighlanders

.

P H

'
.
: Coach Richard Hamilton
begins his fourlh year as head
b¥Skelball coach at South1feslern High School wlfll
fo.ur returning lettermen and
blah hopes of bettering las!
year's 10-9 record
Returning lettennen are 5·
jO senior guard Rick Crouse,
1-1 senior forward Jack
Tt'jlker, 8-0 junior forward
~p Lewla and 6-0 junior
Cl'e'Jier ~Fifll Grate

•

i,..,

junior, Frank Miller, 6-0
junior and Greg Estep, 5-6
junior guard
Others working lor
starting positions are John
Nance, 5·10 senior, John
Berry, 5--10 senior, Frank
Qaln, 5-11 junior, Nick
Gesweln, 5-10 junior, Justin
Miller 5-9 junior , Cec1l
Clary, 5·8 junior, David
KeUey, 6-1 junior and Ralph

schedules
Nov
Nov
Dec
Dec
Dec
Dec
Dec
Jan
Jan
Jan
Jan
Jan
Jan
Jan
Jan
Jan
Feb
Feb
Feb

SYMMES VALLEY
21
SVAC Prev1ew
28
Chesapeake
5
Soulhweslern
6
AI Rock Hill
9
Hannan Trace
13
Fairland
19
AI North Gallla
9
Rock Ht ll
10

AI

Fa~rland

16
AI Southern
17
Eastern
20
At Southwestern
23
North Galli a
24
AI Hannan Trace
30
At Chesapeake
31
Kyger Creek
6
Southern
13
AI Kyger Creek
14
At Eastern
NORTH GALLIA
Nov 21
SVAC Prev&gt;ew
NQv 22
Mtller
Nov 26
At Southern
Dec 2
Southwestern
Dec 5
AI Hannan Trace
Dec 12
AI Eastern Me1gs
Dec 19
Symmes Valley
Jan 2
AI Kyger Creek
Jan 6
AI Eastern Pike
Jan 9
Eastern Meigs
Jan 16
AI Hannan Trace
Jan 23
At Symmes Valley
Jan 27
Eastern P1ke
Jan 30
Southern
Feb 3
Wahama
Feb 6
Kyger Creek
Feb t3
AtMIIler
Feb 17
At Wahama
Feb 20
At Southwestern
KYGER CREEK
Dec 5
Southern
Dec 6
AI Fairland
Dec
Dec
Dec
Jan

16
19
20
2

Jan 9

Jan
Jon
Jon
Jon
Jan
Jan
Feb
Feb
Feb
Feb

Nov
Dec
Dec
Dec
Dec
Dec
Jan
Jan
Jan
Jan
Jan
Jan
Jan

t6
20
23
27
30
31

A 1 Southwest ern

Hannan W Va
AI Eastern
Buffalo
Norlh Galli a

Southwestern
Fairland
AI Southern
Hannan Trace
Eas fern
AI Symmes Valley
6
At North Gail1a
10 At Hannan W Va
13
Symmes Valley
24
At Buffalo
SOUTHWESTERN
28
Ironton Sf Joe
2
At North Galli a
5
AI Symmes Valley
12
Kyger Creek
19
At Hannan Trace
'N
AI Southern Local
2
Wahama
3
At 51 Joe
tO
Eastern
16
AI Kyger Creek
t7
AI Dak Holt
20
Symmes Valley
24

Jan 30
Feb 3

Sou1hern Local

AI Wahama

Hannan

Trece

Feb 6
AI Eastern
Feb 13
Qak Hlll
Feb 20
North Gatlla
HANNAN TRACE
Nov 21
AI SVAC Prev•ew
Nov 25
South Point
Nov 28
Eastern
Dec 5
At North Gallla
Dec 9
AI Symmes Valley
Dec 12
Southern
Dec I~
Southwestern
Dec 30
At Wahama
Jan 2
At Eastern
Jan 9
At Fairland
Jan 9
Kyger Creek
Jan 16
North Galli a
Jan 24
Symmes Valley
Jan 27
AI Kyger Creek
Jan 30
Green
Feb 3
At Southwestern
Feb 7
Fairland
Feb t5
AI Southern
Feb 20
Wahama
SOUTHERN
NOll '2 8

Dec 5
Dec 12
Dec t6

Dec '20

Dec
Jan
Jan
Jan
Jan
Jan
Jan
Jan
Feb
Feb
Feb
Feb
Feb

27
2

9

13
16
23
24

30

3
6
13
t7

20

Seniors are key to Eagles success
By Greg Bailey
EAST MEIGS - As I enlered the gym I could t&lt;:IJ
1mmed1a tely there was
somethmg Important gomg
on
Everyone's attention was
nveted to the center of the
basketball court I expected
to see a coach energelJcally
explammg a new play or
showmg a younger player the
correct way to execute a
move
But to my surpnse, none of
these thmgs was happenmg
Instead, all l could see oc
currm g was a typ1cal bormg
baske !ball drill Typ1cal and
bormg maybe to you and
me, but NOT to Coach Duane
Wolle's 1975-76 Eastern
Eagles The effort and en
thus1asm each achmg player
put mto each move are
lackmg m many h1gh school
cagers especially near the
culmmat10n of a hard, twohour pracllce but flley are
certamly present thiS year m
the Eagles
The Eagles are 1n a
rebwldmg year under a new
coach, havmg lost f1ve
starling semors !rom last
year s squad Two returmng
semor lettermen 6-1 semor
Steve Nelson and f&gt;-9 semor
Don E1chmger, are JOined by
only one other semor, 5-9
guard Bnan Conde, as they
try lo Improve on last year's

At Hannan Trace

N or th Gall Ia

AI Kyger Creek
At Hannan Trace
AI Eastern
Wahama
Southwestern
AI Glouster
AtWahama
Waterford
Symmes Valley
Kyger Creek
At Southwestern
AI North Gall Ia
Eastern
At Symmes Valley
Hannan Trace

AI Waterford
Glouster
EASTERN

Nov 28
At Hannan Trace
Dec 2
AI Waterford
Dec 6
Fed Hocking
Dec 9
AI V•nlon County
Dec 12
North Gall Ia
Dec t6
Southern
Dec t9
Kyger Creek
Ja 2
Hannan Trace
Jan 9
AI North Gall Ia
Jan tO
At Southwestern
Jan 13
At Fed Hocking
Jan 17
At Symmes Valley
Jan 20
Vmton County
Jan
27
Watertord
Ingles, 6-4 sophomore
AI Kyger Creek
Jan
30
Defensively, Symmes Feb 3
AI Southern
Valley will use a mixture of Feb 6
Soulhwestern
Symmes Valley
flle man lo-man and zone Feb 14
defenses Coach Salyer rated
North Galha, Southern and
Hannan Trace as the teams to
beat m lhe SV AC
In 1968, e•plos10n and lire
Assisting Coach Salyer w1ll
be Angelo DeBenedetto, also entombed 78 men m a coal
mine at Farmington WVa
a Marshall graduate

Viking quintet in rebuilding year
It will be a rebuilding year

SVAC

Dec 12

Bobcats are small, hut aggressive
, Good quickness, much
J!Dproved att1tude and better
qyerall school sp1r1l toward
Jtasketball are lhe strengtlls
possessed by ' the 1975-76
Kyger Creek High School
basketball team
Coach Ke1fll Carter, former
Southwestern H1gh School
star entenng his se$ond year
as head boss of flle Bobcat
cagers and th1rd 1n h1s
coaching career, feels his
club has a chance tD become
a spoiler this year
Kyger Creek Will have a
~all but aggressive squad
tts biggest problem, as
0).\Vays, will be an overall
~ck of height
Kyger Creek lists just four
~layers on Its vars1ty and
reserve squads at six or more

,;,;,:::::::_::::;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::.:;:::::::;:::::::::::::

Hannan Trace, flle Southern Valley Alhlehc Con
ference ChampiOn the past
two years moves mto the
1975-76 season w1th JUS! two
returmng lettermen !rom last
year s squad wh1ch recorded
an outstandmg 111-3 record
Gone are All-stater Mark
Swa1n now a member ol flle
R1o Grande College team,
and all.SV AC players Wayne
Hesson and Bill Hall Another
graduatmg semor was Joe
Hmeman Also retmng from
the coachmg ranks was
veteran mentor Paul Dtllon
The new W1ldcat coach IS

weaknesses

The B1g Green team plays a
tough starting schedule,
especially the first s1x games
Their opemng test Nov 28, Is
w1th the always tough
Hannan Trace Wildcats, the
same team they w1ll be
playmg m flle Prev1ews The
head mentor believes II w1U
be a tough SV AC race th1s
year w1th Southern bemg flle
team to beat He said, 'The
Tornadoes have expenence,
mater~al, and a good coach
Also, bofll North Galha and
Hannan-Trace will be strong,
and Kyger Creek w1ll be a
much I!Rproved squad
Wollesa•d that at flleend of
the season fans w•ll see a
much I!Rproved ball club and
fllat hiS team w11l be g1vlng
each contest their best shot
If attitude and enlhus1asm
count for anythmg, !hen that
' shot could hurt and sur
pr1se some opponents, and
area fans could be treated to
some hne, fundamental
basketball

Dan Cornell, a graduate of
Marshall Umvers1ty, who
served under Dillon the past
three seasons Pr1or to that,
Cornell coached at the junior
h1gh level lor two seasons
Returmng lettermen are
Charles Cremeans, 6-2 semor
and Kent Halley, 5-11 semor
guard Oilier squad members
are 5-9 semor Kevm Petrie 60 semor Tun Woodyard 6-0
senior David Shaffer , 5-7
semor Rodney Rankm, 6-2
1un1or Willard Sheets 5-10
JUnior Scott G1bson 5 9
JUniOr RICK Wh1tt 59

sophomore Frank Mooney,
5-10 sophomore Randy
McGwre and 5-10 sophomore
Dav1d Swam
Coach Cornell says he has
10 boys w1tll equal ab1hty
According to the coach both
the varsity and reserve
teams are showmg lots of
enthusiasm
Wildcat weakness listed
are an overall lack of he1ght
and expenence Two players,
Cremeans and Shafler are
recovenng from reoccurrmg
mjurJe.q

How they wound up in 1974·75
FINAL 1974 1S SVAC CAGE
STANDINGS
(League Onlyl

VARSITY

TEAM

w L p
Hannan Trac e 12 0 881
North Gllll•a
10 2 859
southern
1 5 641
SQ.uthweslern
6 6 708
Eas tern
4 6 788
Symmes Valley

OP

643
619
611
718

71 1
3 9 788 868

0 12 602
FlNAL 1914 75 SVAC
RESERVES
w L T
TEAM
Hannan Tra ce 8 4 did
7 5 409
North Ga ll•a
6 6 46~
Southern
6 6 411
Kyger Creek
Sou thw ester n
6 6 329
s 7 371
eas1ern
Kyge r Creek

815
OP

390
381
439
394
319
380

Symmes Valley 4 8 418

457

Expansion teams
will he strong
NEW YORK (UP! ) Seattle and Tampa Bay, the
newest franchises In the
National Football League,
have been provided Willi a
player allocation plan
des1gned to Insure therr bemg
the strongest first-year expansion teams in league
history
NFL owners Wednesday
drew up a plan tD make
available the .largest number
of quality players ever for an
expansion dralt For flle first
Ume, the NFL Will Include
both acllve and reserve
players In the expansion pool,
glvmg the two clubs a pick
from over 475 veteran players
to stock therr teams
In flle past only players
who started the lirst league
game were made available
for expansion,' said NFL
Commissioner Pete Rozelle
"None or the other players
was available "
The pool will consist ol 338
active players from tlle 26
clubs plus players from the

reserve list Thel'e are now
139 players on fllat list but
It will grow before the end ol
flle season The reserve list
cons1sts ol InJUred and
retJred players plus players
m flle armed lorces or NFL
draft picks In &lt;the Canadlan
Football League
Before flle expansion dralt
begins, each of flle 26 clubs
Will be able to withhold two
players from 1ts Oct 28
reserve list Then, each club
can freeze 30 players from Its
active and reserve list before
the draft begms

AVAILAILI FOR RENTAL

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949-2525

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Sizes

2 $2695
b

~

Varsity newcomers are
Bob Rull, f&gt;-10 senior guard,
Larry Ruff, 5--10 junior guardforward, Paul McNeal,
jWiior guard, Mark Banks, 510 sophomore forward, and
John
Fadeley,
5-10
sophomore forward
Freshmen candidates from
last year s eighth grade
championship team are Greg
Nelson Darrell Baker,
Merrill Baker, t'1 ank

trol type ball game w1th lots
of pat1ence, stressmg defense
and a team effort He says all
hu cagers w1ll probably see
acbon and he's glad to be
playmg Hannan-Trace m the
SV AC Previews He beheves
playmg a good team m flle
Previews g1ves the players a
chance to get over the first
game" fillers, and the
coaches can discover their

Wildcats must rebuild

have 4 veterans back

Oth~r hopefuls, who lettered on the reserve squad
last y~ar, are Jell Banks, 5-10
senior forward, Doug Miller,
5-10 junior lorward, 5-10
Larry Carter, a sophomore
guard, John Gilliam, 5-11
sophomore forward, Erwin
Nickels 5·10 sophomore
lorward and Donnie Bush 510 junior transler !rom
Gallipolis nd Monty Blanton 6-0 spPhomore center .j,

4-15 record Besides these
three seniors there are s1x
JWIIOr candidates vymg lor a
spot on flle startmg vars1ty
squad One of these Is 5-10
guard Greg Browning , a
transfer from Me1gs H1gh
School Other jumors up from
last year's reserve learn are
5-10 forward Mark Hawk, 5-9
forward Bruce R1ffie 5 7
guard Kevm Barton 5 8
guard M1ke Smith and f&gt;-7
guard Ph1hp Lacomb
Also on the squad are f&gt;-7
guard Joe Kuhn , 5-11 forward
Gary Nelson and 5-9 guard
Br1an
Matthews
all
sophomores
Bes«Jes llllsme•per~ence,
Wolle says his team lacks
he1ght and speed but they
deflnJlely
have some
strengths He believes that
the athtude of thiS year s
squad Is perhaps the best he s
seen mrecent years, and he s
well-pleased w1th the way
flleJr cond11tomng Is commg
along
But he has three InJured
players - E1ehmger, Nelson,
and Bruce R•ffle - so some
reserve players will be seemg
actiOn on both teams Helpmg
Wolfe with the coaching
chores Will be Assistant
Larry Hemes , freshman
coach Joe Mitchum and
JuniOr h1gh coach Archie
Rose
Accordmg to Wolfe hiS
learn will be playmg a con

Shriver, Gene Layton, Dan
Hutchmson , Kevin Knapp
and Don Spurlock
Coach Hamilton feels his
overall team strengths are
speed and depth He rates
size as the biggest weakness
Graduation losses Wtre All·
SVAC players Kevin Walker
and l.loyd Wood Other
starters graduating were
Terr~ Carter and Jim Nlda
it.

Mounted and
Balanced free.
Offer Good Thru Nov.
'

~.

•, ', •, •,

',

7~

�3- The Deily Sentmel, Middleport Pomeroy 0, Thursdav Nov 20 197'
2- The Da•lySentmel, Middleport Pomeroy, 0, l'hursday, Nov 20 1975_
L t:~a 9u(

N01 1 onal Hockey

Pacesetter school working
RICHARDSON Tex (UP!)
- Three monflls ago school
officials m fll1s Dallas suburb
put mto acUon a plan to
achiev e deseg regatiOn
wifllout court-ordered busing
- and 11 Is workmg
The plan mvolved making a
'pacesetter school" of allblack Hamllton Park
Elementary, fllen inviting an
egual number of white
students from fllc dlstnct to
attend
" We don 't have any
statistiCal data from the
program yet, It's sllll too
early but all I hear from
parents, teachers and
students
1s
entirely
favorable," se1d Dr John

Rob e rts, assistant
supermtendent for mstructlon for the Richardson
School District
"We have had ohly one
child accepted for the
program who requested to
transfer to another school "
As ol this week, 267 white
students attend Hamilton
Park with 250 blacks students
In grades one fllrough six
Classes at Hamilton Park
average 20 pupils The
tcacherpupll ratio Is 1·16
Both are well helow average
In a district already
recognized as excellent
All that manpower means
extra attention and dlverse
course offerings In addition

to the usual elementary
school fare, a student at
Hamilton can study orchestra, band, gymnastics,
mus1c, art and a fore~gn
language
Counselor JIJD Smith says
flle pacesetter program also
has promoted lmndsh1ps
between black and wh1te
students
Our first grade IS flle most
beautifully mixed class you
could ilriagme," he said
There have been several
UIStances of birthday parties
where whites went to black
homes and blacks went to
white, mostly at the s1xth
grade level, and I know these
people were not friends

before the year started " he
says
One fr1endsh1p 1s that between SIXth graders Thomas
Jellerson
and
Tony
Witkowski
&amp;mth says he thmks both
boys recogmzed s1mllar
personaltty tra1ts and
became lnends Thomas
Iailier, Thomas Jefferson Jr ,
sees it a ltttle differently
Thomas and Tony got real
light real qu1ck for some
reason, maybe their s1ze,
flley are both small lor their
age," he saJd Then, of
course Tony wanted to know
If Thomas could come over to
his house and Thomas wanted
Tony to come over here "

By un.ted pr'.".~',nwnal onal
Patnck

(ConUnued !rom page I)
formal declaration whlle
Ford nalled down commitments among GOP
leaders
But Reagan has been far
from Idle smce he left the
governor 's mansion in
January He has made
hundreds of speeches across
tlle notion In the past 10
monflls
He has a dally radio
program, earned by more
Ulan 300 station, on which to
glve his views on everything
from gun control to the
Russian economy He also
has written a weekly colwnn
for
more
than
200
newspapers
Reagan has been acknowl·
edged one of the most
polished speakers among
modern American
politicians, going back to the
days when he first supported
Barry
Goldwater
lor
president and lambasted big
government
Today, he laces his conservative viewpoints w1th
generous dollops or humor
"Federal researchers have
learned what makes people
happy," he said recently
"They learned fllat yoWJg
people are happier than old
people People witll money
arc happier than people
wifllout and people who are
11ell are happier than people
who are sick - a $249,000
grant to learn that it's better
to be young, rlctl and heal Illy
Ulan old , poor and sick '
During hi~ acting career,
Reagan appeared In more
than 50 movies Many were
Grade B aflalrs, but he was
praised for his performance
In Dark Victory " with Bette
Davis and his role as a yoWig
man whose legs were am
pulated m King 's Row "
In Ius early years Reagan
was a frank lin Roosevelt
Democrat and tmlltant Wllon
worker fur flle Screen Actors
Guild In the early 1900s he
changed parties and went on
lo berume a favorlle of the
GOP'u tonservahve wing
Reagan marned actress
Jane W)•man u1 1940 They
1 were divorced e1gl1t years
tater They had two children,
Maureen and Michael
In 1952 he married Nancy
Davis, an aspiring actress
and daughter of a wealthy
Oncagu surgeon They have
two chiltlren, Patricia and
Ronald ll

Sickness hits farmers
By JEFFERY L SHELER
GRAND RAPIDS, Mlch
(UP!) - Last week, Alvin
Green or nearby Chaae shot
and burled his dairy herd It
was contaminated with PBB,
a toxic lire retardant accidentally mixed witll tons of
livestock leed at a leed plant
Now Green hlmsell Is
showing symptoms or PBB
contamination
"It's not h1gh, but It's
fllere, ' his wile, Hilda, said
"The doctora said they
couldn't tell whefller PBB
was the cause ol his
problems, but flley're still
working on it '
Green was one of many
Michigan cattle and dairy
producers who suffered
financially from
polybromlnated biphenyl
contamination of tlleir herds
two years ago Hundreds
since have reported suffering
phySically as well
qreen started suffering
from hypertension and sores
on his legs
"We're assuming he got it
while standing In the con-

tammated grain, shoveling It
Into the Ieeder," said Mrs
Green
Sle said her grandson, who
does chores at the farm, has
similar leg sores
The meat and milk from
contaminated aniJD81s were
consumed by tlle family until
recently, when tests showed
flle PBB levels at I 47 parts
per million
'By then we'd eaten a
whole cow," she sa1d "Now
we won 'I eat the meat and we
won 'I drink the milk
"H flle state had been domg
1ts job, we wouldn't have had
to fmd out about PBB this
way"

Farmers had to destroy
thousands of farm anhnals
alter they learned tlle fireretardant accidentally had
been mixed With livestock
feed Lawswts are pending
Green 1s one of many
farmers caught between
state agriculture offic18ls and
health authorities The state
says contammallon levels
below 3parts per million are
acceptable lor marketing
meat and milk
But Dr Walter Meester,
dlreclor of PBB research at
Blodgett Memorial Hospital
dlsputed state claims that
low4evel contarnmatlon IS
harmless

FBI believ
algn of illegal
WASHINGTON (UPI) - A six-year c
harassment an surveillance
by tlle FBI against Martin
Luther King was conducted
Wider the mtslaken suspicion
he was under ' communist
hairy mammal on numeroWI Influence," according to a
OCC88Jons over the the past ranking FBI official
Elsewhere, FBI Director
two summers
Sle described flle creature Clarence Kelley told a Senate
as covered with short black subcommittee Wednesday
hatr, except for the face, ~rrorlst bombmgs were
hands and feet, which she Increasing m America at an
said were dark brown and alarming rate - 46m flle first
'weather-beaten " It also haH of 1975 compared to 45 for
had high cheek bones, a llat all of 1974 Kelley said 'new
nose and hands like a human left revolut10nar1es" were
being, except that the thumb responsible
James Adams, FBI
was the same length as the
assistant
deputy for infingers
"He could have killed us teiUgence who testified on the
many, many times over the King matter, told a Senate
past two summers 1f he so Investigative panel '!here
desired," she said "He's so was no statutory basis lor
huge he could have done JUSllfJcatlon" ol some 25
almost anytlllng he wanted separate actions carried out
against King before he was
to"
Her son, Danny, 15, said he assassinated In 1968
The campaign Included an
once saw siX ol the Sasquatch
"let5urely walking across the anonymoWI letter written by
road morder, the tallest first, the FBI to King m late 1964,
just before he was to receive
down to the smallest"
the
Nobel Peace Prize,
Danny said h1s school
chums have ridiculed ht5 saying, ' You are done There
sightlngs as tall tales For IS only one way out for you "
Although not mentioned at
that reason he disagrees with
his mother, who IS against the tlle hearing, tlle letter was
said to have been accapture of the creatures
'I'd like to see somebody comparued by a recording or
lrmg one In so It could be transcript of matmal
proven once and lor all," he allegedly compromising
King's character
satd

Bigfoot shielded
ROSEBURG,Ore (UP!) When Jean Fitzgerald sees
monster~lke lootprlnts, she
quickly rubs them out
"We destroy them so some
Bigfoot hunter won'!
stumble across them," said
Mrs Fitzgerald
She is crusading lor legislation to protect the legendary
Sosq11.11tch - Ill~ monster
known as "Bigfoot," a sort of
lowland North Amer1can version ol the Himalayan
'abominable snowman "
Mrs Fitzgerald said she
and her family have seen the
apellke creatures often and
once spotted nine of them
together
"They proved to us tlley
don't mean any harm," she
said Wednesday ' Each thne
we saw them, flley were as
curious about us as we were
about fllem '
Her husband, Steve said he
once left a candy bar lor a
Sasquatch, hid nearby, and
watched the creature devour
flle treat - wrapper and
all
Bigfoot's existence has
been debated lor decades but
Mrs Fitzgerald says the
family has seen the nlne.{oot

DR. LAMB

Diabetes can: affect vision
8) La\1 renrc E Lamb, M 0
DEAR DR lAMB - I have

a f1ve-hour sugar tolerance
lest and was t~ld 1 am a rmld
dlahei JC l m 58 and 5 feet 2
l've lost l4 pounds and have
be~n able to mamlam a
w••~ hl of 120 for II\ e months
Without a r1g1d d1et
I don'I take msuhn or prlls
and wa• told l need not return
to the doctor unless I got mto
trouble I'm ma1n iy In·
tereslrd In how eyes are
affer trd by dl3betes and why
W11en l go ou1 10 eat or
travel 11 s hard to stay on a
sugar free d1et If I have any
rea cti on it IS blurring and
ch ang~ ln mv VISI On, also
occasiOnal severe headaches
about 5 a m and restless
ltchmg all over
What spetlf1c symptoms
mean •rouble that mdicates
more tests, and how severe
doe~ d1abetes have to be tD
cause blmdness' I know of
two cases of very sudden
lllindnt ss whet! d1abelA!s was
the cause Can milk adult

d1abeles cause thJs? Would
one teaspoon pi sugar on
cereal m the morning be
harmful' The subslllutes
leave a ternble taste, and I
need the cereal for regular1ty
I have found
DEAR READER - No
doubt your doctor thought
your fmdmgs ere mUd enough
Ihat he didn't have to give you
a deflmte return date That IS
good news You should ,
however have a check up
eve!") year, and the status of
your diabetes, 1f you have
d1abetes at all, can be
reevaluated You may not
need another glucose test for
a general screening
Depend g on the tyupe
of response, one glucose
tolerance lest Is often
not sufficient basis to make a
d~&amp;gnosls of diabetes II you
want a better understanding
of the glucose tolerance, send
In 50 cents IQr The Health
Letter
number
3 11
D1abefes
D1agnosls ,
P reventio n
an d

Management Just send your
request to me m care or th1s
newspaper, P 0 Box 1551,
Radio City Stahon, New
York, NY 10019 Include a
long,
stamped,
sell·
addressed envelope for
mallmg You w1ll have a
better 1dea of what your
doctor meant by a mild
diabehc, and flle problems of
the glucose tolerance test
The Health Letter w1ll also
g1ve you lips on how to
manage your prpblem One of
the most Important steps IS
conlrolhng or ellmmahng
any excess body fat
Diabetes affects tlle blood
vessels m the back of the eye
They become diseased and
may break, causing a
hemorrhage mto the eye
This will cloud the eye and
not allow 1mages to be
transmitted through the
normally clear mater~al
1ns1de the eyeball causing
sudden bltndness
Also dlabetls may cause
other retmal d1sease al the

back of the eye where the
•mage is projected to enable
Sight
Diabetes tncreases the
chances of developmg
cataracts Although the
method of cataract formation
IS not completely understood
the h1gh blood sugar levels
seem to be the hnportant
foetor here
ll1s hard to say If you will
have eye damage with m1id
diabetes or not You can have
h1gh cholesterol levels and
fatly-cholesterol deposits m
the arteries with m1ld
d1abetes In general, though,
the person who IS controlled
well without h1gh blood sugar
levels and IS on a d1et that
helps to prevent vascular
disease will do better tllan the
person not so well managed
Try one of the m1lk substitutes for babies who cannot
tolerate milk These canned
milk substitutes on cereal
g1ve a slightly sweet taste
and may solve your sugar
problem lor cereal

DIVI S IOn

12 3 5 29
8 6 t1 ?0
79 "1. 16
7 I I 2 16

Alanra
N Y Rangers

Smvthc Dr v•sron
w
10
7
7

Chi cago
Sl LOUIS
Vancouv er
Kan sas C ty
Mrnneso1a

I I pts

4 6 26
7 4 18
8 4 18

s 10 2 12
4 1&lt;1
8

Norn s

o

DI VIS IOn

wltph
Montrea l
Los Anqeles
PITtsburgh

13

4 3 29

12 6
6 9
De tro t
5 11
wash rn gton
2 16
Adams DIVI SIOn
w I
Buffalo
14 3
Toronto
9 5
Boston
9 6
Cat lor n a
l 12

2 26
'l 14
1 14
2 61
t ph
t 29
4 22

3 21
2 16

Wednesday s Res ults
Kansas Cit y 6 NY Ranger s
Montreal 6 M1nneso1a o
Vancouver 5 Wash ngton 2
Boston J De1 ro11 J

&lt;1

Ch cago .4 Los Ang eles 2
Thursday s Games
NY Islanders at Boston
Cal lorn a at Ph•ladelph a
1 D elrolt at Buffalo
H 0 Ck e V

ASSOCiilfiOO

Stand1ngs

By Un ited Press lnternattonal
East

C1ncmnat I

wltpts
9 6 0 18
7 8 I 15

New England
Cleveland

6

7

6 10

lnd anapoll s

2

14

12

0

West

wltpts
9 1 0 18

Houston

1 1 1 15

Mmnesota

San D1 ego

6 7 2 111
6 8 2 lA
5 9 1 11

Phoem x
Denver

Canadlan wltpts
Quebec
14 5 o 28
wonnopeg
12 5 o 24
Edmonton
8 10 2 lB
Calgary
8 8 1 11
Toronlo
4 10 2 10
Wednesday s Resulh
Cleveland 4 Monnesola 3
overl&gt;me
lnd lanapoi1S 3 New England 1
Thuriday s Games
Wlnn•peg al Quebec
Edmon ton at Phoen x
Denver at San Diego
Mlnnesota al New England
International Hockey

League Stand.ngs
Un•ted Press lnternattonal

Northt

w
Sagmaw
Port Huron
Muskegon
Fhn1
Ka l amazoo

6
8
6
6

Broncos

w I I ph

Ph tadelpll a
NY Islanders

World

Reagan

St and

3
7
5
7

tl

0
3
2

473

pts 91
16 52
16
15
14 46
11 43

pa
39

l; li

50
59

South
w 1 t pts

gf
Dayton
10 tl 1 2 1 51 ~~
Toledo
7 11 4 18 51 50
Fort Wayne 6 9 2 14 6~
Co lumbus 3 10 3
9 3S i~
Wednesdays Results
Da t yo n 2 Muskegon 2
Fort Wayne 8 Kalama zoo 4
Toledo 3 Columbus J
Ton1ght s Games
No games scheduled
Fridays Games
Dayton at Fl nt
Sag naw at K alamazoo
Mu skegon at Toledo
~orl Huron at Columbus

UPI film
confiscated
by police
ANN ARBOR, Mich (UP!)

- Michigan Coach Bo
Schembechler Wednesday
ordered a camera and llhn
confiscated from Andy Sacks,
a part-thne photographer lor
Umted Press InternatiOnal,
who was taking pictures of
the Wolvermes "closed'
pracllces from a nearby
apartment buildmg
The pictures were taken on
pnvate property directly
across the street from the
enclosed practice l1eld
Socks was shooting pic
lures !rom the same apartment used by another
photographer two years ago
Schembechler sa1d assiStant
coaches spotted Sacks and
rushed Into the apartment
buJdmg
Socks refused to open the
door and called pollee Pollee
confiscated his camera and
film but returned his camera
"I don't want any pictures
of our fonnations to' get back
so Ohio State can use them,"
said Schembechler m a
telephone call to flle Detroit
UP! bureau ' I don't want
them to see any of our formations That's why the
practices are closed

favored
•
zn
MAC

their offense

By Dale Rothgeb, Jr

BOWIJNG GREEN Ohio
(UP! ) - M1d Amen can
Conference basketball
coaches and represenlallves
of the news media have
p1cked Western M1ch1gan as
flle team to beat m flle battle
for MAC cage supremacy fll1s
season
Coach Eldon Miller s
Broncos were g1ven seven
f1rst-place votes and 91 pomts
by flle 10 league coaches at
tlle annual MAC preseason
cage gathermg Wednesday
Western rece1ved 50 lrrstplace votes and 607 pomts on
flle 60 ballots cast m the
med1a poll
Second on both ballots, w11ll
two first-place votes from the
coaches and mne from the
med1a, was M1am1 Kent
Stale got flle other first-place
vote m buth polls
In order , the coaches
selected Toledo, Kent
Central MIChigan, Eastern
M1ch1gan Bowlmg Green,
Ohio Umvers1ty, Northern
llhnotS and Ball Stale behind
the Broncos and Redskms
Central M1ch1gan was
picked fll1rd by the scribeS,
followed by Toledo, Kent,
Bowhng Green, Eastern
Michigan, Oh10, Ball State
and Northern llllnot5
M1ller has all five starters
and seven ol h1s top e1ght
players mcludmg standouts
Paul Grilfm 6-9, Tom Cutter,
6-8, and Jeff Tyson, 6-3, back
from last season's team
1
Seven lettermen, mcluding
two starters, 6-5 Chuck Good
year and 6-6 Randy Ayers,
are back for M1am1
Defendmg MAC champiOn
Central Michigan lost 1ts top
three scorers, Dan Round
lJeld, James McElroy and
J1m Hehnmk Also Dirk
Dunbar, who averaged 18 1
BY JOE CARNICEW
points per game m 1973-74
has remJured a knee and may UPI Sports Writer
HEMPSTEAD N Y (UP!)
IDISS the commg season lor
Charley Winner had not
tlle Chippewas
left
flle New York Jets'
Dunbar mtssed the last
tra1nmg
site Wednesday
campa1gn w11ll an inJured
when
speculation
about hiS
knee
replacement began and 11
read like a Who's Who" of
coaches
Wmner, who took over
In 1945 24 German leaders under less than 1deal cirwent on trial at Nuremberg cumstances two years ago
before the InternatiOnal War when he succeeded his fatherCrhnes Tribunal
m-law, Weeb Ewbank, as

Search begun
for new coach ·~

Sport Parade
By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sports Editor

maybe make the 1ssue just a

Can Hannan Trace repeat little more cloudy Fr1day

'
addmg "we've been In control
By GENE CADDES
m most of our games " '
UP! Sports Writer
He labeled Moeller "a re'al
Cincmnall Moeller Coach
good
team which seems to lie
Gerry Faust hasn't gone mto
many games as the un gettmg better every game "
The tenms have played \Wp
derdog, but adm1ts No I
common
opponents, Pri.Jlrated Lakewood St Edward
ceton
and
Cleveland St
has to be g1ven the edge m
Joseph
Moeller
beat PrihFriday mght's Class MA
ceton
14-12
and
St
Joseph 12state h1gh school cham7,
while
St
Edward
downell
piOnship game at flle Rubber
Prmceton 2U and St Joe 35Bowl m Akron
~
"We're gomg to have to 14
Currence
called
flle
Ea81$s'
play a perfect lootball game
to beat Ill em " satd tlle coach 56-28 wm over Warren
of the No 2 rated Crusaders Western Reserve early In the
We haven 'I played one yet, season our best game," but
but there's always a fJrSt ss1d the 19-7 wm over Newarll:
was possibly the be~
liJDe
~·
Both St Edward coached defensive effort
The
A
game
matches
NoJ'2
by Mike Currence and
Moeller take 11-11 records mto Newark Catholic (11•01
flle championship game, St ,.galnst No 5 Carey (9-1) '
Newark Catllollc advanced
Ed advancing w1th a 19-7
to
the title game Willi an ll'.:G
seiDifinal wm over Newark
wm
over defendmg champl011
and Moeller beatmg Fmdlay
28 16 m the other AAA Middletown Fenwick last
Fr1day rught, while Carey
semi! mal
outlasted
previously un•
The AM !mal kicks off a
beaten
Burton
Berkshrre !181weekend of champiOnShip
tilts at flle Rubber Bowl, w1fll 24
''
two games Saturday, flle A Newark Catholic, coachii!
game between Newark by J D Graham, has given up
Cafllohc and Carey on tap lor only tllree touchdowns all
11 am and the AA contest year, two coming on klckoU
matchmg Cleveland Holy returns and flle oilier on II
Name and Wyommg at 7 30 blocked punt
The M fmals match a parr
pm
"They (St Edward) of unbeaten teams, Ho}y
probably have the best ol- , Name at 9·0, again!t
fense m the state," sa1d Wyoming, 11-11
Faust, "and I think their
Wyommg, flle No 1 ranked
defense JS just as good They M team m the state, bestM
defm1tely deserve to be No Ironton 26-7m the semlflnal.t';
1"
while No 3 Holy Name roll~
Currence admits •'we over Oregon Cardinal Strltcli';
m1ght have been a little more 35-0
"~
consistent than Moeller "
"'

NEW YORK (UP!) - Upset over flle way he was used, Don
Sulton has asked the Los Angeles Dodgers to deal hhn They're
doing fllerr best to obhge
Sutton, a !i-and-10 player Willi tlle r1ght of saying yes or no to
any deal because he has 10 years m tlle majors and flle last five
With the same club, became unhappy fllls sununer when he
was removed from some games by Walt Alston he felt he ptill
had a good chance of wmnmg
He walked into the office of AI Campams, v1ce president m
charge of player personnel witll flle Dodgers, alter one such
game and told him he wanted to go wifll an American League
club Why not ' Look what that had done for Fergie Jenkins
Sutton said he d like to be traded to the New York Yankees or
Boston Red Sox Campanls tried to talk hhn out of It, but saw
flle JG.year-old nght-llander had hiS mind made up More
recently Sutton who had a 16-13 record this year along wlfll a
2 87 earned rWJ average, sixth best m the National League,
tllrew m a third club he'd agree to go to- Kansas City
Campanls never gave Sutton any flat-out guarantee he'd
trade him, but he has been trymg ever since the World Senes
and still IS now after having swung that b1g six player deal wifll
Atlanta Durmg that portion of flle Senes played In Cincinnati,
Campanls talked to Boston v1ce president Haywood Sulllvan
about Sutton
"Who would you want ?" Sulltvan asked
"What about Fred lynn' "
' Next case," sa1d Sulllvan
Well, then , how about Carlton FJSk'" CampaniB tried
BEREA, Ohio (UPI) - The agam
Cleveland Browns' workout
Case closed," Sullivan sa1d, and thai ended tllat converse
today dealt with lmprovmg lion
the offense lor Sunday's
Campams also has talked wifll Yankees' president Gabe
game against tbe Clnc,lnnah Paul about Sutton Paullold Campanls he'd get back wilh hiiD
Bengals at Municipal again and fllat's where that one stands now It s also one Qf tbe
Stadium 1n Cleveland
reasons he 's here now Another reason Is Andy Messersmlfll,
Coach Forrest Gngg put who won 19 with the Dodgers flits year
his men tllrough a twM!ourMessersmith never s1gned his 1975 contract with lhe
llknlnute defens1ve strategy Dodgers What he IS doing IS testing tlle reserve clause, hoping
session Wednesday m wh1ch he winds up a free agent who can seD his ~~erv1ces to flle highest
recently..acqulred defensive bidder the same way Catfish Hunter did a year ago Mesaerend Joe Jones showed he still smitllJS due to appear before arbitrator Peter M Seltz today
Is quick off tlle ball when
Losing Messersmltll would hlD"t the Dodgers almost as much
rushing the quarterback as liiSing HWiter hurt the A's, but With Burt Hooton pitching the
Jones and rookie Mack way he d1d alter corning from the Cubs and Tommy John
MltdleU an eJpeCied to start apparently back In shape to go again, the Dodgers aren't
overly concerned about fllelr p1tchlng Not when they have
B~~aiml tlle powerful Bengals
Brolllll' offlclall expect a such others around like 15-game winner Doug Rau, Rick
crowd of about 60,000 lor tbe Rhoden, a good~ookmg 22-year-old righthander, and Mike
game, meaning more than Marshall in flle bullpen
25,000 Uckets remain to he
Although the Dodgers got~ Baker In tllelr deal with tbe
sold. So there's no chance the Braves, Campanls would take another top lllght outfielder for
contelll will be televised Sutton Falling that, he'd want a~1tcher he con!lldered at least
on a par wifll Sutton
locally

Browns polish

Sixth SVAC preview at Lyne Center Friday

Lakewood is
AAA favorite

head coach, was !Ired
Wednesday after tlle Jets Ii!St
their sixth straight game aM
seventh m nine games thj$,
season Ken Shipp, the Jets
&lt;!&amp;-year-old offensive coordmator , was named ri/
replace hiiD, strictly on lin'
interhn baSIS
General Manager AI Wald'
IS the man who mlllt
recommend a new coach to
the Jets' Board of Directors
and he 'll begm looking lor a
replacement Immediately1
I m looking lor someollt\"
Wllh flle ability to lead,•:'
Ward sa1d ' I have a co!!ii:
pletely open mind, whether,it,
be a college coach or a P.rn
""'
coach I have no prejudices~
Kenny understands he It
coachmg on purely an In''
terun basis I don't knO'W '
where Charley went wrong';
There
was
just lilt

movement"

The names include some ii{,
the best known coacbes The
big handicap Is the Jet:J
looking ohly for a coach an/!
many coaches also want to bel'
general manager also Soniewant an option to purchase ~~
percentage of the club, which"
the Jet ownership refuses tOo
conSider
"'
The names Include Doli'
~ula of flle MlamiDolphlris~'
George Allen of the '
Washington Redsldns, Atll"
Parsegh1an, former NotrlY,
Dame coach, Penn Sta~
Coach Joe Paterno and Hank"
Stram, former coach of tnt'
Kansas City Chiefs The
leading assistants under
consideration are Monfl"
Clark of Miami, Ernll!
Stautner ol Dallas and Walt
M1chae18 or Philadelphia •
Shula has feuded with Dol&lt; •
plnns owner Joe Robbie In the '
past and would also ask lOt~
the general managership an£
a piece of tlle club
"

are

as I "ampions or lhe Southern
, Vat•• Athlehc Conference?
Will North Galha 's Greg
, James lead the Pirates to the
, SV AC UUe ? Is Southern's
.aenlor-studded hne up
enough to overcome both
llannan Trace and North
~allia lor flle SVAC cham
plonship'
• Fans m flle trJ-coWJty area
~~ill get a chance to answer
.some ol those queshons or

