<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="10003" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/10003?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-21T00:06:28+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="20443">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/e13267f8d9acf367e461feaed229af2d.pdf</src>
      <authentication>b4727cce50fb264f7ea1ecea3427b0aa</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="31987">
                  <text>'

.

.

•

16- The Daily Sentinel, Middleoort~Pomerov . 0 .

M~lrt•l 1

?n

107.1

Money is missing
PT.

PLEASANT -. Tuesd&lt;J y

ni ght's
lnng
Hoard
of
Ed ucH ti ort mfcting w:rs
de signed specifica ll y for
digcussion uf the ensuing risc:r l
year's budget but apparentJy

princip&lt;~ l

.stephens brought to li ght
· from his own notes that $5,000

had been taken in $100 and $50

bills ancl tlra t Easter Sea]
tnoncy0f$:l5wcrsin sma ll coins
lhp board received H jolt when as was other money in smaller
it \em ned money of a loca l t:urrency .
·
Pl~rns
·
Hoaf(l 1l1cmbe rs ~iders,
SC'lluo1 was m1·ssmg.
were made to pursut' the ltrady and Adkins den ied

MRS. CARRIE NEUTZLING, left, presented cash prizes to the winners of the
Americanism essay contest held at Me igs High School by the auxiliary or Drew Webster Post
39, American Legion, at the birthday party Tuesday night. They are, t to r, Diana Carsey, first;
John Lehew, second, and Keith Little, third. Miss Carsey is the daughter of Mr . and Mrs. Jack
Carsey, Mtddleport; Lehew is the son of Mr. and Mrs. William Lehew, Pomeroy, and Little is
tl1e son of Mr. and Mrs. Willium Litt le, Hobson.

Birthday
I Con llnued

from page I l

Vaughan announced winners or
the annua] Arnrriean government test -esSC:Jy contest conducted at Meigs High School by

the Pomeroy post, tl1e feeney·
Bennett Post at Middleport and
Ute Rutland Post. Winners
were Ezra Kiser and Ingrid

Hawl ey, seniors; Richard
Couch, Judy Owe11, j:.miors,

and Dale Browning and June
Wamsley , freshmen. Miss
Owen has also been declared a
district winner in the annual
competition.
Ohio Departm ent Commander Cropper in his talk
paid high tribute to the post
and the auxiliary for their work
in the Gifts for the Yanks Who
Gave Program which is headed
statewide and in the district by
Paul Casci of Middleport. "The
hospitalized veteran deserves
const ant efforL B. nd love,"
Conunander Cropper said.
The state commander said
the American Legion

olways

h:~ s

been opposed

to

Veterans Memorial Uospitu l

Commun ism which, he said,

has a different · plan for
Amer ica than do Legionnaires.
He stated that the Legion is
striving for a lasting peace

througll its varied programs.
'·Our cnmr~u!Ps haV(~ given

the gift of life and they expected us, the lil'ing, to bring
about a better world," he said.
''You have an obligation ."

'The work of Legion members

from the local through the
national level is what makes
growing thing,~' Conunander
Cropper stated.
He spoke of the tack of
confidence that people have
experienced in Washington but
stressed that through work ing
to gether, loving God and
country , and eac h other,

Amf'ricans c.rm continue to
make America the grealP.s!

land in the world.

Charles Swatzel, finan ce
officer. ou tl ining th e life
membership program of the
post, said all World War I
veterans

have

now

been

War IJ veteran, a survivor of

was injw-ed.

MEIGS THEATRE
Tonigh1 &amp; Thur sday
Mar-ch 20-2 1
NOT OPEN

'ews •

7\.
1 ~~

• •

$1,500 was disclosed last night
by Albert Step heus, prim:ipul
ofCentruiSdwol,whorcportcd
on insur&lt;-tnte nwm~ y at Central
Elementary School.
The pr incipal um:ovcrcd to

Keefer, and Barbara Rood.
In further action the board;

s tolen from the s&lt;'hool.
However, The Register on
April II , 1973 reported that city
police we re inves tiga ting a

accepti ng

breaking uod enteri ng tha t
netted the thief or thieves
$1,500. Milton Burdette was

mendation of Supt. Charles
Wi thers .
Sup ervisors and ad-

rerum-

might ignore it.

alternate werP anno un ced

Tuesday night at the bir thday
observance of the Pos t by Mrs.

He was asked how he thought
the commi ttee could meet its
res ponsib ili ties
'Jn
im peachment when denied
documents nnd evidence it
fee ls necessary for a th oroug h
i11 vcstigatjon. He rea ffirm ed
his stan d on Presiden ti al

con fid entia lity and said :

"The House of Represen·
tatives, just like the President,
is bound by the Constitution.

' 'I

&lt;llll

s ugg~ s ting

that the

House fol low tile Cons titutiOn,"
lie satd. " If they do, I Wl ll."
Was Mistaken
Nixon conceded he was

mistaken abo ut his apparently

conflicting sta tments March 6
before reporters in Washington
and last Fr iday in Chicago
before busirress executives,

about how he lear ned of
payments being made to the
seven

origi nal

Watergate

conspirators.
"My statem!:At on March 6
was incorrect i~fa r 3s I sa id I
learned payments had been
made for bla ckmail, that

payments had been made for
the purpose of keepin g
defendants still . I should have
said I learned that payments
were alleged to have been
made."

Ben Neutzling, Americanism
chairwoman.
Miss Greene, whose father

in Briefs

not insured.

The following is taken from a talk by Robert Morris, principal of the Pomeroy Elementary, Middleport Elementary and
Bradbury Schools at the meeting of the Middleport Elementary
P.T .A. meeting Monday, March 18. His remarks were titled , "A
Progress Report on the Schools," and subtitled, "The Positive
View. "
! am one person tired of hearing the negative remarks
concerning schools, teachers, students and edu cation in
general! Recognizing that we are the largest single enterprise in
the community, with the largest payroll and largest number of
participants , [ must recognize that we are in the public eye and
CQme under their scrutiny and watchful eye more than other
operations.
Thur, I am compelled to try in my own meager way to point
out the positive aspects of our schools . First let us look at schools
in a general way:
(A) FOOTBALL FIELD - Some phases of the media have
left the impression that irnnnediately, we will abandon one of the

fine': fit·fdo 111 ooutht'aslrrn Ohio . H o~ Wosh! Perhaps over tho

next five to 10 years we can develop the athletic complex at lhe
Mci~s llig:, School. tWhy c,-for :hr simple rr""on it is foolish to
transport student• all over Meigs Local to participate in the
spurts programs and practice after school, when (again, I
emphasise, in time) the play can take place at the high school
complex.
tBl SCHOOL LUNCH- We have bee~ under criticism over
printing th e menu in the papers and mailing or sending the
menus home. Menus are printed and posted in the buildings;
otherwise we would print 3000 menus. To save tax monies for
paper we deemed this foolish. The lunch provided for 35 cents
would be impossible to provide at home at today's pri~es. Instead of criticism, I would like to.point out (positively) we owe
our fine cooks a vote of confidence and gratitude for their fine
work and u!ilizationof goverrunent surplus. The inspectors were
pleased with our programs when they visited us just a few weeks
ago.

- Declared the old Hartford
School surpluu property since

•

•

it is unsuitable fo r futW"e ex·
code.
- Will ask the Prosecuting
Attorney to make a deed to the
city of Hartford concerning the
three parcels of land contingent on stipulations made in

OUTSTANDING VALUE
ONEIDA' CUSTOM STAINLESS

previous board minutes, on the
s uperintend e nt' s recommendation.

55-Piece
Service for 8

SARAH GREENE

Triplett family
is needing help
RACINE -

The Raci ne

Firemen's Auxiliary is making
a plea to a ll persons to donate

Receipts down

'

VOL XXV -..NO. 238

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

THURSDAY, MARCH 21, 1974

•

Al l ,th e pieces yo1..'ll eve r
need a t a sav ings . Avaikab le

WASHINGTON (UP[) Pushed by higber food prices,
the cost of living jumped 1.3 per
cent in February, its largest
increase in six monthsr the
Bureau of Labor Statistics said
today.
The BLS said almost half the
increase was caused by skyrocketing food prices, and
higher prices for gasoline and

in palterns Pianta ti on
and Sa nd Dune

OONEIDA

L

Today Is the llnal date to
purchase tickets for the
Meigs High School Winter
Sports Banquet. No tickets
wlll be sold at the door.
Tickets at $3 each may be
purchased at the New York
Clothing House and Swisher
and Lohse Pharmacy In
Pomeroy and at the VIllage
Pharmacy and Tbe Western
Auto Sto(e In Middleport.
The banquet will be March 28
at 6: :JO p. m. In the Meigs
High School Cafeteria.

.,

.........

HURRY! Quantities Limited

Housewares Department, 1st Floor

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

wears an 18-% dress , size 40 slip

EBER GILLILAN ILL
'111e Pomeroy E·R squad was
Lorettu wears an 18 dress or called to Chester at 9:55 a.m.
skirt, 38 or 40 slips and blouses Wednesday ior Eber Gillilan
and size 5 shoes.
who was ill. He was taken to
Anyone wishing to help the Veterans Memorial Hospital.
family may call 949-3471, 9493235, or 949-3293.

morse!Electrophonic

STEREO BAR

GLAZE IS ILL
The Pomeroy Emergency
Squad answered a call at 11 :56
p.m. Tue~day to 117 Peacock
Ave., for Dennis Glaze, 18, who

was taken to the Holzer ·
Medical Center is a medical
patient.

Marriage Llenses
Samuel Edison Scott, 23, MAR I NA
McAr thur, and Bonnie Gene
Puckett, 21, Langsville; David
Ira Wellman, 27, Athens, and ·
Dolly Jo Deer, 23, Athens.
COUSIN DIES
RUTLAND - Mrs. Harrisor.
Bentley learned today of the
death of her cousin, Mr. Montgomery , in Colwnbus.

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

GEO. HALL
TONIGHT 10 Tt·L 2

The Rev. Father Jolin Nadzam has begun his duties as
new pastor of the Sacred Heart Church. A constant companion of the nel\ Pomeroy priest is his German shorthaired
pointer, Jay.

A per fect Keepsake diamo nd
backed by our wril1e n guarant ee
of perfec t Cjualil y, fi ne white color

and correct modern cut. Come in
tuda )' to see our f'xd tiug eu!l~:: l'lio n

of Kt!e psa ke Diamond Rings.

Mediterranean style stereo bar with sound-response
psychedelic lighting effects - Spanish Oak Finish - Multicolor psychedelic lights that "play" to the beat of the
music - deluxe BSR record changer with diamond stylus 100 watts (I PP) stereo headphone jack - 8-speaker
"duocone" audio system- stereo-phono plus AM-FM-FM
Stereo radio and built-in S-track tape player.
SEE IT TODAY AT

INGELS FURNITURE
PH. 992-2635

OPEN FRI. &amp; SAT. NIGHTS

community needs to express its appreciation to those dedicated
people who have sacrificed murand denied themselves
(Contin11ed ~age 2)

Father 1Vadzam
at Sacred Heart
By Bob Hoeflich
The Rev . Father John
Nadzam has begun his duties
as new pastor of Pomeroy's
Sacred Heart Church.
Coming here from the St.
Adalbert Church at Dillonvale
where he has sper.t the past
nine and one-half years, the
Rev. Father Nadzam replaces
the Rev. Father Bernard
Krajcovic; who was moved to
Dillonvale.
Born and reared in the Pittsburgh area, the new priest at
the Sacred Heart Church,
graduated from Duquesn e
University in 1939. He -enlisted
in the United States Army and
was trained as a pilot with
armored operations. The Rev.
Father Nadzam spent about
four years in the European
Theater.
Following World War II, he
returned to the Pittsburgh area
where he worked a year before
entering St. Francis Seminary
at Loretto, Pa . He was ordained in 1950 by Bishop John
King Mussio.
The Rev. Father Nadzam,
following ordination, taught for
a year at Catholic Central High

upl.3%

other energy sources ac· and rent, rose .7 per cent in
counted for about 20 per cent of Feburary and medical care
the increase.
costs increased even more
The impact on the American sharply.
The BLS said the spendable
consumer was aggravated, the
BLS said, by a decline In the earnings of American workers
real gross of weekly earnings · declined .6 per cent from
of workers.
January, ahnost entirely beThe index for food rose 3 per cause of the increase in the cost
cent, well above normal for of living .
January, with higher beef
Over the year, average
prices acounting for about one- weekly earnings were down 3.9
per cent. The rise of 6.6 per
third of the total food hike .
The increase in the Con· cent in average hourly wages
· sumer Price Index was the was more than offset by a 10
largest since August, 1973, per cent hike in consumer
when the cost of liv'ing rose 1.6 prices and a .8 per cent decline
per cent. January 's Increase in avenige weekly hours.
was just under I per cent.
Among the few items
The BLS said the price in- cheaper last month were new
crease in gasoline and motor cars, used cars, and poultryoil was not as large as January, which normally goes up in
when a 6 per cent rise was February.
reported.
Fresh vegetable prices inThe index for fuel oil and coal creased sharply last month
rose 3.8 per cent- the smallest instead of declining as they
boost in live months. But that normally do, tbe BLS said.
Over the past year, the BLS
was an Incredible 58 per cent
above Feburary, 1973.
said, real spendable earnings
The index for household were down 4.5 per cent because
services, including charges for of a 3.9 per cent decline in the
gas, electricity, housekeeping

LONDON (UP! ) - The
crime would have been without
parallel in modern times: The
kidnaping of Princess Anne,
daughter of Queen Elizabeth,
and the holding of an entire
nation to ransom. It failed,
School in S!Rubenville before partly by coincidence.
becoming pastor at St.
Police charged Ian Ball, 26,
Patrick's Church in Buchtel. described as unemployed and ·
He next became principal of St.
Joseph High School at Ironton,
LONDON (UP!) - The
a post he held for two years,
man accused of attempting
and then returned to Central
to kidnap Princess Anne was
High for two more years of
held wl\houl ball today In a
teaching.
brief hearing In which pollee
Then came seven and a half revealed he had a large sum
years as pastor of the St.
of money In a bank account
Joseph Church in fairpoint, and may have had the help of
Ohio, and his nine and a h• "
associates.
years a t Dillonvale . At
Dillonvale, the Rev. father of no fixed address, with atNadzam only recently com- tempted murder today after he
ple!Rd a costly remodeling of ambushed the limousine carrythe church. A school is also ing the Princess and her
opera ted there.
husband Capt. Mark Phillips
The Rev. Father Nadzam's near Buckingham Palace
father, George Nadzam resides Wednesday night and shot four
with a daugh!Rr and son-in-law, people before he was captured.
Mr. and Mrs. William Lenkner.
He will appear at Bow Street
The new priest also has a Magistrate's Court today ,
brother, Michael. All live in the charged with the attempted
Pittsburgh area.
murder of Princess Anne's
An avid hunting and fishing bodyguard who was shot three
enthusiast, the Rev . Father times. The would-be kidnaper,
Nadzam is looking forward to a lone non-political operator
the "openess" of Meigs County according to Scotland Yard,
with his fa vorite companion, a
three and a half year old dog, a
German shorthaired pointer.

·

fired six shots into the
limousine .
Neither the Princess nor her
husband was hit in the
macabre scene in which they
scrambled for their lives on the
back seat of the Princess'
maroon Daimler automobile
while the frantic gunman
alternat~ly tried to get a shot
home and shook the car in his
frenzy to force the doors open.
Since he had in his pocket a
ransom note to the Queen about
her daughter, it was asswned
the buUets in the car were
intended to kill only Capt.
Phillips as an obstacle to
escaping with the 23-year-&lt;Jld
princess, who is fourth in
succession to the throne.
Realizing he had failed as
police reinforcements came
up, the gunman raced into the
dark of nearby St. James'
Park, pursued by police constable Peter Edwards, 21, who
brought him down with a flying
tackle. The coincidence that
helped in his capture was the
presence of more police than
usual in the area for that hour
when the queen is not In
residence at nearby Buckingham palace.
Within hours the act had
changed, perhaps for all time,

the British attitude to protecting royalty and other celebrities. Orders went out to step

Disabled Association, one of
her charities. She appears in
the fihn.
The Princess wore a dark
blue velvet dress setting off her
blonde hair. Her husband wore
a dark lounge suit. And with
them was lady-in-waiting
Rowena Brassey in pink.
(Continued on page 2) .

up security around Queen

Elizabeth and Prince Philip,
who are on a state visit to Indonesia, and the Prince of
Wales, heir to the throne, who
is serving on the British frlga te
Jupiter at San Diego, California.
Scotland Yard swnmoned a
meeting of experts which was
expected to recommend buUet
proof glass and armor for royal
automobiles, more armed
guards and a closer inspection
of royal routes, among other
measures, even though it is 160
years since a top British
political figure was assassinated.
Even police were shocked by
the incident. "What the hell is
the world coming to?" said a
senior officer. He added that
security had not expected
anything unusual.
The drama on the Mall, the
broad thorooghfare that leads
to Buckingham Palace, began
at 7:50p.m (2:50 p.m. EDT)
while Princess Anne and Capt.
Phillips were returning from a
private showing of a fihn
"Riding Towards Freedom"
made for the Riding for

JUDY OWEN
Judy Owen, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Richard S.
Owen, Middleport, and a
junior at Meigs High School,
has been named a district
eight winner In the American
Legion's annual American
government test-essay
contest held at Meigs High
School. Other winners at the
school level were Ezra Kiser
and Ingrid Hawley, seniors;
Richard Couch and Miss
Owen, juniors, and Dale

WEO.. ftiNQ

Give
the gilt
of love

anywhere in the stale of Ohio and that somehow, someway 1 U1is

TEN CENTS

e;;;;~~,i~ $7i;i;l~

JUDO

(E) SUMMARY TEACHERS - I personally feel that the
boot strap operation by the teachers of your children and the
upgradin g of their teaching compentencies cannot be matched

By United Press International
COLUMBUS -A STRIKING WORKER who gets a new job
and then is laid off is eligible for unemployment benefits, the
Ohio Supreme Court ruled Wednesday. Paul E. Fox, Mansfield,
became unemployed at the General Motors plant in Mansfield
Sept. 15, 1970, because of a labor dispu!R and took a job at the
Mansfield Flooring and Paving Co., sjx days la!Rr.
Fox was laid off the F1ooring and Paving job in early
November, i970, and returned to his previous General Motors job
Nov. 23, 1970. The Rlehland County Common Pleas Court and the
Court of Appeals upheld a denial by tbe Bureau of Employment
Services of Fox's request for jobless benefits for tbe week ending
Nov. 14, 1970. ·
· .
In a unanimous decision Wednesday, however, tbe Supreme
Court said Fox's "full-time job with Mansfield Flooring and
Paving was bona fide ... and that he was entitled to unem:
ployment compensation for the period claimed."
WASHINGTON - THE SELECTIVE SERVICE conducted
(Continue'd on page 2)
'

MIDDLEPORT

ART WINNERS - Racine Elementary students who
received blue ribbons in the primary division in a recent art
contest judged by Jack Slavin, art Instructor at Wahama
High School, are, first row, 1-r, Tonya Bailey, Lori Simpson
and Kenny McKnight; second row, Lois Frank, Mike Gheen
and Laren Wolfe, and third row, Terry Patterson, Dewayne

Dowell and Scott Justis.

Sen. Byrd says
truth distorted
WASHINGTON (UP!) - In
some of tbe' harshest language
yetaimed at Plresident Nixon
by a Democratic congressional
leader, Sen. Robert C. Byrd
has accused the Chief

Chance spoiled kidnaper ~!E~~~i :~de !~~~.a~~~~
·

Ingels Presents For First Time

61,z shoes .

L.

the last day

bond issue for a new school on

Retail sales tax receipts for
furniture , clothing and cookfebruary
were down 37 perware or food to the Ernest
cc
n
t
and
motor
vehicle sa les
Triplett family, homeless since
Monday's fire which destroyed tax was down 6.14 percent
their two story fr ame home . under the month last year
The Tripletts ' home was according to the report of State
insured, however the contents Treasurer Mrs. Gertrude
were not, and Mr. and Mrs. Donahey.
Retail sales tax receipts for
Triplett, and their daugh!Rr,
february,
1973, totaled
Loretta,lost all their valuables
Horne where arrangemen ts are
in the blaze, the ca use of which $55,552. 19 compared to receipts being completed .
is undetermined . No one was of $37,383.68 for this February,
nome at the time of the fir e. a decrease of $18,168.51.
Fo r persons wishing to february , 1973, moto~ . vehicle
donate clothing, Mr. Triplett's receipts totaled $22,859 .58
sizes a re 34 waist, 32 length, compared to February receipts
medium shirt and T-shirts, and of $21,455.65.
size 8 shoes. Mrs. Triplett

