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                  <text>•

32 - Tho Sunday Times -Sentinel, Sund•y, Mard1 16, 1975

Ev&lt;~ ngelist

Rhodes' is big spender after all
By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
'COLUMBUS I UPil - Identify the author of the following
quotation :
"During these times, all
families have to adjust their
budgets to make ends meet.
Governments
must
do
likewise. The governor must
stand between the proles:nonal

sjX'ndin~ L'\'t'11

higher twd he
been re-electc&gt;d. And Rhodes'
C'COriomic ndvisers deled iln
improving fanancia l picture
starting next year, perhaps
justifying added expenses.
But it seemed s tran ge,
nevertheless, to see Hh odes
spendmg all the money he
complained wa s r aise d by
Gilliga n's taxin g ··every thmg
that walk s, crawls, smokes,
drmk• and fil es."
.
Ev1dently, lhe only thmg left
standm g be tween the tax
spenders and the taxpHyer.s
was the Democratlc~.' ontrolled
legislature, whose bud ge t
recommendation wa s a more
modest $11.5 b1lhon.
One can only b'lless that the
Democrats wtll ratse their
sights and decide to spend the
extra money by the hme the
budget 1s enacted later this
ycur.
Rhodes left prep~Jratwn uf
his budget to Ius competent
financial experts who were less
conctrncd with his carnp~Jign
speeches than th ey were w1th
the realities or government

Ohio politics '
tax spenders and the taxpayers."
Need another clue' Try this
one :

" When I return to th e
go\iernor's office m January, I
intend to do exactly what I did
before, t11t the cost of state
government .''
By now, you may have
guessed tho se word s were
uttered by Gov. James A.
Rhodes . He sa1d them in October during his campaign for
governor at the same time he
was decrying government fat,
" frilly
spendin g"
and

bureaucra cy.

Imaginary damages asked for

opt}ra I ions.
$9.75 nnllion undrr Rhodes'
In so me cases, agency ~t.· nt.•rous hand .
SJX' ndmg was tnmmed . .For
On the surface, the Rhodes
example, mdustrial de\'clop... ~udget would appod r to be a
ment and the Env1rorunental betrayal of ft scal con.
Pr oted ion Agency received scrval tves and his ca mpa1gn
sk1111py mcrcases, and the Oh1o theme or cultmg government
Ruard of Regents ' allocation costs. Rut the governor ts
was actually cu t. Priorities shrewd . You have to get up
were shifted to su1t Rhodes' before breakfast to outsmart
style
h1m
But Rhodes proposed to keep
One the ory for Rhodes'
or add employes tn a number of brimming budget is that it may
agencies. Ill see mmg conflict soft en up the Democrats,
wah h1s campmgn outcry tha t makmg them easier marks for
(;Jihgan had pad&lt;led the state Rhodes' paramount programs
payroll w1th ··9,000-plus addi- - rev1vm g the economy and
tmna I employes whose major creatmg jobs
tasks are to avmd sturnbhng
Another 1s that the Demoover each other wh1le sippmg crats wtll choose to t.hvert some
coffee."
or the lard In the budget toward
Elected officials, most of education, mass transit and
th em Democrats, were granted attraction of tndustry, which 1s
the co m1&gt;le te monetary fine with Rhodes, too.
requests they subnutted to the
A th1rd theory is that the
governor 's office . The in - Democrats will commence to
creases are hand5ome.
hght among themselves about
The budget of the Ohio how to spend the money . Once
Senate would go from $3.9 again, Rhodes slands to gain.
nulhon to $6 1mlhon, and the
The lrymg pan IS on the fire
Ohw House outlay would In- and the gre(l se IS gettmg
crease from $7 Hi million lo warm

So 1t was wilh cha racteristic

slei ght-of-hand th at Hhodes
last week exhorted the
legislatu•·e to pass his
economic recovery programs
while he was slipping them a
record $12.2 bilhon budget
almost as fat as the one
recommended by former Gov.
John J . Gilligan.
Not Had Time
In fairness, it must be noted
tl1at rising costs are forcing
goverrunent to spend more
money just to maintain
existing programs. It should
also be pomted out that Hhodes
is working toward better fiscal
management and has not yet
had time to Implement many
economy measures.
Also, it may be argued,
Gilligan would have pushed

•

Stock market survives
week of heavy trading
Dy FRANK W. SLUSSER
UP! Business Writer
NEW YORK tUPl ) - The
stock market ran mto heavy
sledding this week but ca me
away u winner when investoi'S
saw further signs the recession
may be eas ing.
For the week, the Dow Jones
Industrial average gained 3.37
points to 773.47. Standard &amp;
Poor's 51)t)..stock index rose 0.46
to 84.76. The NYSE common

stock index added 0.32 to 44.87. gamed around 150 points sint'e
The late week sW'ge lielped the first o[ the year and as o[
advances top declines, 1,098 to Wednesday , 1,988 issues had
693, among the 1,989 issues advanced for the year and only
crossing the tape.
88 had declined. Last ye?r 1,859
Although volume eased a b1t s tocks lost ground, · many
after Tuesday's session, It hadly, and only 176 advanced,
picked up Friday to bring the the market 's worst per .
tolal turnover for the week to formanct since 1937.
After such a severe loss, the
only way appeared to be up .
122, 193,430 shares, compared But few expected the market to
w1th 130,070,110 the week takeoff the way itd1d this year
befllfe and 86,812,260 during the Experts have been confounded
same wctk a year ago. It was by its strength.
the foW'th heaviest trading
Although news continued to
week in NYSE history .
flOW' in about layoffs and plant
So far in 1975, 1,108,713,894 closings , the market rallied
shares have been traded, · Fr~day from its profit-laking
sharply higher than th e slump. The rebound was
893,456,599 traded durlhg the sparked by a Commerce
entire first quarter of last year . Department report bus mess
The market had a particular- mventor~es fell $148 mJihon 111
ly difficult time Tuesday when January. the biggest drop smce
the Dow Jone s industrial March, 1961. and the first
average, moving up and down decline si nce 1970
throughout, finally gave up 5_24
That report was a "hea lthy
points in the seventh heaviest s1gn," actording to Commerce
trading session in New York officials , and part or the
Stock Exchange history
"mounting evidence that natural cyclicalforctsare at work"
.31 , 28tl,000 s hares.
Rally Failed
to indicate the economy "will
Mos t analysts saJd this soon be changing direction,"
session was marked par- according to TreasW'y Secreticularly by heavy compel!tion tary William Simon.
between profit-takers and
By the end of the week, most
buyers . Also, a late afternoon hanks had lowered their prime
rally attempt failed for the first rate to 7 ' • per cent from 8 per
ttme in several days, breaking cent. A number of banks
a recent trend. And prolil lowered the rate, which is
taking did remain the major charged key corporate cusfactor from then until late tome rs, to this level more than
ThW'Sday.
a week ago.
To many analysts, the selling
Many observers said the
was inevitable. The Dow had Federal Reserve Board 's
,----~------, report late Thursday loan
demands at New York's 12
leading banks declined by $424
million in the latest reportmg
week presaged lower interest
rates.
So did the Fed's dec1s10n a
week ago to lower its discount
rate to 6 "" per cent from 6 3 ·I
per cent. The deciSion played a
part m Monday's rall y.
ana lysts sa1d.
Analysts Reluctant
Carol! K. Snowden
Until th1s week, analysts
were reluctant to say the 197324 State Street
74 bear market had bottomed
Gallipolis, Ohio
out. Now lhey're reluctant to
446-42'10, Home 446·45 18
suggest the market is in the
See him lor aU your fa mt!y
process of a corr~tion because
1nsurance needs
every time 1t ha s mdicated
such a course, buyers swarm in
lie A
""n ,,..""
to rectify the damage wrought
flood Neighbor,
.A.
by profit takmg.
Stall farm
ICfl§
Many of those buyers have
1$ rhsf'l
HUIIUNtl
been small ones , observers
said.
l..ow-pnced stocks have
St ~t le Fdrm Insurance Co m~ n•es
Horn e ot11ces Bloomm 8ton , llhno• s
dominated the active list this
P 7302
year and this week was no
exception. Even Lev1tz FW"-

Wall Street

IN THE

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BRIDGE
PLAZA

Port1·ait of YOU1' Child

on1y
.

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f!. in~ely n r 1 ll..:tUI GruU11 l&gt;n ly Sl.OO ttcr

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You r ba\.ty'!i ~~~rtial rki\Tnl CIU)lur,ffi by
"u r spN'ialillt m chilli 11huto1l ruvhy-Ju~t
lh(' gift rn r fWl'T)'O ni' in t he hmily!

y.,u'll ~"'!

fhu~htd Plf ti\ Tttt- NOT 1-'R OO!-'S.
- m Ju ~ t =• r.... .tru ... t,;h'"'"'' ~,.,u·.,., s~r~
ot wa lld • iu- ""' ' &gt;lUr "'"'filii "T\\' Jn . pak"
('llmtnl5 m l'nn~ yo •u l' nn buy 1•ortra1ts In

BLACK &amp; WHIT£ TOO !
-"' un~hc:u bly lo10.' priu'

C&amp;R PAINT CE NTER INC,
•" Acrosstfle. s I ree,,rom Rice's Furniture••

853

second Ave.

Ga IIi polis, Ohio

featur·

•ng

Larry &amp; Margaret
Cromlish
and
.Erma J. Robinson

...,. ,.,
Moore
tJ£

PAINTS

*BRING AFRIEND!
STUDIO
HOURS

10 A.M. to 1 P.M.
&amp; 2 P. M. to 6 P.M.

IN THE

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Store Hours : 1:00 A.M. til6 P. M. "

r

I

-~-

,.

.

Reports needed of some
persons beyond age 72
G,\J.I.IP OI.IS - People
under n wlw earned over
$2,400 and go t one or more
month ly soc tal sec unt )
ret ireme nt , dependent, or
surv 1vur s checks m 1974 must
subnu t an an nu al repor t of
their ear mn gs to soc ta t
secunty by Aptll15, according
to Mr s. Tnsche Danest, soc1al
security distn ct manr1ger m
Gallipolis.
The report shows how much
was earned Ill wages and selfemployment mcome last year
by people who got monthly
soc1al securi ty paymen ts - a·s
well as how much they expect
to earn tins year.
"The report will be used to
determine 1f people were pa1d
the cor rect amoun t of soc ial
securit y benehts lor 1974 ,' '
Mrs. Danes! sa id . " It w1ll also
be used to adjust the1r monthly
1975 soc ial security payments
accord1ng to th eir estimated
earnings."
Full soc ial secun ty benef1 ts
could be pa1d to ehg1ble people
m 1974 if they ea rned $2,400 or
less fOJ the year But no matte1'
how much they earned for the
year, they could be pmd tlleir
full soc ial secunty benefits for
any month they earned $200 or
less and didn 'l do substantia l
work m the1r own bustn ess
The flgm es for 1975 are
$2,520 for the year and $210 a
month '·People who ftle an
annual report l&lt;.~ te or don't file
one that 's du e mav suffer a

GALI.IPOLIS - Galhpohs
C1ty Sch oo ls will co ndu ct
kindergarten and f1rst grade
registration for the 1975·76
schoo l year April 15 and 16,
from 9 a.m to 5 p.m.
Kmdergarten ch ildren must
be f1ve on or before Sept. 30,
1975. l&gt;'~rst grade pupils must
be six on or before Sept. 30,
1975.
Parents should bring a
registered copy of their birth
certificate , child's health card·
and immumzat1on record
A S[lllkesman said, "'It is
most important that every
parent register the1r child to
assure that every student will
have books and a classroom to
attend "'
Registra tion will take place
ln tht! prinnpal's office at
Waslungton, R10 Grande, Clay ,
and Green elernenlary schools
niture. that glamor uf the past,
made the achve hst. It [uushed
seventh, up 1 1 i'l to 4 -, H un
875.600 shares.
l.('Vtlz's activit)' nw 1 hl have
been sparked by s~me m.
vestors looking ahead to a
pickup m housing later tlti s
year Eva ns Products was the
th1rd most active issue thts
week, ga ining 1 1,. to 6 on
1,154,800 shares. Tl1e company
recently worked out a fi nancing arrangement.
Kaufman &amp; Broad was in
14th place, up 1 •, to 9 on
624,70(] sha res. US . Steel
followed , Up 2 tO 55 Or! 613,500

sha res. Bmse Cascade rose ' '
to 18 to fmish tn 20th place on
577,800 shares.
Federal
Natmnal Mortgage was 12th,
up 1:.! to 16 1 , on 657, 100 shafes.
u.s. Industr ies was 16th, up 1 11
(0 4 I ~ On 609,100 ShareS AJJ
would benefit from an upsW'gc
in building
Some analysts thmk autotruck lessors will expenence a
recovery later in the year. That
partly explains tho activ1ty of
Ryder System, even though il
IS expected to report a $20
million loss [or 1974. It was
which most active NYSE issue
this week, gainmg 1 3 f! points to
6 5 " on 1,638,500 shares .
Sony Corp. was second on the
list , off •, to9 1 , , Sony is one of
th~ top five active stocks on tl1e
Big Board so far this year and ·
"most amol; sts are baffled by 1ts
pof?Uiant;•.
I

'·~ :: ''f

Mr~ . Oalll':il

pentlify. '

People w iH • \\C'I e / '1. (JI
all months

(It

Siiid
ll\ .._, , 111

1974110il.lllL't'ti tu

fil e an ;nmuul 1 cport ut then
e~1 r mn gs

'· If you ha\'C qucst1uns a lJI'u1

en tine

at 'Y

nightly

in Middleport ·

nl'llO/NI

MIDDLEPORT - The Rev

To The

Jntere.d.~

of 1'he

Meigs-Ma.~orl

Area
..

Tunuthy Dnskell, an ordained

elder ancl reg tste red evangehsl

VOL. XXVI

ttl the Chureh of the Nazarene,

NO. 235

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

~.:a e h

MONDAY, MARCH 17, 1975

PRICE !51

----------------~~----------------~~·-

will speak at sci vtces to be held
evemng tlus week at the

Mtddll·por t Chu r ch of the
Na zilrene

Hev D11skell , a graduate uf
Vennw d Cullege ,
J\11

k,

iliWCI ,

IS

Umv~rstly

(JfC!:iCiltiy

c omplet1n~

!he

hts rcqut ren tents at
Nu za rcnc Tlwo log ica l

S {' lllllldr
L hwches

J

He

pa!'ll orcd

M~

stte and Ottumwa, lc1, pnur to attcndtng
!he senunat) In hi s work as an
e'&lt;angehst he hilS traveled
tl mn1 ghout the Mi dw es t,
l·:.bl('rn &lt;Jnd :;outlrel n Stateo
Hl'\ and :Vlr~ . Dr iskell and 1v.u
L h1ldr

for registration

r------~------.

NOw OPEN

CINCINNAT I IUP!i - What's the value of " f1ct1hous
··trecfrog'' '1
1\ radio slat10n says $110,000 and so a lengthy court battl e
has been waged on behalf of the 1magmary ma scot
Fo1 the f&gt;.ast couple of yea rs loca l radio statwn WEBN has
been usmg humorous references to a fic titi ous ·Treefrog
beer " m program promotion announce menl!:i.
Now a long co mes Laddie Hinton who has fonncd the
'Treefrug Corp." and wants to produce and sell \\ 1ne undt·r
lhe Trecfrog label
The r.:l dJo sta tion has taken Hmton to co w t, cunt ('mlmg th e
rea l t reefro ~ produ ct Wi ll da ma ge Its fltlitwus treefrqg The
.:; tahon seeks $110,000 m damages
VIsiting Judge Guy C Clme hea rd four d&lt;.~ys of · Tr rd1~~~ ··
testim ony Ill Ham1lton County Common Pleas t.'uUJ l IJ 11s
wee k and now has the case under consirleratwn.

2 days set

YOUf
GOOd
NeigHBOr

8 X 10 in,
• · ( 0 JOf
LIVtng

one non-existent. old treefrog

spe&lt;~k

to

1r1

rn 1t..&gt;SHie

tn

Kansas

Cll}.

i\1 11

In &lt;!dd Jt\()n to the evt' mng
vJcl·s \\llh ::; pecaal smgmg

~~·1

l'(Jdl rvPnmg , Hev

Dri.skell

\\'I ll be ell tllr churc h for Sunth.!y Srtwol ~~~ 9 JO and worsh ip
servrce dt 10 ao &lt;:~ m next
Srll td&lt;l Y

Tile
pe~s tm ,

H i' \ '
Don Cole, loca l
exl&lt;'nd-; an mvi la hon to

the antn,.:tl report or Heed an
the pub lic
earmngs report fOJ m, call or
wr1te any socwJ sccur 1t: office," Mrs Dancs1 swU . 'l'h l'
Shoppers al Arnencan meat
Ga lhpol1s sCICJal sccu n ty ulfi LT counters 111av use 212 names to
Is at ~9 Ol 1vc St Th~;" phulll' de::.t'Itbe beeistea k cuts, 151 for
roas ts and 94 for oth er fres h
num bt·l is 4HI -7660
beef Items

REV. DRISKELL
PAPERS FILED
- Ar ticles of
HlC!JI por&lt;:~lwn have been flied
her{' w1t h Sec ret..1 ry of Sta te
Ted W. Brown by the F1rst
Southern Bapllst Churc h of
Pomeroy. pr in cipals being
Euge ne Colenwn , Woodrow T.
Zwli l1ng and D Co lburn,
. throug h their agent, Eugene
Coleman, RD 1, Rutland , by
the law f1rrn Cruw, Crow and
Porter, Pomeroy
CO L UMRU~

CALL ,\NSWERED
POMEROY - Tir e Pomeroy
Emergency Sq uad answered a
call to Ebenezer St , Fnday
mormng for Ernest Davidson
\\ hu was 111 He was taken to
Veterans Mernonal Hospital
wheh.• he was admitted

Elberfelds In POmeroy
SPRING
SPORTSWEAR SALE
MONDAY, MARCH 17th9:30 to 5 P.M.

SAVE ON SPRING
SPORTSWEAR FOR EVERY
MEMBER OF THE FAMILY.

OOIN SHOW - Over 500 coin coUec""' enjoyed Ute 121h
annual coin show sponsored SUnday by the Oh Kan Coin Club
of Middleport at the Holiday !!Ul. Above, eager collectors
study one of the lines of displays mounted by 17 coin dealers.
"Tremendous," was how Club Presidenl Ed BW'kett of
Middleport summed up the event. All booths for the 1976 show
were sold before the end of the day. Dealers and collectors
were present from the Tri.State area and many other midwest and eastern states.

pv;;;:Tri. .Brief~ Bull sale
By United Press International
PHNOM PENH - GOVERNMENT TROOPS have struck
back at rebels threatoming the lifeline (U. S. airlift,) but the
insurgents vowed to capture the Cambodian capital Within weeks
and foreigners fled m mcreasing numbers.
The goverrunent reported a sharp drop in shelling attacks
against Phnom Penh's airport following weekend captW'e of a
major insurgent base in the "rocket belt" to the west. But exiled
Prince Norodom Sihanouk, titular head of the Communist-led
Kluner Rouge guerrillas, said the insW'gents would soon occupy
the besieged capital.
LISBON - THE MILITARY REGIME PLANS to overhaul
Portugal's cabinet, moving one more step to the left following a
weekend of nationalizations and leftist rallies.
has emerged as the
Prime Minister Vasco Gonc~lv,es,
country's strongman, told his ministers Sunday the cabinet
would be dissolved in the next few days and a new one formed to
carry out left-wing policies. Political sources said the change
may ilecrease the power of the Socialist and Liberal Popular
Democratic parties while increasing the authority of the third
coalition partner - the CommWJists.

wpo

MISSES-JUNIORS-WOMEN'S
SPORTSWEAR

OKLAHOMA CITY - PERLE MESTA, THE "Hostess with
the Mostest" of Washington society for 30 years, recently told a
visitor she was anxious to leave her hospital room. "Just as soon
as I can get out of here, I'm going to have a party," she said.
Mrs. Mesta died Sunday at the age of 85.
"The hospital said she died of heart failure," said John
Porter, a family friend. Mrs. Mesta IVJIS ill when she returned to
Oklahoma City last year and moved to the home of her brother,
0. J . Skirvin. She often was visited by family members and
occasionally by stars of the entertamment field who were
passing through.

COORDINATES · PANTS· SKIRTSJEANS - BLOUSES- KNIT TOPS
-SWEATERS and SKIRTS

SALE PRICES
2 ND FLOOR

MEN'S AND BOYS' SPORTSWEAR
Knit Shirts : Men's Double
Knit Dress Slacks - Leisure Suits
Cut and Sewn Dress and Sport
Shirts - Fashion Jeans Jackets - Sport Coats.

NEW YORK- UNIONIZED INTERNS and residents struck
23 hospitals today in a dispute over working conditions. A spokesman for the Committee of Interns and Residents, which
represents the doctors, said the League of VolWJtary Hospitals
proposed that grievance commfttees evenly divided between the
two sides be formed to deal with outstanding issues.
The doctors turned down the proposal at 5:30a.m. when they
felt it was not sufficiently clarified. Involved are 3,000 interns
and residents who serve at 11 voluntary hospitals, six of their
divisions, and six municipal hospltal affiliates, a C!R spokesman
said.
The union sa1d the hospitals affected have a total of 14,000
beds and provide outpatient services through clinics and
emergency rooms to some 10,000 persons a day.

SALE PRICES

Girls Sizes 4 to 14 and
Pre-Teen Sportswear

TOLEDO- THREE DIVERS ARE PRESUMED drowned in
the Salisbury Quarry, just west of here, according to the Lucas
County Sheriff's Department.
John Cumming, 57, of Willowick; David Niles, 24, and
Terrence Coleman, 25, both of Cleveland, were last seen entering
the quarry shortly after noon Sunday, Del. DeMis Chaney said
today. Chaney said the three had 25minutes of air left at the most
when they enU!red the quarry which has a 50 per cent ice
covering at this time of the year.

ENTIRE STOCK OF PANTS SHIRTS - SWEATERS - SKIRTS
COORDINATES - JEANS JACKETS

CHAMPION BULL -A bull owned by Bob Quaintance of Grandview Farms, Springfield,
took top honors at the 28th a!Ulual Southeastern Ohio Hereford Show and Sale Saturday at Hock
Springs Fairgrounds. Shown with the winning animal are, 1-r, Bob Quaintance, Hoger Roberts,
judge, and Paul Lodsdon, herdsman.

nets $7,270
NineU!en bulls and 15 heifers
were sold at the 28th annual
Southeastern Ohio Hereford
Association show and sale
Saturday al Rock Springs
fairgrounds .
The bulls brought a total o[
$7,270, Cor an average of $383.
The heifers brought a total of
$3,500 [or an average or $233.
PW"chasing bulls were Leo
Dougherty , Clint Brown,
Robert Jenkins, ·Dale Stone,
Danny Wells, Larry Welling,
Clyde
Morlan,
Harry
Rutherford, P. E. Gilcrest,
Everett Cutlip, Lewis R. Casto,
Don Cottrill, Wells Orchard,
Henry Woods , Emory Casto,
Everett
Mc Ca nn,
Tom
Balllller, P R. Lockhart, and
Bobby Arnold.
Purchasing he1fers were Jeff
Moyers, Tom Balmer, Guy
Swadley, B11l Nease, Roush
Hereford Farm, Leroy Riffle,
Jennifer Gainer, Forrest
Bumgardner, Floyd Woodward, Roger Roberts, and Carl

· Three students riding a McArthur , one i!aeh from
Vinton CoWJty school bus were Hocking County and Wellston.
seriously injured this morning · The bus driver and three
in a school bus-coal truck students reported to be in
accident at 9 a. m. on Rt . 93, serious condition were taken to
three miles north o[ McArthW", the Hocking Valley Hospital at
Logan. 1-{ospital officials had
in the Creola area .
According ,to unofficial not released the names of the
reports, the bus rolled . over injW'ed at 11:30 a. m. today .
three or foW' limes down an The dr~ver was reported in fair
embankn)ent. Four SEOEMS condition .
The remaining 45 children
units respollded, two from

SECOND FLOOR

COSTUME JEWELRY
New spring selection of colors
and styles. Includes entire stock
of earrings - robes
pins
oendants .

SALE PRICES

Barrels hit by driver

EXCELLENT SELECTIONS

(
Shop Monda y - Tuesday · Wednesday and Thursday 9: 30 to S p.m.-Friday
and Saturday 9: 30 to 8 p.m.

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

Clifford D. Connolly , 34 ,
Racine, was charged with DWI
following an accident at 9 :~0
p.m. SatW"day on the Rt . 7 ByPass in the LaW'el Cliff area in
Meigs county.
The Gallia-Meigs Post State
Highway Patrol said Connolly
lost control of his car which
went left of center to strike a
string of traffic control barrels.
Connolly was taken to

Veterans Memorial Hospital
Cor treatment of minor injuries. There was heavy"
damage to his car.
The patrol is still seeking a
hit-skip motorist in connection
with an accident at 5:22 p.m.
SaiW'day on Rt. 588, fOW' tenths
of a mile east of Rt. 35. ·
The patrol said the l!nknown
vehicle sideswiped a car driven
by Joe D. Will, 43, of Gallipolis.

Nottingham .
Local offi cers and directors
of the assoc1atwn are Lloyd
Bla ckwood, secretary
treasurer, Pomeroy..;- Hiram
Slawter, Middleport: A. F.
Gamer, Pomeroy; Marvin
Roush, New Haven, and James
Mered1th, Pomeroy .
AuctiOneer
was
Col.
•
Emerson Martmg, Washington
C. H., and rmgmen were
'
.
.
James Carnahan, Racme, and
J. E. Sommers , Southside , W. •
Va.
Ribbons Cor the show were
Area residents who are infurnished by the Pomeroy tere s ted in protesting the
Na tion al Bank. Judge was abandonment of the Penn
Roger Roberts, Elizabeth, W Central lines in this area are
Va.
rernmded that Ron Nathan ,

Counselor

commg.on

Wednesday

public
counselor
fr om
Washington, will be in Middleport a t 10 a.m. Wednesday.
He will be in the meeting
room over the CollUilbus and
Southern Ohio Electric Co.
mstead of at Village Hall as
announced previously.
Mr. Nathan will ass ist
anyone 1n preparing their
testimony Cor the hearing on
these lines to be held in Akron
WASHINGTON (UPI) - March 24-26. If these hnes are
Thousands of "miles of aban- to be kept, Mr. Nathan urges
doned or little-used railroad that as many people as possible
The Middleport emergency tracks should be turned into should tes tily in Akron as to the
squad answered a call to 140 trails for hiking, bicycling and effecls, the loss of these lines
Lincoln Hill Road at 6:50 p.m. cross-country skiing, says the would have on this area. This is
Saturday for Delmar A. Citizens' Advisory Committee the last public hea rmg wh1ch
Canaday who was taken to the on Environmental Quality.
will be held in this area prior to
Many of the rail right-&lt;&gt;f- the preparaltnn of the final
Holzer Medical Center where it
was determined he was suf- ways are sloping, scenic routes sysU!m plan of Conn-Ra1I:
fering insulin shock. He is between population centers,
Letters of protest may also
expected to be returned to his but unless states and localities be left a t the Middleport
act quickly they could be ap- Mayor 's off•ce to be presented
Pomeroy home today.
The Middleport squad an- propriated for other purposes, at th1s hearmg
swered the call for the sa id the report, released
Pomeroy unit which was on a Sunday.
It said a " unique optransfer run at tbe time .
!.ow tomght near 40. Mostly
At 2:34 p.m. Sunday the portunity" exists m Maine, cloudy and a httle warmer
Middleport squad went to High New Hampshire, Vermont, Tuesday H1gh m· the m1ddle to
St. for Cora Runyon who was Massachusetts, Rhode Island, upper 50s . Probability of
ill. She was taken to the Holzer Connecticut, New York, New precJpJtation 20 per cent today,
Jersey, Pennsylvania, 10 per cent tonight and 20 per
Medical Center.
Delaware, Maryland , Virginia, ce nt Tuesday.
West Virginia, Ohio, Indiana, PX:::~:::::::::::::::~-s.'X:&gt;.:~..:-x:::;-;::::::::::~«&lt;$
Michigan, Illinois and th e , EXTENDED OUTLOOK
District of Columbia - areas
Wedne s day through
where the Regional Ra1l
Friday, a chance of raln
aboard the bus were takerr to Reorganization Act tentatively each day. Hlghs in the 50s
the nearby Sw'cm' Elementary foresees the abandonment of and lows in the upper 30s and
&amp;hool where EMT's from 6,200 miles of lightly used the lower 40s.
Con tmued on Page 10
SEOEMS were takmg cate or
.... m: .;HS«:: .w-.~.-:~m:~w.::f.f.:
them.
It was reported that eight
additional children were taken
to the hospital for nonemergency injW'ies.
The accident 1s being mWASHINGTON - Welfare and Means Commlltee, which
vestigated by the Athens Post, reform legislation which would will consider the proposal.
Ohio State Highway Patrol and save the tax.payers in excess of . The bill's main provisions
the Vinton CoWJty Sheriff's $1.8 billion a year has been would :
Department . Vinton County intrnduced by Tenth District
- Provide welfare benefits
&amp;hool Superintendent Harold Congressman Clarence Miller, only to those who are in
Felton was unavatlable for together wllh a large bipar- leg1tiniate need , elimma ting
comment.
tisan coalitiOn of members of those wh6 rece ive welfare
the House o[ Representatives. wh1le earning_bigh incomes.
- Substantially improve
More than 50 House memDEER KILLED
efforts
to control and elimina te
bers have co·sponsored the
Adoe deer was killed Sunday mea sure which is ai med fraud, including improved
at 6:30 a. m . on SR 124, niQe primarily at corre ch ng 1dentif• ca t10n methods and
miles west of Racine when it defic iem.:~es in the Aid to expanded fraud control efforts.
ran into the path or a car driven Families with De pendent
- G1ve new emphasis to the
by Junior R. Wilion, 17, Children I AFDC) prog ram . concept of family responPortland, the Meigs County The sponsonng group includes sibll! I)' , s tren gthen child
~eriff's Dept. reported. There
many members of the Wa:ys s upport re qwrements , and
was slight property damage.
require s ta tes lo establish

Dehnar Canaday

Tracks
good for
trails

to return home

Three students inJ~red

SALE PRICES

WARNING GIVEN
There have been several
acts of vandalism In the
Middleport Hill Cemetery
recently. Anyone found
guilty of these acts will be
prosecuted to the fullest
extent of the law.
Penalties for damaging or
defacing a place of burial or
a burial marker can be as
high as $750 fine and 911-days
imprtsonme'nL.

Weather

CHAMPION FEMALE - Tho champion female was also owned by Bob Quaintance of
Grandview Fa rms, Springfield. The animal was judged at tho 28th annual Southeastern Ohio
Hereford Show and Sale SatW'day at Rock Springs FalrgroWJds. Shown with the winning
animal are Roger Roberts, judge, and Paul Logsdon, herdsman.

Ford says help
must keep coming
WASHINGTON {UP! ) President Ford today warned
against a "new Isolationism"
in U.S. foreign policy and sa id
foreign a1d must be continued
for both diplomatic and
humane reasons.
Ford took his foreign policy
and economic recovery· messages to South Bend, !nO., a,nd
told a University of Notre
Dame audience developing nations "must be able to defend
themselves. They must have
the assurance that America
can be counted upon to provide
the means of secW'ity as wen
as tho means of sustenance."
The President's address, in
conJunction with his receiving
an honorary doctor of laws
degree, was to be fo11owed by
meetings with regional news
executives and Eastern gover~
nors.
The Notre Dame speech was
released m Washington. While
it did not mention the controversial subject of aid to
Indochina, White House
sources indicated Ford might
depart from the text, possibly
to urge Congress to approve
emergency aid for Cambodia.
There were indications during
the weekend Ford might settle
for Car less than the $222
million he first asked for .
His speech stressed the need
for interdependence among
nations and America 's "moral
commitment" to help starving
and
lechnica ily
un derdeveloped countries.
"The answers to tho world
food problem are to be round in
interdependence," Ford said.
fWORUNSMADE
The Pomeroy emergency
squad went to Harrisonville at
I :29 p.m. Sunday for Mrs. Heil
French who was ill. She was
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital where she was admitted. At 6:22 p.m. SWJday,
the squad went to Flatwoods
for another l)"ledical patient,
Mittie Nelson, who was also
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital ~nd admit~.

"We can and will help other
nat10ns . But _ simplistic
paternalism may do more
harm than good. OW' help must
take the form of helping every
nation to help Itself."
He asked the students and
faculty to "demonstrate that
the Unlversity of N9tre Dti\!'e
, rejects the new •lsoiBtlllnlsm."
The challenge
facing
America today, Ford sald, "Is
whether we learn nothing
from the past and return to the
mtroverswn of the 1930s, to the
dangerous notion that our fate
1s unrelated to the fate of
others."
"
Before dep~Jrting for Notre
Dame, the home of the
Fighting Irish, the Presldent
was to receive Irish Am-

Court keeps
·offshore oil::
WASHINGTON (.UP!) - The Supreme Court
ruled 8 'o 0 today that the federal government alone
has oil drilling rights in nearly 200,000 square miles
of the Atlantic Ocean beyond the three-mile limit.
The ruling means the United States can im- .
mediately resume preparations to grant leases for :
exploring the Atlantic to determine where potentially vast amounts of oil are located.
In askmg the h1gh court to
affirm federal ownership of the
offshore oil rights, the lnU!rior
Department said the potential
fuel reserves could help ease
the energy shortage in the
coming decade.
The jus tices accepted a
special masU!r's repnrt which
rejecU!d claims by 12 Atlantic
Coast states that thetr colonial
charters granted them IItle to
seabeds up to 100 miles off the1r
shores.
Jushce Byron R. White wrote
the Court's opinion. Just1ce
William 0. Douglas, who ts

Miller sponsors' welfare reform
criminal sanctions for willful
m1suse of AFDC grants.
- Provide incentives ror
recipients to find employment
and allow states to require a
community work experience
program as a cond1lion for
eligibility lor welfare.
- Req~1re effective use of
outside resources, such as
lwnpa~iUffi mcome and cona
tnbutiOns from nonaneedy
indivtduals living with welfare
ramilies.
"AFDC is the nation's
costhest wel£are program, as
well as lhe program most
subject '
to
abuse,"
Representa tive Miller ex-

'\

plained in Washmgton today.
"The detailed legislation we
are introducing today is
designed to close the loopholes
and end abuses in the welfare
system which costs the taxpayer dearly. At the same time
it will ensure that those who
truly need the program and
cannot help themselves will
·receive the a1d. Jt 1s long past
time when the welfare system
should be reformed." Miller
added that other areas of the
welfare system will be 'addressed in additional reform
legislation to be introduced in
coming months.

I

recovering from a stroke, did:
not participate.
In a separate companion
case, lhe justices ruled that
Florida also must 0bey the
three-mile limit established in .:
the Atlantic by Congress.
Florida had claimed its constitutiOJJ permitU!d jW'isdlctlon
up to 30 miles offshore ."
The CoW'! referred back lfl a
special masU!r more technical
questions about how far out .
Florida can control Gulf of ·
Mexico seabeds.
The justices llad ruled In 1960 :
that Florida had historic title to . .
10 miles of Gulf seabeds, 'but ·
the state and the federal :
government were contesting
how the boundary was drawn
in the Florida bay.
In ·still another case involving definition of the threemile limit off Louisiana's
shores, the CoW't overruled'
Louisiana's objections to the
plan drawn by the special
masl&lt;!r.
· DIES IN TEXAS
Mrs. Julia Houdaslielt died
SWJday morning in Dallas,
Tex. Sbe is survived by ber
husband, Stanley, imd a sister,
1n 'Pemsylvania. O'ematloo
will be held ·Tuesday at the
Lllmar and Slnith FUneral
Home iq Dallas . Stanley
Houdashelt is a former
resident of Minersville RD.
~

I

' I

I

bassador John Molloy, a
traditional White House visitor
every St. Patrick's Day;
During the one.&lt;lay visit to
South Bend, the President also
will press for support of his
anti'l'ecesslon and energy conservation
proposals
In
meeting~ wl\h Midwestern
news media executives and
with the governors of Indiana,
Mlchlgan, Ohio, Kentucky,
Virginia, West Vlrginla and
Maryland.
Before his "worldng dinner"
with the governors, Ford
scheduled what the White
House described as a "regional
press conference" for 7 p.m.
EDT.
Nationwlde broadcast coverage was not eiJlected.

11

�2- The Daily Sentinel, Mtddlopori·Pomeroy, 0, Monday,M urch 17. 1~75

G- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday , March 17, I 975

TOM TIEDE

"I. always thought you walked on top!"

Stage set for Ohio'$ 53rd
highschool cage tournament

.........•....
" ·'

•·•··

Unhusinesses get what they_deserve

..
...
·
·•···

By T0111 Tied•
WASHINGTON - (NEA) - A customer 10 A!lanta last
November purchased a 5180 sutt from a haberdasher He watted a
month for alteralions. only to hnd the trouser length an mch tn
excess Sam, he told the clerk, you made the pants too long
Aftt:r another month he was giVen the suat agatn thas hme an
10ch too short Arguments and threats followed The haberda sher
told the customer lo Sitek his complamt 10 hi s eye In the end the
customer patd a lawyer $250 to rec latm the $180
Now comes JUsttce Says the customer "The store has Just
gone ou t of busmess The recessiOn , I suppose I feel gu1lty for

•

saying so 10 ltmes like these. but I'm very happy that th e store
failed ·
The glad guilt IS reasonable The nat1on IS gloomed by
recessiOn·provoked busmess fatlures., some 250 a week now , and
there can be no true JOY m contemplatmg the resu ltmg mtlhons
out of work (in January about 34l 000 a day ).

Sttll , 1t's the truth, as the Atlanta customersuggests. that some
of th ese busmesses and some of these workers deserve the1r

f~ t e

Shoddy mechamcs and arrogant clerks are , 1t's to be hoped, the
first to so tn hard ttmes - and victimi zed consumers say good
rtddance
Thetr departure may aug ur on ly good for the natton The
slothful and the careless have been mcreas mg drags on free
enterpme in recent decades They are the types who push
absentee figures tn so me mdustrtes as htgh as 8 to 10 per cent annually They also are maJor contrtbutors to the uncomfortable
statisltcs wh1ch tod1cate that Amertcan productiVIty figures have
fallen dangerously behind most other industrialized nations The
US Commtss10n on Producllvlty says the 3 3 average for thiS nation IS only a third of Japan's routme 10 5.
But mamly the weak workers and unbusmesshke busmesses

have sabotaged the American customer's once tru sted respect
for hls nallon 's products The Counctl ol Better BuSiness Bureaus
repor ts consumer complamts to local BBB 's have men sleadtly
every year since the '50s

tent business left m the country "
Not even the complamts, however g1ve an accurate picture of

the bunkum consumers must mcreasmgly suffer The Na twnal
Commtsswn on Consumer Safety, for example, says there are
60 ,000 people InJUred each year by fau lty cosmettcs alone (honest
to God, cosmetics), but only a fract1on bother to gnpe formallv
Add to thts lhe people tnjured by shoddy or unsafe household
products !four mtlllon ), the people ndtng 1n miSmade
aulomobiles (45-mtlhon vehtc les were reca lled between 1967 and

practices

.._,,II /~

~

•

il'··

e

eas1ly , that ever y adult m th e l and ts a vacttm of bad bus1ness

•

/f/\'

-.

.

Often the suHermg ts expens1ve An lnd1an woman , trymg to

8et her- car repaued , was kept wa1tmg mne months by a
mechamc who in the end charged her thrtce the es ltmale Almost
as bad , however , is the discomfort and discourtesy consumers
must race - humdrum government burea ucrats who treat the

pubhc as fleas. parktng lot attendants who drtve . &gt;rs as tf the
gun has sounded at the demolttton derby. gum-snappmg clerks,
cra nk y telephone operators , bully10g cops The long list mcludes
employers ~ho, by m large, get the employes they deserve
In good ttmes, perhaps, some of thiS rot IS unavotd able as
money ts easy and competitiOn unnecessary But now. wtth

"

,.

wolves at the doors everywhere, the w1se consum er may take ad-

vantage A customer wt th shopping list m hand should expect
other than boonsh clerks, dtSmterested managemen l and fr umpy
mez:cl1and1se. One way to get 1t as to shop around - there s
nothmg so efrectl ve m separa tmg the busmess men from the
bores

homes."

"

From another quarter, two researchers charge that sociologists are sulletmg from a ·•personblame" bias - the tendency to hold Individuals, rather than the system, responsible for the mdividual's problems .
" U we view delinquents as penons who follow extralegal paths to socially valued goa ls when the
C&lt;lllventionaUy approved paths are barred to them, we would advocate system-change remedies, ..
say Nathan Caplan and Stephen D. Nelson of the University ol Michigan.
There Is, of course, a lot of truth In these arguments. Every parent 1s aware ol how much more
powerlul the influence of outside factors, especially peer-group pressures, IS on thetr children than
values laugh! in the home - if values are taught in the home. And young people who run afoul of the
law have in aU too many cases known nolhing tu blame and failure In their hves.
But tnetrouble with this kind of reasoning is thatil the indiVIdual is not, at some point, to be held
responsible lor his bad behavior, if It Is always society's fault, the "system's" fault , then netther is
the Individual to be praised lor his good behavior.
H those who '1ollow extralegal paths to socially valued goals" are to be held blameless because
the legal paths are barred to them, then those who do follow the legal pallr! can take no cred1l for
their achievements.
In other words, if It is the "system's" failure m the one case, then logically tt should be called the
"system's" success in the other.
A not-so-fwmy thing has been happening on the way to a more perfect soctety, We hea r
everything about indlvtdual rights, but nothing about indiVIdual responSibilities Vet crime,
dellnquence and antisocial behavior grow steadily more prevalent.
In our emphasis on what society owes to Individuals and our de-emphasis on what indivtdua Is
owe society, we actually depreciate the worth of the individual - and what is society bul a collectton
of individuals? By holding out no h~gh standards, no high expectations, to tndiVIduals, we mvite the
very substandard soc1ety we are lamenting.
~o be sure, the "system" has much to answer for. We chuck lawbreakers away m prison for
varytng periods of time, rarely requiring them to make restltuation to their VIctims - or, mdeed ,
making II possible for them to do so even if they wanted to.
Then we set them loose again anu in most states deny ex-eons the exercise of such a baste ctvlc
responsibility as the right to vote - a practice which the U.S. Supreme Court ttself upheld last year
And we wonder why "rehabllilation" is so seldom successful '
This problem ol crime and delinquency needs much more intelligent effort than 11 bas beeo
g~tllng if it is not to be our undoing. But rather than trying to assess blame, laymg tl all on themd!v!dua! on the one hand and all on society on the other, we should begin to recognize that responSibility ts a two-way street and begin to demand the best from both individuals and soctety.

DR. LAMB

ECONOMIC disaster "Ill
result, says consumer adovocate Ralph Nader, if
proposals to Jilt some antitrust restrictions on the soil
Industry materialize. Nader
testl!ied before a Senate
Operatlons Committee
saying President Ford '~
energy policy Indicates Ford
"does not believe In the
competitive free enterprise
system."

Blood pressure drugs link to cancer?

I

.

Ralph Novak

Quote!Unquote

Ms. Bigg shoots
from the hip

What people
are saying·...

By Ralph Novak
Law enforcement agencies are reportmg that Amer1ca is
begmmng to overflow with personally owned piStols and rtfles
and shotguns and bazookas - that the United States is, m short,
su!fermg frorn a gun exploston One authortty who does not
beheve thts IS a bad thing, however, IS Bertba Btgg. preSident and
marshalisstmo first class of Guns Are Good (GAG) , a part of the
sharpshooting gun lobby
Always m character, Ms Btgg began a recent interview on an
aggressive note
"Now first o! all, " she satd, " I know that you know that I'm gomg to say somethmg like, 'Guns don 't commtt murder , people
do • And I know that you know I know you're gomg to say
something like, 'Yes, but who pulls the triggers'' So as a compromiSe, I promise not to bring the subJect up il you don 't "
Someone potnted out that government statistics show increasing numbers of cr1mes mvolv1ng guns are bemg committed
but Ms Bigg wasn't molltlted
"The only complaints you get about guns are from those
bleeding hearts, " she satd "Well, maybe there are a lew
bleeding arms. legs and ears m there, too- not everybody can be
a crack shot, you koow - but there would be crimes even if there
weren 't guns. Our research mdtcates that even though no guns
existed in the days o! the cavemen, there were plenty of bank
robbertes and gas station heists, anyway "
Ms Btgg scoffed at those who say the ordmary c1ttzen has no
need to have his own firearms
"First of all," she satd, patting her hip, "thiS town am 't btg
enough for both of us No, watt, I mean that there are a lot o! gun
collectors and a lot of them don't want to have thetr guns fixed so
they can't shoot anymore Alter all, stamp collectors don't have
thetr stamps fixed so they can't be pasted on letters anymore, do
they ?
"Then you have your baste sell-protectton reasons What t! you
or one o! your loved ones was m danger o! being devoured by a
man-eatmg mooae, lor tnsta 0ce? Wouldn't you want to have a gun
handy? And don 't you think people should be able to delend
themselves !rom all the nuts around who have ltrearms?
"Then there are your basic constitutional reasons I'm not sure
exactly how it goes but in there somewhere tl says somethmg
like. 'Everybody can have as many guns as they want, whether
they know how to shoot them or take care o! them or not • I'm
almost certain that was put tn thetr personally by Ben Franklin
He didn 't read '1984' for nothing, you know"
There have been suggestions that Amertcan men were especially attracted to guns as symbols of vmhty
"I guess I diSprove that pretty clearly, ", Ms Btgg satd. " I
mean, when I get out there on the range or practice my quick
draw in front ol the mtrror at home, I'm showmg those men I can
be JUSt as rough and ready as they can, aren 't I' I dtdn't watch
Anme Oakley and Dale Evans on TV all those years for nothmg "
Ms Bi.gg added that she was adamantly opposed to any laws
maktng 1! more dtfltcull lor people to buy guns in the United
States.
"In !act," she satd , "we've been thmktng that maybe tt would
be good lor the government to gtve out guns to people on welfare
and dlstnbute them to all the kids m first grade. After all, il guns
are so good, why not spread the goodness around a little more?"

Ge11r11 McGoven
" What has happened to us is
not a random VISitation of fate .
It is the result of forces wh1ch
have assumed control of the
Amertcan structure economic royahsts as oppressive as the (Brttish) Crown
200 years ago. These forces are
mthtartsm. monopoly and the
maldiStrtbuttOn or wealth."
-Sen. George McGovern (0S.D.), 197% Democrallc caudidate for tbe presidenl, in an
article on the slate of tlte nation.
. "It's ternbly Important that
·people be people first, not
women or blacks or anythmg
else And tf we hang our Pht
Beta Kappa key over the
washing mach me and play wtth
the soap, then nobody should be
making us go to work "
-Ann Aldrich, law professor at
Cleveland State University.
"1 became a thmg, a publicity
vehtcle, something created by
other people. Everyone claimed
to have diScovered me and I
was used "
-Former sex symbol Ewa
Aulln lamenting her shorl·lived
career blaming opportunists for

nothing for nothing
You
must also constder the benefits•
- the hazards that the co""
tracepttve IS protecting yoQ from
''
-Dr_ Sbeldon Segal, medical
director of tbe Population Council discussing the hazards or'
birth control.
"Thts IS Mam Street USA, no(;
only Ftlth Avenue
People
all over the world look at Filth
Avenue to see how the Umted "
States is domg We can't let this·:
place go down the drain,
become a ghost place, a slum."
-New York furrier Saul Arona,_
closmg shop because o! barallment from thieves aad
sbopliflers.
"They 'II try to run her out ol
baseball 1f they can They'll
JUmp on every questionable call ••
she makes and they'll never let• J
up There IS no way you can get .,
a ktd ready to handle a veteran
manager who ts senous about
getting nd o! h1m."
..
-Umpire Bill Kinnamon who
Instructs a course for umpires ~~~
in Mission Hills, Calli., discuss· •
lng Cbristiae Wren, one .f bit "1.
first women student•.
"~
"Haven't they (the Soviets)""
stood by us whenever we have1
needed any help? When we ""
wanted to !trst industrialize, · -'
they were the first people to .. •
help us wtth heavy ioduslry, ,.
Whenever there was any war,
we have not asked lor their ' .
military help but they have ;;:
stood by us."
-Prime Minister ladlu
Gandbl on wby ldia bas better "
relations wltlt tbe Soviet UniH . .,
than the Ualted States.
- ri

ber reluctance to return to

Hollywood.
"Man lives as the ammal
kmgdom does, by killing, and
when he talks about the sanctity
ol hie, he doesn't really mean
life at all, but only the exempt
hst"
-Colummlsl Russell Bak•r on

By MILTON RICHMAN
UP! Sports Editor

RAY CROMI.EY

An obligation to
protect ourselves

J

States Our economic interests
obviously are much more
closely tied wtth Arab lands,
where we also have close
hiSiortcal ltes. But for reasons
outhned above, it is in our
mteresl to work fo r the
milttary securtty of both Israel
and the Arab natwns, even
thooe we regard as unfnendly.
Otherwtse we ltve m a jungle.
Vtetnarn, as a principle, has
that same tmporlance.
We do not argue wtth such
vehemence against assistance
lo Israel e~en though it may, m
the end, and as a result of tile
Arab JOCk-up of 01( ~001
this nahon more in dollars than
the Vietnam war. And it will
entail many years of suffermg
for the poorer fam1lies of this
country.
No one now knows how to
preven t nations·from invading
other countnes, or knows lor
sure what effects conquering
has on neighbors and the rest of
the world. But tt would seem
logical to assume that if invasions did not pay off, there
would be fewer attempts and
therefore.' a more peaceful
world.
We hire police to .protect the
homes of our neighbors on the
theory 11 protects our own as
well. Men wtU argue logically
that we cannot be the
policemen of the world1 But in

,......

----------------------------------------------~-=

'

COLUMBUS ( UPI)
Canton McKtnley coach Bob
Rupert , who \\as shatte red last
yea r when hts top-ranked
Bulldo~s fuushed wtth a 25-1
record, would love to ftmsh this
season wtth the same mark
McK10 ley , which breezed
mto the f10als aa year ago
agatnst Cinc10natt Eld er with a
25-0 record, only to be beaten
by the Panthers 10 the tttle
ga me of the Class AAA state
tourn ame nt, IS back for yet

another try.
"After lhal first loss, the kuis
McKinley has been lo Co hun- Joked about gmng 25-1 agam
bus many tunes, but has nrvc1 lh1s year." Rupert satd, "but I
''on the title, fm 1shmg second don't llnnk they really thought
seven tunes.
Thts season, wtth only one

\\t~ \\OU!d ''

Now. McKmley 1s just two
returnmg player from a yeHr w1ns away from that goal and 1f
ago, the Bulldogs lost their 1t Is reached, It would gtve
ope nmg game to Alltance McKmley that long sou~hl
S10ce then they have been state champwnsh1p
unstoppable, runnmg orr 23
MrKmiey Fa•·es Elyrm
stra1ght wms. mcludmg a wm
McKtnley made tt ba ck to the
over Alltance m the dtstnct state agam th1s year w1th a
tournament .
relatiVely cctsy 91·73 vtctory
Saturday over Barberton The
Bulldogs' opponent \\Ill be
Cleve land Hetght s. whtc h
knocked off Elyrta 79-al
Sunday m the weather-delayed
Kent Regtonal and which also
goes mto the game wU1 a 2.1-1
mm k.