~Pirates

mght as the annual SVAC
Preview will be held at Paul
R Lyne Center on the
campus of Rio Grande
College
Agam, a w1de~pen race 1s
forecast this lallln the Class
A Southern Valley Afllletlc
Conference but Norfll Gallla
and Southern have been
tabbed as the team's most
bkely to overtake Hannan

Trace
New coaches lh1s fall are
The Wildcats, wmners the Duane Wolfe, Eas~rn Dan
past two seasons, lost three ol Cornell, Hannan Trace, and
their starters from last year's Gary Salyer, Symmes Valley
DJstrJcl team wh1ch f1mshed
W1th the ret~rement from
w1th a 111-3 season
the coachmg ranks of Paul
Action lleilms at 6 30 p m D11lon, J1m Fosler, entenng
w1th Symmt!s Valley playmg h1s f1flh year at North Galba
Southern At 7 30 p m IS the dean of the SVAC
Eastern meets Hannan coaches Other returmng
Trace, Southwestern battles mentors are Carl Wolfe
North Gallla at 8 30 p m Southern, Richard Hamilton,
while Kyger Creek colbdes Southwestern and Ke1th
w1th VInton County In flle Carter, Kyger Creek
Preview's !male AI 9 ~0 nm

have good height this year

'" Led by Greg James, a 6-3
~nlor guard, Coach J1m
.I:"oster begms h1s l11lh year at
the helm of the North Galha
&gt;Pirates wllh h1gh hopes and
probably the best overall
he1ght m the sVAC
, James has been an All
'SVAC player lor the past two
xears Last season, James
was on the Ali.Oh10 Special
mention team as a ]Wiior
alter averagmg 20 3 pomts
per game He has been flle
Pirates' Most Valuable
Jllayer the last two years
Although James mostly plays
lhe guard pos1tion, he has
great reboundmg ab1hty
based on stallstics of 16 6

rebounds a game
North Galha finiShed the
1974 75 season w1fll a 14-5
record and 10-2 slate m flle
SVAC
Other probable starters are
Fred Logan, 6-2 jun1or for
ward Logan averaged 13 5
pom ts per game last year and
was on the honorable menhon
hst All.SV AC
B1g Bruce Runyon, 6-1
semor, a powerful rebounder
at 235 pounds may be an oilier
Pirate forward They are the
fllree returning lettermen
Others working lor a
startmg nod are Robert Neal,
6-2 Junior who according to
Coach Foster has shown good

Reserve players are Ron
IIDprovement Cisco Mmms
a 6-0 sophomore, Mark Plants 6-0 Junwr , Doug
TheiSS 6-0 Junior w1th good S1sson, 6-1 Jumor, Mark
Wheeler, 5·8 JUnJOr Rod
prom1se and a real hustler
Brett Tackett, 5-10 junior and Wellmgton 6-1Junlor, Marty
Rayford' Muck" Minms, 5-11 Hash, 5-11 JUniOr Steve
semor, who has Improved Mundell, 5-10 1un1or Tom
greatly, are all working hard Butterfield 5~ juniOr, Mike
to crack the starting lineup Casey, iHi sophomore Tom
Other candidates are Metchum 5-7 sophomore,
Sturgeon
5-10
Richard Eggleton, 6-0 semor John
Gene Welch, 5-9 senior, Rex sophomore and Dave Shaw 5Justice, 5-11 sophomore and 9 sophomore
GraduatiOn losses mcluded
Terry Payne, iHi junior The
All
SVAC center M1ke
Pirates w11l again play a fastbreaking offense and a man- Camden and Gene Payne, a
starling guard Coach Foster
to-man defense
Coach M1ke Mulford's picked Southern and Hannan
reserve squad will attempt to Trace as the teams to beat
unprove Its 7-5 second place th1s ran
record of last year

reel tall They are Randy
Brown, 6-0 center, forward, a
junior who d1d not play
basketball last year, Fred
Helms, 6-3 sophomore center,
Jon Thompson, 6-5 freshman
center and Yancey Halley, 60 sophomore, all members of
flle Bobcat reserve squad
What the Bobcat players lack
m height must be made up m
speed and hustle
Coach Carter Is planning to
use a man-to-man defense
this fall Last year, Kyger's
mam defense was a zone
Ill two pre-season scrimmages Ibis year, Kyger
Creek used controlled of·
fenaes, taking lht bell oboll
agalDit Federal Hocking and
Waterford. The Bobeats hit

over 50 ~L from lbe field In
both games
Probable Bobcat starters
wUI be returning lettermen
Bill Metzner 5-11 semor
Tom Kern, ~ semor guard
and Tim Lucas, 5-8 semor
guard
Ralph Baylor, 5-11 junior •s
expected to play the pivot
pos1 l1on Baylor should
prov1de additional scormg
punch inside
Two ofllers battlmg hard
for the lllfll.startmg postl1on
are J1m Armbruster, 5-9
semor and Doug Sands, 5-10
)Wilor
Other varsity players are
Handy Brown 6-0 junior, Ed
Mollohan, f&gt;-10 jW11or, Steve
Baird, 5·10 junior, Andy

F1sher, 5-10 1un1or and M1tch
Salem iHi juniOr guard
Bobcat reserve players,
coached by Gary Mmton,
school gUidance counselor
and fanner head cage coach
at North Galha are Jam1e
Westfall 5-9 junior Fred
Helms, 6-3 sophomore,
Yancey
Halley,
60
sophomore Jeff Abshire 5-8
sophomore T1m Lasseter, 5
8sophomore Andy Polcyn, 5
7 sophomore and Jon
Thompson 6-5 freshman
Coach Carter hsts South
ern Hannan Trace and North
Galba as flle teams to beat
fllls year m the SVAC
GraduaiJon losses were
Dave W1se Doug Cottrell,
Joe Sltdham and Terry
Lucas

Tornadoes hoping to cause a storm
By Gng Bailey
By Christmas our fans
will know what kind of a ball
club we'll have " Those were
tlle words of Coach Carl
Wolfe of Southern High
School when asked to com.
ment on the upcoming
basketball season lor his 197f&gt;.
76 Purple Tornadoes He was
referring to flle fact Ilia I from
N'ovember 28 to Christmas
his team plays North Gallla,
Kyger Creek, Hannan Trace
11,11d Eastern, all formidable
opponents Except for flle
opener aga1nst North Gallla,
all these games are on lhe
road
Coach Wolfe expects Norfll
Guilla and Hannan Trace to
ij~ top contenders, but
P,Braphrasing an old sports
adage "Any team on a given
n,ight can come out a win
ner " The third year head
coach continued and pointed
out tllat he e~~PCcts tough
cinnpetitlon tllroughout tlie
~.\!ague this year Hannan
'l)"ace and Nortll Gallia bolll
hpve fllree returning let-

termen He believes the
SV AC Previews are a good
flllng because not only do
they g1ve the fans a chance tD
see the1r teams but also flle
boys get a tasll! of game
condihons before a cheering
crowd
The Tornadoes will be led
by four retlD"nlng lettermenPaul Schultz, Danny Brown,
Mike Roberts, and Greg
Dunning However, Dunning
won't see action until
January because of a broken
leg suffered during football
season Chip Brauer, a
transfer from Meigs High
School, Is expected to pick
up some of the slack caused
by tlle loss of Dunning Up
from last year's reserve
squad will be guards Carl
Johnston, Eric Dunning, Rick
Findley, Dave Roush and
forward Joe Brown Wolle
has one of those rare pleasant
problems - alll2 men on flle
squad are capable of
breaking Into the starling
lineup, and he believes fllal
this deptll will be one of his

team'sstrong pomts Anofller
asset lor the Tornadoes will
be the lac I lha I s1x of the
twelve players are over 6'0"
and Coach Wolfe feels that hiS
learn w1ll dellnilely be strong
on the boards
Schultz is a semor 6-0
forward, Danny Brown a
senior 6-1 center, Roberts a
senior guard and Greg
Dunning a senior 5-11 forward
Brauer, at 11-3, a Junior
lettered two years Wider his
father, Roger Brauer, coach
at Me1gs Local High School,
and Johnston, jumor at 5-8,
Eric Dunning, junior at 5-8,
Findley, jun1or at f&gt;-9, Dave
Roush, junior at 5-11, Joe
Brown, junior forward at 510 Brady Hulfman, senior
forward at 6-0 and Paul
Cross, 6·4 senior center,
round out the squad
The Tornadoes will be
trying to Improve on last
year's 1:1-9 record Wolfe said
that one big weakness last
year was flle lack of senior
leadership, but fllls malady

has been corrected If there
are any weaknesses m lh15
y~ar's team, they may be
lack of speed and mconslsten l
shooting But, of course team
members are working hard to
correct those faults
W1th a lack of speed, the
Tornadoes expect to play a
deliberate type of game,
stressmg strong defense and
ball control Helping Wolfe to
prepare lor the upcoming
season Is AssiStant Coach
Howard Caldwell, a recent
graduate of Rio Grande
College, who also w1ll be
headmg the Freshman squad
Jumor H1gh coaching 1s
handled by James Lawrence
and B1ll Baer
Willi talent height and
expenence the Tornadoes
could have a br~ght season,
and their opponents might
have a glum one But 1n
reference to Coach Wolfe 's
opening
remark
by
Christmas fans m the area
will know what kind of a
storm the 1975-76 Southern
Tornadoes are gmng to be

returnmg lettermen but lack
lor the Symmes Valley overall size and experience
V~klngs under new head
Coach Salyer feels flle team
c9ach Gary Salyer A has a good attitude and lots of
IIJ;~duate
of Marshall desire bul It Is still learning
University and assistant his system
coach for four years at
Returning lettermen InFairland, Salyer will use an elude Kevin Shaeffer, 6-2
aggressive fast-breaking senior, Gene Nance, 5-10
Qllense In an ellort to lm· senior; Randy Stumbo, 6-1
prove last year's 3-15 record senior, Mark Wilson, 6·0
The Vikings have six

'

~Jiighlanders

.

P H

'
.
: Coach Richard Hamilton
begins his fourlh year as head
b¥Skelball coach at South1feslern High School wlfll
fo.ur returning lettermen and
blah hopes of bettering las!
year's 10-9 record
Returning lettennen are 5·
jO senior guard Rick Crouse,
1-1 senior forward Jack
Tt'jlker, 8-0 junior forward
~p Lewla and 6-0 junior
Cl'e'Jier ~Fifll Grate

•

i,..,

junior, Frank Miller, 6-0
junior and Greg Estep, 5-6
junior guard
Others working lor
starting positions are John
Nance, 5·10 senior, John
Berry, 5--10 senior, Frank
Qaln, 5-11 junior, Nick
Gesweln, 5-10 junior, Justin
Miller 5-9 junior , Cec1l
Clary, 5·8 junior, David
KeUey, 6-1 junior and Ralph

schedules
Nov
Nov
Dec
Dec
Dec
Dec
Dec
Jan
Jan
Jan
Jan
Jan
Jan
Jan
Jan
Jan
Feb
Feb
Feb

SYMMES VALLEY
21
SVAC Prev1ew
28
Chesapeake
5
Soulhweslern
6
AI Rock Hill
9
Hannan Trace
13
Fairland
19
AI North Gallla
9
Rock Ht ll
10

AI

Fa~rland

16
AI Southern
17
Eastern
20
At Southwestern
23
North Galli a
24
AI Hannan Trace
30
At Chesapeake
31
Kyger Creek
6
Southern
13
AI Kyger Creek
14
At Eastern
NORTH GALLIA
Nov 21
SVAC Prev&gt;ew
NQv 22
Mtller
Nov 26
At Southern
Dec 2
Southwestern
Dec 5
AI Hannan Trace
Dec 12
AI Eastern Me1gs
Dec 19
Symmes Valley
Jan 2
AI Kyger Creek
Jan 6
AI Eastern Pike
Jan 9
Eastern Meigs
Jan 16
AI Hannan Trace
Jan 23
At Symmes Valley
Jan 27
Eastern P1ke
Jan 30
Southern
Feb 3
Wahama
Feb 6
Kyger Creek
Feb t3
AtMIIler
Feb 17
At Wahama
Feb 20
At Southwestern
KYGER CREEK
Dec 5
Southern
Dec 6
AI Fairland
Dec
Dec
Dec
Jan

16
19
20
2

Jan 9

Jan
Jon
Jon
Jon
Jan
Jan
Feb
Feb
Feb
Feb

Nov
Dec
Dec
Dec
Dec
Dec
Jan
Jan
Jan
Jan
Jan
Jan
Jan

t6
20
23
27
30
31

A 1 Southwest ern

Hannan W Va
AI Eastern
Buffalo
Norlh Galli a

Southwestern
Fairland
AI Southern
Hannan Trace
Eas fern
AI Symmes Valley
6
At North Gail1a
10 At Hannan W Va
13
Symmes Valley
24
At Buffalo
SOUTHWESTERN
28
Ironton Sf Joe
2
At North Galli a
5
AI Symmes Valley
12
Kyger Creek
19
At Hannan Trace
'N
AI Southern Local
2
Wahama
3
At 51 Joe
tO
Eastern
16
AI Kyger Creek
t7
AI Dak Holt
20
Symmes Valley
24

Jan 30
Feb 3

Sou1hern Local

AI Wahama

Hannan

Trece

Feb 6
AI Eastern
Feb 13
Qak Hlll
Feb 20
North Gatlla
HANNAN TRACE
Nov 21
AI SVAC Prev•ew
Nov 25
South Point
Nov 28
Eastern
Dec 5
At North Gallla
Dec 9
AI Symmes Valley
Dec 12
Southern
Dec I~
Southwestern
Dec 30
At Wahama
Jan 2
At Eastern
Jan 9
At Fairland
Jan 9
Kyger Creek
Jan 16
North Galli a
Jan 24
Symmes Valley
Jan 27
AI Kyger Creek
Jan 30
Green
Feb 3
At Southwestern
Feb 7
Fairland
Feb t5
AI Southern
Feb 20
Wahama
SOUTHERN
NOll '2 8

Dec 5
Dec 12
Dec t6

Dec '20

Dec
Jan
Jan
Jan
Jan
Jan
Jan
Jan
Feb
Feb
Feb
Feb
Feb

27
2

9

13
16
23
24

30

3
6
13
t7

20

Seniors are key to Eagles success
By Greg Bailey
EAST MEIGS - As I enlered the gym I could t&lt;:IJ
1mmed1a tely there was
somethmg Important gomg
on
Everyone's attention was
nveted to the center of the
basketball court I expected
to see a coach energelJcally
explammg a new play or
showmg a younger player the
correct way to execute a
move
But to my surpnse, none of
these thmgs was happenmg
Instead, all l could see oc
currm g was a typ1cal bormg
baske !ball drill Typ1cal and
bormg maybe to you and
me, but NOT to Coach Duane
Wolle's 1975-76 Eastern
Eagles The effort and en
thus1asm each achmg player
put mto each move are
lackmg m many h1gh school
cagers especially near the
culmmat10n of a hard, twohour pracllce but flley are
certamly present thiS year m
the Eagles
The Eagles are 1n a
rebwldmg year under a new
coach, havmg lost f1ve
starling semors !rom last
year s squad Two returmng
semor lettermen 6-1 semor
Steve Nelson and f&gt;-9 semor
Don E1chmger, are JOined by
only one other semor, 5-9
guard Bnan Conde, as they
try lo Improve on last year's

At Hannan Trace

N or th Gall Ia

AI Kyger Creek
At Hannan Trace
AI Eastern
Wahama
Southwestern
AI Glouster
AtWahama
Waterford
Symmes Valley
Kyger Creek
At Southwestern
AI North Gall Ia
Eastern
At Symmes Valley
Hannan Trace

AI Waterford
Glouster
EASTERN

Nov 28
At Hannan Trace
Dec 2
AI Waterford
Dec 6
Fed Hocking
Dec 9
AI V•nlon County
Dec 12
North Gall Ia
Dec t6
Southern
Dec t9
Kyger Creek
Ja 2
Hannan Trace
Jan 9
AI North Gall Ia
Jan tO
At Southwestern
Jan 13
At Fed Hocking
Jan 17
At Symmes Valley
Jan 20
Vmton County
Jan
27
Watertord
Ingles, 6-4 sophomore
AI Kyger Creek
Jan
30
Defensively, Symmes Feb 3
AI Southern
Valley will use a mixture of Feb 6
Soulhwestern
Symmes Valley
flle man lo-man and zone Feb 14
defenses Coach Salyer rated
North Galha, Southern and
Hannan Trace as the teams to
beat m lhe SV AC
In 1968, e•plos10n and lire
Assisting Coach Salyer w1ll
be Angelo DeBenedetto, also entombed 78 men m a coal
mine at Farmington WVa
a Marshall graduate

Viking quintet in rebuilding year
It will be a rebuilding year

SVAC

Dec 12

Bobcats are small, hut aggressive
, Good quickness, much
J!Dproved att1tude and better
qyerall school sp1r1l toward
Jtasketball are lhe strengtlls
possessed by ' the 1975-76
Kyger Creek High School
basketball team
Coach Ke1fll Carter, former
Southwestern H1gh School
star entenng his se$ond year
as head boss of flle Bobcat
cagers and th1rd 1n h1s
coaching career, feels his
club has a chance tD become
a spoiler this year
Kyger Creek Will have a
~all but aggressive squad
tts biggest problem, as
0).\Vays, will be an overall
~ck of height
Kyger Creek lists just four
~layers on Its vars1ty and
reserve squads at six or more

,;,;,:::::::_::::;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::.:;:::::::;:::::::::::::

Hannan Trace, flle Southern Valley Alhlehc Con
ference ChampiOn the past
two years moves mto the
1975-76 season w1th JUS! two
returmng lettermen !rom last
year s squad wh1ch recorded
an outstandmg 111-3 record
Gone are All-stater Mark
Swa1n now a member ol flle
R1o Grande College team,
and all.SV AC players Wayne
Hesson and Bill Hall Another
graduatmg semor was Joe
Hmeman Also retmng from
the coachmg ranks was
veteran mentor Paul Dtllon
The new W1ldcat coach IS

weaknesses

The B1g Green team plays a
tough starting schedule,
especially the first s1x games
Their opemng test Nov 28, Is
w1th the always tough
Hannan Trace Wildcats, the
same team they w1ll be
playmg m flle Prev1ews The
head mentor believes II w1U
be a tough SV AC race th1s
year w1th Southern bemg flle
team to beat He said, 'The
Tornadoes have expenence,
mater~al, and a good coach
Also, bofll North Galha and
Hannan-Trace will be strong,
and Kyger Creek w1ll be a
much I!Rproved squad
Wollesa•d that at flleend of
the season fans w•ll see a
much I!Rproved ball club and
fllat hiS team w11l be g1vlng
each contest their best shot
If attitude and enlhus1asm
count for anythmg, !hen that
' shot could hurt and sur
pr1se some opponents, and
area fans could be treated to
some hne, fundamental
basketball

Dan Cornell, a graduate of
Marshall Umvers1ty, who
served under Dillon the past
three seasons Pr1or to that,
Cornell coached at the junior
h1gh level lor two seasons
Returmng lettermen are
Charles Cremeans, 6-2 semor
and Kent Halley, 5-11 semor
guard Oilier squad members
are 5-9 semor Kevm Petrie 60 semor Tun Woodyard 6-0
senior David Shaffer , 5-7
semor Rodney Rankm, 6-2
1un1or Willard Sheets 5-10
JUnior Scott G1bson 5 9
JUniOr RICK Wh1tt 59

sophomore Frank Mooney,
5-10 sophomore Randy
McGwre and 5-10 sophomore
Dav1d Swam
Coach Cornell says he has
10 boys w1tll equal ab1hty
According to the coach both
the varsity and reserve
teams are showmg lots of
enthusiasm
Wildcat weakness listed
are an overall lack of he1ght
and expenence Two players,
Cremeans and Shafler are
recovenng from reoccurrmg
mjurJe.q

How they wound up in 1974·75
FINAL 1974 1S SVAC CAGE
STANDINGS
(League Onlyl

VARSITY

TEAM

w L p
Hannan Trac e 12 0 881
North Gllll•a
10 2 859
southern
1 5 641
SQ.uthweslern
6 6 708
Eas tern
4 6 788
Symmes Valley

OP

643
619
611
718

71 1
3 9 788 868

0 12 602
FlNAL 1914 75 SVAC
RESERVES
w L T
TEAM
Hannan Tra ce 8 4 did
7 5 409
North Ga ll•a
6 6 46~
Southern
6 6 411
Kyger Creek
Sou thw ester n
6 6 329
s 7 371
eas1ern
Kyge r Creek

815
OP

390
381
439
394
319
380

Symmes Valley 4 8 418

457

Expansion teams
will he strong
NEW YORK (UP! ) Seattle and Tampa Bay, the
newest franchises In the
National Football League,
have been provided Willi a
player allocation plan
des1gned to Insure therr bemg
the strongest first-year expansion teams in league
history
NFL owners Wednesday
drew up a plan tD make
available the .largest number
of quality players ever for an
expansion dralt For flle first
Ume, the NFL Will Include
both acllve and reserve
players In the expansion pool,
glvmg the two clubs a pick
from over 475 veteran players
to stock therr teams
In flle past only players
who started the lirst league
game were made available
for expansion,' said NFL
Commissioner Pete Rozelle
"None or the other players
was available "
The pool will consist ol 338
active players from tlle 26
clubs plus players from the

reserve list Thel'e are now
139 players on fllat list but
It will grow before the end ol
flle season The reserve list
cons1sts ol InJUred and
retJred players plus players
m flle armed lorces or NFL
draft picks In &lt;the Canadlan
Football League
Before flle expansion dralt
begins, each of flle 26 clubs
Will be able to withhold two
players from 1ts Oct 28
reserve list Then, each club
can freeze 30 players from Its
active and reserve list before
the draft begms

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~

Varsity newcomers are
Bob Rull, f&gt;-10 senior guard,
Larry Ruff, 5--10 junior guardforward, Paul McNeal,
jWiior guard, Mark Banks, 510 sophomore forward, and
John
Fadeley,
5-10
sophomore forward
Freshmen candidates from
last year s eighth grade
championship team are Greg
Nelson Darrell Baker,
Merrill Baker, t'1 ank

trol type ball game w1th lots
of pat1ence, stressmg defense
and a team effort He says all
hu cagers w1ll probably see
acbon and he's glad to be
playmg Hannan-Trace m the
SV AC Previews He beheves
playmg a good team m flle
Previews g1ves the players a
chance to get over the first
game" fillers, and the
coaches can discover their

Wildcats must rebuild

have 4 veterans back

Oth~r hopefuls, who lettered on the reserve squad
last y~ar, are Jell Banks, 5-10
senior forward, Doug Miller,
5-10 junior lorward, 5-10
Larry Carter, a sophomore
guard, John Gilliam, 5-11
sophomore forward, Erwin
Nickels 5·10 sophomore
lorward and Donnie Bush 510 junior transler !rom
Gallipolis nd Monty Blanton 6-0 spPhomore center .j,

4-15 record Besides these
three seniors there are s1x
JWIIOr candidates vymg lor a
spot on flle startmg vars1ty
squad One of these Is 5-10
guard Greg Browning , a
transfer from Me1gs H1gh
School Other jumors up from
last year's reserve learn are
5-10 forward Mark Hawk, 5-9
forward Bruce R1ffie 5 7
guard Kevm Barton 5 8
guard M1ke Smith and f&gt;-7
guard Ph1hp Lacomb
Also on the squad are f&gt;-7
guard Joe Kuhn , 5-11 forward
Gary Nelson and 5-9 guard
Br1an
Matthews
all
sophomores
Bes«Jes llllsme•per~ence,
Wolle says his team lacks
he1ght and speed but they
deflnJlely
have some
strengths He believes that
the athtude of thiS year s
squad Is perhaps the best he s
seen mrecent years, and he s
well-pleased w1th the way
flleJr cond11tomng Is commg
along
But he has three InJured
players - E1ehmger, Nelson,
and Bruce R•ffle - so some
reserve players will be seemg
actiOn on both teams Helpmg
Wolfe with the coaching
chores Will be Assistant
Larry Hemes , freshman
coach Joe Mitchum and
JuniOr h1gh coach Archie
Rose
Accordmg to Wolfe hiS
learn will be playmg a con

Shriver, Gene Layton, Dan
Hutchmson , Kevin Knapp
and Don Spurlock
Coach Hamilton feels his
overall team strengths are
speed and depth He rates
size as the biggest weakness
Graduation losses Wtre All·
SVAC players Kevin Walker
and l.loyd Wood Other
starters graduating were
Terr~ Carter and Jim Nlda
it.

Mounted and
Balanced free.
Offer Good Thru Nov.
'

~.

•, ', •, •,

',

7~

�.

4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., ThW'sday, Nov . .20.1975

. .

.

.

Basic football name of game at Ann Arbor
stuff. We know what they've
Big Ten Football Kuundup likely to get away with it.
got and they know what we've
Ohio
State
mentor
Woody
CHICAGO t UP! ) - Basic
Hayes
says
his
Buckeyes
are
got."
rootball is the name or the
Both sides have been
game Saturday as Michigan working out a lew surprises
lor
the
Wolverines
and
ex·
holding
closed practices to
meets Ohio Staw for the Big
pects
a
few
in
return.
avoid tipping their hands.
Ten tllle, a Rose Bowl bid
"The bitterness between
and, possibly, the mylhical . "We always do. They will
too," said Hayes.
Michigan and Ohio State 'is
118tional chrunpionship.
"This time or year, new overplayed by the press,''
Each side Is expected to try
plays usually help, but you Michigan Coach
Schemtil pull some surprises on
their opponent. · Netlher is usually win with your old bechler said. "All the fighting

ao

takes place in the stands, not
on the field .
"It's tough, clean, hard·
hitting football on the field,"
the Michigan holili said. "It's
reaDy what college football is
all about."
The similarity between the
two conservative coaches has
been noted well and often
enough in the past. Both

prefer to play ball-eootrol
football, which means runnlng.
"U you go back over all of
our games you'll find they're
all the same,'' he said, ''with
the possible exception of
1971."
Ohio State got four field
goals from Tom Klaban to
win last year's game .in

Columbus, Ohio, 12-10. They
Ued 111-10 the year before
that. The Buckeyes won at
home, 14-11, in 1972 while the
Wolverines won, 111-7, on their
field in 1971. But the
Miehigan.{)hio State contest
isn't the only Big Ten rivalry
coming to a )lead Saturday.
The IIlith renewal of the
longest, uninterrupted

Woody; Bo working on new plays
By GENE CADDES
UPI Sports Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP! ) Ohio State Coach Woody
Hayes plans some surprises
for Michigan Saturday and
expects to get some in return
from the Wolverines.
"We always do, they will
too," Hayes answered when
asked II he had some new
plays ready to spring in
Saturday's nationally
televised Big Ten showdown.
''This time of year, new
plays usually help,'' Hayes

continued, "but )'OU usually
win with your old stuff. We
know what they've got and
they know what we've got."
Hayes said the Buckeyes
"eased way up on our work
tonight (Wednesday ). We
have now done all of our hsrd
work. We've got some kids
who are tired, but if you're
going to work hard, yoU're
going to get tired."
Although recent games between Ohio State and
Michigan
have
been
relatively low scoring, 14·11

Ohio StaUl in 1972, 111-10. in
1973 and 12-10 in ravor of the
Buckeyes last year, Hayes
said he did "not necessarily"
look for the same type of
contest Saturday at Ann
Arbor.
Hayes said he and his staff
would be doing "quite a bit"
of film studying between now
and Saturday.
"We do it to see If there Is
one more thing we can find
and also to make sure they
don't get out of mind," Hayes
said.

He also said the films would will he the most remarkable can do about wind. We can
be of recent Michigan games, year I've ever seen.''
make crowd noise (which be
not those of early in the
The Buckeyes have does), but we can't ·make
season when the Wolves were practice all week in l](k]egree wind."
tied by both Stanford and temperatures, but the
Asked If he remembered
Baylor.
National Weather Service's any bad winds in Ann Arbor,
"Early gamasdoo't tell you long range forecast for Hayes replied, "I recall 5ome
nearly as much as a later Michigan's Lllwer Peninsula ill winds."
game,'' Hayes said.
Hayes said he expected to
calls for mostly cloudy with a
Hayes was curious about chance of snow showers have everybody healthy for
the weather forecast for Saturday, the lows ranging in the Wolverines, Including
Saturday.
the 20s and highs in the 30s. backup middle guard Mark
•'Who can tell me about the
Asked about the possibility Lang who had reinjured a
weather," Hayes asked · of wiixl Saturday, Hayes said, knee last week against
reporters. "U It stays nice, it "There isn 'I a whole lot you MiMesota.

collegiate football series in
the nation could turn into a
two-man showdown Saturday
between. Minnesota quar·
terback Tony Dungy and
Wisconsin running back Billy
Marek.
Dungy is attempting to
become the first Gopher to
lead the Big Ten in passing
and only the fourth to top the
conference in total offense.
He ranks first in both
categories after seven Big
Ten games. ·
The junior quarterback
also is zeroing in on the
league's completions and
touchdown passes records for
a single season. Dungy needs
23 pass completions and one
TD toss to tie the marks of ll8
completed passes and 13
touchdown passes, set by
Purdue 's Mike Phipps six
years ago.
Marek closes out a brilliant

Basketball Roundup
By United Press In·
Unlled Press International
The folks in Atlanta think
.John Drew is one of the best
No. 6 men in the National
Basketball Association.
Fortunately for the Hawks,
however, Drew never got No.
6 Wednesday night.
Playing with live fouls over
the final 14 minutes, Drew,
the Hawks' "still learning"

Herron let go

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21-year old 6-foot-ll forward, us," said Hawks Coach
hi!for six overtime points to Cotton Fitzsimmons,
spark a 104-98 Atlanta victory "especiaUy the guys off the
over the Golden State bench. Drew was an offensive
Warriors.
machine as usual. He's going
Alter the Hawks blew a to really be something when .
chance to win Itin regulation he learns everything about
time when Tom Henderson this game."
missed two tipills at the
Elsewhere in the NBA,
buzzer, Drew took chsrge in Detroit downed Portland 1211overtime, accounting for 114, Philadelphia beat
most of Atlanta's final . 10 Kansas City 113-103, Los
points with two jump shots Angeles dumped Houston 118and two free throws. That 110, Milwaukee edged
made It 101J.116 and Tom Van Phoenix 96-94 and Seattle
Arsdale clinched it by hitting whipped Chicago 97-37.
a 19-footer with 29 seconds
In the American Basketball
left.
Association, Denver breezed
"8veryone played well for past St. Louis 119-106,

FOXBORO, Mass. (UP!) Utile Mack Herron did a big
job for the New England
Patriots last season. But his
production fell 'off this year
and he was put on waivers
Wednesday.
"I was not satislled with his
contribution to the team,"
Coach Chuck Fairbanks said
in a terse statement.
At the same time, Fairbanks announced two
players, guard Bill Dulac and
tackle Shelby Jordan, would
be disciplined for violating
team rules. Neither the
violations nor the punishment
were specified by Fairbanks.
Last season, Herron, only 5foot-5 and 175 pounds, supplied 40 per cent of the
Patriots' offense with 2,444
total yards. He set the NFL
total offense record.

PLAYING NITELY

TUESDAY THRU SATURDAY

GEO. HALL
TUES .-THURS.
S: JQ-1: 00

FRI.&amp;SAT.
9:30-2:00

The MEIGS INN
. 992-3629

Pomeroy
Best In
live Entertainment

e

Herron had 4811 total yards
and no touchdowns in the
seven games he played this
season. He missed two games
because of injuries including
bruised rib carUiage aDd a
strained back muscle.
After big fullback ·Sam
Cunningham broke a leg in
the lOth game last season,
Herron took a physical
beating. Defenders were able
to zero in On him because they
knew, with CuMingham out,
Herron was the main running
and receiving threat in the
Patriots backfield.
Herron did not play last
SUnday in the Patriots' loss to
Dallas, although he ran
sprints along the sideline.
The Patriots later said
Herron had muscle spasms
and could not play but llsted
him as probable for this
SUnday's game at Buffalo.
Fairbanks said he had
spoken to the former Kansas
Slate star twice previously
concerning his performance
this season.
. Herron was known to be
unhappy that he didn't get a
subatantlal raise this year
after breaking the total offense record set in 1966 by
Ollcago's Gale Sayers.
Herron, who was selling
clothing in Chicago after
being waived out of the
Canadian Football League in
1972, was picked up by the
Patriots in 1973. He broke
eight Individual Patriot
return records that year and
led the NFL in kickoff return
yardage.

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D&amp;D MEATS

Virginia surprised the New
York Nets 116-100, San An·
tonlo ambushed Kentucky
113-106 and Indiana routed
Utah 1311-110.
Pistons 120, TraU mazers 114
Eric Money came off the
bench and hit for 15 points in
the final period to rally
Detroit over Portland. Money
hit 7-&lt;*7 shots and added a
free throw in a 1o.mtnute
span to help Detroit break an
lfl~7 Ue.
78ers 113, KIDgs 103
George McGinnis, with 28
points, led a balanced Philadelphia attack that saw five
others hit for double figures
in the win over Kansas City.
McGinnis also had 17
rebounds and six asaists.
Laken liS, Roekels liO ·
Lucius Allen penetrated
Houston's defense for 11
points in the first three
minutes of the second hall to
ignite Los Angeles' win. Held
scoreless in the first half,
Allen wound up with 15.
Kareem Abdui..Jabbar was
high man for the Lakers with
26 points and 20 rebounds.
Bucks IMI, Suns N
Brian Winters scored 20
points to. help Milwaukee
squeeze by Phoenix. The
Bucks led by as much as 89-80

with four minutes left but the ·
SUns rallied to within 95-94
with five seconds to go before
Milwaukee got possession.
Soules 97, Bulla 87
Fred Brown's game high 25
points enabled Seattle to hand
slumping Chicago its seventh
straight loss-loogest since
1969. Tom Burleso11 had 19 for
Seattle.
Squires 110, Nets 100
Virginia nonetheless rallied
to win only its second game in
14 outings this. year. Rookie
guard Ticky Burden scored 32
points. The win was the debut
for Bill Musselman, named
Squires' coach earlier in the
day.
Nuggets 119, Spirits 106
David Thompson scored 31
points as Denver notched its
sixth straight win and ninth in
a row over St. Llluis. Dan
Issei tied the score 93-93 on a
free throw with less than
three minutes to play and
added a basket to put Denver
ahead for good.
Spurs 113, Colonels 106
George Gervin scored 21
points and had 12 rebounds to
lead San Antonio past
defending ABA cha(llplon
Kentucky. The ColonelS got 19
rebounds from Artis Gilmore.

· Thanks to the Red . Sox'
generosity in voting full
shares to Doyle, Burton and
Willoughby, it marked one of
the few limea lbat all 50
players eUglble for the World
Series received lull winners'
and losers' shares.
In addition to the 32 full
shares, the Reds voted one
three-quarter share (to
pitcher Tom Carroll), three
one-quarter shares, three
one-sixth shares, 12 casb ·
grants and a p,ooo donalioo
to the Ruth Lyons Otrlitmas
Fund, a program for
hospitalized youngsters In
Ohio, Kentucky and Indiana.
Full shares of $7,153.56
each will go to the Alllerlcan
League Western Divlaloon
champion A's while full
shares of $6,378.66 will go the
National League Eastern
Division champion Pittsburgh Pirates.
Nine other clubs share In
the $1,11211,264.97 player pool
taken from the tolal receipts
from championship series
and . World Series of
$4,732,064. Tbe 13th team,one
more than usual, ~e as a
results of a thlrcl,-place lie
between the New York Meta
and St. wuls Cardinals in·the

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Thursday's

~ames

National League East. The
total attendance of 584,531 at
the championship series and
the World Series lncressed
the major leagues' attendance for the year to
30,396.473.

FRIDAY,
NOV. 21

POMEROY STORE :ONLY

,In the Area

ofllt

THE STORE WILL .BE CLOSED 6 Tp ~

It's

BEND
nRE CENTER
7/l-5881

//

:~
......__

~ Stiffler's Moonlight 5ale12"x84" SINGLE CONTROL
BEACON AUTOMTIC

ELECTRIC
BLANKET
liiefamous Beacon "Celeste.. iull size,

Stngle control fully automatic electric
blanket is ma chine washable. Choice of
colors.

OPENS
NOV. 14

'1418 each
.

-MOONLIGHT SALEMEN'S FRUIT-OF-THE-LOOM ·
SOLID COLOR POCKET

Our complete line of hunting supplies and
equipment is here ready for selection. Made
by world-known ma·nufacturers and in a
large range of prices.

·TEE SHIRTS

AMMUNITION OF ALL KIN

Regular $1.69 va lue! Men's Fruit of
the Loom brand pocket tee shirts In

•

SHOTGUNS &amp;RIFLES

EBERSBACH
HARDWARE

- Stiffle~s Moonlight SaleSpecial Sale Selection!
Ladies' Fall and Winter

Stiffler's
Moonlight Sale
Special Group Ladies'
BHef and Bikini

PANT SUITS-DRESSES

PANTIES

New fall polyester doubleknit two piece
slack suits and dresses. Misses ·and
half sizes. Your choice of some of the

Moonlight Sale Special
group! ladies' brief and
bikini style stretch nylon
panties . Save at Stiffler's .

'iO\);ason $atest styles and colors .

Q\0\'\Jl

15 each

5tH RTS AND DRAWERS
MEN'S THERMAL KNIT

UNDERWEAR
Men's warm therma l knit un .

derwear. Choose either shirts or
drawers at one low price.

SALESPECIAL SALE GROUP
MEN'S DRESS AND

SPORT SHIRTS
Special sale group of men's dress
and sport shlrls. Long sleeve and

•3''

.DENIM .JEANS

Men'.s famous 14 ounce Maiterlc~
brand blue denim teaM. Come In for
a lan~ing at our Moonlight Sale .

ORGAN and PIANO

SALE

QUILT BATTS
Inch size glazed' cotton quill
baIts. 'fhe best of •II quill balls.
Mo.untaln Mlsll

81 x96

*159

each

-MOONLIGHT SALEOne lot Solid White
HEA~YCOTTONTERRY

each

$300

Five roll pack of Christmas gill
wrap. Assorted colors and pafjerns
Pre-season buy from Stllfler:s.

FREE GIFTS- MUSIC
SAVINGS.
Register for Free Wurlitzer
UP 10 ·
Organ - Drawing Dec. 15th.
On New Wurlltzer and Conn Organs

Men's brown knit jersey gloves. Just
one more f&amp;ntasllc bargain buy from
Stiffler's. Save I

selection

99cpkg.

from

Moonlight Sale.

HOPE. MUSLIN

COLORING
BOOKS
Regular 29 cent
values. Good size and

full

books.

count

-MOONLIGHT SALESPECIAL GROUP LADIES'
POL VESTER RIB OR FLAT

-MOONLIGHT SALELADIES' NAME BRAND
POL VESTER KNIT

KNIT TOPS

UNIFORMS

In your choice of latest fashion

colors . Regular
Sale Special!

•

M11011litht Sale
Ladies' Button F1011t
Fancy Printed Cotton

Moonlight

44 each

Girls' polyester doubleknil flare

DUSTERS

3
PAIR
Ladles' wdrm fa nc y fl anneletle

-MOONLIG
One Lot- 20 Ught Set
MINIATURE CHRISTMAS

TREE LIGHTS
Adecorative set of 20 miniature •ree
lights with colorful plastic rellectors. Moonlight Sale.

gowns and pajamas . Your choice of

assorted otyles and colors.

eke your choice !rom the largest
&gt;Sorlment anywhere ! Great
ocklng sluffers.

KNIT GLOVES
Special Moonlight Sale group of
IacHe!' warm winter knit gloves.

Assorted sty leo and colors.

pair

BED PIUOWS
filled

TOYS-TOYS

-MOONLIGHT SALESPECIAL SELECTION
LADIES' WARM WINTER

'1 00.

STIFI=LE
MOONLIGHT SALE
COMFY FOAM FILLED

HUGE SELECTION!

TRAINING PANTS

Group!

PAJAMAS

$144

-MOONLIGHT SALEONE LOT CHILDREN'S
GERBER COTTON

Gerber brand cotton train ing pants

-MOONLIGHT SALESPECIAL GROUP LADIES'
FLANNELETTE GQWNS

bed pillows In your
choice of colors and
patterns.

0

are made wifh tr iple cro1ch, rein forced and extra absorbent.

Special sale selection
of ladles' fancy printed cotton
dusters In a large assortment of
colors and palterns. Moonlight
Sale.

Comly loom

20

0/ ~:;ULA
/1 PRICE

slacks in your choice of color s and

patterns. Moonl ight Sale Special

SALE18 GALLON SIZE
UNBRE.AKABLE PLASTIC

each

. . Save twenty per cent during
thtS btg Moonlight S•le. Choose from
dress and pant suit styles. A terrific

money saver !

SLACKS

...,.h
,_

- MOONLIGHT SALELAO! ES' and CHILDREN'S
SHOES &amp; HOUSE SLIPPERS

FOOTWEAR .
Close-outs , samples and odd lots of
ladles' and children 's shoes and
house slippers on all kinds , styles
and colors. Moonlight Sale special!
YOUR 'CHOICE

Open Every

-

S2.99 .

-MOONLIGHT SALESPECIAL GROUP GIRLS'
POLYESTER DOUBLEKNIT

Stiffler's

Choose from some of the season's

best fashion colors and patterns.

