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'
32 - The SWlday Times- Sentinei, SWlday, May 4, 1975
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movmg1

DDLE:PORT • POMEROY ·

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drove prices to their highest
level in 10 months.
It also left a month- Aprilwith its second biggest
monthly gain ofthe'year in the
se~ond heaviest monthly
trading in the 183-year history
of the New York Stock Exchange.
The Dow Jones industrial
average, after a slow start
.
gamed
36.68 points to 848.48.'
That was its highest level
since it finished at 852.08 on
June 13, 1974. The Dow has
gained 232.24 points lor the
year and 270.88 points since
reaching its 1974 low of 577.60
on Dec. 6.
Other averages also soared .·
Standard &amp; Poor's climbed
2.60 to 89.22, the highest level

Transportation propided children

· GAL LIPOLIS - April 16 of transportation.
delivered.
will be a date long rememAf ter ob tainin g this in- Tl1e Jaycees express apbered by the children of the (ormation, a booklet was precia ti on to lhe comGallia Cou nty Children' s prepared and present&lt;&gt;d to the missioners for their interest
Home. This was the day they commissioners in Marett. and conce rn for the children's
received thetr 1975 Dodge From this information th~ home. Also, a special thanks
Tradesman Window Van · commissioners adverlis~d for to Ca rroll Norris for his assistpurchased by th e Ga llia bids on the ve hicle . These bids ance in obtaining th e
County Commissioners.
were opened on March 24 wi th necessary information and for
The need for this van was Carroll Norris Dodge [nc the outstanding job done on
brought to the attention of the awarded the contract.' Just equipping the van .
comm1ss1oners by
the three weeks later the va n was
Gallipolis Area Jaycees. The
Jaycees conduct a project
each year called "Christmas
in August" wherein they attempt to provide some type of
service to .the children 's home.
· In last year's projec t, Mr .
and Mrs. Lawrence Gray,
superv isors of the home, were
asked to prepare a l1'st ·of
By LEE LEONARD
ligan, a Democrat, and forme·r h ave first call 10
·
UPI Statehouse Reporter
prethings that they would l1'ke to
Lt. Gov. John W. Brown, a determining an endorsed
see accompli shed for the
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The· Republican, never got along. team. Any other qualified
benefit of the children . A State Senate has taken an And it seems unlikely that candidates for either governor
means of transportation was unprovtdent step in voting \o Gov. James A. Rhodes a or lieutenant governor would
the primary concern listed. allowtheGeneralAssemblyto .Republican, is going to give have to take their chances in
Acommitt&lt;&gt;e of Jaycees met dec1de how ._the lieutenant U : Gov. Richard F. celeste
the primary with whatever
with the commissioners in ·governor of Ohio is Democrat, anything c~n- "teammates" were left over!
January to see what could be nommated.
structive to do
And
t · •
done to obtain a van. The
TheSenatela st week passed Under the· resolution voters mos
would unpoi'tant,
be unable the
to
Jaycees agreed to obta in and sent to the House a con- adopted by the· Senate, the se
t th
dl
prices and information on
para e e can dates in the
what was available to provide
governor and the legislature primary election, as they ·can
a safe and comfo,rtable mea~s
0 po hCS
would be empowered to now.
In recent primary elections
presc ribe duties lor the
stitutional amendment re- lieutenant governor, then of Ohio voters have shown the;
qutrmg tandem election of the the same political party.
. are a discriminating lot. They
governor and lieutenant · As the chief sponsor, Sen. have chosen highly qualified
Like a
governor.
..
'rony P. Hall, D-Dayton, point- nominees over "name" canBut .• last-mmute amend- ed out, the lieutenant governor didates.
good
ment, mserted on the Senate' would "become an "assistant
Under the proposed conneighbor.
floor, would let the legislature governor," and this seems stitutional change, their opState farm
set nominating procedures. wise. It would be just like the portunitles could be reduced
is there.
.Depending on the political federal system, where the and the "name game" might
clunate of the moment, the president has his own vice . make .a comeback.
Wrlh Stale Farminsurance you •~1
law~akers could require president.
The Senate did not mandate
last. lfiendly servrce wherever and
~and1dates for governor and
But team nomination is team nomination. But it .did
whenever you need rt lrom 15.500
lieu.tenant governor to team something else again. It would .something that might prove
agents and ctarm representatrves
up. m party primaries or run seem to set a dangerous worse. It authorized the
ac toss thenatron.l'm oneof them
mdependent of each other.
precedent, in conflict with the legislature to settle the
and I'll be .lhere whenyou needme
The Ohio Olnstitution now intent of the framers of the question.
provides for separate nomina- Ohio Olnstitutlon.
This could result in periodic
. CARROL K. lion and election of each of- Far in advance of the party changes in a procedure now
.
primaries, anyone who sheltered by the Olnstitution
SNOWDEN ftce.
A change in the general wanted to. run for governor and subject ·only to alteration
24 State
procel!ure seems wo'uld have to select a by a vote· of the people.
electwn
Street
wise.
Ohio
has just finished "teammate" to run with him.
Anyone who has been
Gallipolis
one
four-year
period
in
which
It
does
not
take
much
around
the legislature very
Ph . 446· 4290
the governor and lieutenant imagination io envision the long knows how such changes
gove;nor ~ere of opposite wheeling and dealing that are forged- through a lot of
pohhcal
fatth , and it is just would accompany such selec- political haggling followed by
State Farm fnsuranct•Comcantes
begmnmg
another four-year lions.
lith-hour decisions:
l:'lome'Oif•c.es· Bloomrnoron. ll llno1:~o
p ,7401
te~ of the same. .
Naturally, the political
Political considerations and
Former Gov. John J . Gil- party organizations would last-minute switches in procedure ,seldom contribute to
goOd elections.

!andem election proposal
flawed by Senate action

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ffiMPLETE SAFETY COURSE - This Robbins &amp;
Myers Supervisory Group of Gallipolis recently completed a !:!:week !ndustrial Safety Course conducted by
Safety Adv1sor M1lton Miller of the Division of Safety &amp;
Hygiene of the Industrial Olmrnission of Ohio. Left to
rtght, back row, are Larry Taylor, Michael DonneUan,

stocks dearer
ACCEPTS VAN - Carroll Norris of Carroll Norris Dodage, Inc., second right, presents
the keys~ a 1975 Dodge passe nge; van to ~homas Moulton, president of the Gallia OJunty
Cht!dren s ServiCe~ Board .. lookmg on are AI Harris, left, Jaycee Preside'nt, and Tom
Whit~, Jaycee prOJect chatrman. The van was purchased by the Gallia ,_ 1 c _
mtsstoners.
....,un Y om

WASHINGTON (UP!)
Copernicus, the U.S. space
agency'il' satellite
ob,
servatory, is scanning t)lree
stars lor possible laser signals
from other civilizations. It is
the world's first intragalactic
laser COI!lmunications experiment.
Copernicus already has
searched the star Epsilon

MARCHING

By FRANK W. SLUSSER
UPI Business Writer
· NEW YORK (UP!) - The
stock market ended one era ·
and began another last week.
but showed little change . in
character as speculation and
promises of easier money

Eridimi and will scan Tau ceti
and Epsilon Indi this summer
and fall. They are about 11
light years from Earth.
Herbert Wlschnia, president
of Sonitrol-Worcester Olrp.,
Worcester,Mass.,saysalaser
UBing ultraviolet light would
be a logical way beings on
planets circling, other suns
would . announce
their
-

Clyde Day, Kenneth Howe, William Holt, James Kiskis
Robert Steinbrunner, Safety Advisor Milton Miller and
Harold Ault; front, Ray Ellis, Robert Mead, Mary Butnh&lt;iimer, Roger Colvin, Mary Groves, Vaughn Jenkins and
Lewis J. Litterer.

.
.
·
since its close of 89.45 on June
18, 1~74. The NYSE common traded durmg· ~~Ssame week.. ·about switching from a
stoe'k index gained 1.23 to :. yea~
b' ~~ember system of fixed commission
47.18.
trms a a com ~. pre-tax rates to one of bargaining
Advances topped declines profit of $287·9 millton during proved unfounded initially.
96:&gt; to 793 am
th
• the first quarter, sharply And
ve· to
.
d ..
.
,
ong e 2,004 hi her tha th $49 2 ill'
s rs 1gnore w•e
ISSues crossing the tape this
dd n e
· m ton unconditional surrender of
week. A total of 341 issues
r e a year ago:
Saigon to the Olmmunists
reached new highs, while only The market . continued to Mter two mild losses tlte
SO hit new lows. The NYSE· ~~:"~~d to ~othing but favora- market
turned ar~und
reported Thursday the first was :::,s. gns the economy Wednesday on reports
quarter rally boosted the Fed a1 p~ving, r:por~s the Venezuela would lower its
value of all shares by more taki~g a~ser;~c oard ~as expensive lowo~~ulphur oil. The
than $115 biUion.
mo et ·
t omo a 1v: Dow average soared 18 points
Volwne totaled 99,518,270
n a~y
s anc~
~n that day-the last under the
shares down fr
th speculation over otl prices 183-year~Id ftx'ed c
. .
k' dv
~
ommtSSton
'
om
e ignited thi .
109,428,650 traded last week
s w~ s a. ance. rate system. Henceforth
but ahead of the 60,989,950 Olncerns earher thiS week rates lor trad\Jlg securitie~

:go.

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FIRST TIME AW~T MHS- A new award was
given at the annual Meigs High Band Banquet at the high
school Saturday evening when Dwight Goins handed Carol
Lewis, the National Band Directors Association - U.
Marlnll!l Distinguished Musician Award.

s.

will be on a negotiated basis.
Arthur F. Burns, Federal
Reserve Board chairman,
triggered, Thursday's raUy by
stating tl\~ Fed hoped to increase the nation's · money
supply 5 to 7.5 per cent during
the next year to help fight the
recession.
The Treasury Department
late Thursday said it would
sell $5 billion in securities next
week, including a 3l}.year $750
miUion bond Issue. The total,
less •than Wall Street had
anticipated, took pressure off
the bond market.

VOL. XXVII

Storewide Sale Continues

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(EXCEPT MONDAYS)

THE
FRANK SISTY TRIO
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ORGAN, DRUMS and .
. GUITAR
TUES., WED., THURS~ 8:30-1:00
FRI. &amp; SAT. 9;30-2:00
************••••·· ~

THE MEIGS INN
POMEROY

OHIO
PHONE 992-3629

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OUTSI'ANDING UNDERCLASSMEN - Two outstanding freshman and one out.. standing sophomore m~clans were recognized. Left to right are head band director
:. Dwight Goins, outstanding sophomore Suzy Samuels, and vne of the two outstanding fresh~ men, Randy Roach. Carl Gheen, the other, was absent when the picture was taken.

: M arauder Band feted

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declined comment.

"I became suspicious."
ved.''
The woman did not speak His only concern, he said,
English. Her agony was tran- was providing for his family.
slated by Annie Herndon from "I don't have to be a doctor. I
Miami , herself half Viet- can wash floors or work in the
namese. Mrs. Herndon said fields . I am not proud. l just
the woman was distraught want to be alive with my
over what would happen to her family." At Camp Pendleton,
parents, stiU in Vietnam.
Calif., a Marine spokesman
The. woman was given an told ol900 "lost" Cambodians.
injection. When she calmed "We know they are coming
down she gave her marriage down the tube," he said. "But
certificate and the picture to we don't know where they are
Mrs. Herndon and said, "Burn now or when they'll arrive."
Almost 4,500 refugees of the
them."
In Miami Dr. Gia Pham Huu 12,000 who have arrived have
was expansive in his hap- been processed out of Pendpiness. "I want to stay here all leton.
my life and die and be buried At Fort Chaffee Lam Thong,
in Miami," he said. He arrived 15, sat at an empty table in the
with 30otherrelugees. "I have
never felt anything like the
.warm welcome we have recei-

Suit filed
to recover
$}8' 079
36
· •

"at Saturday
· ROCK
SPRINGS
Members of the 1974-75 Meigs
High School Band, ho.nored
here Saturday evening at a
)lanquet received awards,
with special awards going to
members who demonstrated
exceUence and leadership this
8Chool year.
· Dwight Goins, director,
made the presentations to a)l
Ute members as he caUed
them up, class by class.
Fres)lmen were recognized
by Goins who said they were
Q~e of the · best incoming

Mother's Day,

Sunday,
May 11

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A~ Excellent Time._To, Save
.J.

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11 \'I

Station hit

-by. thieves

Tremendous savings on Womens Dr
· St ·
..
fo\ Wom~n - Womens Umbrellas _e~;~~n:~~o~:e~d~ags:- Jeans and Ov~ralls
Sportswear - 9 mens Dusters_ ,12 Price Sal
G'
Knrt To~s - Coordmate•
on sale.
e on rr 1s Dresses- Girls .Sportswear
'
.
On the 1st floor- Save·on Mens Sport Coats - Dr~ss
Jackets - Leisure Suits _ Neckties _ Knit Shirts _ Fash- lacJks - Summer w~tght
Polyester Piece Goods - Stereo Tapes-· Cookware and B~~~w!~:.s - Boys Shtrts -

w

·

.

At the Hom.e Furnishings Annex- Big Sale of Table Covers_· B th E
.
•
.
.
.
a
rn sem bles.
Big Sale at the Mechanic Street Warehouse on Whirl
. Color Television Sets - Stereos and . Roto · Tillers.

fl?O

There were t\Vo outstanding
freshmen players, Randy
Roach, and Carl Gheen . The
.outstanding sophomore was
Suzy Samuels.
•
Next, the annual 1\rion
Award was presented to a
junior, Marc Fultz. This
award places the recipient's
name on the scholarship list at
over 200 colleges and
Wliversities and allows him or
her to audition for a
scholarship after graduating .
This was the third year this
award has 'been presented at

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·
efrtgerators - RCA

During This, Big
Shop
. and Save
.
. Store wt'd e Sal.e .
· Monday 9:30A.M. to S P.M.

ELBERFE.LDS IN. POM·· ·ERo•Y·

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literary publications, ineluding The Decade. of the
University, Ohio University
and The Alden Years. Dr.
Lrivenstein currently serves
~. the Chairman of the Ohio
Council
on
Economic
Education and is ihe past
president of the Ohio
Association of Economists and
Political Scientists. Dr .
Loven stein has been a
member of .the Foundation,
Board ol'l'rustees, since 1969
and previously chaired the
Foundation's Committee lor
Financing of Health Care in
1971.
The following people ' have
been invited to serve on the
committee: David Arledge,
Logan ; Helen Baker, Athens;
Claire M,- Ball, Jr ., Athens;
. ·-

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he said "I hope so."

An
estimated
17,000
refugees were on Guam, the
first step in U.S. territory for
most. More tents are beiru!
built to aecommodate the
60,000 refugees expected
within the week. Officials on
Guam sent out an appeal for
40,000 se ts of chopsticks, the
knives and forks of the Orient.

Am eri ca n involvement,
Kissinger replied:
" ... We did not foresee that
Watergate would sap the
executive authority of the
United States to such a degree
that nexihility of executive
action Inherently would be
circwnscribed.
"We di1 not foresee that the
Congress would pass a law
which prohibited us from
enforcing
the
Paris
agreement ... I do not believe
that Hanoi would have sent 19
of its 20 divisions south if these
two things hadn't happened."

In defense of the U.S.
evacuation of an esiimated
120,000 South Vietnamese
refugees, Kissinger said they
came from a courttry ' 'in
which for 15 years we were
engaged in a major ettort m
which hundreds of thousands
of people cooperated with UB in
the' belief that the United
States would see this effort
through .
" .. .! think when the
American people rell@S:t about
our obligation they will
recognize that we could not
decently do anything else."
Just before th~ evacuation,
he said, "The Soviet Union
played, in the last two weeks,
a moderately constructive
role in enabling us to under stand the possibilities
there were for evacuation,
both of Americans and South
Vietnamese, and for the
possibillties that might exist
for a political-evolution."
But he said he does not want
"to give the Soviet Union
excessive
credit
for
moderating the consequences
that its arms trough! about."

Group ·named to study Osteopathic .School

member who over the year
_
•
ByUoltedPreallatematlual
· displayed .enthusiasm and ATHENS - Ohio Valley
SUBIC BAY,' PHIIJPPINES - AMERICANS evaeuated . leadership .ali of 'the time, Health Services Foundation,
from Saigon in a !a~ minute helicopter operation were sharply went to David Moore.
Inc., has announced that Meno
critical today of u..s. Ambassador Graham Martin for his · one new 'first-time award, Lovenstein, Ph.D., of Athens
iilowness and secrecy In ctll'l'yina out evacu~ion plans. The the .National Band Directors has accepted the chairretugees were ftown to the USS Blue Ridge in 'the South China Association _ u. 'S. Marines manship of its Osteopathic
&amp;elan~ arrived.IIi the Philippines Sunday. Martin was staying Distinguished Musician S\lldy Committee.
at the u. s.ll:mbauy In Manila.
.
Award, was presented to This Ad Hoc Committee,
"Martin just didn't evacuate unW he Wll8 forced to, Carol Lewis. The final award comprised of ' members · and
leaving the deserving Vietnamese behind, the undeservinR of the evening was the M.ost non members of the Founpaying thelt way on, and the Arnerlc.ans having to claw their Improved Musician Award dation, was appointed to make
wayovertheembally-wall,"one~U.S.offlclalsald.
which went to Kim_Jones, · findings, conclusions and·
· A slmllar charge was made laJt Thursday by ABC news given to the musician who recommendations concerning
correapond111t Keli Kallhiwahara who said Martin Ignored showed the most effort tQ tbe ·. proposed School of
North VlelniiJillll!e wU'IIinCI and dlllcDineB and finally left~ improve and has the results to Osteopathic Medicine at Ohio
South VI~ employees lllranded In the courtyard when back it up . . ·
Unive~ity here.
be bQarded a hellcoj)ter to safety.
Following the awards· to the In 1968, Dr. Lovensteln was
band Goins intr.oduced the appointect the first Charles G.
OOWMBUS - GLENN R. WILLEY of Findlay 'Was officers of the Meigs Baild O'Bleness, Professor .of
elected presld111t of the Ohio ·Jaycees at Ita annual weekend Boosters for the past year. Economics at Ohio Univerconv111tlon here where llllln! than 2,000 members from aU Als'o recognized were the sity, a chair which ' he still
Jllrla of the state 1tteoded.
. ·
. , officers for the upcoming holds. He is the author of
year.
'
nUIJierous professional · and
(Contlmted on page 10)

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classes he has e~er had.
Sophomore band members
'were awarded letters, the
juniors received a pin in the
shape of the instrwnent they
play, and the seniors were
presented small trophies, as
Goins said, "To help them
remember the good times they
had in the .Meigs Band during
their high school years."
.
Mter each member of the
hand had been recognized.
Goins presented outstanding
band members with special
awards.

t;=:;;,;;==:=·:·: ;: :;:;.;,:::i·~::·~:·::ii;i;cl ~~~~~~?n~:~~~~:!~

0n

Moth~r's Day Gifts F~r N~t Sunday
•

ba~quet

mess hall reading "A First
Book of Comprehension
Pikes and Olmpositions." He
!eft Saigon with his lrothers
and sisters. His father stayed.
"I would like to be an
engineer," he said. Asked if he
ever would return to Vietnam,

Watergate cited
in Vietnam loss

WASHINGTON (UP!) Because of Watergate and the
By United Press ID.tematiooal return to their families, " the
congressional ban on U.S.
The new VietCong rulers of broadcast said. " He exmilitary action in Indochina,
South Vietnam have· told · pressed the hope that they
there was no other possible
former President Duong Van would contribute In the recon- Two suits for money have outcome of the Vietnam War
Minh and other high-ranki11g structiQ!l of the country ac- been filed in Meigs County than a OlnnnWtist takeover,
officials of. the depoied Saigon cord~g to their capabilities. Common Pleas Court.
says Secretary of State Henry
govenunent they are free to Waves of applause rose up."
The Kansas City Fire and Kissinger.
return to their families.
Marine Co., Colunobus, filed
Kissinger, in a taped televiRadioSaigon,inabroadcast
suit ag~inst Billy Bert Orr, sion interview lor NBC-TV's
monitored In Bangkok, said
Reedsville, asking $18,079.36 Today show, also said the
Minh and 18 other top officials
from Orr, a salesman for · Soviet Union . played "a
of the government that fell .
Agrico Chemical Co. The moderately constructive.role"
last week were given a sendentry claims fraudulently in the evacuation of
off during talks with the
charged invoices in the Americans and South. Viet"milltary management
amount of $18,079.36 were namese from Saigon.
committee" now running
made.
Asked by interviewer BarSaigon.
The plaintiff said it had a bara Walters why the United
A "moments to remember'' contract g uar a nt ee in g States did not tell South
"The comrade representative of the Saigon-Gia Dinh lounge will be a new fea ture of payment lor any loss suffered Vietnamese President Thieu
military management com- the Middleport AlumQi by Agrico Chemical Co. by a to negotiate a settlement after
mittee spoke of_ the great Association reunion this year. salesman and 'that the con- Congress forbade direct
victory of our people's cause
The lounge will be opened in tract included the loss which
of national liberation and a room at the Meigs Junior the Agrico Company suffered
announced the decision of the High School while the dance is due to the misapplication of
revolutionary government to going on, 9 p.m. to midnight. $18,079.36.
allow the personnel in the BobByer and Lewis Sauer' co- The plaintiff paid Agrico the
puppet machine to freely chairmen, . hav e ._already full amount on March 20,1974.
. collected a vartety of Items for
The second suit was filed by
the exhibit.
Henry E. Cleland, dba Cleland
Sheriff Robert 0. HarTrophies, yearbooks, news- Realty, Pomeroy , against tenbach learned at 6:01 a. m.
Cloudy tonight and Tuesday, paper clippings, slides of Barton E. and Johnetta today from Cecil Roseberry,
little temperature change . special events, film clips of Pearson, Rl. I Middleport, in operator, there had been a
Low tonight from the middle the last Middlepor t High the amount of $800 due on breaking and entering at the
to upper 40s. High Tuesday 70 School football game and of commission for sale of Pennzoil Service Station
to 75. Probability of • several band shows are property located in Rutland located at the corner of Third
precipitation 20 per cent today, among the things already Twp.
and Elm Sts. in Raci ne .
10 per cent tonight and collected . Residents with ·
Ray Manley, deputy, and
Tuesday.
·
anything to loan for the exhibit :;:;:::;:::::::::::::::::::;:::~:&lt;:::::::::::::::;:::::::::::: :::::::::::: Herman Henry of the BCI
are invited to contact either
SPORTS TODAYwent to the station and took
::::::::::::::.::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:::::: Byer Ol' Sauer: All items will Baseball, Eastern at
finger prints. Manley said
be
returned.
Hannan
Trace:
entrance
was gained by
. EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Mrs
.
Cherole
Burdette
,
Trimble
at
Southern
;
breaking
a
window
in the east
· Wednes'day through
end of the building . The cash
Friday, chance of showers president, is also requesting Meigs at Logan.
that
residents
who
desire
to
W
h
t
P
k
.
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.
:·register
contammg $150 was
·Wednesday, but more likely reserve tables for the dance
a ama a
ar erstaken, as were between $8 and
Thursday and Friday.
bring card tables marked with burg.
$9 worth of candy and potato
Highs In the upper 60s and
their name to the auditoriunn
TRACK- Meigs at
chips, and $100 worth of
the lower 70s. lows in the
on Friday, May 30, while the Chillicothe.
cigarettes. It is still unqer
40s and lower 50s.
decora ling is being done .
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::,:,:::::::::: investigation ,
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Weather

COLUMBUS (UP!) ~ Asuit
against the Public Employes
Retirement System (PERS)
was filed with the Supreme
Court of Ohio by a state appellate judge Friday in a
dispute over six rulings the
agency made on questions he
raised about his pension benefits.
Born .Dec. 18, 1906, 4th
District Court of .Appeals
Judge Gordon B. Gray,
Athens, will be more than 70
years old when his CliiTent
term on the bench expires
Feb. 8, 1977.
"Bonus points," which
enable them to obtain higher
pensions, · are awarded most
state employes for ·every year
they work between the ages of
65 and 70. The Ohio General.
. , Assembly, however, passed a
law five years ago abolishing
bonus points after Sept, 1
1976.
.
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PERS told Gray he would
forfeit his bonus points if he
·continues to work after Sept.
1,.1976; according to the suit:
PERS rulings on benefits
Gray says are due him for
. service as Athens city solicitor .
and Athens Olunty prosecutor

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Refugees from South
Vietnam still pour across the
Pacific, on their way to new
lives as strangers in a strange
land.
·
The last group of 60,000
steamed toward Guam and
another 11,000 spent Sunday
night sleeping in three relocalion centers in the United
States.
Some arrived relatively
wellheeled, others with only
the clothes on their backs.
For some there was joy at
being safe in a new land. For
others .there was trepidation
at being in a land where they
dot:t't speak the language and
have no one . to spo'nsor
them. .
For one woman it was
hysteria and ·a plea for
someone In give her the means

to kill herself, For a man in
Miami it was the almost
euphoric happiness of being
with his family in a land
without war.
AI Eglin Air Force Base,
F1a., Trinh Hong Mai, 29,
screamed
"give
me
something to kill myself." She
became hysterical · after
failing to reach her husband
.on the telephone. Her mother
in law, she told an interpreter,
refused to accept her call.
"I have lost my country, I
have killed my parents and
now I have lost my husband,"
she screamed.
Among her possessions
were a marraige cetlificate
and a wedding picture. She
said she..had married .Rohert
J. Bray of Danville, Va. He
left Vietnam in November,
1973, and when his letters
stopped coming in April, 1974,

for alumni

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SOUNDS
OF

PRICE 15'

school days

m top court

INNJ»lACE
NITELY

en tine

Mementos of

of Athens sues

natural stellar radiation.
'These reasons make the
ultraviolet lasers rational
candidates for intragalactic ·
beacons."
Wischnia, a guest investigator in the Copernicu.s
observation program,
supervised engineering work
on'the ultraviolet telescope In
-the big satellite.

MONDAY, MAY 5, 1975

Minh is free

Judge Gray

THE

at y

By JOSEPH R. O'BRIEN
Uolted Press lotematiooal

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extraterrestrial community,"
he said. "tntraviolet laser
beacons offer the potential of
high power combined with
high efficiency.
"Further, stars with a
temperature near that of our
own sun radiate very little
energy in the vacuuno ultraviolet, so that the telescope
receivers are not blinded by

Refugees still coming

OUTSI'ANDING PLAYERS- These three Meigs High band members were given
special awards for their outstanding par_tlcipation in the Meigs Band during the past year.
L-r are Marc Fultz, Arion Award ;· Kim Jones, Most Improved Musican, and David Moore,
John Phillip Sousa Award.

MONDAY
9:30 am to 5 pm

successful because, for one,
they do not know- what
·frequency to UBe.
Wischnia says · a laser experiment avoids this problem.
"Lasers in the vacuum
ultraviolet part of the optical
spectrwn repre.sent an eflicient and logical electromagnetic radiation source
which could be used by an

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

NO. 15

ELBERFELDS IN. POMEROY

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presence to .us.
Astronomers and bio.logists
have long believed there may
be life elsewhere in the
universe.
American and Russian
scientists have Qsed powerful
radio telescopes to listen for
radio signals from other
c i vi 1i z at ions .
Their
·eavesdr?pping has been un-

Devoted To The Interests of The Meigs-Mason Area

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Donald Barrett, Athens; Roy Htigh CustelJ. Pomeroy,' and Hearing is to receive
Bontrager , M.D., Logan; John Zimmerly , M.D., statements and materials
William Bourne, Ironton; Jackson : ·
·relative to the issues raised by
James Boyce, Athens; Oakley In his . first step as chair- House Bill 229 and pending in
Collins, Ironton ;· Taylor man, Dr . Lovenstein has the Senate of the lllth General
Culbert, Athens ; Merrill B. appointed a five . m'imlber. Assembly. The hearing panel
Haney, Logan ; Martin Hecht, hearing panel to conduct a has the responsibility of
Athens ; Richard Holl, Logan; public hearing. Members of assisting the lull committee In
. Ronald H. iames , .Proc- the hearing panel are Dr . .obtain sufficient information.
!orville; · Hugh Kirkel, Lovenstei.n, chairman; upon which to make its report.
Gallipolis : Arnold Lee, William H. Allen, Jr ., M.D.,
All interested persons are
D.D.S. , McArthur ; Thomas Athens; Jacl\ Rauch, D.O., enccuraged to participate.
W. Morgan, M.D., Galltpolis; · Logan;- fir-. Rush- Elliott;--f&gt;a.vid-F'Fey.,.-l.egal CoWlsel of---'-.~.:.._,\
.. Ray Pickens, D.O., Pomeroy; Athens, and Bernard Ful,tz; Ohio Valley Health Services
Thomas : Price, O.D., Logan; Pomeroy.
Foundation ,
Inc.,
the
Mark Rothstein, M.D., The hearing will be held at 9 secretary and counsel for the
McArthur; James Seymour, a.m.,
Saturday ,
May· committee, staled that rules
Nelsonville; G. · N. Spears, 10,
at
the
Athens of procedure have not been
. M.P., Ironton :. · William City
County Public adopted yet, but it is 11!1- ·
Theise n, Nelsonville.; Daniel Health Building next to the . ticipated that all proponents
Washam, . Jackson ; J . B. Athens County Fairgrounds on will have an opporl\flllly to
Yanity, Jr., :Athens; George Wes~ Union Street, Athens. make their presentations first
Hackett, Jr ., Middleport ; The purj,ose of the Public wilh the opponetns to follow.
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2- The Dauy_Sentinel, Middleiiort-~eroy, 0 ., Mo11day, May S,1975

3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, Mays. 1975:

SWift aid asked for refugees
WASHINGTON ( UPI) - and President Ford, tlu! HoWle endangered by a return to
SWift awroval of aid to help last week defeated a Senate- their homeland," he said
the eatlmaledl20,000 Vietnam passed bill that would have Sunday in Olarleston, ru. But
refUgees pouring into . the provided some money for the .he added "90 per cent .. ..would
. United ' States is ihe top refugees.
be better off going back to
priority of the Ford ad- 'Sens. Jacob Javits, R-N.Y.; their oWl) !arid now that the
ministration and . Congress and ·Claiborne Pell, D-R:I., inlttal panic has subsided."
this week.
said Saturday they will in- The House voted 248 to 162
But as the first wave of troduce legislation this week against a bill authorizing $327
refugees arrived, some mem- · seeking humanitarian aid.
in humanitarian aid, partly
berli of Omgress reflected
JavitS said adverse public· because it also contained
public opposition and said reaction oo the refugees may authority for Ford to WJe
they oppose the refugee have caused rejection of the American troops oo evacuate
resettlement plans.
HoWle bill.
Vietnamese and partly
Rep. Thomas Morgan, D"As a New Yorker, as the becaWJe some of the aid was
Pa., chairman of the House son of immigrant parents who earmarked for delivery to
Foreign Affairs Committee, arrived in New York City ... I South Vietnam.
said he will SIUilll')on a(!. find that attitude appalling," . A State Department official
ministration officials to he said.
said that when Ford tOld
determine the number of
But Sen. George McGovern, House Speaker Carl Albert the
refugees that will be absorbed D-S.D., said about 90 per cent administration would need at
and the cost of resettling of the refugees should volun- · least $400 million, the estimate
them.
tarily return to their native was based on 70,000 ·refugees
Some details may come home and that he will in- settling iri the Uniled States.
today when the government's troduce legislation providing He said double the number of
refUgee coordinator, L. Dean U.S. _ships and planes for that refugees would mean doubleI
Brown, appears before a purpose
the cost
House refugee subcommittee.
"Am~rica will not turn The ~test estimate is that
Despite backing by Morgan away those few who might be : 120,000
persons
were

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f.adres hand LA secon.d loss zn row

evacualed or fled from South .
Vietnam to U.S.. ships.
A UPI survey 'of more than
SO congressional offices ·
showed constituent mall and
telephone calls pinning
heavily against letting the
refugees Into the Uriltlld
States. Most of the concern
reflects apprehension about
what the sudden· iitflux will
mean oo an already depressed
job market.
Rep. Joe Waggonner Jr., DLa., said some letters oo him
asked: "How do we know that
there aren't any North Vietuamese Communists in the
crowd?"
Some of.the offices reported
evidence of racism Ill the
letters and phone canS, but the
SPECIAL TROPHIES WERE presented to Southern
single worry voiced most oflen
High School girls basketball team members for outwas the impact on em- standing performances during a banquet Saturday night.
ployment.
Receiving the awards from Mrs. Connee Andrews, left,
.
coach, 1..-, were Cheryl Larkins, high scorer with 162
points; Becky Sayre, best foul shooter; Brenda Lawrence,
best rebounder; Jennifer Mugrage, best defensive
player, and a aenior award for four yean of bastetblll,

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KENT, Ohio (UPI) - Five
years ago Sunday, four
students were killed and nine
wounded on the Kent State
University campus during
anti-war demonstrations.'
Today students tend to look
up&lt;in that day as a part of
history .
One of the wounded students
says the annual observance
had become b farce, institutionalized by pipesmoking historians.
Observances this year Included speeches by anti-war
figures Rev, Daniel Berrigan,
former
nun
Elizabeth
McAlister and former U.S.
Sen. Eugene McCarthy, D-

DR. LAMB

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GUEST SPEAKER - Miss Donna Lawson, right,
coach of the "Green Gals" of Marshall University,
Huntington, was guest speaker Saturda~ night for a
banquet held in the cafeteria of Southern High School In
Racine honOring the school's championship girls
basketball leam. Parents, team members, faculty
members aod other guests were on hand for the affair.
With Miss Lawson, left, is Mrs. Connee Andrews,
Southern High Girls, coach. Miss LawsOn taught IO.years
at the high school level In West Virginia before going to
her present position as assistant professor In the Physical
Education Department. Since the origin of the "Green
Gals" in 1970, MissLawson's teams have reigned as state
conference champions all but one year. She has had leamil
to advance oo the regional and natlon81 tournaments.

Mlnn.
It also included the now

SQUARE DANCERS WILL appear in the annual musical of the Salisbury Elementary
School at 7:30p.m. Thursday and Friday in the school auditorium. From the left are Billy
Browning, Mary Ridgway, Todd Thacker, Linda Williams, Bruce Brickles, Kathy Parker,
Dick King and Leslie Cole. The group was taught by senior citizens and Paddle Lambert will
be on hand to call for the students and Carol and Darr~U Taylor will provide the special
music for the dancers.

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traditional midnight candlelight vigil on the spots .
where the four studeots fell,
and the dedication of a
granile, wlnecolored marker
bearing the names of the four.
J(liled In a hall of gunfire by
Ohio National Guard troops ·
were Allison Krause of Pittsbur_M,_j&gt;a. ; Jeffrey Miller of
Plainview, N. Y.; Wllll8m
Schroder of Lorain, Ohio und · --...,-.- - - - - - : - - - - - - - - - - Sandra
Sc~euer
of
St811lps ha~ returned oo KS'O James A.. Rhodes sent the.
Youngstown, Ohio.
· to work on a master's degree Ohio National Guard to the
"Students her~ now look at 1n sociology_ afler being a camplls to put down those ·
the 1970 ~oot~s like a counselor In Dade County, demonstrations.
Gettysburg, sa1d Dr. Jerry Florida.
It a Scblzold Weekend
M. Lewis, an associate
Kahlersayshedoesn'tdwell Berrigan, who addressed an
professor sociol?gy ,:"ho on his· parplySis and becomes audience Saturday night while
witnessed the shootmgs. The a public figure once a year. He a rock concert was going oil on
students tend oo look at the also sa)ls he tries to realize aU a different part of campus,
shoo~lngs _ with far l_ess that baS happened in the past characterized
the
· emot1on and less pa~on. five years.
simultaneous scheduling as a
They tend to look at~ whole
"I realize that if the Uniled "schizo.ld weekend."
a!fair _ with more of . a States had pemutted lhe-1954
h1stor1cal, analytical, m- elections · in Vietnam l
leUectual approach."
wouldn't be .in a wheelcluur
The Dai~ Sentinel
Two Wounded StUI ~
today," he said. "And that
D~~n~~:-?JrE
Only two of the mne realiiationsendchilladoWn by
MEIGS-MASON AREA
Wounded students remain on spm'e."
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL
Exec. Ed.
the, ]{SU .campus -Dean
Stamps is troubled by the
ROBERT HOEFLICH
City Editor
Kahler, 2S • of East Canton, change In the campus mood.
Published dally except •
Ohio, and Robert Stamps, 24.
"It seems to me that May 4 . Saturday by Tho! Otrio Valley 1
Publishing Company, 111
The other seven have quietly has been Institutionalized by . Court st .. Pomeroy , Ohio i
45769 . Business Office Phone _
sea tte r ed around the COIUItry • pipe-smoking historians on 992 2156. Edilorial PhOne 992·
. Kahler, the only one of the campus," he said. May 4 Is a 2157.
Second c lass postage paid
runewho was left permanenUY dead issue literally and lit Pomerov. Oh io.
disabled, moves around figuratively.'
National advertlsi.n~
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representative
campus Ul a w ee c . II', e
"May 4 carries. a pious, Griffith Company,Ward
lnc ,plans to graduate next winter religious sober mood that Is Bottinelll &amp; Gallagher Div:.
'
151 Third Ave .. New York ,
with a. degree in secondary really a farce," he added. N.Y. 10011.
educatton
Subscription rates :
·
"The emphasis has shifted to Delivered by carrier where·
education, ~ut the average available 75 cents per week ;
By Motor Route wher, .
Kent student really doesn't carrier
service
not
,, care or understand what It available, One month. 53.25.
By mall in Ohio and W.Va. ,
Was all about."
One Year , $22.00 ; Six
m.onths,
$11 :SO.;
Three
The anti-war demon- months , S7 .00 . Elsewhere ·
'"'""theU s $26 .00 year; Si x months
strationsbegan ,....,...
· · $13.50 ; three months, 57.50 .
invasion into Cambodia. Gov. :subscription price includes

Bulk isn't bunk doctor replies

Sunda'( Times -Se ntineL '

By Lawrence F. Lamb, M.D.. the facts won't change. I hold
DEAR DR. LAMB- 1 read no quarrel with drinking
your article in the newspaper adequate amounts of water. In
about bulk. The last fact I recommend taking fluid
statement, "Bulk in the solid with the breakfast meal as
foods you eat, not water, is . part of bowel training.
essential to normal bowei
The point you are missing is
funclio~ ... aod most others, Is that water will not stay in the
absolutely wrong. You want to bowel unless there is a
move bulk with water. How reasonable amount of
can a so-called learned roughage.
medical docoor recommend
The whole wheat cereals
such a thing.?
contain brao. Bran naturally
I'm now 81. When [ was absorbs water and in this way
younaer, I •was troubled with prevents hard, dried concouatipation. 1 began drinking stipated stools. There are a lot
eight glasses of water a day Qf sophisticated ignoramuses
andhavehadnotroublesince. in the medical profession who
For 45. years ., liave been know this. ·n was pinpointed
drinking e.lght glasses of recently by brilliant British
.water a day ,and my daily surgeon'after several years of
ellmlnatlon· Is as,-regidar as study, and the general concept
the 11111, moon and stars.
has been proved and published
An you a quack out after by many ot~ fine scientists
the money It brings in·or just a · m Oil' leading medical jour-.
common sophisticated nals.
i«nnnmllll?
I'm glad you. are having no
DEAR READER _ No problems on your regim e. lm'
matter how ab~ve you are. · that doesn 't al~r thefactUlat

a

excess water is eliminated by
DEAR READER _ The
the kidney aod food residue by best thing oo do is forget about
the bowel. Nor does it it. Functional is a term used
minimize the importance of by. doctors to mean there is no
bulk in the diet. You can drink disease or abnormality
water till the cows come related to a finding.
home, and if there is no Physiological would be a
,natural roughage in the liowel better term.
it is not .going oo help to
A murmur means a sound
moisten 'the food residue, but that occurs from the flow of
it will · surely flush out the blood through the heart,
kidneys.
analogous to the term mur.
To learn more about this mll'ing brook. If it occurs
subject write to me in care of during the heart's contraction
this newspaper, P. 0 . Box (systole) it is called a sysoolic
1551, R&lt;ldio City Station, New murmur. When it occurs while
York, N. Y. 10019, and ask for the. heart is relaxing or
The Health Letter number 2-1 .dilating to fill with blood
on colon probl~ms and con-- -rmastole) lt is called a
stipation. Send a long, S~~U:., di~stOiic murtnur. ·
addressed ,stamped envelope
Grade one is the faintest of
aod 50 cents to cover costs.
murmurs, so faint that you
DEAR DR. LAMB - My can't hear it consuiritly on
~ePWt. from the doctor said I eyery examination, So, in
had'a possible functional heart swtunary' you have a faint
murmurgradeone. What does sound from blood flow while'
this mean , and is it serious? your heart is contracting that
Can. anything be done to i' perfecily normal.
overcome il?

SOUTHERN GIRLS ATHLETIC COACH, Mrs.
Connee Andrews, displays a handsome plaque engraved
with aU of the team members • names which Will be added
to the Southern High School trophy case for the girls
basketball learn accomplishments of the p~t year. The
championship team had a 11~ record. During a banquet
Saturday night honoring the Gallia-Meigs championship
'team,- Mrs. Andrews was presenled team gifts and a
personal gift from'Cindy Rolllh and Jennifer Mugrage,
seniors. A buffet dinner w~s served.

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By Bob Hoeflich

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.. POMEROY·- There'U be a "march" .in Pomeroy on May
15; but'iiOJI 't get alanned -It's not a protest.
"
On that day senior citizens will march from the cenler on ~' .
East Main St. to the courthouse where a proclamation will be .,
signed on the courthouse steps In recognition of Senior Citizens.
MonthwhlchlsMay.Atthe center'sannual birthday party this ,.;
year the county's eldest resident and the county's eldest :: ·
veteran of the armed forces will be especially honored. Anyone
with candidates for the honored is asked oophone 1\frs, Eleanor ~~
Thomas, executive dlrecror of the Meigs County Council on · ~·
Aging, at 992-7884.

·

omeowner wants to know why

By MILTON RICHMAN
UP! Sports Editor

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MRS. ALMA B. WJnTE OF Route 1, Langavlile, joins Mrs. •
Sandy Griffith In opposing the bringing of VIetnamese orphans •
Into the United.states. Uke Sandy, Mrs. White Is sympathetic · -~
towarda the cblldren bJt leels there are too many dlsadvanta,tl .involved lncllldiai the dla.sea th~~ · IIO!M ~of.. the · "•
chUdreo have.
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of slo-pitch

Dear Sir:
lwOUldllketoknowwhatcanliedoneloourtown.lhlProad
herem Happy HolloW. Whenthewater.laonthemalnhlgbway
through Rutland everybody baa to travel around thrOugh
WILBUR B,\ILEY·, COUNT\' road 19 rellldent (former '
Happy Hollow. When th~ water goes down, all those people go · Route 33), lelli"chlng among old pbotoe at hil home, came · ::!
their way, but we who live here have to put up with the rough IICfOillla well-pre.-ved bandblll from the Prall H8rdware llld ·:~
Blld chuck-holed road,
Rooflni Co., which was at lll!DI time In hlllory located OJI •
If everyime has to use U, why can't it bemadelnto a county Court St, In Pomeroy.
'"u
road? AllbutacoupleorthreefamilletlownthelrownbOIIItl
1be center of the poster felture1 a pbatoiJ"apb ol an .,.;:
and have to pay high taxes but don't have a decent roiKI to unldmUfled man In ·top hat and IIMIIUit, certalniJ not the
drlveover.Cananyofthevoterssuggestwhattodo?-Leland ordinary COitume f!Jr a roofer. Mr. Bailey, .in bill '1011, does not .,.;: .
Haley, Rt.l, Middleport.
remember the Prall linn, ao It mull have been lome time ago.. ·

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was Sunday

The M &amp; M men 's sio-pitch
softball league held its final
National "League
Atlanta
000 200 006--2 8 0 meeting before the start of
Cincinnati
100 010 10x-3 11 0 league play Sunday at 5 p.m.
Niekro
(1 -3)
and
Correl l;
Gullett , BorbOn (8) and Bench . at the R. C. garage on North
WP -Gullett (3 -1) . HR - ~oncep - 2nd Ave. in Middleport when
~ cion (2nd ) .•Chicago
010 100 51G-B 13 1 rosters were to be turned in
St. Louis ·
100 210 101- 6 11 0 and schedules handed out. A
Zahn, Zamora (4), Knowles (7)
representative of each team
and Swisher ; McGloth en. Gar man (7), Hrabosky (7), Sadetki was to be at that meeting. The
(81 and Simmons. WP -Zamora
&lt;2 . 0) . LP . McGlothen (2 . 2). first week's schedule:
HR S-Sm it h 2 (Jrd &amp; 4th) . - - Tuesday, May 6
. (1st Game)
·
Houston
oso ooo IOD-6 7 o
AT LAIQN - 6 p.m. Hart's
San Francisco 002 022 20x- 8 8 1
Roberts, Granger {5), Crawford Used Car~vs. Jim's Campers:
(61 , York Ill . Scherman (8l. 7 p .. 'l. ~ li's Body Shop vs.
Griffin (8 ) an d May ; Montefus Five Points.
co , Lavel le (2), Heaverlo 16 ),
Moffitt (7), Barr (7) and Hill.
AT KYGEI'\ - 6 p.m Eli
WP -Barr (2-2). LP -York (0 .2) .
Dennison Post 467 vs. Village
. HR -May (2nd ). -.. - San Diego
001 101 70G--1 0 14 0 Pharmacy ; 7 p.m. Midwest
Los Angeles 310 020 10o- 7 12 1
Freisleben, Tomlin (2) , Folker s Steel vs. Royal Crown ; 8 p.m.
(&lt;11, Greif {5), Jones (6) and Fruth Pharmacy vs. Gavin.
Hundley ; Rhoden , Hooton ( &lt;1).
Thursday, May 8
Downing (7) , Hough (6) and
Yeager . WP -Jones (3 -2). LP AT LAKIN - 6 p.. m. Royal
Hooion (0 . J J. . HR s - Garv~y
(3rd). Torre s (1st) , L ocklear Crown vs. Fruth Pharmacy; 7
•. (1stl. .- - ·
p.m. Gavin vs. Hart's" Used
12nd game)
Cars.
Houston
300 620 016--12 1o 1
San Francisc 004 010 201- 8 7 2
AT KYGER - 6 p.m.
Richard , Granger (7) and
Jim's
May ; D'Acqu isto, Williams (4 ), Midwest Steel vs.
Toms 15 ). Heaverlo 17) ; Lavelle Campers; 7 p.m. Five Points
(9 ) and Rader . WP -Richard (J.
vs. Eli Dennison Post 467; B
H . LP -D' Acquisto 11 -J) .
p.m. Village P.harmacy vs.

