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B- The Daily Senti nel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 6 .. March 18, 19i4

Western· coal coming·east
sc1 id coal from the far weSt
stales contains up to 10 times
more mtlistures. In the drying

WASHINGTON t UP() - Big at America n ElectriC Power
power companies are making a en. plan ts.
major shift in their capital outAEP said its plants will be
lays from Appalachian to consuming 2U million tons of
Western enal, according to a cuctl from ·West ern ~ta t f' s by
staff consultant to the House 1980, Willi;uns related .
subcommittee on mines .. and

mining.
Norman Williams, in testimony b the House Committee
on Interior and Insular Affairs,
said the shift could be dramatized by the use of Western coal

process. he add&lt;'&lt;i, the sulfur.
rais~d

wou ld have to be mined, shipped and burned from the west
to produce the same amoun t of

heat value of a smaller amount
of Appalachian coal.
Some of the fa ctors encourwere saf er surface mining
methods, smaller labor for ces
needed and a superior railway

makes it
ever made
·-

·-

Market Report
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
March 16, 1974
SALES REPORT OF
Ohio Valley Livestock Co.
STOCKER CATTLE
. STEERS- 250 to 300 lbs . 47.50
to 49.75; 300 to 400lbs. 42.50 to
46; 400 to 500 lbs. 38 to 44; !iOO to
600 lbs. 35.50 to 43.75; 600 to 700
lbs. 32.50 to 40 ; 700 lbs. and
Over 35 to 40.25.
HEIFER CA LVES - 250 to
300 lbs. 50 to 58.75; 300 to 400
lbs. 46 to 50; 400 to 500 lbs. 42.50
to 45 ; 500 to 600 lbs. 40 to 46; 600
to 700 lbs. 37 to 42; 700 lbs. and
Over 35.50 to 41.
STOCK COWS &amp; BULLS IBy
The Head 1-Stock Cows 300 to
350; Stock Cows and Calves 385
to 505 ; Stock Bulls 275 to 400;
Baby Calves 40 to 105; (By The
Pound) - Canners &amp; Cutlers
Cows 25.50 to 33 ; Holstein Cows
33.50 to 35.85; Commer~i a l
Bulls ( 1,000 lbs. and Over) 34.50
to 41.
LAMBS- Tops 90 lbs. to 110
34 .50 to 39; Seconds 75 lbs. to 80
30 to 34; Lights 40 lbs. to 65 28 to
34; Stock Ewes By the Head 10
to 22.50.
VEAL CALVES - Tops 220
lbs. to 250 69.50 to 73.75;
Medium 200 lbs. to 300 5o to
64.75; Culls 55 Down .
SHOATS - 18 to 37.

(Only 2 feet wide)
1~' ' ''11

''

w"~ •e

1avt 1100 1 ~ "a
y o u r ~ ··

the .. ~~ ~

r~ .

J nd

!omt - ~nyw ~rr

1 11 aoeuua te

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P 'Oiffi()"I J oll'd &gt;f nt oni ; Spee&lt;l
Wnhe r ' tun• la mol l &lt;o /t IGaoH

31 fl e1ula r olld Oeloc ~ l • ~~~ '" I '

• f lowon1 '""at on Df) e&lt; Ira...-!
r l &lt;&gt; lh~s !IIMh on~ 110•~· • P o r
m .. ro en l P o&amp;H C or ~ on W os h~r

and D'Y"'

.

---_-_--..-·---__ II..:claire'

........................
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...._. . ... .... . . ............. ..... , .....-·
S · Yu.r N&amp;tioon•ido! Protedioo\ Ptlo.n
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.&amp; ~ - ~.-. ... a.-.~

BAKER FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

-

Banker Gunna r Kronholm
has delivered a ransom to the
kidnapers of his wife, Eunice , a

fam ily spokesman sa id early
today , and the kidnapers have
promised they wi ll let him
know later today where his
wi fe can be found .
The Rev . Bruce F lemi ng,
Kronholm's brother-in-law and

system.

1

LINO LAKES, Minn. I UPII

TTENTION

paotor of the Beth lehem
Bap tist Chu rch in Minneapolis,
said money had been deli vered
"as per the kidnapers instruction and that word is
supposed lo be received some
time this morning where Mrs.

Kronholm can be found."
Fleming refused to say how
much ransom was paid or

give any details on how the
money was delivered.
Earlier, the FBI annou nced

that the ca r belonging to Mrs.
Kronholm was found in the
Minnea polis suburb of Edin a.
Mrs. Kronholm, 46, disa p·

NITY

died Saturday
Vance Imboden, 67, Miner sville, died Saturday evenil)g at
the St. Joseph Hospital in
ParkNsburg . Mr. Imboden .

Ivan ; a son -in -1aw and
daughter, Mr . and . Mrs.
Charles E. Yost, Rt . 1 Minersv ille, cmd several nieces and
nephews. Mrs. WetI was a
charter member of the Flat.

the son of the la te Joseph and
Meda Bell e Miller Imboden,

woods United
Chvrch .

was also preceded in death by
three brother s and a sister .
Surv i vin g ar e his wi fe,
Elma ; a daughter, Donna Jean
Imboden , Min ersville ; a
granddaughter , Jayn e Im boden, M inersv il le ; f our
brot hers, Oscar and Luther,
both of
Co lumbu s.
and
Clarence and Calvin, both of
Miner svi lle; two sisters, Mrs.
Evelyn lander s. Pomeroy, and
Mrs. Mae Swis her , Middleport.
and seve ral nieces and
nephews.
Pallbearers wi ll be Frank
Kraut:tfer , Butch Im boden,
Oscar Imboden , Jr ., Bob
Imboden, David Bass and Ric h
Arnold .
Funeral services will be at 1
p.m. Tuesday at the Ewing
Funeral Home with the Rev .
Marshall larimore officiating .
Burial will be in Gilmore
Ceme t~ry. Friends may ca ll at
the funeral home an y time.

at 1 p.m. Wednesday at the

Lola Mourning
died on Monday

peared Friday morning some

wEsT coLuMBIA - Mrs .

.lime after 7:30 a. m. Later that
day, a man te lep honed
Kronholm and said: "We have
your w1fe. Deliver all the

Lola Frances Mourning, 71,
West Columbia, died Monday
morning at the Hol zer Medical
Center. Mrs. Mourning was
born Aug . 3, 1902 in the Uni on
Cemetery nea r New Haven .
She was the daughter of the

NON AVAIL ABLE IN OUR LOBBY TO
HELP YOU PUBLICIZE YOUR GROUPS
SOCIAL ACTIVITIES AND CIVIC
AFFAIRS. THIS NEW SERVICE
BROUGHT TO YOU THROUGH THE
COURTESY OF:

Pleasant;

Hiram H. Bolin , 88, a form er
Meigs County res ident, died

Saturday at the Bellefontaine,

Ohio Care Center.
He is su r vived by a daughter.
Mrs. Marie Craig of Cable; a
son, Harley Bolin, in Arizona ;
a sister -in -law, Mr s. Dorothy
Bolin, Cable ; a brother -in-law,
Steve Eblin: Pomeroy , 11nd a
numbe r of grandchildren,
nieces and nephews.
Funeral sf!rv ices will be held

at 2 p.m. Tuesday at the Fresh·

water-Ferguson Funeral Home
in North lewi sburg . Mr . and
Mrs. Bob Houdashelt and sons
are in Cable due to the death of
Mr . Bolin who was Mrs .
Hou dashelt's great·uncle.

,

·
' Elberfelds. In Pomeroy
s

'

Shop Weekdays 9: JO to p.m.
Fridays and Saturdays 9:30 to 9 p.m .

I
I

•I

Ready to party) Hug-me-clo•e turtletop with multicolor posies, pa.tel piping. Snuggled to a free-flowin':l
dirndl •kirt. Vicky Vaughn keeps it fre•h in non-wilting
polyester double knit, machine washable/dryable.
White/Blue or White/Pink. 5-15.

,
I

,

I

President
(Continued from page I )

Mrs. Well, 77,
died on Sunday

',

'

,,
I
,

Embroidered
palette
of posies

/

,

'
I

I
I

,,
,
,''
,,
,
I.

I

1
1

,,
,
,,
,,., Elberfelds ,..,
'.

I

I

Junior Dresses
Second Floor

OUR
2nd STREET

Hallie Cross, Syracuse;
Gordon Collins, Reedsville.

LOCATION IS
GETTING A

Crites,
Hubert

SUNDAY ADMI SS IONS -

Edward Park King, Syracuse;
Mary Ellen Dye, New Haven ;
Philip Donovan , Syracuse ;
Amanda Morris. Pomeroy ;

Stella Bush, Racine ; Will iam

COMPLETE

Grueser, Pomeroy ; Betty Jo
Willis, Racine.

SUNDAY DISCHARGE$ -

Elberfelds

Francis Florists

Elija Ellis, Charles Coon, Ray
Gibbs, Donna Taylor, Barbara

Sergent, Oswell Durham.

Marguerite's Shoes

Crow's Steak House
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
(Births)
Friday - Mr. and Mrs.

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

Goessler's Jewelry

Larry

Sears Catalog Sales Store Cleland Realty

The Farmers· Bank
and Savings Co.

Saturday - Mr. and Mrs.
John c. Ball, daughter,
Ravenswood .

secret and honest not to

reveal it."
It 's a w ise person wh ...
seeks the ver y best in
savings w it hout sacr i ficing

value. Shopping wi th the

CLASS TO MEET
The Willing Workers Class of
the
Enterprise
United
Methodist Church will meet at
7:30 p.m. Thursday at tbe
home of Mrs. Kay Logan .

" FRIENDLY ONES" for
all your needs is the an .

swer.
520,000.00 Ma ximum Insurance For
Each Depositor

I

MEIGS THEATRE
Tonight. Tuesday
Wednesday &amp; Thursday

March 18-2-1

-

DCPO~IT

-

I N!.U R A N ([

CO R PO R A T IO N

-----

NOT OPEN

--~- -

'

We're not quite ready to have you in for inspection
_but it's going to be worth the wait.

Jenkins, sqn, Wellston.

"It is wise not to seek a

POMEROY, OHIO

------M[ M Bf r
FED l i; .q
.
.
- -- -

son ,

Gallipolis; Mr. and Mrs. Floyd

Reuter· Brogan Insurance
Services

Grover's Studio

Burnette ,

FACE-LIFTING!

•

'

We have redecorated from floor to the ceiling, inside
and out.
We think you'll like the new convenient shopping
paHern we have arranged for you- it won't be long now!

POWELL'S
298 SECOND STREET
POMEROY

- ;:;::::::::::::;:;;::;::::;::;:;:;::~::::::~::::::::&amp;:~:::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:::;:;.

By United Press Inlernatiooal
PASADENA, Calif. (UP!) - The Mariner 10space probe will
begin sending back photographs of Mercury on Saturday,
scientists at Jet Propulsion Laboratory said today. Mariner will
still be 3.3 million miles from Mercury and closing at 88,000 miles
per hour when it begins transmissions after a five month journey
of more than 90 million miles.
It will give scientists their first good look at small, hot
Mercury, closest planet to the sun, which has surface- temperatures high enough to melt lead. The planet is difficult to
study from Earth because it is usually lost in the glare of the sun.

··-

ADMISSIONS

Nesselroad, Vane
Raleigh
Sayre,
Stewart.

Shell Oil Co. said lifting of the
embargo "is good news, but it
is no sign tbe nalion can revert
to historica l energy con·
•wnption patterns and uses."
A spokesman for Exxon
enrp., the nation's largest oil
company, said the U.S. "will
remain subatantially- dependent on imported oil to meet its
growing energy requirements
for a number of years. Ef.
licient use and conservation of
all forms of energy will continue to be important..."
Detroit welcomed it as a
much-needed tonic for the
sagging auto industry . which
has nearly 1.75 million unsold
cars on its hands. The United
Auto Workers estimates at
least IOO,OOOworkershave been
cut from auto company
payrolls because of the sales
slwnp .
Roger Dreyer. executive
vice president of the Ohio
Petroleum Marketers
Association, said the lifting of
the embargo will not lower '
prices and "if anything .. .
prices may go higher ."
Interior Secretary Rogers
C.B. Morton told a Texas Cattle
Raisers Association meeting in
Dallas that the energy criSIS IS
not an isolated phenomenon
but :•symptomatic of un derlymg factors in our
economy."
"We have to begin to think in
terms of coal again, especially
the conversion of coal to oil and
gas," Morton said. "I am very
much concerned that we are
think_ing just in . term~ of
gasoline and the 1111ddle distil!ales."

,_

CARACAS- THE VENEZUELAN CONGRESS began study
today of two opposition party bills calling for immediate
nationalization of the country's giant foreign-owned oll industry,
the single largest source of U. S. oil imports. Both bills call for
the state to take over the industry, world's third exporter, by
compensating Amer;can and other foreign oil companies holding
40-year concession agreements. Under present laws the concessions are scheduled to expire between 1893 and 1997, when 5.4
million acres of oil fields and $4.7 billion in installations pass to
state hands without indemnization.
HOUSTON - CITING ATTEMPTS 1'0 "discredit and inthrJdate the news media," Sen. Lloyd M. Bentsen, 0-Tex., has
called for a federal broadcasting licensing policy clearly spelling
out the government's regulatory role of the industry. Bentsen
made the reconunendation Monday before the 5:1r!d amual
convention of the National Association of Broadcasters. He told
the NAB's 5,000 radio ·and television executives he has asked
Congress to extend their licensing period by two ,years to five
years.
President Nixon goes before tbe NAB tonight for an boorlong quiz by the delegates starting at 9 p.m. EDT. Nixon will
return to Washington Wednesday after a brief visit to the
Houston Space Center. "There have been alanning attempts to
discredit and intimidate tbe news media," Bentsen said.
"We bave witnessed in the past few years, a passion for
secrecy in government that conflicts with the people's right to
know ."

I'

VOL XXV

NO. 236

a1 y

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

ent1ne

TUFSDAY, MARCH 19, 1974

PHONE 992-2156

TEN CENTS

1-way street . ~
plan delayed
Proposals to change parts of
two streets to one-way traffic
made little headway Monday
night when Pomeroy council at least temporarily - tabled
both suggestions.
Two unanimous vo tes ,
however, were recorded when
William Snouffer moved to
readvertise lor bids on a new
police crui ser and the appointment of Lawrence Wilson .
as new stree t comm issioner
was confirmed.

Snouffer said he thought
part
of
Lasley
St.,
between Butternut Ave. and
Osborne St., should be
one ~ way.

However,

Coun -

cilman Harry Davis suggested
to the approval of council, to

,.,

' ".:

HOT LUNCH PROGRAM for Meigs enunty senior
citizens got underway Monday at the Senior Citizens Center
located in the fonner Pomeroy Junior High School. Vona
Gillenwater of Rutland, Route I, who comes to town every
Monday on the Center 's mini-bus, enjoyed her chicken
dinner. She is pictured here being served by Mrs. Alma
Newton, Middleport, Retired Senior Volunteer Program
worker. Another volunteer assisting in the serving was Mrs.
Marcia Keller, Chester Road, left (Story on page 6)

table the idea until a survey
could be made of the elf ect on
traffic in the area .
It was also stated that
Mulberry Ave. should be made
one-way. How ever, it was

decided that La urel St. would
be a bottleneck since no matter
which way Mulberry is made
one-way, residents on Laurel

St. would be either unable to
turn up the ramp, or onto
Mulberry off the ramp.
Several
requests
for
soliciting privileges were
approved.
March 23 was designated as

"Daffodil Day" when members of Job's Daughters will
solicit· on the streets lor the
American Cancer Soc i ety .

March 30 was approved for
solicitation by the Kyger Creek
Band Boosters, and April 20
was set aside lor the Eastern
High School Junior class to sell
advertising space to merchants for programs of an
upcoming horse show.
Also, a Meigs High School
welding class was given permission to hold a welding
demonstration on the parking
lot barbecue pit on April 5.
Council also decided to check
ou t a request for two new tires
for a front end loader, sewer

trouble a t !he Wilma Hoschar
residence on Locust St., the
dumping of trash behind a
residence on Seventh St., and a
request for a water line serving
Russ Caruthers on Rutland St.
Attending were coun cil
members William Snouffer,
Harry Davis, I..ouis Osborne
and John Manley ; Mayor Dale
Smith, Lawrence Wilson, new
stree t commissio ner; J8ne
Walton, clerk, and Phyllis
Hennessey, treasurer .

BARBARA AND JAMES ROUSH of Racine have been
named co-chairpersons for the 1974 Meigs County Cance~
Crusade. The annual fund drive will get underway March 30
with a sale of cut daffodils on th e streets of Pomeroy and
Middleport:'-Mrs. Roush is employed with the Southern Coal
en. in western Meigs enunty and James Roush is Meigs
enunty Auditor.

Board orders
Bridge suits scheduled
school supplies W~~ker
RACINE - Purchases of
new carpet, desks, and stage
curtains were approved by the
South~rn Local School District
Board of Education in a
regular session Monday night.
The board agreed to buy
carpet and padding for the
kindergarten room, new desks
and chairs for the elementary
schools from Cartercraft, Inc.,
and new backdrop curtains for
the high school stage.
enach William Jewell was
employed to supervise a
swruner recreation program
and Bill Downie was
authorized to attend a conference on special education at
Marshall University . The
Methodist Churches were
given permission to use the
junior high school auditorium
for volleyball ga mes March
30.
The board ente red into
contract with the Gallia County
Board on the employment of an
m

.e

....

..... *.

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
A chance of rain in the

south and rain or snow north
on Thursday and again on
Friday or Saturday. Cool
with highs 35 to 40 north and
the 40s in the south and lows
in the 20s.

educable mentally retarded
supervisor and Mrs. Mary
Bacon, work study supervisor
of the Meigs and Gallia County
areas, was on hand to discuss
her role in the work study
program if Southern High
School secures approval for
such a program.
Approval was given for two
buses to transport the junior
class to the Ohio University
Library with the date to be set
later. The board approved bills
for payment and recesSed until
March 'tJ with tbe next regular
meeting set for April 11.
Attending the meeting were
Principals Jim Adams, James
Wickline, Bill Baer and Larry
Wolle , Supt. Bob Ord, Clerk
Nancy Carnahan and board
members, Grover Salser, Jr.,

Dennis Hill, Denny Evans,
Jack Bostick and David Nease.
HOME DAMAGED
The under sections of a
mobile home owned by Jolm
Cooper in Ches hire were
damaged in a fire at 6:37p.m.
Monday. Middleport Fire Chief
Bob Byer said that the fire
possibly started from an
electrical short in a junction
box. Damages were confined to
the area under the home.
Sixteen Middleport firemen
responded to the call.

critical

Charleston, W.Va. (UPI) The West Virginia enurt of
Claims scheduled the first two
trials arising from the 1967
collapse of the 'Silver Bridge
for July 15-16.
The three.,an court agreed
to hear the wrongful death
suits filed on behaU of Melvin
A. Cantrell and James A.
White. Cantrell's family asked
for $112,000 in damages, while
White's relatives filed for
$110,000.
A total of $6.3 million in
damages is sought from the
state in the 59 claims filed here.
The collapse of the bridge in
the Ohio River on Dec. 15,1007,

Kurt Muri, 34, a resident of
528 Jackson Pike, Ga llipolis,
and a native of Switzerland,
was listed in critical condition
this morning at the Holzer
Medical Center where he was
admitted Monday following an
indus trial accident at the
James M. Gavin Plant near
Cheshire.
Muri, a superintendent of the
Brown • Boveri Com pany,
suffered a fractured skull,
ches t, and ankle injuries when
he fell 66 feet from the floor of
the turbine room to the ground
noor of the Gavin Plant.
Muri was working on one of
The driver of a car which
the plant's turbo generators went over the riverbank on
which were shipped to North Front St. in Middleport
Cheshire from Switzerland .
at 11 :45 p.m. Monday escaped
injury but not the law.
Chief of Police J · J ·
Cremeans
said that the car,
Band banquet to
driven by Charles R. Tennant,
Mason, W. Va ., was traveling
he planned soon
south on North Front when it
went out of control, crossed
A meeting of the execulive over the railroad tracks and
committee later this month lor over the bank lor a distance of
the purpose of plaming the about 5 feet. It was first
annual band banquet was believed that Tennan t's car
announced when the Meigs had gone into the Ohio River
High School Band Boosters met and the emergency squad was
Monday night with Frank alerted to stand by.
Tennant was not injured .
Sisson, president, in charge.
The boosters discussed. There were medium damage to
possibilities of selling flowers his vehicle. He was cited to
for Easter but look no action mayor's court on an unsafe
and discussed other methods of manner of operation charge.
raising money . Assistant
director Fred Ruth announced
that tbe band camp fees are
payable in three installments
Considerable cloudiness and
- the ·first by April 15, the cooler tonight and Wednesday.
second by May 15 and the last Lows in the 20s and the lower
just before camp at Rio Grande 30s and highs on Wednesday in
this summer.
the 30s and the lower 40s.

Driver avoids

river dunking

Weather

PARIS - THE POLITICAL TALKS BETWEEN South
Vietnam and the VietCong that were supposed to end to Vietnam
war turned one year old today. Saigon negotia!Or Nguyen Xuan
Phong said their result so far ''is one big zero.''
"The net result is one big zero, totally negative, no result at
all - ·can it anything you want to describe a non-achievement,"
fhe ambassador said in an interview marking the anniversary.

near Point Pleasant resulted in
the deaths of 46 persons.
At a pretrial conference,
attorneys for the claimants and
state Attorney General Chauncey Browning viewed photos of
the disaster and indicated
which issues they would pursue
in the trials.
The first t..o cases, according to the court, will

determine whether or not the
State of West Virginia is liable
lor the coUapse of the bridge.
lilould the court find the
state not liable, all claims
would
be
summarily
dismissed . If the state's
responsibility is established,
all the suits would have to be
heard to determine the amount
of any damages.

Ohio's fuel level fluid
CLEVELAND ( UPI) Standard Oil of Ohio officials
said today it is difficult to
determine how much effect the
lifting of the Arab oil embargo
will have on the tight fuel
supply situation.
Frank E. Mosier, vice
pres ident of supply and
distribution for Sohio, said the
company
is
currently
restricted under the federal
all ocation program to running ·
its refineries at 76 pet. of
capacity.

VICA club to

He said any substantial increase in supply will require
the government to review its
allocation program which now
runs throu~h April. President
Alton Whitehouse said the
imporlllnt question is whether
the Arab countries will increase production and to what
level.

Suits filed
with court
Myrtle Walker, Racine, has
been awarded a divorce in
Meigs County Common Pleas
Court from Virgil Walker,
Racine, on the grounds of gross
neglect of duty and extreme
cruelty.
In other court action, 'Irma J.
Booth, Pomeroy, has filed suit
for a divorce from Dennis I.
Booth, Pomeroy, on the
grounds of gross neglect of
duty and extreme cruelty.
Pomeroy National Bank has
filed · for a declaratory
judgment from Leland G.
Shumway, II, Akron, et al.,
asking the court to instruct the
bank as to the party or parties
who should ro: •:eive the

do repairs at

two locations

The Meigs High School
Junior and Senior Welding
VIGA Club is sponsoring a
" Weldin g Repair Day"
Saturday from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m.
in the downtown parking lot in
Pomeroy and at the Meigs
High School.
' Item• needing repair may be
taken to ei ther location with
the exception of aluminum and
stainless steel articles, which
should be taken to the high
school. Welders will be on hand proceeds from an account in
all day in both locations and the bank that was ti!•der the
donations will be accepted for name of the late Lester
Shwnway.
work done.

Easter Seal ·letters in mails

NEWTON FALLS, OHIO- A REDUCTION in the demand
for automobile bwnpers forced the furlough of about 700 North
American Rockwell Corp., employes here Mooday. Officials said
the layoffs were expected to last at least two weeks.
Sources said about 20 maintenance workers were still employed at Rockwell. Reduced demand lor auto bumpers forced
layoffs at Rockwell three weeks ago.

police.

•

Devoted To The Interest.• OJ The Meigs-Mwon Area

•

CLEVELAND - FRATERNAL ORDER OF POLICE
President Richard Faragher has labeled as ' 'plain and simple
Ralph Perk politics" the mayor's appointment of a clergyman
conunittee to investigate allegations of police corruption. " If he
doesn't have the confidence to have the police department investigate the charges then he should make some' persomel
changes," Faragher said.
Faragher, Chief William McNea and Shiled Club head Fred
Johnson said the Perk committee is politically motivated and
will achieve no satisfactory results. The mayor said he would add
four laymen to the ·oonimlttee later' this week and · said the
conunittee will investigate conduct of all city employes, no! only

•

e

United Press International
Americans should have no trouble getting
gasoline for summer vacations, but ~e end of the oil
embargo by most major Arab nations ts seen by
much of U.S. industry as only a short-term answer to
the nation's energy shortage.
The federal government and the American
Petroleum Institute representing the oil companies
reckon if will be two or three months before the
lifting of the five-month-old ban is translated into
full tanks for U.S. autos.
And then , said a spokesr:~an for Gulf Oil in
Houston it will mean higher prices.

ews .. in Briefsi1

'
'

SATURDAY DISCHARGES
- Nellie Vale. Edith Hood.
Ruth
Mulford ,
Hallie

· ·Two-three months delay
expected befo~nks
can be filled at will

- -. .. .-

Veterans Memorial Hospital

LOCAL TEMPS
The temperature in downtown Pomeroy at 11 a. m.
Monday was 40 degrees under
cloudy skies.

More gasoline, costing more, certain

The
'embargo
that
heightened energy problems in
the United States curtaillng
travel and forcin g lower
thermostats throughout winter
was ended Monday by most of
tbe 10 nations of the
Organization
of
Arab
Petroleum Exporting Countries (OAPEC ).
Abu Dhabi, Bahrein, Egypt,
Kuwait, Qatar and Saudi
Arabia ended the boyc ott
unconditionally. Algeria said it
would go along at least until
June 1. Libya and Syria
refused to lift the embargo at
all. Iraq never observed it.
Saudi Arabia the world's
~ ...gest petrol~wn~xporting
nation, even went so far as to
promise the U.S. "all the oil it
needs."
The action brought sighs of
relief from the hard-hit auto
industry and other sections of
the economy, but caution
quickly settled in as shown by
stock prices tbat briefly rallied
on the New York Stock Exchange then dropped to close
lower.
·
"The degree to which Arab
oil will help alleviate this
country's short term supply
situation will depend on whether Arab production is restored
to pre-embargo levels," a
spokesman for the oil industry's American Petroleum
Institute.
"Once this oil becomes
available it will probably take
from 60 io 90 days· for these
supplies to make an appreciable impact on conswners in tbe
United States. of our energy
supply prohiMJs."

•

resolution of the problem,
according to aides.
money you can to a sta tion at
One adviser said ''we're
.... " Kronholm said he couldn 't tate Taylor and Jessie Smith looking into several pos·
understand the last words from Johnson . She was preceded In sibilities" for still more public
by ber husband. John T., appearances by the President.
the caller who immediately death
in 1961.
hung up. Since then. nothing
The President's advisers
Surviving are two daughters,
has bee n hea rd from the kid- Mrs . Kenneth (Delores) realize they are taking the risk
Kearns, and Mrs. Henry Allen
napers.
of alienating !.orne Republican
(Doris) lewi s, both of nea r
Joseph H. Krimback, special West Columbia, and fi ve congressional supporters in tbe
agent in charge of the FBI in grandchildren .
·
committee and the House by
Funeral se r v ices will be held challenging the impeachment
the Minneapolis-St. Paul area,
1: 30 p.m. Wednesday at the
said the ca r belonging to Mrs. at
Foglesong Funeral Home with inquiry step by step. Some
Kronholm was found at 1:25 the Rev . George Hoschar Of · observers believe the White
a.m. EDT toda y by the Edina ficiating. Buria l will be in the House would prefer to refuse a
Graham Cemetery. Friends
Police Department at the ma
y call at the funeral home subpena for presidential docu·
parking lot of the Southdale from 2 to tl and from 7 to 9 p.m . ments and incur a possible
Shopping Ce nter. Edina is Tuesday .
contempt citation rather than
about 30 miles from Lin o
to comply witb the committee's
Lakes.
request.
No other information was
A White House aide indicated
available, Krimback said.
that
he expected federal Judge
'
John J . Sirica to rule today in
Kronlwlm, described as
ex hausted and distraught, was
favor of turning over a
Unable to meet Sunday with
Mrs . Ivan · Well. 77. Rl. l, Watergate grand jury's sealed
Minersville. died Sunday nig ht report on Nixon's possible
newsmen .
at
Veterans
Memorial
Hosp
ita
l.
Mrs
.
Well
was involvement in the scandal to
Strike hits UPI
preceded in deat h by her the Judiciary enmmittee.
"He always has ruled
NEW YORK (UPI) - The
against us," said one aide.
Wire Service Guild today
Nixon appeared in line fettle
stru ck United Press InSunday
at a gt. Pa!fick's Day
ternational in a dispute over a
worship
service at tbe White
new con tract! or more than 900
House during which Dr. Nordomestic editorial and other
man
Vincent Peale delivered a
employes.
sermon on love and forgiveness
The strike, which began at 8
for ''wrongly motivated" misa.m. EDT, was the first by
deeds.
'
editori~l employes in the news
Mrs. Nixon, suffering from
Sheriff
Robert
Hartenbach's
service's history. Jt came after
an all.,ight bargaining session, Dept. investigated two single influenza after her six-day
goodwill tour to Latin America,
with UP! and WSG negotiators car accidents on Bownan's
was unable to attend and is
Run
Road
near
Racine
Sunday.
under the direction of a federal
A south bound car driven by under a doctor's care.
mediator.
A UP! spokesman said the Randall L. McClain, 45, Rt . 2,
news agency would deliver a Racine, fishtailed off the right
basic news, newspicture and of the road and rolled over.
broadcasting service during Damage was moderate. McSALE DAYS SET
the strike. Foreign operations Clain was charged with driving
SYRACUSE
The
while ihtoxicated.
are not affected.
Missionary
Society
of
the
Jesse Morris, 39, Racine,
Syracuse
First
Church
of
God
was the driver in tbe second
PTA TO MEET
accident on the road. Traveling will hold a rummage sale at the
The Middleport Elementary south, Morris went off it to the Fry. Building, Mill St., MidPTA will meet at 7:30 this right and into a creek. dleport, beginning at 9 a.m.
Friday
and
evening at the school. Prin- Moderate damages were Thursday ,
cipal Robert Morris will speak. reported. Both drivers suffered Saturday.
only minor injuries . No
charges were filed in the latter
Marriage License
Both accidents ocaccident.
William David Cash, 20,
'
curred
near
4 p. m.
Athens ,and Shelia Jane Toney,
21, Pomeroy Route 3.
SATURDAY

CLUB TO MEET

Mrs. David Jacks, son, Mid~

Hiram Bolin dies

..

...._FREE ADVERTISING

Poi nt

The Young Wives Club will
dleport ; Mary Ann Miller, New
Ewi ng Funeral Home with the Haven ;
Linda
Ad aline meet at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday
Rev . F r ee land Norris of f iciat ing . Burial will be in the Rhoades, Ripley ; Mrs. David at the home of Mrs. Marilyn
Gilmllf'e Cemetery. Fr iends .Fetty, Point Pleasant; Hollie Spencer.
::'n~Y ~~~~at the funeral home #a • a _. • • a • # ' • , # • # , ·I

stay on Sunday

I

Barker ,

Methodi st Charles Warner, Robertsburg;

Funeral services will be held

road hard to

I

l

Eichinger Frank. and a
crother,
Charles.
Survi ving are her husba nd,

Bouman's Run

I' .

Smith, Robertsburg; Marcia·
Pleasant Valley Hospital
·Harmon, Middleport; James
Wlscharges 1 ,_
Mrs. William I..emley .and O'Neil, Point ' Pleasant ; ·
daughter, Gallipolis; Clodus Caroline Saunders, GlenwQod;
Bush, Leon; - Anne Davis, Eisa J. Kinniard, Southside;
ColumbuS; Mrs. Charles Mrs. W~ndel Casto, daughter ,'
Willet, Point Pleasant; Mrs. Rock Castle; Mrs . Pr'ice
Charles Higginbotham·, I..eon ; Patrick, Point Pleasant; Mrs .
Mrs. Cecil Mink, Northup, 0 .; Samuel Miller, I..eon; Mrs.
Gloria Clonch, Henderson ; Aubin Roush, Mason; Crystal
Veronica Edwards, Ashton ; Casto, Leon .
Phillip Kinzel, Ashton; Lola

parents, George~and M innie

I

for wife

more coal

aging power compan ies to turn
to the western states, he said,

•

•

appr·edably.

Williams said

preferable to Appalachian coal
"is confused" . according to
Williams.
Although eastern coal is
higher in sulfur content, he

l

Ransom i Area Deaths.
gtven up Vance Imboden

conten t of Western coal i:-;

The
determination
of
whether We stern coa l is

·-

r-·----------~--~-------~--~

1

CELEBRATE BIRTHDAY - Mary Roush, president of
the auxiliary, and Bob Roush , commander of SmithCapehart American legion Post No. 140, ,led in the celebration
Monday night at New Haven, W. Va. of the legion's 55tb
·birthday. West Virginia Department Commander Harry
Slaughter was the speake~ for the programJJeld in the new
I..egion house following dinner .

Meigs Co unty residents
began receiving Easter Seals
this past week as the annual
fund drive for crippled children
and adults got into high gear.
Gene Riggs, 1974 Meigs
Easter Seal president, said
letters are being mailed
throughout the state.
Although donations for this
county will be mailed to a
centralized co mpu te r
collection cen ter in enlwn bus,
the majority of the funds raised
here will be used locall y.
The local Eas ter Seal
president said innation has
taken a heavy loll on the

treatment, education and
research services provided by
the society . "The overall cost
of health care in the U. S. increased by more than ten
percent in 19n over 1911," he
noted. "Although the government has increased its spending for heal th by 15 pet.,
private spending also has risen
7.5 pet. This means your
Easter Seal society, a private
agency, needs more dollars to
of
continue
its level
rehabilitative services to
disabled children and adults
and, hopefully, to reach out to

more people in need of help."
The sta tewide goal for tbe
Ohio Society for Crippled
Children and Adults, Inc. is
$1,203,000, representing a 10
pet. increase over the amount
collected in 1973. The current
fund drive extends through
Easte&lt; Sunday, April 14,
During 1973, Easter Seal
services were provided to some
20,000 disabled children and
adults in Ohio through
statewide fac ilities and
programs. Easter Seal services are adapted to specific
community needs and are

admini s: ., , d
throug~
rehabilitati"" • nd treatme"t
centers, sheltered workshops
and -home employment,
resident and day "" mps,
hospitals, and mobi le and
home therapy units. Treatment
is given only by qualified
professionals.
Mrs. Judy Riggs, wife of the
local president, will have her
baton corps, Riggs Royal~ttes,
on the streets of Pomeroy and
Middleport on April 13 for a
Lily Day program . Funds
collected on tbis date will
remain in ,Meigs County!

I'

'.
\

••

�'
3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Tuesday March 19, 1974
2- The Daily Sentmel, Miadleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Tuesday, March 19 1974

~~!~~-.------------------~

I

By Bob Hoeflich

- •

!

Members of the Smith-Clpehart Amencan Legwn Post 140
and Its auxiliary umt must be extremely proud of the fmc new
hall m N~w Haven We understand the post IS m good shape
fmanc1ally on the structw-e because of so much volunteer labor
which has been proVIded by members The brick veneering IS
going up now Monday mght, well over 100 attended the
Amencan Legion birthday party staged at the new home
THE MEIGS COUNTY Fair Board h,as nailed down Ils entertamment for the open grandstand everungs at the annual
Meigs County Fmr m August The e\ emngs when professiOnal
entertainment Ill uwolved are Thursday and Saturday
The board has secured Nat Stucke), Karen Wheeler and Lonzo
and Oscar for the Thw-sda) rughl show and the John Mathews
Fanuly, gospel smgers, for Saturday mghl The professwnal
entertainment Ill free of charge bemg covered m the admiSSIOn
fee to the grounds
MEMBERS OF PRECEPTOR Beta BeUI Chapter of Beta
Sigma Ph• Sorority are asked to contact Margaret Follrod on
!hell' gifts bemg g~ven for a candy sale to be held at the 'Silver
Slipper Saloon" at the Pomeroy Juruor H1gh School on April 20
The members are asked to do thiS at once, proVIdmg at least rno
11tems, so that a list can be compiled
Incidentally, Joe Struble, talented long-time master of
ceremomes of tbe Big Bend Mmstrel Association, w•ll be on hand
April 20 to emcee three nunHnusicals to be staged by the
association m conJunction with the saloon
THE REV THOMAS WEAVER, pastor of the Middleport
Chw-chof the Nazarene, was the fll'sl mmlllter of the commuruty
to attend Middleport Village Council as a part of a new plan
proposed by Councilman Marvm Kelly that a local m1mster be
present for each meetmg The nunllller Isn't necessarily expected to stay for the busmess sessiOn but IS expected to set the
tone of meetings w1th pra) er
THE AMERICAN BATILE MONUMENTS Comnuss10n
recently produced a 28-mmute documentary hhn for the nation's
B1centenmal entitled, "The Price of Freedom" which Is
available on a free-loan basis to schools, religious, CIVIC,
fraternal, veterans and other orgaruzat1ons
The flhn vividly brmgs to life the American Revolution and
subsequent major events m the nation's history Orgaruzahons
mterested m obtammg the £Ihn should contact Modern Talkmg
Picture SerVIce, 2329 New Hyde Park Road, New Hyde Park, N
y 10018
SYRACUSE SCHOOL WINNERS m a colormg contest held
by the Meigs Bookmobile Service to stress the restw-n of books to
the umt mclude Bnan Lee Bw-khamer, Teresa Harden and Angie
Hubbard The wmners will receive badges from the bookmobile

~

Churches

I'

Progress m local schools was
the topic of the speaker when
the Middleport PTA met
Monday evemng at the Mid·
dleport Elementary School
The Pledge of Allegiance led by
Mrs Kmghl's third grade class
opened the meeting

I i\NCAS rEH. Oluo t UP II The Lancaslei St V1ecent de
Paul Soc1etv ::~nd 14 chu rches m
the I•'mrfield Count\ ared were
presented

the

OhiO Youth Comm1sswn

Wilham J Ensign director
of the comnusswn, presented
the awa1 ds on beh.IIf of Gov
John J Gilligan
Churches re ce i\ m g the
awards were New Sa lem

Umted Methodis t Church
Sixth

Avenue

Methodist Church, Lancaster
Lancaster Umted Brethren m
Chnst Church , Lancaster,
M11ls
Memonal
Umted
Methodist Church, Lancaster
First Presb~terian Chu r ch,
Lancaster St Paul s Lutheran
ALC Church, Lancaster
Also,
Chnst
Umted
Methodist Church Baltunm e,
Be"lah Umted Methodist
Church, Baltimore Mal kct
Street Umted MethodiS t
Church, Baltimore Tnnit)
Umted Church of Chnst,
Baltimore
Olive Umted
Methodist Church, Balhmore
St Michael's Umted Church of
Chmt, PICkermgton, Mt Zwn
Umted Church of Chnst,
Pickerington , and St Peter's
Umted Church of Christ,
Winchester

Devotwns were g1ven by the
Rev Wilbur Pernn of the
Tnmty Church of Pomeroy,
and the room award went to
Mrs Kmghl's third grade
class. An Easter egg ht&lt;nt •s
slated for April and a held day
w May was also discussed
Prmc1pal Robert Morns
reviewed progre~ In the Meigs
Local School System, and new
officers for this year were
announced They are Mary
Rose, president, Judy Crow,
firs t vice-president, Betsy
Weaver,
second
vicepresident Cheryl Roush,
secretary, and Carol Wolfe,
treasurer
Delegates to the count)
council are Judy Crooks,
Phyllis Baker, Ruby Vaughan,
Kathy Erwm and Manlyn
Pouhns

GETS 50 YEARS
PHILADELPHIA ( UPf I - A
Washmgton, D C , parkmg lot
attendant was sentenced to 50
yearsm federal pnson Monda)
for his part Ill a 1972
skyJackmg The defendant
Michael S Green, 35, was
convicted last June 19 of
helping hiJaCk a NatiOnal
Airlines 727 here on July 12,
1972 H•s alleged accomplice m
the hiJackmg has not been lr1ed
because of his mental con
d1tion

go vernor's

award for commumty a~.: t10n
here Monda) mght m the
recog mtwn of their efforts 1n
helpm g youns ters at the
Fairfield School fo1 Boys of the

Lancaster,

Progress in local schools reviewed

OWN l ,OOOTH TREE FARM - Mrs Willard Brooks and
her son, Enc, of Albany, Ohio acc'Cpted a tree farm sign for
their Athens County farm s1gmfymg cerllficallon as an Ohio
Tree F'arm, at Ohio Forestry AssociatiOn's 7lst Annual
Meetmg recently m Columbus The Brooks farm was the
J,OOOth Ohio Tree Farm to be certified by the AmeriCan
Forest Institute and the Oh10 Tree Farm Committee of the
Oh10 Forestry AssociatiOn This award, recog.-,1zmg good
woodlands management, brmgs certified tree farm acreage
m OhiO •o over 250 000 acres The OFA w11l hold Its Forestry
Camps June 9-29 at Hidden Hollow Camp m Richland County
and the Paul Bunyan Show at Hocking Technical College,
Nelsonville, Oct 18-20 For 111format10n on these and other
conservatiOn programs, contact The OhiO Forestry
AssociatiOn, The Nell House, Columbus, Ohio 43215

of the report
However, the Judge sa1d
Monday, "It seems mcredible
that grand JW"Y matters should
lawfully be av81lable to disbarment corrumttees and pollee
disc1plmary mvesllgatlons and
yet be unav8llable to the House
of Representatives m a proceeding of so great unport as
an
Impeachment
mveshgahon ,
John J Wilson, attorney for
two of the seven- former top
pres1denllal aides H.R Haldeman and John D Ehrlich·
man- argued vehemently
agall'lllt g1vmg the report to the
comrmttee Wilson said the
matenal would be leaked to
reporters If 11 went to Capitol
H1ll
Argument ReJect.ed
ReJecting that argument,
Sirica said the grand JW"Y
"recommended disclosure, not
public d1ssemmatwn, but
delivery to the House Judiciary
Conumttee With a request that
the report be wed with due
regard for the consltlhonal
rights of persons under mdict-

I

Sirica must relinquish the post
he has held through the most
torrid days of the Watergate
scandal
He will be replaced by Judge
George L Hart Jr , 68 But
Sir1ca will remam a JUdge and
has served nollce that he will
C'.Jntmue as the overseer of the
court acllons bo1hng out of
America's worst pohllcal scan·
dal
Around the courthouse Sinca
Ill called a "tough little JUdge"
by admll'ers, and ' Maxunum
John" by those who know how
he shuns miilllTium sentences
Son of an Italian unm1grant,
Sinca earned his way through
school greasmg cars, selling

