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•

10 - The Daily Seri'tmel, Mtddlepor[:l'omero; 0

"'
l'ut•&lt;&lt;i"l', Ap11l I 1" "

Farm price Railroads
Contmued from page
(Contmued from page 7)
Soybeans accounted for most
of the 6 per cent drop tn prtces
recetved for otl-bearmg crops
Soybean prtces averaged $5 31
.a bushel mmtd-March, down 41
m the past month and 65 per
cent below March, 1974 Smaller declmes were also recorded
fdr cottonseed and flaxs~d
All beef cattle prtces averaged $27 80 per hun• dredwetght - up 90 cents
•durmg the month -and helped
the meat ammal pnce mcrease
•regtster a sltght one per cent
' mcrease by March 15 Cow and
steer prrces also mcreased, but
hog prtces dropped 10 cents to
an Jtverage of $30 30
Sheep and lamb pnces also
mcreased, but the meat antmal
pnces sbll averaged some 20
per cent belo" the le\ els of
March, 1974
Cotton prtces dropped 6 per
cent, wtth upland cotton selling
at 30 cents a pound, down 2
cents from rrud-February. and
23 4 cents below March 1974
The market prtces fell an
average 5 per cent for the
fa rmers' vegetables, "'th decreases for tomatoes , as·
paragus, lettuce and sweet
corn Prtces were htgher for
cabbage, omons, snap beans
and cauliflower, the report
SBld

The caultflower prtces of $25
per hundredweight for the
month ended March 15 were a
ne\\ record, and the overall
vegetable prtce mdex was still
29 per cent higher than one
year ago

II

1

check ..... mt ..J.m•n nr•d

Wllll ll.' ll

James Sci lrl Ted Reed p1est dent tntrodured Jmnes but h&lt;1d to
leav~ soon, t&gt;O F'red M u11 O\\
pres1dc nl pr es1ded
Reed tn h1s upemng remttr ks

Vl l'f'

sa td that the btds on the
Pomeroy-Ma son Br td ~e wt ll be
let Apnl 29 but work wtll. not
start Wl tll all matenals are
available He • t~ l so reported
that there \\ 3S nothmg new to

report on bus service between
Pomeroy a nd Athens He

also menlaoned that 1t ts un
der td ed "hethet a fireworks
dtsplay wtll be held at the Btg
Bend Ragatta 111 June
Reed also announced that
Richard

Ch{Hilbers

was

rehrmg Jrom the Pmnero)
Nattonal Ban k and Mond a)
was hts last day to work Reed
thanked Chambers fot hts loyal
suppor t to the chamber cmd
asked that he contmue attendm g meetmgs
Dan Thomas son of Mr and
Mrs Dan Thomas, atlended
the meehng as part of hts scout
proJect m recetvmg a ~om­
mun tcal ton ment badge Dan
1s a se mor patrol leader for
Pomeroy Scout Thoop 249
Others alle~mg m addthon
to those named were Mrs
Thoma s. secre tar ) , Dale
Warne r , F' ~rma n Moore ,
Ch&lt;~mbers
Bil l Grue se r ,
Melvtn VanM ete r
Jack
Carsev, C E Blakeslee,
Wend ell Hoover, Jack Kerr ,
Bob Ja cobs, Fred Cro" ,
Meltssta Conse, Beulah Jones
•and Kalte Crow

Dinsmore Boyles died Monday
TUPPERS PLAINS - Mr
Dmsmore Boyles, 68, Tuppers
Platns, dted Monday evemng tn
Camden Clark Memm tal
Parker s burg,
Hos pt ta l,
followmg a bnef tllness
Mr Boyles was born at Mt
Zion, Calhoon Count; , W Va ,
a son of the late Lyman and
Martha Dmsmore Boyles He
was preceded m d._ by two
brothers and stx Sisters
He was raiSed tn Parkersburgand hadbeenareStdent of
the Tuppers Plams area for the
past 27 years He was a
member of the Alfred Umted

MEIGS THEATRE
Tontght thru Thursday
Aprtl 1 3

NOT OPEN •

Fn Sat , Sunday

Margarer'Mttchell 's
GONE Wf'fH THE WIND
( Techmcolor)

Ra1ed PG
Show Starts 7 00 p m

Methodtst Church In hts early
yea rs he was employed at the
Bmck Factory ,,t Fltnl Mtch
for ftve years He returned to
Calhoon Coun ty and made hiS
home there before movmg to
Tuppers Plams
He was an acltve church
member, hav mg sung wtth hts
fam tly at man) funeral and
church serv tces m the area
He ts survtved by hts wtfe ,
Eleanor Sturn Boy les, one son,
Phtlhp N (Joe) Boyles, two
daught ers , Mrs Rtchard
(Florence ) Spencer and Mrs
Starhng (Sandra 1 Massar, all
of Tuppers Plams one Sisler,
Mrs Okey (Ada ) E\an s,
Gra nd Blanc , Mt ch , stx
gra ndchtldren and several
meces and nephe" s
Funeral servtces wtll be
Thursday at I p m at t.ne
· Alfred Unt ied Melhodtst
Church wtth Rev Glendon
McKee assiSted by Rev Robert
Mee ce, offtctattng Frtends
may call at the Whtte Funeral
Home m Coolville after noon
Wednesday

/

HOSPITAL _NEWS
"'

Vl·ll runs ~h·nwnal HnsprLal

AHMIT rED John Bh htcl
Mtddlcport Cu1 lts Sn11th
RuHCHI(\
Dorwlt! C'ov~t l
Pumcr ov Don Rca Potht&gt;l o~ •
Vwlct S;mtlt Reedsvrll c Jcc~ n
I aylUI Mason Men vm Dar sl
V r ~m n a Whrle ,
Pomero)
Pomeroy !'r,mkhn StaffOJ d,
Pomcr o\
Jull d
Cribbs,

Tag

...
sticker~

Cnwt ty p,tsscngcr l ,u
0\l.qer S ell(' I Cll1 Jnded thai 1!)75
valuldt mn slu.:kers went on sole
M ct~s

1oda;

Depuly regtslrar offices 111
Metgs Coun ty are h&gt;c,tl ed at
1he Grbbs Grocery Mulbe1ry
Av e , Pom e1o; , and at the
Pomeroy
Qu ahl y P11nl Shop, M11I S\ ,
Paul • Middleport
DISCHAR GED
Mr1 chell
Bess1e Ohvcr ,
Motorrsts are also remrndcd
Eugene Ymmg, Paulute Jooes
Orpha Rouse, Anncl Baker
Edna Stiles. Robert Steffel
Rut h Stetfel, l't!•ry Arcil,er
Orv1lle McVey
Holzer M~dtcal Center
1Disc harged, March 311
Charles Adam s Emma
Barnett Er nest Ca ld we ll ,
Debra
Carter,
Emma
Cheesebre" , Brarr) Cox , Ro)
D.1y Jonathan Durham !.€she
Evans Mrs Patnck Ftelds
and daughter Donald Gates,
Ltllt a Haner, Mrs Larry
Hemby and twtn daughters,
Mtll on Houdashelt Angela
K•ng, Linda Mc.Gutre, Mehssa
Nance, Justa Otler, Kenneth
Ralph , Donme Rayburn, Joey
Rtlbe t ts, Ches ter Roge rs,
Corabell e
Marte Ro ush
Russell, Eddte Russell Glo11e
Sn)der Dora Sorrell, Juamla
Sprouse, Coetta Thomas , Loure
Th omas Mrnme Th or nton,
Myr lt e Welk er , August
Wtmgman
(Btrthsl
Mr and Mrs Wtnton Helton,
a daughter, Ravenswood , W
Va 1' Mr and Mrs C1rvy
Johnson, a son , Btdwell, Mr
and Mrs Phtlhp Ktng, a son,
Mason, W Va , Mr and Mrs
Do nald Luca s, a son,
Galhpolts , Mr and Mrs
James PucciO, a son, Mason ,
W Va , Mr and Mrs Ronald
Reynolds ,
a
daughte r ,
Pomeroy, Mr and Mrs Robert
Roush a son, New Haven, W
Va Mr and Mrs Donald Van
Maler, a daughter , Mason, W
Va

i.

selling today

llltt l I he slate has a new
~ laggered '' lrcensrng plan lhrs
ycell
A~cordmg to the phm,
passenger car uw11 ers wr th last
ncunes starting w1lh A lhrou ~h
K must complete the 1975
1eg tstralton between Aprtl I
and mtdmght Aprtl 30 Only
persons tn the A-1'&lt; alphabettcal
group can obtarn vahdatron
slickers durmg the month of
1

Election rules
1n Mason noted
MASON W Va - Pelt ltons
for electrve off1ces to be !tiled
m Mason's b1enmal electron
are avatlable tn town hall
Persons desrnng to f1l&amp; for
the Jun e 3 eleclton when a
rna} or, recorder and frve
counctlmen are elected must
do so on or before noon the 20th
day precedmg the electton day
Kenneth Reynolds, recorder,
satd today voter eltgtbtll ly
rul es mclude
Qualtftcatton s for the town
offtce holders are they must be
restdents of Mason, must be
legal voters enlltled to vote for
members of tts coun ctl, and for
the year precedm g the electiOn
must have been assessed wrth
and patd taxes upon at least
one hundred dollars ($100)
worth of real or personal
properly !herem
Ballots for absentee votmg
may be cast not more than 30

nor less than 10 days pnor to
the elec tion w1lh the recorder
at c1ty hall
All persons "ho have been
bona ftde restden ts of the
tern lot y tncluded tn the town
of MH son for .10 di:l ys next
precedrng a mumcrpal electiOn
therem are eltgtble to vote
Voters must also be quahfted
under the constttutton and laws
of the state and none others,
shall be enlttled lo vole at any
muntctpal elec llon held tn the
town
The code also stales th at no
person shall be deemed a
restden t of the town of Mason
by reason of bem g statiOned
therem for any temporary
purpose

Aprtl
Passe n g~ r car reg tslr~lton
for th ose tn the L-A
alph abe ttcal group begms on
Ma y I and eon tmues through
May 31
Persons rn etlher group wtll
be able to regtsler trucks ,
lrarlers , motorcycles and other
non-passe nger vehtcles at the
same ltme they buy passenger
car stickers
·Applicants must present a
vahd Ohto hlle for each vehtcle
bemg regtstered If the lttle ts
lost or stolen, a dupltcate can
be obtamed from the County
Clerk of Cow ls offtce before
apphcalwn for a str cker IS
made
Smce 1974 ltcense plates are
remammg rn use, the ap·
pltcant's hcense number must
be vertfted before th e
regtslrahon can be renewed
The qrnckest and most accurate method of venfym g a
ltcense number ts fr om the 1974
reg1stratron card whrch wa s
tssued when 1974 plates were
purcttased Anyone who fatls to
take thetr 1974 regtslratton wtll
ha\ e to wmt "htlc an addi tiOnal venf1 catton form IS
com pleted
State regtstrattOn e e tn
Metgs Count; ts $1
for

Heavy fighting ..breaks out again,·
South Viet forces said crum~lirtg
'

Suit filed
MICK C}IILDS

to contest

Orilds joins

Hyatt will

RETIRE~ Riehard
Chambe;.., vice president of
the Pomero; National Bank,
retired Monday followin g 33
years of service. Chambers
jomed the firm on March 16,
1942. Chambers, active tn
many civic organtzattons
over the years, will spend a
great deal of time enJoymg
his farm 18 the Texas
community, Eastern Meigs
County. HIS wife, Martha, ts
clerk for the Meigs County
Comm1ss1oners They have
one son Eric who IS Instructur 'of the 'workshop forthe mentally retarded m
Meigs County

insurance

In Metgs County Common
Pleas Court an actton to con- ag
test a wtll, and a sut t for money
wer e fri ed, one d1 vo rce
dtss olv ed and ftve others
Mtck Chtlds has become
awarded
assoctaled wtth the DowmngThelma LewiS, Colwnbus, Chtlds Insurance Agency m
ftled aga mst Eltzabelh Axle Mtddleport The son of Mr. and
Roush, Rt 2, Ractne el al to Mrs Wtlltam D Chtlds, 444
contest the wtll of the late Lincoln St , Chtlds ts a 1971
Harnett Hyatt
graduate of Metgs High School
Shetla L Martm, Rt , I, where he was a member of the
pa ssen ger~cars
Cheshtre, and Rtchard E varstly basketball squad
On ly o e slicker til be
Martm, Pomeroy, ftled for
F ollowtng graduatton , Chtlds
tssued for each vehtc,W That
diSsolulton
of
marrtage
•
attended
Ohto State Untversttcker must be placed on the
Eme
l
Ray
Aleshtre
and
stty,
Columbus,
and for two
COMMITTEE MEETS
rear hcense plate, rn the bot.
Linme
Bell
Aleshtre
,
Pomeroy
,
years
was
manager
for the
The Metgs County Com
tom rrght hand corner Thts IS
mttt ee for the Ment ally also lhe localt on otthe sltcker ftled a JUdgment m the amount varstly baske tball team For
Retarded wtll meelat 7 30 p m for
Mo to rcycle of $4,000 agamsl Shelly' and the past year, Ch tlds ha s been
trucks
Thursday at the Metgs County stickers, however, must be Sands, Inc , Zanesvtlle The working for Capttal Fmance m
Courtroom All org amzaltons placed tn the top center of the Aleshtres charge that the Logan, Belpre and Pomeroy
Recently , Chtlds completed
ON DEAN'S LIST
are urged to send represen- rear plate and slickers ISsued defendants ca used charges of
Jean Sla" ter, Mmersvtlle, tal!ves to the sessiOn
for semt -tractor-trucks must explostves to be set off causmg an msurance mst1tute school of
ha s been named to the dean's
be pla ced on the front plate m damag e to thet~ home located the Ohto Assoctatton of Inlt sl at Oh10 Umverstly for the
the bottom , rtgh t hanct corner on SR 7 m Sahsbury Township surance Agents, Inc , held at
The marnage of Lee R Muskingum College and has
wm ter quarter Mrs Slawter
Even though only one shcker
PRACTICE SET
co mpleted
her
studen t
Mary Shrtne 37, Whtte Shrme IS tssued per vehtcle, Cadle and Cheru H Cadle " as passed hts stale exammahon
as an agent
teachmg m the Athens Schools of Jerusalem wtll hold a passenger cars, trucks and dtssolved
were
Carol
CALLED SQUAD
Granted
dtvorces
durtng the quarter and com- prac hce sesston for mstallalton other two plate vehtdes musl
pried a four pom l average for Sunday, Aprt~ 6 at 2 p m at conltnue to dt splay both fr ont Eynon from Robert Joseph
RA CINE _ The Rac tn e
the quarter
Eyn
on
on
charges
of
gross
Emergency
Squad answered a
and rear plates
Pome roy Masom c Temple
neg lect of duty, Ina M Van- ca ll toRt 2, Portland, at 4 55
met.et....fl:om Gar; E Van- p m Monday for Ralph
Pleasant Valley Hospttal
meter ' Dorlene Jeffers from Brewer' hea rt patien t, who was
DISCHARGES - Kalhr; n
Harold F Jeffers ; V.onda Kay taken to the Holzer Medtcal
Casto and daughter , Potnl
Pleasant , Arn old Nq.rman,
A change tn operatiOn at the 24 hour shtft "tlh a staff of requests for SEOEMS servtce J ohnson from George M Center:. At the same hour' the
Potnl Pleasant , Mrs Delbert Pomeroy Ambulance Stat10n ' call-m ' personnel on standby from the Pomeroy sta t10n, Johnson, and Mary Elizabeth Ractne squad two picked up
Se arl es from Charl es W Nra 1s p rc kens who was 111 a"'• a
Jefferson, Pltny , Mrs John has been announced by the
2 Onl; emerge ncy medtcal whtch occurs about 22 ttmes a
McDamel, and Kenneth Ash
Southeast Ohto s Emergency ass rstance and emergency year accordmg to the system 's Searles, all on charges of gross Ractne busmess eslabhshment
wor th, Ashton
tr ansportatiOn wrll be provrded records, the Rutland vehtcle neglec t of duty and extreme , and transported htm to hts
Med•ca l Service
cruelty
home
As requested at a meetmg by Metgs County SEOEMS wtll be routed Should a third
among Metgs County Com- Unt ls Request s for non- stmultaneous request occur,
missiOners, the pr osecutmg emer gency tra nsfers ,from SEOEMS vehtcl e~ from
at torney, Bernard Fultz and hospN,al to hosptlal , hosptlal to sta t1on s surr oundmg Me1 gs
•
SEOEMS offt ctals, alteraltons nursmg home, home to nursmg County wtll be sen t m Three
tn
the
Metgs
County home, etc , will be refused m stmultaneous requests have
Emergency Servtce have been order to allow avatlabthly of not occurred m the coun ty In
the Metgs Coun ty Squad for the 21 months SEOEMS
The Homestead Exemplton made as follows
veh1 cles have been m operatron
1 Full-lime slaffmg has been true emergencies
Btll for the totally and perIn case of simultan eous there
manently dtsabled has passed reduced from four emergency
m both the Ohto House and medtcal techmctans to two
Senate and ts now a"atttng the One EMT "'ll be on duty each
governor's signa ture , Meigs
County Audttor &lt;llo"ard E PENSION AGREEMENT
SAN FRANCISCO (UP! ) Frank sa1d today
from page I)
MaJor
league baseball umprres
The btll wtll be effecttve May
Buy tbe skillet ... Get the
of the JurY would take about a day and a half, much less than m
I , lhts ; ear Apphcattons may came to an agreement on a
other
Watergate..-elated
trtals
And
unhke
those
tnals,
the
saucepan for only one dollar
be !tied from May I, 1975, unltl pensiOn program Monday wtth
Connally JUry Will not be sequestered
Nahonal
and
Amertcan
League
Aug 1, 1975 The appltcaltons
COR "H OWEA emblem
Connally ts charged wtth twtce acceptmg $5,000 m cash for
for the exemplton wtll be on offiCia ls
tnm shown I
512 95
The settleme nt was an- his help as a member of Prestdent Richard M Ntxon's Cabmet m
forms prescnbed by the board
1 Ql ~ove re d
noll!)eed ]Otntly by Natwnal gettmg the 1971 mcrease m the federal prtce support for raw
saucepan
S 7 95
of tax appeals
mtlk He has mamtamed his mnocence
10 m ~ h cove ted
League
Prestdent
Charles
S
These forms wtll not be
sktllet
S11 95
'
Items purchased - - ·
rece tved by the county audttor Feeney and Amencan League
PHNOM PENH - PRESIDENT LON NOL of Cam\4&gt;dia flew
sepatately
Sl9 90
Prestdent Lee MacPhatl, along
Wl hi somt! trme rn May or
mto
extle from hts besteged capttal today , pavmg the way lor
SAVE
$6.95
wtth
thfuard
of
directors
of
June Tl.e quahftcaltons for the
posstble talks wtth CoiRmumst-led Insurgents, who have moved
•
dtsabled homes tead wtll be the Umprres Assocw tion and wtthm four miles of Phnom Penh
1 Ql covered
John
Cifellt,
of
the
Umptre's
publtshed at a later date
saucepan
s 8 95
Mmutes before his departure, rmlitary commanders moved
Council
10 mch COVI31ed
troops to block breaches m the city's defense !me to keep Khmer
sk•Hel
Sl2 95
HH4'HH&lt;OHH---.
Items purchased - Rouge rebels from breakmg through
.
separately
S21 90
the Distinctive
The 62-year.old Lon Nol flew wtth more than 30 persons from
SAVE
$795
le ofthe ...
Pochentong Arrport, under !ll'e from UISurgent 105mm hoWitzers
and 107mm rockets Three rockets landed as Lon Nol boarded an
The buck stops here!
Air Cambodge CaraveUe Jetimer for the Amertcan B52 bomber
base at Utapao m netghbormg Thruland
Now' ONLY ONE DOLLAR MORE Will gel you
a CORN ING WARE 1 qt covered saucepan
when you buy the 10-mch covered Skillet at the
PALM SPRINGS, CAUF - PRESIDENT FORD, faced
Organ, Drums, Guitar
regular pnce Both p1eces are packed m an
wtth a raptdly detertoratmg mthtary situation m Southeast Asia,
attractive g1ft box A ternf1c value avatlable m
Is
sununonmg
Secretary
of
State
Henry
A
Kissmger
here
earlier
NlTELY
either the Cornflower emblem or the Sp1ce
than expected, Whtte House sources mdtcate
0 L1fe dea)gn t
TUES, WED, THURS ,8 301.00
Kissinger, orlgmally scheduled to confer With Ford Frtday or
FRI &amp; SAT , 9 30-2 •00
Saturday, IS now expected here by rmdw~k to revtew
developments m South Vtetnam and Cambodia wtth Ford and to
chart U s Indochma poltcy The Prestdent plaMed to get a
report Saturday from Army Chief of Staff Fredenck C Weyand,
TO ENTERTAIN YOU AT
Products that make life easter
the former u s military commander m Saigon who ts now on a
fact-ltndmg tnp to South Vtetnam

en.cy staff

By United Press International
.
COLUMBUS - THE OHIO EDUCATION Assoc1at10n's
sprmg reprentattve assembly wtll begm here Thursday mght
wtth delegates scheduled to conSider resolutiOn s rangmg from
collectiOn of property taxes to suspenston and expulston of
students m pubhc schools
About 1,400 delegates, representmg teachers from nearly
every distrtct m the state, wtll also elect a full slate of off rcers
durmg the meetmg Htghllghting the eleetwn wt ll be the
presidential contest betw~n E Wade Underwood of Akron and
Carol Gerhard of the Vandalia-Butler school system Underwood, the first OEA president to run for re-election under th e
group's new constitutiOn, wtll end hts ftrst term July I
IT WAS THE SAME OLD STORY - ONLY ENLARGED
Rtchard J Daley mounted the speakers platform to the stra ms of
"Chtcago" and a roarmg ovatiOn Tuesday mght and told about
3,000 supporters how glad he was that th ey had gtven htm an
unprecedented SIXth term and the btggest landslide win tn his 20
years of CIVIC maJesty
The 72-year.old Democratic power-broker and kingmaker
won nearly 78 per cent of the vote, the btggest percentage of his
career, to vanqwsh John J Hoellen, the last mcwnbent
Republican m the "Cincago Ctty Council "It 's hard to be a
Republican m Chtcago," Hoellen said as he watched the
mountmg landslide '

Elbeifelds In Pomeroy

up to Rhodes

CONCEPCION, TEX - SOUTH TEXAS POLITICAL boss
George B Parr, 74, who was called "the Duke of Duval ," was
f~und shot to death Tuesdsy Authonttes satd he commttted
swelde Parr, who faced a pnson sentence for mcome tax
evasion, was supposed to have appeared m Corpus 'ChrtStt
Monday· for a hearmg concerrung hts latest tax evasion convictiOn When he faded to appear, he was ordered arrested
Texas Rangers fanned out across South Texas Tuesday
hunting him Ranger Game Powell, ndmg m a Department ofPublic Sefety helicopter, spotted Parr's car near a wmdrmll 5¥..
mtles from the nearest farmhouse on Parr's Los Orcones Ranch
Rangers found Parr's body slumped over the steermg wheel at
1120am
~

News ... in 'Briefs

DETROIT - THE SPECIAL FUND that guarantees 44 ,000
laid-off Chrusler workers up to 95 per cent of thetr take-home pay
runs dry next week, stgnalling a sharp belt-ttghtenmg for most
lald.off workers and possible fmanctal rum for others
"About one month after the SUB supplemental unemployment beneftts checks stop, I'll be deep m th~ hole," sayd Ray
Rubato, 39, a truck drtver for Chrysler for two years before he
was latd off In Janll8ry. He bought a 1974-model Dodge Monaco
Brougham, a car ma'de by fellow workers, last summer and
doesn't know how he's going to make the monthly $125 payments
"I've got four ktds, house payments and car payments," Rubago
says. "There's no way I can support them on the $106 a week I'll
get from the state."

TRIO

a checking account Whether 1t be

THE MEIGS INN

PH 992-3629

POMEROY'

personal or busmes-. the records a
checkmg account gtves you can help
make tax time or any time easter to

Spring Time

I

know where you stand financially

You '11 find a great selectton of fine .

WALK· UP TELLER WINDOW AND
AUTO TELLER WINDOW OPEN
FRI. EVENINGS 5 To 7 P.M. ·

fu.rnzture, floor covenngs and
appli(znces at_ the lowest posszble

When You Visit, Park FREE

pnces Free delzvery, convenzent

"THE FRIENDLY BANK "

terms, servzce when you need tt.

HOUSEWARES DEPT. '

WASHINGTON - THE UNITED MINE WORKERS Unton
struck the anthraotte coal mmes m northeastern PeMsylvanw
today m a contract diSpute
The old contract exptred at rmdmght and umon offtctals
mvoked thetr "no contract, no work" proviSion m thetr constttubon The ~strike became mevttable when talks between the
umon and the Anthractte Operators Wage Negotwting Com·
mttlee recessed Monday afternoon wtth no settlement. Another
round of talks was scheduled today
d

Baker
Furniture
'

IIIDOL£PORT, OHIO
N•lllr ,...... Deposit Insurance Corpolllion

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I

Miilclleport, Ohio

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DEPOSITS INSURED TO •40,000

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r

-·

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f

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Mam Floor, Annu: and Warehouse
Open Wednesday 9 30 to s p m

ELBERFELD$

THE RAIN-GLU'I'TED MISSISSIPPI and Oh10 nvers
sloshed over !herr banks today and flowed over nearby lowlands,
forcing hundreds of persons from their homes The muddy
floodwaters of the powerful Ohio Rtver swrrled wmdow sill deep
In portions of western Kentucky , drtvtng 200 famtlles from thetr
low-lymg homes
The Mlsslsstppt lumbered southward bringing the threat of
major floodmg to the southern MlsslSstppt Delta. Wtth the Ohto
River 12 feet above flood stage at Paducah , Ky , the big nver's
overflow swamped McCracken County, blocked at least two
major highwayS' and closed many ~·de roads. The Natwnal
Weather Service predicted the Ohio and other swollen Kentucky
rivers would be falllng today.

W~ther
REVIVAL BEGINS
Rev Noel Herman wtll
conduct a re vrva l serv rce
begmmng Wednesday, Apnl 2
at the Ash Street Freewill
Baptist Church. Smgers and
publtc InVIted ServtceS are at
730pm

Servmg )'Ott bas been our busmess
sznce 1952 '

MAIN FLOOR
,

Lows 35 to 40 Cooler Thursday chance of showers m the
mo;nuig. High will be m the
mtd 40s Probabtltty of
preclp~tatton 60 per cent today,
70 per cent tomght, 40 per cent
Thursday.

$1.00 Off A Gayon Of
Any Gray-Seal Product
•

SQ~D SUMMONED

The Pomeroy Emergency
Squad was called to Pleasant
Rtdge at I 48 p m MoMay for
seven year.old Dtanna Whtle
who recetved a fr actured leg m
a fall She was"" taken to
Veterans Memonal Hospttal
where she was admtlted

W1th Th1s Coupon

TWO RUNS MADE
MASON, W Va - Mason's
Emergency Squad made two
runs Tuesday, at 2·25 p m for
Amelia Roach of Hartford who
was transported to Pleasant
Valley Hospital, and Gladys
Blessing was removed from
West Colwnbta to Pleasant
Valley where she "as admttled

I'

\

Try Gray-Seal

SAYRE HARDWARE
NEW HAVEN. W. VA.
Coupon Expires 6/ !'0175

Vreln.un e~e

army

r

~

ollr c L r s

at

the presrdcnlla l p,!l,u:c at 5 30
p rn f01 a CIIS IS meet lnj~

Government sourr.:es s-cud
Premter Tt an I hten Khtem
had subml lteP hts restgna tton
but that tl had not yet bee n
ace ep ted Khtcm appet~led to
the South Vtetnamese people m
an emoltona l addre ss not to
grve up desprtc the OV()I whelm-

EXTENDED WEATHER
Friday through Sunday,
fair and cold Friday.
Moderallng temperatures
and a chance oi showers
Saturday and Sunday. Htghs
Friday will be In the upper
30s north to mid lOs south,
warming to the 50 s on
Sunday. Lows early Friday
In the low and mid 20s and in
tbe 30s Sunday.

Now You Know
The Ltberly Bell wetghs 2,080
pounds

rug Cornmurust &lt;Jdvance 'to·
wa1 ds the capt tal
'I he South Vt etnamese
Senate unanrmously passed ,,
resolutton cal hng for a change
-of leadership m the government- but not specJft cally
ca ll tng for Thteu to restgn It
blamed the staggenng mthta ry
defea ts on fatlure of the Untied
Stat es to honor tls com·

m1tments and on the mtslakes
of the Thuru goverrunent
The f tr s~ convoys of refugees
and soldiers fleemg the central
coast reached the outskirts of
Sa tgon late today, landtn)l at
the port of Vung Tau 40 mtles
so utheast of , Sa tgon a nd
bypassmg the ft ghtmg at Xuan
Loc 40 mtles to lhe north They
were met !fl barncades and

•

tough mtlltar) pohc~men
The MPs dtsarmed soldters
among the refugees . ang
collected thelll m groups Only
ctvt lmns who could prove they
lmd addresses m Satgon were
allo .. ed to pass the barncades
on a crossroads 8 mrles no r
theast of the capt tal
Most could not meet the test
and were left sttltng forlornly

at y

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trucks, buses and cars
parked alongstde the htghway
as a heavy ram fell
Several armored personnel
earners and about 200 MPs
were mannmg the blockade at
the mtersectton of the Bten Hoa
Htghway and the Sa tgon Belt
Road near Tu Due
MPs he ld UP! photographer
Wtllte Vteoy at gunpomt and
m

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enttne

VOL XXVI

NO 247

POMEROY MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

~_::_--------------'-----,,,-----:.....::..:.:..::..__

Colburn
ch 0 ice
11m Colbrn n, sentOI at Metgs
Htgh School, wtll be m Cm
cumatr thrs weekend wh~ re he
\11 11 attend the annual World
Affa trs Institute under the
sponsorshtp of the MtddleportPomeroy Rotary Clu b
Ph1lr p ED\\ en a se mor ctl
E.tslern Ht gh School, also was
named a delegate to the con:
fe~e nce but
not be at
1enclmg beca use he hc:IS not
been released from the care of
hts doctor following a recent
acctdent Anothe r delegate ts
ex pected to be n.m1ed ,at
Eastern
Colburn, the son of M1 and
Mrs Dale Colburn, Route 2
PoiJleroy , IS enrolled m the
academtc course at Metgs Htgh
School He ts a member of the
Spantsh Club and en Joys
playmg basketball, ftshmg and
hun lmg He attends Sac red
Hearl Ch ur ch •
The World Affatrs Inslttute
was begun tn Ctnc tnnalt tn 1947
all!! has p1 ovtded opporlunt ly

"'II

Margaret Allen, 72 Rl 4, mcrde nt
Pomeroy, rs.m farr co nd1hun at
Pomeroy poltce were alerted
Veteran s Memon al Hosp1lal, a and a htgh speed search \\as
vJc lJm o! a htls ktp acc tde nl made fm the car that Itt the
that occurred Tuesda) at 4 18 descnplton gtven by the wtlp m on SR 143 on HOI ner Hill ness At 4 30 p m the car was
The Me tgs Coun ty Shertff s located m front of Fulton
Dep t smd Mrs Allen had Thompson Equtpment busmess
ta ken some trash to a nearby m Pomero}
dump area an d \\ as returnrng
In the meanhme the dnver
to her home, walktn g fac mg of the car, Joe Roach, 29,
traffi c, when a car carne Spr mg Ave,
Pomeroy,
aroun d the sharp curve at the reported to Pomeroy poltce
top of the htll struck her , and that he was the dnver of a car
d•d not stop
that struck Mrs Allen
Mrs Allen \las taken to the
Roach was arreste d on
TIM COLBU RN
hospttal by the Pome roy E-R charges of httsktp reckless
squad A \\tlness at a carry.oul operatron and no operator's
lot 18,000 h1 gh schoo l stude nt store nearby \\tlnessed the li ce nse He was released under
I e ath~ I s of OhiO, Ind iana,
Kentucky and West Vtrgmta to
be better prepared lot then
responsibtlltJes as cttl ze ns by
patltct patmg m crealtve study
of COlUl tn es, regrons and In·
Several staff members were
Pr1mary changes are that
ternat10nal tssues vtlal to the reemployed Tuesday mght by the qualtfymg age for bus
mlerests and concerns of the the Metgs Co unty Board of drt vers ts no" 18 rather than 21
Um led Stales
Educalton
an d the count)' board now
Ro!ary clubs tbroughout the
Htred fo r another year were names one or more doctors
four-slate area sen d student Charlene Gtlmore and Candace who wtll conduct the physteal
delegates to the m•h tute at Rogers , speec h theraptsls ex amt na ttons for pote nttal
wht ch they hear and questton Mary Bacon, work st udy drtvers Under the new stan
lea dm g experts from the ftelds coordtn ator lor Met gs and dards,
an
andtvr dual
of governm ent and diplomacy, Galha Coun ltes, and Sharon dtsqualtfted for phystcal or an;
scholarsh ip , busin ess and Btrch R N, as sc hool nurse other reason can appeal the
JOurnal tsm and dtscuss thetr Mrs Nellte Vale, an elemen dtsqualtft cat ton and ca n
own rdeas
ta ry sup en rsor, was g1ven a req ues t a heanng
The top tc for the 1975 m new four ;ear contract
A report of an audtl by the
The board adopted the new s la te audt tor s office was
shtute ts 'Thts Era of Inte rd ependen ce ' wt lh sub- stan dards m relalton to bus re\tewed and accepted The
topr cs to 1nclude food, ' drtvers as develqped by the board readopted textbooks tn
ag rt cult ure an d pop ul atton OhiO Department of Educal1on health , spellmk, mustc, sc1ence
pr essur es , dile mmas of
,
and wrthng for grades seven,
eco nomic de velopment and
etghl and mne Attending· the
energy sour ces. commod rhes
meetmg were board members
and resources
Harold Roush , George Perry,
Judge and Mrs Robert Beck
Bob Burdette , and Gordon
wtll accompan y the loca l
Col ltns, and Cou nt y Supt
delegates to the weekend mSYRACUSE - Syracuse Robert Bowen
sll tut e
resrde nts ha vrn g queshons
regardtng trnplementatlon of a
prop osed ordmance quahfymg
the vt llage for nattona l flood
protec tr on rn surance should be
present at a meetmg Thursday at 7 30 p m of town
co un ctl, Mayor Herman
The new 1975 verston of the
London sa td today
Mergs Htgh School Band wtll be
The vtllage has been presented \\hen the band apdestgnated as a town wtth flood pears tn three public concerts
Pomeroy 's Drew Webster prone areas and the town Satur&lt;!ay
Pos l 39, Amencan l.egton , wtll government must adopt zomng
The pop muSic concerts,
host the sprtn g conference of re gulatiOns spec tfte d by dtrecte d by Fre d Ruth ,
the Etghth Dtslrtcl Sunday at federal leg tslat10n before July ass tstaGl dtrec tor of the
1, 1975 to qualify property -dtstnct, wtll be staged to make
the post home
-;'I he Etghth Dtstnct ts made owners for flood protectiOn the public a \I are of a four hour
up of 30 Leg ton posts consts!tng wsurance or resrdents withrn telethon over Chan nel 5
of over 6,000 members plus the lhrea lened secttons cannot Saturday begmmng at 12 noon
auxtltary members At leas! qualtfy for loans from federally to seek pledges of contnbutwns
150 memb~rs are expected to regulated mstttutwns to tm- fo r new unf1forms
be at Sunday 's sess ton prove prop erties Also tf
The ftrst of the three conIConlt nued on page 201
Spea ker wtll be Past Departcerts wtll be at 9 a m Saturday
ment Commander Dave
Cropper, Portsmouth
The auxthary of the host untt
will serve the droner at noon
Amertcan fla gs wtll be
dt splayed throughout the
Pomet oy bustness sec tton for
the
day
through
the
cooperatiOn of the Pomeroy Mtddleport Lions Club Mayor
at Frrst NatiOnal Ctty Bank of
Dale E Smtih wtll gtve a short By RICHARD HUGHES
UP! Business Writer
New York, srud m a separate
welcome
Four top economists predict- economtc analysts that the
ed Tuesday the nation would severe economtc slwnp m the
TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
expe nence a strong economtc ftrst three months of thts year
The ' Pomeroy E-R squad recovery m the second balf of "enhances the llkelthood" of a
answered a call to 320 Condor 1975 'One srud 1976 would brmg strong recovery m the next stx
St at 9 17 p m Tuesday for one of the "btggest bot!ms" m months
Edw,jird Marttn who was 30 years.
But, satd Olsen, -" the
havmg dtfftcully brea lhm g He
Edward Bernstem, a con- strength of retatl sales, while
"!as ta ken to Veterans sultant to the TJ S Treasury, better than the fourth qll8rtet
Memortal Hospi tal where he told Dun 's Revtew, a busmess Of 1974, IS not greal enough now
\H t'&gt; 1rlrml lf'd
newsletter, that recent stgns of to suggest that thts ts the
recovery from the recesston turmng pomt "
TO mserlss SALE
are only the begmnmg
Another'Cihbank economtst,
The Mtddleport Chamber of
"Inflation wtll be down to 4 Alan Murray, . said "the
Commerce wtll meet for a per cent and by the mtddle of process of mventory correction '
luncheon at 12' 30 p m Thurs- the btcentennttal year we. wtll has proceeded far enough to be
day at the M.trtm Restaurant be m one of the btggest booms conststent wtth the forecast of
Am ong the bustness tlems to be of the postwar era ," Bernstem an upturn tn the second half of
dtscussed wtll be a stdewalk satd
1975 "
sate betng planned Saturday,
!.tel ·Olsen, semor economtst , Gabnel Hauge, chatrman of
i\Jllll 12
Manufacturers Hanover Ttusl

Staff rehired

in Syracuse

selected
as leader
Douglas Wtlltam [Jttle , a
]uniDr m Frna nce, has been

selec ted as one of 56 outstandmg scholars and leaders tn lh.,
College of Admtmstra ttve
Scte nce at 1he Oluo State
Umverstly
lJttle was se lected as a Pace
Setter , an
or gamza tw n
spo nsored
by
busmess
execultves and pubhc admmlstrators whtch ts destgned
to honor the top sc holars an d
leaders m the college The
names of the 56 students were
announced at the Aprtl 9 Pace
Se llers Banquet held at the
Fawcett Center for Tomorrow
Pace Selle rs recetve th e
orgamzalt~n· s cerltlocate and a
ptn
The son of Mr and Mt s Btll
I.tttle, Rt I, MtddlepOJ l, Ltltle
graduated f1om Metgs Htgh
Sehoul tn 1972 A wmner of the
UV C Summa Award tn th e
sprtng of 1974, he plans etl~r
to ente r liiw sc hool or extend
hts studtes tn busme ss admrmsh at ron after r ece1vmg hrs
degt ee ..at thl! cntl of the \\111 tcr
qu&lt;:~.rle r m 1!l7fl

$250 bond
The shenff's Dept also tn·
veshgated a srngle car ac·
ctdent al 4 30 p m on SR 681,
one mtle east of the JUOclton of
7 and 661
Harry J un10r Smtlh 42, Rt 1,
Reedsville, was t1avehn g :west
on 681 when he reported a truck
ct owded htm off the htgh"ay
caus1ng h1m to leave the htghwa) and stnke a ma tl box He
left the scene, but returned
laler He "as ctled to court on
char ges of no operat or 's
ltre nse The rnatl box belonged
lo Mrs Dorothy Dudderer
There \l as approximate\;~, $100
m propet ty dam.age

.

DIANA WAYNE
M1ss D1ana Wa)ne of
SIGNUP SET
' Sebrmg will he the speaker
RUTbAND - Boys. tn·
at the annual Meigs Count)
tere sted m playmg baseball
grange banquet to· be held
are advi sed that slgnup day
Frtday at 115 p.m at the
IS Saturday, Aprtl 5 at the old
Sahsbury E le mentary
Rutland High School gym
School Mtss Sebring won the
from 11 a m to 12 noon The
1973 contest for the Ohto
fee fo r stgnup is $4 All tn·
State Grange prmcess and
terested boys are " elcome.
re prese nt ed Oht o at the
Nahonal Grange session m
Sacramento Cahf last
November
THREE RUNS MADE
The Mtddlepor l E-R .&amp;juad
answered three calls Tuesday
at 11 42 a m to Pearl St for
Kell) Gt lmore who wa s taken
to the Holzer Medtcal Center ,
at 5 12 p m to the Route 7
bypass for Mary Jane MeCarty , who was taken to
Ve terans Memonal Hospttal,
and at 9 28 p m to Batley Run
Road for Mary Archer, who
was havmg dtfftculty bt eath
mg, and was also taken to
Veterans Memortal Hospt tal

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Legion will

'75 Marauder hand

host spring

three shows Saturday

conference

Doug Little

__:__ _ _ _PRICE
_ _ _15'
__•

Elderly woman hit .

Meeting-set

DOUGLAS LITTLE

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WEDNESDAY APRIL 2. 1975
_ _ _ ___:__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ __ __ __

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m front of the Rutland gym
nastum, the second at 10 am
near the fo rm er R H
Rawltngs and Son Garage m
Mlddlepotl , and the !mal one at
II a m on lhe upper parking lot
m Pomeroy near the barbecue
ptt
.
T)' ts week color ftlm of band
memb ~ rs m vanous actrvtttes
ts bemg shot by Channel 5 for
showmg durmg the telethon
Phone numbers to be called to
make pledges wtll be hsted
durmg the four hour prograr_n

Rutland man is
hurt in wreck
Lee R Cadle 24, of Rutla nd,
was hospttaltzed at the Holzer
Medtcal Center for tiiJurtes
suffered tn a stngle car acctdenlat 10 35 p m Tuesday on
Rl 143, three mt les west of Rt
7 tn Metgs County
The Galha-Metgs Post State
Htghway Patrol reported Cadle
was dn vmg north on Rt l43
when he attempted to pass
another vehtcle Cadle lost
con trol of hts car whtch went
off the Jell Stde of the htghwa\
sinkin g an embankment
Cadle wtll be charged wtth
DWI There was moderate
damage to ht s car
BONDS FORFEITED
SYRACUSE - Two defendants forfetted bon ds tn
Syr ac use Mayor Her man
London's court Monday fli ght
They were Roger B Htll ,
Racme,,, 10, slop stgn vtolalton,
and Gary P Noms, Racme,
$25, for speedmg The defend
ants were ctled by Pollee Chtef
Mtllon Van an

Economists predict good times
, just around the corner in '75 "'
of New York and a economtc
advtser tn the Etsenuower
admimstratlon, told a stockholders meetmg that there are
"fltckers of ltght around the
hortzon ''
He srud the rate of mflation
has declmed, mventones are
close to a pomt where
production must resume and
mter~~t rates contmu~ to fall
Hauge predtcted the economy ·
would begin to move upward m
the thtrd quarter.
Among ~!her, economiC developments •
- New orders for manu!aclured good~ mcreased m
February lot the fil'l't tune m
stx months, the Commerce
Department satd Orders were
up 1 3 per cent after decllrung 2

per cent tn January and 9 3 per
cent m December. Inventortes
were Vll'tually unchanged after
nsmg raptdly In prtor months
-Construclton s~ndmg at
an annual adjusted rate of
$12lll bjJhon in February was
at the lowest levelm 27 montha,
Commerce reported When
higher pnces are constdered,
the volume was the lowest m 13
years: The February decline
was expected because of the
low nwnber of hollSIDg starts
last year
,
- Uruted Auto Workers Vtce
Prestdent Douglas Fraser satd
Tuesday' supplemental unem·
ployment beneftt funds for
44,000 tdled Chrysler workers
wtll be exhausted after next
week's checks

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pulled !tim from hts cameras
at tne roadblock An MP maJor
ordered JOUrnalists to leave the
scene
Tho 41senatprs passed a SIX·
pomt resolutton "htch satd,
"We urgently call for a change
of policy to solve the war and a
new leadershtp whtch wtll base
It' pohc) on freedom and
(Con lmued on page ZO)

Devoted To The Interests of The Meigs-Mason A~ea

COLUMBUS - OHIO'S WELFARE ROLLS continued to
Increase tn March wtth 12,521 reetptents added last month tn the
Aid to Dependent Chtldren Program for a monthly total of
564,686, state Welfare Director Denver L Whtte satd Tuesday
ADC rectplents m February totaled 552,165 persons, an tn·
crease of 13,723 over January, Whtte satd Whtle satd ADC rolls
passed the 500,000 mark m August of 1974 and have been climbmg
steadtly smce that time.

Frank Sisty

. . of peace of mmd when you have

SAIGON (UPI ) - Heavy
fightmg broke out today m the
Xuan Loc regwn 36 mtles
northwest of Satgon where
Commumst forces cut Htghway I, the retreat rou te of
government for ces trytng to
halt the Communtst onslaught
' down the coast
Satgon seeth ed tn a CrtSIS of
leadershtp
Government defenses were
reported crumbltn g around
Cam Ranh Bay , 188 tmles
northeast of Smgon, a nd mill·
tary sources satd less tha n
5,000 government troops stood
betwee n Satgon a nd the
Commumst offenstve that has
swept up 16 provmces m a
matter of weeks Some were
alread; commttied at Xua n
Loc
PreSident Nguyen Van Thieu
held a sen es of ut gent mtlttary
co nferences am td reports
army generals had gtven him
three days to restgn Gen
Fredenck C Weyand, the U S
Army chtef of staff, JOtned
Thteu and htgh rankin g SOuth

•

fj¥~;~ .. {;t"Jjri~js: Rotary

SEOems at Pomeroy in new routine

Exemption bill

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EXTENDED OUTLOOK
T hursday through
Saturday, chance of rain
south and snow or rain north
.,t:Arly Thursday, becoming
fair and cool Frtday and
tem·
Saturday.
High
peratures Thursday ' will be
m the 30s north to the low 40s
south, moderating to mid 40s
or mid 50s by Saturday.
Lo" s will be 20 to 30 Thursday and In the 30s j)y Saturday.

~ontinued

4SSURrD

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Edi~orial

comment,

I

Soil Conservation Service
obse:r:v~g

opinion, features

CO!':UMBUS - Wond ,md
w~Itcr eroswn raeed out of
contr ol E1 uswn and sediment
darrMge ran mto the mtlhons of
dnllars Land ana Y.ater our
great Amencan heritage was
bemg destroyed The year was
1935 and the problem was
recogmzed
as a nati onal
The parents of a child now 10 years of age t'a n expect to spend more than $30,000 for their offspnng s fo ur yea r educalwn at a state umvers1ty and more than $53,000 at a pnvate umvers1ty - menace
On Apn l 27 of that year the
assunung a consenative ' 7 per rent mflatmn rate
U
S Sml ConservatiOn Service
To co\er the latter cost a famtly would ha\e to save more than $4 500 a )ear for the next eight
I
SCS)
was orgamzed for the
years based on a Sper cent after-tax return on their savmgs
the
developmen
t
and
Without question mflalion has become the maJor factor m planmng for educatiOnal expenses,
prosecution
of
a
long
tJm
e
says Ed\\ mE Gate"ood Jr \1Ce president of the Oakland F'manc1al Group Inc , personal fmancwl
program of sml and wate1
couuselors m Charlottes\1lle, Va and Southfield, Mtch, which made the study
The company has assembled a table proJectmg the probable future costs mcluding room board conservatiOn This month will
tmlwn and miscellaneous expenses of a four year college educatiOn based on present costs at s;ate mark the federal agency s 40th
ann!\ ersary,
univerSJtJes ($4 000 a year) and at pnvate mstJtutwns ($6 000 a year )
-· ~
Resource conservatwn or
If the figures are shocking for a 10-year-&lt;Jld, consider what they "Ill be for today's toddler Agam
the
lack of 1t now reaches out to
based on an annua\7 per cent tnflat10n ra1e, the four year cost of an educatiO'n at a state uruverslly 18
)ears from no\\ \nll be $56 160 requrmg an annual savmgs, startmg nght now, of $1,860 If he or she toucll almost evervone tn OhiO
and across the nation
says
goes to a pnvate college the cost" 1ll be $98 280 and w1ll reqmre an annual sa'"ngs of $3 250
Robert
E
Quolham
Cl'lw
State
EducatiOnal costs may vary as w111 the return expected from mvestment dollars But the pomt ts
clear that the total outlay IS likely to be staggermg What may not be so apparent Is that the rate of Conservatwmst for the SCS
The need for SOil and water
the nsmg cost of educatiOn may exceed the current after-tax return on sa\1ngs
a
nd relate~ resource con
In. other words, even the prudent parent who IS plannmg for hts children's educatiOn may fmd
Utal he IS losmg ground to mflatwn and rna) have to borrow, or dip mto capt tal to meet these costs servat10n work contmues to
Yet says Gatewood fewer than hail hts hrm s clients wtth children under 18 ha\0 de\ eloped gro" to keep pace" 1th modern
land use req mrernents saul
cun crete plans f01 fmancmg college co§ts
Qui lham

the higher match of education costs

'

the automated trough
Hoi) cow1 Researchers wtth the Agrtculture Department's Agncultural Research Serv~ce and
the Dhnms Agncultural Experunent Statlon at Urbana have des1gned an electro rue feed-&lt;hspensmg
system which th~y sa) wtllliberate Bosste from the hassle of strugghng for her share of gram at the
commumtv trough as well as save trouble for Farmer Brown
Each co w wears an electromc devtce called a transponder that ftts on a neck collar The transponder serves as a kmdof credtt card and activates a feed dispenser "hen the cow st1cks her head
mto a feed trough
The transponders are electromcally tuned, or coded to 1dentify each cow according to her m1lk
production When the cow move~ her neck mto a loop formed mterrogator antenna to reach the feed,
high frequency radiO energ) flows to the transponder The transponder s coded memor~ de\1ce
begms to charge elect ronicall) and dnves a signal generator wh1ch m turn causes feed to dispense
slowly as the cow eats
When the memory device 1s full) charged, the dispenser stops and the cow gets no more feed
Wtth the passmg of tune , the electromc charge leaks off and the cow may eat agam Her ratiOn IS
computed on a 12-hour bas1s and she may consume It m many or few mstallments
The agncultural engmeers have found that, wtth reasonably accurate calibratiOn of the feed
dispenser and transponder \hey Can Jun1\ errorS In feedmg rates to Wlt~m \0 per cent of prescnbed
allocalions - better than that exercised b) conventiOnal feedmg methods Performance tna ls
showed no s1grufica nt difference m milk production whether the cows were hand fed Jn the mtlkmg
parlor or w1th the electromc feeder control

RAY CROMLEY

Military only as
strong as economy
•

Bv Ray Cromie)
corre ct or fal se ts anyone s
WASHINGTON- iNEA )- guess, But one lhmg IS for
l\ IS not the SIZe of the Sov1et certam Moscow s maJor
defense estabhshment today recen t attempt at brlngmg a
that \.\ Ort 1es admtmstratwn ne ighbor mto lme thro ugh
foreign strategists
m1htar) threat fa iled m Chma
Rather It IS that Sovtel The mammoth So\ Jet border
defense sp~ ndm g as measured bmldup did not ca use Pekmg to
m real equ,valent dollars IS give 1n rather 1t pushed Mao s
somew here between 25 and 50 Commumst government closer
per cent grea ter than ours to the Um led States Would the
This rough figure Is as close as result have been different If we
American analvsts can come, had been weaker'
even "1th the atd of
It should be noted that USSR
sophlsiJca ted computers
m1htary ligures are not as
More Im portantly
the devas tatmg as they sound
combi ned procurement of offhand - especially In
milita ry har dwa re and research and development It
research and development ts ts es!J mated that Sov iet
twice tha t of the Umted States sctent1sts and engmee rs
1he Sov iet military and overall are, a bout 40 pet as
space reseal ch development effechve m their work as lheJr
ha s more than lnpled In the Amencan coun terparts This IS
past decade and Is sltll not to downgrade the Russtan
gro" mg At a lime when the techmcal men It IS rather that
Umted States fmds It dtfficult the Sovtet system makes such
to car ry on one maJOr misstle poor use of Its talent In
resear ch and dev el opment theoretical mathematics and
effor t, the Sov iet Umon IS several other advanced
handling three to four
dlsclplmes Sov1et speciahsls
II IS now esli mated by are " orld famous
techm ca l experts at the
Depar tment of Commerce that
bet\\ een 70 and 90 per cent of
all qualifi ed Russian research
SCientists a11d engmeers are
programmed mlo the USSR s
defense and space "ork
What especially womes
Amencan planners 1s that the
fre ne1Ic Sovie t bmldup began
not long after a sems of maJOr
Sov iet diplomaltc-pohl!cal
defeats - mcludmg the loss of
China from the Russian bloc
the ba ckdown to the Umted
Sta tes In Cuba and the lallmg
apart of Moscow s Southeast
Asia stra tegy
Th~ concern here Is that the
men m lhe Kremlin were
convmced , along with Mao Tse
tung tha t dtplomal1c power
comes out of the barrel of a
gun and that so long as they
were number two mihtanly
they could not have their way
In the world There 's a strong
belief here that N1k1ta Khrush
chev was thrown out because
he wanted to go at a less raptd
pace on the m1htary and pour
Soviet resources mto strange!)
economic growth.
Th1s analysis has jed some
Influential Amencan
strategists to believe the Sovtet
arms bwldup IS not pnmanly
for defense but rather tntended as a psychological club
to wm the Russ1ans pohlical
diplomatic conquests, victories
made possible by wavmg their
arms
Whether this reason tng IS

,

I'

2- The Datly Sentmel, Mtddleport-Pomerov 0 Wednesday,
. Apnl2 1975.

What s hkely to hold the
USSR back desp1te tts hefty
spendmg wh1ch no one tn his
right mmd can Ignore ts the
mefliciency~f the general
economy on which military
strength depends
It Is now eslunated that
overall Soviet produclivity IS 36
per cent of that m the Umted
Slates At the bottom 1s Soviet
agncullure, with an efficiency
roughly lOper cent of ours The
production of machmery and
related eqmpment runs at 67
per cen l But other branches of
mdustry, encompassmg such
Items as steel production and
cons tructiOn, 3'¥erage a
miserable 32 per cent of
Amencan producllVlly levels

Nearly 15 000 spec ies of m
sect life 8o" per cent of the
world s total have been found
and classified m the Amazon
River Bastn

)

Historic
attractions
reopened
COLUMBUS - The OhiO
Histoncal Society this week
reopened all but two of 1ls
h1stor1c attractiOns fur the
upcommg spn ng and summer
travel season
The remammg two s1tes,
Ind ia n Mill near Upper
Sandusky and QuakeII Meetmg
House at Mt Pleasant, will be
opened to the pubhc May lsl
Only seven of the Society s
siles remam open throughout
Ihe ye ar The rem lu mng
properties closecf each
November 1st for the winter
monlhs bee a use of the m
clemen t weather
The OhiO HistoriCal Society
a pnvate non-profi t cor
poratton
operates
56
memona ls and museums,
more than an1 othe1 stiile
orgamzatwn 1n the nahan The
Society s attraclions that are
now open mclude three com
plete villages 11 res tored
homes and estates of famous
Ohtoans 17 modern museums
12 preh1stonc Indian sites, a
presJdenlial home and IIbi ary
a steamboat, a c~ nal boat five
natural h1stor) areas and more
. than a dozen other histone
s1tes
The growmg mterest m the
B1centenmal a tendency
toward c l ose to h ome
vacations and extensive
Soc ie ty promotwn are ex
peeled to help set new atlendance records durmg the
commg season VtsJtatwn at
Soc1ety sites IS already more
than 490 000 persons ahead of
this same ltme last spnng, as
almost 2 mllhon vls1tors have
been recorded smce July, the
begmmng of the fiscal year
A free 24 page full~olor
booklet descnbmg all of 56 of
the Society s atlraclions IS
available by writing 'Gel
Away Into Ohio's Yesterday
Today, ' The Pubhc In
formatiOn Office, The Ohw
Htstoncal Center Columbus
OhiO 43211

3- TheD ai!V Sentinel, Middleport Pome1~y (j, -Wednesday
'
Aprt\2 1~75

Berry's World

40th anniversary

1 he SCS began "ork tn Oh io
m 1942 with the formatiOn of
the states first sOil and water
conse rvatiOn district 1n
Highland Coon ty Working onsile with all la nd users
cooperatmg with their 88 local
d1stncts the federal agency
now ptov1des techni,£al help
each vea r to over 82.000 Ohw
Individuals
gro ups
01gamzatwns land developers
and umt s of government
Sml and water conservation
dislrtc t cooperators noy,
control the use of over 10
mJlhon- ac'es of OhiO land and
their nmnbers are growmg
each year; says Floyd Heft
Chief of the Oh1o Departmen t
of Natural Resources DivisiOn
of SOil and Water D1slmls
The techmca l help dislncls
provide at local levels through
the SCS and other cooperatmg
agencies has and will contmue
to play an mvaluable role m
OhiO s future Heft sa1d

rhe SCS, while slill prov1dmg
techmcal help through per
sona l contact and on st te
ass1stance IS coord tnatlhg
broad mulli-coun ty programs
such as resource conservatiOn
and development and water
s hed
proJects
'T hese
programs, through. local m
volv~ment
says Qmlltam
are prov idmg m[my beneftls
to local cornmumhes counttes
and larger planmn g areas
throughout the stale
Born out oJ the old SOil
Erosion Service 40 years ago
the SCS began work by puttmg
m demonstratiOnal proJect. to
show land users the value of
conservation l..ast year, the
SCS responded to requests for
asstslance from uver one
million Individuals and groups
They also provided techmcal
guidance In makmg land use
decisions to near!) 14 000 um ls
of government ac ross the
couhtry

Libraries loan
about anything
By PATRICIA Me CORM&gt;\CK
UPI Education Editor
Once hbranes Jlfst lent
books, but tunes and libranes
have changed and now one
loans out tools mcludmg post
bole diggers, while another
loans out white !DICe and has a
permanent boarder-a boat
constnctor
Many libranes stage con
certs and one has a resident
AfroAmencan dance com
pany
Dancmg, debatmg, puppet
shows , fre e movies, have
become common on tiN !Jbrary
scene
On hand for lending at the
libraries of the land are
cameras, toys, sllde projec
tors, posters cassettes
records, engravers and mov1e
projectors to go with the reels
of film for loan purposes
With the serviCes has come a
new mood- Silence' s1gns
aren't much m evtdence and
\1Sitors needn t t1ptoe around
Perhaps the best news on the
hbrary front for persons with
overdue books ts that many
hbranes have amnesty days
once a year-no questions
asked, no fmes to be pa1d when
overdue books are returned
Robert Wedgeworth, execu
t1ve d1rector of the American
Ubrary Assoc1allon S31d m an
mterv1ew that some hbrams
stage amnesty days durmg
Nat10nal Ubrary Week, this
year startmg April 13 Most
!Jbrar1es markmg the week wtll
be g1vmg out bookmarks
contammg colorful cartoons
and 100 quesl!ons that can only
be answered by gomg to the
library
Among the more mterestmg
programs and serv1ces,
Wedgeworth
c1ted
the
followmg
- The Er1e, Pa : library has
an anunal center where Katy
Zukowski, anunal techmc1an,
takes care of all the hvmg
thmgs, mcludtng the boa
constrictor There ts a f1sh, a
turtle and herm1t crab Gumea
p1gs and white mice may be
borrowed for 10 days at a tune,
but only if tbe borrower has a
pre-school ch1ld's library card

~

•

©

19 75 by

~E.A ~~
nc

I m ass1gnmg a new secretary to you The one
you have now cla1ms that you have been chasmg h1m around the desk'

TIME OUT FOR LEAPFROG I Or so It seemed through the photographer s lens du1 mg a
recent NBA game at Madison Square Garden Here Walt Frazier of the New York Kmcks tnes
to dnbblearound Seattle's pefS!stent guard, Shck Watts The Somes "on the game 102 101

Yankees acquire
Herrmann

TOM TIEDE

By United Press lnternahonnl
The New York Yankees
gamM a left-handed hittmg
resen e catcher Tuesday but
rna) have lost a switch-htttmg
first baseman
The wheehng-and-dealmg
Yankees apparently not con
lent
With
off season
acquiSiltons Catfish Hunter
and Bobby Bonds, moved to
back up first strmg catcher
Thurman Munson by acqmrmg
lefty h1ltmg backstop Ed
Herrmann, 28, from the
Clucago White Sox Tuesday for
four mmor leaguers
For Herrmann who caught
100 or more games for Chicago
m each of the last four seasons
and last year hit 259 with 10
homers and 39 RBis, the
Yankees gave up southpaw
Fred Anyeski, outftelder f1rst
baseman John Marron , out
fielder Ken Bennett and catcher Terry Qmnn plus cash
However fast on the heels of
the Herrmann acq uiSitiOn ,
came the news that switch
hittmg Roy Wh1te, last years
leflfielder and frequent designated hitler would be stdelmed
for at least a week with a ch ip
fracture m h1s left thumb
White who had been makmg
a fairly succ~ssful transitiOn to
f1rst base this spnng, was

Gun control;
deja vu

By Tom Tiede
- Tools are loaned by llbrar
WASHINGTON
(NEA)
- There IS no argument like the
1es m Grosse Pomte, M1ch,
Canal Fulton OhiO, and gun control argument Regarding the accumulatton of bogus
Cohoes, N Y At Grosse Pomte rationale, warped datum, and one-dunenSJon philosophies the
tools me] ude power saws, debate has no peer One stde says the regulahon of pr1vate
weapons would cure every social sore from crune to tenrus
hammers, saws, screwdrivers
elbow,
the other belteves the deed to be on a moral level w1th the
other power tools One must
rapmg
of nuns Everyone talks much but says less, the result
have an adult card Power
tools go only to those 18 or over belhg a penlously entr~nched stalemate concerntng one of the
nabon's most dtsgustmg conventions !Jrearms \1olence
and may be kept out 48 hours
Two dozen gun btlls have thus far been presented to the 94th
Non power, one week
Congress
(m the 93rd 60), some would ban prtvate arms
- MontclaJr, N J , public h
altogether,
others would repeal control laws already m force, but
brary formed a restdent AfroAmencan dance company none gets to the heart of It No doubt gun regulation 1s necessary
which performs at the !tbrary m a nation that averages at least two weapons per home, but
as well as at cultural mstltu- banrung them or reg~stermg them w1thout addressmg the
reasons for their bemg 1s !Ike trymg to sneak the dawn past the
tlons around the state
- Ciucago public library has rooster , chances for success are low
The plam problem IS guns are as much a part of Amenca as
four no(ln time concerts
the garbage m Newark They are the nation's way of life, as well
monthly presented by mem
as
death, and tryu!g to alter 200 years of thts hentage wtth laws
bers of the strmg sectton of the
mstead
of !ogle ts nsky
Chicago Symphony
Th1s
IS not to say the hoary argument of ConstitutiOnal nghts
-Salt Lake City Pubhc
1s
necessarlly
correct, merely that mllhons believe 1\ to be, some
Ubrary features performances
congressmen are begmmng to worry that even a passage of
by a local mune troupe
slight
gun regulation would lead to unfortunate anrl w•rl••n•••rl
~acksonv11le, Fla, library
law
breaking
by millions of Amencan gun owners who feel "the
stages puppet shows
-Dayton, OhiO s West Car fight to bear arms" IS gospel and would refuse en masse to
rollton Branch has a travelmg • comply wtth any state mterference
The p1ous may gag at thiS And m truth even If the Conmarionette theater which tours
stitutiOn
d1d, m the 1700s guarantee every man a howitzer, the
Dayton libranes and some
schools Staff members make right today may have to g1ve way, as the FBI's Clilrence Kelley
the1r own manonettes, cos- says, for the good of the present maJority What was thought '"tal
tumes and stage settmgs and m a nation of 2 million may pe poisonous to a population 100 tunes
produce ort~nal as well as that Surely Tom Jefferson dtd not beheve that the preservatiOn
of hberty by md1vlduali)lstols would be necessary m a country
commercial p)ays
Special loan semces m possession 8,000 strategtc nuclear weapons
Still, the r1ght to arms ts 200 years old And m fact It IS m
elude toys m Mmneapohs
de!tble
legacy, promoted until recently as palnobc Pr1vate
libraries, mounted posters at
plmkers
defeated the British, preserved the orderly infancy of
the Rhode Island Department
the
nat10n,
belpeq keep 1t from diviSIOn wo,11 the west, N!tluced
of State Library , reproduc
lions of sculpture and pamtmgs barbarism, strengthened defense capabilihes, and turned wilds
at the Newton, Mass , public mto agriculture Whe' could be more Amencan, then than
Remmgton Savage or Colt' Even today there ts an argument to
library
be
made, m a nalton of from 9to 20 millton crunes annually that
At Liberty State College m
one
should still teach a ch1ld 1o shoot rabbits agamst the day he
West Uberty, W Va, there Is
may
have to aun at wild anunals assaultmg his wife
an "embarrassing question
G1ven this, though good sense argues for change There ts a
book" m wh1ch the shy can
pistol
sold every 10 to 12 seconds m the nation. Homicides by
write out questiOns of a senguns
have
r1sen 48 per cent m the last decade , vs 10 per cent by
sttlve nature for the hbranan
other
means
Even 1f control would not dent criminal possession
to answer
(and I thmk 1\ would not) , 1t would undoubtedly save lives and
bloodshed, one study mdicates that people buying guns for
family protectiOn are s\x times more likely to kill frtends than
enem1es, often through accrdents, but also, as the FBI adds,
B ARB S
statistiCS mdiCate that as many as seven of 10 murders are the
---=-...:....:...:....:....=_:::.___ result of pre\1ously law abtdlng Citizens who end arguments by
By PHIL PASTORET
reachmg for gats
No matter how you slice It
ThiS then, ts what s needed educattoti Dav1d Steinberg of
fundmg a country mto defeat IS the Comrruttee for Responstble FJrearms Regulations suggests 1\
still baloney
begm With presidential leadership and go all the way down to
Of course the gals want equal classroom cumculum
nghts - they've long had pret
A plea from Jerry Ford, accompamed perhaps by photos of
ty good lefts
children who blew their heads off wtth daddy s hidden" Brownmg m1ght begm a new Amertcan eth1c We might also be told
that 1n 1972 only one of every 13 people arrested for weapons
possesston m New York City was sent to jail Facts, not
soctologtcal or congressiOnal hyperbole We must as a people
learn, as La Rochefoucauld sa1d long ago, that the VIolence done
to us by others IS often less painful than that which we do to
ourselves

-

Back to Bi:lstc~'

•

63 He sa1d he dtdn't thmk I
needed any pills to brmg 1t
down
I have a constant sound m
my ears wh1ch Is hard to ex
plain It's somethmg like a
nngmg or an a1r pressure
agamst my ears I smoke qwtc
heavily and I know you'll tell
me to qwt But my wtll power
IS too low
I'd appreciate 11 If you could
give me your 1dea as to my
problem I don t doubt that
these people were gettmg the
correct readings, but 1sn t 1\
posstble that so me blood
pressure ga uges can be
maccurate?
DEAR READER - Flrst
about blood pressure, 1\ 1s quite
true that a person s pressure
can fluctuate from one readmg
to the next Even m a few
m1nutes 1l can change markedly Your small artenes
con tract and relax m a reflex
fashwn So as quick as you can
have a change m reflex aclion
you can change your blood

By DAVE .BEG£L
Umtt.&gt;d Press International
Milwaukee wtll .be tuned m
and listemng very closely to
the Clucago Det1 mt ga me on
1ad10 tomght
l'he Buck:-. carne through
wtth .J 98 9T tnW'nph over
Delrml l'ucsday mgh l but the
\1c lory will mean nothm g for
them If the Pistons can bea t
Chicago tomght
Although the Bucks and
PistQns pia) ed one of the most
exc1tmg games of the season
both clubs had their mmds on
tomght s C l ucial matclmp
I he
victor)
kept
Milwaukee s s!Jm playoff
hopes alive The) have three
games left- w1th New York
Fr1day Detroit Saturday and
Chicago Sunday The Pistons
have two left- Chicago and
then Milwaukee on Saturday
The Bucks must wm thetr
three and DetrOit has to lose Its
two If the Bucks are to avmd
m1ssmg the playoffs for the
first lime m flVe years
I JUst hope Chicago goes all
out and plays like they should,
Bucks Coach Larry Costello
said Unfortunately hope IS

'

pressure Then too, your heart
ea n suddenly "'ncrease or
decrease the amount of blood 1t
pumps That can change as
fast as your hear t rate
changes, so you see, 1\ ts pretty
• qmck
You don't have to be anxious
for the changes to occur This
problem IS so common that 'the
armed forces exammatwns
co ntain a proviSIOn for
exaliumng even healthy young
men for three days m successiOn, tw1ce a day before
dectdmg that an elevated
readmg Is really accurate You
had a casual blood pressure
readtng, ' and these are
notonously maccurate usually
tendmg to be on the hlgh s1de
It IS most likely that \be later
readmgs
are
more
representative of your usual
blood pressure, and I agree
that at those levels you cer'\amly don t need treatment
You are correct that blood
pressure gauges can become
faulty That ts why all of the

Instruments with a dtal or
clock fa ce should be checkM
re gularly
The pressure
recorded with a .JIOiumn of
mercury Is accurate The
pressure required to ra1se a
colwnn of mercury follows
fundamental laws of phystcs
The dial-type devices should be
checked regularly agamst a
mercury column
That sound m your ears may
be related to circulation, even
With normal pressure It can be
representallve of many things,
mc!udmg wax In the ear If so, ,
removmg the wax will cure 1t
If 1t's c1rculatton or some other
cause 1t may stay w1th y.ou
Ask your doctor abbitt lt
And, you are right, I think
you should certainly qult
smoking It will do you more
harm a lot faster than your
fa~tly normal blood pressure
You can start getting beneflta
from stopping smoking lmmediately It may even help
!hat sound In your ears Give It
a try and see

InJured after divmg for a
ground ball Monday durmg an
exh1b1t10n game between the
Yanks and Minnesota X rays
revealed a fracture and It was
beheved that White would
likely mls&amp; the Yankees
opener versus Clev.eland
Basts of the Herrmann deal
was the catcher s refusal to
sign a contract with the White
Sox after asking for $52 000 and
bemg offered $48,000 He
ag reed to $50 000 with the
yankees and, Iromcally may
wmd up as the club's opemng
day fi rst baseman m the wake
of Whtte's InJury
In other sprmg trammg
news
The New York Mets optioned
catcher Ron Hodges to T1dewa
ter, thus openmg up a spot for
John Stearns the high!) rated
throw m m the Tug MeGraw
for Del Unser trade w1lh
Philadelphia last wmter
Stearns a former No 1 draft
choice of the !'luis has had a
good-luttmg sprmg for the
Mets as a backup catcher to
Jerry Grote and sometune
thtrd baseman
Montreal's spnng ..phenom,

Gary Carter continued his hot
hittmg with a two-run homer
that lifted the Expos to a 9-.)
wm over Mmnesota Twms
Home runs by Ton) Perez and
Ed Armbnsler highlighted a
19-lnt Cincmna\1 attack that
powered the Reds to an 8 2
\1Clory o.er the Mets
Rookie Pete Van Horne s
bases-clearmg double m the
runth Innmg helped the Uru\erstly of Ar1wna to a th'i come
from behmd tnumph over
Cleveland
Ken Bos well
smgled home Jose Cruz with
the w1nnmg run m the nmth
Innmg to give Houston a 3 2 wm
over St Louis Wilbur Wood
went the seven-mnmg route to
hurl the White Sox to a 4 1
decisiOn over Pittsburgh m the
first game of a doubleheader
A bad hop smg le by Bobby
Gr1ch scored designated hitter
Tommy Davis with the w1nnmg
run m Ballunore's 4 3 wm over
Texas
Catcher Bob Da\1s
smgled m what proved to be the
mnmg run and then scored
himself on Mike l\1e s sacriftce
fly as San Diego downed the
Cubs, 4 2

Alumni win in 9 frames at Racine
when he gave the alums tw o
runs In the top of the mnth with
the score lied 1-1
The 'arsii) had gotten their
run m the fifth "hen Greg
Dunmng lined a double down
the third base !me to scorf Enc
Dunmng from second base
The mnth mmng burst that
gave the alumm the viciOI y
saw nme batters come to the
plate
The leadoff man Qmllen
"alked his th1rd lime of the
afternoon, proceeded to steal
second then th1rd, and scored
the second run of the game for
the alums when once agam
Greg Roush knocked kn ocked
him In w1th a smgle
The Alumni added an In

'E agles clipped
by 14-1 count

all we have left Le ts hope 8J 84 But then the MJ!waukee
!iumehow Il happens
clel ense he ld the Pi ston s
Tl ts one 1s over lorught ;;~nd st ore] ess f01 almost three
we ve got a vcr} b1g one
mmutes and 1ese1 v~ forward
commg up tomorrow ni ght
Mickey Davis got Mih; aukee
sa id Pistons Coach Ra) Scott movmg
l m JUSt glad- very glad- n s
Mi cke; gave us a big li ft m
at home
ther e Costello Sd ld
He
Most of the Bucks smd the) came lh10ugh whm 11 c needed
would be hslenmg on the radiO It the most
to the Pistof.ls ga me and
I li ke &lt;.ommg m m t1gllt
obv1ous ly tn the stri::ln ge games Davis satd It g~ts
pos1lion of hopmg for a Chicago the blood pumping
wm
fh e Bucks were led by
We needed this game so Ka reem Abdul Jabbar s 27
badly, said Bucks guard pomt~" Sob I ame1 had 19 ami
George Thompson "ho had 18 John Mcngelt 18 fm Detro1t
pomts and four assists Ill be
f: lsew he1 e Ch1cago beat
hstenmg tomorrow mght Its Buffalo 98-93 Houston downed
gomg to seem strange rootmg A tl,mta 113104 Ne" York
for ChiCago but that s what ill edge d Philadelphia , 99 95
be dmng
Wash mgton defeated 1\ew Or
The Pistons seemed In leans ll0-101 and Portland
control most of the game and npped Los Angeles 124 106
although the Bucks led 7H9
Hulls 98, Braves 93
gomg mto the last quarter
Chet Walker s 24 pomts led
Detrmt r.llied to take the lead six Bulls)" double flgureo' as
Chicago ended a three game
tailspm and halted the Braves
five game wmnmg streak The
Bu lls took a t"o game lead
over Idle Kansas City-Dmaha
m the Mtdwest DI\ Is Ion \Hth
three games left Bob McAdoo

•I
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York w1th 26 pomts, e1ght of
them m tbe fmal penod, \vhtle
Walt Fraz1er added 21 pmllls
after being held scoreless m
the first period Fred Carter
led the 76ers with 23 pomts and
Billy Cunnmgham had 22
llnllets 1!0, Jazz 101
Washmgton wi th Elv1•
Hay es smkm g 33 potnts
mamtamed Its slun lead over
Boston for the best reco rd m
the NBA b) healing New
Orleans Pete Marav1 ch led the
Jazz With 19 pomls

Triple Rib R/S FRONT
TRACTOR TIRE
$21 97
e I OJl

&gt;50 . "

4 Ply plu~

9n

More sports
on Page 8

IRONTON - The Meigs
Marauder base ball team
opened Its 1975 leag ue cam
pa1gn with a loss here Tuesday
afternoon by the !mal count of
16 7
What started out to be a close
game turned mlo a slugfest m
the fourth mmng when Me1gs
scored lM runs m their half of
that mmng to leave them
tra iling by only one run 54 But
the Tigers had somelhmg to
sa) when they came to the
plate In their half by scor~n g
seven btg runs to run the score
to 12-4 They added four more
runs m the fifth to end their
sconng and the Mara uders
could manage only three more
lo leave them on the short end
of the stick 16-7
Bn ght spots for Meigs In the
defeat was the fa ct that Meigs
h1He• s were conneclm~ With
the ball and only struck out
three limes com pa red to
Ironton batsmen b1tme thr. d '
a total of mne limes
J.eatling hitler for the VIC
tor tous T1gers was their short
slop Mike Brown who collected
four base hils, a s.ngl~ two
doubles and a long home run
O\e r the nght field fen ce
F'm Meigs those gellmg hils
off Tiger p1lchmg were Char he
Marshall w1lh 2 smg les M1 ck
Davenport had a lnple Mike
Magnotta a sin gle Gar)
George a smgle and Steve
Bachner a single Magnolia ~I l
a deep dnve to cen ter field
which the fielder made a great
catch on "1th his back to home
plate at the fence to Rob
Magnotta of a home run or at
least extra bases
For Me1~s th&amp; starling pitch
er \\as Perk Aull who worked
three mmngs, gave up IM
runs struck out three and
walked th1 ee Ault was also the
losmg pitcher
Jeff McKmney came In for
relief of Ault m the fourth and
fm1shed the game glVlng up I I
runs, striking out 6 and
walkmg two batters
The T1gers had three p1t
chers In the game with
rehefman W1lhams ge ttmg the
victory The three pitchers for

Ironton only struck out tile
three Marauders \\ hlle 1ssmng
a total of 10 "alks
Th e
Mat aud ers
are
sc heduled to pla y South
\\ estern toda) on th e RIO
Grande Colle~e field

fe ~

r

E' Ta'

Q til l

I) I

~ tur s

l ow lm\ Pr
• N1 \\ R g~ d R m Sh l'lrl
prolc,;ls lo\\ r s d ~ \\ all
e l li 1r
d L nlrrh
I

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&gt;;

f'f ng

a~

WITH TIIADE

$2497

'
600 " '

4 Piypu 99~

fed £1 Tn

WITM TII:AOE

A

Me1gs

200 20! 0

h ontun

104 740 x- 16 15 2

7 6Q

Batle n es
Au it
li p 1
McKmnc) r 4) and Hamilton
Acl11 Son Williams ( 2 J 1wp I
Ach1son ! 4I lawless 171 and
Bass

POMEROY, OHIC

es

"t"!~o \\~e c"e\\~""
~utget

otl

C~\\l \"
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I

OFFICE CLOSED

.