Gallia cagers
defeat Meigs
The Galha Cou nty In dependent Football team was
VICtOriOUS Saturday mght tn
their basketball game aga10l
Me1 gs County Ind epende nt
Football team.
The Galha team won by 10078. Gene Wtse led all scor10g
w1th 26 poin ls
Other players for the Meigs
learn in double figures are Ron
Qmllen w1th 18 poinls and
Bruce Harris wtth 16 po10ts.
Leadmg the scoring for the
Galha team were John Rumley
wtth 23 pmnls, Davtd Clay wtth
19 pomts, George Curry wtlh 17
potn Is and Lawrence Tabor
wtth 12.
The next game on the agenda
for lhe Galha team will be with
the North Galha faculty
members at North Gallia The
time and dale wtll be annoW!ced at a later dale .
Head coach Jtm Polcyn and

CO LUMBU S

IUPt l

thank 10d1v1duals for thetr School Basketball Tournament
sem 1 fina ls at Oh10 Sta te 's St
purtw1patwn and suppor t.
John Arena
Thursday N1ght
I Class A)
Indian Valley South ( t9 5) vs
M ISSISSi nawa V all ey ( 20 5),
7 30 p m
Maria Stem Manon Local

II.

gam mg momentum as the
tourname nt goes on, raced
el munatc"&lt;i Newark 66-52 m the
Columbus Regtonal
Opemng the three days of
arhvt ty at 7· 30 p m Thursday
mght Will be a pair or Class A

!'Wason

~ames

mght's other Class
MA ga me, scheduled for 6
p.m , finds third-ranked
Kcttenng Aller 124-0). the only
unbeaten team among the 12
sem t-fl nahs ts,
takmg on
Columbus Lmden McKmley,
16-8

~·o urth Straight Trip
lndtan Valley South, making
" fourth stratght appearance
under Coach Charles Huggins,
\1 11l match Its 19-5 record
agamst Mlsslssmawa Valley,
20-5, in the open ing game.
Manon Local, 23-1, and topran ked Mansfteld St Pe ters,
24-2, meet m the second A
contes t w1th the winners
playing at 11 .30 a.m. Saturday
for the small school title
Rossford and Warsaw River
V1ew ktck off the Class AA

~·nctay

Alte1 downed top-1.:1nked

Mtddlctown
day

In

Regwnal ,

72-59 Saturthe
Day ton
wh1le I.1nden.

·-

Vietnam by Russia and China. "-~
If supplies to both a,.noi and •~
Saigon could be cut to a trickle :::
then we cOUld say to the South .-.
Vietnamese, in all h""""ty
-""'....,
1 ' .
"Handle your own affairs".
The Chinese, beset with the
Russian threat and caught up '" mlemal struggles deeper _;:.:,
than the superficial reports : :
comtng out of that secretive :;- land, have need of this country. ;
So do the Soviets, whose ..,
economy is in sad shape and :",
who have worries of their own : :
about Pelting.
,
_ ·
They should be asked to pay
a fair price - including a shut- "'"
oil oC military supplies to
Hanoi In relurn for a U.S. shut- ·o·
o!f to Saigon.
..... \1

For the first time m 16 years,
and only the third bme in 50
years, Pomt Pleasant enters
the West Virginia State htgh
school basketball tournament.
Saturday mght in the Regton

Eveqofft e
beaten pa rh,
State

(23 1) vs Mansf 1etd 51 Peter's
(24 2), 9:30pm
F1nals
Saturday at 11 30
am

( Fr~dayl .
!Class AA
Warsaw R1ver View (23 1)
vs . Ross ford (23-1), 11 a.m
Lou is vil le St
Thomas
Aquinas ( t6 8 ) vs Dayton
Slivers l t5-BL 2 30 p.m
F1nal s Sa lurday at 3 p m
Class AAA
Kettering Alter 124·0) vs
Columbus Li nden McKmley
(16·Bl6 pm
Cleveland Heights 123 I) vs
Canton McK inley l2J.t). 930
p m . Finals Saturday at 7 30

_e.m

Regional results.
By United Press International

CiassAAA
!At Canton)
;Jan ton McKinley 91 Barber ton
(AI Dayton
Ke ttermg Alter 72 Middletown

59

(AI Kent)
(Semifinals)

Cleveland Heights 79 Elyna 51
(At Columbus)
Col s

L1nden

M e K1nley

CLARKSBURG (54) -Carey
24, R"'Jers 4, Davis 4, Furbee
10, Swtger 12.

Score by quarters

VehiCle Poltcy Call or v1s1t for all

the deta1ls

Steve Snowden
1255 POWELL ST.
MIDDLEPORT

PH. 992-7155
Lrke

a

good nerghbor.'

Slate Farm ts there
STITt F- IUTU.It
Ni

"No, our

doc doau't lllecl, but

our son does."

School, 1 Point knocked of!
Clarksburg Liberty, 67-54.
Jim Tatterson led Point with
19 pomls, whtle John Gerlach
added 14, and Tim Col:'(tll 13
Mtke Carey of Clarksburg
led all scorers wtth 24 while
leammales Rodney Swiger and
Richard Furbee added 12 and
10.
Point Pleasanl used a 22pomt fourth quarter exploSion
to post the wm , tts 15th m 23
games.
POINT PLEASANT (67)
Cottnll13, Tatterson 19. Hess B.
Wilson 6, Gerlach 14. Rardin 3.
Corr'ruck 1

lor excttement and recreatiOn;
you're likely to need the extra
protection of our Rec rea ttonal

,_.._...,.

Home Oftlct
Bloommgton, Illinois
p 7363 l

nAn n••

A

66

Newark 52

Class AA
!At Bowtmg Green)
Ross ford 78 Lorain Cathollc
IAI Canton)
Lou1svllle St Thom as

63
85

Brookfield 64

Cleveland He1ghts 66 Eastlake
Nor th 56
Elyna 71 Toledo M acomber 68
IJ of) (,finals - Sunday)

I At Athens)

R1ver

V1ew
McCla in 41

59

Greenf1eld

RCQ FIOilCh Fnes
L~rqf!

(At Canton)
Man sfteld Sf Peter 's

&amp;
Snit Or111 k

Ju i liOYC!

,
Class A

16 14 15 22-67
19 14 10 11-54

The Daily Sentinel
O~VOTED

TO THE

INTEREST OF
ME IGS·MASON AREA
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL

Exec . Ed .
ROBERT HOEFLICH
City Editor
Publi shed dally except
Sa turday by The Ohto Valley
Publishtng Company , 111
Court St, Pomero y , Ohro
A5769 .Bus rn ess Office Phone
992 ,,56 Ed ttor ral Phone 9922 1~ /

Second class posta ge pa td at
Pomeroy , Ohro
Nattonal
ad ve rt t srng

represen t at JVe

Bon 1n eJI

KIOS -

FUNMULTM
Fut'l Tray
Funburger

81g Shc t

Dayton Stivers 63 Sprlngfteld

Stiawnee 44

FOR

ADULT MEAL

Class AA
(At Daylon)

Reg French Friell

Surprise Pr•ze,

Reg sort Drink &amp;
a Sweet Treat

sa

Wmdham 51

!AI Dayton)

MISSISSinawa

Valley

54

Frederlckstown 43

(At Steubenville)
Indian Vall ey S so Ros s

Southeastern 49
(At Bowling
Marion Local 68

Green)
Riverdale 55

Low Prices Plus

Du)\)nt's

00
t)er

~al.

' Browning 2, Lanham l, Me·

Insure the good ttmes. too lf
you've taken to orf the road travel

• •

To Save!

II ftnat at Parkersburg H1gh

Big Black
Clarksburg

competitiOn Friday at 11 a.m.,
with LouiSville St. Thomas
Aquinas (16-8) and Dayton
Sttvers I 15-a) playing at 2·30,
Stivers could be the sleeper
among the AA teams, however.
The Tigers• record officially is
only 15-a, but five of those
defeats were forfeits when it
was found one of the players on
the rosster was Ineligible .
Stivers actually won 20 of tt 23
games .
The coaches met in
Columbus Sunday to go over
Instructions and recetve their
ticket allotments. Each ol the
Class A schools received approXlmately 1,250 ttckels for
th etr semt-final game, while
both the AA and AAA schools
got 2,100 lor their sem1-final
contest.

State pairings. ..

the coachmg staff would like to Pa1nngs for the sJrd state H1gh

PLAY REFUSED
BOGOTA, Colombta (UP!)
- The Colo mbian Tennts
Fedcratton Sunday sa1d the
country would refuse to play
South Afnca 10 the North
Amertcan zone !mal of the
Davts Cup competitiOn because
of tts apartheid pohctes.
Soulh Afrtea won the Davts
Cup last year after India
refused to play tl m the
challenge round, also because
or the natiOn's apartheid
policies Smtih Afnca ga ined
the zone sem1fmals this year
when Mextco reCused lo play

McKmley hrushed second m
the final UP! Coaches'
Rat10gs, wiule Hmghts was
Hth 111 the ralmgs and 11'.18 won
21 slra1ghl after droppmg a
th1 ee-po101er to East Cleveland
Shuw the Uurd game of the

Big Blacks wzn,
•
zn
state tourney

lradietory feelings toward
death.
"There's no such thmg as absolute safety when it comes to
contraception - you get

a world where there are no
police, do we Cold our arms and
look the other way? Does
anyone believe we are strong
enough to be immwie to what
happens on other continents?
The otl embargo and price
h1kes have shown us we are
not.
The otl carle! will fall apart
some day. But we shall not be
mdependent, nevertheless. We
shall not in our lifetime be selfs'ufftctent m energy - or m a
host ·or other essential
resources.
This is not to argue for all the
arms President Ford is asking
for Vietnam and Cambodia. It
ts dillicul ~ in fact, to know how
effective our aid is. Rather , it
IS to say we have a continuing
tmportant naltonal interest in
Vietnam, Cambodi~&gt;, Laos and
Thailand.
My Vietnamese sOw-ces say
that more imporlant than the
amOWII of money sent them is
a continuing assurance this
country will not let them down.
Their belief in us is necessary
il they are nol to give up hope.
In that regard, I am told , $50
million may be as important as
$300 million.
My own feeling is that we are
approaching this problem from
the wrong end. The need is not
arms for the South but rather"
the necessity of reducing
munihons sent to North

ST PETERSBURG. Fla. (UP!) - Regg~e Stluth ripped a line
drive over the thlrd baseman's head, making tt tnlo second base
eastly and suddenly brmgmg the crowd to ltfe bu t one SIX-yearold httle boy JUst sat there unimpressed , never even changtng
expresston.
It m1ght have been he was far more concerned wtlh an tn]w-ed
frog he had found and left for safekeepmg under a hedge outside
the St. Lows Cardmals' clubhouse before Sunday s contest wtlh
the Philadelphta Phtlhes at a""tent AI Lang F1eld .
Bestdes, what was such a big deal '
Carl Regmald Smtih, Jr., or Reggte Smith, Jr, as he IS more
commonly called, has seen his father htt a lot of doubles , and
plenty ol homers, too.
Reggie Smith, Jr ., is only six but you've never seen a kid like
him before in a baseball sense He's m btg league surroundings
lrequently and never awed at all by them. He's a sw1tchlutler
who makes good contact from both Sides like hts lather. He has
many moves of the professional baseball player already, and m
another stx months or so, hts forearms wtll be btgger than Bud
Harrelson's.
He was wearmg a Cardinals' cap, a crtmson and wh1te sports
sh1rt, short pants and sneakers while playmg pepper wtth his
father before Sunday's game here wtth the Phillies
Reggie, Jr , was hitting first right-handed, then left-handed
behind the cage while the Philhes took batting prachce Reggte,
Sr., with his back up almost aga1nst the grandstand screen,"""
throwing to hiS son. Some of the early arrtvals buzzed over the
way the boy was handlmg the bat.
··r don't know whom he patterns hunseH after," said his father ,
gettmg h1s glove down just in time to grab a hot smash. "Not me,
that's for sure. He emulates everybody but me He ftgures he has
the name, Reggte Smith, so what else would he be lookmg for
from me?''
Then, in an astde, the Cardinals' rightftelder satd he was gomg
U.make his next pitch in on his stx-year-&lt;&gt;id son, jam him, and see
how he handled it . Reggte, Jr., handled tt fme, adjustmg
naturally, moVIng his hands automatically. He lined the ball
qght back at his father.
·"When I was a boy, I didn't have any baseballtdols," satd
Reggie, Sr., still tossing 'em up to his son. "I was too busy
ptaying all the time. He's the same way," Smith gestured toward
his boy. "He plays lrom morning until dark. He'd never come in
tl(e hous.! if you didn't call hum.
"He loves baseball. He has been playing practically all his life.
When he was two years old, he was in one of those father-and-son
games at Fenway Park. That's right, he was only two years old.
"Anyway, he took a shot to left field off Lee Stange, I think tt
was. He got to first, then stole second. Someoneelsehit a ball and
Instead of stopping at third, he came aU the way around and
m~de a perfect hook slide mto home plate.
"I was surpriSed. I didn't know where he learned that. I asked
hil)l, and he said it was something he saw on televiston,"
There is no way of predicting whether Reggie Smith, Jr., wtU
ever be a professional ball player but he already has all the
earmarks of one. Should he dec1de to play ball, that will be okay
with his father; should he decide to go into some other !me o!
work, that'll he all rtght with htm too.
"The one thing I'd stress if he chose to become a ball player
would be for him to go to school and complete his education
first," sa1d Reggie Smtih. "I'd also tell him tt would be natural
for people to keep comparing him with me, but the most impoflant thing would be for him to be himself at aU ttmes. I'd tell
him to be just as good as he is, and that would be good enough
Hopefully he'll be better than me. I feel he is."
It was Regg~e Smtih who made his son a swttch-hitter. and
should Reggte. Jr., decide to play professtonal ball someday, his
lather uodoubledly will tell him about the piece of advice given
him by Billy Harrell, a former black mfielder with Cleveland and
Boston.
Harrell's advice came after Reggie Smtth had become
depressed over ractal tnSulls directed at him while playing m
West Virginia and Kentucky his first year m pro baiL Smith,
having been brought up in Los Angeles, wasn't used to hearing
those names and they stirred him up to a pomt where he became
so upset he could hardly see straight
"Billy Harrell told me if I got mad like that over being called
names, it only meant I Celt interior," said Reggie Smith "He
didn 't say anything more. He didn't have to. He made hiS pomt
and just dropped it right there. From then on it was up to me to
deal with it."

•

mankind's erratie and con-

Theodore Roosevelt and
Franklin D. Roosevelt, 26th and
32nd prestdents of the Umted
States re spect tve ly . were
cousms An ancestor of both
men. Cla es Martenszan van
Rose nve lt ca me to New
Amslerdam from Holland
about 1650. The World'A imanac
notes Claes ' son Nicholas, a
New York alderman m 1700 and
1715, had a son Johannes, !rom
whom Theodore Roosevelt was
descended. and a son Jacobus.
!rom whom F D R was
descended

By Ray Cromley
WASHINGTON
The
Umled States does have some
gut issues tn Vtetrtam. The
A thought lor the day· offshore waters reporledly
as compared to a reasonable every ounce o! excess body fat American publisher Horace have major reserves o! otl. The
percentage ol women.
that can be ehmmaled. Often Greeley satd, "The tlluSion that South, at peace, has food to
Thts report does not mean thts wtll lower the blood times that were are better than spare for export. Both are
that e~ther men or women pressitre to completely normal thooe that are has probably cructal tn the Cree world. The
South Vietrtamese are an mpervaded all ages.''
taking these medicmes for high levels.
telltgent, hardworkmg people
blood pressure should stop
Some people who don't thmk
capable
of makmg important
them. The dangers of high they are fat actually are. A thtn
Dra"ing the Line
blood pressure m many cases person may shU have excess
The Mason-Dtxon Ltne contribuhons, especially with
far outwetgh the dangers of fat under lhe skin, as a small tradttiOnaily d1v1d1ng the North the educational resources this
breast cancer. In women past spare ure that can be a {actor from the South was m no wav country has pumped mto that
50, tf posstble, 11 is probablv tn the elevated blood pressure. connected wuh the CIVIl War small land.
But VIetnam is tmportanl to
better to use other medlctnes
Thts means, though, that the Th e line was drawn much
earli
er
to
lend
a
coloma!
land
the
Umted States for a far
when tt is necessary to treat patient has to change hts eating
dtspute between the Cal verts o! different reason, We have
high blood pressure. However. habtts and often improve his Maryland and the Penns
m some cases the reserpme activity or exercise schedule Plotted out m a 1750 com- consistently, whether , ~
medicines prove to be the most Many palienls are unwtlling to promiSe in the EngliSh Court o! Europe. the Mtddle East or
effective and are needed lo do this , and the doclor has to Chancen' the hne was fixed bv Asia, allempted to insure that
control excessively htgh blood use medicines to try to keep the two surVe\lors Charles Mason no country take over another
pressure.
patients out or future trouble and Jeremia h D1xon between by force . We Iough! to prevent
Hitler's mvasion of Russia, and
I have always been opposed because they won't help 1763 and 1767
his attempts on England. We
to treating high blood pressure themselves
balled Tojo's invasion of China
"ith medi cine, except m
No one w1 th h1gh blood
and
Indochina. We blocked
se••ere cases, wtthoul first pressure, who is taking
not very i~portant , and you Brttam, France and Israel
trymg to improve the overall medicine to control it , slrould should contmue your mediCine when the
d
d
·
,
y wu'led tomvae
health. Manv cases of mtld slop the medtcme on hiS own.
your octor adv1ses. II won t Egypt during the Suez Canal
high blood -pressure do not The doctor has a fairly difficult as
hurt to check your breasts oqce -crisis
reqwre medicine at all, but do time reguiatmg the amount or m a \\hile lor any small lump
For. that
IV
the med. .
same pnnctp1e,
require thai the patten! get rid medictne needed in each case.
omen
on
s~
ICme~
many
Nnericans
want to make
of excess Cat and adJust the U you don't foll ow d~tions
shou
ld
gret
th
h
~
tr
.
dd~c
ldorsl
certain
Israel
does
not go
living habils .
then his task m trying to help optruon or l etr m 1v1 ua under or that
permanently
11
The first step m treating you is made ImpOSSible.
_problem . And, certaml)• relain parts of Egwt Syna
anyone wilh h1gh blood
I would think that the women s~ould be extra ddtgent and Jordan. It is not That th
pressure, unless it is an problem of possible breast
m checkmg thetr breasts and uny country 15 ,of strategt~
emergency, IS to eliminate - cancer in you or m olher men is
hav111g regular checkups.
1mpor •a"eo lo lhe United
)

-'I''
'" I \'
~

Q

year on supermarket packaging decept10ns The sum mdacates

The schools, the conununlcations media and the business community should be forced to share
legal responSibility lor the antisocial and criminal behavior of youth, says a crt tic.
According lo John Lyon, wrlllng In U. S. Catholic magazine, society unlatrly forces fam1hes to
bear the legal burden of responslblHty lor adolescent behavior " when agencies outside the home
have had a decisive vote in shPping the character and behavior patterns of youth."
While acknowledging that the chief responsibility is with parents, 11 ts bard to tma gine , he says,
that "drug use, shoplllting, larceny and felonious behavior would be taught - or learned - m most

•

'

1974J and the m1lltons of consumers who are wa stmg $10 mJIIJOn a

Crime and responsibility

By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR
LA~IB
Recently I read an article that
qu oled !rom the medical
journal Lance! stating that
women ovet 50 who used
reserpme reialed drugs for
high blood pressure had a
greater chance or developing
breast cancer.
The article made no mention
of adverse effects on males. I
am a male, 45 years old, and
have been taking Serpasil.
Should I continue taking this
drug' Is it sale ?
DEAR READER - Yes, it
was reported that reserpine,
Serpasil and related medicmes
used in treattng high blood
pressure will mcrease the
chances of having breast
cancer. Thts is also true lor
· men. But men have such a low
incidence of breasl cancer
anyway thai the increase is nol
of very much practical
significance m men. Besides
you have an advantage, you
have less to examine
to
detect
any
lump
that might ' develop. At
least thai is true lor most men

• '

.

~

....·•·.

in 1974, as example, agenctes comptled one mtlllon compla10ts.
up lJ per cent from 1973 Complamts aga1 ns1 department stores
were up 10 per cent, compl amts agamst serv1ce establishments
were up 10 per cent, gr1pes concermng mall order houses· ohe
BBB's b1gges1 bugaboo) were up 17 2 po10ts · We 're swamped"
says one BBB executtve , "sometimes I thmk there Isn' t a compe-

Editorial comment,
• •
opznzon, features

Sport Parade

....

I

~.oc

Gallagher . In c, 12 East ~ 2m2
St , New York. New York
Subscr rp t ... on
rates
Delivered by c arr rer. wfler!
B'l&amp;tlable 15 cents per week ;

By Motor R(l•; te where earn er

senn..::e nM avarlable, One

month , SJ 25 By mall rn Oh i o
and W Va r One Year , $12 00 ;
Srx mon ths , Sll SO . Three
months , $1 00
El se wh e rt
S26 00 year , Sot' mo11th!
113 50 . three months , S7 50 .
Subscriptton pr rce rncludes
S\ln day Ti~es Sentme l

MEIGS GffiLS' BASKETBALL SQUAD-Front row, J..-, Mary Boggs, Mary Weyers·
mtller, Demaris Ash, Pat Vaughan; back row, Mary Jane Deeley, coach; Janel Maue, Cathy
Meadows, Beth Vaughan and Pam Vaughan. The grrls are m finals tomght at Ra cme in the
Southern High Gtrls' Basketball Tourmament, defeatmg Kyger Creek Saturday mght.

Tornado baseball rebuilding
RACINE - Gone from the
W1th only three semors, four
1974 Southern Htgh School jumors, an d 20 untested
basebeall team whtch was 10-8 so ph omo res and fres hmen ,
overall an d 7-3 m the Southern "our season wtll depend upon
Vall ey Athlettc Confeorence, how ow- p1tch10g comes along
are Dave Thetss, Verne Ord, and how well some or the
Randy Warner, Pete Sayre, younger boys develop," Wolfe
Dav1d Clark , and Rex Rpy.
sa1d.
Also, J. F. Young,last year's
So uthern 's season ope ns
regular second baseman who March 31 agamst an alwnnt
was tn)ured m an acctdent tn aggregalton After tha t tuneup
the of! season, probably will be the Tornados go on the road to
unable to play thiS year
Sou thwes tern to open the
Coach Hilton Wolfe Jr. satd league race.
only two semors are returmng
1975 SCHEDULE
from last year's squad , Mitch
(All games at4 :30 p.m.)
March 31, Alumni at Home.
Nease, a three year letterman ,
and John Salser, two year
Apr113, Southwestern, Away.
April 7, North Gallia at
letterman David Snodgrass,
another semor, lS out for Home.
baseball the first time.
Spril8, Hannan, W.Va. (DH )
Juntors who played last year at Home.
are Greg Dunning, two-year
April 9, Wahama, A"ay
letterman, Brady Rullman ,
April 10, Symmes Valley,
and J F. Yo ung, Danny A"a).
Brown, a JW1ior, IS out for hts
April 14, Hanna11 Trace, at
ftrst try at baseball
Home.
Sophomores trymg lor a
April17, Kyger Cree k, Awa).
sta rting call ·are Greg Cundtff,
April 18, Waterford, Home.
Steve Hendnx , Scott Wolfe,
April 21, Eastern at Hom e.
Davtd Bass. Chns Forbes , Rob
April 23, Trimble, Away.
Waldmg, Enc Dunnmg, and
April24, North Ga lha, A"ay.
Jtm R1flie Freshmen are
April2 5, Wahama, at Home.
Sieve Htll, Mtke Huddleston ,
April 28. Southwestern at
John Sayre, Richard Teaford, Home.
Mark Forbes, Marty Foley,
May!. Hannan lrace, Away.
Greg Hoffman , Dan Dudding ,
May 2. Federal Hocking,
Herb Ervi n. Perry Htll , Danny • ,\,.ay.
R1flie. and Butch Shane .
M•y 5, Trimble. at Home.

Fantastic values
on LUCITE@
now
thru March 31st

May 6, Federal Hocking, at
Home.
May 7,

Hannan, W.

you'll get
$2.00/gallon
rebate
from DuPont.

Va.

IDH), Away.
May 8, Eastern, A¥.ay.
May 9, Waterford, Away.

May 16, Kyger, at Home.
May 19, Symmes Valley, at
Home.

COLUMBUS (UP! ) -1'hls IS
"Wildlife Week" 10 Ohto by
proclamatton of Gov. James A.
Rhodes, who urged Ohtoans to
ta k e an act1ve par t 1n
preserving the state's wtldllfe
resources.
The observance week's
theme is 11 We Ca re About
Wtldhfe Habtlat "
"Protection of habitat lS the
key to a healthy and abundant
nl!\ d!:f e

populatiOn, "

the

govern or satd. " Many wtldhfe
habttats are now trampled by
unplanned
grow lh
and
development "
Rhodes satd th e habitat
should not be looked upon as
JUst a place where an ammal
lives but also the sow-ce of the
four baste reqmremenls of
food, wa ter, cover for
protectiOn and a place to raiSe
yo Wig

Save w1th these special pnces, then
save agam w1th an add1t1onal
$2 .00/gallon cash rebate d1rect f ro m ~
DuPont

Here's all you do to collect your
$2.00/gallon rebate •..
1. Buy any number of LUCITE
gallons March 9th - March 31st.
We 'll give you a Great Paint Rebate
coupon. Quarts do not qualify
2. Send DuPont the coupon, your
cash regtster rece1pt, and the words
"DuPont LUCITE" from the front of
each label. Rebate claims must be
postmarked by Apnl 30th .
3. DuPont w111 mali you a check
worth $2.00 for every gallon you
purchase'

Big Values On Other
LUCITE Paints. Too.
DuPont's $2.00
Great Paint Rebate Applfes To AIILUCITE Gallons!

PICKENS HARDWARE CO.
MASON, W. VA:

773-5583

Hrs. 8:00.5:30 Mon.·Thurs. 8:00 to 8:00 Fri., Sal
........................~. . . ,...............1~
. . .~~ .
·I

r

''

"'

�2- The Daily Sentinel, Mtddlopori·Pomeroy, 0, Monday,M urch 17. 1~75

G- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday , March 17, I 975

TOM TIEDE

"I. always thought you walked on top!"

Stage set for Ohio'$ 53rd
highschool cage tournament

.........•....
" ·'

•·•··

Unhusinesses get what they_deserve

..
...
·
·•···

By T0111 Tied•
WASHINGTON - (NEA) - A customer 10 A!lanta last
November purchased a 5180 sutt from a haberdasher He watted a
month for alteralions. only to hnd the trouser length an mch tn
excess Sam, he told the clerk, you made the pants too long
Aftt:r another month he was giVen the suat agatn thas hme an
10ch too short Arguments and threats followed The haberda sher
told the customer lo Sitek his complamt 10 hi s eye In the end the
customer patd a lawyer $250 to rec latm the $180
Now comes JUsttce Says the customer "The store has Just
gone ou t of busmess The recessiOn , I suppose I feel gu1lty for

•

saying so 10 ltmes like these. but I'm very happy that th e store
failed ·
The glad guilt IS reasonable The nat1on IS gloomed by
recessiOn·provoked busmess fatlures., some 250 a week now , and
there can be no true JOY m contemplatmg the resu ltmg mtlhons
out of work (in January about 34l 000 a day ).

Sttll , 1t's the truth, as the Atlanta customersuggests. that some
of th ese busmesses and some of these workers deserve the1r

f~ t e

Shoddy mechamcs and arrogant clerks are , 1t's to be hoped, the
first to so tn hard ttmes - and victimi zed consumers say good
rtddance
Thetr departure may aug ur on ly good for the natton The
slothful and the careless have been mcreas mg drags on free
enterpme in recent decades They are the types who push
absentee figures tn so me mdustrtes as htgh as 8 to 10 per cent annually They also are maJor contrtbutors to the uncomfortable
statisltcs wh1ch tod1cate that Amertcan productiVIty figures have
fallen dangerously behind most other industrialized nations The
US Commtss10n on Producllvlty says the 3 3 average for thiS nation IS only a third of Japan's routme 10 5.
But mamly the weak workers and unbusmesshke busmesses

have sabotaged the American customer's once tru sted respect
for hls nallon 's products The Counctl ol Better BuSiness Bureaus
repor ts consumer complamts to local BBB 's have men sleadtly
every year since the '50s

tent business left m the country "
Not even the complamts, however g1ve an accurate picture of

the bunkum consumers must mcreasmgly suffer The Na twnal
Commtsswn on Consumer Safety, for example, says there are
60 ,000 people InJUred each year by fau lty cosmettcs alone (honest
to God, cosmetics), but only a fract1on bother to gnpe formallv
Add to thts lhe people tnjured by shoddy or unsafe household
products !four mtlllon ), the people ndtng 1n miSmade
aulomobiles (45-mtlhon vehtc les were reca lled between 1967 and

practices

.._,,II /~

~

•

il'··

e

eas1ly , that ever y adult m th e l and ts a vacttm of bad bus1ness

•

/f/\'

-.

.

Often the suHermg ts expens1ve An lnd1an woman , trymg to

8et her- car repaued , was kept wa1tmg mne months by a
mechamc who in the end charged her thrtce the es ltmale Almost
as bad , however , is the discomfort and discourtesy consumers
must race - humdrum government burea ucrats who treat the

pubhc as fleas. parktng lot attendants who drtve . &gt;rs as tf the
gun has sounded at the demolttton derby. gum-snappmg clerks,
cra nk y telephone operators , bully10g cops The long list mcludes
employers ~ho, by m large, get the employes they deserve
In good ttmes, perhaps, some of thiS rot IS unavotd able as
money ts easy and competitiOn unnecessary But now. wtth

"

,.

wolves at the doors everywhere, the w1se consum er may take ad-

vantage A customer wt th shopping list m hand should expect
other than boonsh clerks, dtSmterested managemen l and fr umpy
mez:cl1and1se. One way to get 1t as to shop around - there s
nothmg so efrectl ve m separa tmg the busmess men from the
bores

homes."

"

From another quarter, two researchers charge that sociologists are sulletmg from a ·•personblame" bias - the tendency to hold Individuals, rather than the system, responsible for the mdividual's problems .
" U we view delinquents as penons who follow extralegal paths to socially valued goa ls when the
C&lt;lllventionaUy approved paths are barred to them, we would advocate system-change remedies, ..
say Nathan Caplan and Stephen D. Nelson of the University ol Michigan.
There Is, of course, a lot of truth In these arguments. Every parent 1s aware ol how much more
powerlul the influence of outside factors, especially peer-group pressures, IS on thetr children than
values laugh! in the home - if values are taught in the home. And young people who run afoul of the
law have in aU too many cases known nolhing tu blame and failure In their hves.
But tnetrouble with this kind of reasoning is thatil the indiVIdual is not, at some point, to be held
responsible lor his bad behavior, if It Is always society's fault, the "system's" fault , then netther is
the Individual to be praised lor his good behavior.
H those who '1ollow extralegal paths to socially valued goals" are to be held blameless because
the legal paths are barred to them, then those who do follow the legal pallr! can take no cred1l for
their achievements.
In other words, if It is the "system's" failure m the one case, then logically tt should be called the
"system's" success in the other.
A not-so-fwmy thing has been happening on the way to a more perfect soctety, We hea r
everything about indlvtdual rights, but nothing about indiVIdual responSibilities Vet crime,
dellnquence and antisocial behavior grow steadily more prevalent.
In our emphasis on what society owes to Individuals and our de-emphasis on what indivtdua Is
owe society, we actually depreciate the worth of the individual - and what is society bul a collectton
of individuals? By holding out no h~gh standards, no high expectations, to tndiVIduals, we mvite the
very substandard soc1ety we are lamenting.
~o be sure, the "system" has much to answer for. We chuck lawbreakers away m prison for
varytng periods of time, rarely requiring them to make restltuation to their VIctims - or, mdeed ,
making II possible for them to do so even if they wanted to.
Then we set them loose again anu in most states deny ex-eons the exercise of such a baste ctvlc
responsibility as the right to vote - a practice which the U.S. Supreme Court ttself upheld last year
And we wonder why "rehabllilation" is so seldom successful '
This problem ol crime and delinquency needs much more intelligent effort than 11 bas beeo
g~tllng if it is not to be our undoing. But rather than trying to assess blame, laymg tl all on themd!v!dua! on the one hand and all on society on the other, we should begin to recognize that responSibility ts a two-way street and begin to demand the best from both individuals and soctety.

DR. LAMB

ECONOMIC disaster "Ill
result, says consumer adovocate Ralph Nader, if
proposals to Jilt some antitrust restrictions on the soil
Industry materialize. Nader
testl!ied before a Senate
Operatlons Committee
saying President Ford '~
energy policy Indicates Ford
"does not believe In the
competitive free enterprise
system."

Blood pressure drugs link to cancer?

I

.

Ralph Novak

Quote!Unquote

Ms. Bigg shoots
from the hip

What people
are saying·...

By Ralph Novak
Law enforcement agencies are reportmg that Amer1ca is
begmmng to overflow with personally owned piStols and rtfles
and shotguns and bazookas - that the United States is, m short,
su!fermg frorn a gun exploston One authortty who does not
beheve thts IS a bad thing, however, IS Bertba Btgg. preSident and
marshalisstmo first class of Guns Are Good (GAG) , a part of the
sharpshooting gun lobby
Always m character, Ms Btgg began a recent interview on an
aggressive note
"Now first o! all, " she satd, " I know that you know that I'm gomg to say somethmg like, 'Guns don 't commtt murder , people
do • And I know that you know I know you're gomg to say
something like, 'Yes, but who pulls the triggers'' So as a compromiSe, I promise not to bring the subJect up il you don 't "
Someone potnted out that government statistics show increasing numbers of cr1mes mvolv1ng guns are bemg committed
but Ms Bigg wasn't molltlted
"The only complaints you get about guns are from those
bleeding hearts, " she satd "Well, maybe there are a lew
bleeding arms. legs and ears m there, too- not everybody can be
a crack shot, you koow - but there would be crimes even if there
weren 't guns. Our research mdtcates that even though no guns
existed in the days o! the cavemen, there were plenty of bank
robbertes and gas station heists, anyway "
Ms Btgg scoffed at those who say the ordmary c1ttzen has no
need to have his own firearms
"First of all," she satd, patting her hip, "thiS town am 't btg
enough for both of us No, watt, I mean that there are a lot o! gun
collectors and a lot of them don't want to have thetr guns fixed so
they can't shoot anymore Alter all, stamp collectors don't have
thetr stamps fixed so they can't be pasted on letters anymore, do
they ?
"Then you have your baste sell-protectton reasons What t! you
or one o! your loved ones was m danger o! being devoured by a
man-eatmg mooae, lor tnsta 0ce? Wouldn't you want to have a gun
handy? And don 't you think people should be able to delend
themselves !rom all the nuts around who have ltrearms?
"Then there are your basic constitutional reasons I'm not sure
exactly how it goes but in there somewhere tl says somethmg
like. 'Everybody can have as many guns as they want, whether
they know how to shoot them or take care o! them or not • I'm
almost certain that was put tn thetr personally by Ben Franklin
He didn 't read '1984' for nothing, you know"
There have been suggestions that Amertcan men were especially attracted to guns as symbols of vmhty
"I guess I diSprove that pretty clearly, ", Ms Btgg satd. " I
mean, when I get out there on the range or practice my quick
draw in front ol the mtrror at home, I'm showmg those men I can
be JUSt as rough and ready as they can, aren 't I' I dtdn't watch
Anme Oakley and Dale Evans on TV all those years for nothmg "
Ms Bi.gg added that she was adamantly opposed to any laws
maktng 1! more dtfltcull lor people to buy guns in the United
States.
"In !act," she satd , "we've been thmktng that maybe tt would
be good lor the government to gtve out guns to people on welfare
and dlstnbute them to all the kids m first grade. After all, il guns
are so good, why not spread the goodness around a little more?"

Ge11r11 McGoven
" What has happened to us is
not a random VISitation of fate .
It is the result of forces wh1ch
have assumed control of the
Amertcan structure economic royahsts as oppressive as the (Brttish) Crown
200 years ago. These forces are
mthtartsm. monopoly and the
maldiStrtbuttOn or wealth."
-Sen. George McGovern (0S.D.), 197% Democrallc caudidate for tbe presidenl, in an
article on the slate of tlte nation.
. "It's ternbly Important that
·people be people first, not
women or blacks or anythmg
else And tf we hang our Pht
Beta Kappa key over the
washing mach me and play wtth
the soap, then nobody should be
making us go to work "
-Ann Aldrich, law professor at
Cleveland State University.
"1 became a thmg, a publicity
vehtcle, something created by
other people. Everyone claimed
to have diScovered me and I
was used "
-Former sex symbol Ewa
Aulln lamenting her shorl·lived
career blaming opportunists for

nothing for nothing
You
must also constder the benefits•
- the hazards that the co""
tracepttve IS protecting yoQ from
''
-Dr_ Sbeldon Segal, medical
director of tbe Population Council discussing the hazards or'
birth control.
"Thts IS Mam Street USA, no(;
only Ftlth Avenue
People
all over the world look at Filth
Avenue to see how the Umted "
States is domg We can't let this·:
place go down the drain,
become a ghost place, a slum."
-New York furrier Saul Arona,_
closmg shop because o! barallment from thieves aad
sbopliflers.
"They 'II try to run her out ol
baseball 1f they can They'll
JUmp on every questionable call ••
she makes and they'll never let• J
up There IS no way you can get .,
a ktd ready to handle a veteran
manager who ts senous about
getting nd o! h1m."
..
-Umpire Bill Kinnamon who
Instructs a course for umpires ~~~
in Mission Hills, Calli., discuss· •
lng Cbristiae Wren, one .f bit "1.
first women student•.
"~
"Haven't they (the Soviets)""
stood by us whenever we have1
needed any help? When we ""
wanted to !trst industrialize, · -'
they were the first people to .. •
help us wtth heavy ioduslry, ,.
Whenever there was any war,
we have not asked lor their ' .
military help but they have ;;:
stood by us."
-Prime Minister ladlu
Gandbl on wby ldia bas better "
relations wltlt tbe Soviet UniH . .,
than the Ualted States.
- ri

ber reluctance to return to

Hollywood.
"Man lives as the ammal
kmgdom does, by killing, and
when he talks about the sanctity
ol hie, he doesn't really mean
life at all, but only the exempt
hst"
-Colummlsl Russell Bak•r on

By MILTON RICHMAN
UP! Sports Editor

RAY CROMI.EY

An obligation to
protect ourselves

J

States Our economic interests
obviously are much more
closely tied wtth Arab lands,
where we also have close
hiSiortcal ltes. But for reasons
outhned above, it is in our
mteresl to work fo r the
milttary securtty of both Israel
and the Arab natwns, even
thooe we regard as unfnendly.
Otherwtse we ltve m a jungle.
Vtetnarn, as a principle, has
that same tmporlance.
We do not argue wtth such
vehemence against assistance
lo Israel e~en though it may, m
the end, and as a result of tile
Arab JOCk-up of 01( ~001
this nahon more in dollars than
the Vietnam war. And it will
entail many years of suffermg
for the poorer fam1lies of this
country.
No one now knows how to
preven t nations·from invading
other countnes, or knows lor
sure what effects conquering
has on neighbors and the rest of
the world. But tt would seem
logical to assume that if invasions did not pay off, there
would be fewer attempts and
therefore.' a more peaceful
world.
We hire police to .protect the
homes of our neighbors on the
theory 11 protects our own as
well. Men wtU argue logically
that we cannot be the
policemen of the world1 But in

,......

----------------------------------------------~-=

'

COLUMBUS ( UPI)
Canton McKtnley coach Bob
Rupert , who \\as shatte red last
yea r when hts top-ranked
Bulldo~s fuushed wtth a 25-1
record, would love to ftmsh this
season wtth the same mark
McK10 ley , which breezed
mto the f10als aa year ago
agatnst Cinc10natt Eld er with a
25-0 record, only to be beaten
by the Panthers 10 the tttle
ga me of the Class AAA state
tourn ame nt, IS back for yet

another try.
"After lhal first loss, the kuis
McKinley has been lo Co hun- Joked about gmng 25-1 agam
bus many tunes, but has nrvc1 lh1s year." Rupert satd, "but I
''on the title, fm 1shmg second don't llnnk they really thought
seven tunes.
Thts season, wtth only one

\\t~ \\OU!d ''

Now. McKmley 1s just two
returnmg player from a yeHr w1ns away from that goal and 1f
ago, the Bulldogs lost their 1t Is reached, It would gtve
ope nmg game to Alltance McKmley that long sou~hl
S10ce then they have been state champwnsh1p
unstoppable, runnmg orr 23
MrKmiey Fa•·es Elyrm
stra1ght wms. mcludmg a wm
McKtnley made tt ba ck to the
over Alltance m the dtstnct state agam th1s year w1th a
tournament .
relatiVely cctsy 91·73 vtctory
Saturday over Barberton The
Bulldogs' opponent \\Ill be
Cleve land Hetght s. whtc h
knocked off Elyrta 79-al
Sunday m the weather-delayed
Kent Regtonal and which also
goes mto the game wU1 a 2.1-1
mm k.

Gallia cagers
defeat Meigs
The Galha Cou nty In dependent Football team was
VICtOriOUS Saturday mght tn
their basketball game aga10l
Me1 gs County Ind epende nt
Football team.
The Galha team won by 10078. Gene Wtse led all scor10g
w1th 26 poin ls
Other players for the Meigs
learn in double figures are Ron
Qmllen w1th 18 poinls and
Bruce Harris wtth 16 po10ts.
Leadmg the scoring for the
Galha team were John Rumley
wtth 23 pmnls, Davtd Clay wtth
19 pomts, George Curry wtlh 17
potn Is and Lawrence Tabor
wtth 12.
The next game on the agenda
for lhe Galha team will be with
the North Galha faculty
members at North Gallia The
time and dale wtll be annoW!ced at a later dale .
Head coach Jtm Polcyn and

CO LUMBU S

IUPt l

thank 10d1v1duals for thetr School Basketball Tournament
sem 1 fina ls at Oh10 Sta te 's St
purtw1patwn and suppor t.
John Arena
Thursday N1ght
I Class A)
Indian Valley South ( t9 5) vs
M ISSISSi nawa V all ey ( 20 5),
7 30 p m
Maria Stem Manon Local

II.

gam mg momentum as the
tourname nt goes on, raced
el munatc"&lt;i Newark 66-52 m the
Columbus Regtonal
Opemng the three days of
arhvt ty at 7· 30 p m Thursday
mght Will be a pair or Class A

!'Wason

~ames

mght's other Class
MA ga me, scheduled for 6
p.m , finds third-ranked
Kcttenng Aller 124-0). the only
unbeaten team among the 12
sem t-fl nahs ts,
takmg on
Columbus Lmden McKmley,
16-8

~·o urth Straight Trip
lndtan Valley South, making
" fourth stratght appearance
under Coach Charles Huggins,
\1 11l match Its 19-5 record
agamst Mlsslssmawa Valley,
20-5, in the open ing game.
Manon Local, 23-1, and topran ked Mansfteld St Pe ters,
24-2, meet m the second A
contes t w1th the winners
playing at 11 .30 a.m. Saturday
for the small school title
Rossford and Warsaw River
V1ew ktck off the Class AA

~·nctay

Alte1 downed top-1.:1nked

Mtddlctown
day

In

Regwnal ,

72-59 Saturthe
Day ton
wh1le I.1nden.

·-

Vietnam by Russia and China. "-~
If supplies to both a,.noi and •~
Saigon could be cut to a trickle :::
then we cOUld say to the South .-.
Vietnamese, in all h""""ty
-""'....,
1 ' .
"Handle your own affairs".
The Chinese, beset with the
Russian threat and caught up '" mlemal struggles deeper _;:.:,
than the superficial reports : :
comtng out of that secretive :;- land, have need of this country. ;
So do the Soviets, whose ..,
economy is in sad shape and :",
who have worries of their own : :
about Pelting.
,
_ ·
They should be asked to pay
a fair price - including a shut- "'"
oil oC military supplies to
Hanoi In relurn for a U.S. shut- ·o·
o!f to Saigon.
..... \1

For the first time m 16 years,
and only the third bme in 50
years, Pomt Pleasant enters
the West Virginia State htgh
school basketball tournament.
Saturday mght in the Regton

Eveqofft e
beaten pa rh,
State

(23 1) vs Mansf 1etd 51 Peter's
(24 2), 9:30pm
F1nals
Saturday at 11 30
am

( Fr~dayl .
!Class AA
Warsaw R1ver View (23 1)
vs . Ross ford (23-1), 11 a.m
Lou is vil le St
Thomas
Aquinas ( t6 8 ) vs Dayton
Slivers l t5-BL 2 30 p.m
F1nal s Sa lurday at 3 p m
Class AAA
Kettering Alter 124·0) vs
Columbus Li nden McKmley
(16·Bl6 pm
Cleveland Heights 123 I) vs
Canton McK inley l2J.t). 930
p m . Finals Saturday at 7 30

_e.m

Regional results.
By United Press International

CiassAAA
!At Canton)
;Jan ton McKinley 91 Barber ton
(AI Dayton
Ke ttermg Alter 72 Middletown

59

(AI Kent)
(Semifinals)

Cleveland Heights 79 Elyna 51
(At Columbus)
Col s

L1nden

M e K1nley

CLARKSBURG (54) -Carey
24, R"'Jers 4, Davis 4, Furbee
10, Swtger 12.

Score by quarters

VehiCle Poltcy Call or v1s1t for all

the deta1ls

Steve Snowden
1255 POWELL ST.
MIDDLEPORT

PH. 992-7155
Lrke

a

good nerghbor.'

Slate Farm ts there
STITt F- IUTU.It
Ni

"No, our

doc doau't lllecl, but

our son does."

School, 1 Point knocked of!
Clarksburg Liberty, 67-54.
Jim Tatterson led Point with
19 pomls, whtle John Gerlach
added 14, and Tim Col:'(tll 13
Mtke Carey of Clarksburg
led all scorers wtth 24 while
leammales Rodney Swiger and
Richard Furbee added 12 and
10.
Point Pleasanl used a 22pomt fourth quarter exploSion
to post the wm , tts 15th m 23
games.
POINT PLEASANT (67)
Cottnll13, Tatterson 19. Hess B.
Wilson 6, Gerlach 14. Rardin 3.
Corr'ruck 1

lor excttement and recreatiOn;
you're likely to need the extra
protection of our Rec rea ttonal

,_.._...,.

Home Oftlct
Bloommgton, Illinois
p 7363 l

nAn n••

A

66

Newark 52

Class AA
!At Bowtmg Green)
Ross ford 78 Lorain Cathollc
IAI Canton)
Lou1svllle St Thom as

63
85

Brookfield 64

Cleveland He1ghts 66 Eastlake
Nor th 56
Elyna 71 Toledo M acomber 68
IJ of) (,finals - Sunday)

I At Athens)

R1ver

V1ew
McCla in 41

59

Greenf1eld

RCQ FIOilCh Fnes
L~rqf!

(At Canton)
Man sfteld Sf Peter 's

&amp;
Snit Or111 k

Ju i liOYC!

,
Class A

16 14 15 22-67
19 14 10 11-54

The Daily Sentinel
O~VOTED

TO THE

INTEREST OF
ME IGS·MASON AREA
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL

Exec . Ed .
ROBERT HOEFLICH
City Editor
Publi shed dally except
Sa turday by The Ohto Valley
Publishtng Company , 111
Court St, Pomero y , Ohro
A5769 .Bus rn ess Office Phone
992 ,,56 Ed ttor ral Phone 9922 1~ /

Second class posta ge pa td at
Pomeroy , Ohro
Nattonal
ad ve rt t srng

represen t at JVe

Bon 1n eJI

KIOS -

FUNMULTM
Fut'l Tray
Funburger

81g Shc t

Dayton Stivers 63 Sprlngfteld

Stiawnee 44

FOR

ADULT MEAL

Class AA
(At Daylon)

Reg French Friell

Surprise Pr•ze,

Reg sort Drink &amp;
a Sweet Treat

sa

Wmdham 51

!AI Dayton)

MISSISSinawa

Valley

54

Frederlckstown 43

(At Steubenville)
Indian Vall ey S so Ros s

Southeastern 49
(At Bowling
Marion Local 68

Green)
Riverdale 55

Low Prices Plus

Du)\)nt's

00
t)er

~al.

' Browning 2, Lanham l, Me·

Insure the good ttmes. too lf
you've taken to orf the road travel

• •

To Save!

II ftnat at Parkersburg H1gh

Big Black
Clarksburg

competitiOn Friday at 11 a.m.,
with LouiSville St. Thomas
Aquinas (16-8) and Dayton
Sttvers I 15-a) playing at 2·30,
Stivers could be the sleeper
among the AA teams, however.
The Tigers• record officially is
only 15-a, but five of those
defeats were forfeits when it
was found one of the players on
the rosster was Ineligible .
Stivers actually won 20 of tt 23
games .
The coaches met in
Columbus Sunday to go over
Instructions and recetve their
ticket allotments. Each ol the
Class A schools received approXlmately 1,250 ttckels for
th etr semt-final game, while
both the AA and AAA schools
got 2,100 lor their sem1-final
contest.

