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28 - The Sunday'Ti'mes ·Sentinel, Sund""" March 24, 19i4

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ITT question: Not what, but why?
By MIKE FEINSD.BER
WASHINGTON (UP!) - As with so many of the troubles which
beset him, the question about President Nixon's role in the IT!'
easels nol what he did but why he did it.
• What he did was to intervene personally in the Justice
Department's attempt in 1971 to force the International Telepbone and Telegraph Corp. to sell off ail or part of six businesses
1t had absorbed in one gulp.
Nixon's intervention did not come to light at the time and two of
his attorneys general- John N. Mitchell and Richard G.
Kleindienst-gave sworn testimony that he had not intervened.
Their account was contradicted on Jan. 8, 1974, when the White
House issued an IT!' "white paper" defending Nixon's role as
neither improper nor unusual-&lt;tnd in no way· related to ITI's
pledge to underwrite _some ol the expense ol holding the 1972
Republican National Cnnvention in San Diego, Calif., where
Nixon wanted it.
Out-&lt;Jf.COurt Settlement
Nixon's intervention delayed a Justice Department appea l of a
lower court decision upholding IT'!' in one ol the department's
three antitrust cases against the firm, the Grinnell case.
The delay was long enough to perrnit ITT and the government
to negotiate an out-ol-&lt;:ourt settlement ol all three cases. IT!'
made its convention oller in the course ol those negotiations.
Ever since the terms of the settlement were announced, ex·
pertshave differed on who won-ITI or the Justice Department.
Certainly, IT!' got more than it would have if Nixon had played
no role and if the case had gone to a Supreme cOw-t coltclusion
and the cow-t upheld th e Justice Department's case -&lt;ts the
court has in every other major antitrust action ol the last two
decades.
On the other hand, no less a critic of the Nixon administration
than Archibald Cox has called the settlement satisfactory.
So has Erwin N. Griswold, another former solicitor general.

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Lawmakers face
2 major issues

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COLUMBUS (UP!) - Legis·
lative leaders hope to make
progress this week on campaign fmance reform and an
emergency energy bill - two
pieces of major legislation
standing in the way of a spring
recess early next month.
The campaign financing pr()o
posal, adopted by the House
last week, will be returned to
the Senate Tuesday or Wednesday for concurrence in amendments.
The Senate is expected to ask
for a joint conference committee to look over extensive
changes made in the bill since
it cleared the upper chamber
last montb on a party-line vote.
Sponsors from both parties
have assembled an "agreed"
bill containing limitations on
campaign spending and
reporting requirements, but no
limits on political donations.
The House made one depar·
lure from the compromise version which could concern Re·
publican senators.lt took out a
section of tbe bill which would
have pardoned Sen. Donald E .
Lukens, R-Mlddletown, from a
five-year prohibition against
running for public office.
Sen. Thomas A. Van Meter,
R-Ashland, said he plans to
seek alternative language to
give Lukens an escape from
the penalty once the campaign
financing law takes effect,
later this year.
Energy Measw-e Debated
Leaders from both chambers
will be trying to come up with a
potential compromise on an
emergency energy bill,
Republicans have complained that Gov. John J .
Gilligan 's proposed
Emergency Energy Board
would give the governor too
much power in times of
emergency.
Sen. Michael J. Maloney, R·
Cincinnati, said he would try to
draft language agreeable lo
both the governor's office and
Republicans by the time a spe·
cia! joint House-senate energy
committee meets Tuesday
night.
A House floor vote is sched·
uled for Wednesday on comprehensive drug abuse control
legislation written by Attorney
General William J. Brown.
The Senate Insurance Com·
mittee, despite opposition from
its chairman, Sen. Stanley
Aronoff, R..Cincinnati, w.ill
begin amending a no-fault
r - - - - - - ·-

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Guarantee your
family an income

A Slate Farm Family Income Polic y
can provide a reg ular Income to he lp
pay for food, rent, Jiving expenses
If you'r1. taken out or the ple ture.
Lei me'al,ve you all the details.

P.rk Central Hotel Bldg .
Second Ave ., Gallipolis
Ph . 446-4290., .Home 446 -4518

LIFE

However, committee mem-

bers, bombarded with fiveweeks of testimony, said they
are ready to prepare a biil and
recommend it for passage be-

fore spring recess.
Rep. John T. McCormack,!).
Euclid, will try to keep alive
his proposal to require nickel
deposits on all beverage containers and force a return to

the all-returnable
sysiem.

bottle

Testimony on the controver-

sial bill wiil continue Tuesday
in the House Environmental
and Natural Resources Com·
mittee. Last week the beverage
industry claimed abandonment
of non-returnable containers
would displace thousands of
employes.
McCormack said he may lor
a vote on the bill this week or
next rather than refer it to a
subcommittee, where it could
he buried.
In the House Educa lion Committee on Wednesday, mem·
bers will consider a proposal
by Rep. Donald S. Maddux, D·
Lancaster, which would repeal
Ohio's compulsory education
law.
Also this week, the House
Judiciary and Senate Ways and
Means conimittees wiD take a
look at a joint subcommitte report on how to implement the
farm land tax exemptions approved by voters in November.
The House Interstate Cooperation Committee may vote
Wednesday on a bill drafted by
the state Department of
Rehabilitation and Corrections
to allow Ohio to participate in
prisoner exchange program.
The recently conceived 19member Interstate Corrections
Compact is designed to
promote nationwide adoption
of penal policies and lead to
regionalized planning .
Both chambers reconvene 8
p.m. Monday in an effort to
wrap up pending major leg isla·
lion

before

spring

Griswold played a larger role than was known at the time.
buy no firm with sales over $100 million.
At the time, Lawrence O'Brien, .then Democratic national
In exchange, ITT got to keep the Hartford Fire Insurance Co.,
chairman, and consumer cru5ader Ralph Nader raised a howl
with its $·1 billion in annual premium income and large liquid
but got nowhere in questioning the relationship between the I'IT assets which the cash-6tarved ITT badly wanted. The Hartford
settlement and the pledge by !'IT's Sheraton Hotel subsidiary to
acquisition was the biggest conglomerate merger in history.
support a San Diego convention.
ITT is a Goliath among giomts. It Is the eighth largest U.S.·
Dlta Beard Memo
based company · and the world's largest international
The amount of ITI''s commitment never has been established.
conglomerate.
The "white paper" says it "apparently" was $200,000 with
Teo Major Industries
1100,000 already forwarded when the decision to hold the conAt tbe time of the settlement, ITI had nearly 400,000 employes
vent ion in San Diego was scrubbed. I'IT received a refund.
·
and operated in 67 countries. Its subsidiaries are leaders of 10
But Dita D. Beard in her famous memo said she understood th e major industries with sales approaching $10 billion and inpledge was $300,000 and had been raised to $400,000 as IT!'
sw-ance premiums adding $1.6 billion. Its biggest sectors are
pressed lor an antitrust settlement. She cailed the convention
insurance and telecommunications. (IT!' is to the rest ol the
pledge "our noble commitment ."
world what AT&amp;T is to the U.S. telephone industry.)
The Dita Beard memo, surfacing nearly six months before the
Cbairman Greene, 63, is a hard-driving executive whose 1972
Watergate break-in, gave the Democrats what they were looking
sala ry and bonuses ol $813,311 made him the nation's fifth highest
for - the whiff ol major scandal in the Nixon administra tion in an
paid businessman. His company's profits approach half a billion
election year.
a year.
Mrs. Beard the swear~ike-a&lt;&gt;ailor lobbyist lor IT!' adaed just
Under Geneen, IT!' has taken over some 250 companies. Its
the touch of mystery and drama to keep the story on page one. appetite makes IT!' what Business Week calls "the symbol of the
Especiaily when she vanished from sight shortly alter the acquisitive Machiavellian corporation ' whose sole interest is
memo was published in Jack Anderson's colwnn.
profit by any means."
The merl!o suggested !'IT's San Diego pledge was a payoll for
McLaren defended the out-&lt;&gt;f-&lt;:ourt IT!' settlement at the
the antitrust settlement.
recpened Kleindienst hearings. He called it "harsh," the biggest
"Our noble commitment," said Mrs. Beard , "has gone a l~ng divestitute m history. He said he approved it in part out of fear
way toward our negot1attons on the mergers eventually commg
that breaki ng up the mergers would strike a "near fatal" blow at
out as Hal wa~ts them. Certamly the Pres!~ent has told Mttchell/ ffl', and could have shaken up the stock market, the economy
to see that thmgs are worked out latriy.
and the U. S. balance of payments.
"Hal" w;ts Harold S. Geneen, chairman of ITT. "Please
Not long alter negotiating the settlement McLaren was nomidestroy this, huh' " said Mrs. Beard at the end ol her memo, nated by Nixon for a U.S . district judg.;hip in Cbicago. The
addressed to her boss, W1lliam R. Merrtam.
nomination sailed through the Senate in a single day and without
ITT gave r,jse to bumper stickers that read "Nixon's Had IT!'," hearings.
and the case educated the nation about paper shredders.
Kleindienst and Mitcheil testified under oath that Nix an had
When in the course ol a Senate hearin g Merriam explained why not interfered in the Justice Department's handling of the case.
ITT stuffed 1ts Washmgton hies mto a paper shredder. th1s exSaid Kleindienst: "In the discharge of my responsibilities as
chang e took place.:
.
the acting attorney general in these cases, I was not interfered
Sen. Sam J. Ervm: ."You could ?o~. destroy that (Dita Beard)
with by anybody at the White House. !was not importuned; I was
memo because you dtd not have II.
not pressured ; I was not directed. I did not have conferences with
Merriam: "No, that is right, but theremight have been a lot of respect to what I should or should not do."
others in there like that."
Said Mitchell: "The President has never talked to me about
Mitchell had excused himself !rom handling the IT!' matter any antitrust case that was before the department ...
because he had represented an interested party as a lawyer Specifically, with respect to IT!' or any other litigation, no. I
before becoming attorney general.
have never talked to the President about it."
So Kleindienst, his deputy, handled the case. When Mrs.
Last summer, during the Senate Watergate hearings, a memo
Beard 's memo surfaced, Kleindienst, who had won Senate written in the course of the Kleindienst hearings came to light. It
Judiciary Committee approval to succeed Mitchell without was from White House counsel Charles W. Colson to H. R.
lacing a single IT!' question, demanded that the hearings reopen Haldeman, then White House chief of staff, and it cautioned that
"to clear my name."
there existed memos which ''would lay this case on the
They lasted six weeks and tarnished his image. He was forced
President 's doorstep."
'
to acknowledge that he had met five times with an IT!' director
Wrote Colson :
despite his earlier assertion the settlement "was handled and
" .. . Certain ITT Iiles which were not shredded have been
negotiated exclusively " by Richard McLaren, the depariment's
turned over to the SEC (Securities and Exchange Cnmmission),
antitrust chief.
there was talk yesterday in the committee of subpoenaing these
ASupreme Court Ruling
from IT!' . These Iiles would undermine Griswold's testimony
McLaren had taken office in 1969 determined to slow the
that he made the decision not to take the appeal to the Supreme
growth of conglomerates, whose hugh acquisitions at the time
Court. Correspondence to (then Treasw-y Secretary John B.)
seemed worrisome.
Connally and (then Commerce Secretary Peter G.) Peterson
He saw in the ITT case a chance lor a Supreme Court ruling
credits the delay in Justice's filing of the appeal in the Grinnell
which either would broaden the definition of anticompetitive
case to direct intervention by Peterson and Connally, A memo
behavior, or invite Congress to broaden it.
sent to the Vice President (then Spiro T. Agnew) addressed,
In the settlement, IT!' agreed to sell off the Canteen Corp,, a
'Dear Ted,' from Ned Gerrity (public relations director for IT!')
food vending and catering service; Avis Rent-a-Car, Levitt &amp; tends to contradict John Mitchell's testimony because it outlines
Sons, Inc ., the homebuilding giant; the fire protection insw-ance
Mitcheil's agreement to talk to McLaren following MitcheU's
division of Grinnell Corp.; a plumbing, water sprinkler and
meeting with Geneen in August, 1970 ...
"The memo further states that (White House domestic adviser
firefighting equipment maker, and two small insurance comJohn D.) Ehrlichman assured Geneen that the President had
panies. In aU, IT!' agreed to shed $1 billion worth of assets and to

":a'"

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, Home Offlct: Bloomhlt:lon, lllinoi1 ! ,.,~ .......
Uh •
St•f• F•rm iJ there.
HIISURANCE COMPANY

·~~!!!s::~m=~=:;:::~=::::r..:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~~=::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::;:;::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:=:::::::::::::::::::::::~::::~"!:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::*~==::::::::::::i:i:.;:=..~:=:-":::::::&amp;:.:.~:::::»~::8~~;:;:;:;:::::::.

;instructed' the Justice Department ~ith respect to the bigneSs
policy. (It Is, of coutse, appropriate for the President to lnstnfcl
the Justice Department on policy, but in the context of U.
hearings, that revelation would lay this case on the Presidenr s
doorstep.)"
11TMemos
Cnison told reporters he was only playing "devil's advocate"
when he wrote that memo.
~.
Shortly before the 1972 election, the House commerce lpvestigations subcommittee heard about the ITT memos arid
requested them from the SEC. Rather than comply, SEc
Cbairman William J. Casey shipped 34 cartons of files to tile
Justice Department, where they were out of the House panel's
reach.
,
Casey swore before the subcommittee on Dec. 14, 1972, that the
Justice Department had asked for the files. Ralph E. Erickson,
then deputy attorney general, swore that Justice had not ask~d
for them.
•
Casey, now undersecretary ol state lor economic affairs, hfs
been nominated by Nixon to head tbe Export-Import B~. TJ;Ie
Senate Banking Committee has delayed acting on the nonunation
while Casey is investigated for possible perjury.
.
Last laD, a short time before Nixon fired Archibald Cox as
special Watergate prosecutor, Kleindienst went to Cox with )
new version of ITT events.
~
He said Ehtlichman caiied in 1971 with instructions not to
pursue the I1T appeals. Kleindienst said he replied he could ~t
drop the appeal because it had been recommended by McLar&lt;in
and approved by Griswold.
"
Threatened to Resign
"
A short time later, Kleindienst told Cnx, the telepbone rang
again arid Nixon came on the line. Mter calling him a wlgar
name, he said, Nixon said, "Don't you understand the Engliiih
language?" and ordered the appeal dropped.
·
Kleindienst said he threatened to resign ra !her than carry out
the order. Only then, he said, did Nixon back down .
,
Kleindienst's account to Cox came to public attention on OCt.
30. The White House responded with a denunciation of Cox filr
"leaking" Kleindienst's account and an explanation which for
the first time assigned an IT!' role to Nixon.
•
The White House statement said Nixon had directed Kle!p·
dienst not appeal because he felt the ITT a)llieal "represented·a
policy of the Justice Department with which he strongly
disagreed - namely, !bat bigness per se was unlawful.
"When the specific facts of the appeal were subsequently
explained in greater detail, the President withdrew his objection,
and tbe appeal was prosecuted in exactly the same fonn
,.
originaiiy proposed."
The Jan. 8 "White Paper" gives a somewhat different version.
It says Ehrllchman described the ITT appeal as an "attack on
the conglomerate" which violated Nixon 's antitrust policies. It
says Ebrllchman said he could not convince the Justice
Department to drop the appeal.
' 'The President expressed irritation with the failure of the Head
of the antitrust division, Mr. McLaren, to loUow his policy," the
paper says. It says Nixon telephoned Kleindienst and ordered
him not to appeal. Two days later, MitcheU "advised the
President that in his judgment it was inadvisable for the
President to order no appeal to the Supreme Court in the Grinnell
casen" lhe white paper says.
"The attorney general reasoned that, as a personal matter,
Mr. Erwin N. Griswold, solicitor general of the United States,
had prepared his brief for appeal and would resign were :!be
appeal not to proceed. The attorney general further feared
legislative repercussions if the matter were dropped entirely.:
"Based upon the attorney general's recommendations, the
President reversed his decision ... "
The new version assigns no role lo Kleindienst and introduces
Griswold as the ligw-e whose threat to resign caused Nixon to
retreat.
·
It makes no mention of those named in Colson's memo as
participants in the ITT matter -ConnaUy, Peterson, Agnew,
Ehrlichman, among otbers.

..!::.;:.'::~!..!m:l.7!.~~he d~.~':.!::.C:.~."'·~oo· Kissinger,, Brezhnev in
The amateurs now are operating out of
France, Mexico, South America, Southeast Asia, the United States- anywhere
there are drugs to be had or used, ac·
cording to Bartels.
"People rent planes, fly down to
Mexico, pick up a couple hundred pounds.
of mariJ'uana, an ounce or two of cocaine
and bring it back," he said. Some dealers
bave also been known to use aliens as
"mules" to bring drugs into the United
Slates.
Bartels said it is also getting barder to
guard every potential port of entry for
illegal drUgs with the growth ol the Latin
American in.flow. Such relatively new
entry points as Miami, Seattle and
Vancouver "are a serious problem ."
Asked about incidents where narcotics
agents have broken into the wrong house
or arrested the wrong person , Bartels

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VOL. XXV 'NO. 240

POMEROY·MIDOeEPORT, OHIO

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&lt;

eSOLIQ STATE IGNITION WITH NO MOVING IGNITION
PARTS OR REGULAR STANDARD IGNITION

The Almanac

By United Press International
Today is Sunday, March 24th,
the 83rd day or 1974 with 282 to
foUow. The moon is between
its new phase and first qtiarter.
The morning stars are
MercUry, Venus and Jupiter.
The evening stars are Mars
and Saturn .
Those born on this date are
under the sign of Aries. U.S
treasury secretary Andrew
Mellon was born March 24th,
1855.

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SAIGON - COMMUNIST FORCES BROKE off major
·fighting north of Saigon bul launched heavy new attacks in the
Mekong Delta, the Saigon command said today. Fow- stiff fights
were reported around Cang Long district capital, 50 miles south
of Saigon just below the Mekong River mouth, the command
~d.
.
Initial field reports said there were 25 Communists and 11
govenunenl soldiers killed, with another 31 South Vietnamese
missing in action. '~;here was no report of casualties in one of the
battles. All four fights were within fow- miles of Cang Long, a
small distriC\ town of about 5,0110,

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''We do NOT approve of .
marriage on a financial basis."
In 1965, white civil rights
worker Viola Liuzzo (lee-&lt;&gt;o'. ·
zoh) or Detroit was shot and
killed on a road near Seima;
Alabama . She was foiiowing a
protest march demanding equal
volin~ rights for ne!(roes.

ELBERFE·LDS ·.I N POMEROY

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WASillNGTON- LAWYERS FOR WATERGATE defendants H. R. Haldeman and Gordon Strachan plan to let pass a 5
p.m. deadline today for appealing to tbe Supreme Court a ruling
that a sealed Watergate grand jury report be turned over to a
· House inquiry into the possible impeachment of President Nixon.
The White House did not object to the report, which purportedly
dealt witb Nixon's handling of the Watergate cover-up, going to
tbe House Judiciary Committee. But the two attorneys had
argued that its contents would be leaked to Capitol Hiil reporters,
· · damaging (heir clients' chances for a fair trial.
JohnJ. Wilson, attorney for Haldeman, formerly Nixon's No.
1 aide, said Sunday he was inclined to lei the deadline pass
wltbout filing an appeal. The only thing that would change his
mind, Wilson said, would be a decision by John Bray, Strachan's
attorney, to appeal to the SUpreme Court. Later Sunday, Bray
said he would inform the court early today that he would not
contest tbe ruiiog by the U. S. arcuil Court of Appeals lor the
District of Columbia.

Elderly couple hurt in wreck
Two personlt were taken to
Holzer Medical Center by the
·Pomeroy ER squad. Sunday
following a single car ~ccident
Sunday on County Road 403,
Minersville hiD, · the Meigs
Dept.
County Sheriff's
reported.
Clell B. Wood, 74, Minersville, Rt. 1, was traveling south
on county road 403 when he

Ptl. Evans, of Lower River

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IN;;,~:·: in Brief~

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Lawn Boy a.ccessories in stock. New Blades . Lawn Boy Engine Oil
· Lawn Boy Spark Plugs · Grass Catcher assemblies.
Lawn Boy Mowers on sa - Wa.r.ehouse Mechanic Sfreet.

MISS INGRID HAWLEY, center, received the annual
scholarship award of the Ladies Auxiliary of Drew Webster
Post 39, American Legion, from ·Mrs, Isabelle Couch, right,
chairman, as Mrs. Grace Pratt, auxiliary president, looks
on . A senior al Meigs High School, Miss Hawley is the
daughter of Mrs. Diane Hawley, Wolfe Drive, Pomeroy and
the late Clarence Hawley. She is a Candystriper, a member
of the Meigs County 4-H Advisory Committee, the Meigs
Junior Fair Board, the Middleport 4-H Munchers Club and
works as an office as5istant at Meigs High School. She Is coeditor of the annual, a member of the band, a member of the
National Honor Society, serving as treasurer. She attended
Buckeye Girls State as a junior and was in both the junior and
senior plays. Miss Hawley has been accepted at Capital
University.

Talmadge warns
farmers of '74

looked at an object on the seat,
intending to move it. However,
the road made a slight turn to
, the left at that point in time,
· and Wood did not, his car
rolling over an embankment
sideways.
Wood and his wife had visible
but no apparently serio•s injuries. No citation was Issued.

port emba rgoes will be
tremendous. I also know that if
prices farmers receive drop as
low as the target prices in the
farm bill enacted last year, it
will be disas trous."

He also warned that the
energy crisis would not
disappear with the lifting of the·
oil embargo and it had
"created strong concern for
living may increase another 15 negotiating international rules
to 20 pet. this year. If farmers governing the limitation ol
produce a bumper crop, he exports of basic commodities.
said, prices might he below
''If we use embargoes, other
cost or the export demand nations will too. Even if we
~ould cause a shortage at home
don't some countries will
which would increase costs to certainly be takin g a new look
the housewife.
at the value ol the raw
"Consumers are not likely to materials which they sell us.
tolerate another 20 pet. in- Strong international proteccrease in food prices this tionism will certainly lead to
year," Talmadge said. "If that more shortages here, and
happens the pressure for ex- galloping inflation worldwide."

Ford will quit by 1977
unless party deadlocked
NEW YORK (UP!) - Vice
President Gerald R. Ford has
promised his wife to quit public
life no later than 1977, ruling
out a run for lhe Republican
presidential nomination, according to an interview in
People magazine.
Bul he left open one way he
could be the GOP 's '1976
flagbearer-il the nominating
convention is hopelessly deadlocked.
Ford said in the interview
that
his
self-imposed
retirement deadline stemmed
from a bad neck nerve problem
'his wife had been suffering
since 1964, causing numbness
in her arm. ·
"It was tension created by
problems of me being away so
much and her having to nm the
family," Ford sa id.

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Road, Gallipolis, is in Holzer
Medical Cent er, recoveri ng
from concussion. He wa s
reported in good condition .
Samuel P. Copely, 21, Bid·
well, driver or the truck, was
jailed, charged with driving
while intoxicated and for
eluding a police officer. He was
treated lor minor injuries and
released at Holzer Medical
Center before being confin ed.

Eagle band
rated 'I'
at Minford
The Eastern High School
Band directed by Charles Wills
received a I rating at the
district band and choru s
contest Saturday at Mintord .
The I rating means , "an
outstanding performance with
very few technical errors and
exemplifying a truly musical
expression.
One judge stated, "Good tone
quality, good intonation and
overall good interprel)ltion,
with a highly developed facility
and good precision justifies
this rating .
The contest was divided into
two areas, concert and sight
reading. In the concert portion

there were three judges. The
band performed three numbers . The first was a warmup

mar ch. For this, Eastern
played " The Klaxon " by
Henry Fillmore.
The second number was the
required selection which had to
he played by all groups in that
class. This was "Ariella lor
Winds," by Frank Erickson .
The third number had to be
selection !rom ~ listing of
several options. Eastern chose
" Introduction and Caprice,"

by Charles Carter.
In the sight reading portion
there was one judge. The band
is given a number it has never

seen helore and the director is
Because the ailment persis· then given two minutes to
ted, Ford said, the couple · study the selection and two
consulted a psychiatrist who minutes to discuss it with his
told them the condition could band, then the number must be
performed.
not be eased.
The Fords agreed last year
that his race for another term
TWO TO HOSPITAL
in the House of RepresenRACINE - The Racine E·R
tatives would enable him to · squad was called Sunday at
achieve his goals or 28 years in 6:30 p. m. lor fow--year-&lt;&gt;id
Congress and retire in 1977, he , Brenda Lee Taylor, Racine,
said.
' Rt. 2, a medical patient, who
"She said okay and the kids was taken to Veterans
said okay.lflhadbeen there 28 Memorial Hospital. At 6:51 a.
years, I'd have been 63- which m. today the squad transported
I tbought would be young · Clarence Wickline, 63, Racine,
enough so sbe and I could just a medical patient, to Veterans
go off and really enjoy our· Memorial Hospital.
selves for 10 years or more .. Sle
wouldn't have any more neck
LODGE TO MEET
pains and arm pains," Ford
The Twin City Shrinettes will
was quoted as saying. "I made meetThw-sdayat 7:30p.m. at
a real firm commitment not the home of Marie Hawkins,
(Continued on page 7)
Middleport.

•
•

The Gallipolis local ollicc o[
th e Ohio Bureau ol Employment Services announced
tod ay it is accep tin g ap plications for mine mechanic ·
machinery tra ining to start in .
mid April.
The 30-week training course
will in clude instruction in
maintenance and repair of

underground

coal

mining

machinery as well as the
principals
of
repair in g
mechanical 1 elec tri ca l and

hydra ulic machinery.
The program is coordinated
by the Ohio Bureau of Em·
ployment Services and the
Meigs Count y Board ol

en tine

A high speed chase on the
Route 35 bypass by two MeigsGallia
State
Hi ghway
Patrolmen ol a speeding driver
ended ea rly today when the
pickup truck being chased
rammed the patrol car of Ptl .
Larry M. Evans, 23.

/

/

e19 OR 21 INCH CUT SIZES

Also on this day in history :
In 1902, one of the earliest
" Advice to the Lovelorn"
columns received this question:
"Can two people •live as
comfortably as one on 12

1

'

1

Mine mechanics course offered in mid-April

MONDAY. MA~CH 25, lY/4

~

eBUY YOUR NEW LAWN BOY MOWER WITH OR WITHOUT
GRASS CATCHER

Stop in at Elberfelds Mechanic Street
Warehouse. See the many models of Lawn Boy.
Sele.ct t~e model and size best for your grass
cuttmg 10b.

year, the target date set by
Nixon Brezhnev replied :
1 take an optimistic view on
(Continued on page 7)

Education. It is fed erally
funded by the Manpower
Development and Training
Act.
In terested applicants should
contact the Gailipolis office at
45 Olive St. or telephone 446·
1683 to
discuss
their
qualifications for the training .

A cowbird is the smallest
type or blackbird.

PHONE 992·21 56

TEN CENTS

Officer hurt
in car chase
~"·'

LAWN MOWERS

ad-

where the Soviet Politburo
meets every Thursday.
Asked about the prospects
lor a SALT agreement this

·~~--------------~~=-------------

SYRIAN GUNNERS POUNDED ISRAEU POSITIONS in
the Golan Heights for the 13th consecutive day Sunday. Egyptian
diplomatic sources said tbere must be disengagement in the
WASHINGTON (lJPI) Heights before there can be further withdrawals in Siani. They
Sen.
Herman Talmadge, !).
said Egypt believed that the current Middle East peace efforts or
Ga.
,
warned
today that farSecretary of State Henry A. Kissinger could result in a Syrian .
mers
face
a
very uncertain
Israeli accord by late April or early May, setting the stage for the
lutw-e in 1974 with a number of
Sinai talks and a second Israeli troop pullback there.
critical
issues which cannot be
A Syrian communique said Arab gunners scored direct hits
solved
by
congressional action
on an Israeli observation post at Tel. AI Faras in the southern
alone
likely
to appear.
sector of the Golan Heights Sunday, destroyed an engineering
The chairman of the Senate
unit and killed or wounded "a number" of Israeli troops. An
Agriculture
Committee told the
Israeli communique said there were no casualties in the .;ro.
·
American
Agricultural-Editors
minute barrage which began at midday and that Israeli gunners
Association that the cost of
did not return the fire.

eCHOOSE EITHER A LAWN-BOY PUSH MOWER OR THE
POPULAR SELF PROPEUED MODELS

dR .
ruBoth
es an ·ussla.
men were m an ex· ba t ·
d h
panslve, · n ermg moo w en
they entered the Kremlin room

.

Devoted To The lntere~t. Of The Meigs-MaMJn Area

•

\

u 'ted Stat

fi0 r N.lXO n

Now You Know

at y

Partly cloudy tonight and
Tuesday, chance of a lew
periods of light snow north.
Lows tonight in the 30s. Higbs
Tuesday generally 35 to 40.

HEADQUARTERS FOR

journment.

~

Weather

LONDON- PRINCESS ANNE MIGHT BE.tbe first member
of the immediate royal family to testify in cow-l In a criminal
casein this century if the man who allegedly attempted to kidnap
her goes on trial, legal sources said today. They said the
testimony of the daughter of Queen Elizabeth could he vital both
to the prosecution and to the defense - to the prosJCutlon as the
intended victim who saw it all bappen, to the defense in support
of a possible plea to a lesser charge than attempted mw-der.
Only Queen Elizabeth among Britons cannot be summoned
In a court case. While this excemption thecretically does not
apply to royalty below the sovereign, in practice King Edward
VII, as Prince of Wales, was tbe last member of the immediate
blood royal actually to take the stand in court proceedings - a
divorce case in 1870 and a notorious baccarat gambling scandal
thereafter.