"ho has won h1s second
straight sconn g title paced,
Buffalo with 36 pomts
Rockets 113, Ha"k.' !04
Seven foote1 Kcvm Kunnert
lnt 26 pomls and Rudy rom
JdnoVJch had 27 as Houston
bea t Atlanta and VIrtually
cli nched a playoff spot
Houston leads Idle Cleveland
by one ga me for the second
pla ce spot In the NBA Central
lJJvtsJorJ w•th one game to play
Krucks 99, 16&lt;rs 95
~ e w York ralhed to wm after
tra1hng bv 15 points In the first
pc11od Ear l Monroe led New

Marauders lose opener

surance run when John Arnott
laced a RB I smgle to score
Roush from second base T~is
made II 3 1 In favor of the
former Tornados and that was
ho\\ Il ended when the varstty
could get nothmg gomg In the ir
loa lf of the nmlh
The starter pn the mound for
the alumm "as Jim Hubbard
who gave an excellent showmg
b) gOing live Inmngs walkmg
three sh Iking out eight batters
,md g1vmg up three •h1ts The
wln mng pitcher Denny Evans
also put m a good outmg by
slrikmg out two walkmg none
and gtvmg up two hits and no
runs
The losing pitcher R1ffle
worked five mmngs gave up
four htls struck out me men
walked seven, and gave up the
two mnth mmng runs
Gettmg hi ts for the wmners
were Qmllen w1lh a smgle
Arnott had a smgle and an RBI
Rous a smgle and two RB!s
and Jeff Hubbard had a double
For the l011ers httters were
YANKS
Greg Cundiff with a smg le
ACQUIRE
HERRMANN
Sle\ e Hendr1cks had a smgle,
WEST PALM BEACH, Fla
RAVENSWOOD
fhe lirsl mmng before bemg lifted Jun Riffle two smg les and the
Eastern Eagles were defeated m favor of Randy Blake who fifth htt was the RBI producing (UPI) - The New York
Yankees acquJred left-llanded
by Ravenswood here Tuesday &lt;i worked the remammg four double by Dunning
evemng m only !1ve mnmgs fram es, giVIng up 8 more runs ERAlumm 001 000 002-J 4 o hittmg catcher Ed Herrmann,
because of a ftve mmng 10 run The Eagles' lone run came m Southe1n
000 010 000--1 5 3 28, from the Chicago Wh1te Sox
rule m West VIrgmia The fma l the top of the first mmng g1vmg
Hubb,Jrd Evans (4) (wp), Tuesday m exchange for four
score was a whoppmg 14 1, them a slim and short lived and Jell Hubbard Huffman, mmor leaguers and cash
Herrmann f11ls the Yankee
with the Eagles on the em lead
Riffle I lp I 5 and Dunmng
need for a left-handed pmch
b..ari]!Stng end
The hillers gelling three
hitter and he also w11l be the
For Eastern the starting and Eastern htts were Randy HOUSE FOR SALE
PORTLAND,
Ore
(UP!)
No 3 catcher behtnd Thurman
losm~ pitcher was
Don Blake Joe Kuhn and Dave
Blil
Walton
of
the
Portland
Munson and RICk Dempsey
Etchmger who stuck m there Hannun, each a single off the
Trail
Blazers,
who
has
missed
The mmor leaguers are Fred
through a six run Ravenswood opposmg pitcher Simmons
most
of
the
National
BasketAnyeski,
a left-handed p1tcher,
who went the distance for
ball
Association
season
with
a
John
Marron,
outfielder-first
•
Ravenswood, walkmg four
bone
spur
InJUry,
has
put
his
baseman,
Ken
Bennett, leftThe Daily Sentmel
Eagles and stnkmg out 8
specially
bwl\
A
frame
home
handed
hittmg
outfielder
and
oE\IOTED TO THE
Eastern p1lchmg gave up the
INTEREST OF
on
the
banks
of
the
W1llamette
catcher Terry Qwnn
MEIGS MASON AREA
14 Ravenswood runs on 1Lln ls
CHESTE:,~/~~NEHILL
and four ffilSCUeS In the field , R1 ver up for sale
ROBERT HOEFLICH
The Eagle pitChers combmed
Cttv Edttor
Publosned dally e•cept to walk four batters and strike
Satu rda y by The Oh 1o Valley
out five
Publ sh1ng Company
Ill
Court St Pom eroy Ot110
The lea dmg Ravenswood
45769 Bus ness Office Phone
boilers
wore Blair who went
MARCH 27 UNTIL APRIL 4
992 2156 Ed tor a l Phon e 992
•·
1
2m
" ror two with a double and
secOnd c ass post~;~ge pa 1d at
FOR VAC:ATION
Pomeroy Oh 1o
smgle, the pitcher Simmons
National advertiS ing
h
l
f
t
lh
In Case of Emergency, Call
r!!presentat 1 ve
Bo1tm e11 11 w owen one or wo WI a
Gallagher Inc 12 East 42na
home run, and the catcher
The Galhpohs Offtce Collect·
St New York New York
Subscr 1pt l on
rates r Kennedy, two for ~W0 1 wtth a
446-4290
Del i vered by carr1er where
double and sin•le '
available 75 cents per week
~
...,
By Motor Route where carr er
Une Sf'flfC
STEVE SNOWDEN
serv•ce not avatlab le One
Eastern
100 00- I 3 4
1258 Powell St Moddleport Ph 99Ut5S
month S"J 25 BY ma•l n Ohio
and W va One Year $22 00
Ravens
660 2x- 14 11 1
STAUMMI
Stx months
Sll so
Three
nau •.u•
monlns $7 00 EISewnerl
EASTERN - Eichinger
,_,
"·~·~
S26 00 year
Sot month
(I P )
Bl ke (2)
d
"350 three monlhs $7 so
•
a
, an
Subscription pn ce Includes
Wtnebrenner Ravenswoo~
INSUI4N(f
~s::.u:;.nd:.:•:..:y~TI::.m.:.:•;:•..:s,...e_n!_1 n~•,1 .,....,--'; Simmons and Kennedy
RACINE - The Southe1 n
Varsity baseba ll learn "ent
down to defeat 4-3 to the
Southern High School Alumm
here Tuesday evemng but not
unlil the game went Irlto the
mn th mmng
The alumm drew f1rst blood
m the third when Bob Quillen
drc" a walk, advanced to
second to lh1rd and scored on
a sacrifice fly by Greg Roush
Thts run came off the startmg
varsil) p1lcher Brady Huff
man, who worked four mmngs
g1vmg up the one run no h1ts,
struck out 5 and walked th1 ee
alumm batters
Jtm R1We came on m relief
of Huffman m the ltfth Inmng
and was the losmg pitcher

Blood pressure can vary frequently
By Lawrence E Lamb, M D
DEAR DR LAMB - A few
months ago our Diabetes
Society held a chnlc for the
elderly, which I attended A
nurse took my blood pressure
and got a readmg of 190 over 90
So she had another nurse take
II She got 170 over 90 A few
weeks later they called me
back for a recheck and 1\ was
sbll h1gh They adviSed me to
see a doctor, whlch I d1d He
got 130 over 70 and satd a man
of 30 would be glad to have such
a normal readmg
By thts lime I was utterly
confused as to why three
separate limes my pressure
was htgh and the last tune 1t
was normal The doctor explamed tenSJon can cause the
different fluctuations That
was hard for me 1o buy for I felt
I was e9ually relaxed each
lime Not bemg satisfied yet I
wenl1o another doctor He said
my pressure was 160 over 115
and wasn I bad for m) age of

•

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Milwaukee keeps playoff hopes alive

DR. LAMB

•

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·-....

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•

ou sa'~ ~\
at\d ~." \1\ot\e
bl~

�(

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Edi~orial

comment,

I

Soil Conservation Service
obse:r:v~g

opinion, features

CO!':UMBUS - Wond ,md
w~Itcr eroswn raeed out of
contr ol E1 uswn and sediment
darrMge ran mto the mtlhons of
dnllars Land ana Y.ater our
great Amencan heritage was
bemg destroyed The year was
1935 and the problem was
recogmzed
as a nati onal
The parents of a child now 10 years of age t'a n expect to spend more than $30,000 for their offspnng s fo ur yea r educalwn at a state umvers1ty and more than $53,000 at a pnvate umvers1ty - menace
On Apn l 27 of that year the
assunung a consenative ' 7 per rent mflatmn rate
U
S Sml ConservatiOn Service
To co\er the latter cost a famtly would ha\e to save more than $4 500 a )ear for the next eight
I
SCS)
was orgamzed for the
years based on a Sper cent after-tax return on their savmgs
the
developmen
t
and
Without question mflalion has become the maJor factor m planmng for educatiOnal expenses,
prosecution
of
a
long
tJm
e
says Ed\\ mE Gate"ood Jr \1Ce president of the Oakland F'manc1al Group Inc , personal fmancwl
program of sml and wate1
couuselors m Charlottes\1lle, Va and Southfield, Mtch, which made the study
The company has assembled a table proJectmg the probable future costs mcluding room board conservatiOn This month will
tmlwn and miscellaneous expenses of a four year college educatiOn based on present costs at s;ate mark the federal agency s 40th
ann!\ ersary,
univerSJtJes ($4 000 a year) and at pnvate mstJtutwns ($6 000 a year )
-· ~
Resource conservatwn or
If the figures are shocking for a 10-year-&lt;Jld, consider what they "Ill be for today's toddler Agam
the
lack of 1t now reaches out to
based on an annua\7 per cent tnflat10n ra1e, the four year cost of an educatiO'n at a state uruverslly 18
)ears from no\\ \nll be $56 160 requrmg an annual savmgs, startmg nght now, of $1,860 If he or she toucll almost evervone tn OhiO
and across the nation
says
goes to a pnvate college the cost" 1ll be $98 280 and w1ll reqmre an annual sa'"ngs of $3 250
Robert
E
Quolham
Cl'lw
State
EducatiOnal costs may vary as w111 the return expected from mvestment dollars But the pomt ts
clear that the total outlay IS likely to be staggermg What may not be so apparent Is that the rate of Conservatwmst for the SCS
The need for SOil and water
the nsmg cost of educatiOn may exceed the current after-tax return on sa\1ngs
a
nd relate~ resource con
In. other words, even the prudent parent who IS plannmg for hts children's educatiOn may fmd
Utal he IS losmg ground to mflatwn and rna) have to borrow, or dip mto capt tal to meet these costs servat10n work contmues to
Yet says Gatewood fewer than hail hts hrm s clients wtth children under 18 ha\0 de\ eloped gro" to keep pace" 1th modern
land use req mrernents saul
cun crete plans f01 fmancmg college co§ts
Qui lham

the higher match of education costs

'

the automated trough
Hoi) cow1 Researchers wtth the Agrtculture Department's Agncultural Research Serv~ce and
the Dhnms Agncultural Experunent Statlon at Urbana have des1gned an electro rue feed-&lt;hspensmg
system which th~y sa) wtllliberate Bosste from the hassle of strugghng for her share of gram at the
commumtv trough as well as save trouble for Farmer Brown
Each co w wears an electromc devtce called a transponder that ftts on a neck collar The transponder serves as a kmdof credtt card and activates a feed dispenser "hen the cow st1cks her head
mto a feed trough
The transponders are electromcally tuned, or coded to 1dentify each cow according to her m1lk
production When the cow move~ her neck mto a loop formed mterrogator antenna to reach the feed,
high frequency radiO energ) flows to the transponder The transponder s coded memor~ de\1ce
begms to charge elect ronicall) and dnves a signal generator wh1ch m turn causes feed to dispense
slowly as the cow eats
When the memory device 1s full) charged, the dispenser stops and the cow gets no more feed
Wtth the passmg of tune , the electromc charge leaks off and the cow may eat agam Her ratiOn IS
computed on a 12-hour bas1s and she may consume It m many or few mstallments
The agncultural engmeers have found that, wtth reasonably accurate calibratiOn of the feed
dispenser and transponder \hey Can Jun1\ errorS In feedmg rates to Wlt~m \0 per cent of prescnbed
allocalions - better than that exercised b) conventiOnal feedmg methods Performance tna ls
showed no s1grufica nt difference m milk production whether the cows were hand fed Jn the mtlkmg
parlor or w1th the electromc feeder control

RAY CROMLEY

Military only as
strong as economy
•

Bv Ray Cromie)
corre ct or fal se ts anyone s
WASHINGTON- iNEA )- guess, But one lhmg IS for
l\ IS not the SIZe of the Sov1et certam Moscow s maJor
defense estabhshment today recen t attempt at brlngmg a
that \.\ Ort 1es admtmstratwn ne ighbor mto lme thro ugh
foreign strategists
m1htar) threat fa iled m Chma
Rather It IS that Sovtel The mammoth So\ Jet border
defense sp~ ndm g as measured bmldup did not ca use Pekmg to
m real equ,valent dollars IS give 1n rather 1t pushed Mao s
somew here between 25 and 50 Commumst government closer
per cent grea ter than ours to the Um led States Would the
This rough figure Is as close as result have been different If we
American analvsts can come, had been weaker'
even "1th the atd of
It should be noted that USSR
sophlsiJca ted computers
m1htary ligures are not as
More Im portantly
the devas tatmg as they sound
combi ned procurement of offhand - especially In
milita ry har dwa re and research and development It
research and development ts ts es!J mated that Sov iet
twice tha t of the Umted States sctent1sts and engmee rs
1he Sov iet military and overall are, a bout 40 pet as
space reseal ch development effechve m their work as lheJr
ha s more than lnpled In the Amencan coun terparts This IS
past decade and Is sltll not to downgrade the Russtan
gro" mg At a lime when the techmcal men It IS rather that
Umted States fmds It dtfficult the Sovtet system makes such
to car ry on one maJOr misstle poor use of Its talent In
resear ch and dev el opment theoretical mathematics and
effor t, the Sov iet Umon IS several other advanced
handling three to four
dlsclplmes Sov1et speciahsls
II IS now esli mated by are " orld famous
techm ca l experts at the
Depar tment of Commerce that
bet\\ een 70 and 90 per cent of
all qualifi ed Russian research
SCientists a11d engmeers are
programmed mlo the USSR s
defense and space "ork
What especially womes
Amencan planners 1s that the
fre ne1Ic Sovie t bmldup began
not long after a sems of maJOr
Sov iet diplomaltc-pohl!cal
defeats - mcludmg the loss of
China from the Russian bloc
the ba ckdown to the Umted
Sta tes In Cuba and the lallmg
apart of Moscow s Southeast
Asia stra tegy
Th~ concern here Is that the
men m lhe Kremlin were
convmced , along with Mao Tse
tung tha t dtplomal1c power
comes out of the barrel of a
gun and that so long as they
were number two mihtanly
they could not have their way
In the world There 's a strong
belief here that N1k1ta Khrush
chev was thrown out because
he wanted to go at a less raptd
pace on the m1htary and pour
Soviet resources mto strange!)
economic growth.
Th1s analysis has jed some
Influential Amencan
strategists to believe the Sovtet
arms bwldup IS not pnmanly
for defense but rather tntended as a psychological club
to wm the Russ1ans pohlical
diplomatic conquests, victories
made possible by wavmg their
arms
Whether this reason tng IS

,

I'

2- The Datly Sentmel, Mtddleport-Pomerov 0 Wednesday,
. Apnl2 1975.

What s hkely to hold the
USSR back desp1te tts hefty
spendmg wh1ch no one tn his
right mmd can Ignore ts the
mefliciency~f the general
economy on which military
strength depends
It Is now eslunated that
overall Soviet produclivity IS 36
per cent of that m the Umted
Slates At the bottom 1s Soviet
agncullure, with an efficiency
roughly lOper cent of ours The
production of machmery and
related eqmpment runs at 67
per cen l But other branches of
mdustry, encompassmg such
Items as steel production and
cons tructiOn, 3'¥erage a
miserable 32 per cent of
Amencan producllVlly levels

Nearly 15 000 spec ies of m
sect life 8o" per cent of the
world s total have been found
and classified m the Amazon
River Bastn

)

Historic
attractions
reopened
COLUMBUS - The OhiO
Histoncal Society this week
reopened all but two of 1ls
h1stor1c attractiOns fur the
upcommg spn ng and summer
travel season
The remammg two s1tes,
Ind ia n Mill near Upper
Sandusky and QuakeII Meetmg
House at Mt Pleasant, will be
opened to the pubhc May lsl
Only seven of the Society s
siles remam open throughout
Ihe ye ar The rem lu mng
properties closecf each
November 1st for the winter
monlhs bee a use of the m
clemen t weather
The OhiO HistoriCal Society
a pnvate non-profi t cor
poratton
operates
56
memona ls and museums,
more than an1 othe1 stiile
orgamzatwn 1n the nahan The
Society s attraclions that are
now open mclude three com
plete villages 11 res tored
homes and estates of famous
Ohtoans 17 modern museums
12 preh1stonc Indian sites, a
presJdenlial home and IIbi ary
a steamboat, a c~ nal boat five
natural h1stor) areas and more
. than a dozen other histone
s1tes
The growmg mterest m the
B1centenmal a tendency
toward c l ose to h ome
vacations and extensive
Soc ie ty promotwn are ex
peeled to help set new atlendance records durmg the
commg season VtsJtatwn at
Soc1ety sites IS already more
than 490 000 persons ahead of
this same ltme last spnng, as
almost 2 mllhon vls1tors have
been recorded smce July, the
begmmng of the fiscal year
A free 24 page full~olor
booklet descnbmg all of 56 of
the Society s atlraclions IS
available by writing 'Gel
Away Into Ohio's Yesterday
Today, ' The Pubhc In
formatiOn Office, The Ohw
Htstoncal Center Columbus
OhiO 43211

3- TheD ai!V Sentinel, Middleport Pome1~y (j, -Wednesday
'
Aprt\2 1~75

Berry's World

40th anniversary

1 he SCS began "ork tn Oh io
m 1942 with the formatiOn of
the states first sOil and water
conse rvatiOn district 1n
Highland Coon ty Working onsile with all la nd users
cooperatmg with their 88 local
d1stncts the federal agency
now ptov1des techni,£al help
each vea r to over 82.000 Ohw
Individuals
gro ups
01gamzatwns land developers
and umt s of government
Sml and water conservation
dislrtc t cooperators noy,
control the use of over 10
mJlhon- ac'es of OhiO land and
their nmnbers are growmg
each year; says Floyd Heft
Chief of the Oh1o Departmen t
of Natural Resources DivisiOn
of SOil and Water D1slmls
The techmca l help dislncls
provide at local levels through
the SCS and other cooperatmg
agencies has and will contmue
to play an mvaluable role m
OhiO s future Heft sa1d

rhe SCS, while slill prov1dmg
techmcal help through per
sona l contact and on st te
ass1stance IS coord tnatlhg
broad mulli-coun ty programs
such as resource conservatiOn
and development and water
s hed
proJects
'T hese
programs, through. local m
volv~ment
says Qmlltam
are prov idmg m[my beneftls
to local cornmumhes counttes
and larger planmn g areas
throughout the stale
Born out oJ the old SOil
Erosion Service 40 years ago
the SCS began work by puttmg
m demonstratiOnal proJect. to
show land users the value of
conservation l..ast year, the
SCS responded to requests for
asstslance from uver one
million Individuals and groups
They also provided techmcal
guidance In makmg land use
decisions to near!) 14 000 um ls
of government ac ross the
couhtry

Libraries loan
about anything
By PATRICIA Me CORM&gt;\CK
UPI Education Editor
Once hbranes Jlfst lent
books, but tunes and libranes
have changed and now one
loans out tools mcludmg post
bole diggers, while another
loans out white !DICe and has a
permanent boarder-a boat
constnctor
Many libranes stage con
certs and one has a resident
AfroAmencan dance com
pany
Dancmg, debatmg, puppet
shows , fre e movies, have
become common on tiN !Jbrary
scene
On hand for lending at the
libraries of the land are
cameras, toys, sllde projec
tors, posters cassettes
records, engravers and mov1e
projectors to go with the reels
of film for loan purposes
With the serviCes has come a
new mood- Silence' s1gns
aren't much m evtdence and
\1Sitors needn t t1ptoe around
Perhaps the best news on the
hbrary front for persons with
overdue books ts that many
hbranes have amnesty days
once a year-no questions
asked, no fmes to be pa1d when
overdue books are returned
Robert Wedgeworth, execu
t1ve d1rector of the American
Ubrary Assoc1allon S31d m an
mterv1ew that some hbrams
stage amnesty days durmg
Nat10nal Ubrary Week, this
year startmg April 13 Most
!Jbrar1es markmg the week wtll
be g1vmg out bookmarks
contammg colorful cartoons
and 100 quesl!ons that can only
be answered by gomg to the
library
Among the more mterestmg
programs and serv1ces,
Wedgeworth
c1ted
the
followmg
- The Er1e, Pa : library has
an anunal center where Katy
Zukowski, anunal techmc1an,
takes care of all the hvmg
thmgs, mcludtng the boa
constrictor There ts a f1sh, a
turtle and herm1t crab Gumea
p1gs and white mice may be
borrowed for 10 days at a tune,
but only if tbe borrower has a
pre-school ch1ld's library card

~

•

©

19 75 by

~E.A ~~
nc

I m ass1gnmg a new secretary to you The one
you have now cla1ms that you have been chasmg h1m around the desk'

TIME OUT FOR LEAPFROG I Or so It seemed through the photographer s lens du1 mg a
recent NBA game at Madison Square Garden Here Walt Frazier of the New York Kmcks tnes
to dnbblearound Seattle's pefS!stent guard, Shck Watts The Somes "on the game 102 101

Yankees acquire
Herrmann

TOM TIEDE

By United Press lnternahonnl
The New York Yankees
gamM a left-handed hittmg
resen e catcher Tuesday but
rna) have lost a switch-htttmg
first baseman
The wheehng-and-dealmg
Yankees apparently not con
lent
With
off season
acquiSiltons Catfish Hunter
and Bobby Bonds, moved to
back up first strmg catcher
Thurman Munson by acqmrmg
lefty h1ltmg backstop Ed
Herrmann, 28, from the
Clucago White Sox Tuesday for
four mmor leaguers
For Herrmann who caught
100 or more games for Chicago
m each of the last four seasons
and last year hit 259 with 10
homers and 39 RBis, the
Yankees gave up southpaw
Fred Anyeski, outftelder f1rst
baseman John Marron , out
fielder Ken Bennett and catcher Terry Qmnn plus cash
However fast on the heels of
the Herrmann acq uiSitiOn ,
came the news that switch
hittmg Roy Wh1te, last years
leflfielder and frequent designated hitler would be stdelmed
for at least a week with a ch ip
fracture m h1s left thumb
White who had been makmg
a fairly succ~ssful transitiOn to
f1rst base this spnng, was

Gun control;
deja vu

By Tom Tiede
- Tools are loaned by llbrar
WASHINGTON
(NEA)
- There IS no argument like the
1es m Grosse Pomte, M1ch,
Canal Fulton OhiO, and gun control argument Regarding the accumulatton of bogus
Cohoes, N Y At Grosse Pomte rationale, warped datum, and one-dunenSJon philosophies the
tools me] ude power saws, debate has no peer One stde says the regulahon of pr1vate
weapons would cure every social sore from crune to tenrus
hammers, saws, screwdrivers
elbow,
the other belteves the deed to be on a moral level w1th the
other power tools One must
rapmg
of nuns Everyone talks much but says less, the result
have an adult card Power
tools go only to those 18 or over belhg a penlously entr~nched stalemate concerntng one of the
nabon's most dtsgustmg conventions !Jrearms \1olence
and may be kept out 48 hours
Two dozen gun btlls have thus far been presented to the 94th
Non power, one week
Congress
(m the 93rd 60), some would ban prtvate arms
- MontclaJr, N J , public h
altogether,
others would repeal control laws already m force, but
brary formed a restdent AfroAmencan dance company none gets to the heart of It No doubt gun regulation 1s necessary
which performs at the !tbrary m a nation that averages at least two weapons per home, but
as well as at cultural mstltu- banrung them or reg~stermg them w1thout addressmg the
reasons for their bemg 1s !Ike trymg to sneak the dawn past the
tlons around the state
- Ciucago public library has rooster , chances for success are low
The plam problem IS guns are as much a part of Amenca as
four no(ln time concerts
the garbage m Newark They are the nation's way of life, as well
monthly presented by mem
as
death, and tryu!g to alter 200 years of thts hentage wtth laws
bers of the strmg sectton of the
mstead
of !ogle ts nsky
Chicago Symphony
Th1s
IS not to say the hoary argument of ConstitutiOnal nghts
-Salt Lake City Pubhc
1s
necessarlly
correct, merely that mllhons believe 1\ to be, some
Ubrary features performances
congressmen are begmmng to worry that even a passage of
by a local mune troupe
slight
gun regulation would lead to unfortunate anrl w•rl••n•••rl
~acksonv11le, Fla, library
law
breaking
by millions of Amencan gun owners who feel "the
stages puppet shows
-Dayton, OhiO s West Car fight to bear arms" IS gospel and would refuse en masse to
rollton Branch has a travelmg • comply wtth any state mterference
The p1ous may gag at thiS And m truth even If the Conmarionette theater which tours
stitutiOn
d1d, m the 1700s guarantee every man a howitzer, the
Dayton libranes and some
schools Staff members make right today may have to g1ve way, as the FBI's Clilrence Kelley
the1r own manonettes, cos- says, for the good of the present maJority What was thought '"tal
tumes and stage settmgs and m a nation of 2 million may pe poisonous to a population 100 tunes
produce ort~nal as well as that Surely Tom Jefferson dtd not beheve that the preservatiOn
of hberty by md1vlduali)lstols would be necessary m a country
commercial p)ays
Special loan semces m possession 8,000 strategtc nuclear weapons
Still, the r1ght to arms ts 200 years old And m fact It IS m
elude toys m Mmneapohs
de!tble
legacy, promoted until recently as palnobc Pr1vate
libraries, mounted posters at
plmkers
defeated the British, preserved the orderly infancy of
the Rhode Island Department
the
nat10n,
belpeq keep 1t from diviSIOn wo,11 the west, N!tluced
of State Library , reproduc
lions of sculpture and pamtmgs barbarism, strengthened defense capabilihes, and turned wilds
at the Newton, Mass , public mto agriculture Whe' could be more Amencan, then than
Remmgton Savage or Colt' Even today there ts an argument to
library
be
made, m a nalton of from 9to 20 millton crunes annually that
At Liberty State College m
one
should still teach a ch1ld 1o shoot rabbits agamst the day he
West Uberty, W Va, there Is
may
have to aun at wild anunals assaultmg his wife
an "embarrassing question
G1ven this, though good sense argues for change There ts a
book" m wh1ch the shy can
pistol
sold every 10 to 12 seconds m the nation. Homicides by
write out questiOns of a senguns
have
r1sen 48 per cent m the last decade , vs 10 per cent by
sttlve nature for the hbranan
other
means
Even 1f control would not dent criminal possession
to answer
(and I thmk 1\ would not) , 1t would undoubtedly save lives and
bloodshed, one study mdicates that people buying guns for
family protectiOn are s\x times more likely to kill frtends than
enem1es, often through accrdents, but also, as the FBI adds,
B ARB S
statistiCS mdiCate that as many as seven of 10 murders are the
---=-...:....:...:....:....=_:::.___ result of pre\1ously law abtdlng Citizens who end arguments by
By PHIL PASTORET
reachmg for gats
No matter how you slice It
ThiS then, ts what s needed educattoti Dav1d Steinberg of
fundmg a country mto defeat IS the Comrruttee for Responstble FJrearms Regulations suggests 1\
still baloney
begm With presidential leadership and go all the way down to
Of course the gals want equal classroom cumculum
nghts - they've long had pret
A plea from Jerry Ford, accompamed perhaps by photos of
ty good lefts
children who blew their heads off wtth daddy s hidden" Brownmg m1ght begm a new Amertcan eth1c We might also be told
that 1n 1972 only one of every 13 people arrested for weapons
possesston m New York City was sent to jail Facts, not
soctologtcal or congressiOnal hyperbole We must as a people
learn, as La Rochefoucauld sa1d long ago, that the VIolence done
to us by others IS often less painful than that which we do to
ourselves

-

Back to Bi:lstc~'

•

63 He sa1d he dtdn't thmk I
needed any pills to brmg 1t
down
I have a constant sound m
my ears wh1ch Is hard to ex
plain It's somethmg like a
nngmg or an a1r pressure
agamst my ears I smoke qwtc
heavily and I know you'll tell
me to qwt But my wtll power
IS too low
I'd appreciate 11 If you could
give me your 1dea as to my
problem I don t doubt that
these people were gettmg the
correct readings, but 1sn t 1\
posstble that so me blood
pressure ga uges can be
maccurate?
DEAR READER - Flrst
about blood pressure, 1\ 1s quite
true that a person s pressure
can fluctuate from one readmg
to the next Even m a few
m1nutes 1l can change markedly Your small artenes
con tract and relax m a reflex
fashwn So as quick as you can
have a change m reflex aclion
you can change your blood

By DAVE .BEG£L
Umtt.&gt;d Press International
Milwaukee wtll .be tuned m
and listemng very closely to
the Clucago Det1 mt ga me on
1ad10 tomght
l'he Buck:-. carne through
wtth .J 98 9T tnW'nph over
Delrml l'ucsday mgh l but the
\1c lory will mean nothm g for
them If the Pistons can bea t
Chicago tomght
Although the Bucks and
PistQns pia) ed one of the most
exc1tmg games of the season
both clubs had their mmds on
tomght s C l ucial matclmp
I he
victor)
kept
Milwaukee s s!Jm playoff
hopes alive The) have three
games left- w1th New York
Fr1day Detroit Saturday and
Chicago Sunday The Pistons
have two left- Chicago and
then Milwaukee on Saturday
The Bucks must wm thetr
three and DetrOit has to lose Its
two If the Bucks are to avmd
m1ssmg the playoffs for the
first lime m flVe years
I JUst hope Chicago goes all
out and plays like they should,
Bucks Coach Larry Costello
said Unfortunately hope IS

'

pressure Then too, your heart
ea n suddenly "'ncrease or
decrease the amount of blood 1t
pumps That can change as
fast as your hear t rate
changes, so you see, 1\ ts pretty
• qmck
You don't have to be anxious
for the changes to occur This
problem IS so common that 'the
armed forces exammatwns
co ntain a proviSIOn for
exaliumng even healthy young
men for three days m successiOn, tw1ce a day before
dectdmg that an elevated
readmg Is really accurate You
had a casual blood pressure
readtng, ' and these are
notonously maccurate usually
tendmg to be on the hlgh s1de
It IS most likely that \be later
readmgs
are
more
representative of your usual
blood pressure, and I agree
that at those levels you cer'\amly don t need treatment
You are correct that blood
pressure gauges can become
faulty That ts why all of the

Instruments with a dtal or
clock fa ce should be checkM
re gularly
The pressure
recorded with a .JIOiumn of
mercury Is accurate The
pressure required to ra1se a
colwnn of mercury follows
fundamental laws of phystcs
The dial-type devices should be
checked regularly agamst a
mercury column
That sound m your ears may
be related to circulation, even
With normal pressure It can be
representallve of many things,
mc!udmg wax In the ear If so, ,
removmg the wax will cure 1t
If 1t's c1rculatton or some other
cause 1t may stay w1th y.ou
Ask your doctor abbitt lt
And, you are right, I think
you should certainly qult
smoking It will do you more
harm a lot faster than your
fa~tly normal blood pressure
You can start getting beneflta
from stopping smoking lmmediately It may even help
!hat sound In your ears Give It
a try and see

InJured after divmg for a
ground ball Monday durmg an
exh1b1t10n game between the
Yanks and Minnesota X rays
revealed a fracture and It was
beheved that White would
likely mls&amp; the Yankees
opener versus Clev.eland
Basts of the Herrmann deal
was the catcher s refusal to
sign a contract with the White
Sox after asking for $52 000 and
bemg offered $48,000 He
ag reed to $50 000 with the
yankees and, Iromcally may
wmd up as the club's opemng
day fi rst baseman m the wake
of Whtte's InJury
In other sprmg trammg
news
The New York Mets optioned
catcher Ron Hodges to T1dewa
ter, thus openmg up a spot for
John Stearns the high!) rated
throw m m the Tug MeGraw
for Del Unser trade w1lh
Philadelphia last wmter
Stearns a former No 1 draft
choice of the !'luis has had a
good-luttmg sprmg for the
Mets as a backup catcher to
Jerry Grote and sometune
thtrd baseman
Montreal's spnng ..phenom,

Gary Carter continued his hot
hittmg with a two-run homer
that lifted the Expos to a 9-.)
wm over Mmnesota Twms
Home runs by Ton) Perez and
Ed Armbnsler highlighted a
19-lnt Cincmna\1 attack that
powered the Reds to an 8 2
\1Clory o.er the Mets
Rookie Pete Van Horne s
bases-clearmg double m the
runth Innmg helped the Uru\erstly of Ar1wna to a th'i come
from behmd tnumph over
Cleveland
Ken Bos well
smgled home Jose Cruz with
the w1nnmg run m the nmth
Innmg to give Houston a 3 2 wm
over St Louis Wilbur Wood
went the seven-mnmg route to
hurl the White Sox to a 4 1
decisiOn over Pittsburgh m the
first game of a doubleheader
A bad hop smg le by Bobby
Gr1ch scored designated hitter
Tommy Davis with the w1nnmg
run m Ballunore's 4 3 wm over
Texas
Catcher Bob Da\1s
smgled m what proved to be the
mnmg run and then scored
himself on Mike l\1e s sacriftce
fly as San Diego downed the
Cubs, 4 2

Alumni win in 9 frames at Racine
when he gave the alums tw o
runs In the top of the mnth with
the score lied 1-1
The 'arsii) had gotten their
run m the fifth "hen Greg
Dunmng lined a double down
the third base !me to scorf Enc
Dunmng from second base
The mnth mmng burst that
gave the alumm the viciOI y
saw nme batters come to the
plate
The leadoff man Qmllen
"alked his th1rd lime of the
afternoon, proceeded to steal
second then th1rd, and scored
the second run of the game for
the alums when once agam
Greg Roush knocked kn ocked
him In w1th a smgle
The Alumni added an In

'E agles clipped
by 14-1 count

all we have left Le ts hope 8J 84 But then the MJ!waukee
!iumehow Il happens
clel ense he ld the Pi ston s
Tl ts one 1s over lorught ;;~nd st ore] ess f01 almost three
we ve got a vcr} b1g one
mmutes and 1ese1 v~ forward
commg up tomorrow ni ght
Mickey Davis got Mih; aukee
sa id Pistons Coach Ra) Scott movmg
l m JUSt glad- very glad- n s
Mi cke; gave us a big li ft m
at home
ther e Costello Sd ld
He
Most of the Bucks smd the) came lh10ugh whm 11 c needed
would be hslenmg on the radiO It the most
to the Pistof.ls ga me and
I li ke &lt;.ommg m m t1gllt
obv1ous ly tn the stri::ln ge games Davis satd It g~ts
pos1lion of hopmg for a Chicago the blood pumping
wm
fh e Bucks were led by
We needed this game so Ka reem Abdul Jabbar s 27
badly, said Bucks guard pomt~" Sob I ame1 had 19 ami
George Thompson "ho had 18 John Mcngelt 18 fm Detro1t
pomts and four assists Ill be
f: lsew he1 e Ch1cago beat
hstenmg tomorrow mght Its Buffalo 98-93 Houston downed
gomg to seem strange rootmg A tl,mta 113104 Ne" York
for ChiCago but that s what ill edge d Philadelphia , 99 95
be dmng
Wash mgton defeated 1\ew Or
The Pistons seemed In leans ll0-101 and Portland
control most of the game and npped Los Angeles 124 106
although the Bucks led 7H9
Hulls 98, Braves 93
gomg mto the last quarter
Chet Walker s 24 pomts led
Detrmt r.llied to take the lead six Bulls)" double flgureo' as
Chicago ended a three game
tailspm and halted the Braves
five game wmnmg streak The
Bu lls took a t"o game lead
over Idle Kansas City-Dmaha
m the Mtdwest DI\ Is Ion \Hth
three games left Bob McAdoo

•I
I

"

''

York w1th 26 pomts, e1ght of
them m tbe fmal penod, \vhtle
Walt Fraz1er added 21 pmllls
after being held scoreless m
the first period Fred Carter
led the 76ers with 23 pomts and
Billy Cunnmgham had 22
llnllets 1!0, Jazz 101
Washmgton wi th Elv1•
Hay es smkm g 33 potnts
mamtamed Its slun lead over
Boston for the best reco rd m
the NBA b) healing New
Orleans Pete Marav1 ch led the
Jazz With 19 pomls

Triple Rib R/S FRONT
TRACTOR TIRE
$21 97
e I OJl

&gt;50 . "

4 Ply plu~

9n

More sports
on Page 8

IRONTON - The Meigs
Marauder base ball team
opened Its 1975 leag ue cam
pa1gn with a loss here Tuesday
afternoon by the !mal count of
16 7
What started out to be a close
game turned mlo a slugfest m
the fourth mmng when Me1gs
scored lM runs m their half of
that mmng to leave them
tra iling by only one run 54 But
the Tigers had somelhmg to
sa) when they came to the
plate In their half by scor~n g
seven btg runs to run the score
to 12-4 They added four more
runs m the fifth to end their
sconng and the Mara uders
could manage only three more
lo leave them on the short end
of the stick 16-7
Bn ght spots for Meigs In the
defeat was the fa ct that Meigs
h1He• s were conneclm~ With
the ball and only struck out
three limes com pa red to
Ironton batsmen b1tme thr. d '
a total of mne limes
J.eatling hitler for the VIC
tor tous T1gers was their short
slop Mike Brown who collected
four base hils, a s.ngl~ two
doubles and a long home run
O\e r the nght field fen ce
F'm Meigs those gellmg hils
off Tiger p1lchmg were Char he
Marshall w1lh 2 smg les M1 ck
Davenport had a lnple Mike
Magnotta a sin gle Gar)
George a smgle and Steve
Bachner a single Magnolia ~I l
a deep dnve to cen ter field
which the fielder made a great
catch on "1th his back to home
plate at the fence to Rob
Magnotta of a home run or at
least extra bases
For Me1~s th&amp; starling pitch
er \\as Perk Aull who worked
three mmngs, gave up IM
runs struck out three and
walked th1 ee Ault was also the
losmg pitcher
Jeff McKmney came In for
relief of Ault m the fourth and
fm1shed the game glVlng up I I
runs, striking out 6 and
walkmg two batters
The T1gers had three p1t
chers In the game with
rehefman W1lhams ge ttmg the
victory The three pitchers for

Ironton only struck out tile
three Marauders \\ hlle 1ssmng
a total of 10 "alks
Th e
Mat aud ers
are
sc heduled to pla y South
\\ estern toda) on th e RIO
Grande Colle~e field

fe ~

r

E' Ta'

Q til l

I) I

~ tur s

l ow lm\ Pr
• N1 \\ R g~ d R m Sh l'lrl
prolc,;ls lo\\ r s d ~ \\ all
e l li 1r
d L nlrrh
I

~ S~

&gt;;

f'f ng

a~

WITH TIIADE

$2497

'
600 " '

4 Piypu 99~

fed £1 Tn

WITM TII:AOE

A

Me1gs

200 20! 0

h ontun

104 740 x- 16 15 2

7 6Q

Batle n es
Au it
li p 1
McKmnc) r 4) and Hamilton
Acl11 Son Williams ( 2 J 1wp I
Ach1son ! 4I lawless 171 and
Bass

POMEROY, OHIC

es

"t"!~o \\~e c"e\\~""
~utget

otl

C~\\l \"
.

I

OFFICE CLOSED

.

"ho has won h1s second
straight sconn g title paced,
Buffalo with 36 pomts
Rockets 113, Ha"k.' !04
Seven foote1 Kcvm Kunnert
lnt 26 pomls and Rudy rom
JdnoVJch had 27 as Houston
bea t Atlanta and VIrtually
cli nched a playoff spot
Houston leads Idle Cleveland
by one ga me for the second
pla ce spot In the NBA Central
lJJvtsJorJ w•th one game to play
Krucks 99, 16&lt;rs 95
~ e w York ralhed to wm after
tra1hng bv 15 points In the first
pc11od Ear l Monroe led New

Marauders lose opener

surance run when John Arnott
laced a RB I smgle to score
Roush from second base T~is
made II 3 1 In favor of the
former Tornados and that was
ho\\ Il ended when the varstty
could get nothmg gomg In the ir
loa lf of the nmlh
The starter pn the mound for
the alumm "as Jim Hubbard
who gave an excellent showmg
b) gOing live Inmngs walkmg
three sh Iking out eight batters
,md g1vmg up three •h1ts The
wln mng pitcher Denny Evans
also put m a good outmg by
slrikmg out two walkmg none
and gtvmg up two hits and no
runs
The losing pitcher R1ffle
worked five mmngs gave up
four htls struck out me men
walked seven, and gave up the
two mnth mmng runs
Gettmg hi ts for the wmners
were Qmllen w1lh a smgle
Arnott had a smgle and an RBI
Rous a smgle and two RB!s
and Jeff Hubbard had a double
For the l011ers httters were
YANKS
Greg Cundiff with a smg le
ACQUIRE
HERRMANN
Sle\ e Hendr1cks had a smgle,
WEST PALM BEACH, Fla
RAVENSWOOD
fhe lirsl mmng before bemg lifted Jun Riffle two smg les and the
Eastern Eagles were defeated m favor of Randy Blake who fifth htt was the RBI producing (UPI) - The New York
Yankees acquJred left-llanded
by Ravenswood here Tuesday &lt;i worked the remammg four double by Dunning
evemng m only !1ve mnmgs fram es, giVIng up 8 more runs ERAlumm 001 000 002-J 4 o hittmg catcher Ed Herrmann,
because of a ftve mmng 10 run The Eagles' lone run came m Southe1n
000 010 000--1 5 3 28, from the Chicago Wh1te Sox
rule m West VIrgmia The fma l the top of the first mmng g1vmg
Hubb,Jrd Evans (4) (wp), Tuesday m exchange for four
score was a whoppmg 14 1, them a slim and short lived and Jell Hubbard Huffman, mmor leaguers and cash
Herrmann f11ls the Yankee
with the Eagles on the em lead
Riffle I lp I 5 and Dunmng
need for a left-handed pmch
b..ari]!Stng end
The hillers gelling three
hitter and he also w11l be the
For Eastern the starting and Eastern htts were Randy HOUSE FOR SALE
PORTLAND,
Ore
(UP!)
No 3 catcher behtnd Thurman
losm~ pitcher was
Don Blake Joe Kuhn and Dave
Blil
Walton
of
the
Portland
Munson and RICk Dempsey
Etchmger who stuck m there Hannun, each a single off the
Trail
Blazers,
who
has
missed
The mmor leaguers are Fred
through a six run Ravenswood opposmg pitcher Simmons
most
of
the
National
BasketAnyeski,
a left-handed p1tcher,
who went the distance for
ball
Association
season
with
a
John
Marron,
outfielder-first
•
Ravenswood, walkmg four
bone
spur
InJUry,
has
put
his
baseman,
Ken
Bennett, leftThe Daily Sentmel
Eagles and stnkmg out 8
specially
bwl\
A
frame
home
handed
hittmg
outfielder
and
oE\IOTED TO THE
Eastern p1lchmg gave up the
INTEREST OF
on
the
banks
of
the
W1llamette
catcher Terry Qwnn
MEIGS MASON AREA
14 Ravenswood runs on 1Lln ls
CHESTE:,~/~~NEHILL
and four ffilSCUeS In the field , R1 ver up for sale
ROBERT HOEFLICH
The Eagle pitChers combmed
Cttv Edttor
Publosned dally e•cept to walk four batters and strike
Satu rda y by The Oh 1o Valley
out five
Publ sh1ng Company
Ill
Court St Pom eroy Ot110
The lea dmg Ravenswood
45769 Bus ness Office Phone
boilers
wore Blair who went
MARCH 27 UNTIL APRIL 4
992 2156 Ed tor a l Phon e 992
•·
1
2m
" ror two with a double and
secOnd c ass post~;~ge pa 1d at
FOR VAC:ATION
Pomeroy Oh 1o
smgle, the pitcher Simmons
National advertiS ing
h
l
f
t
lh
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Gallagher Inc 12 East 42na
home run, and the catcher
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Subscr 1pt l on
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Del i vered by carr1er where
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100 00- I 3 4
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month S"J 25 BY ma•l n Ohio
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a
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Subscription pn ce Includes
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INSUI4N(f
~s::.u:;.nd:.:•:..:y~TI::.m.:.:•;:•..:s,...e_n!_1 n~•,1 .,....,--'; Simmons and Kennedy
RACINE - The Southe1 n
Varsity baseba ll learn "ent
down to defeat 4-3 to the
Southern High School Alumm
here Tuesday evemng but not
unlil the game went Irlto the
mn th mmng
The alumm drew f1rst blood
m the third when Bob Quillen
drc" a walk, advanced to
second to lh1rd and scored on
a sacrifice fly by Greg Roush
Thts run came off the startmg
varsil) p1lcher Brady Huff
man, who worked four mmngs
g1vmg up the one run no h1ts,
struck out 5 and walked th1 ee
alumm batters
Jtm R1We came on m relief
of Huffman m the ltfth Inmng
and was the losmg pitcher

Blood pressure can vary frequently
By Lawrence E Lamb, M D
DEAR DR LAMB - A few
months ago our Diabetes
Society held a chnlc for the
elderly, which I attended A
nurse took my blood pressure
and got a readmg of 190 over 90
So she had another nurse take
II She got 170 over 90 A few
weeks later they called me
back for a recheck and 1\ was
sbll h1gh They adviSed me to
see a doctor, whlch I d1d He
got 130 over 70 and satd a man
of 30 would be glad to have such
a normal readmg
By thts lime I was utterly
confused as to why three
separate limes my pressure
was htgh and the last tune 1t
was normal The doctor explamed tenSJon can cause the
different fluctuations That
was hard for me 1o buy for I felt
I was e9ually relaxed each
lime Not bemg satisfied yet I
wenl1o another doctor He said
my pressure was 160 over 115
and wasn I bad for m) age of

•

/

Milwaukee keeps playoff hopes alive

DR. LAMB

•

'

·-....

\

•

ou sa'~ ~\
at\d ~." \1\ot\e
bl~

�.- ....

,, .

.

•

-·

I

I
4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 .. Wednesday, April 2. 1975

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

~he Da~y Sentinel, Mid':'eP&lt;&gt;rt-l'omeroy,_p ., Wednesday, April2, 197,5

'

Democrats, Rhodes . skirm~sh .o,ver trimming state .·b-u dget issue
By LEE LEONARD .
UPI Statehouse Reporler
COLUMBUS (UPl )
Majority Democrats on the
House Finance Commi ttee
fenced briefly with Gov. James
A. Rhodes ' fif\ance . chief
Tuesday over who~hould trim
the new state budgft, the
Rhodes administra.tion or the
legislature .
The outcome was not decisive , but it was clear the issue
will be raised again in the
cominJ! weeks as the General
Assembly continues work on
Rhodes' proposed $12,2 bilUon
budget for l.iscal 1976-77. •
The debate began at Toesday 's packed committee !lleeting when state Finance
Director Howard L. Collier told ·
the ·lawmakers that unless
Ohio's corporation tax payments a re · aCcele rated to
balance the next budget, the
state will be operating in the
red by November.
Even with the stepped-up
payment schedule, Collier
said, $55.6 million will have to
be cut from the spending plan
to avoid a deficit by January,
1977.
Collier recommended selective cuts in the budget as it
travels through the legislature,
rather than forcing Rhodes to
make -across-the-board reductions 1ater to make the budget
balance. .
..
"Cuts across the board would
negate everything the legislature intended in the budget, "
Collier said . "The last thing
this .assembly wants to do is
create any hardship on an
agency by forcing across~he­
board cuts ." .
Make Reductions
Rep. William E. Hinig, DNew Philadelphia, insisted that
if the budget is not balanced,
the administrati on should
make reductions and resubmit
it.
" There s hould be some
adjustments made by the
administration if this is not in .

million -Rhodes hppes to save study ,'_' Collier said, •·and it
thr ough recommenda tions isn 't until two or three ~ears
made by a "Little Hoo.ver ~Iter that- that t-he re commenComm.tssion" HSs ig9ed to ,:. elationS can be _iniplemented."
study efficiency in govern- · Change Payment MethOd
ment.
'
· Collier so id alte rin g the
"II wi~tak e the grea ter part corp ora te
tax paym'ent
of this ''-ear to finish tha t schedule would be a better

alterna ti vC Jhan increa..si ng
corporati on ta xes because the
)a lter co urse would merely
raise the level of state spending
wi thout alleviating the cash
flow problem.
"The stat e is ~e tter off by
changing the payment method

Gro_ceries, and menu•s.
""' . .
By JEANNE LESEM
UP! Food Editor
An oversupply of beef
potatoes, dry beans and splii
_pe.. and plentiful supplies of 12
,or rhore oth.e r staples promise

I

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-!

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TUBE SOCKS

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All m etal wi th p last ic
ti p end. Hang 5 pa'lrs of
wom en 's pa nts or men's
s lacks . Sa ve needed

Green and White
Regular s4.94
On Sale
Thursday thru Sunday

$12 .95
valu e
4 Each
Store

MEN'S CUSHION SOLE SOX
White or Dark colors(j

YOUTH S-BOYS-MEN 'S

, Plugs - Bugs

TENNIS SHOES

Rigged Worm s.
Floats -

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Unbreakable Plastic

BAT and
2 BALLS

Rods

LOW, LOW PRICES!
EleCtr ic or Wind Up

· For · your sp r ing
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our
new
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Reg .
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OUTSIDE WHITE

lATEX PAINT

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$199

Bell or Flare Legs

60 Yards

Regular or Slim

ASKIN
TAPE

Sizes 6 to 18

94¢

$499
Galion
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~----

ON ANY

Visit lli Often

WESTCLOX

SAIDALS

•. Sle~ l ' llghtpxvlnto
1pring and warm
t Mither In o.ur
d•s; sandals. Not

ALL 3 STORES

. ; 1.,.1 &amp;.handful, but a .
• r.t~bow of colors ond

....

-

lfylis, .

DECORI-TIVE

A DIStOUNT ...
DfPARTMfNT STORE

·' JACKSON
AVENUE .
?OINT PLEASANT
W. VA.

MAIN
STREET
MASON

SILVER
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GAWPOLIS

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FENCE
High lmpa"ct Sty~ene
35 inch _length .

7 Inch Aluminum

Just Arrived!

WHITE WOOD

PAINT PAN
AND ROUER

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PICKET
FENCE

..

Compare-at $1.17 '

99~
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28~

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35" long, 9" wide
Easv to Install ,

· WEDGES..:.
·&gt; :'HONGS; _. • SLINGS-

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!FLOWERS NOT INCl-UDED) •
A 'big 9 inch decorative
plastic hanging basket,

complete with bracket and
chains . Regular price is
$3.99 . Give your home

Yourll :II~~ eur
styles-:-·Love•our prices .

low silhouette

·

FM/AM
CLOCK-RADIO

1n·$1

Dependobte clock timer
a handsome dark fj nish .
Black diol with white

OUTDOORS-OR INSIDE

KITCHEN WALL CLOCK

$ 99

look this spring.

· Get months of Bright,
Dependable Light
Without Chang lng
Batteries- Then
Throw it Away, En joy
A. New One. ·

,.
p

r.

· CHARLOTIE, N.C. (UP! ) Ow.ner Upton . Bell of the
efiarlotte Hornets Tuesday
said the public sale of shares in
the World Football League
franchise failed to raise enough
money and he had two more
weeks to come up with an
additional $450,000 in order to
operate the club next season,
Bell announ'c ed tha t the
March 31 deadline for the sale
of shares in the team passed
with less than $600,000 in the
bank. The team must have $1.1
million to start the league's
second season.
TENNIS COACH RETIRES
EVANSTON; Ill. (UP! ) Clare Riessen , the Northwestern University , tennis coach
whose players included his son
Marty, Clark Graebner and
Don Lutz, retired Tuesday.
Riessen, 65, who began at
Northwestern In 1959, coached
the school to a Big Ten tennis
championship ·in 1963 and to
third-place finishes in NCAA
competition in 1963 and 1964.
His son Marty won three
consecutive Big Ten singles
championships and received
All-America recognition while
at Northwestern.
TITLE BOUT PROBABLE
- SAN · DIEGO (UPI) - A
heavyweight title bout between
Muhammad Ali and Ken
Norton, the ex-Marine who
broke Ali's jaw two years ago,
is probable this year, according to Norton ' s comanager Bob Biron.
Biron said Ali would
schedule a fight in June and
that no announcement of his
next fight would be made until
8fter that bout. Biron went on
to say. he hoped the fight announced then would be between
Norton and Ali.
Norton, an underdog,. broke
Ali's jaw en route to a 12-round
· split decision victory in April,
1973.
C~RLSON

•

$147

REINSf ATED ,
ALBANY, N.l(. (UP!) ~
North American ' Hockey
League ·Commissioner Bob
· Dextraze TUesday reinstated
. 'Johnstown center Steve
carlson and placed him on
probaY69 in connection with an
incid~ during the Jets'
quarter-finql playoff series/ ·
.with Cape
C&lt;irlaon was originally s6spended for the remalncle'r of
the season for abuse of game
officials but was reinstated '
· after his club appealed the '
decision ind a.Blled Dextraze
for il review ( the case.

coo:

nurnerals, hands and hour
marking~. 4 each store .

fRILL, CANE OR JLORLEl MODEL
ELECTRIC CLOC~ WITH
BOLD EASY-TO-READ-NUMBERS

Get yours now. Don 't Miss Out--r.,,t
Yours Now While
Selections Ar.e Good.

a

88

Solld s'tate, instant sOund .

westCIOX

FLOWERS

DISPOSABLE
FLASHLIGHT

HANGING BASKET
.
WITH BRACKET

All The fiewr.ites
..

$24.95

ARTIFICIAL SPRING

13~

In Effect Th11rsday thru Sunday

,., .·

-

Short Sleeve - Cap Sleeves
:Solids or Prints
Regular and XL Sizes

SAVE 20% TO
-

10 A.M.

SMOCK
TOPS

Electric Alarm ClockWind Up Alarm ClockTravel ClocksTimersD.rowze Electric Clocks

LIST

Green- Gold-Tangerine
$1.79 Value
·

Women of all Ages

Our Everyday
Discount Price

Shoppen?Mart.

SAUCE PAN

. Solids or Prints
Polyester Blends
Nylons

OFF

and :DIHilrent
At ':~--..

STAINLESS STEEL

A Huge Collection

OUR NEW FULl LINE

New

2 QUART

HALTER TOPS

TO INTRODUCE

SfRIWG

THURS~AY

.'

'

Women's - Teens · Midrif

COMPARE
AT
$12.95

, . !.

Any pair $4.94 up
Thurs •. Fri .. Sat .

· ,··- 1

• · ' She;&gt;r, stretch nylon . Sizes of
pet;te , average or tall,
Cantrece
has super stretch,
.
.
wears longer . Reg. $1.~7.
.

FULL BED SIZE
SOLID COLORS OR PRINTS

~p
Som-.~iilg

.88!R.
CANTRECE II PANTY HOSE
.•
77

-WOMEN'S
UMBRELLA
Complete with -

QUILTED BEDSPREADS

· 'J'IIera-~ls

'

Two sizes . Petite-medium or
medium -tall. Smooth fitting.
extra support. no seams. Regular
$1 .37
' .

PRINTED VINYL

.....

RIGID PLASTIC

·PLANTERS
·&lt;X Lise as
.
Flower Pot Holders

'

rWO MOJtE' WEEKS

SUPPORT PANTY HOSE

Westclox
FINE CLOCKS
NOW AVAILABLE AT SHOPPERS MART

1'12 inch width

WHITE and 6 COLORS

PERFECT QUALITY
WANTED SHADES

liflht and Batteries

a - D size•

•

$ 44

PR .

Easy Care Polyester
Crew
or
U Neck

a-

BOYS
'LEGGS'
JEANS

LATEX WALL PAINT

Stretches to Fit

best

99

Take
Thw"
' .Nay!

TOPS

c Size.

10 -

Permanent Press

ThfJrsday thru Sunday

"~LUX"

~:;,:;....~:·
-t·· t:;LOC~S

-

SIZE COn) .·

BE HERE FOR SAVINGS!

WORK
BOOTS

· REDUCEDI

TEENS AND WOMEN'S

.' ,.

STARTS THURSDAY

Any Pair Of

Thursday for

PantSuits

•••••

I

OFF \

so be here early
selection.

99~

..... ...

30 INCH •1.97

Corrie 0, In!

I

On e large lot of spring checks and sol ids.
Actual values .to $5 .94 . It's not a big group,

FLASHLIGHT

MEN'S LEATHER

$}17

.,

Hooks

Reels -

'V

$200

-

Of
72

.-

GREEN METAL PLANT BOXES
18 INCH SIZE '1.47 24 INCH •1.77

PR.

'

··~

•

.

.

-

'

TRAVEL
SLIPPERS

Package of

Di scount Priced , Of Course!

FIGHT INFLATION
") WITH SHOPPERS MART'

CLOTHES
PINS
Pack

BArrERIES

Stringers- Scalers

'· U

97

MEN'S OR WOMEN'S

•

•••
••
••
••

•

Set

SHORT SLEEVE

'.
SHOP OUR
SELECTION

69~

WOMEN'S
PANTS

Sei lqut Repeat

WOODEN SPRING

•

••

·

• • ••

$

~·

•

~AIR $} 97
By Bata
White · Red · Black . Blue

•

• •• •
..
•

$ 99 ,..i

Fit s 10 to 13

on a Del!locratic-sponsored
$11 .5 billion appropriation
anyway .
The finance chief favors
balancing the budget by
requiring corporations to make
an advance payment late this
year on their . 1976 taxe s,
raising some $85 million.
He also · has propose d
quarterly corporate tax
payments instead of the single
annual payment, in order to
free a $219 million cash cushion
for increased government
spending.
Rhodes Opposes Plan
Rhodes ·-has come out in
op)losition to Collier's plan;
claiming_it would be unfair to
businesses in Ohio.
"The change in the corporate
franchise tax payments
wouldn't solve everything,"
Collier sa id in explaining a
deficit of $55 million would
exist by by Ja nuary , 1977.
"But we feel that because
that 's 16 months into the
biennium , we can contro l
spending." He said the administration could reduce the
rate of hiring and slow dowrf
purchases of equipment and
supplies to save money.
Collier · said an improved
economic forecast still would
not offset the deficit. He added
he has not counted on $100

value.

FOR

CHAIR

Da r k Wood Fin ish

S2~

99¢

ALUMINUM LAWN

CORNER
STAND

cl oset sPa ce .

Value

.

22 x64 ,size In a rainbow of colors .
· E·xtra1 thick and absorbent. Seconds

· c1

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

' " .. ..

Jacqtlards , • -~Hds - Embroidered
· Cannon or Cones quality. The big

Wipe Clean Vinyl

$}22

STARTS THURSDAY!
5 BAR SLACK RACK

~, BATH:~ TOWELS

ur. :-~etusages, or a German..style
cost only 21 cents, The l)igh of
cas.c.;ero 1e of ' pork • ·chops, 63 cents a pound \vas reported
,•·auerkrau t an d poIa, toes.
in Honolulu . Fg!¥1 prices
This is also a good week to generally are , high there
make your own french fries because most products are
any place but Phoenix, where a imported. Frozen french fries ·
one pound pa cka:ge of the sold mostly for 39 to 48 cents a
froze~, heat-and-.,at variety pound elsewhere.
Sugar prices continue"cl to
decline
slowly. The price of a :;.
.
pound bag was belr. $2 in 19
cities on the UP! lis and above
$2 in only live. The top was ,
$2.49 a ba g in New York,
closely followed by' Atlanta , at
$2.39. The low of $1.69 in Pittsburgh was six cents below last
week's low Of $1.75 in Cincinnati.
Frozen orange juice concentrate dropped below 30 cents' .
lor a 'i&gt;&lt;&gt;unce can in Pittsburgh,
Phoenix, Los Angeles, Bir·
mingham, Atlanta , Concord,
N.H. and Hartford, Conn ., but
was generally 30 to 35 cents
elsewhere ,
Fresh ~itrus fruits and juices
also are plentiful, says the
USDA. So is canned noncitrus
fruit, but prices tend to remain
high, reflecting the price of
~ugar at the time of the 197~
·harvest. A 29-&lt;Junce can of
sliced yellow cling peaches in
heavy syrup was selling for a
Regular $10.88 to $13 .88
high of 73 cents in Honolulu and
59 cents or more a can in at
It 's our annual Att'er Easter Mark .
least 13 mainland cities, indown on our entire stock of women ' s
cluding Buffalo, N, Y., Boston,
pant su its: Come shop . you ' ll want a
couple, we're sure.
Chicago, Milwaukee and
Grand ,Bapids.
Sizes 10 to 14
Other foodS expected to
And 14'12 to 22'12
remain plentiful through April
include l&gt;eanuts, walnuts and
aimonds, all of them useful for
adding protein to meatless
menus . But only the peanuts
are apt to be modest in price.
For a novel main dish or snack,
you might cook raw peanuts
southern-style : boil the shelled
nuts in salted water , U(le
soybeans, they retain a nu(ty
texture instead ·of becQITJing
ONE SIZE FITS All
soft like most dried beans.

FROM
· SHOPPERS MART

WHILE THEY LAST!

BIG THICK: VELOUR
GARDEN
HOSE

Fi t s size 10-13

Reg.
97c

TEll YOUR NEIGHBORS

COLORED

: The' sariie cut of por'k wa.·. ,
below $1 a pound ,·n &lt;Jnl•.r f&lt;Jur
cities - Cincin_nat•·, nalla.•' ,
Little Rock and New York : To
make it go further, try dried
bean casseroles such 1\s a ..
French cassoulet made· with
one or morl"kinds of pork and-

·FAST SELLING-STARTS THURSDAY .MORNING 10 AM

&lt;

29¢

59c Valu e
3 COLOR S(Not as pictured)

lawmakers were going to act

,

Louis , Cincinnati, Jacksonville, Fla., . Little Rock and
Philadelphia . But they hit a.
high of 66 cents a pound in
Portland, Ore., which also
reported the week's high of
$1.88 a pound for loin end ·pork
chops.

DECANTER
PITCHER ·

i

Collier declined to predict
whether Rhodes would em- ·
brace the budget bill if it·comes
to his desk with the accelerated
corporation tax payments in it.
He said he understood the

'

Fla., and a low of 59 cents lor
the. third week in a row in Los
An"eles.
o
In Birmingham, 39-ecnt-apound broiler-fryers were the
lowest for the third succ'CSsive
week, followed by 41 to 49 cents
a pound in Dallas, Phoenix, St.

STYRENE PLASTIC

changes .' '

·mORNTON DISABLED
SCoTTsDALE, Ariz. (UPI)
- First baseman Andy
.Thornton of the Cl)icago Cubs.'
Tuesday was pl~ced on the 21day disab!wllls) aner breaking·
a'bone in his right wrist.
Thomlon was hit liy a pitched ball thrown by Cleveland
lildlan Tom Buskey in the ninth
Inning of an exhibition game
Monday at Tucson.
Thomlon finished tlie game
but X-raya Tuesday revealed a
fracture and his wriJit will
remain In a cast for three or
· four weeks.

lower retail prices this month
for American shoppers.
But how !fluch· lower is
anybody's guess. Marketing
speciaUsts at the U.S. Department of Agriculture said prices

for
be the first · fourcitems
· have .
en deelinihg
slowly
.
.
' Ground chuc_k . rem •• ined
about 69 to 99 cents a pound in
most of the 24 cities co vered in
UPJ's weekly survey of 17
blisic grocery items, It reached
a high of $1.19 in Jacksonville,

- 10 A.M.

THURSDAY MORNING

got a bill here . You either
support it or you don't. If you
don't, you should make the

bn

1

years.
- Rep. Arthur R. Rowers, DSteubenvllle, submitted a billon behalf of the Department of
Highway Safety making '55
miles an hour the ab~olute top
speed limit on .all Ohio highways .

'

STARTS

balance," said Hinig. ''We've

19 APPLY FOR JOB
NORMAN, Okla. (UP! )
\ Nineteen persons have applied
for the·head basketball coach·~· .ing job at~Oklahoma Univer&gt; sity, athletic director Wade
Walker said Tuesday.
''I'm sure .there are . other
applications
the way," ·he
said.
,.
.
A search conlmittee, with
Walker as chairman, set up
guidelines for recommending a
sucefSliOr to Joe Ramsey wl!o
resigned last week.

of an Ohio Energy Development - Center to explore conse rv a l,lon and d evelopriu~ rit
projects, seek federal aid · for
pilot projects and make solar
heating and cooling demonstration grants . Th e 'priCe tag
would be $27 miUion for two

than it would be if taxes were
inrreased," he said . 'We'd be
in a deeper pi t then becaw;e of
the level ur spending ."
At a ;'skeletonn House
session :
- Democ rats introduced
legisla tion ca)ling for crea tion

~ower retai~ prices for many staples expected this morfth _to_.-shoppers

•

- Rep. Don S. Maddux, .
Lancaster, offere4 a b
requiring all state-assist ..
medical schools to . dev~
admissions policies to accep
·portion of studenll; from rw
or impoverished areas, even
they do not have top . grado

•
'

.

,

.

.

�.- ....

,, .

.

•

-·

I

I
4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 .. Wednesday, April 2. 1975

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

~he Da~y Sentinel, Mid':'eP&lt;&gt;rt-l'omeroy,_p ., Wednesday, April2, 197,5

'

Democrats, Rhodes . skirm~sh .o,ver trimming state .·b-u dget issue
By LEE LEONARD .
UPI Statehouse Reporler
COLUMBUS (UPl )
Majority Democrats on the
House Finance Commi ttee
fenced briefly with Gov. James
A. Rhodes ' fif\ance . chief
Tuesday over who~hould trim
the new state budgft, the
Rhodes administra.tion or the
legislature .
The outcome was not decisive , but it was clear the issue
will be raised again in the
cominJ! weeks as the General
Assembly continues work on
Rhodes' proposed $12,2 bilUon
budget for l.iscal 1976-77. •
The debate began at Toesday 's packed committee !lleeting when state Finance
Director Howard L. Collier told ·
the ·lawmakers that unless
Ohio's corporation tax payments a re · aCcele rated to
balance the next budget, the
state will be operating in the
red by November.
Even with the stepped-up
payment schedule, Collier
said, $55.6 million will have to
be cut from the spending plan
to avoid a deficit by January,
1977.
Collier recommended selective cuts in the budget as it
travels through the legislature,
rather than forcing Rhodes to
make -across-the-board reductions 1ater to make the budget
balance. .
..
"Cuts across the board would
negate everything the legislature intended in the budget, "
Collier said . "The last thing
this .assembly wants to do is
create any hardship on an
agency by forcing across~he­
board cuts ." .
Make Reductions
Rep. William E. Hinig, DNew Philadelphia, insisted that
if the budget is not balanced,
the administrati on should
make reductions and resubmit
it.
" There s hould be some
adjustments made by the
administration if this is not in .

million -Rhodes hppes to save study ,'_' Collier said, •·and it
thr ough recommenda tions isn 't until two or three ~ears
made by a "Little Hoo.ver ~Iter that- that t-he re commenComm.tssion" HSs ig9ed to ,:. elationS can be _iniplemented."
study efficiency in govern- · Change Payment MethOd
ment.
'
· Collier so id alte rin g the
"II wi~tak e the grea ter part corp ora te
tax paym'ent
of this ''-ear to finish tha t schedule would be a better

alterna ti vC Jhan increa..si ng
corporati on ta xes because the
)a lter co urse would merely
raise the level of state spending
wi thout alleviating the cash
flow problem.
"The stat e is ~e tter off by
changing the payment method

Gro_ceries, and menu•s.
""' . .
By JEANNE LESEM
UP! Food Editor
An oversupply of beef
potatoes, dry beans and splii
_pe.. and plentiful supplies of 12
,or rhore oth.e r staples promise

I

.

