<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="15373" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://host69-005.meigs.lib.oh.us/items/show/15373?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-14T03:42:17+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="48495">
      <src>http://host69-005.meigs.lib.oh.us/files/original/99ebc86ced876a5bd4eeb7f5e5430be2.pdf</src>
      <authentication>00cd99b3ea9e8ea7a2d5bf320361c488</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="49327">
                  <text>••

•'
•
•'
•

•'

RIO GRANDE - Governor
James A. Rhodes has proposed
thai Rio Grande Commwri ly
College receive $2,000,000, to be
used for a technical career
center, in his capital plan for
higher education to benefit
area institutions.
Governor Rhodes' budge t
reco mmendation of $248 .5
million (or capital construction
al Ohio's public colleges and
uni ve rsities wilt ha\'C a
•·tremendous impact on Ohio
co mmunities if enacted."
according to Ohi o Board of
Regents Chancellor James A.
Norton .
''We are very encouraged by
Governor Rhodes' recog nition
of lhe need s of hi gher
education in relaliol\io ca pita l
improvenlenl.8 projec ts," Dr.
Norton sa id . "This kind of
proposal to funn el sizeable
amounts of money int o
renovation and th e co n·
struction or se lec ted new
faci lities will not only benefit
the ins titu tions, but will
stimulate the economiccs of
local commwrilics by pulling
hundreds of people back to
work."
Of the total $248.5 million
capital plan for higher
education, the Governor
proposed lhe $18,350,000 be
directed to projects in the
southeast Ohio area .
Included in lhal sun1 are:
Ohio University, $4,17a,OOO
for utilities and renovution,
Hockin g Conservancy District
assessment and Clipp in ge r
Hall remodeling; Znnesville
Campus, OU, $2,500,001l for
student services • physical
education building; Lancaster
Cam pus, OU , $900,000 for
physical education fucility;
Rio Grande Community
Coll ege, $2.000,000 for technical
career center ; Shawnee State
General and Technical College,
$5,750,000 for technical s tudent se rvi ces building,

MEIGS THEATRE
Tonight &amp; Thursday
March 19-20
NOT OPEN

Friday thr u Tuesday
March 21 -'25
Walt Disn ey's
THE BEARS AND I
(Technicolorl
Show Sta r Is 7:00p .m .

~ducation

physical

and fine

arts building , land purchases

New pump considered

and Massie Hall renovation:
Hoc king Technienl Co llege.
$2 ,900.000 for class room
fa ci lity, and Jefferson Co unty
Techn ica l Institute, $125,1)01),
£or outdoor activities areas.
In a statement prepared for
the press, Chan ce llor Norton
also praised Governor Rhodes'
budget recognition orp~rt-time
stud~n t

needs, the problems of
Ohio Universit y and suppor t

NEW HAVEN , W. Va . - A
larg er pump for the fire
department 's new truc k was
approved, a lease on properly
was discussed, and a building
permit was granted at a
reguiar meeting of New Haven
Council Monday night.
Councilman Charles Roush
asked co uncil if it would
consider pur chasing a 1,000
ga llon pump for the new fire·
truck. The request was made
for $750 to add the pump lo a
truck recentl y purchased for ·
the town by the Mason County
Court. The new pump would

~------

, .

for :Jiedica l schools in the
sl&lt;-~te .

The Chan cell or, howeve r ,
expfessed concern regard ing
what

he

Eyes on
dams at
•
mmes

believes

to

!Je

inadequate provision for the
basic student subsid y and the
failure to provide monies for
any new programs .
He said that although the
Governor's budget does
provide, in the firs t year of the
bienn ium, enough s tudent
sub s id y monies to ac-

enable the truck 1&lt;J pump 1,000
gallons per minute instead of
750.
It was agreed by council to
purchase the new pump,
follo wing a motion by Thomas
Gr instead and a second by
Bernard Lieving.
Hilda Smith, a member of
the library ooard, along with
John Campbell and George
Ingles of the United Methodist
Church in New Haven, visited
council in the interest of a lease
on land the church owns. A
letter from attorneys Mike
Shaw and Ronnie Steen was

to park fund

commodate ant icipated in·

nation without an incrC'ase in
student fees. it does not ca ll fo r
fund s for any civil servife pay
bill the legislature may enact.
The Chancellor noted, also,

are invited

DISTR!Cf RANGER Allan Woller, who was honored
recently as author of Ohio's best outdoor column , " Wayne
National Forest" is shown preparing lo hang the painting
presented to him by the Outdoor Writers of Ohio. The column
appears week ly in the Sunday Times-Sentinel.

that subsidy in the seeond year
does not come up to estimated

inflation rates, and th e con-

Wolter receives Ohio
Outdoor Writers Award

ti nued lack of civi l service pay

inc rooses com pounds ttre
problem for institutions.
The Governor's pr oposed
hmding of the numbers of

students projec ted for enroll·
Al lan Wolter , Ranger of the
ment will fall some $12 million Ir on ton Distri ct of Wayne
short or a continuation budget, National Forest, was honored
Norton said.
by the Outdoor Wrtlers of Ohio
In addition, lite Chancellor as author of the "Best Weekly
expressed disa ppointment in a Colwr.n in Ohio Newspaper"
level of ftmdi ng for the Ohio dlU'ing the 1974 awards banquet
Instructional Grunt Progrmn recen tly in Columbus.
which would allow for no exWolter writes the " Wayne
pansion of grunt eligibility to National Forest." a . colwnn
niw income levels or new lhal appears each week in the
groups of students.
Sunday Times-Sentinel an d
oth er new spape r of the
Distric t. It was the second
consec utive yea r that Wolte r
has received the honor . He was
DONATIONS WANTF.Il
The Racine fire department presented an outdoor painting
is accepting donations from the wi41 an attached insc ription.
public for fi rewor ks for the The painting, of a mallard duck
annual Rac in e Ju ly 4th in fl ig ht, is by intern ationa lly
celebration . The department famous wildlife artist, John A.
would like contributions sent to Ru thven.
Wolter, of 2105 S. Eleventh
Walter Cleland, in car·e of fi re
St.,
Ir onton,
is
secdepartment, Recine,
If donations are not for th- retary of the Southern
coming there will be no Hills Sportsmen Club of
fireworks . Contributions are Ironton and a member of other
due before April 15.
,\ SELWUf
CINCINNATI (U P! ) - Tire
Ci ncinnati Reds announced
Tuesday that their traditional

horne opener is once again a

TONIGHT

sellout.
The Reds sa id thai aU tickets
in the al ,786 seat Riverfront
Stadium for the April 7 game
against the Los Angeles Dodgers have been sold. Standing
room only tickets are now on
sule for $3 apiece .

Enjoy the Distinctive Style of the

Frank Sisty

outdoor sporting organiza tions.
Other writers honored at the
35th Annual Meeting of the
Outdo or Writers of Ohio,
con duc ted at Sto uffer's
Un iversi ty Inn, were: "Dave
Bow ring of Dayton Daily
News, Best Daily Column ;
Robert W. Cha rlton, Hwr ting
SOLIDARITY of the oil·
Dog
Magazine,
Best producing cowttries is pledged
Magazine Feature ; Par ker by Algerian Foreign Minister
BalU'er for film strip "Utile Abdelaziz Boutcflika. He has
Big Mouth," Excellence in vnwed OPEC members would
Craft Award; John Andreoni lake drastic action to block U.
for a series on Lake St. Mary's S. efforts to divide them and
in the St. Mary's Evening driv e down the price of oil.
Leader. General Award; Jim
News
Daube! , Fremont
Messenger. Best Black and
While Photo; George Quigley,
Cincinnati, in Hunting Dog
MAY fRAVEL
Magazine, Best Color Photo.
HARTFORD, Conn .(UPI )Six members of the Yankee
Conference may travel abroad
in Jillle in an experlment to
!'IRE PUT OUT
interest Europeans in football ,
The Racine fire departmen t it was announced Tuesday by
was called Tuesday at 1:45 Dallas promoter Robert Kapp.
p.m. lo the home of Rov Kapp, commissioner of the
VanMeter, Rl. 1, Ra cine, International Leag ue, said an
where a nue was on fire. There agreement may be reached in
were no dam ages to the house the near future but that the
or its contents. Ten men an- proposal was clU'renlly only in
swered the call.
the [&lt;jilting stage.

read and the final decision of
the lease was tabled until the
next meeting.
Tom Armentrout of the
Prime .l)uilders Co. appeared

to answer questions concerning
the construction of the multi·
family development now under
way. He was also granted· a
building permit. Mayor Smith
announced all dogs must be
tied up or they will be picked up
by the city.

10 tapped

Griffin and David Durst are the "kids who save the l&lt;Jwn" of
Dead Dog cf'ulch. Standing are, Ito r, Lori Longenelte, Conni
Stout and Beth Ritchie.

In order to improve services
and equipment al the Mid·
dleport Communi ty Park this
summer more extensive, a
drive for public contributions
has begwr.
Containers have been placed
in several business houses to
collect fwrds to help with the
swnmer activities and con·
tributions also will be accepted
at the office of Mayor Fred
Hoffman. Councilman James
Brewer said already several
donations have been received.

TWO RUNS MADE
The Middleport emergency
squad took Janel Romine ,
Middleport, to Pleasant Valley
Hospital at 6:24p .m. Tuesday.
At 9 p.m. , the squad took
Charles Frazier, Hobson, a
medical patient, to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.

FOOT INJURED
The Pomeroy emergency
squad answered a call lo
LalU'el St. at 2:25p.m. Tuesday
for Ronnie Casto who had a foot
injury who was taken lo
Veterans Memorial Hospital.

MASON, W. Va . - Six
seniors and four juniors were
tapped in recognition for
achieving scholastic honors lo
join the National Honor Society
during a special assembly at
Wahama High School Tuesday.
Mrs. Mary Gapeharl, guidance
counselor, is advisor of th
group .
In an impressive candlelight
ceremony the six seniors
lapped were Martha Jones,
Brenda Campbell, Carolyn
Roush, Guyla Roush, Danny
Harmon and Charlotte Ed·
wards. Juniors achieveing this
same honor were, Carlette
Gibbs, Dan Stodola, Cheryl
Huber and Minda Raynes.

News.

Organ, Drums, Guitar
NITELY

i
~

8:30- 1:00

~Home,
r issued \ \ ~-_;~!~

in Briefs
"

TAKING ROLES IN "The Saga of Dead Dog Gulch" are
seated, Tony Kennedy; standing, I to r, Dean Hawk, Joey
Sayre and Kenny Chapman.

SAIGON - GOVERNMJ:;NT AUT,HORITIES urged the
300,000residents of Hue to flee the former imperial capital and it
appeared todlly !he city 400 miles northeast of Saigon would fall
soon to two North Vietnamese divisions poised for imminent
attack. Field reports said residents of the city streamed southward today along the French-built Highway l&lt;Jward Da Nang, 50
miles to the south. The new exodus came as lens of thousands of
refugees were pouring out of the abandoned Central Highlands
l&lt;Jward government-held coastal ·areas.
President Nguyen Van Thieu already had stripped Da Nang
of a division of paratroopers and ordered them flown to Saigon to
oolster the defenses of the capital. (l()vernment sources said he
had done so also in case dissident generals opposed to abandonment of the Central Highlands took matters into their own bands.

Operetta time
at Meigs school
By ilob Hoeflich
TUPPERS OLAINS
There's excitement in the air al
the Tuppers Plains Elemen·
tary School, and small wonder .
After all, it's operetta time.
For weeks, everyone - in·
'eluding faculty, students and
mothers of students - has been
busy getting it all together.
Mrs. Maxine Whitehead is
directing the presentation with
staff members lending a hand
hither and yon . The mothers
have created unique costumes
and students have ·rehearsed,

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

Berry's World

THE
MEIGS
INN
PH. 992-3629

POME~OY

SIMON'S

pv;. ews""'"""""'•• zn. Brzefi
. .", . .

If You BuyNow!

By United Press International

JERUSALEM - THE ISRAELI CABINET met unex·
pectedly today for the third time in 24 hours to consider proposals
to keep alive Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger's
negotiations for a new agreement between Israel and Egypt.
Kissinger twice postponed his departure for his fourth shuttle lo
Aswan, Egypt, to see President Anwar Sadat and wailed to hear
the resulta of the new cabinet meeting.
The t:abinet met after Kissinger spent most of the morning
conferring with Priine Minister Yitzhak Rabin and the Israeli
·negotiators on the results of a previous marathon cabinet session
that ended at 2 a. m. in the morning. Kissinger called the three·
oour morning session with the Israeli ministers "good, friendly

MARKET

and constructive."

"I do feel that each side is making a very serious effort to try to
take inl&lt;J account the considerations of ,!he other and this is
certainly true of the Israeli side," he said' upon emerging from
Ute meeting.

115 MAIN ST. , POMEROY
«) 1 97~ Cy NO. Inc

MON.-THURS. 9 to 7,FRI. 9 to 8 PM, SAT. 9 to 8:30 ..
FIRST CUT

PORK
lb.

GROUND
HAMBURGER

2 lbs.

sgc
ggc

"My wife is in to terrariums! "

GROUND

QfUCK

lb .

ggc

Head Cheese, Fresh Chicken Liver, Fresh Chicken Giuard Pork &amp;
Beef Liver, Beef To'!.gues, Sait Fish. Oysters, Salt Side Baco~, Fresh
Stde Bacon, Pork 'Spare Ribs, Pork Neck Bones, Jowl Bacon , Trail
a&lt;Jlogna .

---,--=-

......~p(]cia/"'-- ..~---5::p(]cial
COUPON
Folgers
•
R. C. COLA 1 2% MILK
INSTANT OOFFEE
.

$}79

8-16 oz. bottles

$}_09

Reg.
51.59

With C:oupon
Fri.-Sat. Only
Simon's '

With Coupon

F~i .. Sat. Only

Simon 's

•

\

I BROUGHlON'S

I
I

Regular 569 UPRIGHT CLEANER With
Regular 51995 CLEANING TOOLS....... .
$.

Spring Time
You '/lftnd a great selection ofjine
jitmiture. jloor coverings and
appliances at the lou ·est· possible
prices. Free de/ive t)', conl'enient

· Serving )'Oil bas bee11 ottr b11sinen
L

since 1952.

M ithllefJtirt, Ohio
,I

disPosable

CLEANS
SHAGS

·-"-

.. WA'f DIAL-4-IV&gt;P"

-·"""""'""
.... .........
.-.~~;

.-

Baker .Furniture
Fri.-Sat. Only
Simon's

"""'

tenns, seruice ll'lien you need it.

Gal.

I·

SAIGON - THE &amp;JUTH VIETNAMESE GOVERNMENT
abandoned Hue today, giving up one of the bloodiest American
battlefields of tbe war in a mass retreat that sent a million
refugees fleeing cities and towns across the coonlry. The
dramatic pullout from historic Hue, the third largest city in
South Vietnam, left seven of the nation's 44 provinces in Com·
munlst hands and dealt a devastating blow l&lt;J the prestige of the
Saigon government.
North VIetnamese and Viet Cong troops have seized six of
South Vietnam's provinces during thetr three-week-old
'nationWide offensive, taking over an addltional15 per cent of the
country's territory.
The Saigoo government, which now controls only 50 per cent
of the country's terri wry, tried to maintain a surface calm in the
face of the most stunning setbacks since the Communists took
over North Vietnam in 1954. The loss of Hue, a former. imperial
caPital considered the soul of South Vietnam, came as govern·
ment forces ·abandoned QUang Tri and Thua Thien, the two
northernmost provinces, and Binh Long, a province near Saigon.

95

FRESH FISH. • •
PERCH, TROUT, BLACK BASS

ONION SETS- SEED POTATOES· GARDEN SEEDS

10 OZ. JAR

and rehearsed , and.rehearsed.
Al long last, it's, all ready.
Students will present two
operettas, "The Saga of Dead
Dog Gulch" and "The Farmer
in the Dell" at 8 p.m. Friday.
The accompanying photos
show some of the unusual
costuming that has been
created and some of the
leading players .
So, come Friday night, it
won't be "Broadway" in
Tuppers Plains - but it will be
~&lt;show biz" . See more pictures
on Page 2.

"

Housewares Dept., Main Fl_oor

~

---

dust-biG made
hn Sill c::1o1. ln.
eap1i:ltr

ll l llt Clto

1 • • , . , •• •

lllolr•l! I ·
t • •' • o I

~· ­

.... Clo-!

Main Store, An nell a~d Warehouse Open Thursday 9: Jo'to 5 p.m.

ELDS IN POMERoy ·

•'

OONSUMERS ARE MORE OPTIMISTIC ABOUT the future
of the economy than at anytime in the past 10 months, but they
are atlll holding tlchtly to their pocketbooks, according to a
survey. The ~erence Board, a private researcli organization,
said'COilSIIJllel' confidence, though still low, rose in January and
Felruary for the lint time since Ialii SJI'ing.
"ll'snot as if (JIIIIIe are dancing in the streets," said. Fabian
Unden, coosumer rn · ch director. "They are just a little less
bleak In appra~ !be future than they were. a few months ago.
But a separate tlllnlllY ~y Flnl National City !lank of New York
showed that 43 per cent. of 1,414 persons who responded were
worried aboot losing their jobs. ',t'hose most concerned (53 per
(Continued on page 6)

THIIR SDAY. MARCH 20, 1975

POM EROY·M IDDLEPORT, OH 10

VOL. XXVI NO. 238

WOULD ENIJIT
J1unes A. Smith and Hazel
Maxine Smith, Tuppers Plains.
have asked for dissolution of
marriage.

TO ENTERTAIN YOU AT

enttne

Devoted To The Interests of The Meigs-Mason. Area

ContinuO!l from page 1
previous week. The weekly average in March 1974 was 106,25l.
Newly unemployed claimants totaled 26,488 for the week of
March 15 compared to 34,560 the previous week , while the March,
1974 average was 13,381, the Bureau said.

LOCAL TEMPS
The
tem pera tures
in
downtown Pomeroy at 11 a.m.
Wednesday was 51 degrees
under cloudy skies.

•

a1

~

TRIO

and Sarah Goebel. Sealed are the cowboys, Charles Massar,
left, and Larry Harris.

•

HEADS OHIO PATROLLt.
Col.
Frank
R.
Blackstone, the second
highest ranking officer with
the Ohio Highway Patrol,_
has been promoted to colonel
and superintendent of the
Ohio State Highway Patrol.
Blackstone replaced Col.
Robert M. Chiaramonte who
retired last week. A 29-year
veteran of the highway
patrol, Col. Blackstone has
been assigned to the ,
Columbus General t
Headquarters since 1949.

• •

THE VARIETY OF CUSTVMES in lite Tuppers Plains operetta is reflected here. I' rom the
left are front, Gregory Collins, commentator; Troy Guthrie, Ute egg; Jeff Wyers, the rooster;
Paula Freckcr, Lillie Bo Peep, and Tracie Sc hul, as "Puff. the breeze ". The back row, from
the left, is Paul Collins and Chris Conner as the crows with Todd Clemson, center, as the
sca recrow . Jirruny Caldwell, on the floor , is the worm.

THE "SWEET YOUNG THINGS" of "The Saga of Dead
Dog Gulch" are played by I!&lt;J r, Patty Edwards, Dee Durst

SEATED, L TO R, Mark Rice, Pam M~phy, Susan

into NHS

Contributions

WASIDNGTON (UP!)- The
United Mine Workers leader·
ship, concerned about heavy
rains in the Appalachian coal
fields, alerted miners to keep
an eye on swollen impound·
ments that might burst.
" Three years after the
disastrous Buffalo Creek Oood
we cannot and will not sll back
and wait for another needless
tragedy l&lt;J occur," lftlld UMW
Vlce President Mike Troovich.
"Potentially dangerous lrripoundments are scattered all
acr.oss Appalachia, '' he siid.
About 120 persons dled in
Logan County, W.Va ., when a
dam composed of coal slag and
waste burst and released Its
Impounded water.
Trbovich said miners or
(Continoe&lt;l on page 6)

auto smashed by crane

~~

A charter has been issued to
the Meigs County Association
for Retarded Children and
Adults, to operate as a nonprofit corporation . .
The corporation is locating
its principal office in Pomeroy.
According lo the articles of
incorporation filed in the office
of Secretary of State Ted W.
Brown, the corporation was
formed, " To promote the
general welfare of the mentally
retarded whatever they may
be; to foster the development
of programs in their behalf; to
encolU'age research related to
mental retardation; to advise
and aid parents in the solution
of their problems; to coor·
dinate their -efforts and ac·
tivilies, and l&lt;J develop better
understanding of the problems
of mental retardation by the
public."
Rea Roush, Jessie Might,
Phyllis Skinner and Mary
Skinner will serve the corporation as incorporators.
Fred W. Crow, III, has been
appointed lo act as stalutory
agent.

PRIC.F. 15'

,.

~-·~- '

.

'

...... ~
'

..

-~-

a

PROGRAM SET
A program, ~~Growing with
Music" will be presented al the
Middleport Elementary School
at 9 a.m. Friday under the
direction of Mrs. Gladys Foley.
Taking part will be grades one
through four and the choir. All
parents are invited.

A reminder was Issued
today that auditions for
Gallla Country will be held
Saturday and -Sunday
begianing at2 p.m. each day
at the Community Hall in Rio
Grande.
This
year's
production of Gallla Country
has been set for · the
weekends of July 11, 18, and
25.

Weather
,

Partly ·cloudy tonight an~
Friday, lows tonight in the
lower 40s. Highs Frlday_,in the
lower 60s. Porbability of
precipitation near zero today ,
10 per cent tonight and Friday.

CONCLAVE SET .
The Ohio Valley Commandery No. 24, Knights
Templar, will hold a special
conclave Saturday ·beginning
at 3:30 p. m. at the Pomeroy
Masonic Temple. Dinner will
be served at 6 p. m: Knights
and widows are invf ted . A full
form opening will be at 7:30 p.
m . Sir Knight William J . Faul,
grand treasurer, will be the
inspecting offieer.
TO HOSPITAL
· RACINE - The Racine ER
Squad was called at ap·
proximately 9:45 a .m . . today
for John Sellers, ,portland, a
medical patient, who was
'taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.

the Houck home on 12 Hillcrest Drive Wednesday afternoon.
, Making out the police report on right is Patrolman Jerry
Taylor.

INSPECf DAMAGE - Bill Houck and daughter, Lisa,
inspect damage caused by a heavy crane which rammed into

Fire academy
wants to serve
John
B.
Moullelle,
superintendent of the Ohio Fire
Academy, Columbus, spoke lo
65 members of the Area
Volunteer Fire and Emergency
Association Wednesday night
at the Pomeroy Fire Station.
Dr. Moullelle outlined the
purpose of the academy and
showed drawings of its design.
Dr. Moullette said lhal il is a
primary concern that the
academy- will initially and
continuously identify, meet
and serve the education and
training needs of Ohio's
volunteer firefighters.
Presently, he said, 14 ad·
visory committees are func·
tioning to settle on required
education and training needs
for all Ohio's firefighters.
"But, are we absolutely certain
that this will be the case, and
that the volwrteer firefighter
will be adequately .represented
in the Ohio Fire Academy's
l&lt;Jlal education, training and
research efforts," Or. Moulette
asked.
He said he wan Is to hear
from all firemen of their doubts
about the academy's ability to
have an impact on the Ohio
volunteer firefighter.
"We stand o~ the threshhold
of opportunity for ·serving the
Ohio volunteer firefighter. We
must not allow an opportunity
l&lt;J pass wherein we can be
instrumental in providing a
service to the volunteer
firefighter who provides a
much needed and valuable
service to Ohio communities,"
Or. Mouletle sald.
Charles Legar and Bob Byer,
Pomeroy and Middleport fire

chiefs respectively , represent
this . area on one of the
academy 's advisory committees.
Four guests al the meeti ng
were Dale Taylor, Marietta ,
deputy fire marshal of this
area; Charles Williams, Oak
Grove, T and I instructor, and
Bud Harris and Bill Kidd, of
Lower Salem.
Ten
fir e departmen ts
represented reported 37 rwrs
made during February with
!,los miles traveled. Six
squads represented reported
224 runs with 4,306 miles
driven.
Joe Struble, secretary of the
Hocking Valley Regional F/'re
School, outlined the school to
be held in Nelsonville in September.
According to the reports the
following runs were made by
lhe departments represented
last month : Chesler, three fire
runs; Gallipolis, 11 fire rwrs
and 96 emergency runs by the
voluriteer unit; Mason, one fire
run and 29 squad runs; Mid·
dlep_ort, nine fire runs and 28
squad runs; Orange, two fire
runs; Pomeroy, seven fire runs
and 44 squad runs; Racine, two
fire runs and 22 squad runs;
Rutland, one fire run;
Syracuse , one fire run and five
squad runs .
The next regular meeting of
the association will be in
Racine on April 16.

Americans' sense of destiny
weakened in last 12 years
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) - Harlan Cleveland, for·
mer U.S. Ambassador lo NAfO, said here today tb.at the
:~: American "sense of destiny" has been greatly weakened

::~~;::£~~. ::.·::sp::.:n:::u:::::: ::

t::u:::
Program in btternalional Affalrs al Princeton, made the
" statement in remarks prepared fur delivery ot winter
~: ~: ;~: mmmcncement exercises at Ohio State University.
Cleveland said a sense of desllny - shared feeling
···· that we knew where America was going and what it was
supposed to mean to a watching world -held this nation
together lor 187 years.
"But beginning a dozen years ago a succession of
traumatic experiences, seeming denials of what
Americans thought they meant to do and be, have greatly
weakened this sense of destiny," Cleveland said.
"Three political assasslnallons, our first unwinnable
war, an unprecedented White House scandal, the quite
sudden sense of being unsafe on familiar city streets, the
collapse of the dollar as the world's tey currency, the
visible damage of industrial growth to the environment,
;:;: the new fusion of recession and inflation, sudden shorp
:.:,:.:,l.',!

;

\:.:\·..
,\:.:j'·:

::::

~.;

'.1!.'.

,,
:·:·

~:. ,l ,l;

,,.

~~

~~~~~!!o::
~~;i!~,s~~s~~~~;~aeh by Itself might have ;:.;~ [_:.
"Coming together, they produced something like a :.

certainty," said Cleveland, "that the stre~gth and reach
:;:; of America power, far from spreading our traditional ~
values,overseas, dld not even ensure their protection at ~j~
:;:;: home.
~:·
:::::::;:;:;::;o;::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::;:;:;:;.:-:=:i:~:~=~=~=~::::::::::::::~:::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;~:;:;:;:;:f.:;

;f

Cost sharing is offered

DEER KILLED
A doe deer was killed
Wednesday at 5 p.m. on county
road 31 in Lebanon Twp . when
it ran inl&lt;J the path of a car
'ilriven by Bruce· L. Fleming,
· . Rl. I, Long Bottom, the Meigs
County
Sheriff 's
Dept.
LAST SIGNUP
reported. There was minor
The last day for signup for property damage.
the Little League, Pee Wee
League and Pony League of the
LOCAL TEMPS
Pomeroy Boys' League will be
Temperature
in downtown
held at Pomeroy village Hall
"beginning at 1 p.m. Sunday. Pomeroy Thursday al 11 a. m. ·
Boys should have a birth was 49 degrees under partly
cloudy skies.
certificate with them.

The Meigs County ASCS
office in the Farmers Bank
Bldg. has been given authority
to accept requests fo r cost·
sharin g for the follow in g
practices under the 197a ACP·
REAP program :
RE·l establishing permanent
vegetative cover, RE-3
planting trees, RE-6 stri p
cropping , RE-12 sediment
chemical or water runoff
control and RE-13, windbreaks
or shelter bells.
farmers interested should
contact the ASCS office. In
EXTENDED FORECAST
Saturday jhrough Monday,
a chance of showers over the
weekend. Highs In the 60s
Saturday and lowering to the
50s by Monday'- Lows will be
In the mid 30s to the mid 40s.

order to be eligible for cos t
sharing, an application must
be filed before practice Is
started. Signup at this lime will
be limited lo those that will be
started with 60 days. Details
for practices to be performed
later in the year will be an·
nounced later . A current soil
sample will be required for the
RE·l practice.
UNIT CALLED
RACINE - The Racine ER
squad was called Wednesday
at 3 p. m. for Mae Mallory,
Rac in e, who suffered a
possible heart attack. She w~s
ta ken to Holzer Medical'
Center.
FROM HOLZER
. The Pomeroy unit of the
SEOEMS transported Maude
Young fr om !he Holzer Medical
Center to her home in Tuppers
Plains Wednesday.

~~.

I

I---- ..

Extensive damage
resulted Wednesday when the
boom on a crane owned by the
Alan Stone Company of
Chesterhlll, Ohio crashed into
the garage and family room of
Billy Houck's home at 12
Hillcrest Dr., Galllpolls.
Luckily, no one was injured,
but Houck and his daughter,
Usa, had just come out of their
home to watch the crane which
was "backing" down a steep
incline in the road to the
residence of Mr. and Mrs.
Louis R. Ford, 6 Hillcrest Dr.
The accident occurred at
3:20p. m.
According to Russell D. Abel,
44, Rt. I, StockJ)ort, Ohio, the
crane's operator, In order l&lt;J ·
back up, he .r eleased the
digging dogs . (bral(es) and
started to free the wheel. He
put the brakes on again, but
they failed to hold.
The boom came down on a
1974 Volkeswagen owned by
Lisa Houck Pemberton of
Campbellsville, Ky ., parked in
the driveway at her father's
home, and barely missed Mr.
Houck's car.
Houck, staff manager of
National Ufe and Accident
Insurance Co. and his daughter
had been in Ute house painting.
Mr. Houck was recently
transferred to Maysville, Ky.,
and was painting his home
leading l&lt;J renting or selllng it.
There was extensive damage
l&lt;J the garage and family room.
Houck reported that some
gasoline, sitting in the garage,
was overlurned, but did not
ignite.
An insurance adjuster for the
construction firm, was l&lt;J be in
Gallipolis today to Inspect the
damage and check the crane l&lt;J
detennine why the brakes
failed.
The Alan Slone Company is
the general contracl&lt;Jr for tbe
conslrucllon of the Chillicothe
St. bridge.
ll had been employed by
Gallipolis City Commissioners
at a cost of $40 per hour to
maintain road repair and drive
piling for the hillside slippage
problem near the residence of
Mr. Houck and Bill Frazee .
ll was reported that several
trees in the yard at Houck's
residence probably kept the
huge crane from tumbling over
the hillside onl&lt;J the homes
below on Hedgewood Dr.
The area has been a ~jor
problem to city officials and
residents there since heavy
·rains in February caused the
hillside to slip.

TWO HELPED
The Middleport E·R squad
picked up Frank Potts,
Syracuse, from the office of Dr.
John Ridgway al 10:29 a.m .
Wednesday and transported
him l&lt;J Veterans Memorial
Hospital. At 12:24 p.m. Helena
Nelson was taken from her
Leading Creek Road home to
Ve,lerans Memorial Hospital.
WATER OFF
Water service will be turned
off in Pomeroy at 10 a.m.
Friday from Spring Ave. to
· Midwest Steel. The water is not
expected to be off for any ·
extended period.
•

,.

..
'

h'
'

li
I'

!

�I· I
'

'
t

3- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ,, Thursday, March 20.1975

1·-o

'

A,BA Standing s
B y Un1fed Preu Inte rnational
Ea st

w . I.

N ew Yo r k.
K en tuc ky
Sl LOU IS
M em p his
V ir g in i a

54
49
27
23
14
W e st

w

x Denver

pet. g.b.

2'2 71 1
75 662 4
49 . 355 27
51 . 311 30
60 189 39
1.

pet . g .b .

18 763
Sa n An ton io
3 I 594' 13
lnd •ana
33 S4B W 1
Ulah
n 4 \ J46 24
San 0 1eg o '
31 4A 4 13 26 11
K· CIInched diVISIOn ti t le
Wednesday 's R es ults
N ew Y or k 119 1nd1ana 110
V1 r gi n1a 108 De n \le r 12A
Ut ah 100 K en t u ck y '92
San A nton •o 128 St L o uis 11 5
M em ph iS 1'2 1 Sa n 01ego 108
Thursday ' s Games
( No g ames sc h edul ed \
58
45
40

NB A Standmg s
By Un1ted Press l n l er nat1onal
Eas l ern Conferenc e
Atlantic DIVISIOn
w . I pet g b
Bo ston
s 1 21 708 Buffal o
43 29 59?
8
New Yor k
36 37 493 1511
Ph il ad el phia
33 41 4-1 6 19
Centra l DIVI SIOn

w . 1. pel

w

1.

NY Ran ge r s 34 24 13 8 1 '2 83 237
N Y I Si an dersJO 24 1B 78 'Jl7 197
Atla n ta
'2 9 29 13 71 '207 211
DIVI SIOn 2

w

1.

76 240 228

5 1 LOUIS
30 28 13
Ch1c ag o
JJ 31 7
M mn eso ta
20 44 6
Ka n sa s C1 l y \4 J B 10
DI VISIOn 3
w 1 t
M o n trea l
43 11 17

73 23 9 239
73 23 6 213
46 201 )10
38 167 29 8

Los A n ge les 37 15 19
Pi ttsburgh
33 25 15
D etro•t
20 40 11
Washing ton
6 60 5
Division 4

ga
IOJ 33 6 201
93 240
81 301
51 222
17 154

166

263
293
390

gf ga
43 13 15 10 1 317 213

r

lnternilllonal Hockey
League Standmgs
By Un 1f ed Pr ess In te rnat ion al
North
w 1 t pt s gt ga
M usk egon 54 24 3 93 305 '23 6
F IIOt
41 26 5 87 27 3 215
Sag i naw 43 27 3 89 297 '2 43
PI Huron 34 36 3 71 '2 45 257
Ka la m a
17 50 5 39 200 302
x L an s
12 28 I 25 145 21 6
South
w . 1. 1. ots crt qa
z Dayton 43 '2 6 3 89' 278 249'
Co l umbu S 39 30 .d 82 293 258
Tol edo
33 36 4 70 272 260
Des
Moin es
29 38 7 65 24'2 257
F t. w ayne 26 40 6 sa 23 9 297
z d l\li slon w1nn er
x t eam d iSbanded

WHA Sla ndmg s
By Un1td Press lnt er nat•onal
Ea st
w 1. t . pts gf ga
x Nw Englnd 38 25 5 81 239 237
63 197 2'27

H ou ston

30 37 J
27 41 1
17 47 J
West
w I t.
46 23 0

Phoen •x
Mtnn eso ta

35 28 7 77 271 238
36 2q 2 74 269 235

Cleve land
Ch •cag o
tn d•a napol s

San D1ego
Ba lt 1mo r e
Qu eb ec
Tor on to
Edmonton
Va n cou ve r

34 29 3
18 18 3
Canadia n
w 1 t.
42 28 0

55 230 21 6

37 186 282
pts gf ga
92 320 223

71 264 234
39 172 299

pts gf ga
84 294 263

383 1 2 783 12281
3330 3 6924 1 232
33 32 '} 63 223 224

Wmn i peg
32 Jl 4 68 276 24 3
K· DIVISIOII Winner
W ed nes day ' s Re sults
San Diego 6 New England I
Cleveland 5 PhOeniK 4
Houston 6 Ind ianapolis 5
W tnn•peg 8 Vancouver 3
Thur sday's Games
V an couver at Ball 1more
E dmonton at Indianapolis
Chi cago at San Diego
Quebe c a t Houston

HONOLULU (UP!) - NFL
club owners, trying to get more
touchdowns and fewer field
goals, have ditched Ute 50year-eld rule requiring that an
incomplete pass into the end
zone on fourth down moves the
hall back to the !!().yard line.
Under one of eight new rules
c,ha nges announced Wed·
nesday, the ball will be
returned to the line of scrim·
mage.
"The old rule discouraged
passi ng for touchdowns.
Teams took the f1eld goal instead, because 1f they passed
from inside Ule 20 and missed,
they'd lose yardage," NFL
Executive Director Jim Kemil
told a news conference during
the meeting here of owners.
Under the old rule, an incomplete pass 10 the end zone
on four th down from inside the
2().yard line was ruled a touch-hack and went over to Ute
defense at the 20. Now it will go
over to the defense at the line of
scrimmage.
The owners, however, voted
down a proposal that would
have made a pass reception
legal if the receiver had at
least one foot in bounds, as in
college play. NFL rules require
the receiver to complete the
catch with both feet in.
"We feel the tw&lt;&gt;-feet Uting is
peculiar to professional foot·
ball," Kensil said. " It is a
particular talent that goes with
the professiOnal pass recep-

lion." He said the clubs also
retained the present rule for
safety reasons.
"As a player comes to the
sidelines, he has to slow down
m order to execute the
reception with both feet in·
bounds. This minimizes the
chance he'll hit a bench or
stadium wall and be injured,"
Kensil said.
The club owners outlilwed as
"lU1Sporfsmanlike 11 the new
practice of confusing play
stra tegy by sending extra men
into defensive huddles. Minnesota, Kansas City and Oakland tried it late in the 1974
season .
Responding to a request
· from Baltimore for a
clarification, the owners
decided any delay which
results from extra men on Ute
field will subject the team to a

OSU gals advance in tourney

,_

J

1

HARRISONBURG, Va (UP! )
- Immaculata College and
Delta State College advanced
Wednesday night to the quarter
finals of the Women 's Association of Intercollegiate Athle hcs
basketball champtonships at
Madison College here.
Immaculata downed errorprone Kansas State 63-54 in one
of last mght's e~ght first round
games.
Mary Scharf led the Macs

UP! Sports Writer
COLUMB US t UP! )
"Larry Fortner is some kind of
athlete ," marvels Loratn
Clearview coach Bob Walsh.
Fortner, an all-state quarterback m football and two-tune
state htgh jump champion,
today was named the Umted
Press InternatiOnal Class A
basketball player of the year .
It makes two years in a row
the Chppers have provided the
top small school player, wt\h
Larry Harris of Clearv1ew
bemg selected th e top A player
last season.
The 6-5 Fortner wa s a
runaway whmer in tile balloting, with Canal Winchester's
5-10 Jeff Black , who JOlfled
Fortner on the UP! Class A AllOhio first team , a distant
second .
The other ttu·ee members of
the ftr st team are Tun
Stetnhilber of Wynford, Steve
Lemming of Mansfie ld St.
Peter's and Greg Johnson of
Lockland, the only Junior on
the lop team.
Led The Clippers
Fortner averaged 23 pomts
and 12.4 rebounds per game in
leading the Clippers to a 1:;.3
regular season record. ''He
really deserves the honor,"
said Walsh .

Pros go for new pass rule

with 20 points. Immaculata has
a 21·2 record and takes on
Wayland Baptist today .
Wayland ran its record to 27-0
last mght with a 93-37 "tout of
Botse State, which is now 22-2.
California State of Fullerton
defeated William Penn 54-43 to
move into thcquarterfinal
match against Queens College
which was a 83-51) _winner over
tou rnament host Madison

College.
Southern Connecticut beat
Stephen Austm 6&amp;-51 and takes
on Ohio State which downed
West Georgia 72,59.
In today's final game Tennes-see Tech plays Delta State,
which beat Federal City College
77-75 m overtime
Tennessee Tech easily ad·
vanced to the quarterfinal
round With a 91-45 win over
Utah State.

I
....

lf&gt;.yard penalty.
"This doesn't mean they
can't send in substitutes--they
can substitute allll men if they
want to," Kenstl said. "But a~y
man who enters must stay m
the game for at least one play."
Another aid Ill offensive play
came in a rule change which
applies 1D those rare instances
when a penalty is called behind
the line of scrimmage because
of defensive holding. The
penalty now wiU be marked off
from the line of scrimmage
instead of from the spot of the
foul.
Other changes made Wednesday:
- When two fouls are called
on a play and one involves the
disqualification of a player, the
disqualification foul wiU wash
out the other penalty.

ul

Child's crayon
streaks carpet
POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - I have a
real problem. My three-yearold made three deep purple
streaks on my carpet with a
crayon. I now have them down
to a pale lavender and have
tried everything I know . I
would like to hear of some
specific cleaning agent for wax
crayon marks. I would be
forever grateful. - MRS .
A.F.K.
DEAR MRS. A.F.K. -There
are a couple of thing• you
might try that are recommended for use oo wax crayon
marks. Test ou an In·
conspicuous corner first to see
If there Is any adverse color
reaction, ete. Try sponging
wit~ alcohol or put one
teaspoon white vinegar In a
quart of warm water or use a
nonflammable dry cleaning
fluid. Since you have the color
down to a pale shade a
detergent solution might even
remove that last color. Rinse
any solution off well and dry
carpet thoroughly. - POLLY.

with clear plastic or even hair
spray and place in a frame
with glass. - G. M.
DEAR POLLY -I am sure
there must be others who
suffered as I did with a baskettype kitchen sink stepper that
always let Ute hot sudsy water
seep out. (Polly's no~ : I am
one of them) . My inexpensive
solution was Ill place a plastic
lid from a one-half pound tub of
margarine over the basket
stopper after it was in place. If
the water starts Ill leak out it
will create a smaU suction and
the lid becomes a seal. No
more lea'ictng water and a
litUe pressure releases the lid
when you finish washing
dishes. - BEATRICE.
DEAR POLLY - I had not
worn my leather-lined snow
boots for a couple years, When
I did put them on it seemed
they had shrunk and were too
small. I forced them on but
they were hard and dry so f put
some old cold cream on them,
let it soak in and this made the
boots pliable and like new. -

'

SILVER BELLS, Cockle shells and milkmaids. are, back row, I to r, Glenda Conner,
Melissa Scarbrough, Pa tt y Jones, Lori Robinson; front row. I to r, Tara Guthrie. Cathy
Chichester, Amy Eve rett , Tamara Calloway, Lisa Hawk and J)eedra h Sand ers.

DR. LAMB

Liver damage due to fats
By Lawrence Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - Would a

or

person with lots
h ve r
damage. say 15 to 20 per c-ent ,

have a problem with polyun saturated fats ? They say a
fat ly liver ts the problem and
polunsaturated fats are 100 per
cent fat , while butter is only 85
per cent fat. Would this mean
polyunsalurated fa ts could he
just as damaging or more so'?
DEAR READER - If you
have a fatty liver 1\ means tllat
fat is accumulating m abnormal amountS in the small
liver lobes. Ordmarily the liver
processes fat and converts it to
form• that can be used for

The

Dai~

Sentinel

DINO'f ellY&lt;i THE
INTEREST OF

MEIGS-MASON AREA
CHES TER L. TANNEHILL.
e-.ec. Ed ,
ROBERT HOEFLICH
C ity EditOr
· Publ i sh ed dady excep t
Saturday by The Ohio V a lle v
Publ tshmg Co mp any.
11 1
Court S l , P omeroy . Oh1 0
15769 . Bl.lsi n ess Off ice P hone
992-2156. Edit or i al Phon e 992 -

21 57

Second class postage pa• d a t
Pomeroy . Ohio .
,
Nat •ona l
adve r tiSi ng
repre sentat i v e
B o t f i nel l i r
Gallagher . Inc ., 12 East A2nd
Sr .• New Y or k . New York . '
r a t es J
S ub sc r i p tion
Oellvered by carr ier w he r t
evailabte 75 cen ts p er w eek;
By Motor Route w her e c arri er
sertilce not ava i lable, One
month . S3.25 . By ma lt in Ohio
and w. va .. One Year . S22 .00l
, SiJI months, Sll SO , T h r ee
months , $7 . 00
E lsewhe r•
S26 oo year : Six mon thi
S1J.SO ; three mon ths , S7 sol
Subscr ipt ion pr 1ce In cludes.
Sunday Ti!ll,a -sentinet .
_ l.

':

ene r~n

In rc rta tn dtseHses the
ltver ma) be swampe-d \*,rith fa t
and can't process 1t all. Fatty
damage may result .
Excessive alcohol intake can
lead to fatty liver U1rough this
mechanism. Dmbehcs often
develOp fatty hvcr, 1f not
ndcquatcly controlled. beca use
the body ca n't use carbohydra tes and too much faUs
then mobili zed and sent to the
ltver to process. Onre aga m the
hver IS swamped. A si m1lar
thing ca n happen to people on
starvatwn diets. The body fat
ts mob1lized to provide energy
and ma y swa mp the liver's
normal
fa t
proce ssing
machmery.
You can see from these fac ts
that starvation and alcohol are
both hard on the liver. Obviously alcohol and not ea ting
make a \licious combination
The reason for avoiding fat u\
the diet, if you have a fatty
liver 1 is that the liver 1s already
swamped w1th fat and you
shOuldn 't add to the problem.
The tw o things to avoid. then,
are alcohol and fat .
. A good diet for the ltver
pahenl who is nol in hver
failure is one relatively high 111
carbohydrate, moderately ric h
in protein and low in fat.
Adequa te amounts of supplemental vitamins are often
needed. Lean meat is good
because ,it contains choline, a

substance that helps the liver
nd itself of excess fat.
Sometimes choline or sinular
medtcmcs are prescribed for
th1s purpose .
You'll need a small amount
of polyunsatur ated fat in your
die t which you can get from an
in take of whole grain cereals in
your d1e t. You should have
cereal anyway. Otherwise, any
fat should really be avmded,
sa tura ted or unsaturated.
Butter ts 100 per cent fat , not
85 per cent fat , when you talk
about calories. It is 15 per cent
water by weight. You could get
th e same effec t from a
polyunsa turated oil by addirg
wat er to it. The margarmes are
also 15 per cent water. whether
lhey are made rrom corn 011 or
other substances . So you are
not really getting any ad·
vantage at all by using butter
when yo u have a fatty liver
problem.
The evidence that polyunsaturated fats in large amounts
are good for anybody is rather
meager and in dtspute. The
bulk of research stud1es really
show that a high fat iniake of
any type may be harmful and
further that saturated fats may
be more harmful than other
fats . This does not mean that
beyond the small amount of
polyunsaturated fats you need
that additional quantities wiU
be helpful to you in anyway.
I .
I

CAST IN THE ROLES of fanners' helpers are front, 1 to r, Greg Hensley, Devin Barber.
Sean Clemson, Royce Bissell; middle row, 1111 r, Steven Sams, Steve Enevoldsen, Tim Probert
and Jimmy Watson ; back row, I tor, Mark Shrivers, Tom Everett and Joey Runyon.

Warren quoted sa}ing
'

.

Nixon was despicable
NEW YORK (UP! ) - A
friend of the late Chief Justice
Earl Warren Wednesday
quoted him as having said that
President Nixon was "the most
despicable President this
nation has ever had."
Alden Whitman, an obituary
writer for The New York
Times, writing in the current
Esquire magazine. said tbat
Warren also characterized his
successor on the Supreme
Court, Warren Burger, as 11 a
horse's ass."
" Tricky," Whitman says
Warren told him, ' 'is ·perhaJl6
the most despicable President
this nation has ever bad. He
was a cheat, a Uar and a cr90k,
and he brought my country,
which I love, into disrepute.
Even worse than abusing his

office he abused the American
people."
Whitman said he once asked
Warren if he thought the
Burger Coort, "with its array
of Nixon-appointed judicial
midgets, could erase the, accomplishments of the Warren
Court."
He said that'Wamm replied:
"They'll try, that I'm certain,
but in Ute long run Ute
American people won't stand
for a court that would take
them back 1D the days when it
was possible to ask, ~~What's
the Constitution hetween
friends '! "'

BOSTON (UP!)- Six veter.
an dribblers were 1D bounce a
basketball today from Boston
College to Providence, R.I. ·
They plan to complete the 4Smile dribblaUton in 10 hours,
ending at the Providence Civic
Center in time to see Boston
College play Kansas State in
Ute NCM Eastern regional
semifinals.
The same "Boston Six" • who
dribbled 231 miles to New York
City last year when the Boston
College team appeared in the
National Invitational Tour·
nament, said the purpose of the
drlbblathon was to demonstrate student spirit 1D the
Eagle team.

,.

i

,.,..

,..*
•

1

.

.., .... .... ... ...

,.

fry-hioo ..... l

,..

LUMP REMOVED
,.
PIDLADELPHIA (UP!)
Relief pitcher Tug McGraw of
the Philadelphia Phlllies underwent
surgery Wednesday
, Warren was appointed ,in
1953 at the age of 62 and served for removal of a lump located :
until 1969. He died last stun- just helow his left Shoulder
blade.
mer .

•*
:

UTED PG

Mason Drive-In Theatre
MASON, WEST VIRGINIA .

.

ch

8:30- 1:00

_____.

BULK SEEDS NOW ON SALE

•
•

0

•
•
•

•

•

CEILING
TILE

&lt;11.".

•

••
•
•

ft

'

•Good looking
•Easy to put up
• Noise absorbing

•Fire safe
•Won 't warp
•Easy to clean

Jienry Block has
17 reasons why }UU
should come to us

for . incorne tax help•

3rd Ave.

i :

992-2709
'

.

l.

Middleport, Ohio

I

' .

e RAKE5-GARDEN &amp; LAWN

BULK FERRY-MORSE

e PRUN-ING SHEARS

eSAWS. SMALL PLANTING
TOOL
F!ORRY MORSE
SEEDS
BULK &amp; PACKAGE

WEED KILLERS

-.

WEEO.NO.MORE

m~~Ntt

FULL STOCK OF

Ebersbach Hardware

THI IMCOMI T,U . flt:OI'LI

,_

~~~Y
Ph. tn-J7fS

Oponta.m. tosp.m.Mon.-S.t.
NO APP(&gt;!NTM!NT NECESSARY

•
r

HAHN·ECUPSE MOWERS

GRASS SEED

ASK FOR A FREE ESTIMATE

jVALLEY LUMBER &amp;SUPPLY CO.