PHONE 992-2156 ·

~~~ Prices

Logan City School District
voters, for the fifth time since
May, 1970, turned down the
district's proposed $4.9 million

MR. SHOWALTER DIES
The Middleport E-R squad
answered a call to the office of
Dr. J. J. Davis, 306 N. Second
Ave., at 8:55a.m. Wednesday
where Forrest Showalter , Long
Bottom Route I, suffered an
apparent heart attack. Mr.
Shoewalter was dead upon the
squad 's arrival. The body was
taken to the Ewing Funeral

mlnistraUon .

enttne

down school

recently retired after 20 year·s the outskirts of Logan.
Count during Tuesday's
ta king a college preparatory special election was 2,950
CoW"se at Meigs High School. against and 1,751 for, acShe is a member of the French cording to the Logan [,aily
Cl ub and an assistant school News.
li brarian. She at tends the
Logan Supt.. Ken W&lt;.rling
fores t Run Baptist Church,
said the district will attempt to
and her hobbies are traveling,
make necessary adjustments
hi cyc lin g, campin g, and with existing facilities.
sports.
._
Logan has 1,011 students in
Miss Kennedy is also purthe llpper three high school
suing a tollege prepa ratory
grades.

been acCompl ished under the lowest salary system in the state
of Ohio 1
I say; It is time we expressed our gratitude to the staff of the
Meigs Local Sc hools that have worked in tbe past for the lowest
salaries yet have made the fine effort to im prove themselves in
their chosen field for 'IUr children.
(D I SELF' .CRITICISM - Your Meigs Local staff has a!lted
through negotiation ' "nd a strike to be evaluated. This is an
item practically unhea rd of in education. The formal program
was developed eo-operatively between teachers and the ad-

Devoted To The Interests OfT#ui Meigs-Mason Area

14~ $2295

Logan turns

t Ci TF.ACH~:R CRITI CISM - I will review the Meigs Local
District from its beginning :
.At the time pf consolidation ( 1967) a study was made by Ohio
University as to the total overview of the schools, buildings,
buses, staff, and all aspects of the enterprise. At tbe time of that
study 39 per cent of the staff or the elementary schools were nondegree people, 50 per cent had not had a course fn teaching
Readin g, 70 percent had not had a course in teaching Science
and few Master Deg ree teachers were on the staff. Many
secondary teachers were placed in fields other than their fields
of preparation.
NOW THE POSITIVE ; Now we have an extremely low
number of non-degree people in our system . There are many
teachers with Masters Degrees and many more enrolled and
well on their way to obtuining the Master level. Statistically,
there are 21.4 per cent in K~ with Masters and in the 1·12 we
have 24.4 per cent with Masters. In the Pomeroy Elementary
School in 1974-75 lhere will be 11 Master teachers. This feat has

•

at

pan sion pursuant to the state

AND THE HALLMARKS
POMEROY

Recognition asked fo:r .progress in Meigs Lo)(al

in the U. S. Marines. is a junior

Co me on b•CJ
b&lt;Jid and br;wmy

104 E. MAIN

SOLID STA IN LESS BY ONEIDA

and blouse, and size 6 or

was driving, so she pulled into

CHAPMAN' SHOES

other injuries.

Shop Thursday 9:30 to 5 pm

course at Meigs High School
where she is a junior . She
belongs to the Usherette Club
Minnie Greene, Pomeroy, has and is a member of Trinity
been selected as the Buckeye Chur ch, Pomeroy . Buckeye
Girls' State delegate by th e Girls' State wi ll be held in June
Capital
Unive rsity,
American l....eg ion Auxili a ry of at
Columbus.
Drew Webster Poot 39,

House Judiciary comm ittee
subpoenas the 42 tapes, he

the Roseberry Pennzoil Scation
in Racine. When she restarted
her 1963 Oldsmobile, the car
backfired, causing it to catch
fire. The auto. valued at $75,
was a total loss by the time four
firemen arrived. The auto was

fan / Bh1e

on

Plant remain ed in

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

Sarah Inez Greene, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Greene,
and granddaughter of Mrs.

To a question about impeachment, Nixon hinted if the

this morning, the first at 7:30
when a trash container caught
fir e on Bashan Rd. Six firemen
answered the call . There wao
no damage to the container,
and the cause of the fir e was
not known.
At 10:20 Carol Thompson,
Racine, smelled gas while she

lan/Brown

it

Alternate is Debbie Kennedy, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Edward Kennedy , Rock
Springs.
Names or the delegate and

Department made two runs

1he wo1d " go ·

resignation with the board

Gav in

Pomeroy.

RACINE - The Racine fire

and hee l
Check ou t 3 parr Ti ns shoe
is pure pP.rf orm tmce lmm

·board 's pleasure conccr nin g
M"r .
Oli ver's
fur the

generator room to the ground

Com pan y, turbo gene ra tor floor at the Gav in Plant. He
con trador at the James M. suffered a skull fracture and

Miss Greene will go to Girls State

Ignore Subpoena·~

Firemen called

TP. I TQtj ·~s o l e

s hurt
executive session was held
concerning the resigna tion of
Hube rt Oli ver, a form er

the board the loss April 10 last Wahama teacher.
yea r when he sa id the police
Upon reopening the meeting
reported $5,085 in cash was to the pubhc, Mr. Siders asked

(Cuntinucd from page 1)

1Continued from page I)
hostile to the Arabs, but is neutral in the Arab-Zionist conflict ."
The cornnnentary was part of a campaign launched by libya
against the decision taken by seven Arab countries in Vienna
Monday to lift the five-month-&lt;Jld embar~o. originally imposed
because of American pro-Israeli policies.

lr1 Ped~.r ·1·s 11ad!!r rl
""""'·'"" oxf ord Soi,J Sti\lld•ng
wan gtwr . W11h lwo·tone lea th er
A ro u nd~d ou l loc An ti a
l•ghtwe•ghl Super IOugt•

present.
Also las t nig ht a

zerlaud based Brown-Boveri

Will Cape1wrt , Will Ed wards.
Zelda
Kna pp,
Eli zabeth Mattox. Ed
Sommer, Michael Whalen,
Edison Prunty, Warren

member, Ray fields was nut

critical condition today at the
Holzer Medical Center . Murl
Kurt Muri, 34, Gallipolis, was injured Monday afternoon
superintendent fo r the Swit- when he fell f.6 feet from the

AmonAA those appearing
were, Jack Cra nk , Reba Cox,

matter fur ther.
lmowlPdge of the $5,085 loss
The loss of $5,085 instead of before lus t night. A fifth

Nixon

presented life memberships.
The first World War II
veteran, a past commander, to The Constitution says a
be awarded a lifetime mem- Presideni shall be impeached
bership last night was John for treHsun , bribery or high
crillles or 1nisdemeanors.
Will, Texas community.

the Bataan Death March.
Letart, W. Vo.; Robet·t Wood, Swatzel praised highly the
Racine ; Effie Beatrice Ed- work of Vanlnwagen in
wards, Hartford ; John Mc- several activities of the post
C1ain, Albany.
and with the auxiliary.
. DISCHARGED - Thomas
Mrs. Neutzling presented
Cook, Opal Ze rkle, Ellen
Sarah Green, Mei gs High
Reynolds, Mary Bau mgard- School junior who has been
ner, Ralph Werry. fr ed
selected as the auxiliary's
A1eshire, Dixie Snyder.
delegate to Buckeye Girls State
th is summer. Miss Green
AUTOS SIDESWIPE
spoke
briefly, thanking the
The coun ty. Sheriff 's Dept.
investigated a two·car coJlision group for her selection.
Tuesday afternoon on CR 20, . Mrs. Neutzling was pianist
just north of SH 33 in Bedford for th e opening and closing
Twp. where an aut o driven by rituals and ·led group singing
Alan T. Lowery, 17, Rt. 4 which preceded a skit
Pomeroy, in crossing the road featuring post members as
from a sawmill parking lot actresses on parade and a drill
sideswiped an auto driven by by the junior group.
Commander
Nesselroad
Lawrence R. Lipscomb, 18,
Hemlock Grove. Both veh icles
had mod era te damage . No one

Pratt, auxiliar y pres ident,
introduce'&lt;! guests and past
presidents of the auxiliary and
presented a gift of money from
the auxiliary to Comma nder
Nesselroad [or the post.

the organ ization "a great and

Receiving the second award
,\ OMITTED
Helen
was Edgar Vanlnwagen, World
Burkhart, Middleport: Tma
Jacobs , Pomeroy; Ivan Roush.

gave the address of welcome
and mlroduced guests 11110 past
comma nd er s. Mrs . Grace

min istrative personnel were
pn~sent to submit burlget
requests as preparations are
being made fo r the new
budge t that beg ins July I.

STILL CRITICA L

.

Browning and June Warn·

sley, freshmen.

..
unJUStified VICIOOS attack On
. Congress.
The Senate Democratic Whip
leveled the charges in replying
to the President's news conference statement in Houston
Tuesday night that "the greatest shortage of energy is Ure
lack of energy in Congress."
Nixon made the statement in
again calling for action on 17
energy-related bills.
He also said he had provided
the House Judiciary Committee with all the information
It needs to doclde whether to
Iring impeachment charges
against him and said giving the
group all the information It
wants might drag out the
inquiry for years.
Byrd retorted that "the
President is deliberately distorting the truth when he says
be is cooperating" with the
courts, the special prosecutor
and the Judiciary committee.
The West Virginia senator
also accused Nixon of using the
!Rlevision networks as "unwitting allies" in a drive to blunt

40 attended first lesson
Forty boys and girls ages 7- or she can participate. Parenls
13 attended the first lesson in are also invited to each session
the Mei gs County Jaycees to observe.
Shooters Education Program
Wednesday evening at the
Steve finlaw, operator of the·
Middleport High School.
gun shop at Grovely's Traetor
The final five sessions of the Sales in Pomeroy, brought
six-week course will be held on several kinds of rifles to
successive Tuesday evenings Wednesday evening's opening
starting ·at 7 p.m.
session, and stressed the safety
Chairman of the program, and use of each type of weapon
Barry McCoy, who is also the and the importance of using the
instructor, is stressing that right shells in the right gun .
each youngster must have Finlaw ended his program
parental permission before he answering questions.

Easter Seal sale launched in Ohio
I

i

ATI'END.KICKOFF - Mr. and Mrs. Bob Buck pose ·with Gail Storm of TV fame in
Columbus recently. when the Ohio Easter Seal Sale kickoff was held.

COLUMBUS
The
· delightful Gale Storm of TV's
"My Little Margie" and "Oh,
Susanna" fame helped launch
the 1974 Ohio Easter Seal drive
at an all-day kickoff recently in
Columbus.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Buck of
Pomeroy,
Easter
Seal
representatives from this area,
partir:pated in the ~vent which
attracted 'more than 450
volun teers and handicapped

children and adults from
throughout the state.
Robert
R.
Williams,
presitlent of the board of
directors, Ohio Society . for
Crippled Children and Adulfs,
Inc., said the goal of the !974 ·
Ohio campaign is $1,203,000, a
10 per cent increase over last
year's collection of $1,093,870.
This year's drive exte nds

tht ough Easter Sunday. April
14.

I

'

'

•

the impeachment inquiry. Because Nixon can conunand
free , prime television network
lime, he said, Americans are
receiving a distorted, one.,sided
view of things.
Byrd, an astute and normally
cautious man who hopes one
day to be Senate Democratic
Leader, said the President "is
obviously in a apot and he's
trying to divert attention"
from Watergate "with a
vicious, unjustified attack on
Congress.' ·
Other Capitol Hill Democrats
also reacted angrily to Nixon.
House Democratic Leader
Thomas P. O'Neill, Mass., said
the President engaged In "one
of his favorite diversionsattacking Congress before a
partisan audience." He said
Nixon "is worried a bout the
large oil companies. Congress
is worried about the people."
House Speaker Carl Albert of
Oklahoma commented that
"we passed one bill and he
vetoed it" -a reference to an
energy measure containing an
oil price rollback provision the
President said he found
unacceptable.
Rep. Torbert H. MacDonald,
D-Mass ., introduced a bill to
require radio and televisioP
stations to provide equal time
and "equal audience potential"
to the opposition when a
(Continued on page 2)

I

'

The 12th annual kickoff included photography sessions
with Gale Storm and Frazier
Reams, Jr., of Toledo, 1974
Ohio Easter Seal chairman, a
publicity
workshop · for
volunteers, a showing of the

1974 national television
promotional s pots , and a
display of specially equipped
vehicles for the handicapped
from
Montgomery
and
Hamilton counties.· .

�c~;~Ihti;;"imed m truck aecident
A buck dnver for McLean
Truckmg Company of Wmston.
Salem N C was ktlled m a
traffiC acctdent at 3 10 a m
(()day on Rt 35 near the
Redman Inn eas t of Rw
Grande
The vtcttm Robert G
McGUire 35 of Wtnston-Salem

Wed ne sda) and earlv lht s
mormng by the pall ol
Donald Welhngto n 19.

Burhngton N C , dnver of U1e
tractor tratler, "as admttted to
the Holzer Medtca l Center for
treatroent of scalp lacerations
He IS hsled m sal!sfactory
condtlwn
Accordmg to the GalhaMetgs Post State Htghway
Patrol, Warren apparently lost
control of hts truck whtch went
left of the center mto a guard
rat! and brtdge ratting, then
over an embankment
Dr Donald R Warehime
Galha County Coroner ruled
McGutre dted of masstve head

COLUMBUS ( UPI ) _ The
House nas overwhelmmgly adopted and
returned to the Senate a
compromtse campa1gn
fmancmg bt11 descnbed by tts
sponsors as one of the best m
the nation
The 83-10 House vote came
late Wednesday mght after two
hours and 45 mmutes of debate
dunng wh•ch maJority Democrats turned back a half-dozen
Republican attempts to alter
the btU
Republicans had forced thetr
own verston of a ca mpaign
hnancmg btU through the
Senate on a party-hoe vote last
month
Smce
then,
however,
sponsors from both part1es
worked for a compromise
which removed controverSial
tlems, notably a lumtatwn on
mdiVIdual and group contrtbuhons to pohltcal campatgns
The Senate IS expected to
muster the necessary votes for
the compromiSe, perhaps as
early as next week The bill
would then go to the desk of
Gov John J Gtlligan
The governor has mdtcated
he would stgn the proposal,
makmg tl effectiVe for the

Vmton was mvolved m a smgle
car accident at 1 a m tod:n
County Road 2 one ten th of a

op

mile east of Rt 160 Officers
satd Wellington lost control of

;~:~~~~~!~::~~c~;'~a~: House

and chest tnjUrtes The body
was removed to the Waugh
Halley-Wood Funeral Home
It was Galha's lhtrd trafftc
fatality of the year Assisting
wtth traffiC control were two
Galha
Count)
shertff's
deputies The case Is still under
mvesllgahon
Four Accidents
No one was InJured m four
traffic acctdents mvesllgated

Southern

Baseball
Schedule
Moo , Apr 1 at Eastern
Tue., Apr 2 Federal Hocking
Thur , Apr 4 North r:alha
Fri , Apr 5 at Wahama
Mon., Apr 8 at Symmes
Valley
Tues , Apr 9 at Federal
Hocking
Thurs., Apr II at Kyger
Creek
Tues , Apr 16 Wahama
Thurs , Apr 18 Southwestern
Tues., Apr. 23 Federal
Hoeklng
Thurs , Apr 25 Eastern
Mon., Apr. 29 at North Galha
Tues , Apr 30 at Glouster
Wed , May I at Hannan
Trace
Thurs., May 2 Symmes
Valley
Moo. May 6 Kyger Creek
Wed., May 8 Glouster
Thurs , May 9 Hannan Trace
Mon , May 13 at Southwestern
All games begin at 4 30 p. m.

Prices
(Continued Irom Page 1)
rat10 of earrungs a gamst pnces
and a 7 per cent hike m taxes
ThiS was the largest percentage de&lt;.line over a year smce
the monthly spendable earrungs accountmg began m 1964
The cost of livmg mcrease
was up sharply over January,
when a I per cent hike was
recorded, and more sharply
above December, when livmg
costs mcreased by 5 per cent
The Index for nonfarm
commodities rose 1 per cent m
February, followmg mcreases
ofl3percent m January and 7
per cent m December
The mcrease for serv1ces
rose 7 per cent last month, the
same as m January.
The pnces for restaurant
meals did not riSe as sharply as
grocery pnces, but went up 7
per cent nevertheless.
The BLS satd beef pnces
JUmped by 7 5 per cent m
February, followmg a smaller
mcrease m January and declmes m heef pr1ces for the last
three months of 1973

Sen. Byrd

htscaron thewetlughway The
The patrol satd Cora A
vehtcle 1an off the htghwav l oftts 28 Pomeroy, lost
stnkmg a mat! box
control of her bus whtch struck
11 Metgs Dtslm t school bus a br~dge rallmg There were no
was wvolved m an acctdent at passengers aboard the bus
4 55 p m Wednesda; on
Acolhswn occurred at { 15 p
Count) Road 17, one tenth of a m on old Rt 7 four tenths of a
mtle ~est of Rt 143

Sgt.

A !mal m1shap occurred at
6 26 a rn on Rt 7, mne' tenths
of a mile north of Rt 143 where
an auto dnven by Elmer G
Hashngs, 29, South Pomt,
fatted to respond to a lane

•
plX

Swami

'em

direction stgn and struck a

marker barrel

b 11

passes compromise campaign i

Ohw

general electiOn campatgn thts
year
While acknowledgmg some
deftctenctes m the btll, G1lltgan
has termed 1t 'one of the best if
not the best campatgn fmancmg laws of any state No one
could reasonabl) veto ll, ' he
satd Wednesday
Lnrutat1ons Included
The measure contams
hmttalwns on expenditures by
candtdates for vanous offices,
rangmg from U S Senate to
governor to maJor statewide
offtces to county and local
elecUve pos1t10ns
It also reqmres a pre..,lectwn
report of expenses and recetpts
by candidates, as well as a
pcst..,lection report
But tl contams no ce1ling for
contributions, and 1t mcludes
reportmg exemptions for m
dlVIduals funneling money
through labor orgaruzations
and trade assoctatwns, and for
those purchasmg llckets to
fund-ratsmg events costmg $25
or less
Repubhcans complamed
there were loopholes m the bt11
which would allow huge contrJbultons to go unreported and
permtt expenditures of up to
double the amounts mtended
under the language

' Thts bill has so many
loopholes 11 looks hke the Swtss
cheese champwn of the
world," satd Rep Robert E
Lcvtll R-North Canton
"I don't think thiS btU meets
the standards of mtegnty that
we're gomg to parade before
the pubhc," said House Mmonty Leader Charles F Kurless,
R Bowhng Green, after
rectlmg a lengthy hst of
speciftc obJectwns
Kurfess and LeVItt were
among 'etght Republicans to
vote agatnst the bill The others
were Reps Charles E Fry of
Sprmgfteld, John A Galbratth
of Maumee, W Bennett Rose of
Lima, Harry E Turner of Mt
Vernon, Joseph P Tulley of
Mentor and Fredenck N
Young of Dayton
Democrats opposmg 1! were
Reps Thomas P Gtlmartin of
Youngstown and John P
Wargo of Ltsbon
House Ma)ortly Leader Barney Qwlter, D-toledo, defended
the b•ll as ' not a perlect bill
but better than anything we
have now " He satd !he
legtslature would llllprove tt m
the future
One Ullportant amendment
adopted on the House floor
removed a provtston which

Newsman Huntley dies
BIG SKY, Mont (UP!) For 14 years, more than 20
million Ameracan v1ewers
heard the mghtly teleVISIOn
news s1gned off "Good Ntght,
David, Good Ntght, Chet "
Chet Huntley, who was one
half of NBC's Huntley-Brmkley
Report, dted Wednesday at the
age of 62, at h1s home m Btg
Sky two months after undergomg surgery for abdommal

cancer
Huntley and David Brmkley
formed what became teleVISIOn's most famous co-anchor·
men, news team m 1956

Brmkley, tn a broadcast
trtbute Wednesday, stgned off
"I say tt one last tUlle, 'Gnod
rught, Chet '"
Huntley was a newspaper
reporter before he became a
broadcast JournaliSt Durmg
his 31-year radto and teleVIsion
career he worked for CBS, ABC
and NBC
HIS sonorous vmce, which
L1fe magazme once said
"seemed not so much merely
to deliver the news, but fD drop
1t on us as an offending obJect,"
became recogmzable to rrulbons
"The no1se .the clamormg
for attention the divisiOns m
tety ," Huntley satd
retired, ''when you
t mght after mght you
start feeling almost responSible for 11 I'm not ruiUlmg
away from thmgs, I'm ruiUlmg
away to think "

On the mght of July 31, 1970,
Huntley bade Brmkley "good
rught" for the last lUIIe annd
trtbutes from hts colleagues
and an accolade from hiS chtef
competitor, Walter Cronkite,
who S81d on hts CBS show that
evenmg "A gtant leaves the

Services set for
Mr. Showalter
Funeral services for Forrest
Showalter 54 KU Long Bot
tom who dted 1n M 1ddleport
Wednesday mornmg, have
been set for 3 p m Saturday at
the Ewtng Funeral Home Mr
Showalter was preceded 1n

stage ''

After hts reltrement from
broadcastmg, Huntley often
was mentioned as a candidate
for polillcal offtce and was the
subJect of a much-discussed
White House letter m 1972
nammg him as a potenhal
candtdate for the U S Senate
However, Huntley always
mamtamed he had no Interest
m pohttcs
Huntley was born m Cardwell, Mont , Dec 10, 1911, the
son of a ratlroad man who took
his famtly to such colorlul
western towns as Willow
Creek, Logan, Btg Tunber,
Morrts,
Whitehall
and
Bozeman

Leonard Siders
died on Thursday
Leonard S S1ders 50, Rt 2.

Rac1 ne

d ted Thursr1ay mar
at the Holzer Medtcal
Center
Mr Stders had been taken to
Veterans Memonal Hospttal
Wednesday ntght by the Racme
Emergency Squad after suf
fer1ng an apparent heart at
tack He wJs later transferred
to the Med 1cal Center Mr
Stders was a member of
Racme Amencan Leaton Post
602, havtng served In the
armed forces dunng World
n~ng

War tt
Survtvtng are h1s wife
Wtlma F
Stders , a son
Leonard Roseda le Mtss , a
brother, Leland, Martetta, hts
mother, Mrs Lavenna Stders
Marietta, and several n leces
and nephews Funeral services
wtll be 01 I p m Saturday at
the Ewing Funeral Home
where friends may call ,at
any t ime after 7 thts even1i1g

Burial w1 tl be m the Letart
Falls Cemetery

PUBLIC DINNER SET
The Metgs Chapter, Order of
DeMolay, will stage a public
bean dliUler from 4 to 7 p m
r'r~day m the dmmg room of
the Mtddleport Masomc Hall
Beans, cornbread, drmk,
dessert and salad will be
served for a donallon of $1 50
per person The chapter's
mothers club IS working w1th
the proJect

death by h 1s parents Samuel
(Continued from Page I)
E and Mary Alcenda Well s
president goes on the rur to Showalter
an tnfant daughter
make what MacDonald called and a brother, Fred
Survtvmg are his w1fe Mary
MEET TONIGHT
a "parttsall address "
Powe
ll
Showalter
•
a
daughter
The
Me•gs County Ptoneer
When a ch1ef executive can Fern , at home, three sons,
conunand the attentiOn of 75 Dale. Greensboro, N C. Earl. and Htstortcal Soctety wtll
m1llion Americans "to propa- Long Bottom and Ira, Reeds • meet at 7 30 th1s everung at the
vtlle a sl ster • Mrs Beulah Metgs Museum m Pomeroy
gandize on behalf of the ad- Sheppard
Vtenna, W Va two
mtntstratton's stde of a grandsons Ttm and Clay Speaker Wlll be Beverly
pcbtical ISsue, we have a Showalter and several meces Moseley, chtef exhibit destgner
nephews
of the Ohio H1stoncal Soctety
s1tuatton that crtes out for and
Mr Showalter was employed
correction," MacDonald as a secunty guard at Shell
satd
Chemtca l tn the Belpre Area
Offtclahng at the services
Rep Wayne Hays, D.Qhio,
LOCAL TEMPS
Saturday
will be the Rev Roy
also contended "the Prestdent Deeter and
The temperature tn downthe Rev Herbert
IS not out to help the Amertcan Grate Friends may cal l at the town Pomeroy at 11 am
people the Amertcan people funeral home at anytime after Friday was 42 degrees w1th
6 thts eventng Burial well be 1M
ar~ not bemg fooled What he
rain falling
the Chester Cemetery
satd was good for the fatcats of
Texas, not the Amerrcan
people"
But Byrct JiY8S btlterest of all
He satd Nllton was pro.recting
(Contmued from page 1)
the illUSion that tbe JudiCillry tts siXth draft lottery Wednesday, but w1th the.nation of peace
Cornrruttee wanted to back a and volunteers filling out military quotas, the results held little
truck up to the White House cause for the concern by American youth
door and cart off all the
The routme nature of the drawmg was clear from the first
presidential documents.To the when Deputy Dtrector John D Dewhurst S81d there was no
contrary, he said, the conurut- present mterest on the part of ettber Prestdent Nllton or the
tee ts doing a "careful, Congress to "seek restorallor. of the mduction authonty" that
responsible, judicious" job
exptred July I, 1973

News

mtle south of Mtddleport where
cars driven by Edward A
Crooks, 32, Middleport, and
Foster T Grimstead, 47, New
Haven , collided There was
mmor damage and no charges
were ftled

0 , March 21, 1974

•••

in Briefs

•

He attended Montana State
College tn Bozeman, the Cormsh School of Art m Seattle
and the UmverSJly of Washmgton m Seattle, where he
recetved hiS B A degree tn
1934
He began his career a year
before hts graduation as a
reporter for the Seattle Star
and shortly afterward turned
to reportmg the news on the
newspaper's radto station
He also worked for stations
m Spokane, Wash , Portland,
Ore , and Los Angeles before
1ommg CBS m Los Angeles m
1939 In 1951, he shifted to ABC
and ftve years later JOined NBC
m New York.

Two injured
in collision
Two persons InJured 10 an
acctdent 7 45 a m today m
Mmersvtlle were transported
to the Holzer Medtcal Center
by the Metgs Branch of the
Southeastern Ohto Emergency
Medtcal Servtce
Davtd Morehead, MmersVIlle, ftfth grade teacher
at Syracuse, reported to
be the dnver of a Yolkswagen bus mvolved m the
crash, and Jamce Enslen,
Syracuse, a passenger m a
ptckup dnven by her husband
were mJured Mrs Enslen IS a
teacher at Meigs Htgh School
Other delatls were not
available
In other runs, the local EMA
, transported Leonard Stders
from Veterans Memortal
Hospital to the Holzer Medtcal
Center at 8 p m Wednesday,
and Hallie Cross was taken
from Veterans Memortal
Hospttal to the Holzer Medtcal
Center
The service also transported
Thomas Collins, Spnng Ave ,
Pomeroy, age two, from hts
home to the Holzer Medtcal
Center at 9 15 a m Wednesday He was tll from
swallowmg glue
About 4 30 p m Wednesday
the EMS was called to the
Landmark Servtce Statton m
Pomeroy to asstst Ellen
Killinger, Hemlock Grove She
received mmor tn)urtes whtle
getting out of a car whtch was
accidentally movmg She dtd
not requtre treatment
IN HOSPITAL

Jtmmy King, Rt 1, M•ddleport, ts a medtcal paltent at
Veterans Memortal Hospttal,
Pomeroy. Hts room number IS
148
.···:·:·· .... :·:-::·:·:·:·.· ··:.·.··:·:·:···:·. ·.·:·.·:····
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Cloudy with a chance of
snow nurrles northeast on
Saturday and rain or snow
over the slate Monday.
Highs in the 30s in lhe north
and lbe mid tOs in lhe south
and lows lu the upper teens
and 20s north a 0d in the 20s

would have allowed state Sen
Donald E Lukens, R-Middletown, to escape the rest of a
five-year prohtbttion from runmng for public office agam
That amendment, sponsored
by Rep Michael G Oxley, RFmdlay, earned on a 64-29 vote
after Oxley termed 1t "patently
unconstitutional" to adopt a
prOVISIOn allowmg Lukens to
get out of paymg the penalty
for filmg a late report of his
1972 campaign expenditures
Amendments turned down
durmg the debate would have
-Limited contr1bllons to
legtslallve candidates to $1,000
- Reqwred legiSlators wtlh
"conslltuent offices" to count
thetr operatmg expenses as
part of thetr campaign expenditures w•thm 90 days of an
electton
-Strengthened the Oh1o
ElectiOns Comrmsston which ts
to adminiSter the new law
- Forbtd labor orgaruzations
to contrtbute dues money to
political campaigns
-Pernuts corporations to
make polillcal contributions
Other maJOr prOVISIOns m the
adopted bill mclude
- A restrtctlon on coercmg
poltttcal donatwns from
government employes
- A requirement that cam-

Officers named
by police lodge
Offtcers were elected by the
Galha-Me1gs Lodge, Fraternal
Order of Pollee, Wednesday
evenmg at the Gallipolis City
Butldmg
Elected were Sgt Ray
Manley,
Me1gs
County
Shertff's Department,
president, Pt1 Tony Taylor,
Pomeroy Pollee Department,
vice preSident; Sgt Paul
North, Galbpohs Police
Department, secretary , Ptl.
Tim Mills, Gallipolis Pollee
Department, treasurer, Lt
Silas Hannlton, Gallia County
Sheriff's Department, guard,
James Saunders, Gallta
County Sheriff's Deparlment,
conductor, Dewey Ferguson,
Security Guard at Gallipolis
State Institute, chaplam.
New members accepted into
the lodge were Ray Hall,
Galltpolis Police Department;
Clyde Barnhart, Frank
Walker, James Martin and
Holly Hudnall of the Security
Force at the Athens Mental
Health Center
The next meeting will be
Aprtl 17 m Metgs County

pa1gn funds be channeled
through a smgle campaign
commtltee for easy tdentiflcation
-A luntla lion of $100 on cash
contributions
- A prohtbttion against
awardmg a non-b1d government contract to anyone who
has giVen to a campa1gn for
that office durmg the past two
years
Both chambers were to
reconvene at 11 a m today

BLUE RIBBON WINNERS - Rece1vmg blue ribbons in
a recent art contest at the mtermediate level were these
Racme Elementary students front row, 1-r, Melinda
Salmons Brtan Cleland and Alan Payne, second row, 1-r,
Cheryl Rames, Angela Dowell, Rita Slater and Mark Proffitt, third row, 1-r, Carl MorriS, James Gheen, Paul Cardone,
and fourth row, 1-r, Donna Rice, Crtcket Carpenter, Toni
Hudson and Melissa !hie

Chance
(Contmued from page I)
The maroon Daimler ltroousme was movmg over the very
road Anne and Mark had
rtdden m the glass coach
through cheermg throngs only
four months earlier on thetr
way back from !herr splendtd
wedding m Westminster Abbey Asmall white Ford forced
1t to the curb
From an eyewttness, MISS
Sammy Scott whose car was
behind the royal automobile,
and from other sources this
was the sequence of events·
A tall, thin man leaped from
the white Ford and fired at
Detective Inspector James
Beaton who became the
Princess bodyguard on her
wedding day Beaton returned
the ftre till his gun Jammed and
then fell wtth bullets m his
body HIS condilton lS sertous
Another burst of bullets
caught the royal chauffeur,
Alex Callender, and a stray
bullet hit a JOUrnalist, Brtan
McConnell Police Constable
Michael Hills on duty at St
James Palace heard the shootmg and came runnmg only to
rece1ve a bullet m the liver He
managed w report "I have
been shot" on his personal
radio before he fell
Hospital spokesman early
today deSCI'lbed the condition
of all four InJured men as
11
S8lisfactory."

Holzer Medical Center
(Discharged Mcreh 20)
Tamara Buckley, Jan
Carroll, Pearl Conner, TraviS
Curfman, Wtlham Gtlbert,
Dorpthy Hale, Luella Henry,
Leah Htggtns, Jo Ann Jones,
Wtley Lambert, Jaun•ta Love,
Eleanor Markley, Shelley
Mayes, Lucy McKinney, Ina
McC laskey, Amy Metzler,
CurtiS Newsome, Cleo Patton,
Elizabeth Peoples, Clyde
Rogers, Jo Ann Rose, Harry
Russell , Mary Scott, Aaron
Seamon, Jack Sharp, Kaye
Smgleton, Emogene Smtth ,
Maggte
Carl Stephens,
Stewart, Robert Stoltz, Jennie
Stone, Steve Swmdler, Came
Wtlham Dmguss, W•lkes- Thomas, Margaret Webb,
vtlle, indicted by a March 5 Eldon Weeks, Harold Wtlliams,
grand Jury fpr possesston of a Mmrue Wrtght, Hester Yates
hallucmogen for sale, pled no
contest and was found gullty by
Metgs County Common Pleas
Pleasant VaUey Hospital
DIScharges - Floyd Stover,
Court Judge John C Bacon
Wednesday
Pomt Pleasant, Mrs Juntor
Tucker,
Robertsburg; Roger
Dmguss was fined $500 and
costs, sentenced to SIX months Kovalchtk, Pomt Pleasant,
m county Jail and placed on one Mrs Ronald Parsons, son,
year probalton The SIX month Leon, Mrs Randall Gerlach,
daughter, Letart, James
Jad term was suspended
Batsden, Henderson, Mrs
Marlon Clendemn, Potnt
Pleasant, Emma McCarty,
BY GARY CLARK
Henderson, Clarence
Sturgeon, Vmton, and Mrs
Coach Grant Barnettes' Ruth McCoy, Ashton
Wahama
Wh1te Falcon
baseball nme won thetr second
and thtrd games of the young
MARKET REPORT
sprmg season yesterday
Point Pleasant, W.Va.
evenmg when they took a
March 1&amp;, 19'7t
dou~leheaaer from the visiting
SLAUGHTER
HEIFERS Federal Hocking Lancars
Standard
71)().1000
lbs 33 75 Senior hurler Rick Hesson
37
50
went the distance m the first
SLAUGHTER COWS
game to ptck up his second wm
Utility
31 40 • 33, Canner &amp;
of the year by a 6-3 score Kevin
Cutter27.80-30,
Bulls over 1000
"Skip' Camp went all the way
lb.
to
m the ruglitcap fD notch his f1rst '
VEAL - Chotce &amp; Prlffie 19().
wm this season by shutting the
225
lb 69, 226-265 lb. 65, 201).250
Lancers out 6-11 on JUSt one hit.
lb. 58 75
HOGS - US. 1-3 19().240 lb
34-.'l6, Sows, U S 1-3 30().400 lb
Velerans Memorial Hospllal
30-33, Boars 300-600 lb 22, Pigs
ADMITTED - Pauhne (By Head) 20-40 lb. 22.50, 40-60
Derenberger, Pomeroy; Eber lb. 30,
Gtllilan, Chester; Homer Cole.
STEER CALVES - 400-600
Jr , Tuppers Plams; Bessie lb. 46 50- 48
Ervm, Racme; Camilla Lewts,
HEIFER CALVE~- Good &amp;
Pomeroy; Barbara James, Chmce under 3~ lb 54 - 68 50,
Pomeroy, Charles Henry 400-550 lb 48, Cows &amp; Calves
Klem , Pomeroy, Bertha J35..476, Stock Cows by pound
Custer, Middleport
34.75 - 38
DISCHARGED - Stanford
BABY CALVES (by head)Denny, Leona Hubbard, Beef 81, Hoi &amp; Brown Swtss 47Patrtcta Pauley, Albert 67.
Keeton, Marte Duddmg,
FEEDER LAMBS- 60-70 lb.
Thehna Grueser, Hallle Cross. (Red Hip) 25

Ju dge

It took a lot of domg, but the old Turkish oracle uncovered

Recognition asked
(Contloued from Page I)
matertal things m order to pay fees to umverstltes to be a more
effective teacher of your children
(F) CURRICULUM - At the ttme of consolidation we bad a
cumculum (if you will pardon the country phrase) as rruxed
up as "Elmer's Dog" Through coffi!Diltee work wtth the admmiStralton we are movtng towards a currtculum of at least
some "common background" for the students entermg our
secondary phase The Currtculum Committee IS presently
workmg m the area of "Reading K-12" and hope to have an
announcement of great stgnif1cance soon
(G) STUDENTS- I for one am tired of our students bemg
cr•ltctzed m the foliowmg areas
Drugs- I do not kilow of a smgle student w1th the acadennc
capability of makmg a smgle pill Yet all crttic!Sffi seems to go
at the student "Who makes the Plil" and gives the ftrst push 1
Students? I questiOn that 1
BOOZE -1 do not know a student who has the capability of
runmng a still, and If our establiShments are selling to them,
then orgamzahons such as yours has a jOb to do I feel that
adults are buymg. What IS your feeling 1
And, fmally, what about ali the posttive tlems for the
students? The fme job m Auto Mecbamcs, the great numbers of
students on vartous dean's lists from surrounding uruverstltes,
the love they show for less fortunate ktds m school What about
the poSitive? The advancement m reading, etc
I believe the followmg statement can be successfully
challenged
"The Metgs Local Schools, smce the date of 1ts IIICeption,
has made progress m the areas of buildmgs, curnculum, staff
growth, and staff development, and all phases of positive action
that IS comparable, if not surpassmg, that of any school system
tn the State of Ohto I for one feel the State Dept of Education
should recogmze the distrtcl and see that jUSt pr81Se and
recognition be g1ven our schoolS and you, the baste element, also
g1 ven the pratse you deserve "
At the end of hiS talk, the speaker, usmg teleVISion commemals, applied them to God
God IS like Bayer asptrm He works wonders
God IS like Ford He has a bettendea
Gnd IS like Dial He gives you round the clock protection
Gnd IS like Coke ''He's the real thing"
God IS like Pan Am. He makes the gomg great
God IS like Scope He makes you feel great
God IS like G E' He lights your path
God IS like Ohto Bell There's more to him than meets the
ear, and fmally,
Gnd IS like Hallmark Cards He cared enough to send the
very best.

d

SUSpen s
term in J' aiJ

Wahruna wins 2

DIVORCES ASKED
Three dtvorces filed Wednesday m Metgs County
Common Plea• Court were
titled Vona K Whitt, Middleport, vs Charles C Whttt,
Ironton, gross neglect of duty
and extreme curelty; James L
TheiSS, Syracuse, vs Anna H
TheiSS, Pomeroy, gross neglect
of duty and extreme cruelty,
and Bernice McDonald,
Pomeroy, vs James McDonald, Gardena, Cab! , gross
neglect of duty and mental
cruelty Also flhng smt for
Judgment of $4,456 was Roger
W Partlow, Pomeroy, vs
Vtckte Kay Deem, Pomeroy,
and V1olet Kuhl, Coolville, as a
result of a car-motorcycle
acctdent July 14, 1973

ORDINANCE NO 1006 H
AN
ORDINANCE
REPEALING ORDINANCE
NO
1003 7&lt;
ADOPTED
JANUARY 14
1974
AND
DECLARING
AN
EMERGENCY
WHEREAS Th 1S Counc I on
the 14th day of January 1974
adop t ed
an
ordmance
authortztng the 1ssuance of
Dupl •cate Bond Number 12 of
the rssue of S415 000 F1rst Mort
gage Waterworks Revenue
Bonds of thP Vt ll age of M 1d
dleport Me1gs county, Oh10
dated November 1, 19G7 in the
den om In alton
Df
S5 000,
maturtnQ November 1 1991
w1th apj..ourtenant coupons due
on May 1, 1974 and thereafter to
matur1ty to replace the or1gma t
of satd bonr1 owned by Mr
Harry H B ttler and Mrs Hazel
B1t1er of L1ma Ohto wh1ch was
thought to be lost sto len or
d"stroyed and

WHEREA S the ortglnal ot
bond has been found
makmg !he ISSuance of said
Oup l •cate Bond Number 12
unnecessary and
WHEREAS sa1d Duplicate
Bond has not as yet been
prmted executed or delivered
NOW THEREFORE, BE IT
ORDAINED by the Council of
lheVtllageofMiddleport Metgs
County. Oh10, three four.ths of
all the memhers elected thereto
concurrmg
SECTION 1 Yhat Ordtnance
No 1003 74 adopted by th1s
Counctl on Januarv 14 1974 as
descrtbed tn the Preambles
hereto 1S hereby repeated
SECTION 2 That fhtS Dr
drnance Is her"eby declared to be
an emergencv measure 1n that
the public peace, health , safety
and weuare require the 1m
med1ate repee.l of the ordmance
authOrlztng the issuance of the
Duplicate Bond Number 12, as
descrtbed 1n the Preambles
hereto, m order to elimmale the
author1Zat10n therein contained
ta1ned
Adopted fh1s 11th day of
March 1974

the crystal ball from the dusty depths of the basement for this
spectal feature on the state basketball tournaments this weekend
in Columbus
Abit tarntshed perhaps, the well-worn cracked ball of fate IS
ready and rarm' to go for an abbreVIated comeback after last
fall's gndtron dtsasters
Take nottce- you don 'l see Col Mole or Ma1 Hoople taking
such riSks as forecastmg the state cage results Why? Because
they don't have the , uh, guts to pul thetr !me (?) reputattons on
the lme m such a precanous busmess as basketball
prognostications
Therefore, 1t leaves me no chmce but to glVe the pubhc what
they want so here 1! ts
(In an off-the-record conversation wtth Hoople, he sees Indian Valley South, BIShop Hartley and Cincmnati Elder as the
eventual champs, although he won't say 1t publicly )
SEMI-F1NALS: (A), Thursday eveDlng
Pitsburg Franklm-Monroe (24-3) vs Ml Blanchard
Riverdale (21-3) -Boy, these small schools have some long
names, and I don't kilow if anybody knows where they are or
cares who wms thts wm Fltp of the com giVes 11 to FranklinMonroe by 5
Indtan VaHey Scu th (20-4) vs Lor am Clearvtew ( 22-2 l - The
lads from Lake Ene have a short name compared to the other
class A teams, and the rougher competition of the mdustrial
region they inhabtt should prove to be the difference Loram
Clearvtew by 6
AA -Friday morning and afternoon
Akron Manchester (2W) vs ClllCumati McNicholas (19-6)Manchester was knocked out m the regtonals last year wtth a
SICk Mike Philltps on the bench But the Panthers are not to be
derued thiS year Manchester by 15
Genoa (22-1) vs Columbus BIShop Hartley (19-5) - The
Genoa skyscrapers should have too much for Hartley, but then 1t
looked like everyone m the Athens regtona l had too much for the
Hawks Hartley's luck hits the end of the lme, and defense should
be the key Genoa by 8
AAA -Saturday night
Mt Vernon (194) vs Cmcumati Elder (21-3)- How m the
world did Elder get mto the state finals agam? They must be
recruiting 'ern from somehwere Elder will make tl mto the tttle
tilt agam, this tUlle by 5
Toledo Scott (22-2) vs Canton McKinley (24-ll) - Bulldogs
are in the fmals for the 14th tUlle, and this time they may not be
derued But the road may be rocky McKinley by 12
FINALS : (A),Saturdayruornlng
Pitsburg Franklin-Monroe (25-3) vs Loram Clearnew (23-2)
- Clearvtewbegms northern Ohto sweep m breakfast affatr, by
7

AA -Saturday afternoon
Akron Manchester (~) vs Genoa (22-1) - Panthers wm
state crown, but 1t should be a rugged battle Manchester by 4
AAA -Saturday evening
Cmcmnatt Elder (22-3) vs Canton McKinley (25-0) Bulldogs have been the brtdesmatds too long, lime for them to
step up to the altar McKinley by II

The Daily Senti11el
DtYOTEDTOTR!:
lNTIIREin' OF

Ml!iGHIAliON ....,..
CIII'STBRL. TANNDOLL,

.......

-.----....
ROBBRTBOEP'Ual,
Clly-.r
l'llt&gt;llllwddiUrncepl-by ~

~

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

VllloJ l'llblllblni - · Ill

Offtce Pbone tn-ml Edibial Phone 2117
~
Natlon~~l

~·­

Gene G ate
VIllage Clerk

•dnrtliiDI reprneataUve

JJottineW.nen•

.,....,IDc ,lJEut UDd Sl

CERTIFICATE
The undersrgned , VIllage
Clerk of the Vlllage of M1d
dleport , Oh10. hereby certifies
that the foregomg Is a true and
correct copy of Ordmance No
1006 7A adopted by Counc1l of
satd V1llage on March 11 1974

,.,__ ,_ ""'"'""'by,__

NewYort., Nn YortJ:

where anlllbaf: • oeatl per • • By
~ Route when curler l8"1ke not

available

~

axntb,

a.•

By mail In

Olio IIIII • v. I Ont Ye. $11 3J.
monUl1, • H Three mDD.tha, "
Eltewbert ta.OO year , U IDCIIthl tll ~.
thnl! mmthl " IG &amp;lblcrlption prlct

lnc11111esamdly..,.,.._,l

1

13)

21, 28

2tc

Gene Grare
VIllage Clerk

COLUMBUS (UPI) - Semtfmals play m the State Htgh
School Basketball Tournament
gets under way here tomght
wtth Franklin Monroe, fresh
from an tmpresstve- 64-52 re~
g10nal romp over defendmg
champiOn Marton Pleasant,
taking on Mount Blanchard
Rtverdale m the Class A
diVISIOn
Ind1an Valley South, a
veteran of the last two Columbus carmvals, faces Loram
Clearvtew m the other Class A
game here tomght
Class AA and Class AAA
semthnals games w1ll be
played here Fnday, and
championships m all three
diVISIOn Will be decided
Saturday
Franklm Monroe semor forward Mtke Cross scored 23
pomts last week agamst Pleasant as the team ran 1ts wmrung streak to nme games and
tts season record to 23-3
Rtverdale, 21-3, chalked a 6().

Tourney
• •
paznngs
COLUMBUS (UP!)
Patrmgs for the 19H Ohw Htgh
School Basketball Tournament
Semt-fmals
CLASS A
Thursday, 7 30 p m
Frankhn Monroe (24-3) vs Mt
Blanchard Riverdale (21·3)
Thursday, 9 30 p m - Indtan Valley South (204) vs
Loratn C l earv~ew (22-2)
Fmals Saturday, 11 30 a m
CLASSAA
Fnday. 11 a m - Akron
Manchester ( 24-11) vs Cmcmnatt McNicholas (19-6)
Fnday, 2 30 p m - Genoa
(22-1) vs Columbus Hartley
(19-5) Ftnals Saturday, 3 p
•
m
CLASSAAA
Frtday, 6 p m - Mt Vernon
(194 ) vs Cmcmnah Elder (213)
Friday, 9 30 p m - Toledo
Scott ( 22-2) vs Canton
McKtnley (24-0) Fmals
Saturday, 7 30 p m
TALKS REOPENED
NEW YORK (UPI)
Negotiators for Umted Press
Internahonal and the Wtre
Servtce Gutld reopened
negotiations today, one day
after the unton struck the
domestic operahons of the
news agency

Dodgers outlast Reds 5-3
VERO BEACH, Fla (UPI)A runmng Los Angeles
Dodgers team, with flve Jtolen
bases off reserve catcher Hal
King, extended thetr sprmg
wliUlmg streak to four games
Wednesday With a 5-3 VICtory
over Cmcmnati
Don Sutton, Rtck Rhoden and
Charlte Hough shared the
p1tchmg chores for the Dodgers
wtth Sutwn, who worked the
f1rst f1ve tnnmgs, ptclung up
the VICtory
Rhoden worked three shutout
liUlmgs, runrung hts scoreless
strmg to rune for tne sprmg,
while the loss was charged to

Fred Norman, who surrendered three runs m five mmngs, one of them unearned
Dave Lopes p1cked up two of
the base thefts for the Dodgers
off King who was !tiling m for
Johnny Bench Lopes has
seven stolen bases th1s sprmg
Pete Rose provtded the only

bnght spot for the Reds wtth
three of the nme Cincmnati
hits
Joe Ferguson led the Dodger's attack wtth a patr of slllgles and an RBI before leavmg
m the sixth mnmg
The Reds, now 6-6 m sprmg
games, face Phtladelphta
today at Clearwater

To promote marnages and

the propagatmg of ch tldren
bachelors have htstor~cally
been heavily taxed by
authoraltes, from anc1ent
Rome through 18th century
England

Start your
garden this way
and
watch !! grow I

I I I

local

'TILLERS

.....,.__
-t-.......... ...OIIJ

Solllh's Rebels, who won the

Continental m the reg10nal
tourney to barely make the
"!mal four "
The Franklm Monroe-Riverdale ' game 1s to begm at 7 30
pm
The 20-4 Rebels of lndtan
Valley South b~ttle Clearview's thtrd-ranked squad m
the mghtcap at 9 30 p m

stale crown two yem sago and

Pro StandiTllls
N BA Standmgs

By Uruted Press lnternattonal

ftmshed second last season
under coach Charley Huggtns
toppled Peebles, 4341, 111 the
rcg10nals
Clearv1ew, 22-2and pac-ed by
6-6 AII.Ohio Larry Harns who
1s averagmg 29 pomts per
game, ts the htghesl rated
Class A team an the semt

fmals Clearvaew came from
behind to edge Dalton, ~8-.'&gt;6
IdS! week
Unbeaten Manchester, 24-0,
behtnd pacesetter Mtke
Phtlltps goes up agamst
Cmcmnall McNicholas, 19-6, m
the operung Class All semtfmals contest II a m Fnday
Columbus Btshop Hartley,