Oly Edltcr

P\lbliahed dilly except Sat\D"day by The
Ohio Val~ Publiahizll Company, ll1
Court St Pomeroy, Ohio M1te Bulinea
Office PtrJne mme Editorial Phone m

m1

Serond claas postage paid at Pomeroy,

OhiO

Nattona l advertising repre.entattve
l:loi:Unelli.(iallagher Inc UF.ut ttnd St,
Ntw York New Yurk
~becrlpUon

rates Delivered by carrier
where available eo cents P« week By
Motor Route whl!!'f! earrier aervlce not
avatlable One mooth SUO By m.U in
Cillo and W Va One Year $13 SU:
month&amp; tt 50 Three month1 $6
E!Mwhere f22 00 year siJ: mmths $11 510
three mooth!J til 50 SUbecription pnce

U'ICludes 9Jnday 'Ilmea-Sentinel

DEMO&amp; BRAND NEW

1973
&amp;
1974
CHEVROLETS
WILL BE SOLD AT DEALER'S COST ONLY AT
lral'll the la110ry lh1
CIIIJIII!f tharge IO 1,11 On

1

2

10th car 1ncludcng in·

t

•

1torage &amp; •~ -

lerul

we ~"P

II

jttr day

we~~¥ han J5 u,H ~trs
In UOI. wHrtU WI

Th, 11 ne rr..!t 5tlrll.
The cor ilus.U1S II nor•
rnally 1low ncnoo &amp; before
rhe nerrntl spnng ll'pSur

Lei. htrt f prnl w1H.
lllllpllt tfllhmlllt Moll ••
then nrs fUll amnll

1111

11rs lor 30 claws '~'' "

\3060 00

We han

l)t

sau

dt~ided

,hould han

the S30.0 00

IOHflnlJ d!OflJtl
0\lf lou Is ltr leu

wttr?
1!

rs

Wt •••

wt [tnlllll htp tur
pH~enud utd

3.

ro

u.
car

s11!nmtn vtry 1"'11 11 thtJ
do 1101 hovt tDIRI good
uud lOrt to nil Jhit

we

sell these ctrs at dealer s
1011 lhon 1f we poy
urrr•Rg chorges lor JO

Delll&amp;n Cnt Salt h e~~t
way for "' It gtl 1om1

day1

our lot

mvrll good •ned 1ars on

All 1974 Che'4ralets tn sto'k

wtll

SEN ARMSTRONG HONORED - Fow- hundred people
honored Sen Harry L Armstrong at the Logan Armory for
his past record and m support of his current b1d for reelectiOn
as State Senator from the 17th Ohio Senate District The
senat"f, m public service 26 years, IS seekmg his third term
In- the-'Ohio Senate He has served as a township trustee,
count} cotrumssLOner, state representative, and now state
senator Left to nght are Dean S1meral, Ohw Farm Bw-eau
FederatiOn, Pearl Fogle, former area soli conservatwmst,
Frank Sollars, past president, OFBF, and of the S&amp;WCD, the
senator, and Barton Holl, Loga n mdustnahst

Herbert Miller died on Monday
Funeral services for Herbert
Miller , 81, Rt I, Middleport,
who died Monda) at the Holzer
MediCal Center, have been set
for 1 p m Thursdav at the
Ewmg Funeral Home
A member of the B1 adford
Church of Christ, Miller was

the son of the late George and
Nancy Adkins Miller He was
also preceded 111 death by three
sons, Dale, Denny and Roger,
three sisters and a brother
Surv1vmg are his Wife, Helen
Magun e M1ller six daughters,
Mrs Conrad (Elizabeth)
Ohlinger, Pomeroy, Mrs
Elwood t Eileen ) Bowers, Rt 3,
Pomeroy,
Mrs
Frank
(Nadw! ) Neubauer, Jersey
City, N J , Mrs June Glaze,
HOUSTON ( UPJ ) - Barbara Middleport, Mrs John (Jean)
Pardue wore nothmg but Michels, Prospect, Ill , and
panties, a blouse and a frown Mrs James (Jackie) Reed, Rt
But she earned a pistol
I, Middleport a son, Herbert
Charles Hall, 43, told pollee
Roy, Rae me, two sisters, Mrs
the woman entered his
ment "
Lucy Glenn, Pataskala, and
grocery,
pomted the gun at him
He sa1d the possibility of
Mrs Ruby Ruble, Michigan;
public disclosure of the and demanded cash from the and tv.o brothers, Marshall,
report's contents did not JUstify register
Beverly, and Ronald, Mid·
As soon as she left, he
supprtssmg 11, as Wilson had
dleport Also surv1vmg are 27
asked, and he found the report grabbed a gun from under the grandchildren , 26 great"clearly w1thm the bounds of counter and ran out the front grandchildren and several
propriety of pubhc diS· door m pursUit
The clerk and the scantily meces and nephews
closure
of
the
reOfflciatmg at the Thursday
port's contents did not clad woman, standmg 10 paces services will be Clifford Sm1 th
JUStify suppressmg 11 , as apart, exchanged 11 wild shots Bw-1al w•ll be m the Miles
testified
that at each other They all missed Cemetery Fnends may call at
Wilson
there can be no ques- But Hall saved one round and the funeral home at anytime
llon regarding their ma- got the drop on the woman
Her pistol empty, the woman
tenahty to the House
Judiciary Committee's mvesll- threw up her hands 111 defeat Washmgtonran dld not change
1t
gabon," Sirica srud He :.dded and told Hall he could have the Its Judgment when
money
back
If
he
would
let
her
reassessed
the
JUdges
last
fall.
that 11 was the committee's
CIVIl libertarians have
responsibility to deterrmne the go "No deal ," he sa1d
M•ss
Pardue,
28,
a
waitress,
argued that SII'Ica's tactics
"significance of the evidence •
was
mJaii
today
,
charged
w1th
depnve a defendant or full
put forth m the grand JUry's
aggravated
robbery
legal rights A past president of
report
the Amencan Bar Association,
Chesterfield Smith, has said
"We must be concerned about
a federal JUdge-no matter
how worthy hiS mollVeS or bow
much we may applaud his
newspapers, and boxmg He thinks "
results-usmg the criminal
was qUite handy With his fists,
Sir1ca 's unusual tactics from sentencmg process as a means
and former world heavyweight the bench dunng the and tool for further crunmal
champ Jack Dempsey was best Watergate trial last year mvesllgatwn of others."
man at h1s wedding in 1952
brought hun some cnllCism
But the pubhc reaction to
A muscular 5-feeH, Sinca's Always extra tough when Sir1ca 's conduct of the case bas
thick, wavy hair 1s only lightly dealing w1th so-called while been overwhelm10gly
streaked With gray Sharp eyes · collar crunmals, Sirica told favorable, and NIXon himself
peer out from behmd bushy one Watergate defendant, 'I m May Cited a "brave Federal
brows
don 't beheve you," and JUdge" as one of the factors m
S1nca has an enormous threatened all seven with brmgmg out the full story
respect for the U S system of maxtm urn prtson sentence~ Sinca has received thousands
JUSbce, but frequently IS un- unless they decided to of letters and telegrams
patient with Its strict rules and cooperate with the mvesllgaOn Jan I, Sirica was named
technicahlles On at least one tion
Time magazme's Man of the
occasion when a defense
When Washmgtoman Maga- Year "as a symbol of the
lawyer threat~ned to appeal zme assessed DistriCt of Co· American JUdiciary's mone of h1s rulmgs, Smca lumb1a JUdges In 1972, Sirica Sistence on the pnonty of law
retorted "I could care less was ranked m the bottom throughout
the
sordid
what the Court of Appeals quarter Even after Watergate, Watergate saga of 1973"

sold at dealer's cost

be

30°/o

OVER 100 NEW
CARS &amp; TRUCKS
OR
50 USED CARS
AND TRUCKS TO
CHOOSE FROM

IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
FAST-EASY FINANCING
UP TO 48 MONTHS TO PAY
GMAC .. BANK FINANCING
Jhe~e proces

are good only on ems we
ho ve 1 11ock Under n (l c cum\lonces
w1ll we get yav o n11 from the fact a y on
I Ptc ol order or trade CDr! w1th onolher

dealer
fYfRY C.U MUST GOI Pltc~lt do not carnt
witltout t1llt ar 1eth d•IK'Jit Shop atlttr
dnltn lt•f"' rtu 911 our
Wt wtnl It

•...1

trade rod.w

BUOW
WINDOW STICKER PRICE

Your trade

IS

bomple
Pme S449000

$O'I'IAIJS

-30% 1347 00
YOU PAY 1 3143.00
DeoiH co1t Pf"lces as dehl'l'" 1n
Athens Oh10 hery car wdl bt fully
pre-pared and J«vKed before •
after dehvery We will 1ell to
anyorH! mcludrng Mw car deo.... 1

Tradt ms n.t ntrnsary - ~~~~ 1 fair ,net
tlltWIICI Will Itt medt en Yllllf prtstnl Ur If
Ytt "''"' t. trade if 1n

but we reserve the rltht to
withdraw this oHer Without notice

worth a nNntmum of 5850 00 IHI

We

any 197 4 Chevrolet full sized car tn do(k

w•li accept any make year ·

your lrade

model BUT you must dnve

h:ample

Youpay

List Price $4.000.00
Your Trade BSO.OO
5

mto us!

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1974 MONTI CAIIIO&lt;I

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All 197 4 Bek11n

* Impalas * Caprtees *

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Please Tell Your Friends About This Ad!
EVERY ADVERTISED CAR SOlD AT DEAlER COST
NOTia TO SKEPTICS THIS IS NO COME ON! THERE ARE NO GIMMICKS' WE WILL SILL

"NO CHISELERS PLEASE"
SPECIAL INVITATION TO MEIGS COUNTY RESIDENTS!
CRAWL ... WALK, .. RUN ... FLY ... LEAP ... TAKE A BOAT ...
RIDE A BUS ... BOARD A TRAIN ... BUT COMI AT ON_CE!

-

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. ALLROADs
p~•GE
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_ -· LEAD TO PAGE CHEVROlET
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OHIO VALLEY

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Athens, Ohio

OUT OF TOWN CALLS WELCOME

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'
"

··:·./ .,......_.,

'.·-.

Sport Parade
By MILTON RICHMAN
'TPI Sports Editor

''

Atlomftc

~

w t
Boston
N ewYor k

Buffalo
Pillladelphta

(entrat
x Cap 1ial

~1 Shoemaker Third Team
t

ditwn to their bemg granted
licenses to fight m Venezuela
The 25-year-&lt;&gt;ld champiOn
resumed trammg after a twoday break from drills, while
Norton, who spent much of
Monday w1th his parents, was
commg back after a ~our
layoff
"George IS real loose," satd
Foreman spokesman Bill Caplan "The day off did him,. a
world of good "

COLUMBUS iUPI) - M1ke
Phillips, a 6-11 240-pound scorIng and reboundmg machme for
Akron Manchester, IS the 1974
Umted Press Internatwnal Class
AA player of the year
fn captw-mg the player of the
year honors , Ph1lhps heads up
an aJI-Ohio first team \\hich a!
so mcludes M1ke Chne of West
Holmes, Greg Cobb of Olmsted
Fails, Ron Hammye of Genoa
and Garry Allison of Wellsville
Ph1lhps, the most sought after
player 1n the state by colleg•
recrmters has led Mancl)estcr
to two straight unbeaten regular
seasons and helped earn the
Panthers the No I spot this
season 111 the UP! Board of
Coaches ratmgs
B1g enough and talented
enough to carry a team on h1s
shoulders, that's JUst about what
Phillips has done, averaging 36
pom Is and 25 rebounds per
game for coach Berme Conley
The only game the Panthers
have lost during the past two
years was last year m the
tournament and that came with
the "big guy ' on the sidelines
suffering from a blood clot w
h1s arm
Although Ph1lhps carnes a
36-pomts per game average, he
IS sllll second In sconng on the
squad to Cobb, who at 5-11 IS
the smallest player among the
first three teams He IS also the
only JuniOr and the top scorer
with a mark of 37 I per contest
Chne, 6-3, led West Holmes,
coached by AA coach of the
year Jack Van Reeth, to 17-1
regular season record Chne was
the Kmghls' top scorer w1th an
average of 22 per game
Hammye, at 6-10, IS the second largest of the AA players

He paced Genoa to a 17-1 record wtth hts 181 scormg aver
age
Allison , one of a set of twms
who played for Coach Bobby
Dawson 1 paced Wellsvtlle to an
unbeaten regular season mark
and the NM. 2 spot In the UP!
ratmgs Allison IS 6-5 and averaged 18 8 per game
The second team, while not
as large as the first, also has
good scorwg punch, led by II·
rna Catholic's 6-3 Tom Terry
at 27 2 and 6~ Randy Haefner
of Cmcmnall McNicholas at 25 6
Roundmg out the second squad
are Ed Tillman of Columbus Mohawk (6-2, 22 3), John Coleman
of Ashtabula Harbor (6-2, 23 41,
and Gil Pnee of Gallipolis (6-5
18 91
Waverly's John Shoemaker IS
the top scorer among lhe third
learners with a 27 9 per game
mark with J1m Asbury of
Bndgeport (26 4) and Larry
Hall of Barnesville (25 51 close
behmd The other two members
are LOveland's Mark Baron
( 14 3) and Mark Robey ( 18 0) of
Sprmgfleld Shawnee
Van Reeth, m wmmng the
voting for coach of the year
edged out both Conley or No I
ranked Manchester and Dawson
of No 2 Wellsville
Van Reeth received 13 votes
out of the 76 cast 1n theclose
ballotmg, while Dawson got 12
and Conley 10 Loveland's
Char he Harker and Dave Hitch·
en of Genoa each received s1x
Others w1lh more than one
vote were Dave Sheetz of Columbus Mohawk, Tom Swearmgen of Evergreen, Eddie
Armstrong of Ashtabula Harbor
and Mike Akers of Preble
Shawree

Class AA All-Ohio Team
COLUMBUS !UP I ) The
1974 Un1ted Press l nternat1onal
Class AA A l l Ohto basketball
team (wrth height grade and
scor1ng averages listed)

FIRST TEAM
Mtke Clme West Holmes 6
22 0 Greg Cobb Olmsted
Falls
5 11
Jr
37 1 M1ke
Ph1ll1ps Akron Manchester 6

3 Sr
11

sr , 36 o

Ron Hammye Genoa 6 10
Sr 18 1 Garry Alltson Wells
v111e, 6 5 Sr 18
SECOND TEAM
Ed
T1llman
Columbus
Mohawk 6 2 Sr
22 3 John
Coleman Ashtabula H~rbor 6
2 Sr
23 -l Randy Haefner
C1nc1nnatl McNicholas 6 6
Sr
25 6 Tom Terry L1ma
Central CathO l iC 6 3 Sr 27 2
Grl Fnce, Gallrpohs 6 5, Sr,
18 '
THIRD TEAM
J •m A sbury Br1dgeport 6 0
Sr
26 4
John Shoemaker,
Waverly, 6 2 Sr 77 9, Mark
Baron Loveland, 6 4 Sr 14 3
Mark
Roby ,
Sprrngfleld
Shawnee 6 5 Sr 18 0 Larry
Hall Barnesv1lle 6 5 Sr 25 5
SPECIAL MENTION
Larry Allen Martms Ferry
Jay Addy New concord John
Glenn R1ch1e Babcock R1dge
wood Jerry Blade Twrnsburg
Chamberltn
Darrell Ewart
Bellatre
Dan F1nn
Canton
Lehman
John Gerdeman
Delph1s St Johns Dave Haus
feld
St
Marys Memortal
Steve L ong Upper Sandusky
Ted
Lemmon
West
Muskrngum T1m Stemhtlber,
Wynford
John
Saxton
Coshocton
Dave
Short
Wauseon
Scott
Schllltg
Norwalk
R1c
Schne1der
Elyr1a Catholrc
Frank Sa n

a

ders
Dayton Strvers
W11f 1ams Rnrer V1ew

While Falcons
Wahama completed the
sconng m the bottom of the
fow-th, touchmg McKmney for
two walks, a double down the
third base hne, and a smgle
through the Infield.
Marauder Coach Donald
Wolfe, usmg as many pitchers
as possible m order to protect
his staff from developmg sore
arms, mserted Mike Richards
m the fifth who struck out two,
walked none and gave up JUSt
one hit, a double
Semor Steve Price fmlllhed
up the game m the sixth,
walkmg none and giVIng up no
hils as he struck out two of the
three batters he faced, the
thll'd poppmg up weakly to the
mf1eld McKmney was the
losmg pitcher
The Marauder hitting attack
was led by Stobart with a single
and home run, while
· sophomore third baseman
Charhe Marshall slammed a
double and semor catcher M1ck
Ash, Wolfe and Junior second
baseman Mike Nesselroad all
smgled once
All s1x Wahama hits came off
the bats o(the first four batters
m the ballmg order.
Kevrn Camp, who started,

lasted one mmng. He struck out
one and walked Hesson struck
out fow-, walked two, h1t one m
his Impressive performance.
Hesson also had a double at the
plate Dwam Russell had two
smgles and a double, M1ke
Lewis had a double, and Danny
Gardnet a smgle

COACH QUITS
LONG BEACH, Calif (UP!)
-Coach Luther Olson has quit
Long Boach State after a smgle
year with the California school
to take up a $25,000-a-year job
as bead basketball coach at the
University of Iowa
Olson had a 24-2 year With
State thiS season and saw his
school fmish 12th m the UP!
coaches poll

pet g b

52 :lJ
117 3 1
41 37

693
!'103
526

12 1

1J 53

303

29 1

6' :

DIVISIOil

43

w I
JJ

pet g b
558

.otlanta
32 45 416 11
Houston
31 45 408 11 1 ~
Cleveland
7 7 '\ 1 1 .!A l"-'
Western Conferenc e
MidW eS t DIVI SIO il
w 1 pet g b
Milwaukee
55 2? 711
Ch1cago
50 21 658
5

'

'·~

DI \I IS IOil

De tro I

so 26

Ml

51 ,

KC Omaha

3 1 47

394

24 1 ,

Po1CifiC

DIVI S IOn

w

John

HONORABLE MENTION
R I Chard Altman Holland
Spr1ngf 1e ld
Doug
Ak n s
Tr.way
Anderson Brown
Youngstown North
Randy
Backus
Northwestern
(Clark!
Ralph Fe l umlee
L1ck1ng Valley Mtke Gilliland
Columbus
Hartley
M1ke
Gould
Bellefonta ine
Choya
Hawn Clyde Dirk Hammer
sm1th
Mar1emont
Steve
Inman
Morgan
Don
lmobersted , West Branch
Tom
Johnson
Preble
Shawnee
Bobby K1mbro
Bellarre
Jac k Krill
Ver
m iliOn Mark KWa1tkOWSk1
Toledo card1na1 Stntch Kelly
K1nsel
Elg1n
R1tchlc
Longworth Preble Shawnee
M1tch M racle R1ver Har ley
Ma 10rs Leav 1ttsburg Labrae
Herb M1hal tk Loveland Leon
Murray North College H1ll
Kelly Montgomery
United
Local John M cC urdy Sprtng
fteld Catholtc
Jeff N1choll Orange Gerald
Parks Cleveland Bened1Cf1ne
Cra.g Pont1us Teays Valley
Paul Root
Kenton
M 1ke

1

pet g b
573
564
1?

GoldenState
.t] 32
Los Angeles
44 34
Seatlle
J2 44 42\ 11 1
Phoen1 x
26 SO 359 f61
Portland
25 5 1 J29 18 1 ,
x clrnched d1v1s on fil e
Monday s Results
KC Omaha 114 Portland 105
only game sc h ed uled
Ton1ght's Go1mcs
Porlland at Cleveland
Boston at Houston
Phdadelph 1a at Chrcago
M !wauk ee a t Go lden Stat e
(only games sch Pdul ed)

ABA St01ndrngs
By Un1ted Press International
East
w I pel g b
New York
50 29 633
Ken lucky
48 29 623
I
Carol1na
r\6 ]3 582
4
v,rg1n1a
'16 52 333 23 1 7
Memph s
19 58
30
West
w I pet • b
Utah
48 29 6?3
San Anton to
0 36 5&lt;14
lnd1ana
43 37 538
San 0 ego
34 44
436
Denv er
]&lt;t 411
4]6

"'

Mondav s Results

San An t on10 100 Ca rolma 93
only game schedul ed
Tontght 's Games

Utah at MemphtS
I only game sch~du l ed)

WHA Stand1ngs
By Un1ted Press lnternatronal

East
w

N Eng d

Trnto
Quebec
Cleve d
Ch 1cago
Jersey

M 1nn

Wonn

1 t pt s gf

ga

40 29 3 83
3536474
3533 373
J2 30 6 72
3432371

272 245

31 ]6 4 66
West

245 277

278
275
233
237

256
25 6
238
24]

w t 1 pts gf ga
43 2 1 5 91 281 187

Houston
g

Ed ton
Vncuvr

39 30 7 80
3135 5 69

297 756
241 268

34 3 3 1 69

2311 238
255 799

25 tl4 0 50

23 47 0 46 208 293
Mondays Result
Jerse y 11 Toronto 5
only game scheduled
Tomght's Games
M1nneso1a at Van c ouver
Cleve land at Ch1cago
(only game sc h eduled )
LA

COWENS RESTED
BOSTON (UP!)
Center
Dave Cowens, suffering from
pain m his left knee, rested
hete today while the Boston

~~~·~n~~~~~~~:;.::,saroad
Team ph,yslcian Dr Thomas
Sliva said he hoped Cowens
would he able to return to
acbon Friday mght ·when the
Celt1cs return home to the
Boston Garden He said the
center of the diVISIOn cham·
pions suffered a bruiSe several
weeks a;jo and after a flare-up
of pam last weekend "x-rays
revealed calcification m the
soft tissues ''

PLAYER.COACH
NEW YORK (UP!)
Manuel Santana of Spain,
former Wunbledon and U S
tenniS champiOn, has been
named player-eoach of the
New York Sets of the World
Team TenniS League

Orioles wallop Rangers.
By Umlcd Press fnternalional
Earl Weaver and Billy
Martm, two pf baseballs more
acllve brams, have had some
differences before but they
weren't gomg to get mto any
hassle O\ er Charley Pnde
That's right, Charley Pride,
the country smger, who not
only plays pretty good guitar
but also swmgs a hot bat now
and then
Pride played professiOnally
m the mmors before gomg mto
show busmess and the mnova.

Dodger barrage against lour pitcher to face Hank Aaron this
pitchers and Twins lost more year took the loss on two-run
than the game when slugger mmngs m the fourth and sixth
Harmon K1llebew dove for a
g1 ounder by Von Joshua and
Th1 s W eek s Soecta1
ca me up with a d1'l)ocated
shoulder that w•ll keep him
mdefmtely, probably through
VALUE
opemng day Apnl 5 L A
RATED
tallied seven m the second and
that made Tommy John the
wtnner desptte gtvmg Up two
USED CARS
homers

live Martm came up with the

hasn't beaten the A s smce
commg to the A L and he

bnght Idea of usmg him as the
Texas Rangers' designated
hitte1 m Monday s ball game
with the Balllmore Orioles
'It was perfectly okay with
me, ' says Weaver 'They can
try out who they want m sprmg
trammg Besides, Pride 1sn t
exactly a humpty He has
played ball before and he can
handle hunself all nght"
The country smger didn't do
badly at all against Cy Young
award wmner Jim Palmer
gomg 1-for-2 agamst h1m and
smglmg sharply up the middle
m h1s bow &lt;Jut appearance, but
that didn't help the Rangers
much m a 14-2 walloping by the
Orioles
Mark Belanger's three-run
double off young David Clyde
m the second mmng wrapped
up the ball game for Baltimore
and Curt Molton added a
homer later m the contest Jeff
Burrougfis homered for the
Rangers
~
To give you some ' idea of
what kmd of ball game 11 was,
Baltimore's Don Baylor
collected three hits and sllll
saw his average drop He went
mto the game with a 538
average and went to bat SIX
tunes
The Los Angeles Dodgers
ahnost rna tched the Orioles'
fireworks when they got 18 hits
m healing the Mmnesota
Twms, 13-5, and m other
exhibitiOn games, the New
York Mets mcked the New
York Yankees 1-0, the world
champiOn Oakland A's downed
Cleveland 6-3, the Chicago
Cubs beat San Diego 4-2, the
Philadelphia Ph1ls blanked
Cmcmnall 4-0, Boston bombed
the Chicago White Sox 84,
DetrOit trounced Atlanta 1().;1,
Cahforma mcked Milwaukee 65, Kansas C1ty shut out St
Loms l-0, and m San Juan,
Puerto Rico, the Pittsburgh
Pirates downed Montreal, 5-3.
Mets I Yankees 0
Jon Matlack, Bob Apodaca,
and Steve Sunpson three-hilled
the Yanks George Medich
blanked the Mets for five
frames but fa•lw-e to make a
double play on Don Hahn's
grounder to shortstop m the
eighth mnlng cost the Yanks
the game as Wayne Garrett
scored from third
Dodgers 13 Twins 5
Bill Buckner's four hits the

A's 6 Indians 3

lndtan ace GaJ lord Perry
didn l do 11 Monday either,
giVIng up two rW'IS and takmg
the loss Pat Bou1 que had two
doubles and a smgle and
Reggie Jackson a two run
home to lead Oakland as
Catfish Hunter gave up two
runs but got the wm
Ph1ls 4 Cmcinnali 0
Jesus Herna1z and Mik e
Wallace stopped the Red
machme with four hits Jack
BIIImgham, Reds' 19-game
WIMer expected to be the
openmg day pitcher versus
AtlunUI and tlms the first

70 OLDS
CUT. S COUPE
Turquo se ex t y..dh V roo f
rrld 1o c1 r P B P S

•1495

Karr &amp; Van Zandt
You llljk eOurOual ty
Way of Domg Bus1ness
GMAC FINANCING
992 5342
Pomeroy
Open Evenrngs 'T1I6 00

Ttl5 PM Sat

9 out of to
independent insurance agents
help clients when they
have an automobile accident,
says new, impartial survey.
One-company !ialcsmcn tra1l by a w1dc percentage in offcrmg
the same type ol help
Stuvcy rc~ t t l h H.:vctlnl th II 1 re
soundtng 111 ~ 't uf tmh; pcndent
msur l ll LC tgc nh g IH! Jued help

tu 1hc11 clic nt s '' h ~.: n the} needed
help

lllll !-&gt; 1 -

t1 lh ~,: 11l1lC

of

tn

:"ICt.:l

dent tnJ when the] hied 1 cl:111n
I ht s s une unbt:"lsed surve y sho we d
th 11 1 fm lower pet cent 1gc of one

comr tn y sal esmen g.ne ltmi kmd

be1H! f1 ts

\O.,. e

rt! p r csc nt scvc r .d

sttong tcll thle m~ u r &lt;1m:e o.:omp 1
n1cs We se lc ct the lt t: hl rns ur tncc
for you at the bcM pn~.:c md keep
yu tll lll SIJI U1C c li Jl to d IIC And
we II he thet c to hdp you \~ tlh dl

lhc dct.u b when you hHe .m tc
ctJcn t
rom

tk~:

sut c yo u h 1vc contm

of pe rson tl se rv lt:

tun g

Wc rndcpcndcnl tgC tll s otf~.: r c 11
1 /l ~ U I IIH.: C !J u y u S Il l Ill } tJillqLJt:

yom .,; tr md h1llllC tlu ough an

pe rson d

i!ldcpt:mknr

\t cnlton

1gc rrt

(

m smc

II IJ S ~oon

Wrlham D Chtlds

Downing-Childs
Agency, Inc.
Mtddleport, Oh1o

trestone

~~~~~IIRsgi~~~~;,~~~e~::~~~~~~ [DJffiill~

Shaffer
R1ver
Kelly Shy
Portsmouth
west
Terry
Stephens
Warren Kennedy
Bob
Sutula
Steubenville
CathOliC
Greg Spann, In
dependen ce
Randy Sch lc k
Aller1 East
Cl111f Sm1th
Ober l 1n Lew Stdwell Mays
v111e Pal Thomas Whee lers
burg Ron Termeer Dubl1n
Bruce Vance Buckeye South
P layer of the year M1ke
PhillipS
Akron Manches ter

Hesson defeats Marauders 4-2
MASON
The Meigs
Marauder baseball team
opened 1ts 1974 season on a
losmg note, droppmg a 4-2
decision to the Wahama White
Falcons here Monday afternoon R•ck Hesson, who
came on m the second mmng,
gol the wm
Playmg m ankle deep mud,
the Marauders, who were on a
field for the first t1me this year,
took a 2.{) lead m the top of the
third mnmg when semor
centerf1elder Dave Wolfe
smgled, JuniOr nght fielder
Gary George grounded out,
and Rick Stobart homered
deep over the center fielder's
bead
wahama had been held
scoreless the first two mmngs
hehmd the p1tchmg of Junior
nghthander Perk Aull who
struck out two, gave up JUSt
two hits and walked nobody
Sophomore righthander Jeff
McKmney came on m the
bottom of the third and yielded
the fll'sl Wahama run on two
walks and a smgle
The Marauders were held
scoreless the remamder of the
game, despite numerous
rallies that were stopped by
excellent fieldmg plays by the

Ea!ilern Conference

, . on Second Team; John

LAKELAND, Fla 1UP! )- AI I(aline has his young son, Mike,
With hun here, and walking mto the club office the other mormng
he noticed a picture on the wall and called 11 to tbe boy's at
ter.twn
"There's the greatest that ever was, 11 he satd to hlS son
pomtmg out one of the numerous photographs m this camp of the
late Ty Cobb
Some feel Ty Cobb was the greatest player m all baseball
history, some say Babe Ruth and others make a claun for Honus
Wagner. Nobody argues about Cobb bemg the greatest allaround player the Detroit Tigers ever had There Ill equally little
questiOn AI Kalme IS the next gr~alest
On the verge of startmg his 22nd consecutive season with the
Tigers, AI Kalme s1ts m front of his locker this day cradling a bat
between his knees and puffmg on a long cigar
"Trymg to look Important agam, aren't you'" teases pitcher
Mickey Lobch on his way out to the held
'Yup," responds AI Kalme, straight-faced "I'm trymg to look
unportant ''
Nothmg could be fw-ther from the truth For most of the years
he has been With the Tigers, AI Kalme has been !hell' most
valuable commodity Nobody would ever know that though by
the way he conducts himself around the clubhouse He never
pulls any rank, never gives the equipment man a hard time and
never raiSes hill vmce He nunds his own busmess unlliii comes
tune to play the ball game at which time all he does IS go out and
turn m the best all-around performance of any 39-year-&lt;&gt;ld m
sports you can think of
"Ralph," he says, noddmg toward manager Ralph Houk's
office, "told me I'm gomg to be strictly a designated hitter this
year and not play at all I'm happy This way !know when I get to
the park I'll be m the game The other way, you go to the park,
you JUSt s1t there and watch and the whole day Ill wasted "
Every Itinerant wnter who visits thiS camp and speaks w1th
the Tigers' sun-tanned suP.,rstar eventually gets around to the
same question How much longer Ill be gomg to play'
"I'm gomg to play until I get 3,000 hits," says Kaline, who
needs only 139more "l'vemadeupmymmd to that Defmitely I
was ready to qUit last year I thought I had enough, but then you
get so close to somethmg that only 11 others have done and you
feel why not do 11 also'"
Kahne believes Billy Martm handled him well last year He
was m 91 games and fm1shed With 10 nomers, 45 rb1's and a 255
battmg average that was 44 pomts off hill lifetime figure Last
season's average dropped h1s lifetune mark to 299 and this
wmter he agam kicked around the Idea of packmg In the whole
thmg
"!had to consider my two boys," says Kaline "The older one,
Mark, Ill 16, and the younger one, Mike, Ill 11 I talked to them
both and asked them whether I should qmt playmg or contmue
They asked me if I still enJoyed playmg I told them I did They
sa1d I should keep on playmg then The younger one, M1ke, had
one question though He asked me 'if you qmt, can we sbll get m
the ballpark free'' I told hun yes, we sbll coulc! "
Kahne laughs tellmg the story It's perfectly obVIous he loves
his two boys, and in another way, he also loves baseball
"l've been playmg 11 professiOnally smce I was 18," he says
''I've never beenm the 'outs1de world' you could say 1 '
Coming m cold with the Tigers from the Yankees, Ralph Houk
spoke with Kaline and sounded him out on how he liked the Idea
before deciding the veteran Gold Glove outfielder would be used
as a designated hitter and nothing more
"I didn't JUSt go to him aod say now this Ill the way It's gomg to
be," says Houk "!gave hun some of my reasons He can hit both
left-&lt;Illd r1ghthanded pitchers and he drives that run m from lhll'd
base with one out He can shU run Now if I play hun m the outfield and he comes up with a gunpy leg, I've lost hun. I know that
as an opposmg manager one of the fll'st things I'd do when we
faced DetrOit was take a look whether Kaline was playing He's a
fme defensive ballplayer, but when I'd look to see whether he was
playmg I was only thinkmg about hill bat Any tune I d1d't see
him m the startinG lme-up I felt very good."

CARACAS (UPI) - With
their heavyweight champiOn·
ship bout Just a week away,
champiOn George Foreman
and challenger Ken Norton
resumed trammg today after
takmg Monday off to go
s1ghtseemg
Before gomg out to the
Pohedro stadmm for trammg
drills, the fighters were to
undergo
a
physical
exammation at the NatiOnal
Sports Inslltute, a pre con-

NBA Standmgs
By Un1ted Press International

Gallipolis' Gil Price

Today's

Foreman, Norton at Work

1974 CHIYIILI

Female robber
is big failure

Manchester ace named
AA 'Player-of-Year'

- HOEI"'.JCII
F.tl
ROBERT
,

There Are Three Reasons for This Type of Sole

Maximum John (Sirica) h 0 n 0 re d
WASHINhTON (t.JPI)- He
was hailed as "Man of the
Year" by one magazme and
denounced as one of the worst
federal judges m Washington
by another.
He drew praiSe from Pres•·
dent NIXon and harsh rebuke
from leaders of the Amencan
Bar Association
One year ago he was all but
!Dlknown outside Washmgton
judicial and legal Circles Now
the Watergate scandal has
made hun famous.
He IS John J Slrica, and
after today he steps down as
chief U S District Judge of the
D!Jtrict of Columbia
He turns 70 today, and by law

INTEREST OF
MEIGSMA.SON AREA
CHESTER L T,\NNEIID..L,

9 A.M.

1urano:e 11 U 00 p1r day -

Judiciary committee
While cormmttee members
were aware they may not
actually get the report for
weeks or even months because
of appeals and other possible
litigatiOn, they felt Sir1ca's
order had strengthened t:1e11'
request for the presidential
tapes and other Watergate
material NIXon has refused to
relmqu1sh
Rep Harold R Donohue, DMass , said that while the
committee still d1d not know
what was m the report, 11
"could be a maJor factor m
accelerating our comrmttee's
procedure." Rep. Edward Hutchmson of Michigan, ranking
GOP member, was "very
pleased" and said he thought
any appeal could be disposed of
QUICkly
Cormruttee Chall'man Peter
W Rodino Jr , D-N J , said
only that the committee nught
decide later this week whether
to oppose expected arguments
before the appeals court by
Watergate defendants opposmg release of the report
Nixon's Posillon
Sir1ca noted that NIXon's
positiOn, outlmed by attorney
John D St Clall', "Is that he
has no recommendation to
make, suggestmg that the
matter 1s entirely within the
court's discrellon " All the
President had requested,
Sirica said, was the right to
"review and copy the
mater1als "
Sir1ca 's 22-page ruling sa1d
the House cormmttee formally
requested the report and that
Special Watergate Prosecutor
Leon Jaworski urged 1ts release. At a hearmg before Sir1ca
on March 6, attorneys for the
seven men md1cted for conspiracy m the Watergate
coverup obJected to disclosure

D~OTmTOTBE

DEALER COST SALE
POSITIVELY ENDS FRIDAY
~~"'· MORNING, MARCH 22,AT

1ur car or a tot!JI all102

WASHINGTON (UP!) Armed With a court order
giving them a secret grand
jury report on President
NIXon's handlmg of Watergate,
House Judiciary Cormruttee
members believed today they
could brmg new pressw-e on
Nixon to relinQUISh 42 tapes
conSidered VItal to !hell' unpeachment mqwry.
In ruling Monday that the
comm1ttee shoul~ get the
document, Chief U S District
Judge John J Sinca did not
assess the significance ol the
fmdings But he said he had
exammed them carefully and
decided there "can be no
question as to their materiality" to the unpeachment m·
vestlgatlon
In disclosmg for the first
tlllle that the report "focuses"
on NiXon, Sirtca satd It "draws
oo accusatory conclusiOns" but
rather was 11 8 sunple and
straightforward compilation of
information gathered by the
grand Jury and no more "
Therefore, he said, it was
"emmently proper and mdeed
obligatory" to g1ve 11 to the
congressmen
"It should not be forgotten
that we deal m a matter of the
most critical moment to the
nation, an unpeachment mvesi igatlon mvolving the
President of the Umted
States,'' he sa1d
Slays Order
But he stayed his order for
two days to pernut appeals of
his deCISIOn.
The report, consistmg of a
two-page, 50-paragraph
written document and a leather
briefcase contammg unspeCified eVIdence, was giVen
Sir1ca March I when the grand
jury mdicted seven of NIXOn's
former close a1des or campaign ofhc•ais The JUrors
asked Smca to forward 11 to the

The Dai~ Sentinel

GORDON PAGE CHEVROLET INC.

I am the man who has seen
affhctwn under the rod or his
wrath, he has dnven and
brought me Into darkness
without any hght, surely
agamst me he turns h1s hand
agam and agam the whole day
long - LamentatiOns 3 1, 2, 3

New pressure expected
on Nixon for 42 tapes

Greeters and hostesses were
the roommothers of Mrs
Knight's third grade class

Pro Standings

The Marauders now take a
week off when hopefully, the
weather will permit them some
outside practice t1me hefore
they host the White Falcons at
Middleport held Monday,
March 25, at 4 30 p m
Meigs
002 000 11-2 6 1
Wahama
001 300 X-4 6 0
Ault, McKinney (31 (lp),
Richards (5), Price (6), and
Ash Camp, Hesson (2) ( wp)
and Lewis

O

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contents L1ab111ty protection tor
you Many opt1onal extras to meel
yourspec1f 1c needs And ot course
you ca n depend on the best
serviCe Call lor det&lt;"tlls

STEVE SNOWDEN
SS:J Russel St, Mrddltport
PHONE 992 7155
SUITI JUIII

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many new 1974 cars t

double belt under tread

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/imitsd in soms sizss!

The MEIGS INN
The must popular night club in
the tri-county area is proud
present the return of

to
II we slloulil H tout of vour sue "'' I g Vf you t

r1 n et.K~ 1ssur ng 111er oel verv 11 lht ~ vt rliHd prtCt

WINNER WSES

PHILADELPIDA, Pa (UP!)
-Jack McKhmey's reward for
taking St Joseph's College to
the NCAA playoffs was to be
asked to look for anot.her JOb
A terse announcement said
McKinney was bemg replaced
as the college's basketball
coach. No further comment
was available

GEO. HALL
AND THE HALLMARKS

TONIGHT 10 T-JL/2

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto
"Your Complete Tire Center"
Pomeroy, Ohio
606 E. Main
992-2094

�'
3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Tuesday March 19, 1974
2- The Daily Sentmel, Miadleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Tuesday, March 19 1974

~~!~~-.------------------~

I

By Bob Hoeflich

- •

!