State pairings. ..

the coachmg staff would like to Pa1nngs for the sJrd state H1gh

PLAY REFUSED
BOGOTA, Colombta (UP!)
- The Colo mbian Tennts
Fedcratton Sunday sa1d the
country would refuse to play
South Afnca 10 the North
Amertcan zone !mal of the
Davts Cup competitiOn because
of tts apartheid pohctes.
Soulh Afrtea won the Davts
Cup last year after India
refused to play tl m the
challenge round, also because
or the natiOn's apartheid
policies Smtih Afnca ga ined
the zone sem1fmals this year
when Mextco reCused lo play

McKmley hrushed second m
the final UP! Coaches'
Rat10gs, wiule Hmghts was
Hth 111 the ralmgs and 11'.18 won
21 slra1ghl after droppmg a
th1 ee-po101er to East Cleveland
Shuw the Uurd game of the

Big Blacks wzn,
•
zn
state tourney

lradietory feelings toward
death.
"There's no such thmg as absolute safety when it comes to
contraception - you get

a world where there are no
police, do we Cold our arms and
look the other way? Does
anyone believe we are strong
enough to be immwie to what
happens on other continents?
The otl embargo and price
h1kes have shown us we are
not.
The otl carle! will fall apart
some day. But we shall not be
mdependent, nevertheless. We
shall not in our lifetime be selfs'ufftctent m energy - or m a
host ·or other essential
resources.
This is not to argue for all the
arms President Ford is asking
for Vietnam and Cambodia. It
ts dillicul ~ in fact, to know how
effective our aid is. Rather , it
IS to say we have a continuing
tmportant naltonal interest in
Vietnam, Cambodi~&gt;, Laos and
Thailand.
My Vietnamese sOw-ces say
that more imporlant than the
amOWII of money sent them is
a continuing assurance this
country will not let them down.
Their belief in us is necessary
il they are nol to give up hope.
In that regard, I am told , $50
million may be as important as
$300 million.
My own feeling is that we are
approaching this problem from
the wrong end. The need is not
arms for the South but rather"
the necessity of reducing
munihons sent to North

ST PETERSBURG. Fla. (UP!) - Regg~e Stluth ripped a line
drive over the thlrd baseman's head, making tt tnlo second base
eastly and suddenly brmgmg the crowd to ltfe bu t one SIX-yearold httle boy JUst sat there unimpressed , never even changtng
expresston.
It m1ght have been he was far more concerned wtlh an tn]w-ed
frog he had found and left for safekeepmg under a hedge outside
the St. Lows Cardmals' clubhouse before Sunday s contest wtlh
the Philadelphta Phtlhes at a""tent AI Lang F1eld .
Bestdes, what was such a big deal '
Carl Regmald Smtih, Jr., or Reggte Smith, Jr, as he IS more
commonly called, has seen his father htt a lot of doubles , and
plenty ol homers, too.
Reggie Smith, Jr ., is only six but you've never seen a kid like
him before in a baseball sense He's m btg league surroundings
lrequently and never awed at all by them. He's a sw1tchlutler
who makes good contact from both Sides like hts lather. He has
many moves of the professional baseball player already, and m
another stx months or so, hts forearms wtll be btgger than Bud
Harrelson's.
He was wearmg a Cardinals' cap, a crtmson and wh1te sports
sh1rt, short pants and sneakers while playmg pepper wtth his
father before Sunday's game here wtth the Phillies
Reggie, Jr , was hitting first right-handed, then left-handed
behind the cage while the Philhes took batting prachce Reggte,
Sr., with his back up almost aga1nst the grandstand screen,"""
throwing to hiS son. Some of the early arrtvals buzzed over the
way the boy was handlmg the bat.
··r don't know whom he patterns hunseH after," said his father ,
gettmg h1s glove down just in time to grab a hot smash. "Not me,
that's for sure. He emulates everybody but me He ftgures he has
the name, Reggte Smith, so what else would he be lookmg for
from me?''
Then, in an astde, the Cardinals' rightftelder satd he was gomg
U.make his next pitch in on his stx-year-&lt;&gt;id son, jam him, and see
how he handled it . Reggte, Jr., handled tt fme, adjustmg
naturally, moVIng his hands automatically. He lined the ball
qght back at his father.
·"When I was a boy, I didn't have any baseballtdols," satd
Reggie, Sr., still tossing 'em up to his son. "I was too busy
ptaying all the time. He's the same way," Smith gestured toward
his boy. "He plays lrom morning until dark. He'd never come in
tl(e hous.! if you didn't call hum.
"He loves baseball. He has been playing practically all his life.
When he was two years old, he was in one of those father-and-son
games at Fenway Park. That's right, he was only two years old.
"Anyway, he took a shot to left field off Lee Stange, I think tt
was. He got to first, then stole second. Someoneelsehit a ball and
Instead of stopping at third, he came aU the way around and
m~de a perfect hook slide mto home plate.
"I was surpriSed. I didn't know where he learned that. I asked
hil)l, and he said it was something he saw on televiston,"
There is no way of predicting whether Reggie Smith, Jr., wtU
ever be a professional ball player but he already has all the
earmarks of one. Should he dec1de to play ball, that will be okay
with his father; should he decide to go into some other !me o!
work, that'll he all rtght with htm too.
"The one thing I'd stress if he chose to become a ball player
would be for him to go to school and complete his education
first," sa1d Reggie Smtih. "I'd also tell him tt would be natural
for people to keep comparing him with me, but the most impoflant thing would be for him to be himself at aU ttmes. I'd tell
him to be just as good as he is, and that would be good enough
Hopefully he'll be better than me. I feel he is."
It was Regg~e Smtih who made his son a swttch-hitter. and
should Reggte. Jr., decide to play professtonal ball someday, his
lather uodoubledly will tell him about the piece of advice given
him by Billy Harrell, a former black mfielder with Cleveland and
Boston.
Harrell's advice came after Reggie Smtth had become
depressed over ractal tnSulls directed at him while playing m
West Virginia and Kentucky his first year m pro baiL Smith,
having been brought up in Los Angeles, wasn't used to hearing
those names and they stirred him up to a pomt where he became
so upset he could hardly see straight
"Billy Harrell told me if I got mad like that over being called
names, it only meant I Celt interior," said Reggie Smith "He
didn 't say anything more. He didn't have to. He made hiS pomt
and just dropped it right there. From then on it was up to me to
deal with it."

•

mankind's erratie and con-

Theodore Roosevelt and
Franklin D. Roosevelt, 26th and
32nd prestdents of the Umted
States re spect tve ly . were
cousms An ancestor of both
men. Cla es Martenszan van
Rose nve lt ca me to New
Amslerdam from Holland
about 1650. The World'A imanac
notes Claes ' son Nicholas, a
New York alderman m 1700 and
1715, had a son Johannes, !rom
whom Theodore Roosevelt was
descended. and a son Jacobus.
!rom whom F D R was
descended

By Ray Cromley
WASHINGTON
The
Umled States does have some
gut issues tn Vtetrtam. The
A thought lor the day· offshore waters reporledly
as compared to a reasonable every ounce o! excess body fat American publisher Horace have major reserves o! otl. The
percentage ol women.
that can be ehmmaled. Often Greeley satd, "The tlluSion that South, at peace, has food to
Thts report does not mean thts wtll lower the blood times that were are better than spare for export. Both are
that e~ther men or women pressitre to completely normal thooe that are has probably cructal tn the Cree world. The
South Vietrtamese are an mpervaded all ages.''
taking these medicmes for high levels.
telltgent, hardworkmg people
blood pressure should stop
Some people who don't thmk
capable
of makmg important
them. The dangers of high they are fat actually are. A thtn
Dra"ing the Line
blood pressure m many cases person may shU have excess
The Mason-Dtxon Ltne contribuhons, especially with
far outwetgh the dangers of fat under lhe skin, as a small tradttiOnaily d1v1d1ng the North the educational resources this
breast cancer. In women past spare ure that can be a {actor from the South was m no wav country has pumped mto that
50, tf posstble, 11 is probablv tn the elevated blood pressure. connected wuh the CIVIl War small land.
But VIetnam is tmportanl to
better to use other medlctnes
Thts means, though, that the Th e line was drawn much
earli
er
to
lend
a
coloma!
land
the
Umted States for a far
when tt is necessary to treat patient has to change hts eating
dtspute between the Cal verts o! different reason, We have
high blood pressure. However. habtts and often improve his Maryland and the Penns
m some cases the reserpme activity or exercise schedule Plotted out m a 1750 com- consistently, whether , ~
medicines prove to be the most Many palienls are unwtlling to promiSe in the EngliSh Court o! Europe. the Mtddle East or
effective and are needed lo do this , and the doclor has to Chancen' the hne was fixed bv Asia, allempted to insure that
control excessively htgh blood use medicines to try to keep the two surVe\lors Charles Mason no country take over another
pressure.
patients out or future trouble and Jeremia h D1xon between by force . We Iough! to prevent
Hitler's mvasion of Russia, and
I have always been opposed because they won't help 1763 and 1767
his attempts on England. We
to treating high blood pressure themselves
balled Tojo's invasion of China
"ith medi cine, except m
No one w1 th h1gh blood
and
Indochina. We blocked
se••ere cases, wtthoul first pressure, who is taking
not very i~portant , and you Brttam, France and Israel
trymg to improve the overall medicine to control it , slrould should contmue your mediCine when the
d
d
·
,
y wu'led tomvae
health. Manv cases of mtld slop the medtcme on hiS own.
your octor adv1ses. II won t Egypt during the Suez Canal
high blood -pressure do not The doctor has a fairly difficult as
hurt to check your breasts oqce -crisis
reqwre medicine at all, but do time reguiatmg the amount or m a \\hile lor any small lump
For. that
IV
the med. .
same pnnctp1e,
require thai the patten! get rid medictne needed in each case.
omen
on
s~
ICme~
many
Nnericans
want to make
of excess Cat and adJust the U you don't foll ow d~tions
shou
ld
gret
th
h
~
tr
.
dd~c
ldorsl
certain
Israel
does
not go
living habils .
then his task m trying to help optruon or l etr m 1v1 ua under or that
permanently
11
The first step m treating you is made ImpOSSible.
_problem . And, certaml)• relain parts of Egwt Syna
anyone wilh h1gh blood
I would think that the women s~ould be extra ddtgent and Jordan. It is not That th
pressure, unless it is an problem of possible breast
m checkmg thetr breasts and uny country 15 ,of strategt~
emergency, IS to eliminate - cancer in you or m olher men is
hav111g regular checkups.
1mpor •a"eo lo lhe United
)

-'I''
'" I \'
~

Q

year on supermarket packaging decept10ns The sum mdacates

The schools, the conununlcations media and the business community should be forced to share
legal responSibility lor the antisocial and criminal behavior of youth, says a crt tic.
According lo John Lyon, wrlllng In U. S. Catholic magazine, society unlatrly forces fam1hes to
bear the legal burden of responslblHty lor adolescent behavior " when agencies outside the home
have had a decisive vote in shPping the character and behavior patterns of youth."
While acknowledging that the chief responsibility is with parents, 11 ts bard to tma gine , he says,
that "drug use, shoplllting, larceny and felonious behavior would be taught - or learned - m most

•

'

1974J and the m1lltons of consumers who are wa stmg $10 mJIIJOn a

Crime and responsibility

By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR
LA~IB
Recently I read an article that
qu oled !rom the medical
journal Lance! stating that
women ovet 50 who used
reserpme reialed drugs for
high blood pressure had a
greater chance or developing
breast cancer.
The article made no mention
of adverse effects on males. I
am a male, 45 years old, and
have been taking Serpasil.
Should I continue taking this
drug' Is it sale ?
DEAR READER - Yes, it
was reported that reserpine,
Serpasil and related medicmes
used in treattng high blood
pressure will mcrease the
chances of having breast
cancer. Thts is also true lor
· men. But men have such a low
incidence of breasl cancer
anyway thai the increase is nol
of very much practical
significance m men. Besides
you have an advantage, you
have less to examine
to
detect
any
lump
that might ' develop. At
least thai is true lor most men

• '

.

~

....·•·.

in 1974, as example, agenctes comptled one mtlllon compla10ts.
up lJ per cent from 1973 Complamts aga1 ns1 department stores
were up 10 per cent, compl amts agamst serv1ce establishments
were up 10 per cent, gr1pes concermng mall order houses· ohe
BBB's b1gges1 bugaboo) were up 17 2 po10ts · We 're swamped"
says one BBB executtve , "sometimes I thmk there Isn' t a compe-

Editorial comment,
• •
opznzon, features

Sport Parade

....

I

~.oc

Gallagher . In c, 12 East ~ 2m2
St , New York. New York
Subscr rp t ... on
rates
Delivered by c arr rer. wfler!
B'l&amp;tlable 15 cents per week ;

By Motor R(l•; te where earn er

senn..::e nM avarlable, One

month , SJ 25 By mall rn Oh i o
and W Va r One Year , $12 00 ;
Srx mon ths , Sll SO . Three
months , $1 00
El se wh e rt
S26 00 year , Sot' mo11th!
113 50 . three months , S7 50 .
Subscriptton pr rce rncludes
S\ln day Ti~es Sentme l

MEIGS GffiLS' BASKETBALL SQUAD-Front row, J..-, Mary Boggs, Mary Weyers·
mtller, Demaris Ash, Pat Vaughan; back row, Mary Jane Deeley, coach; Janel Maue, Cathy
Meadows, Beth Vaughan and Pam Vaughan. The grrls are m finals tomght at Ra cme in the
Southern High Gtrls' Basketball Tourmament, defeatmg Kyger Creek Saturday mght.

Tornado baseball rebuilding
RACINE - Gone from the
W1th only three semors, four
1974 Southern Htgh School jumors, an d 20 untested
basebeall team whtch was 10-8 so ph omo res and fres hmen ,
overall an d 7-3 m the Southern "our season wtll depend upon
Vall ey Athlettc Confeorence, how ow- p1tch10g comes along
are Dave Thetss, Verne Ord, and how well some or the
Randy Warner, Pete Sayre, younger boys develop," Wolfe
Dav1d Clark , and Rex Rpy.
sa1d.
Also, J. F. Young,last year's
So uthern 's season ope ns
regular second baseman who March 31 agamst an alwnnt
was tn)ured m an acctdent tn aggregalton After tha t tuneup
the of! season, probably will be the Tornados go on the road to
unable to play thiS year
Sou thwes tern to open the
Coach Hilton Wolfe Jr. satd league race.
only two semors are returmng
1975 SCHEDULE
from last year's squad , Mitch
(All games at4 :30 p.m.)
March 31, Alumni at Home.
Nease, a three year letterman ,
and John Salser, two year
Apr113, Southwestern, Away.
April 7, North Gallia at
letterman David Snodgrass,
another semor, lS out for Home.
baseball the first time.
Spril8, Hannan, W.Va. (DH )
Juntors who played last year at Home.
are Greg Dunning, two-year
April 9, Wahama, A"ay
letterman, Brady Rullman ,
April 10, Symmes Valley,
and J F. Yo ung, Danny A"a).
Brown, a JW1ior, IS out for hts
April 14, Hanna11 Trace, at
ftrst try at baseball
Home.
Sophomores trymg lor a
April17, Kyger Cree k, Awa).
sta rting call ·are Greg Cundtff,
April 18, Waterford, Home.
Steve Hendnx , Scott Wolfe,
April 21, Eastern at Hom e.
Davtd Bass. Chns Forbes , Rob
April 23, Trimble, Away.
Waldmg, Enc Dunnmg, and
April24, North Ga lha, A"ay.
Jtm R1flie Freshmen are
April2 5, Wahama, at Home.
Sieve Htll, Mtke Huddleston ,
April 28. Southwestern at
John Sayre, Richard Teaford, Home.
Mark Forbes, Marty Foley,
May!. Hannan lrace, Away.
Greg Hoffman , Dan Dudding ,
May 2. Federal Hocking,
Herb Ervi n. Perry Htll , Danny • ,\,.ay.
R1flie. and Butch Shane .
M•y 5, Trimble. at Home.

Fantastic values
on LUCITE@
now
thru March 31st

May 6, Federal Hocking, at
Home.
May 7,

Hannan, W.

you'll get
$2.00/gallon
rebate
from DuPont.

Va.

IDH), Away.
May 8, Eastern, A¥.ay.
May 9, Waterford, Away.

May 16, Kyger, at Home.
May 19, Symmes Valley, at
Home.

COLUMBUS (UP! ) -1'hls IS
"Wildlife Week" 10 Ohto by
proclamatton of Gov. James A.
Rhodes, who urged Ohtoans to
ta k e an act1ve par t 1n
preserving the state's wtldllfe
resources.
The observance week's
theme is 11 We Ca re About
Wtldhfe Habtlat "
"Protection of habitat lS the
key to a healthy and abundant
nl!\ d!:f e

populatiOn, "

the

govern or satd. " Many wtldhfe
habttats are now trampled by
unplanned
grow lh
and
development "
Rhodes satd th e habitat
should not be looked upon as
JUst a place where an ammal
lives but also the sow-ce of the
four baste reqmremenls of
food, wa ter, cover for
protectiOn and a place to raiSe
yo Wig

Save w1th these special pnces, then
save agam w1th an add1t1onal
$2 .00/gallon cash rebate d1rect f ro m ~
DuPont

Here's all you do to collect your
$2.00/gallon rebate •..
1. Buy any number of LUCITE
gallons March 9th - March 31st.
We 'll give you a Great Paint Rebate
coupon. Quarts do not qualify
2. Send DuPont the coupon, your
cash regtster rece1pt, and the words
"DuPont LUCITE" from the front of
each label. Rebate claims must be
postmarked by Apnl 30th .
3. DuPont w111 mali you a check
worth $2.00 for every gallon you
purchase'

Big Values On Other
LUCITE Paints. Too.
DuPont's $2.00
Great Paint Rebate Applfes To AIILUCITE Gallons!

PICKENS HARDWARE CO.
MASON, W. VA:

773-5583

Hrs. 8:00.5:30 Mon.·Thurs. 8:00 to 8:00 Fri., Sal
........................~. . . ,...............1~
. . .~~ .
·I

r

''

"'

�'

4- The Datly &amp;intthel Mtddleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Monda) Ma rcl111 1975

Nicklaus
cops Dora[

Titans in
•
97-95 WID
NEW YORK (UP!) - Oral
Roberts Coach Jerry Hale had
Jt right
"Sometimes our defense
falls apart a httle," Hale satd
after bs TIU.ns had edged
Memphis Slate, 97-93, tn a
frenzied Nattonal lnvtt&lt;Jtion
Tournament shootout 01fense-wtse, we played pretty
well at tunes '
Memphis Sl&lt;lt&lt;&gt; Coach Wayn e
Yates could have satd the exact
sam• thing about his team
It may not have been textbook-perfect basketball, but tt
was spectacular and 10,152
Madtson Square Garden fans
loved tl, rtght hi the very last
second when the game was •
decided
Wtth both teams btg and fast
tn the extreme, the actton was
awesome
But when the game wa s on
the tine m tlte last mmute, Oral
Roberts won by holdmg the
hall
Memphis State had overcome a 10-pomt de!Jctt m the
!mal 6 42, sparked by 3-foot-10
freshman guard Alvm Wrtghl,
the tnken human on the Tigers'
squad of gtants
Ed Wilson's foul-hne jumper
With 2 11 had gJVen the Tigers
a !Y.&gt;-93 lead, but Anthony
Roberts tied the game for the
Titans at 1 17 And when
Memphis State turned the ball
over on a charge, Hale ordered
his team to freeze the hall until
calling ltmeout wtth nine
seconds left.
"We had tl set up eJther to
Roberts or to let Arnold drtbble
the ball and take the last shot
w1tll three seconds left," Hale
SBJd,

Arnold IS Arnold Dugger, a &amp;3 sophomore from The Bronx
performing before the hometown fans, who backed the
smaller Wright inro the lane
and btl a turnaround jumper

BUILDERS· DEALERS

WANTED FOR
MODUlAR HOMES
Boise

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with over 25 years of housing
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builder dealers to cons tru ct

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Modular

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These

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and olfers you the dlstmct

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complete informatton
Contact
Jtm Armbruster ,
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P 0 BoK lS , Addt5onl Oh1o
45610
(6141 446-1810

golf title

tllat s&gt;~tshed through the net as
the buzzer sounded
In Sunday s other openmground games, South Carohna
topped Connecttcul, 61-01, Oregon JUSt shpped by St Peter's,
115 79 and Pnnceton routed
Holy Cross, 84-63
Another New York nahve,
Mtkc Dunleavy was the hero of
South Ca rohna's trtumph over
Co nnecti c ut
Dunleavy's
outstde shoolmg and the tnstde
sc ormg of South Carolina
na ltve Alex Enghsh were too
much for the o\ ermatched
Huskt es
Dun Ieavy hru shed wtth 22
pomts and Enghsh 21 wht le
Tony Hanson was htgh scorer
for UConn wtth 17
1 he Gamecocks wtll meet
Prmce ton m one of a pa1r of
quarter-ftnal ga mes scheduled
for Thursddy Oregon plays
Oral Roberts m the other
Prmceton g~1med an 18.-pomt
lead wtth 14 mmutcs left before
tts lhtrd st&lt;Jrter was pulled
from the game wtth !our fouls
and rode out the easy wm after
the rest of the contest
detenorated tnto a foul shootmg con test
Barnes Hauptfuhrer and
Mark Hartlev had 18 each for
Pllnceton "htle Chrts Potter
and Btll Doran had 12 aptece
for Hoi) Closs
01 ego n had all sorts of
unmm gull'd dtf!Jculttes wtth
ttnheraltled St Peter 's before
ptt lhng out the dectsion Ftrst
th e Peacocks Jumped out to a
43-34 halfttme lead, then when
the Ducks qm ckly gamed the
lead tn the second hall, St
Peter's refused to fo ld With stx
mmutes left m the game, the
Ducks were forced to resort to
a stall to preserve Its vtctory
Ron Lee, desptte shootmg
only 39 per cent, led the Ducks'
second-half comeback "tth 16
of hts team-htgh 21 pomts Stu
Jackson added 16 for Oregon,
whtle Adam Solomon had 24
and Ken Markowski 17 for St
Peters
In Sa turday's openmg-round
games, St John 's romped over
Lafayette, 94-76, Manhattan
topped Massachusetts, 68-51,
Pittsburgh edged Sauthern 11lmots, 70-65, und Provtdence
upset Clemson, 91-116
St John's wtll meet Manhattan und Ptttsb urgh plays
ProVIdence m a quarter-fmal
doubleheader Tuesday mght
WOODCOCK WINS
STEAMBOAT SPRINGS,
Colo (UP!) - Doug Woodcock
of OShawa, Ont , defeated
Frenchman Jean-Noel Augert
Sunday to wm the LTV Masters
Pro Ski Classtc slalom event
and pocket the $5,200 first
prtze
WOOdcock beat Augeri by
412 seconds m the second run
after the Frenchman bested
the Canadian by 162m the ftrsl
run down the 28--gate course

Free

College Ba sket ball Results

llfacetnent
•
ce.
\\ h.H e H•r your p.ltt tcu l lr t,\ l ~ nl ~,r .. ktll, \H'
lan dm;•..:t ~ou to tht.• hl "l pl.l&gt;.: \ m \ 1111r ll lllHnuntt~
w put tt to work
Helpang ot hers. Tht• nld , tht• ~nun~-:, the ~ u.: k,

tht: dbadvantagr:d In nh.ttt'\lr

\\ ,1\

~ ~~u loHl

fl\r

hll\H\er long wu l .tll Tnu.: ~ou ' ll \\ Urk for frr:~
~ul \ \ 'll \\ Un 't \' ~'rk tnr n•lthm t.: \Vntc,

\OI L NT EER, W,, ,h"'~'" " D C

MIAMI t UPIJ - Jack Ntcklaus won, but Johnny Miller
just nught have had more fun
Ntcklaus fired a 68 Sunday to
wm the $30,000 hrst pme tn the
Doral-Eastern Open golf lnurnament wtth a 12-under-par
276, three shots, better than
Forrest Fuzzy " Fezler and
Bert Yanl"Y, who !Jed for
second Mtller was another
shot ha ck after shooltng 67
It was the third lime this
year nval supersl&lt;lrs N1cklaus
and Mtller have met, but the
f1rst two were no-wm affarrs
Until Sunday's round, Mtllcr
had bee n comp latnmg he
wasn't playmg well, but he was
havmg a good tune "
Sunday, he was both playmg
well and havmg a good ttme,
but th e five-shot lead he
spotted Ntcklaus gomg mto the
!mal round was too much for
him to have a chance at hts
fourth tour wm of the year
After hours the clean-hvmg
outdoorsman was havmg a fme
ltme, ftshmg m the lakes on the
cou rse
" I must have ca ught over 50
bass over f1ve rughts/ ' he satd
' The btggest one was about stx
pounds And I had one that got
away well, you've all heard
those stones "
It was all golf for Ntcklaus,
who won his ftrst victory smce
last September- the Tournament Players DtvJston champtonshlp at Atlanta
He fash toned rounds of 69, 70,
69, 68 over the tough par-72
Dora! ' Blue Monster" course
for thewm, but had to put down
late charges by Fezler and
Yancey
It took htm until the 18th hole
to shut the door There he used
a three-tron to punch the ball
out of a d1vot to wtthtn 20 feet of
the ptn and holed the putt
Fezler, who shot a 71 after
gomg mto the round tied wtth
Ntcklaus for the lead, was
playmg m the same threesome
&gt;~tth Yancey just behind Nicklaus
"We both knew he made the
btrdte Bert was able to see 1t
from where he was and I could
tell from the sound of the
crowd," Fezler sa td "Maybe
that's why we both bogeyed
We were both pretty keyed up
until then but after he made the
putt we felt hke we were
playing for second place."
Before Ntcklaus btrdJed, Fezler and Yancey, who had a
closmg 67, had charged to
w1thm one shot, and after
Nicklaus blrd1ed and they
bogeyed, the spread was three
It was the 54th tour wm for
Nicklaus, putting h1m fourth
wnong all-ltme wumers. And
he d1d tt playtng wtthout his
pttchlng wedge for SIX holes
"The head flew off on the
practice range," he srud He
had ln get a busmess associate
ln find some qutck-drylng glue
and put It hack together
"It had to set awhile, but I
got tl back on the seventh
hole," he sa td

By Umted Press lnternat•onal
Saturday
Tournaments
NCAA Un1 v D1 v •s•on
( ht Round I

East
Kan sas Sr 69 Penn 62
No Ca r 93 N M 5 1 69
Boston Col i 8'2 F urman 76
Sy r acuse 87 La S alle BJ
Mrdeast
lnd 78 Te x El Pa so 53
K entuck y 76 M arqu ell e 54
Or e S l 78 M id Te nn 67
Ce nl M rc h 77 Ge otwn DC 75
M1dwest

Cmc• 87 Texas A&amp;M 79
l OUISVl 91 Rutg e r s 78
Notr e Dame 77 K an sas 71
M a ry land 83 Cr etg hlon 79
West
Anz St 97 Alabama 9 4
N ev L V 9 0 San D•eoo St so
UCL A 103 M IC hrgan 91 , ot
M ontana 69 U tah Sl 63

~t'l'll

A.n J hnJ wur pl 1~ l mlll l

NCAA Col/ 01v l
( Ctlam pton sh•p)
LeMyn e Ow en 57 Clss bro Sf SJ
{ Con~ ol at1onl
Aug&amp;;tna Ill 78 Brc kpr t St 7 1
Nat1onatrnv1tat1on

list round)

Ma nh a ttan 68 Ma ss 51
Pr ov 91 Cle m son 86
So Ill 10 P rtt 65
St Jn o N Y q4 Laf vtte 76

Nat1ona1 Com m tUtoner ' s lnv
(Semifinals)
AriZon a 10'2 Purdu e 96
D rak e 78 Bwlng G rn 65

NAIA
~ Champ•onshtp )
G rnd Cahyon 65 M1dws1 r n 54
( Consol;JIIonl
Alc r n St 76 51 M ry s Te)( 74

Sunday

NIT

Volunteer.

( Open1ng Round)
So C a r 71 Conn 61
P r nce tn 84 Holy Cros s 63
0 Rob rts 97 Mmph 1s St 95
Nat1ooat CommiUtoner s•
lnv itat1ona1 Tournament
( Champ•onsh1p )
D rake 83 An zona 76

· It'll make you
a better hwnan being.
'

IJ.. .,. - . "• ._...,,
i

Th•

Louisville, Maryland favored
Ry Untled Press lnternatmnal

Lefty Drtesell knows the
pressure of college basketball
about as well as anybody, and
he knows at this tune of year
the pressure ts ceaseless ..
"When you get th1s far ' satd
Dr1essell after his Maryland
Terraptns surv1ved thetr open~
mg round game m the NCAA
tournament last week , ' everybody ts tough And that ne&gt;t
bunch 1Notre Dame ) ts a good,
tough , ball team "
The ftfth-ranked Terrapms
and No 14 F1ghtmg Insh meet
Thursday mght m one of the
Mtdwrst Reg tonal sem1hnals
at New Mextco State m Las
Cruces, N M The other senu!Jna l game features No 3
Loui SVIlle and unranked

Cmcmnatt, wh1ch has won 1's
last 16 games
Cmc1nnaJ1 and Lou1 sv tlle
know each other prr tty well
smce they met back on Jan 7
wtth the Cardinals commg out
the wtmer at home, 82-74 That
was the last game the Bearcats
lost
LOUISVIlle and Maryland Will
go mto the games as favon tes
to meet tn next Saturda) 's
Mtd&gt;~ est fmals wtth the wtrmei
there advancmg to the clunac
ttc round of actiOn m San
Otego, Cahf , at the end of the
month
Both LoutSvtlle s Denny
Crum and Cmcmnalt's Gale
Ca tlett credtted the shape of
the1r squad for pushing them
along m the NCAA meet
The Cardinals W(' rr 'l l1'"·

pr1sed by Rutgers m the first
half at Tulsa Saturday mght,
trat!tng by two pomts before
Alan Murphy htt three stratght
JUmp shots from the corner ro
start the second hall and send
Loutsvtlle on tis way to a 91~
de ClSJOO

"I thmk we kind of wore
them down tn the second half,"
Crum satd "I thmk our conditJOntng played a key role "
And 10 Lubbock, where
Ctnctnnati kept tls wm streak
al1ve wtth an 87-79 dectsJon
over Texas A&amp;M, Catlett satd
something sumlar
" H we lost I dtdn't want to
get beat by condittonmg, " the
Bearcats coach srud "We were
tn good condition In fact, we
won a lot of games on the road

tlus year because of our conMaryland's advance came
thanks ln an 83-79 wm over
Cretghtnn and Notre Dame
used the shooting of Adrtan
Dantley for a 77-71 vtctory over
B1g Etght Conference champton Kansas
W1th Maryland m the regtonal sem thnals, the Atlantic
Coast Conference has two
representatives shll abve m

the NCAA tournament North
Carolma won m the Eastern
Regtonal as well Seven conferences came mto the tournament wtth two teams and the
on ly leagues to still have tis
1\\o teams gomg are the ACC
and the Pac~ (UCLA and
Oregon Sl&lt;lte )

Marshall arrives in Dodgers camp
Dodgers danglmg from his
muscular nght arm
Marshall has a un1que agreement wtth hts employer whereby he doesn't have to report to
camp unttl he has ftmshed up
his wmter term dulles as an
tnstructor at Mtchigan St&lt;Jte
Uruvers tty Marshall was expected to arrtve at the Dodger
camp from h1s East Lanstng
home Monday and was scheduled to see achon nght off the
hat when LA takes on the
Texas Ra ngers th1s afternoon
The 31 year-o ld Marshall
pt tched m a Na honal League
record 106 garneo commg out of
the Dodger bullpen last season
on his way to wtnmng the Cr
Young Award
NCJther the Phtls nor the
Cardina ls needed their crack

Tigers 54 in

BY POLLY CRAMER

JO inniTI{!S
TAMPA, Fla (UP!) - The
Cwcmna lt Reds Improved
thetr exhJbtlton game record to
5-4 Sunday wtth a 1()-mmng
vtctory over the Detroit Tigers
Merv Rettenmund doubled
and rook1e Joel Youngblood
smgled htm home wtth none out
m the lOth mmng to gtve the
Reds a 6-5 wm over the Tigers
Clay Carroll, Tommy Hall,
Rawly Eastwtck and Wtll
McEnaney teamed up to
restrtcl the Tigers to eight hits
The Reds collected 10 hits off
three Tiger p1tchers One of the
blows was rookte ftrsl baseman
Dave Revermg's second home
run of the sprtng It came m the
seventh mmng off Tom WalKer
Tom Spencer smgled home
the tymg run wtth two out m the
bottom of the mnth to send the
game mln extra mmngs
Rookie m!Jelder Doug Flynn
of the Reds had three h1ts f&lt;ir
the second consecultve day

rehevers Sunday as Ph•la- Chtcago Whtle Sox to a 6-1 rout
delphta mpped St LoUJs, 1-0, of the New York Mets
Ctncmnall edged DetrOit m
and Los Angeles destroyed
the lOth mmng, 6-5, on a double
Houston, 7-3
The lone run m the Phtla- by Merv Rettenmund, Don
delphta game came when Allan Bay lor hit a parr of home runs DRIVER KILLED
Banruste1 smgled, moved to ro lead Baltunore past Atlanta,
GAINESVILLE, Fla. (UP!)
second on a passed ball, took 8-5, and the Mmnesota Twtns - An exhlbJtton car dnver
thJrd on an mf~eld out and then scored three runs m the f~rst reportedly seeking fmanctal1
beat a throw to the plate on a tnnmg to beat LuiS Tiant and hackmg m hts quest to attempt
the Boston Red Sox, 3-1
ftelder's chmce
a new world land speed record,
John Mayberry hit his f1rst
The Dodgers exploded for
was killed Sunday when his
three f~rst-tnnmg runs off home run of the sprmg ln help rocket -powered
vehiCle
Houston starter Doug Komecz- Kansas Ctty turn back Texas, slammed mto a guardrrul at
ny to put thetr game out of 7-5, Morns Nettles rapped over 268 mtles per hour
three stngles, scored a run and
reach early
Russell Mendez, 35, of
The New Yo rk Yankees stole a base ln drrect Califorma Tampa, was killed m the acscored five tunes m both the to a 4-2 wm over Milwaukee, cident an mstant after a run
second and e1ghth mmngs to and Montreal pushed across all down the quarter-mile drag
destroy Ptttsburgh, 12-3, and 1ts runs m the eighth mnmg ro str1p m h1s rocket-powered
Wilbur Wood stretched his beat Houston's B team, :1-2
dragster 11 Free Spirit 11
In Amona, Joe Rud1, Gene
strmg of scoreless mmngs this
The mc1dent was w1tnessed
sp1 mg to 12 m gutdmg the Tenace and Phil Garner hit by 60,000 spectators, mcludmg
round trtppers ro gtve Oakland
some of hJs relaltves.
a 13-4 wm over the Angels' B
Mendez reached a top speed
team, Chrts Speier homered ro
of 268 65 mtles per hour m hia
scortng slack w1th Spencer pace San FranCISCO Ut a 6-1 4 8-second r un However, eye- ~
trmmph over the Chtcago Cubs
Hal wood out s•ck, scored 16 of
wttnesses reported the car
and rook1e Mike Iv1e lrJpled
his 37 pomts m the second
veered mto the rat! after
quarter and hit a clmchmg and doubled to lead the San Mendez's parachute opened.
Otego assault m a 4-2 wm over
JUmper m the !mal seconds as
Cleveland
Seattle beat New York Earl

]abbar nets 32, Bucks drop Bulls
By ED SAINSBURY
UP! Sports Writer
Kar eem Abdul-Jabbar
doesn't beheve hts Mtlwaukee
Bucks, though ~tors m ftve of
seven games wtth the Chicago
Bulls this season, have any ]mx
on thetr netghborhood nvals
"! think tis more matchups
than any thmg else," he satd
after the Bucks bounced the
Bulls, 103-90 , on national
tev lev tston
Sunday
aftet noon
The matchup he had to be
t&lt;Jlkmg about most was Jon
McGlocklin bemg on tile floor
to help him out when the Bulls'
defense concentrated on stoppmg Jabbar
" Jon shoots very well ,"
Jabhar satd, "and when they
sag on me 1 1t g1ves htm a
chance ln shoot. He makes
them play me honest. "
McGlockhn saw lumted servtce m the ftrst quarter and
Jabbar, under pressure, made
only three of his f1r.st 14 shots
He blamed the performance on
the "httle things," near rmsses
which he conceded gave him a
"bad" start
But when McGlocklin got
mto the game, the Bulls had to
change thetrtac!Jcs because he
began fmng from outs1de and
he wound up wtth 10 held goals
m 12 attempts and 21 p&lt;Jtnts
Jabhar, at the same time,
dropped 10 of hts next 14 shots
to total 32 pomts m the game
"I got to shoot," McGlocklm
SaJd "That's why I play on his
stde I try to get the ball mto
him and tf they sag off and I
can I do tt, I better shoot "
Along "tth Bob Dandrtdge,
who had 24 pomts, Jabhar and
McGlocklm ke)ed the Bucks to
thetr SIXth wm m the last rune
games and strengthened thetr
btd to a playoff berth It was
the seventh loss m rune games
for the Bulls, movtng them
closer to the pack, though they
shlllead the Mtdwest DIVISion
" We need conststency,"
Bucks Coach Larry Costello
sa1d "We JUSt want to get m
the playoffs and \\e've got to
ge t over the hump to do tt

Maybe this game w1ll be the
start "
Elsewhere, Boston bea t
Houston, 99-94, Atlanta edged
Phoemx, 117-114, Seattle
cltpped New York, 97 94,
Cleveland
shaded
New
Orleans, 11:1-111, Los Angeles
npped Golden State, 111-95,
and Portland defeated Buffalo,
102-93
Celttcs 99, Rockets 94Dave Cowens converted a
thr ee-po mt play wtth 36
seconds left to cap a 24-potn t
performance and tnsure
Boston's fourth straight wm
and etghth m the last 10 games
Game htgh scorer Kev tn
Kunnert had 26 pomts m a vam
Houston effort to snap a fourgame losmg streak
Hawks 117, Suns 114 .
Atlanta's John Brown sank
three free throws m the fma I 18
seconds to hand Phoemx 1ts
siXth stra tght loss Charhe
Scott, who scored 38 pomts,
pulled the Suns even w1th 34
seconds left wtth two free
throws Tom Van Arsdale led
the Hawks w1th 27 pomts and
rookie M1ke SoJourner had 20
So nics 97, Knlcks 94 ·
Fred Brown, takmg up the

Monroe scored ftve pomts of
his 30 pomts m the final mmute
lo cut Seattle's lead ln 93-94
But Brown's !0-foot Jumper
wtth 14 seconds left closed out
the scormg
Cavs 1!3, Jazz 1!1:
Jtm Brewer t1pped m the
!mal goal wtth JUSt seconds left
Ut ftmsh Wtlh 24 pomts and 14
rebounds as Cleveland beat
New Orleans to l&lt;l ke a halfgame edge over New York for
the w1ld-eard playoff berth m
the East
Lakers 111, Warriors 95 Gatl Goodrich scored 37
pomts and Cazz1e Russell had
30 to g1ve Los Angeles only Jts
second wm over Golden State
m the last mne meetmgs over
two year span. Elmore Smtih
had 22 rebounds and blocked 10
shots for the Lakers, who had
16 blocked shots- the most m a
game tn the NBA this season
Rook1e Ke1th Wilkes led the
Wamors wtth a career-htgh 31
pomts

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POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR
READERS
Judgmg from our mat!, m1ldew
presents one of the biggest
problems confro n ttng
homemakers Molds that cause
m1ldew are always m the atr
but thnve on mots lure and lack
of fresh atr and wt ll grow on
anythmg that provides enough
food The result ts a musty odor
and often damage to our
household gOOds and weanng
apparel
A U S Government Bulletin
on the subject says to prevent
mildew keep clothes, closets,
basements, dresser drawers,
etc , as clean as possible Sot!
on clothes provides suff1c1ent
food for the growth of m1ldew
Try to fmd and con trol the
source of any dampness Check
dra1nage, crawl space under
the house, cracks m basement
cement Even a clothes dryer
eqwpped wtth a vent that ts not
exhausted ro the outstde can
cause excess mots lure Dry the
a1r by usmg an arr conditioner
or dehurntdtfler When usmg
e1ther keep doors and wmdows
closed Heat the house for a
short ttme and then open doors
and wmdows ro allow mOistureladen atr to escape. Also there
are several chemical compounds that can be purchased
to absorb motsture Never
hang clothes m a closet when
they are damp from ram or
even persptralton and always
allow space between clothes
for atr ctrculalton,
When the outstde aJr ts dner
than ms1de let tl m to absorb
the mtenor mo1sture II 1t ts not
breezy enough outstde for gOOd
ventilatiOn an electric fan wtll
help Cookmg, laundermg and
bathmg add two or more
gallons of water to the mstde
a1r m one day 1! venltlalton ts
not adequate
Getnd of any musty odors as
soon as posstble Heatmg and
drymg the atr are sometimes
all that ts needed but 1f the odor
persists scrub cement floors,
tile walls, bathroom floors and
so on wtth a solutton of one-half
ro one cup of lJqwd household
bleach to a gallon of water
Rinse and dry qwckly leavmg
doors and wmdows open until
thmgs are completely dry

·be found contaminated
COLUMBUS (UPIJ - The
Ohtn
Department
of
Agrtculltu c wtll exarmne
samples of Gtrl Scout cookt es
sold m 16 c"nlt al Ohto counltes
today to de term me tf a recall of
thousands of boxes of "tlun
mmt " vanely should begm

When any stgn of mildew ts
oresent m clothes dry clean
nc1 -Washables tmmedJately
Wash others w1th soap and
water, nns, •nd dry m the sun
If any slam remams bleach
wtth lemon JUice and ,.It or a
household chlonne bleach To
remove mtlde"" stams from
leather wtpewtth a cloth wrung
out of one cup denatured or
rubbm alcohol mtxed wtth a
cup of water Dry m the atr
When dry cover wtth a gOOd
wax dresswg
Try to fmd the source of the
mmsture to stop the ca use of
mtlde&gt;~ and further womes
POLLY

~·

•

-::J

/

DEAR POLLY - When there
IS crawl space under a house
mtldew can often be stopped at
the source - htgh humtdtty
Cover the ground wtlh
polyethylene strtps that should
be avatlable m rolls at a
lumber sUjJply or patnt supp l)
house
The other best rehef I found
was washtng affected areas
wtth watered down bleach that
keeps the mJlde&gt;~ from
growmg back so qutckly
Provide for air ctrculatwn and
keep furntture pteces a few
mches from the walls Keep
closet doors open part of the
ltme and do not allow curtams
or bedspreads to hang to the
floor If these lips do not work
buy a dehumidifier
MARGARET
DEAR f OLLY - I had a
stmtlar problem as those
readers who are bothered w1th
mtldew I read many books on
home repatr at the hbrary _
Mtldew can be removed from
walls and woodwork w1th full
strength rubbmg alcohol but a
humJdtfter prevents more
mtldew formtng Ftnd the
source of the moisture Pamt
walls and wOOdwork of outs1de
walls \\Jth one coat of
alummum pnmer followed by
two coats of regular patn t or
wallpaper or two coats of oil
base enamel These work as
mmsture barners Closet,; are
helped when they have
louvered doors or an electnc
hght ts kept burmng (Safely
away from clothes or paper ) JACQUELINE

beet~ use

l

•J

..

.. t ' •
•• •.. • '
• •• ••
••••••
•
It

,

t}

I

• .•

• t

300TH MEMBER - Mrs Nancy Evans, Galhpohs, rtght , was the 300th member lo JOin the
French Art Colony durmg the 1975 membershtp dnvc She \\ asa&gt;~arded a John Ruthven pnnl,
'Barn Owe!," by Dr Donald Thaler, FAC pres•dent, and Mrs Vtvten Ktrkel, left, membeJsll!]J
drtve cha trwoman, durmg Sunday arternoon 's reception for membe1 s HI Rl\ erb) PtC' tUJ r b)
Jan CountrynJan
"&amp;"&amp;"&amp;~

r :=-w:·:·:·:::·::=-:::::·:·..)ri. •• ••

I Social

'"

;~ Drake captures

ICalendar::f NCIT cage title
MONDAY
CHESTER PTA wtll honor
grandp arents al regular
meeltng 7 30 p m al Chester
Elementary School
REVIVAL sl&lt;!rhog Monda)
at Silver Run Free Bapltst
Church to March 30 wtth Rev
Mer hn Tee ts as spea ker ,
spectal smgmg , 7 30 p m
Pubhc mvt ted
THEODORUS Co uncil ,
Daughters of Amertca, 7 30
p m at IOOF Hall Cha rter will
be draped for the late Sylvta
Badge ley

LOUISVll LE, Ky (UPI) D1ake coac h Bob 01 tegel
concedes 11 would be mce 1£ Ius
basketball team could pull an
' Indiana " next season, but he
sa;s don't bet on tt - even tf
the; dtd wm lhe Nattonal
CommissiOners

Invtt.at10nal

Tournament Sunday
Top 1anked Indtana won Ihe
hrst ed th on of the Com
mlsswners tourney tn St Louts
last year and v.ent on to an
unbeaten season winch the
Hoos1ers hope to cap w1th the
NCAA champtonshtp l111s } ea t
'We're Just losmg too man~
ke} semor off out team to be

POMEROY Chambe r of
Commerce, noon at Meigs Inn
POMEROY Elementary thmkmg 111 terms of an un·
defeated season next year,'
PTA 7 30 p m at the school
sa1d
the 34-year-old D1 ake
RACINE PTQ, 7 30 p m at
sk
tp
per
afler hts Bu lld ogs
the school Cosmeltc demon
stratton by Mrs Ann Sau;age downed 17th ranked Amon" B376
tn
lh c
na ltonall)
Pubhc tnvtted
televtsed NC!T champwnsl11p
SOUTHERN
Athlettc game SUnday
Boosters, 7 30 p m at the htgh
'We've been sneakmg up on
school Plans for basketball people all year and I m JUSt
banquet w1ll be made and happy v.e con tmu ed to do so 111
several fund ratsmg proJects lhts tourney ' sa;d 01 tegc l
wtll be dtscussed. Pubhc IS whose team f1n1 s hed th e
mvtted ro attend
1egular season \\tth a 16-10
CANDYSTRIPERS, 7 p m record and was lhtrd Ill the
at cafetena at Veterans M•ssourt Valley Conference
Memonal Hosp1tal
All
'No one expected us to beat
members asked ro brmg m- Southern Cal tn the ftrsl round
terested persons
Thursda) mght and I don I
By
LIVING LIGHT
Youth thmk we were favmed agamst
group, Pomeroy Church of Bowlmg Green 1n the
REV HOWARD C. BLACK
ChriSt, 7 p m at home of scm1fmals, ' he sa id 'And I
ntE SfRAIGHf WAY
Sharon and Terry Gronmger
kn ow we were the underdogs
The shortest dtstance between two pomts ts a stra1ght !me
MIDDLEPORT
BUSINESS
agamst
thts strong Artzona
Thts prmc1ple IS applied to our modern expressways and Inand
Professwnal
Women
's
team,
cspcctally
after the)
terstate highway system. As a result tra,vel tJme and expense ts
Oub,
7
30
p
m
Monday
mgh
t
knocked off Purdue tn the
cut conSiderably by usmg the modern htghway, but how ansemtfmals '
noying tl ts ln have to take detours and go on crooked roads 1 at the Colurnbta Gas Co offtce
Among the semors Dra ke
Sametunes the temporary routes and the so called short-eut:; try Dtstr~ct dJrector Mrs Lots
Caul
to
be
guest
Program
by
loses
th1s year are Terry
our paltence, waste time, and don't always bring us to our
Donna
Weber,
semor
at
Ohw
McKISSick, the leadmg scOJ cr
des1red destinatiOn, often makmg us late for llllportant appomtments Yes, the best roads are the highways thai are the Umverstty, who wtll la lk on her agamst Artzona w1th 24 pomts
vtstt to the Umted Nattons
Larry Hat alson, a deadly long
stratghtest between twopomts and kept m good repatr
TUESDAY
range gunner desp1te hts 6
As tt IS wtth highway travehng, so tt ts w1th hvmg The obOHIO
ETA
PHI
Chapter,
foot-9 stze, and Andy Graham,
Jectives of accomplishment are realized by the straightest Ime
Beta
Stgma
Pht
Soronty
,
another
6 9 gtant
between our abJhties, opportumties, and the person we want to
Columbus
and
Tuesday,
For
Haralson
v. mmng the
become and the thmg we want to do The detours, crooked roads,
Southern
Ohto
Electnc,
7
30
NCIT was a spectal th11ll
secret passages, and short-euts wtll not lead us to the destred
p m ElectiOn of offtce rs
because 1t was played m hts
ObJeCtives. The straight way IS always best
hometown and he was able to
What are the expressways of accomphshment and abundant Culture report , Kathy rry and
Kathy
Cumm111gs,
hostess,
make
a maJOr 2()-pomt conhvtng? Let me suggest a few
Susan
Ohver
tnbutwn m the fmal Haralson
I Honesty. Be open ln truth about yourself and w1tl1 others,
GROUP
II,
Umted and Mcklsstck were muned to
allowmg the prmctple of r1ght ethtcs to govern your relallonsh1ps
Presbytertan
Church,
the all- wurney team selected
and dealings w1th everyone.
Tuesday,
7
30
p
m
home
of
by spot ts wn ters and broad2 Kindness. Be frtendly , courteous, and cons1derat&lt;&gt; of
caste rs
others. Other people have feelings tno, and as you treat them Mrs !lelen Shuler wtth Mrs
James Buchanan, co-hostess
However, Anzona 's Bob
w1th respect they Will return your kmdness
Mrs
Paul
Hapronstall
to
have
Elhotl,
a 6 10 sophomore from
3. Work. The world doesn't owe you a hvmg, you owe the
the
program,
Mrs
Joseph
Ann Arbor, M1ch , was chosen
world a life Work ts a blesSing, not a curse. Ralph Waldo
the tourney's outst~:~ndw g
Whitman said , ~~work, and thou canst not escape the reward " Batley, the devottons Thank
offenng wtll be l&lt;lken
player Elltott topped all
And remember, tf tl 1s worth domg, tt ts worth d01ng welL
SALISBURY
PTA
Meehng,
scorers m the champwnshrp
4 Disc1plme Ltve by the rules. Nalure has 1ts rules, antmals
have thetr rules, econormcs has to have rules, and man must 7 30 p m w1th fathers mght to game \\ Jth 27 pomts even
be observed and fathers to though the Drake defense was
have rules, Ufe has to be regunented or we do not sui'VIve
count double on room coun t A n gged to choke off hiS SCOrtng
5. Fa1th Believe m God and trust H1s will for your hfe
book
fa1r wtll be held and a film
Believe m yourself, and believe m what you are domg
Right hvtng conststs m nght reliltionsh1ps and nght ob- on wtldhfe to be shown by
Jectives The open road to accomplishment, satisfachon, and representative from the
of Natural
enjoyment of hvmg 1s the stra1ght way Jesus sa1d, "Strati ts the Depar tme nt
Resources
gate, and narrow IS the way, wh1ch leadeth unln tile " (Matthew
7 14 KJV ). Try the open road 1
ANNUAL Inspectton, Racme
Masomc Lodge 461, F&amp;AM,
7 30 p m at temple All Master
Masons mvtted
SOUTHERN Local Band
Boosters meeting , 7 30 p m at
htgh school