19 5 and on a 13-game wm

skcm, plays 22-1 Genoa 2 30
p m Frtday tn the other Class
AA bout
Defendmg champion Cmcmnatt Elder, 21 3, fa ces 194
Mount Vernon 6 p m Fnday
and Canton McKinley 24.p,
battles 22-2 Toledo Scott 9 30
p m m the sem1-fmals of the
Class AAA diVIston
McKmley's top-ranked Bull-

dogs have never won a state
tourney lltle despite havmg
gotten mto the held a record 14
limes All.Ohtoans Frank Rtdle; and Stan Hall lead McKin
ley s charge
The Class A championship
game ts slated for 11 30 am
Saturday, the Class AA t1tle
game for 3 p m and the Class
AAA finals for 7 30 p m

Utah, Boston favored in NIT play

Eastern Conference
Atlanl1c OtVISIOO

Boston

53

New York

48

Bu ffalo

w

41

pet 9 b

1
24

688

31

608

s• ,

526

12 1 2

37

NEW YORK (UP! ) - Utah ts
a 5-pomt favonte over MemphiS State and Boston College a

The wmners advance to
semifmal berths agamst each
other on Saturday afternoon
when Jacksonville and Purdue,
which won quarter-final games
on Tuesday mght, w11l clash m
the
other game
The
natwna11y televiSed !mal round
IS on Sunday afternoon
Utah Impressed wtlh a
pcwerlul attack m 1ts openmg

2-pomt plck over Connecticut m of the Naltonal lnvttatwn

Thursday mght games which
wmd up the quarter.fmal round

basketball tournament at
Madt30R Square Garden

Ph•ladelph•a 23 55 295 30
Central DIVISIOn
w 1 pet g b
x Cap11a 1 ..
43 34 558
Atlanta
33 45 423 10 112
Houston
31 47 397 12'h
Cleveland
28 52 350 16 1h
Western Conference
Midwest Dt\IISIOM
w 1 pet g b
Mtlwauke ~
56 23 709
Ch cago
52 27 658 4
Detrorl
51 28 646 41 2
KC Omaha
31 48 392 24 1h
PaCifiC DIVISIOn
w 1 pel g b
LosAngeles
45 34 570
Golden Sta te 43 34 558
1
Sea tt l e
33 44 &lt;129 11
Phoen• x
28 51 354 17
Po fland
26 52 333 18' 1
X clinChed diVISIOn f1tle
Wedn esday s results
Portland 113 Philadelphia 106
Atlanta 99 Boston 89
Ca p1ta l 101 Cleveland 91
Detrotf !OJ Houston 99
Ch rcag o 87 KC Omaha 86
New York 107 Phoenr:JI 104
Sea ttl e llfl Golden Stat e 107
Los Angeles 120 Mrlwi'lukee 114

round 102-89 victory over

Rutgers, whtch mcluded the
tournament's htghest smglegame scormg perlormance so
far, 34 pomts by Ttcky Burden
The Redskms have the best
record , 2().7, of any of the four
teams on the Thursday program and Burden JS backed up
by Tyrone Medley, who had 27
pomts agamst Rutgers, and
Mike SoJourner, who had 23
pcmts and 13 rebounds
Memphis State'• T1gers, on
the other hand, barely
squeaked through the openmg
round wtth a 73-72 deciSIOn over
Seton Hall and 1ts top scorer,
semor guard Btl! Laurte, had 18
pcmts
Boston College (19-ll) also
was only a one.pomt WIMer m
the openmg, 63-62, over Cmcmnah The Eagles, a losmg
fmalist m the NIT m 1969, will
have a hetght advantage at
four of the ftve startmg spots
over Connecticut (19-7), whtch

Ttlursday s Game s
B u f f a 1 o at Golden State
( 8 OS p m l
(only game scheduled)
ABA Standmgs
By Un1ted Press International

East

w

New York
Kentucky
Ca rolma
v.rgrnli'l
Memphts

pet g b

I

51 29
49 29
~6 34
26 53
19 60

west

638
628

1
575 5
329 24 117
241

111/ ..

pet g b
Utah
so 29 633
lnd ta na
44 37 S43 6 1 7
Sa n Anton o
43 37 538 7
Sa n O tego
35 44 443 14 1 7
Denver
34 45 430 15 1 1
Wednesday's Results
New York 103 Memph s 101
San D 1ego 125 Vtrgrn a 122
lndtana 104 Cc:~rolrna 102
Utah 111 Denver 107
Kentucky 102 San Anton o 98
w

t

WHA Standmgs
By Un•ted Press InternatiOnal
East
w I I pts gf ga
New England 40 29 4 8.1 27 4 247
Toronto
35 36 4 74 27 8 256
Quebec
35 33 3 73 275 256
Cleveland
33 J l 8 74 244 247
Ch tCi'IQO
34 33 31\ 241 250
Je rs ey
32 36 4 68 253 282
West

w 1 I pts gf ga

s 93
2 ao

Houston

44 21

286 191

Mtnnesota
Edmonton

39 31
34 33 2 70

301 261
236 240

Wmn1peg
Vancouver

32 35 5 69
26 44 0 52

241 268
260 303

Los Angeles 2J 48 0 46 213 301
Wednesday s results
Jersey 6 Los Angeles 5
Edmonton 2 New Eng l and 2
Hou ston S Cleveland 4
only games scheduled
Tnursday s Games
Houston at Toronto (8pm I
Edmonton at Quebec ( 8 OS

pm l

van co uv~

pm l

Kentucky

pm )

at
at

Ctucago

(7 30

Memphts

(7 30

NHL Standmgs
By Untied Press I nternational
East
w I I pis gf ga
Bosto "'
47 13 9103 3 11 190
Montreal
.tO 21 9 89 257 210
NY Rangers 37 20 12 66 265 210
Toronto
31 24 15 77 244 204
Buffa lo
30 30 10 70 221 229
Detro•f
26 34 10 62 no 274
Vancouver 19 39 11 49 196 266
NY I sl anders
16 36 16 48 163 224
West
w I t pts gf ga
Ph1 l
43 14 11 97 234 140
Chtcago
34 13 21 89 233 146
L Angeles
27 30 12 66 191 208
At l anta
26 31 12 64 180 207
St LOUI S
24 34 11 59 184 20S
M.nn
21 32 16 58 213 238
P 1tts
24 37 7 56 208 247
Calif
13 47 9 35 181 298
Wednesdays Results
Detro •f 7 Montrea l 6
Vancouver 7 N Y Rangers 5
N Y Islanders 1 Pitt sburgh 1
Buffalo 3 Ch1cago 2
Only games scheduled
Thursday 's Games
N Y Ranger s at Atlanta 8 {]5

pm
Sf LO UIS at Bo ston 7 35 p m
Vancouver at Phtla 8 OS p m
Cal•forn•a at Los Angeles 8 OS

pm

Only games scheduled

GRADE SCHOOL CAGERS - The fourth grade Middleport Spartans, under the dtrection
of coach Mtlford Hysell, concluded the 1973-,74 season w1th a 3-1 record m fourth l!l'ade competttwn Team members are, front row, 1... , Tracy Pope, Rtcky Ebersbach, Bob Ashley,
Bradley Weaver and Jon Cremeans, back row,[.,., Jmnrny Boyer, Dave Hyse11, Greg Bush,
Dave Hoffman, Ty Herman and Dave Meadows Absent were Kevm Mtlam, Terry Wayland
and Frank Martm

scored a surpnse 82-70 wm

over St John's m the openmg
round
The U.Conns, the closest
thmg to a 'home" team the
tournament has now that St
John's, Manhattan, and
Rutgers have been ousted, are
brmgmg several thousand fans
from thetr campus 150 miles
away Leadmg 'the Nutmeggers IS S-1 seruor guard
Junmy Foster, who was a
standout m the operung round
when he sank 11 of 16 shots and
totaled 27 pomts

Nets and Colonels triumph
By Uruted Press International
The New York Nets and
Kentucky Colonels continued
thetr neck-and-neck race for
ftrst place m the Eastern
DIVISIOn of the Amertcan

Basketball AssociatiOn today,
sttll only one game apart after
clutch VJctones Wednesday
mght
The Nets barely held off the
Memphis Tams, 103-101, m
New York while the Colonels
broke out of a Ia te lte to beat
the San Anloo1o Spurs, 102-98,
m Lowsvtlle
The Nets, after leading by 7969 at !be end of the thtrd penod,
had thetr lead cut to 103-101
when Glen Combs hit a threepomter for Memphis wtth 27
seconds to go but they hung on
to wm when Wtll Robtnson
miSsed another lhree.pomt try
wtth four seconds left Julius
ErVIng led the Nets wtth 29

pomts
The Colonels, tted at 9S.98,
went ahead when Arlls
Gtlmore sank two free throws
wtlh SIX seconds left and Ron
Thomas scored a clmchmg
goal at the buzzer after mterceptmg a pass Gtlmore had
24 pomts and 22 rebounds
In other ABA actton Wednes
day mght Btlly Keller's patr of
free throws WIth f1ve seconds
left gave the Indtana Pacers a
104-102 VIctory over Carolina
and second place m the
Western Dtvtswn, and Juruny
Jones and Johnny Neuman
scored 20 pomts each to lead
the Utah Stars tn a come-frombehind l1l 107 wm over the
Denver Rockets, and reserve
Jtmmy 0 'Bnen hit a 20-foot
three-pomt goal wtth one
second left to give the San
Otego Q's a 125-122 vtctory over
the Vtrgmta Squtres movmg

Eagles have young team
EASTERN
The
weatherman predtcted a 60 pet
chance of nun, wtth snow late1
today, but as of lhts mormng,
the Eastern Eagles dtamondmen were slated to open the
1974 season today at Federal
Hockmg
Coach Larry Hetnes Mil try
to tmprove on last year 's 12-11
mark 7 5 m the SVAC, as the
Eagles meet the Golden
Lancers m the seG~sOn opener
for both schools
Only ftve letlermeo are back
from last )'l'ar's squad, and
only one of those ftve 1s a
semor, that betng second
baseman Steve Goebel Other

lettermen returmng are
Jumors Mtke Larkms, Ttm
Spencer and Randy Blake, and
Sophomore Phd Bowen
Hemes wtll be startmg U1e
follo.,mg balling order
tomght Blake wtlllead off and
play shortstop, sophomore Ttm
Kuhn wtll be m left field JURJOr
Mtke Hams m nght f1eld,
Goebel at second base, semor
John Sheets at thtrd base,
Larkms m centerfi eld JUniOr
Greg Bat ley at first base,
JUniOr Greg
Wmebrenner
behmd the plate, and Jumor
Steve Holter wtll be gettmg the
startmg call on the mound
Garne lime IS 4 30 p m

the Q's mto fourth place m the
West, one game ahead of
Denver tn thetr battle for a
playoff berth
Lollen es, ra1s1ng momes
for public as well as pnvate
e nds, ong1nated m

Flor~ n ce

about 1530

THE DEAN DEPENDABLES

IT'S A
STEEL
WHILE THEY LAST

$3179

G78-14
HJS-15
•
•
•
•

includes FET

Steel Belted &amp; Polyester Belts
Whtte Wa 11 Oestgn
Tough and Dependable
Mounted and Balanced

Amenca's 2 Most Popular Sizes

GENERAL TIRE SALES
MIDDLEPORT

PH. 992-7161

Great Buys

ASSORTED
BELTS
Many Types

MODEL

$4To sa

You duplicate nature's own method of building SOli fer
tlllty with a Gillan tiller Here's why Gilson's perfect
slicing and blending act•on mixes up soli and organ1c
matter thoroughly
forms a loose, aerated seedbed As
1 result, plant roots penetrate and reach out easily
moisture Is absorbed more readi ly, decomposition of soil
minerals and organic waste takes plate quicker Your
garden gets off to a Inter start and flowers and
vegetables grow bigger than ever before Gilson f•llers
feature extra heavy construction, guaranteed tines
(replaced free If ever broken) cast Iron gNr case, ad
1ustable tilling widths J 1h and S H P

Leather
Platn or
fancy bu ckles All
s1zes and colors

A Poison Counlerdose Chart
From Your Rexall Pharmacist
for your home
a valuable
gutde no home should be
wtthout Help us observe
Nahonal Potson Preventton
Week, March 17-23

Model C2510 EWA

Philco 25",,,,,.1
Color TV with
100% Solid
State Chassis

PICK UP YOUR FREE CHART TODAY'

2·YEAR
PARTS AND LABOR

GUARANTEE
'For two years
after deltvery
we II ftx any·
thing that sour
fau lt '

Save 1100% solt d state modular chassiS wtth eastly re
placeable modules • Hands Off tuntng • Super
prcture lube • Phllco P1cture Guard Sys
Instant play tor p1clure and sound • Beauttful
Cqjttermr&gt;or.ary c3b1net fm1shed to match Walnut

Ebersbach Hardware

KERM'S KORNER

New York Clothing House

"Everything In Hardware"

POMEROY

POMEROY, OHIO

•
&lt;I

58 overtame vtctory agamst

Belts for Spring

,_,.

5 HP

110 W. MAIN

Bow~

ALA BOWLING LEAGUE
EARLY FRIOAY-6 15
March 1 1974
Team Slandmgs
Po1nts
62
Jun1or Gutter Dusters
Feeney Bennett Fl1ers
50
Rutland .t67 Pioneers
48
Feeney Bennett Strike Outs 47
Racme 602 Rockets
33
Htgh Team Senes - Rutland
467 P1oneers 1379
Feeney
Bennett Fliers 1363 Feeney
Bennett Str1ke Outs 1264
HtQh Team Game - Rut l and
467 Ptoneers 501
Feeney
Bennett F l ters 462, Feeney
Bennett Flters 453
H 1gh lnd Ser .es Gerry
Kessmger 463 Maxine Dugan
4.40 Lou Gilmore 420
H1gh lnd Game Gerry
Kess1nger 177 Lou Gilmore
173 Mi!Ktne Dugan 163

CWII•on

~ard

DISCWSURES ASKED
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Gov
John J Gtlligan Wednesday
ordered all sta~employes
earomg over $15,000 a year to
ftle annual fmanc1al diSclosure
statements m an effort to
"restore the public's fa1th m
government "

52nd state tourney starts tonight

•I

~Dolly I 10 am. to 10 00 p m
Sunday 10 J0·12·:11andstofp"'

PRESCRIPTIONS

Friendly Service
112 E.

PH. 9~&lt;· 295~

·ss

SALE PRICED

ggsLIMITED
TIMEONLY!

FOREMAN &amp; ABBOn

'

�c~;~Ihti;;"imed m truck aecident
A buck dnver for McLean
Truckmg Company of Wmston.
Salem N C was ktlled m a
traffiC acctdent at 3 10 a m
(()day on Rt 35 near the
Redman Inn eas t of Rw
Grande
The vtcttm Robert G
McGUire 35 of Wtnston-Salem

Wed ne sda) and earlv lht s
mormng by the pall ol
Donald Welhngto n 19.

Burhngton N C , dnver of U1e
tractor tratler, "as admttted to
the Holzer Medtca l Center for
treatroent of scalp lacerations
He IS hsled m sal!sfactory
condtlwn
Accordmg to the GalhaMetgs Post State Htghway
Patrol, Warren apparently lost
control of hts truck whtch went
left of the center mto a guard
rat! and brtdge ratting, then
over an embankment
Dr Donald R Warehime
Galha County Coroner ruled
McGutre dted of masstve head

COLUMBUS ( UPI ) _ The
House nas overwhelmmgly adopted and
returned to the Senate a
compromtse campa1gn
fmancmg bt11 descnbed by tts
sponsors as one of the best m
the nation
The 83-10 House vote came
late Wednesday mght after two
hours and 45 mmutes of debate
dunng wh•ch maJority Democrats turned back a half-dozen
Republican attempts to alter
the btU
Republicans had forced thetr
own verston of a ca mpaign
hnancmg btU through the
Senate on a party-hoe vote last
month
Smce
then,
however,
sponsors from both part1es
worked for a compromise
which removed controverSial
tlems, notably a lumtatwn on
mdiVIdual and group contrtbuhons to pohltcal campatgns
The Senate IS expected to
muster the necessary votes for
the compromiSe, perhaps as
early as next week The bill
would then go to the desk of
Gov John J Gtlligan
The governor has mdtcated
he would stgn the proposal,
makmg tl effectiVe for the

Vmton was mvolved m a smgle
car accident at 1 a m tod:n
County Road 2 one ten th of a

op

mile east of Rt 160 Officers
satd Wellington lost control of

;~:~~~~~!~::~~c~;'~a~: House

and chest tnjUrtes The body
was removed to the Waugh
Halley-Wood Funeral Home
It was Galha's lhtrd trafftc
fatality of the year Assisting
wtth traffiC control were two
Galha
Count)
shertff's
deputies The case Is still under
mvesllgahon
Four Accidents
No one was InJured m four
traffic acctdents mvesllgated

Southern

Baseball
Schedule
Moo , Apr 1 at Eastern
Tue., Apr 2 Federal Hocking
Thur , Apr 4 North r:alha
Fri , Apr 5 at Wahama
Mon., Apr 8 at Symmes
Valley
Tues , Apr 9 at Federal
Hocking
Thurs., Apr II at Kyger
Creek
Tues , Apr 16 Wahama
Thurs , Apr 18 Southwestern
Tues., Apr. 23 Federal
Hoeklng
Thurs , Apr 25 Eastern
Mon., Apr. 29 at North Galha
Tues , Apr 30 at Glouster
Wed , May I at Hannan
Trace
Thurs., May 2 Symmes
Valley
Moo. May 6 Kyger Creek
Wed., May 8 Glouster
Thurs , May 9 Hannan Trace
Mon , May 13 at Southwestern
All games begin at 4 30 p. m.

Prices
(Continued Irom Page 1)
rat10 of earrungs a gamst pnces
and a 7 per cent hike m taxes
ThiS was the largest percentage de&lt;.line over a year smce
the monthly spendable earrungs accountmg began m 1964
The cost of livmg mcrease
was up sharply over January,
when a I per cent hike was
recorded, and more sharply
above December, when livmg
costs mcreased by 5 per cent
The Index for nonfarm
commodities rose 1 per cent m
February, followmg mcreases
ofl3percent m January and 7
per cent m December
The mcrease for serv1ces
rose 7 per cent last month, the
same as m January.
The pnces for restaurant
meals did not riSe as sharply as
grocery pnces, but went up 7
per cent nevertheless.
The BLS satd beef pnces
JUmped by 7 5 per cent m
February, followmg a smaller
mcrease m January and declmes m heef pr1ces for the last
three months of 1973

Sen. Byrd

htscaron thewetlughway The
The patrol satd Cora A
vehtcle 1an off the htghwav l oftts 28 Pomeroy, lost
stnkmg a mat! box
control of her bus whtch struck
11 Metgs Dtslm t school bus a br~dge rallmg There were no
was wvolved m an acctdent at passengers aboard the bus
4 55 p m Wednesda; on
Acolhswn occurred at { 15 p
Count) Road 17, one tenth of a m on old Rt 7 four tenths of a
mtle ~est of Rt 143

Sgt.

A !mal m1shap occurred at
6 26 a rn on Rt 7, mne' tenths
of a mile north of Rt 143 where
an auto dnven by Elmer G
Hashngs, 29, South Pomt,
fatted to respond to a lane

•
plX

Swami

'em

direction stgn and struck a

marker barrel

b 11

passes compromise campaign i

Ohw

general electiOn campatgn thts
year
While acknowledgmg some
deftctenctes m the btll, G1lltgan
has termed 1t 'one of the best if
not the best campatgn fmancmg laws of any state No one
could reasonabl) veto ll, ' he
satd Wednesday
Lnrutat1ons Included
The measure contams
hmttalwns on expenditures by
candtdates for vanous offices,
rangmg from U S Senate to
governor to maJor statewide
offtces to county and local
elecUve pos1t10ns
It also reqmres a pre..,lectwn
report of expenses and recetpts
by candidates, as well as a
pcst..,lection report
But tl contams no ce1ling for
contributions, and 1t mcludes
reportmg exemptions for m
dlVIduals funneling money
through labor orgaruzations
and trade assoctatwns, and for
those purchasmg llckets to
fund-ratsmg events costmg $25
or less
Repubhcans complamed
there were loopholes m the bt11
which would allow huge contrJbultons to go unreported and
permtt expenditures of up to
double the amounts mtended
under the language

' Thts bill has so many
loopholes 11 looks hke the Swtss
cheese champwn of the
world," satd Rep Robert E
Lcvtll R-North Canton
"I don't think thiS btU meets
the standards of mtegnty that
we're gomg to parade before
the pubhc," said House Mmonty Leader Charles F Kurless,
R Bowhng Green, after
rectlmg a lengthy hst of
speciftc obJectwns
Kurfess and LeVItt were
among 'etght Republicans to
vote agatnst the bill The others
were Reps Charles E Fry of
Sprmgfteld, John A Galbratth
of Maumee, W Bennett Rose of
Lima, Harry E Turner of Mt
Vernon, Joseph P Tulley of
Mentor and Fredenck N
Young of Dayton
Democrats opposmg 1! were
Reps Thomas P Gtlmartin of
Youngstown and John P
Wargo of Ltsbon
House Ma)ortly Leader Barney Qwlter, D-toledo, defended
the b•ll as ' not a perlect bill
but better than anything we
have now " He satd !he
legtslature would llllprove tt m
the future
One Ullportant amendment
adopted on the House floor
removed a provtston which

Newsman Huntley dies
BIG SKY, Mont (UP!) For 14 years, more than 20
million Ameracan v1ewers
heard the mghtly teleVISIOn
news s1gned off "Good Ntght,
David, Good Ntght, Chet "
Chet Huntley, who was one
half of NBC's Huntley-Brmkley
Report, dted Wednesday at the
age of 62, at h1s home m Btg
Sky two months after undergomg surgery for abdommal

cancer
Huntley and David Brmkley
formed what became teleVISIOn's most famous co-anchor·
men, news team m 1956

Brmkley, tn a broadcast
trtbute Wednesday, stgned off
"I say tt one last tUlle, 'Gnod
rught, Chet '"
Huntley was a newspaper
reporter before he became a
broadcast JournaliSt Durmg
his 31-year radto and teleVIsion
career he worked for CBS, ABC
and NBC
HIS sonorous vmce, which
L1fe magazme once said
"seemed not so much merely
to deliver the news, but fD drop
1t on us as an offending obJect,"
became recogmzable to rrulbons
"The no1se .the clamormg
for attention the divisiOns m
tety ," Huntley satd
retired, ''when you
t mght after mght you
start feeling almost responSible for 11 I'm not ruiUlmg
away from thmgs, I'm ruiUlmg
away to think "

On the mght of July 31, 1970,
Huntley bade Brmkley "good
rught" for the last lUIIe annd
trtbutes from hts colleagues
and an accolade from hiS chtef
competitor, Walter Cronkite,
who S81d on hts CBS show that
evenmg "A gtant leaves the

Services set for
Mr. Showalter
Funeral services for Forrest
Showalter 54 KU Long Bot
tom who dted 1n M 1ddleport
Wednesday mornmg, have
been set for 3 p m Saturday at
the Ewtng Funeral Home Mr
Showalter was preceded 1n

stage ''

After hts reltrement from
broadcastmg, Huntley often
was mentioned as a candidate
for polillcal offtce and was the
subJect of a much-discussed
White House letter m 1972
nammg him as a potenhal
candtdate for the U S Senate
However, Huntley always
mamtamed he had no Interest
m pohttcs
Huntley was born m Cardwell, Mont , Dec 10, 1911, the
son of a ratlroad man who took
his famtly to such colorlul
western towns as Willow
Creek, Logan, Btg Tunber,
Morrts,
Whitehall
and
Bozeman

Leonard Siders
died on Thursday
Leonard S S1ders 50, Rt 2.

Rac1 ne

d ted Thursr1ay mar
at the Holzer Medtcal
Center
Mr Stders had been taken to
Veterans Memonal Hospttal
Wednesday ntght by the Racme
Emergency Squad after suf
fer1ng an apparent heart at
tack He wJs later transferred
to the Med 1cal Center Mr
Stders was a member of
Racme Amencan Leaton Post
602, havtng served In the
armed forces dunng World
n~ng

War tt
Survtvtng are h1s wife
Wtlma F
Stders , a son
Leonard Roseda le Mtss , a
brother, Leland, Martetta, hts
mother, Mrs Lavenna Stders
Marietta, and several n leces
and nephews Funeral services
wtll be 01 I p m Saturday at
the Ewing Funeral Home
where friends may call ,at
any t ime after 7 thts even1i1g

Burial w1 tl be m the Letart
Falls Cemetery

PUBLIC DINNER SET
The Metgs Chapter, Order of
DeMolay, will stage a public
bean dliUler from 4 to 7 p m
r'r~day m the dmmg room of
the Mtddleport Masomc Hall
Beans, cornbread, drmk,
dessert and salad will be
served for a donallon of $1 50
per person The chapter's
mothers club IS working w1th
the proJect

death by h 1s parents Samuel
(Continued from Page I)
E and Mary Alcenda Well s
president goes on the rur to Showalter
an tnfant daughter
make what MacDonald called and a brother, Fred
Survtvmg are his w1fe Mary
MEET TONIGHT
a "parttsall address "
Powe
ll
Showalter
•
a
daughter
The
Me•gs County Ptoneer
When a ch1ef executive can Fern , at home, three sons,
conunand the attentiOn of 75 Dale. Greensboro, N C. Earl. and Htstortcal Soctety wtll
m1llion Americans "to propa- Long Bottom and Ira, Reeds • meet at 7 30 th1s everung at the
vtlle a sl ster • Mrs Beulah Metgs Museum m Pomeroy
gandize on behalf of the ad- Sheppard
Vtenna, W Va two
mtntstratton's stde of a grandsons Ttm and Clay Speaker Wlll be Beverly
pcbtical ISsue, we have a Showalter and several meces Moseley, chtef exhibit destgner
nephews
of the Ohio H1stoncal Soctety
s1tuatton that crtes out for and
Mr Showalter was employed
correction," MacDonald as a secunty guard at Shell
satd
Chemtca l tn the Belpre Area
Offtclahng at the services
Rep Wayne Hays, D.Qhio,
LOCAL TEMPS
Saturday
will be the Rev Roy
also contended "the Prestdent Deeter and
The temperature tn downthe Rev Herbert
IS not out to help the Amertcan Grate Friends may cal l at the town Pomeroy at 11 am
people the Amertcan people funeral home at anytime after Friday was 42 degrees w1th
6 thts eventng Burial well be 1M
ar~ not bemg fooled What he
rain falling
the Chester Cemetery
satd was good for the fatcats of
Texas, not the Amerrcan
people"
But Byrct JiY8S btlterest of all
He satd Nllton was pro.recting
(Contmued from page 1)
the illUSion that tbe JudiCillry tts siXth draft lottery Wednesday, but w1th the.nation of peace
Cornrruttee wanted to back a and volunteers filling out military quotas, the results held little
truck up to the White House cause for the concern by American youth
door and cart off all the
The routme nature of the drawmg was clear from the first
presidential documents.To the when Deputy Dtrector John D Dewhurst S81d there was no
contrary, he said, the conurut- present mterest on the part of ettber Prestdent Nllton or the
tee ts doing a "careful, Congress to "seek restorallor. of the mduction authonty" that
responsible, judicious" job
exptred July I, 1973

News

mtle south of Mtddleport where
cars driven by Edward A
Crooks, 32, Middleport, and
Foster T Grimstead, 47, New
Haven , collided There was
mmor damage and no charges
were ftled

0 , March 21, 1974

•••

in Briefs

•

He attended Montana State
College tn Bozeman, the Cormsh School of Art m Seattle
and the UmverSJly of Washmgton m Seattle, where he
recetved hiS B A degree tn
1934
He began his career a year
before hts graduation as a
reporter for the Seattle Star
and shortly afterward turned
to reportmg the news on the
newspaper's radto station
He also worked for stations
m Spokane, Wash , Portland,
Ore , and Los Angeles before
1ommg CBS m Los Angeles m
1939 In 1951, he shifted to ABC
and ftve years later JOined NBC
m New York.

Two injured
in collision
Two persons InJured 10 an
acctdent 7 45 a m today m
Mmersvtlle were transported
to the Holzer Medtcal Center
by the Metgs Branch of the
Southeastern Ohto Emergency
Medtcal Servtce
Davtd Morehead, MmersVIlle, ftfth grade teacher
at Syracuse, reported to
be the dnver of a Yolkswagen bus mvolved m the
crash, and Jamce Enslen,
Syracuse, a passenger m a
ptckup dnven by her husband
were mJured Mrs Enslen IS a
teacher at Meigs Htgh School
Other delatls were not
available
In other runs, the local EMA
, transported Leonard Stders
from Veterans Memortal
Hospital to the Holzer Medtcal
Center at 8 p m Wednesday,
and Hallie Cross was taken
from Veterans Memortal
Hospttal to the Holzer Medtcal
Center
The service also transported
Thomas Collins, Spnng Ave ,
Pomeroy, age two, from hts
home to the Holzer Medtcal
Center at 9 15 a m Wednesday He was tll from
swallowmg glue
About 4 30 p m Wednesday
the EMS was called to the
Landmark Servtce Statton m
Pomeroy to asstst Ellen
Killinger, Hemlock Grove She
received mmor tn)urtes whtle
getting out of a car whtch was
accidentally movmg She dtd
not requtre treatment
IN HOSPITAL

Jtmmy King, Rt 1, M•ddleport, ts a medtcal paltent at
Veterans Memortal Hospttal,
Pomeroy. Hts room number IS
148
.···:·:·· .... :·:-::·:·:·:·.· ··:.·.··:·:·:···:·. ·.·:·.·:····
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Cloudy with a chance of
snow nurrles northeast on
Saturday and rain or snow
over the slate Monday.
Highs in the 30s in lhe north
and lbe mid tOs in lhe south
and lows lu the upper teens
and 20s north a 0d in the 20s

would have allowed state Sen
Donald E Lukens, R-Middletown, to escape the rest of a
five-year prohtbttion from runmng for public office agam
That amendment, sponsored
by Rep Michael G Oxley, RFmdlay, earned on a 64-29 vote
after Oxley termed 1t "patently
unconstitutional" to adopt a
prOVISIOn allowmg Lukens to
get out of paymg the penalty
for filmg a late report of his
1972 campaign expenditures
Amendments turned down
durmg the debate would have
-Limited contr1bllons to
legtslallve candidates to $1,000
- Reqwred legiSlators wtlh
"conslltuent offices" to count
thetr operatmg expenses as
part of thetr campaign expenditures w•thm 90 days of an
electton
-Strengthened the Oh1o
ElectiOns Comrmsston which ts
to adminiSter the new law
- Forbtd labor orgaruzations
to contrtbute dues money to
political campaigns
-Pernuts corporations to
make polillcal contributions
Other maJOr prOVISIOns m the
adopted bill mclude
- A restrtctlon on coercmg
poltttcal donatwns from
government employes
- A requirement that cam-

Officers named
by police lodge
Offtcers were elected by the
Galha-Me1gs Lodge, Fraternal
Order of Pollee, Wednesday
evenmg at the Gallipolis City
Butldmg
Elected were Sgt Ray
Manley,
Me1gs
County
Shertff's Department,
president, Pt1 Tony Taylor,
Pomeroy Pollee Department,
vice preSident; Sgt Paul
North, Galbpohs Police
Department, secretary , Ptl.
Tim Mills, Gallipolis Pollee
Department, treasurer, Lt
Silas Hannlton, Gallia County
Sheriff's Department, guard,
James Saunders, Gallta
County Sheriff's Deparlment,
conductor, Dewey Ferguson,
Security Guard at Gallipolis
State Institute, chaplam.
New members accepted into
the lodge were Ray Hall,
Galltpolis Police Department;
Clyde Barnhart, Frank
Walker, James Martin and
Holly Hudnall of the Security
Force at the Athens Mental
Health Center
The next meeting will be
Aprtl 17 m Metgs County

pa1gn funds be channeled
through a smgle campaign
commtltee for easy tdentiflcation
-A luntla lion of $100 on cash
contributions
- A prohtbttion against
awardmg a non-b1d government contract to anyone who
has giVen to a campa1gn for
that office durmg the past two
years
Both chambers were to
reconvene at 11 a m today

BLUE RIBBON WINNERS - Rece1vmg blue ribbons in
a recent art contest at the mtermediate level were these
Racme Elementary students front row, 1-r, Melinda
Salmons Brtan Cleland and Alan Payne, second row, 1-r,
Cheryl Rames, Angela Dowell, Rita Slater and Mark Proffitt, third row, 1-r, Carl MorriS, James Gheen, Paul Cardone,
and fourth row, 1-r, Donna Rice, Crtcket Carpenter, Toni
Hudson and Melissa !hie

Chance
(Contmued from page I)
The maroon Daimler ltroousme was movmg over the very
road Anne and Mark had
rtdden m the glass coach
through cheermg throngs only
four months earlier on thetr
way back from !herr splendtd
wedding m Westminster Abbey Asmall white Ford forced
1t to the curb
From an eyewttness, MISS
Sammy Scott whose car was
behind the royal automobile,
and from other sources this
was the sequence of events·
A tall, thin man leaped from
the white Ford and fired at
Detective Inspector James
Beaton who became the
Princess bodyguard on her
wedding day Beaton returned
the ftre till his gun Jammed and
then fell wtth bullets m his
body HIS condilton lS sertous
Another burst of bullets
caught the royal chauffeur,
Alex Callender, and a stray
bullet hit a JOUrnalist, Brtan
McConnell Police Constable
Michael Hills on duty at St
James Palace heard the shootmg and came runnmg only to
rece1ve a bullet m the liver He
managed w report "I have
been shot" on his personal
radio before he fell
Hospital spokesman early
today deSCI'lbed the condition
of all four InJured men as
11
S8lisfactory."

Holzer Medical Center
(Discharged Mcreh 20)
Tamara Buckley, Jan
Carroll, Pearl Conner, TraviS
Curfman, Wtlham Gtlbert,
Dorpthy Hale, Luella Henry,
Leah Htggtns, Jo Ann Jones,
Wtley Lambert, Jaun•ta Love,
Eleanor Markley, Shelley
Mayes, Lucy McKinney, Ina
McC laskey, Amy Metzler,
CurtiS Newsome, Cleo Patton,
Elizabeth Peoples, Clyde
Rogers, Jo Ann Rose, Harry
Russell , Mary Scott, Aaron
Seamon, Jack Sharp, Kaye
Smgleton, Emogene Smtth ,
Maggte
Carl Stephens,
Stewart, Robert Stoltz, Jennie
Stone, Steve Swmdler, Came
Wtlham Dmguss, W•lkes- Thomas, Margaret Webb,
vtlle, indicted by a March 5 Eldon Weeks, Harold Wtlliams,
grand Jury fpr possesston of a Mmrue Wrtght, Hester Yates
hallucmogen for sale, pled no
contest and was found gullty by
Metgs County Common Pleas
Pleasant VaUey Hospital
DIScharges - Floyd Stover,
Court Judge John C Bacon
Wednesday
Pomt Pleasant, Mrs Juntor
Tucker,
Robertsburg; Roger
Dmguss was fined $500 and
costs, sentenced to SIX months Kovalchtk, Pomt Pleasant,
m county Jail and placed on one Mrs Ronald Parsons, son,
year probalton The SIX month Leon, Mrs Randall Gerlach,
daughter, Letart, James
Jad term was suspended
Batsden, Henderson, Mrs
Marlon Clendemn, Potnt
Pleasant, Emma McCarty,
BY GARY CLARK
Henderson, Clarence
Sturgeon, Vmton, and Mrs
Coach Grant Barnettes' Ruth McCoy, Ashton
Wahama
Wh1te Falcon
baseball nme won thetr second
and thtrd games of the young
MARKET REPORT
sprmg season yesterday
Point Pleasant, W.Va.
evenmg when they took a
March 1&amp;, 19'7t
dou~leheaaer from the visiting
SLAUGHTER
HEIFERS Federal Hocking Lancars
Standard
71)().1000
lbs 33 75 Senior hurler Rick Hesson
37
50
went the distance m the first
SLAUGHTER COWS
game to ptck up his second wm
Utility
31 40 • 33, Canner &amp;
of the year by a 6-3 score Kevin
Cutter27.80-30,
Bulls over 1000
"Skip' Camp went all the way
lb.
to
m the ruglitcap fD notch his f1rst '
VEAL - Chotce &amp; Prlffie 19().
wm this season by shutting the
225
lb 69, 226-265 lb. 65, 201).250
Lancers out 6-11 on JUSt one hit.
lb. 58 75
HOGS - US. 1-3 19().240 lb
34-.'l6, Sows, U S 1-3 30().400 lb
Velerans Memorial Hospllal
30-33, Boars 300-600 lb 22, Pigs
ADMITTED - Pauhne (By Head) 20-40 lb. 22.50, 40-60
Derenberger, Pomeroy; Eber lb. 30,
Gtllilan, Chester; Homer Cole.
STEER CALVES - 400-600
Jr , Tuppers Plams; Bessie lb. 46 50- 48
Ervm, Racme; Camilla Lewts,
HEIFER CALVE~- Good &amp;
Pomeroy; Barbara James, Chmce under 3~ lb 54 - 68 50,
Pomeroy, Charles Henry 400-550 lb 48, Cows &amp; Calves
Klem , Pomeroy, Bertha J35..476, Stock Cows by pound
Custer, Middleport
34.75 - 38
DISCHARGED - Stanford
BABY CALVES (by head)Denny, Leona Hubbard, Beef 81, Hoi &amp; Brown Swtss 47Patrtcta Pauley, Albert 67.
Keeton, Marte Duddmg,
FEEDER LAMBS- 60-70 lb.
Thehna Grueser, Hallle Cross. (Red Hip) 25

Ju dge

It took a lot of domg, but the old Turkish oracle uncovered

Recognition asked
(Contloued from Page I)
matertal things m order to pay fees to umverstltes to be a more
effective teacher of your children
(F) CURRICULUM - At the ttme of consolidation we bad a
cumculum (if you will pardon the country phrase) as rruxed
up as "Elmer's Dog" Through coffi!Diltee work wtth the admmiStralton we are movtng towards a currtculum of at least
some "common background" for the students entermg our
secondary phase The Currtculum Committee IS presently
workmg m the area of "Reading K-12" and hope to have an
announcement of great stgnif1cance soon
(G) STUDENTS- I for one am tired of our students bemg
cr•ltctzed m the foliowmg areas
Drugs- I do not kilow of a smgle student w1th the acadennc
capability of makmg a smgle pill Yet all crttic!Sffi seems to go
at the student "Who makes the Plil" and gives the ftrst push 1
Students? I questiOn that 1
BOOZE -1 do not know a student who has the capability of
runmng a still, and If our establiShments are selling to them,
then orgamzahons such as yours has a jOb to do I feel that
adults are buymg. What IS your feeling 1
And, fmally, what about ali the posttive tlems for the
students? The fme job m Auto Mecbamcs, the great numbers of
students on vartous dean's lists from surrounding uruverstltes,
the love they show for less fortunate ktds m school What about
the poSitive? The advancement m reading, etc
I believe the followmg statement can be successfully
challenged
"The Metgs Local Schools, smce the date of 1ts IIICeption,
has made progress m the areas of buildmgs, curnculum, staff
growth, and staff development, and all phases of positive action
that IS comparable, if not surpassmg, that of any school system
tn the State of Ohto I for one feel the State Dept of Education
should recogmze the distrtcl and see that jUSt pr81Se and
recognition be g1ven our schoolS and you, the baste element, also
g1 ven the pratse you deserve "
At the end of hiS talk, the speaker, usmg teleVISion commemals, applied them to God
God IS like Bayer asptrm He works wonders
God IS like Ford He has a bettendea
Gnd IS like Dial He gives you round the clock protection
Gnd IS like Coke ''He's the real thing"
God IS like Pan Am. He makes the gomg great
God IS like Scope He makes you feel great
God IS like G E' He lights your path
God IS like Ohto Bell There's more to him than meets the
ear, and fmally,
Gnd IS like Hallmark Cards He cared enough to send the
very best.

d

SUSpen s
term in J' aiJ

Wahruna wins 2

DIVORCES ASKED
Three dtvorces filed Wednesday m Metgs County
Common Plea• Court were
titled Vona K Whitt, Middleport, vs Charles C Whttt,
Ironton, gross neglect of duty
and extreme curelty; James L
TheiSS, Syracuse, vs Anna H
TheiSS, Pomeroy, gross neglect
of duty and extreme cruelty,
and Bernice McDonald,
Pomeroy, vs James McDonald, Gardena, Cab! , gross
neglect of duty and mental
cruelty Also flhng smt for
Judgment of $4,456 was Roger
W Partlow, Pomeroy, vs
Vtckte Kay Deem, Pomeroy,
and V1olet Kuhl, Coolville, as a
result of a car-motorcycle
acctdent July 14, 1973

ORDINANCE NO 1006 H
AN
ORDINANCE
REPEALING ORDINANCE
NO
1003 7&lt;
ADOPTED
JANUARY 14
1974
AND
DECLARING
AN
EMERGENCY
WHEREAS Th 1S Counc I on
the 14th day of January 1974
adop t ed
an
ordmance
authortztng the 1ssuance of
Dupl •cate Bond Number 12 of
the rssue of S415 000 F1rst Mort
gage Waterworks Revenue
Bonds of thP Vt ll age of M 1d
dleport Me1gs county, Oh10
dated November 1, 19G7 in the
den om In alton
Df
S5 000,
maturtnQ November 1 1991
w1th apj..ourtenant coupons due
on May 1, 1974 and thereafter to
matur1ty to replace the or1gma t
of satd bonr1 owned by Mr
Harry H B ttler and Mrs Hazel
B1t1er of L1ma Ohto wh1ch was
thought to be lost sto len or
d"stroyed and

WHEREA S the ortglnal ot
bond has been found
makmg !he ISSuance of said
Oup l •cate Bond Number 12
unnecessary and
WHEREAS sa1d Duplicate
Bond has not as yet been
prmted executed or delivered
NOW THEREFORE, BE IT
ORDAINED by the Council of
lheVtllageofMiddleport Metgs
County. Oh10, three four.ths of
all the memhers elected thereto
concurrmg
SECTION 1 Yhat Ordtnance
No 1003 74 adopted by th1s
Counctl on Januarv 14 1974 as
descrtbed tn the Preambles
hereto 1S hereby repeated
SECTION 2 That fhtS Dr
drnance Is her"eby declared to be
an emergencv measure 1n that
the public peace, health , safety
and weuare require the 1m
med1ate repee.l of the ordmance
authOrlztng the issuance of the
Duplicate Bond Number 12, as
descrtbed 1n the Preambles
hereto, m order to elimmale the
author1Zat10n therein contained
ta1ned
Adopted fh1s 11th day of
March 1974

the crystal ball from the dusty depths of the basement for this
spectal feature on the state basketball tournaments this weekend
in Columbus
Abit tarntshed perhaps, the well-worn cracked ball of fate IS
ready and rarm' to go for an abbreVIated comeback after last
fall's gndtron dtsasters
Take nottce- you don 'l see Col Mole or Ma1 Hoople taking
such riSks as forecastmg the state cage results Why? Because
they don't have the , uh, guts to pul thetr !me (?) reputattons on
the lme m such a precanous busmess as basketball
prognostications
Therefore, 1t leaves me no chmce but to glVe the pubhc what
they want so here 1! ts
(In an off-the-record conversation wtth Hoople, he sees Indian Valley South, BIShop Hartley and Cincmnati Elder as the
eventual champs, although he won't say 1t publicly )
SEMI-F1NALS: (A), Thursday eveDlng
Pitsburg Franklm-Monroe (24-3) vs Ml Blanchard
Riverdale (21-3) -Boy, these small schools have some long
names, and I don't kilow if anybody knows where they are or
cares who wms thts wm Fltp of the com giVes 11 to FranklinMonroe by 5
Indtan VaHey Scu th (20-4) vs Lor am Clearvtew ( 22-2 l - The
lads from Lake Ene have a short name compared to the other
class A teams, and the rougher competition of the mdustrial
region they inhabtt should prove to be the difference Loram
Clearvtew by 6
AA -Friday morning and afternoon
Akron Manchester (2W) vs ClllCumati McNicholas (19-6)Manchester was knocked out m the regtonals last year wtth a
SICk Mike Philltps on the bench But the Panthers are not to be
derued thiS year Manchester by 15
Genoa (22-1) vs Columbus BIShop Hartley (19-5) - The
Genoa skyscrapers should have too much for Hartley, but then 1t
looked like everyone m the Athens regtona l had too much for the
Hawks Hartley's luck hits the end of the lme, and defense should
be the key Genoa by 8
AAA -Saturday night
Mt Vernon (194) vs Cmcumati Elder (21-3)- How m the
world did Elder get mto the state finals agam? They must be
recruiting 'ern from somehwere Elder will make tl mto the tttle
tilt agam, this tUlle by 5
Toledo Scott (22-2) vs Canton McKinley (24-ll) - Bulldogs
are in the fmals for the 14th tUlle, and this time they may not be
derued But the road may be rocky McKinley by 12
FINALS : (A),Saturdayruornlng
Pitsburg Franklin-Monroe (25-3) vs Loram Clearnew (23-2)
- Clearvtewbegms northern Ohto sweep m breakfast affatr, by
7

AA -Saturday afternoon
Akron Manchester (~) vs Genoa (22-1) - Panthers wm
state crown, but 1t should be a rugged battle Manchester by 4
AAA -Saturday evening
Cmcmnatt Elder (22-3) vs Canton McKinley (25-0) Bulldogs have been the brtdesmatds too long, lime for them to
step up to the altar McKinley by II

The Daily Senti11el
DtYOTEDTOTR!:
lNTIIREin' OF

Ml!iGHIAliON ....,..
CIII'STBRL. TANNDOLL,

.......

-.----....
ROBBRTBOEP'Ual,
Clly-.r
l'llt&gt;llllwddiUrncepl-by ~

~

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

VllloJ l'llblllblni - · Ill

Offtce Pbone tn-ml Edibial Phone 2117
~
Natlon~~l

~·­

Gene G ate
VIllage Clerk

•dnrtliiDI reprneataUve

JJottineW.nen•

.,....,IDc ,lJEut UDd Sl

CERTIFICATE
The undersrgned , VIllage
Clerk of the Vlllage of M1d
dleport , Oh10. hereby certifies
that the foregomg Is a true and
correct copy of Ordmance No
1006 7A adopted by Counc1l of
satd V1llage on March 11 1974

,.,__ ,_ ""'"'""'by,__

NewYort., Nn YortJ:

where anlllbaf: • oeatl per • • By
~ Route when curler l8"1ke not

available

~

axntb,

a.•

By mail In

Olio IIIII • v. I Ont Ye. $11 3J.
monUl1, • H Three mDD.tha, "
Eltewbert ta.OO year , U IDCIIthl tll ~.
thnl! mmthl " IG &amp;lblcrlption prlct

lnc11111esamdly..,.,.._,l

1

13)

21, 28

2tc

Gene Grare
VIllage Clerk

COLUMBUS (UPI) - Semtfmals play m the State Htgh
School Basketball Tournament
gets under way here tomght
wtth Franklin Monroe, fresh
from an tmpresstve- 64-52 re~
g10nal romp over defendmg
champiOn Marton Pleasant,
taking on Mount Blanchard
Rtverdale m the Class A
diVISIOn
Ind1an Valley South, a
veteran of the last two Columbus carmvals, faces Loram
Clearvtew m the other Class A
game here tomght
Class AA and Class AAA
semthnals games w1ll be
played here Fnday, and
championships m all three
diVISIOn Will be decided
Saturday
Franklm Monroe semor forward Mtke Cross scored 23
pomts last week agamst Pleasant as the team ran 1ts wmrung streak to nme games and
tts season record to 23-3
Rtverdale, 21-3, chalked a 6().

Tourney
• •
paznngs
COLUMBUS (UP!)
Patrmgs for the 19H Ohw Htgh
School Basketball Tournament
Semt-fmals
CLASS A
Thursday, 7 30 p m
Frankhn Monroe (24-3) vs Mt
Blanchard Riverdale (21·3)
Thursday, 9 30 p m - Indtan Valley South (204) vs
Loratn C l earv~ew (22-2)
Fmals Saturday, 11 30 a m
CLASSAA
Fnday. 11 a m - Akron
Manchester ( 24-11) vs Cmcmnatt McNicholas (19-6)
Fnday, 2 30 p m - Genoa
(22-1) vs Columbus Hartley
(19-5) Ftnals Saturday, 3 p
•
m
CLASSAAA
Frtday, 6 p m - Mt Vernon
(194 ) vs Cmcmnah Elder (213)
Friday, 9 30 p m - Toledo
Scott ( 22-2) vs Canton
McKtnley (24-0) Fmals
Saturday, 7 30 p m
TALKS REOPENED
NEW YORK (UPI)
Negotiators for Umted Press
Internahonal and the Wtre
Servtce Gutld reopened
negotiations today, one day
after the unton struck the
domestic operahons of the
news agency

Dodgers outlast Reds 5-3
VERO BEACH, Fla (UPI)A runmng Los Angeles
Dodgers team, with flve Jtolen
bases off reserve catcher Hal
King, extended thetr sprmg
wliUlmg streak to four games
Wednesday With a 5-3 VICtory
over Cmcmnati
Don Sutton, Rtck Rhoden and
Charlte Hough shared the
p1tchmg chores for the Dodgers
wtth Sutwn, who worked the
f1rst f1ve tnnmgs, ptclung up
the VICtory
Rhoden worked three shutout
liUlmgs, runrung hts scoreless
strmg to rune for tne sprmg,
while the loss was charged to

Fred Norman, who surrendered three runs m five mmngs, one of them unearned
Dave Lopes p1cked up two of
the base thefts for the Dodgers
off King who was !tiling m for
Johnny Bench Lopes has
seven stolen bases th1s sprmg
Pete Rose provtded the only

bnght spot for the Reds wtth
three of the nme Cincmnati
hits
Joe Ferguson led the Dodger's attack wtth a patr of slllgles and an RBI before leavmg
m the sixth mnmg
The Reds, now 6-6 m sprmg
games, face Phtladelphta
today at Clearwater

To promote marnages and

the propagatmg of ch tldren
bachelors have htstor~cally
been heavily taxed by
authoraltes, from anc1ent
Rome through 18th century
England

Start your
garden this way
and
watch !! grow I

I I I

local

'TILLERS

.....,.__
-t-.......... ...OIIJ

Solllh's Rebels, who won the

Continental m the reg10nal
tourney to barely make the
"!mal four "
The Franklm Monroe-Riverdale ' game 1s to begm at 7 30
pm
The 20-4 Rebels of lndtan
Valley South b~ttle Clearview's thtrd-ranked squad m
the mghtcap at 9 30 p m

stale crown two yem sago and

Pro StandiTllls
N BA Standmgs

By Uruted Press lnternattonal

ftmshed second last season
under coach Charley Huggtns
toppled Peebles, 4341, 111 the
rcg10nals
Clearv1ew, 22-2and pac-ed by
6-6 AII.Ohio Larry Harns who
1s averagmg 29 pomts per
game, ts the htghesl rated
Class A team an the semt

fmals Clearvaew came from
behind to edge Dalton, ~8-.'&gt;6
IdS! week
Unbeaten Manchester, 24-0,
behtnd pacesetter Mtke
Phtlltps goes up agamst
Cmcmnall McNicholas, 19-6, m
the operung Class All semtfmals contest II a m Fnday
Columbus Btshop Hartley,
19 5 and on a 13-game wm

skcm, plays 22-1 Genoa 2 30
p m Frtday tn the other Class
AA bout
Defendmg champion Cmcmnatt Elder, 21 3, fa ces 194
Mount Vernon 6 p m Fnday
and Canton McKinley 24.p,
battles 22-2 Toledo Scott 9 30
p m m the sem1-fmals of the
Class AAA diVIston
McKmley's top-ranked Bull-

dogs have never won a state
tourney lltle despite havmg
gotten mto the held a record 14
limes All.Ohtoans Frank Rtdle; and Stan Hall lead McKin
ley s charge
The Class A championship
game ts slated for 11 30 am
Saturday, the Class AA t1tle
game for 3 p m and the Class
AAA finals for 7 30 p m

Utah, Boston favored in NIT play

Eastern Conference
Atlanl1c OtVISIOO

Boston

53

New York

48

Bu ffalo

w

41

pet 9 b

1
24

688

31

608

s• ,

526

12 1 2

37

NEW YORK (UP! ) - Utah ts
a 5-pomt favonte over MemphiS State and Boston College a

The wmners advance to
semifmal berths agamst each
other on Saturday afternoon
when Jacksonville and Purdue,
which won quarter-final games
on Tuesday mght, w11l clash m
the
other game
The
natwna11y televiSed !mal round
IS on Sunday afternoon
Utah Impressed wtlh a