ON SALE
AT THE WAREHOUSE
ON MECHANIC STREET

Wtl rm up t alk s

such unaulhorized ''frolics.''
·~
"If you decide to break the law and go
out and raid hO)TleS without a warrant or w
.
without any probable cau"'l," Bartels has ~l
warned l)is agents, "we're going to come Sl
down hard. II you pull yow- gun on j MOS COW
(UP!)
_
th
·
ed
·
,
·
.,
unau orLz occa.stons, you ,r. ~ gorng to :-.!, American Secretary of State
••et 30 days of! wtth t
~
•
.
ou pay·
~; Henry A. Kissinger and Soviet
He sa 1d, .h.owever, drug law en- -~ Communist party Secretary
1orcemen t IS "th e t oug hest, most~
~
. ·. Leonid 1. Brezhenv opened
demandmg 1orm of 1awe nforcell'\en t th a, t ;;:&lt;
:&lt;e talks today to pave the way for
ex1sts ...everybody carnes a gun. Its '!i a Russian visit by President
· ::;l
t.. Nixon. Brezhenv optimistically
part .o1 the counter-&lt;:u 1ture or narcoltcs
traff
t
h
t
1
"
.,
. 1c o s oo peep e.
:i~ predicted agreement this year
Bartels also credite,,d a crackdown. on;:;,.:,· on . a new Strategic Arms
heroin
add Icts a.~d ? cha ~ge ~ r a tt 1tude ?,: Umitation (SALT) agreement.
.
m young people . with culling m half the~ That was expected to be the
number of herom addicts m the Uruted ~ main issue in the three days of
States smce 1970.
::t talks to try to sort out difHe said drug arrests nationwide rose j~ ferences on arms, trade and
!rom 15,5CO in 1972 to 24,900 tast year . . . the Middle East that have
fil:lll\&lt;ll111\&lt;il1WO!Siii'IS'll~~~ll\&lt;ll1Wi§i~:;:::;:;.-:::=::-.: =:!: v. ~:.:::!!:..-:::::::::::::.-:::::x::::::*::::~-::: : :o:;:;:;:;:-.;: : : :::::: : : : : : : : :::::::::::::::: : : : : : ::::::8:::8;:;~"!~:~::~:&gt;:~;:?,&gt;_:-:;:~:=-&amp;..~"!":~:-:;.~ &lt;.."OOled the detente between the
connection'' is giving :way to the ''Latin
American connection" in the battle
against drug-trafficking.
The head of the federal drug enforcernent department says "everybody
and his uncle" Is getting in the drug
business as hardcore professionals
Ianguish behind bars.
John -F. Bartels Jr., administrator of
drug enforcement
for the Justice .
.
Department,
said in an interview in U.S.
N
&amp;
ews World Report the back of the
"French connection" has been broken.
' 'Those five French.COrsican fwnilies ·
which for years brought in between 70
and 80 per cent ol the heroin into this
country aren't operating," said Bartels.
"But now any guy with $2,000 can walk
across the Rio Grande or go into Tijuana,
hang around
a bar and find something to
.
bu
d ll
y an se . Everybody and his uncle IS

By. United Pressllttemellonal

dollars a week?" The answer:

Carroll(. Snowden

STATE FARM

insurance bill Thursday .
Aronoff had wanted the committee to continue hearing testimony on various threshold
packages and how premium
rates would be affected.

I .

According to post co mmander Lt. E. W. Wiggleswprth, Ptl . Evans attempted to
pull over the truck operated by
Copley. Copley did not stop, but
proceeded at a high rate of
speed on the Rt. 35 bypass. Pll.
Evans called for assistance
and wa s joined by Sgt. David
Proffitt at the junction ol Rt. 3!i
and Rt. 160.
With both in pursuit, sirens
and blinkers activated, the
truck continued at a speed
es timated at 70 mph, the officers said.
Pti. Evans was able to
ge t in front or the truck, hoping
to Ioree him to stop.
Copley, instead of stopping,
proceeded to go faster . Ptl.
Evans attempted to turn left
into a driveway. At that point,
Copley's truck went left ol
ce nter, striking the patrol
cruiser in the rear .

MRS. MARY J. ROUSH, AMe St., Pomeroy, may be on
the way to becoming a millionaire. Mrs. Rousb received
word Satw-day that sbe has won $500 in the Massachusetts
State L:&gt;ttery and as such a winner will now qualify for the
million dollar drawing. Tl1e million dollar drawing includes
not only the first prize of a cool million, but a second prize of
$1,000,000 and eight $10,000 awards. Holding her $500 check,
Mrs. Roush reported that her name was selected as a winner
on March 15, and that her current lottery ticket expired
March 17.

Cold moving east
By United Press International Central and Northern Dlinols.
A cold wave tbat tumbled
It all goes to prove it's not
spring temperatures In the nice to fool Mother Nature.
Midwest moved east to the
Talk of an early spring
Atlantic Cnast today,
following a mild winter ended
Freezing weather was during the weekend.
reported from Maine to as far
Mother Natw-e struck backsouth as the Southern Ap- dropping the temperatw-e to 33
palachians, the Tennessee below zero in Roseau, Minn.,
Vailey and southern Arkansas. setting a cold mark for late
Snows were forecast for nor- March in Chicago, icing high··
thern Minnesota through the ways in Texas, Missouri,
upper Great Lakes and for lliinois and Indiana, and piling
up as much as seven inches of
snow from central Missouri
through Ohio, western Pennsylvania, upper New York
state and New F;ngland.
Tlie Chicago reading ol 5
above broke a liJO.year record
and came Um same month that
By United Press International the !hemometer climbed to 80
Twelve persons died in lor a pre-6Pring warm weather
traffic accidents on the state's mark on March 3.
highways during the weekend,
including two youtbs killed
while riding their bicycles
EXTENDED OU'ILOOK
Saturday, the sta te highway
Fair Wednesday and a
patrol reported today.
chance of showers Thursday
Brent Taylor, 9, Hamden, and Friday with a warming
was killed when he was struck trend. Lows Wednesday and
by a Highway Patrol cruiser Thursday In the 20s and In
while riding his bicycle on Ohio the 30s Friday. Highs In lhe
J' near his home and David 30s and low 40. Wednesday
Duffy, 15, died alter being
warming lo the 50s and low
struck by a hit-&lt;~kip driver on
60s by Friday.
Ohio 159 while riding his ~'&lt;'JIPl&lt;.mB~~IIm~lltllllllltlllll. rral
bicycle , the patrol said.
The
Highway
Patrol ·
monitors traffk fatalities in
the state durmg weekeqds
from 6 p. m. Friday until
The first day of speakers
midnight Sunday.

Brent Taylor of

Hamden dies

The cold wave set record
lows in dozens ol midwest
communities and threatened
fruit trees in Indiana and
llllnois, where the earlier mild
temperatw-es had started trees
to bud. Horticulturist J . Bon
Harline of Anna , Ill., said the
freeze may have wiped out the
entire comm~cial peach crop
in the Midwest.
An ice storm left hazardous
roads over a broad area of
north, west and central Texas.
At least four highway deatbs
were attributed to storm·
related accidents. Two of the
victims, Melvin L. and Linda
Moyers died when their trailer
truck hit ice at the Braws
River Bridge, skidded into
another truck and exploded.
St. Louis and Cleveland,
Ohio, had seven.Jnch snowfalls.
A 12-&lt;:ar pilOHJp was reported
on the icy South Expressway in
Akr onl Oh'10.
At least nine Iowa communilies reported low record ternperalw-es. 11 was 5 below in
Waterloo, 3 below in Cedar
Rapids and one above in Des
Moines.
In Ohio, new lows included
one degree at Toledo, 4 at
Dayton, 8 at Mansfield and 11
at Cincinnati.

Tuesday speakers listed
Dr. Milton Mason, optometry,
Middleport and Gallipolis;
trades will be held Tuesday at Margaret Hubble, practical
Meigs High School where the nursing, Hocking Technical
sixth
annual
students ' College; Kim Bonewit, hotelvocational conference is un- restaurant management,
derway.
Hocking Technical Coiiege;
Speakers will be Michael David Wright, coal mining,
Kish, admissions department Southern Ohio Coal Co.; Mrs .
of Otterbein College ; Sgt . Dorothy Jenkins, telephone
Jerry Stovall, recruiter, U. S. work, General Telephone Co. ol
Marines; Mrs. Merle Johnson, Ohio; Floyd Hopewell, ad·
owner and operator of Jonnie's missions department, ' Art
Beauty
Salon;
Roger Iitstitute of Pittsburgh ; Madge
Quis.e nberry ,· engineering Hauldren, owner, day care
department, Ohio University ; center, Sun Valley Nursing
Edison
Baker, interior School , Gaiiipolis; Tim
decorating, Baker Fw-niture Shepser, accounting , computer
Co.; Carl Denison, engineer· programming, drafting, police,
chemist, Rutland; John Zerkle, Mtiskingum •Technical College.
trucking, Zerkle Trucking Co.;
from various professions and

CARWASHSET
The senior class at Eastern
High School will sponsor a car
washSatw-day from 9a. m, to 7
p. m. at Bailey's Ashland in
Tuppers Plains.

WILL MEET
Preceptor Beta Beta Chapter
or Beta Sigma Phi Sorority will
meet Thursday at 7:45p.m. at
the home of Mrs . Pearl Welker.
Jean Werry will hi. co-hostess.
Members are to bring a
stockh olders list.
I

y
I

�I
3- The Dmly_Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0, March 25,1974

r;::y:: "·-"·"-'"'"-lGary Nolan may make big comeback

, 2- The Da1lv Sent mel, Middlcpori-Purncroy, 0. March 25. 1974

Sen. Baker asks conciliation
WASHINGTON 1UP! I - De
clanng the time for concthallon ts at hand, Vtce Chatrman
Howard Baker of the Senate
Wate rga te Cornnuttee urged
Sunday that House mvestlgators an d the While House both
'g1ve a httle on demands for
42 pres1 den t~a l tapes

The &lt;:ommattee 1nqmrmg mto
req uests the President makes possible grounds for !mpeachsuch as the presence of counsel mg N1xon
as considering
m the pnnc1pal dehbcrahons sendm g a subpoena to the
and mvcsttgat10ns of the Wh1te House 1f Noton does not
commattee ''
surrender them volun tanly and
Law,ers for former prestden- Nixon has sa1d he Will not
hal a1de H R Haldeman and because many of them are not
Gordon Strachan, both Water relevant to the mvest1gataon
'If there IS an} reasona ble gate defendants sa1d Sunday
cla1m that those tapes or any they d1d not plan to appeal to
other documents are revelan t, I the Supreme Court today an
thmk the President ought to appeals court rulmg that the
g1ve them " sa1d Baker ' That House Judtctary Commtttee
would better serve the 1nstllu must receave a sealed gra nd
lion of the pres1denc) and JUf) report puroortedl) dealing
ce rta mly the country '
"1th N1xon s handling of the
However, the Tennessee Wa tergate cover-up
Republican smd the House
Both men had unhl 5 p m
Jud1c1ary Committee ought to today to ma ke thet r dectswns
honor "ha tever reasonable

Sunday

' The tune for concthatum IS
at ha nd,' sa 1d Baker m an
mterv1ew on CBS Face the
Na hon He sa id there wa s a
"compelling responsibility on

~

the part of the House and the
President to g1ve a lltttle
otherwise he'll have a tembly,
tembly unpleasant expenence
regardless of the outcome "

l
I I

Shortages will
cramp summer

'

'

I
\. I

'

.~J,. '

' '

,,,

i

drivers

WASHINGTO N iUPli - tr1ps
Amencans should have more Sunday was the f1rst Sunday
gasoline for summer vacat1on smce January that gas statwns
dnvmg but they w11I have to were perrmtted to remam open
conserve fu el by observmg the and S1mon said th1s _.,oupled
55 mph speed llm1t and w1th the endmg of the Arab's
curtail use of the1r atr 01! embargo - rmght lull some
Americans mto mmlffilZmg the
By Umted Press International conditioners
In presenhng th1s prospect depth of the energy shortage
Sunday drivers eme rged
Sunday,
energy Chief Wilham
The Umted States, Slffion
from energy criSIS-Imposed
E
S1mon
also
predicted
msa1d,
had demonstrated 1t could
wmter hibernahon, lured by
spring
wea ther
and creased gasoline supplies would conserve fu el, and had avo1ded
availability of gasolme for the brmg h1gher pnces because of the school closmgs, mdustrial
HONG KONG I UPI )
the resumphons of Imports of shutdowns and the economtc
ously were connected with the f1rst tlffie m months
Chmese Premier Chou En-la1 , Kissmger VISit
expens1
ve Arab1an 01! He sa1d slwnp that some had predicted
In Flord1a the cars were
m a speech that comc1ded w1th
The "orld situatiOn Chou stacked up for blocks at a they would go as h1gh as 75 last fall
the VISit to Moscow b) US sa1d , IS characlemed
ce nts per gallon m the
by
"We have a lot of fat, a lot of
Secretary of State Henry urm ersal grea t disorder' and M1arru tourist atttraction Re- northeast
waste
, m our conswnpt10n m
Kissmger said Sunday mght th1s IS 'unfa vorable to the two sorts m V11"gm1a and Maryland
Interviewed on ABC's Issues thiS country and w1th the
there can be no real deten te superpowers which are contend- reported rooms were fillmg up and Answers S1mon said marvelous cooperalior. of the
between the Umted States and Ing With each other m a vam after a nose-d1ve m January motonst.s must carry on w1th Amer1can people and con110rvaand February Traffic on highthe Sov1et Umon
attempt to se1ze world hegemo- ways from Oregon to New York conservahon measures such as twn efforts we showed that we
"The two superpowers at ny
was heavier Sunday than 11 had slower dr1vmg, less use of can hck thiS thmg and we d1d
limes talk about detente, ' he
'Stra tegically, Europe 1s the been smce a voluntary ban on automobile air cond1lion ers, hck 1t With mmlffial econom1c
sa1d, "But m actuality they are focus of their contentwn," he
and not makmg unnecessary unpact," S1mon sa1d
engaged man mtense nvalry " added Bu t ' everywhere they Sunday gasolme sales was
Th1s n valry IS rooted 1n a are fiercely contendmg w1th called for by President NIXOn
struggle " to se1ze world each other from the Mediter- last November The ban
By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
m
became
mandatory
hegemony," he added
DEAR DR LAMB - For
ranean to the Arab world the
~
Chou's remarks were made m M1ddle East, the lndmn January
approxunately fiVe years my
The Pres1dent lifted the ban ~
a speech debvered at a Ocean "
wife has had periods where her
SIX
days
ago
,
saymg
the
end
of
,
t
.
welcome banquet he gave m Chou 's speech was marked by
heart pounda hard or flutters ,
Pekmg's Great Hall of the tw o unusual features, accordmg the Arab oil boycott and m- ..
she feels famt and her fmgers
People for President Julius K to analysts here It was more creased supplies of gasoline "
tmgle I cannot feel any pulse
had
made
II
possible
for
RIVERSIDE,
Calif
(UP!)N1xon
JOined
Mamott
early
Nyerere of Tanzama Nyerere m1hlant than usual , dwelling
at her wriSt durmg these
arr1ved m Peking Sunday more on the theme of vwlent stations to reopen Hundreds The plaque commemoratmg m 1970 as v1ce president for periods. These actiOns used to
mormng on his third visi t to revolutwnary struggle It also did although a maJority re- President N1xon 's mamage at community and mdustry rela- be spaced months apart, but
mamed closed m most areas
the MISSIOn Inn has appa1-ently lions based m Newport Beach, lately they are a lot closer
Chma
made no refer ence to the mass
In C'oMect~eut one couple been stolen
Cahf He has been linked to together, and the periods last
Chou devoted a considerable pohllcal campaign now under
decided
on
the
spur
of
the
Hotel
manager
Sandra
Hartmmmg
cla1ms deals mvolvmg longer (10 mmutes ) She has
portwn of his remarks to way m Chma, centermg around
moment
to
drive
to
Chicago
ness
reported
to
pollee
Sunday
billionaire Howard Hughes The seen a doctor of mternal
Sov1et-Arnencan relations He cnt1c1sm of the anc1ent sage
With
their
children
for
a
VISit
that
the
plaque
had
been
pr1ed
Senate
Watergate Comrmttee 1s med1cme who gave her an
d1d not menl!on e1ther country ConfuciUS and the late Defense
With
grandparents
and
m
loose
from
1ts
place
m
the
mn
's
mvest1gatmg
the posslblhly that electrocardiogram test tw1ce
specifically by name nor d1d he M1mster Lm Pwo He has
Oregon
one
driver
sa1d
his
courtyard,
some
lime
smce
fonner Hughes associates pa1d Each tlffie he has •··d "there IS
refer to Kissmger's current menlioned the campaign m
VISit to Russ1a. But diplomatic rece nt speeches for vasJ tmg wmdsh1eld was cleaned and oil March 11 The President, then "substantial" swns to Donald nothmg wrong, you are a
and tll"es were checked at the a young lawyer, was roamed m for h1s help m mmmg claim woman and lots of people have
analysts spec1ahzmg m Chmese leaders
the courtyard of the h1stonc mn ventures m the western Umted these spells all the tune" This
service
stahon he VISited
affa1rs sa1d h1s remarks obv1There was addihonal good on June, 21, 1940, to Thelma States and the Domm1can al1bl does not help you at all
news, and a word of cautiOn, Catherme Ryan , a sc hoolteach- Republic
As I understand 11, an
from William E Slffion, the er known to her friends as
electrocardiogram test shows
natwn 's energy ch1ef
"Pat '
CHICAGO (UPI) - News- heart damage or change We
S1mon predicted gasoline
caster Walter Cronkite has would like to remedy this
supplies should mcrease suffiBEVERLY HILlS, Calif accused the NIXOn admlnlstra- problem before the damage IS
Ciently for normal summer (UP! ) - Actress and smger lion of an attempt to undennme
travel but drivers should plan Sh1rley Jones, of the televisiOn the press, despite 1ts constitu- done
She IS 40, not overweight,
theU" trips, observe 55 ffille per senes ~' The Partrtdge Fam1ly," honal guarantees of freedom
does not drink or smoke Would
hour speed llffi1ls and shut off was presented the Genu Award
Cronkite sa1d Sunday the you have any comments on this
thetr
car atr conditiOners Sunday by the Society of Constituhon g1ves the press a
CHARLESTON, W Va mm ers w1th black lung
1
Prices for gasolme will also Arnen can Women m Radw and "consl!tutwnal duty to keep situation
(UP!) - Coal mmers whose disease
DEAR READER - From
health and safety cause he
One of the leaders m the will mcrease, he added
Televtston
all branches of government your story, I preswne your
"Usmg OW' heads, we are
champwned for the last e1ght campaign for compensation for
w1fe started havmg th1s
under crthcal scrutmy "
years of hiS life turned out black lung Vlctlffis was Arnold gomg to able to have a normal
WASHINGTON I UP!) - F
Yet, Cronkite sa1d m appar- problem when she was about
about 250 strong m freezmg Miller of nearby Ohley, who swruner," Sunon satd m a Donald NIXon, the President's ent reference to the Washmgton 35 The story suggests two
weather Sunday to pay tribute gamed enough stature m that teleVIsion mterv1ew
brother, IS res1gmng from the Post, " A newspaper wh1ch possible causes. Your wife may
In the Middle AtlantiC states, Marnott hotel cham because of attempts to expose the scheme be havmg an UTegular~ty of the
to Dr. I E Buff
role to become president of the
The memorial service had Uruted Mine Workers uruon where the gasolme shortage 1ll health, the firm announced of a clique to perpetuate 1tself heart These may occur m
almost became a crts1s m He w1ll take early retirement
been announced by the Physi- last year
m power by subverting out
Cians Committee for Mme
M1ller broke mto tears February, a Umted Press Apr~ll5
nat10nal electwns IS accused by
Health and Safety on the steps durmg h1s recital of Buff's International survey showed
A Marrwtt spokesman said m the White House of 'shabby
of the Capitol, but 1t was moved accomplishments, and srud the that desp1te the liftmg of the add1hon to Nixon's health JOurnabsm,"character assassmdoors because of the 3(). doctor was partly responsible ban few servtce stations problems, the corporatiOn had matiDn' and 'mnuendo' "
degree temperatures.
"for my bemg where I am opened Sunday
embarked on an auslenty The CBS newsman sa1d
The crowd was estunated at today "
program caused by the energy televtsiOn news orgamzatlons'
about 300 but a nwnber were
Others wbo spoke mcluded
cns1s Because of that combma- reports of ' events as they see
not coal mmers
Dr Hawey Wells, Prmceton,
llon , N1xon and the firm them are denounced by the MASSU.LON, Ohio (UP!) They heard Rep Ken Hech- who worked With Buff on the
decided JOmtly N1xon would President of the Umted States A strike by c1ty workersler, D-W Va , praiSe Buff as "a phys1c1ans' committee, and
take early retirement and w1ll as outrageous ," v1c1ous,' and mostly from the samtat1on and
fighter wbo taught coal mmers former State Sen. Paul
represent the company as a distorted '
'
streets departmenls not to be m1timidated-to stand Kaufman of Charleston
consultant through Jan 31,
"Reporters with mformation contmued today followmg
up for the rights they deserve
Buff died unexpectedly of a
1975
from ms1de the government are rejecllon of a c1ty wage offer
And he brought digruty, free- heart attack earlier this month
mvestigated by the Federal The strike, wh1ch began Fridom and justice to coal mmers at age 65, and was burted the
Bureau of Invest1galion Theil" day, took on more meanmg to
Blld thell" widows."
next day In accord with Jewish
phones are tapped or !hell" Massillon residents SWJday as
"Every coal miner lives a custom Sunday's memorial
COLUMBUS (UP!)
notes are subpoenaed or their there were no workers to rebetter life and stands taller be- was plaMed to g1ve mmers, Events over the next few days
tax
returns get extraordinary move the 5¥. mches of snow
cause Dr Buff walked the who had too little nolice to get could detenrune if farmers Wlll
attention "
that fell and clogged c1ty
earth," Hechler sa1d of the to his funeral, an opportumty to be urged to Withhold thell"
sleets
man who was a ptoneer m the pay their respects
produce from the market and
The some 250 workers, memdnve for compensalion for
make no further plans for
bers of the American FederaproductiOn, according to a
tion
of State, County and MuruNational Farmers
clpal
Employes Umon Local
Orgaruzation (NFO) official
996, rejected W1 offer from the
Tom Conrad, New Holland,
Despite President Richard
City of a 7 per cent across-tileOhio, satd here over the week- M N1xon's aMouncement last
board wage hike.
end that NFO directors at a week that the energy shortage
IAlcal president Jack Zammeetmg last week m Iowa, was easmg and gasolme serbeatty
termed the offer
called for the munediate reslgVICe slahons no longer had to
''ridiculous, " and sa1d the
nalion or unpeaclunent of Preclose Sundays, indications
Wlion
wanted 50-rents-an-hour
Sident NIXOn, wbo has irked
were
that
90 per cent or more of
hikes
in
each year of a threefanners by saymg they never
the pumps m Ohio were idle
year
pact
The c1ty has srud 1ts
had 1t so 2ood
1
Sunday
offer was final.
Conrad sa1d the dU"ectors felt
Only two stations were open
The same offer was made to
NIXon 's statement "shakes the m one sectwn of Cmcmnatl,
clerical
workers and police and
confidence of farmers at a tune satd Mike Kunnen, Cincmnati
Amenca's mland water- firemen, but those groups had
when they are malung plans
Reta1l Gasoline Dealers ways earned some 315 b1lhon oot voted on the package
for production "
ton·m1les of fre1ght durmg
AssoCiation preSident
Conrad accused NIXOn of try1971,
World Almanac
The only four stat1ons open m notes The
Inland waterway HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
mg to p1t the conswner against
the Cleveland area closed Sun- freight ton-mileage for 1971
the fanner
(,Births)
day afternoon, according to the was MisSISSippi R1ver sys·
"Fanners Will refuse to pro- Cleveland Automobile Club,
Fnday
Mr and Mrs
tem, mcludmg tnbutar1es,
duce another crop this year if and m northwestern Ohio spot 142
4 billion, GrealLakes sys- Thomas Snyder, Oak Hill, son
they keep forcmg pnces checks showed most statwns tem and Alaskan waterways,
Saturday - Mr and Mrs
down," Conrad sa1d
105 billion, Gulf coast water- James Chandler, Jackson, son,
closed and out of gas
ways, 30 5 b1llion, Atlantic
A 30-&lt;rtahon newspaper sur- coast waterways, 28.6 billion, Mr and Mrs James Kelly,
NEARLY NORMAL
vey m central Ohio found only and Pac1f1c coast waterways, Gallipolis, son. Mr and Mrs.
CHILUCOTHE, Oh10 (UP!) two statiOn proprietors planned 8 5 b1llion ton-miles
Terry Proffitt, Portland, Oh1o,
- OperatiOns at the Chillicothe to be open for busmess
son,
and Mr and Mrs William
Copyrlaht IC It74
Correclional lnslitute were
Woodard,
Jackson, son
"If we open on Sunday," said
!NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN I
reported normal Sunday one stahon manager m central
following settlement over the OhiO, "we wouldn 't have
It Was Accidental
weekend of a bnef walkout by enough gas to open at all
BILLIE JEAN WINS
Bermuda, Bntam's oldest
some guards The guards durmg the weekdays."
@ 1974 by NEA. Inc
AKRON,
Oh1o (UP!) -The
r e m a 1 n 1 n g colony was
walked
out
Thursday,
JUSt
not founded by accident When Akron Tenms Open smgles
"There's
proteslin g a policy of enough gas,'' another manager
the sa1hng vessel Sea Ven champiOnship was won here by
Supermtendent Frank Gray of sa1d
'Take that you dlfty rotten rmtatmg seat belt buzzer'
Billie
Jean
Kmg
of
rotatmg guards from post to
The gasoline supply Situation ture, bound from England to Philadelphia who defeated
post to better acquamt them may not Improve for several V~rgm1a sank off Bermuda Nancy Gunter of San Angelo,
With all facets of the med1wn months, some officials have In 1609 , her sun •• ors set- Tex , 6-3, 7-5, after falling
tled on the Island
security fac1hty
srud
hP.hnvl 1n hnth -to:

Real detente is
impossible--Chou

tv

••

on move

,.

To the Rescue'

Problem with heart flutters

Dr. Buff honored

•
Sunday by mmers

Snow left
on streets

may go

on strike

90% of

pumps idle

BERRY'S WORLD

,

c
•

'

:

Pro Standings

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB

Farmers

By Uruted Press Intemallonal
Afew " eeks ago, Gary Nolan
sa1d
he was embarrassed to
:,:,
By CHARLIE SMITH
;.
come
out to the ball park
'&lt;&gt;
UPI Spurts Writer
,,
"I felt like I was m the
GREENSBORO, N C (UP!) - When UCLA's basketball m1ddle of the Oh10 R1ver m a
players emerged from the f~rstclass section of the airplane which boat w1th a hole m 1t," groused
brought them to Chicago last January for the games agamst Cmcmnah's b1g sore-armed
Iowa and Notre Dame, they prov1ded a f~rst-dass commentary righthander
Now, suddenly, things have
on what colleg~ate sports have become today
Keith Wilkes was wearmg a long coat With fur around 1t and changed Nolan may have
Greg Lee looked like a beach boy B1ll Walton, the most dommant plugged that hole m the boat
He's showmg unmistakable
force m the game , wore the most outlandish get-up of all
s1gns
of not bemg up r1ver
Walton wore split-out sneakers, faded Jeans and a sweat shll"t
Toppmg 11 off, the &amp;-foot 11 redhead earned a knapsack on Ius w1thout a paddle anymore
The Reds SW!day sent out
back
two
squads, one of them
All this 1s sunply by way of pumtmg out that eve n such a
tradillonal1st coach as Jolul Wooden, a man who won seven knocking over the New York
straight NCAA basketball champiOnships, cannot completely Mets, 1~, m Tampa, Fla , and
the othe r dr oppmg a 5-s
control a sauad of olavers the wav he did onlv a few vPor&lt; """
dec1s1on to the St Louis CarDtlficult Adjustment
As he has srud, 'It's an adjustment I had to make and 1t was a dinals at St Petersburg, but
diff1cult thing to do " Wooden said 1t agam Sunday m a slightly
different way IIe sa1d Walton and h1s other semors don't have to
play m tomght's NCAA thU"d-place game agamst Kansas If tbey
don 't, the game could deteriOrate mto somethmg of a farce Most World H o c k e y Assoc•a t ton
Standtngs
of the compellhvness m the contest w1ll be m1ssmg
By Untfed Press lnternattonal
But perhaps thiS IS what comes w1th unprecedented success
E as t
As Kansas coach Ted Owens sa1d, "It's hard for me to say
w 1 t pts gt ga
because I haven't won nme of the last 10 champiOnships "
New England 40 30 4 84 277 251
37 36 4 78 287 260
Owens does not want to play UCLA's second-Imers If he's Toronto
Quebec
37 33 4 78 290 266
gomg to lose, he'd prefer to lose to UCLA's best "My concern IS Cleveland
34 31 9 77 250 25 1
35 33 5 75 253 259
for my players," he sa1d "They deserve to play the best UCLA Ch 1cago
Jer se y
32 37 4 68 25 4 286
has to offer "
West
Wooden adm1ts he can't make h1s players play , desp1te the fact
w I I pts gl ga
they 're attendmg UCLA on basketball scholarships
45 22 5 95 296 204
Ho uston
"There are some thmgs I can force them to do though," he
4131 28 4 311266
Mtnnesota
Said "Like take off their mustaches, for example "
34 34 3 71 242 248
Ed m onton
Wooden IS caught m the trap It's obv10us he would prefer to
32 37 5 69 245 278
1peg
have a well disc1plmed team, one that would wear blazers for W1nn
26 46 1 53 26 8 317
Vancouver
public appearances He'd also like to have h1s players go out and
l es
24 49 o 48 221 310
g1ve thell" best effort for the good of the school, too But he un- Los AngeSunday'
s games
derstands the rah-rah days are over
Mtnnesota 5 Houston 3
Lo s Angeles 6 Wtnntpeg 3
Bill Walton, like Kareem Abdui-Jabbar before him, w1ll do as
Toronto 3 Vancouver 1
he pleases If he wants to play,fme If he doesn't,fme
Quebec 4 N ew England 3
Ch1cago 3 Cleveland 3 (over
But Wooden genumely likes Walton He makes that clear
l tme )
uAGood.Persoo"
Monday ' s game s
"He sometlffies does thmgs wh1ch I feel goes agamst what he No games
scheduled
really believes," Wooden sa1d "But m thmgs that really matter,
N H L Stand1ngs
he's a good person "
By Un1ted Press International
For a ffildwesterner bke Owens, the lack of diSCiplme at UCLA East
gt ga
IS totally fore1gn It's mconce!veable, for instance, for Kansas Bostn 49 w1 ~ 19 t 107pts 327
players not to refer to hlffi as "Coach Owens " And when the Mnfr l 41 23 9 91 267 ;~;
N Y Rangers
Jayhawks travel as a team, they wear Kansas blazers
38 21 13
89
AI McGull"e at Marquette perhaps has come closer to str1kmg a Tornt 32 25 15 79 ; ;~
happy mediwn Wllh the youth of today then any other leadmg Buffl 30 J 1 11 71 125 235
Detrt 27 35 10
64 135 285
college basketball coach He and h1s players argue constantly, V ancouver
20 ~I 11
51
200 276
but when thell" playmg days are over, they look back on their
N Y l si
expenences w1th McGuire and Marquette w1th great fondness
17 38 17
51
170 229
we st
"I don't look for respect," sa1d McGuire "If 11 comes, !me"

0

attacks as you descnbe In this
case often the only ev1dence of
the 1rregular1ty that you can
see on an electrocardiogram
occurs durmg the attack The
heart tracmg really has two
purposes, fll"st 1t shows the rate
and rhytlun of the heartbeat,
and second 11 provides
evidence of heart muscle
damage, as m the cas&lt; of a
heart attack
Doctors and pat1 ents are
both frustrated w1th recurrent
attacks of 1rregulanty It
seems that the episodes have a
way of happenmg outs1de the
do cto r's off1ce and never when
he wants to take a record to see
what it IS
There IS a solulion to th1s too,
but 11 1s sometlffies difficult to
accomplish and expensive The
new portable tape recorders
can record your heart rate
contmuously for hours and
even days , and when the attack
occurs you then have a record
of what 11 really was
I would like to reassure you
that most of the ll"regularities
of the heart, In a young person

who has no ev1dence of heart
d1sease, are not really
dangerous They are very
annoymg Your Wife IS
probably m th1s category
because
her
medical
exammahon d1dn't show
anythmg
Incidentally, ~rregularilles of
this sort can be treated if that
IS what the problem IS There
are medicmes that can be
taken to calm down the heart
muscle and prevent the
ll"regular beats from taking
over the heart
The other possibility IS that
your w1fe may be over
breathing, a condition called
hyperventilallon I thmk of this
because of your comment
about her hands tmglmg
Overbreathmg can cause
ll"regularles of the heart and
the tmglmg sensatiOn The next
tlffie your wife has one of these
ask her to breathe very slowly
and m a shallow manner That
may help her Do not ask her to
hold her breath Breath holding
m these Cll"cumslances can
cause her to pass out

RAY CROMLEY
Ford's weaknesses
or strengths?