----

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LOUISVU,LE (UPI)- Once Jacinto Vasquez makes up his
mind, nobody Is going to change it. He .isn't hard-headed, or
unwilling oo lislen, but he isn't going oo be sweet-talked Into.
W-IN
.
doing something he doesn't believe in either.
SEATTLE (UPl) - The .
Eleven years ago, he was approached w.lth what was Seattle Sounders overcame a'
described as an opportunity of a lifetime. The cliance to be a onl!1loal halftime deficit . to ·
part of "the grealest two minutes in sports" by riding In the win their home opener 2-1 over
Kentucky Derby.
.
the Toronoo Metros-Croatia In '
Vasquez was 20 and impressionable then. He had come from North · American Soccer'
Panama only a few years before that and naturally was eager League play Sunday night.
oo make some kind of name for himself.
·
As costs go uo. so do va lues. And as
He accepled. The horse he was assigned was Wil Rad, a S7-1
PRISONER
WINS
the replacement" t:Ost of your home
shot. Wll Rad had one small fault. He ran too long .in the same
~ i"&gt;~ '&gt;, so does the lnl loHton Coyer~se.
. AUKEGAN IU (UP!)
W
,
•·
- m a State f ar m Homeowners Po11cy
spot. ')'hey pOsted a reward for his return that day. He finished
lenth In a field of 12, and Vasquez hai:l had it with long shots. Floyd "Jumbo" Cummings,
That was In the 1964 Kentucky Derby and Vasquez dido 't ride ari lnmale of the · StateviUe
won the
.in another one here until ~turday when he won w.lth Foolish Penitentiary,
heavyweight title of the
1Z5.BPowell Street
Pleasure, the favorite, and his kind of horse.
Middlep&lt;)rl, Ohio
Illinois
AAU
·
Boxing
Toilr· "I had many chances oo come oo the Derby, but I don't take
.nament
Sunday
night,
deciPH. 992-7155
2G-1 shots," explained Vasquez, now 31 and far less imsloning Mike Pantzlaff of
i1Ar I pood trtlflhDOt,
pressionable than he was In his first Derby ..
Sl8ft f1rm IS r~rre.
Foolish Pleasure finished a length and three quarters In Moline In the three..-ound title
1 front of Avatar, who led at one point In the stretch. With bout. Cummings, 25, is serving
STATE FARM FIRE
Foolish Pleasure already making his move, Avatar was a 75-100-year 1erm in conand Casualtv Com pany
Home Oflice:
bumped and turned slightly sideways by Diabolo, the third nection with the slaying of a
Bloomington. Illinois
Chicago
grocer.
He
has
been
place flnlaher.
.
.
P7324
An Inquiry after the race by the slewards deletmlned that imprisoned since 1967. ·
'
the bumping had not affecled ~vatar's or Dlabolo's order of
finish. W1111e Shoemaker, trying for his fourth Derby win
aboard Avatar felt the inc.l&lt;)ent had not helped FQOlish
Pleasure either.
"I think he would have been the winner anyway," said the 43year-()ld dean of the Derby riders. "My horse was on the rail . .
Dlabolo bumped me in the back, I don't think he kept me from
winning."
Foolish Pleasure has now won 11 of his 12 starts, yet even
c;olniog Into Saturday's race there were those th~t were ·
unimpressed, a number who felt John I:. Greer's colt couldn't
handle the Derby's mile and a qUarter distance.
He handled it okay, and a~r he diil,ln 2:02 flat, a clocking
beltered by only 13 of the previous 100 Derby winners, but
nowhere near Secretariat's record time of 1:~.2-5. Va =:j~
was peppered with questions about how good·a horse he
Foolish Pleaure Is. Does he think, for example, he can win the
Triple Crown? .
·
"I don't see why not," ·&amp;nsWered Vasquez.
"How would you compare him with Secretarial?"
"I won't make comparisons, "Vasquez said, "I never.rode
Secretariat. Don't forget Secretarial was 'the Horse of the
Century.' He was bealen a few times, this horse (Foolish
Pleasure) was beaten only once."
. Anotl!er questl011 was put to Vasquez about Foolish Pleasu·

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REG. 12.45
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re., .
''How good Is he?'

·
"You can't teU. He beats them all, doesn't he? That's pretty
good."
.
Jacinto Vuquez can't be talkad Into anything on the track or
Off, He heard tr'ack annoiulcer ChiCk Anderson's mistaken call
that Prince Thou Art was .in front In the stretch Saturday, but
that d.ldn't bother him.
.
.
.
"I bealillt," he said, '.'IJJI I knew lie (Prince Thou Art) had
to be flying to 111 by 1111. I was lQOking for the
I 11!8811'1
worried about II\YIIIbli e11e."
Prince Tbou Art was J'UI!IIin&amp; In sixth place when Anderson
had IUn In front, and Braullo Baeu, hil jockey, wondered
what the whole tbini was about' also,.
"I heard him aay i was in fi'GIIt. I knew he didn't ~n 'me,
beca11111 I was way hack," s-IIBkl, haU lllllllng.
"Yeah," one his fellow joclll needled Baela from a nearby
locker. '"'bey're 1W1 waiting for you In the willners circle."

will acquaint you with
necessary supplies
needed for your·
do-it-yourself
paneling project.