pcwerlul attack m 1ts openmg

2-pomt plck over Connecticut m of the Naltonal lnvttatwn

Thursday mght games which
wmd up the quarter.fmal round

basketball tournament at
Madt30R Square Garden

Ph•ladelph•a 23 55 295 30
Central DIVISIOn
w 1 pet g b
x Cap11a 1 ..
43 34 558
Atlanta
33 45 423 10 112
Houston
31 47 397 12'h
Cleveland
28 52 350 16 1h
Western Conference
Midwest Dt\IISIOM
w 1 pet g b
Mtlwauke ~
56 23 709
Ch cago
52 27 658 4
Detrorl
51 28 646 41 2
KC Omaha
31 48 392 24 1h
PaCifiC DIVISIOn
w 1 pel g b
LosAngeles
45 34 570
Golden Sta te 43 34 558
1
Sea tt l e
33 44 &lt;129 11
Phoen• x
28 51 354 17
Po fland
26 52 333 18' 1
X clinChed diVISIOn f1tle
Wedn esday s results
Portland 113 Philadelphia 106
Atlanta 99 Boston 89
Ca p1ta l 101 Cleveland 91
Detrotf !OJ Houston 99
Ch rcag o 87 KC Omaha 86
New York 107 Phoenr:JI 104
Sea ttl e llfl Golden Stat e 107
Los Angeles 120 Mrlwi'lukee 114

round 102-89 victory over

Rutgers, whtch mcluded the
tournament's htghest smglegame scormg perlormance so
far, 34 pomts by Ttcky Burden
The Redskms have the best
record , 2().7, of any of the four
teams on the Thursday program and Burden JS backed up
by Tyrone Medley, who had 27
pomts agamst Rutgers, and
Mike SoJourner, who had 23
pcmts and 13 rebounds
Memphis State'• T1gers, on
the other hand, barely
squeaked through the openmg
round wtth a 73-72 deciSIOn over
Seton Hall and 1ts top scorer,
semor guard Btl! Laurte, had 18
pcmts
Boston College (19-ll) also
was only a one.pomt WIMer m
the openmg, 63-62, over Cmcmnah The Eagles, a losmg
fmalist m the NIT m 1969, will
have a hetght advantage at
four of the ftve startmg spots
over Connecticut (19-7), whtch

Ttlursday s Game s
B u f f a 1 o at Golden State
( 8 OS p m l
(only game scheduled)
ABA Standmgs
By Un1ted Press International

East

w

New York
Kentucky
Ca rolma
v.rgrnli'l
Memphts

pet g b

I

51 29
49 29
~6 34
26 53
19 60

west

638
628

1
575 5
329 24 117
241

111/ ..

pet g b
Utah
so 29 633
lnd ta na
44 37 S43 6 1 7
Sa n Anton o
43 37 538 7
Sa n O tego
35 44 443 14 1 7
Denver
34 45 430 15 1 1
Wednesday's Results
New York 103 Memph s 101
San D 1ego 125 Vtrgrn a 122
lndtana 104 Cc:~rolrna 102
Utah 111 Denver 107
Kentucky 102 San Anton o 98
w

t

WHA Standmgs
By Un•ted Press InternatiOnal
East
w I I pts gf ga
New England 40 29 4 8.1 27 4 247
Toronto
35 36 4 74 27 8 256
Quebec
35 33 3 73 275 256
Cleveland
33 J l 8 74 244 247
Ch tCi'IQO
34 33 31\ 241 250
Je rs ey
32 36 4 68 253 282
West

w 1 I pts gf ga

s 93
2 ao

Houston

44 21

286 191

Mtnnesota
Edmonton

39 31
34 33 2 70

301 261
236 240

Wmn1peg
Vancouver

32 35 5 69
26 44 0 52

241 268
260 303

Los Angeles 2J 48 0 46 213 301
Wednesday s results
Jersey 6 Los Angeles 5
Edmonton 2 New Eng l and 2
Hou ston S Cleveland 4
only games scheduled
Tnursday s Games
Houston at Toronto (8pm I
Edmonton at Quebec ( 8 OS

pm l

van co uv~

pm l

Kentucky

pm )

at
at

Ctucago

(7 30

Memphts

(7 30

NHL Standmgs
By Untied Press I nternational
East
w I I pis gf ga
Bosto "'
47 13 9103 3 11 190
Montreal
.tO 21 9 89 257 210
NY Rangers 37 20 12 66 265 210
Toronto
31 24 15 77 244 204
Buffa lo
30 30 10 70 221 229
Detro•f
26 34 10 62 no 274
Vancouver 19 39 11 49 196 266
NY I sl anders
16 36 16 48 163 224
West
w I t pts gf ga
Ph1 l
43 14 11 97 234 140
Chtcago
34 13 21 89 233 146
L Angeles
27 30 12 66 191 208
At l anta
26 31 12 64 180 207
St LOUI S
24 34 11 59 184 20S
M.nn
21 32 16 58 213 238
P 1tts
24 37 7 56 208 247
Calif
13 47 9 35 181 298
Wednesdays Results
Detro •f 7 Montrea l 6
Vancouver 7 N Y Rangers 5
N Y Islanders 1 Pitt sburgh 1
Buffalo 3 Ch1cago 2
Only games scheduled
Thursday 's Games
N Y Ranger s at Atlanta 8 {]5

pm
Sf LO UIS at Bo ston 7 35 p m
Vancouver at Phtla 8 OS p m
Cal•forn•a at Los Angeles 8 OS

pm

Only games scheduled

GRADE SCHOOL CAGERS - The fourth grade Middleport Spartans, under the dtrection
of coach Mtlford Hysell, concluded the 1973-,74 season w1th a 3-1 record m fourth l!l'ade competttwn Team members are, front row, 1... , Tracy Pope, Rtcky Ebersbach, Bob Ashley,
Bradley Weaver and Jon Cremeans, back row,[.,., Jmnrny Boyer, Dave Hyse11, Greg Bush,
Dave Hoffman, Ty Herman and Dave Meadows Absent were Kevm Mtlam, Terry Wayland
and Frank Martm

scored a surpnse 82-70 wm

over St John's m the openmg
round
The U.Conns, the closest
thmg to a 'home" team the
tournament has now that St
John's, Manhattan, and
Rutgers have been ousted, are
brmgmg several thousand fans
from thetr campus 150 miles
away Leadmg 'the Nutmeggers IS S-1 seruor guard
Junmy Foster, who was a
standout m the operung round
when he sank 11 of 16 shots and
totaled 27 pomts

Nets and Colonels triumph
By Uruted Press International
The New York Nets and
Kentucky Colonels continued
thetr neck-and-neck race for
ftrst place m the Eastern
DIVISIOn of the Amertcan

Basketball AssociatiOn today,
sttll only one game apart after
clutch VJctones Wednesday
mght
The Nets barely held off the
Memphis Tams, 103-101, m
New York while the Colonels
broke out of a Ia te lte to beat
the San Anloo1o Spurs, 102-98,
m Lowsvtlle
The Nets, after leading by 7969 at !be end of the thtrd penod,
had thetr lead cut to 103-101
when Glen Combs hit a threepomter for Memphis wtth 27
seconds to go but they hung on
to wm when Wtll Robtnson
miSsed another lhree.pomt try
wtth four seconds left Julius
ErVIng led the Nets wtth 29

pomts
The Colonels, tted at 9S.98,
went ahead when Arlls
Gtlmore sank two free throws
wtlh SIX seconds left and Ron
Thomas scored a clmchmg
goal at the buzzer after mterceptmg a pass Gtlmore had
24 pomts and 22 rebounds
In other ABA actton Wednes
day mght Btlly Keller's patr of
free throws WIth f1ve seconds
left gave the Indtana Pacers a
104-102 VIctory over Carolina
and second place m the
Western Dtvtswn, and Juruny
Jones and Johnny Neuman
scored 20 pomts each to lead
the Utah Stars tn a come-frombehind l1l 107 wm over the
Denver Rockets, and reserve
Jtmmy 0 'Bnen hit a 20-foot
three-pomt goal wtth one
second left to give the San
Otego Q's a 125-122 vtctory over
the Vtrgmta Squtres movmg

Eagles have young team
EASTERN
The
weatherman predtcted a 60 pet
chance of nun, wtth snow late1
today, but as of lhts mormng,
the Eastern Eagles dtamondmen were slated to open the
1974 season today at Federal
Hockmg
Coach Larry Hetnes Mil try
to tmprove on last year 's 12-11
mark 7 5 m the SVAC, as the
Eagles meet the Golden
Lancers m the seG~sOn opener
for both schools
Only ftve letlermeo are back
from last )'l'ar's squad, and
only one of those ftve 1s a
semor, that betng second
baseman Steve Goebel Other

lettermen returmng are
Jumors Mtke Larkms, Ttm
Spencer and Randy Blake, and
Sophomore Phd Bowen
Hemes wtll be startmg U1e
follo.,mg balling order
tomght Blake wtlllead off and
play shortstop, sophomore Ttm
Kuhn wtll be m left field JURJOr
Mtke Hams m nght f1eld,
Goebel at second base, semor
John Sheets at thtrd base,
Larkms m centerfi eld JUniOr
Greg Bat ley at first base,
JUniOr Greg
Wmebrenner
behmd the plate, and Jumor
Steve Holter wtll be gettmg the
startmg call on the mound
Garne lime IS 4 30 p m

the Q's mto fourth place m the
West, one game ahead of
Denver tn thetr battle for a
playoff berth
Lollen es, ra1s1ng momes
for public as well as pnvate
e nds, ong1nated m

Flor~ n ce

about 1530

THE DEAN DEPENDABLES

IT'S A
STEEL
WHILE THEY LAST

$3179

G78-14
HJS-15
•
•
•
•

includes FET

Steel Belted &amp; Polyester Belts
Whtte Wa 11 Oestgn
Tough and Dependable
Mounted and Balanced

Amenca's 2 Most Popular Sizes

GENERAL TIRE SALES
MIDDLEPORT

PH. 992-7161

Great Buys

ASSORTED
BELTS
Many Types

MODEL

$4To sa

You duplicate nature's own method of building SOli fer
tlllty with a Gillan tiller Here's why Gilson's perfect
slicing and blending act•on mixes up soli and organ1c
matter thoroughly
forms a loose, aerated seedbed As
1 result, plant roots penetrate and reach out easily
moisture Is absorbed more readi ly, decomposition of soil
minerals and organic waste takes plate quicker Your
garden gets off to a Inter start and flowers and
vegetables grow bigger than ever before Gilson f•llers
feature extra heavy construction, guaranteed tines
(replaced free If ever broken) cast Iron gNr case, ad
1ustable tilling widths J 1h and S H P

Leather
Platn or
fancy bu ckles All
s1zes and colors

A Poison Counlerdose Chart
From Your Rexall Pharmacist
for your home
a valuable
gutde no home should be
wtthout Help us observe
Nahonal Potson Preventton
Week, March 17-23

Model C2510 EWA

Philco 25",,,,,.1
Color TV with
100% Solid
State Chassis

PICK UP YOUR FREE CHART TODAY'

2·YEAR
PARTS AND LABOR

GUARANTEE
'For two years
after deltvery
we II ftx any·
thing that sour
fau lt '

Save 1100% solt d state modular chassiS wtth eastly re
placeable modules • Hands Off tuntng • Super
prcture lube • Phllco P1cture Guard Sys
Instant play tor p1clure and sound • Beauttful
Cqjttermr&gt;or.ary c3b1net fm1shed to match Walnut

Ebersbach Hardware

KERM'S KORNER

New York Clothing House

"Everything In Hardware"

POMEROY

POMEROY, OHIO

•
&lt;I

58 overtame vtctory agamst

Belts for Spring

,_,.

5 HP

110 W. MAIN

Bow~

ALA BOWLING LEAGUE
EARLY FRIOAY-6 15
March 1 1974
Team Slandmgs
Po1nts
62
Jun1or Gutter Dusters
Feeney Bennett Fl1ers
50
Rutland .t67 Pioneers
48
Feeney Bennett Strike Outs 47
Racme 602 Rockets
33
Htgh Team Senes - Rutland
467 P1oneers 1379
Feeney
Bennett Fliers 1363 Feeney
Bennett Str1ke Outs 1264
HtQh Team Game - Rut l and
467 Ptoneers 501
Feeney
Bennett F l ters 462, Feeney
Bennett Flters 453
H 1gh lnd Ser .es Gerry
Kessmger 463 Maxine Dugan
4.40 Lou Gilmore 420
H1gh lnd Game Gerry
Kess1nger 177 Lou Gilmore
173 Mi!Ktne Dugan 163

CWII•on

~ard

DISCWSURES ASKED
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Gov
John J Gtlligan Wednesday
ordered all sta~employes
earomg over $15,000 a year to
ftle annual fmanc1al diSclosure
statements m an effort to
"restore the public's fa1th m
government "

52nd state tourney starts tonight

•I

~Dolly I 10 am. to 10 00 p m
Sunday 10 J0·12·:11andstofp"'

PRESCRIPTIONS

Friendly Service
112 E.

PH. 9~&lt;· 295~

·ss

SALE PRICED

ggsLIMITED
TIMEONLY!

FOREMAN &amp; ABBOn

'

�r, ,.

I

4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 .. March 21, t974 ,

Local fellowship commended

Snyder speaker at All-SEOAL banquet
April
4
.
\rhile Shoenwkrr wa s selecl r d
as the Mos t Va luable Pl :~ye r .
Shoemake r will also rPc:eivc a
specia l cm. anl 'as tht' leag ut&gt;s
top fr ee-t hrow shooter
Snyder compi led a won - lost
ret" ord of 354-245 during his
quar ter century as head cage
me ntor for the Bobcat s . In duded in his record was .s even
Mid-Am e ri can Confere nce
championships, two m ore tha n
a ny oth er coa ch in the leag ue' s
history , am ong them one this
past sea son . He had winnin g
seasons in 21 of his 25 ca m-

Jim Snyder, wh o resigned
earlier this month after 25
years as head basketball r oach

al Ohio University , will be the
m a in

sp ea ke r

wh e n

the

South eas tern Ohi o Ath le tic
League holds its annual all'
leag ue ~ as k e tba!l banqu et
Thursday, April 4.
The 7:30p.m. banquet will be
held at the Rio Grande Coll ege
cafeteria. Gallipolis Coach Jim
Osborne and John Shoemaker
of the Waverl y Ti gers will head
the lis t of honorees. Osborne
was named Coach of the Yea r

pa tg n ~ .

J

A nati ve uf C'&lt;m lon. he is a
1941 gra du a te of Ohi o
Universit y, where he sta rred
on the 1941 tcmn whi ch we nt to
th e
Nat iona l
In vi tati on
Tourna ment. He coached at
Ca nton Le hm a n High School
fo r two_years . with tha t tenure
divided by se r vice .in the a rm ed
fo r ce s. He c am e to Ohi o
Uni vers it y in 1946 a s a n
ass is ta nt
footba ll
an d
basketba ll coach, a nd sueceeded his college coa ch, the
late W. J . ··Dutch" Trautwein ,

as head ba sketball m entor
whe n Trau twein r esigned due
to ill hea lth in l ~W.I . He continued to serve as an assistant
111

football until 1958.
Osborn e, wh o guided

Ttlis

yc&lt;.~ r 's

c ha m pion s hi p

came afte r tw o stra ig!Jt run·
ncr -up fini shes to the Wa ve rl y
Ti ,~e r s and wasn 't clinched

un til the Blue Devils beat the
the

Tige rs 60-50 in the fi na l ga me of
th e r eg ular se a son. H ad

is

a

gruduatc

Ccn e va

Hi gh Sc hool

or

e~nd

Blue Devils to the SEOAL
basketball champi onship thi s Galhpol's lost th at game, the

basketball coach al Wi ttenberg

Tigers woul d have won their

two yea rs before becoming

coach of the team for the past fo ur th stra ight loop title.
This marks the third straight
fi ve yea rs. He is a lso hea d
baseba ll coach at the school. year that Osborn e has bt.-e n
The 29-yca r ~J!d Osborne has selected for the Coach of the
compiled an overall record of Year honor . He shared the
68-:18 at Gallipolis including a honor wi th Waver ly cocu.:h C.

head coach ai Gollipolis. In

past season, hCJ s been hea d

He

wa s

an

a ss is tc.wt

add ition to this yea r 's league
cha mpi onship, the fir st a t the

school since the 1958-59 season,
Osborne had guided te(::tms to
two str aight sec ti ona l c ha m -

46-24 recor d within the lcCJguc.

Bruins eye 1Oth NCAA hardwood championship
The two tea ms m eet in a
semifinal contest Sa turday at
Greensboro, N.C., with the
victor faci ng the winner of the
Marquette-Kansas game in the
championship showdown Monda y night at the same site.
Basketball couldn 't have

LOS ANGELES tUPII UCLA flies east today for its
"dream game" rematch with
North Carolina State that may
well determine whether the
Bruins win their lOth NCAA
basketball championship in 11
years.

much more of a dream

gam ~

than the UCLA-North Carolina
State rematch . The Wolfpack is
ranked No. I in the nati on, and
the Bruins are No. 2. UCLA is
the only team to hav e beaten
North Carolina SUite thi s

Snyder, whose basket bad put
Seattle into the one-point lead,
led the homes!Rnding Sonics
with 30.
Gail Goodrich had 27 points
and Jim Price 24 to lead the
!.akers.
In other NBA action Wednesday :
Bill Bradley sc ored 31
points , including foW' in overtime, to lead the New York
Knicks to a 104-102 victory over
the Phoenix Suns after Keith
Erickson of the Suns had hit a
jump shot at the buzzer to send
the game into a 98-98 tie; Elvin
Hayes tallied 32 points and
latched onto 16 rebou,ds to
lead the Capital Bullets in a
101-91 victory over the
Cleveland Cavaliers ; Geoff

Fur thermore, th ree allIn the first Bruins-Wol!pack
Americans will be on display in game, which UCLA won B4-&lt;i6
the contest: Bill Walton and on a neutral court in St . Louis,
Keith Wilkes of UCLA and Walton got into early foul

r em~1 tch.

.f~;;
&lt;:·
.: _,_:.:~':.
·

Petrie scored 43 points, including 30 in the second half,
to pace Portland in a 113-106
victory over Philadelphia that
ended Portland's 21-game road
losing streak ; Pete Maravich
hit 38 points for the Atlanta
Hawks in a 99-89 win over the
Boston Celtics as he went over
the 2,000 mark for the second
straight year; the Detroit
nstons rallied from 10 points
behind to beat the Houston
Rockets , 103-99, despite 37
points by Rudy Tomjanovich ;
and the Chicago Bulls, led by
Norm Van Lier's 25 points,
downed KC.Qmaha at K•nsas
City when Nate Williams '
buzzer shot rimmed the basket,
ending KC 's four-game winning streak.

Snort
Parade .:~;~:l
I"

po rtakncehito us . W
bee don't want
By MILTON RICHMAN
to ta e s exu ranee away
UPI Sports Editor
::i" from him.
._.,
"I just feel lucky as all getout
TAMPA, Fla. (UP! ) - One of those little shavers, no more we have gone as far as we
than five at the very outside , strategically worked his way over have. 1 don't feel'it would be
to Sparky Anderson's blind side on the field before the ball game the end of the world if we don't
the other day and stood there wi~h a beseeching look on his face win it ."
and a pencil and piece of paper in his hand .
Four members of UCLA's
" Piease ... please .. ." implored the yollflgster softly, oblivious to starting five- Walton, Wilkes,
the fact that some of the boyish awe and excitement of meeting Greg Lee and Tommy Curtishis first major league mana ger was not only.showing but spilling are graduating this year. But
all over him.
Wooden said, "We're not going
Sparky Anderson is the kind of individual who loves kids , to rolloverdeadnextyear even
ballplayers, fans, everybody. It's not sometl!ing he developed, thou gh (they) graduate."
he 's just built that way. He looked down at this little tyke and,
A UCLA spokesman said 15
taking the pencil and piece of paper, said to him :
Bruin players will make the
"For you , the world .. .an ything 1"
trip to Greensboro. In addition
The boy took the autograph and left, but was right back two to th e starting seniors, they .are

minutes later .

With the top look and open

toe you like.

Shiny
White
Bla ck
Navy

the fi rst team, and Marques
Johnson , Adre McCarter, Pete
Trgovich, Ralph Drollinger,
Rich wa shington, Gary Franklin , Wilbert Olinde , Gavin
Smith, Jim Spillane and Bob
Webb.
The spokesman said the
Bruins ' chartered night leaves
today at 9:45a.m. Pacific time,
and that fans will also be
aboard . He said UCLA will hold
a dosed practice Thursday and
have another workout Friday.
The team had a long practice
Wednesday, he said, and
"Everybody's in good shape."

Middleport,

o.

SPRING JACKETS
MEN AND BOYS
NYLONS DACRON/COITON

GOLF JACKETS •
BICYCLE JACKETS
TO

DENIM WESTERN JACKETS
36/46

'1 Q95

MEN'S &amp;BOYS' TANK TOPS
$299
WRANGLER HEADQUARTERS

MIDDLEPORT DEPT. STORE
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

International's Class AA allstate team .

The Waverly senior led the
league in scoring with 382
poinls in 14 games, a 21.3
avera ge. He made 74 uf 96 free
throws (77.1 pet. ), which was
tops in the league.
Members of the all -league
team who will be hon ored at
the banque t in addi tion to
Shoemaker are Dan Dodson of
Meigs , Jim Pierce of Logan ,
David Rann of Ironton, Gil
Price and Jim Niday of
Gallipolis, and Mark Ma ce of
Athens, all on the first team,
and Don Skinner of Athens,
Mike Sickles of Gallipolis ,
Mike McDonald and Pa ul
White of Jackson , Don Young

I
I1
1

l
ca rpet ... tes ted safe on
I ayour
ll ca rpet fa br1 cs and

!

upholstery .

Do not use on velvet.

l

Rent A Shampooer
$!.00 A Day

I STAR SUPPLY
L~~cine, Ohio

SPRING SPECIAL

10% OFF
ON ALL ITEMS
FISH • A.OWERS • PET SUPPLIES

VILLAGE FLOWER SHOP
949-2571

RACIN 0.

operating. By keeping your thermostat set
six degrees lower than you did
last winter, and conserving gas in
other ways, you'll not only save sorne
money, but you'll help provide gas that
will keep people on !he job.
Saving gas in your home can help
save jops.

C~WMBIAGAS

Twins,~ who

have won only one

of their 14 games this spring.
Burroughs went 4-for-5 against
(Continued on page 5)

.MIDD

MAKE BELI..S RING - The group of youths and their instrUctor above, who make music
by bells, will appear at the Heath United Methodist Church in Middleport at I0 :30a . m. Sunday ,
March 24. Tbey arefrom Bridgeport, W. Va. First row (1-r) Mrs. Ruby Golden Jr., director ;
Brenda Ashby, Monica Musg rave, Georgia Rice, Becky Golden, Cheryl Morteney, Becky Beto,
Cindy Myers; second row, Kathy Shockey, Barbara Lubbe and Holly Ellenbarger . Following
morning worship there will be a covered dish mea lin the fellowship room .

and

which

wa s

c ha rte red

. ........

•'

C. R . Sw ogger has a nnoun ce d th e Ea s tern High

Burroughs
(Continued from page 4)
the Twins and drove m three
runs, including the game
wi!Uler with a ninth i!Uling
single.
Alex Johnson and Tom
Grieve had two-run homers for
the Rangers and Steve Braun
hit one for the Twins.
Greg Luzinski had the same
kind of day for Philadelphia
Burroughs had for Texas,
hitting a solo home run off
Harry Parker in the sixth inning and a three-run shot off
Parker in the seventh to knock
ov~r the New York Mets, 1().9.
Luzinski's 14-for-28 gives him
the Same spring average as
Burroughs,.500.
Jim Fuller, bidding for one of
Baltimore's outfield berths,
belted a two-run homer in the
eighth imling that was the
Orioles' margin of victory in a
4-3 decision over the Kansas
City Royals. Dave McNally
worked the first seven innings
for Baltimore, yielding one
run, a homer by Paul Schaal.
Reggie Smith's double in the
seventh inning snapped a tie
and ·gave the St. Louis Cardinals a 3-2 victory over the
New York Yanke~s. Smith's
blow was his third hit of the
contest, came at the expense of
Lowell Pabner and followed a
single by Jose Cruz.
Mickey Stanley's third
straight hit, a three-run homer
in the sixth, powered Detroit to
a 6-3 triwnph over Boston, and
Houston got some good news
from Larry Dierker in the form
of five hitless innings against
Montreal in a 7-3 win over the
Expos. Dierker, hampered by
a variety of troubles last year ,
walked the leadoff batter and
then retired 13 in a row.
The Los Angeles Dodgers
stole five bases off catcher Hal
King, filling in for Johnny
Bench, and beat the Cincinnati
Reds, 5-3, for their fourth
straight victory. Don Sutton
allowed two runs in five imlings
for the win. Pete Rose had
three of the Reds' nine hils.
Rain washed out the three
games schedule in Arizona,
canceling the San Diego·
Oakland meeting at Mesa; the
Cleveland-San Francisco contest at Phoenix and the
Milwaukee-California exhibition at -get this -Sun City ..

School honor rol l for th e fourth
si,( wee ks grad ing pe riod .
Nam ed were :
FRE SHMAN tAl -

Teresa Bu ck le y. Teresa Carr ,
Cindy Dill , Bar bara Douglas,
Te r esa
E dward s. Marlin
Eva ns, T ammy F ifch . Kath y
Fo ll rod , Jennifer Gainer , Suzi e
Goebel, Caro lyn Harper. Paula
Haw k , Rac hel Hunter , Brenda
Lanh am . Jayne Smith , Juli
Whitehead , Nola Young : ( 8) Ja net Ambro se, Cindy An ·
de rson , Deanna 6aker, Dian a
Benedum ,
Je w~ll
Blak e.
Patri ci a Bost on. David Car ·
nahan . Juli a Carpenter . Pam
Congro ve. Be li nda Deeter .
Robin
El k in s,
Melani e
Enev old sen , Diana Eppl e,
Ba r ba r a H enders on . J ohn
H e nd e r s o n ,
Teres a
Lo ng enette , L is a Ma st er s,
Ja ne Millh one, Da vi d Mill s,
Tamm y Ni ce. Cindy Ritchie,
Ter esa Sm ith . Pa m Spurlo ck ,
Gail Thoma , Br ian Windon,
Bonni e Wood.
SCPHOMOR E IAI Sonya Ada m s, Barbara Andrews, Di ana Ath erton , Tom
A vis. E dn a Bogg s, Deni se
Dea n, M elin da Ev ans, J oanne
Fick. Je ff Holter , T im Kuhn,
Cr issy Mor la n. Kath y Newell,
George Pi cken s. Diana Pu ll ins,
Nancy Ridenour, Diana Root,
Debb ie Sander s, Julia Schul t z.
Debb ie Windon . Patri ci a
Windon ; { B ) Bet sy Am sba ty, T amm i Bahr, Katrina
Batey, Cher yl Benedum , A vi s
Bi ssell , Joe Bu chanan , Pam
Clonch . Niese! Duva ll, Harold
Eagl e. Don Eichinger, Sherry
Eppl e. Dana Fi&lt;:k , Dav e
Hannum. Beth Hewitt, Cathy
Maxey , Pam Millhone, Diana
Morri s. Steve Nelson. Debbie
Samos, Carol Spurlock , Peggy
Trusse ll , Lola Walker. Jan
Wils on , Pam Kau tz, Mark
Mora .
J UN lOR (A I J ane
Bahr . Debb ie Boat right. Anita
Bu ck ley, Sally Bur ke. Barbara
Coates , Cathy Davi s, Homer
Delong , Li z Edwards. V i&lt;:ki
Gaul, Deanna Hen sley, Ma r sha
K im es, Regina Kimes , Marylu
M ills , Luann Newell, Karen
Reed . Becky Root , Pam Sams ,
Cindy Thoma s; ( 8) - Mary
Barrlng oe r, R a ndy Blak e.
Phillip Bowen, Terry Brawley,
Conn ie Dailey, Kev in Dill,
Be&lt;:ky Ebersba c h, Ed Gibbs,
Mik e Harris, Robert Harris,
Jim Lod w ick, Rhonda M illiron.
Kip Reed, St eve Roseberry .
J ohn Smith , Terry Sm i th.
Rhon da Sa vel, Coy Starcher.
Mi &lt;:ki Taylor , Bonnie Wel sh.
Charl es White , Ke ith Wood .
SENIO R - t Al - Bern ice
Bogg s, Debbie Burns, Marti e
Ca ldwe ll , Ter esa Chiches ter.
Rose m a ry Clark , M elissa
Coleman . Cry sta l Erwin, J o
En evold sen . Steve Follrod.
Steve
Goebel.
Pat t y
Grossni&lt;: k le. Paula Hauber,
Cryll Kimes, Iris Pigott,
~ h e ila
Sa mp son .
Jan e
Whil ehead ; ( Bl William
Amb erger, Stev e Ander son,
Larry A th erton , T im Baum .
Sue Burke. Peggy Chaney. Sue
Cr emeans, Rhonda Fortney.
J eff Gi lland , J oy Grov e r .
Tanya
K ee bau g h,
Pam
Lanham , Nanc'f M il ler , David
Sorden. Da v id Weber , Debbie
Wil son , Sher i Young .

KUTLAN U -

Four classes

soci.al' . lf

ICalendarI
Conservation League, 8 p.m.,

Elementary, which is one of

Sacred
Heart
Church
basement. 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 conduct the
program and Mrs . Opha Offutt,
the con tesls.
TWIN CITY .Shrine Club,
7:30 p.m. at hall. Refreshmenls; all Shriners welcome.
FINAL Day for purchasing
tickels to Meigs High School
Winter Sports Banquet; no
tick ets at door. Tickets
availabl e at New York
Clothin g, Swi s he r -Lohse
Drugs, Pomeroy; Village
Pharmacy ·ar.d Western Auto,
Middleport. Banquet will be
6:30p.m. on March 28 at Meigs
High cafeteria.
RACINE American Legion
Post 602, 8 p.m., legion hall.
MEIGS County Democrat
Club, 7:30 p.m. , Grace
Episcopal Church, Pomeroy .
Guest speaker, Grant McDonald.
ALL women m ~yrac.:u:tt:
interested in training and

the main fund raising projects
of the Wahama Band Boosters
Club. Food sales will begin at 4
p.m . from a menu of chicken,
noodles, dressing, a variety of
vegetables, cake , pie, meatballs , fish , tea and coffee. Each
·t
·n b · d
t
' em w1 e pnce separa e1y. ,

. -. ......
·,. .'t :.

01

perial House in Columbus on
Monday. Bert J. Gast of Illinois
was guest desi gner assisted by
other memorial designers in
the area . Sketching and
creative modern design was
the theme of the day . Seven
members of the Logan company attended .

' ·~ '

r·,, ··~ ··· "''

,_

.w~

..
1' G- t 75

HOurs: ~o.m. loS::IO p.m. DallY
77J-5H:I a.m. lOt p.m. Frldoy &amp; Solurdoy Moson. W. Yo.

..
.'
, I'

"

"

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

WM. WARNOCK
period durin ~ Friday , March
22.

Minstrel dates
changed to
May 29-30-31
WELLSTON - Dates for the
21st Annual Wellston Ro!Rry
Min s trel Show hav e been
advanced one day to prevent a

SENTINEL CARRIERS - Jeff Staals, left, and his
sister , Christy ,are carriers for the Daily Sentinel. Jeff, 12, of
Martin St. , Mason, has been a car.J;ii:r.!llr almost two years,
and delivers to 36 customers. Ch nsty, 10, helps her brother on
the route. Jeff likes to collec t old coins and stamps, while
Christy has _a rock collection . Jeff, who enjoys football, atlends Wahama Junior High a nd Christy attends Mason
Eleme ntary School.

possible conflict with the Jun e
1, 1974, Wellston Lions Club
Horse Show at the Wellston
fairgrounds.
Wellston Rotary President
James I. Fox said the minstrel
show would be Wedn esday ,
Thursday, and Friday, Ma y 2930-31, rather than on June 1.
~' The

SIMON SAYS:
" TAKE A GIANT STEP
IN BOYS' STAX
BY THOM MeAN."

horse show is a major

Lions Club activity, and helps
the Lions rai se fund s for
community activities, just as

the minstrel show, along with
the auction and bean dinner,
are

major

events

mon ey-rai s in g

to fund

Rotary's

community activities,"

Fox

said.
Rehearsals for the 21st annual Rotary minstrel will begin
April 22, Fox said .

..
REVIVAL SET
MASON - A revival will be
held at Christian Brethren
Church here opening March 24
startingat7:30p. m. There will
be special singing each
evening. The Rev. James
Lewis is pastor .

CHILI SUPPER
There will be a chili supper,
open to the public at the Enterprise United Methodist
Church, Friday evening, 0 to
7:30. Chili, salad, pie and
beverage, all for donations of
$1 and 50c.

The MEIGS INN
The most popular night club in

When it co mes
to th e hea lth of r· uur

children' s feet. Thom MeAn

the tri-county area is pr·oud
present the return of

to

GEO. HALL
AND THE HALLMARKS

TONIGHT 10 TIL 2

doesn 't play g ames. Our boys· Stax;
are sc ien tifically desi gned to exerc ise
and shape yo ur chi ldren's fee t to promote
norm al healthy g rowth, and Boys' Stax have been ex te nsivel y
tested in ou r own laborato ry l or co mlort and du rabi lity.
These boys ' size version s of man f lyled sho es haVe
modera te platforms and slightly hi gher heels. And the price
is boys' size too-

heritage house
" 1v our

1'h om Jr1c
'" A· n S tore "

Middleport, Ohio

joining the Women's Division

of the Syracuse Emergency
Squad should meet at 1:30 p.m.
at the Syracuse Municipal
Building.
FRIDAY
CHILI SUPPER, Enterprise
United Methodist Church, 5 to
7:30 p,m. by Helping Hands
Class . Proceeds for church
carpeting; $1 adults; oO cents
children.
SPECIAL MEETING,
Racine Lodge 461, F&amp;AM, 7:30
p.m. for annual inspection.
Work in fellowcraft degree.
'
SATURDAY
MEIGS HIGH junior and
senior welding VICA Club
holding welding repair day 8
a.m. to 4 p.m. in downtown
parking lot in Pomeroy and at
Meigs High SchooL Items
needing repair can be taken
either place ;
however,
aluminum and stainless steel
articles must go to high school.
Donations for work will be
accepted.
SQUARE DANCE at Shade
&amp;hool, 9 p.m. to midnight by
Shade PTA with music by Frog
Stack and the Greenhorns .
SUNDAY
RACINE Chapter 134, OES,
will hold a practice session at 2
p.m.
J . B. and the Tiny Trio,
singing group from Vienna, W.
Va ., will be at the Eagle Ridge
Church, at 2 p. m. Public invited.
REV. JOHN Ellswick will be

REGULAR $10.95

PANELING
Looks cozy .. . feels it,
too. Aids insulation saves fuel and cooll

•s••

4x8 SHEET

Hawaiian Aloha by EVANS
Pre-Finished Decorative
Printed VInyl
Plywood Paneling
'

Save Now

starting Sunday at the Boring
Chapel UB Church on County
Road43C near Vales Mills, 7:30
p. m. each evening.
THE REV . David Gee,
director of Camp Co-tu-bic
n~ar
Bellefontaine
is
evangelist at tbe Mt. Hermon
UB Church near Chester for
revival meetings , 1:30 each
evening through March 31.

MEET POSTPONED
The March meeting of the
P¥t Matrons of Evangeline
Chapter , O.E .S., has been
cancelled . There will be a ·
meeting in April.

PARTICLE
BOARD
4x8
SHEET

evangelist for revival services

18" CUT UP

\

..

in

Pupils see Indian drama

... .

';I~·~

!inued blessing of God ."

great deal of power.
His greatest test wa s
- the 4th, 5th, 6th and special
education - were on the Ohio whether or not he could use his
University campus March 6 to new power wisely . The story
see the play, Johnny Moon- was told in narrative, songs
beam and the Silver Arrow at and dances, and provided
3*»--.;:?@*';•M•,'.'.::!-'•..'•!•:•:•:•:x:•:•!•:•:•:•'•
opportunity for audience
the OU School of Theater.
It was the story of a 12-year participation .
The Ohio Arts Council gran t
old America n Indian boy who
wanted to prove that he was a paid tor all busing and gasoline
man . In order to do so, he had expenditures.
to perform three teals of
bravery. He did them, and in
ATTENDED SEMINAR
the process accumulated a
!.eo
L. Vaughan, memorial
THURSDAY
and manager of
consultant
WILLING Workers Class,
SUPPERSET
Logan Monument Company,
Enterprise United Methodist
NEW HAVEN _ A Jitney Inc . of Meigs County attended
Church, 7:30p.m. at the home
Supper
is planned Saturday a design seminar and
of Kay Logan, Route 33.
MIDDLEPORT Child evening at the New Haven ;~~~~~~;' / ~~: a~~~~m~:~

Honor students listed :if ·
at Eastern High School

STOCK

RT
•

j

* NOW ·IN

DUTTON'S
· Prescriptions Are Our Main Business
992-3106

Prayer

pray . a"d seek God , and January, and meels the first
straighten out our own lives Saturday evening each month
then our Heavenly Father will al the Holiday Inn.
hear us, and forgive us , and
The chapel at the Grace
heal and bless America. That's United Methodist Church will
His promise in II Citron 7:14. be open from sundown Thurs"And by joining together day until midnight Friday for
arounC. the world in an un- those who wi s h to com e
broken chain of prayer through together with others for some

HUFfYoo

Wheel Chairs
Walkers
Crutches and Canes
Hack Braces
Bedside Commodes
Support Stockings
Trusses
Incontinent Garments
· Traction Equipment
Elastic Supports
Surgical Dressings

of

nam e, humble ourselves and

I

the indust r ia l qua lity r ug
sham poo . .. the one that
act ua ll y pro lon gs the life of

1

.. :

. ,. '.• ~ ~ 'r....
··: :

Fasting on Friday, March 22.
Warn ock is the International
Said Warnock: " If we Director who sponson ..d the
Christians, who go by Christ's Gallipolis Chapter FGI!MP'l

!I

never seen such a change in a

pertormer. Playing left field,
the 23-year-&lt;&gt;ld Long B&lt;ach,
Calif., Jongballer was considered adequate defensively but
since moving over to right, he
has been making some great
plays, getting a good jump on
the ball and carrying on like he
means to win the Gold Glove
this year.
Billy Martin, the Rangers'
manager, was the one with the
inspiration
to
switch
Burroughs from left field to
right. Martin knew Burroughs
could hit from his credentials
of last year -115 rbis, 30 homers
and a .279 average -and now
he'salsofindingouthe can do a
job defensively.
Burroughs isn't neglecting
his work at the plate either.
He's hitting .500 on the button
this spring with J().for-20, four
of those hits being home runs .
Two of them came in Wednes·
day's 10·9 win over the
ma!f,unctioning Minnesota

program

I

1
1
I

Locahndustry needs gas to keep

Burroughs
in switch

THE SHOE BOX

tearn berth on Uni ted Press

RUG SHAMPOO

par~

Gallipolis community for their licipatin g, are responsible for
participation in the 1974 the community and its eofl -

BUYriiiWAi-l

Dave Meyers, who rounds . . .ut

Lions going
independent

ACTION
FASHION

makemanyfouls. He keeps his
' hands up. He knows his im-

$,:~j.

"Can I have your hat ?" he asked Sparky Anderson .
"I can't," said the Cincinnati Reds' manager. I'll get fired."
The kid looked as if somebody had just destroyed him with all
the hard, cold fa cls about Santa Claus. He picked his head up and
his eyes found Anderson's.
"You said 'ANYTHING,"' he mumbled before ambling off.
Sparky Anderson doesn 't get stopped too often on the ballfield,
but that little episode stopped him. He laughs when he talks about
it and believes that in a way, it bears out one of his theories
perteclly .
Big league managers, he feels, do not have all the answers.
They are not omniscient and all-knowing as people make them
out to be, says Sparky Anderson. Big league managers, he says,
are the same as everybody else. They have weaknesses, and they
make mistakes.
"A manager is not God, " Sparky Anderson says. "You mean to
UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. representative of their point of tell me it isn't logical to think there could be somebody oo the ball
(UP!) - a desire to be a view than of the view of a club smarter than the manager? Why not? There've been ball"national leader" in college major college with a large players who stepped right out of the ranks and became big league
athletic policy and to save as athletic program like Penn managers. They immediately were labeled 'smart.' Did they
much as $60,000 a year are the State's," is supported by the get smart overnight? Ridiculous. They were smart all along,
reasons fdr the announced money angle .
maybe even smarter than the manager."
The Lions, with a nationallyresignation of powertul Penn
Some managers regard their ballplayers only a jump or so
State University from the ranked football tean, coached ahead of the village dummy and wouldn't accept advice from
nation's largest conference. by Joe Paterno which has gone them if they were going down for the last time in the ocean and
The Nittany Lions, for many to bowl games four times in the nobody else was around , but Anderson goes the other way .
years a national power in last five years and appeared
"If any of my players comes up with an idea I didn't think of, I
football, wrestling, and several many times on the NCAA's don't discourage it, I welcome it," says the Reds ' manager.
other sports, formally declared program of college football TV, "Every year somebody on our club comes up with one that
Tuesday they will go through have had to cut the ECAC in for nobody else thought of. If it's a good idea, I accept it and use it.
June 30 with previous plans to a share of the money it got I'd have to be crazy not to."
pull out of the more-than-200 from these appearances.
The policy must work okay because Sparky Anderson has
Morris said the ECAC's managed the Reds four years now and has won three division
member Eastern College Ath·
share has been averaging titles and two National League pennants.
letic Conference.
The main reason, according $55,000 to $60,000 per year for
Not a single world series yet, but this is the year, he says .
to Lions' athletic director those last five. years. That
It could be because the Reds seem to have everything, in·
Edward Czekaj, is to pursue makes Penn State, he said, eluding a manager who's smart enough to realize he can have all
the university's desire to exert "the largest financial con- other things in the world going for him, but if he doesn't have the
" national leadership in in- tributor to the ECAC."
horses pulling in the same direction he is, he isn't going
tercollegiate athletics."
anywhere.
John Morris, university spoAsk Sparky Anderson what he considers the most important
kesman, explained that Penn
quality a manager must have and he comes up with the answer
State wants to be "a national
immediately.
independent within the NCAA,
"Honesty," he says.
rather tllan a regional or
"Look, nomaUer how hard you try, your personality and some
eastern independent within the
of your players' personalities will clash sometimes. But if you're
ECAC.''
honest, with yourself as well as with your players, I'll guarantee
Ballplayers ·are funny .
This feeling of having outSometimes little things make you'll never have a problem.
grown the bulky, loose-knit them bappy, even such little
"There is no way to fool a man on honesty. I think this - if
· ECAC, which Morris pointed
you're
completely honest with your players, they will bear with
things as maybe switching
out is "made up mainly of
over from left field to right anything you do. There's no W'ay for me to go before these guys
smaller colleges and is more
every day and try to kid 'em. I never have and never will''
field .
Jeff Burroughs of tbe Texas
Hangers made that switch
three days ago and you've

MISS AMERICA.
SHOES

trouble and had tc sit out much
of the contest. And UCLA
coach Jolm Wooden JOShed at a
spo r ts luncheon Wednesday
that the Bruin s were going to
ha ve Wa lton refuse to commit
ea rly fouls in the Saturday

r~::;.;'" ""'"""=-"'·1 =~~l;:~f£;~~

Lakers move ahead
•
one game In chase
By United Press International
The Los Angeles Lakers
moved one game ahead today
in the ra ce for lead in the
Pacific Division of the National
Basketball Association, and
you might say that a fellow
named Slick Watls stole a
share of the lead away from the
Golden Slate Warriors.
The Lakers, playing at home,
came uw with a big 120-114
victory over the Milwaukee
Bucks, even if the Bucks'
Kareem AbduJ.Jabbar had
been named the " Most
Valuable Player" in the league
earlier in the day. Meanwhile,
the Warriors were losing their
second game in as many
nights,' 110..101, to the Seattle
Sonics with the help of Sonic
rookie Watts.
The Warriors trailed by only
one point in the closing second
and ace Rick Barry had the
ball when Watts pilfered the
ball, raced the entire length of
the court, and sank a clinching
basket with six seconds to play.
Barry took game scorings
honors with 36 points and Dick

sea son-and has won seven David Thompson of the Wolfna tional titles in a r ow.
pa ck.

Chapter I FGBMFI), and the churches (lOll oth ers

by scor ing 643 poi nt.&gt;; this year · Green of Ir onton , Artie
DeStep hen of Ja ckson, Jeff
Ia 26.8 ave r age ), a se nior
Campbell
of Logan, and Tony
record at the school. That
boosted his three-yea r career Swin dler of Waverly , all of
scoring total to 1,211 points, wh om were picked for
placing him second on the honorable mention status.
Tic kels for the banquet at
sc hool's all-time scoring list.
Denny Thompson is on top with $4 .50 each are on sale at lea gue
1, 457 points in four years, whil e sc hools·. Menu for the banquet
Rick Eolin 's three-year total of will in cl ude roa st beef and all
the trimmin gs .
1,204 is now third .
Shoemaker , who also starre d
in football and base ball for the
honors in basketball this year
in additi on to his selection to
th e all -leag ue team and MVP
honor . He wa s na m ed to a fi rstteam berth and as Player of the
Year on the Associated Press '
Class AA all-district tea m for
the Southeastern Distr ict, then
gaoned a first-team berth on
the AP 's Class AA all-state
team . He wa s named to a thiril-

dirc&lt;:tor power of Gud move by his 11oly

of lhe Internatiunnl Full Gu~pel Spiri.t in the lives of men and
Business Men's Fellowship has nations. The Gallipolis Chapter
commended the Gallipolis members and fri ends, and the

Al so to be honored are Arnie
Chonko of Athens, Tom
Val entin e of Gallipolis, Kenny

Ti gers, ha s ga ined a number of

F. .

Co.. Hunting ton, and C:J

Wa ve rl y, on the second team .

were a lso dis trict cha mps a
yc(:lr ago .

Shoemaker capped his cage
Witte nbe rg Univer sity, starcareer
at Wa verly Hi gh Sc hool
ting ii1 U c.~s ke tba ll ami bHseball

at bo th ·sc hools.

Warnock , OVer BOO chapters WH.J c: umprcsiden l of Mc:01rkle Milehine munities, we will ))Ure ly sec the

of Loga n and Doug Tracy of

D. Hawhee two yea r s CJ go. pionships and the Blue Devils

Osbom e

William

Open Daily 9 to 6
(CLOSED SUNDAYS)

EA.

88

�r, ,.

I

4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 .. March 21, t974 ,

Local fellowship commended

Snyder speaker at All-SEOAL banquet
April
4
.
\rhile Shoenwkrr wa s selecl r d
as the Mos t Va luable Pl :~ye r .
Shoemake r will also rPc:eivc a
specia l cm. anl 'as tht' leag ut&gt;s
top fr ee-t hrow shooter
Snyder compi led a won - lost
ret" ord of 354-245 during his
quar ter century as head cage
me ntor for the Bobcat s . In duded in his record was .s even
Mid-Am e ri can Confere nce
championships, two m ore tha n
a ny oth er coa ch in the leag ue' s
history , am ong them one this
past sea son . He had winnin g
seasons in 21 of his 25 ca m-

Jim Snyder, wh o resigned
earlier this month after 25
years as head basketball r oach

al Ohio University , will be the
m a in

sp ea ke r

wh e n

the

South eas tern Ohi o Ath le tic
League holds its annual all'
leag ue ~ as k e tba!l banqu et
Thursday, April 4.
The 7:30p.m. banquet will be
held at the Rio Grande Coll ege
cafeteria. Gallipolis Coach Jim
Osborne and John Shoemaker
of the Waverl y Ti gers will head
the lis t of honorees. Osborne
was named Coach of the Yea r

pa tg n ~ .

J

A nati ve uf C'&lt;m lon. he is a
1941 gra du a te of Ohi o
Universit y, where he sta rred
on the 1941 tcmn whi ch we nt to
th e
Nat iona l
In vi tati on
Tourna ment. He coached at
Ca nton Le hm a n High School
fo r two_years . with tha t tenure
divided by se r vice .in the a rm ed
fo r ce s. He c am e to Ohi o
Uni vers it y in 1946 a s a n
ass is ta nt
footba ll
an d
basketba ll coach, a nd sueceeded his college coa ch, the
late W. J . ··Dutch" Trautwein ,

as head ba sketball m entor
whe n Trau twein r esigned due
to ill hea lth in l ~W.I . He continued to serve as an assistant
111

football until 1958.
Osborn e, wh o guided

Ttlis

yc&lt;.~ r 's

c ha m pion s hi p

came afte r tw o stra ig!Jt run·
ncr -up fini shes to the Wa ve rl y
Ti ,~e r s and wasn 't clinched

un til the Blue Devils beat the
the

Tige rs 60-50 in the fi na l ga me of
th e r eg ular se a son. H ad

is

a

gruduatc

Ccn e va

Hi gh Sc hool

or

e~nd

Blue Devils to the SEOAL
basketball champi onship thi s Galhpol's lost th at game, the

basketball coach al Wi ttenberg

Tigers woul d have won their

two yea rs before becoming

coach of the team for the past fo ur th stra ight loop title.
This marks the third straight
fi ve yea rs. He is a lso hea d
baseba ll coach at the school. year that Osborn e has bt.-e n
The 29-yca r ~J!d Osborne has selected for the Coach of the
compiled an overall record of Year honor . He shared the
68-:18 at Gallipolis including a honor wi th Waver ly cocu.:h C.

head coach ai Gollipolis. In

past season, hCJ s been hea d

He

wa s

an

a ss is tc.wt

add ition to this yea r 's league
cha mpi onship, the fir st a t the

school since the 1958-59 season,
Osborne had guided te(::tms to
two str aight sec ti ona l c ha m -

46-24 recor d within the lcCJguc.

Bruins eye 1Oth NCAA hardwood championship
The two tea ms m eet in a
semifinal contest Sa turday at
Greensboro, N.C., with the
victor faci ng the winner of the
Marquette-Kansas game in the
championship showdown Monda y night at the same site.
Basketball couldn 't have

LOS ANGELES tUPII UCLA flies east today for its
"dream game" rematch with
North Carolina State that may