•••

By Ray Cromley
WASHINGTON (NEA) - How badly have we ffilSJUdged
V1ce President Gerlad Ford'
One of the more CUrious features of this c1ty IS the manner m
which a man gets a reputahon -as a penetratmg constituhonal
authority, as a discernmg expert on fore1gn affall"s, or as a
ploddmg, urumagmalive congressiOnal mmortty leader
An anecdote cBII move w1th a man for years - as bas
President Johnson's story about Ford's havmg played football
too often with his hefmet off
Men get a repuat10n for braiDS m th1s ca}lltal City when they
are good w1th words, to Wlt, "Ask not what your country can do
for you . "
Ford's literary style, by compar~son, IS more llffiited, his
vo1ce 1s a little flat
Other men become admired for thell" w1t, charm and
char1sma, qualihes sometunes confused w1th mtelligence
Ford 1s lackmg m these VIrtues too. A friend savs "Gerrv's
Wladventurous, urumagmahve, even pedestrtan m his
thinking
Pres1dents, senators and congressmen have gained prestige
and mtellectual stature when they or thell" speech writers
enunCiate mnovative concepts - which may or may not work
Even Ford's admirers don't claim originality IS his
trademark As a result, m one way or another, Ford has been
described as a seat wanner Without VISible signs of leadership.
But the qualilles outlmed above are not those most reqwred of a
president
What then about Gerald Ford'
Says an old college friend, "He's slow to embrace new Ideas
but no one has to tell hlffi anythmg twice. He doesn't try t~
change the syotem He sees his job as trymg to make 11 work."
A legislator who worked With Ford on Capitol Hill for a
decade says, "I don't know about hiS br~ghtness or his
ongmality But as an administrator he's tope. You come to bini
for a deciSion. He asks sharp questions- brings in other people,
asks them about some gaps m what you've sa1d and seeks con!
fll1llllhon or objections. Then makes his decision. It's usually the
right one, well-reasoned and to the pomt - not wishy-washy.
He's tops m this busmess
"Earlier GOP House leaders ran one-man shows," says an
old timer on the Hill, now retll"ed ''Ford expanded the leadership
to a nme-man team and never made unportant decisions alone
As president, I thmk he'd operate with a cabinet-type ad- ·
mlnistrahon, rather than with an elite White House staff."
Says another former colleague, ''He doesn 't g1ve you any of
that '!'Usee what I cando' stufflikesomanymenhere on the Hill '
do when they know they can't, or won 't, do anything. He will tell'
you right off, 'I can't buy that, but here's what! can do ' And then'
he does 11."
Other men use these words m descnbmg Ford comfortable, "~
reassurmg , bones!, sensible, nonnal, a feeling for traditiOn, not
slipshod -and, every so often, "not very bright "
'
Another aspect of Gerry Ford, mentioned by many men and "
women m Washmgton, was stated succmctly bji one : "When :
Gerry looks at you outpf th011esoft eyes,you can't say 'no'."
There obv1ously are strengths as well u weaknesaes in the "
ln ...a..nto"'"•...ll'.,t

I

Nolan was the b1g news and he
didn't even take part m either
game In fact he hasn't pitched
a smgle mmng m actual
competitiOn all sprmg, but that
doesn't mean he hasn 't been
workmg
- Nolan, on the disabled bst
prachcally all last year, asked
Larry Shepard, the Reds'
p1tchmg coach, to catch him
last Thursday
"It was the first tune this
sprmg that he threw the ball
where 11 landed m my hands
Without commg m on an arc,"
sa1d Shepard
Nolan threw to Shepard
aga m on Saturday
11
He threw so hard, I couldn't
handle hun, so I turned him
over to (John) Bench," sa1d the
Reds' coach "He wasn't only
throwmg fast balls, but hard
curves, changeups and everytlung ."

Bench also was llllpressed
'Gdl"y's fast ball 1s back to
about three-quarters what 1t
used to be,'' sa1d the Reds'
recetver
That m 1tself IS enough to get
the entire Cincmnall ball club

Wolfpack

lS

big favorite
GREENSBORO, N C
(UP!- To hear Marquette
coach AI McGwre tell It, his
team shouldn't even be allowed
m the Greensboro Cohsewn
tomght, much less play North
Carolina State for the NCAA
champ10nsh1p
"Marquette has been at the
top now for eight years and you
know for the last fiVe we have
never been out of the top 10,"
McGuU"e smd as he discussed
his team's fll"st appearance
ever in the finals "I would say
that thiS year 's team IS the fifth
or sixth best team I've )fl the
last e1ght years "
Marquette Wlll square off
agaJnst North Carolma State,
which beat UCLA m double
overtime, at 9 10 p, m EDT m
a nattonally-televised match
UCLA will play Kansas in a
consolation game at 6 35 p m
EDT, the f1rst time smce 1966
that the Brums Wlll not be m
the champiOnship game

Miller
champ
HILTON HEAD ISLAND,
S C (UP!) - A fully-dothed
Johnny Miller has streaked off
w1thanother $40,000 And that 's
$40,000 more than the other
three streakers got for thell"
run m the sun ~-·~day
The 26-year-&lt;&gt;ld golfmg
sensation from San Franc1sco
won the Her1tage ClaSSic, his
fourth golf lriwnph of the year,
by three strokes over Gibby
Gilbert and pushed hiS earnmgs to $149,105
Cool as you please , Miller
birdted the 15th hole to finish
the !mal round at !-under-par
70 and then Ignored a nude
yoWJg man and woman who
ran together down the next
faU"Way
HYeah, I saw them rumung
on the 16th faU"Way,'' sa1d
Miller "But after the bll"d!e on
15, I had no tellSlon whatsoever Nothing could bother

me."
Witnesses said that a lone,
nude male also streaked beside
the 18th f8li"Way before Miller
arr1ved to r eceive v1ctory
applause of some 7,000 persons
gathered around the !mal
green.
Gilbert hmshed w1th a
sparkling 69 over the tight little
per 72, 6,115S-yard Harbour
Town course on this wmdwhipped 1sland resort. He
picked up $22,800.

McGull"e, m a press br1efmg
Sunday, said one of the maJOr
reasons hiS team made 1t to the
fmals was Michigan's upset
wm over Notre Dame m the
first round of the Mideast
Regwnal Marquette, now 26-4
for the year, managed to slip
by Michigan, 72-70, to get to
Greensboro
"Notre Dame 1s def1mtely a
better ball club than we are
physiCally, and a lot of other
thmgs,'' sa1d McGwre, dressed
m bright yellow pants, a
pullover sweater, tenrus shoes
and no socks
McGu1re, asked what his
team has to do to beat North
Carolma State, deadpanned,
"Be very fortWlate "
Wolfpack coach Norman
Sloan wasn 't falling for any of
McGuli'e 's poor.ofllouthmg
Sloan, whose team now IS 291, was willmg to bu1ld up
Marquette's chances of upsetting the Wolfpack, even if
McGull"e wasn't
"This particular ball club
caught my eye m the latter
stages of the season," he sa1d
"I even picked them to come
out of the Mideast Regwnals
"They are a great basketball
team, they have a !me
defenstve team, and they have
fine players "
Sloan sa1d the very fact that
Marquette 1s g1ven little
chance of wmnmg the game
should serve as "added msptratlon" to the Warnors
"! think they are m an enVIable positiOn "
Marquette downed Kansas,
65-.51, m their Saturday senufmal which saw little offense
from e1ther club m tbe frrst
half Marquette blew a lead m
the last mmute and a half of the
first period to go mto mtermisslOn trailing by a pomt

The

COLUMBUS (UP!) - Pmse,
Cincmnall Elder's strong su1t
m recent years, shone through
agam here Saturday when the
Panthers
turned
back
preVIously unbeaten Canton
McKinley, 60-M, to wm the
Class AAA State H1gh School
Basketball Tournament
champwnsh1p for the second
season m a row
Akron Manchester defeated
Columbus B1shop Hartley, 7252, for the Class AA Iitle, and
Loram Clearvtew beat P1tts
burg Franklin Monroe, 74-69,
for the Class A crown
'We had to keep our pmse
because there was no way we
gf ga could have run w1th them,"
~
I t pts
Ph ladephla
45 14 11 101
2 ~1
142 sa1d Elder Coach Paul Frey
Chlcg 36 13 21
93
242 147 after Saturday's game "!
Lo s Angeles
30 30 12
72
209 212 didn't know last mght whether
Atlnl 27 32 13
67
193 221 or not we had a chance agamst
M tnnesola
22 33 16
60
21 8 245 them, but we got them down at
St L s 24 38 11
59
188 223 the end, and you know the
P ttl sburgh
.
25 38 7 58 21 7 2S2 potse ''
Cllrn 13 SO
9
35
187 314
McKinley's
highly
regarded
Sunday's results
Bulldogs came 1nto the game
Boston 6 Montreal 3
Vancouver 3 Toronto 2
With a perfect 2.&gt;-0 record but
N Y Rangers 5 Buffalo 3
fa1Ied offensively agamst CmN Y Is la nd ers 6 Atlanta 4
p ,tfsbu rgh 8 Detrott 0
Cinnall's light 2-3 zone defense
Ch1 cago 6 Mtnnesota 0
The game's top scorer,
Philade l phia 4 5 1 L OU IS 1
Lo s Ang eles 7 Calt torn 1a 1
Frank Ridley of Canton, scored
20 pomts and helped the
Monday's gam es
No games sc h edul ed
Btllldgos pull to w1thin five
potnts of the Panthers w1th JUSt
N BA Standtngs
under four mmutes left m the
By Umted Press Internation al
contest
Eastern Conference
Attant1c Dtvtsion
Bill Earley sank a fould shot
w 1 pet g b
for Elder, however, Rick Apke
Bos ton
56 24 700
New York
48 33 593
B
dropped m a field goal and the
Buffalo
42 39 519 u h
Ph l ladel phta 23 57 288 3211~ Panthers gamed control of the
Central DIVISIOn
boards to take a 57-50 advanw I pet g b
tage mto the !mal two mmutes
x Caplfal
45 35 563
Atlanta
35 ~6 432 10 1/:~ of play
Hou ston
31 SO 383 14'1'
"ThiS was the best team ever
Cleveland
29 52 358 16 1 ~
Western Conference
to
come out of Canton,'' sa1d
Midwest DIVISIOn
McKinley coach Bob Rupert,
w I
pet g b
M 1lwaukee
58 23 716
"and 1t didn't qmte make it
Chicago
53 28 654
5
agamst
a super ball club
Detrotl
52 29 642 6
KC Omah a
33 48 407 25
There ISII't a team m OhiO that
PaCifiC DIVISIOn
could run With us, and 1t took a
w I pet g b
L osAngele s
47 34 580
very deliberate team to beat
Gold en State
A3 37 538 3
Seattle
35 45 438 1Jl/, us"
Phoentx
30 51 370 17
The Panthers had a 23-3 rePortland
26 54 325 20 /~
cord
to go w1th thell" champiOnx c l m ched d 1v1S10n •,ue
Sunday's games
ship trophy
Bost on 109 Houston 106 (of)
Phillips Sets Pace
Capttal 120 Atlanta 92
Cleveland 114 New York 92
UPJ's Class AA Player of the
Los Angel es 150 Buffalo 124
Year,
t&gt;-11, 245-pound Mike
Phoentx 134 Golden State 121
Milwaukee 120 Portland 110
Plulltps, tallied 38 pomts and
Chicago 122 Sea ttle 113
fRilled down 22 reboWJds m
Monday ' s,JJam es
pacmg Manchester's Panthers
No games scheduled
to theU" convmcmg VIctory over
the Hawks of Hartley
ABA Standengs
By Un1ted Preu tnternal1onal
Ph1ll1ps was unquestiOJUJbly
East
the
dommant factor m leadmg
w 1 pet g b
N y
54 29 65 1
the Akron team to 118 last of 26
52 29 642
l
Ken tucky
46 36 561
71h wms, wtUmut a defeat, and
Car ol ma
27 55 329 2 6 1J~ haltmg a 14-{:ame Hartley wmVtrgtnta
21 61 256 32 1h
MemphiS
mng streak
west
w I pet g b
F1ve straight Ph1ll1ps
Utah
50 32 610
lnd tana
-45 37 549
4 /~ buckets m the second period
San Ant
44 38 537
5 112 helped the Panthers to a 33-16
Denver
36 46 439
13 12
San Dleqo
35 47 427 l4 1h edge after which Manchester
never traUed
Sunday's. James
New York 99 San Anton10 97
Hartley's M1ke Gilliland
MemphiS 104 Vtrgtnla 94
scored 13 pomts durmg the
Denver 109 carol ma 107
lnd1ana 101 Utah 89
fourth quarter m a futile
Kentucky 122 San Otego 111
Hawks attempt to rally and
Monaay's games
fmished the game Wlth 25
No games scheduled
POUlts

fNTI!2ti!Br or
MEI&lt;lii-IIA8II&lt;AREA
ROBDTIIOI'.J'Ual ,

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So&lt;onddoa-ptldol......,,

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Matlou.l advertlllnl repreltnt.Uft
lllc ' 12 - - St.,
New York.., New Yodl;
e.t Is: lim,.._ OebeNd 111 earrMr
where nallllble 10 cenll per ....a, a,.
.tcc.or Reule when carrier ..moe not
anllable One month, $2.110 By m1U in
aUo Ind. W Va Om Yeat", IU , .!h
months, se 50, Three montlls $6
Ellrwhere $22 00 year liz rnmths $11 ~ ,
""""
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lndudaSUndlyntneJ.Sentinel

underway

DENVER ( UPI ) - The 330
compelltors m the fo ur-day
p1te the foul trouble," sa1d Golden Gloves Tournament of
Walsh, "because we figured Champwns have taken their
the game had reached the pomt last friendly Jabs at each other
that we had to go with the best Boxmg begms m earnest
we had, and if they fouled out tomght
they JUSt fouled out,'' said
The
amateur
boxers
Walsh
gathered for a kickoff banquet
Larry Harns, the Class A Sunday mght at wh1ch
Player of the Year, led the heavyweight title con tender
Clippers, 22-2, w1th 30 pomts Jerry Quarry represented the
All-Oh1oan Mike Cross scored many professwnal boxers who
28 markers for the 25-4 Jets.
have come from the Golden
Gloves' ranks
More than JOO bouts w1ll be
AAA Champ1onshtp
CA NTON McKINLEY (54) held tomght and Tuesday m
R tdlc y 10 ( 0 OJ 20 Brown 5 (0
three rmgs set up on the floor of
0) 10 Hubbard 3 (3 4) 9 Hall 3
(l 4) 7 Ca lla s '1 ( 0 0 ) 4 Green 1
the Denver Aud1tonwn. One of
(0 0) 2 Sh tpp 1 (0 0) 2 Eilt s 0
the rmgs will be removed for
(0 0) 0 Totals 15 14 8) 5&lt;1
CIN C tNNATt Fl nFQ IM1
Wednesday mght 's quarter!!·
- A eke 5 ( 8 13) 18 Earley 7 ( 2
nals
and the sputl1ght w11l shine
41 16 Apro 1 (0 0) 2 N1emeyer 4
(0 1l 8
Brown I (0 0) 2
on a smgle rmg for Thursday's
St eng er 2 (2 4) 6 Bloemker 1
semlfmals and fmals
{ 6 6 ) 8 Tot al s 21 { 18 18 ) 60
The Rocky Mountam Golden
Gloves Franchise, the defendBy Quarters
mg team champwn, 1s hostmg
Canlon M cK mley
16 14 5 19- 54
the natiOnal event for the fll"st
Cm Cinnah Elder
tlffie m Its 47year history
5 18 13 14- 60
Fouled
ovt
Hubbard
Among the favorites to Win
Tec hn ,cal foul s None Total
the
team Iitle this year are
fo ul s
Can ton McKinley 21
Ctnctnnat t E ld er 11 A - 13 976
Fort Worth, Tex , which represents all of Texas, and Las
Vegas, Nev , which represents
seven states mcludmg Califorrua, Washmgton, Anzona and
Nevada
The nallonal competitors
was tagged for five of the Mets'
runs while Grote slammed a were the wmners of regwnal
three-run bomer off a Hall tournaments beld m the 33
golden gloves centers throughpltcll
out
the country
The Cardinals were led by
Jose Cruz who drove m three
runs with a double and an mfleld out to defeat the Reds 5-2
Cruz, batting 346 thiS sprmg,
doubled m the fll"st mning to
dr1ve m Ted Sizemore, who had
smgled, and Reggie Smith, who
had walked
Alan Foster settled down after a shaky fll"st inning and went
SIX for the Cards AI Hrabosky
followed w1th three scoreless
mnmgs
Clay Kirby gave up the fll"st
four St LouiS runs and Mike
McQueen worked the last two
mnings
Cruz's brother , Hector,
added the !mal run for the
Cardinals With his third sprmt
bomer m the seventh mnmg

Reds split in exhibition
TAMPA, Fla (UPI)- Asplit
squad of Cmcmnab Reds' players notched a 1~ victory over
the New York Mets here Sunday while the other half of the
club dropped a 5-2 contest to
the St. LouiS Cardmals m St
Petersburg, Fla
Tony Perez slammed a
three-run double durmg a
seven-rWJ e1ghth mnmg rally to
pace the Reds m the victory
over the Mets
Rookie nghthander John
Glass and veteran Bob Miller
were tagged for seven h1ts m
the b1g e1ghth to allow the Reds
to take the lead after entermg
the frame behind 8-3
The Mets pounded Jack Bll·
lmgham, Tommy Hall and Pedro Borbon for 14 hits, mcludmg three by Jerry Grote to
buUd the early advantage
Billingham worked the first
SIX inrungs for the Reds and

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when you buy
a new car.
Ask me about the
State Farm
Car Ftnance Plan

.i

Steve Snowden
SSJ Russel St

(G rav el Htll l
; }.... Middl eport, Otuo
,_
PH 992 1155

like a good
neighbor,
State Farm
1s there

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finals

4 p.m. to closing

Jl-&amp;"t~

- _EDt E\111

Boxing

ball club since their tnp to
Puerto R1co last week for a
parr of exJnb1llon games J1m
Sundberg walked w1th one out
m the 15th and Frank Bolick
th e wmrung pitcher, hit a
double play ball to Foil The
shortstop let the ball go
through his legs and M1ke
Kubbage then smgled home
Sundberg
Padres 2 Athleti CS 0
Bill Grei f, R1ch Troedson and
Vtcente Romo combmed to
p1tch San D1ego to a five hit 2-()
Vlctory over Oakland Clarence
Gaston Si ngled home the
Padres first run off loser Ken
Holtzma n 1n the f~rst mnmg
and also thetr second one wtth
an mfleld out m the fifth
Angels 15 Brewers 2
Charlie Sands fourth home
run of the sprmg was a grand
slam that" as the key blow m a
15-2 VIctory by the Angels over
the Brewers Bob Oliver and
Joe Lahoud also homered for
the Angels, who broke open the
contest wtth a ftve run rally m
the s1xth mnmg The game was
played m Palm Sprmgs, Calif ,
where for the second straight
day two male streakers raced
across tth e outfield.
Cubs 5 Giants 4
The Cubs came up Wlth three
runs m the fifth off Jlffi Barr
for a 5-4 wm over the
Giants Julio Morales' double
was the key blow durmg the
rally Milt Pappas was the
WIMer and Barr the loser Ed
Goodson, San franc1sco f1rst
baseman, suffered a hamstrmg
pull m h1s left leg and 1s expected to be out a week
R1ghthanders D1ck T1drow
and Cec1I Upshaw p1tched
Cleveland to a 9-4 victory over
the Umvcrs1ty of Anzona

Special Family Meal Prices

INSURANCI

CIII!:IRK L TANNmiLL,

"We respected their shootIng ability," SBi d Akron coach Bernard Conley, "but we though t
we could take them on the
boards Gilliland 1s a fme
shooter."
Coach DICk Geyer of 20-8
Hartley wasn't b1tter about the
setback
"I have no complamts," sa1d
Geyer "It's been a tremendous expenence for all of l..L'I3
We have to make the right
plays at the r~ght time, and
today It JUSt didn't happen"
Switch Eflectlve
Asw1tch from a zone defense
to a man~o-man defense w1th
4 42 left m the game was JUSt
what Clearv1ew's Clippers
needed to come from six pomts
behmd and stop the Jets of
Franklm Monroe
Three Ulrmn starters had a
total of 11 fouls when coach Bob
Walsh ordered the defensive
change
"We went to the man-to-man
defense w1th our starters des-

Pirates 7 Phlllles 2
RIChie Zisk hit a pall" of
homers and Bob Robertson one
m Pittsburgh's 7-2 wm over
Philadelphia M1ke Anderson
connected for the Ph11lhes Jim
Rooker went the first five mrungs for Pittsburgh, )'lelded
one unearned runand was the
wmner
Orioles 8 Braves 1
Andy Etchebarren's smgle
w1th the bases loaded
Wlraveled a !-all tie m the
seventh and the Baltunore
Orioles added five more runs m
the e1ghth to crush the Atlanta
Braves, 8-1 Doug DeCinces
had a solo home run for the
Onoles
Rangers 3 Expos 2
Tlffi Fob's eighth error 1n 10
ga mes enabled the Texas
Rangers to register a 3-2
dec1s1on over the Montreal
Expos The loss was the siXth
m a row for the Expos who
haven't looked like the same

1

...-~-A.u;
...
lJiJ
JW,

IJtvOTEDTOTHE

._.-·by
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DliiJ S.IIitel

teammates, held them to one
hit through the first seven
mnmgs
Yankees 2 While Sox I
Steve Klme and Scott
McGregor snapped a four
game losmg shde for the
Yankees w1th a combmed four
hit 2 I conqUj!st of the Wh1te
Sox Reliever Stan Perza nowskl wild pitched the
wmmng run across m the
seven th
Royals 7 Tigers 2
The Kansas City Royals
JUmped on lefthand er Mickey
Lohch for SIX runs m siX m-nmgs to beat the Detro1t
Tigers, 7 2 Amos OtiS and Fran
Healy each doubled home two
runs, w1th Steve Busby
a,Ilowmg two runs on f1ve hits
over siX mnmgs to get the
VICtory
Red Sox 6 Twins 4
Tommy Harper 's two -run
smgle capped a f1ve-run s1xth
mnmg rally that gave the
Boston Red Sox a 6-4 triumph
over the Minnesota TwUIS
R1ck WISe was the wmner
although he gave up homers to
Steve Braun, Bobby Darwm
and Rr1c Soderholm

Elder repeats

m

•

exc1ted Gary Nolan, even
three-quarters as rast as he
used t&lt;r be, still makes a formidable add111on to the Reds'
staff
They rallied for seven runs 10
the eighth mnmg m their game
w1th the Mets Sunday for a 10-8
VICtory Tony Perez' double
was the b1g blow m the mnmg
The Reds' second squad was
beaten by the Cardmals 5-2
w1th Clay Kirby gJVmg up four
of the Cards' runs m the sncth
uuun gs he worked Jose Cruz ,
contmumg his sp1r1ted hittmg,
drove m three runs for St
LoUIS
Dodgers 3 Astros 0
Willie Crawford Singled
home two runs and Jlffi Wynn
another agaJnst his former
Houston teanunates m a three·
run e1ghth mrung rally that
proVIded Los Angeles with a ~
VIctory Don Sutton and M1ke
Marshallluruted the Astros to
f1ve hils, with Marshall p!Ckmg
up the deciSion Reliever Fred
Scherman , who came on m the
e1ghth, was the loser His
predecessor, Claude Osteen,
gomg agaUJSt his ex-Dodger

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�I
3- The Dmly_Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0, March 25,1974

r;::y:: "·-"·"-'"'"-lGary Nolan may make big comeback

, 2- The Da1lv Sent mel, Middlcpori-Purncroy, 0. March 25. 1974

Sen. Baker asks conciliation
WASHINGTON 1UP! I - De
clanng the time for concthallon ts at hand, Vtce Chatrman
Howard Baker of the Senate
Wate rga te Cornnuttee urged
Sunday that House mvestlgators an d the While House both
'g1ve a httle on demands for
42 pres1 den t~a l tapes

The &lt;:ommattee 1nqmrmg mto
req uests the President makes possible grounds for !mpeachsuch as the presence of counsel mg N1xon
as considering
m the pnnc1pal dehbcrahons sendm g a subpoena to the
and mvcsttgat10ns of the Wh1te House 1f Noton does not
commattee ''
surrender them volun tanly and
Law,ers for former prestden- Nixon has sa1d he Will not
hal a1de H R Haldeman and because many of them are not
Gordon Strachan, both Water relevant to the mvest1gataon
'If there IS an} reasona ble gate defendants sa1d Sunday
cla1m that those tapes or any they d1d not plan to appeal to
other documents are revelan t, I the Supreme Court today an
thmk the President ought to appeals court rulmg that the
g1ve them " sa1d Baker ' That House Judtctary Commtttee
would better serve the 1nstllu must receave a sealed gra nd
lion of the pres1denc) and JUf) report puroortedl) dealing
ce rta mly the country '
"1th N1xon s handling of the
However, the Tennessee Wa tergate cover-up
Republican smd the House
Both men had unhl 5 p m
Jud1c1ary Committee ought to today to ma ke thet r dectswns
honor "ha tever reasonable

Sunday

' The tune for concthatum IS
at ha nd,' sa 1d Baker m an
mterv1ew on CBS Face the
Na hon He sa id there wa s a
"compelling responsibility on

~

the part of the House and the
President to g1ve a lltttle
otherwise he'll have a tembly,
tembly unpleasant expenence
regardless of the outcome "

l
I I

Shortages will
cramp summer

'

'

I
\. I

'

.~J,. '

' '