-!

~EN'S

TUBE SOCKS

ll•1111:1ttf41·

112

Long Handled

inch by 25 feel

STEEL
SHOVEL

TABLE
CLOTHS

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RAKE

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FOAM BACK

4 FT. WOOD HAND

For Yard Clean Up

~.98

"N EVCO" 3 SHELF

All m etal wi th p last ic
ti p end. Hang 5 pa'lrs of
wom en 's pa nts or men's
s lacks . Sa ve needed

Green and White
Regular s4.94
On Sale
Thursday thru Sunday

$12 .95
valu e
4 Each
Store

MEN'S CUSHION SOLE SOX
White or Dark colors(j

YOUTH S-BOYS-MEN 'S

, Plugs - Bugs

TENNIS SHOES

Rigged Worm s.
Floats -

1•••

J\ _
Line -

fit '®

Unbreakable Plastic

BAT and
2 BALLS

Rods

LOW, LOW PRICES!
EleCtr ic or Wind Up

· For · your sp r ing
~~"""' pa int ing chores try
our
new
"Eve rl ast i n g '~ la te&gt;e
pa int

Reg .
~~~ .To $3.98

$3 9tuon

OUTSIDE WHITE

lATEX PAINT

ALARM
~

$199

Bell or Flare Legs

60 Yards

Regular or Slim

ASKIN
TAPE

Sizes 6 to 18

94¢

$499
Galion
'

STARTS

.

~----

ON ANY

Visit lli Often

WESTCLOX

SAIDALS

•. Sle~ l ' llghtpxvlnto
1pring and warm
t Mither In o.ur
d•s; sandals. Not

ALL 3 STORES

. ; 1.,.1 &amp;.handful, but a .
• r.t~bow of colors ond

....

-

lfylis, .

DECORI-TIVE

A DIStOUNT ...
DfPARTMfNT STORE

·' JACKSON
AVENUE .
?OINT PLEASANT
W. VA.

MAIN
STREET
MASON

SILVER
BRIDGE ·
PlAZA

W.- VA.

GAWPOLIS

.PLASTIC.
FENCE
High lmpa"ct Sty~ene
35 inch _length .

7 Inch Aluminum

Just Arrived!

WHITE WOOD

PAINT PAN
AND ROUER

rAINY
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PICKET
FENCE

..

Compare-at $1.17 '

99~
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"

28~

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35" long, 9" wide
Easv to Install ,

· WEDGES..:.
·&gt; :'HONGS; _. • SLINGS-

':.:--:

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!FLOWERS NOT INCl-UDED) •
A 'big 9 inch decorative
plastic hanging basket,

complete with bracket and
chains . Regular price is
$3.99 . Give your home

Yourll :II~~ eur
styles-:-·Love•our prices .

low silhouette

·

FM/AM
CLOCK-RADIO

1n·$1

Dependobte clock timer
a handsome dark fj nish .
Black diol with white

OUTDOORS-OR INSIDE

KITCHEN WALL CLOCK

$ 99

look this spring.

· Get months of Bright,
Dependable Light
Without Chang lng
Batteries- Then
Throw it Away, En joy
A. New One. ·

,.
p

r.

· CHARLOTIE, N.C. (UP! ) Ow.ner Upton . Bell of the
efiarlotte Hornets Tuesday
said the public sale of shares in
the World Football League
franchise failed to raise enough
money and he had two more
weeks to come up with an
additional $450,000 in order to
operate the club next season,
Bell announ'c ed tha t the
March 31 deadline for the sale
of shares in the team passed
with less than $600,000 in the
bank. The team must have $1.1
million to start the league's
second season.
TENNIS COACH RETIRES
EVANSTON; Ill. (UP! ) Clare Riessen , the Northwestern University , tennis coach
whose players included his son
Marty, Clark Graebner and
Don Lutz, retired Tuesday.
Riessen, 65, who began at
Northwestern In 1959, coached
the school to a Big Ten tennis
championship ·in 1963 and to
third-place finishes in NCAA
competition in 1963 and 1964.
His son Marty won three
consecutive Big Ten singles
championships and received
All-America recognition while
at Northwestern.
TITLE BOUT PROBABLE
- SAN · DIEGO (UPI) - A
heavyweight title bout between
Muhammad Ali and Ken
Norton, the ex-Marine who
broke Ali's jaw two years ago,
is probable this year, according to Norton ' s comanager Bob Biron.
Biron said Ali would
schedule a fight in June and
that no announcement of his
next fight would be made until
8fter that bout. Biron went on
to say. he hoped the fight announced then would be between
Norton and Ali.
Norton, an underdog,. broke
Ali's jaw en route to a 12-round
· split decision victory in April,
1973.
C~RLSON

•

$147

REINSf ATED ,
ALBANY, N.l(. (UP!) ~
North American ' Hockey
League ·Commissioner Bob
· Dextraze TUesday reinstated
. 'Johnstown center Steve
carlson and placed him on
probaY69 in connection with an
incid~ during the Jets'
quarter-finql playoff series/ ·
.with Cape
C&lt;irlaon was originally s6spended for the remalncle'r of
the season for abuse of game
officials but was reinstated '
· after his club appealed the '
decision ind a.Blled Dextraze
for il review ( the case.

coo:

nurnerals, hands and hour
marking~. 4 each store .

fRILL, CANE OR JLORLEl MODEL
ELECTRIC CLOC~ WITH
BOLD EASY-TO-READ-NUMBERS

Get yours now. Don 't Miss Out--r.,,t
Yours Now While
Selections Ar.e Good.

a

88

Solld s'tate, instant sOund .

westCIOX

FLOWERS

DISPOSABLE
FLASHLIGHT

HANGING BASKET
.
WITH BRACKET

All The fiewr.ites
..

$24.95

ARTIFICIAL SPRING

13~

In Effect Th11rsday thru Sunday

,., .·

-

Short Sleeve - Cap Sleeves
:Solids or Prints
Regular and XL Sizes

SAVE 20% TO
-

10 A.M.

SMOCK
TOPS

Electric Alarm ClockWind Up Alarm ClockTravel ClocksTimersD.rowze Electric Clocks

LIST

Green- Gold-Tangerine
$1.79 Value
·

Women of all Ages

Our Everyday
Discount Price

Shoppen?Mart.

SAUCE PAN

. Solids or Prints
Polyester Blends
Nylons

OFF

and :DIHilrent
At ':~--..

STAINLESS STEEL

A Huge Collection

OUR NEW FULl LINE

New

2 QUART

HALTER TOPS

TO INTRODUCE

SfRIWG

THURS~AY

.'

'

Women's - Teens · Midrif

COMPARE
AT
$12.95

, . !.

Any pair $4.94 up
Thurs •. Fri .. Sat .

· ,··- 1

• · ' She;&gt;r, stretch nylon . Sizes of
pet;te , average or tall,
Cantrece
has super stretch,
.
.
wears longer . Reg. $1.~7.
.

FULL BED SIZE
SOLID COLORS OR PRINTS

~p
Som-.~iilg

.88!R.
CANTRECE II PANTY HOSE
.•
77

-WOMEN'S
UMBRELLA
Complete with -

QUILTED BEDSPREADS

· 'J'IIera-~ls

'

Two sizes . Petite-medium or
medium -tall. Smooth fitting.
extra support. no seams. Regular
$1 .37
' .

PRINTED VINYL

.....

RIGID PLASTIC

·PLANTERS
·&lt;X Lise as
.
Flower Pot Holders

'

rWO MOJtE' WEEKS

SUPPORT PANTY HOSE

Westclox
FINE CLOCKS
NOW AVAILABLE AT SHOPPERS MART

1'12 inch width

WHITE and 6 COLORS

PERFECT QUALITY
WANTED SHADES

liflht and Batteries

a - D size•

•

$ 44

PR .

Easy Care Polyester
Crew
or
U Neck

a-

BOYS
'LEGGS'
JEANS

LATEX WALL PAINT

Stretches to Fit

best

99

Take
Thw"
' .Nay!

TOPS

c Size.

10 -

Permanent Press

ThfJrsday thru Sunday

"~LUX"

~:;,:;....~:·
-t·· t:;LOC~S

-

SIZE COn) .·

BE HERE FOR SAVINGS!

WORK
BOOTS

· REDUCEDI

TEENS AND WOMEN'S

.' ,.

STARTS THURSDAY

Any Pair Of

Thursday for

PantSuits

•••••

I

OFF \

so be here early
selection.

99~

..... ...

30 INCH •1.97

Corrie 0, In!

I

On e large lot of spring checks and sol ids.
Actual values .to $5 .94 . It's not a big group,

FLASHLIGHT

MEN'S LEATHER

$}17

.,

Hooks

Reels -

'V

$200

-

Of
72

.-

GREEN METAL PLANT BOXES
18 INCH SIZE '1.47 24 INCH •1.77

PR.

'

··~

•

.

.

-

'

TRAVEL
SLIPPERS

Package of

Di scount Priced , Of Course!

FIGHT INFLATION
") WITH SHOPPERS MART'

CLOTHES
PINS
Pack

BArrERIES

Stringers- Scalers

'· U

97

MEN'S OR WOMEN'S

•

•••
••
••
••

•

Set

SHORT SLEEVE

'.
SHOP OUR
SELECTION

69~

WOMEN'S
PANTS

Sei lqut Repeat

WOODEN SPRING

•

••

·

• • ••

$

~·

•

~AIR $} 97
By Bata
White · Red · Black . Blue

•

• •• •
..
•

$ 99 ,..i

Fit s 10 to 13

on a Del!locratic-sponsored
$11 .5 billion appropriation
anyway .
The finance chief favors
balancing the budget by
requiring corporations to make
an advance payment late this
year on their . 1976 taxe s,
raising some $85 million.
He also · has propose d
quarterly corporate tax
payments instead of the single
annual payment, in order to
free a $219 million cash cushion
for increased government
spending.
Rhodes Opposes Plan
Rhodes ·-has come out in
op)losition to Collier's plan;
claiming_it would be unfair to
businesses in Ohio.
"The change in the corporate
franchise tax payments
wouldn't solve everything,"
Collier sa id in explaining a
deficit of $55 million would
exist by by Ja nuary , 1977.
"But we feel that because
that 's 16 months into the
biennium , we can contro l
spending." He said the administration could reduce the
rate of hiring and slow dowrf
purchases of equipment and
supplies to save money.
Collier · said an improved
economic forecast still would
not offset the deficit. He added
he has not counted on $100

value.

FOR

CHAIR

Da r k Wood Fin ish

S2~

99¢

ALUMINUM LAWN

CORNER
STAND

cl oset sPa ce .

Value

.

22 x64 ,size In a rainbow of colors .
· E·xtra1 thick and absorbent. Seconds

· c1

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

' " .. ..

Jacqtlards , • -~Hds - Embroidered
· Cannon or Cones quality. The big

Wipe Clean Vinyl

$}22

STARTS THURSDAY!
5 BAR SLACK RACK

~, BATH:~ TOWELS

ur. :-~etusages, or a German..style
cost only 21 cents, The l)igh of
cas.c.;ero 1e of ' pork • ·chops, 63 cents a pound \vas reported
,•·auerkrau t an d poIa, toes.
in Honolulu . Fg!¥1 prices
This is also a good week to generally are , high there
make your own french fries because most products are
any place but Phoenix, where a imported. Frozen french fries ·
one pound pa cka:ge of the sold mostly for 39 to 48 cents a
froze~, heat-and-.,at variety pound elsewhere.
Sugar prices continue"cl to
decline
slowly. The price of a :;.
.
pound bag was belr. $2 in 19
cities on the UP! lis and above
$2 in only live. The top was ,
$2.49 a ba g in New York,
closely followed by' Atlanta , at
$2.39. The low of $1.69 in Pittsburgh was six cents below last
week's low Of $1.75 in Cincinnati.
Frozen orange juice concentrate dropped below 30 cents' .
lor a 'i&gt;&lt;&gt;unce can in Pittsburgh,
Phoenix, Los Angeles, Bir·
mingham, Atlanta , Concord,
N.H. and Hartford, Conn ., but
was generally 30 to 35 cents
elsewhere ,
Fresh ~itrus fruits and juices
also are plentiful, says the
USDA. So is canned noncitrus
fruit, but prices tend to remain
high, reflecting the price of
~ugar at the time of the 197~
·harvest. A 29-&lt;Junce can of
sliced yellow cling peaches in
heavy syrup was selling for a
Regular $10.88 to $13 .88
high of 73 cents in Honolulu and
59 cents or more a can in at
It 's our annual Att'er Easter Mark .
least 13 mainland cities, indown on our entire stock of women ' s
cluding Buffalo, N, Y., Boston,
pant su its: Come shop . you ' ll want a
couple, we're sure.
Chicago, Milwaukee and
Grand ,Bapids.
Sizes 10 to 14
Other foodS expected to
And 14'12 to 22'12
remain plentiful through April
include l&gt;eanuts, walnuts and
aimonds, all of them useful for
adding protein to meatless
menus . But only the peanuts
are apt to be modest in price.
For a novel main dish or snack,
you might cook raw peanuts
southern-style : boil the shelled
nuts in salted water , U(le
soybeans, they retain a nu(ty
texture instead ·of becQITJing
ONE SIZE FITS All
soft like most dried beans.

FROM
· SHOPPERS MART

WHILE THEY LAST!

BIG THICK: VELOUR
GARDEN
HOSE

Fi t s size 10-13

Reg.
97c

TEll YOUR NEIGHBORS

COLORED

: The' sariie cut of por'k wa.·. ,
below $1 a pound ,·n &lt;Jnl•.r f&lt;Jur
cities - Cincin_nat•·, nalla.•' ,
Little Rock and New York : To
make it go further, try dried
bean casseroles such 1\s a ..
French cassoulet made· with
one or morl"kinds of pork and-

·FAST SELLING-STARTS THURSDAY .MORNING 10 AM

&lt;

29¢

59c Valu e
3 COLOR S(Not as pictured)

lawmakers were going to act

,

Louis , Cincinnati, Jacksonville, Fla., . Little Rock and
Philadelphia . But they hit a.
high of 66 cents a pound in
Portland, Ore., which also
reported the week's high of
$1.88 a pound for loin end ·pork
chops.

DECANTER
PITCHER ·

i

Collier declined to predict
whether Rhodes would em- ·
brace the budget bill if it·comes
to his desk with the accelerated
corporation tax payments in it.
He said he understood the

'

Fla., and a low of 59 cents lor
the. third week in a row in Los
An"eles.
o
In Birmingham, 39-ecnt-apound broiler-fryers were the
lowest for the third succ'CSsive
week, followed by 41 to 49 cents
a pound in Dallas, Phoenix, St.

STYRENE PLASTIC

changes .' '

·mORNTON DISABLED
SCoTTsDALE, Ariz. (UPI)
- First baseman Andy
.Thornton of the Cl)icago Cubs.'
Tuesday was pl~ced on the 21day disab!wllls) aner breaking·
a'bone in his right wrist.
Thomlon was hit liy a pitched ball thrown by Cleveland
lildlan Tom Buskey in the ninth
Inning of an exhibition game
Monday at Tucson.
Thomlon finished tlie game
but X-raya Tuesday revealed a
fracture and his wriJit will
remain In a cast for three or
· four weeks.

lower retail prices this month
for American shoppers.
But how !fluch· lower is
anybody's guess. Marketing
speciaUsts at the U.S. Department of Agriculture said prices

for
be the first · fourcitems
· have .
en deelinihg
slowly
.
.
' Ground chuc_k . rem •• ined
about 69 to 99 cents a pound in
most of the 24 cities co vered in
UPJ's weekly survey of 17
blisic grocery items, It reached
a high of $1.19 in Jacksonville,

- 10 A.M.

THURSDAY MORNING

got a bill here . You either
support it or you don't. If you
don't, you should make the

bn

1

years.
- Rep. Arthur R. Rowers, DSteubenvllle, submitted a billon behalf of the Department of
Highway Safety making '55
miles an hour the ab~olute top
speed limit on .all Ohio highways .

'

STARTS

balance," said Hinig. ''We've

19 APPLY FOR JOB
NORMAN, Okla. (UP! )
\ Nineteen persons have applied
for the·head basketball coach·~· .ing job at~Oklahoma Univer&gt; sity, athletic director Wade
Walker said Tuesday.
''I'm sure .there are . other
applications
the way," ·he
said.
,.
.
A search conlmittee, with
Walker as chairman, set up
guidelines for recommending a
sucefSliOr to Joe Ramsey wl!o
resigned last week.

of an Ohio Energy Development - Center to explore conse rv a l,lon and d evelopriu~ rit
projects, seek federal aid · for
pilot projects and make solar
heating and cooling demonstration grants . Th e 'priCe tag
would be $27 miUion for two

than it would be if taxes were
inrreased," he said . 'We'd be
in a deeper pi t then becaw;e of
the level ur spending ."
At a ;'skeletonn House
session :
- Democ rats introduced
legisla tion ca)ling for crea tion

~ower retai~ prices for many staples expected this morfth _to_.-shoppers

•

- Rep. Don S. Maddux, .
Lancaster, offere4 a b
requiring all state-assist ..
medical schools to . dev~
admissions policies to accep
·portion of studenll; from rw
or impoverished areas, even
they do not have top . grado

•
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,

.

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•

-.·

~'

..

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'

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..
,....,.

~-·-

"

·'"'•
'

" '

·

•. r'

· ·

_

.

'

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-.

...

'·
•·

,

,•

.•
•
._,
"

Ruppert going .straight
..
"leisurely fashion" by

.

"

"·"

'
AMONG the many hats Henry Kissinger wears as .
secretary of State and the nation's top diplomat is a cowboy
Stetson he dons during a speech in Houston.

HAMILTON, Ohio (UPI) The case of James U. Ruppert,
40, charged" in the Ii:aster
Sunduy slaying of II of his
relatives, will be taken directly
w a special grand' jury today .
·Butler County Prosecutor
John .Holcomb called the grand
jury Tuesday a few hours after
receil(ing a partial report from
the Bureau of Criminal
" ld~n-tification at London; Ohio,
on tests of guns taken from
home where the slayings occurred.
Holcomb said the results of
the report will be released to
the public "at the time of
triaL"
_ Earlier Tuesday, Butler
County Coroner Dr. Garreti
· Boone said the murders could
of been committed in a

a .gunman sitting on a davenport in
the living .room.
..
.Boone was asked about
· speculation as to why there
were no' signs oT a struggle in
the Ruppert nome.
"They were all inside at the
time," Boone said. ~~Th'e kids
were playing and they were
having a general family get
I&lt;Jgether. The man was sitting
there with .three guns with him.
He was sitting on the davenport
and had complete control of the
line of l ire.
"I never killed anyone in my
life but I sure could have kiUed
II persons there with no
trouble at aU, " said Boone.
BoOne said the living room
·window was behind the davenport on which the gunman was
sittlng,
. ;. . the front door was to his

lett and the r11ar door· through the livirt'g room and
·kitchen- was to his right and
he could see them alL
·
"He could have shot !bern all
easily," Boone said.. "They .
were.all .in his line of fire. It
was done in a · very leisurely
fashion."
Boone commented as to why
there was no apparent attempt
by any of the victims to flee.
"They probably felt he would
never go through with shooting
them;" said Boone.
Boone said all but one of the
victims had been shot in the
head but several of them had
multiple bullet -wounds,
"There were 20~odd shots
that could have been lethal and
approximmately 60 bullets that
could have been used," said
Boone.

Mentally ill shortchanged on
COLUMBUS · (UP! ) - A menls in " basic custodial
but professional
shortage of physicians at care "
Ohio's hospital facilities for the treatment has deteriorated to
mentally . ill has created the point of making a "farce of
"grossly substandurd levels" terms hospital, mental health
and
jeopardizes the lives of pa- center and institutes,' : Moritz
"
tients, Dr. Timothy B. Moritz, said .
director of the state DepartHe said the number of
ment of Mental Health and physicians, not including resiRetardation, 'said Tuesduy.
-dents in training, and medical
Moritz, recently appointed w aSsistants in the state civil
head the department by Gov. service in the institutions has
James A. Rhodes, testified . declined 37 per cent since 1970
before the Education. Subcom- · and only the use of expensive
mittee of the House Finance personal service contracts has
Committee regarding the de- prevented " disastrous conpartment's budget for the next sequences."
..
Non-Certified Doctors Out
...,. biennium.
"I
am
shocked
at
the
alarMoritz
that for years
.' ming , frightening shortages in non-boardnoted
certified physicians
." medical staff at our facilities," h3d been'permitted to practice
Moritz, adding he had in the state's institutions . He
.' ·" said
recently inspected several of said the ,non..,ertified physithe state's mental hospitals cians will be completely
. and institutions for the men- phased out by July of this year
to further deteriorate the staff
tally retarded..
"The quantity and quality of of the hospitals .
medical and psychiatric staff
"The department has only
· at the state's mental hospitals nine full-time and four partand institutions lor the men- time board certified psychia·
.
tally retarded has deteriorated trists in its 28 institutions,"
-: ~ ramatically since 1970 to Moritz said: "Sixteen mental
~: $ OSsly substandard levels hospitals and six institutes for
&gt; which jeopardize the lives of the mentally retarded have no
: institution residents and seri- hoard certified psychiatrists on
; ous ly undermines .the ef.. their staffs:"
' fectiveness of treatment and
Moritz said he had met with
habilitation programs," Moritz Gov. Rhodes and state Finance
said.
Director Howard Coltier and
Nothing Was Done
received their full backing to
• · Asked how the situation had seek emergency legislation
deteriorated so quickly, Moritz . granting immediate pay in' said he had seen reports creases to the department's
• written during· the last ad- physicians as recommended by
'# ministration and it appeared the Ohio Civil Service Study
, some people were aware of the Commission.
·
;, deteriorating conditions, but
As an example of Ohio's non·.; nothing was done.
competitive salaries for physi~
"In spite of supstantial cians, Moritz noted that of 350
budget increases .and the inquiries by physicial'ls regard.
liighly publicized humanization ing positions within the depart~- program," Moritz said of the ment, none seriously · con:. previous adJ1linistration 's ef- . side red working for the state.
':, forts, " in effect, the state
·"The Rockland County .Com.
~ added some frills to its human . !"unity Mental Health Center
in New York where I worked
- warehouses . "
There have been improve- before coming to Ohio em-

ployed more board certified
psychiatrists thai! the .entire
state of Ohio," Moritz said.

-

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-•

MUSEUM LEAKS
CARSON CITY, Nev. [UP!)
- Leaks in washroom fixtures
of the state museum are
sending drips into a mine
beneath the museum that is
popular with tourists, state
officials said.
The plumbing bill to repair
the fixtures, six toilets, will be
about $35,000 an assembly '
committee was told .

·,

- ~

·•
'

FIRST BIG .WEEK
•

Register for •1000.00 of Free Groceries

298 SECOND 3T
POMEROY, ·OHIO
MOTORCYCI.;E POLICE PERSONS are an impressive sight as they assemble before
headquarters in Singapore where the aU.women, 35-member squad was recently appointed.

to show on making paper
gliders, instead ol the re~nt

PRICES GOOD THRU. APRIL 5

Mike Weber. He said the idea make-it-at-home nuclear ~evJCe
w·play 16 records-each one show.
.
continuously for an hour's
HALL'S SALVAGE
period- was an April Fools
Day joke dreamed up by staff
Located on old 33 Just 1112
mile above Meigs Fair
members Monday night.
Grounds on right, just across
"We even went on the air late
Grueser's Chip Mi.ll.
from
in the duy and said the trouble
Put those junk autos into
might have been the result of a
cash. We pay Sll for stanvery rare atmospheric condi'f
dard size cars with frame

STORE HOURS
8 AM-10 PM

MON.-SAT.

~ 0 A .~.- 10 P.M. SUNJ&gt;AY

and rear end. We buy steel
and unstripped motors, have
scales so there is no
guessing , we need material
to fill our quota . Try us,
we're sure our prices will

Conrail Will attempt to get
the choo-choo industry rolling
- if the wheels haven 't all
come off by the time it takes
over.

satisfy you.
Open 9 Tii4 : JO
' Mon. Cthru) Fri.
9 untii2:JO Sat .

FASTEST ART object on wheels, though probably one of
the slowest dragsters ever made, is this gleaming creation on
display at the San Francisco Museum of Art. Though the
dragster does move, it is actuaUy a work of art by artist Don
Potts who spent four years on it. Potts' dragster, an··
arrangement of chrome, hoses and tubber irl an unconventional way, can do a whopping 12 mph, about t!)e same
speed as a jogger.
·

of coal annually, mostly for
"The men are still dissatishome heating purposes.
lied," said Albert Buchanan,
The 'l'uesduy meeting was president of UMW Local 900,
called amid reports of some · District 25, which represents
dissatisfaction with the lack of the workers, "they want to
information from Washington know what the talks are about. · ·
on contract negotiations .
"The men have definitely
decided go on strike Wednesduy. They've given the men in
Washington until Friduy to let
BIRDS KILLED
them know what's going on.
. SAN JOSE, Calif . (UP!) Hopefully,
they. will have the
The bombing of a Pacific Gas &amp;
details
they.
need."
Electric Co. substation touched
He
said
they
will meet again
off an oil spill which killed
several birds, according to 'the Friday . to make any further
state Department of Fish and . decisions abgut their support of
the strike.
Game.
DFG officials said Tuesday
that lour waterfowl were kiUed
and 20 others were saved
because their feathers were
cleaned.
A terroriSt group bombed the
A cle an desk is a sign
Hicks substation last week.
About 600 gaUons of light oil, you 've learne~ llow to shove
used to cool electrical equip- your work olt on the ot her
ment, spilled into water fellow.
A whistle-stop is what a
storage ponds.
fellow makes when he sees a
·preUy girl.

2(Y OFF
ON ALL SIZES

TONY'S PIZZA

CUBE
SPRING
SPECIAL

.
•1
·
2
9
STEAK...................LB...............
'

LAUAN
Medium Tone
•

Ground ·Chuck................~a.....79e

4x8
'

SHEET

· FRENCH CITY

WI ENE RS ...................• 2D.fcQU.~.T..~.1

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN
773-5554

· MATERIALS CO.

ECKRICH

..·

KRA"

.

·'

·

....•
~

.•

MA·RG A Rl N E~..:.........~~·.... 49e

....·=
.......

-·
-..,·..-..··-.,,....

TUN A.~ .......•...............~.~.9~·..,..49e.

"

·.

.

.CI.'!SE_g SUNDAYS

. ·
'

.

··

ENGLISH

g~

.

USDA CHOICE

v

LB.

89~

lb.

. J

'

'

BONELESS, lb.9!r
(,

'

'

lB. 79~

.·· ROAST

ROAST

lb. 39•

2lb~ '694

ARM·

VALVOUNE
.'

MOTOR OIL

95~

..

QT. .

10W40

.

· NEW RED

ATOES

FLORIDA

'

ORANGES

'

5-lb. bag

'

,.
. I

-

..

Wilson's Evap. Milk
3 cans 99c
.· i=avorite Bread
·
loaves 89c
. P.eak ·l\iavy Beans --~--- 21b. 49c.
. . Jo-Bo Dog Food
.·
_6 cans SI
.

2

USDA CHOICE

.

~

.. ·

-..

··OU~ GOOO
:Gl\tlUMO
·sEEf .

.. jumbo ·

EVERYDAY LOW PRICES

!

•

••
•
•••

lb.

gal.

.

., .. FAustibn's !iR vaSiue ._f.t

saturday 9 to 9

•
••

15 oz.

.

.

Kraft American or Pimento

"· Mooday Thru Friday
. 9:00 to 7:00

ARMIX SHORTENING
3 lb. can 1.69
.

. .

••

Prices Effective April 2-9

,

•

4ge
.Viva Towels.......... ~o~
7
Sliced Cheese.....: •• ;v::. .
f:~· '7g~
a nc o ener.......... .
The Jumbo Roll

... .
•

WITH 10.00
OR MORE ORDER

"'"'

M~g1c . Bleach •• ~ •••••• ~!. 5.9~

: .~e Glad~ Aceept Fed. 'Food.Stamps

.

1

Pliebe~s ~est Buy . ·

"The Store With A·Heart
You, W.E Ll KE" .

LETTUCE..............4-HEADS '1 ----ES.....J!:.....39~ .--..

OSDA CHOICE .

'

cans

Right Reserved to limit Quantities .

.~

. .

...

NU MAID

3
$1
Fru1t Cocktail••••-.... .
HUNT'~

·~: .5th and PEARL STS., RACINE

-

,.. "' ~

.

.
. . .6 oz ' 1
MUSTARD..............................~ ....

FRENCH CITY
"

·

.

.

.~ ... ;1

°

9

B0-L OG NA......................!:~-~:...9'9 ~

MASON, W.VA.

DEL MONTE

Miracle
Whip

•

...

=~
•- ~~--~------~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--~~
•
'

.,

'

NO SALES TO DEALERS

more comfortable with a how-

tion," Weber said . ·

'

.- QUANTITY. RIGHTS RESERVED

If TV doesn't mind, we'd feel

Listeners go in all way

LUCKY WINNER WILL GET 520 WORTH
.. OF FREE GROCERIES
FOR 50 ·wEEK'S. DRAWING WED., APRIL 23 AT 4 PM '

'

HAZLETON, Pa. (UP!) Some 500 members o~ the
United Mine Workers Union in
Northeastern Pennsylvania
met neat. here Tuesduy and
promised to support the UMW
strike atleast until Friday .
The UMW struck the anthracite coal mines in this area
after negotiations with the
Anthr?cite Operators Wage
Negollatlng Committee· m
Washmgton fatled to reach an .
agreement ?n a new co~tr~ct,
which expired at mtdm_ght
Monday.
_
The strike was called
because of the "no contract, no
work" provision of the contract
but there was little picketing
here Tuesday because of the
traditional miners' holiday to
commemorate the winning of
the eight4lour day..
.
The Strike affects about 2,300
anthracite miners in northeastern Pennsylvania who
produce about four million tons

•·

.

.

....

Support .g ained for strike
·by Pennsylvania miners

~

I

."'

·, ./

OXFORD, Ohio (UP!) _ ,
Listeners to radio station
WOXR here Tuesday were
taken in "hook line' and sinker"
by an April Fools Day scheme
in which staff announcers
played the same record continuously every ho,ur' introducing it each time as if .it were a
different recording.
Callers were told there
probably was a problem with
their radios or were asked if
they were sure they were
listening to the right station.
·. "We got several hundred
calls but very few listeners
were irate,, said announcer

care Dr. Moritz claims

•

·

..

.

~

-

7~ '!'he Dally !IentineI; Mlddl,!'"rt-Pomeroy, o:, Wedne~y, ; ;•I :; ~. 1975j _

.

.

.....
..--..

·,

..

&lt; '

to :g rand jury hearing

•'
1

•

•,

'

.

.

.
.
Wednesduy, Apal 2, 1975
'

, 6- The Dailv Sentinel, Middleport-Pom e l'Oy,. O.~

-----

...'

·~-~---~-~~~,......-·~···-·-··

'

'

..

', •

.

.

·,

•,

•

/

...

f .
.

'

'·

'

'

•
.'

'
"

·.

'

.

..

�r--·
•

-.·

~'

..

'

.

'

.

..
,....,.

~-·-

"

·'"'•
'

" '

·

•. r'

· ·

_

.

'

.

\

-.

...

'·
•·

,

,•

.•
•
._,
"

Ruppert going .straight
..
"leisurely fashion" by

.

"

"·"

'
AMONG the many hats Henry Kissinger wears as .
secretary of State and the nation's top diplomat is a cowboy
Stetson he dons during a speech in Houston.

HAMILTON, Ohio (UPI) The case of James U. Ruppert,
40, charged" in the Ii:aster
Sunduy slaying of II of his
relatives, will be taken directly
w a special grand' jury today .
·Butler County Prosecutor
John .Holcomb called the grand
jury Tuesday a few hours after
receil(ing a partial report from
the Bureau of Criminal
" ld~n-tification at London; Ohio,
on tests of guns taken from
home where the slayings occurred.
Holcomb said the results of
the report will be released to
the public "at the time of
triaL"
_ Earlier Tuesday, Butler
County Coroner Dr. Garreti
· Boone said the murders could
of been committed in a

a .gunman sitting on a davenport in
the living .room.
..
.Boone was asked about
· speculation as to why there
were no' signs oT a struggle in
the Ruppert nome.
"They were all inside at the
time," Boone said. ~~Th'e kids
were playing and they were
having a general family get
I&lt;Jgether. The man was sitting
there with .three guns with him.
He was sitting on the davenport
and had complete control of the
line of l ire.
"I never killed anyone in my
life but I sure could have kiUed
II persons there with no
trouble at aU, " said Boone.
BoOne said the living room
·window was behind the davenport on which the gunman was
sittlng,
. ;. . the front door was to his

lett and the r11ar door· through the livirt'g room and
·kitchen- was to his right and
he could see them alL
·
"He could have shot !bern all
easily," Boone said.. "They .
were.all .in his line of fire. It
was done in a · very leisurely
fashion."
Boone commented as to why
there was no apparent attempt
by any of the victims to flee.
"They probably felt he would
never go through with shooting
them;" said Boone.
Boone said all but one of the
victims had been shot in the
head but several of them had
multiple bullet -wounds,
"There were 20~odd shots
that could have been lethal and
approximmately 60 bullets that
could have been used," said
Boone.

Mentally ill shortchanged on
COLUMBUS · (UP! ) - A menls in " basic custodial
but professional
shortage of physicians at care "
Ohio's hospital facilities for the treatment has deteriorated to
mentally . ill has created the point of making a "farce of
"grossly substandurd levels" terms hospital, mental health
and
jeopardizes the lives of pa- center and institutes,' : Moritz
"
tients, Dr. Timothy B. Moritz, said .
director of the state DepartHe said the number of
ment of Mental Health and physicians, not including resiRetardation, 'said Tuesduy.
-dents in training, and medical
Moritz, recently appointed w aSsistants in the state civil
head the department by Gov. service in the institutions has
James A. Rhodes, testified . declined 37 per cent since 1970
before the Education. Subcom- · and only the use of expensive
mittee of the House Finance personal service contracts has
Committee regarding the de- prevented " disastrous conpartment's budget for the next sequences."
..
Non-Certified Doctors Out
...,. biennium.
"I
am
shocked
at
the
alarMoritz
that for years
.' ming , frightening shortages in non-boardnoted
certified physicians
." medical staff at our facilities," h3d been'permitted to practice
Moritz, adding he had in the state's institutions . He
.' ·" said
recently inspected several of said the ,non..,ertified physithe state's mental hospitals cians will be completely
. and institutions for the men- phased out by July of this year
to further deteriorate the staff
tally retarded..
"The quantity and quality of of the hospitals .
medical and psychiatric staff
"The department has only
· at the state's mental hospitals nine full-time and four partand institutions lor the men- time board certified psychia·
.
tally retarded has deteriorated trists in its 28 institutions,"
-: ~ ramatically since 1970 to Moritz said: "Sixteen mental
~: $ OSsly substandard levels hospitals and six institutes for
&gt; which jeopardize the lives of the mentally retarded have no
: institution residents and seri- hoard certified psychiatrists on
; ous ly undermines .the ef.. their staffs:"
' fectiveness of treatment and
Moritz said he had met with
habilitation programs," Moritz Gov. Rhodes and state Finance
said.
Director Howard Coltier and
Nothing Was Done
received their full backing to
• · Asked how the situation had seek emergency legislation
deteriorated so quickly, Moritz . granting immediate pay in' said he had seen reports creases to the department's
• written during· the last ad- physicians as recommended by
'# ministration and it appeared the Ohio Civil Service Study
, some people were aware of the Commission.
·
;, deteriorating conditions, but
As an example of Ohio's non·.; nothing was done.
competitive salaries for physi~
"In spite of supstantial cians, Moritz noted that of 350
budget increases .and the inquiries by physicial'ls regard.
liighly publicized humanization ing positions within the depart~- program," Moritz said of the ment, none seriously · con:. previous adJ1linistration 's ef- . side red working for the state.
':, forts, " in effect, the state
·"The Rockland County .Com.
~ added some frills to its human . !"unity Mental Health Center
in New York where I worked
- warehouses . "
There have been improve- before coming to Ohio em-

ployed more board certified
psychiatrists thai! the .entire
state of Ohio," Moritz said.

-

.

..

.

-•

MUSEUM LEAKS
CARSON CITY, Nev. [UP!)
- Leaks in washroom fixtures
of the state museum are
sending drips into a mine
beneath the museum that is
popular with tourists, state
officials said.
The plumbing bill to repair
the fixtures, six toilets, will be
about $35,000 an assembly '
committee was told .

·,

- ~

·•
'

FIRST BIG .WEEK
•

Register for •1000.00 of Free Groceries

298 SECOND 3T
POMEROY, ·OHIO
MOTORCYCI.;E POLICE PERSONS are an impressive sight as they assemble before
headquarters in Singapore where the aU.women, 35-member squad was recently appointed.

to show on making paper
gliders, instead ol the re~nt

PRICES GOOD THRU. APRIL 5

Mike Weber. He said the idea make-it-at-home nuclear ~evJCe
w·play 16 records-each one show.
.
continuously for an hour's
HALL'S SALVAGE
period- was an April Fools
Day joke dreamed up by staff
Located on old 33 Just 1112
mile above Meigs Fair
members Monday night.
Grounds on right, just across
"We even went on the air late
Grueser's Chip Mi.ll.
from
in the duy and said the trouble
Put those junk autos into
might have been the result of a
cash. We pay Sll for stanvery rare atmospheric condi'f
dard size cars with frame

STORE HOURS
8 AM-10 PM

MON.-SAT.

~ 0 A .~.- 10 P.M. SUNJ&gt;AY

and rear end. We buy steel
and unstripped motors, have
scales so there is no
guessing , we need material
to fill our quota . Try us,
we're sure our prices will

Conrail Will attempt to get
the choo-choo industry rolling
- if the wheels haven 't all
come off by the time it takes
over.

satisfy you.
Open 9 Tii4 : JO
' Mon. Cthru) Fri.
9 untii2:JO Sat .

FASTEST ART object on wheels, though probably one of
the slowest dragsters ever made, is this gleaming creation on
display at the San Francisco Museum of Art. Though the
dragster does move, it is actuaUy a work of art by artist Don
Potts who spent four years on it. Potts' dragster, an··
arrangement of chrome, hoses and tubber irl an unconventional way, can do a whopping 12 mph, about t!)e same
speed as a jogger.
·

of coal annually, mostly for
"The men are still dissatishome heating purposes.
lied," said Albert Buchanan,
The 'l'uesduy meeting was president of UMW Local 900,
called amid reports of some · District 25, which represents
dissatisfaction with the lack of the workers, "they want to
information from Washington know what the talks are about. · ·
on contract negotiations .
"The men have definitely
decided go on strike Wednesduy. They've given the men in
Washington until Friduy to let
BIRDS KILLED
them know what's going on.
. SAN JOSE, Calif . (UP!) Hopefully,
they. will have the
The bombing of a Pacific Gas &amp;
details
they.
need."
Electric Co. substation touched
He
said
they
will meet again
off an oil spill which killed
several birds, according to 'the Friday . to make any further
state Department of Fish and . decisions abgut their support of
the strike.
Game.
DFG officials said Tuesday
that lour waterfowl were kiUed
and 20 others were saved
because their feathers were
cleaned.
A terroriSt group bombed the
A cle an desk is a sign
Hicks substation last week.
About 600 gaUons of light oil, you 've learne~ llow to shove
used to cool electrical equip- your work olt on the ot her
ment, spilled into water fellow.
A whistle-stop is what a
storage ponds.
fellow makes when he sees a
·preUy girl.

2(Y OFF
ON ALL SIZES

TONY'S PIZZA

CUBE
SPRING
SPECIAL

.
•1
·
2
9
STEAK...................LB...............
'

LAUAN
Medium Tone
•

Ground ·Chuck................~a.....79e

4x8
'

SHEET

· FRENCH CITY

WI ENE RS ...................• 2D.fcQU.~.T..~.1

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN
773-5554

· MATERIALS CO.

ECKRICH

..·

KRA"

.

·'

·

....•
~

.•

MA·RG A Rl N E~..:.........~~·.... 49e

....·=
.......

-·
-..,·..-..··-.,,....

TUN A.~ .......•...............~.~.9~·..,..49e.

"

·.

.

.CI.'!SE_g SUNDAYS

. ·
'

.

··

ENGLISH

g~

.

USDA CHOICE

v

LB.

89~

lb.

. J

'

'

BONELESS, lb.9!r
(,

'

'

lB. 79~

.·· ROAST

ROAST

lb. 39•

2lb~ '694

ARM·

VALVOUNE
.'

MOTOR OIL

95~

..

QT. .

10W40

.

· NEW RED

ATOES

FLORIDA

'

ORANGES

'

5-lb. bag

'

,.
. I

-

..

Wilson's Evap. Milk
3 cans 99c
.· i=avorite Bread
·
loaves 89c
. P.eak ·l\iavy Beans --~--- 21b. 49c.
. . Jo-Bo Dog Food
.·
_6 cans SI
.

2

USDA CHOICE

.

~

.. ·

-..

··OU~ GOOO
:Gl\tlUMO
·sEEf .

.. jumbo ·

EVERYDAY LOW PRICES

!

•

••
•
•••

lb.

gal.

.

., .. FAustibn's !iR vaSiue ._f.t

saturday 9 to 9

•
••

15 oz.

.

.

Kraft American or Pimento

"· Mooday Thru Friday
. 9:00 to 7:00

ARMIX SHORTENING
3 lb. can 1.69
.

. .

••

Prices Effective April 2-9

,

•

4ge
.Viva Towels.......... ~o~
7
Sliced Cheese.....: •• ;v::. .
f:~· '7g~
a nc o ener.......... .
The Jumbo Roll

... .
•

WITH 10.00
OR MORE ORDER

"'"'

M~g1c . Bleach •• ~ •••••• ~!. 5.9~

: .~e Glad~ Aceept Fed. 'Food.Stamps

.

1

Pliebe~s ~est Buy . ·

"The Store With A·Heart
You, W.E Ll KE" .

LETTUCE..............4-HEADS '1 ----ES.....J!:.....39~ .--..

OSDA CHOICE .

'

cans

Right Reserved to limit Quantities .

.~

. .

...

NU MAID

3
$1
Fru1t Cocktail••••-.... .
HUNT'~

·~: .5th and PEARL STS., RACINE

-

,.. "' ~

.

.
. . .6 oz ' 1
MUSTARD..............................~ ....

FRENCH CITY
"

·

.

.

.~ ... ;1

°

9

B0-L OG NA......................!:~-~:...9'9 ~

MASON, W.VA.

DEL MONTE

Miracle
Whip

•

...

=~
•- ~~--~------~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--~~
•
'

.,

'

NO SALES TO DEALERS

more comfortable with a how-

tion," Weber said . ·

'

.- QUANTITY. RIGHTS RESERVED

If TV doesn't mind, we'd feel

Listeners go in all way

LUCKY WINNER WILL GET 520 WORTH
.. OF FREE GROCERIES
FOR 50 ·wEEK'S. DRAWING WED., APRIL 23 AT 4 PM '

'

HAZLETON, Pa. (UP!) Some 500 members o~ the
United Mine Workers Union in
Northeastern Pennsylvania
met neat. here Tuesduy and
promised to support the UMW
strike atleast until Friday .
The UMW struck the anthracite coal mines in this area
after negotiations with the
Anthr?cite Operators Wage
Negollatlng Committee· m
Washmgton fatled to reach an .
agreement ?n a new co~tr~ct,
which expired at mtdm_ght
Monday.
_
The strike was called
because of the "no contract, no
work" provision of the contract
but there was little picketing
here Tuesday because of the
traditional miners' holiday to
commemorate the winning of
the eight4lour day..
.
The Strike affects about 2,300
anthracite miners in northeastern Pennsylvania who
produce about four million tons

•·

.

.

....

Support .g ained for strike
·by Pennsylvania miners

~

I

."'

·, ./

OXFORD, Ohio (UP!) _ ,
Listeners to radio station
WOXR here Tuesday were
taken in "hook line' and sinker"
by an April Fools Day scheme
in which staff announcers
played the same record continuously every ho,ur' introducing it each time as if .it were a
different recording.
Callers were told there
probably was a problem with
their radios or were asked if
they were sure they were
listening to the right station.
·. "We got several hundred
calls but very few listeners
were irate,, said announcer

care Dr. Moritz claims

•

·

..

.

~

-

7~ '!'he Dally !IentineI; Mlddl,!'"rt-Pomeroy, o:, Wedne~y, ; ;•I :; ~. 1975j _

.

.

.....
..--..

·,

..

&lt; '

to :g rand jury hearing

•'
1

•

•,

'

.

.

.
.
Wednesduy, Apal 2, 1975
'

, 6- The Dailv Sentinel, Middleport-Pom e l'Oy,. O.~

-----

...'

·~-~---~-~~~,......-·~···-·-··

'

'

..

', •

.

.

·,

•,

•

/

...

f .
.

'

'·

'

'

•
.'

'
"

·.

'

.

..

�..--....~...---~~--~..~~~~~............~~~--~we~~~8a-.~--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

~t,~~~~l~~~~~~~~~~~~~~··'·
~ ~ ~.~~~~i~~~~~i~~-~;
~· ~~~~~~~~·~~~~~~~~~~7;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--~--~~~~~~~~~~~~--,~·--~ir:nr~.-----------~------~~~~--~.---~
'·
•• • • • • • ~
.,. '
'~ ~o:;·
.- ~
- ..
'

'""

' '

..

&gt;
I

8- The Dally Snetlnel, Mlddlepoft-Pouieroy, 0., Wednesday, April 2, 1975

· Pro Standings

{l't hens edges

NBA Standing~
Bv Unit ed Pr ()~\ . l ntcrnM•ona~

E"\tc rn Co nt crc ntl'

Gallipo,is
4-3
,
.
'

Visiting Athens broke a 3-3 hurler Dailey was Iough In the
deadlock in the top of the sixth clutch, lea ving six GAHS·base·
Inning and then held off host runners stranded.
Gallipolis the last two innings · · Oailey went the distance for
to post a 4·3 Southeastern Ohio !.l.thens, He /!ave up nine hils,
. League· victory over the Blue walked only one, and struck out
Devils on the Rio Grande seven .
Jim Perry went the distance·
Coll ege diamond Tuesday
for'GAHS. Perry permitted six
evening.
It was the ·season opener for hits. He fanned 12 and walked .
four. Each team committed
both teams.
tgree four errors .
Athens
scored
unearned runs in 'tht! t'hird · · Perry led Gi\HS at the plate
ihning after two were out to with a home run and two
!&lt;Ike 9 3-0 advantage. In the si ngles in three trips, Jim
bottom of the fiflh iiming, Niday had two singles in three
Gallipolis' Jim Per~ol:' socked a trips and Brent Johnson two
three-run homer, scoring Brett singles in four trips,
:Ma y and Dailey paced
Wilson who had reached base
with two hi ts apiece .
Athens
on an en;o and Gary Swain
Galli polls will host Meigs at 4
who dreli' a walk ,
In Athe ns' sixth. May singled p.m . Thursday in the Blue
with one out. Cartmill walked, Devils next outing,
Score by in nings:
then May scored what proved
00.1 001 ri-4-fl-4
to be the win ning run on Scott A! hens •
GAHS
000 030 0-3-9-4
Dailey 's si ngle.
Batteries - Dailey &amp; Dee!;
GAHS had men on bases
every innin g, but winning P~rry &amp; Johnson,

Kyger Creek tied the score in
its second frame on a walk to
C~ris Preston , a stolen base
and clutch single by leftfielder
Jim Armbruster, The Bobcats
moved ahead in the third on
singles by Tim Lucas, Steve
Baird, an error and walks to
Dave Wise , Preston and Paul
Fife.
Southwes tern tallied its
second run in the fifth chasing
starting pi tcher Tim Lucas
from the mound. Larry Carter
opened the rally with a single .
He came across on consecutive
singles by Walker and Russell .
The final two ' Bobcat tallies
came In the sixth on a walk to

Today's

By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sportl Editor
NEW YORK (UP!)- Rod Carew likes to get things straight.
He's not pouting. Everything's patched up between him and
Minnesota Twins' boss, Calvjn Griffith, the man who pays. him.
The bitterness, most of It, anyway, Is gone.
It's true, there had been some coolness at the arbitration table
where Rod Carew, 'the first American Leaguer since Ty Cobb lo
win three straight batting titles, argued for a $140,000 contract,
but lost and had to settle for a $120,000 one.
The ball club made the point that even thougl\ Carew's .384
batting average was the highest in the league, both leagues, in
fact, his RBI output of 55 was rather anemic, and then by way of
rubbing some salt crystals into tile wound, the Twins aald they
had to go back more than a quarter century to find another
second basem1111 with the club who made as many errors as
Carew did last year. Somewhat dryly and quite accurately,
Carew replied, they had ' to go back farther than that to find
another player with them who nit as well as he has.
Rod Carew gave the general Impression after he lost his ar·
bitation case the Twins did not appreciate him. When the press
asked him specifically how he felt, he aald unhappy and there
was no question about it, he was.
More than a month has gone by and Carew has had ample time
to look back and reflect upon how he actually felt then, and hoW
he feels now.
"They said! was disf!ll.sted," he says, talking about the way he
was characterized after arbitration. "Everybody Is disappointed
If he doesn 't win something. Nobody likes to lose. I'm trying to
make a living tike anybody else. I got letters about so many
people being laid off. Some day I'm going to be laid off, too. You
Should've seen some of the letters. My wife S.ld, 'Honey, you
can't let it both~r you. We've been through this before.'"
Rod Carew and his wife, Marilyn, have an interracial
marriage that is working beautifully. Her reference to the letters
has to do with some other IJlBil, much more vicious, he got from
bigots when he was first married.
,. ·
Anyway, Rod Carew is a lot happier now.
He'll be happier yet to learn Calvin Griffith truly does appreciate his ability --regsrdless of what happened at the ar. • bitration table,
"You have to appreciate him," says the Twins' board chair·
man and president. "He has been an AD.Star eight years; he has
won the batting title three years In a r~, he's a helluva
ballplayer.
"I'll tell you how much I aAJreclate Rod Carew. Sam Mele
wanted to l!Bnd him back to Charlotte eight years ago, but I told '
Sam to play him bedmse I · thought he was a blg league
ballplayer. I've only dictated to a manager in the caae of three
ballplayers -Bob Allison, Harmon Klllebrew and Carew -and
all three lurnedoutto be All..Stars. That's not so bad, Is It?" .
The ,big difficulty with tt1l many employer-employe rela'
tlonahlps, in boseball as well as in so many other businesses, Is
that frequently pne side can't see the other side's point of view ·
and vice veraa. Worie yet, neither side tries to.
Calvin Griffith, I've always found , is more candid that .most
other big league operators. Sometimes, he's even too candid.
This time is no exception.
.
·
·
"I have to look out for Calvin Griffith, too," he says in the face
of repeatedc harges that economy is the key to the way he always
·operates. "I lost a half million dollars last year; two mUlion in
the put folD' years; Our ticket department did a comprehe111lve
survey and sbowed we had only 30 good ciays to play taaeball last
year. .
· ·
.
.
·
·
"Okay, Carew was upset becauae he didn't.get what he asked
for -4140,000. We offered hipll125,000 but he wanted to arbitrate
·and ended up with 1120,000. He belt hlmlelf out of 15,000. Still, he , ·
iln'tmaklnla bad salary. l'dllke to get what he'i getting. I don't ·
mike thai much.
·
' "I'll tell yl)lllhll about Rod Carew: he can be as good as
anYl!od:Y Ia buebllllf be wants to be. He's got the speed, he can
handle the bit, he's got the glove. AD he has to do Is knock in
·more ru1111. Did you know he drove in seven less I'WlS last
)'ear than the year before? When you offer a guy a S25,000 raise,
lba'altllla
pretty aood ralae."
·
r

• 'If

Vi ro lnr .'l

. I~ b l
· West

.J'!IJ
18 J

'1'1

1\ 1

s

w . J. pet. g .b .
New York
Ke ntucky

St. Lours

56 26 .683
56 . 26 .68J
31 51 .378 25

Fife, a double by Terry Lucas
and a throwing error,
Ge tting hits for the winners
were Terry and Tim Lucas,
Steve Baird, and Jim Arm·
bruster . Walker led the
Highlanders with three hi\:! ·in
four trips. Russell had two
singles, Larry and Terry
Carter, Kim Lewis and Jim
Nlda had the other SW hits.
Garter was the losing pitcher . He was reli eved by Nida
in the third.
Lucas was the winner. H•
was relieved by Baird in the
fifth and Terry Lucas in the
sixth.
Line Score:
100 010 1- 2 9 3
SW
01 3 002 x...j) 4 0
KC

A's, LA

Sport Parade

'·'l

A~ 4' 1ll p h r' .

Af1itnHc 0 1tds•on
w . 1. p~t . g .b .
w . I. pet . q . b . 11 Denv er
6·1 19 . 77 I
K Ooston
'JI ?1 .rn
:-.M r.n·l onlo
.'J fl JJ ,flQ:i' IJ
Buff~IO
48 3 1 .6UA
9
. lndliln CI.
•IS 37 .549 1~ 1 ••
Nl'W Yo rk
39 . ·10" , o\ 9~ IR
Ufrlh
.36 4fl . 439 '27 1 ,
Ph i l ~de l pi"\Ja
34 ' I&amp;- J7 5 ? ~1 1 • • ~ A:n Dlc{io
31 5 1 .318 371 ~
·
Ct&gt;J\t ri' l D ivision
)1 -(lmchl'd divi sion titl e
w. I . pet . 9 .b.
Tu cs d~y 's Resuth
X Washin gton 57 ' 71 7J 1
Denver -116 l nPIAna li S
1
Housl Un
4 1 •10' .506 17 : Sttn Anton io r30 Sa n Di ego ll ~
Cleveland
39 4 1 . 488 19
~ I . Lou i t'&gt; 11 2 Utah 109
Jq l &amp;nl~
3 1 50 .383 27 1 1 Memp h.is lH Virgin ia 102
New Or leans :l3 57 . 288 , \15
W edncs. tlay ' s Games
Western Conference
VirQinle at Kentucky
Midwest D iVIIIOn
Memph is a t New Yo r k
w. I . pe t . g .b. st. Lou is &amp;t San Ot ego
Chicago
45 3&amp; 570
Utah at Indiana
KC Omaha
43 36 .54 4 2
Detro i t
39 .s1 488
6.1 ..
NHLf Stan ding '
M i lwaukee
36 43 .456
9
R.v Un ited Press Internation al
PolC ifiC Division
Di visi on I
·w. i. pet . g .b .
w. 1. 1. pt s gf ga
x Golden Stat e 47 33 588
,.. Ph ll adlph 49 18 10 108 282 177
Seat tie
39 39 . 500 :r
Port"ta nd
36 44 .450 II
NY Islanders 32 24 22 86 257 21 3
PhoE&gt;n iX ·
31 48 .392 1 5 1 ~ NY Rangers 36 28 13 85 311 267
LosAn$1elu
3.0 , 49 .380 16 1 ~ Atla nta
JJ 29 15 8123612 4
•· Clinched d ivision titl e
Div is ion '2
T~esday 's Results
w. I. t. ph gf ga
Chicag o 98 Buff elo 9J
VAncouver
36 32 10 82 264 25 3
Ne~ York 99 Philade lphle 95
Wuhlng ton 110 New Or lea ns St . Louis
JJ 30 H 80 260 257
10 I ·
Ch icago
35 34 a 78 256 2Jl
M i lwa ukee 98 Detro i t 9 1
Minnesot a
'23 48 7 55 220 J].d
Houston 113 Atlanta 104
Kan"sas City 15 52 11 41 178 319
Por tland 124 Los Ange les 106
Dlv fsi on J
• Wedn es day 's Games
w . 1. t. pt' gf va
Buffalo at 'Bosl on
Montrea t
44 14 19 107 354 27 1
Houston al Washi ngton
Chicago at Detro it
Los An ge les 40 17 20 100 258 179
Los Angeles at Phoenix
•iltsbur gh
36 26 15 87 315 274
KC Omaha at Seatt le
Detroil
22 o 12 56 ·248 32 1
Wash ington . 7 65
19 168 423
D ivis •on 4
ABA Standings
w. 1. t . pts gf va
· By 'United Preu Internat ional
x -Buffalo
.:17 16 15 109 3.16 236
East

·K C ·Bobcats twin 6-2
Kyger 'Creek took advantage
of the wildness of start ing
pitcher Terry Carter and his
reliever Jim Nida Tuesday
night· to score three runs in the
third inning enroute to a 6-2
diamond victory over South. western.
. '
It was the Iirst victory of the
season after two opening losses
Monday for Coach. Jim
Sprague's defending SVAC
champion Bobcats . Coach Mel
Carter 's Highlanders are O.L
Southwestern plated its first
run in the first inning on-singles
by Kevin Walker and Mike
Russell' and a double by ·Terry
Carter .

'

(

favored
in 1975

Boston
40 25 13 93 339 237
Toron to
J l 31 15 77 274 298
Calirorn il!l
19 46 12 50 208 307
x -CIIndted division
·Tuesday's Results ·
Buff a lo 3 Bost on I
A lia 2 NY Is landers 2. t ie
Kans as City 3 Los Ang eles 1'
St . Louis 7 M in nesota 3
Va n couver 7 Cali forn ia 0
Wettne5day 's' Games
Kans as Cit y ar Chicago
Was h ington at Detroit
A tlan ta at Toron to
P itt sburg h at Mon treal
Los Ang eles' at sr. Louis
Vancouver at Ca l iforn ia
WHA Standings

By United Press Internat ional
East

w. I. t. ptS" gf

ga
42 28 5 89 267 270

x -New Eng
Cleveland
Chicago
l ndlan ap ols

34 39 3 71 225 24 9

29 45 I 59 255 305

x Houston

18 55 3 39 210 32 6
West
w. I. t . pts gf ga
~ 50 24 0 100 J47 2lJ

Minnesot a
SM D iego

41 30 3 85 296 25 9
41 3 1 3 85 30d 258

Ph·oenl)(
Baltimore

Quebec

38 30 8
20 50 4
canadia n
w . I. t .
44 31 0

Toronto
Wi nni p eg

8\:l 292 257
44 188 316
pts gf ga
88 3 16 287

42 J2 2 86 J40 298
38 32 4 80 307 166

Edmon to n
34 37 4 12 266 270
Vanc ou ver
33 39 2 68 238 257
)1. Cl incl'led divis ion titl e
Tuesday •, Resu lts
N ew England 5 P h oeni~t J
Mi nnesota S Vancouver 2
Chi cago J Cl eve land 2, o1
Toron to 7 Indianapolis 1
Ba l t im ore 4 San Die go 3
Quebec 5 Edmonton 3
W-ednesday's Games
Quebec at Minnesota
Cle ve land i!U Houston
Va n couver at Winnipeg

I H L Pl1yoff Stan ding s

LAS VEGAS , Nev. (UP!) "According to the Hollywood
Sports Book, the Oakland A's
and Los Angeles Dodgers wlll
meet again this Octol)er in the
World Series,
The book has the A's, three·
time world champions, who
routed the Dodgers last year in
five . games, ·as solid ~-2
favorites to win the American
League pennant and Los
Angeles as a 9-S pick to win the
National League flag.
The book did not llst odds on
the respective division races.
Instead it picked the teama as
po88lble pennant winners.
Stlll, since · the . Baltimore
Orioles were Hated at il-l in the
AL pennant race , obviously
they are the favorites to win
the AL East and face the A's
for the pennant.
In the NL, the Pittsburgh
Pirates were 3-1 picks In the
pennant race, second behind
the Dodgers, which means they
are the top pick in the East.
The New York Yankees, with
key acquisitions' In Jim "Cal·
fiah" Hunter and Bobby Bonds,
are third in the AL at 7-2 with
Texas at 6-1, Boston 8·1,
Chicago and Cleveland 1~1.
Minnesota, Kanau City and
Mllwaukee 15-1, C811fornla 20-1
and Detroit 50-1.
In the NL behind Pittsburgh,
Is Cincinnati at 7·2, St. Louis 61, Atlanta 8-), PllUadelphla and
Montreal 1~1. San Francisco
and Houston 12-1, New York 151, Chicago 50-1 and San Diego

Br United Press Inter nat ional
Ounterfinals - Best of Seven
w. 1. gf ga
Da yton
J 2 18 16
2 3 16 18
Des Moines
Muskegon
Port · Hur on

w . 1. gf ga
J 1 18 15
1 J

I5

osurplayers

Reds hammer
Mets, . 8 to 2
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla.
(UP!) - The .Cincinnati Reds
launched a 19-llit attack Tuesday, highlighted with home
runs by Tony Perez and Ed
Armbrister, en route to an ~2
victory over the New York
Mets. '
Jerry Cnim and Mac Scarce,
two members of the Mets'
bullpen crew, gave up aU the
runs . Cram was tagged lor two
runs in each of the first two
Innings and Scarce gave up
three· runs in the fifth and
another in the sixth. Both home
runs were off Scarce.
Armbrister drove . in three
runs with a double in the

second and a two-rui'Phomer in
Uie fifth. Perez had a triple
along with his homer,
Cesar Geronimo tripled off
Scarce to open the fifth and
scored on Ken Griffey's sacrifice fly. Doug Flynn then
singled and Armbrister hit a .
1
two-run homer.
,
Tom Hall, Pat ·Darcy and
Will McEnney pitched for the
Reds, who are now 16·9 on the
exhibition circuit The loss for
the Mets was their loth in 22
games.
The Mets optioned catcher
Ron Hodges to their Tidewater
farm club to reduce the ir squad
to 28.

,,1\.rElf
1
~

push ·bu :.on drop·
in bobbin , more !

Save

$30

z1G -ZAG wiTH BUILT·IN suNo -H EM sTITCH

Model 252/242

Carrying case or cabinet extra

'hcle•in And SaVe Even More!
SALE ENDS APRIL S

The Fabric

S~op

POMEROY

~

McCall• &amp; Simplicity Pattern•

~
AP giO OV ( C 11110111

Phone 992-2284

11SW, 2nd

·open Friday &amp; Satu rday THB

OUt~~~

WE ACCEPT
FEDERAL FOOD
COUPONS

,,

3 1 18

10

10

1B

1

3

w. 1. gt ua
Toledo
4 1 11 . 11
Columbus
1 4 11 17
Tuesday ' s Results
Dayton 3 Des Moin es 2, 2 ot
Sa g inaw 4 F tln t 0
Toledo .h.Columbus 2
....anight's Game s
Por t Huron at Muskegon
Sag inaw ·at F l in ft

FINED AND SUSPENDED
LOS ANGELES (UPI)- The
World Hockey Association an·
nounced Tuesday that Indianapolis Racers goaltender
Andy Brown has been fined
$250 and suspended for one
game.
Bud Poile, vice president and
executive director of the WHA,
said the penalties were handed
down as a result of an alter·
cation Brown had with officials
in a game at Cleveland March
29, The suspension will be
served when the Racers visit
Vancouver AprU 6.

MONDAY THRU FRIDAY 8-5, SATURDAY &amp;SUNDAY 9-6
SPECIALS

3 lbs. GROUND CHUCK
2 lbs. SLICED BACON '
2 lbs. PORK STEAK .
2 lbs. Sl RLOIN STEAK

~~ALL

GRASS
·CATTLE
lULU, STEERS, HE.IFERS and

~·

FRONT• • • 72• lb.

ih SEMI BONELESS HAM

4 lbs. GROUND CHUCK
· 3 lbs. BEEF ROAST

2 lbs. RIB STEAK
2 lbs. GROUND CHUCK

3 lbs. PORK ROAST

3 lbs. ROUND-STEAK

3 lbs. ROUND STEAK

3 lbs. BEEF ROAST

3 lbs, BEEF ROAST

YEARLINGS

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

TUESDAY, APRIL 22, ·1975
AT 8:00 P.M •.

lb.

HIND • • • 93c lb.

''

AT OHIO VALLEY LIVESTOCK CO.

lb~

..

$

$

'·'

1 lb. HAM. SALAD
2 lbs. CUBE STEAK
1 lb. SLAB ~ACON
2 lb. SLICED BOLOGNA
3 lbs. SPARE RIBS

"·

''

..
II

.'
'

CONSIGNMENTS WELCOME
·FOR INFORMATION PHONE

446-9760 OR 446-3941 ·

"

I

Then there was the New
· York accountant who refused
even to. consider two prime
jobs across the Hudson River
in. New Jersey because he
co uldn't bear the idea of
crossing
the
George
WaShington bridge every day.
"Someday that bridge Is going
to fall In the river," he ex·
plained.
1
,... A Pittsburgh computer progranuner gave one of the
strangest excuses of all for
turning down a job. At the
Interview, the prospective boss
wore white socks. " Unpardo"hable!"
said
the
progranuner .
Then there was the fellow
who actually accepted a job in
Boston at a salary better than
he had asked for. But the n·ext
day he g.ot a warm welcoming
note from the big boss that was
carelessly typed--two letters
struck over and a misspelled
word. "I can't work for such a
sloppy compan)'," he said, and
quit forthwith.
An unemployed San Francis·
co executive refu sed a job .with
a company that paid its employes twice a month. He said
he wouldn't be able to get used
to anything · but the weekly
paycheck
he 'd
always
received . ·
A female executive in Houston who had been out of work
six months had set $18,000 as
her minimum salary and
turned down a job paying
$11,500.
A Detroit . executive, who
hadn't worked for three
mdhths, refused a job that was
to start in· two weeks because
he wanted to start work im·
mediately,
~. A Cleveland lady was all set
to take a fine job until she
noticed a certificate ·of appreciation on the boss's wall
from a local Republican club.
''I'm a lifelong Democrat,'' she
told the Half manager. "I just
can't imagine myself working
for a Republican."
', A traveling auditor who lived
in Seattle turned down an offer
tiecause the company insisted
ijs employes fly coach instead
'f. first class.
1Half aaid many unemployed
~xecuti ves
and financial
service officers continue to

'

. ~. ~choqse

a .patio· fu ·9f cool ··comfort .
at saVIngs that make .1t
· . - even 'more fun!

f

NO. 8101
CLUB CHAIR
Seat 19"x20"
1

.

NO. 8712
GLIDER

Aluminum ends-; overa ll
wJ dtb...SE

NO. 8131
ROCKER

ALL

Seat 19"x20" .

PIECES

5 Pc~ . Table Cafe Set
The expanded me tal table
top is 36" round . Stylis h
round seats on the mesh ·
chai rs. All-weather fin 1sh.

$

95

SPRING SALE

•

.. I
Houdini II, greatest modern escape artist, will be on stage free, open to the public, Aprill7
at RIO Grande College· Rio Grande Community College .

Houdini II claimed world's
greatest new escap~ artist
RID GRANDE - Houdini II,
Houdini reinca rna ted, the
world's greates t escape artist!
Thos,. are some of the terms
used to descri be Norma n
Bige low , escape artist, who
will appear at Rio Grande-Rio
Grande Community College
Thursday, Aprill7 at 9 p.m. He
will appear in the college
dinin g halL The program,
sponsored by the Studen t
Activities Committe€, is free
and is open to !he p~P.lic .
Bigelow's work is receiving
so much national attention that
recently he was the only escape
artist !o be selected for the 9().
minute NBC Television special
with Bill Bixbe, the "Magic~
man' '.

. In the blackness of nigljt,
Bigelow steps ft.o· his coffin to
be shackled t a mound of
gunpowder ~· a 60 second

fu se, lighting up a . world you
never knew exis ~ed and wi ll
never forge t You will see his
eer ie " Boar d of Death ",
Chained and bound, 'Bigelow
must free himself wj !hin three
minute s or an . automatic
timing device will' bring ins tant
dealh.
Hi s
complete
st11ge
production is the resu lt or 20.
years or t hough~ and study and

combines history , hwnor and
total excilement. To convince
skepti cs , there is full audience
participation and inspection.
During one part of his performance. he is sealed in a
huge plastic bag with a canvas
bag containing a live poisonous
snake. In minutes he emerges , .
displaying the deadly snake
out side its ca nvas bag and in
the pas tic bag.

First Watergater
hegins sentence

I

ALL NEW
FOR SPRING!
'l

MONTGOMERY, Ala. (UP!)
- Former White House consultant Fred C. LaRue, the first
man to plead guilty in the
Watergate cover-up and the
last to be sentenced, began
serving a six-month prison
term Tuesday.
The balding, bespectacled
former top aide of ex-Attorney
General John N. Mitchell
surrendered to federal officials
at Maxwell Air Force Base's
minimum secu rity . prison,
Warden R. W, Grunska said he
would be ireated like the
facility's 265 other inmates.
.LaRue, a Mississippi oil
millionaire and land developer,
who became known as the
Nixon adinistration 's Southern
stfategist, was sentenced to
one to three years by U.S.
District Court Judge John J.
Sirica after pleading guilty to
conspiring to 'obstruct justice.
Sir!Ca suspended all but six
months of the term.

campaign,
LaRue pleaded guilty June
28,1973, to one count of conspiracy to obstru ct justice and
offered key testimony at both
the 1973 Senate watergate
hearings and the 1974 cover-up
triaL
He confessed that he' helped
handle payoffs to the
Waterga te defendants an d
destroy incriminating records
concerning the Waterga te,
He testified he was present
March 30,1972, when Mitchell
allegedly approved an intellige nce-gathering plan that led
to the break-in at the
Democratic offices in the
Watergaie hotel three months
later. He ~!so pleaded gu ilty to .•
handling more than $300,000 in
hush money.

Savi~gs

on this rugged
redwood patio-:full at iust

Big

The top quality wobd in t he chaise wit h
wheels, roomy settee and cl u b chair is
nicely co mplem ented with plump vinyl,
and duck cus hions th at are hand tufted.
~eque

MASON-CLIFTON
spent Easter with their
. AND AREA PERSONALS
parents , Mr. and Mrs. J ohn
Easter dinner guests of Mr. Marshall and Mr. and Mrs.
ahd Mrs. John Sisson , Miriam, Granville Smith and Tommy.
Melanie , Marcia and Mary
Mr. and Mrs. 'Don QuisenAlice were Mr. and Mrs. James berry and daughters, Und a
Sisson, Jamie and Julie of and Kimberly of South
Pomeroy; Mr . and Mrs . Charleston, Ohio visited last
·charles Cohen, Pomeroy ; Mr. week' with Mrs. Thelma Henry
and Mrs. Russell Capehart, at Clifton .
Mason .
Mrs. Chester Oliver, Mr . and
, Mrs. Lee Richardson has Mrs. Rober t Oliver, Lance and
.returned fr om a Florida . Lynn visited with Mr. and Mrs .
vacation and is now visiting Louie Harms at Toledo, 0. ,
her daughter and family , Mr , over the weekend.
and Mrs . Leroy Medca lf and
Mrs . Ora Hi ggins, Pt.
sons In Columbus. Mrs . Pleasant and Betty Lyons were,
Richardson 's other daughter Easter gues ts of Mr. and Mrs.
and her husband, Mr. and Mrs . Uoyd Willial)1s and family at
Ralph Potter of Baltimore, Clifton .
I'
visited at the Medcalf home in· · Mr. 'and Mrs. William Lee
JOKE BACKFffiES .
Columbus during Easter (former Shirley Riley ) and.\
· · LOS ANGELES (UP!)· - It
holidays.
family Lois, Lori, Russ and
was a 'horrible sight· and the
1
Mr. Theodore (Ted) Riley, Kenny of Dex ter City, Ohio
The46-year-&lt;~ldonetlmeGOP woman screamed.
Sr . Is recuperating at his home visited recently ,.with Mr. and national committeeman from.
A real estate agent was
after being hospitalized at ' Mrs. Ted Riley at Clifton..
Mississippi worked in Nixon's taking the woman and her
Holzer Medical Center for
1968presidential campaign and husband through a vacant
several days.
Mr. and Mrs. Homer Harris, . left Jackson i/11969 t,a join the apartment· in the San Pedro .
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Lee , a · Charleston and her son, Bob White House staff as an aide area Tuesday when she
grandson and wife, Elaine, and Barker of Charleston, visited after the election. But tie was stepped into the bathroom to
two grea !-grandchildren, the latter's grandmother, Mrs. 'on the staff -without pay - for look it over. .
·
Margie and Amy of Caldwell, Helen Barker at Clifton on her three \ Y.ears before his. name
Floating in a tub of murky
Ohio spent a week with his birthday, March 21, and took was listed in the White House water was what appeared to be·
grandparents; Mr. and Mrs. her out to dinner. Another · directory.
the headless skeleton of a child:
Ted Riley, Sr.
·
grandson and his wife, Mr. and
During the 1972 campaign, Sbe Shrieked. The real estate
Dinner · guests of Mr. and Mrs. Joe Barker of Charleston LaRue went to tfie Committee agent called police. ·
Mrs. J&lt;enneth Reynolds and also took his grandmother out for ·the Re-Election ·of the
Investigators , reached into
family on Easter were Mr. and to dinner on Friday evening. · Presidfri\asaspeclalassistant · the tub and retrieved ' the
Mrs. Norman Reynolds , · Mrs. Elmer VanMeter, · to Mitchell, where he became "body" - a rehlistic looking
Mason ; Mrs. R. C. King, Clifton and her sister, Mrs. kJ\own as the cal}lpaign direc- inflatable rubber "headless
· corpse" sold innovelty stores.
Henderson, 8nd Mrs. Landon Robert Greer, Pt. Pleasan t, · tor's "right hand .man."
Smith.
attended ~ · Cantata at the ·
After Mitchell resigned from It lii&amp;S "-P.farently planted
Ed~le RusselL ol West United Methodist Church iii Pt. the campaign{-LaRue became there as iiilA April Fool's Day
Columbia was returned from . Pleasant,
special assistant to his succes- joke, but on who re111ained a
the Holzer Medical Center· on . Mr . .and Mrs. Randy ·van- sor, Clark MacGregor. It mystery, police ·sald.
Meter and son, Matt, vjsited became known quickly that he
The agent was not amused.
,Mond11y
Mr. and Mrs. Phillip Smith recently with Mr. and Mrs. was a go-between for Mitchell The couple said they were not
children, Patti Jo . and Harold Hinkle at Chesapeake, and MacGregor, allowing inte~ted in' the apartment
ilteJ)haJ~Ie. qf Lexlngton , , Ky. Ohio.
Mitchelltokeephishan~ ihthe , any mor.e.
,,

'

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Circle pat tern , steel
en.ds on · c h airs.
avocado or lemon.

1

..

.

Season Openers

'

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2 lbs. PORK CHOPS .. .
2 lbs. POLISH SAUSAGE

•

make statU. symbol demands · cqrpora te policy allows only in ·the d epa£tme~L One
of ·prospect,ive employers that t~o Weeks for newcomers , for · demanded the c ompany
are absurd on tOday's job exanjple," he 8aid, "or they headquarters not be more than
market becau,se they display will stick in ·a demand for a three blocks from the downdelusions of grandeur· and a prime spot in the headquarters town shoAJing section of the
·
lack of perspective and · parking lot, a .sunlit office or ~city· . "
realism.
even will ask bluntly for a desk
1\s we said. this is Robert
· "Th ey will demand a larger than.that of anyone else . Hall's story..
mon th 's vacation even though

: :~::::::::::::::::::::::; :;: ;:;:;:;: ;:;:;:;:;:;: ;:;:;:::;: ;:;:;:; :;:;:;:; :;: ;:;: ; :;: ;:;:;:;:; :;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:; :;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;: ;:;:;:; ::

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Fresh Trout ••••••••••••• ; ••••••••••• • •• ••• •. 90• lb.
Fresh Perch Fillet •••••• • •••• • ••••••••••••• • • • 90' ·lb.

SIDE• • • 83c .lb.

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'

'

By LeROY POPE
· · · UPI Businexs Wrlier
NEW YORK . (UPI) - I(
·· Robert Half, ·head of the
executive employment agency
bearing'hls name, didn't have a
· · reputation for ·veracity, this ·
might be a hard story to take,
For Half says, .with uneml)loyment running at the
highest rate in '30 years, many·
Americans are turning down
perfectly good Jo.bs for the
!kldest reasons.
Take the ' client at ·Half's
Chicago office who refused a
job wl~ a . top publishing
comphny because he no!lced
his · prospe9tlve empioye• ,
putting salt on a steak at lunch
without tasting It first. "That
steak may not have needed
.salt," be explained to Half.
"How could I possibly work for
someone who does things in
such arbitrary ahd hasty

Woody experimenting ·

18

100.1.

.

'

The 34-year-old native of · He proceeded to repaint the
SoUth Bend, Ind ., gul(led old' basketball office and even
Dartmouth to. an ~18 season took down the picture .Df
even though leading scorer revered coach "DOggie" JuHan
Adam Sutton m!saed most of llecause "most players today .
the g*mes with· injuries. The don't even remember who he · .
Big Green ha,d won only 10 of 52 was."
•
games In the two ,previous · The major ·accompUahment
seasons.
in Jackson's single season stint
Jackson, who had inherited a was to guide the then-winless'
similar situation at Cae but Big Green to the championship
produced a 56-14 record in of the Kodak Class.lc with wins
three seasons, promised to over Rochester l!lld NCAA·
rebuild the sagging Dartmouth bound Georgetown.
program. "One of" my long.
Jackson's finest r~rd in
range goals Is to diwelop a college coaching came in 1972COLUMBUS (UP!) - Ohio
"We had a great freshman program where high school · 73 ·when he led Coe to ·a 22-0
State University football coach crop last year-you bet;" said players wiD call us and say, regular season mark and into
WOddy .Hayes says "we'll be Hayes. "Just think how many 'We want to "come to · Dart- the quarterfinals of the NCAA
experimenting au spring" and ·will be starting this !alL" · mouth,"' said Jackson In an College Divlslon playoffs. Coe
maybe right up until the season
Oue switch sent 6-3, 252 interview Shortly, after taking was beaten that year by Joe
O'Brien 's Assumption College
opener Sept 13 against Mlchi- pound Cincinnati sophomore the post.
gan State in an attempt to Rick Applegate from tackle to
replace 13 starters from last center.
season's co-Big Ten Cham·
"We want to take a look, " '.
pions.
said Hayes . "We might a1sa t ry
"I'd rather not line up a Garth . Cox ·(&amp;-5, 242 pound
starting offense,.. and defense freshman) there instead of
for the cameras now," said tacldg. I dunno.''
Hayes, beginning his 25th
"Pass defense may not be
season at the Buckeyes' helm. physically str ong enough,"
"The nine returning regulars, H8yes said. "We might try
sure. They 've earned their Herman Jones (a 6-3, 200 pound
positions, but they'll have to freshman) at defensive half.
keep 'em.
. back instead of tight end."
"But otherwise we 'll be · Ray Griffin, brother of
experimenting all spring and . Heisman trophy winner Archie
.maybe right up lo September Griffin, has been switched
TOUCH &amp; SEW'
and the opening game and then froq) tailback to safety in one
MACHINE WIT!'
we'll have a meaningful li· move to shore up the seconCABINET
neup," Hayes said.
dary,
• SJDg~ . exclus1ve

with . new

'

,..

Some
folks
fussy
.about
bQsses
.

HANOVER, N.H. (UP! ) \ · Jackson, hired 8 1'.! 'months
Marcus Jackson, whos&amp; magi- ago after performing a threeca l touch was. suppos~ to year transformation at Coe
transform the l"Oefl!l · Dart- College In Iowa, announced his·
mouth basketball team into an resignation Tuesday t~take the·
Eastern 'contender, has left the head · coaching job at Wright
Ivy League school after one State University in Oayton,
mediocre season.
O~io.
·

w. 1. . gf va
Se ginaw
Flint

9- The Diill;r. Sentinel,l\!idctieport.Pomeroy; 0..;· Wednesday., April 2, 1975

Wright .~tate has' new cage mentor,_. .

-;"?.'""·-...

Th is handsome redwood bar·

set o nclu ~es a big 26·1/4x70"
table and 2 sturdy be nch es.

9

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$5995
.

a

lovely gin rummy settee and
table. Comfortable cushions are
in floral vinyl and duck. UmbreBa
is ·

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· Big Savings on this bright
and
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cheery patio-full, only·

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This ?:i!" -lohg sofa and, 2 lounge chairs
·are in ·elegim'tly finished wrought metal.
The gorgeous cover~ of their 100% polyester foam cushi()Jls are reversib le. ·

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Includes 2 .end tables
and 1 coffee table~
"
"

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�..--....~...---~~--~..~~~~~............~~~--~we~~~8a-.~--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

~t,~~~~l~~~~~~~~~~~~~~··'·
~ ~ ~.~~~~i~~~~~i~~-~;
~· ~~~~~~~~·~~~~~~~~~~7;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--~--~~~~~~~~~~~~--,~·--~ir:nr~.-----------~------~~~~--~.---~
'·
•• • • • • • ~
.,. '
'~ ~o:;·
.- ~
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&gt;
I

8- The Dally Snetlnel, Mlddlepoft-Pouieroy, 0., Wednesday, April 2, 1975

· Pro Standings

{l't hens edges

NBA Standing~
Bv Unit ed Pr ()~\ . l ntcrnM•ona~

E"\tc rn Co nt crc ntl'

Gallipo,is
4-3
,
.
'

Visiting Athens broke a 3-3 hurler Dailey was Iough In the
deadlock in the top of the sixth clutch, lea ving six GAHS·base·
Inning and then held off host runners stranded.
Gallipolis the last two innings · · Oailey went the distance for
to post a 4·3 Southeastern Ohio !.l.thens, He /!ave up nine hils,
. League· victory over the Blue walked only one, and struck out
Devils on the Rio Grande seven .
Jim Perry went the distance·
Coll ege diamond Tuesday
for'GAHS. Perry permitted six
evening.
It was the ·season opener for hits. He fanned 12 and walked .
four. Each team committed
both teams.
tgree four errors .
Athens
scored
unearned runs in 'tht! t'hird · · Perry led Gi\HS at the plate
ihning after two were out to with a home run and two
!&lt;Ike 9 3-0 advantage. In the si ngles in three trips, Jim
bottom of the fiflh iiming, Niday had two singles in three
Gallipolis' Jim Per~ol:' socked a trips and Brent Johnson two
three-run homer, scoring Brett singles in four trips,
:Ma y and Dailey paced
Wilson who had reached base
with two hi ts apiece .
Athens
on an en;o and Gary Swain
Galli polls will host Meigs at 4
who dreli' a walk ,
In Athe ns' sixth. May singled p.m . Thursday in the Blue
with one out. Cartmill walked, Devils next outing,
Score by in nings:
then May scored what proved
00.1 001 ri-4-fl-4
to be the win ning run on Scott A! hens •
GAHS
000 030 0-3-9-4
Dailey 's si ngle.
Batteries - Dailey &amp; Dee!;
GAHS had men on bases
every innin g, but winning P~rry &amp; Johnson,

Kyger Creek tied the score in
its second frame on a walk to
C~ris Preston , a stolen base
and clutch single by leftfielder
Jim Armbruster, The Bobcats
moved ahead in the third on
singles by Tim Lucas, Steve
Baird, an error and walks to
Dave Wise , Preston and Paul
Fife.
Southwes tern tallied its
second run in the fifth chasing
starting pi tcher Tim Lucas
from the mound. Larry Carter
opened the rally with a single .
He came across on consecutive
singles by Walker and Russell .
The final two ' Bobcat tallies
came In the sixth on a walk to

Today's

By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sportl Editor
NEW YORK (UP!)- Rod Carew likes to get things straight.
He's not pouting. Everything's patched up between him and
Minnesota Twins' boss, Calvjn Griffith, the man who pays. him.
The bitterness, most of It, anyway, Is gone.
It's true, there had been some coolness at the arbitration table
where Rod Carew, 'the first American Leaguer since Ty Cobb lo
win three straight batting titles, argued for a $140,000 contract,
but lost and had to settle for a $120,000 one.
The ball club made the point that even thougl\ Carew's .384
batting average was the highest in the league, both leagues, in
fact, his RBI output of 55 was rather anemic, and then by way of
rubbing some salt crystals into tile wound, the Twins aald they
had to go back more than a quarter century to find another
second basem1111 with the club who made as many errors as
Carew did last year. Somewhat dryly and quite accurately,
Carew replied, they had ' to go back farther than that to find
another player with them who nit as well as he has.
Rod Carew gave the general Impression after he lost his ar·
bitation case the Twins did not appreciate him. When the press
asked him specifically how he felt, he aald unhappy and there
was no question about it, he was.
More than a month has gone by and Carew has had ample time
to look back and reflect upon how he actually felt then, and hoW
he feels now.
"They said! was disf!ll.sted," he says, talking about the way he
was characterized after arbitration. "Everybody Is disappointed
If he doesn 't win something. Nobody likes to lose. I'm trying to
make a living tike anybody else. I got letters about so many
people being laid off. Some day I'm going to be laid off, too. You
Should've seen some of the letters. My wife S.ld, 'Honey, you
can't let it both~r you. We've been through this before.'"
Rod Carew and his wife, Marilyn, have an interracial
marriage that is working beautifully. Her reference to the letters
has to do with some other IJlBil, much more vicious, he got from
bigots when he was first married.
,. ·
Anyway, Rod Carew is a lot happier now.
He'll be happier yet to learn Calvin Griffith truly does appreciate his ability --regsrdless of what happened at the ar. • bitration table,
"You have to appreciate him," says the Twins' board chair·
man and president. "He has been an AD.Star eight years; he has
won the batting title three years In a r~, he's a helluva
ballplayer.
"I'll tell you how much I aAJreclate Rod Carew. Sam Mele
wanted to l!Bnd him back to Charlotte eight years ago, but I told '
Sam to play him bedmse I · thought he was a blg league
ballplayer. I've only dictated to a manager in the caae of three
ballplayers -Bob Allison, Harmon Klllebrew and Carew -and
all three lurnedoutto be All..Stars. That's not so bad, Is It?" .
The ,big difficulty with tt1l many employer-employe rela'
tlonahlps, in boseball as well as in so many other businesses, Is
that frequently pne side can't see the other side's point of view ·
and vice veraa. Worie yet, neither side tries to.
Calvin Griffith, I've always found , is more candid that .most
other big league operators. Sometimes, he's even too candid.
This time is no exception.
.
·
·
"I have to look out for Calvin Griffith, too," he says in the face
of repeatedc harges that economy is the key to the way he always
·operates. "I lost a half million dollars last year; two mUlion in
the put folD' years; Our ticket department did a comprehe111lve
survey and sbowed we had only 30 good ciays to play taaeball last
year. .
· ·
.
.
·
·
"Okay, Carew was upset becauae he didn't.get what he asked
for -4140,000. We offered hipll125,000 but he wanted to arbitrate
·and ended up with 1120,000. He belt hlmlelf out of 15,000. Still, he , ·
iln'tmaklnla bad salary. l'dllke to get what he'i getting. I don't ·
mike thai much.
·
' "I'll tell yl)lllhll about Rod Carew: he can be as good as
anYl!od:Y Ia buebllllf be wants to be. He's got the speed, he can
handle the bit, he's got the glove. AD he has to do Is knock in
·more ru1111. Did you know he drove in seven less I'WlS last
)'ear than the year before? When you offer a guy a S25,000 raise,
lba'altllla
pretty aood ralae."
·
r

• 'If

Vi ro lnr .'l

. I~ b l
· West

.J'!IJ
18 J

'1'1

1\ 1

s

w . J. pet. g .b .
New York
Ke ntucky

St. Lours

56 26 .683
56 . 26 .68J
31 51 .378 25

Fife, a double by Terry Lucas
and a throwing error,
Ge tting hits for the winners
were Terry and Tim Lucas,
Steve Baird, and Jim Arm·
bruster . Walker led the
Highlanders with three hi\:! ·in
four trips. Russell had two
singles, Larry and Terry
Carter, Kim Lewis and Jim
Nlda had the other SW hits.
Garter was the losing pitcher . He was reli eved by Nida
in the third.
Lucas was the winner. H•
was relieved by Baird in the
fifth and Terry Lucas in the
sixth.
Line Score:
100 010 1- 2 9 3
SW
01 3 002 x...j) 4 0
KC

A's, LA

Sport Parade

'·'l

A~ 4' 1ll p h r' .

Af1itnHc 0 1tds•on
w . 1. p~t . g .b .
w . I. pet . q . b . 11 Denv er
6·1 19 . 77 I
K Ooston
'JI ?1 .rn
:-.M r.n·l onlo
.'J fl JJ ,flQ:i' IJ
Buff~IO
48 3 1 .6UA
9
. lndliln CI.
•IS 37 .549 1~ 1 ••
Nl'W Yo rk
39 . ·10" , o\ 9~ IR
Ufrlh
.36 4fl . 439 '27 1 ,
Ph i l ~de l pi"\Ja
34 ' I&amp;- J7 5 ? ~1 1 • • ~ A:n Dlc{io
31 5 1 .318 371 ~
·
Ct&gt;J\t ri' l D ivision
)1 -(lmchl'd divi sion titl e
w. I . pet . 9 .b.
Tu cs d~y 's Resuth
X Washin gton 57 ' 71 7J 1
Denver -116 l nPIAna li S
1
Housl Un
4 1 •10' .506 17 : Sttn Anton io r30 Sa n Di ego ll ~
Cleveland
39 4 1 . 488 19
~ I . Lou i t'&gt; 11 2 Utah 109
Jq l &amp;nl~
3 1 50 .383 27 1 1 Memp h.is lH Virgin ia 102
New Or leans :l3 57 . 288 , \15
W edncs. tlay ' s Games
Western Conference
VirQinle at Kentucky
Midwest D iVIIIOn
Memph is a t New Yo r k
w. I . pe t . g .b. st. Lou is &amp;t San Ot ego
Chicago
45 3&amp; 570
Utah at Indiana
KC Omaha
43 36 .54 4 2
Detro i t
39 .s1 488
6.1 ..
NHLf Stan ding '
M i lwaukee
36 43 .456
9
R.v Un ited Press Internation al
PolC ifiC Division
Di visi on I
·w. i. pet . g .b .
w. 1. 1. pt s gf ga
x Golden Stat e 47 33 588
,.. Ph ll adlph 49 18 10 108 282 177
Seat tie
39 39 . 500 :r
Port"ta nd
36 44 .450 II
NY Islanders 32 24 22 86 257 21 3
PhoE&gt;n iX ·
31 48 .392 1 5 1 ~ NY Rangers 36 28 13 85 311 267
LosAn$1elu
3.0 , 49 .380 16 1 ~ Atla nta
JJ 29 15 8123612 4
•· Clinched d ivision titl e
Div is ion '2
T~esday 's Results
w. I. t. ph gf ga
Chicag o 98 Buff elo 9J
VAncouver
36 32 10 82 264 25 3
Ne~ York 99 Philade lphle 95
Wuhlng ton 110 New Or lea ns St . Louis
JJ 30 H 80 260 257
10 I ·
Ch icago
35 34 a 78 256 2Jl
M i lwa ukee 98 Detro i t 9 1
Minnesot a
'23 48 7 55 220 J].d
Houston 113 Atlanta 104
Kan"sas City 15 52 11 41 178 319
Por tland 124 Los Ange les 106
Dlv fsi on J
• Wedn es day 's Games
w . 1. t. pt' gf va
Buffalo at 'Bosl on
Montrea t
44 14 19 107 354 27 1
Houston al Washi ngton
Chicago at Detro it
Los An ge les 40 17 20 100 258 179
Los Angeles at Phoenix
•iltsbur gh
36 26 15 87 315 274
KC Omaha at Seatt le
Detroil
22 o 12 56 ·248 32 1
Wash ington . 7 65
19 168 423
D ivis •on 4
ABA Standings
w. 1. t . pts gf va
· By 'United Preu Internat ional
x -Buffalo
.:17 16 15 109 3.16 236
East

·K C ·Bobcats twin 6-2
Kyger 'Creek took advantage
of the wildness of start ing
pitcher Terry Carter and his
reliever Jim Nida Tuesday
night· to score three runs in the
third inning enroute to a 6-2
diamond victory over South. western.
. '
It was the Iirst victory of the
season after two opening losses
Monday for Coach. Jim
Sprague's defending SVAC
champion Bobcats . Coach Mel
Carter 's Highlanders are O.L
Southwestern plated its first
run in the first inning on-singles
by Kevin Walker and Mike
Russell' and a double by ·Terry
Carter .

'

(

favored
in 1975

Boston
40 25 13 93 339 237
Toron to
J l 31 15 77 274 298
Calirorn il!l
19 46 12 50 208 307
x -CIIndted division
·Tuesday's Results ·
Buff a lo 3 Bost on I
A lia 2 NY Is landers 2. t ie
Kans as City 3 Los Ang eles 1'
St . Louis 7 M in nesota 3
Va n couver 7 Cali forn ia 0
Wettne5day 's' Games
Kans as Cit y ar Chicago
Was h ington at Detroit
A tlan ta at Toron to
P itt sburg h at Mon treal
Los Ang eles' at sr. Louis
Vancouver at Ca l iforn ia
WHA Standings

By United Press Internat ional
East

w. I. t. ptS" gf

ga
42 28 5 89 267 270

x -New Eng
Cleveland
Chicago
l ndlan ap ols

34 39 3 71 225 24 9

29 45 I 59 255 305

x Houston

18 55 3 39 210 32 6
West
w. I. t . pts gf ga
~ 50 24 0 100 J47 2lJ

Minnesot a
SM D iego

41 30 3 85 296 25 9
41 3 1 3 85 30d 258

Ph·oenl)(
Baltimore

Quebec

38 30 8
20 50 4
canadia n
w . I. t .
44 31 0

Toronto
Wi nni p eg

8\:l 292 257
44 188 316
pts gf ga
88 3 16 287

42 J2 2 86 J40 298
38 32 4 80 307 166

Edmon to n
34 37 4 12 266 270
Vanc ou ver
33 39 2 68 238 257
)1. Cl incl'led divis ion titl e
Tuesday •, Resu lts
N ew England 5 P h oeni~t J
Mi nnesota S Vancouver 2
Chi cago J Cl eve land 2, o1
Toron to 7 Indianapolis 1
Ba l t im ore 4 San Die go 3
Quebec 5 Edmonton 3
W-ednesday's Games
Quebec at Minnesota
Cle ve land i!U Houston
Va n couver at Winnipeg

I H L Pl1yoff Stan ding s

LAS VEGAS , Nev. (UP!) "According to the Hollywood
Sports Book, the Oakland A's
and Los Angeles Dodgers wlll
meet again this Octol)er in the
World Series,
The book has the A's, three·
time world champions, who
routed the Dodgers last year in
five . games, ·as solid ~-2
favorites to win the American
League pennant and Los
Angeles as a 9-S pick to win the
National League flag.
The book did not llst odds on
the respective division races.
Instead it picked the teama as
po88lble pennant winners.
Stlll, since · the . Baltimore
Orioles were Hated at il-l in the
AL pennant race , obviously
they are the favorites to win
the AL East and face the A's
for the pennant.
In the NL, the Pittsburgh
Pirates were 3-1 picks In the
pennant race, second behind
the Dodgers, which means they
are the top pick in the East.
The New York Yankees, with
key acquisitions' In Jim "Cal·
fiah" Hunter and Bobby Bonds,
are third in the AL at 7-2 with
Texas at 6-1, Boston 8·1,
Chicago and Cleveland 1~1.
Minnesota, Kanau City and
Mllwaukee 15-1, C811fornla 20-1
and Detroit 50-1.
In the NL behind Pittsburgh,
Is Cincinnati at 7·2, St. Louis 61, Atlanta 8-), PllUadelphla and
Montreal 1~1. San Francisco
and Houston 12-1, New York 151, Chicago 50-1 and San Diego

Br United Press Inter nat ional
Ounterfinals - Best of Seven
w. 1. gf ga
Da yton
J 2 18 16
2 3 16 18
Des Moines
Muskegon
Port · Hur on

w . 1. gf ga
J 1 18 15
1 J

I5

osurplayers

Reds hammer
Mets, . 8 to 2
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla.
(UP!) - The .Cincinnati Reds
launched a 19-llit attack Tuesday, highlighted with home
runs by Tony Perez and Ed
Armbrister, en route to an ~2
victory over the New York
Mets. '
Jerry Cnim and Mac Scarce,
two members of the Mets'
bullpen crew, gave up aU the
runs . Cram was tagged lor two
runs in each of the first two
Innings and Scarce gave up
three· runs in the fifth and
another in the sixth. Both home
runs were off Scarce.
Armbrister drove . in three
runs with a double in the

second and a two-rui'Phomer in
Uie fifth. Perez had a triple
along with his homer,
Cesar Geronimo tripled off
Scarce to open the fifth and
scored on Ken Griffey's sacrifice fly. Doug Flynn then
singled and Armbrister hit a .
1
two-run homer.
,
Tom Hall, Pat ·Darcy and
Will McEnney pitched for the
Reds, who are now 16·9 on the
exhibition circuit The loss for
the Mets was their loth in 22
games.
The Mets optioned catcher
Ron Hodges to their Tidewater
farm club to reduce the ir squad
to 28.

,,1\.rElf
1
~

push ·bu :.on drop·
in bobbin , more !

Save

$30

z1G -ZAG wiTH BUILT·IN suNo -H EM sTITCH

Model 252/242

Carrying case or cabinet extra

'hcle•in And SaVe Even More!
SALE ENDS APRIL S

The Fabric

S~op

POMEROY

~

McCall• &amp; Simplicity Pattern•

~
AP giO OV ( C 11110111

Phone 992-2284

11SW, 2nd

·open Friday &amp; Satu rday THB

OUt~~~

WE ACCEPT
FEDERAL FOOD
COUPONS

,,

3 1 18

10

10

1B

1

3

w. 1. gt ua
Toledo
4 1 11 . 11
Columbus
1 4 11 17
Tuesday ' s Results
Dayton 3 Des Moin es 2, 2 ot
Sa g inaw 4 F tln t 0
Toledo .h.Columbus 2
....anight's Game s
Por t Huron at Muskegon
Sag inaw ·at F l in ft

FINED AND SUSPENDED
LOS ANGELES (UPI)- The
World Hockey Association an·
nounced Tuesday that Indianapolis Racers goaltender
Andy Brown has been fined
$250 and suspended for one
game.
Bud Poile, vice president and
executive director of the WHA,
said the penalties were handed
down as a result of an alter·
cation Brown had with officials
in a game at Cleveland March
29, The suspension will be
served when the Racers visit
Vancouver AprU 6.

MONDAY THRU FRIDAY 8-5, SATURDAY &amp;SUNDAY 9-6
SPECIALS

3 lbs. GROUND CHUCK
2 lbs. SLICED BACON '
2 lbs. PORK STEAK .
2 lbs. Sl RLOIN STEAK

~~ALL

GRASS
·CATTLE
lULU, STEERS, HE.IFERS and

~·

FRONT• • • 72• lb.

ih SEMI BONELESS HAM

4 lbs. GROUND CHUCK
· 3 lbs. BEEF ROAST

2 lbs. RIB STEAK
2 lbs. GROUND CHUCK

3 lbs. PORK ROAST

3 lbs. ROUND-STEAK

3 lbs. ROUND STEAK

3 lbs. BEEF ROAST

3 lbs, BEEF ROAST

YEARLINGS

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

TUESDAY, APRIL 22, ·1975
AT 8:00 P.M •.

lb.

HIND • • • 93c lb.

''

AT OHIO VALLEY LIVESTOCK CO.

lb~

..

$

$

'·'

1 lb. HAM. SALAD
2 lbs. CUBE STEAK
1 lb. SLAB ~ACON
2 lb. SLICED BOLOGNA
3 lbs. SPARE RIBS

"·

''

..
II

.'
'

CONSIGNMENTS WELCOME
·FOR INFORMATION PHONE

446-9760 OR 446-3941 ·

"

I

Then there was the New
· York accountant who refused
even to. consider two prime
jobs across the Hudson River
in. New Jersey because he
co uldn't bear the idea of
crossing
the
George
WaShington bridge every day.
"Someday that bridge Is going
to fall In the river," he ex·
plained.
1
,... A Pittsburgh computer progranuner gave one of the
strangest excuses of all for
turning down a job. At the
Interview, the prospective boss
wore white socks. " Unpardo"hable!"
said
the
progranuner .
Then there was the fellow
who actually accepted a job in
Boston at a salary better than
he had asked for. But the n·ext
day he g.ot a warm welcoming
note from the big boss that was
carelessly typed--two letters
struck over and a misspelled
word. "I can't work for such a
sloppy compan)'," he said, and
quit forthwith.
An unemployed San Francis·
co executive refu sed a job .with
a company that paid its employes twice a month. He said
he wouldn't be able to get used
to anything · but the weekly
paycheck
he 'd
always
received . ·
A female executive in Houston who had been out of work
six months had set $18,000 as
her minimum salary and
turned down a job paying
$11,500.
A Detroit . executive, who
hadn't worked for three
mdhths, refused a job that was
to start in· two weeks because
he wanted to start work im·
mediately,
~. A Cleveland lady was all set
to take a fine job until she
noticed a certificate ·of appreciation on the boss's wall
from a local Republican club.
''I'm a lifelong Democrat,'' she
told the Half manager. "I just
can't imagine myself working
for a Republican."
', A traveling auditor who lived
in Seattle turned down an offer
tiecause the company insisted
ijs employes fly coach instead
'f. first class.
1Half aaid many unemployed
~xecuti ves
and financial
service officers continue to

'

. ~. ~choqse

a .patio· fu ·9f cool ··comfort .
at saVIngs that make .1t
· . - even 'more fun!

f

NO. 8101
CLUB CHAIR
Seat 19"x20"
1

.

NO. 8712
GLIDER

Aluminum ends-; overa ll
wJ dtb...SE

NO. 8131
ROCKER

ALL

Seat 19"x20" .

PIECES

5 Pc~ . Table Cafe Set
The expanded me tal table
top is 36" round . Stylis h
round seats on the mesh ·
chai rs. All-weather fin 1sh.

$

95

SPRING SALE

•

.. I
Houdini II, greatest modern escape artist, will be on stage free, open to the public, Aprill7
at RIO Grande College· Rio Grande Community College .

Houdini II claimed world's
greatest new escap~ artist
RID GRANDE - Houdini II,
Houdini reinca rna ted, the
world's greates t escape artist!
Thos,. are some of the terms
used to descri be Norma n
Bige low , escape artist, who
will appear at Rio Grande-Rio
Grande Community College
Thursday, Aprill7 at 9 p.m. He
will appear in the college
dinin g halL The program,
sponsored by the Studen t
Activities Committe€, is free
and is open to !he p~P.lic .
Bigelow's work is receiving
so much national attention that
recently he was the only escape
artist !o be selected for the 9().
minute NBC Television special
with Bill Bixbe, the "Magic~
man' '.

. In the blackness of nigljt,
Bigelow steps ft.o· his coffin to
be shackled t a mound of
gunpowder ~· a 60 second

fu se, lighting up a . world you
never knew exis ~ed and wi ll
never forge t You will see his
eer ie " Boar d of Death ",
Chained and bound, 'Bigelow
must free himself wj !hin three
minute s or an . automatic
timing device will' bring ins tant
dealh.
Hi s
complete
st11ge
production is the resu lt or 20.
years or t hough~ and study and

combines history , hwnor and
total excilement. To convince
skepti cs , there is full audience
participation and inspection.
During one part of his performance. he is sealed in a
huge plastic bag with a canvas
bag containing a live poisonous
snake. In minutes he emerges , .
displaying the deadly snake
out side its ca nvas bag and in
the pas tic bag.

First Watergater
hegins sentence

I

ALL NEW
FOR SPRING!
'l

MONTGOMERY, Ala. (UP!)
- Former White House consultant Fred C. LaRue, the first
man to plead guilty in the
Watergate cover-up and the
last to be sentenced, began
serving a six-month prison
term Tuesday.
The balding, bespectacled
former top aide of ex-Attorney
General John N. Mitchell
surrendered to federal officials
at Maxwell Air Force Base's
minimum secu rity . prison,
Warden R. W, Grunska said he
would be ireated like the
facility's 265 other inmates.
.LaRue, a Mississippi oil
millionaire and land developer,
who became known as the
Nixon adinistration 's Southern
stfategist, was sentenced to
one to three years by U.S.
District Court Judge John J.
Sirica after pleading guilty to
conspiring to 'obstruct justice.
Sir!Ca suspended all but six
months of the term.

campaign,
LaRue pleaded guilty June
28,1973, to one count of conspiracy to obstru ct justice and
offered key testimony at both
the 1973 Senate watergate
hearings and the 1974 cover-up
triaL
He confessed that he' helped
handle payoffs to the
Waterga te defendants an d
destroy incriminating records
concerning the Waterga te,
He testified he was present
March 30,1972, when Mitchell
allegedly approved an intellige nce-gathering plan that led
to the break-in at the
Democratic offices in the
Watergaie hotel three months
later. He ~!so pleaded gu ilty to .•
handling more than $300,000 in
hush money.

Savi~gs

on this rugged
redwood patio-:full at iust

Big

The top quality wobd in t he chaise wit h
wheels, roomy settee and cl u b chair is
nicely co mplem ented with plump vinyl,
and duck cus hions th at are hand tufted.
~eque

MASON-CLIFTON
spent Easter with their
. AND AREA PERSONALS
parents , Mr. and Mrs. J ohn
Easter dinner guests of Mr. Marshall and Mr. and Mrs.
ahd Mrs. John Sisson , Miriam, Granville Smith and Tommy.
Melanie , Marcia and Mary
Mr. and Mrs. 'Don QuisenAlice were Mr. and Mrs. James berry and daughters, Und a
Sisson, Jamie and Julie of and Kimberly of South
Pomeroy; Mr . and Mrs . Charleston, Ohio visited last
·charles Cohen, Pomeroy ; Mr. week' with Mrs. Thelma Henry
and Mrs. Russell Capehart, at Clifton .
Mason .
Mrs. Chester Oliver, Mr . and
, Mrs. Lee Richardson has Mrs. Rober t Oliver, Lance and
.returned fr om a Florida . Lynn visited with Mr. and Mrs .
vacation and is now visiting Louie Harms at Toledo, 0. ,
her daughter and family , Mr , over the weekend.
and Mrs . Leroy Medca lf and
Mrs . Ora Hi ggins, Pt.
sons In Columbus. Mrs . Pleasant and Betty Lyons were,
Richardson 's other daughter Easter gues ts of Mr. and Mrs.
and her husband, Mr. and Mrs . Uoyd Willial)1s and family at
Ralph Potter of Baltimore, Clifton .
I'
visited at the Medcalf home in· · Mr. 'and Mrs. William Lee
JOKE BACKFffiES .
Columbus during Easter (former Shirley Riley ) and.\
· · LOS ANGELES (UP!)· - It
holidays.
family Lois, Lori, Russ and
was a 'horrible sight· and the
1
Mr. Theodore (Ted) Riley, Kenny of Dex ter City, Ohio
The46-year-&lt;~ldonetlmeGOP woman screamed.
Sr . Is recuperating at his home visited recently ,.with Mr. and national committeeman from.
A real estate agent was
after being hospitalized at ' Mrs. Ted Riley at Clifton..
Mississippi worked in Nixon's taking the woman and her
Holzer Medical Center for
1968presidential campaign and husband through a vacant
several days.
Mr. and Mrs. Homer Harris, . left Jackson i/11969 t,a join the apartment· in the San Pedro .
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Lee , a · Charleston and her son, Bob White House staff as an aide area Tuesday when she
grandson and wife, Elaine, and Barker of Charleston, visited after the election. But tie was stepped into the bathroom to
two grea !-grandchildren, the latter's grandmother, Mrs. 'on the staff -without pay - for look it over. .
·
Margie and Amy of Caldwell, Helen Barker at Clifton on her three \ Y.ears before his. name
Floating in a tub of murky
Ohio spent a week with his birthday, March 21, and took was listed in the White House water was what appeared to be·
grandparents; Mr. and Mrs. her out to dinner. Another · directory.
the headless skeleton of a child:
Ted Riley, Sr.
·
grandson and his wife, Mr. and
During the 1972 campaign, Sbe Shrieked. The real estate
Dinner · guests of Mr. and Mrs. Joe Barker of Charleston LaRue went to tfie Committee agent called police. ·
Mrs. J&lt;enneth Reynolds and also took his grandmother out for ·the Re-Election ·of the
Investigators , reached into
family on Easter were Mr. and to dinner on Friday evening. · Presidfri\asaspeclalassistant · the tub and retrieved ' the
Mrs. Norman Reynolds , · Mrs. Elmer VanMeter, · to Mitchell, where he became "body" - a rehlistic looking
Mason ; Mrs. R. C. King, Clifton and her sister, Mrs. kJ\own as the cal}lpaign direc- inflatable rubber "headless
· corpse" sold innovelty stores.
Henderson, 8nd Mrs. Landon Robert Greer, Pt. Pleasan t, · tor's "right hand .man."
Smith.
attended ~ · Cantata at the ·
After Mitchell resigned from It lii&amp;S "-P.farently planted
Ed~le RusselL ol West United Methodist Church iii Pt. the campaign{-LaRue became there as iiilA April Fool's Day
Columbia was returned from . Pleasant,
special assistant to his succes- joke, but on who re111ained a
the Holzer Medical Center· on . Mr . .and Mrs. Randy ·van- sor, Clark MacGregor. It mystery, police ·sald.
Meter and son, Matt, vjsited became known quickly that he
The agent was not amused.
,Mond11y
Mr. and Mrs. Phillip Smith recently with Mr. and Mrs. was a go-between for Mitchell The couple said they were not
children, Patti Jo . and Harold Hinkle at Chesapeake, and MacGregor, allowing inte~ted in' the apartment
ilteJ)haJ~Ie. qf Lexlngton , , Ky. Ohio.
Mitchelltokeephishan~ ihthe , any mor.e.
,,

'

'

Circle pat tern , steel
en.ds on · c h airs.
avocado or lemon.

1

..

.

Season Openers

'

'

2 lbs. PORK CHOPS .. .
2 lbs. POLISH SAUSAGE

•

make statU. symbol demands · cqrpora te policy allows only in ·the d epa£tme~L One
of ·prospect,ive employers that t~o Weeks for newcomers , for · demanded the c ompany
are absurd on tOday's job exanjple," he 8aid, "or they headquarters not be more than
market becau,se they display will stick in ·a demand for a three blocks from the downdelusions of grandeur· and a prime spot in the headquarters town shoAJing section of the
·
lack of perspective and · parking lot, a .sunlit office or ~city· . "
realism.
even will ask bluntly for a desk
1\s we said. this is Robert
· "Th ey will demand a larger than.that of anyone else . Hall's story..
mon th 's vacation even though

: :~::::::::::::::::::::::; :;: ;:;:;:;: ;:;:;:;:;:;: ;:;:;:::;: ;:;:;:; :;:;:;:; :;: ;:;: ; :;: ;:;:;:;:; :;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:; :;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;: ;:;:;:; ::

(FROZEN and WRAPPED TO YOUR ORDER)

· 2 lbs. RIB STEAK

SPECIAL SAlE

lb.
lb.
lb.

Rib Steaks (Frozen Packed) •• •• •••••••• ••... •1.19 lb.
Fresh Trout ••••••••••••• ; ••••••••••• • •• ••• •. 90• lb.
Fresh Perch Fillet •••••• • •••• • ••••••••••••• • • • 90' ·lb.

SIDE• • • 83c .lb.

•

fashion?"

t

MEATS

Semi Boneless Ham •••••••••••••••••••• • ••• •1 .39
Sliced Bacon •••••.••••••••••••••••••••••·• • • • • 99•
Polish Sausage •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 69'
Homemade Sausage • •••••••••••• •. • •••••••• • 79•
Fresh Ground Chuck ••••••••••••• ~ ••••• il • • • • • 99•

'

'

By LeROY POPE
· · · UPI Businexs Wrlier
NEW YORK . (UPI) - I(
·· Robert Half, ·head of the
executive employment agency
bearing'hls name, didn't have a
· · reputation for ·veracity, this ·
might be a hard story to take,
For Half says, .with uneml)loyment running at the
highest rate in '30 years, many·
Americans are turning down
perfectly good Jo.bs for the
!kldest reasons.
Take the ' client at ·Half's
Chicago office who refused a
job wl~ a . top publishing
comphny because he no!lced
his · prospe9tlve empioye• ,
putting salt on a steak at lunch
without tasting It first. "That
steak may not have needed
.salt," be explained to Half.
"How could I possibly work for
someone who does things in
such arbitrary ahd hasty

Woody experimenting ·

18

100.1.

.

'

The 34-year-old native of · He proceeded to repaint the
SoUth Bend, Ind ., gul(led old' basketball office and even
Dartmouth to. an ~18 season took down the picture .Df
even though leading scorer revered coach "DOggie" JuHan
Adam Sutton m!saed most of llecause "most players today .
the g*mes with· injuries. The don't even remember who he · .
Big Green ha,d won only 10 of 52 was."
•
games In the two ,previous · The major ·accompUahment
seasons.
in Jackson's single season stint
Jackson, who had inherited a was to guide the then-winless'
similar situation at Cae but Big Green to the championship
produced a 56-14 record in of the Kodak Class.lc with wins
three seasons, promised to over Rochester l!lld NCAA·
rebuild the sagging Dartmouth bound Georgetown.
program. "One of" my long.
Jackson's finest r~rd in
range goals Is to diwelop a college coaching came in 1972COLUMBUS (UP!) - Ohio
"We had a great freshman program where high school · 73 ·when he led Coe to ·a 22-0
State University football coach crop last year-you bet;" said players wiD call us and say, regular season mark and into
WOddy .Hayes says "we'll be Hayes. "Just think how many 'We want to "come to · Dart- the quarterfinals of the NCAA
experimenting au spring" and ·will be starting this !alL" · mouth,"' said Jackson In an College Divlslon playoffs. Coe
maybe right up until the season
Oue switch sent 6-3, 252 interview Shortly, after taking was beaten that year by Joe
O'Brien 's Assumption College
opener Sept 13 against Mlchi- pound Cincinnati sophomore the post.
gan State in an attempt to Rick Applegate from tackle to
replace 13 starters from last center.
season's co-Big Ten Cham·
"We want to take a look, " '.
pions.
said Hayes . "We might a1sa t ry
"I'd rather not line up a Garth . Cox ·(&amp;-5, 242 pound
starting offense,.. and defense freshman) there instead of
for the cameras now," said tacldg. I dunno.''
Hayes, beginning his 25th
"Pass defense may not be
season at the Buckeyes' helm. physically str ong enough,"
"The nine returning regulars, H8yes said. "We might try
sure. They 've earned their Herman Jones (a 6-3, 200 pound
positions, but they'll have to freshman) at defensive half.
keep 'em.
. back instead of tight end."
"But otherwise we 'll be · Ray Griffin, brother of
experimenting all spring and . Heisman trophy winner Archie
.maybe right up lo September Griffin, has been switched
TOUCH &amp; SEW'
and the opening game and then froq) tailback to safety in one
MACHINE WIT!'
we'll have a meaningful li· move to shore up the seconCABINET
neup," Hayes said.
dary,
• SJDg~ . exclus1ve

with . new

'

,..

Some
folks
fussy
.about
bQsses
.

HANOVER, N.H. (UP! ) \ · Jackson, hired 8 1'.! 'months
Marcus Jackson, whos&amp; magi- ago after performing a threeca l touch was. suppos~ to year transformation at Coe
transform the l"Oefl!l · Dart- College In Iowa, announced his·
mouth basketball team into an resignation Tuesday t~take the·
Eastern 'contender, has left the head · coaching job at Wright
Ivy League school after one State University in Oayton,
mediocre season.
O~io.
·

w. 1. . gf va
Se ginaw
Flint

9- The Diill;r. Sentinel,l\!idctieport.Pomeroy; 0..;· Wednesday., April 2, 1975

Wright .~tate has' new cage mentor,_. .

-;"?.'""·-...

Th is handsome redwood bar·

set o nclu ~es a big 26·1/4x70"
table and 2 sturdy be nch es.

9

·

$5995
.

a

lovely gin rummy settee and
table. Comfortable cushions are
in floral vinyl and duck. UmbreBa
is ·

,,

\··

· Big Savings on this bright
and
.
'

'

'

cheery patio-full, only·

"

..

'.

This ?:i!" -lohg sofa and, 2 lounge chairs
·are in ·elegim'tly finished wrought metal.
The gorgeous cover~ of their 100% polyester foam cushi()Jls are reversib le. ·

v

"

Includes 2 .end tables
and 1 coffee table~
"
"

"
'

•·

•

..,

'

�r
.

.

10 - The-Daily Sentinel, Middlepo~t-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wedn~sday, A~ri\2, 1975

STAR

SLICED

.

.PORK STEAK

'

.

-- ---- M&amp;R .
SHOPPING CENTER

IGA FOODUNlR
ARMUUK'~

UILUMHIA·

.

.;

C9'MMERCIAL

. . · Ru-s-sET ,

- - -IGA ~ARGA!NLANO

POTATOES
.

.

'·

'

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

SLI.CED BACON
~

•

•
LADIES'

SPRING
·DRESSES
Lad ie's love ly spr ing
dresses. Choose f rom a
wide assortment of styles,
fa brics and colors. Junior,
M isses, Hal l and Su per
srzes . .

LB.
ARMOUR STAR

IGA

BONELESS

PORK STEAK

Lates t sty les for
sp·'ri ng . These
pa nts ore mode of
polyester with

200Jo

4 ROLL PACK

KING SIZE BREAD .' 3 FOR .$}

PANTS

.

TOILET.:-TISSUE ·
IGA ·

LADIES' ·
POLYESTER

pu l l-o._n

GIRLS' COTTON

SLACKS
.

OFF

00

HECK'S REG.
PRICE .•.. """.:': .
HECK' S REGULAR TO $18.99 .

G irls' perma nen t press sla cks mode of
polyeste r and colton in 3 os~rted
styles . Sizes 2·4 ,

·S J '69

lcfn· AND GIRLS'
''NUMBER"
T-SHIRTS

.

LB.

59~

COUNTRY. STYLE PORK .

ct01111/IG ogr.

2-PIECE SKIRT SETS

HECK'S REG. PRICE · .·.

HECK'S REGULAR TO $18 .99

ClOTHING DEPT.

(lOTHINC DEPT.

·oR. PEPPER

FAMILY PACK

REGINA

RUG
HAMPOOER

..

10 oz. THROW-AWAY BOTILES

HD-12

$3199

GILLETTE

WARING

PRO-MAX

BLENDER

U."S. NO• .1 BLUE TAG
CERTIFIED MAINE
'

50LB,·$277

ClAIROL
PRETTY

POWER
STYLER

Heck's Reg. •39.96

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HECK' S REG. 68 1 PAIR

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ct0111111C ogr.

LADIES'

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HECK' S REG . 4 .88

HECK' S REG. $3.49

· Styled in solid s and prints, short and lqng sleeves. Sizes 5· 13
and 8· 18. A 'bea uliful selection sure to pleose not only ot
~aster but oil yea r long .

Comfo rtable ny lon pcn ties in whi te end soh pastels. Selec t from s\l;es 5-10 briefs
or sizes 5-7 biki ni s.
·
'I
·

MARGARINE

HECK 'S
REG .
S.99

in tomfo rl in l~t"f P""'""'"' Pte\\, Couon
Ou11 ~ " 5tyl~d wrih '""P end bunon tronl\ wi t ~ cne
po&lt;let_ A"o•ll!,d ~• i nh in 1i1u S·/.H

S_J 69 ·

o•r.

LADIES' NYLON PANTIES

LB.

DUSTERS
l oo~ QI!

Ru gged denim ieon s for boys wihh octi..-e
life styles . Sa nfo rized co li e n in 3 styles to
choose. Size 2 · ~ .

HECK'.S REG. 1.99

ct01111116

~400

LM;IES' COTtON .:~..

JEANS

. ·S 149

CLOTHINC
DEPT.

KRAFT PARKAY

BOYS'
BLUE DENIM

'

100 pet . Co t to n Sh ort S leeVe
num bere d '· T · Sh irts .
Whi t e
bao:kground w i t h Red , Bl ue and
Gr een numera ls. S izes 1 1~

HECK 'S REG.
2 .59

wois1.

Choose from Solids and PoHe rns.
Size 8-1 8.

HECK'S REG, 121.96

$1&amp;··

JEWELRY DEPT. ·

JEWELRY DEPT.

" Mini· SiH ' 8 tiOt~ ou)omptit to r lit~ tcpe ploy ·
" - Nt ... Jhi&gt;IN:I-wheel volv!lw (Onlrol!, pkn treble
boll tonltcl. ._,..tornclit or mon100l t ho Mtl ..elec ·
Iron. f'C)Iolrrligkl, l:IY lle'g Oi i ~ ground, with 1-...-o
1pe(j,tr1 ,

SJ788

LB.

H!CK'SUG.

•23.96

,RENCH FRIES

•

CtJSJIIITIC

JEWB.IIY
IJIIIT.

HD-51

52]88,

HECK'S REG. 94'

••r.

HECK'SI!G.

27.96
JfWB.IIY IJIIIT.
'

II

DRIP-0-LATOR
h GAL BOTTLES

1

5-LB. BAG

•

.

'

THO
AWAYS

' ·

EACH
'
.

Water - Intake
op ening
screen . Sel f-cleaning .metal
tank and exclusive "speed· · .
heating" element . Coffeebrewing fun nel with' starter
supply . of 25 di sposa bl e .
filters. Never -mar fi nish .
Shatter -proof polypropylene
construction. No mov i ng
'parts to wear or replace. · .

16

SUAVE
CREMERIIU
lEG, 01 WITH EGG

CHOICE ·

'55( .·

HECK'S
. REG. '33.96

-- -

_,

••

..

.

,.

'

•

..

'

' -·
'

w

'
.

.

.

oz.

200%• .

. 18 oz.

LISTERINE .

sac

SCOPE

ANTISEPTIC

' RIG.
HECK'S
1.09

.

. GENERAL ELECTRIC CSl

$104

CURLING IRON

HKK'SIIG,'

1.39 .
COSIIITK 1

:Heck's Reg. '17.96

-1.

$}466 .· .
JEWELRY DEPT.

.

,,
'

.'

.

....
·'

•

. '

•

·'

�r
.

.

10 - The-Daily Sentinel, Middlepo~t-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wedn~sday, A~ri\2, 1975

STAR

SLICED

.

.PORK STEAK

'

.

-- ---- M&amp;R .
SHOPPING CENTER

IGA FOODUNlR
ARMUUK'~

UILUMHIA·

.

.;

C9'MMERCIAL

. . · Ru-s-sET ,

- - -IGA ~ARGA!NLANO

POTATOES
.

.

'·

'

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

SLI.CED BACON
~

•

•
LADIES'

SPRING
·DRESSES
Lad ie's love ly spr ing
dresses. Choose f rom a
wide assortment of styles,
fa brics and colors. Junior,
M isses, Hal l and Su per
srzes . .

LB.
ARMOUR STAR

IGA

BONELESS

PORK STEAK

Lates t sty les for
sp·'ri ng . These
pa nts ore mode of
polyester with

200Jo

4 ROLL PACK

KING SIZE BREAD .' 3 FOR .$}

PANTS

.

TOILET.:-TISSUE ·
IGA ·

LADIES' ·
POLYESTER

pu l l-o._n

GIRLS' COTTON

SLACKS
.

OFF

00

HECK'S REG.
PRICE .•.. """.:': .
HECK' S REGULAR TO $18.99 .

G irls' perma nen t press sla cks mode of
polyeste r and colton in 3 os~rted
styles . Sizes 2·4 ,

·S J '69

lcfn· AND GIRLS'
''NUMBER"
T-SHIRTS

.

LB.

59~

COUNTRY. STYLE PORK .

ct01111/IG ogr.

2-PIECE SKIRT SETS

HECK'S REG. PRICE · .·.

HECK'S REGULAR TO $18 .99

ClOTHING DEPT.

(lOTHINC DEPT.

·oR. PEPPER

FAMILY PACK

REGINA

RUG
HAMPOOER

..

10 oz. THROW-AWAY BOTILES

HD-12

$3199

GILLETTE

WARING

PRO-MAX

BLENDER

U."S. NO• .1 BLUE TAG
CERTIFIED MAINE
'

50LB,·$277

ClAIROL
PRETTY

POWER
STYLER

Heck's Reg. •39.96

BAG

KENNEBEC SEED

.

·200Jo OFF

HECK' S REG. 68 1 PAIR

. 8 PACK

ct0111111C ogr.

LADIES'

'

4 STICKS

HECK' S REG . 4 .88

HECK' S REG. $3.49

· Styled in solid s and prints, short and lqng sleeves. Sizes 5· 13
and 8· 18. A 'bea uliful selection sure to pleose not only ot
~aster but oil yea r long .

Comfo rtable ny lon pcn ties in whi te end soh pastels. Selec t from s\l;es 5-10 briefs
or sizes 5-7 biki ni s.
·
'I
·

MARGARINE

HECK 'S
REG .
S.99

in tomfo rl in l~t"f P""'""'"' Pte\\, Couon
Ou11 ~ " 5tyl~d wrih '""P end bunon tronl\ wi t ~ cne
po&lt;let_ A"o•ll!,d ~• i nh in 1i1u S·/.H

S_J 69 ·

o•r.

LADIES' NYLON PANTIES

LB.

DUSTERS
l oo~ QI!

Ru gged denim ieon s for boys wihh octi..-e
life styles . Sa nfo rized co li e n in 3 styles to
choose. Size 2 · ~ .

HECK'.S REG. 1.99

ct01111116

~400

LM;IES' COTtON .:~..

JEANS

. ·S 149

CLOTHINC
DEPT.

KRAFT PARKAY

BOYS'
BLUE DENIM

'

100 pet . Co t to n Sh ort S leeVe
num bere d '· T · Sh irts .
Whi t e
bao:kground w i t h Red , Bl ue and
Gr een numera ls. S izes 1 1~

HECK 'S REG.
2 .59

wois1.

Choose from Solids and PoHe rns.
Size 8-1 8.

HECK'S REG, 121.96

$1&amp;··

JEWELRY DEPT. ·

JEWELRY DEPT.

" Mini· SiH ' 8 tiOt~ ou)omptit to r lit~ tcpe ploy ·
" - Nt ... Jhi&gt;IN:I-wheel volv!lw (Onlrol!, pkn treble
boll tonltcl. ._,..tornclit or mon100l t ho Mtl ..elec ·
Iron. f'C)Iolrrligkl, l:IY lle'g Oi i ~ ground, with 1-...-o
1pe(j,tr1 ,

SJ788

LB.

H!CK'SUG.

•23.96

,RENCH FRIES

•

CtJSJIIITIC

JEWB.IIY
IJIIIT.

HD-51

52]88,

HECK'S REG. 94'

••r.

HECK'SI!G.

27.96
JfWB.IIY IJIIIT.
'

II

DRIP-0-LATOR
h GAL BOTTLES

1

5-LB. BAG

•

.

'

THO
AWAYS

' ·

EACH
'
.

Water - Intake
op ening
screen . Sel f-cleaning .metal
tank and exclusive "speed· · .
heating" element . Coffeebrewing fun nel with' starter
supply . of 25 di sposa bl e .
filters. Never -mar fi nish .
Shatter -proof polypropylene
construction. No mov i ng
'parts to wear or replace. · .

16

SUAVE
CREMERIIU
lEG, 01 WITH EGG

CHOICE ·

'55( .·

HECK'S
. REG. '33.96

-- -

_,

••

..

.

,.

'

•

..

'

' -·
'

w

'
.

.

.

oz.

200%• .

. 18 oz.

LISTERINE .

sac

SCOPE

ANTISEPTIC

' RIG.
HECK'S
1.09

.

. GENERAL ELECTRIC CSl

$104

CURLING IRON

HKK'SIIG,'

1.39 .
COSIIITK 1

:Heck's Reg. '17.96

-1.

$}466 .· .
JEWELRY DEPT.

.

,,
'

.'

.

....
·'

•

. '

•

·'

�.

.

.•.

J

,.

.

'

' '

12 - ,Tile Daily Sen~~el, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Apni ~. m a-

,

• ·13 -.:.The Dallf:Belltinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, .•;,rio ~. 1975

V'NiJ

..

.. .

:

.

.,

OPEII DAILY

io .9

10

OF FREE
PARKING

..

.

.

ROSE
BUSHEs ·

r

.

:!

.

.

'

·

RURAL ·

MAIL BOX

.

,.
·iJ·

-

if
·~

·Ru)lproof, i: hrome.piOted gri d.
New po~itive gri d odiuslment
has 4 heig hh and cool, horcf.
· wood ha ndle . Thi rd lOg de· ·
foehn a nd all l&amp;gs fold under
bowl for compact storage.

.

.

.

POTTING S~OIL

.

8 Q.T •.

GARCIA- MITCHELL

.

$2''

'

NO. 308/309

SPINNING REEL

•

HECK'S REG •

s1'999

. $'l8.99

HECK'S REG. $(&gt;.24

SPORTS.DEPT.

EACH .·

$9''

HARDWARE
DEPT.

MAIL BOX POST
$366

__...._

HECK'S REG • .

HECK'S REG. $7.67 .

$12.88

SPIN-CAST REEL
.
·

HARDWARE
DEPT. '

· HARDWARE DEPT.

.:, · s

•

88

· L(::.

.

\

HOSE -NOZZLE

,L

'"'».......... ..

\

~ ·.'·'

: .
'-.'--

REG.

""" .

$9''

97'

$3.88

HARDWARE
DEPT.

. HECK'S REG. $13.88

HARDWARl.DlPT.
·,

HARDWARE DEPT.

PRUNING
SHEARS.

$1.68

H~RDWARI

HARDWARE
DEPT.

DEPT.

t io~

shear. Ha rdened and te mpered

$100
.
EACH

..
.

HECK'S REG.

$ .3 .26

I

'

;

HARDWARE
DEPT.

HECK'S REG. $1.59 EACH

HARDWARE DEPT.

"

1

...
I

.

i

'

:

1 /

I

1)

\

1

•'

.HECK'S REG. $1.99
'\

RECOVERY KIT

Colors: Grey ,
or Red .

.

·

LIMIT 5 QTS.

'

$166

CHOICE

HECK'&amp;
REG .
69'

47CQT.

94&lt;

HECK'S REG.• $3.99

HECK'S REG. $9 .99

fjOR;rSDEPT.

PLASTIC

-t RAIN JACKET

spo-RTS-D-EP-T.

..

s144
HECK'S REG. $2 .99

sleeve. Two in side coll·ars with set
scr ew . Two large outside collars
· with handle bolt wrench . Four 10
pound interlocking grey-f inish ed·
vinyl plates . Two 14" dumbbell bars
with two chrome-plated revolv ing
sleeves . Four dumbbell collars .
Bil
Barbell Traininci- Chctrt

SPORTS DEPT.

SET
·•

s.1699

I

COLEMAN .
6PAK .

LANTERN MANTLES
HECK'S REG.

99'
SPORTS DEPT.

HECK'S REG. $'26 .99

SPORTS DEPT.

METAL

SHELVING UNIT

ldeol for a ny room of the house. Use it for

AUTO
DEPT.

Jl ll

FESCO PLASTIC

.

$1.66

.

PLANTERS
e
•

HECK'S REG .

38
eMmago~~~
~
~~~,
~
~~!~'s
S2
e
e
Reg