It's planting lime again ...
Gel all lawn. garden supplies
you'll need, plus "how to"
' tips riQht here.

B · - 14. We're human, and once
In a great while we make a mlatake.
But If our error meana you m1111t pay
additional tax, you pay only the tax.
We pay any intereet or penalty .
We atand behind our work.

OWENS-CORNING LAY-IN
FIBERGLAS* CEILINGS

~

•

., ,.

'·

•
•
•

,.

( ,,

FIBERGLAS

---

,.

•••

t*******************************• ~
..

Co

THE MEIGS INN

•

: ** •••
** '
** •••
*: :
* •:"
** ':.
: ;

Spring Opening

a

J

•

_,.

Choose

TRIO

••

MOOUmE COMMENTATOR
Walt Disney 4s ·
MILWAUKEE, Wis. (UP! )
THE BEARS AND t
- AI McGuire, Marquette
(Technicolor)
University's colorful
Show Starts 7:00p.m.
basketball coach, wiU be a
commentator and analyst at
the NCAA regional championships, It was announced ***************~*****************
Wednesday .
McGuire, who last year
coached his Warriors tp the
runnerup spot in the NCAA
:
FRI· SAT· SUN
MAR. 21·22·23
:
championship, will discuss the
East and West tiUe gan1es wiUt ,.
DoUBLE FEATURE PROGRAM
,..
NBC's Tim Ryan, and also will
comment on the regional
''BLACK JACK"
broadcasts of the Mideast and
-,.St............
Midwest championship con- ,.
,.
tests.
,..,, K-wt..
pan _ •• a11cl h•'• .,011111
1 Jt

'Dream Teams'

Frank Sisty

•

Friday thru Tuesday
Marchll -25

I# Class A

Enjoy the Distinctive Style of the

MEIGS THEATRE
TONIGHT
March 20
NOT OPEN

contest 1 reserve catch er Larry
Cox looped a run-sconng single
to center to give the Phtladelphia Phillies a f&gt;.4 verdict in
UIC 13th inning over Boston.
Ferguson Jenkins, who lied
Catfish Hunter for the most
1974 wms w1th 25, hurled four
scoreless mmngs as Texas bea t
Houston f&gt;-2 ... Hank Webb gave
up the only run of the game in
Ule second inning as Cmc)nnati
beat the New York Mcts, 1-0,
U1en jomed the Met.&gt;;' growing
casualty hst witl1 a pulled
muscle in h1s left buttock ...
The Los Ange les Dodgers
pulled out their fifth successive
win wth a bloop single by Lee
Lacy in the bottom of the ninth
for a 4-3 win over Montreal ...
Scott McGre gor's wildness
helped the Minnesota Twins
score three runs in the e1ghth
mning to beat the New York
Yankees, f&gt;-1.

TONIGHT

BEND TIRE CENTER
Va

£tnd lms knocked in 13 runsUlrL'e more Umn his 1974 season
total.
Bradford's ftrst roundtripper cleared men from
every base, commg in the
!oiecond mmng Orr loser Ray
Sadecki. The second was a two~
rw1 blast m the seventh off AI
Hrabosky.
Starter Jtm KaHt receaved
credtl for the win after hurling
the first f1ve mnings of the
slugfest. Clucago's Jerry Hairston a nd St. Louis' Ron Hunt
and Luis Melendez also bonged
out four-baggers.
Elsewhere in the Gra pefruit
League, the Dctrott Tigers, in
another sluggmg duel, offset
SIX Kansas City home runs with
two of their own includmg
rookie Leon Roberts' opposite
field blast m the lOth mning for
a come-from-behmd 11-10 win
... In another exlra-mntng

Star Supply

~rea

Ma so n. W.

Ch1c.a go White Sox outf~elder
Huddy Bradford, still waiting
to play a full season in the
tW~Jors, IS showmg Lhis spring
wha t he mt gltt be capable of if
hO ven that long to play.
Bradford, who first started
pht y m the maJor leagues m
1966 :md has yet to pla y in more
than 107 ga mes , appea n.'&lt;i in
only 39 g::~mes last year, battmg .33;1 w1U1 fi ve homers,
aft er he mjured has leg only a
few months into the se::~son
Th1 s spnng, however, he 's
trymg to make up for lost time.
Wedne sda y.
Bradford
slugged two home runs, two
stnglt's and a double m fiv e
trips to the plate as U1e Sox
bombed the St. Louis Cardmals
14-7 Bradford , who ha s
~ lugged SIX home runs m the
last four games. ts balling 44 1

Steve Snowoen

It's

WILL BOUNCE BALL

B) Uullt•d l'rcss Jutt•rmH innal

chain for
any purpose

Tire Prices

irithe

JANE.

DEAR POLLY- Something
that really peeves me is that
foods and other articles are
marked with stamps that come
off on everything they touch
and are often almost impossible to wash off. I have to
clean some off my counter
most every day and it seems
something less indelible would
work for these stamps, - MRS.
L.H.
DEAR POLLY -A.T. should
consider herself lucky 1D have
so many pressed flowers. When
mine were completely dry I
·glued them to very heavy
paper after arranging them in
a natural manner with the
leaves and long stems included. Next I added a mat of
cardboard purchased at an art
sopply store and then put in a
frame with glass. Mine is a
mixture of flowers but I have
seen this done with single
plant.&gt;; and even their roots for
a most effective result. BARBARA F .
DEAR POLLY - A. T. who
has so many pressed flowers
could embroider a vase or pot.
on a heavy piece of linen-like
materia,l and then arrange her
flowers on this. Glue them in
place with that pop~lar allpurpose white glue and spray

--

An

:,::;:;;::;: s'[JOrt p a... d e

r;~~;:.-]st
J. A

CHESTEH

or~ani zati unal mcctHig for a

Bradford day perfect

8

COLUMBUS(i.JPI) - Mansfield St. Peter's Ron Barbo,
named the Umted Press In ternational Class A coach of the
year fo r the second consecutive
tlme, lsn•t counting on making
1t three.
"We hetter enjoy it this
year ," said Barbo when informed of the ~ward, " because
when we say we 'll be rebuilding, we really mean it. Six or
our first seven players are
seniors and have been playing
two or three years."
The 37-year-old Barbo, a
graduate of Salem College
(W .Va. ), has gu1ded the Spartans to a 24-2 record and into
the Class A State Tournament
finals Thursday night against
Maria Stein Marion Local. His
Spartans were ranked No. I tn
the ftnal UP! Board of
Coaches' Class A ratings for
the second straight season.
Barbo, since replacing Bub

.-uu.r CRAMER

is proposed

Today's

Ron Barbo top Class ;4

Polly's PoinT.Clt'"IO:

Oturch league

In the Cactus League, Pedro
Metgs HrcH intcr ·~.:hurc h soft Garcia's two doubles and two
ball league hil s been c;dled for
singles helped the Milwaukee
' Fortner, who has s1gned a and 16 r£1bound S per game as Monday, Mar. 24, at the Mt
Brewers to an 8-4 decision over
fo otball tender at Miami, St Pete rolled up a 24-2 record Hermon Unt ted Brethre11
California. In the game, allplayed center most of the time. gomg into Thursday's semi- Church of Chester , at 7 :50 p.m
lime home·run king Hank
although Walsh said, .. we used fin als at St. John Arena
Aaron started m left field fof
There an• some people Ill·
him basiCally the same wa)' we
Johnson. 6-.&gt;, is the lone tcrested 10 forming a church
the first time and threw out a
used Harrts last year."
JUnior on the No 1 team . He sof tball leag ue, a nd thi s
runner trying to score from
Fortner shot 57 per cent from was the second lea ding SC'orer mec tJng '" will help detemune
second on a single .. . Mike !vie
U1e held and 65 per cent from m the Cincmnah area wtth an n hcther the Interest 1s ~::rc ..~ t
walked with the bases loaded 111
the char ity stnpe for the year. avera ge of 26.7 per game.
force in the winnmg run in the
enough to orga nize
Black was the leading scorer
Givens, who missed the last
bottom of the ninth as San
Every church th&lt;:~t 1s Ill·
for Canal W10chester. wh1ch part of the 1973-74 season Wltll a te rested 1n parttc1pat111g 111 a
Dtego edged the Chicago Cubs,
was li-t m regular season play knee mjury, this season was church softball league as asked
f&gt;.4 ... Ex· Yankee Bobby Murand ranked second in the UP! A named tp the second squad
cer's tripl e and Derrel
to have the pastor, or 1f he
ratm gs. He avera ged 26 1
He averaged only 12.5 potnts cannot come, to se nd someone
Thomas' two..-un double helped
points per game.
per game, du e mainly to his to represe nt hun. an d a nother
San Francisco to defeat crossBlack is also a multi-sports lack of playing time after he lay person to represent the
bay riva l Oakland, 7-2.
performer. quarterback ing the returned from his mjury . In
church at the meeti ng Monday
Winchester football team and tournament play, the 6-2 mg:ht. If interest 1s sufhcwnt
stamng m baseball.
Givens IS averaging better plans will be dascussed ~nd
TO DO PLAY-BY-PLAY
Durmg the year, he broke the than 20 per contest.
DI':S MOINES (UP!)
deta1ls worked out f01 the
school career scoring record,
Joming G1vens on the second forming of the church league.
Former Cy Young Award·
held previously by his father.
team are Waterford's 5-11 Dave
w1nner Denny McLain will do
The &amp;-3 Steinhilber is a three- McFerren. who scored at a 23the
play-by-play broadcast of
year starter for Wynford. He points per game chp ; &amp;-I Mark ~l~~~~;~l~~~~r;l;~;~~~~~~~~l;;~~~;l~~;J:;~;~;lt;j]J:m:~;~:~~;~:~:~:~:~=~~~:~:mmmmj~tf~l~~:;:~~mt~~~~~
tl1e entire 1975 Iowa Oaks
averaged 20.2 pomts per game Swam of Hannan-Trace. 20.2;
schedule, it was announced
for the Royals, shot 56 per cent Joe Sprowl, 6-.\, of Monroeville, jijjjjj
Wednesday.
from the field, 67 from the free 22.1; and 6-4 Jeff Smith of
-thro" line and grabhed 217 Zanesville Rosecrans, 20.7. All ,:;:;:;:
~-:::.~
CO L UMB US ( U P i l
The Ne w come r stow n , M arv M ee k .
rebounds 10 18 regular season are seniors.
*:~ 197J 75 Un •l ed Pre ss In Pe ii i S\Iill e La rry N edo l as t ,
ckeye Ce ntr al Br1a n N ea l.
~
$.'::&lt; le m alo ona l Class A A ll Oh, O HBuard
games. He also has a 4.0 mark
The third team is made up of :::::::
•n
N o rth e rn ,
Jay
1 U
:~ ba sk e1ball tea m w 1th 11 e1ght ,
Over h o l dt . F rede r. c k town ,
~~ g ra de an d scor1ng average
in the classroom
three juniors and a pair of ,:;:;:;:
Ca r l Re nw1 ck Gr and Va l l ey .
·:·:·:·:
X•!O:·
FIRST TEAM
Lemming Carries Load
semors.
:;:;:;:
.~
Je ff B l ac k . ca n al wm
Paul Roeder , Mon roev ille , Bo b
Sl epeck.y, Pa r ma Byz an t m e.
The underclassmen are 6-2 :;:;:;:
W, cheste r . 5 10 . Sr . 16 1
Lemming, 6-4, shouldered
Duan e T rar es , Norwal k St
By MILTON RICHMAN
:;:;.~
Ti m s te mhll be r . Wyn t or d , 6
the load for top-ranked St. B•r adSp!lnaleofContmental, 6- :;:;:;:
Pau l .
W y att
Ta ylo r ,
:::::::
UP! Sports Editor
&gt;::::-:1 J, Sc • 10 2 ~
J im
Tu1t le ,
Peter's when th ree-year 4 Mike Conley of Mechanics· :.:.:.:
· ··"'
La rr y
!- ortner
Lora•n Crook svil le ;
A s h l and
Cres tview .
J im
Cl c ar view , 6 5. Sr . 13 0
regular Greg Givens, suffered burg, and 6-.\ Dave H1gginbo-FORT MYERS, Fla .I UPI ) - NexJ lime you see Vada Pinson
Sieve Lemm ;ng, M an sfo ela V o g l e r . Co v 1ng1on .
B ill
War f ie l d , Lord s town ; Sl e \le
an ankle injury the fl rst ga me !ham of Kirtland. The two play, notice his shoes.
Sl P e ie n, 6 ' · Sr . 20 B
•
Gr eg John son, Loc kl an d. 6 5. Wlll1am s, Old F ort. We s t
of the season and missed 10 seniors are M1ck Shoemaker, 6They're the most hi ghly polished pair m the big leagues, and J c , 20 7
Williams , West L i ber l y Sa l em.
St ev e Zs igray , Be ll a i r e S1
games.
I, of Paint Valley and &amp;-2 Mike have been ever since he fir st came up 17yearsago.
secoN o TEAM
Mark Sw tttn , Hannan-Trace, John
He responded with 20.8 points Chtlds of Yellow Springs.
Normally, no hallplayer pays tl1e kind uf attentton to the shine 6-1, sc .. 30 .2.
on h1s baseball shoes that Vada Pinson does. But m his case it
. Da ve M cFe r re n , Wate rford,
5
~
goes deeper than that. The veteran outfielder ror the Kansas City
~o~ rsPi~~l . M onroeVI l le, 6 5,
Person to person
0
Royals IS equally mellculous about his uniform, his street sc · " '
Je ff
Sm• l h.
Zan e sville
health insurance
cIot hes, his life style.
Ros ecr an s. 6 4, s r , 20. 7
Frye four years ago, has
Dan Brisker of Canal WmVada Pinson IS neat as a pm in every possible respect. He•s the
Gr e g G 1ven s, M(l ns f •e ld St
compiled an 84-19 record at St. chester was runnerup to Barbo
Pe ter ' s , 6 2. Sr , 12 5
best-dressed player in basebsll. Not m the flashy sense either
THIRD TEAM
Peter's, with 10 of the losses in the coach of the year voting, Basically, all this goes back to the way he shines has shoes.
II can help pay
Br ad Sp1 tna 1e. Contm enta I ,
coming the first season.
6
2
followed by Lorain Clearview's
soaring
hospital
A few Y.eeks ago, Don Newcombe. engaged in commuruty
~~;e· ~~n l e y , M ech an• c
Both of St. Peter's losses this Bob Walsh.
relations work for the Dodgers now, and Jack McKeon,· the sb urg . 6 " · J r .• n 3
and surgical bills.
year came early in the season
Dav e H• QQi nbotha m , Kir .
Others witt more than one Roya Is' manager, were in Burlington, N.C., to do a public service t lan
d . 6-5. Jr . 22 5
Call me.
with &amp;-2 Greg G1vens Sidelined vote were Paul Dtllon of program together. They began talking about ballplayers in
M ic k
Shoemak er,
P ai nt
with an ankle mjury suffered 10 Hannan-Trace, Phil Rychener g
t 1
V al l ey , 61. Sr .• 31.1
.
·
enera,I and Va da Pmson m par JCU ar.
M1ke Childs , Y ell ow Spring s,
the first quarter of the f1rst of Pettisville, Dave Ewart of
i'Hey. tell me something," Newcombe asked McKeon, 6 7. s r , 2 1 s
1255 Powell St.
game .
SPECIAL MENTION
Zanesville Rosecrans, Charles Iaugllingand remembering when he and Pinson played With the
Ma r 11n B tdw c l l, M iddl e town
Middleport
The Spartans lost 54-.&gt;2 to Stmgel of Lordstown, Mark Reds cen turies ago. "Does Pinson st11l shine his shoes like he Fenwt c k . Kevm Dom za l ski ,
AA A Mansfield Madtson the Smith of Riverdale. lrv
PH. 992-7155
'used to? He a lways spit-shined h1s shoes and got 'em rea lly ~~~ah~~:~.e •grt':~/ 1 ~a~~n\l~ ~:
fourth game of the season and Besecker of Man on Local, Bob sparkling.' '
Marion L ocal , Harry Huggtn s.
r.,:::,..~,.::
..,: 'l STATE FAAM MUTUAl.
52-5() to AA Canton Lehman the Pittser of Macon Eastern, Jim
McKeon had to laugh, too .
l nd •an Va l ley South , Ch r is
.A_
Automo bile Insurance Co
Hamm on , Grand Va l ley . Greg
sixth game and Smce have won Bauer of Wynford and Terry
fGID Home 01!1ce
''He hasn't changed a btt," answered the KC manager. "His Ja m es, Norttl Gallia ; Ro land
·-·•••• &lt; Bl oom ington, IllinOIS
20 in a row.
Jam es, G r e en e v .e w . J a c k
Marsh of Grand Valley .
hoesaresh'II highlypolished. Idon 'tknowof anybetter-dressed
RACINE, OHIO
s
M~s s m e r , R•v e rdal e, Jim
"I really think we would
ballplayer in the game."
Se lgo , P e tt• svlll e , T •m Se lgo ,
have gone unbeaten if we'd had
Vada Pinson•s explanation for the extraordmary f'a re he gaves Pe
tt .sv ill e. Bob Sh Jpp , Upp er
V a ll ey ,
Ge or ge
Sc •oto
Givens the whole year," said
his shoes as perfectly stmple, and also providr s the reason why he Th •em an . Mi n •s ter . B e n
Barbo. "We felt the ftrst part of
tsgoingallouttocollect3,000hit:beforehefinishes.
U selt on , s outh Cen t ral ; Vtr Qil
"'
Ward , Be lt Sv ill e
our schedule was the toughest.
" Pride," says the Royals' 36-year-old left-handed hitter, bePlover-of-th e-Yea r - Lacrv
"But one of the biggest PETERSON REPLACED
.
Fort'ner, Cl earv1 ew .
gmning his 18th season with 2,686 hits. "I look at it this way - if
coach -of-the -Year Ron
things for us this year was
SEBRING, Fla . (UP!)
you've got any pride at all in what you're doing, whether \t's
Barbo, Man sfi eld Sl. Peler ' s.
heing able to hold together Australian race car driver
. yourshoes or h'tttmg
· a base ball , you certainly strive to do
HONORABLE: MENTION
sh.mmg
Jami e A ndrik.o , L ords town .
when-Givens was hurt," Barbo Allan Moffatt has replaced the best you possibly ca n.
R1 c k
B r un sw• c k ,
M a r.on
contin ued. " It was a blow and Swedish Grand Prix driver
' ' 1 was never as hoe shme bo y wen
h 1 was growmg
· up, but I !Loor cvalil le
, M ax Brag g , Pr oc .
K e v 1n
1r land ,
it really tells a lot about the Ronnfe Peterson on the BMW remember bei ng in Trafftc Control School for litUe kids in Bern er, F aAnna
,
Dave
rest of the team,"
factory racing team for Satur- Oakland, and If you didn 't have your shoes shmed, the lady-m· Chlvlngton , Cont•n en tal , Pa t
Clark.
A ll e n
E as l .
K en
Barbo, who will be bringing day's 12 hours of Sebring auto charge always told us something bad would happen to us. I Chri
slen se n , Coal Grov e. John
his second St. Peter's team to endurance race, it was an- heheved her and began sh imng my· street shoes as hard as 1 Co r so , R "h mond H o ,ghiS ,
G l en
Con l e y . M•dd le fl e l d
the State Tournament in his no~ced VVednesday.
COUld.
Ca r dinal .
Pete
Ca n d e l a,
four years as head coach,
A spokesman for the track
''Whenl firstcame up withtheReds,InohcedLeo Cardenas A s htabula 51 John . C l a r k
, Berne Un 1on , Tom
asked to give credit to his two said Peterson was the victim of also was very particular about the way he shined his shoes. So I Dupler
Duckwor t ll , Canal W •nc h es ter
assistants, Pat Maurer, a Kent
"international red tape." He saw I wasn't alone. I carry my shoe polish along with me now.
Stev e F ri es, Norwalk St
Pa u l , Gi!ry Ga rb er , Ga raway ,
State grad who also handles the said Sweden's chapter of the Guys ask me 'Will you lend me your polish?' I always do. A man R
Organ, Drums, Guitar
•ck. G e rber. wayne Trace ,
scoutin g chores, and Phil Federation lnternationale de can wear the nicest clothes in the world, but if hi s shoes are dirty Cra•g H e r shberg er · H •land ;
Br 1an Hamilton , Malvern.
NITElY
Hawk, an Ashland College !'Automobile. the hcensi ng andgrimy,Iaskyou,howdoesitlook?
Ru ss ell
Hau c k ,
M a c on
alum.
body for the race, could not
"Ordinarily, the clubhouse boy shmes our shoes. I'm not the ~:J!~~~lle . K e ~~~~ H~~~~~~~ :
"They have really bee n clear up paperwork in time to onlyonewhodoes his own shoes on this club, though. Fred Patek se neca Ea st , Doug J am l5on ,
instr111nental in what success license Peterson, making him and Amos Otis do also.
St B erna r d . Jim Kram er . F l.
J cnn •ngs , K ev in
Kr. e ger ,
we've had, " satd Barbo.
ineligible for the race.
"Sometunes people say to me 'Don't you trust the clubhouse sa ndusky s t Marys . K e v•n
boy?' It'snot that. My shoes are part of my tools. 1should be the Long str e th , Li ncolnvi ew .
B ill Long , Wood Sfi el d Bry an
TO ENTERTAIN YOU AT
one to take care of them. You know what happens when the Lentz , I ndian Va l l ey south ,
clubhouse boy shines my shoes? I go over 'em and do it again. " Jo hn L arg e n! , Mi ll e r s por t·
Randy L1n stead , Pym a1un•ng
Vada Pinson wasn•t aware Ted Williams was a bug on shinmg Va l l ev ,
Lonn 1e
M o or e.
POMEROY
PH . 992-3629
shoes, too. He and Sam Snead once got into a discussion over who c I eve Ian d L u t 11 era n East.
John Me es ig , Norwalk Sl
shined shoes best and Williams said Snead never could get a P aul ,
Randy
M il ler , 1 ~----------------'*"
higher polish on his shoes than he could. The two men happened
to be quartered in the same place at the lime of the discussion,
and the next day Williams' shoes had a shine on them that almost
blinded everyone. He had worked on the shoes nearly two hours.
As outstanding a hitter as Williams was, he wasn't able to
amass 3,000 hits. ilest he could do was 2,654 although he would've
heen a cmch to make 3,000 had he not served with the Mar ines
Now Showing
two diffe rent limes during his career.
P1nson wants ' those 3,000 hits very much.
GILSON TILLERS
"I need exactly 314 more," he said, showing he's counting.
"I'm gonna get ·em somewhere, somehow. The way I..fii'ure it
could take me three yea rs. That means I have to take care of
myself phystcally."

ByGENE CADDES

pts gf

w. t. t . pts

x Bu ffa lo

Webb left with what doctors
described as a pulled muscle in
hts left buttock. The Mets•
injury list this year already
includes Cleon Jones, Jon
Matlack, Joe Torre, Bud
Harrelson and John Milner.
Cincinnati scored when Johnny Bench doubled, took Utird on

t . ph gf ga

3J 30 8

Van c ouver

g .b

Go lden Stat e
42 32 5~6
Sea li te
... 36 37 493
s• 1
Por t land
32 40 444
9
PhOen •)C
29 AJ
403 12
LosA ng eles
26 46 361 15
11 -(flnctle d diVI SIOn tlti C
Wedn esday ' s Resu lts
New Or 1Pa n s 12 6 P hila d el ph ia
11 5
Washmgton 97 Bos ton 80
N ew Yo rk 101 Ph oe n •x 96
Seatt le 101 Milw a u kee 100
Thur sday 's Games
Ch •c ag o at Cl evela nd
Portland a t Gol de n Stat e
N ew Orl ean s at KC Om all a

THE CLEVER, COLORFUL apples of "The Farmer in the De ll" are, Ito r, Jeff Bissell,
Mark'Gillllan, Robert Matheny, Brian Bowers, Mike Collins, James Weber and Roger Balser.

NHL Stand.ngs
By Un •fed Press International
DIVISIOO I
w l. t ph gl ga
K Ph •lad lp h
43 18 10 96 25 6 168

'Swain on 2nd team AllOhio; James honored

Ed Armbrister's sacrifice and
scored on Darrell Chaney's
infield out.
Clay Kirby and Fred Norman
pitched a flve-hit~r for the
Reds.
After Webb left in the third,
Bob Apodaca and Mac Scarce
blanked the Reds the rest of the
way.

run .

PETERSBURj}, Fla.
(UPII - The Cincinati reds
scored the game's only run
Wednesday in defeating the
New York Mets 1-0 m an
exhibition game here.
The Mets mjury list continued
Ill grow when pitcher Hank
Webb was forced to leave the
game after g1ving up the only
ST.

Bosto n
39 22 11 89 321 219
Tor on lo
28 31 13 69 255 78 4
1
15 &lt; Cali tor n •a ·
18 41 12 48 189 271
17
lii · DIVISIOn Wi nner
25
Wednesday's Resu lts
32
NY Rang er s 3 V an couv er 0
A tla r~ ta 8 Tor onto 7
NY Is l ander s 3 K a r~ C1IY 1
g b. M ont re al 2 Bo ston 1
P 1tt sburg h 3 Ca l •forn•a 3
21 ~
Thursday's Games
B'1 NY R ang er s at Buffalo
9
M 1nn es ota at Wa sh ing ton
Ch1ca go at De l ro •t
p et . g b . St Lou• s a t L os Angel es

x wash. n g lon 53 20 726
H ous l on
38 36 514
Cle v eland
36 37 J93
Atla nta
29 46 JB 7
N ew Orl ea n s 20 51 2B2
Western Confere n ce
M•dw est Dt\II Sion
w
1. pet
Ch •cago
4 2 29 592
K C Om ah a
4032 55 6
De tr o• l
35 39 J1J
Mli wault.ee
34 39 ·166
PaCifiC D I VISIOn

THESE YOUNG B lfl'l'E K~· tJ E :S are anXIoUS to try tne1r wmgs m .. Tne ~·armer m tne
Dell". They a~e. 1tor, KunSchul, Tncie Sarns, Lisa Henderson, Tern Stout, Joy Brannon, Lisa
Van Hoose . .

Reds slip by Mets

Wednesday's Re su lls
Oe s M o in es 6 F ort Wayne 0
Tole d o 7 f' l •n l 1
K al a m azoo 5 Sag ina w 5, ot
TOAI!Jtll ' s Gam es
N o games schedu led

J

" EVERYTHING IN HARDWARE"
'
MAIN STREET
POMEROY, OHIO

J

�I· I
'

'
t

3- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ,, Thursday, March 20.1975

1·-o

'

A,BA Standing s
B y Un1fed Preu Inte rnational
Ea st

w . I.

N ew Yo r k.
K en tuc ky
Sl LOU IS
M em p his
V ir g in i a

54
49
27
23
14
W e st

w

x Denver

pet. g.b.

2'2 71 1
75 662 4
49 . 355 27
51 . 311 30
60 189 39
1.

pet . g .b .

18 763
Sa n An ton io
3 I 594' 13
lnd •ana
33 S4B W 1
Ulah
n 4 \ J46 24
San 0 1eg o '
31 4A 4 13 26 11
K· CIInched diVISIOn ti t le
Wednesday 's R es ults
N ew Y or k 119 1nd1ana 110
V1 r gi n1a 108 De n \le r 12A
Ut ah 100 K en t u ck y '92
San A nton •o 128 St L o uis 11 5
M em ph iS 1'2 1 Sa n 01ego 108
Thursday ' s Games
( No g ames sc h edul ed \
58
45
40

NB A Standmg s
By Un1ted Press l n l er nat1onal
Eas l ern Conferenc e
Atlantic DIVISIOn
w . I pet g b
Bo ston
s 1 21 708 Buffal o
43 29 59?
8
New Yor k
36 37 493 1511
Ph il ad el phia
33 41 4-1 6 19
Centra l DIVI SIOn

w . 1. pel

w

1.

NY Ran ge r s 34 24 13 8 1 '2 83 237
N Y I Si an dersJO 24 1B 78 'Jl7 197
Atla n ta
'2 9 29 13 71 '207 211
DIVI SIOn 2

w

1.

76 240 228

5 1 LOUIS
30 28 13
Ch1c ag o
JJ 31 7
M mn eso ta
20 44 6
Ka n sa s C1 l y \4 J B 10
DI VISIOn 3
w 1 t
M o n trea l
43 11 17

73 23 9 239
73 23 6 213
46 201 )10
38 167 29 8

Los A n ge les 37 15 19
Pi ttsburgh
33 25 15
D etro•t
20 40 11
Washing ton
6 60 5
Division 4

ga
IOJ 33 6 201
93 240
81 301
51 222
17 154

166

263
293
390

gf ga
43 13 15 10 1 317 213

r

lnternilllonal Hockey
League Standmgs
By Un 1f ed Pr ess In te rnat ion al
North
w 1 t pt s gt ga
M usk egon 54 24 3 93 305 '23 6
F IIOt
41 26 5 87 27 3 215
Sag i naw 43 27 3 89 297 '2 43
PI Huron 34 36 3 71 '2 45 257
Ka la m a
17 50 5 39 200 302
x L an s
12 28 I 25 145 21 6
South
w . 1. 1. ots crt qa
z Dayton 43 '2 6 3 89' 278 249'
Co l umbu S 39 30 .d 82 293 258
Tol edo
33 36 4 70 272 260
Des
Moin es
29 38 7 65 24'2 257
F t. w ayne 26 40 6 sa 23 9 297
z d l\li slon w1nn er
x t eam d iSbanded

WHA Sla ndmg s
By Un1td Press lnt er nat•onal
Ea st
w 1. t . pts gf ga
x Nw Englnd 38 25 5 81 239 237
63 197 2'27

H ou ston

30 37 J
27 41 1
17 47 J
West
w I t.
46 23 0

Phoen •x
Mtnn eso ta

35 28 7 77 271 238
36 2q 2 74 269 235

Cleve land
Ch •cag o
tn d•a napol s

San D1ego
Ba lt 1mo r e
Qu eb ec
Tor on to
Edmonton
Va n cou ve r

34 29 3
18 18 3
Canadia n
w 1 t.
42 28 0

55 230 21 6

37 186 282
pts gf ga
92 320 223

71 264 234
39 172 299

pts gf ga
84 294 263

383 1 2 783 12281
3330 3 6924 1 232
33 32 '} 63 223 224

Wmn i peg
32 Jl 4 68 276 24 3
K· DIVISIOII Winner
W ed nes day ' s Re sults
San Diego 6 New England I
Cleveland 5 PhOeniK 4
Houston 6 Ind ianapolis 5
W tnn•peg 8 Vancouver 3
Thur sday's Games
V an couver at Ball 1more
E dmonton at Indianapolis
Chi cago at San Diego
Quebe c a t Houston

HONOLULU (UP!) - NFL
club owners, trying to get more
touchdowns and fewer field
goals, have ditched Ute 50year-eld rule requiring that an
incomplete pass into the end
zone on fourth down moves the
hall back to the !!().yard line.
Under one of eight new rules
c,ha nges announced Wed·
nesday, the ball will be
returned to the line of scrim·
mage.
"The old rule discouraged
passi ng for touchdowns.
Teams took the f1eld goal instead, because 1f they passed
from inside Ule 20 and missed,
they'd lose yardage," NFL
Executive Director Jim Kemil
told a news conference during
the meeting here of owners.
Under the old rule, an incomplete pass 10 the end zone
on four th down from inside the
2().yard line was ruled a touch-hack and went over to Ute
defense at the 20. Now it will go
over to the defense at the line of
scrimmage.
The owners, however, voted
down a proposal that would
have made a pass reception
legal if the receiver had at
least one foot in bounds, as in
college play. NFL rules require
the receiver to complete the
catch with both feet in.
"We feel the tw&lt;&gt;-feet Uting is
peculiar to professional foot·
ball," Kensil said. " It is a
particular talent that goes with
the professiOnal pass recep-

lion." He said the clubs also
retained the present rule for
safety reasons.
"As a player comes to the
sidelines, he has to slow down
m order to execute the
reception with both feet in·
bounds. This minimizes the
chance he'll hit a bench or
stadium wall and be injured,"
Kensil said.
The club owners outlilwed as
"lU1Sporfsmanlike 11 the new
practice of confusing play
stra tegy by sending extra men
into defensive huddles. Minnesota, Kansas City and Oakland tried it late in the 1974
season .
Responding to a request
· from Baltimore for a
clarification, the owners
decided any delay which
results from extra men on Ute
field will subject the team to a

OSU gals advance in tourney

,_

J

1

HARRISONBURG, Va (UP! )
- Immaculata College and
Delta State College advanced
Wednesday night to the quarter
finals of the Women 's Association of Intercollegiate Athle hcs
basketball champtonships at
Madison College here.
Immaculata downed errorprone Kansas State 63-54 in one
of last mght's e~ght first round
games.
Mary Scharf led the Macs

UP! Sports Writer
COLUMB US t UP! )
"Larry Fortner is some kind of
athlete ," marvels Loratn
Clearview coach Bob Walsh.
Fortner, an all-state quarterback m football and two-tune
state htgh jump champion,
today was named the Umted
Press InternatiOnal Class A
basketball player of the year .
It makes two years in a row
the Chppers have provided the
top small school player, wt\h
Larry Harris of Clearv1ew
bemg selected th e top A player
last season.
The 6-5 Fortner wa s a
runaway whmer in tile balloting, with Canal Winchester's
5-10 Jeff Black , who JOlfled
Fortner on the UP! Class A AllOhio first team , a distant
second .
The other ttu·ee members of
the ftr st team are Tun
Stetnhilber of Wynford, Steve
Lemming of Mansfie ld St.
Peter's and Greg Johnson of
Lockland, the only Junior on
the lop team.
Led The Clippers
Fortner averaged 23 pomts
and 12.4 rebounds per game in
leading the Clippers to a 1:;.3
regular season record. ''He
really deserves the honor,"
said Walsh .

Pros go for new pass rule

with 20 points. Immaculata has
a 21·2 record and takes on
Wayland Baptist today .
Wayland ran its record to 27-0
last mght with a 93-37 "tout of
Botse State, which is now 22-2.
California State of Fullerton
defeated William Penn 54-43 to
move into thcquarterfinal
match against Queens College
which was a 83-51) _winner over
tou rnament host Madison

College.
Southern Connecticut beat
Stephen Austm 6&amp;-51 and takes
on Ohio State which downed
West Georgia 72,59.
In today's final game Tennes-see Tech plays Delta State,
which beat Federal City College
77-75 m overtime
Tennessee Tech easily ad·
vanced to the quarterfinal
round With a 91-45 win over
Utah State.

I
....

lf&gt;.yard penalty.
"This doesn't mean they
can't send in substitutes--they
can substitute allll men if they
want to," Kenstl said. "But a~y
man who enters must stay m
the game for at least one play."
Another aid Ill offensive play
came in a rule change which
applies 1D those rare instances
when a penalty is called behind
the line of scrimmage because
of defensive holding. The
penalty now wiU be marked off
from the line of scrimmage
instead of from the spot of the
foul.
Other changes made Wednesday:
- When two fouls are called
on a play and one involves the
disqualification of a player, the
disqualification foul wiU wash
out the other penalty.

ul

Child's crayon
streaks carpet
POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - I have a
real problem. My three-yearold made three deep purple
streaks on my carpet with a
crayon. I now have them down
to a pale lavender and have
tried everything I know . I
would like to hear of some
specific cleaning agent for wax
crayon marks. I would be
forever grateful. - MRS .
A.F.K.
DEAR MRS. A.F.K. -There
are a couple of thing• you
might try that are recommended for use oo wax crayon
marks. Test ou an In·
conspicuous corner first to see
If there Is any adverse color
reaction, ete. Try sponging
wit~ alcohol or put one
teaspoon white vinegar In a
quart of warm water or use a
nonflammable dry cleaning
fluid. Since you have the color
down to a pale shade a
detergent solution might even
remove that last color. Rinse
any solution off well and dry
carpet thoroughly. - POLLY.

with clear plastic or even hair
spray and place in a frame
with glass. - G. M.
DEAR POLLY -I am sure
there must be others who
suffered as I did with a baskettype kitchen sink stepper that
always let Ute hot sudsy water
seep out. (Polly's no~ : I am
one of them) . My inexpensive
solution was Ill place a plastic
lid from a one-half pound tub of
margarine over the basket
stopper after it was in place. If
the water starts Ill leak out it
will create a smaU suction and
the lid becomes a seal. No
more lea'ictng water and a
litUe pressure releases the lid
when you finish washing
dishes. - BEATRICE.
DEAR POLLY - I had not
worn my leather-lined snow
boots for a couple years, When
I did put them on it seemed
they had shrunk and were too
small. I forced them on but
they were hard and dry so f put
some old cold cream on them,
let it soak in and this made the
boots pliable and like new. -

'

SILVER BELLS, Cockle shells and milkmaids. are, back row, I to r, Glenda Conner,
Melissa Scarbrough, Pa tt y Jones, Lori Robinson; front row. I to r, Tara Guthrie. Cathy
Chichester, Amy Eve rett , Tamara Calloway, Lisa Hawk and J)eedra h Sand ers.

DR. LAMB

Liver damage due to fats
By Lawrence Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - Would a

or

person with lots
h ve r
damage. say 15 to 20 per c-ent ,

have a problem with polyun saturated fats ? They say a
fat ly liver ts the problem and
polunsaturated fats are 100 per
cent fat , while butter is only 85
per cent fat. Would this mean
polyunsalurated fa ts could he
just as damaging or more so'?
DEAR READER - If you
have a fatty liver 1\ means tllat
fat is accumulating m abnormal amountS in the small
liver lobes. Ordmarily the liver
processes fat and converts it to
form• that can be used for

The

Dai~

Sentinel

DINO'f ellY&lt;i THE
INTEREST OF

MEIGS-MASON AREA
CHES TER L. TANNEHILL.
e-.ec. Ed ,
ROBERT HOEFLICH
C ity EditOr
· Publ i sh ed dady excep t
Saturday by The Ohio V a lle v
Publ tshmg Co mp any.
11 1
Court S l , P omeroy . Oh1 0
15769 . Bl.lsi n ess Off ice P hone
992-2156. Edit or i al Phon e 992 -

21 57

Second class postage pa• d a t
Pomeroy . Ohio .
,
Nat •ona l
adve r tiSi ng
repre sentat i v e
B o t f i nel l i r
Gallagher . Inc ., 12 East A2nd
Sr .• New Y or k . New York . '
r a t es J
S ub sc r i p tion
Oellvered by carr ier w he r t
evailabte 75 cen ts p er w eek;
By Motor Route w her e c arri er
sertilce not ava i lable, One
month . S3.25 . By ma lt in Ohio
and w. va .. One Year . S22 .00l
, SiJI months, Sll SO , T h r ee
months , $7 . 00
E lsewhe r•
S26 oo year : Six mon thi
S1J.SO ; three mon ths , S7 sol
Subscr ipt ion pr 1ce In cludes.
Sunday Ti!ll,a -sentinet .
_ l.

':

ene r~n

In rc rta tn dtseHses the
ltver ma) be swampe-d \*,rith fa t
and can't process 1t all. Fatty
damage may result .
Excessive alcohol intake can
lead to fatty liver U1rough this
mechanism. Dmbehcs often
develOp fatty hvcr, 1f not
ndcquatcly controlled. beca use
the body ca n't use carbohydra tes and too much faUs
then mobili zed and sent to the
ltver to process. Onre aga m the
hver IS swamped. A si m1lar
thing ca n happen to people on
starvatwn diets. The body fat
ts mob1lized to provide energy
and ma y swa mp the liver's
normal
fa t
proce ssing
machmery.
You can see from these fac ts
that starvation and alcohol are
both hard on the liver. Obviously alcohol and not ea ting
make a \licious combination
The reason for avoiding fat u\
the diet, if you have a fatty
liver 1 is that the liver 1s already
swamped w1th fat and you
shOuldn 't add to the problem.
The tw o things to avoid. then,
are alcohol and fat .
. A good diet for the ltver
pahenl who is nol in hver
failure is one relatively high 111
carbohydrate, moderately ric h
in protein and low in fat.
Adequa te amounts of supplemental vitamins are often
needed. Lean meat is good
because ,it contains choline, a

substance that helps the liver
nd itself of excess fat.
Sometimes choline or sinular
medtcmcs are prescribed for
th1s purpose .
You'll need a small amount
of polyunsatur ated fat in your
die t which you can get from an
in take of whole grain cereals in
your d1e t. You should have
cereal anyway. Otherwise, any
fat should really be avmded,
sa tura ted or unsaturated.
Butter ts 100 per cent fat , not
85 per cent fat , when you talk
about calories. It is 15 per cent
water by weight. You could get
th e same effec t from a
polyunsa turated oil by addirg
wat er to it. The margarmes are
also 15 per cent water. whether
lhey are made rrom corn 011 or
other substances . So you are
not really getting any ad·
vantage at all by using butter
when yo u have a fatty liver
problem.
The evidence that polyunsaturated fats in large amounts
are good for anybody is rather
meager and in dtspute. The
bulk of research stud1es really
show that a high fat iniake of
any type may be harmful and
further that saturated fats may
be more harmful than other
fats . This does not mean that
beyond the small amount of
polyunsaturated fats you need
that additional quantities wiU
be helpful to you in anyway.
I .
I

CAST IN THE ROLES of fanners' helpers are front, 1 to r, Greg Hensley, Devin Barber.
Sean Clemson, Royce Bissell; middle row, 1111 r, Steven Sams, Steve Enevoldsen, Tim Probert
and Jimmy Watson ; back row, I tor, Mark Shrivers, Tom Everett and Joey Runyon.

Warren quoted sa}ing
'

.

Nixon was despicable
NEW YORK (UP! ) - A
friend of the late Chief Justice
Earl Warren Wednesday
quoted him as having said that
President Nixon was "the most
despicable President this
nation has ever had."
Alden Whitman, an obituary
writer for The New York
Times, writing in the current
Esquire magazine. said tbat
Warren also characterized his
successor on the Supreme
Court, Warren Burger, as 11 a
horse's ass."
" Tricky," Whitman says
Warren told him, ' 'is ·perhaJl6
the most despicable President
this nation has ever bad. He
was a cheat, a Uar and a cr90k,
and he brought my country,
which I love, into disrepute.
Even worse than abusing his

office he abused the American
people."
Whitman said he once asked
Warren if he thought the
Burger Coort, "with its array
of Nixon-appointed judicial
midgets, could erase the, accomplishments of the Warren
Court."
He said that'Wamm replied:
"They'll try, that I'm certain,
but in Ute long run Ute
American people won't stand
for a court that would take
them back 1D the days when it
was possible to ask, ~~What's
the Constitution hetween
friends '! "'

BOSTON (UP!)- Six veter.
an dribblers were 1D bounce a
basketball today from Boston
College to Providence, R.I. ·
They plan to complete the 4Smile dribblaUton in 10 hours,
ending at the Providence Civic
Center in time to see Boston
College play Kansas State in
Ute NCM Eastern regional
semifinals.
The same "Boston Six" • who
dribbled 231 miles to New York
City last year when the Boston
College team appeared in the
National Invitational Tour·
nament, said the purpose of the
drlbblathon was to demonstrate student spirit 1D the
Eagle team.