,,,

i

drivers

WASHINGTO N iUPli - tr1ps
Amencans should have more Sunday was the f1rst Sunday
gasoline for summer vacat1on smce January that gas statwns
dnvmg but they w11I have to were perrmtted to remam open
conserve fu el by observmg the and S1mon said th1s _.,oupled
55 mph speed llm1t and w1th the endmg of the Arab's
curtail use of the1r atr 01! embargo - rmght lull some
Americans mto mmlffilZmg the
By Umted Press International conditioners
In presenhng th1s prospect depth of the energy shortage
Sunday drivers eme rged
Sunday,
energy Chief Wilham
The Umted States, Slffion
from energy criSIS-Imposed
E
S1mon
also
predicted
msa1d,
had demonstrated 1t could
wmter hibernahon, lured by
spring
wea ther
and creased gasoline supplies would conserve fu el, and had avo1ded
availability of gasolme for the brmg h1gher pnces because of the school closmgs, mdustrial
HONG KONG I UPI )
the resumphons of Imports of shutdowns and the economtc
ously were connected with the f1rst tlffie m months
Chmese Premier Chou En-la1 , Kissmger VISit
expens1
ve Arab1an 01! He sa1d slwnp that some had predicted
In Flord1a the cars were
m a speech that comc1ded w1th
The "orld situatiOn Chou stacked up for blocks at a they would go as h1gh as 75 last fall
the VISit to Moscow b) US sa1d , IS characlemed
ce nts per gallon m the
by
"We have a lot of fat, a lot of
Secretary of State Henry urm ersal grea t disorder' and M1arru tourist atttraction Re- northeast
waste
, m our conswnpt10n m
Kissmger said Sunday mght th1s IS 'unfa vorable to the two sorts m V11"gm1a and Maryland
Interviewed on ABC's Issues thiS country and w1th the
there can be no real deten te superpowers which are contend- reported rooms were fillmg up and Answers S1mon said marvelous cooperalior. of the
between the Umted States and Ing With each other m a vam after a nose-d1ve m January motonst.s must carry on w1th Amer1can people and con110rvaand February Traffic on highthe Sov1et Umon
attempt to se1ze world hegemo- ways from Oregon to New York conservahon measures such as twn efforts we showed that we
"The two superpowers at ny
was heavier Sunday than 11 had slower dr1vmg, less use of can hck thiS thmg and we d1d
limes talk about detente, ' he
'Stra tegically, Europe 1s the been smce a voluntary ban on automobile air cond1lion ers, hck 1t With mmlffial econom1c
sa1d, "But m actuality they are focus of their contentwn," he
and not makmg unnecessary unpact," S1mon sa1d
engaged man mtense nvalry " added Bu t ' everywhere they Sunday gasolme sales was
Th1s n valry IS rooted 1n a are fiercely contendmg w1th called for by President NIXOn
struggle " to se1ze world each other from the Mediter- last November The ban
By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
m
became
mandatory
hegemony," he added
DEAR DR LAMB - For
ranean to the Arab world the
~
Chou's remarks were made m M1ddle East, the lndmn January
approxunately fiVe years my
The Pres1dent lifted the ban ~
a speech debvered at a Ocean "
wife has had periods where her
SIX
days
ago
,
saymg
the
end
of
,
t
.
welcome banquet he gave m Chou 's speech was marked by
heart pounda hard or flutters ,
Pekmg's Great Hall of the tw o unusual features, accordmg the Arab oil boycott and m- ..
she feels famt and her fmgers
People for President Julius K to analysts here It was more creased supplies of gasoline "
tmgle I cannot feel any pulse
had
made
II
possible
for
RIVERSIDE,
Calif
(UP!)N1xon
JOined
Mamott
early
Nyerere of Tanzama Nyerere m1hlant than usual , dwelling
at her wriSt durmg these
arr1ved m Peking Sunday more on the theme of vwlent stations to reopen Hundreds The plaque commemoratmg m 1970 as v1ce president for periods. These actiOns used to
mormng on his third visi t to revolutwnary struggle It also did although a maJority re- President N1xon 's mamage at community and mdustry rela- be spaced months apart, but
mamed closed m most areas
the MISSIOn Inn has appa1-ently lions based m Newport Beach, lately they are a lot closer
Chma
made no refer ence to the mass
In C'oMect~eut one couple been stolen
Cahf He has been linked to together, and the periods last
Chou devoted a considerable pohllcal campaign now under
decided
on
the
spur
of
the
Hotel
manager
Sandra
Hartmmmg
cla1ms deals mvolvmg longer (10 mmutes ) She has
portwn of his remarks to way m Chma, centermg around
moment
to
drive
to
Chicago
ness
reported
to
pollee
Sunday
billionaire Howard Hughes The seen a doctor of mternal
Sov1et-Arnencan relations He cnt1c1sm of the anc1ent sage
With
their
children
for
a
VISit
that
the
plaque
had
been
pr1ed
Senate
Watergate Comrmttee 1s med1cme who gave her an
d1d not menl!on e1ther country ConfuciUS and the late Defense
With
grandparents
and
m
loose
from
1ts
place
m
the
mn
's
mvest1gatmg
the posslblhly that electrocardiogram test tw1ce
specifically by name nor d1d he M1mster Lm Pwo He has
Oregon
one
driver
sa1d
his
courtyard,
some
lime
smce
fonner Hughes associates pa1d Each tlffie he has •··d "there IS
refer to Kissmger's current menlioned the campaign m
VISit to Russ1a. But diplomatic rece nt speeches for vasJ tmg wmdsh1eld was cleaned and oil March 11 The President, then "substantial" swns to Donald nothmg wrong, you are a
and tll"es were checked at the a young lawyer, was roamed m for h1s help m mmmg claim woman and lots of people have
analysts spec1ahzmg m Chmese leaders
the courtyard of the h1stonc mn ventures m the western Umted these spells all the tune" This
service
stahon he VISited
affa1rs sa1d h1s remarks obv1There was addihonal good on June, 21, 1940, to Thelma States and the Domm1can al1bl does not help you at all
news, and a word of cautiOn, Catherme Ryan , a sc hoolteach- Republic
As I understand 11, an
from William E Slffion, the er known to her friends as
electrocardiogram test shows
natwn 's energy ch1ef
"Pat '
CHICAGO (UPI) - News- heart damage or change We
S1mon predicted gasoline
caster Walter Cronkite has would like to remedy this
supplies should mcrease suffiBEVERLY HILlS, Calif accused the NIXOn admlnlstra- problem before the damage IS
Ciently for normal summer (UP! ) - Actress and smger lion of an attempt to undennme
travel but drivers should plan Sh1rley Jones, of the televisiOn the press, despite 1ts constitu- done
She IS 40, not overweight,
theU" trips, observe 55 ffille per senes ~' The Partrtdge Fam1ly," honal guarantees of freedom
does not drink or smoke Would
hour speed llffi1ls and shut off was presented the Genu Award
Cronkite sa1d Sunday the you have any comments on this
thetr
car atr conditiOners Sunday by the Society of Constituhon g1ves the press a
CHARLESTON, W Va mm ers w1th black lung
1
Prices for gasolme will also Arnen can Women m Radw and "consl!tutwnal duty to keep situation
(UP!) - Coal mmers whose disease
DEAR READER - From
health and safety cause he
One of the leaders m the will mcrease, he added
Televtston
all branches of government your story, I preswne your
"Usmg OW' heads, we are
champwned for the last e1ght campaign for compensation for
w1fe started havmg th1s
under crthcal scrutmy "
years of hiS life turned out black lung Vlctlffis was Arnold gomg to able to have a normal
WASHINGTON I UP!) - F
Yet, Cronkite sa1d m appar- problem when she was about
about 250 strong m freezmg Miller of nearby Ohley, who swruner," Sunon satd m a Donald NIXon, the President's ent reference to the Washmgton 35 The story suggests two
weather Sunday to pay tribute gamed enough stature m that teleVIsion mterv1ew
brother, IS res1gmng from the Post, " A newspaper wh1ch possible causes. Your wife may
In the Middle AtlantiC states, Marnott hotel cham because of attempts to expose the scheme be havmg an UTegular~ty of the
to Dr. I E Buff
role to become president of the
The memorial service had Uruted Mine Workers uruon where the gasolme shortage 1ll health, the firm announced of a clique to perpetuate 1tself heart These may occur m
almost became a crts1s m He w1ll take early retirement
been announced by the Physi- last year
m power by subverting out
Cians Committee for Mme
M1ller broke mto tears February, a Umted Press Apr~ll5
nat10nal electwns IS accused by
Health and Safety on the steps durmg h1s recital of Buff's International survey showed
A Marrwtt spokesman said m the White House of 'shabby
of the Capitol, but 1t was moved accomplishments, and srud the that desp1te the liftmg of the add1hon to Nixon's health JOurnabsm,"character assassmdoors because of the 3(). doctor was partly responsible ban few servtce stations problems, the corporatiOn had matiDn' and 'mnuendo' "
degree temperatures.
"for my bemg where I am opened Sunday
embarked on an auslenty The CBS newsman sa1d
The crowd was estunated at today "
program caused by the energy televtsiOn news orgamzatlons'
about 300 but a nwnber were
Others wbo spoke mcluded
cns1s Because of that combma- reports of ' events as they see
not coal mmers
Dr Hawey Wells, Prmceton,
llon , N1xon and the firm them are denounced by the MASSU.LON, Ohio (UP!) They heard Rep Ken Hech- who worked With Buff on the
decided JOmtly N1xon would President of the Umted States A strike by c1ty workersler, D-W Va , praiSe Buff as "a phys1c1ans' committee, and
take early retirement and w1ll as outrageous ," v1c1ous,' and mostly from the samtat1on and
fighter wbo taught coal mmers former State Sen. Paul
represent the company as a distorted '
'
streets departmenls not to be m1timidated-to stand Kaufman of Charleston
consultant through Jan 31,
"Reporters with mformation contmued today followmg
up for the rights they deserve
Buff died unexpectedly of a
1975
from ms1de the government are rejecllon of a c1ty wage offer
And he brought digruty, free- heart attack earlier this month
mvestigated by the Federal The strike, wh1ch began Fridom and justice to coal mmers at age 65, and was burted the
Bureau of Invest1galion Theil" day, took on more meanmg to
Blld thell" widows."
next day In accord with Jewish
phones are tapped or !hell" Massillon residents SWJday as
"Every coal miner lives a custom Sunday's memorial
COLUMBUS (UP!)
notes are subpoenaed or their there were no workers to rebetter life and stands taller be- was plaMed to g1ve mmers, Events over the next few days
tax
returns get extraordinary move the 5¥. mches of snow
cause Dr Buff walked the who had too little nolice to get could detenrune if farmers Wlll
attention "
that fell and clogged c1ty
earth," Hechler sa1d of the to his funeral, an opportumty to be urged to Withhold thell"
sleets
man who was a ptoneer m the pay their respects
produce from the market and
The some 250 workers, memdnve for compensalion for
make no further plans for
bers of the American FederaproductiOn, according to a
tion
of State, County and MuruNational Farmers
clpal
Employes Umon Local
Orgaruzation (NFO) official
996, rejected W1 offer from the
Tom Conrad, New Holland,
Despite President Richard
City of a 7 per cent across-tileOhio, satd here over the week- M N1xon's aMouncement last
board wage hike.
end that NFO directors at a week that the energy shortage
IAlcal president Jack Zammeetmg last week m Iowa, was easmg and gasolme serbeatty
termed the offer
called for the munediate reslgVICe slahons no longer had to
''ridiculous, " and sa1d the
nalion or unpeaclunent of Preclose Sundays, indications
Wlion
wanted 50-rents-an-hour
Sident NIXOn, wbo has irked
were
that
90 per cent or more of
hikes
in
each year of a threefanners by saymg they never
the pumps m Ohio were idle
year
pact
The c1ty has srud 1ts
had 1t so 2ood
1
Sunday
offer was final.
Conrad sa1d the dU"ectors felt
Only two stations were open
The same offer was made to
NIXon 's statement "shakes the m one sectwn of Cmcmnatl,
clerical
workers and police and
confidence of farmers at a tune satd Mike Kunnen, Cincmnati
Amenca's mland water- firemen, but those groups had
when they are malung plans
Reta1l Gasoline Dealers ways earned some 315 b1lhon oot voted on the package
for production "
ton·m1les of fre1ght durmg
AssoCiation preSident
Conrad accused NIXOn of try1971,
World Almanac
The only four stat1ons open m notes The
Inland waterway HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
mg to p1t the conswner against
the Cleveland area closed Sun- freight ton-mileage for 1971
the fanner
(,Births)
day afternoon, according to the was MisSISSippi R1ver sys·
"Fanners Will refuse to pro- Cleveland Automobile Club,
Fnday
Mr and Mrs
tem, mcludmg tnbutar1es,
duce another crop this year if and m northwestern Ohio spot 142
4 billion, GrealLakes sys- Thomas Snyder, Oak Hill, son
they keep forcmg pnces checks showed most statwns tem and Alaskan waterways,
Saturday - Mr and Mrs
down," Conrad sa1d
105 billion, Gulf coast water- James Chandler, Jackson, son,
closed and out of gas
ways, 30 5 b1llion, Atlantic
A 30-&lt;rtahon newspaper sur- coast waterways, 28.6 billion, Mr and Mrs James Kelly,
NEARLY NORMAL
vey m central Ohio found only and Pac1f1c coast waterways, Gallipolis, son. Mr and Mrs.
CHILUCOTHE, Oh10 (UP!) two statiOn proprietors planned 8 5 b1llion ton-miles
Terry Proffitt, Portland, Oh1o,
- OperatiOns at the Chillicothe to be open for busmess
son,
and Mr and Mrs William
Copyrlaht IC It74
Correclional lnslitute were
Woodard,
Jackson, son
"If we open on Sunday," said
!NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN I
reported normal Sunday one stahon manager m central
following settlement over the OhiO, "we wouldn 't have
It Was Accidental
weekend of a bnef walkout by enough gas to open at all
BILLIE JEAN WINS
Bermuda, Bntam's oldest
some guards The guards durmg the weekdays."
@ 1974 by NEA. Inc
AKRON,
Oh1o (UP!) -The
r e m a 1 n 1 n g colony was
walked
out
Thursday,
JUSt
not founded by accident When Akron Tenms Open smgles
"There's
proteslin g a policy of enough gas,'' another manager
the sa1hng vessel Sea Ven champiOnship was won here by
Supermtendent Frank Gray of sa1d
'Take that you dlfty rotten rmtatmg seat belt buzzer'
Billie
Jean
Kmg
of
rotatmg guards from post to
The gasoline supply Situation ture, bound from England to Philadelphia who defeated
post to better acquamt them may not Improve for several V~rgm1a sank off Bermuda Nancy Gunter of San Angelo,
With all facets of the med1wn months, some officials have In 1609 , her sun •• ors set- Tex , 6-3, 7-5, after falling
tled on the Island
security fac1hty
srud
hP.hnvl 1n hnth -to:

Real detente is
impossible--Chou

tv

••

on move

,.

To the Rescue'

Problem with heart flutters

Dr. Buff honored

•
Sunday by mmers

Snow left
on streets

may go

on strike

90% of

pumps idle

BERRY'S WORLD

,

c
•

'

:

Pro Standings

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB

Farmers

By Uruted Press Intemallonal
Afew " eeks ago, Gary Nolan
sa1d
he was embarrassed to
:,:,
By CHARLIE SMITH
;.
come
out to the ball park
'&lt;&gt;
UPI Spurts Writer
,,
"I felt like I was m the
GREENSBORO, N C (UP!) - When UCLA's basketball m1ddle of the Oh10 R1ver m a
players emerged from the f~rstclass section of the airplane which boat w1th a hole m 1t," groused
brought them to Chicago last January for the games agamst Cmcmnah's b1g sore-armed
Iowa and Notre Dame, they prov1ded a f~rst-dass commentary righthander
Now, suddenly, things have
on what colleg~ate sports have become today
Keith Wilkes was wearmg a long coat With fur around 1t and changed Nolan may have
Greg Lee looked like a beach boy B1ll Walton, the most dommant plugged that hole m the boat
He's showmg unmistakable
force m the game , wore the most outlandish get-up of all
s1gns
of not bemg up r1ver
Walton wore split-out sneakers, faded Jeans and a sweat shll"t
Toppmg 11 off, the &amp;-foot 11 redhead earned a knapsack on Ius w1thout a paddle anymore
The Reds SW!day sent out
back
two
squads, one of them
All this 1s sunply by way of pumtmg out that eve n such a
tradillonal1st coach as Jolul Wooden, a man who won seven knocking over the New York
straight NCAA basketball champiOnships, cannot completely Mets, 1~, m Tampa, Fla , and
the othe r dr oppmg a 5-s
control a sauad of olavers the wav he did onlv a few vPor&lt; """
dec1s1on to the St Louis CarDtlficult Adjustment
As he has srud, 'It's an adjustment I had to make and 1t was a dinals at St Petersburg, but
diff1cult thing to do " Wooden said 1t agam Sunday m a slightly
different way IIe sa1d Walton and h1s other semors don't have to
play m tomght's NCAA thU"d-place game agamst Kansas If tbey
don 't, the game could deteriOrate mto somethmg of a farce Most World H o c k e y Assoc•a t ton
Standtngs
of the compellhvness m the contest w1ll be m1ssmg
By Untfed Press lnternattonal
But perhaps thiS IS what comes w1th unprecedented success
E as t
As Kansas coach Ted Owens sa1d, "It's hard for me to say
w 1 t pts gt ga
because I haven't won nme of the last 10 champiOnships "
New England 40 30 4 84 277 251
37 36 4 78 287 260
Owens does not want to play UCLA's second-Imers If he's Toronto
Quebec
37 33 4 78 290 266
gomg to lose, he'd prefer to lose to UCLA's best "My concern IS Cleveland
34 31 9 77 250 25 1
35 33 5 75 253 259
for my players," he sa1d "They deserve to play the best UCLA Ch 1cago
Jer se y
32 37 4 68 25 4 286
has to offer "
West
Wooden adm1ts he can't make h1s players play , desp1te the fact
w I I pts gl ga
they 're attendmg UCLA on basketball scholarships
45 22 5 95 296 204
Ho uston
"There are some thmgs I can force them to do though," he
4131 28 4 311266
Mtnnesota
Said "Like take off their mustaches, for example "
34 34 3 71 242 248
Ed m onton
Wooden IS caught m the trap It's obv10us he would prefer to
32 37 5 69 245 278
1peg
have a well disc1plmed team, one that would wear blazers for W1nn
26 46 1 53 26 8 317
Vancouver
public appearances He'd also like to have h1s players go out and
l es
24 49 o 48 221 310
g1ve thell" best effort for the good of the school, too But he un- Los AngeSunday'
s games
derstands the rah-rah days are over
Mtnnesota 5 Houston 3
Lo s Angeles 6 Wtnntpeg 3
Bill Walton, like Kareem Abdui-Jabbar before him, w1ll do as
Toronto 3 Vancouver 1
he pleases If he wants to play,fme If he doesn't,fme
Quebec 4 N ew England 3
Ch1cago 3 Cleveland 3 (over
But Wooden genumely likes Walton He makes that clear
l tme )
uAGood.Persoo"
Monday ' s game s
"He sometlffies does thmgs wh1ch I feel goes agamst what he No games
scheduled
really believes," Wooden sa1d "But m thmgs that really matter,
N H L Stand1ngs
he's a good person "
By Un1ted Press International
For a ffildwesterner bke Owens, the lack of diSCiplme at UCLA East
gt ga
IS totally fore1gn It's mconce!veable, for instance, for Kansas Bostn 49 w1 ~ 19 t 107pts 327
players not to refer to hlffi as "Coach Owens " And when the Mnfr l 41 23 9 91 267 ;~;
N Y Rangers
Jayhawks travel as a team, they wear Kansas blazers
38 21 13
89
AI McGull"e at Marquette perhaps has come closer to str1kmg a Tornt 32 25 15 79 ; ;~
happy mediwn Wllh the youth of today then any other leadmg Buffl 30 J 1 11 71 125 235
Detrt 27 35 10
64 135 285
college basketball coach He and h1s players argue constantly, V ancouver
20 ~I 11
51
200 276
but when thell" playmg days are over, they look back on their
N Y l si
expenences w1th McGuire and Marquette w1th great fondness
17 38 17
51
170 229
we st
"I don't look for respect," sa1d McGuire "If 11 comes, !me"

0

attacks as you descnbe In this
case often the only ev1dence of
the 1rregular1ty that you can
see on an electrocardiogram
occurs durmg the attack The
heart tracmg really has two
purposes, fll"st 1t shows the rate
and rhytlun of the heartbeat,
and second 11 provides
evidence of heart muscle
damage, as m the cas&lt; of a
heart attack
Doctors and pat1 ents are
both frustrated w1th recurrent
attacks of 1rregulanty It
seems that the episodes have a
way of happenmg outs1de the
do cto r's off1ce and never when
he wants to take a record to see
what it IS
There IS a solulion to th1s too,
but 11 1s sometlffies difficult to
accomplish and expensive The
new portable tape recorders
can record your heart rate
contmuously for hours and
even days , and when the attack
occurs you then have a record
of what 11 really was
I would like to reassure you
that most of the ll"regularities
of the heart, In a young person

who has no ev1dence of heart
d1sease, are not really
dangerous They are very
annoymg Your Wife IS
probably m th1s category
because
her
medical
exammahon d1dn't show
anythmg
Incidentally, ~rregularilles of
this sort can be treated if that
IS what the problem IS There
are medicmes that can be
taken to calm down the heart
muscle and prevent the
ll"regular beats from taking
over the heart
The other possibility IS that
your w1fe may be over
breathing, a condition called
hyperventilallon I thmk of this
because of your comment
about her hands tmglmg
Overbreathmg can cause
ll"regularles of the heart and
the tmglmg sensatiOn The next
tlffie your wife has one of these
ask her to breathe very slowly
and m a shallow manner That
may help her Do not ask her to
hold her breath Breath holding
m these Cll"cumslances can
cause her to pass out

RAY CROMLEY
Ford's weaknesses
or strengths?

•••

By Ray Cromley
WASHINGTON (NEA) - How badly have we ffilSJUdged
V1ce President Gerlad Ford'
One of the more CUrious features of this c1ty IS the manner m
which a man gets a reputahon -as a penetratmg constituhonal
authority, as a discernmg expert on fore1gn affall"s, or as a
ploddmg, urumagmalive congressiOnal mmortty leader
An anecdote cBII move w1th a man for years - as bas
President Johnson's story about Ford's havmg played football
too often with his hefmet off
Men get a repuat10n for braiDS m th1s ca}lltal City when they
are good w1th words, to Wlt, "Ask not what your country can do
for you . "
Ford's literary style, by compar~son, IS more llffiited, his
vo1ce 1s a little flat
Other men become admired for thell" w1t, charm and
char1sma, qualihes sometunes confused w1th mtelligence
Ford 1s lackmg m these VIrtues too. A friend savs "Gerrv's
Wladventurous, urumagmahve, even pedestrtan m his
thinking
Pres1dents, senators and congressmen have gained prestige
and mtellectual stature when they or thell" speech writers
enunCiate mnovative concepts - which may or may not work
Even Ford's admirers don't claim originality IS his
trademark As a result, m one way or another, Ford has been
described as a seat wanner Without VISible signs of leadership.
But the qualilles outlmed above are not those most reqwred of a
president
What then about Gerald Ford'
Says an old college friend, "He's slow to embrace new Ideas
but no one has to tell hlffi anythmg twice. He doesn't try t~
change the syotem He sees his job as trymg to make 11 work."
A legislator who worked With Ford on Capitol Hill for a
decade says, "I don't know about hiS br~ghtness or his
ongmality But as an administrator he's tope. You come to bini
for a deciSion. He asks sharp questions- brings in other people,
asks them about some gaps m what you've sa1d and seeks con!
fll1llllhon or objections. Then makes his decision. It's usually the
right one, well-reasoned and to the pomt - not wishy-washy.
He's tops m this busmess
"Earlier GOP House leaders ran one-man shows," says an
old timer on the Hill, now retll"ed ''Ford expanded the leadership
to a nme-man team and never made unportant decisions alone
As president, I thmk he'd operate with a cabinet-type ad- ·
mlnistrahon, rather than with an elite White House staff."
Says another former colleague, ''He doesn 't g1ve you any of
that '!'Usee what I cando' stufflikesomanymenhere on the Hill '
do when they know they can't, or won 't, do anything. He will tell'
you right off, 'I can't buy that, but here's what! can do ' And then'
he does 11."
Other men use these words m descnbmg Ford comfortable, "~
reassurmg , bones!, sensible, nonnal, a feeling for traditiOn, not
slipshod -and, every so often, "not very bright "
'
Another aspect of Gerry Ford, mentioned by many men and "
women m Washmgton, was stated succmctly bji one : "When :
Gerry looks at you outpf th011esoft eyes,you can't say 'no'."
There obv1ously are strengths as well u weaknesaes in the "
ln ...a..nto"'"•...ll'.,t

I

Nolan was the b1g news and he
didn't even take part m either
game In fact he hasn't pitched
a smgle mmng m actual
competitiOn all sprmg, but that
doesn't mean he hasn 't been
workmg
- Nolan, on the disabled bst
prachcally all last year, asked
Larry Shepard, the Reds'
p1tchmg coach, to catch him
last Thursday
"It was the first tune this
sprmg that he threw the ball
where 11 landed m my hands
Without commg m on an arc,"
sa1d Shepard
Nolan threw to Shepard
aga m on Saturday
11
He threw so hard, I couldn't
handle hun, so I turned him
over to (John) Bench," sa1d the
Reds' coach "He wasn't only
throwmg fast balls, but hard
curves, changeups and everytlung ."

Bench also was llllpressed
'Gdl"y's fast ball 1s back to
about three-quarters what 1t
used to be,'' sa1d the Reds'
recetver
That m 1tself IS enough to get
the entire Cincmnall ball club

Wolfpack

lS

big favorite
GREENSBORO, N C
(UP!- To hear Marquette
coach AI McGwre tell It, his
team shouldn't even be allowed
m the Greensboro Cohsewn
tomght, much less play North
Carolina State for the NCAA
champ10nsh1p
"Marquette has been at the
top now for eight years and you
know for the last fiVe we have
never been out of the top 10,"
McGuU"e smd as he discussed
his team's fll"st appearance
ever in the finals "I would say
that thiS year 's team IS the fifth
or sixth best team I've )fl the
last e1ght years "
Marquette Wlll square off
agaJnst North Carolma State,
which beat UCLA m double
overtime, at 9 10 p, m EDT m
a nattonally-televised match
UCLA will play Kansas in a
consolation game at 6 35 p m
EDT, the f1rst time smce 1966
that the Brums Wlll not be m
the champiOnship game

Miller
champ
HILTON HEAD ISLAND,
S C (UP!) - A fully-dothed
Johnny Miller has streaked off
w1thanother $40,000 And that 's
$40,000 more than the other
three streakers got for thell"
run m the sun ~-·~day
The 26-year-&lt;&gt;ld golfmg
sensation from San Franc1sco
won the Her1tage ClaSSic, his
fourth golf lriwnph of the year,
by three strokes over Gibby
Gilbert and pushed hiS earnmgs to $149,105
Cool as you please , Miller
birdted the 15th hole to finish
the !mal round at !-under-par
70 and then Ignored a nude
yoWJg man and woman who
ran together down the next
faU"Way
HYeah, I saw them rumung
on the 16th faU"Way,'' sa1d
Miller "But after the bll"d!e on
15, I had no tellSlon whatsoever Nothing could bother

me."
Witnesses said that a lone,
nude male also streaked beside
the 18th f8li"Way before Miller
arr1ved to r eceive v1ctory
applause of some 7,000 persons
gathered around the !mal
green.
Gilbert hmshed w1th a
sparkling 69 over the tight little
per 72, 6,115S-yard Harbour
Town course on this wmdwhipped 1sland resort. He
picked up $22,800.

McGull"e, m a press br1efmg
Sunday, said one of the maJOr
reasons hiS team made 1t to the
fmals was Michigan's upset
wm over Notre Dame m the
first round of the Mideast
Regwnal Marquette, now 26-4
for the year, managed to slip
by Michigan, 72-70, to get to
Greensboro
"Notre Dame 1s def1mtely a
better ball club than we are
physiCally, and a lot of other
thmgs,'' sa1d McGwre, dressed
m bright yellow pants, a
pullover sweater, tenrus shoes
and no socks
McGu1re, asked what his
team has to do to beat North
Carolma State, deadpanned,
"Be very fortWlate "
Wolfpack coach Norman
Sloan wasn 't falling for any of
McGuli'e 's poor.ofllouthmg
Sloan, whose team now IS 291, was willmg to bu1ld up
Marquette's chances of upsetting the Wolfpack, even if
McGull"e wasn't
"This particular ball club
caught my eye m the latter
stages of the season," he sa1d
"I even picked them to come
out of the Mideast Regwnals
"They are a great basketball
team, they have a !me
defenstve team, and they have
fine players "
Sloan sa1d the very fact that
Marquette 1s g1ven little
chance of wmnmg the game
should serve as "added msptratlon" to the Warnors
"! think they are m an enVIable positiOn "
Marquette downed Kansas,
65-.51, m their Saturday senufmal which saw little offense
from e1ther club m tbe frrst
half Marquette blew a lead m
the last mmute and a half of the
first period to go mto mtermisslOn trailing by a pomt

The

COLUMBUS (UP!) - Pmse,
Cincmnall Elder's strong su1t
m recent years, shone through
agam here Saturday when the
Panthers
turned
back
preVIously unbeaten Canton
McKinley, 60-M, to wm the
Class AAA State H1gh School
Basketball Tournament
champwnsh1p for the second
season m a row
Akron Manchester defeated
Columbus B1shop Hartley, 7252, for the Class AA Iitle, and
Loram Clearvtew beat P1tts
burg Franklin Monroe, 74-69,
for the Class A crown
'We had to keep our pmse
because there was no way we
gf ga could have run w1th them,"
~
I t pts
Ph ladephla
45 14 11 101
2 ~1
142 sa1d Elder Coach Paul Frey
Chlcg 36 13 21
93
242 147 after Saturday's game "!
Lo s Angeles
30 30 12
72
209 212 didn't know last mght whether
Atlnl 27 32 13
67
193 221 or not we had a chance agamst
M tnnesola
22 33 16
60
21 8 245 them, but we got them down at
St L s 24 38 11
59
188 223 the end, and you know the
P ttl sburgh
.
25 38 7 58 21 7 2S2 potse ''
Cllrn 13 SO
9
35
187 314
McKinley's
highly
regarded
Sunday's results
Bulldogs came 1nto the game
Boston 6 Montreal 3
Vancouver 3 Toronto 2
With a perfect 2.&gt;-0 record but
N Y Rangers 5 Buffalo 3
fa1Ied offensively agamst CmN Y Is la nd ers 6 Atlanta 4
p ,tfsbu rgh 8 Detrott 0
Cinnall's light 2-3 zone defense
Ch1 cago 6 Mtnnesota 0
The game's top scorer,
Philade l phia 4 5 1 L OU IS 1
Lo s Ang eles 7 Calt torn 1a 1
Frank Ridley of Canton, scored
20 pomts and helped the
Monday's gam es
No games sc h edul ed
Btllldgos pull to w1thin five
potnts of the Panthers w1th JUSt
N BA Standtngs
under four mmutes left m the
By Umted Press Internation al
contest
Eastern Conference
Attant1c Dtvtsion
Bill Earley sank a fould shot
w 1 pet g b
for Elder, however, Rick Apke
Bos ton
56 24 700
New York
48 33 593
B
dropped m a field goal and the
Buffalo
42 39 519 u h
Ph l ladel phta 23 57 288 3211~ Panthers gamed control of the
Central DIVISIOn
boards to take a 57-50 advanw I pet g b
tage mto the !mal two mmutes
x Caplfal
45 35 563
Atlanta
35 ~6 432 10 1/:~ of play
Hou ston
31 SO 383 14'1'
"ThiS was the best team ever
Cleveland
29 52 358 16 1 ~
Western Conference
to
come out of Canton,'' sa1d
Midwest DIVISIOn
McKinley coach Bob Rupert,
w I
pet g b
M 1lwaukee
58 23 716
"and 1t didn't qmte make it
Chicago
53 28 654
5
agamst
a super ball club
Detrotl
52 29 642 6
KC Omah a
33 48 407 25
There ISII't a team m OhiO that
PaCifiC DIVISIOn
could run With us, and 1t took a
w I pet g b
L osAngele s
47 34 580
very deliberate team to beat
Gold en State
A3 37 538 3
Seattle
35 45 438 1Jl/, us"
Phoentx
30 51 370 17
The Panthers had a 23-3 rePortland
26 54 325 20 /~
cord
to go w1th thell" champiOnx c l m ched d 1v1S10n •,ue
Sunday's games
ship trophy
Bost on 109 Houston 106 (of)
Phillips Sets Pace
Capttal 120 Atlanta 92
Cleveland 114 New York 92
UPJ's Class AA Player of the
Los Angel es 150 Buffalo 124
Year,
t&gt;-11, 245-pound Mike
Phoentx 134 Golden State 121
Milwaukee 120 Portland 110
Plulltps, tallied 38 pomts and
Chicago 122 Sea ttle 113
fRilled down 22 reboWJds m
Monday ' s,JJam es
pacmg Manchester's Panthers
No games scheduled
to theU" convmcmg VIctory over
the Hawks of Hartley
ABA Standengs
By Un1ted Preu tnternal1onal
Ph1ll1ps was unquestiOJUJbly
East
the
dommant factor m leadmg
w 1 pet g b
N y
54 29 65 1
the Akron team to 118 last of 26
52 29 642
l
Ken tucky
46 36 561
71h wms, wtUmut a defeat, and
Car ol ma
27 55 329 2 6 1J~ haltmg a 14-{:ame Hartley wmVtrgtnta
21 61 256 32 1h
MemphiS
mng streak
west
w I pet g b
F1ve straight Ph1ll1ps
Utah
50 32 610
lnd tana
-45 37 549
4 /~ buckets m the second period
San Ant
44 38 537
5 112 helped the Panthers to a 33-16
Denver
36 46 439
13 12
San Dleqo
35 47 427 l4 1h edge after which Manchester
never traUed
Sunday's. James
New York 99 San Anton10 97
Hartley's M1ke Gilliland
MemphiS 104 Vtrgtnla 94
scored 13 pomts durmg the
Denver 109 carol ma 107
lnd1ana 101 Utah 89
fourth quarter m a futile
Kentucky 122 San Otego 111
Hawks attempt to rally and
Monaay's games
fmished the game Wlth 25
No games scheduled
POUlts