\

- ~~~treal at New Y~rk. f?Pd::. .- Bill's ~ody

five for St. Louis and drove In
five runs. Two.of his hits were
home runs.
· Glanll 8-8, Alltros ~12
Houston's Bob Watson
scored
major
league
basebaU's one millionth run
.and the Astro pitchers combined with San Francisco
bur lers oo set a record for .
most walks in a doubleheader
with 42 as the tw'o NL West
teams split. Watson scored the
millionth·run In a losing cause
in the first game as Gary
Thomasson ripped a two..-un
triple in the seventh oo snap a
6-6 ·tie . Rob Andrews
highlighled a six..-un fourth
Inning. · for Housoon In the
second game with a two..-un ·
triple.

EXPERIENCED
PERSONNEL

Final meeting

"A11

JOHN ARBAUGH, FORMERLY OF Tuppers Plains and
nowofLogan,lsrecuperatlllg at his home following a two week
stay at the Hocking Community Hospital following a heart
attack. Mr. Arbaugh was more than perked up by the many
cards and remembrances which were sent his way,
· Incidentally, Nellie Burford of 119 Devonshire Ave.,
Dayron, formerly of Meigs County, would like ·to hear from
friends on her birthday anniversary which is May 7. She'll be
88. .
.
Up Columbus way, Mrs. Clara Hennesy, a long-time active'
Middleport resjdent, was extremely pleased with the many
birthday carda she received. She was 89 on AprU 28. Mrs.
Hennesy wali hospitalized for almost a morith bJt has been
home with her son-In..law and daughler. Mr. and Mrs. Gordon
K, Harris, 4155 Kendale Road, ColumbiiS, the past six weeks.

CHARLES CALDWELL, ORIGINALLY FROM the
· Tuppers Plains area, graduated with a b8chelor ·of science
degree in business 8dmlnlstration when Franklin University
held .its commencement In Veterans. Memorial Auditorium,
Columbus, In April.
Olarles .Ia married to the former Peggy Amberger and the
couple has a daughter, llknonth-()ld, . Carrie Lynn. He has
· accepled employment In t!JI! accounting department of the
Jeffrey Manufacturing Co. in Columbus and the . family Ia
· residing 011 Broadview Ave.
•,
1
Allendlng the commencement besides Peggy were Mr,
1 and Mrs. Wallace Amberger and 8011; BW, Mr. and Mrs.
I Gardland Caldwell, Mrs. Janice Ritchie·and Mn. Ben Ewing.
1
I

Sport Parade

HuQhes ( 1-1J. LP -F itzmorris (32) . HR S-Killebrew (5th), Kuslck
f ( 1stL ._--'
New York
000 003 016--4 13 2
MilWaukee 000 451 lOx- 11 16 1
Dobson. Wallace (4J. Gura (51 ,
Ly le {8) and Munsoh ; Slaton ,
Rodriguez (7) and Porter . WP -.
Slaton (3 -4) . LP -Dobson (2 -3) .
r HR -Nettles (lst l. - - Detroit at Boston , 2" gam es,
ppd ., rain

:::~RS

.....

--------------------------1
Letters of:opinion are welcomed. They a~oald be :
1
1 less tban 3Giwords long.(or be subject to redllet... by I
1 the editor) and m111t be alped wtda die II&amp;Dee'• 1111- 1
I dreaa. Names llliy be withheld UJIO!I pabUeaUaa. I
However, OD request,IIBlDc!l will be dlscloaed. LeUen I
should
be iD good taste, ·addreuing waeli, Dot per- 1
1
soDalities.
.
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1
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. Concepcion and Baltimore's
Doug DeCinces hit the other
two.
Tootsie Roll's centra! center
in New York reporled Concepcion was just rounding third.
when Watson oouched home
plale .
. "I figured I had a chance,"
said Concepcion. "That's wby
I ran as hard as I could after I
reached first and saw my ball

Pittsburgh

the 'Bend~

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·-····

Beat

player who scored the major
league's 1,000,000th run .
After . the count-down
reached one, six minutes
elapsed before Houston's Bob
Watson crossed the plate In
San Francisco with the prize;
winning run.
Wal'aon scored from second
him,
on a Milt May homer, one of
Since his son was born, he three hits within a ten-second
has rapped out 11 hits in 23 span.
times at bat for a .478 average.
Three of those hits came
Sunday as the Reds edged
Major League ResuuS
Atlanta 3-2 .in the finale of a By United
Press International
thrE!e-game series.
Am·e rican League
· ·
I 1st Gamel
On eof.the hits_,a fir 8I -ijln~
Baltimore
010 033103- 11171
single, led to the Reds' first .Cleveland 000 000 Olo- 1 6 3
run of the game The second Torrez (3 . 1) and Hendricks ;
•
G . Perry , Kern (6). LaRoche
was a Hfth-inning homer 111 . Buskey IBI and Ellis. LP ·
which tied the •ame at 2-2. G Perry. 14-31 . HRS-Bumbry
9
(lstl , OeCmces (lstl .
The third was a seventh·
·
d · bl
h'ch dro
(2nd, 11 innings)
· ·
mmng OU e W I
ve Baltimore 200 000 100 Oo-J 10 0
home pitcher Don -GuUett to
010 200 000 01- 4 11 o
give the left-bander his third Cleveland
Alexander, Jackson (10), Jeff victory in four decisions.
erson ( 10 ) and Duncan ; Hood .
Eckersley 0), Buskey (9 ) and
The game-w.lning hit was Ashby
. WP -Buskey 11 -0) L P the fifth of the season for Jefferosn ·(0 -2) . HR S-Gamble
•,' ~ lJ, Duncan { lsn . ..,- --=...
Concepcion. That's three Oakland
ooo 110 ooo--2 9 1
more than any other Reds Ctticago
003 110 OO;~C-5 so
Abbott. Lindblad (5) , Fingers
player.
(8) and Tenace : Kaat, Forster
"lve got to work harder now (8) and Downing . WP -Kaat (4 . LP -Abbott 12·11 . HRS .
that !have another mouth to 01
Jackson (4th) , Downing (2nd) .
feed;" Concepcion said.
lifornia
ooo ooo ooo-o 5o
The double won the game, Ca
Texas
000 100 oox-1 4 o
but the homer almost won Hassler (3 -2) and .Egan ; Hands ,
Umbarger {9 ), Foucault (9) ·
Concepcion a $1,000watch and and
Sundberg . WP -Hands (2 -2).
a watch for each of his ; HR -Burroughs (5th ). - -'
Kansas City JOO ooo oob-J 6 2
teanunates.
Minnesota
310 020 OOx- 6 11 2
Tootsie RoD had offered the Fitzmorris, Leonard (2). Bird
(7)
and Mart inez ; Albury,
)lfize to the major league Huahes
(3) and Borgmann . WP -

Linescores

'.

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TONY. HAWK, center, front, will be doing the vocal on "I Can't Give You Antying But
Love" oo bring on this "Tramp" dance 'line composed of, I tor, Jena Welker, Joyce Baker,
Carol Morris, Judy Well and Kim Basham, at the annual musical of the Salisbury School to
be presenled at 7:30p.m. Thursday and Friday in the school auditorium.

CINCINNATI (UPI) ~ Cincinnati Reds Ali..Star' shortsoop · Dave Concepcion ·is a
proud papa tllese days.
And the way Concepc.lon is
hitting the baU since his son
David Alejandro was born one
week ago, he evidently wants
the child to be equally proud of

"

history

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a senior a.ward for four years of play. Each player
received an Individual trophy and an engraved medal
from Mrs. Andrews. Other learn members were Karen
Guinther, Nancy Roy, Mel Waldnig, Debble Roush, Ja~e
Ord, Oleryl Roseberry, and Jean Ritchhart. Southern s
girls learn was the Meigs-Gallia champions.

cOast League, homered and
doubled in the same inning to
spark a seven-run San Diego
outburst in the · seventh and
overcome the early Los
Angeles lead.
The Padres collected six
hits as 11 men paraded to the
plate in the seventh against
Dodger pitchers Burt Hooton
aod AI Downing.
Locklear drove in three of
the runs with his two hits.
The conquest came before
42 000 fans at Dodger Stadium
~. crowd which pushed Los
Angeles'
season attendance to
go over the fence.
after j~st 13 home
"Maybe my grandchild wiD 527
score baseball's 2,000,000th
run," he said.
His two RBI's boosted his
season total to 16.
Gullett yielded seven hits,
two runs, walked three and
struck out two before giving
way to Pedro Borbon in the
eighth. Borbon got credit for
his first save of the season.
equalled their ·vicoory output
of last season ·against the
Dodgers witli still 15 games
-remaining against "their
neighbors up_the Coast.
Gene Locklear, a 21-yearold outfielder who spent most
of last season polishing hls bat
with Hawaii of the Pacific

Papa Concepcion hot with bat

"

'
and Cindy Rolllh, second high scorer with 155 points,
and

The Dodgers played the . Diego's asset of 1975. The
Padres 18 tinles last year and Padres rallied from a 6-2
registered
16 · wins, deficit Sunday to claim an 8-6
dominating San Diego like no win over the National League
other club in the elder clrcu.lt. champs. The vicooij c.ame on
In both of the Padre triumphs, ' the heels of a 3-1 San Diego
the winning margin was just win in a IS-inning ·contest at
one run.
·
Dodger Stadium Saturday
But the youth wh.lch proved night.
detrimental last season is .San
The Padres have thus

'

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day.now

,

By RICK GOSSELIN
UPI Sports Writer
The San Diego Padres were
·a .major reason the Los
Angeles Dodgers won the
National League West last
season -and San -Diego
Manager John McNamara is
out oo see It doesn't happen
again.

•

dates. It marks the earliest swamped Kansas City 6-3, and
time a team has ever passed ·Cleveland split a twinbiU with
.the half miUion figure in at- Baltimore, w.lnning 4-3 and
tendance . The Dodgers drew losing 11-1. Detroit at Boston
2,632,474 fans last season.
was rained out.
The Cincinnati Reds nipped Reds 3, Braves 2
the Atlanta Braves 3-2, the
Dave Con,ceppion belted
Chicago Cubs outlasted St. three hits, including a home
Louis 8-6, .the Houston Astros run aod a tie-breaking double,
split a doubleheader with the oo pull Cincinnati to within two
San Francisco Giants, win- games of the division leading
ning 12-aafter falling 8-0in the Dodgers. Don GuUett pitched
operier, and the Montreal the first seven Innings to pick
Expos-New York Mets and · up the win and Pedro Borbon
Pi It s burgh
Pirates- finished up to coUect his first
Philadelphia Phillies games save.
were rained out.
Cubs 8, Cardinals 6 ·
In the American League,
Jerry Morales belted a
Texas nipped California 1-0, biises loaded single to cap a
Milwaukee beat the New York five-run seventh Inning- and
Yankees 11-4, Chicago spilled push Chicago past St. Louis.
Oakland S-2, . Mmnesota Reggie Smith went five-for-

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,.

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2- The Dauy_Sentinel, Middleiiort-~eroy, 0 ., Mo11day, May S,1975

3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, Mays. 1975:

SWift aid asked for refugees
WASHINGTON ( UPI) - and President Ford, tlu! HoWle endangered by a return to
SWift awroval of aid to help last week defeated a Senate- their homeland," he said
the eatlmaledl20,000 Vietnam passed bill that would have Sunday in Olarleston, ru. But
refUgees pouring into . the provided some money for the .he added "90 per cent .. ..would
. United ' States is ihe top refugees.
be better off going back to
priority of the Ford ad- 'Sens. Jacob Javits, R-N.Y.; their oWl) !arid now that the
ministration and . Congress and ·Claiborne Pell, D-R:I., inlttal panic has subsided."
this week.
said Saturday they will in- The House voted 248 to 162
But as the first wave of troduce legislation this week against a bill authorizing $327
refugees arrived, some mem- · seeking humanitarian aid.
in humanitarian aid, partly
berli of Omgress reflected
JavitS said adverse public· because it also contained
public opposition and said reaction oo the refugees may authority for Ford to WJe
they oppose the refugee have caused rejection of the American troops oo evacuate
resettlement plans.
HoWle bill.
Vietnamese and partly
Rep. Thomas Morgan, D"As a New Yorker, as the becaWJe some of the aid was
Pa., chairman of the House son of immigrant parents who earmarked for delivery to
Foreign Affairs Committee, arrived in New York City ... I South Vietnam.
said he will SIUilll')on a(!. find that attitude appalling," . A State Department official
ministration officials to he said.
said that when Ford tOld
determine the number of
But Sen. George McGovern, House Speaker Carl Albert the
refugees that will be absorbed D-S.D., said about 90 per cent administration would need at
and the cost of resettling of the refugees should volun- · least $400 million, the estimate
them.
tarily return to their native was based on 70,000 ·refugees
Some details may come home and that he will in- settling iri the Uniled States.
today when the government's troduce legislation providing He said double the number of
refUgee coordinator, L. Dean U.S. _ships and planes for that refugees would mean doubleI
Brown, appears before a purpose
the cost
House refugee subcommittee.
"Am~rica will not turn The ~test estimate is that
Despite backing by Morgan away those few who might be : 120,000
persons
were

•

f.adres hand LA secon.d loss zn row

evacualed or fled from South .
Vietnam to U.S.. ships.
A UPI survey 'of more than
SO congressional offices ·
showed constituent mall and
telephone calls pinning
heavily against letting the
refugees Into the Uriltlld
States. Most of the concern
reflects apprehension about
what the sudden· iitflux will
mean oo an already depressed
job market.
Rep. Joe Waggonner Jr., DLa., said some letters oo him
asked: "How do we know that
there aren't any North Vietuamese Communists in the
crowd?"
Some of.the offices reported
evidence of racism Ill the
letters and phone canS, but the
SPECIAL TROPHIES WERE presented to Southern
single worry voiced most oflen
High School girls basketball team members for outwas the impact on em- standing performances during a banquet Saturday night.
ployment.
Receiving the awards from Mrs. Connee Andrews, left,
.
coach, 1..-, were Cheryl Larkins, high scorer with 162
points; Becky Sayre, best foul shooter; Brenda Lawrence,
best rebounder; Jennifer Mugrage, best defensive
player, and a aenior award for four yean of bastetblll,

.'

Bl00dy

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KENT, Ohio (UPI) - Five
years ago Sunday, four
students were killed and nine
wounded on the Kent State
University campus during
anti-war demonstrations.'
Today students tend to look
up&lt;in that day as a part of
history .
One of the wounded students
says the annual observance
had become b farce, institutionalized by pipesmoking historians.
Observances this year Included speeches by anti-war
figures Rev, Daniel Berrigan,
former
nun
Elizabeth
McAlister and former U.S.
Sen. Eugene McCarthy, D-

DR. LAMB

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GUEST SPEAKER - Miss Donna Lawson, right,
coach of the "Green Gals" of Marshall University,
Huntington, was guest speaker Saturda~ night for a
banquet held in the cafeteria of Southern High School In
Racine honOring the school's championship girls
basketball leam. Parents, team members, faculty
members aod other guests were on hand for the affair.
With Miss Lawson, left, is Mrs. Connee Andrews,
Southern High Girls, coach. Miss LawsOn taught IO.years
at the high school level In West Virginia before going to
her present position as assistant professor In the Physical
Education Department. Since the origin of the "Green
Gals" in 1970, MissLawson's teams have reigned as state
conference champions all but one year. She has had leamil
to advance oo the regional and natlon81 tournaments.

Mlnn.
It also included the now

SQUARE DANCERS WILL appear in the annual musical of the Salisbury Elementary
School at 7:30p.m. Thursday and Friday in the school auditorium. From the left are Billy
Browning, Mary Ridgway, Todd Thacker, Linda Williams, Bruce Brickles, Kathy Parker,
Dick King and Leslie Cole. The group was taught by senior citizens and Paddle Lambert will
be on hand to call for the students and Carol and Darr~U Taylor will provide the special
music for the dancers.

.,....... .·

traditional midnight candlelight vigil on the spots .
where the four studeots fell,
and the dedication of a
granile, wlnecolored marker
bearing the names of the four.
J(liled In a hall of gunfire by
Ohio National Guard troops ·
were Allison Krause of Pittsbur_M,_j&gt;a. ; Jeffrey Miller of
Plainview, N. Y.; Wllll8m
Schroder of Lorain, Ohio und · --...,-.- - - - - - : - - - - - - - - - - Sandra
Sc~euer
of
St811lps ha~ returned oo KS'O James A.. Rhodes sent the.
Youngstown, Ohio.
· to work on a master's degree Ohio National Guard to the
"Students her~ now look at 1n sociology_ afler being a camplls to put down those ·
the 1970 ~oot~s like a counselor In Dade County, demonstrations.
Gettysburg, sa1d Dr. Jerry Florida.
It a Scblzold Weekend
M. Lewis, an associate
Kahlersayshedoesn'tdwell Berrigan, who addressed an
professor sociol?gy ,:"ho on his· parplySis and becomes audience Saturday night while
witnessed the shootmgs. The a public figure once a year. He a rock concert was going oil on
students tend oo look at the also sa)ls he tries to realize aU a different part of campus,
shoo~lngs _ with far l_ess that baS happened in the past characterized
the
· emot1on and less pa~on. five years.
simultaneous scheduling as a
They tend to look at~ whole
"I realize that if the Uniled "schizo.ld weekend."
a!fair _ with more of . a States had pemutted lhe-1954
h1stor1cal, analytical, m- elections · in Vietnam l
leUectual approach."
wouldn't be .in a wheelcluur
The Dai~ Sentinel
Two Wounded StUI ~
today," he said. "And that
D~~n~~:-?JrE
Only two of the mne realiiationsendchilladoWn by
MEIGS-MASON AREA
Wounded students remain on spm'e."
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL
Exec. Ed.
the, ]{SU .campus -Dean
Stamps is troubled by the
ROBERT HOEFLICH
City Editor
Kahler, 2S • of East Canton, change In the campus mood.
Published dally except •
Ohio, and Robert Stamps, 24.
"It seems to me that May 4 . Saturday by Tho! Otrio Valley 1
Publishing Company, 111
The other seven have quietly has been Institutionalized by . Court st .. Pomeroy , Ohio i
45769 . Business Office Phone _
sea tte r ed around the COIUItry • pipe-smoking historians on 992 2156. Edilorial PhOne 992·
. Kahler, the only one of the campus," he said. May 4 Is a 2157.
Second c lass postage paid
runewho was left permanenUY dead issue literally and lit Pomerov. Oh io.
disabled, moves around figuratively.'
National advertlsi.n~
·
h
1
ha'
H
representative
campus Ul a w ee c . II', e
"May 4 carries. a pious, Griffith Company,Ward
lnc ,plans to graduate next winter religious sober mood that Is Bottinelll &amp; Gallagher Div:.
'
151 Third Ave .. New York ,
with a. degree in secondary really a farce," he added. N.Y. 10011.
educatton
Subscription rates :
·
"The emphasis has shifted to Delivered by carrier where·
education, ~ut the average available 75 cents per week ;
By Motor Route wher, .
Kent student really doesn't carrier
service
not
,, care or understand what It available, One month. 53.25.
By mall in Ohio and W.Va. ,
Was all about."
One Year , $22.00 ; Six
m.onths,
$11 :SO.;
Three
The anti-war demon- months , S7 .00 . Elsewhere ·
'"'""theU s $26 .00 year; Si x months
strationsbegan ,....,...
· · $13.50 ; three months, 57.50 .
invasion into Cambodia. Gov. :subscription price includes

Bulk isn't bunk doctor replies

Sunda'( Times -Se ntineL '

By Lawrence F. Lamb, M.D.. the facts won't change. I hold
DEAR DR. LAMB- 1 read no quarrel with drinking
your article in the newspaper adequate amounts of water. In
about bulk. The last fact I recommend taking fluid
statement, "Bulk in the solid with the breakfast meal as
foods you eat, not water, is . part of bowel training.
essential to normal bowei
The point you are missing is
funclio~ ... aod most others, Is that water will not stay in the
absolutely wrong. You want to bowel unless there is a
move bulk with water. How reasonable amount of
can a so-called learned roughage.
medical docoor recommend
The whole wheat cereals
such a thing.?
contain brao. Bran naturally
I'm now 81. When [ was absorbs water and in this way
younaer, I •was troubled with prevents hard, dried concouatipation. 1 began drinking stipated stools. There are a lot
eight glasses of water a day Qf sophisticated ignoramuses
andhavehadnotroublesince. in the medical profession who
For 45. years ., liave been know this. ·n was pinpointed
drinking e.lght glasses of recently by brilliant British
.water a day ,and my daily surgeon'after several years of
ellmlnatlon· Is as,-regidar as study, and the general concept
the 11111, moon and stars.
has been proved and published
An you a quack out after by many ot~ fine scientists
the money It brings in·or just a · m Oil' leading medical jour-.
common sophisticated nals.
i«nnnmllll?
I'm glad you. are having no
DEAR READER _ No problems on your regim e. lm'
matter how ab~ve you are. · that doesn 't al~r thefactUlat

a

excess water is eliminated by
DEAR READER _ The
the kidney aod food residue by best thing oo do is forget about
the bowel. Nor does it it. Functional is a term used
minimize the importance of by. doctors to mean there is no
bulk in the diet. You can drink disease or abnormality
water till the cows come related to a finding.
home, and if there is no Physiological would be a
,natural roughage in the liowel better term.
it is not .going oo help to
A murmur means a sound
moisten 'the food residue, but that occurs from the flow of
it will · surely flush out the blood through the heart,
kidneys.
analogous to the term mur.
To learn more about this mll'ing brook. If it occurs
subject write to me in care of during the heart's contraction
this newspaper, P. 0 . Box (systole) it is called a sysoolic
1551, R&lt;ldio City Station, New murmur. When it occurs while
York, N. Y. 10019, and ask for the. heart is relaxing or
The Health Letter number 2-1 .dilating to fill with blood
on colon probl~ms and con-- -rmastole) lt is called a
stipation. Send a long, S~~U:., di~stOiic murtnur. ·
addressed ,stamped envelope
Grade one is the faintest of
aod 50 cents to cover costs.
murmurs, so faint that you
DEAR DR. LAMB - My can't hear it consuiritly on
~ePWt. from the doctor said I eyery examination, So, in
had'a possible functional heart swtunary' you have a faint
murmurgradeone. What does sound from blood flow while'
this mean , and is it serious? your heart is contracting that
Can. anything be done to i' perfecily normal.
overcome il?

SOUTHERN GIRLS ATHLETIC COACH, Mrs.
Connee Andrews, displays a handsome plaque engraved
with aU of the team members • names which Will be added
to the Southern High School trophy case for the girls
basketball learn accomplishments of the p~t year. The
championship team had a 11~ record. During a banquet
Saturday night honoring the Gallia-Meigs championship
'team,- Mrs. Andrews was presenled team gifts and a
personal gift from'Cindy Rolllh and Jennifer Mugrage,
seniors. A buffet dinner w~s served.

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By Bob Hoeflich

..
.. POMEROY·- There'U be a "march" .in Pomeroy on May
15; but'iiOJI 't get alanned -It's not a protest.
"
On that day senior citizens will march from the cenler on ~' .
East Main St. to the courthouse where a proclamation will be .,
signed on the courthouse steps In recognition of Senior Citizens.
MonthwhlchlsMay.Atthe center'sannual birthday party this ,.;
year the county's eldest resident and the county's eldest :: ·
veteran of the armed forces will be especially honored. Anyone
with candidates for the honored is asked oophone 1\frs, Eleanor ~~
Thomas, executive dlrecror of the Meigs County Council on · ~·
Aging, at 992-7884.

·

omeowner wants to know why

By MILTON RICHMAN
UP! Sports Editor

.

•:
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::::

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MRS. ALMA B. WJnTE OF Route 1, Langavlile, joins Mrs. •
Sandy Griffith In opposing the bringing of VIetnamese orphans •
Into the United.states. Uke Sandy, Mrs. White Is sympathetic · -~
towarda the cblldren bJt leels there are too many dlsadvanta,tl .involved lncllldiai the dla.sea th~~ · IIO!M ~of.. the · "•
chUdreo have.
· ''"

of slo-pitch

Dear Sir:
lwOUldllketoknowwhatcanliedoneloourtown.lhlProad
herem Happy HolloW. Whenthewater.laonthemalnhlgbway
through Rutland everybody baa to travel around thrOugh
WILBUR B,\ILEY·, COUNT\' road 19 rellldent (former '
Happy Hollow. When th~ water goes down, all those people go · Route 33), lelli"chlng among old pbotoe at hil home, came · ::!
their way, but we who live here have to put up with the rough IICfOillla well-pre.-ved bandblll from the Prall H8rdware llld ·:~
Blld chuck-holed road,
Rooflni Co., which was at lll!DI time In hlllory located OJI •
If everyime has to use U, why can't it bemadelnto a county Court St, In Pomeroy.
'"u
road? AllbutacoupleorthreefamilletlownthelrownbOIIItl
1be center of the poster felture1 a pbatoiJ"apb ol an .,.;:
and have to pay high taxes but don't have a decent roiKI to unldmUfled man In ·top hat and IIMIIUit, certalniJ not the
drlveover.Cananyofthevoterssuggestwhattodo?-Leland ordinary COitume f!Jr a roofer. Mr. Bailey, .in bill '1011, does not .,.;: .
Haley, Rt.l, Middleport.
remember the Prall linn, ao It mull have been lome time ago.. ·

...

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~

was Sunday

The M &amp; M men 's sio-pitch
softball league held its final
National "League
Atlanta
000 200 006--2 8 0 meeting before the start of
Cincinnati
100 010 10x-3 11 0 league play Sunday at 5 p.m.
Niekro
(1 -3)
and
Correl l;
Gullett , BorbOn (8) and Bench . at the R. C. garage on North
WP -Gullett (3 -1) . HR - ~oncep - 2nd Ave. in Middleport when
~ cion (2nd ) .•Chicago
010 100 51G-B 13 1 rosters were to be turned in
St. Louis ·
100 210 101- 6 11 0 and schedules handed out. A
Zahn, Zamora (4), Knowles (7)
representative of each team
and Swisher ; McGloth en. Gar man (7), Hrabosky (7), Sadetki was to be at that meeting. The
(81 and Simmons. WP -Zamora
&lt;2 . 0) . LP . McGlothen (2 . 2). first week's schedule:
HR S-Sm it h 2 (Jrd &amp; 4th) . - - Tuesday, May 6
. (1st Game)
·
Houston
oso ooo IOD-6 7 o
AT LAIQN - 6 p.m. Hart's
San Francisco 002 022 20x- 8 8 1
Roberts, Granger {5), Crawford Used Car~vs. Jim's Campers:
(61 , York Ill . Scherman (8l. 7 p .. 'l. ~ li's Body Shop vs.
Griffin (8 ) an d May ; Montefus Five Points.
co , Lavel le (2), Heaverlo 16 ),
Moffitt (7), Barr (7) and Hill.
AT KYGEI'\ - 6 p.m Eli
WP -Barr (2-2). LP -York (0 .2) .
Dennison Post 467 vs. Village
. HR -May (2nd ). -.. - San Diego
001 101 70G--1 0 14 0 Pharmacy ; 7 p.m. Midwest
Los Angeles 310 020 10o- 7 12 1
Freisleben, Tomlin (2) , Folker s Steel vs. Royal Crown ; 8 p.m.
(&lt;11, Greif {5), Jones (6) and Fruth Pharmacy vs. Gavin.
Hundley ; Rhoden , Hooton ( &lt;1).
Thursday, May 8
Downing (7) , Hough (6) and
Yeager . WP -Jones (3 -2). LP AT LAKIN - 6 p.. m. Royal
Hooion (0 . J J. . HR s - Garv~y
(3rd). Torre s (1st) , L ocklear Crown vs. Fruth Pharmacy; 7
•. (1stl. .- - ·
p.m. Gavin vs. Hart's" Used
12nd game)
Cars.
Houston
300 620 016--12 1o 1
San Francisc 004 010 201- 8 7 2
AT KYGER - 6 p.m.
Richard , Granger (7) and
Jim's
May ; D'Acqu isto, Williams (4 ), Midwest Steel vs.
Toms 15 ). Heaverlo 17) ; Lavelle Campers; 7 p.m. Five Points
(9 ) and Rader . WP -Richard (J.
vs. Eli Dennison Post 467; B
H . LP -D' Acquisto 11 -J) .
p.m. Village P.harmacy vs.

----

I

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g 1·ng

a t · Philadelphia .' - - - - - - - - - -

LOUISVU,LE (UPI)- Once Jacinto Vasquez makes up his
mind, nobody Is going to change it. He .isn't hard-headed, or
unwilling oo lislen, but he isn't going oo be sweet-talked Into.
W-IN
.
doing something he doesn't believe in either.
SEATTLE (UPl) - The .
Eleven years ago, he was approached w.lth what was Seattle Sounders overcame a'
described as an opportunity of a lifetime. The cliance to be a onl!1loal halftime deficit . to ·
part of "the grealest two minutes in sports" by riding In the win their home opener 2-1 over
Kentucky Derby.
.
the Toronoo Metros-Croatia In '
Vasquez was 20 and impressionable then. He had come from North · American Soccer'
Panama only a few years before that and naturally was eager League play Sunday night.
oo make some kind of name for himself.
·
As costs go uo. so do va lues. And as
He accepled. The horse he was assigned was Wil Rad, a S7-1
PRISONER
WINS
the replacement" t:Ost of your home
shot. Wll Rad had one small fault. He ran too long .in the same
~ i"&gt;~ '&gt;, so does the lnl loHton Coyer~se.
. AUKEGAN IU (UP!)
W
,
•·
- m a State f ar m Homeowners Po11cy
spot. ')'hey pOsted a reward for his return that day. He finished
lenth In a field of 12, and Vasquez hai:l had it with long shots. Floyd "Jumbo" Cummings,
That was In the 1964 Kentucky Derby and Vasquez dido 't ride ari lnmale of the · StateviUe
won the
.in another one here until ~turday when he won w.lth Foolish Penitentiary,
heavyweight title of the
1Z5.BPowell Street
Pleasure, the favorite, and his kind of horse.
Middlep&lt;)rl, Ohio
Illinois
AAU
·
Boxing
Toilr· "I had many chances oo come oo the Derby, but I don't take
.nament
Sunday
night,
deciPH. 992-7155
2G-1 shots," explained Vasquez, now 31 and far less imsloning Mike Pantzlaff of
i1Ar I pood trtlflhDOt,
pressionable than he was In his first Derby ..
Sl8ft f1rm IS r~rre.
Foolish Pleasure finished a length and three quarters In Moline In the three..-ound title
1 front of Avatar, who led at one point In the stretch. With bout. Cummings, 25, is serving
STATE FARM FIRE
Foolish Pleasure already making his move, Avatar was a 75-100-year 1erm in conand Casualtv Com pany
Home Oflice:
bumped and turned slightly sideways by Diabolo, the third nection with the slaying of a
Bloomington. Illinois
Chicago
grocer.
He
has
been
place flnlaher.
.
.
P7324
An Inquiry after the race by the slewards deletmlned that imprisoned since 1967. ·
'
the bumping had not affecled ~vatar's or Dlabolo's order of
finish. W1111e Shoemaker, trying for his fourth Derby win
aboard Avatar felt the inc.l&lt;)ent had not helped FQOlish
Pleasure either.
"I think he would have been the winner anyway," said the 43year-()ld dean of the Derby riders. "My horse was on the rail . .
Dlabolo bumped me in the back, I don't think he kept me from
winning."
Foolish Pleasure has now won 11 of his 12 starts, yet even
c;olniog Into Saturday's race there were those th~t were ·
unimpressed, a number who felt John I:. Greer's colt couldn't
handle the Derby's mile and a qUarter distance.
He handled it okay, and a~r he diil,ln 2:02 flat, a clocking
beltered by only 13 of the previous 100 Derby winners, but
nowhere near Secretariat's record time of 1:~.2-5. Va =:j~
was peppered with questions about how good·a horse he
Foolish Pleaure Is. Does he think, for example, he can win the
Triple Crown? .
·
"I don't see why not," ·&amp;nsWered Vasquez.
"How would you compare him with Secretarial?"
"I won't make comparisons, "Vasquez said, "I never.rode
Secretariat. Don't forget Secretarial was 'the Horse of the
Century.' He was bealen a few times, this horse (Foolish
Pleasure) was beaten only once."
. Anotl!er questl011 was put to Vasquez about Foolish Pleasu·

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re., .
''How good Is he?'

·
"You can't teU. He beats them all, doesn't he? That's pretty
good."
.
Jacinto Vuquez can't be talkad Into anything on the track or
Off, He heard tr'ack annoiulcer ChiCk Anderson's mistaken call
that Prince Thou Art was .in front In the stretch Saturday, but
that d.ldn't bother him.
.
.
.
"I bealillt," he said, '.'IJJI I knew lie (Prince Thou Art) had
to be flying to 111 by 1111. I was lQOking for the
I 11!8811'1
worried about II\YIIIbli e11e."
Prince Tbou Art was J'UI!IIin&amp; In sixth place when Anderson
had IUn In front, and Braullo Baeu, hil jockey, wondered
what the whole tbini was about' also,.
"I heard him aay i was in fi'GIIt. I knew he didn't ~n 'me,
beca11111 I was way hack," s-IIBkl, haU lllllllng.
"Yeah," one his fellow joclll needled Baela from a nearby
locker. '"'bey're 1W1 waiting for you In the willners circle."

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- ~~~treal at New Y~rk. f?Pd::. .- Bill's ~ody

five for St. Louis and drove In
five runs. Two.of his hits were
home runs.
· Glanll 8-8, Alltros ~12
Houston's Bob Watson
scored
major
league
basebaU's one millionth run
.and the Astro pitchers combined with San Francisco
bur lers oo set a record for .
most walks in a doubleheader
with 42 as the tw'o NL West
teams split. Watson scored the
millionth·run In a losing cause
in the first game as Gary
Thomasson ripped a two..-un
triple in the seventh oo snap a
6-6 ·tie . Rob Andrews
highlighled a six..-un fourth
Inning. · for Housoon In the
second game with a two..-un ·
triple.

EXPERIENCED
PERSONNEL

Final meeting

"A11

JOHN ARBAUGH, FORMERLY OF Tuppers Plains and
nowofLogan,lsrecuperatlllg at his home following a two week
stay at the Hocking Community Hospital following a heart
attack. Mr. Arbaugh was more than perked up by the many
cards and remembrances which were sent his way,
· Incidentally, Nellie Burford of 119 Devonshire Ave.,
Dayron, formerly of Meigs County, would like ·to hear from
friends on her birthday anniversary which is May 7. She'll be
88. .
.
Up Columbus way, Mrs. Clara Hennesy, a long-time active'
Middleport resjdent, was extremely pleased with the many
birthday carda she received. She was 89 on AprU 28. Mrs.
Hennesy wali hospitalized for almost a morith bJt has been
home with her son-In..law and daughler. Mr. and Mrs. Gordon
K, Harris, 4155 Kendale Road, ColumbiiS, the past six weeks.

CHARLES CALDWELL, ORIGINALLY FROM the
· Tuppers Plains area, graduated with a b8chelor ·of science
degree in business 8dmlnlstration when Franklin University
held .its commencement In Veterans. Memorial Auditorium,
Columbus, In April.
Olarles .Ia married to the former Peggy Amberger and the
couple has a daughter, llknonth-()ld, . Carrie Lynn. He has
· accepled employment In t!JI! accounting department of the
Jeffrey Manufacturing Co. in Columbus and the . family Ia
· residing 011 Broadview Ave.
•,
1
Allendlng the commencement besides Peggy were Mr,
1 and Mrs. Wallace Amberger and 8011; BW, Mr. and Mrs.
I Gardland Caldwell, Mrs. Janice Ritchie·and Mn. Ben Ewing.
1
I

Sport Parade

HuQhes ( 1-1J. LP -F itzmorris (32) . HR S-Killebrew (5th), Kuslck
f ( 1stL ._--'
New York
000 003 016--4 13 2
MilWaukee 000 451 lOx- 11 16 1
Dobson. Wallace (4J. Gura (51 ,
Ly le {8) and Munsoh ; Slaton ,
Rodriguez (7) and Porter . WP -.
Slaton (3 -4) . LP -Dobson (2 -3) .
r HR -Nettles (lst l. - - Detroit at Boston , 2" gam es,
ppd ., rain

:::~RS

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--------------------------1
Letters of:opinion are welcomed. They a~oald be :
1
1 less tban 3Giwords long.(or be subject to redllet... by I
1 the editor) and m111t be alped wtda die II&amp;Dee'• 1111- 1
I dreaa. Names llliy be withheld UJIO!I pabUeaUaa. I
However, OD request,IIBlDc!l will be dlscloaed. LeUen I
should
be iD good taste, ·addreuing waeli, Dot per- 1
1
soDalities.
.
·
. I
1
1
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l

. Concepcion and Baltimore's
Doug DeCinces hit the other
two.
Tootsie Roll's centra! center
in New York reporled Concepcion was just rounding third.
when Watson oouched home
plale .
. "I figured I had a chance,"
said Concepcion. "That's wby
I ran as hard as I could after I
reached first and saw my ball

Pittsburgh

the 'Bend~

.

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·-····

Beat

player who scored the major
league's 1,000,000th run .
After . the count-down
reached one, six minutes
elapsed before Houston's Bob
Watson crossed the plate In
San Francisco with the prize;
winning run.
Wal'aon scored from second
him,
on a Milt May homer, one of
Since his son was born, he three hits within a ten-second
has rapped out 11 hits in 23 span.
times at bat for a .478 average.
Three of those hits came
Sunday as the Reds edged
Major League ResuuS
Atlanta 3-2 .in the finale of a By United
Press International
thrE!e-game series.
Am·e rican League
· ·
I 1st Gamel
On eof.the hits_,a fir 8I -ijln~
Baltimore
010 033103- 11171
single, led to the Reds' first .Cleveland 000 000 Olo- 1 6 3
run of the game The second Torrez (3 . 1) and Hendricks ;
•
G . Perry , Kern (6). LaRoche
was a Hfth-inning homer 111 . Buskey IBI and Ellis. LP ·
which tied the •ame at 2-2. G Perry. 14-31 . HRS-Bumbry
9
(lstl , OeCmces (lstl .
The third was a seventh·
·
d · bl
h'ch dro
(2nd, 11 innings)
· ·
mmng OU e W I
ve Baltimore 200 000 100 Oo-J 10 0
home pitcher Don -GuUett to
010 200 000 01- 4 11 o
give the left-bander his third Cleveland
Alexander, Jackson (10), Jeff victory in four decisions.
erson ( 10 ) and Duncan ; Hood .
Eckersley 0), Buskey (9 ) and
The game-w.lning hit was Ashby
. WP -Buskey 11 -0) L P the fifth of the season for Jefferosn ·(0 -2) . HR S-Gamble
•,' ~ lJ, Duncan { lsn . ..,- --=...
Concepcion. That's three Oakland
ooo 110 ooo--2 9 1
more than any other Reds Ctticago
003 110 OO;~C-5 so
Abbott. Lindblad (5) , Fingers
player.
(8) and Tenace : Kaat, Forster
"lve got to work harder now (8) and Downing . WP -Kaat (4 . LP -Abbott 12·11 . HRS .
that !have another mouth to 01
Jackson (4th) , Downing (2nd) .
feed;" Concepcion said.
lifornia
ooo ooo ooo-o 5o
The double won the game, Ca
Texas
000 100 oox-1 4 o
but the homer almost won Hassler (3 -2) and .Egan ; Hands ,
Umbarger {9 ), Foucault (9) ·
Concepcion a $1,000watch and and
Sundberg . WP -Hands (2 -2).
a watch for each of his ; HR -Burroughs (5th ). - -'
Kansas City JOO ooo oob-J 6 2
teanunates.
Minnesota
310 020 OOx- 6 11 2
Tootsie RoD had offered the Fitzmorris, Leonard (2). Bird
(7)
and Mart inez ; Albury,
)lfize to the major league Huahes
(3) and Borgmann . WP -

Linescores

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TONY. HAWK, center, front, will be doing the vocal on "I Can't Give You Antying But
Love" oo bring on this "Tramp" dance 'line composed of, I tor, Jena Welker, Joyce Baker,
Carol Morris, Judy Well and Kim Basham, at the annual musical of the Salisbury School to
be presenled at 7:30p.m. Thursday and Friday in the school auditorium.

CINCINNATI (UPI) ~ Cincinnati Reds Ali..Star' shortsoop · Dave Concepcion ·is a
proud papa tllese days.
And the way Concepc.lon is
hitting the baU since his son
David Alejandro was born one
week ago, he evidently wants
the child to be equally proud of

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a senior a.ward for four years of play. Each player
received an Individual trophy and an engraved medal
from Mrs. Andrews. Other learn members were Karen
Guinther, Nancy Roy, Mel Waldnig, Debble Roush, Ja~e
Ord, Oleryl Roseberry, and Jean Ritchhart. Southern s
girls learn was the Meigs-Gallia champions.

cOast League, homered and
doubled in the same inning to
spark a seven-run San Diego
outburst in the · seventh and
overcome the early Los
Angeles lead.
The Padres collected six
hits as 11 men paraded to the
plate in the seventh against
Dodger pitchers Burt Hooton
aod AI Downing.
Locklear drove in three of
the runs with his two hits.
The conquest came before
42 000 fans at Dodger Stadium
~. crowd which pushed Los
Angeles'
season attendance to
go over the fence.
after j~st 13 home
"Maybe my grandchild wiD 527
score baseball's 2,000,000th
run," he said.
His two RBI's boosted his
season total to 16.
Gullett yielded seven hits,
two runs, walked three and
struck out two before giving
way to Pedro Borbon in the
eighth. Borbon got credit for
his first save of the season.
equalled their ·vicoory output
of last season ·against the
Dodgers witli still 15 games
-remaining against "their
neighbors up_the Coast.
Gene Locklear, a 21-yearold outfielder who spent most
of last season polishing hls bat
with Hawaii of the Pacific

Papa Concepcion hot with bat

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and Cindy Rolllh, second high scorer with 155 points,
and

The Dodgers played the . Diego's asset of 1975. The
Padres 18 tinles last year and Padres rallied from a 6-2
registered
16 · wins, deficit Sunday to claim an 8-6
dominating San Diego like no win over the National League
other club in the elder clrcu.lt. champs. The vicooij c.ame on
In both of the Padre triumphs, ' the heels of a 3-1 San Diego
the winning margin was just win in a IS-inning ·contest at
one run.
·
Dodger Stadium Saturday
But the youth wh.lch proved night.
detrimental last season is .San
The Padres have thus

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By RICK GOSSELIN
UPI Sports Writer
The San Diego Padres were
·a .major reason the Los
Angeles Dodgers won the
National League West last
season -and San -Diego
Manager John McNamara is
out oo see It doesn't happen
again.

•

dates. It marks the earliest swamped Kansas City 6-3, and
time a team has ever passed ·Cleveland split a twinbiU with
.the half miUion figure in at- Baltimore, w.lnning 4-3 and
tendance . The Dodgers drew losing 11-1. Detroit at Boston
2,632,474 fans last season.
was rained out.
The Cincinnati Reds nipped Reds 3, Braves 2
the Atlanta Braves 3-2, the
Dave Con,ceppion belted
Chicago Cubs outlasted St. three hits, including a home
Louis 8-6, .the Houston Astros run aod a tie-breaking double,
split a doubleheader with the oo pull Cincinnati to within two
San Francisco Giants, win- games of the division leading
ning 12-aafter falling 8-0in the Dodgers. Don GuUett pitched
operier, and the Montreal the first seven Innings to pick
Expos-New York Mets and · up the win and Pedro Borbon
Pi It s burgh
Pirates- finished up to coUect his first
Philadelphia Phillies games save.
were rained out.
Cubs 8, Cardinals 6 ·
In the American League,
Jerry Morales belted a
Texas nipped California 1-0, biises loaded single to cap a
Milwaukee beat the New York five-run seventh Inning- and
Yankees 11-4, Chicago spilled push Chicago past St. Louis.
Oakland S-2, . Mmnesota Reggie Smith went five-for-

REG.

16.79

988
PAIR

OTHER SIZf$ AVA/tAaLE

4e INCHES WIDE

REG4 4.25

Rosen.bloom Bros. Co.

FOA KlDS -

Big Shei ~­
Aeg. Frenct'l Fries.
tu"rno"Ver &amp;
•
Large Sol! Drink

wire:

FU"NMEAL'M
Fun Tray ,

Funburg.er ".
·Reg. French Fries.
SurpriS:e Prize,
Reg. Soft Drink &amp;
a Sweel Treat

The Frierdy Ones
GALLIPOLIS
1513 E~sltrn Ave.

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POMEROY
CEMENT BLOCK 'CO.
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"The Department Store
Of Building Since 19}5"
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4- The Dilily Sentirlel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, May 5, 1975

ww&amp;~~~~~~~~~w~~~~~~~~m

Van ·Lie·r · nets
35 as Bulls

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Red-hot Texas.· Rangers
blank Angels by 1:to 0
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top Warriors

Pro Standings

THE RACINE H.OME:··NAJ:IOIAt·':BANK
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~,ilfii'GCIII..Iofotiulldl"'iieontldtl_,ion..;_ Mf'y•"-'_:.:19:,:.7!_ _~

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\ iii"MYN ili)Nii &amp;;c;th; OG

Texas at Kansas City , night
Minnesota at Chicago, night
Milwaukee at Detroit. night
Boston at Cleveland, night
New York at Baltimore, night

p.m ..
Houston (Dierker 3·21 at Los
Angeles (Rau J.t) , 10 :30 p .m .
Tuesday's Games
Chicago at Montreal, night
Philadelph ia at St. Louis,
night
Houston at Los Angeles. night

One way to keep from coiJee. n i:~:tsburgh at New York, .
·II•&amp; junk 11 to burn down lbe .san Francisco at At lanta,
I
n1 ght
·
ara1e.
San Dieg9 at Cinc innati •. night
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Dear Hlen: . .
' I hope you'll be honest about the number of letters you
receive agreeing with "Tired of Pretense." Many of us do but
a mUll on letters wouldn't coii'vince one media person to t~U . it
.like It is.
.
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Why do you think the late night talk shows are so popular?
Beca~ women are sitting before the TV waiting to hear that
first snore from the bedroom. 1n·spite of the conpsiracy to turn
us Into selpols
a lot of us are- SICK OF SEX.
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Dear Helen:·
I feel sorry for people Uke "Tired of Pretense'' who are
lurnedoff by sex. I'm a 25-year~ld working wife.and mother.
I'm not a nympho, but there are times when I stop by husband
from "turning over and going to sleep,'' and I know he doesn't
mind !
I thank God for the gift and pl!lllsure of·love; I thank my
parents for bringing me up right, and I thank my husband for ·
being, die gentle, considerate lover that he is. - NOT

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PRET~ING!

Dear Helen:
I do not think sex is repulsive, nor is it pleasant. It just
l!lists, for women, like many other biologic funCtions. I have
long believed this must he a fact for the majority of women,
bu\ Uterature, films and music have bullt up a fiction-largely
originated by men - that females are as highly sexed as
males.
·
. I don't object to fulfilling my mate's need for sex, but I do
resent the fact that I must pretend pleasure In the act. This is
the only way to continue a stable relationship with my husband
whose ego:is so sensitive regarding his ability to give sex
pleasure, that In order to .Protect It, he must blame me if I do
not receive pleasure.
I enjoy my husband's company, his respect, kindness and
companionship, biit never sex. ~ WHO NEEDS IT?
.

Dear Helen~·u· ...~•r ·~..-..~!11&gt;

RUTLAND
Flower
arrangements for the allsports banquet of Meigs ·High
School and the Rutland
· . Alumni Association banquet
on May 24 will be made by the
Rutland Friendly Gardeners,
it was decided at the Wednesday night meeting of the
club at the home of Mrs. Suzy
Carpenter.
The club also voted to expand the planting at Forest
Acres Park for the late Jean
Parker. Areport on the recent
regional meeting held at
Marietta was given "with the
club being represented by
DEBBIE DAILEY
M':_s. Marie Birchfield, Mrs.
Carpenter, Mrs. Margaret
Edwards and Mrs. Joann
Fetty.
The' Rutland spring cleanup
work was again discussed and
it was noted that May 21 and 22
RACINE - Mr. and Mrs. will be pickup days: Janet
Leonard Dailey entertained Bolin, Mrs. Edwards, Mrs.
recently with a party In ob- Lois Walker, and Mrs. Judy
servance of the lith birthday Snowden furnished refreshof their daughter, Debbie.
ments to the children who
A cake decorated wlth red helped in some cleanup work
roses was served with ice at the schooi·Friday.
a .eam, soft drinks, and chips.
Mrs. Carpenter reported on
Guests were Mr. and Mrs·. a meeting of the OAGC which
Gene Ward, Diann and Troy; she attended on April 9 and 10
Mr. and Mrs. Darrell Cozart, which included a tour of
Mrs. Nellie Cozart, Mrs. King 's Island and the
Shirley Bowman, Julia and gree nhouses where the
Gary; Mrs. LBvema Kauff&gt; flowers used in the park are
Syiithia, Chris and Becky ; grown,
·
Mrs. Carole Pickens, Mitche)l
Welcomed into membership
and Christy; Mr. and Mrs . of the club were Mrs. Martha
Blaine Dailey, Brian and Willis, Mrs. Shirley Wilson
Benny; Mrs. Ocran Dailey, and Mrs. Velma Nicinsky:
Mrs. Judy West, Mr. and Mrs. Plans were made for the May
David Dailey and Ray Lynn,
Alisha Bissen, Beth Hayman,
Kathy Pierce, Dee Dailey,
Sheila Harris, Dale Connolly,
Johnny Connolly, Jimmy
Harris, Robert Harris.
Sending gifts were Mr. and
Mrs. Gene Westfall, Sanford
Cozart, Mr, and Mrs. Florence
Deeters, RUa Young, Scottie
Dillon, and Mrs. Mary Hoffman.

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11th birthday
is celebrated

27 therapy session with the Mrs. Donna Williamson. Mr .
Rutland special education Fetty wlll .!,lost the' nex.t ·
children to be a picnic at meeting with Mrs . Allee
Forest . Acres Park. Mi-s . Thompson to. be th~ g~~i
Birchfield and Mrs. Edwards demonstrator. Refreshmenl8
will have charge. On April 30 . were served.
the club members toured
Kingwood Center.
Devo lions .to ·open the
meeting were given by Mrs.
_Quallty..Jh,oes
Carpenler
who
used
"Friendships that Need
At .Everyday
Mending". For roll call
low Prices
m~mbers named a spring
Hn . Moi!.-Frl., 91o s
flower blooming in their
Set. 91o8
gardens and . exc han ged
Your Ttio,m ~cAn Stor,p
plants. Mrs. Edwards gave
gardening tips for May.
Mrs . Charlotte Willford ·
made arrangements in basic
design and also showed
severa l geometric designs.
The door prize was won by

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If they '!"Ould only admit it, I feel a great many women are
like m~Jl:~~;!II~M~ith ·my husband, but only because it
makes HIM feel:,w.mplete: ~ is a beautiful expression of
love. The power to aY.~.IIIt:en · ~chulher 'makes hlln' teef'virile
and me feel very special to him, but if the truth were known,
I'd be ).l"'lu{'ohaP!Ili&gt;Wifha,J.O\oliig IIUg and a bit of cuddling.
Yes·, l'Nil6dti ~ :r. :il~il!f ~lill¥~ :to lake orgasms - but
sometimes I'd rather not. It's only his loving need that creates
my , sex drlve. '.''JI '· want to" make ''him happy. - GOOD
MAI!RfAGE. .· ,;.
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RACINE - The annual
CEIJ:BRATE BIRTHDAYS
banquet ani! dance of the
Terry McCarty, i3 and his mother, Mrs. Olga McCarty,
•
Racine Alumni Association
_65, celebrated then' birthdays Thursday night with a party
has been se t for May 24 in the
given at the home of Mr. McCarty's friend, Debbie ArSouther n High
School
mentraut. The party was hosted by Miss Armentraut's
auditorium.
parents and bro~r. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Armentraut
William McNickle of
and' son·, IJonnle. Cake, Ice cream, SQft drinks and.potato
McArthur, class of 1952, will
chlpa were serve!L Guests at the party were Ronnie
he the speaker for the 6 p. m.
McCarty, Mr. and Mrs. Donald McCarty and David Ray,
steak dinner. McNickle has a
NOTE FROM HELEN: A tremendous number of readers
· Mr. and Mrs, Dale McCarty, Mrs. Clara Price, Lisa
master's degree in education
answered "Tired of Pretense." Their letters·are sad ... wise .. ,
Jolmson, Judy Price, Rhonda Price and son,.Brian, Jolm
and has taught school for 15
tholllhtful .,. wry ... hateful ... happy ... and withail, very
Nelson, Darlene Reeves, Jackie Wagner, Chris Lemley,
years. He is a member of the
. hone~. I'll share a few more with you on Wednesday, - H,
and Jeff Moore. :;
National Education
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Association and ''the Ohio
Education Association and for
11 years he has been an
athletic coach. He belongs to
several
lodges, spent four
.,
number of positions at the years in the Marine Corps and
Mrs. Jean Dye, 2486 Strat- for Cleveland Scholarship
state and council levels, prior works part-tirrie as an inlord Road, Cleveland Heights, Programs, Inc., and is a
to assuming · the slate sUrance salesman.
president of tl!e Ohio PTA, has member and second vicepresidency, For the Ohio PTA, McNickle is married to the
been niRillnated for the office presideht of the Ohio Advisory
she has been first vice- former Juanita Schuster.
ol Coordinator of Legislative Council for .Vocational
·president and advisor to They have three sons.
Activity lor the-National PTA. Education.
councils, vice-president and Tbe dance will begin at 9 p.
Mrs. Dye will be up for. Mrs. Dye's legislative efdlrec!Qr of the department of m. with music to be provided
eleetlon by a Special electors' forts for education have Ineducation, · and chairman of by "Temperance" of Langroup, · during the National volved activities leading to the
the committees on magazines, caster. The dance is open to ·
PTA's 1975 convel!tlon In enactment of the Ohio Senate
membership,
budget, the public. The dinner is being
Atlantic City, New Jersey, Btu 303ln 1967, which made it
resolutions, leadership ·served by the jllJlior class and
Jujl~ 1·1. The Coordinator of possible for Ohio boards of
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development, and legislation. their mothers. Reservations
Legislative Activity serves for education to pc)oJ funds lor the
At the council level, she at $3.50 per plate for alumni
a two-y.eljl' term, promoting joint establishment and
MRS.
DYE
.
served as secretary, chair- and guest and $1 dues for the
the organlzatlon1s• views on operation of facilities, and
man of school education and scholarship fund to be ·made
legislative action 'affecting provision of services, for
education and the welfare .of handicapped children. The prospective teachers at Ohio juvenUe protection, and as by May 18 with Mrs. ·Raymond
'•
liaisOn between the council Pierce, 949-2374.
c111jdren, all!l youth.
Immediate result was the colleges and universiti~.
Active In the Ohio PTA since creation of tl!e Mayfield
Former vQiunteer activities and the ~ool .board. Mrs. ·
IN HOSPIT;\L
1948, Mrs. Dye · became a School for the Deaf, an In behalf of health and human Dye has been president of the
member of the National PTA exemplary model in Cuyahoga welfare organlzatio1111 en- Falrfa1 Elementary PTA, ind RUTLAND - • Mrs. Iva
Bolird .of. Managers In 1973 County. Mrs. ' Dye has ap. compass advisory board is. currently a member of the Stewar.l of Rutlan(l Is : ~
. with 1Jier , election BS Stale jleared frequently before the membership and a vice- Clexeland Heights High medical patient at the Holzer
prnldellt, a position she holds Ohio Senate and House presidency in the Family School PTSA ,(Parent- Medical Center. Room 224.
·mw thll October. She is.also Education Committees In Service Association; advisory Teacher-student Association).
BIH!ppolnted member of the behalf of chlldren and youth, board member •. Cleveland Mrs. Dye and her husband,
National PTA Commission on testifying for the . Ohio PTA, Welfare Federation; m\!Ulber, Sherman, &lt;~n attorney, are the
Me m ~ e r s h I p
a n d the Ohio School Boards United Youth Services; and parents of six children.
Orgaillzstlon81 Services, and Association, , and
the member, Mental Health
Ia ~ on the Legislative Cleveland Heights-University Planning ServiCes. · '
Progrem ·Committee. Heights Board of Education.
A recipient · of numerqus
Taxing.\he imagination is bePtoll)!nently Identified ·with She has also appeared before awarda and honors, Mr~. Dye
ing . considered by a Congress
edUcatloll In her stale, Mrs. Congressional HEW Com- holds the Ohio L.ealllle of
GUEST AT SHOW~R
with holes in its pockets. ·
Dye .has .been an observer for_ mlttees In Wasl)ington, D. C.- Women Voters' Diltlnguilhed Mrs. Caddie Wlckhiun was a
·the Ohio PTA and Ohio School In November, 1970, Mrs. Dye Service !fllaiiiJII; she . was guest at a shower honcring
I,
Bon ' AIIOCiation to. the ,ran ·UlliUceessfuUy for the named Outstanding Layman Mrs. Robin Kuhn _Wolfe
~ Edueati811 .Coilimllllon of the Ohio House of Represen- ol 1969 by the Ohio Depart- recently at the Pomeroy Fits!
, State. since lbi Inception. She tatlves. · ·
menl of Elementary j!ehool Baptist Church. Her name
~ was lbe ' OIIIy lay peraon In- Other activltiee for Principals; !She 'ti'Bil reCipient was unintenUonaily omitted. Reduces Bloat dOd Swelling
' vlted to testify at the educaUon · have Included of a scholarship for work In
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com"niission'• 1970 annual membenhlp on the Title IU ""·--- latl · and
·
l"uring the Menstrual Cycle
•
::,:::::::, re byons
groelaupnd
·
New ODRINIL, a "Nalural" Water
meelq, where abe wU· '8 ESEA ( ElemeQtary · and ..,.,a.,uCS
~e C
Pill can help you lo!e mess weight,
,~ ractF lo the lll'lt flridlnga Secondary' EdJ!.eatiqn _Act) Council on Human RelatiOIIB;
•.
swellln.&amp;..!J1U!ncomfortable body ~1011 .
j lrllmlbeNatlonaiAuellllllent. State · Advisory Council; recipient of the Diltlnpllhed
(pUffiness In ankles, arms, stomach)
...•Aa"--'
. 'the
due entire
to excess
water cycle.
retentlbn
duringis
;' of"'""""'
...,.,.. p t..,....... Mrl
· • pr..\..odent
.,.. of the Ohl0 Scbool Serv·1ce Award• BUo•k eye
mensttuol
OORINIL
• ·. Dylt worked with the late Boards Auoclatlon and the AasoclaUon of School Ad·
7 DAYS
a &amp;•ntla diuretic compound . conloins
1 . WhitQe)' Young, · Jr. ~n ClevelaDd Heights - Unlver- mlnlltrators (October, Jll74);
notural herbs in • tablet that Is fast' YOCatlonal ind , career. llty Helghta School Board; and Ill lilted In Who's Who In
A-~
:;~~s's =.::~~~~~:.;.~ 1ppr~ ~~~~~~:1
edneation during the 1986 member, Vocational and the uDtled States, Who's Who
bll&gt;at. ·
White Houle Confel'lllce on Manpower PlaMlnc Services; of American Women, InOORINIL- the "Nottirol" woter Pitt
Cblldren and Youtb. A and 1 member of lhe ateerq· temitlonal Who's Who in
&amp;antlo, olfoctivo, economical! S.llsllc
mirnber of the Ohio Colmcll cooU!uttee, Ohio' CollllCil for Calnlpunlty Service, and the
lion or 1110ney bock.
for Education (president, Adv!Uicement of Educational · Wcrld's Who's Who of Wcmen.
830 E: Main
,NELSON'S DRUG STORE
1171-73), Mn. Dye II a1ao Admlnlltratlon. Sbe has been
Mrs. Dye's utenllve P:'J'A
~I!Jaenlnll IJI!l ~ · • ;; ,vllltlng lecturer to background Include• a l.lllii•Po•m-•.r.oy;.••Oh._illlto-.1 '---~·t&gt;u_·_m_•_"'_Y_,Oh_lo_ _-'1

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Let's Talk Soon

DALE C. WARNER
992-2143
102 W. Main
Pomeroy

HURRY!

LIMITED TIME
ONLY!

80% SOLID-ST

WAS '629.95

NOW I

$54995

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NOW!

$29995

New
"NAJUUL" WATER PILL

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Play it safe an.t lltll'll.
IJ may be time to
have ·your presenl'
policy updated,

Ohio's Mrs. Dye to nation41 PTA office

OPEN···

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McNickle is
·speaker for
alumni event

D&amp;D M
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Dear Helen:
"Tired of Pretense" says "most women" are disgusted by
sex. Wbere did she take her poll? Not In MY house !
.
~'ve got a man with the personality of a saint, a body that
won t q~t, and he could easily paSs for Robert Redford's
younger brother,
P. Believe me, Idon'thavetopretend! -SORRY FORT . OF

· Ground covers can solve a variety of garden problems and
be .very attractive. Ground cover plants are carpeting plants.
Wblle no carpet is lovelier or more restful than a lawn· of
~lvety well-kept grass, there are places where grass will not
grow ~ell, or wh-:e mowing is difficult. In such places ground
cover Is a charming and satisfactory solutidn.
Once eats bllshed, a planting of ground cover keeps down
weeds and Is easy to care for , Mowing, for example, is difficult
on slopes and banks and around trees that have exposed roots.
M~st of us are famUia~ with the more PQpular ground ·
covers - myrtle (Vinca minor), English ivy, Wy~f-the-valley.
Actually, there are hundreds of plants that make good ground
covers, so choosing the right ones is worth careful exploring.
For·slopes and banks, low-growing junipers are nice.
- Sedum spurium blooms with masSes of scarlet flowers all
summer. Another bloomer Is a-own-vetch, but must be kept
under controL
.
Creeping phlox you probably know. It carpets a bank or
any other sunny area with bright colors. It flowers in April and
May and will grow even in' poor soil. ·
Around trees, edging patha, and along drives, no ground
covers surpass English. and Baltic ivy, or myrtle,
· For that damp shady spot, try lliy.of-the-valley and ferns.
There are big ferns that can serve as background with low
dainty ones making a carpet In front. Their growing habits are
fascinating .
'
Most ground covers are best planted In spring or fall. Give
them a mulch and each season an occasional feeding. After
they are established they ask for little care beyond watering.

WEEK

We, the widel'llgned directors attest the correctna ollhll nport Gl con- ,
clition aild declare that It hae been eumlnl!ll by Ul and to the beat of our
lmowledge and belief Ill true ~ correct.
..
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~ a.' Norris
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om.
Dlnettn "
J. W. W•wr, Jr.

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l;rampton
Houston
champion

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GREENERYPROBLEMS?USEGROUNDCOVERS

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By Miss Ruby Diehl, Rutland Garden Club

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Garden ·club projects plan nee{ ~

I· l:ly ~ DOWN
.. three by George Scott. Jim, . for hlllourth lllraight win lblt
UPI Spot1B Writer
~ton allowed 11 · hits, ·. in- 11e11100 and hll 11th In a l'Oir
The Texas Rangers ~re only eluding a three-run homer by dating back to Jut Augull ·11
· half kidding when they refer to Gralg Nettles, in 612-3lnnlnga ~ the Wblte Sox topped 1b1
Steve FouCl\ult as their one- but received a-edit for his A's. Terry Forster replecld
man bullpen.
third vlc!Qry.
Kaat with the ba~e~!Wed aid
The z;.year old right-bander TWIDi 8 Royall 3
two out 1n· the eighth lnnlii
from Duluth, Minn., isn't as
Rod Carew doubled. in the and ended the threat 111
By U~ Preu International
Rick Barry, the Warriors'
well known as some of the Twins' tiH&gt;reaking ~·In the strlklnj
out · ClludeU
Respect is finally coming to 'top scorer, was ·held more
American League's other second ·inning and Craig Washington.
•
Norm Van Uer, the tough than 10 points below his
relief stars but he has a unique Kuslck hlt a two-run hcmer in Oriole• 11~ Indlll• 1~ -'
HWe guard of the Chl~go average with only 21.
statistic: he's recorded aU the the fifth, Rarmon Killebrew, AI ·Bumbry drove In IO!ar
Bulls.
Boston pulled oock Into
saves Texas pitchers. have honored
In
pre-game l'llllJ and ;Mike Torrez pitched
Long regarded as an contention in its Eastern
achieved
in
the
last
two
ceremonies
during
which hll a sizhltter lor the Orioles, wJ!O
mE POMEROY, MIDDLEPORT STREET CAR LINE
aggressive ballliandler with Conference finals 'against
seasons.
,
old
uniform.
number
was snapped a sb.game I~
·
· By Janet Morris
.;
.potential Slilr qualities, the Washington with a 101-90
That total reached 14 retired by the Twln.!l, sent the streak In their opener t*
There was once a street car line which ran between the Drake Hotel .lit Racine and the
articulate and handsome · 6- victory ·over the Bullets
SUnday
when Foucault closed Royals off In front with a Cleveland. The lndlalll W4j!l
Hobson Depot. The car line had its beginning as the P&amp;M Railway and Power Co. (Pomeroy
foot I backcourtman scored a Saturday afternoon.
out
the
Rangers' M victory three-run ho,mer In the first the aeeond game wben GeGrge
\
·
career .high 35 pointS SWlday The Celtics say they no and Middleport) around 1900,
Hendrick singled home Frank
In 1899 the Ohio River Electric Company made a survey of the county and set up one over the California Angels. He Inning.
to pace the BWls to a 108-101 longer have any doubts about
now has two victories against Wblte Sal 5 A's 2
Duffy with two out In the 11th
electric
line
between
Racine
and
Hobson.
The
street
cars
ran
off
the
power
from
this
line.
After
victory over the Golden State why they were losing so badly
no
losses
plus
two
saves
to
Jim
Kaat
went
7
:1-3
innings
inning.
the street cars made their runs in the morning, the stores of the towns used the power from this
Warriors in a nationally- to Washington in the first two line.
·
show for hll work this season
televised game that gave games of that best of seven
'
'
There were two street cars, dark yellow or orange In color, One wits open for summer compared to eight wins and 12
Chicago a 2-1 edge In the hest series.
riding
~d D?e was closed for winter trips. The open car also offered Sunday rides along the . saves in 69 gariles last season . NHL Playoff Scrtedule and Chii::a9o 9o . GOlden 'state .• • ,.,
of seven NBA Western Con- "You start wondering if
The victory was th·e
Results
Sun., May ~-Chitago
f08
Oluo R1ver m the summer.
·
terence finals.
maybe you can't beat them, if
Da.nners'eighthinthe
. irlast 10
By iJnile&lt;l Press International
Golden State 101 Tues ., Mav 6--At night a car propelled by an electric motor called a dummy was used to push freight cars .na~-e
( Semif inals-'8 est of Seven)
at Golden State, 11 :00 p.m .
Van Lier never has been ·a something' is wrong," said
garries and moved them to r Philadelphia leads series, 3-0) Thurs., May B or Fri.. May 9up
and
down
the
track
and
deliver
supplies
to
the
stores.
The
dummy
was
a
smaU
clreed
cab
particularly hitlh scorer; his Boston forward Pa.ul Silas ..
withln a half game of the first- Series 1-Ph;tadelphia vs. NY at Golden State, 11 :00 p.m. ~