,.

i

,.,..

,..*
•

1

.

.., .... .... ... ...

,.

fry-hioo ..... l

,..

LUMP REMOVED
,.
PIDLADELPHIA (UP!)
Relief pitcher Tug McGraw of
the Philadelphia Phlllies underwent
surgery Wednesday
, Warren was appointed ,in
1953 at the age of 62 and served for removal of a lump located :
until 1969. He died last stun- just helow his left Shoulder
blade.
mer .

•*
:

UTED PG

Mason Drive-In Theatre
MASON, WEST VIRGINIA .

.

ch

8:30- 1:00

_____.

BULK SEEDS NOW ON SALE

•
•

0

•
•
•

•

•

CEILING
TILE

&lt;11.".

•

••
•
•

ft

'

•Good looking
•Easy to put up
• Noise absorbing

•Fire safe
•Won 't warp
•Easy to clean

Jienry Block has
17 reasons why }UU
should come to us

for . incorne tax help•

3rd Ave.

i :

992-2709
'

.

l.

Middleport, Ohio

I

' .

e RAKE5-GARDEN &amp; LAWN

BULK FERRY-MORSE

e PRUN-ING SHEARS

eSAWS. SMALL PLANTING
TOOL
F!ORRY MORSE
SEEDS
BULK &amp; PACKAGE

WEED KILLERS

-.