CHOICE

HOUSEWARE
DEPT.

e

·

$4.44

TO

$266

HWSEWAIE DEPT.
16 oz. ·

I,__ -. .~. GOBLETS

COVER

STAINLESS STEEL

l!!~J~!fF~~~er

ASSORTED COLORS

.I .

s 16.6

··~-

Pepper Moi iCoddy Tow el Ho lder
Bull e t1n Boord
'Spooo Hold., ,
To

e

· S.J66

, FESCO PLASTIC
CAKE PLATE AND

. ,A_ ,

!L

WOOD

Fluted Plan ter

ljECK'S REG. $2.99

AUTO DEPT.

COSMETIC
DEPT.

••
·~~

storoge, boqks or knickk nacks.

Ar chitec tural Planter
• Colonode Planter
e. Seon,Pot Pla nter

"-

SPORTS DEPT.

' ''

HECK'S REG .•

AUTO DEPT.

HECK'S REG.

HECK'SREG .
$8.58

•

One 51h ·foot bar and one ·deepknurled chrome plated revolving

.

e

$1.47

AUTO DEPT.

ss''

HECK'S REG.
$1.69

8's

s.s ss

o...o..______

..-s;.;.P~IN-...R...

99(

.

3 TIER

SET OF EIGHT

. . BLADES

SUPtRB 10W30 OR
GT1 -30WT

$'12.58
. SPORTS DEPT.·

*,

EY6'/2 FT

SPRAY
OIL
l2 oz.

·HECK'S REG .

'"rM'@il 1lt.fV
""'!!iii!!'
I1 1 'fti ~?-ibfuk[;1 ; ~;..:.~~I=:c(!
'1j;fc:gil~I]\§::JbnDmi!I IA1~·
~
BERKL

AEROSOL

HAIIDWAIE DEPT.

HE ATIN G AND
COOtANT LOSS.

KENDALL MOTOR OIL

RAIN SUIT .

e

HECK'S REG.
TO $2.66

PREVENTS OVER

'

I

.,,~,.

.... --·ONDITIONE
SPARK PLUGS

SPRAY PRIMER
black

·COOLANT

ss99

~ BARBELL

$1 ~A~&lt;

HARDWARE
DEPT.

HARDWARE DEPT.

SPORTS
DEPT.

$699,

e

SPORTS DEPT.

O utwears pla in cotton
man y times
Resl us
moi stu re
Mo c h ine woshobl e .

$156

$10.99

BILLARD 11 0 POUND

e

HECK'S REG.
$3.44

HECK'S REG .

6' SPittliT ROD

,

e

I
'

3 TRAY
REG. •8.23 SALE

HECK'S REG. 2.58

den Glove s A tough , ·
long lasting glove for
~u perior protection

e

EACH

$4CJ9

REG. •6.77 SALE

Vi ny l im pregnct e d

FOLDING FENCE
:I ·' ./· ~

WORM BEDDING
$158

GREEN THUMB • Ga•·

WHITE METAL

LAWN MOWER WHEELS

5 POUNDS

GARDEN
GLOVES-

steel blo des wi th ground cuttin~ edges.
Thumb operated ca tch holds blades
closed when not in vse.

llo.

----------------1
SPORTS DEPT.

. GREEN
THUMB

Popu lor priced, lig htweight sing le oc·

2 TRAY

99

BERKLEY

. SPIN CAST ROD
HECK'S REG.
$222
$3.•77

•

GRASS SHEARS

Popular price d, lightweig ht pru ner
with no rur al cultin g a ngle. Hard ·
ened and tempered steel blade,
w•"''~" ground for easy, dean
. Colorfu l molded ..-i nyl kcnd
grip~ . Hend y stay-put ca tch for
one handed cpe ni n ~ a nd clos il'IQ
Pocked one eac h in vi nyl hong-up
po uch.
.

7x1.50
. PLASTIC INSERT

ANGLER
5 FT. ONE PIECE

HECK'S REG.

$3.99

SALE$3

a HEra-$ '·

""'

HECK'S REG .

REG. •4.89

WD-40

5Ja" X50 FT

HECK'S REG .

1 TRAY

,

I

19

$

RUBBER HOSE

HECK'S

GAS CAN

'

•

$2188

$29.99
. SPORTs ·
DEPT.

5GALLON

BRASS

•shadow. Two ;pools. each wtth 111 o....:n wtdc-ronge fef lon dra g . le t yov
change lines Imler ! Man most anglers con change lures . LCJ~y r in t h cop on
handle shol t lo.eeps ou t dirt on d grot . Weight, 1L5 or .

HECK'S REG. ·

•

HOSE
HANGER

'

Fo~l re f ri e~ ~er5i on of th e 300 wi th ligh tning lost 4.8to 1 retrieve and ~moo t h
Tefl on dreg . Two ~e t s o f ro ller l:&gt;eonnq~ ~eep the 410 runr~in)l quie t a&gt; ·o

$1.88

GARDEN RAKE

TACKLE BOXES

MITCHELL 410 •

.

HARDWARE DEPT.

HECK 'S REG .

or Cou rt Signatu re .

ALUMINUM
HECK'S REG.
$1.39

I I

Choose f ro m W or ld A ce

s:·

eoiy- roll wheels and trip odtype legs' of plo ted .steel.

·. TENNIS
RACQUET ·

· HECK'S REG. $3;66

.

HOIISIWAIE DI~T.

-

3

.

s1 oo.

.

Kni¥es, ..
Sal.a d Knives, ~oup Spoo ns, Butt er
Kn ives, Sugar Spoo ns &amp; ~e Teo Spoons
in assortod fancy st oinlels steel.

fOR
. HECK'S REG.
8'

,HOUSEWA/11

5

FOR

$1 00

HECK'S REG.
33' EACH

'

SNACK TRAY
·WHEEL.

·..BALANCER

RUBBER.
·MALLET. .

tire mileage. Portable, lig htwe iqht, easy tb use. More
accura te, prec isian .e_nli inee red. Wh eel we ights ava ila b le.

sac :

$1·· 188.
. HECK,' ~ IIG. $17 .tl ·

HECK'S REG. $1.49

. .fUTtJDII'T. ,.

DEODORAIT

CHOICE -

70h.

£;;.

SURE

. , IIG. OILIMI

lnsuros a safer and smoothe-r ride.' Soves mon ey, i.ncreoses

Holds ~u·ps, cons, sandwic~es. So~ die bogs
keep troy on hump. .

60Z.

OLD SPICE
STICK DEODORANT

16 OZ;
JOHNSON
NO-BUFF ·.

IIGULAI 01 UNSCINTID

. CHOICE

·72c .l

SCHICK
..
SUPER II RAZO~

. .

s 189 .

EA;

. SPRINlWAX

. HICK'•

. 110.
$1.04

_$ 144 ·

· HECK'SREG, $2.69

AUTO
/JIPT.

CosMITit /JB'T.

0-CEDAR
TRiANGLE

HECK'S REG. $2.49

5

OO .

1

.

MOP
$129

•

STOP&amp; TAIL

. · LIGHT ·
BULBS

I

.DUSTMOP
$188_

I

15

. TO

TOP

.$149

J08
. METAL 19" JUMBO

SERVING
TRAY
.
.

PACKAGE O.F 2

s1.00

66&lt; ' "·

-'
'I

.'

.

'

"'

•'
I'
.,

~

"

"
••
..'
.
~.

·' ·,

.

.

.

T

,; .!

•

'

u

•

.
.

\

-

•
'.

•I

'.

.

,

.

.•

·'

HECK' S lEG. $1 .81
IIIIISIWAIIf, ,

"

l'
)

oz.

\

33&lt;

. ASSORTED

WALL PLAQUES

HECK'S

r ,, 50'

.

(
.
·
99

EA. . ·

54

oz .

SPIC &amp; SPAN
$

GIANT SiZE

BIZ

'79'

HECK'SREG. $1.02

1101/SIWAII"'"

�.

.

.•.

J

,.

.

'

' '

12 - ,Tile Daily Sen~~el, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Apni ~. m a-

,

• ·13 -.:.The Dallf:Belltinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, .•;,rio ~. 1975

V'NiJ

..

.. .

:

.

.,

OPEII DAILY

io .9

10

OF FREE
PARKING

..

.

.

ROSE
BUSHEs ·

r

.

:!

.

.

'

·

RURAL ·

MAIL BOX

.

,.
·iJ·

-

if
·~

·Ru)lproof, i: hrome.piOted gri d.
New po~itive gri d odiuslment
has 4 heig hh and cool, horcf.
· wood ha ndle . Thi rd lOg de· ·
foehn a nd all l&amp;gs fold under
bowl for compact storage.

.

.

.

POTTING S~OIL

.

8 Q.T •.

GARCIA- MITCHELL

.

$2''

'

NO. 308/309

SPINNING REEL

•

HECK'S REG •

s1'999

. $'l8.99

HECK'S REG. $(&gt;.24

SPORTS.DEPT.

EACH .·

$9''

HARDWARE
DEPT.

MAIL BOX POST
$366

__...._

HECK'S REG • .

HECK'S REG. $7.67 .

$12.88

SPIN-CAST REEL
.
·

HARDWARE
DEPT. '

· HARDWARE DEPT.

.:, · s

•

88

· L(::.

.

\

HOSE -NOZZLE

,L

'"'».......... ..

\

~ ·.'·'

: .
'-.'--

REG.

""" .

$9''

97'

$3.88

HARDWARE
DEPT.

. HECK'S REG. $13.88

HARDWARl.DlPT.
·,

HARDWARE DEPT.

PRUNING
SHEARS.

$1.68

H~RDWARI

HARDWARE
DEPT.

DEPT.

t io~

shear. Ha rdened and te mpered

$100
.
EACH

..
.

HECK'S REG.

$ .3 .26

I

'

;

HARDWARE
DEPT.

HECK'S REG. $1.59 EACH

HARDWARE DEPT.

"

1

...
I

.

i

'

:

1 /

I

1)

\

1

•'

.HECK'S REG. $1.99
'\

RECOVERY KIT

Colors: Grey ,
or Red .

.

·

LIMIT 5 QTS.

'

$166

CHOICE

HECK'&amp;
REG .
69'

47CQT.

94&lt;

HECK'S REG.• $3.99

HECK'S REG. $9 .99

fjOR;rSDEPT.

PLASTIC

-t RAIN JACKET

spo-RTS-D-EP-T.

..

s144
HECK'S REG. $2 .99

sleeve. Two in side coll·ars with set
scr ew . Two large outside collars
· with handle bolt wrench . Four 10
pound interlocking grey-f inish ed·
vinyl plates . Two 14" dumbbell bars
with two chrome-plated revolv ing
sleeves . Four dumbbell collars .
Bil
Barbell Traininci- Chctrt

SPORTS DEPT.

SET
·•

s.1699

I

COLEMAN .
6PAK .

LANTERN MANTLES
HECK'S REG.

99'
SPORTS DEPT.

HECK'S REG. $'26 .99

SPORTS DEPT.

METAL

SHELVING UNIT

ldeol for a ny room of the house. Use it for

AUTO
DEPT.

Jl ll

FESCO PLASTIC

.

$1.66

.

PLANTERS
e
•

HECK'S REG .