Islanders
Sunday , May IF-- at Chlcag ~
game is cbaracterized more "Now we have a better at- car with eight wheels. The dummy also transported cars carrying coal from the ~es.
place Oakland A's In the AL Tues .. April 29- Phlladelphia 4 3:10 p.m. • ·Tues .. May 13-at.
Jake
Hartenbach
was
the
first
conductor
of
the
cars.
He
later
became
sheriff
of
Meigs
by penetrating and passing titude about this series... We'U
West.
Jeff
Burroughs NY Islanders 0 Thurs .. May .1- Golden State, 9:00 p.m . •·"
Philadelphia 5 -NY Islanders ,.e, necessary
:
off, playing defense imd play with a lot more Intensity County. Hayes Roush was the first motorman. Others working on the .cars were Wilbur Logan provided the ony run of the ot
Sun .. May 4- Phlladelphia 1
•
moving the ball and the team. now, because we know we can Eddie Hoeflich, Herman Werner, Roy Kasper, aU of Pomeroy, and Ernest LaUance of Mid: game when he hit his fifth NY Islanders 0 Wed .. May 7- at ABA -Playoff Sthedule an(
dleport.
OO
f the
off Andy New York , 8:os· p .m . x-Thurs..
Resulh
But when the opportunities · beat them.
111
Country people rode their horses to town, left them at the livery stable, and rode the street
mer o
season
May 8- at Philadelphia . 8: 05
By United Press International !II
presented themselves Sunday, Boston took only a 61h17lead
Hassler in the fourth Inning . p.m. •·Sat.. May 10 or Sun.,
• (All Times EDTI
. •
Van Lier went straight to the in the ftrst half. But as the car between the towns to do their shopping. The cars also carried wotkers to the R. A. Miller
'lbe Milwaukee Brewers de- May ll - at New York, A: OO
(All Series Best of Seven) ..
. JC -Tues .,
May
13- at
Eastern Division Finals
:
hoop.
third quarter got under way, Lumber Mill in Hobson and to the Thomas Mine, now Batley's Lake. Sometimes it was feated the New York Yankees p.m
8 :0 5p . m.~:..:
Ph
iladelphia.
K
1
k
Sf
Lo
Is
J-Buffalo vs. MoMreil
en uc Y '!'s. •
u
"Sometimes you only get the
Celtics
outscored necessary for the conductors to wear "dusters" over their uniforms because the crowd Qf 11-4, the Minnesota Twins beat series (Series
tied, 2.2)
.
( Kentuc~y w1ns series, 4-1) •
miners
riding
home
from
work
were
covered
with
coal
dust.
The
cars
could
seat
about
100
·
attention when you score a lot Washington 21-!0withastrong
D..,
Sun .,
April
27-Buffalo
6 Mon ., ~prtt 21 - Kentucky Ht
th KaDSSS City Ro ya Is ""•
Montreal 5, ot Tues .. April 29- S\. LOUIS 109 Wed ., April 23--,
of points," Van Lier said. "But running', shooting and people and on Saturday nights the cars were loaded to their fullest. All the men got off work thee Chicago
wb,lte Soi topped Buffalo 4 Montreal 2 Thurs., Kentucky 108 St . Louis 103 . •
that night and everybody went to town ,
that's not my game. I do other defensive game.
the
A's
5-2,
and
the Cleveland May 1- Montreal 7 Buffalo 0 Fro .. April 25- St . Louis 10J;:
The fare for the cars was five cents from Middleport to Pomeroy and 14 cents to Hobson.
Sat., May 3-Montreal 8 Buffalo Kentucky_ 97
•
things."
·
John Havlicek, with 26
Indians scored a 4-3, 11-inning 2 Tues., May 6-at Buffalo, 8:05 Sun ,, Aprol 27- Kentucky 117 St.
You.
could
buy
a
ticket
good
for
.several
rides.
During
the
Meigs
County
Fair
people
from
For most of the last 2 '&gt;2 points, had his best game of
oina th f' st p.m . Thurs ., May 8-at Mon - LOUIS 98
•
trl,urnph after I0-..,
e lr treal. 8:05 p.m. K-Sal., May 10 Mon ., .April 28-Kentucky 12l:
seasons, Van Lier has been the season. Dave Cowens had Racme rode the cars down to the Roedel corner atNye Avenue where they waited for a band or
game of their doubleheader to or sun .. May n- al Buffalo. Y- st. Lou •s ,103
•
hay wagon to take them lo the fairgrounds lor 25 cents.
.
content to feed the ball off to 24 and Jo-Jo White 21.
the
Baltimore
Orioles
11-1.
tba
x-lf
necessary
•
The cars performed a vital service since the roads were not the best and there were few
y- Time to be announced
Western Division Finills
..
Chicago's high scoring forThe fourth game of the
Detroit's
doubleheader
at
Denver
.
v
s
..
lndlona
•
( lndiitna win$ series, 4· 3) c
"
wards, Bob Love and Chet series will be played Wed- automobiles. Coal miners and railroad employees rode the cars to and from work.
During the 18908 the streets of Pomeroy, Middleport, and Racine were dirt. It only took a , Boston·was postponed by rain. N BA Playoff Sthedule and Sun , April 2D-Denver 13
Walker. In the Bulls ' style of nesday at. Landover, Md.
In the National League, it
Resulls
Indiana 128
,
•
small rain to make many of the cow'ltry roads impassable . Paved roads did not appear until
offense, under the direction of
. By United Pr.ess International Tues ., April 22-lndiane 1311
Diego
Angeles
Was
San
10
Los
1910 with the Increasing popularity of the automobile. Those were the days when the inost
• •
•
(All T1mes EDT)
Denver UA
•
coach Dick Motta, the guards
7, _ Cincmnati 3 AUanta 2, E a stern Conference ·Finals Thurs ., Afrll 24-lndiana nC
popular
means
of
transportation
were
the
horse
and
buggy,
Derby
hats
were
the
latest
In
try to get the ball up quickly,
men's fashion and people got their water for drlnkirig and Other purposes directly from the Chicago 8 St. Louis 6, and
Bos\::~s~~saesvh~~~ton
~;i~~er~~rll 25-0enver 12;
penetrate the middle to force
Houston over San Francisco (Washington leads series, 2-1) Indiana 109
•
"Old Ohio."
the defense to collapse, then
12-8
after
an
11-6
loss.
PittSun
..
A
pril
27Washing.ton
100
Sun
..
April
27-lndlana
1of
-Ev~n though the street cars were a necessity to the some 29,000 residents of Meigs County,
•
Boston 95 Wed., Apr 11 3Q- Denver 90
•
pass off to the forwards. The
·
they
still had their problems. Some cars jumped the track and some crashed Into each other sburgh at Philadelphia and Wash;ngton 117 Boston 92 Sat., Wed ., April 3D-Denver 10.
whole key is a tight, rugged
Montreal at New York were May 3- Boston 101 Washington Indiana 99
10:
when they got their schedules mixed and moved along on the same track.
. ed t ·
90 Wed ., May 7- at wash ington .
Set ., May 3-lneliana
•
delens~ to spiing the guards
ram
OU .
8:05 p.m . Fri. May 9- at Denver 96
. , :
During
this
time,
Mason
and
New
Haven,
W.
Va.,
did
not
have
high
schools.
If
children
loose.
Basion, 7:30 p.m. x -Sun ., May
11
wished to continue their education past gtade school, they had to come to Meigs County. Since Brewers 11 Yllinkees 4
11- at WaSh ington, J:tO 'p.m . )( a
The game staned off as an
The Brewers, first In the AL Tues .. May 13- at Boston .. 9: oo
•
the Pomeroy Mason Bridge was not completed until August 22, 1928, the children rode a skiff
apparent runaway for i the
HOUSTON (UP!) - -Bruce
/ p . m .~~
.
Ca
•
across the river. Once 911 the Ohio side, the students rode the street car to Racine High SchooL .East, ran · their winning
'th , western conference Fmals
· n you recall when a sea~
Warriors, who :wtU host the Crampton no sooner had wori
fl
1
tr
k
t
The street cars of this area were a common sight from 1900 to 1929 when they became s ea o ve games Wl a u1Best of seven&gt;
under chair cushions would tuJII
nell two games Tuesday and the $150,000 Houston Open
four
.
Golden
State
vs.
Chicago
up
sm
. •II, change In addition "'
obsolete with the advent of the automobile and the building of the Pomeroy-Mason Brtage:"'l'he hit attack which included
·
C Chicago leads Series, 2-1)
..,
Ill
Thursday In Oakland. Hitting than he served notice of his line operated until February 25, 1919, when the OhiQ River Electric Railway and Power hits by Sixto Lezcano
0
and Sun., April 27- Golden State 107 the lint?
from the field at a 70 per cent . Intentions this weekend In
·
Chi!=aQo
89
Wfid.,
April
Jo-----·
:
Company was placed In the hands of a receiver. Later, at a juelalal sale, the property was sold
cllp whUe the Bulls could Dallas.
•
to a committee of bondholders, who In tW11 were granted permission by an order of the Public
manage only 37 per cent,
"I've won two In a row
Utilities Commission to sell the property to the Ohio River Railway and Power Company on
~' ! •_ ) ~ ' I
Golden State jumped out to a before," Crampton said, "and .!uly 5, 1924. On June 26, 1929, the passenger service was cancelled and on June 30 1929 the
CaUNo.493
Charter No. 981J ,
· N'auoall BUflte'.icia No. t
37-26 adYantage after the first 1 came close once at (Fort street car line shut down forever.
'
'
REPORT OF OONDlriON, OONSOLIDATING ' "i.'rf"
.
period. ·
Worth's) Colonial after ~ The car barns are still standing today on East Main Street next to the old Foundry building, · '
. :, DOICESTIC SUBSIDIARIEs, OY.TR!: ·' -. ' 1 '
· .,,,
. ! :i
"I don't think anyone ever winning in Houston . If 1 get a now known as Midwest Steh The cars left With the great depresSion. Some 'were pui' out to ·
., 10,1 &lt;l' ,;:;•o ti l,' '/ -1-&lt;.J I'J!J ,
played a better first quarter chance, this time I'll be a little
pasture, some were sent to Louisville, Ky. while still others went to other cities to do their
more diligent on the 18th work. Not many small towns had them, so it was a great loss.to Pomeroy and Middleport.
against us," said Motta.
Slowly but surely, however, hole_" .
It wa.s the end of the slow, peaceful way of life and the heglbning of the desperate struggle
1
,
. 11' ' ,_ {,: rl "" .:' :1 . ·::: ·:..::fi: ~,.., lr t·"'-·
Chica~o chipped away at the
Crampton will head the field to keep up with and colltrol the automobile.
·
·
Qf a.cllle In the ~lite ofOblo, at the close,olii!Pblesllon Aprlltl,' Jtlll publllbed
deficit and took the lead for at Dallas' Bryon Nelson Golf
in response to call made by Comptroller of the Currency, under Title 12, VDJlal
the first time with 13 seconds Classic beginning Thursday ,
Sources: "The Street Car Line," by Mr. and Mrs . Gerald Shuster; "The Street Car Line,"
States
Code, Section 181.
.
remaining In .the first half. btit before the Australia native
by
Mrs.
Sylvia
Pool;
''The
Street
Qar
Line,"
by
Earl
B.
Morris;
"St.
Louis
Had
Nothing
on
'
Going Into the second half with drove home to Dallas late
Pq~eroy , Mtddleport," by Beulah Jones, ~d Pioneer History o( Meigs County, by Edgar
.
ASSETS
a 52-50 edge, the Bulls held Sunday, he talked of the four Ervtn.
·
·
Cash
and
due
from
banks
- - - - ·- - - - ·- ~ - - ••• 1 W,l7l.ll
command the rest of the ·way. straight sub-par rounds which
.......
U.S. Treasury securities - - - - - - - - - - - ·- - - - - - - ~ · I :138 552115
"Van Uer was the key," lifted .him to a two-,stroke Dalla
s) to tell her where I was very much the competition Crampton for the lead both
·
·
Obligations
of other U.S. Government
' ' ·
said Golden State COR ch AI victory over Wewoka, Okla. ,
·
agencies and corporations - - - - - - - - - - 38 464 rr
Attles · "He got t'de and hurt optometrist Dr. Gil Morgan, Slilying anq asked her to but trBI'Iing Lee Trevt' no by times. But Morgan could
watch
the
papers
to
see
if•
I
two
strokes.
gather
only
a
string
of
13
pars
US and after he Started
Obligations~
States
and
political
subdivisions
• - • 144;1163:91
. go ing ,
"It's a riice feeling to have
the
rest
of
the
afternoon.
·
we never 1got our · delense won again. It's been almost made the cut.
· Crampton fired a -·-~~der
Otber
secunties
•
•
•
•
•
_
_
_
_
_ • 12,500.00
=~·
Despite
his
frustration,
Federal funds sold ~d securities purchased
going. When we had that little ·two years since 1 did that ,
"I didn't want her passing par 66 Saturday to take the
lead, we flgilred our offense Crampton,· 39, said. "I w~s me on the highway Friday lead, and be came back with a Morgan took a check for
under agreements to resell - - - - - - - - • - - •
1,000,000.00
Loans
- • - - - - - - - - - ·_ - • __ , . __
$17,100
hack
to
his
hometown.
would carry us, but when It worried because I played a night::
·
69 SUnday, leaving a faltering
4,395,171.44
Bank premiSes, furniture and flltures, and
diW:;t. our defense faltered, practice round Tuesday and
As It turned out, Joan Trevino and a downhearted Crampton got the $30,000 .
winner's share and Joe Inman
too.
dldpoorly.1caUedmywife(ln Crampton came to Houston . Morgan behind.
other assets. representing bank premises - - -. - - - ..25,006.57
Otherassets •u - - - - - • ·- •• _ ___ _ - - - - -· l,'IB,30
Jr. collected $10,650 for third,
-:;;iiii~=:~~~::--:=::--:;;;::'--------Sa-tur_d_ay_.wi_th_h_er_h_us_:b..and~ · a,nThe
Ukeable Morgan holed
Ill-foot wedge and a five- three strokes back of the
TOTAL ASSETS - • - - - - - - - - ·- -f7,2M,58U5
foot putt for birdies in the first leader.
LWIIUl'IFS
'
five holes Sunday, tying
Demand deposits of tndlvtdusls, partnerships
and corporations - - . - - - - • • - _' •
$1,492,148.96
Time and savings deposits of Individuals,
partnerships, and corporations - - - • - - - - - - - - - 4 399 309 38
Deposits of United States Government • - - - - - • - - - ·-' 33925.91
Deposits of States an~ political subdivisions - - - - - - - - - - m:010:02
Certified and officers cheeks, etc. - - - • - - - - - - - - " 17m 73
TOTAL DEPOSITS - - - - - - - - - IM30.1ri2.00
' .
Ameri~an League
Nationai League
By United Press International
Total
demand
deposits_
~
.
f2.030J!!2.82
(a)
· East ·
East
w. 1. pet. g .b.
(1;1) Total time and savings deposits - - • - - 14,399,3111.38 ;
...
w. 1. pet. g.b. Chicago
15
6 .714 Milwaukee
13 7 .650
,.
Other
liabilities
:
•
:
~
•
'
215.191.83
9 .526 4
Detroit
10 8 .556 2 New Yorkhia . 10
11 10 .524
'
TOTAL UABILITIES - - - - - - • - - - - • ., ·- -· 18,645;363.63
Cleveland
10 10 .500 3 Philadelp
Pittsburgh
9 10 ..474 5
. RESERVES ON LOANS AND SECURlriES
·
Boston
9 9 .500 3
St. Louis
8 12 · ..400 6112
New York
io t3 .435 4112 Montreal
6 12 .333 J 1h
Reserve for bad debt losses on loans
,,
Baltimore
8 13 .381 5112
West
West
{set up PlfBIUlllt to IRS rulings) - - - - - - - - - 173,322.011
I
t
b
w. I. pet. g .b.
w . · P&lt; · g. · Los Angeles
16 10 .615
Reservesonsecurltles
;
_
·- - . eeo.oo
0 a kl an d '
13 10 ·565
Cincinnati
14 12 .538 2
D"''uGHT TO YOU BY CITY ICE &amp;
TOTAL nESER~ ON LOANS AND SECI.!RITIES • - - - - :173,972.011 ·
Texas
12 10 .545
'h San Diego
13 12 520 2'h
California
13 It .542
rh San Francisco 12 12 .SOO 3
FUEL, VILLAGE PHARMACY, CITIZENS
CAPITAL ~CCOVNTS
..
:
Kansas City
17 12 .500 l'h Atfanta
13 14 ..481 3112
.,
K
PL
. Minnesota
Equity
capital-total
•
•
•.
•
,
f$7UU.74
.
9 10 .474 2
Houston
10 18 .357 7
Chicago
9 15 .375 41f2
Satun:fav's Resulh
Common Stock:wtal·par value
- - - 121,000.00
Saturday's Results
Montreal 3 New York 0
No. share~ authorized 5,000
Boston 12 Detroit 2
Cleveland 6 Baltimore 1
Philadelphia 6 Pittsburgh 2,
Jt!o. shares outstanding 5,QOO
1st , twit ight
·
. ' '
I .
Milwaukee 4 New- York 3
Philad~lphJa , 4 Pittsburgh 3,
SUrplus---------Minnesota 14 Kansas City S
. 2nd, night .
·
12!,000.00
- ·'
Chicago , A Oak·l and 3, 10
Cincinnati ·6 Allanta 1', night
.... r ,. r.o 321W74
Undlvlcted
profits
'
·-·
Inn ings , night,
Ch'ICago 7 s t . Louis 3, night
. TOTAL CAPITAL ACOOUNTS
California 4 Tex!ls 2, niQht
57U&amp;!!,74
·
sunday l s Results
San Diego 3 Los Ange les 1, ··15
TOTAL UABIUTIES, RESERVES, AND
inn .• night
Baltimore 11 Cleveland 1, 1st
Houston at san Francisco.
' CAPITAL ACCOUNTS - - ~ . - - ·
,. [
.Cleveland A Baltimore 3, 2nd , ppd., rain
f7,2M,51U5
'
'
'
11 inn ings
•
·
Sunday's Results · •
,,
. ,
·
MEMORANDA
Chicago 5 Oakland 2
Cincinnati 3 Atlanta .2
•,
!CI OmiATING 1
A'vera~e of total depoelts lor the 1S calendar
IIICAI"ITAl
' .I • ' . ( \, .... '
Milwaukee n New York 4
Chicago. 8 st . t.ouls 6
M#.,INT EHAHCE
"
6 Kansas Citv 3
san Francisco 18 Houston 6, .
" " "' 'lli~hiullng witll Clll date - , - - - - - - • , - .•
"· Minnesota
; ' • •..,ti5,4auo
Texas 1 Californ ia 0
1st
AVerage of tots( loans lor the 15 calendar .
'"
Detroit at Boston, 2 games,
Houston 12 San Franclsc:o 8,
ppd ., ra in
.
2nd
daya endinll with can date - - -· - - ,. . , - - - - , , - . - - •4JOI,427:41
Mondav's Games
, San, Diego 10 Los Angeles 7
SCIPIO TOWNSHIP
''
.' '
' .
I All Times EDTJ
P'1tt 5b
h
t p 'I d l I
COUNTY TR!ASUAER
Boston (Tiant 2-Jl at Cleveurg
a
hi a e ph a,
""
ppd ., rain ·
•
• &gt;
•
'
MEIGS COUNTY
land (J - Perry 1-4), 7: 30p.m .
Montreal at New York, ppd .,
••
R. R. I
I, Johri T. Wolle, Cashler,olthe above-named bank do hereby declare that
N.ew Yor~ (Hunter 2-3) at rain
·
ALBANY,
OHIO
40710
.
·Baltimore !Palmer :;J -2), 7:30
Monday's ,Games
.this repo~ 91 condition is true and correc~ to the beat of my.,•Iedc• ~
belief.
.· .;, •••
P· ~alifornia nanane 1 ~-0l at
('All Ttnlts I!DTJ
'
' '
Texas !Jenkins 3_2,., 9 : 00 p.m .
Chicago (Stone 4-0l at Mont -· I'
Jolm.T. Wolle
nn
. JII,JIU,Uifl,,.rlfiMU,J/IL,III,~,/Im/1,,~/h,,l
Tuesday's Games
real (Blair 0-31, B:OOp'. m.
California at Oakland , n•'"ht
Philadelphia (Ciirlton 1-3) at
..,
St. Louis (Gibson 0 -31, 8:30·
(Of'

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VENDURA • McxW m14W

WITH EXCUJSIVE
SPEAKER SYSTEM

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·i=URNI·TURE

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4- The Dilily Sentirlel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, May 5, 1975

ww&amp;~~~~~~~~~w~~~~~~~~m

Van ·Lie·r · nets
35 as Bulls

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Red-hot Texas.· Rangers
blank Angels by 1:to 0
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top Warriors

Pro Standings

THE RACINE H.OME:··NAJ:IOIAt·':BANK
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~,ilfii'GCIII..Iofotiulldl"'iieontldtl_,ion..;_ Mf'y•"-'_:.:19:,:.7!_ _~

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\ iii"MYN ili)Nii &amp;;c;th; OG

Texas at Kansas City , night
Minnesota at Chicago, night
Milwaukee at Detroit. night
Boston at Cleveland, night
New York at Baltimore, night

p.m ..
Houston (Dierker 3·21 at Los
Angeles (Rau J.t) , 10 :30 p .m .
Tuesday's Games
Chicago at Montreal, night
Philadelph ia at St. Louis,
night
Houston at Los Angeles. night

One way to keep from coiJee. n i:~:tsburgh at New York, .
·II•&amp; junk 11 to burn down lbe .san Francisco at At lanta,
I
n1 ght
·
ara1e.
San Dieg9 at Cinc innati •. night
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Dear Hlen: . .
' I hope you'll be honest about the number of letters you
receive agreeing with "Tired of Pretense." Many of us do but
a mUll on letters wouldn't coii'vince one media person to t~U . it
.like It is.
.
.
Why do you think the late night talk shows are so popular?
Beca~ women are sitting before the TV waiting to hear that
first snore from the bedroom. 1n·spite of the conpsiracy to turn
us Into selpols
a lot of us are- SICK OF SEX.
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Dear Helen:·
I feel sorry for people Uke "Tired of Pretense'' who are
lurnedoff by sex. I'm a 25-year~ld working wife.and mother.
I'm not a nympho, but there are times when I stop by husband
from "turning over and going to sleep,'' and I know he doesn't
mind !
I thank God for the gift and pl!lllsure of·love; I thank my
parents for bringing me up right, and I thank my husband for ·
being, die gentle, considerate lover that he is. - NOT

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PRET~ING!

Dear Helen:
I do not think sex is repulsive, nor is it pleasant. It just
l!lists, for women, like many other biologic funCtions. I have
long believed this must he a fact for the majority of women,
bu\ Uterature, films and music have bullt up a fiction-largely
originated by men - that females are as highly sexed as
males.
·
. I don't object to fulfilling my mate's need for sex, but I do
resent the fact that I must pretend pleasure In the act. This is
the only way to continue a stable relationship with my husband
whose ego:is so sensitive regarding his ability to give sex
pleasure, that In order to .Protect It, he must blame me if I do
not receive pleasure.
I enjoy my husband's company, his respect, kindness and
companionship, biit never sex. ~ WHO NEEDS IT?
.

Dear Helen~·u· ...~•r ·~..-..~!11&gt;

RUTLAND
Flower
arrangements for the allsports banquet of Meigs ·High
School and the Rutland
· . Alumni Association banquet
on May 24 will be made by the
Rutland Friendly Gardeners,
it was decided at the Wednesday night meeting of the
club at the home of Mrs. Suzy
Carpenter.
The club also voted to expand the planting at Forest
Acres Park for the late Jean
Parker. Areport on the recent
regional meeting held at
Marietta was given "with the
club being represented by
DEBBIE DAILEY
M':_s. Marie Birchfield, Mrs.
Carpenter, Mrs. Margaret
Edwards and Mrs. Joann
Fetty.
The' Rutland spring cleanup
work was again discussed and
it was noted that May 21 and 22
RACINE - Mr. and Mrs. will be pickup days: Janet
Leonard Dailey entertained Bolin, Mrs. Edwards, Mrs.
recently with a party In ob- Lois Walker, and Mrs. Judy
servance of the lith birthday Snowden furnished refreshof their daughter, Debbie.
ments to the children who
A cake decorated wlth red helped in some cleanup work
roses was served with ice at the schooi·Friday.
a .eam, soft drinks, and chips.
Mrs. Carpenter reported on
Guests were Mr. and Mrs·. a meeting of the OAGC which
Gene Ward, Diann and Troy; she attended on April 9 and 10
Mr. and Mrs. Darrell Cozart, which included a tour of
Mrs. Nellie Cozart, Mrs. King 's Island and the
Shirley Bowman, Julia and gree nhouses where the
Gary; Mrs. LBvema Kauff&gt; flowers used in the park are
Syiithia, Chris and Becky ; grown,
·
Mrs. Carole Pickens, Mitche)l
Welcomed into membership
and Christy; Mr. and Mrs . of the club were Mrs. Martha
Blaine Dailey, Brian and Willis, Mrs. Shirley Wilson
Benny; Mrs. Ocran Dailey, and Mrs. Velma Nicinsky:
Mrs. Judy West, Mr. and Mrs. Plans were made for the May
David Dailey and Ray Lynn,
Alisha Bissen, Beth Hayman,
Kathy Pierce, Dee Dailey,
Sheila Harris, Dale Connolly,
Johnny Connolly, Jimmy
Harris, Robert Harris.
Sending gifts were Mr. and
Mrs. Gene Westfall, Sanford
Cozart, Mr, and Mrs. Florence
Deeters, RUa Young, Scottie
Dillon, and Mrs. Mary Hoffman.

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11th birthday
is celebrated

27 therapy session with the Mrs. Donna Williamson. Mr .
Rutland special education Fetty wlll .!,lost the' nex.t ·
children to be a picnic at meeting with Mrs . Allee
Forest . Acres Park. Mi-s . Thompson to. be th~ g~~i
Birchfield and Mrs. Edwards demonstrator. Refreshmenl8
will have charge. On April 30 . were served.
the club members toured
Kingwood Center.
Devo lions .to ·open the
meeting were given by Mrs.
_Quallty..Jh,oes
Carpenler
who
used
"Friendships that Need
At .Everyday
Mending". For roll call
low Prices
m~mbers named a spring
Hn . Moi!.-Frl., 91o s
flower blooming in their
Set. 91o8
gardens and . exc han ged
Your Ttio,m ~cAn Stor,p
plants. Mrs. Edwards gave
gardening tips for May.
Mrs . Charlotte Willford ·
made arrangements in basic
design and also showed
severa l geometric designs.
The door prize was won by

·'•

If they '!"Ould only admit it, I feel a great many women are
like m~Jl:~~;!II~M~ith ·my husband, but only because it
makes HIM feel:,w.mplete: ~ is a beautiful expression of
love. The power to aY.~.IIIt:en · ~chulher 'makes hlln' teef'virile
and me feel very special to him, but if the truth were known,
I'd be ).l"'lu{'ohaP!Ili&gt;Wifha,J.O\oliig IIUg and a bit of cuddling.
Yes·, l'Nil6dti ~ :r. :il~il!f ~lill¥~ :to lake orgasms - but
sometimes I'd rather not. It's only his loving need that creates
my , sex drlve. '.''JI '· want to" make ''him happy. - GOOD
MAI!RfAGE. .· ,;.
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RACINE - The annual
CEIJ:BRATE BIRTHDAYS
banquet ani! dance of the
Terry McCarty, i3 and his mother, Mrs. Olga McCarty,
•
Racine Alumni Association
_65, celebrated then' birthdays Thursday night with a party
has been se t for May 24 in the
given at the home of Mr. McCarty's friend, Debbie ArSouther n High
School
mentraut. The party was hosted by Miss Armentraut's
auditorium.
parents and bro~r. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Armentraut
William McNickle of
and' son·, IJonnle. Cake, Ice cream, SQft drinks and.potato
McArthur, class of 1952, will
chlpa were serve!L Guests at the party were Ronnie
he the speaker for the 6 p. m.
McCarty, Mr. and Mrs. Donald McCarty and David Ray,
steak dinner. McNickle has a
NOTE FROM HELEN: A tremendous number of readers
· Mr. and Mrs, Dale McCarty, Mrs. Clara Price, Lisa
master's degree in education
answered "Tired of Pretense." Their letters·are sad ... wise .. ,
Jolmson, Judy Price, Rhonda Price and son,.Brian, Jolm
and has taught school for 15
tholllhtful .,. wry ... hateful ... happy ... and withail, very
Nelson, Darlene Reeves, Jackie Wagner, Chris Lemley,
years. He is a member of the
. hone~. I'll share a few more with you on Wednesday, - H,
and Jeff Moore. :;
National Education
•
Association and ''the Ohio
Education Association and for
11 years he has been an
athletic coach. He belongs to
several
lodges, spent four
.,
number of positions at the years in the Marine Corps and
Mrs. Jean Dye, 2486 Strat- for Cleveland Scholarship
state and council levels, prior works part-tirrie as an inlord Road, Cleveland Heights, Programs, Inc., and is a
to assuming · the slate sUrance salesman.
president of tl!e Ohio PTA, has member and second vicepresidency, For the Ohio PTA, McNickle is married to the
been niRillnated for the office presideht of the Ohio Advisory
she has been first vice- former Juanita Schuster.
ol Coordinator of Legislative Council for .Vocational
·president and advisor to They have three sons.
Activity lor the-National PTA. Education.
councils, vice-president and Tbe dance will begin at 9 p.
Mrs. Dye will be up for. Mrs. Dye's legislative efdlrec!Qr of the department of m. with music to be provided
eleetlon by a Special electors' forts for education have Ineducation, · and chairman of by "Temperance" of Langroup, · during the National volved activities leading to the
the committees on magazines, caster. The dance is open to ·
PTA's 1975 convel!tlon In enactment of the Ohio Senate
membership,
budget, the public. The dinner is being
Atlantic City, New Jersey, Btu 303ln 1967, which made it
resolutions, leadership ·served by the jllJlior class and
Jujl~ 1·1. The Coordinator of possible for Ohio boards of
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development, and legislation. their mothers. Reservations
Legislative Activity serves for education to pc)oJ funds lor the
At the council level, she at $3.50 per plate for alumni
a two-y.eljl' term, promoting joint establishment and
MRS.
DYE
.
served as secretary, chair- and guest and $1 dues for the
the organlzatlon1s• views on operation of facilities, and
man of school education and scholarship fund to be ·made
legislative action 'affecting provision of services, for
education and the welfare .of handicapped children. The prospective teachers at Ohio juvenUe protection, and as by May 18 with Mrs. ·Raymond
'•
liaisOn between the council Pierce, 949-2374.
c111jdren, all!l youth.
Immediate result was the colleges and universiti~.
Active In the Ohio PTA since creation of tl!e Mayfield
Former vQiunteer activities and the ~ool .board. Mrs. ·
IN HOSPIT;\L
1948, Mrs. Dye · became a School for the Deaf, an In behalf of health and human Dye has been president of the
member of the National PTA exemplary model in Cuyahoga welfare organlzatio1111 en- Falrfa1 Elementary PTA, ind RUTLAND - • Mrs. Iva
Bolird .of. Managers In 1973 County. Mrs. ' Dye has ap. compass advisory board is. currently a member of the Stewar.l of Rutlan(l Is : ~
. with 1Jier , election BS Stale jleared frequently before the membership and a vice- Clexeland Heights High medical patient at the Holzer
prnldellt, a position she holds Ohio Senate and House presidency in the Family School PTSA ,(Parent- Medical Center. Room 224.
·mw thll October. She is.also Education Committees In Service Association; advisory Teacher-student Association).
BIH!ppolnted member of the behalf of chlldren and youth, board member •. Cleveland Mrs. Dye and her husband,
National PTA Commission on testifying for the . Ohio PTA, Welfare Federation; m\!Ulber, Sherman, &lt;~n attorney, are the
Me m ~ e r s h I p
a n d the Ohio School Boards United Youth Services; and parents of six children.
Orgaillzstlon81 Services, and Association, , and
the member, Mental Health
Ia ~ on the Legislative Cleveland Heights-University Planning ServiCes. · '
Progrem ·Committee. Heights Board of Education.
A recipient · of numerqus
Taxing.\he imagination is bePtoll)!nently Identified ·with She has also appeared before awarda and honors, Mr~. Dye
ing . considered by a Congress
edUcatloll In her stale, Mrs. Congressional HEW Com- holds the Ohio L.ealllle of
GUEST AT SHOW~R
with holes in its pockets. ·
Dye .has .been an observer for_ mlttees In Wasl)ington, D. C.- Women Voters' Diltlnguilhed Mrs. Caddie Wlckhiun was a
·the Ohio PTA and Ohio School In November, 1970, Mrs. Dye Service !fllaiiiJII; she . was guest at a shower honcring
I,
Bon ' AIIOCiation to. the ,ran ·UlliUceessfuUy for the named Outstanding Layman Mrs. Robin Kuhn _Wolfe
~ Edueati811 .Coilimllllon of the Ohio House of Represen- ol 1969 by the Ohio Depart- recently at the Pomeroy Fits!
, State. since lbi Inception. She tatlves. · ·
menl of Elementary j!ehool Baptist Church. Her name
~ was lbe ' OIIIy lay peraon In- Other activltiee for Principals; !She 'ti'Bil reCipient was unintenUonaily omitted. Reduces Bloat dOd Swelling
' vlted to testify at the educaUon · have Included of a scholarship for work In
I"
com"niission'• 1970 annual membenhlp on the Title IU ""·--- latl · and
·
l"uring the Menstrual Cycle
•
::,:::::::, re byons
groelaupnd
·
New ODRINIL, a "Nalural" Water
meelq, where abe wU· '8 ESEA ( ElemeQtary · and ..,.,a.,uCS
~e C
Pill can help you lo!e mess weight,
,~ ractF lo the lll'lt flridlnga Secondary' EdJ!.eatiqn _Act) Council on Human RelatiOIIB;
•.
swellln.&amp;..!J1U!ncomfortable body ~1011 .
j lrllmlbeNatlonaiAuellllllent. State · Advisory Council; recipient of the Diltlnpllhed
(pUffiness In ankles, arms, stomach)
...•Aa"--'
. 'the
due entire
to excess
water cycle.
retentlbn
duringis
;' of"'""""'
...,.,.. p t..,....... Mrl
· • pr..\..odent
.,.. of the Ohl0 Scbool Serv·1ce Award• BUo•k eye
mensttuol
OORINIL
• ·. Dylt worked with the late Boards Auoclatlon and the AasoclaUon of School Ad·
7 DAYS
a &amp;•ntla diuretic compound . conloins
1 . WhitQe)' Young, · Jr. ~n ClevelaDd Heights - Unlver- mlnlltrators (October, Jll74);
notural herbs in • tablet that Is fast' YOCatlonal ind , career. llty Helghta School Board; and Ill lilted In Who's Who In
A-~
:;~~s's =.::~~~~~:.;.~ 1ppr~ ~~~~~~:1
edneation during the 1986 member, Vocational and the uDtled States, Who's Who
bll&gt;at. ·
White Houle Confel'lllce on Manpower PlaMlnc Services; of American Women, InOORINIL- the "Nottirol" woter Pitt
Cblldren and Youtb. A and 1 member of lhe ateerq· temitlonal Who's Who in
&amp;antlo, olfoctivo, economical! S.llsllc
mirnber of the Ohio Colmcll cooU!uttee, Ohio' CollllCil for Calnlpunlty Service, and the
lion or 1110ney bock.
for Education (president, Adv!Uicement of Educational · Wcrld's Who's Who of Wcmen.
830 E: Main
,NELSON'S DRUG STORE
1171-73), Mn. Dye II a1ao Admlnlltratlon. Sbe has been
Mrs. Dye's utenllve P:'J'A
~I!Jaenlnll IJI!l ~ · • ;; ,vllltlng lecturer to background Include• a l.lllii•Po•m-•.r.oy;.••Oh._illlto-.1 '---~·t&gt;u_·_m_•_"'_Y_,Oh_lo_ _-'1

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Let's Talk Soon

DALE C. WARNER
992-2143
102 W. Main
Pomeroy

HURRY!

LIMITED TIME
ONLY!

80% SOLID-ST

WAS '629.95

NOW I

$54995

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NOW!

$29995

New
"NAJUUL" WATER PILL

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Play it safe an.t lltll'll.
IJ may be time to
have ·your presenl'
policy updated,

Ohio's Mrs. Dye to nation41 PTA office

OPEN···

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McNickle is
·speaker for
alumni event

D&amp;D M
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Dear Helen:
"Tired of Pretense" says "most women" are disgusted by
sex. Wbere did she take her poll? Not In MY house !
.
~'ve got a man with the personality of a saint, a body that
won t q~t, and he could easily paSs for Robert Redford's
younger brother,
P. Believe me, Idon'thavetopretend! -SORRY FORT . OF

· Ground covers can solve a variety of garden problems and
be .very attractive. Ground cover plants are carpeting plants.
Wblle no carpet is lovelier or more restful than a lawn· of
~lvety well-kept grass, there are places where grass will not
grow ~ell, or wh-:e mowing is difficult. In such places ground
cover Is a charming and satisfactory solutidn.
Once eats bllshed, a planting of ground cover keeps down
weeds and Is easy to care for , Mowing, for example, is difficult
on slopes and banks and around trees that have exposed roots.
M~st of us are famUia~ with the more PQpular ground ·
covers - myrtle (Vinca minor), English ivy, Wy~f-the-valley.
Actually, there are hundreds of plants that make good ground
covers, so choosing the right ones is worth careful exploring.
For·slopes and banks, low-growing junipers are nice.
- Sedum spurium blooms with masSes of scarlet flowers all
summer. Another bloomer Is a-own-vetch, but must be kept
under controL
.
Creeping phlox you probably know. It carpets a bank or
any other sunny area with bright colors. It flowers in April and
May and will grow even in' poor soil. ·
Around trees, edging patha, and along drives, no ground
covers surpass English. and Baltic ivy, or myrtle,
· For that damp shady spot, try lliy.of-the-valley and ferns.
There are big ferns that can serve as background with low
dainty ones making a carpet In front. Their growing habits are
fascinating .
'
Most ground covers are best planted In spring or fall. Give
them a mulch and each season an occasional feeding. After
they are established they ask for little care beyond watering.

WEEK

We, the widel'llgned directors attest the correctna ollhll nport Gl con- ,
clition aild declare that It hae been eumlnl!ll by Ul and to the beat of our
lmowledge and belief Ill true ~ correct.
..
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~ a.' Norris
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om.
Dlnettn "
J. W. W•wr, Jr.

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l;rampton
Houston
champion

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GREENERYPROBLEMS?USEGROUNDCOVERS

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By Miss Ruby Diehl, Rutland Garden Club

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Garden ·club projects plan nee{ ~

I· l:ly ~ DOWN
.. three by George Scott. Jim, . for hlllourth lllraight win lblt
UPI Spot1B Writer
~ton allowed 11 · hits, ·. in- 11e11100 and hll 11th In a l'Oir
The Texas Rangers ~re only eluding a three-run homer by dating back to Jut Augull ·11
· half kidding when they refer to Gralg Nettles, in 612-3lnnlnga ~ the Wblte Sox topped 1b1
Steve FouCl\ult as their one- but received a-edit for his A's. Terry Forster replecld
man bullpen.
third vlc!Qry.
Kaat with the ba~e~!Wed aid
The z;.year old right-bander TWIDi 8 Royall 3
two out 1n· the eighth lnnlii
from Duluth, Minn., isn't as
Rod Carew doubled. in the and ended the threat 111
By U~ Preu International
Rick Barry, the Warriors'
well known as some of the Twins' tiH&gt;reaking ~·In the strlklnj
out · ClludeU
Respect is finally coming to 'top scorer, was ·held more
American League's other second ·inning and Craig Washington.
•
Norm Van Uer, the tough than 10 points below his
relief stars but he has a unique Kuslck hlt a two-run hcmer in Oriole• 11~ Indlll• 1~ -'
HWe guard of the Chl~go average with only 21.
statistic: he's recorded aU the the fifth, Rarmon Killebrew, AI ·Bumbry drove In IO!ar
Bulls.
Boston pulled oock Into
saves Texas pitchers. have honored
In
pre-game l'llllJ and ;Mike Torrez pitched
Long regarded as an contention in its Eastern
achieved
in
the
last
two
ceremonies
during
which hll a sizhltter lor the Orioles, wJ!O
mE POMEROY, MIDDLEPORT STREET CAR LINE
aggressive ballliandler with Conference finals 'against
seasons.
,
old
uniform.
number
was snapped a sb.game I~
·
· By Janet Morris
.;
.potential Slilr qualities, the Washington with a 101-90
That total reached 14 retired by the Twln.!l, sent the streak In their opener t*
There was once a street car line which ran between the Drake Hotel .lit Racine and the
articulate and handsome · 6- victory ·over the Bullets
SUnday
when Foucault closed Royals off In front with a Cleveland. The lndlalll W4j!l
Hobson Depot. The car line had its beginning as the P&amp;M Railway and Power Co. (Pomeroy
foot I backcourtman scored a Saturday afternoon.
out
the
Rangers' M victory three-run ho,mer In the first the aeeond game wben GeGrge
\
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career .high 35 pointS SWlday The Celtics say they no and Middleport) around 1900,
Hendrick singled home Frank
In 1899 the Ohio River Electric Company made a survey of the county and set up one over the California Angels. He Inning.
to pace the BWls to a 108-101 longer have any doubts about
now has two victories against Wblte Sal 5 A's 2
Duffy with two out In the 11th
electric
line
between
Racine
and
Hobson.
The
street
cars
ran
off
the
power
from
this
line.
After
victory over the Golden State why they were losing so badly
no
losses
plus
two
saves
to
Jim
Kaat
went
7
:1-3
innings
inning.
the street cars made their runs in the morning, the stores of the towns used the power from this
Warriors in a nationally- to Washington in the first two line.
·
show for hll work this season
televised game that gave games of that best of seven
'
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There were two street cars, dark yellow or orange In color, One wits open for summer compared to eight wins and 12
Chicago a 2-1 edge In the hest series.
riding
~d D?e was closed for winter trips. The open car also offered Sunday rides along the . saves in 69 gariles last season . NHL Playoff Scrtedule and Chii::a9o 9o . GOlden 'state .• • ,.,
of seven NBA Western Con- "You start wondering if
The victory was th·e
Results
Sun., May ~-Chitago
f08
Oluo R1ver m the summer.
·
terence finals.
maybe you can't beat them, if
Da.nners'eighthinthe
. irlast 10
By iJnile&lt;l Press International
Golden State 101 Tues ., Mav 6--At night a car propelled by an electric motor called a dummy was used to push freight cars .na~-e
( Semif inals-'8 est of Seven)
at Golden State, 11 :00 p.m .
Van Lier never has been ·a something' is wrong," said
garries and moved them to r Philadelphia leads series, 3-0) Thurs., May B or Fri.. May 9up
and
down
the
track
and
deliver
supplies
to
the
stores.
The
dummy
was
a
smaU
clreed
cab
particularly hitlh scorer; his Boston forward Pa.ul Silas ..
withln a half game of the first- Series 1-Ph;tadelphia vs. NY at Golden State, 11 :00 p.m. ~
Islanders
Sunday , May IF-- at Chlcag ~
game is cbaracterized more "Now we have a better at- car with eight wheels. The dummy also transported cars carrying coal from the ~es.
place Oakland A's In the AL Tues .. April 29- Phlladelphia 4 3:10 p.m. • ·Tues .. May 13-at.
Jake
Hartenbach
was
the
first
conductor
of
the
cars.
He
later
became
sheriff
of
Meigs
by penetrating and passing titude about this series... We'U
West.
Jeff
Burroughs NY Islanders 0 Thurs .. May .1- Golden State, 9:00 p.m . •·"
Philadelphia 5 -NY Islanders ,.e, necessary
:
off, playing defense imd play with a lot more Intensity County. Hayes Roush was the first motorman. Others working on the .cars were Wilbur Logan provided the ony run of the ot
Sun .. May 4- Phlladelphia 1
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moving the ball and the team. now, because we know we can Eddie Hoeflich, Herman Werner, Roy Kasper, aU of Pomeroy, and Ernest LaUance of Mid: game when he hit his fifth NY Islanders 0 Wed .. May 7- at ABA -Playoff Sthedule an(
dleport.
OO
f the
off Andy New York , 8:os· p .m . x-Thurs..
Resulh
But when the opportunities · beat them.
111
Country people rode their horses to town, left them at the livery stable, and rode the street
mer o
season
May 8- at Philadelphia . 8: 05
By United Press International !II
presented themselves Sunday, Boston took only a 61h17lead
Hassler in the fourth Inning . p.m. •·Sat.. May 10 or Sun.,
• (All Times EDTI
. •
Van Lier went straight to the in the ftrst half. But as the car between the towns to do their shopping. The cars also carried wotkers to the R. A. Miller
'lbe Milwaukee Brewers de- May ll - at New York, A: OO
(All Series Best of Seven) ..
. JC -Tues .,
May
13- at
Eastern Division Finals
:
hoop.
third quarter got under way, Lumber Mill in Hobson and to the Thomas Mine, now Batley's Lake. Sometimes it was feated the New York Yankees p.m
8 :0 5p . m.~:..:
Ph
iladelphia.
K
1
k
Sf
Lo
Is
J-Buffalo vs. MoMreil
en uc Y '!'s. •
u
"Sometimes you only get the
Celtics
outscored necessary for the conductors to wear "dusters" over their uniforms because the crowd Qf 11-4, the Minnesota Twins beat series (Series
tied, 2.2)
.
( Kentuc~y w1ns series, 4-1) •
miners
riding
home
from
work
were
covered
with
coal
dust.
The
cars
could
seat
about
100
·
attention when you score a lot Washington 21-!0withastrong
D..,
Sun .,
April
27-Buffalo
6 Mon ., ~prtt 21 - Kentucky Ht
th KaDSSS City Ro ya Is ""•
Montreal 5, ot Tues .. April 29- S\. LOUIS 109 Wed ., April 23--,
of points," Van Lier said. "But running', shooting and people and on Saturday nights the cars were loaded to their fullest. All the men got off work thee Chicago
wb,lte Soi topped Buffalo 4 Montreal 2 Thurs., Kentucky 108 St . Louis 103 . •
that night and everybody went to town ,
that's not my game. I do other defensive game.
the
A's
5-2,
and
the Cleveland May 1- Montreal 7 Buffalo 0 Fro .. April 25- St . Louis 10J;:
The fare for the cars was five cents from Middleport to Pomeroy and 14 cents to Hobson.
Sat., May 3-Montreal 8 Buffalo Kentucky_ 97
•
things."
·
John Havlicek, with 26
Indians scored a 4-3, 11-inning 2 Tues., May 6-at Buffalo, 8:05 Sun ,, Aprol 27- Kentucky 117 St.
You.
could
buy
a
ticket
good
for
.several
rides.
During
the
Meigs
County
Fair
people
from
For most of the last 2 '&gt;2 points, had his best game of
oina th f' st p.m . Thurs ., May 8-at Mon - LOUIS 98
•
trl,urnph after I0-..,
e lr treal. 8:05 p.m. K-Sal., May 10 Mon ., .April 28-Kentucky 12l:
seasons, Van Lier has been the season. Dave Cowens had Racme rode the cars down to the Roedel corner atNye Avenue where they waited for a band or
game of their doubleheader to or sun .. May n- al Buffalo. Y- st. Lou •s ,103
•
hay wagon to take them lo the fairgrounds lor 25 cents.
.
content to feed the ball off to 24 and Jo-Jo White 21.
the
Baltimore
Orioles
11-1.
tba
x-lf
necessary
•
The cars performed a vital service since the roads were not the best and there were few
y- Time to be announced
Western Division Finills
..
Chicago's high scoring forThe fourth game of the
Detroit's
doubleheader
at
Denver
.
v
s
..
lndlona
•
( lndiitna win$ series, 4· 3) c
"
wards, Bob Love and Chet series will be played Wed- automobiles. Coal miners and railroad employees rode the cars to and from work.
During the 18908 the streets of Pomeroy, Middleport, and Racine were dirt. It only took a , Boston·was postponed by rain. N BA Playoff Sthedule and Sun , April 2D-Denver 13
Walker. In the Bulls ' style of nesday at. Landover, Md.
In the National League, it
Resulls
Indiana 128
,
•
small rain to make many of the cow'ltry roads impassable . Paved roads did not appear until
offense, under the direction of
. By United Pr.ess International Tues ., April 22-lndiane 1311
Diego
Angeles
Was
San
10
Los
1910 with the Increasing popularity of the automobile. Those were the days when the inost
• •
•
(All T1mes EDT)
Denver UA
•
coach Dick Motta, the guards
7, _ Cincmnati 3 AUanta 2, E a stern Conference ·Finals Thurs ., Afrll 24-lndiana nC
popular
means
of
transportation
were
the
horse
and
buggy,
Derby
hats
were
the
latest
In
try to get the ball up quickly,
men's fashion and people got their water for drlnkirig and Other purposes directly from the Chicago 8 St. Louis 6, and
Bos\::~s~~saesvh~~~ton
~;i~~er~~rll 25-0enver 12;
penetrate the middle to force
Houston over San Francisco (Washington leads series, 2-1) Indiana 109
•
"Old Ohio."
the defense to collapse, then
12-8
after
an
11-6
loss.
PittSun
..
A
pril
27Washing.ton
100
Sun
..
April
27-lndlana
1of
-Ev~n though the street cars were a necessity to the some 29,000 residents of Meigs County,
•
Boston 95 Wed., Apr 11 3Q- Denver 90
•
pass off to the forwards. The
·
they
still had their problems. Some cars jumped the track and some crashed Into each other sburgh at Philadelphia and Wash;ngton 117 Boston 92 Sat., Wed ., April 3D-Denver 10.
whole key is a tight, rugged
Montreal at New York were May 3- Boston 101 Washington Indiana 99
10:
when they got their schedules mixed and moved along on the same track.
. ed t ·
90 Wed ., May 7- at wash ington .
Set ., May 3-lneliana
•
delens~ to spiing the guards
ram
OU .
8:05 p.m . Fri. May 9- at Denver 96
. , :
During
this
time,
Mason
and
New
Haven,
W.
Va.,
did
not
have
high
schools.
If
children
loose.
Basion, 7:30 p.m. x -Sun ., May
11
wished to continue their education past gtade school, they had to come to Meigs County. Since Brewers 11 Yllinkees 4
11- at WaSh ington, J:tO 'p.m . )( a
The game staned off as an
The Brewers, first In the AL Tues .. May 13- at Boston .. 9: oo
•
the Pomeroy Mason Bridge was not completed until August 22, 1928, the children rode a skiff
apparent runaway for i the
HOUSTON (UP!) - -Bruce
/ p . m .~~
.
Ca
•
across the river. Once 911 the Ohio side, the students rode the street car to Racine High SchooL .East, ran · their winning
'th , western conference Fmals
· n you recall when a sea~
Warriors, who :wtU host the Crampton no sooner had wori
fl
1
tr
k
t
The street cars of this area were a common sight from 1900 to 1929 when they became s ea o ve games Wl a u1Best of seven&gt;
under chair cushions would tuJII
nell two games Tuesday and the $150,000 Houston Open
four
.
Golden
State
vs.
Chicago
up
sm
. •II, change In addition "'
obsolete with the advent of the automobile and the building of the Pomeroy-Mason Brtage:"'l'he hit attack which included
·
C Chicago leads Series, 2-1)
..,
Ill
Thursday In Oakland. Hitting than he served notice of his line operated until February 25, 1919, when the OhiQ River Electric Railway and Power hits by Sixto Lezcano
0
and Sun., April 27- Golden State 107 the lint?
from the field at a 70 per cent . Intentions this weekend In
·
Chi!=aQo
89
Wfid.,
April
Jo-----·
:
Company was placed In the hands of a receiver. Later, at a juelalal sale, the property was sold
cllp whUe the Bulls could Dallas.
•
to a committee of bondholders, who In tW11 were granted permission by an order of the Public
manage only 37 per cent,
"I've won two In a row
Utilities Commission to sell the property to the Ohio River Railway and Power Company on
~' ! •_ ) ~ ' I
Golden State jumped out to a before," Crampton said, "and .!uly 5, 1924. On June 26, 1929, the passenger service was cancelled and on June 30 1929 the
CaUNo.493
Charter No. 981J ,
· N'auoall BUflte'.icia No. t
37-26 adYantage after the first 1 came close once at (Fort street car line shut down forever.
'
'
REPORT OF OONDlriON, OONSOLIDATING ' "i.'rf"
.
period. ·
Worth's) Colonial after ~ The car barns are still standing today on East Main Street next to the old Foundry building, · '
. :, DOICESTIC SUBSIDIARIEs, OY.TR!: ·' -. ' 1 '
· .,,,
. ! :i
"I don't think anyone ever winning in Houston . If 1 get a now known as Midwest Steh The cars left With the great depresSion. Some 'were pui' out to ·
., 10,1 &lt;l' ,;:;•o ti l,' '/ -1-&lt;.J I'J!J ,
played a better first quarter chance, this time I'll be a little
pasture, some were sent to Louisville, Ky. while still others went to other cities to do their
more diligent on the 18th work. Not many small towns had them, so it was a great loss.to Pomeroy and Middleport.
against us," said Motta.
Slowly but surely, however, hole_" .
It wa.s the end of the slow, peaceful way of life and the heglbning of the desperate struggle
1
,
. 11' ' ,_ {,: rl "" .:' :1 . ·::: ·:..::fi: ~,.., lr t·"'-·
Chica~o chipped away at the
Crampton will head the field to keep up with and colltrol the automobile.
·
·
Qf a.cllle In the ~lite ofOblo, at the close,olii!Pblesllon Aprlltl,' Jtlll publllbed
deficit and took the lead for at Dallas' Bryon Nelson Golf
in response to call made by Comptroller of the Currency, under Title 12, VDJlal
the first time with 13 seconds Classic beginning Thursday ,
Sources: "The Street Car Line," by Mr. and Mrs . Gerald Shuster; "The Street Car Line,"
States
Code, Section 181.
.
remaining In .the first half. btit before the Australia native
by
Mrs.
Sylvia
Pool;
''The
Street
Qar
Line,"
by
Earl
B.
Morris;
"St.
Louis
Had
Nothing
on
'
Going Into the second half with drove home to Dallas late
Pq~eroy , Mtddleport," by Beulah Jones, ~d Pioneer History o( Meigs County, by Edgar
.
ASSETS
a 52-50 edge, the Bulls held Sunday, he talked of the four Ervtn.
·
·
Cash
and
due
from
banks
- - - - ·- - - - ·- ~ - - ••• 1 W,l7l.ll
command the rest of the ·way. straight sub-par rounds which
.......
U.S. Treasury securities - - - - - - - - - - - ·- - - - - - - ~ · I :138 552115
"Van Uer was the key," lifted .him to a two-,stroke Dalla
s) to tell her where I was very much the competition Crampton for the lead both
·
·
Obligations
of other U.S. Government
' ' ·
said Golden State COR ch AI victory over Wewoka, Okla. ,
·
agencies and corporations - - - - - - - - - - 38 464 rr
Attles · "He got t'de and hurt optometrist Dr. Gil Morgan, Slilying anq asked her to but trBI'Iing Lee Trevt' no by times. But Morgan could
watch
the
papers
to
see
if•
I
two
strokes.
gather
only
a
string
of
13
pars
US and after he Started
Obligations~
States
and
political
subdivisions
• - • 144;1163:91
. go ing ,
"It's a riice feeling to have
the
rest
of
the
afternoon.
·
we never 1got our · delense won again. It's been almost made the cut.
· Crampton fired a -·-~~der
Otber
secunties
•
•
•
•
•
_
_
_
_
_ • 12,500.00
=~·
Despite
his
frustration,
Federal funds sold ~d securities purchased
going. When we had that little ·two years since 1 did that ,
"I didn't want her passing par 66 Saturday to take the
lead, we flgilred our offense Crampton,· 39, said. "I w~s me on the highway Friday lead, and be came back with a Morgan took a check for
under agreements to resell - - - - - - - - • - - •
1,000,000.00
Loans
- • - - - - - - - - - ·_ - • __ , . __
$17,100
hack
to
his
hometown.
would carry us, but when It worried because I played a night::
·
69 SUnday, leaving a faltering
4,395,171.44
Bank premiSes, furniture and flltures, and
diW:;t. our defense faltered, practice round Tuesday and
As It turned out, Joan Trevino and a downhearted Crampton got the $30,000 .
winner's share and Joe Inman
too.
dldpoorly.1caUedmywife(ln Crampton came to Houston . Morgan behind.
other assets. representing bank premises - - -. - - - ..25,006.57
Otherassets •u - - - - - • ·- •• _ ___ _ - - - - -· l,'IB,30
Jr. collected $10,650 for third,
-:;;iiii~=:~~~::--:=::--:;;;::'--------Sa-tur_d_ay_.wi_th_h_er_h_us_:b..and~ · a,nThe
Ukeable Morgan holed
Ill-foot wedge and a five- three strokes back of the
TOTAL ASSETS - • - - - - - - - - ·- -f7,2M,58U5
foot putt for birdies in the first leader.
LWIIUl'IFS
'
five holes Sunday, tying
Demand deposits of tndlvtdusls, partnerships
and corporations - - . - - - - • • - _' •
$1,492,148.96
Time and savings deposits of Individuals,
partnerships, and corporations - - - • - - - - - - - - - 4 399 309 38
Deposits of United States Government • - - - - - • - - - ·-' 33925.91
Deposits of States an~ political subdivisions - - - - - - - - - - m:010:02
Certified and officers cheeks, etc. - - - • - - - - - - - - " 17m 73
TOTAL DEPOSITS - - - - - - - - - IM30.1ri2.00
' .
Ameri~an League
Nationai League
By United Press International
Total
demand
deposits_
~
.
f2.030J!!2.82
(a)
· East ·
East
w. 1. pet. g .b.
(1;1) Total time and savings deposits - - • - - 14,399,3111.38 ;
...
w. 1. pet. g.b. Chicago
15
6 .714 Milwaukee
13 7 .650
,.
Other
liabilities
:
•
:
~
•
'
215.191.83
9 .526 4
Detroit
10 8 .556 2 New Yorkhia . 10
11 10 .524
'
TOTAL UABILITIES - - - - - - • - - - - • ., ·- -· 18,645;363.63
Cleveland
10 10 .500 3 Philadelp
Pittsburgh
9 10 ..474 5
. RESERVES ON LOANS AND SECURlriES
·
Boston
9 9 .500 3
St. Louis
8 12 · ..400 6112
New York
io t3 .435 4112 Montreal
6 12 .333 J 1h
Reserve for bad debt losses on loans
,,
Baltimore
8 13 .381 5112
West
West
{set up PlfBIUlllt to IRS rulings) - - - - - - - - - 173,322.011
I
t
b
w. I. pet. g .b.
w . · P&lt; · g. · Los Angeles
16 10 .615
Reservesonsecurltles
;
_
·- - . eeo.oo
0 a kl an d '
13 10 ·565
Cincinnati
14 12 .538 2
D"''uGHT TO YOU BY CITY ICE &amp;
TOTAL nESER~ ON LOANS AND SECI.!RITIES • - - - - :173,972.011 ·
Texas
12 10 .545
'h San Diego
13 12 520 2'h
California
13 It .542
rh San Francisco 12 12 .SOO 3
FUEL, VILLAGE PHARMACY, CITIZENS
CAPITAL ~CCOVNTS
..
:
Kansas City
17 12 .500 l'h Atfanta
13 14 ..481 3112
.,
K
PL
. Minnesota
Equity
capital-total
•
•
•.
•
,
f$7UU.74
.
9 10 .474 2
Houston
10 18 .357 7
Chicago
9 15 .375 41f2
Satun:fav's Resulh
Common Stock:wtal·par value
- - - 121,000.00
Saturday's Results
Montreal 3 New York 0
No. share~ authorized 5,000
Boston 12 Detroit 2
Cleveland 6 Baltimore 1
Philadelphia 6 Pittsburgh 2,
Jt!o. shares outstanding 5,QOO
1st , twit ight
·
. ' '
I .
Milwaukee 4 New- York 3
Philad~lphJa , 4 Pittsburgh 3,
SUrplus---------Minnesota 14 Kansas City S
. 2nd, night .
·
12!,000.00
- ·'
Chicago , A Oak·l and 3, 10
Cincinnati ·6 Allanta 1', night
.... r ,. r.o 321W74
Undlvlcted
profits
'
·-·
Inn ings , night,
Ch'ICago 7 s t . Louis 3, night
. TOTAL CAPITAL ACOOUNTS
California 4 Tex!ls 2, niQht
57U&amp;!!,74
·
sunday l s Results
San Diego 3 Los Ange les 1, ··15
TOTAL UABIUTIES, RESERVES, AND
inn .• night
Baltimore 11 Cleveland 1, 1st
Houston at san Francisco.
' CAPITAL ACCOUNTS - - ~ . - - ·
,. [
.Cleveland A Baltimore 3, 2nd , ppd., rain
f7,2M,51U5
'
'
'
11 inn ings
•
·
Sunday's Results · •
,,
. ,
·
MEMORANDA
Chicago 5 Oakland 2
Cincinnati 3 Atlanta .2
•,
!CI OmiATING 1
A'vera~e of total depoelts lor the 1S calendar
IIICAI"ITAl
' .I • ' . ( \, .... '
Milwaukee n New York 4
Chicago. 8 st . t.ouls 6
M#.,INT EHAHCE
"
6 Kansas Citv 3
san Francisco 18 Houston 6, .
" " "' 'lli~hiullng witll Clll date - , - - - - - - • , - .•
"· Minnesota
; ' • •..,ti5,4auo
Texas 1 Californ ia 0
1st
AVerage of tots( loans lor the 15 calendar .
'"
Detroit at Boston, 2 games,
Houston 12 San Franclsc:o 8,
ppd ., ra in
.
2nd
daya endinll with can date - - -· - - ,. . , - - - - , , - . - - •4JOI,427:41
Mondav's Games
, San, Diego 10 Los Angeles 7
SCIPIO TOWNSHIP
''
.' '
' .
I All Times EDTJ
P'1tt 5b
h
t p 'I d l I
COUNTY TR!ASUAER
Boston (Tiant 2-Jl at Cleveurg
a
hi a e ph a,
""
ppd ., rain ·
•
• &gt;
•
'
MEIGS COUNTY
land (J - Perry 1-4), 7: 30p.m .
Montreal at New York, ppd .,
••
R. R. I
I, Johri T. Wolle, Cashler,olthe above-named bank do hereby declare that
N.ew Yor~ (Hunter 2-3) at rain
·
ALBANY,
OHIO
40710
.
·Baltimore !Palmer :;J -2), 7:30
Monday's ,Games
.this repo~ 91 condition is true and correc~ to the beat of my.,•Iedc• ~
belief.
.· .;, •••
P· ~alifornia nanane 1 ~-0l at
('All Ttnlts I!DTJ
'
' '
Texas !Jenkins 3_2,., 9 : 00 p.m .
Chicago (Stone 4-0l at Mont -· I'
Jolm.T. Wolle
nn
. JII,JIU,Uifl,,.rlfiMU,J/IL,III,~,/Im/1,,~/h,,l
Tuesday's Games
real (Blair 0-31, B:OOp'. m.
California at Oakland , n•'"ht
Philadelphia (Ciirlton 1-3) at
..,
St. Louis (Gibson 0 -31, 8:30·
(Of'

"•
••

I

'

~

VENDURA • McxW m14W

WITH EXCUJSIVE
SPEAKER SYSTEM

~

•

"

'

·i=URNI·TURE

.•.•• .
•

••

.

••
•••
•••

'

••

•

•\

.

.......

••
•

...,.

�,. I ;

L

''

J "..'·

'

'

r-_......,... . . __________._..___

7- The Daily Sentinel, Middlepi&gt;rt-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday,May 5,1975 ·
•

f" ' ,•

''l

· s,Poin+a.-..
l!'t'

PllLI.Y CRAMER.

:I

needs ~softening
final rin~e Wf ter to make a
blanket really fluffy and soft.
Do you let a WP&lt;II blanket
l!ecome completely'dry before
remQvlng from the dryer or
ihe line. The slight dampness
will allow for stretching to
shape. Then brush both sides .
with a stiff brush to fluff It up.
If drying a blanket out doors
~n parallel lines take hold of
. ; . ' ., the ,corners and shake It
several times during the .
drying period. Never hang
blanket out doors when the
weather is too cold. l'his will
'stiffen the (lbers. Also never
P.u tit in the hot sun. -:POLLY

DEAR POLLY - The fibers
in my all-wool blanket are a
little stiff. It was washed in
water that was too hot. Do you.
know of remedy that wtil ;,
·soften my blan.ket a bil? _:__
MABEL.
DEAR MABEL - A good
trick Is lo add a tablespoon of
household ammonia to the
'""&amp;!~~~-lllii'$1!18S11!!381i181i 1-.
II®

So'c"I' aI

w

.:

Mrs.
Harold
Sauer,
president of the MiddleportPomeroy Area Branch of the
-American Association of
University· Women, was In
Cleveland last weekend to
attend the state convention of
the AAUW held at the Shea ton
Inn Hopkins.
Speakers for tile more than
500 in attendance included Dr.

'

Wool b/4nl:?.et

a

· C'lev·.e/and
M rs. Sa. uer. tn
.

r·,

1

.CaIendar '

..

'1: · -:

r

Ann Camp'bell. The study

rJrforriling at . the convention were the 'Lakewood
Congregational . Church Bell
Ringers, the Lithuanian Art
Ensemble, · an instrumental
group, and the Berea High
School jazz band doing Glenn
Miller Music. The 1977 con- .
vention will be . held on the

'

DI(;~TRACY

II

KNIFE YOU

1

EVER SAW!

Preventive Care 33.

r

counter"; · "Economic Facts The only vioi"'ce on our TV Is
of Life : Li.ving.with Less, and ·that which we Inflict when the
"The 21st Century: Deciding picture 19es pbhht.

NoW".

.... .

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

";

WILL Be
R~ADY IN A JIFFY TO SAMPLE THE
!?,~A~ LADY'S HOSPITALITY~

24 at K C Roman Banquet

Jim : "He starts by leading the

tO 2
+KQI074

• J

• 72
.,_

. BORN LOSp:R

WEST
• Ql0832

*

tOtNb i\'Q)ND
~E~~~ GAU.it-lb
HE~R'I

EAST
.965
•Q9H
•K 75
+53
+A 62
.K 10,83
•lo9 5
SOUTH (DJ
.AK

\

LISTEIJ, flA~E ltV EieEtJ

HEf.IF'!;Ci&lt;?

WE'LL, I'LL Hfl,Y~ 'PJ l&lt;M:W 1\Vo.T
I Nv\ A V~R! ~EFUL ftR50N!
I LAJ.J
bl.Af:&gt;/&lt;; (X) AN'ITHI~
-=+!EO W,A.f.JT&lt;;; TO (X)

""'*

• A83

+J98
.AQJ64
North-South vulnerable
West

Nortb

Pass

Pass
3 N.T. Pass

Pass

1

East

2N.T.
West

East

South

t•

contracts ." ,
Oswald : "The 'R' for Review the
bidding isn't important in this hand ,
but the 'A' for Analyze the lead ; the
'C ' for Count winners and losers and

the 'H' lor How can I make this

TODA 't''S QUESTION

Jim : " The code word ARCH is

never more useful than at notrump

Art club news

Nor\h

hand re"!!!Y.i!fe important."
your partner continues to four
Jim : ''South COWlts three winners spades . What do you do now?
in tile majors and needs six in the.
ADswer Tomorrow
minors to maknhree notrump. He ,----,-.,..-.,----,,-:-:=:--=-:::-:-.
has to play botlr minor suits and. Sand $1 for JACOBY MODERN
sees l~ttle chance _to ma~e hi~ 'con- book to: " Win at Bridge," (c/o this
tract..'! the ctub fmesse IS gomg to .nawspaper), P.O. Box 489, RadiO

lose. .

Oswald

"Therefore, he should

City Station, New

York. NY. 10019.
·

~
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
4 Hooray!
I Initiate
5 High place
6 Ancient
6 Italian city
dagger
7 Joint
11 Opposite
8 Break
12 Silly
bread
13 In
9 Black
.subjection
cuckoo
(4 wds.)
(var.)
15 Extremely 10 Ship-shaped
16 Sea ~agle
clock
17 Greek
14 Borders
portico
17 Do away
18 Before
with
21 Fashionable 18 Colleen's
shop
name
23 Spoken
19 Deserve
24 Imprisoned 20 District of
' (2 wds;)""
England .
26 Differen~ · 21 Unexpected
tiate
problem

IMBIA GAS ·

GASOLINE ALLEY

now,·

Joel?

21

_·Buying
telephone equipment
have
·
its·hangups.

~Raiac~h.a.;oer

~-

1

I

KNOW HOW HEAVY )'QUI(

''RE~PON~IBILITI E5 ,,ArlE ...

ANDJ. ll4Q!JGHT.... IN
VIEW OF 1HE MA NY
PRE&amp;SURE:; -,ou 'RE

UNDEr?. ... :-~~~

._FREE
GARMEN'I'
·s-rORAG

I nl I I

'

·

Wallach

IFLUGAR
. I
n
.

.,

I .I

,

A L.AC.t&lt;
OF "6-PIRI"TI.IAL."
INFI.UE:N,E.

COULO MEAN

••
•

•u

·•

Now arranp the circled letters
to form the IUrprile BJIIWH• U

UJ · ·

sugreoted by the above cartoon.

~I~~Prittl=dte~SIII=ll"~IISI::::AIISWIR~IIen~~,

L_ ___::=.:=.:::::.::=.:::=:::.:.c:c___

_J_

r XXI IJ
-

-

-

-

-

(ADIW~rl IOMOrrOW)

Jucul&gt;l~e : GlAND

!'Oalurdu, ·,.
·

WIPED DRUDGE FEWEST

I

Am~·t'r: What Mill' dislihd mOHI about the self·prwlaimcd
; - ; - ''puX~~yfoott'r'' - HIS "PAWING"
'

Across

1

,\

,,

You'll mistakenly rely upon

~o~cts.)

another to take care of
something important you could
do better ydurseH. -

fO Religiousnt,ss
fl Gunpowder
ingredient

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Now. 221

38
3SForeign

; Beomlc:e Bede Osot
For Tueldll,, Mo, e, 1175
AlliES (MIIrch 21 -April 111
-+-+---,.! Weigh what you say today very
carefully when deall1"9 wilh a
=+--+-+--+-;sensitive friend. A lhoughtless
remark will leave ill feelings.

-:;-:-+-+-t-t-i TAURUS . (April
L--L-"-...L.-L--

Your social inage is eKtremely

potentially in pOor taste.

SAGITTAIIII/1 (N"". 23-Dec.
21) An event will not turn out as
fruitlully as you hope today. ~
won't be lao disappointing .
Don't make too much of it.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jon.
191 Don't be lavish with your

with friends today who are able
to spend more freely than you

party deserves them . Flattery

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it :

INIRR'r1NG
YOU ?

One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A io
used for the three L's, X ftlr the two O's, etc. Single letters.
apoatrophes, the length and formati?n of the · words .are all
hinto. Each day the code letters are Qlfferent.

AXYD ,LBAAXR
LONiil!'ELLOW

complirit~ts

for its own sake woo't work .

GEMINI (MOJ 21-Ju,. 201 You
won't be,as self-dlsclpllni¥1 t&lt;&gt;:-

AQUARIUS (.hln. :111-r.b. 11)
Put blinders on today when you

day as you . should be. You'll

tomorrow.

••
•'"

ul

......•

..
'

.M

pass shop wlnclows featuring

expensive items that you 'koow ·

are beyond your budget
CANCER (JUM 21·JW, 221 Pt•cia (r.b. 20--"'h 201
Decisions you male e today are You'll knowlngty let those In
apt Ia be short-sighted and your charge get away with
CRYPTOQUOTE
based upon conclusi ons things they s~ouldn'l today.
'
neither factual nor pr"!'tlcal. . Later lh.4!Y'II1ry the,..,. thing .
VLHT
DIKMG_VZ .E TQM P
CELWFX
'
LEO (,lut1 23-Aug. 221 Be. again.
·G L Q carefulln.materlal transactions '
KL
CT~
U IV Z
with lr iends today. Your
N I' I K · K I A I K
.
.
generous nature is Ukety to
MTDMTCTQKIKGLQ
G C overrule common sense.
NGKE
VIRGO (Aug. 23-S.pt. 221
Things wmnot cern e your Wtlf You'll become lnvotvecl fn an
today by wishful thinking. important new group lntw•1
You'cl beller roll up your this year. From It you1t mlko
. sleeves and g eUo wale:.
m.any ·new acqualnto~c• .
So
m• of thMo cont1C11 wNt
LIBRA (lepl. 23-0cl. 231
prO\te beneficial caretrwloe. ·
'.
·''·

Your

.

'·-"

unless the ott\er

can.

fi nd it easier IO pul th lngs Off till

·"
'"

delicate today. Don't try 10 upstage others or do anything

You ' ll find yourself em-..L......I-..l...:-L--rl barrassed n you pal around

lljAT J.
MIGf.\T HAVE
CH,A,NGEDMY
MIND ABOUT

II

20-MIIy 201

.

..

-.,
...

~

I I

2

DOWN
1 Falling-out
Zln(completely)
3 qhoir voice

COrsages Wt'/.'1
ned

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

" .,'"""' &gt;••c •~•l" ,......

Yesterday's Answer
23 Pizzeria
32 Maple
fixture
genus
2t Marsh· elder 33 English
STOfF
25 Siang term
river
for a tireless 3t High
athlete
mountain
(2 wds.)
35 Indochines~
29 Cautious
native
GAROUC
30 Measure of 36 Lacoman '
speed
clan group
U.
. . .
31 Fortitude·
37 Actor
. -· ~
- :;=-:~;:;~_J__.__,_,