WEEO.NO.MORE

m~~Ntt

FULL STOCK OF

Ebersbach Hardware

THI IMCOMI T,U . flt:OI'LI

,_

~~~Y
Ph. tn-J7fS

Oponta.m. tosp.m.Mon.-S.t.
NO APP(&gt;!NTM!NT NECESSARY

•
r

HAHN·ECUPSE MOWERS

GRASS SEED

ASK FOR A FREE ESTIMATE

jVALLEY LUMBER &amp;SUPPLY CO.

It's planting lime again ...
Gel all lawn. garden supplies
you'll need, plus "how to"
' tips riQht here.

B · - 14. We're human, and once
In a great while we make a mlatake.
But If our error meana you m1111t pay
additional tax, you pay only the tax.
We pay any intereet or penalty .
We atand behind our work.

OWENS-CORNING LAY-IN
FIBERGLAS* CEILINGS

~

•

., ,.

'·

•
•
•

,.

( ,,

FIBERGLAS

---

,.

•••

t*******************************• ~
..

Co

THE MEIGS INN

•

: ** •••
** '
** •••
*: :
* •:"
** ':.
: ;

Spring Opening

a

J

•

_,.

Choose

TRIO

••

MOOUmE COMMENTATOR
Walt Disney 4s ·
MILWAUKEE, Wis. (UP! )
THE BEARS AND t
- AI McGuire, Marquette
(Technicolor)
University's colorful
Show Starts 7:00p.m.
basketball coach, wiU be a
commentator and analyst at
the NCAA regional championships, It was announced ***************~*****************
Wednesday .
McGuire, who last year
coached his Warriors tp the
runnerup spot in the NCAA
:
FRI· SAT· SUN
MAR. 21·22·23
:
championship, will discuss the
East and West tiUe gan1es wiUt ,.
DoUBLE FEATURE PROGRAM
,..
NBC's Tim Ryan, and also will
comment on the regional
''BLACK JACK"
broadcasts of the Mideast and
-,.St............
Midwest championship con- ,.
,.
tests.
,..,, K-wt..
pan _ •• a11cl h•'• .,011111
1 Jt

'Dream Teams'

Frank Sisty

•

Friday thru Tuesday
Marchll -25

I# Class A

Enjoy the Distinctive Style of the

MEIGS THEATRE
TONIGHT
March 20
NOT OPEN

contest 1 reserve catch er Larry
Cox looped a run-sconng single
to center to give the Phtladelphia Phillies a f&gt;.4 verdict in
UIC 13th inning over Boston.
Ferguson Jenkins, who lied
Catfish Hunter for the most
1974 wms w1th 25, hurled four
scoreless mmngs as Texas bea t
Houston f&gt;-2 ... Hank Webb gave
up the only run of the game in
Ule second inning as Cmc)nnati
beat the New York Mcts, 1-0,
U1en jomed the Met.&gt;;' growing
casualty hst witl1 a pulled
muscle in h1s left buttock ...
The Los Ange les Dodgers
pulled out their fifth successive
win wth a bloop single by Lee
Lacy in the bottom of the ninth
for a 4-3 win over Montreal ...
Scott McGre gor's wildness
helped the Minnesota Twins
score three runs in the e1ghth
mning to beat the New York
Yankees, f&gt;-1.

TONIGHT

BEND TIRE CENTER
Va

£tnd lms knocked in 13 runsUlrL'e more Umn his 1974 season
total.
Bradford's ftrst roundtripper cleared men from
every base, commg in the
!oiecond mmng Orr loser Ray
Sadecki. The second was a two~
rw1 blast m the seventh off AI
Hrabosky.
Starter Jtm KaHt receaved
credtl for the win after hurling
the first f1ve mnings of the
slugfest. Clucago's Jerry Hairston a nd St. Louis' Ron Hunt
and Luis Melendez also bonged
out four-baggers.
Elsewhere in the Gra pefruit
League, the Dctrott Tigers, in
another sluggmg duel, offset
SIX Kansas City home runs with
two of their own includmg
rookie Leon Roberts' opposite
field blast m the lOth mning for
a come-from-behmd 11-10 win
... In another exlra-mntng

Star Supply

~rea

Ma so n. W.

Ch1c.a go White Sox outf~elder
Huddy Bradford, still waiting
to play a full season in the
tW~Jors, IS showmg Lhis spring
wha t he mt gltt be capable of if
hO ven that long to play.
Bradford, who first started
pht y m the maJor leagues m
1966 :md has yet to pla y in more
than 107 ga mes , appea n.'&lt;i in
only 39 g::~mes last year, battmg .33;1 w1U1 fi ve homers,
aft er he mjured has leg only a
few months into the se::~son
Th1 s spnng, however, he 's
trymg to make up for lost time.
Wedne sda y.
Bradford
slugged two home runs, two
stnglt's and a double m fiv e
trips to the plate as U1e Sox
bombed the St. Louis Cardmals
14-7 Bradford , who ha s
~ lugged SIX home runs m the
last four games. ts balling 44 1

Steve Snowoen

It's

WILL BOUNCE BALL

B) Uullt•d l'rcss Jutt•rmH innal

chain for
any purpose

Tire Prices

irithe

JANE.

DEAR POLLY- Something
that really peeves me is that
foods and other articles are
marked with stamps that come
off on everything they touch
and are often almost impossible to wash off. I have to
clean some off my counter
most every day and it seems
something less indelible would
work for these stamps, - MRS.
L.H.
DEAR POLLY -A.T. should
consider herself lucky 1D have
so many pressed flowers. When
mine were completely dry I
·glued them to very heavy
paper after arranging them in
a natural manner with the
leaves and long stems included. Next I added a mat of
cardboard purchased at an art
sopply store and then put in a
frame with glass. Mine is a
mixture of flowers but I have
seen this done with single
plant.&gt;; and even their roots for
a most effective result. BARBARA F .
DEAR POLLY - A. T. who
has so many pressed flowers
could embroider a vase or pot.
on a heavy piece of linen-like
materia,l and then arrange her
flowers on this. Glue them in
place with that pop~lar allpurpose white glue and spray

--

An

:,::;:;;::;: s'[JOrt p a... d e

r;~~;:.-]st
J. A

CHESTEH

or~ani zati unal mcctHig for a

Bradford day perfect

8

COLUMBUS(i.JPI) - Mansfield St. Peter's Ron Barbo,
named the Umted Press In ternational Class A coach of the
year fo r the second consecutive
tlme, lsn•t counting on making
1t three.
"We hetter enjoy it this
year ," said Barbo when informed of the ~ward, " because
when we say we 'll be rebuilding, we really mean it. Six or
our first seven players are
seniors and have been playing
two or three years."
The 37-year-old Barbo, a
graduate of Salem College
(W .Va. ), has gu1ded the Spartans to a 24-2 record and into
the Class A State Tournament
finals Thursday night against
Maria Stein Marion Local. His
Spartans were ranked No. I tn
the ftnal UP! Board of
Coaches' Class A ratings for
the second straight season.
Barbo, since replacing Bub

.-uu.r CRAMER

is proposed

Today's

Ron Barbo top Class ;4

Polly's PoinT.Clt'"IO:

Oturch league

In the Cactus League, Pedro
Metgs HrcH intcr ·~.:hurc h soft Garcia's two doubles and two
ball league hil s been c;dled for
singles helped the Milwaukee
' Fortner, who has s1gned a and 16 r£1bound S per game as Monday, Mar. 24, at the Mt
Brewers to an 8-4 decision over
fo otball tender at Miami, St Pete rolled up a 24-2 record Hermon Unt ted Brethre11
California. In the game, allplayed center most of the time. gomg into Thursday's semi- Church of Chester , at 7 :50 p.m
lime home·run king Hank
although Walsh said, .. we used fin als at St. John Arena
Aaron started m left field fof
There an• some people Ill·
him basiCally the same wa)' we
Johnson. 6-.&gt;, is the lone tcrested 10 forming a church
the first time and threw out a
used Harrts last year."
JUnior on the No 1 team . He sof tball leag ue, a nd thi s
runner trying to score from
Fortner shot 57 per cent from was the second lea ding SC'orer mec tJng '" will help detemune
second on a single .. . Mike !vie
U1e held and 65 per cent from m the Cincmnah area wtth an n hcther the Interest 1s ~::rc ..~ t
walked with the bases loaded 111
the char ity stnpe for the year. avera ge of 26.7 per game.
force in the winnmg run in the
enough to orga nize
Black was the leading scorer
Givens, who missed the last
bottom of the ninth as San
Every church th&lt;:~t 1s Ill·
for Canal W10chester. wh1ch part of the 1973-74 season Wltll a te rested 1n parttc1pat111g 111 a
Dtego edged the Chicago Cubs,
was li-t m regular season play knee mjury, this season was church softball league as asked
f&gt;.4 ... Ex· Yankee Bobby Murand ranked second in the UP! A named tp the second squad
cer's tripl e and Derrel
to have the pastor, or 1f he
ratm gs. He avera ged 26 1
He averaged only 12.5 potnts cannot come, to se nd someone
Thomas' two..-un double helped
points per game.
per game, du e mainly to his to represe nt hun. an d a nother
San Francisco to defeat crossBlack is also a multi-sports lack of playing time after he lay person to represent the
bay riva l Oakland, 7-2.
performer. quarterback ing the returned from his mjury . In
church at the meeti ng Monday
Winchester football team and tournament play, the 6-2 mg:ht. If interest 1s sufhcwnt
stamng m baseball.
Givens IS averaging better plans will be dascussed ~nd
TO DO PLAY-BY-PLAY
Durmg the year, he broke the than 20 per contest.
DI':S MOINES (UP!)
deta1ls worked out f01 the
school career scoring record,
Joming G1vens on the second forming of the church league.
Former Cy Young Award·
held previously by his father.
team are Waterford's 5-11 Dave
w1nner Denny McLain will do
The &amp;-3 Steinhilber is a three- McFerren. who scored at a 23the
play-by-play broadcast of
year starter for Wynford. He points per game chp ; &amp;-I Mark ~l~~~~;~l~~~~r;l;~;~~~~~~~~l;;~~~;l~~;J:;~;~;lt;j]J:m:~;~:~~;~:~:~:~:~=~~~:~:mmmmj~tf~l~~:;:~~mt~~~~~
tl1e entire 1975 Iowa Oaks
averaged 20.2 pomts per game Swam of Hannan-Trace. 20.2;
schedule, it was announced
for the Royals, shot 56 per cent Joe Sprowl, 6-.\, of Monroeville, jijjjjj
Wednesday.
from the field, 67 from the free 22.1; and 6-4 Jeff Smith of
-thro" line and grabhed 217 Zanesville Rosecrans, 20.7. All ,:;:;:;:
~-:::.~
CO L UMB US ( U P i l
The Ne w come r stow n , M arv M ee k .
rebounds 10 18 regular season are seniors.
*:~ 197J 75 Un •l ed Pre ss In Pe ii i S\Iill e La rry N edo l as t ,
ckeye Ce ntr al Br1a n N ea l.
~
$.'::&lt; le m alo ona l Class A A ll Oh, O HBuard
games. He also has a 4.0 mark
The third team is made up of :::::::
•n
N o rth e rn ,
Jay
1 U
:~ ba sk e1ball tea m w 1th 11 e1ght ,
Over h o l dt . F rede r. c k town ,
~~ g ra de an d scor1ng average
in the classroom
three juniors and a pair of ,:;:;:;:
Ca r l Re nw1 ck Gr and Va l l ey .
·:·:·:·:
X•!O:·
FIRST TEAM
Lemming Carries Load
semors.
:;:;:;:
.~
Je ff B l ac k . ca n al wm
Paul Roeder , Mon roev ille , Bo b
Sl epeck.y, Pa r ma Byz an t m e.
The underclassmen are 6-2 :;:;:;:
W, cheste r . 5 10 . Sr . 16 1
Lemming, 6-4, shouldered
Duan e T rar es , Norwal k St
By MILTON RICHMAN
:;:;.~
Ti m s te mhll be r . Wyn t or d , 6
the load for top-ranked St. B•r adSp!lnaleofContmental, 6- :;:;:;:
Pau l .
W y att
Ta ylo r ,
:::::::
UP! Sports Editor
&gt;::::-:1 J, Sc • 10 2 ~
J im
Tu1t le ,
Peter's when th ree-year 4 Mike Conley of Mechanics· :.:.:.:
· ··"'
La rr y
!- ortner
Lora•n Crook svil le ;
A s h l and
Cres tview .
J im
Cl c ar view , 6 5. Sr . 13 0
regular Greg Givens, suffered burg, and 6-.\ Dave H1gginbo-FORT MYERS, Fla .I UPI ) - NexJ lime you see Vada Pinson
Sieve Lemm ;ng, M an sfo ela V o g l e r . Co v 1ng1on .
B ill
War f ie l d , Lord s town ; Sl e \le
an ankle injury the fl rst ga me !ham of Kirtland. The two play, notice his shoes.
Sl P e ie n, 6 ' · Sr . 20 B
•
Gr eg John son, Loc kl an d. 6 5. Wlll1am s, Old F ort. We s t
of the season and missed 10 seniors are M1ck Shoemaker, 6They're the most hi ghly polished pair m the big leagues, and J c , 20 7
Williams , West L i ber l y Sa l em.
St ev e Zs igray , Be ll a i r e S1
games.
I, of Paint Valley and &amp;-2 Mike have been ever since he fir st came up 17yearsago.
secoN o TEAM
Mark Sw tttn , Hannan-Trace, John
He responded with 20.8 points Chtlds of Yellow Springs.
Normally, no hallplayer pays tl1e kind uf attentton to the shine 6-1, sc .. 30 .2.
on h1s baseball shoes that Vada Pinson does. But m his case it
. Da ve M cFe r re n , Wate rford,
5
~
goes deeper than that. The veteran outfielder ror the Kansas City
~o~ rsPi~~l . M onroeVI l le, 6 5,
Person to person
0
Royals IS equally mellculous about his uniform, his street sc · " '
Je ff
Sm• l h.
Zan e sville
health insurance
cIot hes, his life style.
Ros ecr an s. 6 4, s r , 20. 7
Frye four years ago, has
Dan Brisker of Canal WmVada Pinson IS neat as a pm in every possible respect. He•s the
Gr e g G 1ven s, M(l ns f •e ld St
compiled an 84-19 record at St. chester was runnerup to Barbo
Pe ter ' s , 6 2. Sr , 12 5
best-dressed player in basebsll. Not m the flashy sense either
THIRD TEAM
Peter's, with 10 of the losses in the coach of the year voting, Basically, all this goes back to the way he shines has shoes.
II can help pay
Br ad Sp1 tna 1e. Contm enta I ,
coming the first season.
6
2
followed by Lorain Clearview's
soaring
hospital
A few Y.eeks ago, Don Newcombe. engaged in commuruty
~~;e· ~~n l e y , M ech an• c
Both of St. Peter's losses this Bob Walsh.
relations work for the Dodgers now, and Jack McKeon,· the sb urg . 6 " · J r .• n 3
and surgical bills.
year came early in the season
Dav e H• QQi nbotha m , Kir .
Others witt more than one Roya Is' manager, were in Burlington, N.C., to do a public service t lan
d . 6-5. Jr . 22 5
Call me.
with &amp;-2 Greg G1vens Sidelined vote were Paul Dtllon of program together. They began talking about ballplayers in
M ic k
Shoemak er,
P ai nt
with an ankle mjury suffered 10 Hannan-Trace, Phil Rychener g
t 1
V al l ey , 61. Sr .• 31.1
.
·
enera,I and Va da Pmson m par JCU ar.
M1ke Childs , Y ell ow Spring s,
the first quarter of the f1rst of Pettisville, Dave Ewart of
i'Hey. tell me something," Newcombe asked McKeon, 6 7. s r , 2 1 s
1255 Powell St.
game .
SPECIAL MENTION
Zanesville Rosecrans, Charles Iaugllingand remembering when he and Pinson played With the
Ma r 11n B tdw c l l, M iddl e town
Middleport
The Spartans lost 54-.&gt;2 to Stmgel of Lordstown, Mark Reds cen turies ago. "Does Pinson st11l shine his shoes like he Fenwt c k . Kevm Dom za l ski ,
AA A Mansfield Madtson the Smith of Riverdale. lrv
PH. 992-7155
'used to? He a lways spit-shined h1s shoes and got 'em rea lly ~~~ah~~:~.e •grt':~/ 1 ~a~~n\l~ ~:
fourth game of the season and Besecker of Man on Local, Bob sparkling.' '
Marion L ocal , Harry Huggtn s.
r.,:::,..~,.::
..,: 'l STATE FAAM MUTUAl.
52-5() to AA Canton Lehman the Pittser of Macon Eastern, Jim
McKeon had to laugh, too .
l nd •an Va l ley South , Ch r is
.A_
Automo bile Insurance Co
Hamm on , Grand Va l ley . Greg
sixth game and Smce have won Bauer of Wynford and Terry
fGID Home 01!1ce
''He hasn't changed a btt," answered the KC manager. "His Ja m es, Norttl Gallia ; Ro land
·-·•••• &lt; Bl oom ington, IllinOIS
20 in a row.
Jam es, G r e en e v .e w . J a c k
Marsh of Grand Valley .
hoesaresh'II highlypolished. Idon 'tknowof anybetter-dressed
RACINE, OHIO
s
M~s s m e r , R•v e rdal e, Jim
"I really think we would
ballplayer in the game."
Se lgo , P e tt• svlll e , T •m Se lgo ,
have gone unbeaten if we'd had
Vada Pinson•s explanation for the extraordmary f'a re he gaves Pe
tt .sv ill e. Bob Sh Jpp , Upp er
V a ll ey ,
Ge or ge
Sc •oto
Givens the whole year," said
his shoes as perfectly stmple, and also providr s the reason why he Th •em an . Mi n •s ter . B e n
Barbo. "We felt the ftrst part of
tsgoingallouttocollect3,000hit:beforehefinishes.
U selt on , s outh Cen t ral ; Vtr Qil
"'
Ward , Be lt Sv ill e
our schedule was the toughest.
" Pride," says the Royals' 36-year-old left-handed hitter, bePlover-of-th e-Yea r - Lacrv
"But one of the biggest PETERSON REPLACED
.
Fort'ner, Cl earv1 ew .
gmning his 18th season with 2,686 hits. "I look at it this way - if
coach -of-the -Year Ron
things for us this year was
SEBRING, Fla . (UP!)
you've got any pride at all in what you're doing, whether \t's
Barbo, Man sfi eld Sl. Peler ' s.
heing able to hold together Australian race car driver
. yourshoes or h'tttmg
· a base ball , you certainly strive to do
HONORABLE: MENTION
sh.mmg
Jami e A ndrik.o , L ords town .
when-Givens was hurt," Barbo Allan Moffatt has replaced the best you possibly ca n.
R1 c k
B r un sw• c k ,
M a r.on
contin ued. " It was a blow and Swedish Grand Prix driver
' ' 1 was never as hoe shme bo y wen
h 1 was growmg
· up, but I !Loor cvalil le
, M ax Brag g , Pr oc .
K e v 1n
1r land ,
it really tells a lot about the Ronnfe Peterson on the BMW remember bei ng in Trafftc Control School for litUe kids in Bern er, F aAnna
,
Dave
rest of the team,"
factory racing team for Satur- Oakland, and If you didn 't have your shoes shmed, the lady-m· Chlvlngton , Cont•n en tal , Pa t
Clark.
A ll e n
E as l .
K en
Barbo, who will be bringing day's 12 hours of Sebring auto charge always told us something bad would happen to us. I Chri
slen se n , Coal Grov e. John
his second St. Peter's team to endurance race, it was an- heheved her and began sh imng my· street shoes as hard as 1 Co r so , R "h mond H o ,ghiS ,
G l en
Con l e y . M•dd le fl e l d
the State Tournament in his no~ced VVednesday.
COUld.
Ca r dinal .
Pete
Ca n d e l a,
four years as head coach,
A spokesman for the track
''Whenl firstcame up withtheReds,InohcedLeo Cardenas A s htabula 51 John . C l a r k
, Berne Un 1on , Tom
asked to give credit to his two said Peterson was the victim of also was very particular about the way he shined his shoes. So I Dupler
Duckwor t ll , Canal W •nc h es ter
assistants, Pat Maurer, a Kent
"international red tape." He saw I wasn't alone. I carry my shoe polish along with me now.
Stev e F ri es, Norwalk St
Pa u l , Gi!ry Ga rb er , Ga raway ,
State grad who also handles the said Sweden's chapter of the Guys ask me 'Will you lend me your polish?' I always do. A man R
Organ, Drums, Guitar
•ck. G e rber. wayne Trace ,
scoutin g chores, and Phil Federation lnternationale de can wear the nicest clothes in the world, but if hi s shoes are dirty Cra•g H e r shberg er · H •land ;
Br 1an Hamilton , Malvern.
NITElY
Hawk, an Ashland College !'Automobile. the hcensi ng andgrimy,Iaskyou,howdoesitlook?
Ru ss ell
Hau c k ,
M a c on
alum.
body for the race, could not
"Ordinarily, the clubhouse boy shmes our shoes. I'm not the ~:J!~~~lle . K e ~~~~ H~~~~~~~ :
"They have really bee n clear up paperwork in time to onlyonewhodoes his own shoes on this club, though. Fred Patek se neca Ea st , Doug J am l5on ,
instr111nental in what success license Peterson, making him and Amos Otis do also.
St B erna r d . Jim Kram er . F l.
J cnn •ngs , K ev in
Kr. e ger ,
we've had, " satd Barbo.
ineligible for the race.
"Sometunes people say to me 'Don't you trust the clubhouse sa ndusky s t Marys . K e v•n
boy?' It'snot that. My shoes are part of my tools. 1should be the Long str e th , Li ncolnvi ew .
B ill Long , Wood Sfi el d Bry an
TO ENTERTAIN YOU AT
one to take care of them. You know what happens when the Lentz , I ndian Va l l ey south ,
clubhouse boy shines my shoes? I go over 'em and do it again. " Jo hn L arg e n! , Mi ll e r s por t·
Randy L1n stead , Pym a1un•ng
Vada Pinson wasn•t aware Ted Williams was a bug on shinmg Va l l ev ,
Lonn 1e
M o or e.
POMEROY
PH . 992-3629
shoes, too. He and Sam Snead once got into a discussion over who c I eve Ian d L u t 11 era n East.
John Me es ig , Norwalk Sl
shined shoes best and Williams said Snead never could get a P aul ,
Randy
M il ler , 1 ~----------------'*"
higher polish on his shoes than he could. The two men happened
to be quartered in the same place at the lime of the discussion,
and the next day Williams' shoes had a shine on them that almost
blinded everyone. He had worked on the shoes nearly two hours.
As outstanding a hitter as Williams was, he wasn't able to
amass 3,000 hits. ilest he could do was 2,654 although he would've
heen a cmch to make 3,000 had he not served with the Mar ines
Now Showing
two diffe rent limes during his career.
P1nson wants ' those 3,000 hits very much.
GILSON TILLERS
"I need exactly 314 more," he said, showing he's counting.
"I'm gonna get ·em somewhere, somehow. The way I..fii'ure it
could take me three yea rs. That means I have to take care of
myself phystcally."

ByGENE CADDES

pts gf

w. t. t . pts

x Bu ffa lo

Webb left with what doctors
described as a pulled muscle in
hts left buttock. The Mets•
injury list this year already
includes Cleon Jones, Jon
Matlack, Joe Torre, Bud
Harrelson and John Milner.
Cincinnati scored when Johnny Bench doubled, took Utird on

t . ph gf ga

3J 30 8

Van c ouver

g .b

Go lden Stat e
42 32 5~6
Sea li te
... 36 37 493
s• 1
Por t land
32 40 444
9
PhOen •)C
29 AJ
403 12
LosA ng eles
26 46 361 15
11 -(flnctle d diVI SIOn tlti C
Wedn esday ' s Resu lts
New Or 1Pa n s 12 6 P hila d el ph ia
11 5
Washmgton 97 Bos ton 80
N ew Yo rk 101 Ph oe n •x 96
Seatt le 101 Milw a u kee 100
Thur sday 's Games
Ch •c ag o at Cl evela nd
Portland a t Gol de n Stat e
N ew Orl ean s at KC Om all a

THE CLEVER, COLORFUL apples of "The Farmer in the De ll" are, Ito r, Jeff Bissell,
Mark'Gillllan, Robert Matheny, Brian Bowers, Mike Collins, James Weber and Roger Balser.

NHL Stand.ngs
By Un •fed Press International
DIVISIOO I
w l. t ph gl ga
K Ph •lad lp h
43 18 10 96 25 6 168

'Swain on 2nd team AllOhio; James honored

Ed Armbrister's sacrifice and
scored on Darrell Chaney's
infield out.
Clay Kirby and Fred Norman
pitched a flve-hit~r for the
Reds.
After Webb left in the third,
Bob Apodaca and Mac Scarce
blanked the Reds the rest of the
way.

run .

PETERSBURj}, Fla.
(UPII - The Cincinati reds
scored the game's only run
Wednesday in defeating the
New York Mets 1-0 m an
exhibition game here.
The Mets mjury list continued
Ill grow when pitcher Hank
Webb was forced to leave the
game after g1ving up the only
ST.

Bosto n
39 22 11 89 321 219
Tor on lo
28 31 13 69 255 78 4
1
15 &lt; Cali tor n •a ·
18 41 12 48 189 271
17
lii · DIVISIOn Wi nner
25
Wednesday's Resu lts
32
NY Rang er s 3 V an couv er 0
A tla r~ ta 8 Tor onto 7
NY Is l ander s 3 K a r~ C1IY 1
g b. M ont re al 2 Bo ston 1
P 1tt sburg h 3 Ca l •forn•a 3
21 ~
Thursday's Games
B'1 NY R ang er s at Buffalo
9
M 1nn es ota at Wa sh ing ton
Ch1ca go at De l ro •t
p et . g b . St Lou• s a t L os Angel es

x wash. n g lon 53 20 726
H ous l on
38 36 514
Cle v eland
36 37 J93
Atla nta
29 46 JB 7
N ew Orl ea n s 20 51 2B2
Western Confere n ce
M•dw est Dt\II Sion
w
1. pet
Ch •cago
4 2 29 592
K C Om ah a
4032 55 6
De tr o• l
35 39 J1J
Mli wault.ee
34 39 ·166
PaCifiC D I VISIOn

THESE YOUNG B lfl'l'E K~· tJ E :S are anXIoUS to try tne1r wmgs m .. Tne ~·armer m tne
Dell". They a~e. 1tor, KunSchul, Tncie Sarns, Lisa Henderson, Tern Stout, Joy Brannon, Lisa
Van Hoose . .

Reds slip by Mets

Wednesday's Re su lls
Oe s M o in es 6 F ort Wayne 0
Tole d o 7 f' l •n l 1
K al a m azoo 5 Sag ina w 5, ot
TOAI!Jtll ' s Gam es
N o games schedu led

J

" EVERYTHING IN HARDWARE"
'
MAIN STREET
POMEROY, OHIO

J

�I

•
'
'

..

s ~ The DaUySentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy,·O., Thursday, March.20.1975

4- The DiiUy Sentinel, Middlepori·Pomeroy, 0, Thursday. Marrh 20, 1975

-INSULATION-

Linden Panthers eye upset
over unbeaten Kettering 5
By GENE CADDES

UPISporta Writer
COLUMBUS (UPI ) - Jene
Davis, coach of Columbus
lhtden McKinley 's surprising
Panthers, isn't conceding anything to unbeaten Kettering
Alter in their opening Class
AAii semifinal State Tournament game.
The Panthers and Knights
meet at6 p.m. Friday, followed
at 9:30 by the Canton McKinley-Cleveland Heights contest.
The Class A teams open the
tournament tonight with Indian
Valley South (19-51, making its

its first nine games , fm1shed

fourth straight appearance,
meeting Mlsslssinawa Valley
( ~ ) in the 7:30 game and
Maria Stein Marion Local ( 231) playing top-ranked Mansfield St. Peter's (24-2) in the
9:30 contest.
The AA semifinals, at 11 a.m.
and 2:30 p.m. Friday, match
Warsaw River View and
Rossford, both 23~. in the first
game and Louisville St.
Thomas Aquinas ( 16-8 ) and
Dayton Stivers (15-8 ) in the
second.
Ended Season 10-8
Linden, which dropped six of

the regular season with a 10-&lt;1
mark and has won 13 of its last
15 games, so the 16-8 and is a
litUe misleading .
" Tlie games we lost in
December and January don 't
mean a thing, " said Davis.
"It 's what happens Friday
night that counts."
Davis, in his rirst year as
head coach, says his team's
Improvement is "a matter of
confidence."
" ll just took time to teach
what we were tryin g to get
accomplished," he said. " But

Hoosiers' 33-game streak on
line tonight at Dayton
By United Preaslnteroallonal

The nation's longest college
baskelball winning streak will
ccme to an end tonight at
Dayton, Ohio:·
That's the prediction of Joe
Hall, coach of Kentucky , who
loreaeei top-ranked Indiana's
33-game wlnl'llng streak being
halted by Oregon State in the
semtnnala of the NCAA Mideast
regional tournament.
"I pick Oregon State based
on their win over Indiana last
season and their defense," said
Hall, whoee club meets Central
Mlchi&amp;an in other semifinal
match at Dayton. "They have
the type Of defenae that is most
difficult lor Indiana lo work
against."
Oregoo Stale, which has a 19,
10 record, defeated Indiana, 61·
· 48, last year at the Far West
Clalliic In Portland, Ore., and
that lou 'left a deep Impression
.on Hoosiers' Coach Bobby
Knight.

"We were greatly impressed
by Oregon State in our loss out
at Portland last season," said
Knight. "Oregon State was a
young team then and it has
matur~d and improved in the
nearly two seasons since then.
"They are sound in funda·
menials and have been seasoned by the great competition
found in their conference.
There are none but good teams
leflin the tourney and.an:;.thjng
less but our very best will not
be good enough."
Ralph Miller,- coach of
Oregon ·state, believes strongly
that defense will be the key to
the final outcome of the game.
· "In tournament play it is
defense that wins championships and both clubs have It,"
said Miller;
Indiana, despite Miller's optimlsm and the fact that AllAmerica Scott May will proba·
bly not be ready to play still
remains a solid fav orite. '

Unseld is hack
and Bullets win
'

the kids have a great altitude only starter back from last
and didn't give up. We lost a lot year's unbeaten Alter team,
of games by a close margin but ··does everything welL"
they didn't let it gel them
Aller. third in the final UP !
down.
"
Bo(lrrl nf rn,qrhf' .::' /\ /\/\
Davis points to a 53-36 win at
Findlay early in the season as a
key victory.
" Right then , I knew what we
could do," he said.
Linden will have a decisive
height disadvantage against
than Alter: with !H Napoleon
Allen the Panthers' tallest
player . He is also 'their top
scorer with a 14.5 average.
Pair of Mini-Guards
The other Linden starters
are &amp;-loot James Love, &amp;-2
Robin Bryant and a pair of
mini guards, &gt;-8 sophomore
Todd Penn and 5-7 Melvin
Owens.
"I know Alter is much bigger

In the other game, Kentucky,
which earlier this season got
whipped soundly by Indiana, 1s
favored to defeat Central
Michigan .
Other regional matchups tonight include :
East: North Carolina (22-71
vs. Syracuse (211-7) and Kansas
State ( 19-ll) vs. Boston College
(21·7)at Providence, R.I.
Midwest: Louisville (25-2) vs.
Cincinnati (22-5) and Maryland
(24-4) vs. Notre Dame (19-ll) at
U.s Cruces, N.M.
Far West : UCLA (24-3 ) vs.
Montana (21-6) and Nevada-U.s
Vegas (23-4) vs. Arizona Stale
(25-3) at PorUand.
North Carolina and Kansas
State rate as the favorites in
the East regional, Louisville
and Maryland are expected to
win in the Midwest and UCLA
and Arizona State are the
choices in the Far West.
Winners advance to the
regional finals Saturday afternoon with the four survivors
moving on to San Diego for the
national championship next
week.

Free Estimates-No Obligation

FOREMAN &amp; ABBOTT

ratmgs, eliminated top-ranked
Middletown 72-59 in the finals
of the Dayton Regional to
reach the State Tournament.

Middleport, Ohio

r----------- .____,__
~WI~Ht:H - LUM~t

I

l
l1

Pharmacy
Kenneth McCullough. R. Ph . Charles Riffle, R. Ph.
Open Daily s,oo a.m.to 9,30 p.m .

I
Sunday 10: 30 to 12 : 30 and s to 9 p .m .
I PRESCRIPTIONS
PH. 992-2955
I
Friendly Service
I 112 E. MAIN
POMEROY, o.

~---------------·-------_..

REXALL

MOUTHWASH

ASPIRIN

LISTERINE

Noveltys, Gifts,

REG. 1.75
ONLY

ONLY

Chester, Ohio
Phone 985-3537

Pepto-Bismol

AYDS

12 oz.

24 oz.
REG. 4.50

REG. 1.59
ONLY

ONLY

FOR COLDS

EYE DROPS

VI SINE
lf2 oz.

REG. 1.75
ONLY

99¢

6

NYQUIL
oz.
.

REG. L79

.

99¢

VITAMIN C
TABS
79

500 MG

100

REG. 7.89
1

REG. 3.22

ONLY

( -f{ )'' ~.

ONLY

JOHNSON'S

Alka-Seltzer

BABY POWDER

ONLY

14 oz.
REG. 11.59

57~

RASHUGHT BAITERIES

SUDDEN BEAUTY
12 oz.

·~'

REG. 1.20

-~'

TUNING

.e

ONLY

HAIR SPRAY

Dish

EVEREADY
D or C

~

REG. 30'

ONLY

ONLY

.

Song/est drew

overflow crowd

•1!

BALLS

.

e

TOYS
".aaskets,
Baskeh to Be Filled,
Gr.. s - oil the
goodies you need.
Filled

Ar1ificial Flowers inCluding Easter Lilies,
cinths.
'

-·--._.._..

Two additional petitions of
candidacy have been filed with
the Meigs County Board of
Elections.
Dale E. Smith, Republican
mayor of Pomeroy, filed his
petition for the nomination to
run again. In Middleport Carl
J . Horky, serving now on
council by appointment, filed
to run lor nomination for
council. He is a Republican.

LOSE UGLY FAT

Pickaged Flower Seeds, Garden Seeds and
Bulbs for Spring Planting Are Here.

Stan losiO, weiGht today or monty

LAWN DECORATIONS Hen &amp; cnicks. duck &amp;
ducklings, rabbits, flamingos, gees, bird baths and swan
planters. Wire &amp; plastic decorating fence and corners.
MAK.~I!_OY YOUR SHOPPING CENTER

food . Eit 1. . - weigh less. Contains
no da.,oUs drup IOd will not
make you nervous. No nrenuoos
exercise. Change your life , •. st1rt
todfly , MO~ADEX cort $3.00 for
a 20 dty suppty, Large economy
size is$5.00. Also trY AOUATABS:
they work gently to hllp you lote
water-bloat, AOU'AT ADS -a "water
pill" that works - S3.00. Both
QUII'tntted 1rtd IOkf by:
Swisher &amp; Lohse Pharmacy
112 E . Main, Pomeroy

..

'

$

Uck, MONADl:X is a tin'l_ tablet
lnd lilY to take. MONAOEX will
help curb your desire for ex.~

FROM BAKER'S BUDGET
HP •.. All NEW AJRNITURE
AT BUDGET PRICES!!

e 3 PC. BEDROOM SUITE... ............. ~.138
e 5 PC: DINErrE SET................... ;.•••~58
e 4 DRAWER CHESTS..... . . .•..•.••.•.•~38
•Bo~ultiAt ,BEbDS
I ......... · ... . · • · ...............~~~
u e r cs. good c' ., .ng construction.
1

e·ADMiRAL REFRIGERATORS ............!.199
SPECIAL VALUES ON MATTRESS&amp;
BOX S!'RING~ALL SIZES.

Pomeroy

'

Our new Exersole shoe helps you walk the way your feet were bom to walk .
Think of walking barefoot on a beach. Free and easy. Your heels sink down
into the sand. Your weight shifts back, otT your arches.
See the way the Exersole is designed. The heel is lower than the toe. To
shift your weight back, where it belongs. To help you walk more naturally,
more comfoitably. likewalking barefoot.
·come in and check out the shoe your feet were hom to walk in.
The Exersole. All in natural,leathers '
.
.

her'i tage h~u•e
Your' Thom MeAn Store
Middleport, Ohio- ·

Middleport, Ohio

(

'II

"

The shbe your feet
_. · · ,
were born to walk in.

.•

v

..

Two niore file
for offices

Dutton Drug Slore

..
I

lileni:

Neil Simon's 'Two by
Two' will be presented

CANDY,

Effervescent Antacid

25 TABLETS
REG. 91'

Relish

I

Ca Iend ar"ll

Six programs
featuring
Baxter series

FLOWERS,

fLOWEQ .~-~= ~~-··-

f

s0C1'aI

The-,Exersole
by Thom MeAn.
.

McKESSON

High Potency Vitamin
Formula With Minerals
30 FREE
WITH 100

Stile Priced

.

Choir prepares cantata

MIDDLEPORT
DEPARTMENT STORE

Theragran M

international Holloware

. .

Playground at
·circle meets
school improved

ggc

GIFTS for EASTER

tourt St.,

4 Eastern FFA
attend seminar

..

play noted

Ph. 949-4811

The instrumental muslr
department
of Wahama High
The Lovejoy L. nue of the get-well cards were s igned for
The Electra Circle of the devotions using an article used clotliing to CainjibeU
Middleport First Baptist lwo members of the t:hureh. St·hool. under the direction of
Middleport First Baptist about Palm Sunday.
Christian Center; Da]'ton.
Church met Tuesday night "'
Members.wer-e asked to la ke Charles Ycago and Thomas
Who Can a Girl Trust? ,
Churc h with Mrs. Milton Hood,
A thank you note was read Closing prayer waa given !JY
l'hilllps, will prese nt Its
Rap:
the home of Mrs. Lillie Hub- la yette articles to the next
chairperson, presiding, met from Kelly Gilmore and plans Mrs. Cleo Boyd.
:.
'ann
ual spring t:oncert
bard with Mrs. Janet Lewis as mee ting which will be a potluck
I went through hell when my girlfriend left with my fiance.
Tuesday at the church. •
were made to remember shutMlsa HaU and Mr•. lloxd
hostess .
Tuesday, March 25 at 7:30
dinner for all three circles.
They spent a month in Europe and when they came back she told
Rh&lt;.da Hall, president of the ins at Easter. They also were guests. Others atte~
Chairperson Mrs . Kali e
Mrs. Martha King was in p.m. at tht• high sr.hool gym.
me all about how lucky I was to be rid of him as he 's chintzy
missi onary soc iety, gave discussed presenting the were Maril)&gt;n Fultz, Euu~ll1
Several selections will be
Anthony
presented
a
poem.
cheap, and selfish, among other bad things.
.
'
charge of the program using
scholarship girl with a gift of Gardner,
Iaabeli
"Spring" by Lydia Jackson. the "Doubler " as her topic. A pn·scnted by the junior and
· But HE has_told me a_ll the bad things she is, and about how
money.
Winebrenner,
Paulne
Ho •
Mrs. Iva Turner led the salud &lt;'Ourse W(J S served l o senior bands ranging from
she talked him mto the tr1p after she convinced him 1 was going
Miss Hallannouriced that the man, Elizabeth Slavin, Elee
devotional period, prese ntin g a Mrs . Anth ony, Mrs. June srrious music to Broadway
out on him. When he learned bow she's lied to him (he says) he
women 's conference will be Souders and Freda Hood.
1
Billy Graham sermon. Thank· Kl oes, Mrs. Clara Mae Darst, musirals.
told her to get lost and that's why she's mean-mouthing him.
held at Capital University,
Hostesses were Mrs. Hood
Included In the program
you notes were read from Mrs. Mrs. Frances Smart, Mrs.
In the tw_o years we were engaged, he was just terrific, not
Columbus, in June. A layette and Helen Bodlmet.
Dana Hamm, Kelly Gilmore Sara Fowler, Mrs. Hubbard. "Ill be a trumpet duet
:,eapor selfish, etc. ! still love him. Who should I believe ? - E.
will be taken to the conference.
and Mrs . Belz . Plans were Mrs. Mar tha Kin g and featuring Rex Howard and
Plans were made to send
EASTERN
Eastern
made for remembering shut- children, Michl and Marsha. Cheryl Weaver, selections Chapter of Future Farmers of
E·
frum earlier as well us
ins of the church for Easter and
America sen t four members to
contem porary periods, and
Since you obviously want to - beli~ve HIM. - SUE
· the officers training seminar at
the 0\'Crture from the
+++
Warren High School, Saturday,
Broadway Musical March 15. They were Steve
Dear E.:
·:Brlgadoone", which will
But with a bit of skepticism. - HELEN
Young, Rusty Burns, Randy
The Afternoon Circle m•t
('O IIcl udt• thr program.
'+++
Boston, Marhn Evans, and
Richard Vaughan reported recently at Heath United
The public Is cordially accompanying the group was
Dear Helen and Sue :
RACINE - The choir of Cwnm ins and Mrs. Ronald
on
new materials and other Methodist Church In Mid·
Racine Baptist Church will Salser, Frank Cleland and invited.
I fell in love with Harv when I was 14 and he was 19. All he
.
their advisor Aaron Sayre.
improvements for the school dleport.
. :;:;:;.·:·.;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:::::;:;:;:·:;:;:;:·:::·.·:·:::;::
present th e evangelistic Dennis Manuel.
saw was his kid sister's gangly friend. When I was 17, he took me
Mrs. Nan Moore, prealden~
Highlights of the event were playground when the MidThe regularly sched ul ed ,.~,~x=&lt;·~~"'":&lt;-""'''·'''"'··
" Behold
the
can tat a ,
out a few times, between girlfriends, but then he got engaged.
•..::.c.x..~o:-x ..'-'-..._...;o...,.~..\,:- :....~:.:~.: a fruit sale sen11'n
opened the meeting leadlri•
dleport
Elementary
School
·
:
·
:
~=
ar,
earm
ngs
Crucified!" on Palm Surday prayer mee tin g and Bible ~:~~
Once, when they had a fight, we - you know - "consoled" each
group singing of "They'U KrJo1i
~ and savingS seminar, public PTA met Monday night.
other.
evening at 7:30p.m., directed study will be held Wednesday ~~
Children of the third grade of We Are ChrlsUana by Otlt
~ re)ations se~inar and chapter
He broke it off when they went back together. I was then 19.
by Mrs. Walter P. Bikacsan. at 7:30 p.m. Candl eligh t ;:;:
~ awards semmar.
Mrs. Cor tney Knight led the Love" with Mrs. Roijerl
Mrs. William Hayman will be CommlUlion will be observed ;~:
U.st week she gave him back his ring and he's really down.
~
Also there was an offiCers' pledge of allegiance and the Rinehart at the plln~ 1 . MriJ
But yesterday he was asking his sister about me. He won't
pianist. Soloists are Mrs. Jack during the Maundy Thursday
training semi nar for each Rev . W. H. Perrin gave prayer. Moore presented the IICMpiutt
service at 7:30 p.m. The i!i
come over because he feels guilty about the other time but he
:;~
:::: officer of the FFA .
The room attendance award and prayer and the If
congregation will worship in :::·
needs cheering . His fiancee won't take him back- sh~'s been
went to the third grade of Mrs. hers stood lor silent pray r _to&lt;
the Commur ity Good Friday
seeing another guy for a month on the Q·T.
Knigh t. Refreshments were Mrs. Crary Davia who dl'il
THURSDAY
service at 7:30 p.m. at the
Sle was never right for him. I am! Isn't it about time I told
served
by mothers of fourth March 7. The lesson prueri~
YOUTH RALLY, Danville
Racine Wesleyan Methodist
him so? Should I call him? - STilL WAITING AFTER SIX
graders taught by Mrs. Lucy by Mrs. Grace French waa on
Wesleyan Methodist Church,
ffiMS
.
Church.
Jonah. Cards and thank you
White.
Easler Day sched ule of 7:30 Thursday ni~ht. All youth
notes for ValenUne coolil~
Dear SWASY:
services include sunrise ser- mv1ted to a t~~ " ~~ parwere
read. The hostesses, Mri•
vice at 6:30 a.m., Sunday hclpale With talenL 1111 • , 11,
You may be asking lor another hurt, but I'd say, take a
MODEL PROJECT
Clara
Criswell, Mrs. Ma~
ROCK SPRINGS Better
An overflow crowd attended
School at 9:30 l\.m., morning
chance and call Harv. Old friends are ftlr cheering a guy when
Southeast Ohio'sEmergency Ketchka and Mrs. Garnei
he's down. -SUE
worship at10:40 a.m., and the Health Club, Thursday, ,1:15 a songlest Sunday, March 9, at Medical Service began as a Enlarnlnger served refrealt;
Sunday
School
Easter p.m. home of Mrs. Beuna the Pomeroy Seventh-day health demonstration project ments.
Adventist Church. Offering
HU
NTINGTON
The
DearS. :
programs at 7:30 p.m. The Grueser.
of the .Ohio Valley Health
WOMEN'S
Association, musical selections were Bob Services Foundation, Inc.-,
Marshall Artists Series will public is cordially invited.
. But let Harv di~cover for himself that she was never right for
Middleport First United Bush, U!ncaster; the Matson
observe its 40th anniversary
him -you are. W1th proper cheering, he will ... he will ... (OVHSF) and the Board of
DAUGHTER BORN
Presbyterian Church, 7:30 Family and Linda, l)renda and County Commissioners of
season
with
six
gala
programs
HELEN
Mr. and Mrs. Lewilliilillh of
p.m.
An
Easter
playlet
to
be
Debbie
Black,
Rutland;
on
the
1975-76
Baxter
Series
++ +
.· Nthens ; Hocking, Meigs,
given. Overseas sewing will be Ronald Browning and son, Vi nton,' Gallia, Lawrence and Middleport are announc~ 111e
beginning in late summer.
Dear Rap:
dedicated. Mrs. Lewis Sauer Kim, and The Frank Martin Jackson . SEOEMS is now birth of a daughter, Shelrl
Metropolitan Opera basso
Here's advice for those "Scared Little Girls" who have been
will give devotions with Family, Pomeroy; Mrs. Clara incorporated as a private non- Jeannine, March 7. the ~t
Jerome Hines will open the
raped and are afraid to tell. It happened to me when I was 15.
members
of Group I to be the · Mcintyre, RD Minersvllle; prof! t service governed by a weighed 6 lbs., 1i~ ol~·
season
Sept.
17
with
a
Some so-called friends had it all set up. I was so frightened and
hostesses.
Robert Green
Fl!mily, · non-partisan
grandpareiita
dramatized recital of arias and
ashamed (and threatened by the boy who said he'd kill me if I
Board
of Maternal
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Mariort Parker
YOUTH
RALLY,
Danville
Gallipolis;
Mrs.
Sandy
Bqtcher
.
songs.
Hines
will
be
per·
told) that I meant to keep quiet. Finally I couldn't hold back any
Trustees. SEOEMS 22-member Long Bottom: paterna
United Methodist Church, 7:30 and Robert Pickett, RD Board will be comprised of a
longer and sobbed it out to an understanding neighbor who then forming his l,OOOth recital
during the 1975-76 season .
p.m. Thursday. All youth in- Pomeroy; The Freeland Norris health provider, a consumer grandmother Ia Mra. Fredl
helped me tell my parents and the police.
vi ted.
Quartet, Mrs. Tessie Evans and a public official from each Smith of Pomeroy, anci
Jurgen Jurgens will conduct
You know what? The rapist went to court and was fined $5(1,
ST. PATRICK DAY card and Okey Kiser, Racine; the of the counties, and the maternal great-grandlilolher·
the lOll-member Monteverdi
that's all! Why? Because after nearly a month, nothing could be
Funeral
services
for
Mrs.
parly
Thursday 7:JO p.m. at Robert Persons Family, Little executive director of OVHSF.· Is Tresale Spencer 01 MidChoir and Orchestra of
proved. If I had asked for help right away, maybe I wouldn't
dleport:
Hamburg Oct. 13. The group's Leah Schaefer were held at the Pomeroy Sacred Heart Kyger; Virginia Grogan and
have needed a psychiatrist later on. But there's a happy ending:
six soloists include noted residence Monday with the Catholic Chlll'ch. Prizes to be John Dill, Middleport; the
I got rid of my hangups, met and married a fantastic guy.
British tenors Ian Partridge Rev. W. H. Perrin officiating. awarded . Refreshments. Stewart Family, Mrs. Maxine
The trauma of rape should be dealt with Immediately. You
Relatives a ttendin g the Public invited.
Matthews, and Mrs. Debbie
and
Nigel Rogers, and soprano
save other girls from being victims, and you save yourself
fun eral were Mrs. Joan
MIDDLEPORT MASONIC Howard, Harrisonville; Unda,
months or years of needless misery. Rape should be considered a Barbara Schlick.
Stoneburner,
Kettering;
Mr.
Lodge
363 Thursday 7 p.m. Larry and Cindy Stewart,
Pianist
David
Bar-IIlan,
p~ysical assault, not a guilt-causing secret. - P.L.R.
accorded the honor of giving and Mrs. Rex Davis, Colum- En~red Apprentice degree to Willard Pigott, and the Junior
the first piano recital at the bus; Mr. and Mrs. U.wrence be conferred. All master While Trio, Kyger.
Men's &amp; Boys'
Ladies &amp; Child~n·s
The opening prayer was
John F. Kennedy Center for the · Bradford, Columbus; Mr. and masons invited.
William
Smith,
Performing Arts, will present a Mrs .
REGULAR MEETING, offered by the pastor, Gerard
SPORT COATS
DRESSEs .
Alexandria, Va.; Mr. Bradford Twin City Shrine at Racine Seton, and Willie Cundiff of.
concert Nov . 13.
SLACKS
PANTSUITS'
In a retW'n engagement, the Powell, West Jefferson; and Shrine Park, 7:30 p.m. Thurs· fered the benediction.
TIES
EN,SEMBL&amp;S
Canadian Opera Company will Mrs . Nancy Tell, Parkersburg, day. Special film by Belpre
SHIRTS
Bl-OUSES
••
perform its new production of W.Va.
Shrine Club; refreshments . All
BELTS
SKIRTS
Pall
bearers
were
Wallace
"La Boheme" by Puccini, Jan .
Shriners invited.
Sunday school to follow.
JACKETS
PURSES
Bradford, Lawrence Bradford,
14.
FRIDAY
EASTER Cantata the "Seven
RIO GRANDE - The Rio Grande Community Oollege
HOSE
On Mar. 3, Michel Tabachnik Bradford Powell, Don Collins,
SOUTHERN CLUSTER of Saymgs at the Cross" Sunday
Grande CoUege • Rio Grande courses can be completed will conduct the Gulbenkian Richard Jones and Rex Da.vis. young adults Friday 6:30p.m. 7:30p.m. at Syracuse Asbury
. Community College Theatre Monday, March 25th at the Festival Orchestra of Lisbon
Honorary pallbearers were at Rutland United Methodist United Methodist Church.
Wilson Champion
Coats &amp; Clarks
will present Neil Simon's play College. Registration will be with Grand Prix du Disque Rodney Downing, Irving Karr, Church Youth Center. Bring a Combined
choirs
from
ORLON WINTER
TENNIS
"Two By Two" in May, ac- Open all day and until9:00p. m. pianist Mario Joao Pires as Roy Betzing, Edison Hob- sack lunch.
Syracuse, Forest , Run and
cording to Dr . Charlotte Monday evening. For more soloist.
stetter, Manning Webster ,
FIVE ' POINT Junior and Minersville Methodist ChurYARN
Can of 3
Carver, assistant dean for arts, information, contact the AdClosing the season Apr. 7 will Wayne Swisher, William Senior Star Stitchers 4-H Clubs ches will participate. Mrs.
sciences, and professional missions Office, Rio Grande be the Don Cossacks of Rostov, · Howard, Robert Elberfeld and Friday 7 p.m. at home of Mrs. Jani_ce Sauvage, pianist, ·
education.
GIRLS' FUN HATS
College , Rio Grande , Ohio singing and dancing in the Clyde Ingels. Mrs. Schaefer, Roy Holter to reorganize and to Eleanor Robson, narrator, and
60" POLY. KNit
· Large
Three theatre courses will be 45674. Telephone (614) 245-5353. famed tradition of the people of 81 , resided at 230 Lincoln Hill, elect officers for 1975. Those Mrs . Ann Sauvage, director.
Assortment
' offered in connection with the Collect calls will be accepted. the Don River region of the Pomeroy. Burial was in Beech interested in joining the junior Public welcome.
FABRICS
' play during the quarter, which
Grove Cemetery .
Soviet Union.
MONDAY
or senior clubs should con tact
$ 99
• begins Tuesday, March 25th.
Information about season
FAlL
Gospel
meeting at the
Mrs. Holter or Mrs . Roger
: Introduction to Theatre 225,
memberships can be obtained
Middleport High School March
Starcher.
. will be taught each day
from
the
Marshall
Artists
24 through the 29 at 7:30p.m.
PAST
MATRON&amp;,
CLASS TO MEET
: Monday through Thursday
Series,
Marshall
University,
nightly. Evangelist will be A.
Evangeline
Chapter,
O.E.S.
Class 12 will meet at 7:30
HIGH INCIDENCE
; from 3:SO until 5 p. m. p.m. tonight at the Heath Huntington, W. Va.
Victims of auto accidents are 7:30 Friday home of Mrs. Willis C. Estep and H. D. CQok.
•Stagecraft 25S will be offered United Methodist Church with
.Featured sjnging groups will
especially likely to have head, Anthony.
. on each of those days from 6:10 Mrs. Lillian Smith as leader.
be the Coy Family and the
THIRD
Friday
Club
at
7
p.m.
neck and back Injuries acOPEN TILLB:OO P.M. FRI. &amp; SAt.
. unU18 p.m., and a Drama Lab
ANY OLD TIME
Joyfulaires.
Friday al home of Mrs. Mabel
cording
to
a
study
done
by
Dr.
Medical emergencies happen
Practicum will also be offered
Wolfe, W. Main St., Pomeroy .
"J IJ
at all hours of the day or night. George J . Alker of Meyer