well determine whether the
Bruins win their lOth NCAA
basketball championship in 11
years.

much more of a dream

gam ~

than the UCLA-North Carolina
State rematch . The Wolfpack is
ranked No. I in the nati on, and
the Bruins are No. 2. UCLA is
the only team to hav e beaten
North Carolina SUite thi s

Snyder, whose basket bad put
Seattle into the one-point lead,
led the homes!Rnding Sonics
with 30.
Gail Goodrich had 27 points
and Jim Price 24 to lead the
!.akers.
In other NBA action Wednesday :
Bill Bradley sc ored 31
points , including foW' in overtime, to lead the New York
Knicks to a 104-102 victory over
the Phoenix Suns after Keith
Erickson of the Suns had hit a
jump shot at the buzzer to send
the game into a 98-98 tie; Elvin
Hayes tallied 32 points and
latched onto 16 rebou,ds to
lead the Capital Bullets in a
101-91 victory over the
Cleveland Cavaliers ; Geoff

Fur thermore, th ree allIn the first Bruins-Wol!pack
Americans will be on display in game, which UCLA won B4-&lt;i6
the contest: Bill Walton and on a neutral court in St . Louis,
Keith Wilkes of UCLA and Walton got into early foul

r em~1 tch.

.f~;;
&lt;:·
.: _,_:.:~':.
·

Petrie scored 43 points, including 30 in the second half,
to pace Portland in a 113-106
victory over Philadelphia that
ended Portland's 21-game road
losing streak ; Pete Maravich
hit 38 points for the Atlanta
Hawks in a 99-89 win over the
Boston Celtics as he went over
the 2,000 mark for the second
straight year; the Detroit
nstons rallied from 10 points
behind to beat the Houston
Rockets , 103-99, despite 37
points by Rudy Tomjanovich ;
and the Chicago Bulls, led by
Norm Van Lier's 25 points,
downed KC.Qmaha at K•nsas
City when Nate Williams '
buzzer shot rimmed the basket,
ending KC 's four-game winning streak.

Snort
Parade .:~;~:l
I"

po rtakncehito us . W
bee don't want
By MILTON RICHMAN
to ta e s exu ranee away
UPI Sports Editor
::i" from him.
._.,
"I just feel lucky as all getout
TAMPA, Fla. (UP! ) - One of those little shavers, no more we have gone as far as we
than five at the very outside , strategically worked his way over have. 1 don't feel'it would be
to Sparky Anderson's blind side on the field before the ball game the end of the world if we don't
the other day and stood there wi~h a beseeching look on his face win it ."
and a pencil and piece of paper in his hand .
Four members of UCLA's
" Piease ... please .. ." implored the yollflgster softly, oblivious to starting five- Walton, Wilkes,
the fact that some of the boyish awe and excitement of meeting Greg Lee and Tommy Curtishis first major league mana ger was not only.showing but spilling are graduating this year. But
all over him.
Wooden said, "We're not going
Sparky Anderson is the kind of individual who loves kids , to rolloverdeadnextyear even
ballplayers, fans, everybody. It's not sometl!ing he developed, thou gh (they) graduate."
he 's just built that way. He looked down at this little tyke and,
A UCLA spokesman said 15
taking the pencil and piece of paper, said to him :
Bruin players will make the
"For you , the world .. .an ything 1"
trip to Greensboro. In addition
The boy took the autograph and left, but was right back two to th e starting seniors, they .are

minutes later .

With the top look and open

toe you like.

Shiny
White
Bla ck
Navy

the fi rst team, and Marques
Johnson , Adre McCarter, Pete
Trgovich, Ralph Drollinger,
Rich wa shington, Gary Franklin , Wilbert Olinde , Gavin
Smith, Jim Spillane and Bob
Webb.
The spokesman said the
Bruins ' chartered night leaves
today at 9:45a.m. Pacific time,
and that fans will also be
aboard . He said UCLA will hold
a dosed practice Thursday and
have another workout Friday.
The team had a long practice
Wednesday, he said, and
"Everybody's in good shape."

Middleport,

o.

SPRING JACKETS
MEN AND BOYS
NYLONS DACRON/COITON

GOLF JACKETS •
BICYCLE JACKETS
TO

DENIM WESTERN JACKETS
36/46

'1 Q95

MEN'S &amp;BOYS' TANK TOPS
$299
WRANGLER HEADQUARTERS

MIDDLEPORT DEPT. STORE
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

International's Class AA allstate team .

The Waverly senior led the
league in scoring with 382
poinls in 14 games, a 21.3
avera ge. He made 74 uf 96 free
throws (77.1 pet. ), which was
tops in the league.
Members of the all -league
team who will be hon ored at
the banque t in addi tion to
Shoemaker are Dan Dodson of
Meigs , Jim Pierce of Logan ,
David Rann of Ironton, Gil
Price and Jim Niday of
Gallipolis, and Mark Ma ce of
Athens, all on the first team,
and Don Skinner of Athens,
Mike Sickles of Gallipolis ,
Mike McDonald and Pa ul
White of Jackson , Don Young

I
I1
1

l
ca rpet ... tes ted safe on
I ayour
ll ca rpet fa br1 cs and

!

upholstery .

Do not use on velvet.

l

Rent A Shampooer
$!.00 A Day

I STAR SUPPLY
L~~cine, Ohio

SPRING SPECIAL

10% OFF
ON ALL ITEMS
FISH • A.OWERS • PET SUPPLIES

VILLAGE FLOWER SHOP
949-2571

RACIN 0.

operating. By keeping your thermostat set
six degrees lower than you did
last winter, and conserving gas in
other ways, you'll not only save sorne
money, but you'll help provide gas that
will keep people on !he job.
Saving gas in your home can help
save jops.

C~WMBIAGAS

Twins,~ who

have won only one

of their 14 games this spring.
Burroughs went 4-for-5 against
(Continued on page 5)

.MIDD

MAKE BELI..S RING - The group of youths and their instrUctor above, who make music
by bells, will appear at the Heath United Methodist Church in Middleport at I0 :30a . m. Sunday ,
March 24. Tbey arefrom Bridgeport, W. Va. First row (1-r) Mrs. Ruby Golden Jr., director ;
Brenda Ashby, Monica Musg rave, Georgia Rice, Becky Golden, Cheryl Morteney, Becky Beto,
Cindy Myers; second row, Kathy Shockey, Barbara Lubbe and Holly Ellenbarger . Following
morning worship there will be a covered dish mea lin the fellowship room .

and

which

wa s

c ha rte red

. ........

•'

C. R . Sw ogger has a nnoun ce d th e Ea s tern High

Burroughs
(Continued from page 4)
the Twins and drove m three
runs, including the game
wi!Uler with a ninth i!Uling
single.
Alex Johnson and Tom
Grieve had two-run homers for
the Rangers and Steve Braun
hit one for the Twins.
Greg Luzinski had the same
kind of day for Philadelphia
Burroughs had for Texas,
hitting a solo home run off
Harry Parker in the sixth inning and a three-run shot off
Parker in the seventh to knock
ov~r the New York Mets, 1().9.
Luzinski's 14-for-28 gives him
the Same spring average as
Burroughs,.500.
Jim Fuller, bidding for one of
Baltimore's outfield berths,
belted a two-run homer in the
eighth imling that was the
Orioles' margin of victory in a
4-3 decision over the Kansas
City Royals. Dave McNally
worked the first seven innings
for Baltimore, yielding one
run, a homer by Paul Schaal.
Reggie Smith's double in the
seventh inning snapped a tie
and ·gave the St. Louis Cardinals a 3-2 victory over the
New York Yanke~s. Smith's
blow was his third hit of the
contest, came at the expense of
Lowell Pabner and followed a
single by Jose Cruz.
Mickey Stanley's third
straight hit, a three-run homer
in the sixth, powered Detroit to
a 6-3 triwnph over Boston, and
Houston got some good news
from Larry Dierker in the form
of five hitless innings against
Montreal in a 7-3 win over the
Expos. Dierker, hampered by
a variety of troubles last year ,
walked the leadoff batter and
then retired 13 in a row.
The Los Angeles Dodgers
stole five bases off catcher Hal
King, filling in for Johnny
Bench, and beat the Cincinnati
Reds, 5-3, for their fourth
straight victory. Don Sutton
allowed two runs in five imlings
for the win. Pete Rose had
three of the Reds' nine hils.
Rain washed out the three
games schedule in Arizona,
canceling the San Diego·
Oakland meeting at Mesa; the
Cleveland-San Francisco contest at Phoenix and the
Milwaukee-California exhibition at -get this -Sun City ..

School honor rol l for th e fourth
si,( wee ks grad ing pe riod .
Nam ed were :
FRE SHMAN tAl -

Teresa Bu ck le y. Teresa Carr ,
Cindy Dill , Bar bara Douglas,
Te r esa
E dward s. Marlin
Eva ns, T ammy F ifch . Kath y
Fo ll rod , Jennifer Gainer , Suzi e
Goebel, Caro lyn Harper. Paula
Haw k , Rac hel Hunter , Brenda
Lanh am . Jayne Smith , Juli
Whitehead , Nola Young : ( 8) Ja net Ambro se, Cindy An ·
de rson , Deanna 6aker, Dian a
Benedum ,
Je w~ll
Blak e.
Patri ci a Bost on. David Car ·
nahan . Juli a Carpenter . Pam
Congro ve. Be li nda Deeter .
Robin
El k in s,
Melani e
Enev old sen , Diana Eppl e,
Ba r ba r a H enders on . J ohn
H e nd e r s o n ,
Teres a
Lo ng enette , L is a Ma st er s,
Ja ne Millh one, Da vi d Mill s,
Tamm y Ni ce. Cindy Ritchie,
Ter esa Sm ith . Pa m Spurlo ck ,
Gail Thoma , Br ian Windon,
Bonni e Wood.
SCPHOMOR E IAI Sonya Ada m s, Barbara Andrews, Di ana Ath erton , Tom
A vis. E dn a Bogg s, Deni se
Dea n, M elin da Ev ans, J oanne
Fick. Je ff Holter , T im Kuhn,
Cr issy Mor la n. Kath y Newell,
George Pi cken s. Diana Pu ll ins,
Nancy Ridenour, Diana Root,
Debb ie Sander s, Julia Schul t z.
Debb ie Windon . Patri ci a
Windon ; { B ) Bet sy Am sba ty, T amm i Bahr, Katrina
Batey, Cher yl Benedum , A vi s
Bi ssell , Joe Bu chanan , Pam
Clonch . Niese! Duva ll, Harold
Eagl e. Don Eichinger, Sherry
Eppl e. Dana Fi&lt;:k , Dav e
Hannum. Beth Hewitt, Cathy
Maxey , Pam Millhone, Diana
Morri s. Steve Nelson. Debbie
Samos, Carol Spurlock , Peggy
Trusse ll , Lola Walker. Jan
Wils on , Pam Kau tz, Mark
Mora .
J UN lOR (A I J ane
Bahr . Debb ie Boat right. Anita
Bu ck ley, Sally Bur ke. Barbara
Coates , Cathy Davi s, Homer
Delong , Li z Edwards. V i&lt;:ki
Gaul, Deanna Hen sley, Ma r sha
K im es, Regina Kimes , Marylu
M ills , Luann Newell, Karen
Reed . Becky Root , Pam Sams ,
Cindy Thoma s; ( 8) - Mary
Barrlng oe r, R a ndy Blak e.
Phillip Bowen, Terry Brawley,
Conn ie Dailey, Kev in Dill,
Be&lt;:ky Ebersba c h, Ed Gibbs,
Mik e Harris, Robert Harris,
Jim Lod w ick, Rhonda M illiron.
Kip Reed, St eve Roseberry .
J ohn Smith , Terry Sm i th.
Rhon da Sa vel, Coy Starcher.
Mi &lt;:ki Taylor , Bonnie Wel sh.
Charl es White , Ke ith Wood .
SENIO R - t Al - Bern ice
Bogg s, Debbie Burns, Marti e
Ca ldwe ll , Ter esa Chiches ter.
Rose m a ry Clark , M elissa
Coleman . Cry sta l Erwin, J o
En evold sen . Steve Follrod.
Steve
Goebel.
Pat t y
Grossni&lt;: k le. Paula Hauber,
Cryll Kimes, Iris Pigott,
~ h e ila
Sa mp son .
Jan e
Whil ehead ; ( Bl William
Amb erger, Stev e Ander son,
Larry A th erton , T im Baum .
Sue Burke. Peggy Chaney. Sue
Cr emeans, Rhonda Fortney.
J eff Gi lland , J oy Grov e r .
Tanya
K ee bau g h,
Pam
Lanham , Nanc'f M il ler , David
Sorden. Da v id Weber , Debbie
Wil son , Sher i Young .

KUTLAN U -

Four classes

soci.al' . lf

ICalendarI
Conservation League, 8 p.m.,

Elementary, which is one of

Sacred
Heart
Church
basement. 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 conduct the
program and Mrs . Opha Offutt,
the con tesls.
TWIN CITY .Shrine Club,
7:30 p.m. at hall. Refreshmenls; all Shriners welcome.
FINAL Day for purchasing
tickels to Meigs High School
Winter Sports Banquet; no
tick ets at door. Tickets
availabl e at New York
Clothin g, Swi s he r -Lohse
Drugs, Pomeroy; Village
Pharmacy ·ar.d Western Auto,
Middleport. Banquet will be
6:30p.m. on March 28 at Meigs
High cafeteria.
RACINE American Legion
Post 602, 8 p.m., legion hall.
MEIGS County Democrat
Club, 7:30 p.m. , Grace
Episcopal Church, Pomeroy .
Guest speaker, Grant McDonald.
ALL women m ~yrac.:u:tt:
interested in training and

the main fund raising projects
of the Wahama Band Boosters
Club. Food sales will begin at 4
p.m . from a menu of chicken,
noodles, dressing, a variety of
vegetables, cake , pie, meatballs , fish , tea and coffee. Each
·t
·n b · d
t
' em w1 e pnce separa e1y. ,

. -. ......
·,. .'t :.

01

perial House in Columbus on
Monday. Bert J. Gast of Illinois
was guest desi gner assisted by
other memorial designers in
the area . Sketching and
creative modern design was
the theme of the day . Seven
members of the Logan company attended .

' ·~ '

r·,, ··~ ··· "''

,_

.w~

..
1' G- t 75

HOurs: ~o.m. loS::IO p.m. DallY
77J-5H:I a.m. lOt p.m. Frldoy &amp; Solurdoy Moson. W. Yo.

..
.'
, I'

"

"

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

WM. WARNOCK
period durin ~ Friday , March
22.

Minstrel dates
changed to
May 29-30-31
WELLSTON - Dates for the
21st Annual Wellston Ro!Rry
Min s trel Show hav e been
advanced one day to prevent a

SENTINEL CARRIERS - Jeff Staals, left, and his
sister , Christy ,are carriers for the Daily Sentinel. Jeff, 12, of
Martin St. , Mason, has been a car.J;ii:r.!llr almost two years,
and delivers to 36 customers. Ch nsty, 10, helps her brother on
the route. Jeff likes to collec t old coins and stamps, while
Christy has _a rock collection . Jeff, who enjoys football, atlends Wahama Junior High a nd Christy attends Mason
Eleme ntary School.

possible conflict with the Jun e
1, 1974, Wellston Lions Club
Horse Show at the Wellston
fairgrounds.
Wellston Rotary President
James I. Fox said the minstrel
show would be Wedn esday ,
Thursday, and Friday, Ma y 2930-31, rather than on June 1.
~' The

SIMON SAYS:
" TAKE A GIANT STEP
IN BOYS' STAX
BY THOM MeAN."

horse show is a major

Lions Club activity, and helps
the Lions rai se fund s for
community activities, just as

the minstrel show, along with
the auction and bean dinner,
are

major

events

mon ey-rai s in g

to fund

Rotary's

community activities,"

Fox

said.
Rehearsals for the 21st annual Rotary minstrel will begin
April 22, Fox said .

..
REVIVAL SET
MASON - A revival will be
held at Christian Brethren
Church here opening March 24
startingat7:30p. m. There will
be special singing each
evening. The Rev. James
Lewis is pastor .

CHILI SUPPER
There will be a chili supper,
open to the public at the Enterprise United Methodist
Church, Friday evening, 0 to
7:30. Chili, salad, pie and
beverage, all for donations of
$1 and 50c.

The MEIGS INN
The most popular night club in

When it co mes
to th e hea lth of r· uur

children' s feet. Thom MeAn

the tri-county area is pr·oud
present the return of

to

GEO. HALL
AND THE HALLMARKS

TONIGHT 10 TIL 2

doesn 't play g ames. Our boys· Stax;
are sc ien tifically desi gned to exerc ise
and shape yo ur chi ldren's fee t to promote
norm al healthy g rowth, and Boys' Stax have been ex te nsivel y
tested in ou r own laborato ry l or co mlort and du rabi lity.
These boys ' size version s of man f lyled sho es haVe
modera te platforms and slightly hi gher heels. And the price
is boys' size too-

heritage house
" 1v our

1'h om Jr1c
'" A· n S tore "

Middleport, Ohio

joining the Women's Division

of the Syracuse Emergency
Squad should meet at 1:30 p.m.
at the Syracuse Municipal
Building.
FRIDAY
CHILI SUPPER, Enterprise
United Methodist Church, 5 to
7:30 p,m. by Helping Hands
Class . Proceeds for church
carpeting; $1 adults; oO cents
children.
SPECIAL MEETING,
Racine Lodge 461, F&amp;AM, 7:30
p.m. for annual inspection.
Work in fellowcraft degree.
'
SATURDAY
MEIGS HIGH junior and
senior welding VICA Club
holding welding repair day 8
a.m. to 4 p.m. in downtown
parking lot in Pomeroy and at
Meigs High SchooL Items
needing repair can be taken
either place ;
however,
aluminum and stainless steel
articles must go to high school.
Donations for work will be
accepted.
SQUARE DANCE at Shade
&amp;hool, 9 p.m. to midnight by
Shade PTA with music by Frog
Stack and the Greenhorns .
SUNDAY
RACINE Chapter 134, OES,
will hold a practice session at 2
p.m.
J . B. and the Tiny Trio,
singing group from Vienna, W.
Va ., will be at the Eagle Ridge
Church, at 2 p. m. Public invited.
REV. JOHN Ellswick will be

REGULAR $10.95

PANELING
Looks cozy .. . feels it,
too. Aids insulation saves fuel and cooll

•s••

4x8 SHEET

Hawaiian Aloha by EVANS
Pre-Finished Decorative
Printed VInyl
Plywood Paneling
'

Save Now

starting Sunday at the Boring
Chapel UB Church on County
Road43C near Vales Mills, 7:30
p. m. each evening.
THE REV . David Gee,
director of Camp Co-tu-bic
n~ar
Bellefontaine
is
evangelist at tbe Mt. Hermon
UB Church near Chester for
revival meetings , 1:30 each
evening through March 31.

MEET POSTPONED
The March meeting of the
P¥t Matrons of Evangeline
Chapter , O.E .S., has been
cancelled . There will be a ·
meeting in April.

PARTICLE
BOARD
4x8
SHEET

evangelist for revival services

18" CUT UP

\

..

in

Pupils see Indian drama

... .

';I~·~

!inued blessing of God ."

great deal of power.
His greatest test wa s
- the 4th, 5th, 6th and special
education - were on the Ohio whether or not he could use his
University campus March 6 to new power wisely . The story
see the play, Johnny Moon- was told in narrative, songs
beam and the Silver Arrow at and dances, and provided
3*»--.;:?@*';•M•,'.'.::!-'•..'•!•:•:•:•:x:•:•!•:•:•:•'•
opportunity for audience
the OU School of Theater.
It was the story of a 12-year participation .
The Ohio Arts Council gran t
old America n Indian boy who
wanted to prove that he was a paid tor all busing and gasoline
man . In order to do so, he had expenditures.
to perform three teals of
bravery. He did them, and in
ATTENDED SEMINAR
the process accumulated a
!.eo
L. Vaughan, memorial
THURSDAY
and manager of
consultant
WILLING Workers Class,
SUPPERSET
Logan Monument Company,
Enterprise United Methodist
NEW HAVEN _ A Jitney Inc . of Meigs County attended
Church, 7:30p.m. at the home
Supper
is planned Saturday a design seminar and
of Kay Logan, Route 33.
MIDDLEPORT Child evening at the New Haven ;~~~~~~;' / ~~: a~~~~m~:~

Honor students listed :if ·
at Eastern High School

STOCK

RT
•

j

* NOW ·IN

DUTTON'S
· Prescriptions Are Our Main Business
992-3106

Prayer

pray . a"d seek God , and January, and meels the first
straighten out our own lives Saturday evening each month
then our Heavenly Father will al the Holiday Inn.
hear us, and forgive us , and
The chapel at the Grace
heal and bless America. That's United Methodist Church will
His promise in II Citron 7:14. be open from sundown Thurs"And by joining together day until midnight Friday for
arounC. the world in an un- those who wi s h to com e
broken chain of prayer through together with others for some

HUFfYoo

Wheel Chairs
Walkers
Crutches and Canes
Hack Braces
Bedside Commodes
Support Stockings
Trusses
Incontinent Garments
· Traction Equipment
Elastic Supports
Surgical Dressings

of

nam e, humble ourselves and

I

the indust r ia l qua lity r ug
sham poo . .. the one that
act ua ll y pro lon gs the life of

1

.. :

. ,. '.• ~ ~ 'r....
··: :

Fasting on Friday, March 22.
Warn ock is the International
Said Warnock: " If we Director who sponson ..d the
Christians, who go by Christ's Gallipolis Chapter FGI!MP'l

!I

never seen such a change in a

pertormer. Playing left field,
the 23-year-&lt;&gt;ld Long B&lt;ach,
Calif., Jongballer was considered adequate defensively but
since moving over to right, he
has been making some great
plays, getting a good jump on
the ball and carrying on like he
means to win the Gold Glove
this year.
Billy Martin, the Rangers'
manager, was the one with the
inspiration
to
switch
Burroughs from left field to
right. Martin knew Burroughs
could hit from his credentials
of last year -115 rbis, 30 homers
and a .279 average -and now
he'salsofindingouthe can do a
job defensively.
Burroughs isn't neglecting
his work at the plate either.
He's hitting .500 on the button
this spring with J().for-20, four
of those hits being home runs .
Two of them came in Wednes·
day's 10·9 win over the
ma!f,unctioning Minnesota

program

I

1
1
I

Locahndustry needs gas to keep

Burroughs
in switch

THE SHOE BOX

tearn berth on Uni ted Press

RUG SHAMPOO

par~

Gallipolis community for their licipatin g, are responsible for
participation in the 1974 the community and its eofl -

BUYriiiWAi-l

Dave Meyers, who rounds . . .ut

Lions going
independent

ACTION
FASHION

makemanyfouls. He keeps his
' hands up. He knows his im-

$,:~j.

"Can I have your hat ?" he asked Sparky Anderson .
"I can't," said the Cincinnati Reds' manager. I'll get fired."
The kid looked as if somebody had just destroyed him with all
the hard, cold fa cls about Santa Claus. He picked his head up and
his eyes found Anderson's.
"You said 'ANYTHING,"' he mumbled before ambling off.
Sparky Anderson doesn 't get stopped too often on the ballfield,
but that little episode stopped him. He laughs when he talks about
it and believes that in a way, it bears out one of his theories
perteclly .
Big league managers, he feels, do not have all the answers.
They are not omniscient and all-knowing as people make them
out to be, says Sparky Anderson. Big league managers, he says,
are the same as everybody else. They have weaknesses, and they
make mistakes.
"A manager is not God, " Sparky Anderson says. "You mean to
UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. representative of their point of tell me it isn't logical to think there could be somebody oo the ball
(UP!) - a desire to be a view than of the view of a club smarter than the manager? Why not? There've been ball"national leader" in college major college with a large players who stepped right out of the ranks and became big league
athletic policy and to save as athletic program like Penn managers. They immediately were labeled 'smart.' Did they
much as $60,000 a year are the State's," is supported by the get smart overnight? Ridiculous. They were smart all along,
reasons fdr the announced money angle .
maybe even smarter than the manager."
The Lions, with a nationallyresignation of powertul Penn
Some managers regard their ballplayers only a jump or so
State University from the ranked football tean, coached ahead of the village dummy and wouldn't accept advice from
nation's largest conference. by Joe Paterno which has gone them if they were going down for the last time in the ocean and
The Nittany Lions, for many to bowl games four times in the nobody else was around , but Anderson goes the other way .
years a national power in last five years and appeared
"If any of my players comes up with an idea I didn't think of, I
football, wrestling, and several many times on the NCAA's don't discourage it, I welcome it," says the Reds ' manager.
other sports, formally declared program of college football TV, "Every year somebody on our club comes up with one that
Tuesday they will go through have had to cut the ECAC in for nobody else thought of. If it's a good idea, I accept it and use it.
June 30 with previous plans to a share of the money it got I'd have to be crazy not to."
pull out of the more-than-200 from these appearances.
The policy must work okay because Sparky Anderson has
Morris said the ECAC's managed the Reds four years now and has won three division
member Eastern College Ath·
share has been averaging titles and two National League pennants.
letic Conference.
The main reason, according $55,000 to $60,000 per year for
Not a single world series yet, but this is the year, he says .
to Lions' athletic director those last five. years. That
It could be because the Reds seem to have everything, in·
Edward Czekaj, is to pursue makes Penn State, he said, eluding a manager who's smart enough to realize he can have all
the university's desire to exert "the largest financial con- other things in the world going for him, but if he doesn't have the
" national leadership in in- tributor to the ECAC."
horses pulling in the same direction he is, he isn't going
tercollegiate athletics."
anywhere.
John Morris, university spoAsk Sparky Anderson what he considers the most important
kesman, explained that Penn
quality a manager must have and he comes up with the answer
State wants to be "a national
immediately.
independent within the NCAA,
"Honesty," he says.
rather tllan a regional or
"Look, nomaUer how hard you try, your personality and some
eastern independent within the
of your players' personalities will clash sometimes. But if you're
ECAC.''
honest, with yourself as well as with your players, I'll guarantee
Ballplayers ·are funny .
This feeling of having outSometimes little things make you'll never have a problem.
grown the bulky, loose-knit them bappy, even such little
"There is no way to fool a man on honesty. I think this - if
· ECAC, which Morris pointed
you're
completely honest with your players, they will bear with
things as maybe switching
out is "made up mainly of
over from left field to right anything you do. There's no W'ay for me to go before these guys
smaller colleges and is more
every day and try to kid 'em. I never have and never will''
field .
Jeff Burroughs of tbe Texas
Hangers made that switch
three days ago and you've

MISS AMERICA.
SHOES

trouble and had tc sit out much
of the contest. And UCLA
coach Jolm Wooden JOShed at a
spo r ts luncheon Wednesday
that the Bruin s were going to
ha ve Wa lton refuse to commit
ea rly fouls in the Saturday

r~::;.;'" ""'"""=-"'·1 =~~l;:~f£;~~

Lakers move ahead
•
one game In chase
By United Press International
The Los Angeles Lakers
moved one game ahead today
in the ra ce for lead in the
Pacific Division of the National
Basketball Association, and
you might say that a fellow
named Slick Watls stole a
share of the lead away from the
Golden Slate Warriors.
The Lakers, playing at home,
came uw with a big 120-114
victory over the Milwaukee
Bucks, even if the Bucks'
Kareem AbduJ.Jabbar had
been named the " Most
Valuable Player" in the league
earlier in the day. Meanwhile,
the Warriors were losing their
second game in as many
nights,' 110..101, to the Seattle
Sonics with the help of Sonic
rookie Watts.
The Warriors trailed by only
one point in the closing second
and ace Rick Barry had the
ball when Watts pilfered the
ball, raced the entire length of
the court, and sank a clinching
basket with six seconds to play.
Barry took game scorings
honors with 36 points and Dick

sea son-and has won seven David Thompson of the Wolfna tional titles in a r ow.
pa ck.

Chapter I FGBMFI), and the churches (lOll oth ers

by scor ing 643 poi nt.&gt;; this year · Green of Ir onton , Artie
DeStep hen of Ja ckson, Jeff
Ia 26.8 ave r age ), a se nior
Campbell
of Logan, and Tony
record at the school. That
boosted his three-yea r career Swin dler of Waverly , all of
scoring total to 1,211 points, wh om were picked for
placing him second on the honorable mention status.
Tic kels for the banquet at
sc hool's all-time scoring list.
Denny Thompson is on top with $4 .50 each are on sale at lea gue
1, 457 points in four years, whil e sc hools·. Menu for the banquet
Rick Eolin 's three-year total of will in cl ude roa st beef and all
the trimmin gs .
1,204 is now third .
Shoemaker , who also starre d
in football and base ball for the
honors in basketball this year
in additi on to his selection to
th e all -leag ue team and MVP
honor . He wa s na m ed to a fi rstteam berth and as Player of the
Year on the Associated Press '
Class AA all-district tea m for
the Southeastern Distr ict, then
gaoned a first-team berth on
the AP 's Class AA all-state
team . He wa s named to a thiril-

dirc&lt;:tor power of Gud move by his 11oly

of lhe Internatiunnl Full Gu~pel Spiri.t in the lives of men and
Business Men's Fellowship has nations. The Gallipolis Chapter
commended the Gallipolis members and fri ends, and the

Al so to be honored are Arnie
Chonko of Athens, Tom
Val entin e of Gallipolis, Kenny

Ti gers, ha s ga ined a number of

F. .

Co.. Hunting ton, and C:J

Wa ve rl y, on the second team .

were a lso dis trict cha mps a
yc(:lr ago .

Shoemaker capped his cage
Witte nbe rg Univer sity, starcareer
at Wa verly Hi gh Sc hool
ting ii1 U c.~s ke tba ll ami bHseball

at bo th ·sc hools.

Warnock , OVer BOO chapters WH.J c: umprcsiden l of Mc:01rkle Milehine munities, we will ))Ure ly sec the

of Loga n and Doug Tracy of

D. Hawhee two yea r s CJ go. pionships and the Blue Devils

Osbom e

William

Open Daily 9 to 6
(CLOSED SUNDAYS)

EA.

88

�•
I

, 7..,- The Daily Sentinel, Middleoort-Pomeroy, 0., March 21.1974
Salisbury Elementary School.
The bride's table featured a

Tickets for

four-tiered cu kr with column
se parators . BPtwren the tiers
were wedding bells and a
miniature bride a nd groom
rtgurlne, and on
top were
doves encircled with roses. A

PT. PLEASANT -

Tickets
are on sale for a Gospel Music
Concert at Point Pleasant High
School March 28. Profits will be
used to benefit the Youth
Center now under construction.
On hand will be the Sacred
Tones and the Challengers, all
of Columbus, Ohio, and the
Singing Goffs, with Jerry Goff,
of Nashville, Tenn .
Performances will be at 2 p.
m. and 8 p. m. Reserved seats
lare $3 and general admission
$2. Harry Rhodes, chairman,
said student tickets are $1 , but
only for the afternoon per·
for

Denna . Anderson, and Mrs.

Gary Acree. Barbara Hooper,
Point PleaSant, registered the
guests.
For an overnight wedding
lrip, the bride changed into a
navy blue suit and white blouse
and wore the rosebud corsage

from .,her bridal bouquet. The

Roush-DeLong vows read
The Pomer oy Wesleyan
Holiness Church located on
Route 143 wa s the scene of the
Jan . 12 wedd ing of Miss V1ckie
Sue DeLong and Victor Lee
Roush.
The bride is the daughter of
Mr . and Mrs. Kenneth H.
DeLong. Rt. 2, Pomerdy, and
the bridegroom is the son of the
Rev. and Mrs. Eugene Roush,
Rt. 1, Shade . The father of the
groom offlciated at the 1:30

King . It wa s the first wedding
to take place in the sanctuary
of the new church.
In lieu of an exchange of
rings, a small white Bible was
presented to the bride by the
groom . Candelabra and vases
of white and blue tinted mums
decorated the church.
Pre-nuptial music was
presented by Miss Kathleen
Sargeant, Point Pleasant.
Playmg the ''Bridal Chorus"
p .m . ceremony and was and accompanying Mrs. Larry
assisted by the Rev. Dewey Young, Harrisonville, as she
sang ~~ wither Thou Goest",
was Mrs. Henry Eblin, Jr. Bob
DeLong, brother of the bride,
accompanied Mrs. Young
· when she sang "The Lord's
DOUBLE FEATURE
Prayer. "
EVERY NIGHT
Given in marriage by her
father
tne bride was attired in
FRI . . SAT .. SUN .
MARCH 22-23·24
a gown of lace over taffeta. It
Double Feature Program
was fashioned with a hoop skirt
" THE BIG BUST OUT"
of
layered scalloped lace, a
Rated R

MASON DRIVE-IN
THEATRE

.

The French Art Colony will
hold its regular monthly ,
parent-child workshop at
Riverby, Sunday, March 24
from 2 tp 4 p.in. This month's
workshop is weaving and will
be conducted by Mrs. Beverly
Louden. Mrs. Louden will be
teaching the children beginning techniques in weaving.
The students will he using yarn
wrapped around cardboard
and will be weaving with their
fingers.
You do not have to he a .
member of the French Art
Colony to attend these
workshops and there is no
charge. An adult may bring as
many children as he or she can
supervise.
Anyone who might be interested in joining the French
Art Colony might find this
workshop an ideal opportunity
to see the type of work and
teaching that is conducted by
Riverby, especially since
March i• the month of the FAC

matched their gowns, and each

Come In and ua aar
miDy 1tyl•• in popul1r
prlcar1n111·

GOESSLER

JEWELRY STORE
Court Sl., Pameroy

,

C-..
· --·

JUST ARRIVED

t
t

Flower Bulbs for
Spring
Planting.
Gladioli,
Dahlias.
Cannas.

+
••

Al so Peat Pots, Garden Trowels , Package Flower and
Garden Seeds and other Horticulture Items. "Soil-Less"
Peat Starter Trays Requ1res No Sml, Just Plant' and

i -·

SPECIAL REG. $1.09 For 88c

t

-i

~:

:

t
t

UNTTCALLED
The Middleport Emergency
Squad was called to 344 Pearl
St. at 7:44p.m. Wednesday for
Elva Newell, who was ill. She
was taken to the Holzer
Medical Center.

t

I C/

'

.

: a::.m::.a..:

BEN~FRANKUDI.
PHONE
200-202 East Main St.
992-3498

POMEROY, OHIO

OPEN'I'RtDAY &amp; SATURDAY NIGHTS TIU

!...........................
Use Our Convenient Lav-P..-If!av Plan.

eerved ice cream and cupcakes
and gave each one a favor.

ONE-A·
DAY

Scriptures were read and there
was group singing of hymns.
Mrs. Smart presided at the
business meeting with Mrs.
-nJttmes
Brewer
giving
: devotions. Arrangements were
':made to visit shut-ins at Easter
: taking a small gift for each
:one . Refreshments were
• served by the hostess to Mrs.
•--Tony Fowler , Mrs. Milton
:'Hood, Mrs. Ethel Hughes, Mrs.
• Ted Riley , Jr., Mrs. Brewer,
: Mrs. Arland King, Mrs. Harold
• Hubbard, Mrs. Dale Walburn,
·.Mrs. Allen Hughes, and Michl
· and Marsha King,

Vitamins
100's
$2 .98 Value

Abs.tt.r . ·~

ONE-ADAY

PLUS
";i•
..... ......... .. ·.,.co
COlD 1:1UlETS

~~

..! \&gt;·*;;·
" ~·
. ~~
~ ·-· ~ ·&lt;J

Vitamins
Plus Iron
100's

..........

- dt,f? ~

~~m : V::}J'

..

"' " "' """'" "'"""

$3.39 Value

]ftllagr

1flfanttary
"'Il! c:aATOI C»
..IONUI' DIUO .. 11:

"lot• 992-5759
271 M. IIIII. MI.,
'

'

TONIGHT,
MARCH 21

ELECT A CIRCLE
:. Remembering the children .
~.at the Meigs County Home is a ·
:;:continuing project of the
· Elecbl Circle, and at the
: Tuesday night meeting it was
reported that a gift had been
~: sent to one of the children.
:; Miss Rhoda Hall, president
,; of the Sanborn Society, was a
~ guest at the meeting and
' presented the
program
·, " American Asians" taken
: from the American Baptist
.: Magazine. Plans were made by
;; the circle to host the April
:" IT!eeting of the San born
• Society, and to remember shut-

in ·

LOSSES HEAVY
SAIGON fUPIJ ..:. South
Vietnamese mili tary sources

said today 78 governm ent
Rangers fou ght their way
through Communist lines to
safety, but more than 300
others are still trapped in the
rugged Central Highlands.
Half of the force was reported
wounded or dead.

LOSE UGLY FAT
Start losing weight today or money
back , MONADEX is a tiny tablet
and easy to take. MONADEX will
help c urb your desire for eJCces.s
food . Eat less - weigh less . Contains
no dangerous drugs and will not
mak e you nervous.

No strenuous

eKercise. Change your life ... slln
today .

MONADEX cost $3.00 for

a 20 dey supply. Large economy
size is $5.00. Also lry AOUAT ABS:
they worlt gently to help you lose
water·bloat , AQUAT ABS -a "water
pill" thai works - $3.00. Both
guaranteed and sold by :
Swi sher &amp; Loh se Ph a rmac y ·
112 E . Mai n, Pom er oy &amp; Dutton
Drug St ore , M iddl e por t. Ma il

Ord e r s Fil le d .

MA ·9

ALKA
SELTZER
PLUS

•

VICK'S
NYQUIL

CEPACOL
Mouthwash

Colds
Medicine
10 oz.
$2 .59 Value

Cold Tablets
36's
$1.69 Value

CREST
Family Size
$1.1~ Value

20 oz .
$1.67 Value

4

NEW
Soldi Automatic

~. ins at Easter.

': The meeting was held at the
~· home of Mrs. Fred Lewis with
:; Mrs . Beulah White giving
• devotions on the topic, "Are
;:. You Listening". Mrs. Lewis
.. served refreshments to those
. named and Mrs. Ber~ Bodimer,
.. Mrs. John Werner, Mrs. Pearl ,
• Hoffman, and Mrs. Willis

NOT OPEN

Aladdin

EVEREADY
SIZED
BATT£RIES

WOTTHAll
THERMOS

VANISH

Pint
Wide· Mouth
No. 3470
53 .19 Value

Toilet Bowl Cleaner
89c Value

2·Pack
.60c Value

'219

~

•
•

STP

DORCAS CIRCLE
:: "ANew Life for Angels" was
~ the program topic used by Mrs.
• Leora Sigman when l)Orcas
~ Circle met at the home of Mrs.
, Manning Kioes with Mrs.
~ Isabelle Winebrenner as co: hostess.
~

OIL
TREATMENT

arrangements

To Keep
Septic Tanks
and
Trouble•. F1ree
One Pound
Sl.85 Value

LOTION

15 oz.
84c Value

Officers' rep·o rts were given

·and

RID-X

BRUT

were

~ completed for remembering
~.

the shut-ins at Easter. Mrs.
Sigman read 11 An Illusion~~

•

OLD
SPICE

~ Nuptials

•

~solemnized

You don 't have to tie up your money for a long time to enjoy a high yield .
Capital Savings and Loan pays 6.50% per annum, payable quarterly on
six-month time deposits . Minimum deposit is just $1000.
Of cour s e , if you choose to leave your money on deposit longer than six
months, it will continue to earn at the 6.50% per annum rate. Interest is paid
from date of deposit to date of withdrawal or maturity. If you withd:aw before
· the first six months your money will receive interest .at 5.75% per annum ,
· payable semi-annually.

VACUFLO

For big savers, Capital has a monthly interest checkrplan. If you deposit $5000
or more, you may receive an interest check the first of every month equal to
one-twe lfth the annual interest .

Don't ruin good carpet by

inefficient vacuuming.

FOREMAN &amp; ABBOTT
Middleport

EV110

Let Capital put your capital to wNk. Earn more on your money with less time
on deposit. Stop in your friendly Capital office today .
.
5.75% Certifi c ates of Deposi llalso available-minimum $100.

@

f«: : ·

Capi•al
&amp;avinga &amp; Loan
CORIIH*IIV

.

Formerly The Economy Savings and Loan Company

Parading!

For more information call or contact

992-2111

L.IZA
Available now in blue , beige. brown -beige.

Deposit Office: 100 E. Broad St ., Columbus, Ohio 43215

MARGUERITE'S SHOES.
Betty Ohlin~er '

-. Hosp ital

'

SHOll

Main St.

Riverside ·
Columbus. ·

•

MEIGS THEATRE

300 W. 2nd ST.
PI'

Connie Bailey \vas elected trea s ur~r ; and Wilma Reece,
president
of Ohi u Eta Phi c1ty coun (' il represe ntative.
John Fultz, devotional leader,
Chapter
of
Beta Sigma Phi
The Be ta Si gn~;• Phi congivin g a m editation on
Sorority at a meeting Tuesday vention was announced for
" Riessed Are They Th at
at the Columbus and Southern May 17-19 at the Sheraton Hotel
Mourn "
taken
from
Ohio Elec tric Co.
in Columbus. Plans were also
Guideppsts .
Other officers elected fo r the ann oun ced for the annual
Refn~ slunents were served to
1974-75 year were Barbara founder's day dinner April 30 at
Mrs. Sigman, Mrs. Fultz, Mrs.
Loga n, vice president ; Janet the Sportsman Club in Athens.
Elizabeth Slavin, Mrs. Charles
The service committee told
Searles and Mrs. Charles Pickens; recording secretary:
Dottie Musse r, corresponding of pla ns for an Easter party for
Edwards.
secretary; Karen Stanley, the children of the Meigs
and gave pra yer , with Mrs.

HOSTVISJTORS
"'~Ce 4" (' Weekend visj tors· of Mr . and
(/.
'1 J Mrs. Howard Ru~l . Wolfpen,
were Mr. and Mrs. William
Russell , Chester ; Mr. and Mrs.
Communi ty School April 11 at Ja mes Za yer, Brenda Sue,
the Rutland Park. March 25 at Car ol Lynn a nd James,
noon there will be a mee ting of Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. Harry
the commi ttee to ch::;cuss the Johnson, Cindy and DeniSe,
Regatta queen contest at the Columbus; Mr . and Mrs.
Meigs Inn .
Robert Russell, Mr . and Mrs.
Kathy King gave the cultural Steven Ha ggy, Stephanie Kay,
re port us in g " Mu sic's In- Pomeroy, and Robert Venoy
rluence on Our Lives" as hf r and Robin , Pomeroy. W. L.
topic. Sandi Sa rgent and Sandy Boyce, son.in-law of th e
Korn se rved refreshments.
Russells in a patient at the

•~ Anthony .

RENT A CARPET SHAMPOOER

.!li.~J~.

Pie and sandwiches were
served . A silent auction was

This was the message of
Milton Bennett, president of
the Ohio Baptist Convention,
speaking Sunday morning at
the Pomeroy First Baptist
Church.
He quoted the testimonies of
Abraham Lincoln, Emerson, J.
C. Penney and others giving
their formula for the good life.
Highlights of the Ohio Baptist
Convention meeting . were
given by Bennett.
In his talk, Bennett stressed
that God loves us not for what

decorated chocolate eggs. chocolate rabbits,
artificial flowers, jelly beans, novelty candy,
toys and gift items.

MAKE POMEROY YOUR-SHOPPING CE;JIITER

Middleport, 0 .

as On eraft• .
fhi

~

Sl.OO a Day wllll purchan of Blue Lustre

BAKER FURNITURE

.
(fi
·o
Ohio Eta Phi r;lects ifJ

LOVE JOY CIRCLE
Eight members of the Love
Joy Circle went to the Etinwood Nursing Home preceding
the regular meeting at the
home of Mrs. Paul Smart. To
the patients at the home they

$549~

use it to help others ."

PH. 992 -5321

, • Plans for the annual ob·
, ~ servance will he finalized at
: · the April meeting of the San.
born Society.
Each of the circles made
arrangements to remember
shut-ins during the Easter
season and reported on various
other projects being carried
out.

touc h lapprox. 125deg . F. )

Mill p "'· Ohloo
AITENDSERVICE
Mrs. Myrtle Grover, Mrs.
Pat Humphrey and J~. Mrs.
Loraine Venoy and Romn , Mr .
and Mrs . Bob Houdashelt,
Brent and Brian, attended
funeral services for their great
uncle, Hiram Bolin, in North
Lewisburg Tuesday . .

The

Ceramatop

~ night.

It s
s m oo th , ~ unbro k en
ce ram ic cooking surface let s
you cl ea n up most soil with a
da mp cloth. Het Surfa ce
Sig n~. l L ight glows when an y
coo k ing ar ea i s too hot to

by Mrs. Tuttle .

,

+

....:..

cleanability.

Fr-igidaire
Range .

R VIVALDELAVED
'I:h revival at the United
Pe costal Church on S. 3rd
ve. , Middleport, has heen
postponed until this Sunday
du• to the illness of the
evangelist.

home from the hospi ta l.
held by the good of the order
Meeting time wa s changed to committee. Attending the
8 p. m. and games were played meeting besides those named
under the dire ction of the or- were Ethel Orr, Apa Van
phans committee.
Meter, Zelda Weber, Dorothy
Quarterly birthday s were Ritchie, Dorothy Myers,
observed with Mrs. Zona Thelma
White ,
Hattie
Biggs, Mrs. Mabel Van Meter, Frederick, Ada Neutzling,
Mrs. Mary Jo. Pooler, Mrs . Esther Ridenour, Ada Morris,
Margaret Tuttle , Mrs . Opal Helen Wolf, Mae Spencer,
Hollon, Mrs: Marcia Keller, Mary K. Holter, Goldie
Mrs. Goldl e Wolfe, Mrs. Frederick, Elizabeth Hayes,
Doro thy Lawson and Mrs. Ada Bissell, Joe Bissell, Mary
Sad1e Trussell, be1r.g honored. Hayes, Doris Koenig, Doris
The birthday cake was baked Grueser, Letha Wood, Leona
'
Hensley and Betty Roush.

t .------------------·-~

i ~ EJISTE~~c
t

rema ins confined to her home.
Mrs. Barbara Sarge nt is now

......,
·

The beautifully new look of

total

..

old member of the council,

~

IU~n

•

Plans for the district rally
April18at 2p . m. in Gallipolis
were made during the Tuesday
night meetin g of Che ster
Council 323, Daughters of
America, at the hail.
Mrs. Erma Cleland, coun·
ciior , announced practice for
receiving of state and national
officers and also practice for
the district team , Sunda y,
March 31, at 2 p. m., at the
Belpre Lions Building.
It was reported lhat Mrs.
Elizabeth Wickham, IOO.year·

one carried a single pompon
sprayed to match her dress.
Cathy Sue DeLong, Rt. 2,
Pomeroy, a cousin of the bride,
and Angela Roush, Fostoria,
niece of the groom, were the
we were or are now, but for
flower girls, who wore yellow
what He can make of our lives,
and green gowns designed
and urged the practice of faith,
similar to the ones worn by the
not fear. He said fear is an
other attendants. Each carried
enemy,
faith is a friend, and
a white basket of petals. Sonny
the request to God should be
Roush, Fostoria, nephew of the
"make
me a better person".
groom, was the Bible bearer.
The
speaker
announced the
Serving as best man for the
150 year celebration of the
bridegroom was his brother,
convention in Columbus in 1976
Daniel Roush, Rt. I, Shade.
noting that the theme is
Ushers were Kenneth Roush ,
"Heritage
Today ·- Horisons
Fostoria , also a brother of the
Tomorrow" . Mrs . Robert Kuhn
groom , and Ronnie Eblin,
sang "Fill My Cup, Lord", and
Pomeroy .
membership drive .
the Rev. Robert Kuhn gave the
For her daughter's wedding,
·· benediction .
Mrs. DeLong wore a pale blue
double knit ensemble with a
blue tinted carnation corsage.
ROUND THE CLOCK
HOSPITALIZED
Mrs. Roush was in a rose
BEREA, Ohio ( UPI) - Oil
C.
P.
Bradbury, Middleport,
colored double knit dress with companies operating service
is
a
surgical
patient at St.
white lace accent and had a stations along the Ohio Turncorsage of white carnations. pike were ordered Wednesday Petersburg General Hospital in
A reception honoring the to resume 24·hour·a-day St. Petersburg, Fla. His room
number is 305. He has heen
:ouple was held immediately gasoline sales.
confined there for the past
'allowing the ceremony at the
three weeks.

""-J
...................

r

Chester council p,lans rally

" If we preach , prea ch well ;
if we teach, do our best, and if
we have money at our disposal,

Jenny Caruthers, Pomeroy,
bridesmaids. Miss McComas
was in a medium blue gown of
polyester crepe fashioned with
an empire waist, A-line skirt,
bateau neckline and long
sleeves. The two bridesmaids
wore gowns of identical style,
but in a pale blue crepe. Their
bow headpieces with netting

\(·

BIRTHDAY CELEBRATION - Miss Nelle Bing, Union Ave ., Pomeroy, was o~onored on
the occasion of her 90th birthday anniversary with a party at the Pomeroy United Methodist
Church hosted by her niece, Mrs. Harold (Phyllis ) Russell, Leesburg, Fla. , and tw
nieces, Mrs. Keith (Phyllis) Thomas, Gallipolis, and Mrs. Howard (Mary Jane Waldeck,
Huntington, W. Va . Gifts and flowers were presented to Miss Bing, retired Meigs County