John Russell died Saturday

COI~'I\00. 1

I

Few homes escape
irritatinf! mildew

and he was SUI I uunded by
Bulldog de fende rs nea rlJ
eve1} lime he wenl up fm c~
!:lhot
Roundmg ou t the a ll. tourney
temn \\ ere Purdue's John
Ga11 ctt, who tall ted a tourney
htgh of 34 pomts tn the 102-96
luss to Anzona SatUI da) rngh l,
and Bow l1n g Gr een 's JeH
Montgomery, the sparkjilug tn
!us learn's upset of 'Jennessce
F'Jtda) utgh t
llle champwns h1p game
C:lC luaU) was won at the free
lht O\\- !me, where Drake
cashed 23 of 24 a ttempts
Artzona had on ly etght fou l
shots and connected on SIX
"!
know
tt
lo oks
d1spr opOI t10nate when we had
th1 ee tunes as many foul shots
as the) got,' Ortegel sa td
' But you have to consider the
type of game the y were
playmg They had to pia)
aggresstve catch-up ball most
oJ the game and any team
plaJ mg that way ts bound to
commit more fouls "
W1pmg out i:l 16~8 Anzona
lead Drake Jumped m front to
sU!y at 18-17 on one of
Hara lson's patented htgh
archtn g bombs wtlh 9 16
remammg tn Ihe fu st half 'I he
Bulldogs mcreased theJr lead
to :H-29 at the half and shot mto
then btggesl margm at 62-48
wtth 10 12 left m the ga me
Mamly due to the outstdc
shootmg of Jtm Rappts ,
Arizona managed to tnm the
fma l margm to seven pomts as
he meshed ftve field goals 1n
the las t seve n mmutes
In addJtton to the outstandmg
play of Mcktsstck and
Hat alson Dra ke got 17 pomts
from 1ts ' shor ty " center
" , 6~7
Ken Harrts, and 12 poml.s and
mne ass1sts from guard Terry
Benka Rapp1s, wtth 16 pomts
and mn e assists a nd 1\1
Flemmg, wi th 13 potnl.s and a
gam e lngh 10 rebounds,
p1 ov1ded Elhott's ch1ef support
for Anzona
Ju st hefore the !mal game,
NCI'l officials announced the
tourney would return to
Freedom Hall here next March
11-14 They satd they wCJe not
dtsmayed by the relaltvely low
allcndancc of 4,161 fo r the
champiOnsh ip game, wh1ch
was blacked out locall) on TV
" It \\as sttll better than we
drew m St I oms las t year,"
sa td t ourne~ chairman Chuck
Nemas, commiSSIOner of the
Btg Etght Conference

of

1 epot

ted con

tanunatton
The Quaket Oats Co
produce• s of the cooktes dnd
the Central Ohto Gul Scout
Coun ctl S1md~sued a JOITit
stat emen t calhng on con swncrs to watt (01 complet wn
of lesls befot e ea tmg the
cookiCs

"

dbuut a recall was hkely after Scout Council, sa1d the Flderal
tho complehon of the Ohto Food and Drug Adrnlmstration
Depar tment of Ag rr culture also was lnvestigaltng
tcs l.s
The 16 counltes affected
Nancy Gat es, a spokes - mclude Fran khn , Delaware,
womun for the gtrl scout UniOn , Madison, Fayette 1
counci l, saai persons who have Ptckaway, FaJrfteld, Hockmg,
Plil t.:hu sed Ihe l ook1 es should Htghland Adams, Ross, Pike,
keep the boxes se(1 led and save Sc10 to, Vtnton, Galha and
them for proof of pun:hase 111 Jackson
refund s Hl the Cd SC of a re c~lll
Mrs Welton satd about
B.u bara Welton execut1ve 120,000 boxes have been
rln ec tor of the Seal of Ohw Gtrl d1stnbuted m central Oh10

Fighting guided

Sidle diu! Iedet al offl ctal s
WCI e alCI ted to the posstble

conltlmlflaiiO n follow t n~ a
comp la ant b) a Colu mbu s
restd ent who s,lld he found
wh at appeared to be a shvet of

glass

box of the CC)Oktes
Gtrl scou t oHJ ctd !s Sdtd
In "l

authOIJtte s suspected (On
t(nmna tJon 1t1 the shrene
plt~ s ll~.: m the pack,1gcs
Robert 'I hurston Qu.tkei s
SCni OI
VI CC pi CSident fUI
cor pot ate afra tr s ~ud ln
Cht cago that swce Fttday

Quake• Oa ts has sampled more
than 5,000 packages of cooktes
fl om every lot produced m the
last two months at Its Burry
plant 111 Ehzabe th, N J and
fo und no other ev tdence of
conlammt:tlton
'There IS no mdtcahon tht~t 1t
ts any more widespread U1an m

thts hmtled case," Thutston
sa td "We would sttll say that
until the lesltng tn Colwnb us IS
completed, tl would be a good
tdea lor people tn the
Col tunbus area to hold what
they ve got "
Thurston smd a dec1s1on

Marauder.girls
defeat Bobcats
In the sem tflna l t.:o nt est
played al Southern H1gh School
Saturday mght the Metgs
Marauder gals of Mary Jane
Deely defeated the gtrls roundbailers from Kyger Creek by
the !mal score of 56-46
The Mara uders now play the
undefeated Southern girls
tomght at6 p m m the fm•ls If
the Meigs gd lS defeat the
Soul hern team lontght they wtll
have lo play a second game
ruesday mght lo dectde the
champi onship
For the Marauders tn
Satw day mght's contes t Ute
leader was Pam Vaughan who
led all scorers w1th 22 pomts
Following behmd were Janel
Maue wtth 11 , Mary Weyersmtller 10, Beth Vaughan had 7,
and Demans Ash ftnt shed wtth
6 markers
For Kyger Creek the leaders
were Wanda Saxon and V1ck1
Stroud wtth 12 pomts each
Mary Ro!hns had 9, Shtrl e)
Clay 8, and Cmdy Hu1lcy had I
potnt
By quarters
Metgs
14 12 16 14- 56
KC
18 7 6 15- 46

out of embassy
WASHINGTON (UP!) Sen Stuart Symmgton, D-Mo ,
says the Uruted States Js lnflue ncmg the ft ghtmg tn
Cambodta by dJrectmg
government mr stnkes from
the U S Embassy m Phnom
Penh
Symmgton and House GOP
leader John J Rhodes also
predtcted
Sunday
that
Congress wtll not gtve
Prestdent Ford the $222 mllhon

m additiOnal emergency a1d ln
Cambodia he wants, despite
Wh1te House efforts ln compromise
The
Senate
Foreign
Relahons Committee meets
lnday to act on $125 mW10n m
additional !Wlds for Cambodia,
far less than the Wblte House
has requested
Symington was asked If he
knew of "anything the U.S. ts
doing now" to Influence
ftghtmg m CambodJB,
"One thmg we found out
'
recently was that
the air
strikes were being directed by
ABA Stand 1ng s
the embassy m Cambodia," he
Bv Un •tcd Press tnt erna t1ona1
East
sa1d. "You can't go on w1tll this
w 1 pet g b type of operation in Cambodia
N ew York
52 '2 '2 703
K entu c ky
49 24 6 71
, and mamtain the credibility
St LOUt S
27 48 360
of
the admmistration wltll tile
M e mph s
n s1 301
V rgmta
14 59 192
Congress and , as tllese facta
w est
w I pet 9 b unfold, the Congress Is getting
x Denv er
57 18 760
Increasingly suspicious of tile
San A nt on to
4&lt;~ 3 1
587
whole foreign policy "
lndtana
40 31 563
11
Utah
3'2 41 43 8 24
0o you mean to say at this
San Diego
31 43 4 19
25 ' ' time the US embassy •In
x Clmched d1 V1s1on t1t1e
Saturday s Re sult s
Pbnom Penh Is actually conSan An ton 10 112 U tah 102
trolling
the bombmg?" he was
Ind iana 107 M emphiS 100
asked,
K entucky 113 sa n DteQO 98
Su nda ys G am es
"W1thm the last year we ~
St LOU tS 1'2'2 MemphiS 11 4
controllmg It," Symingt&lt;!JI
N e w Yor k 100 Ut ah 89
lnd 1ana 121 Vlrgmla 103
said
"
Denv er 128 Ke n t ucky 125 ot
•
Sources
m
the
Senate
wliO
Monday 's Game
l nd ana at New York
declined ro be Identified hicause their infonnaUon dU·
NBA Standmgs
Cered from Symlilgton 's sa~
By Untted Press lnlernat1onal
Eastern Conference
although the emball8y dlrectea
AtlantiC DIVI S IOn
w I Pet 9 b U.S bombing lllrlkes befoie
Bo ston
SO 20 714
' the 1973 halt, it was not
Buflalo
43 28 606 ,, ,
11 d in
••
N ew York
34 37 479 " '• lua yo gsonow.
•
Phlladelpt11a 33 39 &lt;t51l ' "
Asked
about
comproml'f,l!
Central Dt vi sion
w1th the admimstration on the
w 1 pet g 0
x wa s 11 ngton 5 '1 19 73 2
rud funds, Symington said, !b
Hou ston
37 36 50 7 11\
know what til
Clt!vel iJnd
35 37
472 17 ' ~ don't
A tl a n ta
29 45 39'2 24 1 1 Repubhcans are gomg to do.;,J
N ewOrl e an s
19 50 275 32
am confident that a Jar~
Wt! stern Conference
MtdWesl Ot VIS IOO
percentage of the Democrats
w 1 pet 9
w1ll not vote any more aid tD
•
Ch cage
11 '29 586
K C Om a lltl
39 32 549
2 , e1ther Vietoam or Cambodla1'
Detro I
35 38 4 79
;:1;
Rhodes said he felt a1d Ill
Milwaukee
34 37 4 79
Pa c tfi C OtVI St On
Cambodia was a dead

Pro Standings

\l

ac-

Golden Sta te
Sea ttl e
Portland
Phoenu'
Los Ange les

w 1

pet
32 562
37 486

41
35
31 40
29 4 1
26 &lt;15

51 7
437 9
414 11
366 14
x Clinched dPn ston t1fl c
Saturday's Re sults
New Or l ean s 140 A tl an ta 123
Phllad el ph a 96 Cl eveland 88
Go ld en Slate 120 Seattl e Bt
Sunday's Results
Bos ton 99 Hou s ton 9.4
Atlanta 111 Phoen x 114
Milwauk ee 103 Ch1 cago 90
Seattle 97 New York 94
Cle ve land 11 3 New Or lean s 11 I
Lo s An g e les I l l Golden Sta l e 95
Por tl il nd 10 2 Buffalo 95
Monday s Games
(No games sc hedu led)

MILLER IN GALLIA •
Co ngressman Claren~e
Mtller will be in hts Laitcaslir
Office Saturday, March 22 !Dr
scheduled appomtments wilh
area residents That eveniftg
he wtll travel to Galbo Couni y
where he will address tSe
annual dmner meeting of tile
Ga lhpohs Area Chamber .Pf
Commerce at the Rio Gran~e
College cafetena
•
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The Easiest Bank To Get To

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&amp;

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The Daily Sentinel

John Russell, 71, of 6 Cave
St, Pomeroy, dted Saturday at
Veterans MemorJal HospitaL
Mr Russell was preceded m
death by his parents, John and
Pearl Flermng Russell , two
Sisters, and a brother
Surv1vmg are hts wtfe.
Magdalene Allen Russell ,
three sons, Robert E , Samuel
and DaVId, all of Columbus;
two daughters, Judy Nelson,
Homer, La , and Fanme Mae
West,
Pomeroy,
three
brotllers, Thomas and James,
both of Columbus, and

Luther of Dayton , two Sisters,
Mrs
Allen
Hampton,
Pomeroy, and Mrs Leon
Tatum, Colwnbus; 11 grandchaldren, and several meces
and nephews.
Mr Russell was a member of
the Forest Run Baptist Church
Funeral services wtll be held
at 2 p m Tuesday at the Ewmg
Funeral Home w1th the Rev
Edward Buffmgtnn offJctatmg
Burtal Will be m Beech Grove
Cemetery Fnends may, call at
the funeral home any tune

DBIVB·IN BANICINQ'
•
Easy does tt , , no pam, no stram You don't even have to get 0'\JI
of your car - and that ends pesky parktng problems. Just' pull up
and transact your business- On Fridays our Drtve In Window iS'
open 9 a m to 7 p m continuously to better serve you

Frank Sisty

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY CHAPTER 80,
Royal Arch MB.sons, con·
voca l ton, Wednesda y, 7 30
p m for the purpose of con
fernng
most
excellent
mast&lt;&gt;r 's degree
MIDD!,IEPORT LITERARY
Club, 2 p m Wednesda y, home
of Mrs Forest Bachtel Mrs
Thereon Johnson to review
"Thomas Jefferson" b) Pawn
Brod1e Roll call wtll be a
comment on the program

TRIO
Organs, Drum s, Guitar
NITELY

Farmers Bank &amp; Savings Co.
POMEROY, OHIO

(,_...0-l:Oo

Member of Federal Reserve System
$40,ooo.oo Maximum Insurance for Each Depositor

TO ENTERTAIN YOU AT

THE MEIGS INN'
PH 992 3629

'

OPIN FRIDAYS 9 'TIL 7

POMEROY

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tssus.

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•

Enjoy the Distinctive Style of the

comple le del• ••s

PH. 992-23 IB

Pomeroy!

•

STARTING MAR. 18

11 you 11 a two &lt;:11 l•m•ly
Nahonwu;le can s•ve ~ o u
money Qn you1 auto
•nsu fart&lt;:e Add I11Jn8l hb
erahred benehts .,., av••l
able to those who quality
Call • Na uonw•de IIJ'OI tor

P. J. PAULEY
307 Sprrng Ave. • Pomeroy

•

Robinson's Cleaners
216 E. 2nd

Thin mint cookies may

Polly's Pointers

dillonmg "

•

By RICK GOSSELIN
UPI Sp&lt;Jrts Writer
As one m1racle man was on
his way out of Flortda Sunday,
another was on h1s "'ay m
Rehel pttcher Tug McGraw
was sent back to Phtladelphta
b) the Phtlhes for an exammatton by a spectahst to determme t! surgery IS needed to
repatr recurrmg back and
chest pams Those same pams
cnppled his performance wtth
the New York Mets last season
after he led them to a Natwnal
Leag ue pennant the year
before
And as McGraw left With the
hopes of a Ph1ladelphta pennant strapped ro hts back, Los
Angeles superman M1ke Marshall was on his way to Vero
Beach wtth the hopes of the

~b:&lt;

Reds defeAt

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4- The Datly &amp;intthel Mtddleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Monda) Ma rcl111 1975

Nicklaus
cops Dora[

Titans in
•
97-95 WID
NEW YORK (UP!) - Oral
Roberts Coach Jerry Hale had
Jt right
"Sometimes our defense
falls apart a httle," Hale satd
after bs TIU.ns had edged
Memphis Slate, 97-93, tn a
frenzied Nattonal lnvtt&lt;Jtion
Tournament shootout 01fense-wtse, we played pretty
well at tunes '
Memphis Sl&lt;lt&lt;&gt; Coach Wayn e
Yates could have satd the exact
sam• thing about his team
It may not have been textbook-perfect basketball, but tt
was spectacular and 10,152
Madtson Square Garden fans
loved tl, rtght hi the very last
second when the game was •
decided
Wtth both teams btg and fast
tn the extreme, the actton was
awesome
But when the game wa s on
the tine m tlte last mmute, Oral
Roberts won by holdmg the
hall
Memphis State had overcome a 10-pomt de!Jctt m the
!mal 6 42, sparked by 3-foot-10
freshman guard Alvm Wrtghl,
the tnken human on the Tigers'
squad of gtants
Ed Wilson's foul-hne jumper
With 2 11 had gJVen the Tigers
a !Y.&gt;-93 lead, but Anthony
Roberts tied the game for the
Titans at 1 17 And when
Memphis State turned the ball
over on a charge, Hale ordered
his team to freeze the hall until
calling ltmeout wtth nine
seconds left.
"We had tl set up eJther to
Roberts or to let Arnold drtbble
the ball and take the last shot
w1tll three seconds left," Hale
SBJd,

Arnold IS Arnold Dugger, a &amp;3 sophomore from The Bronx
performing before the hometown fans, who backed the
smaller Wright inro the lane
and btl a turnaround jumper

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45610
(6141 446-1810

golf title

tllat s&gt;~tshed through the net as
the buzzer sounded
In Sunday s other openmground games, South Carohna
topped Connecttcul, 61-01, Oregon JUSt shpped by St Peter's,
115 79 and Pnnceton routed
Holy Cross, 84-63
Another New York nahve,
Mtkc Dunleavy was the hero of
South Ca rohna's trtumph over
Co nnecti c ut
Dunleavy's
outstde shoolmg and the tnstde
sc ormg of South Carolina
na ltve Alex Enghsh were too
much for the o\ ermatched
Huskt es
Dun Ieavy hru shed wtth 22
pomts and Enghsh 21 wht le
Tony Hanson was htgh scorer
for UConn wtth 17
1 he Gamecocks wtll meet
Prmce ton m one of a pa1r of
quarter-ftnal ga mes scheduled
for Thursddy Oregon plays
Oral Roberts m the other
Prmceton g~1med an 18.-pomt
lead wtth 14 mmutcs left before
tts lhtrd st&lt;Jrter was pulled
from the game wtth !our fouls
and rode out the easy wm after
the rest of the contest
detenorated tnto a foul shootmg con test
Barnes Hauptfuhrer and
Mark Hartlev had 18 each for
Pllnceton "htle Chrts Potter
and Btll Doran had 12 aptece
for Hoi) Closs
01 ego n had all sorts of
unmm gull'd dtf!Jculttes wtth
ttnheraltled St Peter 's before
ptt lhng out the dectsion Ftrst
th e Peacocks Jumped out to a
43-34 halfttme lead, then when
the Ducks qm ckly gamed the
lead tn the second hall, St
Peter's refused to fo ld With stx
mmutes left m the game, the
Ducks were forced to resort to
a stall to preserve Its vtctory
Ron Lee, desptte shootmg
only 39 per cent, led the Ducks'
second-half comeback "tth 16
of hts team-htgh 21 pomts Stu
Jackson added 16 for Oregon,
whtle Adam Solomon had 24
and Ken Markowski 17 for St
Peters
In Sa turday's openmg-round
games, St John 's romped over
Lafayette, 94-76, Manhattan
topped Massachusetts, 68-51,
Pittsburgh edged Sauthern 11lmots, 70-65, und Provtdence
upset Clemson, 91-116
St John's wtll meet Manhattan und Ptttsb urgh plays
ProVIdence m a quarter-fmal
doubleheader Tuesday mght
WOODCOCK WINS
STEAMBOAT SPRINGS,
Colo (UP!) - Doug Woodcock
of OShawa, Ont , defeated
Frenchman Jean-Noel Augert
Sunday to wm the LTV Masters
Pro Ski Classtc slalom event
and pocket the $5,200 first
prtze
WOOdcock beat Augeri by
412 seconds m the second run
after the Frenchman bested
the Canadian by 162m the ftrsl
run down the 28--gate course

Free

College Ba sket ball Results

llfacetnent
•
ce.
\\ h.H e H•r your p.ltt tcu l lr t,\ l ~ nl ~,r .. ktll, \H'
lan dm;•..:t ~ou to tht.• hl "l pl.l&gt;.: \ m \ 1111r ll lllHnuntt~
w put tt to work
Helpang ot hers. Tht• nld , tht• ~nun~-:, the ~ u.: k,

tht: dbadvantagr:d In nh.ttt'\lr

\\ ,1\

~ ~~u loHl

fl\r

hll\H\er long wu l .tll Tnu.: ~ou ' ll \\ Urk for frr:~
~ul \ \ 'll \\ Un 't \' ~'rk tnr n•lthm t.: \Vntc,

\OI L NT EER, W,, ,h"'~'" " D C

MIAMI t UPIJ - Jack Ntcklaus won, but Johnny Miller
just nught have had more fun
Ntcklaus fired a 68 Sunday to
wm the $30,000 hrst pme tn the
Doral-Eastern Open golf lnurnament wtth a 12-under-par
276, three shots, better than
Forrest Fuzzy " Fezler and
Bert Yanl"Y, who !Jed for
second Mtller was another
shot ha ck after shooltng 67
It was the third lime this
year nval supersl&lt;lrs N1cklaus
and Mtller have met, but the
f1rst two were no-wm affarrs
Until Sunday's round, Mtllcr
had bee n comp latnmg he
wasn't playmg well, but he was
havmg a good tune "
Sunday, he was both playmg
well and havmg a good ttme,
but th e five-shot lead he
spotted Ntcklaus gomg mto the
!mal round was too much for
him to have a chance at hts
fourth tour wm of the year
After hours the clean-hvmg
outdoorsman was havmg a fme
ltme, ftshmg m the lakes on the
cou rse
" I must have ca ught over 50
bass over f1ve rughts/ ' he satd
' The btggest one was about stx
pounds And I had one that got
away well, you've all heard
those stones "
It was all golf for Ntcklaus,
who won his ftrst victory smce
last September- the Tournament Players DtvJston champtonshlp at Atlanta
He fash toned rounds of 69, 70,
69, 68 over the tough par-72
Dora! ' Blue Monster" course
for thewm, but had to put down
late charges by Fezler and
Yancey
It took htm until the 18th hole
to shut the door There he used
a three-tron to punch the ball
out of a d1vot to wtthtn 20 feet of
the ptn and holed the putt
Fezler, who shot a 71 after
gomg mto the round tied wtth
Ntcklaus for the lead, was
playmg m the same threesome
&gt;~tth Yancey just behind Nicklaus
"We both knew he made the
btrdte Bert was able to see 1t
from where he was and I could
tell from the sound of the
crowd," Fezler sa td "Maybe
that's why we both bogeyed
We were both pretty keyed up
until then but after he made the
putt we felt hke we were
playing for second place."
Before Ntcklaus btrdJed, Fezler and Yancey, who had a
closmg 67, had charged to
w1thm one shot, and after
Nicklaus blrd1ed and they
bogeyed, the spread was three
It was the 54th tour wm for
Nicklaus, putting h1m fourth
wnong all-ltme wumers. And
he d1d tt playtng wtthout his
pttchlng wedge for SIX holes
"The head flew off on the
practice range," he srud He
had ln get a busmess associate
ln find some qutck-drylng glue
and put It hack together
"It had to set awhile, but I
got tl back on the seventh
hole," he sa td

By Umted Press lnternat•onal
Saturday
Tournaments
NCAA Un1 v D1 v •s•on
( ht Round I

East
Kan sas Sr 69 Penn 62
No Ca r 93 N M 5 1 69
Boston Col i 8'2 F urman 76
Sy r acuse 87 La S alle BJ
Mrdeast
lnd 78 Te x El Pa so 53
K entuck y 76 M arqu ell e 54
Or e S l 78 M id Te nn 67
Ce nl M rc h 77 Ge otwn DC 75
M1dwest

Cmc• 87 Texas A&amp;M 79
l OUISVl 91 Rutg e r s 78
Notr e Dame 77 K an sas 71
M a ry land 83 Cr etg hlon 79
West
Anz St 97 Alabama 9 4
N ev L V 9 0 San D•eoo St so
UCL A 103 M IC hrgan 91 , ot
M ontana 69 U tah Sl 63

~t'l'll

A.n J hnJ wur pl 1~ l mlll l

NCAA Col/ 01v l
( Ctlam pton sh•p)
LeMyn e Ow en 57 Clss bro Sf SJ
{ Con~ ol at1onl
Aug&amp;;tna Ill 78 Brc kpr t St 7 1
Nat1onatrnv1tat1on

list round)

Ma nh a ttan 68 Ma ss 51
Pr ov 91 Cle m son 86
So Ill 10 P rtt 65
St Jn o N Y q4 Laf vtte 76

Nat1ona1 Com m tUtoner ' s lnv
(Semifinals)
AriZon a 10'2 Purdu e 96
D rak e 78 Bwlng G rn 65

NAIA
~ Champ•onshtp )
G rnd Cahyon 65 M1dws1 r n 54
( Consol;JIIonl
Alc r n St 76 51 M ry s Te)( 74

Sunday

NIT

Volunteer.

( Open1ng Round)
So C a r 71 Conn 61
P r nce tn 84 Holy Cros s 63
0 Rob rts 97 Mmph 1s St 95
Nat1ooat CommiUtoner s•
lnv itat1ona1 Tournament
( Champ•onsh1p )
D rake 83 An zona 76

· It'll make you
a better hwnan being.
'

IJ.. .,. - . "• ._...,,
i

Th•

Louisville, Maryland favored
Ry Untled Press lnternatmnal

Lefty Drtesell knows the
pressure of college basketball
about as well as anybody, and
he knows at this tune of year
the pressure ts ceaseless ..
"When you get th1s far ' satd
Dr1essell after his Maryland
Terraptns surv1ved thetr open~
mg round game m the NCAA
tournament last week , ' everybody ts tough And that ne&gt;t
bunch 1Notre Dame ) ts a good,
tough , ball team "
The ftfth-ranked Terrapms
and No 14 F1ghtmg Insh meet
Thursday mght m one of the
Mtdwrst Reg tonal sem1hnals
at New Mextco State m Las
Cruces, N M The other senu!Jna l game features No 3
Loui SVIlle and unranked

Cmcmnatt, wh1ch has won 1's
last 16 games
Cmc1nnaJ1 and Lou1 sv tlle
know each other prr tty well
smce they met back on Jan 7
wtth the Cardinals commg out
the wtmer at home, 82-74 That
was the last game the Bearcats
lost
LOUISVIlle and Maryland Will
go mto the games as favon tes
to meet tn next Saturda) 's
Mtd&gt;~ est fmals wtth the wtrmei
there advancmg to the clunac
ttc round of actiOn m San
Otego, Cahf , at the end of the
month
Both LoutSvtlle s Denny
Crum and Cmcmnalt's Gale
Ca tlett credtted the shape of
the1r squad for pushing them
along m the NCAA meet
The Cardinals W(' rr 'l l1'"·

pr1sed by Rutgers m the first
half at Tulsa Saturday mght,
trat!tng by two pomts before
Alan Murphy htt three stratght
JUmp shots from the corner ro
start the second hall and send
Loutsvtlle on tis way to a 91~
de ClSJOO

"I thmk we kind of wore
them down tn the second half,"
Crum satd "I thmk our conditJOntng played a key role "
And 10 Lubbock, where
Ctnctnnati kept tls wm streak
al1ve wtth an 87-79 dectsJon
over Texas A&amp;M, Catlett satd
something sumlar
" H we lost I dtdn't want to
get beat by condittonmg, " the
Bearcats coach srud "We were
tn good condition In fact, we
won a lot of games on the road

tlus year because of our conMaryland's advance came
thanks ln an 83-79 wm over
Cretghtnn and Notre Dame
used the shooting of Adrtan
Dantley for a 77-71 vtctory over
B1g Etght Conference champton Kansas
W1th Maryland m the regtonal sem thnals, the Atlantic
Coast Conference has two
representatives shll abve m

the NCAA tournament North
Carolma won m the Eastern
Regtonal as well Seven conferences came mto the tournament wtth two teams and the
on ly leagues to still have tis
1\\o teams gomg are the ACC
and the Pac~ (UCLA and
Oregon Sl&lt;lte )

Marshall arrives in Dodgers camp
Dodgers danglmg from his
muscular nght arm
Marshall has a un1que agreement wtth hts employer whereby he doesn't have to report to
camp unttl he has ftmshed up
his wmter term dulles as an
tnstructor at Mtchigan St&lt;Jte
Uruvers tty Marshall was expected to arrtve at the Dodger
camp from h1s East Lanstng
home Monday and was scheduled to see achon nght off the
hat when LA takes on the
Texas Ra ngers th1s afternoon
The 31 year-o ld Marshall
pt tched m a Na honal League
record 106 garneo commg out of
the Dodger bullpen last season
on his way to wtnmng the Cr
Young Award
NCJther the Phtls nor the
Cardina ls needed their crack

Tigers 54 in

BY POLLY CRAMER

JO inniTI{!S
TAMPA, Fla (UP!) - The
Cwcmna lt Reds Improved
thetr exhJbtlton game record to
5-4 Sunday wtth a 1()-mmng
vtctory over the Detroit Tigers
Merv Rettenmund doubled
and rook1e Joel Youngblood
smgled htm home wtth none out
m the lOth mmng to gtve the
Reds a 6-5 wm over the Tigers
Clay Carroll, Tommy Hall,
Rawly Eastwtck and Wtll
McEnaney teamed up to
restrtcl the Tigers to eight hits
The Reds collected 10 hits off
three Tiger p1tchers One of the
blows was rookte ftrsl baseman
Dave Revermg's second home
run of the sprtng It came m the
seventh mmng off Tom WalKer
Tom Spencer smgled home
the tymg run wtth two out m the
bottom of the mnth to send the
game mln extra mmngs
Rookie m!Jelder Doug Flynn
of the Reds had three h1ts f&lt;ir
the second consecultve day

rehevers Sunday as Ph•la- Chtcago Whtle Sox to a 6-1 rout
delphta mpped St LoUJs, 1-0, of the New York Mets
Ctncmnall edged DetrOit m
and Los Angeles destroyed
the lOth mmng, 6-5, on a double
Houston, 7-3
The lone run m the Phtla- by Merv Rettenmund, Don
delphta game came when Allan Bay lor hit a parr of home runs DRIVER KILLED
Banruste1 smgled, moved to ro lead Baltunore past Atlanta,
GAINESVILLE, Fla. (UP!)
second on a passed ball, took 8-5, and the Mmnesota Twtns - An exhlbJtton car dnver
thJrd on an mf~eld out and then scored three runs m the f~rst reportedly seeking fmanctal1
beat a throw to the plate on a tnnmg to beat LuiS Tiant and hackmg m hts quest to attempt
the Boston Red Sox, 3-1
ftelder's chmce
a new world land speed record,
John Mayberry hit his f1rst
The Dodgers exploded for
was killed Sunday when his
three f~rst-tnnmg runs off home run of the sprmg ln help rocket -powered
vehiCle
Houston starter Doug Komecz- Kansas Ctty turn back Texas, slammed mto a guardrrul at
ny to put thetr game out of 7-5, Morns Nettles rapped over 268 mtles per hour
three stngles, scored a run and
reach early
Russell Mendez, 35, of
The New Yo rk Yankees stole a base ln drrect Califorma Tampa, was killed m the acscored five tunes m both the to a 4-2 wm over Milwaukee, cident an mstant after a run
second and e1ghth mmngs to and Montreal pushed across all down the quarter-mile drag
destroy Ptttsburgh, 12-3, and 1ts runs m the eighth mnmg ro str1p m h1s rocket-powered
Wilbur Wood stretched his beat Houston's B team, :1-2
dragster 11 Free Spirit 11
In Amona, Joe Rud1, Gene
strmg of scoreless mmngs this
The mc1dent was w1tnessed
sp1 mg to 12 m gutdmg the Tenace and Phil Garner hit by 60,000 spectators, mcludmg
round trtppers ro gtve Oakland
some of hJs relaltves.
a 13-4 wm over the Angels' B
Mendez reached a top speed
team, Chrts Speier homered ro
of 268 65 mtles per hour m hia
scortng slack w1th Spencer pace San FranCISCO Ut a 6-1 4 8-second r un However, eye- ~
trmmph over the Chtcago Cubs
Hal wood out s•ck, scored 16 of
wttnesses reported the car
and rook1e Mike Iv1e lrJpled
his 37 pomts m the second
veered mto the rat! after
quarter and hit a clmchmg and doubled to lead the San Mendez's parachute opened.
Otego assault m a 4-2 wm over
JUmper m the !mal seconds as
Cleveland
Seattle beat New York Earl

]abbar nets 32, Bucks drop Bulls
By ED SAINSBURY
UP! Sports Writer
Kar eem Abdul-Jabbar
doesn't beheve hts Mtlwaukee
Bucks, though ~tors m ftve of
seven games wtth the Chicago
Bulls this season, have any ]mx
on thetr netghborhood nvals
"! think tis more matchups
than any thmg else," he satd
after the Bucks bounced the
Bulls, 103-90 , on national
tev lev tston
Sunday
aftet noon
The matchup he had to be
t&lt;Jlkmg about most was Jon
McGlocklin bemg on tile floor
to help him out when the Bulls'
defense concentrated on stoppmg Jabbar
" Jon shoots very well ,"
Jabhar satd, "and when they
sag on me 1 1t g1ves htm a
chance ln shoot. He makes
them play me honest. "
McGlockhn saw lumted servtce m the ftrst quarter and
Jabbar, under pressure, made
only three of his f1r.st 14 shots
He blamed the performance on
the "httle things," near rmsses
which he conceded gave him a
"bad" start
But when McGlocklin got
mto the game, the Bulls had to
change thetrtac!Jcs because he
began fmng from outs1de and
he wound up wtth 10 held goals
m 12 attempts and 21 p&lt;Jtnts
Jabhar, at the same time,
dropped 10 of hts next 14 shots
to total 32 pomts m the game
"I got to shoot," McGlocklm
SaJd "That's why I play on his
stde I try to get the ball mto
him and tf they sag off and I
can I do tt, I better shoot "
Along "tth Bob Dandrtdge,
who had 24 pomts, Jabhar and
McGlocklm ke)ed the Bucks to
thetr SIXth wm m the last rune
games and strengthened thetr
btd to a playoff berth It was
the seventh loss m rune games
for the Bulls, movtng them
closer to the pack, though they
shlllead the Mtdwest DIVISion
" We need conststency,"
Bucks Coach Larry Costello
sa1d "We JUSt want to get m
the playoffs and \\e've got to
ge t over the hump to do tt

Maybe this game w1ll be the
start "
Elsewhere, Boston bea t
Houston, 99-94, Atlanta edged
Phoemx, 117-114, Seattle
cltpped New York, 97 94,
Cleveland
shaded
New
Orleans, 11:1-111, Los Angeles
npped Golden State, 111-95,
and Portland defeated Buffalo,
102-93
Celttcs 99, Rockets 94Dave Cowens converted a
thr ee-po mt play wtth 36
seconds left to cap a 24-potn t
performance and tnsure
Boston's fourth straight wm
and etghth m the last 10 games
Game htgh scorer Kev tn
Kunnert had 26 pomts m a vam
Houston effort to snap a fourgame losmg streak
Hawks 117, Suns 114 .
Atlanta's John Brown sank
three free throws m the fma I 18
seconds to hand Phoemx 1ts
siXth stra tght loss Charhe
Scott, who scored 38 pomts,
pulled the Suns even w1th 34
seconds left wtth two free
throws Tom Van Arsdale led
the Hawks w1th 27 pomts and
rookie M1ke SoJourner had 20
So nics 97, Knlcks 94 ·
Fred Brown, takmg up the

Monroe scored ftve pomts of
his 30 pomts m the final mmute
lo cut Seattle's lead ln 93-94
But Brown's !0-foot Jumper
wtth 14 seconds left closed out
the scormg
Cavs 1!3, Jazz 1!1:
Jtm Brewer t1pped m the
!mal goal wtth JUSt seconds left
Ut ftmsh Wtlh 24 pomts and 14
rebounds as Cleveland beat
New Orleans to l&lt;l ke a halfgame edge over New York for
the w1ld-eard playoff berth m
the East
Lakers 111, Warriors 95 Gatl Goodrich scored 37
pomts and Cazz1e Russell had
30 to g1ve Los Angeles only Jts
second wm over Golden State
m the last mne meetmgs over
two year span. Elmore Smtih
had 22 rebounds and blocked 10
shots for the Lakers, who had
16 blocked shots- the most m a
game tn the NBA this season
Rook1e Ke1th Wilkes led the
Wamors wtth a career-htgh 31
pomts

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POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR
READERS
Judgmg from our mat!, m1ldew
presents one of the biggest
problems confro n ttng
homemakers Molds that cause
m1ldew are always m the atr
but thnve on mots lure and lack
of fresh atr and wt ll grow on
anythmg that provides enough
food The result ts a musty odor
and often damage to our
household gOOds and weanng
apparel
A U S Government Bulletin
on the subject says to prevent
mildew keep clothes, closets,
basements, dresser drawers,
etc , as clean as possible Sot!
on clothes provides suff1c1ent
food for the growth of m1ldew
Try to fmd and con trol the
source of any dampness Check
dra1nage, crawl space under
the house, cracks m basement
cement Even a clothes dryer
eqwpped wtth a vent that ts not
exhausted ro the outstde can
cause excess mots lure Dry the
a1r by usmg an arr conditioner
or dehurntdtfler When usmg
e1ther keep doors and wmdows
closed Heat the house for a
short ttme and then open doors
and wmdows ro allow mOistureladen atr to escape. Also there
are several chemical compounds that can be purchased
to absorb motsture Never
hang clothes m a closet when
they are damp from ram or
even persptralton and always
allow space between clothes
for atr ctrculalton,
When the outstde aJr ts dner
than ms1de let tl m to absorb
the mtenor mo1sture II 1t ts not
breezy enough outstde for gOOd
ventilatiOn an electric fan wtll
help Cookmg, laundermg and
bathmg add two or more
gallons of water to the mstde
a1r m one day 1! venltlalton ts
not adequate
Getnd of any musty odors as
soon as posstble Heatmg and
drymg the atr are sometimes
all that ts needed but 1f the odor
persists scrub cement floors,
tile walls, bathroom floors and
so on wtth a solutton of one-half
ro one cup of lJqwd household
bleach to a gallon of water
Rinse and dry qwckly leavmg
doors and wmdows open until
thmgs are completely dry

·be found contaminated
COLUMBUS (UPIJ - The
Ohtn
Department
of
Agrtculltu c wtll exarmne
samples of Gtrl Scout cookt es
sold m 16 c"nlt al Ohto counltes
today to de term me tf a recall of
thousands of boxes of "tlun
mmt " vanely should begm

When any stgn of mildew ts
oresent m clothes dry clean
nc1 -Washables tmmedJately
Wash others w1th soap and
water, nns, •nd dry m the sun
If any slam remams bleach
wtth lemon JUice and ,.It or a
household chlonne bleach To
remove mtlde"" stams from
leather wtpewtth a cloth wrung
out of one cup denatured or
rubbm alcohol mtxed wtth a
cup of water Dry m the atr
When dry cover wtth a gOOd
wax dresswg
Try to fmd the source of the
mmsture to stop the ca use of
mtlde&gt;~ and further womes
POLLY

~·

•

-::J

/

DEAR POLLY - When there
IS crawl space under a house
mtldew can often be stopped at
the source - htgh humtdtty
Cover the ground wtlh
polyethylene strtps that should
be avatlable m rolls at a
lumber sUjJply or patnt supp l)
house
The other best rehef I found
was washtng affected areas
wtth watered down bleach that
keeps the mJlde&gt;~ from
growmg back so qutckly
Provide for air ctrculatwn and
keep furntture pteces a few
mches from the walls Keep
closet doors open part of the
ltme and do not allow curtams
or bedspreads to hang to the
floor If these lips do not work
buy a dehumidifier
MARGARET
DEAR f OLLY - I had a
stmtlar problem as those
readers who are bothered w1th
mtldew I read many books on
home repatr at the hbrary _
Mtldew can be removed from
walls and woodwork w1th full
strength rubbmg alcohol but a
humJdtfter prevents more
mtldew formtng Ftnd the
source of the moisture Pamt
walls and wOOdwork of outs1de
walls \\Jth one coat of
alummum pnmer followed by
two coats of regular patn t or
wallpaper or two coats of oil
base enamel These work as
mmsture barners Closet,; are
helped when they have
louvered doors or an electnc
hght ts kept burmng (Safely
away from clothes or paper ) JACQUELINE

beet~ use

l

•J

..

.. t ' •
•• •.. • '
• •• ••
••••••
•
It

,

t}

I

• .•

• t

300TH MEMBER - Mrs Nancy Evans, Galhpohs, rtght , was the 300th member lo JOin the
French Art Colony durmg the 1975 membershtp dnvc She \\ asa&gt;~arded a John Ruthven pnnl,
'Barn Owe!," by Dr Donald Thaler, FAC pres•dent, and Mrs Vtvten Ktrkel, left, membeJsll!]J
drtve cha trwoman, durmg Sunday arternoon 's reception for membe1 s HI Rl\ erb) PtC' tUJ r b)
Jan CountrynJan
"&amp;"&amp;"&amp;~

r :=-w:·:·:·:::·::=-:::::·:·..)ri. •• ••

I Social

'"

;~ Drake captures

ICalendar::f NCIT cage title
MONDAY
CHESTER PTA wtll honor
grandp arents al regular
meeltng 7 30 p m al Chester
Elementary School
REVIVAL sl&lt;!rhog Monda)
at Silver Run Free Bapltst
Church to March 30 wtth Rev
Mer hn Tee ts as spea ker ,
spectal smgmg , 7 30 p m
Pubhc mvt ted
THEODORUS Co uncil ,
Daughters of Amertca, 7 30
p m at IOOF Hall Cha rter will
be draped for the late Sylvta
Badge ley

LOUISVll LE, Ky (UPI) D1ake coac h Bob 01 tegel
concedes 11 would be mce 1£ Ius
basketball team could pull an
' Indiana " next season, but he
sa;s don't bet on tt - even tf
the; dtd wm lhe Nattonal
CommissiOners

Invtt.at10nal

Tournament Sunday
Top 1anked Indtana won Ihe
hrst ed th on of the Com
mlsswners tourney tn St Louts
last year and v.ent on to an
unbeaten season winch the
Hoos1ers hope to cap w1th the
NCAA champtonshtp l111s } ea t
'We're Just losmg too man~
ke} semor off out team to be

POMEROY Chambe r of
Commerce, noon at Meigs Inn
POMEROY Elementary thmkmg 111 terms of an un·
defeated season next year,'
PTA 7 30 p m at the school
sa1d
the 34-year-old D1 ake
RACINE PTQ, 7 30 p m at
sk
tp
per
afler hts Bu lld ogs
the school Cosmeltc demon
stratton by Mrs Ann Sau;age downed 17th ranked Amon" B376
tn
lh c
na ltonall)
Pubhc tnvtted
televtsed NC!T champwnsl11p
SOUTHERN
Athlettc game SUnday
Boosters, 7 30 p m at the htgh
'We've been sneakmg up on
school Plans for basketball people all year and I m JUSt
banquet w1ll be made and happy v.e con tmu ed to do so 111
several fund ratsmg proJects lhts tourney ' sa;d 01 tegc l
wtll be dtscussed. Pubhc IS whose team f1n1 s hed th e
mvtted ro attend
1egular season \\tth a 16-10
CANDYSTRIPERS, 7 p m record and was lhtrd Ill the
at cafetena at Veterans M•ssourt Valley Conference
Memonal Hosp1tal
All
'No one expected us to beat
members asked ro brmg m- Southern Cal tn the ftrsl round
terested persons
Thursda) mght and I don I
By
LIVING LIGHT
Youth thmk we were favmed agamst
group, Pomeroy Church of Bowlmg Green 1n the
REV HOWARD C. BLACK
ChriSt, 7 p m at home of scm1fmals, ' he sa id 'And I
ntE SfRAIGHf WAY
Sharon and Terry Gronmger
kn ow we were the underdogs
The shortest dtstance between two pomts ts a stra1ght !me
MIDDLEPORT
BUSINESS
agamst
thts strong Artzona
Thts prmc1ple IS applied to our modern expressways and Inand
Professwnal
Women
's
team,
cspcctally
after the)
terstate highway system. As a result tra,vel tJme and expense ts
Oub,
7
30
p
m
Monday
mgh
t
knocked off Purdue tn the
cut conSiderably by usmg the modern htghway, but how ansemtfmals '
noying tl ts ln have to take detours and go on crooked roads 1 at the Colurnbta Gas Co offtce
Among the semors Dra ke
Sametunes the temporary routes and the so called short-eut:; try Dtstr~ct dJrector Mrs Lots
Caul
to
be
guest
Program
by
loses
th1s year are Terry
our paltence, waste time, and don't always bring us to our
Donna
Weber,
semor
at
Ohw
McKISSick, the leadmg scOJ cr
des1red destinatiOn, often makmg us late for llllportant appomtments Yes, the best roads are the highways thai are the Umverstty, who wtll la lk on her agamst Artzona w1th 24 pomts
vtstt to the Umted Nattons
Larry Hat alson, a deadly long
stratghtest between twopomts and kept m good repatr
TUESDAY
range gunner desp1te hts 6
As tt IS wtth highway travehng, so tt ts w1th hvmg The obOHIO
ETA
PHI
Chapter,
foot-9 stze, and Andy Graham,
Jectives of accomplishment are realized by the straightest Ime
Beta
Stgma
Pht
Soronty
,
another
6 9 gtant
between our abJhties, opportumties, and the person we want to
Columbus
and
Tuesday,
For
Haralson
v. mmng the
become and the thmg we want to do The detours, crooked roads,
Southern
Ohto
Electnc,
7
30
NCIT was a spectal th11ll
secret passages, and short-euts wtll not lead us to the destred
p m ElectiOn of offtce rs
because 1t was played m hts
ObJeCtives. The straight way IS always best
hometown and he was able to
What are the expressways of accomphshment and abundant Culture report , Kathy rry and
Kathy
Cumm111gs,
hostess,
make
a maJOr 2()-pomt conhvtng? Let me suggest a few
Susan
Ohver
tnbutwn m the fmal Haralson
I Honesty. Be open ln truth about yourself and w1tl1 others,
GROUP
II,
Umted and Mcklsstck were muned to
allowmg the prmctple of r1ght ethtcs to govern your relallonsh1ps
Presbytertan
Church,
the all- wurney team selected
and dealings w1th everyone.
Tuesday,
7
30
p
m
home
of
by spot ts wn ters and broad2 Kindness. Be frtendly , courteous, and cons1derat&lt;&gt; of
caste rs
others. Other people have feelings tno, and as you treat them Mrs !lelen Shuler wtth Mrs
James Buchanan, co-hostess
However, Anzona 's Bob
w1th respect they Will return your kmdness
Mrs
Paul
Hapronstall
to
have
Elhotl,
a 6 10 sophomore from
3. Work. The world doesn't owe you a hvmg, you owe the
the
program,
Mrs
Joseph
Ann Arbor, M1ch , was chosen
world a life Work ts a blesSing, not a curse. Ralph Waldo
the tourney's outst~:~ndw g
Whitman said , ~~work, and thou canst not escape the reward " Batley, the devottons Thank
offenng wtll be l&lt;lken
player Elltott topped all
And remember, tf tl 1s worth domg, tt ts worth d01ng welL
SALISBURY
PTA
Meehng,
scorers m the champwnshrp
4 Disc1plme Ltve by the rules. Nalure has 1ts rules, antmals
have thetr rules, econormcs has to have rules, and man must 7 30 p m w1th fathers mght to game \\ Jth 27 pomts even
be observed and fathers to though the Drake defense was
have rules, Ufe has to be regunented or we do not sui'VIve
count double on room coun t A n gged to choke off hiS SCOrtng
5. Fa1th Believe m God and trust H1s will for your hfe
book
fa1r wtll be held and a film
Believe m yourself, and believe m what you are domg
Right hvtng conststs m nght reliltionsh1ps and nght ob- on wtldhfe to be shown by
Jectives The open road to accomplishment, satisfachon, and representative from the
of Natural
enjoyment of hvmg 1s the stra1ght way Jesus sa1d, "Strati ts the Depar tme nt
Resources
gate, and narrow IS the way, wh1ch leadeth unln tile " (Matthew
7 14 KJV ). Try the open road 1
ANNUAL Inspectton, Racme
Masomc Lodge 461, F&amp;AM,
7 30 p m at temple All Master
Masons mvtted
SOUTHERN Local Band
Boosters meeting , 7 30 p m at
htgh school

John Russell died Saturday

COI~'I\00. 1

I

Few homes escape
irritatinf! mildew

and he was SUI I uunded by
Bulldog de fende rs nea rlJ
eve1} lime he wenl up fm c~
!:lhot
Roundmg ou t the a ll. tourney
temn \\ ere Purdue's John
Ga11 ctt, who tall ted a tourney
htgh of 34 pomts tn the 102-96
luss to Anzona SatUI da) rngh l,
and Bow l1n g Gr een 's JeH
Montgomery, the sparkjilug tn
!us learn's upset of 'Jennessce
F'Jtda) utgh t
llle champwns h1p game
C:lC luaU) was won at the free
lht O\\- !me, where Drake
cashed 23 of 24 a ttempts
Artzona had on ly etght fou l
shots and connected on SIX
"!
know
tt
lo oks
d1spr opOI t10nate when we had
th1 ee tunes as many foul shots
as the) got,' Ortegel sa td
' But you have to consider the
type of game the y were
playmg They had to pia)
aggresstve catch-up ball most
oJ the game and any team
plaJ mg that way ts bound to
commit more fouls "
W1pmg out i:l 16~8 Anzona
lead Drake Jumped m front to
sU!y at 18-17 on one of
Hara lson's patented htgh
archtn g bombs wtlh 9 16
remammg tn Ihe fu st half 'I he
Bulldogs mcreased theJr lead
to :H-29 at the half and shot mto
then btggesl margm at 62-48
wtth 10 12 left m the ga me
Mamly due to the outstdc
shootmg of Jtm Rappts ,
Arizona managed to tnm the
fma l margm to seven pomts as
he meshed ftve field goals 1n
the las t seve n mmutes
In addJtton to the outstandmg
play of Mcktsstck and
Hat alson Dra ke got 17 pomts
from 1ts ' shor ty " center
" , 6~7
Ken Harrts, and 12 poml.s and
mne ass1sts from guard Terry
Benka Rapp1s, wtth 16 pomts
and mn e assists a nd 1\1
Flemmg, wi th 13 potnl.s and a
gam e lngh 10 rebounds,
p1 ov1ded Elhott's ch1ef support
for Anzona
Ju st hefore the !mal game,
NCI'l officials announced the
tourney would return to
Freedom Hall here next March
11-14 They satd they wCJe not
dtsmayed by the relaltvely low
allcndancc of 4,161 fo r the
champiOnsh ip game, wh1ch
was blacked out locall) on TV
" It \\as sttll better than we
drew m St I oms las t year,"
sa td t ourne~ chairman Chuck
Nemas, commiSSIOner of the
Btg Etght Conference

of

1 epot

ted con

tanunatton
The Quaket Oats Co
produce• s of the cooktes dnd
the Central Ohto Gul Scout
Coun ctl S1md~sued a JOITit
stat emen t calhng on con swncrs to watt (01 complet wn
of lesls befot e ea tmg the
cookiCs

"

dbuut a recall was hkely after Scout Council, sa1d the Flderal
tho complehon of the Ohto Food and Drug Adrnlmstration
Depar tment of Ag rr culture also was lnvestigaltng
tcs l.s
The 16 counltes affected
Nancy Gat es, a spokes - mclude Fran khn , Delaware,
womun for the gtrl scout UniOn , Madison, Fayette 1
counci l, saai persons who have Ptckaway, FaJrfteld, Hockmg,
Plil t.:hu sed Ihe l ook1 es should Htghland Adams, Ross, Pike,
keep the boxes se(1 led and save Sc10 to, Vtnton, Galha and
them for proof of pun:hase 111 Jackson
refund s Hl the Cd SC of a re c~lll
Mrs Welton satd about
B.u bara Welton execut1ve 120,000 boxes have been
rln ec tor of the Seal of Ohw Gtrl d1stnbuted m central Oh10

Fighting guided

Sidle diu! Iedet al offl ctal s
WCI e alCI ted to the posstble

conltlmlflaiiO n follow t n~ a
comp la ant b) a Colu mbu s
restd ent who s,lld he found
wh at appeared to be a shvet of

glass

box of the CC)Oktes
Gtrl scou t oHJ ctd !s Sdtd
In "l

authOIJtte s suspected (On
t(nmna tJon 1t1 the shrene
plt~ s ll~.: m the pack,1gcs
Robert 'I hurston Qu.tkei s
SCni OI
VI CC pi CSident fUI
cor pot ate afra tr s ~ud ln
Cht cago that swce Fttday