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lndudaSUndlyntneJ.Sentinel

underway

DENVER ( UPI ) - The 330
compelltors m the fo ur-day
p1te the foul trouble," sa1d Golden Gloves Tournament of
Walsh, "because we figured Champwns have taken their
the game had reached the pomt last friendly Jabs at each other
that we had to go with the best Boxmg begms m earnest
we had, and if they fouled out tomght
they JUSt fouled out,'' said
The
amateur
boxers
Walsh
gathered for a kickoff banquet
Larry Harns, the Class A Sunday mght at wh1ch
Player of the Year, led the heavyweight title con tender
Clippers, 22-2, w1th 30 pomts Jerry Quarry represented the
All-Oh1oan Mike Cross scored many professwnal boxers who
28 markers for the 25-4 Jets.
have come from the Golden
Gloves' ranks
More than JOO bouts w1ll be
AAA Champ1onshtp
CA NTON McKINLEY (54) held tomght and Tuesday m
R tdlc y 10 ( 0 OJ 20 Brown 5 (0
three rmgs set up on the floor of
0) 10 Hubbard 3 (3 4) 9 Hall 3
(l 4) 7 Ca lla s '1 ( 0 0 ) 4 Green 1
the Denver Aud1tonwn. One of
(0 0) 2 Sh tpp 1 (0 0) 2 Eilt s 0
the rmgs will be removed for
(0 0) 0 Totals 15 14 8) 5&lt;1
CIN C tNNATt Fl nFQ IM1
Wednesday mght 's quarter!!·
- A eke 5 ( 8 13) 18 Earley 7 ( 2
nals
and the sputl1ght w11l shine
41 16 Apro 1 (0 0) 2 N1emeyer 4
(0 1l 8
Brown I (0 0) 2
on a smgle rmg for Thursday's
St eng er 2 (2 4) 6 Bloemker 1
semlfmals and fmals
{ 6 6 ) 8 Tot al s 21 { 18 18 ) 60
The Rocky Mountam Golden
Gloves Franchise, the defendBy Quarters
mg team champwn, 1s hostmg
Canlon M cK mley
16 14 5 19- 54
the natiOnal event for the fll"st
Cm Cinnah Elder
tlffie m Its 47year history
5 18 13 14- 60
Fouled
ovt
Hubbard
Among the favorites to Win
Tec hn ,cal foul s None Total
the
team Iitle this year are
fo ul s
Can ton McKinley 21
Ctnctnnat t E ld er 11 A - 13 976
Fort Worth, Tex , which represents all of Texas, and Las
Vegas, Nev , which represents
seven states mcludmg Califorrua, Washmgton, Anzona and
Nevada
The nallonal competitors
was tagged for five of the Mets'
runs while Grote slammed a were the wmners of regwnal
three-run bomer off a Hall tournaments beld m the 33
golden gloves centers throughpltcll
out
the country
The Cardinals were led by
Jose Cruz who drove m three
runs with a double and an mfleld out to defeat the Reds 5-2
Cruz, batting 346 thiS sprmg,
doubled m the fll"st mning to
dr1ve m Ted Sizemore, who had
smgled, and Reggie Smith, who
had walked
Alan Foster settled down after a shaky fll"st inning and went
SIX for the Cards AI Hrabosky
followed w1th three scoreless
mnmgs
Clay Kirby gave up the fll"st
four St LouiS runs and Mike
McQueen worked the last two
mnings
Cruz's brother , Hector,
added the !mal run for the
Cardinals With his third sprmt
bomer m the seventh mnmg

Reds split in exhibition
TAMPA, Fla (UPI)- Asplit
squad of Cmcmnab Reds' players notched a 1~ victory over
the New York Mets here Sunday while the other half of the
club dropped a 5-2 contest to
the St. LouiS Cardmals m St
Petersburg, Fla
Tony Perez slammed a
three-run double durmg a
seven-rWJ e1ghth mnmg rally to
pace the Reds m the victory
over the Mets
Rookie nghthander John
Glass and veteran Bob Miller
were tagged for seven h1ts m
the b1g e1ghth to allow the Reds
to take the lead after entermg
the frame behind 8-3
The Mets pounded Jack Bll·
lmgham, Tommy Hall and Pedro Borbon for 14 hits, mcludmg three by Jerry Grote to
buUd the early advantage
Billingham worked the first
SIX inrungs for the Reds and

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Steve Snowden
SSJ Russel St

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State Farm
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finals

4 p.m. to closing

Jl-&amp;"t~

- _EDt E\111

Boxing

ball club since their tnp to
Puerto R1co last week for a
parr of exJnb1llon games J1m
Sundberg walked w1th one out
m the 15th and Frank Bolick
th e wmrung pitcher, hit a
double play ball to Foil The
shortstop let the ball go
through his legs and M1ke
Kubbage then smgled home
Sundberg
Padres 2 Athleti CS 0
Bill Grei f, R1ch Troedson and
Vtcente Romo combmed to
p1tch San D1ego to a five hit 2-()
Vlctory over Oakland Clarence
Gaston Si ngled home the
Padres first run off loser Ken
Holtzma n 1n the f~rst mnmg
and also thetr second one wtth
an mfleld out m the fifth
Angels 15 Brewers 2
Charlie Sands fourth home
run of the sprmg was a grand
slam that" as the key blow m a
15-2 VIctory by the Angels over
the Brewers Bob Oliver and
Joe Lahoud also homered for
the Angels, who broke open the
contest wtth a ftve run rally m
the s1xth mnmg The game was
played m Palm Sprmgs, Calif ,
where for the second straight
day two male streakers raced
across tth e outfield.
Cubs 5 Giants 4
The Cubs came up Wlth three
runs m the fifth off Jlffi Barr
for a 5-4 wm over the
Giants Julio Morales' double
was the key blow durmg the
rally Milt Pappas was the
WIMer and Barr the loser Ed
Goodson, San franc1sco f1rst
baseman, suffered a hamstrmg
pull m h1s left leg and 1s expected to be out a week
R1ghthanders D1ck T1drow
and Cec1I Upshaw p1tched
Cleveland to a 9-4 victory over
the Umvcrs1ty of Anzona

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INSURANCI

CIII!:IRK L TANNmiLL,

"We respected their shootIng ability," SBi d Akron coach Bernard Conley, "but we though t
we could take them on the
boards Gilliland 1s a fme
shooter."
Coach DICk Geyer of 20-8
Hartley wasn't b1tter about the
setback
"I have no complamts," sa1d
Geyer "It's been a tremendous expenence for all of l..L'I3
We have to make the right
plays at the r~ght time, and
today It JUSt didn't happen"
Switch Eflectlve
Asw1tch from a zone defense
to a man~o-man defense w1th
4 42 left m the game was JUSt
what Clearv1ew's Clippers
needed to come from six pomts
behmd and stop the Jets of
Franklm Monroe
Three Ulrmn starters had a
total of 11 fouls when coach Bob
Walsh ordered the defensive
change
"We went to the man-to-man
defense w1th our starters des-

Pirates 7 Phlllles 2
RIChie Zisk hit a pall" of
homers and Bob Robertson one
m Pittsburgh's 7-2 wm over
Philadelphia M1ke Anderson
connected for the Ph11lhes Jim
Rooker went the first five mrungs for Pittsburgh, )'lelded
one unearned runand was the
wmner
Orioles 8 Braves 1
Andy Etchebarren's smgle
w1th the bases loaded
Wlraveled a !-all tie m the
seventh and the Baltunore
Orioles added five more runs m
the e1ghth to crush the Atlanta
Braves, 8-1 Doug DeCinces
had a solo home run for the
Onoles
Rangers 3 Expos 2
Tlffi Fob's eighth error 1n 10
ga mes enabled the Texas
Rangers to register a 3-2
dec1s1on over the Montreal
Expos The loss was the siXth
m a row for the Expos who
haven't looked like the same

1

...-~-A.u;
...
lJiJ
JW,

IJtvOTEDTOTHE

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DliiJ S.IIitel

teammates, held them to one
hit through the first seven
mnmgs
Yankees 2 While Sox I
Steve Klme and Scott
McGregor snapped a four
game losmg shde for the
Yankees w1th a combmed four
hit 2 I conqUj!st of the Wh1te
Sox Reliever Stan Perza nowskl wild pitched the
wmmng run across m the
seven th
Royals 7 Tigers 2
The Kansas City Royals
JUmped on lefthand er Mickey
Lohch for SIX runs m siX m-nmgs to beat the Detro1t
Tigers, 7 2 Amos OtiS and Fran
Healy each doubled home two
runs, w1th Steve Busby
a,Ilowmg two runs on f1ve hits
over siX mnmgs to get the
VICtory
Red Sox 6 Twins 4
Tommy Harper 's two -run
smgle capped a f1ve-run s1xth
mnmg rally that gave the
Boston Red Sox a 6-4 triumph
over the Minnesota TwUIS
R1ck WISe was the wmner
although he gave up homers to
Steve Braun, Bobby Darwm
and Rr1c Soderholm

Elder repeats

m

•

exc1ted Gary Nolan, even
three-quarters as rast as he
used t&lt;r be, still makes a formidable add111on to the Reds'
staff
They rallied for seven runs 10
the eighth mnmg m their game
w1th the Mets Sunday for a 10-8
VICtory Tony Perez' double
was the b1g blow m the mnmg
The Reds' second squad was
beaten by the Cardmals 5-2
w1th Clay Kirby gJVmg up four
of the Cards' runs m the sncth
uuun gs he worked Jose Cruz ,
contmumg his sp1r1ted hittmg,
drove m three runs for St
LoUIS
Dodgers 3 Astros 0
Willie Crawford Singled
home two runs and Jlffi Wynn
another agaJnst his former
Houston teanunates m a three·
run e1ghth mrung rally that
proVIded Los Angeles with a ~
VIctory Don Sutton and M1ke
Marshallluruted the Astros to
f1ve hils, with Marshall p!Ckmg
up the deciSion Reliever Fred
Scherman , who came on m the
e1ghth, was the loser His
predecessor, Claude Osteen,
gomg agaUJSt his ex-Dodger

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AF\ottlc ~d ,_.~&amp;Tl'I! ....,_.~ Co.,on,;O ~

�4- The Daily Septinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Macch 25, 1974

s

Blazers may land·Bill Walton

IRA BERKOW

Pete Rose--a Ty Cobb
for our time?
By Ira Berkow
NEW YORK ( UPil
"A
Pete Hose by any other name
still stinks," scribbled one ncoShakespearean paraphrast on

Co bb was playmg-manager.
. Then he wa s traded to
Philadelphia. The fi rst game
Ehmke wa s in against Detroit,

he hit Ehmke with a pitch . And
Ehmke called lo Cobb, 'I hit 20
batters for you last year . Now I

a banner last October here in

Shea Stadium.
This literary brainstorm was

got one for myself.' "

conceived after Pete Rose of
the Cincinnati Reds slammed
into Bud Harrelson of the Mets
while trying to break up a
double play. Dust, sp ikes and a
fist or two new .
When Rose returned to his
left-field position, after th e

Cobb would snarl at the
opposit ion, said Fonseca. And ,
in his wa:y, so does Rose . "One

pitcher got Pete out three
straight times," sa id Fonseca.

"The fourth time up , Pete
shouted to him, 'Go down tu the
bullpen and get warmed up,

nefarious inning , boos and

to teammates.

Foreman,
Norton
weigh-in
CARACAS (UP!) - Heavyweight champion George Foreman, who has a contract In his
pocket for a multi-million
dollar September defense
against extilleholder
Muhammed All in far away
Africa, meets Ken Norton
officially today when they
'l'uesday 's
weigh-in for
scheduled IIH'ound championship fight.
Harry Schwartz, vice-president of Video Techniques, Inc.,
co-promoters of Tuesday's
fight, said a contract was
signed several weeks ago for a
Foreman-Ali fight, in Kinshasha, Zaire providing Norton
does not upset the champion.
He said a group of Swiss
businessmen , representing

African
interests,
had
guaranteed a $10 million purse
Ior the bout.
The unbeaten Foreman was
expected to weight 220 pounds
for his 40th professional fight
while Norton, a :Uo-1 underdog, should come in at a
career high of 213 or .. 214
pounds. The ceremonies are
set for noon EDT at the
Poliedro Stadium, site of the
first heavyweight title fight to
be held in South America.
Another fight behind closed
doors also was likely.
Foreman's trainer, D-ick
Sadler, was fined an undisclosed amount SUnday for
failing to appear before the
local boxing commission to
discuss the rules for the fight.
Sadler, however, maintains
the local commission has
nothing to do witlt the fight
which, he insists, is under the
jurisdiction of the World
Boxing Council and the World
Boxing Association. The local
people think differently. They
say they have exclusive contrQV
Norton, who split two 12round decisions with Ali last
year, was due to leave his
mountain retreat of the last
tllree days, where he went for
.peace and quiet.
The gate for Tuesday's fight,
·being telecast live to 70
countries, was expected to be
in tbe range of $3 million.
Foreman, 25, Is on a $700,000
guarantee against 40 per cent
of all monies, while Norton, 28,
receives $200,000pr 20 per cent.

Philadelphia 76ers, the Golden State Warriors, 134-121,
Eastern tailenders, for the despite 46 points by Warrior
right to pick first in the amual . ·eazzie Russell as Keith Erickdraft pf college players. If the son of the Suns had a careerBlazers win the toss, there L' high 40; the Boston Celtics'beat
little doubt they'll grab Walton. the Houston Rockets, 109-106,
The Lakers earned the right in overtime to dim the Rockets'
to meet Milwaukee in the first hopes for a playoff berth in the
• round of the playoffs Friday in Central Division as Jo Jo White
Milwaukee by beating the scored 35 points for tbe Celts;
Buffalo Braves, IS0-124, Capital had four players over
Sunday night as Elmore Smith 20points, led by Kevin Porter's
scored 37 points and Gail
Goodrich had 35.
·
Bob McAdoo, the league's
leading scorer , returned to
action for Buffalo after missing
six games with a virus and
scored 40 points.
The Plloenix Suns eliminated
the playoff chances of the

stand in ' on second base ," it

POPULARITY has nothing to do with bas-•h:lll as played
by T~· ('obb, left. and Pete Rose.

even more absorbing. They

differ mainly in degree.
Cobb had a lifetime batting
average of .361 for 24 seasons.
Rose, going into his 12th bigleague year , has a .312 career
average.
~~cobb was a super hitter,"

said Lew Fonseca, the
American League battin g
champion in 1929 and currently
a sometime hitting coach with
the Cincinnati Reds, "and Pete
is a fine hitter.
"I think overall Cobb was
more talented , but both showed

tr emend ous desire an d used

their skills to the ultimate .
"Pete is always asking me
about Co bb . I remember his
first question. 'Tell me, Lew,
was Cobb as tough as they
say ?'

"Tougher, I told him ."
Cobb was always getting in
brawls, with teammates , with

opponent.s and with fans , who
he would climb into the stands
to wound .
"Cobb would do any thing to
win," sa id Fo nseca. " I
remember a stor y concerning

Jayhawks to show the nation
they are a good team .
Kansas, which lost a 64-51
decision to Marquette in Saturday 's NCAA semifinal round,
will play UCLA at 6:35 p.m.
EDT prior to Marquette's
championship game with topranked North Carolina State.
Wooden, who has described
the consolation game as "ror
the birds," has said he will
allow his seniors and starters
to decide if they want to play.
There are indications that AllAmerica center Bill Walton
may not play.
Owens told newsmen Sunday
that he realized that ail
coaches have different styles
but told Wooden that he hoped
UCLA will field its regular
starting five.
"Our players really hope
that the seniors will want to
play." he said. "We would
prefer to play against the very
best of UCLA even though we
wouldn't have as good a chance
. "
to wm.
Owens said his team play~d

il

II
~

Yarborough zs
A~lanta 500 champ
.

ATLANTA (UP!) - David
Pearson had all the power, but
Cale Yarborough is $26,950
richer today because he found
the best way to drive the
Atlanta
International
Raceway.
That way, said Cale, is only a
few feet from the outside wall
at speeds nearing 150 miles per
hour.
Yarborough powered to a
surprisingly easy victory of
nearly a half-minute over
Pearson in the $113,500 Atlanta
500 stock car race Sunday. It
was victory nwnber three of
the season for Yarborough in
his Junior Johnson-prepared
Chevrolet.
"I have never run harder,"
said the popular Timmonsville,
S.C., driver, who'added that he
got more"revolutions out of his
engine by driving high on the
1.5-mile speedwaY,.
·
Pearson , who picked up
$10,150 for his second place
finish, was the heavy pre-race
favorite in his Woods Brothers
Mercury. He took the green
flag in the pole position, aiming
for his second victory in a row
in this race.
But Yarborough's tactics
and a little luck late in the race,
left the rest of the field so far
behind that oniy .Pearson
finishe9 in the same lap.
Anotller lap back in third
place was George Follmer in a
Ford, who ran out ol gas on the
last lap but was voted the
rookie o? ihe race by sportswriters.
Buddy Baker .was fourth in a

t
11·1

~

Dodge and Donnie Allison fifth
in a Chevrolet. ·
Yarborough, who had
predicted before the race that
Pearson was the man to beat
since his was the most
powerful car and had qualified
at five mph faster than Yarborough, took the lead for good
with 83 miles to go .
Shortly after Yarborough
took the lead, Pearson pitted in
hopes of making a late run at
the leader. But Yarborough
was able to pit a few laps later
under a caution after Carl
Adams spun out in his Ford and
the caution flag came out.
Yarborough 's race speed of
139.910 mph was far below the
record average of 140.701 mph
he set here in winning in 1970. It
was the .fourth time Yarborough has won this race.

six left."

there were some unusual

By United Press lntemattonal
The historic city of Boston,
considered by some the
cradle of American hockey,
rocked with that familiar old
cry again:
" We're No . 1!" •.. "We're
No. 1!"

VACUFLO
Don't break your back ·
tugging a heavy Vac unit.

FOREMAN &amp; ABBOTT
.PH . 9Yl-S321 ·- - Middleport
e:v112

calls," is the way Purdue
coach Fred Schaus recalls that
night. But things came full
circle Sunday afternoon at
Madison Square Garden when
the two teams met again in the
NIT finals -ru~d Purdue won,
87-81, for the championship.
"I'm glad we mel Utah in the
final because knowing them
gave us an edge," said Schaus,
whose Boilermakers finished
third in the Big Ten this season,
then came to New York ,
eliminated tournament
favorite North Carolina in the
first round of the NIT, and
rolled through three more wins
to the title.
One thing Purdue did not win
- the "Most Valuable Player"
Award, which went to 6-ll
center Mike Sojourner of Utah,
who tallied 94 points and

insistently

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YOUR FULL SERVICE BANK_

-Income Supplement Program .Administered by Social
Security paid from general revenue funds.
-For Aged over 65

If you are 65 or over, or blind or disabled, you may qualify for SSI If:
-Your total resources are less tha_n 51500 for a single person or $2250 for a
couple. Resources . mclude savmgs, checking, stocks, bonds, etc.
Resources do NOT mclude home or car.

-Your mont~ly inco_me from pensions, retire~ent, social security or
other related mcome IS less than $160 a month for a single person or les
lhan $230 a month for a couple.
·
s

Robinson's

Address--------------------:-------- Social Security No.------------'
.Are you married? _________ Are you over 65? __________·Biind?
Disabled?
------

992 5428

Signature

Pomeroy

Haven, W.Va. Mark manages the route, but Mike is always
there to help. They are the sons of Rev. and Mrs. J. William
DeMoss, New Haven. Rev . DeMoss is the pastor of the New
Haven United Methodist Church. Both boys attend the New
Haven Elementary School, take piano lessons, and sing in the
church choir. Mark enjoys all sports, but admits that golfing
is his thing. He also plays trumpet in the school band. Mike
and Mark enjoy family camping in the summer. Mark has
had his paper route since September in 1973.

~::I'SI!'~~::I'SI!'-'.!*::;;.::~=:~'!so:..c.~:;::•;cQ•:=:;;; :: _!.

..,,...

~

Family Lib

.,,

~l

The dollars and
'sense ' of kids

bu~

you are willin g to lead a lessexciting

me ror a

few years so

" Do Ameri ca ns sudd enl y yo u ca n give your young
children the emotional support
hate kids ?
"Esquire" asks the ques tion they need ~ Here 's Ms. Wil son's
in its March issue, with its answer to that. 1
usual emphasis on bein g . "The dominant America n

I N\lRANll

-

Won Lost
54
34
Pul lins Excav at ing
46
42
T eam l
44
44
Royal Cr own
32
56
Tea m Hig h J games - Team
I, 1769; Team 4, 15 72; Ro y a l
Cr own 1565 .
High Team Ga me - T eam 1,
64 9 ; Tea m 1, 623; ROyal Crow n

Ind. J Games Bec k y
Dunfee 545, Marlene Wil son
51 1. Be tty Whitlatch 471.
Hig h Ind . Game Be cky
Dunfee 2M R,,... ~, ·· ,.....
•
Marlen e Wil son . ]~7.

Sa turd;ay Junior League
March 161 1974

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High Ind . Game - Ron Casci
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H i gh Seri es - Greg Cundiff
442 , Ron Casci 420 .
Team High Ga me - Gutt er
Dusters 73 1!

parental emotion, when con-

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ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY
We Congmtulate Pomeroy National on the Opening
of the New Auto Bank.

s

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ON THIS

''

WASHER-DRYER
INIOII=~IC?IEI
by FEDDERS

marriages, but no such thing as
trial children."
·
About 40 years ago another
young American had her '·"
doubtr, about parenting . As she
examined the child-hating
attitudes of the primitive
Mun gdugumoor tribesmen
(and tribeswomen ), Margaret
Mead made up her mind :
"I rea cted so strongly
against the set of the culture
that it was here I decided that I
would have a child no matter
how many miscarriages it
meant . It seemed clear to me
that a culture that so
repudiated children could not
be a good culture."
VACATION HERE
John Ray Tubbs of
Washington c. H. spent the
spring break from Ohto
University, Chillicothe Branch,
here with his grandparents,
Mrs. Mildred Tubbs ~d Mr.
and Mrs. Norman Snuth and
other relatives.

NO OTHER
MA-NUFACTURER
MAKES IT

20 lb.
capacity

3/4

hp Motor

2 speeds
6 cycles
WATER SAVER
Auto Limit Filter
System
Porcelain Top·
3 Cycle Dryer
Reg.-Perm Press
Double Knit
. .
Mttlel LWA2158A Washer

Model LDE2050A Dryer

Limited Time
OHer

because they k now th ey're

----

minor , lasting only a few
seconds . PTI made no mention
of casualties or damage.

doing
bu si ness
with
f.riendly neighbor s who
appreciate
t h e ir
patronage ...

C ORPORA T ION

- ----------

ignore curfews and flee into the
streets.
The Press Trust of India
(PTII said the quake was

Team 4

front ed with what selfless
effort has wrought over the
Team H ig h Series - Gutter
years in the family room , is Dust er s 2069 _
likely to be built, closely
seconded by rage, and a feeling
There may be fewer cars
of having been thoroughly on the road, but the number
of nuts driving hasn't
conned.''
(I'm still in the family room, diminished.
so !can't look back. And I have
felt guilt and rage as a parent,
but I've also experienced
satisfaction and pride, wonder
and delight, and a deeper .sense
of gratitude than a paycheck
has ever inspired. )
Gary Wills' giece, " Are
Young Americans Afraid to
Have Kids ?, " finally gets
beyond the deledtably snide
Esquire put downs, to the
source of the trouble. He uncovers a fear that grows as the
underpinnings of our culture
are kicked out in the name of
freedom , a fear that we are not
up to the job of parenting, of
fos tering another person 's
identity , because we don 't

-·

--

DFP OSI T

ca usin g panicky residents to

March '21 , 1974

for tools and materials
whe·n they need them.

S20,000.00 Maximum Insurance For
Eoch Depositor

--

MILD EARTHQUAKE
NEW DELHI I UP II - A
mild earthquake struck the
capital of the riot-scarred
Indian sta te of Bihar Sunday,

Thursday Allernoon League

trendy and ironic and avoiding

With Cus hion Insole

lf O ERA L

were not released.

l.ncal Bowling

sentiment like the plague.
There's the "High Cost of
Childhood" chart which
enumerates expenses incurred
by children from conception
through graduate school - at
least $203,026 according to their
calculations. (Figures, of
course, include tuition to
Harvard Law School, $200
worth of infant toys, color TV
for the kids ' room and other
exJl&lt;nses which some of Us
might not consider absolutely
essential.)
.If the dollar cost doesn't
make you think twice about
progeny, Jane Wilson sends out
these salvos on the emotional
toll: " What is the most
desirable temperament for an
adult human being whose days
are to be spent in the constant
custodial care of small
children? An unusual combination of vitality ·and
placidity is required, of a sort
most likely to be found, if

POMEROY, OHIO

M!Millll

the com pany. Some 800
members of the Independent
Slovewo-f.kers Union ratified
the pact covering 13 Tappan
plants. Details of the contract

Sale! WINTUK YARN

What'' You say you realize

(Today 's column is written ' infants can be draining,

by Joanne )

a new three-year contract with

559

:·:·:

By Joanne and Lew Koch

WORKERS RETURN
MANSF IELD, Ohio ( UPI J Workers began returning to
their jobs at Tappan Corp.
plants here and in Ontario,
Ohio, Sunday, after approv ing

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

the " FRIENDLY ONES"

THE FARMERS BANK
AND SAVINGS CO.

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

.,

An optimist is a pessimist ·
in -training.

Don ' t be fooled by price
pennants and ads saying
" Look how chea p we are"
- Remember. you alway's
get exactly what you pay
lor . Wise people depend on

----

Date

brother, Mike, 7, are the Sentinel paper carriers in New

"Fools need advice, but
only wise m en are better
for if."

And even a very good money
manager 's job is-easier when
he has more of it to manage.

SUPPLEMENTAL SECURITY INCOME

DRY CLEANING
LAUNDRY

BROTHER TEAM - Mark DeMoss, 11, left, and his

Tucker, Warren High ; Vincent
and Julie Watki!l)!, Valley
Force High, Parma Heights.

... There are, as they say, trial

Name ____________________________~---------.
Phone No. -------------

Amount earned last month from a j o b ? - - - - - - - - Amount received la'st
month from Social Security, Veteran's Pension, Retirement, etc.
Can you visit your local Social Security Office?
r---------~----

i.sm or inaptitude."

"'!:k for you in a Savings Account
or Certificates of Deposit with
us ... where they will grow some
every day .

"

A repreSentative from Social Security will contact you.

discharge papers which could
ruin their chances of getting
jobs.
Many employers knew the
code, Aspin and Koch said, and
could determine prospective
employes had been mustered
out for such things as "apathy,
defective attitude, financial
irresponsibility, bed-wetting,
homosexual tendences, alcohol-

~1 by keeping your spares at

AMERICAN RED CROSS
401 FOURTH STREET
MARlEnA, Ol:tiO 45750

'
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Gov. Upper Arlington High; D-ovid
and Mrs: John J. Gilligan Sun- Co ry, Taylo r Hi gh, North
day presented awards to 27 Bend; Victor D' Altorio,
high school artists from around Normandy High,. Parma; Tim
Ohio at the opening of the Third Decker , Brookhaven High ,
Anntwl Governor's Youth Art Columbus; Don Moe, Maumee
Month Exhibition at the Hi gh; Paula Goodman,
Columbus Gallery of Fine Arts. Eastmoo r Se ni or
High,
The ceremonies recognized Columbus .
the top winners among the alLinda Gregg, Brookhaven
most 3,000 entries in the com- High, Columbus ; Peggy Harpetition, sponsored by The Ohio man, Memo rial High , St.
Art Education Association , the Mary's ; Debbie Hatfield, FindGallery , The Ohio Education lay High ; Mike Hord, NorthDepartment and the Ohio Arts land High, Colwnbus; AlexCouncil.
ander Huryn, James Ford
This year's exhibit included Rh odes High , Cleveland;
macrame, ceramics, fabr ic Debbie Kaskowski, Cleveland
and weaving as well as pencils, Ce ntral Ca tholi c;
Rose
oils and other media .
J avor ina, Westland Hi gh,
The 1974 award to the top Gallaway; Donald Jones,
artist was designed by Andy Eastmoor , Columbus; Sue
Burns, a senior at Westland Konanz, also Eastmoor.
High School, Columbus.
Steve Nichols, Granville
Mrs. Gilligan presented the High ; Walter Ongaro, Rhodes
awards to :
High; Cleveland ; Nancy PeruMichael Adams, Ce ntral- sek, Euclid Senior High; Dee
Hower High School, Akron ; Dee Sells, Fairview High, DayMark Bucklew, Worthington ton; Sandy Spoon, Sycamore
High; Susan Clellen, Shaker High , Cincinnati ; Duane Stepp,
Heights High; Holly Cooper, Fairview High, Dayton; Aaron

men were unaware they had
such a specification on their

by good
management

:- ~o~r monthly income from employment is less than 5365 a month for an
tndtvldual or less· than $505 for a couple.

&lt;ON REQUEST)

/

14-year-&lt;Jld girl."
"Until one knows who or
(How's that for sticking it to what he or she is, how bring
the American housewive? another thing or self into the
messy guessing ga me of
modern life' It is bad enough to
be a guinea pig oneself. Guinea
'piggizing' others seems cruel

Your dollars
can be
stretched

Who are blind or disabled

PROJECT SSI-ALERT

decode the milita ry discharge
papers of their colleagues.
The Defense Department said
last week . it no longer would
code military paJl&lt;rs so that the
reason for discharge could be
determined . The Pentagon decision capped a long determined
effort by Reps. F. Edward
Hebert, D-La. ; Edward Koch.
D-N.Y.; and Les Aspin, D-Wis.
The congressmen said last
ye~r 35,000 servicemen were
given SPN (Separation Program Numbers) "indicating
unsuitable " military service,
and that in many cases the

anywhere, in a not very-bright _ know who we are .

OR THOSE

CLE A N ING

In by 10. Out at 5

---

-

If you feel you might be eligible for SSI, please fiH out the coupon below"~nd to:

SHIRT
FINISHING

MEIGS THEATRE

_OPTOMETRIST. .