Ladles· polyester fla t or rib knittops

color ·

Ladles' new fa ll doubleknlt
polyester flare leg style slacks.

each

WENDELL'S

We Accept Federal· Food Stamps
Eve. 'til9 P.M.
1209 Garfield Ave.
PHQN E
n Mrn· thru s.u !if.1
, s"".:;;;;,_._...__ __. l::l:a:s:s:aca=aza:s:a:~l:lll:la::~la•aazm• .__E_x_c_•p_t_Sa_r_._ _ _R_,a_r_k_e_rs_b_u_rg_,_w_._v_a_.____4_as_-_44_0.;.I_.;I

regular stock .

Genuine Hope bleached5
cotton m us I in . 36 Inches
wide. ~ave now!
. ., ...~

c pair
Good quality g•rb•ge c•ns.
Eighteen gallon size. with light
fitting lids. Rogular S2:99 value.

GIFT WRAP

FRI. AND SAT. ONLY IN THE PARKING LOT' (POMEROY)

JERSEY GLOVES

Sale lot ol solid white heavy colton
wastrcloths . 12" x12" size. Lay
In a supply!

-MOONLIGHT ...... ,.PRE-SEASON $UYI
FIVE-ROLL PACK-HOLIDAY

WENDELL'S
MUSIC
CABOOSE
.
FROM PARKERSBURG, W. VA,

LIGHT SALESPE
SALE GROUP
MEN'S BROWN KNIT

GARBAGE CANS

14C

SLACKS

COVERALLS

WASH CLOTHS
terry

BLOUSES

The pre-ohrunk work suit . Zlpo from
top to bottom, deep roomy pockets,
concealed metal snaps.
·

•12''
GHTSALEFamous Mountain Mist
81"x96" Size Cotton

-MOONLIGHT SALELADIES' FALL&amp; WINTER
POL VESTER OOUBLEKNIT

and winter knit tops and blouses

'

SPECIAL GROUP MEN'S
PRE-SHRUNK QUALITY

-MOONLIGHT SALESPECIAL GROUP LADIES'
KNIT TOPS AND

Special sale group of ladies ' new fall

REGULAR 29c BIG COUNT

:M~OO~N~L~I:G~HT~S~A~L~E~ 1t--~~~ ~~E~. .~

, .. .
..
SPECIAL GROUP MEN'S
MAVERICK BRAND

llOW. MAIN
POMEROY
We Issue Hunting Ucense

IFFLER'S
MOONLIGHT SALE
36"WIDE BLEACHED

perm press . Your choice.

2for$ 50()

EACH

SWEAT .SHIRTS

'Men 's warm fleece lined long sleeve
sweat shirt s In white and grey . Sizes
small, medium ! large ond X-l•rge.

-MOONLIG~H~T~S:A~L:.E~-,-~~~

Remington ,.-- Winchester - Ithaca
Harrison &amp; Richardson Mossberg - Browning Gun Cleaning
Kits - Gun Oil - Recoil Pads Game Bags - Shell Vests - Gun ·
Cases - Hunting Accessories Hunters Jackets &amp; Caps - Hunting
Pants &amp; Caps- Rifle Sling StrapsSteel Traps.

LICENSED GUN DEALER

-MOONLIGHT SALE~
SALE GROUP MEN'S
WARM FLEECE LINED

2

)lour cho ice of assorted solid colors .

WESTERN • REMINGTON

Buffa lo at Clevelend
Atlanta at washington

GALLIPOLIS. OHI04U31
NEXT TO OLD SILVER BRIDGE

PHONE 446-4()60

-

Special group of ladies'
quilted robes . Take your
choice of waltz length or long
robes in the prettiest pastel
shades. lace trimmed.

Tire Prices

Western Conterence

Midwest Division
w. I. pet. g. b.
Detroit
7 5 .593 Milwaukee
6 7 .462 H7
Kensas City
3 7 .JOO 3
Chicago
3 9 .250 4
Pacific Di.vision
w. 1. pet. g.b.
Golden State
9 4 .692 Los Angeles
10 6 .625
,1
' Sea ttle
7 8 .467 3
Phoen ix
4 6 .AOO 31.11
Portland
S 8 .385 4
Wednesdn's Results
Detroit 120 Porl land 114
Philadelphia 11 3 Kansas City
103
AHanta 104 Golden State 98,
overtime
Los Angeles 118 Houston 110
Milwaukee 96 Phoenl)( 94
se attle 97 Chicago 87

BATH ROBES

$500each

Season

National Basketball Association
Standings
By l:Jnited Press lnterna1ional
Eastern Conference
Atlantic Division
w. I. pet. g.b.
Buffalo
a 4 .667
Ph iladelphia
a 4 .667
Bos ton
6 s .545 Jlh
New York
6 9 .400 Jl/ 1
Central Division
w. 1. pet. g.b.
Atlanta
a 4 .667 washington
6 4 .600 1
New Orleans
6 7 .462 2112
Houston
5 6 , .455 21h
Cleveland
4 8 .333 4

35,206.

.'

la.di~s' new fall two-piece
sutts'" misses and half sizes.
Made from bonded knit
fabrics with screem print
short sleeve tops .

Rabbit

serzes
• share announ
NEW YORK (UP!) Thirty-two members of the
world champion Cincinnati
Reds will receive full shares
of $19,060.46 each, fourth
largest in history, for their
roles in defeating the Boston
Red Sox in the World Series,
it was announced today by
Baseball Commissioner
Bowie Kuhn.
Kuhn also revealed that 34
members of the Red Sox,
Including second baseman
Denny Doyle and pitchers
Jim Burton and Jim
Willoughby, will receive lull
losers' shares of $13,325.ffl
apiece.
Doyle,
Burton
and
Willoughby were voted lull
shares by their Red Sox
teanunates although Doyle
started the season with the
California Angels and Burton
and Willoughby began it in
the minor leagues.
The full Cincinnati shares,
taken from the club's total
player pool of $657,455.39,
were exceeded In World
Series hlatory only by those of
the Oakland A's in 1972-73-74
despite the fact that the first
two of the four games which
formed the pool were played
in Fenway Park, Boston,
which has a capacity of only

PANT SUITS

/·'

Pacers 100, Stars 110
.
Indiana blasted the Stars
behind Billy Keller's 33 points
and four three-point baskets.
The Stars had won only two of
10 games going into the Indiana contest. Billy Knight
added 26 points for the
Pacers.

ABA

college career havlfia
already captured nea~IJ
every Badger rushing record
and several more in the Bti
Ten. The senior tailback li
the second all-time conference rusher with 3;,.,
yards and is No. I on tiJd
league scoring list with 4$
touchdowns, good for 2'1!
points.
"~

· STIFFLER'S
MOONLIGHT SALE
01 ES' QUILTED NYLON 1
LACE TRIMMED

If

Atlanta trips Warriors, 104-98
Pro

IFFLER'S
MOONLIGHT SALE
LADlE$' REGULAR $10.99
FANCY BON.DED KNIT

'

.

-MOONLIGHT SALETAKE YOUR CHOICE!
LARGE SELECTION

HOLIDAY GIFTS
Fine gilts selecled from all the
lead ing mark ets ol the world .
Practical. useful. decorative and
novelty gifts for everyone. Take
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YOUR CHOICE

'1 ooeach
\ ~

.

.

'·

�.

4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., ThW'sday, Nov . .20.1975

. .

.

.

Basic football name of game at Ann Arbor
stuff. We know what they've
Big Ten Football Kuundup likely to get away with it.
got and they know what we've
Ohio
State
mentor
Woody
CHICAGO t UP! ) - Basic
Hayes
says
his
Buckeyes
are
got."
rootball is the name or the
Both sides have been
game Saturday as Michigan working out a lew surprises
lor
the
Wolverines
and
ex·
holding
closed practices to
meets Ohio Staw for the Big
pects
a
few
in
return.
avoid tipping their hands.
Ten tllle, a Rose Bowl bid
"The bitterness between
and, possibly, the mylhical . "We always do. They will
too," said Hayes.
Michigan and Ohio State 'is
118tional chrunpionship.
"This time or year, new overplayed by the press,''
Each side Is expected to try
plays usually help, but you Michigan Coach
Schemtil pull some surprises on
their opponent. · Netlher is usually win with your old bechler said. "All the fighting

ao

takes place in the stands, not
on the field .
"It's tough, clean, hard·
hitting football on the field,"
the Michigan holili said. "It's
reaDy what college football is
all about."
The similarity between the
two conservative coaches has
been noted well and often
enough in the past. Both

prefer to play ball-eootrol
football, which means runnlng.
"U you go back over all of
our games you'll find they're
all the same,'' he said, ''with
the possible exception of
1971."
Ohio State got four field
goals from Tom Klaban to
win last year's game .in

Columbus, Ohio, 12-10. They
Ued 111-10 the year before
that. The Buckeyes won at
home, 14-11, in 1972 while the
Wolverines won, 111-7, on their
field in 1971. But the
Miehigan.{)hio State contest
isn't the only Big Ten rivalry
coming to a )lead Saturday.
The IIlith renewal of the
longest, uninterrupted

Woody; Bo working on new plays
By GENE CADDES
UPI Sports Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP! ) Ohio State Coach Woody
Hayes plans some surprises
for Michigan Saturday and
expects to get some in return
from the Wolverines.
"We always do, they will
too," Hayes answered when
asked II he had some new
plays ready to spring in
Saturday's nationally
televised Big Ten showdown.
''This time of year, new
plays usually help,'' Hayes

continued, "but )'OU usually
win with your old stuff. We
know what they've got and
they know what we've got."
Hayes said the Buckeyes
"eased way up on our work
tonight (Wednesday ). We
have now done all of our hsrd
work. We've got some kids
who are tired, but if you're
going to work hard, yoU're
going to get tired."
Although recent games between Ohio State and
Michigan
have
been
relatively low scoring, 14·11

Ohio StaUl in 1972, 111-10. in
1973 and 12-10 in ravor of the
Buckeyes last year, Hayes
said he did "not necessarily"
look for the same type of
contest Saturday at Ann
Arbor.
Hayes said he and his staff
would be doing "quite a bit"
of film studying between now
and Saturday.
"We do it to see If there Is
one more thing we can find
and also to make sure they
don't get out of mind," Hayes
said.

He also said the films would will he the most remarkable can do about wind. We can
be of recent Michigan games, year I've ever seen.''
make crowd noise (which be
not those of early in the
The Buckeyes have does), but we can't ·make
season when the Wolves were practice all week in l](k]egree wind."
tied by both Stanford and temperatures, but the
Asked If he remembered
Baylor.
National Weather Service's any bad winds in Ann Arbor,
"Early gamasdoo't tell you long range forecast for Hayes replied, "I recall 5ome
nearly as much as a later Michigan's Lllwer Peninsula ill winds."
game,'' Hayes said.
Hayes said he expected to
calls for mostly cloudy with a
Hayes was curious about chance of snow showers have everybody healthy for
the weather forecast for Saturday, the lows ranging in the Wolverines, Including
Saturday.
the 20s and highs in the 30s. backup middle guard Mark
•'Who can tell me about the
Asked about the possibility Lang who had reinjured a
weather," Hayes asked · of wiixl Saturday, Hayes said, knee last week against
reporters. "U It stays nice, it "There isn 'I a whole lot you MiMesota.

collegiate football series in
the nation could turn into a
two-man showdown Saturday
between. Minnesota quar·
terback Tony Dungy and
Wisconsin running back Billy
Marek.
Dungy is attempting to
become the first Gopher to
lead the Big Ten in passing
and only the fourth to top the
conference in total offense.
He ranks first in both
categories after seven Big
Ten games. ·
The junior quarterback
also is zeroing in on the
league's completions and
touchdown passes records for
a single season. Dungy needs
23 pass completions and one
TD toss to tie the marks of ll8
completed passes and 13
touchdown passes, set by
Purdue 's Mike Phipps six
years ago.
Marek closes out a brilliant

Basketball Roundup
By United Press In·
Unlled Press International
The folks in Atlanta think
.John Drew is one of the best
No. 6 men in the National
Basketball Association.
Fortunately for the Hawks,
however, Drew never got No.
6 Wednesday night.
Playing with live fouls over
the final 14 minutes, Drew,
the Hawks' "still learning"

Herron let go

NEW HOURS

8:30to8 :l0 Daily
11 : oo to 4:00 Sunday
The best place to look
for it is at DUTTONS,
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, We Accept
BankAmericard

21-year old 6-foot-ll forward, us," said Hawks Coach
hi!for six overtime points to Cotton Fitzsimmons,
spark a 104-98 Atlanta victory "especiaUy the guys off the
over the Golden State bench. Drew was an offensive
Warriors.
machine as usual. He's going
Alter the Hawks blew a to really be something when .
chance to win Itin regulation he learns everything about
time when Tom Henderson this game."
missed two tipills at the
Elsewhere in the NBA,
buzzer, Drew took chsrge in Detroit downed Portland 1211overtime, accounting for 114, Philadelphia beat
most of Atlanta's final . 10 Kansas City 113-103, Los
points with two jump shots Angeles dumped Houston 118and two free throws. That 110, Milwaukee edged
made It 101J.116 and Tom Van Phoenix 96-94 and Seattle
Arsdale clinched it by hitting whipped Chicago 97-37.
a 19-footer with 29 seconds
In the American Basketball
left.
Association, Denver breezed
"8veryone played well for past St. Louis 119-106,

FOXBORO, Mass. (UP!) Utile Mack Herron did a big
job for the New England
Patriots last season. But his
production fell 'off this year
and he was put on waivers
Wednesday.
"I was not satislled with his
contribution to the team,"
Coach Chuck Fairbanks said
in a terse statement.
At the same time, Fairbanks announced two
players, guard Bill Dulac and
tackle Shelby Jordan, would
be disciplined for violating
team rules. Neither the
violations nor the punishment
were specified by Fairbanks.
Last season, Herron, only 5foot-5 and 175 pounds, supplied 40 per cent of the
Patriots' offense with 2,444
total yards. He set the NFL
total offense record.

PLAYING NITELY

TUESDAY THRU SATURDAY

GEO. HALL
TUES .-THURS.
S: JQ-1: 00

FRI.&amp;SAT.
9:30-2:00

The MEIGS INN
. 992-3629

Pomeroy
Best In
live Entertainment

e

Herron had 4811 total yards
and no touchdowns in the
seven games he played this
season. He missed two games
because of injuries including
bruised rib carUiage aDd a
strained back muscle.
After big fullback ·Sam
Cunningham broke a leg in
the lOth game last season,
Herron took a physical
beating. Defenders were able
to zero in On him because they
knew, with CuMingham out,
Herron was the main running
and receiving threat in the
Patriots backfield.
Herron did not play last
SUnday in the Patriots' loss to
Dallas, although he ran
sprints along the sideline.
The Patriots later said
Herron had muscle spasms
and could not play but llsted
him as probable for this
SUnday's game at Buffalo.
Fairbanks said he had
spoken to the former Kansas
Slate star twice previously
concerning his performance
this season.
. Herron was known to be
unhappy that he didn't get a
subatantlal raise this year
after breaking the total offense record set in 1966 by
Ollcago's Gale Sayers.
Herron, who was selling
clothing in Chicago after
being waived out of the
Canadian Football League in
1972, was picked up by the
Patriots in 1973. He broke
eight Individual Patriot
return records that year and
led the NFL in kickoff return
yardage.

Order Your
·..

Holiday Turkey

Now
From D&amp;D.
.OIJR FRESH JUICY TURKEYS
WIU..OOME FROM LEWIS 1URKfY
FARMS. ORDER BEFORE NOV. 22ncl.

D&amp;D MEATS

Virginia surprised the New
York Nets 116-100, San An·
tonlo ambushed Kentucky
113-106 and Indiana routed
Utah 1311-110.
Pistons 120, TraU mazers 114
Eric Money came off the
bench and hit for 15 points in
the final period to rally
Detroit over Portland. Money
hit 7-&lt;*7 shots and added a
free throw in a 1o.mtnute
span to help Detroit break an
lfl~7 Ue.
78ers 113, KIDgs 103
George McGinnis, with 28
points, led a balanced Philadelphia attack that saw five
others hit for double figures
in the win over Kansas City.
McGinnis also had 17
rebounds and six asaists.
Laken liS, Roekels liO ·
Lucius Allen penetrated
Houston's defense for 11
points in the first three
minutes of the second hall to
ignite Los Angeles' win. Held
scoreless in the first half,
Allen wound up with 15.
Kareem Abdui..Jabbar was
high man for the Lakers with
26 points and 20 rebounds.
Bucks IMI, Suns N
Brian Winters scored 20
points to. help Milwaukee
squeeze by Phoenix. The
Bucks led by as much as 89-80

with four minutes left but the ·
SUns rallied to within 95-94
with five seconds to go before
Milwaukee got possession.
Soules 97, Bulla 87
Fred Brown's game high 25
points enabled Seattle to hand
slumping Chicago its seventh
straight loss-loogest since
1969. Tom Burleso11 had 19 for
Seattle.
Squires 110, Nets 100
Virginia nonetheless rallied
to win only its second game in
14 outings this. year. Rookie
guard Ticky Burden scored 32
points. The win was the debut
for Bill Musselman, named
Squires' coach earlier in the
day.
Nuggets 119, Spirits 106
David Thompson scored 31
points as Denver notched its
sixth straight win and ninth in
a row over St. Llluis. Dan
Issei tied the score 93-93 on a
free throw with less than
three minutes to play and
added a basket to put Denver
ahead for good.
Spurs 113, Colonels 106
George Gervin scored 21
points and had 12 rebounds to
lead San Antonio past
defending ABA cha(llplon
Kentucky. The ColonelS got 19
rebounds from Artis Gilmore.

· Thanks to the Red . Sox'
generosity in voting full
shares to Doyle, Burton and
Willoughby, it marked one of
the few limea lbat all 50
players eUglble for the World
Series received lull winners'
and losers' shares.
In addition to the 32 full
shares, the Reds voted one
three-quarter share (to
pitcher Tom Carroll), three
one-quarter shares, three
one-sixth shares, 12 casb ·
grants and a p,ooo donalioo
to the Ruth Lyons Otrlitmas
Fund, a program for
hospitalized youngsters In
Ohio, Kentucky and Indiana.
Full shares of $7,153.56
each will go to the Alllerlcan
League Western Divlaloon
champion A's while full
shares of $6,378.66 will go the
National League Eastern
Division champion Pittsburgh Pirates.
Nine other clubs share In
the $1,11211,264.97 player pool
taken from the tolal receipts
from championship series
and . World Series of
$4,732,064. Tbe 13th team,one
more than usual, ~e as a
results of a thlrcl,-place lie
between the New York Meta
and St. wuls Cardinals in·the

BAIRD BROS. AUTO PARTS
-COMPLETE GARAGE SERVICE- ,
AUTOMATIC TRANS. A SPECIAL Y
NEW &amp; USED PARTS
BODY SHOP
RADIATOR REPAIR
ROUTE7

Thursday's

~ames

National League East. The
total attendance of 584,531 at
the championship series and
the World Series lncressed
the major leagues' attendance for the year to
30,396.473.

FRIDAY,
NOV. 21

POMEROY STORE :ONLY

,In the Area

ofllt

THE STORE WILL .BE CLOSED 6 Tp ~

It's

BEND
nRE CENTER
7/l-5881

//

:~
......__

~ Stiffler's Moonlight 5ale12"x84" SINGLE CONTROL
BEACON AUTOMTIC

ELECTRIC
BLANKET
liiefamous Beacon "Celeste.. iull size,

Stngle control fully automatic electric
blanket is ma chine washable. Choice of
colors.

OPENS
NOV. 14

'1418 each
.

-MOONLIGHT SALEMEN'S FRUIT-OF-THE-LOOM ·
SOLID COLOR POCKET

Our complete line of hunting supplies and
equipment is here ready for selection. Made
by world-known ma·nufacturers and in a
large range of prices.

·TEE SHIRTS

AMMUNITION OF ALL KIN

Regular $1.69 va lue! Men's Fruit of
the Loom brand pocket tee shirts In

•

SHOTGUNS &amp;RIFLES

EBERSBACH
HARDWARE

- Stiffle~s Moonlight SaleSpecial Sale Selection!
Ladies' Fall and Winter

Stiffler's
Moonlight Sale
Special Group Ladies'
BHef and Bikini

PANT SUITS-DRESSES

PANTIES

New fall polyester doubleknit two piece
slack suits and dresses. Misses ·and
half sizes. Your choice of some of the

Moonlight Sale Special
group! ladies' brief and
bikini style stretch nylon
panties . Save at Stiffler's .

'iO\);ason $atest styles and colors .

Q\0\'\Jl

15 each

5tH RTS AND DRAWERS
MEN'S THERMAL KNIT

UNDERWEAR
Men's warm therma l knit un .

derwear. Choose either shirts or
drawers at one low price.

SALESPECIAL SALE GROUP
MEN'S DRESS AND

SPORT SHIRTS
Special sale group of men's dress
and sport shlrls. Long sleeve and

•3''

.DENIM .JEANS

Men'.s famous 14 ounce Maiterlc~
brand blue denim teaM. Come In for
a lan~ing at our Moonlight Sale .

ORGAN and PIANO

SALE

QUILT BATTS
Inch size glazed' cotton quill
baIts. 'fhe best of •II quill balls.
Mo.untaln Mlsll

81 x96

*159

each

-MOONLIGHT SALEOne lot Solid White
HEA~YCOTTONTERRY

each

$300

Five roll pack of Christmas gill
wrap. Assorted colors and pafjerns
Pre-season buy from Stllfler:s.

FREE GIFTS- MUSIC
SAVINGS.
Register for Free Wurlitzer
UP 10 ·
Organ - Drawing Dec. 15th.
On New Wurlltzer and Conn Organs

Men's brown knit jersey gloves. Just
one more f&amp;ntasllc bargain buy from
Stiffler's. Save I

selection

99cpkg.

from

Moonlight Sale.

HOPE. MUSLIN

COLORING
BOOKS
Regular 29 cent
values. Good size and

full

books.

count

-MOONLIGHT SALESPECIAL GROUP LADIES'
POL VESTER RIB OR FLAT

-MOONLIGHT SALELADIES' NAME BRAND
POL VESTER KNIT

KNIT TOPS

UNIFORMS

In your choice of latest fashion

colors . Regular
Sale Special!

•

M11011litht Sale
Ladies' Button F1011t
Fancy Printed Cotton

Moonlight

44 each

Girls' polyester doubleknil flare

DUSTERS

3
PAIR
Ladles' wdrm fa nc y fl anneletle

-MOONLIG
One Lot- 20 Ught Set
MINIATURE CHRISTMAS

TREE LIGHTS
Adecorative set of 20 miniature •ree
lights with colorful plastic rellectors. Moonlight Sale.

gowns and pajamas . Your choice of

assorted otyles and colors.

eke your choice !rom the largest
&gt;Sorlment anywhere ! Great
ocklng sluffers.

KNIT GLOVES
Special Moonlight Sale group of
IacHe!' warm winter knit gloves.

Assorted sty leo and colors.

pair

BED PIUOWS
filled

TOYS-TOYS

-MOONLIGHT SALESPECIAL SELECTION
LADIES' WARM WINTER

'1 00.

STIFI=LE
MOONLIGHT SALE
COMFY FOAM FILLED

HUGE SELECTION!

TRAINING PANTS

Group!

PAJAMAS

$144

-MOONLIGHT SALEONE LOT CHILDREN'S
GERBER COTTON

Gerber brand cotton train ing pants

-MOONLIGHT SALESPECIAL GROUP LADIES'
FLANNELETTE GQWNS

bed pillows In your
choice of colors and
patterns.

0

are made wifh tr iple cro1ch, rein forced and extra absorbent.

Special sale selection
of ladles' fancy printed cotton
dusters In a large assortment of
colors and palterns. Moonlight
Sale.

Comly loom

20

0/ ~:;ULA
/1 PRICE

slacks in your choice of color s and

patterns. Moonl ight Sale Special

SALE18 GALLON SIZE
UNBRE.AKABLE PLASTIC

each

. . Save twenty per cent during
thtS btg Moonlight S•le. Choose from
dress and pant suit styles. A terrific

money saver !

SLACKS

...,.h
,_

- MOONLIGHT SALELAO! ES' and CHILDREN'S
SHOES &amp; HOUSE SLIPPERS

FOOTWEAR .
Close-outs , samples and odd lots of
ladles' and children 's shoes and
house slippers on all kinds , styles
and colors. Moonlight Sale special!
YOUR 'CHOICE

Open Every

-

S2.99 .

-MOONLIGHT SALESPECIAL GROUP GIRLS'
POLYESTER DOUBLEKNIT

Stiffler's

Choose from some of the season's

best fashion colors and patterns.

Ladles· polyester fla t or rib knittops

color ·

Ladles' new fa ll doubleknlt
polyester flare leg style slacks.

each

WENDELL'S

We Accept Federal· Food Stamps
Eve. 'til9 P.M.
1209 Garfield Ave.
PHQN E
n Mrn· thru s.u !if.1
, s"".:;;;;,_._...__ __. l::l:a:s:s:aca=aza:s:a:~l:lll:la::~la•aazm• .__E_x_c_•p_t_Sa_r_._ _ _R_,a_r_k_e_rs_b_u_rg_,_w_._v_a_.____4_as_-_44_0.;.I_.;I

regular stock .

Genuine Hope bleached5
cotton m us I in . 36 Inches
wide. ~ave now!
. ., ...~

c pair
Good quality g•rb•ge c•ns.
Eighteen gallon size. with light
fitting lids. Rogular S2:99 value.

GIFT WRAP

FRI. AND SAT. ONLY IN THE PARKING LOT' (POMEROY)

JERSEY GLOVES

Sale lot ol solid white heavy colton
wastrcloths . 12" x12" size. Lay
In a supply!

-MOONLIGHT ...... ,.PRE-SEASON $UYI
FIVE-ROLL PACK-HOLIDAY

WENDELL'S
MUSIC
CABOOSE
.
FROM PARKERSBURG, W. VA,

LIGHT SALESPE
SALE GROUP
MEN'S BROWN KNIT

GARBAGE CANS

14C

SLACKS

COVERALLS

WASH CLOTHS
terry

BLOUSES

The pre-ohrunk work suit . Zlpo from
top to bottom, deep roomy pockets,
concealed metal snaps.
·

•12''
GHTSALEFamous Mountain Mist
81"x96" Size Cotton

-MOONLIGHT SALELADIES' FALL&amp; WINTER
POL VESTER OOUBLEKNIT

and winter knit tops and blouses

'

SPECIAL GROUP MEN'S
PRE-SHRUNK QUALITY

-MOONLIGHT SALESPECIAL GROUP LADIES'
KNIT TOPS AND

Special sale group of ladies ' new fall

REGULAR 29c BIG COUNT

:M~OO~N~L~I:G~HT~S~A~L~E~ 1t--~~~ ~~E~. .~

, .. .
..
SPECIAL GROUP MEN'S
MAVERICK BRAND

llOW. MAIN
POMEROY
We Issue Hunting Ucense

IFFLER'S
MOONLIGHT SALE
36"WIDE BLEACHED

perm press . Your choice.

2for$ 50()

EACH

SWEAT .SHIRTS

'Men 's warm fleece lined long sleeve
sweat shirt s In white and grey . Sizes
small, medium ! large ond X-l•rge.

-MOONLIG~H~T~S:A~L:.E~-,-~~~

Remington ,.-- Winchester - Ithaca
Harrison &amp; Richardson Mossberg - Browning Gun Cleaning
Kits - Gun Oil - Recoil Pads Game Bags - Shell Vests - Gun ·
Cases - Hunting Accessories Hunters Jackets &amp; Caps - Hunting
Pants &amp; Caps- Rifle Sling StrapsSteel Traps.

LICENSED GUN DEALER

-MOONLIGHT SALE~
SALE GROUP MEN'S
WARM FLEECE LINED

2

)lour cho ice of assorted solid colors .

WESTERN • REMINGTON

Buffa lo at Clevelend
Atlanta at washington

GALLIPOLIS. OHI04U31
NEXT TO OLD SILVER BRIDGE

PHONE 446-4()60

-

Special group of ladies'
quilted robes . Take your
choice of waltz length or long
robes in the prettiest pastel
shades. lace trimmed.

Tire Prices

Western Conterence

Midwest Division
w. I. pet. g. b.
Detroit
7 5 .593 Milwaukee
6 7 .462 H7
Kensas City
3 7 .JOO 3
Chicago
3 9 .250 4
Pacific Di.vision
w. 1. pet. g.b.
Golden State
9 4 .692 Los Angeles
10 6 .625
,1
' Sea ttle
7 8 .467 3
Phoen ix
4 6 .AOO 31.11
Portland
S 8 .385 4
Wednesdn's Results
Detroit 120 Porl land 114
Philadelphia 11 3 Kansas City
103
AHanta 104 Golden State 98,
overtime
Los Angeles 118 Houston 110
Milwaukee 96 Phoenl)( 94
se attle 97 Chicago 87

BATH ROBES

$500each

Season

National Basketball Association
Standings
By l:Jnited Press lnterna1ional
Eastern Conference
Atlantic Division
w. I. pet. g.b.
Buffalo
a 4 .667
Ph iladelphia
a 4 .667
Bos ton
6 s .545 Jlh
New York
6 9 .400 Jl/ 1
Central Division
w. 1. pet. g.b.
Atlanta
a 4 .667 washington
6 4 .600 1
New Orleans
6 7 .462 2112
Houston
5 6 , .455 21h
Cleveland
4 8 .333 4

35,206.

.'

la.di~s' new fall two-piece
sutts'" misses and half sizes.
Made from bonded knit
fabrics with screem print
short sleeve tops .

Rabbit

serzes
• share announ
NEW YORK (UP!) Thirty-two members of the
world champion Cincinnati
Reds will receive full shares
of $19,060.46 each, fourth
largest in history, for their
roles in defeating the Boston
Red Sox in the World Series,
it was announced today by
Baseball Commissioner
Bowie Kuhn.
Kuhn also revealed that 34
members of the Red Sox,
Including second baseman
Denny Doyle and pitchers
Jim Burton and Jim
Willoughby, will receive lull
losers' shares of $13,325.ffl
apiece.
Doyle,
Burton
and
Willoughby were voted lull
shares by their Red Sox
teanunates although Doyle
started the season with the
California Angels and Burton
and Willoughby began it in
the minor leagues.
The full Cincinnati shares,
taken from the club's total
player pool of $657,455.39,
were exceeded In World
Series hlatory only by those of
the Oakland A's in 1972-73-74
despite the fact that the first
two of the four games which
formed the pool were played
in Fenway Park, Boston,
which has a capacity of only

PANT SUITS

/·'

Pacers 100, Stars 110
.
Indiana blasted the Stars
behind Billy Keller's 33 points
and four three-point baskets.
The Stars had won only two of
10 games going into the Indiana contest. Billy Knight
added 26 points for the
Pacers.

ABA

college career havlfia
already captured nea~IJ
every Badger rushing record
and several more in the Bti
Ten. The senior tailback li
the second all-time conference rusher with 3;,.,
yards and is No. I on tiJd
league scoring list with 4$
touchdowns, good for 2'1!
points.
"~

· STIFFLER'S
MOONLIGHT SALE
01 ES' QUILTED NYLON 1
LACE TRIMMED

If

Atlanta trips Warriors, 104-98
Pro

IFFLER'S
MOONLIGHT SALE
LADlE$' REGULAR $10.99
FANCY BON.DED KNIT

'

.

-MOONLIGHT SALETAKE YOUR CHOICE!
LARGE SELECTION

HOLIDAY GIFTS
Fine gilts selecled from all the
lead ing mark ets ol the world .
Practical. useful. decorative and
novelty gifts for everyone. Take
your choke now!

YOUR CHOICE

'1 ooeach
\ ~

.

.

'·

�6 - tl)e DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, O.;Thursday, Nov. 20, 1915

.

.

Concert to feature young Koreans
Thirty-two Koreans be·
eight and 15 years old
- 29 of th em delicate,
sprightly young ladies - wiU
present a showcase or their
COWl try 's ancient legends and
art in the Gallia Academy
High School auditorium at 8
p.m. Sunday.
The~ young folk C
orm the
nuclei!$ of The Lillie Angels,
Korea's national folk dancing
company, appearing uncter
auapices of the Tri -Coun ty
Community Concert Assn.
The audience is assured of a
fascinating experience
because firs t, of the
gorgeously exotic costumes.
These are changed many
. Urnes (during most numbers,
only about half of the young
corps are on stage, while
thetf enchanting colleagues
are dressing for the next
"spectacular") and are both
tlfte~

breathtakingly beautiful , and
or dazzling opulence .
Then there are the fantastic
musical instr uments - more
than 50 or them - played, by
th e fiye adult faculty
members of Seoul 's National
Court Music Academy who
comprise the "aak'\ or court
music orchestra.
Bea rin g such strang e
names as the hai-kuem, and
the tang..pipa , and the ~han g­
k9, they Include an hour-glass
shaped drum , a mouth organ
with vertical bamboo pipes, a
fascinating assortm ent of
oddl y-shaped stringed in·
strurnents (some played with
a stick of polished wood
rather than a bow ) and a
dazzling assor tment or
cymbals, gongs , bell~. hand·
drums, and the like.
But above all there arc the

dances themselves, and the
charming. exuberance and
delicate grace of the little
girls who perform them. This
is a far cry from the static
dan ce forms most Westerners associate with oriental
art.
Korean
dance
has
tr aditi onall y nur tured the
more lively eleme nts of
expression, and a spirit of
joyousness, coquetr y occasionally
even
of
misch ieveousness - constantly tempers the more
solemn and tradition-bound
elements.
The Utile Angels are on a
coast-to&lt;oast tour of the
Un it~d States - their eighth
triumph ant return
to
America - under the cosponsorship of the Ministry of
Public Inform ation of the

Republic of Korea an d \he
Korean Cultur al and
Freedom ~'oun da ti on , Inc., of
Washington, D. C., whose
Foundin g President is Ad·
mira! Arlcigh Burke. · The
group also enjoys the per·
sonal patronage of His Ex·
cellency You Chan Yang,
Ambassador at Large of the
Republic of Korea .
Their appearance in this
area is sponsored by the Tri·
County Community Concert
Assoc iation , and admission to
the concert is by membership
card only. .
Rio Grande College and Rio
Grande Community College
students are reminded that
through the cooperation of
the College with the TCCCA,
they may attend this concert
by showing their 10 cards at
the door.

TIIESE' DEUCATE YOUNG KOREANS will be
featured Sunday evening when The Uttle Angels, Korea 's
national folk dancing company, performs at Gallla
Academy High School in the opening concert of the Tri·
County Community Concert Association season. Curtain
time is 8 p.m.

Polly's Pointers
Try hairspray
on ballpoint marks

'111E ANCIENT LEGENDS OF KOREA wiD be
poeaented in a dance performance Sunday evening by the

Uttle Angels of Korea. The concert is the season opener
for the Tl:i-County Community Concert Association.
I'

PTA membership up

New

.'

REEDSVIlLE - It was
IIUIOUllced at the November ·
~ of the Riverview
PI'A that membership based
an enrollment has now exceedecllOO per cent. Teacher
enrollment Is also 100 per
ctntapin.
Marlene Putman,
)ll'tlident, presided at the
~ with Ricky Putman
leadlnR the flag pledge.
Carlotta
Reed
gave
devotions.
·
· Plana were made to pur·
chue and construct new
pme~~ for future carnivals.
An additional dusk-dawn
Ucht will be installed. at the
ldlooland new bllnds will be
boUiht for the gymnasiwn.
Mqulne 9Ubscriptloos for
the lltudenta were renewed
for another year,
Mrs. Putman gave a report
oo the recent County PTA
rueetinB held at Eastern High
School. County dues and
ICbolal'llllp lund wiU be paid
thll month. Wayne Upton
pmented slides, ";Slippery
Wire" , from the Bell
Tele~e Co., an enjoyable

program for both adults and
students.
Grade five received the
attendance · banner and
refreshments were served by
the fourth grade mothers,
A Christmas assembly
during a day of school will be
presented by the students in
December in place of a
reglilar December meeting.
Parents will be guests wlth
teachers
serving
as
hostesses.

DINNER PLANNED
SYRA C USE
Thanksgiving dinner will be
served at the Syracuse
Church of God Saturday at 1
p.m. Everyone is welcome.

CANCEL~

OUT
The Third Friday Club
meeting that was ·to be
Friday has been cancelled
Indefinitely.

REMODEUNG
NEEDS
- FULL LINE-

VALL£Y
LUMBER &amp;
SUPPLY
CO.
Middleport
Ohio

•'

A new contest was planned
for the Meigs TOPS (Take Off
Pounds Sensibly) Club at a
meeting held Tuesday at the
Middleport American Legion
hall.
Mrs. Betty Clark presided
with the pledge to the flag and
the TOPS pledge being said in
unison. Mrs. Betty Sayre had
devotions. Arrangement s
were made for the new
contest to begin at the next
meeting. To be eligible for the
competition members must
be present.
Weekly quee ns were
Joanne Eads and Paulette
Farley. Betty Fife was the
runnerup. Anyone interested
in joining the club is invited to
come to the legion hall any
ruesdayevening at 7:3op.m..

GANGS RUN WILD
LOS ANGELES (UP! )
Philadelphia, Detroit and Los
Angeles have th e mos t
serious youth gang problems
in the nation, a Harvard
researcher says, and gang
activity is local crisis" in
all three cities. Walter Miller,
at the opening session or the
National .Justice Wednesday,
said the problem is probably
worst here, where 45 per cent
of all violent crimes are
committ ed by youths.
committed by youths.

"a

YOUR GIFT HEADQUARTERS

FOR

Dinner plans
are finalized
RUTLAND - Final pl{lns
for the annual turkey dinner
to be held tonight by the
Rutl and Fire Department
were made when the
Auxiliary mel Tuesday night
at the hall .
Meeting wi th the Auxiliary
members were two firemen
to discuss the purcha se or
wall ti&gt;an elin g, kit chen
ca binets and floor covering
for the new addilion to the
fire house.
A Christmas party was
planned for the next meeting
with each member to take a
covered dish. Mrs. Marjorie
Davis and Mrs. Maxine Dyer
will be hostesses. A
ho use wares par ty was
scheduled for spring, The
traveling prize donated by ·
Mrs. Marie Birchfield was
won by Mrs. Muriel Foley.
Mrs. Freda Davis and Mrs.
Juanil y Lam ber t served
refreshments.

Party surprises
Will Haley
RUTLAND - Will Haley,
Rutland was honored with a
surpr ise birthd ay party
Sunday given by his children
and grandchildren.
Attending were Mr . and
Mrs. Ed Nelson, Mr.and Mrs.
Edward Archer, Mr. and
Mrs. Marvin Haley, Mr . and
Mrs. Larry Haley, Debbie
Hina, Eric and Troy, Mrs.
Phyllis Haley, Mr. and Mrs.
Sherman Tillis, Mr . and Mrs.
Daniel Roush, Mr. and Mrs.
Roger Smith and D. R., Mr.
and Mrs. Bill Nelson, Mrs.
Pauline Tillis and Denise,
Mr. and Mrs: John Tillis and
Johnny,' Mr. &lt;Jn d Mrs. ,lfff
111lis, Jodie and Mike, Mr.
and Mrs. Danny Tillis and
Heather.

DEAR POLLY - A ball·
point pen has made several
very ugly marks on my
beautiful white purse. I have
tried removing them with
toothpaste , cuticle remover,
ordinary soap and a cleaning
nuid. I hope someone can
give .me some tried and
proven suggestions.
HELEN.
DEAR HELEN - Have you
tried hair spray as suggested
in a recent column? POLLY.
DEAR POLLY - The page
numbering systel)l of most
magazines is my Pet Peeve,
plus the practice of hiding the
contents page inside the
volume. If I pick up a
magazine it is because I only
have a few minutes to spare
and by the time I select and
find the article of my choice
my free time is nearly gone.
If I do get to the "Continued
on - " page I become lost in a
lnaze of advertising pages
that are either unnumbered
or numbered differently from
the ones they are interspersed
with.
VALERIE.
DEAR VALERIE - You
are not alone as we have
received many letters with
the same Peeve. -POLLY.
DEAR POLLY - An ~
year old grandmother would
like to tell Mrs. F. H. how she
makes nylon pot scrubbers.
Buy a sheet of one-fourth inch
thick sponge (artificial), cut
down the center and then cut
each of the two pieces into
four pieces each. Cover each
piece or sponge with about
four layers of net, cut two
inches larger so that it exlends well beyond the sponge.
Then sew by hand with heavy
cord to enclose the sponge
and have a good scrubber.

TRAVELTOWAVERLY
William Quillen , Mason ,
and Mrs. Charles Quillen, Sr.,
Middleport, v i site ~ in
Waverly Sunday with Mr. and
Mrs. Harold Persinger and
fam ily.