Quake• Oa ts has sampled more
than 5,000 packages of cooktes
fl om every lot produced m the
last two months at Its Burry
plant 111 Ehzabe th, N J and
fo und no other ev tdence of
conlammt:tlton
'There IS no mdtcahon tht~t 1t
ts any more widespread U1an m

thts hmtled case," Thutston
sa td "We would sttll say that
until the lesltng tn Colwnb us IS
completed, tl would be a good
tdea lor people tn the
Col tunbus area to hold what
they ve got "
Thurston smd a dec1s1on

Marauder.girls
defeat Bobcats
In the sem tflna l t.:o nt est
played al Southern H1gh School
Saturday mght the Metgs
Marauder gals of Mary Jane
Deely defeated the gtrls roundbailers from Kyger Creek by
the !mal score of 56-46
The Mara uders now play the
undefeated Southern girls
tomght at6 p m m the fm•ls If
the Meigs gd lS defeat the
Soul hern team lontght they wtll
have lo play a second game
ruesday mght lo dectde the
champi onship
For the Marauders tn
Satw day mght's contes t Ute
leader was Pam Vaughan who
led all scorers w1th 22 pomts
Following behmd were Janel
Maue wtth 11 , Mary Weyersmtller 10, Beth Vaughan had 7,
and Demans Ash ftnt shed wtth
6 markers
For Kyger Creek the leaders
were Wanda Saxon and V1ck1
Stroud wtth 12 pomts each
Mary Ro!hns had 9, Shtrl e)
Clay 8, and Cmdy Hu1lcy had I
potnt
By quarters
Metgs
14 12 16 14- 56
KC
18 7 6 15- 46

out of embassy
WASHINGTON (UP!) Sen Stuart Symmgton, D-Mo ,
says the Uruted States Js lnflue ncmg the ft ghtmg tn
Cambodta by dJrectmg
government mr stnkes from
the U S Embassy m Phnom
Penh
Symmgton and House GOP
leader John J Rhodes also
predtcted
Sunday
that
Congress wtll not gtve
Prestdent Ford the $222 mllhon

m additiOnal emergency a1d ln
Cambodia he wants, despite
Wh1te House efforts ln compromise
The
Senate
Foreign
Relahons Committee meets
lnday to act on $125 mW10n m
additional !Wlds for Cambodia,
far less than the Wblte House
has requested
Symington was asked If he
knew of "anything the U.S. ts
doing now" to Influence
ftghtmg m CambodJB,
"One thmg we found out
'
recently was that
the air
strikes were being directed by
ABA Stand 1ng s
the embassy m Cambodia," he
Bv Un •tcd Press tnt erna t1ona1
East
sa1d. "You can't go on w1tll this
w 1 pet g b type of operation in Cambodia
N ew York
52 '2 '2 703
K entu c ky
49 24 6 71
, and mamtain the credibility
St LOUt S
27 48 360
of
the admmistration wltll tile
M e mph s
n s1 301
V rgmta
14 59 192
Congress and , as tllese facta
w est
w I pet 9 b unfold, the Congress Is getting
x Denv er
57 18 760
Increasingly suspicious of tile
San A nt on to
4&lt;~ 3 1
587
whole foreign policy "
lndtana
40 31 563
11
Utah
3'2 41 43 8 24
0o you mean to say at this
San Diego
31 43 4 19
25 ' ' time the US embassy •In
x Clmched d1 V1s1on t1t1e
Saturday s Re sult s
Pbnom Penh Is actually conSan An ton 10 112 U tah 102
trolling
the bombmg?" he was
Ind iana 107 M emphiS 100
asked,
K entucky 113 sa n DteQO 98
Su nda ys G am es
"W1thm the last year we ~
St LOU tS 1'2'2 MemphiS 11 4
controllmg It," Symingt&lt;!JI
N e w Yor k 100 Ut ah 89
lnd 1ana 121 Vlrgmla 103
said
"
Denv er 128 Ke n t ucky 125 ot
•
Sources
m
the
Senate
wliO
Monday 's Game
l nd ana at New York
declined ro be Identified hicause their infonnaUon dU·
NBA Standmgs
Cered from Symlilgton 's sa~
By Untted Press lnlernat1onal
Eastern Conference
although the emball8y dlrectea
AtlantiC DIVI S IOn
w I Pet 9 b U.S bombing lllrlkes befoie
Bo ston
SO 20 714
' the 1973 halt, it was not
Buflalo
43 28 606 ,, ,
11 d in
••
N ew York
34 37 479 " '• lua yo gsonow.
•
Phlladelpt11a 33 39 &lt;t51l ' "
Asked
about
comproml'f,l!
Central Dt vi sion
w1th the admimstration on the
w 1 pet g 0
x wa s 11 ngton 5 '1 19 73 2
rud funds, Symington said, !b
Hou ston
37 36 50 7 11\
know what til
Clt!vel iJnd
35 37
472 17 ' ~ don't
A tl a n ta
29 45 39'2 24 1 1 Repubhcans are gomg to do.;,J
N ewOrl e an s
19 50 275 32
am confident that a Jar~
Wt! stern Conference
MtdWesl Ot VIS IOO
percentage of the Democrats
w 1 pet 9
w1ll not vote any more aid tD
•
Ch cage
11 '29 586
K C Om a lltl
39 32 549
2 , e1ther Vietoam or Cambodla1'
Detro I
35 38 4 79
;:1;
Rhodes said he felt a1d Ill
Milwaukee
34 37 4 79
Pa c tfi C OtVI St On
Cambodia was a dead

Pro Standings

\l

ac-

Golden Sta te
Sea ttl e
Portland
Phoenu'
Los Ange les

w 1

pet
32 562
37 486

41
35
31 40
29 4 1
26 &lt;15

51 7
437 9
414 11
366 14
x Clinched dPn ston t1fl c
Saturday's Re sults
New Or l ean s 140 A tl an ta 123
Phllad el ph a 96 Cl eveland 88
Go ld en Slate 120 Seattl e Bt
Sunday's Results
Bos ton 99 Hou s ton 9.4
Atlanta 111 Phoen x 114
Milwauk ee 103 Ch1 cago 90
Seattle 97 New York 94
Cle ve land 11 3 New Or lean s 11 I
Lo s An g e les I l l Golden Sta l e 95
Por tl il nd 10 2 Buffalo 95
Monday s Games
(No games sc hedu led)

MILLER IN GALLIA •
Co ngressman Claren~e
Mtller will be in hts Laitcaslir
Office Saturday, March 22 !Dr
scheduled appomtments wilh
area residents That eveniftg
he wtll travel to Galbo Couni y
where he will address tSe
annual dmner meeting of tile
Ga lhpohs Area Chamber .Pf
Commerce at the Rio Gran~e
College cafetena
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The Easiest Bank To Get To

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The Daily Sentinel

John Russell, 71, of 6 Cave
St, Pomeroy, dted Saturday at
Veterans MemorJal HospitaL
Mr Russell was preceded m
death by his parents, John and
Pearl Flermng Russell , two
Sisters, and a brother
Surv1vmg are hts wtfe.
Magdalene Allen Russell ,
three sons, Robert E , Samuel
and DaVId, all of Columbus;
two daughters, Judy Nelson,
Homer, La , and Fanme Mae
West,
Pomeroy,
three
brotllers, Thomas and James,
both of Columbus, and

Luther of Dayton , two Sisters,
Mrs
Allen
Hampton,
Pomeroy, and Mrs Leon
Tatum, Colwnbus; 11 grandchaldren, and several meces
and nephews.
Mr Russell was a member of
the Forest Run Baptist Church
Funeral services wtll be held
at 2 p m Tuesday at the Ewmg
Funeral Home w1th the Rev
Edward Buffmgtnn offJctatmg
Burtal Will be m Beech Grove
Cemetery Fnends may, call at
the funeral home any tune

DBIVB·IN BANICINQ'
•
Easy does tt , , no pam, no stram You don't even have to get 0'\JI
of your car - and that ends pesky parktng problems. Just' pull up
and transact your business- On Fridays our Drtve In Window iS'
open 9 a m to 7 p m continuously to better serve you

Frank Sisty

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY CHAPTER 80,
Royal Arch MB.sons, con·
voca l ton, Wednesda y, 7 30
p m for the purpose of con
fernng
most
excellent
mast&lt;&gt;r 's degree
MIDD!,IEPORT LITERARY
Club, 2 p m Wednesda y, home
of Mrs Forest Bachtel Mrs
Thereon Johnson to review
"Thomas Jefferson" b) Pawn
Brod1e Roll call wtll be a
comment on the program

TRIO
Organs, Drum s, Guitar
NITELY

Farmers Bank &amp; Savings Co.
POMEROY, OHIO

(,_...0-l:Oo

Member of Federal Reserve System
$40,ooo.oo Maximum Insurance for Each Depositor

TO ENTERTAIN YOU AT

THE MEIGS INN'
PH 992 3629

'

OPIN FRIDAYS 9 'TIL 7

POMEROY

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•'

tssus.

g b

•

Enjoy the Distinctive Style of the

comple le del• ••s

PH. 992-23 IB

Pomeroy!

•

STARTING MAR. 18

11 you 11 a two &lt;:11 l•m•ly
Nahonwu;le can s•ve ~ o u
money Qn you1 auto
•nsu fart&lt;:e Add I11Jn8l hb
erahred benehts .,., av••l
able to those who quality
Call • Na uonw•de IIJ'OI tor

P. J. PAULEY
307 Sprrng Ave. • Pomeroy

•

Robinson's Cleaners
216 E. 2nd

Thin mint cookies may

Polly's Pointers

dillonmg "

•

By RICK GOSSELIN
UPI Sp&lt;Jrts Writer
As one m1racle man was on
his way out of Flortda Sunday,
another was on h1s "'ay m
Rehel pttcher Tug McGraw
was sent back to Phtladelphta
b) the Phtlhes for an exammatton by a spectahst to determme t! surgery IS needed to
repatr recurrmg back and
chest pams Those same pams
cnppled his performance wtth
the New York Mets last season
after he led them to a Natwnal
Leag ue pennant the year
before
And as McGraw left With the
hopes of a Ph1ladelphta pennant strapped ro hts back, Los
Angeles superman M1ke Marshall was on his way to Vero
Beach wtth the hopes of the

~b:&lt;

Reds defeAt

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Y.·...

6:.... The Daily Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday , March 17, 1915

7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Mont~l .l' . Murdo t7, 1975

' '

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Irish press school bus

Green Thumb
'f

llOS'IDN ( UPi I -

!,

Notes.

-··
-"

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• • •

A weekly feature of Meigs
County Garden Club members.

North Churr h rolled through
South llosto11 Sunday in the St.
Patrick's D;ty parade . It bore a
fXIinlin g of Puul Revere shou.

~-

,,.~

ting , "The BtLSes lire Coming ,

.'~-

Uu• lluses arc com ing."
Tht· float was on~ of seve ral
lf' nding an antibusing flavor to
the trnditiarul l p8radt" thut
drew an unexpectedly large
crowd of more than 100,000.

......
• • 1 ...

When is a bulb a bulb?
... ,..

'.

By Mrs. Sharon A. Jewell,

Star Garden Club
'· ·
The trade custom of calling any lwnpy underground
·"" structure a bulb, may not be good botony but is too well
' .... established to ignore.
~" "
A garden center operator may offer .. tOO gladioli bulbs for
' ,' $5" on the same counter with "five Giant Dahlia Bulbs lor $5."
\ 1'hc first is a corm while the second a tuber.
,.
A true bulb is made up either of fleshy sca les, as in the lily, or
~ · · ·· or tunics. concentric costs, as in the on ion and tulip, surroundin g
· ' " a basal plate from which U1e bud grows and becomes the above
'" ' ground plant.
A conn is similar to a bulb, but is solid instead of being made
up of scales. A tuber is a thickened underground stem with buds
' · on the sides or top. A rhizonc is a thickened underground stem
, ... with the growing tip at one end or at a joint.
.. , '·
Because some bulbous plants come from the tropics they will
,not survive winters in the temperatures here and are grown as
· · summer-fl ower ing species. The bulbs arc dug before freezing
" weather begins and stored indoors.
'·'
Among the best known hardy bulbs·is the tulip of which about
~ ·· IOO,OOO,OOOareplanted in the United States each year.
' ""
A typical true bulb produces a plant In early spring, flowers
1· less than a month after emerging, grows for a short time after
"flowering , then dies down until the following spring. It is one of
the so-ealled Dutch bulbs grown For centuries in Holland along
"'''with crocus, hyacinths, narcissus, scillas and snowdrops .
'Y" · An "off-beat" bull is the hardy amaryllis which flowers in
"" :'late summer. Several species of crocus flowers in late fall,
' :·1111ving apparently adapted their life cycle to take advantage of
' "the brief period when foliage has been thinned out by approach'· -ing winter but fhe soil has not yet frozen .
\
Bulbs do not like excessive moisture . If water ever stands in
l an area, do not plant bulbs there.
,
A rich sollls'a dlsa~vantage. Most bulbs develop where soils
: are thin. If they are planted where more food is available then is
• needed when mature, the bulb will proceed to split into bulblets.
~ Moved to a poorer soli, these little bulbs will increase in size and
( "in two to Four years they will flower. If left in the same rich soil,
' however, they will grow slightly and divide again.
~
The ideal soil For most Dutch bulbs is a good sandy loam
: cont.~ining considerable humus, but no fresh organic matter.
• Such a soil is not over rich, drains well, yet holds enough
.• moisture for normal growth. Adding well-decayed organic
,•• matter is a good practice . The reason for ruling out organic
• matter which has not gone through decay is that such matter
, ... nourishes certain fungus organisms that damage bulbs .
: ' ; In planting bulbs, the directions often say to "plant Uorec
, ipches deep" without explaining whether you are to measure
' • from the top of the bulb or the base. Always measure from the top
II
-'
'•
or
the bulb unless otherwise directed . Some bulb plants are able
~ ~ ronn a new bulb above the old if planted deeply.

•

I!Mli!Ml~~'

1

••
•••

•

•••
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..

~

r
M

t•

...

... ....,., · ·nr~~~"-'*'-~-,.~~,

Helen Help

I

Us.

'

By Helen BotteJ

••

Just 'foo, 'foo Considerate!

~

Dear Helen :
"
I'm a little overweight, maybe 20 pounds. So what ? It's MY
r body. Recently I was In the bospital lor minor surgery, and a
:~lend sent me a nice box of candy, in care of my mother's ad~c .r.lress. Anyway, I GUESS It was nice.
My mother brolll!hlme the empty box! She said she opened it
~ Jll!ssed it around to all the family because she knew that·
::~ I was tempted, I'd eat all those rattening things, Really, I'm not
wl child who must be watched! I'm 24.
~ Isn't this carrying "help" too far ' - DEPRIVED

"

INSTAlLED - New officers of the Rio Grande Baptist Association installed Saturday a•
the arutual meeting in Middleport were left to ri ght, Ed Parkins, Salem, treasurer; Mrs.
Florence Richards , Middleport, clerk; the Rev . Henry Lancaster, Jackson, vice modera tor ;
and the Rev. Bill Uber, Cheshire, moderator.

+++

:;fl'ear HELEN:
:
I read with fascination the l~tter lrom "A Man" who feels
~n would rather be married to wealthy and Famous men
.;'Ulan make it on their own.
It IS a pity he couldn't attend a university. Evidently his
education was limited or he would never have made such absurd
remarks, insulting hall the human race. In college, he would see
vast numbers or women seeking to be more than "a good catch
for a husband."
In reply to his question: Yes, I DO want "all that hassle of
working for It," and I prefer MY OWN glory, not the reflected
glory of the ''Woman behind the man who made it."
I Find such crude insults against the ambitions of women
totally inexcusable. The implication that women are parasites is
§II outdated Fallacy, contrived and nurtured in the small minds of
ifl:secure yet inflated male egos. - WOMAN
.I

'

.near Helen :
Bully for "A Man" 1or course, most of us women (except the
strident libbers) would rather be our husbandS' helpmates than
llusiness executives or careerists. But we're presently too intimidated to say so.
This Liberation bull is being carried too far. We had it good
until the equality chicks started·causing trouble. Now man is too
scared to even help carry packages or open a door for a girl. He
espects his wife to work oull!ide the borne, and do man's jobs in
it. He ~ives herno special treatment; after aU, isn't ahe "jtisl one
of the guys" ? Often he,snags a successful, wealthy woman so HE
won't have to work.
If this equality-ri(l-&lt;lff continues, the 21st century will see a
nation or hqusehusbands, with women dying earlier From such
predominantly ''male" diseases as heart attacks and ulcers, as
they figot out there in the oosiness world jungles.
"Liberation" is ruining it For us who like things as they were.
I (and a lot of my female Friends) want to be dominated, walked
on a bit, allowed to stay borne with kids rather than work. Believe
me, we have the IIpper hand. A man enjoys being coaxed, not
ordered, He likes thinking he's the boss, even though his wife
really is. It's good for his ego, and heaven knows after a hard
days' work, he deserves it.
I'm not one of those old ladies who are resigned to life.! 'm 19,
and have been al1lllnd more than most :!G-year-olds. But I believe
that- WOMAN'S PLACE IS IN THE HOME
.
'
· Dear Readers:

.'"'"A Man" really whipped up a blaze with his supposition that
most wOmen prefer reflected glory and "aren 't single-minded
enough to make it on their own."
·
So Far, "making it on my own" (married or not) has a slight
lead over "behind-the«enes helpnate" -but this doesn't mean
lbe majority or women are eager achieVfl'll ... only that "A
Man's" oorxlescending remarks riled female careerists into
~ back. - H: .

.'

found at Boy Scout cabin
1Im

REV. CHARLES LUSHER, Crown aty, center, the area minister of Southeastern
Ohio and director or Town and Country Churches for the Ohio Baptist Convention, was guest
speaker at the Rio Grande Baptist Association meeting Saturday. Pictured with him are the
Rev. Walter Bikacsan, Racine,lefl, and Mrs. Robert Kuhn, Pomeroy, Ohio Baptist Convention
trustees.

GALENA, Ill . I UPJ I - 111e
nude, !l'07.en body of Joseph
Didier, abducted two weeks
ugo as he was delivering news.
p:1pers, has been found in a

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Performan ces by
the
Covenant Players of Reseda,
Calif. highlighted the Rio
Grande Baptist Association
annual meeting held Saturday
in Middleport and allended by
over 200 men and women
representing Southeastern
Ohio Baptist Churches.
The Mount Moriah Baptist
·church was host for the
meeting which also featured
the Rev. Charles !.usher ,
Southeastern Ohio Area
minister, as speaker, and the
installation of new Association
ollicers.
An international repertory
theater group dealing with
Christian challenges , the
Covenant Players - Maggie
Simmons of Mississippi, Jim
Craig of California, Rick
Taylor of Pennsylvania, and
Judi Sanderson of Alberta,
Canada - provided fascinating
entertainment
as
they
presented
solid
Bible
teachings .
During the day they gave two
one·hour performances in
addition to a number of minimessages, all taking a
dramatic form with a Charlie
Brown format .
"Mystery of Christ" was the
sermon topic of the Rev. Mr.
Lusher. He also installed the

HOSPITAL NEWS
Vett•rans Mcmurial Hospital
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS
- Nellie Dunn , Middleport ;
James Sellers, Shade; Cynthia
WolfeJ Syracuse.
SATURDAY DISCHARGES

newly elected Rio Grande
Baptist Association officers,
the Hev. Bill Uber, Cheshire,
moderator; the Rev. Henry
Lan caster , Jackson,

~

moderator ; Mrs. F'lorence
Hichards, Middleport. clerk;
and Ed Parkins, Salem,

{
''

treasurer .

Recognized and reporting
during the day were the Ohio
Baptist Convention trustees
from the Association, Mrs.
Robert Kuhn, Pomeroy, and
the Rev. Walter Bikacsan,
Racine.

The Rev. Henry Key , Jr.,
pastor of the host church extended the welcome and gave
the prayer to open the meeting.
Mrs. Campbell Harper was
pianist lor the day and the
soloists were llfrs. Kuhn who
sang "Here Comes Jesus" and
"They Crucified My Lord" and
Danny Thompson, Pomeroy,
singing "There's Something
About That Name" and "His
Name is Wonderful."
A corsage was presented by
Mrs . Ghidys Rife of the
American Baptist Women of
the Association to Miss Mary
Ann Woodruff, Wellston , the
outgoing clerk .
Benediction was by the Rev.
Lew M. Swancott, pastor of the
Ca lvary Baptist Church ,
Gallipolis.

HEt.IROD1Nlli [)()0!:;!
15 AL'II/&gt;4S OPEN ..

ffiVENANT PLAYERS - Christian dynamics is how
the Covenant Players describe what they do. Pictured here in
one of their skits are, left to right, Maggie Simmons of
Mississippi, Jim Craig of California, Rick Taylor of Penn-

sylvania, and Judi Sanderson, Alberta, Canada. They performed Saturday at the Rio Grande Baptist Association
annual meeting held at the MI. Moriah Baptist Church,
Middleport.

d
are
et-ecte
White Shrine officers
7

.

of
offices
Election
highlighted a meeting of Mary
Shrine 37, Order of the White
Shrine of Jerusalem at the
Pomeroy Masoni c Temple
Friday night.
Midge Abbott, worthy high
pnestess , and Allen Hughes,
watchman of shepherds,
presided at the meeting .
Elected were Mrs. Clara Belle
Riley, worthy high priestess ;
Thomas Edwards, Watchman
of shepherds: Mrs. Helen
Pickens, noble prophetess :
Oscar Casto, associate watchman of shepherds; Erma
Yoho, worthy scribe: Mrs.
Barbara Dugan, worthy
treasurer; Mrs. Ne!lie Casto,
worthy chaplain; Mrs. Sharon
Warner, worthy shepherdess ;

and Mrs . Arline Davis, worthy April 11 at the Temple.
guide.
Members of Mary Shrine are to
Mrs . Riley announced a take sandwiches and cookies.
practice for installa tion on
Invitations for installations
April6 at 2 p.m . at the Masonic were read from Fairborn
Temple. The open installation Shrine, March 22, 8 p.m. with
will take place at 8 p.m. on Mary Hawks, supreme noble

prophetess, installing officer;
Nazarene Shrine, March 22,
Chllhcolhe; Manon Shrme,
April 5, Marion, Ohio; Huntington Shrine, April 26, 8 p.m.
Huntington, W. VVa.
Potluck refreshments were
served in the dining room
following
the
meeting.
Members are reminded that
dues are now payable.

representatives. She concluded
with two poems, "What Is
Good ?" and " There Is a
Destiny ."
Introduced were Mrs. J oan
Wood, Gallipolis, incomin g
diret·tor: Helen Morrison , state
Mrs. l.ola Mae Suiter, past
district dire-ctor.
The inv ocation to open the
mee rin g was given by a

member of the Gallipolis.Club.
The McArthur Club members

Several members of auxiliary ill

INSPECTION SET
Annual inspection of the Ohio
Valle y Commandery 24 ,
Knights Templar, will be held
Saturday a I the Pomeroy
Masonic Temple. The order of
the. temple will be conferred .
Work will begin at 3: 30 p.m.
There will be a dinner at 6 p.m.
with a full form opening at 7:30
p.m. Sir Knight William Saul.
grand treasurer, will be the
inspecting officer. Ladies are
in.vited .

the Auxiliary and DA V
members
following
the
meeting.
Next meeting wiU be on the
sec.ond Tuesday in April.

'

BARBS

collet·th·e nouns : A broke of

horseplayers. .

--------- ------=---=----~.:____

______ _

Pmnero}'.

-

Saturday - Mr . and Mrs.
James Aldri ch, daughter,
Jackson; Mr . and Mrs. Donald
Cole, daughter, Middleport ;
Mr. and Mo·s . Billy Harrington,
daughter, Rio Grande ; Mr. and
Mrs. William W. Morrison ,
daughter, Pt. Pleasant · Mr
and Mrs. james H. Sisso~, son:
Gallipolis and Mr. and Mrs .
Robert Theiss , daughter ,
Bidwell.
Sunday - Mr. and Mrs.
William Allen, son , Jackson.

Walton claims·FBI is covering -u p

LOS ANGELES (UPI) against him .
has reason to believe the newspaper the three may be in
Professional basketball star
The
San
Francisco Harrises spent some ttme in a the San Francisco Bay Area
Bill Walton says a search lor Examiner said the fugitives'
New York City apartment harbored by members of the
his close friend, radical sports trail is "bound inextricably" to Scott rented.
Berkeley radical group.
writer Jack Scott, is part or an a Berkeley, Calif., radical
"I trust and believe in Jack · "Anybody that might have .
FBI campaign to cover up its group which may have been and Mickie Scott" Walton said. information should contact us"
inability to find fugitive heiress the prototype for the SLA. The "They are Fantastic people. said FBI agent Frank Perrone.
Patricia Hearst and two known newspaper said the three Whatever they have been doing "We need help in locating and
members or the terrorist connected with· Scott through in their past Uvea has been for apprehending these people."
Symbionese Liberation Army. the radical groojl soon after the commendable reasons."
"Possibly I'm being used as Los Angeles shootout last May
Walton said the FBI quesa scapegoat to cover up the that left six other SLA mem- tioned hinn about his Friends
FBI's inability to lind these . bers dead.
but that he had no information
three people," he Said in a
Time magazine also reported for them.
broadcast interview in Port- a "West Coast radical leader"
The FBI meanwhile called
land, Ore.
asked Scott to help Miss Hearst for citirem' help in locating the
Scott and his wife Mickillved and her friends and other three SLA me.mbers amid
in Walton's $100,1100 home in media reports indicate the FBI reports in the He~st Family
Portland part or last year and
early this year. A telephone at
the borne was reported to have
been used lor calls to the
eastern Pennsylvania farm.
bouse where Miss Hearst's
fingerprints were Found along
with !bose or fugitive artist
Wendy Yoshimura.
No formal warrant or
charges have been placed
---- ·-·-----· -. ----....
Students have a choice here. Comagainst Scott, the FBI said, but
authorities on the West Coast
munity College featuring two-year,
have indicated a grand jury in
state-assisted, arts, transfer, and
Pennsylvania, scheduled to
technical programs at $13 a credit
reconvene in mid-April, soon
hour. Private College featuring four
may be issuing an indictment
BUBONIC PLAGUE
ATLANTA (UP!) - The
National Center lor Disease
Control says an 11-year-old
New Mexico boy· recently
contracted the r.rst case or
human bubonic plague ever
associated with a coyote.
The center said the boy was
released from the hospital
March 5 after undergoing a
variety of treabnents.
The youth contracted the
plague in February after he
and another boy Found and
sltlnned a coyote which had
been dead for three days, the
CDC Said.

mEY SHARED SANDWICH
RICHMOND, Va. (UPI) Hundreds or hungry students
paid apiece to share an 1100foot.Jong sulxnarlne sandwich
at the University of Vlrginla'a
student center.
The
sandwich, which
students say weighed alm08t a'
ton, was molded into one
continuous 'strand In the
hallway or the building.
Students &amp;mday claimed It
was the longest every made,
and they boped to win a
mention In the Guinnesa World
Book of Records for Ita construction .

'1

.

'

I'

COLORFUL KEDS
•

'"

The Clown Print wlfh
red Pompon nose trill\.
'"

YourThom MeAn Storer"
Middl&amp;part, Ohio ' ''

Play it oare iDtt lllftl,
It may be tlllie to
have your preeeot
pol!cy updaled.

&amp;of'• falk ·Soon

dications young Didier was
taken into the cabin alive and
that there was no paint on the
body. Police Indicated there

DALE C. WARNER ,
"2-2143

-~

'

Office of Admissions
Rio Grande College
Rio 'Grande, Ohio 45674
Telephone (614) 245-5353

Every minute of every shopping day. $1.800 in merchandise is
stolen from Ohio stores. Last year. shoplifting losses in Ohio totalea
more than $488.000.000 Because stores are unable to absorb this
entire loss. it costs your family $ 150 per year to pay for what shop·
lifters steal.
How can you help? Simple. Just tell the store clerk if yo u see some o ne who may be shoplifting. You won 't become involved.
·
It's time to take shoplifting serio·usly.

•J i

Grab a great buy! "''
Save up to s1oo .;,
on 50 square yards
of our finest carpet.
in our qreatest . .
,.

· March Sale.

inlhe[;1

II I I

-··
long-wearing nylon

Sale

Sliop for shoe

,,...,

__ ,

$3 9~-

indoor-outdoor

yd.

....

-~ ,

patterned nylon shag

'

$~9
Green, Orange &amp; Red

g

sq. yd.

embossed ac:rylc

..,.

. N... Kitdlen t.pet

"~"~ 'II

; r.::~'J

. Sale

Blue, ,Green &amp;-Red
With Rubber Back

$499yd.
sq.

..

~

.. $ 99
.With Rubber Back

5

sq. Jd.

Ia ~

~.: :r.

.

Add to yo ur dictionary &lt;&gt;f
collective nouns: a lie of
f1shermen.
A fellow on the way up has
been known to forget tba1 the
elrvator .also comes do~·n .

Attorney 'General William J . Bm\L'Il. Chainnan
Coo~ratingO~anlzations Ohio Counnl of RetaHM!?rchants · O h10 Chamber of Comm~?rce · Ohio School
Boards A~50di!. tLOn · Ohio As.."-Oda tion of ('hiofs of rohce · Ohio ProsvcutiJlg Attomet~ Association .
B m::kc~oe Stare Shenffs AssociatiOn ·Ohio Reta1l Jewelers Association

'

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

GELS .FURNITURE

Ohio Council Against Shoplifting
' PH. 992-2635

BANK; RATE FINANCING

•

MIDDUPORT

.

I

KEDS CANVAS .•

information: there were in·

year liberal arts degrees at $1890
tuition per year. Campus housing is
available to all students at $425 per
quarter. 39 different evening and night
classes are available. Register now.
Classes begin March 25. Remember,
there will be registration at night,
Monday, March 24th from 6-9 p.m. in
Allen Hall at Rio. Grande College.

The $1,800 Minute

By PHIL PASTORET
Couples who claim they 've
nerer had an argument in 40
years either have bad
memories or a very dull life to
recalL
Add to your colle&lt;tion of

good fairies don't have? For an Irishman, he's the
. mischievioous little guy who, merrily smoking a pipe, will
reveal where a handaome treasure is buried. That is, if one is
deserving of such good fortune.

Holzer Medico! Center
(Births)
~'riday - Mr . and Mrs. Jack
Collins, daughter , Wellston.
Mr. and Mrs. Dickie Huffer,
son , Ray and Mr. and Mrs.
Cec il · Midkiff, daughter

was little similarity between
his death and the other two
abductloos.
Each of the first two victims,
a 12-year-old in 1973, and a 14year-old in 1974, were sprayed
with paint. The first WBB
stripped and beaten and &gt;the
second was sexually molested,
tied up and leltlying For three
bours at a cemetery, pollee
said.

o.r-..

~

repli cas .

Several members were
reported ill at the Friday night
meeting of the Auxiliary of the
Disabled Vet&lt;irans of America
held at the DAV hall.
Mrs. Sam Clark opened the
meeting in ritualistic form with
Mrs. Mary Sisson giving the
secretary's report. Repor ted ill
were Mrs. Mae Roach, Mrs.
Marvin Kelly. Mrs . Lena
Wolfe. and Mrs. Ethel Thomas,
a patient at Universi ty
Hospital. Cards will be sent.
Refreshments were served to

Jaso n

small cabin at a Boy Scout
ca mp near the Wisconsin st.lte
line .
Jo Daviess County Coroner
Alan Steinke said Sunday that
Didier, the eighth-grade son of
a
Rockford
alderman ,
probably was strangled to
death by his abductor.
Didier's body was discovered
by Steve Olsen, 17, a member
of a Munroe, Wis., scout troop,
and William Kline, 22, a troop
iead&lt;!r, who were summer st.lfl
members at the camp. They
were checking the cabin Saturday for winter weather
damage when they round the
body .
Tioe body was lying on the
floor of a small cabin. Olsen
and Kline said they noticed red
cuts around the boy's wrists.
Steinke said it had not been
determined bow long the youth
had been dead.
The discovery ol the body
ended an extensive 12-day
search which began when he
disappeared on the morning of
March 4.
But in Rockford, Illinois'
second largest city, a reward
fund !Or Information leading to
the arrest and conviction of the
boy's abductor reached $6,500.
Steinke conducted an extensive autopsy, but refused to
elaborate on the circumstances
surrounding the slaying.
Young Didier, the IS.year-old
son of Rockford alderman
George Didier Jr., was the
third Rockford youth in three
years to disappear while
delivering papers .
Rockford Police Chief
Delbert Peterson held a news
conference Sunday night and
offered only two new pieces of

the integration plan, recelftil
only applause.
-·
South Boaton haa bt!en ·Cbli
center of opposition ~
oosing order, and South
High School has been the IIC.'elle ·
of numer01111 Fights between
black and white youths.
Groups from the South
Boston, East Boston,
town, Jamaica Plain and
Roslindale sections or BotlloR,
in addition to suburban Dedham, spollBOred Floats Ul'linl
opposition to the busing p.
The crowd wore buttAinti t11111
carried signs supporlhtll
Flynn's candidacy and ,.U.ll.
District
Judge
At(thtar
Garrity's Impeachment, lri
addition to the tradit!pnal
"Kiss Me I'm Irish': emblems,
Garrity originated the bti,tng
order for Boeton.
"
One youngster marebed,Jrith
a sign that said "BOIL&lt;!!) or
Bustown? ." Signs sa_ring
"stopped forced busing" were
numerous.
..
Political leaders, inchiling
Gov. Michael Dukalda, pthered For a traditional St.
Patrick's Day luncheon of
corned beef and calltiage; 'and
were subjected to good-&lt;~aturm
ribbing from South ~·a
political elite.
,,
Louise Day Hicks, a lel\d«
an antibusing group IIJI(IIIIOI'InK
a lobbying trip to Wash~~Jlon
this week, pinned one oLibe
group's buttons on Dukildi.

a unique opportunity

presen ted a membership skit ,
and enterta inment by the
Athen s Club wa s a ·slide
prese ntation of scenic views in
the United States and Europe .
Loretta Jones handled the
silent auction and the door
prizes were awarded to Mrs.
Weiss, Mrs . Suiter, Mrs . Lucy
Earwood, Mrs . Wilma Ashcrafl, and Mrs. Morrison.
The tables carried out the St.
Patrick's Day theme and the
nam e tags were rabbit

legislative chairwoman, and

IN IRISH FOLKLORE little is so intriguing as . the
leprechaun, espeicially on St. Patrick's Day, because he's
the little guy perching on an Irish shoulder, or at the loot or a
bed, or under a dinner t.lble. What does he have that other

RIO GRANDE
COLLEGE

Eight attended district meeting
Eight members of the
Middleport Business and
Profe ssio nal Wome n's Club
were at the Hocking Hills
Lodge, Logan, Sunday for the
spring meeting of District 15,
BPW.
Gomg fr om the Middleport
club were Mrs. Marian Taylor,
Mrs. Janet Lcffle, Mrs. Janet
Korn, Mrs. Eloise Wilson, Mrs .
Nellie Val e, Mrs . Thelma
Lytle.
Miss
Freddie
Houdashelt, and Mrs . Mary
Mortin .
Mrs . Lois Caul , districl
director, presided at the
meeti ng which opened with u
coffee hour at II a .m. and a
lun cheon a1 noon for the ap·
proximately 70 attending.
Speaker was Virginia Weiss,
Licking County Probate Judge.
and candidate for second vice
presiden t of the Ohio
Federa tion. She talked on th e
pr oblems
of
juvenile
delinquents noting that e\•ery
year in the United States,
nearly ont&gt; million teenagers
rWl away rrom home.
She spoke of the foster home
program in Licking County, a
program o! placing runaways
in homes where the basic
problems can be dealt with.
She noted that the program
started with five homes and
now over 50 foster homes are
available . Mrs. Weiss announced the
May 16-18 state convention to
be held at the Neil Hoose in
Co hun bus and also the fall
conference to be at Salt Fork
Lodge. She reported that this
year's national convention will
be held .July 21J.24 at Las Vegas
and U1al plaris are ... for a
char tered plane to take Ohio's

George Jeffers,

Fields, William Middlcswart,
Lovie Watson, Charles McMillin , Sandra Marcinko,
Albert
Keeton,
Frances
Davidson, Mary Gardner and
Tiffany Ga rdn er.
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS Cora Roush, Clifton; Kimberly
Bolyard, Racine; La&gt;ry Baker,
Pomeroy : Adrienne French,
Pomeroy ; Mary Rathburn,
Rutland ; Rubert Hudson.
Pomeroy; Mitti e Nelson,
Pomeroy; Henr y Milliron,
Middleport .
SUNDAY DISCHARGES William Norton , Sandra
Jenkins, Oscar Jo l~ n son .

vice

~

h t.t

Newspaperhoy's frozen body

Over 200 attended
Baptists' meeting

-, _

•:&lt;Dear D. :
'-'
I'd say it's carrying "help" to the point of pilfering, but since
'ibur mother thinks she did it for your own good ... well, put her
~wn as the "type who would take candy !rom a body" and let it
;1,!) at that. - H.

Many onlookers, watching marchers from a nwnber of
w1der ·sunny skies, wore an~ groups opposing a Federal
tibusing buttons.
court order mandating school
The parade is held one day desegregation.
before St. P-.ltrick's Day, on
The crowd both booed and
Evac uation
Day,
com- cheered for Mayor Kevin
memoruting the British retreat White, whose re-election
from Boston during the c-hances are believed uncertain
Bevolutionary War.
because of his support lor the
The co·owd, six to eight deep busing order. State Rep .
at many points along the 71). Raymond Flynn, a candidate
block route, gave an enthusias- lor mayor and a vocal critic or
tiC' reception to floats and

j
I

.::=.

•

A fluat

r('.Sl'lllbling the historic Old

theme

,,

'.

l lt,;.. l
J

~·~

v
............
,,.,_.,.
;••eL

�,I

I.

I ,

Y.·...

6:.... The Daily Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday , March 17, 1915

7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Mont~l .l' . Murdo t7, 1975

' '

"

Irish press school bus

Green Thumb
'f

llOS'IDN ( UPi I -

!,

Notes.

-··
-"

,........

..., .

• • •

A weekly feature of Meigs
County Garden Club members.

North Churr h rolled through
South llosto11 Sunday in the St.
Patrick's D;ty parade . It bore a
fXIinlin g of Puul Revere shou.

~-

,,.~

ting , "The BtLSes lire Coming ,

.'~-

Uu• lluses arc com ing."
Tht· float was on~ of seve ral
lf' nding an antibusing flavor to
the trnditiarul l p8radt" thut
drew an unexpectedly large
crowd of more than 100,000.

......
• • 1 ...

When is a bulb a bulb?
... ,..

'.

By Mrs. Sharon A. Jewell,

Star Garden Club
'· ·
The trade custom of calling any lwnpy underground
·"" structure a bulb, may not be good botony but is too well
' .... established to ignore.
~" "
A garden center operator may offer .. tOO gladioli bulbs for
' ,' $5" on the same counter with "five Giant Dahlia Bulbs lor $5."
\ 1'hc first is a corm while the second a tuber.
,.
A true bulb is made up either of fleshy sca les, as in the lily, or
~ · · ·· or tunics. concentric costs, as in the on ion and tulip, surroundin g
· ' " a basal plate from which U1e bud grows and becomes the above
'" ' ground plant.
A conn is similar to a bulb, but is solid instead of being made
up of scales. A tuber is a thickened underground stem with buds
' · on the sides or top. A rhizonc is a thickened underground stem
, ... with the growing tip at one end or at a joint.
.. , '·
Because some bulbous plants come from the tropics they will
,not survive winters in the temperatures here and are grown as
· · summer-fl ower ing species. The bulbs arc dug before freezing
" weather begins and stored indoors.
'·'
Among the best known hardy bulbs·is the tulip of which about
~ ·· IOO,OOO,OOOareplanted in the United States each year.
' ""
A typical true bulb produces a plant In early spring, flowers
1· less than a month after emerging, grows for a short time after
"flowering , then dies down until the following spring. It is one of
the so-ealled Dutch bulbs grown For centuries in Holland along
"'''with crocus, hyacinths, narcissus, scillas and snowdrops .
'Y" · An "off-beat" bull is the hardy amaryllis which flowers in
"" :'late summer. Several species of crocus flowers in late fall,
' :·1111ving apparently adapted their life cycle to take advantage of
' "the brief period when foliage has been thinned out by approach'· -ing winter but fhe soil has not yet frozen .
\
Bulbs do not like excessive moisture . If water ever stands in
l an area, do not plant bulbs there.
,
A rich sollls'a dlsa~vantage. Most bulbs develop where soils
: are thin. If they are planted where more food is available then is
• needed when mature, the bulb will proceed to split into bulblets.
~ Moved to a poorer soli, these little bulbs will increase in size and
( "in two to Four years they will flower. If left in the same rich soil,
' however, they will grow slightly and divide again.
~
The ideal soil For most Dutch bulbs is a good sandy loam
: cont.~ining considerable humus, but no fresh organic matter.
• Such a soil is not over rich, drains well, yet holds enough
.• moisture for normal growth. Adding well-decayed organic
,•• matter is a good practice . The reason for ruling out organic
• matter which has not gone through decay is that such matter
, ... nourishes certain fungus organisms that damage bulbs .
: ' ; In planting bulbs, the directions often say to "plant Uorec
, ipches deep" without explaining whether you are to measure
' • from the top of the bulb or the base. Always measure from the top
II
-'
'•
or
the bulb unless otherwise directed . Some bulb plants are able
~ ~ ronn a new bulb above the old if planted deeply.

•

I!Mli!Ml~~'

1

••
•••

•

•••
,,•
..

~

r
M

t•

...

... ....,., · ·nr~~~"-'*'-~-,.~~,

Helen Help

I

Us.

'

By Helen BotteJ

••

Just 'foo, 'foo Considerate!

~

Dear Helen :
"
I'm a little overweight, maybe 20 pounds. So what ? It's MY
r body. Recently I was In the bospital lor minor surgery, and a
:~lend sent me a nice box of candy, in care of my mother's ad~c .r.lress. Anyway, I GUESS It was nice.
My mother brolll!hlme the empty box! She said she opened it
~ Jll!ssed it around to all the family because she knew that·
::~ I was tempted, I'd eat all those rattening things, Really, I'm not
wl child who must be watched! I'm 24.
~ Isn't this carrying "help" too far ' - DEPRIVED

"

INSTAlLED - New officers of the Rio Grande Baptist Association installed Saturday a•
the arutual meeting in Middleport were left to ri ght, Ed Parkins, Salem, treasurer; Mrs.
Florence Richards , Middleport, clerk; the Rev . Henry Lancaster, Jackson, vice modera tor ;
and the Rev. Bill Uber, Cheshire, moderator.

+++

:;fl'ear HELEN:
:
I read with fascination the l~tter lrom "A Man" who feels
~n would rather be married to wealthy and Famous men
.;'Ulan make it on their own.
It IS a pity he couldn't attend a university. Evidently his
education was limited or he would never have made such absurd
remarks, insulting hall the human race. In college, he would see
vast numbers or women seeking to be more than "a good catch
for a husband."
In reply to his question: Yes, I DO want "all that hassle of
working for It," and I prefer MY OWN glory, not the reflected
glory of the ''Woman behind the man who made it."
I Find such crude insults against the ambitions of women
totally inexcusable. The implication that women are parasites is
§II outdated Fallacy, contrived and nurtured in the small minds of
ifl:secure yet inflated male egos. - WOMAN
.I

'

.near Helen :
Bully for "A Man" 1or course, most of us women (except the
strident libbers) would rather be our husbandS' helpmates than
llusiness executives or careerists. But we're presently too intimidated to say so.
This Liberation bull is being carried too far. We had it good
until the equality chicks started·causing trouble. Now man is too
scared to even help carry packages or open a door for a girl. He
espects his wife to work oull!ide the borne, and do man's jobs in
it. He ~ives herno special treatment; after aU, isn't ahe "jtisl one
of the guys" ? Often he,snags a successful, wealthy woman so HE
won't have to work.
If this equality-ri(l-&lt;lff continues, the 21st century will see a
nation or hqusehusbands, with women dying earlier From such
predominantly ''male" diseases as heart attacks and ulcers, as
they figot out there in the oosiness world jungles.
"Liberation" is ruining it For us who like things as they were.
I (and a lot of my female Friends) want to be dominated, walked
on a bit, allowed to stay borne with kids rather than work. Believe
me, we have the IIpper hand. A man enjoys being coaxed, not
ordered, He likes thinking he's the boss, even though his wife
really is. It's good for his ego, and heaven knows after a hard
days' work, he deserves it.
I'm not one of those old ladies who are resigned to life.! 'm 19,
and have been al1lllnd more than most :!G-year-olds. But I believe
that- WOMAN'S PLACE IS IN THE HOME
.
'
· Dear Readers:

.'"'"A Man" really whipped up a blaze with his supposition that
most wOmen prefer reflected glory and "aren 't single-minded
enough to make it on their own."
·
So Far, "making it on my own" (married or not) has a slight
lead over "behind-the«enes helpnate" -but this doesn't mean
lbe majority or women are eager achieVfl'll ... only that "A
Man's" oorxlescending remarks riled female careerists into
~ back. - H: .

.'

found at Boy Scout cabin
1Im

REV. CHARLES LUSHER, Crown aty, center, the area minister of Southeastern
Ohio and director or Town and Country Churches for the Ohio Baptist Convention, was guest
speaker at the Rio Grande Baptist Association meeting Saturday. Pictured with him are the
Rev. Walter Bikacsan, Racine,lefl, and Mrs. Robert Kuhn, Pomeroy, Ohio Baptist Convention
trustees.

GALENA, Ill . I UPJ I - 111e
nude, !l'07.en body of Joseph
Didier, abducted two weeks
ugo as he was delivering news.
p:1pers, has been found in a

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Performan ces by
the
Covenant Players of Reseda,
Calif. highlighted the Rio
Grande Baptist Association
annual meeting held Saturday
in Middleport and allended by
over 200 men and women
representing Southeastern
Ohio Baptist Churches.
The Mount Moriah Baptist
·church was host for the
meeting which also featured
the Rev. Charles !.usher ,
Southeastern Ohio Area
minister, as speaker, and the
installation of new Association
ollicers.
An international repertory
theater group dealing with
Christian challenges , the
Covenant Players - Maggie
Simmons of Mississippi, Jim
Craig of California, Rick
Taylor of Pennsylvania, and
Judi Sanderson of Alberta,
Canada - provided fascinating
entertainment
as
they
presented
solid
Bible
teachings .
During the day they gave two
one·hour performances in
addition to a number of minimessages, all taking a
dramatic form with a Charlie
Brown format .
"Mystery of Christ" was the
sermon topic of the Rev. Mr.
Lusher. He also installed the

HOSPITAL NEWS
Vett•rans Mcmurial Hospital
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS
- Nellie Dunn , Middleport ;
James Sellers, Shade; Cynthia
WolfeJ Syracuse.
SATURDAY DISCHARGES

newly elected Rio Grande
Baptist Association officers,
the Hev. Bill Uber, Cheshire,
moderator; the Rev. Henry
Lan caster , Jackson,

~

moderator ; Mrs. F'lorence
Hichards, Middleport. clerk;
and Ed Parkins, Salem,

{
''

treasurer .

Recognized and reporting
during the day were the Ohio
Baptist Convention trustees
from the Association, Mrs.
Robert Kuhn, Pomeroy, and
the Rev. Walter Bikacsan,
Racine.

The Rev. Henry Key , Jr.,
pastor of the host church extended the welcome and gave
the prayer to open the meeting.
Mrs. Campbell Harper was
pianist lor the day and the
soloists were llfrs. Kuhn who
sang "Here Comes Jesus" and
"They Crucified My Lord" and
Danny Thompson, Pomeroy,
singing "There's Something
About That Name" and "His
Name is Wonderful."
A corsage was presented by
Mrs . Ghidys Rife of the
American Baptist Women of
the Association to Miss Mary
Ann Woodruff, Wellston , the
outgoing clerk .
Benediction was by the Rev.
Lew M. Swancott, pastor of the
Ca lvary Baptist Church ,
Gallipolis.

HEt.IROD1Nlli [)()0!:;!
15 AL'II/&gt;4S OPEN ..

ffiVENANT PLAYERS - Christian dynamics is how
the Covenant Players describe what they do. Pictured here in
one of their skits are, left to right, Maggie Simmons of
Mississippi, Jim Craig of California, Rick Taylor of Penn-

sylvania, and Judi Sanderson, Alberta, Canada. They performed Saturday at the Rio Grande Baptist Association
annual meeting held at the MI. Moriah Baptist Church,
Middleport.

d
are
et-ecte
White Shrine officers
7

.

of
offices
Election
highlighted a meeting of Mary
Shrine 37, Order of the White
Shrine of Jerusalem at the
Pomeroy Masoni c Temple
Friday night.
Midge Abbott, worthy high
pnestess , and Allen Hughes,
watchman of shepherds,
presided at the meeting .
Elected were Mrs. Clara Belle
Riley, worthy high priestess ;
Thomas Edwards, Watchman
of shepherds: Mrs. Helen
Pickens, noble prophetess :
Oscar Casto, associate watchman of shepherds; Erma
Yoho, worthy scribe: Mrs.
Barbara Dugan, worthy
treasurer; Mrs. Ne!lie Casto,
worthy chaplain; Mrs. Sharon
Warner, worthy shepherdess ;

and Mrs . Arline Davis, worthy April 11 at the Temple.
guide.
Members of Mary Shrine are to
Mrs . Riley announced a take sandwiches and cookies.
practice for installa tion on
Invitations for installations
April6 at 2 p.m . at the Masonic were read from Fairborn
Temple. The open installation Shrine, March 22, 8 p.m. with
will take place at 8 p.m. on Mary Hawks, supreme noble

prophetess, installing officer;
Nazarene Shrine, March 22,
Chllhcolhe; Manon Shrme,
April 5, Marion, Ohio; Huntington Shrine, April 26, 8 p.m.
Huntington, W. VVa.
Potluck refreshments were
served in the dining room
following
the
meeting.
Members are reminded that
dues are now payable.

representatives. She concluded
with two poems, "What Is
Good ?" and " There Is a
Destiny ."
Introduced were Mrs. J oan
Wood, Gallipolis, incomin g
diret·tor: Helen Morrison , state
Mrs. l.ola Mae Suiter, past
district dire-ctor.
The inv ocation to open the
mee rin g was given by a

member of the Gallipolis.Club.
The McArthur Club members

Several members of auxiliary ill

INSPECTION SET
Annual inspection of the Ohio
Valle y Commandery 24 ,
Knights Templar, will be held
Saturday a I the Pomeroy
Masonic Temple. The order of
the. temple will be conferred .
Work will begin at 3: 30 p.m.
There will be a dinner at 6 p.m.
with a full form opening at 7:30
p.m. Sir Knight William Saul.
grand treasurer, will be the
inspecting officer. Ladies are
in.vited .

the Auxiliary and DA V
members
following
the
meeting.
Next meeting wiU be on the
sec.ond Tuesday in April.