Members of the Smith-Clpehart Amencan Legwn Post 140
and Its auxiliary umt must be extremely proud of the fmc new
hall m N~w Haven We understand the post IS m good shape
fmanc1ally on the structw-e because of so much volunteer labor
which has been proVIded by members The brick veneering IS
going up now Monday mght, well over 100 attended the
Amencan Legion birthday party staged at the new home
THE MEIGS COUNTY Fair Board h,as nailed down Ils entertamment for the open grandstand everungs at the annual
Meigs County Fmr m August The e\ emngs when professiOnal
entertainment Ill uwolved are Thursday and Saturday
The board has secured Nat Stucke), Karen Wheeler and Lonzo
and Oscar for the Thw-sda) rughl show and the John Mathews
Fanuly, gospel smgers, for Saturday mghl The professwnal
entertainment Ill free of charge bemg covered m the admiSSIOn
fee to the grounds
MEMBERS OF PRECEPTOR Beta BeUI Chapter of Beta
Sigma Ph• Sorority are asked to contact Margaret Follrod on
!hell' gifts bemg g~ven for a candy sale to be held at the 'Silver
Slipper Saloon" at the Pomeroy Juruor H1gh School on April 20
The members are asked to do thiS at once, proVIdmg at least rno
11tems, so that a list can be compiled
Incidentally, Joe Struble, talented long-time master of
ceremomes of tbe Big Bend Mmstrel Association, w•ll be on hand
April 20 to emcee three nunHnusicals to be staged by the
association m conJunction with the saloon
THE REV THOMAS WEAVER, pastor of the Middleport
Chw-chof the Nazarene, was the fll'sl mmlllter of the commuruty
to attend Middleport Village Council as a part of a new plan
proposed by Councilman Marvm Kelly that a local m1mster be
present for each meetmg The nunllller Isn't necessarily expected to stay for the busmess sessiOn but IS expected to set the
tone of meetings w1th pra) er
THE AMERICAN BATILE MONUMENTS Comnuss10n
recently produced a 28-mmute documentary hhn for the nation's
B1centenmal entitled, "The Price of Freedom" which Is
available on a free-loan basis to schools, religious, CIVIC,
fraternal, veterans and other orgaruzat1ons
The flhn vividly brmgs to life the American Revolution and
subsequent major events m the nation's history Orgaruzahons
mterested m obtammg the £Ihn should contact Modern Talkmg
Picture SerVIce, 2329 New Hyde Park Road, New Hyde Park, N
y 10018
SYRACUSE SCHOOL WINNERS m a colormg contest held
by the Meigs Bookmobile Service to stress the restw-n of books to
the umt mclude Bnan Lee Bw-khamer, Teresa Harden and Angie
Hubbard The wmners will receive badges from the bookmobile

~

Churches

I'

Progress m local schools was
the topic of the speaker when
the Middleport PTA met
Monday evemng at the Mid·
dleport Elementary School
The Pledge of Allegiance led by
Mrs Kmghl's third grade class
opened the meeting

I i\NCAS rEH. Oluo t UP II The Lancaslei St V1ecent de
Paul Soc1etv ::~nd 14 chu rches m
the I•'mrfield Count\ ared were
presented

the

OhiO Youth Comm1sswn

Wilham J Ensign director
of the comnusswn, presented
the awa1 ds on beh.IIf of Gov
John J Gilligan
Churches re ce i\ m g the
awards were New Sa lem

Umted Methodis t Church
Sixth

Avenue

Methodist Church, Lancaster
Lancaster Umted Brethren m
Chnst Church , Lancaster,
M11ls
Memonal
Umted
Methodist Church, Lancaster
First Presb~terian Chu r ch,
Lancaster St Paul s Lutheran
ALC Church, Lancaster
Also,
Chnst
Umted
Methodist Church Baltunm e,
Be"lah Umted Methodist
Church, Baltimore Mal kct
Street Umted MethodiS t
Church, Baltimore Tnnit)
Umted Church of Chnst,
Baltimore
Olive Umted
Methodist Church, Balhmore
St Michael's Umted Church of
Chmt, PICkermgton, Mt Zwn
Umted Church of Chnst,
Pickerington , and St Peter's
Umted Church of Christ,
Winchester

Devotwns were g1ven by the
Rev Wilbur Pernn of the
Tnmty Church of Pomeroy,
and the room award went to
Mrs Kmghl's third grade
class. An Easter egg ht&lt;nt •s
slated for April and a held day
w May was also discussed
Prmc1pal Robert Morns
reviewed progre~ In the Meigs
Local School System, and new
officers for this year were
announced They are Mary
Rose, president, Judy Crow,
firs t vice-president, Betsy
Weaver,
second
vicepresident Cheryl Roush,
secretary, and Carol Wolfe,
treasurer
Delegates to the count)
council are Judy Crooks,
Phyllis Baker, Ruby Vaughan,
Kathy Erwm and Manlyn
Pouhns

GETS 50 YEARS
PHILADELPHIA ( UPf I - A
Washmgton, D C , parkmg lot
attendant was sentenced to 50
yearsm federal pnson Monda)
for his part Ill a 1972
skyJackmg The defendant
Michael S Green, 35, was
convicted last June 19 of
helping hiJaCk a NatiOnal
Airlines 727 here on July 12,
1972 H•s alleged accomplice m
the hiJackmg has not been lr1ed
because of his mental con
d1tion

go vernor's

award for commumty a~.: t10n
here Monda) mght m the
recog mtwn of their efforts 1n
helpm g youns ters at the
Fairfield School fo1 Boys of the

Lancaster,

Progress in local schools reviewed

OWN l ,OOOTH TREE FARM - Mrs Willard Brooks and
her son, Enc, of Albany, Ohio acc'Cpted a tree farm sign for
their Athens County farm s1gmfymg cerllficallon as an Ohio
Tree F'arm, at Ohio Forestry AssociatiOn's 7lst Annual
Meetmg recently m Columbus The Brooks farm was the
J,OOOth Ohio Tree Farm to be certified by the AmeriCan
Forest Institute and the Oh10 Tree Farm Committee of the
Oh10 Forestry AssociatiOn This award, recog.-,1zmg good
woodlands management, brmgs certified tree farm acreage
m OhiO •o over 250 000 acres The OFA w11l hold Its Forestry
Camps June 9-29 at Hidden Hollow Camp m Richland County
and the Paul Bunyan Show at Hocking Technical College,
Nelsonville, Oct 18-20 For 111format10n on these and other
conservatiOn programs, contact The OhiO Forestry
AssociatiOn, The Nell House, Columbus, Ohio 43215

of the report
However, the Judge sa1d
Monday, "It seems mcredible
that grand JW"Y matters should
lawfully be av81lable to disbarment corrumttees and pollee
disc1plmary mvesllgatlons and
yet be unav8llable to the House
of Representatives m a proceeding of so great unport as
an
Impeachment
mveshgahon ,
John J Wilson, attorney for
two of the seven- former top
pres1denllal aides H.R Haldeman and John D Ehrlich·
man- argued vehemently
agall'lllt g1vmg the report to the
comrmttee Wilson said the
matenal would be leaked to
reporters If 11 went to Capitol
H1ll
Argument ReJect.ed
ReJecting that argument,
Sirica said the grand JW"Y
"recommended disclosure, not
public d1ssemmatwn, but
delivery to the House Judiciary
Conumttee With a request that
the report be wed with due
regard for the consltlhonal
rights of persons under mdict-

I

Sirica must relinquish the post
he has held through the most
torrid days of the Watergate
scandal
He will be replaced by Judge
George L Hart Jr , 68 But
Sir1ca will remam a JUdge and
has served nollce that he will
C'.Jntmue as the overseer of the
court acllons bo1hng out of
America's worst pohllcal scan·
dal
Around the courthouse Sinca
Ill called a "tough little JUdge"
by admll'ers, and ' Maxunum
John" by those who know how
he shuns miilllTium sentences
Son of an Italian unm1grant,
Sinca earned his way through
school greasmg cars, selling

Oly Edltcr

P\lbliahed dilly except Sat\D"day by The
Ohio Val~ Publiahizll Company, ll1
Court St Pomeroy, Ohio M1te Bulinea
Office PtrJne mme Editorial Phone m

m1

Serond claas postage paid at Pomeroy,

OhiO

Nattona l advertising repre.entattve
l:loi:Unelli.(iallagher Inc UF.ut ttnd St,
Ntw York New Yurk
~becrlpUon

rates Delivered by carrier
where available eo cents P« week By
Motor Route whl!!'f! earrier aervlce not
avatlable One mooth SUO By m.U in
Cillo and W Va One Year $13 SU:
month&amp; tt 50 Three month1 $6
E!Mwhere f22 00 year siJ: mmths $11 510
three mooth!J til 50 SUbecription pnce

U'ICludes 9Jnday 'Ilmea-Sentinel

DEMO&amp; BRAND NEW

1973
&amp;
1974
CHEVROLETS
WILL BE SOLD AT DEALER'S COST ONLY AT
lral'll the la110ry lh1
CIIIJIII!f tharge IO 1,11 On

1

2

10th car 1ncludcng in·

t

•

1torage &amp; •~ -

lerul

we ~"P

II

jttr day

we~~¥ han J5 u,H ~trs
In UOI. wHrtU WI

Th, 11 ne rr..!t 5tlrll.
The cor ilus.U1S II nor•
rnally 1low ncnoo &amp; before
rhe nerrntl spnng ll'pSur

Lei. htrt f prnl w1H.
lllllpllt tfllhmlllt Moll ••
then nrs fUll amnll

1111

11rs lor 30 claws '~'' "

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We han

l)t

sau

dt~ided

,hould han

the S30.0 00

IOHflnlJ d!OflJtl
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wttr?
1!

rs

Wt •••

wt [tnlllll htp tur
pH~enud utd

3.

ro

u.
car

s11!nmtn vtry 1"'11 11 thtJ
do 1101 hovt tDIRI good
uud lOrt to nil Jhit

we

sell these ctrs at dealer s
1011 lhon 1f we poy
urrr•Rg chorges lor JO

Delll&amp;n Cnt Salt h e~~t
way for "' It gtl 1om1

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mvrll good •ned 1ars on

All 1974 Che'4ralets tn sto'k

wtll

SEN ARMSTRONG HONORED - Fow- hundred people
honored Sen Harry L Armstrong at the Logan Armory for
his past record and m support of his current b1d for reelectiOn
as State Senator from the 17th Ohio Senate District The
senat"f, m public service 26 years, IS seekmg his third term
In- the-'Ohio Senate He has served as a township trustee,
count} cotrumssLOner, state representative, and now state
senator Left to nght are Dean S1meral, Ohw Farm Bw-eau
FederatiOn, Pearl Fogle, former area soli conservatwmst,
Frank Sollars, past president, OFBF, and of the S&amp;WCD, the
senator, and Barton Holl, Loga n mdustnahst

Herbert Miller died on Monday
Funeral services for Herbert
Miller , 81, Rt I, Middleport,
who died Monda) at the Holzer
MediCal Center, have been set
for 1 p m Thursdav at the
Ewmg Funeral Home
A member of the B1 adford
Church of Christ, Miller was

the son of the late George and
Nancy Adkins Miller He was
also preceded 111 death by three
sons, Dale, Denny and Roger,
three sisters and a brother
Surv1vmg are his Wife, Helen
Magun e M1ller six daughters,
Mrs Conrad (Elizabeth)
Ohlinger, Pomeroy, Mrs
Elwood t Eileen ) Bowers, Rt 3,
Pomeroy,
Mrs
Frank
(Nadw! ) Neubauer, Jersey
City, N J , Mrs June Glaze,
HOUSTON ( UPJ ) - Barbara Middleport, Mrs John (Jean)
Pardue wore nothmg but Michels, Prospect, Ill , and
panties, a blouse and a frown Mrs James (Jackie) Reed, Rt
But she earned a pistol
I, Middleport a son, Herbert
Charles Hall, 43, told pollee
Roy, Rae me, two sisters, Mrs
the woman entered his
ment "
Lucy Glenn, Pataskala, and
grocery,
pomted the gun at him
He sa1d the possibility of
Mrs Ruby Ruble, Michigan;
public disclosure of the and demanded cash from the and tv.o brothers, Marshall,
report's contents did not JUstify register
Beverly, and Ronald, Mid·
As soon as she left, he
supprtssmg 11, as Wilson had
dleport Also surv1vmg are 27
asked, and he found the report grabbed a gun from under the grandchildren , 26 great"clearly w1thm the bounds of counter and ran out the front grandchildren and several
propriety of pubhc diS· door m pursUit
The clerk and the scantily meces and nephews
closure
of
the
reOfflciatmg at the Thursday
port's contents did not clad woman, standmg 10 paces services will be Clifford Sm1 th
JUStify suppressmg 11 , as apart, exchanged 11 wild shots Bw-1al w•ll be m the Miles
testified
that at each other They all missed Cemetery Fnends may call at
Wilson
there can be no ques- But Hall saved one round and the funeral home at anytime
llon regarding their ma- got the drop on the woman
Her pistol empty, the woman
tenahty to the House
Judiciary Committee's mvesll- threw up her hands 111 defeat Washmgtonran dld not change
1t
gabon," Sirica srud He :.dded and told Hall he could have the Its Judgment when
money
back
If
he
would
let
her
reassessed
the
JUdges
last
fall.
that 11 was the committee's
CIVIl libertarians have
responsibility to deterrmne the go "No deal ," he sa1d
M•ss
Pardue,
28,
a
waitress,
argued that SII'Ica's tactics
"significance of the evidence •
was
mJaii
today
,
charged
w1th
depnve a defendant or full
put forth m the grand JUry's
aggravated
robbery
legal rights A past president of
report
the Amencan Bar Association,
Chesterfield Smith, has said
"We must be concerned about
a federal JUdge-no matter
how worthy hiS mollVeS or bow
much we may applaud his
newspapers, and boxmg He thinks "
results-usmg the criminal
was qUite handy With his fists,
Sir1ca 's unusual tactics from sentencmg process as a means
and former world heavyweight the bench dunng the and tool for further crunmal
champ Jack Dempsey was best Watergate trial last year mvesllgatwn of others."
man at h1s wedding in 1952
brought hun some cnllCism
But the pubhc reaction to
A muscular 5-feeH, Sinca's Always extra tough when Sir1ca 's conduct of the case bas
thick, wavy hair 1s only lightly dealing w1th so-called while been overwhelm10gly
streaked With gray Sharp eyes · collar crunmals, Sirica told favorable, and NIXon himself
peer out from behmd bushy one Watergate defendant, 'I m May Cited a "brave Federal
brows
don 't beheve you," and JUdge" as one of the factors m
S1nca has an enormous threatened all seven with brmgmg out the full story
respect for the U S system of maxtm urn prtson sentence~ Sinca has received thousands
JUSbce, but frequently IS un- unless they decided to of letters and telegrams
patient with Its strict rules and cooperate with the mvesllgaOn Jan I, Sirica was named
technicahlles On at least one tion
Time magazme's Man of the
occasion when a defense
When Washmgtoman Maga- Year "as a symbol of the
lawyer threat~ned to appeal zme assessed DistriCt of Co· American JUdiciary's mone of h1s rulmgs, Smca lumb1a JUdges In 1972, Sirica Sistence on the pnonty of law
retorted "I could care less was ranked m the bottom throughout
the
sordid
what the Court of Appeals quarter Even after Watergate, Watergate saga of 1973"

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I Ptc ol order or trade CDr! w1th onolher

dealer
fYfRY C.U MUST GOI Pltc~lt do not carnt
witltout t1llt ar 1eth d•IK'Jit Shop atlttr
dnltn lt•f"' rtu 911 our
Wt wtnl It

•...1

trade rod.w

BUOW
WINDOW STICKER PRICE

Your trade

IS

bomple
Pme S449000

$O'I'IAIJS

-30% 1347 00
YOU PAY 1 3143.00
DeoiH co1t Pf"lces as dehl'l'" 1n
Athens Oh10 hery car wdl bt fully
pre-pared and J«vKed before •
after dehvery We will 1ell to
anyorH! mcludrng Mw car deo.... 1

Tradt ms n.t ntrnsary - ~~~~ 1 fair ,net
tlltWIICI Will Itt medt en Yllllf prtstnl Ur If
Ytt "''"' t. trade if 1n

but we reserve the rltht to
withdraw this oHer Without notice

worth a nNntmum of 5850 00 IHI

We

any 197 4 Chevrolet full sized car tn do(k

w•li accept any make year ·

your lrade

model BUT you must dnve

h:ample

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Your Trade BSO.OO
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1974 MONTI CAIIIO&lt;I

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* Impalas * Caprtees *

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Please Tell Your Friends About This Ad!
EVERY ADVERTISED CAR SOlD AT DEAlER COST
NOTia TO SKEPTICS THIS IS NO COME ON! THERE ARE NO GIMMICKS' WE WILL SILL

"NO CHISELERS PLEASE"
SPECIAL INVITATION TO MEIGS COUNTY RESIDENTS!
CRAWL ... WALK, .. RUN ... FLY ... LEAP ... TAKE A BOAT ...
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. ALLROADs
p~•GE
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_ -· LEAD TO PAGE CHEVROlET
~
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OHIO VALLEY

AND AREA

Athens, Ohio

OUT OF TOWN CALLS WELCOME

750 EAST STATE, ATHENS, OHI0-614-593-6671

'
"

··:·./ .,......_.,

'.·-.

Sport Parade
By MILTON RICHMAN
'TPI Sports Editor

''

Atlomftc

~

w t
Boston
N ewYor k

Buffalo
Pillladelphta

(entrat
x Cap 1ial

~1 Shoemaker Third Team
t

ditwn to their bemg granted
licenses to fight m Venezuela
The 25-year-&lt;&gt;ld champiOn
resumed trammg after a twoday break from drills, while
Norton, who spent much of
Monday w1th his parents, was
commg back after a ~our
layoff
"George IS real loose," satd
Foreman spokesman Bill Caplan "The day off did him,. a
world of good "

COLUMBUS iUPI) - M1ke
Phillips, a 6-11 240-pound scorIng and reboundmg machme for
Akron Manchester, IS the 1974
Umted Press Internatwnal Class
AA player of the year
fn captw-mg the player of the
year honors , Ph1lhps heads up
an aJI-Ohio first team \\hich a!
so mcludes M1ke Chne of West
Holmes, Greg Cobb of Olmsted
Fails, Ron Hammye of Genoa
and Garry Allison of Wellsville
Ph1lhps, the most sought after
player 1n the state by colleg•
recrmters has led Mancl)estcr
to two straight unbeaten regular
seasons and helped earn the
Panthers the No I spot this
season 111 the UP! Board of
Coaches ratmgs
B1g enough and talented
enough to carry a team on h1s
shoulders, that's JUst about what
Phillips has done, averaging 36
pom Is and 25 rebounds per
game for coach Berme Conley
The only game the Panthers
have lost during the past two
years was last year m the
tournament and that came with
the "big guy ' on the sidelines
suffering from a blood clot w
h1s arm
Although Ph1lhps carnes a
36-pomts per game average, he
IS sllll second In sconng on the
squad to Cobb, who at 5-11 IS
the smallest player among the
first three teams He IS also the
only JuniOr and the top scorer
with a mark of 37 I per contest
Chne, 6-3, led West Holmes,
coached by AA coach of the
year Jack Van Reeth, to 17-1
regular season record Chne was
the Kmghls' top scorer w1th an
average of 22 per game
Hammye, at 6-10, IS the second largest of the AA players

He paced Genoa to a 17-1 record wtth hts 181 scormg aver
age
Allison , one of a set of twms
who played for Coach Bobby
Dawson 1 paced Wellsvtlle to an
unbeaten regular season mark
and the NM. 2 spot In the UP!
ratmgs Allison IS 6-5 and averaged 18 8 per game
The second team, while not
as large as the first, also has
good scorwg punch, led by II·
rna Catholic's 6-3 Tom Terry
at 27 2 and 6~ Randy Haefner
of Cmcmnall McNicholas at 25 6
Roundmg out the second squad
are Ed Tillman of Columbus Mohawk (6-2, 22 3), John Coleman
of Ashtabula Harbor (6-2, 23 41,
and Gil Pnee of Gallipolis (6-5
18 91
Waverly's John Shoemaker IS
the top scorer among lhe third
learners with a 27 9 per game
mark with J1m Asbury of
Bndgeport (26 4) and Larry
Hall of Barnesville (25 51 close
behmd The other two members
are LOveland's Mark Baron
( 14 3) and Mark Robey ( 18 0) of
Sprmgfleld Shawnee
Van Reeth, m wmmng the
voting for coach of the year
edged out both Conley or No I
ranked Manchester and Dawson
of No 2 Wellsville
Van Reeth received 13 votes
out of the 76 cast 1n theclose
ballotmg, while Dawson got 12
and Conley 10 Loveland's
Char he Harker and Dave Hitch·
en of Genoa each received s1x
Others w1lh more than one
vote were Dave Sheetz of Columbus Mohawk, Tom Swearmgen of Evergreen, Eddie
Armstrong of Ashtabula Harbor
and Mike Akers of Preble
Shawree

Class AA All-Ohio Team
COLUMBUS !UP I ) The
1974 Un1ted Press l nternat1onal
Class AA A l l Ohto basketball
team (wrth height grade and
scor1ng averages listed)

FIRST TEAM
Mtke Clme West Holmes 6
22 0 Greg Cobb Olmsted
Falls
5 11
Jr
37 1 M1ke
Ph1ll1ps Akron Manchester 6

3 Sr
11

sr , 36 o

Ron Hammye Genoa 6 10
Sr 18 1 Garry Alltson Wells
v111e, 6 5 Sr 18
SECOND TEAM
Ed
T1llman
Columbus
Mohawk 6 2 Sr
22 3 John
Coleman Ashtabula H~rbor 6
2 Sr
23 -l Randy Haefner
C1nc1nnatl McNicholas 6 6
Sr
25 6 Tom Terry L1ma
Central CathO l iC 6 3 Sr 27 2
Grl Fnce, Gallrpohs 6 5, Sr,
18 '
THIRD TEAM
J •m A sbury Br1dgeport 6 0
Sr
26 4
John Shoemaker,
Waverly, 6 2 Sr 77 9, Mark
Baron Loveland, 6 4 Sr 14 3
Mark
Roby ,
Sprrngfleld
Shawnee 6 5 Sr 18 0 Larry
Hall Barnesv1lle 6 5 Sr 25 5
SPECIAL MENTION
Larry Allen Martms Ferry
Jay Addy New concord John
Glenn R1ch1e Babcock R1dge
wood Jerry Blade Twrnsburg
Chamberltn
Darrell Ewart
Bellatre
Dan F1nn
Canton
Lehman
John Gerdeman
Delph1s St Johns Dave Haus
feld
St
Marys Memortal
Steve L ong Upper Sandusky
Ted
Lemmon
West
Muskrngum T1m Stemhtlber,
Wynford
John
Saxton
Coshocton
Dave
Short
Wauseon
Scott
Schllltg
Norwalk
R1c
Schne1der
Elyr1a Catholrc
Frank Sa n

a

ders
Dayton Strvers
W11f 1ams Rnrer V1ew

While Falcons
Wahama completed the
sconng m the bottom of the
fow-th, touchmg McKmney for
two walks, a double down the
third base hne, and a smgle
through the Infield.
Marauder Coach Donald
Wolfe, usmg as many pitchers
as possible m order to protect
his staff from developmg sore
arms, mserted Mike Richards
m the fifth who struck out two,
walked none and gave up JUSt
one hit, a double
Semor Steve Price fmlllhed
up the game m the sixth,
walkmg none and giVIng up no
hils as he struck out two of the
three batters he faced, the
thll'd poppmg up weakly to the
mf1eld McKmney was the
losmg pitcher
The Marauder hitting attack
was led by Stobart with a single
and home run, while
· sophomore third baseman
Charhe Marshall slammed a
double and semor catcher M1ck
Ash, Wolfe and Junior second
baseman Mike Nesselroad all
smgled once
All s1x Wahama hits came off
the bats o(the first four batters
m the ballmg order.
Kevrn Camp, who started,

lasted one mmng. He struck out
one and walked Hesson struck
out fow-, walked two, h1t one m
his Impressive performance.
Hesson also had a double at the
plate Dwam Russell had two
smgles and a double, M1ke
Lewis had a double, and Danny
Gardnet a smgle

COACH QUITS
LONG BEACH, Calif (UP!)
-Coach Luther Olson has quit
Long Boach State after a smgle
year with the California school
to take up a $25,000-a-year job
as bead basketball coach at the
University of Iowa
Olson had a 24-2 year With
State thiS season and saw his
school fmish 12th m the UP!
coaches poll

pet g b

52 :lJ
117 3 1
41 37

693
!'103
526

12 1

1J 53

303

29 1

6' :

DIVISIOil

43

w I
JJ

pet g b
558

.otlanta
32 45 416 11
Houston
31 45 408 11 1 ~
Cleveland
7 7 '\ 1 1 .!A l"-'
Western Conferenc e
MidW eS t DIVI SIO il
w 1 pet g b
Milwaukee
55 2? 711
Ch1cago
50 21 658
5

'

'·~

DI \I IS IOil

De tro I

so 26

Ml

51 ,

KC Omaha

3 1 47

394

24 1 ,

Po1CifiC

DIVI S IOn

w

John

HONORABLE MENTION
R I Chard Altman Holland
Spr1ngf 1e ld
Doug
Ak n s
Tr.way
Anderson Brown
Youngstown North
Randy
Backus
Northwestern
(Clark!
Ralph Fe l umlee
L1ck1ng Valley Mtke Gilliland
Columbus
Hartley
M1ke
Gould
Bellefonta ine
Choya
Hawn Clyde Dirk Hammer
sm1th
Mar1emont
Steve
Inman
Morgan
Don
lmobersted , West Branch
Tom
Johnson
Preble
Shawnee
Bobby K1mbro
Bellarre
Jac k Krill
Ver
m iliOn Mark KWa1tkOWSk1
Toledo card1na1 Stntch Kelly
K1nsel
Elg1n
R1tchlc
Longworth Preble Shawnee
M1tch M racle R1ver Har ley
Ma 10rs Leav 1ttsburg Labrae
Herb M1hal tk Loveland Leon
Murray North College H1ll
Kelly Montgomery
United
Local John M cC urdy Sprtng
fteld Catholtc
Jeff N1choll Orange Gerald
Parks Cleveland Bened1Cf1ne
Cra.g Pont1us Teays Valley
Paul Root
Kenton
M 1ke

1

pet g b
573
564
1?

GoldenState
.t] 32
Los Angeles
44 34
Seatlle
J2 44 42\ 11 1
Phoen1 x
26 SO 359 f61
Portland
25 5 1 J29 18 1 ,
x clrnched d1v1s on fil e
Monday s Results
KC Omaha 114 Portland 105
only game sc h ed uled
Ton1ght's Go1mcs
Porlland at Cleveland
Boston at Houston
Phdadelph 1a at Chrcago
M !wauk ee a t Go lden Stat e
(only games sch Pdul ed)

ABA St01ndrngs
By Un1ted Press International
East
w I pel g b
New York
50 29 633
Ken lucky
48 29 623
I
Carol1na
r\6 ]3 582
4
v,rg1n1a
'16 52 333 23 1 7
Memph s
19 58
30
West
w I pet • b
Utah
48 29 6?3
San Anton to
0 36 5&lt;14
lnd1ana
43 37 538
San 0 ego
34 44
436
Denv er
]&lt;t 411
4]6

"'

Mondav s Results

San An t on10 100 Ca rolma 93
only game schedul ed
Tontght 's Games

Utah at MemphtS
I only game sch~du l ed)

WHA Stand1ngs
By Un1ted Press lnternatronal

East
w

N Eng d

Trnto
Quebec
Cleve d
Ch 1cago
Jersey

M 1nn

Wonn

1 t pt s gf

ga

40 29 3 83
3536474
3533 373
J2 30 6 72
3432371

272 245

31 ]6 4 66
West

245 277

278
275
233
237

256
25 6
238
24]

w t 1 pts gf ga
43 2 1 5 91 281 187

Houston
g

Ed ton
Vncuvr

39 30 7 80
3135 5 69

297 756
241 268

34 3 3 1 69

2311 238
255 799

25 tl4 0 50

23 47 0 46 208 293
Mondays Result
Jerse y 11 Toronto 5
only game scheduled
Tomght's Games
M1nneso1a at Van c ouver
Cleve land at Ch1cago
(only game sc h eduled )
LA

COWENS RESTED
BOSTON (UP!)
Center
Dave Cowens, suffering from
pain m his left knee, rested
hete today while the Boston

~~~·~n~~~~~~~:;.::,saroad
Team ph,yslcian Dr Thomas
Sliva said he hoped Cowens
would he able to return to
acbon Friday mght ·when the
Celt1cs return home to the
Boston Garden He said the
center of the diVISIOn cham·
pions suffered a bruiSe several
weeks a;jo and after a flare-up
of pam last weekend "x-rays
revealed calcification m the
soft tissues ''

PLAYER.COACH
NEW YORK (UP!)
Manuel Santana of Spain,
former Wunbledon and U S
tenniS champiOn, has been
named player-eoach of the
New York Sets of the World
Team TenniS League

Orioles wallop Rangers.
By Umlcd Press fnternalional
Earl Weaver and Billy
Martm, two pf baseballs more
acllve brams, have had some
differences before but they
weren't gomg to get mto any
hassle O\ er Charley Pnde
That's right, Charley Pride,
the country smger, who not
only plays pretty good guitar
but also swmgs a hot bat now
and then
Pride played professiOnally
m the mmors before gomg mto
show busmess and the mnova.

Dodger barrage against lour pitcher to face Hank Aaron this
pitchers and Twins lost more year took the loss on two-run
than the game when slugger mmngs m the fourth and sixth
Harmon K1llebew dove for a
g1 ounder by Von Joshua and
Th1 s W eek s Soecta1
ca me up with a d1'l)ocated
shoulder that w•ll keep him
mdefmtely, probably through
VALUE
opemng day Apnl 5 L A
RATED
tallied seven m the second and
that made Tommy John the
wtnner desptte gtvmg Up two
USED CARS
homers

live Martm came up with the

hasn't beaten the A s smce
commg to the A L and he

bnght Idea of usmg him as the
Texas Rangers' designated
hitte1 m Monday s ball game
with the Balllmore Orioles
'It was perfectly okay with
me, ' says Weaver 'They can
try out who they want m sprmg
trammg Besides, Pride 1sn t
exactly a humpty He has
played ball before and he can
handle hunself all nght"
The country smger didn't do
badly at all against Cy Young
award wmner Jim Palmer
gomg 1-for-2 agamst h1m and
smglmg sharply up the middle
m h1s bow &lt;Jut appearance, but
that didn't help the Rangers
much m a 14-2 walloping by the
Orioles
Mark Belanger's three-run
double off young David Clyde
m the second mmng wrapped
up the ball game for Baltimore
and Curt Molton added a
homer later m the contest Jeff
Burrougfis homered for the
Rangers
~
To give you some ' idea of
what kmd of ball game 11 was,
Baltimore's Don Baylor
collected three hits and sllll
saw his average drop He went
mto the game with a 538
average and went to bat SIX
tunes
The Los Angeles Dodgers
ahnost rna tched the Orioles'
fireworks when they got 18 hits
m healing the Mmnesota
Twms, 13-5, and m other
exhibitiOn games, the New
York Mets mcked the New
York Yankees 1-0, the world
champiOn Oakland A's downed
Cleveland 6-3, the Chicago
Cubs beat San Diego 4-2, the
Philadelphia Ph1ls blanked
Cmcmnall 4-0, Boston bombed
the Chicago White Sox 84,
DetrOit trounced Atlanta 1().;1,
Cahforma mcked Milwaukee 65, Kansas C1ty shut out St
Loms l-0, and m San Juan,
Puerto Rico, the Pittsburgh
Pirates downed Montreal, 5-3.
Mets I Yankees 0
Jon Matlack, Bob Apodaca,
and Steve Sunpson three-hilled
the Yanks George Medich
blanked the Mets for five
frames but fa•lw-e to make a
double play on Don Hahn's
grounder to shortstop m the
eighth mnlng cost the Yanks
the game as Wayne Garrett
scored from third
Dodgers 13 Twins 5
Bill Buckner's four hits the

A's 6 Indians 3

lndtan ace GaJ lord Perry
didn l do 11 Monday either,
giVIng up two rW'IS and takmg
the loss Pat Bou1 que had two
doubles and a smgle and
Reggie Jackson a two run
home to lead Oakland as
Catfish Hunter gave up two
runs but got the wm
Ph1ls 4 Cmcinnali 0
Jesus Herna1z and Mik e
Wallace stopped the Red
machme with four hits Jack
BIIImgham, Reds' 19-game
WIMer expected to be the
openmg day pitcher versus
AtlunUI and tlms the first

70 OLDS
CUT. S COUPE
Turquo se ex t y..dh V roo f
rrld 1o c1 r P B P S

•1495

Karr &amp; Van Zandt
You llljk eOurOual ty
Way of Domg Bus1ness
GMAC FINANCING
992 5342
Pomeroy
Open Evenrngs 'T1I6 00

Ttl5 PM Sat

9 out of to
independent insurance agents
help clients when they
have an automobile accident,
says new, impartial survey.
One-company !ialcsmcn tra1l by a w1dc percentage in offcrmg
the same type ol help
Stuvcy rc~ t t l h H.:vctlnl th II 1 re
soundtng 111 ~ 't uf tmh; pcndent
msur l ll LC tgc nh g IH! Jued help

tu 1hc11 clic nt s '' h ~.: n the} needed
help

lllll !-&gt; 1 -

t1 lh ~,: 11l1lC

of

tn

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dent tnJ when the] hied 1 cl:111n
I ht s s une unbt:"lsed surve y sho we d
th 11 1 fm lower pet cent 1gc of one

comr tn y sal esmen g.ne ltmi kmd

be1H! f1 ts

\O.,. e

rt! p r csc nt scvc r .d

sttong tcll thle m~ u r &lt;1m:e o.:omp 1
n1cs We se lc ct the lt t: hl rns ur tncc
for you at the bcM pn~.:c md keep
yu tll lll SIJI U1C c li Jl to d IIC And
we II he thet c to hdp you \~ tlh dl

lhc dct.u b when you hHe .m tc
ctJcn t
rom

tk~:

sut c yo u h 1vc contm

of pe rson tl se rv lt:

tun g

Wc rndcpcndcnl tgC tll s otf~.: r c 11
1 /l ~ U I IIH.: C !J u y u S Il l Ill } tJillqLJt:

yom .,; tr md h1llllC tlu ough an

pe rson d

i!ldcpt:mknr

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1gc rrt

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II IJ S ~oon

Wrlham D Chtlds

Downing-Childs
Agency, Inc.
Mtddleport, Oh1o

trestone

~~~~~IIRsgi~~~~;,~~~e~::~~~~~~ [DJffiill~

Shaffer
R1ver
Kelly Shy
Portsmouth
west
Terry
Stephens
Warren Kennedy
Bob
Sutula
Steubenville
CathOliC
Greg Spann, In
dependen ce
Randy Sch lc k
Aller1 East
Cl111f Sm1th
Ober l 1n Lew Stdwell Mays
v111e Pal Thomas Whee lers
burg Ron Termeer Dubl1n
Bruce Vance Buckeye South
P layer of the year M1ke
PhillipS
Akron Manches ter

Hesson defeats Marauders 4-2
MASON
The Meigs
Marauder baseball team
opened 1ts 1974 season on a
losmg note, droppmg a 4-2
decision to the Wahama White
Falcons here Monday afternoon R•ck Hesson, who
came on m the second mmng,
gol the wm
Playmg m ankle deep mud,
the Marauders, who were on a
field for the first t1me this year,
took a 2.{) lead m the top of the
third mnmg when semor
centerf1elder Dave Wolfe
smgled, JuniOr nght fielder
Gary George grounded out,
and Rick Stobart homered
deep over the center fielder's
bead
wahama had been held
scoreless the first two mmngs
hehmd the p1tchmg of Junior
nghthander Perk Aull who
struck out two, gave up JUSt
two hits and walked nobody
Sophomore righthander Jeff
McKmney came on m the
bottom of the third and yielded
the fll'sl Wahama run on two
walks and a smgle
The Marauders were held
scoreless the remamder of the
game, despite numerous
rallies that were stopped by
excellent fieldmg plays by the

Ea!ilern Conference

, . on Second Team; John

LAKELAND, Fla 1UP! )- AI I(aline has his young son, Mike,
With hun here, and walking mto the club office the other mormng
he noticed a picture on the wall and called 11 to tbe boy's at
ter.twn
"There's the greatest that ever was, 11 he satd to hlS son
pomtmg out one of the numerous photographs m this camp of the
late Ty Cobb
Some feel Ty Cobb was the greatest player m all baseball
history, some say Babe Ruth and others make a claun for Honus
Wagner. Nobody argues about Cobb bemg the greatest allaround player the Detroit Tigers ever had There Ill equally little
questiOn AI Kalme IS the next gr~alest
On the verge of startmg his 22nd consecutive season with the
Tigers, AI Kalme s1ts m front of his locker this day cradling a bat
between his knees and puffmg on a long cigar
"Trymg to look Important agam, aren't you'" teases pitcher
Mickey Lobch on his way out to the held
'Yup," responds AI Kalme, straight-faced "I'm trymg to look
unportant ''
Nothmg could be fw-ther from the truth For most of the years
he has been With the Tigers, AI Kalme has been !hell' most
valuable commodity Nobody would ever know that though by
the way he conducts himself around the clubhouse He never
pulls any rank, never gives the equipment man a hard time and
never raiSes hill vmce He nunds his own busmess unlliii comes
tune to play the ball game at which time all he does IS go out and
turn m the best all-around performance of any 39-year-&lt;&gt;ld m
sports you can think of
"Ralph," he says, noddmg toward manager Ralph Houk's
office, "told me I'm gomg to be strictly a designated hitter this
year and not play at all I'm happy This way !know when I get to
the park I'll be m the game The other way, you go to the park,
you JUSt s1t there and watch and the whole day Ill wasted "
Every Itinerant wnter who visits thiS camp and speaks w1th
the Tigers' sun-tanned suP.,rstar eventually gets around to the
same question How much longer Ill be gomg to play'
"I'm gomg to play until I get 3,000 hits," says Kaline, who
needs only 139more "l'vemadeupmymmd to that Defmitely I
was ready to qUit last year I thought I had enough, but then you
get so close to somethmg that only 11 others have done and you
feel why not do 11 also'"
Kahne believes Billy Martm handled him well last year He
was m 91 games and fm1shed With 10 nomers, 45 rb1's and a 255
battmg average that was 44 pomts off hill lifetime figure Last
season's average dropped h1s lifetune mark to 299 and this
wmter he agam kicked around the Idea of packmg In the whole
thmg
"!had to consider my two boys," says Kaline "The older one,
Mark, Ill 16, and the younger one, Mike, Ill 11 I talked to them
both and asked them whether I should qmt playmg or contmue
They asked me if I still enJoyed playmg I told them I did They
sa1d I should keep on playmg then The younger one, M1ke, had
one question though He asked me 'if you qmt, can we sbll get m
the ballpark free'' I told hun yes, we sbll coulc! "
Kahne laughs tellmg the story It's perfectly obVIous he loves
his two boys, and in another way, he also loves baseball
"l've been playmg 11 professiOnally smce I was 18," he says
''I've never beenm the 'outs1de world' you could say 1 '
Coming m cold with the Tigers from the Yankees, Ralph Houk
spoke with Kaline and sounded him out on how he liked the Idea
before deciding the veteran Gold Glove outfielder would be used
as a designated hitter and nothing more
"I didn't JUSt go to him aod say now this Ill the way It's gomg to
be," says Houk "!gave hun some of my reasons He can hit both
left-&lt;Illd r1ghthanded pitchers and he drives that run m from lhll'd
base with one out He can shU run Now if I play hun m the outfield and he comes up with a gunpy leg, I've lost hun. I know that
as an opposmg manager one of the fll'st things I'd do when we
faced DetrOit was take a look whether Kaline was playing He's a
fme defensive ballplayer, but when I'd look to see whether he was
playmg I was only thinkmg about hill bat Any tune I d1d't see
him m the startinG lme-up I felt very good."

CARACAS (UPI) - With
their heavyweight champiOn·
ship bout Just a week away,
champiOn George Foreman
and challenger Ken Norton
resumed trammg today after
takmg Monday off to go
s1ghtseemg
Before gomg out to the
Pohedro stadmm for trammg
drills, the fighters were to
undergo
a
physical
exammation at the NatiOnal
Sports Inslltute, a pre con-

NBA Standmgs
By Un1ted Press International

Gallipolis' Gil Price

Today's

Foreman, Norton at Work

1974 CHIYIILI

Female robber
is big failure

Manchester ace named
AA 'Player-of-Year'

- HOEI"'.JCII
F.tl
ROBERT
,

There Are Three Reasons for This Type of Sole

Maximum John (Sirica) h 0 n 0 re d
WASHINhTON (t.JPI)- He
was hailed as "Man of the
Year" by one magazme and
denounced as one of the worst
federal judges m Washington
by another.
He drew praiSe from Pres•·
dent NIXon and harsh rebuke
from leaders of the Amencan
Bar Association
One year ago he was all but
!Dlknown outside Washmgton
judicial and legal Circles Now
the Watergate scandal has
made hun famous.
He IS John J Slrica, and
after today he steps down as
chief U S District Judge of the
D!Jtrict of Columbia
He turns 70 today, and by law

INTEREST OF
MEIGSMA.SON AREA
CHESTER L T,\NNEIID..L,

9 A.M.

1urano:e 11 U 00 p1r day -

Judiciary committee
While cormmttee members
were aware they may not
actually get the report for
weeks or even months because
of appeals and other possible
litigatiOn, they felt Sir1ca's
order had strengthened t:1e11'
request for the presidential
tapes and other Watergate
material NIXon has refused to
relmqu1sh
Rep Harold R Donohue, DMass , said that while the
committee still d1d not know
what was m the report, 11
"could be a maJor factor m
accelerating our comrmttee's
procedure." Rep. Edward Hutchmson of Michigan, ranking
GOP member, was "very
pleased" and said he thought
any appeal could be disposed of
QUICkly
Cormruttee Chall'man Peter
W Rodino Jr , D-N J , said
only that the committee nught
decide later this week whether
to oppose expected arguments
before the appeals court by
Watergate defendants opposmg release of the report
Nixon's Posillon
Sir1ca noted that NIXon's
positiOn, outlmed by attorney
John D St Clall', "Is that he
has no recommendation to
make, suggestmg that the
matter 1s entirely within the
court's discrellon " All the
President had requested,
Sirica said, was the right to
"review and copy the
mater1als "
Sir1ca 's 22-page ruling sa1d
the House cormmttee formally
requested the report and that
Special Watergate Prosecutor
Leon Jaworski urged 1ts release. At a hearmg before Sir1ca
on March 6, attorneys for the
seven men md1cted for conspiracy m the Watergate
coverup obJected to disclosure

D~OTmTOTBE

DEALER COST SALE
POSITIVELY ENDS FRIDAY
~~"'· MORNING, MARCH 22,AT

1ur car or a tot!JI all102

WASHINGTON (UP!) Armed With a court order
giving them a secret grand
jury report on President
NIXon's handlmg of Watergate,
House Judiciary Cormruttee
members believed today they
could brmg new pressw-e on
Nixon to relinQUISh 42 tapes
conSidered VItal to !hell' unpeachment mqwry.
In ruling Monday that the
comm1ttee shoul~ get the
document, Chief U S District
Judge John J Sinca did not
assess the significance ol the
fmdings But he said he had
exammed them carefully and
decided there "can be no
question as to their materiality" to the unpeachment m·
vestlgatlon
In disclosmg for the first
tlllle that the report "focuses"
on NiXon, Sirtca satd It "draws
oo accusatory conclusiOns" but
rather was 11 8 sunple and
straightforward compilation of
information gathered by the
grand Jury and no more "
Therefore, he said, it was
"emmently proper and mdeed
obligatory" to g1ve 11 to the
congressmen
"It should not be forgotten
that we deal m a matter of the
most critical moment to the
nation, an unpeachment mvesi igatlon mvolving the
President of the Umted
States,'' he sa1d
Slays Order
But he stayed his order for
two days to pernut appeals of
his deCISIOn.
The report, consistmg of a
two-page, 50-paragraph
written document and a leather
briefcase contammg unspeCified eVIdence, was giVen
Sir1ca March I when the grand
jury mdicted seven of NIXOn's
former close a1des or campaign ofhc•ais The JUrors
asked Smca to forward 11 to the

The Dai~ Sentinel

GORDON PAGE CHEVROLET INC.

I am the man who has seen
affhctwn under the rod or his
wrath, he has dnven and
brought me Into darkness
without any hght, surely
agamst me he turns h1s hand
agam and agam the whole day
long - LamentatiOns 3 1, 2, 3

New pressure expected
on Nixon for 42 tapes

Greeters and hostesses were
the roommothers of Mrs
Knight's third grade class

Pro Standings

The Marauders now take a
week off when hopefully, the
weather will permit them some
outside practice t1me hefore
they host the White Falcons at
Middleport held Monday,
March 25, at 4 30 p m
Meigs
002 000 11-2 6 1
Wahama
001 300 X-4 6 0
Ault, McKinney (31 (lp),
Richards (5), Price (6), and
Ash Camp, Hesson (2) ( wp)
and Lewis

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The MEIGS INN
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present the return of

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WINNER WSES

PHILADELPIDA, Pa (UP!)
-Jack McKhmey's reward for
taking St Joseph's College to
the NCAA playoffs was to be
asked to look for anot.her JOb
A terse announcement said
McKinney was bemg replaced
as the college's basketball
coach. No further comment
was available

GEO. HALL
AND THE HALLMARKS

TONIGHT 10 T-JL/2

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto
"Your Complete Tire Center"
Pomeroy, Ohio
606 E. Main
992-2094

�L ,

4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleoort-Pomerov. 0 .. '1\!l'sday, March 19. 19H

Indiana capt:ures
'
'runnerup event
.