They make nice little inexpensive gifts, and I enclose
one with my Christmas
greetings to special friends.
- RUTH.
DEAR POlLY - I make
KNITTED nylon net pot
scrubbers. Buy six or eight
yards of net and cut into
strips as long as possible and
about three inches wide. With
site 10 aluminum knitting
needles cast on 15 to 20 slit·
ches and knit rows of
stockinette stitch for 3 to 6
Inches depending on the size
you want. As you knit, twist
the length of net so it is round
like yarn. When it is the
desired length bind off. These
are great for scrubbing pots
and pans, vegetables and
even the bathtub. - LYNDA.
DEAR POLLY - and Mrs.
F.H. - May I add a
suggestion for the making of
nylon net balls for scrubbers?
I use two six inch lengths for
each ball, I gather the outer
edges of each length together
with my fingers and tem·
porarily fasten the ends with
robber bands. In the center I
wire then with copper or
other non-rusting wire and
tighten with the pliers so they
are firm and last longer than
if fastened with cord in the
center. I sew on a gold cord
for hanging and a plastic
flower for decoration. NElLIE.
You wlll receive a dollar H
Polly uses your favorite
homemaking Idea, Pet
Peeve, PoUy's Problem or
solation to a problem. Write
Polly In care of this
newspaper.

CHESTER - The charter
was draped for Mrs. Ona
Osborne at the Tuesday night
meetin g of the Chester
CoUilcll 323, Daughters of
America held at the hall .
Mrs. Marcia Keller , coun·
cilor, presided with 28
members attending.
It was reported that Mrs.
Dorothy Lawson is improving
and a thank-you note from
her for a gift and cards was
read. Mrs. Millie Dill was
reinstated into membership.
A communication was read
by recording secretary, Mary
Jo Pooler , from Grace
Trollinger , national conn ·
cilor.
The District Deputies Club
Dec. 7 meeting will be held at
the Chester Hall. It will begin
with a 2 p.m. potluck with the
meal furnished and a gin
exchange .
Members sang "Happy
Birthday" to Zelda Weber
and Mrs. Dill. Mrs. Helen
Wolf was ' pianist for. the
meeting.
Members attending besides
those named were Mrs .
Eileen Martin, Mrs. Erma
Cleland, Mrs. Jean Summerfield, Mrs. Ada Morris,
Mrs. Mary K. Holter, Mrs.
Ada
Neutzling , Mrs .
Margaret Tuttle, Mrs: Mae

MEN and WOMEN
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9:15-5 MON.-sAT.
9:15-8 FRI.

1

BANKAMERICARD
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BAHRMIDDClOTHIERS
PORT OHIO

McPeak, Mrs. Letha WooCI,
Mrs. Leona Hensley, Mrs.
Dorothy Ritchie, .Mrs. Ada
Van Meter, Mrs. Ethel Orr,
Mrs. Doris Grueser, Mrs.
Ada Bissell , Mrs . Opol
Hollon, Mrs. lnzy Newell;
Mrs. Mabel Van Meter, Mrs.
Helen Boatwright, Mrs. Sadie
Trussell, Mrs. Thebna White,
Mrs. Goldie Frederick, Mrs.
Betty Roush, Mrs. Hattie
Frederick.

GLOA/
TQJ

FRESH TURKEYS
6 to 16111. 89~ 161b. &amp; up79~
lb.
lb.

SIMON'S MARKET
115 w. MAIN
POMEROY
0 n Dai 9-7 Fri. &amp;

9-8

Reg .

MASON - The children of
the Faith Baptist Church will
present a Thanksgiving
program Sunday, Nov . 23, at
II a. m.
Guest speaker at the 11 am.
m. service will be Pastor
· Gilbert E. Wilder, Director of
Church Training and Music,
' Columbus. Guest speaker at
the evening service will the
the Rev. Freeland Norris,
Racine, at 1:30 p. m.
The Faith Baptist Church is
conducting services on a
temporary basis In the Steel
Workers Union Hall on
Railroad St. between Horton
and Pomeroy Sts.
.
Sunday School is held each
Sunday at .10 a. m., Bible
study Sunday and Wednesday
evening at 7:30 p. m. The
' public is Invited.

SIZES 10-18
and J4-24%
ASK ABOUT OUR
' LAY-AWAY PLAN
~

WE WELOOME
BANKAMERICARD

. MIDDLEPORT
DEPARTMENT STORE

.•

:
.

•

•
'

on 48-Month Battery

;
,
•

Autoinotive .
Sale!
••
••
'•
•

..

••

SAVE '8
48-Month
Battery
Wu~U5

'
:
•

!'be Almauac
By Uolted Pre~a lo· .
'
•
ternat10111l
Today Is Thursday, Nov. 20,
the 324th day of 1975 and 41 to , ,
follow.
'
The moon is between Its full
]ilase and Iaiii qua~r.
• The morning stars are
Mercury, Venua, Mars and

' Saturn.

' : The evening star is Jupiter.
: Thoae born oo this date are
• pnder the sign of Srorpio:
, 1 John Merle Coulter, Amerl• ean botanlat, teacher and
: Writer, was born Nov, 20,
' ill51. American actress .Gene
Tterney waa born on this date
ln 1920.
: On this day ln history:
In 1620, a baby girl was
delivered aboard
the
Mayflower ln Massachusetts
Bay, the first white child horn
in the New England colonies.
9\e waa nalned Peregrine
White.

AntNTION All
SEN lOR CITIZENS,
GUARANTEE
Free replace ment within 110 days
purchase if bnltcry provet

dcft-t li ve. Mt~r 90 daya we will
rep l1tce it with a new batte ry if ·
dcfcdivc , charcin1 only (.or the
p e ri o d of o wn cu h i p . Your
monthly char1es for ownerthip
will be computed b'f dioJ idln1
the current k•llinJ · price let~
trad e-i n Bl the t i m ~· or rclurn,
by thl! m1m bcr or mon1 h11 of
ruarantcc.

Sears Ha• a Credit Plan to Suit Moet Every Need
·
• Price. are Ca talo1 Prlceo
• Shlpplnl Extra
• S1Je Elldl Dee. !I
220 E. MAIN ST.
POMEROY
PH. ~·2171

--.-ca:.,uco.

AUTHORIZED CATALOG SALlES MERCHANT
LOU OSBORNE

•

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Electric
Can Opener

-~

~~

~

BATH SIZE
SOAP
Nelson's
Reg. Price
2-72 c

Open Mon.·Thur.
' 9:00 to 5:00

Frldey9to 7
Saturday 9 to 2"'

Adds, - · mulripllel ...t dMdeo iaattatly.
Perccat key allow• cuy cak:ulatm. ~ t&amp;Ieti,
diaa&gt;u111S, owl.·ups ...t ratloo ..,......S u

--·

A•tomatie c:outaat ill all ftn fuctlou.
Elly-to-rco4,
lip, o1l

Up to $30,000 Is now
available to you when ·
you must enter a
Nur·
Convalescent
sing Home.
· For"·,_ · mformciilon
with IIO'oblliotion, mad
lhli coupon ,to,

Mulull Paiective
Insurance Co..
P.O. Box 4
Gallipolis, Oh. 45631
446·1875

tJIIII _____ _

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Street- - - - - - - - Clt\L------Zip.
Phone _______ _- _
I

1-dJait

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lodlearioo.

dltflly - · _....

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Elly·O&gt;&lt;&gt;peftte - pms keys ill ume order u
ptob~m

Nelson' •

Reg. Price

4 LB.

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0pen1et ,.,_

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TAPE REOORDER

iJ written.

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Reg . $6 ,15

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$3399
' Nelson's
Reg . Price
$39.95

' .

FRI. AND SAT. TIL 8:00

Sears

-&lt;

RIVAL

All Purpose,
Reusable
Towels
10 ct.
Nelson's
Reg. Price
39c

Thanksgiving
program set ·

PANT SUITS

&amp;tit{odiDn Gtuuolllftd
or YDIU' MuM)! 80&lt;:1!

DYNA.
WIPES

DRIED
.
A.OWER

Mr. and Mrs. Rodney L.
Gheen of Belmont are an· ·
nouncing the birth or a
daughter, Trisha Reana ,
Nov. 6 at the Bellaire City
Hospital. She weighed six
pounds. Mr. and Mrs. Gheen
have a son, Rodney Lee, 14
months old.
Materu•l grandparents ar~
Mr. and Ml s . Allen Grfrtin,
Bellaire; ,Mrs. Mary Mezden,
St. Clairsville , and th e
paternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Sanford W.
Gheen, Mrs. Sarah McCloud,
Belmont, and Mr. and Mrs.
Carl 0 . Gheen, Racine.

LADIES
3 and 4 piece

ISiliOP AT SEARS AND SAVE

senio r; . Mary Helm and
Katherine
L.
Mead,
managers; Jennie Maddy,
past distri ct de pu ty and
protector ; Goldie Flowers
and Mrs. Mead, guards, and
TI1elma Campbell, pianist.
Mrs·. Good presided at the

Plain or
with Me at
Qt. Size

announced

or

Now taking arders for

Birth is

. MIDDLEPORT DEPARTMENT STORE

Hi1h Volta1e n1ea ns 1Lra i ght·
t.hrou1h-the-partition ce ll con nector•
deliver more inltiol at.art.ing I&gt;OWCr
than an ot hcrwiae ide ntical battery
with up-a nd-over Ct.'ll conncc tora.

Flowers and Wykle Whitley,
treasurer's. Others taking
part were Neva Melz, past
ch ief ; Garnet Reichelderfer,
grand chief; Anna Ogdin,
most excellent chief; Neva
Melz, Mae Delaney, excellent

IIAGU
SPAGHElTI
SAUCE

TRISHA GHEEN

.

SAVE '8.00

Good , sect·e tat·ies, and Goldie

E. Dees, Margaret Johnson

and Barbara Lester. Mrs.
Ogdin presided and m a~e
forma l introductions.
Favors were provided by
Milton
Bankihg
Co.,
Wellston ; First Na tio nal
Ban k, We Iiston; Kentucky
Fried Chicken , City Loan,
·Loc kard Insurance Co.,
Western and Southern In·
surance Co., Wellston, and
the Walker Funeral Home,
Wi lkesville.

TH:

•

Sears

Pylhian Sisters. was held at
the Wilkesv ille Temple 591 nn
Nov. 14 with 42 members
present.
·
Convention ofWcers were
Arlene Winzil, grand chief;
Robbie Good, district deputy;
Jewel Str ong and Na ncy

presentations.
Patton, past grand tru stee.
The welcome was given by and Ra ym ond Patton ,
Eugene Campbell from the Nelsonville.
Wilkesville Lodge 593 and
In stall ed
hy
Mr s.
Raymond Patton respon ded Reichelderfer ·were Gladys
from the Nelsonville Lodge. Major, grand ch ief, grand
Informa l introducti ons man ager, and Shirley Peters ,
were given Mrs. Good, Arlene grand senior .
Wenzil , Cleve land, gran d
A5p.m. dinner was se rved.
chief; Charles Wenzil , Mrs. The work was exem plifi ed in
Reichelderfer, Circleville, the evening session by the
Walden Reichelderfer, Hazel Wilkesville staff with Mrs .
Thomas, Amanda ; Mrs. Ma jor, captain . The canMead , Circleville ; Nelle didates initiated were Marion

CLUSTER

~·

BAZAAR SET
TUPPERS PLAINS
There will be a soup supper
and bazaar Saturday, Nov.
22 ; at St. Paul 's Uni ted
Methodi st Church Annex ,
Tuppers Plains, from 4 to 7 p.
m. Menu Includes chili and
vegetable soup, sandwiches,
pie, cake and coffee.

SIMON'S MARKET

WILKESVILLE - The 44th
District 11 convention of

-. '

....

aft ernoon session iollowing
regis tration. The charter w~ s
draped with Mabel Wood,
Mrs. Mctz and Mrs. Mead
offi ciating. The memorial
was presen ted using the love
candle and the living cross as
the symbol. Mr'!:(lgdin, Mrs.
Shirley Peters and Miss
Cam pbeU presented it to
honor all national, grand and
s ubor di nat e
tem pl es
representzd. Ne lle Pa tton
was rn usician for both

Pythian Sisters hold convention

CHOIR TO PERFORM
The Point Pleasant Bible
School choir will present
vocal music and a student,
Raymond DeVault., will
speak at 1:30 p.m. Sunday at
the ·Hysell Run Free
Methodist Church. Paul E.
Neville , pastor , extends an
invitation to the public.

FINE WEARING APPAREL
FOR BOTH

.

Council has meeting

Dazzling. performance"promised
.

'

7- The DaUy Sentinel, Mldd!e.P-Ort·Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Nov. 20, 1975

·

Super-thin llexiole head.
Ex tra lh&gt;n so the blades
shave extra close.
34 Sharp Schick Blades.
Gives you extra close.
las!, clean shaves.
Nelson's _

$2877

=~·e

$35.95

USAM" 700
••crta1bly power-pachd
aad nhae -pacted. 700
Wlttl of power dclivcr a

-tlo-lowofbeat&lt;4
air for fast diyla1 •••
ll)ltq. l!4oippoll .... z.
.,.,d1 11d 3 poalltoa
. -. - o f Unble
chlp · rnlatut plastic .

REG.
$10.99

l.lptwdalll, -

s.t. lor ..

typeo

.. llold.

of !lair.

You Can Treat
Yourself To Essential
Beauty In Minutes .
NELSON'S
REG. PRICE S8 .99

23

'9.95
HAMILTON BEACH
Model 1500
Butter-Up cora
popper is self·
buttering for
perfect popcorn
every time. ·

POPPE~

NELSON'S
REG. PRICE
s14. 99

$}323

HAPPY APPLE

CHATTER TELEPHONE

NELSON ' S
REG.
PRICE
$3.47

Nelson's
Rea . Price 53 .89

Pre-School Activity,
voice answers .

CORN

', nngs,
.

FIRE ENGINE
··with Siren, ·1 8ell
and Extension Ladder
NEL"'S'O"N'S
REG. PRICE
$3.39

Chime
Toy That
Floats
Touch Plastic
Non -Toxic .
NELSON'S
REG. PRICE
$4.99

ROCK·A·ST
Squeezable,
~hewable ,

Poly

Rings .
NELSON'S
REG. PRICES149
$1.79

DOVE
LIQUID
22 OI •
Nelson's
Reg . Price
83c

�6 - tl)e DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, O.;Thursday, Nov. 20, 1915

.

.

Concert to feature young Koreans
Thirty-two Koreans be·
eight and 15 years old
- 29 of th em delicate,
sprightly young ladies - wiU
present a showcase or their
COWl try 's ancient legends and
art in the Gallia Academy
High School auditorium at 8
p.m. Sunday.
The~ young folk C
orm the
nuclei!$ of The Lillie Angels,
Korea's national folk dancing
company, appearing uncter
auapices of the Tri -Coun ty
Community Concert Assn.
The audience is assured of a
fascinating experience
because firs t, of the
gorgeously exotic costumes.
These are changed many
. Urnes (during most numbers,
only about half of the young
corps are on stage, while
thetf enchanting colleagues
are dressing for the next
"spectacular") and are both
tlfte~

breathtakingly beautiful , and
or dazzling opulence .
Then there are the fantastic
musical instr uments - more
than 50 or them - played, by
th e fiye adult faculty
members of Seoul 's National
Court Music Academy who
comprise the "aak'\ or court
music orchestra.
Bea rin g such strang e
names as the hai-kuem, and
the tang..pipa , and the ~han g­
k9, they Include an hour-glass
shaped drum , a mouth organ
with vertical bamboo pipes, a
fascinating assortm ent of
oddl y-shaped stringed in·
strurnents (some played with
a stick of polished wood
rather than a bow ) and a
dazzling assor tment or
cymbals, gongs , bell~. hand·
drums, and the like.
But above all there arc the

dances themselves, and the
charming. exuberance and
delicate grace of the little
girls who perform them. This
is a far cry from the static
dan ce forms most Westerners associate with oriental
art.
Korean
dance
has
tr aditi onall y nur tured the
more lively eleme nts of
expression, and a spirit of
joyousness, coquetr y occasionally
even
of
misch ieveousness - constantly tempers the more
solemn and tradition-bound
elements.
The Utile Angels are on a
coast-to&lt;oast tour of the
Un it~d States - their eighth
triumph ant return
to
America - under the cosponsorship of the Ministry of
Public Inform ation of the

Republic of Korea an d \he
Korean Cultur al and
Freedom ~'oun da ti on , Inc., of
Washington, D. C., whose
Foundin g President is Ad·
mira! Arlcigh Burke. · The
group also enjoys the per·
sonal patronage of His Ex·
cellency You Chan Yang,
Ambassador at Large of the
Republic of Korea .
Their appearance in this
area is sponsored by the Tri·
County Community Concert
Assoc iation , and admission to
the concert is by membership
card only. .
Rio Grande College and Rio
Grande Community College
students are reminded that
through the cooperation of
the College with the TCCCA,
they may attend this concert
by showing their 10 cards at
the door.

TIIESE' DEUCATE YOUNG KOREANS will be
featured Sunday evening when The Uttle Angels, Korea 's
national folk dancing company, performs at Gallla
Academy High School in the opening concert of the Tri·
County Community Concert Association season. Curtain
time is 8 p.m.

Polly's Pointers
Try hairspray
on ballpoint marks

'111E ANCIENT LEGENDS OF KOREA wiD be
poeaented in a dance performance Sunday evening by the

Uttle Angels of Korea. The concert is the season opener
for the Tl:i-County Community Concert Association.
I'

PTA membership up

New

.'

REEDSVIlLE - It was
IIUIOUllced at the November ·
~ of the Riverview
PI'A that membership based
an enrollment has now exceedecllOO per cent. Teacher
enrollment Is also 100 per
ctntapin.
Marlene Putman,
)ll'tlident, presided at the
~ with Ricky Putman
leadlnR the flag pledge.
Carlotta
Reed
gave
devotions.
·
· Plana were made to pur·
chue and construct new
pme~~ for future carnivals.
An additional dusk-dawn
Ucht will be installed. at the
ldlooland new bllnds will be
boUiht for the gymnasiwn.
Mqulne 9Ubscriptloos for
the lltudenta were renewed
for another year,
Mrs. Putman gave a report
oo the recent County PTA
rueetinB held at Eastern High
School. County dues and
ICbolal'llllp lund wiU be paid
thll month. Wayne Upton
pmented slides, ";Slippery
Wire" , from the Bell
Tele~e Co., an enjoyable

program for both adults and
students.
Grade five received the
attendance · banner and
refreshments were served by
the fourth grade mothers,
A Christmas assembly
during a day of school will be
presented by the students in
December in place of a
reglilar December meeting.
Parents will be guests wlth
teachers
serving
as
hostesses.

DINNER PLANNED
SYRA C USE
Thanksgiving dinner will be
served at the Syracuse
Church of God Saturday at 1
p.m. Everyone is welcome.

CANCEL~

OUT
The Third Friday Club
meeting that was ·to be
Friday has been cancelled
Indefinitely.

REMODEUNG
NEEDS
- FULL LINE-

VALL£Y
LUMBER &amp;
SUPPLY
CO.
Middleport
Ohio

•'

A new contest was planned
for the Meigs TOPS (Take Off
Pounds Sensibly) Club at a
meeting held Tuesday at the
Middleport American Legion
hall.
Mrs. Betty Clark presided
with the pledge to the flag and
the TOPS pledge being said in
unison. Mrs. Betty Sayre had
devotions. Arrangement s
were made for the new
contest to begin at the next
meeting. To be eligible for the
competition members must
be present.
Weekly quee ns were
Joanne Eads and Paulette
Farley. Betty Fife was the
runnerup. Anyone interested
in joining the club is invited to
come to the legion hall any
ruesdayevening at 7:3op.m..

GANGS RUN WILD
LOS ANGELES (UP! )
Philadelphia, Detroit and Los
Angeles have th e mos t
serious youth gang problems
in the nation, a Harvard
researcher says, and gang
activity is local crisis" in
all three cities. Walter Miller,
at the opening session or the
National .Justice Wednesday,
said the problem is probably
worst here, where 45 per cent
of all violent crimes are
committ ed by youths.
committed by youths.

"a

YOUR GIFT HEADQUARTERS

FOR

Dinner plans
are finalized
RUTLAND - Final pl{lns
for the annual turkey dinner
to be held tonight by the
Rutl and Fire Department
were made when the
Auxiliary mel Tuesday night
at the hall .
Meeting wi th the Auxiliary
members were two firemen
to discuss the purcha se or
wall ti&gt;an elin g, kit chen
ca binets and floor covering
for the new addilion to the
fire house.
A Christmas party was
planned for the next meeting
with each member to take a
covered dish. Mrs. Marjorie
Davis and Mrs. Maxine Dyer
will be hostesses. A
ho use wares par ty was
scheduled for spring, The
traveling prize donated by ·
Mrs. Marie Birchfield was
won by Mrs. Muriel Foley.
Mrs. Freda Davis and Mrs.
Juanil y Lam ber t served
refreshments.

Party surprises
Will Haley
RUTLAND - Will Haley,
Rutland was honored with a
surpr ise birthd ay party
Sunday given by his children
and grandchildren.
Attending were Mr . and
Mrs. Ed Nelson, Mr.and Mrs.
Edward Archer, Mr. and
Mrs. Marvin Haley, Mr . and
Mrs. Larry Haley, Debbie
Hina, Eric and Troy, Mrs.
Phyllis Haley, Mr. and Mrs.
Sherman Tillis, Mr . and Mrs.
Daniel Roush, Mr. and Mrs.
Roger Smith and D. R., Mr.
and Mrs. Bill Nelson, Mrs.
Pauline Tillis and Denise,
Mr. and Mrs: John Tillis and
Johnny,' Mr. &lt;Jn d Mrs. ,lfff
111lis, Jodie and Mike, Mr.
and Mrs. Danny Tillis and
Heather.

DEAR POLLY - A ball·
point pen has made several
very ugly marks on my
beautiful white purse. I have
tried removing them with
toothpaste , cuticle remover,
ordinary soap and a cleaning
nuid. I hope someone can
give .me some tried and
proven suggestions.
HELEN.
DEAR HELEN - Have you
tried hair spray as suggested
in a recent column? POLLY.
DEAR POLLY - The page
numbering systel)l of most
magazines is my Pet Peeve,
plus the practice of hiding the
contents page inside the
volume. If I pick up a
magazine it is because I only
have a few minutes to spare
and by the time I select and
find the article of my choice
my free time is nearly gone.
If I do get to the "Continued
on - " page I become lost in a
lnaze of advertising pages
that are either unnumbered
or numbered differently from
the ones they are interspersed
with.
VALERIE.
DEAR VALERIE - You
are not alone as we have
received many letters with
the same Peeve. -POLLY.
DEAR POLLY - An ~
year old grandmother would
like to tell Mrs. F. H. how she
makes nylon pot scrubbers.
Buy a sheet of one-fourth inch
thick sponge (artificial), cut
down the center and then cut
each of the two pieces into
four pieces each. Cover each
piece or sponge with about
four layers of net, cut two
inches larger so that it exlends well beyond the sponge.
Then sew by hand with heavy
cord to enclose the sponge
and have a good scrubber.

TRAVELTOWAVERLY
William Quillen , Mason ,
and Mrs. Charles Quillen, Sr.,
Middleport, v i site ~ in
Waverly Sunday with Mr. and
Mrs. Harold Persinger and
fam ily.

They make nice little inexpensive gifts, and I enclose
one with my Christmas
greetings to special friends.
- RUTH.
DEAR POlLY - I make
KNITTED nylon net pot
scrubbers. Buy six or eight
yards of net and cut into
strips as long as possible and
about three inches wide. With
site 10 aluminum knitting
needles cast on 15 to 20 slit·
ches and knit rows of
stockinette stitch for 3 to 6
Inches depending on the size
you want. As you knit, twist
the length of net so it is round
like yarn. When it is the
desired length bind off. These
are great for scrubbing pots
and pans, vegetables and
even the bathtub. - LYNDA.
DEAR POLLY - and Mrs.
F.H. - May I add a
suggestion for the making of
nylon net balls for scrubbers?
I use two six inch lengths for
each ball, I gather the outer
edges of each length together
with my fingers and tem·
porarily fasten the ends with
robber bands. In the center I
wire then with copper or
other non-rusting wire and
tighten with the pliers so they
are firm and last longer than
if fastened with cord in the
center. I sew on a gold cord
for hanging and a plastic
flower for decoration. NElLIE.
You wlll receive a dollar H
Polly uses your favorite
homemaking Idea, Pet
Peeve, PoUy's Problem or
solation to a problem. Write
Polly In care of this
newspaper.

CHESTER - The charter
was draped for Mrs. Ona
Osborne at the Tuesday night
meetin g of the Chester
CoUilcll 323, Daughters of
America held at the hall .
Mrs. Marcia Keller , coun·
cilor, presided with 28
members attending.
It was reported that Mrs.
Dorothy Lawson is improving
and a thank-you note from
her for a gift and cards was
read. Mrs. Millie Dill was
reinstated into membership.
A communication was read
by recording secretary, Mary
Jo Pooler , from Grace
Trollinger , national conn ·
cilor.
The District Deputies Club
Dec. 7 meeting will be held at
the Chester Hall. It will begin
with a 2 p.m. potluck with the
meal furnished and a gin
exchange .
Members sang "Happy
Birthday" to Zelda Weber
and Mrs. Dill. Mrs. Helen
Wolf was ' pianist for. the
meeting.
Members attending besides
those named were Mrs .
Eileen Martin, Mrs. Erma
Cleland, Mrs. Jean Summerfield, Mrs. Ada Morris,
Mrs. Mary K. Holter, Mrs.
Ada
Neutzling , Mrs .
Margaret Tuttle, Mrs: Mae

MEN and WOMEN
USE OUR
LAY·AWAY
PLAN

STORE
lfOURS:

9:15-5 MON.-sAT.
9:15-8 FRI.

1

BANKAMERICARD
WEU;OME
HERE

BAHRMIDDClOTHIERS
PORT OHIO

McPeak, Mrs. Letha WooCI,
Mrs. Leona Hensley, Mrs.
Dorothy Ritchie, .Mrs. Ada
Van Meter, Mrs. Ethel Orr,
Mrs. Doris Grueser, Mrs.
Ada Bissell , Mrs . Opol
Hollon, Mrs. lnzy Newell;
Mrs. Mabel Van Meter, Mrs.
Helen Boatwright, Mrs. Sadie
Trussell, Mrs. Thebna White,
Mrs. Goldie Frederick, Mrs.
Betty Roush, Mrs. Hattie
Frederick.

GLOA/
TQJ

FRESH TURKEYS
6 to 16111. 89~ 161b. &amp; up79~
lb.
lb.

SIMON'S MARKET
115 w. MAIN
POMEROY
0 n Dai 9-7 Fri. &amp;

9-8

Reg .

MASON - The children of
the Faith Baptist Church will
present a Thanksgiving
program Sunday, Nov . 23, at
II a. m.
Guest speaker at the 11 am.
m. service will be Pastor
· Gilbert E. Wilder, Director of
Church Training and Music,
' Columbus. Guest speaker at
the evening service will the
the Rev. Freeland Norris,
Racine, at 1:30 p. m.
The Faith Baptist Church is
conducting services on a
temporary basis In the Steel
Workers Union Hall on
Railroad St. between Horton
and Pomeroy Sts.
.
Sunday School is held each
Sunday at .10 a. m., Bible
study Sunday and Wednesday
evening at 7:30 p. m. The
' public is Invited.

SIZES 10-18
and J4-24%
ASK ABOUT OUR
' LAY-AWAY PLAN
~

WE WELOOME
BANKAMERICARD

. MIDDLEPORT
DEPARTMENT STORE

.•

:
.

•

•
'

on 48-Month Battery

;
,
•

Autoinotive .
Sale!
••
••
'•
•

..

••

SAVE '8
48-Month
Battery
Wu~U5

'
:
•

!'be Almauac
By Uolted Pre~a lo· .
'
•
ternat10111l
Today Is Thursday, Nov. 20,
the 324th day of 1975 and 41 to , ,
follow.
'
The moon is between Its full
]ilase and Iaiii qua~r.
• The morning stars are
Mercury, Venua, Mars and

' Saturn.

' : The evening star is Jupiter.
: Thoae born oo this date are
• pnder the sign of Srorpio:
, 1 John Merle Coulter, Amerl• ean botanlat, teacher and
: Writer, was born Nov, 20,
' ill51. American actress .Gene
Tterney waa born on this date
ln 1920.
: On this day ln history:
In 1620, a baby girl was
delivered aboard
the
Mayflower ln Massachusetts
Bay, the first white child horn
in the New England colonies.
9\e waa nalned Peregrine
White.

AntNTION All
SEN lOR CITIZENS,
GUARANTEE
Free replace ment within 110 days
purchase if bnltcry provet

dcft-t li ve. Mt~r 90 daya we will
rep l1tce it with a new batte ry if ·
dcfcdivc , charcin1 only (.or the
p e ri o d of o wn cu h i p . Your
monthly char1es for ownerthip
will be computed b'f dioJ idln1
the current k•llinJ · price let~
trad e-i n Bl the t i m ~· or rclurn,
by thl! m1m bcr or mon1 h11 of
ruarantcc.

Sears Ha• a Credit Plan to Suit Moet Every Need
·
• Price. are Ca talo1 Prlceo
• Shlpplnl Extra
• S1Je Elldl Dee. !I
220 E. MAIN ST.
POMEROY
PH. ~·2171

--.-ca:.,uco.

AUTHORIZED CATALOG SALlES MERCHANT
LOU OSBORNE

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Can Opener

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SOAP
Nelson's
Reg. Price
2-72 c

Open Mon.·Thur.
' 9:00 to 5:00

Frldey9to 7
Saturday 9 to 2"'

Adds, - · mulripllel ...t dMdeo iaattatly.
Perccat key allow• cuy cak:ulatm. ~ t&amp;Ieti,
diaa&gt;u111S, owl.·ups ...t ratloo ..,......S u

--·

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Elly-to-rco4,
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Up to $30,000 Is now
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· For"·,_ · mformciilon
with IIO'oblliotion, mad
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P.O. Box 4
Gallipolis, Oh. 45631
446·1875

tJIIII _____ _

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Street- - - - - - - - Clt\L------Zip.
Phone _______ _- _
I

1-dJait

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Elly·O&gt;&lt;&gt;peftte - pms keys ill ume order u
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Reg. Price

4 LB.

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iJ written.

C..-eo\ellt poruble ti&amp;e -

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' Nelson's
Reg . Price
$39.95

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FRI. AND SAT. TIL 8:00

Sears

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All Purpose,
Reusable
Towels
10 ct.
Nelson's
Reg. Price
39c

Thanksgiving
program set ·

PANT SUITS

&amp;tit{odiDn Gtuuolllftd
or YDIU' MuM)! 80&lt;:1!

DYNA.
WIPES

DRIED
.
A.OWER

Mr. and Mrs. Rodney L.
Gheen of Belmont are an· ·
nouncing the birth or a
daughter, Trisha Reana ,
Nov. 6 at the Bellaire City
Hospital. She weighed six
pounds. Mr. and Mrs. Gheen
have a son, Rodney Lee, 14
months old.
Materu•l grandparents ar~
Mr. and Ml s . Allen Grfrtin,
Bellaire; ,Mrs. Mary Mezden,
St. Clairsville , and th e
paternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Sanford W.
Gheen, Mrs. Sarah McCloud,
Belmont, and Mr. and Mrs.
Carl 0 . Gheen, Racine.

LADIES
3 and 4 piece

ISiliOP AT SEARS AND SAVE

senio r; . Mary Helm and
Katherine
L.
Mead,
managers; Jennie Maddy,
past distri ct de pu ty and
protector ; Goldie Flowers
and Mrs. Mead, guards, and
TI1elma Campbell, pianist.
Mrs·. Good presided at the

Plain or
with Me at
Qt. Size

announced

or

Now taking arders for

Birth is

. MIDDLEPORT DEPARTMENT STORE

Hi1h Volta1e n1ea ns 1Lra i ght·
t.hrou1h-the-partition ce ll con nector•
deliver more inltiol at.art.ing I&gt;OWCr
than an ot hcrwiae ide ntical battery
with up-a nd-over Ct.'ll conncc tora.

Flowers and Wykle Whitley,
treasurer's. Others taking
part were Neva Melz, past
ch ief ; Garnet Reichelderfer,
grand chief; Anna Ogdin,
most excellent chief; Neva
Melz, Mae Delaney, excellent

IIAGU
SPAGHElTI
SAUCE

TRISHA GHEEN

.

SAVE '8.00

Good , sect·e tat·ies, and Goldie

E. Dees, Margaret Johnson

and Barbara Lester. Mrs.
Ogdin presided and m a~e
forma l introductions.
Favors were provided by
Milton
Bankihg
Co.,
Wellston ; First Na tio nal
Ban k, We Iiston; Kentucky
Fried Chicken , City Loan,
·Loc kard Insurance Co.,
Western and Southern In·
surance Co., Wellston, and
the Walker Funeral Home,
Wi lkesville.

TH:

•

Sears

Pylhian Sisters. was held at
the Wilkesv ille Temple 591 nn
Nov. 14 with 42 members
present.
·
Convention ofWcers were
Arlene Winzil, grand chief;
Robbie Good, district deputy;
Jewel Str ong and Na ncy

presentations.
Patton, past grand tru stee.
The welcome was given by and Ra ym ond Patton ,
Eugene Campbell from the Nelsonville.
Wilkesville Lodge 593 and
In stall ed
hy
Mr s.
Raymond Patton respon ded Reichelderfer ·were Gladys
from the Nelsonville Lodge. Major, grand ch ief, grand
Informa l introducti ons man ager, and Shirley Peters ,
were given Mrs. Good, Arlene grand senior .
Wenzil , Cleve land, gran d
A5p.m. dinner was se rved.
chief; Charles Wenzil , Mrs. The work was exem plifi ed in
Reichelderfer, Circleville, the evening session by the
Walden Reichelderfer, Hazel Wilkesville staff with Mrs .
Thomas, Amanda ; Mrs. Ma jor, captain . The canMead , Circleville ; Nelle didates initiated were Marion

CLUSTER

~·

BAZAAR SET
TUPPERS PLAINS
There will be a soup supper
and bazaar Saturday, Nov.
22 ; at St. Paul 's Uni ted
Methodi st Church Annex ,
Tuppers Plains, from 4 to 7 p.
m. Menu Includes chili and
vegetable soup, sandwiches,
pie, cake and coffee.

SIMON'S MARKET

WILKESVILLE - The 44th
District 11 convention of

-. '

....

aft ernoon session iollowing
regis tration. The charter w~ s
draped with Mabel Wood,
Mrs. Mctz and Mrs. Mead
offi ciating. The memorial
was presen ted using the love
candle and the living cross as
the symbol. Mr'!:(lgdin, Mrs.
Shirley Peters and Miss
Cam pbeU presented it to
honor all national, grand and
s ubor di nat e
tem pl es
representzd. Ne lle Pa tton
was rn usician for both

Pythian Sisters hold convention

CHOIR TO PERFORM
The Point Pleasant Bible
School choir will present
vocal music and a student,
Raymond DeVault., will
speak at 1:30 p.m. Sunday at
the ·Hysell Run Free
Methodist Church. Paul E.
Neville , pastor , extends an
invitation to the public.

FINE WEARING APPAREL
FOR BOTH

.

Council has meeting

Dazzling. performance"promised
.

'

7- The DaUy Sentinel, Mldd!e.P-Ort·Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Nov. 20, 1975

·

Super-thin llexiole head.
Ex tra lh&gt;n so the blades
shave extra close.
34 Sharp Schick Blades.
Gives you extra close.
las!, clean shaves.
Nelson's _

$2877

=~·e

$35.95

USAM" 700
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aad nhae -pacted. 700
Wlttl of power dclivcr a

-tlo-lowofbeat&lt;4
air for fast diyla1 •••
ll)ltq. l!4oippoll .... z.
.,.,d1 11d 3 poalltoa
. -. - o f Unble
chlp · rnlatut plastic .

REG.
$10.99

l.lptwdalll, -

s.t. lor ..

typeo

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of !lair.

You Can Treat
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NELSON'S
REG. PRICE S8 .99

23

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Model 1500
Butter-Up cora
popper is self·
buttering for
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POPPE~

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REG. PRICE
s14. 99

$}323

HAPPY APPLE

CHATTER TELEPHONE

NELSON ' S
REG.
PRICE
$3.47

Nelson's
Rea . Price 53 .89

Pre-School Activity,
voice answers .

CORN

', nngs,
.

FIRE ENGINE
··with Siren, ·1 8ell
and Extension Ladder
NEL"'S'O"N'S
REG. PRICE
$3.39

Chime
Toy That
Floats
Touch Plastic
Non -Toxic .
NELSON'S
REG. PRICE
$4.99

ROCK·A·ST
Squeezable,
~hewable ,

Poly

Rings .
NELSON'S
REG. PRICES149
$1.79

DOVE
LIQUID
22 OI •
Nelson's
Reg . Price
83c

�&amp;-

'J'!Ie Dally Sentinel, Mlddleport·Pomeroy, O., Thursday, Nov . 20,1976

o; .

.
change the PTA to a 1'1'0, to
provide candy for a Christ·
mas treat at the .school, and
to give each room US for
classroom purchases. The
ilmt. aIso. agreed to spon sor
the Jtmior Girl Scout Troop
100:
.
It was reported that
mat~rials for doors m the
boys rest rooms had been
purchased. Jesse Rodman
HILOTEMPS
displayed pictures of benches
NEW '(ORK (UJ'I) - The ·which might be saltable for
·highest temperature reported
WedneSday to the Nal[onal use with the tables purchased
Weather Service, exclUding
Alaska and Hawaii, was 81
degrees at Naples, Fla .
Today's low was 14 degrees
below zero at Bozeinan,
Mont.
·
A total of $620.72 was made
on the fall festival held
recently at the Salisbury
Elemenlary School, it was
reported when the Salisbury
PTA mel Tuesday night at
the school.
·
Dur.ing the business
meeting it was voted to

TUPPERS PLAINS - Mrs.
0. J. Pennington demon·
straled
basi c
fall
arrangements using plants

and weeds foWJd along the Stout .
roadside at a recent meeting
The program for the month ,
of the Rose Garden Club held featured simple, baste long ·
at the home of Mrs. James . lasting arrangementS with
--;-:-::;;:;:;:;~i'iir""________
seve ral of the members
.
displaying and Mrs. Carl
· ·
Barnhill bringing the special
arrangement of the month.
Q'
•0 J .The club .voted to have a
bOoth atthe Tuppers Plains
··
• • PTA carnival and each
member was asked to furnish
LONG &amp; SHORT
a plant or flower for the
event. ·
'
DRESS•UPS
For roll call members gave
FROM OUR
a Halloween symbol. Mrs.
HOLIDAY
Glen -stout gave devotions
and the officers reports were
COLLECTION
read . Refreshments were
served by the hostess.

·•1.C
~

®

. .· ··

Social
Calendar

Sizes 2T·4T

and 4-6x

(

Fl'om S6.so

THURSDAY
MAGNOUA CL'OB, home
of Mrs. Dale Smith, 7:30p.m .
MIDDLEPORT Child
Conservation League, 7 p.m.,
old-fashioned Thanksgiving
dinner at the Pomeroy
Church of Christ. Other
meinberB of Conservation
Leagues Invited along with
honoraty mothers of the local
league.
·
CLASS 12, 7:30 p.m. at
Heath United Methodist
Church.
CUB SCOUT Pack 242,
Syracuse Elementary ~hoot,
6:30 p.m. at· the school.
·Parents requested to attend.
ROCK SPRINGS Better
Health Club, I:15 p.m. at the
home of Mrs. Bar~ara Offutt,
NOMiNATION OF officers
when Twin City Shrlnettes
meets, 7:30p.m. at Columbus
and Southern Ohio Electric
offices, Middleport. Ail
members asked to attend.
EASTERN P.T .S. A.
meeting at Eastern High
School, 7:30 p.m. Instead of
•egular meeting night.
FRIDAY
HYMN SING, 7:30p.m. at
Hazel Community Church
with Dan Hayman and Hymn
Timers.
BRADI10RD c·hurch of
christ, revival , 7:30 each
night through Swlday, with
Dave Roberson, evangelist.
Bible study class on Saturday
starting at 9 a.m.

J,

'-=

MEN'S &amp; YOUNG MEN'S

.·Famous Lee
Pre-Washed

DENIM

· Miss. Justis, Charles Hoffman
-

BROWNOMmED
REEDSVILLE - · Terry
Brown, a freshman, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Brown,
Route I, Minersville, was
WJintentlonslly ~milled frotn
the Eastern High School first
nine weeks honor roll list.