~~~~~~--~=-----------------~~----~,-------~----------------~----~3t&amp;el3

ltJf!INATIONw!oe

·.

one letter to each square, to .

city
30 "Show
Boat"
composer
31 j'Roscoe"

-SIGH!r-AH RARE:LY
SEES ANY OTHER SIDE
O' ANYBODY'S F.ACE!!-

.•

form four ordinar)' words.

29 Mexican

NOTHIN' PE;RSONAL,
BUT AH DRUTHE=R FACE T'OTHER
WAY WHILE TALKN TO YO'rr-~--

·-

:rnscrambte theso four Juniblts,

..22....,1s..,ra_e.,.li,.:.po_r..,t.....,.,.:..pluck

28

•.

Gourmet 8; New Zoo Revue 13.

5

Pass
3•
Pass
44
Pass
4+
Pass
?
You, South, hold : .
• K Q 9 8.5 • A 2 + K 4 olo A 9 8 7
What do ·you do now?
A - Bid four hearts. Your
partner has shown the ace of
diamonds. You can afford to show
your ace of bearts .

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

1

· Th e bidding has been :

Pass

·•

10:-.telebrlty Sweepstakes 3,4,15; Joker's Wild 8,10;
Dinah! 13.
10 :30---Wheet of Fortune 3,4,15; Gambit 8,10 .
11 :00-High Rollers 3,4, 15; One Life To Live 6; Now
You See It 8,10; Electric Company 20.
11 :3()-Hollywood Squares 3,6,15; Btankety Blanks 13;
News 4; Love of Life 8, 10; Sesame Street 20.
11 :55-0raham Kerr 8; Dan Imel's World 10.
12 :00-J.ackpol! 3,15; Passw~rd 6,13:. Bob Braun's 50,
~0 Club 4; News 8;10.
12.:3G-Biank Check3,15; SplitSecond6.13; Search For
Tomorrow 8,10.
12 :45-Eiectric Company 33. , ·
12 :55-NBC News 3,15.
1:00-News 3; All My Children 6,13; Ph it Donahue 8;
Young And The Restless 10; Not For Women Only
15.
1:3()-Days Of Our Lives 3,4,15; Lers Make A Deal
6, 13; As The World Turns 8,10.
2:00-$10,000 Pyramid 6.13; Guicllng Light 8,10.
2:3G-Doctors 3,4,15; Big Showdown 6,13; Edge Of
Night 8, 10.
3:00-Another World 3.4. iS; General Hospital 6,13;
Price Is Right 8,10; Lilias, Yoga"and You 20.
3:3tl--One Life To Live 13; Lucy Show 6; Match Game
8, 10; The Romagnolls' Table 20.
4:00-Mr. Cartoon 3; I Dream Of Jeannie 4; Somerset
15; Giligan's Island 6; 'Tattletales 8; Sesame
Street 20,33; Movie "Musical ((Wabash Avenue"
10; Mike Douglas 13.
4:3()-Bewitched 3; Merv Griffin 4; Mocl Squad 6;
Mickey Mouse Club 8; Bonanza 15.
5:00-FBI 3; Andy Griffith 8; Mister Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33; Ironslde 13.
5:3()-News6; Beverly Hillblllles8; Hodgepodge Loclge
20; Get Smart 15; Electrlc Company 33.
6:00-News 3,4,8,10,13, 15; ABC News 6; Electric
Company 20; Prevenilve Care 33.
6:3G-NBC News 3,4,15; ABC News 13; Bewitched 6;
CBS News 8,10; Zoom 20,33.
7:00-Truth or Consequences 3,4; Bowling For Dollars
6; What's·My Line? 8; News 10; Name That Tune
13; High School T. V. Honor Society 15; Antiques
20; Lilias, Yoga and You 33.
7:3G-Holtywoocl Squares 3; Hollywood Squares 4;
'
Let's Make A Deat 6; Buck Owens 8; New Price ts
Right 10: To To Tell The Truth 13; To Be Announced 15; RFO 20; Marco Sportllle 33 .

t•

+

Opemng lead - 3 4

', ;

eight of diamonds and .overtaking
with dummy 's ten. East stays off .
Next South must lead a club and
take the finesse . It works."
Oswald : " Now South leads a second diamond, overtaking in dummy while East can do no better than
to hold· up again. A second club
finesse followed by ace and a small
Club lets East take his king. East
clears the ·spades now, but it js too
late. South scores a fourth club
trick which gives him the six: minor
suit tricks he needs."

Soutb

Pass

We're going across the ~ean to
get you more clean-bttrning gas.

r, ,

Robinson 13.
6:35-Cotumbus Today 4.
6:45-Morning Report 3; Farmtlme 10.
·7:00---Today 3,4, 15; AM. America 6, 13; CBS News 8,10.
8:00-Lassle 6; Captain Kangaroo B; Schoolles 10;
Sesame Street 33.
8:1G-Your Future Is Now 20.
8:3G-Big Valley 6; Popeye 10.
8:55-Ch.uck White Reports 10.
9:00-A.M. 3; Phil Donahue 4; Phil Donahue 15; Rocky
and Bullwinkle 8; Captain Kangaroo 10; Morning
With D.J . 13.
9:3()-Not For Women Only 3; Dinah! 6; Galloping

, -- - - - - ' -- - - - - - , assume that the club .finesse will
NORTH
5 work. This gives him the winning
tine of play ...
• J 74

MONDAY ·
... DEAR POLLy . _ I take
CHESHIRE - The Kyger paper , but undecorated . .Clarke, chairperson; Steve
REGULAR meeting Meigs pride in my yard and want to Creek S.P.Q.R Latin Cl~b Beside each plate was a scroll Harrison, Arthur Leach, Sue
Fair Board, 8 p.m. at keep it looking nice. My Pete ended its celebration of Lahn tied with gold ribbon on which Hughes, Debbie Baird , and Liz
secretary's office on . Rock Peeve is with those people who · Week, April 20;26, with the was written the menu in Latin. Hood. The-nreal was prepared
Springs Fairgrounds.
throw their.cigarette butts and annual Roman Banquet, for The seroUs were made by by Mrs. Clarke, Mrs.
EASTERN High School empy soft drink cans on it. 1 do Latm Club members onl~, G~orge Thompson and Tony Harrison, and Mrs. Leach.
Athletic Boosters wiU meet at not smoke or drink so do not Thursday, April 24 at 7. p.m. m Shamblin.
.
Each course was served to
7:30 p.m. at the high school. appreciate cleaning up after the htgh school ~afeterl8 . Mrs.
The banquet was a three- the . other members by
Pl~ns will be rriade ·for the after others who do. Today , I Fay Sauer, club sponsor, and course Roman meal served "slaves," (first year Latin
July 4th chicken barbecue and even picked up a whiskey 24 members attended.
"ab eva ad mala," (from eggs st~dents). The slaves, Rick
the pony pull. All parents are bottle. Polly, if ypu print this
The cafeteria tables and to apples).
.
Wmebrenner, Y11ncy Hailey,
invited.
'
chairs
were
moved
out
and
The
antecena
first
course
Anna Jarrell, Carl Myers,
in your coiwnn and IF those
HARRISONVILLE Chapter, who do this have·a conscience low risers · served as tables consisted of devlled eggs on~ Jody Fox, and Semaki CorDES will practice at 7 p.m. for read this I hope it hurts. _ placed in aU-shape according bed of parsley, head lettuce lias, were alUred in tunics and
inspection . All officers ar~ DISGUSTED.
to the. ancient Roman style of salad with Italian dressing slave collars. Master of the
asked \O attend.
am
sure
this
is
Peeve
dining
. Each table was and punch to represent th~ slaves was Jody Fox. Besides
1
3
POMEROY Garden Club,
covered with white .paper and Roman use of wine. Cena , the serving. the meal the slaves
7:30p.m. at the home of Mrs. shared by many·- POLLY. had a centerpiece of. purple main course, served next, had to perform all orders from
·
DEAR POLLV - I am a
Walter Grueser, Riverview
and gold madras paper included fried chicken relish the senators and patrtctans.
constant reader of the coiwnn
Drive. Roll call is to be an
flowers on a bed of greenery. trays of carrots, ~elery, Due to high· water, more
.
t
d f
and think ·there must have The tables were set with radishes, and olives; punch, slaves were unable to .attend.
arrangemen rna e rom been a mistake about the
foliage, flowers,' or both.
ingredients for the cookies yellow cups, paper plates, and Italian bread and melted After the meal Latm Club
urple napkins, printed with butter.
MIDDLEPORT
members played games and
Garden
.
made with biscuit mix, P
Club mee. Is at 7: 30 p ·m · at the pudding mix and water. !tried the club's name in gold.
The secunda mensa, participated in a quiz on
Supporting poles in the dessert, was composed , of Roman emperors. Milch
Middleport Fire Department it twice. The first time the
Lounge. Mrs. Mary Skinner to batter was very thin arid cafeteria were wrapped in apples, bananas, grapes, Salem won the price in the
Present
the
Prog •am
•· ; runny and I tried baking the white corrugated paper and oranges, snowball cake, and emperor quiz. The door prize
was won by Susan Swisher.
hostesses, Miss Nellie Zerkle , cookies but had to throw them purple crepe paper to punch.
Mrs . Es s .le R usse 11 , M'tss out for the birds. The second resemble Roman colwnns. Off
Members of the food George Thompson 'provided
Hallie Zker Ie an d Mr s · Rl.ta time was the same but I added to one side was the slave's committee were Cynthia the games.
Hamm ·
The decorating committee
more of both dry ingredients table, covered with white
was
made up of Mark Waller,
In just a few years, huge ships with
supply more than 14,000 homes for a
JUNIOR American Legion and they baked a little better
Tony
Shamblin,
Stephen
·
Auxiliary, Drew Webster Post but 1 do not think they were
specially designed , super-cold compartfull year, will deliver LNG to a special
Roush , and Pauline Wolfe,
39, 7 p.m: at the ·home. of Mrs. right. I would like to know
ments will be bringing additional natreceiving terminal that Columbia Gas is
chairperson. Those who
Harry Davis.
what went wrong. I like the
ural gas supplies- in liquid form-from
helping to build on Chesapeake Bay.
helped clean up after the
RACINE Chapter I~ QES idea of saving and also being
gas
can
be
across the ocean. Natural
There, the LNG will be revaporized for
CHESHIRE - The Kyger Mollohan, Chris Haye, Julia banquet were Steve Harrison,
7:30 p.m. Plans wall b.,.__ quick.· Thank you. - MRS.
Gardner,
Creek
High
School
Art
Club
Stephanie
Adkins,
Mark
Waller,
Arthur
Leach,
by
reducing
its
temperature
to
delivery
to Columbia's pipeli(les.
liquefied
completed for grand . in- P.G.
m.et
April
30
in
the
art
room
Kevin Curnutte, Doris Hively, Stephen . Roush ·and Mrs.
minus 260°F., making it possible toreAlthough its cost will be higher, LNG
spection June 3.
DEAR MRS. P.G: - This
with 29 art students attending. Becky Polcyn·, Dawn '1-!artin, Sauer.
RACINE PTO 7:30 p.m.
duce 625 cubic feet of gas to I cubic
. will give Columbia's customers more
President Pam Russell Paula Higginbotham, Pam
The senators and patricians
Program by elementary band cookie batter is VERY thin
foot of liquid. That means LNG can
clean energy. And with scarcity and
students. Refreshments will and if you carefully read lbe opened the meeting by telling Haye, Denise Gardner ,.· attending, wearing a toga or
be shipped in cryogenic tankers from
mounting expense affecting all types of
recipe It said to only drop a the members that the sixth Debbie Crouse, Carl Myers, stollas, were Liz Hood, Debbie
be served by the teache~s.
TEASPOON FULL at a time grade students of Washington· Carl Curnutte, .Marie Grose, Baird, Sue Hughes, Judy
places we can't reach with our p'ipelines.
energy, your gas bill will still represent
DR. PERSONS CruSades, on the cookie sheet. they Elem(lnlary School · had
' enough gas to.
one of your most economical purchases.
Ellen Wears, Bob Grim, Dean Sullins Berkley, Cynthia
Each ship, carrying
Miracles· ··of ... Faith .Revival,
sprea!l and tben bake very visited' the' French Art Colony · Rainy, · Brenda Drummond Clarke, Jata' Drummond,
· through May 10, 7:30 p.m. at quickly. I made tbem with while the exhibit of the works
and Pauline White.
Oliver Taylor, Stephen Roush,
Uie Meigs Jr. High' School.
chocolate pudding . 'and the of Kyger Creek art students
Arthur Leach, Mark Waller,
Special singing by Jr .. White resulting soft ·cookies were· was on display. They each
Steve Harrison, . George
and the Kyger Trio, the Green
almost like thin brownies. One wrote a letter to the K. c.
LAFF
.
A
l
DAy
Thompson, Mitch Salem, Fred
Family,
the
Gospel of my neighbors made them
is doing something about the Jne;gy crisis.
hose ar1 work th ey
,....~=~
'
student
w
MA
.
.
IAGE
Westfall, -R~ymond PenMess~ngers alld others.
with lemon pudding and the thought was · the best. The
, COUNSELOR
nington, Tony Shamblin, Mrs.
M~IGS County United people who tasted them letters were then sent to Mrs.
I • -~
Suer and Pauline White.
Methodist Men at Chester thought they were sur- Sarah Moshier, art teacher ~~
..
Church al_7:30 p.m.
prisingly good. If YoU object to and club sponsor. She passed
I'' ·
~
1 ·
EASTERN Athletic the very thin batter, why not around the letters at the
,
Boosters, 7:30 p.m. at high use less water? - 'POLLY.
meeting so that each member ~school. Plans for July·ot barDEAR POLLY - It is very could read them. The Art Club ~!F.r'FF-~~~~~
becue and pony pull to be handy to leave a wooden pop- thanks the Washington sixth :!!
made. All interested P.rsons sickle stick in the flour bin and graders for their beautiful
urged to attend.
another in the sugar canister letters.
to
have
to
use
for
leveling
off
a
~'
TUESDAY
'
T~ Ar~ Ciut~~ce ~s ~en ,.=::::, ~ ;, ....- -- ~~~
MIDDLEPORT Masonic filled measuring cup. - MRS.
p~ doi
fo."~ooths ar::; "MAKE our marriage work?
Lodge ,363 meets at 7:30p.m. J.S.
DEAR POLLY - The as e or 1 eas
a That's just tl)e tro•1ble - it's
All master masons invited.
renewed interest in house things to sell at the dance. The nothing BUT work!"
SOUTHEASTERN Ohio
. .
art students have been
Tractors Pullers meeting 8 plants and our smaller hvmg making ceramic. beads .and
p.m. Tuesday at Meigs Inn to quarters have caused many of . painting them. These will be
finalize plans for tractor pull us to hang plants tn the ":lh· .made into necklaces and sold
Life insurance
Sunday, May 25, at Rock dows. To make an attrachve at the dance. Art students
Springs Fairgrounds. Wives hanger use a piasttc mesh have also been working on
for
are invited io attend a special omon bag. Fasten one end individual projects which will
meeting; any interested • securely and threat sturdy serve as decorations at the
·
persons invited to join and cords from the . bottom . to dance.
make
a
suspensaon
devace
.
An
exhibit
of
shident artattend meetings.
W• h1v1 a policy t• • Pklflle
One can even hold a work will be held at the
llll'hO think they can'l
OHIO Eta Phi Chapter, Beta terrariwn. The mesh cuts the graduation exercises on May
afford lift lnluranct .
Sigma Phi Sorority, 7:30p.m. hght and other pots. reqwre 30. Some new projects and the
Ctll tod1y .
Columbus and Southern Ohio another contamer . to prevent work which was displayed at
P. J. PAULEY
Electric Co. installation of drtppmg. Dress up the cords Riverby will be shown. The
new
officers.
Cultural wtth bag beads and fan~y public is invited.
307 Spring Ave.. Pomeroy
program 'by "JoyceBartimus. buttons from Grandma_ s
Art Club members nr•••nt
PH. 992-2318 · ·
Susan Oliver and Connie b~tton box. - ELIZABETH. were Mike Hendrickson, Tim
'
Bailey, hostesses.
Fetty, Jerry Sparks, B(ti
CHESTER Council 323,
Sullins, Pam Russell, Stephen
~J.I L~!~~~~C!
Daughters of America, 8 p.m.
Roush,
Mike
Beaver,
Todd
at the haiL Charter will be
·
When you buy your phones, you own
Thomas, Susan Swisher,
· draped lor Mrs. Zona Biggs.
I
Rhonda Skaggs, Marlene
' them. So you have to take care of them.
Members asked to wear white;"".,
·
•
You have to arrange for maintenance
WEDNESDAY
.~.-'be tJUCttO
and repair, for one thing. And worry
MIDDLEPORT Firemom 's •' ·
'•
Auxiliary, 7:3Q ·p.m. ·at the " · An auction of holllemade .
ab9ut higher insurance payments, for
flrehw.e: New ilfficers will lie ~corsages· will be a featqre of
another . .·
·
the hostesaes. There will bea the next meeting of the Se'ivWhen we provide your telephones, we
lilent auction :i!Jid. members . Rite Sew~g Club. The auction
own them. So we take care of them.
are to take ~.:W..apped and . was !llanned at a meeting
·~We"1frrvice them for nothing extra.
one unwrapped item for sale. _~edne$y night as a way of
'I u i.
· ' ~'}plenishing the treasury.
RIJ,Iace 'wo1'n or .broken parts at no extra
POME!JOY WDGE 16{ .,f;. lMrs. Ann Browning was
cos'J;. And come running the minute you
llld A.M. \.7:Bq ·Wednesday at hostess for the meeting beld at
Now you can have air your fii!ll and whiter
need us. ·
the. Masonic temple . · All 'the club house . Members
garments dry cleaned and ·stored free of
At General Telephone~ we don't sell
master lllBiOna invited.
measured their waists and
charge until needed later.
TIIURSDAY
'
then pajd a penny an inch to
phone equipment. But we do provid~?
.
. i _:-!J
1
MEIGS cbUI'I':i.'V H~Q;i ir~asurer, Betty Wehrung .
just about any kind · you want, at the
Jl~lrlg;l~em In NOW. Thl!f1 pic~ up tatei and P~;y v .,
Society, 7:3tl.Th'Ur.sday night, . Mrs. Evelyn Gilmore gave the
I)NL Y the cleaning charge. ..
·
.
-· -... lo\\'ei!t-possible-rates... - . ·
Middleport .VIllage Hall. secretary's report. D.thers
·
· You can own your own phones .
•'' :·
Publlc invited. ·1. · ·
attending were Mrs. Martha
I
Or
get
them
from
us,
and
leave
the
M~R .. - , [lAUGHTER Hoffman, Mrs. Carolyn Mc' INSURED FUR STORAGE
oblervlllce, Pomeroy First Daniel, Mrs. Pandora Collina,
hangup!i where they belong.
For AU Your Fun Avaltabte Here
Bapllst Churcli, 1~ Thurs- · Mrs . Mildred Wells,
ldlj
day. Mill s.Jn•tlesllmari ui_ Nel.tie 1iloyer,;Mrs. Flo l:lrll~kII I 1! J r·,yl,,
..&amp;EnEAAL TELEPHOnE
lhow IIldes Of"'Rhodesia ~d: Mrs. Lenora M:~:~~~
Vataw-lina, s,u1it Afric,l, ' A d~rt course was
_where IW parents serve_ {Is .by the h~tess. Mrs. Shirley
~. . Covered dlsll Baity will
. be hostess for the
216 E. 2nd
POMEIIO·Y
rtfi......,..ta.
nat !lleeting.
.
.. ~ ....
11

swers 8; Concerns &amp; Comments 10; Rev. Cleophus

WIN AT BRIDGE
South must pl~y for finesse

Morrison who was absent, Teresa Harden, Gina Johnson. Thereon Johnson represents the
soil and water conservation district.

·Homemade

6:25-Farm Report 13.
6:3()-Five Minutes To Live By 4; News 6; Bible An·

8:00-Smothers Brothers 3,4,15; Rookies 6,13; Great
Migration: Year of the Wildebeest• 8, 10; At The
Top 20,33 .
"
9:00-Movle "One of Our Own" 3,4,15; SWATY 6.13;
America's Junior Miss Pageant 8,10; World's

.• &lt;:i U~U BA600 ANO l

small
budgelS

TUESDAY,MA,Y6,197S
6 :oo-Sunrise Seminar 4; Sunrise Semester 10.

Action 33 .

I

.
POMEROY ELEMENTARY- Anna Baxter, holding the first place poster of Vickie

. . . . . . . . . . . . . ___. --._....,.. . . _____

, Worst Air Crash 20,33.
10 :-.&lt;:arlbe 6, 13; Medical Center 8, 10; · News .:10;
Washington Straight Talk 33.
1h
.,. ....10 :3"S
~ poll g t 33. .
.
·
:::;;·11 .00-News 3,4,6;8,1Q,13,15.; ·ABC' News 33. '
.. 11 3()-J 0 h
c
:::·. :
nny arson 3,4, 15 ' Wide World Mystery 13;
· FBI 6; Movie "The Couple Takes a Wife" 8; Movie
"A Hatfut of Rain" 10; Janakl 33.
12:3()-Wide world Mystery 6 .
1,:00-Tomorrow 3,4; News 13.

MONDAY, MAY 5' 19 75
·
6:oo:-News 3,4,8, 10, i3, 15; ·I&lt;BC News 6; Etec . Co. 20;
. 6:3()-NBC News 3.4, 15; ABC News 13; Bewitched ~;
CBS News 8, 10; Zoom 20.33.
· 7:00-Truth or Cons. 3,4; Bowling for Dollars 6; What's
· My Line 8; News 10; New Candid Camera 13;
Wally's Workshop 15; Ohio· This Week 20; Lilias
Yoga &amp; You 33.
7:3()-That Good Ole Nashville Music 3; Masquerade
Party 4; Pollee Surgeon 6; $25,000 Pyramid 8;
Municipal Court 10;" Tt&gt; Tell the Truth 13/ Untamecl
Worlcl 15; Washington Straight Talk 20; Eplsocle

0

·:t"

·---~_...__...._._

!I .: Television
.log-for easy viewing
.
.

-AND WHIPPED
OUT THE MEANEST

topics for the next biennlwn
presented · at the convention
were "Society and the Individual : · Conformity yersus
Creativity''; World
Pluralism: The Hwnan En- Ohio University·. campus ..

'

Birthday

'

....

'","

·-

-·

1

.

-·

r

.'

\ fiD,

'•

..

-Robinson's Cleaner$

..

.

'

I

•

•'•
.i·~

.."
•

.
,.

•

\

\

'

�,. I ;

L

''

J "..'·

'

'

r-_......,... . . __________._..___

7- The Daily Sentinel, Middlepi&gt;rt-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday,May 5,1975 ·
•

f" ' ,•

''l

· s,Poin+a.-..
l!'t'

PllLI.Y CRAMER.

:I

needs ~softening
final rin~e Wf ter to make a
blanket really fluffy and soft.
Do you let a WP&lt;II blanket
l!ecome completely'dry before
remQvlng from the dryer or
ihe line. The slight dampness
will allow for stretching to
shape. Then brush both sides .
with a stiff brush to fluff It up.
If drying a blanket out doors
~n parallel lines take hold of
. ; . ' ., the ,corners and shake It
several times during the .
drying period. Never hang
blanket out doors when the
weather is too cold. l'his will
'stiffen the (lbers. Also never
P.u tit in the hot sun. -:POLLY

DEAR POLLY - The fibers
in my all-wool blanket are a
little stiff. It was washed in
water that was too hot. Do you.
know of remedy that wtil ;,
·soften my blan.ket a bil? _:__
MABEL.
DEAR MABEL - A good
trick Is lo add a tablespoon of
household ammonia to the
'""&amp;!~~~-lllii'$1!18S11!!381i181i 1-.
II®

So'c"I' aI

w

.:

Mrs.
Harold
Sauer,
president of the MiddleportPomeroy Area Branch of the
-American Association of
University· Women, was In
Cleveland last weekend to
attend the state convention of
the AAUW held at the Shea ton
Inn Hopkins.
Speakers for tile more than
500 in attendance included Dr.

'

Wool b/4nl:?.et

a

· C'lev·.e/and
M rs. Sa. uer. tn
.

r·,

1

.CaIendar '

..

'1: · -:

r

Ann Camp'bell. The study

rJrforriling at . the convention were the 'Lakewood
Congregational . Church Bell
Ringers, the Lithuanian Art
Ensemble, · an instrumental
group, and the Berea High
School jazz band doing Glenn
Miller Music. The 1977 con- .
vention will be . held on the

'

DI(;~TRACY

II

KNIFE YOU

1

EVER SAW!

Preventive Care 33.

r

counter"; · "Economic Facts The only vioi"'ce on our TV Is
of Life : Li.ving.with Less, and ·that which we Inflict when the
"The 21st Century: Deciding picture 19es pbhht.

NoW".

.... .

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

";

WILL Be
R~ADY IN A JIFFY TO SAMPLE THE
!?,~A~ LADY'S HOSPITALITY~

24 at K C Roman Banquet

Jim : "He starts by leading the

tO 2
+KQI074

• J

• 72
.,_

. BORN LOSp:R

WEST
• Ql0832

*

tOtNb i\'Q)ND
~E~~~ GAU.it-lb
HE~R'I

EAST
.965
•Q9H
•K 75
+53
+A 62
.K 10,83
•lo9 5
SOUTH (DJ
.AK

\

LISTEIJ, flA~E ltV EieEtJ

HEf.IF'!;Ci&lt;?

WE'LL, I'LL Hfl,Y~ 'PJ l&lt;M:W 1\Vo.T
I Nv\ A V~R! ~EFUL ftR50N!
I LAJ.J
bl.Af:&gt;/&lt;; (X) AN'ITHI~
-=+!EO W,A.f.JT&lt;;; TO (X)

""'*

• A83

+J98
.AQJ64
North-South vulnerable
West

Nortb

Pass

Pass
3 N.T. Pass

Pass

1

East

2N.T.
West

East

South

t•

contracts ." ,
Oswald : "The 'R' for Review the
bidding isn't important in this hand ,
but the 'A' for Analyze the lead ; the
'C ' for Count winners and losers and

the 'H' lor How can I make this

TODA 't''S QUESTION

Jim : " The code word ARCH is

never more useful than at notrump

Art club news

Nor\h

hand re"!!!Y.i!fe important."
your partner continues to four
Jim : ''South COWlts three winners spades . What do you do now?
in tile majors and needs six in the.
ADswer Tomorrow
minors to maknhree notrump. He ,----,-.,..-.,----,,-:-:=:--=-:::-:-.
has to play botlr minor suits and. Sand $1 for JACOBY MODERN
sees l~ttle chance _to ma~e hi~ 'con- book to: " Win at Bridge," (c/o this
tract..'! the ctub fmesse IS gomg to .nawspaper), P.O. Box 489, RadiO

lose. .

Oswald

"Therefore, he should

City Station, New

York. NY. 10019.
·

~
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
4 Hooray!
I Initiate
5 High place
6 Ancient
6 Italian city
dagger
7 Joint
11 Opposite
8 Break
12 Silly
bread
13 In
9 Black
.subjection
cuckoo
(4 wds.)
(var.)
15 Extremely 10 Ship-shaped
16 Sea ~agle
clock
17 Greek
14 Borders
portico
17 Do away
18 Before
with
21 Fashionable 18 Colleen's
shop
name
23 Spoken
19 Deserve
24 Imprisoned 20 District of
' (2 wds;)""
England .
26 Differen~ · 21 Unexpected
tiate
problem

IMBIA GAS ·

GASOLINE ALLEY

now,·

Joel?

21

_·Buying
telephone equipment
have
·
its·hangups.

~Raiac~h.a.;oer

~-

1

I

KNOW HOW HEAVY )'QUI(

''RE~PON~IBILITI E5 ,,ArlE ...

ANDJ. ll4Q!JGHT.... IN
VIEW OF 1HE MA NY
PRE&amp;SURE:; -,ou 'RE

UNDEr?. ... :-~~~

._FREE
GARMEN'I'
·s-rORAG

I nl I I

'

·

Wallach

IFLUGAR
. I
n
.

.,

I .I

,

A L.AC.t&lt;
OF "6-PIRI"TI.IAL."
INFI.UE:N,E.

COULO MEAN

••
•

•u

·•

Now arranp the circled letters
to form the IUrprile BJIIWH• U

UJ · ·

sugreoted by the above cartoon.

~I~~Prittl=dte~SIII=ll"~IISI::::AIISWIR~IIen~~,

L_ ___::=.:=.:::::.::=.:::=:::.:.c:c___

_J_

r XXI IJ
-

-

-

-

-

(ADIW~rl IOMOrrOW)

Jucul&gt;l~e : GlAND

!'Oalurdu, ·,.
·

WIPED DRUDGE FEWEST

I

Am~·t'r: What Mill' dislihd mOHI about the self·prwlaimcd
; - ; - ''puX~~yfoott'r'' - HIS "PAWING"
'

Across

1

,\

,,

You'll mistakenly rely upon

~o~cts.)

another to take care of
something important you could
do better ydurseH. -

fO Religiousnt,ss
fl Gunpowder
ingredient

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Now. 221

38
3SForeign

; Beomlc:e Bede Osot
For Tueldll,, Mo, e, 1175
AlliES (MIIrch 21 -April 111
-+-+---,.! Weigh what you say today very
carefully when deall1"9 wilh a
=+--+-+--+-;sensitive friend. A lhoughtless
remark will leave ill feelings.

-:;-:-+-+-t-t-i TAURUS . (April
L--L-"-...L.-L--

Your social inage is eKtremely

potentially in pOor taste.

SAGITTAIIII/1 (N"". 23-Dec.
21) An event will not turn out as
fruitlully as you hope today. ~
won't be lao disappointing .
Don't make too much of it.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jon.
191 Don't be lavish with your

with friends today who are able
to spend more freely than you

party deserves them . Flattery

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it :

INIRR'r1NG
YOU ?

One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A io
used for the three L's, X ftlr the two O's, etc. Single letters.
apoatrophes, the length and formati?n of the · words .are all
hinto. Each day the code letters are Qlfferent.

AXYD ,LBAAXR
LONiil!'ELLOW

complirit~ts

for its own sake woo't work .

GEMINI (MOJ 21-Ju,. 201 You
won't be,as self-dlsclpllni¥1 t&lt;&gt;:-

AQUARIUS (.hln. :111-r.b. 11)
Put blinders on today when you

day as you . should be. You'll

tomorrow.

••
•'"

ul

......•

..
'

.M

pass shop wlnclows featuring

expensive items that you 'koow ·

are beyond your budget
CANCER (JUM 21·JW, 221 Pt•cia (r.b. 20--"'h 201
Decisions you male e today are You'll knowlngty let those In
apt Ia be short-sighted and your charge get away with
CRYPTOQUOTE
based upon conclusi ons things they s~ouldn'l today.
'
neither factual nor pr"!'tlcal. . Later lh.4!Y'II1ry the,..,. thing .
VLHT
DIKMG_VZ .E TQM P
CELWFX
'
LEO (,lut1 23-Aug. 221 Be. again.
·G L Q carefulln.materlal transactions '
KL
CT~
U IV Z
with lr iends today. Your
N I' I K · K I A I K
.
.
generous nature is Ukety to
MTDMTCTQKIKGLQ
G C overrule common sense.
NGKE
VIRGO (Aug. 23-S.pt. 221
Things wmnot cern e your Wtlf You'll become lnvotvecl fn an
today by wishful thinking. important new group lntw•1
You'cl beller roll up your this year. From It you1t mlko
. sleeves and g eUo wale:.
m.any ·new acqualnto~c• .
So
m• of thMo cont1C11 wNt
LIBRA (lepl. 23-0cl. 231
prO\te beneficial caretrwloe. ·
'.
·''·

Your

.

'·-"

unless the ott\er

can.

fi nd it easier IO pul th lngs Off till

·"
'"

delicate today. Don't try 10 upstage others or do anything

You ' ll find yourself em-..L......I-..l...:-L--rl barrassed n you pal around

lljAT J.
MIGf.\T HAVE
CH,A,NGEDMY
MIND ABOUT

II

20-MIIy 201

.

..

-.,
...

~

I I

2

DOWN
1 Falling-out
Zln(completely)
3 qhoir voice

COrsages Wt'/.'1
ned

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

" .,'"""' &gt;••c •~•l" ,......