'

BARBS

collet·th·e nouns : A broke of

horseplayers. .

--------- ------=---=----~.:____

______ _

Pmnero}'.

-

Saturday - Mr . and Mrs.
James Aldri ch, daughter,
Jackson; Mr . and Mrs. Donald
Cole, daughter, Middleport ;
Mr. and Mo·s . Billy Harrington,
daughter, Rio Grande ; Mr. and
Mrs. William W. Morrison ,
daughter, Pt. Pleasant · Mr
and Mrs. james H. Sisso~, son:
Gallipolis and Mr. and Mrs .
Robert Theiss , daughter ,
Bidwell.
Sunday - Mr. and Mrs.
William Allen, son , Jackson.

Walton claims·FBI is covering -u p

LOS ANGELES (UPI) against him .
has reason to believe the newspaper the three may be in
Professional basketball star
The
San
Francisco Harrises spent some ttme in a the San Francisco Bay Area
Bill Walton says a search lor Examiner said the fugitives'
New York City apartment harbored by members of the
his close friend, radical sports trail is "bound inextricably" to Scott rented.
Berkeley radical group.
writer Jack Scott, is part or an a Berkeley, Calif., radical
"I trust and believe in Jack · "Anybody that might have .
FBI campaign to cover up its group which may have been and Mickie Scott" Walton said. information should contact us"
inability to find fugitive heiress the prototype for the SLA. The "They are Fantastic people. said FBI agent Frank Perrone.
Patricia Hearst and two known newspaper said the three Whatever they have been doing "We need help in locating and
members or the terrorist connected with· Scott through in their past Uvea has been for apprehending these people."
Symbionese Liberation Army. the radical groojl soon after the commendable reasons."
"Possibly I'm being used as Los Angeles shootout last May
Walton said the FBI quesa scapegoat to cover up the that left six other SLA mem- tioned hinn about his Friends
FBI's inability to lind these . bers dead.
but that he had no information
three people," he Said in a
Time magazine also reported for them.
broadcast interview in Port- a "West Coast radical leader"
The FBI meanwhile called
land, Ore.
asked Scott to help Miss Hearst for citirem' help in locating the
Scott and his wife Mickillved and her friends and other three SLA me.mbers amid
in Walton's $100,1100 home in media reports indicate the FBI reports in the He~st Family
Portland part or last year and
early this year. A telephone at
the borne was reported to have
been used lor calls to the
eastern Pennsylvania farm.
bouse where Miss Hearst's
fingerprints were Found along
with !bose or fugitive artist
Wendy Yoshimura.
No formal warrant or
charges have been placed
---- ·-·-----· -. ----....
Students have a choice here. Comagainst Scott, the FBI said, but
authorities on the West Coast
munity College featuring two-year,
have indicated a grand jury in
state-assisted, arts, transfer, and
Pennsylvania, scheduled to
technical programs at $13 a credit
reconvene in mid-April, soon
hour. Private College featuring four
may be issuing an indictment
BUBONIC PLAGUE
ATLANTA (UP!) - The
National Center lor Disease
Control says an 11-year-old
New Mexico boy· recently
contracted the r.rst case or
human bubonic plague ever
associated with a coyote.
The center said the boy was
released from the hospital
March 5 after undergoing a
variety of treabnents.
The youth contracted the
plague in February after he
and another boy Found and
sltlnned a coyote which had
been dead for three days, the
CDC Said.

mEY SHARED SANDWICH
RICHMOND, Va. (UPI) Hundreds or hungry students
paid apiece to share an 1100foot.Jong sulxnarlne sandwich
at the University of Vlrginla'a
student center.
The
sandwich, which
students say weighed alm08t a'
ton, was molded into one
continuous 'strand In the
hallway or the building.
Students &amp;mday claimed It
was the longest every made,
and they boped to win a
mention In the Guinnesa World
Book of Records for Ita construction .

'1

.

'

I'

COLORFUL KEDS
•

'"

The Clown Print wlfh
red Pompon nose trill\.
'"

YourThom MeAn Storer"
Middl&amp;part, Ohio ' ''

Play it oare iDtt lllftl,
It may be tlllie to
have your preeeot
pol!cy updaled.

&amp;of'• falk ·Soon

dications young Didier was
taken into the cabin alive and
that there was no paint on the
body. Police Indicated there

DALE C. WARNER ,
"2-2143

-~

'

Office of Admissions
Rio Grande College
Rio 'Grande, Ohio 45674
Telephone (614) 245-5353

Every minute of every shopping day. $1.800 in merchandise is
stolen from Ohio stores. Last year. shoplifting losses in Ohio totalea
more than $488.000.000 Because stores are unable to absorb this
entire loss. it costs your family $ 150 per year to pay for what shop·
lifters steal.
How can you help? Simple. Just tell the store clerk if yo u see some o ne who may be shoplifting. You won 't become involved.
·
It's time to take shoplifting serio·usly.

•J i

Grab a great buy! "''
Save up to s1oo .;,
on 50 square yards
of our finest carpet.
in our qreatest . .
,.

· March Sale.

inlhe[;1

II I I

-··
long-wearing nylon

Sale

Sliop for shoe

,,...,

__ ,

$3 9~-

indoor-outdoor

yd.

....

-~ ,

patterned nylon shag

'

$~9
Green, Orange &amp; Red

g

sq. yd.

embossed ac:rylc

..,.

. N... Kitdlen t.pet

"~"~ 'II

; r.::~'J

. Sale

Blue, ,Green &amp;-Red
With Rubber Back

$499yd.
sq.

..

~

.. $ 99
.With Rubber Back

5

sq. Jd.

Ia ~

~.: :r.

.

Add to yo ur dictionary &lt;&gt;f
collective nouns: a lie of
f1shermen.
A fellow on the way up has
been known to forget tba1 the
elrvator .also comes do~·n .

Attorney 'General William J . Bm\L'Il. Chainnan
Coo~ratingO~anlzations Ohio Counnl of RetaHM!?rchants · O h10 Chamber of Comm~?rce · Ohio School
Boards A~50di!. tLOn · Ohio As.."-Oda tion of ('hiofs of rohce · Ohio ProsvcutiJlg Attomet~ Association .
B m::kc~oe Stare Shenffs AssociatiOn ·Ohio Reta1l Jewelers Association

'

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

GELS .FURNITURE

Ohio Council Against Shoplifting
' PH. 992-2635

BANK; RATE FINANCING

•

MIDDUPORT

.

I

KEDS CANVAS .•

information: there were in·

year liberal arts degrees at $1890
tuition per year. Campus housing is
available to all students at $425 per
quarter. 39 different evening and night
classes are available. Register now.
Classes begin March 25. Remember,
there will be registration at night,
Monday, March 24th from 6-9 p.m. in
Allen Hall at Rio. Grande College.

The $1,800 Minute

By PHIL PASTORET
Couples who claim they 've
nerer had an argument in 40
years either have bad
memories or a very dull life to
recalL
Add to your colle&lt;tion of

good fairies don't have? For an Irishman, he's the
. mischievioous little guy who, merrily smoking a pipe, will
reveal where a handaome treasure is buried. That is, if one is
deserving of such good fortune.

Holzer Medico! Center
(Births)
~'riday - Mr . and Mrs. Jack
Collins, daughter , Wellston.
Mr. and Mrs. Dickie Huffer,
son , Ray and Mr. and Mrs.
Cec il · Midkiff, daughter

was little similarity between
his death and the other two
abductloos.
Each of the first two victims,
a 12-year-old in 1973, and a 14year-old in 1974, were sprayed
with paint. The first WBB
stripped and beaten and &gt;the
second was sexually molested,
tied up and leltlying For three
bours at a cemetery, pollee
said.

o.r-..

~

repli cas .

Several members were
reported ill at the Friday night
meeting of the Auxiliary of the
Disabled Vet&lt;irans of America
held at the DAV hall.
Mrs. Sam Clark opened the
meeting in ritualistic form with
Mrs. Mary Sisson giving the
secretary's report. Repor ted ill
were Mrs. Mae Roach, Mrs.
Marvin Kelly. Mrs . Lena
Wolfe. and Mrs. Ethel Thomas,
a patient at Universi ty
Hospital. Cards will be sent.
Refreshments were served to

Jaso n

small cabin at a Boy Scout
ca mp near the Wisconsin st.lte
line .
Jo Daviess County Coroner
Alan Steinke said Sunday that
Didier, the eighth-grade son of
a
Rockford
alderman ,
probably was strangled to
death by his abductor.
Didier's body was discovered
by Steve Olsen, 17, a member
of a Munroe, Wis., scout troop,
and William Kline, 22, a troop
iead&lt;!r, who were summer st.lfl
members at the camp. They
were checking the cabin Saturday for winter weather
damage when they round the
body .
Tioe body was lying on the
floor of a small cabin. Olsen
and Kline said they noticed red
cuts around the boy's wrists.
Steinke said it had not been
determined bow long the youth
had been dead.
The discovery ol the body
ended an extensive 12-day
search which began when he
disappeared on the morning of
March 4.
But in Rockford, Illinois'
second largest city, a reward
fund !Or Information leading to
the arrest and conviction of the
boy's abductor reached $6,500.
Steinke conducted an extensive autopsy, but refused to
elaborate on the circumstances
surrounding the slaying.
Young Didier, the IS.year-old
son of Rockford alderman
George Didier Jr., was the
third Rockford youth in three
years to disappear while
delivering papers .
Rockford Police Chief
Delbert Peterson held a news
conference Sunday night and
offered only two new pieces of

the integration plan, recelftil
only applause.
-·
South Boaton haa bt!en ·Cbli
center of opposition ~
oosing order, and South
High School has been the IIC.'elle ·
of numer01111 Fights between
black and white youths.
Groups from the South
Boston, East Boston,
town, Jamaica Plain and
Roslindale sections or BotlloR,
in addition to suburban Dedham, spollBOred Floats Ul'linl
opposition to the busing p.
The crowd wore buttAinti t11111
carried signs supporlhtll
Flynn's candidacy and ,.U.ll.
District
Judge
At(thtar
Garrity's Impeachment, lri
addition to the tradit!pnal
"Kiss Me I'm Irish': emblems,
Garrity originated the bti,tng
order for Boeton.
"
One youngster marebed,Jrith
a sign that said "BOIL&lt;!!) or
Bustown? ." Signs sa_ring
"stopped forced busing" were
numerous.
..
Political leaders, inchiling
Gov. Michael Dukalda, pthered For a traditional St.
Patrick's Day luncheon of
corned beef and calltiage; 'and
were subjected to good-&lt;~aturm
ribbing from South ~·a
political elite.
,,
Louise Day Hicks, a lel\d«
an antibusing group IIJI(IIIIOI'InK
a lobbying trip to Wash~~Jlon
this week, pinned one oLibe
group's buttons on Dukildi.

a unique opportunity

presen ted a membership skit ,
and enterta inment by the
Athen s Club wa s a ·slide
prese ntation of scenic views in
the United States and Europe .
Loretta Jones handled the
silent auction and the door
prizes were awarded to Mrs.
Weiss, Mrs . Suiter, Mrs . Lucy
Earwood, Mrs . Wilma Ashcrafl, and Mrs. Morrison.
The tables carried out the St.
Patrick's Day theme and the
nam e tags were rabbit

legislative chairwoman, and

IN IRISH FOLKLORE little is so intriguing as . the
leprechaun, espeicially on St. Patrick's Day, because he's
the little guy perching on an Irish shoulder, or at the loot or a
bed, or under a dinner t.lble. What does he have that other

RIO GRANDE
COLLEGE

Eight attended district meeting
Eight members of the
Middleport Business and
Profe ssio nal Wome n's Club
were at the Hocking Hills
Lodge, Logan, Sunday for the
spring meeting of District 15,
BPW.
Gomg fr om the Middleport
club were Mrs. Marian Taylor,
Mrs. Janet Lcffle, Mrs. Janet
Korn, Mrs. Eloise Wilson, Mrs .
Nellie Val e, Mrs . Thelma
Lytle.
Miss
Freddie
Houdashelt, and Mrs . Mary
Mortin .
Mrs . Lois Caul , districl
director, presided at the
meeti ng which opened with u
coffee hour at II a .m. and a
lun cheon a1 noon for the ap·
proximately 70 attending.
Speaker was Virginia Weiss,
Licking County Probate Judge.
and candidate for second vice
presiden t of the Ohio
Federa tion. She talked on th e
pr oblems
of
juvenile
delinquents noting that e\•ery
year in the United States,
nearly ont&gt; million teenagers
rWl away rrom home.
She spoke of the foster home
program in Licking County, a
program o! placing runaways
in homes where the basic
problems can be dealt with.
She noted that the program
started with five homes and
now over 50 foster homes are
available . Mrs. Weiss announced the
May 16-18 state convention to
be held at the Neil Hoose in
Co hun bus and also the fall
conference to be at Salt Fork
Lodge. She reported that this
year's national convention will
be held .July 21J.24 at Las Vegas
and U1al plaris are ... for a
char tered plane to take Ohio's

George Jeffers,

Fields, William Middlcswart,
Lovie Watson, Charles McMillin , Sandra Marcinko,
Albert
Keeton,
Frances
Davidson, Mary Gardner and
Tiffany Ga rdn er.
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS Cora Roush, Clifton; Kimberly
Bolyard, Racine; La&gt;ry Baker,
Pomeroy : Adrienne French,
Pomeroy ; Mary Rathburn,
Rutland ; Rubert Hudson.
Pomeroy; Mitti e Nelson,
Pomeroy; Henr y Milliron,
Middleport .
SUNDAY DISCHARGES William Norton , Sandra
Jenkins, Oscar Jo l~ n son .

vice

~

h t.t

Newspaperhoy's frozen body

Over 200 attended
Baptists' meeting

-, _

•:&lt;Dear D. :
'-'
I'd say it's carrying "help" to the point of pilfering, but since
'ibur mother thinks she did it for your own good ... well, put her
~wn as the "type who would take candy !rom a body" and let it
;1,!) at that. - H.

Many onlookers, watching marchers from a nwnber of
w1der ·sunny skies, wore an~ groups opposing a Federal
tibusing buttons.
court order mandating school
The parade is held one day desegregation.
before St. P-.ltrick's Day, on
The crowd both booed and
Evac uation
Day,
com- cheered for Mayor Kevin
memoruting the British retreat White, whose re-election
from Boston during the c-hances are believed uncertain
Bevolutionary War.
because of his support lor the
The co·owd, six to eight deep busing order. State Rep .
at many points along the 71). Raymond Flynn, a candidate
block route, gave an enthusias- lor mayor and a vocal critic or
tiC' reception to floats and

j
I

.::=.

•

A fluat

r('.Sl'lllbling the historic Old

theme

,,

'.

l lt,;.. l
J

~·~

v
............
,,.,_.,.
;••eL

�'
'

'

8- The Deily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0, Monday ,March

.-...

~~~:~~}.~ .~.~! •o···· .,... For

Dorcas Social Notes

..' Tom and Barbara Brutvan

..

1 7, 1 97~

•nd children, J effr ey and
~nnlfer, or Cincinnati spent a
weekend with thetr blfandperents, Earnest and Vashti
Grimm of Letart and vistted
with June and Lorry Roush.
Alice Beegle and Ohs and Edn a
Knopp.
Tomm y Beegle 1s vacationing tn Flortdo where
he will vtstt with hts coosln
Mildre&lt;l Murcer
Joy Ky (Titetssl and Marty_
Morarlty and daug hter have
moved Into their new home tn
Dorcas.
Aaron ,Knopp of Galhpolts
spent Thursday evening wtth
hls grandparents, Olts and
Edna Knopp wlule his parents,
Max and Sherry, attended a
bell game.
Emma J ohns on, Ali ce
Sheville, Berntce Lovelley and
Maymie Custer spent a day
shopping in Ma ri etta and
Parkersburg . They cele brated
Maymle's btrthday by having
dinner at The Ponderosa in
Parkersburg.
Mr. and Mrs Ronald Salser
and daughter, Tonya spent the
weekend at the home or hls
brother, Mr and Mrs Charles
Ivan (Took ) Salse r . They
VISited with Took's daughter ,
Mr. and Mrs Lorry Jones at
Dayton.
Otis and Edna Knopp and
Rev . Steve Wilson were dhmer
guests or Dick and Lois Sterrett
and sons and Max and Sherry
Knopp and son, Aaron, of
Gallipolis on Sunda y
Mrs. Allee Shevllle of East
Uverpool Is spendin g th e
winter with her sister, Emma
Johnson. Emma was hostess to
a birthday surprise for her
sister. Those present were
Jerry and Dorothy Johnson,
Racine, Bernard and Bernice
Lavalley and son, Steve ,
Debbie Lavalley, Ray Vun
Meter. Her daughters, Betty
and James Fairley, Freedom,
Pa ., Roberta and Ed ward
Boyle, Pittsburgh, Pa , ttnd her
son, Mr. and Mrs Robert
Sheville, East Uverpool. They
lrotll{hl lier Rifts for her ?Sth
birthday and a cake. Gills were
candles ol which she has a
collecUon of over three hundred different kinds. She has
sia children, 25 grandchildren
and ~ sreat'j!randchildren .
Rev . $leve Wilson spent
Monday through Friday with
Mark and BLocky Montgomery

News, Notes
Gennaen Paya, an Indian
girl from the Grand Canyon,
Arizona, who is attendin g
school at Athens, spent Sunday
with Jodi Smith.
Mr . and Mrs . James
Carruthers and Penny and Mr.
and Mrs Bert Schrlmsber and
Scotty of Louisville were
weekend IJUests of Mrs Bessie
Larklllll .
Mr. and Mrs. Wtlliam
Thomas and family of Enon
were weekend guests of her
parenls, Mr. and Mrs. Walter
Brown and David
Dale Smllh is a tt end ing
school
at
Vicks burg,
Mtssissippl
Mr. and Mrs Isaac Frydman
of Colwnbus vistled Saturda y
wtth Mr. and Mrs Ernest
Whitebead and family
Mrs. Helen Archer spent a
day with Mrs. Millon Tuttle of
Pwneroy Road .
Mrs. Warren Pickens, Mrs
Lyle Balderson and Kay a ttended a !ashton show at
Parkersburg on Wed nesd ay
evening.Mrs. Kathryn Dtelz,
sister o( Mrs Pickens and Mrs
Balderson was one of the
models.

any co n dll•on
~ avl n g
S lO
each F trs t f loo r on l y Wrt t e
Pta n o Co , Box 188. Sard tS,

rep;urs and has been v1s1tmg
f rien d~

and relatives.

J() Ann tl u\'cns of Delaware.

·--

J I J 6t p

T24

Rt

4, Pom e ro y

Oh.to

Cil ll 99 1 5468
10 17 He

Found

OR DIN ANCE
PR O VIDING
fOR SA LA RY O F M A Y O R ,
C LER K
AND
V ILLACE
MEMBERS O F CO UNCIL OF
I HE V I L LAGE O F P OMERO Y
EFrEC TIVE J anua ry 1st 197 6

Mr a"'! Mrs FrHnk Hudson
or Racmc Hlld Mr . and Mrs.
Shelby Ptt kens and family of
Mr und Mrs Allan Tayln1
Mrs Hal ite Powell and
daughter , A&lt;Idte, of Racme, H.
D., spent Thursday evemng
with Mary Circle.
Mr . and Mrs George Ctrcle
and Mr. und Mrs. Jumes C1rclc
of New Haven spent Sunda y
with Mary Circle
M1 un d Mt s \'lllll@t!l
C.trlCtOJI of RIICJne and 'Malidll'";
Fry spen t Fnday cve nmg wilh
Mt nnd Mt .s AI thur F.m l
Johnson. Pa trick and Sheryl
f.eAnn
Mr. and Mt s 1\r lhur Orr of
Chesler called at the home of
Mr and Mrs Robert I.ee, Bob
Bill and Becky, recently

by Gill Fox

tJ
I'

I

layaway!"

Notice
V 'all Come to landmark ' s

Spring Roundup
MARCH 19-22
Fun , Re lreshments ,
and
Prizes.
Regt stratton

In 1!1611, the U.S. Navy
successfully launched Vanguard
I, a 311-pomtd satellile, mto
&lt;rbl t around the earth .

-~

@

992-3092

..

Mmersvt Ue, 0.

CAP!'AlN EASY

f&amp;

P-J
Home Maintenance

! 'M

For lnfonnation
Call

M OR E IM -

Mlddltport, Oltlo 1 2 1 Mo

IM IN VJT IN6

HIM TO LI!CTUICE HERE A'T'

7H E FOUN DEC'Ji:.

McK EE IN PU5 TRI E5i

AND REVERED
GURU OF THE
LOVE · LOT U~

1 f614) 247-3644

498 Locust St.

EXA C TLY~ YOU SFE

PORTANT, HE:5

JOY ANO
HAPPINE SS

2·17.75c_

&lt;: UL T"!

19 13 MALIBU 2 door metallic
b,-own , black vmyt top, power
steertng , power brakes. a tr
c ond Excellent cond Pr iced
v e ry reasonable Phone 992
3273
3 16 at e

Y'ALL COME!
POMEROY LANOMARK

9 .. _Jack w C•ney, Mgr
tliidl Pnone 992 -2111

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

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

3 BEDROOM mobile home . a.r
conditioning,
corner
of
Broadway &amp; Elm Phone 992
2580 after 6 p m
3 11 ·tfC

WOMAM to baby sit and do light
housework , days week w1th t RAILER - S PACE
north of Meigs H lgh School on
occasional
even11ig
and
old Rt 33 Phone 992 7Ul
saturday
Meats prov1ded
L 1berat sa llllry Call 992 2832
1 23 tfc
or wr1t e P
0
Box 68 1.
Pome~ y , o 45769
ttc o U PLex :-2i8v, - waTnuiSr,
Middleport , Ohio Phone 99 2
3 13
'2780 or 992 34J2
2 19 lfc
L ADtE:S lo do light housework ,
I day week , must be able to
work around teenagers Must COUNTRY Mob 1le Homt'"Park ,
R t 33. ten m' ies north of
have references and trans
Pomeroy
Large lots with.
portat1on wr.te In care of The
c oncrete patios . stdewalks ,
Dally Sentinel , BOK 729P
runner s and off
street
Pomerov . Ohro 45769
1
parking Pltone 992 H79
J 12 6tc
12 31 tfc
J..E SP ON SIBLE lady to ltVe tn - - - - -- - - - - -- -With e lderly lady Phon e (1 ) 3 'and 4 ROOM turnlsrted aul.i
66 7 330S
unfurnished
apartments
Phone 992 5434
3 4 121c
412ttc

-:--..--;;,ii"l

s

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

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

---------------Entployment Wanted

--------------.PRIVATE meeting room tor
any organ 1Utlon . phone 992

REMODEliNG
plumbing ,
3915
huttng. artd all types ' of
J 11 He
general
repa1r
Work
guaran t eed 70 years eK 2 BEDROOM mobile home
per ience Phone 992 1409
Phone 949.1261 . A l bert H1ll
J 11 He
3 10 61C

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

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

Mlddltport, Oltlo

PtJont m-sw or m.-1

INDIAN JOE'S
CB SALES &amp; PARTS
308 Page St.
Middleport, 0. 992-35~9
R ad101, Antennas, Towers.
Used T.V 's. luy from the
"lndlan 41 end save "Wam
Pum". Wt buy ustd l:1dlos
and Towers Aid los repllred
by FCC licensed service
aersonnel Stop •nd see the
1•tndlln"
and
Bubbles .
Monilor Channel 10 and 20 .

BORN LOSER
DO 'OJMt~D

i&gt;,WFUU.:I M'i

TIU..ifob \())

-

Whtte Hal Spec1als

BABYSITTER for 3 school
children Call after 7 p m ,
992 36-15
J 14 3t c

771 MrlS!rtet

"19'/ J F ORO Country Squ i re
wagon
20 ,000 m llu , aH
equipment. S3 ,500 Phone 992
3_i91. .£.'_9_!_7:_2~!_ _ __ ___ _

LOOK FOR THE
b -·

a.K EXCAVAnNG
OOMPANY

301 P•ge, Middleport
H eattng
Cooling
Refrigtratlon - Roof Repairs
· Gutters · Prumbint E l~&gt; ctriul
RepAirs and
5£ •Ice .
Ci1119t2·350tand
Save on YDJJr repairs: Also
repair mower1, compressors
and outbouds Brlnt it In
and save .

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

REMODELING ,
plumbing ,
heati ng , and all types of
ge n eral
repa~r
Work
gu.u an t e ed 20 years e• PUREBRED BEEGLE PUPS.
51 .SO EACH PHONE (6141
pe nence Ph one 992 2409
66 1 3493
) 19 II C
3 16 Jtc

Pets For SaM

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

GIV E a IOV tJ'lg Easter poodle
puppy Call AKC Reg 2 l of
ters. Sl l¥er , champagne, and
wtute Phon e 16141 696 1297
NOTI &lt;;: E from Berry M i ller
after .. . 30 p m Wttl hold for
Mob1le Home Sates - Here •S
Easter
a new ll$11ng of the un1ts we
J 16 4f c
now have on our lot due to the
fore c losure of another Mob1le
Home Deater ·
60x 1&lt;1 New Moon , 2 bedroom
60J~1 .. Nashua , total el ectrt c . 2
~ ELL your mobile tlome for
bedroom
60K 12 Nashua , 2 bedroom
cash 15 homes wanh:d , 1958
thru 1971 models. Phone 1614)
60x 12 Globemuter. 3 bedroom
sox12 Buddy ~ 2 bedroom
446 1425. Gallipolrs
70 J~1J
B everly
Manor ,
3
3 9 78tc
bedroom , 1 bath . Wtlh 1x 12
expando
3 BE OROOM turn 1slled mobdi
6Qx 12 Oart an. 2 bedroom . 2 full
h ome and lot located on .. New
bat hs
L1ml!l Road near Rutland .
~Ox t 2 lt ber ty. 2 bedroom
Phone 742 59 • 3
6Dx 12 Schull , 2 bedroom . total
3 13 4IC
elec tnc
60x 1:1 T 1tan , 2 bedr oom
~Ox 12 El cona . l bedroom
Mbt 12 Park wood , balcon y front
k i tchen. These are mostl y all
I at~ models (some never ltved STEREO RADIO , am fm . 8
track Upe comb tnatlon ,
i n } and wtll be llq_uldated at a
separate contro l s
Balance
very large d1Scount So 1f you
$102 78, or t erms Ca ll 992
are Interested In 11 Mobile
3965
Home at a huge savtng don ' t
3 14 tf c
wa lt , stop tOday at Berry .
~-- - M 11ter M o bile Home Sales, 705
~arson
Sf. , Belpn , On io , ST A NLE Y Product s for sat e
p hone ..t7J 953 1
Ph one 1&lt;1'2 3762.
3 14 IOt t
1 9 26tc

Mobile Homes For Sale

Mobile tbnes For SMe

D&amp;D
CONSTRUCTION
PHONE

Blown
Insulation Services
Blowa Into Walls&amp; AHles.
STORM
Windows &amp; Doors
'
ALUMINUM
Siding- SoffiH
Gutters. Awnings
Free Estimates
Ph. 992-3993

949·3832 or 843·2667
All Types of
BUILDING
and .REMODELING
From a shelf to a house.
Painting, siding, roofing,
paper honging, kitchen
cabinets, expert carpeting,

lARRY LAVENDER
Syracuse. ohio

etc .

HEI,L

&amp;HEAnNG
tomplete plumbing

----

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

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

1...

"Crowhaven Farm" 6; MASH 8,10, Ascent of Man 20,33
9:110-Hawall Flve.o 8,10.
9:30-Woman 20; Witness to Yesterday 33.
10·110-Pollc• Story 3.~.15; Marcus Welby, M.D 13; A Flower ,,
out of Ploce 6; Barnaby Jones 8; Tom Jones 10; News 20,
Interface 33.
10 30-Your Future Is Now 20, Asstgnmenl America 33.
11 ·110-News 3,~.6.8,10, 13,15; ABC Newo 33.
11 :30--Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Wide World Mystery 13; FBI 6;
Movie "Kid Rodeo" 8; Movie "Stagecoach" 10, Janak! 33.
12:30-Wide World Mystery 6.
1:110-Tomorrow 3,4; News 13
"'
Their m istakes could have a •

form four ordinary words.

AtLEY OOP

Phone 949-5961

or. 991-5700.

0 "

.

EXCAVATING, dozer , loader
and backhoe work, septic
tanks Installed; dump trucks
6 ROOM house with bath , 3
anctto boys tor hire, will haul
bedroom full basement. gas
m1 dirt , top soli, limestone &amp;
heat , h w floor , wall to wall
gravel. Cal I Bob or Roger
carpet Close to school m
Jeffers, day phone 992 7089
Pam eroy Phone 992 3097
n lght phone 992· 3S2S or 992
J 9 52tc
5232
2-11 tfl
HOME for sale m Chest er
----~--- -----Tuppers
Plains
water , PIANO tun 1 ng ~ Lane Oan tels
natural gas , 2 bedroom s.
Phon e 992 2082
&lt;ompletely remodeled Phone
3 16 12tc
985 410 2
3 16 12tc TREE tr~mm l ng. year s of
exper1ence Bob Sayre, phone
BUY NOW &amp; : O AVE Low , low,
247 2166
down payments, 8 pet 1n
3 16 3tc
terest JO yr f1na11cing on new
homes m 3 MetgS County
-fOME
Improvement
and
locat1ons , or BUILD on your
Repa1r Service Anvthlng
lot Phone 992 5976 or 992 5844
f1xtd around the home , from
3 13 He
roof to basement You Wtll
l1k.e our work and rates
Phone 7425081
MU ST SELL new home on lake,
12 29 lfc
J bedrooms 1 1 ~, baths , ca r J)e f
drapes ,
di s hwa s her
refr~gerato r. dOUble oven "'S"EPTIC
TANKS
cleaned
stove Phone 992 3493 for
Modern San 1tatlon, 992 395_. or
appomtment
992 1349.
3 12 6tc
9 18 tfc

Real Estate For Sale

READY. !i.IIJC C0NCRE1'!; de
llver;:ed right tb your prolect
Fast
and
easy
Free
estimates Phone t92 321N
Goegleln Ready Mix Co ,
Middleport Ohio
6 30-tfc

I)

--------------SEWING MACHINE , Repairs,

I I rJl

serv1ce, all makes, t92 228C.
The Fabric Shop . Pomeroy,
Authorized S1nger Sales and
Service We sharpen Scissors
J 29 tfc

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

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

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

....

Foi'Sale
lJSEO parts, Frye' s Truck and
Auto Parts , Rutland, Ohio
Phone (614 1 742 6094
1 22 78tp

-- ------~ -

- --

WILL tnm or cut trees or
shrubberv .
clean
out
basements , attics, etc Phone
949 3221 or 742 44 .. 1
2 28 26tc

Real Estate For Sale
--------------NEW and used chain saws,

COlER work, land clearing by
the acre , hourly or contract
Farm pond s, roads, etc .
Large dozer and operator
with over 20 years ex
penence Pullins EKcavatlng,
Pam eroy. Oh lo Pllone 992
2478
12 19.tfc

HERE COMES OLD

--C------------Auct1oneer
BRAD~ORD,
Complete Service
Phone 9491821 or 949 3161
RBc lne, OhiO
Cr.tt Bradfor d

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

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR
- sweepers , toasters, 1rons.
all small appliances Lawn
mowers, next to State High
way Garage on Route 7
Phone 985 3825
3 ll 26tc

""Liom fer a
minute that were
her. but rt am't.

Mis!:

3-10 t11

Melba

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

1973 KAWASAKI 450 CC dtrt
bike , 1974 Kawa salit 125 CC
Enduro See at Welker ' s
Ashland , 992 3535
3 lJtfc
SHALLOW well ret pump and JO
gal tank Call 992 7560
3 17 6tp

--------------10 ACRE.S , suitable for butld.ng
lots or trailers . W111 sell as a
whole or separate Located on
Rt 7 m Middleport Phone
992 3218
3 12 6tc

--------------INDIAN Joe's Sporting Goods ,
buy and sell guns , ammo,
f1shmg equipment, and after
Apnl 1. we will have fish bail
Stop by at 308 Page St •
M 1ddteport Pho11e 992 3509
3 2 3Dtc
1974 YAHAMA :250 cc Endura
Less th1n 400 m titS . All a c
cessorles , Sl.DOO Phone 992
7897
3 16 6t c

-------- -----ONE 1971 Allis Chalmers dozer,

653 senes all hydraul iC blade,
roll canopy and wmch Better
than
average
conditton.
S7 ,700 One 1969 John Deere
ba c khoe w1th
Sims
All
Weather cab. large floalatron
t~res on fron t, new rear tires
Better than average con
d1t ton S6, 700 Phone 1614) 992
2478
3 16 31c

and water system Close to

River $4,700.00
POMEROY. - 1'f&gt;
frame- 3 BR , bath,
oor·cn.
R , ut1llly
basement,
storm

doors

&amp;

S10,500.00.
NEAR REEDSVILLE - 135
Acres,
fronts on 681,
minerals. TPwater, close to

Forked Run Lake. $16,600.00.
POME AO Y- 1 story frame,
2 BR. bath, 'h basemen!,
utility, gas
furnace.
large tot,
Inside
A
992-2251

done

NEW LISTING~ 19U Skyline
12x60 mobile home. 2
bedrooms, all eledrlc, over

f'qot
us!

half acre and concrete patio.
Country location on water line.

NEW LISTING- Building lof
with city water. natural gas,

a11d sewage. Only $2500.00.
LAUREL CLIFF - 6 room
house,

all

electric,

bath,

lJL ABNER

garage and level tot Only
$7500.00.
MIDDLEPORT Steam
heated 4 bedroom home, 2
baths, full basement. several
garages and lofs of parking.
Large building for hobby,
business,

or

BLITHE

WANTED

MORe AN'
MORE!!

storage .

YOUR INVESTMENT 'tODAY
WILL MAKE YOUR FORTUNE TOMORROW. SERVICE AND RESULTS IS
WHAT WE OFFER YOU
PLACE YOUR PROPERTIES
WITH US CALL m ·3325.

hOrn~:

with 3 bedrooms. kitchen and
dmtng aree , livtng room and
bath
Full size basement,
partially
finished
with
laundry area , recreation
room, storage, and workshop
area 1,080 sq ft of floor
space on main floor and three
and two thtrds acres of land
Located i n Recme area on
C. R . 28 belween Dorcas &amp;
Apple Grove Phone 9 ..9 ~57
3 11 6tp

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

SO HE TOOt&lt;
OIL- WELL'S
AWAY FUM US
AN' RAISED TH'
PRICE SKY
HIGH~!

L~~--.

AN' WE- SOBrrGOT'T'A PAY IT
BECUZ THAR'5
NOWHAR ELSE
'f'IE l&lt;fN GIT
IT !r!

I,
tt

(

-.

•••

LOW LOW DOWN PAYMENT.'
Lovely new flomes in three
locations in Meigs County
Some w lth wooded lots W..l
Will bu11t on your Tot Or ours.
Call 992 5976 or 992. su .. for
more Information
2·27 26tc

------ ------A MOOE R N all electric

6 ~MS ~ , garage , paneling,
breezeway, e acres Call 992

3059

3 16 7tc

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

BARNEY

pm

WHILE \fO'RE DOWN
AT TH' GENERAL STORE.

cy l tnde r. dtesel , 8 11 blade,
new pam t, clutches . tracks.
brakes , and canopy . 16,000.
Phone 985 3S94
J 11 6tp

3 16-7tp
---------------23" ZENtTH Color TV
247 2166

Phont

0

3 l6-3tc

--------------M I XED , ha v to r sa le Phont
992

PAW, WOULD 'fE 61T
TATER A NEW

__
--....._....., ......
.__
---"'......loo-·L..."'

AN' JEST
SO'S \fE WON'T
FERGIT---

--

CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-Jan.
11) Doubts you have about
your career will be swiftly dis- ••
slpated once you swing Into ac ~
tlon Keep your eyes solely on
the target
•

OI!MINI (MIJ It -June 20)

your converaatlon in har·
mony wllh lhoae whose com·
pany you stlllre today Don t
talk about things you alone are
Keep

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
40 Counler1 Brogan or
fetters
wmgttp
nemeses
5 Brittsh
DOWN
composer
I
Participate
10 Nazt
2
Singer
greeting
Reddy
ll Unwilling
12 r:morl
3 Blandishes
( 3 wda.)
Yesterday's Anawer
13 Spanish
monetary
· 9 Nuclear
26 Made the
4 English
unit
cathedral
devjce
sound or
14 Matter
cily
11 ImitaliDg
a cat
(law)
5 Happening 15 Poverty
%8 Bakery
15 Be
6 Pianist
18 Foxy ploy
product
triwnphant
McCann
21 Ascent
Z9 Illegality
16 Jeanne
22 Certain
30 Chinese
7 Bribe;
d'buy off
drmks
province
17 Contest
( 3 wds.)
23 Poor person 35 Gnawed
joiner
8 On
( hyph. wd.) 38 Doorway
19 Perch
horseback 24 Ponder
fiXIIlre
211 Suspended
~~..;.,.-..,
21 Make over
22 Storage
box
24 Archbtshop's ~-+-~+­
headdress
2S Abhor
26 Word to a
dog team
27 Cotn of
Timor
28 Entreat
31 Jun.'s
opposilt
32 Daunt
33- bono
publico
34 Betroth ·
36 Domtnant
37 Put to
flight
38 Gtrl's
name
39 Metal

AQUARIUS (Jtn. 20·Feb. 18) '
You tend to buy on Impulse to day Decide f irst if you really .,..
need the Item , then shop ..
around

Interested In

CANCI!R (Juno 21-Julr 22)

PISCES (Fob. 20-March 20)
Tie a string around your finger
to remind you lo fulfill a
promise lo the family Your
mind will be elsewhere You're

Too much time wilt be wasted
today ·worrying about things
pertaining to the future Make
belter progress by living In the

now"

apt 10 lorgst

LEO (Julr 23·Aug. 22) You 'll
aee a way that you can gain but
it means taking advantage of
another P111 up such selfish
lnleresta

·~your
: ll'll' brttld&lt;::ly

YIRQO (Aug. 23·1ept. 22) This

Morel! 11, 1t75

could be a financially rewar·
ding day lor you, II you don'l

"

You II make several Important
changes th is year One could
be your place of res idence If
you don't move you'll at least

pay too much attention to petty
1lde 111uea

LIIIIA (hpt. 23-0ct. 23) Co-

....,aka extenSI\Ie Improvements

workers are careless today

WIN AT BRIDGE

Act like you have no problem
17

NORTH
• Q 97
• 86 ~ 2

tJ4
• K J to 5

WEST tDI
.6

EAST
.8543

•AKQ 'J 3

.97

OAto6
.9873

t9852
. 6 42

SOUTH
.AKJto2
• tO 4
t K Q7 3

.AQ
East-West vulnerable
West

North

East

I•

Pa§s

Pass

Dble

Pass

2•
3•

Pa ss

2•
4•

rass
Pass

Pass
Pa ss
Opemng lead - K ¥

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

South.

"'"'Jim..

would have no problems unless ,
trumps broke 4-1 If they did '
break 4-1 he would only come · ·
to mne tricks So South led the""
three of diamonds at trick ..
three West thought a while before playing the stx spot . ,
Dummy's Jack won South
proceeded to draw trumps,
cash the four clubs , and chalk
up game and rubber ."
Oswald " The play really
shouldn' t work West should
really be able to reahze that
South ts trying to steal a diamond trtck If West nses wtth '
the ace of diamonds and leads a • •
fourth heart, he wtll be estabhshtn~ a trump trick lor hts •~
partner ' -

The bidding has been

Pass

" West stat·ted out with
three htgh hearts. East dtscard·
ed the deuce of clubs on the
third lead and South rurfed.
South had already seen that he

17

West

North

East

South

Pass
P,ass

1•

Pa ss

2•

3•

Pa ss

?

t•

You South, hold

•KJ94.AQ2 tJ43.Kl05
What do you do now 1
A - Bad rour spades Your
partner is trying to get to game. Bid
II.

TODAY 'S QUESTION
Vour partner continues to fiVe . .
diamonds What do you do now'
An!lwer

Tomorrow

Send $1 for JACOBY MODERN
book ro "Win at Bridge, " (elo this
newspaper). P 0 . Box 489. Radio
C•tr Stat•on. New Yorl&lt;, NY 10019

.. ..
'

.

-

MILK BOTTLE?

''

-AirfW e,.._• F -

•

_,..,_11&lt;1- . • lrc
~

""""'~_.,.......,

\

3. 16Jic

- - ------

mak ing today Consult with
others affected before resolvIng a family matter

'

3658

- ----

(Nov. 23·D11C-·'
21) Three heeds are better ,
than two In your decision-

You ha\le little confidence In an
tdea about work proposed by a
pal Don't reJect It before you
give i\ a fa1r trial.

I

I J VV
Yeoterday's Cryptoquote: SOME MEN CAN UVE UP TO
THEIR LOFTIEST IDEALS WITHOUT EVER GOING
ffiGHER THAN A BASEMENT.- THEODORE ROOSEVLET

8AQlTTAAIU8

TAUIIUI (Aprtt 20-Mor 20)'

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Jtm: " Deception at the
bridge table ts perfectly all
right, provtded you decetve by
CRYPTOQUOTES
, the actual card you play and not
by the manrer in which you
CU C OQXPJ KCFGVJ XF
C QZVM play I!."
Oswald " You are even
to act fast, when you
prtvtleged
EVCKJ
UZ
XU
PQJ
IJCNPM ZL CP'
have a problem You JUSt aren 't
supposed to look ltke you have a
C WJ G
LCKJ - TZUJEQ
K C R E • ·problem , when you don't have

---

RED boe r hog tor sale or
ava tlable for ser11 i ce Phone
Reedsv ille , 378 63 11 after 6

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

FINAL PILLAR ACHING

One letter 11mply stands for another. In lhla sample A Ia
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc Slnele leiters,
apostrophes, the leneth and formalton of the word1 are all
hints Each day the code letters are dll!erent

BUY ON LAND CONTRACT•
As low as SSOO down for 2
bedroom house w ith hard
wood floors , gas f1red hot air
heater, n tee bath with tub ,
ba~ment , 10 years to r,ay
with monthly payment ess
than 1100 per month Call 992
3509 , after 1 p m
l 16·3tc

Don't gamble where business

Is concerned It's best today to ' ·
deal with reliable and trusted ..
firms and people.

fldentlal matter antruated to
you Even an unintentional leak
could faiL on the wrong ears

An1nra Coldly fini,.helt tJif the 1redding
cab - "ICING'

Ia

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) ", '

Yoor rendency Is ro say more
than you should about a con~

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:

- - ----~----- --- ·

8 N F ORO tractor wllh s•de
mower , good rubber . Runs
good , $950 Phone 91S 3594

[ J I ~::.':'t.!l'::t:'.::-~
!Ptila.s.IIISI~~m~~~nl r I I J "LI II I)"
s.turd.,...
I
~IMM'D~

5 1 lfc

:iROCERY buslhess tor sale
Building tor sale or lease
Phone 773-'S618from 8 30p. m
to 10 p m for appointment

eQU i pment. 3 pre c e hand
sharpener , c ircular saw
sharpener , chain saw grmd
er , all lrke new
Phone
992 2386
3 14 4tc

MESSAGE - BU T niAT 'S
SILLV 0 CO llRSE -

trouble

Bemlco Bede Oeol
f1&lt; TUHdor, Morch 11, 1111
Alll!l (Mo"'h 21·Aprll 1t)

A S IF HE WAS US THJI~ TO A

A. TUNE Wl"TH IT-

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

-------------F 0 LEY
saw
sharpener

SHUX l &lt;O:UE SS l GOT TOO
MUCH 'MAGINATION- BUT lH'
WAY HIS HEAD WAS COCk:ED ON
ON E SIDE IT SEEMED AL.MO ST

"BLINKEV ; TAPPIN ALONG I ALWAYS GET A KICI(
OUTA 1H WAY 5 1-\E. ~At.l t&gt;LE S
Tl-IAT C,t,NE - lfOU'D ALMOST
THIN K SHE WI'.S PLAYIN '

bad effect upon you Supervise
their work carefully to evotd • ,

Grapt-1

Now arnnp !he clrelodlellen

Jumbln CYNIC

GASOUNE ALLEY

FAA ou:r - Witting to do
some WORK• This house
needs some repair - oood
garage and storage building,
4 level lois, good drilled welt

Astro-

WHAT THE KIN6
FOU6HT WITH.

(Aalwtin lo•orrow)

tillers and mowers
Also.
rep . rs
498 Locust St ..
Middleport Phone 9'92 3092
2 28 2.6tc

CLbSE OUT on new Zig Zag
sewing machines. For sewing
stretch fabrics, buttonholes.
fancy designs. etc Paint
slightly blemished Choice of
carrying c1se or sewing
stand $.49 80 cash or terms
available Phone 992 77S5
· 12 18 ttc

III

THAGUT

l 16-ltc
--------------- --------------1965 JOHN DEERE dozer. i

-

8·30-Movle "The Impostor" 3,,.,1Si Movie "Ordeal" 13; Movie·

UnscramblelheaefoarJumble~,
one letter to each square, to

Emetgency 992-3995

3 10 15

,,

Tomorrow 8,10

Jlr!l1lOOID11rn;-.~~=!:::~c

RACINE PWMBING
heating service and
general sheet metal
works.
Free
Estimates.

I

12 45-Eiec Co 33,
12 55-NBC News 3,15
Henry Fonda as Clarence Darrow 20,33.
1·110-News 3. All My Children 6,13; Phil Donahue 8, Young &amp;
9 oo-Movle " Impasse" 3,4.15, SWAT 6,13 ; Maude 8.10.
the Retlless 10; Not For Women Only 15
9 30- Rhoda 8,10, Romantic Rebellion 20,33.
· t:»-How To Survive a Marriage 3,4,15; Let's Make a Deal
tO oo-Carlbe 6,13 : Medical Center 8, 10; News 20, Washlnglon
6,13; As lhe World Turns 8,10
,
Straight Talk 33 ; Behind the Lines 33.
2:110-Days ot Our Lives 3,4,15, 510,000 Pyramid 6,13; Guiding
ll ·OQ-News 3,4,6.8, 10, 13,15, ABC News 33
Light 8,10
II 30-Johnny Carson 3,4,15, Wide World Myatrry 13; FBI 6;
2 »-Doctors 3,4,15, Big Showdown 6, 13, Edge of Night 8,10
Movie "Please Don' t Eat the Daisies" 8; Movie "Get
Yourself a College Girt" 10: Janakl 33
3:110-Another World 3,4, 15; General Hospital 6,13, Price Is ·
12 30-Wide World Mystery 6
Right 8, 10. Llllos Yoga &amp; You 20
I 00--Tomorrow 3,4, News 13
3.»--ne Lite to Llvel3; Luch Show 6: Match Game 8, 10, Your
Fulure Is Now 20.
TUESDAY, MARCH 18, 1975
• :110-Mr. Cartoon 3; I Dream of Jeannie 4; Somerset 15; ,
Gilligan's ts 6; Tattletales 8, Sesame St 20,33, Movie
6 00--Sunrise Seminar .4 ; Sunrise Semester 10
"Botany
Bay" 10; Mike Douglas 13.
6 25-Farm Reporl 13
4
»-Bewitched
3, Merv urll1tn •• Mod Squad 6; Lucy Show '8;
6 30- Frve Mlnules to Live By 4; News 6; Bible Answers 8;
Bonanza 15.
Con cerns &amp; Commenls 10; Rev Cleophus Robinson 13.
5:110-FBl 3; Andy Grtfltth 8; Mtster Ro9ers· Neighborhood
6·4s-cotumbus Today
20,33; Ironside 13.
6 45-Mornlng Reporl 3, Farmttme 10
6; Beverly Hillbillies B, Hodgepodge Lodge 20; Get
5·»-News
7 oo-Today 3,4, 15; A.M. ·America 6,13; CBS News 8,10.
Smart
15;
Elec Co 33
8 OQ-Lassle6, Capl Kangaroo&amp;. Popeye10; Sesame St 33
6
110-News
3,4,8,10,13,15;
ABC News 6, Electric Co, 20. lTV
8 tO-Capl Kangaroo 10
Ullllrotlon 33
6:30-NBC News 3,4,15; ABC News 13; Bewitched 6, CBS News ,
8 30-Misslon t mposslble 6
8,10: Zoom 20, Your Future Is Now 33.
9 oo-A M 3. Phil Donahue 4,15: Rocky &amp; Friends 8; Morning
7:110-Truth or Cons. M: Bowling for Dollars 6; What's My Line
wothD J 13
8; News 10; Name That Tune 13; High School TV Honor
9 25-Chuck While Reports 10
Society
15: Antlqlltls 20, Lilias Yoga &amp; You 33.
9 30-Not For Women Only 3, Dinah 6, Galloping Gourmet I;
7
30-Hollywood
Squares 3,~; Wild Wild World ot Animals 6;
Tattletales 10. New Zoo Revue 13
Buck Owens 81 New Price ts Right 10; To Tell the Truth 13;
Spring Street USA 15; RFD20, MarcoSporlllte33
,
8·110-Adam·12 3.4,15; Happy Days 6,13, Good Times 8.10; ,,
America 20,:tJ.

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

Gtfts
Free

Help Wanted

Vegetable soup, bean soup, pie
and coffee will be available.
The pubhc ts mvtted to atttnd
and donHhOns wtll be recetved
Mrs Herb Wolfe and Mrs .
Wtlham Mtller were hostesses
for the March meeting of the
Temple United Methodist
Women at Mr. Wolfe!s mobile
h&lt;me. The program Included a
tape, "The Second Coming or
Qlrist" along with prayers and
scripture . Kay Wolfe was
qevotional leader lor the
~en ing . ~ ,,
" • Mrs. Harold Gtllogly , Vicky
and Bruce. caUed on her
·parents. Mr and Mrs. lincoln
Russell at \Volfpen on Sunday
afternoon

OQ-News 3,4,6,8, 10, 13, 15; ABC News 6; Etec. Co. 20; Project
Care 33
6 30-NBC News 3,4, 15, ABC News 13, Bewitched 6; CBS News
8, 10, Zoom 20
7 ,oo-Trulh or Cons. 3.4; Porter Wagoner 6; What' I My Ltna 1,
News 10, New Candid Camera 13. Ohto Thts Week 20; Lllt11
Yoga &amp; You 33.
7 30-That Good Ole Nashville Music 3, Masquerade Parly 4,
Pollee Surgeon 6, $25,000 Pyramid 8, Municipal Court 10; To
Tell the Truth 13, Unlamed World 15; Washington Straight
Talk 20, Episode Action 33.
8 oo-smothers Brothers 3,4,15; Rookies 6,13, Gunsmoke 8,10;

, _ , _ __ _ _ _ 1

.

10 ~etebrlty Sweepstakes 3,4,15; Joker's Wild 8,10; Dinah"
13 .
,,
10:30--Wheet of Forlune 3,4,15; Gambit 8,10.
"
11:110-Htgh Rollers 3,4,15; One Life lo Live 6; Now ou See If,
8,10; Elee Co. 20.
11 30--Hollywood Squares 3.15, Brady Bunch 6,13, News 4:
Love of Lite 8,10; Sesame St. 20
11 55-Graham Kerr 8, Dan !mel's World tO.
'
12 110-Jackpol 3,15, Password 13; Bob Braun's 50-50 Club 4;
· Homer Formby . Woodworking 6; News 8,10.
·"
12 30--Biank Check 3. 15. Split Second 6,13; Search for ,

6

SALES&amp; SERVICE

W•t.r, Electric; Gu, s.(lnts, lnsttllod. Work
g.. rtntttd.
Dorer, lock hot, Trucks
Lim"- &amp; Fill Dirt

v 8 1 dr coup e Call 992 J19 J
or see al lOS Union A v enue ,
Pomeroy
3 11 6tc

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

servmg to start at 6 o'clock

~--

;,.

MONDAY, MARCH t7, 1m

WilKINSON
SMALL ENGINE

Chain
Precision
Ground

19 12 OL D SMOBILE Cutlass 350

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

home
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Stansbury and sons of Reynoldsburg spenl a say here with hls
parents, Mr. and Mrs . Dale
Stansbury and other relatives.
There wtll be a supper at the
Dyesville church on March 22,

- - -~·~·

Blocks
Cement and Mortar
Wood Burning Stoves
Heatllators
and
Fireplace Accessories
2·19· 1 mo

19 73
COUNTRY
SC1U1re
Stattonwagon , for sale to
se ttle es tat e Like new Phone
99 2 J49 J
3 12 6tc

w

Ham on ha s n ow r eturned

992-2067

RDNo. 1

Constnoctlon &amp; Rtmodtl

For Rent

and Mendal Jordan, Colwnbia
Grange, attended Meigs
County Pomona Grange on
fo, nday evemng. Plans were
compl eted for the annual
banque t on April 4 at Salisbury
school.
Ellen Facemyre , who ts
' wylng wtth Mr and Mrs
Lw coln Russell , Wolfpen,
spent the weekend at her home
here Mrs Rex Cheadle and
Mr. and Mrs. Rexie Cbeadle
spent a day m Colwnbus and
vlstted with Mrs Noble Hamon
ut UmHrsity Hospi tal. Mrs.

FOREST RUN
BLOCK CO.

Commtrclt~Ruldtntltl

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

l

t

POMEROY, OHIO

BE 11 ORDA IN E D by th e
Co unCil of the Vtllaoe o f
Pomeroy i\ lt member s th er eto VACA NCY for lln e a mbulatory 1961 CH EV ROL ET . ret tabte, get
concurr mg
mal e Pl ease cllntact Jean
to work c ar " 49 Broadway
1 That the salary of th e
Sto u t
Syra c u s e N u rsmg
Phon e 992 2082
Mayor o f the Vi l lag e of
Hom e 992 3707
3 16 12tc
Pomeroy commencmg Jan 1st.
3 16 31c
1\176 , Sha ll b e $2,400 00 p er
197f MONTE -Carlo , 4, 000 miles.
ann um
1 WILL do small garden
att power , a1r, AM stereo
2 That the salary tor th e
plow ing . Wtth Gravely garden
tape Call 992 7036 afler 5 p m
Cler k of the V Illage of Pomeroy .
t ractor Phone 992 7492 or 992
J 5 tfc
com men ci ng January 1St , 1976,
3716
sha l l be $3,000 00 p er annum
3 16 6tp 1973 VEGA Hatchback , 4 speed.
l Th at ea c h dutv elec ted and
transm ISS10n, new trres , tape
qua111 1ed m e mber of th e V Htage FR EE CHICK S EASTER
player , excellent cond1t1on
Co lJ n c +l sha l l . e ff ecti ve Januar y
SU NDAY ,
MIOOI FPOAT
Will sell reasonable Phone
l SI 1976, rece 1v e S IO 00 for ea ch
UNITED
PENTECOSTAL
(6 14 1 992 2377 or 992 2732 after
r e g u ~a r
cou n ci l m ee11ng !U
C H U RCH ,
SOUTH
3rd
IC tTdtd and th e surn of S5 00 for
• p "'
AVE NUE
S UNDAY
3 14 12tp
cr. ch special mee t 1n~ att ended
SCH OO L 10 00 AM , TRANS
4
Thai al l Ordma n ces or
P ORTA TION
AND
IN
parU o f Ordinance s m conf li ct
FO RM A T IO N PH ONE 99 2
w11t1 l h 1S Ordinance are h er eby
3824 or 992 2502
~ mer1ded ell ecftve Jonuar y 1st ,
31 6 lltp 1 BEDRM turn tshed trailer .
197 6
&lt;
- - - - - - - ------'--Oepostt requ ired Phone 992
Ttu s Or din a n ce sh all be In PU PPI ES , F REE to good
3429
Ior ee and eff ect t r om an d a ft er
f1 1l m E' Phon e 992 22 19
3 16 121p
ttH~ ea r l iest per iod al low ed b y
3 16 Jlc - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - law
3 RM apartment, new and
fu rn1shed, wall to wall car
P
IA
N
O
lun
ing
Ph
one
949
4811
D ale E Sm 1t h
p e t1ng Phone 992 2050 after 12
3
4
tf
c
Mayor
pm
3 16 3tp
Ralph H Werry I WILL do root1ng , heating ,
r epatr , plum b ing and elec
Prestdent o f Coun c1 l
tr ic al work Phon e Charle s 7 RM HOUSE and bath at 8
Attes t Jitne Watton
Ltberty Avenue Also . J rm
S 1n c 1a~r 985 4121
apartment , J)relerred older
3 4 121p
Clerk
c ouple at 9 L1ber t y Phone
992 71J5
F LOWER S fo r Eas ter Baskets,
I IH'i OrdltHmcc pa ss ed 3 J 15
po ts sprays , et c Phone 98 5
3 16 Jl c
JSJ7
S.manev ·s Gift Shop,
I J ) 10, I} , 1f t
1
B
E
DR:OOM
trailer
.
Brown
's
Ch es ter Oh to
Tra iler Court . Phone 992 3324
J 4 111c
3 4 tfc
NOTICE OF
AP P OINTMENT
~OR your " Otl ol Mink "
Cue No 21440
Cosmet 1u Phone BROWN 'S 3 BEDROOM mobile home ,
E st ate of Beulah B
Smllh
washer and dryer , 1l!2 bathS ,
99 2 511 J ..
D eceas ed
ufllitles
pa1d , S-42 50 week. 308
1 7 tfc
Notic e IS here b y given tha t
Page St . Middleport. Oh10
Emma~t•n Oabo of Pomeroy ,
3 4 tfc
Otuo . HaS' I'.l een dul y appcl lnted AUCTION, Thursday nigl'lt, 7
p
m
at
Mason
Auction
,
Execu t ,~lx
of th e E stat e of
4 RMS &amp; bath p lus utlltiV rm
Horton St In Mason,
Va
Beulah. B Srn1 lh . d ec ea sed , lat e
Furnished . forced a.r fur
Consignments. welcome
ol Me 1&lt;1 S Cou ntv . Oh ln
na&lt;
e , screened in porch
Phone { 304) 77 3 5&lt;1171
Creddo r s are r e qu i r ed to fi le
Phone 949 36 58
2 2 tic
their cl a im s with s;i ld fiduc iary
J 14 3tc
w lthm tour months
D at ed th is 11th da y of March NOW selling ,_:utter Brush BE gentle, be ktnd , to that
Products , phone 992 3410
1915
eKpent1ve carpet . cleah W1lh
1 24 ttc
Blue Lustre
Rent electnc
M a nning D Webtltr
shampooer $1
Baker Fur
Judge
n1ture Co
Court ot Common Pleas .
J 14 Jtc
Probate D1vlslon
EARN
SSO
to
S75
per
week,
2
13) 17, 2,., 31, 3tc
7 BEDROOM mobile home tn
hours per day, .5 days per
Syracuse No chrldren or pets
week , car necessary Phone
Call 992 2,. 41 after 6 p m
t49 4113
Oepos1t requlrt&gt;d
3 16 3tc
J 11 tfc

· In 1938, Generalissimo Fran-- 'e~S.:b · Franco ordered the
bombing or Loyalist-held Barcelona in the Spanish Ovil War.

I' "Could I give you a deposit? I want to put a filet mtgnon on

S3495

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

Pomer oy spent Sunday w1th

SIDE GLANCES

CHEVROLET HON

POMO~~~!E~~~~ co.@)

3 IJ 3t c

1 BED R OOM tr ader for r en t or
tor salE" I n R u t l and Ph one
99? J429
J 17 121p

Television log for easy viewing

1-----,

good t l n~s

Rew a r d

For Rent

14695

_.

C&amp;E 102 " C A , 4 speed tr a n s , 2 spee d 15, 000 rear a xle ,

P •ne Gro ve a r ea on Co Rd
12 Bl ack a nd gr ey. an swe rs
to the na me ol " Tur key " Call

By the Day

Jordan. J crrte Soe, Betty and
Dann) and gues t Judy Hill, Mr .
and Mrs. Larry Birchfield, Mr
and Mrs Jack Jordan , Mr and
Mrs r.cne Jeffers, Robert,
Mnt co nnd Lester and Mr and
Mrs Mike Lmvson, all local
area, a nd Mr and Mrs David
Llewelyn and Jenny, New
Marshfield.
Earl Starkey, Carl Greenlees

1'11

GE RM AN Sheph erd dog lost In

OR OINANCE 457

were Mr . and Mrs Lavern

1974 MONTE CARLO LANDAU
( Dem o ) , loaded w1th opt ions

lDst

FEMALE Ger man Shepher d ,
b lond e wdh b lac k m a r ki ng s
Tag ge d A th en s Count y 534
A lso fo un d n ear M ec ha n ic
Str eet , bl ac k
lll njJ e si r ed
m al e pup P h on e 949 491 7
3 11 2fC

$3095

da rk gre y fini sh , radio

Phon e a r ea c o de 61.4 423 953 1
4 13 li e

991 73 62

CHEVELLE MALIBU

GM Dtvi Sion ca r . a tr cond ltion 1ng . 350 V 8, P steenng .

m od el s of mo bile homes

Carmel News,

Mr and MI'S Haroid Ox ley
spent a clay in Groveport with
ber son and daughter-tn.faw,
Mr and Mrs . Dole Eugene
Tm·ncr.
Ca llers a t the home of Murl
Galawa y were !.eon Woodnun ,
sons RICk and Randy, Randy
Radchff •nd Chu c ~ Petty,
McArthur
and
Da vi d
WoodrWll, Canal Winches ter.
Rev James H McCormack, '
Superinttndent of th&amp; .. Athell8"
Dlstnc t of · the •United
Methodist Church was guest
speaker on the Albany Charge
on Sunday mornmg and gave
the sermon at Temple Church
as well as Albany and Pearl
Chapel churches Rev Howard
Mayne ts pastor on this charge
Ro.lalives wh o gathered at
the home of Mr and Mrs Reed
J&lt;' ffcrs on S1mday to help he~
mother . Mrs Beulah Cord t ay .
ce lebrate her R6th btr lhdn)

1914

CAS H pa i d fo r al l make s an d

Cora Bird 1

Carpenter

$4195
1914 CHEVROLET IMPALA
4 Dr only 10,400 m tl es , tully equ i pped 111 t a1r, dark red A
rea l c r ea m puff

lo. tndl ot sc r ap me t o t ~ and
tr.Dn Ri de r ' s S al ... a g e , St R:t

Business
Services
- - - --

Pomeroy
Motor Ca.

QUALITY

JU N K a utos , complete and
de l •v er ed t o o ur ya r d We p ic k
up a uto bo dies and bu y a ll

Ohw, spen t Sat urd ay · a nd
Sunday wtth her grandmother,
All ee Shev ille a nd Emm a
Johnson.
Mrs Allee Beegle of Ingles,
Fla , has bee n a guest of her
da ughter and son-In-law, June
and Larry Roush. She accom pnmcd her son, Lynn
Rrrgle to his home 1n
('olumbus. She wtll return by
p1.me to her home in Florida on
Sa turday
Kenneth and BePIIIce 111e1ss
.spe nt a weekend m Columbus
vtstlmg wtth lhetr chlld1 en,
Donna and Dan Sayre, Mr and
Mrs Kenneth Theiss and Davts
Thctss. \\ho tsa student at Oh1o
State Um versll y
B&lt;Jb and Carol Burch and
da u!(hlers of Bellvue spent the
weekend wtl h their parents,
Emma Su lscr and Elza and

'

2 SIGNS
OF

and g•ve dtrect•ons to Wi tt en
OhiO 43946

OH, WHAT HE SAID
OH !!- OH!

Auto Sales

-------------W}\N TEO o ld up rig ht p iano s.

B11l Johnson of Shippingport,
Pa dwner of a towboat, .1\as
his 'boa t on dock at the Okan
Harbor near Ga lltpolls for
w1th

Fast Results Use Se~tinel Classifie~

Po meroy . Oh• o Call '92 7760
. 10 7 74

friend s

News, Event

Reedsville

beds, or comp l ete hou S:ehold 5
Wr 1l e M D . Mt ll er , Rt 4,

m Toledo and vtsited with

•

I'

''

'•

•
'

�'
'

'

8- The Deily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0, Monday ,March

.-...