ENGAGEME)'lT ANNOUNCED - MJ:. and Mrs.
Raymond Justis, Middleport, announce the engagement
In 1M7, Princess (later
and forthcoming marriage of ihelr daughter, Melissa to .' · Q.ieen) Elizabeih of England
Charles R. Hoffman, iiOII of Mrs. Clarence E. Roush of
married Royal Navy Lt.
Letart and the late Winfred (Red) Hoffman. Miss Justice
Philip Mountbalten.
Ia a 1975 graduate of Wahama High School and Is em·
ployed at th~ Ametlcan Cancer Society Offlce In Midentitled "Golden Heritage"
dleport. Mr. Hoffmarl, also a 1975 graduate of Wahama, Is
by · Ben Franklin, and
presen\ly employed at the Clement State Tree Nursery at
devotions by Mrs. Gibbs were
Lakin, W.Va. The wedding will take place Nov. 28,7:30
on the theme "Thanks Be to
p.m. at tile Fairview Bible Churcl! at Falrvlew. The Rev.
God."
'
George Hoschar wlll perform the open church wedding. A
The program· by Miss
reception will lmmedlately follow the ceremony.
Rhoda Hall was on splrllual
galdance. The Rev . Peter
Granda! had prayer and
refreshment$ were served.
· Others attending the
meeting were Mrs. Eva
Hartley, Mrs . Marjorie
Walburn, Mrs . Carol
Granda!, Mrs. lillie Hubbard, Mrs. Helen Bodimer,
Holiday activities were giving " .
Mrs. Sara ·Owen, Mrs. Oelda
Arrangements were made Chase, Mrs. Katie Anthony,
planned during the Tuesday
to
provide Christmas Dorothy and Barbara An·
night meetings of the Orcles
of the B. H. Sanborn remembrances for residents thony.
Missionary Society, Mid· of the Meigs County Jndleport First Baptist Church. firtnary , the Syracuse
At each of the meetings it Nursing Home and shutins,
was also annQWJced that the as well as Richard Kane, a Start losing weight today or
back. MONADEX Is a
Sanborn
meeting
In . Baptist ·scholarship student, money
tiny tab let and easy to take.
. DeL'Cmher had been changed and Elwyn Gibbs, a home MONADEX will help curb
.desire tor excess food.
from Dec. Ito Dec. 2 due to missionary. Shutins will also vo11r
Eat tau . weigh leu. Contain•
the Christmas parade in the be remembered with a gift of no dlnterous drugs and will
not m•ka you nervout. No
village. Members were Thanksgiving.
strenuous uerclse. Change
reminded that the meeting is
Mrs . Sarah
Fowler your lite .. . start today .
MONA DEX cost U .OO for a 20
the time tci tutn in their presented the program using day
supplv. Large acanomy
Christmas stocking offerings articles, ' "God's Corner", size Is ss.oo . Also try
AQUA TABS : they work gently
which are used for a special "My CoWJtry lfoliday" and to
help you lose Wlter-bloat.
project each year.
"ThanksglvlDg". A card Will AQUA TABS - a ' Wiftr p il l"
that works n.oo . Both
ELECTA CIRCLE
be sent to Mrs. Ma11de Betz, tuaranteed
11\d S:Oid by :
Meeting at the church with Colwnbus, on thanksljlvlng. Swisher &amp; Lohu Pharmacy,
E . Main, Pomerby &amp;
Mrs . Eloise Wilson as Others attending the meeting 112
Dutton Drug store, M i d·
hostess, the EJecta Circle were Mrs. Freda Edwards, dleport. Mail Orden Filled.
members ·decided to provide Mrs . Elizabeth Gardner,
gifts for shutins for Thanks· Mrs. Florence Rhodes, Miss
glvlhg. They also made plans Freddie Houdashelt, Mrs.
for Christmas pro~cl$ which Jessie Houdashelt, Mrs.
will include sending gifts of Leora Sigman and Marsha
money to foreign and horne King , guest.
missionaries, and the
LOVE JOY CIRCLE
scholarship student.
Names of residents·at the
Mrs . Wilson gave the Meigs County Infirmary were
devotions and Mrs. Manning given out to members of the
Kloes, Sanborn Misslooary Love Joy Circle who wtll buy
president, prese~ted the personal holiday gifts for .
program. Mrs. Lolilse Davis them during a meeting
will· have the December Tuesday night at the home of
meeting . Mrs . Alwllda Mrs. Janice Glbba.
Werner, chalrwol)lan, noted
Mrs. Eloise· Hayes was
that all active members of appointed as a new sb,utln of
the circle were present.
the class to be remembered
DORCAS CIRCLE
during the year. A thank-you
Mrs. Pauline Hoffman nole was read from Venlda
hosted the Dorcas Circle and Larry Wilson for a
meeting with Mrs. Elizabeth shower given at the church.
Slain, chairwoman , Plans were made for the
presiding.
Mrs. Frances circle to host the December
Smart gave the devotions meeting of the Sanbo'rn
using a meditation, "When Society.
Papa Read the Bible", and a
Mrs. Katie Anthony,
poem, "Reasons for Thanks· chairwoman , gave a reading

COOL &amp; HEAT YOUR

SIGNING PROCLAMATION -

HOME WITH THE

are, from left, Joe Parsons, president; Marly Holbrook·, vice president; Phil Jarrell,
treasurer, and Rick WoHe, secretary, of the Wahama High School service club. ·
®

Generation Rap
UNIT, ·

1

SAFE

NO FUMES IN YOUR HOME
NO FlAME IN YOUR HoME
L

.-INSTALLED OUTDP.QliS.I -

fOREMAN &amp; ABBOTT I
MIDDLIP0RT• .OH19 ,

PH. ,..1.5321

+++

'Julia : .
Don't EVER stay with a guy because you hate to admit
you've made a mistake! So what, if, your mother says "I.told
you so"? Thal'shetter than hearing It after you've messed up '
part of your IHe In a lousy marriage.
Tell her she's right (and bite your tongue before you add,
"For once" ). This may be the start of better relationship! at
home as wen as out of it. - SUE

+++

fort experience. Pillow soft with the feel
df Walking on air. Perfect for pants OF
skirts. Available In a variety
of colors.

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(Flare Leg Style)

Black

Green
Camel
· Brown

~
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~

blue
chambray and flannel shirts
to go wl!h the jeans.
Ni ce selection of

Kerm 's Korner·

Use Our

'

Great Gift
For A·Guy

The~11n 's

Shop

·New York Clothing House
'

Olritmas!!

Christm11s
Layaway

*
Christmas
Cards
• on

Local State liarm Agent
Stephen C. Snowden said
today that State Farm Life
Insurance Company reached
$1 billion in individual life
insurance in force in Ohio on
October 31. The milestone
means that State Farm 's
Ohio operatio n, hea dquar·
tered in Newark , would rank
among the 330 largest life
insurers out of 1,900 in the
U.S. and Canada , if it were a

C HW!

•

I

Perhaps your parents already HAVE caught up with the
times, but you've never given them a chance to admit It on a
pef80nallevel.
Why not come right out and discuss your loving
relationship With them? You might be surprlaed how well they
accept a circwnstance they realize they can't change. HELEN AND SUE

separate company.
" II too~ us 11 years to
reach $100 million of in·
dividual coverage in force in
lhe sla te," Snowden said.
That was in 1964, fo ur years
afl er State Farm opened its
Ohio regional office.
Slate Farm Life - the
largest individual life insurer
in the U. S. - is one of fiv e
affilia tes of Stale Farm
Mutual Automobile In·
sura nce Company. Stale
Farm Mutual is the coWJ lry's
largest car insurer with more
tha n 15 mi llion policies .
Another affiliate, State Farm
Fire and Casualty Company,
Insures more than 4.4 million
homes, making it the larges t
in the nation.

. .- - - - - - -

~II

DRILL KIT

Versatile kit includes
drill, chuck key, three
drill bits, backing
pod,
wheel
cotton
buffarbor
and
polishing bonnet
in fitted case.

REG. 19.99

'

M• uerlte'.s Shoes
DITTY OHLiftOIR

3/8" VARIABLE

7~ 11

SPEED DRILL

SAW

Double insulated. Ideo I
for ceramics and metals.
It handles the big iobs .

JV, HP motor. Makes
bevel and depth
ments with ease. In·
eludes 7'!.'' blade.

REG.22.99

REG. 24.99

An'other good buy
from ·BAKER'S.

e

HOOVER$
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3/8"

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2 SPEED JIG SAW KIT DRILL KIT

Makes straight, curved and Versatile kit includes saw,
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and plastic. Includes blade. 7504 and plastic case. 7531

AS
LOW AS
, i

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REG.
12.99

1999.

loss

Makes a good screwdriver! In·
eludes drill, chuck key, bits,
sanding discs, polishing wheel.
7181

2999.

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MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

REGULAR 279.95
11~

This Is a winner from the startl J
Just full of easy-goln' good looks, ·
It will take ,you just about ·
everywhere, 1'1 skirts or pants. ;
And tlie slacked wedge Is the only i
way for the glrl·on·the-go
to go! I•
.

249!~N.

SANDER ASSORTMENT
Substitute the pd1ishing pod for the
sandpaper, remove dust attachment ...

BIBck a O.ckBf'./DEWA LT. .

.. ""'""1999~";. ,

10" DELUXE POWER SHOP
with leg stand &amp; dodo blade

SpeCial offer includes power saw with 10" blade that cuts .
a full 3" deep and on-top, up-front controls for easy oper·
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blade that adjusts fro!ll W' to 13116 . 7743

conne·

w.

1. pet. g.b.
4 .636 1
5 .583
''il
1 1 .500 1111
2 12 ·. 143 61/ 'il

!&lt; ent.uc:kv
New York

'

POMJifby

I

'7
7

West
w. 1.

102 I. MAIN

~~,

1377 1777 1999

weeks .
Irvine, a veteran forward
acquired from Virginia
during the summer along
with the rights to rookie
David Thompson, recently
underwent knee surgery.

Eut

VIrginia

·'

7114 \.

opens Sundays

St. LOUIS

.

Address,_____:---:-----:-:-------::::-::~
For those who have not been contacted.
Mail to Mrs. Dun t Carol yn ) Thomas, in care
of Pom ero y Cha mb er of Comm erce,
Pomeroy 45i(i!l by noon on Nov . 25th. 'rhe .
parade will line up behind the Pomeroy
.Junior High at 6:30 p . m .

tlon srondlnts

Fall Bulbs For
Spring Blooms

'

F or pa rtic ipation · in th e annual
&lt;.:hristma s pa r ade to be held in Pomeroy ,
Nov. 25:
Na me ____________~------~----'rype of EntrY.,_____ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

Dininghftll

American 8uketbllll Anocll·

Plan! ·

POMEROY, OHIO

Parade Entry Coupon

.

By United Prtst lntern•tlonal

Sale .
llox&amp; Bulk

OPEN FRIDAY I 54TUIIDAV NI.NU

Dear Helen and Sue :
.
Since a recent survey showed that over 90 per cent of
women under 35 weren't virgins at marriage, then why are
parents still so uptight when their 21-year-old daughter sleeps
with her fiance? We can 'I be married Ull next year. We're very
much in love. We know we're right, yet we must pretend that
we only klasgoodnlght,even though we know they know better.
When wlll parents catch up with the times? - A. 0.

RIO GRANDE - The Rio
Grande ·College-Rio Grande
CommWJIIy College dining
hall Will he open to the public
for SWJday lunch during the
break between quarters.
Students leave the school
Friday, Nov. 21, and the
cafeteria will be closed
during the week ;Biter that
date but will be open to the
public for ·noon dinner on
Sundays.

Also
. Maverick Dark
Blue Denim, Flare
and Straight Leg.

Many, Items On
Sale For
.

Thanksgiving Day

Friday
R O L LI NG HILL S
CHAPTER 838, P~ re nt ~
Wi thout Partners; 7:30· p.m.
at Grace United Methodist
Church . Speaker Jan
We therholt will discuss
problems of marriage and
divorce.
Election
of
nominating committee to be
held.
PAST
MATKU Jii S ,
Evan geline Chapter 116,
O.E.S., 7:30p.m. at the home
of Mrs. Marte Hawkins.
SATURDAY
BAKE SALE by Trinity
Yotilh at the New York
. Clothing House beginning at
9:30a.m. '
SOUP AND SANDWICH
IWJ cheon at Trinity Church
basement, with serving to
begin at 10:30 a.m. sponsored
by SWJday School. Soup, chill,
sandwiches, dessert$.
, SOUP SUPPER and
Bazaar, St. Paul's United
Methodi st Church Ann ex,
Tuppers Plains from 4 to 1
p.m.
SOUTHER~ High School
Football banquet , 6:30 p.m.
Bring covered dish. Public
invited.
WORK IN EA degree,
Shade River Lodge 453, at the
hall in Chester, 7:30p.m.
·RACINE Grange annual
turkey dinner, 6:30 p.m. a l
hall. Take covered dish, own
ta ble service , items for
aucllon and Christmas gifts
for Athens State Hospital.
SOUP AND pie supper at
Syracuse MWJiclpal building,
starting at 4 p.m. by Syracuse
United Methodi st Church.
Those wi shing carry out
servi ce, please take con·
tainers.
PUBLICSquare dance, 8 to
midnight at Middleport
Elementary School with
music by String Dusters and
Gl en Lamber t and Cora
Hilton, callers. Admission $1
per person. Children Wider 12
accompanying parents will
be admi tted fr ee. Dance
sponsored by Middleport
Disaster Unit.

Dear A.:

I

'

Oinic to close

The Holzer Medical Center
,Don't Stay Out Of Pity
Clinic will be closed Thurs·
day, Nov. ?:1, in observance of
If I were advising another girl, I'd say like a Dash : "Drop Thanksgiving Day.
loser!" but when I'm going with him, It's something else
In case of an emergency,
the physicians of the Holzer
We've been IDgether two years, Dave Is the greatest - and Medical Center Clinic staff
worst. When he's In a good mood he's fantasUc. But ,the bad will be on duty in the
wipe him out. And ine along With him.
· Emergency Room (Phone
When he gels mad be throws things, breaks things, and 446-5201) of the Holzer
bangs his head off walls. He's ~emely jealous, and Medical Center Hospital to
threatens to kill hlmseH If I quit. All his friends teU me I've handle emergency cases
been a great tnnuence on him and don't give up. But I wonder only. Holzer Medical Center
how much more I can take , even though I think I love him - Clinic will resume normal
sometimes.
operations on Friday ,
Now that he's pretty sure I'll stay (I don 't want his suicide November 28, 1975 at 8 a.m.
on my conscience), he'sl!larted bossing. He won't let me wear
mirror sunglasses because "I'll be staring at other dudes with
them on." It's doo't buy that dress: ''too sexy - you juat want
guys IAilook at your legs, etc."; no platform shoes; no bikini
RRA,DLEY ACTIVATED
.next swruner. He calls three times a day to third-degree me
DENVER (UPI) - For·
about fellows at work.
ward Jim Bradley Wed·
On the other hand, he takes me wherever I want IAI go and nesday was activated by the
will do anything for me. He just wants to own me, that'aall.
Denver Nuggets of the
Why don't I break up? It's parUy habit; part fear that he'll American Basketball
hurl himself and any other guy I date; a big part: persuasion Association, while George
by friends and HIS famlly that I'm the only one who can help IrVIne was placed 011 the
him; and thennthere's another part : my mother diJllkes Dave, injured reserve list
and she and I don't get along. I'd hate to admit she's right
Bradley played the past
becatllle she'd never stop saying "I told you ao."
year and a half with the
Am 1doomedtomarryDave,so lean make a min of him? Kentucky Colonels and was
- JUUA
selected by the now d" unct
Baltimore Claws in the ABA
Dear Julia:
equallialion draft. When the
If you marry a guy "to make a man of him," he'll probably Claws folded last month,
make a wreck of you flrl!l !
.
Bradley became a free agent
Those suicide threats ? A p!lychlatrlst should handle this and has been working out
side of Dave'spersonallty - It's too much for you!
With Denver the past • two '
Ease out before you're trapped by family and friends and your conscience - iniAl more trouble than you can
manage. - HELEN

Circles.plan
holiday activities

JEANS

27 TO 44

By Helen and Sue Hottel

HEATS 'WITH
. . GAS I

'1699

SIZES IN GROUP

IMWMIIIIIIMIII~llmi!i3i8l!i~
· ~·~~~i'?m.W~~ww,;»"k

ELECTRIC/GAS.·

LOSE UGLY FAT

Mason Mayor Fred Taylor, above, issued a

pro(:lan~aH'on selt!Qg November 16-22 as Key Club Week. Looking on as the proclamation Is

,4,,,,

life insurance
plateau hit

Calendar

b the PTA recently. A total
or 76 paid rnembet;s are
reported Mrs . Wendell
Hoover's Elrst grade won the
ttendance award and a
i!
f music was
program
t d byo Mr and Mrs.
f{;~~ ;aylor on. the guitar
and violin.
To open the meeting, the
ledge to the nag was led by
~tisbury Junior Troop 100
.
· Tr op 220 Mrs
··
•
and Brownte 0
Hoo~er gave a Thanksgiving
reading·

REVOWTIONARY

$1 billion in

Social .

Fall festival is success

Rose Garden Club has program
on basic fall arrangements

~ •K-;)::::::::(~~;:;:;:;:;:;:::;;;8::•:::~:~ ·

Denver
1
tndlana
San Antonio
Uloh
.

9
9
8

2
Wtdhesdly's

2
J
•
9

[•=i~

pet. g. b'.
.818 J SD
'·"a
.667 1 1 1-o~
.112 7

TI-e FriencJy Ones

....

THE DEPARTMENT STORE

OF BUILDING SINCE 1915 .

Ga~ts

VIrginia 110 Now Yor ~ 100
Sl!ln Antonio 113 Kentucky 106
Denver 119 St . Louis 106
lndiono 130 Ulah 110
Thursd1y'1 Games
1 Denv~ l!lf i ndiana

POMEROY
CEMENT·BLOCK CO.

91o 5 Mon.- Fri .

f'lo I Sal.
tlostdSI!nd•v

• monufacturer's regular suggested ~etoil price

..-

�&amp;-

'J'!Ie Dally Sentinel, Mlddleport·Pomeroy, O., Thursday, Nov . 20,1976

o; .

.
change the PTA to a 1'1'0, to
provide candy for a Christ·
mas treat at the .school, and
to give each room US for
classroom purchases. The
ilmt. aIso. agreed to spon sor
the Jtmior Girl Scout Troop
100:
.
It was reported that
mat~rials for doors m the
boys rest rooms had been
purchased. Jesse Rodman
HILOTEMPS
displayed pictures of benches
NEW '(ORK (UJ'I) - The ·which might be saltable for
·highest temperature reported
WedneSday to the Nal[onal use with the tables purchased
Weather Service, exclUding
Alaska and Hawaii, was 81
degrees at Naples, Fla .
Today's low was 14 degrees
below zero at Bozeinan,
Mont.
·
A total of $620.72 was made
on the fall festival held
recently at the Salisbury
Elemenlary School, it was
reported when the Salisbury
PTA mel Tuesday night at
the school.
·
Dur.ing the business
meeting it was voted to

TUPPERS PLAINS - Mrs.
0. J. Pennington demon·
straled
basi c
fall
arrangements using plants

and weeds foWJd along the Stout .
roadside at a recent meeting
The program for the month ,
of the Rose Garden Club held featured simple, baste long ·
at the home of Mrs. James . lasting arrangementS with
--;-:-::;;:;:;:;~i'iir""________
seve ral of the members
.
displaying and Mrs. Carl
· ·
Barnhill bringing the special
arrangement of the month.
Q'
•0 J .The club .voted to have a
bOoth atthe Tuppers Plains
··
• • PTA carnival and each
member was asked to furnish
LONG &amp; SHORT
a plant or flower for the
event. ·
'
DRESS•UPS
For roll call members gave
FROM OUR
a Halloween symbol. Mrs.
HOLIDAY
Glen -stout gave devotions
and the officers reports were
COLLECTION
read . Refreshments were
served by the hostess.

·•1.C
~

®

. .· ··

Social
Calendar

Sizes 2T·4T

and 4-6x

(

Fl'om S6.so

THURSDAY
MAGNOUA CL'OB, home
of Mrs. Dale Smith, 7:30p.m .
MIDDLEPORT Child
Conservation League, 7 p.m.,
old-fashioned Thanksgiving
dinner at the Pomeroy
Church of Christ. Other
meinberB of Conservation
Leagues Invited along with
honoraty mothers of the local
league.
·
CLASS 12, 7:30 p.m. at
Heath United Methodist
Church.
CUB SCOUT Pack 242,
Syracuse Elementary ~hoot,
6:30 p.m. at· the school.
·Parents requested to attend.
ROCK SPRINGS Better
Health Club, I:15 p.m. at the
home of Mrs. Bar~ara Offutt,
NOMiNATION OF officers
when Twin City Shrlnettes
meets, 7:30p.m. at Columbus
and Southern Ohio Electric
offices, Middleport. Ail
members asked to attend.
EASTERN P.T .S. A.
meeting at Eastern High
School, 7:30 p.m. Instead of
•egular meeting night.
FRIDAY
HYMN SING, 7:30p.m. at
Hazel Community Church
with Dan Hayman and Hymn
Timers.
BRADI10RD c·hurch of
christ, revival , 7:30 each
night through Swlday, with
Dave Roberson, evangelist.
Bible study class on Saturday
starting at 9 a.m.

J,

'-=

MEN'S &amp; YOUNG MEN'S

.·Famous Lee
Pre-Washed

DENIM

· Miss. Justis, Charles Hoffman
-

BROWNOMmED
REEDSVILLE - · Terry
Brown, a freshman, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Brown,
Route I, Minersville, was
WJintentlonslly ~milled frotn
the Eastern High School first
nine weeks honor roll list.

ENGAGEME)'lT ANNOUNCED - MJ:. and Mrs.
Raymond Justis, Middleport, announce the engagement
In 1M7, Princess (later
and forthcoming marriage of ihelr daughter, Melissa to .' · Q.ieen) Elizabeih of England
Charles R. Hoffman, iiOII of Mrs. Clarence E. Roush of
married Royal Navy Lt.
Letart and the late Winfred (Red) Hoffman. Miss Justice
Philip Mountbalten.
Ia a 1975 graduate of Wahama High School and Is em·
ployed at th~ Ametlcan Cancer Society Offlce In Midentitled "Golden Heritage"
dleport. Mr. Hoffmarl, also a 1975 graduate of Wahama, Is
by · Ben Franklin, and
presen\ly employed at the Clement State Tree Nursery at
devotions by Mrs. Gibbs were
Lakin, W.Va. The wedding will take place Nov. 28,7:30
on the theme "Thanks Be to
p.m. at tile Fairview Bible Churcl! at Falrvlew. The Rev.
God."
'
George Hoschar wlll perform the open church wedding. A
The program· by Miss
reception will lmmedlately follow the ceremony.
Rhoda Hall was on splrllual
galdance. The Rev . Peter
Granda! had prayer and
refreshment$ were served.
· Others attending the
meeting were Mrs. Eva
Hartley, Mrs . Marjorie
Walburn, Mrs . Carol
Granda!, Mrs. lillie Hubbard, Mrs. Helen Bodimer,
Holiday activities were giving " .
Mrs. Sara ·Owen, Mrs. Oelda
Arrangements were made Chase, Mrs. Katie Anthony,
planned during the Tuesday
to
provide Christmas Dorothy and Barbara An·
night meetings of the Orcles
of the B. H. Sanborn remembrances for residents thony.
Missionary Society, Mid· of the Meigs County Jndleport First Baptist Church. firtnary , the Syracuse
At each of the meetings it Nursing Home and shutins,
was also annQWJced that the as well as Richard Kane, a Start losing weight today or
back. MONADEX Is a
Sanborn
meeting
In . Baptist ·scholarship student, money
tiny tab let and easy to take.
. DeL'Cmher had been changed and Elwyn Gibbs, a home MONADEX will help curb
.desire tor excess food.
from Dec. Ito Dec. 2 due to missionary. Shutins will also vo11r
Eat tau . weigh leu. Contain•
the Christmas parade in the be remembered with a gift of no dlnterous drugs and will
not m•ka you nervout. No
village. Members were Thanksgiving.
strenuous uerclse. Change
reminded that the meeting is
Mrs . Sarah
Fowler your lite .. . start today .
MONA DEX cost U .OO for a 20
the time tci tutn in their presented the program using day
supplv. Large acanomy
Christmas stocking offerings articles, ' "God's Corner", size Is ss.oo . Also try
AQUA TABS : they work gently
which are used for a special "My CoWJtry lfoliday" and to
help you lose Wlter-bloat.
project each year.
"ThanksglvlDg". A card Will AQUA TABS - a ' Wiftr p il l"
that works n.oo . Both
ELECTA CIRCLE
be sent to Mrs. Ma11de Betz, tuaranteed
11\d S:Oid by :
Meeting at the church with Colwnbus, on thanksljlvlng. Swisher &amp; Lohu Pharmacy,
E . Main, Pomerby &amp;
Mrs . Eloise Wilson as Others attending the meeting 112
Dutton Drug store, M i d·
hostess, the EJecta Circle were Mrs. Freda Edwards, dleport. Mail Orden Filled.
members ·decided to provide Mrs . Elizabeth Gardner,
gifts for shutins for Thanks· Mrs. Florence Rhodes, Miss
glvlhg. They also made plans Freddie Houdashelt, Mrs.
for Christmas pro~cl$ which Jessie Houdashelt, Mrs.
will include sending gifts of Leora Sigman and Marsha
money to foreign and horne King , guest.
missionaries, and the
LOVE JOY CIRCLE
scholarship student.
Names of residents·at the
Mrs . Wilson gave the Meigs County Infirmary were
devotions and Mrs. Manning given out to members of the
Kloes, Sanborn Misslooary Love Joy Circle who wtll buy
president, prese~ted the personal holiday gifts for .
program. Mrs. Lolilse Davis them during a meeting
will· have the December Tuesday night at the home of
meeting . Mrs . Alwllda Mrs. Janice Glbba.
Werner, chalrwol)lan, noted
Mrs. Eloise· Hayes was
that all active members of appointed as a new sb,utln of
the circle were present.
the class to be remembered
DORCAS CIRCLE
during the year. A thank-you
Mrs. Pauline Hoffman nole was read from Venlda
hosted the Dorcas Circle and Larry Wilson for a
meeting with Mrs. Elizabeth shower given at the church.
Slain, chairwoman , Plans were made for the
presiding.
Mrs. Frances circle to host the December
Smart gave the devotions meeting of the Sanbo'rn
using a meditation, "When Society.
Papa Read the Bible", and a
Mrs. Katie Anthony,
poem, "Reasons for Thanks· chairwoman , gave a reading

COOL &amp; HEAT YOUR

SIGNING PROCLAMATION -

HOME WITH THE

are, from left, Joe Parsons, president; Marly Holbrook·, vice president; Phil Jarrell,
treasurer, and Rick WoHe, secretary, of the Wahama High School service club. ·
®

Generation Rap
UNIT, ·

1

SAFE

NO FUMES IN YOUR HOME
NO FlAME IN YOUR HoME
L

.-INSTALLED OUTDP.QliS.I -

fOREMAN &amp; ABBOTT I
MIDDLIP0RT• .OH19 ,

PH. ,..1.5321

+++

'Julia : .
Don't EVER stay with a guy because you hate to admit
you've made a mistake! So what, if, your mother says "I.told
you so"? Thal'shetter than hearing It after you've messed up '
part of your IHe In a lousy marriage.
Tell her she's right (and bite your tongue before you add,
"For once" ). This may be the start of better relationship! at
home as wen as out of it. - SUE

+++

fort experience. Pillow soft with the feel
df Walking on air. Perfect for pants OF
skirts. Available In a variety
of colors.

'

J

(Flare Leg Style)

Black

Green
Camel
· Brown

~
1

=
~

blue
chambray and flannel shirts
to go wl!h the jeans.
Ni ce selection of

Kerm 's Korner·

Use Our

'

Great Gift
For A·Guy

The~11n 's

Shop

·New York Clothing House
'

Olritmas!!

Christm11s
Layaway

*
Christmas
Cards
• on

Local State liarm Agent
Stephen C. Snowden said
today that State Farm Life
Insurance Company reached
$1 billion in individual life
insurance in force in Ohio on
October 31. The milestone
means that State Farm 's
Ohio operatio n, hea dquar·
tered in Newark , would rank
among the 330 largest life
insurers out of 1,900 in the
U.S. and Canada , if it were a

C HW!

•

I

Perhaps your parents already HAVE caught up with the
times, but you've never given them a chance to admit It on a
pef80nallevel.
Why not come right out and discuss your loving
relationship With them? You might be surprlaed how well they
accept a circwnstance they realize they can't change. HELEN AND SUE

separate company.
" II too~ us 11 years to
reach $100 million of in·
dividual coverage in force in
lhe sla te," Snowden said.
That was in 1964, fo ur years
afl er State Farm opened its
Ohio regional office.
Slate Farm Life - the
largest individual life insurer
in the U. S. - is one of fiv e
affilia tes of Stale Farm
Mutual Automobile In·
sura nce Company. Stale
Farm Mutual is the coWJ lry's
largest car insurer with more
tha n 15 mi llion policies .
Another affiliate, State Farm
Fire and Casualty Company,
Insures more than 4.4 million
homes, making it the larges t
in the nation.

. .- - - - - - -

~II

DRILL KIT

Versatile kit includes
drill, chuck key, three
drill bits, backing
pod,
wheel
cotton
buffarbor
and
polishing bonnet
in fitted case.

REG. 19.99

'

M• uerlte'.s Shoes
DITTY OHLiftOIR

3/8" VARIABLE

7~ 11

SPEED DRILL

SAW

Double insulated. Ideo I
for ceramics and metals.
It handles the big iobs .

JV, HP motor. Makes
bevel and depth
ments with ease. In·
eludes 7'!.'' blade.

REG.22.99

REG. 24.99

An'other good buy
from ·BAKER'S.

e

HOOVER$
CLEANER

SABRE SAW

3/8"

VARIABLE
SPEED
2 SPEED JIG SAW KIT DRILL KIT

Makes straight, curved and Versatile kit includes saw,
scroll cuts in wood, metal rip fence, four assorted blades
and plastic. Includes blade. 7504 and plastic case. 7531

AS
LOW AS
, i

BAKER FURNITURE

REG.
12.99

1999.

loss

Makes a good screwdriver! In·
eludes drill, chuck key, bits,
sanding discs, polishing wheel.
7181

2999.

r

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

REGULAR 279.95
11~

This Is a winner from the startl J
Just full of easy-goln' good looks, ·
It will take ,you just about ·
everywhere, 1'1 skirts or pants. ;
And tlie slacked wedge Is the only i
way for the glrl·on·the-go
to go! I•
.

249!~N.

SANDER ASSORTMENT
Substitute the pd1ishing pod for the
sandpaper, remove dust attachment ...

BIBck a O.ckBf'./DEWA LT. .

.. ""'""1999~";. ,

10" DELUXE POWER SHOP
with leg stand &amp; dodo blade

SpeCial offer includes power saw with 10" blade that cuts .
a full 3" deep and on-top, up-front controls for easy oper·
otion i sturdy metal leg stand and 6',', high-corban steel dodo
blade that adjusts fro!ll W' to 13116 . 7743

conne·

w.

1. pet. g.b.
4 .636 1
5 .583
''il
1 1 .500 1111
2 12 ·. 143 61/ 'il

!&lt; ent.uc:kv
New York

'

POMJifby

I

'7
7

West
w. 1.

102 I. MAIN

~~,

1377 1777 1999

weeks .
Irvine, a veteran forward
acquired from Virginia
during the summer along
with the rights to rookie
David Thompson, recently
underwent knee surgery.

Eut

VIrginia

·'

7114 \.

opens Sundays

St. LOUIS

.

Address,_____:---:-----:-:-------::::-::~
For those who have not been contacted.
Mail to Mrs. Dun t Carol yn ) Thomas, in care
of Pom ero y Cha mb er of Comm erce,
Pomeroy 45i(i!l by noon on Nov . 25th. 'rhe .
parade will line up behind the Pomeroy
.Junior High at 6:30 p . m .

tlon srondlnts

Fall Bulbs For
Spring Blooms

'

F or pa rtic ipation · in th e annual
&lt;.:hristma s pa r ade to be held in Pomeroy ,
Nov. 25:
Na me ____________~------~----'rype of EntrY.,_____ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

Dininghftll

American 8uketbllll Anocll·

Plan! ·

POMEROY, OHIO

Parade Entry Coupon

.

By United Prtst lntern•tlonal

Sale .
llox&amp; Bulk

OPEN FRIDAY I 54TUIIDAV NI.NU

Dear Helen and Sue :
.
Since a recent survey showed that over 90 per cent of
women under 35 weren't virgins at marriage, then why are
parents still so uptight when their 21-year-old daughter sleeps
with her fiance? We can 'I be married Ull next year. We're very
much in love. We know we're right, yet we must pretend that
we only klasgoodnlght,even though we know they know better.
When wlll parents catch up with the times? - A. 0.

RIO GRANDE - The Rio
Grande ·College-Rio Grande
CommWJIIy College dining
hall Will he open to the public
for SWJday lunch during the
break between quarters.
Students leave the school
Friday, Nov. 21, and the
cafeteria will be closed
during the week ;Biter that
date but will be open to the
public for ·noon dinner on
Sundays.

Also
. Maverick Dark
Blue Denim, Flare
and Straight Leg.

Many, Items On
Sale For
.

Thanksgiving Day

Friday
R O L LI NG HILL S
CHAPTER 838, P~ re nt ~
Wi thout Partners; 7:30· p.m.
at Grace United Methodist
Church . Speaker Jan
We therholt will discuss
problems of marriage and
divorce.
Election
of
nominating committee to be
held.
PAST
MATKU Jii S ,
Evan geline Chapter 116,
O.E.S., 7:30p.m. at the home
of Mrs. Marte Hawkins.
SATURDAY
BAKE SALE by Trinity
Yotilh at the New York
. Clothing House beginning at
9:30a.m. '
SOUP AND SANDWICH
IWJ cheon at Trinity Church
basement, with serving to
begin at 10:30 a.m. sponsored
by SWJday School. Soup, chill,
sandwiches, dessert$.
, SOUP SUPPER and
Bazaar, St. Paul's United
Methodi st Church Ann ex,
Tuppers Plains from 4 to 1
p.m.
SOUTHER~ High School
Football banquet , 6:30 p.m.
Bring covered dish. Public
invited.
WORK IN EA degree,
Shade River Lodge 453, at the
hall in Chester, 7:30p.m.
·RACINE Grange annual
turkey dinner, 6:30 p.m. a l
hall. Take covered dish, own
ta ble service , items for
aucllon and Christmas gifts
for Athens State Hospital.
SOUP AND pie supper at
Syracuse MWJiclpal building,
starting at 4 p.m. by Syracuse
United Methodi st Church.
Those wi shing carry out
servi ce, please take con·
tainers.
PUBLICSquare dance, 8 to
midnight at Middleport
Elementary School with
music by String Dusters and
Gl en Lamber t and Cora
Hilton, callers. Admission $1
per person. Children Wider 12
accompanying parents will
be admi tted fr ee. Dance
sponsored by Middleport
Disaster Unit.

Dear A.:

I

'

Oinic to close

The Holzer Medical Center
,Don't Stay Out Of Pity
Clinic will be closed Thurs·
day, Nov. ?:1, in observance of
If I were advising another girl, I'd say like a Dash : "Drop Thanksgiving Day.
loser!" but when I'm going with him, It's something else
In case of an emergency,
the physicians of the Holzer
We've been IDgether two years, Dave Is the greatest - and Medical Center Clinic staff
worst. When he's In a good mood he's fantasUc. But ,the bad will be on duty in the
wipe him out. And ine along With him.
· Emergency Room (Phone
When he gels mad be throws things, breaks things, and 446-5201) of the Holzer
bangs his head off walls. He's ~emely jealous, and Medical Center Hospital to
threatens to kill hlmseH If I quit. All his friends teU me I've handle emergency cases
been a great tnnuence on him and don't give up. But I wonder only. Holzer Medical Center
how much more I can take , even though I think I love him - Clinic will resume normal
sometimes.
operations on Friday ,
Now that he's pretty sure I'll stay (I don 't want his suicide November 28, 1975 at 8 a.m.
on my conscience), he'sl!larted bossing. He won't let me wear
mirror sunglasses because "I'll be staring at other dudes with
them on." It's doo't buy that dress: ''too sexy - you juat want
guys IAilook at your legs, etc."; no platform shoes; no bikini
RRA,DLEY ACTIVATED
.next swruner. He calls three times a day to third-degree me
DENVER (UPI) - For·
about fellows at work.
ward Jim Bradley Wed·
On the other hand, he takes me wherever I want IAI go and nesday was activated by the
will do anything for me. He just wants to own me, that'aall.
Denver Nuggets of the
Why don't I break up? It's parUy habit; part fear that he'll American Basketball
hurl himself and any other guy I date; a big part: persuasion Association, while George
by friends and HIS famlly that I'm the only one who can help IrVIne was placed 011 the
him; and thennthere's another part : my mother diJllkes Dave, injured reserve list
and she and I don't get along. I'd hate to admit she's right
Bradley played the past
becatllle she'd never stop saying "I told you ao."
year and a half with the
Am 1doomedtomarryDave,so lean make a min of him? Kentucky Colonels and was
- JUUA
selected by the now d" unct
Baltimore Claws in the ABA
Dear Julia:
equallialion draft. When the
If you marry a guy "to make a man of him," he'll probably Claws folded last month,
make a wreck of you flrl!l !
.
Bradley became a free agent
Those suicide threats ? A p!lychlatrlst should handle this and has been working out
side of Dave'spersonallty - It's too much for you!
With Denver the past • two '
Ease out before you're trapped by family and friends and your conscience - iniAl more trouble than you can
manage. - HELEN

Circles.plan
holiday activities

JEANS

27 TO 44

By Helen and Sue Hottel

HEATS 'WITH
. . GAS I

'1699

SIZES IN GROUP

IMWMIIIIIIMIII~llmi!i3i8l!i~
· ~·~~~i'?m.W~~ww,;»"k

ELECTRIC/GAS.·

LOSE UGLY FAT

Mason Mayor Fred Taylor, above, issued a

pro(:lan~aH'on selt!Qg November 16-22 as Key Club Week. Looking on as the proclamation Is

,4,,,,

life insurance
plateau hit

Calendar

b the PTA recently. A total
or 76 paid rnembet;s are
reported Mrs . Wendell
Hoover's Elrst grade won the
ttendance award and a
i!
f music was
program
t d byo Mr and Mrs.
f{;~~ ;aylor on. the guitar
and violin.
To open the meeting, the
ledge to the nag was led by
~tisbury Junior Troop 100
.
· Tr op 220 Mrs
··
•
and Brownte 0
Hoo~er gave a Thanksgiving
reading·

REVOWTIONARY

$1 billion in

Social .

Fall festival is success

Rose Garden Club has program
on basic fall arrangements

~ •K-;)::::::::(~~;:;:;:;:;:;:::;;;8::•:::~:~ ·

Denver
1
tndlana
San Antonio
Uloh
.

9
9
8

2
Wtdhesdly's

2
J
•
9

[•=i~

pet. g. b'.
.818 J SD
'·"a
.667 1 1 1-o~
.112 7

TI-e FriencJy Ones

....

THE DEPARTMENT STORE

OF BUILDING SINCE 1915 .

Ga~ts

VIrginia 110 Now Yor ~ 100
Sl!ln Antonio 113 Kentucky 106
Denver 119 St . Louis 106
lndiono 130 Ulah 110
Thursd1y'1 Games
1 Denv~ l!lf i ndiana

POMEROY
CEMENT·BLOCK CO.

91o 5 Mon.- Fri .

f'lo I Sal.
tlostdSI!nd•v

• monufacturer's regular suggested ~etoil price

..-

�1

~Wi~ill;.:,':,-:;~:;,::.:"For Fast Results Use The Sentinel Classifieds

11 - Thf&gt; l)aUy Sentinel, Middlepart-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Nov. 20, 1975
DICKJitAcy

I

Television log for easy viewing

Unscrambl• those !oor Jumbles,
o~e letter to each squart, to
form four ordmary words.

r:o

ITYBLUS
~
I I X]
~&gt;JNGRY

J

I

THE CHICKeN
FAVOgrTE
VEI5ETAESLE: .

Now arrance the drcled !etten
to form the aurpri~e antwer, u
auccuted by the above &lt;artoon.

(Auwen tomorrow)

)umbl~·

CHAMP FUDGE LIQUOR VERSUS

Annu!rl

)owed up

I

Tt1e Publisher reserves thf
nght lo edl l or re ject anv ad!
deemed objectional
The
pub l1 sher
will
not
be
responsib le tor more than one
mcorrec I Inser t ion

RATES

FA~ M E~'5

I I ()
1n

l

the Na1 y- SPUCEO

For Want Ad Service

5 cen ts per word one Inser ti on

Min1mum Charge $1 00
14 cen ts per word thr ee
conse cul 1ve insert 10ns
26 cen ts per word six co n
se cultve in serhons
25 Per Cent Dlscoun I on paid
ads and ads paid within 10
days

CA RD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY

....

-

otor Co.

QUALITY
1972 COMET! DR,
nice ca r w1th

W· W t ires, blue f1 nlsh ,

From the largest Truck or
Bulldo zer R:adlato r to the
smallest Heater Core

good economy

1911 MATADOR
$1395
4·door, local car, atr condlttoned, full equipment

Nathan Blg~s
Radiator Spec1alist

S129S
1970 NOVA V·8 CPE .
Blk . v1nyl roof, grey f1nlsh, good tires, automatic,
cower steering, radio.