with the time and days to be
SA'fURDAY
Memorial
Hospital
in
Buffalo,
SHOWER
PLANNED
Statistics
gathered
by
Southannourced .
FISH FRY by Middleport
'
Instructor lor the courses
A bridal shower for Lenora east Ohio's Emergency N. ~ · In some instances, Fire Department at departmovmg
or
these
victims
will be Mr. Ed Roark, assistant Michael, bride-dect of Roger Medical Service shows that
ment headquarters all day
:professor of theatre at Rio Leifheit, wiU be held Saturday most emergencies (41.4 pet. ) needlessly and carelessly has Saturday; fish sandwiches and
'Grande.
at 7:30p.m. at Rock Springs happen between the hours of 8 resulted in death and per- dinners will be 'available.
Rehearsals lor the Simon United Methodist Church. All a.m. and 4 p.m. with 39.8 pet. manent paralysis .
ROCK SPRINGS U.dy Bugs
Only people trained in proper
happening between 4 p.m. and
·play will be each evening friends are welcome.
4-H Club, Saturday, starting at
-Monday through Friday from
midnight. No specific day of rescue techniques, such as 10 a.m. at Krogers .
.
emergency
medical
the week seems particularly
,8:10 until10:45 p. m., and the
'public is invited to participate
BAKE Sale, begi!IJii;l!t 10
A thought for the day: high for accidents or sudden tech nicians, s hould move
whether enrolled in class j!r Norwegian writer Henrik Ibsen illness . Emergency ambulance accident victims unless there's a.m. Saturday" li t' SP. 1'1'aul's
danger of explosion, fire , or United Methodist · Church
·not.
said, "The spirit of truth and . service is available 24 hours a
ONLY
.,
Enrollment for these and the spirit of freedom ... they day, seven days a week by other impending disaster . annex, Tuppers Plains.
Technicians at the Southeast
SUNDAY
.
other Rio Grande College ·Rio are the pillars of society."
calling 1-800-282-7777, a toll free
Ohio
Emergency
Medical
HOLY
WEEK
services
at
number.
Service are trained in these Bethlehem Baptist Church
procedures and a toll free call beginning March 23 through
to 1-800-282-7777 will bring a March 28 each evening at 7:3tl
fully s tailed ambulance p.m. at Bethlehem Bap.tist
quickly, anywhere in the Church . Easter Sunday sunrise
seven-county service area.
services at 6:30 a.m. with

By Helen and Sue Bottel

. DRESS-UP TIME

FOR UPSET STOMACH

REDUCING PLAN CANDY

to enter

. Goessler's Jewelry Stpre

EJecta Circle oj··church meets.

EASTER TIME IS

10.99-11.99.......................... 7.69
12.99-13.99.......................... 8.65
·14.99-15.99........................... 9.61
16.99-17.99 ........................ 10.57
18.99-19.99......................... 12.50

PJANO

Concert planned

·'

''•

held on Monday

Smalley's Gift Shop

LADIES' DRESS AND SPORT

cWQING

Church circle meets

Funeral service

20 oz.

Rowers, etc.

PRICE

Generation Rap

·:··.·:-:-:-:·:·:·:·:::::.;.;:;.;.;.;:::::::;:;:::;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;.;:;:;:;:;:;:·

Heath Church

5 GRAIN
100 TABLETS
REG. 79'

Chapman's Shoes

I

-Fire Retardant-

Saturday and Sunday

payoff lor finishing with the lop
·BY JOE CARNICEw
AT
league mark and the best
VPI spon. Writer.
· It hai become quite evident. record In the Eastern ConAll Wes Ullleld goes, so go the ference.
Washington Is 53-20 with nine
Waahln&amp;lon Bullets.
Urweld pro\'ed that again games left. Boston Is 51-21 with
Wadneaday night as be re- 10 games to play.
Main St., Pomeroy
"It's a great feeling to have
lllmed after an elghl-f!ame
ab8ence to spark the Bullets to Wes on the floor," said Elvin
a 97-80 rout of the Boston Hayes, who took advantage of
Celtica in the b8tUe between Unselil's presence to score a
the leacue's top ,two wlmers. game-high 21 points. "It gives
The &amp;loot..S center, out with a you mare freedom to do things.
NOW
REGULAR
broken flnl!l!r, came olf the You can get on the fast break
bench in. the second period to and It's easier to get your
. Ignite Washington's attack. shot."
''We wanted to use Wes
'nle victory glvtt~llle Bullets a
one-same lead in the loss tonight and he did well," said
column owr Boston in the race Bullet Coach K.C. Jones. "He
tor' the best record In the was able to use his hand and he
National Basketball did the job when we put him in.
Allaoctallon and an $80,000 He did well on the offensive
boards."
"The finger dldn 't give me
any trouble," said Unseld.
"Last week I couldn't grasp the
ball Ullthe finger was put back
in a cast. But there was 09 pain
tonight."
"We just couldn't put the ball
ONE GROUP
ONE GROUP
throu~ the hoop, " said Ce!Uc
CHILD.REN'S
MEN'S
star Dave !':owens aner Boston
was able to connect on only 35SHOES
SHOES
of-94 shots. "Of course, it was a
The Mtlg¥-Mason Men's Slo big game but it's not going to
~
Pitch Softball League will meet put a nate of despair on the rest
Sunday, March 23 at 4· p.m. at of the season. It was just
the Rojral Crown Garage on one game."
No. Second Ave. in Middleport.
Any new learn wishing to join
the league must have a
representailve at the meeting.
There · wW be no new clubs
added aiter this meeting.
New olitcers elected lor this
year are George Hofflnan,
... AND ·SPECIAL OCCASIONS
president ; Kenny Wiggins,
vice-pi'esiden t;
Jerry
Davenport , secretaryptlbUclty, and Larry Grogan,
treasurer.
Teams returning to the
league lhil aeason are Fruth
Pharmacy, Royal Crown,
Hart's U!led Cars, Five Points
Grill and Jim's Campers. New
Chip &amp; Dip
teams added at the last
meeting were VIllage Pharmacy, and the Rutland
American Legion.

Last chance

and Attics

DAYS YO SAVE:
Thursday, Friday,

Pllf·EASit:R SALE

.

Blown Into Walls

Ulan we are," said Davis, " but

we've played against that all
year."
Alter, 24-0, is paced by &amp;-5
All.Ohioan Jim ·Paxson, who
has avera~ed 21 points per
game and 6-1 Doug Harris and
6-7 Bob Schaefer, both over 17
per game.
The other two Starters for
coach .Joe Petrocelli are !Hi
Mark U.ravie and 6-1 Jack
Zimmerman .
Petrocelli 5aid his Knights
"probably haven 't played a
team as quick as Linden," this
season. "We're used to playing
bigger teams."
Petrocelli said Paxson, the

J

I

''

'

.

..

"

:' ;.
l

�I

•
'
'

..

s ~ The DaUySentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy,·O., Thursday, March.20.1975

4- The DiiUy Sentinel, Middlepori·Pomeroy, 0, Thursday. Marrh 20, 1975

-INSULATION-

Linden Panthers eye upset
over unbeaten Kettering 5
By GENE CADDES

UPISporta Writer
COLUMBUS (UPI ) - Jene
Davis, coach of Columbus
lhtden McKinley 's surprising
Panthers, isn't conceding anything to unbeaten Kettering
Alter in their opening Class
AAii semifinal State Tournament game.
The Panthers and Knights
meet at6 p.m. Friday, followed
at 9:30 by the Canton McKinley-Cleveland Heights contest.
The Class A teams open the
tournament tonight with Indian
Valley South (19-51, making its

its first nine games , fm1shed

fourth straight appearance,
meeting Mlsslssinawa Valley
( ~ ) in the 7:30 game and
Maria Stein Marion Local ( 231) playing top-ranked Mansfield St. Peter's (24-2) in the
9:30 contest.
The AA semifinals, at 11 a.m.
and 2:30 p.m. Friday, match
Warsaw River View and
Rossford, both 23~. in the first
game and Louisville St.
Thomas Aquinas ( 16-8 ) and
Dayton Stivers (15-8 ) in the
second.
Ended Season 10-8
Linden, which dropped six of

the regular season with a 10-&lt;1
mark and has won 13 of its last
15 games, so the 16-8 and is a
litUe misleading .
" Tlie games we lost in
December and January don 't
mean a thing, " said Davis.
"It 's what happens Friday
night that counts."
Davis, in his rirst year as
head coach, says his team's
Improvement is "a matter of
confidence."
" ll just took time to teach
what we were tryin g to get
accomplished," he said. " But

Hoosiers' 33-game streak on
line tonight at Dayton
By United Preaslnteroallonal

The nation's longest college
baskelball winning streak will
ccme to an end tonight at
Dayton, Ohio:·
That's the prediction of Joe
Hall, coach of Kentucky , who
loreaeei top-ranked Indiana's
33-game wlnl'llng streak being
halted by Oregon State in the
semtnnala of the NCAA Mideast
regional tournament.
"I pick Oregon State based
on their win over Indiana last
season and their defense," said
Hall, whoee club meets Central
Mlchi&amp;an in other semifinal
match at Dayton. "They have
the type Of defenae that is most
difficult lor Indiana lo work
against."
Oregoo Stale, which has a 19,
10 record, defeated Indiana, 61·
· 48, last year at the Far West
Clalliic In Portland, Ore., and
that lou 'left a deep Impression
.on Hoosiers' Coach Bobby
Knight.

"We were greatly impressed
by Oregon State in our loss out
at Portland last season," said
Knight. "Oregon State was a
young team then and it has
matur~d and improved in the
nearly two seasons since then.
"They are sound in funda·
menials and have been seasoned by the great competition
found in their conference.
There are none but good teams
leflin the tourney and.an:;.thjng
less but our very best will not
be good enough."
Ralph Miller,- coach of
Oregon ·state, believes strongly
that defense will be the key to
the final outcome of the game.
· "In tournament play it is
defense that wins championships and both clubs have It,"
said Miller;
Indiana, despite Miller's optimlsm and the fact that AllAmerica Scott May will proba·
bly not be ready to play still
remains a solid fav orite. '

Unseld is hack
and Bullets win
'

the kids have a great altitude only starter back from last
and didn't give up. We lost a lot year's unbeaten Alter team,
of games by a close margin but ··does everything welL"
they didn't let it gel them
Aller. third in the final UP !
down.
"
Bo(lrrl nf rn,qrhf' .::' /\ /\/\
Davis points to a 53-36 win at
Findlay early in the season as a
key victory.
" Right then , I knew what we
could do," he said.
Linden will have a decisive
height disadvantage against
than Alter: with !H Napoleon
Allen the Panthers' tallest
player . He is also 'their top
scorer with a 14.5 average.
Pair of Mini-Guards
The other Linden starters
are &amp;-loot James Love, &amp;-2
Robin Bryant and a pair of
mini guards, &gt;-8 sophomore
Todd Penn and 5-7 Melvin
Owens.
"I know Alter is much bigger

In the other game, Kentucky,
which earlier this season got
whipped soundly by Indiana, 1s
favored to defeat Central
Michigan .
Other regional matchups tonight include :
East: North Carolina (22-71
vs. Syracuse (211-7) and Kansas
State ( 19-ll) vs. Boston College
(21·7)at Providence, R.I.
Midwest: Louisville (25-2) vs.
Cincinnati (22-5) and Maryland
(24-4) vs. Notre Dame (19-ll) at
U.s Cruces, N.M.
Far West : UCLA (24-3 ) vs.
Montana (21-6) and Nevada-U.s
Vegas (23-4) vs. Arizona Stale
(25-3) at PorUand.
North Carolina and Kansas
State rate as the favorites in
the East regional, Louisville
and Maryland are expected to
win in the Midwest and UCLA
and Arizona State are the
choices in the Far West.
Winners advance to the
regional finals Saturday afternoon with the four survivors
moving on to San Diego for the
national championship next
week.

Free Estimates-No Obligation

FOREMAN &amp; ABBOTT

ratmgs, eliminated top-ranked
Middletown 72-59 in the finals
of the Dayton Regional to
reach the State Tournament.

Middleport, Ohio

r----------- .____,__
~WI~Ht:H - LUM~t

I

l
l1

Pharmacy
Kenneth McCullough. R. Ph . Charles Riffle, R. Ph.
Open Daily s,oo a.m.to 9,30 p.m .

I
Sunday 10: 30 to 12 : 30 and s to 9 p .m .
I PRESCRIPTIONS
PH. 992-2955
I
Friendly Service
I 112 E. MAIN
POMEROY, o.

~---------------·-------_..

REXALL

MOUTHWASH

ASPIRIN

LISTERINE

Noveltys, Gifts,

REG. 1.75
ONLY

ONLY

Chester, Ohio
Phone 985-3537

Pepto-Bismol

AYDS

12 oz.

24 oz.
REG. 4.50

REG. 1.59
ONLY

ONLY

FOR COLDS

EYE DROPS

VI SINE
lf2 oz.

REG. 1.75
ONLY

99¢

6

NYQUIL
oz.
.

REG. L79

.

99¢

VITAMIN C
TABS
79

500 MG

100

REG. 7.89
1

REG. 3.22

ONLY

( -f{ )'' ~.

ONLY

JOHNSON'S

Alka-Seltzer

BABY POWDER

ONLY

14 oz.
REG. 11.59

57~

RASHUGHT BAITERIES

SUDDEN BEAUTY
12 oz.

·~'

REG. 1.20

-~'

TUNING

.e

ONLY

HAIR SPRAY

Dish

EVEREADY
D or C

~

REG. 30'

ONLY

ONLY

.

Song/est drew

overflow crowd

•1!

BALLS

.

e

TOYS
".aaskets,
Baskeh to Be Filled,
Gr.. s - oil the
goodies you need.
Filled

Ar1ificial Flowers inCluding Easter Lilies,
cinths.
'

-·--._.._..

Two additional petitions of
candidacy have been filed with
the Meigs County Board of
Elections.
Dale E. Smith, Republican
mayor of Pomeroy, filed his
petition for the nomination to
run again. In Middleport Carl
J . Horky, serving now on
council by appointment, filed
to run lor nomination for
council. He is a Republican.

LOSE UGLY FAT

Pickaged Flower Seeds, Garden Seeds and
Bulbs for Spring Planting Are Here.

Stan losiO, weiGht today or monty

LAWN DECORATIONS Hen &amp; cnicks. duck &amp;
ducklings, rabbits, flamingos, gees, bird baths and swan
planters. Wire &amp; plastic decorating fence and corners.
MAK.~I!_OY YOUR SHOPPING CENTER

food . Eit 1. . - weigh less. Contains
no da.,oUs drup IOd will not
make you nervous. No nrenuoos
exercise. Change your life , •. st1rt
todfly , MO~ADEX cort $3.00 for
a 20 dty suppty, Large economy
size is$5.00. Also trY AOUATABS:
they work gently to hllp you lote
water-bloat, AOU'AT ADS -a "water
pill" that works - S3.00. Both
QUII'tntted 1rtd IOkf by:
Swisher &amp; Lohse Pharmacy
112 E . Main, Pomeroy

..

'

$

Uck, MONADl:X is a tin'l_ tablet
lnd lilY to take. MONAOEX will
help curb your desire for ex.~

FROM BAKER'S BUDGET
HP •.. All NEW AJRNITURE
AT BUDGET PRICES!!

e 3 PC. BEDROOM SUITE... ............. ~.138
e 5 PC: DINErrE SET................... ;.•••~58
e 4 DRAWER CHESTS..... . . .•..•.••.•.•~38
•Bo~ultiAt ,BEbDS
I ......... · ... . · • · ...............~~~
u e r cs. good c' ., .ng construction.
1

e·ADMiRAL REFRIGERATORS ............!.199
SPECIAL VALUES ON MATTRESS&amp;
BOX S!'RING~ALL SIZES.

Pomeroy

'

Our new Exersole shoe helps you walk the way your feet were bom to walk .
Think of walking barefoot on a beach. Free and easy. Your heels sink down
into the sand. Your weight shifts back, otT your arches.
See the way the Exersole is designed. The heel is lower than the toe. To
shift your weight back, where it belongs. To help you walk more naturally,
more comfoitably. likewalking barefoot.
·come in and check out the shoe your feet were hom to walk in.
The Exersole. All in natural,leathers '
.
.

her'i tage h~u•e
Your' Thom MeAn Store
Middleport, Ohio- ·

Middleport, Ohio

(

'II

"

The shbe your feet
_. · · ,
were born to walk in.

.•

v

..

Two niore file
for offices

Dutton Drug Slore

..
I

lileni:

Neil Simon's 'Two by
Two' will be presented

CANDY,

Effervescent Antacid

25 TABLETS
REG. 91'

Relish

I

Ca Iend ar"ll

Six programs
featuring
Baxter series

FLOWERS,

fLOWEQ .~-~= ~~-··-

f

s0C1'aI

The-,Exersole
by Thom MeAn.
.

McKESSON

High Potency Vitamin
Formula With Minerals
30 FREE
WITH 100

Stile Priced

.

Choir prepares cantata

MIDDLEPORT
DEPARTMENT STORE

Theragran M

international Holloware

. .

Playground at
·circle meets
school improved

ggc

GIFTS for EASTER

tourt St.,

4 Eastern FFA
attend seminar

..

play noted

Ph. 949-4811

The instrumental muslr
department
of Wahama High
The Lovejoy L. nue of the get-well cards were s igned for
The Electra Circle of the devotions using an article used clotliing to CainjibeU
Middleport First Baptist lwo members of the t:hureh. St·hool. under the direction of
Middleport First Baptist about Palm Sunday.
Christian Center; Da]'ton.
Church met Tuesday night "'
Members.wer-e asked to la ke Charles Ycago and Thomas
Who Can a Girl Trust? ,
Churc h with Mrs. Milton Hood,
A thank you note was read Closing prayer waa given !JY
l'hilllps, will prese nt Its
Rap:
the home of Mrs. Lillie Hub- la yette articles to the next
chairperson, presiding, met from Kelly Gilmore and plans Mrs. Cleo Boyd.
:.
'ann
ual spring t:oncert
bard with Mrs. Janet Lewis as mee ting which will be a potluck
I went through hell when my girlfriend left with my fiance.
Tuesday at the church. •
were made to remember shutMlsa HaU and Mr•. lloxd
hostess .
Tuesday, March 25 at 7:30
dinner for all three circles.
They spent a month in Europe and when they came back she told
Rh&lt;.da Hall, president of the ins at Easter. They also were guests. Others atte~
Chairperson Mrs . Kali e
Mrs. Martha King was in p.m. at tht• high sr.hool gym.
me all about how lucky I was to be rid of him as he 's chintzy
missi onary soc iety, gave discussed presenting the were Maril)&gt;n Fultz, Euu~ll1
Several selections will be
Anthony
presented
a
poem.
cheap, and selfish, among other bad things.
.
'
charge of the program using
scholarship girl with a gift of Gardner,
Iaabeli
"Spring" by Lydia Jackson. the "Doubler " as her topic. A pn·scnted by the junior and
· But HE has_told me a_ll the bad things she is, and about how
money.
Winebrenner,
Paulne
Ho •
Mrs. Iva Turner led the salud &lt;'Ourse W(J S served l o senior bands ranging from
she talked him mto the tr1p after she convinced him 1 was going
Miss Hallannouriced that the man, Elizabeth Slavin, Elee
devotional period, prese ntin g a Mrs . Anth ony, Mrs. June srrious music to Broadway
out on him. When he learned bow she's lied to him (he says) he
women 's conference will be Souders and Freda Hood.
1
Billy Graham sermon. Thank· Kl oes, Mrs. Clara Mae Darst, musirals.
told her to get lost and that's why she's mean-mouthing him.
held at Capital University,
Hostesses were Mrs. Hood
Included In the program
you notes were read from Mrs. Mrs. Frances Smart, Mrs.
In the tw_o years we were engaged, he was just terrific, not
Columbus, in June. A layette and Helen Bodlmet.
Dana Hamm, Kelly Gilmore Sara Fowler, Mrs. Hubbard. "Ill be a trumpet duet
:,eapor selfish, etc. ! still love him. Who should I believe ? - E.
will be taken to the conference.
and Mrs . Belz . Plans were Mrs. Mar tha Kin g and featuring Rex Howard and
Plans were made to send
EASTERN
Eastern
made for remembering shut- children, Michl and Marsha. Cheryl Weaver, selections Chapter of Future Farmers of
E·
frum earlier as well us
ins of the church for Easter and
America sen t four members to
contem porary periods, and
Since you obviously want to - beli~ve HIM. - SUE
· the officers training seminar at
the 0\'Crture from the
+++
Warren High School, Saturday,
Broadway Musical March 15. They were Steve
Dear E.:
·:Brlgadoone", which will
But with a bit of skepticism. - HELEN
Young, Rusty Burns, Randy
The Afternoon Circle m•t
('O IIcl udt• thr program.
'+++
Boston, Marhn Evans, and
Richard Vaughan reported recently at Heath United
The public Is cordially accompanying the group was
Dear Helen and Sue :
RACINE - The choir of Cwnm ins and Mrs. Ronald
on
new materials and other Methodist Church In Mid·
Racine Baptist Church will Salser, Frank Cleland and invited.
I fell in love with Harv when I was 14 and he was 19. All he
.
their advisor Aaron Sayre.
improvements for the school dleport.
. :;:;:;.·:·.;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:::::;:;:;:·:;:;:;:·:::·.·:·:::;::
present th e evangelistic Dennis Manuel.
saw was his kid sister's gangly friend. When I was 17, he took me
Mrs. Nan Moore, prealden~
Highlights of the event were playground when the MidThe regularly sched ul ed ,.~,~x=&lt;·~~"'":&lt;-""'''·'''"'··
" Behold
the
can tat a ,
out a few times, between girlfriends, but then he got engaged.
•..::.c.x..~o:-x ..'-'-..._...;o...,.~..\,:- :....~:.:~.: a fruit sale sen11'n
opened the meeting leadlri•
dleport
Elementary
School
·
:
·
:
~=
ar,
earm
ngs
Crucified!" on Palm Surday prayer mee tin g and Bible ~:~~
Once, when they had a fight, we - you know - "consoled" each
group singing of "They'U KrJo1i
~ and savingS seminar, public PTA met Monday night.
other.
evening at 7:30p.m., directed study will be held Wednesday ~~
Children of the third grade of We Are ChrlsUana by Otlt
~ re)ations se~inar and chapter
He broke it off when they went back together. I was then 19.
by Mrs. Walter P. Bikacsan. at 7:30 p.m. Candl eligh t ;:;:
~ awards semmar.
Mrs. Cor tney Knight led the Love" with Mrs. Roijerl
Mrs. William Hayman will be CommlUlion will be observed ;~:
U.st week she gave him back his ring and he's really down.
~
Also there was an offiCers' pledge of allegiance and the Rinehart at the plln~ 1 . MriJ
But yesterday he was asking his sister about me. He won't
pianist. Soloists are Mrs. Jack during the Maundy Thursday
training semi nar for each Rev . W. H. Perrin gave prayer. Moore presented the IICMpiutt
service at 7:30 p.m. The i!i
come over because he feels guilty about the other time but he
:;~
:::: officer of the FFA .
The room attendance award and prayer and the If
congregation will worship in :::·
needs cheering . His fiancee won't take him back- sh~'s been
went to the third grade of Mrs. hers stood lor silent pray r _to&lt;
the Commur ity Good Friday
seeing another guy for a month on the Q·T.
Knigh t. Refreshments were Mrs. Crary Davia who dl'il
THURSDAY
service at 7:30 p.m. at the
Sle was never right for him. I am! Isn't it about time I told
served
by mothers of fourth March 7. The lesson prueri~
YOUTH RALLY, Danville
Racine Wesleyan Methodist
him so? Should I call him? - STilL WAITING AFTER SIX
graders taught by Mrs. Lucy by Mrs. Grace French waa on
Wesleyan Methodist Church,
ffiMS
.
Church.
Jonah. Cards and thank you
White.
Easler Day sched ule of 7:30 Thursday ni~ht. All youth
notes for ValenUne coolil~
Dear SWASY:
services include sunrise ser- mv1ted to a t~~ " ~~ parwere
read. The hostesses, Mri•
vice at 6:30 a.m., Sunday hclpale With talenL 1111 • , 11,
You may be asking lor another hurt, but I'd say, take a
MODEL PROJECT
Clara
Criswell, Mrs. Ma~
ROCK SPRINGS Better
An overflow crowd attended
School at 9:30 l\.m., morning
chance and call Harv. Old friends are ftlr cheering a guy when
Southeast Ohio'sEmergency Ketchka and Mrs. Garnei
he's down. -SUE
worship at10:40 a.m., and the Health Club, Thursday, ,1:15 a songlest Sunday, March 9, at Medical Service began as a Enlarnlnger served refrealt;
Sunday
School
Easter p.m. home of Mrs. Beuna the Pomeroy Seventh-day health demonstration project ments.
Adventist Church. Offering
HU
NTINGTON
The
DearS. :
programs at 7:30 p.m. The Grueser.
of the .Ohio Valley Health
WOMEN'S
Association, musical selections were Bob Services Foundation, Inc.-,
Marshall Artists Series will public is cordially invited.
. But let Harv di~cover for himself that she was never right for
Middleport First United Bush, U!ncaster; the Matson
observe its 40th anniversary
him -you are. W1th proper cheering, he will ... he will ... (OVHSF) and the Board of
DAUGHTER BORN
Presbyterian Church, 7:30 Family and Linda, l)renda and County Commissioners of
season
with
six
gala
programs
HELEN
Mr. and Mrs. Lewilliilillh of
p.m.
An
Easter
playlet
to
be
Debbie
Black,
Rutland;
on
the
1975-76
Baxter
Series
++ +
.· Nthens ; Hocking, Meigs,
given. Overseas sewing will be Ronald Browning and son, Vi nton,' Gallia, Lawrence and Middleport are announc~ 111e
beginning in late summer.
Dear Rap:
dedicated. Mrs. Lewis Sauer Kim, and The Frank Martin Jackson . SEOEMS is now birth of a daughter, Shelrl
Metropolitan Opera basso
Here's advice for those "Scared Little Girls" who have been
will give devotions with Family, Pomeroy; Mrs. Clara incorporated as a private non- Jeannine, March 7. the ~t
Jerome Hines will open the
raped and are afraid to tell. It happened to me when I was 15.
members
of Group I to be the · Mcintyre, RD Minersvllle; prof! t service governed by a weighed 6 lbs., 1i~ ol~·
season
Sept.
17
with
a
Some so-called friends had it all set up. I was so frightened and
hostesses.
Robert Green
Fl!mily, · non-partisan
grandpareiita
dramatized recital of arias and
ashamed (and threatened by the boy who said he'd kill me if I
Board
of Maternal
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Mariort Parker
YOUTH
RALLY,
Danville
Gallipolis;
Mrs.
Sandy
Bqtcher
.
songs.
Hines
will
be
per·
told) that I meant to keep quiet. Finally I couldn't hold back any
Trustees. SEOEMS 22-member Long Bottom: paterna
United Methodist Church, 7:30 and Robert Pickett, RD Board will be comprised of a
longer and sobbed it out to an understanding neighbor who then forming his l,OOOth recital
during the 1975-76 season .
p.m. Thursday. All youth in- Pomeroy; The Freeland Norris health provider, a consumer grandmother Ia Mra. Fredl
helped me tell my parents and the police.
vi ted.
Quartet, Mrs. Tessie Evans and a public official from each Smith of Pomeroy, anci
Jurgen Jurgens will conduct
You know what? The rapist went to court and was fined $5(1,
ST. PATRICK DAY card and Okey Kiser, Racine; the of the counties, and the maternal great-grandlilolher·
the lOll-member Monteverdi
that's all! Why? Because after nearly a month, nothing could be
Funeral
services
for
Mrs.
parly
Thursday 7:JO p.m. at Robert Persons Family, Little executive director of OVHSF.· Is Tresale Spencer 01 MidChoir and Orchestra of
proved. If I had asked for help right away, maybe I wouldn't
dleport:
Hamburg Oct. 13. The group's Leah Schaefer were held at the Pomeroy Sacred Heart Kyger; Virginia Grogan and
have needed a psychiatrist later on. But there's a happy ending:
six soloists include noted residence Monday with the Catholic Chlll'ch. Prizes to be John Dill, Middleport; the
I got rid of my hangups, met and married a fantastic guy.
British tenors Ian Partridge Rev. W. H. Perrin officiating. awarded . Refreshments. Stewart Family, Mrs. Maxine
The trauma of rape should be dealt with Immediately. You
Relatives a ttendin g the Public invited.
Matthews, and Mrs. Debbie
and
Nigel Rogers, and soprano
save other girls from being victims, and you save yourself
fun eral were Mrs. Joan
MIDDLEPORT MASONIC Howard, Harrisonville; Unda,
months or years of needless misery. Rape should be considered a Barbara Schlick.
Stoneburner,
Kettering;
Mr.
Lodge
363 Thursday 7 p.m. Larry and Cindy Stewart,
Pianist
David
Bar-IIlan,
p~ysical assault, not a guilt-causing secret. - P.L.R.
accorded the honor of giving and Mrs. Rex Davis, Colum- En~red Apprentice degree to Willard Pigott, and the Junior
the first piano recital at the bus; Mr. and Mrs. U.wrence be conferred. All master While Trio, Kyger.
Men's &amp; Boys'
Ladies &amp; Child~n·s
The opening prayer was
John F. Kennedy Center for the · Bradford, Columbus; Mr. and masons invited.
William
Smith,
Performing Arts, will present a Mrs .
REGULAR MEETING, offered by the pastor, Gerard
SPORT COATS
DRESSEs .
Alexandria, Va.; Mr. Bradford Twin City Shrine at Racine Seton, and Willie Cundiff of.
concert Nov . 13.
SLACKS
PANTSUITS'
In a retW'n engagement, the Powell, West Jefferson; and Shrine Park, 7:30 p.m. Thurs· fered the benediction.
TIES
EN,SEMBL&amp;S
Canadian Opera Company will Mrs . Nancy Tell, Parkersburg, day. Special film by Belpre
SHIRTS
Bl-OUSES
••
perform its new production of W.Va.
Shrine Club; refreshments . All
BELTS
SKIRTS
Pall
bearers
were
Wallace
"La Boheme" by Puccini, Jan .
Shriners invited.
Sunday school to follow.
JACKETS
PURSES
Bradford, Lawrence Bradford,
14.
FRIDAY
EASTER Cantata the "Seven
RIO GRANDE - The Rio Grande Community Oollege
HOSE
On Mar. 3, Michel Tabachnik Bradford Powell, Don Collins,
SOUTHERN CLUSTER of Saymgs at the Cross" Sunday
Grande CoUege • Rio Grande courses can be completed will conduct the Gulbenkian Richard Jones and Rex Da.vis. young adults Friday 6:30p.m. 7:30p.m. at Syracuse Asbury
. Community College Theatre Monday, March 25th at the Festival Orchestra of Lisbon
Honorary pallbearers were at Rutland United Methodist United Methodist Church.
Wilson Champion
Coats &amp; Clarks
will present Neil Simon's play College. Registration will be with Grand Prix du Disque Rodney Downing, Irving Karr, Church Youth Center. Bring a Combined
choirs
from
ORLON WINTER
TENNIS
"Two By Two" in May, ac- Open all day and until9:00p. m. pianist Mario Joao Pires as Roy Betzing, Edison Hob- sack lunch.
Syracuse, Forest , Run and
cording to Dr . Charlotte Monday evening. For more soloist.
stetter, Manning Webster ,
FIVE ' POINT Junior and Minersville Methodist ChurYARN
Can of 3
Carver, assistant dean for arts, information, contact the AdClosing the season Apr. 7 will Wayne Swisher, William Senior Star Stitchers 4-H Clubs ches will participate. Mrs.
sciences, and professional missions Office, Rio Grande be the Don Cossacks of Rostov, · Howard, Robert Elberfeld and Friday 7 p.m. at home of Mrs. Jani_ce Sauvage, pianist, ·
education.
GIRLS' FUN HATS
College , Rio Grande , Ohio singing and dancing in the Clyde Ingels. Mrs. Schaefer, Roy Holter to reorganize and to Eleanor Robson, narrator, and
60" POLY. KNit
· Large
Three theatre courses will be 45674. Telephone (614) 245-5353. famed tradition of the people of 81 , resided at 230 Lincoln Hill, elect officers for 1975. Those Mrs . Ann Sauvage, director.
Assortment
' offered in connection with the Collect calls will be accepted. the Don River region of the Pomeroy. Burial was in Beech interested in joining the junior Public welcome.
FABRICS
' play during the quarter, which
Grove Cemetery .
Soviet Union.
MONDAY
or senior clubs should con tact
$ 99
• begins Tuesday, March 25th.
Information about season
FAlL
Gospel
meeting at the
Mrs. Holter or Mrs . Roger
: Introduction to Theatre 225,
memberships can be obtained
Middleport High School March
Starcher.
. will be taught each day
from
the
Marshall
Artists
24 through the 29 at 7:30p.m.
PAST
MATRON&amp;,
CLASS TO MEET
: Monday through Thursday
Series,
Marshall
University,
nightly. Evangelist will be A.
Evangeline
Chapter,
O.E.S.
Class 12 will meet at 7:30
HIGH INCIDENCE
; from 3:SO until 5 p. m. p.m. tonight at the Heath Huntington, W. Va.
Victims of auto accidents are 7:30 Friday home of Mrs. Willis C. Estep and H. D. CQok.
•Stagecraft 25S will be offered United Methodist Church with
.Featured sjnging groups will
especially likely to have head, Anthony.
. on each of those days from 6:10 Mrs. Lillian Smith as leader.
be the Coy Family and the
THIRD
Friday
Club
at
7
p.m.
neck and back Injuries acOPEN TILLB:OO P.M. FRI. &amp; SAt.
. unU18 p.m., and a Drama Lab
ANY OLD TIME
Joyfulaires.
Friday al home of Mrs. Mabel
cording
to
a
study
done
by
Dr.
Medical emergencies happen
Practicum will also be offered
Wolfe, W. Main St., Pomeroy .
"J IJ
at all hours of the day or night. George J . Alker of Meyer
with the time and days to be
SA'fURDAY
Memorial
Hospital
in
Buffalo,
SHOWER
PLANNED
Statistics
gathered
by
Southannourced .
FISH FRY by Middleport
'
Instructor lor the courses
A bridal shower for Lenora east Ohio's Emergency N. ~ · In some instances, Fire Department at departmovmg
or
these
victims
will be Mr. Ed Roark, assistant Michael, bride-dect of Roger Medical Service shows that
ment headquarters all day
:professor of theatre at Rio Leifheit, wiU be held Saturday most emergencies (41.4 pet. ) needlessly and carelessly has Saturday; fish sandwiches and
'Grande.
at 7:30p.m. at Rock Springs happen between the hours of 8 resulted in death and per- dinners will be 'available.
Rehearsals lor the Simon United Methodist Church. All a.m. and 4 p.m. with 39.8 pet. manent paralysis .
ROCK SPRINGS U.dy Bugs
Only people trained in proper
happening between 4 p.m. and
·play will be each evening friends are welcome.
4-H Club, Saturday, starting at
-Monday through Friday from
midnight. No specific day of rescue techniques, such as 10 a.m. at Krogers .
.
emergency
medical
the week seems particularly
,8:10 until10:45 p. m., and the
'public is invited to participate
BAKE Sale, begi!IJii;l!t 10
A thought for the day: high for accidents or sudden tech nicians, s hould move
whether enrolled in class j!r Norwegian writer Henrik Ibsen illness . Emergency ambulance accident victims unless there's a.m. Saturday" li t' SP. 1'1'aul's
danger of explosion, fire , or United Methodist · Church
·not.
said, "The spirit of truth and . service is available 24 hours a
ONLY
.,
Enrollment for these and the spirit of freedom ... they day, seven days a week by other impending disaster . annex, Tuppers Plains.
Technicians at the Southeast
SUNDAY
.
other Rio Grande College ·Rio are the pillars of society."
calling 1-800-282-7777, a toll free
Ohio
Emergency
Medical
HOLY
WEEK
services
at
number.
Service are trained in these Bethlehem Baptist Church
procedures and a toll free call beginning March 23 through
to 1-800-282-7777 will bring a March 28 each evening at 7:3tl
fully s tailed ambulance p.m. at Bethlehem Bap.tist
quickly, anywhere in the Church . Easter Sunday sunrise
seven-county service area.
services at 6:30 a.m. with

By Helen and Sue Bottel

. DRESS-UP TIME

FOR UPSET STOMACH

REDUCING PLAN CANDY

to enter

. Goessler's Jewelry Stpre

EJecta Circle oj··church meets.

EASTER TIME IS

10.99-11.99.......................... 7.69
12.99-13.99.......................... 8.65
·14.99-15.99........................... 9.61
16.99-17.99 ........................ 10.57
18.99-19.99......................... 12.50

PJANO

Concert planned

·'

''•

held on Monday

Smalley's Gift Shop

LADIES' DRESS AND SPORT

cWQING

Church circle meets

Funeral service

20 oz.

Rowers, etc.

PRICE

Generation Rap

·:··.·:-:-:-:·:·:·:·:::::.;.;:;.;.;.;:::::::;:;:::;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;.;:;:;:;:;:;:·

Heath Church

5 GRAIN
100 TABLETS
REG. 79'

Chapman's Shoes

I

-Fire Retardant-

Saturday and Sunday

payoff lor finishing with the lop
·BY JOE CARNICEw
AT
league mark and the best
VPI spon. Writer.
· It hai become quite evident. record In the Eastern ConAll Wes Ullleld goes, so go the ference.
Washington Is 53-20 with nine
Waahln&amp;lon Bullets.
Urweld pro\'ed that again games left. Boston Is 51-21 with
Wadneaday night as be re- 10 games to play.
Main St., Pomeroy
"It's a great feeling to have
lllmed after an elghl-f!ame
ab8ence to spark the Bullets to Wes on the floor," said Elvin
a 97-80 rout of the Boston Hayes, who took advantage of
Celtica in the b8tUe between Unselil's presence to score a
the leacue's top ,two wlmers. game-high 21 points. "It gives
The &amp;loot..S center, out with a you mare freedom to do things.
NOW
REGULAR
broken flnl!l!r, came olf the You can get on the fast break
bench in. the second period to and It's easier to get your
. Ignite Washington's attack. shot."
''We wanted to use Wes
'nle victory glvtt~llle Bullets a
one-same lead in the loss tonight and he did well," said
column owr Boston in the race Bullet Coach K.C. Jones. "He
tor' the best record In the was able to use his hand and he
National Basketball did the job when we put him in.
Allaoctallon and an $80,000 He did well on the offensive
boards."
"The finger dldn 't give me
any trouble," said Unseld.
"Last week I couldn't grasp the
ball Ullthe finger was put back
in a cast. But there was 09 pain
tonight."
"We just couldn't put the ball
ONE GROUP
ONE GROUP
throu~ the hoop, " said Ce!Uc
CHILD.REN'S
MEN'S
star Dave !':owens aner Boston
was able to connect on only 35SHOES
SHOES
of-94 shots. "Of course, it was a
The Mtlg¥-Mason Men's Slo big game but it's not going to
~
Pitch Softball League will meet put a nate of despair on the rest
Sunday, March 23 at 4· p.m. at of the season. It was just
the Rojral Crown Garage on one game."
No. Second Ave. in Middleport.
Any new learn wishing to join
the league must have a
representailve at the meeting.
There · wW be no new clubs
added aiter this meeting.
New olitcers elected lor this
year are George Hofflnan,
... AND ·SPECIAL OCCASIONS
president ; Kenny Wiggins,
vice-pi'esiden t;
Jerry
Davenport , secretaryptlbUclty, and Larry Grogan,
treasurer.
Teams returning to the
league lhil aeason are Fruth
Pharmacy, Royal Crown,
Hart's U!led Cars, Five Points
Grill and Jim's Campers. New
Chip &amp; Dip
teams added at the last
meeting were VIllage Pharmacy, and the Rutland
American Legion.

Last chance

and Attics

DAYS YO SAVE:
Thursday, Friday,

Pllf·EASit:R SALE

.

Blown Into Walls

Ulan we are," said Davis, " but

we've played against that all
year."
Alter, 24-0, is paced by &amp;-5
All.Ohioan Jim ·Paxson, who
has avera~ed 21 points per
game and 6-1 Doug Harris and
6-7 Bob Schaefer, both over 17
per game.
The other two Starters for
coach .Joe Petrocelli are !Hi
Mark U.ravie and 6-1 Jack
Zimmerman .
Petrocelli 5aid his Knights
"probably haven 't played a
team as quick as Linden," this
season. "We're used to playing
bigger teams."
Petrocelli said Paxson, the

J

I

''

'

.

..

"

:' ;.
l

�.'

•

J

Electronic publis.h ing making strong advance

I- Tile Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thilrsday, March 20, 1975

17 youths

- By LeROY POPE
doctors. The casse tt~s arc Loll.wratorirs, a leading n•;wL'ulkiil houses also have
.- UPI BuaiDess Writer
projected from a standard pharmaceutical house, and the finiml·t·d surh probrrams and
NEW YORK (UP!) - Elec- video cassette player on a . programs were QiStl·ibuted there are u number or smaller
tronic publishing through television screen.
free. Ruche .• :oil provides companies engaged in elecclosed circuit telp,Yision and
The business has changed a financial help on the programs tronic publishing for medical,
videotape cassetWs is making lot over tlie years, Raeben but they now are produced for scientific and other audiences .
strong headway in the medical said. Originally,
Some big companies such as
VIS 's sale as regular journals.
and scientific fields and shows operations were financed
Smith, Kline &amp; French, lnc., Westinghouse Electric are
great promise in other areas as entirely
by
Roche and other large phar- involved In it and some large
well.
Currently, it takes the form
of regular journals, bi-weeklies
lor the most part, sold to
hospitals, universities and
other institutions for Yiewing in
hour-long sessions by doctors
and research technicians. The
subscription price for a typical
such journal is around $600 a •·
year.
"This kind of publishing will
spread to the legal, engineer ing, educational and
general business communities
in the years to come,'' predicts
Jay E. Raeben, president of
Visual Information Systems,
Inc., New York, a subsidiary of
HINES
Republic Corp., that is the
leader al present in medical
electronic publishing.
Raeben said the business had
49 oz.
its origins
ago in those
early morning radio broad1!b . 7oz.
casts "£or physicians only,"
and his company now is con·
sidering establishing a new
physicians' radio network to
bring the latest medical news
to doctors.
Each issue of VIS's chief
journal, Continuing Medical
Education, deals with three
topics of up-tl&gt;()ate interest to

at retreat

NEW MEMBERS - Tapped for membership into the
National Honor Society at Wahama High School Tu esday
were, front row , 1-r, Cheryl Huber, Martha Jones, Guyla

Seventeen United Methodist
youth of Mei gs Coun ty attended a retreat last weekend
at C~mp Francis Asbury , Rio
Grande. · The Reverends D.
William Sydenstricker and
Howard Shively were the c&lt;&gt;deans of the camp.
The weekend was spent in
confirmation classes to
prepare the youth to become
members of various local
United Methodist Churches.
They s tudied basic Christian
beliefs, the Bible, Ch ur ch
history , the Discipline and the
Roush, Mindy Raynes; back row , carletta. Gibbs, Danny
meaning
and responsibilities of
Harmon, Dan Stodola, Carolyn Roush, and Charlotte Edchurch
membership.
wards. Absent was Brenda CampbelL
Youths atte nding were Dale
Riffle , Steven Riffle, Tammy
Tallent, David Robinson, Patty
Robin son , Berta Robinson,
Annie
Delia
J ohnson,
Houchins, Jean Horton, David
behalf of the local hospital funeral directors, appeared to Horton, Terry Clark, Patty
saying personnel there would support the Emergency Ser- Edwards, Tracey Jeffers, Jim
provide Emergency Medical vic e pr ogram. Wilc oxen Jeffers, John Shively and two
Training to all peop le in Mason commented , " I see what they who are a lready members,
County who are interested are doing".
Teresa Ervin and Gene
Ro ger Hyse ll of Mason Shively.
without charge .
In relation lo a unit in Poin t contended, ''All we want is
Four adults serv in g as
Pleasant, she sa id Pleasant approval. We're not asking for counsel ors and assis tants were
Valley Hospita l could provide dollars."
Ma ck Horton , Edgar Abbott,
Richard Grinstead talked of Mrs. Jane Abbott, and Cathy
the land for a garage for an
ambulance based at the the county-wide program when Smi th.
hospital as well as the com- it was s,Up~ia ted that there is a
in addition to classes taught
need
t:ounty pian first. by the deans of t~e camp, two
munication systeni .
Loraine Wilcoxen and Lewis Gr instead said, ''delay is other United Methodist
Hussell , both Point Pl ~asant ruining it. "
ministers of Meigs Coun ty, the
Rev. Robert Bumgarner and
the Rev. Steve Wilson, taught

Action wanted on EMS project
POINT PLEASANT - A
large delegation asked es·
tablishment of emerge ncy
services in Mason County by
the Mason County Board of
Commiisionors Wednesday
evening .

Spokesmen recommended
appointment of an Advisory
Committee as a pre lude to
launching the project.
Although discussion on that
issue comprised most of the
long session, the three member
board made up of Clarence
Adkins, WIUiam H. Rardin Jr ..
and Michael Whalen took no
action other than agree to
study the reques t. Commissioners asked for the delay,
pending a report from the
Region II Health Planning
Council concerning emergency

services.
While those present included
Joe E. Richards, program
manager, of the Governor's
Highway Safety Commi ttee;
mayors, funeral directors, and
nwnerous volunteers trained
as emergency technicians, and
others, they asked for no
money, only for the commission 's approval at this
time.
In trying to acquire this
service for Point Pleasant, and
an eXpansion of the program in
New Haven and Mason,
' Richards said:
"The big thing we need is
your blessing ." He explained
that funding can come from
any source except revenue
sharing for three ambulances
cited as the first need . "The
Commission would be under no
obligation to pay for any or this
at this point," he said.
Citing a need for an Advisory
Committee to study the
program, Richards asked the
Commission to appoint appro~lmately 25 persons to it . In
addiUon to the purchase of the
emergency vehicles, the group

also asked [or rela ted equipmen t such as a com munication
sy stem .

Since Ma son and New Haven
have
been
operatin g
emergency ambulances more
than three years, the need was
made k11 own for addii tonal
veh icles. While the state
pr og ram does not provide
replacement ve hicles. these
two communities are plann ing

expansions, which could be
covered.
Rich ard s

was

com.

piimenl&lt;lry of the groups in the
bend area operated by
volunteers, saying "I have
been to New Haven on run s and
will vouch for their integri ty
and skills. It is one of the best
in the state."
In di scussi ons centering

around legislation that makes
it mandatory for counties to
provide emergency service,
Richards commented that if
funeral

homes·

in

Poi nt

Pleasant would go out of
business because of the ruling
"pa rt of your coun ty would be
out of service".

Services could be offered
professionaliy, by volunteers
entirely or by combin ations,
Richards explained.
PresenUy in Point Pleasant
there are 25 persons taking
Emergency Medical
Tec hni cian
trainin g
at
Pleasant Valley Hospital. In
New Haven 14 persons are
trained as EMTs while Mason
has 16.
Part of the duties of the
Advisory Committee Richards
said would be to s tudy to see
whether or not there would be
any competition with those
hav ing free enterprises . He

added that he would also like to
see deputies and all policemen
trained as EMTs.
Betty Martin, Dit'ector of
Nursing Service at Pleasant
Valley Hospital , spoke in

65 suspended
MASON, W. Va . - Bugs
allegedly seen in the girls rest
rooms of Wahama High School
and Junior High School
resulted in a walkout of
students Tuesday afternoon
that resulted in suspension of
approximately 65 students and
an investigation of the
premises.
Larry Sawyers, principal,
said sus pensions of the
students were made when
school administrators talked to
them informing them they
were breaking school rules by
not returning to classes
following the walkout at 1 p. m.
Tuesday. Sawyers said many
milled around the school
grounds, some left school, and
others returned to classes.

vice principa l.

Gary Epling, county health
sanitarian , conducted an investigation at Wahama Junior
and Senior High Schools on
Tuesday.
He said today in a letter
summing up what he found that
the "bugs'' were not body lice
or "crabs" but rather. a
variety of an apparently
harmless flea .

Hallmark ·\\
EASTER ~
CARDS
-----------

EASTER
CANDY
and BASKETS

l,
DUTTON'S ~
.1

I!~\

Henry Walker
died Tuesday

Crooksville , with burial in Rose
Hill Cemetery there. Friends

may call at the funeral home
from 7 to 9 tonight.
·

News ... in Briefs

Dependable Contracting
Ben -Tom Corp .
Roush's La ndin g
Evelyn's Groc ery

Ebersbach Hardware

Fran cis Flor is ts
High

ser ies -

THE SHOE BOX

II " ' ' - - - - - '
4 ':-=;../A,
. ~· ~.l~~-.....
•

. Middleport, Ohio

64
63
47
34

24
25
41
54

26

62

30 sa

game

Marlene Wilson 512.

Team high game - Depend ab le Contracting 841.
able Contracting 2417 .

~",.,I pH Bat,.

Tuesda y Triplicate T eam
Standings
Tea m
W.
Fr iendly Ta vern
59
Royal Crown Bottling
46
King Builders' Supp ly
43
Royal Oak Park
41
Turner's Grocery
38
New York Clothing House

37

SUIT OR
SPORT
COAT

@

Turner's Grocery

•

"·~

· Green Apple, For Oily Hair
· Apricot ... ,, For Normal Hai r .---:--...
· Avocado. . . For Dry Hair

FUN-SIZE

MILKY WAY
SNICKERS
3M
Candy Bars
I lb. Bag

51

$1.29 Value

FILLED

DECOREGGER

EASTER
BASKETS

The New,
Fun Way
to Decorate
Easter Eggs.
$1.98 Value

12 OZ

Luden''s
Sptced

EASTER BEAN BAGS

•

JELLY EGGS

..,.!.

CHICKS &amp;
RABBITS

69~

32 48

High ind l.vidual gam e Betty Smith 2 17 ; seconct high
ind . game - Betty Smith 194.
High series - Betty Smith
532; Second h igh series - Oot
Rif e .4 81.
Team high game Royal
Crown Bottling 477.
T eam high ser i es Royal
Oak Park 131 8.
Wednesday Early Bird

eBean bags take the
characteristics of
bunnies and chicks.
eChild safe stuffing
e3.00 Value

71/• oz.

LUDEN'S HOLLOW-MOLD

League
Feb. 24, 1975

Standings
Team
W. L.
Dependable Contra ct ing 52 20
Ben -Tom Corp.
47 25
Roush 's Landing ...
.4 3 29
Ebersbach Hardware
28 44
Evelyn's Grovery
26 46
Franci s' F lori sts
20 52
High ind i vidua l game
Marlene Wilson 212 ; sec ond
high ind . game - Anne Hat .
field 203 .
1
High se ries - Ellen Rought