LOA BOXBERGER
OVER 220 ENTRIES have been received already by Sam
Serves for the $15,000 pro-am event on April 21-22 prior to the
$50,000 Akron Sa,;ngs &amp; Loan Bowling Classic at Colonial
Village Lanes in Akron April 24-27. Bowlers recetve a stnke
the first frame and will roll games with three women pros
using the highest sanctioned average of 21 or more games in
1972-73. Handicap is 80 pet., based on 200 scra tch for both men
and women. Entry deadline is April\7. One of the favorites in
the Classic will be Loa Boxberger, above, who won first
money of $12,500 Jan, 5 in the Red Crown Classic in
Baltimore, Md. For further information, contact: Sam
Serves, Colonial Village Lanes, 193 E. Waterloo Rd., Akron,
Ohio, phone (216) 773.jj286.

.

'

playing in the NCAA tournamen t in Tusca loosa or the
NIT in New York ... " Tbe St.
Louis arena was filled with
boos that drowned out Knight's
next words. Knight shouted
"I'm happy to win this tournament anyway," and stalked ·
away.
Lnight told reporters after
th e game,"We ca me here
because this was the only
tournament we had a ticket to.
I would hope that from now on
teams would have the right to
choose which pos t season
tournament they want to
play."
Knight sa w his players win
the tournament from a seat in
the stands. He was ejected
from the game with 8:29 left in
Songs hy Six, n ew talented singing group
the first half when he drew
three rapid technical fouls for
complaining too loudly that
USC's Mike Westra had
palmed the ball.
The Hoosiers trailed by five
points when Knight walked
slowly off the court but outscored the Trojans 15-5 over
the next five minutes a nd ·
began building the lead that
eventually reached 27 points in
the second half.
"Songs by Six" is a new ta lented Mr. Dryden has also the New York Choral Society
Junior forward Steve Green, mus ical organization th at won critical acclaim as a and Mozart's " Requiem" with
who led Indiana with 24 points combines the talents of six theatrical designer and further the New Haven Symphony
in the championship game and young artists unde r the overall added to his versatility by Orches tra.
made the all-tournament team, artistic direction of Mr. Robert dancing the role of Toby in
Pianist David Ralph, a
expl~ined Knight's method: DeCormier.
Menotti 's
opera
" The native of Cleveland, has
This e nse mble, th e final Medium."
received degrees both in piano
prese ntation in the current
Patricia Pri ce, so prano, an d organ from the Cleveland
ser ies of th e Tri-County attended Ithaca College where Institute of Music. His talents
Commu n i ty
Co n ce rt she gra duated as a major in as accompanist have been
Association, will appear at 8 violin . While at Ithaca, where ·utilized by soprano Eleanor
p.m. Thursday in the Gallia Gregg Smith headed the choral Steber in recital and as pianist
Academy
High
Sc hool department, she became in· by Robert Shaw and the
tcrested in singing and in 1968 Cleveland Philharmonic
auditoriwn.
WASHINGTON IU PI ) - The
Katherine Dryden, mezzo- joined the Greg Smith Singers.
government plans to spend sop rano with the sextet, has She has been soloist with the
$865,000 over two years to build had an extensive professional latter on a nwnber of their
a space-age windmill to see if and academic career in both recordings.
The $100
the wind can be harnessed Europe and the United States,
David. Dusing has just taken
economically to generate despite her youth, Mrs. Dryden leave of his position as
electricity, it was announced has sun g with the Rober t Shaw Associate Co ndu ctor of
today ,
Chorale, Abraham Kaplan's Choruses at the New England
The windmill will be built at Camerata Singers, and the Conse rvatory to join "Songs by
the space agency's Lewis past few seasons as a soloist Six ." After re ce iving his
Research Center. Clevela nd, with the Robert DeCormier Master of Music degree in
Ohio, in a project sponsored by Singers.
choral conducti.ng at the
the National Science FounShe received her formal Conservatory, Mr . Dus ing was
dation (NSF).
education at Texas Christian invited to JOin their faculty
The experimenlal genera tor University, where she took her where he has been for the past
will use a 125-foot rotor Master of Music and was then three years.
mounted atop a tower 125 feet appointed a Fulbright Scholar
Lowell Harris ha s performed
lall to genera te up to 100 at the Rome Opera House. as both actor and singer in a
kilowatts of power. It will be While in Rome she sang with variety of mediwns. As an
erected at the Plwn Brook test the Rome Philharmonic and actor, he has appeared in
Stainless steel,
water resistant.
area at Sandusky, Ohio.
l&gt;ecame a popular fi gure to the leading roles in the American
Sharkskin strap.
The NSF sa id the windmill is nightclub audiences in Rome Shakespeare
1100.
Festival
at
a step toward future wind where she was heard and seen Stratford, Conn., and on TV in
generators capable of pro- s inging th e more popular many dramatic programs. As
ducing
1,000 to 2,000 songs.
a singer he has appeared in
Never before
kilow a tts.
It
will
be
has
an Accutron
everything
from
night
clubs
to
the first large wind energy This versatile artist became opera. Last season he was a
watch
been priced
to many moviegoers
system constructed in United familiar
so
low.
It has
as the singin g· voice of Snow soloist in the Bernstein " Mass"
the same tuning fork
States in 30 years.
White and Sleeping Beauty in which toured Wa shington,
' movement found in
The new windmill will be
the film versions of these Philadelphia
and
th e
more costly models; it
des igned to ge nerate 100 fa mihar children's classics.
Metropolilan Opera in New
carries
'the same
kilowatts with 18 mile an hour
written ouarantee.
Raymond Dryden. baritone, York .
winds. The winds at the SanAccurate 10 within a
is married to Katherine and
Diana Jone s, mezzo
dusky site average 10 m.p.h. ,
minute a monlh. •
brings to the concert stage a soprano, is an honor graduate
but 18 m.p.h. winds occur often comb ination of many l&lt;llents. of Hartt College of Music,
enough to provide an adequate
For the past two years he has University of Hartford in
tes t of the experimental
appeared as soloist with the Connec ticut. While there, she
system, the NSF said.
Robert DeCormier Singers. He appeared throughout the area
The blades of the windmill
has appeared in a number of in "Mar at Sade, '' " The
will be able to change pitch like
Broadway and off-Broadway Boyfriend," as Jenny in "Down
those on a helicopter and for
productions.
in the' Valley" and in "Lil
St.,
wind speeds above 18 m.p.h.,
He was seen in the role of Abner" as Daisy Mae. She was
•we wUI adjust to this tolerance, If
the blades will change pitch
Guarantee Is for one
Matt in "The Fantasticks" featured alto soloist in
and spill some of the wind,
with the Bernhark Theater Beethoven's "Mass in C" with
maintaining power generator
complex in Bridgeport, Conn.,
at 100 kw .
The NS F will provide and summer stock has seen
Mr. Dryden featured in such
$865,000 for the project over
diverse roles as Nick in "Who's
two years, Future systems, if
placed
in
commercia l Afraid of Virginia Woolf?,"
Starbuck in "The Rainmaker"
production, are expected to
and Richard in shakespeare's
cost considerably less, the NSF
" Richard Ill." Th e multisa id.

By DON BERNS
ST. LOUIS. Mo . I UP! I
Bobby Knight, the vola tile
coach of Indiana University.
won the tournament he didn 't
want to play and Jeft the fans
booing at the St. Louis Arena
Monday night.
Ind iana finished as cochampion of th e Big Ten with
Michigan, but lost a playoff
, game that sent Michigan to th e
NCAA regional, where the
Wolverines lost to Marquette.
TI1e Hoosiers were selected
to play in the first conunmissioner's basketball to urnament, which ~rew seven
second-place teams from seven
other conferences, plus the cochampion Hoosiers.
Knight resen ted what he
considered an insult a nd
persisted in calling the CCA a
"runnerup tournament~~ while
the other seven coaches told
how happy they were to be
here.
K~i g ht 's opinion ga in ed
greater forum when Indiana
won the tournament with a
smas hin g 85-60 win ove r
Southern California.
At the end of the game
Knight stepped forward to
accept the champio nship
trophy and said into the
microphone, "I'd rather be

Chorus. In particular , Community Concert audiences will
recall the outstanding playing
of Mr. Ralph as pianist with the
Robert DeCormier singers and
the New York Lyric Quartet for
the past five seasons.
The ense mble's program,
which promises a variety of
entertainment for every
member of their audience, will
in cl ude· selec tion s from
Leonard Bernstein's 11 The
Lark" and Randall Thompson's "Frostiana," followed by
a number of Gilbert and
Sullivan highlights. The second
portion of their program will be
"A Look at the Popular
American Musical Scene," and
will include such selections as
"What the World Needs Now Is
Love," "Try to Remember,"
"Promi ses, Promises, "
" Ye s terday ," "If we Only
Have Love," and many others.

5 - The Daily Sentinel, Middlepo~t-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tue~day ,-March 19, 19

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

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end of the trail, or are opening
dissatisified with the money
they're getting or the chance
they have of moving up on their
NFL team.
For example, there was
quarterhack Craig Morton of
the Dallas CIJwboys, who has
had to take a back seat in
Texas to Roger Staubach - the
Binningham WFL team picked
him in the second round.
Quarterback Pete Beathard of
Kansas City, something of a
similar case, was named on the
first round by . Houston.
Another quarterback, Randy
Johnson of the New York
Giants who even went home for
a time during the 19973 season
when he thought he was being
overlooked, was a sixth-round
choice by Hawaii.

Court

.

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ing out they didn't mention in
the draft the names of players
they.' ve already sigl11!d players who have played out
the option in their NFL contracts and therefore are free as
birds. 'The New York entry of
the WFL, for instance, claims
to have lines on 50 players not by any means all NFLers,
of course.
However, the New York
team, the Stars, did take the
occasion to announce the
signing of one option-free
player - tackle John Elliott,
for seven years the "Big Bad
John" of the New York Jets'
defense. Elliott had made no
secret of his dissatisfaction
with the Jets.
The WFL didn 't pretend that
it expects to swipe all of the
NFLers it named. League
officials pointed out that
naming these players establis hes the lines of communica tion for any of the
p!ayers who feel like jwnping
in the future - tbey know
whom they can dicker with,
and it prevents squabbles
between WFL clubs.
A number of the NFL players
named early were players like
Elliott who may be nearing the

WOMEN'S AND TEENS NEWEST

OUR NEW SPRING SELECTION OF REGULAR 13.94

WIND CHIMES

The onion has little or no
taste, but it has a very strong
odo r which is what one
" ta st~s" when eating it.

Power windmill
will produce
100 kilowatts

NEW YORK (UP!) - If
there was any doubt al)out it
befor.e 1 the first player draft
staged by the World Football
League erased it today -the
fledgling WFL means all-out
war against the dominance of
the National Football League.
Blithely and boldly, the 12
teams of the new league read
off i:he names of established
stars of the NFL as they went
through the first 40 rounds of
their draft Monday - names
like Joe Namath, Jim Plunkett,
Calvin Hill, and the three
biggest stars of the NFL
champions: Larry Csonka , Jim
Kiick, and Paul Warfield.
While they were at it, the
WFL upstarts didn't forget the
Canadian Football League, either. They sprinkled their
selection list with the names of
many of the best north-of-theborder players, too.
And they even tossed out
ominous little hints like point-

SILVER
BRIDGE
SHOPPING
PLAZA

MASON
WEST
VIRGINIA

STARTS
WEDNESDAY
10 AM

•'

final season concert

All-out pro grid war sure

WE FIGHT INFLATION
WITH

A DISCO.U NT
Ot:PARTM£NT STOll

•

Songs by Six group

TO PRESENT SACRED CONCERT - Members of the Bridgeport United Methodist
Church Youth Hand Bell Choir will present a sacred concert Sunday, March 24, at 6 p.m. in the
New Haven United Methodist Church. The Rev. William DeMoss, pastor, said the chotr has
ga ined national recognition. Afamily covered dish dinner will be served at 5 p.m: The public is
welcome. The choir, 1-r, are Mrs. Helen Golden, dtrector; Brenda Ashby, Momca Musgrave,
Georgia Rice , Becky Golden, Cheryl Marteney, Becky Be to, Cindy Meyer, all first row; second
row, Kathy Sh0ckey, Barbara Luebbe and Holly Ellenberger.

74

SET

.

7,.
1
'•
~

.til

I~
i
'· .

'I

•

A DISCOUNT
OfPARTMf.NT STOQE

PT. PLEASANT - MASON - SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

COLORED ENAMELED

TEA POTS
As Shown or With
Carrying Handle-3 Colors

SIZES 14X27

CARPET
REMNANTS

18~~

•

�L ,

4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleoort-Pomerov. 0 .. '1\!l'sday, March 19. 19H

Indiana capt:ures
'
'runnerup event
.

LOA BOXBERGER
OVER 220 ENTRIES have been received already by Sam
Serves for the $15,000 pro-am event on April 21-22 prior to the
$50,000 Akron Sa,;ngs &amp; Loan Bowling Classic at Colonial
Village Lanes in Akron April 24-27. Bowlers recetve a stnke
the first frame and will roll games with three women pros
using the highest sanctioned average of 21 or more games in
1972-73. Handicap is 80 pet., based on 200 scra tch for both men
and women. Entry deadline is April\7. One of the favorites in
the Classic will be Loa Boxberger, above, who won first
money of $12,500 Jan, 5 in the Red Crown Classic in
Baltimore, Md. For further information, contact: Sam
Serves, Colonial Village Lanes, 193 E. Waterloo Rd., Akron,
Ohio, phone (216) 773.jj286.

.

'

playing in the NCAA tournamen t in Tusca loosa or the
NIT in New York ... " Tbe St.
Louis arena was filled with
boos that drowned out Knight's
next words. Knight shouted
"I'm happy to win this tournament anyway," and stalked ·
away.
Lnight told reporters after
th e game,"We ca me here
because this was the only
tournament we had a ticket to.
I would hope that from now on
teams would have the right to
choose which pos t season
tournament they want to
play."
Knight sa w his players win
the tournament from a seat in
the stands. He was ejected
from the game with 8:29 left in
Songs hy Six, n ew talented singing group
the first half when he drew
three rapid technical fouls for
complaining too loudly that
USC's Mike Westra had
palmed the ball.
The Hoosiers trailed by five
points when Knight walked
slowly off the court but outscored the Trojans 15-5 over
the next five minutes a nd ·
began building the lead that
eventually reached 27 points in
the second half.
"Songs by Six" is a new ta lented Mr. Dryden has also the New York Choral Society
Junior forward Steve Green, mus ical organization th at won critical acclaim as a and Mozart's " Requiem" with
who led Indiana with 24 points combines the talents of six theatrical designer and further the New Haven Symphony
in the championship game and young artists unde r the overall added to his versatility by Orches tra.
made the all-tournament team, artistic direction of Mr. Robert dancing the role of Toby in
Pianist David Ralph, a
expl~ined Knight's method: DeCormier.
Menotti 's
opera
" The native of Cleveland, has
This e nse mble, th e final Medium."
received degrees both in piano
prese ntation in the current
Patricia Pri ce, so prano, an d organ from the Cleveland
ser ies of th e Tri-County attended Ithaca College where Institute of Music. His talents
Commu n i ty
Co n ce rt she gra duated as a major in as accompanist have been
Association, will appear at 8 violin . While at Ithaca, where ·utilized by soprano Eleanor
p.m. Thursday in the Gallia Gregg Smith headed the choral Steber in recital and as pianist
Academy
High
Sc hool department, she became in· by Robert Shaw and the
tcrested in singing and in 1968 Cleveland Philharmonic
auditoriwn.
WASHINGTON IU PI ) - The
Katherine Dryden, mezzo- joined the Greg Smith Singers.
government plans to spend sop rano with the sextet, has She has been soloist with the
$865,000 over two years to build had an extensive professional latter on a nwnber of their
a space-age windmill to see if and academic career in both recordings.
The $100
the wind can be harnessed Europe and the United States,
David. Dusing has just taken
economically to generate despite her youth, Mrs. Dryden leave of his position as
electricity, it was announced has sun g with the Rober t Shaw Associate Co ndu ctor of
today ,
Chorale, Abraham Kaplan's Choruses at the New England
The windmill will be built at Camerata Singers, and the Conse rvatory to join "Songs by
the space agency's Lewis past few seasons as a soloist Six ." After re ce iving his
Research Center. Clevela nd, with the Robert DeCormier Master of Music degree in
Ohio, in a project sponsored by Singers.
choral conducti.ng at the
the National Science FounShe received her formal Conservatory, Mr . Dus ing was
dation (NSF).
education at Texas Christian invited to JOin their faculty
The experimenlal genera tor University, where she took her where he has been for the past
will use a 125-foot rotor Master of Music and was then three years.
mounted atop a tower 125 feet appointed a Fulbright Scholar
Lowell Harris ha s performed
lall to genera te up to 100 at the Rome Opera House. as both actor and singer in a
kilowatts of power. It will be While in Rome she sang with variety of mediwns. As an
erected at the Plwn Brook test the Rome Philharmonic and actor, he has appeared in
Stainless steel,
water resistant.
area at Sandusky, Ohio.
l&gt;ecame a popular fi gure to the leading roles in the American
Sharkskin strap.
The NSF sa id the windmill is nightclub audiences in Rome Shakespeare
1100.
Festival
at
a step toward future wind where she was heard and seen Stratford, Conn., and on TV in
generators capable of pro- s inging th e more popular many dramatic programs. As
ducing
1,000 to 2,000 songs.
a singer he has appeared in
Never before
kilow a tts.
It
will
be
has
an Accutron
everything
from
night
clubs
to
the first large wind energy This versatile artist became opera. Last season he was a
watch
been priced
to many moviegoers
system constructed in United familiar
so
low.
It has
as the singin g· voice of Snow soloist in the Bernstein " Mass"
the same tuning fork
States in 30 years.
White and Sleeping Beauty in which toured Wa shington,
' movement found in
The new windmill will be
the film versions of these Philadelphia
and
th e
more costly models; it
des igned to ge nerate 100 fa mihar children's classics.
Metropolilan Opera in New
carries
'the same
kilowatts with 18 mile an hour
written ouarantee.
Raymond Dryden. baritone, York .
winds. The winds at the SanAccurate 10 within a
is married to Katherine and
Diana Jone s, mezzo
dusky site average 10 m.p.h. ,
minute a monlh. •
brings to the concert stage a soprano, is an honor graduate
but 18 m.p.h. winds occur often comb ination of many l&lt;llents. of Hartt College of Music,
enough to provide an adequate
For the past two years he has University of Hartford in
tes t of the experimental
appeared as soloist with the Connec ticut. While there, she
system, the NSF said.
Robert DeCormier Singers. He appeared throughout the area
The blades of the windmill
has appeared in a number of in "Mar at Sade, '' " The
will be able to change pitch like
Broadway and off-Broadway Boyfriend," as Jenny in "Down
those on a helicopter and for
productions.
in the' Valley" and in "Lil
St.,
wind speeds above 18 m.p.h.,
He was seen in the role of Abner" as Daisy Mae. She was
•we wUI adjust to this tolerance, If
the blades will change pitch
Guarantee Is for one
Matt in "The Fantasticks" featured alto soloist in
and spill some of the wind,
with the Bernhark Theater Beethoven's "Mass in C" with
maintaining power generator
complex in Bridgeport, Conn.,
at 100 kw .
The NS F will provide and summer stock has seen
Mr. Dryden featured in such
$865,000 for the project over
diverse roles as Nick in "Who's
two years, Future systems, if
placed
in
commercia l Afraid of Virginia Woolf?,"
Starbuck in "The Rainmaker"
production, are expected to
and Richard in shakespeare's
cost considerably less, the NSF
" Richard Ill." Th e multisa id.

By DON BERNS
ST. LOUIS. Mo . I UP! I
Bobby Knight, the vola tile
coach of Indiana University.
won the tournament he didn 't
want to play and Jeft the fans
booing at the St. Louis Arena
Monday night.
Ind iana finished as cochampion of th e Big Ten with
Michigan, but lost a playoff
, game that sent Michigan to th e
NCAA regional, where the
Wolverines lost to Marquette.
TI1e Hoosiers were selected
to play in the first conunmissioner's basketball to urnament, which ~rew seven
second-place teams from seven
other conferences, plus the cochampion Hoosiers.
Knight resen ted what he
considered an insult a nd
persisted in calling the CCA a
"runnerup tournament~~ while
the other seven coaches told
how happy they were to be
here.
K~i g ht 's opinion ga in ed
greater forum when Indiana
won the tournament with a
smas hin g 85-60 win ove r
Southern California.
At the end of the game
Knight stepped forward to
accept the champio nship
trophy and said into the
microphone, "I'd rather be

Chorus. In particular , Community Concert audiences will
recall the outstanding playing
of Mr. Ralph as pianist with the
Robert DeCormier singers and
the New York Lyric Quartet for
the past five seasons.
The ense mble's program,
which promises a variety of
entertainment for every
member of their audience, will
in cl ude· selec tion s from
Leonard Bernstein's 11 The
Lark" and Randall Thompson's "Frostiana," followed by
a number of Gilbert and
Sullivan highlights. The second
portion of their program will be
"A Look at the Popular
American Musical Scene," and
will include such selections as
"What the World Needs Now Is
Love," "Try to Remember,"
"Promi ses, Promises, "
" Ye s terday ," "If we Only
Have Love," and many others.

5 - The Daily Sentinel, Middlepo~t-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tue~day ,-March 19, 19

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

POINT
PLEASANT
WEST
VIRGINIA

r---------~==~~~--~ATAPLL•3•S•ro•R•ES----------~----~
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FOREMAN &amp; ABBOTT
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end of the trail, or are opening
dissatisified with the money
they're getting or the chance
they have of moving up on their
NFL team.
For example, there was
quarterhack Craig Morton of
the Dallas CIJwboys, who has
had to take a back seat in
Texas to Roger Staubach - the
Binningham WFL team picked
him in the second round.
Quarterback Pete Beathard of
Kansas City, something of a
similar case, was named on the
first round by . Houston.
Another quarterback, Randy
Johnson of the New York
Giants who even went home for
a time during the 19973 season
when he thought he was being
overlooked, was a sixth-round
choice by Hawaii.

Court

.

Choose

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excl u ~ivc

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PLAYING
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¢

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PORTA
FILE

• Rider Back
• Regular or
• Large Index

for

Last

Handy metal fil e box for

perso na l papers. . Get
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····50¢
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STARTS WEDNESDAY - 10 A.M.
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AND

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Middleport, 0.

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ALUMINUM
BAKEWARE
-

Ideal for · exterior wood or
masonry. Dries to flat finish in 30
minutes. Now . priced at 1973
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98

88

$

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A VERY SPECIAL BUY!

EAGLE SHAPE

SIZES

DECANTER
BOTTLE
1
A $1.98 value. Select from 3
colors in this unique eagle
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store.
'

We also ha ve a liberal trade-in- pol icy.

The Fabric Shop

,.
••

¢

POLYESTER BED PILLOWS
Regul;o• ~ 3.44

White Mvslin Cover

WOMEN'S
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SIZES 5-6-7

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OR AS PICTURED

$ 00

Both style s have strainer in lid
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ALL
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WEDNESDAY
10 AM

'Phone 992-2284

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Values
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Perfe_c t for clothing, furniture,
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All short sleeve styles

are on sale for 5 days -

variety of colors and
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on your yearly insurance

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REGULAR $1.94

Favorites For Teens, Too
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IS

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HALTER TOPS

WOMEN'S TOPS

REGULAR 94'

Bulova

ing out they didn't mention in
the draft the names of players
they.' ve already sigl11!d players who have played out
the option in their NFL contracts and therefore are free as
birds. 'The New York entry of
the WFL, for instance, claims
to have lines on 50 players not by any means all NFLers,
of course.
However, the New York
team, the Stars, did take the
occasion to announce the
signing of one option-free
player - tackle John Elliott,
for seven years the "Big Bad
John" of the New York Jets'
defense. Elliott had made no
secret of his dissatisfaction
with the Jets.
The WFL didn 't pretend that
it expects to swipe all of the
NFLers it named. League
officials pointed out that
naming these players establis hes the lines of communica tion for any of the
p!ayers who feel like jwnping
in the future - tbey know
whom they can dicker with,
and it prevents squabbles
between WFL clubs.
A number of the NFL players
named early were players like
Elliott who may be nearing the

WOMEN'S AND TEENS NEWEST

OUR NEW SPRING SELECTION OF REGULAR 13.94

WIND CHIMES

The onion has little or no
taste, but it has a very strong
odo r which is what one
" ta st~s" when eating it.

Power windmill
will produce
100 kilowatts

NEW YORK (UP!) - If
there was any doubt al)out it
befor.e 1 the first player draft
staged by the World Football
League erased it today -the
fledgling WFL means all-out
war against the dominance of
the National Football League.
Blithely and boldly, the 12
teams of the new league read
off i:he names of established
stars of the NFL as they went
through the first 40 rounds of
their draft Monday - names
like Joe Namath, Jim Plunkett,
Calvin Hill, and the three
biggest stars of the NFL
champions: Larry Csonka , Jim
Kiick, and Paul Warfield.
While they were at it, the
WFL upstarts didn't forget the
Canadian Football League, either. They sprinkled their
selection list with the names of
many of the best north-of-theborder players, too.
And they even tossed out
ominous little hints like point-

SILVER
BRIDGE
SHOPPING
PLAZA

MASON
WEST
VIRGINIA

STARTS
WEDNESDAY
10 AM

•'

final season concert

All-out pro grid war sure

WE FIGHT INFLATION
WITH

A DISCO.U NT
Ot:PARTM£NT STOll

•

Songs by Six group

TO PRESENT SACRED CONCERT - Members of the Bridgeport United Methodist
Church Youth Hand Bell Choir will present a sacred concert Sunday, March 24, at 6 p.m. in the
New Haven United Methodist Church. The Rev. William DeMoss, pastor, said the chotr has
ga ined national recognition. Afamily covered dish dinner will be served at 5 p.m: The public is
welcome. The choir, 1-r, are Mrs. Helen Golden, dtrector; Brenda Ashby, Momca Musgrave,
Georgia Rice , Becky Golden, Cheryl Marteney, Becky Be to, Cindy Meyer, all first row; second
row, Kathy Sh0ckey, Barbara Luebbe and Holly Ellenberger.

74

SET

.

7,.
1
'•
~

.til

I~
i
'· .

'I

•

A DISCOUNT
OfPARTMf.NT STOQE

PT. PLEASANT - MASON - SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

COLORED ENAMELED

TEA POTS
As Shown or With
Carrying Handle-3 Colors

SIZES 14X27

CARPET
REMNANTS

18~~

•

�..
'
8. }'"')33\'~~'!W»~:=:~::::;::~:::::::~~

:&lt;·

Calendar I
TUESDAY
CHESTER Cou ncil 323,
Daughters of ·America, 7:30
p.m. at the hall . Quarterly
birthda;·s to be observed.
Silent auctiOn by the good of
the order committee . Members

- .,

U..ged to attend.
MEIGS Bi-Centennial
Commi ttee meeting, 7: 30p.m .
at the Museum. Butternut Ave .

•

' · FRIENDLY Circle at Tri nity
Church. 7:30 p m. with Thomas
Young as prog ram leader .

OHIO ETA PHI Cha pter,
Beta Sigma Ph1 Sorority. 7:30
Tu esday . Col umbus and
Southern Ohi o Electric Co.

&lt;\

'

.~

'

Cultura l program on musical

influence, Kathy King.
WEDNESDAY
OHI O VALLEY Commandery, Knights Ternplar.
special con·clave, to confer the

Order' of the Temple. All Si r
Knights in uniform.
MIDDLEPOR T Litera ry
Club, 2 p.m. Wednesday, home
of Mrs. Rodney Downing. Mrs.
Roy Cassell to review, "It's I.
James McNeill Whistler " by
Lawrence Williams. Roll call .
a famou s painting.

FIRST meeting of Jaycees
shoote rs safety ed uca tion
program begins at 7 p.m. at the
Meigs Jun ior High cafeteria in
Middleport. All in ter_es ted boys
and girls between 7 · and 14
invited _A gun presentation will
be given the fir st class. Ap. plications
ava ilable
at
cafeteria on night of meeting.
YOUNG Wives' Club, 7:30
p.m. at the home of Mrs.
Marilyn Spencer.
WINDING Tra il Ca rden
Club, 8 p.m. at the Columbus
and Southern Ohio Electric Co.
Ope n meeting with members of
area clubs invi ted. Ohio
Association of Ga rden Club
film to be shown _ Door prizes,
refreshments.
THURSDAY
WILLING Workers Class,
Enterprise United Methodist
Church, 7:30 p_m_at the home
of Kay Logan, Route 33.
MIDDLEPORT Child
Conservation League, 8 p.m.,
Sacred
Heart
Church
basemen t. Business meeting
then go to Mason Lanes for a
bowling party _ Guest night to
be observed_
ROCK Springs Better Health
Club, I : 15 p.m. at home of Mrs.
Wendell Jeffers. Mrs. William
Bradford will condu ct the
program and Mrs. Opha Offutt,
the contests.
TWIN CITY Shrine Club,
7:30 p.m. at hall . Refreshments ; all Shriners welcome.
FINAL Day for purchasing
tickets to Meigs High School
Winter Sports Banquet; no
tickets at door _ Tickets
available at New York
Clothing, Swisher- Lohse
Drug s, Pomeroy; Village
Pharmacy and Western Auto,
Middleport_ Banquet will be
6:30p.m. on March 28 at Meigs
High ca_feteria.
RACINE American L•gion
Post 602, 8 p.m., legion halL
MEIGS · County Democrat
Club, 7:30 p.m., Grace
Episcopal Church, Pomeroy.
Guest speaker, Grant McDonald.

Dance held

S"~re~Tend Hind Quart.e r Sa.l e

Society meets·"'

Social ;: .

•
SIXTY SENIOR CITIZENS of Meigs County took 3dvantage of the hot lWJch program now being offered Monday
through Friday at the Senior Citizens Center. There is no
6'

charge for the luncheons although contributions of 25 cents or
more are encouraged to help defray the cost of the federallyfunded nutrition program_ Any Meigs CoWJty senior citizen is
welcome to eat at the Center.

Hot lunches available to seniors
By Churlcnc Hoeflich
Corporation of Appa la chian
Meigs County se nior ci tizens Deve lopment whi ch subcan beat the rap of loneliness contracted the whole thin g to

and the high cost of food - at
least for one meal a day thr oug h the hot lunch program
whi ch began in Pomeroy
Monday.
Lunches are being served at
the Senior Citize ns Ce nter in
the former Pomeroy Junior

High School, Monday through
Friday, from II :30 a.m. to
12:30 p.m.
There are no fixed charges
for the lun ches, but any senior
citizen able or willing to make
a donation of 25 cents or more
is encouraged to do so.

The "tab" for the program is
picked up by the federal
government through th e

fruit, and a hot or cold
beverage .
Today 's menu was beef
the Gallia-Meigs Community patties , buttered potatoes ,
Action Program . This group green beans, fru it sa lad,
works in cooperation with the cookies, rolls with butter, milk
Meigs County Council on and a beverage . The menus are
Aging .
planned ahead and posted so
The hot lunch program got that the senior ci tize ns can
off to a dandy start Monday. decide on what they will need
The cooks - Mrs. Loretta for their at-home meals.
Beegle, Pomeroy, and Mrs.
Purpose of the whol e
Dorline Phillips, Rutland - program is similar to the
prepared for 50 and ended up school lunch program - a way
serving 60. The last few served toward better nutrition for the
got a ham dinner rather than elderly, many of whom are on
the chicken one planned for the limited incomes.
day .
In co nfere nces on aging
The menu was fri ed chicken, across the nati on , poor
mashed pota toes and gravy, nutrition has been a primary
candied carrots, rolls with area of concern. Not only do
butter, milk, a lime .Tello with many of the seni or citizens live

PTA has meeting
SALEM CENTER - Two
petitions, one asking priority
for construction of a new Route
124, and the other in support of
the Ohio PTA's proposal for
legislation exemptin g Ohio
fr om daylight savings time
during the dark winter months
of December through March,
were signed at the Moeday
night meeting of the Salem
Center PTA.
A potluck supper with
visitat ion

of

cl a ssrooms

preceded the meeting. The
nomina ting committee repor t
was give n by Mrs. Olive Page
with the following officers
being elected for the 1974-75
school term : Mrs. Wallace
Fetty, president ; Mrs. Kenneth
Lon gstreth, vice president;
Mrs. William
Willford,
secre tary; and Mrs. Paul
Graves, treasurer .
It was announced by Mrs.
F etty that money for

hou sewares orders must be in

by Thursday. She also reported
that a total of $109.3o"was made
on the recent pancake supper .
Also announ ced was a meeting
of the Meigs County Council of
Parents and Teachers at
Racine April 4.
Guests introduced by Mrs .
Roberta Wilson included
Robert Bowen, Meig~ County
·s uperintendent of schools, and
Mrs. Bowen; Robert Burdette,
members of the Meigs County
Board of Education, and Mrs.
Burdette ; Mr . and Mrs. Arnold
Grate, Mr. and Mrs. Wendell
Grate and Jenny, Mr. and Mrs.
George Grate, Beverly and
Georgene, Mr . and Mrs. David
Grate, Billy Hall, and Debbie
Black.
Arnold Grate gave prayer
preceding the potluck supper.
A program by the Grate
Family Singers was presented
following the meeting. Among
their selections was -!•Happy
Birthday" to Wendell Grate.

Miss Roush feted
A "swee t six tee n'' party
honored Becky Roush recently
at the home of her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Albert Roush, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy. Hosting the birthday

The National Honor Society
sponsored a dance recently in
the Kyger Creek High School
cafeteria with the "Staffhouse ce lebration were her sister,
Road " of Point Pleasant Mrs. Larry Flowers, Columbus , and her siste r-ln-law, Mrs .
providing the music_
Door prizes for the dance Roger Roush, Pataskala.
A pink and white color
were provided by Roush's
scheme was carri ed out in the
Dairyland , Chesh ire; JohnThe
ca ke
nie's Beauty Salon , Pomeroy, decorat ions_
decorated with a large heart
Rall's Ben Franklin, Dutton
and
pink roses and inscribed
Qrugs, Bahr Clotheirs , and the
"
Happy
Birthday, Sweet
Middleport Book Store, all of
Sixteen"
was
served with soft
Middleport_
Winning the prizes were drinks. Games were played
Rusty Lucas, Cindy Price,
Wand a Saxon, Mi ke Rife ,
David Rife, Mitch Sa lem, Rick
Thomas, Pete Peck, Tim
PT. PLEASANT - Mrs,
Moles, Eddie Skaggs, Vicky Naomi Bumgarner and three
Stroud , Edricess Cremeans other women of the Pt.
and Sammy Nibert_
Pleasant area, Mrs. Lillian
Hyer,
Mrs_ Edith Fox, and
SHOW PLANNED
TUPPERS PLAINS - A 'l'!rs. Eva Miller, atte nded the
variety show will be staged United Methodist Spiritual Life
Retreat recently at Jackson 's
Satur~ay, March 30, at the
Tuppers Plains Elementary Mill with 300 women attending.
Ther e were three sessions of
School under the sponsorship
study,
" Lovest Thou Me," a
of_ the Tuppe~s Plains
study
on Repentance and
Booster Club . The show is
Confession ; "Yes, Lord, I Do,"
seheduled from 7:30 to 10 p.m.
and will be preceded by a a stud y on Pra ise and
ji tn~y supper from 4:30 to 7 Proclamation, and "Feed My
p.m. Featured in the variety Sheep," a study of dedication.
show will be the Alvin Chutes Mrs. Betty Dippolito, a
Band, the Blue Grass Band and minister's wife, led the studies .
the Reed Brothers and Jean
Trussell.

with prizes going to the winners, and the group enjoyed
listening to records and dancing during the evening.
Guests were Dick Owen,
Pam Powers , Steven Bachner,

Kim Roush, Christy Smith,
Jack Humphreys, Sharon Bing,
Douglas Roush, Jimmy Joe
Arnold, Bobby Powers, Paula
Kloes, Crensin Pratt, Lois Ann
Roush, Kevin Smith, Kenny
Roush, Carol Lewis , John
Vroman, Sherrie Barnhart,
Mrs . Charles Kessinger, Mr.
and Mrs. Albert Roush, Roger
Roush and Larry Flowers.

Retreat attended by four women
Ftfu and ins'liration was enjoyed through group singing
and skits, and a Bible study on
the book, "Jesus Christ For
Today."
Throughout all the sessions
burned a huge candle composed of candles sent in by all
the districts and molded into
one called, "Candle of
Oneness." Mrs. Bumgarner
said the sessions offered
"Christian fellowship that
could not be matched. "

GETS CERTIFICATE
Grace Allen , rural mail
carrier of Portland, recently
received her 15- year safe
driving award. Formerly a
'
Used Bufla ln coats of. the P.ostmistress-for 10 years, Mrs.
MEET TONIGIIT
Wmnipeg police de partment · Allen has been a rural carrier
RACINE - The sOuthern wind up in church. The fur for 18 y•ars drivin g apAthletic Boosters will meet at coats are donated to St. proximately 13,000. miles a
7:30 this evening at the high An drew ·s Church on the Red year, delivering mail to about
Hivcr Ia r e · uph o l s H~ r th e
school in Racine.
kn ce l111g benches.
200 families.

on small and inadequate incomes, bu t it was found that
many do not plan and prepare
nutritionally balanced meals
necessary for good health.
Living alone is a contribu ting
fac tor _
At the Senior Citizens Center
Monday, the men and women
were sea ted at tables covered
with attractive clo ths and
centered with arrangements of
daffodils from Mrs. Beegle's
garden. Several of the senior
citizens assis ted in serving the
dinners .

The atmosphere was friendly
and the men and women sat
around the tables long after
they ha d eaten their meal,
chatting with each other and
enjoying a good cup of coffee .

Rev. Buckley honored
A surprise birthday party
was held Saturday night at the
Meigs County Infirmary dining
room honoring the Rev. Robert
Buckley, pastor of the Laurel
Cliff Free Methodist Church.
A money tree with $50 on it
was prese nted to him_ He also
received, from Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Barton, a cross replica
cake iced in orhid and
decorated with white lilies.
Mrs. Harry Clark sang a solo_
Attending were Mr. and Mrs .
Jack Robson, Mrs. Genevieve
Ward, Mrs. George Folmer
and children, Mr. and Mrs .
Ernest Powell, Mr. and Mrs.
otto Loh n, Tom Soulsby, Mrs.
Richard Friend and children,
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Pullins
and sons, Franklin Martin and
children, Mrs. Frances Martin,
Mr. and Mrs. Roher! Barton

and children, Mr. and Mrs.
Clifford Ja cobs, Mr. and Mrs.
Larry Jacobs and daughter,
Mrs. Harry Clar k and
daughter, Sherry, \l'lr. and
Mrs. Jack Jacobs, Jeffrey
Hilliary, Mr. and Mrs. James
Gilmore, Pearl Jacobs, Bertha
Parker, Wayne Leifheit, Mrs.
Marguerite Leifheit, Mr. and
Mrs_ Clarence Curtis, Diana
Lewis, Mr. and Mrs. Jack
Stanley and daughter, Mrs .
Sybil Durst, Mr. and Mrs.
Lloyd Wright, Michael Wright
and children, the Rev. and
Mrs. Buckley and children,
Ricky Esenhauer, Betty Will,
Jeannie Windon, Anna Mae
Ellis , Ella Rostifer, Bertha
Righthouse, Oscar Price, C. 0.
Gilmore, Dayton Pierce and
Chester Morris.

"SWords into Plolvshares"
was the program theme
developed by Mrs . Oliver
Michael at the Thursday night
meeting of the Missionary
Society of the Pomeroy First
Baptist OJUrch.
Posters depicting the
destruction of war painted by
the art department of Meigs
High School were used by Mrs.
Michael in her presentation
which stressed the futility of
war and the promise of peace.
· She spoke of the huge bronze
statue of man beating sword
into
plowshare
which
dominated the scene in the
North Garden of the United
Nations, reminding all that
enter the halls that the United
Nations' primary purpose is to
save succeeding generations
from the scourge of war.
She said that hopefully fu ture
history books will list the
greatest achievement of the
20th century not as the moon
walk, but the fuHillment of the
message on the plaque placed
there by the astronauts , "We
ca me in peace for all
· mankind."
Mrs_ Michael said that for
several years, the world has
spent over 200 billion dollars
for military purposes each
year _Of that amoWJt, she said
the United States has spent
one-third, and Russia claims
one-fifth. She spoke on the
escalating arms race and the
question of disarmament. Only
recently has foreign aid been
divided into military aid and
economic aid, the program
leader said, and the public has
been advised that the largest
"slice of the aid pie" goes to 45
nations to prepare them to
wage war. The real need, she
said, is to aid developing
nations in establishing an
economic base for survivaL
The staggering debt of war
which is our children's
inheritance was discussed by
Mrs . Michael who cited figures
on the billions of dollars indebtedness incurred through
wars in the past 30 years. She
charged that the future
generations are already mortgaged in that their taxes will be
paying for the mistakes of
today.
A skit featuring demonstrators picketing the UN
Security CoWJcil with placards
denollhcing war was presented . Taking the role of mothers
for peace were Mrs. Joseph
Cook, Mrs. Ellen Couch, Mrs.
George Skinner and Mrs.
William Watson. Making up the

Birthday observed
other sons, Charles, Gerry,
Ryan, and Joe, Mr. and Mrs.
Gary Falcon and . Justin,
Patriot; Mr. and Mrs. Tim Hall
and Tammy, Columbus; Mr.
and Mrs. Jeff Tillis, Mike and
J ody, Rutland ; Mr _ and Mrs.
James Ferguson and Howie,
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Ferguson,
Jr., Pomeroy ; Mr. and Mrs. '
Joe Moodispaugh, Middleport, ffl
Mrs. Maxine Whittington,
Foster Grinstead, New Haven,
and Mrs. Ruth Priddy, MidSING SCHEDULED
dleport.
POINT PLEASANT - The
se mi-annual Mason Coun ty
Gospel Sing will be held at the
Cheer The Sick
First Church of the Nazarene,
With A Lovely
25th and MI. Vernon, Point
Pleasant, at 7:30 p.m. Saturday sponsored by the Mason
County
Gospel Singers
Association. Featured singers
will include the Homeward
Bound
Trio, Lordsman
Quartet, Gethesamane Trio,
Shafer Family , McDaniel Trio,
Christian Five, the Heavenly
Highway Singers and others. 59 N. 2nd
- Middleport, o.
The public is invited.

HOST GUESTS
Mr _ and Mrs. Roy Miller,
Mrs_
Mildred
Meade,
Columbus; Mrs. Garnet Herdman and granddaughter,
Lynette , Mrs . Leota Anderson,
Kevin and Trisha, Leon, W.
Va., and Mr. and Mrs. Sam
Clark, Hobson, were Saturday
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Albert
Roush.
IN HOSPITAL
Mrs. Robert (Carolyn Sue 1
Vanco, Middleport, is a
surgical patient at the Holzer
Medical Center_ Her room
number is 308.