Yesterday's Answer
23 Pizzeria
32 Maple
fixture
genus
2t Marsh· elder 33 English
STOfF
25 Siang term
river
for a tireless 3t High
athlete
mountain
(2 wds.)
35 Indochines~
29 Cautious
native
GAROUC
30 Measure of 36 Lacoman '
speed
clan group
U.
. . .
31 Fortitude·
37 Actor
. -· ~
- :;=-:~;:;~_J__.__,_,

~~~~~~--~=-----------------~~----~,-------~----------------~----~3t&amp;el3

ltJf!INATIONw!oe

·.

one letter to each square, to .

city
30 "Show
Boat"
composer
31 j'Roscoe"

-SIGH!r-AH RARE:LY
SEES ANY OTHER SIDE
O' ANYBODY'S F.ACE!!-

.•

form four ordinar)' words.

29 Mexican

NOTHIN' PE;RSONAL,
BUT AH DRUTHE=R FACE T'OTHER
WAY WHILE TALKN TO YO'rr-~--

·-

:rnscrambte theso four Juniblts,

..22....,1s..,ra_e.,.li,.:.po_r..,t.....,.,.:..pluck

28

•.

Gourmet 8; New Zoo Revue 13.

5

Pass
3•
Pass
44
Pass
4+
Pass
?
You, South, hold : .
• K Q 9 8.5 • A 2 + K 4 olo A 9 8 7
What do ·you do now?
A - Bid four hearts. Your
partner has shown the ace of
diamonds. You can afford to show
your ace of bearts .

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

1

· Th e bidding has been :

Pass

·•

10:-.telebrlty Sweepstakes 3,4,15; Joker's Wild 8,10;
Dinah! 13.
10 :30---Wheet of Fortune 3,4,15; Gambit 8,10 .
11 :00-High Rollers 3,4, 15; One Life To Live 6; Now
You See It 8,10; Electric Company 20.
11 :3()-Hollywood Squares 3,6,15; Btankety Blanks 13;
News 4; Love of Life 8, 10; Sesame Street 20.
11 :55-0raham Kerr 8; Dan Imel's World 10.
12 :00-J.ackpol! 3,15; Passw~rd 6,13:. Bob Braun's 50,
~0 Club 4; News 8;10.
12.:3G-Biank Check3,15; SplitSecond6.13; Search For
Tomorrow 8,10.
12 :45-Eiectric Company 33. , ·
12 :55-NBC News 3,15.
1:00-News 3; All My Children 6,13; Ph it Donahue 8;
Young And The Restless 10; Not For Women Only
15.
1:3()-Days Of Our Lives 3,4,15; Lers Make A Deal
6, 13; As The World Turns 8,10.
2:00-$10,000 Pyramid 6.13; Guicllng Light 8,10.
2:3G-Doctors 3,4,15; Big Showdown 6,13; Edge Of
Night 8, 10.
3:00-Another World 3.4. iS; General Hospital 6,13;
Price Is Right 8,10; Lilias, Yoga"and You 20.
3:3tl--One Life To Live 13; Lucy Show 6; Match Game
8, 10; The Romagnolls' Table 20.
4:00-Mr. Cartoon 3; I Dream Of Jeannie 4; Somerset
15; Giligan's Island 6; 'Tattletales 8; Sesame
Street 20,33; Movie "Musical ((Wabash Avenue"
10; Mike Douglas 13.
4:3()-Bewitched 3; Merv Griffin 4; Mocl Squad 6;
Mickey Mouse Club 8; Bonanza 15.
5:00-FBI 3; Andy Griffith 8; Mister Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33; Ironslde 13.
5:3()-News6; Beverly Hillblllles8; Hodgepodge Loclge
20; Get Smart 15; Electrlc Company 33.
6:00-News 3,4,8,10,13, 15; ABC News 6; Electric
Company 20; Prevenilve Care 33.
6:3G-NBC News 3,4,15; ABC News 13; Bewitched 6;
CBS News 8,10; Zoom 20,33.
7:00-Truth or Consequences 3,4; Bowling For Dollars
6; What's·My Line? 8; News 10; Name That Tune
13; High School T. V. Honor Society 15; Antiques
20; Lilias, Yoga and You 33.
7:3G-Holtywoocl Squares 3; Hollywood Squares 4;
'
Let's Make A Deat 6; Buck Owens 8; New Price ts
Right 10: To To Tell The Truth 13; To Be Announced 15; RFO 20; Marco Sportllle 33 .

t•

+

Opemng lead - 3 4

', ;

eight of diamonds and .overtaking
with dummy 's ten. East stays off .
Next South must lead a club and
take the finesse . It works."
Oswald : " Now South leads a second diamond, overtaking in dummy while East can do no better than
to hold· up again. A second club
finesse followed by ace and a small
Club lets East take his king. East
clears the ·spades now, but it js too
late. South scores a fourth club
trick which gives him the six: minor
suit tricks he needs."

Soutb

Pass

We're going across the ~ean to
get you more clean-bttrning gas.

r, ,

Robinson 13.
6:35-Cotumbus Today 4.
6:45-Morning Report 3; Farmtlme 10.
·7:00---Today 3,4, 15; AM. America 6, 13; CBS News 8,10.
8:00-Lassle 6; Captain Kangaroo B; Schoolles 10;
Sesame Street 33.
8:1G-Your Future Is Now 20.
8:3G-Big Valley 6; Popeye 10.
8:55-Ch.uck White Reports 10.
9:00-A.M. 3; Phil Donahue 4; Phil Donahue 15; Rocky
and Bullwinkle 8; Captain Kangaroo 10; Morning
With D.J . 13.
9:3()-Not For Women Only 3; Dinah! 6; Galloping

, -- - - - - ' -- - - - - - , assume that the club .finesse will
NORTH
5 work. This gives him the winning
tine of play ...
• J 74

MONDAY ·
... DEAR POLLy . _ I take
CHESHIRE - The Kyger paper , but undecorated . .Clarke, chairperson; Steve
REGULAR meeting Meigs pride in my yard and want to Creek S.P.Q.R Latin Cl~b Beside each plate was a scroll Harrison, Arthur Leach, Sue
Fair Board, 8 p.m. at keep it looking nice. My Pete ended its celebration of Lahn tied with gold ribbon on which Hughes, Debbie Baird , and Liz
secretary's office on . Rock Peeve is with those people who · Week, April 20;26, with the was written the menu in Latin. Hood. The-nreal was prepared
Springs Fairgrounds.
throw their.cigarette butts and annual Roman Banquet, for The seroUs were made by by Mrs. Clarke, Mrs.
EASTERN High School empy soft drink cans on it. 1 do Latm Club members onl~, G~orge Thompson and Tony Harrison, and Mrs. Leach.
Athletic Boosters wiU meet at not smoke or drink so do not Thursday, April 24 at 7. p.m. m Shamblin.
.
Each course was served to
7:30 p.m. at the high school. appreciate cleaning up after the htgh school ~afeterl8 . Mrs.
The banquet was a three- the . other members by
Pl~ns will be rriade ·for the after others who do. Today , I Fay Sauer, club sponsor, and course Roman meal served "slaves," (first year Latin
July 4th chicken barbecue and even picked up a whiskey 24 members attended.
"ab eva ad mala," (from eggs st~dents). The slaves, Rick
the pony pull. All parents are bottle. Polly, if ypu print this
The cafeteria tables and to apples).
.
Wmebrenner, Y11ncy Hailey,
invited.
'
chairs
were
moved
out
and
The
antecena
first
course
Anna Jarrell, Carl Myers,
in your coiwnn and IF those
HARRISONVILLE Chapter, who do this have·a conscience low risers · served as tables consisted of devlled eggs on~ Jody Fox, and Semaki CorDES will practice at 7 p.m. for read this I hope it hurts. _ placed in aU-shape according bed of parsley, head lettuce lias, were alUred in tunics and
inspection . All officers ar~ DISGUSTED.
to the. ancient Roman style of salad with Italian dressing slave collars. Master of the
asked \O attend.
am
sure
this
is
Peeve
dining
. Each table was and punch to represent th~ slaves was Jody Fox. Besides
1
3
POMEROY Garden Club,
covered with white .paper and Roman use of wine. Cena , the serving. the meal the slaves
7:30p.m. at the home of Mrs. shared by many·- POLLY. had a centerpiece of. purple main course, served next, had to perform all orders from
·
DEAR POLLV - I am a
Walter Grueser, Riverview
and gold madras paper included fried chicken relish the senators and patrtctans.
constant reader of the coiwnn
Drive. Roll call is to be an
flowers on a bed of greenery. trays of carrots, ~elery, Due to high· water, more
.
t
d f
and think ·there must have The tables were set with radishes, and olives; punch, slaves were unable to .attend.
arrangemen rna e rom been a mistake about the
foliage, flowers,' or both.
ingredients for the cookies yellow cups, paper plates, and Italian bread and melted After the meal Latm Club
urple napkins, printed with butter.
MIDDLEPORT
members played games and
Garden
.
made with biscuit mix, P
Club mee. Is at 7: 30 p ·m · at the pudding mix and water. !tried the club's name in gold.
The secunda mensa, participated in a quiz on
Supporting poles in the dessert, was composed , of Roman emperors. Milch
Middleport Fire Department it twice. The first time the
Lounge. Mrs. Mary Skinner to batter was very thin arid cafeteria were wrapped in apples, bananas, grapes, Salem won the price in the
Present
the
Prog •am
•· ; runny and I tried baking the white corrugated paper and oranges, snowball cake, and emperor quiz. The door prize
was won by Susan Swisher.
hostesses, Miss Nellie Zerkle , cookies but had to throw them purple crepe paper to punch.
Mrs . Es s .le R usse 11 , M'tss out for the birds. The second resemble Roman colwnns. Off
Members of the food George Thompson 'provided
Hallie Zker Ie an d Mr s · Rl.ta time was the same but I added to one side was the slave's committee were Cynthia the games.
Hamm ·
The decorating committee
more of both dry ingredients table, covered with white
was
made up of Mark Waller,
In just a few years, huge ships with
supply more than 14,000 homes for a
JUNIOR American Legion and they baked a little better
Tony
Shamblin,
Stephen
·
Auxiliary, Drew Webster Post but 1 do not think they were
specially designed , super-cold compartfull year, will deliver LNG to a special
Roush , and Pauline Wolfe,
39, 7 p.m: at the ·home. of Mrs. right. I would like to know
ments will be bringing additional natreceiving terminal that Columbia Gas is
chairperson. Those who
Harry Davis.
what went wrong. I like the
ural gas supplies- in liquid form-from
helping to build on Chesapeake Bay.
helped clean up after the
RACINE Chapter I~ QES idea of saving and also being
gas
can
be
across the ocean. Natural
There, the LNG will be revaporized for
CHESHIRE - The Kyger Mollohan, Chris Haye, Julia banquet were Steve Harrison,
7:30 p.m. Plans wall b.,.__ quick.· Thank you. - MRS.
Gardner,
Creek
High
School
Art
Club
Stephanie
Adkins,
Mark
Waller,
Arthur
Leach,
by
reducing
its
temperature
to
delivery
to Columbia's pipeli(les.
liquefied
completed for grand . in- P.G.
m.et
April
30
in
the
art
room
Kevin Curnutte, Doris Hively, Stephen . Roush ·and Mrs.
minus 260°F., making it possible toreAlthough its cost will be higher, LNG
spection June 3.
DEAR MRS. P.G: - This
with 29 art students attending. Becky Polcyn·, Dawn '1-!artin, Sauer.
RACINE PTO 7:30 p.m.
duce 625 cubic feet of gas to I cubic
. will give Columbia's customers more
President Pam Russell Paula Higginbotham, Pam
The senators and patricians
Program by elementary band cookie batter is VERY thin
foot of liquid. That means LNG can
clean energy. And with scarcity and
students. Refreshments will and if you carefully read lbe opened the meeting by telling Haye, Denise Gardner ,.· attending, wearing a toga or
be shipped in cryogenic tankers from
mounting expense affecting all types of
recipe It said to only drop a the members that the sixth Debbie Crouse, Carl Myers, stollas, were Liz Hood, Debbie
be served by the teache~s.
TEASPOON FULL at a time grade students of Washington· Carl Curnutte, .Marie Grose, Baird, Sue Hughes, Judy
places we can't reach with our p'ipelines.
energy, your gas bill will still represent
DR. PERSONS CruSades, on the cookie sheet. they Elem(lnlary School · had
' enough gas to.
one of your most economical purchases.
Ellen Wears, Bob Grim, Dean Sullins Berkley, Cynthia
Each ship, carrying
Miracles· ··of ... Faith .Revival,
sprea!l and tben bake very visited' the' French Art Colony · Rainy, · Brenda Drummond Clarke, Jata' Drummond,
· through May 10, 7:30 p.m. at quickly. I made tbem with while the exhibit of the works
and Pauline White.
Oliver Taylor, Stephen Roush,
Uie Meigs Jr. High' School.
chocolate pudding . 'and the of Kyger Creek art students
Arthur Leach, Mark Waller,
Special singing by Jr .. White resulting soft ·cookies were· was on display. They each
Steve Harrison, . George
and the Kyger Trio, the Green
almost like thin brownies. One wrote a letter to the K. c.
LAFF
.
A
l
DAy
Thompson, Mitch Salem, Fred
Family,
the
Gospel of my neighbors made them
is doing something about the Jne;gy crisis.
hose ar1 work th ey
,....~=~
'
student
w
MA
.
.
IAGE
Westfall, -R~ymond PenMess~ngers alld others.
with lemon pudding and the thought was · the best. The
, COUNSELOR
nington, Tony Shamblin, Mrs.
M~IGS County United people who tasted them letters were then sent to Mrs.
I • -~
Suer and Pauline White.
Methodist Men at Chester thought they were sur- Sarah Moshier, art teacher ~~
..
Church al_7:30 p.m.
prisingly good. If YoU object to and club sponsor. She passed
I'' ·
~
1 ·
EASTERN Athletic the very thin batter, why not around the letters at the
,
Boosters, 7:30 p.m. at high use less water? - 'POLLY.
meeting so that each member ~school. Plans for July·ot barDEAR POLLY - It is very could read them. The Art Club ~!F.r'FF-~~~~~
becue and pony pull to be handy to leave a wooden pop- thanks the Washington sixth :!!
made. All interested P.rsons sickle stick in the flour bin and graders for their beautiful
urged to attend.
another in the sugar canister letters.
to
have
to
use
for
leveling
off
a
~'
TUESDAY
'
T~ Ar~ Ciut~~ce ~s ~en ,.=::::, ~ ;, ....- -- ~~~
MIDDLEPORT Masonic filled measuring cup. - MRS.
p~ doi
fo."~ooths ar::; "MAKE our marriage work?
Lodge ,363 meets at 7:30p.m. J.S.
DEAR POLLY - The as e or 1 eas
a That's just tl)e tro•1ble - it's
All master masons invited.
renewed interest in house things to sell at the dance. The nothing BUT work!"
SOUTHEASTERN Ohio
. .
art students have been
Tractors Pullers meeting 8 plants and our smaller hvmg making ceramic. beads .and
p.m. Tuesday at Meigs Inn to quarters have caused many of . painting them. These will be
finalize plans for tractor pull us to hang plants tn the ":lh· .made into necklaces and sold
Life insurance
Sunday, May 25, at Rock dows. To make an attrachve at the dance. Art students
Springs Fairgrounds. Wives hanger use a piasttc mesh have also been working on
for
are invited io attend a special omon bag. Fasten one end individual projects which will
meeting; any interested • securely and threat sturdy serve as decorations at the
·
persons invited to join and cords from the . bottom . to dance.
make
a
suspensaon
devace
.
An
exhibit
of
shident artattend meetings.
W• h1v1 a policy t• • Pklflle
One can even hold a work will be held at the
llll'hO think they can'l
OHIO Eta Phi Chapter, Beta terrariwn. The mesh cuts the graduation exercises on May
afford lift lnluranct .
Sigma Phi Sorority, 7:30p.m. hght and other pots. reqwre 30. Some new projects and the
Ctll tod1y .
Columbus and Southern Ohio another contamer . to prevent work which was displayed at
P. J. PAULEY
Electric Co. installation of drtppmg. Dress up the cords Riverby will be shown. The
new
officers.
Cultural wtth bag beads and fan~y public is invited.
307 Spring Ave.. Pomeroy
program 'by "JoyceBartimus. buttons from Grandma_ s
Art Club members nr•••nt
PH. 992-2318 · ·
Susan Oliver and Connie b~tton box. - ELIZABETH. were Mike Hendrickson, Tim
'
Bailey, hostesses.
Fetty, Jerry Sparks, B(ti
CHESTER Council 323,
Sullins, Pam Russell, Stephen
~J.I L~!~~~~C!
Daughters of America, 8 p.m.
Roush,
Mike
Beaver,
Todd
at the haiL Charter will be
·
When you buy your phones, you own
Thomas, Susan Swisher,
· draped lor Mrs. Zona Biggs.
I
Rhonda Skaggs, Marlene
' them. So you have to take care of them.
Members asked to wear white;"".,
·
•
You have to arrange for maintenance
WEDNESDAY
.~.-'be tJUCttO
and repair, for one thing. And worry
MIDDLEPORT Firemom 's •' ·
'•
Auxiliary, 7:3Q ·p.m. ·at the " · An auction of holllemade .
ab9ut higher insurance payments, for
flrehw.e: New ilfficers will lie ~corsages· will be a featqre of
another . .·
·
the hostesaes. There will bea the next meeting of the Se'ivWhen we provide your telephones, we
lilent auction :i!Jid. members . Rite Sew~g Club. The auction
own them. So we take care of them.
are to take ~.:W..apped and . was !llanned at a meeting
·~We"1frrvice them for nothing extra.
one unwrapped item for sale. _~edne$y night as a way of
'I u i.
· ' ~'}plenishing the treasury.
RIJ,Iace 'wo1'n or .broken parts at no extra
POME!JOY WDGE 16{ .,f;. lMrs. Ann Browning was
cos'J;. And come running the minute you
llld A.M. \.7:Bq ·Wednesday at hostess for the meeting beld at
Now you can have air your fii!ll and whiter
need us. ·
the. Masonic temple . · All 'the club house . Members
garments dry cleaned and ·stored free of
At General Telephone~ we don't sell
master lllBiOna invited.
measured their waists and
charge until needed later.
TIIURSDAY
'
then pajd a penny an inch to
phone equipment. But we do provid~?
.
. i _:-!J
1
MEIGS cbUI'I':i.'V H~Q;i ir~asurer, Betty Wehrung .
just about any kind · you want, at the
Jl~lrlg;l~em In NOW. Thl!f1 pic~ up tatei and P~;y v .,
Society, 7:3tl.Th'Ur.sday night, . Mrs. Evelyn Gilmore gave the
I)NL Y the cleaning charge. ..
·
.
-· -... lo\\'ei!t-possible-rates... - . ·
Middleport .VIllage Hall. secretary's report. D.thers
·
· You can own your own phones .
•'' :·
Publlc invited. ·1. · ·
attending were Mrs. Martha
I
Or
get
them
from
us,
and
leave
the
M~R .. - , [lAUGHTER Hoffman, Mrs. Carolyn Mc' INSURED FUR STORAGE
oblervlllce, Pomeroy First Daniel, Mrs. Pandora Collina,
hangup!i where they belong.
For AU Your Fun Avaltabte Here
Bapllst Churcli, 1~ Thurs- · Mrs . Mildred Wells,
ldlj
day. Mill s.Jn•tlesllmari ui_ Nel.tie 1iloyer,;Mrs. Flo l:lrll~kII I 1! J r·,yl,,
..&amp;EnEAAL TELEPHOnE
lhow IIldes Of"'Rhodesia ~d: Mrs. Lenora M:~:~~~
Vataw-lina, s,u1it Afric,l, ' A d~rt course was
_where IW parents serve_ {Is .by the h~tess. Mrs. Shirley
~. . Covered dlsll Baity will
. be hostess for the
216 E. 2nd
POMEIIO·Y
rtfi......,..ta.
nat !lleeting.
.
.. ~ ....
11

swers 8; Concerns &amp; Comments 10; Rev. Cleophus

WIN AT BRIDGE
South must pl~y for finesse

Morrison who was absent, Teresa Harden, Gina Johnson. Thereon Johnson represents the
soil and water conservation district.

·Homemade

6:25-Farm Report 13.
6:3()-Five Minutes To Live By 4; News 6; Bible An·

8:00-Smothers Brothers 3,4,15; Rookies 6,13; Great
Migration: Year of the Wildebeest• 8, 10; At The
Top 20,33 .
"
9:00-Movle "One of Our Own" 3,4,15; SWATY 6.13;
America's Junior Miss Pageant 8,10; World's

.• &lt;:i U~U BA600 ANO l

small
budgelS

TUESDAY,MA,Y6,197S
6 :oo-Sunrise Seminar 4; Sunrise Semester 10.

Action 33 .

I

.
POMEROY ELEMENTARY- Anna Baxter, holding the first place poster of Vickie

. . . . . . . . . . . . . ___. --._....,.. . . _____

, Worst Air Crash 20,33.
10 :-.&lt;:arlbe 6, 13; Medical Center 8, 10; · News .:10;
Washington Straight Talk 33.
1h
.,. ....10 :3"S
~ poll g t 33. .
.
·
:::;;·11 .00-News 3,4,6;8,1Q,13,15.; ·ABC' News 33. '
.. 11 3()-J 0 h
c
:::·. :
nny arson 3,4, 15 ' Wide World Mystery 13;
· FBI 6; Movie "The Couple Takes a Wife" 8; Movie
"A Hatfut of Rain" 10; Janakl 33.
12:3()-Wide world Mystery 6 .
1,:00-Tomorrow 3,4; News 13.

MONDAY, MAY 5' 19 75
·
6:oo:-News 3,4,8, 10, i3, 15; ·I&lt;BC News 6; Etec . Co. 20;
. 6:3()-NBC News 3.4, 15; ABC News 13; Bewitched ~;
CBS News 8, 10; Zoom 20.33.
· 7:00-Truth or Cons. 3,4; Bowling for Dollars 6; What's
· My Line 8; News 10; New Candid Camera 13;
Wally's Workshop 15; Ohio· This Week 20; Lilias
Yoga &amp; You 33.
7:3()-That Good Ole Nashville Music 3; Masquerade
Party 4; Pollee Surgeon 6; $25,000 Pyramid 8;
Municipal Court 10;" Tt&gt; Tell the Truth 13/ Untamecl
Worlcl 15; Washington Straight Talk 20; Eplsocle

0

·:t"

·---~_...__...._._

!I .: Television
.log-for easy viewing
.
.

-AND WHIPPED
OUT THE MEANEST

topics for the next biennlwn
presented · at the convention
were "Society and the Individual : · Conformity yersus
Creativity''; World
Pluralism: The Hwnan En- Ohio University·. campus ..

'

Birthday

'

....

'","

·-

-·

1

.

-·

r

.'

\ fiD,

'•

..

-Robinson's Cleaner$

..

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•

•'•
.i·~

.."
•

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,.

•

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\

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�•·

I

9- The Daily Sentinel, Middlepor\-Pomeroy, 0., Mondsy, May 5, 1975

8-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, May 5, 1975

River Basin projects recommended
Representatives of the Ohio water 'transportatiOn costmg Urg~ng expedited progress the Tennessee and the Ten- and IllinoiS, for navigation and
Valley
Improvement only about one-third the on the comprehensive Ohio nessee-Tomb1gbeeWaterway, to determine benefits and costs
A.s8ociation, Inc., Wednesday average of comparable large Basic Flood contrp! program, closing the gap between the of providing a channel of 12 foot
presented the Associahon's volume rail haulage of bulk OVJA pomted out that 36 of the Tennessee.Qhio R1ver System mmimum depth for the Ohio
"FY !976" recommendallons commodities, plays an unport- 100 a uth orl~d lakes and and the Gulf of Mexico at River where the authoriZed
for funding the Oh10 R1ver ant part. Further reduction m reservOirs ani! 18 of the 100 Mob1le,
Alabama .
Its depth IS currently 9 feet under
Basin
Water
Resource water transportahon costs authorized local protection statement stressed also the the Rivers and Harbors Act of
Projects to the ,House Pubhc through relief of the present proJeCts are not yet completed unportance of continuation of 1910. Studies of navigation,
Works Appropriations Sub- congestion on the Ohio R1ver and that each year of delay the Monongahela River flood control and mulllpurpose
committee.
anditstributariesoffersahelp mcreases exposure of life and replacement program, potentials on many Ohio Basin
Harry M. Mack, President of potential for Iun1tmg mcreases property wh1ch could be requesting funds for FY 1976 to Waterways were recom- '
the Association sa1d OVIA's in consumer prices . In protected
contmue on the 'Pomt Marion mended to assure continuity of
recommendations w1ll be analyzmg th1s beneficial mOVIA also stressed the and Grays Landing projects. the program looking toward
urgency
for
forward OVJA gave its full support to optimum development of the
submitted later to the Senate fluence OVIA stated that.
Public Works Appropriations " Because of the in- movement to
complete stud1es to determine the R1ver's rich water resource
Committee.
frastructure character of the replacement of obsolete, feas1bihty of an unprovement endowment.
OVIA,anassoc1atwnbroadly water-based industries
Inadequat e navigation ·of the Wabash RIVer, Indiana
representative of Ohw Valley chemicals, oil refining, steel, fac1~tles on the Ohw Wh1le 13
'
civic, industr1al, commerc•al, coal mining, and electric of the planned 19 replacement
transportation anti fmancial energy among them, - their fac1~tles are completed or wdl
interests IS celebratmg this COStS of production enter, be operative for navigation
year 1ts 80th anniversary of directly or indirectly, into the purposes within the current
dedication to development of final price of v1rtually every year, the s1x proJects (:HESHIRE _ The s P.Q.R. Hughes, Tony Shamblm,
Valley water resources for product offered at the retail remairung are of critical un- Lahn Club of Kyger Creek Conme Haskins, Jan Drumnavigation, flood control, counter."
portance to the elunmatwn o( High School met Apnl 30 mond, Kim Reynolds, Arthur
water supply, recreatwn, The Ohio River and its bottlenecks obstruct in g dw mg the actiVIty penod Leach, Ed Mollohan and
environmental enhancement nav1gable tr1butar1es make a movem.ent of v1tal traff1 c. when, due to confllcllng club Pauline White.
and other benellclal purposes contribution to alleviatmg the Exped1ted
constr uction meetmgs, only 15 members
Its FY 1976 program, con- energy crisis by prov1ding,_a schedules to complete the could attend Consul Mane
tinuing its h1stonc com- h1ghly efficient energy tempos ary supplemental lock Grose had charge of the
mitment , places particular dehvery system, OVIA pomted at Lock and Dam No. 53, and meetmg 10 the Latm room
emphasLS on the cntJCal un- out. This contr1butwn ,
the
Sm•thland
project, Censer Mark Waller r~ad
J
/II,
portanceofa sound program of "is measured by the fact replacing Locks and Dams the mmutes of last meeting on
public mvestment m the water that, in 1973, of a total of 168.8 Nos. 50 and 51 are of critical Apnl 1 Sue Hughes, quaester,
resources of the Ohio River mill! on tons o1cargo ca rried on urgency.
who read the trea surer 's
Basin to the alleviation of the system, 113.7 million tons, The comm~nce~ent of report, asked that all bills
f 1
receSSion, Inflation and the or 67.4 percent, consisted of advance engmeermg and fr om the reception and Roman
energy crisis.
bitnmioous coal and petrolenm des1gn
work
on
the banquet be turned 10 to her so
•
RecogniZing that mass1ve products ... in addition to replacement facililles at the that they may be paid as soon A poster contest to promote
unemployment LS one of !he deliveries to coke plants and Galhpohs Locks and Dam as possible.
the 1.6 m1ll operating levy for
foremostconcernsofCongress, electric utilities within the (Oh1o and West V1rg.ma) 1s of Mane read a letter from the Me1gs Commumty School
OVIA pointed out that the region, rising tonnages of Ohio the highest prionty 1f a major Frank Cremeans superm- was planned at the Thursday
projects recommended for FY Basin coal are being carried traff1c congestwn CriSI S IS to be tendent of transporiatwn who mght meetmg of the Clhzens
1976 funding "offer a h1gh all-water to consumiog centers mitigated. Such a crisis clearly IS a former Latm student Comm1ttee for the Mentally
potential for stimulating m- on the GuH Coast, extendiog IS '". pros~ct for 1980, sub- addressed to Mrs. Fay Sauer: Retarded held at the Me1gs
dustrial output and mcreased from Galvest~n , Texas to slantlally m .advance of the sponsor and the Lalm Glub County Courthouse
job opportumlles. " The Tampa, . . Flonda, and to earliest possible complebon Mr. Cr~means congratulated Judge Mannmg Webster
A.s8ociation l)oted parhcularly commumlles throughout th~te would affect haslC In· th
th gave a report on the speakers,
b
1b
. portance of 1ow~•ost MisslSSippl
· · · Bas io , 1rom New du 1es
· - ste e,
ers
on
the un
1 co al an d e c u f mem
th
"The rad1o advert 181 ng
and
·
Orl
·
Is
th
success o
e p1ay,
e
tr
rtati
mass anspo
on VIa liD·
eans to. the Twin Cities. To chemiCa - m e Upper OhiO Wme" which was resented newspaper advertising .
proved waterways m this communities as distant as •and Kanawha R1ver Valleys as recenll 10 a school ~ssembl . Buttons and leaflets about the
regard, its statement pointed these, no alternative mode of well as essential movement of M C y
t yt levy were diStributed
"
t t ' al
·
t
r remeans was a gues a
d
t
that
1
ou
a na 1on averages transportation IS economically pe ro eum
pro ucts
to th
bl
Plans were made for a
pedton, ~: ~~h~ ~tee! avallabl~.
, householders •. industnal and ~~~em S~·uer
thanked square dance to be held May
197~
on ~ed ~ ve~m "Partic~rly on the Guld &lt;?mmemal mstall~tlOns and members for the~r hard work 10 at the Royal Oak Park from
represen
e pro c- Coast, Oh1o ~as1c ~oal 1s m highway transportation. Funds In re arm and the•r ex- 8·30 to 11:30 p. m with Horace
lion of over 21,000steel workers direct compelltion w1th fore1gn appropriated to Initiate liP tp f g
h Karr donat1ng the bw'ld1'ng
d
1
11
.
.
.
ce en per ormance o1 "T e
an an annua payro ex- supplies of petroleum .. The planmng on th1s proJect have W ,
and the Khord Kin&amp;s
ceeding $261 million. Much of carriage of refined petroleum been Withheld in abeyance me
prov 1dmg the musiC . The
this steel was. waterborne to products, especially of gasoline pending
completion
of Members present were
Debb B d L H0od M
fmance comm1ttee reported •e alr · •z
' ane on the Jitney supper. Offfcers
markets as ~ant as the GuH and fuel oil, on the Ohio RIVer authorization procedures.
Coast to which It had no and its tr1butar1es contributes
OVIA expressed the hope Grose, Cynthia Clarke, Jody
competitive access by any significant relief to the that steps to
perfect _f ox, Mark Waller' Sue reports were g•ven. Fay Sauer
pres1ded at the meeting.
other · mode of transportabon. mounting balance of payments authorlZ8tion of the project w11I
The bituminous coal trans- problem associated w1th the be taken promptly so that . .-~~~~ported on the Ohw R1ver and energy shortage. The oil funds prev10usly appropnated
its tributaries !!' 1973 refinmg mdustry of the Ohw can be put to work at the
•
represented the output of 11,500 and connecting rivers utilizes earliest possible date.
full-time miners and mmmg the nav1gat10n system as a
OVIA also recommended
OFFICE HO
S: :30 to 12,2 to 5 (CLOSE
payrollaolov~r$253mlllion ... distr1butionnetworkoverw1de expedited construction of the
AT NOON ON THURS.I-EAST COURT
projects dedicated to other areas of the continental m- Cordell Hull Lock and Dam on II.SI.Tiil.:i~~i.;~;:.-•••••••••••
objectives, such as flood ter10r. Indeed, most of the
control, water supply, and low- gasoline and fuel oil consumed
flow augmentation, offer· msuchstates as West Virginia
promise of the same charac- Kentucky, and Tennessee 1~
ter."
delivered from domestic
Similarly, In the national refmenes by nver barge "
effort to restrain inflation,

Ouh play, 'The Wine,
is commended by ex•student

Rosfer.·c-

;Me1gs ---

..

H{GTII';, ~ ~ -·

AGREAT'WAY TO ·SAY
•

educ.ation
week planned

_ ,

W'.;lf

'

.

/ ..J.r

"f-f• . .

~ictor

c~rnl

--Mothers-----told
~hotJ id be

!odl'f

much l"ey are loved Tc ycu on

,~&gt;XI II -IJ'IY

Edf111

A.- $;i~C rii - M iis ~ age!Om-y -sPeCial
Mother. love on til 5 Mother' Day

A whole lot more rha n money can

Gene

buy.
TO APPLY: Simply wnte, VOLUNTEER,
Washington, D. C. 200 I 3
It's a better-than •equal

Y Qu

ilnd

Lt OII~

:

1

I :---,-- ---..::.·~:"----

to rou. I.M,

des1gns . Shown on the ra1sed center blue mist Georgia marble.
lot or call for complete informatton. '

:

Visit our display

Logan Monument Co., Inc.
Stmply mao\ the convenoent Coupon . Call .•. . Wnte .. or come tn , Transportation gladly
f urnished to and from any of our showrooms, without obligation

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

POMEROY. OHIO
Display Yard near
Pomeroy-Mason Bridge
leo L. Vaughan, Mgr.
Telephone 992-2588

r--------------------·
COUPON

I
Logan Monur11ent Company, Pomeroy, Oh1o I
a Please send me FREE booktet(show&lt;ng I
memonals pnnted 1n full co lor w ith s1zes and
prices l 1sted

1
1

l

a Kindly have an authorized Logan
Monument Co representative call at my 1
~m~
1
aPiease send me details aooutl
Mau,&lt;oieums Without ob\tgafton.
I
Name
Street -o-r"'R-o-ut_e______ __
C•ty or Town
1

'y OHIO

D.ISP Iay ar d
on W. Main Street
James 0. Bush, Mgr.
Telephone 388-8603

l

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1.:::::::::::::::::::::::.._~. . ~~'=---=--------------..1
(

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(6
9

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17·;.'- - -.--..::18::,$-.;;;__ ..._,.:..;.._

_ _ _....;,_2o ,).~

Print mess.Jge clearly -·write
one word per space. Me• I with
$1.00 to:

. *JdlMAIL TO: DAILY SENTINEL.111 Court St., Pemeroy, O.

***************••·········--llttlllfl··· :

SUNDAY

•'

TIMES-SENTINEL ·.
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- -of the
-

Me~bers

· 14

# .1~..___
1.1-=-9·"",~'--**
** *

P.irk Rt 33, ten mtles north
of Pomeroy Large tots wtth
co ncrete paltos, st dewalks .
r unners and off s tr eet
parktng Phone 992 7479
12 31 tfc

AUCTION, Thursday night. 7
p m
at Mason Auctton,
Hor ton St m Mason , w Va
Consignments
welcome

FUR NISHED
apartment.
adults only 10 Mtdclleport
Phone 992 3874
3 25 tfc

- --------- - - - -- ---Phone 13041 773 5471

2 2 tfc

your '01 l of Mtn~'
Cosmetics
-Phone
BROWN ~ 992 5113

FOR

Jr aka Allen Penn aka Allen
T Penn Decea sed

Notoce " hereby gtven Ihat

· Mol l te Altce Penn of Route 3,
Albany Oh 1o, has been duly
appotn ted Adm lntstratriK of
th e Estate of Truman Allen
Penn Jr a ka A l len Penn aka

Allen T Penn deceased. late
Route 3. Albany, M e tgs
county Ohoo

of

Credtlors are requtred to
ftle the 1r clatms wtth sa td
ftduc !ary w1th•n four months

Dried th&gt;S " ' day of May
197
'

15 1 5

Manntng El Webster
Judge
Cour t of Common Pleas,
Probate DIVISIOn
Metgs County
12 19, 3tc

Local Bowling
POMEROY .J.ANES
TRICOUNTY'IIEAGUE
Apnt 22, &lt;975
Pts.
Roach's Gun Shop
76
Sear 's Cat Merch
11
Rawl&gt;ngs Aulo Paris
68
H&amp;R Firestone
62
Pomeroy cem Bkl co
61
-

223

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Happy
HwiUj!fs C1rcle of the United
~.i&lt;feth~ist Church assembled
, in tl1f( social room on Wednesd~ at noornmd enj~yed a
deliclll\ls covered d1sh dmner.
TliG.)nvocatmn was given by
Mrs·. ~ r&gt;~ar~aret Houdashelt.
Fol\ql'ing· ·the dmner the
gr~'was led by the chalfw
· Mrs ~ ·Grace ' Krider:
' '
Tlle'!meetmg
was called to
ordet 'and ·the· opening song
was-' ~',:Showers ol BIessmgs, "
wlth!2
' s. ~llil!il\" ~pson at
the ' no. }fi's. Margaret
Hou
Jt;rnl.i(,Psalm 139
after~~whict ~a~h j ,!Dember
gave t,-:~1 !1! .~r.lp,tl,ll'~- . :•
The buSiness sess1on was
quite lengthy and the
collection was taken and Mrs.
Bertha Spencer sent $3.00 and
Mrs. Laura Watson $5.00. The
totat collection was $14.88.
The song, "Hav~ /rhine Own
way' Lord", was sung by all.
Flowers were sent m

5 4 6tc
NOW sellmg Fuller Brush
-- - - - - - - - - Products , phone 992 3410 3 RMS and bath , turntshed
Phone 992 2937
1 24 lfc
5 4 6fp
- ---AQ HA St a l lto n Serv i ce
SMA LL 2 bedroom double
Dtamond Cham - Go Man
w tde mob•le home near
Go Dtamond Charge blood
Pomeroy , off Rt 7 by pass.
l 1nes Excel lent dJspostf ton
no chtldren or pets Phone
16 2, ltve foal, guaranteed
992 1017 or 992 7666
$100 Phone 992 7300
5 4 31p
4 27 121 p

------:--- ---- 18

Yard Sale
YARD SAL E Monday and
Tuesday , May 5 anct 6 98
Pearl St , Mtddleport
5 2 3tc

FT
All self contatned
twtltght
camper
wtth
shower, T V , a tr con
dlttoned s 1,575 Phone 992
7106
5 4 Jtp

11 x52' 1 BEDROOM tratler ,
l tke new $35 week, utl l tttes
pa td Phone 992 3324

4 11 He
4 FAM I LY Yard Sale, May 6
and 7 10 a m to 5 p m 3 RM and bath furntsh ed apt
Uftl1t tes patd 356 North &lt;tth
Sa l em
St,
Rutland
St, Middleport
Clothtng. furntture , record
.c1 9 tfc
p layer , sewtng machtnes.
-r
-----swee per , toys, m 1SC odds
3 A ND &lt;1 ROOM furn tshed and
and ends
unfurntshed
apartments
5 4 3tc
Phone 992 5434
4 12 lfc

WoHe &amp; Ward
Garage
OPEN9a m to6p m
Mondav thru Saturday
We Wtll ptck up &amp; delivery
Spec tal low pnce s on all
m ecl'lan1cal y.rork .

FLOWERS for Mother 's Day
Sma ll ey's
Gift
Shop ,
Chester Oh10 Phone 985
3537
&lt;I 29 IOtc

5

ROOM hovse , bath . 2
bedrooms , gas heat , wtth
lot 550 South Th 1rd Avenue ,
Middleport Phone 992 5078

toll free
l 800 33 4 0578,
(Answer,ng Serv1ce 1 No
ln!Jesfment
5 4 3tp

HOUSEKEEPER to ltve in at
790 Map le St , Middleport
Phone 992 2936
5 4 3tc

REMODELING,

Plumbmg ,

heatmg and all typ~~ of
genera l
repa1r
~ark
guaranteed 20 years ex
per i ence
Phone '992-2409
5 1 tfc

------ --------For Rent
TRAILER space for rent 111

Middleport

Call

992 2625
. , 4,'R lfc

------------ --,...---

TRAILER space, I m1le from
Pomeroy Phone 992 .5858
-

s-a tfc

_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ..!._ _ _ _ _ _

2 BEDROOM mobile home ,
a c , In Racme area P.hone

992

SELL your mobtle t~om e for
cash 15 homes wanted , 1958
thru 1972 models Phone
(614) 446 1&lt;125, Ga ii •POIJ S.
l 9 78tf
1954 PACEMAKER trader.
n1ce for c ouple Phone 378
6298
4 28 tfc

acre and close in. $22,700

2'12 ACRES now,

All tn lawn

garden

space,

building sties, laces on Rt.

F01 Sale

siding. 2 BR. bath, dining

BLACK 8ft alum,num ptckuo
topp er, like new S115 or best
offer Phone 949 2181 or 949
4989
5 &lt;1 3tc

welt . and city water. A
STEAL AT JUST $10,500.
135 ACRES ON RT. 681 -

7 -

ha~~¥

R.,

Home has new steel

part

basement.

own

close to recreation, good

hunting, minerals, city
water available, AL'L FOR
LESS THAN $125 PER
ACRE.
BE INDEPENDENT - A
RENT BEATER - Needs
some repair, 1 large BR,

lhis

year wtth a 11vlng room Suite
from Jack 's Furniture
Many styles and colors to
choose I rom. All suites sale
1U1ced, starting as low as
$139 oo and up Also , a nice
select1on of swivel rockers
at $89 .95 Jack's Furniture &amp;
Uphol stery Supply, 236 E
Matn,
Pomeroy,
Ohio
Phone 992 3903

bath, part basement, large

lot. $4.1lM
GOOD USED HOMES ARE
BEING
TAKEN
UP
RAPIDLY. CALL TODAY
992-2259

5·1 IOtc

5858

ll)emory of Mrs. Hazel Cleland - 5 2 ttc VARIETY OF cobbage,
HOUSE NEAR CHESTER':
tomalo and pepper plants
from her son Rotwofk,Qel ru:1 ---- - ------ - - - - - OH 10 L shaped brtck, 3
Also, cauliflower, broccoli.
$. ' FURNISHED 3 rm apt and
bedroom , ranch style, rovat
brussel sprouts. egg plants
after whiCh they were taken to
bath Also. 4 rm house with
home
1 5
acres
futl
Bedding plants - pansies ,
the ceme.y at Letart.
bath , I child accerted Or
b a s e m e.n t ,
garage,
petun1a, marigold, salvia,
..._
U
I d 'th
renl a 4 rm ap , bath ,
t.replace Call 985 J945
phlox, portulaca, agertum.
u1e mee ng c ose WI
utll 1t 1es patd, unturn1shed

, r•

prayer.
••~
.t.w_-3.

One chtld

eccepted

John

Beulah Bradford nd
Sheets. 3 moles so uth of
,
8
Middleport. Rl 1
Mrs. Grace ''Krider served
4 30 6lp
cake, ice cream, coffee and ~8 - ~-; · : -;;~NNER Travel
teamhonorofthebirthdaysof
!railer ,
self contained ,
Mrs. Roberta Thaxton and
steeps 6, exceptionally
clean Phone Paul werner ,
Mrs. ·Ruth Tucker who w~re
992 3695, aller 5 p m
5 &lt;I 3tp
quite surprised.

alyffum, impatiens. coleus,
Var1ely of geraniums, also,
pots of petun1as and mums
Hangmg
baskets
petunias, ivy geran1um,
lobelia. ferns, wandering
1ews, porch bOJCes, large
hearty red azeleas, Cleland
Greenhouse,
Racine.
Geraldine Cleland
4 13 -tfc

----

FREE ESTIMATES
PH. "949-5184

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.
Ph . 992 -2174

Water , Electnc, Gas,
Sewer Lines, 1n sta lled .
Work guaranteed.
Dozer, Backhoe , Trucks
Ltmestone &amp; Ftll D.rt
Commercial Restdenttal
Construchon &amp; Remodel

5 4 3tc

7

RM
2 story
house ,
atumtnum
sidtng
with
shutters,
Completely
remodeled W1th wa lt to wall
carpettng, upstairs and
down
Workshop
and
gara~e See by appt only .
phone 9119 3025 ~

5 4 6lc

Pleasant R1dge
Pomeroy, Ohio

FREE ESTIMATES
Reasonable Rates

Phone 992-7665

Pomerov

WILKINSON
SMALL ENGINE

EXCAVATING
Dozer,
Backhoe , d1tcher . water
l tnes , footers , dra ms, roads
and brush clean1ng No 10b
too small , no weather too
bad
Phon e Char l es R
Hatfteld Rl
l
Rutland
OhtO Phone 742 6092
5 2 52tp
McDA NIEL Cust om But
c hermg Stat e and Federal
In spected, slaughter cut
and wrap Phone (304) 882
3224
4 27 121p

Real Estate for Sale

bedrooms, modern kitchen
w1th cook and bake units
Refrigerator and large lot
near town.

FISHING CABIN - AI Forke~
Run

3 room s,

HElL
Racine Plumbing
&amp; Heating
Atr condtttontng , plumbtng , heat tng , rooftng ,
spouttng , generpl sheet
metal work.

Free Estimates
Phone 949-5961
Emergency 949-2211
or 992-5700
4 2 75

NEW LISTING - 60xl2
Skyline mobile home w1th 3

water

and

bedrooms,
bath ,
dintng,
concrete porch , basement, gas
F A furnace , storm doors and

windows. $17,500 oo. NOW
$12,500 00
NEW LISTING - Busmess
locaf1on w1th 2 bedroom
apartment Modern k i tchen
and v1ew of the nver wtfh

paneling, carpeting, porch,
carport and nice garden
WE HAVE MANY PEOPLE
WANTING SMALL FARMS
WITH LARGE HOMES CALL
992-3325 RIGHT AWAY.

RVICE slat ton and garage,
Rutland
Will ftnance or
l ease Cal l 742 5052
4 9 26 tc
1 72 ACRES of land and locust
posts Phone 742 3656
4 20 26tp

FREE ESTIMATES

Blown
Insulation Services

LARRY LAVENDER
Syracuse, Ohto

Ph 992.3993

4 10 1 m o

FOR FREE
ESTIMATES
On alumtnum replacl.'m('nf
wtndows, sadtng, s t or m
doors and wtndow s. • il th ng,
phone
Charl es
Lt ste,
Syracuse,
Ohto
Ca rl
Jac:;ob, Sal es Repr esc n
tat•v e

V. V. JOHNSON
AND SON; INC.

S EW I NG
MACHINE .
Repatr s serv •ce . a ll makes
992 2284 Th e Fab r• c Shop
Pomeroy AuThor1zed Stng er
Sates and Serv1ce
We
Sha rp en SCISSO rS
3 29 lfc

SEPTIC tankso nd le ach lmts
1nsta ll ed Als o f tc ld d r am
Tll f! S A ll wor k quaranl c ed
Lewts Excavating, Rt
1,
Rutlend , Oh 10 Phon (&gt;; 7 \?
37.1'2

DO ZER work land cl ea rtn g
by th e acr e, hourly or
contract
Farm
pond s ,
road s. etc Larg e dozer and
operator w1th over 20 y ears
e xp ertence
Pu l l1n s Ex
cavat1ng , Pomeroy , Oh10
Phon e 992 2478
12 19 tf c

SHALLOW Well s dug . sp r mgs
develo-ped a nd ets l ern s
1nsta l l ed to appr ox 1mate ty
18ft Le wt s Excavatmg , Rt
l Rutland Phone 7 12 3742
4 21261c

CARPET tns tallattOn , $1 25
per yard
Call R •chard
West , Phone 843 2667
J 3 JOip

SEPTIC TANK S CLEA NED

Reasonable RATE S Phone
4782 GalltpOII S Jo h n
Russel l, own er
4 9 lfc

Jd6

WI LL TR IM or cut trees and
shrubbery
Clean
out
basem ents aii1C. etc Phone
949 322 \ or 742 444 1
4 a 26t c

,j

---1-

-

H A ND Y rnan ? Yes we are
Ha v1ng prob le m s w 1th t hose
mtnor repatrs , giv e us a
call Ph one 843 2871

-------

5 4 6tc
-~-------

ELWOOD BOWER S REPAIR

- Sweepers, toa sters , trans ,
a ll sma ll appl ian ces Lawn
mower, n eK t to State H 1gh
way Garage on Route 7
Phone 985 3825
.c1 16 ttc

LA WN mower repatr
308
Page St , Middleport Phone
992 3509
4 16 30 tc
P

&amp; J Hom e Mam tenan ce.
Retrtg erat1on .
A
C
Heattng Phone 99 2 3509
4 16 30 tc

SE PTIC TANK S c le an ed
Modern San dalton 992 ~954
or 992 7J49
9 1a lfc
EXCA VAT ING. dozer load er
and backhoe work se pttc
tank s 1n st alled
dump
truck s and lo boy s for htre.
will ha ul ftll dtrt , top SOtl
l1m es tone and g ravel. Call
Bob or Roger Jeffers, day
phone 992 7089 n1gh t phon e
99 2 352 5 or 992 5232

SPRING
SPECIALS
2 pc. Ltvmg Room Su ites,
beauftful
"Scotchgat d 11
floral matena ls-$198.00
Herculon or vmyl Recliners,

Reg. $69.95-Now 549.95
"3 Graces" or 11 4 Cup1ds 1 '
Table lamps, chotce of gold
or whtte, 517.50 ea . or $34 set.

30" foam Bunk Maltresses
$17
Good s elecllon Mex1can
Imports. Bull Horns 512;
Hangmg Flower Pots $4;
Handpa1nted v ases
sa ;
statues $12

BEAUTIFUL new home on
take, 3 bedrooms bath &amp; 1h ,
carpetmg, drapes, b tg den
USED GOODS.
Ca tJ 992 3J93
R1dmg Lawn Mowers $150 up
l 24 tfc
Several D•ning Rm. Suites,
- - - - -- - - - - - - - CARPE T Installation , Sl 25
CIRC LE Motel &amp; Chnsty Ann
per yard
Call Rtchard
includeng a 6 pc Duncan
Restaurant.
Gallipolts , , west , Phone 843 2667
Phyte.
Ohio Phone &lt;146 2501 or 446
S 4 26tc 1
396~ Charte~ K 1esltng
~ - --- - - - - - - - -- I
4 23 12tp
"At Cauhon Light. Rt. 7"
D &amp; 0 TREE Tr~mmmg , :ll)
Tuppers Plains, Ohio
years
experience
Insured,
2 BEDROOM home. new
free esttmates Call 992 3057,
Phone 667-3858
foundatton. rooftng , cement
coolville Phone (I) 667
porches ,
thermo
pane
OPEN WED. THRU
30"
windows, storm doors ,
SUNDAY 9 A.M.-7 P.M.
4 30 lfc
natural gas furnace, Wh1te
alum•num Stding, black
shutter , , kttchen
cabinets,
panelmg
cei l ing tile.
floors
refinished, low heatmg btll ,ntce locat 1on, c1ty water
Phone 985 &lt;1102

~~iiiliiii~;;~j;;~~;~

4 4 26tc

4ACRESonRt 143,wa tertap ,
PtPrtric. a as and ttrlyewav
Two Caterpillar 22 bull
dozers lor sale, S1,50D for
both Co,nta ct Lawrence
Lee, Larkins St, Rutlar:d

4 30 6tc

.,..,..,.. ..... PT- H"'lollo
..,.;tA•fMI (;I'I'IM • f--..1
Mlri119H11&lt;&gt; &lt;1HI~.t ~~~ ~ ...

2 OR 3 bedroom nome with
beth ,
full
basemen!.
alurtltnum Stdmg and storm
wtndows and doors Fenced
yard , forced a1r heat Phone

992 3702

I

.............. '&gt;OIIPlO ~ • ~ "'"'