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

NOTICE OF
PUBLICATlON
To
G eorg e Dee m , Jr,
wh ose l as t known reSidence
wa s Ee s l L i v erpooL Oh 10
439 20 r Fran klm O'Ne il, whose
lu i known r esidence was Ol d
Pitt sburgh Road , Ro chester .
Penn sylvl!n i a 15014
Hobert
Ice nhOwer , whose last known
re s1dence was 11 6 Pacolot
Dr iv e, Gaffney , S C 293.40,
W ll l l Bm I cenhower . whose
last known residenc e was R
F D , Wendy Dr.ve , Bailie,
Conn 06330 ; Jerry Icenhower ,
whose last known res1dence
wu 5430 Cloverly Avenu e.
Te mple City , Callfor n1a 91180 ,
Jo Ann Conar d . whose la st
known reSide n ce was Rou te 1,
Cro ton Ohio .tiJO l 3. Ma r y Jo
Mock , whose las t known
resid ence was 10 535 Rose
Avenue, Apt 17, Los Angeles .
C ,:~~li f ornla , and tl'1e un known

heirs and devisees of Martha

O' Neil , decei'lSt'd
You are h ereby not1t1ed that
you
hav e
been
named
defendan Is in a legal ac110n
ent it led Garne l E Johnson el
a l , pla lnll ff s , v s
Edna
Shroads , e l at , defendanls
This action has been ass igned
Case Number 15,687 , and Is
pending i n lhe Court of
Pleas ,
Me igs
c ommon
Counly , Pomeroy Ohio 45769
The object of the Comp la.nt IS
to parlillon the f oll owing
deUr lbed real estale , to W I!
Situate In L ebanon Town

Ship, Meig s County , Oh iO,
be•no B part of FractiOn A.
Sec lion 141 Town 3, Range 11 ,
Ohio Compan y 's Purchase.
bounded and described as
lo llo ws
Beg i nnin g at the
southwest corner of said
section , thence north on said
sec lion line 88 rods to a. ro ck
f rom wh iCh a chestnut oak 20
i n ches b ear s soulh 74 ' 1
degrees east 1512 teet , !hen ce
east 69 rods and 23 links,
t h~nce sou th 88 rods to south
l in e of seld se ction . lhen'e
w esl to the pla ce ot beg1nn 1ng ,
containing 38 1 2 acres , more or
less
Als o th e f oll o w 1ng real
es tate sil uated In the town
sh ip . county and sl at e abov e
menlloned . and 1n Frac llon A ,
Sec lion H , Town 3, Range 11 ,

Lol 166 , Dh lo Compa ny 's

Purchase , and desc r ibed as
follows . Beglnnmg at a point

on lh esoufh llneo lso ld lol , sa
1 16rods west of the sout he11st

corner ot said 10 1. thence west
on soulh line of sa1d lot lo lhe
sout h east corner of l and
heretofore deeded to Thom as
Gor r ell by R . D . Mlddleswart ,
I hence north to said Gorr ell 's
northeast cor n er . thence east
toe po in t 58 1-16 rods west of
the east line ot said iol , thence
south to the place of b eg inning
and cont a ining 3 acres . more

1/!

IUS .

Also the f o ll ow i ng r ea l
estat e sltuat ed 1n 1he town
sh 1p , county , state and
tracllon , se c tion , tow n , range
and lot above mentioned , and
In Ohio Company ' s Pur chase.
and described as follows
Beginning at a point on lh e
soul h line of sa id Lot 166, H

BLIND ADS

to 5 00 p m
to 12 oo Noon

m

f:mplovmenl Wanted

- - --------- ·- ----1.

Wanted

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

-------------Help Wanled

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

for Rent

Modd leswart and wife ond
recorded December 24, 189&lt; In
Deed Book 76 , Pages 585 on d
lli
Also the fo ll owing reol

estl!llt slluated In the tow n
shi p, county and sla te above
men tio ned . and bounded as
fOllows
Beg i nnin g at lhe
sou th east corner of Lot 166 ;
t h ence west to Thomas
Gorre ll ' s e1nt l ine . thence
nor1h with sai d Thomas
Gorre l l' s east line to a line
running west from Hen derson
Price's northwest corner .
thence eas110 sa1d Henderson
Price ' s northwest corne r .
thence south a long 11ne of sa id
LQ t 166 to the p la ce of
beginning Being In Section 1.4,
Range 11 , Town 3, and being a
part of Fract1on A , and con
talnl ng 24 acres . more or less .
Al so the toll ow ing descrtbed
real es tate situated m lhe
Township of Leban on , County
of Meigs and State of Ohio,
being In Section lJ, Town 3,
Range 11 , L.ol l66 , of the Ohio
Company ' s Purc ha se , and
more f ully described as
follow s Commen cing alA H
Pr ice ' s and R w Connell ' s
sou th east co r ner , running .
west 10 feet i t~ence northeast
20 feet to the north and soulh
line of R . w Conn ell 's tarm ;
th~ n ce south 10 feet to th e
piece of beg inning , conta ining
one rod of ground . more or
tess . The same to be an outle1
between two parcels of land
owned bY the sa id Thomas
Gorrell
Also I he foltowlno d escrtbed
real estate , situated ln the
Townsh ip , County and Stale
above
menl i oned .
and
bounded and descri bed as
follows Be ing In Lois 1~2 and
HJ , sec tions 1A and 15, Town J.
Range 11. of I he Oh lo Com
pany' s Pur c hase Begmn lng
at R1chard HaddoJC, ' s sou th •
wesl co rner , then ce north
abOut 7 rod s, !hence west to
John w Haddu ' s corner ,
Ihen ce soulh with road abOut 7
ro ds th en ce to lhe place of
b eglnnmg , conta in ing 2 acres ,
more or less
You are "eQul red to answer
w ithin 28 dl!lys after the last
publ ication o f noti ce, whi ch
w ilt be pu blishe d onc e each
week for six succ essi v e we eks ,
beginning Thur sdav . October
16, 1975 Th e l asl publication
w l ll~e made on Npvemb er 20,

1975 DATSUN B 210 Hat ch
back w1th a1r cond 1t1onlng,
elec clotk, rea r wmdow
shade. rad1 al ttr es , also 4
ta ctorv ttres and 2 sn ow
t.r es $3 490 Call 992 3453

II 18 61p

1971 DODGE PI CkUp , 1 1 ton.
V a eng 1ne ~ ul o ma i i C , good
runn1ng cond1 t 1on S800
Phon e (614 ) 247 2161
11 1.11 8tp
1971 CHEVY P1ck up Wilh 8 ft
cam per Phone (614) 667
6227
11 u 61 c

GIVE YOUR: Wile a Christmas
present th•s year of oreat
en1oymen t A new Bi Level
home, bath &amp; 1 1 , 3 or 4
bedrms , two ca r garag e
and acre of ground located
on the Wildwood estates at
Fl atwoods 6 miles from
Pom eroy , Oh10 Se ll1ng a t
GeOrge 5
cost p r ic e
Hobsle tt er , Owner , Bo)( 101 ,
Pomeroy Oh10 Pl'1one (614)

985 4166

Cheve!le

4169

and

FOR SALE by Owner 1' 11
story small frame house 11
Tuppers Plll tn S, Oh10 on Rl
7, .11 b edr m
llv 1ng rm ,
k1 tch en , bath , util ity room , 2
por ches Elec
ba seboa rd
heat , sto r m door and wm
dows, well msulat ed Ap
pro iC 2 acre lo t Sl2 ,500
11 16 61p

1971

Phone j61.4) 985

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

11146tC

1972 CHEVY Capr. ce 4 dr 400
Sport Sedan, 2 barrel. all
tinted g1ass , 1111 steermg ,
a c and power w1ndows
S2,J50 At so. 1971 Oldsmob ile
De lla 88 4 dr 350 2 barrel,
low mileage , like new
52,100 Phon e 949 2051

______ _____

---

._~..

TINGLEY

p Is

e

-------- ------Mobile Homes For Sale
992 3388

11 16 6tc

For Rent

A tho ht f r the day·
ug
0
·
Scottish writer Thomas
Carlyle said, "Music is well
said to be the speec hof

angels."

12dS TRAILER smo~~ l l co t
tao e. sui I able for 1 or 2 men .
Ro ush Lane, Ches hi re.
Ohio , 3 bedroom trailer ,
Clift on , w Va Construction
wo r kers preferred Cal l 304
113 5873
11 20 6tc
3 RM and bath tu rn lsl'led,
house , 11duils only Phone

991 5535

11 20 tfc

For Salt

19 71

KAWASAKI

750 ,

motorcycle and Honaa 50
Mini bike
1n
e)(cellenl
cond1llon
Phone 992 3191
11 19 Jtc

WARM

MORNING

gas

heater, 12,000 BTU auto
te mpera tu re controls , S125.
Dorothy Young at Young 's
Market or ca ll 992 7229

11 20 3tc

NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE
T he follow ing descri bed
Items w111 be offered ' for
public s11le 10 the h 1ghes t
b1dder on the premises of
the C1ty Loa n &amp; Savings
Company, Pomeroy , Ohio,
on the 1st day of Dece mber ,
197 5, at 9 o 'c lock AM . 1
Zenith 19 " co lor TV Terms
of Sa le cash Item s may be
sold In units or In pl!lrcel s
Seiler reserv es the right to
reject any and all bids

&lt; RM fvr nished a pt , adults
onl y Phone 992 5908 before 2
11 18 31c
pm
II 2 lie EARLY American liv ing rm
3 BEDRM par tl y turnls.,ed ,
basement , new fu rna ce apd
wa ter heater. propane gas ,
on Co Rd 28, SlOO per
monlh and $100 depos1 t
referen ce requested Phon e

lni'·&amp;t

"What om I and the garbage
di&gt;potol you got In the W&lt;rot

The Meigs Coun ty Com
mi!sloners will hold l! publ tc
hear1ng November 25, et 9:00
am In the Comm issioner 's
office in tt~e Courthouse . Th is
will be the second hearmg on
the proposed appllcat1on of a
Tille I Community Develop
ment Block Grant Ci tizen
participation IS requested

II II lie

11183tp

7 RM HOUSE In Syracuse ,
Ohio Basement. garage .
r eal nice home . musl have
re ferences lllnteres1ed . Call
day (614 ) .U6.7699 , evening s,
(6141 446 9539 .

11 5 lfc

'T RA ILE R: spa ce fo r rent All
ut11it1eS Ph one 992 5535
9 16 ftc
""=··

-

TRAILER: space In Rutland
Phone 742 2397

II 18 61c

(111 20, IIC
FUR NI SHED 2 bedrm co t
tage . Rock Sprmos . Ad ults
only Very nice PI)'One 992

2789

iolll l 6, 13, 20 , 61c

lpm

7&lt;2 2856

5 GA ITED Pal amino sta ll ion

Phone 992 7094

11 18 41&lt;

POTATOEStorsaie50and 100
lb
bag1
Across from
Shamrock in Henderson, w
Va Donald Walhu. Rl 35,
H,enderson , w Va

II 1816tc

11 167tc

HAVE shotgun shel ls,
shells , c1ean1ng ac
cessories, hun t 1ng clothes,
boots , blacK powder guns
and accessories , reloadmg
matertals , scopes, mounts,
knives , sl eep ing bags, boa t
jackets
and
cush1ons,
holsters. belts, r1fle strap s
and mu c h ~~ much mor e a t
Indian Joe •s Spor ts and
r~fle

10 l7 301C

10" Boot.

Walnut

fib erg lass. boat, shallow
well pump , hose and che&lt;k
valve New 11 fl . truck
Arrow camper Phore 742

CUSTOM Homes , no down
payment. VA Loan s, FHA As low a s 3 per ce nt down
Yo ur plan s or ours Call or
wnte, Shepard Contracting ,
Box 28A , Rutl and , 45775
Phone 742 24 09
10 31 26tc

changer, Balan ce 5101 80 or
lerms Call 992 3965

II 20 lie

Real Estate For Sale

---------.-----'---

-------or--------

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

AIRCO weld1ng mach•ne,
new elec all accessories
ineluded
Phone 992 3,.10

10 28 lie

-· -· ------------

1973 TR UCK , I ton Ford , F.
350. Heavv duty LWB ex
cellent condition Call 304

113 5308 after 5 p m

3

E.

'

__

M ~ C H-1 N E ,
Shop.

e furnace repair. Phone

992 5858

9 18 "'
D fREE Tr imming , 20

part
&amp; Use too

much type

7- Cruces

• Bemice Bide Oaol

f.--t-f-f-+--1f-+-i
b-++-f---jf-t-

2 Card

® OH , WINNI~Tier
SOGOOD IU
HAVE YOU BACK

UP THE WALK NOW. .

DUPED!$UCI(EI(Ef)

AND HE LOOK5 ....., ...._

MADDER THAN
A WET HeN!

IN/!/

Herman Grate

mob l·le hOm e,

panelling, wall to wall
ca rpeting , oarade , ut ility
building, 3 &amp; &lt; I~ acre lot ,
Rutland St M iddle port

LISTEN TO

11·18 6tc

----------"\"--TWO lots In th e coun/ry , 105 x

''Great Country Stereo"

105 &lt;eachJ. Tuppe s Plains
water. near Meig s High
School. S2,500 each 1 One Jot
Is set up for rnoblle home
Mobile
home
sold

separately Phone 992 7060
)l .t8 .6t c

WITH
JIM WILLIAMS

A TREE

Weekdays 10:00 A.M. to 2:00 A.M.

--- ------ ----I

EVER' TIME MAW
GIT6 HOPPIN ' MAD
SHE GOES OUT
AN' CHOPS DOWN

ON
WMPO
FM STEREO 92
•
'

•

•• HER AN' HER
DAD8URN

-...L.-1-...L"'::':!

One letter simply stands for another In thtS sample A "
used for the three L's, X for th e 1wo O's, etc Stn gle )etters,
apoatrophes, the length and form,,lion of th e words ore all
hinll. Each day the code tellers are dtiTeront
CXNM

CR.VPTOQUOTES
FQJQN NQZMMU

ZG

HQMM

z

GAQZPGLXB,

ZG

GLQ

KYQG

YF

MYYWG
RYZNK

Tod ay you 11 b e very sure oi
your Ideas and 1deals Your
emot10n s are strong 1n defense
of what you bel1eve b ul you II
not be unreason 1ng aboul 11
a !ouch of gemus mvolvlng meten a l thmgs today II
som el hmg come s your way
you II know how lo I urn 11 to
your advantage

CANCER (June 21·JUIJ 22)
l eadership Is your str ang su1t
loday II fnends pr ove lobe tn·
decisive don't hes1tate to call
lh e shots

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) There's
been a Ihorn In your side talely
Today IS the day whe n tho
perfect opening w111 present
Itself to ellmlna le !he problem
completely

VIAQQ (Aug. 23·Stpt. 22)

z

Avo1d the mundane crowd M!)(
with eMclllng and unusual peo·

UZDLA . -ZF XAZ
MYYG
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: YOU'VE HEARD OF THE THREE
AGES OF MAN - YOUTH, AGE, AND "YOU ARE LOOKING
WONDERFUL." - FRANCIS CARDINAL SPELLMAN

doldrum s and enliven your
crea.t1ve tmagtnatlon

YN

QJQF

(C) U7~ Kina Ft1turt1 Syndlu.tt, lnc.)

HEI(! THE~E'S A BUNCH
KIDS ON Af'LAI(6fDUND!

earn1ngs Don t overlook new
techmques - nothing ven ·
l ured noth 1ng accomplished

SCORPIO (Oc1. 24 · NaY. 22) II
would be a mistake to
challenge vou today on a subJect you know well and feel
strongly aboul Your retorts are
razor sharp and accurate.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·0oc.

You'll feel very protective of 21) Friends who are ca ught 1n a
!hose under your cere today ' rut shou ld look to you for inYou will go Ia unusual lengths splrBIIOn today You can show
Ia safeguard them
them how to get oil dead
~
TAURUS (April 20·MIJ 20) cenler

GEMINI (May 21 -Juno 201 You

TIMBER

TANTRUMS

F..- MdaJ, Nov. 21, 1975
ARIES (March 21·Aprll t9)

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

DAILY CRYPTO(WOTE - Here'• how to work It :
AXVDLBAAXR.
Is LONGFEI. LOW

... z

Mason, W.Va.

•+-1--t-i

iii

Ii"'+-1--t-i

game
3 WhoUy
4 Express
assent

0'\LM DOWN,

8 ·00-Country &amp; Western U S.A. Ic)
9 GO-Stagecoach West
10 :oo-Burke's Law

6-+-+-

~ -

10.31 16tc

CHANNEL s.Frlday.
1·oo-Wrestllng

AstroGrapM

·~~~~i!or~~--~--:-:--T----,----7i:Ni:it;i;~~:LI t2 (3Mount
wds.&gt;
f3 Countess'
counterpart
II Tonguelaslling
15 ThreHpot
DOWN
I One of the
Wednesdays

6 00-Columbus Today 4; Sunrise Semester 10.
6: 15-Folk Literature 3.
6·25-Farm Reparl 13
6:Jo-New Zoo Revue 4, News 6; Bible Answers 8;
Farmtlme 10; Blue Ridge Quartet 13.
6·4Q-{)unce of Prevention 10
6:45-Morn lng Report 3.
6:55-Chuck While Reports 10, News 13.
7·oo-Today 3,4,15; Good Morning, America 6,13 ; CBS
News 8; Bugs Bunny &amp; Friends 10.
.
7.3D-Schoolles 10
8:oo-Lucy Show 6; Capt Kangaroo 8, 10. Sesame St.
33.
8 JD-Big Valley 6.
9.0G-A M 3; Phil Donahue 4,15; Lucy Show 8; Mike
Douglas 10; Morning with D J 13.
9:»---Nol For Women On ly 3; One Life to Live 6; Give·
N·Take 8; New Zoo Revue 13
10 00-Celebrlty Sweepstakes 4,15: Dinah 6; Price Is
Right 8, 10, Mike Douglas 13
IO :JD-Wheel of Fortune 3,4,15.
n ·oo-High Rollers 3,15; I Dream of Jeannie 4,
Gomblt 8,10
11 ·3Q-Hollywood Squares 3, 15; Happy Days 13,
Midday 4; Love of Llle8, 10; Sesame St. 20,33.
11 :55-Take Kerr 8; Dan !mel's World 10.
12 oo-Magnlflcent Marble Machine 3,15; Showofts 13;
Bob Braun's 50.50 Club 4; News 6,8, 10.
t2 ·3D-3 for The Money 3,15, All My Children 6,13;
Search for tomorrow 8,1 0
12·45-Eiec. Co. 33.
i2 55-BNBC News 3, IS
1:GO-News 3; Ryan's Hope 6,13, Phil Donahue 8;
Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not For Women Only IS
1 3D-Days of Our Llves3,4, 15; Let's Make a Deal6,13;
As The World Turns 8,10
1:()0-$10,000 Pyramid 6,13; Guiding Light 8,10.
2: »--Doctors 3,4,15; Rhyme &amp; Reason 6,13 ; !;dge of
Night 8,10
3 GO-Another World 3,4, 15; General Hospital 6,13;
Match Game 8.10; Say Brother 20.
3 ~e Life to Live 13; Ma&lt; B Nlmble6; Tatlletales
8, 10; Black Perspective on the News 20.
4 GO-Mister Cartoon 3; MA!rv Griffin 4; Somerset 15;
Mickey Mouse Club 6,8; Mister Rogers 20,33 ,
Movie " Saratoga" 10; Dinah 13
4: »-Bewitched J; Mod Squad 6; Partr idge Family 8;
Sesame St 20,33; Get Smart 15.
s .oo-Bonannza 3, Family Affair 8; Star Trek 15.
5:»--Adam·12 4; News 6, Beverly Hillbillies 8; Elec.
Co. 20.33 ; Adam 12 13.
6 oo-News 3,4,8,t0,13,15 , ABC News 6; Hodgepodge
Lodge 20.
6:3D-NBC News 3,4,15; ABC News 13, Andy Grltllth 6;
CBS News 8,10; Two-Way Street 20
7 oo-Truth or Cons . J ; To Tell the Truth 4; Bowling for
Dollors 6; Lawrence Welk 8; Aviation Weather 33;
News 10; Adams Screen Test 13, Family Affair 15;
Ohio Journal 20 .
7 »--Porter Wagoner J ; Bobby VInton 4; Candid
Camera 6, Evening Edition with Martin Agronsky
20, $2S,OOO Pyramid 10; To Tell the Truth 13; Pop
Goes the Country 15, Black Perspective on the
News 33.
8·GO-Sanford &amp; Son 3,4,1S; Barbary Coast 6,13; Dr .
Seuss 8; Washington Week In Review 20,33; Archie
Griffin 10.
8 30-Chlco &amp; the Man 3,4, IS ; MASH 8,10; Woll Street
Week 20,33
9.oo-Rockford Flies 3,4,1S; Movie "Murder on Flight
502" 6,13; Hawaii Flve.O 8, 10; Firing Line 20;
Masterpiece Theatre 33.
10 GO-Pollee Story 3,4, 15; Barnaby Jones 8, 10; News
20, Paul Nuchlms 33.
10 3D-Aviation Wealher 20.
11 GO-News 3,4,6,8,10,13, 1S; ABC News 33
11 »-Johnny Carson 3,4.1S; Wide World . Special
" JFK-A Time to Remember" 13; Sammy &amp;
Company 6, Movie "The Trouble with Girls" 8;
Movie " Hush .. . Hush , Sweet Charlotle" 10; Janakl
33.
I :GO-Midnight Special 3,4,15; Wide World Special 6 ;
Movie " Return of the Fly" 10; News 13
2:»---Movle " Now You See It, Now You Don'r' 4
4 30-Movle""See How They Run" 4

t;;-+-+-1r-

Sol~ !!'l

773-5592

sto~p~(~a~bbr~.J...,~~~rl

,.

lust'

9·23 ·1fC

Yestercllty's Answer
22 " West Side 33 S. Air. fox
Story" role 34 Negative
23 - de foie 35 Yale man
gras
3i Man (Lat.)
24 Erstwhile 37 AdoH's
Russian
mate
ruler
38 Still
25 Shanty
39 Patriotic org.
27 Asked for 40 Anger
31 Subway
41 District of

1::-+-++-

Optimist's
motto

BEAUT I FY your home with
Perma Stone New homes
as we ll as re modeling work
Exp ert Insta lla t ion
Free
esllmal es Phone 142 2409

FRIDAY UNTIL 8 PM

_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _J_ _ _ _

Phone 992 38&lt;3

5 Window

30 Demolished
31 Body fluids
'-::"""."!~~N IJI!Ir.~"" Mom's ad,..
monition

WE SPE CIALIZE In mobile

IO.I5 1fc

ACROSS
I One of the
Kings
5 Well-be·
haved
11 Kind of

port

3 29 ti,

years u peri ence . In sured,
fl"ee estimates Call 992 3057
or (1) 661 304 1, Co olville .

N Y 10019)

1e

POQ'Ieroy Autnoti.zed's•ne-er
We
Sal es and Ser vice
sh arp en Scissor s
'

&amp;

a t Br~dge ," c l o fh• s
newspaper. P 0 Box 489,
Rad1o Crty Stat•on, tve w York,

8 Japanese
statesman
12 Incarnation 9 Playing
of Vishnu
marble
13 Stand fast
10 Sea eagle
(3 wds.)
14 Cockney's
15 Apiece
expectation
II Love's op.
Medieval
_,----~
posite
merchant
11 Discard
guild (Var. )
Zf Domesticate
17 Gather
25 Montana
18 Arikara
city
abode
2&amp; Cheer up
20 Almost there
(4 wds.)
21 Submit for
Z8 Affirm
settlement
Z9 French

Repa 1rs . serv 1ce, a ll makes

D

(For a copy of JACOBY
MODERN, send $1 to "Wm

flight

Build an all steel building at
Pole Barn prices? Golden
G1ant A ll -Stee l Buildings .
Rt" 4, Bo)( 148, waverty ,
Ohio Phone 9b7 2296
1 24 1fc

ho~

An Alabama reader wants
to know bow th e tmposstble
slam made m a recent article
The contract was s1x spades
Sou th had lost a lnck and led
the queen of spades from
Q 9 8 5 toward dummy ' s
A 7 6 4 3 West got brtlhant,
played th e deuce from king·
deuce and there 1t was The
gremlins had cui a few words
out of the arttcle