Health Department nurse and an active member of the United Methodist Church and the
Women's Christian Temperance Union. A large arrangement of pink carnations centered the
table from which refreshments were served by women of the church. The honored guest and
the hostesses are pictured left to right - Mrs. Russell, Miss Bing, Mrs. Thomas and Mrs.
Waldeck.

Workshop talks here
scheduled
-

sister of the bride; and Miss

"ALL YOU ADO IS LOVE"e

•

•
onvent ton
PIY/Jst'U1Aent

bateau neckline and sleeves

which came to points over her
hands . Her veil of illusion fell
from a crown of pearls and she
carried a bouquet of white
mums and baby's breath
around a corsage of red roses.
The bride's attendants were
Miss Strelsa McComas,
Albany, maid of honor; Miss
Carol DeLong, Rt. 2, Pomeroy,

at

Burlingham.
The bride is a graduate of the
West Virginia Bible School at
Point Pleasant and was a
member of the school choir
which toured West Virginia ,
Michigan, Pennsylvania and
Ohio. Roush attended the West
Virginia Bible School and is
now employed at Veterans
Memorial Hospital, Pomeroy.
Out-of-town guests at the
wedding were Mr. and Mrs .
Herbert Clay, Ginny Clay,
Dearborn, Mich.; Mr, and Mrs.
Larry Clay, Ann Arbor, Mich.;
Mr . and Mrs. Otis Allen, Mr.
and Mrs. Ed Alien, and Steve
Allen, Coolville;
Roger
Powell, Barbara Hooper, Mr.
and Mrs . Carlton Hooper,
Willie and Pa4l, Mr. and Mrs.
Troy Hooper, M. R. Clouse,
Denna Anderson, Kathleen
Sargeant, Jane Griffeth, Kathy
Sargeant and Lorene Smith,
Point Pleasant, W. Va .; Mr.
and Mrs. Ken Roush and
family , Fostoria; the Rev. and
Mrs. Dewey King and family,
Mrs. Martha King, Mr. and
Mrs. Leroy Manns, Mr. and
Mrs. Bernard Hudson, Mrs.
Patty Van Meter, West
Columbia, W. Va .; Mrs. Agnes
Gibbs, Mrs. Josephine Napper, .c
Mrs. Cleo Graham, Mrs. Hazel
Williams, Glouster; the Rev.
and Mrs. Roy Taylor, Mineral ;
M~. and Mrs. George Thacker,
W1lkesvllie .

Mr. and Mrs. Victor Lee Roush

- PLUS" HELL ' S
BLOODY DEVILS"

res ide

The observance of Women's
" 'Day. at the Sunday morning
: service of the Middleport First
Baptist Church April 21 was
: discussed during meetings of
: the circles of the B. H. Sanborn
: "Missionary Society Tuesday

sold for $2

over the ta ble.
Hos tesses for the reception
were Mrs. Ca rl DeLong, aunt
of the bride, Louise Titlis,

now

diets in his carhohyd tates.

•

white streamers wa s used

couple

fellow who has too many

concert being

simulated canopy of blue and

Women's day ~fated

A·n unhappy l'at man is a

I

OFFER LIMITED TO OHIO .RESIDENTS ONLY ' .

Pomeroy

•·

43/4 oz.

51.75 Value

:;. RACINE - In an evening
=: wedding at the home of Mr. and
~ Mrs. Ronald Holter, Feb. 2,
:';wedding vows were exchanged
" by Helen Hubbard, daughter of
' Mrs. Susie Workman, Cot; tageville, W. Va., and Roger
: Holter, son of Mr. and Mrs.
: Thomas Holter, Rt. I, Racine.
The Rev. Freeland Norris,
: Racine, performed the double

NEUTROGENA
WORTHALL

HEATING PAD

A reception was held immediately following the
: ceremony . Attending were
• Mrs. Susie Workman and Miss
' Mary Ann Workman, Col: tageville, W.Va.; Mr. and Mrs.
: Gary Lee and Darrin ,
' Columbus; Dan Earich,
• Cambridge; Dave and Jill
: Earich, Westerville; Peggy
Pomeroy;

GLUE
STICK
.22 oz.
79c Value

LISTEROL

GREAT-lAs~
MASCARA

SPRAY
DISINFECTANT
21 oz.
$2 .4~ v ~~ ""

F••t-Acting
Ant.cfd

Mediutitm

-

.... ._._ .

fro: «

Va.~! ne·,

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

f

...... _...... _,...

•

'

CONTAINS PROTEIN
Bu ilds, thi ckens colors
&amp; curls

REVLON

Prince

tchabelli

HAIR NET

WIND
SONG

S2 .50 Value

SPRAY COLOGNE

FLEX
&gt;1.79 Value

RETURNS HOME
Kimberly Roush, nine year
, old daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
' Bobby Roush, Middlepori, was
, returned home from St. Joseph'
: Hospibll Wednesday. A third
• grader at the Middleport
· Elementary School, Kimberly
: was admitted to the hospital
: last Saturday with a viral
: pneumonia.

PRITT

77e

$3.77

Mrs .

Naomi Brinker, Ron Brinker,
Mr. and Mrs. Ra~dall Reiber
and Rachael, Mr . and Mrs.
Paul Card, Mr, and Mrs.
James Werry, Jimmy, Randy
and Ricky , Mr. and . Mrs.
, Thomas Holter and Kevin,
: Jerry, Angie, Robin, Rick and
· Rosemary Hubbard, and Mr .
and Mrs. Ronald Holter,
Debbie and Tammy, all of
Racine.

s1.00 Value

Soap

No. 1811 ·6
2 Year Guaranlee
55.95 Value

: ring ceremony.

: O'Brien,

HyP~ · AIIergenic

SPECIAL

$225

..,

-

�•
I

, 7..,- The Daily Sentinel, Middleoort-Pomeroy, 0., March 21.1974
Salisbury Elementary School.
The bride's table featured a

Tickets for

four-tiered cu kr with column
se parators . BPtwren the tiers
were wedding bells and a
miniature bride a nd groom
rtgurlne, and on
top were
doves encircled with roses. A

PT. PLEASANT -

Tickets
are on sale for a Gospel Music
Concert at Point Pleasant High
School March 28. Profits will be
used to benefit the Youth
Center now under construction.
On hand will be the Sacred
Tones and the Challengers, all
of Columbus, Ohio, and the
Singing Goffs, with Jerry Goff,
of Nashville, Tenn .
Performances will be at 2 p.
m. and 8 p. m. Reserved seats
lare $3 and general admission
$2. Harry Rhodes, chairman,
said student tickets are $1 , but
only for the afternoon per·
for

Denna . Anderson, and Mrs.

Gary Acree. Barbara Hooper,
Point PleaSant, registered the
guests.
For an overnight wedding
lrip, the bride changed into a
navy blue suit and white blouse
and wore the rosebud corsage

from .,her bridal bouquet. The

Roush-DeLong vows read
The Pomer oy Wesleyan
Holiness Church located on
Route 143 wa s the scene of the
Jan . 12 wedd ing of Miss V1ckie
Sue DeLong and Victor Lee
Roush.
The bride is the daughter of
Mr . and Mrs. Kenneth H.
DeLong. Rt. 2, Pomerdy, and
the bridegroom is the son of the
Rev. and Mrs. Eugene Roush,
Rt. 1, Shade . The father of the
groom offlciated at the 1:30

King . It wa s the first wedding
to take place in the sanctuary
of the new church.
In lieu of an exchange of
rings, a small white Bible was
presented to the bride by the
groom . Candelabra and vases
of white and blue tinted mums
decorated the church.
Pre-nuptial music was
presented by Miss Kathleen
Sargeant, Point Pleasant.
Playmg the ''Bridal Chorus"
p .m . ceremony and was and accompanying Mrs. Larry
assisted by the Rev. Dewey Young, Harrisonville, as she
sang ~~ wither Thou Goest",
was Mrs. Henry Eblin, Jr. Bob
DeLong, brother of the bride,
accompanied Mrs. Young
· when she sang "The Lord's
DOUBLE FEATURE
Prayer. "
EVERY NIGHT
Given in marriage by her
father
tne bride was attired in
FRI . . SAT .. SUN .
MARCH 22-23·24
a gown of lace over taffeta. It
Double Feature Program
was fashioned with a hoop skirt
" THE BIG BUST OUT"
of
layered scalloped lace, a
Rated R

MASON DRIVE-IN
THEATRE

.

The French Art Colony will
hold its regular monthly ,
parent-child workshop at
Riverby, Sunday, March 24
from 2 tp 4 p.in. This month's
workshop is weaving and will
be conducted by Mrs. Beverly
Louden. Mrs. Louden will be
teaching the children beginning techniques in weaving.
The students will he using yarn
wrapped around cardboard
and will be weaving with their
fingers.
You do not have to he a .
member of the French Art
Colony to attend these
workshops and there is no
charge. An adult may bring as
many children as he or she can
supervise.
Anyone who might be interested in joining the French
Art Colony might find this
workshop an ideal opportunity
to see the type of work and
teaching that is conducted by
Riverby, especially since
March i• the month of the FAC

matched their gowns, and each

Come In and ua aar
miDy 1tyl•• in popul1r
prlcar1n111·

GOESSLER

JEWELRY STORE
Court Sl., Pameroy

,

C-..
· --·

JUST ARRIVED

t
t

Flower Bulbs for
Spring
Planting.
Gladioli,
Dahlias.
Cannas.

+
••

Al so Peat Pots, Garden Trowels , Package Flower and
Garden Seeds and other Horticulture Items. "Soil-Less"
Peat Starter Trays Requ1res No Sml, Just Plant' and

i -·

SPECIAL REG. $1.09 For 88c

t

-i

~:

:

t
t

UNTTCALLED
The Middleport Emergency
Squad was called to 344 Pearl
St. at 7:44p.m. Wednesday for
Elva Newell, who was ill. She
was taken to the Holzer
Medical Center.

t

I C/

'

.

: a::.m::.a..:

BEN~FRANKUDI.
PHONE
200-202 East Main St.
992-3498

POMEROY, OHIO

OPEN'I'RtDAY &amp; SATURDAY NIGHTS TIU

!...........................
Use Our Convenient Lav-P..-If!av Plan.

eerved ice cream and cupcakes
and gave each one a favor.

ONE-A·
DAY

Scriptures were read and there
was group singing of hymns.
Mrs. Smart presided at the
business meeting with Mrs.
-nJttmes
Brewer
giving
: devotions. Arrangements were
':made to visit shut-ins at Easter
: taking a small gift for each
:one . Refreshments were
• served by the hostess to Mrs.
•--Tony Fowler , Mrs. Milton
:'Hood, Mrs. Ethel Hughes, Mrs.
• Ted Riley , Jr., Mrs. Brewer,
: Mrs. Arland King, Mrs. Harold
• Hubbard, Mrs. Dale Walburn,
·.Mrs. Allen Hughes, and Michl
· and Marsha King,

Vitamins
100's
$2 .98 Value

Abs.tt.r . ·~

ONE-ADAY

PLUS
";i•
..... ......... .. ·.,.co
COlD 1:1UlETS

~~

..! \&gt;·*;;·
" ~·
. ~~
~ ·-· ~ ·&lt;J

Vitamins
Plus Iron
100's

..........

- dt,f? ~

~~m : V::}J'

..

"' " "' """'" "'"""

$3.39 Value

]ftllagr

1flfanttary
"'Il! c:aATOI C»
..IONUI' DIUO .. 11:

"lot• 992-5759
271 M. IIIII. MI.,
'

'

TONIGHT,
MARCH 21

ELECT A CIRCLE
:. Remembering the children .
~.at the Meigs County Home is a ·
:;:continuing project of the
· Elecbl Circle, and at the
: Tuesday night meeting it was
reported that a gift had been
~: sent to one of the children.
:; Miss Rhoda Hall, president
,; of the Sanborn Society, was a
~ guest at the meeting and
' presented the
program
·, " American Asians" taken
: from the American Baptist
.: Magazine. Plans were made by
;; the circle to host the April
:" IT!eeting of the San born
• Society, and to remember shut-

in ·

LOSSES HEAVY
SAIGON fUPIJ ..:. South
Vietnamese mili tary sources

said today 78 governm ent
Rangers fou ght their way
through Communist lines to
safety, but more than 300
others are still trapped in the
rugged Central Highlands.
Half of the force was reported
wounded or dead.

LOSE UGLY FAT
Start losing weight today or money
back , MONADEX is a tiny tablet
and easy to take. MONADEX will
help c urb your desire for eJCces.s
food . Eat less - weigh less . Contains
no dangerous drugs and will not
mak e you nervous.

No strenuous

eKercise. Change your life ... slln
today .

MONADEX cost $3.00 for

a 20 dey supply. Large economy
size is $5.00. Also lry AOUAT ABS:
they worlt gently to help you lose
water·bloat , AQUAT ABS -a "water
pill" thai works - $3.00. Both
guaranteed and sold by :
Swi sher &amp; Loh se Ph a rmac y ·
112 E . Mai n, Pom er oy &amp; Dutton
Drug St ore , M iddl e por t. Ma il

Ord e r s Fil le d .

MA ·9

ALKA
SELTZER
PLUS

•

VICK'S
NYQUIL

CEPACOL
Mouthwash

Colds
Medicine
10 oz.
$2 .59 Value

Cold Tablets
36's
$1.69 Value

CREST
Family Size
$1.1~ Value

20 oz .
$1.67 Value

4

NEW
Soldi Automatic

~. ins at Easter.

': The meeting was held at the
~· home of Mrs. Fred Lewis with
:; Mrs . Beulah White giving
• devotions on the topic, "Are
;:. You Listening". Mrs. Lewis
.. served refreshments to those
. named and Mrs. Ber~ Bodimer,
.. Mrs. John Werner, Mrs. Pearl ,
• Hoffman, and Mrs. Willis

NOT OPEN

Aladdin

EVEREADY
SIZED
BATT£RIES

WOTTHAll
THERMOS

VANISH

Pint
Wide· Mouth
No. 3470
53 .19 Value

Toilet Bowl Cleaner
89c Value

2·Pack
.60c Value

'219

~

•
•

STP

DORCAS CIRCLE
:: "ANew Life for Angels" was
~ the program topic used by Mrs.
• Leora Sigman when l)Orcas
~ Circle met at the home of Mrs.
, Manning Kioes with Mrs.
~ Isabelle Winebrenner as co: hostess.
~

OIL
TREATMENT

arrangements

To Keep
Septic Tanks
and
Trouble•. F1ree
One Pound
Sl.85 Value

LOTION

15 oz.
84c Value

Officers' rep·o rts were given

·and

RID-X

BRUT

were

~ completed for remembering
~.

the shut-ins at Easter. Mrs.
Sigman read 11 An Illusion~~

•

OLD
SPICE

~ Nuptials

•

~solemnized

You don 't have to tie up your money for a long time to enjoy a high yield .
Capital Savings and Loan pays 6.50% per annum, payable quarterly on
six-month time deposits . Minimum deposit is just $1000.
Of cour s e , if you choose to leave your money on deposit longer than six
months, it will continue to earn at the 6.50% per annum rate. Interest is paid
from date of deposit to date of withdrawal or maturity. If you withd:aw before
· the first six months your money will receive interest .at 5.75% per annum ,
· payable semi-annually.

VACUFLO

For big savers, Capital has a monthly interest checkrplan. If you deposit $5000
or more, you may receive an interest check the first of every month equal to
one-twe lfth the annual interest .

Don't ruin good carpet by

inefficient vacuuming.

FOREMAN &amp; ABBOTT
Middleport

EV110

Let Capital put your capital to wNk. Earn more on your money with less time
on deposit. Stop in your friendly Capital office today .
.
5.75% Certifi c ates of Deposi llalso available-minimum $100.

@

f«: : ·

Capi•al
&amp;avinga &amp; Loan
CORIIH*IIV

.

Formerly The Economy Savings and Loan Company

Parading!

For more information call or contact

992-2111

L.IZA
Available now in blue , beige. brown -beige.

Deposit Office: 100 E. Broad St ., Columbus, Ohio 43215

MARGUERITE'S SHOES.
Betty Ohlin~er '

-. Hosp ital

'

SHOll

Main St.

Riverside ·
Columbus. ·

•

MEIGS THEATRE

300 W. 2nd ST.
PI'

Connie Bailey \vas elected trea s ur~r ; and Wilma Reece,
president
of Ohi u Eta Phi c1ty coun (' il represe ntative.
John Fultz, devotional leader,
Chapter
of
Beta Sigma Phi
The Be ta Si gn~;• Phi congivin g a m editation on
Sorority at a meeting Tuesday vention was announced for
" Riessed Are They Th at
at the Columbus and Southern May 17-19 at the Sheraton Hotel
Mourn "
taken
from
Ohio Elec tric Co.
in Columbus. Plans were also
Guideppsts .
Other officers elected fo r the ann oun ced for the annual
Refn~ slunents were served to
1974-75 year were Barbara founder's day dinner April 30 at
Mrs. Sigman, Mrs. Fultz, Mrs.
Loga n, vice president ; Janet the Sportsman Club in Athens.
Elizabeth Slavin, Mrs. Charles
The service committee told
Searles and Mrs. Charles Pickens; recording secretary:
Dottie Musse r, corresponding of pla ns for an Easter party for
Edwards.
secretary; Karen Stanley, the children of the Meigs
and gave pra yer , with Mrs.

HOSTVISJTORS
"'~Ce 4" (' Weekend visj tors· of Mr . and
(/.
'1 J Mrs. Howard Ru~l . Wolfpen,
were Mr. and Mrs. William
Russell , Chester ; Mr. and Mrs.
Communi ty School April 11 at Ja mes Za yer, Brenda Sue,
the Rutland Park. March 25 at Car ol Lynn a nd James,
noon there will be a mee ting of Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. Harry
the commi ttee to ch::;cuss the Johnson, Cindy and DeniSe,
Regatta queen contest at the Columbus; Mr . and Mrs.
Meigs Inn .
Robert Russell, Mr . and Mrs.
Kathy King gave the cultural Steven Ha ggy, Stephanie Kay,
re port us in g " Mu sic's In- Pomeroy, and Robert Venoy
rluence on Our Lives" as hf r and Robin , Pomeroy. W. L.
topic. Sandi Sa rgent and Sandy Boyce, son.in-law of th e
Korn se rved refreshments.
Russells in a patient at the

•~ Anthony .

RENT A CARPET SHAMPOOER

.!li.~J~.

Pie and sandwiches were
served . A silent auction was

This was the message of
Milton Bennett, president of
the Ohio Baptist Convention,
speaking Sunday morning at
the Pomeroy First Baptist
Church.
He quoted the testimonies of
Abraham Lincoln, Emerson, J.
C. Penney and others giving
their formula for the good life.
Highlights of the Ohio Baptist
Convention meeting . were
given by Bennett.
In his talk, Bennett stressed
that God loves us not for what

decorated chocolate eggs. chocolate rabbits,
artificial flowers, jelly beans, novelty candy,
toys and gift items.

MAKE POMEROY YOUR-SHOPPING CE;JIITER

Middleport, 0 .

as On eraft• .
fhi

~

Sl.OO a Day wllll purchan of Blue Lustre

BAKER FURNITURE

.
(fi
·o
Ohio Eta Phi r;lects ifJ

LOVE JOY CIRCLE
Eight members of the Love
Joy Circle went to the Etinwood Nursing Home preceding
the regular meeting at the
home of Mrs. Paul Smart. To
the patients at the home they

$549~

use it to help others ."

PH. 992 -5321

, • Plans for the annual ob·
, ~ servance will he finalized at
: · the April meeting of the San.
born Society.
Each of the circles made
arrangements to remember
shut-ins during the Easter
season and reported on various
other projects being carried
out.

touc h lapprox. 125deg . F. )

Mill p "'· Ohloo
AITENDSERVICE
Mrs. Myrtle Grover, Mrs.
Pat Humphrey and J~. Mrs.
Loraine Venoy and Romn , Mr .
and Mrs . Bob Houdashelt,
Brent and Brian, attended
funeral services for their great
uncle, Hiram Bolin, in North
Lewisburg Tuesday . .

The

Ceramatop

~ night.

It s
s m oo th , ~ unbro k en
ce ram ic cooking surface let s
you cl ea n up most soil with a
da mp cloth. Het Surfa ce
Sig n~. l L ight glows when an y
coo k ing ar ea i s too hot to

by Mrs. Tuttle .

,

+

....:..

cleanability.

Fr-igidaire
Range .

R VIVALDELAVED
'I:h revival at the United
Pe costal Church on S. 3rd
ve. , Middleport, has heen
postponed until this Sunday
du• to the illness of the
evangelist.

home from the hospi ta l.
held by the good of the order
Meeting time wa s changed to committee. Attending the
8 p. m. and games were played meeting besides those named
under the dire ction of the or- were Ethel Orr, Apa Van
phans committee.
Meter, Zelda Weber, Dorothy
Quarterly birthday s were Ritchie, Dorothy Myers,
observed with Mrs. Zona Thelma
White ,
Hattie
Biggs, Mrs. Mabel Van Meter, Frederick, Ada Neutzling,
Mrs. Mary Jo. Pooler, Mrs . Esther Ridenour, Ada Morris,
Margaret Tuttle , Mrs . Opal Helen Wolf, Mae Spencer,
Hollon, Mrs: Marcia Keller, Mary K. Holter, Goldie
Mrs. Goldl e Wolfe, Mrs. Frederick, Elizabeth Hayes,
Doro thy Lawson and Mrs. Ada Bissell, Joe Bissell, Mary
Sad1e Trussell, be1r.g honored. Hayes, Doris Koenig, Doris
The birthday cake was baked Grueser, Letha Wood, Leona
'
Hensley and Betty Roush.

t .------------------·-~

i ~ EJISTE~~c
t

rema ins confined to her home.
Mrs. Barbara Sarge nt is now

......,
·

The beautifully new look of

total

..

old member of the council,

~

IU~n

•

Plans for the district rally
April18at 2p . m. in Gallipolis
were made during the Tuesday
night meetin g of Che ster
Council 323, Daughters of
America, at the hail.
Mrs. Erma Cleland, coun·
ciior , announced practice for
receiving of state and national
officers and also practice for
the district team , Sunda y,
March 31, at 2 p. m., at the
Belpre Lions Building.
It was reported lhat Mrs.
Elizabeth Wickham, IOO.year·

one carried a single pompon
sprayed to match her dress.
Cathy Sue DeLong, Rt. 2,
Pomeroy, a cousin of the bride,
and Angela Roush, Fostoria,
niece of the groom, were the
we were or are now, but for
flower girls, who wore yellow
what He can make of our lives,
and green gowns designed
and urged the practice of faith,
similar to the ones worn by the
not fear. He said fear is an
other attendants. Each carried
enemy,
faith is a friend, and
a white basket of petals. Sonny
the request to God should be
Roush, Fostoria, nephew of the
"make
me a better person".
groom, was the Bible bearer.
The
speaker
announced the
Serving as best man for the
150 year celebration of the
bridegroom was his brother,
convention in Columbus in 1976
Daniel Roush, Rt. I, Shade.
noting that the theme is
Ushers were Kenneth Roush ,
"Heritage
Today ·- Horisons
Fostoria , also a brother of the
Tomorrow" . Mrs . Robert Kuhn
groom , and Ronnie Eblin,
sang "Fill My Cup, Lord", and
Pomeroy .
membership drive .
the Rev. Robert Kuhn gave the
For her daughter's wedding,
·· benediction .
Mrs. DeLong wore a pale blue
double knit ensemble with a
blue tinted carnation corsage.
ROUND THE CLOCK
HOSPITALIZED
Mrs. Roush was in a rose
BEREA, Ohio ( UPI) - Oil
C.
P.
Bradbury, Middleport,
colored double knit dress with companies operating service
is
a
surgical
patient at St.
white lace accent and had a stations along the Ohio Turncorsage of white carnations. pike were ordered Wednesday Petersburg General Hospital in
A reception honoring the to resume 24·hour·a-day St. Petersburg, Fla. His room
number is 305. He has heen
:ouple was held immediately gasoline sales.
confined there for the past
'allowing the ceremony at the
three weeks.

""-J
...................

r

Chester council p,lans rally

" If we preach , prea ch well ;
if we teach, do our best, and if
we have money at our disposal,

Jenny Caruthers, Pomeroy,
bridesmaids. Miss McComas
was in a medium blue gown of
polyester crepe fashioned with
an empire waist, A-line skirt,
bateau neckline and long
sleeves. The two bridesmaids
wore gowns of identical style,
but in a pale blue crepe. Their
bow headpieces with netting

\(·

BIRTHDAY CELEBRATION - Miss Nelle Bing, Union Ave ., Pomeroy, was o~onored on
the occasion of her 90th birthday anniversary with a party at the Pomeroy United Methodist
Church hosted by her niece, Mrs. Harold (Phyllis ) Russell, Leesburg, Fla. , and tw
nieces, Mrs. Keith (Phyllis) Thomas, Gallipolis, and Mrs. Howard (Mary Jane Waldeck,
Huntington, W. Va . Gifts and flowers were presented to Miss Bing, retired Meigs County
Health Department nurse and an active member of the United Methodist Church and the
Women's Christian Temperance Union. A large arrangement of pink carnations centered the
table from which refreshments were served by women of the church. The honored guest and
the hostesses are pictured left to right - Mrs. Russell, Miss Bing, Mrs. Thomas and Mrs.
Waldeck.

Workshop talks here
scheduled
-

sister of the bride; and Miss

"ALL YOU ADO IS LOVE"e

•

•
onvent ton
PIY/Jst'U1Aent

bateau neckline and sleeves

which came to points over her
hands . Her veil of illusion fell
from a crown of pearls and she
carried a bouquet of white
mums and baby's breath
around a corsage of red roses.
The bride's attendants were
Miss Strelsa McComas,
Albany, maid of honor; Miss
Carol DeLong, Rt. 2, Pomeroy,

at

Burlingham.
The bride is a graduate of the
West Virginia Bible School at
Point Pleasant and was a
member of the school choir
which toured West Virginia ,
Michigan, Pennsylvania and
Ohio. Roush attended the West
Virginia Bible School and is
now employed at Veterans
Memorial Hospital, Pomeroy.
Out-of-town guests at the
wedding were Mr. and Mrs .
Herbert Clay, Ginny Clay,
Dearborn, Mich.; Mr, and Mrs.
Larry Clay, Ann Arbor, Mich.;
Mr . and Mrs. Otis Allen, Mr.
and Mrs. Ed Alien, and Steve
Allen, Coolville;
Roger
Powell, Barbara Hooper, Mr.
and Mrs . Carlton Hooper,
Willie and Pa4l, Mr. and Mrs.
Troy Hooper, M. R. Clouse,
Denna Anderson, Kathleen
Sargeant, Jane Griffeth, Kathy
Sargeant and Lorene Smith,
Point Pleasant, W. Va .; Mr.
and Mrs. Ken Roush and
family , Fostoria; the Rev. and
Mrs. Dewey King and family,
Mrs. Martha King, Mr. and
Mrs. Leroy Manns, Mr. and
Mrs. Bernard Hudson, Mrs.
Patty Van Meter, West
Columbia, W. Va .; Mrs. Agnes
Gibbs, Mrs. Josephine Napper, .c
Mrs. Cleo Graham, Mrs. Hazel
Williams, Glouster; the Rev.
and Mrs. Roy Taylor, Mineral ;
M~. and Mrs. George Thacker,
W1lkesvllie .

Mr. and Mrs. Victor Lee Roush

- PLUS" HELL ' S
BLOODY DEVILS"

res ide

The observance of Women's
" 'Day. at the Sunday morning
: service of the Middleport First
Baptist Church April 21 was
: discussed during meetings of
: the circles of the B. H. Sanborn
: "Missionary Society Tuesday

sold for $2

over the ta ble.
Hos tesses for the reception
were Mrs. Ca rl DeLong, aunt
of the bride, Louise Titlis,

now

diets in his carhohyd tates.

•

white streamers wa s used

couple

fellow who has too many

concert being

simulated canopy of blue and

Women's day ~fated

A·n unhappy l'at man is a

I

OFFER LIMITED TO OHIO .RESIDENTS ONLY ' .

Pomeroy

•·

43/4 oz.

51.75 Value

:;. RACINE - In an evening
=: wedding at the home of Mr. and
~ Mrs. Ronald Holter, Feb. 2,
:';wedding vows were exchanged
" by Helen Hubbard, daughter of
' Mrs. Susie Workman, Cot; tageville, W. Va., and Roger
: Holter, son of Mr. and Mrs.
: Thomas Holter, Rt. I, Racine.
The Rev. Freeland Norris,
: Racine, performed the double

NEUTROGENA
WORTHALL

HEATING PAD

A reception was held immediately following the
: ceremony . Attending were
• Mrs. Susie Workman and Miss
' Mary Ann Workman, Col: tageville, W.Va.; Mr. and Mrs.
: Gary Lee and Darrin ,
' Columbus; Dan Earich,
• Cambridge; Dave and Jill
: Earich, Westerville; Peggy
Pomeroy;

GLUE
STICK
.22 oz.
79c Value

LISTEROL

GREAT-lAs~
MASCARA

SPRAY
DISINFECTANT
21 oz.
$2 .4~ v ~~ ""

F••t-Acting
Ant.cfd

Mediutitm

-

.... ._._ .

fro: «

Va.~! ne·,

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

f

...... _...... _,...

•

'

CONTAINS PROTEIN
Bu ilds, thi ckens colors
&amp; curls

REVLON

Prince

tchabelli

HAIR NET

WIND
SONG

S2 .50 Value

SPRAY COLOGNE

FLEX
&gt;1.79 Value

RETURNS HOME
Kimberly Roush, nine year
, old daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
' Bobby Roush, Middlepori, was
, returned home from St. Joseph'
: Hospibll Wednesday. A third
• grader at the Middleport
· Elementary School, Kimberly
: was admitted to the hospital
: last Saturday with a viral
: pneumonia.

PRITT

77e

$3.77

Mrs .

Naomi Brinker, Ron Brinker,
Mr. and Mrs. Ra~dall Reiber
and Rachael, Mr . and Mrs.
Paul Card, Mr, and Mrs.
James Werry, Jimmy, Randy
and Ricky , Mr. and . Mrs.
, Thomas Holter and Kevin,
: Jerry, Angie, Robin, Rick and
· Rosemary Hubbard, and Mr .
and Mrs. Ronald Holter,
Debbie and Tammy, all of
Racine.

s1.00 Value

Soap

No. 1811 ·6
2 Year Guaranlee
55.95 Value

: ring ceremony.

: O'Brien,

HyP~ · AIIergenic

SPECIAL

$225

..,

-

�sen t l n el

8-TheDailySentmel M1ddlrnort Pomerov U March 21 1974
PUBLIC NOTICE
e

To th e Defendants George M
W seman
Mary W seman
H iram
W seman
Howard
W seman
Holl s Ernest ne
W seman
Frankl n Emery
W seman
Char ley W seman
Allee W seman G C W seman
and to the unknown hers
dev1sees
legatees
ad

mm•strators

executors and

ass gns of each of the fo row ng
George M w sema n Deceased
H ram W seman Deceased
Howard

Ho liS

W seman

Deceased

Ernst ne

W seman

WANT ADS

INFORMATION
DEADLINES
5 PM Oay Before Pub/ cat o

Monday Dead! ne 9 a m
Cance at on Correct ons
w II be accepted unt I 9 a m for
Day of F'ubl cat on

REGULATIONS

'

r - --.,.-o-'-

ClassifiedS Get Results!
Wan!Prl fo Buy
1-!ECYCLE your newspape ~
and co rug ated pas eboa rd IO
Th e Rosenburq Company a
Athens 01'1 o We are your
bes n ar~cl at $ 50 pe 100
pounds tor botll te ms We buy
scrap ron cas t ron sheet
on
copper
brass a d
a um num
We ha"e been
here s n ee t9 6 so we know a
n "t b
abou
ccyc 9
Conserve recycle and se
your waste mater al s t o
Rosenbe Q a A tl'1en s 0 1 o
We c ose each Fr day noon for
ba ance of the weeK
f you
would
k e to ca l us abou
nlo mal on
our
phone
number s593 7477 Se t to Tl'1e
Rosenbe g Co
at Athens
Oh o We need your bus n ess
and
your
support
n
Recyc ng
J 57c

For Sale

lost

f- E MALE beag c brow n b ~ 1o,
and wh te no col ilr Lost a
R
7~ and Rou e 7 by pass
!= am ty pet r eword off ered
P o e !11 3266
3 19 3 c

9- The Daily Sentmel Middleport Pomeroy 0 March 21 !974

Business Servict:s
ASK US ABOUT
PRE FABRICATED

LOOK
At These Specials

WOOD TRUSSES
~

DITCHING SERVICE

..

The Pvb she r reserves the
BLA CK c ut c h pur se ost r.~ear
Deceased
Frank l n Emery r ght to ~d o re ect any ads
Burger
Ch e f or
Holler
W1seman
Deceas ed
Char e"Y deemed
BUIIttoVour Specs
ob ect ona
Tne
H osp I a
n Ga I po s
If
W seman
Deceased
A ce publ Sher w I not be respon
1965 Olds 88 Cpe
Delivered to Job Stte
found
pleas
e
ca
I
99'1
7008
Wiseman Deceased and G C s be for more tl'1an one n
$350
Re wa d
w seman Deceased a of correct nsert on
J 20 3t c
whose res dences are unknown
RATES
1966 Comet HT Cpe
IN THE COMMON
For Want Ad Serv•ce
$200
PLEAS COURT OF
5 cents per word one nseJ:t on
MEIGSCOUNTY OHIO
MATERIALS CO
Min mum Charge Sl 00
1966
Comet
4
Door
Ohto Power Company
773 5554
Mason W Va
14 cents •er word tl'1ree
$199
an Oh o Corporal on
consecut ve nsert ons
B
L
ACK
fema
e
Ge
man
P amf ff
'16 cents per word s x con
1966 GMC 6 P1ckup
Shepl'1 erd
spayed
and
vs
secut ve nsert ons
rr
endly
Phone
991
59d7
George M W1seman
$199
25 Per Cent D scounl on pad
3 9 3t c
et at
ads and ads pa d w th n 10
1963
Dart
6
4
Dr
Defendants
days
No 1S 4BO
$99
CARD OF THANKS
NOTICE BY
&amp; OBtTUARY
1958 Chrysler 4 Dr
PUBLICATION
$2 00 for 50 wo d m n
p a nt If has brough
th s m urn Each add 1 on a word
Ph 992 5271
$99
JUNK
AUTOS
co mp etc
act on nam ng you as Del en 3c
de l ve ed o our yard We p ck TRUCK toppe for 8 fl bed
Fa ctory made
PI one 992
dants n the above named court
BLIND AD;,
up auto bod es and buy al
808 W Mam Pomeroy
by t ng ts Comp anton 1'1e Stl'1
131
Add tona l 25c Cha ge pe
k nds of scrap meta s r~nd
3
9
6t
c
day of February 1974
Advert semen
ron R de s Sa l vage St~ te
The ob1ect of the Com pia nt s
OFFICE HOURS
Route 24 Route 4 Pomeroy
RT 36 Dav s d tche r one 3 x
to part t on the to ow ng
8 30 a m to S 00 p m Da ly
01'1 o Phone 992 5466
36 and one 6 and 24 cl'1a n
descr bed rea estate
8 Jfl a m
to 12 00 Noon
J 14 IUp
L Ke new cond on Phone
A that certa n ve n of coa
Sllturday
Area s Most
6 4 A46 0762 alter 5 p m $500
ocal 9 and var ous l y known as
Rea sonable Pnces
J a 6tc
Number Four Fou r A Clar on
Your Chevy Dealer
OLD turn lure oak tabes
or Limestone Coa under l y ng
cocks ce boxes brass beds LOSE we gt1t wIll N ew Shape
the tract of land he r e nafter S HOOT NG MATCH
All work guaranteed
Co rn
d shes desks o
comp lete
Tabes and Hyd ex Wale DAV I S
descr bed
together w h the
Ho ow Gun Club tu n f rst
rencher w th
househo ld s Wr te M
D
P 1 s at Sutton DruQ M d
r gtlt o m ne and re nove the
r gl'1t after M es Cemetery
b l ade S3 200 W th
ra er
M I er Rt 4 Pomeroy Oh o
d epo rl and Ne son 0 ug
said coa l by underground
Rut and
Fac t ory choked
S3 500 97 8 h p lh eel horse
cal
992
n6o
3 9 Jl c
mm ng processes (st r p m n ng
guns only Sunday Marcl'1 2J
w h 36
mower and 42
5 13 IC
not nciuded ~ and ttle r ght and
blade $700 A so hay SOc a
1 p n
pr vi ege of m n ng remov ng
J 21 3 c
973 MAS SE Y Ferguson
d n9
ba e Phone 985 3373 e v en ngs
and transport ng underground
nwn moor J4 mower 7 h p
OLD Upr ght p anos
A y
3 15 61p
Phone 1 (304 773 5 61
and vnder the surface of he GUN Shoot Salu day March
co d ton Pay ng $ 0 cash
3 19 Stp 1971 1 WHEEL dr ve .J 4 ton
tract of land here naf er
Wr t e g ve d re c ons
to
23 7 p n
M e H I Road
descr bed
coa l from other
WITTEN P ANO CO
P 0
F ord p kup tru ck
$20 600
Sponsored by R ac ne F r e
ands now owned or nereafter
BOX 18 Sa rd s Oh o 43946
m l es
10
II
cab over
Depa tment
1
F
T
Cob
a
speed
boat
200
acqu red
by
01'1 o Power
3 13 JOi c
3 9 4 c
camper se f conta ned A so
horsepow er
Bu ck V 8 n
Company
ts successors or
topper W 1 se I seoara telv
V1 r qll B Tt' •lford . Sr.
board
outboard
dr
ve
full
assigns
LET US se 1 t lor yo;.~ at au c
Ca 1 985 3554 after 6 p m
B vI v ng oom sa le 61!1 Sou th
cove
rs
tandem
tra
er
Br ok,-.r
Sa d tract of
and be ng
ton W II buy al fvrn ure or
weekdays
Harold Brew
Th rd Avenue
M dd epor
Exce l en t con d ton
Phone
s tualed n the County of Me gs
household
goods
Potty
s
110
M
cc
h&lt;llli C Strr&gt;r: l
er
Long
Botton
Oh
o
5 ar ng Wednesday March
6 4 ) 949 2433
n the State of or~ o and n the
Aucl on House Open 9 30 to
3
I
5
tfc
20 1 1 sod ou
Every day 10
Pomeroy,
Oh1o ·IS76q
3 I 7 6tc
Townsh p of Sa lem co nta n ng
S 30 da y Phone 992 3509 537
amt l 7pm
49 50 acres more or te ss and
H g l'1 Sl
M dd epor t 01'1 o
3 9 6 p
AM Flv st ereo rad o 8 tra c K 10 ACRES - On Rl 7 Loop n
bounded as follows
2 26 Jbtc 1- OAM to f
your o d couch and
tape payer 4 spe~ker sound
On tne North by lands now or TRAP Shoot ng eve y Thurs
c ha r cush ens as
ow as
system
Ba ance SI09 46 or M ~ iep ort Good locatiOn for
formerly owned by Wm
R
day even ng 7 p m At the
S 0 95 Upholstery books on y
use our budg et terms Ca l
hom es or busmess
Nelson et al On the East by
Rutland Gun C ub New L ma
SOc
4 ncl'1 cove red fo am
992 3965
POMEROY - 3 ~droom
lands now or former y owned by
Road Everyone welcome
mattr esses fo standard s ze
3 18 tf c
Everett M chael on the South
BERRY MILLER Mob l e Home
3 9 3tc
ran
ch ty pe home Hot water
bed
$29 95
Pomero"
by ands now or form er y owned
Sales has a ot to offer when
Recovery 622 E Man Street COAL FOR SALE JAYMAR hentmg n ce modern k 1tchen
by Truman P Brewer Merle S KOSCOT
you :.tar shopp ng lor you
KOSMET CS
8.
Pomeroy Oh o Phone 992
COAL
COMPANY
THE fron t porch and garage
Davis On 11'1 West by ands now
Mob e Home You can beat
W GS
For a good
ne of
7554
ME GS &amp; GALLI A LINE
or forroer y owned by Mer e S
th e 1'1 gh deprec at on you I
Sl800000
Cosme cs fr end y serv ce
3 5 26 t c
STATE
ROUTE
7
AT
Dav s
have on your home tl'1e f rst
and someone to cha t w th
MIDDLEPORT
Large 9
CHESH
RE
OPEN
7
AM
Sa d parcel be ng descr bed
two years by shopp ng tor a
g ve me a ca
Hel en Jane
room
home
w
th
large
front
T O 630 PM 5 DAY S A
as follows
late mode vsed Mob e Home
Br own 9925113
WEEK
PHO
NE
992
5693
yard
Also
a
renta
l
to
help
pay
su
te
Be; inn ng at a pont in the
H ere are some every day ow ANT I QUE
bedroom
3 19 tfc
3 18 SIC off Room for 2 tra 1 ers Only
north
ne of Fract on 4
exce enf cond ton Phone
pr ces
TownshiP 8 Range 15 Oh o BIG SA LE Wt1o l e house tu I
Super Spec a of ttie WeeK 992 562 1 or 992 5947
$17 soo 00
Com pany s Purchase wh ch
3 21 Jtc
new 65x12
Detro fer
3
ant ques turn lure art etc
POMEROY - Good 3 story
said pont s one 1'1undr d and
bedroom
I
1
baths
reduced
Fol ow s gns from Hem ock
th rty one rods east of the
$1 000 00 to S6 495 00 (Th s
Grove Sa turda y Ma r ch 23
5 ROOM house and bath two bus ness bu ld ng on Ma n St
northwes t corner of sa d
Mob e Home s loaded w tl'1 N CE SPR NT m n b ke 4
The Lynas
Pl'1one 992 6083
car garage 2 story on Carso n N th a 2 story bu s ness room
Fract1on thence east s xty one
extras)
3 21 2t c
1'1orsepower good cond t on
Road
n Mason
Contac
and rent a l on 2nd
rods and ten 1 nks tnenc e south
1971 64x 2 Champ on
2
Ca 992 2502
Russe l Sa l 773 5606
LAND - On Rt 7 about one
one hundred and thirty two rods AUCT ON Thursday 7 p m
bedroom 1 2 bat h extra good
3 21 Jtc
3 l2 ti c
to the south 1 ne of sa1d Frac
buy at $4 995 00
m le ou t
Polys Auct on House 537
tlon thence Wests xty one rods
60x 12 Champ on
2 bed oom
H gh St
M ddleport Oh o
EDGE OF TOWN - 2 acres
and ten lmks the 1ce north one
$4 495 00
s ROOM house w th batn n pus
Appl ances ant que stands
1'1undred and th rty two rods to
upper end of Syra cuse Phone
ch na cupboard
household 60x 12 Globemas ter 3 bedroom
the place of beg1nnlng con
BUILDING LOT - In Chester
glass sl d ng doors
on y
992 3 16
furn sl'1 ngs
ta nmg f fty acres more or less
3 15 ate Town sh p S1800 00
$4 495 00
32 lip
seve and except therefrom one
60x12
Homette
exce l ent
NDUSTRY IS BUYING
half acre ly ng in tl'1e nort heast
cond t on $4 495 00
2 BEDROOM house n M d
A
FULL
gospel
rev
val
w
II
be
MORE LAND BETTER BUY
T1re Pnces
corner of said tract east of the
60x12
L
bertY
de
uxe
$4
995
00
deport
New k ! c hen and
he d at the Me gs Jun or H gh
road tead ng from Parkers Run
YOURS NOW WHILE IT IS
2 bedroom
batl'1 app ance s n c l uded
M dd l eport Oh o Marcn 29 60x12 P M C
to the old Dexter Church and
AVAILABLE
AND
$4
995
00
JO and 31 at 7 JO p m each
Ca 992 53 0
conta nmg after sa1d except on
60x 12 Elcona Custom
cos t
3 19 26tc SOMEWHAT REASONABLE
evenmg
and
Sunday
af
m
the
Area
forty nine and one half acres
S7 995 00 new
now on l y
ternoon 2 p m
Evangel st
Reference Deeds Vol 239
$5 795 00
cnester
Estep
Ch
1
cotne
.&lt;1
BEDROOM home at Brad
Page 757 Vol 94 Page 266 Vol
tl • 1 t- N I
' I :, I ' •I· I·
Oh o Spec al s ng ng each We also 1'1ave a good select on of
bury
tust s m nutes from
61 Page 67 Vol 59 Page 572
, I •,.. [ )( .11\j I ; I I ;. I • • '• I •
Band
Ow
de
Mob
l
e
Homes
n
It's
even ng by Gospe Ton es and
M ddieport Pl'10n e 992 2297
and Vol 19 Page 433 Deed
&lt;"•\'&gt;0( lr• I I
stock
other s ngers
Everybody
3 17 6tp
Records Me gs County Oh o
Tnese
are
mostly
ail
lat
e
model
we
come
The prayer of the Complamt
Cjl&lt;jl2 -3325 or
homes and th e prices nclude
3 20 Otc
s to part t1on the real estate
NEW J bedroom house near
your del very and comp lete
above descr~bed or t t cannot
Rut and Phone 742 6161
set up So for an 11onest o
CjiQ2 -3 61 ')
be partit ioned to order that I be J BAnd The T ny Tr o and the r
J 7 6tc
goodness good dea
stop n
773
5881
Mason
W
Va
s
ng
ng
g
roup
from
V
enna
sold
at Berry M I er Mob e
w Va w 1 be at he Eag le today
You are requ.red to answer
Homes Sales
705 Fa rson
.BU I LD NG ots Phone A ber
R
dge
Cl'1u
r
ch
Sunday
the Complaint w th n twenty
Street Belpre Oh o Phone STEREO
Walnu
AM FM
H II Rae ne 949 226
March 24
974 at 2 p m
eight days after the
ast
423 953 c osed Sunday
Rad o 8 track ta pe com
3 20 6tp
Pub l c s we come
publication of th s notic e w1'11ch
3 n 6tc
b
nat
on
Ba
ance
$110
73
or
3
20
31p
will be pub I shed once eacl'l
ter m s ava l ab le Phone 992 2 BEDROOM house n M d
week for SIX consecut v e weeks
3965
d eport Se by owner pr ced
nn
Seco nd an
and the ast publ cat on w II be FABR I C
2 4 fc
to sel Phone 949 3832
n versary sa eon many yards
made on the 21st day of March
J 20 6tc
of
matenats
tl'1rough
March
1974
30th
Located
on
County
Road
uROCERY bus ness for sa e
In case of your fa lure to
50 between Tuppers Pia ns
608 E
answer or otherw se respond as
Bu 'd ng tor sale or ease BEAUTIFUL new homes now
and
Reedsv
lie
Phone
378
.un,jer cons tru ct on n pr me
perm tted by the Oh o Ru les of
Phone 773 56 18 from 8 30 p m
MAIN
6276
l ocal on on c ty water and
to 10 p m tor appo ntment
c vii Procedure w1th n tne time
3
20
3tp
sewer
Cho
ceoldes
gns
Wa
3
20
ti
c
stated judgment by default w II
WANTED TO RENT a 2 or 3
POMEROY,
to wa 1 carpet ng and a r
be rendered agamst you lor t h e
bedroom 1'10me or rpa tm ent
GUN
Shoot
7p
m
Fr
day
at
the
cond ton ng
n cluded
w I
relief demanded n the Com
WE
HAV
E
a
I
your
upho
stery
turn shed or unfurn shed for a
Racme Gun Cub Factory
1'1e l p
arrange
f1nan c ng
CLOSE IN O\ler 4 acres
pia nt
needs
burlap
den m
m ddle aged couple
Must
choked guns on y Assorted
conven t on a oan s w th down
cambr
c
foam
g
ue
z
ppers
Furn shed home 3 BR bath
have
wasl'1er
and
dryer
and
meats
payment low as 5 pet Other
LARRY E SPENCER
tack ng stnps spr ngs and
a
r
cond
t
onmg
Can
prov
d
e
3
20
Jtc
Natural gas hea t C ty water
new
homes
ava
able
to
Clerk of the
c ps
ch pboard
button
references
Phone 992 579
qual fed bvyers w1th NO
Por c h es
Many
other
Common Pleas Court
tw
ne
sew
mg
thread
legs
3 21 .Up
DOWN
PAYMENT
Ca
Me gs Coun ty Oh1o CA LL Po ty s Aucl on or stop by
upho stery books dacron
features $7 100 00
to
get
r
d
of
those
unwanted
co l ect 614 837 6540 or 239 0785
Pomeroy Oh o
webb ng spr ng tw ne tacks
REEDSVILLE AREA - 180
tems Se ll t the auct on way
or wr t e
Gr ea t Amer can
(2 7 14 21 28 (3) 7 14 21 7tc
WAN TED to rent a turn shed
well
cord
cotton
sw
vel
537 H gh Street M ddl eport
acres
at $120 per r.~cre On
Homes
nc
P
0
Box
687
t ra l er or sma ll house n he
bases
foam
foam
foam
992 3509 Open 9 a m to 5 p m
Pomeroy Oh o 45769
country n Pomeroy Rut and
blacktop
h ghway Water lap
Pomeroy
Recovery
622
E
Monday Wednesday Thurs
3 1 li e
ORDINANCE NO 100S 74
area Contact Dean Scl'1ro ck
Man St
Pomeroy
Oh o
pa d Most m nera ls
day
Fnday
unt
noon
An Ord nance to regulate the
Hunts Tra ler Park ackson
phone 992 7554
3 13 30tc
SYRACUSE - Large 2 story
demol/t on of bu dmgs
Oh o
3 5 26tc NEW 3 bedroom home p: bath
lrame 7 rooms 4 BR 2
3 20 61p
Be 1t ordamed by the Counc I
garage basement on Grave
of the V1llege of M1Cidleport as tAStfPaid lOr"arlmakes and'
H II M dd l eport Natural gas
baths
Basement Garage
models of mob le home s
ONE ADM RAL sefdefrostng
follows
a ready
l'l
Pl'1one Dale
N
ew
gas
furnace
New
Phon e area code 614 423 95 31
r efr gerator and one bed tor
Sec 1 That no person shall
Out on 992 3369 even ngs
4 IJtfc
copper
plumbtng
Rver
sa e Phone 992 5778
demohs1'1 a bu ld ng serveel by a
992 2534
pubi1c sewer Without f rst ob
WOMAN to ve nand ne p w1th
1 17 ttc
frontage to dock the boat
3 21 Jtc
l'O"LL
Y
S
Aucl
on
House
537
taining a permit from the
1 ght housework Phone E ma
SIOSOOOO
H
gh
Str
eet
M
ddleport
for
v llage
Russell Un on Ave 992 2653
CLOSE IN
17 acres
reta I and cons gnments 9 30
Sec 11 Any person des r ng to
3 21 3tp
to 5 30 da y Phone 992 3509
(fenced)
barn
sto rag e
demol sh a build ng descr bed
Buy 'Em Now'
2 26 30tc
n Sect on 1 of th1S ord nance
bu ld•ng
l ar-ge garage
20 Turf Tnm 3 H P
shall make app 1cat on to the
Home 2 yea r s old 3 BR
Rut and
Mayor and pay a fee of $2 00 for REVIVAL Serv ces
Freew I Bapt st Churcl'1
bath Love ly k tchen w th
POVVER MOWERS
each bu ld ng to be demo sl'1ed
March 24 through 30 7 30
lots of cab nets range and
The appl~eat on shall conta n
p m
W th th e Rev
Pau
the date on WhiCh sad ap
ref Ut1llty P lenty of room
Galllpol
s
Taylor from He per Utah as
pl cat on is filed and the
here $22 500 00
Evange
ist
Spec
a
t
s
ng
ng
locat on and descr pt on of th e
For
26" Turf Til l'h HP
n ght y everyone we co me
FOR NEW At:JVENTURE
bu ld ng be ng de mol shed
Exc1tmg
3 17 6tc
Upon rece pt of tt1e ap
TILLERS
SEE AND OWN ONE OF
New Home
pi ca t on and lee the Mayor
THE ABOVE TO BUY OR
sl'1al ssue a perm t to demol sh HARRISON S TV and Serv ce
SEL
L CALL US TODAY
cal s Phone 992 2522
YOU
WO NT BEL EVE
the bu ld ng or bu ld1ngs
2 22 26tc
HENRY E CLELANO
descr bed n the app ca t on
YO UR EYES W HEN YOU
POMEROY LANDMARK
The perm t s1'1all requ re the
ST EP NS DE T HI S NEW
BROKER
app cant to not ty the V II age
SPL T
Lj::VEL
HUGE
9.
_Jack W Carsey Mgr
992 2259
Bu /dmg
nspector when the
NOTICE OF
LIVING ROOM WITH A
~Phone
992
2181
If
no
answer
992 "568
bu id ng or bu ld ngs have been
APPOINTMENT
LOVELY BALCONY EF
Case No 21090
removed and the perm t shal
FECT GO NG TO THE 3
requ re the perm t ho der to Estate of Mildred 8 Headley
Pomeroy Oh1o
LARGE
BEDROOMS
SEW N G Mach nes Brand New
expose tl'le sewer serv ng the Deceased
BEAUT F UL
BU L TIN
z g Zag n n ce walnut table
bu 1id ng and cap the same w tn
Not ce s hereby g1ven that
OAK
CAB
IN
E
T
S WITH
In
or
g
nal
car
ton
s
Never
con crete or s m lar substance to Clarence M Headle y of Reeds
POS ITI ON
w th
We come
used
C l earance on
7.4 Q UAL TY
APPLIANCES
prevent any substance from v lie Oh o R D has been du y
Wagon
In terna l ona
957 CHEVROLET Exce llent
Models
On y
a
few
BUll T IN COMPLETELY
enter ng the sewer
Upon appo nted Executor of the
Peasant c areer
flex bl e
cond t on Ca I 992 2967 after S
ava labl e
S63 40 cash or
CARPETED FOR DAD - A
rece pt of the not ce the Estate of M ldred B Head ey
hours good earn ngs
Car
pm
terms ava abl e Phone 992
LARGE 2 CAR GARAGE
necessary
For personal
Bu ld ng
Inspector
shall deceased ld e of Reedsv I e
3 20 7tc
2653
W
TH
WORKSHOP
PLUS
2
exam ne tl'1e sewer and approve Me gs County Ohio
nterv ew ca l Athens Oh o
3
20
tfc
(614
592 12 1 Equa Op
or d sapprove the capp ng If
Cred tors are requ red to f le
ACRE~
TO
PUTTER
1973 MGB convertbe
7500
portun ty Emp oyer
disapproved tl'1e perm t holder the rca ms w th sad f dqc ary
AROUND ON LOCATED N
Vacuum
m les ots of extras Call 1
3 20 3 c ELECTROLUX
shell have se\len days In which w th n four months
RUTLAND
YOU
MUST
Cleaners complete w th at
J04 773 5323
to properly cap tt1e sewer
Dated th s 18th day of March
tacl'1ments cordw nder and SEE THE INSIDE OF THIS
J 18 6tc
Sec II t
Demolition of a 197 4
ONE
TO
APPREC
ATE
T
pant spray Used but n l ke
bu tdm; shall be competed and
new cond ton
Pay $34 4:~
Mann ng D Webster
the sewer capped w th n 2
1971 DODGE Moneca
a r
OFFICE 446 3643
cash or budget plan ava I abl e
Judge 3 AND A ROOM furn shed and
months of the date a perm1 t s
cond t 011 ng 4 door P S and
EVENINGS
Phone 992 2653
Court of Common Pleas
ssued prov ded however vpon
P B
Good gas m l eage
unfvrn shed
apartments
3 20 tfc
Bud McGhee-446 1255
Probate D vis on
good cause shown the Mayor
Phone 992 5434
Phone Dav d H 11
Rae ne
E M
Ike W1 se man-H6
may extend the t me for
949 2762
4 2 tfc
LAST mlonth for w n ter pr ces
3796
demol lion of svch bv1id ng and (J) 21 28 (4) 4 3 c
J 15 6t c
capp ng
f
sewer
for
a
PRIVATE meet ng room for
197
4
t
r
a
1
er
s
an
d
to
d
;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;:._
.,;.;;
~:.::.::.::
.::.:~
:.::.:;;..,
on
downs
Reese
h tches
reasonable t1me not to exceed
any organ zat1on phone 992
Re fr gerators
Furnaces 25
an add1t onal three (3) months
3975
Pel
off
Awn o mat c
Sec IV Th s ord nance sha t
3 11 tfc
Awnmgs 20 Pet off 12 montl'1
not apply to the demo ton of ANT QUE quIts and ewelry