Security eoQr;cil were Mrs. J.
Edward Foster representing
the United States, and the Rev.
Robert Kuhn, representing the
Peoples Republic of China.
Questions were put to the
Security Co uncil by the
mothers for peace_
To conclude the program,
Mrs. Michael projected a
picture of . a man beating
swords into plowshares on the
wall. She read Isaiah 2:4 and
conducted a litany . A prayer of
consecration was given by the
Rev. Mr . Kuhn .
Mrs. Foster presided at the
business meeting which opened
with group singing of "More
About Jesus" and a poem.
Announcement was made of
the Rio Grande Association
meeting Saturday at Racine
with Milton Bennett, president
of the Ohio Baptist Conven lion
as guest speaker .
Mrs. Ellen Couch will be the
April program leader with
Mrs. I. B. Walker and Mrs.
Robert Kuhn as hostesses.
Mrs . Orval Wiles sent a report
that the white cross quota of
bandages has been almost
filled, and Mrs. Harry Bailey
reported that more pillows are
needed for the children at the
Meigs Community School.
It was decided to send a
check to the Miguel's Answered Prayer project, and to
pay the Latin America pledge.
The love gift of $24 was
dedicated by Mrs. Couch.
Mrs. Harry Bailey WJd Mrs.
L. P. Sterrett were hostesses
and served sherbet, cookies,
mints, tea Wid coffee from a
table centered with jonquils in
white glass containers Wid
decorated with shamrocks.
Others attending besides those
named were Mrs . Mary
Shelton, and Mrs. Judy Schmidt and son, Tedd of Carroll.

I
(if

....IHII&lt;,I)""' ' "

SUPER MARKET - Open Daily 9 to 10 • Sun. 10 to 10
The

To k yo

We Accept Federal Food Stamps
PHONE: 992-3480

subway

se r vice
of
Japan ese
Nat iona l Rai lways carries
6,1 29 ,000 passengers daily .

1 nd Second

Profess iona l pushe r s are
employed
to
squeez e
pa ssengers in be fore the

door s can be c lose d .
Amo ng ar tic les reported
lost in t he cru sh in 1970
were 419.929 umbrellas,
250,630 eyeg la sse.. 172. 106
shoes, hats , and a w ide

asso..- tm e nt

of

muscel laneous items . The
busies t sta tion s are Tokyo
Cent r al.
handling
an
everage of 2600 train s
dail y;
an d
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handling
2.2 00 , 000
passengers da il y.
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recei ve Refined Water . A
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hav ing " m ai d service"
every da y because it does the cleaning tor you . No~
more hard scrubbing to
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Dishes can air dry without
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RUTLAND - Mrs. Cassie
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Guests were Mrs. Hall's
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Calendar I
TUESDAY
CHESTER Cou ncil 323,
Daughters of ·America, 7:30
p.m. at the hall . Quarterly
birthda;·s to be observed.
Silent auctiOn by the good of
the order committee . Members

- .,

U..ged to attend.
MEIGS Bi-Centennial
Commi ttee meeting, 7: 30p.m .
at the Museum. Butternut Ave .

•

' · FRIENDLY Circle at Tri nity
Church. 7:30 p m. with Thomas
Young as prog ram leader .

OHIO ETA PHI Cha pter,
Beta Sigma Ph1 Sorority. 7:30
Tu esday . Col umbus and
Southern Ohi o Electric Co.

&lt;\

'

.~

'

Cultura l program on musical

influence, Kathy King.
WEDNESDAY
OHI O VALLEY Commandery, Knights Ternplar.
special con·clave, to confer the

Order' of the Temple. All Si r
Knights in uniform.
MIDDLEPOR T Litera ry
Club, 2 p.m. Wednesday, home
of Mrs. Rodney Downing. Mrs.
Roy Cassell to review, "It's I.
James McNeill Whistler " by
Lawrence Williams. Roll call .
a famou s painting.

FIRST meeting of Jaycees
shoote rs safety ed uca tion
program begins at 7 p.m. at the
Meigs Jun ior High cafeteria in
Middleport. All in ter_es ted boys
and girls between 7 · and 14
invited _A gun presentation will
be given the fir st class. Ap. plications
ava ilable
at
cafeteria on night of meeting.
YOUNG Wives' Club, 7:30
p.m. at the home of Mrs.
Marilyn Spencer.
WINDING Tra il Ca rden
Club, 8 p.m. at the Columbus
and Southern Ohio Electric Co.
Ope n meeting with members of
area clubs invi ted. Ohio
Association of Ga rden Club
film to be shown _ Door prizes,
refreshments.
THURSDAY
WILLING Workers Class,
Enterprise United Methodist
Church, 7:30 p_m_at the home
of Kay Logan, Route 33.
MIDDLEPORT Child
Conservation League, 8 p.m.,
Sacred
Heart
Church
basemen t. Business meeting
then go to Mason Lanes for a
bowling party _ Guest night to
be observed_
ROCK Springs Better Health
Club, I : 15 p.m. at home of Mrs.
Wendell Jeffers. Mrs. William
Bradford will condu ct the
program and Mrs. Opha Offutt,
the contests.
TWIN CITY Shrine Club,
7:30 p.m. at hall . Refreshments ; all Shriners welcome.
FINAL Day for purchasing
tickets to Meigs High School
Winter Sports Banquet; no
tickets at door _ Tickets
available at New York
Clothing, Swisher- Lohse
Drug s, Pomeroy; Village
Pharmacy and Western Auto,
Middleport_ Banquet will be
6:30p.m. on March 28 at Meigs
High ca_feteria.
RACINE American L•gion
Post 602, 8 p.m., legion halL
MEIGS · County Democrat
Club, 7:30 p.m., Grace
Episcopal Church, Pomeroy.
Guest speaker, Grant McDonald.

Dance held

S"~re~Tend Hind Quart.e r Sa.l e

Society meets·"'

Social ;: .

•
SIXTY SENIOR CITIZENS of Meigs County took 3dvantage of the hot lWJch program now being offered Monday
through Friday at the Senior Citizens Center. There is no
6'

charge for the luncheons although contributions of 25 cents or
more are encouraged to help defray the cost of the federallyfunded nutrition program_ Any Meigs CoWJty senior citizen is
welcome to eat at the Center.

Hot lunches available to seniors
By Churlcnc Hoeflich
Corporation of Appa la chian
Meigs County se nior ci tizens Deve lopment whi ch subcan beat the rap of loneliness contracted the whole thin g to

and the high cost of food - at
least for one meal a day thr oug h the hot lunch program
whi ch began in Pomeroy
Monday.
Lunches are being served at
the Senior Citize ns Ce nter in
the former Pomeroy Junior

High School, Monday through
Friday, from II :30 a.m. to
12:30 p.m.
There are no fixed charges
for the lun ches, but any senior
citizen able or willing to make
a donation of 25 cents or more
is encouraged to do so.

The "tab" for the program is
picked up by the federal
government through th e

fruit, and a hot or cold
beverage .
Today 's menu was beef
the Gallia-Meigs Community patties , buttered potatoes ,
Action Program . This group green beans, fru it sa lad,
works in cooperation with the cookies, rolls with butter, milk
Meigs County Council on and a beverage . The menus are
Aging .
planned ahead and posted so
The hot lunch program got that the senior ci tize ns can
off to a dandy start Monday. decide on what they will need
The cooks - Mrs. Loretta for their at-home meals.
Beegle, Pomeroy, and Mrs.
Purpose of the whol e
Dorline Phillips, Rutland - program is similar to the
prepared for 50 and ended up school lunch program - a way
serving 60. The last few served toward better nutrition for the
got a ham dinner rather than elderly, many of whom are on
the chicken one planned for the limited incomes.
day .
In co nfere nces on aging
The menu was fri ed chicken, across the nati on , poor
mashed pota toes and gravy, nutrition has been a primary
candied carrots, rolls with area of concern. Not only do
butter, milk, a lime .Tello with many of the seni or citizens live

PTA has meeting
SALEM CENTER - Two
petitions, one asking priority
for construction of a new Route
124, and the other in support of
the Ohio PTA's proposal for
legislation exemptin g Ohio
fr om daylight savings time
during the dark winter months
of December through March,
were signed at the Moeday
night meeting of the Salem
Center PTA.
A potluck supper with
visitat ion

of

cl a ssrooms

preceded the meeting. The
nomina ting committee repor t
was give n by Mrs. Olive Page
with the following officers
being elected for the 1974-75
school term : Mrs. Wallace
Fetty, president ; Mrs. Kenneth
Lon gstreth, vice president;
Mrs. William
Willford,
secre tary; and Mrs. Paul
Graves, treasurer .
It was announced by Mrs.
F etty that money for

hou sewares orders must be in

by Thursday. She also reported
that a total of $109.3o"was made
on the recent pancake supper .
Also announ ced was a meeting
of the Meigs County Council of
Parents and Teachers at
Racine April 4.
Guests introduced by Mrs .
Roberta Wilson included
Robert Bowen, Meig~ County
·s uperintendent of schools, and
Mrs. Bowen; Robert Burdette,
members of the Meigs County
Board of Education, and Mrs.
Burdette ; Mr . and Mrs. Arnold
Grate, Mr. and Mrs. Wendell
Grate and Jenny, Mr. and Mrs.
George Grate, Beverly and
Georgene, Mr . and Mrs. David
Grate, Billy Hall, and Debbie
Black.
Arnold Grate gave prayer
preceding the potluck supper.
A program by the Grate
Family Singers was presented
following the meeting. Among
their selections was -!•Happy
Birthday" to Wendell Grate.

Miss Roush feted
A "swee t six tee n'' party
honored Becky Roush recently
at the home of her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Albert Roush, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy. Hosting the birthday

The National Honor Society
sponsored a dance recently in
the Kyger Creek High School
cafeteria with the "Staffhouse ce lebration were her sister,
Road " of Point Pleasant Mrs. Larry Flowers, Columbus , and her siste r-ln-law, Mrs .
providing the music_
Door prizes for the dance Roger Roush, Pataskala.
A pink and white color
were provided by Roush's
scheme was carri ed out in the
Dairyland , Chesh ire; JohnThe
ca ke
nie's Beauty Salon , Pomeroy, decorat ions_
decorated with a large heart
Rall's Ben Franklin, Dutton
and
pink roses and inscribed
Qrugs, Bahr Clotheirs , and the
"
Happy
Birthday, Sweet
Middleport Book Store, all of
Sixteen"
was
served with soft
Middleport_
Winning the prizes were drinks. Games were played
Rusty Lucas, Cindy Price,
Wand a Saxon, Mi ke Rife ,
David Rife, Mitch Sa lem, Rick
Thomas, Pete Peck, Tim
PT. PLEASANT - Mrs,
Moles, Eddie Skaggs, Vicky Naomi Bumgarner and three
Stroud , Edricess Cremeans other women of the Pt.
and Sammy Nibert_
Pleasant area, Mrs. Lillian
Hyer,
Mrs_ Edith Fox, and
SHOW PLANNED
TUPPERS PLAINS - A 'l'!rs. Eva Miller, atte nded the
variety show will be staged United Methodist Spiritual Life
Retreat recently at Jackson 's
Satur~ay, March 30, at the
Tuppers Plains Elementary Mill with 300 women attending.
Ther e were three sessions of
School under the sponsorship
study,
" Lovest Thou Me," a
of_ the Tuppe~s Plains
study
on Repentance and
Booster Club . The show is
Confession ; "Yes, Lord, I Do,"
seheduled from 7:30 to 10 p.m.
and will be preceded by a a stud y on Pra ise and
ji tn~y supper from 4:30 to 7 Proclamation, and "Feed My
p.m. Featured in the variety Sheep," a study of dedication.
show will be the Alvin Chutes Mrs. Betty Dippolito, a
Band, the Blue Grass Band and minister's wife, led the studies .
the Reed Brothers and Jean
Trussell.

with prizes going to the winners, and the group enjoyed
listening to records and dancing during the evening.
Guests were Dick Owen,
Pam Powers , Steven Bachner,

Kim Roush, Christy Smith,
Jack Humphreys, Sharon Bing,
Douglas Roush, Jimmy Joe
Arnold, Bobby Powers, Paula
Kloes, Crensin Pratt, Lois Ann
Roush, Kevin Smith, Kenny
Roush, Carol Lewis , John
Vroman, Sherrie Barnhart,
Mrs . Charles Kessinger, Mr.
and Mrs. Albert Roush, Roger
Roush and Larry Flowers.

Retreat attended by four women
Ftfu and ins'liration was enjoyed through group singing
and skits, and a Bible study on
the book, "Jesus Christ For
Today."
Throughout all the sessions
burned a huge candle composed of candles sent in by all
the districts and molded into
one called, "Candle of
Oneness." Mrs. Bumgarner
said the sessions offered
"Christian fellowship that
could not be matched. "

GETS CERTIFICATE
Grace Allen , rural mail
carrier of Portland, recently
received her 15- year safe
driving award. Formerly a
'
Used Bufla ln coats of. the P.ostmistress-for 10 years, Mrs.
MEET TONIGIIT
Wmnipeg police de partment · Allen has been a rural carrier
RACINE - The sOuthern wind up in church. The fur for 18 y•ars drivin g apAthletic Boosters will meet at coats are donated to St. proximately 13,000. miles a
7:30 this evening at the high An drew ·s Church on the Red year, delivering mail to about
Hivcr Ia r e · uph o l s H~ r th e
school in Racine.
kn ce l111g benches.
200 families.

on small and inadequate incomes, bu t it was found that
many do not plan and prepare
nutritionally balanced meals
necessary for good health.
Living alone is a contribu ting
fac tor _
At the Senior Citizens Center
Monday, the men and women
were sea ted at tables covered
with attractive clo ths and
centered with arrangements of
daffodils from Mrs. Beegle's
garden. Several of the senior
citizens assis ted in serving the
dinners .

The atmosphere was friendly
and the men and women sat
around the tables long after
they ha d eaten their meal,
chatting with each other and
enjoying a good cup of coffee .

Rev. Buckley honored
A surprise birthday party
was held Saturday night at the
Meigs County Infirmary dining
room honoring the Rev. Robert
Buckley, pastor of the Laurel
Cliff Free Methodist Church.
A money tree with $50 on it
was prese nted to him_ He also
received, from Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Barton, a cross replica
cake iced in orhid and
decorated with white lilies.
Mrs. Harry Clark sang a solo_
Attending were Mr. and Mrs .
Jack Robson, Mrs. Genevieve
Ward, Mrs. George Folmer
and children, Mr. and Mrs .
Ernest Powell, Mr. and Mrs.
otto Loh n, Tom Soulsby, Mrs.
Richard Friend and children,
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Pullins
and sons, Franklin Martin and
children, Mrs. Frances Martin,
Mr. and Mrs. Roher! Barton

and children, Mr. and Mrs.
Clifford Ja cobs, Mr. and Mrs.
Larry Jacobs and daughter,
Mrs. Harry Clar k and
daughter, Sherry, \l'lr. and
Mrs. Jack Jacobs, Jeffrey
Hilliary, Mr. and Mrs. James
Gilmore, Pearl Jacobs, Bertha
Parker, Wayne Leifheit, Mrs.
Marguerite Leifheit, Mr. and
Mrs_ Clarence Curtis, Diana
Lewis, Mr. and Mrs. Jack
Stanley and daughter, Mrs .
Sybil Durst, Mr. and Mrs.
Lloyd Wright, Michael Wright
and children, the Rev. and
Mrs. Buckley and children,
Ricky Esenhauer, Betty Will,
Jeannie Windon, Anna Mae
Ellis , Ella Rostifer, Bertha
Righthouse, Oscar Price, C. 0.
Gilmore, Dayton Pierce and
Chester Morris.

"SWords into Plolvshares"
was the program theme
developed by Mrs . Oliver
Michael at the Thursday night
meeting of the Missionary
Society of the Pomeroy First
Baptist OJUrch.
Posters depicting the
destruction of war painted by
the art department of Meigs
High School were used by Mrs.
Michael in her presentation
which stressed the futility of
war and the promise of peace.
· She spoke of the huge bronze
statue of man beating sword
into
plowshare
which
dominated the scene in the
North Garden of the United
Nations, reminding all that
enter the halls that the United
Nations' primary purpose is to
save succeeding generations
from the scourge of war.
She said that hopefully fu ture
history books will list the
greatest achievement of the
20th century not as the moon
walk, but the fuHillment of the
message on the plaque placed
there by the astronauts , "We
ca me in peace for all
· mankind."
Mrs_ Michael said that for
several years, the world has
spent over 200 billion dollars
for military purposes each
year _Of that amoWJt, she said
the United States has spent
one-third, and Russia claims
one-fifth. She spoke on the
escalating arms race and the
question of disarmament. Only
recently has foreign aid been
divided into military aid and
economic aid, the program
leader said, and the public has
been advised that the largest
"slice of the aid pie" goes to 45
nations to prepare them to
wage war. The real need, she
said, is to aid developing
nations in establishing an
economic base for survivaL
The staggering debt of war
which is our children's
inheritance was discussed by
Mrs . Michael who cited figures
on the billions of dollars indebtedness incurred through
wars in the past 30 years. She
charged that the future
generations are already mortgaged in that their taxes will be
paying for the mistakes of
today.
A skit featuring demonstrators picketing the UN
Security CoWJcil with placards
denollhcing war was presented . Taking the role of mothers
for peace were Mrs. Joseph
Cook, Mrs. Ellen Couch, Mrs.
George Skinner and Mrs.
William Watson. Making up the

Birthday observed
other sons, Charles, Gerry,
Ryan, and Joe, Mr. and Mrs.
Gary Falcon and . Justin,
Patriot; Mr. and Mrs. Tim Hall
and Tammy, Columbus; Mr.
and Mrs. Jeff Tillis, Mike and
J ody, Rutland ; Mr _ and Mrs.
James Ferguson and Howie,
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Ferguson,
Jr., Pomeroy ; Mr. and Mrs. '
Joe Moodispaugh, Middleport, ffl
Mrs. Maxine Whittington,
Foster Grinstead, New Haven,
and Mrs. Ruth Priddy, MidSING SCHEDULED
dleport.
POINT PLEASANT - The
se mi-annual Mason Coun ty
Gospel Sing will be held at the
Cheer The Sick
First Church of the Nazarene,
With A Lovely
25th and MI. Vernon, Point
Pleasant, at 7:30 p.m. Saturday sponsored by the Mason
County
Gospel Singers
Association. Featured singers
will include the Homeward
Bound
Trio, Lordsman
Quartet, Gethesamane Trio,
Shafer Family , McDaniel Trio,
Christian Five, the Heavenly
Highway Singers and others. 59 N. 2nd
- Middleport, o.
The public is invited.

HOST GUESTS
Mr _ and Mrs. Roy Miller,
Mrs_
Mildred
Meade,
Columbus; Mrs. Garnet Herdman and granddaughter,
Lynette , Mrs . Leota Anderson,
Kevin and Trisha, Leon, W.
Va., and Mr. and Mrs. Sam
Clark, Hobson, were Saturday
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Albert
Roush.
IN HOSPITAL
Mrs. Robert (Carolyn Sue 1
Vanco, Middleport, is a
surgical patient at the Holzer
Medical Center_ Her room
number is 308.

Security eoQr;cil were Mrs. J.
Edward Foster representing
the United States, and the Rev.
Robert Kuhn, representing the
Peoples Republic of China.
Questions were put to the
Security Co uncil by the
mothers for peace_
To conclude the program,
Mrs. Michael projected a
picture of . a man beating
swords into plowshares on the
wall. She read Isaiah 2:4 and
conducted a litany . A prayer of
consecration was given by the
Rev. Mr . Kuhn .
Mrs. Foster presided at the
business meeting which opened
with group singing of "More
About Jesus" and a poem.
Announcement was made of
the Rio Grande Association
meeting Saturday at Racine
with Milton Bennett, president
of the Ohio Baptist Conven lion
as guest speaker .
Mrs. Ellen Couch will be the
April program leader with
Mrs. I. B. Walker and Mrs.
Robert Kuhn as hostesses.
Mrs . Orval Wiles sent a report
that the white cross quota of
bandages has been almost
filled, and Mrs. Harry Bailey
reported that more pillows are
needed for the children at the
Meigs Community School.
It was decided to send a
check to the Miguel's Answered Prayer project, and to
pay the Latin America pledge.
The love gift of $24 was
dedicated by Mrs. Couch.
Mrs. Harry Bailey WJd Mrs.
L. P. Sterrett were hostesses
and served sherbet, cookies,
mints, tea Wid coffee from a
table centered with jonquils in
white glass containers Wid
decorated with shamrocks.
Others attending besides those
named were Mrs . Mary
Shelton, and Mrs. Judy Schmidt and son, Tedd of Carroll.

I
(if

....IHII&lt;,I)""' ' "

SUPER MARKET - Open Daily 9 to 10 • Sun. 10 to 10
The

To k yo

We Accept Federal Food Stamps
PHONE: 992-3480

subway

se r vice
of
Japan ese
Nat iona l Rai lways carries
6,1 29 ,000 passengers daily .

1 nd Second

Profess iona l pushe r s are
employed
to
squeez e
pa ssengers in be fore the

door s can be c lose d .
Amo ng ar tic les reported
lost in t he cru sh in 1970
were 419.929 umbrellas,
250,630 eyeg la sse.. 172. 106
shoes, hats , and a w ide

asso..- tm e nt

of

muscel laneous items . The
busies t sta tion s are Tokyo
Cent r al.
handling
an
everage of 2600 train s
dail y;
an d
Skinjuki ,
handling
2.2 00 , 000
passengers da il y.
The bu siest appl iance in
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recei ve Refined Water . A
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Ref ined Water when you
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hav ing " m ai d service"
every da y because it does the cleaning tor you . No~
more hard scrubbing to
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or cabinets . Your clothes
do not need to presoak to
look clean and fluffy soft .
Dishes can air dry without
dreaded water spots to ruin
,
r appearance. Why not
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hanJie the many jobs of
cleaning for you? Call 882 2525.

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Henry Block has
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12 ~z. can

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RUTLAND - Mrs. Cassie
Hall, Rutland, was honored
Saturday night with a surprise
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son, Billy _
Guests were Mrs. Hall's
husband, William, and their

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8

The Dally Senlmel Middleport Pomeroy 0 Tuesday March 19 1974

Meigs
Property
Transfers

9- The Daily Sent mel Middleport Pomeroy 0 Tuesday March 19 1974

Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!/
WANT ADS

NFORMATION
DEADLINES
5 P M Day Before Pub car on
Monday Dead I ne 9 a m
Ca ce Ia! on - Cor r ec ons
w I be accepled unti 9 a m for
Dav ot PtJb cat on

REGULATIONS

T he Publ she reserves th e
gh to t;d t or r e ject any ads
deemed ob ect onal
The
publ Sher w
not be r espon
s be tor mo e than one n
co rect nse r on
RATES
For Want Ad Serv ce
5 cen s per Word on e nse ,; t on
M n mum Charge ' 00
14 cents • er wo d thr ee
consecu ve nserl ens
26 cents per word s x con
sec u ve nser ons
25 Per Cen t D scoun on pa d
ads and ads pa d w h n 0
days

Dale B Adams Bonme D
Adams to Monongahela Power
Co Easeme nt Ohve
Robert V Bohal)l Betty u
Baham Charles W Mtles
Mary J M1les to Garv I
Gearhart Kay A Gearhart
165 4&gt; Acres Sc1p10
Laurence A Hvse ll Nelhe
Hysell to Roosevelt Branham
Polly Branham l6's Acres
CARD OF THANKS
Rutland
&amp; OBITUARY
Frankhn Real Esl.ale Co to
S2 00 t o
so word m n
OhiO Power Co 23 50 Acres mum Each add ona l word
3c
Coal Salem
BLIND AD"
Add t ona 25c Cha rg e pe r;.
Albert Htll Jr Ora E Htll to
Advertisement
Robert C Hill
198 Acre
OFFICE HOURS
8 JO a m to 5 00 p m Da ly
Sutton
8 30 a m
o
2 00 Noon
Helen I Lackey Jacquelyn s ~~ u day
R Lockard Wilham Thomas
Lockard to Andre w Hart
Dar he Hart 62 83 Acres 3 47 F EMALE b eag e br own b a ck
and wh te no co Ia L os t a t
Acres Salem
Rt 1'24 and Roue 7 by pa ss
Fam y pe
ewa d offe ed
Ralph R Prall Emalene
Phone 7tS2 3266
Pratt to Dale Hwnphreys Amy
3 9 3 (
Hwnphreys Lot 4 Middleport
W1lham L Larkins Vtolet D
Lar kms lo Leadmg Creek Pets for sa e
1 BLACK f e ma e Ger man
Conservan cy D1st Ease
Sh epherd
spaye d
and
Rutland
fr endly Phone 992 5947
3 9 3 c
Raymond Badgley dec to
Martha Badgley dec Clotst Wan ted ro bu y
E REG STEREO mal e
Badgle) Ralph Badgley ONDachshund
puppy Phone 992
Herschel Badgley
Lma
59117
3 93c
Brmker Zelia Lawson Aff for
trans Letart

Lost

WantP.rt To Buy

2 SIGNS

JUNK
AUTOS
omp l e e
de ver ed to ou yard W e p ck
up au o bod es and buy nl
~ nd s of s r ap me as and
on R der s Savage Sr a e
Rou e 24 Roufe 4 PIJm€ ov
Oh o Phone 992 5468
3 14 2 p

RECYC LE you
e w ~ pap e r s
and corrugil f ed pas eboard to
Th e Rosenbu r g Com pany a
A h ens Oh o We a e you r
bes m a k et a I 50 pe
00
pound s fo r both !ems We buy
sc ap r on ca S1 r on sh ee t
on
co ppe
bra ss and
&lt;' um num
We have b en
he r e s n ee 9 6 so we know a
n a
b
abou
c yc l ng
Conserve ree ve e and se I
your was e ma t er as to
Ro se nbe r g a A hens Oh o
We c ose each F day noon tor
b a anc e of lhe week
f you
wou d
k e to ca
us abou
nformat on
ou
phone
number s593 747 Se I to Th e
Rosenbe r g Co
at A hens
Oh o We need your bu s n ess
and
you
suppo rt
n
Recyc ng
...
3 15 7tc
1 copper 75c rad ators
35c. r ed brass 40c btt f er es
s 20 M A Hal Ree d sv le
Oh o Phone 378 6'2 49

NO

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

OF
QUALITY
1970 PLYMOUTH FURY Ill

POMEROY
tiOME &amp; AUTO
992 2094
606 E Mam Pomeroy

and

On Most American Cars
- GUARANTEEDPHONE 992 2094

FURNITURE

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

Stop In and See Our
Floor Display

Open a TotS

OFFICE SUPPLIES

Now Only Sl295

4 doo V 8 au tom~ I c power stee r ng r od o good t re s
b uc f n sh s. pof ess nt er or

967 DODGE DART

$795

d door 6 cy l nder eng ne stc1ndard trans m ss on
good res dean nter o d:.rk b lue f n sh

ado

1970 FORD FAIRLANE SOD
H&lt;'!rdtop Coupe V 8 eng ne
powe stee ng r :.do

Monday thru Saturda v

60li E Mam Pomeroy 0

Hooked on
nasal spray

a utomat c transm ss on

ltnes and Power
lmes All work done by the
foot or contrac1 Also dozer
work and septic tanks 1n

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

s1a lied

OPEN EVES 8 00 PM
POMEROY OHIO

NotiCe
HAR R SON S TV and Ser v ce
ca Is Phone 992 2522
2 22 26 c

See or Call
Bob or Roger Jeffers
Day 9Y2 7989
N1ght 992 3525
or 992 5232

By Lawrence E Lamb M D
DEAR DR LAMB - I am
hooked For the past f1ve or s1x
years I have had to keep a
bottle of nasal spray m my
possessiOn 24 hours a day
I have l.alked w1th other
people who have the same
problem Someone suggested
takmg larg e quant1lles of
v1tamm C but this was to no
avail If I don t have the nasal
spray my nasal passages slay
clogged
l have also heard that the
long term
use
of an
tih1starrunes was debimental
Help please
DEAR READER - Yes
you II need more than vtl.amm
C for that problem
Your case IS a good
IllustratiOn of the dangers of
usmg nasal decongestant
sprays too often They work
because the med~eme m the
sprays consbicts the small
blood vessels and causes the
nasal membranes to shrmk
The problem IS that these
mediCmes wear off and then a
rebound reaction occurs and
the membranes swell more
than they were swollen m the
f1rsl place
If you use these med1cmes
for JUst a few days durmg
swell19g from a cold they are
all nghl m lumled amounts
But you should never continue

these med1cmes on your own
for more than a few days
They cause a chemtcal
reaction to the nasal mem
branes and then you have a
new and more persistent
problem Il usually requires
the help of a specialist m ear
nose and throat problems to
helpyougelofE the habit or you
can get help from your family
doctor
No doubt you w11l have to
tough 1l out w1th a stuffed nose
until your membranes can
recover and that may lake a
while
For the rest of my readers I
would say lake heed and don t
let th1s happen to you
A ~ ord about sprays 1f you
must spray use a squeeze
bottle or a squeeze bulb The
aerosol sprays mto the nose
and back of the throat can be
dangerous m my opm10n and I
don t thmk you should use any
aerosol sprays mto the throat
DEAR DR LAMB - I am a
grrl 16 Lately several people
have noticed that I ve been
breathmg heav1ly I never used
to II could be due to my
we1ght I m five feet four and
we1gh 130 pounds
Il m1ght also have to do with
the fact that I JUS! had a hOse
JOb a few months ago
l m a b1t womed Could you
please tell me what causes
thiS '
DEA R READER - Most
likely 1l1s from the nose JOb In
reducmg the s1ze of the nose
th~ a1r passages are usually
narrowed The result IS that the
breathing through the nose IS
often not as easy Forcmg the
a1r through the smaller
passages results m more noise
Just as water runnfng rapidly

CAL L Pol ys A uct on or stop b y

1973 MG B conv e t b e 7 500
m le s los of extras Ca I
304 773 5323
3 8 6

c

through a narrow channel
PUBLIC NOTICE
makes more no1se 1 d 1gnore 1!
To the Defendant John Robert
unless you feel uncomforl.able Weddle whos e address s
If you have too much breathmg unknown
IN THE COMMON
difficult) you may need to
PLEAS COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY OHIO
have the nasa l pa.sages
enlarged Some small noses ODESSA WEDDLE

are more of a decoratton than a
functional organ

Route 1
Portland Oh o
Pla1nt If

Laurel Cliff
News Notes

JOHN ROBERT WEDDLE SR
Address unknown
Defendant
No 15485

- NOTICE BY

PUBLICATION Pant ff ha s brou gh t th s
act on nam ng VO\J as Defendant
n the above named Cour by
f ng
ts Co mp ant on the
8th day of February 197.4
Theob1ect of the Compla nt s
that th e Pant ff demands that
she bed vorced from Defendant
and that she be awarded the
care custody and coni rot ol the
parte s
ch ldr en
to w t
Deborah Weddle John Robert
Wed d e Jr
Danelle Weddle
and George Danny Wedd e
You are requ red to answer
the Com pta nt w th n t wenty
e ght day s afte the ast
put:H cat on of th s not ce wh ch
w I be pub! shed once each
week tor s x consecu t ve weeks
and t he ast pub ca t on w II be
made on the 26th day of M arc h

BY BERTHA PARKER
974
Sabbath School attendance
n case of your fa ure o
a11swer or otherw se r espond as
Mar 17 at the Free Method1sl perm
tted by the Oh o Rules of
Church was 110 Mornmg C v Proce1ure w th n the t me
stated judgm ent by default w II
worship was attended by 76 be
rendered aga nst you for th e
persons Offermg was $85 42 re et demanded n the Com
Chmr members present were p a nt
22

tem s Se f t the auct on .uay
537 H gh Street M ddleport
Q92 3509 Open 9 a m o 5 p m

Monday Wednesday Thv s

dav Fr day unt I noon
3 3 30 tc
"CAS H pa cf fOr all makes ana
modes of mob le hom es
Phone area cod e 614 423 953
4 13 ftc

PUBLIC NOTICE

E D A Pro ect No 06 00940
V llage of Pom eroy Oh1o
Owne

V5

Send your questions to Dr
Lamb In care of this
newspaper P 0 Box 1551
Radio City Station New York
N Y 10019 For a copy of Dr
Lamb s booklet on losing
weight send 50 ceniB to the
same address and ask for
Losing Weight booklet

o gel r d of tho se unwanted

LARRY E SP ENCER
C erkotthe
Com mon Pleas Court
Me gs Coun t y Oh o
Pam eroy Oh o
9 26 (3) 5 12 19

~
vduced '" lhe 17th
ce n&lt;ur1 the bayonet took its
name Irom the French c1ty of
Bayonne where 1l was made

them at l eas f ve days pr or to
the dat e se t fo r hea r ng
G ven under my hand and
seal ot sa d Cou rt th s 6th da y
of March 1974
Manning D Webster
Judge

C3

19 26 2tc

By Ann B Watson
Deputy C erk

12 MEN NEEDED
1}40 00 WEEK
Full or Parthme
Men needed to work tn
Gall1a
&amp;
Mason
County No expertence
necessary ~ust have
car and nea' ap
pearance
Call Mr Nap1er
9 to 5 Monday &amp;
Tuesday Only

Sepa rate seated b ds for
Waterwork s mprovements w
be rece ved bV the Board of
Tr ustees of Pub c A tta rs of th e
V I age of Pomeroy
at th e
V I age Hall Pomeroy Oh o
unt 1 twe ve o cock noon E D T
on March 27 1974 and men at
sa d off ce pub ely opened and
ea d a oud
A I proposa s shat be sealed
and endorsed for Waterworks
For
mprovements
Contract 72
1
72 2
72 3 or 72 4 as
app cab e and addressed to the
C erk and del vered to the Cl erk
of !he Board of Trustee s of
Publ c Afta rs
v llage Ha 1
Pomeroy Oh o
The nforma t on for B dd er s
Form of B d Form of Contract
P lan s
Spec f cat ons
and
Forms of B d Bond Perform
I"
ance and Payment Bond and
Pomeroy Oh1o
other contract documents may
be exam ned at the off ce of th e
Board of Trustees of Pub c
Affa rs V llage Halt Pomeroy
WOMEN or g rts over 18 Ca
Oh o or at the off ce of Burgess
992 2565 to nterv ew
&amp; N p e L m t ed 2015 We st
3 17 3tc
F fth Avenue Columbus Oh o
43 2 2
The work covered by th e
plans and spec f cat ons
n
eludes water ma ns booster
pump stat ons ground s orag e 3 AND 4 ROOM turn shed and
unfurn shed
apartments
wat er tanks a we i f eld and
Phone 992 5434
other water supply tac 1 t es as
4 12 tfc
further def ned n the
n
format on for B dders sec t on
Cop es may be Qbta ned at the PR IV ATE meet ng room for
any org an zat on phone 992
off ce of Burgess &amp; N pie
3975
L m ted ocated at 2015 west
3 11 ftc
F fth Avenue Co lumb us Oh o
upon payment of S20 00 NONE
OF
WHICH
WILL
BE A PARTMENT for r en t 2
bedroom s Phone 992 5908
REFUNDED
3 19 6t c
Each b dder mu st depos t
w th h s b d secur tv n th e
amount form and subject to the APARTMENT for rent Phone
992 5592
cond tons prov ded n th e n
3 19 t c
formation for B dders
Attent on of b dders s par
t cu ar ly
c a ll ed
to
th e FURNISHED
2
bedroom
requ rements as to cond Ion s of
tra l er c lose to schoo l s
emp loyment to be observed and
shopp ng center and sw m
m n mum wage rates to be pa d
m ng poo Phone 992 5914
und er the contract
Specif c
3 17 6tc
attent on of the b dder s s ca l ed
to the requ rements ot Sect ions 2 BEDROOM mob e hom e
53 and 59 of !he General Con
adu ts no pels Phon e 992
ditions
52 47
The pro eel
s rece v ng
3 17 3tc
federal f nanc1a ass stance
from the E conom c Develop
ment Adm nlstratlon for a
Publ c Works Pro ect The
successfu l b deter must comply
wi t h the rec;u rements of th e TRUCK topper for 8 ft bed
Dav s Bacon Act
Contract
F actory made Phone 992
Work Hours Standard Act
7132
J 19 6t c
Cope and Act {Ant K ckback
and T tie VI C v R ghts Act of
1964
RT 36 Dav s d tcher one 3 x
No b dder may w thdraw h s
36 and one 6 and 24 cha n
b d w th n 90 days after th e
L ke new cond ton Phone 1
actual date of the open ng
614 446 0762 after 5 p m $500
thereof
3 8 6tc
The v I age reserves the r ght
to wave any ntormat t es or to LOSE we ght w th New Sha pe
Tab ets and Hydrex Water
retect any and a t b ds or to
P I s at Sutton Drug M d
ncrease or decr ease or om t
deport and N elson Drug
any tern or terns and or to
3 19 3tc
award to the owest and best
b dder
Ea c h proposa l "must
conta n th e fu I n.arne of every 1973 MASSEY Ferguson r d ng
lawn motor 34 mower 7 h p
person or company nterested n
Phon e 1 (304 773 5161
same
3 19 5tp
By order of the Board of
Trustees of Pub I c Affa rs of the
V llage Of Pomeroy Oh o
Jane Walton 21 FT Cob a speed boat 200
horsepower
Bui ck v 8 n
Clerk
board outboard dr ve fu 1
VI age of
covers
tandem
tra er
Pomeroy Oh o
Exce ent cond t on
Phone
(614) 949 2433
(2 26 (3 5 12 19 Ate
3 17 6tc
.---..:....--------,

446-0677
WANTED

PAPER CARRIER

WfTON, W. VA.
PHONE 992-2156
THE DAILY
SENTINEL

For Rent

Mrs Irene Klme wa~ m
Holzer several days for a
medical checkup
{ 2) 12
Mr and Mrs W1ll1am Dav1s
Columbus v1s1ted Saturday
w1th Mr and Mrs Pearl
PUBLIC NOTICE
Jacobs
BIDS W LL BE RECE VED
Mrs Bobby Burke and ChriS BY THE ME GS COUNTY
COMMISSIONERS AT THE R
Columbus v1s1ted recently OFF
CE UNTIL 9 30 AM ON
w1th Mr and Mrs Harmon Tuesday March 26 1974 for
nstallat on or an automatic
Fox
a arm system
n the Me gs
The Men s Fellowship held Countv lnf rmary bu ld ng
The successfu l b dder s to
the1r regular meeting at the turn
sh a 1 labor and mater a
home of Mr and Mrs Richard and be respon s bfe for f na
by the State Fire
Fnend w1th potluck and 26 appro11a
Marshal s off ce and N F P A
persons present
72A 1972 ed ton
etlon date 60 day s from
Mrs Polly Ann DeConmck b dComp
open ng
Plans are on f le at the Me gs
was hostess to 16 co-workers
County
Comm ss oners off ce
recently at the home of her
grandparents Mr and Mrs
Board of Comm ss oners
Me gs County Oh 0
Charles Karr
M "rtha Chambers
S1xty mne persons surprised
.,
Cl erk
Rev
Buckley Saturday (3 12 19 2tc
evenmg w1th a birthday party
at the home of Mr and Mrs
Clifford Jacobs Ice cream
cake and punch were served
N,....ICE ON FILING
Mrs Vern Story spent a week
O"F INVENTORY
AND APPRAISEMENT
m Colwnbus w1th her husband
The State of Oh o Ml gs county
who 1s employed there
Court of CA'"mon
Pleas
Prrobate Oiv stbn
The Me1gs County Semor
To the E x ecutr x of the estate
Citizen Chorr Will be at the
o suc h of the fo tow ng as are
Laurel Cliff Free Methodist res dents of the Stat e of Oh 0
v z - t he surv v ng spouse the
Church March 24 7 30 p m All neKt
of k n the bene f cares
are mv1led to come and hear under the w 1 and t o the at
tornev
or
attorneys
them smg
represent ng
anv
of
the
Twelve members of the aforement oned pers ons
Carre Elf e Wood
Rt 1
Laurel Chff Health Club Club Carpenter
Oh 0 c o um b a
met al the home of Mrs Jean Townsh p No 21 154
You are Hereby not I ed that
Wr~ght Thursday evemng w1th
the
lnv enlory
and of Ap:
'INFORMATION A·souT
Mrs Mahel Tracy co-hostess
pra sement
of the estate
the
afore
ment
oned
deceased
ate
Guest was Mrs Betty Card
of sad County was f ed n th s
JOB OPPORTUNITI!E:S
Refreshments were served
Co rt
Sa d Inventory a nd I '
SOCIAL SECURJTY
Mr and Mrs Edward Ar
~::/~9 s~e~o~~tth ~ i~ur~~n ;~~ CONSUMER PROTECTION I '
cher Roseville v1s1ted Sunday 2nd day of Apr 19" at 10 00
AND
A M
wtth Mr and Mrs Norman 9 clock
Any person des r ng to f l e
&amp;haefer
exce pt ons t hereto must f fe

GREAT COUNTRY

STEREO
92.1 FM
WMPO
_ Mtdoleport-Pomeroy -

-

"

~ 1
~

MATERIALS CD
55S4
Mason W Va

9 00 -

Auto Sales

For Sale

WE HAVE a I your upho s er y
ne eds
burlap
den m
camb c foam g ue z ppers
tack ng str ps spr ngs and
c ps
ch pboard
button
tw ne se w ng thread l egs
upholstery books dacron
webb ng spr ng tw ne ta cks
wet cord
co tton sw vel
bases foam
foam
foam
Pomeroy Recove ry ~22 E
Man St
Pom e oy
Oh o
phon e 992 7554
3S2Lc

5 R COM house w l h bat h n
upper end of Sy racu se Phon e
992 3 116
3 15 8 c

- -----

A BEDROOM

hom e at Brad
bury
ust 5 m nutes from
M ddleport Phone 9~2 2297
l 17 6tp

70 ACRE S of pasture land on
St ate Route 33 S300 per acre
no bu ld ngs For add t anal
nform at on ca l 992 2720
3 17 Jtc

Buy 'Em Now'
20 TurfTrm3HP

POVVER MOWERS

NEW 3 bedroom house near
Rut and Phone 742 616 1
3 17 6tc

52.95
26

2 BEDROOM house n M d
deport
N ew k tchen and
bath app an ce s ncluded
Ca l 992 53 0
3 19 26tc

Turf Ttl31f2 H P
TILLERS

BEAUT FUL new homes now
un d er construct on n pr m e
ocat on on c ty water and
sew er Cho ceo f des gns Wa l
to wall ca rpet ng and a r
ncluded
W I
cond t on ng
POMEROY LANDMARK
help
arrange
f nanc ng
convent onal loans w th down
9 .. _Jack W Carsey Mgr
payment low as s pet Other
ot!!tJjj!Phone 992 2181
new ho.mes ava able to
qua f ed buyers w th NO
DOWN PAYMENT
Ca I
EXCELS OR ~a ll Works E
co teet 6 4 837 6540 or 239 0785
Man St Pomeroy A I k nd~
or write
Great Amer ca n
of salt water pell ets wat er
Homes Inc P 0 Box 687
nuggets block sart and own
Pomeroy Ohio 45769
Oh o R ver Salt Phone 992
3 1 tfc
389 1