38
eMmago~~~
~
~~~,
~
~~!~'s
S2
e
e
Reg

CHOICE

HOUSEWARE
DEPT.

e

·

$4.44

TO

$266

HWSEWAIE DEPT.
16 oz. ·

I,__ -. .~. GOBLETS

COVER

STAINLESS STEEL

l!!~J~!fF~~~er

ASSORTED COLORS

.I .

s 16.6

··~-

Pepper Moi iCoddy Tow el Ho lder
Bull e t1n Boord
'Spooo Hold., ,
To

e

· S.J66

, FESCO PLASTIC
CAKE PLATE AND

. ,A_ ,

!L

WOOD

Fluted Plan ter

ljECK'S REG. $2.99

AUTO DEPT.

COSMETIC
DEPT.

••
·~~

storoge, boqks or knickk nacks.

Ar chitec tural Planter
• Colonode Planter
e. Seon,Pot Pla nter

"-

SPORTS DEPT.

' ''

HECK'S REG .•

AUTO DEPT.

HECK'S REG.

HECK'SREG .
$8.58

•

One 51h ·foot bar and one ·deepknurled chrome plated revolving

.

e

$1.47

AUTO DEPT.

ss''

HECK'S REG.
$1.69

8's

s.s ss

o...o..______

..-s;.;.P~IN-...R...

99(

.

3 TIER

SET OF EIGHT

. . BLADES

SUPtRB 10W30 OR
GT1 -30WT

$'12.58
. SPORTS DEPT.·

*,

EY6'/2 FT

SPRAY
OIL
l2 oz.

·HECK'S REG .

'"rM'@il 1lt.fV
""'!!iii!!'
I1 1 'fti ~?-ibfuk[;1 ; ~;..:.~~I=:c(!
'1j;fc:gil~I]\§::JbnDmi!I IA1~·
~
BERKL

AEROSOL

HAIIDWAIE DEPT.

HE ATIN G AND
COOtANT LOSS.

KENDALL MOTOR OIL

RAIN SUIT .

e

HECK'S REG.
TO $2.66

PREVENTS OVER

'

I

.,,~,.

.... --·ONDITIONE
SPARK PLUGS

SPRAY PRIMER
black

·COOLANT

ss99

~ BARBELL

$1 ~A~&lt;

HARDWARE
DEPT.

HARDWARE DEPT.

SPORTS
DEPT.

$699,

e

SPORTS DEPT.

O utwears pla in cotton
man y times
Resl us
moi stu re
Mo c h ine woshobl e .

$156

$10.99

BILLARD 11 0 POUND

e

HECK'S REG.
$3.44

HECK'S REG .

6' SPittliT ROD

,

e

I
'

3 TRAY
REG. •8.23 SALE

HECK'S REG. 2.58

den Glove s A tough , ·
long lasting glove for
~u perior protection

e

EACH

$4CJ9

REG. •6.77 SALE

Vi ny l im pregnct e d

FOLDING FENCE
:I ·' ./· ~

WORM BEDDING
$158

GREEN THUMB • Ga•·

WHITE METAL

LAWN MOWER WHEELS

5 POUNDS

GARDEN
GLOVES-

steel blo des wi th ground cuttin~ edges.
Thumb operated ca tch holds blades
closed when not in vse.

llo.

----------------1
SPORTS DEPT.

. GREEN
THUMB

Popu lor priced, lig htweight sing le oc·

2 TRAY

99

BERKLEY

. SPIN CAST ROD
HECK'S REG.
$222
$3.•77

•

GRASS SHEARS

Popular price d, lightweig ht pru ner
with no rur al cultin g a ngle. Hard ·
ened and tempered steel blade,
w•"''~" ground for easy, dean
. Colorfu l molded ..-i nyl kcnd
grip~ . Hend y stay-put ca tch for
one handed cpe ni n ~ a nd clos il'IQ
Pocked one eac h in vi nyl hong-up
po uch.
.

7x1.50
. PLASTIC INSERT

ANGLER
5 FT. ONE PIECE

HECK'S REG.

$3.99

SALE$3

a HEra-$ '·

""'

HECK'S REG .

REG. •4.89

WD-40

5Ja" X50 FT

HECK'S REG .

1 TRAY

,

I

19

$

RUBBER HOSE

HECK'S

GAS CAN

'

•

$2188

$29.99
. SPORTs ·
DEPT.

5GALLON

BRASS

•shadow. Two ;pools. each wtth 111 o....:n wtdc-ronge fef lon dra g . le t yov
change lines Imler ! Man most anglers con change lures . LCJ~y r in t h cop on
handle shol t lo.eeps ou t dirt on d grot . Weight, 1L5 or .

HECK'S REG. ·

•

HOSE
HANGER

'

Fo~l re f ri e~ ~er5i on of th e 300 wi th ligh tning lost 4.8to 1 retrieve and ~moo t h
Tefl on dreg . Two ~e t s o f ro ller l:&gt;eonnq~ ~eep the 410 runr~in)l quie t a&gt; ·o

$1.88

GARDEN RAKE

TACKLE BOXES

MITCHELL 410 •

.

HARDWARE DEPT.

HECK 'S REG .

or Cou rt Signatu re .

ALUMINUM
HECK'S REG.
$1.39

I I

Choose f ro m W or ld A ce

s:·

eoiy- roll wheels and trip odtype legs' of plo ted .steel.

·. TENNIS
RACQUET ·

· HECK'S REG. $3;66

.

HOIISIWAIE DI~T.

-

3

.

s1 oo.

.

Kni¥es, ..
Sal.a d Knives, ~oup Spoo ns, Butt er
Kn ives, Sugar Spoo ns &amp; ~e Teo Spoons
in assortod fancy st oinlels steel.

fOR
. HECK'S REG.
8'

,HOUSEWA/11

5

FOR

$1 00

HECK'S REG.
33' EACH

'

SNACK TRAY
·WHEEL.

·..BALANCER

RUBBER.
·MALLET. .

tire mileage. Portable, lig htwe iqht, easy tb use. More
accura te, prec isian .e_nli inee red. Wh eel we ights ava ila b le.

sac :

$1·· 188.
. HECK,' ~ IIG. $17 .tl ·

HECK'S REG. $1.49

. .fUTtJDII'T. ,.

DEODORAIT

CHOICE -

70h.

£;;.

SURE

. , IIG. OILIMI

lnsuros a safer and smoothe-r ride.' Soves mon ey, i.ncreoses

Holds ~u·ps, cons, sandwic~es. So~ die bogs
keep troy on hump. .

60Z.

OLD SPICE
STICK DEODORANT

16 OZ;
JOHNSON
NO-BUFF ·.

IIGULAI 01 UNSCINTID

. CHOICE

·72c .l

SCHICK
..
SUPER II RAZO~

. .

s 189 .

EA;

. SPRINlWAX

. HICK'•

. 110.
$1.04

_$ 144 ·

· HECK'SREG, $2.69

AUTO
/JIPT.

CosMITit /JB'T.

0-CEDAR
TRiANGLE

HECK'S REG. $2.49

5

OO .

1

.

MOP
$129

•

STOP&amp; TAIL

. · LIGHT ·
BULBS

I

.DUSTMOP
$188_

I

15

. TO

TOP

.$149

J08
. METAL 19" JUMBO

SERVING
TRAY
.
.

PACKAGE O.F 2

s1.00

66&lt; ' "·

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HECK' S lEG. $1 .81
IIIIISIWAIIf, ,

"

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oz.

\

33&lt;

. ASSORTED

WALL PLAQUES

HECK'S

r ,, 50'

.

(
.
·
99

EA. . ·

54

oz .

SPIC &amp; SPAN
$

GIANT SiZE

BIZ

'79'

HECK'SREG. $1.02

1101/SIWAII"'"

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· New York say~, · 've-rsatile
and varied' the men 's wear message
By Helen Hennessy
NEA Women's Editor
NEW YORK - Remember
the sartorial image of the
American businessman as dull,
conservatave and conformist?
Well , forget it'
·
" The Amencan man at
business this season will have a
look as·varied and versati le as
what he does for a living and
where he does 1l," said Chip
Tolbert, fashion director of the
Men 's FashiOn Assoc1al10n.
In shol'mg· a virtually
.unlim1led range of concepts.
models,' colors and patterns,
Tolbert observed, "It's not any
·anything goes' s1luat10n by
any means 1n tollay 's work-a·
day world, but the ophons for
the U S. businessman have
never been bigger or better ."
The clothes shown at the
MFA press preview ranged
from conventiona l su1ts far
more mterestmg and fashlDnor~ented than in the past , to
more casual sUJls and sport
coats wh1ch w11l be worn by
men in the creahve areas

where a tonti of informali ty IS
not on ly perm1ssable but encouraged
Among the new raincoats to
he worn for busmess w1ll be
raglan . shouldered, smg le ·
breasted trench coats in tattersall plaids, doublebreasted

ll·e nch coats slyled w1 th angled
scalloped pockets in a new
shade of grey, and a shckertype trench mode l tai lored' of
r~Sin-c oa led co tton . Other
treatments include many kneele ngth an d shorter verstons m
wh1te and pastel shades.
Rain sutts are • a relatively
new concept. Some are styled
like regular SlUts. Others take
fa shion cues from letsure suits
- mode ls smulm: to sa ran
sUits, shirt-Jacket smts and the
abbrev iat ed battle Jackel All
are ram resistant and can
mam ta1 ~ a cnsp good look ·
e\'en after the worst downp our.

brown, combmatwns of green
and bJCge, green a nd rust and a
ve ry conventi onal str1pcd
scersutker

SUit models appear m bot h
trad1l10nal a nd E urop ean
verswns , some deCorated w1th
Willi~

cobbler slltc hm g.

most

•

·meelmgs of Vmt on County welcoming, Mrs. Emma that· $110 was sent in on the
Salon on ilpnl 11_; Fmrfleld Wayland, Mrs. Fay Wtlder· nurses scholarship lund -Of
Salon on May 1U ; Richland • muth , Mrs. Norma Jewell, and that amoun t all but $10 wa s
County Salon on May 21 The Mrs.
Lul a
Hampton , raised
through
special
pouvior to be hel&lt;! May J and 4 reg istration; Miss Erma pt'ojecis.
•
m Toledo was noted
Smith, fl owers; Mrs. Wayland ,
Salon members planned a
Mrs. Martin reported lhat favors~ Mis s' Smtth , Mrs trip to Fenton Glass on May 7.
she Will be attendmg Chapeau Jewell mvitations· and Mrs. Jewelry Will be purchased for
Day at the National JewiSh G lad y~
Cummgs, . Mrs sale by the Salon and trophies
Hospita l in DcJ1ver, Colo. on Richards
Mrs . -Dorothy won for service proj~cts will be
May 16- 18. Mrs. Martm, dem1 Hecker , a~d Mrs. Juha Hysell, graved':_Mr~ Marbn won the
chap eau nat10nale, Central se rving
, door -prize
Div ision, will be il onore&lt;l on
A nominattng committee of
Th~ salon through lhe
Apnl 20from 1 to'4-.~. w1th a Ml's Walker, Mrs. Boyd, and husband of a member wlll .
reception at the Middleport · Mrs Bnnker was appotnted sponsor Joan Sellers and !)andy
Churcl1 of Christ. Hoshng the The ·offi cers w111 be elected aC- lnnarelli in the " hike bike': of
reception w11l be the AmencarY the May meeti ng with 10• the Meigs Chapter of the Ohw
Legion AuXIli ary of Drew slallaliOn to take place 10 • Association for Retarded
Webster Post 30, the Galila ·August. Also at the May Citizens. An Easter d~ess was
Coun ty Salon UlZ and the Me1gs mee tin g
delegates
an d purchased fo r She_rrle. MarCounty Salon 710, Eight and al ternates !o the na tional shall, a cy~tlc fibrosis child, by
Forty.
conven tion will be named. It the Salon
Committees announced for was voted to pay assessments
Refr eshments were served
the .recep.hOn were Mrs Pearl and the delegate fees 'to the oily the hostess For June and
Knapp , Mrs Myrtle ,Walker , natiOnal convention.
July, the Salon will have. PIC·
and Mrs . Mabel Brown,
Mrs Mary Roush reported nics combined w1th meetmgs

!\ lll l' !lll!I'IC.ll SCI'VICC for' lflrec
tlet:cascd par l nei'S, Mrs . Mary

-

Bc"pp, M". Ruth Thornton
~nd Mrs Hanett NeiKle l', was
held at 1he MQild'!Y night
mce hnK of Me1gs County Salon
710, E1ght and Forty , held at
!he home of Mrs. Mane IJoyd
M1 s Florence R1chard s,
l'aumomer, cood ucted th e
sc1 v1cc with Mrs. Pearl Knapp
as the taper lighter, and Mrs

anryounced were an mversary

Hike bike plans
finalized by
local group
A real summer wardrobe
st retcher , s,e ersucker
blue and white Jports
coat tops ri"avy s lack ~. a ll
m textumed polyester
and co tton

1

•

.'

taken, accordwg

onl~n,

1
1

1m111

1

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..

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$} 29

to

Cleland . who does, however,
adv1se that participan ts will
nde at their own risk. The
event IS scheduled for Saturday , April 19.

Chicken Gizzards, Beef Tongues, Jowl Bacon, Sliced
Fresh Side, Bulk Sausage, Head Cheese, Trail Bologna,
Beef Liver, Pork Liver.

!:;p(l_ciaI

,...

VISIT IN NEW HAV EN
M1 and Mrs Ernest Powell
of Pomeroy were in New
Haven•Easter afternoon to visit
Wilhf~m Stump and dau~hter,
M1chelle, their son-m-law and
gra nddaughter. At the Sunday

COUPON

i R. C. COLA
I

8-16 oz. bottles

1

1I

m urmng se r vice at the lAurel

Cli ff Free Methodist Church,
memona l fl owers were placed
on tile alLar for Ernestme
Slump11y her daughter, Robin
Campbell and Mrs MarJOrie
Goett .

I
I
I
I

Reg.
$1.59

0

!;pQcia/

---,
II
1

s1o9 II
With C4&gt;upon

Thurs.- Fri. -Sat.
Simon's

I
I
I
I

..--------~-J

COKE
8/16 OZ. BTtS.
$l~9
EVERYDAY
PRICE

,--•Y."'
4
·u.--,
I
I
I 2% MIL~
I BROUGHTON'S

I
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Gal.

$109

·I

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I

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._
I

Sat. Only
Simon's

green

pepper,

l1rg1 aaur grHn tpple, peel·
od, cored oncl chopped
ltttpoon• curry powder
c~po

chlckon brolh

"·

2 ~~:!~:.~·b~l~:
.. Angootura
tableopoon

1
1

ooll

can 11 pound) lomato ""'"
·r
In a large Dutch oven or kett Ie, heat butter and brown
chicken pieces on all sides. Add

RUTLAND - Slides on lawn t1hzer IS the 10-5-5 mixture to
care were shown by John Rice, be applied in September, June
Meigs County Extension or July. In mowing the grass,
Agent, at the Monday night he cautioned about dull blades
meeting of the Rutland Garden which bruise the grass, and
Club held at lhe home of Mrs about cut ting more than one
Chris D1ehl.
mch of the grass a t a time.
Introduced by Mrs. Eugene
The speaker recommended
Atkins, Rice showed slides and Zytron to kill the crabgrass and
then talked on proper seeding, chloridane for the grubs.which
fertilizmg, and mowing grass. attract the moles.
He said that the most tmportMr s . Ralph Turn er, coant thmg is to select fhe right hostess for the meet in g,
' . }• grass seed and recommended diSplayed bu-dhouses made by
· I•,," Kentucky Blue Grass for th1s her pup1ls. Gardenmg ltps for
• area. He said for shaded lawn Apnl given by Mrs. Russell
areas , Red Fescue is the best Little tncluded puttin g lim e "'l
-and where there is lots of the lawn, feed mg the bll'll~
traffic or wear, then Bermuda planting lilies of the valley, and
grass or Tall Fescue stands up feedin g the roses.
better.
During the busmess meetmg
Seeds should be planted m Mtss Ruby D1ehl and Mrs.
the mlildle of September, R1ce V~rg1 l Atkins reported on the
said, and If mulch IS desirable , thera py program at th e
then he recommended ' the use Gallipolis State Institute. Th ey"
of clean oats or wheat straw. made terrariums and dtsh
He also suggested using a gardens with the therapy club,
roller and said the best fer- played games, presented each

79'
2-lb.

Bntlsh homemake:s in India made mulligatawny soup famous.

chopped
clove gorllc, chopped

., '

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Us. • •

By Helen Bottel

Yellow Sllk shantung cent~rvented swt (-left) features
peaked lapel and soft shoulder styling, accented w1th bluebrown tnne print silk tie . Three-p1ece su it in 1vory texturized

Polly's Pointers:
BY POLLY CRA MER

Amateur can put
burlap on walls
DEAR POLLY - I would our weekly house cleaning has
like to replace the wallpaper on never been much of a chore. I
one of my hvmg room walls ~ have set aside Fnday evening
with colored burlap What is and Saturday for lh1s and no
the best way to remove old one goes anywhere unttl his
wallpaper and how do you shck share of the work is completed.
burlap on the wall? Rearrangements are made in
DOROTHY.
adva nce and by ge nera l
DEAR POLLY - Wallpaper agreement.
usually can be removed with
Clean ing day worked out fin e
just hot water and a putty but 1n between I was always
knife. A little vinegar could be havmg to nag at each one to
added to the water if needed. clean up and pick up Now each
Wash off any remaining scraps child is ass1gned a room, m
of paper and glue with steel addi tion to h1s own bedroom, to
wool and a cleaning solution. clea n thoroug hly during
Rinse with clear water and weekly cleaning. After that he '
' allow to dry thoroughly. Apply IS m charge of keeping it
sizing.
"picked up " unlll next cleaning
I have found the following day. If someone else leaves a
10 be th' easiest way for an mess '" that room, the one m
amateur to apply fabric 10 a charge fines the offender two
wall: I use wheat wallpaper cenis for each item out of
paste, mixed a bit thicker ,than place. If the one in charge is
the directions on the package, not doing hi s job, mother fines
and put paste on the wall for him. Mom and Dad are also
one strip at a time. Then slart · subject to fines that are put on
at the top and smooth fabric a charge and pa1d on allowance
on with a clean, soft cloth, 1ay. Any problem of b1ckenng
working from the· center out. and argumg over fmes IS
DG not cut burlap .the exact sol v~by a !;1mily discussion
length but allow for some on ~
sportsmanship and the
shrinkage. Pull away at the import nee of each domg -his
bottom and trim. - POLLY. share.
;:'"'
This really keeps qur family
DEAR' POLLY - My Pet on lis toes and the children
Peeve is with those tactless assume responsib1hty for the
people )Vho ask us single upkeep of their ~orne, not to
women, " Why didn 't you get mention the better frame of
married?". They seem to in- mmd this puts Mom in. As an
sinuate that there is something incentive we use the fine
radically wrong with us. Many money to treat the family lo
of us have several college some thing extra · hke ham·
degrees and have done much to bW'gers out or a movie. If I win
make.lhe world a ltttle better. a Polly Dollar il will not go in
My pel IIISWer is: "I would the family kitty but be framed.
rather be single than to wish I as a reminder lo the family
that you thought our idea worth
were." - MARJORIE.
DEAR , POLLY - l ,am a sharing, thus creatmg more
working mother wtlh thr,ee mcenttve for doing omi's share.
children ages 12, 13 and 15 and - - KATHY
'

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polyester lw11l1S styled w1th top st1tchmg and patch pockets.
Planter's hat is naturallmen. Cooling sce ne (right ) stars a
cotton knit striped pullover and cream cotton print sh irt with
pmeapple mo\lf and pajama collar.

Communion service
held at Rock Springs
Church on Thursday
An impressive candlelight
comm umon service was held
on Maundy Thursday at the
Rock Springs Uni ted Methodist
Church for the congregallons
of llie Enterpnse, Flatwoods
and Rock Spnngs Churches.
The Enterprise Chur.ch chOif
presented "The Sounds of
Love '' and "Spread the Gospel
to All Nations m H1s Name",
the latter written by Becky W11l
and Mr. and Mrs. Dale Dav1s,
members of the Enterprise
Church. Conme Radford, Mary
Radford and Mrs Karen Sloan
sang "Thirty Pieces of Silver".
A potl uck supper preceded the
comrp umon service .

The " Teens for Christ"
conducted the sunrise serviCes
at the Rock Springs Church
w1lh Terry Clark g1v10g the
call to worship. The responstve
reading was g1ven by Jim
Jeffers with Connie Radford
and Mrs. Slo"n smging "He
Lives" . There were readings

by Pam Evans, Judy Radford
and Jackie King and the group
presented a playlet; " Death

'Just·

Folgers . ·
with richer, better flavor.

.

,

Clar k, " Net Long", L1sa
Pullms, "Easter Joy"; Tami
Ebhn, " Some Cluldren ~~ ; Jay

'"

Humphreys, "One and All ";
Neal Richmond , "Songs of
Joy" , Tm1m1e .Jeffers, " Ever
New"; Ltsa Darst, "Ltltle"
and Angle Sloan, " It's Easter
Day" The group sang "Oh, B~
Careful".
Pru'l!lry children reciting,

•

·'

were Tfm Ebhn , " I Believe";

...,.

Mary Doerffer, " I'm New";
Tim Sloan , "A Lovely T1me" ;
and Seott Pullins, "A Short
Sweet Story"
JlUlwr class rec1tatwns were
"Very Glad" by Jay Evans ;
" The Bible Story", Dixie
Ebhn; "Where Does lhe Easter
'Bun ny Ltve" by Alan Partlow;
and "This I Know" , Crystal
Sisson.
'Connie Radford and Mrs.
Sloan sang "His Wonderful
Look of Love". Tracy and Jtm
Jeffers were rece1ved into
membe1 sl11 p. The Lord's
Supper conclutled the service.
An Easter egg hunt wa...:Cthen
held for I he child1 en.
'

,..,.:,..

..

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••

'

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'·'

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... 5ave20&lt;:
the rot1'ee
.

.

on
that"tastes as rim as it looks:
-~

'·

i

'•

.,

.'

•

••
•

-' .

chicken is tender, about40to45
mmutes Serve spooned into
bowls with Syrian, l\.ra bian .
·
bread or toasted French bread
RACINE
rounds Mak 6
- Molly Ann
es generous ser· F'Is· he,• has bee n se1ec,ted as
vings. .
delegate and Cheryl Larkins
alternate for Buckeye Girls'
Stale by the Amertcan Legion
Auxiliary of Racine Post 602.
Both g~rls are juniors at Southern Htgh Sehool.
Daughter of Bonnie Marlene
F1sher , Rae me, and J oh n
member w1th a gift from the · Mrs. Harvey Erlewme, Mr~ Fisher , Jr ., Route 1, Racine,
club, and Mrs. Atkms had a Robert Cana da y and Mr s. MISs Fisher ts a member of the
reading , "The Miracle at the Mar jan e Milhoan plan'ned a
visit to Carpers Nursery to
Cross."
M1ss D1ehl also reported on purchase two yews for tlie
the open mee tm g of th e entrance planting at Miles
Rutland Friendly Gardeners Cemetery.
During the past month
held last week at lhe Rutland
flowers
have been fur'nished
Church of Chnst. Miss Diehl
and Mrs. Eugene Atkins vtSiled for churches by Mrs. Erlewine,
the Mmgs County Infirmary Mrs. Robert Canaday, Mtss
wi;h Easter treats for the 15 D1ehl, Mrs Turner, and Mrs.
James T1tus
reSidents there.
For roll ca ll me mbers
Carl 0 . Gilmore, Mildred E.
diScusses thetr lawn problems.
Gilm
or e lo Co lumbia Gas
Mrs. Turner had the devottons
Trans.
Corp., R·W, Rutland .
us111g scnptW'e from St. Luke
Gladys
H. Hetderg ott ,
She also read the legend of the
•
Bernard
R.
Higley,
Bern.ice M.
Easle r lily Club creed and
collect were given in Wlison. Higley to Columbia Gas Trans.
Mrs. L1ttle won the travehng Corp., R-W, Rutland.
On s L. Frederick to Neva E
Plans are moving forward
pnze donated by Mrs. Murice
Bailey,
Parce l', Chester.
for the 1975 Middleport High
Thompson Mrs. T1tus will
Earl Arlx to Jethe Anx, 6 A.,
School Alumm Assoc ia tion
furm sh the one for the Apnl
Seipio
banquet and dance slated for
meetmg.
Zelia Weyand, W1lma Huff,
May 3J·, accordmg to Mrs.
Cherole Burdette, president.
:~~&amp;3!.!!!!::~::::~::=!:!:·::::40:·:·:::·:·:): •. Jerome Huff, Emily Turner,
,
:::: J osep h Turner, E. Pauline
Mrs Burdette announced :;;
today thai the banquet will be
Foster lo Danny L. Turner,
'~:
.
::;
Pa tsy M . T urner, 114 A .,
..•
....
served by the Middleport PTA
~
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.
:::,
.
:&lt;· Columbia .
and music lor the dance will be
~
;~ Mabel Cline, dec. to Glenda
provided by George Hall ,
orgamst. Kenneth McElhinny ~;;:
Warren, Helen Marr , Fredd1e
;~; Chne, Cert. of Trans ., Mid·
will be master of ceremonies :;:;
" dleport.
for the banquet which wtll be "
WEDNESDAY
Gary E. Van Meter to Ina M.
served tn the Middleport
POMEROY LodgeJ64 F&amp;AM Van Me te r , 1.OJ A., 01·1ve.
Elementary School
auditoriUm, 6·30 p m. The 7:30 p.m. All master masons
Cec1 l Dillon Jr ., Flossie
dance to be held m the Me~ gs inv1led.
Dillon to Virgil L. Cozart, Lona
Jun1or High Sehool audttori~
MIDDLEPORT LITERARY
will begin at 9 p.m. Alumni and Cl ub, Wednesday, 2 p m. at the E. Cozart, Lot, Oltve
Chester Van Meter lo Roy
guests are invited to &amp;ttend home of Dr. Kathryn Philson .
Van Meter, Theresa Van
both the banquet and dance. Mrs. James T1 tus to review
Meter, 40 A., Sutton.
Several mon ey -m a kin g "Worki ng" by Studs Terkel.
Pearl W1lhs to Helen Slack,
projects are underway. Letters Roll call w1ll be a comment on
Lois, Letart.
to alumm will be put mto the
Kat hleen 0 . Cec1l to Samuel
ma1I next week and those who
Fry,
Jr. , Martha L Fry, Lot,
SOC IAL
.S ecurlly
do not receive a letter are
Pomeroy.
asked to contact one of the representative at Middleport
officers, Mrs. Burdette, Mrs . Village Counctl Chambers, 9.30
PARTY PLANNED
Marjone
Blake,
vice a.m. to 12: 30 p m.
NEW
HAVEN, W. Va. - A
ATHENS County Satsang
president ; Mrs. Nancy Cale,
card
party
sponsorell by the
secretary; or MISS Freddie Soc1ety w1ll present a public
New
Have
n
Women
's Club will
lecture at 7:30 p.m at Room
Houdashelt, treasurer.
be held Tuesday, AprilS al7:JO
Appomted to handle the table · 327, Baker Center, Athens, with
p.m. ' at the New Haven
decorations for the banquet Barbara Roaden as speaker,
LLbrary
was Margaret . Ella Lewis.
BIG Bend Neighborhood
Other decorating will be done meeting of leaders, assistant
by Mr and Mrs. Rtchard leade rs a nd committee
VISIT BLAKESLEE
Hovattel'l"'
,
Mrs.
Melvin Circle and
members at the home of Mrs.
The reunion classes are 1905, Pat Thomas, service. unit ch1ldren of Columbus are in
1910, 1915, 1920, 1925, 1930, 1935, director, 9: 30 a.m. Mrs . Po'meroy VIsiting Mr. and Mrs.
1940, 1945, 1950, 1955, 1960 and Isa belle Foster diStrict C. E. Blakeslee.
1965.
director , to he present. For
directions to the Thoma home
George Otler, pastors . Pubhc
telephone 992-2277
IDVIted.
THURSDAY
FRIDAY
EDWARD BW'kett, preSident
POMEROY
Wom e n 's
of OHKAN Coin Club, speaker
Bowling
Assoc
ia
tion
annual
for meetmg of Meigs County
meehng,
Pomeroy
Bowling
Ptoneer and Historical Soc1ety
7:30 p.m Thursday at Meigs Lanes, 7 p.m.

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/-; U e

Meigs
Prop_erty
Transfers

A lumnt. event

planS ongozng

: ; Soc IaI ;:
{cale ndar§:
·

'·Dear Don :
Two ways : either laugh at (or hopefully WITH) your
~~daughter about her hangups, or introduce her In a g'!Od book on
• 'aging, with the small reminder that sbe'U he t!Je're too in a few
, years.
. Among the most readable of such books is "The Fires of
· Autunm:' Sexual Activity in the Middle and -Later Years". by
Peter A. Dickinson (Drake Publishers, Inc. ).
WiUt empathy and insight, much research and lhe right light
,,sprinkling of humor, Dickinson attacks the myth of "sexless old
age," and explores the kinds of loving relationships_-:- emotional
and physical - that can add life to your years, and perhaps years
In your life.
In such chapters as "Hangups Are for Hypocrites," "How to
"Why don't you tell the olflcer
Keep It Rolling," "It's Never Too Late wTry Something New,'.'
"The Best Is Yet to Come?," he offers frank, practical advice on what you told me when I said
.overcomil)g frigidity and impotency; how to cope with male and you were driving too fast?"
female menopause ; why pornography might ,he good for you;
MONEY COMES
and discusses Ute .many new life and love styles now open to
State Aud1tor Thomas E.
elders, Jncludirig single blessedneSs as well as married bhss.
Fe rguson's office reported
"You shouldn't lose any more sexual vigor with age than you
$10,392,316.20 in welfare
do any other physical capacity,'' the •!!thor writes. "You may
assistance money dtstributed
not be able to run 100 yards· as fast as you did, ·but,'' he em·
to Ohio's 88 counties in
phasizes, "you can still ream yoW' goal" '" (which may not be
February. Meigs County's
that set forth in unrealistic sex mecharucs manuals ).
portion was $11,908.16.
Dickinson has been a writer and editor in the field of aging
for over 15 years. He advocates that older couples learn touching,
holding and stroking, for those pleasures alone, addtng, " ... any
UNDERGOES SURGERY
marriage that doesn't include cuddling or fondling - without any
MISS Dorothy Leifheit,
definite commitments- is frigid ." Sexuality in the 'la!J!r years
former Meigs Coun tian , of
means more than physical sex. High on his list of "needs" for a
Ori e nt , underwen t major
rew,ardlng relationship are affection; emotiOruil expression,
surgery Tuesday at Mt. Carwarmth communication and, perhaps the most valued of all,
mel Hospital. Carc,ls may .be
'
sent to Mt. Carmel Hospltai,
companionship.
' He concludes. with a reassuring note : "Whatever you do, it
Room 775, - 793 -W, Slate St.,
· doesn'( matter - if you don 'I mind. By expressing your
Columbus, Ohio 43222.
• BeX118llty you'D flnd that the Fires of Autumn are just as warm
as - and ~ lot more comforting than- the Fires of Spring.
REVIVAL NOTED
Baek w your question, Don : You could point out to yoW'
'!) rev1val w1ll l)egin at the
• daughter that nude swlmrtling-necking at any age· is areal
Morgar. Center Wesleyan
"emotional expression, companionship," et al . But you might
Church Monday , Apr. 7 at 7:30
abo take a lltUe of the blame for her uptight attitude. Back in
p.m.
nightly . The Rev. · Earl
i!ER teen yell'S, parent,s protected t~ir girl's virginity at all
coats. The ptlce? She often grew up thinking sex was "dirty.'' So · Oiler ':"ill l)e _the guest speaker .
0. H. Cart, pastor, invites the
why wouldn't she be shocked to discover her pW'e, unearthy folks
pubhc tc, attend .
were "carrying on"? - H.

~ lm g w tt h- the htKh
mJmg vamp tha t sw1 tches

T11c httlt:

'

ombn, carrot, green pepper,
garhc and apple Shr over high
heat until vegeta bles are
Willed , about 5 minutes. S\lr 111
·curry powder, chicken broth,
bitters , salt and tomato puree.
S1mmer over med1um heat until

...

...

and Resurrecti on " . Linda

Partlow gave the benedldlon.
E~LOYED BY KAY'S·
A cross and crown of thonis
Anne tte Phalin of Pomeroy is
were featured in the church now employed with Shirley
decoratiOns for the mormng Kay's Beauty Salon in
worship service. Lilies on the Pomero!'
altar were placed there by
Wa1d Radford in me&lt;r,..,'y , ( h1s
ON DEAN'S LIST
wtfe, Flora; Gla&lt;lys Margin in
Robert E. Grossnickle, son of
memqry of lhe Joachim and Mr. and Mrs . Herman
Morgan famihes ; and Mr. and Grossnickle of R~dsville, was
'Mrs . W1iliam Grueser '" named lo the dean's list for his
memory of Mr. and Mrs Jacob last quar te r's' studies. He
Gruescr and Mr. and Mrs. gradua ted from the OhiO InHaru Smilh .
st ltute
of
Technology,
Rec1tal10ns were given by Columbu s, on March 22 when
the children : Nursery children he was one of 135 s(ud~nts
taking part were Sally Rad· rcce.1v1ng the1r tec hn1eia ns ·
ford , :'Wily IY• Sing" . Apt•t! · cerlifltat c.

Sexy Seniors Embarrass Kids
Dear Helen :
My wife and I are over 60. Contrary In popular opinion
(especially that of OW' groWn children) we are not has-beens.
Since the kids left home, we've pushed aside many of our sexual
inhibitions and are enjoying more tngetherness than we had 30
• years ago ... when you had to wait ltll the youngsters were sound
asleep.
One evening while we were swimming nude in our secluded
. pool, Olll' 4Z.year-old daughb!r and son-in-law dropped in unexpectedly. (They don't knock.) Let's say we weren't exactly
swimming; it was more like necking.
You could see "dirty old man" written all over her fa ce. She
made my wife feel as g_uilty as if she were a teenager caught
fooling around by her parents.
Their idea is that old folks (leastwise HER foolks ) should live
by the "Sex After Sixty" book that circulated a few years back.
1Open it and you find page after blank page of - nothing. )
Our daughter has made us feel "siUy, ".where before we were
' proud of our abili!tes and aliVeness.
How do you keep your offspring from agmg you? - DoN
(NOT D.O.M. )

flush PU()I!!~iarc your dogs· best friends.

Molly Ann Fisher
to go to '·Gz'..vl.s J(""'ate
bt

SOUP

ctrrot, chopped

CHERYL LARKINS

-

chopped

a Saviour."

Muse um , Pomeroy.

Those

at lending mv1ted to take coins
or paper money to discuss
with Burkett.
COMMITTEE for mentally
retarded meeting, 7:30 p.rit.
Thursday, at Meigs County
Courtroom. All organizations
urged to send representahves
to the meeting
SPECIAL meeting Preceptor
((hapter , Beta- Sigma Ph1
Sorority, 7:45 p.m. to make
final plaJlS for sponsoring
Sprmg Fling ln'!'ICal April 12.
Members to take candy prizes.
TV Stamp books and
stockholder names.
EVANGELINE Chapter 172,
Order of the Eastern Star, 7: 30
'p.m. at the Middleport Masonic
Temple .
REVIVAL now in progress
this week at Rutland Community ChW'ch 7:30p.m. Rev .
W11liam Owen speaker.
CATHOLIC WOMEN's Club,
Pomeroy Sacred Heart Parish,
8 p.m . DemonstrationS- on
crafts by l&gt;hirley Huston.
-R.EVIVALnow in progress at
First Church of God, Syrac~,
through April 6, 7:30 p.m .
ni~htl y. · W1lbur !.l'ilhmt nnd

•

THE REV. Ndel Herman is
now holding a revwal at, the
Ash Street Freewill Baptist
Church. Singers and public
mv1ted. Serv1ce at 7:30 .p.m.
THE
HARRISONVILLE
Order of Eastern Star w11I hold
a rummage sale Fr1daw and
Saturday at the former H. and
R. Block building m Pomeroy ,
E. Mam St., from 9 a.m. to 4
·p.m. on Friday and from 9 until
l;l noon on Saturday.
SATURDAY
TU I'PERS PLAINS Pony
Pullers Assn ., will hold its first
pony pull contest, 7:30 p:m.
Saturday at Bar-30 grounds
near Tuppers 'Plains. Refreshmenis available; publtc m·
vi led.
SPAGHETTI Dinner, II a.m.
to 7 p.m. Saturday at Pomeroy
Fire Station :with p'roceeds to
go to the fire department
building fund. $2 adults, $1
children. Public mvited.
SPAGHETTI Supper ,
Rulfand
Grade School,
beg111mng 4:30 p.m. SatW'day
wit h proceeds tu Rutland
Voluntee~ Emergency Squad
building Iun~ : adults $1.511:
children, 75_cents. Public in·
\'Ht" l

The Rev. Floyd Shook
presented a solo, " No Greater
Love" and gave r.emarks about
Holy Week. There was a poem,
"If There Had Been -No
Calvary," by Jane Jacobs, and
smging a number were Diana
Lew•~. D1ane Smtih and
Belinda Friend.
Shirley .friehd and Sharon
Folmer sang " Ali that Thrills
My Soul " and the benediclton
was given by the pastor.

·cool )C)ndols

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• MOL'i.. V !i'{SHER

Lawn care shown in exten5ion

,.-

al 8 p.m.

been

1

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SLICED
BOLOGNA '

~~What

1/4 cup bUJttr or m1rg1rlne
1
chicken, 3 poundt, cut up

2

Hank Cleland, chmrman of
the event, advises that sponsors 1n the "hike bike" may
earmark theconlnbution as to
how the money 1s to be· spent.
The route has been established
and all safety precautions have

An Easter cantata, "Christ is
Risen" was presented Sunday
evenmg at the LaW'ei Cliff
Free Meth&lt;xllst Church.
• Narrators for the presentaiion were Rick Friend, Uoyd
Wn~h t, Lawrence Eblin,
Kat hy .. Pullins and .J1m
G1imore. Selections by the
choinncluded " He Lives," "At
the Cross, " "Lead Me to
calvary," "Christ Arose," and

Mention mulhg~tawny soup
and most people Will say it i~ an
lnsh concoctiOn Perhaps that
•s. true, but it took a side route
through India ~t one point m 1ts ,
' culinary travels It •s · conSi dered an Indian soup so
"worked upon" by generatiOns
of BntiSh housewives m India
, that 1t has lost ·~ 1cientity. The
word " mtflllgatawny" actually
IS a corrupt10nl of the Tamil
" molegoo tunee" or pepper
water. The custom was to add
. rice to the soup and thiS dated
from the time when the British
m India had' r~ce served w1th
ev~rything they ale. ·
' MULLIGATAWNY

.

Easter canta~ given Sunday

, lly Aileen Claire 1
NEA FoOd Editor

I

Plans for the "h1ke b1kc" will
be fmallzed at the Wednesday
n1ght meehng of the Me igs
Chapter , Ohi o Assoc1alion of
Re tarded Cihzens, to be held m
tl1e Mmgs Co unty Courthouse

.

'

Mulligaiaivnyfrofn
Ireland .via India
.

Hampton. and Mrs . Calhenne
Welsh pa rhc1patmg
Mrs Mary Martm, chapeau,
ope ned the meeting in
ntuailshc form Plans were
made for several to attend the
Gal ha County Sal on ·612
meet mg to be held Thursday
mght al Trmi ty Church. Also

dressed up wit h neckwear and

fas hwn-nllnd ed. Among the dressed down Wllh open-collar
mos t popular colors will be shu·ts. One mtere sting garhght tu 111ed1wn blues. The ment .was made with short
fabncs currently at the head of sleeves 1n chambray and came
the fashiOn hsts are tropical wilh a matchmg shirt.
worsteds, m any of \\'htch are . Coordinates will • be vel y
blended of polyester w1th !men strong for cas ual bu siness
and many other blends that wear and many w11l be marked
offer cool"'nsp, 11nnkle-free by subtle colornlwns Some
wearab1hty for warm weather w11l have peaked lapels. In
SUit patterns 1nclude solids, add1llon to the usual comstnpes and plaids and 10 ad- binatiOns of a jacket w1th one
dl lton to the blues, some of the ma lchmg and one con~r ashng
outstandmg su1t colors are soft pa1r of trousers, there are
gree ns tans , naturals, some outfits that include tw o jackets,
very smart yellows, a teal makmg for great mix in g and
gree n, a pistachio stubbed wtth malchmg posS1 b1hf1es.

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.

15 - TheDaUy ~ntinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, O., Wednesday, April2, 1975

•

Eunie Hnnkcr , Mrs . Lula

afe m tile curren t favored

sin gle-br eas te d two-bu tto n
styles, there IS a spnnkhng of
double-breastects treatme nts .
One group of smts was
devoted to wh1tes and natural
shade s , mcludlng shadow
pl"1ds. suhd hnen weaves and
textW'IZed polyester
Smts m a more casual vcm Ma1.1y spnng '75 busmess tmlored 10 ctenifil , chambray ,
sUJ ts fea lw·e · matc hm g. Con- p1n cord, seersucker. pophn
fr ast mg or reversible vests - 3 and lmen-types _: were shown
good tLi t!a fur the economy, and

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14- The Daily Sentinel, Mlddleport-Pomet oy, 0 ., Wednesday, ~111 2. 1975

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from pa nts io ':lklrts Without m ~ ~~­
mg a beat. C ho ose one of ou r re~ort

1

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.~·.. ,

colors to w~ar no w and all throuKh

~~~: ..... ~ ,

East Letart United Methodist
Church. She IS president of the
French Club at Southern, is
active member of the march-mg band, the concert band,
the pep band, the Tri-M, the
Pep Club, the Chess Club, the
m1xed chorus, and IS voter
mformation program coordinator at the high school.
Mtss Ftsher IS also an active
member of the Parish Church
Group . La st summer she
toW'ed Europe w1 th a group of
local
st udents
visihng
England, France, Switzerland
and Italy in the 19 days . spent
abroad.
Daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Howard Larktns, Portland,
Chery Its a member of the girls
basketball teatp at Southern
and a varsity c~eerleader . She
IS a lso a st udent counc1l
representative and .attends the
Portland Methodist Church.

,~ . ·'\ ...... ,--· . ,
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oN. .

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su mm~r Senstbly pnceJ
.

~ts.oo

._

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~~CHARM

Hush

BLK. PATENT
NAVY LEATHER

Hartley 's Shoes
Middle of Upper Block- Pomeroy
Open All Day Thursdays-Til8 p.m. Friday

WAIDCROSS SONS STORE
Racine, Ohio

Pearl St.
949-5772

BEm CROCKER
1

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CAKE MIX
DEVIL'S FOOD, WHITE
AND YELLOW
box 59~

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

KRAFT
1-I.B. PKG.
SOFT PARKAY MARGARINE

--------------------------·

FIRESIDE
COOKIES (Assorted)

9 oz.

MUELLER'S ELBOW
39~
MACARONI
16 oz. box
-------------------------KRAFT MUSTARD
25 oz. jar

--------------------------BROUGHTON'S 2% MILK Gallon
"'
.
·-------------------------PORK SHOULDER STEAK

lb.

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

Boston Butt Style

PORK ROAST

lb.

P~RK

lb.

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

PURE

SAUSAGE

79~ -

----------------------·

FLORIDA

GRAPEFRUIT

~

5 lb.

bag
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GOLDEN
ISLE
,.

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BISCUITS ........... ~...~.~~...
TICKETS ON SALE

OPEN

I

HERE.
NOW

•

'9 til 7
Mon.-Sat.

· Prices effective

Thursday ttiru Saturday

We Resetve Right To limit Quantity

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· New York say~, · 've-rsatile
and varied' the men 's wear message
By Helen Hennessy
NEA Women's Editor
NEW YORK - Remember
the sartorial image of the
American businessman as dull,
conservatave and conformist?
Well , forget it'
·
" The Amencan man at
business this season will have a
look as·varied and versati le as
what he does for a living and
where he does 1l," said Chip
Tolbert, fashion director of the
Men 's FashiOn Assoc1al10n.
In shol'mg· a virtually
.unlim1led range of concepts.
models,' colors and patterns,
Tolbert observed, "It's not any
·anything goes' s1luat10n by
any means 1n tollay 's work-a·
day world, but the ophons for
the U S. businessman have
never been bigger or better ."
The clothes shown at the
MFA press preview ranged
from conventiona l su1ts far
more mterestmg and fashlDnor~ented than in the past , to
more casual sUJls and sport
coats wh1ch w11l be worn by
men in the creahve areas

where a tonti of informali ty IS
not on ly perm1ssable but encouraged
Among the new raincoats to
he worn for busmess w1ll be
raglan . shouldered, smg le ·
breasted trench coats in tattersall plaids, doublebreasted

ll·e nch coats slyled w1 th angled
scalloped pockets in a new
shade of grey, and a shckertype trench mode l tai lored' of
r~Sin-c oa led co tton . Other
treatments include many kneele ngth an d shorter verstons m
wh1te and pastel shades.
Rain sutts are • a relatively
new concept. Some are styled
like regular SlUts. Others take
fa shion cues from letsure suits
- mode ls smulm: to sa ran
sUits, shirt-Jacket smts and the
abbrev iat ed battle Jackel All
are ram resistant and can
mam ta1 ~ a cnsp good look ·
e\'en after the worst downp our.

brown, combmatwns of green
and bJCge, green a nd rust and a
ve ry conventi onal str1pcd
scersutker

SUit models appear m bot h
trad1l10nal a nd E urop ean
verswns , some deCorated w1th
Willi~

cobbler slltc hm g.

most

•

·meelmgs of Vmt on County welcoming, Mrs. Emma that· $110 was sent in on the
Salon on ilpnl 11_; Fmrfleld Wayland, Mrs. Fay Wtlder· nurses scholarship lund -Of
Salon on May 1U ; Richland • muth , Mrs. Norma Jewell, and that amoun t all but $10 wa s
County Salon on May 21 The Mrs.
Lul a
Hampton , raised
through
special
pouvior to be hel&lt;! May J and 4 reg istration; Miss Erma pt'ojecis.
•
m Toledo was noted
Smith, fl owers; Mrs. Wayland ,
Salon members planned a
Mrs. Martin reported lhat favors~ Mis s' Smtth , Mrs trip to Fenton Glass on May 7.
she Will be attendmg Chapeau Jewell mvitations· and Mrs. Jewelry Will be purchased for
Day at the National JewiSh G lad y~
Cummgs, . Mrs sale by the Salon and trophies
Hospita l in DcJ1ver, Colo. on Richards
Mrs . -Dorothy won for service proj~cts will be
May 16- 18. Mrs. Martm, dem1 Hecker , a~d Mrs. Juha Hysell, graved':_Mr~ Marbn won the
chap eau nat10nale, Central se rving
, door -prize
Div ision, will be il onore&lt;l on
A nominattng committee of
Th~ salon through lhe
Apnl 20from 1 to'4-.~. w1th a Ml's Walker, Mrs. Boyd, and husband of a member wlll .
reception at the Middleport · Mrs Bnnker was appotnted sponsor Joan Sellers and !)andy
Churcl1 of Christ. Hoshng the The ·offi cers w111 be elected aC- lnnarelli in the " hike bike': of
reception w11l be the AmencarY the May meeti ng with 10• the Meigs Chapter of the Ohw
Legion AuXIli ary of Drew slallaliOn to take place 10 • Association for Retarded
Webster Post 30, the Galila ·August. Also at the May Citizens. An Easter d~ess was
Coun ty Salon UlZ and the Me1gs mee tin g
delegates
an d purchased fo r She_rrle. MarCounty Salon 710, Eight and al ternates !o the na tional shall, a cy~tlc fibrosis child, by
Forty.
conven tion will be named. It the Salon
Committees announced for was voted to pay assessments
Refr eshments were served
the .recep.hOn were Mrs Pearl and the delegate fees 'to the oily the hostess For June and
Knapp , Mrs Myrtle ,Walker , natiOnal convention.
July, the Salon will have. PIC·
and Mrs . Mabel Brown,
Mrs Mary Roush reported nics combined w1th meetmgs

!\ lll l' !lll!I'IC.ll SCI'VICC for' lflrec
tlet:cascd par l nei'S, Mrs . Mary

-

Bc"pp, M". Ruth Thornton
~nd Mrs Hanett NeiKle l', was
held at 1he MQild'!Y night
mce hnK of Me1gs County Salon
710, E1ght and Forty , held at
!he home of Mrs. Mane IJoyd
M1 s Florence R1chard s,
l'aumomer, cood ucted th e
sc1 v1cc with Mrs. Pearl Knapp
as the taper lighter, and Mrs

anryounced were an mversary

Hike bike plans
finalized by
local group
A real summer wardrobe
st retcher , s,e ersucker
blue and white Jports
coat tops ri"avy s lack ~. a ll
m textumed polyester
and co tton

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taken, accordwg

onl~n,

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1m111

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$} 29

to

Cleland . who does, however,
adv1se that participan ts will
nde at their own risk. The
event IS scheduled for Saturday , April 19.

Chicken Gizzards, Beef Tongues, Jowl Bacon, Sliced
Fresh Side, Bulk Sausage, Head Cheese, Trail Bologna,
Beef Liver, Pork Liver.

!:;p(l_ciaI

,...

VISIT IN NEW HAV EN
M1 and Mrs Ernest Powell
of Pomeroy were in New
Haven•Easter afternoon to visit
Wilhf~m Stump and dau~hter,
M1chelle, their son-m-law and
gra nddaughter. At the Sunday

COUPON

i R. C. COLA
I

8-16 oz. bottles

1

1I

m urmng se r vice at the lAurel

Cli ff Free Methodist Church,
memona l fl owers were placed
on tile alLar for Ernestme
Slump11y her daughter, Robin
Campbell and Mrs MarJOrie
Goett .

I
I
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Reg.
$1.59

0

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1

s1o9 II
With C4&gt;upon

Thurs.- Fri. -Sat.
Simon's

I
I
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COKE
8/16 OZ. BTtS.
$l~9
EVERYDAY
PRICE

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4
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I
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I 2% MIL~
I BROUGHTON'S

I
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Gal.

$109

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I

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I

Sat. Only
Simon's

green

pepper,

l1rg1 aaur grHn tpple, peel·
od, cored oncl chopped
ltttpoon• curry powder
c~po

chlckon brolh

"·

2 ~~:!~:.~·b~l~:
.. Angootura
tableopoon

1
1

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can 11 pound) lomato ""'"
·r
In a large Dutch oven or kett Ie, heat butter and brown
chicken pieces on all sides. Add

RUTLAND - Slides on lawn t1hzer IS the 10-5-5 mixture to
care were shown by John Rice, be applied in September, June
Meigs County Extension or July. In mowing the grass,
Agent, at the Monday night he cautioned about dull blades
meeting of the Rutland Garden which bruise the grass, and
Club held at lhe home of Mrs about cut ting more than one
Chris D1ehl.
mch of the grass a t a time.
Introduced by Mrs. Eugene
The speaker recommended
Atkins, Rice showed slides and Zytron to kill the crabgrass and
then talked on proper seeding, chloridane for the grubs.which
fertilizmg, and mowing grass. attract the moles.
He said that the most tmportMr s . Ralph Turn er, coant thmg is to select fhe right hostess for the meet in g,
' . }• grass seed and recommended diSplayed bu-dhouses made by
· I•,," Kentucky Blue Grass for th1s her pup1ls. Gardenmg ltps for
• area. He said for shaded lawn Apnl given by Mrs. Russell
areas , Red Fescue is the best Little tncluded puttin g lim e "'l
-and where there is lots of the lawn, feed mg the bll'll~
traffic or wear, then Bermuda planting lilies of the valley, and
grass or Tall Fescue stands up feedin g the roses.
better.
During the busmess meetmg
Seeds should be planted m Mtss Ruby D1ehl and Mrs.
the mlildle of September, R1ce V~rg1 l Atkins reported on the
said, and If mulch IS desirable , thera py program at th e
then he recommended ' the use Gallipolis State Institute. Th ey"
of clean oats or wheat straw. made terrariums and dtsh
He also suggested using a gardens with the therapy club,
roller and said the best fer- played games, presented each

79'
2-lb.

Bntlsh homemake:s in India made mulligatawny soup famous.

chopped
clove gorllc, chopped

., '

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Us. • •

By Helen Bottel

Yellow Sllk shantung cent~rvented swt (-left) features
peaked lapel and soft shoulder styling, accented w1th bluebrown tnne print silk tie . Three-p1ece su it in 1vory texturized

Polly's Pointers:
BY POLLY CRA MER

Amateur can put
burlap on walls
DEAR POLLY - I would our weekly house cleaning has
like to replace the wallpaper on never been much of a chore. I
one of my hvmg room walls ~ have set aside Fnday evening
with colored burlap What is and Saturday for lh1s and no
the best way to remove old one goes anywhere unttl his
wallpaper and how do you shck share of the work is completed.
burlap on the wall? Rearrangements are made in
DOROTHY.
adva nce and by ge nera l
DEAR POLLY - Wallpaper agreement.
usually can be removed with
Clean ing day worked out fin e
just hot water and a putty but 1n between I was always
knife. A little vinegar could be havmg to nag at each one to
added to the water if needed. clean up and pick up Now each
Wash off any remaining scraps child is ass1gned a room, m
of paper and glue with steel addi tion to h1s own bedroom, to
wool and a cleaning solution. clea n thoroug hly during
Rinse with clear water and weekly cleaning. After that he '
' allow to dry thoroughly. Apply IS m charge of keeping it
sizing.
"picked up " unlll next cleaning
I have found the following day. If someone else leaves a
10 be th' easiest way for an mess '" that room, the one m
amateur to apply fabric 10 a charge fines the offender two
wall: I use wheat wallpaper cenis for each item out of
paste, mixed a bit thicker ,than place. If the one in charge is
the directions on the package, not doing hi s job, mother fines
and put paste on the wall for him. Mom and Dad are also
one strip at a time. Then slart · subject to fines that are put on
at the top and smooth fabric a charge and pa1d on allowance
on with a clean, soft cloth, 1ay. Any problem of b1ckenng
working from the· center out. and argumg over fmes IS
DG not cut burlap .the exact sol v~by a !;1mily discussion
length but allow for some on ~
sportsmanship and the
shrinkage. Pull away at the import nee of each domg -his
bottom and trim. - POLLY. share.
;:'"'
This really keeps qur family
DEAR' POLLY - My Pet on lis toes and the children
Peeve is with those tactless assume responsib1hty for the
people )Vho ask us single upkeep of their ~orne, not to
women, " Why didn 't you get mention the better frame of
married?". They seem to in- mmd this puts Mom in. As an
sinuate that there is something incentive we use the fine
radically wrong with us. Many money to treat the family lo
of us have several college some thing extra · hke ham·
degrees and have done much to bW'gers out or a movie. If I win
make.lhe world a ltttle better. a Polly Dollar il will not go in
My pel IIISWer is: "I would the family kitty but be framed.
rather be single than to wish I as a reminder lo the family
that you thought our idea worth
were." - MARJORIE.
DEAR , POLLY - l ,am a sharing, thus creatmg more
working mother wtlh thr,ee mcenttve for doing omi's share.
children ages 12, 13 and 15 and - - KATHY
'

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polyester lw11l1S styled w1th top st1tchmg and patch pockets.
Planter's hat is naturallmen. Cooling sce ne (right ) stars a
cotton knit striped pullover and cream cotton print sh irt with
pmeapple mo\lf and pajama collar.

Communion service
held at Rock Springs
Church on Thursday
An impressive candlelight
comm umon service was held
on Maundy Thursday at the
Rock Springs Uni ted Methodist
Church for the congregallons
of llie Enterpnse, Flatwoods
and Rock Spnngs Churches.
The Enterprise Chur.ch chOif
presented "The Sounds of
Love '' and "Spread the Gospel
to All Nations m H1s Name",
the latter written by Becky W11l
and Mr. and Mrs. Dale Dav1s,
members of the Enterprise
Church. Conme Radford, Mary
Radford and Mrs Karen Sloan
sang "Thirty Pieces of Silver".
A potl uck supper preceded the
comrp umon service .

The " Teens for Christ"
conducted the sunrise serviCes
at the Rock Springs Church
w1lh Terry Clark g1v10g the
call to worship. The responstve
reading was g1ven by Jim
Jeffers with Connie Radford
and Mrs. Slo"n smging "He
Lives" . There were readings

by Pam Evans, Judy Radford
and Jackie King and the group
presented a playlet; " Death

'Just·

Folgers . ·
with richer, better flavor.

.

,

Clar k, " Net Long", L1sa
Pullms, "Easter Joy"; Tami
Ebhn, " Some Cluldren ~~ ; Jay

'"

Humphreys, "One and All ";
Neal Richmond , "Songs of
Joy" , Tm1m1e .Jeffers, " Ever
New"; Ltsa Darst, "Ltltle"
and Angle Sloan, " It's Easter
Day" The group sang "Oh, B~
Careful".
Pru'l!lry children reciting,

•

·'

were Tfm Ebhn , " I Believe";

...,.

Mary Doerffer, " I'm New";
Tim Sloan , "A Lovely T1me" ;
and Seott Pullins, "A Short
Sweet Story"
JlUlwr class rec1tatwns were
"Very Glad" by Jay Evans ;
" The Bible Story", Dixie
Ebhn; "Where Does lhe Easter
'Bun ny Ltve" by Alan Partlow;
and "This I Know" , Crystal
Sisson.
'Connie Radford and Mrs.
Sloan sang "His Wonderful
Look of Love". Tracy and Jtm
Jeffers were rece1ved into
membe1 sl11 p. The Lord's
Supper conclutled the service.
An Easter egg hunt wa...:Cthen
held for I he child1 en.
'

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..

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... 5ave20&lt;:
the rot1'ee
.

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on
that"tastes as rim as it looks:
-~

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chicken is tender, about40to45
mmutes Serve spooned into
bowls with Syrian, l\.ra bian .
·
bread or toasted French bread
RACINE
rounds Mak 6
- Molly Ann
es generous ser· F'Is· he,• has bee n se1ec,ted as
vings. .
delegate and Cheryl Larkins
alternate for Buckeye Girls'
Stale by the Amertcan Legion
Auxiliary of Racine Post 602.
Both g~rls are juniors at Southern Htgh Sehool.
Daughter of Bonnie Marlene
F1sher , Rae me, and J oh n
member w1th a gift from the · Mrs. Harvey Erlewme, Mr~ Fisher , Jr ., Route 1, Racine,
club, and Mrs. Atkms had a Robert Cana da y and Mr s. MISs Fisher ts a member of the
reading , "The Miracle at the Mar jan e Milhoan plan'ned a
visit to Carpers Nursery to
Cross."
M1ss D1ehl also reported on purchase two yews for tlie
the open mee tm g of th e entrance planting at Miles
Rutland Friendly Gardeners Cemetery.
During the past month
held last week at lhe Rutland
flowers
have been fur'nished
Church of Chnst. Miss Diehl
and Mrs. Eugene Atkins vtSiled for churches by Mrs. Erlewine,
the Mmgs County Infirmary Mrs. Robert Canaday, Mtss
wi;h Easter treats for the 15 D1ehl, Mrs Turner, and Mrs.
James T1tus
reSidents there.
For roll ca ll me mbers
Carl 0 . Gilmore, Mildred E.
diScusses thetr lawn problems.
Gilm
or e lo Co lumbia Gas
Mrs. Turner had the devottons
Trans.
Corp., R·W, Rutland .
us111g scnptW'e from St. Luke
Gladys
H. Hetderg ott ,
She also read the legend of the
•
Bernard
R.
Higley,
Bern.ice M.
Easle r lily Club creed and
collect were given in Wlison. Higley to Columbia Gas Trans.
Mrs. L1ttle won the travehng Corp., R-W, Rutland.
On s L. Frederick to Neva E
Plans are moving forward
pnze donated by Mrs. Murice
Bailey,
Parce l', Chester.
for the 1975 Middleport High
Thompson Mrs. T1tus will
Earl Arlx to Jethe Anx, 6 A.,
School Alumm Assoc ia tion
furm sh the one for the Apnl
Seipio
banquet and dance slated for
meetmg.
Zelia Weyand, W1lma Huff,
May 3J·, accordmg to Mrs.
Cherole Burdette, president.
:~~&amp;3!.!!!!::~::::~::=!:!:·::::40:·:·:::·:·:): •. Jerome Huff, Emily Turner,
,
:::: J osep h Turner, E. Pauline
Mrs Burdette announced :;;
today thai the banquet will be
Foster lo Danny L. Turner,
'~:
.
::;
Pa tsy M . T urner, 114 A .,
..•
....
served by the Middleport PTA
~
~
.
:::,
.
:&lt;· Columbia .
and music lor the dance will be
~
;~ Mabel Cline, dec. to Glenda
provided by George Hall ,
orgamst. Kenneth McElhinny ~;;:
Warren, Helen Marr , Fredd1e
;~; Chne, Cert. of Trans ., Mid·
will be master of ceremonies :;:;
" dleport.
for the banquet which wtll be "
WEDNESDAY
Gary E. Van Meter to Ina M.
served tn the Middleport
POMEROY LodgeJ64 F&amp;AM Van Me te r , 1.OJ A., 01·1ve.
Elementary School
auditoriUm, 6·30 p m. The 7:30 p.m. All master masons
Cec1 l Dillon Jr ., Flossie
dance to be held m the Me~ gs inv1led.
Dillon to Virgil L. Cozart, Lona
Jun1or High Sehool audttori~
MIDDLEPORT LITERARY
will begin at 9 p.m. Alumni and Cl ub, Wednesday, 2 p m. at the E. Cozart, Lot, Oltve
Chester Van Meter lo Roy
guests are invited to &amp;ttend home of Dr. Kathryn Philson .
Van Meter, Theresa Van
both the banquet and dance. Mrs. James T1 tus to review
Meter, 40 A., Sutton.
Several mon ey -m a kin g "Worki ng" by Studs Terkel.
Pearl W1lhs to Helen Slack,
projects are underway. Letters Roll call w1ll be a comment on
Lois, Letart.
to alumm will be put mto the
Kat hleen 0 . Cec1l to Samuel
ma1I next week and those who
Fry,
Jr. , Martha L Fry, Lot,
SOC IAL
.S ecurlly
do not receive a letter are
Pomeroy.
asked to contact one of the representative at Middleport
officers, Mrs. Burdette, Mrs . Village Counctl Chambers, 9.30
PARTY PLANNED
Marjone
Blake,
vice a.m. to 12: 30 p m.
NEW
HAVEN, W. Va. - A
ATHENS County Satsang
president ; Mrs. Nancy Cale,
card
party
sponsorell by the
secretary; or MISS Freddie Soc1ety w1ll present a public
New
Have
n
Women
's Club will
lecture at 7:30 p.m at Room
Houdashelt, treasurer.
be held Tuesday, AprilS al7:JO
Appomted to handle the table · 327, Baker Center, Athens, with
p.m. ' at the New Haven
decorations for the banquet Barbara Roaden as speaker,
LLbrary
was Margaret . Ella Lewis.
BIG Bend Neighborhood
Other decorating will be done meeting of leaders, assistant
by Mr and Mrs. Rtchard leade rs a nd committee
VISIT BLAKESLEE
Hovattel'l"'
,
Mrs.
Melvin Circle and
members at the home of Mrs.
The reunion classes are 1905, Pat Thomas, service. unit ch1ldren of Columbus are in
1910, 1915, 1920, 1925, 1930, 1935, director, 9: 30 a.m. Mrs . Po'meroy VIsiting Mr. and Mrs.
1940, 1945, 1950, 1955, 1960 and Isa belle Foster diStrict C. E. Blakeslee.
1965.
director , to he present. For
directions to the Thoma home
George Otler, pastors . Pubhc
telephone 992-2277
IDVIted.
THURSDAY
FRIDAY
EDWARD BW'kett, preSident
POMEROY
Wom e n 's
of OHKAN Coin Club, speaker
Bowling
Assoc
ia
tion
annual
for meetmg of Meigs County
meehng,
Pomeroy
Bowling
Ptoneer and Historical Soc1ety
7:30 p.m Thursday at Meigs Lanes, 7 p.m.

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;}
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/-; U e

Meigs
Prop_erty
Transfers

A lumnt. event

planS ongozng

: ; Soc IaI ;:
{cale ndar§:
·

'·Dear Don :
Two ways : either laugh at (or hopefully WITH) your
~~daughter about her hangups, or introduce her In a g'!Od book on
• 'aging, with the small reminder that sbe'U he t!Je're too in a few
, years.
. Among the most readable of such books is "The Fires of
· Autunm:' Sexual Activity in the Middle and -Later Years". by
Peter A. Dickinson (Drake Publishers, Inc. ).
WiUt empathy and insight, much research and lhe right light
,,sprinkling of humor, Dickinson attacks the myth of "sexless old
age," and explores the kinds of loving relationships_-:- emotional
and physical - that can add life to your years, and perhaps years
In your life.
In such chapters as "Hangups Are for Hypocrites," "How to
"Why don't you tell the olflcer
Keep It Rolling," "It's Never Too Late wTry Something New,'.'
"The Best Is Yet to Come?," he offers frank, practical advice on what you told me when I said
.overcomil)g frigidity and impotency; how to cope with male and you were driving too fast?"
female menopause ; why pornography might ,he good for you;
MONEY COMES
and discusses Ute .many new life and love styles now open to
State Aud1tor Thomas E.
elders, Jncludirig single blessedneSs as well as married bhss.
Fe rguson's office reported
"You shouldn't lose any more sexual vigor with age than you
$10,392,316.20 in welfare
do any other physical capacity,'' the •!!thor writes. "You may
assistance money dtstributed
not be able to run 100 yards· as fast as you did, ·but,'' he em·
to Ohio's 88 counties in
phasizes, "you can still ream yoW' goal" '" (which may not be
February. Meigs County's
that set forth in unrealistic sex mecharucs manuals ).
portion was $11,908.16.
Dickinson has been a writer and editor in the field of aging
for over 15 years. He advocates that older couples learn touching,
holding and stroking, for those pleasures alone, addtng, " ... any
UNDERGOES SURGERY
marriage that doesn't include cuddling or fondling - without any
MISS Dorothy Leifheit,
definite commitments- is frigid ." Sexuality in the 'la!J!r years
former Meigs Coun tian , of
means more than physical sex. High on his list of "needs" for a
Ori e nt , underwen t major
rew,ardlng relationship are affection; emotiOruil expression,
surgery Tuesday at Mt. Carwarmth communication and, perhaps the most valued of all,
mel Hospital. Carc,ls may .be
'
sent to Mt. Carmel Hospltai,
companionship.
' He concludes. with a reassuring note : "Whatever you do, it
Room 775, - 793 -W, Slate St.,
· doesn'( matter - if you don 'I mind. By expressing your
Columbus, Ohio 43222.
• BeX118llty you'D flnd that the Fires of Autumn are just as warm
as - and ~ lot more comforting than- the Fires of Spring.
REVIVAL NOTED
Baek w your question, Don : You could point out to yoW'
'!) rev1val w1ll l)egin at the
• daughter that nude swlmrtling-necking at any age· is areal
Morgar. Center Wesleyan
"emotional expression, companionship," et al . But you might
Church Monday , Apr. 7 at 7:30
abo take a lltUe of the blame for her uptight attitude. Back in
p.m.
nightly . The Rev. · Earl
i!ER teen yell'S, parent,s protected t~ir girl's virginity at all
coats. The ptlce? She often grew up thinking sex was "dirty.'' So · Oiler ':"ill l)e _the guest speaker .
0. H. Cart, pastor, invites the
why wouldn't she be shocked to discover her pW'e, unearthy folks
pubhc tc, attend .
were "carrying on"? - H.

~ lm g w tt h- the htKh
mJmg vamp tha t sw1 tches

T11c httlt:

'

ombn, carrot, green pepper,
garhc and apple Shr over high
heat until vegeta bles are
Willed , about 5 minutes. S\lr 111
·curry powder, chicken broth,
bitters , salt and tomato puree.
S1mmer over med1um heat until

...

...

and Resurrecti on " . Linda

Partlow gave the benedldlon.
E~LOYED BY KAY'S·
A cross and crown of thonis
Anne tte Phalin of Pomeroy is
were featured in the church now employed with Shirley
decoratiOns for the mormng Kay's Beauty Salon in
worship service. Lilies on the Pomero!'
altar were placed there by
Wa1d Radford in me&lt;r,..,'y , ( h1s
ON DEAN'S LIST
wtfe, Flora; Gla&lt;lys Margin in
Robert E. Grossnickle, son of
memqry of lhe Joachim and Mr. and Mrs . Herman
Morgan famihes ; and Mr. and Grossnickle of R~dsville, was
'Mrs . W1iliam Grueser '" named lo the dean's list for his
memory of Mr. and Mrs Jacob last quar te r's' studies. He
Gruescr and Mr. and Mrs. gradua ted from the OhiO InHaru Smilh .
st ltute
of
Technology,
Rec1tal10ns were given by Columbu s, on March 22 when
the children : Nursery children he was one of 135 s(ud~nts
taking part were Sally Rad· rcce.1v1ng the1r tec hn1eia ns ·
ford , :'Wily IY• Sing" . Apt•t! · cerlifltat c.

Sexy Seniors Embarrass Kids
Dear Helen :
My wife and I are over 60. Contrary In popular opinion
(especially that of OW' groWn children) we are not has-beens.
Since the kids left home, we've pushed aside many of our sexual
inhibitions and are enjoying more tngetherness than we had 30
• years ago ... when you had to wait ltll the youngsters were sound
asleep.
One evening while we were swimming nude in our secluded
. pool, Olll' 4Z.year-old daughb!r and son-in-law dropped in unexpectedly. (They don't knock.) Let's say we weren't exactly
swimming; it was more like necking.
You could see "dirty old man" written all over her fa ce. She
made my wife feel as g_uilty as if she were a teenager caught
fooling around by her parents.
Their idea is that old folks (leastwise HER foolks ) should live
by the "Sex After Sixty" book that circulated a few years back.
1Open it and you find page after blank page of - nothing. )
Our daughter has made us feel "siUy, ".where before we were
' proud of our abili!tes and aliVeness.
How do you keep your offspring from agmg you? - DoN
(NOT D.O.M. )

flush PU()I!!~iarc your dogs· best friends.

Molly Ann Fisher
to go to '·Gz'..vl.s J(""'ate
bt

SOUP

ctrrot, chopped

CHERYL LARKINS

-

chopped

a Saviour."

Muse um , Pomeroy.

Those

at lending mv1ted to take coins
or paper money to discuss
with Burkett.
COMMITTEE for mentally
retarded meeting, 7:30 p.rit.
Thursday, at Meigs County
Courtroom. All organizations
urged to send representahves
to the meeting
SPECIAL meeting Preceptor
((hapter , Beta- Sigma Ph1
Sorority, 7:45 p.m. to make
final plaJlS for sponsoring
Sprmg Fling ln'!'ICal April 12.
Members to take candy prizes.
TV Stamp books and
stockholder names.
EVANGELINE Chapter 172,
Order of the Eastern Star, 7: 30
'p.m. at the Middleport Masonic
Temple .
REVIVAL now in progress
this week at Rutland Community ChW'ch 7:30p.m. Rev .
W11liam Owen speaker.
CATHOLIC WOMEN's Club,
Pomeroy Sacred Heart Parish,
8 p.m . DemonstrationS- on
crafts by l&gt;hirley Huston.
-R.EVIVALnow in progress at
First Church of God, Syrac~,
through April 6, 7:30 p.m .
ni~htl y. · W1lbur !.l'ilhmt nnd

•

THE REV. Ndel Herman is
now holding a revwal at, the
Ash Street Freewill Baptist
Church. Singers and public
mv1ted. Serv1ce at 7:30 .p.m.
THE
HARRISONVILLE
Order of Eastern Star w11I hold
a rummage sale Fr1daw and
Saturday at the former H. and
R. Block building m Pomeroy ,
E. Mam St., from 9 a.m. to 4
·p.m. on Friday and from 9 until
l;l noon on Saturday.
SATURDAY
TU I'PERS PLAINS Pony
Pullers Assn ., will hold its first
pony pull contest, 7:30 p:m.
Saturday at Bar-30 grounds
near Tuppers 'Plains. Refreshmenis available; publtc m·
vi led.
SPAGHETTI Dinner, II a.m.
to 7 p.m. Saturday at Pomeroy
Fire Station :with p'roceeds to
go to the fire department
building fund. $2 adults, $1
children. Public mvited.
SPAGHETTI Supper ,
Rulfand
Grade School,
beg111mng 4:30 p.m. SatW'day
wit h proceeds tu Rutland
Voluntee~ Emergency Squad
building Iun~ : adults $1.511:
children, 75_cents. Public in·
\'Ht" l

The Rev. Floyd Shook
presented a solo, " No Greater
Love" and gave r.emarks about
Holy Week. There was a poem,
"If There Had Been -No
Calvary," by Jane Jacobs, and
smging a number were Diana
Lew•~. D1ane Smtih and
Belinda Friend.
Shirley .friehd and Sharon
Folmer sang " Ali that Thrills
My Soul " and the benediclton
was given by the pastor.

·cool )C)ndols

..-

• MOL'i.. V !i'{SHER

Lawn care shown in exten5ion

,.-

al 8 p.m.

been

1

I

SLICED
BOLOGNA '

~~What

1/4 cup bUJttr or m1rg1rlne
1
chicken, 3 poundt, cut up

2

Hank Cleland, chmrman of
the event, advises that sponsors 1n the "hike bike" may
earmark theconlnbution as to
how the money 1s to be· spent.
The route has been established
and all safety precautions have

An Easter cantata, "Christ is
Risen" was presented Sunday
evenmg at the LaW'ei Cliff
Free Meth&lt;xllst Church.
• Narrators for the presentaiion were Rick Friend, Uoyd
Wn~h t, Lawrence Eblin,
Kat hy .. Pullins and .J1m
G1imore. Selections by the
choinncluded " He Lives," "At
the Cross, " "Lead Me to
calvary," "Christ Arose," and

Mention mulhg~tawny soup
and most people Will say it i~ an
lnsh concoctiOn Perhaps that
•s. true, but it took a side route
through India ~t one point m 1ts ,
' culinary travels It •s · conSi dered an Indian soup so
"worked upon" by generatiOns
of BntiSh housewives m India
, that 1t has lost ·~ 1cientity. The
word " mtflllgatawny" actually
IS a corrupt10nl of the Tamil
" molegoo tunee" or pepper
water. The custom was to add
. rice to the soup and thiS dated
from the time when the British
m India had' r~ce served w1th
ev~rything they ale. ·
' MULLIGATAWNY

.

Easter canta~ given Sunday

, lly Aileen Claire 1
NEA FoOd Editor

I

Plans for the "h1ke b1kc" will
be fmallzed at the Wednesday
n1ght meehng of the Me igs
Chapter , Ohi o Assoc1alion of
Re tarded Cihzens, to be held m
tl1e Mmgs Co unty Courthouse

.