~~~:~~}.~ .~.~! •o···· .,... For

Dorcas Social Notes

..' Tom and Barbara Brutvan

..

1 7, 1 97~

•nd children, J effr ey and
~nnlfer, or Cincinnati spent a
weekend with thetr blfandperents, Earnest and Vashti
Grimm of Letart and vistted
with June and Lorry Roush.
Alice Beegle and Ohs and Edn a
Knopp.
Tomm y Beegle 1s vacationing tn Flortdo where
he will vtstt with hts coosln
Mildre&lt;l Murcer
Joy Ky (Titetssl and Marty_
Morarlty and daug hter have
moved Into their new home tn
Dorcas.
Aaron ,Knopp of Galhpolts
spent Thursday evening wtth
hls grandparents, Olts and
Edna Knopp wlule his parents,
Max and Sherry, attended a
bell game.
Emma J ohns on, Ali ce
Sheville, Berntce Lovelley and
Maymie Custer spent a day
shopping in Ma ri etta and
Parkersburg . They cele brated
Maymle's btrthday by having
dinner at The Ponderosa in
Parkersburg.
Mr. and Mrs Ronald Salser
and daughter, Tonya spent the
weekend at the home or hls
brother, Mr and Mrs Charles
Ivan (Took ) Salse r . They
VISited with Took's daughter ,
Mr. and Mrs Lorry Jones at
Dayton.
Otis and Edna Knopp and
Rev . Steve Wilson were dhmer
guests or Dick and Lois Sterrett
and sons and Max and Sherry
Knopp and son, Aaron, of
Gallipolis on Sunda y
Mrs. Allee Shevllle of East
Uverpool Is spendin g th e
winter with her sister, Emma
Johnson. Emma was hostess to
a birthday surprise for her
sister. Those present were
Jerry and Dorothy Johnson,
Racine, Bernard and Bernice
Lavalley and son, Steve ,
Debbie Lavalley, Ray Vun
Meter. Her daughters, Betty
and James Fairley, Freedom,
Pa ., Roberta and Ed ward
Boyle, Pittsburgh, Pa , ttnd her
son, Mr. and Mrs Robert
Sheville, East Uverpool. They
lrotll{hl lier Rifts for her ?Sth
birthday and a cake. Gills were
candles ol which she has a
collecUon of over three hundred different kinds. She has
sia children, 25 grandchildren
and ~ sreat'j!randchildren .
Rev . $leve Wilson spent
Monday through Friday with
Mark and BLocky Montgomery

News, Notes
Gennaen Paya, an Indian
girl from the Grand Canyon,
Arizona, who is attendin g
school at Athens, spent Sunday
with Jodi Smith.
Mr . and Mrs . James
Carruthers and Penny and Mr.
and Mrs Bert Schrlmsber and
Scotty of Louisville were
weekend IJUests of Mrs Bessie
Larklllll .
Mr. and Mrs. Wtlliam
Thomas and family of Enon
were weekend guests of her
parenls, Mr. and Mrs. Walter
Brown and David
Dale Smllh is a tt end ing
school
at
Vicks burg,
Mtssissippl
Mr. and Mrs Isaac Frydman
of Colwnbus vistled Saturda y
wtth Mr. and Mrs Ernest
Whitebead and family
Mrs. Helen Archer spent a
day with Mrs. Millon Tuttle of
Pwneroy Road .
Mrs. Warren Pickens, Mrs
Lyle Balderson and Kay a ttended a !ashton show at
Parkersburg on Wed nesd ay
evening.Mrs. Kathryn Dtelz,
sister o( Mrs Pickens and Mrs
Balderson was one of the
models.

any co n dll•on
~ avl n g
S lO
each F trs t f loo r on l y Wrt t e
Pta n o Co , Box 188. Sard tS,

rep;urs and has been v1s1tmg
f rien d~

and relatives.

J() Ann tl u\'cns of Delaware.

·--

J I J 6t p

T24

Rt

4, Pom e ro y

Oh.to

Cil ll 99 1 5468
10 17 He

Found

OR DIN ANCE
PR O VIDING
fOR SA LA RY O F M A Y O R ,
C LER K
AND
V ILLACE
MEMBERS O F CO UNCIL OF
I HE V I L LAGE O F P OMERO Y
EFrEC TIVE J anua ry 1st 197 6

Mr a"'! Mrs FrHnk Hudson
or Racmc Hlld Mr . and Mrs.
Shelby Ptt kens and family of
Mr und Mrs Allan Tayln1
Mrs Hal ite Powell and
daughter , A&lt;Idte, of Racme, H.
D., spent Thursday evemng
with Mary Circle.
Mr . and Mrs George Ctrcle
and Mr. und Mrs. Jumes C1rclc
of New Haven spent Sunda y
with Mary Circle
M1 un d Mt s \'lllll@t!l
C.trlCtOJI of RIICJne and 'Malidll'";
Fry spen t Fnday cve nmg wilh
Mt nnd Mt .s AI thur F.m l
Johnson. Pa trick and Sheryl
f.eAnn
Mr. and Mt s 1\r lhur Orr of
Chesler called at the home of
Mr and Mrs Robert I.ee, Bob
Bill and Becky, recently

by Gill Fox

tJ
I'

I

layaway!"

Notice
V 'all Come to landmark ' s

Spring Roundup
MARCH 19-22
Fun , Re lreshments ,
and
Prizes.
Regt stratton

In 1!1611, the U.S. Navy
successfully launched Vanguard
I, a 311-pomtd satellile, mto
&lt;rbl t around the earth .

-~

@

992-3092

..

Mmersvt Ue, 0.

CAP!'AlN EASY

f&amp;

P-J
Home Maintenance

! 'M

For lnfonnation
Call

M OR E IM -

Mlddltport, Oltlo 1 2 1 Mo

IM IN VJT IN6

HIM TO LI!CTUICE HERE A'T'

7H E FOUN DEC'Ji:.

McK EE IN PU5 TRI E5i

AND REVERED
GURU OF THE
LOVE · LOT U~

1 f614) 247-3644

498 Locust St.

EXA C TLY~ YOU SFE

PORTANT, HE:5

JOY ANO
HAPPINE SS

2·17.75c_

&lt;: UL T"!

19 13 MALIBU 2 door metallic
b,-own , black vmyt top, power
steertng , power brakes. a tr
c ond Excellent cond Pr iced
v e ry reasonable Phone 992
3273
3 16 at e

Y'ALL COME!
POMEROY LANOMARK

9 .. _Jack w C•ney, Mgr
tliidl Pnone 992 -2111

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

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

3 BEDROOM mobile home . a.r
conditioning,
corner
of
Broadway &amp; Elm Phone 992
2580 after 6 p m
3 11 ·tfC

WOMAM to baby sit and do light
housework , days week w1th t RAILER - S PACE
north of Meigs H lgh School on
occasional
even11ig
and
old Rt 33 Phone 992 7Ul
saturday
Meats prov1ded
L 1berat sa llllry Call 992 2832
1 23 tfc
or wr1t e P
0
Box 68 1.
Pome~ y , o 45769
ttc o U PLex :-2i8v, - waTnuiSr,
Middleport , Ohio Phone 99 2
3 13
'2780 or 992 34J2
2 19 lfc
L ADtE:S lo do light housework ,
I day week , must be able to
work around teenagers Must COUNTRY Mob 1le Homt'"Park ,
R t 33. ten m' ies north of
have references and trans
Pomeroy
Large lots with.
portat1on wr.te In care of The
c oncrete patios . stdewalks ,
Dally Sentinel , BOK 729P
runner s and off
street
Pomerov . Ohro 45769
1
parking Pltone 992 H79
J 12 6tc
12 31 tfc
J..E SP ON SIBLE lady to ltVe tn - - - - -- - - - - -- -With e lderly lady Phon e (1 ) 3 'and 4 ROOM turnlsrted aul.i
66 7 330S
unfurnished
apartments
Phone 992 5434
3 4 121c
412ttc

-:--..--;;,ii"l

s

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

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

---------------Entployment Wanted

--------------.PRIVATE meeting room tor
any organ 1Utlon . phone 992

REMODEliNG
plumbing ,
3915
huttng. artd all types ' of
J 11 He
general
repa1r
Work
guaran t eed 70 years eK 2 BEDROOM mobile home
per ience Phone 992 1409
Phone 949.1261 . A l bert H1ll
J 11 He
3 10 61C

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

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

Mlddltport, Oltlo

PtJont m-sw or m.-1

INDIAN JOE'S
CB SALES &amp; PARTS
308 Page St.
Middleport, 0. 992-35~9
R ad101, Antennas, Towers.
Used T.V 's. luy from the
"lndlan 41 end save "Wam
Pum". Wt buy ustd l:1dlos
and Towers Aid los repllred
by FCC licensed service
aersonnel Stop •nd see the
1•tndlln"
and
Bubbles .
Monilor Channel 10 and 20 .

BORN LOSER
DO 'OJMt~D

i&gt;,WFUU.:I M'i

TIU..ifob \())

-

Whtte Hal Spec1als

BABYSITTER for 3 school
children Call after 7 p m ,
992 36-15
J 14 3t c

771 MrlS!rtet

"19'/ J F ORO Country Squ i re
wagon
20 ,000 m llu , aH
equipment. S3 ,500 Phone 992
3_i91. .£.'_9_!_7:_2~!_ _ __ ___ _

LOOK FOR THE
b -·

a.K EXCAVAnNG
OOMPANY

301 P•ge, Middleport
H eattng
Cooling
Refrigtratlon - Roof Repairs
· Gutters · Prumbint E l~&gt; ctriul
RepAirs and
5£ •Ice .
Ci1119t2·350tand
Save on YDJJr repairs: Also
repair mower1, compressors
and outbouds Brlnt it In
and save .

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

REMODELING ,
plumbing ,
heati ng , and all types of
ge n eral
repa~r
Work
gu.u an t e ed 20 years e• PUREBRED BEEGLE PUPS.
51 .SO EACH PHONE (6141
pe nence Ph one 992 2409
66 1 3493
) 19 II C
3 16 Jtc

Pets For SaM

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

GIV E a IOV tJ'lg Easter poodle
puppy Call AKC Reg 2 l of
ters. Sl l¥er , champagne, and
wtute Phon e 16141 696 1297
NOTI &lt;;: E from Berry M i ller
after .. . 30 p m Wttl hold for
Mob1le Home Sates - Here •S
Easter
a new ll$11ng of the un1ts we
J 16 4f c
now have on our lot due to the
fore c losure of another Mob1le
Home Deater ·
60x 1&lt;1 New Moon , 2 bedroom
60J~1 .. Nashua , total el ectrt c . 2
~ ELL your mobile tlome for
bedroom
60K 12 Nashua , 2 bedroom
cash 15 homes wanh:d , 1958
thru 1971 models. Phone 1614)
60x 12 Globemuter. 3 bedroom
sox12 Buddy ~ 2 bedroom
446 1425. Gallipolrs
70 J~1J
B everly
Manor ,
3
3 9 78tc
bedroom , 1 bath . Wtlh 1x 12
expando
3 BE OROOM turn 1slled mobdi
6Qx 12 Oart an. 2 bedroom . 2 full
h ome and lot located on .. New
bat hs
L1ml!l Road near Rutland .
~Ox t 2 lt ber ty. 2 bedroom
Phone 742 59 • 3
6Dx 12 Schull , 2 bedroom . total
3 13 4IC
elec tnc
60x 1:1 T 1tan , 2 bedr oom
~Ox 12 El cona . l bedroom
Mbt 12 Park wood , balcon y front
k i tchen. These are mostl y all
I at~ models (some never ltved STEREO RADIO , am fm . 8
track Upe comb tnatlon ,
i n } and wtll be llq_uldated at a
separate contro l s
Balance
very large d1Scount So 1f you
$102 78, or t erms Ca ll 992
are Interested In 11 Mobile
3965
Home at a huge savtng don ' t
3 14 tf c
wa lt , stop tOday at Berry .
~-- - M 11ter M o bile Home Sales, 705
~arson
Sf. , Belpn , On io , ST A NLE Y Product s for sat e
p hone ..t7J 953 1
Ph one 1&lt;1'2 3762.
3 14 IOt t
1 9 26tc

Mobile Homes For Sale

Mobile tbnes For SMe

D&amp;D
CONSTRUCTION
PHONE

Blown
Insulation Services
Blowa Into Walls&amp; AHles.
STORM
Windows &amp; Doors
'
ALUMINUM
Siding- SoffiH
Gutters. Awnings
Free Estimates
Ph. 992-3993

949·3832 or 843·2667
All Types of
BUILDING
and .REMODELING
From a shelf to a house.
Painting, siding, roofing,
paper honging, kitchen
cabinets, expert carpeting,

lARRY LAVENDER
Syracuse. ohio

etc .

HEI,L

&amp;HEAnNG
tomplete plumbing

----

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

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

1...

"Crowhaven Farm" 6; MASH 8,10, Ascent of Man 20,33
9:110-Hawall Flve.o 8,10.
9:30-Woman 20; Witness to Yesterday 33.
10·110-Pollc• Story 3.~.15; Marcus Welby, M.D 13; A Flower ,,
out of Ploce 6; Barnaby Jones 8; Tom Jones 10; News 20,
Interface 33.
10 30-Your Future Is Now 20, Asstgnmenl America 33.
11 ·110-News 3,~.6.8,10, 13,15; ABC Newo 33.
11 :30--Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Wide World Mystery 13; FBI 6;
Movie "Kid Rodeo" 8; Movie "Stagecoach" 10, Janak! 33.
12:30-Wide World Mystery 6.
1:110-Tomorrow 3,4; News 13
"'
Their m istakes could have a •

form four ordinary words.

AtLEY OOP

Phone 949-5961

or. 991-5700.

0 "

.

EXCAVATING, dozer , loader
and backhoe work, septic
tanks Installed; dump trucks
6 ROOM house with bath , 3
anctto boys tor hire, will haul
bedroom full basement. gas
m1 dirt , top soli, limestone &amp;
heat , h w floor , wall to wall
gravel. Cal I Bob or Roger
carpet Close to school m
Jeffers, day phone 992 7089
Pam eroy Phone 992 3097
n lght phone 992· 3S2S or 992
J 9 52tc
5232
2-11 tfl
HOME for sale m Chest er
----~--- -----Tuppers
Plains
water , PIANO tun 1 ng ~ Lane Oan tels
natural gas , 2 bedroom s.
Phon e 992 2082
&lt;ompletely remodeled Phone
3 16 12tc
985 410 2
3 16 12tc TREE tr~mm l ng. year s of
exper1ence Bob Sayre, phone
BUY NOW &amp; : O AVE Low , low,
247 2166
down payments, 8 pet 1n
3 16 3tc
terest JO yr f1na11cing on new
homes m 3 MetgS County
-fOME
Improvement
and
locat1ons , or BUILD on your
Repa1r Service Anvthlng
lot Phone 992 5976 or 992 5844
f1xtd around the home , from
3 13 He
roof to basement You Wtll
l1k.e our work and rates
Phone 7425081
MU ST SELL new home on lake,
12 29 lfc
J bedrooms 1 1 ~, baths , ca r J)e f
drapes ,
di s hwa s her
refr~gerato r. dOUble oven "'S"EPTIC
TANKS
cleaned
stove Phone 992 3493 for
Modern San 1tatlon, 992 395_. or
appomtment
992 1349.
3 12 6tc
9 18 tfc

Real Estate For Sale

READY. !i.IIJC C0NCRE1'!; de
llver;:ed right tb your prolect
Fast
and
easy
Free
estimates Phone t92 321N
Goegleln Ready Mix Co ,
Middleport Ohio
6 30-tfc

I)

--------------SEWING MACHINE , Repairs,

I I rJl

serv1ce, all makes, t92 228C.
The Fabric Shop . Pomeroy,
Authorized S1nger Sales and
Service We sharpen Scissors
J 29 tfc

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

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

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

....

Foi'Sale
lJSEO parts, Frye' s Truck and
Auto Parts , Rutland, Ohio
Phone (614 1 742 6094
1 22 78tp

-- ------~ -

- --

WILL tnm or cut trees or
shrubberv .
clean
out
basements , attics, etc Phone
949 3221 or 742 44 .. 1
2 28 26tc

Real Estate For Sale
--------------NEW and used chain saws,

COlER work, land clearing by
the acre , hourly or contract
Farm pond s, roads, etc .
Large dozer and operator
with over 20 years ex
penence Pullins EKcavatlng,
Pam eroy. Oh lo Pllone 992
2478
12 19.tfc

HERE COMES OLD

--C------------Auct1oneer
BRAD~ORD,
Complete Service
Phone 9491821 or 949 3161
RBc lne, OhiO
Cr.tt Bradfor d

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

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR
- sweepers , toasters, 1rons.
all small appliances Lawn
mowers, next to State High
way Garage on Route 7
Phone 985 3825
3 ll 26tc

""Liom fer a
minute that were
her. but rt am't.

Mis!:

3-10 t11

Melba

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

1973 KAWASAKI 450 CC dtrt
bike , 1974 Kawa salit 125 CC
Enduro See at Welker ' s
Ashland , 992 3535
3 lJtfc
SHALLOW well ret pump and JO
gal tank Call 992 7560
3 17 6tp

--------------10 ACRE.S , suitable for butld.ng
lots or trailers . W111 sell as a
whole or separate Located on
Rt 7 m Middleport Phone
992 3218
3 12 6tc

--------------INDIAN Joe's Sporting Goods ,
buy and sell guns , ammo,
f1shmg equipment, and after
Apnl 1. we will have fish bail
Stop by at 308 Page St •
M 1ddteport Pho11e 992 3509
3 2 3Dtc
1974 YAHAMA :250 cc Endura
Less th1n 400 m titS . All a c
cessorles , Sl.DOO Phone 992
7897
3 16 6t c

-------- -----ONE 1971 Allis Chalmers dozer,

653 senes all hydraul iC blade,
roll canopy and wmch Better
than
average
conditton.
S7 ,700 One 1969 John Deere
ba c khoe w1th
Sims
All
Weather cab. large floalatron
t~res on fron t, new rear tires
Better than average con
d1t ton S6, 700 Phone 1614) 992
2478
3 16 31c

and water system Close to

River $4,700.00
POMEROY. - 1'f&gt;
frame- 3 BR , bath,
oor·cn.
R , ut1llly
basement,
storm

doors

&amp;

S10,500.00.
NEAR REEDSVILLE - 135
Acres,
fronts on 681,
minerals. TPwater, close to

Forked Run Lake. $16,600.00.
POME AO Y- 1 story frame,
2 BR. bath, 'h basemen!,
utility, gas
furnace.
large tot,
Inside
A
992-2251

done

NEW LISTING~ 19U Skyline
12x60 mobile home. 2
bedrooms, all eledrlc, over

f'qot
us!

half acre and concrete patio.
Country location on water line.

NEW LISTING- Building lof
with city water. natural gas,

a11d sewage. Only $2500.00.
LAUREL CLIFF - 6 room
house,

all

electric,

bath,

lJL ABNER

garage and level tot Only
$7500.00.
MIDDLEPORT Steam
heated 4 bedroom home, 2
baths, full basement. several
garages and lofs of parking.
Large building for hobby,
business,

or

BLITHE

WANTED

MORe AN'
MORE!!

storage .

YOUR INVESTMENT 'tODAY
WILL MAKE YOUR FORTUNE TOMORROW. SERVICE AND RESULTS IS
WHAT WE OFFER YOU
PLACE YOUR PROPERTIES
WITH US CALL m ·3325.

hOrn~:

with 3 bedrooms. kitchen and
dmtng aree , livtng room and
bath
Full size basement,
partially
finished
with
laundry area , recreation
room, storage, and workshop
area 1,080 sq ft of floor
space on main floor and three
and two thtrds acres of land
Located i n Recme area on
C. R . 28 belween Dorcas &amp;
Apple Grove Phone 9 ..9 ~57
3 11 6tp

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

SO HE TOOt&lt;
OIL- WELL'S
AWAY FUM US
AN' RAISED TH'
PRICE SKY
HIGH~!

L~~--.

AN' WE- SOBrrGOT'T'A PAY IT
BECUZ THAR'5
NOWHAR ELSE
'f'IE l&lt;fN GIT
IT !r!

I,
tt

(

-.

•••

LOW LOW DOWN PAYMENT.'
Lovely new flomes in three
locations in Meigs County
Some w lth wooded lots W..l
Will bu11t on your Tot Or ours.
Call 992 5976 or 992. su .. for
more Information
2·27 26tc

------ ------A MOOE R N all electric

6 ~MS ~ , garage , paneling,
breezeway, e acres Call 992

3059

3 16 7tc

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

BARNEY

pm

WHILE \fO'RE DOWN
AT TH' GENERAL STORE.

cy l tnde r. dtesel , 8 11 blade,
new pam t, clutches . tracks.
brakes , and canopy . 16,000.
Phone 985 3S94
J 11 6tp

3 16-7tp
---------------23" ZENtTH Color TV
247 2166

Phont

0

3 l6-3tc

--------------M I XED , ha v to r sa le Phont
992

PAW, WOULD 'fE 61T
TATER A NEW

__
--....._....., ......
.__
---"'......loo-·L..."'

AN' JEST
SO'S \fE WON'T
FERGIT---

--

CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-Jan.
11) Doubts you have about
your career will be swiftly dis- ••
slpated once you swing Into ac ~
tlon Keep your eyes solely on
the target
•

OI!MINI (MIJ It -June 20)

your converaatlon in har·
mony wllh lhoae whose com·
pany you stlllre today Don t
talk about things you alone are
Keep

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
40 Counler1 Brogan or
fetters
wmgttp
nemeses
5 Brittsh
DOWN
composer
I
Participate
10 Nazt
2
Singer
greeting
Reddy
ll Unwilling
12 r:morl
3 Blandishes
( 3 wda.)
Yesterday's Anawer
13 Spanish
monetary
· 9 Nuclear
26 Made the
4 English
unit
cathedral
devjce
sound or
14 Matter
cily
11 ImitaliDg
a cat
(law)
5 Happening 15 Poverty
%8 Bakery
15 Be
6 Pianist
18 Foxy ploy
product
triwnphant
McCann
21 Ascent
Z9 Illegality
16 Jeanne
22 Certain
30 Chinese
7 Bribe;
d'buy off
drmks
province
17 Contest
( 3 wds.)
23 Poor person 35 Gnawed
joiner
8 On
( hyph. wd.) 38 Doorway
19 Perch
horseback 24 Ponder
fiXIIlre
211 Suspended
~~..;.,.-..,
21 Make over
22 Storage
box
24 Archbtshop's ~-+-~+­
headdress
2S Abhor
26 Word to a
dog team
27 Cotn of
Timor
28 Entreat
31 Jun.'s
opposilt
32 Daunt
33- bono
publico
34 Betroth ·
36 Domtnant
37 Put to
flight
38 Gtrl's
name
39 Metal

AQUARIUS (Jtn. 20·Feb. 18) '
You tend to buy on Impulse to day Decide f irst if you really .,..
need the Item , then shop ..
around

Interested In

CANCI!R (Juno 21-Julr 22)

PISCES (Fob. 20-March 20)
Tie a string around your finger
to remind you lo fulfill a
promise lo the family Your
mind will be elsewhere You're

Too much time wilt be wasted
today ·worrying about things
pertaining to the future Make
belter progress by living In the

now"

apt 10 lorgst

LEO (Julr 23·Aug. 22) You 'll
aee a way that you can gain but
it means taking advantage of
another P111 up such selfish
lnleresta

·~your
: ll'll' brttld&lt;::ly

YIRQO (Aug. 23·1ept. 22) This

Morel! 11, 1t75

could be a financially rewar·
ding day lor you, II you don'l

"

You II make several Important
changes th is year One could
be your place of res idence If
you don't move you'll at least

pay too much attention to petty
1lde 111uea

LIIIIA (hpt. 23-0ct. 23) Co-

....,aka extenSI\Ie Improvements

workers are careless today

WIN AT BRIDGE

Act like you have no problem
17

NORTH
• Q 97
• 86 ~ 2

tJ4
• K J to 5

WEST tDI
.6

EAST
.8543

•AKQ 'J 3

.97

OAto6
.9873

t9852
. 6 42

SOUTH
.AKJto2
• tO 4
t K Q7 3

.AQ
East-West vulnerable
West

North

East

I•

Pa§s

Pass

Dble

Pass

2•
3•

Pa ss

2•
4•

rass
Pass

Pass
Pa ss
Opemng lead - K ¥

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

South.

"'"'Jim..

would have no problems unless ,
trumps broke 4-1 If they did '
break 4-1 he would only come · ·
to mne tricks So South led the""
three of diamonds at trick ..
three West thought a while before playing the stx spot . ,
Dummy's Jack won South
proceeded to draw trumps,
cash the four clubs , and chalk
up game and rubber ."
Oswald " The play really
shouldn' t work West should
really be able to reahze that
South ts trying to steal a diamond trtck If West nses wtth '
the ace of diamonds and leads a • •
fourth heart, he wtll be estabhshtn~ a trump trick lor hts •~
partner ' -

The bidding has been

Pass

" West stat·ted out with
three htgh hearts. East dtscard·
ed the deuce of clubs on the
third lead and South rurfed.
South had already seen that he

17

West

North

East

South

Pass
P,ass

1•

Pa ss

2•

3•

Pa ss

?

t•

You South, hold

•KJ94.AQ2 tJ43.Kl05
What do you do now 1
A - Bad rour spades Your
partner is trying to get to game. Bid
II.

TODAY 'S QUESTION
Vour partner continues to fiVe . .
diamonds What do you do now'
An!lwer

Tomorrow

Send $1 for JACOBY MODERN
book ro "Win at Bridge, " (elo this
newspaper). P 0 . Box 489. Radio
C•tr Stat•on. New Yorl&lt;, NY 10019

.. ..
'

.

-

MILK BOTTLE?

''

-AirfW e,.._• F -

•

_,..,_11&lt;1- . • lrc
~

""""'~_.,.......,

\

3. 16Jic

- - ------

mak ing today Consult with
others affected before resolvIng a family matter

'

3658

- ----

(Nov. 23·D11C-·'
21) Three heeds are better ,
than two In your decision-

You ha\le little confidence In an
tdea about work proposed by a
pal Don't reJect It before you
give i\ a fa1r trial.

I

I J VV
Yeoterday's Cryptoquote: SOME MEN CAN UVE UP TO
THEIR LOFTIEST IDEALS WITHOUT EVER GOING
ffiGHER THAN A BASEMENT.- THEODORE ROOSEVLET

8AQlTTAAIU8

TAUIIUI (Aprtt 20-Mor 20)'

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Jtm: " Deception at the
bridge table ts perfectly all
right, provtded you decetve by
CRYPTOQUOTES
, the actual card you play and not
by the manrer in which you
CU C OQXPJ KCFGVJ XF
C QZVM play I!."
Oswald " You are even
to act fast, when you
prtvtleged
EVCKJ
UZ
XU
PQJ
IJCNPM ZL CP'
have a problem You JUSt aren 't
supposed to look ltke you have a
C WJ G
LCKJ - TZUJEQ
K C R E • ·problem , when you don't have

---

RED boe r hog tor sale or
ava tlable for ser11 i ce Phone
Reedsv ille , 378 63 11 after 6

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

FINAL PILLAR ACHING

One letter 11mply stands for another. In lhla sample A Ia
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc Slnele leiters,
apostrophes, the leneth and formalton of the word1 are all
hints Each day the code letters are dll!erent

BUY ON LAND CONTRACT•
As low as SSOO down for 2
bedroom house w ith hard
wood floors , gas f1red hot air
heater, n tee bath with tub ,
ba~ment , 10 years to r,ay
with monthly payment ess
than 1100 per month Call 992
3509 , after 1 p m
l 16·3tc

Don't gamble where business

Is concerned It's best today to ' ·
deal with reliable and trusted ..
firms and people.

fldentlal matter antruated to
you Even an unintentional leak
could faiL on the wrong ears

An1nra Coldly fini,.helt tJif the 1redding
cab - "ICING'

Ia

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) ", '

Yoor rendency Is ro say more
than you should about a con~

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:

- - ----~----- --- ·

8 N F ORO tractor wllh s•de
mower , good rubber . Runs
good , $950 Phone 91S 3594

[ J I ~::.':'t.!l'::t:'.::-~
!Ptila.s.IIISI~~m~~~nl r I I J "LI II I)"
s.turd.,...
I
~IMM'D~

5 1 lfc

:iROCERY buslhess tor sale
Building tor sale or lease
Phone 773-'S618from 8 30p. m
to 10 p m for appointment

eQU i pment. 3 pre c e hand
sharpener , c ircular saw
sharpener , chain saw grmd
er , all lrke new
Phone
992 2386
3 14 4tc

MESSAGE - BU T niAT 'S
SILLV 0 CO llRSE -

trouble

Bemlco Bede Oeol
f1&lt; TUHdor, Morch 11, 1111
Alll!l (Mo"'h 21·Aprll 1t)

A S IF HE WAS US THJI~ TO A

A. TUNE Wl"TH IT-

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

-------------F 0 LEY
saw
sharpener

SHUX l &lt;O:UE SS l GOT TOO
MUCH 'MAGINATION- BUT lH'
WAY HIS HEAD WAS COCk:ED ON
ON E SIDE IT SEEMED AL.MO ST

"BLINKEV ; TAPPIN ALONG I ALWAYS GET A KICI(
OUTA 1H WAY 5 1-\E. ~At.l t&gt;LE S
Tl-IAT C,t,NE - lfOU'D ALMOST
THIN K SHE WI'.S PLAYIN '

bad effect upon you Supervise
their work carefully to evotd • ,

Grapt-1

Now arnnp !he clrelodlellen

Jumbln CYNIC

GASOUNE ALLEY

FAA ou:r - Witting to do
some WORK• This house
needs some repair - oood
garage and storage building,
4 level lois, good drilled welt

Astro-

WHAT THE KIN6
FOU6HT WITH.

(Aalwtin lo•orrow)

tillers and mowers
Also.
rep . rs
498 Locust St ..
Middleport Phone 9'92 3092
2 28 2.6tc

CLbSE OUT on new Zig Zag
sewing machines. For sewing
stretch fabrics, buttonholes.
fancy designs. etc Paint
slightly blemished Choice of
carrying c1se or sewing
stand $.49 80 cash or terms
available Phone 992 77S5
· 12 18 ttc

III

THAGUT

l 16-ltc
--------------- --------------1965 JOHN DEERE dozer. i

-

8·30-Movle "The Impostor" 3,,.,1Si Movie "Ordeal" 13; Movie·

UnscramblelheaefoarJumble~,
one letter to each square, to

Emetgency 992-3995

3 10 15

,,

Tomorrow 8,10

Jlr!l1lOOID11rn;-.~~=!:::~c

RACINE PWMBING
heating service and
general sheet metal
works.
Free
Estimates.

I

12 45-Eiec Co 33,
12 55-NBC News 3,15
Henry Fonda as Clarence Darrow 20,33.
1·110-News 3. All My Children 6,13; Phil Donahue 8, Young &amp;
9 oo-Movle " Impasse" 3,4.15, SWAT 6,13 ; Maude 8.10.
the Retlless 10; Not For Women Only 15
9 30- Rhoda 8,10, Romantic Rebellion 20,33.
· t:»-How To Survive a Marriage 3,4,15; Let's Make a Deal
tO oo-Carlbe 6,13 : Medical Center 8, 10; News 20, Washlnglon
6,13; As lhe World Turns 8,10
,
Straight Talk 33 ; Behind the Lines 33.
2:110-Days ot Our Lives 3,4,15, 510,000 Pyramid 6,13; Guiding
ll ·OQ-News 3,4,6.8, 10, 13,15, ABC News 33
Light 8,10
II 30-Johnny Carson 3,4,15, Wide World Myatrry 13; FBI 6;
2 »-Doctors 3,4,15, Big Showdown 6, 13, Edge of Night 8,10
Movie "Please Don' t Eat the Daisies" 8; Movie "Get
Yourself a College Girt" 10: Janakl 33
3:110-Another World 3,4, 15; General Hospital 6,13, Price Is ·
12 30-Wide World Mystery 6
Right 8, 10. Llllos Yoga &amp; You 20
I 00--Tomorrow 3,4, News 13
3.»--ne Lite to Llvel3; Luch Show 6: Match Game 8, 10, Your
Fulure Is Now 20.
TUESDAY, MARCH 18, 1975
• :110-Mr. Cartoon 3; I Dream of Jeannie 4; Somerset 15; ,
Gilligan's ts 6; Tattletales 8, Sesame St 20,33, Movie
6 00--Sunrise Seminar .4 ; Sunrise Semester 10
"Botany
Bay" 10; Mike Douglas 13.
6 25-Farm Reporl 13
4
»-Bewitched
3, Merv urll1tn •• Mod Squad 6; Lucy Show '8;
6 30- Frve Mlnules to Live By 4; News 6; Bible Answers 8;
Bonanza 15.
Con cerns &amp; Commenls 10; Rev Cleophus Robinson 13.
5:110-FBl 3; Andy Grtfltth 8; Mtster Ro9ers· Neighborhood
6·4s-cotumbus Today
20,33; Ironside 13.
6 45-Mornlng Reporl 3, Farmttme 10
6; Beverly Hillbillies B, Hodgepodge Lodge 20; Get
5·»-News
7 oo-Today 3,4, 15; A.M. ·America 6,13; CBS News 8,10.
Smart
15;
Elec Co 33
8 OQ-Lassle6, Capl Kangaroo&amp;. Popeye10; Sesame St 33
6
110-News
3,4,8,10,13,15;
ABC News 6, Electric Co, 20. lTV
8 tO-Capl Kangaroo 10
Ullllrotlon 33
6:30-NBC News 3,4,15; ABC News 13; Bewitched 6, CBS News ,
8 30-Misslon t mposslble 6
8,10: Zoom 20, Your Future Is Now 33.
9 oo-A M 3. Phil Donahue 4,15: Rocky &amp; Friends 8; Morning
7:110-Truth or Cons. M: Bowling for Dollars 6; What's My Line
wothD J 13
8; News 10; Name That Tune 13; High School TV Honor
9 25-Chuck While Reports 10
Society
15: Antlqlltls 20, Lilias Yoga &amp; You 33.
9 30-Not For Women Only 3, Dinah 6, Galloping Gourmet I;
7
30-Hollywood
Squares 3,~; Wild Wild World ot Animals 6;
Tattletales 10. New Zoo Revue 13
Buck Owens 81 New Price ts Right 10; To Tell the Truth 13;
Spring Street USA 15; RFD20, MarcoSporlllte33
,
8·110-Adam·12 3.4,15; Happy Days 6,13, Good Times 8.10; ,,
America 20,:tJ.

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

Gtfts
Free

Help Wanted

Vegetable soup, bean soup, pie
and coffee will be available.
The pubhc ts mvtted to atttnd
and donHhOns wtll be recetved
Mrs Herb Wolfe and Mrs .
Wtlham Mtller were hostesses
for the March meeting of the
Temple United Methodist
Women at Mr. Wolfe!s mobile
h&lt;me. The program Included a
tape, "The Second Coming or
Qlrist" along with prayers and
scripture . Kay Wolfe was
qevotional leader lor the
~en ing . ~ ,,
" • Mrs. Harold Gtllogly , Vicky
and Bruce. caUed on her
·parents. Mr and Mrs. lincoln
Russell at \Volfpen on Sunday
afternoon

OQ-News 3,4,6,8, 10, 13, 15; ABC News 6; Etec. Co. 20; Project
Care 33
6 30-NBC News 3,4, 15, ABC News 13, Bewitched 6; CBS News
8, 10, Zoom 20
7 ,oo-Trulh or Cons. 3.4; Porter Wagoner 6; What' I My Ltna 1,
News 10, New Candid Camera 13. Ohto Thts Week 20; Lllt11
Yoga &amp; You 33.
7 30-That Good Ole Nashville Music 3, Masquerade Parly 4,
Pollee Surgeon 6, $25,000 Pyramid 8, Municipal Court 10; To
Tell the Truth 13, Unlamed World 15; Washington Straight
Talk 20, Episode Action 33.
8 oo-smothers Brothers 3,4,15; Rookies 6,13, Gunsmoke 8,10;

, _ , _ __ _ _ _ 1

.

10 ~etebrlty Sweepstakes 3,4,15; Joker's Wild 8,10; Dinah"
13 .
,,
10:30--Wheet of Forlune 3,4,15; Gambit 8,10.
"
11:110-Htgh Rollers 3,4,15; One Life lo Live 6; Now ou See If,
8,10; Elee Co. 20.
11 30--Hollywood Squares 3.15, Brady Bunch 6,13, News 4:
Love of Lite 8,10; Sesame St. 20
11 55-Graham Kerr 8, Dan !mel's World tO.
'
12 110-Jackpol 3,15, Password 13; Bob Braun's 50-50 Club 4;
· Homer Formby . Woodworking 6; News 8,10.
·"
12 30--Biank Check 3. 15. Split Second 6,13; Search for ,

6

SALES&amp; SERVICE

W•t.r, Electric; Gu, s.(lnts, lnsttllod. Work
g.. rtntttd.
Dorer, lock hot, Trucks
Lim"- &amp; Fill Dirt

v 8 1 dr coup e Call 992 J19 J
or see al lOS Union A v enue ,
Pomeroy
3 11 6tc

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

servmg to start at 6 o'clock

~--

;,.