warranty w th serv ce Camp
en y bu• d ng
I tl'1e owner
A so nterested n furn lure 2 BEDROOM mob le home
Con ey Starcraft Sa l es Rt 62
commences construct on of a
also 1 tra ler space Pl'1one
and d shes
Call 992 5262
N of Pt P easant Beh nd
new structure on the prem ses
949 2261
even ngs or morn ngs
Red Carpe nn 675 5Jl!4
which utilizes the sewer w th n
2 20 tfc
3 20 61p
3 20 Jtc
60 days after demo r ton or f the
sewer s connected to a struc
SMALL FARM
20 acres at EXCELSIOR Sat Works
ture other than a bv1ld ng such
E
Bradbury Phone 992 7275 ~
as a mob le home Wlthm 60
Mam St Por(leroy All k nds
days after demolition
3 21 4tc
of salt water pellets water
Sec v The reopenmg of a
nuggets block sart and own
JOB OPPORTUNITIES
SMALL Furn shed 1 bedroom
sewer capped under th•s sect on
011 o R ver Salt Phone 992
11ouse arge yard all ut 1 t es
sha
not be construed as
3891
SOCIAL SECURiTY
pad Phone 992 7494
requiring a sewer tap
6 5 tf(;
CONSUMER PROTECTION
Sec
VI
Whoever v o ates
3 21 4tc
Sect on 1 2 or 3 of th s or
1969 GRANO Pr1x red w th
d nance shalt be fined not more
APARTMENT for rent
2
black v nyl top $975 Phone
than S2S 00
Each day of
bedrooms Phone 992 5908
992 5335
violation shall canst lute a
J 9 6tc
3 18 Jt c
sepa rat e offense
Sec VII Th s Ord nance sha ll
APARTMENT for rent Phone
SINGER sew ng mac1'11nes 1972
takt effect and be n force from
992 5592
and after March 11 1974
m'del m beaut tur walnut
3 19 tfc
Passed the 1111'1 day of March
cab net Make! des gn stit
1914
ches zig zog buttonholes
FURNISHED
2
bedroom
Fred Hoffman
bl nd hems etc Like new
Easy Terms'
M
GRATE
Ira le r
close to schools
Pre$ldentof Counc1
Only $89 95 Call Ravenswood
HEft AN
st1opp
ng
center
and
sw
m
A !test Gene Grate
m ng pool Phon e 992 5914
273 9521 or 213..._9893 otters
• .;M;.;,;A.o.SO.O.N•W•V•A•. .
Clerk
12 7 oo
tfc
Nhddleporl Pomeroy
3 17 6tc
J) u 21 21c

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN

Pets For Sale

Gene's

Body Shop

For Sale

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

Pa1nt1ng A Specialty

Not1ce

Real Estate For Sale

TEAFORD

Mobile Homes For Sale

Real Estate For Sale

I

BEND TIRE CENTER

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

I

Wanted

Water L1nes and Power
Lmes All work done by the
foot or contract Also dozer
work and septtc tanks m

sta lled
See or Call
Bob or Roger Jeffers
Day 992 7089
N1ght 992 3525
or 992 5232

I
"

.-.

EKPERIENCED
Radiata
' I
!,..... , _ II l
Service
'

FURNITURE

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

Stop In and See Our
Floor Display

OpenS Tol5

F1rehouse 6 13
Ironside 3 4 15 Black Journal 20 Confl c t s of Harry S
Truman 33 Jung Fu 6 13 Moves Sex and the Stng le G r
Eltot Norton Rev ews 33
News 20 Energy Crunch 6
Stre~ts of San Franc sco 13

Phone
3 21 6tp

ex
1970 MAL BU Chevrolet
cetlent shape Phone 992 5621
or 992 59 47
3 21 3tc

THE

------------:--

WISEMAN

WANTED

PAPER CARRIER

CLIFTON, W. VA.
PHONE 992-2156
lHE DAILY
SENTINEL

52.95

AGENCY

129.95

Auto Sales

For Rent

•

Wanted To Buy

ZENITH
COLOR TV

•

INFORMATION ABOUT

e

BLACK &amp;
WHITE TV

STEREO
92.1 FM

WMPO

e STEREO

MASON fURNITURE

________ ______ IL.••Filr~e~e;.;;;De.;;.i;lt~v;e~ry;.;.'111!1,.;.7~7J;!jS;5~92;..

News 4

Svnnse Semmar 4 Sacred Heart 10
Folk L1teratureJ M l es toneso fProgress 10

6 15 6 15 -

Farm Report 11

6 30- B1ble Answers 8 Blue R dge Quartet 13

F ve

M nutes to L1v e By 4
Columbus Today .4
Farmt me 10 Mornmg Report 3

Most sa1d tl stands for a kiss (but not a propoSitiOn even tf
the stamp 1s placed m lhe bottom left-hand corner
Heres an observation from a 26 year-old man

+++
Dear Rap
ln my teen days the stamp ups1de down sa1d I love you
Two stamps one upstde doWJ; and I he olher upnght represented
I wanl to take you out and (or) make tl wtth you
To further substantiate th1s rumor I attended one of our
local schools and asked some teenagers Results Out of 50 ktds
questioned 80 pet knew a mtsplaced stamp meant love or a kiss
15 pet never wnte letters and 5 pet sa1d 11 was stupid puttmg
stamps on backwards - DAVID

+++

7 00- Today 3 4 15 CBS New' 6 10 D ck Van Dyke 13 Speed
racer 6
7 30 Rocky &amp; Bullwtnkle 13 New Zoo Re ..... ue6
8 00 - Capt Kangaroo 8 10 Sesame St 33 New Zoo Revue 13
Jeffs Collie 6

9 25

Jack LaLanne 13
6 30 - Brady Bunch 6
6 55 - News 13

9 00- Paul D xan 4 Ph I Donahue 15 Fr end l y Junct on 10
AM 3 Abbott 8. Costello 8 Wold W ld West 6 Move All
Hands on Deck

13

9 30- To Tell the Truth 3 Tattletales 6

l

l

9 55 - Chuck Whole Reports 10
10 00 - D nah Shore 3 IS Jokers Wold 8 10 Com pony 6
10 30 - $10000Pyramld8 10 JeopardyJ 4 15
11 00 - Gambit 8 10 Password 13 W za rd of Odds 3 4 15 M ke
Douglass 6
HollywoodSquares3 4 IS Brady Bunch 13

11 30 -

6 10 Sesame Sl 33
115S-CBSNews6 DanlmelsWorldiO

~veof L fe

12 00- Ja ckpot 3 15 Password 6 Bob Brau-ns SO 50 Club 4

News 8 10 13
12 30 - Bilffle 3 15 Spl1t Second 6 Sea rch for Tomorrow 8 10
12 55- NBC News 3 15
1 00 - News 3 All My Choldren 6 13 Not For Women Only 15
Concentration 8 What s My L ne 10
I 30 - 3 On A Match 3 4 IS Lets Make A Deal 6 13 As lhe
World Turns 8 10
2 00- Days of Our L1ves 3 .4 15
Gu d ng L1ght 8 10

Newlywed Game 6

13

2 30-Doclors3 415 Edgeo1Noghl8 10 GorlmMy Lfe6 13
3 00 - Another Wor ld 3 4 IS

General Hospital 6 13

R ghl 8 10 Lock Stock &amp; Barrel 20
3 10 - One L te to L ve 6 13 Phil Donahue

4

Pr ce 1s

Olmmg back to Father w1th a Vengeance
got a unanunous roastmg Examples

+++
Rap
That vengeful father who would rather beat 11 out of his
ch1ldren than talk 11 out should have a warden s JOb When ne
excuses h1s cruelty wtth passages from th e Bible well I hope
God 11 get hun for that 1
How awfultoltve m a family where a dJCtator (father) brags
about making h1s sub jects fear mm He s askmg for a lonely old
age - A S

+++

Dear Helen and Sue
I m 18 and I was ra1sed by a Father Wlth a Vengean&lt;-e
Whenever I had to ask hun somethmg I ltterally shook with.
frtght I never knew how he would react If I had done anythlna
wrong he wouldn I explam but would JUSt yell and hlt There
were times when I wanted to stay out of the house for good for the
sunple reason I was scared to death to open the front door
I never satd anythmg but what he mterrupted me wotb cut
tmg words but tf I mterrupted HIM run for your ltfe'
Fathers ltke thos should ask themselves if they d1sagreed
wtth a fnend would they haul off and htl him' Never 1So why do
the) use their chtldren as punchmg bags just to show who s

Racer 6 Love Amertcan Sty l e 13

Shenff Was A Lady 10

Lucy show 8 Move

The

4 30 - Green Acres 3 G1ll gan s Isle 13 6 Bonanza 15 Hazel B
Jackpot 4
5 00- Bonanza 3 Merv Grtffm .4 M1ss on

lmposs ble

Gnff lh8 Mr Rogers20 33 Gomer Pyle USMC 13

5 30 -

Beverly H1llb1lltes 8

Electr c Company 33

6 Andy
Hog ans

Heroes 13 Tra1ls West 15 Hodgepodge Lodge 20

STEWART OHIO PH 662
3035

6 00 - News 3 8 10 15 13 Truth or Consequences 6 Sesame

Street 20 Adterliln Counsel ng Techn ques 33 H gh School
Baskelbatt 4
6 30- NBC News 3 15 ABC News 6 CBS News 8 10 Room 222
13

10 A tfc

SE PTIC
TANK S
cleaned
Modern San it at on 992 3954 or
992 73.49
10 23 ffc

7

00- Truth or Conseq 3 News 6 10 What s My Lme 8 W ld
K ngdom 13 Elec Co 20 I Spy 15 Av aflon Weather 33

W LL TRIM or cut trees and
shrubbery Also clean out
basements att1cs etc Call
949 3221 or 742 4441

WIN AT BRIDGE

South's dummy play does 1t
NORTH
.62

8 00 - Wash ngton Rev ew 20 33 Brady Bunch 6 lJ Fa rn I t'
Thea tr e 3 15 Ph I Donahue m Hollywood 4 D1rty Sal l y 8 10
8 30
Wash ngton Connect on 20 Good T1mes 8 10 Campus
Scene 33 Ja cques Cous teau 6 13
9 00 Ma st erp ece Theater 33 8 cen t enn a l Lecture Seres 20
Cour f slde4 Move s Sen 1or Year 8
Th e VIP s 10
9 30 - Odd Couple 13 Ozz •e s G I s 6 H gh School Basketbal/4
10 00 - News 20 Toma 6 13 Rei g1ou s Amenca 33 Dean
Martn 3 15

10 30 - Day At Noghl33 Comedy Pilots
11 00 - News Weather Sports3 4 6 8 10 13 15 Janak 33
1l 30 - Johnny Carson 3 4 15 Scream ng Skull 6 Moves
Scream and Scream Aga n 8
The Curse of the Mummy s
Tomb 10
Mara of the W1lderness 13
00
M C:71 ght Spec al 3 4 Don K~rshner s Rock Concerl 6
Scream mg Skull 13
1 15 - Mov1e Fog Is land lO

2 30

News 13 4

IM CALLING
THE POLIC.E''

.KQJ97

.J

'Qt04
• J 106

+ K932
•

10 86
OJ

• A84
'A K 85 3
• Q74
"'7 2

Custom Hatchback Coupe dark green f1msh like new
white wa ll t res
full wheel covers
protectl\le S1de
moldmgs power brakes radio 6 cylinder eng ne stan
dard tran sm •ss•on A very papular model and pr ced to go

u

.4 door 1 owner new car trade n good 1st line tires
spotless clean ntenor small V 8 eng ne automattc trans
m ss on The r ght SIZe - the r ght pnce Value $1625

~2395

1971 OOUGAR H.T. CPE.. .....

Green f n sh spotless clean Interior a1r condlt oned good
fires automatic trans
P steermg &amp; brakes rdd o

Sharp

1970 DiEVROLET BEL Alk . ... $1395
clean mter or blue f msh

1970 PLYMOUTH FURY Ill

Now
Only

4 door V 8 automat1c power steer ng rad o good ttres
blue f m sh spotless 1ntertor

Now

1970 FORD FAIRlANE 500
automattc transm1ss1on

WI SEll &amp; SERVICE CHEVROlET CARS &amp; TRUCIIS,

dummy and

RCO.

"Your Chevy Dealer"

992-2126 Open Eves Til 8

POMEROY

WHAT I&amp;

EF:AH WINS

IT'LL l;A.KE

TH LA5TSHREDO M4L£
PRIOE OUTA fM,c,Py' ' '

NEWSPAPER ENTEHf It SE r\SSN

-...•
The b1ddmg has been
East
West
North

21

Pass
Pass
2+
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass
You South hold

3.3.

POMEROY

MOeT 1St-IT OESE!lr/NG
HER TD LIKE 70 KNO.Il

two m

hiS own hand He leads to
dummy s ace of d1amonds
and plays the last club
II East ruffs South s last
trump w11llake hiS lOth tnck
If East doesn t ruff that club
1s the lOth tnck
All very s1mple but the
sort of dummy play that wms
m all forms of competition

Sale Price '3895

MJ~erv slmote buStne&amp;

® F WENDI'S PICKING UP AND
LEAV1NG fOR NEW YORK JU6T
WHEN HER IIDll&lt;Eil. NEED&amp; HER

he ts reacty ana aote tO

one ruff m

Factory air t1nted glass deluxe belts s1de protective
mldgs w w t res bumper guards std V 8 eng.ne
power steer ng &amp; d sc brakes automatic AM radio &amp;
tape low m leage wtth bal of new car warranty color
wh t e w th be 1ge v nyl top

ONLY A FEW NEW '73 PASSENGER CARS LEFT!
CHECit OUR CLOSE-OUT PRICES

WINKLE

ruff h1s last spade A fourth
club IS led and ruffed and
South has e~ght tncks m The
ace of spades ace kmg of
trumps ace queen of clubs

1973 CHEVROLET CAPRICE 4 DOOR

"We

"2'Pass

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
There 1s nothmg spectacu
lar about today • hand The
contract ts a humdrum four
hearts wh1ch South bnngs
home w1thout any squeezes
coups or end plays He does
take a fmesse but everybody
takes !messes
Nevertheless the band IS
worthy of lots of study be
cause the wmnmg play re
qu1res faultless techmque
South must start by duck
mg the first spade West can
do nothmg better than to con
tmue the smt South wms and
IllS now up to h1m to take an
1mmed1a1e club f1nesse
When that works he must
cash hiS ace and kmg of
trumps Then he leads a club
to the ace and ruffs a th1rd
club

1971 DODGE CORONET ......... $1495

Ret:~~ 3 ~•st

South

Opemng lead- • K

340 V 8 eng me automatic transm1ss on power steer ng
black v nyl mtenor red f ntsh I ke new wh te wall t res
rad o

Hardtop Coupe V 8 engine
power steer ng rad1o

Pass
Pass

Pass
Pass

1972 DODGE DEMON

4 Door V 8 eng1ne std trans
rad o good t.res 1 owner

Both vulnerable
North
East

West

21 July 22) P lans that you re

c ons denng have a good c hance
of success because you re now
th nk ng n b oad og 1ca l terms

LEO (July 23 Aug 22) Today

shou d tu n ou t to be p of tab le for
you through some nvo vemenl
you share w th a partne or c lose
compan on

March 21 1974
Much beh nd the scenes act v ly
w II be gomg on tor you th s year
When th s b ecomes v s bie you 1
I nd the resu I ng effects most

sat isfactory

!acts

SAGITTARIUS (Nov 23 Dec
21) An mportanl s tuat on you e
Involved m Will worK out w1th
amaz1ng smoothness Luck pul ng
th e stnngs

CAPRICORN (Dec 22 Jan 19)

~

Before the day s over you should
be 1n a happy frame ol m1nd Some
good news w II br ghten your au t
took

AQUARIUS (Jan 20 Feb 19)

Influences are at work that should
ease f nanc a d scomlorl you ve
felt lal e y Be prudent o advan
!ages w 11 be lost

PISCES (Feb

20 March 20)

Tod ay l'nay start out slow for you
but iUS! s I t ght Some nterest ng
th ng s a e deve op ng that w II
please you

by THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS

1 Burn

5. Resort
8 Bullets

(sl )
9 Here and
there

(Laltn)
13 Interpret
14 Relaxed
(2

wds)

15 Dolt
16 Tea serv

boss ' If I bey want to be gods m tbetr own homes they should
ratse dogs not children But even dogs bite after one too many
beatmgs
I left home the mmute I legally could and I U never go back
SWC

19

+++

%0

Dear Helen and Sue
Father Wlth a Vengeance could have been my father and I
despised hun from the bottom of my soul We didn t dare defend
ourselves even tf we were tMocent We sneaked to hve hved to
protect each other :rom thiS devil
God paid him back In h1s gld age be hved m a lonely hotel
room and thoul!h his children patd hts keep we never went near
him When we burled hbn we crted for the father we never bad
but not ror him - NOW A GRANDMOTHER

l'l

%1
22

Ice piece
Former
great
(hyph
wd)
C1rcle
segment
Augment
Vtcltm

40 Saucy

DOWN

I Wtfe of

Abraham

2 Symn

ctty
Gather
512 yards
Exempted
Euchanst
plate
'J Cru1smg
10 Maple
frwl
11 French
3
4
5
6

r1ver

12 Compas

ston

16 Y1eld

18 Dop out

Yesterday's

21 Walden 22 Affable

23 Resound
24 Under
stand
(2 wds )
25 Peerless
26 Pennant

.108654 'A K Q83 +AJ 5.
What rJo you do now?

three notrump Hope
for the best
A-Bid

TODAY S QUESTION
Instead of b1ddmg three spades
your partner has b1d three
notrump over your three hearts
What do you do now?

Answer
28 Small bll'll
29 Sultan s
decree
30 Not on
your llfdl
31 Put forth
33 Latv1an
36 Steal (al )

Dessert
order

23 Brown
klwo
!4 Hoose
gow m

Readmg
26 Storage
box
27 Bmldmg
extension

28 PhilO

JJ

WIDM®Ikal4c-''*'-.~,....
hV IH NRI AflNOlO o!&lt;Hl nOll l f [

u -..... thtotfourJumbles,

(Lat)
35 Budding
MD
36 Grotto
37 SqUirrel
monkey
SR European
nver
39 Craggy
hill

HYSUB

I I
I I I

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It•
Is

7'AJRoJJ

I

YECKAL

!I

Now

arranre the cln:ttd leltm

to rorm

the IUrprile &amp;niWtr

l-__Priii_.._SIR_PR_ISI_AIISW!ft
_ lln
_ __,l rI I

..

x)

(Anlwel'l to mono~ •

Jumlil"' LOONY

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

One letter somply stands for another In lhts sample A Ill
used for the three L s X for the two 0 s etc Single letters,
apostrophes the length and formalton of the words are all
hmts Each day the code leiters arc dtiTercnt

I~==L:::J====~~-~~~~:"":':re:•~l:td::by~lheabovecartoon
\ f'elot:rday •

32 Workmg

34 King

ont letttr to nch square to
lorm four ordinary words

v~

Vance s
creator

WtPED JAILED

\ A.nn•rr Hhat pagf'ff oflf'l he 1
a ~ehlle- YELLOWED

1

PRIMER

nfl1 r

CRYPTOQUOTES
LBFSUQZ XBMPA GUN

FONJWS!T

QOSIT SY XU XUJU BIPZ SIQUJULQUA

51 BIU NIBQOUJ -ISFBPNL FONWYBJQ
Yesterday's Cryploquote I ALWAYS 1HINK OF NATURE
AS A GREAT SPECTACLE SOMEWHAT RESEMBLING THE
OPERA-BERNARD DE FONTENELLE
(C 1874 11:1•1 Ftat~rea Syndicate, Inc.)
UH-BETTER COME I
HERE, TRACY. LtZZ .JI
FOUND

EAST
• 105 3

,92

. $2695

now be made CANCER (June

ava lab e n your work or t:areer
Take advantage of th s cycle
Don I 1gnore the breaks
SCORPIO (Oct 24 Nov 22)
One you II be meeting through a
fnend w111 assume an mteresl ng
ro e 10 your alia rs Through th s
person you ll make va luable con

NOT THIS SUNDAY
Cl E'ffiLAND IUPI) Some service sbillons In lilt
Cleveland area probably Willi'(
open Sunday despite Presldellf'
N1xon s statement that Sundet,
~"sohne sa les will reswne
There !Sn t enough gasollne tit
prese nt fur Sunday openlnlll

DICK TRALY

"'AQ9 54

SOI}TH

your m os t mportant goal
Greater than usua stndes can

Week 20 33 Beol the Clock 11

21

WEST

"'K 3

ARIES (March 21 Aprol 19)
Someth ng now a source of an

Porter Wagon er 3 Hollywood Squares 4 N ew Treasure
Hun t 10 To Te ll the Truth 6 Con ce ntrat on 8 W[lil Stre e t

+ A65

~t~

FOR THURSDAY
March 21 1974

7 30 -

• J76

We're Wheelin' and Dealin'

23 Oct 23)

HOOP1

Match Game 8

OC - Mr Cortoon 3 Somerset 15 Sesame Sf 20 33 Speed

4

SANITAT ON

1973 DiEVROLET NOVA ...

he predictably

10 Oh •o Th1s Week 20 How to Surv ve A Marnage 3 15

3 14 26tc

~

News 6

6 JO 6 45 -

4782 Galltpo Is Jonn Russell
Owner and Operator
S 12 tfC

•

AND
GREAT COUNTRY

2 00 -

FRIDAY MARC'i22 1974

0

Help Wanted

News 13

6 00

SE PTIC TANKS AROBIC
SEWAGE SYSTEMS
CLEANED
REPAIRED

1969 DODGE cnarger
742 3722

1 30

LIBRA (Sept

Dear Dale
noyance 10 you w II be el m nated
Father Wtth a Vengeance won top honors - If you can call Th1s w I sllortly c ear the way Ia
new beg nn ngs
the blasttng he got an honor
TAURUS (April 20 May 20)
Next m lme was E N whose descnpuon of a highly Fnends a e your mast valuable
traumattc abortton b10ught much p1ty - and some reahst1c asset today You II I nd them moe
appraisal Tomorrows co lwnn will mclude a few of these letters w1 ltng than usual t o help where
they can
Third wmner was a sleeper Who would thmk the question GEMINI (May 21 June 20)
What does an upstde-down stantp on an envelope mean' could Devote your complete attent on to

fetch so many answers ?

11 00-NewsJ 4 6 810 13 15 Janakl33
ll 30 - Johnny Carson 3 4 15 D ck Cavett 6 13 Mov es
V oiPnt Road 8
Hemmgway s Adventures of a You 19
Man 10
1 00 - Tomorrow 3 4

NTER IOROr -exter~or pa nf
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
ng For free est mates ca I REASONABLE rates Ph 446

1972 VW bus exce l ent con
d1t on $2695 00 Pt1one 1 (3041
773 5867
3 21 6tc

15

Energ.v Report 3 4

10 JO - DayAtN!ghl33 ComedyP tol 6

606 E Ma1n Pomeroy 0

MILLER

10

9 30 10 00 -

From a s1'1elf
!l EWING MACHINES Repa r REMODEL NG
to a house Ca l l 949 J832o r 843
ser11 ce al makes 992 2284
2667
The Fabr c Shop Pomeroy
3 20 6tc
Au hor zed S nger Sa les and
Serv ce We Sharpen Sc ssors
C BRAD FOR 0 AUCtiOneer
3 29 tfc
Complete Ser vice
Phone 9-19 3821
DOZER and back hoe work
Racne Oh o
ponds and sept c tanks d•t
Cr tt Bradford
ch ng serv ce top so I fll
5 1 tic
d rt
mPstone
B&amp;K Ex
caval ng Phone 992 5367 or
EXCAVATING dozer loader
992 3861
and bac khoe work
septic
9 1 ttc
tank s nstalled dump trucks
and 10 boys for h re will naul
OPEN Roger HyseiT sGarage
f 11 d1rt top so I 1mestone
near Crossroads on St Route
and grave l Cali Bob or Roger
24 8 30 to 6 p m Monday
Jeffers day phone 992 7089
through Saturday Pl'1one 992
n ght pt1one 992 3525 Or 992
5682 or 992 7121
5232
2 22 26tc
2 11 lf c
DON T fUSS Don 1 cuss turn ----------- ~--your 1unk automobtles ov er to DOZER work land cle•ar ng by
u s R v ers1de Auto Wreck ng
the acre hOurly or contract
Phone 1 (304) 773 58~0
farm ponds roads etc Large
3 7 26tc
dozer and operator w th over
20 years expenence Pullins
-==~ -Excavat ng Pomeroy Oh o
~RICE
CONSTRUCTION
Phone 992 2478
Roof ng
spouting
kitchens
1219tfc
and bathrooms Complete
remodeling Phone 742 6273
12 3 tf c READY MIX
CONCRETE
delivered r ght to
your
Al.T'IOM"01fTIE: Insurance been
protect Fast and easy Free
cance ll ed?
Lost
your
est n1ates Phone 992 3284
operators
cense Call 992
Goegle n Ready Mix Co
7428
M1ddleport 01'1 o
6 15 tfc
6 30 tfc

A:.tlo Sales

S de K cks

8

Monday thru Saturday

3 1 26tc

Which letters bt ought most response 10 early 1974' D1d old
blowhard Father wtth n Vco geancc rate 10 the top three' DALE

23 Sept 22)

Grea l er opportun t es are now

Cold Father Gels Roasted

7 00 -

Wt son3 415

'5.55

and

Yoga and You 33

Rap

Pomeroy

On Most' American tars
-GUARANTEEDPHONE 992 2094

L lias

6 30 - NBC News 3 4 15 ABC News 6 CBS News 6 10 Your

8 30
9 00

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment

992 3903

By Helen and Sue Bottel

Company 20 G fl of L1fe 33

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.

OFFICE SUPPLIES

THURSDAY MARCH 21 1974
6 00 - News 3 4 6 10 15 Sesa me St 20 ABC News 13 Truth

7 30- Hollywood Squar es 3 W ld K ngdom 10 Beat the Clock
13 Look1ng Ahead 33 To Tell the Truth 6 Ozz e c; G 1rls 8
Johnny Manns Stand Up &amp; Cheer IS Zoom 20 Readmg For
the Classroom Teacher 33 Dealer s Cho1ce 4
8 00 - Waltons 8 10 Advocates 20 33 Chopper One 6 13 F p

Nathan Boggs

992 2094
606 E Mam
Pomeroy

Generation Rap

Future Is Now 33 Room 222 13
Truth or Conseq J Beat the Clock 4 What s My L neB
News 6 10 Lets Make A Deal 13 Sports Desk 5 Electnc

Rad1ator Spectahst

POMEROY
liOME &amp; AUTO

Television Log
or Consequences 6

From the largest Truck or
Bulldozer Rad1ator to the
smallest Heater Core

Ph 992 2174

VlftGO (Aug

All ances or agreements entered
lnto now look excepl ona ily prom
IS ng prov•ded you can t nue to
look out for the nterest of others

5NUFFV 11 I THOUGHT
I SEEN DOC PRITCHART
HEADtN FER
HOUSE

NOW DOCS
IN TH HOUSE
PATCH IN UP
MAW

•

�sen t l n el

8-TheDailySentmel M1ddlrnort Pomerov U March 21 1974
PUBLIC NOTICE
e

To th e Defendants George M
W seman
Mary W seman
H iram
W seman
Howard
W seman
Holl s Ernest ne
W seman
Frankl n Emery
W seman
Char ley W seman
Allee W seman G C W seman
and to the unknown hers
dev1sees
legatees
ad

mm•strators

executors and

ass gns of each of the fo row ng
George M w sema n Deceased
H ram W seman Deceased
Howard

Ho liS

W seman

Deceased

Ernst ne

W seman

WANT ADS

INFORMATION
DEADLINES
5 PM Oay Before Pub/ cat o

Monday Dead! ne 9 a m
Cance at on Correct ons
w II be accepted unt I 9 a m for
Day of F'ubl cat on

REGULATIONS

'

r - --.,.-o-'-

ClassifiedS Get Results!
Wan!Prl fo Buy
1-!ECYCLE your newspape ~
and co rug ated pas eboa rd IO
Th e Rosenburq Company a
Athens 01'1 o We are your
bes n ar~cl at $ 50 pe 100
pounds tor botll te ms We buy
scrap ron cas t ron sheet
on
copper
brass a d
a um num
We ha"e been
here s n ee t9 6 so we know a
n "t b
abou
ccyc 9
Conserve recycle and se
your waste mater al s t o
Rosenbe Q a A tl'1en s 0 1 o
We c ose each Fr day noon for
ba ance of the weeK
f you
would
k e to ca l us abou
nlo mal on
our
phone
number s593 7477 Se t to Tl'1e
Rosenbe g Co
at Athens
Oh o We need your bus n ess
and
your
support
n
Recyc ng
J 57c

For Sale

lost

f- E MALE beag c brow n b ~ 1o,
and wh te no col ilr Lost a
R
7~ and Rou e 7 by pass
!= am ty pet r eword off ered
P o e !11 3266
3 19 3 c

9- The Daily Sentmel Middleport Pomeroy 0 March 21 !974

Business Servict:s
ASK US ABOUT
PRE FABRICATED

LOOK
At These Specials

WOOD TRUSSES
~

DITCHING SERVICE

..

The Pvb she r reserves the
BLA CK c ut c h pur se ost r.~ear
Deceased
Frank l n Emery r ght to ~d o re ect any ads
Burger
Ch e f or
Holler
W1seman
Deceas ed
Char e"Y deemed
BUIIttoVour Specs
ob ect ona
Tne
H osp I a
n Ga I po s
If
W seman
Deceased
A ce publ Sher w I not be respon
1965 Olds 88 Cpe
Delivered to Job Stte
found
pleas
e
ca
I
99'1
7008
Wiseman Deceased and G C s be for more tl'1an one n
$350
Re wa d
w seman Deceased a of correct nsert on
J 20 3t c
whose res dences are unknown
RATES
1966 Comet HT Cpe
IN THE COMMON
For Want Ad Serv•ce
$200
PLEAS COURT OF
5 cents per word one nseJ:t on
MEIGSCOUNTY OHIO
MATERIALS CO
Min mum Charge Sl 00
1966
Comet
4
Door
Ohto Power Company
773 5554
Mason W Va
14 cents •er word tl'1ree
$199
an Oh o Corporal on
consecut ve nsert ons
B
L
ACK
fema
e
Ge
man
P amf ff
'16 cents per word s x con
1966 GMC 6 P1ckup
Shepl'1 erd
spayed
and
vs
secut ve nsert ons
rr
endly
Phone
991
59d7
George M W1seman
$199
25 Per Cent D scounl on pad
3 9 3t c
et at
ads and ads pa d w th n 10
1963
Dart
6
4
Dr
Defendants
days
No 1S 4BO
$99
CARD OF THANKS
NOTICE BY
&amp; OBtTUARY
1958 Chrysler 4 Dr
PUBLICATION
$2 00 for 50 wo d m n
p a nt If has brough
th s m urn Each add 1 on a word
Ph 992 5271
$99
JUNK
AUTOS
co mp etc
act on nam ng you as Del en 3c
de l ve ed o our yard We p ck TRUCK toppe for 8 fl bed
Fa ctory made
PI one 992
dants n the above named court
BLIND AD;,
up auto bod es and buy al
808 W Mam Pomeroy
by t ng ts Comp anton 1'1e Stl'1
131
Add tona l 25c Cha ge pe
k nds of scrap meta s r~nd
3
9
6t
c
day of February 1974
Advert semen
ron R de s Sa l vage St~ te
The ob1ect of the Com pia nt s
OFFICE HOURS
Route 24 Route 4 Pomeroy
RT 36 Dav s d tche r one 3 x
to part t on the to ow ng
8 30 a m to S 00 p m Da ly
01'1 o Phone 992 5466
36 and one 6 and 24 cl'1a n
descr bed rea estate
8 Jfl a m
to 12 00 Noon
J 14 IUp
L Ke new cond on Phone
A that certa n ve n of coa
Sllturday
Area s Most
6 4 A46 0762 alter 5 p m $500
ocal 9 and var ous l y known as
Rea sonable Pnces
J a 6tc
Number Four Fou r A Clar on
Your Chevy Dealer
OLD turn lure oak tabes
or Limestone Coa under l y ng
cocks ce boxes brass beds LOSE we gt1t wIll N ew Shape
the tract of land he r e nafter S HOOT NG MATCH
All work guaranteed
Co rn
d shes desks o
comp lete
Tabes and Hyd ex Wale DAV I S
descr bed
together w h the
Ho ow Gun Club tu n f rst
rencher w th
househo ld s Wr te M
D
P 1 s at Sutton DruQ M d
r gtlt o m ne and re nove the
r gl'1t after M es Cemetery
b l ade S3 200 W th
ra er
M I er Rt 4 Pomeroy Oh o
d epo rl and Ne son 0 ug
said coa l by underground
Rut and
Fac t ory choked
S3 500 97 8 h p lh eel horse
cal
992
n6o
3 9 Jl c
mm ng processes (st r p m n ng
guns only Sunday Marcl'1 2J
w h 36
mower and 42
5 13 IC
not nciuded ~ and ttle r ght and
blade $700 A so hay SOc a
1 p n
pr vi ege of m n ng remov ng
J 21 3 c
973 MAS SE Y Ferguson
d n9
ba e Phone 985 3373 e v en ngs
and transport ng underground
nwn moor J4 mower 7 h p
OLD Upr ght p anos
A y
3 15 61p
Phone 1 (304 773 5 61
and vnder the surface of he GUN Shoot Salu day March
co d ton Pay ng $ 0 cash
3 19 Stp 1971 1 WHEEL dr ve .J 4 ton
tract of land here naf er
Wr t e g ve d re c ons
to
23 7 p n
M e H I Road
descr bed
coa l from other
WITTEN P ANO CO
P 0
F ord p kup tru ck
$20 600
Sponsored by R ac ne F r e
ands now owned or nereafter
BOX 18 Sa rd s Oh o 43946
m l es
10
II
cab over
Depa tment
1
F
T
Cob
a
speed
boat
200
acqu red
by
01'1 o Power
3 13 JOi c
3 9 4 c
camper se f conta ned A so
horsepow er
Bu ck V 8 n
Company
ts successors or
topper W 1 se I seoara telv
V1 r qll B Tt' •lford . Sr.
board
outboard
dr
ve
full
assigns
LET US se 1 t lor yo;.~ at au c
Ca 1 985 3554 after 6 p m
B vI v ng oom sa le 61!1 Sou th
cove
rs
tandem
tra
er
Br ok,-.r
Sa d tract of
and be ng
ton W II buy al fvrn ure or
weekdays
Harold Brew
Th rd Avenue
M dd epor
Exce l en t con d ton
Phone
s tualed n the County of Me gs
household
goods
Potty
s
110
M
cc
h&lt;llli C Strr&gt;r: l
er
Long
Botton
Oh
o
5 ar ng Wednesday March
6 4 ) 949 2433
n the State of or~ o and n the
Aucl on House Open 9 30 to
3
I
5
tfc
20 1 1 sod ou
Every day 10
Pomeroy,
Oh1o ·IS76q
3 I 7 6tc
Townsh p of Sa lem co nta n ng
S 30 da y Phone 992 3509 537
amt l 7pm
49 50 acres more or te ss and
H g l'1 Sl
M dd epor t 01'1 o
3 9 6 p
AM Flv st ereo rad o 8 tra c K 10 ACRES - On Rl 7 Loop n
bounded as follows
2 26 Jbtc 1- OAM to f
your o d couch and
tape payer 4 spe~ker sound
On tne North by lands now or TRAP Shoot ng eve y Thurs
c ha r cush ens as
ow as
system
Ba ance SI09 46 or M ~ iep ort Good locatiOn for
formerly owned by Wm
R
day even ng 7 p m At the
S 0 95 Upholstery books on y
use our budg et terms Ca l
hom es or busmess
Nelson et al On the East by
Rutland Gun C ub New L ma
SOc
4 ncl'1 cove red fo am
992 3965
POMEROY - 3 ~droom
lands now or former y owned by
Road Everyone welcome
mattr esses fo standard s ze
3 18 tf c
Everett M chael on the South
BERRY MILLER Mob l e Home
3 9 3tc
ran
ch ty pe home Hot water
bed
$29 95
Pomero"
by ands now or form er y owned
Sales has a ot to offer when
Recovery 622 E Man Street COAL FOR SALE JAYMAR hentmg n ce modern k 1tchen
by Truman P Brewer Merle S KOSCOT
you :.tar shopp ng lor you
KOSMET CS
8.
Pomeroy Oh o Phone 992
COAL
COMPANY
THE fron t porch and garage
Davis On 11'1 West by ands now
Mob e Home You can beat
W GS
For a good
ne of
7554
ME GS &amp; GALLI A LINE
or forroer y owned by Mer e S
th e 1'1 gh deprec at on you I
Sl800000
Cosme cs fr end y serv ce
3 5 26 t c
STATE
ROUTE
7
AT
Dav s
have on your home tl'1e f rst
and someone to cha t w th
MIDDLEPORT
Large 9
CHESH
RE
OPEN
7
AM
Sa d parcel be ng descr bed
two years by shopp ng tor a
g ve me a ca
Hel en Jane
room
home
w
th
large
front
T O 630 PM 5 DAY S A
as follows
late mode vsed Mob e Home
Br own 9925113
WEEK
PHO
NE
992
5693
yard
Also
a
renta
l
to
help
pay
su
te
Be; inn ng at a pont in the
H ere are some every day ow ANT I QUE
bedroom
3 19 tfc
3 18 SIC off Room for 2 tra 1 ers Only
north
ne of Fract on 4
exce enf cond ton Phone
pr ces
TownshiP 8 Range 15 Oh o BIG SA LE Wt1o l e house tu I
Super Spec a of ttie WeeK 992 562 1 or 992 5947
$17 soo 00
Com pany s Purchase wh ch
3 21 Jtc
new 65x12
Detro fer
3
ant ques turn lure art etc
POMEROY - Good 3 story
said pont s one 1'1undr d and
bedroom
I
1
baths
reduced
Fol ow s gns from Hem ock
th rty one rods east of the
$1 000 00 to S6 495 00 (Th s
Grove Sa turda y Ma r ch 23
5 ROOM house and bath two bus ness bu ld ng on Ma n St
northwes t corner of sa d
Mob e Home s loaded w tl'1 N CE SPR NT m n b ke 4
The Lynas
Pl'1one 992 6083
car garage 2 story on Carso n N th a 2 story bu s ness room
Fract1on thence east s xty one
extras)
3 21 2t c
1'1orsepower good cond t on
Road
n Mason
Contac
and rent a l on 2nd
rods and ten 1 nks tnenc e south
1971 64x 2 Champ on
2
Ca 992 2502
Russe l Sa l 773 5606
LAND - On Rt 7 about one
one hundred and thirty two rods AUCT ON Thursday 7 p m
bedroom 1 2 bat h extra good
3 21 Jtc
3 l2 ti c
to the south 1 ne of sa1d Frac
buy at $4 995 00
m le ou t
Polys Auct on House 537
tlon thence Wests xty one rods
60x 12 Champ on
2 bed oom
H gh St
M ddleport Oh o
EDGE OF TOWN - 2 acres
and ten lmks the 1ce north one
$4 495 00
s ROOM house w th batn n pus
Appl ances ant que stands
1'1undred and th rty two rods to
upper end of Syra cuse Phone
ch na cupboard
household 60x 12 Globemas ter 3 bedroom
the place of beg1nnlng con
BUILDING LOT - In Chester
glass sl d ng doors
on y
992 3 16
furn sl'1 ngs
ta nmg f fty acres more or less
3 15 ate Town sh p S1800 00
$4 495 00
32 lip
seve and except therefrom one
60x12
Homette
exce l ent
NDUSTRY IS BUYING
half acre ly ng in tl'1e nort heast
cond t on $4 495 00
2 BEDROOM house n M d
A
FULL
gospel
rev
val
w
II
be
MORE LAND BETTER BUY
T1re Pnces
corner of said tract east of the
60x12
L
bertY
de
uxe
$4
995
00
deport
New k ! c hen and
he d at the Me gs Jun or H gh
road tead ng from Parkers Run
YOURS NOW WHILE IT IS
2 bedroom
batl'1 app ance s n c l uded
M dd l eport Oh o Marcn 29 60x12 P M C
to the old Dexter Church and
AVAILABLE
AND
$4
995
00
JO and 31 at 7 JO p m each
Ca 992 53 0
conta nmg after sa1d except on
60x 12 Elcona Custom
cos t
3 19 26tc SOMEWHAT REASONABLE
evenmg
and
Sunday
af
m
the
Area
forty nine and one half acres
S7 995 00 new
now on l y
ternoon 2 p m
Evangel st
Reference Deeds Vol 239
$5 795 00
cnester
Estep
Ch
1
cotne
.&lt;1
BEDROOM home at Brad
Page 757 Vol 94 Page 266 Vol
tl • 1 t- N I
' I :, I ' •I· I·
Oh o Spec al s ng ng each We also 1'1ave a good select on of
bury
tust s m nutes from
61 Page 67 Vol 59 Page 572
, I •,.. [ )( .11\j I ; I I ;. I • • '• I •
Band
Ow
de
Mob
l
e
Homes
n
It's
even ng by Gospe Ton es and
M ddieport Pl'10n e 992 2297
and Vol 19 Page 433 Deed
&lt;"•\'&gt;0( lr• I I
stock
other s ngers
Everybody
3 17 6tp
Records Me gs County Oh o
Tnese
are
mostly
ail
lat
e
model
we
come
The prayer of the Complamt
Cjl&lt;jl2 -3325 or
homes and th e prices nclude
3 20 Otc
s to part t1on the real estate
NEW J bedroom house near
your del very and comp lete
above descr~bed or t t cannot
Rut and Phone 742 6161
set up So for an 11onest o
CjiQ2 -3 61 ')
be partit ioned to order that I be J BAnd The T ny Tr o and the r
J 7 6tc
goodness good dea
stop n
773
5881
Mason
W
Va
s
ng
ng
g
roup
from
V
enna
sold
at Berry M I er Mob e
w Va w 1 be at he Eag le today
You are requ.red to answer
Homes Sales
705 Fa rson
.BU I LD NG ots Phone A ber
R
dge
Cl'1u
r
ch
Sunday
the Complaint w th n twenty
Street Belpre Oh o Phone STEREO
Walnu
AM FM
H II Rae ne 949 226
March 24
974 at 2 p m
eight days after the
ast
423 953 c osed Sunday
Rad o 8 track ta pe com
3 20 6tp
Pub l c s we come
publication of th s notic e w1'11ch
3 n 6tc
b
nat
on
Ba
ance
$110
73
or
3
20
31p
will be pub I shed once eacl'l
ter m s ava l ab le Phone 992 2 BEDROOM house n M d
week for SIX consecut v e weeks
3965
d eport Se by owner pr ced
nn
Seco nd an
and the ast publ cat on w II be FABR I C
2 4 fc
to sel Phone 949 3832
n versary sa eon many yards
made on the 21st day of March
J 20 6tc
of
matenats
tl'1rough
March
1974
30th
Located
on
County
Road
uROCERY bus ness for sa e
In case of your fa lure to
50 between Tuppers Pia ns
608 E
answer or otherw se respond as
Bu 'd ng tor sale or ease BEAUTIFUL new homes now
and
Reedsv
lie
Phone
378
.un,jer cons tru ct on n pr me
perm tted by the Oh o Ru les of
Phone 773 56 18 from 8 30 p m
MAIN
6276
l ocal on on c ty water and
to 10 p m tor appo ntment
c vii Procedure w1th n tne time
3
20
3tp
sewer
Cho
ceoldes
gns
Wa
3
20
ti
c
stated judgment by default w II
WANTED TO RENT a 2 or 3
POMEROY,
to wa 1 carpet ng and a r
be rendered agamst you lor t h e
bedroom 1'10me or rpa tm ent
GUN
Shoot
7p
m
Fr
day
at
the
cond ton ng
n cluded
w I
relief demanded n the Com
WE
HAV
E
a
I
your
upho
stery
turn shed or unfurn shed for a
Racme Gun Cub Factory
1'1e l p
arrange
f1nan c ng
CLOSE IN O\ler 4 acres
pia nt
needs
burlap
den m
m ddle aged couple
Must
choked guns on y Assorted
conven t on a oan s w th down
cambr
c
foam
g
ue
z
ppers
Furn shed home 3 BR bath
have
wasl'1er
and
dryer
and
meats
payment low as 5 pet Other
LARRY E SPENCER
tack ng stnps spr ngs and
a
r
cond
t
onmg
Can
prov
d
e
3
20
Jtc
Natural gas hea t C ty water
new
homes
ava
able
to
Clerk of the
c ps
ch pboard
button
references
Phone 992 579
qual fed bvyers w1th NO
Por c h es
Many
other
Common Pleas Court
tw
ne
sew
mg
thread
legs
3 21 .Up
DOWN
PAYMENT
Ca
Me gs Coun ty Oh1o CA LL Po ty s Aucl on or stop by
upho stery books dacron
features $7 100 00
to
get
r
d
of
those
unwanted
co l ect 614 837 6540 or 239 0785
Pomeroy Oh o
webb ng spr ng tw ne tacks
REEDSVILLE AREA - 180
tems Se ll t the auct on way
or wr t e
Gr ea t Amer can
(2 7 14 21 28 (3) 7 14 21 7tc
WAN TED to rent a turn shed
well
cord
cotton
sw
vel
537 H gh Street M ddl eport
acres
at $120 per r.~cre On
Homes
nc
P
0
Box
687
t ra l er or sma ll house n he
bases
foam
foam
foam
992 3509 Open 9 a m to 5 p m
Pomeroy Oh o 45769
country n Pomeroy Rut and
blacktop
h ghway Water lap
Pomeroy
Recovery
622
E
Monday Wednesday Thurs
3 1 li e
ORDINANCE NO 100S 74
area Contact Dean Scl'1ro ck
Man St
Pomeroy
Oh o
pa d Most m nera ls
day
Fnday
unt
noon
An Ord nance to regulate the
Hunts Tra ler Park ackson
phone 992 7554
3 13 30tc
SYRACUSE - Large 2 story
demol/t on of bu dmgs
Oh o
3 5 26tc NEW 3 bedroom home p: bath
lrame 7 rooms 4 BR 2
3 20 61p
Be 1t ordamed by the Counc I
garage basement on Grave
of the V1llege of M1Cidleport as tAStfPaid lOr"arlmakes and'
H II M dd l eport Natural gas
baths
Basement Garage
models of mob le home s
ONE ADM RAL sefdefrostng
follows
a ready
l'l
Pl'1one Dale
N
ew
gas
furnace
New
Phon e area code 614 423 95 31
r efr gerator and one bed tor
Sec 1 That no person shall
Out on 992 3369 even ngs
4 IJtfc
copper
plumbtng
Rver
sa e Phone 992 5778
demohs1'1 a bu ld ng serveel by a
992 2534
pubi1c sewer Without f rst ob
WOMAN to ve nand ne p w1th
1 17 ttc
frontage to dock the boat
3 21 Jtc
l'O"LL
Y
S
Aucl
on
House
537
taining a permit from the
1 ght housework Phone E ma
SIOSOOOO
H
gh
Str
eet
M
ddleport
for
v llage
Russell Un on Ave 992 2653
CLOSE IN
17 acres
reta I and cons gnments 9 30
Sec 11 Any person des r ng to
3 21 3tp
to 5 30 da y Phone 992 3509
(fenced)
barn
sto rag e
demol sh a build ng descr bed
Buy 'Em Now'
2 26 30tc
n Sect on 1 of th1S ord nance
bu ld•ng
l ar-ge garage
20 Turf Tnm 3 H P
shall make app 1cat on to the
Home 2 yea r s old 3 BR
Rut and
Mayor and pay a fee of $2 00 for REVIVAL Serv ces
Freew I Bapt st Churcl'1
bath Love ly k tchen w th
POVVER MOWERS
each bu ld ng to be demo sl'1ed
March 24 through 30 7 30
lots of cab nets range and
The appl~eat on shall conta n
p m
W th th e Rev
Pau
the date on WhiCh sad ap
ref Ut1llty P lenty of room
Galllpol
s
Taylor from He per Utah as
pl cat on is filed and the
here $22 500 00
Evange
ist
Spec
a
t
s
ng
ng
locat on and descr pt on of th e
For
26" Turf Til l'h HP
n ght y everyone we co me
FOR NEW At:JVENTURE
bu ld ng be ng de mol shed
Exc1tmg
3 17 6tc
Upon rece pt of tt1e ap
TILLERS
SEE AND OWN ONE OF
New Home
pi ca t on and lee the Mayor
THE ABOVE TO BUY OR
sl'1al ssue a perm t to demol sh HARRISON S TV and Serv ce
SEL
L CALL US TODAY
cal s Phone 992 2522
YOU
WO NT BEL EVE
the bu ld ng or bu ld1ngs
2 22 26tc
HENRY E CLELANO
descr bed n the app ca t on
YO UR EYES W HEN YOU
POMEROY LANDMARK
The perm t s1'1all requ re the
ST EP NS DE T HI S NEW
BROKER
app cant to not ty the V II age
SPL T
Lj::VEL
HUGE
9.
_Jack W Carsey Mgr
992 2259
Bu /dmg
nspector when the
NOTICE OF
LIVING ROOM WITH A
~Phone
992
2181
If
no
answer
992 "568
bu id ng or bu ld ngs have been
APPOINTMENT
LOVELY BALCONY EF
Case No 21090
removed and the perm t shal
FECT GO NG TO THE 3
requ re the perm t ho der to Estate of Mildred 8 Headley
Pomeroy Oh1o
LARGE
BEDROOMS
SEW N G Mach nes Brand New
expose tl'le sewer serv ng the Deceased
BEAUT F UL
BU L TIN
z g Zag n n ce walnut table
bu 1id ng and cap the same w tn
Not ce s hereby g1ven that
OAK
CAB
IN
E
T
S WITH
In
or
g
nal
car
ton
s
Never
con crete or s m lar substance to Clarence M Headle y of Reeds
POS ITI ON
w th
We come
used
C l earance on
7.4 Q UAL TY
APPLIANCES
prevent any substance from v lie Oh o R D has been du y
Wagon
In terna l ona
957 CHEVROLET Exce llent
Models
On y
a
few
BUll T IN COMPLETELY
enter ng the sewer
Upon appo nted Executor of the
Peasant c areer
flex bl e
cond t on Ca I 992 2967 after S
ava labl e
S63 40 cash or
CARPETED FOR DAD - A
rece pt of the not ce the Estate of M ldred B Head ey
hours good earn ngs
Car
pm
terms ava abl e Phone 992
LARGE 2 CAR GARAGE
necessary
For personal
Bu ld ng
Inspector
shall deceased ld e of Reedsv I e
3 20 7tc
2653
W
TH
WORKSHOP
PLUS
2
exam ne tl'1e sewer and approve Me gs County Ohio
nterv ew ca l Athens Oh o
3
20
tfc
(614
592 12 1 Equa Op
or d sapprove the capp ng If
Cred tors are requ red to f le
ACRE~
TO
PUTTER
1973 MGB convertbe
7500
portun ty Emp oyer
disapproved tl'1e perm t holder the rca ms w th sad f dqc ary
AROUND ON LOCATED N
Vacuum
m les ots of extras Call 1
3 20 3 c ELECTROLUX
shell have se\len days In which w th n four months
RUTLAND
YOU
MUST
Cleaners complete w th at
J04 773 5323
to properly cap tt1e sewer
Dated th s 18th day of March
tacl'1ments cordw nder and SEE THE INSIDE OF THIS
J 18 6tc
Sec II t
Demolition of a 197 4
ONE
TO
APPREC
ATE
T
pant spray Used but n l ke
bu tdm; shall be competed and
new cond ton
Pay $34 4:~
Mann ng D Webster
the sewer capped w th n 2
1971 DODGE Moneca
a r
OFFICE 446 3643
cash or budget plan ava I abl e
Judge 3 AND A ROOM furn shed and
months of the date a perm1 t s
cond t 011 ng 4 door P S and
EVENINGS
Phone 992 2653
Court of Common Pleas
ssued prov ded however vpon
P B
Good gas m l eage
unfvrn shed
apartments
3 20 tfc
Bud McGhee-446 1255
Probate D vis on
good cause shown the Mayor
Phone 992 5434
Phone Dav d H 11
Rae ne
E M
Ike W1 se man-H6
may extend the t me for
949 2762
4 2 tfc
LAST mlonth for w n ter pr ces
3796
demol lion of svch bv1id ng and (J) 21 28 (4) 4 3 c
J 15 6t c
capp ng
f
sewer
for
a
PRIVATE meet ng room for
197
4
t
r
a
1
er
s
an
d
to
d
;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;:._
.,;.;;
~:.::.::.::
.::.:~
:.::.:;;..,
on
downs
Reese
h tches
reasonable t1me not to exceed
any organ zat1on phone 992
Re fr gerators
Furnaces 25
an add1t onal three (3) months
3975
Pel
off
Awn o mat c
Sec IV Th s ord nance sha t
3 11 tfc
Awnmgs 20 Pet off 12 montl'1
not apply to the demo ton of ANT QUE quIts and ewelry
warranty w th serv ce Camp
en y bu• d ng
I tl'1e owner
A so nterested n furn lure 2 BEDROOM mob le home
Con ey Starcraft Sa l es Rt 62
commences construct on of a
also 1 tra ler space Pl'1one
and d shes
Call 992 5262
N of Pt P easant Beh nd
new structure on the prem ses
949 2261
even ngs or morn ngs
Red Carpe nn 675 5Jl!4
which utilizes the sewer w th n
2 20 tfc
3 20 61p
3 20 Jtc
60 days after demo r ton or f the
sewer s connected to a struc
SMALL FARM
20 acres at EXCELSIOR Sat Works
ture other than a bv1ld ng such
E
Bradbury Phone 992 7275 ~
as a mob le home Wlthm 60
Mam St Por(leroy All k nds
days after demolition
3 21 4tc
of salt water pellets water
Sec v The reopenmg of a
nuggets block sart and own
JOB OPPORTUNITIES
SMALL Furn shed 1 bedroom
sewer capped under th•s sect on
011 o R ver Salt Phone 992
11ouse arge yard all ut 1 t es
sha
not be construed as
3891
SOCIAL SECURiTY
pad Phone 992 7494
requiring a sewer tap
6 5 tf(;
CONSUMER PROTECTION
Sec
VI
Whoever v o ates
3 21 4tc
Sect on 1 2 or 3 of th s or
1969 GRANO Pr1x red w th
d nance shalt be fined not more
APARTMENT for rent
2
black v nyl top $975 Phone
than S2S 00
Each day of
bedrooms Phone 992 5908
992 5335
violation shall canst lute a
J 9 6tc
3 18 Jt c
sepa rat e offense
Sec VII Th s Ord nance sha ll
APARTMENT for rent Phone
SINGER sew ng mac1'11nes 1972
takt effect and be n force from
992 5592
and after March 11 1974
m'del m beaut tur walnut
3 19 tfc
Passed the 1111'1 day of March
cab net Make! des gn stit
1914
ches zig zog buttonholes
FURNISHED
2
bedroom
Fred Hoffman
bl nd hems etc Like new
Easy Terms'
M
GRATE
Ira le r
close to schools
Pre$ldentof Counc1
Only $89 95 Call Ravenswood
HEft AN
st1opp
ng
center
and
sw
m
A !test Gene Grate
m ng pool Phon e 992 5914
273 9521 or 213..._9893 otters
• .;M;.;,;A.o.SO.O.N•W•V•A•. .
Clerk
12 7 oo
tfc
Nhddleporl Pomeroy
3 17 6tc
J) u 21 21c

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN

Pets For Sale

Gene's

Body Shop

For Sale

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

Pa1nt1ng A Specialty

Not1ce

Real Estate For Sale

TEAFORD

Mobile Homes For Sale

Real Estate For Sale

I

BEND TIRE CENTER

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

I

Wanted

Water L1nes and Power
Lmes All work done by the
foot or contract Also dozer
work and septtc tanks m

sta lled
See or Call
Bob or Roger Jeffers
Day 992 7089
N1ght 992 3525
or 992 5232

I
"

.-.

EKPERIENCED
Radiata
' I
!,..... , _ II l
Service
'

FURNITURE

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

Stop In and See Our
Floor Display

OpenS Tol5

F1rehouse 6 13
Ironside 3 4 15 Black Journal 20 Confl c t s of Harry S
Truman 33 Jung Fu 6 13 Moves Sex and the Stng le G r
Eltot Norton Rev ews 33
News 20 Energy Crunch 6
Stre~ts of San Franc sco 13

Phone
3 21 6tp

ex
1970 MAL BU Chevrolet
cetlent shape Phone 992 5621
or 992 59 47
3 21 3tc

THE

------------:--

WISEMAN

WANTED

PAPER CARRIER

CLIFTON, W. VA.
PHONE 992-2156
lHE DAILY
SENTINEL

52.95

AGENCY

129.95

Auto Sales

For Rent

•

Wanted To Buy

ZENITH
COLOR TV

•

INFORMATION ABOUT

e

BLACK &amp;
WHITE TV

STEREO
92.1 FM

WMPO

e STEREO

MASON fURNITURE

________ ______ IL.••Filr~e~e;.;;;De.;;.i;lt~v;e~ry;.;.'111!1,.;.7~7J;!jS;5~92;..

News 4

Svnnse Semmar 4 Sacred Heart 10
Folk L1teratureJ M l es toneso fProgress 10

6 15 6 15 -

Farm Report 11

6 30- B1ble Answers 8 Blue R dge Quartet 13

F ve

M nutes to L1v e By 4
Columbus Today .4
Farmt me 10 Mornmg Report 3

Most sa1d tl stands for a kiss (but not a propoSitiOn even tf
the stamp 1s placed m lhe bottom left-hand corner
Heres an observation from a 26 year-old man

+++
Dear Rap
ln my teen days the stamp ups1de down sa1d I love you
Two stamps one upstde doWJ; and I he olher upnght represented
I wanl to take you out and (or) make tl wtth you
To further substantiate th1s rumor I attended one of our
local schools and asked some teenagers Results Out of 50 ktds
questioned 80 pet knew a mtsplaced stamp meant love or a kiss
15 pet never wnte letters and 5 pet sa1d 11 was stupid puttmg
stamps on backwards - DAVID

+++

7 00- Today 3 4 15 CBS New' 6 10 D ck Van Dyke 13 Speed
racer 6
7 30 Rocky &amp; Bullwtnkle 13 New Zoo Re ..... ue6
8 00 - Capt Kangaroo 8 10 Sesame St 33 New Zoo Revue 13
Jeffs Collie 6

9 25

Jack LaLanne 13
6 30 - Brady Bunch 6
6 55 - News 13

9 00- Paul D xan 4 Ph I Donahue 15 Fr end l y Junct on 10
AM 3 Abbott 8. Costello 8 Wold W ld West 6 Move All
Hands on Deck

13

9 30- To Tell the Truth 3 Tattletales 6

l

l

9 55 - Chuck Whole Reports 10
10 00 - D nah Shore 3 IS Jokers Wold 8 10 Com pony 6
10 30 - $10000Pyramld8 10 JeopardyJ 4 15