001~-d' ~"' ~

.........

I

.. ...

ot""'

-to~""'~""'
eolled ll e~l ',lt•••II "'I~

l""'!htcr' c: "'" " l looool&gt;

5 4 6fp

-- ----------:;;r.,.-- ----'

LOT near Ractne , Phone 8&lt;13 ·
'2253 after 5 p m

54 7tc

-~---..-

I

'1 1 26 f t

RE A DY MIX L UN C RETE
de l 1v e red r 1ght to y o ur
p rot ect Fasl and ea sy r r et•
esl1mat es Phone 992 32 6·1
Goeg l etn Rea dy M 1x Co ,
M id d leport Oh to
6 30 11 (

I

v

10 1 mo

STORM
WINDOWS&amp; DOORS
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SIDING 50FFITT
GUTTER S-AWN tNGS

Also Repa1rs On All
Rtdmg Tractors
498 locust St.
Mtddleport, Ohto
59 1 mo

777 Pearl Street
Mtddlepo .:t . Oh10
Phone 992-5367 or 992 -3861

t

Blown mto Walls &amp; Atft c s

'

8-K EXCAVATING
COMPANY

'

0. J. LAUDERMILT
ROOFING

Sales &amp; Service
992-3092

Nat gas furnace, porches,

garage, l'/2 acres. JUST
$13.000.
A CHARMING NEW
HOUSE that needs only
your presence to be a
home, 2 BR. bath, nice
kitchen Ref . &amp; Range ,
carpeled, full basement
w1th carpeted Rec. R •
carport &amp; storage R.. 1

Home Building
Room Additions
and Garages
5·51 mo.

Nathan 81ggs
Radtator Spectallst

home, bath, automatic heat,

2 BEDROOM mobile home,
call 992 76 49 after 4 p m
&lt;1 30 6tc

M;.KE MOTHER

AWMINUM &amp;
VINYL SIDING

and the last oflhe wild $225 00
per acre New listing
NEW LISTING - 3 bedroom

Mobile Homes For Sale

Ph. 985-4102

From t he largest Tru c k or
Bul ldozer Radtator to th e
smallest Heater Core

summer cottage. All m1nerals

608 E.
MAIN
POMEROY, 0 . "A CB RADIO OPERATOR'S DREAM - Htgh
on a hill and very private, 2
nice BR. bath, utttlty R.

Chesttr, Ohio

Radiato
Service

business room to let.
100 ACRES M or L - Hunting
..- - - - - - - - - - - , land, deer, grouse. etc A real
thicket -for a weekend or

-

POPULAR
ENGRAVED
METAL
SOCIAL
SECURITY CARDS Call

GLEN R.
Bisseii-

5 2 3tp electric ava&lt;lable $2900.00.
POMEROY - Near stores. 3

3 BEDROOM home on 4 acres
of ground , full basement,
fuel oil furnace, a c ,
breezeway and la rg e garage
m the country but close to
town On hardtop road, 2
tra tler setups mcluded Ca ll
992 1.649 after 4 p m or 992
2519 any ltm e for al')
pomtment
4 JO 26tc

QJnstrudion ·Co.

EXPERIE~CED

Real Estate For Sale

Help Wanted
-

5-1·1mo .

1974 HONDA 754 800 miles
Phone 992 7692 after 1 p m
4 29 6tp

2 BEDROOM t ra iler and lo t tn
town Phone 992 3975 or 992
2571
4 9 tfc

Bi5S aft Brothels

In Syracuse

Condor St

STRAWBERRY plants
Rt
338 near Ractne Lock s
Char11 e Foster
4 29 12t c

Hubbard's
Greenhouse
Now open for seaso n Now
avatlable ~ most
varietieS
of vege ta bl e plants &amp;
fl owers plu s pott ed flowers..:
OUR SPECIALTY over
2, 000 hang tn g baskets of
Pctun1a s Ivy, Gerantum.., ,
Vtnes , and BegontMTOP QUALITY AT"
LOWEST PRICES
992 5776
4171m o .

PHONE 992-2823

STEREO, modern walnut 8
track tape combtnat,on am
fm rad to , balance $107 59 or
terms Cal l 992 '3 965
4 29 tfc

PRIVATE meettng room for
any organ1zat1on . phone 992
J975
J BEELINE FashiOns, needs 3
3 II tfc
sty l 1sts tn lh1s area
No
mvestment Ca ll 992 7789 APT ltke new , 3 rooms, wtth
large bath , tabletop range ,
5 5 1tc
- - - - --- - ' - -- -large closet East Ma1n St ,
Pomeroy See to appreciale
$5 HOUR POSSIBLE PART
Phone Gal lipolis durtng day
TIME SHOW IN G SAMPLE,
·146 9699, even1ngs 446 9539
TAK IN G ORDERS FOR
4 10 tfc

EARLY WED MIX EO

pts.
Regatta In
88
Smtth Nelson Motors
77
Young's Supermarket
70
Tenth Framers
54
!Ides Sport Shop
50
Nelson Drug Co
47
H i gh lnd Game Gary
wayland 213 and V1c Wipple
195 Pat Carson 204 and
caro lyn Bachner 188
H 19h Sertes - A l Phelps
Jr
542, Bob Couch, 536.
Women Pat Carson 530, Betty
Smith 528
Team Htgh Game and
Series ___. Ydung's Super
Market. 720 and 2006.

5873

1 7 tiC

H tgh Senes ..- Ray R,oach , .
616 Henry Cl atworthy , 574
Team
~1gh
Game
Roach's Gun Sh op , 934
Team· H tgh
Se rtes
WILL Cut grass anywhere 1n
Roach 's Gun Shop. 2600
Pomeroy Cal l 992 3445 after
6 p m even1ngs
5 1 6tp
Aprtl23, l97S

SMALL cottage suJtable for
two men 60x 12 mobile
home on Roush Lane.
Cheshtre Phone {3 04 ) 773

i

'

Grand Opening

'

'
_j

' ------,-~------,-------__:,-~-

5 2 &lt;ttc

he was 2 Offtctal AA wtth an
89 speed tndex, halter,
conformatton, and best
dtSpOS!tiOn Fee SIOO at ttme
of serv1ces w1th l tve foal
guaran t ee Phone 992 7888
4 20 26 ft;:

Employment Wanted

10.:;,.!_ __.., _ _ _..;.' 1:...:.1__.:,__.,;._ _ _1_2...__ ........._ _ _ .

)3

case No. 21509
Estate of Truman Allen Penn,

M tdwest Steel Co
48
Htgh lnd Game Ray
Roach 229, Henry Ctatworthy,

,

*
--~~------~~~--~~* _.,_;,___...._
:

'

~

__

*

I

Molhcr's Day
Joe &amp; llttr

11/I~Plt.~t

The Praying Hand and Dogwood Design makes one of the outstanding Christian

41C

barn

- -~---

APNP~~~ciMoe"NT

"'

Racine

Fi'OVifRsdM·f lnt.""~e..,!l..;-dii

..
_
.
_
.
.
.
_
************************************
-------2,_____ __.3

Volunteer.

J

mun so

M••

opportunity.

52

GIB SON
S1de
by
Stde 1
refr 1gerator tr eezer .
u tll
tltes, excellent condition
Phooe 992 2257 on weekends
or affer 5 30 durmg th e
week
5 2 &lt;t tc

"'•.,,- - - - - - - - - - ---- · · - - -- ---"-

0. Swain, Lida Swain

W1nt SOCC•II toV'e- lo · u "·,,~;-·=·
ddy

Court of Common P leas .
Probate DIVIStOn
12
19
5
tS l •
•
' 3tc

\

ijJ.

Oh10, has been duly appomted
Admtnistra tor of th e Estate of
HarPid e:arnah an , deceased
late of Me1gs county , Ohto
Cr.e dttOrlt are requ1red to
f1le th e ir ' cla1ms w 1fh satd
f1ductary w tt h tn tour months
Dated thts 1st day of May
1975

.
Mann•no D Webster
Judge

to Paul H. Roush, Helen E.
Rof!sh, .318 'l~re, Sutton.
lt. H. SW'Wiings' Sdtis Co. to
Crpw's SleiOOHou~ Inc., lot,
Middleport
Robert C Hysell, Connie
Hysell to Truman D. Hall,
Ilene Hall';'•lots, Pomeroy.
Marie Postlewait, dec. to
Pauline N Bowland cert. of
,·
'
trans., Middleport.
Asa D Stansbury, Golden
Faye Stansbury to Asa D
St~nsbury
Golden Fay&amp;&lt;
'
.
Stansbury, parcels, Columbia.

Mother's Day greeting ads cost only $1.00 for 20 wercls.

41•

..

Hyseu' .31Z acre, Salisbury.
Eva Jean Cunmngham,
Danny Lee Cunmngham to
Willard Lucas : '.G %aldme
Luc~s, 2 acres, Rlllla d.
James F Arnold, Ruth B.
Arnold to William L. Folmer,
Louise t :f1t!~~,.~ £;l9 • a_cre1
Sahsburv
"
t, t (.•:\.,
Sylvester . L\Jrig, EXec.,
Earl KY(g, u~c~. , to· M'tlo
Hutchinson, lots, Rutland
Sylvan Cleland, Dolly
Cleland lo Jolen L. Bass,
Stella M~t:ss, lots, Salem

Not only will your message appear in the Sunday TimesSentinel, but we'1 11 send her ·a card telling her to Jook for
your greeting on May 11th.

Oe.tr-Molher- 11'1 1~- ,s-lo-si\y-floil!
YO\/ m a VH~ sPfCIRI w11y love

Cla renc e V Proce of Portland,

E. Hysell to Roger Wi iam

(Mattins

7tc

NOTICE OF

•
'
L&gt;
_.,\&gt;
Lynne Murray Crow o llY--'rShuler Mary M.' hulet ~
•
'
acres, Letart.
•
c
benver G. Hysell,. Fran'
ll es

•

s, 6 , 7, 8 , 9

APPOINTMENT
Case No 21510
E state of HAROlD CAR
NAHAN , Deceased
Notice 1S hereby gtven !hat

~·'
Fred W. Cro~ r~~r
Karr Crow Fred ~
] /

WE'LL SEND MOM ASPECIAL CARD-

--I

&lt;5) 2 4

_-

~

misfortunate.

PAY:

Guard1an of
Lui a Wheaton Davts

··

Tell her she 1s great .with a Mother/s Day greeting ad 11
Sunday Times-Sentinel's special feature on May 11
She'll be pleased with your thol,lghtfulness and sur:
1
prised by such an original idea.
•

Plan Now For MemorW Day!

No matter what .,.ou ca n do, ~ ou
(an do a lot of g:ood for snmehoJy.

cents for good or better
lndtan penntes and 17 cents
for Ltberty (V) ntckels Also

Phone 843 2414 evenmgs

NEW Wooden uttlity
Phon e 992 2719

j

Busm·ess Servi·ces

use d tomat o s tak es 7.000
S27 5 \
APPROXIMATELY

'104.95&lt; KD)

TO MOTHER WITH LOVE

the diSadvantaged, the old, the
young, the Sick and the

SKILLS:

1964 and old er com s Will pa'tl
Sl 20 for halves , 60c for
Quarters. 24c for dtmes , 33

Property
1\
Tran.sJ.ers

For all the tears
She wiped away
For all the hurts
She made okay
For all the nights
You woke up scared
For the many tender
Moments you shared
For all the things you
Wanted to say
Say it now on
This Mother's Day

•

Whatever )UU u m !-. p&lt;~r{', '\ hem·vc r
you can spare them .

2 SI~_Ns Pomeroy
OF ,
;QUALm Motor Co.

4 29 6tc '

Meigs
.

IT WIU ALWAYS BE THERE

HOURS:

For Sale

'72.90&lt;KD)

Your own message to Mother on these pag4ta, .,
Mother's Day, May 11. We'll send Mom • apeclll
card too! It's a thoughtful and unique w-.y to
tell her how wonderful she is.

BUY WITH CARE

dcscripuon and age to do Important
work in the commumty. Helpmg

Auto Sales

TURF TRIM
MOWER

,.,------------------------------"'1"1

People of every SIZe, shape,

For Fast· Results Use Sentinel Classifieds ·

-~--

N

WANTED:

,

&lt;974 CHEVROLET IMP LA LA
$4195
naflon currency,
Activ11les '.of , Youth Tern· want
4·door. only 10,400 mites. fully equipped &lt;nclud&lt;ng atr,
Middleport , Pomeroy or
perance 'E~uC'atiQn Week,
Racme banks , lar ge ordark red ftnish A real cream puff
small btlls Also , Carson
Apr. 20-28 were reviewed
1974 CHEVELLE MALIBU CLASSIC
$3895
C1!y mml sliver dollars to
during
the Wednesday buy se ll , or trade U S
HT Cpe, 350 V a. automatic lrans .. power steering &amp;
ns or curr ency ,Ca ll 742
brakes, factory air, tmted g lass, wheel covers, AM FM
meeting of the ·Pomeroy coi
365 1. ut land l Rog er Wam s
CLOSE OUT on new Ztg Zag
rad1o, less than 13,000 miles, red v1nyl top, white ftnish,
Women 's Chrishan Tem- ley
sew tng
machtnes
For
a
beat.~ttful
lu
xury
m1d-s1
ze
car
.
5 1 6tp
sew 1ng stretch fabrtcs .
perance Union held at the
buttonholes 1 fancy designs ,
1972 DODGE DART 4 DOOR
$2345
Pomeroy Umted Methodist CASH pa1d for all makes and
etc
Patnt
sltghtly
models
of
mobile
homes
Local
owner
&amp;
low
mileage,
good
whtte
wall
tires,
blemtshed
Cho1ce
of
Church.
Phone area code 614 423 ·
carrymg case or sewmg
small V a engtne, power steenng, factory atr, gold
It was reported that posters
9531
stand S49 80 cash or terms
ftnt sh, blk vmyl top, vinyl interior trim, radio. A clean
4 13 tfc
avatlable Phone 992 7755
governor's
and
the
car
~-~ ~~-----=--12 l B tfc
proclamation had been placed JUNK autos complete and
del1vered
to
our
yard
We
K R I S 600 Ltnear 250 Watts
m the sc hools , churches, Ptck up auto bodtes and buy
Sl50 Ph one ( 614 ) 667 3759
busmess places and hbraries all kmds of scrap metals and
4 30 5t c
iron R lder 's Salvage , St
dunng the week to bring at- Rt
124, Rt 4, Pomeroy .
F I SH BAIT - ftSh batt We
tentiOn to the observance
Oh10 Ca ll 992 5468
haiJe our batt '" · ntght
10
11
tfc
Mrs . Allen Hampton ,
c rawl e rs ,
la rge
meal
worms, worms, red worms,
president, opened the meetmg
NOTICE OF
blood ba1t, lnd tan Joe 's
1969 CHEVROLET ' ~ ton
with prayer and a report on
APPOINTMENT
Sport and C B Shop, 308 Page
Notice
ptc~up,
6
cy
l
mder
stan
Case No 21502
St, Middleport Phone 992
efforts to stop the free ad- E!&gt;hte of Wllltam
dard,
$700
Also
1910
Ford
TO
GIVE
AWAY
Ma
l
e
Ernest
3509
Maverick
6
cylinder
Ge
rm
an
Shep
herd
,
I
yr
old,
vertismg of liquor was given Sellards. Deceased.
A 9 30tc
automaftc. $700 Gary R
good w1th ch tldren Free to
Not1 ce 1S heretjy gtven that
Members were urged to wr1te E dgar
Otll
Phone
98
5
4274
or
985
good
home
Phone
742
45&lt;12
Se llard s of Rou te I ,
3597
52 3tc
GRAVELY
tractor
With
their representahves 10 Dover OhtO 44622, has been - ----5 2 Jtc
mower and sulky Also, 1957
d
uly
appotnled
1\dmmtstr
ator
support of H. R 1659 ~n d H. R. of the Estate of 1 Wtl lt am Er CLELAND'S
Fo~d Rancher 0 truck , bOth
BLOOMERS'
tn good cond1t10n Phone 742
1660, both directed toward nest Sellards , deceased , late
Openmg May 5th Flowers , 1965 1 TON truck stake bed, 6
cy l , &lt;1 sp S550 Phone 949
6352
plants and produce
Fa1r
Metgs County, Oh1o
stoppmg the free advertismg . of Cred
211
5
5 2 3tc
prt
ces,
courteous
servtce
ttor s are ,.re qutred t o
5 4 3tc
The Union agreed to s,end a hie thetr cl atm'5 wtth sa1d
next door to Steamboat Inn
HOME grown tomato plants ,
Jim Cleland, Racme, Ohto
W1 lh1n tou r months
contribuhon to the U.S.O. to ftduc,ary
tmproved Mextcan and
Beneftl
Ohto
Valley 1965 FORO Fa trlane, good
Dated th 1S 23rd day of April
shape Phone 992 5612
Hetnz 1350
Across from
FeiiOWShtp
help provide ftwt JUices to 1915
54 Jtp
Mun1etpal Park tn Syracuse.
5 I 6tp
youth m the armed services.
Thomas Hayman
Manntng D Webst er
1972 CHEVELLE Malibu, 350
4 28 30tc
The Ocean Spray Co. supports
Probate J udg e QUICK r&gt;RINT by mad from
auto 2 dr hardtop. green. a
of
satd
Coun
ty
camera ready copy One
the Temperance Umon
1 condttton . $1,895 Call (304)
page S5 55 ftrst 100, $1 15
882 3148 after 4 p m
on
program.
tJ l 28 (5) 5 12. 3tc
each ad d tttOnal 100 Send
Sa turdays
check
to
LET
"Copy,
·"Promi\\1[ or'' Performance"
5 4 31c
TER SHOP PLU S, 72 W
was the d"',otioni!l theme used
Unton , Athens, Ohto Also . 1973 DATSUN 1200sertes, 2dr
PUBLIC NOTICE
10b p rmt1 ng
Btds Wt ll be r ece1ved at the
Phone 992 3'293 or see at 105
by Mrs. WiU~•L. Sm1th who
20" .3117 H P •
off1ce of Bernard v Ful tz ,
4 29 38tp
' "''I ' '"~ \ ·~
Unton Avenue
also read scripture from 2 Attorney. Pom eroy N attonal
4 29 61C
Peter J,il(lliil6ugh 14: She also Bank Pomeroy , Oh10, until BEAUTIFUl selec ltan of -- - ------ --------.Sa turday . May 10 1975, at
flow ers , po ts, bask e ts and 1960 FORD 11 ton 1n excellent
presen~ ~' er9gra'i'\ ; ;N,ew 10 00 O' Clock A M for t he sa le
condttiOn 6 QOod t tr es and
spray
s for Memortal Day
22"-31h HP
HorizOns ~ tii _,Literature ." of the Lu l a Wheaton Dav ts
nms v 8 standard, 3 sp
Cltff's Pla ce, N Secon d Sf,
property stluated tn the
SelfPropelled
R t 681 come to Darwtn a"nd
M 1ddleport
Membel'll!s¥1l I)!•AffioThiRe, 0 'uh1ncorporated Vtllage of
turn left , or phone 992 5570
5
4
tfc
Portland tn L ebanon Town
Lord" .
Mrs
Clyde Ship
4 30 6tc
- - - -- ----- 4-------- - - -·- , Me1gs County , OhtO The
&lt;, Winebren ner, Mrs. Jacob sa le of the property tS sub tect QUARTER horse at stud,
young son of "T HE OLE
POMEROY LANDI'vfARK;
the approval Of the Court.
Turner and Mrs. Lena to
MAN ," AAAT. a leadmg
9'
•
.:.Ja ck W Carsey, Mgr
Th e rtght ts res erved to reje c t
For Rent
Stre of race and show hor
McKinley of the Middleport any or all bidS
lltdll Phone 992. -2.181
.
ses Ran wtth tn 1001h of a
Umon were guests
second of AAA ttme before COUNTRY Mobtle Home
Edwtn Mcleod,

:J

L]d~Wmted

To Buy

OLD furnttur e, tee boxes ,
bra.;ts beds , or comp le te
~ouSehold s
Wr~te M
o
Miller , Rl 4. Pom eroy
Ohto ~all 992 7760
10 7 74

p¥()mOte levy

'Ibis is the

Wan~ed

I

I

I

,.

•

�•·

I

9- The Daily Sentinel, Middlepor\-Pomeroy, 0., Mondsy, May 5, 1975

8-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, May 5, 1975

River Basin projects recommended
Representatives of the Ohio water 'transportatiOn costmg Urg~ng expedited progress the Tennessee and the Ten- and IllinoiS, for navigation and
Valley
Improvement only about one-third the on the comprehensive Ohio nessee-Tomb1gbeeWaterway, to determine benefits and costs
A.s8ociation, Inc., Wednesday average of comparable large Basic Flood contrp! program, closing the gap between the of providing a channel of 12 foot
presented the Associahon's volume rail haulage of bulk OVJA pomted out that 36 of the Tennessee.Qhio R1ver System mmimum depth for the Ohio
"FY !976" recommendallons commodities, plays an unport- 100 a uth orl~d lakes and and the Gulf of Mexico at River where the authoriZed
for funding the Oh10 R1ver ant part. Further reduction m reservOirs ani! 18 of the 100 Mob1le,
Alabama .
Its depth IS currently 9 feet under
Basin
Water
Resource water transportahon costs authorized local protection statement stressed also the the Rivers and Harbors Act of
Projects to the ,House Pubhc through relief of the present proJeCts are not yet completed unportance of continuation of 1910. Studies of navigation,
Works Appropriations Sub- congestion on the Ohio R1ver and that each year of delay the Monongahela River flood control and mulllpurpose
committee.
anditstributariesoffersahelp mcreases exposure of life and replacement program, potentials on many Ohio Basin
Harry M. Mack, President of potential for Iun1tmg mcreases property wh1ch could be requesting funds for FY 1976 to Waterways were recom- '
the Association sa1d OVIA's in consumer prices . In protected
contmue on the 'Pomt Marion mended to assure continuity of
recommendations w1ll be analyzmg th1s beneficial mOVIA also stressed the and Grays Landing projects. the program looking toward
urgency
for
forward OVJA gave its full support to optimum development of the
submitted later to the Senate fluence OVIA stated that.
Public Works Appropriations " Because of the in- movement to
complete stud1es to determine the R1ver's rich water resource
Committee.
frastructure character of the replacement of obsolete, feas1bihty of an unprovement endowment.
OVIA,anassoc1atwnbroadly water-based industries
Inadequat e navigation ·of the Wabash RIVer, Indiana
representative of Ohw Valley chemicals, oil refining, steel, fac1~tles on the Ohw Wh1le 13
'
civic, industr1al, commerc•al, coal mining, and electric of the planned 19 replacement
transportation anti fmancial energy among them, - their fac1~tles are completed or wdl
interests IS celebratmg this COStS of production enter, be operative for navigation
year 1ts 80th anniversary of directly or indirectly, into the purposes within the current
dedication to development of final price of v1rtually every year, the s1x proJects (:HESHIRE _ The s P.Q.R. Hughes, Tony Shamblm,
Valley water resources for product offered at the retail remairung are of critical un- Lahn Club of Kyger Creek Conme Haskins, Jan Drumnavigation, flood control, counter."
portance to the elunmatwn o( High School met Apnl 30 mond, Kim Reynolds, Arthur
water supply, recreatwn, The Ohio River and its bottlenecks obstruct in g dw mg the actiVIty penod Leach, Ed Mollohan and
environmental enhancement nav1gable tr1butar1es make a movem.ent of v1tal traff1 c. when, due to confllcllng club Pauline White.
and other benellclal purposes contribution to alleviatmg the Exped1ted
constr uction meetmgs, only 15 members
Its FY 1976 program, con- energy crisis by prov1ding,_a schedules to complete the could attend Consul Mane
tinuing its h1stonc com- h1ghly efficient energy tempos ary supplemental lock Grose had charge of the
mitment , places particular dehvery system, OVIA pomted at Lock and Dam No. 53, and meetmg 10 the Latm room
emphasLS on the cntJCal un- out. This contr1butwn ,
the
Sm•thland
project, Censer Mark Waller r~ad
J
/II,
portanceofa sound program of "is measured by the fact replacing Locks and Dams the mmutes of last meeting on
public mvestment m the water that, in 1973, of a total of 168.8 Nos. 50 and 51 are of critical Apnl 1 Sue Hughes, quaester,
resources of the Ohio River mill! on tons o1cargo ca rried on urgency.
who read the trea surer 's
Basin to the alleviation of the system, 113.7 million tons, The comm~nce~ent of report, asked that all bills
f 1
receSSion, Inflation and the or 67.4 percent, consisted of advance engmeermg and fr om the reception and Roman
energy crisis.
bitnmioous coal and petrolenm des1gn
work
on
the banquet be turned 10 to her so
•
RecogniZing that mass1ve products ... in addition to replacement facililles at the that they may be paid as soon A poster contest to promote
unemployment LS one of !he deliveries to coke plants and Galhpohs Locks and Dam as possible.
the 1.6 m1ll operating levy for
foremostconcernsofCongress, electric utilities within the (Oh1o and West V1rg.ma) 1s of Mane read a letter from the Me1gs Commumty School
OVIA pointed out that the region, rising tonnages of Ohio the highest prionty 1f a major Frank Cremeans superm- was planned at the Thursday
projects recommended for FY Basin coal are being carried traff1c congestwn CriSI S IS to be tendent of transporiatwn who mght meetmg of the Clhzens
1976 funding "offer a h1gh all-water to consumiog centers mitigated. Such a crisis clearly IS a former Latm student Comm1ttee for the Mentally
potential for stimulating m- on the GuH Coast, extendiog IS '". pros~ct for 1980, sub- addressed to Mrs. Fay Sauer: Retarded held at the Me1gs
dustrial output and mcreased from Galvest~n , Texas to slantlally m .advance of the sponsor and the Lalm Glub County Courthouse
job opportumlles. " The Tampa, . . Flonda, and to earliest possible complebon Mr. Cr~means congratulated Judge Mannmg Webster
A.s8ociation l)oted parhcularly commumlles throughout th~te would affect haslC In· th
th gave a report on the speakers,
b
1b
. portance of 1ow~•ost MisslSSippl
· · · Bas io , 1rom New du 1es
· - ste e,
ers
on
the un
1 co al an d e c u f mem
th
"The rad1o advert 181 ng
and
·
Orl
·
Is
th
success o
e p1ay,
e
tr
rtati
mass anspo
on VIa liD·
eans to. the Twin Cities. To chemiCa - m e Upper OhiO Wme" which was resented newspaper advertising .
proved waterways m this communities as distant as •and Kanawha R1ver Valleys as recenll 10 a school ~ssembl . Buttons and leaflets about the
regard, its statement pointed these, no alternative mode of well as essential movement of M C y
t yt levy were diStributed
"
t t ' al
·
t
r remeans was a gues a
d
t
that
1
ou
a na 1on averages transportation IS economically pe ro eum
pro ucts
to th
bl
Plans were made for a
pedton, ~: ~~h~ ~tee! avallabl~.
, householders •. industnal and ~~~em S~·uer
thanked square dance to be held May
197~
on ~ed ~ ve~m "Partic~rly on the Guld &lt;?mmemal mstall~tlOns and members for the~r hard work 10 at the Royal Oak Park from
represen
e pro c- Coast, Oh1o ~as1c ~oal 1s m highway transportation. Funds In re arm and the•r ex- 8·30 to 11:30 p. m with Horace
lion of over 21,000steel workers direct compelltion w1th fore1gn appropriated to Initiate liP tp f g
h Karr donat1ng the bw'ld1'ng
d
1
11
.
.
.
ce en per ormance o1 "T e
an an annua payro ex- supplies of petroleum .. The planmng on th1s proJect have W ,
and the Khord Kin&amp;s
ceeding $261 million. Much of carriage of refined petroleum been Withheld in abeyance me
prov 1dmg the musiC . The
this steel was. waterborne to products, especially of gasoline pending
completion
of Members present were
Debb B d L H0od M
fmance comm1ttee reported •e alr · •z
' ane on the Jitney supper. Offfcers
markets as ~ant as the GuH and fuel oil, on the Ohio RIVer authorization procedures.
Coast to which It had no and its tr1butar1es contributes
OVIA expressed the hope Grose, Cynthia Clarke, Jody
competitive access by any significant relief to the that steps to
perfect _f ox, Mark Waller' Sue reports were g•ven. Fay Sauer
pres1ded at the meeting.
other · mode of transportabon. mounting balance of payments authorlZ8tion of the project w11I
The bituminous coal trans- problem associated w1th the be taken promptly so that . .-~~~~ported on the Ohw R1ver and energy shortage. The oil funds prev10usly appropnated
its tributaries !!' 1973 refinmg mdustry of the Ohw can be put to work at the
•
represented the output of 11,500 and connecting rivers utilizes earliest possible date.
full-time miners and mmmg the nav1gat10n system as a
OVIA also recommended
OFFICE HO
S: :30 to 12,2 to 5 (CLOSE
payrollaolov~r$253mlllion ... distr1butionnetworkoverw1de expedited construction of the
AT NOON ON THURS.I-EAST COURT
projects dedicated to other areas of the continental m- Cordell Hull Lock and Dam on II.SI.Tiil.:i~~i.;~;:.-•••••••••••
objectives, such as flood ter10r. Indeed, most of the
control, water supply, and low- gasoline and fuel oil consumed
flow augmentation, offer· msuchstates as West Virginia
promise of the same charac- Kentucky, and Tennessee 1~
ter."
delivered from domestic
Similarly, In the national refmenes by nver barge "
effort to restrain inflation,

Ouh play, 'The Wine,
is commended by ex•student

Rosfer.·c-

;Me1gs ---

..

H{GTII';, ~ ~ -·

AGREAT'WAY TO ·SAY
•

educ.ation
week planned

_ ,

W'.;lf

'

.

/ ..J.r

"f-f• . .

~ictor

c~rnl

--Mothers-----told
~hotJ id be

!odl'f

much l"ey are loved Tc ycu on

,~&gt;XI II -IJ'IY

Edf111

A.- $;i~C rii - M iis ~ age!Om-y -sPeCial
Mother. love on til 5 Mother' Day

A whole lot more rha n money can

Gene

buy.
TO APPLY: Simply wnte, VOLUNTEER,
Washington, D. C. 200 I 3
It's a better-than •equal

Y Qu

ilnd

Lt OII~

:

1

I :---,-- ---..::.·~:"----

to rou. I.M,

des1gns . Shown on the ra1sed center blue mist Georgia marble.
lot or call for complete informatton. '

:

Visit our display

Logan Monument Co., Inc.
Stmply mao\ the convenoent Coupon . Call .•. . Wnte .. or come tn , Transportation gladly
f urnished to and from any of our showrooms, without obligation

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

POMEROY. OHIO
Display Yard near
Pomeroy-Mason Bridge
leo L. Vaughan, Mgr.
Telephone 992-2588

r--------------------·
COUPON

I
Logan Monur11ent Company, Pomeroy, Oh1o I
a Please send me FREE booktet(show&lt;ng I
memonals pnnted 1n full co lor w ith s1zes and
prices l 1sted

1
1

l

a Kindly have an authorized Logan
Monument Co representative call at my 1
~m~
1
aPiease send me details aooutl
Mau,&lt;oieums Without ob\tgafton.
I
Name
Street -o-r"'R-o-ut_e______ __
C•ty or Town
1

'y OHIO

D.ISP Iay ar d
on W. Main Street
James 0. Bush, Mgr.
Telephone 388-8603

l

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1.:::::::::::::::::::::::.._~. . ~~'=---=--------------..1
(

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~.

(6
9

--~-:--~-

17·;.'- - -.--..::18::,$-.;;;__ ..._,.:..;.._

_ _ _....;,_2o ,).~

Print mess.Jge clearly -·write
one word per space. Me• I with
$1.00 to:

. *JdlMAIL TO: DAILY SENTINEL.111 Court St., Pemeroy, O.

***************••·········--llttlllfl··· :

SUNDAY

•'

TIMES-SENTINEL ·.
'

'

..

'::

....

··~·

'

- -of the
-

Me~bers

· 14

# .1~..___
1.1-=-9·"",~'--**
** *

P.irk Rt 33, ten mtles north
of Pomeroy Large tots wtth
co ncrete paltos, st dewalks .
r unners and off s tr eet
parktng Phone 992 7479
12 31 tfc

AUCTION, Thursday night. 7
p m
at Mason Auctton,
Hor ton St m Mason , w Va
Consignments
welcome

FUR NISHED
apartment.
adults only 10 Mtdclleport
Phone 992 3874
3 25 tfc

- --------- - - - -- ---Phone 13041 773 5471

2 2 tfc

your '01 l of Mtn~'
Cosmetics
-Phone
BROWN ~ 992 5113

FOR

Jr aka Allen Penn aka Allen
T Penn Decea sed

Notoce " hereby gtven Ihat

· Mol l te Altce Penn of Route 3,
Albany Oh 1o, has been duly
appotn ted Adm lntstratriK of
th e Estate of Truman Allen
Penn Jr a ka A l len Penn aka

Allen T Penn deceased. late
Route 3. Albany, M e tgs
county Ohoo

of

Credtlors are requtred to
ftle the 1r clatms wtth sa td
ftduc !ary w1th•n four months

Dried th&gt;S " ' day of May
197
'

15 1 5

Manntng El Webster
Judge
Cour t of Common Pleas,
Probate DIVISIOn
Metgs County
12 19, 3tc

Local Bowling
POMEROY .J.ANES
TRICOUNTY'IIEAGUE
Apnt 22, &lt;975
Pts.
Roach's Gun Shop
76
Sear 's Cat Merch
11
Rawl&gt;ngs Aulo Paris
68
H&amp;R Firestone
62
Pomeroy cem Bkl co
61
-

223

. ... .·.'

"

-

Happy
HwiUj!fs C1rcle of the United
~.i&lt;feth~ist Church assembled
, in tl1f( social room on Wednesd~ at noornmd enj~yed a
deliclll\ls covered d1sh dmner.
TliG.)nvocatmn was given by
Mrs·. ~ r&gt;~ar~aret Houdashelt.
Fol\ql'ing· ·the dmner the
gr~'was led by the chalfw
· Mrs ~ ·Grace ' Krider:
' '
Tlle'!meetmg
was called to
ordet 'and ·the· opening song
was-' ~',:Showers ol BIessmgs, "
wlth!2
' s. ~llil!il\" ~pson at
the ' no. }fi's. Margaret
Hou
Jt;rnl.i(,Psalm 139
after~~whict ~a~h j ,!Dember
gave t,-:~1 !1! .~r.lp,tl,ll'~- . :•
The buSiness sess1on was
quite lengthy and the
collection was taken and Mrs.
Bertha Spencer sent $3.00 and
Mrs. Laura Watson $5.00. The
totat collection was $14.88.
The song, "Hav~ /rhine Own
way' Lord", was sung by all.
Flowers were sent m

5 4 6tc
NOW sellmg Fuller Brush
-- - - - - - - - - Products , phone 992 3410 3 RMS and bath , turntshed
Phone 992 2937
1 24 lfc
5 4 6fp
- ---AQ HA St a l lto n Serv i ce
SMA LL 2 bedroom double
Dtamond Cham - Go Man
w tde mob•le home near
Go Dtamond Charge blood
Pomeroy , off Rt 7 by pass.
l 1nes Excel lent dJspostf ton
no chtldren or pets Phone
16 2, ltve foal, guaranteed
992 1017 or 992 7666
$100 Phone 992 7300
5 4 31p
4 27 121 p

------:--- ---- 18

Yard Sale
YARD SAL E Monday and
Tuesday , May 5 anct 6 98
Pearl St , Mtddleport
5 2 3tc

FT
All self contatned
twtltght
camper
wtth
shower, T V , a tr con
dlttoned s 1,575 Phone 992
7106
5 4 Jtp

11 x52' 1 BEDROOM tratler ,
l tke new $35 week, utl l tttes
pa td Phone 992 3324

4 11 He
4 FAM I LY Yard Sale, May 6
and 7 10 a m to 5 p m 3 RM and bath furntsh ed apt
Uftl1t tes patd 356 North &lt;tth
Sa l em
St,
Rutland
St, Middleport
Clothtng. furntture , record
.c1 9 tfc
p layer , sewtng machtnes.
-r
-----swee per , toys, m 1SC odds
3 A ND &lt;1 ROOM furn tshed and
and ends
unfurntshed
apartments
5 4 3tc
Phone 992 5434
4 12 lfc

WoHe &amp; Ward
Garage
OPEN9a m to6p m
Mondav thru Saturday
We Wtll ptck up &amp; delivery
Spec tal low pnce s on all
m ecl'lan1cal y.rork .

FLOWERS for Mother 's Day
Sma ll ey's
Gift
Shop ,
Chester Oh10 Phone 985
3537
&lt;I 29 IOtc

5

ROOM hovse , bath . 2
bedrooms , gas heat , wtth
lot 550 South Th 1rd Avenue ,
Middleport Phone 992 5078

toll free
l 800 33 4 0578,
(Answer,ng Serv1ce 1 No
ln!Jesfment
5 4 3tp

HOUSEKEEPER to ltve in at
790 Map le St , Middleport
Phone 992 2936
5 4 3tc

REMODELING,

Plumbmg ,

heatmg and all typ~~ of
genera l
repa1r
~ark
guaranteed 20 years ex
per i ence
Phone '992-2409
5 1 tfc

------ --------For Rent
TRAILER space for rent 111

Middleport

Call

992 2625
. , 4,'R lfc

------------ --,...---

TRAILER space, I m1le from
Pomeroy Phone 992 .5858
-

s-a tfc

_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ..!._ _ _ _ _ _

2 BEDROOM mobile home ,
a c , In Racme area P.hone

992

SELL your mobtle t~om e for
cash 15 homes wanted , 1958
thru 1972 models Phone
(614) 446 1&lt;125, Ga ii •POIJ S.
l 9 78tf
1954 PACEMAKER trader.
n1ce for c ouple Phone 378
6298
4 28 tfc

acre and close in. $22,700

2'12 ACRES now,

All tn lawn

garden

space,

building sties, laces on Rt.

F01 Sale

siding. 2 BR. bath, dining

BLACK 8ft alum,num ptckuo
topp er, like new S115 or best
offer Phone 949 2181 or 949
4989
5 &lt;1 3tc

welt . and city water. A
STEAL AT JUST $10,500.
135 ACRES ON RT. 681 -

7 -

ha~~¥

R.,

Home has new steel

part

basement.

own

close to recreation, good

hunting, minerals, city
water available, AL'L FOR
LESS THAN $125 PER
ACRE.
BE INDEPENDENT - A
RENT BEATER - Needs
some repair, 1 large BR,

lhis

year wtth a 11vlng room Suite
from Jack 's Furniture
Many styles and colors to
choose I rom. All suites sale
1U1ced, starting as low as
$139 oo and up Also , a nice
select1on of swivel rockers
at $89 .95 Jack's Furniture &amp;
Uphol stery Supply, 236 E
Matn,
Pomeroy,
Ohio
Phone 992 3903

bath, part basement, large

lot. $4.1lM
GOOD USED HOMES ARE
BEING
TAKEN
UP
RAPIDLY. CALL TODAY
992-2259

5·1 IOtc

5858

ll)emory of Mrs. Hazel Cleland - 5 2 ttc VARIETY OF cobbage,
HOUSE NEAR CHESTER':
tomalo and pepper plants
from her son Rotwofk,Qel ru:1 ---- - ------ - - - - - OH 10 L shaped brtck, 3
Also, cauliflower, broccoli.
$. ' FURNISHED 3 rm apt and
bedroom , ranch style, rovat
brussel sprouts. egg plants
after whiCh they were taken to
bath Also. 4 rm house with
home
1 5
acres
futl
Bedding plants - pansies ,
the ceme.y at Letart.
bath , I child accerted Or
b a s e m e.n t ,
garage,
petun1a, marigold, salvia,
..._
U
I d 'th
renl a 4 rm ap , bath ,
t.replace Call 985 J945
phlox, portulaca, agertum.
u1e mee ng c ose WI
utll 1t 1es patd, unturn1shed

, r•

prayer.
••~
.t.w_-3.

One chtld

eccepted

John

Beulah Bradford nd
Sheets. 3 moles so uth of
,
8
Middleport. Rl 1
Mrs. Grace ''Krider served
4 30 6lp
cake, ice cream, coffee and ~8 - ~-; · : -;;~NNER Travel
teamhonorofthebirthdaysof
!railer ,
self contained ,
Mrs. Roberta Thaxton and
steeps 6, exceptionally
clean Phone Paul werner ,
Mrs. ·Ruth Tucker who w~re
992 3695, aller 5 p m
5 &lt;I 3tp
quite surprised.

alyffum, impatiens. coleus,
Var1ely of geraniums, also,
pots of petun1as and mums
Hangmg
baskets
petunias, ivy geran1um,
lobelia. ferns, wandering
1ews, porch bOJCes, large
hearty red azeleas, Cleland
Greenhouse,
Racine.
Geraldine Cleland
4 13 -tfc

----

FREE ESTIMATES
PH. "949-5184

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.
Ph . 992 -2174

Water , Electnc, Gas,
Sewer Lines, 1n sta lled .
Work guaranteed.
Dozer, Backhoe , Trucks
Ltmestone &amp; Ftll D.rt
Commercial Restdenttal
Construchon &amp; Remodel

5 4 3tc

7

RM
2 story
house ,
atumtnum
sidtng
with
shutters,
Completely
remodeled W1th wa lt to wall
carpettng, upstairs and
down
Workshop
and
gara~e See by appt only .
phone 9119 3025 ~

5 4 6lc

Pleasant R1dge
Pomeroy, Ohio

FREE ESTIMATES
Reasonable Rates

Phone 992-7665

Pomerov

WILKINSON
SMALL ENGINE

EXCAVATING
Dozer,
Backhoe , d1tcher . water
l tnes , footers , dra ms, roads
and brush clean1ng No 10b
too small , no weather too
bad
Phon e Char l es R
Hatfteld Rl
l
Rutland
OhtO Phone 742 6092
5 2 52tp
McDA NIEL Cust om But
c hermg Stat e and Federal
In spected, slaughter cut
and wrap Phone (304) 882
3224
4 27 121p

Real Estate for Sale

bedrooms, modern kitchen
w1th cook and bake units
Refrigerator and large lot
near town.

FISHING CABIN - AI Forke~
Run

3 room s,

HElL
Racine Plumbing
&amp; Heating
Atr condtttontng , plumbtng , heat tng , rooftng ,
spouttng , generpl sheet
metal work.

Free Estimates
Phone 949-5961
Emergency 949-2211
or 992-5700
4 2 75

NEW LISTING - 60xl2
Skyline mobile home w1th 3

water

and

bedrooms,
bath ,
dintng,
concrete porch , basement, gas
F A furnace , storm doors and

windows. $17,500 oo. NOW
$12,500 00
NEW LISTING - Busmess
locaf1on w1th 2 bedroom
apartment Modern k i tchen
and v1ew of the nver wtfh

paneling, carpeting, porch,
carport and nice garden
WE HAVE MANY PEOPLE
WANTING SMALL FARMS
WITH LARGE HOMES CALL
992-3325 RIGHT AWAY.

RVICE slat ton and garage,
Rutland
Will ftnance or
l ease Cal l 742 5052
4 9 26 tc
1 72 ACRES of land and locust
posts Phone 742 3656
4 20 26tp

FREE ESTIMATES

Blown
Insulation Services

LARRY LAVENDER
Syracuse, Ohto

Ph 992.3993

4 10 1 m o

FOR FREE
ESTIMATES
On alumtnum replacl.'m('nf
wtndows, sadtng, s t or m
doors and wtndow s. • il th ng,
phone
Charl es
Lt ste,
Syracuse,
Ohto
Ca rl
Jac:;ob, Sal es Repr esc n
tat•v e

V. V. JOHNSON
AND SON; INC.

S EW I NG
MACHINE .
Repatr s serv •ce . a ll makes
992 2284 Th e Fab r• c Shop
Pomeroy AuThor1zed Stng er
Sates and Serv1ce
We
Sha rp en SCISSO rS
3 29 lfc

SEPTIC tankso nd le ach lmts
1nsta ll ed Als o f tc ld d r am
Tll f! S A ll wor k quaranl c ed
Lewts Excavating, Rt
1,
Rutlend , Oh 10 Phon (&gt;; 7 \?
37.1'2

DO ZER work land cl ea rtn g
by th e acr e, hourly or
contract
Farm
pond s ,
road s. etc Larg e dozer and
operator w1th over 20 y ears
e xp ertence
Pu l l1n s Ex
cavat1ng , Pomeroy , Oh10
Phon e 992 2478
12 19 tf c

SHALLOW Well s dug . sp r mgs
develo-ped a nd ets l ern s
1nsta l l ed to appr ox 1mate ty
18ft Le wt s Excavatmg , Rt
l Rutland Phone 7 12 3742
4 21261c

CARPET tns tallattOn , $1 25
per yard
Call R •chard
West , Phone 843 2667
J 3 JOip

SEPTIC TANK S CLEA NED

Reasonable RATE S Phone
4782 GalltpOII S Jo h n
Russel l, own er
4 9 lfc

Jd6

WI LL TR IM or cut trees and
shrubbery
Clean
out
basem ents aii1C. etc Phone
949 322 \ or 742 444 1
4 a 26t c

,j

---1-

-

H A ND Y rnan ? Yes we are
Ha v1ng prob le m s w 1th t hose
mtnor repatrs , giv e us a
call Ph one 843 2871

-------

5 4 6tc
-~-------

ELWOOD BOWER S REPAIR

- Sweepers, toa sters , trans ,
a ll sma ll appl ian ces Lawn
mower, n eK t to State H 1gh
way Garage on Route 7
Phone 985 3825
.c1 16 ttc

LA WN mower repatr
308
Page St , Middleport Phone
992 3509
4 16 30 tc
P

&amp; J Hom e Mam tenan ce.
Retrtg erat1on .
A
C
Heattng Phone 99 2 3509
4 16 30 tc

SE PTIC TANK S c le an ed
Modern San dalton 992 ~954
or 992 7J49
9 1a lfc
EXCA VAT ING. dozer load er
and backhoe work se pttc
tank s 1n st alled
dump
truck s and lo boy s for htre.
will ha ul ftll dtrt , top SOtl
l1m es tone and g ravel. Call
Bob or Roger Jeffers, day
phone 992 7089 n1gh t phon e
99 2 352 5 or 992 5232

SPRING
SPECIALS
2 pc. Ltvmg Room Su ites,
beauftful
"Scotchgat d 11
floral matena ls-$198.00
Herculon or vmyl Recliners,

Reg. $69.95-Now 549.95
"3 Graces" or 11 4 Cup1ds 1 '
Table lamps, chotce of gold
or whtte, 517.50 ea . or $34 set.

30" foam Bunk Maltresses
$17
Good s elecllon Mex1can
Imports. Bull Horns 512;
Hangmg Flower Pots $4;
Handpa1nted v ases
sa ;
statues $12

BEAUTIFUL new home on
take, 3 bedrooms bath &amp; 1h ,
carpetmg, drapes, b tg den
USED GOODS.
Ca tJ 992 3J93
R1dmg Lawn Mowers $150 up
l 24 tfc
Several D•ning Rm. Suites,
- - - - -- - - - - - - - CARPE T Installation , Sl 25
CIRC LE Motel &amp; Chnsty Ann
per yard
Call Rtchard
includeng a 6 pc Duncan
Restaurant.
Gallipolts , , west , Phone 843 2667
Phyte.
Ohio Phone &lt;146 2501 or 446
S 4 26tc 1
396~ Charte~ K 1esltng
~ - --- - - - - - - - -- I
4 23 12tp
"At Cauhon Light. Rt. 7"
D &amp; 0 TREE Tr~mmmg , :ll)
Tuppers Plains, Ohio
years
experience
Insured,
2 BEDROOM home. new
free esttmates Call 992 3057,
Phone 667-3858
foundatton. rooftng , cement
coolville Phone (I) 667
porches ,
thermo
pane
OPEN WED. THRU
30"
windows, storm doors ,
SUNDAY 9 A.M.-7 P.M.
4 30 lfc
natural gas furnace, Wh1te
alum•num Stding, black
shutter , , kttchen
cabinets,
panelmg
cei l ing tile.
floors
refinished, low heatmg btll ,ntce locat 1on, c1ty water
Phone 985 &lt;1102

~~iiiliiii~;;~j;;~~;~

4 4 26tc

4ACRESonRt 143,wa tertap ,
PtPrtric. a as and ttrlyewav
Two Caterpillar 22 bull
dozers lor sale, S1,50D for
both Co,nta ct Lawrence
Lee, Larkins St, Rutlar:d

4 30 6tc

.,..,..,.. ..... PT- H"'lollo
..,.;tA•fMI (;I'I'IM • f--..1
Mlri119H11&lt;&gt; &lt;1HI~.t ~~~ ~ ...

2 OR 3 bedroom nome with
beth ,
full
basemen!.
alurtltnum Stdmg and storm
wtndows and doors Fenced
yard , forced a1r heat Phone

992 3702

I

.............. '&gt;OIIPlO ~ • ~ "'"'
001~-d' ~"' ~

.........

I

.. ...

ot""'

-to~""'~""'
eolled ll e~l ',lt•••II "'I~

l""'!htcr' c: "'" " l looool&gt;

5 4 6fp

-- ----------:;;r.,.-- ----'

LOT near Ractne , Phone 8&lt;13 ·
'2253 after 5 p m

54 7tc

-~---..-

I

'1 1 26 f t

RE A DY MIX L UN C RETE
de l 1v e red r 1ght to y o ur
p rot ect Fasl and ea sy r r et•
esl1mat es Phone 992 32 6·1
Goeg l etn Rea dy M 1x Co ,
M id d leport Oh to
6 30 11 (

I

v

10 1 mo

STORM
WINDOWS&amp; DOORS
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SIDING 50FFITT
GUTTER S-AWN tNGS

Also Repa1rs On All
Rtdmg Tractors
498 locust St.
Mtddleport, Ohto
59 1 mo

777 Pearl Street
Mtddlepo .:t . Oh10
Phone 992-5367 or 992 -3861

t

Blown mto Walls &amp; Atft c s

'

8-K EXCAVATING
COMPANY

'

0. J. LAUDERMILT
ROOFING

Sales &amp; Service
992-3092

Nat gas furnace, porches,

garage, l'/2 acres. JUST
$13.000.
A CHARMING NEW
HOUSE that needs only
your presence to be a
home, 2 BR. bath, nice
kitchen Ref . &amp; Range ,
carpeled, full basement
w1th carpeted Rec. R •
carport &amp; storage R.. 1

Home Building
Room Additions
and Garages
5·51 mo.

Nathan 81ggs
Radtator Spectallst

home, bath, automatic heat,

2 BEDROOM mobile home,
call 992 76 49 after 4 p m
&lt;1 30 6tc

M;.KE MOTHER

AWMINUM &amp;
VINYL SIDING

and the last oflhe wild $225 00
per acre New listing
NEW LISTING - 3 bedroom

Mobile Homes For Sale

Ph. 985-4102

From t he largest Tru c k or
Bul ldozer Radtator to th e
smallest Heater Core

summer cottage. All m1nerals

608 E.
MAIN
POMEROY, 0 . "A CB RADIO OPERATOR'S DREAM - Htgh
on a hill and very private, 2
nice BR. bath, utttlty R.

Chesttr, Ohio

Radiato
Service

business room to let.
100 ACRES M or L - Hunting
..- - - - - - - - - - - , land, deer, grouse. etc A real
thicket -for a weekend or

-

POPULAR
ENGRAVED
METAL
SOCIAL
SECURITY CARDS Call

GLEN R.
Bisseii-

5 2 3tp electric ava&lt;lable $2900.00.
POMEROY - Near stores. 3

3 BEDROOM home on 4 acres
of ground , full basement,
fuel oil furnace, a c ,
breezeway and la rg e garage
m the country but close to
town On hardtop road, 2
tra tler setups mcluded Ca ll
992 1.649 after 4 p m or 992
2519 any ltm e for al')
pomtment
4 JO 26tc

QJnstrudion ·Co.

EXPERIE~CED

Real Estate For Sale

Help Wanted
-

5-1·1mo .

1974 HONDA 754 800 miles
Phone 992 7692 after 1 p m
4 29 6tp

2 BEDROOM t ra iler and lo t tn
town Phone 992 3975 or 992
2571
4 9 tfc

Bi5S aft Brothels

In Syracuse

Condor St

STRAWBERRY plants
Rt
338 near Ractne Lock s
Char11 e Foster
4 29 12t c

Hubbard's
Greenhouse
Now open for seaso n Now
avatlable ~ most
varietieS
of vege ta bl e plants &amp;
fl owers plu s pott ed flowers..:
OUR SPECIALTY over
2, 000 hang tn g baskets of
Pctun1a s Ivy, Gerantum.., ,
Vtnes , and BegontMTOP QUALITY AT"
LOWEST PRICES
992 5776
4171m o .

PHONE 992-2823

STEREO, modern walnut 8
track tape combtnat,on am
fm rad to , balance $107 59 or
terms Cal l 992 '3 965
4 29 tfc

PRIVATE meettng room for
any organ1zat1on . phone 992
J975
J BEELINE FashiOns, needs 3
3 II tfc
sty l 1sts tn lh1s area
No
mvestment Ca ll 992 7789 APT ltke new , 3 rooms, wtth
large bath , tabletop range ,
5 5 1tc
- - - - --- - ' - -- -large closet East Ma1n St ,
Pomeroy See to appreciale
$5 HOUR POSSIBLE PART
Phone Gal lipolis durtng day
TIME SHOW IN G SAMPLE,
·146 9699, even1ngs 446 9539
TAK IN G ORDERS FOR
4 10 tfc

EARLY WED MIX EO

pts.
Regatta In
88
Smtth Nelson Motors
77
Young's Supermarket
70
Tenth Framers
54
!Ides Sport Shop
50
Nelson Drug Co
47
H i gh lnd Game Gary
wayland 213 and V1c Wipple
195 Pat Carson 204 and
caro lyn Bachner 188
H 19h Sertes - A l Phelps
Jr
542, Bob Couch, 536.
Women Pat Carson 530, Betty
Smith 528
Team Htgh Game and
Series ___. Ydung's Super
Market. 720 and 2006.

5873

1 7 tiC

H tgh Senes ..- Ray R,oach , .
616 Henry Cl atworthy , 574
Team
~1gh
Game
Roach's Gun Sh op , 934
Team· H tgh
Se rtes
WILL Cut grass anywhere 1n
Roach 's Gun Shop. 2600
Pomeroy Cal l 992 3445 after
6 p m even1ngs
5 1 6tp
Aprtl23, l97S

SMALL cottage suJtable for
two men 60x 12 mobile
home on Roush Lane.
Cheshtre Phone {3 04 ) 773

i

'

Grand Opening

'

'
_j

' ------,-~------,-------__:,-~-

5 2 &lt;ttc

he was 2 Offtctal AA wtth an
89 speed tndex, halter,
conformatton, and best
dtSpOS!tiOn Fee SIOO at ttme
of serv1ces w1th l tve foal
guaran t ee Phone 992 7888
4 20 26 ft;:

Employment Wanted

10.:;,.!_ __.., _ _ _..;.' 1:...:.1__.:,__.,;._ _ _1_2...__ ........._ _ _ .

)3

case No. 21509
Estate of Truman Allen Penn,

M tdwest Steel Co
48
Htgh lnd Game Ray
Roach 229, Henry Ctatworthy,

,

*
--~~------~~~--~~* _.,_;,___...._
:

'

~

__

*

I

Molhcr's Day
Joe &amp; llttr

11/I~Plt.~t

The Praying Hand and Dogwood Design makes one of the outstanding Christian

41C

barn

- -~---

APNP~~~ciMoe"NT

"'

Racine

Fi'OVifRsdM·f lnt.""~e..,!l..;-dii

..
_
.
_
.
.
.
_
************************************
-------2,_____ __.3

Volunteer.

J

mun so

M••

opportunity.

52

GIB SON
S1de
by
Stde 1
refr 1gerator tr eezer .
u tll