by

BAt:KHOES

F~ brlc

~~~~

~~THOMAS JOSEPH

BRONSON
l'oOULD LIKE
ONE IF WE
CAN Gn IT!

Mon., Tues., Wed . &amp; Sat.-8:301115:00
THURSDAY TIL 12 NOON

Take over payments S
BASSETT twin bed bedrm .
rooms and bath , good· well.
2761
su lle and single beds ,
and 2 acres of gro und.
11183tp
drfsser s, and double bedrm .
Phone 8&lt;3 2292
su 11 s Refrigerators , and
11 18·121&lt;
VANITY dresser and m lrror ,•
black ar\d white telev is ion
·I
record
cab1 net :
1968
set
Phone (6 1.til 667 6361 38
ACRES, 2 houses. 2
Monterey M ercury , p s .
_,
.._
II 16-6tp
garages , barn , drilled well,
pow er d1SC brakes , factory
overlook i ng Ohio R iver
air conditio nmg Phone 742 RABBIT dog and , ducks
Pr 1ce d for quick sale Phone
152&lt;
Phone 7&lt;2 2185
1411241
I
11 18 3tc
11 -128t c
II 19 4tp

_ ____

ALLEY OOP

w oiiLifv6-u - 8E"Li evE?

992 2284 The

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

Greed IS a ternble tbm g."
remarked East as he watched
htS opponents chalk up that
doubled slam
"South could always make
11." remarked West halfhea rtedly
After West's double and ht s
ftrst look at dummy South
dec;ded thai the double could
only be based· on both ma)orsmt ktngs In that case the
!messes were sure lo lose and
the normal play of takmg

Ill-· WELL , WMA'I DO
1111111( Of 'lOUR """·

11 712tc

S E W I NG

Pass

I NT
4t
5•
Pa s!;

Hy Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

STORE HOURS

-·- ... ·----~·------

_ __ _

otl, HEllO, Ottl.TY ~E ­
GO AHEPD! &amp;TAR£. I'M
U!II'O TO 11f11«1 STARED

OlD '10U 6AY WE'!Ui
EXPECTED '1t) !SET
A UV1 SI'ICtMIH
OF 1}115 FLYING
LIZARt&gt;7/

IA

Souch

those two !messes would lead
to defeat
Then South saw a way to end
pl ay West, tf he held exactly
two trumps and at least three
clubs and three d1amonds
He took h1 s que e n of
dtamonds, ace of hearts and
queen of clubs Then he led a
club to dummy's kmg and
cashed th e ace-ktng of
dtamonds and kmg of clubs
Now he led and ruffed the last
club
West saw that tl was
hopeless to overruff and dt s·
carded a dtamond whereupon
South stmply threw htm m
wtth the kmg of trumps He
was ca ught m the same end
play

Openmg lead - .I t

AMNII£- NO

MASON FURNITURE

II 16 If HOU SE for sale In Porlland

"'. ··------------

LITT-LIE

Dbl

7583

POMEROY - 1 BR, balh,
full basemen! has I BR, TV
room, utility workshop .
Large yard. S9,500.
MIDDLEPORT E&lt; ·
cellent cond., 2 BR. bath ,
carpeted , paneled, fu ll
basement, carport, FA· N
gas heal. 513,000
POMEROY - 200 It
fronta ge, for home or
trailer , waler available,
originally has 1 houses.
$3,000
.
RUTLAND - 2 BR , bath,
carpeting,
paneling,
porches, garage, good
condition . $9,500.
DEXTER - 151 acres,
large house. water system,
barn &amp; other bldgs $38,000
POMEROY - 7'1&gt; acres . 4
BR , bat h, co rpeflng ,
paneling, hot waler heat,
basement, storage SIS,OOO.
PHONE 992·22S9

St, Ru tl an d Phone J42 1JJJ9
after .t1 p m or see Milo B
Hutchison .

3 BEDRM

U'I'I'LE ORPHAN ANNlli

5 •• !:'

prese nt one remodeled , or
you are in need of a n ew
root. Call " Roush Con
str uction " Greg Roush , 992

I I I J lfc

BEDRM
home ,
fin ish ed , remodeling ,

"

dlt&gt;

6 kOOM House wilh ba th ,
garage, basement , bullt .in
porch, 1 1 ,1cre, Hobson

Phone 992 7733

0

Pass
Pa ss
Pa ss

AND DOZER . LARGE AND
SMALL SEPTIC TA NKS
IN S TALLED
BILL
PULLINS , PHONE 992 2478,
DAY OR NIGH T
111178tp

Sl/,000.

MAIN
POM.E.ROY.O

Nort h F..ast

\\ es1

new home or have your

II 6 261C

11196tc
10 6 ttc

EXLAVA l iNG ,

• 714 J
4o10 K!i ..

"' Q 2

------.-------I F y uv
1nter es tea In a

'

--------

NOW- se111ng F ul ler Brush
, Produc ts
Phon e 992 3410

s·EPT I C TANKS cleane~
Modern San1 taf 10 n 99'2 3904
or 99 2 7349
9 18 tk

• 71

North South vulnerable

BRAD FOR U, AUCtioneer.
Phone
Comp lete Service
949 2487 or 949 2000 Racine.
01'110, Cr.ll Bradford
10 9 ttc

delt.Yered right 10 vour
pro1e ctt. Fast and easy Free
estimates Phone 992 3284,
Goegleln Ready Mix Co ,
~ 1 ddleport . Oh 10,.
6 30 ttc

t:AST
• 7 54

SOUTH
• AQJ86
• AQIOH4
tQ

---- ---- --- '
~EADY Ml)1 CO NCRE TE

I

s

cw.

EXCAVAT lNG' dOz.!!;r . loade r
and backhoe wotk . sepl1c
tanks 1nstalled . dump
tru cks Zlnd lo boys for hi re
wil l haul 1111 d.rl, top soil,
limestone an d gravel.; Ca ll
Bob or Roger J effer~. day'1
pl'1one (19 2 7089, nig ht phone
992 352 5 or 992 5232
2 11 tfc

M

Phon e • - - - - - - - - - 11 20 3tC SW INGIN G baby cradle , new
un finished , while ptne
tllanler
c lock ,
so l id
GARAGE Sale, Thursda y and
mahogan y Gail Miller .
Frida y , 9 am tl lf
p m
Ph one 992 3196.
11 19 4tc
New afghan , Two F78 14
-----tires and rtms Also , Fu ller
bru sh products a t sale
pnces Other mise llem s
F rom 9 a m till s p m
Ho lstei n
res1dence , 3 BEDRM , large kllchen ,
Syracus e, Ohio .
liv ing rm•. din ing rm , J1 1
11 1a 2tc
bath , d iSp osal , cen tra l air ,
central
heat,
water ,
GA RAGE Sa le, Friday and
purtflcatloh system, fully
So turday, 3 miles oul 124
carpeted, w ir ed throughout
towards Ru tl and AntiQues,
for T v
and t ele pl'1on e
furn it ure , clothing of all
Vinyl sidmg , double g lass
kinds
windows , excess s torage
11 20 lie
space in close ts and 11 &gt;&lt; 11
meta l lawn buildin g One of
YAR D SA LE , .Thurs day and
M idd leport 's better homes
F r1day , furniture, c lothes
Call 992 311'1 between 2 15
and mise , 12 1111 ,. p m
and 4 p m tor appointmen t
Thursday and 10 till 4 p m
11 2() 6tc
Fr iday M D Mtlle(, cor ner
of Wolf Pen Road and Rout e
143 Phone 9917760
HOU SE for sale in Portland ,
11 20 .11c take over paym ents, 5 rms
and balh , goOd well o~~ n d 2
acres of g r ound Phon e 8.43
2 F.4.M ILY Yard Sele, Frtday
2292
and Sa turday, 10 a m till 5
II 1712tc
p m Antique oak china
cabinet, c hesl of drawers.
col. pi c tures , d esk, old l BR HOME , , Ius I lln lshed
dishes clothing, Christmas
remod e li ng
Salem St ,
Rutlan d Phone 7.42 2306
deco r at •ons. aluminum tree.
aft er 4 p m or see Milo B
old oak doll cabine1 , sofa. 2
Hutchinson
cherry end ll!lbles and olher
10 9 tfc
mis e
Items
Wisecup
res idence. 109 Un 1on Ave .
HOUSE on Lincoln Heights. 2
Pomeroy
bedrm, large kitc hen . full
11 20 31c
basement, nice ba ck ya rd ,
only S8 .900 W1th new fur
HOG S ready to but cher Also ,
n 1ture , onlY $10.300 Phon e
beef and da iry canle Ca ll
992 76 48

\olD, 1 \).Q.)'T 6\~E: 'iCJJ A R~. 8UT IF '/OUtL- APf't..'{
FOR "' JOB I)JITH
~ITIOO I I'U- FURtJISI-l
'IOU WITH ~ EU8U..8!JT REF~~ !

-----.--·

ki1chen , gas fu rnace and

cond1tlon
S15lerpa.r
985 3824. ,Ches

9492115

Swee per s, toasters irons ,
all sma ll appl1 anc es Lawn
mower, nex l l o Stal e Hlgl'lWay Garage on Route 1'
Phone 985 382 5
4 16-ttC""

with

sale. Second septic tank .
All lor On Iy S8500.
26 ACRES - Of rolling
land . Good 6 Rm house,
bath, barn &amp; other
buildings . $26,000.
MIDDLEPORT
3
bedrooms, dining , nice

POMEROY LANDMARK
....~ock W. Cat'My, Mgr .
Phol\e fn·211t

TWO SNOW ttres, 700 13, good

II f:sT
• K 10 2
¥ K5
tJ 109M2
• J 96

BORNWSER

El.W-DDP BOWERS REPAI'I&lt;

C

basem~nt

t A K ti
o!o AK7 J

II 16 lfc

Console .

AM F M radio , 4 speed

WATER HEATER, 52 gallon ,

___ __ _

Real Estate for Sale

full

• •J 9 62

O ' DELL A l1 nement tocaled
behmd
Rutland
Grad e
Sc hool Tuneup , brakes ,
w heel balan c 1ng , a l1 nement
Phone 7.112 2004

improved pastures, 8 room

DON ' T
merely
br.ghten
carpets
Blue Lustr e Deep Iough tread
Knee High
them
no raptd resotllng Exclus1ve
Rent shampooer, Nel son's bullon cfosure Deep Iough
Drug Store
!read Exclus1ve
II 20 6Jc
bulton closure
M ODE RN

- -.:t .10.1mo

20

• 93

Phone 742-2331
Roger Wamsley .Rutllnd
10·15 1 mo.

Ph. 992·3993

tra iler

South finds end to play

R&amp;J COINS

Syracuse, Ohio

On e

WIN AT BRIDGE
NORTII illl

Appraisal service on
estates and collectlans.

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 197S

~Longstreet ~;_N~~ 1 ~.

Buy, Sell or Trade

LARRY LAVENDER·

acres

DON'T BE S ILLY! THEY'() 5 HOOT
THE' BLIMP FULL OF HOLES !.. JUST
GUN THE ~ N GI N E' AND GET U5
MOVING ON WHEELS Flg5T!

and Supplies

Blown tnlo Walls &amp; AHtcs
STORM
WINDOWS&amp; DOORS
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SIDING.SOFFITT
GUTTERS.AWNINGS

house, &amp; minerals S60.000,
TRAILER LAND - 3 95

CB 's, 308 Page St , M1d

1972 KAWASAK I 35 0 Bighorn
like ne w , electric . S60 GAS
trail bike: Ma ytag washer ;
CLOTHES DRYER , used ,
g1ri 'S green 10 spee d blk P. 4
$40 or best offer Phon e 992
SI'Jeed $Uper shlfler Eller
2081
brock 4 barrel Intake for 318
11137tc
Ouster , 2 8 inch Crag.tr
mags and 24" Cr1ger mags
on tires 1962 Pon ti ac Ph one ONE cow to freshen soon , One
250 gallon Un 1co bulk milk
992 2512 or 992 613&lt;
tank, 2 un ll De Lav al milkers
11 183tc
with vacuum pump All for
S475 Phone Arthur Spencer,
l9ilooo'GEc h;;;:ile-;:-s -e-:-A
161&lt;1 98S.3891
1 con d1lton . new m ot or and
11 ·16-llp
t r11nsrn Iss ion Phone 949
2417 Buhan

11.18 61p
-- ----;··._
II 18 Si c ONE J pt httch mower ; 12 ft

1975. and ' ~ 28 days fo r an
swer w ill ~o. ommence on that
date In case of your failur e. 3 AND 4 rm . furnished and
or otherw.se , to res pona as
unfurnished apts Phon e 992
required by the Ohio Rules of
5434
Clv1 1 Procedure , ju dgm ent by
11 -9 lfc
default will be rendered -- ---~----:-:::::::-=--- ·against you for lhe re11e f A v ,A ILA.BL E ~ 2 bedrm
all
demanded In the cl aim
electr i c modern ranch
located outside ~aclne Up
Larry Spencer
to 25 acres bolt om land
Cl erk of Co uris
ava d ab l e
References
Me 1g s County
requ i red Ca ll 992·5550 afl er
Common Pleas Court
( tO) 16, n .

11 18 31c

8&lt;3 2793 day or 949 2828 after

Ads having t9fll ght , dear?"

PUBLIC NOTICE

7&lt;2 1103

32.000 BTU Gas Heater with
fan and automattc controls
Excellent condition Phone

6p m

L

suite , 2 end tables. coffee
to~~bl e, George Grate, I'Jhone

WE

IT

OUT Tf\ROUGf\ THE! T,UNioJE;t.!

Coins, Cunency

Blown
Insulation Services

PHONE 992·3325
10 Mechani c
Pomeroy, 0
RUTLAND - 6 rms., 4 or 5
B.R s, bath, 2 car garage
and ga rden S12.000.
POMEROY - 6 Rms., 1'12
baths , hot water heat
Basement &amp; large yard
S20,IIIXI.
'
1S7 ACRES - Good fences,

For Sale

~

Bustness Phone : 992·5880
Restdence: 992-3313
11·18·1 mo.

FREE ESTIMATES

10:DO-Burke's Law

10 GO-Dean Martin 3,4,1S; Harry 0 6, 13; News 20
II. GO-News 3,4,6,8,1 0,13,1S; ABC News 33
II :3D-Johnny Carson 3,4, IS ; Mannix 13, FBI 6,
Cannon 8; Movie "Camille" 10; Janak! 33
12:»---Longslreet 13, Mannix 6.
I. oo-Tomorrow 3,4.

CAPI'AIN
.......EASY
WHE;W! ... AT LI!A5T WE' MAPE

Call today for
Service Tomorrow

Thursday on Channel Five:
•7 GO-Special Edition
7·»-Stagecoach West
8.»-Re&lt; Humbard (c)
9:»-Muslc Connection (cl

33; Movie "Hombre" 10
~

TEAFORD REALTY

1116 6tc

d leport

•

11 16 6tc

Phone 161 41 6676361

197 0 CAMARO

new

11·12 I mo.

1

Wanted To Buy

reasonable price would be
14x70 TRAILER . e)(
deemed a public enemy. A 197S
ce ll e.n l cond lt1on . es pe cia lly
special committee was
built for off1ces Low price
for (1Uick sa le Phone (304)
named to Inspect warehoUBes
675 1921 or 675 5619
rods and 12 links west of th e
10 30 lfc
sou th east corne r of sai d tot at ID see If there was any
a sto ne . thence west 14 rods hoarding of the scarce
an d 13 7· 11 links to a ston e ,
th ence norl h 88 rods , thence commodity.
east H rods an d lJ 7 11 links to
a stone ; thence south 88 rods
to l he pla ce of beginning.
contain ing 8 acres , and leming
land heretofore deeded lo
Thomas Gorrell by R c

3· bedroom
homes. Now under construction with carpet ,
ceramic tile, garage, large
lot. Buy now and pick your
colors FHA financing
available Price S21,SOO
Pbone : 667·6304

.

For Sale

Addlltonat 2Sc Cha rg e per
Adverllsement

tN MEMORY o f Madge Haley
Har t 's Used Cars, New Haven ,
who passed away 11 years
W Va Authori.zed R:oper
ago Nov 20, 1964
Dealer Tractors 8 10 13. 16
~(EMODELING
,
Plumbln~
,
Deep In our hearts lt es a
Hors e power Lawn mowers
heatmg and all types of
picture .
Idl er s saws Year end sa l e
general
r ep air
Work
More precious !han silver or
12" chain saw Reg $147 SO
guaranteed 20 years u
gold .
now S129 95 Hart's Used
per.ence
Phone 992 24 09
It's a picture of our dear loved
Car s Phon e 882 2793 New
S
I
tf'
Haven
mother .
Whose m emory wtl l nev er
1117 6t c
CARPE
NTR
Y
.
paneling,
--- ----~ --- ---grow old
floonng and ce iling Phone Harl ' s Used Ca rs
Your
992 2759,
C olumb1 a
B 1 ke
No one knows the hea r ta ches ,
10 21 30tc
Hea dquarters Full tme of
On l y those who have l ost can
B1cycles to choose from
te ll ,
Phone 882 2793 New Haven
Of the g ne t that 1s borne tn
11 17 61c
sil ence
For the one w e loved so well ;.As-H pa id for all makes ane Hart's Used Cars
Reddy
models of mobile hom es
Po rta b le Heaters
S1ze
Phone
area
code
614
423
So dearly lov ed and sadly
ranges 30,000 BTU to 150.000
9531
missed by the husband and
BTU Some vented Ther
4 13 ttc
children
mostals available with
11 20 ltc
healers 30,000 BTU Reg
$129 95 Sale S109 95 Phone
---------------882 2793 New Haven
11 17 6tc
~ofice
L ADY to c.c: ..... 2 days a weeK ,
r eferences Ph on e 949 2774
R: OOM and boa rd l or sen1or
Jtc
11 18
c1 llzens, very ni ce Phone - - - - - . . - - - - - - - - - 992 3509
apartment
10 12 tf c HE LP WANTED in M 1d ~ (I RNI S HED
adults on ly 1n Middleport
-------------dleport area . 2 hrs eac h
Phone 992 3874
SALE Thursday and Fr1day at
afte r noon Phon e 99 2 2776
3 25 He
Smalley ' s Gift Shop , odds
11201fc:
and ends less than 11 pr.c e
LARGE bu smess bu1ldmg m
11 19 2tc
Mason , large g lass front ,
-------------dnve m rear door s, Will rent
SKATE ·A WAY
ROLLER
' ' or all of ground fl oor , 3200
R IN K AN NOUNCES BUS ALL 1t ems m usl be old Old
sq uare feet. good locallon
SC HEDULE SATURDAY S
keys , matc h tobs. gun s.
Phon e (30.11 ) 882 3356 or 773
ONLY STARTING NOV
powder fla sks. powder
5611
14th
~AC IN E
6 dO
horns . bank , a nd toys , tin or
lllltfc
SYRACUSE 6 50 , MID
Iron , store llems
Ad
DLEPORT 7 15, Thanks
verllsing, etc Post ca rds ,
g iving Parly Nov 26 and 28
s11verware , sew ing Items . ~b UNT RY Mobile Hom e
OPE N WED, F RI , A N D
thimbles , e t c
Kn1ves.
Park. Rt 33 ten m1 !es north
SA TURDAY
7 30 10 oo
sm oking
p i p es ,
Of Pomeroy L arg e lot s w1th
p R 1VAT E
PART 1E s
phonograph s, music bo•es .
concret e pa11os , Si dewalks .'~
M oN , T u E S , T H U R S
paperweights, marbles , In k
runners a nd off s tr eet
EVE SAT AND SU ND AY
wells. bellies , 1'1at p i n s,
'par'klng "Phone 99 1 7479'
AFTERNOON S
PHON E
ca mpa1gn 1tem s, bells, oil
12.31 ttc
(614 ) 98 S 3929 or 90S 9996 or
lamps and lanterns. miners ,
98S 414 1
railroad. etc , clocks, dolls , FRE E RENT AT VILLAGE
11 9 12tc
old jewe lry . watches . rings.
' MAN OR
IN
MID
~--·---......._ ______ _ _
cha in s. etc
Steel tra ps.
DLEPORT! we are so sure
derbys , h i gh hals , eye
W tT HOUT- m-.,. perm 1SS !On .
I hat you will love 1our aparl
g luses , pollery jars , jugs .
ment s tha t we g1ve you two
th ere witt be no huhllng or
pew
ter
,
pictures
.
and
tr espassing on my property
week! RENT FREE Ju!t
frames
,
g
lass
,
d
ishes.
and
Bob McGraw , Meagan
pay your secur1ty deposit
c
hina
.
pla
)(es.
f
urniture
of
F arm , off l ow er Bowman ' s
and slay SIX monll'15 and lh e
all
types
money
and
coins.
f 1rst2w eeks Is free You Wi ll
Run
arrow heads , and Ind ian
1\ 4 76tc
entOY monthly leases. all
artifacts, p lus all Na.zl war
~leclnc
11v1ng, carpetmg,
Items . Phone 99 2 2050 be
range and retr 1geralor. fre e
tween 3 p m and 11 p m
tr ash pi ckup , ca bl e TV
Monday through Fnday
(opt ional) and laundry
1119 12t c
tacli1t1eS Conv enient to
IE
10 give away
shopping on Th.rd and M 1ll
COLL
pups
In M1ddleporl
VILLAGE
·1LD turndure, " Ice bo xes,
Phone 992 7022
2tc
11 19 _1
MANOR IS yours for one
brass beds , or complete
__ _. __________
bedroom
apartmen t s
households Wr i te M . ~
starting at 5104 monthly p lus
Mi ll er , Rt 4. Pomeroy ,
elec We pay for everylhmg
Oh io Coli 992 771\Q
DatellDe 1775
else See the Manager at
10 114
R1verside Apartments or
By United Press In·
ca ll 992 3273 Th1 s offer Will
tematiooal
end soon , so move in now
and ~ave SSSS
BALTIMORE, Md. , Nov. 197) NASHUA. I&lt; X 70 , 3
10 23 tfc
~ The local committee
bedrm .. 1' ' bat h , gas heat
Ta ke over pa yme nts Ph one
ruled that any merchant with

salt who refused to sell It for a

Five

Pomerov

Ph 992·2114

Intersection of Rt. l3 &amp; 7
Pomeroy

I

S2 00 tor SO word m ln1mu m
E5ch addlllonal word 3
ce nts

8 30 a m
Dcu ty , 8 JO a
Sat urc;tay

Sales and SeiYice

Tuppers Plains, Ohio

OFFICE HOURS

In Memory

D&amp;M ApplimM:e

MORLAN
Construction Co.

$1795

6 cy l std trans .• rad io, like new

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 20,1975
7:»-=-Hollywood Squares 3, Hollywood Squares 4;
State Lottery 6, Evening Edlllon with Marlin
Agronsky 20, Wild Kingdom 10, To Tell the Truth
13; Musi c City U.S.A. 1S
8:0G-McLean Stevenson 3,4,15; Barney Miller 6, 13;
Waltons 8,10, Romantic Rebe llion 33, Classic
Theatre 20
8 30-Qn The Rocks 6, q , Classic Theatre Preview 33.
9:oo-Famlly Theatre 3,4,1S; Streets of San Francisco
6,13; Movie " Hannie Caulder" 8, Classic Theatre

Business Services

2 SIGNS Pomeroy
OF

REGULATIONS

IKIIIIIIIJ
ve.. rnl•r'•

Auto Sales

WANT ADS

INFORMATION
.JEADLINES
S
PM
Day
Be fore
Publication
M onday Deadlme 9 a m
Canceliet 1on - Corrections
will be accepted unlll 9 a m
for Day of Pub li cat ion

pie today II wil l Gure yout
LIBRA (Sopt. 23-Qct. 23)
Devot e your energ ies today to
lh1ngs lhal will enhanc e your

1

ILl 6ET THE't''D LIKE
A 00610 P\.AI( WITH ...

CAPRICORN !Doc. 22-Jon.
19) You 're al you• basi loday II
you 're backed mto a corner
and have to come up with a
qu•ck. answer The lougher the
problem. !he better you 'll hke
II

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20· Fob. 1t)
M otivation to be th e leader Is
uppermost for you today You'll
go to elt\ra pa1ns to escape bew
1ng tdentif1ed as part or the
herd

PISCES (Fib. 20-Man:h 20)
Recharge your batteries today
You can make a few hours
seem like a brief vacation If you
do somethmg ollbeat In your •
spare t1me

~Your
VBirthday
Nov. 21, 1t7S
Vou II have a reawakened thirst
for knowledge lh1s coming
yea r The desire wlll be
tnggered by a personal drive
for sell -betterment. as well as
the Profit motive

FOR6ET IT... 11D

I'RO!lAllLY 6ET .¥»66£01

�1

~Wi~ill;.:,':,-:;~:;,::.:"For Fast Results Use The Sentinel Classifieds

11 - Thf&gt; l)aUy Sentinel, Middlepart-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Nov. 20, 1975
DICKJitAcy

I

Television log for easy viewing

Unscrambl• those !oor Jumbles,
o~e letter to each squart, to
form four ordmary words.

r:o

ITYBLUS
~
I I X]
~&gt;JNGRY

J

I

THE CHICKeN
FAVOgrTE
VEI5ETAESLE: .

Now arrance the drcled !etten
to form the aurpri~e antwer, u
auccuted by the above &lt;artoon.

(Auwen tomorrow)

)umbl~·

CHAMP FUDGE LIQUOR VERSUS

Annu!rl

)owed up

I

Tt1e Publisher reserves thf
nght lo edl l or re ject anv ad!
deemed objectional
The
pub l1 sher
will
not
be
responsib le tor more than one
mcorrec I Inser t ion

RATES

FA~ M E~'5

I I ()
1n

l

the Na1 y- SPUCEO

For Want Ad Service

5 cen ts per word one Inser ti on

Min1mum Charge $1 00
14 cen ts per word thr ee
conse cul 1ve insert 10ns
26 cen ts per word six co n
se cultve in serhons
25 Per Cent Dlscoun I on paid
ads and ads paid within 10
days

CA RD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY

....

-

otor Co.

QUALITY
1972 COMET! DR,
nice ca r w1th

W· W t ires, blue f1 nlsh ,

From the largest Truck or
Bulldo zer R:adlato r to the
smallest Heater Core

good economy

1911 MATADOR
$1395
4·door, local car, atr condlttoned, full equipment

Nathan Blg~s
Radiator Spec1alist

S129S
1970 NOVA V·8 CPE .
Blk . v1nyl roof, grey f1nlsh, good tires, automatic,
cower steering, radio.

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

NOTICE OF
PUBLICATlON
To
G eorg e Dee m , Jr,
wh ose l as t known reSidence
wa s Ee s l L i v erpooL Oh 10
439 20 r Fran klm O'Ne il, whose
lu i known r esidence was Ol d
Pitt sburgh Road , Ro chester .
Penn sylvl!n i a 15014
Hobert
Ice nhOwer , whose last known
re s1dence was 11 6 Pacolot
Dr iv e, Gaffney , S C 293.40,
W ll l l Bm I cenhower . whose
last known residenc e was R
F D , Wendy Dr.ve , Bailie,
Conn 06330 ; Jerry Icenhower ,
whose last known res1dence
wu 5430 Cloverly Avenu e.
Te mple City , Callfor n1a 91180 ,
Jo Ann Conar d . whose la st
known reSide n ce was Rou te 1,
Cro ton Ohio .tiJO l 3. Ma r y Jo
Mock , whose las t known
resid ence was 10 535 Rose
Avenue, Apt 17, Los Angeles .
C ,:~~li f ornla , and tl'1e un known

heirs and devisees of Martha

O' Neil , decei'lSt'd
You are h ereby not1t1ed that
you
hav e
been
named
defendan Is in a legal ac110n
ent it led Garne l E Johnson el
a l , pla lnll ff s , v s
Edna
Shroads , e l at , defendanls
This action has been ass igned
Case Number 15,687 , and Is
pending i n lhe Court of
Pleas ,
Me igs
c ommon
Counly , Pomeroy Ohio 45769
The object of the Comp la.nt IS
to parlillon the f oll owing
deUr lbed real estale , to W I!
Situate In L ebanon Town

Ship, Meig s County , Oh iO,
be•no B part of FractiOn A.
Sec lion 141 Town 3, Range 11 ,
Ohio Compan y 's Purchase.
bounded and described as
lo llo ws
Beg i nnin g at the
southwest corner of said
section , thence north on said
sec lion line 88 rods to a. ro ck
f rom wh iCh a chestnut oak 20
i n ches b ear s soulh 74 ' 1
degrees east 1512 teet , !hen ce
east 69 rods and 23 links,
t h~nce sou th 88 rods to south
l in e of seld se ction . lhen'e
w esl to the pla ce ot beg1nn 1ng ,
containing 38 1 2 acres , more or
less
Als o th e f oll o w 1ng real
es tate sil uated In the town
sh ip . county and sl at e abov e
menlloned . and 1n Frac llon A ,
Sec lion H , Town 3, Range 11 ,

Lol 166 , Dh lo Compa ny 's

Purchase , and desc r ibed as
follows . Beglnnmg at a point

on lh esoufh llneo lso ld lol , sa
1 16rods west of the sout he11st

corner ot said 10 1. thence west
on soulh line of sa1d lot lo lhe
sout h east corner of l and
heretofore deeded to Thom as
Gor r ell by R . D . Mlddleswart ,
I hence north to said Gorr ell 's
northeast cor n er . thence east
toe po in t 58 1-16 rods west of
the east line ot said iol , thence
south to the place of b eg inning
and cont a ining 3 acres . more

1/!

IUS .

Also the f o ll ow i ng r ea l
estat e sltuat ed 1n 1he town
sh 1p , county , state and
tracllon , se c tion , tow n , range
and lot above mentioned , and
In Ohio Company ' s Pur chase.
and described as follows
Beginning at a point on lh e
soul h line of sa id Lot 166, H

BLIND ADS

to 5 00 p m
to 12 oo Noon

m

f:mplovmenl Wanted

- - --------- ·- ----1.

Wanted

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

-------------Help Wanled

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

for Rent

Modd leswart and wife ond
recorded December 24, 189&lt; In
Deed Book 76 , Pages 585 on d
lli
Also the fo ll owing reol

estl!llt slluated In the tow n
shi p, county and sla te above
men tio ned . and bounded as
fOllows
Beg i nnin g at lhe
sou th east corner of Lot 166 ;
t h ence west to Thomas
Gorre ll ' s e1nt l ine . thence
nor1h with sai d Thomas
Gorre l l' s east line to a line
running west from Hen derson
Price's northwest corner .
thence eas110 sa1d Henderson
Price ' s northwest corne r .
thence south a long 11ne of sa id
LQ t 166 to the p la ce of
beginning Being In Section 1.4,
Range 11 , Town 3, and being a
part of Fract1on A , and con
talnl ng 24 acres . more or less .
Al so the toll ow ing descrtbed
real es tate situated m lhe
Township of Leban on , County
of Meigs and State of Ohio,
being In Section lJ, Town 3,
Range 11 , L.ol l66 , of the Ohio
Company ' s Purc ha se , and
more f ully described as
follow s Commen cing alA H
Pr ice ' s and R w Connell ' s
sou th east co r ner , running .
west 10 feet i t~ence northeast
20 feet to the north and soulh
line of R . w Conn ell 's tarm ;
th~ n ce south 10 feet to th e
piece of beg inning , conta ining
one rod of ground . more or
tess . The same to be an outle1
between two parcels of land
owned bY the sa id Thomas
Gorrell
Also I he foltowlno d escrtbed
real estate , situated ln the
Townsh ip , County and Stale
above
menl i oned .
and
bounded and descri bed as
follows Be ing In Lois 1~2 and
HJ , sec tions 1A and 15, Town J.
Range 11. of I he Oh lo Com
pany' s Pur c hase Begmn lng
at R1chard HaddoJC, ' s sou th •
wesl co rner , then ce north
abOut 7 rod s, !hence west to
John w Haddu ' s corner ,
Ihen ce soulh with road abOut 7
ro ds th en ce to lhe place of
b eglnnmg , conta in ing 2 acres ,
more or less
You are "eQul red to answer
w ithin 28 dl!lys after the last
publ ication o f noti ce, whi ch
w ilt be pu blishe d onc e each
week for six succ essi v e we eks ,
beginning Thur sdav . October
16, 1975 Th e l asl publication
w l ll~e made on Npvemb er 20,

1975 DATSUN B 210 Hat ch
back w1th a1r cond 1t1onlng,
elec clotk, rea r wmdow
shade. rad1 al ttr es , also 4
ta ctorv ttres and 2 sn ow
t.r es $3 490 Call 992 3453

II 18 61p

1971 DODGE PI CkUp , 1 1 ton.
V a eng 1ne ~ ul o ma i i C , good
runn1ng cond1 t 1on S800
Phon e (614 ) 247 2161
11 1.11 8tp
1971 CHEVY P1ck up Wilh 8 ft
cam per Phone (614) 667
6227
11 u 61 c

GIVE YOUR: Wile a Christmas
present th•s year of oreat
en1oymen t A new Bi Level
home, bath &amp; 1 1 , 3 or 4
bedrms , two ca r garag e
and acre of ground located
on the Wildwood estates at
Fl atwoods 6 miles from
Pom eroy , Oh10 Se ll1ng a t
GeOrge 5
cost p r ic e
Hobsle tt er , Owner , Bo)( 101 ,
Pomeroy Oh10 Pl'1one (614)

985 4166

Cheve!le

4169

and

FOR SALE by Owner 1' 11
story small frame house 11
Tuppers Plll tn S, Oh10 on Rl
7, .11 b edr m
llv 1ng rm ,
k1 tch en , bath , util ity room , 2
por ches Elec
ba seboa rd
heat , sto r m door and wm
dows, well msulat ed Ap
pro iC 2 acre lo t Sl2 ,500
11 16 61p

1971

Phone j61.4) 985

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

11146tC

1972 CHEVY Capr. ce 4 dr 400
Sport Sedan, 2 barrel. all
tinted g1ass , 1111 steermg ,
a c and power w1ndows
S2,J50 At so. 1971 Oldsmob ile
De lla 88 4 dr 350 2 barrel,
low mileage , like new
52,100 Phon e 949 2051

______ _____

---

._~..

TINGLEY

p Is

e

-------- ------Mobile Homes For Sale
992 3388

11 16 6tc

For Rent

A tho ht f r the day·
ug
0
·
Scottish writer Thomas
Carlyle said, "Music is well
said to be the speec hof

angels."

12dS TRAILER smo~~ l l co t
tao e. sui I able for 1 or 2 men .
Ro ush Lane, Ches hi re.
Ohio , 3 bedroom trailer ,
Clift on , w Va Construction
wo r kers preferred Cal l 304
113 5873
11 20 6tc
3 RM and bath tu rn lsl'led,
house , 11duils only Phone

991 5535

11 20 tfc

For Salt

19 71

KAWASAKI

750 ,

motorcycle and Honaa 50
Mini bike
1n
e)(cellenl
cond1llon
Phone 992 3191
11 19 Jtc

WARM

MORNING

gas

heater, 12,000 BTU auto
te mpera tu re controls , S125.
Dorothy Young at Young 's
Market or ca ll 992 7229

11 20 3tc

NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE
T he follow ing descri bed
Items w111 be offered ' for
public s11le 10 the h 1ghes t
b1dder on the premises of
the C1ty Loa n &amp; Savings
Company, Pomeroy , Ohio,
on the 1st day of Dece mber ,
197 5, at 9 o 'c lock AM . 1
Zenith 19 " co lor TV Terms
of Sa le cash Item s may be
sold In units or In pl!lrcel s
Seiler reserv es the right to
reject any and all bids

&lt; RM fvr nished a pt , adults
onl y Phone 992 5908 before 2
11 18 31c
pm
II 2 lie EARLY American liv ing rm
3 BEDRM par tl y turnls.,ed ,
basement , new fu rna ce apd
wa ter heater. propane gas ,
on Co Rd 28, SlOO per
monlh and $100 depos1 t
referen ce requested Phon e

lni'·&amp;t

"What om I and the garbage
di&gt;potol you got In the W&lt;rot

The Meigs Coun ty Com
mi!sloners will hold l! publ tc
hear1ng November 25, et 9:00
am In the Comm issioner 's
office in tt~e Courthouse . Th is
will be the second hearmg on
the proposed appllcat1on of a
Tille I Community Develop
ment Block Grant Ci tizen
participation IS requested

II II lie

11183tp

7 RM HOUSE In Syracuse ,
Ohio Basement. garage .
r eal nice home . musl have
re ferences lllnteres1ed . Call
day (614 ) .U6.7699 , evening s,
(6141 446 9539 .

11 5 lfc

'T RA ILE R: spa ce fo r rent All
ut11it1eS Ph one 992 5535
9 16 ftc
""=··

-

TRAILER: space In Rutland
Phone 742 2397

II 18 61c

(111 20, IIC
FUR NI SHED 2 bedrm co t
tage . Rock Sprmos . Ad ults
only Very nice PI)'One 992

2789

iolll l 6, 13, 20 , 61c

lpm

7&lt;2 2856

5 GA ITED Pal amino sta ll ion

Phone 992 7094

11 18 41&lt;

POTATOEStorsaie50and 100
lb
bag1
Across from
Shamrock in Henderson, w
Va Donald Walhu. Rl 35,
H,enderson , w Va

II 1816tc

11 167tc

HAVE shotgun shel ls,
shells , c1ean1ng ac
cessories, hun t 1ng clothes,
boots , blacK powder guns
and accessories , reloadmg
matertals , scopes, mounts,
knives , sl eep ing bags, boa t
jackets
and
cush1ons,
holsters. belts, r1fle strap s
and mu c h ~~ much mor e a t
Indian Joe •s Spor ts and
r~fle

10 l7 301C

10" Boot.

Walnut

fib erg lass. boat, shallow
well pump , hose and che&lt;k
valve New 11 fl . truck
Arrow camper Phore 742

CUSTOM Homes , no down
payment. VA Loan s, FHA As low a s 3 per ce nt down
Yo ur plan s or ours Call or
wnte, Shepard Contracting ,
Box 28A , Rutl and , 45775
Phone 742 24 09
10 31 26tc

changer, Balan ce 5101 80 or
lerms Call 992 3965

II 20 lie

Real Estate For Sale

---------.-----'---

-------or--------

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

AIRCO weld1ng mach•ne,
new elec all accessories
ineluded
Phone 992 3,.10

10 28 lie

-· -· ------------

1973 TR UCK , I ton Ford , F.
350. Heavv duty LWB ex
cellent condition Call 304

113 5308 after 5 p m

3

E.

'

__

M ~ C H-1 N E ,
Shop.

e furnace repair. Phone

992 5858

9 18 "'
D fREE Tr imming , 20

part
&amp; Use too

much type

7- Cruces

• Bemice Bide Oaol

f.--t-f-f-+--1f-+-i
b-++-f---jf-t-

2 Card

® OH , WINNI~Tier
SOGOOD IU
HAVE YOU BACK

UP THE WALK NOW. .

DUPED!$UCI(EI(Ef)

AND HE LOOK5 ....., ...._

MADDER THAN
A WET HeN!

IN/!/

Herman Grate

mob l·le hOm e,

panelling, wall to wall
ca rpeting , oarade , ut ility
building, 3 &amp; &lt; I~ acre lot ,
Rutland St M iddle port

LISTEN TO

11·18 6tc

----------"\"--TWO lots In th e coun/ry , 105 x

''Great Country Stereo"

105 &lt;eachJ. Tuppe s Plains
water. near Meig s High
School. S2,500 each 1 One Jot
Is set up for rnoblle home
Mobile
home
sold

separately Phone 992 7060
)l .t8 .6t c

WITH
JIM WILLIAMS

A TREE

Weekdays 10:00 A.M. to 2:00 A.M.

--- ------ ----I

EVER' TIME MAW
GIT6 HOPPIN ' MAD
SHE GOES OUT
AN' CHOPS DOWN

ON
WMPO
FM STEREO 92
•
'

•

•• HER AN' HER
DAD8URN

-...L.-1-...L"'::':!

One letter simply stands for another In thtS sample A "
used for the three L's, X for th e 1wo O's, etc Stn gle )etters,
apoatrophes, the length and form,,lion of th e words ore all
hinll. Each day the code tellers are dtiTeront
CXNM

CR.VPTOQUOTES
FQJQN NQZMMU

ZG

HQMM

z

GAQZPGLXB,

ZG

GLQ

KYQG

YF

MYYWG
RYZNK

Tod ay you 11 b e very sure oi
your Ideas and 1deals Your
emot10n s are strong 1n defense
of what you bel1eve b ul you II
not be unreason 1ng aboul 11
a !ouch of gemus mvolvlng meten a l thmgs today II
som el hmg come s your way
you II know how lo I urn 11 to
your advantage

CANCER (June 21·JUIJ 22)
l eadership Is your str ang su1t
loday II fnends pr ove lobe tn·
decisive don't hes1tate to call
lh e shots

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) There's
been a Ihorn In your side talely
Today IS the day whe n tho
perfect opening w111 present
Itself to ellmlna le !he problem
completely

VIAQQ (Aug. 23·Stpt. 22)

z

Avo1d the mundane crowd M!)(
with eMclllng and unusual peo·

UZDLA . -ZF XAZ
MYYG
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: YOU'VE HEARD OF THE THREE
AGES OF MAN - YOUTH, AGE, AND "YOU ARE LOOKING
WONDERFUL." - FRANCIS CARDINAL SPELLMAN

doldrum s and enliven your
crea.t1ve tmagtnatlon

YN

QJQF

(C) U7~ Kina Ft1turt1 Syndlu.tt, lnc.)

HEI(! THE~E'S A BUNCH
KIDS ON Af'LAI(6fDUND!

earn1ngs Don t overlook new
techmques - nothing ven ·
l ured noth 1ng accomplished

SCORPIO (Oc1. 24 · NaY. 22) II
would be a mistake to
challenge vou today on a subJect you know well and feel
strongly aboul Your retorts are
razor sharp and accurate.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·0oc.

You'll feel very protective of 21) Friends who are ca ught 1n a
!hose under your cere today ' rut shou ld look to you for inYou will go Ia unusual lengths splrBIIOn today You can show
Ia safeguard them
them how to get oil dead
~
TAURUS (April 20·MIJ 20) cenler

GEMINI (May 21 -Juno 201 You

TIMBER

TANTRUMS

F..- MdaJ, Nov. 21, 1975
ARIES (March 21·Aprll t9)

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

DAILY CRYPTO(WOTE - Here'• how to work It :
AXVDLBAAXR.
Is LONGFEI. LOW

... z

Mason, W.Va.

•+-1--t-i

iii

Ii"'+-1--t-i

game
3 WhoUy
4 Express
assent

0'\LM DOWN,

8 ·00-Country &amp; Western U S.A. Ic)
9 GO-Stagecoach West
10 :oo-Burke's Law

6-+-+-

~ -

10.31 16tc

CHANNEL s.Frlday.
1·oo-Wrestllng

AstroGrapM

·~~~~i!or~~--~--:-:--T----,----7i:Ni:it;i;~~:LI t2 (3Mount
wds.&gt;
f3 Countess'
counterpart
II Tonguelaslling
15 ThreHpot
DOWN
I One of the
Wednesdays

6 00-Columbus Today 4; Sunrise Semester 10.
6: 15-Folk Literature 3.
6·25-Farm Reparl 13
6:Jo-New Zoo Revue 4, News 6; Bible Answers 8;
Farmtlme 10; Blue Ridge Quartet 13.
6·4Q-{)unce of Prevention 10
6:45-Morn lng Report 3.
6:55-Chuck While Reports 10, News 13.
7·oo-Today 3,4,15; Good Morning, America 6,13 ; CBS
News 8; Bugs Bunny &amp; Friends 10.
.
7.3D-Schoolles 10
8:oo-Lucy Show 6; Capt Kangaroo 8, 10. Sesame St.
33.
8 JD-Big Valley 6.
9.0G-A M 3; Phil Donahue 4,15; Lucy Show 8; Mike
Douglas 10; Morning with D J 13.
9:»---Nol For Women On ly 3; One Life to Live 6; Give·
N·Take 8; New Zoo Revue 13
10 00-Celebrlty Sweepstakes 4,15: Dinah 6; Price Is
Right 8, 10, Mike Douglas 13
IO :JD-Wheel of Fortune 3,4,15.
n ·oo-High Rollers 3,15; I Dream of Jeannie 4,
Gomblt 8,10
11 ·3Q-Hollywood Squares 3, 15; Happy Days 13,
Midday 4; Love of Llle8, 10; Sesame St. 20,33.
11 :55-Take Kerr 8; Dan !mel's World 10.
12 oo-Magnlflcent Marble Machine 3,15; Showofts 13;
Bob Braun's 50.50 Club 4; News 6,8, 10.
t2 ·3D-3 for The Money 3,15, All My Children 6,13;
Search for tomorrow 8,1 0
12·45-Eiec. Co. 33.
i2 55-BNBC News 3, IS
1:GO-News 3; Ryan's Hope 6,13, Phil Donahue 8;
Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not For Women Only IS
1 3D-Days of Our Llves3,4, 15; Let's Make a Deal6,13;
As The World Turns 8,10
1:()0-$10,000 Pyramid 6,13; Guiding Light 8,10.
2: »--Doctors 3,4,15; Rhyme &amp; Reason 6,13 ; !;dge of
Night 8,10
3 GO-Another World 3,4, 15; General Hospital 6,13;
Match Game 8.10; Say Brother 20.
3 ~e Life to Live 13; Ma&lt; B Nlmble6; Tatlletales
8, 10; Black Perspective on the News 20.
4 GO-Mister Cartoon 3; MA!rv Griffin 4; Somerset 15;
Mickey Mouse Club 6,8; Mister Rogers 20,33 ,
Movie " Saratoga" 10; Dinah 13
4: »-Bewitched J; Mod Squad 6; Partr idge Family 8;
Sesame St 20,33; Get Smart 15.
s .oo-Bonannza 3, Family Affair 8; Star Trek 15.
5:»--Adam·12 4; News 6, Beverly Hillbillies 8; Elec.
Co. 20.33 ; Adam 12 13.
6 oo-News 3,4,8,t0,13,15 , ABC News 6; Hodgepodge
Lodge 20.
6:3D-NBC News 3,4,15; ABC News 13, Andy Grltllth 6;
CBS News 8,10; Two-Way Street 20
7 oo-Truth or Cons . J ; To Tell the Truth 4; Bowling for
Dollors 6; Lawrence Welk 8; Aviation Weather 33;
News 10; Adams Screen Test 13, Family Affair 15;
Ohio Journal 20 .
7 »--Porter Wagoner J ; Bobby VInton 4; Candid
Camera 6, Evening Edition with Martin Agronsky
20, $2S,OOO Pyramid 10; To Tell the Truth 13; Pop
Goes the Country 15, Black Perspective on the
News 33.
8·GO-Sanford &amp; Son 3,4,1S; Barbary Coast 6,13; Dr .
Seuss 8; Washington Week In Review 20,33; Archie
Griffin 10.
8 30-Chlco &amp; the Man 3,4, IS ; MASH 8,10; Woll Street
Week 20,33
9.oo-Rockford Flies 3,4,1S; Movie "Murder on Flight
502" 6,13; Hawaii Flve.O 8, 10; Firing Line 20;
Masterpiece Theatre 33.
10 GO-Pollee Story 3,4, 15; Barnaby Jones 8, 10; News
20, Paul Nuchlms 33.
10 3D-Aviation Wealher 20.
11 GO-News 3,4,6,8,10,13, 1S; ABC News 33
11 »-Johnny Carson 3,4.1S; Wide World . Special
" JFK-A Time to Remember" 13; Sammy &amp;
Company 6, Movie "The Trouble with Girls" 8;
Movie " Hush .. . Hush , Sweet Charlotle" 10; Janakl
33.
I :GO-Midnight Special 3,4,15; Wide World Special 6 ;
Movie " Return of the Fly" 10; News 13
2:»---Movle " Now You See It, Now You Don'r' 4
4 30-Movle""See How They Run" 4

t;;-+-+-1r-

Sol~ !!'l

773-5592

sto~p~(~a~bbr~.J...,~~~rl

,.

lust'

9·23 ·1fC

Yestercllty's Answer
22 " West Side 33 S. Air. fox
Story" role 34 Negative
23 - de foie 35 Yale man
gras
3i Man (Lat.)
24 Erstwhile 37 AdoH's
Russian
mate
ruler
38 Still
25 Shanty
39 Patriotic org.
27 Asked for 40 Anger
31 Subway
41 District of

1::-+-++-

Optimist's
motto

BEAUT I FY your home with
Perma Stone New homes
as we ll as re modeling work
Exp ert Insta lla t ion
Free
esllmal es Phone 142 2409

FRIDAY UNTIL 8 PM

_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _J_ _ _ _

Phone 992 38&lt;3

5 Window

30 Demolished
31 Body fluids
'-::"""."!~~N IJI!Ir.~"" Mom's ad,..
monition

WE SPE CIALIZE In mobile

IO.I5 1fc

ACROSS
I One of the
Kings
5 Well-be·
haved
11 Kind of

port

3 29 ti,

years u peri ence . In sured,
fl"ee estimates Call 992 3057
or (1) 661 304 1, Co olville .

N Y 10019)

1e

POQ'Ieroy Autnoti.zed's•ne-er
We
Sal es and Ser vice
sh arp en Scissor s
'

&amp;

a t Br~dge ," c l o fh• s
newspaper. P 0 Box 489,
Rad1o Crty Stat•on, tve w York,

8 Japanese
statesman
12 Incarnation 9 Playing
of Vishnu
marble
13 Stand fast
10 Sea eagle
(3 wds.)
14 Cockney's
15 Apiece
expectation
II Love's op.
Medieval
_,----~
posite
merchant
11 Discard
guild (Var. )
Zf Domesticate
17 Gather
25 Montana
18 Arikara
city
abode
2&amp; Cheer up
20 Almost there
(4 wds.)
21 Submit for
Z8 Affirm
settlement
Z9 French

Repa 1rs . serv 1ce, a ll makes

D

(For a copy of JACOBY
MODERN, send $1 to "Wm

flight

Build an all steel building at
Pole Barn prices? Golden
G1ant A ll -Stee l Buildings .
Rt" 4, Bo)( 148, waverty ,
Ohio Phone 9b7 2296
1 24 1fc

ho~

An Alabama reader wants
to know bow th e tmposstble
slam made m a recent article
The contract was s1x spades
Sou th had lost a lnck and led
the queen of spades from
Q 9 8 5 toward dummy ' s
A 7 6 4 3 West got brtlhant,
played th e deuce from king·
deuce and there 1t was The
gremlins had cui a few words
out of the arttcle

by

BAt:KHOES

F~ brlc

~~~~

~~THOMAS JOSEPH

BRONSON
l'oOULD LIKE
ONE IF WE
CAN Gn IT!

Mon., Tues., Wed . &amp; Sat.-8:301115:00
THURSDAY TIL 12 NOON

Take over payments S
BASSETT twin bed bedrm .
rooms and bath , good· well.
2761
su lle and single beds ,
and 2 acres of gro und.
11183tp
drfsser s, and double bedrm .
Phone 8&lt;3 2292
su 11 s Refrigerators , and
11 18·121&lt;
VANITY dresser and m lrror ,•
black ar\d white telev is ion
·I
record
cab1 net :
1968
set
Phone (6 1.til 667 6361 38
ACRES, 2 houses. 2
Monterey M ercury , p s .
_,
.._
II 16-6tp
garages , barn , drilled well,
pow er d1SC brakes , factory
overlook i ng Ohio R iver
air conditio nmg Phone 742 RABBIT dog and , ducks
Pr 1ce d for quick sale Phone
152&lt;
Phone 7&lt;2 2185
1411241
I
11 18 3tc
11 -128t c
II 19 4tp

_ ____

ALLEY OOP

w oiiLifv6-u - 8E"Li evE?

992 2284 The

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

Greed IS a ternble tbm g."
remarked East as he watched
htS opponents chalk up that
doubled slam
"South could always make
11." remarked West halfhea rtedly
After West's double and ht s
ftrst look at dummy South
dec;ded thai the double could
only be based· on both ma)orsmt ktngs In that case the
!messes were sure lo lose and
the normal play of takmg

Ill-· WELL , WMA'I DO
1111111( Of 'lOUR """·

11 712tc

S E W I NG

Pass

I NT
4t
5•
Pa s!;

Hy Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

STORE HOURS

-·- ... ·----~·------

_ __ _

otl, HEllO, Ottl.TY ~E ­
GO AHEPD! &amp;TAR£. I'M
U!II'O TO 11f11«1 STARED

OlD '10U 6AY WE'!Ui
EXPECTED '1t) !SET
A UV1 SI'ICtMIH
OF 1}115 FLYING
LIZARt&gt;7/

IA

Souch

those two !messes would lead
to defeat
Then South saw a way to end
pl ay West, tf he held exactly
two trumps and at least three
clubs and three d1amonds
He took h1 s que e n of
dtamonds, ace of hearts and
queen of clubs Then he led a
club to dummy's kmg and
cashed th e ace-ktng of
dtamonds and kmg of clubs
Now he led and ruffed the last
club
West saw that tl was
hopeless to overruff and dt s·
carded a dtamond whereupon
South stmply threw htm m
wtth the kmg of trumps He
was ca ught m the same end
play

Openmg lead - .I t

AMNII£- NO

MASON FURNITURE

II 16 If HOU SE for sale In Porlland

"'. ··------------

LITT-LIE

Dbl

7583

POMEROY - 1 BR, balh,
full basemen! has I BR, TV
room, utility workshop .
Large yard. S9,500.
MIDDLEPORT E&lt; ·
cellent cond., 2 BR. bath ,
carpeted , paneled, fu ll
basement, carport, FA· N
gas heal. 513,000
POMEROY - 200 It
fronta ge, for home or
trailer , waler available,
originally has 1 houses.
$3,000
.
RUTLAND - 2 BR , bath,
carpeting,
paneling,
porches, garage, good
condition . $9,500.
DEXTER - 151 acres,
large house. water system,
barn &amp; other bldgs $38,000
POMEROY - 7'1&gt; acres . 4
BR , bat h, co rpeflng ,
paneling, hot waler heat,
basement, storage SIS,OOO.
PHONE 992·22S9

St, Ru tl an d Phone J42 1JJJ9
after .t1 p m or see Milo B
Hutchison .

3 BEDRM

U'I'I'LE ORPHAN ANNlli

5 •• !:'

prese nt one remodeled , or
you are in need of a n ew
root. Call " Roush Con
str uction " Greg Roush , 992

I I I J lfc

BEDRM
home ,
fin ish ed , remodeling ,

"

dlt&gt;

6 kOOM House wilh ba th ,
garage, basement , bullt .in
porch, 1 1 ,1cre, Hobson

Phone 992 7733

0

Pass
Pa ss
Pa ss

AND DOZER . LARGE AND
SMALL SEPTIC TA NKS
IN S TALLED
BILL
PULLINS , PHONE 992 2478,
DAY OR NIGH T
111178tp

Sl/,000.

MAIN
POM.E.ROY.O

Nort h F..ast

\\ es1

new home or have your

II 6 261C

11196tc
10 6 ttc

EXLAVA l iNG ,

• 714 J
4o10 K!i ..

"' Q 2

------.-------I F y uv
1nter es tea In a

'

--------

NOW- se111ng F ul ler Brush
, Produc ts
Phon e 992 3410

s·EPT I C TANKS cleane~
Modern San1 taf 10 n 99'2 3904
or 99 2 7349
9 18 tk

• 71

North South vulnerable

BRAD FOR U, AUCtioneer.
Phone
Comp lete Service
949 2487 or 949 2000 Racine.
01'110, Cr.ll Bradford
10 9 ttc

delt.Yered right 10 vour
pro1e ctt. Fast and easy Free
estimates Phone 992 3284,
Goegleln Ready Mix Co ,
~ 1 ddleport . Oh 10,.
6 30 ttc

t:AST
• 7 54

SOUTH
• AQJ86
• AQIOH4
tQ

---- ---- --- '
~EADY Ml)1 CO NCRE TE

I

s

cw.

EXCAVAT lNG' dOz.!!;r . loade r
and backhoe wotk . sepl1c
tanks 1nstalled . dump
tru cks Zlnd lo boys for hi re
wil l haul 1111 d.rl, top soil,
limestone an d gravel.; Ca ll
Bob or Roger J effer~. day'1
pl'1one (19 2 7089, nig ht phone
992 352 5 or 992 5232
2 11 tfc

M

Phon e • - - - - - - - - - 11 20 3tC SW INGIN G baby cradle , new
un finished , while ptne
tllanler
c lock ,
so l id
GARAGE Sale, Thursda y and
mahogan y Gail Miller .
Frida y , 9 am tl lf
p m
Ph one 992 3196.
11 19 4tc
New afghan , Two F78 14
-----tires and rtms Also , Fu ller
bru sh products a t sale
pnces Other mise llem s
F rom 9 a m till s p m
Ho lstei n
res1dence , 3 BEDRM , large kllchen ,
Syracus e, Ohio .
liv ing rm•. din ing rm , J1 1
11 1a 2tc
bath , d iSp osal , cen tra l air ,
central
heat,
water ,
GA RAGE Sa le, Friday and
purtflcatloh system, fully
So turday, 3 miles oul 124
carpeted, w ir ed throughout
towards Ru tl and AntiQues,
for T v
and t ele pl'1on e
furn it ure , clothing of all
Vinyl sidmg , double g lass
kinds
windows , excess s torage
11 20 lie
space in close ts and 11 &gt;&lt; 11
meta l lawn buildin g One of
YAR D SA LE , .Thurs day and
M idd leport 's better homes
F r1day , furniture, c lothes
Call 992 311'1 between 2 15
and mise , 12 1111 ,. p m
and 4 p m tor appointmen t
Thursday and 10 till 4 p m
11 2() 6tc
Fr iday M D Mtlle(, cor ner
of Wolf Pen Road and Rout e
143 Phone 9917760
HOU SE for sale in Portland ,
11 20 .11c take over paym ents, 5 rms
and balh , goOd well o~~ n d 2
acres of g r ound Phon e 8.43
2 F.4.M ILY Yard Sele, Frtday
2292
and Sa turday, 10 a m till 5
II 1712tc
p m Antique oak china
cabinet, c hesl of drawers.
col. pi c tures , d esk, old l BR HOME , , Ius I lln lshed
dishes clothing, Christmas
remod e li ng
Salem St ,
Rutlan d Phone 7.42 2306
deco r at •ons. aluminum tree.
aft er 4 p m or see Milo B
old oak doll cabine1 , sofa. 2
Hutchinson
cherry end ll!lbles and olher
10 9 tfc
mis e
Items
Wisecup
res idence. 109 Un 1on Ave .
HOUSE on Lincoln Heights. 2
Pomeroy
bedrm, large kitc hen . full
11 20 31c
basement, nice ba ck ya rd ,
only S8 .900 W1th new fur
HOG S ready to but cher Also ,
n 1ture , onlY $10.300 Phon e
beef and da iry canle Ca ll
992 76 48

\olD, 1 \).Q.)'T 6\~E: 'iCJJ A R~. 8UT IF '/OUtL- APf't..'{
FOR "' JOB I)JITH
~ITIOO I I'U- FURtJISI-l
'IOU WITH ~ EU8U..8!JT REF~~ !