'

Mulligaiaivnyfrofn
Ireland .via India
.

Hampton. and Mrs . Calhenne
Welsh pa rhc1patmg
Mrs Mary Martm, chapeau,
ope ned the meeting in
ntuailshc form Plans were
made for several to attend the
Gal ha County Sal on ·612
meet mg to be held Thursday
mght al Trmi ty Church. Also

dressed up wit h neckwear and

fas hwn-nllnd ed. Among the dressed down Wllh open-collar
mos t popular colors will be shu·ts. One mtere sting garhght tu 111ed1wn blues. The ment .was made with short
fabncs currently at the head of sleeves 1n chambray and came
the fashiOn hsts are tropical wilh a matchmg shirt.
worsteds, m any of \\'htch are . Coordinates will • be vel y
blended of polyester w1th !men strong for cas ual bu siness
and many other blends that wear and many w11l be marked
offer cool"'nsp, 11nnkle-free by subtle colornlwns Some
wearab1hty for warm weather w11l have peaked lapels. In
SUit patterns 1nclude solids, add1llon to the usual comstnpes and plaids and 10 ad- binatiOns of a jacket w1th one
dl lton to the blues, some of the ma lchmg and one con~r ashng
outstandmg su1t colors are soft pa1r of trousers, there are
gree ns tans , naturals, some outfits that include tw o jackets,
very smart yellows, a teal makmg for great mix in g and
gree n, a pistachio stubbed wtth malchmg posS1 b1hf1es.

•

.

15 - TheDaUy ~ntinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, O., Wednesday, April2, 1975

•

Eunie Hnnkcr , Mrs . Lula

afe m tile curren t favored

sin gle-br eas te d two-bu tto n
styles, there IS a spnnkhng of
double-breastects treatme nts .
One group of smts was
devoted to wh1tes and natural
shade s , mcludlng shadow
pl"1ds. suhd hnen weaves and
textW'IZed polyester
Smts m a more casual vcm Ma1.1y spnng '75 busmess tmlored 10 ctenifil , chambray ,
sUJ ts fea lw·e · matc hm g. Con- p1n cord, seersucker. pophn
fr ast mg or reversible vests - 3 and lmen-types _: were shown
good tLi t!a fur the economy, and

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14- The Daily Sentinel, Mlddleport-Pomet oy, 0 ., Wednesday, ~111 2. 1975

.·

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from pa nts io ':lklrts Without m ~ ~~­
mg a beat. C ho ose one of ou r re~ort

1

I '