tltes, excellent condition
Phooe 992 2257 on weekends
or affer 5 30 durmg th e
week
5 2 &lt;t tc

"'•.,,- - - - - - - - - - ---- · · - - -- ---"-

0. Swain, Lida Swain

W1nt SOCC•II toV'e- lo · u "·,,~;-·=·
ddy

Court of Common P leas .
Probate DIVIStOn
12
19
5
tS l •
•
' 3tc

\

ijJ.

Oh10, has been duly appomted
Admtnistra tor of th e Estate of
HarPid e:arnah an , deceased
late of Me1gs county , Ohto
Cr.e dttOrlt are requ1red to
f1le th e ir ' cla1ms w 1fh satd
f1ductary w tt h tn tour months
Dated thts 1st day of May
1975

.
Mann•no D Webster
Judge

to Paul H. Roush, Helen E.
Rof!sh, .318 'l~re, Sutton.
lt. H. SW'Wiings' Sdtis Co. to
Crpw's SleiOOHou~ Inc., lot,
Middleport
Robert C Hysell, Connie
Hysell to Truman D. Hall,
Ilene Hall';'•lots, Pomeroy.
Marie Postlewait, dec. to
Pauline N Bowland cert. of
,·
'
trans., Middleport.
Asa D Stansbury, Golden
Faye Stansbury to Asa D
St~nsbury
Golden Fay&amp;&lt;
'
.
Stansbury, parcels, Columbia.

Mother's Day greeting ads cost only $1.00 for 20 wercls.

41•

..

Hyseu' .31Z acre, Salisbury.
Eva Jean Cunmngham,
Danny Lee Cunmngham to
Willard Lucas : '.G %aldme
Luc~s, 2 acres, Rlllla d.
James F Arnold, Ruth B.
Arnold to William L. Folmer,
Louise t :f1t!~~,.~ £;l9 • a_cre1
Sahsburv
"
t, t (.•:\.,
Sylvester . L\Jrig, EXec.,
Earl KY(g, u~c~. , to· M'tlo
Hutchinson, lots, Rutland
Sylvan Cleland, Dolly
Cleland lo Jolen L. Bass,
Stella M~t:ss, lots, Salem

Not only will your message appear in the Sunday TimesSentinel, but we'1 11 send her ·a card telling her to Jook for
your greeting on May 11th.

Oe.tr-Molher- 11'1 1~- ,s-lo-si\y-floil!
YO\/ m a VH~ sPfCIRI w11y love

Cla renc e V Proce of Portland,

E. Hysell to Roger Wi iam

(Mattins

7tc

NOTICE OF

•
'
L&gt;
_.,\&gt;
Lynne Murray Crow o llY--'rShuler Mary M.' hulet ~
•
'
acres, Letart.
•
c
benver G. Hysell,. Fran'
ll es

•

s, 6 , 7, 8 , 9

APPOINTMENT
Case No 21510
E state of HAROlD CAR
NAHAN , Deceased
Notice 1S hereby gtven !hat

~·'
Fred W. Cro~ r~~r
Karr Crow Fred ~
] /

WE'LL SEND MOM ASPECIAL CARD-

--I

&lt;5) 2 4

_-

~

misfortunate.

PAY:

Guard1an of
Lui a Wheaton Davts

··

Tell her she 1s great .with a Mother/s Day greeting ad 11
Sunday Times-Sentinel's special feature on May 11
She'll be pleased with your thol,lghtfulness and sur:
1
prised by such an original idea.
•

Plan Now For MemorW Day!

No matter what .,.ou ca n do, ~ ou
(an do a lot of g:ood for snmehoJy.

cents for good or better
lndtan penntes and 17 cents
for Ltberty (V) ntckels Also

Phone 843 2414 evenmgs

NEW Wooden uttlity
Phon e 992 2719

j

Busm·ess Servi·ces

use d tomat o s tak es 7.000
S27 5 \
APPROXIMATELY

'104.95&lt; KD)

TO MOTHER WITH LOVE

the diSadvantaged, the old, the
young, the Sick and the

SKILLS:

1964 and old er com s Will pa'tl
Sl 20 for halves , 60c for
Quarters. 24c for dtmes , 33

Property
1\
Tran.sJ.ers

For all the tears
She wiped away
For all the hurts
She made okay
For all the nights
You woke up scared
For the many tender
Moments you shared
For all the things you
Wanted to say
Say it now on
This Mother's Day

•

Whatever )UU u m !-. p&lt;~r{', '\ hem·vc r
you can spare them .

2 SI~_Ns Pomeroy
OF ,
;QUALm Motor Co.

4 29 6tc '

Meigs
.

IT WIU ALWAYS BE THERE

HOURS:

For Sale

'72.90&lt;KD)

Your own message to Mother on these pag4ta, .,
Mother's Day, May 11. We'll send Mom • apeclll
card too! It's a thoughtful and unique w-.y to
tell her how wonderful she is.

BUY WITH CARE

dcscripuon and age to do Important
work in the commumty. Helpmg

Auto Sales

TURF TRIM
MOWER

,.,------------------------------"'1"1

People of every SIZe, shape,

For Fast· Results Use Sentinel Classifieds ·

-~--

N

WANTED:

,

&lt;974 CHEVROLET IMP LA LA
$4195
naflon currency,
Activ11les '.of , Youth Tern· want
4·door. only 10,400 mites. fully equipped &lt;nclud&lt;ng atr,
Middleport , Pomeroy or
perance 'E~uC'atiQn Week,
Racme banks , lar ge ordark red ftnish A real cream puff
small btlls Also , Carson
Apr. 20-28 were reviewed
1974 CHEVELLE MALIBU CLASSIC
$3895
C1!y mml sliver dollars to
during
the Wednesday buy se ll , or trade U S
HT Cpe, 350 V a. automatic lrans .. power steering &amp;
ns or curr ency ,Ca ll 742
brakes, factory air, tmted g lass, wheel covers, AM FM
meeting of the ·Pomeroy coi
365 1. ut land l Rog er Wam s
CLOSE OUT on new Ztg Zag
rad1o, less than 13,000 miles, red v1nyl top, white ftnish,
Women 's Chrishan Tem- ley
sew tng
machtnes
For
a
beat.~ttful
lu
xury
m1d-s1
ze
car
.
5 1 6tp
sew 1ng stretch fabrtcs .
perance Union held at the
buttonholes 1 fancy designs ,
1972 DODGE DART 4 DOOR
$2345
Pomeroy Umted Methodist CASH pa1d for all makes and
etc
Patnt
sltghtly
models
of
mobile
homes
Local
owner
&amp;
low
mileage,
good
whtte
wall
tires,
blemtshed
Cho1ce
of
Church.
Phone area code 614 423 ·
carrymg case or sewmg
small V a engtne, power steenng, factory atr, gold
It was reported that posters
9531
stand S49 80 cash or terms
ftnt sh, blk vmyl top, vinyl interior trim, radio. A clean
4 13 tfc
avatlable Phone 992 7755
governor's
and
the
car
~-~ ~~-----=--12 l B tfc
proclamation had been placed JUNK autos complete and
del1vered
to
our
yard
We
K R I S 600 Ltnear 250 Watts
m the sc hools , churches, Ptck up auto bodtes and buy
Sl50 Ph one ( 614 ) 667 3759
busmess places and hbraries all kmds of scrap metals and
4 30 5t c
iron R lder 's Salvage , St
dunng the week to bring at- Rt
124, Rt 4, Pomeroy .
F I SH BAIT - ftSh batt We
tentiOn to the observance
Oh10 Ca ll 992 5468
haiJe our batt '" · ntght
10
11
tfc
Mrs . Allen Hampton ,
c rawl e rs ,
la rge
meal
worms, worms, red worms,
president, opened the meetmg
NOTICE OF
blood ba1t, lnd tan Joe 's
1969 CHEVROLET ' ~ ton
with prayer and a report on
APPOINTMENT
Sport and C B Shop, 308 Page
Notice
ptc~up,
6
cy
l
mder
stan
Case No 21502
St, Middleport Phone 992
efforts to stop the free ad- E!&gt;hte of Wllltam
dard,
$700
Also
1910
Ford
TO
GIVE
AWAY
Ma
l
e
Ernest
3509
Maverick
6
cylinder
Ge
rm
an
Shep
herd
,
I
yr
old,
vertismg of liquor was given Sellards. Deceased.
A 9 30tc
automaftc. $700 Gary R
good w1th ch tldren Free to
Not1 ce 1S heretjy gtven that
Members were urged to wr1te E dgar
Otll
Phone
98
5
4274
or
985
good
home
Phone
742
45&lt;12
Se llard s of Rou te I ,
3597
52 3tc
GRAVELY
tractor
With
their representahves 10 Dover OhtO 44622, has been - ----5 2 Jtc
mower and sulky Also, 1957
d
uly
appotnled
1\dmmtstr
ator
support of H. R 1659 ~n d H. R. of the Estate of 1 Wtl lt am Er CLELAND'S
Fo~d Rancher 0 truck , bOth
BLOOMERS'
tn good cond1t10n Phone 742
1660, both directed toward nest Sellards , deceased , late
Openmg May 5th Flowers , 1965 1 TON truck stake bed, 6
cy l , &lt;1 sp S550 Phone 949
6352
plants and produce
Fa1r
Metgs County, Oh1o
stoppmg the free advertismg . of Cred
211
5
5 2 3tc
prt
ces,
courteous
servtce
ttor s are ,.re qutred t o
5 4 3tc
The Union agreed to s,end a hie thetr cl atm'5 wtth sa1d
next door to Steamboat Inn
HOME grown tomato plants ,
Jim Cleland, Racme, Ohto
W1 lh1n tou r months
contribuhon to the U.S.O. to ftduc,ary
tmproved Mextcan and
Beneftl
Ohto
Valley 1965 FORO Fa trlane, good
Dated th 1S 23rd day of April
shape Phone 992 5612
Hetnz 1350
Across from
FeiiOWShtp
help provide ftwt JUices to 1915
54 Jtp
Mun1etpal Park tn Syracuse.
5 I 6tp
youth m the armed services.
Thomas Hayman
Manntng D Webst er
1972 CHEVELLE Malibu, 350
4 28 30tc
The Ocean Spray Co. supports
Probate J udg e QUICK r&gt;RINT by mad from
auto 2 dr hardtop. green. a
of
satd
Coun
ty
camera ready copy One
the Temperance Umon
1 condttton . $1,895 Call (304)
page S5 55 ftrst 100, $1 15
882 3148 after 4 p m
on
program.
tJ l 28 (5) 5 12. 3tc
each ad d tttOnal 100 Send
Sa turdays
check
to
LET
"Copy,
·"Promi\\1[ or'' Performance"
5 4 31c
TER SHOP PLU S, 72 W
was the d"',otioni!l theme used
Unton , Athens, Ohto Also . 1973 DATSUN 1200sertes, 2dr
PUBLIC NOTICE
10b p rmt1 ng
Btds Wt ll be r ece1ved at the
Phone 992 3'293 or see at 105
by Mrs. WiU~•L. Sm1th who
20" .3117 H P •
off1ce of Bernard v Ful tz ,
4 29 38tp
' "''I ' '"~ \ ·~
Unton Avenue
also read scripture from 2 Attorney. Pom eroy N attonal
4 29 61C
Peter J,il(lliil6ugh 14: She also Bank Pomeroy , Oh10, until BEAUTIFUl selec ltan of -- - ------ --------.Sa turday . May 10 1975, at
flow ers , po ts, bask e ts and 1960 FORD 11 ton 1n excellent
presen~ ~' er9gra'i'\ ; ;N,ew 10 00 O' Clock A M for t he sa le
condttiOn 6 QOod t tr es and
spray
s for Memortal Day
22"-31h HP
HorizOns ~ tii _,Literature ." of the Lu l a Wheaton Dav ts
nms v 8 standard, 3 sp
Cltff's Pla ce, N Secon d Sf,
property stluated tn the
SelfPropelled
R t 681 come to Darwtn a"nd
M 1ddleport
Membel'll!s¥1l I)!•AffioThiRe, 0 'uh1ncorporated Vtllage of
turn left , or phone 992 5570
5
4
tfc
Portland tn L ebanon Town
Lord" .
Mrs
Clyde Ship
4 30 6tc
- - - -- ----- 4-------- - - -·- , Me1gs County , OhtO The
&lt;, Winebren ner, Mrs. Jacob sa le of the property tS sub tect QUARTER horse at stud,
young son of "T HE OLE
POMEROY LANDI'vfARK;
the approval Of the Court.
Turner and Mrs. Lena to
MAN ," AAAT. a leadmg
9'
•
.:.Ja ck W Carsey, Mgr
Th e rtght ts res erved to reje c t
For Rent
Stre of race and show hor
McKinley of the Middleport any or all bidS
lltdll Phone 992. -2.181
.
ses Ran wtth tn 1001h of a
Umon were guests
second of AAA ttme before COUNTRY Mobtle Home
Edwtn Mcleod,

:J

L]d~Wmted

To Buy

OLD furnttur e, tee boxes ,
bra.;ts beds , or comp le te
~ouSehold s
Wr~te M
o
Miller , Rl 4. Pom eroy
Ohto ~all 992 7760
10 7 74

p¥()mOte levy

'Ibis is the

Wan~ed

I

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I

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10 - The Daily Sentinel, Mi~dJeport~Pomeroy, 0., Monday, May 5, 1975

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Miller opposes
abandonment of .
C&amp;O

•

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SIX NEW MEMBERS of Xi Gamma Mu Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, were
received into the chapter Sonday evening when the Exemplar Tea was held at the hom~ of
Becky Anderson. Conducting the ceremonies was the chapter president, Charlotte Hannmg.
From the left are Karen Stanley, Janet Pickens, Lmda Sauvage, Kathy King , W1hna Reece
and Connie Bailey.

toPomeroy

WASHlONGTON - In a
letter to th e Interstate
Commerce Commis sion ,
Representative Cla rence
Miller last week expressed his
opposition to the proposed
abandonment' of the 83 mile
C&amp;O line be twee n Loga nGallipolis-Pomeroy .
The C&amp;o Railway Company
ha s petitioned the ICC [or
permission to abandon the line
and end service to th e
Hocking, Vinton, Gallia and
Meigs County area.
Miller pointed out in · his
letter to ICC Chai rm an
George Stafford th at th e
combined e[[ect of the C&amp;o
action and that proposed by
the Preliminary Rail System
Plan (under the Regional Rail
Re organiza tion Act ) would
virtuall y isolate the four
county region in terms of
railway service and would·
deal a severe blow to the
economic outlook of the area.

Hospital News

CambOdian blood flows
'

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NEW YORK (UP!) - Time
and Newsweek !llllgazines re·
port · massive executions of
army and government of.
ficials in Cambodia by the
victorious Khmer Rouge
rebels. Time says President
Ford revealed the bloodbath
to Republican congressmen
last week.
Time, in this week's
editions, said Ford told the
Republican congressman 80
high ...anking officers of the
defeated Cambodian army

Injury clajmed
in collision
SYRACUSE . - Syracuse
Police Olief Milton Varian
investigated a two-car accident Saturday at 6:15 p.m.
on Third S!. in ,front of the
·
Syracuse ·Drive-In :
James H. Smitll, Columbus,
traveling east, was stopped in
line of traffic in front of the
drive-in when a car driven by
Mark A. Clark, Pomeroy,
traveling in the same direction failed to stop and struck
the Smith car in the rear.
A passenger in the Smith
car, Faye Smith, claimed
injuries but was not immediately treated. Clark was
cited to Mayor Herman
London's court on a charge of
failure to stop within assured
clear distance. There was
light damage to the Clark car
and medium to the Smith
vehicle.

News •. in Briefs

LAYOFFS DUE
SAN FRANCISCO (UP!) Hospital unions say as many
as 3,000 employes could be laid
off this week if aneslhe lists
continue their strike over
soar in g malpractice insurance rates. Protesting
doctors held firm in refusing
to handl e nonemergency
medical cases.

SPRING
TIME

You1l find
a grfUlt
selection of
fine
furniture,
floor ·
covenngs
and

aTJJ'Jli.a!nCf~S

at

the lowest.
possible
prices. Free
delivery,
•

convenzent

when you
need it.
Serving you ·
has been our
business

since 1952.

BAKER

r

have he en killed.
· "They killed the wives too ,"
Times quotes F.ord as saying.
"They said the wives were
just the same as their
husbands. this is a horrible
thing to report to you, but we
are certain that our sources
are accurate."
Time quoted a congressman
at the meeting as saying
"there was a gasp arund the
table ."
The maglll'ine also said

Veterans Memorial Hospital
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS
- Dalton Grover, Pomeroy;
. (Continued from page I)
Bessie Allis, Pomeroy; Ruth
Thornton,
Long Bottom ;
Willey, a Jaycees programming vice-president and acWilliam
Martin,
Shade ; John
countant with the Marathon Oil Co. at Findlay, defeated John
Four persons. thrown about Mazor of Mayfield Heights, current Jaycees administrative Leber, Ironton; Esta Roberts,
inside their car, had apparent vice president, by a 282-272 vote. Willey succeeds Wendell E. · Pomeroy ; Judith Bacon ,
minor, injuries in a traffic Richardson of Perrysburg. Elected programming vice Middleport.
SATURDAY DISCHARGES
accident at 12:15 p.m. Sunday presidents were Gary L. Lawson of West Milton, Leslie
Drexel Lambert, Adrienne
on Rt. 7 at the junction to Rt. Schiefer of Bucyrus and Enos L. Singer of Marietta. Paul L.
French,
Harold Stobart,
Fettrow of London was elected administrative vice president.
143 in Meigs County.
Dianna
White,
Ronald Fraley,
According to the Gallia IJNVILLE, OHIO- PARKERSBURG, W. Va., won the Glennie Little.
· Meigs Post State Highway
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS Patrol, they were injured Big Ten Motocross competition by scoring 101 points to 96 .for
Milhoan, Shade ; Okle M. Steele
Wayne
when the right front tire failed ·Honda Hills and 49 by Portsmouth in the three-team com·
Joseph
Quivey,
Pomeroy ;
on a car operated by J immy petition here Son day. Honda Hills and Parkersburg were tied
Alice Dodson, Long Bottom;
G. King , 41, Rt. I, Minersville. 47-47 at halftime, with Portsmouth trailing at 29 points.
John
McCurray, Jr., Mason; died on Sunday
First place money winners in the semipro competition
Injured were Mary King, 40;
Paul Stewart, West ColumTimothy Kin g, age nine; were Mike Agin of Zanesville in the 125 cc class, Bill Leake of bia ; Timothy Lawrence,
PT. PLEASANT - Okle M.
Bruce Hysell , age 12, and Columbus in the 250 cc class and Scott Sampson of Portsmouth
Steele,
61, of Fraziers Bottom,
Pamela Lawrence, both
Norma Hysell, age six, all in the open class.
was dead on arrival Sunday at
Minersville; Al'ma Pooler,
pasSe ngers. No one was
Pleasant Valley HospitaL
WASHINGTON - THE FIRST INCOME TAX rebate Pomeroy ; Elmer Brinker, Funeral services will be held
hospitalized.
New Haven; James Partlow,
Timothy E. Fife, 17, Rt. l, checks will he mailed this Thursday. The pdministration hopes
Wednesday at 2 p.m. from the
Pomeroy.
Ches hire, was injured in a they will lure tight-fisted consumers into the marketplace once
Everg~een Church of Christ
SUNDAY DISCHARGES single car accident at 12: 15 again and help fight the recession .
with
Billy Steele officiating.
The checks will be between $100 ;md $200 'for most tax· Robert Williams , Vera Burial will follow in the
p.m. Saturday on SR 775, three
Stewart, Ricky Smith.
tenths of a mile south of Rt. payers. In the first week, the Treasury Department's regional
Evergreen Church Cemetery.
141. The patrol said Fife lost offices plan to send out $1.7 billion in 13.7 million green checks.
Pleasant Valley Discharges Visitation hours will be at the
control of his car wh ich ran off The first recipients will he those who filed 1974 federal tax
Mrs . Kenneth 'furley , Stevens Funeral Home after 2
the highway stri king a tree . returns early . Those who mailed returns in January should get Racine; Jan McGuire, North- p.m. Tuesday. The body will
Linda C. Davis, 18, Rodney, rebates in the next week or so.
up ; Mrs. J ames Hurlow, be taken to the church one
Those who filed aroWJd the April 15 deadline will not get Leon; Mrs. Vir gil Carl, hour before the services.
was charged with driving left
of center following a tra ffic their checks until June or early July. A total of 66.8 million Pomeroy; Bess Starc her,
She is survived by four sons
accident at 6:15 a.m. Sunday Americans are eJ!'pected to receive $8.1 billion in rebates.
Gallipolis; Mrs. Leona Pritt, and four ·daughters , one
on·u. S. Rt. 35, one mile east of
Vinton; Raymond Chapman, brother and four sisters , inMOBILE, ALA. - AMERICA'S JUNIOR MISS Pageant Oallipolis Ferry; Roger cluding Mrs: Mary Spencer of
SR 588. The patrol said Davis
apparently fell asleep at the lacks the word "beauty" in its title for a reason. It's no beauty Blankenship, Point Pleasant ; Pomeroy .
wheel and her car wen t left of contest, officials say, and young women competing for the title Mabel Marsh, Point Pleasant ;
center, strikin g an auto agree. Officials ·of the pageant, to be televi.s~ nationally Pamela Thomas, Letart; Mrs . 'Mrs. · Michael Yeagle, son ,
operated by Walter R. Simp- tonight, say they look for outstandmg qualities m young Brady Hu ghes and son, Minford.
son, 27, Rt. 4, Oak Hill.
American females, not beauty. .
.
Ashton; Mrs. Robert Glenn
Saturday _ -Mr. and Mrs.
"lt'snotabeautycontest,"sa1dAlaba[lla'sentry
,
D1ane
~
and
son,
Frazers
Bottom;
Willi
am
Hu ghes · Jr .--···
' A de~r was killed in an
accident Sunday on Rt. 7, Eddins, 17. "You're b":'"d on poise and appearance ~d your Lewis Taylor, Gallipolis; Mrs. daughter, Oak Hill . 'Mr. and
seven tenths miles south of alertness and JUS! bemg yourseU, r~.ally, and _that s. w~~t Elsie Rardin, Point Pleasant; Mrs . Terry Osborne, son,
Gallia County Road 2. The makes .'t not~ M1s~ Amenc~ conU:st, MISs Eddms _sal~- It Anita Birchfield, Gallipolis Jackson . Mr. and Mrs. Frarik
animal ran into the path of a makes 11a Junior miSS - the !deal high school seruor g~rl.
Ferry ; Mrs. Arthur qe lwicks, Swanson, Jr., son, Cheshire.
car operated by Ronald K.
DRIVER CITED
Point Pleasant; Waldo Black,
Sunday _ Mr . and Mrs.
White, 30, of Thurman.
Areas
cleaned
Fraziers
Bottom
;
Louella
David
Gillispie, daughter ,
A car was heavily damaged
Stewart,
Lakin;
Mrs.
James
New
Haven.
Mr. and Mrs.
and its driver was cited to
k
up
by
cub
pac
Smith
,
Point
Pleasant;
Paul
Roger
E.
Jackson,
daughter ,
mayor 's court as the result of
an accident on Lasley St., in
Middleport Cub Scout Pack Voss, Pomeroy; Mrs. George Gallipolis, and Mr. and Mrs.
Pomeroy at I:15 a.m. Sunday. 245 Saturday , in observance of Hall , Cheshire ; Laretta Greg Pauley, son, Gallipolis.
Police said . a car driven by " Ke ep America Beautiful Haynor , Gallipolis: Ray Flint
Larry Phillips, Pomer oy, Day," cleaned up around the II , Henderson; Steve Mctraveling northeast on Brick C&amp;O Depot in Middleport and Clung , Ravenswood ; Mrs.
. St., attempted a right turn the roadside park next to the Michael Lewis, Ravenswood;
on to Lasley. The car went pos t office before being rained Albert Rose , Point Pleasant
and Charles Meadows,
over a curb _and struck a out.
utili ty pole . Phillips was tiled
Participating were Eddie Ashton.
for reckless opera tion.
Miller, Howard Jeffers, Brent
Holzer Medical Center
George, Brian George, Allen
. SING PLANNED
(Births)
There will be a hymh sing Spaulding, Ronni e Denny, Friday - Mr. and Mrs.
Saturday, May '10 at 7:30p.m. J ohn Bacon III, Chris Bur- Ken neth Black, son, New
at the Hazel Commu nity dette, Jirruny Farley, Nick Haven. Mr. and Mrs. Ivan
Church petween Portland and Bush, Keith Scott, Dann y Potter, son, Oak Hill ..Mr. and
Long Bottom. Dan Hayman Thomas, Charles Davis,
and the Hymntimers will Marshall Spaulding, and Jack
provide specia l singin g. Bacon cubmaster.
Everyone
is welcome .
•
BALL MEETING SET

Tire fails,
four hurt

refugees have reported execu·. _[llOnks were reportedly shot to
tlons of 100 wealthy or death on the steps of a pagoda
religiouS figure, and thatfour when they krefusetdes10 198Uve.S.
Newswee quo
·8
·
official as saying "thousandl
Two collisions
have already. been execuled•" ·
and the figure could rise to
of minor kind
''tens of thousands of Cam·
bodians loyal to the Lon No!
Meigs County Sheriff Robert
C. Hartenbach's Dept. in· regime."
vestigated two minor ac- The magazine said the In·
formation comes from radio
cidents Saturday.
At 7 p.m. in Olive Twp., on a Intercepts of Khmer Rouge
communications by U.S. Intel·
private road Donnie Lee
GQggs, 17, Coolville, and Karl ligence.
The Intercepts reportedly
W. Heeks, 19, Athens, collided
Included
orders for the blood·
due to muddy road conditions.
bath
to
begtn,
and field radio
There was minor damage. No
reports saying the Initial
citation was issued.
round
of executions had been
At 10:30 p.m. in Orange
carried
out .
Twp. on the parking lot ·at
am
not speculating,"
"I
Eastern High School Stephen
E. Follrod, 18, Pomeroy, Newsweek quotes one ofliclal.
backing, struck a car driven "I am not dealing in third·
by James Way Hill, 27, Woods·. hand reports. I am telling you
field, Ohio. There was minor what Is being said by the
da 1ge. No citation was Cambodians themselves in
their own communications ."
issued.

(HWIJ

s

300
500
1,000
2,500"
5,000

Jeffers fund at $1739.20
A public fund drive for Ryan is the son of Mr. and
three-year-old Ryan ?._:'ott Mrs . David Jeffers, Route I,
Jeffers, injured in a power Pomeroy. Mr . Jeffers is
mower accident r ecently, employed by the Pomeroy
reached $1739.20 jVlonday Police Department which has
morning.
no hospitalization insurance.
Relatives reported Saturday
.Latest contributors to the
surgical procedures to graft fund are Mr. and Mrs. Larry
skin onto· the child's injured Hudson, Sam Logan, Helen
left foot got underway Lyons, Pete Simpson, Mr. and
Saturday at St. Mary's · Mrs. Alvin Haggy, Bob and
Hospital in Huntington, W. Va. Donna Byer, Mr. and Mrs.
Reino Lind, Mr . and Mrs.
Clarence Pyatt, Mildred L.
Smith, Carlotta Skiles, Beulah
Hayes and Early Roush.
Donations may be sent to
Pri .. Sal. and Sunday
Mrs. Dori nda Nardei at
MY 1\jAME
Pomeroy village hall or
IS NOBODY
dropped off at vi lla ge halt
(Technicolorl
Starring
Henry FOnda
LOCAL TEMPS
Terence Hill
· The
temperat11,re
in
Rated "PG"
downtown Pomeroy al ll a.m .
Cotorcartoon
Monday 'was 62 degrees under
Show starts at7 : oo p.m.
sunny skies.

MEIGS THEATRE

Usual
fee
$ 3.00

5.00
10.00
25.00
5000

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VOL. XXVII

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•Handbags
I

•Hosiery
•Candy
•Cards
•Gift Wrap
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MELODY BURNEM, 8, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Lee Burnem, near Salem Center, a third grader at the
Salem Center Elementary School, is county winner in
iiterature, pr~ dlvjslon ..

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SHOP FRIDAY AND
SATURDAY 9:30 TO SPM

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
AMY YOUNG, 6, DAUGHTER of Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Young, Route 1 Reedsville, a first grader at the
Riverview Elementary School, is county winner in visual
arta. primary division.

during May only

$2.00
2.00
2.00
2.00
2.00

YOU

SAVE
$ 1.00
3.00
8.00
23.00
48 .00 ·

Wherever you tr11vel ... or
if you keep money at home·
or at work . .• the best way .
to protect your money is to Use
First National City Travelers Chet;:ks,

·140,000.00 Maximum Insurance
for Each Depositor

.

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1,

toward meeting the problems
cited by President Ford as
reasons for his veto," said
Sen. Henry Jackson, D-Wash.
"! see no reason why. the
President should not sign (the
bill) ·.when it reaches his
desk."
But the President expressed
his displeasure with many of
its provisions as late as last
month.
If Ford again vetoes the bill,
he would face a stiff congressional · test to sustain the action. The original versions this
year passed the Senate by an

Refugee notes:

world prf!blem

EL TORO MCAS, Calif.
(UP!) - Former South
· Vietnamese Prennier Nguyen
Cao Ky arrived in the United
States as just one more
refugee aboard a military
cargo plane - then immediately pledged to assume
leadership of Vietnamese
evacuees in the country.
He also said le~ping from
the war zone to the United
States was " quite a difference" and predicted fellow
Vietnamese refngees ~ould
have a difficult time adjusting
to life in this country.
Ky, wearing a white
jumpsuit and a purple silk
scarf, stepped off the jet
Monday night and sp_ent 15
minutes talking with reporters
before entering a room to have
his papers checked and his
duffle bag searched.
The former premier, first of
the 68 refugees to leave the
Cl41, was escorted by seven
military police officers. Other
refugees filed past him and
quietly walked down the
runway, virtually unnoticed.

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84-13 vote and the House by a
333-00 vote, both margins well
over the two-thirds thatwould
he necessary to override a
veto ..
Environmentalists have
tried, so far unsuccessfully, to
ga in enactment of a federal
surface mining law for · five
years.
Strip mining is a method by
which topSQjJ.i.o. s,&lt;;ra ped away
by bulldozers; allowing easy
extraction of the mineral by
giant shovels. ·
Ford said he pocket vetoed
the last bill because it would
cut domestic coal production
and would be inflationary.
· The bill sets minimum
federal standards for the
extraction of surface-mined
coal as well as criteria for
reclaiming the land to its
approximate original contour.

:

CAMP PENDLETON, Calif.
'
- Vietnamese
r-ef-ugees;under· the directi on of
'
.
"mayor"
Khuong Huu D1eu
and with the blessing of the
U.S. military, are setting up
On . r~ c ommendatio n of and public transportation,
their dwn "mini-government" Police Ch ief Jed Webster , (streets), $10,977.
witl]in. the military command Henry Werry was promoted · Gary· Ellis asked council if
at thi~ Marine base.
from sergeant to captain in he could place a trailer on
Diep,
educated
a t the Pomeroy Police Depart- Wehe Terrace . He said he had
Massac husetts Institute of men! by Pomeroy council purchased two Jots there, Eltis
Techriology and former Mond ay night. The new also said a sewer line in the
chaifillan of the Vietnamese ca ptain has been with the area is broken and needed to
Agricultural D~velopment department 23 years.
,be repaired. The sewer line
Bank; said at a news conWerry, a full time employe will be repaired he was told .
Cou ncil
approved . a
ference Monday he and two of the Pomeroy Motor Comother refugees would se t up a pany, takes on duties as a resolution to cooperate with
nucleus of ahout 20 persons Pomeroy policeman every the. Ohio Director of Transwhowould coordinate the care eveni ng , working an eig ht porta tion to conduct a
of the evacuees.
hour shift. His duties are the pavement marking demonHe said this would iNchide same as any other officer of stration program.
The
the "huts and bolts sort of the force. The promotion federally funded project by
thing'! such as calling for a apparently carries no added the state will upgrade center
doctor. when needed, getting responsibility or a~thority .
lines, Jane lines or edge lines
families together and anIn other business, Webster on all highways or streets
nouncing new arrivals on the said there no longer is a other than interstate.
loudspeaker. A total of 16,063 janitor at city hall and asked
Don McKenzie, street
refugees had been processed council for permission to ask superi ntend ent, presented his
through the camp by Monday the CAP if a person may be monthly repor t listing all that
night, with 5,819 processed obtained to do the work. had been done during April
out. Some 3,373 persons . Council agreed.
and its cost.
REFUGE ES
FROM arrived at the camp Monday,
Cou ncil approved thr ee
Attending were Mayor Dale
Vietnam and Cambodia are bringing the total at that time necessary readings to an Smith, Ralph Werry, Louis
trying to adjust to their new to !0,5b4.
ordinance for the issuance of Osborne·, Harry Davis, Phil
lives in America, and' the
renewal notes in the principal - Globokar. William Snouffer
'
government is trying to give
amount of $300,000 . by the and Joh n Manley, coonassurances the refugees won't
village of Pomeroy in an- cilmen ; Mrs. Walton, Phyllis
disrupt
the
lives' of
tr eas urer ,
ticipatfon of the issuance of Hennessy,
Americans.
bonds for ,the purpose of McKenzie, Webster and
Refugees settled into their
making improvements to the Werry.
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American camps Monday,
The Meigs County Sheriff's· water works.
Jane Walton, clerl;, ineven selling up their own Department investigated a
camp government at Camp single ·c ar accident Monday at formed council that the village
Pendleton, Calif, and Fort 10:30 p.m. on County Road will receive from revenue
Chaffee, Ark., including a One in: Columbia Township, sharing from July 1975 to July
Cloudy toriight and Wed"mayor" or act as spokes- three tenths of a mile north of 1976 a total of $15,977. Council
nesd
ay, chance of showers
voted
to
spend
the
money
as
man .
SR 143.' .
W
ednesday;
little change in
follows
:
recreation
$2,000,
Dean L. Brown, coordinator
Mart0 w. Davis, 17,_Mictof the refugee p(ogram, sent dleport1 was !raveling north public sa fety (cruiser) $3,000, temperature. Lows tonight 50
to 55, highs Wednesday in
telegram's t~ ·.the 50 governors when h~ lost control in a curve
lower
70s.
saying the refugees will he going. 4qwn . hill. Th:e · auto
resettled so as not to become struck hbridge on the right
a burden on any community. and lan~ed in a ditch . He then·
SPORTS TODAY
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
He said the United States struck a mailbox owned by
Thursday . through
BASE6ALL
"A"
will have to absorb or dive{! to Walter Robb, Rt. 3, Pomeroy,
Saturday, considerable
other countries about 125,000 crossed the road, went off,on Tournament, Miller at
cloudlaeas with a chance of
South Vietnamese.
the left \hrough a fence across South ern; ." AA"
sbowefl
or thundershowers
The Pentagon said more a
before commg to a To11rnament, Meigs at
day.
Hlghs will be in
each
than 11.000 refugees already stop on
other side.
Ironton; Eastern at
the upper qls to ibe middle
haq been to new homes in the
Th1!ref·was meditim damage. Symmes Valley.
United States, and another
70s. Lows will "" In the
dri~•r was iwt injured. No
•
upper 40s to the midd}e 50s.
11,000 or so. ':'ere still ut.
issuPcl .

.

JAYNE LEE HOEFUCH, 10, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Bob Hoeflich, Pomeroy, a sixth grader at BradburY
School, is a dual county winner in Uterature and original
music, Intermediate division .

Lewis heads Med group
GANK

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CHARLES:rON, ' W. Va : W.Va., staff. He assumed his
(UPI) - Charles R. Lewis, a new duties this month, follow·
natlv~ of Middleport, Ohio, ing a near two-year tenure as
has ·been named new . execlitive director of the West
executive secretary o1 the Virginia Medical Institute.
West VIrginia, State Medical . Lewis earUer served briefly ~
Assoclallon to succeed as executive director of the
·;,. Willlam H. Lively, who re- West VIrginia Railroad
Blgned last March.
Association. For ~ven years,
Anewsman In West VIrginia he was executive secretary of
for 17 years, Lewis will bead the West Virginia Deparbnent
the .ilrglllllJation's Charleston, of Welfare.
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/:News. . .in Briefsl

1
:

Werry promoted
to captain rank

process centers.

'

A FULL
SERVICE

PRICE 15'

.
·By United Press International
CINCINNATI - THE I.,EVY QUINTUPLETS are two
weeks old today and doctors at General Hospital say all five
are doing fine. The three gir Is and two boys were born April 22
to Mr. and Mrs. Mark Levy - the couple's first children.
Mrs. Pamela Levy, 28, still in the hospital recovering from
the caeserean section childbirth, has not yet talked with news
Certain lands could be reporters, but hospital officials said she nnight hold a news
designated unsuitable for any conference later this week. Three of the infants remained in
strip mining.
incubators Monday. However, doctors said there's a chance
The compromise bill rejects some of the babies and Mrs. Levy will he allowed to go home
administration complaints next week .
against a ban on strip mining
in national forests. It also
XENIA, OHIO - THE EDITOR OF· THE Xenia Daily
retains language requiring the Gazette figures his Pulitzer Prize-winning newspaper staff
written consent of surface provided a "symbol of hope" after a savage tornado hit a year
0 wners before any such ago. The paper's staff won the Pulitzer Prize Monday for
mining, also opposed by the general local reporting-coverage of a tornado that killed 32
administration.
persons and flattened this southwestern Ohio community on
Modifications from the April 3, 1974.
vetoed bill include provisions
"lt .was a hard way to win a Pulitzer Prize," said editor
on citizen suits, hydrological Jack Jordan. "No Pulitzer could make me go through it again.
disturbances, impoundments,
" But," added Jordan, 53, editor since 1954, "we'll take it.
stream siltation, a nnined area It's a great honor for us." The paper had to publish from a
reclamation fund and alluvial nearby Middletown, Ohio, newspaper plant for a week after
valley floors of the West.
the tornado, but not a day of publication was missed. •
The conferees went along
with the administration and
THE NEW VIET CONG RULERS OF SOUTH VIETNAM
eliminated a Senate-passed have freed political prisoners from "tiger cages" on Con Son
provision for special unem- Island in the South China Sea, according to Commurust
ployment rights for persons reports. The Yugoslav news agency Tanjug, in a dispatch from
adversely affected by the bill. Hanoi, said th~ new regime released all political prisoners held
without trial on the island and was organizing a ceremonial
welcome for them in Saigon.
Tanjug did not comment on the condition of the prisoners
but said inmates freed previously from Con Son were often
unable to walk erect because of muscles crippled by lack of
use. The Yugoslav news agency said the prisoners had been
kept in cramped "tiger cages" on Con Son, an island 50 miles
· off the southern coast of South Vietnam.

Auto jumps

" A suilable gift lor the
mother who bas everything
would be ii burlgar alarm."

THE FARMERS ·BANK
AND SAVINGS
co~Pomerov. Ohio ·

WASIDNGTON (UP!) - A
strip mining bill'similar to one
vetoed by President For(j_ in
· December is on its way to his
desk again -but this time a
veto could provoke a congres• sional override.
The compromise legislation ,
which supporters say takes
care of some of Ford's earlier
objections, .received final approval in the Senate Monday
and is expected to be sent to
Ford by the House later this
week.
"The modifications made by
the conferees go a long way

a

MAIN STORE, ANNEX AND
WAREHOUSE OPEN WEEKDAYS
9:30 TO 5 PM

May
fee

NO. 16

Strip bill veto faces
override in Congress

Pomeroy.Elementary School, is county winner in visual
arts, intermediate division.

Remember Mother's Day·
Is Next Sunday, May 11

enttne
·::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::::.:·:·: ·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::·:::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~::::~:::~::::

Mrs. W. H. Perrin, Pomeroy, a sixth grader at the

•Dresses
•Coats
•Lingerie
•Sportswear ...
•Jewelry

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BETH PERRIN, 12, DAUGHTER of the Rev. and

.

welders of Meigs High School designed and constructed it
from the ground ·up. It will hold approximately 42 bikes.
Seated from left to right are Chris Neece, Mike Gilmore,
Roger Nelson and Bill Milier, instructor, and Don Hysell and
Bryan Shank.

Too far behind, some members of Ullman 's Ways and
Means Committee felt. They
considered the tax bill too
watered down for its original
purpose -savin g a con,
siderable amount of gasoline
and other fuels.
The committee ha s approved in tentative form the
biggest issues. dt hopes to
fin ish in the next day or two

with the remaining issues specific quotas on imports, a
surtax on industrial use of
fuels; a windfall profits tax on
oil companies and credits for
solar energy use.
The committee got over one
big hurdle Monday. It · approyed, 21 to 13, a proposal by
Rep. Joe Waggonner Jr., DLa., to tax cars based.on .how
many miles they get to the
gallon of gasoline.
The tax would fall on
manufacturers
whose
domestically produced fleet of
autos do not average 18 miles
to the gallon or better in 1978
models, 19 or better in 1979
models and 20 or better in 1980
(Continued on page 10)

Devoted 1'o 1'he Interests of The Meigs-Mason Area
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
TUESDAY, MAY 6, 1975

•. · \to!

The most extensive refund 'service in the travelers check
business. They're honored world-wide in millions of places.
Best time to buy them is during May. Offer ends May 31st.

" FRIEN'DLY
ON ES".
!SHE'LL LOVE YOU FOR
IT 365 DAYS A YEAR).

-.

at y

If they're·lost or stolen you can get an on-the-spot refund
at over 35,000 refund points in the U.S. and overseas.

A suitable gift for almost
any Mother on Her Da y is a
p er so na.lity
de sig ned
K ITCH~N . Come in and
talk it oVer with one of. th e

us.' ~

•

Up to $5000 worth of
First National City
Travelers 'Checks
for a fee of just $2

Amount of
Travelers
Checks

By WILLIAM E. CLAYTON
WASHINGTON ( UP!) Rep . AI Ullman, D-Ore .,
locked over the energy tax bili
-a gaspline tax, an auto fuel
efficiency tax, a new way to
control · iniports - and said
"the big things are behind

SITTING ON THE JOB - After the work is finished it's
time to take a rest. So what better place than on the fWshed
product? This product is. a bicycJe ·rack for the Middleport
Municipal Park. The steel for the rack was furnished through
the Middleport Recreation Cornmjssion_ and these senior

if your trip is months away
buy from us in May and save up to $48!

and sign up for little league,
pee . wee league , and pony
league. Each child must he
accompanied by an adult.

••

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Your Mother's Day Gift HfUld,quarters

Energy hill has
tough new taxes

I "· ,-,

. The ~our pupils below have been judged Meigs County
wmners m the annual cultural arts contest sponsored by the
Meigs County Parent-Teachers Association.
Cultural areas included in the contest are visual arts
literature and original music. Winners were selected in each
school in the primary division, grades one through three. and
iniermediaie division, grades four through six, and school
w!Mers competed in county-wide competition.
The work of the four county winners will now be placed in
district competition, and the winners there will be announced
Saturday at the district PTA meeling in Zaleski. District
winners go into state competition . The four county winners are
pictured.

ELBERfELDS IN POMEROY

unusual
Offer
Even

There will be a baseball
meeting Wednesday, May 7, at
6:30 p.m. at the Racine Jr.
High School to elect officers

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Arts Winne~s
are selected

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Weather ·

.·.

WASHINGTON - AMERICA'S WORLDWIDE network of
nnilitary bases is getting smaller. The Greeks on one side of the
world and the Thais on the other are giving the United States
itli walking papers. The governments of Thailand and the
United States announced jointly Monday more than onequarter of the remaining u. s. forces in· Tbeiland woul&lt;l he
removed by June, dropping the total to below 19,500.
Some Thai officials have insisted ,all the Americans must
go within a year, but U. S. officials hope to keep about 10,000
airmen there. Bas~s in many other parts of the world could be
closed or cut back in the coming months.
The U. S. Military is far from closing up shop abroad. It
still has about 2,000 installations in 33 foreign countries. Most
are single buildings - radar sites or navigational aides - but
about-340 are rated as major ·bases.
WASHINGTON - EVERYONE STILL CALLED HIM
"Mr. Chail'IIlan," but the Wilbur Mills who returned to
Congress Monday was not the same man who left in disgrace
five months ago. Calm, steady, almost serene, Millil preached
the virtues of abstinence and said he now realized he was never
the "man of steel" he once thought he was.
The man once regarded as the most powerful in the House
said he now welcomed the idea of being No.2 on the Ways and
Means Comrilittee he once headed, because he would no longer
have to bear the heavy burdens that led him to alcoholism and
an embarrassing scandal involving a stripper friend.
HAVANA - SEN. GEORGE McGOVERN toured Havana
today, dining on black beans and riee at an intellectual
hangout and calling for an end to the U. S. trade boycott
against Cuba. The South Dakota Delllocrat arrived in HaVIIfUl
Mooday evening on a threCo(Jay fact-finding visit and drove
right from the airport to a lecture on farni reform.
"I have no powers to lift the embargo, but open trade ~ in
the interest of both countries, " McGovern said on arrival at
Havana's Jose Marti Airport. Leier in the evening, he dined
with a group of Cuban intellectuals at La Bodeglta del M!!&lt;lio -a quaint restaurant in the old section ofHAVANA.
Poet Nicolas GuiUen, who chatted with McGovern over a
typical Cuban meal of black beans, ric_t, lried bananas and
pork, said he . liked the senator's "(foetic sense of life."
McGovern set out today to visit a mental hospital, a school, a ·
museum and a nightclub in Havana. But he has yet to announce a meeting with Cuban Premier Fidel Castro.

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School.choir sings Friday
RACINE ~ The Southern
High School choir will present
"Swing into Spring" Friday,
May 9 at Southern High School
gym.
The opening number will be
a boys' chorus line singing and
dancing to "Put On A Happy

Face". There will be Qther ·
dance lines, vocal solos, duets
and skits. Admission is $1.25
for adults !1011' 75 cents for
students. Curlaln' time Is 8
p.m. Tile prognm II under the
directiOn ,of Mrs. Lee Lee. ·
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