129.95

6 5 tf c

THE

F IR ST and second cut hd y tor
sa e Phone Star ng Massar

985 3953

WISEMAN
AGENCY

FORDs de del very havrake
3 pt h t ch p ckup on rubber
Exce l ent cond ton Contact
Kenneth Hartley
Bunk er
H
~92 6320
3 14 6tc
SIN GER sew ng mach nes 1972
model n beaut fut wa nut
cab net Makes des gn st t
ches zig zag
buttonholes
blind hems etc L ke new
Only $89 95 Call Ravenswood
273 9521 or 273 9893 after s 00
12 7 tfc
FOR SA LE L ,e eve lot Q[l
New L ma Road Rutland All
ut t es ava abe Ph one 742

3083

2

tfc

GRANO Prx r ed wth
bla ck v nv top S975 Phone
992 5335
3 8 3tc

9~9

--- -

OAV S
300
trenche
w th
blade $3 200 W th Ira er
S3 500 971 B h p wheel horse
w th 36
mower and 42
bade $700 Also hay SOc a
bale Phone 985 3373 even ng s
3 15 6tp
97 4 WHEEL dr ve 3 " ton
Ford p c kup t ruck $20 600
m es
10 ' ft
cob over
camper self conta ned A so
topper w 1 sel secaratel/
ca 985 3554 after 6 p m
weekdays
Harold Brew
er Long Bottom Oh o
315tfc
PA NT

DAMAGE

1974

ZIG

ZAG SE WING MACH INE S

St II n or g nat cartons N"o
attachments needed as our
controls are bu t n Sews
w th 1 or 2 needles makEs
buttonholes sew on buttons
monograms and bl nd hem
st tch F u I cash pnce 138 50
or budget plan ava tabl e
Phone 992 2653
3 11 tfc

Gall pol s

YOU

Exc1hng
New Home
WONT BELIEVE

YOUR EYES WHEN YOU
STEP IN SIDE THIS NEW
SP LIT
LEVEL
HU GE
LIV NG ROOM W TH A

LOVELY BA LCO NY EF

FECT GO IN G TO THE 3
LARGE
BEDROOMS
BEAUTI F UL
BUILT N
OAK
CAB N~TS W ITH
QUALITY
A PPLIAN CES
BUll T IN CO MPLETELY
CARPETED r- OR DAD
A
LARGE 2 CAR GARAGE
W TH WORK SHOP PLUS 2

ACRES

TO

PUTTER

AROUND ON LOCATED IN
RUTLAND
YOU MUST
SEE THE INSIDE OF THIS

ONE TO APPREC ATE T
OFFICE-446 3643
EVENINGS

Bud McGhee-446 1255
E M
Ike W seman-446
3796

1~62

FORO p ckup S300 Phone
742 4361
3 15 4tc

7 30 8

Comp ete Serv ce
Phone 949 3821
Rae ne Oh o
Cr tt BradfOTd

EXCAVATING dozer
oader
and backhoe work
septic
tanks rnstal ed dump truc ks
and lo boys for h re w I hau
fill d rt top so 1 limestone
and gravel Ca ll Bob or Roger
Jeffer s day phone 992 7089
n ght phone 992 3525 or 992

3 bedroom

Good 3 story

Days of Ovr LtvesJ 4 15 Gu d ng L gh t 8
Game 6 13

2 00 -

3 00 -

AVAILABlE
AND
SOMEWHAT REASONABI E

Another War d 3 4 15 General Hasp tal 6 13 Pr ce s

R ght 8 10 RFD 20
3 30 - One L fe to L ve 6 13 Ph I Donahue • Match Game B
10 How To Sur v ve A Marr age 3 15 Wa sh ng ton Str a gh t
Talk 20
4 00 - Mr Cartoon 3
Amencan Style 13

Copper Canyon

4 30 -

SEPT IC TANKS ARDBIC
SE WAGE
SYSTEMS
CLEANED
REPA RED
MILLER
SAN TATION
STEWART OH 0 PH 662

Somerset 15 Sesame St 20 33 Love
Speedracer 6 Lu cy Show 8 Move

10

Green Acres 3

Bonanza

Haze

8

Ja ck pot

Mr Roberts 20 33 Bonanza 3 Merv Grtff n 4 Andy
Grtfftth 8 M ss on lmposs ble 6 Gomer Pyl e USM C 13

Tra Is West 15 Hogans Heroe s 13
6 00 - News 3 4 8 10 5 ABC Nev s 13 Sesame Sf 20 Per
sana ty &amp; Behav oral Deve opment JJ T uth or Con
sequences 6

6 30 - News 3 4 6 B 10 15 Room 2221 3
7 00 - News 10 6 What s My L ne a Truth or Conseq 3 Bea t
the Clock • Elec Co 20 Know Your Schools 33
Spy 5

10 23 tfc

B lly Graham Crusade 3

and
out
Call

WIN AT BRIDGE

26tc

South upset over East's lead

Repar

ser v ce al mak.es 992 2284
The Fabr c Shop Pomeroy
Author zed Singer Sales and
Service We Sharpen ScissorS
3 29 ttc

NORTH

19

• 97 64
+ AQ7
"' A K

WEST
• J 75 2
\' K lOB

+J 84

9 I tfC

"'Q 93

------- -

OPEN Roger Hysell s Garage
near Crossroads on St Route
124 8 30 to 6 p m Monday
through Saturday Phone 992
5682 or 992 7121
2 2:1 26tc

neww

remark
5 Man

sland
2 Ita\ a

I andlc
8 Swed sh

expect ng a the s to co ope ate on
so nelh ng you wa 1 done gel
th e r comm ments to day To
morrow th ey I be tess ag eeabl e

\otO I n

WlnC

3

measures
9 Cossack

plu nder
4 Sl ort
rest
5 Source

chief

VIRGO (Aug 23 Sept 221 Th s

13 Wash
14 Re volve
15 V1rg m a

can be a ve y p edu ct ve day f
vou ke ep you nose l o
"'

6 Expiate
7 Electn al

Willow

Dear Bnde
Have you two eve1 tr1ed provmg that women and sports DO
nux Getmvolvcd With your husbands uctmttes Don t lellhem
leave you home - or out of their conversal ons Ins1sl they teach
you how to f1sh golf hunt whatever
ThtS m1ght help two ways E1ther you ll learn to enjoy
spo rts or you ll become such nmsances that they ll compromise
and spe nd more of thetr lime domg what truly pleases YOU
HELEN AND SUE

+++
P S Good luck In re-&lt;:ducatmg Jtm s mother It 1sn l easy
changmg a patient htlle stay-at-homer mlo an achv1st But
Without her cooperatiOn you may he bcked before you start
HELEN

form four ord•nary word s

-

MOC1'E

Yesterdays Answer

12 Requ tred
18 Not

10 Eden or

21 Uto p a

29 Oar peg
30 Seasonal

Chuzzle

22 l&lt;ondll!
23 Short

song
31 Equalizes

16 Dmner

her e

Ul I t

course

17 Chant
19 Boy

\Ill

~0 Shanty
21 Butldmg

25 Pallid
27 Porter

11 ReslJ 1g
( 2 wds I

poem
24Sp lc

33 F ootpnnt

35Brnk

maten al

22 Ce lesl al
body
25 Uo

1;.---1-+ - 1---

m m shed

26 Jewtsl

mo tl
27 Exclude

2B Elecln
cal
un t
29 Wh st
card
combma

bon
32 Hebrew
proph et
34 -

hy HENRI ARNOLD .,.,.1 ROB l££

Howoeyo
ee ng'&gt;

mak er
Devour

Brubeck

36 Pao l
37 Incensed
38 Engbsh

I•

essayist
39 - of

ALIVA

Solomon

rJ

40 Ap1ece
41 Otherwtse
1

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE -Here s how to work 1t

'PERIA11

Is

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

""

One letter Simply stands for another In lhlS sample A Is
used for the three L s X for the lwo 0 s clc Smgle lett ers
apostrophes lhe length and formation of lhe words are all

3

hmts Each day tl c code letters are differ ent

Now arrange the e~rcled letters
to form the aurprlse answer u
suggested by the above cartoon

9 00 - M ove The Ca e a ke s 3 A 5 Cannon 8 0 Un cle
Sam Req uest s the P easur e Of 20
0 00 - Ko ak e 10 News 20 Ene gy Report IJ E ergy C u ch
6 Inter face 33
10 30 - Day AI N ghl 33
1 00 News3 4 6 B 10 13 15 Janak 33
30 - Johnn y Carson 3 4 15 B rth and Babes 6 J Mov es
Tr bute to a Bad Man 8 We Wer e St ra ngers 10
00 - Tomorrow 3 4 News 13
200 - News4

CRYPTOQUOTES
WIBHDRNVZ NA FBRNBU NE ARNPXV

A[l JJJlJll]

BTNHBEWB

(An twel'l lomorrowJ

QNVX

EM

BTNHBEWB

MI

AROMA BILGE METRIC QUAINT

OPONEAV BTNHBEWB - VIZ ME BHQOIHA

( N t'llfm rif' t I ' II I I li e l1gf u t
lt u l AIR MAIL

Yesterday o Cryploquote AN OPTIMIST IS A MAN WHO
HAS NEVER HAD MUCH EXPERIENCE DON MARQUIS
(@ 1974 K ng-Feature1 Syndkat.e lne)

U'l'I'LE ORPHAN ANNIE
THAT

,-----==-:--'1·

EAST Dl
• A K3
\' A2
+ K652
... J IOB4

THEY

Ollt..DN T

8 £ VERY F111t f\WAY C ,.-.oN

HARR.Y
~ME600T' M~Y
~AVE. SEEN THEM OUT

Tj,t£ KIO AND liER. 006
MUST \f£ LEFT THE 'f\R.
WHEN WE STOPPiO FOFt

T~!t!

ON

THIS MIIST 8E TH ~LA&lt;E'
SAf"DY
LOOKS L.IKf"
~J,~E I'll~ DE

IT

l~E RO~ O

corFEE

SOUTH

West

North

Pass

Double Pass

Double Pass
Double Pass

East
IN T

Pass
Pass

South

2.

Pass
CAPTAIN EASY

2'

Pass

HAr
MAY &amp;E N!" DE
HE CAVE ~POR T
~~...Of

INTER lOR or ex ter or pant
ng For free est mates call

3903

3 1 26tc

Real Estate For Sale
N'EW 3 bedroom home 1"/i balh
garag e basement on Gravel
H I Middleport Natural gas
already
n
Phone Dee
Dutton 992 3369 even ngs
992 2534
1 17 tfc

He Led a low diamond

Furnoshed home 3 BR bath
Natural gas heat C ty water
Porches
Many
other
features S7 100 00

blacktop hoghway. W&lt;&gt;ter tap
patd Most mtnerals

SYRACUSE - Large 2 story
frame 7 rooms 4 BR 2
baths
Basement Garage
New gas furnace
New
copper plumbrng
River

NE W SPII P~

-

J1

$\
·~L-~~~~~--~------~

.P

AFTl:R ALL I
®

)J
=

c~

'

""

lots of cab nets range and
ref Ut 1ity Plenty of room

•

19

P~os

2+

Pass

3+

Pass
Pass

I JEST SEEN TH S AGE
BRESH GANG DOWN AT
TH MOV N PITCHERS
UNK SNUFFV

'

you South hold
.1086 5 4.AKQ83 +AJ5+
What do you do now?

A-Bid five or sl• diamonds
depending on now you feel Your
partner may have a singleton

oplode II nul a spade lillY nol be
opened

.PJ\nf\

n

I t.."NTERPH St: ASSN

The b ddmg has been
Wtst
North East

•

I SI&gt;N NOT p.N0\1-\SR DROP
1\L.L. 111~'1 SlOP HTEI&lt;M\IJAi\fllt&gt;
o-:;1

Th1s produced Souths mne
West s Jack and dummy s
qt~een A heart was led and
Souths Jack lost to Wests
ktng Back ca me a second
d1~mond South played low
from dummy whereupon
E*•l took h1s kmg a nd led a
third dia mond lo dummy s
aGe
'(' se cond trump lo st to
East s ace East cashed h1s
a~e of spades for the fifth
defenstve tnck and led h1s
fo~rth d1amond to establish
h1s partner s 10 of trumps as
th~ settmg tnck

CLOSE IN over 4 acres

MAYBf THE-Y lL.
RE5POND

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
West s doubl e of two hearts
was one of those unpopul ar
doubles He d1dn t really like
1t himse lf but South had
wr1ggled and s qu~rmed
before btddmg two clubs a nd
had re peated the process
before runnmg to two hearts
North dtdn t like 11 because
he had "atched h1s partner
g~ra t10n s East "ho ha c
opened a 15 pomt notrum1
was afra1d South mtgh
wheel th e contract m
As for South he ha d bee
unhappy all the ttme
Dummy s e1g ht of spade&lt;
forc ed East s kmg at lnck
one and Easl really went nlo
a huddle Et was well that he
d1d Any roulme play at tnck
two would have let South
m'ke h1s contract but East
came up wtlh the one wm
mpg play

6 IS tfc

AT EA!i f THEY RE
NOT ArrACK N6
F WE? ACT FR EtJ DlY:

0 D ALL

Opemng lead- •2

cancelled?
Lost
your
operator s tcense Cat 992

here S22 500 00
FOR NEW ADVENTURE
SEE AND OWN ONE OF
THE ABOVE TO BUY OR
SELL CALL US TOOAY
HENRY E CLE(AND
BROKER
992 2259

DOWN

I Indo

Both vu lnerable

AUl~ BILE InsuranCe been

Home 2 years old 3 BR
bath Lovely kitchen w lh

6

ACROSS
1 Ca ustic

+

Roofing spou t ng k tchens
and bathrooms Comp lete
remode ng Phone 742 6~73
I l l tic

storage
garage

Dragon

by rHOMAS JOSEPH

• QJ 53
10 9 3
"'76 52

--'1------------PRICE C ONSTRUCT ON

frontage to dock the boat
S1050000
CLOSE IN - 17 acres

LEO (July 23 Aug 22) I you e

~.~

• 64

DON T F US S Don'f cuss turn
your l unk automobileS; over to
us Phone 1 (304) 733·5890
3 7 26tc

On

be done tod ay w hou d aw ng a
ten on to yourse r He p a he s
tr am beh nd he see es

• Q 10 9 B

DOZER and back hoe work
ponds and sept c tanks d t
ch ng serv ce top soil fill
dirt
t mestone
B&amp;K Ex
caval ng Phone 992 5367 or
992 3861

180

You w I prof
n some manne
h o ugh a c ose comp an on who s
w
g to sha e someth ng w th
yo u Keep t a sec ret

7 30

5 30 - Elec Co 33 Beverly H lb II es B Hodgepodge Lodge 20

SEPTIC
TANKS
cleaned
Modern San tat on 992 3954 or
992 7349

REEDSVILLE AREA

To Te l the T u h 6 Sa le of I he Century 8 The Judge 0
Bea t th e Coc k J Po ce Su geon 3 0 I he Money
An
t ques 20 E p sode Act on n
8 00 - Sonn y &amp; Che 0 B I M oye s Jou nil 20 Wash ngfon
Connec ti on 33 The Cow boys 6 3 Chase 3 B I y G t a l
Cr usa de 4 15
8 30
Th ea ter In Amer ca 33 Woman 20 Mov e Men o the

appea ng You a e part c u a ly a
rac t ve o he oppos te sex

PISCES (Feb 20 March 201
CANCER (June 21 July 221 Fo
bes t resu s do what needs to

4

5 00 -

10 4 tfc

11 no answer 992 2568

5

Don 1 be eluc l all to let th em
know wha t s on you n nd Be
pas ve asser ve

Unscr amble these four Jumbles
one letter to each square to

Today we are afraid of
Simple words hke goodness and
mercy and kwdness We don t
beheve m the good old words
hecause we don t helieve 10 the
good old values anymore And
thal1s why the world 1s so sick
L n Yutang Chwese
phllosopl er

Tomo row you not be as canny
as you are today

(Jan 20 Feb 191
GEMINI (May 21 June 201 AQUARIUS
You have a ce Ian magnet sm
Othe s w 1 buy you deas today
abou t you that ot he s w f nd ve y

Gill gan s Island 6 13

3035

barn
large

0 New ywed

230 - Doclors3 • 15 Edgeo1Nghl8 0 Gr lonMy lfe6 13

REASONABLE rates Ph 446
4782 Galltpo Is John R.usself
Owner and Operator
s 12 tfc

(fenced)
but dtng

Lets

Make A Deal 6 13

SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED

acres at $120 pe r;,.. acre

Dea r Rap
You hear a lot about Mama s boys but ty problem IS I m
marr1ed to a Father s boy
My husband called h1s Dadd y on our honeymoon to tell him
the hsh were really b1tmg and come on up After that t1 ey
were out on the streams while I tagged along getl ng n osqmto
bites
In the SIX months we ve heen marned J1m and hi s fatheo
have spent almost every weekend playmg golf or h shmg hun
tmg or whatever We re over there several times a week and 1
actually know h1s moll er better than! do her so n beca use were
together so much - wh1le the men are talking sports or wal
chmg games on TV She doesn l hke lh1s e1U er but what can
we do when they wont mcl ude us' They d rather go off by
themselves as they lhlllk women and sports don t m x WNELY BRIDE

Search for Tomorrow 8 10 Spl t Second 6 Baff le 3 15

Concentratton 8 What s My L ne? 10
1 30 - 3 On A Match 3 4 15 As the War d Turns 8 10

10 ACRES On Rl 7 Loop n
M ddl eport Good ocat on for
POMEROY -

++ +

15 M k e

12 55 - NBC News 3 15
1 00 - News 3 All My Ch ldren 6 3 Not For Women On y 15

Olllrl i'llt-,ol

homes or bu smess

A

Jackpol 3 15
12 30 -

del vered r ght to your
proiect Fast and easy Free
est mates Phone 992 3284
Goeg en Ready M x Co
M ddleport Oh- o
6 10 lie

992

p S Perhaps 1 should change my deflmtwn to arg table
1romc absurdity Our examples will felc h a raft of rebuttals

Douglas 6

CONCRETE

7d'l,8

s Colloe 6
Jack La La nne 13
Brady Bunch 6
News 13

11 30 - Hoi ywood Squares 3 4 15 L ove o f L f e 8 0 B &lt;'!dy
Bunch 13 Sesame Str ee t 33
11 55 - CBS News8 Dan lme s Word 0
12 00 - Password 6 Bob Brau n s 50 SO Cl ub 4 News 8 10 13

DOZER work and cle•ar ng by
the acre hourly or contract
farm ponds roads etc Large
dozer and operator with over
20 years exper ence Pull ns
Excavat ng Pomeroy Oh o
Phone 992 2478
12 19 ttc

LL TRIM or cut trees
shrubbery A lso clean
basemen ts attics etc
949 3221 or 7-42 44 41
3 14

Co lumbus Today 4
Farmt me 10 Mo n ng Repo t 3
Tooay3 d 15 CBSNewsB 0 Dck VanDyke l3 TBA6
Rocky &amp; Bullw nk e 3
New Zoo Revue 13 Sesame St 33 Capt Kangaroo 8 0

11 00 - Gamb t8 10 Password 3 W zard of Odds 3

2 11 tfc

-

1 Some Amencans ha ll Aleksander Solzhemtsyn as a
martyr (His book The Gulag Archipelago ex poses ll e
horrors of Commumst rule m h1s native Russia) Yet many of
these same people beheve Jane Fonda should he Jatled &gt;r
drummed oul of the U S as a trat tor (whtle m Rus a she s
ha1led as a marly!) Whtch s1de of the fence you 1e on makes
Af I the difference
2 The person who opposes capital ptmlshment &gt;cl favors
abortton 1s (paradoxiCally) saymg the g 1lty should hve wh 1le t1 e
mnocent should die - HELEN

10 00- D nah Shore 3 15 Joker s W dB 10 Company 6
10 30- Pyram d8 10 Jeopardy 3 • 15

-~-------·~ -- -

- --

An editor fnend g1ves two examples

9 00
Paul 0 xon 4 Fr e ndly Junct on 0 AM 3 Abbott &amp;
Cos tello 8 Ph I Donahue S W d W ld Wes t 6 Cover to
Co ver 33 M ov e The Rook e
3
9 30 - ToTe I the Truth 3 Tatt leta es 8
9 55 - Chuck Wh 1e Reports 10

5 1 ttc

w

oo -

Jeff
a 25 B 30
a 55

C BRADFORD Auct oneer

Ill) Mo•(h,JII!• '-&gt;I t•
f&gt; ll rn~&gt;roy,

POMEROY

19'64 FORO Galax e 352 C I 0
automat c transm ss on and
runs good Phone 992 3920
3 13 6tc

6 35 6 45 7 00 -

+++

we

Story 13

1./ttqll!l T•1i&lt;&gt;1d '&gt;
1-hok ·t

ranch type home Hot water
heatmg n ce modern k tchen
front por ch and garage
SIB 000 00
VACUUM Cleaners new 1974 MIDDLEPORT Large 9
MOde
Compete w th all
room
home
w
ith
large
front
cleaning tools Sma I pant
dam.we n sh pp ng wIt take yard Also a rental to help pay
S27 cash or budget p an off Room f or 2 tra ler::. Only
ave table Phone 992 2653
31111 S17 500 00

Auto Sales

6 00 - Sunr se Sem nar 4 Sacred Hea r t 0
6 IS - Urban League 10 Folk L ter ature 3
6 25 - Farm Report 13
6 30 - F ve M nutes to L ve By 4 New::. 6 B be Answers 8 The

TEAFORD

SINGER Automat c Zig Zag bus ness burldtng on Ma n St
Sew ng Mach nes n sew ng w th a 2 story bus ness room
table Makes buttonholes
sews on buttons b lnd hems and renta on 2nd
etc Top notch cond lion Pay LAND - On Rl 7 about one
S5 or terms avallab e Phone m le out
REDUCE excess flu d w th
992 2653
F tu dex
Lose w e ght w th
EDGE OF TOWN
2 acres
3 n tfc
De x ~ D et
capsu l es
at
plu s
Ne lson Drugs
3 l7 3tp 12 HORSEPOWER cub cadet BUILDING LOT - In Chester
.48 nc., mower 8 months old Townshop S1800 00
GoOo- -;ua - t-;-ha;- - A lso 2
Hydro stat c Phone 742 3821
INDU STRY
S BUYING
2 27 tfc MORE LAN D BETTER BUY
reg stered beagle dogs Ca l
992 7201 after 5 p m
YOUR S NOW WHILE IT IS
3 1.4 6tp

FOAM to f1 I your old couch and
chair cush ons as low as
$10 95 Upholstery book s on y
SOc 4 nch covered team
mattresses for standard s ze
bed
S.29 95
Pomerov
Recovery 622 E Man Street
Pomeroy Oh o P110ne 992
7554
3 5 26tc

WEDNESDAY MARCH20 1974

All work guaranteed

SEW NG MACHINES

w

e

The lottery 1s a product the
same
.as any other It has to be
Favo abe cond ons hat have an
FOR TUESDAY
merchandised
and 1mrpoved
efl ect upon your nanc es a e
p
esently
at
wo
k
Don
t
d
sturb
hke
razor
blades and
March 19 1974
a ters today
detergents you alwa) shave to
(No• 23 Dec
ARIES (March 21 Apr I 191 SAGITTARIUS
21 , You 1 know how and where come up w1lh some thmg new
You e a you b es t today w th
your
deas can best be used fo
- Edward J Powers New
l ends who thtnk on the !eel and
you
advantage
Don
I
JU
St
th
k
Hampshtre sta te lottery
know how to get th ngs done M x
abou t lh ngs Ac t on them
w th s owpokes ana her I me
director
d1scussmg threats that
(Dec 22 Jan 191
TAURUS (Apr I 20 May 201 CAPRICORN
the
FCC
may curb lottery
T
y
to
ge
most
o
you
I
nanc
a
Th s w be a good day l o you
deal ng out of th e wa y now
advert1smg
conce n n g a Ia nmen
T he
ewa ds w I be n propo rt on o
your goa s

You re nghl the dictionary defmllwn 1sn l exact!) helpful
Mme says A statement seemmgly absurd or contradictorv to
the received belief
but perhaps really tru e Come agam
Messrs Funk and Wag nalls?
A friend gave me an example of wl at he calls a pa 1dox
W1lh the same amount of oil and gas supplies m lhe U S 1 o~
eome last ) ear we wet e urged to tru y and buv and th s )ear
there s an enerv.: cns1s - SUE

I OO - News346810 J SJa nak J3
1 30 - Johnny Carson 3 4 5 Th e Book of Mu der 6 1J M ov es
These W lder Years
Hot Rods to H e I 10
1 oo - Tomorrow 3 4 News J
2 00 - News 4

Area s Most
Reasonable Prrces

READY MIX

wc

10 30 - Day AI N ght 33

Pamting A Speaalty

5232

I m a word collector but my dicltonary deftml1on of
paradox throws me So I asked a fr end for an example and of
course he came up w1th somctlung hilariOus hke a couple of
water squatters
When 1didn !laugh he got huffy and bel me lhatthe ftrstlen
people I quest toned couldn t gl\ e me an example
You two ar~ the nmlh and tenth Please don t let me down -

Back Journa 33 TBA 15

go od t me to check w th f ends
to futur e event s you are p ann ng
It w 1 avo d a con fl ct n sc hed

But the fruit of the Spirll Ia
love JOY peace pal1ence,
kmdness goodness faith
fuln ess gentleness self
controlagamsl such there Is no
law - Galatians &gt;22 23

March 19 1974
Th s w be ayea wheeyOUif1 j l
ea l ze the fru Is a you abors
You statu s s ascend ng So s
your mage n the eyes of o thers

es
SCORPIO (Oct 24 Np• 221

Rap

9 30
Adam 12 15 Mo11 e She Cr ed Murd er a o
10 00 - Marcu s Welby M 0 13 Wash ngton S ra ght Ta k 33
Pol ce Stor y 3 15 B ly G aham Cru sade 4 Ene gy Crunch 6

808 W Mam Pomeroy

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

Help Wanted

23 oeg nn " 9 ao 9 am 3 19 2tc

8 30 - Hawa F ve 0 10 B ly Gra ha m Crusade 5 Snoop
S sters 3 4 Mov1e The Dev s Daughter 6
3 8 lv
Graham Cru sade 8 The Cur ous Case of Vitam n E 33

Ph 992 5271

Radiator Spec1ahst

5

ttt e task s

that need dong
LIBRA (Sept 23 Oct 231 A

u

Paradox not a Pa1r of Durks

o

Teacher 33

Gene's
Body Shop

From the larges t Tru ck or
Bulldozer Rad afar to the
sma lest Hea ter Core

News 6

8 00 - Maude B 10 8 I Moyers Jollrna 33 Adam 2 3 4
Happy Day~ 6 13 Mov e 20 B ly Graham Cru sade 5

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN

Nathan Boggs

For Sale

Sales

Butltto Your Specs

llehvered 1o Job Sole

773

4

gr ndst one Do all the

~

By Helen and Sue Bnttel

15 ABC News 6 CBS News B 0 Your

Electr c Co 20 Tru h or Consequences 3 What s M y L neB
H gh Schoo l TV Honor Soc ely 15 B ly Graham Cru sade 3
7 30 - To Te 1 The Truth 6 R F 0 20 Hollywood Squares J
Johnny Man s Stand Up and Chee 4 New Pr ce s R gh t 8
10 Bea t the Clock 13 Lass e 5 Read ng Fo the Classr oom

4

EXPERIENCED
Radla

DITCHING SERVICE

GU N Shoot Sat urday Mar ch
Ph 992 1174
Pomeroy
1 27 f c
13 7 p m
M le H
Roa d
Spon sored by Rae ne F re
Depa tm ent
AN T QUE quIts and ew etr v
Ru t and
3 ~ -4 c REV VAL Se rv cec.
A l so ntere st ed n f ur n lure
Freew 1 Bapt s t Ch urch
and d shes Ca 1 992 5262
March 24 through 30 1 30
B G v ng room sa e 6 8 South
even ng s or mo n ng s
p m
w th the Rev Paul ~ROCERY bus ness tor sa e 1971 DODGE Monaca a r
Tl d Avenu e
M dd epo r
2 20 tf C
cond it on ng 4 door P S and
Tay or from He per Utah as
Star ng Wednesday Mar ch
eu td ng for sa e or tea se
P B
Good gas m eage
Evange s
Spec a s ng ng
20
1 sod ovt Every day 10
Phone 773 56 8 from 8 30 p m
OLD furnitur e oak ab es
Phone Dav d H
Ra e ne
n
g
ht
y
everyone
we
com
e
am
7
p
m
10
p
m
for
appo
ntment
to
c ocks ce bo xe s brass beds
949 2762
3 76 c
9
6
p
3
3
20
fc
d shes desk s or complete
3 5 6t c
househo d s W t e M
D
- --TRAP Shoot ng eve v Thur s PO LLY S Auct on House 537 STEREO
M ler R t 4 Pome r oy Oh o
Walnut
AM F M
da y even ng 7 p m A t the
964 DOD GE 4 dr Sedan 6
Rad o 8 track tape com
ca I 992 7760
H gh St ee t M dd eport tor
R u and Gun Club N ew L m a
cy l nde Phon e 992 2455 at er
b nat on Ba ance S 0 73 or
r eta and co ns gnments 9 30
Road Everyo ne we lcome
3 p m
terms ava !able Phone 99 2
to
5
JO
daly
Phone
992
3509
3 9 Jt c
3 17 3tc
O LD Up r gh
p anos
A ny
3965
2 26 JOrc
2
14
fc
cond ton Pay ng SIO cas h
KO SKO T
KOSMET CS
&amp;
973 PONT AC
OW m l eage
Wr te
g ve d reel ons
o
WIG S For a good
ne of KO SCOT KOSMET CS &amp; WI GS
Phone 949 2725 or 949 4492
W TTEN P A ND CO P 0
We have the produc t on hand SEVERAL
Cos me s fr end l y se r v ce
3 17 3tc
var et es
of
BOX 18 Sa rd s Oh o 43946
and we del ver to you pe
and someone o chat w th
st rawberry pants also blac k
3 13 30 c
son a tv Helen Jan e Brown
g ve me a ca I Helen Jane
ra spbe rry p a nt s M dwa y
992 5 3
B own 992 51 3
Market
West
Ma n
LE T U S se t t for you at auc
2 30 ttc
3 9 lf c
Pomeroy Phone 992 2565 or
on W 1 buy a I tur n tur e o
5 ROOM hou se and bath two
992 2582
househo d good s
Po ly s THE MI SS ONARY Soc ely Of
car. garage 2 story on Carson
3 17 3 c
Auct &lt;:l n House Open 9 30 to
Roa d
n Mason
Contact
he
sv
acvse
F
rs
Chu
ch
of
5 30 da tv Phone 99'1 3509 537
R usse 1 Ba ll 773 5606
God w hod a rummag e sale
6 FT
LARSON sk
boat
H gh Sf
M ddl epor
Oh o
3 2 lfc
n he Fry Bu ld ng on M I St , - - -- - - - - -- - ,
comp l ete Phone 992 2297
•
2 26 30tc
M dd lepor M a rch 21 22 and
3 17 3 p --------------

~uto

tfl4

d

Future Is Now 33 Room 222 3
7 00 - Marco Sporthte 33 Beat th e Clock

S89S

Real Estate For Sale

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB

6 30 - NBC News 3

WOOD TRUSSES

Water

Notice

6 00

«:::~::~&lt;~:~,:;;:::::::::::::::~:::::::::-.::::::-.~::::~: ,:::::::::::::::&lt;&lt;:::::::».:WW:.:t.c_:)

v

Generation Rap

&gt;

New s 3 4 a 10 I S Sesame Str ee t 20 AB C NewS 13
Truth or Consequences 6 L111as Yoga and You 33

ASK US ABOUT
PRE FABRICATED

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment
•5.55

rw~~

Te~~~A~~~R~?,974Log

Business Services

~;&lt;

'IE NEVER SEEN SICH THAT
REM NDS
L'IIN CHEATIN
ME
THIEV Ill CUTTI N
FIGHTIN AN SHOOT N
VARM INTS IN ALL
YORE 80RNE D
DA'IS

•

�•
8

The Dally Senlmel Middleport Pomeroy 0 Tuesday March 19 1974

Meigs
Property
Transfers

9- The Daily Sent mel Middleport Pomeroy 0 Tuesday March 19 1974

Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!/
WANT ADS

NFORMATION
DEADLINES
5 P M Day Before Pub car on
Monday Dead I ne 9 a m
Ca ce Ia! on - Cor r ec ons
w I be accepled unti 9 a m for
Dav ot PtJb cat on

REGULATIONS

T he Publ she reserves th e
gh to t;d t or r e ject any ads
deemed ob ect onal
The
publ Sher w
not be r espon
s be tor mo e than one n
co rect nse r on
RATES
For Want Ad Serv ce
5 cen s per Word on e nse ,; t on
M n mum Charge ' 00
14 cents • er wo d thr ee
consecu ve nserl ens
26 cents per word s x con
sec u ve nser ons
25 Per Cen t D scoun on pa d
ads and ads pa d w h n 0
days

Dale B Adams Bonme D
Adams to Monongahela Power
Co Easeme nt Ohve
Robert V Bohal)l Betty u
Baham Charles W Mtles
Mary J M1les to Garv I
Gearhart Kay A Gearhart
165 4&gt; Acres Sc1p10
Laurence A Hvse ll Nelhe
Hysell to Roosevelt Branham
Polly Branham l6's Acres
CARD OF THANKS
Rutland
&amp; OBITUARY
Frankhn Real Esl.ale Co to
S2 00 t o
so word m n
OhiO Power Co 23 50 Acres mum Each add ona l word
3c
Coal Salem
BLIND AD"
Add t ona 25c Cha rg e pe r;.
Albert Htll Jr Ora E Htll to
Advertisement
Robert C Hill
198 Acre
OFFICE HOURS
8 JO a m to 5 00 p m Da ly
Sutton
8 30 a m
o
2 00 Noon
Helen I Lackey Jacquelyn s ~~ u day
R Lockard Wilham Thomas
Lockard to Andre w Hart
Dar he Hart 62 83 Acres 3 47 F EMALE b eag e br own b a ck
and wh te no co Ia L os t a t
Acres Salem
Rt 1'24 and Roue 7 by pa ss
Fam y pe
ewa d offe ed
Ralph R Prall Emalene
Phone 7tS2 3266
Pratt to Dale Hwnphreys Amy
3 9 3 (
Hwnphreys Lot 4 Middleport
W1lham L Larkins Vtolet D
Lar kms lo Leadmg Creek Pets for sa e
1 BLACK f e ma e Ger man
Conservan cy D1st Ease
Sh epherd
spaye d
and
Rutland
fr endly Phone 992 5947
3 9 3 c
Raymond Badgley dec to
Martha Badgley dec Clotst Wan ted ro bu y
E REG STEREO mal e
Badgle) Ralph Badgley ONDachshund
puppy Phone 992
Herschel Badgley
Lma
59117
3 93c
Brmker Zelia Lawson Aff for
trans Letart

Lost

WantP.rt To Buy

2 SIGNS

JUNK
AUTOS
omp l e e
de ver ed to ou yard W e p ck
up au o bod es and buy nl
~ nd s of s r ap me as and
on R der s Savage Sr a e
Rou e 24 Roufe 4 PIJm€ ov
Oh o Phone 992 5468
3 14 2 p

RECYC LE you
e w ~ pap e r s
and corrugil f ed pas eboard to
Th e Rosenbu r g Com pany a
A h ens Oh o We a e you r
bes m a k et a I 50 pe
00
pound s fo r both !ems We buy
sc ap r on ca S1 r on sh ee t
on
co ppe
bra ss and
&lt;' um num
We have b en
he r e s n ee 9 6 so we know a
n a
b
abou
c yc l ng
Conserve ree ve e and se I
your was e ma t er as to
Ro se nbe r g a A hens Oh o
We c ose each F day noon tor
b a anc e of lhe week
f you
wou d
k e to ca
us abou
nformat on
ou
phone
number s593 747 Se I to Th e
Rosenbe r g Co
at A hens
Oh o We need your bu s n ess
and
you
suppo rt
n
Recyc ng
...
3 15 7tc
1 copper 75c rad ators
35c. r ed brass 40c btt f er es
s 20 M A Hal Ree d sv le
Oh o Phone 378 6'2 49

NO

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

OF
QUALITY
1970 PLYMOUTH FURY Ill

POMEROY
tiOME &amp; AUTO
992 2094
606 E Mam Pomeroy

and

On Most American Cars
- GUARANTEEDPHONE 992 2094

FURNITURE

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

Stop In and See Our
Floor Display

Open a TotS

OFFICE SUPPLIES

Now Only Sl295

4 doo V 8 au tom~ I c power stee r ng r od o good t re s
b uc f n sh s. pof ess nt er or

967 DODGE DART

$795

d door 6 cy l nder eng ne stc1ndard trans m ss on
good res dean nter o d:.rk b lue f n sh

ado

1970 FORD FAIRLANE SOD
H&lt;'!rdtop Coupe V 8 eng ne
powe stee ng r :.do

Monday thru Saturda v

60li E Mam Pomeroy 0

Hooked on
nasal spray

a utomat c transm ss on

ltnes and Power
lmes All work done by the
foot or contrac1 Also dozer
work and septic tanks 1n

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

s1a lied

OPEN EVES 8 00 PM
POMEROY OHIO

NotiCe
HAR R SON S TV and Ser v ce
ca Is Phone 992 2522
2 22 26 c

See or Call
Bob or Roger Jeffers
Day 9Y2 7989
N1ght 992 3525
or 992 5232

By Lawrence E Lamb M D
DEAR DR LAMB - I am
hooked For the past f1ve or s1x
years I have had to keep a
bottle of nasal spray m my
possessiOn 24 hours a day
I have l.alked w1th other
people who have the same
problem Someone suggested
takmg larg e quant1lles of
v1tamm C but this was to no
avail If I don t have the nasal
spray my nasal passages slay
clogged
l have also heard that the
long term
use
of an
tih1starrunes was debimental
Help please
DEAR READER - Yes
you II need more than vtl.amm
C for that problem
Your case IS a good
IllustratiOn of the dangers of
usmg nasal decongestant
sprays too often They work
because the med~eme m the
sprays consbicts the small
blood vessels and causes the
nasal membranes to shrmk
The problem IS that these
mediCmes wear off and then a
rebound reaction occurs and
the membranes swell more
than they were swollen m the
f1rsl place
If you use these med1cmes
for JUst a few days durmg
swell19g from a cold they are
all nghl m lumled amounts
But you should never continue

these med1cmes on your own
for more than a few days
They cause a chemtcal
reaction to the nasal mem
branes and then you have a
new and more persistent
problem Il usually requires
the help of a specialist m ear
nose and throat problems to
helpyougelofE the habit or you
can get help from your family
doctor
No doubt you w11l have to
tough 1l out w1th a stuffed nose
until your membranes can
recover and that may lake a
while
For the rest of my readers I
would say lake heed and don t
let th1s happen to you
A ~ ord about sprays 1f you
must spray use a squeeze
bottle or a squeeze bulb The
aerosol sprays mto the nose
and back of the throat can be
dangerous m my opm10n and I
don t thmk you should use any
aerosol sprays mto the throat
DEAR DR LAMB - I am a
grrl 16 Lately several people
have noticed that I ve been
breathmg heav1ly I never used
to II could be due to my
we1ght I m five feet four and
we1gh 130 pounds
Il m1ght also have to do with
the fact that I JUS! had a hOse
JOb a few months ago
l m a b1t womed Could you
please tell me what causes
thiS '
DEA R READER - Most
likely 1l1s from the nose JOb In
reducmg the s1ze of the nose
th~ a1r passages are usually
narrowed The result IS that the
breathing through the nose IS
often not as easy Forcmg the
a1r through the smaller
passages results m more noise
Just as water runnfng rapidly

CAL L Pol ys A uct on or stop b y

1973 MG B conv e t b e 7 500
m le s los of extras Ca I
304 773 5323
3 8 6

c

through a narrow channel
PUBLIC NOTICE
makes more no1se 1 d 1gnore 1!
To the Defendant John Robert
unless you feel uncomforl.able Weddle whos e address s
If you have too much breathmg unknown
IN THE COMMON
difficult) you may need to
PLEAS COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY OHIO
have the nasa l pa.sages
enlarged Some small noses ODESSA WEDDLE

are more of a decoratton than a
functional organ

Route 1
Portland Oh o
Pla1nt If

Laurel Cliff
News Notes

JOHN ROBERT WEDDLE SR
Address unknown
Defendant
No 15485

- NOTICE BY

PUBLICATION Pant ff ha s brou gh t th s
act on nam ng VO\J as Defendant
n the above named Cour by
f ng
ts Co mp ant on the
8th day of February 197.4
Theob1ect of the Compla nt s
that th e Pant ff demands that
she bed vorced from Defendant
and that she be awarded the
care custody and coni rot ol the
parte s
ch ldr en
to w t
Deborah Weddle John Robert
Wed d e Jr
Danelle Weddle
and George Danny Wedd e
You are requ red to answer
the Com pta nt w th n t wenty
e ght day s afte the ast
put:H cat on of th s not ce wh ch
w I be pub! shed once each
week tor s x consecu t ve weeks
and t he ast pub ca t on w II be
made on the 26th day of M arc h

BY BERTHA PARKER
974
Sabbath School attendance
n case of your fa ure o
a11swer or otherw se r espond as
Mar 17 at the Free Method1sl perm
tted by the Oh o Rules of
Church was 110 Mornmg C v Proce1ure w th n the t me
stated judgm ent by default w II
worship was attended by 76 be
rendered aga nst you for th e
persons Offermg was $85 42 re et demanded n the Com
Chmr members present were p a nt
22

tem s Se f t the auct on .uay
537 H gh Street M ddleport
Q92 3509 Open 9 a m o 5 p m

Monday Wednesday Thv s

dav Fr day unt I noon
3 3 30 tc
"CAS H pa cf fOr all makes ana
modes of mob le hom es
Phone area cod e 614 423 953
4 13 ftc

PUBLIC NOTICE

E D A Pro ect No 06 00940
V llage of Pom eroy Oh1o
Owne

V5

Send your questions to Dr
Lamb In care of this
newspaper P 0 Box 1551
Radio City Station New York
N Y 10019 For a copy of Dr
Lamb s booklet on losing
weight send 50 ceniB to the
same address and ask for
Losing Weight booklet

o gel r d of tho se unwanted

LARRY E SP ENCER
C erkotthe
Com mon Pleas Court
Me gs Coun t y Oh o
Pam eroy Oh o
9 26 (3) 5 12 19