MONDAY, MARCH t7, 1m

WilKINSON
SMALL ENGINE

Chain
Precision
Ground

19 12 OL D SMOBILE Cutlass 350

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

home
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Stansbury and sons of Reynoldsburg spenl a say here with hls
parents, Mr. and Mrs . Dale
Stansbury and other relatives.
There wtll be a supper at the
Dyesville church on March 22,

- - -~·~·

Blocks
Cement and Mortar
Wood Burning Stoves
Heatllators
and
Fireplace Accessories
2·19· 1 mo

19 73
COUNTRY
SC1U1re
Stattonwagon , for sale to
se ttle es tat e Like new Phone
99 2 J49 J
3 12 6tc

w

Ham on ha s n ow r eturned

992-2067

RDNo. 1

Constnoctlon &amp; Rtmodtl

For Rent

and Mendal Jordan, Colwnbia
Grange, attended Meigs
County Pomona Grange on
fo, nday evemng. Plans were
compl eted for the annual
banque t on April 4 at Salisbury
school.
Ellen Facemyre , who ts
' wylng wtth Mr and Mrs
Lw coln Russell , Wolfpen,
spent the weekend at her home
here Mrs Rex Cheadle and
Mr. and Mrs. Rexie Cbeadle
spent a day m Colwnbus and
vlstted with Mrs Noble Hamon
ut UmHrsity Hospi tal. Mrs.

FOREST RUN
BLOCK CO.

Commtrclt~Ruldtntltl

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

l

t

POMEROY, OHIO

BE 11 ORDA IN E D by th e
Co unCil of the Vtllaoe o f
Pomeroy i\ lt member s th er eto VACA NCY for lln e a mbulatory 1961 CH EV ROL ET . ret tabte, get
concurr mg
mal e Pl ease cllntact Jean
to work c ar " 49 Broadway
1 That the salary of th e
Sto u t
Syra c u s e N u rsmg
Phon e 992 2082
Mayor o f the Vi l lag e of
Hom e 992 3707
3 16 12tc
Pomeroy commencmg Jan 1st.
3 16 31c
1\176 , Sha ll b e $2,400 00 p er
197f MONTE -Carlo , 4, 000 miles.
ann um
1 WILL do small garden
att power , a1r, AM stereo
2 That the salary tor th e
plow ing . Wtth Gravely garden
tape Call 992 7036 afler 5 p m
Cler k of the V Illage of Pomeroy .
t ractor Phone 992 7492 or 992
J 5 tfc
com men ci ng January 1St , 1976,
3716
sha l l be $3,000 00 p er annum
3 16 6tp 1973 VEGA Hatchback , 4 speed.
l Th at ea c h dutv elec ted and
transm ISS10n, new trres , tape
qua111 1ed m e mber of th e V Htage FR EE CHICK S EASTER
player , excellent cond1t1on
Co lJ n c +l sha l l . e ff ecti ve Januar y
SU NDAY ,
MIOOI FPOAT
Will sell reasonable Phone
l SI 1976, rece 1v e S IO 00 for ea ch
UNITED
PENTECOSTAL
(6 14 1 992 2377 or 992 2732 after
r e g u ~a r
cou n ci l m ee11ng !U
C H U RCH ,
SOUTH
3rd
IC tTdtd and th e surn of S5 00 for
• p "'
AVE NUE
S UNDAY
3 14 12tp
cr. ch special mee t 1n~ att ended
SCH OO L 10 00 AM , TRANS
4
Thai al l Ordma n ces or
P ORTA TION
AND
IN
parU o f Ordinance s m conf li ct
FO RM A T IO N PH ONE 99 2
w11t1 l h 1S Ordinance are h er eby
3824 or 992 2502
~ mer1ded ell ecftve Jonuar y 1st ,
31 6 lltp 1 BEDRM turn tshed trailer .
197 6
&lt;
- - - - - - - ------'--Oepostt requ ired Phone 992
Ttu s Or din a n ce sh all be In PU PPI ES , F REE to good
3429
Ior ee and eff ect t r om an d a ft er
f1 1l m E' Phon e 992 22 19
3 16 121p
ttH~ ea r l iest per iod al low ed b y
3 16 Jlc - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - law
3 RM apartment, new and
fu rn1shed, wall to wall car
P
IA
N
O
lun
ing
Ph
one
949
4811
D ale E Sm 1t h
p e t1ng Phone 992 2050 after 12
3
4
tf
c
Mayor
pm
3 16 3tp
Ralph H Werry I WILL do root1ng , heating ,
r epatr , plum b ing and elec
Prestdent o f Coun c1 l
tr ic al work Phon e Charle s 7 RM HOUSE and bath at 8
Attes t Jitne Watton
Ltberty Avenue Also . J rm
S 1n c 1a~r 985 4121
apartment , J)relerred older
3 4 121p
Clerk
c ouple at 9 L1ber t y Phone
992 71J5
F LOWER S fo r Eas ter Baskets,
I IH'i OrdltHmcc pa ss ed 3 J 15
po ts sprays , et c Phone 98 5
3 16 Jl c
JSJ7
S.manev ·s Gift Shop,
I J ) 10, I} , 1f t
1
B
E
DR:OOM
trailer
.
Brown
's
Ch es ter Oh to
Tra iler Court . Phone 992 3324
J 4 111c
3 4 tfc
NOTICE OF
AP P OINTMENT
~OR your " Otl ol Mink "
Cue No 21440
Cosmet 1u Phone BROWN 'S 3 BEDROOM mobile home ,
E st ate of Beulah B
Smllh
washer and dryer , 1l!2 bathS ,
99 2 511 J ..
D eceas ed
ufllitles
pa1d , S-42 50 week. 308
1 7 tfc
Notic e IS here b y given tha t
Page St . Middleport. Oh10
Emma~t•n Oabo of Pomeroy ,
3 4 tfc
Otuo . HaS' I'.l een dul y appcl lnted AUCTION, Thursday nigl'lt, 7
p
m
at
Mason
Auction
,
Execu t ,~lx
of th e E stat e of
4 RMS &amp; bath p lus utlltiV rm
Horton St In Mason,
Va
Beulah. B Srn1 lh . d ec ea sed , lat e
Furnished . forced a.r fur
Consignments. welcome
ol Me 1&lt;1 S Cou ntv . Oh ln
na&lt;
e , screened in porch
Phone { 304) 77 3 5&lt;1171
Creddo r s are r e qu i r ed to fi le
Phone 949 36 58
2 2 tic
their cl a im s with s;i ld fiduc iary
J 14 3tc
w lthm tour months
D at ed th is 11th da y of March NOW selling ,_:utter Brush BE gentle, be ktnd , to that
Products , phone 992 3410
1915
eKpent1ve carpet . cleah W1lh
1 24 ttc
Blue Lustre
Rent electnc
M a nning D Webtltr
shampooer $1
Baker Fur
Judge
n1ture Co
Court ot Common Pleas .
J 14 Jtc
Probate D1vlslon
EARN
SSO
to
S75
per
week,
2
13) 17, 2,., 31, 3tc
7 BEDROOM mobile home tn
hours per day, .5 days per
Syracuse No chrldren or pets
week , car necessary Phone
Call 992 2,. 41 after 6 p m
t49 4113
Oepos1t requlrt&gt;d
3 16 3tc
J 11 tfc

· In 1938, Generalissimo Fran-- 'e~S.:b · Franco ordered the
bombing or Loyalist-held Barcelona in the Spanish Ovil War.

I' "Could I give you a deposit? I want to put a filet mtgnon on

S3495

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

Pomer oy spent Sunday w1th

SIDE GLANCES

CHEVROLET HON

POMO~~~!E~~~~ co.@)

3 IJ 3t c

1 BED R OOM tr ader for r en t or
tor salE" I n R u t l and Ph one
99? J429
J 17 121p

Television log for easy viewing

1-----,

good t l n~s

Rew a r d

For Rent

14695

_.

C&amp;E 102 " C A , 4 speed tr a n s , 2 spee d 15, 000 rear a xle ,

P •ne Gro ve a r ea on Co Rd
12 Bl ack a nd gr ey. an swe rs
to the na me ol " Tur key " Call

By the Day

Jordan. J crrte Soe, Betty and
Dann) and gues t Judy Hill, Mr .
and Mrs. Larry Birchfield, Mr
and Mrs Jack Jordan , Mr and
Mrs r.cne Jeffers, Robert,
Mnt co nnd Lester and Mr and
Mrs Mike Lmvson, all local
area, a nd Mr and Mrs David
Llewelyn and Jenny, New
Marshfield.
Earl Starkey, Carl Greenlees

1'11

GE RM AN Sheph erd dog lost In

OR OINANCE 457

were Mr . and Mrs Lavern

1974 MONTE CARLO LANDAU
( Dem o ) , loaded w1th opt ions

lDst

FEMALE Ger man Shepher d ,
b lond e wdh b lac k m a r ki ng s
Tag ge d A th en s Count y 534
A lso fo un d n ear M ec ha n ic
Str eet , bl ac k
lll njJ e si r ed
m al e pup P h on e 949 491 7
3 11 2fC

$3095

da rk gre y fini sh , radio

Phon e a r ea c o de 61.4 423 953 1
4 13 li e

991 73 62

CHEVELLE MALIBU

GM Dtvi Sion ca r . a tr cond ltion 1ng . 350 V 8, P steenng .

m od el s of mo bile homes

Carmel News,

Mr and MI'S Haroid Ox ley
spent a clay in Groveport with
ber son and daughter-tn.faw,
Mr and Mrs . Dole Eugene
Tm·ncr.
Ca llers a t the home of Murl
Galawa y were !.eon Woodnun ,
sons RICk and Randy, Randy
Radchff •nd Chu c ~ Petty,
McArthur
and
Da vi d
WoodrWll, Canal Winches ter.
Rev James H McCormack, '
Superinttndent of th&amp; .. Athell8"
Dlstnc t of · the •United
Methodist Church was guest
speaker on the Albany Charge
on Sunday mornmg and gave
the sermon at Temple Church
as well as Albany and Pearl
Chapel churches Rev Howard
Mayne ts pastor on this charge
Ro.lalives wh o gathered at
the home of Mr and Mrs Reed
J&lt;' ffcrs on S1mday to help he~
mother . Mrs Beulah Cord t ay .
ce lebrate her R6th btr lhdn)

1914

CAS H pa i d fo r al l make s an d

Cora Bird 1

Carpenter

$4195
1914 CHEVROLET IMPALA
4 Dr only 10,400 m tl es , tully equ i pped 111 t a1r, dark red A
rea l c r ea m puff

lo. tndl ot sc r ap me t o t ~ and
tr.Dn Ri de r ' s S al ... a g e , St R:t

Business
Services
- - - --

Pomeroy
Motor Ca.

QUALITY

JU N K a utos , complete and
de l •v er ed t o o ur ya r d We p ic k
up a uto bo dies and bu y a ll

Ohw, spen t Sat urd ay · a nd
Sunday wtth her grandmother,
All ee Shev ille a nd Emm a
Johnson.
Mrs Allee Beegle of Ingles,
Fla , has bee n a guest of her
da ughter and son-In-law, June
and Larry Roush. She accom pnmcd her son, Lynn
Rrrgle to his home 1n
('olumbus. She wtll return by
p1.me to her home in Florida on
Sa turday
Kenneth and BePIIIce 111e1ss
.spe nt a weekend m Columbus
vtstlmg wtth lhetr chlld1 en,
Donna and Dan Sayre, Mr and
Mrs Kenneth Theiss and Davts
Thctss. \\ho tsa student at Oh1o
State Um versll y
B&lt;Jb and Carol Burch and
da u!(hlers of Bellvue spent the
weekend wtl h their parents,
Emma Su lscr and Elza and

'

2 SIGNS
OF

and g•ve dtrect•ons to Wi tt en
OhiO 43946

OH, WHAT HE SAID
OH !!- OH!

Auto Sales

-------------W}\N TEO o ld up rig ht p iano s.

B11l Johnson of Shippingport,
Pa dwner of a towboat, .1\as
his 'boa t on dock at the Okan
Harbor near Ga lltpolls for
w1th

Fast Results Use Se~tinel Classifie~

Po meroy . Oh• o Call '92 7760
. 10 7 74

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News, Event

Reedsville

beds, or comp l ete hou S:ehold 5
Wr 1l e M D . Mt ll er , Rt 4,

m Toledo and vtsited with

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10 - -The Daily Sentinel. Middlepnrt-Pom,•rO)'. () .. Momk1y, Mardi I7, 1 97~

Onassis to be buried on own island
PARIS (UP! ) - Mrs.
Jacqueline Kermedy Onassls,
oow twice widowed, will take
the body of millionai r e
AristoUe Onassis to Greece
Tuesday for burial on the
shipping ma gnate's pri va te
island of Skorpios, a famil y
spokesman said today.
Orly airport officials said a
sj&gt;ecial Boeing 7'!1 of Onassis's
Olympir. Airways was sche·
duled to leave for Greece with
Onassls' body, his widow and
his daughter , Otristma , be·
tween 9 a.m. and 10 a.m.
Tuesday.
Legal expert. in Athens sa id
most of his half-billion dollar
fortWJe was expected to go to
au istina, 24, but that Mrs.
Onassls might inheri t as much
as Sl25 million .

Market Report

said .

Onassis died of bronchtal

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
March 15. 1974
Sales Report of
Ohio Valley Liveslock Co.
STOCKER CATTL E
StEERS - 25() to 300 lbs. 18 to
23.25 ; 300 to 400 lbs 19 to 23.40:
400 lo 500 lbs. 2IJ to 28; 500 to 600
lbs. 2il.50 to 29: 600 to 700 lbs.
18.50 to 25; 700 lbs. and Over 20
to 27.10.
HEIFER CALVES - 250 to
300 lbs. 17 to 24; 300 to 400 lbs.
17.85 to 22.50; 400 to 500 lbs. 19
to23; 500 to600 lbs. 20 to 23: 600
to 700 lbs. 2IJ lo 22.50; 700 lbs.
and Over 2IJ to 23.
STOCK COWS &amp; BULLS (By
The Head) - Slack Cows 120 to
197.50: Stock Cows and Calves ·
165 to 240; Stock Bulls 115 to
180; Baby calves 12.50 to 30;
!By the Pound) - canners &amp;
Cutters Cows 14.50 to 19 ;
Holstein Cows 17 lo 22.30;
Cmnmercial Bulls ( 1,000 lbs.
and Over ) 19 to 24.10.
VEAL CALVES - Tops 220
lbs. to 250 50 to 55 ; Medium 200
lbs. to 300 36 to 46; Culls 30
Down.
SHOATS- 12 to 35.

MEIGS THEATRE
Tonight&amp; Tuesday

March

17 -18

THE STING

(Technlcotorl
Robert Fedtord
( PG l

Show Starts 7 p.m.

''

M r. rr l . ~l r

" Men are nol rewarded for
having brains . but for using
them "

It doesn ' t ta k e bra in s, j ust
good taste. to se lect brackets
sh e l vi ng

Laura L. Knapp
of Letart dies

Laura L. Knapp, Route I ,
Letart, age 70, died SlUiday tn
Pleasant Vall ey Hos pita l.
Fun er al se rvices will be
conducted Wednesday at I : 30
p. m. at the Fair view Bible
C1turch w1th the Rev . George
Hoschar officiating.
Burial will be in the Fatrview
Cemetery . Friends will be
re ceived at th e Fog leson g
FWleral Home in Mason after 2
p. m. Tuesda y. The body will
be ta ken to the chW'Ch one hour
before the service.
Mrs. Knapp was born Feb.
13, 190!i in Laurel C1if!, Meigs
CoWJty, Ohio, a daughter or the
lale William Doetfer and Lena
Young Doerler. Her first
husband was lhe late Lawrence
Taylor, who died In 1941.
Survivers include her· second
husband , Charles W. Knapp,
Route
I,
Lelart ; two
daughters, Mrs . Elizabeth
Ohlinger, Mason , and Mrs.
Frances Edwards, Richlands,
Va . ; three sons, Thomas
Taylor, Richlands , and
Clarence and Roger Taylor, of
Napoleon ; a stepson, George
W. Knapp, Middleport ; three
step-&lt;laughters, Mrs. Imogene
Golianek, Elyria, Ohio ; Mrs.
Mae Scarbro and Mrs. Luella
Hendrick, both of Middleport ;
four sJslers, Mrs . Evel yn
Young, Pomeroy; Mrs. Lucille
Hood of Warren, and Mrs.
· Hazel Clubber and Mrs .'
Frances Clark, both in
Florida ; 11 grandchildren, four
great-grandchildren, and four
step-grandchildren .
CLUB TO DINE
The Harrisonville Golden
Circle Senior Citizens Club will
hold &amp; birthday and potluck
supper Tuesday, March 25 at 6
p. m. at the HarrisonviUe
.Elementary School. Mr . and
Mrs. Darold Taylor, Portland,
will provide enterlalnment.
COUNCIL TO MEET
Chester
Council
323,
Daughters of America, will
meet Tuesday at 7:30 p. m .
Pr rc tic e for a rally and
quarterly birthdays will be
observed. Potluck refresh·
ment. will be served .

QHWI

and

Some legal sources familiar
with the Onassis fortune said ,
however, the multimillionaire
gave his wife $10 million when
th ey were marrted and she
renounced any claims on his
estate.
Onassis associates smd the
aircraft carrying the body will
land at Aktion. an airport near
Skorpios, the island which
Onassis bought in 1963.
From Aktion , scene- of the
lUI val batlle in 31 B.C . where
August us Caesar defeated
Mark Antony, the body, acrompanied by members of the
Onassis family and household,
will be placed on a hearse for
the 10-mile ride to the fishing
port of Ntdri.
Nidrt lies across the bay
fr om Skorpios and the last part
of the journey will be made by
motor launch, a SP&lt;Jkesman

fr o m

ou r

" FRtENDL Y ONES"

POMEROY CEMENT
BLOCK CO.

AUTOS BUMP
Meigs CoWlty Deputy Ray
Manley Investigated a minor
accident today at 8:42a.m. in
front of the post offi ce in
Tuppers Plains . Dale W.
Welsh, 37, Tuppers Plains. had
stopped to go into the post
office when a car driven by
Lula Huffman, 61, Tuppers
Plains. backed from a
driveway and struck Welsh's
car.
There was slight damage to
1lle Huffman car and moderate
to Welsh 's. No citation was
issued .

pneumonia in the American
Hospital in Pari:) S&lt;.t turday
afte r hve weeks of treatmcnl.
John Kenn edy , Jr ., a nd
Ca roline Kennedy , the children
of the late President , fl ew to
Aklion via Athens today. The
two children, who were accorn.
panied by Mrs. Hugh Auchin·
loss, mother of Mrs. Onass•s.
wtll go from Aktion to Skorptos
by helicopter, a n Olympic
spokesman said .
A motorboat will take the
body to the small 2tJO.year-&lt;lid
chapel of Panagtsta amidst
orange and cypress trees and
flowers that Jacqueline herself
planted overlooking the loman
&amp;&gt;a.
In the chapel, dedicated to
the Virgin Mar y, Onass1s
marri ed the widow of
President Kennedy in 1968 and
buned hi s beloved son
Alexander in 1973.
Onass1s, a painted anc1ent
ikon of the Greek Orthodox
church on his breast, lay on a
bier s urround ed by whtte
fl owers today in the chapel on
the groWJds of the America n
Hospital where he died 34 days
after a gall bladder operation.
One orchid sent by his widow
was placed on the bier , family
friends said .

rail move
ConUnued !rom page I
track .
The development, it said,
"represents an OpP&lt;Jrlunity for
recreational development that
will probably never occur
again on such a scale ."
The report says good
examples of what can be done
are the Elroy-sparta State
Trail in Wisronsin , 1lle Dlinois
Prairie Path, the Cargill Long
Park Trail in Longview, Tex.,
and 1lle Burke-Gihnan Trail in
the metropolitan Seattle area.
Conunltlee Chairman Henry
Diamond said the report is not
recommending rail lines be
abandoned. But, he said, "if all
else falls creating trails from
rails no! only provides
recreation and environmental
benefits, but it preserves the
rorridor for P&lt;JSSible future
transP&lt;Jrlation needs: '

Mrs . Onassis, dressed in
·n,c archibi shop of the Greek
black
coa t, sweater and stoc k·
Orthodox chW'ch in Paris, C.
Mcllitios, said a prayer over in ~s. walked silently through
_the bier this morn ing for the th e bronze doors of Ute chilly
so ul of the 7J.year-old shtpptn g chapel.
tycoon.
She spent 15 solitary minutes
The body was to be placed in in the Am en can Hospital 's
a dark walnut roffin trii,mned cliapel Sunday evening with
with brass at 3: 15p.m. today. the body then left on the a rm of
Fun era l home off icial Gabrtel a bW'ly bodyguard , stared
Dumont said necessary papers stra ight ahead through sunfor transP&lt;Jrl of ihe body were glasses and drove to t he
be tng signed today at the Onassts apartment in the hear t
of Parts .
Greek l'onsulate.

Kissinger with
Minister Rabin
J ERUSA LEM IUPI J
Secreta ry of State Henry
Ktssmger met with Israeli
Prime Mmtster Yitzhak Rabin
today to ge t the Israeli unswer
K1ssmger hopes will keep his
shu ttle misswn gumg in search
of a second·stage accord be~
tween Egypt and Israel.
He had a green ll ght to
continu e negotiati ons from th e
Israe lJ c.:a bmet but it was W1clea r what proposal he was
ta kmg back to Presid ent An·
war Sadat when he ta kes orr for
Aswan, Egypt , to begm his
tturd shuttle betwee n the two
COWl tries.
· Departure was set for 3 p.m
19 a.m. EDT ).
Ki ss mger first had brea kfast
with Rabm and \hen met the
full Israe li negoHating team
for 90 minutes.
Afterward s he said, "We
revtewed once aga in the ideas
which I brought from Egypt
and th e Isra eli reaction as well
as the considerations which the
Israeli cabmet are asking me
to ta ke to Etypt."
Ktssinger will bnng back
Sada t 's res ponse Tuesday
afternoon:
On Kissinger 's way here last
Friday, a seni or offici al said
Israel would have to carn e up
with something new for Sadat
to keep the negotiations going.
Israel SOW'ces satd a gap still
eXIs ts between. the two countri es on wha t the settlemen t
should be and tha t Israel was
not yet talking about tern tonal

1ss ues - a formal orfer to withdraw from the Abu Rudeis Oi l
fields and the Sinm mo Wl tain
passes .
" What we are talkin g :.1hout
ts wh at Egypt g1ves in return
for ve ry su bsta ntia l and
'pa inful Is rael i territ ori a l
co ncess ions, ., an Is rae li
governm ent official said.
Kiss 1n ge r put a news
blackoul on details of the
nego tJa twns, but the Israeli
newspapers wer e full of
spec ulation and reports.
The Enghsh language Post
said Egypt was not prepared to
s1gn th e nonbelli gere ncy
declara tiOn that Israel has
demanded.
Th e Post said Sunday n1ght's
scsston between Kissinger and
the Israeli negotiators was the
to ughest ye t beca use th e
secre tary "dt d not hide his fear
that Israel's stand might endanger the successful out come
of the talk s."
Th e Hebr ew • lan guage
newspaper s
Davar
and
Ha' ar etz said Egypt had
proposed a join t pledge with
Israel to refrain from using
fo rce or the threat of fo rce but
linked such a pled ge to con·
tinued progress toward an
overall peace settlement.
"The Israeli team told Dr.
Kissin ger last night tha t the
pledge must s tand on its own
feet and be WJconnected to
external developments, " th e
two newspapers said

·

~usic

M. Harris

died at Holzer
Mrs. Susie M. Harris, 59, a
Icsident or 701 Beach St.,
Middleport, died at 1lle Holzer
Medical Center's Emergency
Room at 6 a.m. today. She was
born 10 Meigs County, Nov. 12,
1915 the da ughter of the late
John and Sarah Cochran
Lewis.
She married Uoyd Harris
who survives along with two
daughters, Mr s. Joyce Circle of
New Haven, W. Va . and Mrs.
Jamce Gibbs of Middleport ;
four gra nddaughters , four
brothers, Georg e Lewis of Salt
Lake City ; John, Belpre, Ohio ;
Robert of Racine and Samuel
of Harrisonville, Ohio, a stster,
Mrs. Dorothy Strickline of
Cambridge , Ohio.
Private IWJeral services will
be held at 2 p.m. Wednesday at
Miller's Home For FWlerals ,
Gallipolis, with burial in Meigs
Memorial Garden .
In lieu of flowers, friends
may contribute to the
American Cancer Society .
Ca lling hours will be held at the
fWJeral home from 6-9 p.m .
Tuesday.

N H L Standings
By Unit e d Pre ss Int ern a tional
bt vhion 1
w . I. t. pi S gf ga
P hila dlph ia 42 18 10 94 249 165

I

Driver cited
after mishap

N Y 1Sian d e r s29 24 17 75 230 19 2
A t la nt a
28 28 13 69 198 199

Russell D. Morris, 18, Rt. 2,
Pomeroy, was cited to
D• vision 2
w . 1. ' I. piS gf 91 Municipal Court for driving left
Va n couver
34 29 1 75 237 122
of 1lle center following a traffic
Ch icago
33 3 1 7 73 237 2 14 accident at 9 p.m. SatW'day on
S t . LOUIS
29 28 13 7 1 234137
Min neso ta
20 43 6 46 198 305 First Ave. and Sycamofe St.
K ansas City 14 47 10 38 169 291
City police said the Morris
D1vi s ion J
w 1 t . ptsgf g;~ car went left of the center
M on tr ea l
4 1 11 17 99 32 9199 striking a vehicle operated by
L os An geles 36 15 19 91 235 163 Ralph W. Elliott, 26, Rt. 2,
P itt sburg h 33 2J 14 80 29 6 255 Gallipolis .
There
was
De tro •I
20 40 11 5 1 221 293
Was h in gton 6 59 5 17 152 383 moderate damage.
DIVI SiOn 4
A backing mishap occurred .
w . L I. pi s gt ga
at
10:18 p. m. SatW'day on
B uffa l o
4) lJ 15 10 1 317 213
Serond Ave. where an auto '
Bos ton
39 2 1 11 89 32 0 217
To r o n to
28 30 13 !Yil 248 277 driven by Maria F. Griffin, is,
Ca l i fornia
18 41 11 47 186 168 GalliP&lt;JliS, was struck by a car
Saturday's R es ults
backing operated by Vickie
NY Isl and ers 3 Bos t on 1
P1tt sburgh 12 Wa s h ington 1
· Lynn Moore, 16, Rt. 2,
P h ilad elph ia 4 Toron to 4
Cheshire. No charge was filed .
Mon t r ea l 3 Los Ang eles 0
Ch icag o 5 M 1nn es ota 2
Sunday 's Re sult s
Ph ilad elph ia J L os A nge les 0
M1 nn es ota .4 De troi t 3
B u ffal o 11 Toronto 3
B OS tOn 7 St LOU IS 2
P itt sburgh 6 Kansas C ity 3
Vancouv er 5 Ch1cag o 4
Monday 's Game
At lanta at Montreal

WHA Standing s
By Un1ted Pr ess International
E as t
w . L t. pfs gt ga
N ew En g lnd 38 24 5 80 2J S.23 l
Cl ev eland
29 36 ]
Chi ca go
26 40 I
lnd 1anapo1 s 17 46 ]
West
w. t. f .
Housto n
45 22 0

6 1 190 220
53 224 265
37 181 27 6

FAMILY THANKFUL
DEDHAM , Mass. !UP[) - A
pfS gt ga
family is thankful to a passing
90 3 10 21J
stranger for saving five lives.
Ph oe n1 x
34 27 7 75 25 3 219
Problem is, they don't know his Mi n nesota 35 19 2 72 264 232
name.
Sa n 01ego
33 29 3 69 258 233
The man smashed through a Ba1t 1mor e 18 48 3 39 112 301
Canadian
front bedroom window when he
w . 1. t. pts gt ga
saw flames in a burning home Qu ebec
41 11 0 84 189 255
as he was driving by Saturday,
Toronto
37 31 2 76 307 277
said Frances Ward, 38.
Van cou v er
33 30 2 68 217 211
Mrs. Ward was not home at Edmonton 32 30 3 67 233 226
the time, but the warning Winn ipeg
Jl 31 4 66 268 243
X· Franchise transferred trom
roused her three sons MiChigan
Michael, 15 ; Thomas, 14; and
Saturday's Result s
Joseph, 13 -;~ s well as her New Eng land 6 Edmonton 2
lnd1anapo i1S 7 Baltimore 3
brother, Michael Dayie, 40, and Van
couver 7 Quebe c 4
Sunday 's Results
her mo1ller, Frances Dayie, 58.
Hou ston 2 Cleveland 1
Aneighbor said the man then Van cou\ler 4 Quebe c 2
went back into 1lle burning New England 7 Toronto 5
Winn ipeg 10 Edmonton I
house and pulled blankels off Ch
icago A San Diego 2
Monday's Games
1lle beds to wrap around 1lle
C le veland at Chicago
boys, outside in 1lleir pajamas. Hou ston at Toronto
The neighbor took the family
UNIT CALLED
to her home.
The
Racine
ER squad was
The stranger then tlrove
away, wi1llout identifying him- called Saturday at 7: 30 p. m.
for John Sellers, Portland, a
self.
m edical patient , who was
taken to Veterans Memorial
LOCAL TEMPS
Hospital .
The temperature in down·
town Pomeroy at II a. m.
NOW YOU KNOW
Monday was 51 degrees WJder
In London in 1742, sugar sold
sWJny skies.
for $2.75 a poWJd.

NOI"th

w. 1. t. pts gt

3erving you bas been out· business
since )952.

M iddleporl, Ohio

,.

pts gf

ga

Dayton

42 26

3 87 273 245

Columbus
Tole do
Des Mom es
F o rt Wayn e

39 30
32 36

3 81 290 255
4 68 265 259
6 62 233 25 4

24 3
25 5
27 2
36 3
17 49 4
12 28 I
Souttt
w. 1. t.

28 36
16 38

93
87
86
71

1

;:;:::: ::~=~::;:::;:;:; :;:;: ;:;:;:-::·:·::;:;:;: ·:

6 58 236 21 9
t eam d isbanded

x-

Saturday ' s Results
Sag maw 7 Kalama zoo 4
Columbu s 4 To ledo 2
Dayton 6 F l 1nt 4
Port Huron 5 Des Moin es 3
Muskegon 9 Fort Wayn e 2
Sunday's Result s
Columbu s S Dayton 0
De s Moines 5 Sagmaw 3
Flint 7 Por t Hurton 2
Toledo 5 Klamazoo 4
Mu sk e gon 7 F t Wayne 5
Today ' s Game
D es Moines at Columbu s.

PHILS SUFFER BLOW
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla.
1UP!) - The Philadelphia
Phillies suffered a blow to 1lleir
peMant hopes when relief
pitcher Tug McGraw was sent
back to Philadelphia Sunday
for fur1ller examination of
back and chest pains which
hampered his performance as
a New York Met last season.
Club officials said the southpaw McGraw is likely to undergo surgery and will
probably miss 1lle first month
of t,he season.
INTO HOSPITAL
The Pomeroy unit of
SEOEMS transP&lt;Jrted Thomas
Clark, Syracuse, to the Holzer
Medical Center at 6:15 a. m .
Monday.

:;:,:;:;:;:,:: :;:·::::

COLUMBUS I UP I) - Sections of state railroa d track
prOP&lt;JSed for abaMonmen t by
the federal gove rrm1ent should
be held available st nce they
provtde links to Ohio ma l
fi elds, the Publi c Utili ti es
Commission of Ohio urged
Monday.
The proposed abandonments
are part of the United Sillies
R ai lw ay Assoc ia t io n 's
"PrelimiiUi ry System Pia~."
"Some of the railroad track
in qu estiO n pro\'ides direct
ltnks to coal fie lds in Ohto,"
PUCO Conumssioner Dav id C.
Sweet said 1n a statement
"While 1llese fields are not
produ cmg coal at the present
time, the coal is of lugh energy
content and could be used in
the ruture as environm ental
techn ology comes into wtder
application. " ·
Th e tra ck involved includes
$eel ions from Corning (Perry
County) to Hobson (Meigs
County) ; Piney Fork (Jef.

Can

Fill
Any of

Your
Carpet

..

... ~t '?t'~~d~~Jl{j
Come to the Carpet Department on the 3rd floor .
We have several hundred samples· of carpet to
g•ve you the color, fibre and style of carpet for
every room in your home. office, church or
school .

We will come to your home at your convenience,
measure and give you a completely installed
price. All carpet installed by our own carpet
·
mechanics with years of experience.

SHOP FRIDAYS AND SATURDAYS
'
- 9:30 TO 8 PM

·ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY
.,

•

discussiott contmucs as to the
P&lt;Jsstbilily of loca ting eoal
gasification plants within
Ohio," Sweet sa id. " It would
seem ridiculous to abandon
th ese rails now. only to ha ve to
rebuild them at some future
da te whtm coal IS aga in being
produced from these fields."
"These secti ons of track
Th e PUCO suggested the rail
offer acccss lbtli ty to Oh io C\l rridors be kept available
a reas or sig nif ica nt eoa l through a process known us
resC'ncs, wh ic h might be "rail banking ." Rail banking
utlli tzed in the fut ure as In VOl VeS pn~&lt;:.PI'\':l lj ron nf ~~ r• 1iJ

VOL. XXVI

1

NO. 236

right-{)f-way not currently in
so the ra il service l'an be
IWallable when needed.
lJ.';C

Sweet urged rail se rvtce be

tnaintained to three coa l-rired
generating plants
located on hn es considered
l."xccss by the associa tiO n. The
pla nts arc lol'ated at St. Mu rys
lfl Auglaize County, Yellow
Springs 1n Greene County nnd
DHy ton in Montgomery
Count y.
stea m

G-T business office closed
The closmg of the Pomeroy
business o£f1cc, effective w1 th
the d ose of business Thursday,
Mm·ch 27, is being announ ced
by Ge nera l Telephone Co. of
Oht o
Donald H. Pearch, J r ..
Pome r oy l' us tomer se r vice
s up er visor , said spLra lm g
inflat mg cost.s and the ge neral
economic c1unale rn.akP the

continued opera ti on of th e
office unpracllcal.
Pea rc h explaHJ ed that
customers in the Pomeroy,
Rac ine. Rutland, Lel&lt;\rt F"lls
and Por tland exehan ges can
make payments by usmg the
envel opes enclosed wtth each
bill. Payment m person can be
made at the Dutton Drug Store
in Mtddle port , th e Rac in e

Home-Nut10nal Bank or the
Rutland Departmen t Stort'.
Cus tomers &lt;:an continue to
contac l the business office by
dialing 418 Wid the repatr
department by diali ng 414.
The customer se rvt ce
supervisor and the installalion
and mamtena ncc force w1ll
remam in Pomeroy

•

FLAG PRESENTED - Oh io Ron James, 92nd District, of Proctorville, left, Monday night
presented an Ohio flag whi ch flew over the capitol building m Colwnbus on Ma rch 12 to tlw
Gallia-Mcigs Chapter of the Order of De Malay in Middlepm·t. In a short ta lk, Rep. Jam es
commended UJC chapter on il5 "servtce to U1e people", relating h1s remarks to ~real people m
Ohio's history With Rep. James, from the left , are Mike Hendrickso n, junior councilor: Seott
Reuter, sc~ior cow1cilor , a nd Bert Moshier, master cotmcilor. The present ation was &lt;~ rra nged
by Bill Qutckle, a past master counci lor

•

at

Rain likely tonight, endtng
Wednesday. Lows tonigh t in
the low 40s. Highs in lhe mid
50s. Probability of rain 50 per
cent this afternoon, 90 per cent
tonight and 50 per cent Wed·
nesday.

Now You Know

enttne

Natural ice was first transported commercially in the
United Sta tes m 1799, when ice
blocks were shipped from New
York City lo Charleston, S. C.

Devoted To Tire lntereMs OJ' Th(' Meigs-Mu.~un Art•u

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

By United Press International

COLUMBUS - DEMOCRATIC LEGISLATORS are
prepared to proceed with their own economic recovery programs
and leave Gov. James A. Rhodes' plans on 1lle back burners for
awhile. As the lawmakers reconvened this week, legislation
suspending the state sales tax on new motor vehtcles for three
months was beaded for a Senate floor vote, perahaps as early as
this afternoon.
Democrats hope 1lle bill, au1llored by Sen. Robert D.
Freeman, [).(:anton, will spur car sales and help employment tn
the auto industry . It is estimated to cost 1lle state in excess of $211
nilllion in lost revenues. Senate Majority Whip Harry Me she!, D·
Youngstown, sald the Democrat. would have other proP&lt;Jsals. He
said he doubts the date of the June primary wtll be set back to
acconunodate Rhodes' plans on housing finance and transP&lt;Jrtation.

Election
is close

Needs!

ferson County) to Dillonvale
\ Je fferson
Co un ty );
Crooksv ille 1Perry County l to
Ful to nh am {Mu sking um
County); Mm crva (portions of
Ca rroll , Co hunbta na and Sta rk
cou nt1es l
to
Mar iett a
(Washington County).

Weather

WASlllNGTON - AN AGRICULTURE DEPARTMENT
survey of fanners intentions Monday showed the farmers have
cutback ~n plaryting plans for major 1975 grain crops. The survey
llhOwed O!tlo farmers intend to pl~nt 3,700,000 acres of rorn, down
Bper cent from previous estimates. However, soybean plantings
in the Buckeye state were estimated at 3,250,000 acres, up 1 per
cent.
Despite the cutbacks from estimates shown in a preliminary
Jabuary survey, however, the new report left acreage at levels
which still may be big enough to yield record crops If weather
conditions snap back from last year's sub-normal performance.
The new report, based on surveys made about March I,
showed farmers intend to reduce rorn planting to 75.3 million
acres, down 3 per cent from last year. In the January survey,
growers had indicated plans for a cut of 0.4 per cent.
WASH!NGTON - PRESIDENT FORD SAYS Asian allies
are rt&gt;&lt;!xamining their relationship with the United Sl&lt;\tes
because of Congress' reluctance to provide $222 million in
emergency military aid to Cambodia. Ford told a news conference in South Bend, Ind., he does not condone "sloppy bookkeeping in the Department of Defense" that resulted in $21.5
Continued on page 8

ELBERFELD$ IN· POMEROY

MAIN STORE, ANNEX AND WAREHOUSE OPEN WEEKDAYS 9:30' TO 5

Baker.Furniture

ga
236
208
235
257
292
2 16

45
41
42
34

appliances at t/Je lowest possible

t.erms, service whm you need it.

305
272
280
245
38 191
25 145

Mu skegon
F lint
Sag 1naw
Port Huron
K al amazoo
x Lan si ng

;.;:;:;:;:;.::·:·:·:·:·:· .

PLACE CHANGED
Due to a previous com.
mltment of the electric
company meeting room the
meeting with Mr. Ron .
Nathan, concerning the
abandonment of the Penn
Central lines In 1llls area,
'will be held In the MlddleP&lt;Jrt
VIllage Council Chambers
over the VIllage Hall at 10
a.m. Wednesday.
will
be
Testimony
welcomed from all sources,
especially business people
who will be affected by the
loss of a $2 million payroll In
this area If the lines are
abandoned.
Persons unable to attend
Wednesday's session or the
Akron hearing may offer
Input by mailing six copies of
their testimony, on 8\, by 11
paper, to:
Interstate
Commerce Commission,
1900 L St., Washlngton. D. C.
211036.

League Standings
By United Press International

You 'II find a great selection offine
fu miture, floo r coverings and
prices. Free delivery, convenient

,

~~\'S·:·:·::::; . ;.;.;.;.;:;.;. ;.;.;:;:;:;:;.;

International Hockev

.J.

Spring Time

Tracks to coal fields needed

N Y R ange r s 332413 79280237

TUESDAY, MARCH 18, 1975

Hospital to
build office
The Meigs County Board of Meigs County in the event 1lle
Co mmi ss ioners today ap- hospital corporati on should
proved a resolution to ad· ever dissolve.
vertise and sell to Veterans
In other busmess the comMemorial Hospital, Inc ., missioner transferred money
suffi cie nt land adjacent to the already appropriated , $42,500
children's home building to from the general fWld to 1l1e
enabl e the co rporation to landfill accolUil.
cons truct an office building.
Attending were Henry Wells,
Aconveyance of the land will Warden OW's, and Bernard
be necessary in order to enable Gilkey, commissioners, and
the corporation to borrow a Martha Chambers, clerk. Also
porhon of the money necessary meeting wtth the comfor construction.
missioners were Bernard
It was pointed out that the Fultz, prosecuting attorney,
arlicies of incorporation of the and Scott Lucas , hospital
hospttal provide that monies admtnistrator tn regard to the
and properties accwnulated by selling or land adjacent to the
the hospttal shall at any future children's home .
lime become U1e property of

Pleiku given up
SAIGON (UP!) - South
Vietnamese troops and
civilians today abandoned the
Central Highlands- where the
!unerican war in IndoChina
began 14 years ago - in the
worst setback for anti CommWJist forces in Southeast
Asia since the loss of North
Vte tnam.
Trucks,
buses ,
cars,
motorcycles and thousands of

ctvilians on foot fled Pletku
province capital, 230 miles
north of Saigon, in the largest
convoy of the war.
Field report. said the ragtag
convoy stretched 60 miles at
noon today , from Ple1ku to
Cheo Reo provincial c~pital,
halfway to the coastal havens
and 210 miles northeast of
Saigon .
Virtually all 80,000 civilian
residents of Pleiku and Kontum province cap1tals were in
the convoy, the reports said.

I

I

1S CENTS

Chamber urged
• •
to JOin protest
JOY WHITE

Joy White
winsAEP
scholarship
Joy White, a senior at Meigs
High School in Pomeroy, is a
wmner in the 21st annual
American Elec tric Power
System Educational Awards
competition .
She IS the daughl&lt;!r of George
White, unit foreman at Central
Operatmg Company's Phtlip
Sporn Plant. Central Operating
Company is one of th e
operatmg companies of the
AEP System.
The awards are based on
grades, test scores, interviews
and other information and are
administered by the AEP
System Educational Tr us t
Fund. They are generated
from dividends on llEP
common stock anQ other mv,estments and can be used only
for educational purposes. The
Continued on page 8

HE SHUT UP
LOS ANGELES (UP!)
Pohce Chief Ed Davis, barred
by a court order from
discussing a suspect in the ;:::::;:;:;:::::;:;:::::::::;.;:;:;:;::.;·:·:·:=:·:·:·:·::·:·:···:··:;:;:;:·:··
slasher killings, Monday
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
stuffed a green St. Patrtck's
Thursday
through
Wi 111 the filing deadline - 4 Day handkerchief in his mouth.
Saturday, chance or rain
p.m. this Thursday - fast "You know I have difficulty
Thursday,
ending Friday
LOCAL TEMPS
approaching, little interest has saying 'no comment," ' he said ,
and
fair
Saturday.
Highs will
been shown so far by can- "but, no comment." Davts
Temperature in downtown
be In the 50s and lows in the
Pomeroy at II a.m. Tuesday
&lt;lidates seeking village offices earlier Identified the suspect
30s.
was 53 degrees under sunny
in Pomeroy and Middleport. on a television news show.
skies .
With two seats on village
council opening 1llis year, only
one candidate - John Manley,
Republican incumbent, has
filed. His tenn and 1lle tenn of
William Snouffer expire this
year.
The mayor's post In
Pomeroy will be filled 1llis year
and the only candidate to date
is Clarence Andrews, a
Republican. Jane Walter,
Republican incumbent, has
filed for village clerk and E. F .
Robinson , Republican incumbent, for the one seat on
the board of public affairs to be
filled this year.
In Middleport, two seats on
council will be filled this year.
Carl Horky and William
Walters now fill the offices.
The only candidate to file for
one of 1l1e seats to date is
Lowell Price, Republican.
Fred Hoffman, Republican
incumbent mayor serving by
appointment, has filed for
nomination to run for the office
and Gene Grate, Republican
incumbent clerk-treasurer, has
filed for nomination to run
again for his post. There are no
o1ller candidates for the two
offices at this time. Two seats
&lt;11 1l1e board of public affairs in
Middleport will be filled this
year. So far, Utere are no
STEADY PERFORMER - Jean Ritchhart of the
.candidates. ·
outing. Above, she ctrives against Meigs defender sophomore
Sou1llern High champion - and undefeated - girls
The Meigs County Board of
Pam Vaughan, and at right Jean goes high with a shot from
basketball team, had a good night in the fin a I game against
Elections is open frmn I to 4
outside
(See Page 2 for team pictUre ). - PictW'es by Katie
Meigs Monday night. Her great floor game and six point.
p.m. for 1l1e convenience or
Crow.
were a good evening's work for anyone in Southern's &lt;0·22
candidates.
...
. 'I
'·

PHONE 992-2156

Ted Reed, president of the
Pomeroy Chamber of Com·
mer ce, urg ed m(\Jllbers
Monday at their noon luncheon
meeting a t the Meigs Inn to
attend a meeting Wedn~sday to
protest abandonment of the
Penn Central Lines tn this
area .
Charles . Winebrenner, formerly of Middleport now of
Cheshtre , asked full support of
the chamber by attendance at
the mee ting . Winebrenner is
employed on the railroad.
Ron Nathan, public coun·
selor from Washington, will be
in Middl eport a t 10 a .m .
Wednesday. The meeting ' will
be held at Village Hall .
This will be the last public
hearing in this area prior to the
preparation of the final system
of "Conn-Rail. " Reed and Jack
Carsey are to represent the
chamber at the mee ting .
In other busmess, Reed said
bids to repair the PomeroyMason Bndge will be sold tn
• \pril but as to when the buidge
will be closed is not known.
Reed also present&lt;.'&lt;! a letter

to the chamber from James
Schmidt, a semor at University
of Cinctnnati , who asked for
ftnancial assistance to attend
medi cal sc hool with th e
guarantee that whe n he
graduates he would practice in
the area that gives financtal
support. No action was taken.
Carolyn Thomas , secreta ry ,
reported lha t a lounsm
promotion mee ting will be held
at 7:30p.m. Tuesday, March 25
at the Meigs In~ . The meeting
1s open to the public,1especialfy
members of the busin ess
community who would benefit
by tourism promoti on.
Its purpose IS to make public
the Regi onal Co operative
Touri sm Promoti on plan
design ed by the federall ·
fWJded Buckeye Travel-Tour
Project.
Mrs. Thomas also reported
that sponsors are needed for a
bike hike on April 19. Those
m teres ted are to call Hank
Cleland at Chester . Mrs.
Thomas also repor~d that the
chambe r office is seeking
rental hM!tngs. Those who have

proper ty to rent are to call on
Mrs. Thoma s at the office of
the Pomeroy Chamber of
Commerce.
Mrs. Millard Va nMete r
presen ted a ca talog ue on
Christmas decorations for the
chamber to rev iew.
Named as co-c hairmen for
the Big Bend Regatta to be held
on June 20, 21 and 22 were B!ll
Grueser, Earl Ingels, and Jack
Carsey.
Mrs. Thomas announced that
the annual dmner meeti ng of
the Galltpolis Area Chwn ber of
Co mmerce wil l be held
Saturday, March 22 at 6::10
p.m. m the cafet.eria at Rio
Gra nd e Coll ege. Marvin
VanMe ter will at tend Ute
mee tmg.
Attending were Reed, Mt·s.
Th omas , Mr s. Va nM eter ,
Marvin VanMeter, Wendell
Hoover, Bill Grueser , Richard
Chambers , Virgil Teaford ,
Jack Kerr, Earl Ingles, Bob
Jacobs, Jack Carsey, Becky
Mallory, Melissia Corise a nd
Katie Crow .

Parking lot wall bids
will be let on May I
By Katie Cro"
Ma yo r Dale Smith said
Monday night the Army Corps
of En gineers has approved
fundmg for repatr to the upper
parking lot wall and that bids
will be let May I. This and a
vanely of other matters were
discussed and acted on when
Pomeroy council met.
There are approxim a tely
seven parkmg spi:lces facing
the river tha t are closed to
parkmg due to a large fault tn
the parking lot wall.
In other business council
agreed to purchase, follow ing
1lle opening of bids, a tar kettle
and burner and a portable
burner fr om South eastern
Equipment Co. , Gallipolis, at a
cost of $1 ,375. The equipment IS
to be received wtthin 10 days.
They also agreed to have
brakes on the backhoe repaired
by the same company at a cost
of $650.
Coun cil, aft er hearin g a
request from Chief of Police
Jed Webster, agreed to pur·
chase a siren for the police
cruiser from Bobier Electronic
Inc .. Parkersburg, at a cos t of
$190 plus $20 fo r installation.

The s1ren on the cruiser has ~he Village, as agreed, so 1t
been moper able for two months ihay be used at Beech Grove
and cannot be repaired.
cemetery.
Chi ef Webster gav e th e
Ma yor Smith reported that
foll owtng report for February
the owners of the Blue and
45 arrests were made, 19 ac· Grey Res taurant would like
cide nts were in ves ti gated, permtssion to leave a canopy
1,370 parkm g ti ckel• issued, on to the side door going mto the
$2,5r.7 collected fr om parkmg restauran t off Court St. Counctl
lot meters and $2,195.50 from did not feel the can opy adds to
s treet me ters , 1total of the appearance or the town and
$4 ,762.50), drove 4,:130 miles agreed it must come down .
and had th e cruiser serviCe two
Council voted 5 to I to purtimes.
cha se a lot on Ann St. for acIt was brought up that since a cess to the water ta nk that will
new truck has been purchased be loca ted tn tha t area fo r $400
for the water department its plus $300in back taxes. Ca s lin~
old truck is to be turned over to
Continued on page 8

Middleport sets
its Sign Up day

Richard Hovatter annoWJced
today Stgnup Day for the
Middleport Swnmer Baseball
League will be Saturday ,
March 22, between the hours of
9 a .m. and 3 p.m. at the Feeney
Bennet! American Legion Hall.
Ages for pee wee league is 7.
:;:::;.;:;::::=:·:·:::::::::::::.;:;:;:;.;:::;.;:;.;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::;:;:;:
9, li ttle league 1()..12 and pony
YER'ALL WELCOME
league , IJ.I5. Insurance fees
. The public Is invited to
for pee wee and little leagu e
attend the annual Meigs
are $2 and $3 for pony league.
County Spelling Bee to he
At a recent meeting, it was
held at 7:30p.m. this evening
decided to change the name
at the ~afeterlp of Southern
from Boys League to Youth
High School, Racine. Sixteen
League to allow girls to play in
finalists from the county's
Pee Wee and Little Leagues.
elementary and junior high
Officers elec ted were
schools will he rompetlng for
Rtcbard Hovatter, 'presidenl ;
the county championship.
Milford Hysell, vice p_resident;
.::::::::::.;:::::::::::::::::s;::·:::::::::::::::::::.:::::::·:-:':': :.::::::: Allen King, seljl'etary and
I

publici ty, and Gat! Hova tter,
treasurer.
Coaches for the Pee Wee
League will be Bob Southern
and Mickey Childs . Youth
League coaches will be Ray
Stewart, Charl es Scott ,
Richard Hovatter and Milford
Hysell. Pony teague coaches
will be Dave Dodson and Jerry
Davenport.
All boys and gtrls interested
·are w·ged lo sign up Saturday.
Those who will be playing pony
league are to take their birth
certificales to the sign up.
A public meeting for the
Youth League. wiU be held at
7:30p.m. Saturday , March 29,
Iat the Miqqleport Fire u ouse.
'

'

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