54 8 ; second tligh ser i es "'""'
Marlene ,Wilson 527 .
Team high game - Ben -Tom
Corp . 848 .
Team .high series Ben .
Tom Corp . 2"64 .

49~
Yellow
Pink
SITTING RABBIT, 1 oz.
DANDY ANDY, 2 oz.
MONEYBUNNY,2oz .
.PET BUNNY, 2112 oz.
CUT IE BUNNY, 31!, oz.
FUZZY BUNNY, 3112 oz.
SUNNY BUNNY, 7'12 oz .
FUNNY BUNNY, 3112 oz.

Tuesday Triplicate Team

20c
63c
63c
72c
BSc
85c

Gre~n

$1.99

85c

. Feb. 25, 1975
Slandings
Team
W.
Fri end ly Tavern
53
Roy at Crown Bottling
36
Royal Oak Park
35
King Bu ilders Supp ly
33
New York Clolhlng House

GIANT 4 FT.

L.

Ruby's

19

, EASTER EGG DYE KIT

3~

37
39

INFLATABLE
BUNNY

"

Turner ' s Groc·ery
28 44
High ind i vidual game ,
Betty Smith 245 ; second high
ind . game- Pat Carson 192.
High series - BettY Smith
585 ; second tlig'h ser ies - Pat
Carson 523.
·
Team high game Royal
Crown Bottling 585.
Team high series - Roya l
Crown Bottling 1568.

SUNRISE
$15.99
BAGS TO
MATCH

'

..

Inc
dipper
complete
instruc1ions • .

&amp;!r

In !963, a volcano on the
island of Ball in the East UIWieS :
began erupting. The eventual
death toll went over 1,0110.
.
In 1968, Israel launched ;
heavy attacks upon terrorist
bases in Arab Jordan.

···-

'

. ' "'-·...- .
·~

·~·" ~

$17,99 Value

*198 .·· $3.00
value

$}099

. plus a $3.00 rebate
from Sunbeam makes
your Iota I net cost

WHERE ·YOU GET ·THE' BEST .BEST FOR. LESS
I .

~

•

. j

.

@n!·i~

L.
29
42
45
47
50

Tuesday Triplicate League
March 4,1975
Standings
w. L.
Team
Fri endly Tavern
57 23
Roy a! Crown Bottling
40 40
39 41
Royal Oak Par k
King Bu i lders' Supply
37 43
New Y ork Clothing House
35 45

31

PARTY SET
A games party will be held
at 7:30 p.m. Friday at Drew ·
Webster Post 39, American
Legion Hall.

~..

High individua l game
Be tty Smith 200; Second high
ind . game Isabell e Couch
191.
High series - Betty Smit h
522; second high series Isabelle Couch 49 1.
Royal
T eam tdgh game Crown Bottling 506 .
T ea m high se ri es - Royal
Crown Bottling 1A4.4 .
·
Wednesday Early Bird
League
March 5, 197S
Standings
T ea m
W. L.
Dependable Contracting 56 ,24
Ben .Tom Corp .
55 25
Roush 's Landing
.47 33
Ebersbach Hard ward
30 50
Evelyn's Groce ry .
26 54
Francis' Flori sts
26 54
High individual g;;~me
M a rl en e . Wilson and Betty
Whitla tch 210; Second h igh in d .
ga m e - LoU ise Harrison 207.
High series Marlene
Wi lson 574 ; second h igh series
- Betty Whitlatch 541.
Team high game - Ben -Tom
Corp. 870.
Team high series - Ben .
Tom Corp . 2475 .

iM1I1 ~prm

Pin k, Yellow, Green,
and Black Patent -

'

l;:;,I~~~UJ ll

Team high series - ·Depend ·

eWHITE eBlACK

OPEN FRIDA Y9 to 8, SATURoAY 9 1o B
- CHILDREN REGISTER FOR EASTER GtFT5NO PURCHASE REQUIRED

individual

w. L

h igh ind . game Louise
Gi lmore 183.
H igh ser ies Donna Me ·
Farla nd 5 18 ; seco nd high

New York Clothing House

BROWN TO HOSPITAL
The Pomeroy Emergency
Squad answered a call to the
home of Ben Brown near
Pomeroy at 3:38 a.m . Thursday. He was taken to.Veterans
Memorial Hospital.

$1.49
Value

· Donna McFarland 201 ; second

DRESS UP FOR EASTER IN
THIS SHINY T-STRAP IN

lo

Standings

Team

WBUE

CHILDREN' S SIZES
5 to 8
8"&gt; to 3

.\

16 oz.
Reg . $1.63_

Bird League

T~t h·wv.IAI\NIA.I

")

1 lb.

March 12 , 1915

When You
Purchase Any

.

$2.29
Va lue

Wednesday Early

TIE
FREE

Strict policy
is enforced

50 oz.

In engineering, the law,
education and business, the
need .lor continuing education
is becoming as aeute as in
medicine and the scientific
world , Raeben said, and this
will open big opportunities for
the electronic publishing companies in the next five to 10
years .

WOOLITE
LIQUID

DANISH
HAM
'

3 lb .
Can

ing cOnventions."

Pameroy Bowling Lane s

YOUR EASTER

HOSPITAL NEWS

publishing, Raeben said, are
lhat it can depict actionsproblems being solved, technology being supplied- and
that the information it supplies
can be absorbed by many
people nl uch faster and more
readily than they could absorb

at aiiieveiS -and lllUch cheaper
than the traditional national
and regional sales and market-

Local Bowling

Thomas
Dye, 78' dieS

:.Eyes on

The hi~ appeals of electronic

it by reading books or printed
journals.
It Is unlikely, however, ever
to be cheap enough to replace
print publishing altogether,
despite the Asing price of
paper.
In business, electronic publishin g was seen originally, ·
Raeben said, only as a worker
training tooL "But now companies are starting to see it as an
extremely versatile method of
communication that is efficient

CRISCO

MIX

rears

Henry
Walker,
61,
Deavertown, Ohio, formerly of
Meigs County, died Tuesday at
his home .
sessions.
He was born Dec. 14, 19t2, at
Normalville, Pa., the son of the
Continued from page I '
late James and E liz abeth
cent) were 18 to 3&lt;1 years old.
Walker. He was a member of
the Reorganized Church of
LOS ANGELES - OMAR N. BRADLEY, the nation 's only
·
Jesus Christ of Latter Day
remaining live star general, who took his greatest pride as the
Saints.
·
epitome of the slogging American foot soldier, lay gravely ill
Survivors include his wife,
today following a stroke. Bradley, 82, was being treated in the
Jessie, of Roseville; six sons,
intensive care unit of UCLA Medical Center. His physician
Thomas J. Dye, 78, Col- Larry and Lester, Norwalk,
termed his condition "very serious."
umbus , formerly or Har· Pa .; Eve rett of Warren;
The soft-spoken but tough Missouria n was admi tted to the risonvi li e, who suffered a
Danny, U. S. Army in
hospital at I:20 a. m. Monday but news of the stroke was not heart attack Tuesday while
·"
made known until Wednesday. UCLA doctors and the Army said driving his car, struck a semi Missouri ; Michael, Roseville,
he suffered the stroke in the right portion of his brain. A brief rig at an in tersection and was and James of MI. Zion, W.Va.;
th ree daughters, Mrs. Sue
statement said he was not paralyzed. However, the guarded dead at the scene.
Rupe, Mrs. Patricia Roush and
reports left little room for optimism about his recovery.
His wile, Mrs. Tom (Lena) Miss Cathy Walker, all of
Dye, who was a passenger in
WASHINGTON - THE $29.2 BILUON tax-cut bill has the car went through the Roseville; several gra ndbogged down in the Senate because of debate on how to tax oil windshield and is listed in poor children ; two brothers and live
companies and what to do about Social Security benefits. The condition at Grant Hospital. sisters.
Funeral services will be at 2
Senate Wednesday voted a $1 billion tax increase on the foreign Mrs . Dye's sister, Mrs.
p.
m . Friday at the Goebel
income of U.S. oil companies and a $600 million tax increase on Georgia Thoma, Chester, is in
Funeral Home, Buckeye St.,
ail U. S.-based multinational corporations. It then got bogged Columbus with her sister.
down.
Mr. Dye was a retired emThe main bill, which would cut taxes overall, got sidetracked ploye of Fairmont Foods. fn
in a Wednesday night debate over whether to increase Social addition to his wife he is surSecurity benefits. The often confusing parliamentary situation vived by these children, Enid
DIVORCE GRANTED
could be clarified today by a debate-&lt;ending cloture vote, but the A. Foster, Lucasville; Mrs. .. Kathryn Jean Bratton has
outcome was uncertain because senators were lining up to vote Wilbur (Reba ) Williams, ,- :been granted a divorce from
for or against cloture depending on how it would affect their own Columbus ; John and Cathy of
Robert Bratton on charges of
amendments to the recession-lighting bilL
Waverly ; Earl and Shirley,
gross neglect of duty and exPataskala, and Leon and
treme cruelty m Meigs County
WASHINGTON - REP. JAMES R. JONES, ().{)kla., told the Sondra, Grove City; 14 grand- Common Pleas Court.
House Interior Committee Wednesday that tbe shipment of coal childr en;
15
greatby pipeline would be the most useful transportation in the grandchildren ; three sisters,
development of coal deposits in the West. Pipelines carrying coal Murl Bolen, Dorothy Forno!
slurry - a mixture of ground up coal and water - already are and Mrs . Don (Irene) Robbins;
operating in some paris of the country.
several nieces and nephews, :; ' Continued from page 1
But Jones, in urging Congress to pass pipeline legislation, and a host or friends .
•
others living near impoundsaid the first coal pipeline, built in Ohio in 1957, was shut down
Funeral services will be held ments should notify authorities
because of "underpricing " by railroads. The Oklahoma Friday at 8 p. m. at the if they feel a dangerous conFriday and Saturday At
Democrat also said the railroads were "strongly opposed" to Maeder-Quint Funeral Parlor, dition exists.
pending legislation to relax current restrictions on the con- 106ll South High St., where the
"Many of these areas have
struction of coal slurry pipelines over federal lands.
family will receive friends been experiencing ver'y heavy
Thursday 7·9 p. m. and Friday .' rains and freezing conditions.
2-4 p. m. The Rev . Foster H. The fre ez ing and thawing
Jenne will offi ciate. Buria l will process doubles the hazard
Kathleen Moody and Connie be in Wells Cemetery at when you have poorly conHolzer Medical Center
POMEROY, OHIO
Downington, Saturday at I p. structed dams to begin with,"
Morrison .
Discharges
OPEN FRI.&amp; SAT. TIL8
he said .
Births
m.
Natalie Radeker. James
Mr . a nd Mrs . Fiem
Ranson, Claunce Richards ,
Averill Robinson, James Arrowood, Oak Hill , a
·-·--··,...·----·-·------·--·-------·-------~
Rogers, Kathleen Rose, Brad daughter; Mr. and Mrs .
Siders, Timothy Siders, Mrs . Hardman Grimes, Jr., MidJames Sisson and infan t sor., dleport, a daughter.
Jodi Smith, Rickey Smith.
candy Snyder, Jason Stover,
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Mrs. Robert Thiess and infant
ADMITTED - Thomas
daughter, Ora Vaughan . Sarver, Middleport ; Frank
Phyllis Vineward, Charles Potts. Syracuse; Jerry Powell,
Walter, Maude Young .
Racine; J er ry Fe rguson,
Joyce Askew, Debra Bailey, Middiepor ~ She lba Dye ,
Kevin Barr, Charles Baykin, Racine .
'
Milessa
Buck ,
Delmar
DISCHARGED - Kimberly
Canaday, May Chevelair, Mrs. Bolyard, . William Bryant,
Donald Cole and infant Susan Clark, Hazel Curtis,
dau g hter ;
Michel l e David Morgan, Sherewood
Best way to bridge the seasons a n·d expand
Coughenour, Ronald Davis. Meredith.
Emma Eberts , Patricia Flint,
your wardrobe! Luxuriously soft sand als have
James Gheen, Glenn Greer.
the perfect heel for pants , sk irts , even ·dresses.
PLEASANT VALLEY
Mrs. Billy Harrington and
DISCHARGES : Nathan
Pius a pillow-cushioned insole which promises
infant daughter, Jean Head, Rayburn, Point Pleasant ; Tina
total comfort. Choose from a· wide variety of
Donald Henderson, William Grimm, Letart; Floyd Ekers,
Hollman , Amy Icenhower, Glenwood ; Mrs . Charles
Ivory Jennings, Cathryn King , Kinniard, Apple Grove; Roy
Helen Manking, Claude Mason, Fish er, Gallipolis Ferry:
Robert Mayes, Sr., Eleanor Stevie Casto, Leon; Shawn
McKelvey , Lois Meade, Mrs. Jordan , Leon; Mrs. Roy Miller,
Cecil Midkiff and infant Point Pleasant ; Nicholas
daughter, Linda Miller. Meaige, Jr., Gallipolis.

PRES,CRIPTION DRUG STORE
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

II'

COSTUME WINNERS - These are the costume prize winners for the annual costume
party of Xi Gamma Mu Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority Wednesday night at the Grace
Episcopal Parish House in Pomeroy. The party carried out a "Roaring 20's" theme. From the
left,areTexanna Well, Carol McCuliough, Vikki Gloeckner, Debbie Finlaw, Charlotte Hanning
and Jane Bourne.

f&amp;i.·il

~

print publishi~ houses an~
(lt tlv('ly
exploring
the
possibility of getting into t11c
eiPCtronic business.
The videotape cassette is lhe
most popular format but VIS
actually supplies programs in
14 different formats; some
even are printed.

TIDE

KERM'S KORNER

Students in volved in the
walkout have been suspended
for three days. A small number
in the junior high refused to sit
down in their seats. the school
official said, which resulted in
suspensions of one day . Each
student is to report individually
with his parents to either Mr .
Sawyers or to Hanes Poage,

·~~,.~~~-~~

''

"

7- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, March 2tl, l975

.,

'

I'

'.

'

-

I

~

~

.

''
~

'.

I

�.'

•

J

Electronic publis.h ing making strong advance

I- Tile Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thilrsday, March 20, 1975

17 youths

- By LeROY POPE
doctors. The casse tt~s arc Loll.wratorirs, a leading n•;wL'ulkiil houses also have
.- UPI BuaiDess Writer
projected from a standard pharmaceutical house, and the finiml·t·d surh probrrams and
NEW YORK (UP!) - Elec- video cassette player on a . programs were QiStl·ibuted there are u number or smaller
tronic publishing through television screen.
free. Ruche .• :oil provides companies engaged in elecclosed circuit telp,Yision and
The business has changed a financial help on the programs tronic publishing for medical,
videotape cassetWs is making lot over tlie years, Raeben but they now are produced for scientific and other audiences .
strong headway in the medical said. Originally,
Some big companies such as
VIS 's sale as regular journals.
and scientific fields and shows operations were financed
Smith, Kline &amp; French, lnc., Westinghouse Electric are
great promise in other areas as entirely
by
Roche and other large phar- involved In it and some large
well.
Currently, it takes the form
of regular journals, bi-weeklies
lor the most part, sold to
hospitals, universities and
other institutions for Yiewing in
hour-long sessions by doctors
and research technicians. The
subscription price for a typical
such journal is around $600 a •·
year.
"This kind of publishing will
spread to the legal, engineer ing, educational and
general business communities
in the years to come,'' predicts
Jay E. Raeben, president of
Visual Information Systems,
Inc., New York, a subsidiary of
HINES
Republic Corp., that is the
leader al present in medical
electronic publishing.
Raeben said the business had
49 oz.
its origins
ago in those
early morning radio broad1!b . 7oz.
casts "£or physicians only,"
and his company now is con·
sidering establishing a new
physicians' radio network to
bring the latest medical news
to doctors.
Each issue of VIS's chief
journal, Continuing Medical
Education, deals with three
topics of up-tl&gt;()ate interest to

at retreat

NEW MEMBERS - Tapped for membership into the
National Honor Society at Wahama High School Tu esday
were, front row , 1-r, Cheryl Huber, Martha Jones, Guyla

Seventeen United Methodist
youth of Mei gs Coun ty attended a retreat last weekend
at C~mp Francis Asbury , Rio
Grande. · The Reverends D.
William Sydenstricker and
Howard Shively were the c&lt;&gt;deans of the camp.
The weekend was spent in
confirmation classes to
prepare the youth to become
members of various local
United Methodist Churches.
They s tudied basic Christian
beliefs, the Bible, Ch ur ch
history , the Discipline and the
Roush, Mindy Raynes; back row , carletta. Gibbs, Danny
meaning
and responsibilities of
Harmon, Dan Stodola, Carolyn Roush, and Charlotte Edchurch
membership.
wards. Absent was Brenda CampbelL
Youths atte nding were Dale
Riffle , Steven Riffle, Tammy
Tallent, David Robinson, Patty
Robin son , Berta Robinson,
Annie
Delia
J ohnson,
Houchins, Jean Horton, David
behalf of the local hospital funeral directors, appeared to Horton, Terry Clark, Patty
saying personnel there would support the Emergency Ser- Edwards, Tracey Jeffers, Jim
provide Emergency Medical vic e pr ogram. Wilc oxen Jeffers, John Shively and two
Training to all peop le in Mason commented , " I see what they who are a lready members,
County who are interested are doing".
Teresa Ervin and Gene
Ro ger Hyse ll of Mason Shively.
without charge .
In relation lo a unit in Poin t contended, ''All we want is
Four adults serv in g as
Pleasant, she sa id Pleasant approval. We're not asking for counsel ors and assis tants were
Valley Hospita l could provide dollars."
Ma ck Horton , Edgar Abbott,
Richard Grinstead talked of Mrs. Jane Abbott, and Cathy
the land for a garage for an
ambulance based at the the county-wide program when Smi th.
hospital as well as the com- it was s,Up~ia ted that there is a
in addition to classes taught
need
t:ounty pian first. by the deans of t~e camp, two
munication systeni .
Loraine Wilcoxen and Lewis Gr instead said, ''delay is other United Methodist
Hussell , both Point Pl ~asant ruining it. "
ministers of Meigs Coun ty, the
Rev. Robert Bumgarner and
the Rev. Steve Wilson, taught

Action wanted on EMS project
POINT PLEASANT - A
large delegation asked es·
tablishment of emerge ncy
services in Mason County by
the Mason County Board of
Commiisionors Wednesday
evening .

Spokesmen recommended
appointment of an Advisory
Committee as a pre lude to
launching the project.
Although discussion on that
issue comprised most of the
long session, the three member
board made up of Clarence
Adkins, WIUiam H. Rardin Jr ..
and Michael Whalen took no
action other than agree to
study the reques t. Commissioners asked for the delay,
pending a report from the
Region II Health Planning
Council concerning emergency

services.
While those present included
Joe E. Richards, program
manager, of the Governor's
Highway Safety Commi ttee;
mayors, funeral directors, and
nwnerous volunteers trained
as emergency technicians, and
others, they asked for no
money, only for the commission 's approval at this
time.
In trying to acquire this
service for Point Pleasant, and
an eXpansion of the program in
New Haven and Mason,
' Richards said:
"The big thing we need is
your blessing ." He explained
that funding can come from
any source except revenue
sharing for three ambulances
cited as the first need . "The
Commission would be under no
obligation to pay for any or this
at this point," he said.
Citing a need for an Advisory
Committee to study the
program, Richards asked the
Commission to appoint appro~lmately 25 persons to it . In
addiUon to the purchase of the
emergency vehicles, the group

also asked [or rela ted equipmen t such as a com munication
sy stem .

Since Ma son and New Haven
have
been
operatin g
emergency ambulances more
than three years, the need was
made k11 own for addii tonal
veh icles. While the state
pr og ram does not provide
replacement ve hicles. these
two communities are plann ing

expansions, which could be
covered.
Rich ard s

was

com.

piimenl&lt;lry of the groups in the
bend area operated by
volunteers, saying "I have
been to New Haven on run s and
will vouch for their integri ty
and skills. It is one of the best
in the state."
In di scussi ons centering

around legislation that makes
it mandatory for counties to
provide emergency service,
Richards commented that if
funeral

homes·

in

Poi nt

Pleasant would go out of
business because of the ruling
"pa rt of your coun ty would be
out of service".

Services could be offered
professionaliy, by volunteers
entirely or by combin ations,
Richards explained.
PresenUy in Point Pleasant
there are 25 persons taking
Emergency Medical
Tec hni cian
trainin g
at
Pleasant Valley Hospital. In
New Haven 14 persons are
trained as EMTs while Mason
has 16.
Part of the duties of the
Advisory Committee Richards
said would be to s tudy to see
whether or not there would be
any competition with those
hav ing free enterprises . He

added that he would also like to
see deputies and all policemen
trained as EMTs.
Betty Martin, Dit'ector of
Nursing Service at Pleasant
Valley Hospital , spoke in

65 suspended
MASON, W. Va . - Bugs
allegedly seen in the girls rest
rooms of Wahama High School
and Junior High School
resulted in a walkout of
students Tuesday afternoon
that resulted in suspension of
approximately 65 students and
an investigation of the
premises.
Larry Sawyers, principal,
said sus pensions of the
students were made when
school administrators talked to
them informing them they
were breaking school rules by
not returning to classes
following the walkout at 1 p. m.
Tuesday. Sawyers said many
milled around the school
grounds, some left school, and
others returned to classes.

vice principa l.

Gary Epling, county health
sanitarian , conducted an investigation at Wahama Junior
and Senior High Schools on
Tuesday.
He said today in a letter
summing up what he found that
the "bugs'' were not body lice
or "crabs" but rather. a
variety of an apparently
harmless flea .

Hallmark ·\\
EASTER ~
CARDS
-----------

EASTER
CANDY
and BASKETS

l,
DUTTON'S ~
.1

I!~\

Henry Walker
died Tuesday

Crooksville , with burial in Rose
Hill Cemetery there. Friends

may call at the funeral home
from 7 to 9 tonight.
·

News ... in Briefs

Dependable Contracting
Ben -Tom Corp .
Roush's La ndin g
Evelyn's Groc ery

Ebersbach Hardware

Fran cis Flor is ts
High

ser ies -

THE SHOE BOX

II " ' ' - - - - - '
4 ':-=;../A,
. ~· ~.l~~-.....
•

. Middleport, Ohio

64
63
47
34

24
25
41
54

26

62

30 sa

game

Marlene Wilson 512.

Team high game - Depend ab le Contracting 841.
able Contracting 2417 .

~",.,I pH Bat,.

Tuesda y Triplicate T eam
Standings
Tea m
W.
Fr iendly Ta vern
59
Royal Crown Bottling
46
King Builders' Supp ly
43
Royal Oak Park
41
Turner's Grocery
38
New York Clothing House

37

SUIT OR
SPORT
COAT

@

Turner's Grocery

•

"·~

· Green Apple, For Oily Hair
· Apricot ... ,, For Normal Hai r .---:--...
· Avocado. . . For Dry Hair

FUN-SIZE

MILKY WAY
SNICKERS
3M
Candy Bars
I lb. Bag

51

$1.29 Value

FILLED

DECOREGGER

EASTER
BASKETS

The New,
Fun Way
to Decorate
Easter Eggs.
$1.98 Value

12 OZ

Luden''s
Sptced

EASTER BEAN BAGS

•

JELLY EGGS

..,.!.

CHICKS &amp;
RABBITS

69~

32 48

High ind l.vidual gam e Betty Smith 2 17 ; seconct high
ind . game - Betty Smith 194.
High series - Betty Smith
532; Second h igh series - Oot
Rif e .4 81.
Team high game Royal
Crown Bottling 477.
T eam high ser i es Royal
Oak Park 131 8.
Wednesday Early Bird

eBean bags take the
characteristics of
bunnies and chicks.
eChild safe stuffing
e3.00 Value

71/• oz.

LUDEN'S HOLLOW-MOLD

League
Feb. 24, 1975

Standings
Team
W. L.
Dependable Contra ct ing 52 20
Ben -Tom Corp.
47 25
Roush 's Landing ...
.4 3 29
Ebersbach Hardware
28 44
Evelyn's Grovery
26 46
Franci s' F lori sts
20 52
High ind i vidua l game
Marlene Wilson 212 ; sec ond
high ind . game - Anne Hat .
field 203 .
1
High se ries - Ellen Rought
54 8 ; second tligh ser i es "'""'
Marlene ,Wilson 527 .
Team high game - Ben -Tom
Corp . 848 .
Team .high series Ben .
Tom Corp . 2"64 .

49~
Yellow
Pink
SITTING RABBIT, 1 oz.
DANDY ANDY, 2 oz.
MONEYBUNNY,2oz .
.PET BUNNY, 2112 oz.
CUT IE BUNNY, 31!, oz.
FUZZY BUNNY, 3112 oz.
SUNNY BUNNY, 7'12 oz .
FUNNY BUNNY, 3112 oz.

Tuesday Triplicate Team

20c
63c
63c
72c
BSc
85c

Gre~n

$1.99

85c

. Feb. 25, 1975
Slandings
Team
W.
Fri end ly Tavern
53
Roy at Crown Bottling
36
Royal Oak Park
35
King Bu ilders Supp ly
33
New York Clolhlng House

GIANT 4 FT.

L.

Ruby's

19

, EASTER EGG DYE KIT

3~

37
39

INFLATABLE
BUNNY

"

Turner ' s Groc·ery
28 44
High ind i vidual game ,
Betty Smith 245 ; second high
ind . game- Pat Carson 192.
High series - BettY Smith
585 ; second tlig'h ser ies - Pat
Carson 523.
·
Team high game Royal
Crown Bottling 585.
Team high series - Roya l
Crown Bottling 1568.

SUNRISE
$15.99
BAGS TO
MATCH

'

..

Inc
dipper
complete
instruc1ions • .

&amp;!r

In !963, a volcano on the
island of Ball in the East UIWieS :
began erupting. The eventual
death toll went over 1,0110.
.
In 1968, Israel launched ;
heavy attacks upon terrorist
bases in Arab Jordan.

···-

'

. ' "'-·...- .
·~

·~·" ~

$17,99 Value

*198 .·· $3.00
value

$}099

. plus a $3.00 rebate
from Sunbeam makes
your Iota I net cost

WHERE ·YOU GET ·THE' BEST .BEST FOR. LESS
I .

~

•

. j

.

@n!·i~

L.
29
42
45
47
50

Tuesday Triplicate League
March 4,1975
Standings
w. L.
Team
Fri endly Tavern
57 23
Roy a! Crown Bottling
40 40
39 41
Royal Oak Par k
King Bu i lders' Supply
37 43
New Y ork Clothing House
35 45

31

PARTY SET
A games party will be held
at 7:30 p.m. Friday at Drew ·
Webster Post 39, American
Legion Hall.

~..

High individua l game
Be tty Smith 200; Second high
ind . game Isabell e Couch
191.
High series - Betty Smit h
522; second high series Isabelle Couch 49 1.
Royal
T eam tdgh game Crown Bottling 506 .
T ea m high se ri es - Royal
Crown Bottling 1A4.4 .
·
Wednesday Early Bird
League
March 5, 197S
Standings
T ea m
W. L.
Dependable Contracting 56 ,24
Ben .Tom Corp .
55 25
Roush 's Landing
.47 33
Ebersbach Hard ward
30 50
Evelyn's Groce ry .
26 54
Francis' Flori sts
26 54
High individual g;;~me
M a rl en e . Wilson and Betty
Whitla tch 210; Second h igh in d .
ga m e - LoU ise Harrison 207.
High series Marlene
Wi lson 574 ; second h igh series
- Betty Whitlatch 541.
Team high game - Ben -Tom
Corp. 870.
Team high series - Ben .
Tom Corp . 2475 .

iM1I1 ~prm

Pin k, Yellow, Green,
and Black Patent -

'

l;:;,I~~~UJ ll

Team high series - ·Depend ·

eWHITE eBlACK

OPEN FRIDA Y9 to 8, SATURoAY 9 1o B
- CHILDREN REGISTER FOR EASTER GtFT5NO PURCHASE REQUIRED

individual

w. L

h igh ind . game Louise
Gi lmore 183.
H igh ser ies Donna Me ·
Farla nd 5 18 ; seco nd high

New York Clothing House

BROWN TO HOSPITAL
The Pomeroy Emergency
Squad answered a call to the
home of Ben Brown near
Pomeroy at 3:38 a.m . Thursday. He was taken to.Veterans
Memorial Hospital.

$1.49
Value

· Donna McFarland 201 ; second

DRESS UP FOR EASTER IN
THIS SHINY T-STRAP IN

lo

Standings

Team

WBUE

CHILDREN' S SIZES
5 to 8
8"&gt; to 3

.\

16 oz.
Reg . $1.63_

Bird League

T~t h·wv.IAI\NIA.I

")

1 lb.

March 12 , 1915

When You
Purchase Any

.

$2.29
Va lue

Wednesday Early

TIE
FREE

Strict policy
is enforced

50 oz.

In engineering, the law,
education and business, the
need .lor continuing education
is becoming as aeute as in
medicine and the scientific
world , Raeben said, and this
will open big opportunities for
the electronic publishing companies in the next five to 10
years .

WOOLITE
LIQUID

DANISH
HAM
'

3 lb .
Can

ing cOnventions."

Pameroy Bowling Lane s

YOUR EASTER

HOSPITAL NEWS

publishing, Raeben said, are
lhat it can depict actionsproblems being solved, technology being supplied- and
that the information it supplies
can be absorbed by many
people nl uch faster and more
readily than they could absorb

at aiiieveiS -and lllUch cheaper
than the traditional national
and regional sales and market-

Local Bowling

Thomas
Dye, 78' dieS

:.Eyes on

The hi~ appeals of electronic

it by reading books or printed
journals.
It Is unlikely, however, ever
to be cheap enough to replace
print publishing altogether,
despite the Asing price of
paper.
In business, electronic publishin g was seen originally, ·
Raeben said, only as a worker
training tooL "But now companies are starting to see it as an
extremely versatile method of
communication that is efficient

CRISCO

MIX

rears

Henry
Walker,
61,
Deavertown, Ohio, formerly of
Meigs County, died Tuesday at
his home .
sessions.
He was born Dec. 14, 19t2, at
Normalville, Pa., the son of the
Continued from page I '
late James and E liz abeth
cent) were 18 to 3&lt;1 years old.
Walker. He was a member of
the Reorganized Church of
LOS ANGELES - OMAR N. BRADLEY, the nation 's only
·
Jesus Christ of Latter Day
remaining live star general, who took his greatest pride as the
Saints.
·
epitome of the slogging American foot soldier, lay gravely ill
Survivors include his wife,
today following a stroke. Bradley, 82, was being treated in the
Jessie, of Roseville; six sons,
intensive care unit of UCLA Medical Center. His physician
Thomas J. Dye, 78, Col- Larry and Lester, Norwalk,
termed his condition "very serious."
umbus , formerly or Har· Pa .; Eve rett of Warren;
The soft-spoken but tough Missouria n was admi tted to the risonvi li e, who suffered a
Danny, U. S. Army in
hospital at I:20 a. m. Monday but news of the stroke was not heart attack Tuesday while
·"
made known until Wednesday. UCLA doctors and the Army said driving his car, struck a semi Missouri ; Michael, Roseville,
he suffered the stroke in the right portion of his brain. A brief rig at an in tersection and was and James of MI. Zion, W.Va.;
th ree daughters, Mrs. Sue
statement said he was not paralyzed. However, the guarded dead at the scene.
Rupe, Mrs. Patricia Roush and
reports left little room for optimism about his recovery.
His wile, Mrs. Tom (Lena) Miss Cathy Walker, all of
Dye, who was a passenger in
WASHINGTON - THE $29.2 BILUON tax-cut bill has the car went through the Roseville; several gra ndbogged down in the Senate because of debate on how to tax oil windshield and is listed in poor children ; two brothers and live
companies and what to do about Social Security benefits. The condition at Grant Hospital. sisters.
Funeral services will be at 2
Senate Wednesday voted a $1 billion tax increase on the foreign Mrs . Dye's sister, Mrs.
p.
m . Friday at the Goebel
income of U.S. oil companies and a $600 million tax increase on Georgia Thoma, Chester, is in
Funeral Home, Buckeye St.,
ail U. S.-based multinational corporations. It then got bogged Columbus with her sister.
down.
Mr. Dye was a retired emThe main bill, which would cut taxes overall, got sidetracked ploye of Fairmont Foods. fn
in a Wednesday night debate over whether to increase Social addition to his wife he is surSecurity benefits. The often confusing parliamentary situation vived by these children, Enid
DIVORCE GRANTED
could be clarified today by a debate-&lt;ending cloture vote, but the A. Foster, Lucasville; Mrs. .. Kathryn Jean Bratton has
outcome was uncertain because senators were lining up to vote Wilbur (Reba ) Williams, ,- :been granted a divorce from
for or against cloture depending on how it would affect their own Columbus ; John and Cathy of
Robert Bratton on charges of
amendments to the recession-lighting bilL
Waverly ; Earl and Shirley,
gross neglect of duty and exPataskala, and Leon and
treme cruelty m Meigs County
WASHINGTON - REP. JAMES R. JONES, ().{)kla., told the Sondra, Grove City; 14 grand- Common Pleas Court.
House Interior Committee Wednesday that tbe shipment of coal childr en;
15
greatby pipeline would be the most useful transportation in the grandchildren ; three sisters,
development of coal deposits in the West. Pipelines carrying coal Murl Bolen, Dorothy Forno!
slurry - a mixture of ground up coal and water - already are and Mrs . Don (Irene) Robbins;
operating in some paris of the country.
several nieces and nephews, :; ' Continued from page 1
But Jones, in urging Congress to pass pipeline legislation, and a host or friends .
•
others living near impoundsaid the first coal pipeline, built in Ohio in 1957, was shut down
Funeral services will be held ments should notify authorities
because of "underpricing " by railroads. The Oklahoma Friday at 8 p. m. at the if they feel a dangerous conFriday and Saturday At
Democrat also said the railroads were "strongly opposed" to Maeder-Quint Funeral Parlor, dition exists.
pending legislation to relax current restrictions on the con- 106ll South High St., where the
"Many of these areas have
struction of coal slurry pipelines over federal lands.
family will receive friends been experiencing ver'y heavy
Thursday 7·9 p. m. and Friday .' rains and freezing conditions.
2-4 p. m. The Rev . Foster H. The fre ez ing and thawing
Jenne will offi ciate. Buria l will process doubles the hazard
Kathleen Moody and Connie be in Wells Cemetery at when you have poorly conHolzer Medical Center
POMEROY, OHIO
Downington, Saturday at I p. structed dams to begin with,"
Morrison .
Discharges
OPEN FRI.&amp; SAT. TIL8
he said .
Births
m.
Natalie Radeker. James
Mr . a nd Mrs . Fiem
Ranson, Claunce Richards ,
Averill Robinson, James Arrowood, Oak Hill , a
·-·--··,...·----·-·------·--·-------·-------~
Rogers, Kathleen Rose, Brad daughter; Mr. and Mrs .
Siders, Timothy Siders, Mrs . Hardman Grimes, Jr., MidJames Sisson and infan t sor., dleport, a daughter.
Jodi Smith, Rickey Smith.
candy Snyder, Jason Stover,
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Mrs. Robert Thiess and infant
ADMITTED - Thomas
daughter, Ora Vaughan . Sarver, Middleport ; Frank
Phyllis Vineward, Charles Potts. Syracuse; Jerry Powell,
Walter, Maude Young .
Racine; J er ry Fe rguson,
Joyce Askew, Debra Bailey, Middiepor ~ She lba Dye ,
Kevin Barr, Charles Baykin, Racine .
'
Milessa
Buck ,
Delmar
DISCHARGED - Kimberly
Canaday, May Chevelair, Mrs. Bolyard, . William Bryant,
Donald Cole and infant Susan Clark, Hazel Curtis,
dau g hter ;
Michel l e David Morgan, Sherewood
Best way to bridge the seasons a n·d expand
Coughenour, Ronald Davis. Meredith.
Emma Eberts , Patricia Flint,
your wardrobe! Luxuriously soft sand als have
James Gheen, Glenn Greer.
the perfect heel for pants , sk irts , even ·dresses.
PLEASANT VALLEY
Mrs. Billy Harrington and
DISCHARGES : Nathan
Pius a pillow-cushioned insole which promises
infant daughter, Jean Head, Rayburn, Point Pleasant ; Tina
total comfort. Choose from a· wide variety of
Donald Henderson, William Grimm, Letart; Floyd Ekers,
Hollman , Amy Icenhower, Glenwood ; Mrs . Charles
Ivory Jennings, Cathryn King , Kinniard, Apple Grove; Roy
Helen Manking, Claude Mason, Fish er, Gallipolis Ferry:
Robert Mayes, Sr., Eleanor Stevie Casto, Leon; Shawn
McKelvey , Lois Meade, Mrs. Jordan , Leon; Mrs. Roy Miller,
Cecil Midkiff and infant Point Pleasant ; Nicholas
daughter, Linda Miller. Meaige, Jr., Gallipolis.

PRES,CRIPTION DRUG STORE
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

II'

COSTUME WINNERS - These are the costume prize winners for the annual costume
party of Xi Gamma Mu Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority Wednesday night at the Grace
Episcopal Parish House in Pomeroy. The party carried out a "Roaring 20's" theme. From the
left,areTexanna Well, Carol McCuliough, Vikki Gloeckner, Debbie Finlaw, Charlotte Hanning
and Jane Bourne.

f&amp;i.·il

~

print publishi~ houses an~
(lt tlv('ly
exploring
the
possibility of getting into t11c
eiPCtronic business.
The videotape cassette is lhe
most popular format but VIS
actually supplies programs in
14 different formats; some
even are printed.

TIDE

KERM'S KORNER

Students in volved in the
walkout have been suspended
for three days. A small number
in the junior high refused to sit
down in their seats. the school
official said, which resulted in
suspensions of one day . Each
student is to report individually
with his parents to either Mr .
Sawyers or to Hanes Poage,

·~~,.~~~-~~

''

"

7- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, March 2tl, l975

.,

'

I'

'.

'

-

I

~

~

.

''
~

'.

I

�9- The Datly Sent mel, MtdcDeport-Pm nero\ , 0 '!11tu sd.11 M.n r h 20 1D75

THAT
CALL. '
IS !)lOT

Auto Sales
FOR SAL E

serv1ce.

Stivers ville
News Notes

Commumty Good Fnda y
servtce wtll be at the Racme U
M Church at 7 30 p m
Sunday Sc hool Easter
program at Ftrst Baptist wtll
be Easter Sunday at 7 30 p m
Mrs A C Bradford honored
Mr Bradford Sunday with a
btrthday dinner
Guests
present were his children, Crill
Bradford , Jr , Mrs . Ruth
Frank and daughters, Ann and
Lois, and Mrs Mary Carson
and daughter, Martha Ann
.Mr and Mrs Philip Roberts
of Gallipolis spent Sunday wtth
hts mother, Mrs Frances
Roberts, honormg her wtth a
birthday dinner and gifts
Mr and Mrs. Roy Riffle
spent Sunday with Mr and
Mrs Bill McKenzte and family
at Gallipolis. Mr Riffle's btrthday was observed with a
dinner
Mr and Mrs Bob Beegle
spent a recent weekend in
Akron with Mr and Mrs Kyle
Stump and attended the annual
Kroger Store Banquet at
Canton
Mr and Mrs Steve Badgley,
enroute to their home in
Columbus, after vacationing m
AUanta, Ga , spent the
weekend with parents, Mr and
Mrs Ralph Badgley Their
daughter who had visited her
grandparents, accompanied
them home.
Mrs David Parry returned
after hospitalization at Holzer
Medical Center.
Mr. Melvin Riffle of
Columbus spent a weekend
with his parents, Mr and Mrs
Roy Rlffie.
Mrs Harold Hawk of Springfield •pent several days with
Mrs. Mlna Lewis and Mr. and
Mrs. Ben Philson
Mr. and Mrs. Davtd Parry
and sons spent the weekend
wtth his parents in Hillsboro

Alfred

Social Notes
Sunday School attendance on
March 16 was 44, the offering
$21.31.

Worshtp services were held
at II wtth Charles D Woode,
leading and Vernon Nease of
Forest R1111 Church, speaking
from Mark 9:34-38, on "Deny
Yourself as Christ Dented
Himself " Rev Meece was
able to be present for the
worshtp services and had
prepared bulletins to diStribute
for the servtce. He is making
steady progress and hopes to
return to his pulpit work next
month. Attendance at worship
service was 23, offering $21 50,
pledges $7
John Taylor of the Air Force
spent last weekend with his
parents, Mr. and Mrs Ernest
Taylor and attended church
here Sunday morning A fannly
dinner was enjoyed at the
hiXlle S1111day noon.
Ntta Dillinger, moUter of
Uoyd Dtlhnger of Alfred
Church, underwent gallbladder surgery m Holzer
Medtcal Center last Monday
morrung. She IS reported ~o be
recovering rucely. Her friends
here wtsh her a speedy

recovery.
Bobby Brooks, son of Mr and
Mrs. Uoyd Brooks had a
toosilectomy In a Parkersburg
hospital recently. He ts
reported to be domg well
Leonard Amos underwent
major surgery m the CamdenClark Hospttallast week and IS
still cllllflned there at this
writing.

Jeanie Flanders IS a patient
m the Camden-Clark Hospital
at Parkersburg, and IS expected to have possible surgery
after 1111dergoing tests.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert White of
Keno visited Iris Carr and
daughters, Sunday. This was
Mrs. White's ftrSt time out,

1971 KAWASAK 1 500 Show ro om
condtt 10n
l ow
m il eag e

Ex tras P hon e 992 l56 J
3 20 J lp

ORDINANCE NO 1024 7S
An Ord•nan ce to prov d e for
t he salary of the Mayor and

I.Dst
G Ef.!MAN Shep herd dog lost n
Pmeg r ove area on Coun ty
Road 32 Black and g r ey
answer s to t he a ame of
Tur key
Call 992 7362
3 19 3TC

Vtl lage Clerk T rea surer

Be 11 o r da ined by t he Counrll
ot the V tll age of M•dd leport a s.
fol l OWS

Sec 1 That the salary o f t he
Mayor o r the V tl lage of M 1d
d leport commenc1ng Jan 1st
1976
sha l l be $2 500 00 per

2 SIGNS

Nobce

m

J 20 Jt c

annum •
Sec II Thai th e salary of th e
Cler k Tre a su r er of the VIl la ge
o f M•ddle por t commen c m g Jan
l SI 1976 sha l l be 12 500 00 per

annum
Sec I ll Th1 S Ordman c e shall
ta ke effec ! an d be 1n for ce f r om
and after Ma r ch 10 197 5
PBssed the l Oth day of M arc h
19 75

Attut

Ge ne Grat e
Clerk Tr eas

M

L Ke ll y
Pres dent o f Council
J 20 272 t c

Mrs Ruby Bryant and Mrs
Vtolet Rtlchie VISited Mrs
Paulette Van Meter, Pomeroy,
on Frtday
Mr 1 and
Mrs
Bob
Moorehead , Rev Wilham
Bartholomew , Louts De Luz,
Davtd Wolfe and Randy Forbes
were recent callers at the home
of Mr. and Mrs R R. Durst
and Tom
Mrs Elva Dailey, Syracuse,
spent Wednesday afternoon
with her parents, Mr. and Mrs
Carl Autherson
Mrs Correne De Luz, local,
and Mr and Mrs Richard
Abels, LQng Bottom, shopped
at Pt Pleasant, W Va on
Tuesday.
The home occupted by Mr
and Mrs Ronald Oatley and
famtly, Wells Run, was
destroyed by fire on Sunday
night.
Nicki Dawn Von Meter
visited Elaine Lehew on
Sunday afternoon.
Mr and Mrs Monty Proffitt
were Columbus visloors over
the weekend
Mrs. Mike Evans, Aficta,
Cindy and Ryan and leota
Birch called on Mrs. Ada Van
Meter on S]lllday afternoon
Mr and Mrs Elza Birch,
Racme, vtstled Mr Chnt Birch
and Leota, on Sunday afternoon.
Mrs Merle Evans called on
Mrs. Mae Van Meter, and
Ruby, DeWttt's Run on
Tuesday
Mr and Mrs Bob Price and
daughter, LQng Bottom, visited
her parents, Mr and Mrs Bill
Middleswart on Sunday
The Rev. and Mrs William
Bartholomew and daughters,
Racme, spent Sunday wtth Mr
and Mrs LQuis De Luz
Mr. and Mrs Charles Htlton
entertained the members of Ute
Lebanon Golden Age Club at
their home on Wednesday
afternoon
Mrs Ruby Bryant, Mrs
Mattie Teaford, Tom Durst,
Mrs. Roy Donohew, David
Bryant, David Talbott, Paul
Evans, Don Meadows, S W.
Durst, Charles Hanson, Joe
Wheeler, Dan Mtller and Mr
and Mrs R R. Durst were
guests of E. H Carpenter and
family recenUy
TheAlmanar
By United Presa IDtemallonal
Today is Thursday, March 20,
the 79th day of 1975 wtth 286 to
follow
The moon IS in the final
quarter
The morning stars are
Mercury and Mars.
The evening stars are Venus,
Saturn and Jupiter
Those born on this date are
under the sign of Pisces
Norwegian poet and dramatist Hennk Ibsen was born
March 20, 1828 This Is
Amencan enlertamer Carl Reiner's 52nd birthday
On this day In history
In 1852, Harriet Beecher
Stone's slavery-era book "Uncle
Tom's Cabin" was published
for the first lime
In 19SI, Argentina dtctator
Juan Peron seiZed control of
the oppostUon newspaper ' 'La

Prensa "
stncesuffering a heart attack a
few weeks ago, We WISh her a
speedy recovery.
Mr and Mrs
Ernest
Vtneyard of Jackson , Mich ,
sp!!nt the weekend wtUt her
parents, Mr and Mrs Arthur
Atherton and hiS parents, Mr
and ~ Hobart VIneyard at
Tuppers Plains.
Mr and Mrs. Charles D
Woode called on Mr and Mrs
James Smtih of Hemlock
Grove, and Evelyn Well,
a8rbara and Brtan of Cherry
Ridge Sunday afternoon

GARAG E SA L E on SR 143
T hu r sday
F r. day
an d
Sat ur day Phone 992 Sl 46
3 19 3tc
SH OOT IN G M atc h Racm e Gun
Cl ub Sunday March 23 I
p m

3 19 41 C

SHIR L EY K ay$ Beaut y Sa lon
Permanent Sp ec1al
Un 1
P er m R ~g 120 now $16 Re g
perms Sl 5 now $1 2 50 An
nett e Phalln M ar c1 a Carr and
Sandy Jan narell1
3 19 Jtc
RE VI VA L sta r l tn g M ar ch 26
1975 at t he Rutland Com
mun ty Chur ch w1th Rev
Su per 1n
W ll ltam Owe n s
t endent ol ttle w es leyan
Holtn eS!. Chur ches ol Ch est er
W V a Spec 1al smgtng ea ch
eyen mg eyer yon e w elcome
The P astor E ug ene Rou sh
J 19 3t c
1

WIL L do sm all g ar de n
p low1ng w it h Gr ave ly gard en
tr ac tor Phon e 992 7492 or 992
) 716
3 16 6tp

A TT E N D

•1971 Matador 4 Dr.

.

$1595

SUNDA Y

1979 Bel Atr 4 dr . Sed., 8 cyl .. std.
1968 Impala 2 dr. Cpe., 8, auto .
1969 Plymouth 2 dr., auto.
1969 Ford V-8, 2 dr .. auto.
TRUCKS
1972 Datsun Ptckup wtth Topper
1972 Chevrolet "'• Ton 8 cyl., 4 speed

- _

---~- ---- .:_ ~_!tc

196 ! C H EV ROLE T r eliabl e get
to wo rk c ar 149 Broad way
Phon e '19 2 2082
3 16 12t c

MID

DLEP ORT UN I TED PEN 196-i RAMBLER
Phone 80
TE COS TAL
C HUR C H
2353
SOU TH
Jrd
AVENUE
3 18 Jt c
SUN DAY SC HOOL 10 00 A
M TRAN SPORT A T ION AND 1971 VEGA 6T 4 sp
-4 new
INFORMATION
PHONE
rad111 t1res good condition
992 38 24 or 992 2502
S950 Phone 992 71 32
316 11tp
3 18 Jtc
GU N SHOOT on Mile Hill Road ,
factory c hoked guns on ly
Spo nsored by the R a c m e
Am eri can Leg i on Saturday ,
Mar c n 22 , 7 p m
3 18 41 C

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

1 7 lfc

------------ADCTION -_f hur! day lilgh f l
p m
at Ma son Au c t io n
Horton St In Mason , W va
Con s 1gnm en t s wel c ome
Phone ( 304) 773 5471
2 2 lfc
~--------~--=~
~

NOW selling Fuller Brush
Produc ts phone 99 2 3.tll0
I 24 lie
W A NTED'=- Rumm age to sell
for bo y scout Troop 242
Syracuse . Ohio 949 5757 or 992
1258
3 20 Jl c

WantP.II To Buy

Ca l l 99 2 3105
K enneth W1it

or

JUN K autos comp lete and
delivered to our yard we p1c k
up I!IUto bod i es and buy al i
k mds of scrap metals and
1ron R lder 's Sal v age St Rt
12A, Rt 4 Pomeroy Oh.lo
Call 992 5468
10 17 tfc
CA SH p11d tor all makes and
models of mobile homes
Phone area CQde 614 11123 9531
(
,.13tfc

Y all Come to Landmark ' s

Spring Roundup
MARCH 19-22
Fun. Refreshments,
and
Pnzes
Reg•stratton

G11t1
Free

LOOK FOR THE
Whlte Hat Spec1als
Y ALL COME'
POMEROY LANDMARK:

9._Jack w. c~rsev. Mvr
6711 Phone tn 2111

Employment Wanted
W I LL 00 babySitting on
evenings and weekends
Pl'1one Vanessa Folm er 992

2533

3 20 3t c

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

guaranteed .

Dazor, llckhoo, Trucks
LlmHtont &amp; Fill Dirt

Commercial-Residential

2-11-75c

308 Page St.
Middleport, 0. 992-3509
Radtos, Antennas, Towers,
Used T v 's Buy from the
' 1 lnd1an ~' and save "Wam
Pum' We buy t.Jstd Racl1os
and TowerJ Rad101 repa•r ed
by FCC hcens.ed urv1ce
p,ers.onnel Stop and see the
'Indian "
and
Bubbles
Mon•tor Channel 10 and 20

1966 F ORD tr uck call after 5
p m Phone 992 3625 or 992
5945
3 19 Otc
ONE 1972 Pon t 1a c Catalma, A 1
cond iti on One 1966 But ck
Wildcat
One two wheel
trailer factory bU 11t Phone
992 31 65
3 19 3t c
1972 SUPER Beetle 1n good
condit ion . $1 350 Phone 992
5866
3 18 61 C

NOTICE from Berry Md l er
Mobtle Home Sa les - Here ts
a new l lst1ng of tl'1e un its we
now have on our lot due to the
foreclosure of another Mob1 l e
Hom e Deal er
60x 14 New Moon 2 bedroom
60x14 Nashua , tota l el eclr tc, 2
bedroom
60x 12 Nashua 2 bedroom
60x1 2 Globemaster 3 bedroom
50K1 2 Buddy 2 bedr oo m
70 x 14
Beverly
Manor
3
bedroom , 2 bath w 1th 8x 12
ex "ando
60K1 2 Dartan , 2 bedroom 2 tull
baths
60x l2 L1berty 2 bedroom
60x 12 Schult , 2 bedroom t otal
electn c
60x 12 T 111n 2 bedroom
60x 12 El cona , 2 bedroom
60x 12 Parkwood , bal cony front
k1t chen These are mosfly all
late models (some never lived
10 l and wtll be IICIUtclated at a
very large discount So 1f you
are mterested 1n a Mob1le
Home at a I'11Jge uvmg don't
w a tt stop today al Berry
Mt l ler MOb tie Home Sal es , 105
F arson St
Belpre
Ohio
phone 423 953 1
3 14 l Otc

For Sale
MOO ERN stereo , conso le AM
F M radto, separate controls 4
speaker
sound
system
Balan c e 5103 10 or t erms Call

992 3965

3 20 tf c

USED parts , Frye sTruck l!l'nd
Auto Par ts Rutland Ohto
Phone ( 614 ) 742 60IJ 4
1 22 78tp

" REMODELING
plumb,ng
heat 1ng
&amp;nd all types of
general
repa1r
Work SHALLOW well 1et pump and 30
gal tank Cal l 991 7560
guaranteed 20 years eK
penence Phone 992 2409
3 17 61p
lo 19 trc
NEW and used cha1fl saws ,
REMODEliNG plumbing ,
tillers and mowers
Also
heating and all types or
repatr S
A98 LOCIJSI Sf ,
genera l
repa tr
Work
M i ddleport Phone 992 3092
guarant eed 20 y ears eK
2 28 26TC
perten c e Phone 992 2409
311t1c
1913 KAWASAKI 450 CC d1rt
b1ke 1974 K awasakt 125 CC
Enduro
See at Welker ' s
Ashland , 992 3535
3 lllfc
TRAILER l!lpartments for rent
Phon e 992 5248
3 19 6tc 1971
KAWA SAKI
100
cc
tradb1ke, 2.900 m 1I!S as m!ln
111 BEDROOM house wall to wall
per gallon $300 Phone 992
29 26
car peltnQ a c fenced 1n yard
wtth patto , n 1ce Phone 992
3 18 6tp
27 80 or 992 3-4 32
3 19 ttc FARM Lumber See us for your
ne~ds
Pomeroy Fo rr est
1 TR AI LER: lot for r en t F&gt;hone
Products Bat tey Run Road