~
vduced '" lhe 17th
ce n&lt;ur1 the bayonet took its
name Irom the French c1ty of
Bayonne where 1l was made

them at l eas f ve days pr or to
the dat e se t fo r hea r ng
G ven under my hand and
seal ot sa d Cou rt th s 6th da y
of March 1974
Manning D Webster
Judge

C3

19 26 2tc

By Ann B Watson
Deputy C erk

12 MEN NEEDED
1}40 00 WEEK
Full or Parthme
Men needed to work tn
Gall1a
&amp;
Mason
County No expertence
necessary ~ust have
car and nea' ap
pearance
Call Mr Nap1er
9 to 5 Monday &amp;
Tuesday Only

Sepa rate seated b ds for
Waterwork s mprovements w
be rece ved bV the Board of
Tr ustees of Pub c A tta rs of th e
V I age of Pomeroy
at th e
V I age Hall Pomeroy Oh o
unt 1 twe ve o cock noon E D T
on March 27 1974 and men at
sa d off ce pub ely opened and
ea d a oud
A I proposa s shat be sealed
and endorsed for Waterworks
For
mprovements
Contract 72
1
72 2
72 3 or 72 4 as
app cab e and addressed to the
C erk and del vered to the Cl erk
of !he Board of Trustee s of
Publ c Afta rs
v llage Ha 1
Pomeroy Oh o
The nforma t on for B dd er s
Form of B d Form of Contract
P lan s
Spec f cat ons
and
Forms of B d Bond Perform
I"
ance and Payment Bond and
Pomeroy Oh1o
other contract documents may
be exam ned at the off ce of th e
Board of Trustees of Pub c
Affa rs V llage Halt Pomeroy
WOMEN or g rts over 18 Ca
Oh o or at the off ce of Burgess
992 2565 to nterv ew
&amp; N p e L m t ed 2015 We st
3 17 3tc
F fth Avenue Columbus Oh o
43 2 2
The work covered by th e
plans and spec f cat ons
n
eludes water ma ns booster
pump stat ons ground s orag e 3 AND 4 ROOM turn shed and
unfurn shed
apartments
wat er tanks a we i f eld and
Phone 992 5434
other water supply tac 1 t es as
4 12 tfc
further def ned n the
n
format on for B dders sec t on
Cop es may be Qbta ned at the PR IV ATE meet ng room for
any org an zat on phone 992
off ce of Burgess &amp; N pie
3975
L m ted ocated at 2015 west
3 11 ftc
F fth Avenue Co lumb us Oh o
upon payment of S20 00 NONE
OF
WHICH
WILL
BE A PARTMENT for r en t 2
bedroom s Phone 992 5908
REFUNDED
3 19 6t c
Each b dder mu st depos t
w th h s b d secur tv n th e
amount form and subject to the APARTMENT for rent Phone
992 5592
cond tons prov ded n th e n
3 19 t c
formation for B dders
Attent on of b dders s par
t cu ar ly
c a ll ed
to
th e FURNISHED
2
bedroom
requ rements as to cond Ion s of
tra l er c lose to schoo l s
emp loyment to be observed and
shopp ng center and sw m
m n mum wage rates to be pa d
m ng poo Phone 992 5914
und er the contract
Specif c
3 17 6tc
attent on of the b dder s s ca l ed
to the requ rements ot Sect ions 2 BEDROOM mob e hom e
53 and 59 of !he General Con
adu ts no pels Phon e 992
ditions
52 47
The pro eel
s rece v ng
3 17 3tc
federal f nanc1a ass stance
from the E conom c Develop
ment Adm nlstratlon for a
Publ c Works Pro ect The
successfu l b deter must comply
wi t h the rec;u rements of th e TRUCK topper for 8 ft bed
Dav s Bacon Act
Contract
F actory made Phone 992
Work Hours Standard Act
7132
J 19 6t c
Cope and Act {Ant K ckback
and T tie VI C v R ghts Act of
1964
RT 36 Dav s d tcher one 3 x
No b dder may w thdraw h s
36 and one 6 and 24 cha n
b d w th n 90 days after th e
L ke new cond ton Phone 1
actual date of the open ng
614 446 0762 after 5 p m $500
thereof
3 8 6tc
The v I age reserves the r ght
to wave any ntormat t es or to LOSE we ght w th New Sha pe
Tab ets and Hydrex Water
retect any and a t b ds or to
P I s at Sutton Drug M d
ncrease or decr ease or om t
deport and N elson Drug
any tern or terns and or to
3 19 3tc
award to the owest and best
b dder
Ea c h proposa l "must
conta n th e fu I n.arne of every 1973 MASSEY Ferguson r d ng
lawn motor 34 mower 7 h p
person or company nterested n
Phon e 1 (304 773 5161
same
3 19 5tp
By order of the Board of
Trustees of Pub I c Affa rs of the
V llage Of Pomeroy Oh o
Jane Walton 21 FT Cob a speed boat 200
horsepower
Bui ck v 8 n
Clerk
board outboard dr ve fu 1
VI age of
covers
tandem
tra er
Pomeroy Oh o
Exce ent cond t on
Phone
(614) 949 2433
(2 26 (3 5 12 19 Ate
3 17 6tc
.---..:....--------,

446-0677
WANTED

PAPER CARRIER

WfTON, W. VA.
PHONE 992-2156
THE DAILY
SENTINEL

For Rent

Mrs Irene Klme wa~ m
Holzer several days for a
medical checkup
{ 2) 12
Mr and Mrs W1ll1am Dav1s
Columbus v1s1ted Saturday
w1th Mr and Mrs Pearl
PUBLIC NOTICE
Jacobs
BIDS W LL BE RECE VED
Mrs Bobby Burke and ChriS BY THE ME GS COUNTY
COMMISSIONERS AT THE R
Columbus v1s1ted recently OFF
CE UNTIL 9 30 AM ON
w1th Mr and Mrs Harmon Tuesday March 26 1974 for
nstallat on or an automatic
Fox
a arm system
n the Me gs
The Men s Fellowship held Countv lnf rmary bu ld ng
The successfu l b dder s to
the1r regular meeting at the turn
sh a 1 labor and mater a
home of Mr and Mrs Richard and be respon s bfe for f na
by the State Fire
Fnend w1th potluck and 26 appro11a
Marshal s off ce and N F P A
persons present
72A 1972 ed ton
etlon date 60 day s from
Mrs Polly Ann DeConmck b dComp
open ng
Plans are on f le at the Me gs
was hostess to 16 co-workers
County
Comm ss oners off ce
recently at the home of her
grandparents Mr and Mrs
Board of Comm ss oners
Me gs County Oh 0
Charles Karr
M "rtha Chambers
S1xty mne persons surprised
.,
Cl erk
Rev
Buckley Saturday (3 12 19 2tc
evenmg w1th a birthday party
at the home of Mr and Mrs
Clifford Jacobs Ice cream
cake and punch were served
N,....ICE ON FILING
Mrs Vern Story spent a week
O"F INVENTORY
AND APPRAISEMENT
m Colwnbus w1th her husband
The State of Oh o Ml gs county
who 1s employed there
Court of CA'"mon
Pleas
Prrobate Oiv stbn
The Me1gs County Semor
To the E x ecutr x of the estate
Citizen Chorr Will be at the
o suc h of the fo tow ng as are
Laurel Cliff Free Methodist res dents of the Stat e of Oh 0
v z - t he surv v ng spouse the
Church March 24 7 30 p m All neKt
of k n the bene f cares
are mv1led to come and hear under the w 1 and t o the at
tornev
or
attorneys
them smg
represent ng
anv
of
the
Twelve members of the aforement oned pers ons
Carre Elf e Wood
Rt 1
Laurel Chff Health Club Club Carpenter
Oh 0 c o um b a
met al the home of Mrs Jean Townsh p No 21 154
You are Hereby not I ed that
Wr~ght Thursday evemng w1th
the
lnv enlory
and of Ap:
'INFORMATION A·souT
Mrs Mahel Tracy co-hostess
pra sement
of the estate
the
afore
ment
oned
deceased
ate
Guest was Mrs Betty Card
of sad County was f ed n th s
JOB OPPORTUNITI!E:S
Refreshments were served
Co rt
Sa d Inventory a nd I '
SOCIAL SECURJTY
Mr and Mrs Edward Ar
~::/~9 s~e~o~~tth ~ i~ur~~n ;~~ CONSUMER PROTECTION I '
cher Roseville v1s1ted Sunday 2nd day of Apr 19" at 10 00
AND
A M
wtth Mr and Mrs Norman 9 clock
Any person des r ng to f l e
&amp;haefer
exce pt ons t hereto must f fe

GREAT COUNTRY

STEREO
92.1 FM
WMPO
_ Mtdoleport-Pomeroy -

-

"

~ 1
~

MATERIALS CD
55S4
Mason W Va

9 00 -

Auto Sales

For Sale

WE HAVE a I your upho s er y
ne eds
burlap
den m
camb c foam g ue z ppers
tack ng str ps spr ngs and
c ps
ch pboard
button
tw ne se w ng thread l egs
upholstery books dacron
webb ng spr ng tw ne ta cks
wet cord
co tton sw vel
bases foam
foam
foam
Pomeroy Recove ry ~22 E
Man St
Pom e oy
Oh o
phon e 992 7554
3S2Lc

5 R COM house w l h bat h n
upper end of Sy racu se Phon e
992 3 116
3 15 8 c

- -----

A BEDROOM

hom e at Brad
bury
ust 5 m nutes from
M ddleport Phone 9~2 2297
l 17 6tp

70 ACRE S of pasture land on
St ate Route 33 S300 per acre
no bu ld ngs For add t anal
nform at on ca l 992 2720
3 17 Jtc

Buy 'Em Now'
20 TurfTrm3HP

POVVER MOWERS

NEW 3 bedroom house near
Rut and Phone 742 616 1
3 17 6tc

52.95
26

2 BEDROOM house n M d
deport
N ew k tchen and
bath app an ce s ncluded
Ca l 992 53 0
3 19 26tc

Turf Ttl31f2 H P
TILLERS

BEAUT FUL new homes now
un d er construct on n pr m e
ocat on on c ty water and
sew er Cho ceo f des gns Wa l
to wall ca rpet ng and a r
ncluded
W I
cond t on ng
POMEROY LANDMARK
help
arrange
f nanc ng
convent onal loans w th down
9 .. _Jack W Carsey Mgr
payment low as s pet Other
ot!!tJjj!Phone 992 2181
new ho.mes ava able to
qua f ed buyers w th NO
DOWN PAYMENT
Ca I
EXCELS OR ~a ll Works E
co teet 6 4 837 6540 or 239 0785
Man St Pomeroy A I k nd~
or write
Great Amer ca n
of salt water pell ets wat er
Homes Inc P 0 Box 687
nuggets block sart and own
Pomeroy Ohio 45769
Oh o R ver Salt Phone 992
3 1 tfc
389 1

129.95

6 5 tf c

THE

F IR ST and second cut hd y tor
sa e Phone Star ng Massar

985 3953

WISEMAN
AGENCY

FORDs de del very havrake
3 pt h t ch p ckup on rubber
Exce l ent cond ton Contact
Kenneth Hartley
Bunk er
H
~92 6320
3 14 6tc
SIN GER sew ng mach nes 1972
model n beaut fut wa nut
cab net Makes des gn st t
ches zig zag
buttonholes
blind hems etc L ke new
Only $89 95 Call Ravenswood
273 9521 or 273 9893 after s 00
12 7 tfc
FOR SA LE L ,e eve lot Q[l
New L ma Road Rutland All
ut t es ava abe Ph one 742

3083

2

tfc

GRANO Prx r ed wth
bla ck v nv top S975 Phone
992 5335
3 8 3tc

9~9

--- -

OAV S
300
trenche
w th
blade $3 200 W th Ira er
S3 500 971 B h p wheel horse
w th 36
mower and 42
bade $700 Also hay SOc a
bale Phone 985 3373 even ng s
3 15 6tp
97 4 WHEEL dr ve 3 " ton
Ford p c kup t ruck $20 600
m es
10 ' ft
cob over
camper self conta ned A so
topper w 1 sel secaratel/
ca 985 3554 after 6 p m
weekdays
Harold Brew
er Long Bottom Oh o
315tfc
PA NT

DAMAGE

1974

ZIG

ZAG SE WING MACH INE S

St II n or g nat cartons N"o
attachments needed as our
controls are bu t n Sews
w th 1 or 2 needles makEs
buttonholes sew on buttons
monograms and bl nd hem
st tch F u I cash pnce 138 50
or budget plan ava tabl e
Phone 992 2653
3 11 tfc

Gall pol s

YOU

Exc1hng
New Home
WONT BELIEVE

YOUR EYES WHEN YOU
STEP IN SIDE THIS NEW
SP LIT
LEVEL
HU GE
LIV NG ROOM W TH A

LOVELY BA LCO NY EF

FECT GO IN G TO THE 3
LARGE
BEDROOMS
BEAUTI F UL
BUILT N
OAK
CAB N~TS W ITH
QUALITY
A PPLIAN CES
BUll T IN CO MPLETELY
CARPETED r- OR DAD
A
LARGE 2 CAR GARAGE
W TH WORK SHOP PLUS 2

ACRES

TO

PUTTER

AROUND ON LOCATED IN
RUTLAND
YOU MUST
SEE THE INSIDE OF THIS

ONE TO APPREC ATE T
OFFICE-446 3643
EVENINGS

Bud McGhee-446 1255
E M
Ike W seman-446
3796

1~62

FORO p ckup S300 Phone
742 4361
3 15 4tc

7 30 8

Comp ete Serv ce
Phone 949 3821
Rae ne Oh o
Cr tt BradfOTd

EXCAVATING dozer
oader
and backhoe work
septic
tanks rnstal ed dump truc ks
and lo boys for h re w I hau
fill d rt top so 1 limestone
and gravel Ca ll Bob or Roger
Jeffer s day phone 992 7089
n ght phone 992 3525 or 992

3 bedroom

Good 3 story

Days of Ovr LtvesJ 4 15 Gu d ng L gh t 8
Game 6 13

2 00 -

3 00 -

AVAILABlE
AND
SOMEWHAT REASONABI E

Another War d 3 4 15 General Hasp tal 6 13 Pr ce s

R ght 8 10 RFD 20
3 30 - One L fe to L ve 6 13 Ph I Donahue • Match Game B
10 How To Sur v ve A Marr age 3 15 Wa sh ng ton Str a gh t
Talk 20
4 00 - Mr Cartoon 3
Amencan Style 13

Copper Canyon

4 30 -

SEPT IC TANKS ARDBIC
SE WAGE
SYSTEMS
CLEANED
REPA RED
MILLER
SAN TATION
STEWART OH 0 PH 662

Somerset 15 Sesame St 20 33 Love
Speedracer 6 Lu cy Show 8 Move

10

Green Acres 3

Bonanza

Haze

8

Ja ck pot

Mr Roberts 20 33 Bonanza 3 Merv Grtff n 4 Andy
Grtfftth 8 M ss on lmposs ble 6 Gomer Pyl e USM C 13

Tra Is West 15 Hogans Heroe s 13
6 00 - News 3 4 8 10 5 ABC Nev s 13 Sesame Sf 20 Per
sana ty &amp; Behav oral Deve opment JJ T uth or Con
sequences 6

6 30 - News 3 4 6 B 10 15 Room 2221 3
7 00 - News 10 6 What s My L ne a Truth or Conseq 3 Bea t
the Clock • Elec Co 20 Know Your Schools 33
Spy 5

10 23 tfc

B lly Graham Crusade 3

and
out
Call

WIN AT BRIDGE

26tc

South upset over East's lead

Repar

ser v ce al mak.es 992 2284
The Fabr c Shop Pomeroy
Author zed Singer Sales and
Service We Sharpen ScissorS
3 29 ttc

NORTH

19

• 97 64
+ AQ7
"' A K

WEST
• J 75 2
\' K lOB

+J 84

9 I tfC

"'Q 93

------- -

OPEN Roger Hysell s Garage
near Crossroads on St Route
124 8 30 to 6 p m Monday
through Saturday Phone 992
5682 or 992 7121
2 2:1 26tc

neww

remark
5 Man

sland
2 Ita\ a

I andlc
8 Swed sh

expect ng a the s to co ope ate on
so nelh ng you wa 1 done gel
th e r comm ments to day To
morrow th ey I be tess ag eeabl e

\otO I n

WlnC

3

measures
9 Cossack

plu nder
4 Sl ort
rest
5 Source

chief

VIRGO (Aug 23 Sept 221 Th s

13 Wash
14 Re volve
15 V1rg m a

can be a ve y p edu ct ve day f
vou ke ep you nose l o
"'

6 Expiate
7 Electn al

Willow

Dear Bnde
Have you two eve1 tr1ed provmg that women and sports DO
nux Getmvolvcd With your husbands uctmttes Don t lellhem
leave you home - or out of their conversal ons Ins1sl they teach
you how to f1sh golf hunt whatever
ThtS m1ght help two ways E1ther you ll learn to enjoy
spo rts or you ll become such nmsances that they ll compromise
and spe nd more of thetr lime domg what truly pleases YOU
HELEN AND SUE

+++
P S Good luck In re-&lt;:ducatmg Jtm s mother It 1sn l easy
changmg a patient htlle stay-at-homer mlo an achv1st But
Without her cooperatiOn you may he bcked before you start
HELEN

form four ord•nary word s

-

MOC1'E

Yesterdays Answer

12 Requ tred
18 Not

10 Eden or

21 Uto p a

29 Oar peg
30 Seasonal

Chuzzle

22 l&lt;ondll!
23 Short

song
31 Equalizes

16 Dmner

her e

Ul I t

course

17 Chant
19 Boy

\Ill

~0 Shanty
21 Butldmg

25 Pallid
27 Porter

11 ReslJ 1g
( 2 wds I

poem
24Sp lc

33 F ootpnnt

35Brnk

maten al

22 Ce lesl al
body
25 Uo

1;.---1-+ - 1---

m m shed

26 Jewtsl

mo tl
27 Exclude

2B Elecln
cal
un t
29 Wh st
card
combma

bon
32 Hebrew
proph et
34 -

hy HENRI ARNOLD .,.,.1 ROB l££

Howoeyo
ee ng'&gt;

mak er
Devour

Brubeck

36 Pao l
37 Incensed
38 Engbsh

I•

essayist
39 - of

ALIVA

Solomon

rJ

40 Ap1ece
41 Otherwtse
1

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE -Here s how to work 1t

'PERIA11

Is

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

""

One letter Simply stands for another In lhlS sample A Is
used for the three L s X for the lwo 0 s clc Smgle lett ers
apostrophes lhe length and formation of lhe words are all

3

hmts Each day tl c code letters are differ ent

Now arrange the e~rcled letters
to form the aurprlse answer u
suggested by the above cartoon

9 00 - M ove The Ca e a ke s 3 A 5 Cannon 8 0 Un cle
Sam Req uest s the P easur e Of 20
0 00 - Ko ak e 10 News 20 Ene gy Report IJ E ergy C u ch
6 Inter face 33
10 30 - Day AI N ghl 33
1 00 News3 4 6 B 10 13 15 Janak 33
30 - Johnn y Carson 3 4 15 B rth and Babes 6 J Mov es
Tr bute to a Bad Man 8 We Wer e St ra ngers 10
00 - Tomorrow 3 4 News 13
200 - News4

CRYPTOQUOTES
WIBHDRNVZ NA FBRNBU NE ARNPXV

A[l JJJlJll]

BTNHBEWB

(An twel'l lomorrowJ

QNVX

EM

BTNHBEWB

MI

AROMA BILGE METRIC QUAINT

OPONEAV BTNHBEWB - VIZ ME BHQOIHA

( N t'llfm rif' t I ' II I I li e l1gf u t
lt u l AIR MAIL

Yesterday o Cryploquote AN OPTIMIST IS A MAN WHO
HAS NEVER HAD MUCH EXPERIENCE DON MARQUIS
(@ 1974 K ng-Feature1 Syndkat.e lne)

U'l'I'LE ORPHAN ANNIE
THAT

,-----==-:--'1·

EAST Dl
• A K3
\' A2
+ K652
... J IOB4

THEY

Ollt..DN T

8 £ VERY F111t f\WAY C ,.-.oN

HARR.Y
~ME600T' M~Y
~AVE. SEEN THEM OUT

Tj,t£ KIO AND liER. 006
MUST \f£ LEFT THE 'f\R.
WHEN WE STOPPiO FOFt

T~!t!

ON

THIS MIIST 8E TH ~LA&lt;E'
SAf"DY
LOOKS L.IKf"
~J,~E I'll~ DE

IT

l~E RO~ O

corFEE

SOUTH

West

North

Pass

Double Pass

Double Pass
Double Pass

East
IN T

Pass
Pass

South

2.

Pass
CAPTAIN EASY

2'

Pass

HAr
MAY &amp;E N!" DE
HE CAVE ~POR T
~~...Of

INTER lOR or ex ter or pant
ng For free est mates call

3903

3 1 26tc

Real Estate For Sale
N'EW 3 bedroom home 1"/i balh
garag e basement on Gravel
H I Middleport Natural gas
already
n
Phone Dee
Dutton 992 3369 even ngs
992 2534
1 17 tfc

He Led a low diamond

Furnoshed home 3 BR bath
Natural gas heat C ty water
Porches
Many
other
features S7 100 00

blacktop hoghway. W&lt;&gt;ter tap
patd Most mtnerals

SYRACUSE - Large 2 story
frame 7 rooms 4 BR 2
baths
Basement Garage
New gas furnace
New
copper plumbrng
River

NE W SPII P~

-

J1

$\
·~L-~~~~~--~------~

.P

AFTl:R ALL I
®

)J
=

c~

'

""

lots of cab nets range and
ref Ut 1ity Plenty of room

•

19

P~os

2+

Pass

3+

Pass
Pass

I JEST SEEN TH S AGE
BRESH GANG DOWN AT
TH MOV N PITCHERS
UNK SNUFFV

'

you South hold
.1086 5 4.AKQ83 +AJ5+
What do you do now?

A-Bid five or sl• diamonds
depending on now you feel Your
partner may have a singleton

oplode II nul a spade lillY nol be
opened

.PJ\nf\

n

I t.."NTERPH St: ASSN

The b ddmg has been
Wtst
North East

•

I SI&gt;N NOT p.N0\1-\SR DROP
1\L.L. 111~'1 SlOP HTEI&lt;M\IJAi\fllt&gt;
o-:;1

Th1s produced Souths mne
West s Jack and dummy s
qt~een A heart was led and
Souths Jack lost to Wests
ktng Back ca me a second
d1~mond South played low
from dummy whereupon
E*•l took h1s kmg a nd led a
third dia mond lo dummy s
aGe
'(' se cond trump lo st to
East s ace East cashed h1s
a~e of spades for the fifth
defenstve tnck and led h1s
fo~rth d1amond to establish
h1s partner s 10 of trumps as
th~ settmg tnck

CLOSE IN over 4 acres

MAYBf THE-Y lL.
RE5POND

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
West s doubl e of two hearts
was one of those unpopul ar
doubles He d1dn t really like
1t himse lf but South had
wr1ggled and s qu~rmed
before btddmg two clubs a nd
had re peated the process
before runnmg to two hearts
North dtdn t like 11 because
he had "atched h1s partner
g~ra t10n s East "ho ha c
opened a 15 pomt notrum1
was afra1d South mtgh
wheel th e contract m
As for South he ha d bee
unhappy all the ttme
Dummy s e1g ht of spade&lt;
forc ed East s kmg at lnck
one and Easl really went nlo
a huddle Et was well that he
d1d Any roulme play at tnck
two would have let South
m'ke h1s contract but East
came up wtlh the one wm
mpg play

6 IS tfc

AT EA!i f THEY RE
NOT ArrACK N6
F WE? ACT FR EtJ DlY:

0 D ALL

Opemng lead- •2

cancelled?
Lost
your
operator s tcense Cat 992

here S22 500 00
FOR NEW ADVENTURE
SEE AND OWN ONE OF
THE ABOVE TO BUY OR
SELL CALL US TOOAY
HENRY E CLE(AND
BROKER
992 2259

DOWN

I Indo

Both vu lnerable

AUl~ BILE InsuranCe been

Home 2 years old 3 BR
bath Lovely kitchen w lh

6

ACROSS
1 Ca ustic

+

Roofing spou t ng k tchens
and bathrooms Comp lete
remode ng Phone 742 6~73
I l l tic

storage
garage

Dragon

by rHOMAS JOSEPH

• QJ 53
10 9 3
"'76 52

--'1------------PRICE C ONSTRUCT ON

frontage to dock the boat
S1050000
CLOSE IN - 17 acres

LEO (July 23 Aug 22) I you e

~.~

• 64

DON T F US S Don'f cuss turn
your l unk automobileS; over to
us Phone 1 (304) 733·5890
3 7 26tc

On

be done tod ay w hou d aw ng a
ten on to yourse r He p a he s
tr am beh nd he see es

• Q 10 9 B

DOZER and back hoe work
ponds and sept c tanks d t
ch ng serv ce top soil fill
dirt
t mestone
B&amp;K Ex
caval ng Phone 992 5367 or
992 3861

180

You w I prof
n some manne
h o ugh a c ose comp an on who s
w
g to sha e someth ng w th
yo u Keep t a sec ret

7 30

5 30 - Elec Co 33 Beverly H lb II es B Hodgepodge Lodge 20

SEPTIC
TANKS
cleaned
Modern San tat on 992 3954 or
992 7349

REEDSVILLE AREA

To Te l the T u h 6 Sa le of I he Century 8 The Judge 0
Bea t th e Coc k J Po ce Su geon 3 0 I he Money
An
t ques 20 E p sode Act on n
8 00 - Sonn y &amp; Che 0 B I M oye s Jou nil 20 Wash ngfon
Connec ti on 33 The Cow boys 6 3 Chase 3 B I y G t a l
Cr usa de 4 15
8 30
Th ea ter In Amer ca 33 Woman 20 Mov e Men o the

appea ng You a e part c u a ly a
rac t ve o he oppos te sex

PISCES (Feb 20 March 201
CANCER (June 21 July 221 Fo
bes t resu s do what needs to

4

5 00 -

10 4 tfc

11 no answer 992 2568

5

Don 1 be eluc l all to let th em
know wha t s on you n nd Be
pas ve asser ve

Unscr amble these four Jumbles
one letter to each square to

Today we are afraid of
Simple words hke goodness and
mercy and kwdness We don t
beheve m the good old words
hecause we don t helieve 10 the
good old values anymore And
thal1s why the world 1s so sick
L n Yutang Chwese
phllosopl er

Tomo row you not be as canny
as you are today

(Jan 20 Feb 191
GEMINI (May 21 June 201 AQUARIUS
You have a ce Ian magnet sm
Othe s w 1 buy you deas today
abou t you that ot he s w f nd ve y

Gill gan s Island 6 13

3035

barn
large

0 New ywed

230 - Doclors3 • 15 Edgeo1Nghl8 0 Gr lonMy lfe6 13

REASONABLE rates Ph 446
4782 Galltpo Is John R.usself
Owner and Operator
s 12 tfc

(fenced)
but dtng

Lets

Make A Deal 6 13

SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED

acres at $120 pe r;,.. acre

Dea r Rap
You hear a lot about Mama s boys but ty problem IS I m
marr1ed to a Father s boy
My husband called h1s Dadd y on our honeymoon to tell him
the hsh were really b1tmg and come on up After that t1 ey
were out on the streams while I tagged along getl ng n osqmto
bites
In the SIX months we ve heen marned J1m and hi s fatheo
have spent almost every weekend playmg golf or h shmg hun
tmg or whatever We re over there several times a week and 1
actually know h1s moll er better than! do her so n beca use were
together so much - wh1le the men are talking sports or wal
chmg games on TV She doesn l hke lh1s e1U er but what can
we do when they wont mcl ude us' They d rather go off by
themselves as they lhlllk women and sports don t m x WNELY BRIDE

Search for Tomorrow 8 10 Spl t Second 6 Baff le 3 15

Concentratton 8 What s My L ne? 10
1 30 - 3 On A Match 3 4 15 As the War d Turns 8 10

10 ACRES On Rl 7 Loop n
M ddl eport Good ocat on for
POMEROY -

++ +

15 M k e

12 55 - NBC News 3 15
1 00 - News 3 All My Ch ldren 6 3 Not For Women On y 15

Olllrl i'llt-,ol

homes or bu smess

A

Jackpol 3 15
12 30 -

del vered r ght to your
proiect Fast and easy Free
est mates Phone 992 3284
Goeg en Ready M x Co
M ddleport Oh- o
6 10 lie

992

p S Perhaps 1 should change my deflmtwn to arg table
1romc absurdity Our examples will felc h a raft of rebuttals

Douglas 6

CONCRETE

7d'l,8

s Colloe 6
Jack La La nne 13
Brady Bunch 6
News 13

11 30 - Hoi ywood Squares 3 4 15 L ove o f L f e 8 0 B &lt;'!dy
Bunch 13 Sesame Str ee t 33
11 55 - CBS News8 Dan lme s Word 0
12 00 - Password 6 Bob Brau n s 50 SO Cl ub 4 News 8 10 13

DOZER work and cle•ar ng by
the acre hourly or contract
farm ponds roads etc Large
dozer and operator with over
20 years exper ence Pull ns
Excavat ng Pomeroy Oh o
Phone 992 2478
12 19 ttc

LL TRIM or cut trees
shrubbery A lso clean
basemen ts attics etc
949 3221 or 7-42 44 41
3 14

Co lumbus Today 4
Farmt me 10 Mo n ng Repo t 3
Tooay3 d 15 CBSNewsB 0 Dck VanDyke l3 TBA6
Rocky &amp; Bullw nk e 3
New Zoo Revue 13 Sesame St 33 Capt Kangaroo 8 0

11 00 - Gamb t8 10 Password 3 W zard of Odds 3

2 11 tfc

-

1 Some Amencans ha ll Aleksander Solzhemtsyn as a
martyr (His book The Gulag Archipelago ex poses ll e
horrors of Commumst rule m h1s native Russia) Yet many of
these same people beheve Jane Fonda should he Jatled &gt;r
drummed oul of the U S as a trat tor (whtle m Rus a she s
ha1led as a marly!) Whtch s1de of the fence you 1e on makes
Af I the difference
2 The person who opposes capital ptmlshment &gt;cl favors
abortton 1s (paradoxiCally) saymg the g 1lty should hve wh 1le t1 e
mnocent should die - HELEN

10 00- D nah Shore 3 15 Joker s W dB 10 Company 6
10 30- Pyram d8 10 Jeopardy 3 • 15

-~-------·~ -- -

- --

An editor fnend g1ves two examples

9 00
Paul 0 xon 4 Fr e ndly Junct on 0 AM 3 Abbott &amp;
Cos tello 8 Ph I Donahue S W d W ld Wes t 6 Cover to
Co ver 33 M ov e The Rook e
3
9 30 - ToTe I the Truth 3 Tatt leta es 8
9 55 - Chuck Wh 1e Reports 10

5 1 ttc

w

oo -

Jeff
a 25 B 30
a 55

C BRADFORD Auct oneer

Ill) Mo•(h,JII!• '-&gt;I t•
f&gt; ll rn~&gt;roy,

POMEROY

19'64 FORO Galax e 352 C I 0
automat c transm ss on and
runs good Phone 992 3920
3 13 6tc

6 35 6 45 7 00 -

+++

we

Story 13

1./ttqll!l T•1i&lt;&gt;1d '&gt;
1-hok ·t

ranch type home Hot water
heatmg n ce modern k tchen
front por ch and garage
SIB 000 00
VACUUM Cleaners new 1974 MIDDLEPORT Large 9
MOde
Compete w th all
room
home
w
ith
large
front
cleaning tools Sma I pant
dam.we n sh pp ng wIt take yard Also a rental to help pay
S27 cash or budget p an off Room f or 2 tra ler::. Only
ave table Phone 992 2653
31111 S17 500 00

Auto Sales

6 00 - Sunr se Sem nar 4 Sacred Hea r t 0
6 IS - Urban League 10 Folk L ter ature 3
6 25 - Farm Report 13
6 30 - F ve M nutes to L ve By 4 New::. 6 B be Answers 8 The

TEAFORD

SINGER Automat c Zig Zag bus ness burldtng on Ma n St
Sew ng Mach nes n sew ng w th a 2 story bus ness room
table Makes buttonholes
sews on buttons b lnd hems and renta on 2nd
etc Top notch cond lion Pay LAND - On Rl 7 about one
S5 or terms avallab e Phone m le out
REDUCE excess flu d w th
992 2653
F tu dex
Lose w e ght w th
EDGE OF TOWN
2 acres
3 n tfc
De x ~ D et
capsu l es
at
plu s
Ne lson Drugs
3 l7 3tp 12 HORSEPOWER cub cadet BUILDING LOT - In Chester
.48 nc., mower 8 months old Townshop S1800 00
GoOo- -;ua - t-;-ha;- - A lso 2
Hydro stat c Phone 742 3821
INDU STRY
S BUYING
2 27 tfc MORE LAN D BETTER BUY
reg stered beagle dogs Ca l
992 7201 after 5 p m
YOUR S NOW WHILE IT IS
3 1.4 6tp

FOAM to f1 I your old couch and
chair cush ons as low as
$10 95 Upholstery book s on y
SOc 4 nch covered team
mattresses for standard s ze
bed
S.29 95
Pomerov
Recovery 622 E Man Street
Pomeroy Oh o P110ne 992
7554
3 5 26tc

WEDNESDAY MARCH20 1974

All work guaranteed

SEW NG MACHINES

w

e

The lottery 1s a product the
same
.as any other It has to be
Favo abe cond ons hat have an
FOR TUESDAY
merchandised
and 1mrpoved
efl ect upon your nanc es a e
p
esently
at
wo
k
Don
t
d
sturb
hke
razor
blades and
March 19 1974
a ters today
detergents you alwa) shave to
(No• 23 Dec
ARIES (March 21 Apr I 191 SAGITTARIUS
21 , You 1 know how and where come up w1lh some thmg new
You e a you b es t today w th
your
deas can best be used fo
- Edward J Powers New
l ends who thtnk on the !eel and
you
advantage
Don
I
JU
St
th
k
Hampshtre sta te lottery
know how to get th ngs done M x
abou t lh ngs Ac t on them
w th s owpokes ana her I me
director
d1scussmg threats that
(Dec 22 Jan 191
TAURUS (Apr I 20 May 201 CAPRICORN
the
FCC
may curb lottery
T
y
to
ge
most
o
you
I
nanc
a
Th s w be a good day l o you
deal ng out of th e wa y now
advert1smg
conce n n g a Ia nmen
T he
ewa ds w I be n propo rt on o
your goa s

You re nghl the dictionary defmllwn 1sn l exact!) helpful
Mme says A statement seemmgly absurd or contradictorv to
the received belief
but perhaps really tru e Come agam
Messrs Funk and Wag nalls?
A friend gave me an example of wl at he calls a pa 1dox
W1lh the same amount of oil and gas supplies m lhe U S 1 o~
eome last ) ear we wet e urged to tru y and buv and th s )ear
there s an enerv.: cns1s - SUE

I OO - News346810 J SJa nak J3
1 30 - Johnny Carson 3 4 5 Th e Book of Mu der 6 1J M ov es
These W lder Years
Hot Rods to H e I 10
1 oo - Tomorrow 3 4 News J
2 00 - News 4

Area s Most
Reasonable Prrces

READY MIX

wc

10 30 - Day AI N ght 33

Pamting A Speaalty

5232

I m a word collector but my dicltonary deftml1on of
paradox throws me So I asked a fr end for an example and of
course he came up w1th somctlung hilariOus hke a couple of
water squatters
When 1didn !laugh he got huffy and bel me lhatthe ftrstlen
people I quest toned couldn t gl\ e me an example
You two ar~ the nmlh and tenth Please don t let me down -

Back Journa 33 TBA 15

go od t me to check w th f ends
to futur e event s you are p ann ng
It w 1 avo d a con fl ct n sc hed

But the fruit of the Spirll Ia
love JOY peace pal1ence,
kmdness goodness faith
fuln ess gentleness self
controlagamsl such there Is no
law - Galatians &gt;22 23

March 19 1974
Th s w be ayea wheeyOUif1 j l
ea l ze the fru Is a you abors
You statu s s ascend ng So s
your mage n the eyes of o thers

es
SCORPIO (Oct 24 Np• 221

Rap

9 30
Adam 12 15 Mo11 e She Cr ed Murd er a o
10 00 - Marcu s Welby M 0 13 Wash ngton S ra ght Ta k 33
Pol ce Stor y 3 15 B ly G aham Cru sade 4 Ene gy Crunch 6

808 W Mam Pomeroy

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

Help Wanted

23 oeg nn " 9 ao 9 am 3 19 2tc

8 30 - Hawa F ve 0 10 B ly Gra ha m Crusade 5 Snoop
S sters 3 4 Mov1e The Dev s Daughter 6
3 8 lv
Graham Cru sade 8 The Cur ous Case of Vitam n E 33

Ph 992 5271

Radiator Spec1ahst

5

ttt e task s

that need dong
LIBRA (Sept 23 Oct 231 A

u

Paradox not a Pa1r of Durks

o

Teacher 33

Gene's
Body Shop

From the larges t Tru ck or
Bulldozer Rad afar to the
sma lest Hea ter Core

News 6

8 00 - Maude B 10 8 I Moyers Jollrna 33 Adam 2 3 4
Happy Day~ 6 13 Mov e 20 B ly Graham Cru sade 5

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN

Nathan Boggs

For Sale

Sales

Butltto Your Specs

llehvered 1o Job Sole

773

4

gr ndst one Do all the

~

By Helen and Sue Bnttel

15 ABC News 6 CBS News B 0 Your

Electr c Co 20 Tru h or Consequences 3 What s M y L neB
H gh Schoo l TV Honor Soc ely 15 B ly Graham Cru sade 3
7 30 - To Te 1 The Truth 6 R F 0 20 Hollywood Squares J
Johnny Man s Stand Up and Chee 4 New Pr ce s R gh t 8
10 Bea t the Clock 13 Lass e 5 Read ng Fo the Classr oom

4

EXPERIENCED
Radla

DITCHING SERVICE

GU N Shoot Sat urday Mar ch
Ph 992 1174
Pomeroy
1 27 f c
13 7 p m
M le H
Roa d
Spon sored by Rae ne F re
Depa tm ent
AN T QUE quIts and ew etr v
Ru t and
3 ~ -4 c REV VAL Se rv cec.
A l so ntere st ed n f ur n lure
Freew 1 Bapt s t Ch urch
and d shes Ca 1 992 5262
March 24 through 30 1 30
B G v ng room sa e 6 8 South
even ng s or mo n ng s
p m
w th the Rev Paul ~ROCERY bus ness tor sa e 1971 DODGE Monaca a r
Tl d Avenu e
M dd epo r
2 20 tf C
cond it on ng 4 door P S and
Tay or from He per Utah as
Star ng Wednesday Mar ch
eu td ng for sa e or tea se
P B
Good gas m eage
Evange s
Spec a s ng ng
20
1 sod ovt Every day 10
Phone 773 56 8 from 8 30 p m
OLD furnitur e oak ab es
Phone Dav d H
Ra e ne
n
g
ht
y
everyone
we
com
e
am
7
p
m
10
p
m
for
appo
ntment
to
c ocks ce bo xe s brass beds
949 2762
3 76 c
9
6
p
3
3
20
fc
d shes desk s or complete
3 5 6t c
househo d s W t e M
D
- --TRAP Shoot ng eve v Thur s PO LLY S Auct on House 537 STEREO
M ler R t 4 Pome r oy Oh o
Walnut
AM F M
da y even ng 7 p m A t the
964 DOD GE 4 dr Sedan 6
Rad o 8 track tape com
ca I 992 7760
H gh St ee t M dd eport tor
R u and Gun Club N ew L m a
cy l nde Phon e 992 2455 at er
b nat on Ba ance S 0 73 or
r eta and co ns gnments 9 30
Road Everyo ne we lcome
3 p m
terms ava !able Phone 99 2
to
5
JO
daly
Phone
992
3509
3 9 Jt c
3 17 3tc
O LD Up r gh
p anos
A ny
3965
2 26 JOrc
2
14
fc
cond ton Pay ng SIO cas h
KO SKO T
KOSMET CS
&amp;
973 PONT AC
OW m l eage
Wr te
g ve d reel ons
o
WIG S For a good
ne of KO SCOT KOSMET CS &amp; WI GS
Phone 949 2725 or 949 4492
W TTEN P A ND CO P 0
We have the produc t on hand SEVERAL
Cos me s fr end l y se r v ce
3 17 3tc
var et es
of
BOX 18 Sa rd s Oh o 43946
and we del ver to you pe
and someone o chat w th
st rawberry pants also blac k
3 13 30 c
son a tv Helen Jan e Brown
g ve me a ca I Helen Jane
ra spbe rry p a nt s M dwa y
992 5 3
B own 992 51 3
Market
West
Ma n
LE T U S se t t for you at auc
2 30 ttc
3 9 lf c
Pomeroy Phone 992 2565 or
on W 1 buy a I tur n tur e o
5 ROOM hou se and bath two
992 2582
househo d good s
Po ly s THE MI SS ONARY Soc ely Of
car. garage 2 story on Carson
3 17 3 c
Auct &lt;:l n House Open 9 30 to
Roa d
n Mason
Contact
he
sv
acvse
F
rs
Chu
ch
of
5 30 da tv Phone 99'1 3509 537
R usse 1 Ba ll 773 5606
God w hod a rummag e sale
6 FT
LARSON sk
boat
H gh Sf
M ddl epor
Oh o
3 2 lfc
n he Fry Bu ld ng on M I St , - - -- - - - - -- - ,
comp l ete Phone 992 2297
•
2 26 30tc
M dd lepor M a rch 21 22 and
3 17 3 p --------------

~uto

tfl4

d

Future Is Now 33 Room 222 3
7 00 - Marco Sporthte 33 Beat th e Clock

S89S

Real Estate For Sale

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB

6 30 - NBC News 3

WOOD TRUSSES

Water

Notice

6 00

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New s 3 4 a 10 I S Sesame Str ee t 20 AB C NewS 13
Truth or Consequences 6 L111as Yoga and You 33

ASK US ABOUT
PRE FABRICATED

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment
•5.55

rw~~

Te~~~A~~~R~?,974Log

Business Services

~;&lt;

'IE NEVER SEEN SICH THAT
REM NDS
L'IIN CHEATIN
ME
THIEV Ill CUTTI N
FIGHTIN AN SHOOT N
VARM INTS IN ALL
YORE 80RNE D
DA'IS

•

�'

10 - The Dally Sentmel,Mtddleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Tuesda}, March 19, 1974

"Maybe a Little Streaking from Here to Here
Would Help My Image, Too, Henry!"