DRY

SERVICE ON

Ceramatop·

MONDAY
p. m. Tuesday at Harri~nville
OR KAN Coin Club meeting . School. Potluck, take own table
Election of officers . Social hour service. Door prize. Everyone
and tradin'g session starting at invited.
7 p.m. will precede meeting
XI GAMMA Mu Chapter.
when out of town coin dealers Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, 7:30
will be present to buy, sell and p.m. at the Columbus and
trade. Committees for March Southern Ohio Electric Co.,
31 coin show to be named and Middleport.
coin auction to follow meeting.
Refreshments. Mee ting at
WEDNESDAY
social rooms of the Columbus
POMEROY
- MIDDLEPORT
and Southern Ohio Electric,
Lions
Club,
regular
meeting,
Middleport.
CHAPTER
17,
Ohio Wednesday noon, Meigs Inn.
POMEROY MASONIC TemAssociation of Public School
ple
Assn. Wednesday, 6:30 p.
Employes will meet at 7:30
m. All trustees and officers to
p.m. Monday in the Meigs
attend.
Junior High School cafeteria at
OHIO VAILEY Cornmandry
Middleport.
24, Knights Templar, WedCULTURAL Arts Fair, 7 to 8 nesday, 7:30 p. m. Masonic
p.m. at the Pomeroy Temple, Pomeroy , stated
Elementary School.
oon,clave. All Sir Kllights inBEND 0' THE RIVER vited .
Garden Club, Monday, 7:30 p.
WILDWOOD GARDEN Club,
m. at the home of Mrs. Andrew Wednesday, 7:30p.m. home of
Cross , Racine. Mrs. James Mrs. Karl Grueser.
Diehl to have devotions.
AMERICAN
Legion
TUESDAY
Auxiliary , Feeney-Bennett
SOUTHERN Band Boosters Post 128, 6:30 potluck dinner
monthly meeting, 7:30p.m. at with legionnaires as guests.
high school in Racine.
Meeting at 7:30 p.m.
RACINE Post American
FEENEY - BENNETT Post
Legion Auxiliary, 7:30p.m. at 128. American Legion, 7:30
p.m. at the hall.
hall.
JUNIOR American Legion
luvestigatlog Explosion
Auxiliary, Feeney-Bennett
TRAVIS AFB, Calif. (UP!) Post 128, 6:30p.m. at the hall . An investigating board of Air
AMERICAN
Legion Force officers has been sifting
Auxiliary, Drew ·Webster Post wreckage of a DC-8 commercial
39, 7:30 p. m. Tuesday at the jetliner which exploded on the
hall. Mrs. Ellen Couch to ground Saturday night, resulting in one death and three
present the program.
POMEROY CHAPTER 80, injuries.
Three explosions erupted as
Royal Arch Masons, special
convocation, Tuesday, 7:30 p. ground crews were performing
m. Pomeroy Masonic Temple routine maintenance on the
to confer the mark master and Airlift International jet at a
the past master degrees. parking ramp.
Maurice Simon, 36, a civilian
Refreslnnents.
MIDDLEPORT Masonic mechanic, was killed and three
Lodge, 363, 7:30 Tuesday night fellow employes of Servair, Inc.
at the Temple for fellowcraft were injured. The firm perdegree work . All master forms maintenance for all
civilian aircraft at Travis.
masons invited.
MEIGS COUNTY Riding
Club, 7:30p.m. Tuesday, home COSTING MILLIONS
WASHINGTON (UP!) - Rep .
of Mrs. Sharon Wilson, Middleport. Invitation to all new Les Aspin, D-Wis ., says the
upgrading of Civil Service
members.
workers
at the Pentagon is
HARRISONVIlLE Senior
Citizens, birthday dinner, 6:30 costing American taxpayers
$400 million a year.
Aspin , frequent critic of the
Defense Department, said this
figure was the conclusion of a
Library of Congress study
Tonight &amp; Tuesday
made
at his request.
March25·26
The library told Aspin that
"It
must be emphasized that
Walt Disney's
these
figures represent crude
ROBIN HOOD
. (Technicolor)
averages and only approximate
Meet Robin Hood , and his
the amount actually spent .. .
merry Menagerie.
according
to our calculations,
(GJ
therefore, grade creep would
Disney FeatureHe :
Islands of the Sea
currently account for an
Disney Cartoon:
increase in the annual DOD
Peter and the Wolf
civilian payroll of approximateShow Starts 1 p.m.
ly $400 million."

IT IS

2 HR.

1 DAY

The

N. W. COMPTON, 0. D.

this season.

"If you want something
badly, you have to sacrifice to
get it," Schaus said. 41 You have
to discipline yourself."

500 Inaugural
Ray Harroun won the fi rs!
indianapolis 500 auto ra ce
with a speed of 74.59 miles
per hour in 1911. Mark Dono·
hue set a record of !63.&lt;UJ5
m.p.h. in 1972.

SECURITY INCOM.E?

unin-

Boston Bruins made It official by mauling the Montreal Canadlens, 6-3, for their
third National Hockey
League Eastern Division
title In four years.

grabbed 72 rebounds in four
games.
Sojourner, whose brother
Willie is a star of the New York
Nets of the American Basketball Association, is a
sophomore at Utah and said
today he wants to graduate
from college. But he admitted,
"I really don't know what I'd
do," if the pros come at him
now with a juicy offer to turn
professional.
If and when he does turn pro,
Sojourner thinks his most
natural position in the pros
would be forward and thinks he
would be able to make the
swilch from center easily.
For Schaus, former coach of
the University of West Virginia
and later coach and general
manager of the L&lt;ls Angeles
Lakers of the National Baskethall Association, the N. I. T.
triumph represented a huge
personal achievement.
"I've been coaching for IS or
16 years in the colleges and in
the pros," he said. "I've been
in the playoffs many times, but
until this time l never had won
the big game."
Schaus praised his players
for their ••willingness to sacrifice" to achieve their goals

Legal arguments which could
determine whether the George
Foreman-Ken Norton heavyweight title fight Is viewed at
200 closed circuit television
locations in North America will
be heard Monday In federal
court.
K.O. Inc., a Nevada corporation headed by L&lt;lren Cassina,
is seeking a preliminary injunction in a breach of contract
suit. The suit is against
Foreman, his manager and
trainer Charles Sadler, the
champion's financial and business manager Leroy Jackson,
and several corporations.
Attorney Robert Reid, representing Cassina , says U.S.
District Judge Roger D. Foley
set arguments for 1:30 p.m.
Monday to determine whether
to grant a preliminary injunction . The federal court hearing
is scheduled about 30 hours
before Foreman and Norton
step into the ring in Caracas,
Venezuela, on Tuesday night.
The legal action is directed
at blocking the closed circuit
television, not the IIH'ound
boxing match itself.
K.O. Inc. is · seeking $2.5
million in damages on grounds
it has a five-year exclusive
contract for all ancillary rights
to Foreman fights. Tbe contract, signed by Sadler, was
dated Jan. 9, 1971, about one
year before Foreman became
heavyweight champion .
If Cassino were granted his
motion for a preliminary in-

junction, it could; In effect,
suspect all a n c i I I a r y
agreements, covering closed
circuit television, for example,
until the breach of contract suit
were settled.

Awards made to artists

congressmen today offered to

-

terruptedly, Boston Garden
fans kept repeating the
phrase Sunday night and out
on the

26, in beating tbe
Hawks, 126-92, as Pete
vich, Atlanta ace, missect"'r"3''·l
IS field goal attempts
scored only 11 points;
Lenny Wilkens' 22 points
the Cleveland Cavaliers to a
114-92 win over the New York
Knicks in the Cavs' final ap.
pearance at their old Cleveland
Arena home before moving
next year to the new Coliseum.

WHAT IS SUPPLEMENTAL

For the last fiv e minutes,

•

In 1973, James McCord,
former security chief for
President Nixon's cainpaign .
committee, told a senate
investigating committee that
White House counsel John Dean
and Jeb Stuart Magruder,
Nixon election committee official, knew in advance of the
Watergate bugging.

NIT honors

draws a laugh from Perez. And
a slow sm ile from Rose.
NEW YORK (UPI ) - Back
Cobb , parti cularly , was on New Year's Day , the
obsessed with being tops. Once, Purdue Boilermakers weren 't
he was ange red when he exactly happy about the way
r eturned to his hotel room saw 1974 was getting underway. But
his roomma te in the bath tub. now, as the first Big Ten team
Cobb scr ea med, " Get out of ever to win the National Inth ere - I'm always first!"
vitation basketball TourRose ha s his peculiar ities , nament, they figure their
too. Once he was g iv ing a troubles then were a blessing in
baseball clinic for ki ds on a disguise.
Ham ilton, Ohio, sa ndlot field ,
It was in Salt Lake City on
and he ·tel a grounder go Jan. I that Purdue lost an 87-85
thr ough IS legs. One kid decision to Utah on a lastlaughed. Rose skewered him second basket by Utes' scoring
with a look and said, "I make ace Tickey Burden.
seven err or s a season. I have
"It was a tough loss and

Both Rose and Cobb were
Howard Ehmke, the pi tcher. influenced by their fathers.
He had pitched at Detroit when Rose's father taug ht him to
sw1tch hit I "And I'll always do
it 1 I promised Dad that" - ,
emphasized to youn g Pete how
Enos Slaugh ter always hustled
everywhere on lhe fie ld .
He told Pete, "That stuff
poorly against Marquette and
about
it's not whether you win
that his players were disapor
lose,
but how you play the
pointed in their performance in
game,
tha
t's a lot of bunk . If
a game which saw little offense
from either team in the first you don 't win, you have n't
accomplished anything."
half.
" If my fat her were alive ,"
"I think that this game does
represent a challenge to us to said Rose, "he'd have bawled
demonstrate the type of team me out if I hadn't put the slug
on Ha rre lson.' '
we are," he said.
In his autobiography, written
It will be the first lime since
1966 that Wooden has not taken with AI Stwnp , Cobb talks
his Bruins into the champion- abou t the tragedy of his
ship game. He said the decision father's death. "My father had
to allow his players to make up his head blown off with a
their own minds on whether to shotgun when I was 18 years
old '''I've never gotten over it."
play is nothing new.
It seems that Cobb tried ever
"This has been my philosoafter
to vindicate his father
phy and, believe me, it is no
and
produced
, in Stump's
different than it has ever
been, " he said. " It doesn 't words, " th e mo st violent,
mean that we don't go out there suc cessf ul , t horoughly
and do the best we can, but we maladjusted personality ever
give the guys who haven't had to pa ss across Am e rican
much of a chance to play sports .''
As Cobb himself put it, "I
throughout the season a chance
had
to fi ght all my life to
to play now. "
The last time UCLA was in a survive . They were all against
NCAA consolation game was in me ... but I beat the bastards
and left them in the ditch."
1963, a game the Bruins lost.

r~~:::m::-~:;:;~:;::::::;~:::::::«;:;:::;:;:,,:,~:::.-::::::-~~:::&gt;::::::::&gt;&gt;:~:::&gt;::&gt;::::::::::::&gt;:m:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:l;

.

LAS VEGAS, Nev. (UP!) -

OFFERING DECODING
WASHINGTON (UP!) - Two

Social Calendar

Legal arguments
heard in court

talks,

th ough some tim es doubl eedged. When Rose says to Tony
Perez , who passes him in the
locker room, " When you .gon na
knock mr in ' I'm tired of

•

both in pla ying skills and attitude, but the differences are

Rose

Kansas team is fired up
GREENSBORO, N.C. (UP! )
- It might be a detested
consolation game to UCLA
coach John Wooden, but
Kansas Coach Ted Owens sees
as one last chance for the

By United Press International
The Los Angeles Lakers have
come up with a National
Basketball Association playoff
berth for the 14th straight year
but the lowly Portland Trail
Blazers have something that
may be even better ___, shot at
landing Bill Walton of UCLA.
The Blazers backed into that
enviable position by losing a
120-110 decision at home
Sunday night to the Milwaukee
Bucks, with "Most Valuable
Player" Kareem Abdul-Jabbar
leading the Bucks with 43
points.
That means the Blazers have
"clinched" the worst record in
the NBA's Western Conference
and will coin-flip with the

yo~n:i~~r::;i~:~:.~~~e is th•t Pu~due COTJS
Cobb often d1d not even speak

whizzing beer bottles greeted
him.
Nothing new for Rose .
Bleacher bums in Wrigley
Field pelt him with paper clips.
Fans in San Francisco bathe
him with invective. Even
home-town Cincinnati fans, as
well as some play ers,
figuratively hold their nose
when they hear the name Rose.
He is called hot dog for his
head-first slides , his rifling the
ball into the infield after a
out,
his
meaningless
executioner-like motion after
catching a fly ball , his running ,
running even on walks. He has
been called , not alwa ys with
admiration, "Charley Hustle."
"Well, says Rose, "nobody
like Ty Cobb either."
Rose sees himself in the mold
of a modern-day Ty Cobb. Rose
is a man who hits for average.
Last season he batted .338, to
win his third league hitting title
and it was his ninth straight
season hitting over .300.
The similarities between
Rose and Cobb are interesting,

March 25, 1974

•

from Toe to Hee l
By Connie

heritage house.
" Your

·rhom MeAn
1

~tore

, OhtD

INGELS APPLIANCES
N. Second Ave.

•

Ph. 992-2635
.,

Middleport

�4- The Daily Septinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Macch 25, 1974

s

Blazers may land·Bill Walton

IRA BERKOW

Pete Rose--a Ty Cobb
for our time?
By Ira Berkow
NEW YORK ( UPil
"A
Pete Hose by any other name
still stinks," scribbled one ncoShakespearean paraphrast on

Co bb was playmg-manager.
. Then he wa s traded to
Philadelphia. The fi rst game
Ehmke wa s in against Detroit,

he hit Ehmke with a pitch . And
Ehmke called lo Cobb, 'I hit 20
batters for you last year . Now I

a banner last October here in

Shea Stadium.
This literary brainstorm was

got one for myself.' "

conceived after Pete Rose of
the Cincinnati Reds slammed
into Bud Harrelson of the Mets
while trying to break up a
double play. Dust, sp ikes and a
fist or two new .
When Rose returned to his
left-field position, after th e

Cobb would snarl at the
opposit ion, said Fonseca. And ,
in his wa:y, so does Rose . "One

pitcher got Pete out three
straight times," sa id Fonseca.

"The fourth time up , Pete
shouted to him, 'Go down tu the
bullpen and get warmed up,

nefarious inning , boos and

to teammates.

Foreman,
Norton
weigh-in
CARACAS (UP!) - Heavyweight champion George Foreman, who has a contract In his
pocket for a multi-million
dollar September defense
against extilleholder
Muhammed All in far away
Africa, meets Ken Norton
officially today when they
'l'uesday 's
weigh-in for
scheduled IIH'ound championship fight.
Harry Schwartz, vice-president of Video Techniques, Inc.,
co-promoters of Tuesday's
fight, said a contract was
signed several weeks ago for a
Foreman-Ali fight, in Kinshasha, Zaire providing Norton
does not upset the champion.
He said a group of Swiss
businessmen , representing

African
interests,
had
guaranteed a $10 million purse
Ior the bout.
The unbeaten Foreman was
expected to weight 220 pounds
for his 40th professional fight
while Norton, a :Uo-1 underdog, should come in at a
career high of 213 or .. 214
pounds. The ceremonies are
set for noon EDT at the
Poliedro Stadium, site of the
first heavyweight title fight to
be held in South America.
Another fight behind closed
doors also was likely.
Foreman's trainer, D-ick
Sadler, was fined an undisclosed amount SUnday for
failing to appear before the
local boxing commission to
discuss the rules for the fight.
Sadler, however, maintains
the local commission has
nothing to do witlt the fight
which, he insists, is under the
jurisdiction of the World
Boxing Council and the World
Boxing Association. The local
people think differently. They
say they have exclusive contrQV
Norton, who split two 12round decisions with Ali last
year, was due to leave his
mountain retreat of the last
tllree days, where he went for
.peace and quiet.
The gate for Tuesday's fight,
·being telecast live to 70
countries, was expected to be
in tbe range of $3 million.
Foreman, 25, Is on a $700,000
guarantee against 40 per cent
of all monies, while Norton, 28,
receives $200,000pr 20 per cent.

Philadelphia 76ers, the Golden State Warriors, 134-121,
Eastern tailenders, for the despite 46 points by Warrior
right to pick first in the amual . ·eazzie Russell as Keith Erickdraft pf college players. If the son of the Suns had a careerBlazers win the toss, there L' high 40; the Boston Celtics'beat
little doubt they'll grab Walton. the Houston Rockets, 109-106,
The Lakers earned the right in overtime to dim the Rockets'
to meet Milwaukee in the first hopes for a playoff berth in the
• round of the playoffs Friday in Central Division as Jo Jo White
Milwaukee by beating the scored 35 points for tbe Celts;
Buffalo Braves, IS0-124, Capital had four players over
Sunday night as Elmore Smith 20points, led by Kevin Porter's
scored 37 points and Gail
Goodrich had 35.
·
Bob McAdoo, the league's
leading scorer , returned to
action for Buffalo after missing
six games with a virus and
scored 40 points.
The Plloenix Suns eliminated
the playoff chances of the

stand in ' on second base ," it

POPULARITY has nothing to do with bas-•h:lll as played
by T~· ('obb, left. and Pete Rose.

even more absorbing. They

differ mainly in degree.
Cobb had a lifetime batting
average of .361 for 24 seasons.
Rose, going into his 12th bigleague year , has a .312 career
average.
~~cobb was a super hitter,"

said Lew Fonseca, the
American League battin g
champion in 1929 and currently
a sometime hitting coach with
the Cincinnati Reds, "and Pete
is a fine hitter.
"I think overall Cobb was
more talented , but both showed

tr emend ous desire an d used

their skills to the ultimate .
"Pete is always asking me
about Co bb . I remember his
first question. 'Tell me, Lew,
was Cobb as tough as they
say ?'

"Tougher, I told him ."
Cobb was always getting in
brawls, with teammates , with

opponent.s and with fans , who
he would climb into the stands
to wound .
"Cobb would do any thing to
win," sa id Fo nseca. " I
remember a stor y concerning

Jayhawks to show the nation
they are a good team .
Kansas, which lost a 64-51
decision to Marquette in Saturday 's NCAA semifinal round,
will play UCLA at 6:35 p.m.
EDT prior to Marquette's
championship game with topranked North Carolina State.
Wooden, who has described
the consolation game as "ror
the birds," has said he will
allow his seniors and starters
to decide if they want to play.
There are indications that AllAmerica center Bill Walton
may not play.
Owens told newsmen Sunday
that he realized that ail
coaches have different styles
but told Wooden that he hoped
UCLA will field its regular
starting five.
"Our players really hope
that the seniors will want to
play." he said. "We would
prefer to play against the very
best of UCLA even though we
wouldn't have as good a chance
. "
to wm.
Owens said his team play~d

il

II
~

Yarborough zs
A~lanta 500 champ
.

ATLANTA (UP!) - David
Pearson had all the power, but
Cale Yarborough is $26,950
richer today because he found
the best way to drive the
Atlanta
International
Raceway.
That way, said Cale, is only a
few feet from the outside wall
at speeds nearing 150 miles per
hour.
Yarborough powered to a
surprisingly easy victory of
nearly a half-minute over
Pearson in the $113,500 Atlanta
500 stock car race Sunday. It
was victory nwnber three of
the season for Yarborough in
his Junior Johnson-prepared
Chevrolet.
"I have never run harder,"
said the popular Timmonsville,
S.C., driver, who'added that he
got more"revolutions out of his
engine by driving high on the
1.5-mile speedwaY,.
·
Pearson , who picked up
$10,150 for his second place
finish, was the heavy pre-race
favorite in his Woods Brothers
Mercury. He took the green
flag in the pole position, aiming
for his second victory in a row
in this race.
But Yarborough's tactics
and a little luck late in the race,
left the rest of the field so far
behind that oniy .Pearson
finishe9 in the same lap.
Anotller lap back in third
place was George Follmer in a
Ford, who ran out ol gas on the
last lap but was voted the
rookie o? ihe race by sportswriters.
Buddy Baker .was fourth in a

t
11·1

~

Dodge and Donnie Allison fifth
in a Chevrolet. ·
Yarborough, who had
predicted before the race that
Pearson was the man to beat
since his was the most
powerful car and had qualified
at five mph faster than Yarborough, took the lead for good
with 83 miles to go .
Shortly after Yarborough
took the lead, Pearson pitted in
hopes of making a late run at
the leader. But Yarborough
was able to pit a few laps later
under a caution after Carl
Adams spun out in his Ford and
the caution flag came out.
Yarborough 's race speed of
139.910 mph was far below the
record average of 140.701 mph
he set here in winning in 1970. It
was the .fourth time Yarborough has won this race.

six left."

there were some unusual

By United Press lntemattonal
The historic city of Boston,
considered by some the
cradle of American hockey,
rocked with that familiar old
cry again:
" We're No . 1!" •.. "We're
No. 1!"

VACUFLO
Don't break your back ·
tugging a heavy Vac unit.

FOREMAN &amp; ABBOTT
.PH . 9Yl-S321 ·- - Middleport
e:v112

calls," is the way Purdue
coach Fred Schaus recalls that
night. But things came full
circle Sunday afternoon at
Madison Square Garden when
the two teams met again in the
NIT finals -ru~d Purdue won,
87-81, for the championship.
"I'm glad we mel Utah in the
final because knowing them
gave us an edge," said Schaus,
whose Boilermakers finished
third in the Big Ten this season,
then came to New York ,
eliminated tournament
favorite North Carolina in the
first round of the NIT, and
rolled through three more wins
to the title.
One thing Purdue did not win
- the "Most Valuable Player"
Award, which went to 6-ll
center Mike Sojourner of Utah,
who tallied 94 points and

insistently

and

ice

the

obedient

The beautllully new look of
totdl

cleanability.

Frigidaire
Range.

Its
smooth ,
unbroken
ceramic cooking surface let s
you clean up most soil with a
damp cloth. Hot Surface
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cooking area is too hOt to

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$54995
BAKER FURNITURE
Midd IPr&gt;o&gt;rt. O.

OFFICE HOURS 9:30 TO 12, 2 TO 5 (CLOSE'
AT NOON ON THURS.) - EAST COURT ST.,
POMEROY.
.

YOUR FULL SERVICE BANK_

-Income Supplement Program .Administered by Social
Security paid from general revenue funds.
-For Aged over 65

If you are 65 or over, or blind or disabled, you may qualify for SSI If:
-Your total resources are less tha_n 51500 for a single person or $2250 for a
couple. Resources . mclude savmgs, checking, stocks, bonds, etc.
Resources do NOT mclude home or car.

-Your mont~ly inco_me from pensions, retire~ent, social security or
other related mcome IS less than $160 a month for a single person or les
lhan $230 a month for a couple.
·
s

Robinson's

Address--------------------:-------- Social Security No.------------'
.Are you married? _________ Are you over 65? __________·Biind?
Disabled?
------

992 5428

Signature

Pomeroy

Haven, W.Va. Mark manages the route, but Mike is always
there to help. They are the sons of Rev. and Mrs. J. William
DeMoss, New Haven. Rev . DeMoss is the pastor of the New
Haven United Methodist Church. Both boys attend the New
Haven Elementary School, take piano lessons, and sing in the
church choir. Mark enjoys all sports, but admits that golfing
is his thing. He also plays trumpet in the school band. Mike
and Mark enjoy family camping in the summer. Mark has
had his paper route since September in 1973.

~::I'SI!'~~::I'SI!'-'.!*::;;.::~=:~'!so:..c.~:;::•;cQ•:=:;;; :: _!.

..,,...

~

Family Lib

.,,

~l

The dollars and
'sense ' of kids

bu~

you are willin g to lead a lessexciting

me ror a

few years so

" Do Ameri ca ns sudd enl y yo u ca n give your young
children the emotional support
hate kids ?
"Esquire" asks the ques tion they need ~ Here 's Ms. Wil son's
in its March issue, with its answer to that. 1
usual emphasis on bein g . "The dominant America n

I N\lRANll

-

Won Lost
54
34
Pul lins Excav at ing
46
42
T eam l
44
44
Royal Cr own
32
56
Tea m Hig h J games - Team
I, 1769; Team 4, 15 72; Ro y a l
Cr own 1565 .
High Team Ga me - T eam 1,
64 9 ; Tea m 1, 623; ROyal Crow n

Ind. J Games Bec k y
Dunfee 545, Marlene Wil son
51 1. Be tty Whitlatch 471.
Hig h Ind . Game Be cky
Dunfee 2M R,,... ~, ·· ,.....
•
Marlen e Wil son . ]~7.

Sa turd;ay Junior League
March 161 1974

Pts

Hot Shot s

22' ':~

A ll ey Cat s
Gutter Oust er s

22
19h
19
12

Bowling Ston es

Apaches

St rikers

Regular price $1.45. Big new selection in regular and
Sparkling Wintuk. 100 Pet . orion, shrink and mothproof.
ready to knit pull out skeins. Solid colors and variegated.

Sale
Price

4

High Ind . Game - Ron Casci
190, Gr eg Cundiff 170
H i gh Seri es - Greg Cundiff
442 , Ron Casci 420 .
Team High Ga me - Gutt er
Dusters 73 1!

parental emotion, when con-

skein

Home Furnishings Dept., 1st Aoor

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY
We Congmtulate Pomeroy National on the Opening
of the New Auto Bank.

s

00
ON THIS

''

WASHER-DRYER
INIOII=~IC?IEI
by FEDDERS

marriages, but no such thing as
trial children."
·
About 40 years ago another
young American had her '·"
doubtr, about parenting . As she
examined the child-hating
attitudes of the primitive
Mun gdugumoor tribesmen
(and tribeswomen ), Margaret
Mead made up her mind :
"I rea cted so strongly
against the set of the culture
that it was here I decided that I
would have a child no matter
how many miscarriages it
meant . It seemed clear to me
that a culture that so
repudiated children could not
be a good culture."
VACATION HERE
John Ray Tubbs of
Washington c. H. spent the
spring break from Ohto
University, Chillicothe Branch,
here with his grandparents,
Mrs. Mildred Tubbs ~d Mr.
and Mrs. Norman Snuth and
other relatives.

NO OTHER
MA-NUFACTURER
MAKES IT

20 lb.
capacity

3/4

hp Motor

2 speeds
6 cycles
WATER SAVER
Auto Limit Filter
System
Porcelain Top·
3 Cycle Dryer
Reg.-Perm Press
Double Knit
. .
Mttlel LWA2158A Washer

Model LDE2050A Dryer

Limited Time
OHer

because they k now th ey're

----

minor , lasting only a few
seconds . PTI made no mention
of casualties or damage.

doing
bu si ness
with
f.riendly neighbor s who
appreciate
t h e ir
patronage ...

C ORPORA T ION

- ----------

ignore curfews and flee into the
streets.
The Press Trust of India
(PTII said the quake was

Team 4

front ed with what selfless
effort has wrought over the
Team H ig h Series - Gutter
years in the family room , is Dust er s 2069 _
likely to be built, closely
seconded by rage, and a feeling
There may be fewer cars
of having been thoroughly on the road, but the number
of nuts driving hasn't
conned.''
(I'm still in the family room, diminished.
so !can't look back. And I have
felt guilt and rage as a parent,
but I've also experienced
satisfaction and pride, wonder
and delight, and a deeper .sense
of gratitude than a paycheck
has ever inspired. )
Gary Wills' giece, " Are
Young Americans Afraid to
Have Kids ?, " finally gets
beyond the deledtably snide
Esquire put downs, to the
source of the trouble. He uncovers a fear that grows as the
underpinnings of our culture
are kicked out in the name of
freedom , a fear that we are not
up to the job of parenting, of
fos tering another person 's
identity , because we don 't

-·

--

DFP OSI T

ca usin g panicky residents to

March '21 , 1974

for tools and materials
whe·n they need them.

S20,000.00 Maximum Insurance For
Eoch Depositor

--

MILD EARTHQUAKE
NEW DELHI I UP II - A
mild earthquake struck the
capital of the riot-scarred
Indian sta te of Bihar Sunday,

Thursday Allernoon League

trendy and ironic and avoiding

With Cus hion Insole

lf O ERA L

were not released.

l.ncal Bowling

sentiment like the plague.
There's the "High Cost of
Childhood" chart which
enumerates expenses incurred
by children from conception
through graduate school - at
least $203,026 according to their
calculations. (Figures, of
course, include tuition to
Harvard Law School, $200
worth of infant toys, color TV
for the kids ' room and other
exJl&lt;nses which some of Us
might not consider absolutely
essential.)
.If the dollar cost doesn't
make you think twice about
progeny, Jane Wilson sends out
these salvos on the emotional
toll: " What is the most
desirable temperament for an
adult human being whose days
are to be spent in the constant
custodial care of small
children? An unusual combination of vitality ·and
placidity is required, of a sort
most likely to be found, if

POMEROY, OHIO

M!Millll

the com pany. Some 800
members of the Independent
Slovewo-f.kers Union ratified
the pact covering 13 Tappan
plants. Details of the contract

Sale! WINTUK YARN

What'' You say you realize

(Today 's column is written ' infants can be draining,

by Joanne )

a new three-year contract with

559

:·:·:

By Joanne and Lew Koch

WORKERS RETURN
MANSF IELD, Ohio ( UPI J Workers began returning to
their jobs at Tappan Corp.
plants here and in Ontario,
Ohio, Sunday, after approv ing

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

the " FRIENDLY ONES"

THE FARMERS BANK
AND SAVINGS CO.

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

.,

An optimist is a pessimist ·
in -training.

Don ' t be fooled by price
pennants and ads saying
" Look how chea p we are"
- Remember. you alway's
get exactly what you pay
lor . Wise people depend on

----

Date

brother, Mike, 7, are the Sentinel paper carriers in New

"Fools need advice, but
only wise m en are better
for if."

And even a very good money
manager 's job is-easier when
he has more of it to manage.

SUPPLEMENTAL SECURITY INCOME

DRY CLEANING
LAUNDRY

BROTHER TEAM - Mark DeMoss, 11, left, and his

Tucker, Warren High ; Vincent
and Julie Watki!l)!, Valley
Force High, Parma Heights.

... There are, as they say, trial

Name ____________________________~---------.
Phone No. -------------

Amount earned last month from a j o b ? - - - - - - - - Amount received la'st
month from Social Security, Veteran's Pension, Retirement, etc.
Can you visit your local Social Security Office?
r---------~----

i.sm or inaptitude."

"'!:k for you in a Savings Account
or Certificates of Deposit with
us ... where they will grow some
every day .