992 5433
Ph on e 992 5965
3 19 4tC
3 19 111c

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

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

For Rent

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

RACINE PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING
tomplete plumbing .,;·
heating service and
general sheet metal
works.
F r e e
Estimates.
Phone 949-5961
Emergency 992-3995
or 992-5700 .

For Sale
STAN L EY Products for sale
Phone 142 3762
.J 9 26tc

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

TRA I LER: SPACE , l4 mile
nor t h of Me1gs H 1Qh School on
old Rt 33 Phone 9'92 2941
1 23 ffC

--------------D U PLE X . 238
Wal nut St ,
1,

M idd l epor t Oh•o
2780 or 992 l-132

Phone 992

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

-------------19 74 YA HAMA 250 cc Endura

Less 11'1an AOO mt l es All ac
$1 000 Phone 992
7897
3 16 6tc

c essor~es ,

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

1965 JOHN DEERE dour , 4
c ylinder, dtese l 8 ft bl ade.
2 19 ttc
n tw pa.nt, cl utches . tracks.
.~= ---- --------;-brakes and canopy , $6 ,000
COUNTR Y MOb ile Home Pa r k ,
Phone 985 3594
R t Jl t en m ties nortn of
l 11 6tp
Pomeroy
L arge lots w 1tl\. - - - - - - - - - - - - -- conc rete pat•os . sidewllk$ , 8 N FORO tractor w1th side
runners lnd off
street
mower , good rubb1r Runs
par k. ng Pttone 992 7479
' goOd , $950 Phone 985 359,.
12 31 lfc
3 16 7tp

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

3-'llnd .A ROOM f urn .shecl and
unfurn iShed
apartments
Phon e 992 5-i 3A
4 12 lfc

- - ----- -------.~~-

PR I VATE meeting room fo r
any organ i r:ation , phone 992
3975
3 11 ,,,

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

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

M IXED My for sal e
992 3658

~e:AD DIS, HO~' IT 5 ASC'UT

PAT YOU N ~ PU'-JI&lt;. S WAM&gt;
PA JE WE- L ED JOY 80 \o
AN L0VE:' · L 0 i U5 ~

' n

Phone

WHY fJOT OU"

6u.:;reR z

I NAMF5 R.I&gt;.NelD

3 10 ""
--- ------------~

I /.JA WLITA DUPRE ,
Mf/. V!;&lt;:Bt-fiFGSTEOR 'S

~e&amp;.E~R . ~D

I

1))fJO AJ&lt;C;

Kangaroo I 0
JQ-M isslon Imposs ible 6
9 oo--A M 3 Pht l Donahue 4 15 Bullwmkl e

a

'/OU,MV

13
9 25--Chuck Wh ite Reports 10
10 00--Celeb,nt y

sta r ling at $139
Sw tv el
r ocker s your c f'lot ce of colors
S99 and up Jack 's Furn1ture
&amp; Upho ls tery Supply 236 E
Man .S t
Pomeroy
Oh to
Phon e 992 3903
3 18 6tC

.. 11-1E 11-10RN KING
HAS PI&lt;OM lSED SUCH
STATUS "TO ANY WHO
CAN PRE SENT HIM
WITH SUCH A PRIZE !

00 yOU REALIZ E WHAT
11-11S MEANS, COMRADE &lt;'
WE'LL BECOME MEMBERS
OF l'HE PR1V1 LEGED CL ASS 1

ll1EN SIND
.. . AND I 'LL
HIM SECURELY INFORM THE
SO WE OON'T
CASTLE OF
LOSE HIM ..
OUR LUCK '

I ()

NEED WASHER or dryer
repa1red? Call now for fast
servtce at reasonable ra t es
free esttmates Call now 992
33 13 ,
3 18 6tc

IHUUSTHI

K)

UPHO LS TERY
fabrt c
cl oseouts , values to 19 95 per
yd
now $1 99
All other
fabn c s 10 pel off thru month
of Mar ch Jacks Furn1ture &amp;.
Upholstery Suppl y
236 E
Mam St Pom eroy 0 Phone
992 3903
3 18 6t C
COMPLETE bedroom SUJte
SfUd10 c ou c h
10 c u
ft
refr1gerator
p l atform
ro ckers antique chatr other
terns Phone 992 3457
3 18 6tc
MR AND MR S Ronald Dougan
would l 1ke t o mv 1te you to
att end Sunday Scf'lool at t he
Un 1ted
Pen
M iddleport
recostal Church South Th1rd
AYenu e start1ng at 10 a m
3 20 2tp
HORNED Her eford s, males or
f emales Hugh Le1fhe•t Rt 2
BOK I Pomeroy Oh iO 45769
Or phone (6141 992 59 18

UTTLE ORPHAN ANNIE

LITTLE ORPI!AN

ANNIE-VOH~E

and

water system

Close

WRITIN A M ILE A

MI ~TE

m 1nerals, TP water, close to

Forked Run Lake $16.600 DO
POMEROY - 1 story frame,
2 BR. bath, 'I&gt; basement,
util ity gas floor furnace,

large lot. recen~ly renovated
1ns1de and out $9,500 00

:GASOUNE AILEY
He'p
t.j'self!

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

ELWOOD BOWE•s REPAlR

- Sweepers toasters, Irons,
ail small app11ances Lawn
mowers next to State High
way Garage on Rot.Jte 7
Phone 985 3825
3 11 26tc

3 20 3tc

HOUSE barn and garage A
acres on Route 1&lt;13 6 m tl es
from State Route 7 $8500 Call -------~~--- - - ~E"PTI( - TANKS
cleaned
( 614 ) 992 2120
Modern Sanitation , 992 395.4 or
.,,
3 20 3tc
992 73.49
6 ROOM house wtth bath , 3 ---- ~ - -... ------9 18 tf(
NEW
BRICK
home
on
Rl
7
bedroom full basement, gas
between
Pomeroy
and
-.....-------~~--neat h w floor wall to wa ll
Chesler , res tr.cted area 3 br
rfbME tmpiovement -;;;d
carpet Close to schOol 1n
2 balta
bullttn kttchen
Repatr Servtee Anyth1ng
Pomero y Phone 992 3097
carpeting f trep l ace double
fi x td around the home , from
3 9 52tc
garage ba sem ent Call 985
roof to basement You will
- ---- ------- - ~- 3365
4 BEDROOM br~c k home m
ltke our work and rates
3 20 31p
Phone H2 5081
M ldd leport Phone 992 3457
3 18 6t c
1229tfc

Real Estate For Sale

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

6 RM S
garage panelmg
breezeway 8 acres Cal i 992
3059
3 16 71 c
HOME for sal e 1n Ches t er
Tuppers
P l a1ns
water
natural gas 2 bedrooms
complet e ly
remodeled
$13 ,800 Phone 985 4102
3 16 l '2 tc
9 ACRE S of proper t y w1th a 2
$7 ,000
bedroom
tra il er
Phone 742 347 1
3 19 6tp

BUY NOW &amp; SAVE Low low
down payments 8 pet In
tere s! 30 yr flnancmg on new
1'1omes m 3 Me1gs County
1ocat1ons , or BUILD on your
lot Phone 992 5976 or 992 5844
3 lJ tfc

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

LIL ABNER

- ------------ 'WILL tr.m- or Cut trees

or
shrubbery
clean
out
basements, att1cs. etc Phone ,
949 3221 or 742 .44A1
2 28 26tc

PIANO tunmg Lane DanielS
Phone 992 2082
3 16 12tc

•

NATURA L LY rr
OH, 00 OFOOBA-DGD- ANYBWY
RICH SHOULD
r;;v r:;;p,y OOBA - DQOBAN
HAVE S ERVANTS '
HAS AN INCOMEO OF
$ 250,000 A YE:AR,
SOTHEY WANT

.SEI&lt;VANT6

CAN'T GET EM SO St=: ND O UT TO f'OOR
COUt-JT R IE S - LIKE
FROVI OUR
THE U.S.A !rNr:;; IG HBO RING
CCU f.JT RIES'THEY'RE &lt;JUST
A'S R IC H AS
WF:: ARE -

''

•I ''

WMPO-FM

7

'
I'

IS

GREAT COUNTRY STEREO
TUNE TO WMPO-FM 92.1

bedrooms, all

holt

acle and concrete patio

Country locahon on wa~er line

I I I

I

An.wer1 On t of th e rmgmalunrlfd Hlofu - MARRIAGE

elec,r l c ,

O NN

garage and level tot Only
$7500110
MIDDLEPORT
Steam
heated • bedroom home, 2
baths

COLOR

IV .

•

ft.JII basement. several

garages and lots of parking
Large bulld1ng for hobby,
business. or storage
YOUR INVESTMENT TODAY
WILL MAKE YOUR FOR
TUNE TOMORROW. SER
VICE AND RESULTS IS
WHAT WE OFFER YOU•
PLACE YOUR PROPERTIES
WITH US CALL 'l92 3325
EesyTtrmsl
Fret Dtlfveryl

VCOCH

•~LACK &amp;

1 NEUER Sill iTCHED

WHITE T-v'

:'lORE HOG LAST
t-'IGHT, LUKEV- --

•STEREO

iN
BED
'

MAD FURNilURE .
HERMAN GltATI
77J.m2
MASON, W. VA.

TV FNS J

•
B!RNEY

~

WUZ HOME

WOULD 'I E TAKE
A LIE-DETECTOR
TEST ON THAT,
SNUFFV '

SHORE!!
GO G IT TH'
DA DBURN

T HING

For Frld1y, March 21, 1175

Don 1 ta lk about things today
unless they re a · la1t accompli
or yo u il k 1d yo ursell Into
behevlng they re already done

LEO (July 23-Aug 22) Your
hunches about Ideas of others

are nol lao sharp today Don t

assocmte

Q VG V R

S JV

DID 'IOU SNITCH
M'l HOG LAST
NIGHT, SNUFF'/ '

--'"-"""-,::,r,

ONNR

22)

Vou tend to face taska much
too n~gatlvely today - that's

CANCER (June 21-Juty 22) Be

sample A is

words are all

NF CX,

SK

~

'
•'

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-No•.

ex tra careful today not to say
t hrngs that wl!l refl ect poorly on
you tn th e eyes of others You
need their respect

CRYPTOQUOTES

ZENITH

Paul Nuchlms 33
10 3D--World Press 20
11 OQ--News 3,4,8,10,13,15, ABC News 33
11 3D--Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Wide World Mystery 13, ABC
News Closeup 6, Movie "Watusl" 8, Movie "Thin Air" 10;
Janakl 33
12 tectrl'!e'(l• 6
1 DO-Midnight Special 3,4,15, Wide Worttd Mystery 6, News 13
1 15--Movle "A Blueprint for Murder" 10
2 3D--Star Trek 4
3 30--Movle ' Beau Ge•te" 4
5 30--Movle 'The Evil of Frankenstein" 4

da y

15 Rested
Yesterday's Answer
With
t6 Poettcal
(3 wds)
9 Pennsyl25 Caus\tc
adverb
vama
26 Grtt
4 Summer
t7 Fabled btrd
(Fr )
ctty
28 Mame
1~ Wallach
5 Mode of
12 Church
ctty
t9 Some
utterance
30 Htgh strung
reader
20 Campmg
6 "Sphce"
16 'Duck
32 Assatled
ttem
7 Neroman
soup'
(2 wds )
21 Hotbed
')1atl'
22 Eternity
33 Playmg
23 Don't tell
8 Atr Force
23 Put tn one's marble
me' (2 wds)
operation
- (meddle ) 38 Exasperate
24 Lure
( 2 wds)
24 Expand
39 Tune of life
26 Phthppme r.--n--11'"""11'tsiand
27 Press
2HItalian ctty
29 Baseball's
Brock
30 Hostery
shade
31 Shmlo
temple
34 Horned vtper
35 Word on
movte
screeru;
36 Collapse
37 Workmg
wtth tesserae t..,-+- +--39 Vcrdt opera
40 'Be 11 humble "
(2 wds )
41 Fall guy
42 Glactai
sand ndge

.

bath,

20, Movie "Four

9 3if-Odd Couple 13. High School Basketball 6, Assignment
America 33
10 DO-Pollee Woman 3,4 15. ABC News Closeup 13, News 20.

st11l have warning signals to
1reat your purse with respect
Buy only wh at s nece ssary to-

apostrophes, the l ength and formation of the
htnts Each day the code l ett ers are dtffcrcn t

w i th city water, natural gas,

all

Raisin In
Sun" 8. Masterpiece Theatre
f or Te xas" 10 Consumer Survival Kit 33

to complele with any degree of

TAURUS (April 20-May 20)

NEW LISTING - Building lot

house,

20. Personality &amp; Behavioral Development 33

6 3D--NBC News 3,4,15, ABC News 13. CBS News 8,10; Zoom 20.
7 DO-Truth or Cons 3,4, WCHS TV Report 8, Aviation Weather .
20,33 News 10, Jimmy Dean 13, Garner Ted Armstrong 15,
7 3D--Porter Wagoner 3, Pop' Goes the Country 4, New Candid
Camera 6 Pop' Goes the Country e. Black Peropectlve on
the News 20,33. Treasure Hunt 10, To Tell the Truth 13,
Outdoors with Ken Callaway 15
8 DO-Sanford &amp; Son 3.4.15 Night Stalker 6.13. Comedy Special
8 10, Washington Week In Review 20.33
8 3D--Chico &amp; the Man 3,4,15, We'll Get By 8.10; Wall Street
Week 20,33
9 DO-Rockford Files 3,4,15, Hot L Baltimore 6,13, Movie "A

(A-wen lomorrv'tt')

to form the

used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc Single letters,

6:00 A.M. 11L MIDNIGHT

and sewage Only $2500 110
LAUREL CLIFF - 6 room

20.33 Ironside 13
5 3G-News 6. Beverly Hlttbllltes e. Hodgepodge Lodge 20, Gel
Smart 15, Elec Co 33
6 DO-News 3.4 8 10.13 15 High School Basketball 6; Etec Co.

I .,... ,••,uwu... I [I I H I I X I LU

Now arranre the clrolecl tettera

One letter simply stands for another In th1s

eledrfc, over

'

Mister Rogero' Neighborhood

why they w1il be e~~:tra-dlfficult

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work tl :
AXYDLBAAXR
is LONGFELLOW

FROM
NEW LISTING- 1974 Skyline
12x60 mobile home
2

Bonanza 15

SAGITTARIUS

14 Cause

2 11 tft..

ALL CASH FOR YOUR
PROPERTY - LET US
SELL IT
992 2259

Young and the Brave' 10. Mike Douglas 13
4 3D--Bewitched 3, Merv Griffin 4. Mo&lt;J Squad 6. -Show 8,

WHAT'5 REAU.Y
E!IEHtNc:&gt; T HE HEADLINES IN THE PAPER?

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
43 Bemg ( Sp )
1 footh
DOWN
pt obiem
Came
1
5 Confederate
about
of Absalom 2 Deep
10 Debacle
pmk
t1 Nurse Edtth 3 Flock
13 French nver
together ,

5232

4 oo--Mr Cartoon 3 I Dream of Jeannie 4, Somerset 15,
\\ G1 ll!gan s I s 6, Tattletales 8 Sesame St 20,33, Movie "The

GEMINI (May 21 -June 20) You

12 19 tfc
- EXC'AV'2TtNG. dozer, loadir
and back1'1oe work , septic
tanks installed dump trucks
anctlo boys for h1re, Wtll haul
flU dirt, top so11. limestone&amp;.
gravel Call Bob or Roger
Jeffers. day phone 992 7089,
n1ght phone 992 3525 or 992

6 13, As the World Turns 8,10
2 DO- Days of Our Lives 3,, ,15. S10 000 Pyramid 6, 13. Guiding
L1ght 8 10
2 3D--Doctors 3,4,15, Big Showdown 6.13, Edge of Nlght8.10.
3 OD--Another World 3,4,15 General Hospital 6,13. Price Is
Right e.10. Ascent of Man 20
3 3if-One Life to Llve13 Lucy Show6, Match Game8,10

tations can only be avo!ded lf
you re not too self-serving

aurprise answer, u
~::=::::::'L:
l ====':·::;-~·;::::;;'..;•::,:uneeted by the above cu1oon..

SWEAR HE S TAKIN DOWN A.
MESSAG E - BUT .,IS R'ADIO
ISN T SAY IW "'~l NG-

2•78

$10,500 00
NEAR REEDSVILLE - 135
Acres .
fronts on
681 ,

Not For Women Only 15

se ... eral others today Confron-

Jumbl•• GAVEL SNARL MYRIAD PLEDGE

work land c l earing by
the acre hourly or contract
Farm ponds roads
etc
Large dozer and operator...
with OYer 20 years ex
perience Pullins Excavating
Pomeroy , Oh io Phone 992

R , utility space, porch, 112
basement, Hardwood floors,
storm doors &amp; windows

the Res tl ess 10

I JQ-- How To Survive a Marriage 3,.4, 15, Let's Make a Deal

You II be tugged at from a!l
s td es tod a.v unless you limit the
num ber ol1rons In the ftre Set
pnor1 ttes and stick to them

~

Yr.•lr.rd•y' •

oo!"e R

River $4.700 DO
POMEROY - 1'1&gt; story
Ira me - 3 BR, bath, dln1ng

Tomorrow 8, 10, To Be Announced 33

12 45-- Etec Co 33
12 55--NBC News 3,15
1 DO- News 3 All My Children 6,13. Phil Donahue 8, Young &amp;

success

IN

111AT LITTLE BOOK- I D

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

to

IN THE CANE

New s 8, 10

12 3D--Blank Check 3, 15, Split Second 6,13, Search lor

1J
I tJ

F

YGV A

FM MBLB NFS V R

J FRS TJVGV
FCX

LV C
XVMFA - HKNXRL OS J
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: THE MAN WHO NEVER ALTERS
HIS OPINION IS UKE STANDING WATER, AND BREEDS
REPTILES OF THE MIND - WILLIAM BLAKE
IF TllERE 5 AN EARTHall41KE
AND THE OTHfl1 TEAM IS
SWALLOWED UP, WE .\\i6HI
lliiN 6~ DEFAIJLT

~

12 DO-Jac kpot 3, 15 Password 6,13 Bob Braun's 50 50 Club 4,

ARIES (March 2t -April 18)

UM M M lJ.IAT S FUNN VCAPTAIN CUFF · AND 1-4E'S

serv,ce, ail makes, 992 2284
The Fabnc Shop, Pomeroy,
Autl'1orlzed Singer Sates and
Serv 1ce We sharpen Scissors
3 29 tfc

garage and storage building,
4 level lots. good dnlled well

tX

K.ABREY ~

--------------SEWING MACHINE, Repairs,
some WORK? Th1s house
needs some repair - good

8,10

Unscramble tht&gt;se four Jumbles,
one letter to each square, to
form four ord1nary words.

3 18 t2tp

Willing to do

Gambl~

I

Love of L1fe 8 10 Sesame St 20,33
11 55-Graha M Kerr 8 Dan lmel 's World 10

3,4, 15 Joker's Wild 8,10, Dina h

JHt!J~~®/J..J louw"J .-J , -

l\11)( CONc•errr.
ltveJ:e&lt;f right tb your pro[ect
Fast
and
easy
Free
esttm ates Phone 992 32&amp;4
Goegle 1n Ready Mtx Co,
Middleport Oh1o
6 30 tfc

FAR OUT -

Morning w i th

11 _DD-- H1gh Rollers 3.4.15:_One Life to Live 6. Now You See It

D&amp;O TREE trimming , 20 years
exp ln&amp;ured , free est1mates
Ccsll 992 305? or Coolville, 1
667 30Al

- -------------NEW 2 pC i !v mg r oom suiteS

Sw,e~{'M~~"'s

13 ,
1 II •
10 3o-Wheel of Fortun e% 4 15

4?8 Locust 51.
Middleport, Ohio 3 2 1 Mo

- - ----...

a

DJ

9 30--N ol For Wom en Only 3. D i nah 6 Ga lloping Gourmet 8,
Tattletales 10 New Zoo Revue 13

Chain
Precision
Ground

C BRAD r OR D Au ct1oneer
Complete Service
Phco!'\e 9"9 3821 or 9.49 3161
Ra cme, Oh10
Cr l tt Bradford
5 1 tfc

a

a 25-Capt

SALES&amp; SERVICE
992-3092

!f.~Tnio

Sunn se Semes ter 10

6 .45- M orm ng Report 3 F armt lm e 10
7 DO- Today 3 4,15 AM America 6 13. CBS News 8 10
8 oo-L ass 1e 6 Capt Kangaroo
Popeye 10 Sesame St 33

RONa t

3 16 tf c

But ldmg for sate or Ina '
Phvnt 773 S6lt from 1 30 p m
to 10 p m far appo lntlt'lent

1

8 10. Elec Co 20
t1 3G-Holtywood Squares 3,15, Brady Bunch 6,13, News 4, .

5 DO- FBI 3 Andy Griffith 8

6 35- Cotumbus Today 4
BORN LOSER

WiLKINSON
SMALL _ENGINE

?1'2·21167
Mtnersvllle, 0.
Blocks
Cement and Mortar
Wood Burning Stoves
Heati Ia tors
and
Fireplace Accessories

DO- News 3 4 6 8 10 13 15 ABC News 33

11 30-J ohnny Car son 3 4 IS W !de Wor ld Spec tal 13, FBI 6,
M ov1e " W here Were You When the L1g ht s Went Ou P ' 8
Mov te ' Part y G trl 10 Janakl 33
12 30..- Wide Worl d Spec1 al 6
1 oo- Tom orr ow 3 4 N ew s 13

6 15- Engllsh 505 3

reAR '?

BLOCK CO.

11

6 25- Far m Report 13
6 30-- F ive Mtnutes to L 1ve By 4, N ew s 6 B ible A nsw ers 8,
Public Affat r s 10, Blue R 1dge Quart et 13

3 10 75

FOREST RUN

7 00- T r uth or Cons 3 4 Wha t s M y Lme 8, New s 10 Let s
Make a Dea l 13 J1mmy Dean 15 l ock Stock &amp; Barr el 20
Nov a 33
7 30- Ho ll ywood Squares 3 4 Oh1o L ottery 6, New Price IS
Rtgh t 8 Con sume r Sur v ival Kit 20 Wild Kingdom 10 To
Te ll the Tru t h 13 Amen can Ou tdoorsma n 15
B oo-S unsh lne 3 4 15 Barney Mtller 6, 13 T he W altons 8, 10 B 1ll
Moyer s Joruina l 20 33
B 3Q- Bob Cran e 3 4 15 Kar en 6 13
9 OQ.....o.M ac Dav 1s 3 4 15 !; tr ee fs of San F r a nc isco 6 13 M ov ie
24 Eyes' 20 Littl e P ri ncess 33
10 Oo-M ovm On 3 4 15 Ha r ry 0 6 13 C BS News Specia l 8 10,
Wom an 33
10 JQ--Hor a ce Ma r sha ll 33

6 00- Sun nse Se mtn ar 4

S¥facuse. ohio-

etc

THURSOAY, MARCH 20, 1?75

FRIDAY, MARCH 21, 1975

LARRY LAVENDER

paper hanging, kitchen
cabtnets. expert carpetmg,

~ - - -·- -'- - - - - - - - - -

' GRO CeR Y bus 1ness for sale

IF f"&amp;! T ~,.i U!=:. !J .-, , ~1-\4
S WAMI !3 ...'1 500 I-. 1/\J
MAKE D'"'T KIN DA
li VII'J WJr. A &amp;LA Nk.

H15 CU LT- FOL-LO WER: 5
$ HOWER HIM Wl £"1 MON EY
J OOL 5 Al'l/ UMOL.I 51Nf .c;

•EADY

2 BEDR OO M tr ali &amp;r BrownS GASOLINE golf cart and ufil l fY
T r a d er Court , Phon~ 992 3324
t r ader Phone 992 5523
3 -4 ti C
3 19 4tc

3 BEDRO OM mob 1le home ST ARCRA F T t raders U , 924
washer 1\nd qryer P 1 baths
now 13 895 Fold downs S1.400
ul1 ll t l es pa i d , $42 50 week lOa
up 3 way rad iO $90 value .
Page St , Mtdd l eport Oh1o
Un our lay a wa y ftnanclnQ3 • tfc
arranged
Camp Conley
Starcraft Sales , Rt 62 N of
2 BEOROOM mob tl e home In
Point Pleasant Phone 675
Sy racuse No Cl'1tldren or ptHS
538.t
Call 992 2H1 after 6 p m
3 19 31 ~
Depos it r equtr ed
3 11 lf c IN DIA N Joe 's Sport ing Goods ,
buy and sell guns ammo
A VAILABLE t h is week , small 2
fl sn 1ng equ,pment and after
bed ro om double Wide mob lit
Apnl 1 we w111 ha ve f1Sh batt
homtnear Pomer oy OffRt 7
Stop by at JOB Page Sl
by pass No Ch ildren or pets
M iddlepor t Phone 992 3509
Phone 992 701 7 or 992 7666
3 2 30tc
3 HI Jtc

FROM ? "ASKS VERA.

CAPTAIN EASY

Gutters Awnings
Free Estimate!li
Ph. ~2-3H3

Pa1nt1ng, stdtng, rooftng,

•
•
Television log for easy l'lt:wmg

A CALL BE MADE

Blown
tnsulation Serv1ces
Blown onto Walls &amp; Attics
STORM
WondowSTlloort
'
ALUMINUM
Sldtng Soffttl

PHONE
?4?·3832 or 843-2667
All Types of
BUILDING
and REMODELING
From a shelf to 1 house

HEI,L

I'.WJ.i! ERE ELSE COULD

6 3D--NBC News 3,4 15. ABC News 13. Bewi tched 6 CBS News
8 10 Zoom 20, MU Report 33

-

D&amp;D
CONSTRUCTION

INDIAN JOE'S
CB SALES &amp;PARTS

·rv

lNG!

6 00 - New s 3, 4,8, 10 13, 15, A BC News 6, E l ec Co 20, T eac hing
Children w tlh Spec ta l Needs 33

301 Page, Middleport
Huting
cooling
Refrtieraflon Roof Repatrs
Gutters • Plumbing •
EleclrtColl Repa•rs
ond
Serv1ce
C1ll t92·l509 and
Save on your repa1rs also
repa 1r mowers. compressors.
and outboards Bring II I n
and save

Construcfion &amp; RomiMMI

3 19 6tc

Mobile Homes For Sale

10 7"

Work

1 (6141 247-3644

BE K

BEING

c onta c t

WANTEO old upright pianos, ~ ELL your mob 1le home for
any cond 1t10n
Paymg IHI
cash IS homes wanted , 1958
c ash F 1rsl f l oor only and
t hru 1972 models Phone { 6141
91Ye d i re c tions to Witten
4A6 1425 Ga llipOliS
P 1ano Co
BoK 188 Sard1s ,
3 9 78tc
Oh io Al946
3 19 6tp 10xS2
MOBILE
home
2
bedroom approK 1 ~ acre lot ,
OLD furniture tc• tious, b'rlss
country locat ton . cttY water
beds or complete households
available Phone 99 2 7649
Write M D M iller, Rt • ·
after .tl p m
Pomeroy, 01'1 10 Call 992 7760
3 18 6tc

Notice
COUNTY MEIGS
PUBLIC NOTICE
Tht follow i ng documents
were recefYtd or prepared by
The
Ohio
Environmental
Protection Agency dur ing the
prev1ous
week
Anyone
aggrie ved or adversely affected
by 1ssuan ce ot renewal or any
permitls) ,
llcenn ( s l
or
vanan ce (sl may request an
adlud lcarlon hear ing by wr i tten
request pursuant to Ohio
Rev 1sed Code Section 3745 07
wtthtn thirty IJO ) days ot the
d 1re c tors proposed action to
Issue or deny such documents
That sta t ute does not provide
for hearing reQuests t o the
OEPA
on
appl i cations ,
re vo c ations
mod tf 1cat1ons
complamts
verif i ed c om
plaints certi fi cations , teases,
orders or f inal ~etlons
W 1th1n 30 days of publl caflon
of th is nollce any person may
also
( 1) submit written
comments relating to actions
proposed actions complamts ,
or v en f l ed c ompla i ns , (2 )
request a publ t c meet 1ng
regard1n0 proposed acttons
and or (3 ) r eQuest notice of
furtl'1er act tons on proceedmgs
Requests for hurlngs on t tnal
ac t i ons t o Issue deny , mod1fy ,
re v oke or renew permlts,
licenses or variances that are
n ot pr eceded by proposed ac
flons and so Identif ied. In th 1S
not 1ce should be sent to The
En v r tonmenta l
Boar d
of
R:ev •ew Sut te 505 33 North H1gh
Str eet Co lumbus , Ohto A3215
All other requests tor ad
IUd lc at lon 1'1earlnos. and other
c ommun• c &amp;tions con c er n 1n0
pub l• c
htarmgs
publtc
m e etings
ad[ud1cat l on
hearmgs , compla ints ot anv
ki nd and regulat i ons should be
addr essed to The Leva I Records
Sec t 1on , Oh iO EPA P 0 Bo x
10-49 Columbus , Oh io ,.32 16.
( IIU ) 466 6037
Unless ot l'1erw ise stated In
par tlcu l l!l r notic es , all other
c omm u n l cattons ,
tnc ludmg
comments on propostd act1ons
and
r eque-sts
for
public
mee t mgs ShOU l d be addressed
etth er to The New Source A1 r.
or NF&gt;DE S Perm•t Records
Sec t 1on
wl'1 !chever is ap
p r opnate , at The Oh io EPA , P
0 Box IOA9 Columbus Oh tO
A3216
Ap p i1Ci f10 n for perm 1t to
1nstall
G n mm M in ing Co
Or ange Twp Oh 10
F ac lt tt y descnptton Stnp
m in e
App ll ca t 10n NO 06 001 32 SM
Nutter M1ne 6 8 acres on Twp
Rd 288 NW of SR 7 and SR 63 1
Oh 1D Pow er Co , Centr al Oh i o
Coat Co
M ei QS Twp , Oh lo
F ac lltly cus c r~pt . on Str •p
m 1ne
App i1C at 10n No 06 00136 SM
324 3 acres between Twp Rei
.4 11 and SR 284 so uth
1'5suance Of perm tt to Insta ll
Gr imm M 1n 1nQ Co
Orange Twp , Oh 10
F a cilit y des cr. p t iOn St r• p
m me
Applicati On No 06 OO U 2 SM
Nutter Mme 6S,acres on Twp
Rd 288 NW of SR 1 and SR 611
nus act ion not preceded by
proposed ac t ton and •S ap
pealabte t o EBR under ORC
sec 37A5 07
Oh io Power Co Centra l Oh tO
Coa l Co
Me •gs Twp , 01'1 tO
F ec li 1t y ducr 1pt 1on Str ip
m 1ne
Appi 1Ci!l t1 0n No 06 00136 SM
324 3 acres bttween Twp Rd
All &amp; SR 28-4south Th 1S action
not pr eceded by proposed 1CI 10n
and 1S appu l able to EBA under
ORC Sec 3?45 07
3.20 H e

- - - - ---------1964 C HEV Y Bela ir A 1 shape

-

instilled

YOU'vE G 0 1

p.J
Horne Maintenance

Eteet ric, Glts, -

777 f'Hrt SlrHI
Middleport, Ohio
Pllo.. m-S:N1or?H-316t

POMEROY, OHIO

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

nes,

S.K EXCAVATING
OOMPANY

$2395
$2250

ON E T RU CK J .,. ton
19 70
CheY r ole t tru ck and 1970 Z2 8
Cama ro Ph one 992 7338 aft er
5p m
DODGE Pol ara stat1on
3 20 51C 1965
wagon , oood m ec han1 c 111
cond1l1on New battery and
IY) 3 MALIB U 2 d oor meta!l C
heat er studded ttres on rear
brown b lac k v m y t top , power
3 extra tires and wh eel s Can
s teer ing , power bra k es atr
be seen at 1628 Linco ln Hgt s
cond Ex cetle.nt cond Pr. ced
or ca ll 992 3683
ve r y rea sonabl e Pl'10ne 992
3 19 41 c
3213

~Iter,

For Information
Call

POMo~~9Yv~~!9~! co. @)

1975 MONTE Carlo 4,000 mi les
all power a1r AM stereo
t ape Cal/9'127036 a lter 5 p m
SC HOOL
3 5 tfc

EA STER SUNDAY

$1295
795
$695
$495

1957 FORD Ran chero
good
cond11ton Phone 742 6352
3 20 6tC

.

Profes!ional
WEDDING
Photography

Local car, atr, full eqUJpment

SH OO T I NG M A TCH
Co r n
Hollow Gun Club turn f 1r st
r igh t afte r M 1les Ceme tery
Rut l an d
F a c t ory c hoked
g uns on l y Sunday M ar ch 2J
1 p

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

OF
QUALITY

J

Business Se..Vices

~-----1

By Mrs. Francis Morris
Attending the Rio Grande
Baptist Assoctatton at Mount
Moriah Baptist Church,
Mtddleport, Saturday, March
15 from Racine mcluded Rev
and Mrs Walter Btkacsan and
daughter, Sharon; Mr and
Mrs Rodertck Grurun, Mrs
Wanda Powell, Mrs Mar tha
LQu Beegle, Mrs Olhe Mae
Cozart, Mrs Helen Sllllpson,
Mrs Mary K Yost, Mrs
Gretta Stmpson, Mrs Mildred
Hart, Mtss Vera Beegle, Mrs
Frances Wilcoxen
Rev and Mrs Btkacsan held
open house Sunday afternoo n
at tOC parsonage to see the new
kitchen cabinets They served
lovely
refreshmen ts
of
homemade cooktes and candy,
punch and coffee
The cho1r wtll prese nt
Bea canta ta en tttled
hold th e Cructfted" a t
Ftrst Baptist Church Palm
Sunday durmg the 7 30 p m

I

r

rely on th em or yo u U turn off
s o m e goo d f r t e n d s o r
assoc1ates

VIRGO (Aug. 23-S.pt. 22)
You II encounte r persons wlth
wh om you have h!Ue 1n c om
mon at a gathering Try to
avo1d ttl em You II have less
pa tience th an usual

(Nov. 23-Doa.
21) Be careful not to be drawn
!nto another's complicated af·
la•r and be put In a position
where you must dip Into your
pocket to ball her out

, CAPRICORN (Doc.

22-~en.

11) Yo u c an't be all things to all
people now If you try you'll
wtnd up pleastng no one, Including yourself

AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Feb. II)
Don t tack le tasks now th ai you
know will be too difficult to
handle Wa11 until you get a
knowl edgeable co ~worker

PISCES (Fob. 20·Merch 201 W
you gamble today be aware of

what could happen II It comes
v p lemons

Don 1 risk more

®'lW:

March 21. 1175
Grea ter responsibilities will be
place d on your sMoulders this
year Th e rewards are commensur ate w1lfl the toad you'll
bear 1f you perform well

LIBRA (Sopl 23-0ct 231 Your

'1/~WS f' .-\PE Jt

tnterests w111 be m c onlllct with

\' NTI-RPRISfo 1\SSNfl

WIN AT BRIDGE

Knight turns the table on slam
•'" I NORrH
A K QJ 4
, Q9 5

20

+K 5
• Q9 7 3
WEST

EAST

A I06 6 2

• 95 3

¥ 74 3

.4

1P K 2
•.1 10 7
.KIU86 2
SOU111 IDI

+Q 9 84 2

A A7
9A 1106

6

+ A6 3

"'A 15
Bolh vulnera ble
Wes t

Nor-th

E ast

Pass

Pass

Pass
Pass

Pass

Soutli

Pass

(messes workmg for h1m In ad·

dtlton oo thts West opened the
four of clubs South played
dummy ' s seven and Str
Trtstram played the ,ktng
wtthout any apparent thought
Declarer put on the ace and
then dtd some thmkmg That
four spot mtght well have been
fourth best of five , m whtch
case South wanted to do
anythtng posstbie to prevent a
club ruff He tatd down his ace
of hearts and played a second
heart Tnstram look hts ktng
and proceeded to lead a club to
gtve hts partner the deadly ruff
that South had lrted oo avotd.

u:e;!:11!&amp;,&gt;.t.tr1
The btddmg has been
West

North

East

Pass

L•

Pass

Opemng lead - 4 4o

'

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
When Tristram de Lyonesse
ctrnved at Kmg Arthur 's court ,
he was thought to be a country
bumpkm Bul 1t d1d not take
htm long to prove h1mself w1th
sword lance and sh1eld He
became one of th e two or three

Pass
2 N T Pass
You South hold
AKJ949AQ2

20

South

,.

2 It
~

.J43.Kl05

What do you do now'
A - Bid three spades 1bis two
notrump Is the one rebid you dlda't
want to hear but you still shoUld
show your very good spades

TODAY 'S QUESTION

most feared Kmghts of the Instead of b1ddmg two notrump
your partner has Jumped to three
Round Table
It took h1m a tnfle longer to notrump over your two spades
show t hat he could handle What do you do now ~
h1mse lf JUSt as well at the
bndge table A few hands such
as today s dtd the tnck for htm Send S7 lor JACOBY MODERN
He sat East and as any one book to Wm at Br~dQe. • (clo tnlo
ca n piamly see South 1S cold newspaper) P 0 Box 489 Recllo
fo r seve n hea rts wtth all Clly Station. New Yorl&lt; NY 10019

WE'Ii RATHER LOSE THAN
WIN THAT WA'f'

'

�9- The Datly Sent mel, MtdcDeport-Pm nero\ , 0 '!11tu sd.11 M.n r h 20 1D75

THAT
CALL. '
IS !)lOT

Auto Sales
FOR SAL E

serv1ce.

Stivers ville
News Notes

Commumty Good Fnda y
servtce wtll be at the Racme U
M Church at 7 30 p m
Sunday Sc hool Easter
program at Ftrst Baptist wtll
be Easter Sunday at 7 30 p m
Mrs A C Bradford honored
Mr Bradford Sunday with a
btrthday dinner
Guests
present were his children, Crill
Bradford , Jr , Mrs . Ruth
Frank and daughters, Ann and
Lois, and Mrs Mary Carson
and daughter, Martha Ann
.Mr and Mrs Philip Roberts
of Gallipolis spent Sunday wtth
hts mother, Mrs Frances
Roberts, honormg her wtth a
birthday dinner and gifts
Mr and Mrs. Roy Riffle
spent Sunday with Mr and
Mrs Bill McKenzte and family
at Gallipolis. Mr Riffle's btrthday was observed with a
dinner
Mr and Mrs Bob Beegle
spent a recent weekend in
Akron with Mr and Mrs Kyle
Stump and attended the annual
Kroger Store Banquet at
Canton
Mr and Mrs Steve Badgley,
enroute to their home in
Columbus, after vacationing m
AUanta, Ga , spent the
weekend with parents, Mr and
Mrs Ralph Badgley Their
daughter who had visited her
grandparents, accompanied
them home.
Mrs David Parry returned
after hospitalization at Holzer
Medical Center.
Mr. Melvin Riffle of
Columbus spent a weekend
with his parents, Mr and Mrs
Roy Rlffie.
Mrs Harold Hawk of Springfield •pent several days with
Mrs. Mlna Lewis and Mr. and
Mrs. Ben Philson
Mr. and Mrs. Davtd Parry
and sons spent the weekend
wtth his parents in Hillsboro

Alfred

Social Notes
Sunday School attendance on
March 16 was 44, the offering
$21.31.

Worshtp services were held
at II wtth Charles D Woode,
leading and Vernon Nease of
Forest R1111 Church, speaking
from Mark 9:34-38, on "Deny
Yourself as Christ Dented
Himself " Rev Meece was
able to be present for the
worshtp services and had
prepared bulletins to diStribute
for the servtce. He is making
steady progress and hopes to
return to his pulpit work next
month. Attendance at worship
service was 23, offering $21 50,
pledges $7
John Taylor of the Air Force
spent last weekend with his
parents, Mr. and Mrs Ernest
Taylor and attended church
here Sunday morning A fannly
dinner was enjoyed at the
hiXlle S1111day noon.
Ntta Dillinger, moUter of
Uoyd Dtlhnger of Alfred
Church, underwent gallbladder surgery m Holzer
Medtcal Center last Monday
morrung. She IS reported ~o be
recovering rucely. Her friends
here wtsh her a speedy

recovery.
Bobby Brooks, son of Mr and
Mrs. Uoyd Brooks had a
toosilectomy In a Parkersburg
hospital recently. He ts
reported to be domg well
Leonard Amos underwent
major surgery m the CamdenClark Hospttallast week and IS
still cllllflned there at this
writing.

Jeanie Flanders IS a patient
m the Camden-Clark Hospital
at Parkersburg, and IS expected to have possible surgery
after 1111dergoing tests.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert White of
Keno visited Iris Carr and
daughters, Sunday. This was
Mrs. White's ftrSt time out,

1971 KAWASAK 1 500 Show ro om
condtt 10n
l ow
m il eag e

Ex tras P hon e 992 l56 J
3 20 J lp

ORDINANCE NO 1024 7S
An Ord•nan ce to prov d e for
t he salary of the Mayor and

I.Dst
G Ef.!MAN Shep herd dog lost n
Pmeg r ove area on Coun ty
Road 32 Black and g r ey
answer s to t he a ame of
Tur key
Call 992 7362
3 19 3TC

Vtl lage Clerk T rea surer

Be 11 o r da ined by t he Counrll
ot the V tll age of M•dd leport a s.
fol l OWS

Sec 1 That the salary o f t he
Mayor o r the V tl lage of M 1d
d leport commenc1ng Jan 1st
1976
sha l l be $2 500 00 per

2 SIGNS

Nobce

m

J 20 Jt c

annum •
Sec II Thai th e salary of th e
Cler k Tre a su r er of the VIl la ge
o f M•ddle por t commen c m g Jan
l SI 1976 sha l l be 12 500 00 per

annum
Sec I ll Th1 S Ordman c e shall
ta ke effec ! an d be 1n for ce f r om
and after Ma r ch 10 197 5
PBssed the l Oth day of M arc h
19 75

Attut

Ge ne Grat e
Clerk Tr eas

M

L Ke ll y
Pres dent o f Council
J 20 272 t c

Mrs Ruby Bryant and Mrs
Vtolet Rtlchie VISited Mrs
Paulette Van Meter, Pomeroy,
on Frtday
Mr 1 and
Mrs
Bob
Moorehead , Rev Wilham
Bartholomew , Louts De Luz,
Davtd Wolfe and Randy Forbes
were recent callers at the home
of Mr. and Mrs R R. Durst
and Tom
Mrs Elva Dailey, Syracuse,
spent Wednesday afternoon
with her parents, Mr. and Mrs
Carl Autherson
Mrs Correne De Luz, local,
and Mr and Mrs Richard
Abels, LQng Bottom, shopped
at Pt Pleasant, W Va on
Tuesday.
The home occupted by Mr
and Mrs Ronald Oatley and
famtly, Wells Run, was
destroyed by fire on Sunday
night.
Nicki Dawn Von Meter
visited Elaine Lehew on
Sunday afternoon.
Mr and Mrs Monty Proffitt
were Columbus visloors over
the weekend
Mrs. Mike Evans, Aficta,
Cindy and Ryan and leota
Birch called on Mrs. Ada Van
Meter on S]lllday afternoon
Mr and Mrs Elza Birch,
Racme, vtstled Mr Chnt Birch
and Leota, on Sunday afternoon.
Mrs Merle Evans called on
Mrs. Mae Van Meter, and
Ruby, DeWttt's Run on
Tuesday
Mr and Mrs Bob Price and
daughter, LQng Bottom, visited
her parents, Mr and Mrs Bill
Middleswart on Sunday
The Rev. and Mrs William
Bartholomew and daughters,
Racme, spent Sunday wtth Mr
and Mrs LQuis De Luz
Mr. and Mrs Charles Htlton
entertained the members of Ute
Lebanon Golden Age Club at
their home on Wednesday
afternoon
Mrs Ruby Bryant, Mrs
Mattie Teaford, Tom Durst,
Mrs. Roy Donohew, David
Bryant, David Talbott, Paul
Evans, Don Meadows, S W.
Durst, Charles Hanson, Joe
Wheeler, Dan Mtller and Mr
and Mrs R R. Durst were
guests of E. H Carpenter and
family recenUy
TheAlmanar
By United Presa IDtemallonal
Today is Thursday, March 20,
the 79th day of 1975 wtth 286 to
follow
The moon IS in the final
quarter
The morning stars are
Mercury and Mars.
The evening stars are Venus,
Saturn and Jupiter
Those born on this date are
under the sign of Pisces
Norwegian poet and dramatist Hennk Ibsen was born
March 20, 1828 This Is
Amencan enlertamer Carl Reiner's 52nd birthday
On this day In history
In 1852, Harriet Beecher
Stone's slavery-era book "Uncle
Tom's Cabin" was published
for the first lime
In 19SI, Argentina dtctator
Juan Peron seiZed control of
the oppostUon newspaper ' 'La

Prensa "
stncesuffering a heart attack a
few weeks ago, We WISh her a
speedy recovery.
Mr and Mrs
Ernest
Vtneyard of Jackson , Mich ,
sp!!nt the weekend wtUt her
parents, Mr and Mrs Arthur
Atherton and hiS parents, Mr
and ~ Hobart VIneyard at
Tuppers Plains.
Mr and Mrs. Charles D
Woode called on Mr and Mrs
James Smtih of Hemlock
Grove, and Evelyn Well,
a8rbara and Brtan of Cherry
Ridge Sunday afternoon

GARAG E SA L E on SR 143
T hu r sday
F r. day
an d
Sat ur day Phone 992 Sl 46
3 19 3tc
SH OOT IN G M atc h Racm e Gun
Cl ub Sunday March 23 I
p m

3 19 41 C

SHIR L EY K ay$ Beaut y Sa lon
Permanent Sp ec1al
Un 1
P er m R ~g 120 now $16 Re g
perms Sl 5 now $1 2 50 An
nett e Phalln M ar c1 a Carr and
Sandy Jan narell1
3 19 Jtc
RE VI VA L sta r l tn g M ar ch 26
1975 at t he Rutland Com
mun ty Chur ch w1th Rev
Su per 1n
W ll ltam Owe n s
t endent ol ttle w es leyan
Holtn eS!. Chur ches ol Ch est er
W V a Spec 1al smgtng ea ch
eyen mg eyer yon e w elcome
The P astor E ug ene Rou sh
J 19 3t c
1

WIL L do sm all g ar de n
p low1ng w it h Gr ave ly gard en
tr ac tor Phon e 992 7492 or 992
) 716
3 16 6tp

A TT E N D

•1971 Matador 4 Dr.

.

$1595

SUNDA Y

1979 Bel Atr 4 dr . Sed., 8 cyl .. std.
1968 Impala 2 dr. Cpe., 8, auto .
1969 Plymouth 2 dr., auto.
1969 Ford V-8, 2 dr .. auto.
TRUCKS
1972 Datsun Ptckup wtth Topper
1972 Chevrolet "'• Ton 8 cyl., 4 speed

- _

---~- ---- .:_ ~_!tc

196 ! C H EV ROLE T r eliabl e get
to wo rk c ar 149 Broad way
Phon e '19 2 2082
3 16 12t c

MID

DLEP ORT UN I TED PEN 196-i RAMBLER
Phone 80
TE COS TAL
C HUR C H
2353
SOU TH
Jrd
AVENUE
3 18 Jt c
SUN DAY SC HOOL 10 00 A
M TRAN SPORT A T ION AND 1971 VEGA 6T 4 sp
-4 new
INFORMATION
PHONE
rad111 t1res good condition
992 38 24 or 992 2502
S950 Phone 992 71 32
316 11tp
3 18 Jtc
GU N SHOOT on Mile Hill Road ,
factory c hoked guns on ly
Spo nsored by the R a c m e
Am eri can Leg i on Saturday ,
Mar c n 22 , 7 p m
3 18 41 C

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

1 7 lfc

------------ADCTION -_f hur! day lilgh f l
p m
at Ma son Au c t io n
Horton St In Mason , W va
Con s 1gnm en t s wel c ome
Phone ( 304) 773 5471
2 2 lfc
~--------~--=~
~

NOW selling Fuller Brush
Produc ts phone 99 2 3.tll0
I 24 lie
W A NTED'=- Rumm age to sell
for bo y scout Troop 242
Syracuse . Ohio 949 5757 or 992
1258
3 20 Jl c

WantP.II To Buy

Ca l l 99 2 3105
K enneth W1it

or

JUN K autos comp lete and
delivered to our yard we p1c k
up I!IUto bod i es and buy al i
k mds of scrap metals and
1ron R lder 's Sal v age St Rt
12A, Rt 4 Pomeroy Oh.lo
Call 992 5468
10 17 tfc
CA SH p11d tor all makes and
models of mobile homes
Phone area CQde 614 11123 9531
(
,.13tfc

Y all Come to Landmark ' s

Spring Roundup
MARCH 19-22
Fun. Refreshments,
and
Pnzes
Reg•stratton

G11t1
Free

LOOK FOR THE
Whlte Hat Spec1als
Y ALL COME'
POMEROY LANDMARK:

9._Jack w. c~rsev. Mvr
6711 Phone tn 2111

Employment Wanted
W I LL 00 babySitting on
evenings and weekends
Pl'1one Vanessa Folm er 992

2533

3 20 3t c

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

guaranteed .

Dazor, llckhoo, Trucks
LlmHtont &amp; Fill Dirt

Commercial-Residential

2-11-75c

308 Page St.
Middleport, 0. 992-3509
Radtos, Antennas, Towers,
Used T v 's Buy from the
' 1 lnd1an ~' and save "Wam
Pum' We buy t.Jstd Racl1os
and TowerJ Rad101 repa•r ed
by FCC hcens.ed urv1ce
p,ers.onnel Stop and see the
'Indian "
and
Bubbles
Mon•tor Channel 10 and 20

1966 F ORD tr uck call after 5
p m Phone 992 3625 or 992
5945
3 19 Otc
ONE 1972 Pon t 1a c Catalma, A 1
cond iti on One 1966 But ck
Wildcat
One two wheel
trailer factory bU 11t Phone
992 31 65
3 19 3t c
1972 SUPER Beetle 1n good
condit ion . $1 350 Phone 992
5866
3 18 61 C

NOTICE from Berry Md l er
Mobtle Home Sa les - Here ts
a new l lst1ng of tl'1e un its we
now have on our lot due to the
foreclosure of another Mob1 l e
Hom e Deal er
60x 14 New Moon 2 bedroom
60x14 Nashua , tota l el eclr tc, 2
bedroom
60x 12 Nashua 2 bedroom
60x1 2 Globemaster 3 bedroom
50K1 2 Buddy 2 bedr oo m
70 x 14
Beverly
Manor
3
bedroom , 2 bath w 1th 8x 12
ex "ando
60K1 2 Dartan , 2 bedroom 2 tull
baths
60x l2 L1berty 2 bedroom
60x 12 Schult , 2 bedroom t otal
electn c
60x 12 T 111n 2 bedroom
60x 12 El cona , 2 bedroom
60x 12 Parkwood , bal cony front
k1t chen These are mosfly all
late models (some never lived
10 l and wtll be IICIUtclated at a
very large discount So 1f you
are mterested 1n a Mob1le
Home at a I'11Jge uvmg don't
w a tt stop today al Berry
Mt l ler MOb tie Home Sal es , 105
F arson St
Belpre
Ohio
phone 423 953 1
3 14 l Otc

For Sale
MOO ERN stereo , conso le AM
F M radto, separate controls 4
speaker
sound
system
Balan c e 5103 10 or t erms Call

992 3965

3 20 tf c

USED parts , Frye sTruck l!l'nd
Auto Par ts Rutland Ohto
Phone ( 614 ) 742 60IJ 4
1 22 78tp

" REMODELING
plumb,ng
heat 1ng
&amp;nd all types of
general
repa1r
Work SHALLOW well 1et pump and 30
gal tank Cal l 991 7560
guaranteed 20 years eK
penence Phone 992 2409
3 17 61p
lo 19 trc
NEW and used cha1fl saws ,
REMODEliNG plumbing ,
tillers and mowers
Also
heating and all types or
repatr S
A98 LOCIJSI Sf ,
genera l
repa tr
Work
M i ddleport Phone 992 3092
guarant eed 20 y ears eK
2 28 26TC
perten c e Phone 992 2409
311t1c
1913 KAWASAKI 450 CC d1rt
b1ke 1974 K awasakt 125 CC
Enduro
See at Welker ' s
Ashland , 992 3535
3 lllfc
TRAILER l!lpartments for rent
Phon e 992 5248
3 19 6tc 1971
KAWA SAKI
100
cc
tradb1ke, 2.900 m 1I!S as m!ln
111 BEDROOM house wall to wall
per gallon $300 Phone 992
29 26
car peltnQ a c fenced 1n yard
wtth patto , n 1ce Phone 992
3 18 6tp
27 80 or 992 3-4 32
3 19 ttc FARM Lumber See us for your
ne~ds
Pomeroy Fo rr est
1 TR AI LER: lot for r en t F&gt;hone
Products Bat tey Run Road
992 5433
Ph on e 992 5965
3 19 4tC
3 19 111c

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

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

For Rent

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

RACINE PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING
tomplete plumbing .,;·
heating service and
general sheet metal
works.
F r e e
Estimates.
Phone 949-5961
Emergency 992-3995
or 992-5700 .

For Sale
STAN L EY Products for sale
Phone 142 3762
.J 9 26tc

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

TRA I LER: SPACE , l4 mile
nor t h of Me1gs H 1Qh School on
old Rt 33 Phone 9'92 2941
1 23 ffC

--------------D U PLE X . 238
Wal nut St ,
1,

M idd l epor t Oh•o
2780 or 992 l-132

Phone 992

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

-------------19 74 YA HAMA 250 cc Endura

Less 11'1an AOO mt l es All ac
$1 000 Phone 992
7897
3 16 6tc

c essor~es ,

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

1965 JOHN DEERE dour , 4
c ylinder, dtese l 8 ft bl ade.
2 19 ttc
n tw pa.nt, cl utches . tracks.
.~= ---- --------;-brakes and canopy , $6 ,000
COUNTR Y MOb ile Home Pa r k ,
Phone 985 3594
R t Jl t en m ties nortn of
l 11 6tp
Pomeroy
L arge lots w 1tl\. - - - - - - - - - - - - -- conc rete pat•os . sidewllk$ , 8 N FORO tractor w1th side
runners lnd off
street
mower , good rubb1r Runs
par k. ng Pttone 992 7479
' goOd , $950 Phone 985 359,.
12 31 lfc
3 16 7tp

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

3-'llnd .A ROOM f urn .shecl and
unfurn iShed
apartments
Phon e 992 5-i 3A
4 12 lfc

- - ----- -------.~~-

PR I VATE meeting room fo r
any organ i r:ation , phone 992
3975
3 11 ,,,

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

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

M IXED My for sal e
992 3658

~e:AD DIS, HO~' IT 5 ASC'UT

PAT YOU N ~ PU'-JI&lt;. S WAM&gt;
PA JE WE- L ED JOY 80 \o
AN L0VE:' · L 0 i U5 ~

' n

Phone

WHY fJOT OU"

6u.:;reR z

I NAMF5 R.I&gt;.NelD

3 10 ""
--- ------------~

I /.JA WLITA DUPRE ,
Mf/. V!;&lt;:Bt-fiFGSTEOR 'S

~e&amp;.E~R . ~D

I

1))fJO AJ&lt;C;

Kangaroo I 0
JQ-M isslon Imposs ible 6
9 oo--A M 3 Pht l Donahue 4 15 Bullwmkl e

a

'/OU,MV

13
9 25--Chuck Wh ite Reports 10
10 00--Celeb,nt y

sta r ling at $139
Sw tv el
r ocker s your c f'lot ce of colors
S99 and up Jack 's Furn1ture
&amp; Upho ls tery Supply 236 E
Man .S t
Pomeroy
Oh to
Phon e 992 3903
3 18 6tC

.. 11-1E 11-10RN KING
HAS PI&lt;OM lSED SUCH
STATUS "TO ANY WHO
CAN PRE SENT HIM
WITH SUCH A PRIZE !

00 yOU REALIZ E WHAT
11-11S MEANS, COMRADE &lt;'
WE'LL BECOME MEMBERS
OF l'HE PR1V1 LEGED CL ASS 1

ll1EN SIND
.. . AND I 'LL
HIM SECURELY INFORM THE
SO WE OON'T
CASTLE OF
LOSE HIM ..
OUR LUCK '

I ()

NEED WASHER or dryer
repa1red? Call now for fast
servtce at reasonable ra t es
free esttmates Call now 992
33 13 ,
3 18 6tc

IHUUSTHI

K)

UPHO LS TERY
fabrt c
cl oseouts , values to 19 95 per
yd
now $1 99
All other
fabn c s 10 pel off thru month
of Mar ch Jacks Furn1ture &amp;.
Upholstery Suppl y
236 E
Mam St Pom eroy 0 Phone
992 3903
3 18 6t C
COMPLETE bedroom SUJte
SfUd10 c ou c h
10 c u
ft
refr1gerator
p l atform
ro ckers antique chatr other
terns Phone 992 3457
3 18 6tc
MR AND MR S Ronald Dougan
would l 1ke t o mv 1te you to
att end Sunday Scf'lool at t he
Un 1ted
Pen
M iddleport
recostal Church South Th1rd
AYenu e start1ng at 10 a m
3 20 2tp
HORNED Her eford s, males or
f emales Hugh Le1fhe•t Rt 2
BOK I Pomeroy Oh iO 45769
Or phone (6141 992 59 18

UTTLE ORPHAN ANNIE

LITTLE ORPI!AN

ANNIE-VOH~E

and

water system

Close

WRITIN A M ILE A

MI ~TE

m 1nerals, TP water, close to

Forked Run Lake $16.600 DO
POMEROY - 1 story frame,
2 BR. bath, 'I&gt; basement,
util ity gas floor furnace,

large lot. recen~ly renovated
1ns1de and out $9,500 00

:GASOUNE AILEY
He'p
t.j'self!

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

ELWOOD BOWE•s REPAlR

- Sweepers toasters, Irons,
ail small app11ances Lawn
mowers next to State High
way Garage on Rot.Jte 7
Phone 985 3825
3 11 26tc

3 20 3tc

HOUSE barn and garage A
acres on Route 1&lt;13 6 m tl es
from State Route 7 $8500 Call -------~~--- - - ~E"PTI( - TANKS
cleaned
( 614 ) 992 2120
Modern Sanitation , 992 395.4 or
.,,
3 20 3tc
992 73.49
6 ROOM house wtth bath , 3 ---- ~ - -... ------9 18 tf(
NEW
BRICK
home
on
Rl
7
bedroom full basement, gas
between
Pomeroy
and
-.....-------~~--neat h w floor wall to wa ll
Chesler , res tr.cted area 3 br
rfbME tmpiovement -;;;d
carpet Close to schOol 1n
2 balta
bullttn kttchen
Repatr Servtee Anyth1ng
Pomero y Phone 992 3097
carpeting f trep l ace double
fi x td around the home , from
3 9 52tc
garage ba sem ent Call 985
roof to basement You will
- ---- ------- - ~- 3365
4 BEDROOM br~c k home m
ltke our work and rates
3 20 31p
Phone H2 5081
M ldd leport Phone 992 3457
3 18 6t c
1229tfc

Real Estate For Sale

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

6 RM S
garage panelmg
breezeway 8 acres Cal i 992
3059
3 16 71 c
HOME for sal e 1n Ches t er
Tuppers
P l a1ns
water
natural gas 2 bedrooms
complet e ly
remodeled
$13 ,800 Phone 985 4102
3 16 l '2 tc
9 ACRE S of proper t y w1th a 2
$7 ,000
bedroom
tra il er
Phone 742 347 1
3 19 6tp

BUY NOW &amp; SAVE Low low
down payments 8 pet In
tere s! 30 yr flnancmg on new
1'1omes m 3 Me1gs County
1ocat1ons , or BUILD on your
lot Phone 992 5976 or 992 5844
3 lJ tfc

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

LIL ABNER

- ------------ 'WILL tr.m- or Cut trees

or
shrubbery
clean
out
basements, att1cs. etc Phone ,
949 3221 or 742 .44A1
2 28 26tc

PIANO tunmg Lane DanielS
Phone 992 2082
3 16 12tc

•

NATURA L LY rr
OH, 00 OFOOBA-DGD- ANYBWY
RICH SHOULD
r;;v r:;;p,y OOBA - DQOBAN
HAVE S ERVANTS '
HAS AN INCOMEO OF
$ 250,000 A YE:AR,
SOTHEY WANT

.SEI&lt;VANT6

CAN'T GET EM SO St=: ND O UT TO f'OOR
COUt-JT R IE S - LIKE
FROVI OUR
THE U.S.A !rNr:;; IG HBO RING
CCU f.JT RIES'THEY'RE &lt;JUST
A'S R IC H AS
WF:: ARE -

''

•I ''

WMPO-FM

7

'
I'

IS

GREAT COUNTRY STEREO
TUNE TO WMPO-FM 92.1

bedrooms, all

holt

acle and concrete patio

Country locahon on wa~er line

I I I

I

An.wer1 On t of th e rmgmalunrlfd Hlofu - MARRIAGE

elec,r l c ,

O NN

garage and level tot Only
$7500110
MIDDLEPORT
Steam
heated • bedroom home, 2
baths

COLOR

IV .

•

ft.JII basement. several

garages and lots of parking
Large bulld1ng for hobby,
business. or storage
YOUR INVESTMENT TODAY
WILL MAKE YOUR FOR
TUNE TOMORROW. SER
VICE AND RESULTS IS
WHAT WE OFFER YOU•
PLACE YOUR PROPERTIES
WITH US CALL 'l92 3325
EesyTtrmsl
Fret Dtlfveryl

VCOCH

•~LACK &amp;

1 NEUER Sill iTCHED

WHITE T-v'

:'lORE HOG LAST
t-'IGHT, LUKEV- --

•STEREO

iN
BED
'

MAD FURNilURE .
HERMAN GltATI
77J.m2
MASON, W. VA.

TV FNS J

•
B!RNEY

~

WUZ HOME

WOULD 'I E TAKE
A LIE-DETECTOR
TEST ON THAT,
SNUFFV '

SHORE!!
GO G IT TH'
DA DBURN

T HING

For Frld1y, March 21, 1175

Don 1 ta lk about things today
unless they re a · la1t accompli
or yo u il k 1d yo ursell Into
behevlng they re already done

LEO (July 23-Aug 22) Your
hunches about Ideas of others

are nol lao sharp today Don t

assocmte

Q VG V R

S JV

DID 'IOU SNITCH
M'l HOG LAST
NIGHT, SNUFF'/ '

--'"-"""-,::,r,

ONNR

22)

Vou tend to face taska much