.~·.. ,

colors to w~ar no w and all throuKh

~~~: ..... ~ ,

East Letart United Methodist
Church. She IS president of the
French Club at Southern, is
active member of the march-mg band, the concert band,
the pep band, the Tri-M, the
Pep Club, the Chess Club, the
m1xed chorus, and IS voter
mformation program coordinator at the high school.
Mtss Ftsher IS also an active
member of the Parish Church
Group . La st summer she
toW'ed Europe w1 th a group of
local
st udents
visihng
England, France, Switzerland
and Italy in the 19 days . spent
abroad.
Daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Howard Larktns, Portland,
Chery Its a member of the girls
basketball teatp at Southern
and a varsity c~eerleader . She
IS a lso a st udent counc1l
representative and .attends the
Portland Methodist Church.

,~ . ·'\ ...... ,--· . ,
..

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\.,

\

~
,::

.,

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oN. .

,,

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su mm~r Senstbly pnceJ
.

~ts.oo

._

\1;.-

'

~~CHARM

Hush

BLK. PATENT
NAVY LEATHER

Hartley 's Shoes
Middle of Upper Block- Pomeroy
Open All Day Thursdays-Til8 p.m. Friday

WAIDCROSS SONS STORE
Racine, Ohio

Pearl St.
949-5772

BEm CROCKER
1

•

CAKE MIX
DEVIL'S FOOD, WHITE
AND YELLOW
box 59~

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

KRAFT
1-I.B. PKG.
SOFT PARKAY MARGARINE

--------------------------·

FIRESIDE
COOKIES (Assorted)

9 oz.

MUELLER'S ELBOW
39~
MACARONI
16 oz. box
-------------------------KRAFT MUSTARD
25 oz. jar

--------------------------BROUGHTON'S 2% MILK Gallon
"'
.
·-------------------------PORK SHOULDER STEAK

lb.

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

Boston Butt Style

PORK ROAST

lb.

P~RK

lb.

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

PURE

SAUSAGE

79~ -

----------------------·

FLORIDA

GRAPEFRUIT

~

5 lb.

bag
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GOLDEN
ISLE
,.

' .

BISCUITS ........... ~...~.~~...
TICKETS ON SALE

OPEN

I

HERE.
NOW

•

'9 til 7
Mon.-Sat.

· Prices effective

Thursday ttiru Saturday

We Resetve Right To limit Quantity

.•*

••
"••
•
•••
••
•
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6- The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., •Wednesday, April2, 1~7~
-4

&lt; ~What

f

•

•

•

shortage?
I

•

acrQSS the oceans and act at"
great floating storage tallks.
The big oil companies madE
embarrassingly large stock
'l&gt;rofits in the first half of 197~
because of the quintupling I~

' miTOR'S NOTE: During tbe
· -11 rrlils ' tau year, tbe
~ronomlst of London publlsbed
I rommeatary tliled "T be
:Oming Glut of Energy," a

tiere for wblcb tbey were
:~pe rally criticized In tbe world

price but now recognized un·

comf~rtabiy that they might

, ~ress .. Now lhe energy glut bas

suffer huge stock losses on
record inventories held at a
lime when demand was fallln8
fast.
Since mid-1974 some oil com·
panies have seemed to join with

, . iljlterlalized more hlp\dly tban
wen the EconomiSI" foresaw.
' rb'e.Jollowing commentary exJiains wby.

the otl countr-ies in urging

llf !1/EA·LOIMIOII Eronomlsl NtWI Srrm.~

History is being swayed by
the mcreasing capability of lm~ortant groups to persuade
each other and themselves that
Uu~y

are observmg ijle precise

of what IS actually
happening.
'In oil what is happemng IS
lllat the world IS now trymg to
produce abou(20 per cent more
than people are willing to buy
re~erse

while the price of oil is around

$10 a barrel, and that some gM

would probably persist even 1f
the price' dropped to $3-1 a
barrel MediUm-term energy
policies all over the world are
now geared to making, this present glut enormously greater
wtth every year that passes .

Under one of these polic-:es
ttie world 's governments may ·
•- as a d1plomallc ploy, :&gt;erhars
nghtly - s 1gn Henr)'
kissinger 's piece of paper
pretending th at all this
generation's successorS wtll

"pi'ilinise to pay through the
1960s perhaps $7 a. barrel,
maybe index-linked, for a com·
mud1ty wh1ch costs 10 cents a
barrel to produce m much of the
Middle East and whose
margmal operating costs are

sometimes barely over two
cents a barrel.
II there IS an index-lmked
floor price of $7 a barrel, then it
IS probable that more than half
of the productive capacity of
primary energy either already
exlstmg or now planned for the

early 1980s will have to be held
or edged out of prod~tction: in\, deed Kissinger's obJective in

' · talkmg about $7 a barrel is
precisely to create such a glut.
People can believe if they
wish that the capac1ty declared
redundant will not then be the
, ex.11ensive (and rising. marginal-cost) capacity like
Alaska and the North Sea plus
• the high-wage coal mines of
Britain and America. People
can believe if they wtsh that
countries like Japan will be
bound by a piece of paper saying that they must buy 011 at $7.
a barrel when margmal
producers will be offering it at
a price many times lower than
that, and that Japan's competitors will then allow their
own energy costs to stay up to
70 times more expensiVe than

• hers.
"

People will believe what they
want to believe, including dear
detusions

'

The story began with the
breakdown of a longstanding
restrictive practice (oil com-

!rom the most e!tfclent
producers (Arabs) so , as to
finance the digging of oil from

everybody to believe that prices
will not come dolltn, while
backstage they have franhcally
cut their purchases so as not to
be holding quite such large
stocks when pr1ces actually do.
The cuts in production have
not been dictated by Arab
solidarity, but by ,the companies' sensible commercial
decision not to buy from the
most expensive OPEC
suppliers. Libya and Abu Dhabi
(who were unlucky enough to
enjoy price extras ror their lo~~
sulphur crude) have seen their
sales cut by more than half,
While Saudi Arabia was until
recently selling more than
before ·Yom Kippur.
Actually,
OPEC ' s
nationalizations have broken

the old cartel up. In place of the
experienc.O ring of the seven
Yom Kippur) .
sisters (the bi~ oil companies
who ooce controlled nearly all
The breakdown led initially to
productiOn and distribution),
At the same time, the coma w1ldly unsustainable attempt
at more extravagant market- pahles cannily d1d not push sell- there are now a dozen inexrigging the other way so that or- ing prices so high as to induce perienced nationalized' C?m·
dinary market forces swung substitution or indeed even so panies trymg to sell their 011 m
mto reacbon
high as to max1mize monopoly a market of surging surplus,
While they were thus m sw- prof1ts (leavmg grateful confronted by the. old oil coming, governments who aly;ays We*'" governments room to panies, who still control dis·
believe they can repeal the il!'w~ imp{lse h~avy 011 taxes m a stdl tribution and whose sole mcen.
tive m the OPEC area should
of supply and dema'!d \"ere rising market).
holding meetings in lush hotels
The big question was always soon be to shop around for the
(OPEC summits, finance whether the Arabs, when the best deal thty can get.
ministers' conferences) , and moment came to strike the oil
The cartel can only last if the
JOUrnalists always wrote as if companies down, would be too Western oil companies find
something importan·t was greedy, and stimulate over· some new reason for wanting to
happening there
keep oil prices up.
supply against themselves.
OPEC's ophmiSts say that
But anybody who stayed
When they qmntupled the oil
home and based his guesses on price under the emotion of the the drop in demand is caused by
any reasonable calculatio~· of Yom Kippur war, it was clear , world recession. But receovery
elasticities of substitution and that' the Arabs had over-&lt;!gged from recessiOn will coincide
w1th the begmnings of new oil
supply could guess correctly thw pudding
what would happen first to de·
Reports of that first winter's commg on flow . The present
mand for oil, then to stocks, "boycott" were delusive ..
market situ~on, to repeat, is
then to supply and next to
The Economist at this time that the operators of existing
prices.
Simply checked the msurance capacity want to produce 20 per
Before Yom K1ppur of 1973, coverage at Lloyd 's of oil cent more oil than the world
)-the rTiajor international oiJ ~ shipments from the Gulf, and wants at present·prices to buy:
Compames rigged world oil found that the boycott was not while, for the first tin;&gt;e in any
prices in a way whtch enstited bemg ·enforced as fully as both slump for anything, every coun·
that their very cheap Middle sides' propaganda alleged. try has an "energy .policy"
designed to make this overexEast oil did not undercut their Does anybody now deny thiS?
somellmes 40-ti me-mor eIn the peak boycott month of pansion of supply far more
expensive 011 from ex.sting and January, 1974, shipments of oli overexpanded still.
intended ventures in un - from the Middle East were five
The diplomats of the world
economic areas like North per cent h1gher than in the free
r~ghtly look beyond this pr1ce·
America, the Arctic, )he North market month of January, 1975. induced glut; and Kissinger and
Sea. This market-rigging was All through the early months an army of thousands in the
probably illegal under after the price hoist, all through West and the Middle East are
American and other antitrust the period when the world was now sensibly lOOking for trading
laws, hut was thought worth supposed to be hemg strangled and price arrangements that
allowmg to "keep us out of th~ by the boycott, the Arabs were may prevent the next war from
power of the Arabs "
.
shipping out more oil than creating an oil-price nonsense
The old cartel hurt con· customers were ever likely to ag~in.
sumers because it kept selling want to buy at the new price.
But that ·doesn't change the
prices well above marginal
By June the glut was obvious, economic fact of the matter. An
cost, but kept most of the gravy as tankers were told to go slow oil-price nonsense it .is.
pames' ngging of world ml

uneconomic areas on which

pnces agamst the Arabs before

these companies got both a
producer's and distributor's
profit.

r----------;-----~--------~ William Gibbs, ·38 ,dies
I
'·•
+~ W'as h m·gt0 n
I
Fi~lds
1

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1~

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·

·

..t,

Re·pOrt ,.•By
.' "?. .

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- ••

HARTFORD

•

Miller

,_. .... if!'J ' Hospital.

!

(First of Two Parts)
tended the FPC's Jurisdlchon
The av81labillty and pr&gt;ce of fr om the interstate gas
liatural gas is an issue that has pipelines to the producers that
had great impact on residents supply them
of Southeastern Ohio this
To comply with the court's
winter. Acutback on .the supply decree , the FPC attempted to
of such a v1tal energy source se t rates for each produfer
ha; a domwo-effect on the engaged m mterstate sales.
industr i ~ l ~
agricultural, Th1s soon proved unworkable
educatiOnal, commercial and as thou sands of mdividual
domestic life of all reSidents. cases · overwhelmed the
The scope of the problem can agency. The FPC then turned
be more fully realized by the to an attempt at ~rea-rate
fact thai OhiO has nearly three cei.lings wh1ch was generally
million natural gas customers, as unworkable as the case-byincluding two and a half million case approach. This led in turn
homes, 200,000 business, iQ- to the present nal10nw1de rate
stitutional, and government that governs the mdustry
buildings, and 6,200 wdustrial today. .
establishments. In an average · The Supreme Court decision
year they consume 1.2 trillion '4futting government regulation
cubic feel of natural gas L 5 on the producers had the effect
percent of the national con- of curtailing \,he explortation
sumption of ~3 trillion cubic for •cl;!e.~ -natural gas supplies.
feet.
.
.. 1 ~!It ' example, in 1956 there
.•
The supply of natural gas m i 11&gt;ere -16;000 ·e.ploratory wells
• the United Stales has not ;,l'Mfm.d. By 1969 this numbe r
~ always bee~&gt; a problem. '\'h~ • had dropped to 7,000. In 1956
;: erosion of an adequate suppl}': th~re were approx imately
.. has been a gradual process 16,000 drillers in the fields,
:: that is generally conceded to today that number IS down to
·: have begWl with the beginning · 4,000. However, at the ,same
:: 0! regulation by the federal time that production ex:: government...'I:he Natural Gas plortation· was decreasing, the
- - • Act of 1938 ordered the Federal demand for natural gas was on
: •Power Commission (FPC ) to the rise. :The industna~ sector
;: regulate the sale of natural gas · became a prime customer, in
:: In the int&lt;:rstate commerce for pari because gas was sb ll
'! resale. This regulatory power. relatively cheap as compared :: given the federal governm~nt .. to other energy sources and in
;: by the Natural Gas Act was ,part' b'ecause gas is virtually
:• initially interpreted to apply polluhon-free. Natural gas
:!:l!'lY to the .mterstate trans- became such a popular energy
:"'-illsion of the gas. Thai is, to source in Ohio that the state
,
pipelines that carried the now ranks f1rst among all
· ::::Ps to the market areas, and midwestern and eastern states
:.::JII!t ' to producers in the gas in industrial usage.
; :-=!;Ids themselves. In 1954, in
Over the 20 years since the
• ~e very controversial Phillips Phillips decisi.en, llje discovery
; ' .filetroledln Co. v. Wisconsin of new fields has st'eadUy gone
"' 'Case ille ~upreme Court ex· down whi le the demand has

..

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I. .

W. Va. -

7:· ,,,) , William D. Gibbs, 38, of Hart· jt ;ll' i I ford died Tuesday unexClarenc!l;41 !1: .pectedly at Pleasant Valley

and Mrs. Donald
(Grace) Goodnite, both
of Hartford; Mrs. James
(Janice Goodnite, and Mrs.
John (Sandra) McKmght, both
of New Haven.
Funeral services Will be ~t
Foglesong Funeral Home
Thursday at 1:30p.m. The Rev.
George Hoschar a~d th~ Rev.
Dave Fieltls, Jr., w1ll off1c1ateo
Burial " will" follow in the
Fairview Cemetery. Fr&gt;ends
may call at the funeral home
between 6 and 9 tomght.

·
ATHENS _ Tickets are now
on sale for the 14th annual
Green and White Club
Recognition Banquet, to be
held Thursday, April 24, at the
Ollio University Convocahon
Center . Glenn E. ( Bo)
Schembechler, head football
coach at the University of
Mich1gan, will be the mam
apeaker for the 6·32 p.m.
banquet.
Four persons will be
pr'ISOn ted w1 lh · cerhfica!es of
acheivement from the Green
and White Club, whiCh serves
as the bopster orgfllli.zation of
'

R lOt
0

ht
mars {l"zn
~'

after decision
TOYAMA, JAPAN (UPI)A near riot broke out Monday
niJ,iht when 6,000 ang'Y. spectators violently protested a split
15-round decision in favor of
challenger Erbito Salavarria
of · the Philippines agai nst
World Boxing Association
flyweight champion Susumu
Hanagata of Japan.
The spectatQrs hurled programs and other objects into
the ring when Referee Herbert
Minn, an American of Korean
ancestry who lives in Honolulu,
announced Salavarria ·as the
winner.
Both Minn and Filippino
judge Enrique Jimenez of
Manila scored 71-68 for
Salavarria. Japanese Judge
Masao Kato called lt 7~9 for
Hanagata . The UPI had it 7~7
for Hanagata who used his left
hand effectively and was the
aggressor aU the way.
The Japan Boxing Commission withheld payment of
services to Minn and Jimenez.
It also sent a telegram to Bill

LOcal Bowling
Pom eroy Bowtmg Lailes
Tuesday Triplica te L ea9ue

Marett 25, 1975

Stand.ngs

Name

~ n end l y

Tavern

Royal Crown Bo t ti ing
New York Cloth1ng House
K 1ng Bui l ders Supply
Royal oa·k Park

Turner' s Grocery
H 1gh lOdPi idualgame Smith 19 7.
Second h1gh md1vidua1
- Betty Smith 195
H1gh series Betty
550 .

Second high ser ies

W
67
58
49
47
47

L.
37
46
.

55
57

57
44 60
Betty

POINT

,

•

--

Pat

Carson 484

Team high game

Royal

Crown Bottlmg 470
Team h 1gh se r ies
Crown Eioltling 1377 .

Royal

Morn1ng G1ones League
March 25, 1975
Stand•ngs

Team

Excels ior Oil Co
G &amp; J . Auto Parts

Pts.
165
126
118

Gibbs Grocer,y
Newel l Sunoco
102
WM P 0.
98
Spencer's Market
. 63
H1gh 1ndi111dUal game Marlen e Wilson 191
Second h1gh md1V1 dua1 game
- - Ca rolyn McDaniel 188
High senes - Marlene Wi lson
515
Second high series - Carolyn
Mc:OallliliJ_ 479
Tea ~ gh game - EKcelslor
011 Co 833
Team h 1gh ser1es - EKce1s1or
Oil Co 2403.

7DAYS
'A .WEEK

D&amp;D

&lt;

Master's degree in Chemical

Brennan, chairman of the WBA
championship conunittee , protesting the decisiOn. It called
the verdict one of the worst
made in Japan and asked for a
rematch within 80 days.
There were no knockdowns
although Ha~agata and Salavarria
traded
punches
viciously from time to time.
Minri said "I gave the fight to
Salavarria because he landed
the cleaner punches, particularly his left hooks to the
body." .
Hanagata failed in the first
defense of the title which he
won by a sixth;ound knockout
over Chartcha1 ChionOI of
Thailand last October in
Yokohama.
Salavarria won the WBA
flyweight crown for the first
time. He previously was World
Boxing Council flyweight
championo Hanagata. ·He
previously was the World
Boxing Council
(WBC)
flyweight champion, hut lost
his tibe to Venezuelllls Betulio
Gonzalez when he ' was
disqualified for allegedly
taking a stimulant while they
were fighting on November 20,
1971 ln Maracaibo.
J
It was Salavarrio's 57th win
against five losses and two
draws in 64- fights. For
Hanagata it was his 14th defeat
against 41 wins and eight
draws in 63 bouts. They are
both 28 years old.

Engineenng from Ohio
UmverSI ty. He was promoted
to Assistant Department
Manager in 1967 and · has
worked in the plant Operations,
Engineering, and Technical
Departments. In his new
ass1gnment in Houston, Roush
w1ll be Manufaclunng Coordinator for a new process unit
to be con~ucte d at the Belpre
locahon/ He and his wife
Louella (Thompson) have one
c h1l~ , Valerie.

oys

r

..

Little League

All Leather .

Your Thorn MeAn Store

prices. Free delivery, convenient
terrns, service when you need it.
Serving you has been our business
since 1952.

Dr. Hiclwrd Martin,

Middleport, Ohio
..

RUTLAND, 0.

09

SPAGHETTI .DINNER •.~.~Il-.~~~~.2~

BORDEN'S ·

5

super hearts in other words, "

of

All 12 nmners lind a loud,
extra heart sound , a heart
murmur and one or more
aiJnormalities on theu· electroeardlpgl·ams wh1ch t11e contro l group did not have.
" From this emerged a
pictu re o[ certam kinds of
abnor nl'a h(ies one Ci:ln clearly
expect and clearly account for
based on the fact ll1al ~h e

pCJticnt ' is &lt;:~ super athlo te,JI

Mortm said in an interview.
The M P doctor·s em ployed a
vHricty of sop histicated tests,

"There was a loud third
heart sound. as well as a heart
murmur and those unusual
findings on the EKG ," Marlin
said. "A year ago I would have
had to conclude that these
findings were sufficiently
suggestiVe of heart damage to
keep Willie out of the game and
require observation for at least
a few more !lays.
"But the ·research of my
colleagues here demonstrated
that all of these findings, which
are not usually present in
healthy normal individuals,
are typical of the highly conditioned athlete and are not
'abnormal' at all."
Willie wound up playing the
entire game and led all scorers
with 20 points.

' ,,,

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Mrs.~s

of Long Bottom

died on Monday
•

CONTAGIOUS SMILE spreads from 1,4()().year-old
Chinese Buddha to a young art fancier at Kansas City's
Nelson Gallery, one of only two U.S. museums to show the
famed Chinese art exhibit.

career out of.1 '

Willie Smith , a guard on the FIREMEN DISMISSED
T1gers' basketball squad who
CONCEPCION, Chile (UPI)
hus scored better than 20 points - Eighty-four members of the
per game, ,was injured two Concepcion volunteer fire de!lays befor.e a 1·ecenl game. An partment were dismissed from
el bow rammed him in the the force this week because
chest, and Smith had a bruise (\ley didn't feel like volunteering anymore.
but no b1·oken ribs.
The 84 firemen were accused
When Smith still was feeling
pain on the day of the game, of "lack of discipline" in
tl;ie team trainer sent him to a asking that they be paid for
doctor who found ab- putting out fires. All firemen in
normalities in Smith's EKG Qtlle are yolunteers.
that could have been caused by
a bruise directly on the heart
muscle. There was also a loud
BASEBALL TOOA Y
extra sound thai could have
!Jeen ·another sign of a heart
Meigs at Southwestern
·muscle bruise.
on Hio Grande Field.
Only five hours before tipoff,
·flastern at Belpre.
Smith was sent to Martln ·for
further evaluation.

3

MIAMI, Fla. (UPI) - An
OhiQ teenager visiting a Jriend
here drowned Tuesday when he
lost his balance upon entering a
lake from a rope on a tree,
police said.
Police sa id the v1cl1m, Bonny
Leroy Chilcoat, 17, of St.
. Mary 's, Ohio, swUJ'Ig from a

rope ha ngi ng (roru the tree to

enter the lake, but began to
panic afld splash about shortly
after entry.
Police sa1d three friends
well! to the victim's aid, but
were dragged under water by
him. They managed to free
themselves, but Chilcoat did
not surface and was pulled
from the lake by two unlden-

JUICE 6 oz.

·

'---T-_. BREADED

pkg.

2/69'

FISH PORTIONS

· Accutron~

watch.

We have~
lots more.
Seo our eompteto ootoCI\o'n
of atylea for men and

·: ,..

women. All with the

Accutron tuning rork ·: j~
movement that guarantees
accuracy to wlthl.n a

1 1

minute a month. •
From $95 to St800.

,....,
'""'

:~

llluat,.t.d: $pac•vl•w mod"fl-'
ln at•lnl•ll at•el. •111.
, ,, H,

~-••••••••~;;;;;;;~=;;
'"'" '

Announcing
NEW STORE HOURS

l.l l l l

....

"

STARTING THIS WEEK:

RALL'S BEN FRANKLIN

"

Middleport. Ohio
.

OPEN9A.M.to8P.M. FRIDAY
MON.thru T"HURS. &amp; SAT. 9Til5

'",

I .. ,,

•

CLOSED .SUNDA Y5

"

.... ..

Middleport, Ohio

,,.., I

I

Clearance

1 I In

.....
,

MEN'S

SHOEs~·:

Dress Styles

! '

Vtlues S10.99 to $19.99

Values s12.99 to $23. ~r"·~

Chagman's Shoes
Mlln St.. Pomeroy

$1·49

"'
'"

"'

PRINTS • f1.0RAI.S .• POLKA OOTS '"

"Ideal For ProT~J,~J"
INTEREST

on-·certificates '
Of .Deposit
s1,000 Minimum
30 Mo. Term

:.@

JUST
IN TIME

FOR THE PROlil

The Athens County

Savings &amp; Loan Co.
296 St'Cond St.
Pomeroy, OhiC'

IT GOES ON ·HERE - Larry Boyer, assistant to the
publisher, Ohio Valley Publishing Co., displays 1975
va lidation slicker on lower right side o( old license pla!e.

Approxlmetely 275 qa111a County passenger car owners
purchased new stickers Tuesday at three registrar offices
located in Crown City; Gallipolis and Vinton .

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•

~.~

1

•
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,.,eigs Co. Blanch

,. ~

To

'"

N lnety dey i nterest pena11v
It
w•thdrewn
be f ort
matur 1ty date .

.

0 ...

POLYE-STER:~:

~

~

1111" '

•

Sport &amp; Dress

I0 ~ •

,.' "'

.RALL'S BEN FRANKLIN

LADIES' SHOES

&gt;A

..,.., ~,

·•"

(

'

This·is a
ButQya

INTERLON UGHIWEIGHT

•

Prices Include Fed. Taxes and Balancing

24b,

movea on lh)s project. .
Wattersoh also Invited
c&lt;immlllionera . to attend a
regull!' lllee!Ung ·of the ftre
departmenl Monday at, 7:30
p.m. At that time repreeenllllvea of CIUzens National
Bank and the Maaon County
Insurance Agency will be
present to con ll'lbute to the ftre
volunteera.
Watterson informed commlaaloners, "We're trying to
help ourselves and not ask you
lor all our needs." He reported
that a 1,800 gaUon water tank
has been purchased and at·
tempts ll'e being made to get a
surplus army truck to carry it.
· A Juallct of Peace Advisory
Committee was appointed
comprised of Dr. William
Artrip, Earnest Hesaon, L. w.
Getty, Howard Schultz and
Judce James Lee Thompson.
L. W. Getty, CoWlty Oerk,
read a letter from Michael
Shaw, a local attorney working
with . the Publlc Service
rilstrict, which stated that the
county group has been lnvlted
to aubmlt Its final application
to HUD lon f400,ooo grant for
Mason County's Water project.
Shaw aaked the commlaaloners for a "narrative"
letter setting out the county's
needs for the next live to ten
years. II wu noted that this
appUcallon must be complete
before AprU 18. '111e commlesloners next meeting has
been set lor 7 p.m. · next
Wednesday.

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LEITUCEl
••••••••••••••••••••••••head
,••••••• 29~

BOOTH'S

LONG BOTTOM - Mrs.
Frances U. Larkin,, 75, Long
Bottom, died Monday mornlng
at her home here ldllowlng an
extended Illness.
Born at Old Town Flats, Mrs.
Larkins was the daughter of
the late Neut and Jane Bush
Powell. She had been . a
resident of this area most of
her life. She was a member of
the Old Town Flats United
Brethren Church and wu
formerly a Grange member.
Surviving are her husband,
Elza; a daughter, Mrs. Dora
· Opal Price, lAng Bottom; a
son, Junior Spa!Ul, Racine; a
sister, Mrs. Uza Foreman,
Gre~rt Bend, and several
grandchildren, nieces and
nephews.
Besldea her parent.l, she Wll
preceded in death by three
brothers and four lliatera. ·
Funeral services will be held
at 3p,m, Thursday at the White
Funeral Home ln Coolville with
the Rev. Eldon Blake of. ficlatlng. Burial wlll be in Sand
Hill Cemetery. Friends may
call at the fWleral home any
time.

STUDENTS AT his feet, thls 90Q.year-old carved wood
Buddha gazes down upon them at Kansas City's Nel8on
Gallery. The Buddha is just one of 380 art treasures on loan
from Peking for display in this country. The coUection will
return to the i;'eople's Republic at China later this year.

RACORN SLiCED BACON ••• !~!~~-~~~~~!~~ ....79e
SUPERIORS BOLOGNA .•••• ~ ••• ~ •••••••• !~~ .. _6.9~
IORS
.
••••• ~; •• ~ 79~

GRAPE '·

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I

tified passersby.
Chilcoat was pronounced
dead on arrival at' North Miami
General Hospital, police
said.
Police Sind Chilcoat and h1s
father arrived here earlier in
the day from Ohio to visit a
friend.
·

12 oz.

WELCH'S

Planning Council urged for·
mation qf a steering conunlttee
comprised of persons In the
region, to make an overaU
study of Emergency Medical
Services and then present a
plan.
'
CommiSSioners appointed
James L. Farley of Point
Pleasant to be Mason CoWl ty 's
represe ntative on the· special
commlltee to carry out socalled "task force" dulles.
Mrs. Carlson, at Rardin's
request, agreed to send copies
of the minutes on Region II
meetinRs to the Board of
Coml'rlisaloners. She also appeared confident that an application for fWldlng wiD be
approved.
CARL COOK, MASON
Coun_ty Extension Agent, was
present to display plct~ of
work und"er way at the 4-H
camp site at Southalde. Most of
the discuSSion centered around
and walkwaya. Cook
indicated !hat a complete
report Is to be made next week.
Jimmy Watterson was
spokesman for the Valley
Volunteer F.lre ' Department
when the group of five
dlscusaed the heating systems
at the new fire facility at Ajjple
Grove. Making up the
delegation were al8o Harold
Blain Jr. , Vernon Factmyer, ·
Earnest M. McCarty and
James F. Jeffers.
A request was also entered
by the Valley Volunteers for an
ambulance to offer emergency
service in the event the county

Individual Slices •

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Ohio_teenager drowns entering lake

.
12 oz.
SPAM •••••••••••••••••••••
WELCH'S
.
20 oz. 79~
GRAPE JELL.y ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
-1 99
CRISCO SHORTENING.•••..•~~~s~ ••••~.
3 oz..box
.
3/75"".,
'JELLO ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
NESCAFE
$2·19
INSTANT COFFEE ......•...•.••~~.~... .
19
TIDE (lOc: off) ....... ~··········~~-~~·····~'1
(WITH .

ch~ef

t'ftl'diolOJ4 Y al tile lliC(I!Ca l
center , t•uonhnated an Jntell s)ve study of 12 long
distance ruuners com pe~ red to
a t;itnilllr munber of }lea ltlly
but tnol'e normal men of the
same ages.

Baker Furniture

.

many made available only m
the past few years, to come up
w1Ih complete pictures of the
athletes' hearts.
"Their hearts are slighlly
larger, slightly mote muscular
and they contract with more
force than normal-so they 're

Marhn said . .
Marlin said the study began
A temn of MU ca rdiologists
last
fall because heart specialis preparing tts fmdings for
ists
had grown increasingly
fJI'O fess i\l ual jOu rnal s . They
concerned
about what the true
want to give ol her doclors
range
of
nOrmal
conditions is in
guJrtchnt·s so they won't keep
normal. healthy athletes from the hearts of athletes.
"We freq uently have found
pi a) in g JUSt because thct r
things
about the EKG in
hearts sound dtfferen l from
athletes
which were questionathosu of noni.lthletes.
ble,"
he
said . "The physiCian
A star btosketba ll pluyer for
!he Missuun T1 gcrs is one of tends to mak~is decision on
the first athlrtes who can the conservative side. This
cred it the study for keepmg might keep a guy out of a sport ·
whic h he could have made a
hHn on thr ('Uurts .

appliances at the lowest possible

29 oz.
2I $1
PEACHES..............................

M~

1

science tO'day

fiirniture, floor coverings and

DEL MONTE
SLICED OR ·
' · ·· -·· - HALVES

Mason

COI.UMBlA, Mo. {lJPI )
University of ~hssow· i Medical'
Center doctors htlVe confirmed
what some heart specialists
long Sl"pected- the hearts of
higltly rnn diti onecl athle tes
lnnk and sound abnormal but
are perfectly healthy.

Midclleporl , Ohio

You 'II find a great selection of fine .

CHEF BOY-AR-DEE

w •••

r

athletes can

heriijge house

Spri1!g Time

742-5543

about the Red t;mpet ln11 as a

•
Bad sounding hearts In

BASEBALL
SHOES

.RUTLAND
DEPARTMENT STORE

A78-13 .....·.............'19.95
.
E78-14...................t21.50
'

for She.D--OiJ.

M~T

---

gone up. When the Arab oil
embargo hit during 1973-74,
,this put an additional demand
on natural gas. The effect has
been to rapidly deplete the
available supplies and lead to
shortages and allocations that
Ohio is now suffering. In our
next Washmgton Report,
several possible soiuliont to
the problem will be dlsrLL%ed

Roush in Texas

Sm ith

eOPENe

,

the baseball team while at
Miami (OhiO) . He is a 1951 ,
graduate of Miami, a~d
received his master's degree m
education in 1952 from OhiO ·
State University.
He was an assistant at
se vera! schools, including
Bowling t;;reen,_Northwestern
(under Ara Parseghian) and ·
•
Obio State (under Woody
Ha&gt;es) before being named
heJd coach at Miam&gt;. He
compiled a 40-17-3 record in six .
seasons w1th the Redskins
Including a· 27-8-1 . Midv. Wayne 'Roush, native of Amencan conlerence record.
Langsville m Meigs County, of
Ticke ts for the banquet are
shell Chemical Company 's $7.50 per person, a·nd may be
Belpre plan t was transferred to purchased from members of
the company 's head offi ce in the orgamzatwn 's board of
Houston, Tex effective April!. directors. They are also on sale
Roush joined Shell as an at · several
out-of-town
engineer at the Belpre location locations.
tn 1966 after earning his

(hke mure money wa s cited
us lhe big factor in locating a

s, Ebc r Jl(I USh , Mrs . t:(llllplehenslvc plan toward a
probable Sl le, but Adkil1s saicl llle mma Doss , Mrs Russell physica l plant. They also asked
Cuun ty, contm utng thei r £ight nursi ng home he r~. but O'Neal
they chd nol lwv e up- l u-d~• l L' Rart un and Mary Phillips.
conunisswners lo designate ·
fur tl NursiJ1g Rome , were contended tha t various funds informal ion ,
llowHrcl
Price,
pres1clent
of
th e Mason County Fair Board
l'e pre se nl ecl by 0:1 la f' gc arc avuilablc if applications
"Personally, I believe there clhe Mason County F'air Board , the official operating group for
&lt;le legnlivn at Tuesday's Mason m·c properl y ·made to eorrect
sh ould be some ac lwns,'' 'Said and Walden Roush. (I d ir ector, I he Fairgrounds.
Counly Hoard of 'to m- · govemmcnt Hgencies.
O'Neal. ''These people grew up
Co mmissioners agreed to
, missionl!rs' meeting.
O'Neal said, ·•t have some in IhiS county." Adk i11s 11greed·. of f~ rc d p1eliminary plum; m a
con"lp
lehenSi
vc
st
udy.
give
the Fair Board support In
Sieveral other de legatio ns prett y Important people here.
"I go along 100 per cent for 1t
The
f'll
ll
"
Board
represen·
lis
endeavors
and urged that it
were recoglllzcd, dw·lng the These peoplc.arc the salt ol the
I'm mterested in it myself Any rat 1ve s &lt;tskcd for com.- proceed wit.h plans. It was
long sessiOn in the Co m M e;.trtiJ. '' Commissioner llilrdin
step we can lake, w~' ll take,' ' llllss ioners to des igna te a st1puJaled that certain portions
lll l s~ i orJers' Cour thouse office SH id " Bo nds have ne ver been
he suid
slzeH blc port ion of the · Jand · will be used for adult slowtn&lt;'luU in g
F;11r
Bon rd ISSued "
• O'Neal staled tha! he lws ,icquil'ecl recen tly 111 01 der for pitch softball practice.
rcpl·esenleit ives, a represen" But money can be gotten ," been in conl&lt;!ct with Delega tes
the group to cwTy out· the. Sue Carlson of the Region II
tHlJ vP or the Hcgion n Plmmtng ()'Neal replied. " I'd like to see
Dr, William Artrip and Charles
Counci l. the County ExtensiOn Jl worked out. ''They Ve been
Damron, as · wi th Se ni:ll or
Agent and u gruup fi'Dm lhe
wa iling a long time. It can be
Robert Hatfield, and fi nd they
Va lley
Volunteer
F tr e worked out, "
also arc Interested in such a
Dep:lrlnlt::llt.
It was observe d thai a project. O'Neal c01i tiimed by
C:ladys OcVnult ,ncl D&lt;~ve cumrmttcc compt'iscd of David
urging that the Comm1ltee
O'Neal rcp r·cscntcd the Scll \01' N1bert, Jim FISher and the
become re-actJv';1ted .
CiliZ('ns gro up as spokesmen 111 Hev. Tally Hmma, who later
"Let's do somethin g for
pressmg Commissioners for was replaced by Dav1d EISel, these people," he sa1d . He
"some ~mswer s" reganllug a had t•eported that the market
suggested that the commi ttee
humc for the ~1 ge d unable to f01· the type of bonds needed is
co ntact
th e
co unty's
lJv(i alone
"al m.ost non-existent, "
represe ntativ es
1n
the
Cumrmssioners l'htrenc e
Mrs. DeV,mlt , stressmg the "leg islature for possible ass istAdkins. p' eSidej11 ; Wilham H. need, ctted mdividual cases ance.
flarclm and Michael Wl1alen whe re elde rl y pers ons are
In additioR to Mrs DeVault
aJJPC1!rectto unantmouslv fnvor al6ne wi thout lhe proper care. . and O'Neal, others forming the
sut,;lt :1 foct l1 ty uru.l prOmised
Mrs. C. K Watkins, of the delegailon were: Mrs. C. K.
:-~ u pport
tu a comn 11tlee Fort Ha11dolph' Senior Ci tiZens,
Walktns, Edna BwTis, Mrs.
01gantzeO ea r ~er to study its
tJues ti oned conun1 sswne rs
Velma Neal, I.Min ia O'Nea l,
fcastllih ty
.Seniur C1 li zens 1n

coach, who has the school's
best winning perceni&lt;lge of any
coach since 1900, has been
honored at both . the national
and B1g Ten level ·
Anall-statestarwhile in high
school at Barberton, he was an
offensive tackle and pitched for

game

.
Mr. Gibbs, who was born on
July 14, 1936, in Gibbstown,
was a construction carpenter
who was recently employed at
the Gavin Piant. He was a
RACE EARNINGS
member of the Carpenters
NEWARK, N.J. (UPI)-The
Union Local 650 and .of the
New
Jersey Sports and ExposiFau-.liew Bible Church. He was
tion
Authority
says it earned
preceded m death by his
$5.3
million
from
ra_cing dates
father, Dewey Gibbs
held
at
Garden
State
Park and
Survivors· include his w1fe,
Freehold Raceway.
Virginia Johnson Gibbs; his
The authority, which is
mother, Wila Edwards Gibbs,
,building
· a track in the
of Gibbstown; a son, Timothy;
ijackensack
Meadowlands in
two brothers, Roland of GibbsEast
Rutherford,
said Monday
town, and Jack of Letart; six
that
the
earnings
were
current
sisters, Mrs. Ralph (Maysel ) TRIAUl START FRIDAY
NORTH WILKESBORO, through the end of the
Zirkle of Mason; Mrs. Donald
N.C.
(UPI ) - Qualifying trials authority winter meets at ..
(Elizabeth) J ohnson, of
begining
Friday for the 15th Garden State.
Letart; Mrs. Qyde (Dorothy)
annual $41,754 Gwyn Staley 400
NASCAR Grand National wiU
be
something of a homecoming
COACH·CONFIRMED
celebration
for this year's
NEW YORK (UPI) - The
Daytona
500
winner BeMy
United Stau;s Olympic Committee announced Tuesd"ay Parsons.
Parsons, who claims a home
that Dale Elizabeth Flansaas,
crowd
at three tracks, inwho ·operates the Reno School
cluding
the five-eights-of-aof Gymnastics, has been conmile
asphalt
oval at North
firmed py the USOC Executive
Wilkesboro,
will
be among 34
Committee as the head coach
of the wol)len's _gymnasUc entrants shooting for the 30
830 E. Main
team for the · Pan Amettcan stat:ting positions for Sunday's
Pomeroy, Ohio
Games in Mexico, Oct. 12-26. race.
Ms. Flansaas was .. member
' .
of the 1963 Pan American team
and 1964 Olympic team as well
WHILE THEY LASTI
as the 1962 and 1966 national
teams for the world champion4 PLY POLY~STER WHITE WALL
ships.
1

OhiO Un1vers1ty athletics .
Se"mor ' athletes at th e
university will-also be honored,
with special awards planned
for the top semor athletes. This
year for the first time, there
will be separate awa rds for the
top male and female semor
athletes.
Schembechler has compiled
a 56-7·1 record m hiS six
seasons at Michigan Although
he has guided tearris to a 30-2-j..
record in the past three years,
the Wolverines have fa1led to
make a bol'll appearance
during tha t time. The Michigan

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·M ason Co.u nty ·senior ~-citizens. .continue fight for .home

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14th ~annUal Green ·and White

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17 -;- The Daily Sentine 1, M1rloUeoort-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday , Ap&gt;·ii 2, 1975

Oil glut world's real problem .Clzib banquet slated ~April 24

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6- The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., •Wednesday, April2, 1~7~
-4

&lt; ~What

f

•

•

•

shortage?
I

•

acrQSS the oceans and act at"
great floating storage tallks.
The big oil companies madE
embarrassingly large stock
'l&gt;rofits in the first half of 197~
because of the quintupling I~

' miTOR'S NOTE: During tbe
· -11 rrlils ' tau year, tbe
~ronomlst of London publlsbed
I rommeatary tliled "T be
:Oming Glut of Energy," a

tiere for wblcb tbey were
:~pe rally criticized In tbe world

price but now recognized un·

comf~rtabiy that they might

, ~ress .. Now lhe energy glut bas

suffer huge stock losses on
record inventories held at a
lime when demand was fallln8
fast.
Since mid-1974 some oil com·
panies have seemed to join with

, . iljlterlalized more hlp\dly tban
wen the EconomiSI" foresaw.
' rb'e.Jollowing commentary exJiains wby.

the otl countr-ies in urging

llf !1/EA·LOIMIOII Eronomlsl NtWI Srrm.~

History is being swayed by
the mcreasing capability of lm~ortant groups to persuade
each other and themselves that
Uu~y

are observmg ijle precise

of what IS actually
happening.
'In oil what is happemng IS
lllat the world IS now trymg to
produce abou(20 per cent more
than people are willing to buy
re~erse

while the price of oil is around

$10 a barrel, and that some gM

would probably persist even 1f
the price' dropped to $3-1 a
barrel MediUm-term energy
policies all over the world are
now geared to making, this present glut enormously greater
wtth every year that passes .

Under one of these polic-:es
ttie world 's governments may ·
•- as a d1plomallc ploy, :&gt;erhars
nghtly - s 1gn Henr)'
kissinger 's piece of paper
pretending th at all this
generation's successorS wtll

"pi'ilinise to pay through the
1960s perhaps $7 a. barrel,
maybe index-linked, for a com·
mud1ty wh1ch costs 10 cents a
barrel to produce m much of the
Middle East and whose
margmal operating costs are

sometimes barely over two
cents a barrel.
II there IS an index-lmked
floor price of $7 a barrel, then it
IS probable that more than half
of the productive capacity of
primary energy either already
exlstmg or now planned for the

early 1980s will have to be held
or edged out of prod~tction: in\, deed Kissinger's obJective in

' · talkmg about $7 a barrel is
precisely to create such a glut.
People can believe if they
wish that the capac1ty declared
redundant will not then be the
, ex.11ensive (and rising. marginal-cost) capacity like
Alaska and the North Sea plus
• the high-wage coal mines of
Britain and America. People
can believe if they wtsh that
countries like Japan will be
bound by a piece of paper saying that they must buy 011 at $7.
a barrel when margmal
producers will be offering it at
a price many times lower than
that, and that Japan's competitors will then allow their
own energy costs to stay up to
70 times more expensiVe than

• hers.
"

People will believe what they
want to believe, including dear
detusions

'

The story began with the
breakdown of a longstanding
restrictive practice (oil com-

!rom the most e!tfclent
producers (Arabs) so , as to
finance the digging of oil from

everybody to believe that prices
will not come dolltn, while
backstage they have franhcally
cut their purchases so as not to
be holding quite such large
stocks when pr1ces actually do.
The cuts in production have
not been dictated by Arab
solidarity, but by ,the companies' sensible commercial
decision not to buy from the
most expensive OPEC
suppliers. Libya and Abu Dhabi
(who were unlucky enough to
enjoy price extras ror their lo~~
sulphur crude) have seen their
sales cut by more than half,
While Saudi Arabia was until
recently selling more than
before ·Yom Kippur.
Actually,
OPEC ' s
nationalizations have broken

the old cartel up. In place of the
experienc.O ring of the seven
Yom Kippur) .
sisters (the bi~ oil companies
who ooce controlled nearly all
The breakdown led initially to
productiOn and distribution),
At the same time, the coma w1ldly unsustainable attempt
at more extravagant market- pahles cannily d1d not push sell- there are now a dozen inexrigging the other way so that or- ing prices so high as to induce perienced nationalized' C?m·
dinary market forces swung substitution or indeed even so panies trymg to sell their 011 m
mto reacbon
high as to max1mize monopoly a market of surging surplus,
While they were thus m sw- prof1ts (leavmg grateful confronted by the. old oil coming, governments who aly;ays We*'" governments room to panies, who still control dis·
believe they can repeal the il!'w~ imp{lse h~avy 011 taxes m a stdl tribution and whose sole mcen.
tive m the OPEC area should
of supply and dema'!d \"ere rising market).
holding meetings in lush hotels
The big question was always soon be to shop around for the
(OPEC summits, finance whether the Arabs, when the best deal thty can get.
ministers' conferences) , and moment came to strike the oil
The cartel can only last if the
JOUrnalists always wrote as if companies down, would be too Western oil companies find
something importan·t was greedy, and stimulate over· some new reason for wanting to
happening there
keep oil prices up.
supply against themselves.
OPEC's ophmiSts say that
But anybody who stayed
When they qmntupled the oil
home and based his guesses on price under the emotion of the the drop in demand is caused by
any reasonable calculatio~· of Yom Kippur war, it was clear , world recession. But receovery
elasticities of substitution and that' the Arabs had over-&lt;!gged from recessiOn will coincide
w1th the begmnings of new oil
supply could guess correctly thw pudding
what would happen first to de·
Reports of that first winter's commg on flow . The present
mand for oil, then to stocks, "boycott" were delusive ..
market situ~on, to repeat, is
then to supply and next to
The Economist at this time that the operators of existing
prices.
Simply checked the msurance capacity want to produce 20 per
Before Yom K1ppur of 1973, coverage at Lloyd 's of oil cent more oil than the world
)-the rTiajor international oiJ ~ shipments from the Gulf, and wants at present·prices to buy:
Compames rigged world oil found that the boycott was not while, for the first tin;&gt;e in any
prices in a way whtch enstited bemg ·enforced as fully as both slump for anything, every coun·
that their very cheap Middle sides' propaganda alleged. try has an "energy .policy"
designed to make this overexEast oil did not undercut their Does anybody now deny thiS?
somellmes 40-ti me-mor eIn the peak boycott month of pansion of supply far more
expensive 011 from ex.sting and January, 1974, shipments of oli overexpanded still.
intended ventures in un - from the Middle East were five
The diplomats of the world
economic areas like North per cent h1gher than in the free
r~ghtly look beyond this pr1ce·
America, the Arctic, )he North market month of January, 1975. induced glut; and Kissinger and
Sea. This market-rigging was All through the early months an army of thousands in the
probably illegal under after the price hoist, all through West and the Middle East are
American and other antitrust the period when the world was now sensibly lOOking for trading
laws, hut was thought worth supposed to be hemg strangled and price arrangements that
allowmg to "keep us out of th~ by the boycott, the Arabs were may prevent the next war from
power of the Arabs "
.
shipping out more oil than creating an oil-price nonsense
The old cartel hurt con· customers were ever likely to ag~in.
sumers because it kept selling want to buy at the new price.
But that ·doesn't change the
prices well above marginal
By June the glut was obvious, economic fact of the matter. An
cost, but kept most of the gravy as tankers were told to go slow oil-price nonsense it .is.
pames' ngging of world ml

uneconomic areas on which

pnces agamst the Arabs before

these companies got both a
producer's and distributor's
profit.

r----------;-----~--------~ William Gibbs, ·38 ,dies
I
'·•
+~ W'as h m·gt0 n
I
Fi~lds
1

J.
1~

~;

·

·

..t,

Re·pOrt ,.•By
.' "?. .

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- ••

HARTFORD

•

Miller

,_. .... if!'J ' Hospital.

!

(First of Two Parts)
tended the FPC's Jurisdlchon
The av81labillty and pr&gt;ce of fr om the interstate gas
liatural gas is an issue that has pipelines to the producers that
had great impact on residents supply them
of Southeastern Ohio this
To comply with the court's
winter. Acutback on .the supply decree , the FPC attempted to
of such a v1tal energy source se t rates for each produfer
ha; a domwo-effect on the engaged m mterstate sales.
industr i ~ l ~
agricultural, Th1s soon proved unworkable
educatiOnal, commercial and as thou sands of mdividual
domestic life of all reSidents. cases · overwhelmed the
The scope of the problem can agency. The FPC then turned
be more fully realized by the to an attempt at ~rea-rate
fact thai OhiO has nearly three cei.lings wh1ch was generally
million natural gas customers, as unworkable as the case-byincluding two and a half million case approach. This led in turn
homes, 200,000 business, iQ- to the present nal10nw1de rate
stitutional, and government that governs the mdustry
buildings, and 6,200 wdustrial today. .
establishments. In an average · The Supreme Court decision
year they consume 1.2 trillion '4futting government regulation
cubic feel of natural gas L 5 on the producers had the effect
percent of the national con- of curtailing \,he explortation
sumption of ~3 trillion cubic for •cl;!e.~ -natural gas supplies.
feet.
.
.. 1 ~!It ' example, in 1956 there
.•
The supply of natural gas m i 11&gt;ere -16;000 ·e.ploratory wells
• the United Stales has not ;,l'Mfm.d. By 1969 this numbe r
~ always bee~&gt; a problem. '\'h~ • had dropped to 7,000. In 1956
;: erosion of an adequate suppl}': th~re were approx imately
.. has been a gradual process 16,000 drillers in the fields,
:: that is generally conceded to today that number IS down to
·: have begWl with the beginning · 4,000. However, at the ,same
:: 0! regulation by the federal time that production ex:: government...'I:he Natural Gas plortation· was decreasing, the
- - • Act of 1938 ordered the Federal demand for natural gas was on
: •Power Commission (FPC ) to the rise. :The industna~ sector
;: regulate the sale of natural gas · became a prime customer, in
:: In the int&lt;:rstate commerce for pari because gas was sb ll
'! resale. This regulatory power. relatively cheap as compared :: given the federal governm~nt .. to other energy sources and in
;: by the Natural Gas Act was ,part' b'ecause gas is virtually
:• initially interpreted to apply polluhon-free. Natural gas
:!:l!'lY to the .mterstate trans- became such a popular energy
:"'-illsion of the gas. Thai is, to source in Ohio that the state
,
pipelines that carried the now ranks f1rst among all
· ::::Ps to the market areas, and midwestern and eastern states
:.::JII!t ' to producers in the gas in industrial usage.
; :-=!;Ids themselves. In 1954, in
Over the 20 years since the
• ~e very controversial Phillips Phillips decisi.en, llje discovery
; ' .filetroledln Co. v. Wisconsin of new fields has st'eadUy gone
"' 'Case ille ~upreme Court ex· down whi le the demand has

..

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'

.

I. .

W. Va. -

7:· ,,,) , William D. Gibbs, 38, of Hart· jt ;ll' i I ford died Tuesday unexClarenc!l;41 !1: .pectedly at Pleasant Valley

and Mrs. Donald
(Grace) Goodnite, both
of Hartford; Mrs. James
(Janice Goodnite, and Mrs.
John (Sandra) McKmght, both
of New Haven.
Funeral services Will be ~t
Foglesong Funeral Home
Thursday at 1:30p.m. The Rev.
George Hoschar a~d th~ Rev.
Dave Fieltls, Jr., w1ll off1c1ateo
Burial " will" follow in the
Fairview Cemetery. Fr&gt;ends
may call at the funeral home
between 6 and 9 tomght.

·
ATHENS _ Tickets are now
on sale for the 14th annual
Green and White Club
Recognition Banquet, to be
held Thursday, April 24, at the
Ollio University Convocahon
Center . Glenn E. ( Bo)
Schembechler, head football
coach at the University of
Mich1gan, will be the mam
apeaker for the 6·32 p.m.
banquet.
Four persons will be
pr'ISOn ted w1 lh · cerhfica!es of
acheivement from the Green
and White Club, whiCh serves
as the bopster orgfllli.zation of
'

R lOt
0

ht
mars {l"zn
~'

after decision
TOYAMA, JAPAN (UPI)A near riot broke out Monday
niJ,iht when 6,000 ang'Y. spectators violently protested a split
15-round decision in favor of
challenger Erbito Salavarria
of · the Philippines agai nst
World Boxing Association
flyweight champion Susumu
Hanagata of Japan.
The spectatQrs hurled programs and other objects into
the ring when Referee Herbert
Minn, an American of Korean
ancestry who lives in Honolulu,
announced Salavarria ·as the
winner.
Both Minn and Filippino
judge Enrique Jimenez of
Manila scored 71-68 for
Salavarria. Japanese Judge
Masao Kato called lt 7~9 for
Hanagata . The UPI had it 7~7
for Hanagata who used his left
hand effectively and was the
aggressor aU the way.
The Japan Boxing Commission withheld payment of
services to Minn and Jimenez.
It also sent a telegram to Bill

LOcal Bowling
Pom eroy Bowtmg Lailes
Tuesday Triplica te L ea9ue

Marett 25, 1975

Stand.ngs

Name

~ n end l y

Tavern

Royal Crown Bo t ti ing
New York Cloth1ng House
K 1ng Bui l ders Supply
Royal oa·k Park

Turner' s Grocery
H 1gh lOdPi idualgame Smith 19 7.
Second h1gh md1vidua1
- Betty Smith 195
H1gh series Betty
550 .

Second high ser ies

W
67
58
49
47
47

L.
37
46
.

55
57

57
44 60
Betty

POINT

,

•

--

Pat

Carson 484

Team high game

Royal

Crown Bottlmg 470
Team h 1gh se r ies
Crown Eioltling 1377 .

Royal

Morn1ng G1ones League
March 25, 1975
Stand•ngs

Team

Excels ior Oil Co
G &amp; J . Auto Parts

Pts.
165
126
118

Gibbs Grocer,y
Newel l Sunoco
102
WM P 0.
98
Spencer's Market
. 63
H1gh 1ndi111dUal game Marlen e Wilson 191
Second h1gh md1V1 dua1 game
- - Ca rolyn McDaniel 188
High senes - Marlene Wi lson
515
Second high series - Carolyn
Mc:OallliliJ_ 479
Tea ~ gh game - EKcelslor
011 Co 833
Team h 1gh ser1es - EKce1s1or
Oil Co 2403.

7DAYS
'A .WEEK

D&amp;D

&lt;

Master's degree in Chemical

Brennan, chairman of the WBA
championship conunittee , protesting the decisiOn. It called
the verdict one of the worst
made in Japan and asked for a
rematch within 80 days.
There were no knockdowns
although Ha~agata and Salavarria
traded
punches
viciously from time to time.
Minri said "I gave the fight to
Salavarria because he landed
the cleaner punches, particularly his left hooks to the
body." .
Hanagata failed in the first
defense of the title which he
won by a sixth;ound knockout
over Chartcha1 ChionOI of
Thailand last October in
Yokohama.
Salavarria won the WBA
flyweight crown for the first
time. He previously was World
Boxing Council flyweight
championo Hanagata. ·He
previously was the World
Boxing Council
(WBC)
flyweight champion, hut lost
his tibe to Venezuelllls Betulio
Gonzalez when he ' was
disqualified for allegedly
taking a stimulant while they
were fighting on November 20,
1971 ln Maracaibo.
J
It was Salavarrio's 57th win
against five losses and two
draws in 64- fights. For
Hanagata it was his 14th defeat
against 41 wins and eight
draws in 63 bouts. They are
both 28 years old.

Engineenng from Ohio
UmverSI ty. He was promoted
to Assistant Department
Manager in 1967 and · has
worked in the plant Operations,
Engineering, and Technical
Departments. In his new
ass1gnment in Houston, Roush
w1ll be Manufaclunng Coordinator for a new process unit
to be con~ucte d at the Belpre
locahon/ He and his wife
Louella (Thompson) have one
c h1l~ , Valerie.

oys

r

..

Little League

All Leather .

Your Thorn MeAn Store

prices. Free delivery, convenient
terrns, service when you need it.
Serving you has been our business
since 1952.

Dr. Hiclwrd Martin,

Middleport, Ohio
..

RUTLAND, 0.

09

SPAGHETTI .DINNER •.~.~Il-.~~~~.2~

BORDEN'S ·

5

super hearts in other words, "

of

All 12 nmners lind a loud,
extra heart sound , a heart
murmur and one or more
aiJnormalities on theu· electroeardlpgl·ams wh1ch t11e contro l group did not have.
" From this emerged a
pictu re o[ certam kinds of
abnor nl'a h(ies one Ci:ln clearly
expect and clearly account for
based on the fact ll1al ~h e

pCJticnt ' is &lt;:~ super athlo te,JI

Mortm said in an interview.
The M P doctor·s em ployed a
vHricty of sop histicated tests,

"There was a loud third
heart sound. as well as a heart
murmur and those unusual
findings on the EKG ," Marlin
said. "A year ago I would have
had to conclude that these
findings were sufficiently
suggestiVe of heart damage to
keep Willie out of the game and
require observation for at least
a few more !lays.
"But the ·research of my
colleagues here demonstrated
that all of these findings, which
are not usually present in
healthy normal individuals,
are typical of the highly conditioned athlete and are not
'abnormal' at all."
Willie wound up playing the
entire game and led all scorers
with 20 points.

' ,,,

J

'

Mrs.~s

of Long Bottom

died on Monday
•

CONTAGIOUS SMILE spreads from 1,4()().year-old
Chinese Buddha to a young art fancier at Kansas City's
Nelson Gallery, one of only two U.S. museums to show the
famed Chinese art exhibit.

career out of.1 '

Willie Smith , a guard on the FIREMEN DISMISSED
T1gers' basketball squad who
CONCEPCION, Chile (UPI)
hus scored better than 20 points - Eighty-four members of the
per game, ,was injured two Concepcion volunteer fire de!lays befor.e a 1·ecenl game. An partment were dismissed from
el bow rammed him in the the force this week because
chest, and Smith had a bruise (\ley didn't feel like volunteering anymore.
but no b1·oken ribs.
The 84 firemen were accused
When Smith still was feeling
pain on the day of the game, of "lack of discipline" in
tl;ie team trainer sent him to a asking that they be paid for
doctor who found ab- putting out fires. All firemen in
normalities in Smith's EKG Qtlle are yolunteers.
that could have been caused by
a bruise directly on the heart
muscle. There was also a loud
BASEBALL TOOA Y
extra sound thai could have
!Jeen ·another sign of a heart
Meigs at Southwestern
·muscle bruise.
on Hio Grande Field.
Only five hours before tipoff,
·flastern at Belpre.
Smith was sent to Martln ·for
further evaluation.

3

MIAMI, Fla. (UPI) - An
OhiQ teenager visiting a Jriend
here drowned Tuesday when he
lost his balance upon entering a
lake from a rope on a tree,
police said.
Police sa id the v1cl1m, Bonny
Leroy Chilcoat, 17, of St.
. Mary 's, Ohio, swUJ'Ig from a

rope ha ngi ng (roru the tree to

enter the lake, but began to
panic afld splash about shortly
after entry.
Police sa1d three friends
well! to the victim's aid, but
were dragged under water by
him. They managed to free
themselves, but Chilcoat did
not surface and was pulled
from the lake by two unlden-

JUICE 6 oz.

·

'---T-_. BREADED

pkg.

2/69'

FISH PORTIONS

· Accutron~

watch.

We have~
lots more.
Seo our eompteto ootoCI\o'n
of atylea for men and

·: ,..

women. All with the

Accutron tuning rork ·: j~
movement that guarantees
accuracy to wlthl.n a

1 1

minute a month. •
From $95 to St800.

,....,
'""'

:~

llluat,.t.d: $pac•vl•w mod"fl-'
ln at•lnl•ll at•el. •111.
, ,, H,

~-••••••••~;;;;;;;~=;;
'"'" '

Announcing
NEW STORE HOURS

l.l l l l

....

"

STARTING THIS WEEK:

RALL'S BEN FRANKLIN

"

Middleport. Ohio
.

OPEN9A.M.to8P.M. FRIDAY
MON.thru T"HURS. &amp; SAT. 9Til5

'",

I .. ,,

•

CLOSED .SUNDA Y5

"

.... ..

Middleport, Ohio

,,.., I

I

Clearance

1 I In

.....
,

MEN'S

SHOEs~·:

Dress Styles

! '

Vtlues S10.99 to $19.99

Values s12.99 to $23. ~r"·~

Chagman's Shoes
Mlln St.. Pomeroy

$1·49

"'
'"

"'

PRINTS • f1.0RAI.S .• POLKA OOTS '"

"Ideal For ProT~J,~J"
INTEREST

on-·certificates '
Of .Deposit
s1,000 Minimum
30 Mo. Term

:.@

JUST
IN TIME

FOR THE PROlil

The Athens County

Savings &amp; Loan Co.
296 St'Cond St.
Pomeroy, OhiC'

IT GOES ON ·HERE - Larry Boyer, assistant to the
publisher, Ohio Valley Publishing Co., displays 1975
va lidation slicker on lower right side o( old license pla!e.

Approxlmetely 275 qa111a County passenger car owners
purchased new stickers Tuesday at three registrar offices
located in Crown City; Gallipolis and Vinton .

'

'

•
•

~.~

1

•
..

•

.,

.'

""

"'

'

,.,eigs Co. Blanch

,. ~

To

'"

N lnety dey i nterest pena11v
It
w•thdrewn
be f ort
matur 1ty date .

.

0 ...

POLYE-STER:~:

~

~

1111" '

•

Sport &amp; Dress

I0 ~ •

,.' "'

.RALL'S BEN FRANKLIN

LADIES' SHOES

&gt;A

..,.., ~,

·•"

(

'

This·is a
ButQya

INTERLON UGHIWEIGHT

•

Prices Include Fed. Taxes and Balancing

24b,

movea on lh)s project. .
Wattersoh also Invited
c&lt;immlllionera . to attend a
regull!' lllee!Ung ·of the ftre
departmenl Monday at, 7:30
p.m. At that time repreeenllllvea of CIUzens National
Bank and the Maaon County
Insurance Agency will be
present to con ll'lbute to the ftre
volunteera.
Watterson informed commlaaloners, "We're trying to
help ourselves and not ask you
lor all our needs." He reported
that a 1,800 gaUon water tank
has been purchased and at·
tempts ll'e being made to get a
surplus army truck to carry it.
· A Juallct of Peace Advisory
Committee was appointed
comprised of Dr. William
Artrip, Earnest Hesaon, L. w.
Getty, Howard Schultz and
Judce James Lee Thompson.
L. W. Getty, CoWlty Oerk,
read a letter from Michael
Shaw, a local attorney working
with . the Publlc Service
rilstrict, which stated that the
county group has been lnvlted
to aubmlt Its final application
to HUD lon f400,ooo grant for
Mason County's Water project.
Shaw aaked the commlaaloners for a "narrative"
letter setting out the county's
needs for the next live to ten
years. II wu noted that this
appUcallon must be complete
before AprU 18. '111e commlesloners next meeting has
been set lor 7 p.m. · next
Wednesday.

.,

''

· ·
LEITUCEl
••••••••••••••••••••••••head
,••••••• 29~

BOOTH'S

LONG BOTTOM - Mrs.
Frances U. Larkin,, 75, Long
Bottom, died Monday mornlng
at her home here ldllowlng an
extended Illness.
Born at Old Town Flats, Mrs.
Larkins was the daughter of
the late Neut and Jane Bush
Powell. She had been . a
resident of this area most of
her life. She was a member of
the Old Town Flats United
Brethren Church and wu
formerly a Grange member.
Surviving are her husband,
Elza; a daughter, Mrs. Dora
· Opal Price, lAng Bottom; a
son, Junior Spa!Ul, Racine; a
sister, Mrs. Uza Foreman,
Gre~rt Bend, and several
grandchildren, nieces and
nephews.
Besldea her parent.l, she Wll
preceded in death by three
brothers and four lliatera. ·
Funeral services will be held
at 3p,m, Thursday at the White
Funeral Home ln Coolville with
the Rev. Eldon Blake of. ficlatlng. Burial wlll be in Sand
Hill Cemetery. Friends may
call at the fWleral home any
time.

STUDENTS AT his feet, thls 90Q.year-old carved wood
Buddha gazes down upon them at Kansas City's Nel8on
Gallery. The Buddha is just one of 380 art treasures on loan
from Peking for display in this country. The coUection will
return to the i;'eople's Republic at China later this year.

RACORN SLiCED BACON ••• !~!~~-~~~~~!~~ ....79e
SUPERIORS BOLOGNA .•••• ~ ••• ~ •••••••• !~~ .. _6.9~
IORS
.
••••• ~; •• ~ 79~

GRAPE '·

. '

I

tified passersby.
Chilcoat was pronounced
dead on arrival at' North Miami
General Hospital, police
said.
Police Sind Chilcoat and h1s
father arrived here earlier in
the day from Ohio to visit a
friend.
·

12 oz.

WELCH'S

Planning Council urged for·
mation qf a steering conunlttee
comprised of persons In the
region, to make an overaU
study of Emergency Medical
Services and then present a
plan.
'
CommiSSioners appointed
James L. Farley of Point
Pleasant to be Mason CoWl ty 's
represe ntative on the· special
commlltee to carry out socalled "task force" dulles.
Mrs. Carlson, at Rardin's
request, agreed to send copies
of the minutes on Region II
meetinRs to the Board of
Coml'rlisaloners. She also appeared confident that an application for fWldlng wiD be
approved.
CARL COOK, MASON
Coun_ty Extension Agent, was
present to display plct~ of
work und"er way at the 4-H
camp site at Southalde. Most of
the discuSSion centered around
and walkwaya. Cook
indicated !hat a complete
report Is to be made next week.
Jimmy Watterson was
spokesman for the Valley
Volunteer F.lre ' Department
when the group of five
dlscusaed the heating systems
at the new fire facility at Ajjple
Grove. Making up the
delegation were al8o Harold
Blain Jr. , Vernon Factmyer, ·
Earnest M. McCarty and
James F. Jeffers.
A request was also entered
by the Valley Volunteers for an
ambulance to offer emergency
service in the event the county

Individual Slices •

'

'

'

Ohio_teenager drowns entering lake

.
12 oz.
SPAM •••••••••••••••••••••
WELCH'S
.
20 oz. 79~
GRAPE JELL.y ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
-1 99
CRISCO SHORTENING.•••..•~~~s~ ••••~.
3 oz..box
.
3/75"".,
'JELLO ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
NESCAFE
$2·19
INSTANT COFFEE ......•...•.••~~.~... .
19
TIDE (lOc: off) ....... ~··········~~-~~·····~'1
(WITH .

ch~ef

t'ftl'diolOJ4 Y al tile lliC(I!Ca l
center , t•uonhnated an Jntell s)ve study of 12 long
distance ruuners com pe~ red to
a t;itnilllr munber of }lea ltlly
but tnol'e normal men of the
same ages.

Baker Furniture

.

many made available only m
the past few years, to come up
w1Ih complete pictures of the
athletes' hearts.
"Their hearts are slighlly
larger, slightly mote muscular
and they contract with more
force than normal-so they 're

Marhn said . .
Marlin said the study began
A temn of MU ca rdiologists
last
fall because heart specialis preparing tts fmdings for
ists
had grown increasingly
fJI'O fess i\l ual jOu rnal s . They
concerned
about what the true
want to give ol her doclors
range
of
nOrmal
conditions is in
guJrtchnt·s so they won't keep
normal. healthy athletes from the hearts of athletes.
"We freq uently have found
pi a) in g JUSt because thct r
things
about the EKG in
hearts sound dtfferen l from
athletes
which were questionathosu of noni.lthletes.
ble,"
he
said . "The physiCian
A star btosketba ll pluyer for
!he Missuun T1 gcrs is one of tends to mak~is decision on
the first athlrtes who can the conservative side. This
cred it the study for keepmg might keep a guy out of a sport ·
whic h he could have made a
hHn on thr ('Uurts .

appliances at the lowest possible

29 oz.
2I $1
PEACHES..............................

M~

1

science tO'day

fiirniture, floor coverings and

DEL MONTE
SLICED OR ·
' · ·· -·· - HALVES

Mason

COI.UMBlA, Mo. {lJPI )
University of ~hssow· i Medical'
Center doctors htlVe confirmed
what some heart specialists
long Sl"pected- the hearts of
higltly rnn diti onecl athle tes
lnnk and sound abnormal but
are perfectly healthy.

Midclleporl , Ohio

You 'II find a great selection of fine .

CHEF BOY-AR-DEE

w •••

r

athletes can

heriijge house

Spri1!g Time

742-5543

about the Red t;mpet ln11 as a

•
Bad sounding hearts In

BASEBALL
SHOES

.RUTLAND
DEPARTMENT STORE

A78-13 .....·.............'19.95
.
E78-14...................t21.50
'

for She.D--OiJ.

M~T

---

gone up. When the Arab oil
embargo hit during 1973-74,
,this put an additional demand
on natural gas. The effect has
been to rapidly deplete the
available supplies and lead to
shortages and allocations that
Ohio is now suffering. In our
next Washmgton Report,
several possible soiuliont to
the problem will be dlsrLL%ed

Roush in Texas

Sm ith

eOPENe

,

the baseball team while at
Miami (OhiO) . He is a 1951 ,
graduate of Miami, a~d
received his master's degree m
education in 1952 from OhiO ·
State University.
He was an assistant at
se vera! schools, including
Bowling t;;reen,_Northwestern
(under Ara Parseghian) and ·
•
Obio State (under Woody
Ha&gt;es) before being named
heJd coach at Miam&gt;. He
compiled a 40-17-3 record in six .
seasons w1th the Redskins
Including a· 27-8-1 . Midv. Wayne 'Roush, native of Amencan conlerence record.
Langsville m Meigs County, of
Ticke ts for the banquet are
shell Chemical Company 's $7.50 per person, a·nd may be
Belpre plan t was transferred to purchased from members of
the company 's head offi ce in the orgamzatwn 's board of
Houston, Tex effective April!. directors. They are also on sale
Roush joined Shell as an at · several
out-of-town
engineer at the Belpre location locations.
tn 1966 after earning his

(hke mure money wa s cited
us lhe big factor in locating a

s, Ebc r Jl(I USh , Mrs . t:(llllplehenslvc plan toward a
probable Sl le, but Adkil1s saicl llle mma Doss , Mrs Russell physica l plant. They also asked
Cuun ty, contm utng thei r £ight nursi ng home he r~. but O'Neal
they chd nol lwv e up- l u-d~• l L' Rart un and Mary Phillips.
conunisswners lo designate ·
fur tl NursiJ1g Rome , were contended tha t various funds informal ion ,
llowHrcl
Price,
pres1clent
of
th e Mason County Fair Board
l'e pre se nl ecl by 0:1 la f' gc arc avuilablc if applications
"Personally, I believe there clhe Mason County F'air Board , the official operating group for
&lt;le legnlivn at Tuesday's Mason m·c properl y ·made to eorrect
sh ould be some ac lwns,'' 'Said and Walden Roush. (I d ir ector, I he Fairgrounds.
Counly Hoard of 'to m- · govemmcnt Hgencies.
O'Neal. ''These people grew up
Co mmissioners agreed to
, missionl!rs' meeting.
O'Neal said, ·•t have some in IhiS county." Adk i11s 11greed·. of f~ rc d p1eliminary plum; m a
con"lp
lehenSi
vc
st
udy.
give
the Fair Board support In
Sieveral other de legatio ns prett y Important people here.
"I go along 100 per cent for 1t
The
f'll
ll
"
Board
represen·
lis
endeavors
and urged that it
were recoglllzcd, dw·lng the These peoplc.arc the salt ol the
I'm mterested in it myself Any rat 1ve s &lt;tskcd for com.- proceed wit.h plans. It was
long sessiOn in the Co m M e;.trtiJ. '' Commissioner llilrdin
step we can lake, w~' ll take,' ' llllss ioners to des igna te a st1puJaled that certain portions
lll l s~ i orJers' Cour thouse office SH id " Bo nds have ne ver been
he suid
slzeH blc port ion of the · Jand · will be used for adult slowtn&lt;'luU in g
F;11r
Bon rd ISSued "
• O'Neal staled tha! he lws ,icquil'ecl recen tly 111 01 der for pitch softball practice.
rcpl·esenleit ives, a represen" But money can be gotten ," been in conl&lt;!ct with Delega tes
the group to cwTy out· the. Sue Carlson of the Region II
tHlJ vP or the Hcgion n Plmmtng ()'Neal replied. " I'd like to see
Dr, William Artrip and Charles
Counci l. the County ExtensiOn Jl worked out. ''They Ve been
Damron, as · wi th Se ni:ll or
Agent and u gruup fi'Dm lhe
wa iling a long time. It can be
Robert Hatfield, and fi nd they
Va lley
Volunteer
F tr e worked out, "
also arc Interested in such a
Dep:lrlnlt::llt.
It was observe d thai a project. O'Neal c01i tiimed by
C:ladys OcVnult ,ncl D&lt;~ve cumrmttcc compt'iscd of David
urging that the Comm1ltee
O'Neal rcp r·cscntcd the Scll \01' N1bert, Jim FISher and the
become re-actJv';1ted .
CiliZ('ns gro up as spokesmen 111 Hev. Tally Hmma, who later
"Let's do somethin g for
pressmg Commissioners for was replaced by Dav1d EISel, these people," he sa1d . He
"some ~mswer s" reganllug a had t•eported that the market
suggested that the commi ttee
humc for the ~1 ge d unable to f01· the type of bonds needed is
co ntact
th e
co unty's
lJv(i alone
"al m.ost non-existent, "
represe ntativ es
1n
the
Cumrmssioners l'htrenc e
Mrs. DeV,mlt , stressmg the "leg islature for possible ass istAdkins. p' eSidej11 ; Wilham H. need, ctted mdividual cases ance.
flarclm and Michael Wl1alen whe re elde rl y pers ons are
In additioR to Mrs DeVault
aJJPC1!rectto unantmouslv fnvor al6ne wi thout lhe proper care. . and O'Neal, others forming the
sut,;lt :1 foct l1 ty uru.l prOmised
Mrs. C. K Watkins, of the delegailon were: Mrs. C. K.
:-~ u pport
tu a comn 11tlee Fort Ha11dolph' Senior Ci tiZens,
Walktns, Edna BwTis, Mrs.
01gantzeO ea r ~er to study its
tJues ti oned conun1 sswne rs
Velma Neal, I.Min ia O'Nea l,
fcastllih ty
.Seniur C1 li zens 1n

coach, who has the school's
best winning perceni&lt;lge of any
coach since 1900, has been
honored at both . the national
and B1g Ten level ·
Anall-statestarwhile in high
school at Barberton, he was an
offensive tackle and pitched for

game

.
Mr. Gibbs, who was born on
July 14, 1936, in Gibbstown,
was a construction carpenter
who was recently employed at
the Gavin Piant. He was a
RACE EARNINGS
member of the Carpenters
NEWARK, N.J. (UPI)-The
Union Local 650 and .of the
New
Jersey Sports and ExposiFau-.liew Bible Church. He was
tion
Authority
says it earned
preceded m death by his
$5.3
million
from
ra_cing dates
father, Dewey Gibbs
held
at
Garden
State
Park and
Survivors· include his w1fe,
Freehold Raceway.
Virginia Johnson Gibbs; his
The authority, which is
mother, Wila Edwards Gibbs,
,building
· a track in the
of Gibbstown; a son, Timothy;
ijackensack
Meadowlands in
two brothers, Roland of GibbsEast
Rutherford,
said Monday
town, and Jack of Letart; six
that
the
earnings
were
current
sisters, Mrs. Ralph (Maysel ) TRIAUl START FRIDAY
NORTH WILKESBORO, through the end of the
Zirkle of Mason; Mrs. Donald
N.C.
(UPI ) - Qualifying trials authority winter meets at ..
(Elizabeth) J ohnson, of
begining
Friday for the 15th Garden State.
Letart; Mrs. Qyde (Dorothy)
annual $41,754 Gwyn Staley 400
NASCAR Grand National wiU
be
something of a homecoming
COACH·CONFIRMED
celebration
for this year's
NEW YORK (UPI) - The
Daytona
500
winner BeMy
United Stau;s Olympic Committee announced Tuesd"ay Parsons.
Parsons, who claims a home
that Dale Elizabeth Flansaas,
crowd
at three tracks, inwho ·operates the Reno School
cluding
the five-eights-of-aof Gymnastics, has been conmile
asphalt
oval at North
firmed py the USOC Executive
Wilkesboro,
will
be among 34
Committee as the head coach
of the wol)len's _gymnasUc entrants shooting for the 30
830 E. Main
team for the · Pan Amettcan stat:ting positions for Sunday's
Pomeroy, Ohio
Games in Mexico, Oct. 12-26. race.
Ms. Flansaas was .. member
' .
of the 1963 Pan American team
and 1964 Olympic team as well
WHILE THEY LASTI
as the 1962 and 1966 national
teams for the world champion4 PLY POLY~STER WHITE WALL
ships.
1

OhiO Un1vers1ty athletics .
Se"mor ' athletes at th e
university will-also be honored,
with special awards planned
for the top semor athletes. This
year for the first time, there
will be separate awa rds for the
top male and female semor
athletes.
Schembechler has compiled
a 56-7·1 record m hiS six
seasons at Michigan Although
he has guided tearris to a 30-2-j..
record in the past three years,
the Wolverines have fa1led to
make a bol'll appearance
during tha t time. The Michigan

....

&gt;..,..)..

'

,,

·- ..,

·M ason Co.u nty ·senior ~-citizens. .continue fight for .home

•

•

•

.

/

14th ~annUal Green ·and White

"

..

'

17 -;- The Daily Sentine 1, M1rloUeoort-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday , Ap&gt;·ii 2, 1975

Oil glut world's real problem .Clzib banquet slated ~April 24

•

. "'

\

.

''

'

')

�.,
•
'

(

•J

-

)

18 - The Dally Sentlhel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Wednesday, April 2, 197~

•

•
••

CARRIER
WANTED

'

"

ON

GRAVEL HILL

~

v

2 SIGNS
OF
QUALITY

IN

MIDDLEPORT
AND

Po_meroy
'Moto_r: C_o.

1914 CHEVROUT IMPALA•

CONTACT

WJndows, stdlng, storm doors

and windows, ra1hng, phone
Ohto Carl Ja co b ,
Representative

S309l

5555
4

$2795

2 Jt c

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

~.ard

of Thanks

any Wll
m on ey

with

an d

food . prav.e rs,
most

of

all

pnay ers In the deo!lt h ot my
fa the r Mr Clar en ce l h le of

deadline for evacuation of all
U. A. air-bases there within a
year. Th e ne" ruler succeeded his brother as prime
minister last month "hen the
a ir-bases were a controverslal Issue

Mason , w v a

M r s Bob ( Louell a l Moore
~ 2 1tc

Notice
ME IGS Coun ty Hu m a n e Soc 1e t y

•

Ph , 992-2174.

ConstructioJ1 Co.
Chester, Ohio

'

3

1972 PLY Dus ter 318, 2 bl
au to ma t1 c new tires an d
sh ocks 51 560 or fa ke over
pa ymen ts Call 992 368 :1 afle r
5 p m
4 l 51c

ful l
blo o ded
G erm ttn
Sh ep herd t em .!l l e 3 mon ths
old One black and wh it e
m i xed br eed m ale , 18 mo nth s
ol d T w o Co l li e a nd Sheph erd
m n(e d , b lack a nd w h it e
ma les 31 m on th s ol d Call

949 491 7

3 30 lip
A NNO UN C IN G new hou rs .
S KATE A WAY . 1 30 to 10
p m , Wed n esd a y . F&gt;rl d 11y
and Satu r d a y A\lallabl e f or
pr 1vate p a r t 1e s Mo nd ay

T uesday

ni g flts

and

T h ursd ay

We d nesd a y

an d

1974 CUTL ASS Supr em e A m
F m t~pe ac super sport
wheels , f )I;C ell ent c: ond,1t ron
Phon e 992 9981
o:1 2 Jt c
19 69 FO R D. on e ton du al wheel
so 000 m lies one own er ca b
1n e)(f ra , good cond rt1on for
model Phone 742 3232
4 2 4t c

Su nd ay afte r noon s Phon e
985 3939, 985 9996 or 985 41 41
yo ur
' O i l of M mk "
Co sm etics Phon e BR OW N'S
?92 511 3 ~
1 7 tf c

992-3092

C!lain
Precision
Ground

2 BE DR OOM mob rle hom e rn
Syrac use No chr ld r en or pets
Ca l l 992 2441 aft er 6 P m
Deposi t r equrred
J 11 !fc

498 Locust Sl
Middlepor t , Ohio 1 2 1 M o

Blown
Insulation Services
mro Wails &amp; Att1cs.
STO,l!M

Blown

3 RM t ur n rshed apt . utr lrt 1es
pa i d 356 N ort h .tt h St ,
M iddl ep or t
J 30 6tc

Free Estimates
Phone: 949-5961
Emerg ency 949-2211 or
992 -5700
75

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

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

----- ------------- --- - - - - - ----Help Wanted

- ---

Gutters · Awnmg &amp;
Free Estimates

LARRY lAVENDER
Sy,racuse, Ohio -

3

10 75

Real Estate For Sale
BUY NOW &amp; SA VE LOW 1 low ,
do wn pa ym en ts, 8 pet rn
ter es t 30 yr f manc rng on new
hom es rn 3 Merg s C,o un ty
loc atrons or BUILD on your
lot Ph on e 992 597 6 or 99 2 5844
3 13 lfc
MA SON Now 3 bedroo m
home wtth a11l! Ched garage
M 1d 10s . good loca l ron PhOn e
(J OJ l 773 5468
4 1 6fC

-

-

tlnu,

Installed.

-------Em ptoym en! Wanted

guar•nteed .
Dozer, Backhoe, Trucks

Llmutone r. Fill Dirt
Commorciai-Rtsldtnilai

-

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

--- --· -- - -- -

_________ _

------ -

-·-

---~ ------ -

-- -- --

tME

....-

NEW LISTING - 2 bedroo m
h ou se w 1t h shower ba t h
Por ches and gar age w ith level

lot s•soo oo

/\

COMPANY
777 Pt1rl Street
Middleport. Ohio
Phone 992-5367 or 992-3U1

Gutt er s
Electr i cal
Servic e

-lOM E
Im pro ve m en t
and
Reparr Ser vic e - Anyt hrng
fi Kea aro un d t he horn e fr om
r oo f to basem en t You will
lrk e our w or k and r ates
Phone 742 S08 1
12 29 lf c
C BRADFO N 0 , Auctrone er
Com pl ete Se r v Ice
Phone 949 382 1or 949 3161
Ro!!clne, Ot'I IO
Crr tt Br ad fo rd
5 1 t fc

'

8 25-Ca pt Ka ngaroo 10
a 3()-M ISslon Impossibl e 6
9 DO-AM 3. Ph 1l Donahue 4, To Be Anno unced 8; Morn ing
w1th D J 13, Phil Donahue 15
9 25-Chuck Whtte Reports 10
9 30-Not For Women On ly 3. D1nah 6, Ga lloping Gourmet 8,
Death Va lley Days 10, New Zoo Revue 13
· 10 0()-Ce lebrlty Sweepstakes 3.4, 15; Joker's Wild 8,10. Dinah
13
10 J()-Wheel of Fortune 3. 4,15. Ga mbit 8,10
11 DO-H1gh Rollers 3, 4,15. One L1fe to' Live 6; Now You See II· '
8, 10; Elec Co 20
1l. 3()-Holly,wood Squar es 3,1 5, Brady Bun ch 6,13; News 4,
Love of L1fe 8, 10. Sesame St 20
·
11 55-Graha m Kerr 8; Dan Imel's Worl d 10

LOSER
(£1"

t. LOO ~ lilt&gt;,

!.Jo.AN WllO LA-reRS

WHitH 'lYFE WWXJ

10 HGR GIJEKY ~II.\,

T\.111) I&lt; ,., \OCMAil

1Heorn€R Kl~'?

PR!';~ ...

'

~lg~M® ~ l&lt;l•a"'t.J -J,.....

Plumbmg .
Repairs and
•
Call 992-3509 and
Save en your rtpalrs : 1lso
repair mowers, compressors
and outboards Bring it In
and sa ve

Unscramble these four Jumbl es,
one letter to each square, t o
form f our ordmary wo rd s.

ALLEY OOP
IF "TH ' lHOI(N KING IS
50 ANXIOUS TGI:T HIM·
SELF ANO"TriER 1i.UEN:. ,

,;J1-lEN I 1joliNK. WE
OUGHTA TAKE 'IM

--------------.
B OW ER S REP A IR

9 18·tf C
- 0.- -----------&amp; D TREE Tr rm mrn g, 20
•

•

yea r s

? •

e ~~: pen e nce

Insured ,

tree es trm a tes Call 99 2 3057

RACINE - Modern 3 bedroom
L ar ge bat h Nat ga s
F A furna ce . 7 la rge closet s

ho m e

- o:l 2 12tp
- - - -- --- --------Real Estate For Sale

w rth st or ag e ' shel ves Dr y
basemen t, gara9e w 1th shop
and large lot

BUSINESS - We

·HELP·

and locat 1ons w1 th bu1l dl ng s
Wor k f or you r self wr th no
layoffs

We are in great
properties to sell .
WE HA VE NEARLY 50 Strike while the iron is
PROP ERTIES FOR SALE
WH EN YOU REALLY WANT hot- Seii ·Today while
IT SO LD, TRY TEAFORD AT we have Cash Buyers.
992 3325.
All Cash for Your
Property.

CALL 992·2259
Buyers See Us For Your
Needs in Real Estate.
6 ~ OOM

house w 1th ba th , J
bedroo'm full basem ent , gas . - - - - - - - - - - - . ,
heat , h w floor . wa ll to wa ll
LET US DO IT!!
ca rp et Close to school In
Pom eroy Phone 992 30 97
3 9 52tc

--·-----~

-------

B EA UTIFU L new hO me on
lak e, 3 bedrooms bath &amp; 1 2.
carp eti ng, dra pes , brg den
Call 997 J493
3 24 tt c
3

BE DR OOM h ou se , full y
carp eted base ment , g ar age,
on cor ne r lot , fenced yard ,
fo rced a i r f ur n ace h eat
ou t s i de s t or aQe b uild ing ,
storm wi ndows, al um rnvm
sl dmg , 1 1 mrle eas t of M ason ,
on Rt JJ , Sl9,500 Phone (30.4 )
773 594 2
3 31 l i e:

-· -------------

For Sale

TURF TRIM
MOWER
20"-3Va HP

'72.90(KDI

__

22"-3'1• HP

Self-Propelled
1

104.95(KDl

Carpeting
501 NYLON

4

' '

'J

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

oto••oo• N.... I IM
... . ~ ih1 1 ~ ....... ~

Read me

what tt

about
holdtn'
ladLJ'S

S&amp;j

EX CAVATING , dozer , looder
and bac khoe work , septic
ta nks Ins talled . dump ~ru cks
and to boys for h ir e. wilt hau l
fll.l dirt. top soli , li mestone &amp;
gravel , Call Bob or Roger
~ effers , day p hone 992 7089 ,
night Phone 992 3525 or 99~

q love f

RufL.IS!

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

I&lt;UHL'S
UL
-,

THAT - Bi&lt;RR ·~ ­

Tuppers Plains, 0.

WIND-UP IS GIVING
,ME A - !&lt;OFF r!-

SPRING
SPECIALS

TERRIBL.c

CO!.t&gt; !1

G IVE UP!!-

';j.j-116,i&lt;(ETHEM
BACK TO
THE

U.SA. !!-

.A -HA' HA~ FINE:: COLJNTRY THEY'L L
THERE .' - I'L L QUADRLJPL-E
PRICECFOIU ' - THEIR
CARS Wil..L BE: S TL.JC I&lt; IN THE:
STREETS •r- THEY'LL BE ':,.--.1~~"";
F~ee=ZtNG

IN

THIC:II'i: HOMES rr-

2 pc. Living Room Suites,
"Scolchgard"
beeullful
floral materlela--lt•a.oo

CALL 741-4211
TALKT O WENDELL
!;RATE,
CARPET CONSULTANT

RUTLAND
FURNITURE
Rutland

"3 Graces ' 1 or "4 Cupids"

Table Lamps, choice of gold
or while, lt7 .so 11. or 134 set
30" foam Bynk Mat$17

tresses

Good .. lecllon Mexican
Imports: Bull Horns
Honglng Flower Pots 141
Hondpaintoa vuu l 1.1
slalu11 S12.
USED GOODS :
R1dlng Lawn Mowers I ISO up
Stvtrol Dining Rm . Suit~&amp;,
Including 1 6 pc. Duncon
Phyfo.

WELL.&lt; ATlEAO&gt;T
l}jA 1 PUTS UB

Yt!,lf' rd•y'•

C"--" ,..........'

Jumbl, , MOUNT BUSHY

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
DOWN
I Arnved
I 'Turandot"
5 Imitation
hero
gem
2 Greek
11 Expectant
marketplace
3 Upright
12 Pos1t10n ·
in ballet
4 Freudian
13 Monk
term
parrot
5 Tie the
14 Foregoing
knot
15 Macaw
6 Bootlicker
16 Invitation
7 Slower
(mus. )
17 Have debts
18 Error
8- Carlos
20 Miss F abray, Jobun
to some
9 Lindbergh,
21 "in the
movies
Buttermilk
Sky"
10 PlaCid
22 Bog
down
23 Hotbed
25 Debatable
26 Bowlmg
alley
27 Inlet
28 Statute
29 Preacher's
desk
33 Indian
weight
34 Wood
sorrel
35 Indo-Chinese 1-i;t-t--tnatlve
36 Split
38 Suggestion
38 Winged
40 Brink
41 Call 1t
a day
42 Lack

ALPACA

CAUGHT

8.DO-Sunshlne 3,4,15, Confessions of Dick Van Dyke 6, 13, Jhe
Waltons 8,10; Bill Moyers' Jo1urnal 20,33
8:30-Bob Crane 1!.4.15
,
9·DO-Mac Da vis J.J, t 5; Sireets of Sao an CISco 6,13, Movie " The
Roman Spring of Mrs Stone" 8, Mov1e " Early Summer " 20.
Mov ie " Countdown" 10; Pef1nsyi vania Dutch Jazz Fes t rv al

33.
10· DO-Lucas Tanner 3,4,15, Harry 0 6, 13, WomAn 33
10 3()-Horace Marsha ll 33
11 oo-News 3,4,6,8,10, 13,1 5,33.

, :3()-Johnny Carson 3,4,15, W1de Wor,ld Specia l 13, FBI 1&gt;,
Mov ie " The Crime Club" 8, M ov1e " Trapeze" 10, News 20,

Janak! 33
12 30-Wide World Spec1al 6

Your fi rst rea ct1on today IS to
vrew srt uatro ns negativ e ly
Remember, they may have a
brr ght srde as well

BALLGAME
AGAIN !

·.

Yesterday's Answer
16 Litlluanian 26 E~ Indian
19 Misplace
seaman
22 Castle
27 Draw back
protection
29 Romeo
23 Aircraft
30 Slur over
section
31 Scope
24 Beseech
32 lllusbious
25 Transparent 37 N.Z, trthe
mmeral
38 Biddy

'

.
I

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jon .
19} On an rm porta nt matter today don t sa'(j dJe yourself w1th
one who can 't carry her we1ght
She s a hand1cap you cant atlord

GEMINI (Moy 21-Juno 20)
Don t expec t ano ther to do
more fo r you than you r e W1 ll 1~9
to do rn retu rn If you want to
dance, you must pay the PIPer

CANCER (Juno 2t -July

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19!
The werghl on yo ur shoulder IS
the heavy han d of neg lec ted
responsrb1lrty React bu t don t
try to do what you ve left rrde all
at once

22)

Your att itude wri t determ ine the
kmd of respo nse you rece ive
from others today If you re
'sharp-tong ued or cranky expec t a repl y In kind

NORTH

.4

2

EAST

• 10 7 3

• J9

¥ 954
t 5
,j,KJ 97 65

¥ 102
t li.,Ql074
,j,Q 832

A6
KQ 8 63

98 63
A lO

I.
~·

Pass
Pass
Pass

P WR

L0R

u.

V WM D R

PHSJLL

• Yesterday's Cryptoquote: PONDER NOT WHAT YOU
MIGHT DO, BUT WHAT YOU SHOULD DO, AND LET
REGARD FOR DUTY CONTROL YOUR MIND.-CLAUDIAN

(0 187&amp; Kin1 F.. l\lrn Syndlcatc. lnc. l

r NE ~ S P A PI::ft ENTERP R I S~

Norlh

3•
4,j,
4 NT

5N T

Pass · 6 ¥
Pass

East

Soulh

Pass

2¥

Pass

3NT

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

4•
5¥

1¥

opened and some five m1lig1es
la ter South had played the
deuce from ,dummy East won
the tn ck led the su1t bark and
wa tched the slam go to nevernever land

Most of the t1me we tell people tha t you ca n fllld sym!'B tlly
m the dJ ctwnary somewhere
betwee n stup1d1t v a nd un-

consciousness. but this tim e we
do sympathize With poor South
·He ha d no sound reason to expect a slllgleton diamond lead
and had he played the d1 amond
ace the hand would have
collapsed aga mst a four-one
spade break ThiS way, 1f East
had to Will the (liCk with the
.klllg or quee n he would no t have
been ab le \o lead the SUit back
and So uth could then have
handled a 4-1 spade break

tz:e: I:~ ~~MtZD
The b1ddmg has been

6.

I.

Pa ss
West

North

East

Pa~s

l NT

Pass

Opemng lead - 5 t

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Here 1s a hand from the recent World ' s cham pwnshtp ,
where the unfortunate decla rer
mtght well hll the roll of the
Unlucky Expert.
The btddmg IS mtereshng
though not very mstruct1ve A
look over the cards will show
that North a nd South can
coll ec t 13 easy tri c ks a t
notrurrip . spades or hearts Of
course, a four-one spade break
would ruin all grand slams but
m this r ase we;ean see that the
s~ades are gomg to behave
mcely
Anyway , South found himself
m a conservative six-heart contract The f1ve 'of d1amonds was

Pass

2t
2.
3t
You, South hold
•K Q965 ¥ A2 t K4 3 . Q8 7
Wha t do vou do nOw?
A - We favor a pass with three ..
spaJies a pour seC'ond choice You
opened a m1mmum and 1hould not
bad agairt.J

'

I

TODAY 'S QUESTION
In s tead o f r esp on d1 ng o ne
notrump your partner has ra tsed
ynu lo two spades What do you do

oow"'

sewing machines For se wing
str etch f abrics, buttonhol es ..
fan c y d esig n s, el c Fl aln t
!lig ht ly ble mi Sh ed Choice of
carrying case or sewing
stand . St1,9 80 cas~ or t erms
available P'hon e 992,7155

!NEWSPA PER Ellri'TEftPRISB ASSN l

•i'

'&gt;

.
..
-•
'
•

"
"'

•
•' •

'

·~

-

. . . -~

"" ...

1

"'

12 18trc

I

Sand $1 for JA COBY MODERN •••
book to " Wm at Brldf/6 ," fclo !his •
newspaper), P 0 Box 489, Radio _,•
•C1ty Srat1on. New York, N Y 10019,

·•.•

CLO SE OUT on new ZIQ Zog

"
·

·1
Ans wer Tomorrow

THIS IS tNf

---

2

Sout h

Ft.\I!RtTE !'LACE

3 30 71p

ASSN I

Losing play gets sympathy

We st

WPLORW

Rewards that ha\/e been slow
1n comrng to you wr ll be rea ped
th rs ye ar Natu re may seem t ardy rn act1ng bu t she II deliver
as promrsed

WIN AT BRIDGE

North South vulnera bl e

RQVRWMRTSR

Apr~t l , 1975

LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct, 23)

SOUTII IDI

LOPT

20)

··~

Somet hmg you've prom rsed
has qeen negl ected To d ay

.
¥
•
,j,

'

(Ftb. 20-March

PI~CES

Don't let yourself be pressured
rn to dorng thrngs aga rnst your
better JUdgment Wh en you
No ' mean 1t

unpleasant sac ral expen ence
can be a\/orded today If you eKe us e yo ur se lf fr o m the
presence of one With whom
you ve had angry word s

WEST

D J WR

RKISPLJWF. - POJF

•

You're likely to waste much
t1me today try ing to Ux blame
fo r a blu nder It's far w1ser to
rust correct th e mrstake

•K Q 8 542
¥A J 7
t AJ 2

CRYPTOQUOTE
JUFRWNPLMJT

'

TAURUS (April 20-Moy 20)

VIRGO (Aug, 23-Sopl. 22) An

One letter stmply stands for another. In thiS sample A Is
used lor tlle three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
•!'ostrophes, the length and format!on of the words are all
hli!ts. Each day the code letters are ddferent.

V R WF J T F ,

21) So meone already rn debted
to you writ try to tap you agarn rf
he thrn ks he can get away w1 t h
rl If you g1ve rn don 1 cry abou t
11 later

LEO (Juty 23-Aug. 22) You

AXYDLBAAXR
lo LONGFELLOW

UJJAF ,

SAGITTARIUS (Nov 23-Doc.

Ing pressure to ach 1eve resu lts
Will not be el!ect1ve to day Be
tactful - you'll cat~h more fhes
w1th honey th an vmeg ar

d on ' t · r ea d1 ly ta ke to
suggestions today You fear
others are dlctatrn g rat her th an
tryr ng to help

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's !tow to work it:

L 0 P T.

L::.:..-,_~,-----,--~

rn rI I xJ

Anaw.- r: / t'H lfal d t o hr111Q adum lu a haiJ -' STOP"

BACK IN/}j E

"AI Caullon Light, Rt, 7"
Tuppon Pllina, Ohio
Ph,Rno U7·:1151
OI'ENWED. THRU

FOR O Trac fo r wrth s id e
m owe r . ru ns good and good
ru b ber 59 50 985·3594
3 3D 7tp
-·- -·-·-----·-~~---·TWO 12 rn plo ws 3 pt t'l l tct'l ,
S185 Aiso ,2 14r n. P, IOVfS,3 pt
hitc h S200 Phone 985 3594
~-"

k'tnd
of a
muff? ol' 1

a

5232

PhOne 992. -2: 111

- -

What 's

be a tdtot, bol! !
Ldtll.l~ han's ts t h' same
now as t he!.!
alwaLJs wu• '

han's,

POMEROY lANDMARK ,

- - --

~•

Reg $69.95-Now 149.95,

We ha ve hundreds of CiU pet
val ues Your l ob can be
com pleted in 1 to 2 week s No
long w allin g period Our
Install er ha s 28 yea rs ex
-per i en ce
E x p er t
In
srallat lon You' ll like wha t
you g et

to

~\1e~

ser vice , a ll m a kes, 992 2284
The Fa br ic Sho p, Flomero y ,
A uth or ized Singer Sales and
Ser v rce We sha r pen Sc iss ors
3 29 lfc

9',. _Jack W. C_,sty , Mer
~

Tl\IS lOW't-4 OUG HT TO BE
MIGHTl' GRATHULTo HEI? -

--------------.
SEWI N G M AC H INE , Repa ir s,

BARGAIN
CENTER

t

,. ,. .- ~ • I

C lf~CU~ ATI ON FOR GOOD-

I'S, SHe' S GlAD· SME
W~ -3 AWFUL BRAVE -

Herculon or vinyl Recliners,

9!uare
Yard
RUBBER BACK

742-421 t

l~E GUV5 OU T OF

BET, WHEREVER: GINGeR.

R E A DY MIX CclNCR Et E" a e·
li v ered r ig ht to yo ur pr olect
Fa s t
an d
eas y
Fre e
estlm at es P' ho ne?- 99 2 328'41
Goegte m Re ady M rK Co ,
M idd l epor t Oh io
I 30 1f t

.........

severa l

h av~

COMIM'
TO 'EM FOR YE'ARS- I'LL.

C.El THEY'V E H~D

E'!IAD G UY5.

L-...:.:,.=·..=IMISI==AHSWIII
= Iten
::..:.__j'

~l f. 'D li i"IVE BE EN IYi ll iN '
ro Gl'l'f. HfR LI FE To N T

'tES, SIFi! - WHAT THE'f11L.

WH E: FI:E: I HEY 3AFI:

Now UTanp the circled lettora
form the 1urprlae an~wer, u
~=~~==~~===::::::::::..:•:•~~~lelttd by the above cartoon.

ANNIE-SAC~IFICE

------- -:- - -

on Shade Ra ver $6,000

Right 8. Consumer Survi val Kit 20. Wi ld Kingdom 10; To
Tell the Truth 13 , Amer1can Ou1doot-sman 15

F01 Thultdty, A~rll 3, 1975
ARIES (M•c~ 21-Aprll 19) Us-

KJ I I
I y I x'J
ARNIT'

1478

30 ACRES - In th e boon dock s

7 30-Hollywood Squares 3, 4, Ohio Lotter y 6. New Pri ce i s

SCORPIO (Oct. 24- Nov. 22)

IPREIJF I

3-25-1mo

12 ' "" lfc

5·DO-FBI 3; Andy Griff ith a, Mister Rogers Ne ighborh.OOd
20,33, Ironside 13
5·3()-News 6, Beverly H! llbi llles a. Hodgepodge Lodge 20, Get
Smart 1S; Elee Co 33.
6' DO-News 3,4,8,10,13, 15, AB C News 6; Elec Co 20, Teach1ng
Children with Special Needs 33
6·3()-NBC News 3,4, 15; BC News 13 , Bew1lche d 6, CBS News
8,\0, Zoom 20. M.U Report 33
1 oo-Truth or Cons 3,4, Bowl1 ng for Dollars 6 Wha t's My L1ne
8, News 10 , L et ' s Make a Dea l 13 , J rmm y Dean 15; Lock
Stock &amp; Barret 20; Nova 33

1 ·00--Tomorrow 3,4, Pilot Fil m 8 , News 13 '

I
I I [J

Building Homes

and 3 mce b ulld mg lots Onl y
$9,500 OQ

Future is Now 20
4 oo-Mr Car toon 3, I Dr eam of Jeanni e 4, Som erset 15,

ALVIA

We Sp e_cialize In

NEWLISTING - 2 houses and
a tra l ler One house rs re nte d

3 3D-One Lite to L1 ve 13. Luch Show 6, Match Garfle B, 10,, Your

you II be pressured to get the
JOb done by vrct1ms of your
procrast1 natron

949-3104

DOf"ER: work , land clearing by
the acre , hou rl y or contra ct
F arm pond s, ro ads , et c
Large dozer an d operetor
w i th ove r 20 years u .
per renc e Pullins E ~~: ca v etl n g ,
Pomero y , Oh io Phone 99 2