"

A repreSentative from Social Security will contact you.

discharge papers which could
ruin their chances of getting
jobs.
Many employers knew the
code, Aspin and Koch said, and
could determine prospective
employes had been mustered
out for such things as "apathy,
defective attitude, financial
irresponsibility, bed-wetting,
homosexual tendences, alcohol-

~1 by keeping your spares at

AMERICAN RED CROSS
401 FOURTH STREET
MARlEnA, Ol:tiO 45750

'
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Gov. Upper Arlington High; D-ovid
and Mrs: John J. Gilligan Sun- Co ry, Taylo r Hi gh, North
day presented awards to 27 Bend; Victor D' Altorio,
high school artists from around Normandy High,. Parma; Tim
Ohio at the opening of the Third Decker , Brookhaven High ,
Anntwl Governor's Youth Art Columbus; Don Moe, Maumee
Month Exhibition at the Hi gh; Paula Goodman,
Columbus Gallery of Fine Arts. Eastmoo r Se ni or
High,
The ceremonies recognized Columbus .
the top winners among the alLinda Gregg, Brookhaven
most 3,000 entries in the com- High, Columbus ; Peggy Harpetition, sponsored by The Ohio man, Memo rial High , St.
Art Education Association , the Mary's ; Debbie Hatfield, FindGallery , The Ohio Education lay High ; Mike Hord, NorthDepartment and the Ohio Arts land High, Colwnbus; AlexCouncil.
ander Huryn, James Ford
This year's exhibit included Rh odes High , Cleveland;
macrame, ceramics, fabr ic Debbie Kaskowski, Cleveland
and weaving as well as pencils, Ce ntral Ca tholi c;
Rose
oils and other media .
J avor ina, Westland Hi gh,
The 1974 award to the top Gallaway; Donald Jones,
artist was designed by Andy Eastmoor , Columbus; Sue
Burns, a senior at Westland Konanz, also Eastmoor.
High School, Columbus.
Steve Nichols, Granville
Mrs. Gilligan presented the High ; Walter Ongaro, Rhodes
awards to :
High; Cleveland ; Nancy PeruMichael Adams, Ce ntral- sek, Euclid Senior High; Dee
Hower High School, Akron ; Dee Sells, Fairview High, DayMark Bucklew, Worthington ton; Sandy Spoon, Sycamore
High; Susan Clellen, Shaker High , Cincinnati ; Duane Stepp,
Heights High; Holly Cooper, Fairview High, Dayton; Aaron

men were unaware they had
such a specification on their

by good
management

:- ~o~r monthly income from employment is less than 5365 a month for an
tndtvldual or less· than $505 for a couple.

&lt;ON REQUEST)

/

14-year-&lt;Jld girl."
"Until one knows who or
(How's that for sticking it to what he or she is, how bring
the American housewive? another thing or self into the
messy guessing ga me of
modern life' It is bad enough to
be a guinea pig oneself. Guinea
'piggizing' others seems cruel

Your dollars
can be
stretched

Who are blind or disabled

PROJECT SSI-ALERT

decode the milita ry discharge
papers of their colleagues.
The Defense Department said
last week . it no longer would
code military paJl&lt;rs so that the
reason for discharge could be
determined . The Pentagon decision capped a long determined
effort by Reps. F. Edward
Hebert, D-La. ; Edward Koch.
D-N.Y.; and Les Aspin, D-Wis.
The congressmen said last
ye~r 35,000 servicemen were
given SPN (Separation Program Numbers) "indicating
unsuitable " military service,
and that in many cases the

anywhere, in a not very-bright _ know who we are .

OR THOSE

CLE A N ING

In by 10. Out at 5

---

-

If you feel you might be eligible for SSI, please fiH out the coupon below"~nd to:

SHIRT
FINISHING

MEIGS THEATRE

_OPTOMETRIST. .

DRY

SERVICE ON

Ceramatop·

MONDAY
p. m. Tuesday at Harri~nville
OR KAN Coin Club meeting . School. Potluck, take own table
Election of officers . Social hour service. Door prize. Everyone
and tradin'g session starting at invited.
7 p.m. will precede meeting
XI GAMMA Mu Chapter.
when out of town coin dealers Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, 7:30
will be present to buy, sell and p.m. at the Columbus and
trade. Committees for March Southern Ohio Electric Co.,
31 coin show to be named and Middleport.
coin auction to follow meeting.
Refreshments. Mee ting at
WEDNESDAY
social rooms of the Columbus
POMEROY
- MIDDLEPORT
and Southern Ohio Electric,
Lions
Club,
regular
meeting,
Middleport.
CHAPTER
17,
Ohio Wednesday noon, Meigs Inn.
POMEROY MASONIC TemAssociation of Public School
ple
Assn. Wednesday, 6:30 p.
Employes will meet at 7:30
m. All trustees and officers to
p.m. Monday in the Meigs
attend.
Junior High School cafeteria at
OHIO VAILEY Cornmandry
Middleport.
24, Knights Templar, WedCULTURAL Arts Fair, 7 to 8 nesday, 7:30 p. m. Masonic
p.m. at the Pomeroy Temple, Pomeroy , stated
Elementary School.
oon,clave. All Sir Kllights inBEND 0' THE RIVER vited .
Garden Club, Monday, 7:30 p.
WILDWOOD GARDEN Club,
m. at the home of Mrs. Andrew Wednesday, 7:30p.m. home of
Cross , Racine. Mrs. James Mrs. Karl Grueser.
Diehl to have devotions.
AMERICAN
Legion
TUESDAY
Auxiliary , Feeney-Bennett
SOUTHERN Band Boosters Post 128, 6:30 potluck dinner
monthly meeting, 7:30p.m. at with legionnaires as guests.
high school in Racine.
Meeting at 7:30 p.m.
RACINE Post American
FEENEY - BENNETT Post
Legion Auxiliary, 7:30p.m. at 128. American Legion, 7:30
p.m. at the hall.
hall.
JUNIOR American Legion
luvestigatlog Explosion
Auxiliary, Feeney-Bennett
TRAVIS AFB, Calif. (UP!) Post 128, 6:30p.m. at the hall . An investigating board of Air
AMERICAN
Legion Force officers has been sifting
Auxiliary, Drew ·Webster Post wreckage of a DC-8 commercial
39, 7:30 p. m. Tuesday at the jetliner which exploded on the
hall. Mrs. Ellen Couch to ground Saturday night, resulting in one death and three
present the program.
POMEROY CHAPTER 80, injuries.
Three explosions erupted as
Royal Arch Masons, special
convocation, Tuesday, 7:30 p. ground crews were performing
m. Pomeroy Masonic Temple routine maintenance on the
to confer the mark master and Airlift International jet at a
the past master degrees. parking ramp.
Maurice Simon, 36, a civilian
Refreslnnents.
MIDDLEPORT Masonic mechanic, was killed and three
Lodge, 363, 7:30 Tuesday night fellow employes of Servair, Inc.
at the Temple for fellowcraft were injured. The firm perdegree work . All master forms maintenance for all
civilian aircraft at Travis.
masons invited.
MEIGS COUNTY Riding
Club, 7:30p.m. Tuesday, home COSTING MILLIONS
WASHINGTON (UP!) - Rep .
of Mrs. Sharon Wilson, Middleport. Invitation to all new Les Aspin, D-Wis ., says the
upgrading of Civil Service
members.
workers
at the Pentagon is
HARRISONVIlLE Senior
Citizens, birthday dinner, 6:30 costing American taxpayers
$400 million a year.
Aspin , frequent critic of the
Defense Department, said this
figure was the conclusion of a
Library of Congress study
Tonight &amp; Tuesday
made
at his request.
March25·26
The library told Aspin that
"It
must be emphasized that
Walt Disney's
these
figures represent crude
ROBIN HOOD
. (Technicolor)
averages and only approximate
Meet Robin Hood , and his
the amount actually spent .. .
merry Menagerie.
according
to our calculations,
(GJ
therefore, grade creep would
Disney FeatureHe :
Islands of the Sea
currently account for an
Disney Cartoon:
increase in the annual DOD
Peter and the Wolf
civilian payroll of approximateShow Starts 1 p.m.
ly $400 million."

IT IS

2 HR.

1 DAY

The

N. W. COMPTON, 0. D.

this season.

"If you want something
badly, you have to sacrifice to
get it," Schaus said. 41 You have
to discipline yourself."

500 Inaugural
Ray Harroun won the fi rs!
indianapolis 500 auto ra ce
with a speed of 74.59 miles
per hour in 1911. Mark Dono·
hue set a record of !63.&lt;UJ5
m.p.h. in 1972.

SECURITY INCOM.E?

unin-

Boston Bruins made It official by mauling the Montreal Canadlens, 6-3, for their
third National Hockey
League Eastern Division
title In four years.

grabbed 72 rebounds in four
games.
Sojourner, whose brother
Willie is a star of the New York
Nets of the American Basketball Association, is a
sophomore at Utah and said
today he wants to graduate
from college. But he admitted,
"I really don't know what I'd
do," if the pros come at him
now with a juicy offer to turn
professional.
If and when he does turn pro,
Sojourner thinks his most
natural position in the pros
would be forward and thinks he
would be able to make the
swilch from center easily.
For Schaus, former coach of
the University of West Virginia
and later coach and general
manager of the L&lt;ls Angeles
Lakers of the National Baskethall Association, the N. I. T.
triumph represented a huge
personal achievement.
"I've been coaching for IS or
16 years in the colleges and in
the pros," he said. "I've been
in the playoffs many times, but
until this time l never had won
the big game."
Schaus praised his players
for their ••willingness to sacrifice" to achieve their goals

Legal arguments which could
determine whether the George
Foreman-Ken Norton heavyweight title fight Is viewed at
200 closed circuit television
locations in North America will
be heard Monday In federal
court.
K.O. Inc., a Nevada corporation headed by L&lt;lren Cassina,
is seeking a preliminary injunction in a breach of contract
suit. The suit is against
Foreman, his manager and
trainer Charles Sadler, the
champion's financial and business manager Leroy Jackson,
and several corporations.
Attorney Robert Reid, representing Cassina , says U.S.
District Judge Roger D. Foley
set arguments for 1:30 p.m.
Monday to determine whether
to grant a preliminary injunction . The federal court hearing
is scheduled about 30 hours
before Foreman and Norton
step into the ring in Caracas,
Venezuela, on Tuesday night.
The legal action is directed
at blocking the closed circuit
television, not the IIH'ound
boxing match itself.
K.O. Inc. is · seeking $2.5
million in damages on grounds
it has a five-year exclusive
contract for all ancillary rights
to Foreman fights. Tbe contract, signed by Sadler, was
dated Jan. 9, 1971, about one
year before Foreman became
heavyweight champion .
If Cassino were granted his
motion for a preliminary in-

junction, it could; In effect,
suspect all a n c i I I a r y
agreements, covering closed
circuit television, for example,
until the breach of contract suit
were settled.

Awards made to artists

congressmen today offered to

-

terruptedly, Boston Garden
fans kept repeating the
phrase Sunday night and out
on the

26, in beating tbe
Hawks, 126-92, as Pete
vich, Atlanta ace, missect"'r"3''·l
IS field goal attempts
scored only 11 points;
Lenny Wilkens' 22 points
the Cleveland Cavaliers to a
114-92 win over the New York
Knicks in the Cavs' final ap.
pearance at their old Cleveland
Arena home before moving
next year to the new Coliseum.

WHAT IS SUPPLEMENTAL

For the last fiv e minutes,

•

In 1973, James McCord,
former security chief for
President Nixon's cainpaign .
committee, told a senate
investigating committee that
White House counsel John Dean
and Jeb Stuart Magruder,
Nixon election committee official, knew in advance of the
Watergate bugging.

NIT honors

draws a laugh from Perez. And
a slow sm ile from Rose.
NEW YORK (UPI ) - Back
Cobb , parti cularly , was on New Year's Day , the
obsessed with being tops. Once, Purdue Boilermakers weren 't
he was ange red when he exactly happy about the way
r eturned to his hotel room saw 1974 was getting underway. But
his roomma te in the bath tub. now, as the first Big Ten team
Cobb scr ea med, " Get out of ever to win the National Inth ere - I'm always first!"
vitation basketball TourRose ha s his peculiar ities , nament, they figure their
too. Once he was g iv ing a troubles then were a blessing in
baseball clinic for ki ds on a disguise.
Ham ilton, Ohio, sa ndlot field ,
It was in Salt Lake City on
and he ·tel a grounder go Jan. I that Purdue lost an 87-85
thr ough IS legs. One kid decision to Utah on a lastlaughed. Rose skewered him second basket by Utes' scoring
with a look and said, "I make ace Tickey Burden.
seven err or s a season. I have
"It was a tough loss and

Both Rose and Cobb were
Howard Ehmke, the pi tcher. influenced by their fathers.
He had pitched at Detroit when Rose's father taug ht him to
sw1tch hit I "And I'll always do
it 1 I promised Dad that" - ,
emphasized to youn g Pete how
Enos Slaugh ter always hustled
everywhere on lhe fie ld .
He told Pete, "That stuff
poorly against Marquette and
about
it's not whether you win
that his players were disapor
lose,
but how you play the
pointed in their performance in
game,
tha
t's a lot of bunk . If
a game which saw little offense
from either team in the first you don 't win, you have n't
accomplished anything."
half.
" If my fat her were alive ,"
"I think that this game does
represent a challenge to us to said Rose, "he'd have bawled
demonstrate the type of team me out if I hadn't put the slug
on Ha rre lson.' '
we are," he said.
In his autobiography, written
It will be the first lime since
1966 that Wooden has not taken with AI Stwnp , Cobb talks
his Bruins into the champion- abou t the tragedy of his
ship game. He said the decision father's death. "My father had
to allow his players to make up his head blown off with a
their own minds on whether to shotgun when I was 18 years
old '''I've never gotten over it."
play is nothing new.
It seems that Cobb tried ever
"This has been my philosoafter
to vindicate his father
phy and, believe me, it is no
and
produced
, in Stump's
different than it has ever
been, " he said. " It doesn 't words, " th e mo st violent,
mean that we don't go out there suc cessf ul , t horoughly
and do the best we can, but we maladjusted personality ever
give the guys who haven't had to pa ss across Am e rican
much of a chance to play sports .''
As Cobb himself put it, "I
throughout the season a chance
had
to fi ght all my life to
to play now. "
The last time UCLA was in a survive . They were all against
NCAA consolation game was in me ... but I beat the bastards
and left them in the ditch."
1963, a game the Bruins lost.

r~~:::m::-~:;:;~:;::::::;~:::::::«;:;:::;:;:,,:,~:::.-::::::-~~:::&gt;::::::::&gt;&gt;:~:::&gt;::&gt;::::::::::::&gt;:m:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:l;

.

LAS VEGAS, Nev. (UP!) -

OFFERING DECODING
WASHINGTON (UP!) - Two

Social Calendar

Legal arguments
heard in court

talks,

th ough some tim es doubl eedged. When Rose says to Tony
Perez , who passes him in the
locker room, " When you .gon na
knock mr in ' I'm tired of

•

both in pla ying skills and attitude, but the differences are

Rose

Kansas team is fired up
GREENSBORO, N.C. (UP! )
- It might be a detested
consolation game to UCLA
coach John Wooden, but
Kansas Coach Ted Owens sees
as one last chance for the

By United Press International
The Los Angeles Lakers have
come up with a National
Basketball Association playoff
berth for the 14th straight year
but the lowly Portland Trail
Blazers have something that
may be even better ___, shot at
landing Bill Walton of UCLA.
The Blazers backed into that
enviable position by losing a
120-110 decision at home
Sunday night to the Milwaukee
Bucks, with "Most Valuable
Player" Kareem Abdul-Jabbar
leading the Bucks with 43
points.
That means the Blazers have
"clinched" the worst record in
the NBA's Western Conference
and will coin-flip with the

yo~n:i~~r::;i~:~:.~~~e is th•t Pu~due COTJS
Cobb often d1d not even speak

whizzing beer bottles greeted
him.
Nothing new for Rose .
Bleacher bums in Wrigley
Field pelt him with paper clips.
Fans in San Francisco bathe
him with invective. Even
home-town Cincinnati fans, as
well as some play ers,
figuratively hold their nose
when they hear the name Rose.
He is called hot dog for his
head-first slides , his rifling the
ball into the infield after a
out,
his
meaningless
executioner-like motion after
catching a fly ball , his running ,
running even on walks. He has
been called , not alwa ys with
admiration, "Charley Hustle."
"Well, says Rose, "nobody
like Ty Cobb either."
Rose sees himself in the mold
of a modern-day Ty Cobb. Rose
is a man who hits for average.
Last season he batted .338, to
win his third league hitting title
and it was his ninth straight
season hitting over .300.
The similarities between
Rose and Cobb are interesting,

March 25, 1974

•

from Toe to Hee l
By Connie

heritage house.
" Your

·rhom MeAn
1

~tore

, OhtD

INGELS APPLIANCES
N. Second Ave.

•

Ph. 992-2635
.,

Middleport

�•

•

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..

.

. ..

..

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I .

6:_ The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., March 25, ·197~

~

.,.,

~ MiscellaneOus shower given couple
Green Thumb

Mr. and Mrs. James K.

Ables, the former Rhonda

Notes . ...

Prayer and the fla g salute.
Mrs . George Skinner read
A weekly feature or Meigs
"God the Safe Guide" and
County Garden Club members.
scripture from Psalm 78.
The program prepared by
Mrs. William Radford was
By Mrs. Margaret Parsons
prese nted by Mrs . . Homer
RutiWJd Garden Club
Radford. Readings were
"Handing Colds Around " by
"Far off, unseen, Spring faintly cries
Mrs. Fred Goeglein; "Have
Bidding
her earliest plant to arise."
Pharmac ists Inspect Old
. . .. anniversary ce lebration of Medicine " by Mrs. Welby
This is March, an active month in the outdoor garden in all
Miss Nelle Bing, who founded Whaley; "Women's Attitudes but the very coldest parts of North America .
the club while she was a nurse about Breast Cancer" by Mrs.
One must plan carefully and take advantage of every
Opha Offutt; "New Tests for
~ with the Meigs County Health
Heart Attacks" by Mrs. Louis favorable day the weather provides for outdoor work. The very
, , Department.
foundation for your summer gardens are made during this
' Mrs. Blackston opened the Grueser; ''Yaw ning~ Con- month . A busy time indeed 1
a
Natural
meeting with the Lord's sidered
Complete all spring pruning, including that of the roses, frui t
Tranquilizer," Mrs. William
"
trees, red ra spberries. Hedges that are overgrown or unshapely
Folmer .
Mrs. Offutt conducted the may be pruned which will reduce their size and thicken their
. Lilacs, rhododendrons, yew, and other plants may be cut
J contest which was won by Mrs. growth
back
to
within one foot of the ground and mulching with a rich
Lewis Grueser and Mrs . Black·
compost
is good before hot weather comes .
ston . Mrs. G. J . Morgan won
Lawns
will benefit much by top dressing with "mixture of
the door prize. It was an·
humus,
leaf
mold, or peat moss and some fertilizer. Roll th e lawn
noun ced that the annual
with a medium weight roller when it is moist but not wet. Patch
•
'
Donna Boyd and Sarah grange banquet will be held at and repair spots which have no grass by sowing seeds early.
the Salisbury School on April 5
.:; Greene ente rtained Friday
and
that tickets are available Bulbs for summer blooming that may be planted now are calla
· night with a surprise party
lilies, gloriosas, elephant ears, gladioli, cannas, and crinums.
.;: honoring Jimmy D. Qualls on from Fred Goeglein. Mrs .
Keep the cultivator busy between growing plants as it is
• his 16th birthday. The party Skinner will host the April much easier to destroy weeds which are sma ll.
• was held at the home of his meeting.
If one is interested in cold frames and hotbeds which are
Mrs. Jeffers served refreshaun t, Mrs. Marie Cy rus,
ments to those named and Mrs. useful in starting young vegetables and flowers, one should
Pomeroy.
Hugh Bearhs, Mrs. James locate the hotbed in a sheltered place where the cold winds
A green and white color
Conkle, Mrs. Scott Folmer, cannot strike and where the sunshine will shine as much as
scheme was carried out and
possible . On cold nights cover it with mats or boards to conserve
cake , punch, sandwiches and Mrs. William Grueser, Mrs. the heat.
·
Arnold Snowden, and the
potato chips were served. Gifts
Plants in hotbeds should be given the same treatment as
were presented to the honored Jeffers children.
those which are recently moved from a greenhouse to cold
guest.
fr~mes . It is importWJt not to over-ventilate plants in cold
Attending were Sharon
framts. Temperature at SOlo 90degrees is harmful.
KUHNS IN SERVICE
Buffington, Blaine Qualls,
The Rev . and Mrs. Robert . Keep up with spraying because in this way only can you be
Dwayne Qualls,
Orrion Kuhn participated Thursday in sw-e to have healthy plants. Spring blooming shrubs tha t need
Blanchard, Jeff English, Greg the Lenten program at Grace pruning should receive this attention as soon as they have
James, David Boyd, Mark Methodist Church, Gallipolis. finished flowering.
Oiler, Andrew English, Mike The Rev. Mr . Kuhn, pastor of
Woolard, Kevin McLaughlin, the Pomeroy First Baptist
THE GREEN BOUGH
Becky Bego, Stephanie Bego, Church, gave th e Lenten
By Louise Hajek
: Mary Kay Qualls, Ed Sisson, meditation, and Mrs. Kuhn
I keep a g~een bough in my heart
: Harold Sisson, Jeff Reuter, played the organ for the serFor the singing birds' return.
: Bruce Reed, Tim Coats, Terry vice. Mrs. Kuhn has been inThough fields lie still
" Qualls , Danny Buffington, vited to be organist for the
And cool winds start,
: Lonnie Coats and Floyd Good Friday Service at Grace
I keep a green bough in my heart.
: BW'ney.
Methodist Church.
As the season pale and burn,
'
I keep a green bough in my heart
For the singing birds' return.

Bales, were honored recently

wi lh a misce llaneous shower

held at the Kyger Lodge Hall.
Mrs. Rita White and Mrs.

-;:;; Mrs. Arlee Abbott, Mrs.
'::Harold Blackston, and Mrs.
• Amos Leonard were appointed
,;;: to take the April trea t to the
Meigs County Infirmary when
i the Rock Springs Better Health
: Club met Thursday at the home
'• of Mrs. Wendell Jeffers.
•
During the meeting it was
• noted the 10 members of the
~. club attended the 90th birthday

Chureh .

,.

mem1s that the chapel which
ha s been a miss ion or th e
French City Baptist CIJU rch,
will be a church without direct

r

..

Quall.
-~- is surprised

,'!..Jimmy

FOOD FOR AMERICANS

§eAtU)u/t£4

Marie Spi res host~ d the
shower. Winn ing the door prize
was Mary Bradbury. Cake,
potato chips, mints and punch
were served.
Others attending the shower

were Mrs. Martha Grueser,
Mrs . lrma Bales, Mrs . Genevie
Jones and J eanette, Mrs .
Treva Denney and Sarah Jane,
Shelia Conkle, Becky Hock:oan, Mr. and Mrs. Junior
White, Mrs. Kay Hockman ,

.Plans are being made by the

First Southern Baptist Chapel
of Pom eroy to constitute on
April 21 as a New Testament
The cons titution

bread and beans has been
planned for Friday night.
Those planning to attend are
asked to notify Bob Mills.

s~rvice

ties to a sponsoring chun:h .

The service will begin at 3 p.
m. wit h the Rev . Raymond
Pinson to give the constitution
to the new church.
Saturday several men and

cht~rge

boy s of the chapel traveled to
Dayton to visit the Air Force
Mus eum there. A men's

fellowship supper with corn -

Howard Ferguson
now in Columbus
Howard Michael Ferguson,
12-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs .
James Ferguson, Sr .. Hysell
Run Road, was transferred
from the Holzer Medical
Center to Children's Hospital ,
Columbus Thursday.
The youth had been a patient
at Holze r sin ce Monda y
evenin g when he was thrown

from il horse on Hysell Run
Road. He suffered a brain
concussion and skull fracture.
Hi s room nurnber at Children's

Hospita l is 321.
Riding on the horse with the
Ferguson boy and also thrown
wa s Gary Priddy, 12, son of Mr.
an d Mrs . Dale Priddy, Hysell
Run Road. He also suffered a
skull frac ture and was taken to
the Holzer Medical Center
where he was confitl ed until

Thursday. Both boys are
studenL' at Meigs Junior High
School.

Revival serv ices will begin
at the Chapel on April 4 and
continue ·through April 7.
Spea ker will be the Rev. James
Bradford.

Anita Collins is engaged
Announcement is made of Sarasota.

Miss Collins graduated from
the engagement of Miss Anita
School,
M. Collins, 106 Florsota Drive, Pomeroy High
Sarasota, Fla ., and Mr. Bruce received her bachelor of arts
lsphord ing, 1102 Colleton degree from Florida State
University and her master's
Drive, Sarasota .
Miss Collins is the daughter degree from Emory University
of Mr. an d Mrs. William Collins in Florida. She is employed as
of Ft. Myers, Fla., formerly of librarian for the Sarasota
Pomeroy, and the parents of Herald Tribune and Journal.
Her finance graduated from
the bridegroom-€lect are Mr .
and Mrs. William lsphording, the University of Alabama and
did his post graduate work at
the University of Florida. He is
employed
by the Sarasota
VISIT IN COLUMBUS
LETART FALLS - Mr. and Journal as sportswriter. The
Mrs. Bert Grimm, Letart wedding has been set for April
Falls, have returned from a 19.
several day s' visit in Columbus
with their son, Bob Grimm and
family.
VISITED HERE
Miss Effie Price of St.
Albans, W. Va. and Mrs.
Lorene Taylor, Nitro, were
recent visitors of Mr. and Mrs.
Clifford Hayes, Middleport .
Clifford Hayes and Mr. and
Mrs. Gregory Hayes were in
Columbus Wednesday and
Thursday to visit Mr. and Mrs.
John E. Piatt, Sr. and Mr. and
Mrs. J. K. West. Mrs. Piatt and
Mrs. West are sisters of Clifford Hayes. They went
especially to see Mr . Piatt who
is ill.
VISIT IN MEIGS
The Rev. and Mrs. Frank
Cheesebrew of Shawnee were
Friday visitors of relatives and
friends in Meigs County.

Bunny, bread, eggs.· an Easter Trio

TO

By Aileen Claire
NEA Food Editor
Real rabbits or those of
candy, cake or bread dough are
an integral part of the Easter
ON THEIR
celebration in North America
and are as important as the
AUTO BANK OPENING
traditional egg.
Actually, it is the hare and
not its relative, the prolific
rabbit, that should be the true
symbol. The hare is a symbol
for the moon and the date for
.
Easter depends upon the phase
of the moon.
Whatever, the bunny and the
•
POM
0.
egg also were symbols of
, '-c:;"G"G"G"&lt;::'"oo-o-o'-Q0-o-o...:&gt;...:&gt;...:&gt;...:&gt;...:&gt;-oo-o-~ Anglo-Saxon spring goddess
Eostre and emblematic of
fertility. Both remain closely
allied to Eastertime. As a
special treat this Easter you
can make an Easter bunny or
an Italian Easter bread ring
with colored eggs using the
same basic dough recipe.
Easter Bunny or Italian
ON THE OPENING OF
Easter Bread
2V• to
3V, cups unsifted flour
'14 cup sugar
1 teaspoon salt
1 package active dry yeast
Two-thirds cup milk
2 tablespoons margarine
2 eggs (at room temp. l
'h cup mixed candled fruits
li• cup chopped blanched
almonds
Basic dough becomes an Easter bunny or Italian Easter bread ring.
~, teaspoon anise seed
Confectioners' sugar
frosting
Punch dough down ; turn out Twist ropes together loosely arms of bunny with aluminum
Mixed candled fruits and
onto lightly floured board. and form into a ring on a foii for the last 10 minutes of
uncooked spaghetti or
Knead in fruit mixture. greased baking sheet. Brush baking to prevent excessive
colored sprinkles.
Proceed according to direc- with melted margarine. Place browning . Remove from
POMEROY, 0.
In a large bowl thoroughly tions below for desired shape . 5 colored raw eggs into spaces baking sheet and cool on wire
Easter Bwmy: Divide dough in the twist. Cover; let rise in rack. Frost with confectioners'
mix I cup flow-, sugar, salt and
undissolved active dry yeast. into 2 pieces, one piece about warm place, rree from draft, sugar frosting. Decorate bunny
Combine milk and margarine two-thirds the weight of the until doubled in bulk, about I with candied fruits for eyes and
in a saucepan. Heat over low dough and the other piece hour . Bake at 350-degrees nose and whiskers. Sprinkle
heat until liquid is very warm about one-third the weight of about 30 to 35 minutes, or until ring with colored sprinkles.
to
130-degrees l. the dough. Form larger piece done .
(120
Makes I bunny or I bread ring .
Margarine does not need to into a smooth ball . Place on
For bunny cover ears and
melt. Gradually add to dry greased baking sheet. Squeeze
ES, f"'JDERN
ingredients and beat 2 minutes this dough to form a head about
~~S T~KEN THE
I
H~•D5HIP OUT OF FIRE FIGHTING 1•
at medium speed of electric one-third the size of the body.
-HI\KK"F
F: -WliiLE PROSPECT·
mixer,"or use rotary beater. If Make an indentation in the
iNG IN T&gt;\E 'iUI\ON l Wl&gt;6 CHIEF
mixing by hand, beat very body and place a raw. egg into
OF THE C,A,RIBOU VOLUNTEEJ&lt;S:
'WHEN iT 'W~$ "TOO COLD
hard ... about ~00 strokes a indentation. Form remaining
FOR OUR SLED PMS. wE
one-third
of
ctough
into
a
roll
minute .. .for the same amount
PULL£V I~ E. HOSE CA~ (
of time. Add eggs and 'h cup of about 12 inches long. Form
flour, or enough flo!¢ to make a each into a ball and place in
thick batter. Beat at high speed appropriate places on body to
2 minutes, scraping bowl oc- form legs. Divide remaining
casionally. Stir in enough dough into 4 equal pieces. Roll
additional flour to make a soft slightly with rolling pin to
dough. Turn out onto lightly flatten. Taper one end of each
floured board; knoad until _piece. Tuck 2 strips under top
smooth and elastic, about 8 to of head to form ears. Tuck
10 minutes. Place in greased remaining 2 pieces just below
bowl, turning to grease top. the neck to form arms. Fold
· Cover; .let rise in warm phice, arms lbver egg .
free from draft, until doubled
in bulk, about I hour :
Italian F;aster Bread: Divide
(0)
~'E.C~LLIN6
· Combine frui Is, almonds and · dough in half. Roll each piece
THE NIGHT THE
of dough into a 24-inch rope ,
anise seed.
I I FL"ME 5 FR02E ~

POMEROY NATIONAL
BANK

AUTO BANK

MOORE'S STORE
TO_
PNB AUTO BANK

STIFFLER STORES INC.

'

-~

•
'·

~

'

. . .
'

RITCHEY ELECTRIC
SIGN COMPANY

Carts invited
for handouts

Inventor of Coney
Islands cut hot
dogs to five cents

TO

''· ...,....
!'Gtlpnal

Hats Off

POMEROY NATIONAL
BANK

Kissinger

AUTO BANK

AUTO BANK

The Fa.rmers- Bank
and Savings Co.
·uo.ooo.oo Maximum

Insurance

@

Each Deoosllor

MfMAFr

rFDfF"~ i

f i [,O',I T

For

N~l'f!A~(f

---

---

-

(Cil:PORAT I ON

·-

(Total Ekctric)

Ford

·I

C. HINDY ELECTRIC

President's '68
returns reviewed

POMEROY
NATIONAL
AUTO BANK
ON YOUR OPENING
MARCH 27th

THE MEIGS INN
POMEROY, 0.