too n~gatlvely today - that's

CANCER (June 21-Juty 22) Be

sample A is

words are all

NF CX,

SK

~

'
•'

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-No•.

ex tra careful today not to say
t hrngs that wl!l refl ect poorly on
you tn th e eyes of others You
need their respect

CRYPTOQUOTES

ZENITH

Paul Nuchlms 33
10 3D--World Press 20
11 OQ--News 3,4,8,10,13,15, ABC News 33
11 3D--Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Wide World Mystery 13, ABC
News Closeup 6, Movie "Watusl" 8, Movie "Thin Air" 10;
Janakl 33
12 tectrl'!e'(l• 6
1 DO-Midnight Special 3,4,15, Wide Worttd Mystery 6, News 13
1 15--Movle "A Blueprint for Murder" 10
2 3D--Star Trek 4
3 30--Movle ' Beau Ge•te" 4
5 30--Movle 'The Evil of Frankenstein" 4

da y

15 Rested
Yesterday's Answer
With
t6 Poettcal
(3 wds)
9 Pennsyl25 Caus\tc
adverb
vama
26 Grtt
4 Summer
t7 Fabled btrd
(Fr )
ctty
28 Mame
1~ Wallach
5 Mode of
12 Church
ctty
t9 Some
utterance
30 Htgh strung
reader
20 Campmg
6 "Sphce"
16 'Duck
32 Assatled
ttem
7 Neroman
soup'
(2 wds )
21 Hotbed
')1atl'
22 Eternity
33 Playmg
23 Don't tell
8 Atr Force
23 Put tn one's marble
me' (2 wds)
operation
- (meddle ) 38 Exasperate
24 Lure
( 2 wds)
24 Expand
39 Tune of life
26 Phthppme r.--n--11'"""11'tsiand
27 Press
2HItalian ctty
29 Baseball's
Brock
30 Hostery
shade
31 Shmlo
temple
34 Horned vtper
35 Word on
movte
screeru;
36 Collapse
37 Workmg
wtth tesserae t..,-+- +--39 Vcrdt opera
40 'Be 11 humble "
(2 wds )
41 Fall guy
42 Glactai
sand ndge

.

bath,

20, Movie "Four

9 3if-Odd Couple 13. High School Basketball 6, Assignment
America 33
10 DO-Pollee Woman 3,4 15. ABC News Closeup 13, News 20.

st11l have warning signals to
1reat your purse with respect
Buy only wh at s nece ssary to-

apostrophes, the l ength and formation of the
htnts Each day the code l ett ers are dtffcrcn t

w i th city water, natural gas,

all

Raisin In
Sun" 8. Masterpiece Theatre
f or Te xas" 10 Consumer Survival Kit 33

to complele with any degree of

TAURUS (April 20-May 20)

NEW LISTING - Building lot

house,

20. Personality &amp; Behavioral Development 33

6 3D--NBC News 3,4,15, ABC News 13. CBS News 8,10; Zoom 20.
7 DO-Truth or Cons 3,4, WCHS TV Report 8, Aviation Weather .
20,33 News 10, Jimmy Dean 13, Garner Ted Armstrong 15,
7 3D--Porter Wagoner 3, Pop' Goes the Country 4, New Candid
Camera 6 Pop' Goes the Country e. Black Peropectlve on
the News 20,33. Treasure Hunt 10, To Tell the Truth 13,
Outdoors with Ken Callaway 15
8 DO-Sanford &amp; Son 3.4.15 Night Stalker 6.13. Comedy Special
8 10, Washington Week In Review 20.33
8 3D--Chico &amp; the Man 3,4,15, We'll Get By 8.10; Wall Street
Week 20,33
9 DO-Rockford Files 3,4,15, Hot L Baltimore 6,13, Movie "A

(A-wen lomorrv'tt')

to form the

used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc Single letters,

6:00 A.M. 11L MIDNIGHT

and sewage Only $2500 110
LAUREL CLIFF - 6 room

20.33 Ironside 13
5 3G-News 6. Beverly Hlttbllltes e. Hodgepodge Lodge 20, Gel
Smart 15, Elec Co 33
6 DO-News 3.4 8 10.13 15 High School Basketball 6; Etec Co.

I .,... ,••,uwu... I [I I H I I X I LU

Now arranre the clrolecl tettera

One letter simply stands for another In th1s

eledrfc, over

'

Mister Rogero' Neighborhood

why they w1il be e~~:tra-dlfficult

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work tl :
AXYDLBAAXR
is LONGFELLOW

FROM
NEW LISTING- 1974 Skyline
12x60 mobile home
2

Bonanza 15

SAGITTARIUS

14 Cause

2 11 tft..

ALL CASH FOR YOUR
PROPERTY - LET US
SELL IT
992 2259

Young and the Brave' 10. Mike Douglas 13
4 3D--Bewitched 3, Merv Griffin 4. Mo&lt;J Squad 6. -Show 8,

WHAT'5 REAU.Y
E!IEHtNc:&gt; T HE HEADLINES IN THE PAPER?

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
43 Bemg ( Sp )
1 footh
DOWN
pt obiem
Came
1
5 Confederate
about
of Absalom 2 Deep
10 Debacle
pmk
t1 Nurse Edtth 3 Flock
13 French nver
together ,

5232

4 oo--Mr Cartoon 3 I Dream of Jeannie 4, Somerset 15,
\\ G1 ll!gan s I s 6, Tattletales 8 Sesame St 20,33, Movie "The

GEMINI (May 21 -June 20) You

12 19 tfc
- EXC'AV'2TtNG. dozer, loadir
and back1'1oe work , septic
tanks installed dump trucks
anctlo boys for h1re, Wtll haul
flU dirt, top so11. limestone&amp;.
gravel Call Bob or Roger
Jeffers. day phone 992 7089,
n1ght phone 992 3525 or 992

6 13, As the World Turns 8,10
2 DO- Days of Our Lives 3,, ,15. S10 000 Pyramid 6, 13. Guiding
L1ght 8 10
2 3D--Doctors 3,4,15, Big Showdown 6.13, Edge of Nlght8.10.
3 OD--Another World 3,4,15 General Hospital 6,13. Price Is
Right e.10. Ascent of Man 20
3 3if-One Life to Llve13 Lucy Show6, Match Game8,10

tations can only be avo!ded lf
you re not too self-serving

aurprise answer, u
~::=::::::'L:
l ====':·::;-~·;::::;;'..;•::,:uneeted by the above cu1oon..

SWEAR HE S TAKIN DOWN A.
MESSAG E - BUT .,IS R'ADIO
ISN T SAY IW "'~l NG-

2•78

$10,500 00
NEAR REEDSVILLE - 135
Acres .
fronts on
681 ,

Not For Women Only 15

se ... eral others today Confron-

Jumbl•• GAVEL SNARL MYRIAD PLEDGE

work land c l earing by
the acre hourly or contract
Farm ponds roads
etc
Large dozer and operator...
with OYer 20 years ex
perience Pullins Excavating
Pomeroy , Oh io Phone 992

R , utility space, porch, 112
basement, Hardwood floors,
storm doors &amp; windows

the Res tl ess 10

I JQ-- How To Survive a Marriage 3,.4, 15, Let's Make a Deal

You II be tugged at from a!l
s td es tod a.v unless you limit the
num ber ol1rons In the ftre Set
pnor1 ttes and stick to them

~

Yr.•lr.rd•y' •

oo!"e R

River $4.700 DO
POMEROY - 1'1&gt; story
Ira me - 3 BR, bath, dln1ng

Tomorrow 8, 10, To Be Announced 33

12 45-- Etec Co 33
12 55--NBC News 3,15
1 DO- News 3 All My Children 6,13. Phil Donahue 8, Young &amp;

success

IN

111AT LITTLE BOOK- I D

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

to

IN THE CANE

New s 8, 10

12 3D--Blank Check 3, 15, Split Second 6,13, Search lor

1J
I tJ

F

YGV A

FM MBLB NFS V R

J FRS TJVGV
FCX

LV C
XVMFA - HKNXRL OS J
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: THE MAN WHO NEVER ALTERS
HIS OPINION IS UKE STANDING WATER, AND BREEDS
REPTILES OF THE MIND - WILLIAM BLAKE
IF TllERE 5 AN EARTHall41KE
AND THE OTHfl1 TEAM IS
SWALLOWED UP, WE .\\i6HI
lliiN 6~ DEFAIJLT

~

12 DO-Jac kpot 3, 15 Password 6,13 Bob Braun's 50 50 Club 4,

ARIES (March 2t -April 18)

UM M M lJ.IAT S FUNN VCAPTAIN CUFF · AND 1-4E'S

serv,ce, ail makes, 992 2284
The Fabnc Shop, Pomeroy,
Autl'1orlzed Singer Sates and
Serv 1ce We sharpen Scissors
3 29 tfc

garage and storage building,
4 level lots. good dnlled well

tX

K.ABREY ~

--------------SEWING MACHINE, Repairs,
some WORK? Th1s house
needs some repair - good

8,10

Unscramble tht&gt;se four Jumbles,
one letter to each square, to
form four ord1nary words.

3 18 t2tp

Willing to do

Gambl~

I

Love of L1fe 8 10 Sesame St 20,33
11 55-Graha M Kerr 8 Dan lmel 's World 10

3,4, 15 Joker's Wild 8,10, Dina h

JHt!J~~®/J..J louw"J .-J , -

l\11)( CONc•errr.
ltveJ:e&lt;f right tb your pro[ect
Fast
and
easy
Free
esttm ates Phone 992 32&amp;4
Goegle 1n Ready Mtx Co,
Middleport Oh1o
6 30 tfc

FAR OUT -

Morning w i th

11 _DD-- H1gh Rollers 3.4.15:_One Life to Live 6. Now You See It

D&amp;O TREE trimming , 20 years
exp ln&amp;ured , free est1mates
Ccsll 992 305? or Coolville, 1
667 30Al

- -------------NEW 2 pC i !v mg r oom suiteS

Sw,e~{'M~~"'s

13 ,
1 II •
10 3o-Wheel of Fortun e% 4 15

4?8 Locust 51.
Middleport, Ohio 3 2 1 Mo

- - ----...

a

DJ

9 30--N ol For Wom en Only 3. D i nah 6 Ga lloping Gourmet 8,
Tattletales 10 New Zoo Revue 13

Chain
Precision
Ground

C BRAD r OR D Au ct1oneer
Complete Service
Phco!'\e 9"9 3821 or 9.49 3161
Ra cme, Oh10
Cr l tt Bradford
5 1 tfc

a

a 25-Capt

SALES&amp; SERVICE
992-3092

!f.~Tnio

Sunn se Semes ter 10

6 .45- M orm ng Report 3 F armt lm e 10
7 DO- Today 3 4,15 AM America 6 13. CBS News 8 10
8 oo-L ass 1e 6 Capt Kangaroo
Popeye 10 Sesame St 33

RONa t

3 16 tf c

But ldmg for sate or Ina '
Phvnt 773 S6lt from 1 30 p m
to 10 p m far appo lntlt'lent

1

8 10. Elec Co 20
t1 3G-Holtywood Squares 3,15, Brady Bunch 6,13, News 4, .

5 DO- FBI 3 Andy Griffith 8

6 35- Cotumbus Today 4
BORN LOSER

WiLKINSON
SMALL _ENGINE

?1'2·21167
Mtnersvllle, 0.
Blocks
Cement and Mortar
Wood Burning Stoves
Heati Ia tors
and
Fireplace Accessories

DO- News 3 4 6 8 10 13 15 ABC News 33

11 30-J ohnny Car son 3 4 IS W !de Wor ld Spec tal 13, FBI 6,
M ov1e " W here Were You When the L1g ht s Went Ou P ' 8
Mov te ' Part y G trl 10 Janakl 33
12 30..- Wide Worl d Spec1 al 6
1 oo- Tom orr ow 3 4 N ew s 13

6 15- Engllsh 505 3

reAR '?

BLOCK CO.

11

6 25- Far m Report 13
6 30-- F ive Mtnutes to L 1ve By 4, N ew s 6 B ible A nsw ers 8,
Public Affat r s 10, Blue R 1dge Quart et 13

3 10 75

FOREST RUN

7 00- T r uth or Cons 3 4 Wha t s M y Lme 8, New s 10 Let s
Make a Dea l 13 J1mmy Dean 15 l ock Stock &amp; Barr el 20
Nov a 33
7 30- Ho ll ywood Squares 3 4 Oh1o L ottery 6, New Price IS
Rtgh t 8 Con sume r Sur v ival Kit 20 Wild Kingdom 10 To
Te ll the Tru t h 13 Amen can Ou tdoorsma n 15
B oo-S unsh lne 3 4 15 Barney Mtller 6, 13 T he W altons 8, 10 B 1ll
Moyer s Joruina l 20 33
B 3Q- Bob Cran e 3 4 15 Kar en 6 13
9 OQ.....o.M ac Dav 1s 3 4 15 !; tr ee fs of San F r a nc isco 6 13 M ov ie
24 Eyes' 20 Littl e P ri ncess 33
10 Oo-M ovm On 3 4 15 Ha r ry 0 6 13 C BS News Specia l 8 10,
Wom an 33
10 JQ--Hor a ce Ma r sha ll 33

6 00- Sun nse Se mtn ar 4

S¥facuse. ohio-

etc

THURSOAY, MARCH 20, 1?75

FRIDAY, MARCH 21, 1975

LARRY LAVENDER

paper hanging, kitchen
cabtnets. expert carpetmg,

~ - - -·- -'- - - - - - - - - -

' GRO CeR Y bus 1ness for sale

IF f"&amp;! T ~,.i U!=:. !J .-, , ~1-\4
S WAMI !3 ...'1 500 I-. 1/\J
MAKE D'"'T KIN DA
li VII'J WJr. A &amp;LA Nk.

H15 CU LT- FOL-LO WER: 5
$ HOWER HIM Wl £"1 MON EY
J OOL 5 Al'l/ UMOL.I 51Nf .c;

•EADY

2 BEDR OO M tr ali &amp;r BrownS GASOLINE golf cart and ufil l fY
T r a d er Court , Phon~ 992 3324
t r ader Phone 992 5523
3 -4 ti C
3 19 4tc

3 BEDRO OM mob 1le home ST ARCRA F T t raders U , 924
washer 1\nd qryer P 1 baths
now 13 895 Fold downs S1.400
ul1 ll t l es pa i d , $42 50 week lOa
up 3 way rad iO $90 value .
Page St , Mtdd l eport Oh1o
Un our lay a wa y ftnanclnQ3 • tfc
arranged
Camp Conley
Starcraft Sales , Rt 62 N of
2 BEOROOM mob tl e home In
Point Pleasant Phone 675
Sy racuse No Cl'1tldren or ptHS
538.t
Call 992 2H1 after 6 p m
3 19 31 ~
Depos it r equtr ed
3 11 lf c IN DIA N Joe 's Sport ing Goods ,
buy and sell guns ammo
A VAILABLE t h is week , small 2
fl sn 1ng equ,pment and after
bed ro om double Wide mob lit
Apnl 1 we w111 ha ve f1Sh batt
homtnear Pomer oy OffRt 7
Stop by at JOB Page Sl
by pass No Ch ildren or pets
M iddlepor t Phone 992 3509
Phone 992 701 7 or 992 7666
3 2 30tc
3 HI Jtc

FROM ? "ASKS VERA.

CAPTAIN EASY

Gutters Awnings
Free Estimate!li
Ph. ~2-3H3

Pa1nt1ng, stdtng, rooftng,

•
•
Television log for easy l'lt:wmg

A CALL BE MADE

Blown
tnsulation Serv1ces
Blown onto Walls &amp; Attics
STORM
WondowSTlloort
'
ALUMINUM
Sldtng Soffttl

PHONE
?4?·3832 or 843-2667
All Types of
BUILDING
and REMODELING
From a shelf to 1 house

HEI,L

I'.WJ.i! ERE ELSE COULD

6 3D--NBC News 3,4 15. ABC News 13. Bewi tched 6 CBS News
8 10 Zoom 20, MU Report 33

-

D&amp;D
CONSTRUCTION

INDIAN JOE'S
CB SALES &amp;PARTS

·rv

lNG!

6 00 - New s 3, 4,8, 10 13, 15, A BC News 6, E l ec Co 20, T eac hing
Children w tlh Spec ta l Needs 33

301 Page, Middleport
Huting
cooling
Refrtieraflon Roof Repatrs
Gutters • Plumbing •
EleclrtColl Repa•rs
ond
Serv1ce
C1ll t92·l509 and
Save on your repa1rs also
repa 1r mowers. compressors.
and outboards Bring II I n
and save

Construcfion &amp; RomiMMI

3 19 6tc

Mobile Homes For Sale

10 7"

Work

1 (6141 247-3644

BE K

BEING

c onta c t

WANTEO old upright pianos, ~ ELL your mob 1le home for
any cond 1t10n
Paymg IHI
cash IS homes wanted , 1958
c ash F 1rsl f l oor only and
t hru 1972 models Phone { 6141
91Ye d i re c tions to Witten
4A6 1425 Ga llipOliS
P 1ano Co
BoK 188 Sard1s ,
3 9 78tc
Oh io Al946
3 19 6tp 10xS2
MOBILE
home
2
bedroom approK 1 ~ acre lot ,
OLD furniture tc• tious, b'rlss
country locat ton . cttY water
beds or complete households
available Phone 99 2 7649
Write M D M iller, Rt • ·
after .tl p m
Pomeroy, 01'1 10 Call 992 7760
3 18 6tc

Notice
COUNTY MEIGS
PUBLIC NOTICE
Tht follow i ng documents
were recefYtd or prepared by
The
Ohio
Environmental
Protection Agency dur ing the
prev1ous
week
Anyone
aggrie ved or adversely affected
by 1ssuan ce ot renewal or any
permitls) ,
llcenn ( s l
or
vanan ce (sl may request an
adlud lcarlon hear ing by wr i tten
request pursuant to Ohio
Rev 1sed Code Section 3745 07
wtthtn thirty IJO ) days ot the
d 1re c tors proposed action to
Issue or deny such documents
That sta t ute does not provide
for hearing reQuests t o the
OEPA
on
appl i cations ,
re vo c ations
mod tf 1cat1ons
complamts
verif i ed c om
plaints certi fi cations , teases,
orders or f inal ~etlons
W 1th1n 30 days of publl caflon
of th is nollce any person may
also
( 1) submit written
comments relating to actions
proposed actions complamts ,
or v en f l ed c ompla i ns , (2 )
request a publ t c meet 1ng
regard1n0 proposed acttons
and or (3 ) r eQuest notice of
furtl'1er act tons on proceedmgs
Requests for hurlngs on t tnal
ac t i ons t o Issue deny , mod1fy ,
re v oke or renew permlts,
licenses or variances that are
n ot pr eceded by proposed ac
flons and so Identif ied. In th 1S
not 1ce should be sent to The
En v r tonmenta l
Boar d
of
R:ev •ew Sut te 505 33 North H1gh
Str eet Co lumbus , Ohto A3215
All other requests tor ad
IUd lc at lon 1'1earlnos. and other
c ommun• c &amp;tions con c er n 1n0
pub l• c
htarmgs
publtc
m e etings
ad[ud1cat l on
hearmgs , compla ints ot anv
ki nd and regulat i ons should be
addr essed to The Leva I Records
Sec t 1on , Oh iO EPA P 0 Bo x
10-49 Columbus , Oh io ,.32 16.
( IIU ) 466 6037
Unless ot l'1erw ise stated In
par tlcu l l!l r notic es , all other
c omm u n l cattons ,
tnc ludmg
comments on propostd act1ons
and
r eque-sts
for
public
mee t mgs ShOU l d be addressed
etth er to The New Source A1 r.
or NF&gt;DE S Perm•t Records
Sec t 1on
wl'1 !chever is ap
p r opnate , at The Oh io EPA , P
0 Box IOA9 Columbus Oh tO
A3216
Ap p i1Ci f10 n for perm 1t to
1nstall
G n mm M in ing Co
Or ange Twp Oh 10
F ac lt tt y descnptton Stnp
m in e
App ll ca t 10n NO 06 001 32 SM
Nutter M1ne 6 8 acres on Twp
Rd 288 NW of SR 7 and SR 63 1
Oh 1D Pow er Co , Centr al Oh i o
Coat Co
M ei QS Twp , Oh lo
F ac lltly cus c r~pt . on Str •p
m 1ne
App i1C at 10n No 06 00136 SM
324 3 acres between Twp Rei
.4 11 and SR 284 so uth
1'5suance Of perm tt to Insta ll
Gr imm M 1n 1nQ Co
Orange Twp , Oh 10
F a cilit y des cr. p t iOn St r• p
m me
Applicati On No 06 OO U 2 SM
Nutter Mme 6S,acres on Twp
Rd 288 NW of SR 1 and SR 611
nus act ion not preceded by
proposed ac t ton and •S ap
pealabte t o EBR under ORC
sec 37A5 07
Oh io Power Co Centra l Oh tO
Coa l Co
Me •gs Twp , 01'1 tO
F ec li 1t y ducr 1pt 1on Str ip
m 1ne
Appi 1Ci!l t1 0n No 06 00136 SM
324 3 acres bttween Twp Rd
All &amp; SR 28-4south Th 1S action
not pr eceded by proposed 1CI 10n
and 1S appu l able to EBA under
ORC Sec 3?45 07
3.20 H e

- - - - ---------1964 C HEV Y Bela ir A 1 shape

-

instilled

YOU'vE G 0 1

p.J
Horne Maintenance

Eteet ric, Glts, -

777 f'Hrt SlrHI
Middleport, Ohio
Pllo.. m-S:N1or?H-316t

POMEROY, OHIO

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

nes,

S.K EXCAVATING
OOMPANY

$2395
$2250

ON E T RU CK J .,. ton
19 70
CheY r ole t tru ck and 1970 Z2 8
Cama ro Ph one 992 7338 aft er
5p m
DODGE Pol ara stat1on
3 20 51C 1965
wagon , oood m ec han1 c 111
cond1l1on New battery and
IY) 3 MALIB U 2 d oor meta!l C
heat er studded ttres on rear
brown b lac k v m y t top , power
3 extra tires and wh eel s Can
s teer ing , power bra k es atr
be seen at 1628 Linco ln Hgt s
cond Ex cetle.nt cond Pr. ced
or ca ll 992 3683
ve r y rea sonabl e Pl'10ne 992
3 19 41 c
3213

~Iter,

For Information
Call

POMo~~9Yv~~!9~! co. @)

1975 MONTE Carlo 4,000 mi les
all power a1r AM stereo
t ape Cal/9'127036 a lter 5 p m
SC HOOL
3 5 tfc

EA STER SUNDAY

$1295
795
$695
$495

1957 FORD Ran chero
good
cond11ton Phone 742 6352
3 20 6tC

.

Profes!ional
WEDDING
Photography

Local car, atr, full eqUJpment

SH OO T I NG M A TCH
Co r n
Hollow Gun Club turn f 1r st
r igh t afte r M 1les Ceme tery
Rut l an d
F a c t ory c hoked
g uns on l y Sunday M ar ch 2J
1 p

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

OF
QUALITY

J

Business Se..Vices

~-----1

By Mrs. Francis Morris
Attending the Rio Grande
Baptist Assoctatton at Mount
Moriah Baptist Church,
Mtddleport, Saturday, March
15 from Racine mcluded Rev
and Mrs Walter Btkacsan and
daughter, Sharon; Mr and
Mrs Rodertck Grurun, Mrs
Wanda Powell, Mrs Mar tha
LQu Beegle, Mrs Olhe Mae
Cozart, Mrs Helen Sllllpson,
Mrs Mary K Yost, Mrs
Gretta Stmpson, Mrs Mildred
Hart, Mtss Vera Beegle, Mrs
Frances Wilcoxen
Rev and Mrs Btkacsan held
open house Sunday afternoo n
at tOC parsonage to see the new
kitchen cabinets They served
lovely
refreshmen ts
of
homemade cooktes and candy,
punch and coffee
The cho1r wtll prese nt
Bea canta ta en tttled
hold th e Cructfted" a t
Ftrst Baptist Church Palm
Sunday durmg the 7 30 p m

I

r

rely on th em or yo u U turn off
s o m e goo d f r t e n d s o r
assoc1ates

VIRGO (Aug. 23-S.pt. 22)
You II encounte r persons wlth
wh om you have h!Ue 1n c om
mon at a gathering Try to
avo1d ttl em You II have less
pa tience th an usual

(Nov. 23-Doa.
21) Be careful not to be drawn
!nto another's complicated af·
la•r and be put In a position
where you must dip Into your
pocket to ball her out

, CAPRICORN (Doc.

22-~en.

11) Yo u c an't be all things to all
people now If you try you'll
wtnd up pleastng no one, Including yourself

AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Feb. II)
Don t tack le tasks now th ai you
know will be too difficult to
handle Wa11 until you get a
knowl edgeable co ~worker

PISCES (Fob. 20·Merch 201 W
you gamble today be aware of

what could happen II It comes
v p lemons

Don 1 risk more

®'lW:

March 21. 1175
Grea ter responsibilities will be
place d on your sMoulders this
year Th e rewards are commensur ate w1lfl the toad you'll
bear 1f you perform well

LIBRA (Sopl 23-0ct 231 Your

'1/~WS f' .-\PE Jt

tnterests w111 be m c onlllct with

\' NTI-RPRISfo 1\SSNfl

WIN AT BRIDGE

Knight turns the table on slam
•'" I NORrH
A K QJ 4
, Q9 5

20

+K 5
• Q9 7 3
WEST

EAST

A I06 6 2

• 95 3

¥ 74 3

.4

1P K 2
•.1 10 7
.KIU86 2
SOU111 IDI

+Q 9 84 2

A A7
9A 1106

6

+ A6 3

"'A 15
Bolh vulnera ble
Wes t

Nor-th

E ast

Pass

Pass

Pass
Pass

Pass

Soutli

Pass

(messes workmg for h1m In ad·

dtlton oo thts West opened the
four of clubs South played
dummy ' s seven and Str
Trtstram played the ,ktng
wtthout any apparent thought
Declarer put on the ace and
then dtd some thmkmg That
four spot mtght well have been
fourth best of five , m whtch
case South wanted to do
anythtng posstbie to prevent a
club ruff He tatd down his ace
of hearts and played a second
heart Tnstram look hts ktng
and proceeded to lead a club to
gtve hts partner the deadly ruff
that South had lrted oo avotd.

u:e;!:11!&amp;,&gt;.t.tr1
The btddmg has been
West

North

East

Pass

L•

Pass

Opemng lead - 4 4o

'

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
When Tristram de Lyonesse
ctrnved at Kmg Arthur 's court ,
he was thought to be a country
bumpkm Bul 1t d1d not take
htm long to prove h1mself w1th
sword lance and sh1eld He
became one of th e two or three

Pass
2 N T Pass
You South hold
AKJ949AQ2

20

South

,.

2 It
~

.J43.Kl05

What do you do now'
A - Bid three spades 1bis two
notrump Is the one rebid you dlda't
want to hear but you still shoUld
show your very good spades

TODAY 'S QUESTION

most feared Kmghts of the Instead of b1ddmg two notrump
your partner has Jumped to three
Round Table
It took h1m a tnfle longer to notrump over your two spades
show t hat he could handle What do you do now ~
h1mse lf JUSt as well at the
bndge table A few hands such
as today s dtd the tnck for htm Send S7 lor JACOBY MODERN
He sat East and as any one book to Wm at Br~dQe. • (clo tnlo
ca n piamly see South 1S cold newspaper) P 0 Box 489 Recllo
fo r seve n hea rts wtth all Clly Station. New Yorl&lt; NY 10019

WE'Ii RATHER LOSE THAN
WIN THAT WA'f'

'

�I

I

~

"'

&gt;.

·'

.,f . '

I·

The Daily Sentinel Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday,March 2tl, 1975

Rockefeller: from liability to an asset
By {!.!CHARD H. GROWALD
UPI Senior Ed,itor
.
WASHINGTON (UP I) Washington politics sometimes
has the logic of bazaar traders,
F1at Earth advocates and John
LeCarre spyrnasters.
An ample is what's hal&gt;'
, ex WI'th President Ford
perung
and Vice President Nelson A.
Rockefeller.
In public and in priva te Ford
says he is delighted with

.

I

Roc~ef e ller .

grl'ssman - .especially a mem-

Fur example, Sen. James A.

AI the same time, the ber of his own party--wants to McClu 1·e of Idaho, a leader of
th e
President the conservative GOP senators
President's men do not hide attack
'
politi
ca
lly
,
lw
rises
and ca lling th emselves
the
that t~ t~m Rockefeller today
wagg les a finger at some Republican Steering Com, IS a ltablitty .
.
In the ways of Washmgton, cabinet official or other White mittee, stood on the White
House aide. The congressma n House lawn recently and had at
both appear true.
It ties in with another never bad mouths the chief Ford for consorting too much
exam ple
political executive himself.
wi th Democratic lea ders~ for
.of
Well, in Washington today, overspending in the budget, for
gamesmanshtp
on
the
Potomac. This has. to do w1th you have Republican lawmak- mishandling relations with
ers attack ing the Republican senators of his own party and
altackmg the President.
Traditionally, when a con- President.
moving too far from the right.

Th•• exa mples go together.
The Washington logic is something like this :
- Ford is Jelighted with
Rockefeller.
_ The White House now lists

llockcfeller as a liability
because of woe he stirs for
Ford among conservative

Republicans who rega rd the
vice president as a political
Judas for failing to back Barry
Goldwater's 1964 presidential

race ~~d for symbolizing the
incursion of eastern establish·
ment liberal thought in the
Grand Old Party.
- Tht• White House regards

Rockefeller as becoming a
very big plus next year when
he will aid in fetching middle of
the road and indepe ndent
voters for the Republican
presidential ticket Ford takes
for granted he will head.
Today 's bum is tomorrow's

hero .
- The right-wing
Republicans hit at Ford not
because they really want to
undo him. Emotionally some

may }ea rn for Ronald Reagan
to lead them in 1976. But, as
pr.actical politicians, they see,
at least for now, that Ford, a
sitting Rep,ublican President,
is their leader and presidential
·candidate next year· The
reason they have at Ford,
according to Washington logic,
is their hope of making him so
sick of their party guerrilla
warfare that he would drop
Rockefeller as his ruMing
mate in 1976.
Ford has come close to
saying flatly 'that Rockefeller
will be his rWJning mate nex t
year. But, in the tradition that

running illates ,are not named
Wllil the last convenUon JIIOo
menl, ·he has not committed
himself absolutely.
In Ford's March 6 news
conference, a repOrter asked
about the right wing rumbllng
that the President was goinC
"too far to the left." Ford In
reply said In part:
" It is my feeling that the

Republican Party has to be a
broad-based, wid~rum
party if it is going to be a viable
force in the political situation
in the United States.

Elberfelds In Pomero Easter Sale
FRIDAY AND SATURDAY 9:30 TO 8:00PM
..

Federal help asked to rejuvenate Ohio railroadS
COLUMBUS ( UPI) - Mrs. Sally Bloomfield, c&lt;lmmissioner of
Uie Public Utilities Commission of Ohio, Thursday urged the
federal government to aid in a rejuvenation of Ohio railroad li~es
' Wld continue railroad track to Ohio coal fields.
She also called upon the federal government to retain track
which now provides coal transportation to three steam
ge~rating planls in Ohio, .
Mrs. Bloomfield's remarks were prepared for a hearing before
the Interstate Commerce Commission here. The hearing con·
&lt;!l!rned a preliminary rail' system plan of the United States
Railway Association (USRA).
"For the past 18 months, the Public Utilltes Commission of
Ohio has been cooperating with the Ohio Department of Transporation and the USRA by forwarding information concerning
the economic status of branch lines considered 'potentially ex-

· cess' by the USRA," she said. "The Public Utilites Commission
and the USRA may be in agreement that certain lines are 'unprofital!le' under the federal agency's definition of that term.
"However," Mrs. Bloomfield said, "present track usage
stands at one extreme and abandonment of track is at the other,
while noneofthe alternatives in between have been considered to
remedy the 'unprofitabUity' status."
·
Confirm '11te Data
The PUCO coiJUIIissioner said, "We must first confirm that the
data used in determining the profitability was accurate. Enough
computational errors have been found to warrant a thorough
verification of the information. Inaccuracies by federal analysis
must be corrected and the line reevaluated.
"We must first ask whether a line might not be profitably
opera ted by one of Ohio'.s solvent railroads, rather than have the

VOL XXVI

NO. 239

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

• • • _1 .
{

'

1,

HANDBAGS
elEATHERS eVINYLS eSTRAWS

\

Our . entire stock of Spring
Handbags is included in this
sale.

SALE PRICES

'\

\

EASTER SALE!

\

\

I

MEN'S KNIT SHIRTS

'
I

\

Sizes small, medium, large and extra large.
Includes our entire stock of dressy knits, tank
tops and print shirts.
.
· .
Solid colors- while - stripes and patterned sh 1rls.

I __..,•

-l
Save this weekend on a new
Spring. Coat. Big selection of
···regular length and pant
coats.
i

Mens
Mens
Mens
Mens
Mens
Mens
Mens
Mens
Mens

SALE PRICES
PLAYTEX SPRING SALE
Save up to $2.00 on these great Playtex
styles.

•"Cross Your Heart"
• "Soft Side('

Easter Sale! Girls' Dresses
Shop and save this weekend - Complete selection of dressy styl es for
Easter in Toddlers and Girls Sizes 4 to 14. .
.

EASTER

EASTER SALE!

Men's Double Knit

DRESS SLACKS

Dress and Sport

Sl1irts · Short sleeves .
Dress shirt sizes 141n to 17h - sport
shir ts sizes sma ll ( 14· 14 117), medium
( 15-JSih ), large (J6 -llll1), and e}(tra
large (17 -1711'1).
Light and dark solid colors - plaids str ipes - check s . novelty patterns . All
permanent pr !'!ss. Fine big sele~\~•.
.

14.95 SHIRTS
SALE 11 .2 9

A tremendous selection of solid
colors, plaids and checks .
This sale includes our entire stock
-Sizes 29 to 44 waist. Choose your
correct length.

~~-~

12 .95 SHIRTS
SALE 9.79

MEN'S 118.95 KNIT SLACKS
SALE '14.29

11.95 SHIRTS
SALE 8.99 ·

MEN'S 17.95 KNIT SLACKS
SALE 13.49

10.95 SHIRTS.
SALE 8.29

MEN'S 16.95 KNIT SLACKS

9.95 SHIRTS
SALE 7.49

SALE 12.79

8.95 SHIRTS
SALE6.79

MEN'S 15.95 KNIT SLACKS

7.95 SHIRTS
SALE 5.99

MEN'S 14.95 KNIT SLACKS

SALE 11.99

6.95 SHIRTS
SALE 5.29

EASTER SALE!

WOMEN'S TOPS
·.&amp;lOUSES
.SWEATERS

Sale 8.29
Sale 7.49
Sale 6.79
Sale 5.99
Sale 5.29
Sale 4.49
Sale 3.79
Sale 2.99
Sale 2.29

'

,MEN'S AND
YOUNG MEN'S

.sHIRTS

Shirts
Shirts
Shirts
Shirts
Shirts
Shirts
Shirts
Shirts
Shirts

•"Double Diamonds"

Department.

-

Knit
Knit
Knit
Knit
Knit
Knit
Knit
Knit
Knit

SALE PRICES

•"living Slretth"

On sale now in the Second Floor Foundations

.,

10.95
9.95
8.95
7.95
6.95
5.95
4.95
3.95
2.95

SALE 11.29

MEN'S 13.95 KNIT SLACKS

5.95 SHIRTS
4.95 SHIRTS
SALE 3.79

MEN'S 12.95 KNIT SLACKS

I

SAi.E 9.79

eTANK TOPS
ePULLOVERS

Juniors . Misses - Womens

REmESENTEo ROTARY- Representing the Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary Club at the
state Easter Seal convention beld at the Student Union Center, Columbus, in February were
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Buck who are shown with the winner of the decorated wheelchair contest.
The Easter Telethon will be conducted live over TV Saturday and Sunday. Peter Faulk is the
national chairman. Donations may be made to the Rotary Club, the Rev. Robert Kuhn,
treasurer.
'

EASTER SALEI FAMOUS MAKE

MEN'S NECKTIES

Four-in-hand and ready tied lies. Solid col ors and a big selection of patterns
and polka dots.
This sale includes our ent ire stock.
MENS 6.50 TIES ------ SALE 4.88
·MENS. 5.50 Tl ES - - - · · - SALE
. 4.18

MENS 5.00 TIES ------ SALE 3.78
MENS 4.50 TIES-- -·-- SALE 3.38

By United PreRI! International

By ALAN DAWSON
SAIGON (UP!) - Communist gunners slammed
artillery and rocket fire into
the old Imperial capital of Hue
today and government troopo
blew up a key bridge outside
the city 400 miles north of
Saigon to slow down North
Vietnamese tanks Wld troopo
menacing the evacuation.
Bloodied soldiers and weary
women, shoe!e,. old men and
mudstained children trudged
along South Vietnam's winding
roads in a terrified. exodus
from a third of the country's
provinces.
The South Vietnamese government evacuated or began
pulling out of II provinces.
Panicky civilians fled on their
own from three others.

•

WASIDONGTON - CONSUMERS SERVED by the Georgia
Power Co. may get price reductions because of previous overchArging by an oil supplier to the utility. The Federal Energy
Administration aMounced Thursday it would issue an order next
week, its first involving electric company prices, against an
unnamed supplier to Georgia Power .
The order begins a new phase in the FEA's battle against
widespread oil price gouging, repOrted by the Washington Post
earlier this week to have cost $1 billion to $3 billion, mostly
during the 1973-1974 Arab oil embargo. An FEA spokesmwt said
the supplier would be ordered to repay Georgia Power Co.
$710,000 for fuel oil overcharges during a single three-month
period. He said additional refunds covering other periods might
be ordered eventually for the Atlanta-based utility. ·
He refused to name the supplier · or say when the overcharging occurred, pending iS5uance of the order.

MEN'S 10.95 KNIT SLACKS
SALE 8.29

MEN'S 9.95 KNIT SLACKS
SALE 7.49

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

on

15 CENTS

Quang Tri in the north touched
off a wave of panic buying,
food-hoarding and airline
ticketscalping across the
country .
Worried civilians in Dalal, a
resort city north of Saigon,
paid black marketeers more
than· $200 in gold bullion for
scarce 110 airline tickels to the
capital.
ResidentS of Saigon rushed to
the city 's crowded food
markets to buy supplies for
home stockpiles, driving up the
price of rice. ,at least 10 per
cent.
Vendors ran out of
vegetables by mid-morning at
the city's main market and
leftover seafood normally
given to beggars sold at
premium prices .
Officials of the four-nation
peacekeeping team pulled
officers out of all but three field

military aid for hampering his
armed forces in combatting the
three-week-old Viet Cong. and
North Vietnamese offensive.
" We have been fighting
under conditions resulting
from
weak
military ·
assistance," Thleu said
Thursday in a radio lroadcast.
He vowed, however, "to defend
our country to the end."
Reports of savage CommWJ!st rocket wtd artillery
attacks against a massive
refugee convoy In the Central
Highlands spread panic among
civlliwts fleeing other paris or
the country.
The attack appeared to
(Continued on page 10)

3 held in
~~t~:g~~~~rth~~ ';'~n~ ·gas ·heist

and the resort city of Vung Tau
near Saigon.
Deputy Sheriff Randall
President Nguyen Van Thieu
Carpenter
apprehended two
blamed cutbacks in U.S.
men 8/ld a woman suspected of
taking gasoline from a school
bus owned by the Eastern
Local Board of Education early
today in the Tuppers Plains
area.
last approximately four hours.
Taken into custody and
Stud ents will also assist lodged in jail were John L,
Gerard by answering phones Chevalier, 29, Rt.I, Reedsville,
and doing whatever else is Ruth Ann Smith, 30, Rt. I,
necessary. Snme parents will Reedsville, and Charles JWJior
also assist.
Smith, 38, Rt. I, Reedsville.
There will be 160 band They will appear before Meigs
students attending band camp COWlty Court Judge Robert E.
July '1:1 through Aug. 2 at Rio Buck today. Approximately 35
Grande College. The fee is $38 to 50 gallons were taken, It was
per student and the first reported. Carpenter was on
deposit of $10 is due April 1.
patrol dt the time.
The Meigs Baed has again
The departinent of Sheriff
been asked to perform the Robert Hartenbach also Inopening day at Kings Island, vestigated a motorcycle acApril26. They will perform at 6 cident Thursday at 6:45 p.m. ln
p.m. in front of the Eiffel Rutland township on coun ly
Tower. Following the perform- road 3.
ance they will return home.
Robert E. Daniels, 40, Rt. I,
Final plans for the awards · Middleport, traveling north, in
banquet to be held May 3 will rOWJding a curve struck a large
be made at the April meeting. rock lying in the middle. of the
road: Dwtiels was taken to an
area hospital by the Rutland
ER squad. There was no
damage to the vehicle.

Band auction set April 19

.,..
.

'.

-• •• ,·
I

f -

~

.,,

' \"
.
'~
!'
'· .

•(,rt 1....£

'

'

GOING To GIRLI ftATE

EXTENDED FORECAST
Sunday through Tuesday,
cbaoce of obowers Sunday
and Mouday. Partly cloudy
' and cooler Tuesday. Highs In
the mid and upper ~Os
Sunday and In the upper too
aad low li(!s ruesday. Lo•n
41 to 45 Suaday aod In the
mid 30s Tuesday.

Frank Sisson, president. A
nomina tin g committee was
named of Clarice Krautter,
c ha irp erso n ,
Kathr y n
Wildermuth and Pat Woods.
They will submi t their report at
the next meeting.
Dwight Goi ns, band director,
reported the results of a recent
sale of candy, popcorn and
litter baskets, by the students,
which netted $1 ,400. The total
to date earned toward ·the
purchase of new wliforms is
$12,500, leaving a balance of
$7,500.
Band
members·
are
scheduled to appear over
PoinTVIew Cable TV, channel
:;, on April :;, Paul Gerard, TV
Cameraman, wilJ
show
students while they are selling
and entertaining. The show will

- Aagle Sluoa wao chocen
. as delegate to atieod Giril!
State wben lbe 51111 birthday
of the American Legion was
observed Tuesday Dlght. ·
?::~=x.~w£.Z.X~-:~'Y/AW

WlNNER - BID lltcille, Dilly Sentinel newsboy, wu lbe top winner In the l'e(fllt carrier
contest, sponsored by The Dally Sentinel. Miss Sharon Wllson, employe of 'l'be Daily Sentinel,
presented BiU with the top prize, a portable TV Thursda~ . Bill is the sen o!J(enee Stone,
Pomeroy. He is a student at Mfigs High School and services.53 customers in the Pomeroy area .
·Other carriers, for each new subscriber received a silver dollar. ReceiVing silver dollars were
O!arlle Rickard, Clifton; Mike WU;;9n, Pomeroy; Rand~ Randolph, Pomeroy; Charlie Smith,
Middleport; Tammy Knittel, Pomeroy; Mark Johnson, Mason; David Lewis, Pom~roy; Tina
Pierce, Syracuse; Todd Smith, Pomeroy; MF"k Gilkey, Clifton, and John Gordon, N~.w Haven.

•
\

.•

PHONE 992·2 156

Field military ·reports said
Government troops today
goverrunent marines screening were driven out or Kien Due, a
the evacuation of Hue's 300,000 town 110 miles northeast of
inhabitanls destroyed a vital Saigon, after six hours of heavy
!ridge over the My Chanh fighting, government spokesRiver on Highway 14, 21 miles men said .
north of Hue, in their
Over 500 rounds of Commurearguard action to buy time nist artillery fire pounded Klen
for 'r efugees streaming south- Due and severed communicaward.
tion with Gla Nghia provincial
Communist guMers lobbed capital 10 miles away.
30 rounds of artillery and
The mass retreat from the
rocket fire into Hue city, ils Mekong Delta in the south to
suburban airport, and the
headquarters of . the 1st Infantry Division . No casualties
LOTTERY WINNERS
were reported.
CLEVE LAN!;&gt; ( UPI) Highway 1, which runs 50
Here are this week's winning
road miles from Hue to Da
numbers In the Ohio lottery:
Nang was packed solid with
Number 818 (eight one
vehicles bringing out Hue
eight) In any box on ticket
refugees .
wins $20.
The government launched an
Numbers 662 (eight six
emergency program to shelter
two) and 762 (seven six two 1
and resettle the flood of
in green and blue wins $500.
refugees from the fallen and
Numbers 662 and 762 In
falling provinces in the far
blue boxes wins 1,000.
north and the Central HighNumbers 862 and 762 In
lands. Officials said as many
green boxes eligible for
as I million people may have
$300,000 drawing and
been left homeless in the threeautomatically wins $15,000.
week CommWlist offensive.

June 3 primary election for the one seat on the town 's
races are in store for voters of board of public affairs to be
both Pomeroy and Middleport, filled this year .
according to the final showup
In Middleport, there is a race
of candidates who had filed among Republicans for the two
Don Thomas, chairman of
petitions of candidacy with the seats to be filled on vilhtge the uniform ways lind means
Meigs County Board of council. Cary Horky and committee, announced at a
Efections by the 4 p.m. dead- William Walters filed as did meeting of Meigs Band
line on Thursday .
Lowell Price. Horky and Boosters recently that an
In
Pomeroy,
two Walters are incumbents, auction will be held at the
Republicans are seeking the Horky serving on an ap- Pomeroy Junior High building
nomination of their party to poinlment.
on April 19.
rWl for mayor. They are Dale
In Middleport, the two
Those having articles to be
E. Smilh , incumbent, and Republican nominees in the auctioned can bring them to
PARIS- THE WORLD'S INDUSTRIAL giants have united
Clarence A. Andrews. The June 3 election will be opposed the Pomeroy building after
behind an American proposal to keep oil prices high enough to
winner will be opposed in the in the fall by John David April 14. If pick up of items is
stimulate the development of other energy . sources. Tbey
fall by William Snouffer, a . Gerard, a DemocraL
needed persons may conta ct
adopted a minimum-price oil policy by a 17-0 vote Thursday at
Democrat, who is on Pomeroy
Incumbent Mayor Fred Mrs. Belva Glaze, Pomeroy,
the second and final day of the International Energy Agency
village coWJcil, but did not file Hoffman, a Republican, is 992-5206, Mrs. Joe Bolin,
conference. Sweden abstained.
for reelection to coWJcil. He is seeking his first elected term of Rutland, 742-3254 or Mrs.
The agreement was aimed at encouraging the development
unopposed in his party.
office, having automatically Harold Fitch, Middleport, 992of nuclear energy, tidal and solar power and the conversion of
Pomeroy has no contest on become mayor several months 2972.
industrial wastes Wld sewage into fuel. The members of the fourthe
Republican ticket for the ago upon the death of the late
Refreshments will be sold by
month-old agency still have to decide what minimum price to
two seats to be filled on village Mayor John Zerkle. Hoffman the boosters and donations of
press. far when they meet with oil-producing countries at a
council this year. The seats are was president of coWlcil at the food and workers will be
conference in Paris on April 7.
now held by John H. Manley, time. While Hoffman will be solicited later .
serving
on appointment, and W1opposed in the primary, he
Presiding at the meeting was
COLUMBUS - LEGISLATION TO AlLOW drilling for
.
Snouffer
.
Manley
filed
his
will
be
opposed
in
the
fall
by
a
natural gas under more than half of Ohio's portion of Lake Erie
petition of candidacy and the Democratic candidate,
was introduced in the General Assembly Thursday. Rep. Sam
second Republican candidate Sammie Planls.
, Speck, R-New Concord, said his bill would allow drilling for
is
Charles Bartels. They will be
Incumbent Republican
natural gas, but not oil, east of a line from Huron in Erie County,
opposed
in
the
fall
by
the
only
Clerk-Treasurer
Gene Grate Ia
to the Canadian boundary northeast of Kelleys Island.
Democrat to file for council, unopposed in his bid for
The General Assembly last year continued a ban on drilling
Dr.
Harold D. Btown.
nomination to run for
, for gas and oil under the lake until July I, 1978. The ban has been
Jane
Walton,
Republican
reelection
and there are no
in effect almost continuously since 1970. It la[iaed for 31&gt; months
incumbent
clerk,
is
Wlopposed
Democrat
candidates
for the
in 1972, but the Department of Natural Resources reported there
for
reelection
as
is
E.
F.
fall
election.
·waa no interest in seeking minerals under the lake. The departRobinson, Republican, running
Two
women ;
both
. ment said not a single application f9r a drilling permit was
Republicans, have filed for the
received.
two seats to be filled on Middleport's
board of public af.
AMES, IOWA - DISGRUNTLED AT THE prospect of
fairs
this
year . They are
sinking grain prices next fall, farmers in the nation's breadFreddie Houdsahseit and'
basket are banding together to voluntarily reduce corn and C
Helen
Shuler. ·
sOybean acreage by at least 10 per cent this spring.
Some 3,000 Midwestern farmers supporting a grassroots
move to trim grain acreage gatber~ In Ames Thursday, where
organizers asked the growers. to sign pledge cards to reduce
FISH FRY SET
grain production. As an alternative, the organizers suggested the
A
fish
fry by the Middleport
fanners use the idle grain.land for conservation practices or hay
Fire
Department
at the
prodUction.
.
headquarters Saturday will get
The "trim the grain acreage campaign" apparently is
underway
at 11 a.m. and
picking up steam these days, according to one organizer, Vernon
·~
,.
cqntinue
throughout
the day. ;1t
Flderlick, a grain elevator operator from Buffalo Center. He said
· Fish sandwiches and dinners
many farmers are worried abo!lt overproduction and subsequent
will be available.
de~ssed grain prices next fall, and are seriously considering
. planting less.this. spring to reduce supplies.
TACOMA, WASH.- AN AIR FORCE Cl41 Starlifter cartying 16 persons crashed late Thursday night in the Olympic
Mountains .to miles northwest of Seattle. An Air Force CI30
located the ttashed plane with electronic equi]ment at 2:45 a.m.
PDT (~:45a.m . EDT ) today, but poor weather prevented a visual
si8hting of the plane, aCC&lt;Il'ding to capt. Cary Stevens at Scott
Air Force Base in Dlinois, which controls all search missions for
downed Air Force craft.
·
· Al McChord Air Force Base here, Air Force Lt. Nancy Bernstrrlm said the plane, with a crew of 10 and-sill passengers, had
been oo a regular daily run from Yokota Air Base on the outskirts
(Cootinued
page 10)

SALE 8.99

\

The largest iceberg ever
seen in the Antarctic was 200
miles long and 60 mlles wide.

Reds menacing evacuation
hit with .artillery, rocket fire

fR;;~·:~ '.iin-;:;;) Races assured
h
th
t
m 0
0 wn s

MEN'S 11.95' KNIT SLACKS

eHALTERS

Now YouKnow

enttne

I

SALE 10.49

SALE 4.49

T

.... ;~

EASTER SALE!

i

all

•

FRIDAY, MARCH 21, 1975

SALE PRICES

I

"While some Ohio coal fields are not being mined at this time
because their output falls to meet environmental standards
there is every reason to believe that with technological advances'
this coal will certainly be used in the future, particularly with
the discussion of coal gasification facilities which Ohio is seeking
to' develop," Mrs . ijloomfield said.
"We are suggesting that the segments in question, while they
might not be profitable to operate today, be placed in a 'rail
hank' system, so that the tracks could be used later," she·added.
She said the PUCOdoes not believe wide-scale abwtdonment of
rail service is the answer to Ohio's rail problems, but that
selective abandonment of spa ringly used lines should be coupled
with a mass transfusion of funds to rejuvenate the many
remaining lines so "both people and freight may be safely and
efficiently transported by rail. "

Devoted To The Interests Of' The Meigs-M1mm Are11

Big selection of Misses, _Ju!'iors and Ha If Sizes.
Our entire spring stock IS mcluded.

(

The commissioner also said she is concerned rail lines .in Ohio
areas containing coal reserves might be lost.
The sections of track which provide corridors into coal fields
are Corning to Hobson, Piney Fork to Dillunva!e, Crooksville to
Fultonham and Minerva to Marietta.

at y

Cloudy tonight, lows in mid
40s. Cloudy Saturday, highs in
upper 60s. Probability of
precipitation near zero today,
10 per cent tonight and 20 per
Cl!nt Saturday.

EASTER SALE!

service completely discontinued. In addition, consideration
sho uld be given to rurming a lesser number of trains over a
segment of track, rather than abandoning the service," she
added.
Mrs. Bloomfield also noted that St. Mary's in Auglaize County,
Yellow Springs in Greene County and a government defense
supply facility in Dayton utilize steam generating equipment
which is fired from coal delivered over railroad lines,
"We certainly do not want to see any existing energy sources
hampered by an inability to receive coal over the rails," she said.

•

Weather

DRESSES and PANTSUITS

EASTER
SALE!

'I

Public invited
to make known
. ideas of aging
Eleanor Thomas, executive
director of Meigs . County
CoWlcil on Aging, asks for
citizen input at a meeting to be
held March 25 at the Pomeroy
Junior High School.
' This is .the second of two
public meetings to inform
people of the permissible .uses
of fWlds. A pre-application was
filed through the ·Federal
Housing and Community
Development Act of 1974 to
purchase and renovate
property to be used as a Senior
Citizens Center In · Meigs .
Center..
Citizen input is needed, Mrs.
Thomas said. ,A survey of the
COWlty's hoUsing needs will ·be
made during the preparation of
the final application which Ia
due April I.
The application will · be
reviewed by various state Wld
·federal agencies before going
to the U. S. Departinent of
Housing
and : Urban
Developlljent .( HU ~l;t In
Washing ~, D. C.
,
I

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="762">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11162">
                <text>03. March</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="49329">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="49328">
              <text>March 20, 1975</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="82">
      <name>dye</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="91">
      <name>walker</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