Inflation worse,·then better
WASHINGTON (UP)) S1xty two economists , m·
eluding some of the natiOn's
leadtng professtonal
forecasters, beheve mflahon
will "get worse rather than
better, especially m the very
near future," two economic
research groups reported
today
The economiSts also beheved
the natton 's outpot of goods and
servtces (GNP) would decline
shghtly m the frrst half of 1974

The Tr1.County Commumty
Concert Assoctalwn 1s offenng

m terms of constant dollars

an unu sual

the forecasters have grown
somewhat more pesstmtsttc
smce the prevtous survey ( m

December, 1973) when thetr
medtan predtctwns mcluded a nse m 1974 of 1 I per

results

were

bonus to new

as!WClatwn th1s season

announced by the Amertcan
"Songs by SIX " a delightful
Statistical Association w1th and refreshing group of }oung
headquarters m Washmgton swgers, will be the fmal ofand the Nattonal Bureau of fer~n g of the 1973-74 local
Economic Research, based m . concer t season a t Bp m fhurs-

New York
' ' The

day m the Calha Academv
ant 1 c 1 p a ted

An} prospective new
member wiShing to subscribe to the association's
series next fall and wmter
may buy their season
membership at the door
Thursday e&gt;emng and attend that concert as a spee13l
bonus
Memberships are pnced al
$10 for an adult, $5 for a full
lime student through college
age, and $30 for a fam1ly
membership Thts year, for the
first lime, the assoc1ahon ts
offenng a spectal rate of $5 for

cent

members of area semor cttizen
orgamzalwns
1Membership

ca rd s md1catmg m embership

m a spect[tc orgamzatton must

be shown at lhe door to obtam
th1s spec1al rate)

Adrmsswn to the concerts
are by membership only - no

l1ckels are sold at the door for
any

asks $125 million
been ftled agrunst McDonnell
Douglas Corp , makers of the
DCJO JCtlmer m which 346
persons were killed near Parts
March 3
The wrongful death class
acllon sutt was brought by Jaw
firms m lns Angeles, New
York Ctty and Washmgton,
DC
The swt was ftled on behalf
of Edith Mary Hope, and her
late husband, FranciS Michael
Hope, Paris correspondent of
the lnndon Observer, who was
killed when the Turk1sh
Airlines Paris-to-lnndon flight
crashed shortly after takeoff
The sutt filed m U S. District
Court here also sought to
represent 334 other persons

STEEL TGE
MINERS' RUBBER
BOOTS

•19.99

heritage house
"Your Thom MeAn Store

M1dd leporl, 0 .

tndJvldUal

concert

Membership m the TCCCA also
enables our members to attend

concerts presented by netghbortng associations throughout

the area, usuall} some 30

swnary

Concert Assoctcthon cannot
The Charles ton , W Va , make 11s fmal chmce for the
Mus1c Assn , wh1ch shares next concert season unhl the
reclproclly with the local close of the annual fall
assoctatJon , has announced 1ts membership campaign , but
forlhcommg senes, wh1ch wlll three outslandmg attractwns
mclude the folio~&lt; mg Andre ( a chamber orchestra, a Jazz
Prevm and the Pltt,burgh quartet and a folk duo) are
Symphony, Metropolitan und er constderatlon InOpera star Mary Costa, the formatiOn about these selecSovte t Georgtan Dancers and twns w.II be avatlable at the
the Tb1hsl Polyphomc Chmr door Thursday evemng
concerts

, 'PAPPY" HARRIS of New Boston, Ohio, n ght, and
Edgar Yen In wagen, vete1ans of World War II and both
JOHN WilL, left, was the first World War II veteran to
recetve a life membessh1p m Dre" Webster Post 39,
American Legwn, at the post's annual btrlhday party
Charles Swatzel, fmance officer, made the presenlat10n The
memberships have been giVen all World War I veterans and
wtll now be gtven to past commanders of the post

The Trt-Counlv Commumty

Your hospital reports ...

·..·
'•

"'

,.
killed
'·
"A class actwn wtll be ·:
supertor to any other available ;:;
method for the farr and ef- :·:
hctent adjudtcatwn of the
cuntroversy as to liability of
the defendant," said the sutt,
whtch demands a Jury lrtal
''There will be one cuncen!rated mvesllgation, prepara!ton and cuurse of disclosuredtscovery by highly ext
li
perienced
hligalton
neg gence
The smt ctted a cargo door
failure of DCIO arrcraft opera!ed by Amertcan Airllnes Inc'
over Wmdsor, Ont , on June !2, ;:.
1972, causmg an emergency ·;!
and loss of cuntrol due to loes of ~::
pressurtzation which nearly :::
resulted m a crash, as fitting :;:
the same pattern as the cause ;:;
of the French crash
;:;
In the brtef, the plamtiffs ask
for $1 mtllton in general ·;;
damages, plus funeral and ~
btmal expenses
"Also," the smt srud, "under ;~
the damages law of France, ;:;
plamtiffshave suffered pecwu- ~
ary loss ..and moral damages, ;:;
mcludmg damages resultmg :;;
from gnef"
;~;
The smt estunated damages :;.

c:~::.:f~.

t

J

~~th~~~t':~ W,~l

By Hugh p K~rkel
Executive VIce PreSident
Holzer Medical Center
Holzer Medical Center provides two
very Important tests to ass!sl our
Medical Staff m makmg a d1agnos 1s
They are the "electroencephalogram,"
called m stmpler terms, EEG, and the

enltre EEG recordmg
about 15
mmutes to hook up the eqmpment, then
approximately 3li mmutes to run the test
Durmg lhe lest, you must he perfectly
slill , m fact , you're enco,!ll'aged to go to
sleep, whtch often IS easy to do because of
only two hours sleep permttled the mght

"electrocardiOg ram. n

before

more

often

referred to as an ECG
First, let's talk about the EEG,
.vhlch IS a recordmg of the electrtcal
activity of the bram, known as bram
waves, for d1agnosllc purposes If you
rece tve a head mJury or have symptoms
that cannot be tmmedtately dtagnosed,
your phys1ctan may prescrtbe an l:EG to
be taken
You feel absolutely no pam and no
sensalwn durtng the test, and 1t 1s
completely harmless When you're an
outpatient, commg lo the EEG
Laboratory from your home, you are
gtven a list of mstructwns to follow
precedmg the test If you're over age 14
you're told to wash your ha1r the mght
before the test, dry 1t but leave 1t completely natural; go to bed at 12 m•dmght,
then get up at 2 a m and stay up unhl the
lime of your appomtment at the hospttal'
drmk no coffee, tea, coke or other
st•mulant , however, breakfast 1s per
mttted butnoshmulallngbeveragessuch
as coffee
Precedmg the EEG, you're asked to
fiJI out a one page pre-test htstory , answertng questwns that relate to any
symptoms or problems that you 're
havmg, m addtlton to your age and other
vttal mformatwn Then, stlhng in a
chatr' an open woven rubber cap Wllh a
chm strap 18 placed on your head
Seventeen small electrode clamps that
have been dampened m a bakmg soda
and water solulton are 'placed externally
on your scalp and held m place by the
rubber cap The soda and water on the
clamps prevents outstde electrtcal mterference durmg the test One end of a
wtre IS attached to the top of each clamp,
Wllh the other end connected to the EEG
machme
As the pallent, you must lie down on
your back for the test. When the machme
ts turned on, 1t records and charts on
paper the pattern of eleclrtcal waves m

A palient under age 4 ts sedated for
the test, If between ages 4 and 7, four to
five hours sleep IS allowed the mght
before; between ages 8 and 11, three to
four hours sleep, and ages 11 to 12, three
hours sleep the mght before the EEG IS
reqmred When a patten! IS In the
hosptlal, sleepmg and ealtng are eas1ly
controlled by the Nursmg Staff durmg
the mght precedmg the test
The second test we referred lo 1s an
"electrocardiOgram," or ECG, whtch ts
the recordmg of electrtcal activtllty
assoctated w1th the phys•cal acttvlly of
the heart onto heal-senslhve paper
No preparatiOn 1s necessary for a
palient who IS to have an ECG, whtch ts
qutle dtfferent from that requtred for lhe
EEG we JUst descrtbed If the doctor
prescrtbes an ECG for you, JUSt go mto
the ECG Laboratory at the ttme of your
appomtment You may either he on your
back for the test or bema parltal sttlmg
postlion If you have any breathmg
problems Mmst pads are put on your
arms and legs, one for each, and held m
place by a plashc clamp A strap ts
fastened around your c_Mst to ptck up the
voltage of your heart :lfe electrode that
1s placed on your chest ts moved around
tostxspectftcareasofyourchestmorder
to more accurately recogmze any mdtcatwns of ctrculatory deftctenctes or
heart muscle problems
The ECG ts also painless, harmless,
takes only about ten mmutes to record,
and can be read and mterpreted at any
time ECG's are extremely valuable m
asstslmg your phystctan to determme the
presence or absence of heart dtsorcers
The Supervtsor of the EEG and ECG,
testmg laboratory IS Leon Sldlhngs,
asststed by a staff of stx people Holzer
Medtcal Center has a staff sktlled m the
operatwn of these advanced and unportant pteces of electromc equtpment,
makmg available for our paltents these

VOL
XXV NO 237
- - - - -- -- - · - - ,-;

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resulted when two names once

Whatever your bankmg needs, you'll find us
ready and able to serve you Passbook and
Cert1f1cate Savings, Loans ot all types, Safe
Depos1t Boxes, Check1ng Accounts, Cash1er's
~hecks. Money Orders - whatever you want
m bankmg you'll fmd 11 at our bank!

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED - Olga Lewts,
Clifton , Chnstine Branham,
Pomeroy;

WALK-UP TELLI:R WINDOW AND
AUTO TELLER WINDOW OPEN
FRI. EVENINGS5To7PM.

WHEN YOU VISIT, PARK FREE PITTSBURGH

liibens /iaHonal
TJ

Vmton,

Mark

Batley,

Truneda

Bragg,

Vmton ; Martm Cunmngham,

Racme; Marlm Rtfe, Cheshtre;
James Kmg , Mtddleport,
Edward Wtllett, New Haven;
policemen
Ruby Schultz, Langsvtlle.
It was reported that there
DISCHARGED - Thomas
lttve
been 18 known tires
Sarver, Sr , lnwell Collins,
punctured
al the bowhng
June Well , Edtlh McCoy,
center last week Raymond
Kenneth Wolfe.
Jewell asked that the vandalism be curbed
Council also
- Set March 19 as the &lt;ttme
for a spectal meelt~g to set the
Tomght, Wed , Thurs
levy for the next ftscal year,
March 19 20 21
- Agreed to a Spring CleanNOT OPEN
Up program set up by Mayor
AlJ&lt;inSOn

MEIGS THEATRE

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

entered Taylor's name In
turn, Mayor Ira Atkmson
sublllltled the name of Betty
Ltsh to ftll the vacancy and this
too came out m a 3-3 tie Votmg
for the appomtment of Mrs
Lish were Mayor Atkmson,
Reynolds and Roach They
diSSented on the malton mvolvmg Taylor
Capehart moved to employ
Rtchard Ohlinger, a former
Mason Pollee Chtef, to !til
duties of a second policeman
after cotinc1l accepted the
resignation of Kenneth Legg
Foilowmg d1scusston, copnctl
agreed to table the motion until
further mformatwn could be
gamed
Also durmg d1scusston of
pohce work, Capehart asked
for clariftcation of police dulles
and espectally whether or not
policemen should check doors
of busmess establishments and
schools.lt was tbe consensus of
council that doors should be
checked
regularly
by

N.IX0 n t en·mg
T exas h IS
• SI•de
WASHINGTON (UP!) PrestdentNtxon took hts tell-1!to-the people campatgn to
Texas today wtth expectatwns
of a toughemng of h1s
restslance lo congresstonal
Impeachment proceedmgs or
suggestwns of restgnation
The Prestdent was flymg to
Houston He wtll decorate
three Amertcan astronauts
who spent the longest time men
have been m space, mspect
preparatiOns for a JOint USSoviet
earth orbtl proJect, and
th
en answer questions from
members of the Natwnal
Assoctalton of Broadcasters m
a live televtston sesswn
Whtte House sources satd
Ntxon ts "gmng public" m
defense of posstble tmpendmg
impeaclmnent, tax evasuln and
other charges agamst htm
He flew to Chtcago last
Frtday and then to Nashvtlle,
Tenn , to pledge hts mnocence
m the Watergate scandal He
also bluntly told Europe that tl
must cooperate m economtc
and political mallets or face
possible wtthdrawal of the
Amencan mllitary and nuclear
defense umbrella.
Ntxon
1s
presenllng

~~j

m~~~~~~t:~~ ~~ ne~~a~;pe~~;

Mrs. Grace E Woodyard,
Rt 2, Albany, dted Monday
the Holzer Medteal Center
Mrs Woodyard was
daughter of the late
and Patience
Reeves She was also
m death by her husband,
four s•sters and three brc&gt;th••~
Survtvors wclude a
Seldon,
Newark,
daughters, Mrs Ruth
Athens; and Mrs, Paulir
Zetgler, Albany , two
Mrs Elza McCall, Albany
Mrs Myrta Morrtson, AUlen
etght grandchildren and
great-grandchildren
Funeral servtces will be
at 3 p m Thursday at
Ewmg Funeral Home wtth
Rev. Paul G. Wtlliams
ftctting Burtal Will be m
Wells
Cemetery
Downmgton. Frtends may
at the funeral home
any tune.

en tine

PAULCASCI, Mtddleport,left, Ohto Department Gtft for
the Yanks Who Gave Chairman, and David A Cropper,
Commander of the Leg10n m Ohto, represented the state
Amertcan LegiOn, at the mmual birthday part} of Drew
Webster Post 39, Tuesday mghl at the post home Casc11s a
member of the Pome10y post

T1pton,

Melody Wheatley, Charles
Wh1te, Grace Woodyard
(Births, March 17)
Mr and Mrs Rodney
Gtbeaut, a daughter, Racme.
(Births, March 18)
Mr. and Mrs. Alvm Hewing,
a daughter, Rodney

comnurtee to speed up mveshgatloll un .nformat10n tt now

55th birthday
•
IS celebrated

b~fore the Nallonal Assoctahon
of Broadcasters where he Will
answer questwns Thts wtll be
broadcast and televiSIOn at 8
p 111 EDT
Whtte House strategtsts satd
Ntxon wtll agam come out
strong, as he dtd m Chicago, to
WALTERS DIES
proclatm hts mnocence of any
Ronme Walters, Mi·ddlep&lt;ltl
wrongdmng m the Watergate was pronounced dead
affatr and also press Congress arrtval at 9 11 P m Mo·nd~•i:&lt;
to resolve the tmpeaclmnent when
the
Emergency Squad was calleil
ISS;:~ Prestdent IS spendmg to the home of Margaret
the mght m Houston and Cooney, North Second Ave
returmng to Washmgton body was taken to the E"•iniC
Wednesday
Funeral
Home

BY BOB HOEFI 1CH
There was "somethmg for

everybody" Tuesday mght
when the 55th btrthday of th e
Amertcan Legton was observed wtth a party at the
Drew Webster Post 39 Home m
Pomeroy
The evenmg featured a
dmner for mewber s and
guests, presentatlon of awa1 ds ,

naming of the Legwnnn1re of
v"'e Year, a speech by State
'$fommander Dav1d A Croppe1
of Portsmouth, and a spectal
segment m which post mem·
bers appeared as famous
actresses of stage, screen and

TV.
Don Hunnel, Korean veteran

who has been acllve wtth the
post's baseball progrrun and IS
a pas t corrunander , \HIS
presented the Legwnnau e of
the Year award by Russell
Moore
Recetvmg membership pms
were Rtchard Vaughan,
Kenneth Harrts, Don Whale},
Rod Karr and Edgar Van lnwagen, bronze stars for frve or

has m hand on Waterga te and
resolve th e 1ssue

mare members, Raymond
Jewell and James G1lm01 e for
10 or more , s•lve1 sta rs, Don
Hunn el, Leonard Je\\ell,
Charles Swatzel, George
Nesselroad, for 2.5 or more,
gold stars, and a spec1al 'go
getter" award for 26 members
or more went to Hunn cl,
Nesselroad and Paul CaSC1,
11ho presented the a11a rds
Case! emerged as champwn
111 the membersh1p achVIhes of
the post
Mrs Carne Neutzlmg,
Amerlcamsm chatrwoman of
U1 e auxrhary ) announced
"nme1 s of an essa y contest
11h1ch she conducted at the
Mmgs H1gh School on, 'What
Amenca Means to Me "
Jud ges we re Mrs Arnold
Richards und the Rev Btll
Per nn Wmners mtroduced
wer e D1ana Carsey, ftr.st place,
$3&gt; pme, John Lehew , second
place, $25 prize, and Ketlh
Little, th1rd place, $20 pliZe.
E1ghth Dt st rt c t
Amencam:;;m Chau mHJJ Frank
(Con linucd on page 16 1

, . . :· ,.,, .., _, ;: ;· · ,,,.,. ,. ,., , .
Jl ,ews.. in Briefs~

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\

Get on the ball wtth thi~ fin~ Jacket made of nylon- style as pictured.
S1zes 6 to 20. Moms wont stnke out on washday w1th this washable nylon
ctre z1p front Jacket - solid colors with candy stnpe knit bottom and
cuffs. 2 zip pockets and a self collar.
Mens and Boys Department, 1st Floor

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

stan

'Dragg mg on Watergate
He satd of h1s m1sswn as
drags down Amen ca,'' Nixon clnef executive that 11 would
declared
In a na\ionally tele"'""d,
hour-long question -and-answer
sesswn befo1 e a generally
fnend ly aud~ence of broadeast

ta ke com age to stand and f!gl1t
and do the JOb vou've been

elected to do
And he smd he w 1s gomg to

do JUS! thai
Ntxon scheduled a lnp to the
Amertcans nught share the nearby L} ndon B .Johnson
senliments Buckley vo1ced that Space Center today to deem ale
he res1gn and get the counlr) ilrnel lCa 's llu cc• newest Sky lab
out of the "Watergate swamp ' astronauts for theu longest
Without judgm g gu1lt or cvrr rmsswn 111 sp.H c hy mmt
mnocence, Buckle)' sa 1d, the and 1evtev. plans for a JOin t
11 e'!dent should r es1gn as ' an lJ S -Sovtd e&lt;J tlll nr!J tt mtsswn
ex traor dm ary
act
o[ next ycdt
It was the Pr es tdent 's thud
statesmanship and courage "
execut1ves Ntxon smd many

Nixon Adamant

tn p mlo the counll ) s m tdsec

TEN Cr NTS

PHONE 992 2156

'

liOn 111 five d.1ys A"les smd he
w,ts dele! mmed to go public"
m hopes of bluntmg the

nght of self-defense '
Throughout the sesswn the
crowd was generally on the

congt esswnal unpeachrnent spectre nf ' a new sense of
dtt ve and neutra ll zmg the tsol:~ llum sm ' 111 the Umted
Wutetl;ate sca ndal
SU1tes
W"lc Ranging Talk
- Sa 1d AmetJca n farmers
In the WHle t angmg sessiOn, ' never had 1t so good, and we
th e P1 estdent
want to keep 1l tillS way
Announced tlJ.l l the end of beca use the frume1s men't
llll' A1a b 011 Clnb,Hgo should gomg to produce unless they
bnug steadt ly dtuHnt sh lll g get .l. good pra:e '

lmes at the gas pulllpS l'orgel
- Spar red Wilh repo1 ters
abo ut compulsory gasolme c1bout hts relnttans with the
rat10mng Servtct• statwns wtll pt css, suymg the Prcstdent
open agm n on Su tHLl ys - should !1 eat the merlia JUSt as
stm tmf{ Uu s wcckC'nd
fau ly as the pi ess !!Cats hun
- Chtded the nmc l•:uropcan

and " the PI esadent hRs the

Prestdent's s tde

fh e\ ap

plauded some of tl1e tough
questions on Watergate They
also hand clapped rnan1 of
Nixon's rephes

Pledges Fight
111 pledgmg he would chg 1n to
f1ght fo r h1s off1re, N!Kor. " lid a
re&gt;s1gnatwn would mean that
evet y future Prestdent "ioulti
presule over a weak gov •·t nment Tite Umt ed St8 1Ps 111d
the free \~o dd fl l-'ctl .1 s\ 1 u n ~-:
Pres1dent not a Pn sHIPnt \\ l tu
W ill resign wh~ Tl C\ ( r \1 1• pul ls
are down '

Everybody in Bicentennial act;fi3D~i:~~::r~:I
County

Sibley Slaek and M1 s Jeanm e ntght Ill the medmg a t tl1c

gamzatwn s "'" b~ mv1ted to

Bowen \HIS ;;~ pp omted to lmttc: Museum 111 Po mer O) the
orgamzahons to undertake cl com mt ssw n vo lctl tu t~sk
sUitable p1 OJeCl lo mal k the D11 1gllt Mutchler of lllhens to
2001h birlhd,!y of the nat1 on do ._1 ( mnrnemm attH clt .m mg
I'hc commJsswn m.Jy awc1rd or p,untmg m ('OilJUnr twn \\ Ill!
ce1tJftcates to g ro up ~ n l11 rh Llle b1 &lt;. cnt~.:m t l t~l
P.~uhnc
compl ete a prOJecl Ut hu Atkms .llld (' n l r)! Til SOn Wt ll
persons Will be added to tlw t,l]k tO tlt t' I , I IO IId il }
comm1ttee dS th e work Iet ogntzt'LI a1 tt st '"' ''IJ 1, .J
progt esses
JW live of Ru tland
A cmmmttee was olso ap
l'he ('OllHlllSSIOrl dJ SlU ':iSed
pomted to mve stJ g:1 te til e st ttm g up f• s pet~k '
h1 ue.w
poss1ble restoratwn of th e of metnbr.Js '' tw v 11il (l ,~.; o h1
Chestc1 courthouse and other orga niZdl wn s to ht 11J
academy " 1lh the mm kmg of thrm dectde what adwn
'11
the lustm lca l s1te se t for Jul ) 4 be tak en to cl S~t st In Ui'
this vear The Metgs r.uurt serV,In( e
house IS the nldest m the stat&lt;•
(ontnbutwns fo1 opr·r 1r tl1g
M1ke Gerlach 1s chan mau of the &lt;.Onlllll SSIOil !C CC I V ~(] Ill
that ~.:on uml h.! l\ and Leo Stm y dulle $1 5 ft orn the !{,Jun e
wil l asSist hun Others will h&lt;• !\mc1Jcdn Legwn Post $20

All
OJ

Me1gs

' do theu !lung ' for the Me1gs
Cou nt) B1-Cente nn ~al Ob
serv:mre the co unty b1
centenr1Jal comrntsston drctded

Tuesday mgh t
1\ committee composed of C
~: Blakeslee, &lt;ltatrman, and
MIS Eli za beth Htlfe rty, Mrs

SEOEI\'IS' &lt;·ase
given commission
The Me1gs Count} Com
mJssJonei s, rneetmg 1 uesday
morn lrl g Ill theu offi ce,
rece ived two representatives

of the So uth easte rn Uhw
Emergem;y Medtcal Se t v r ~.:es
lSEOEMS )
D Kenneth Morga n and H1c
libel explamed the medical
serv ice's budget for the nex t

named later
In a th1rd actton Ut ken l.1 sl

fisca l year
In other ac tion on an

ab~

brev1ated agenda, Bob McDonald of Ohto UmverSlty
discussed county records for
h1stonca l purposes He sa1d
rec01 ds
of
htston ca l
s1gm£tcancc wtll he domJted to

f1(JITI the f eeney-B enrH tl
A1111 rJ (;cl n L cgwn Post 111
'

Fines paid by

•
SIX

S1x defendanl&lt; were fmed Rutland " total of $175 &lt;1ncl
and a se\oenth wo~ s assessed cos ts on c h&lt;~r ~es of rc s1stm g
cos ts on ly hy Mtd rll eport f1rrest, d1sordf'l lv man ner .J JU!
Mayot John Zcr kle J ut:sd ~ v assault up0n ~ [)Oitce uffJl:CT,

the IJmverSl ty ~ttcndmg were mght
· Walter E Ch.mey 18. Sh.&gt;dr
CommisSioners Hobei t Clark,
Denc1l Ca rney , 54 Mmn oe and Drnms W Talley 22
Henry Well s and Warden M1ch , 11as f111ed $150 and costs Alb,my, both $5 and 'usts

By United hess mternatlonal
WASHINGTON - DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA police sa1d
Tuesday an unknown number of h1gh school bands across the
United States mcludmg some from Oh10, have been mVIted to
Washmgton m an apparent elaborate hoax for a non-&lt;!x1stent
event m May sponsored by a group tha~ doesn't extst Sgt
Wilham F McGill of the Metropolitan Police Deparltnent sa 1d
lllVilaltons and brochures contatnmg lists and places of events
and mstructwns "e' e sent lo schools for an event called '"111e
President's All-Arnertcan Fes!tval of Champions"
McGill sa1d the bands were mvtted here by a group called the
"Umted States Parade Assocmt10n ' He added, ' Some bands
may be gear mg Up for a trip nere for a non-&lt;!Xistent event
sponsored by a group of which there 1s no reco1 d we can ftnd, "
Satd McGill

STYLE 2912

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 20, 1974

•

HOUS I'ON (UPI) - DeclarIng that he w11l 'stand and
fight" to preserve the office,
President Ntxon Tuesday mght
brushed as1de a plea that he
re s1gn from a previOusly
staunch Republican ally, Sen
J&lt;~mes L Buckle} of New
York
Ntxon also refused agam to
rehnqu•sh 42 tapes the House
Jud•cwr} Commtttee deems
vtlal to 1ts Impeac hment
mquu y Rut he Ul ged the

II

BOYS'
BASEBALL JACKET

Holzer Medical Center
(Discharges Mareh 18)
Shelly Allen, Larry Arthur,
Rachel Clark, Betty Cooper,
Lester Gtbbs, Randall Hawks,
Mary Helton, Elwood Howard •
James Howard, Barbara
Jones, Ralph Leach, Suzanne
Lewts, Kimball Mapes, VIVIan
Maxey, Ethel McFadden,
Sarah McGowen, Cora McManms, Brenda Meade, Anna
Metzler, James Nelson, Carol
Pierce, Ada Poulton, Todd
Prtce, Jeanette Ramson
•
Cltrlslopher Rtltenhouse, DIXte
Roush , Brenda jahsbury,
Donald Thomas, Mrs Delden
Storms and daughter, Donald
Morr1s

•

zxon wz

EIb f Id I p
er e s n 0meroy

- Employ Glen Bonecutter
as dtspatcher for the town wtth
the fire department and
emergency squad sharmg the
cost
- Patd town btlls m the
amount of $647 70 wtlh a
balance of $1,274 44 and water
btlls m the amount of $811 12
wtth a balance of $3,959 66
After a power btll was patd for
hbrary of $8 64 the balance m
Revenue Sharing funds Is
$9,462 50

Thomas,

to Apollo astronauts Joseph T
Carr, Wllham Pogue and Dr
Edward Gtbson for thetr
marathon voyage m space
He IS VISiting the Lyndon ll
Johnson Space Center where
U S astronauts and Sovlel
cosmonauts wtll tram for a
jmnt mtsston m 1975
Three Amertcans wtll fly a
spacecraftto link m earth or btl
with a two-man Russian shtp
They w•ll work together on
space rescue techniques
Th e p restden 1 ts addressmg
employes of the NatiOnal
A
d
1

POMEROY MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

•

&lt;d~t!st~m~g~u~•s:he:d,.:se:rv;:•c~e:_:m~e=d~a~Js~---..;--------~a:rr:a~n~g:e:m:e:n~ts~a:r:e~be:m:g~=:i

':l •

..

more were submttted
Counctl voted 3-3 when
Capehart, for a second time,

,,

IJel!oled 1'o Tlw lnlt•t·esb Of The Meigs-Muson Area

Filling council seat,
police issue delayed

Convenient one-slop
full-service banking

o b serv~mce 1 uesdi..i)' ntght

at y

·~ :WS: : &lt;~r!'&lt;:..:~ ;£~:=: &gt;.~ro:!~ ~ l ldl lr~ ~ ~.l l~os: &gt;.: ~:s~ts;l l: :&gt;.,;~o ~o~l l~ ~ ~ ro:l~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~'"'tl l~l lo ro:l~ :a~·~ ~ m~·~ ;cht&lt;l ol !n~s!8al !nl !d!8v!8ai !:8U:1~b!8lei i 1PI I'~ ~'

MAlsON - Much of Mason
Town Counctl diScusston
Monday evemng was on ftlling
a counc1l seat and employmg
another policeman, bul action
was tabled
The vacancy on counctl was
created by the restgnallon of
George Ray VanMatre
Mollons to seat Fred Taylor
and Jtm Lavender m earlier
meetmgs met wtth defeat.
Then m other attempts last
mght to ftil the seat on the ftve'
member counctl 3-3 ties

surv tvm s of the Bataan Death March were on the spe.1k ~1 s
platfm rn Harns, a muswtan, was credated w1th ket&gt; pmv thP
mm ale of Amertcan pri SOners up durmg theu mam months
of confmelllent m the home tsla nds

Commandc1 Gem gc Nesselroad at the annu~1l bn thdci}

It lakes less than an hour for the

be m excess o f l

The bunk for
all rebsons ...

II I .I I I Ul !11UNEY Wil&gt; ~I esemt'&lt;l Lh e post by Mrs
Grace P1 at! aux1harv prcs1dent, to Drew Webe,ter Post

DON RUNNEL, left, accepted the Legwnna tre of the
Yea1 trophy from Russell W Moore at Tuesday mght's b~rth
day observance by Drew Webster Post 39

••
'

EEGand ECG

Class action suit
WS ANGELES (UPI) - A
$125 millton damage sutt has

before.
Tire pl'OJCCtiOnS assumed an
end to the Arab ml boycutt and
a belief that monetary policy
Will become more expan-

H1gh School aud itoriUm

sluggtslmess would be about
hall that experienced m the
very mild recessiOn of 1969-70,"
the groups srud
In contrast to the 1973growth
rate of 5 2 per cent, they satd
the GNP ts expected to declme
by SIX tenths of I per cent and
one tenth of I per cent
respecllvely m the frrst and
secund quarters and then nse
by SIX tenths of I per cent and
nme tenths of I per cent m the
thtrd and fourth quarters That
would mean an overall riSe for
the year of six tenths of I per
"These estunates unply that

"Greater pr1ce level Increases are expected m each
quarter," the survey sa1d, "but
the prevalent vtew IS sttll that
mflat10n will be somewhat
lower after mtdyear than

Last concert is new member bonus

and then riSe m the secund half reSidents of the area and to
for a small overall gam for the others who hm e not been
year
members of th e concert
The survey

cen t," the report sa1d
The economtsts expected the
rate of tnflalion to mcrease by 7
per cent this year whereas
three months ago they antiCipated a me of 5 9 per cent

Ours

and se ntenced to three days m
jail on conv1ctton of dJ JVmg
whtle mtoxtcated, Not man
LOCAL TEMPS
Evans, 36, J ong Bottom drew
The temperature m down- an Identical sentence and was
town Pomeroy tins mo1 nmg at fmed $10 and costs for not
II a m "'" 45 degrees unde•· havmg an operator's li cense
sunny sk1es
Harold (Samrn} 1 L1tlle ~7

fa tltng to yie ld the rt ght uf
way, VtrgHJid Ward 50, Wes l
Columbta ~ 10 and costs , no
operator's li ce nse and assessed
costs only \'loBS Enunett W

Ellis, 62, Chflon, for pe1 m1tlin g
dnunhcen.sed dn\er to uper ate

a motor vehicle

Gt' l aid

Powell

publ1&lt;.:

Middl opm t .111d $211 f1 om Ill(' re la twn s chaunum of the

Pmnt11 o) Nd ll onal B:lllk 1\
letter wus r ~~.ul fi VIII Prcccplot

commtsswn, wi ll cont:.1 ct news·
panersmtefet ence to, \\Cckly
Bo la Jleta ( h o~ p i i'r nf B• 1.1 ( ul umn fJCilammg to1 bJ cen
Stgma Pht Sorrut tv 111 lcnma l rna terra l The m tJcle
1 t:feJ ence to .t ( Jr:mup c cml ~
\\OUid appea r lLJdei d spec ta l
pdl~ll 111 Pomeroy
ft n , JS lle&lt;J&lt;hng ,llld ti tle
agr r ed to \\1 tiP .1 leltPr to
1\ set uf bJ· I,,ws for the
Pomcrov Vtllclgc toUil t: !l 111 commiSSIOn wt~ s appl oved Its
-:uppo1 t of thl' ( dJI)p.u gn
purpose wos estahhshPd to
f~ .n l c Pnce \\.J S n.Jmed H
' deve lop and coor dn1&lt;1te the
m·w !epreseut rJt tve on th e ubserv a11ce of lhe 200th bu th{ IJtnllliS SJOn rr I)Jn I elwnon
I wp M1s Eliz.1beth Hillrrly cia) of the notwn 1n Me1gs
COIUi t) '
)J l esente(] tl1re~ s~1mple s of
Kettlt 1-\sl!le\, as lustort an
\•tterhe.1 d ~ designed by lle1
wll! keep 1 scr.1pbuok uf news·
111\Sb;HJd f0 1 tllf.~ ( mn!OJ SSHJFI
On• \\d S selec ted ,md the rwpcr rllp ptn ~ s per t.urnng to
the obseJ van ce 111 r1 permanent
leti(•J hf·~H! wll l br. pr mted ft ee
by Vernon w~ IJcr ' ( O! lllni ~S I I)I t ~· pe book \\hu~ h ta n be
mem bt 1
It v. as report ed tlldl the
Me1gs Co untv

Pwner. r

d!UI

Ht sto tJcdl Soci ety h.J'i 1gtecd

to p,Iy the cost or a post offllr
box for the comm rssJOII m
PomeJoj Ihe comm1ss ton 1s
hoping to get Hox ' 1776

pr csc r v ~d

is accepted

g roup

The restgnat10n of Mrs June

Epple a, tl1e clerk of !he bo,!fd

aed out on a
U Jlllll lUII ty
lJI t O\HtShlp, Or
.:.ow1t} IPve l I he next meetmg
f

uuld hr

The

! dri

was

ac~.:epted

by the Eastern

Local School D•slllct bourcl of
In v spe( 1.11 ~(·ssHm
•es set fm Ap11l 30 Mrs Tuesday mght
Mrs Epple, who hart been
hnntfeJ Shetc ls f hdtrm an ,
employed as clerk on a trw!
pn•s1d ed
educat1on

basts, was to lwve stc1rt u l or1

Lustudy for questwrung and
wc1e .u res ted e.1 rly tori 13 hy both }Ottths have confessed ,
Pumc1 ny Pollet' followtng '-' Clucf Webster smd l'he ch1ef
hrcakmg ,md ente11ng al the w,1.., c.llh:d to the scene shor tl y
::~fte r tile mctden t
Wlu t e hou ~e C;.J(e I' Ma111 St
1 he yquths gamed enh i;ti\Ce
t e~.:: rrd gl

Resignation

tll sc ussed S{'V Nd l proJects that

Teenagers confess B&amp;E
l\\ lJ JO( al

trying to mee t cn11gn•• ron,Jl
derndnds fur pl CSJdt&gt;ntJ .d fll u ;
' but I must thmk not of mJ ~elf
but of futute Presidents
'I m not gomg to do illl J t111ng
and I'm not gmng to g JH &gt; IJ P to
any demands thdt I belJt' 1e w1ll
\\Cdken the PresJdenc) I \\Ill
not partJclp.1 te tn
th e
destr uctwn of the F1es tdt'IIC)
of the United States v. ln lc [ .ml
m offt ce "
(Con linued on pa.~e 1G i

\ &lt;J ut ll s

Po he e l'h1ef Jed Wcb,ter to the ca fe by p1ckmg the lock
sa td th e ent1)
o c u1r ~ on tile h on! door They stole
red at 3 10 am
an d $45 36m cash and $16 10 worth
that b} 3 26 one suspect of alcoholic beverages Both
had been appl ehemled !I hr~ vc been ..wrned over to
seconrl. suspe&lt;t \HIS tdken mto )uvemle autbor1trcs

he1 JOb on Ap1111, workmg w1lh
long.tune clerk Cr es t on
Ne\\ land un ti l ht s restgncltJO n
became effective un Jul} 1 ,
However after Mrs Eppl e s
res1gna t~on Tuesdav nt ght ut
the lllSistence of the b ur~ rd,
New land agre ed to remi-ltn m
the de1k's post another \ eaJ
The board also went on
record as opp osmg proposed
changes m how Ohw 11gh
school athlellcs are controlled,
a bill now under constdera tton
by the legislature

Sunday gasoline in, rationing out says Nixon
" It wtll not be necessary for
Uruted Prel;s International
us
to ha ve compulsory rattOnMotonsts w11J be able to buy
mg
m the Umted States,"
more gasolme- but probably
Ntxon
satd over nattonwtde
at htgher prices- and on
Sundayo from now on And teleVISIOn "And effecttve this
PreSident N1xon said he hopes Sunday, I have rescmded the
those hnes at the gas pump wtll order whtch closes all serv1ce
get shorter and eventually go sta ltons " That order was
made last December
away
Shortage Not Over
The threat of compuslory
But,
he warned, "The short·
gasoline rallomng that had
age
ts
not over yet It w1ll be
hung o&gt;er the natiOn
throughout
wmter was necessary to continue our
removed by the President's voluntary program of car·
announcement to the Nalwnai poolmg and slower drlVlng '
Pressure wtll stay on oil
Assoctatwn of Broadcasters m
Houston Tuesday that 11 1s no pnces, NIXon satd, because
"Arab otl custs ahout tw1ce as
longer necessary
much
as the otl we produce m
The good news, cumpbments
the
Umted
States "
of Arab natwns wh1ch bfted the
He srud energy chtef W1lham
oil embargo, came af!er word
Snnools
~ ·mcreasm g alloca
from the Amencan Autnmoblle
ttons
to
mdustry
and agr!culA.~socwtton that so much more
lure
so
the)
can
have the
gasohne was becommg avallable that service stalimts were necessary ene rgy to operate at
alre'ady exlendmg therr hours full capactt}

NEW YORK - WILLIAM CASEY, who was urged to drop a
major mvesttgation of a top NIXon re-&lt;!lectton campatgn donor
when he was eharrman of the Secunties and Exchange Commtsston, 1s expected to tell his story today at the Mttchell..Stans
conspiracy tr1al
Casey, no\\ chamnan of the Import-Export Bank, was the
subject of testunony Tuesday m the trtal of former N1xon Cabmet
officers John N Mitchell and Maunce H Stans
Leonard W Hall, 73, one or Tuesday's f1ve government
Witnesses, descrtbed attempts by Vesco, now a fugtttve from U
S juslice, to ge1 Casey to call off the SEC mvestigatton of Vesco's
curporate mampulahons Hall served as congressman for 14
years and charrman of the Republican Nallonal Commtttee
durmg the Eisenhower period
BEIRUT -- LIBYA PLEDGED 'I'ODA Y to mamtam the otl
boycott wulaterally until the Umted States proves 1t IS "neutral"
m the Middle East confltcl.
Ahtgh Libyan off1c1al w11l Vlstt the Umted States, the Sovtet
Union and Brtlam wtthm days to "explore the real sttuatton and
defme WhO IS the frtend and who IS the enemr," a commentary
broadcast by the ofhctal Libyan radio satd
The radio satd Ltbya Will matntam the embar~o 'unt1l
Washtngton proves by acts and not words that 1t ts no longer
(Contmued on page 16 )

•

L

Ntxon said tl was essenttal
thai Congress act on energy

In Was hm gton, Paul E

proposals, mcludmg one to

Pierce, a spok c ~man fm the
natton's truck stops, cntlctzed

deregulate prices on natural

federal handbng of the energy

gas to mcrease produdwn,

cnsts as a flop, and satd he

opposes creatwn of a fcder.il
energy sources on governmen t energy superagency
Pierce, governmental affmrs
property and relax en director
of the Nat1onal A.&lt;vironmental
restn ctw n ~.
socl~
hon
of Truck Stop Opera·
par\tcularly on coal
"We have 63 per cent of the tors, pamted a bleak picture of
coal m the wor ld ," he satd, federal bungling and fo otdr aggmg before a House
"and we shoUld be usmg 1! "
mvesttgating
The sprmgtJme energy news subcommtttee
the energy SituatiOn
was not all good, however
He satd he spent 40 days- •
Tourism Hurt
Texas lounst mdustry off•- from Feb 6 to March 18ctals blamed the cut m spen gettmg the Federal Energy
dable mcome and the gas pmch Ofl1ce to 1ssue an understandafor a cut of one per cent m ble statement glVlng truck
VISitors and two per cent m stops all the fu el they need He
dollar spendm g last year said no one:..-o perators, drivers
compared w1th 1972 F1gures or the otl mdu slry- coul d
show that 22,741 000 vtsltors unu'e1 stand 1\ hit the FEO
spent $2.145,977,000 m Texas nraers meant
I &gt;annol expect the g.l\ ern
last yenr
allow more expl01 alton f01

T

ment, \\ihlch cannot even

dchve1 the mail, to be able to
properly dtstrtbute or allocate
the energy needs better than
Exxon, Gulf, 'lexaco , Mobil,
Skell y, Umon 76 and the rest,"
sa1d Pie1ce
AgenC) Proposed
New York Assembly Speaker
Perry B Duryea sa td Tuesday
that he w1ll mtroduce JeglSlallon to create a State Office of
Energy and Resources as a
' long-haul " solutwn to the
proble'n
Duryea sa1d the proposal,
which would cost taxpayers
about $800,000 durmg 1ts nuttal
year, would deal prunartly
wtth the long-range aspects of
shortages, not only m energy,
but wtth other pote ntially
mltcal shortages of fe•llltzer,
coal, chlor me, fore st products,
ba'JXJte a."'ld other nuncrnls
ScJCntJftc 1 esearcher)5 \\ md

up the first mternatwnal
conference oq salisf) mg the
l'orld's energ} criSIS wtth
ordmary water today m Mumu
Beach
The most optuntsllc estunate
was th at tl would take until the
year 2000 before selected areas
of the United States started
cunvertmg to the fuel of the
future, and some scwnhsts
foresaw a more dtstant dawn
for energy generated from the
oceans and lakes of the world
More than 700 delegate~ f1 om
20 countries gathered hdre for
the conference, wtuch was
organ1zed and hosted bv the
Umverstty of Miam1
The three-day confer ence
was devoted to the theory that
hydrogen, extracted from ordinary water,1s the ultunate fuel
whtch promises mankmd an
abundance of energy wtlh
to11 e1 levels of pollutwn

'

'•

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