3 oo--Another Wor ld 3,4, 15, General Hosp1tar 6, 13, Pnce 1s
.,Right 8,10: Li lias Yoga &amp; You 10

ONE !

I
NEIGLER
BUILDERS SUPPLY

,,

..

8 lG-Your Fu tur e Is Now 20
Rl'l~llll

•

Racine , 0

.

1'DO-Today 3,4,15, A M Amert ca 13. ,6, CB S News 8,10
8 0()-Lasste 6, Capt. Kangaroo 8; Popeye 10, Sesame St. 33

Rolrlgorallon - Rool Repairs

Coo tv ril e, ( 1l ~67 304 1

------tr-----~

~ -"""·-

• School Scene 10, Pat terns for ltvl ng 13

6 · 45-Morning Reporl 3, Farmt ime 10

T omorrow 8, 10

12 45-E iec Co 33.
12 5.1T-NBC Nev.: s 3,15
1 DO-News 3; All My Ch ildren 6,13, Phi l Donahue 8; Young &amp;
the Restless 10, Not For Women On ly 15
1 3()-How to Survive a Marnag e 3,4, 15, Let's Make a Deal 6, 13,
. As "lhe Wor ld Tur ns 8,l0
·2 DO-Days of Our Lives 3,4,15, $10,000 Pyram1d 6.1 3, Guldtng
Light 8,1 0
'
2 3()-Docto rs 3, 4, 15, . B1g Showdown 6,13, Edge of Ni ght 8,10

Bonanza 15.

6 35- Columbus Today 4

J08 Pege , MIDdleport
I··Heal rng
Coot1ng

.

992 734 9

- ----

---

THURSDA Y."APRIL 3, 1975

6 125-Farm Repor t-.1 3

p.J
Home Maintenance

Work

"'S CPT IC
T A N K S cl eaned
Mo dern Sen It at ron , 992 3954 or

------

- --- - ---- -

... \o ,.

•

1

News 8, 10.

12 3()- Biank Check 3,15, Split Secohd 1,1 3, Sear ch .tor

Gilligan 's Is 6: Tattletales 8, Sesam e St 20,33: Movie
" Buffalo Bill" 10; Mtke Douglas 13
4·30-Bewltched 3; Merv Griff in 4: Mod Squad 61 Luch Show 8:

6 30-Fi ve M mut es to Live . By 4, News 6, Bi b le Answe rs 8,

Radio s, Antenna s. Towers,
Use D T.V 's Bu y from the
" Ind ian " ana uve " Wam
Pum ''. we buy uaed Radios
and Tow ers A 1d ro• repaired
by FCC llcen.rd service
oersonn el . Stop 1nd see lhe
,-,lndran" and Bubble! ·
Monitor Channel 10 and 20 .

-- Sweepers t oasters , rron s
all smal l appl ian ces Lawn
mowers nelC t to State High
way Garage on ~out e 1
Phone 98S 382S
31 1 26t c

-- --

~. •

1 hn- Tn mnr,..ow 3,4, New.s 13

o.

EL WOOD

-------- ---

- - --

12 3()-Wide World Spec1al 6.

308 Page St.
Middleport, 992-3509

Water, Eledrlc, 011, :.ewer

Ph. 992-3993

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

-- -

- -'

11 30-Johnny Carson 31 4, 15, W1 de Worl d Spectal 13, FB I 6,
M ov 1e " Cor ky " 8, Mov te " A Kmg of Lovmg" 10; Your
F ut ure rs Now 20, Janaki 33

CB SALES &amp; PARTS

hea ting service ana
general sheet metal
works.
Free
Estimates.
Phone 949-5961
Emergency 992-3995
or 992-5700

OK EXCAVATING
U"'

For Sale

- ----------

- _____

AI War 33
11 0()-News 3,4.6,8,10, 13,15,20, ABC News 33

INDIAN JOE'S

RACINE PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING
tomplete plumbing

Construction &amp; Remodel

ALUMINUM
S1ding- Sofhtl

J and 4 RO OM fu rn rshed ah d

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

.
Mobile Homes For Sale

CAPJ'AIN EASY
THE J EWHED
JOY- BOY AND
FLOWERING
LOV E· LOTU ~.
G!J R, U MAHA·
1;1'11\MI SA&amp;Oo,
APPEAl'!? ON·
~TA aiE TO Hl5
ADORtr.JG

Wan!P.II To Buy

---------

Pets For Sale

9 00- Pet r ocellr 3,4, l S, Cannon 8, 10 , Mas.t er p rece The atre 33.
10 OQ-Movrn ' On 3,4, 15, Baretta 6, 13, M an hun ter 8.10, Fa mil y

~OLLOWI?t&lt;:? !

4-2-75

HEI,L

Windows &amp; Doors

F URN I SHED
a pa r tm ent.
ad ult s on l y rn M tdd lepo rt
Phon e 99 2 3874
3 25 ffc

PR'IVATE meetm g r oom for
any organ i zat ion , phone 99 2
RALLYING the Gaulllst
3975
WA NT~O old upr rgh t pia nos
3 11 tf c
fa ithful, · Michel Jobert,
an y condrt lon Pay rng SIO
each
Fr
r
sl
fl
oo
r
only
Wrr
te
forme r for eign minist er
AUC T ION , T hur sda y n rght. 7
and g rve d rr ec t rons to Witt en fRAI L E R SPA CE , ~ . m11 t:
p m
a t Mason A uc r ro n ,
nor th of Me igs H1g h School on
under the la$f ' President
P rano Co , Bo x 18 8 Sard rs
Horton St In Mason w Va
old Rt 33 Phon e 992 29 41
O~r o JJ946
Pompldou, has created a
Co ns l gnm ent s welcome
1 23 tf c
4 2 6tp
Ph one 1304) 773 547 1
ne" politic al party for
1
D UP LE X, 138 J Walnut St
2 2 tfc
nationalist - minded French.
~~----M rdd l eport Ohro Phone 992
STA NDING trm bers Con tac t
2780 or 99 2 3432
Jobert, noted for his sharp
NO W sell in g Fu l ler Br ush
Po m er oy Forr'est Produ cts
2 19 tf c
Produ
c
ts
.
p
hone
992
Jo:I
JO·
P 0 Bo1&lt; 726 Pom er oy Oh ro
cri tic is m of th e United
1 2.:1 rtc
Phone 99 2 596 5
L UU N r ~v lv •v u• c hom t r drk ,
States: has never run In any
J 30 12tc
Rt JJ . ten mr les north of
P U BLI C S ~l OO t , M ergs Muzz l e
public election.
L ar ge lot s wrth
Pome
roy
Lo ader s. t zaak Wa lt on Farm
con cr et e patr os
sidewal ks,
Cheste r A pril 5, 1 30 p m
ru n n ers a nd off
stre et
OLD fur nrtu r e, lee bo ~~:es bi'as s
Apr il 6 rain date
p ar~ rn g
PDon e 992 7479
beds , or complet e househo lds
12 31 tfc
Wrr te M 0 M rl ler , Rt 4,
3 3 I Sic
Pomero y , Oh ro Cal l 99 2 7760
10 7 74
A S OF Ap r rJ I, 1975 ,. Th e
Syr a c u se Ho me Utrll!les
Compa n y w rl l b e co!lect rng WAN TED Old upr igh t ~ l an es
!herr ga s br tls ar t he forme r
any ,cond rl ton Payi ng SlO R ED UC E sa f e and fast w rt h
0
off rce rn Syracuse
GoBese Tabl ets and E Vap
each " Prrs t f loor onl y Wr rt e
· wat er p il ls," Nelson Drug
and Q•ve direc tions to W1tten
J I l Otc
Ray Rodeheaver of Guysville
- - - - - --- L - - -- - 4 2 ltp
Pran o Co , Box 188, Sa r drs .
and Anna Thompson of Fros t GR A ND op en m g Ap r il I of D &amp; J
Oh ro' 439 46
Fabr rc Shop , 1 m rl e be low
3 27 l ip R IO IN6 mow er . 8 hp Br rgg s &amp;
spent Easter Sunday with Kate
M rddl epo r t on Ro ut e 7
STratton Eng rne 36 1nch cut.
Honacher and Freddie , and
r ecorl start . lrl\ e new -Pr rcc
Specr a l polyes t er do u bl e
J UNK autos , comple te and
kn rts Sl 39 yd
S400 Call 992 733 1
atte nded worshtp serv1ces at
del ivered to our yard We pi ck
4 2 2fp
o:1 1 l tc
up ' uto bod ies an d bu y all
the c hurc h here Sunda y
kinds
of
sc
rap
meta
l
s
and
Y ar d Sat e
morning.
rron Rrder 's Sal\/ag e, St ~~ MO DE~ N ster eo ra d10 am fm ,
w il l b e a g l! r ag e sa le at
separ ate co nt rols o:1 sp ea ker ·
124, Rt 4, Pomeroy, Ot\r o.
Mr, a nd Mr s Clar ence THERE
Euge n e Frnk ' S r es rd ence
soun d
sy stem
Ba l an ce
Call
992
5418
beh rnd Rutl an d Gr ad e Sc hool
Henderson spent Easter wi th
$103 58 or t er m s Ca ll 992 3965
1017
tfc
Ap r rl 4 and S Fe w Av on
3 31 tt c
Mr . and Mrs. Lee Henderson m
bell ies an d antrq ues . Odds an d CA SH pa1d for all m akes and
ends
Athens.
model s of m ob i le ho me s 10 H P SE A R S tr actor 46 rn
4 1 Jtc
Phon e. ar ea c:o de 614 423 9531
Dmsmore Boyles of Tuppers ---- --mowe r , diSC , 8 rn turn 1ng
4 13 tf c
.p
low an d snow blade Phone
Plai ns, formerly from Alfred, RE V I VA L st art ing Aprrl 7 at
Charl es R Har r rs, 843 269 3
Mo
rg
an
Ce
nter
Wesle
ya
n
lS cri tically 111 in Camden4 1 3t c
Chur ch , J JO each even rn g
Clark Hosp11&lt;ll
•The Rev Ea r l Orler spea ker'
15 F T F IB E RG L A SS boat 50
0 H Car t. pas tor , rnv ltes the
Mr a nd Mrs . Gerald Swartz
EO N E
to
c ondu ct
h p Mercu r y motor , tr ar ler
pub lrc to attend Ev ery one SOM
telep hone sur\/ey rn their own
and family of Mane tl&lt;l v1s1ted
and skrr ng eq ur pm ent E x
wel come •
home Mu st hav e prr vat e l rne
cellenl cond rl 10n $900 Phone
4 2 Stc
his paren ts , Mr . and Mrs.
Hou r s from 5 9, phon e or
days , 992 2689 or ev enrn gs 992
w
r
rte
G
all
rp
o
i
1
S
Busi
n
ess
2941
Hobart Swar tz , Easter Sunday. COO N HU NTE R'S m eetrn g ,
Colle
ge
,
P
0
Bo
x
7o:l9
Ph
one
4 1 6tc
Frr d ay eve n in g , A pr rl 4
Mr. and Mrs Clatr Woode
446
43
67
aft
er
2
p
m
on
l
y
- - - --Snow ball H rl l Refr eshmen ts
4 2 2tc 1977 K AWA SAK I mot or cy cle
and Conm of Circleville, 0.
served
7.50 CC , 2,200 m rles, lr ke new
4 2 3tc SOMEONE to sta y wlth eld er l y
spen t Satw·day afternoon and
cond1 t ron Srssy ba r M d J
- man w eekday s Wrr te to Box
evening with his parents, Mr. SWEEPER &amp; Se w ing M ach ine$
lugga ge ra ck, 2 hel me ts, must
729 0 , co The Da ll y Sen ti nel,
se ll Phone 985 413 1
Repa
ir
,
Parts
,
and
Suppli
es
,
and Mrs. Charles D. Woode and
Pomeroy
Ohro
4 1 Si c
o _, v1s Vacu um Cleaner , ~ ~
4 2 6t p
Sunday and Sunday evening
m rle up Geo rg e's Creek Roa d
ONE 10x20 t ~r e , nm and lube,
off Stat e R t 7 Phone 446 029.1
w1th her parents, Mr and Mrs.
c omp l et e , S25 r ea d y for
o:l 7 ltp D R A FTS MA N
wante d
truck Phone 992 7429
Robert White, ISeno and Mr - - --Pref erab l y wr th tr ack wor k
4 1 3tc
eKpenen • e Send resum e ro
and Mrs . W1lham Carr and SHOOT. l N G Mat ch , Rac rne Gun
~ - - - - - --------Cl ub, Sund ay, A pri l 6. 1 p m
P 0 Box 1S2 Pomeroy , Oh ro
daughters , here.
10F T A L UM I N UM boat , 7 h p
Equ a l
Oppo rt un rt y
em
oil 2 4tp
Esk a m otor , A I con drtron 2
pla ye rs
Mrs Iris Carr Is not so well
new lr fe 1ackets , used oa r s
3
30
71
c
a t this wn tmg, at her home
sa le o r tr a de for good
- - - -- - -----~barg a rn Phon e 992 7429
here
PO ODLE gro om 1ng $5wl th bo!! lh
4 1 31c
Mr and Mrs . Charles D
--- --. --~ -- S6 Appo in tm en t not o!llway s
necessary Hou r s 9 t o 9 ex cept WAN T pe rt or f ull t im e w ork as CA P we d ges an d t ra rl er
Woode attended rev1val serwedges An y am ount Phone
su nd a y
Poo d l e
pup
rece pt 1on lst or cl er k t yp1 st.
7d2 3743
vices a t the Chester Nazarene
a va il abl e Oua l rt y prr ced We
el&lt;per rence d on IBM Key
we l com e yo ur busrnesf! Ca ll
J1 1 6tc
Pun ch, and off ice procedu re
Church Friday evemng.
Coo l vi ll e, 667 39 15
Phon e 99 2 S171
Mr . and Mrs Lloyd Brooks
4 2 3tc:
4 2 31P GRO CERY bu s1ness for sa le
- --- - - home was the scene of a family
Bui ld ing tor sate or lease
SEEK IN G e m ployment , a p
Phon
e 173 5618 fro m 8 30 p , m
'
get-toge ther of about 20 on
prox 18 yr s experience rn
to 10 p m for appo intmen t
nursi ng se r v ice rn St ate In
Easter Sunday.
3 10 lfc
st1 tut1on s or wil l ta ke an y ----~- - -- -- --- 10K50 M OB I LE hom e, QOO d
t ype of comm on la bor Pho ne 197 1 FO RD t r uck 1 ~ ton , m oc ed
condr tlon S2, 150 2.50 gall on
992 7273
cat tl e water ing ta nk , $2.5 30
hay Phone 992 3436 or 992.
4 2 3t p
r&gt; .:~ " c; nf l 1m e Ph on e 992 7330
52 48
A gallon of nectar can provide
-4 1 6t c
3 JO Stc:
enough energy for a bee to
B A In Spanish ( Bilingu al I and
- - -- off
rce
wor
k
,
f
ll
rng
,
general
cruise lour million m1I~s at ~ E LL you r mob ile I'IO rne tor
lJSE O par a , F r ye 's Tru ck and
et c Phone 992 7H 6
cash 1.5 hOmes want ed , 19.58
seven m ph
Auto Part s, Rufla nd . Ohro
o:l 2 Jt p
thru 1972 mod els Ph one {614)
Pt'lon e ( 6loil l 742 6094
.446 1425, Gal ll polll .
T
YPING
,
genera
l
off
ice
work
1 22 7atp
....._
3 9 78tc
No sho r thand Wil l ing t o --- --- ~-- -----\
app l y m ys~ lt to my wor k ST ANL E Y l?1v ... .. ... . .. tv• .. u,~
MO BI L E hom e, 1911 6.5 11: 12
diligentl y Re fer ence s Phon e
Ph one 142 3762
K rn g 2 bed roo m Phone 992
Fl earl A Scott , 99 2 595 7
'
3 9 26t c
5oil 96 .
•
'
4 2 Jtp - - ---- - - - - - - - - - - 3 28 6tc
--- ------- - - ------ - -~I WILL 00 bookke eping In m y INDI A N Joe s Sport ing Goods ,
bu y and sell Qun s am m o,
NOTICE
hom e or yo ur busi ness Ca ll
fi shin g equ ipm ent. an d aft er
Not ice Is her eby g iv en tha t
Su san Pu l lin s, 992 73 16
Apr i l 1 w e wi ll M ve fis h ba ll
t h e und er s igned lnhnd l to
4 2 l ip
Stop by at 308 Pa ge St ,
m ake applicat ion to ttl &amp; Probate
M iddl eport , Phone 992 3509
Cou rt of M eigs Col,lnty , Ohio , for _E :XPE R I E N C ED , secr et a r y
(
an or'de r to ch ang e her nam e to
se e k i ng
em p l o y m e nt
__ _....._ 3 2 301
_,
Paul ine L a vonne Dartt
Capab ilit ies
t yping , shor t
Sa id appl icat ion w ill be by
hand ab ili ty t o work w i th 24.000 STU General El ectric a ~r
pet lt ron to be f lied In nl d
f igures. and fl ll no Phone 992
c ondi tion er , •not a ye ar OlD
Phon e 992 2952
Prob at e Coun . on or i ller th t
H 5J fQr res um e
Jrd day of M e v 19 75
4 2 31p
3 26 lfc
Da ted th is 31st de y of March
- -·---·----1975
TRE E Tnm mlng an d remove !
J SE O cemen t and Cind er block
Hou se end r oof pa int ing , all
for Sllle Phone }4 2 3743
P a ulin e Ferr en
work
g ua ra nt eed
Free
4 1 61 C
est ima t es Phone 992 5278
l4l 2 li e
&lt; 2 liR P OT ATQ E 5 br ing . ~w';;fc~Q '
talner . S4 f or lOOi b A lso . 1966
W I LL do l a nllor w on. 01 " r ord van bus for sal e or trad e
NOTIC E TO BIOOERS
pa! nt rng Phone 992 2262
tor m oto rcyc l e Ph on e 98 5
The E astern L o c~ l Bo.nrd or
3fl ,t9
3 30 lie
Edu ca t ro n , will r.ecef ve bids .
4 1 6t (l
until 12 o · c~Jock Noon , Apl' ll 10, ·P A Rr T
bo Ok k-e-;,pi~·g ,
.
:
.
1975, at the ir otr iet to cattd In
t l e•a bl e hour s 1·or 2 days a
19 7 1 6'10 TR IUM PH
good
theE o!i ternHigt'I ,School , for ont
week or even ings ,l eK
con d •lron Ph one 992 rOS4 ar
sc hool bus cha 1111. 1u l t1bl l for
p er le n ced , elCcel l en t lifca l
99, ;OAI
a 66 SChPOI bus bod v. Jnd one 66
r e fe r en ce Phon e 99 2 709 0
•
4 I Ole
passcnvtr school but body.
Sptclflcetlon s and b l~ form s
ev enings
3 30 8tc 150 •HO N DA motor cy cle lor
~r e 1\/llllblt
I I f hl Clt l'k 'I
~ ~~ ~ ~ Phone 74 2 4294
offi ce 1t fh e E ast ern Hig h
4 1 5tc
School , Rt \ Reed sv ill e, Ohio REMODE LIN G, plumbi ng,
heat m g, and all typ es of
4!)712 F'hon(! 6l.t 985 4792
gene r al
r epa i r
Work t&lt; E l rOOD 1\ f.l ii.MA Srde by
g u ara ntee d 20 years ex
sr d e r c frrq ou • tor f r e('zc r
C 0 NC'w land ,
per lence Phon e 99 2 2409
Phone 9\1 ? '}')) 7 il fl r r 5 30 p m
( I (Irk
fJJ 19, 26 ( 41 2, Jt c:
J 11 ti c
-' I :H'p

- ·----- - - -

SALES &amp; SERVICE

unt urnr S; hed
ap ar t m ent s
Phon e 992 5434
4 12 tt c

3 30 12tc

""tOR

WILKINSON ,
SMALL EN_G_INE

197.5 MONTE Carlo. 4,000 m it es T WO bedroom trail er Adu lt s
on l y Phon e 992 39 75 or 992
all po we r . a rr A M st ere o
157 1
tape Ca ll 992 7036 after 5 p m
J 23 tf c
3 5 tf c

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

.i

general sheet meta' work .

21

8 JQ-M ovre " Dead Man on the Run " 13, Mov te " The Ball ad of

Andy Crocker" 6, To Be Announced 3,3

healing, roofing, •pouting ,

Home Building
Room Additions
and Garages

T ony Orla ndo &amp; Dawn 8, 10, F eelrng Good 33. Thea ter rn
Am er ica 20

'

Air conditioning , plumbing ,

Ph. 985-4102

PomeroY1t

6" Wdburn Brothers 8, The Judge 10, To Tell the Truth \3 ,
Book Bea t 20, EpiSode Action 33

6 OO-Sunri se.... Sem1nar 4, Sun nse Se m es ter 10

1974 CA t-'~ I V 6 engr ne, st eel
be lted re d lo!I IS. decor gr oup
el&lt;celle nt con d it ion 2S to 1B TR Ail:._~R apa r tm e.nts_IOJ rJ•.." t
Phon e 99 2 52 48
m p g Call 992 .5170 aft er 5
3 30 61C
Rm
3 JO 7t c
B~D~OOM mobrle hom e
z J was
her and dr yer , 11 , bath s
1973 CJS Je ep , lJ ,OOO mr les Lrke
ut
rl
rlr
es pa 1d S4 2 .50 w ee k JOB
n ew SJ 000 Phon e 949 S 182
Page St M i dd lep or t. Ohio
4 J Jtc
3 4 ti c
-,

DOG S FO R ADO P T IO N On e

Alfred Social Notes
Sun day School at tendance on
jllarch 30 was 53, the offenng
$27 90 Several til people were
remembered w1th cards The
teachers treated the1r classes.
An Easter egg hunt was held m
the church basement after
Sunday School for the children
Worship services were held
at II With the Rev Meece
leadmg and Glen Smnett, lay
speaker from Rockland U. M.
Church , speakmg on "The
Risen Lord and Wha t He
Means to us." Attendance was
20, offe rmg $21.56, pledges $5
Ea s ter Su nn se Servi ces
were )leld at 6:30a .m., wttll the
young people puttmg on the
program w1th Don s D1lhnger
and Ruth Br ooks m charge.
Attendance was ~0 Breakfast
foll owe d in the church
basement wi th 46 attendmg. (A
potted Ea ste r lily was
presented to a shut-m , after all
serv ices were over.)
Easter-lime guests of Mr.
and Mrs Vere Swar tz were
their son, Mr and Mrs
Rtchard" Swartz, sons, Rtcky
and Randy of Ravenna, 0 ; Mr.
and Mrs . Elmer Bibbee and
Dorset, local; Ar thur Atherton
and Millard Swartz, local, and
Gene Bailey and son of Success, 0 ., and r ecently
ca llin g we re Mr . and
Mrs. Waid Swar tz of Athens.
Easter Sunday guests of
Clara F oll r od an d Nwa
Robinson were Mr and Mrs
B1ll Follrod and Sue Ann of
Atllens: Mr. and Mrs Pete
Follrod, Stephen and Kathy,
' local ; and Mr and Mrs Gerald
Swartz and fam1!y of Manetta ,

"""' J I

SMITH N.ELSON
MQTOR_S. INC.

4 BEDROOM house w all to w all
ca r pe tm g , a c, fen ced rn ya rd
Wr f h pat 10 nr ce Ph one 992
27 80 or 992 34 32
3 19 1t c

1 WOUL D !I k e to the nk f r iend s
~.-nif'nel~fffb ~.'.if'!l' " ~ hel ped In

country,s

Point Pleasant Market
March 29, 1975
SLAUG HTER COWS
Commemal (Fat ) 21.60,
Ut1h ty 18 60 ; Canner &amp; Cutter
17 10-18.
VEAL- Choice &amp; Pn me 190225 lbs. 50 2~ ; 226-265 lhs 45
YEA RLING HEIFERS GOQd &amp; Ch01ce 50~00 Jbs.
27.50.
BULL CALVES - Good &amp;
Cho1ce b) Head 117 , 50~00 lbs
25.25.
HEIFER CALVES ''• Good &amp;
Cho1ce By Head 77 ; By Head
80; 400-550 lbs 21-24
BABY CALV ES (BY HEAD)
- Beef 51 ; Hoi &amp; Brown Sw1ss
13-35
HOGS- U S 1-3, 190-240 lbs
39 60 , U. S. 2-4, 240-260 lbs
39.50, Sows, U S 1-3, 300-400
lbs 33-35: Boars 360-600 lbs
25.50-26c;O ; Pigs (By Head ) 2040 lbs. 15-18, 4~ 0 lbs 18-20: ~0
lbs. + 20-24

I

12·DO-Jackpot 3,15, Password 6, 13. Bob Braun's 50-SO Cl..b 4;

7 JQ-.... Pollce Surgeon '3, Nam e That Tune 4, Let 's Make a Deal

RACINE P.LUMBING
&amp; HEATING

-

4 2 Jt c

P EN TAGON
military
e&gt; perts a re hinting that
Prime Minister Kukrlt
Pramoj of Thailand may not
th at

\,...

•

WEDNE-SDAY, APJii L2, 1975
"

HElL

Bissell' Brothers ·

Bulldozer Radiator to the
smal lest Hea ter Cd re
Nathan Btggs
Radiator Speciall •t

11 "-e new \35
p e r w ee k , ut rl rt res p ard
Phone 992 3 3 2·1
.:l 2 11c

long er take or ders for

.I-

Television-log for easy viewing ·

.B 00-Ldtle Hou se on the Pr atn e 3,4, 15, Tha t 's M y Mam a 6, 13,

'

From the largest l'ruck or

For Rent

c$k es Joa n Tuttl e

enforce

Sarvke

l ~ K5 2 1R I\ I L E R

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

--

;·

V. V. JOHNSON
AND SON, INC.

Suburban 3-sea t . V 8 engi ne. au toma t ic transmi ss ion,
po wer stee ring , po we r bra kes, fact ory air condlt lori lng .
luggage ra ck , green f inish , rad io, li ke new whi te wt'lll
tir es

4, and S. on e mile off Rt 7
on Rt 143 Hyse l l ' s Phon e 992

Sa les

E«PERIENCED
Radlato '

I

..

't"--:::=-=-:::-::::-:=-::-=:::-:::---"1

1

Charle s LIS le , Syroc use .

1973 PLYMOUTH STA. WAGON

sale , T h u rs day .
F r 1di'I V an d Saturday , A p ril 3 -

.

On a lumJn um r eplacement

GM..Qiv is lon car, ai r cond ltlon rng 350 V 8, power stee ring ,
dark grey f in ish, r adio

Yard Sa les
C A RPOR T

no

FREE
ESTIMATES

' S41f 5- ,

197~ CHEVELLE MAL IBU

Notice

1 CA N

~fOR

da rk red A REAL CREAM PU FF.

Ph. (614) 992-2156

8u~iness Services _

Business Services

4 door onl y 10,400 miles Full y equipped Inclu ding air ,

THE DAILY SENTINEL

I

For Fast Results ·Use-Sentinel Classifieds

Auto Sales

MASON, W.VA.

(

2, 1975

I

'
•

'

�.,
•
'

(

•J

-

)

18 - The Dally Sentlhel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Wednesday, April 2, 197~

•

•
••

CARRIER
WANTED

'

"

ON

GRAVEL HILL

~

v

2 SIGNS
OF
QUALITY

IN

MIDDLEPORT
AND

Po_meroy
'Moto_r: C_o.

1914 CHEVROUT IMPALA•

CONTACT

WJndows, stdlng, storm doors

and windows, ra1hng, phone
Ohto Carl Ja co b ,
Representative

S309l

5555
4

$2795

2 Jt c

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

~.ard

of Thanks

any Wll
m on ey

with

an d

food . prav.e rs,
most

of

all

pnay ers In the deo!lt h ot my
fa the r Mr Clar en ce l h le of

deadline for evacuation of all
U. A. air-bases there within a
year. Th e ne" ruler succeeded his brother as prime
minister last month "hen the
a ir-bases were a controverslal Issue

Mason , w v a

M r s Bob ( Louell a l Moore
~ 2 1tc

Notice
ME IGS Coun ty Hu m a n e Soc 1e t y

•

Ph , 992-2174.

ConstructioJ1 Co.
Chester, Ohio

'

3

1972 PLY Dus ter 318, 2 bl
au to ma t1 c new tires an d
sh ocks 51 560 or fa ke over
pa ymen ts Call 992 368 :1 afle r
5 p m
4 l 51c

ful l
blo o ded
G erm ttn
Sh ep herd t em .!l l e 3 mon ths
old One black and wh it e
m i xed br eed m ale , 18 mo nth s
ol d T w o Co l li e a nd Sheph erd
m n(e d , b lack a nd w h it e
ma les 31 m on th s ol d Call

949 491 7

3 30 lip
A NNO UN C IN G new hou rs .
S KATE A WAY . 1 30 to 10
p m , Wed n esd a y . F&gt;rl d 11y
and Satu r d a y A\lallabl e f or
pr 1vate p a r t 1e s Mo nd ay

T uesday

ni g flts

and

T h ursd ay

We d nesd a y

an d

1974 CUTL ASS Supr em e A m
F m t~pe ac super sport
wheels , f )I;C ell ent c: ond,1t ron
Phon e 992 9981
o:1 2 Jt c
19 69 FO R D. on e ton du al wheel
so 000 m lies one own er ca b
1n e)(f ra , good cond rt1on for
model Phone 742 3232
4 2 4t c

Su nd ay afte r noon s Phon e
985 3939, 985 9996 or 985 41 41
yo ur
' O i l of M mk "
Co sm etics Phon e BR OW N'S
?92 511 3 ~
1 7 tf c

992-3092

C!lain
Precision
Ground

2 BE DR OOM mob rle hom e rn
Syrac use No chr ld r en or pets
Ca l l 992 2441 aft er 6 P m
Deposi t r equrred
J 11 !fc

498 Locust Sl
Middlepor t , Ohio 1 2 1 M o

Blown
Insulation Services
mro Wails &amp; Att1cs.
STO,l!M

Blown

3 RM t ur n rshed apt . utr lrt 1es
pa i d 356 N ort h .tt h St ,
M iddl ep or t
J 30 6tc

Free Estimates
Phone: 949-5961
Emerg ency 949-2211 or
992 -5700
75

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

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

----- ------------- --- - - - - - ----Help Wanted

- ---

Gutters · Awnmg &amp;
Free Estimates

LARRY lAVENDER
Sy,racuse, Ohio -

3

10 75

Real Estate For Sale
BUY NOW &amp; SA VE LOW 1 low ,
do wn pa ym en ts, 8 pet rn
ter es t 30 yr f manc rng on new
hom es rn 3 Merg s C,o un ty
loc atrons or BUILD on your
lot Ph on e 992 597 6 or 99 2 5844
3 13 lfc
MA SON Now 3 bedroo m
home wtth a11l! Ched garage
M 1d 10s . good loca l ron PhOn e
(J OJ l 773 5468
4 1 6fC

-

-

tlnu,

Installed.

-------Em ptoym en! Wanted

guar•nteed .
Dozer, Backhoe, Trucks

Llmutone r. Fill Dirt
Commorciai-Rtsldtnilai

-

-------

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

--- --· -- - -- -

_________ _

------ -

-·-

---~ ------ -

-- -- --

tME

....-

NEW LISTING - 2 bedroo m
h ou se w 1t h shower ba t h
Por ches and gar age w ith level

lot s•soo oo

/\

COMPANY
777 Pt1rl Street
Middleport. Ohio
Phone 992-5367 or 992-3U1

Gutt er s
Electr i cal
Servic e

-lOM E
Im pro ve m en t
and
Reparr Ser vic e - Anyt hrng
fi Kea aro un d t he horn e fr om
r oo f to basem en t You will
lrk e our w or k and r ates
Phone 742 S08 1
12 29 lf c
C BRADFO N 0 , Auctrone er
Com pl ete Se r v Ice
Phone 949 382 1or 949 3161
Ro!!clne, Ot'I IO
Crr tt Br ad fo rd
5 1 t fc

'

8 25-Ca pt Ka ngaroo 10
a 3()-M ISslon Impossibl e 6
9 DO-AM 3. Ph 1l Donahue 4, To Be Anno unced 8; Morn ing
w1th D J 13, Phil Donahue 15
9 25-Chuck Whtte Reports 10
9 30-Not For Women On ly 3. D1nah 6, Ga lloping Gourmet 8,
Death Va lley Days 10, New Zoo Revue 13
· 10 0()-Ce lebrlty Sweepstakes 3.4, 15; Joker's Wild 8,10. Dinah
13
10 J()-Wheel of Fortune 3. 4,15. Ga mbit 8,10
11 DO-H1gh Rollers 3, 4,15. One L1fe to' Live 6; Now You See II· '
8, 10; Elec Co 20
1l. 3()-Holly,wood Squar es 3,1 5, Brady Bun ch 6,13; News 4,
Love of L1fe 8, 10. Sesame St 20
·
11 55-Graha m Kerr 8; Dan Imel's Worl d 10

LOSER
(£1"

t. LOO ~ lilt&gt;,

!.Jo.AN WllO LA-reRS

WHitH 'lYFE WWXJ

10 HGR GIJEKY ~II.\,

T\.111) I&lt; ,., \OCMAil

1Heorn€R Kl~'?

PR!';~ ...

'

~lg~M® ~ l&lt;l•a"'t.J -J,.....

Plumbmg .
Repairs and
•
Call 992-3509 and
Save en your rtpalrs : 1lso
repair mowers, compressors
and outboards Bring it In
and sa ve

Unscramble these four Jumbl es,
one letter to each square, t o
form f our ordmary wo rd s.

ALLEY OOP
IF "TH ' lHOI(N KING IS
50 ANXIOUS TGI:T HIM·
SELF ANO"TriER 1i.UEN:. ,

,;J1-lEN I 1joliNK. WE
OUGHTA TAKE 'IM

--------------.
B OW ER S REP A IR

9 18·tf C
- 0.- -----------&amp; D TREE Tr rm mrn g, 20
•

•

yea r s

? •

e ~~: pen e nce

Insured ,

tree es trm a tes Call 99 2 3057

RACINE - Modern 3 bedroom
L ar ge bat h Nat ga s
F A furna ce . 7 la rge closet s

ho m e

- o:l 2 12tp
- - - -- --- --------Real Estate For Sale

w rth st or ag e ' shel ves Dr y
basemen t, gara9e w 1th shop
and large lot

BUSINESS - We

·HELP·

and locat 1ons w1 th bu1l dl ng s
Wor k f or you r self wr th no
layoffs

We are in great
properties to sell .
WE HA VE NEARLY 50 Strike while the iron is
PROP ERTIES FOR SALE
WH EN YOU REALLY WANT hot- Seii ·Today while
IT SO LD, TRY TEAFORD AT we have Cash Buyers.
992 3325.
All Cash for Your
Property.

CALL 992·2259
Buyers See Us For Your
Needs in Real Estate.
6 ~ OOM

house w 1th ba th , J
bedroo'm full basem ent , gas . - - - - - - - - - - - . ,
heat , h w floor . wa ll to wa ll
LET US DO IT!!
ca rp et Close to school In
Pom eroy Phone 992 30 97
3 9 52tc

--·-----~

-------

B EA UTIFU L new hO me on
lak e, 3 bedrooms bath &amp; 1 2.
carp eti ng, dra pes , brg den
Call 997 J493
3 24 tt c
3

BE DR OOM h ou se , full y
carp eted base ment , g ar age,
on cor ne r lot , fenced yard ,
fo rced a i r f ur n ace h eat
ou t s i de s t or aQe b uild ing ,
storm wi ndows, al um rnvm
sl dmg , 1 1 mrle eas t of M ason ,
on Rt JJ , Sl9,500 Phone (30.4 )
773 594 2
3 31 l i e:

-· -------------

For Sale

TURF TRIM
MOWER
20"-3Va HP

'72.90(KDI

__

22"-3'1• HP

Self-Propelled
1

104.95(KDl

Carpeting
501 NYLON

4

' '

'J

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

oto••oo• N.... I IM
... . ~ ih1 1 ~ ....... ~

Read me

what tt

about
holdtn'
ladLJ'S

S&amp;j

EX CAVATING , dozer , looder
and bac khoe work , septic
ta nks Ins talled . dump ~ru cks
and to boys for h ir e. wilt hau l
fll.l dirt. top soli , li mestone &amp;
gravel , Call Bob or Roger
~ effers , day p hone 992 7089 ,
night Phone 992 3525 or 99~

q love f

RufL.IS!

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

I&lt;UHL'S
UL
-,

THAT - Bi&lt;RR ·~ ­

Tuppers Plains, 0.

WIND-UP IS GIVING
,ME A - !&lt;OFF r!-

SPRING
SPECIALS

TERRIBL.c

CO!.t&gt; !1

G IVE UP!!-

';j.j-116,i&lt;(ETHEM
BACK TO
THE

U.SA. !!-

.A -HA' HA~ FINE:: COLJNTRY THEY'L L
THERE .' - I'L L QUADRLJPL-E
PRICECFOIU ' - THEIR
CARS Wil..L BE: S TL.JC I&lt; IN THE:
STREETS •r- THEY'LL BE ':,.--.1~~"";
F~ee=ZtNG

IN

THIC:II'i: HOMES rr-

2 pc. Living Room Suites,
"Scolchgard"
beeullful
floral materlela--lt•a.oo

CALL 741-4211
TALKT O WENDELL
!;RATE,
CARPET CONSULTANT

RUTLAND
FURNITURE
Rutland

"3 Graces ' 1 or "4 Cupids"

Table Lamps, choice of gold
or while, lt7 .so 11. or 134 set
30" foam Bynk Mat$17

tresses

Good .. lecllon Mexican
Imports: Bull Horns
Honglng Flower Pots 141
Hondpaintoa vuu l 1.1
slalu11 S12.
USED GOODS :
R1dlng Lawn Mowers I ISO up
Stvtrol Dining Rm . Suit~&amp;,
Including 1 6 pc. Duncon
Phyfo.

WELL.&lt; ATlEAO&gt;T
l}jA 1 PUTS UB

Yt!,lf' rd•y'•

C"--" ,..........'

Jumbl, , MOUNT BUSHY

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
DOWN
I Arnved
I 'Turandot"
5 Imitation
hero
gem
2 Greek
11 Expectant
marketplace
3 Upright
12 Pos1t10n ·
in ballet
4 Freudian
13 Monk
term
parrot
5 Tie the
14 Foregoing
knot
15 Macaw
6 Bootlicker
16 Invitation
7 Slower
(mus. )
17 Have debts
18 Error
8- Carlos
20 Miss F abray, Jobun
to some
9 Lindbergh,
21 "in the
movies
Buttermilk
Sky"
10 PlaCid
22 Bog
down
23 Hotbed
25 Debatable
26 Bowlmg
alley
27 Inlet
28 Statute
29 Preacher's
desk
33 Indian
weight
34 Wood
sorrel
35 Indo-Chinese 1-i;t-t--tnatlve
36 Split
38 Suggestion
38 Winged
40 Brink
41 Call 1t
a day
42 Lack

ALPACA

CAUGHT

8.DO-Sunshlne 3,4,15, Confessions of Dick Van Dyke 6, 13, Jhe
Waltons 8,10; Bill Moyers' Jo1urnal 20,33
8:30-Bob Crane 1!.4.15
,
9·DO-Mac Da vis J.J, t 5; Sireets of Sao an CISco 6,13, Movie " The
Roman Spring of Mrs Stone" 8, Mov1e " Early Summer " 20.
Mov ie " Countdown" 10; Pef1nsyi vania Dutch Jazz Fes t rv al

33.
10· DO-Lucas Tanner 3,4,15, Harry 0 6, 13, WomAn 33
10 3()-Horace Marsha ll 33
11 oo-News 3,4,6,8,10, 13,1 5,33.

, :3()-Johnny Carson 3,4,15, W1de Wor,ld Specia l 13, FBI 1&gt;,
Mov ie " The Crime Club" 8, M ov1e " Trapeze" 10, News 20,

Janak! 33
12 30-Wide World Spec1al 6

Your fi rst rea ct1on today IS to
vrew srt uatro ns negativ e ly
Remember, they may have a
brr ght srde as well

BALLGAME
AGAIN !

·.

Yesterday's Answer
16 Litlluanian 26 E~ Indian
19 Misplace
seaman
22 Castle
27 Draw back
protection
29 Romeo
23 Aircraft
30 Slur over
section
31 Scope
24 Beseech
32 lllusbious
25 Transparent 37 N.Z, trthe
mmeral
38 Biddy

'

.
I

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jon .
19} On an rm porta nt matter today don t sa'(j dJe yourself w1th
one who can 't carry her we1ght
She s a hand1cap you cant atlord

GEMINI (Moy 21-Juno 20)
Don t expec t ano ther to do
more fo r you than you r e W1 ll 1~9
to do rn retu rn If you want to
dance, you must pay the PIPer

CANCER (Juno 2t -July

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19!
The werghl on yo ur shoulder IS
the heavy han d of neg lec ted
responsrb1lrty React bu t don t
try to do what you ve left rrde all
at once

22)

Your att itude wri t determ ine the
kmd of respo nse you rece ive
from others today If you re
'sharp-tong ued or cranky expec t a repl y In kind

NORTH

.4

2

EAST

• 10 7 3

• J9

¥ 954
t 5
,j,KJ 97 65

¥ 102
t li.,Ql074
,j,Q 832

A6
KQ 8 63

98 63
A lO

I.
~·

Pass
Pass
Pass

P WR

L0R

u.

V WM D R

PHSJLL

• Yesterday's Cryptoquote: PONDER NOT WHAT YOU
MIGHT DO, BUT WHAT YOU SHOULD DO, AND LET
REGARD FOR DUTY CONTROL YOUR MIND.-CLAUDIAN

(0 187&amp; Kin1 F.. l\lrn Syndlcatc. lnc. l

r NE ~ S P A PI::ft ENTERP R I S~

Norlh

3•
4,j,
4 NT

5N T

Pass · 6 ¥
Pass

East

Soulh

Pass

2¥

Pass

3NT

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

4•
5¥

1¥

opened and some five m1lig1es
la ter South had played the
deuce from ,dummy East won
the tn ck led the su1t bark and
wa tched the slam go to nevernever land

Most of the t1me we tell people tha t you ca n fllld sym!'B tlly
m the dJ ctwnary somewhere
betwee n stup1d1t v a nd un-

consciousness. but this tim e we
do sympathize With poor South
·He ha d no sound reason to expect a slllgleton diamond lead
and had he played the d1 amond
ace the hand would have
collapsed aga mst a four-one
spade break ThiS way, 1f East
had to Will the (liCk with the
.klllg or quee n he would no t have
been ab le \o lead the SUit back
and So uth could then have
handled a 4-1 spade break

tz:e: I:~ ~~MtZD
The b1ddmg has been

6.

I.

Pa ss
West

North

East

Pa~s

l NT

Pass

Opemng lead - 5 t

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Here 1s a hand from the recent World ' s cham pwnshtp ,
where the unfortunate decla rer
mtght well hll the roll of the
Unlucky Expert.
The btddmg IS mtereshng
though not very mstruct1ve A
look over the cards will show
that North a nd South can
coll ec t 13 easy tri c ks a t
notrurrip . spades or hearts Of
course, a four-one spade break
would ruin all grand slams but
m this r ase we;ean see that the
s~ades are gomg to behave
mcely
Anyway , South found himself
m a conservative six-heart contract The f1ve 'of d1amonds was

Pass

2t
2.
3t
You, South hold
•K Q965 ¥ A2 t K4 3 . Q8 7
Wha t do vou do nOw?
A - We favor a pass with three ..
spaJies a pour seC'ond choice You
opened a m1mmum and 1hould not
bad agairt.J

'

I

TODAY 'S QUESTION
In s tead o f r esp on d1 ng o ne
notrump your partner has ra tsed
ynu lo two spades What do you do

oow"'

sewing machines For se wing
str etch f abrics, buttonhol es ..
fan c y d esig n s, el c Fl aln t
!lig ht ly ble mi Sh ed Choice of
carrying case or sewing
stand . St1,9 80 cas~ or t erms
available P'hon e 992,7155

!NEWSPA PER Ellri'TEftPRISB ASSN l

•i'

'&gt;

.
..
-•
'
•

"
"'

•
•' •

'

·~

-

. . . -~

"" ...

1

"'

12 18trc

I

Sand $1 for JA COBY MODERN •••
book to " Wm at Brldf/6 ," fclo !his •
newspaper), P 0 Box 489, Radio _,•
•C1ty Srat1on. New York, N Y 10019,

·•.•

CLO SE OUT on new ZIQ Zog

"
·

·1
Ans wer Tomorrow

THIS IS tNf

---

2

Sout h

Ft.\I!RtTE !'LACE

3 30 71p

ASSN I

Losing play gets sympathy

We st

WPLORW

Rewards that ha\/e been slow
1n comrng to you wr ll be rea ped
th rs ye ar Natu re may seem t ardy rn act1ng bu t she II deliver
as promrsed

WIN AT BRIDGE

North South vulnera bl e

RQVRWMRTSR

Apr~t l , 1975

LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct, 23)

SOUTII IDI

LOPT

20)

··~

Somet hmg you've prom rsed
has qeen negl ected To d ay

.
¥
•
,j,

'

(Ftb. 20-March

PI~CES

Don't let yourself be pressured
rn to dorng thrngs aga rnst your
better JUdgment Wh en you
No ' mean 1t

unpleasant sac ral expen ence
can be a\/orded today If you eKe us e yo ur se lf fr o m the
presence of one With whom
you ve had angry word s

WEST

D J WR

RKISPLJWF. - POJF

•

You're likely to waste much
t1me today try ing to Ux blame
fo r a blu nder It's far w1ser to
rust correct th e mrstake

•K Q 8 542
¥A J 7
t AJ 2

CRYPTOQUOTE
JUFRWNPLMJT

'

TAURUS (April 20-Moy 20)

VIRGO (Aug, 23-Sopl. 22) An

One letter stmply stands for another. In thiS sample A Is
used lor tlle three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
•!'ostrophes, the length and format!on of the words are all
hli!ts. Each day the code letters are ddferent.

V R WF J T F ,

21) So meone already rn debted
to you writ try to tap you agarn rf
he thrn ks he can get away w1 t h
rl If you g1ve rn don 1 cry abou t
11 later

LEO (Juty 23-Aug. 22) You

AXYDLBAAXR
lo LONGFELLOW

UJJAF ,

SAGITTARIUS (Nov 23-Doc.

Ing pressure to ach 1eve resu lts
Will not be el!ect1ve to day Be
tactful - you'll cat~h more fhes
w1th honey th an vmeg ar

d on ' t · r ea d1 ly ta ke to
suggestions today You fear
others are dlctatrn g rat her th an
tryr ng to help

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's !tow to work it:

L 0 P T.

L::.:..-,_~,-----,--~

rn rI I xJ

Anaw.- r: / t'H lfal d t o hr111Q adum lu a haiJ -' STOP"

BACK IN/}j E

"AI Caullon Light, Rt, 7"
Tuppon Pllina, Ohio
Ph,Rno U7·:1151
OI'ENWED. THRU

FOR O Trac fo r wrth s id e
m owe r . ru ns good and good
ru b ber 59 50 985·3594
3 3D 7tp
-·- -·-·-----·-~~---·TWO 12 rn plo ws 3 pt t'l l tct'l ,
S185 Aiso ,2 14r n. P, IOVfS,3 pt
hitc h S200 Phone 985 3594
~-"

k'tnd
of a
muff? ol' 1

a

5232

PhOne 992. -2: 111

- -

What 's

be a tdtot, bol! !
Ldtll.l~ han's ts t h' same
now as t he!.!
alwaLJs wu• '

han's,

POMEROY lANDMARK ,

- - --

~•

Reg $69.95-Now 149.95,

We ha ve hundreds of CiU pet
val ues Your l ob can be
com pleted in 1 to 2 week s No
long w allin g period Our
Install er ha s 28 yea rs ex
-per i en ce
E x p er t
In
srallat lon You' ll like wha t
you g et

to

~\1e~

ser vice , a ll m a kes, 992 2284
The Fa br ic Sho p, Flomero y ,
A uth or ized Singer Sales and
Ser v rce We sha r pen Sc iss ors
3 29 lfc

9',. _Jack W. C_,sty , Mer
~

Tl\IS lOW't-4 OUG HT TO BE
MIGHTl' GRATHULTo HEI? -

--------------.
SEWI N G M AC H INE , Repa ir s,

BARGAIN
CENTER

t

,. ,. .- ~ • I

C lf~CU~ ATI ON FOR GOOD-

I'S, SHe' S GlAD· SME
W~ -3 AWFUL BRAVE -

Herculon or vinyl Recliners,

9!uare
Yard
RUBBER BACK

742-421 t

l~E GUV5 OU T OF

BET, WHEREVER: GINGeR.

R E A DY MIX CclNCR Et E" a e·
li v ered r ig ht to yo ur pr olect
Fa s t
an d
eas y
Fre e
estlm at es P' ho ne?- 99 2 328'41
Goegte m Re ady M rK Co ,
M idd l epor t Oh io
I 30 1f t

.........

severa l

h av~

COMIM'
TO 'EM FOR YE'ARS- I'LL.

C.El THEY'V E H~D

E'!IAD G UY5.

L-...:.:,.=·..=IMISI==AHSWIII
= Iten
::..:.__j'

~l f. 'D li i"IVE BE EN IYi ll iN '
ro Gl'l'f. HfR LI FE To N T

'tES, SIFi! - WHAT THE'f11L.

WH E: FI:E: I HEY 3AFI:

Now UTanp the circled lettora
form the 1urprlae an~wer, u
~=~~==~~===::::::::::..:•:•~~~lelttd by the above cartoon.

ANNIE-SAC~IFICE

------- -:- - -

on Shade Ra ver $6,000

Right 8. Consumer Survi val Kit 20. Wi ld Kingdom 10; To
Tell the Truth 13 , Amer1can Ou1doot-sman 15

F01 Thultdty, A~rll 3, 1975
ARIES (M•c~ 21-Aprll 19) Us-

KJ I I
I y I x'J
ARNIT'

1478

30 ACRES - In th e boon dock s

7 30-Hollywood Squares 3, 4, Ohio Lotter y 6. New Pri ce i s

SCORPIO (Oct. 24- Nov. 22)

IPREIJF I

3-25-1mo

12 ' "" lfc

5·DO-FBI 3; Andy Griff ith a, Mister Rogers Ne ighborh.OOd
20,33, Ironside 13
5·3()-News 6, Beverly H! llbi llles a. Hodgepodge Lodge 20, Get
Smart 1S; Elee Co 33.
6' DO-News 3,4,8,10,13, 15, AB C News 6; Elec Co 20, Teach1ng
Children with Special Needs 33
6·3()-NBC News 3,4, 15; BC News 13 , Bew1lche d 6, CBS News
8,\0, Zoom 20. M.U Report 33
1 oo-Truth or Cons 3,4, Bowl1 ng for Dollars 6 Wha t's My L1ne
8, News 10 , L et ' s Make a Dea l 13 , J rmm y Dean 15; Lock
Stock &amp; Barret 20; Nova 33

1 ·00--Tomorrow 3,4, Pilot Fil m 8 , News 13 '

I
I I [J

Building Homes

and 3 mce b ulld mg lots Onl y
$9,500 OQ

Future is Now 20
4 oo-Mr Car toon 3, I Dr eam of Jeanni e 4, Som erset 15,

ALVIA

We Sp e_cialize In

NEWLISTING - 2 houses and
a tra l ler One house rs re nte d

3 3D-One Lite to L1 ve 13. Luch Show 6, Match Garfle B, 10,, Your

you II be pressured to get the
JOb done by vrct1ms of your
procrast1 natron

949-3104

DOf"ER: work , land clearing by
the acre , hou rl y or contra ct
F arm pond s, ro ads , et c
Large dozer an d operetor
w i th ove r 20 years u .
per renc e Pullins E ~~: ca v etl n g ,
Pomero y , Oh io Phone 99 2

3 oo--Another Wor ld 3,4, 15, General Hosp1tar 6, 13, Pnce 1s
.,Right 8,10: Li lias Yoga &amp; You 10

ONE !

I
NEIGLER
BUILDERS SUPPLY

,,

..

8 lG-Your Fu tur e Is Now 20
Rl'l~llll

•

Racine , 0

.

1'DO-Today 3,4,15, A M Amert ca 13. ,6, CB S News 8,10
8 0()-Lasste 6, Capt. Kangaroo 8; Popeye 10, Sesame St. 33

Rolrlgorallon - Rool Repairs

Coo tv ril e, ( 1l ~67 304 1

------tr-----~

~ -"""·-

• School Scene 10, Pat terns for ltvl ng 13

6 · 45-Morning Reporl 3, Farmt ime 10

T omorrow 8, 10

12 45-E iec Co 33.
12 5.1T-NBC Nev.: s 3,15
1 DO-News 3; All My Ch ildren 6,13, Phi l Donahue 8; Young &amp;
the Restless 10, Not For Women On ly 15
1 3()-How to Survive a Marnag e 3,4, 15, Let's Make a Deal 6, 13,
. As "lhe Wor ld Tur ns 8,l0
·2 DO-Days of Our Lives 3,4,15, $10,000 Pyram1d 6.1 3, Guldtng
Light 8,1 0
'
2 3()-Docto rs 3, 4, 15, . B1g Showdown 6,13, Edge of Ni ght 8,10

Bonanza 15.

6 35- Columbus Today 4

J08 Pege , MIDdleport
I··Heal rng
Coot1ng

.

992 734 9

- ----

---

THURSDA Y."APRIL 3, 1975

6 125-Farm Repor t-.1 3

p.J
Home Maintenance

Work

"'S CPT IC
T A N K S cl eaned
Mo dern Sen It at ron , 992 3954 or

------

- --- - ---- -

... \o ,.

•

1

News 8, 10.

12 3()- Biank Check 3,15, Split Secohd 1,1 3, Sear ch .tor

Gilligan 's Is 6: Tattletales 8, Sesam e St 20,33: Movie
" Buffalo Bill" 10; Mtke Douglas 13
4·30-Bewltched 3; Merv Griff in 4: Mod Squad 61 Luch Show 8:

6 30-Fi ve M mut es to Live . By 4, News 6, Bi b le Answe rs 8,

Radio s, Antenna s. Towers,
Use D T.V 's Bu y from the
" Ind ian " ana uve " Wam
Pum ''. we buy uaed Radios
and Tow ers A 1d ro• repaired
by FCC llcen.rd service
oersonn el . Stop 1nd see lhe
,-,lndran" and Bubble! ·
Monitor Channel 10 and 20 .

-- Sweepers t oasters , rron s
all smal l appl ian ces Lawn
mowers nelC t to State High
way Garage on ~out e 1
Phone 98S 382S
31 1 26t c

-- --

~. •

1 hn- Tn mnr,..ow 3,4, New.s 13

o.

EL WOOD

-------- ---

- - --

12 3()-Wide World Spec1al 6.

308 Page St.
Middleport, 992-3509

Water, Eledrlc, 011, :.ewer

Ph. 992-3993

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

-- -

- -'

11 30-Johnny Carson 31 4, 15, W1 de Worl d Spectal 13, FB I 6,
M ov 1e " Cor ky " 8, Mov te " A Kmg of Lovmg" 10; Your
F ut ure rs Now 20, Janaki 33

CB SALES &amp; PARTS

hea ting service ana
general sheet metal
works.
Free
Estimates.
Phone 949-5961
Emergency 992-3995
or 992-5700

OK EXCAVATING
U"'

For Sale

- ----------

- _____

AI War 33
11 0()-News 3,4.6,8,10, 13,15,20, ABC News 33

INDIAN JOE'S

RACINE PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING
tomplete plumbing

Construction &amp; Remodel

ALUMINUM
S1ding- Sofhtl

J and 4 RO OM fu rn rshed ah d

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

.
Mobile Homes For Sale

CAPJ'AIN EASY
THE J EWHED
JOY- BOY AND
FLOWERING
LOV E· LOTU ~.
G!J R, U MAHA·
1;1'11\MI SA&amp;Oo,
APPEAl'!? ON·
~TA aiE TO Hl5
ADORtr.JG

Wan!P.II To Buy

---------

Pets For Sale

9 00- Pet r ocellr 3,4, l S, Cannon 8, 10 , Mas.t er p rece The atre 33.
10 OQ-Movrn ' On 3,4, 15, Baretta 6, 13, M an hun ter 8.10, Fa mil y

~OLLOWI?t&lt;:? !

4-2-75

HEI,L

Windows &amp; Doors

F URN I SHED
a pa r tm ent.
ad ult s on l y rn M tdd lepo rt
Phon e 99 2 3874
3 25 ffc

PR'IVATE meetm g r oom for
any organ i zat ion , phone 99 2
RALLYING the Gaulllst
3975
WA NT~O old upr rgh t pia nos
3 11 tf c
fa ithful, · Michel Jobert,
an y condrt lon Pay rng SIO
each
Fr
r
sl
fl
oo
r
only
Wrr
te
forme r for eign minist er
AUC T ION , T hur sda y n rght. 7
and g rve d rr ec t rons to Witt en fRAI L E R SPA CE , ~ . m11 t:
p m
a t Mason A uc r ro n ,
nor th of Me igs H1g h School on
under the la$f ' President
P rano Co , Bo x 18 8 Sard rs
Horton St In Mason w Va
old Rt 33 Phon e 992 29 41
O~r o JJ946
Pompldou, has created a
Co ns l gnm ent s welcome
1 23 tf c
4 2 6tp
Ph one 1304) 773 547 1
ne" politic al party for
1
D UP LE X, 138 J Walnut St
2 2 tfc
nationalist - minded French.
~~----M rdd l eport Ohro Phone 992
STA NDING trm bers Con tac t
2780 or 99 2 3432
Jobert, noted for his sharp
NO W sell in g Fu l ler Br ush
Po m er oy Forr'est Produ cts
2 19 tf c
Produ
c
ts
.
p
hone
992
Jo:I
JO·
P 0 Bo1&lt; 726 Pom er oy Oh ro
cri tic is m of th e United
1 2.:1 rtc
Phone 99 2 596 5
L UU N r ~v lv •v u• c hom t r drk ,
States: has never run In any
J 30 12tc
Rt JJ . ten mr les north of
P U BLI C S ~l OO t , M ergs Muzz l e
public election.
L ar ge lot s wrth
Pome
roy
Lo ader s. t zaak Wa lt on Farm
con cr et e patr os
sidewal ks,
Cheste r A pril 5, 1 30 p m
ru n n ers a nd off
stre et
OLD fur nrtu r e, lee bo ~~:es bi'as s
Apr il 6 rain date
p ar~ rn g
PDon e 992 7479
beds , or complet e househo lds
12 31 tfc
Wrr te M 0 M rl ler , Rt 4,
3 3 I Sic
Pomero y , Oh ro Cal l 99 2 7760
10 7 74
A S OF Ap r rJ I, 1975 ,. Th e
Syr a c u se Ho me Utrll!les
Compa n y w rl l b e co!lect rng WAN TED Old upr igh t ~ l an es
!herr ga s br tls ar t he forme r
any ,cond rl ton Payi ng SlO R ED UC E sa f e and fast w rt h
0
off rce rn Syracuse
GoBese Tabl ets and E Vap
each " Prrs t f loor onl y Wr rt e
· wat er p il ls," Nelson Drug
and Q•ve direc tions to W1tten
J I l Otc
Ray Rodeheaver of Guysville
- - - - - --- L - - -- - 4 2 ltp
Pran o Co , Box 188, Sa r drs .
and Anna Thompson of Fros t GR A ND op en m g Ap r il I of D &amp; J
Oh ro' 439 46
Fabr rc Shop , 1 m rl e be low
3 27 l ip R IO IN6 mow er . 8 hp Br rgg s &amp;
spent Easter Sunday with Kate
M rddl epo r t on Ro ut e 7
STratton Eng rne 36 1nch cut.
Honacher and Freddie , and
r ecorl start . lrl\ e new -Pr rcc
Specr a l polyes t er do u bl e
J UNK autos , comple te and
kn rts Sl 39 yd
S400 Call 992 733 1
atte nded worshtp serv1ces at
del ivered to our yard We pi ck
4 2 2fp
o:1 1 l tc
up ' uto bod ies an d bu y all
the c hurc h here Sunda y
kinds
of
sc
rap
meta
l
s
and
Y ar d Sat e
morning.
rron Rrder 's Sal\/ag e, St ~~ MO DE~ N ster eo ra d10 am fm ,
w il l b e a g l! r ag e sa le at
separ ate co nt rols o:1 sp ea ker ·
124, Rt 4, Pomeroy, Ot\r o.
Mr, a nd Mr s Clar ence THERE
Euge n e Frnk ' S r es rd ence
soun d
sy stem
Ba l an ce
Call
992
5418
beh rnd Rutl an d Gr ad e Sc hool
Henderson spent Easter wi th
$103 58 or t er m s Ca ll 992 3965
1017
tfc
Ap r rl 4 and S Fe w Av on
3 31 tt c
Mr . and Mrs. Lee Henderson m
bell ies an d antrq ues . Odds an d CA SH pa1d for all m akes and
ends
Athens.
model s of m ob i le ho me s 10 H P SE A R S tr actor 46 rn
4 1 Jtc
Phon e. ar ea c:o de 614 423 9531
Dmsmore Boyles of Tuppers ---- --mowe r , diSC , 8 rn turn 1ng
4 13 tf c
.p
low an d snow blade Phone
Plai ns, formerly from Alfred, RE V I VA L st art ing Aprrl 7 at
Charl es R Har r rs, 843 269 3
Mo
rg
an
Ce
nter
Wesle
ya
n
lS cri tically 111 in Camden4 1 3t c
Chur ch , J JO each even rn g
Clark Hosp11&lt;ll
•The Rev Ea r l Orler spea ker'
15 F T F IB E RG L A SS boat 50
0 H Car t. pas tor , rnv ltes the
Mr a nd Mrs . Gerald Swartz
EO N E
to
c ondu ct
h p Mercu r y motor , tr ar ler
pub lrc to attend Ev ery one SOM
telep hone sur\/ey rn their own
and family of Mane tl&lt;l v1s1ted
and skrr ng eq ur pm ent E x
wel come •
home Mu st hav e prr vat e l rne
cellenl cond rl 10n $900 Phone
4 2 Stc
his paren ts , Mr . and Mrs.
Hou r s from 5 9, phon e or
days , 992 2689 or ev enrn gs 992
w
r
rte
G
all
rp
o
i
1
S
Busi
n
ess
2941
Hobart Swar tz , Easter Sunday. COO N HU NTE R'S m eetrn g ,
Colle
ge
,
P
0
Bo
x
7o:l9
Ph
one
4 1 6tc
Frr d ay eve n in g , A pr rl 4
Mr. and Mrs Clatr Woode
446
43
67
aft
er
2
p
m
on
l
y
- - - --Snow ball H rl l Refr eshmen ts
4 2 2tc 1977 K AWA SAK I mot or cy cle
and Conm of Circleville, 0.
served
7.50 CC , 2,200 m rles, lr ke new
4 2 3tc SOMEONE to sta y wlth eld er l y
spen t Satw·day afternoon and
cond1 t ron Srssy ba r M d J
- man w eekday s Wrr te to Box
evening with his parents, Mr. SWEEPER &amp; Se w ing M ach ine$
lugga ge ra ck, 2 hel me ts, must
729 0 , co The Da ll y Sen ti nel,
se ll Phone 985 413 1
Repa
ir
,
Parts
,
and
Suppli
es
,
and Mrs. Charles D. Woode and
Pomeroy
Ohro
4 1 Si c
o _, v1s Vacu um Cleaner , ~ ~
4 2 6t p
Sunday and Sunday evening
m rle up Geo rg e's Creek Roa d
ONE 10x20 t ~r e , nm and lube,
off Stat e R t 7 Phone 446 029.1
w1th her parents, Mr and Mrs.
c omp l et e , S25 r ea d y for
o:l 7 ltp D R A FTS MA N
wante d
truck Phone 992 7429
Robert White, ISeno and Mr - - --Pref erab l y wr th tr ack wor k
4 1 3tc
eKpenen • e Send resum e ro
and Mrs . W1lham Carr and SHOOT. l N G Mat ch , Rac rne Gun
~ - - - - - --------Cl ub, Sund ay, A pri l 6. 1 p m
P 0 Box 1S2 Pomeroy , Oh ro
daughters , here.
10F T A L UM I N UM boat , 7 h p
Equ a l
Oppo rt un rt y
em
oil 2 4tp
Esk a m otor , A I con drtron 2
pla ye rs
Mrs Iris Carr Is not so well
new lr fe 1ackets , used oa r s
3
30
71
c
a t this wn tmg, at her home
sa le o r tr a de for good
- - - -- - -----~barg a rn Phon e 992 7429
here
PO ODLE gro om 1ng $5wl th bo!! lh
4 1 31c
Mr and Mrs . Charles D
--- --. --~ -- S6 Appo in tm en t not o!llway s
necessary Hou r s 9 t o 9 ex cept WAN T pe rt or f ull t im e w ork as CA P we d ges an d t ra rl er
Woode attended rev1val serwedges An y am ount Phone
su nd a y
Poo d l e
pup
rece pt 1on lst or cl er k t yp1 st.
7d2 3743
vices a t the Chester Nazarene
a va il abl e Oua l rt y prr ced We
el&lt;per rence d on IBM Key
we l com e yo ur busrnesf! Ca ll
J1 1 6tc
Pun ch, and off ice procedu re
Church Friday evemng.
Coo l vi ll e, 667 39 15
Phon e 99 2 S171
Mr . and Mrs Lloyd Brooks
4 2 3tc:
4 2 31P GRO CERY bu s1ness for sa le
- --- - - home was the scene of a family
Bui ld ing tor sate or lease
SEEK IN G e m ployment , a p
Phon
e 173 5618 fro m 8 30 p , m
'
get-toge ther of about 20 on
prox 18 yr s experience rn
to 10 p m for appo intmen t
nursi ng se r v ice rn St ate In
Easter Sunday.
3 10 lfc
st1 tut1on s or wil l ta ke an y ----~- - -- -- --- 10K50 M OB I LE hom e, QOO d
t ype of comm on la bor Pho ne 197 1 FO RD t r uck 1 ~ ton , m oc ed
condr tlon S2, 150 2.50 gall on
992 7273
cat tl e water ing ta nk , $2.5 30
hay Phone 992 3436 or 992.
4 2 3t p
r&gt; .:~ " c; nf l 1m e Ph on e 992 7330
52 48
A gallon of nectar can provide
-4 1 6t c
3 JO Stc:
enough energy for a bee to
B A In Spanish ( Bilingu al I and
- - -- off
rce
wor
k
,
f
ll
rng
,
general
cruise lour million m1I~s at ~ E LL you r mob ile I'IO rne tor
lJSE O par a , F r ye 's Tru ck and
et c Phone 992 7H 6
cash 1.5 hOmes want ed , 19.58
seven m ph
Auto Part s, Rufla nd . Ohro
o:l 2 Jt p
thru 1972 mod els Ph one {614)
Pt'lon e ( 6loil l 742 6094
.446 1425, Gal ll polll .
T
YPING
,
genera
l
off
ice
work
1 22 7atp
....._
3 9 78tc
No sho r thand Wil l ing t o --- --- ~-- -----\
app l y m ys~ lt to my wor k ST ANL E Y l?1v ... .. ... . .. tv• .. u,~
MO BI L E hom e, 1911 6.5 11: 12
diligentl y Re fer ence s Phon e
Ph one 142 3762
K rn g 2 bed roo m Phone 992
Fl earl A Scott , 99 2 595 7
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3 9 26t c
5oil 96 .
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4 2 Jtp - - ---- - - - - - - - - - - 3 28 6tc
--- ------- - - ------ - -~I WILL 00 bookke eping In m y INDI A N Joe s Sport ing Goods ,
bu y and sell Qun s am m o,
NOTICE
hom e or yo ur busi ness Ca ll
fi shin g equ ipm ent. an d aft er
Not ice Is her eby g iv en tha t
Su san Pu l lin s, 992 73 16
Apr i l 1 w e wi ll M ve fis h ba ll
t h e und er s igned lnhnd l to
4 2 l ip
Stop by at 308 Pa ge St ,
m ake applicat ion to ttl &amp; Probate
M iddl eport , Phone 992 3509
Cou rt of M eigs Col,lnty , Ohio , for _E :XPE R I E N C ED , secr et a r y
(
an or'de r to ch ang e her nam e to
se e k i ng
em p l o y m e nt
__ _....._ 3 2 301
_,
Paul ine L a vonne Dartt
Capab ilit ies
t yping , shor t
Sa id appl icat ion w ill be by
hand ab ili ty t o work w i th 24.000 STU General El ectric a ~r
pet lt ron to be f lied In nl d
f igures. and fl ll no Phone 992
c ondi tion er , •not a ye ar OlD
Phon e 992 2952
Prob at e Coun . on or i ller th t
H 5J fQr res um e
Jrd day of M e v 19 75
4 2 31p
3 26 lfc
Da ted th is 31st de y of March
- -·---·----1975
TRE E Tnm mlng an d remove !
J SE O cemen t and Cind er block
Hou se end r oof pa int ing , all
for Sllle Phone }4 2 3743
P a ulin e Ferr en
work
g ua ra nt eed
Free
4 1 61 C
est ima t es Phone 992 5278
l4l 2 li e
&lt; 2 liR P OT ATQ E 5 br ing . ~w';;fc~Q '
talner . S4 f or lOOi b A lso . 1966
W I LL do l a nllor w on. 01 " r ord van bus for sal e or trad e
NOTIC E TO BIOOERS
pa! nt rng Phone 992 2262
tor m oto rcyc l e Ph on e 98 5
The E astern L o c~ l Bo.nrd or
3fl ,t9
3 30 lie
Edu ca t ro n , will r.ecef ve bids .
4 1 6t (l
until 12 o · c~Jock Noon , Apl' ll 10, ·P A Rr T
bo Ok k-e-;,pi~·g ,
.
:
.
1975, at the ir otr iet to cattd In
t l e•a bl e hour s 1·or 2 days a
19 7 1 6'10 TR IUM PH
good
theE o!i ternHigt'I ,School , for ont
week or even ings ,l eK
con d •lron Ph one 992 rOS4 ar
sc hool bus cha 1111. 1u l t1bl l for
p er le n ced , elCcel l en t lifca l
99, ;OAI
a 66 SChPOI bus bod v. Jnd one 66
r e fe r en ce Phon e 99 2 709 0
•
4 I Ole
passcnvtr school but body.
Sptclflcetlon s and b l~ form s
ev enings
3 30 8tc 150 •HO N DA motor cy cle lor
~r e 1\/llllblt
I I f hl Clt l'k 'I
~ ~~ ~ ~ Phone 74 2 4294
offi ce 1t fh e E ast ern Hig h
4 1 5tc
School , Rt \ Reed sv ill e, Ohio REMODE LIN G, plumbi ng,
heat m g, and all typ es of
4!)712 F'hon(! 6l.t 985 4792
gene r al
r epa i r
Work t&lt; E l rOOD 1\ f.l ii.MA Srde by
g u ara ntee d 20 years ex
sr d e r c frrq ou • tor f r e('zc r
C 0 NC'w land ,
per lence Phon e 99 2 2409
Phone 9\1 ? '}')) 7 il fl r r 5 30 p m
( I (Irk
fJJ 19, 26 ( 41 2, Jt c:
J 11 ti c
-' I :H'p

- ·----- - - -

SALES &amp; SERVICE

unt urnr S; hed
ap ar t m ent s
Phon e 992 5434
4 12 tt c

3 30 12tc

""tOR

WILKINSON ,
SMALL EN_G_INE

197.5 MONTE Carlo. 4,000 m it es T WO bedroom trail er Adu lt s
on l y Phon e 992 39 75 or 992
all po we r . a rr A M st ere o
157 1
tape Ca ll 992 7036 after 5 p m
J 23 tf c
3 5 tf c

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

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general sheet meta' work .

21

8 JQ-M ovre " Dead Man on the Run " 13, Mov te " The Ball ad of

Andy Crocker" 6, To Be Announced 3,3

healing, roofing, •pouting ,

Home Building
Room Additions
and Garages

T ony Orla ndo &amp; Dawn 8, 10, F eelrng Good 33. Thea ter rn
Am er ica 20

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Air conditioning , plumbing ,

Ph. 985-4102

PomeroY1t

6" Wdburn Brothers 8, The Judge 10, To Tell the Truth \3 ,
Book Bea t 20, EpiSode Action 33

6 OO-Sunri se.... Sem1nar 4, Sun nse Se m es ter 10

1974 CA t-'~ I V 6 engr ne, st eel
be lted re d lo!I IS. decor gr oup
el&lt;celle nt con d it ion 2S to 1B TR Ail:._~R apa r tm e.nts_IOJ rJ•.." t
Phon e 99 2 52 48
m p g Call 992 .5170 aft er 5
3 30 61C
Rm
3 JO 7t c
B~D~OOM mobrle hom e
z J was
her and dr yer , 11 , bath s
1973 CJS Je ep , lJ ,OOO mr les Lrke
ut
rl
rlr
es pa 1d S4 2 .50 w ee k JOB
n ew SJ 000 Phon e 949 S 182
Page St M i dd lep or t. Ohio
4 J Jtc
3 4 ti c
-,

DOG S FO R ADO P T IO N On e

Alfred Social Notes
Sun day School at tendance on
jllarch 30 was 53, the offenng
$27 90 Several til people were
remembered w1th cards The
teachers treated the1r classes.
An Easter egg hunt was held m
the church basement after
Sunday School for the children
Worship services were held
at II With the Rev Meece
leadmg and Glen Smnett, lay
speaker from Rockland U. M.
Church , speakmg on "The
Risen Lord and Wha t He
Means to us." Attendance was
20, offe rmg $21.56, pledges $5
Ea s ter Su nn se Servi ces
were )leld at 6:30a .m., wttll the
young people puttmg on the
program w1th Don s D1lhnger
and Ruth Br ooks m charge.
Attendance was ~0 Breakfast
foll owe d in the church
basement wi th 46 attendmg. (A
potted Ea ste r lily was
presented to a shut-m , after all
serv ices were over.)
Easter-lime guests of Mr.
and Mrs Vere Swar tz were
their son, Mr and Mrs
Rtchard" Swartz, sons, Rtcky
and Randy of Ravenna, 0 ; Mr.
and Mrs . Elmer Bibbee and
Dorset, local; Ar thur Atherton
and Millard Swartz, local, and
Gene Bailey and son of Success, 0 ., and r ecently
ca llin g we re Mr . and
Mrs. Waid Swar tz of Athens.
Easter Sunday guests of
Clara F oll r od an d Nwa
Robinson were Mr and Mrs
B1ll Follrod and Sue Ann of
Atllens: Mr. and Mrs Pete
Follrod, Stephen and Kathy,
' local ; and Mr and Mrs Gerald
Swartz and fam1!y of Manetta ,

"""' J I

SMITH N.ELSON
MQTOR_S. INC.

4 BEDROOM house w all to w all
ca r pe tm g , a c, fen ced rn ya rd
Wr f h pat 10 nr ce Ph one 992
27 80 or 992 34 32
3 19 1t c

1 WOUL D !I k e to the nk f r iend s
~.-nif'nel~fffb ~.'.if'!l' " ~ hel ped In

country,s

Point Pleasant Market
March 29, 1975
SLAUG HTER COWS
Commemal (Fat ) 21.60,
Ut1h ty 18 60 ; Canner &amp; Cutter
17 10-18.
VEAL- Choice &amp; Pn me 190225 lbs. 50 2~ ; 226-265 lhs 45
YEA RLING HEIFERS GOQd &amp; Ch01ce 50~00 Jbs.
27.50.
BULL CALVES - Good &amp;
Cho1ce b) Head 117 , 50~00 lbs
25.25.
HEIFER CALVES ''• Good &amp;
Cho1ce By Head 77 ; By Head
80; 400-550 lbs 21-24
BABY CALV ES (BY HEAD)
- Beef 51 ; Hoi &amp; Brown Sw1ss
13-35
HOGS- U S 1-3, 190-240 lbs
39 60 , U. S. 2-4, 240-260 lbs
39.50, Sows, U S 1-3, 300-400
lbs 33-35: Boars 360-600 lbs
25.50-26c;O ; Pigs (By Head ) 2040 lbs. 15-18, 4~ 0 lbs 18-20: ~0
lbs. + 20-24

I

12·DO-Jackpot 3,15, Password 6, 13. Bob Braun's 50-SO Cl..b 4;

7 JQ-.... Pollce Surgeon '3, Nam e That Tune 4, Let 's Make a Deal

RACINE P.LUMBING
&amp; HEATING

-

4 2 Jt c

P EN TAGON
military
e&gt; perts a re hinting that
Prime Minister Kukrlt
Pramoj of Thailand may not
th at

\,...

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WEDNE-SDAY, APJii L2, 1975
"

HElL

Bissell' Brothers ·

Bulldozer Radiator to the
smal lest Hea ter Cd re
Nathan Btggs
Radiator Speciall •t

11 "-e new \35
p e r w ee k , ut rl rt res p ard
Phone 992 3 3 2·1
.:l 2 11c

long er take or ders for

.I-

Television-log for easy viewing ·

.B 00-Ldtle Hou se on the Pr atn e 3,4, 15, Tha t 's M y Mam a 6, 13,

'

From the largest l'ruck or

For Rent

c$k es Joa n Tuttl e

enforce

Sarvke

l ~ K5 2 1R I\ I L E R

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

--

;·

V. V. JOHNSON
AND SON, INC.

Suburban 3-sea t . V 8 engi ne. au toma t ic transmi ss ion,
po wer stee ring , po we r bra kes, fact ory air condlt lori lng .
luggage ra ck , green f inish , rad io, li ke new whi te wt'lll
tir es

4, and S. on e mile off Rt 7
on Rt 143 Hyse l l ' s Phon e 992

Sa les

E«PERIENCED
Radlato '

I

..

't"--:::=-=-:::-::::-:=-::-=:::-:::---"1

1

Charle s LIS le , Syroc use .

1973 PLYMOUTH STA. WAGON

sale , T h u rs day .
F r 1di'I V an d Saturday , A p ril 3 -

.

On a lumJn um r eplacement

GM..Qiv is lon car, ai r cond ltlon rng 350 V 8, power stee ring ,
dark grey f in ish, r adio

Yard Sa les
C A RPOR T

no

FREE
ESTIMATES

' S41f 5- ,

197~ CHEVELLE MAL IBU

Notice

1 CA N

~fOR

da rk red A REAL CREAM PU FF.

Ph. (614) 992-2156

8u~iness Services _

Business Services

4 door onl y 10,400 miles Full y equipped Inclu ding air ,

THE DAILY SENTINEL

I

For Fast Results ·Use-Sentinel Classifieds

Auto Sales

MASON, W.VA.

(

2, 1975

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Veterans Memorial Huspilal
Ad;nilted - . Worley Haley.
Middleport; Margaret Allen,
• Harrisonville; Mary McCarty,
·· Pomer oy; Edward Mar 1in,
Pomeroy; Osea r Imbo den,
Minersville.
· Disc harged · ~ Helen Nelson;
James Reynoids, Stanl ey
Gillilan, Debra Hager.

-Heavy
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FIN ALISTS NAMED
. (,'OI.UMBUS i UP! ) - ! The
.

G-T reelects R~ Wopat,
300 dra wing are:
· · .'
·
n
Sleven Aller, 286 Barkley names new COfltro er
Pl., Colwnbus.

•
looking over s1x

~Democr_ats
·

The. r~soluttun was 11assed

Vermont search
for Patty futile

in a sta te wi th 11
RePubli ca n gove rnor. New
York has Democrats in both
City Hall and the sta te house,
but does not have recent exper ienCe in-handling a nationalpo litical convention.
Los Angeles, with ~ black
Democratic mayor a nd a new
young Democratic governor,
held a number of conventions, ·
including the 1960· gathering
that nominated John F. Kennedy: It is regarded as the
t11ayor

"early ra vorite.

The Democratic co nvention
is expectoo to be held the week
of J uly 12, 1976.. The
Republicans, with a president
already in office, are expected
to meet later, possibly late in
August. The GOP site selection
process also is unQe r way, with
most .of the same cities appearing before the Democratic
committee scheduleil to make
the ir
pitches
to
the
Republicans OJ! Friday. The
GOP will heal"lhe cities in a
closed meeting.

• Ann ie Diamond, 80!&gt; S. 13th
Richmond, Ind .
· Jack F. Mann e, 916 Claren,
don Ave., Canton.
·
James s. Mofttirtney . 1325 W.
lith s t'.' Lorain.
Thomas L. Goodwin, 6549
ChiltenhHm, Toledo.

. St.,

substantial casll contribu tions
in additiOn to the dona tion of
meeting facili ties a nd. other
services. Neither party has
made it clear whether cash
donations will be needed for
1976_- but some offi cials have ·
said they expected the $2
million subsidies to do little ·
more tha n replace mo ney
fo rme rly raised by se lling
advertisements in convention
program books. -

Meeting
Conti nued from page I
Syracuse is not quu liried fo r
national fl ood protection,
persons wishi ng to buy
property with in the flood prone
areas cannot obtain loans from
federa ll y reg ulated len ding
i nstitutions such as banks, the

Farmers
Home
Admi nis tration, · or Vetera ns
Administration.

JOBS ·ro NATIVES
MIDDLETOWN , DeL (UP! )
_ The Green Giant co. has
announced it wiU hir.e unemployed Delaware residents
rather than migrant laborers
for 946 jobs cutting asparagus
for $2.25 an hour. Each job
lasts 10 weeks.
Arthur H. Benson, state
directol'"' of employment s~r­
vices, said Green Giant has
offeroo harvest work to state
residents in the past but never
be fore on such a scale.
The asparagus harvest is to
begin in mid-ApriL

-

CARRIERS END VISIT
ZURICH ( UPI) - One
hundred · and twenty -five
Coluinbus, Ohio, newspaper
"GREAT EGG BUST"
ca
rriers Tuesday endoo a fiveANN ARBOR, Mich. (UP! )
day
visit to Switzerland and
- A guillotine blade slashed
The 1976 conventions will be
moved
on to Austria for a
through an · egg, "Stars and
the first to be linanced by
fiv.e
days' vacation.
further
Str ipes Forever" began to
federa l subsidies - up to $2
The
boys
and
girls spent the~
play, the American fl ag went
million each drawn frorri the
Easter holiday visiting Zurich,
presidentia l cam-paign fund up and two University of Lucerne and other tourist'
Mich igan students won a free
being created by voluntary $1
dinner Tuesday in the " Grea ~ centers in Switzerland. They
i11come tax checkoffs on inattendoo official luncheons and
Egg Bust" contest.
dividua l returns.
The contest was aimoo at dinners and enga ged · in
In the past. conve ntion cities
di scovering the most ingenious sporiing competitions against
have been requiroo . to make
Swiss teenagers:
way to break an egg.

MA RION ~ Robe rt M.
Wopal was re-elected presid ent
of General Telephone Co. of
Ohio and Robert L. G)ffin of
Moun lvale, N. -. J., vice
pres iden t-con troller a t the
comp any's an nual boa~d
meeting here Monday. G1ff1D
succeeds Robert A. Lindsay
who' has been. ~lecled vice
preside nt of General Telephone
Co. of Florida. Th_e changes are
effective May I.
. Wopal will be serving his
-l i th term as presiden t of
General of Ohio. Other officers
of the company also wer"e re·
elected at the meeting Monday.
Gi ffin has bee n bud ge t
of
te lephone
direc tor
_operat ions with be"rtera l
Telephone &amp; Elec tronics Corp.,
Stamford, Conn., since 1969.
General of Ohio and General of
Florida are subsidiaries of
GTE. A native of Pittsburg h,
Pa ., Giffi n is ·a graduate of
Muskingum . Co llege, New
Concord.
Giffin has held var ious
pos iti ons wi th other G T~
subsidiaries. He started his
ca reer wi th General. of Pennsylvania at ~rie, Pa., 1953 as a

junior accountan t.
Other General -of Ohio officers re-elected were: R. J .
Den nis,

vice

pres iden t ,

engi neerin g and construction;
Robert C:' -Fletc her , vi c~
president, personne l; A. W.
Hu ghes, vice pr esident ,
cus tomer se rvices; T. S.

a

La uver, secretary-'( re'a"surer,
R. J . .White, vice president,
revenue re quiremenl• ; G. T.
Winn vice' pres ident, 'public
' and Belly J. V/llson,
'
affa irs,
asSistant treasurer.
Di rec tors re-elected were
Raymond H. Adkins of Dover,
Herbert K. Ames of . Bryan,
Charles H.- Campbell of
Ashland, Frank C. Henry of
Cleveland, PeterS. Mykranz of
Colwnbus, Richard H. Pe ters
of Toledo, James 1). Pugh of
Portsmouth , FrM W. Uljlman
of Toledo, Harold F. Zel g of
Colwnbus, and Wopat.

••

SURCHARGE REJECTED
COLUMBUS (UPI) - A
reques t by the Cleveland
Electric Illuminating Co. for a
14.6 per cent surcharge on
existing rates was rejected
Tuesday by the Public Utilities
Commission of Ohio.
The PUCO also denied a
"'r~uest by Cincinnati Gas and
Electric Co. !or an 8.6 per cent
surcharge on existing rates.

.war.

The rehels, whose troops are
now within three miles of the
capital, have said tbey would
not negotia te a peace settlement with Lon No!. But oi&gt;servers bere said the Communists were doing so well
militarily it was not likely they

MEIGS THEATRE
Ton ight thru Thursda y

Apri12-April3 .
NOT OPEN

Fri .. Sat., Sunday
Marga ret Mitchell's
GONE WITH THE WIND .
(·Technicolor)
R ~ted

:' PG"

Show Sta rts 7: 00p.m .

In Peking, exiled Cambodian
Prince Norodom Sihanouk
called Lon Nol's depa rture a
plot by the Unitoo States which
be said wlll install "other
supertraitors mortal enemies
of the Cambodian people (to)
save the skin of, its
neo c oloni a list
system.
established in Phnom Penh."

"'-"IVY

. by BESTFORMO

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at y
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AI" your kind of prices.
gi~.es )OJ a lot-~- than ~u pay
tor. And t-heseiJays, thaH~ good

LACE

CROSS-OVER BRA

By United Pre$s International
COLUMBUS - ALL EMPLOYES in the office of state At·
tomey General William J. Brown earning mo're than $15,000 last
year will be requlroo to file public financial disclosure
statements.
Brown, in announcing Wednesday he was continuing ~
policy he establlshoo last year, said although the law requires
only himself and a few lop aides to file annual financial
disclosure statements with the Ohio Ethics Commission, he
believes the r~uirements should be interpreted more broadly to
include aU public employes in decision-making jobs. "Openness
and accountability by government officials and public employes
is absolutely essential in today's atmosphere of public distrust
and apathy," Brown said in a statement. ·

....

With the Bffil form know-how tha~

6802

6807

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news for e\erj ~rdoff-igwe.

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OOUBLEKNIT BRA

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"IrS SEAMLESS"

6801

LACE

FIBERFILL

Organ, Drums; Gui~ar ·

CROSS-OVER BRA

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ON SALf NOW IN THE SECOND FLOOR FOUNDATION_$ DEPARTMENT

NITELY

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TUES., WED., THURS., B: J0-1: 00
.FRI . &amp; SAT., 9: 30-2: 00

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MAIN STORE, ANt,IEX A"ND WAREH04SE OPEN THURS!J;AY 9:3D TO 5 P~
.

TO E~TERTAlN YOU AT

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ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

THE MEIGS INN

POMEROY

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LOUISVILLE, KY. -AN OHIO BUSINESSMAN said here
Wednesday there are signs the nation's economy will get
stronger by ~ummer . But, said David B. Meeker, board chairman of the National Association of Manufacturers (NAM), he
doubts if employment levels will reach pre..-ecesslon marks for
another·year or two.
·
"We probably will be weD into the fourth quarter of this year
before we see strong signs of a resurgence of the economy,'" said
Meeker president and chief executive officer of the Hobart Corp.
of Troy; Ohio. "You have to remember that when we start to
recover fl.om the current recession we will be starting from a low
base of employment,'' Mllier said.
·
NE)\' YO~ - ,FOUR BoMBS EXPLODED in a 35-rninute
period early today at midtown office buildings housing banks or
insUrance offices. Police said damage was not sever'!', and there
were no reports of seriolis injuries. ·
A passerby knocked to the sidewalk by one of the blasts was
hospitalized. Early reports from pollee and fire officials indicated the blasts were caused by high-intensity exjllosive
devices. There was no meSsage from any llfoup claiming
responsllilit&gt;: for the explosions.
V

DDUBLEKNIT

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WITH STRE'Tai STRAPS

I

6805

PLUNGE. BRA

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enttne

Devoted To The Interests of Th e Meigs-Mason Area

N_:_.: :-D.:_2;,_.:;
: 4B:::...,___~P..:O:.:::ME:::.:R.:.:OY..::
-M::.::ID:_::DL:::EP~O.::_:
RT:.c_,O~H~IO:_.__

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_ _~_
TH_UR_;__S_
DA_;__Y,~A_
PR_IL_3_;__,1_97_5_ _--:----_ _ _ _ __

_PR_IC_E__15_ '

the same time, Re p. Miller inves'ti gation of .. Ohio River
directed correspondence up to · bank failures in the vicinity of
the Ohio Depar tment of the Middleport, Ohio.- sewage
Natur al Resoin-ces and' the lagoon.
Ol1io Environmental Protec·•Aforma l investigation of
lion Agency seeking additiona l the pr'oblem h as- ~een initiated
aid for t h~ communi ty and its under the auth'orily of sec tion
eros ion problem.
,14 of the Flood Control ·Act of
The text of the . corps _ 1946, as ·amended. A tentative
respo nse to Rep . Miller's · remedia l · plan will be
inquiry follows :
developed · by : the end of lh1s
"This is in response to your month 7 Mareh . Represenletter of 13 February, 1975, tatjves of this office will meet
concerning the status of our
•

with local offiqals in early
April to obtain their views an d
commen ts on thi s remedia l
plan. Appropriate ,Ohio
agencies will be invited · to
participate in this meeting.
" Should -local a nd sta te vage ncies concu r in the
remedial plan the• Huntington
Dis tri ct will complete _nnd
submit a formal report to the
Ohio Ri ver Division Office by
30 April 1975."

Xenia missed this time -

By United Press International ·homes, uprooted trees and tore early today whicll prompted a
A violent · spring storm down utility lines.
high wind warning for the state
movoo into Ohio late Wed- , "Otis Alexander, 59, of RR 2, today.
nesday night , s pa wn ing . .a Waynesville, and his wife,
In add ition, fo'recasters said, ·
tornado that touched down Myrtle, 61, were treated snow flurries are expected in
near Waynesville in Warren \Voonesday night for abrasions several areas and a travelers
County, 20 miles south of Xenia and shock at Charles F. Ket- advisory is in effect near Lake
where a tornado struck just one tefin g Memorial Hospita l, • Erie for locally heavier noyear ago today, killing 35 Dayton. .
cumulations of snow.
persons and des_troying half the
Their home was one of at
Temperatures today were
city.
least 10 homes destroyoo in the not expected. to rise much over
The tornado that hit the area by the twister, authorities readings of early today and
Waynesville area injured at said: Warren County officials - drop tonight to vear record low
least two peroons, destroyed 10 said they would not be able to levels for some locations.
determin e the ex t ~~ of
Lows tonight are expected to
ATHENS -'-- A gala Golden - league schools. Deadline for
damage until the area was bti in tl1e low 20s and upper
Anniversary party has been purchase of tickets is April14.
inspectoo sometime today.
teens as the winds slowly
planned for the Southeastern
·
.
The · Ohio Highway Patrol diminish,
,
Current leagues members
ohio Athletic League at 7 p.m. are Athens, Gallipolis, Ironton,
post ·at 'Lebanon said. the torThe outlook for Friday is for ·
Thursday, April 17, at the
Jackson
,
Logan
,
Meigs,
nadotouchoodown
nearU.S.42
·
clcaringfromthewestoverthe
Coach House in Wellston.
Wells ton .
and Ohio 122 about 9:30 p.m. sta te, with afternoon tempera- 0
Waverly
and
Highlights of the program
- KAREN REED
Fourteen
schools
hav e
This week atld next Meigs then came down aga in about a tu res reaching the upper 30s
will include remarks by Dr.
belonged to the league over the Soil .&amp; Water Conservation ' mile east of the area .
and low 40s. Further warming
Harold A. Meyer , com50-year
span
including District person nel are visiti ng
The tornado struck Wednes- is schoouloo for the weekend
missioner of the Ohio High
Pomeroy and Middl eport each elementary sc~ool in the . day night shortly after candle: _l'lith readings reachi'ng normal
School Athletic Association, which.. were part of the concount y to present a _con- light memorial service!! In by Sunday . ·
and presentation of plaques to solidation into Meigs.
The extend~ outlook for
servation education program, Xenia on
. the anniversary of
representatives of· present
Nelsonville was a member showing two fi lms that explain '!a!;t year's. kliter tornado.
Saturday t hro ug ~ Monday
'Karen Reed, daughter of schools of the league.
for
a
number
of
years,
then
what
is
meant
by
conservation.
"A
violent
Spring
storm
is
ca lls for moderatin g temWillard Reoo, Reedsville, was
It is significan\ that the continuoo as a member for
bringing
winter
weather
back
peratures
· and a chance of
selected Wednesday as banquet Is being held at the
three more years when il
" Our Land , Its Many tb Ohio· and nea rby areas _ showers during he period.
delegate from Eastern High Coach House, because it is the
consolidated wi th Buchte l- Faces " , shows how man today," the National Weather HighsSaturdnyareexpec ted to
School to attend· the annual site of the "old Rogan Hotel
York to form Nelsonville-York. learned lo save the land; "The Ser vice said·. " Yesterday's be in the upper 40s and low 50s,
World Affairs Institute in which is where the first Other schools who were Adve ntures of Jun ior ' Rain- balmy temperatures reac hed warming to the upper 50s and
Cincinnati this weekend.
meeting was held on llfarch 7, members of the league In its drop" shows holf raindrops the 70s in 'southern Ohio but low 60s on Monday .
Miss Reed is vice president 1925, to organize the league·;' -early years are Portsmouth can effect land if they are not ~ouldn 'l last. "
. Lows are expectoo to be in
of the Eastern High School
Representatives of nine .and New l)oston.
controlled.
Forecasters said the storm the 20s early Saturday and in
Chapter of the National Honor schools were on hand for rthat
The · plaques to the eight
Th e annual conservati~ _center and low pressure area the upper 30s and low 40s on
Society, a member of the an· meeting, which was arranged current members will be poster contest, open to fotirth w-aS over northeastern Ohio Monday.
nual staff, treasurer of the by tbe late William E. (Bill) presented · by Mrs. Ka ty grade students on ly, is also
'
senior class, a member of the Thomas of Wellston. All but Thomas Weber (Mrs. John L. heing explained. Judging of the - ~
senior class play -ahd ·attends one of the schools became
Weber), whOse late father , posters, fi vefrom each schoo!, . .
the Eden United Brethren charter members, and six of William E. (Bill) Thomas, will be don e by .dist rict
· Church.
those eight are still members inspired founding of the league supervisors and personnel in
AT •NS, 'Ohio (UP! ) _ to _go on str ike after a union
A senior at Eastern, Miss - although two have not had
which is ·recognized as the the district office.
state workers set up picket steward was transferred to the
Ree'd Is being sponsoroo to the continuous membership.
After
a
first;
second,
and
lines woortesday night at the Nelsonville Me ntal Hea lth
oldest
high
school
a
thletic
Cincinnati event· by. the MidTickets fot the l!anquet at $5 league in · the Slate of Ohio in third place winner is chose n Athens Mental Health Center . Center ,
dleport-Pomeroy Rotary Club. per person are on sale at
from each school , a champion foliowing a vote to strike the
More than . 20 picketers
continuous operation.
and reserve champion will be tacility.
turned a_way workers assigned
sele cted fr om first place
The ~orkers, members -of to the 11 p.m. shift at the health
winners. Ribbons and silve~ Loc al 1782 of the American center.
Local 1782 President Mike
dollars will be awarded in each Federation of state, County
'
school
and
trophies
to
county
.
and
Muncipal
Employes
Hunter
said the strikers "were
Routing of a "Hike-Bike" to ' the Pomeroy Junior High County Road 26 (check point
winn
ers.
Dead)in
e
for
the
Union,
votoo
by
more
than
:i-1
going
to
stay out as long as
raise money for ·Meigs School building and m• -, e 5). Participants wiD turn Ieft contest
is
April
-25.
;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::
:
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necessary"
and refused to say
· County's retardoo has been through Pomeroy and ~d· on County _Road 26, going to
·. AMSTERDAM ~ UPI) 7
if there were any other reasons
completed.
dleport to Route 7 below the Route 7 at Five Points, turn
CLINIC REOPENS
Th e Int ernational Chess for his union's decision to walk
-The event wiD be held April railroad bridge, turn right on right on Route .7 to Route 33, , The Ve terans Merrior iat'
feijeration today stripped out.
19. Invited to · take part are · Route 7 to County Road 5 and will go left on Route 33, Hospital Speech and He~ring
~merican champion Bobby
·"we are going to j~st try to
hikers and persons wishing to. · (check point 2). ·
returning to the sixth check Clinic is openinll,,;il_8ain this
ride any non-motorized
They will tm:n left on County point, ~~o;hich is the Pomeroy . . Saturday, April 5~ Pomeroy ,Fischer of .hls title and gave run the institution as efficiently
It to Anatoly Karpov of the as possible under the circuin'
vehicle, including horses. . Road 5,- travehng to Route 124, Junior High building, als'l the Elelf)entary School and will be
unlon.
stances," said Mental Health
Soviet
Riders and walkers are to have then to R~ute 7, turning left on starting point.
open from 9 until 12. All those
Karpov,
theofficial
Center Superv ~r David Caul .
sponsors whO will contribute Route 7, going to Route 33 (the
Persons wishing to take part persons previously scheduled
financially to 'the activity route 7 and 33 interchange will are asked to contact Mrs. should please atten4 at their .- -challenger, won the title by "Fortunately we got a shift of
staged by the .Meigs Chapter of be check point 3).
Jessie Might, 742-4055, Hank regular time unless notified. -ilefauit bec ause Fischer workers in here before the'"
refused· to· play him on the pickets were set up. "
the Ohio Association for
The group will turn left on Cleland, 985-4209 or Mrs. Hugh otherwise by Mrs. Susie
federation' s terms. Fischer
Caul had an nounced his
Retardoo Children and Adults. ' -Route 33 and move to County Roush, 992-3232. Sponsors can Heines, speech and hearing
had subm itted a sel ol resignation Tuesday, effectiv,e
There will be cheek points Road 18 ~fourth check point ). be businesses, organizations or coordinator . Anyone who
proposoo rules changes, liut at the end of the month. He said
along the route at which rests Turning right onto County individuals and anyone wishing would be interested ·in
the federa fion accepted It - be was "spending too much .
will be taken and refreshments Road 18 the route' goes to to help through sponsorship is diagnos tic testing should
only· In part.
time deali~ g with · laborservoo.
'Coimty Road 20, whkh is old asked to .contact one of those con tact Mrs. Heines at 96.5managelr)_'ent problems."
The participants will start at Route· 33, then turn .right: to ttiree persotls.
4163.
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Athletic ·league
50th anniversary
party is April 17

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Your ki'ld rl bras.

t he Distinc-tive
of the ...

I.

VOL. XXVI

SEARCH FOR ABODY reportoo seen iri Ohio River Wednesday was fruitless for members
of Middleport's E-R unit after several calls were receivoo by the Middleport Police Department that a corpse had been sighted in the riyer. One report said Charles Legar, Pomeroy, h:Jp
notified officials that he had seen a bod~ that appeared to have a life jacket on. A search nea r
the Middleport levee proved fru itless. In the boat, back to front are, Tom Darst and Carl
Platter and standing is Russell Mills. They said the W!lter was too rough and lou many logs
were in it to venture far. Shortly after tl)e picture was taken, the boat was removed from the
river.

The shoot to kill orders
already have been carried out
in some areas. The com·
mander of the III Corps- the
Saigon area - usoo firing
squads Woonesday to execute a
number of unruly troops.

WASHINGTON, D. C. - U. ·closely with local and federal behalf of the community inS. Representative Clarence officials on the problem for cludoo contacting the Corps for.
Miller released here today a "quite some time."
a reassessment of that agenletter to him in which the U. S.
His mos t recent efforts in cy's posi tion on the project. Al
Army Corps of En gineers
pledged a re111edial plan for the
correction of the eroded
Middl eport sewage lagoon
walls.
WASHING'TON (UP!) -Spurred by lower farm prices,
The seriously eroded lagoon
the nation's Wholesale Price Index dipped 0.6 per cent in
walls thr eaten to dump
March for Its fourth straight monthly deeUne, the Labor
"' thousands of gallons of unDepartmffit reported today. It was the first time since 1963
treated sewage into the Ohio
that the Index declined lor four conseeudve months. The
River unless corr ective, longindex, which usuaUy forecasts short-term future movesjn
range assistance is offeroo to
retaU prices, bas made a dramatic ~ound this year.
stabilize the lagoons. 'Rep.
HIGHLIGHTING THE ANNUAL basketball banquet at
·The WPI for March was 170.4, 12.5 per cent higher than
Miller said he has worked
Southern High School W008esday night was the unveiling of
a year 8f1o, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. But
the Larry Morrison plaque and picture on the waD In the
for the first quarter of 1975, the compound annual rate of
corridor as one enters the high school. The dedication was
change In the Index was down 6.7 per cent. At the end of the
made by Jim Adams, principal, and Coach Carl Wolfe. At the
third quarter Ill 1974, the rate of change had been increasing
-presentation were the late Mr. Morrison's parents, Mr. and
at 35.2 per cent.
Mrs. Harold Morrison; his widow, Mrs, Sabra Morrison and
daughter Vickie; bia brother and wife, Mr. lind Mrs. Mike
Morrison aQII three aunts. The athlete who lives up to and
dedicates' himself to the game of basketball wiD liave his
name placed under Mr. Morrison's picture. See Page 3.

$ 00
for

TRIO

PH. 992-3629

Th ~ r e have never been
substantive talks between the
SoUth Vietnamese and Viet
Cong---and there has been no
.formal contact betwren them
Since April of 1974 when Saigon
calloo off the weekly-meetings
in .Saigon and Paris.

Wholesale price index off

Fr~ Sisty

- ,.

The Communists indicated
that the three-party National
Council of Reconcilia tion
which was provided for in tlie
Paris peace accords but was
never put into operation might
be the vehicle for the peace
negotiations.

Corps to ·offer lagoon remedy plan

'

to look like a mill ion.

Communist ·force
overruns outposts
would stop now for talks.
Senior government officials
said it was clear the 62-yearold,
stroke-erippled Lo~ No! was
not expected to return.
The s ituation at Ba ttambang, 156 miles northwest
of the capital, was reported
worsening, with defense lines
pushoo back to within 11\ree
miles of the city and the airport
closed by insurgent fire.
The American Embassy announced it had decided to cut
the size of its approximately
200-member staff in Phnom
Penh by 15 per cent on a
"temporary" basis and fly
them to Thailand during the_
next three day·s .
Robert V. Keeley, the embassy's
seco nd-r a nki ng
diplomat, said those evacuated
would 'include administrative
person nel , U.S. employes of the
Agency for International Deve·
lopment, members of the
military attache offices and the
military ~u ipment delivery
team, which handles military
aid.

e

. GUEST SPEAKER at .the anooal basketball banquet .._
Wednesday !light ·was PhD Roach, Marietta College's 1975
Ohio Bas~etball "Coach of the Year", left, with eSouthern's
Head COach and Athletic Director, Clirl Wolfe, who Roach
said is one of "southeastern Ohio's finest high school
c:oadies." See P8fle 3.
·

See.
11·
.
You don't have to be a·mi _1ona1re

...

. remained in Office. There were
similar official sta \)!ments
Woonesday in Paris by__mem- .
bers of the permanent Viet
Cong delegation there who sa id
Saigon could even come under
-artillery bombardment.

Weather

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PHNOM PENH (UP! )
Thousands of Cornrilunist-led
troops overran tbe last government outposts on the Mekong
River Tuesday night, clearing
the way for a final siege on
Phnom ~nh .
The U.S. Embass y announced it was evacuating· lo
per cent of its personnel from
the ca pital to Thailand.
The towns of Neak Luong and
- Banam, 30 miles southeast of
Phn'om Penh, fell only a few
hours after a tearful President
Lon Nol flew to Indonesia's
sun swept island of Bali ,
clearing the way for a possible
negotiatoo 'end to ·the five-year

swallowoo up most of Sou\h second time in three years the
Vietnam.
generals were known to have
Streams of refugees -and rile\ in a group.
army' ·stragglers still poured
There was pressure from the
into Saigon and the city Saigon senate, from Buddhi!ts,
government issuoo shoot to kill from militant Roman Cathotics
orders and ·other stringent - and from outside sources for
- regulations to keep control of a Thieu to step down. Today in
chaotic-situation .
London, Sen. Jacob Javits, RMilitary authorities _an- N.Y. , said there was a
nounced that the curfew in possibility the U.S. Congress
Saigon was being movoo ahead would be inore favorably
oneho1u'from10p.m. to9p.m. disposed to aid South Vietnam
effective tonight.
if Thieu quit.
In the Mekong Delta city of Anoth e r Communist
Can Tho, 7~ miles southwest of diplomat said, "Negotiations
~igon where
Australian which would bring about some
!lanes flew in 1,800 rel~gees sort of coatition and elections
,W008esday, ihe curfew- was · would be tbe cheap way .to
~ovoo up to 6 p.m. fr~ 10 victory.''
p.m.
The diplomats said, however
Thleu's fate was Increasingly that the Viet Cong would likely
in doubt. -He was in disfavor press for a decisive battle for
with some military leaders Saigon if President Thieu
who blamed him for the
debacle that has delivered
three--fourths of South Vietnam
to the CommuniSts without a
Partial clearing, diminishing
struggle.
winds
tonight, colder with lows
Reports Woonesday said the
20.
Fair Friday, highs in
near
genernls had given Thieu three
days to resign. The Cooncil of the low 40s. Probability of
Generals met throughout the precipitation 20 per cent
day to discuss action--&lt;Jnly the tonight, 10-per ce,nt Friday.

ACT IONS FILED
An action to dissolve a
mar riage an d a suit fo r
divorce were filed Tuesday.
!neva M. Howard, Rt. 2,
Albany and Walter W. Howard,
Washin gton C. H. have filed fdr
dissolution and Walter Voss,
Spring ' Ave., Pomeroy, has
fil ed for · di vo rce fr om
Margaret Voss, Takoma Park,
Md., charging gross neglect of
duty and extreme cruelty.

'

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Thien goes--Viet Cong
SAIGON (Ufi)' - Senior told the UP!.
Corruimnlsf1!lplomats said to'- ~ ''I am sure Utat if Thieu goes
night the Viet tOng will' enter tl)e PRG (Provisional Revoluinto immediate negotiations li ona ry Government) will
for a cease-fire if South Viet- enter
into , immediate
namese President Nguyen Van negotiations," the diplomat
Thieu is ousted.
said. "The PRG is very in·
"They are ready' to stop the terestoo in negotiating."
fighting immedU!tely," a-leadWith tbe Communist peace
ing Communist ·diplomat with •feelers, no major Cominunist
close ties to the ViEit Cong advances were reportoo today
military delegation in .Saigon in their offensive that ·has
'·

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BRA-rTLEBORO , V.t. (U PII - FBI official•
aclmowledged Tuesday that they had searchoo this southern
Vermont community for missing fugitive - heiress Patricia
Hearst- especially after two of their most wanted lugilives
turned up here 1reeently.
But they sald their investigation falloo to unearth any
evidence that Miss Hearst had been In Vermont.
FBI agents in Albany, N. Y. said their Investigation
centeroo on the Brattleboro area after two fugitives -sought
for radical activities during the late 1960s - were found to
have taken up residence here.
They were Patricia Swlnton,.charged In connecUon with
a series of New York bombings, and Barry Stein who
surrendered on charges stemming from Chicago riots In 1969.
·The FBI also discounted reports that Miss Hearst had
been in the area aroun(i Champlain, N. Y. -near the Ver- __ ,
mont and Canadian border.
· Offlclals sald they bad no evidence of ~ possible link between her, Mrs. Swinton or Stein.
·"r

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Bu ckey~

cities for convention sites·

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after an aii-&lt;Jay meeting, lhe
Senate's fi1'st session ·since .the
Cmnmunist offensive began
WASHINGTON tUP l i
March 4. ·
With the list of contending
"There must immediately be · cities down to six, th e
a new ·government, united and De mocratic Natio nal ComHolzer Medical Center
'effective, which will gat her all mi ttee's sea rch for a 1976
~Births I
capa ble good will and clean convention site focused on the
April ! - Mr. and Mrs. Jack elements "the senators urged. Midlands today.
Crace, daughter , Vinton: Mr.
-- ... We ~lso call on the United
Kansas City, Mo., and Cleveand Mrs. Robert' R. Mullins, States to immooiately honor its !arid were to present formal
son, Wellston; Mr . and Mrs.
commitments .to South Viet- bids to the Site Selec tion
Stephen Paxson, a son, Pliny
nam and we earnestly call on Committee 'til the first. of two
and Mr. and Mrs. Frank Rose , signatories of the Paris peace . _days of hearings. Los Angeles,
son, Gallipolis.
agreement to use their power Miami Beach, New Orleans
and influ ence to-siop the North and New York are in line for
PLEASANT VALLEY
Vietnamese aggressors."
presentations Thursday-.
DISCHARGES ·- Bo nnie
In a radio address earlier,
Kansas Ci ty, host to the
1974 _ "miniWoyan, Sou thSl'de; Rebecca Prime Minister Tran Thienh parte's
,
'Ki nniard , Apple Grove: KWem ca lled on the Soul
convention," is one of the more
Ga rl-and
Mayes ,
Point ·.Vietnamese peo ple no t to aggressive bidders. City ofPleasant: Arthur Mc Coy, surrender.
ficia ls hope the generally good
Henderson; Gordon Powell.
"With your calm and with · ex perience of last December,
v·1rgm1a
· · ·vo\fr. determination to fight- plus a prom1·se of have a brand
Po int Pleasant;
-Whittington, Point PIeasan t ; all the p~ple. and all the ar- new arena will have a n impact.
Kan-sas City shares with
Roy Da le Cri tes , Wes t my.:.. we will concentrate our
h
efforts
to
slop
the
enemy,"
e
M
Columbia : Becky Gillispie,
1·a1111· and New Orleans the
Poi nt Pleasan t: Debra York , said .
disadvantage of being in a
Ga llipolis Fe rry: Jessie
state whiGh has not ratified the
Li ke ns, Gall ipolis; Clayton
Equal 'Rights Amendment to
FINE D$5ANDCOSTS
th e
Constitutio n.
The
Duncan, Point Pleasa nt:
Cynthia Hipes, Point Pleasant:
Virgin ia N. Buc hanan, De mocratic Na tional ComGeorge Dabney, Hende rson ; Middleport, was fi ned $5 and mittee told the group last
Mabe l Blankens hip, Poi nt costs only when she appeared month to make ratification of
'P leasant; Kevi n Yonker , m 'Middleport Mayor Fred ERA a "tie brea king"
Mason . New Citize ns: April !, a Hoffman's court Tuesday night qualifi ca I ion bet ween cities
son, to Mr . and Mrs. Floyd on an assured clear distance with otherwise equal bids.
Siders, Point Pleasant .
_charge.
Only_Cleveland, Los Angeles
and New York go before the
com mittee with th e ERA
preference already in hand.
But Cleveland has the pa rtisa n
disadvantage of a Republican

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fi ve finalists for Thursda.Y\s

-

Continued fr.om puge l

justice." .

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20 - The Daily Sentinel; Middleporl-Pomrru)·, 0 .. WL,hll'"hiy, April 2.'197:;

. HosPITAL NEws

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ClUCAGO - AN APRIL BLIZZARD PARALYZED the
Windy City Wednesday, closing the airport, str"'lding motorists,
and causing eight deaths. ThoUII8nds of travelers were stranded
"at O'Hare International Airport as the world's buslnest airport
llhut.down for only the third time In history.
.
' At leSat eight ~nons died of heart attacks attempting to
above! out from under the foot-deep snows, pushing staUoo car;s
or hlldng to shelter frond tbelr ablmdoned cars. All city Schools
were orderoo closed today, as were most suburban sch!)Ols.
Numerous businesseS also shut down.
·
AKRON, OHIO -:- B.F. GOODRICH TIRE CO. announced the
recall Wednesday of 3,671 steel-belted radial snow tires. ,The
ClOIIIP8DY laid it had been discovered that lhe tires could fail
through aeplll'ltlon of the two steel belts.
·
The 11rea bear. the name Sllvertown Trallmaker Radial
steel's with eertaJ numben BCVYLP130t, 1324, 1334, 1344 and
13M Othen produced undei- the Hood, Diamond. Brunswick and
MDI;.. radial steel traction trade'· name have serial number!!
(Continuoo on page 2)' .

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