-----.--·

ki1chen , gas fu rnace and

cond1tlon
S15lerpa.r
985 3824. ,Ches

9492115

Swee per s, toasters irons ,
all sma ll appl1 anc es Lawn
mower, nex l l o Stal e Hlgl'lWay Garage on Route 1'
Phone 985 382 5
4 16-ttC""

with

sale. Second septic tank .
All lor On Iy S8500.
26 ACRES - Of rolling
land . Good 6 Rm house,
bath, barn &amp; other
buildings . $26,000.
MIDDLEPORT
3
bedrooms, dining , nice

POMEROY LANDMARK
....~ock W. Cat'My, Mgr .
Phol\e fn·211t

TWO SNOW ttres, 700 13, good

II f:sT
• K 10 2
¥ K5
tJ 109M2
• J 96

BORNWSER

El.W-DDP BOWERS REPAI'I&lt;

C

basem~nt

t A K ti
o!o AK7 J

II 16 lfc

Console .

AM F M radio , 4 speed

WATER HEATER, 52 gallon ,

___ __ _

Real Estate for Sale

full

• •J 9 62

O ' DELL A l1 nement tocaled
behmd
Rutland
Grad e
Sc hool Tuneup , brakes ,
w heel balan c 1ng , a l1 nement
Phone 7.112 2004

improved pastures, 8 room

DON ' T
merely
br.ghten
carpets
Blue Lustr e Deep Iough tread
Knee High
them
no raptd resotllng Exclus1ve
Rent shampooer, Nel son's bullon cfosure Deep Iough
Drug Store
!read Exclus1ve
II 20 6Jc
bulton closure
M ODE RN

- -.:t .10.1mo

20

• 93

Phone 742-2331
Roger Wamsley .Rutllnd
10·15 1 mo.

Ph. 992·3993

tra iler

South finds end to play

R&amp;J COINS

Syracuse, Ohio

On e

WIN AT BRIDGE
NORTII illl

Appraisal service on
estates and collectlans.

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 197S

~Longstreet ~;_N~~ 1 ~.

Buy, Sell or Trade

LARRY LAVENDER·

acres

DON'T BE S ILLY! THEY'() 5 HOOT
THE' BLIMP FULL OF HOLES !.. JUST
GUN THE ~ N GI N E' AND GET U5
MOVING ON WHEELS Flg5T!

and Supplies

Blown tnlo Walls &amp; AHtcs
STORM
WINDOWS&amp; DOORS
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SIDING.SOFFITT
GUTTERS.AWNINGS

house, &amp; minerals S60.000,
TRAILER LAND - 3 95

CB 's, 308 Page St , M1d

1972 KAWASAK I 35 0 Bighorn
like ne w , electric . S60 GAS
trail bike: Ma ytag washer ;
CLOTHES DRYER , used ,
g1ri 'S green 10 spee d blk P. 4
$40 or best offer Phon e 992
SI'Jeed $Uper shlfler Eller
2081
brock 4 barrel Intake for 318
11137tc
Ouster , 2 8 inch Crag.tr
mags and 24" Cr1ger mags
on tires 1962 Pon ti ac Ph one ONE cow to freshen soon , One
250 gallon Un 1co bulk milk
992 2512 or 992 613&lt;
tank, 2 un ll De Lav al milkers
11 183tc
with vacuum pump All for
S475 Phone Arthur Spencer,
l9ilooo'GEc h;;;:ile-;:-s -e-:-A
161&lt;1 98S.3891
1 con d1lton . new m ot or and
11 ·16-llp
t r11nsrn Iss ion Phone 949
2417 Buhan

11.18 61p
-- ----;··._
II 18 Si c ONE J pt httch mower ; 12 ft

1975. and ' ~ 28 days fo r an
swer w ill ~o. ommence on that
date In case of your failur e. 3 AND 4 rm . furnished and
or otherw.se , to res pona as
unfurnished apts Phon e 992
required by the Ohio Rules of
5434
Clv1 1 Procedure , ju dgm ent by
11 -9 lfc
default will be rendered -- ---~----:-:::::::-=--- ·against you for lhe re11e f A v ,A ILA.BL E ~ 2 bedrm
all
demanded In the cl aim
electr i c modern ranch
located outside ~aclne Up
Larry Spencer
to 25 acres bolt om land
Cl erk of Co uris
ava d ab l e
References
Me 1g s County
requ i red Ca ll 992·5550 afl er
Common Pleas Court
( tO) 16, n .

11 18 31c

8&lt;3 2793 day or 949 2828 after

Ads having t9fll ght , dear?"

PUBLIC NOTICE

7&lt;2 1103

32.000 BTU Gas Heater with
fan and automattc controls
Excellent condition Phone

6p m

L

suite , 2 end tables. coffee
to~~bl e, George Grate, I'Jhone

WE

IT

OUT Tf\ROUGf\ THE! T,UNioJE;t.!

Coins, Cunency

Blown
Insulation Services

PHONE 992·3325
10 Mechani c
Pomeroy, 0
RUTLAND - 6 rms., 4 or 5
B.R s, bath, 2 car garage
and ga rden S12.000.
POMEROY - 6 Rms., 1'12
baths , hot water heat
Basement &amp; large yard
S20,IIIXI.
'
1S7 ACRES - Good fences,

For Sale

~

Bustness Phone : 992·5880
Restdence: 992-3313
11·18·1 mo.

FREE ESTIMATES

10:DO-Burke's Law

10 GO-Dean Martin 3,4,1S; Harry 0 6, 13; News 20
II. GO-News 3,4,6,8,1 0,13,1S; ABC News 33
II :3D-Johnny Carson 3,4, IS ; Mannix 13, FBI 6,
Cannon 8; Movie "Camille" 10; Janak! 33
12:»---Longslreet 13, Mannix 6.
I. oo-Tomorrow 3,4.

CAPI'AIN
.......EASY
WHE;W! ... AT LI!A5T WE' MAPE

Call today for
Service Tomorrow

Thursday on Channel Five:
•7 GO-Special Edition
7·»-Stagecoach West
8.»-Re&lt; Humbard (c)
9:»-Muslc Connection (cl

33; Movie "Hombre" 10
~

TEAFORD REALTY

1116 6tc

d leport

•

11 16 6tc

Phone 161 41 6676361

197 0 CAMARO

new

11·12 I mo.

1

Wanted To Buy

reasonable price would be
14x70 TRAILER . e)(
deemed a public enemy. A 197S
ce ll e.n l cond lt1on . es pe cia lly
special committee was
built for off1ces Low price
for (1Uick sa le Phone (304)
named to Inspect warehoUBes
675 1921 or 675 5619
rods and 12 links west of th e
10 30 lfc
sou th east corne r of sai d tot at ID see If there was any
a sto ne . thence west 14 rods hoarding of the scarce
an d 13 7· 11 links to a ston e ,
th ence norl h 88 rods , thence commodity.
east H rods an d lJ 7 11 links to
a stone ; thence south 88 rods
to l he pla ce of beginning.
contain ing 8 acres , and leming
land heretofore deeded lo
Thomas Gorrell by R c

3· bedroom
homes. Now under construction with carpet ,
ceramic tile, garage, large
lot. Buy now and pick your
colors FHA financing
available Price S21,SOO
Pbone : 667·6304

.

For Sale

Addlltonat 2Sc Cha rg e per
Adverllsement

tN MEMORY o f Madge Haley
Har t 's Used Cars, New Haven ,
who passed away 11 years
W Va Authori.zed R:oper
ago Nov 20, 1964
Dealer Tractors 8 10 13. 16
~(EMODELING
,
Plumbln~
,
Deep In our hearts lt es a
Hors e power Lawn mowers
heatmg and all types of
picture .
Idl er s saws Year end sa l e
general
r ep air
Work
More precious !han silver or
12" chain saw Reg $147 SO
guaranteed 20 years u
gold .
now S129 95 Hart's Used
per.ence
Phone 992 24 09
It's a picture of our dear loved
Car s Phon e 882 2793 New
S
I
tf'
Haven
mother .
Whose m emory wtl l nev er
1117 6t c
CARPE
NTR
Y
.
paneling,
--- ----~ --- ---grow old
floonng and ce iling Phone Harl ' s Used Ca rs
Your
992 2759,
C olumb1 a
B 1 ke
No one knows the hea r ta ches ,
10 21 30tc
Hea dquarters Full tme of
On l y those who have l ost can
B1cycles to choose from
te ll ,
Phone 882 2793 New Haven
Of the g ne t that 1s borne tn
11 17 61c
sil ence
For the one w e loved so well ;.As-H pa id for all makes ane Hart's Used Cars
Reddy
models of mobile hom es
Po rta b le Heaters
S1ze
Phone
area
code
614
423
So dearly lov ed and sadly
ranges 30,000 BTU to 150.000
9531
missed by the husband and
BTU Some vented Ther
4 13 ttc
children
mostals available with
11 20 ltc
healers 30,000 BTU Reg
$129 95 Sale S109 95 Phone
---------------882 2793 New Haven
11 17 6tc
~ofice
L ADY to c.c: ..... 2 days a weeK ,
r eferences Ph on e 949 2774
R: OOM and boa rd l or sen1or
Jtc
11 18
c1 llzens, very ni ce Phone - - - - - . . - - - - - - - - - 992 3509
apartment
10 12 tf c HE LP WANTED in M 1d ~ (I RNI S HED
adults on ly 1n Middleport
-------------dleport area . 2 hrs eac h
Phone 992 3874
SALE Thursday and Fr1day at
afte r noon Phon e 99 2 2776
3 25 He
Smalley ' s Gift Shop , odds
11201fc:
and ends less than 11 pr.c e
LARGE bu smess bu1ldmg m
11 19 2tc
Mason , large g lass front ,
-------------dnve m rear door s, Will rent
SKATE ·A WAY
ROLLER
' ' or all of ground fl oor , 3200
R IN K AN NOUNCES BUS ALL 1t ems m usl be old Old
sq uare feet. good locallon
SC HEDULE SATURDAY S
keys , matc h tobs. gun s.
Phon e (30.11 ) 882 3356 or 773
ONLY STARTING NOV
powder fla sks. powder
5611
14th
~AC IN E
6 dO
horns . bank , a nd toys , tin or
lllltfc
SYRACUSE 6 50 , MID
Iron , store llems
Ad
DLEPORT 7 15, Thanks
verllsing, etc Post ca rds ,
g iving Parly Nov 26 and 28
s11verware , sew ing Items . ~b UNT RY Mobile Hom e
OPE N WED, F RI , A N D
thimbles , e t c
Kn1ves.
Park. Rt 33 ten m1 !es north
SA TURDAY
7 30 10 oo
sm oking
p i p es ,
Of Pomeroy L arg e lot s w1th
p R 1VAT E
PART 1E s
phonograph s, music bo•es .
concret e pa11os , Si dewalks .'~
M oN , T u E S , T H U R S
paperweights, marbles , In k
runners a nd off s tr eet
EVE SAT AND SU ND AY
wells. bellies , 1'1at p i n s,
'par'klng "Phone 99 1 7479'
AFTERNOON S
PHON E
ca mpa1gn 1tem s, bells, oil
12.31 ttc
(614 ) 98 S 3929 or 90S 9996 or
lamps and lanterns. miners ,
98S 414 1
railroad. etc , clocks, dolls , FRE E RENT AT VILLAGE
11 9 12tc
old jewe lry . watches . rings.
' MAN OR
IN
MID
~--·---......._ ______ _ _
cha in s. etc
Steel tra ps.
DLEPORT! we are so sure
derbys , h i gh hals , eye
W tT HOUT- m-.,. perm 1SS !On .
I hat you will love 1our aparl
g luses , pollery jars , jugs .
ment s tha t we g1ve you two
th ere witt be no huhllng or
pew
ter
,
pictures
.
and
tr espassing on my property
week! RENT FREE Ju!t
frames
,
g
lass
,
d
ishes.
and
Bob McGraw , Meagan
pay your secur1ty deposit
c
hina
.
pla
)(es.
f
urniture
of
F arm , off l ow er Bowman ' s
and slay SIX monll'15 and lh e
all
types
money
and
coins.
f 1rst2w eeks Is free You Wi ll
Run
arrow heads , and Ind ian
1\ 4 76tc
entOY monthly leases. all
artifacts, p lus all Na.zl war
~leclnc
11v1ng, carpetmg,
Items . Phone 99 2 2050 be
range and retr 1geralor. fre e
tween 3 p m and 11 p m
tr ash pi ckup , ca bl e TV
Monday through Fnday
(opt ional) and laundry
1119 12t c
tacli1t1eS Conv enient to
IE
10 give away
shopping on Th.rd and M 1ll
COLL
pups
In M1ddleporl
VILLAGE
·1LD turndure, " Ice bo xes,
Phone 992 7022
2tc
11 19 _1
MANOR IS yours for one
brass beds , or complete
__ _. __________
bedroom
apartmen t s
households Wr i te M . ~
starting at 5104 monthly p lus
Mi ll er , Rt 4. Pomeroy ,
elec We pay for everylhmg
Oh io Coli 992 771\Q
DatellDe 1775
else See the Manager at
10 114
R1verside Apartments or
By United Press In·
ca ll 992 3273 Th1 s offer Will
tematiooal
end soon , so move in now
and ~ave SSSS
BALTIMORE, Md. , Nov. 197) NASHUA. I&lt; X 70 , 3
10 23 tfc
~ The local committee
bedrm .. 1' ' bat h , gas heat
Ta ke over pa yme nts Ph one
ruled that any merchant with

salt who refused to sell It for a

Five

Pomerov

Ph 992·2114

Intersection of Rt. l3 &amp; 7
Pomeroy

I

S2 00 tor SO word m ln1mu m
E5ch addlllonal word 3
ce nts

8 30 a m
Dcu ty , 8 JO a
Sat urc;tay

Sales and SeiYice

Tuppers Plains, Ohio

OFFICE HOURS

In Memory

D&amp;M ApplimM:e

MORLAN
Construction Co.

$1795

6 cy l std trans .• rad io, like new

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 20,1975
7:»-=-Hollywood Squares 3, Hollywood Squares 4;
State Lottery 6, Evening Edlllon with Marlin
Agronsky 20, Wild Kingdom 10, To Tell the Truth
13; Musi c City U.S.A. 1S
8:0G-McLean Stevenson 3,4,15; Barney Miller 6, 13;
Waltons 8,10, Romantic Rebe llion 33, Classic
Theatre 20
8 30-Qn The Rocks 6, q , Classic Theatre Preview 33.
9:oo-Famlly Theatre 3,4,1S; Streets of San Francisco
6,13; Movie " Hannie Caulder" 8, Classic Theatre

Business Services

2 SIGNS Pomeroy
OF

REGULATIONS

IKIIIIIIIJ
ve.. rnl•r'•

Auto Sales

WANT ADS

INFORMATION
.JEADLINES
S
PM
Day
Be fore
Publication
M onday Deadlme 9 a m
Canceliet 1on - Corrections
will be accepted unlll 9 a m
for Day of Pub li cat ion

pie today II wil l Gure yout
LIBRA (Sopt. 23-Qct. 23)
Devot e your energ ies today to
lh1ngs lhal will enhanc e your

1

ILl 6ET THE't''D LIKE
A 00610 P\.AI( WITH ...

CAPRICORN !Doc. 22-Jon.
19) You 're al you• basi loday II
you 're backed mto a corner
and have to come up with a
qu•ck. answer The lougher the
problem. !he better you 'll hke
II

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20· Fob. 1t)
M otivation to be th e leader Is
uppermost for you today You'll
go to elt\ra pa1ns to escape bew
1ng tdentif1ed as part or the
herd

PISCES (Fib. 20-Man:h 20)
Recharge your batteries today
You can make a few hours
seem like a brief vacation If you
do somethmg ollbeat In your •
spare t1me

~Your
VBirthday
Nov. 21, 1t7S
Vou II have a reawakened thirst
for knowledge lh1s coming
yea r The desire wlll be
tnggered by a personal drive
for sell -betterment. as well as
the Profit motive

FOR6ET IT... 11D

I'RO!lAllLY 6ET .¥»66£01

�..'•
~

I

12 -

'
1'be DaUySentinel,Middleport-Pomeroy,O., Thursday, Nov .•20;·~1~97;5_ _1!1111_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _~------------------------,

Reading Herman Ross
of Mason dies
council
• ed
OrganlZ
TUPPERS PLAINS - A
"Right-to-Read" A'dvisory
Cotlllcii has been formed at
Tuppers Plains Elementary
School to help improve
reading instruction and
reading-readiness activities
In the kindergarten, !irst,
second and third grades.
Parents and teachers met
in the school library at 3 p.m.
Nov.Jito discussproblemsin
reading and plans to improve
reading levels of the children .
Parents attending the
organization meeting .were
Mrs. Robert Sanders, Mrs.
Bernard Shrivers, Mrs.
James Stout, Mrs. John Rice,
Mrs. Harold Hawk, Mrs.
Chaires Collins, Mrs. Robert
Trlpp, Mrs. Trent Upton,
Mrs. Robert Davis and Mrs.
Jon Karschnik.
Teachers present were
Mrs. Brannon, Mrs. Tripp,
Mrs. Caldwell, Mrs. Parker
and Mrs. Jonas.
Mrs. Greta Suttle, Meigs
County Educational
Supervisor, explained the
"Right to Read" program.
Mrs, Bea Douglas, principal,
welcqmed the group and
thanked parents for their
Interest In Improving the
reading program. Mrs. Rose
Marie Jonas and Mrs. San·
ders agreed to co-chair the
group. It Is planned to
determine children's reading
levels through testing, then
develop goals and activities
to strengthen reading.

~ospil4ll

News

Velerinl Memoriai Hospital
ADMITTED - . Kevin
. Mowery, Pomeroy; Clarence
Hayman, Racine; Alberta
Linthicum, Reedsville ;
General Hall, Racine; Debbie
Campbell, Pomeroy.
DISCHARGED - Carl
HubWd, Mary Roush, Allen
Durham, Berdena Gardner.
PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGES - ' Mrs.
Harold · Stover,
Point
Pleasant; Wayne Cl\pehart,
New Haven; Robert Sheley,
Middleport; Albert Parsons,
Leon; Anita Spurloch, Point
Pleasant ; Freda Schultz,
Point Pleasant ; Donna
Hudson, Gallipolis Ferry;
James Stevens, Henderson;
Earl Reynolds, Gallipolis;
Joseph Bennett, Point
Pleasant ; Mrs . Kenneth
Blrchfleld, Gallipolis, and
Robert wallace. Ft. Bragg,
N.C.

Voc center

MASON, W . Va. ~ Herman
D. Ross, 82, Mason, who died
Thursday morning in Holzer
Medical Center, was a retired
coal mmer. He was born
March I, 1893 at Clifton, a son
of Abb and Elizabeth Tully
Ross. He was a World War I
veteran and a member of the
VFW.
.
Surviving are his wife,
Carrie Riffie Ross, Mason;
four daughters, Mrs. Patrick
(Gladys) Riley, Mrs. Opal
McKirgan · and Mrs. Rose
Williamson, all Mason, and
Mrs. Carroll (Lillian) Eiliott,
St. Mary's w. Va.; one son,
John Henry Ross, Mason ; a
stepson, Herman Dempsey .
Riff, Swmyside, Utah; 13 •
grandchildren, 22 greatgrandchildren, and one
sister, Mrs. Lola Emerson,
Coschocton,
FWieral services will be
held Saturday at 1:30 p.m.
from the Foglesong FWieral
Home at Mason. The Rev.
James Lewis will officiate,
with burial in the IOOF
Cemetery
at
Mason.
Visitation hours at the
fWieral home will be 2 to 4
and 7 to 9 p.m. Friday.

"

..

.'

Shop Both

available

Friday c:and
Sc:aturday
'

Fall Coats
Stop by our Second
Floor Coat Department
now and try on a new
coat.

Still a nice selection of
fabrics, lengths and
colors
in
misses,
womens, half sizes and
preteens
(young
Juniors).

9:30 to

·

~~

YOUR CHRISTMAS GIFT HEADQUARTERS

William' Bennett

Shop The Second Floor
Ungerie Department
For a fine . selection of
womens sleepwear
in
regular and womens sizes.
Nylon,
permanent
press, polyester cotton
and brushed tricot In a
wipe range of solid
colors and prints; waltz
gowns, long gowns,
baby dolls, pajamas and
robes.

NEW CHRISTMAS DECORATIONS were placed throughout Pomeroy Thursday hy
Ohio Power Company. The attractive Christmas trees were purchased by
Ute Pomeroy Chamber of Conunerce at a cost of $1,000. Pictured is one of the two that were
placed on the Meigs County Court House. Colored lights are featured on the trees . Aparade
will be held Tuesday to kick off the Christmas season. The parade will line up behind the
Pomeroy Junlor High at 6:30 p.m. and move down Main Street beginning at 7 p.m. The
parade will welcome the arrival of Santa Claus.
employ~ of the

died on Thursday
CHESHIRE - William C.
Bennett, 89, Rt. l, Cheshire,
died In Messer Nursing Home
In Clifton, W.Va., at 7:15a.m.
today. Mr. Bennett had been
Ill the past three years.
A retired. farmer and coal
miner, he was born April 4,
1886, in Concord, Ky.
Twice married, his first
wife was Bernice Bennett,•
who preceded him in death.in
1969. In 19'10 be married
Margaret Kyle, who sur·
vives, as do the following
step-children, Mrs. Paula
Dolin, Ottawa, W.Va.; David
Acree, Harrlaonville; Gary
Acree, Middleport; Rev.
James Acree, Port Huron,
Mich., and Phillip Acree,
Ripley, W. Va.; two grandchildren,
18
step·
grandchildren and two step
great~andchlldren; and a
brother, Edward Bennett,
Waverly.
Two brothers, two sisters
and a daughter preceded him
in death.
Mr. Bennett had been a
resident of the Clieshire area
since 1957. He was a member
of the Church of Christ,
Henderson, W. Va.
FW!eral services will be
held 2p.m. Saturday from the
Waugh-Halley-Wood FWieral
Home with Rev. James Acree
officiating. Burial will be in
Gravel Hill Cemetery.
Friends may call at the
fWieral home Friday from 7
until 9 p.m.

(CmUnued from page I)
Fioor surraces also provide
flexibility ; 40 per cent of lhe
BACK AT HOME
floor space is carpeted to give
BELPRE - Mr. and Mrs.
an aesthetic value, and a
seamless floor cov~ring is Carpenter, formerly of the
used where carpet is not Apple Grove-Letart Falls
appllca,ble such as rest area in Meigs County, are at
rooms, kitchens, cosmetology home bere after spending
laboratories, and the con- several weeks in Columbus
course areas. This type of where Mr. Carpenter WI·
· floor covering saves on derwent major surgery at
maintenance due to the fact it University Hospital. He is
needs only water and reported recuperating
detergent for cleaning. The satisfactorily.
remainder of the shop areas
have treated concrete floors
which requires minimum ·
amo111ts of maintenance.
,...--------,
Buildings are designed with
fullD'e . as well as present
needs In mind. As training
TnNtTE
areas progress and change,
NOV. lO
this physical flexibility will
become even more imNUrOPEN
portant.
FRI. thru SUN.

MEIGS lHEATRE

NOV. 2l·l3

EVERYBODY

Norm1n Jewlson''

.Featuring. .
•Printzess
•Mary Lane
•Jerold
•Jet Set
•Dee Dee Deb

I

VOL. XXVII

7"111

I

I,...,,.............,.. .........,.. _

(Tothnltotorl

Show starts at 1:00 p.m.

WANT AD WAY

1HE GIOVANNI
By

R!d\Nin.
Step Into e pair.
Platform soles
tall heela aet

In atyle.

leather
I

halp k..p

udget In shape.

THE SHOE BOX
, MIDDUPOIT,

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

_... ... , ....................

On His

~~=~;:::,~::::~::::::::::::::::::::;:;:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::·:·:-:·:-:::·:::: :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::i::::::::

..,

'

Jl"ews • •. in Briefs\\1
.
By United Pl'Cis International ·
····
WASHINGTON - THE SENATE HAS VOTED for a
ceiling of $375.6 billion on federal spemjing during the current
fiscal year, ending June 30, 19'16. That's $8.6 billion more than
Congress agreed to last March. The resolutioo , approved
Thursday by a vote of 69-23. binds Congress under a law
enacted last year to appropriate no more than that amount,
and contemplates a deficit of $74.8 billion .
Debate centered chiefly on an effort by Sen. Edward M.
Kennedy ,!&gt;-Mass., to commit the Senate to approve $1.5 billion
in tax reforms. The House has voted in principle to commit
itaelf to $1 blilion worth of additional taxes through reform.
Sen. Russell B. long, D-La., chairman ol the Senate Finance
Committee, argued that "tax reform" is a misnomer because .
It means different things to different people and always winds
up culling, rather than Increasing, government revenues.
long made his point with doggerel: "Don tax you, don't
tax me, tax the fellow behind that tree." Kennedy's amend·
ment was defeated 76-21.

Sportswear

"Preferred List"

For Christmas

MENS SHIRTS - If you're looking for
mens shirts visit our mens department
lst floor - Dress Shirts - Sport Shirts ·
Knit Shirts - Leisure Shirts . Westerns.
Excellent selections in every type ·
famous make.
MENS BELTS - We feature Paris
belts for men - a wide assortment of
colors, widths - styles to fit your par·
tlcular needs - plus anothe~ selection
of popular priced sport belts - leather
work belts . Be sure to see them all.
Ties for him by
MENS TIES Wembley - an enormous selection In
solids and neat patterns. Ready tied
and tie them yourself ties. Select your
tie needs early while selection Is best.
Ask for a free gift box.
MENS. KNIT DRESS SLACKS- In
sizes from 29 to 44 waist. Hundreds of
pairs · all fine quality. Solid colors plaids. A fine selection of patterns.
Western styled slacks and regular
styles. All arranged for easy selection.

•CMfdinates

•Sweaters
•Blouses

•Skirts
•Pants·
•Shirts

•Jeans
•Kn~

Top$

Big selectibn of fashion
and basic colors in
misses. womens and
junior sizes_.

Stop In The Mens and lqs
• 1st Floor ~ See our fine line of Men's
Sweaters.

Gift .Suggestions

For the Boys On Your Ust

~~

-·

In sizes 36 'to 54. You're sure to find his size
-Coat Sweaters · Plenty of Sweater Vests .
Pullover styles, too In V neck - round neck
and novelty styles pi us the popular shawl
sweaters.
Solid col'ors and patterns. Now Is the time to
see these fine sweatt!rs and buy what you
need.
~~w-----~~~~~~~--~~~~_.~

Shop the Mechanic Street_Warehouse For RCA
Televisions ancl Whlrlaool Appliances

The curtailment levels that
will go· into effect with
December billings are: '
- 10 per cent curtailment
of all no-substituable industrial loads of one million
cubic feet or more a month .
- 20 per cent curtailment
of all substitutable industrial
loads of one million cubic feet
or more a month.
- 20 per cent curtailment
of all commercial cuStomers
that use one million cubic feet ·
or more a month.
- 100 per cent curtailment
of all industrial boiler loads of
one million cubic feet or more
per month.
,· ·
The individual curtailment

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1975

PRICE 15'

Elbirfelds Toyland is located in the Mechanic stleet .
Warehouse. Plenty ~ free customer pnng
.

Main Store, Annex and Wiriihciuie- Tiiylan!l Open
Both Friday and S.turday 9:30 to 8 P.M.

~lbe~elds

In-PQ.meroy

foWid 15 to 20 vacant or half
demolished houses that could
be razed at no expense to the
village by making application
through HUD. Total cost to
raze the houses was
(Continued on page 12)
TOPLAYSUNDAY
EAST MEIGS - The
Eastern-Southern Alumni
football game will be played
at 2 p.m. Sunday on the
Eastern field. Admission is
$1.25 for adults and 75 cents
for students.

JOHN KERR, JR.

Kerr will MC
Jwrlor Miss
event Swulay

. g on di.splays
lgom

II Is planned lo sell bazaar

items during the oecem. ber display; donations Of
handmade gifts will be appredated . All items for the
display or bazaar should be
lefl at the museum on week
days . For furth er in- .
formati on, ph on~
the
musewn 992-3810 or 992-2264
or 992-5877.

The ASC Community
Committee election on Dec. I
is the final date for mailing or
delivering voted ballots to the
Meigs CoWity ASCS Office .
Ballots were mailed ·to all
known eligible voters today
for election of commWiily
committeemen and delegates
to the coWi ty convention . Any
eligible voter that does not
receive a ballot should
contact the ASCS Office,
Farmers Bank Building,
Pomeroy . Telephone number
is 992-3687.
Questions on eligibility to
vote or to hold office can be
answered by the ASCS Office,
which · has a copy of the
Regulations Governing ASC
County and Community
Committeemen available for
review . The County ASC
Committee decides questioos
on election procedures, and,
on eligibility to vote or hold
office . Such decisions may be
appealed to the State ASC
Committee.
Ballot coWiting is open to
the public, and will be at the

Meigs ASCS Office, at 9 a.m.
Dec. 4.
To insure the secrecy of a
vote,. the blank envelope
containing the ballot will be
thoroughly shuffled among
the other ballot envelopes
before opening. The number
of votes received by any
candidate is available on
reque st after the vote
counting is completed.
The candidates receiving
the first through the fifth
highest number of votes will
be elected to ihe positions of
chairman , vice-chairman,
regular member , first
alternate, and second
alternate on the c~mmittee in
that order .
The COW!ty convention will
he held at 10 a.m. Dec. 15 at
the local ASCS Office when a
cOWity committee member
and two alternates will be
elecld for the coming year.
ASCS Committee elections
are open to all eligible voters
without regard to race, color,
relig ion , sex, Qr national
origin.

14 GSI workers
on strike fired

Blaettnar
· b 00k S

material to bring them to the
musewn Sunday and share
them with the public.
· Plans for the December
display, "O ld Fashi oned
Chritmas," are complete.
Following is a list (Jf items
needed to make it a reality:
Chri stmas' pictures, old
cards, ~holos of Christmas
gatherings. Cln·islmas books,

I

ends on Dec·. 1

·-

relates to youngsters

lincluding floods , early
jchurches, families and
•buslnesses Will be On display
lin books owned by Fred
'Biaettnar Sunday 2·4 p.m. at
:I he Meigs County Museum on
• Butternut. Ave . In Pomeroy .
' The display of Indian ar: ufacts also is being continued.
An inv itation is extended lo

'I

ASC voting

levels for any of the 1,380
industrial customers subject
to cunailment will depend on
how much gas each customer
uses in each category. There
are 1,250 commercial
customers subject to curtailment.
During the November
billing period curtailment
levels were 100 per cent of
non-substitutable loads, 100
per cent of substitutable
loads except where exceptions were granted hy the
Public Utilities Commission
of Ohio, 100 per cent of boiler
loads, and 40 per cent on
large commercial customers.

Blind «;ollege student

youdrivea car?, ~nd how can
you tell li me ?
The visit was a profitable
one, not only for fhe children
but also for Miss Moon .
Alihou gh discussing her
blindneess with small
children is a relatively new
experi~nce, she said she
enjoyed thr frankness of the
questior.s.

J

imposed."

The master of ceremonies
and the judges for the i976
Southeast Ohio JWiior Miss
Scholarship Program are
announced today by the
Southeast Ohio JWtior Miss
Committee.
NEW YORK - CONSUMER DEMAND for dairy products
The M. C. will be John E.
has outpaced national milk production and pushed the
Kerr, Jr., sales represenwholesale price of butter to a record $1.16 pet pound -and it
tative of WMPO Radio, and
probably will get worse before it gets better.
judges for the finals are :
Indian sununer weather, the high price of butter. sub- ·
Mrs . Janet Korn , WJEH
stitutes and thirsty milk drinkers combined to raise butter
Radio, Gallipolis; Mrs . Suzy
prices, dairy industry observers said. Tbey predicted ThursCarpenter, 1965 Meigs County
day butter would cost even more before tapering next year,
Junior Miss; Joh n Zell,
when widespread dairy shortages are expected to ease.
secondary school consultant
for Henry County . Public
SAN CLEMENTE.t__CAIJF.
- WHILE MOST world
SchOOls; Richard Johnson,
(Continued on page 12)
assistant principal at Union
School, Mawnee, and Dean
Lutz, manager WLIT Radio ,
Steubenville .
Usherettes for the finals
MUSEUM viSITORS - Twenty~ine Pmteroy Elementary School first graders with
will be Barb Theiss, Vicki
tlleir teachCI', Mrs. Jeanette Thomas, and several mothers hiked to the Meigs Museum
Baso, Bobbie Chapman and
Thilrsday afternoon to view the exllibits. A group of tlle children with Uteir teacher are
Sheila Crouch of Southern
shown here at the cases containing Indian artifacts owned by lowell McNickle on display
High School. Providing music
Mrs. Denise Gibson's
Many Interesting qu~stions ' tl!ere the remainder of November. Groups are encouraged by the Meigs County Pioneer and
for the program will 'be apHistorical
SoCiety
tp
visit
the
museum,
but
should
call
for
an
appointment.
These.
Special Education .class at were asked by the pupils in
proximately 30 students from
Pomeroy Elementary School both classes. The pupils were .YOWlgsters were Ute first group of school children to tour the museum.
Meigs
High School Band
was vls(ted by Miss Peggy open and after the discussion
under direction of Dwight
Moon , a blind student at Ohio · began, they were comGoins and Randy Hunt.
University last Friday . Miss forta~leln~skin~peneirating "
old trucks and boys' toys,
The finals will be SWiday at
Moon is the roommate of quesltons mcludmg, how do ,
dolls, carriages, girls' toys, the .Meigs Junior High
Miss Lisa Wessinger who is you get dressed in the morold tree ornaments, wooden Auditorium in Middleport,
doing her student teaching ning ?, how do you eat1, how
bicycle&gt;, old winter sporting beginning at 3: U p.m . Ad·
with Mrs. Gibson.
do you read', liow do you
items (sleds, skates, etc.) vance tickets are students , $1
The class has been studying cross the streets?, how ean
and any other old fashioned and adults, $1.50. Tickets at
the human senses and how you get around withou t
Pictures and tl.slu rical I!Vei') IJI!Chavingscrap buuks , items representing Christthe door will be $1.25 and
il!lportant they are. Most bumping into things?, can !aCCOWlls of Meigs CoWity, pictures or other interesting mas.
recently they have been
studying
sight. ' , Miss .
Wessinger invited Miss Moon
to come and talk with the
class about what it is like to .
"be blind, giving the students a
chance to ask questions.
After talking with Mrs.
Gibson's class Miss Moon
went to Mrs. Ina Meadows'
fourth grade class.

'

BAlLOTS MAILED - Violet Morarity and Rita Buckley, ! tor, clerical workers at the
Meigs County Agriculture Stabilization and Conservation in Pomeroy display some of the
1700 ballots for the annual Af£ Community Committee election. The ballots went into the
mail to Meigs CoWily farmers today,

enttne

The first citizens' "input Manley , and Phyllis Henmeeting " that could lead to nessy, clerk, and 12 other
obtaining a federal grant for · persons attended the town
Pomeroy
thro ugl1 the hall meeting .
Housing Urban Development
Don Dunnell said that he
( HUD 1 Thursday evening knows of a ll)·acre vacant Jot
brought suggestions of behind
Rock
Springs
building a ball park for boys Cemetery that could be made
and girls, razing old vacant In to a ball park for boys and
homes, paving streets, and girls and a nice picnic area .
bui lding a commWiity center · F·rancis
Leighty,
on Prospect Hill .
representin g the Ralph
Mayor
Dale
Smith, Woolpert Consul ti ng Services
Coun cil men Ralph Werry, of Dayton, said he and Mayor
Harry Davis, Lou Osborne, Smith and Charles Legar, fire
Phil Globokar and John chief, on a tour of Pomeroy

r
I

HUD help available
ro·, lliiprove Pomeroy

Featuring Sty1t!s By. • •
•lorraine
•Fonnfit-RogeiS
•Phil Maid
•Katz

Christmas Gifts

BOYS BLUE JEANS- Sizes 8 to 18 In
regulars, slims ahd huskies - regular
denims and the popular pre-washed
styles.
BOYS FASHION JEANS- Regular and
slim sizes 8 to 18. Solid colors and plaids.
Polyester and cotton blends · corduroys.
A fine selection.
BOYS SHIRTS- Popular knit shirts and
numbers shirts. A wide array of colors styles and neat patterns. Let us help you
find one or two he'd like · also dressy
shirts and westerns.
BOYS JACKETS - Practical • good
looking jackets In plaids and solid colors.
Many with attached hands.
BQYS SWEATERS - Coat styles popular sleeveless sweaters and
pullovers . Select his proper size and
color.
And many, many other gift items suah as
plrjamas, belts, socks, toboggans.

NO. 156

.,J'

I

-- L.- - - - - - - - - - ' - - - -

Shop our Second Floor
Childrens Department for
girls coats in sizes 4 to 6x
and 7 to 14.

I ..

•

"The winter is only
beginning and all of
Columbia's figures are based
on the assumption that
wea !her will be normal," said
White. "If we should have a
severe winter, or If our
customers do not continue to
practice good conservation
and if the 'best effort contracts' we have with the
southwest producers do not
meet expectations the
situation could reverse itself
once again and more severe
curtailment levels could be

Devotell To .The lntere.d s uf1'he Meigs-Mason Area

•Preen

..,_....,... _ _ _ _ _ _ _ . ,

COLUMBUS (UP!) Columbia Ga~ of Ohio announced today that beginning
next month more natural gas
than had been expected
would be available to large
industrial and commercial
customers in Ohio.
A spokesman said winter
curtailment levels to the
large industrial and commercial customers would be
reduced but warned the
prospect of a severe natural
gas shortage still exists.
The company said the
purchase of large quantities
of gas surplus from the intrastate market in the Southwest and the availability of
additional volwnes of gas
from its suppliers were the
reasons for the reduction in
curtailment levels.
"Although the threat of
plant closings has diminished
because Columbia Gas of
Ohio has been able to offset
severe curtailments from its
suppliers through large
purchases of gas on the intrastate market In the southwest, the threat of a severe
gas shortage· has not been
eliminated," said Marvin E.
White, president of Columbia
Distribution Companies.

at y

e

"ROLLERBALL"

Shops the

More gas

..

$1.7~.

Tickets can be purchased
from the contestants or at the
Meigs Inn in Pomeroy
Saturday arternoon .
YOU KNOW
Masai tribesmen of Tan·
zania spit at each other to
indicate respect and good
will.
NOW

Fourteen workers at
· Gallipolis State Institute who
have been striking the facility
since Sunday were fired
Thursday.
Dr. Bernard Niehm, GSI
superintenden t, said the
workers were fired after
being off the job three consecutive days . He also said
the employes had been
picketing the facility and
blocking entrances.
As of II a.m. today, Dr.
Niehm was ln.conference and
not available to elaborate on
the firings.
Gallia County Commo n
Pleas Court issued a temporary restrat ining order
Thursday prohibiting strikers
from blockin g entrances ,
according to Niehm.
Probate Judge R. Wiiliam
Jenkins scheduled a hearing
for 3 p.m. today on a permanen! injunction against
. the strikers. Judge Jenkins is
sitting in for Judge Ron
Calhoun who is on assignment in Clerm ont County.
Niehm said at least 65
employes were off the job
Thursday, but he said the
hospital was operating at
near normal levels.
Niehm warned that other
workers may be fired if the
strike con tinues.
The workers were reportedly striking over a number
of local grievances.
Meanwhile. United Press
International reported today
an investigation at state
mental facilities should be
expanded to in clude the
" poli cies and practices
condoned or issued by administrators," according to
Karl Stewart , executive
director of the 35,000-rnember
Ohio Civil Service Employes
Association , who says
problems at the instituti ons
can be traced to cutbacks in
fWids.
The Ohio Highway Patrol
has been ordered by Gov.
James A. Rhodes to investigate reports of patient
abuse and mismanagement
ai the institutions.
·'We are in favor of the
highway patrol investigations
.. . as long as the Inquiries do

not run roughshod over
employes by questioning
them without informing them
of !heir constitutional rights,
as was recently done at
Haw thor nden State
Hospital," Stewart said
Thursday.
" We disagree, however,

that investigations of this sort
should concentrate at the
lowest levels on the table of
organization. We believe the
inquireis should be expanded
to include policies and
practices condoned or issued
by administrators, which
often help to feed the seeds of
discontent, temptation and
stress among workers and
result in neg lect or abuse for
the helpless residents. ·
Abuse and neglect can
also be attributed to the gross
inadequacy of funds in the
(Continued on page 12)

Basic Ed is
offered at
Eastern High
TUPPERS PLAINS - Free
adult basic education classes
are being offered io all Meigs
CoWl ty residents from 6 to 9
p.m. each Monday, Tuesday
and Thursday at Eastern
High School.
There is no charge to
enrolees and all materials
are furnished . Although the
ins truction Is primarily
centered upon the basic skills
of Reading, Math and
English , students are given a
variety of other subjects from
which to choose .
Students work toward their
own goals at their own
rates of speed. All adults
over 16 not currently enrolled in a public
school is welcome . Students
may learn to read or write,
prepare for the G.E.D. high
sc~oo l equi valency test,
refresh
knowledge
in ·
preparation for college or
technical school , or simply
pursue a fie ld of interest.
Those wishing more information should call 91154292.

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