11 00 - Gambit 8 10 Password 13 W za rd of Odds 3 4 15 M ke
Douglass 6
HollywoodSquares3 4 IS Brady Bunch 13

11 30 -

6 10 Sesame Sl 33
115S-CBSNews6 DanlmelsWorldiO

~veof L fe

12 00- Ja ckpot 3 15 Password 6 Bob Brau-ns SO 50 Club 4

News 8 10 13
12 30 - Bilffle 3 15 Spl1t Second 6 Sea rch for Tomorrow 8 10
12 55- NBC News 3 15
1 00 - News 3 All My Choldren 6 13 Not For Women Only 15
Concentration 8 What s My L ne 10
I 30 - 3 On A Match 3 4 IS Lets Make A Deal 6 13 As lhe
World Turns 8 10
2 00- Days of Our L1ves 3 .4 15
Gu d ng L1ght 8 10

Newlywed Game 6

13

2 30-Doclors3 415 Edgeo1Noghl8 10 GorlmMy Lfe6 13
3 00 - Another Wor ld 3 4 IS

General Hospital 6 13

R ghl 8 10 Lock Stock &amp; Barrel 20
3 10 - One L te to L ve 6 13 Phil Donahue

4

Pr ce 1s

Olmmg back to Father w1th a Vengeance
got a unanunous roastmg Examples

+++
Rap
That vengeful father who would rather beat 11 out of his
ch1ldren than talk 11 out should have a warden s JOb When ne
excuses h1s cruelty wtth passages from th e Bible well I hope
God 11 get hun for that 1
How awfultoltve m a family where a dJCtator (father) brags
about making h1s sub jects fear mm He s askmg for a lonely old
age - A S

+++

Dear Helen and Sue
I m 18 and I was ra1sed by a Father Wlth a Vengean&lt;-e
Whenever I had to ask hun somethmg I ltterally shook with.
frtght I never knew how he would react If I had done anythlna
wrong he wouldn I explam but would JUSt yell and hlt There
were times when I wanted to stay out of the house for good for the
sunple reason I was scared to death to open the front door
I never satd anythmg but what he mterrupted me wotb cut
tmg words but tf I mterrupted HIM run for your ltfe'
Fathers ltke thos should ask themselves if they d1sagreed
wtth a fnend would they haul off and htl him' Never 1So why do
the) use their chtldren as punchmg bags just to show who s

Racer 6 Love Amertcan Sty l e 13

Shenff Was A Lady 10

Lucy show 8 Move

The

4 30 - Green Acres 3 G1ll gan s Isle 13 6 Bonanza 15 Hazel B
Jackpot 4
5 00- Bonanza 3 Merv Grtffm .4 M1ss on

lmposs ble

Gnff lh8 Mr Rogers20 33 Gomer Pyle USMC 13

5 30 -

Beverly H1llb1lltes 8

Electr c Company 33

6 Andy
Hog ans

Heroes 13 Tra1ls West 15 Hodgepodge Lodge 20

STEWART OHIO PH 662
3035

6 00 - News 3 8 10 15 13 Truth or Consequences 6 Sesame

Street 20 Adterliln Counsel ng Techn ques 33 H gh School
Baskelbatt 4
6 30- NBC News 3 15 ABC News 6 CBS News 8 10 Room 222
13

10 A tfc

SE PTIC
TANK S
cleaned
Modern San it at on 992 3954 or
992 73.49
10 23 ffc

7

00- Truth or Conseq 3 News 6 10 What s My Lme 8 W ld
K ngdom 13 Elec Co 20 I Spy 15 Av aflon Weather 33

W LL TRIM or cut trees and
shrubbery Also clean out
basements att1cs etc Call
949 3221 or 742 4441

WIN AT BRIDGE

South's dummy play does 1t
NORTH
.62

8 00 - Wash ngton Rev ew 20 33 Brady Bunch 6 lJ Fa rn I t'
Thea tr e 3 15 Ph I Donahue m Hollywood 4 D1rty Sal l y 8 10
8 30
Wash ngton Connect on 20 Good T1mes 8 10 Campus
Scene 33 Ja cques Cous teau 6 13
9 00 Ma st erp ece Theater 33 8 cen t enn a l Lecture Seres 20
Cour f slde4 Move s Sen 1or Year 8
Th e VIP s 10
9 30 - Odd Couple 13 Ozz •e s G I s 6 H gh School Basketbal/4
10 00 - News 20 Toma 6 13 Rei g1ou s Amenca 33 Dean
Martn 3 15

10 30 - Day At Noghl33 Comedy Pilots
11 00 - News Weather Sports3 4 6 8 10 13 15 Janak 33
1l 30 - Johnny Carson 3 4 15 Scream ng Skull 6 Moves
Scream and Scream Aga n 8
The Curse of the Mummy s
Tomb 10
Mara of the W1lderness 13
00
M C:71 ght Spec al 3 4 Don K~rshner s Rock Concerl 6
Scream mg Skull 13
1 15 - Mov1e Fog Is land lO

2 30

News 13 4

IM CALLING
THE POLIC.E''

.KQJ97

.J

'Qt04
• J 106

+ K932
•

10 86
OJ

• A84
'A K 85 3
• Q74
"'7 2

Custom Hatchback Coupe dark green f1msh like new
white wa ll t res
full wheel covers
protectl\le S1de
moldmgs power brakes radio 6 cylinder eng ne stan
dard tran sm •ss•on A very papular model and pr ced to go

u

.4 door 1 owner new car trade n good 1st line tires
spotless clean ntenor small V 8 eng ne automattc trans
m ss on The r ght SIZe - the r ght pnce Value $1625

~2395

1971 OOUGAR H.T. CPE.. .....

Green f n sh spotless clean Interior a1r condlt oned good
fires automatic trans
P steermg &amp; brakes rdd o

Sharp

1970 DiEVROLET BEL Alk . ... $1395
clean mter or blue f msh

1970 PLYMOUTH FURY Ill

Now
Only

4 door V 8 automat1c power steer ng rad o good ttres
blue f m sh spotless 1ntertor

Now

1970 FORD FAIRlANE 500
automattc transm1ss1on

WI SEll &amp; SERVICE CHEVROlET CARS &amp; TRUCIIS,

dummy and

RCO.

"Your Chevy Dealer"

992-2126 Open Eves Til 8

POMEROY

WHAT I&amp;

EF:AH WINS

IT'LL l;A.KE

TH LA5TSHREDO M4L£
PRIOE OUTA fM,c,Py' ' '

NEWSPAPER ENTEHf It SE r\SSN

-...•
The b1ddmg has been
East
West
North

21

Pass
Pass
2+
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass
You South hold

3.3.

POMEROY

MOeT 1St-IT OESE!lr/NG
HER TD LIKE 70 KNO.Il

two m

hiS own hand He leads to
dummy s ace of d1amonds
and plays the last club
II East ruffs South s last
trump w11llake hiS lOth tnck
If East doesn t ruff that club
1s the lOth tnck
All very s1mple but the
sort of dummy play that wms
m all forms of competition

Sale Price '3895

MJ~erv slmote buStne&amp;

® F WENDI'S PICKING UP AND
LEAV1NG fOR NEW YORK JU6T
WHEN HER IIDll&lt;Eil. NEED&amp; HER

he ts reacty ana aote tO

one ruff m

Factory air t1nted glass deluxe belts s1de protective
mldgs w w t res bumper guards std V 8 eng.ne
power steer ng &amp; d sc brakes automatic AM radio &amp;
tape low m leage wtth bal of new car warranty color
wh t e w th be 1ge v nyl top

ONLY A FEW NEW '73 PASSENGER CARS LEFT!
CHECit OUR CLOSE-OUT PRICES

WINKLE

ruff h1s last spade A fourth
club IS led and ruffed and
South has e~ght tncks m The
ace of spades ace kmg of
trumps ace queen of clubs

1973 CHEVROLET CAPRICE 4 DOOR

"We

"2'Pass

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
There 1s nothmg spectacu
lar about today • hand The
contract ts a humdrum four
hearts wh1ch South bnngs
home w1thout any squeezes
coups or end plays He does
take a fmesse but everybody
takes !messes
Nevertheless the band IS
worthy of lots of study be
cause the wmnmg play re
qu1res faultless techmque
South must start by duck
mg the first spade West can
do nothmg better than to con
tmue the smt South wms and
IllS now up to h1m to take an
1mmed1a1e club f1nesse
When that works he must
cash hiS ace and kmg of
trumps Then he leads a club
to the ace and ruffs a th1rd
club

1971 DODGE CORONET ......... $1495

Ret:~~ 3 ~•st

South

Opemng lead- • K

340 V 8 eng me automatic transm1ss on power steer ng
black v nyl mtenor red f ntsh I ke new wh te wall t res
rad o

Hardtop Coupe V 8 engine
power steer ng rad1o

Pass
Pass

Pass
Pass

1972 DODGE DEMON

4 Door V 8 eng1ne std trans
rad o good t.res 1 owner

Both vulnerable
North
East

West

21 July 22) P lans that you re

c ons denng have a good c hance
of success because you re now
th nk ng n b oad og 1ca l terms

LEO (July 23 Aug 22) Today

shou d tu n ou t to be p of tab le for
you through some nvo vemenl
you share w th a partne or c lose
compan on

March 21 1974
Much beh nd the scenes act v ly
w II be gomg on tor you th s year
When th s b ecomes v s bie you 1
I nd the resu I ng effects most

sat isfactory

!acts

SAGITTARIUS (Nov 23 Dec
21) An mportanl s tuat on you e
Involved m Will worK out w1th
amaz1ng smoothness Luck pul ng
th e stnngs

CAPRICORN (Dec 22 Jan 19)

~

Before the day s over you should
be 1n a happy frame ol m1nd Some
good news w II br ghten your au t
took

AQUARIUS (Jan 20 Feb 19)

Influences are at work that should
ease f nanc a d scomlorl you ve
felt lal e y Be prudent o advan
!ages w 11 be lost

PISCES (Feb

20 March 20)

Tod ay l'nay start out slow for you
but iUS! s I t ght Some nterest ng
th ng s a e deve op ng that w II
please you

by THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS

1 Burn

5. Resort
8 Bullets

(sl )
9 Here and
there

(Laltn)
13 Interpret
14 Relaxed
(2

wds)

15 Dolt
16 Tea serv

boss ' If I bey want to be gods m tbetr own homes they should
ratse dogs not children But even dogs bite after one too many
beatmgs
I left home the mmute I legally could and I U never go back
SWC

19

+++

%0

Dear Helen and Sue
Father Wlth a Vengeance could have been my father and I
despised hun from the bottom of my soul We didn t dare defend
ourselves even tf we were tMocent We sneaked to hve hved to
protect each other :rom thiS devil
God paid him back In h1s gld age be hved m a lonely hotel
room and thoul!h his children patd hts keep we never went near
him When we burled hbn we crted for the father we never bad
but not ror him - NOW A GRANDMOTHER

l'l

%1
22

Ice piece
Former
great
(hyph
wd)
C1rcle
segment
Augment
Vtcltm

40 Saucy

DOWN

I Wtfe of

Abraham

2 Symn

ctty
Gather
512 yards
Exempted
Euchanst
plate
'J Cru1smg
10 Maple
frwl
11 French
3
4
5
6

r1ver

12 Compas

ston

16 Y1eld

18 Dop out

Yesterday's

21 Walden 22 Affable

23 Resound
24 Under
stand
(2 wds )
25 Peerless
26 Pennant

.108654 'A K Q83 +AJ 5.
What rJo you do now?

three notrump Hope
for the best
A-Bid

TODAY S QUESTION
Instead of b1ddmg three spades
your partner has b1d three
notrump over your three hearts
What do you do now?

Answer
28 Small bll'll
29 Sultan s
decree
30 Not on
your llfdl
31 Put forth
33 Latv1an
36 Steal (al )

Dessert
order

23 Brown
klwo
!4 Hoose
gow m

Readmg
26 Storage
box
27 Bmldmg
extension

28 PhilO

JJ

WIDM®Ikal4c-''*'-.~,....
hV IH NRI AflNOlO o!&lt;Hl nOll l f [

u -..... thtotfourJumbles,

(Lat)
35 Budding
MD
36 Grotto
37 SqUirrel
monkey
SR European
nver
39 Craggy
hill

HYSUB

I I
I I I

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It•
Is

7'AJRoJJ

I

YECKAL

!I

Now

arranre the cln:ttd leltm

to rorm

the IUrprile &amp;niWtr

l-__Priii_.._SIR_PR_ISI_AIISW!ft
_ lln
_ __,l rI I

..

x)

(Anlwel'l to mono~ •

Jumlil"' LOONY

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

One letter somply stands for another In lhts sample A Ill
used for the three L s X for the two 0 s etc Single letters,
apostrophes the length and formalton of the words are all
hmts Each day the code leiters arc dtiTercnt

I~==L:::J====~~-~~~~:"":':re:•~l:td::by~lheabovecartoon
\ f'elot:rday •

32 Workmg

34 King

ont letttr to nch square to
lorm four ordinary words

v~

Vance s
creator

WtPED JAILED

\ A.nn•rr Hhat pagf'ff oflf'l he 1
a ~ehlle- YELLOWED

1

PRIMER

nfl1 r

CRYPTOQUOTES
LBFSUQZ XBMPA GUN

FONJWS!T

QOSIT SY XU XUJU BIPZ SIQUJULQUA

51 BIU NIBQOUJ -ISFBPNL FONWYBJQ
Yesterday's Cryploquote I ALWAYS 1HINK OF NATURE
AS A GREAT SPECTACLE SOMEWHAT RESEMBLING THE
OPERA-BERNARD DE FONTENELLE
(C 1874 11:1•1 Ftat~rea Syndicate, Inc.)
UH-BETTER COME I
HERE, TRACY. LtZZ .JI
FOUND

EAST
• 105 3

,92

. $2695

now be made CANCER (June

ava lab e n your work or t:areer
Take advantage of th s cycle
Don I 1gnore the breaks
SCORPIO (Oct 24 Nov 22)
One you II be meeting through a
fnend w111 assume an mteresl ng
ro e 10 your alia rs Through th s
person you ll make va luable con

NOT THIS SUNDAY
Cl E'ffiLAND IUPI) Some service sbillons In lilt
Cleveland area probably Willi'(
open Sunday despite Presldellf'
N1xon s statement that Sundet,
~"sohne sa les will reswne
There !Sn t enough gasollne tit
prese nt fur Sunday openlnlll

DICK TRALY

"'AQ9 54

SOI}TH

your m os t mportant goal
Greater than usua stndes can

Week 20 33 Beol the Clock 11

21

WEST

"'K 3

ARIES (March 21 Aprol 19)
Someth ng now a source of an

Porter Wagon er 3 Hollywood Squares 4 N ew Treasure
Hun t 10 To Te ll the Truth 6 Con ce ntrat on 8 W[lil Stre e t

+ A65

~t~

FOR THURSDAY
March 21 1974

7 30 -

• J76

We're Wheelin' and Dealin'

23 Oct 23)

HOOP1

Match Game 8

OC - Mr Cortoon 3 Somerset 15 Sesame Sf 20 33 Speed

4

SANITAT ON

1973 DiEVROLET NOVA ...

he predictably

10 Oh •o Th1s Week 20 How to Surv ve A Marnage 3 15

3 14 26tc

~

News 6

6 JO 6 45 -

4782 Galltpo Is Jonn Russell
Owner and Operator
S 12 tfC

•

AND
GREAT COUNTRY

2 00 -

FRIDAY MARC'i22 1974

0

Help Wanted

News 13

6 00

SE PTIC TANKS AROBIC
SEWAGE SYSTEMS
CLEANED
REPAIRED

1969 DODGE cnarger
742 3722

1 30

LIBRA (Sept

Dear Dale
noyance 10 you w II be el m nated
Father Wtth a Vengeance won top honors - If you can call Th1s w I sllortly c ear the way Ia
new beg nn ngs
the blasttng he got an honor
TAURUS (April 20 May 20)
Next m lme was E N whose descnpuon of a highly Fnends a e your mast valuable
traumattc abortton b10ught much p1ty - and some reahst1c asset today You II I nd them moe
appraisal Tomorrows co lwnn will mclude a few of these letters w1 ltng than usual t o help where
they can
Third wmner was a sleeper Who would thmk the question GEMINI (May 21 June 20)
What does an upstde-down stantp on an envelope mean' could Devote your complete attent on to

fetch so many answers ?

11 00-NewsJ 4 6 810 13 15 Janakl33
ll 30 - Johnny Carson 3 4 15 D ck Cavett 6 13 Mov es
V oiPnt Road 8
Hemmgway s Adventures of a You 19
Man 10
1 00 - Tomorrow 3 4

NTER IOROr -exter~or pa nf
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
ng For free est mates ca I REASONABLE rates Ph 446

1972 VW bus exce l ent con
d1t on $2695 00 Pt1one 1 (3041
773 5867
3 21 6tc

15

Energ.v Report 3 4

10 JO - DayAtN!ghl33 ComedyP tol 6

606 E Ma1n Pomeroy 0

MILLER

10

9 30 10 00 -

From a s1'1elf
!l EWING MACHINES Repa r REMODEL NG
to a house Ca l l 949 J832o r 843
ser11 ce al makes 992 2284
2667
The Fabr c Shop Pomeroy
3 20 6tc
Au hor zed S nger Sa les and
Serv ce We Sharpen Sc ssors
C BRAD FOR 0 AUCtiOneer
3 29 tfc
Complete Ser vice
Phone 9-19 3821
DOZER and back hoe work
Racne Oh o
ponds and sept c tanks d•t
Cr tt Bradford
ch ng serv ce top so I fll
5 1 tic
d rt
mPstone
B&amp;K Ex
caval ng Phone 992 5367 or
EXCAVATING dozer loader
992 3861
and bac khoe work
septic
9 1 ttc
tank s nstalled dump trucks
and 10 boys for h re will naul
OPEN Roger HyseiT sGarage
f 11 d1rt top so I 1mestone
near Crossroads on St Route
and grave l Cali Bob or Roger
24 8 30 to 6 p m Monday
Jeffers day phone 992 7089
through Saturday Pl'1one 992
n ght pt1one 992 3525 Or 992
5682 or 992 7121
5232
2 22 26tc
2 11 lf c
DON T fUSS Don 1 cuss turn ----------- ~--your 1unk automobtles ov er to DOZER work land cle•ar ng by
u s R v ers1de Auto Wreck ng
the acre hOurly or contract
Phone 1 (304) 773 58~0
farm ponds roads etc Large
3 7 26tc
dozer and operator w th over
20 years expenence Pullins
-==~ -Excavat ng Pomeroy Oh o
~RICE
CONSTRUCTION
Phone 992 2478
Roof ng
spouting
kitchens
1219tfc
and bathrooms Complete
remodeling Phone 742 6273
12 3 tf c READY MIX
CONCRETE
delivered r ght to
your
Al.T'IOM"01fTIE: Insurance been
protect Fast and easy Free
cance ll ed?
Lost
your
est n1ates Phone 992 3284
operators
cense Call 992
Goegle n Ready Mix Co
7428
M1ddleport 01'1 o
6 15 tfc
6 30 tfc

A:.tlo Sales

S de K cks

8

Monday thru Saturday

3 1 26tc

Which letters bt ought most response 10 early 1974' D1d old
blowhard Father wtth n Vco geancc rate 10 the top three' DALE

23 Sept 22)

Grea l er opportun t es are now

Cold Father Gels Roasted

7 00 -

Wt son3 415

'5.55

and

Yoga and You 33

Rap

Pomeroy

On Most' American tars
-GUARANTEEDPHONE 992 2094

L lias

6 30 - NBC News 3 4 15 ABC News 6 CBS News 6 10 Your

8 30
9 00

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment

992 3903

By Helen and Sue Bottel

Company 20 G fl of L1fe 33

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.

OFFICE SUPPLIES

THURSDAY MARCH 21 1974
6 00 - News 3 4 6 10 15 Sesa me St 20 ABC News 13 Truth

7 30- Hollywood Squar es 3 W ld K ngdom 10 Beat the Clock
13 Look1ng Ahead 33 To Tell the Truth 6 Ozz e c; G 1rls 8
Johnny Manns Stand Up &amp; Cheer IS Zoom 20 Readmg For
the Classroom Teacher 33 Dealer s Cho1ce 4
8 00 - Waltons 8 10 Advocates 20 33 Chopper One 6 13 F p

Nathan Boggs

992 2094
606 E Mam
Pomeroy

Generation Rap

Future Is Now 33 Room 222 13
Truth or Conseq J Beat the Clock 4 What s My L neB
News 6 10 Lets Make A Deal 13 Sports Desk 5 Electnc

Rad1ator Spectahst

POMEROY
liOME &amp; AUTO

Television Log
or Consequences 6

From the largest Truck or
Bulldozer Rad1ator to the
smallest Heater Core

Ph 992 2174

VlftGO (Aug

All ances or agreements entered
lnto now look excepl ona ily prom
IS ng prov•ded you can t nue to
look out for the nterest of others

5NUFFV 11 I THOUGHT
I SEEN DOC PRITCHART
HEADtN FER
HOUSE

NOW DOCS
IN TH HOUSE
PATCH IN UP
MAW

•

�I'.'

11! - The

Sentinel,

"•

1974

'

'

E

0

Eft E BS INPOME

'

.

1

Weather

.

.

FRIDAY AND SflTllHDA Y SALE!
MEN'S
NIT SPORT SHIRTS

Friday and
Saturday

Short s leeve Includes our entire
selection of mens hanging knit shirts.
Solids and patte rns in small, medium,
large' and. extra large sizes.

Coordinate
Sportswear

Mens 2.95 Knit Shirts
Mens 3. 95 Knit Shirts
Mens 4.95 Knit Shirts
Mens 5.95 Knit Shirts
Mens 6.95 !Wlit Shirts
Mens 7.95 Knit Shirts
Mens 8.95 Knit Shirts
Mens 10.95 Knit Shirts
Mens 11.95 Knit Shirts - - - -

Misses - Womens Juniors
spring
styles and colors .
Selected from our
regular stock .
(Not all sizes in all
colors)

mi~

Men's Double Knit
Dress Slacks

Story of
road told

9.95 MENS SLACKS

SALE •7.99

·..

10.95 MENS SLACKS

'·

-·

SALE •8.49
11.95 MENS SLACKS

SALE 18.99

WHILE
THEY
LAST

12 .95 MENS SLACKS

MEN'S LIGHlWEIGHT JACKETS

14.95 MENS SLACKS

SALE '10.49
Sizes 36 to 50 in wai st length and longer length
styles . Sol1d colors and neat color combinations.
Stop in - try on one or two and buy what you
need no w.
.

PRICE

MENS 7.95 JACKETS
MENS 9.95 JACKETS
MENS 11 .95 JACKETS
MENS 12.95 JACKETS
MENS 16.95 JACKETS

SALE 8.99
SALE 9.49
SALE 11.49

SALE 3.99

BOYS 5.95 JACKETS

-SALE 4.99

SALE '13.49
18.95 &amp; 19.50 MENS SLACKS

SALE '14.49

SALE 7.49

BOYS 9.95 JACKETS

-SALE 7.99

SPORT SHIRTS
An excellent se lection in
sizes 6 to 20. So lid colors
and plenty of fine patte rn s.

Famous Maker

PANT SUITS
Misses and
Half Sizes

Our entire stock of womens
spring dusters is included.

Regular $24.00 to $36 .00
While They Last

Regular $44.00

$}488

Now Only

Second Floor

SQUARE SHOOTER 2

All are permanent press well known brands.

Take color pictures with
Type 86 Polaroid film.
Pic ture size J lf4" by Jl.1J".

Friday and Saturday

Friday -saturday Sale

SALEI SERTI MATTRESSES
$74.95 Serla Posture Deluxe full size matching mattress and box springs.

SALE '109.00
Ser!a Canfield Twin Bed Set. Including quilt top mattress and mathcing box
spnngs, maple spmdle and steel frame.

SALE '109.00

Special

BATES
BEDSPREADS

Sale! Serta $109.95 full size mattress or box springs. Luxury firm or extra
firm .

Custom Made

DRAPERIES SALE

SALE '90.00
Sale! Serta $99.95twin size mattress and box springs Lux
f.
firm.
.
ury trm or extra

Order made-to-measure draperies for your home
now and save 20 Pet. during this Semi -Annual
Sate . Please bring
in your
window
measurements .
Home Furnishings, First Floor

SALE

SALE '239.00
Sale! $399.95 King Size. 3 Piece Sets.
Extra firm or luxury ·firm.

BESTFORM FOUNDATIONS DEPARTMENT

'

.

a~d

Reg . 51.75 Box

LUXURY .
PERFUMED
SOAP

Saturday

Regular $1 .00

PRE TEEN
SPORTSWEAR
Save this weekend on
famous maker pre teen
(young ju11iar l sportswear .

SALE PRICES

Panty Hose
SALE

5

pairs

$288

Second Floor

PORCH, LAWN AND PATIO
FURNITURE

Famous Ben Rickert soap .

PRE-SEASON SALE

Hosiery Dept.
Second Floor

Girts Dept.

LUGGAGE SALE

Sale! Friday and Saturday

3 cakes (3 oun ces each) to a

carton.

Q.UB ALUMINUM OOOKWARE

English Jasmin
Fren ch
Lavender - Belgian Rose Danish Carnation . Spani sh
Garden ia.

Big selection of Chaise
Lounges · Rockers.- Chairs .
Swings and Gliders.

Friday and Saturday

Saucepans · Skillets - Dutch Ovens- - RoasterS . Cove~ed

Skillets.
·
Avocado, Poppy and Harvest Gold color.s. Mostly non.Teflon

On Sale Now At Our
Mechanic Street Warehouse

SAVE 20%

.,

1\eg. 19.95 quart size Covered Saucepans
Reg. 11.95 1112 quart Covored Saucepans
Reg. 12.95 2 quart Covered Saucepans . Reg.l3.95 J quart Covered Saucepans - .

Sale a 81
Sate , :Pa
Sale 10 41
Sale10.81

Reg . 12 .95 8'12 inch Covered Fry Pans . .
Reg . 14.95 ID1f2 inch Covered Frv Pans .

Sale -10"48
Sale 11"41

Reg. 12.95 12 inch Open Fry Pans - . Reg . 16.95 4112 quart Covered Dutch Ovens

Sale 10"48
Sale 12:81 -

Elberfelds Main Store and Warehou~e Open Friday and
.
Saturday
9:30
t~ 9 ,~m
.
.

.

'
- - (_ -

-~ -

-

"~

---

- - ·.

. .

-

.

:• . - . -- _...: -· --

5:18p.m. Thursday.
Pomeroy police sa id an
eastbound ca r driven by James

Glaze , 21, Middleport, crossed
over the ce nterline and struck

the wes tbound car of. Charles

•.

-·- - ~ - J --.~-_:_-~--:...--.....,;___________

I

into tl~e path of) I westbound

t:e1 lmg of one room because of

a lightbulb pressing against

across the road, a nd over the
bank . It was believed the

21 , of Alban y. Ne ither driver

cei ling tile.

driver may have suffered a

was injured .

AI 4:20 a.m. F'riday the head in jury . The ea rly morning
Middleport E-R squad was search failed to loca te the
ca lled to Locust St. at · the ow ner of the car, who was Lee

C&lt;J r dn ven

bJ;,B~b er l

Hudnall,

Fi re Doused
Damages were estimated (;I I
$75 in ~'-fire at the home of J ohn
Bryan, Nor th Second Ave. in

Middleport at 9· 44 p.m. Thurs-

community park where a car Will ia m ~, who wa s reached
was found ove r a n em · later in lhe day at his mobile

bankmen t. Police said th e home in Rutland.

said .

BEVERLY MOSELEY, chief exhibits design or of the
· Ohio Historical Society, was guest speaker Thursday night at
a meeting of the Meigs County Pioneer and Historical
Society. Above, he Is welcomed by Leo Story, a trusiee of the
local Society.
creations . He told ot tne hours
of work involved and the
techniqu es employed in
creating the people and

WASHINGTON - BECAUSE A UNANIMOUS vote is
needed, Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger says he doesn't
believe the Mideast oil embargo will be reimposed when the Arab
states meet later this spring to reassess Ute situation.
" ... Tile consensus seems to be that what the Arabs will do on
June 1 is to review the decision and that it would require a new
decision to reimpose the embargo ... and presumably that
decision would have to be unanimous,' ' Kissinger told a news
conference Thursday. "So, we do not believe that it is probable
that the embargo will be reimpose&lt;l."

CHAPTER TO MEET
Xi Gamma Mu Chapter of
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority will
mee t at 7:30p .m. Tuesda y in
the social rooms of the
Columbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Co. in Middleport.
• The

TO MEET
Racine Post

602

Ame ri ca n Legion AuXiliary'

will meet at 7:30p .m. Tuesday
at the post home .

(

Both th e Pomeroy and
Middleport E-R squads were
on the scene wi lh the Middlepor t squad taking Bailey to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
and the Pomeroy squad taking
Glaze fir st to . Veterans

Services for
Mrs. Theobald
the most popular in the state. .set Saturday
Certain phases remain to be

completed although the facility
was dedicated anrl opened to
animals for the scenes in the the public last fall .
The speaker was introduced
13a.foot diorama .
He described the musewn by Mrs . J ennifer Sheets.
located at Concord just 10 president of the Meigs County
mile~ from Zanesville as one of
Pioneer and Historical Society .

NEW YORK - PRESIDENT NIXON IS LESS popular now
Utan at any other time, but most Americans polled by the Harris
Survey do not think he should quit. Harris said Thursday results
of a nationwide sampling this month indicate only 26 pet. of the
people approve of the job Nixon is doing, compared with 29 pet. in
Februaa and a 60 pet. rating in February, 1973, before the
Watergate scandal broke.
"These latest figures reOect the reaction of the public to the
President after the spate of indictments against his former close
aides in cases connected with the Watergate affair," Harris said.
"However, when asked if he should resign, the verdict was
47-44 pet. opposed to his taking such a move, with 9 pet. unable to
make up their mind. On the other hand, when asked if they would
'respect President Nixon more if he resigned from office to allow
Vice President Ford to lake over in his place in an act of national
unity,' a narrow plurality, 42-39 pet., agreed," he said.

I.

Clmrges had not been filed
this morning.
About noon Wednesd ay,
Pomeroy Police said moderate
damages were caused to twu
vehicles on West Ma in St. near

Middleport, made " left turn

driver of the car apparently
day.
fell
as leep at the whee l
Mi ddle po rt fir emen sa id
there was minor damage to the some time around 3 a.m., went

Cruw's SteJk House . A ca r
driven by Ani ta Fu ltz, 20,

car was knocked onto the
sidewalk by the impact. police

SAVAGE WEATHER ON TilE FIRST FULL DAY OF
SPRING left five dead in violent wind storms in the South
followed by snow and cold in much of the rest of the nation today .
Snow fell from the central Appalachians to northern New
England, with as much as eight inches accumulating in some
places. Temperatures were below normal everywhere east of the
Rockies except for the extreme Southeast.
The first full day of spring dumped two inches of rain on New
York City Thursday, part of a national weather picture that
triggered the tornadoes'and wind storms which killed five persons and injured at least 50. At Natchitoches, La., where tornadoes killed two persons and injured 18, Mayor W. Ray Scott
said the twisters were ' accompanied by the most spectacular
display of lightning he ever witnessed - and, then, it was
"totally still, totally quiet."

CALL ANSWERED
RACINE - .The Racine
Emergency squad answered a
call at 12:10 a.m. Friday to
Long Bottom for Ruth M.
Thornton who was ill with
stomach cramps and nausea .
She was taken to the Holzer
Medical Center. At 7:35 a.m.
Friday, the squad took M~ude
Young, Racine, who was
havingchestpains,'tO Veterans
Memorial Hospital.

• •

Bailey, Z9, Pomeroy . Bailey's

coated with lim ited quantity of Teflon coated pieces.

Special Sale

SALE PRICES

Our entire stock of mens and womens luggage is
included.
·

Memorml Hosp ital , th en to ttlc
Holze r Medica l Ct:nter. B:1iley
was in sa tisfadory cond itlOn
th1s morning. Glaze suffered
broken bones , 1t was reportt.'tl.
and Van Za ndt Motor Co., a t in his legs and an arm .

WASHINGTON - R. EDWARD BEWLEY, coordinator of
radio and television for Gov. JohnJ. Gilligan, has been dismissed
from the governor's staff for attempting to sell public relations
services to congressmen in Washington, Max Brown, executive
assistant for communications on the GiUigan staff, said Friday.
Brown said Bewley and S.D. Edelman, a former Columbus
television newscaster had formed a partnership under the name
"Access" and reportedly used the governor's name to promote
thetr public relations services to the congressmen.

SALE •329.00

For the Whirlpool Washer and Dryer ·to be won
by one of our customers. No purchase is
necessary and you need not be present to win .
Friday

•ao.oo

Sale! Serta $279 .95 Queen Set.
Mattress and box springs . Luxury firm or extra firm .

Ladies- Be sure to register in the Second Floor.

Friday and Saturday

Slides
depicting
the
dioramas and other exhibits in
The National Road-Zane Grey
Musewn at Zanesville were
shown by Beverly Moseley,
chief exhibits designor of the
p bio Historical Society Thursday night at a mee ting of the
Meigs County Pioneer and
Historical Society .
Moseley in his narration of
the slides presented a portrayal of life from about 1825
when the National Road, today
Route 40, extending from
Maryland to Illinois was.
constructed, to about 1924 when
the road was completed . The
advancement of the times, in
modes of transportation , in
construction methods, in at·
lire, were vividly depicted.
Shown in the musewn in
miniature seale form is the full
story of the building of the
National Road as well as one
wing which deals exclusively
with Zane Grey, his books,
personal effects, and · equipment. Exterior exhibits of life
in the early 19th century are
also included in the museum
displays.
In his talk, Moseley ex.
plained that above the
dioramas
hang
actual
photographs of the miniature

TEN CENTS

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

Two a utos were demolished
and their drivers were
hospitalized wi th serious m·
juries s u£fe red in Gl co llision a t
West Main St. , near the Karr

WASHINGTON- SPECIAL PROSECUTOR Leon Jaworski
has subpoenaed President Nixon for more Watergate materials,
but neither the White House nor the prosecutor's office wiU
disclose what docwnents are being sought. Disclosure of the
subpoena came Thursday during a televised interview with
.James St. Clatr, Nixon's chief Watergate attorney, who
acknowledged on the NBC Today program that the White House
received the subpoena last Friday.
The Ho- Judiciary· Committee, meanwhile, continued its
party-line wrangle over just what part St. Clair will play in the
panel's inquiry into possible grounds for impeaching Nixon. The
White Ho-lawyer wants to be able to question witnesses and
inspect evidence gathered by the committee staff - a proposal
opposed by Democrats.

CAMERAS

·---

·,

urt In co lSIOn

Is
Ch amp
ws .. in Briefsl
speIIers

Polaroid $24.95

"geometry" is

mea sure J.

f'HON l Y922156

•

-.YoY:oi!:oX•:&lt;'.-."Y'-';'1'~··:0:•'_..._.,...~~
»:-:•'•'•X•'~•&gt;"'"•'•'•'•-.'•'•:o!o:-:0:•'•'•
,.,
,.,.,•,, ,,,.,., ..,•,•,-,•,,,-.•,•,y,~
.•o•••'•'••'•••'·"'"·'·'•'•'•'• •••• •'•''1

·SALE 5.99

BOYS 8.95 JACKETS

i~ /4

IRI OAY, MARCH 22,

By United Press International

BOYS 4.95 JACKETS

BOYS 7.95 JACKETS

Halters and midriffs are
slated to be No. 1 in tops
this summer. Enjoy pre·
season savings now by
buying early. Our entire
stock is included in this
sale.

lingerie Department

17.95 MENS SLACKS

Sizes 4 to 20. So lid colors and two color com ·
binations. Waist length and longer length styles.
Buy now during !hi s sale and save.

$3 .95
Short Sleeve

SALE PRICES

16.95 MENS SLACKS

SALE PRICES
FRIDAY AND SATURDAY

HALTERS AND
MIDRIFF
TOPS

WOMEN'S
DUSTERS

SALE •11.99

Boys' Ughtweight Jackets

PRE-SEASON SALE

Friday and Saturday

15.95 MENS SLACKS

SALE •12.99
SALE 4.99
SALE 5.99
SALE 7.99

FRIDAY AND SATURDAY

I

13.50 &amp; 13.95 MENS SLACKS

SALE '9.99

MENS 5.95 JACKETS

I

SALE •9.49

SALE PRICES

POMEROY·MIOOLU'OR I. UHIU

NO. 239

-·

Sizes 29 to 42 and extra large 44 to
50 . Good selections of styles. Solid •
colors, plaids and stripes . An ••
excelle nt selection.

FRIO A Y AND SATURDAy

enttne

The word

derived from lhe greek ge
fea rth J and metrein r to

Devot¢ To The lnteresl$ Of The Mei{{s-Mason Area

VOL XXV

lnciudes our entire stock of mens
dr ess slacks for this special two
day sale .

•

•

at y

:U...

Friday and Saturday Salel

Sale 2.34
Sale3.14
Sale4.14
Sale 4.84
Sale 5.84
Sale 6.44
Sale 7.14
Sale 8.84
Sale 9.84

•

Cloudy over entire state
tonight and Saturday, snow
Ourries likely north . Lows
tonight in the upper 20s and
lower 30s and the hi ghs
Saturday in the lower :10s and

Now You Know

compete
The annual Meigs County
spelling bee will be held at 7:30
Monday at the Eastern High
School with finalists from 15
schools taking part.
Carol Swogger, English
teacher at Eastern High, will
pronounce the words with John
Riebel ,
Eastern
Local
Superi11tendent , Geor ge
Hargraves, Meigs Local
Superintendent, and Bob Ord,
Sou thern Local Superin·
tendent, the judges. Mrs. Nellie
Vale, a Meigs County school
supervisor, is chairwoman of

RUTLAND

services for Mrs. Susan M.

Theobald, 78, Main St., Rut·
land , who dted Wednesday at
the Justice Nursing Home in
Clifton, W. Va ., following a
three year illness, will be held
at 2 p.m. Saturday &lt;Jt the
Walker Funeral Home in Ru tland.
·
Mrs. Theobald was th e
. daughter of the late Rice C. and
Lucy Lemaster Longstreth and
was born Feb. 6, !896, in
Langsv ille. She was married
May 20, 1914, to Weber C.
Theobald who preceded her in
death March 28, 1970. Also
preceding her in death were a
son, a brother imd a sister . A
homemaker all of her life, Mrs .
Theobald was a charter
member of the ltutland United
Methodi s t Church and a
member of the women's group
of that church.
Surviving are a daughter,
Mrs. Carl( Janet) Morns , Rutland ; · and three grandsons,
James Morris, Dexter, and
Mark and .John Morris, both of
Rutland.
Officiating at the Saturday
service will be th e Rev .
Chester J. Lemley . Burial will
be in Miles Cemetery . Friends
may call at the funeral home at

the bee. Awards will be
presented by Robert E. Bowen,
superintendent of the Metgs anytime.
County Schools.
An alternate has been named
in each school in case the
finalist is unable to appear
TO DINE, DANCE
Monday night. The finalist.s,
The Racine Emergency
grade, school and parents, and Squad will hold a jitney supper
the alternates follow :
and square dance Saturday at
Bradbury - Janet Hor ky, the Racine Junior High School
Si&gt;&lt; th grader, daughter of Mr
and Mrs . Ca rl Horky, Mid- Building. Serving will start at 5
dlepor t : Tammy Mc Danie L p.m. The square dance with the
sixth grade, daught er of Mr. Kord Kings providing music.
and Mrs. Walte r McDan iel, will begin at 9 p.m. Proceeds
M1dd lepor t.
Cheste r - Debbie Spen cer , will go to tlje squad's new truck
seven th gra de , daughter of Mr . fund .

and Mr s. Gilbert Spe ncer ,
Pomeroy ; Teresa Spencer.
sixth grader , al so the daughter
of Mr . and Mr s. Gilbert
Spence r .

Harr is on ville
Garv
Howard. sixth grader, son of
and Mrs. Gillespie,
Pomeroy ; Ro bert Harm on,
fifth grader , son of Mr . and
Mr.

Mrs Pa t Harmo n.
Letart - Christophe r Wolfe,

six th

g rader,

son

of

Mrs.

Pauline
W olf e,
Rac in e ;
(harme n Man uel, si)( fh

1Continued on Page 121

..
... ...

Funeral

H,OURS SET
The Pomeroy office of the
Burea u of Motor Vehicles
loca ted at Simon 's Shoe Store
will maintain hours from 9:30
a.m. to 4:30p.m. weekdays and
from 9 a.m. until 12 noon on
Saturdays. Only cash will be
accepted for

new li ce nse

plates.

-,

:.

r
ON TO TilE DISTRICT - Four Racine Elementary
students received two blue ribbons each in the recent art and

poetry judging in the cultural arts program. All four will now
go on to the district judging May 4 at Middleport. District

qualifiers are, from left, David Dowell, art, Richard Lyons,
poetry, Teresa Rice, poetry, and Toni Hudson, art. Judge for
the art competition was Jack Slavin, and Mrs. Margaret
Houdashelt judged th e poetry .

New power plant has green light
CHARLESTON, W. Va .
The West Virgin ia
Publi c Serv ice Com mi ss ion
Thursday granted a certificate

In other action Thursday, the customers.
The application had been
PSC announced that railroads
operating in West Virginia filed by the Penn Central,
ha ve been authorized by the Chesapeake &amp; Ohio and
of conv enience to the Ap- PubHc Service Commission to Baltimore &amp; Ohio systems.
The PSC also held that the
palachian Power Co., to build add a 2.5 pet. surcharge to their
the electric generct ting plant on freight rates to cover the White Oak Public Servi ce
the Ohio River near New higher cos t of fuel. In applying District, which opera tes a

$20 tap-on fee when the Public

I UPI l -

Service District was being

Haven.

formed, although the cost of
the connection was to be $100
after the system was constructed.
Following acquisition of the
original tap-on to their home,
the Kincaids received another

announced, is to be loca ted in

sewage system , had "im·
in fuel costs be· properly charged" Mary and
tween Ocl. 1 and Feb. II made Gerald Kincaid Sr. for a $100

Graham District of Mason
County .

it essential that they
be tap-on-fee.
The Kincaids agreed lo pay a
allowed to pass the co&gt;t onto

for the increase, the railroads

The plan t, already formally

sct id

DeMolay

i n creG~ses

•

IS

connection for their trailer on

the sa me property.
The Public Service District
(Continued on Page 12)

(partly) ·for fun

100 me: 11bcrs.

Tl1rough DcMolay a young

the Meigs Chapter Order of

man lea rn s dram atics by

word and deed, as the result of
Founder of DeMolay was the
lhe absence of any rough stuff late FrankS. Land who was the
DeMolay is observmg N ~1 tiona l l&lt;tking part in deg ree work; or shady doings in a DeMolay Order's secretary ge neral
self confidence by being Chapter, and responsibility, by from 1919 until his death on
DeMolay Week.
"What is DeMolay?" Holler! prov ided the opportunity to being assigned to committees, Nov. 8, 1959. He defin ed
King, Middleport bustnessma n speak before people both in given jobs to do and par· DeMolay as follows :
who serves as chapter advisor speeches and through degree ticipating in Chapter ac tivities.
for the loca l group , said work; comradeship by doing
The purpose of DeMolay is to
"DeMolay is like religion in
th ings as a group , by meeting build better citizens. The Order that it's hard to define. It works
DeMolay
is
a
" fun
organization " of young men a nd wor king out programs a nd does so by offering young men in so many ways and does so
eve nts with others; respect for a wholesome occupation for his many good things to and for a
with serious goals.
Young men from 13 to 21 are others by working as a team. spare time, wor thwhil e young man that it actually has
eligible to join. The local mee ting in wholesome Masonic associates, the best of en- to be experienced to be fully
chapter accep ts members Temples; sportsmanship by vironment a nd an interesting understood , evaluated and
from Meigs, Mason, and Gallia participating in athletic eve nts and complete program of all- appreciated. But litera lly
speaking, I would say the
Counties and from a small part of the Chapter, district and around youth development.
sta te, which are non-varsi ty
Each Chapter of DeMolay Order of. DeMolay is a youth
of Vinton County .
Officers
are
c hose n orien~d, gi ving him the op· varies in particular activities organization for young men
frequently so that young men portun ity to compete with boys but all have programs in the who.e purpose is the building
can kn ow the ex per ience of of his own ab ili ty ; religion , by areas of social a ffa ir s, of be t~r citizens . ~~
Past DeMolay members are
leadership . The prese nt four meeting around the open Bible athletics, civic activities and
top officers of th e Meigs and never meeting without a fund.raising projects. The local such well-known nati ona l
Chapter are Don Vaughan , word of prayer ; patriotism by chapter is sponsoring a public personali ties as the late Wall
m aste r co un cil or; Herbe rt pl edg in g an un swerving bean din ner from 4 to 7 this Disney, Bob Mathias, the late
Carson, senior councilor ; Bert allegiance to his country, his evening at the dining room of Rober! Cummings, Fred
Moshier, junior councilor, a nd flag, his parents and his the Masoni c Temple in Mid- MacMurray, Walter Cronkite,
school; cleanness in thought, dleport as a fund ra ising event. and John wa-yne.
Va n Windsor, scribe.
With

C:~lmust

Meigs Local in critical shortage of gasoline
By GEORGE HARGRAVES, Supl.

Meigs Local School District
The gasoline shortage has become a critical problem in the
Meigs Local School District. Following is an ou tline of how and
why.
·
It requires between 450 and 500 gallons' of gas per day for us
to operate our bus routes. This rounds out to about 10,000 gallons
per month. We have been through a long process of gathering
information about previous gasoline consumption which we
.used to complete required for.ns. From lhis we obtained a
"percentage allocation." Due to the 'inadequacy of the
Speuldn{! of .~chool.~--No. :w7
allocation, we have submitted a hardship requ est to obtain
additional gasoline.
Stated briefly, our situation is this:
We need 10,000 gallons of gasoline per month. Our present
allocation for March is approximately 8400 gallons. This is not
enough. Consequently, we have been makjng some purchases at
gasoline stations and have plaeed a strict limitation on all extra
trips. Just this week we received a hardt;hip allocation of 1800
gallons. Assuming that we ca n get this 1800 gallons (enough for
four days) we should be able to compiHe successfully lhe sc hool
ea lendar for March . This will be due in part to our purchases at
filling stations.
i
.
The fuel allocation system works strictly on a monthly
basis. It would appear thitt we should have enough gasoline for
March. Again, this assumes that we will be able to obtain the
1800 gallons haraship allowance. What !IPril will brin ~. we do
not know. We won 't know what our percentage allocation is until

,,

.

after the first of the month.
I feel !hal you should know the background of this situation
so you will know the reason why some of our buses have been
filled at commercial stations . This action was and is an important part of our program to obtain sufficient gasoline to·
operate our fleet of 27 buses. You should remember !hal any day
that is missed due to insufficient gasoline would be a day that
would have to be made up. We are trying desperately to avoid
this and will continue to do so.
The gasoJine shortage is a real problem for our school
district. It is a problem that must be solved. Nol every school
district has this problem, but we do . We will attempt to take the
necessary actions to keep schools operating according to our
stated ealendar .
We are sorry if you·have to wait in a gas line behind a school
bus. We are sorry that our buses are taking some gasoline that
would normally be ava ilable to you and me as private motorists.
We are so rry that we have to pay the high price that we do at a
gas pump. Nevertheless, the fact remains that we need the gas
to kee p schools ope n. Hopefully, this situation will not exist very
long.
BUSES AND TRANSPORTATION, as you can see from the
above statements, are very much on our minds these days. Let
me take the opportunity to stress again our great concern for
safety on our buses. There are many people who .can contribute
to rna king the bus ride a safe ride. Certainly ,tj1e parent and the
student can make a great contribution. The parent can help by
emphasizin~ to the student that bus conduct must be of such a
nature :1s to not disturb the bu ~· driver . The student can con· ~

tribut e to safely by showing proper conduct on the school bus
'••

and thereby not distracting the bus driver.
A bus driver has the responsibility for moving a large
vehicle on heavily traveled roads or rough back roads and-the
bus driver must have his or her attention on the road. With 50 to
60 or more active youngsters riding behind him or her in the bus,
the bus drivr is not in a position · to play policeman or
policewoman. For the sake of a safe ride, that bus driver nee&lt;js
the cooperation of every student on the bus.
When a student cannot conduct himself or herself properly,
that student may be denied the right to ride a bus for a short
period of time or for an indefinite period of time. The right to
ride a bus also carries the responsibility for proper conduct. We
do not intend to jeopardize the safety of over 60 students because
one or two students ca!Ulot properly control their own behavior .
We are responsible for providing transportation only so long as
the conduct of the student is acceptable in producing a safe
situation on the bus.
When a pupil is excluded from the bus, it is the responsibility of the parents to provide transportation for the pupil. If
the student does not come to school, the student will be considered as truant . This can result in legal action against both the
student and the parent. This we want to avoid. I would hope that
you would want to avoid it also. The student can avoid it by
exhibiting proper conduct on the bus. The parent can avoid it by
giving definite directions to the student concerning bus conduct.
,We want our buses to be a safe means of moving our

students to and from school each day . I am quite certain that
you do also. We need yo'ur cooperation in this matter aod we
strongly encourage you to give it to us. Working together we can
obtain our objectiv• - a safe bus ride for all students.
~

h

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="749">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11149">
                <text>03. March</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="31989">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="31988">
              <text>March 21, 1974</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="1080">
      <name>showalter</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1136">
      <name>siders</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