HATS OFF
TO

POMEROY
NATIONAL
AUTO BANK
KERM :S KORNER

NEW YORK
CLOTHING
HOUSE
POMEROY, 0.

.

SI' . Augustine, Fla. (UP! ) followed by cancer of the
Dr. Justin J. stein ssid one
Cancer
of !be stomach is the uterine cervix, skin, breast, out of three cancer deaths could have been prevented by
Federal Hocking added one who made the tag to end, the
earlier
better treatment.
Pitching
. and
'
IP R H BB SO moot common form of the lungs and esophagus among
more run in the sixth to inning.
Walker!WP )
7 o 6 3 ' 10 disease in Russia but it ranks women in Russia. Lung and
The Federal Hocking complete the scoring for the
Federal
Hocking
scored
an
CampiLP)
4 I ~ 3 2 far down the list of American breast cancers are increasing
Lancers snapped . the Wahama game.
WI earned run to take a 1-0 lead.
Goldsberry
1-3 2 0 2 0 cancers and a leading Soviet in Russia.
White Falcon string of conIn the nightcap Wahama 's
stiU
had
plenty
of
W
ahama
Belcher
I
2-3 2 4 2 1. scientist says the reason is a
secutive diamond wins Danny Harmon made his
In the United States, lung
time
to
take
the
lead
as
Harmystery.
Saturday afternoon by taking a pitching debut WJd hooked up
cancer
is most common among
mon was doing a fine job on the
twin ~ill.
"It's very hard to explain men and breast can~r is most
in a pitching duel with Federal mount but everything the
Federal Hocking helped the Hockings' Tom Ru.sseU.
and its very hard to un- common among women . Lung
Falcons
hit
went
right
to
a
derstand," said Dr. Vadim N. cancer is also increasing in the
Falcons scoreless throughout
Neither team managed to Lancer defender for WI easy
2ndGame 1234567-RHE Gerasimenko, deputy director U.S., but breast cancer cases
the fourteen innings that were cross the plate tliroughout the put out.
WHS
0000000-0~2 of the Institute of Explayed by winning out on first three innings but Federal
are showing no change.
Russell kept the White F-H
0
0 0 I 0 0 x - I ~ 0 perimental · and Clinical Onscores of lHl Wid 1-0.
Gerasimenko, repor.ting on
Hocking broke the ice in their Falcons from crossing the
cology in Moscow; in a report cancer control efforts in RusIn the first contest Federal half of the fourth.
plate during the remainder of
Hocking got on the board first
sia, said cancer is responsible
Jarvis led off with a single, the game to pick up the win. WHS Hitting : Lewis , single; released today.
by plating a run in the bottom
the next man hit a grounder to Harmon absorbed the loss even Belcher single, Harmon single; ' He.said at a science writers for 16 per cent of all deaths
seminar sponsored by the there and is second only to
half of the third inning,
short which should have been though he pitched a fine Camp single.
Amerlca'n Cancer Society that cardiovascular diseases. An
Wahama looked as though
converted into a double play ballgame.
PITCHING
IP
R
H
BB
SO
gastric
cancer is the leading almost identical situation
they were going to take the
but the ball skipped by for an
.J
The White Falcons now must RusseU(WPl
7 0 ~ 3 3 form of tlle disease in both men exists in the United States.
lead in the top of the fourth
error putting men on first and try and get back on the winning Harmon ( LP)
6 I~ 2 2 and women in Russia although
when they loaded the bases
second. ,.
In an earlier report, the
track
when
the
journey
Ill
its
incidence
is
decreaalng.
It
with no outs, but the Lancer
president of the American
The next Lancer batter fued
ranks ninth in the U.S. and also Cancer Society said an acpitcher managed to get out of out to right for the first out. Meigs. Wahama will sport a 4-2
record with one of those wins
the jam unscathed.
is decreasing, for unknown celerated effort is needed to
Harmon got the next batter to coming over the Mauraders a David 0. Haning
reasons.
Skip Camp, the startng pop out to second for the second
identify persons most likely to
Lung cancer ranks second develop cancer in an attempt to
Wahama hurler, left the after out. A sharp single to left week ago today, Game-time
among Soviet men followed by save more of the 100,000 peop.le
four innings Wid Mike Gold· loaded the bases with two out. thiseveningwillbearound~ :30 died on Saturday
p.m.
.
sberry took over the chores. Then Harmon got the next man
First Game 12 34 56 7 R HE O.ona 0. Hamng, 60, Lan- cancer of the skin and he said die needlessly of the
Goldsberry had control trouble to ground to second which WHS
0 0 0 no· 0 0 0 -0 6 1 cas ter, formerly of Meigs esophagus. Stomach cancer is disease each year.
WJd walked the first batter. He should have ended the inning. FH
oo 1 o 3 1 x -5 8 2 County, died Saturday at his
then got the next man out but The throw from second pulled
walked the third man he faced . the first baseman off the bag WHS Hitting : Hesson single, home. Th~ son ofthe late Clyde
Lewis single, Russell single, and Hallie Hanmg, . he sp~nt
Robbie Belcber then came in allowing the runner from third
Harmon single, Belcher single, most of his life m Meigs
and before he could set the to score. In all the commotion Davis silll(le.
299 PUTMAN ZANESVILLE, 0.
County. Mr. Hamng was forLan~rs down they had added
the runner from second tried to
merly employed as a cook in
three more nms.
score but Russell fired to Lewis
restaurants of the Athens area.
Surviving are his wife ,
Luella ; five brothers, Graham,
SAN FRANCISCO (UP!) of Columbus; Ray, of Urging needy Californians to was abducted Feb. 4.
After tbe kidnaping, the SLA
Pomeroy; Willis , Piqua; "bring shopping carts,'' a
demanded
Hearst give $70
Morris, Nelsonville, and Max bigger and better food give'
of Carpenter. Funeral services away was today reported worth of food to all California's
will be at I p.m. Tuesday at the ready to go in a bid to win poor, even before negotiations
Hughes Funeral Home in freedom for newspaper heiress for his daughter's releaae could
begin .
Athens with the Rev. Charles Patricia Hearst.
But the giveaway as
Norris officiating. Burial will
A. Ludlow Kramer, director originally set up carne to an
be in the Wells Cemetery at of the $2 million People in Need
Downington . Friends may call distribution program, an- abrupt halt two. weeks ago
TO THE
after the SLA kidnapers
NEW YORK (UPij had become a hit singing, at the funeral home after ~ p. nounced that food will be labeled it only "crumbs" for
Nathan Handwerker was "Nathan, Nathan, Why You m. today.
handed out at 17 places in the the people. They termed some
making ends meet slicing Waitin'?" at a nearby cafe.
San Francisco Bay Area of the free food as "hog feed"
bread rolls at Feltman's
beginning at 8 a.m. PDT.
On Saturday, he suffered a
and "unfit for human conGerman Gardens on Coney heart attack at his retirement
"Bring shopping carts of swnption."
Island, where the red hots cost home in North Port Charlotte.
something to carry the food, "
So far, about $1 million worth
10 cents.
Kramer said.
The body was retw-ne&lt;l. to
(Continued from page ll
ON THE OPENING OF THEIR
of food haa been given to
That was in 1916, and two New York lor funeral services
He said the program "now 120,000 persons.
Binging walters at FeltmWJ's, scheduled for 10:15 a.m . Tues- that. We have made a very has a quality food to disMeanwhile, the FBI sought
Eddie Cantor and Jimmy day at Riverside Chapel, good beginning on that process. tribute," thus meeting a major to determine the authenticity
REV. MR. GILL
nurante, challenged Nathan to Brooklyn, with bw-ial at Mt. The further we proceed from complaint of the Symbionese of a purported SLA letter
THE MONTHLY HoUness
start his own hotdog stand Wid L.ebanon Cemetery, ·Queens. the date (of the first SALT Liberation Army which kid- received by a San Francisco
agreement in 19721, people will
RaUy of the M.A.H.A. wlll be
charge only five cents a frank.
naped Patricia, 20, from near underground newspaper, the
really appreciate the imporheld Tuesday night at 7:30
Ten cents, they said, was too
the University of California at Phoenix. The letter claimed
tance of that significant step."
p.m. at the Racine Church of
much to pay.
Berkeley where she is enrolled that Patricia has learned
"That document speaks of as .a coed.
the Nazareae with the Rev.
There are many stories
"political consciousness"
(Continued from page I )
peace and good neighborliness
Eugene Gill of Warren as
about Nathan and how the
The
food
program
is
fiDWlced
during
her 48days in captivity.
speaker. Pastor of the
business began, but this is the only to her but to the chUdren." because the only other alterna- by Randolph Hearst, president
The
Hearst kidnaping wns
Ford left a slight opening for tive is war . There is no other
Warren Free Methodist
way he told it, how with his
and
editor
of
the
San
Francisco
the
ftrst
political abduction in
Church, the Rev. Mr. Glll
ELECTRICAL
bride Ida they sold coneys for a a draft as the GOP presidential alternative ."
Examiner,
in
an
effort
to
U.S. history.
nominee
two
years
from
now.
When
Kissinger
entered
the
was pastor of the Laurel Cliff
nickel and spiced them with
fmally free his daughter who
"If you were writing the room a moment later,
Free Methodist Church here
Ida's secret recipe.
for 12 years. Paul Hess,
When Nathan Handwerker, worst scenario, which I don't Brezhnev told him he had been
president of the assoclallon,
known for 50 years as "Mr. think is ever going to happen, talking to the press. "I told
Invites the public to ullend.
Coney Island", died at St. for me it would be a them I was optimistic and tbey
Joseph's Hospital in Port Republican convention dead- agreed with me that all want
Charlotte, F1a. Sunday at the locked. Reagan, Rockefeller, peace . That makes it easier to
age of 83, the llt'Je stand at Surf Connally-anyody else you start."
Brezhnev also expressed the
and Stillwell Avenues had want --completely deadlocked
after
a
series
of
votes.
opinion
that "relations at this
grown into Nathan's Famous
DIVORCES GRANTED
"What
happens
then
if
they
point (with the United States)
Inc., a chain of 18 restaurants
Two divorces granted in selling 12 million hotdogs a and the others come to me?
are good. There is much work
Meigs County Commori Pleas year.
BALTIMORE (UP!) - The inquiry was going beyond a
to do at this time."
Court, each on charges of gross
Teachers
reject
Baltimore
Sun said today the routine reexamination of tax
"You
do
want
it
better,
don't
Handwerker and Ida put in 18
neglect of duty and extreme to 20 hours of grinding work a
Revenue
Servi~ is return items previously made
Internal
you?" a newsman asked.
cruelty, are to Carl L. day but hts flair for promotion wage proposal
"There are such people who checking into the 1968 tax public by the White House.
Barringer from Frances E. had a part in their success, too.
would like to see things wor- returns of President Nixon to
The newspaper said only the
LOUISVILLE, Ohio (UP!)- se," Brezhnev replied .
Barringer, and Rolland C. He called the stand "NathWJ's"
see if tbere is any evidence of possibility that fraud might
Searles from Veva V. Searles. in 1921 because Sophie Tucker Members of the Louisville
Kissinger arrived Sunday fraoo.
exist would enable the IRS to
Education Association voted night for WI expected three
The newspaper said In Its go into returns for years prior
Sunday night to reject the days of talks with Brezhnev morning editions the inquiry to 1970. A three-year statute of
latest wage proposal on a new and other Soviet officials. The waa being conducted by the limitations prohibits routine
·contract from the city's school major issue before them is the Baltimore District Office of the checks for previous years, the
board and to strike the schools AALT negotiations that are IRS and it included the paper said.
beginning at 12:01 a.m. today. now stalemated in Geneva.
President's 1968 return, the
The newspaper said it had
David Augusta, president of
year
before he became the learned a key element in the
Kissinger said he also would
the association, said lack of discuss the controversy in the nation's chief executive.
deduction involving the vice
supervision at the schools United States over trade with
Sow-ces knowledgable about presidential papers was whethcould endanger the safety of the Soviet Union and his Middle the investigation, the San said, er the deed was backdated in
IN
reported the probe would focua order to circumvent the cut-off
the children and reconunended Eaat diplomacy.
on several key items, Including date when such donations no
parents keep their children at
home.
the $567,000 deduction Nixon longer would be deductible.
PLEASANT VALLEY
The strike will idle some 165 , Discharges: Mrs. Robert. took in 1969 for his vice
It said, in reference to the
teachers in the scholll system Hayes, New Haven; Mrs. Alvin presidential papers given the 1968 re!lD'Il, It centered on
and close the doors of six Powell , daughter , Racine ; goverment, and a 1968 deduc- three points-the deduction for
schools to about ~.ooo students. Mrs . Anthony Bonecutter, tion claimed for business use of use of the New York apartment
No negotiations to settle the Point Pleasant; Thomas Nixon's apartment in New for business purposes ; a
dispute were scheduled.
tranafer of stock in Fisher's j
Kaylor , Letart; Millard York City.
The
Sun
said
the
broadening
lllland,
near Miami, and a I
Loudermilt, Mason ; Mrs .
of
the
investigation
to
cover
the
deduction
for the gift of earlier
Merrill Clonch, Osborne
POMEROY, 0.
E. 2ND
1968
returns
was
the
first
papers not involved in the 1989
Stear!, Point Pleasant;
Virginia Snodgrass, Hen- visible evidence the IRS donation.
derson; Mrs. Decil Roush,
Point Pleasant; Mrs . Weldon
Wears, Pliny ; Freda Byus,
Point Pleasant; Mrs. Aldean
Miller, Crown City; Mervin
Deal·, Fraziers Bottom; Eddie
PT . PLEASANT
A Fish, Gallipolis Ferry .
Gallipolis woman, Linda Veterans Memorial Hospital
Louise Preston, was treated at
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS
Pleasant Valley Hospital in - Edward Martin, Pomeroy.
Point Pleasant for injuries
SATURDAY DISCHARGES
received in a single car .ac- - Amanda Morris, Ivan
cident Saturday evening. It Roush, Homer Cole, James
was · one of three weekend King, Edith Roush, Daniel
accidents investigated by the Davidson, Angie Brunty.
The Progressive Future of the Business Life of the
Mason County Sheriff's
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS Department.
Thomas Cook, Pomeroy;
Big Bend Area is Enhanced by the Addition of the New
Ms. Preston, released after George Clonch, Belpre ; Ralph
trealment, wa• identified by Stover, Gallipolis ; Mary
deputy James Craddock as the Wingett, Pomeroy; James
driver.
Pickens, Racine; · Brenda
Police said Ms. Preston was Taylor, Racine ; Elmer Still,
driving north on State Route 62 Pomeroy.
when the vehicle ran off the
SUNDAY DISCHARGES roadway on the right side, then Fannie Phillips, Camillia
back on to the left when she loot Lewis, Betty Willis, Carl Still,
control due to tHe icy road Stella Bush.
surfa~. Finally it went off the
I
D~U6
I roadway again on the right side
and into a fence.
\
20H l_.a.c,T MA'I\., S•&gt;-~FT
\
LOCAL TEMPS
'•
p .• ~ · l n..,-,
-,.-,
I
,_:~..__
L~.)·~b
F' . V f l ,
I
'". ... ,
I
Temperatw-e in downtown
The local beanery serves Pomeroy Monday at 11 a. m.
f A:,T F'Rf E DELIVER'
I
everything
with a dose of was 28 degrees under sunny
,,
,_.,
,.,,.,
,,_,
CANTON,
heartburn.
skies.

PNB
AUTO
BANK

•

POMEROY, OHIO

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Cancer hits Russians in stomachs

BY GARY CLARK

MEETING CANCELLED
Regular March meeting of
the Past Matrons, Pomeroy
Chapter 186, Order of the
Eastern Star, has been cancelled. The April meeting will
be held at .the home of Mrs.
Alfred Crow, Racine .

MULLEN INS. AGENCY INC.

POMEROY
NATIONAL

.. . .

Falcons Drop Twin Bill

Connie Gibbs, Denise and Julie
Spires, Mrs. Patsy Spires and
Diana, J.D., Michael, and Beth
Ann, Brenda Yoi.ulg, Ro.berta
Youn g, Mrs. Annabelle Sisson,
Mrs. Amy Short, Mrs. Joyce
Wooten, Mrs. Betty Stewart.
Sending gifts were Mr. and
Mrs. Alex Shuler, Mrs. Muriel
Spire s,
Mrs .
Charlene
Spaulding and Cathy , Mr . and
Mrs. Jess Louden, Bonnie
Short, Mr. and Mrs. Oshel
Tribble, Mrs. Pat Bentz and
family, Mrs. Pauline Rife,
Mrs . Christine Napier, Ruby
Grueser, Mrs . Malinda
Bradbury, Mrs. Audrey
Bradbury, Mildred Phillips ,
Mr. and Mrs. Clinton Jones,
Mrs. Janice Swisher, Mr. and
Mrs. Ben Rupe, Mrs. Lucille
Mulford , Mrs. Amanda Van
Kirk, Mr . and Mrs. Jim Bentz ,
Mrs. William Rizer, Margaret
Persons and Rick Geiger, and
Mr. and Mrs . Kenny Rizer.

Congregation to formalize on April 21

.

' Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 ., March 25, 1974
7- The Daily Sentijlel,

(,

Founder
of
club
....
is recognized

.

~eJIO}f~M~

OPENING

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Auto Bank

OHIO VAllEY
PLUMBING &amp; HEATING

Gallipolis
woman hurl

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POMEROY, 0.

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TO

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DIEBOLD CO.

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6:_ The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., March 25, ·197~

~

.,.,

~ MiscellaneOus shower given couple
Green Thumb

Mr. and Mrs. James K.

Ables, the former Rhonda

Notes . ...

Prayer and the fla g salute.
Mrs . George Skinner read
A weekly feature or Meigs
"God the Safe Guide" and
County Garden Club members.
scripture from Psalm 78.
The program prepared by
Mrs. William Radford was
By Mrs. Margaret Parsons
prese nted by Mrs . . Homer
RutiWJd Garden Club
Radford. Readings were
"Handing Colds Around " by
"Far off, unseen, Spring faintly cries
Mrs. Fred Goeglein; "Have
Bidding
her earliest plant to arise."
Pharmac ists Inspect Old
. . .. anniversary ce lebration of Medicine " by Mrs. Welby
This is March, an active month in the outdoor garden in all
Miss Nelle Bing, who founded Whaley; "Women's Attitudes but the very coldest parts of North America .
the club while she was a nurse about Breast Cancer" by Mrs.
One must plan carefully and take advantage of every
Opha Offutt; "New Tests for
~ with the Meigs County Health
Heart Attacks" by Mrs. Louis favorable day the weather provides for outdoor work. The very
, , Department.
foundation for your summer gardens are made during this
' Mrs. Blackston opened the Grueser; ''Yaw ning~ Con- month . A busy time indeed 1
a
Natural
meeting with the Lord's sidered
Complete all spring pruning, including that of the roses, frui t
Tranquilizer," Mrs. William
"
trees, red ra spberries. Hedges that are overgrown or unshapely
Folmer .
Mrs. Offutt conducted the may be pruned which will reduce their size and thicken their
. Lilacs, rhododendrons, yew, and other plants may be cut
J contest which was won by Mrs. growth
back
to
within one foot of the ground and mulching with a rich
Lewis Grueser and Mrs . Black·
compost
is good before hot weather comes .
ston . Mrs. G. J . Morgan won
Lawns
will benefit much by top dressing with "mixture of
the door prize. It was an·
humus,
leaf
mold, or peat moss and some fertilizer. Roll th e lawn
noun ced that the annual
with a medium weight roller when it is moist but not wet. Patch
•
'
Donna Boyd and Sarah grange banquet will be held at and repair spots which have no grass by sowing seeds early.
the Salisbury School on April 5
.:; Greene ente rtained Friday
and
that tickets are available Bulbs for summer blooming that may be planted now are calla
· night with a surprise party
lilies, gloriosas, elephant ears, gladioli, cannas, and crinums.
.;: honoring Jimmy D. Qualls on from Fred Goeglein. Mrs .
Keep the cultivator busy between growing plants as it is
• his 16th birthday. The party Skinner will host the April much easier to destroy weeds which are sma ll.
• was held at the home of his meeting.
If one is interested in cold frames and hotbeds which are
Mrs. Jeffers served refreshaun t, Mrs. Marie Cy rus,
ments to those named and Mrs. useful in starting young vegetables and flowers, one should
Pomeroy.
Hugh Bearhs, Mrs. James locate the hotbed in a sheltered place where the cold winds
A green and white color
Conkle, Mrs. Scott Folmer, cannot strike and where the sunshine will shine as much as
scheme was carried out and
possible . On cold nights cover it with mats or boards to conserve
cake , punch, sandwiches and Mrs. William Grueser, Mrs. the heat.
·
Arnold Snowden, and the
potato chips were served. Gifts
Plants in hotbeds should be given the same treatment as
were presented to the honored Jeffers children.
those which are recently moved from a greenhouse to cold
guest.
fr~mes . It is importWJt not to over-ventilate plants in cold
Attending were Sharon
framts. Temperature at SOlo 90degrees is harmful.
KUHNS IN SERVICE
Buffington, Blaine Qualls,
The Rev . and Mrs. Robert . Keep up with spraying because in this way only can you be
Dwayne Qualls,
Orrion Kuhn participated Thursday in sw-e to have healthy plants. Spring blooming shrubs tha t need
Blanchard, Jeff English, Greg the Lenten program at Grace pruning should receive this attention as soon as they have
James, David Boyd, Mark Methodist Church, Gallipolis. finished flowering.
Oiler, Andrew English, Mike The Rev. Mr . Kuhn, pastor of
Woolard, Kevin McLaughlin, the Pomeroy First Baptist
THE GREEN BOUGH
Becky Bego, Stephanie Bego, Church, gave th e Lenten
By Louise Hajek
: Mary Kay Qualls, Ed Sisson, meditation, and Mrs. Kuhn
I keep a g~een bough in my heart
: Harold Sisson, Jeff Reuter, played the organ for the serFor the singing birds' return.
: Bruce Reed, Tim Coats, Terry vice. Mrs. Kuhn has been inThough fields lie still
" Qualls , Danny Buffington, vited to be organist for the
And cool winds start,
: Lonnie Coats and Floyd Good Friday Service at Grace
I keep a green bough in my heart.
: BW'ney.
Methodist Church.
As the season pale and burn,
'
I keep a green bough in my heart
For the singing birds' return.

Bales, were honored recently

wi lh a misce llaneous shower

held at the Kyger Lodge Hall.
Mrs. Rita White and Mrs.

-;:;; Mrs. Arlee Abbott, Mrs.
'::Harold Blackston, and Mrs.
• Amos Leonard were appointed
,;;: to take the April trea t to the
Meigs County Infirmary when
i the Rock Springs Better Health
: Club met Thursday at the home
'• of Mrs. Wendell Jeffers.
•
During the meeting it was
• noted the 10 members of the
~. club attended the 90th birthday

Chureh .

,.

mem1s that the chapel which
ha s been a miss ion or th e
French City Baptist CIJU rch,
will be a church without direct

r

..

Quall.
-~- is surprised

,'!..Jimmy

FOOD FOR AMERICANS

§eAtU)u/t£4

Marie Spi res host~ d the
shower. Winn ing the door prize
was Mary Bradbury. Cake,
potato chips, mints and punch
were served.
Others attending the shower

were Mrs. Martha Grueser,
Mrs . lrma Bales, Mrs . Genevie
Jones and J eanette, Mrs .
Treva Denney and Sarah Jane,
Shelia Conkle, Becky Hock:oan, Mr. and Mrs. Junior
White, Mrs. Kay Hockman ,

.Plans are being made by the

First Southern Baptist Chapel
of Pom eroy to constitute on
April 21 as a New Testament
The cons titution

bread and beans has been
planned for Friday night.
Those planning to attend are
asked to notify Bob Mills.

s~rvice

ties to a sponsoring chun:h .

The service will begin at 3 p.
m. wit h the Rev . Raymond
Pinson to give the constitution
to the new church.
Saturday several men and

cht~rge

boy s of the chapel traveled to
Dayton to visit the Air Force
Mus eum there. A men's

fellowship supper with corn -

Howard Ferguson
now in Columbus
Howard Michael Ferguson,
12-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs .
James Ferguson, Sr .. Hysell
Run Road, was transferred
from the Holzer Medical
Center to Children's Hospital ,
Columbus Thursday.
The youth had been a patient
at Holze r sin ce Monda y
evenin g when he was thrown

from il horse on Hysell Run
Road. He suffered a brain
concussion and skull fracture.
Hi s room nurnber at Children's

Hospita l is 321.
Riding on the horse with the
Ferguson boy and also thrown
wa s Gary Priddy, 12, son of Mr.
an d Mrs . Dale Priddy, Hysell
Run Road. He also suffered a
skull frac ture and was taken to
the Holzer Medical Center
where he was confitl ed until

Thursday. Both boys are
studenL' at Meigs Junior High
School.

Revival serv ices will begin
at the Chapel on April 4 and
continue ·through April 7.
Spea ker will be the Rev. James
Bradford.

Anita Collins is engaged
Announcement is made of Sarasota.

Miss Collins graduated from
the engagement of Miss Anita
School,
M. Collins, 106 Florsota Drive, Pomeroy High
Sarasota, Fla ., and Mr. Bruce received her bachelor of arts
lsphord ing, 1102 Colleton degree from Florida State
University and her master's
Drive, Sarasota .
Miss Collins is the daughter degree from Emory University
of Mr. an d Mrs. William Collins in Florida. She is employed as
of Ft. Myers, Fla., formerly of librarian for the Sarasota
Pomeroy, and the parents of Herald Tribune and Journal.
Her finance graduated from
the bridegroom-€lect are Mr .
and Mrs. William lsphording, the University of Alabama and
did his post graduate work at
the University of Florida. He is
employed
by the Sarasota
VISIT IN COLUMBUS
LETART FALLS - Mr. and Journal as sportswriter. The
Mrs. Bert Grimm, Letart wedding has been set for April
Falls, have returned from a 19.
several day s' visit in Columbus
with their son, Bob Grimm and
family.
VISITED HERE
Miss Effie Price of St.
Albans, W. Va. and Mrs.
Lorene Taylor, Nitro, were
recent visitors of Mr. and Mrs.
Clifford Hayes, Middleport .
Clifford Hayes and Mr. and
Mrs. Gregory Hayes were in
Columbus Wednesday and
Thursday to visit Mr. and Mrs.
John E. Piatt, Sr. and Mr. and
Mrs. J. K. West. Mrs. Piatt and
Mrs. West are sisters of Clifford Hayes. They went
especially to see Mr . Piatt who
is ill.
VISIT IN MEIGS
The Rev. and Mrs. Frank
Cheesebrew of Shawnee were
Friday visitors of relatives and
friends in Meigs County.

Bunny, bread, eggs.· an Easter Trio

TO

By Aileen Claire
NEA Food Editor
Real rabbits or those of
candy, cake or bread dough are
an integral part of the Easter
ON THEIR
celebration in North America
and are as important as the
AUTO BANK OPENING
traditional egg.
Actually, it is the hare and
not its relative, the prolific
rabbit, that should be the true
symbol. The hare is a symbol
for the moon and the date for
.
Easter depends upon the phase
of the moon.
Whatever, the bunny and the
•
POM
0.
egg also were symbols of
, '-c:;"G"G"G"&lt;::'"oo-o-o'-Q0-o-o...:&gt;...:&gt;...:&gt;...:&gt;...:&gt;-oo-o-~ Anglo-Saxon spring goddess
Eostre and emblematic of
fertility. Both remain closely
allied to Eastertime. As a
special treat this Easter you
can make an Easter bunny or
an Italian Easter bread ring
with colored eggs using the
same basic dough recipe.
Easter Bunny or Italian
ON THE OPENING OF
Easter Bread
2V• to
3V, cups unsifted flour
'14 cup sugar
1 teaspoon salt
1 package active dry yeast
Two-thirds cup milk
2 tablespoons margarine
2 eggs (at room temp. l
'h cup mixed candled fruits
li• cup chopped blanched
almonds
Basic dough becomes an Easter bunny or Italian Easter bread ring.
~, teaspoon anise seed
Confectioners' sugar
frosting
Punch dough down ; turn out Twist ropes together loosely arms of bunny with aluminum
Mixed candled fruits and
onto lightly floured board. and form into a ring on a foii for the last 10 minutes of
uncooked spaghetti or
Knead in fruit mixture. greased baking sheet. Brush baking to prevent excessive
colored sprinkles.
Proceed according to direc- with melted margarine. Place browning . Remove from
POMEROY, 0.
In a large bowl thoroughly tions below for desired shape . 5 colored raw eggs into spaces baking sheet and cool on wire
Easter Bwmy: Divide dough in the twist. Cover; let rise in rack. Frost with confectioners'
mix I cup flow-, sugar, salt and
undissolved active dry yeast. into 2 pieces, one piece about warm place, rree from draft, sugar frosting. Decorate bunny
Combine milk and margarine two-thirds the weight of the until doubled in bulk, about I with candied fruits for eyes and
in a saucepan. Heat over low dough and the other piece hour . Bake at 350-degrees nose and whiskers. Sprinkle
heat until liquid is very warm about one-third the weight of about 30 to 35 minutes, or until ring with colored sprinkles.
to
130-degrees l. the dough. Form larger piece done .
(120
Makes I bunny or I bread ring .
Margarine does not need to into a smooth ball . Place on
For bunny cover ears and
melt. Gradually add to dry greased baking sheet. Squeeze
ES, f"'JDERN
ingredients and beat 2 minutes this dough to form a head about
~~S T~KEN THE
I
H~•D5HIP OUT OF FIRE FIGHTING 1•
at medium speed of electric one-third the size of the body.
-HI\KK"F
F: -WliiLE PROSPECT·
mixer,"or use rotary beater. If Make an indentation in the
iNG IN T&gt;\E 'iUI\ON l Wl&gt;6 CHIEF
mixing by hand, beat very body and place a raw. egg into
OF THE C,A,RIBOU VOLUNTEEJ&lt;S:
'WHEN iT 'W~$ "TOO COLD
hard ... about ~00 strokes a indentation. Form remaining
FOR OUR SLED PMS. wE
one-third
of
ctough
into
a
roll
minute .. .for the same amount
PULL£V I~ E. HOSE CA~ (
of time. Add eggs and 'h cup of about 12 inches long. Form
flour, or enough flo!¢ to make a each into a ball and place in
thick batter. Beat at high speed appropriate places on body to
2 minutes, scraping bowl oc- form legs. Divide remaining
casionally. Stir in enough dough into 4 equal pieces. Roll
additional flour to make a soft slightly with rolling pin to
dough. Turn out onto lightly flatten. Taper one end of each
floured board; knoad until _piece. Tuck 2 strips under top
smooth and elastic, about 8 to of head to form ears. Tuck
10 minutes. Place in greased remaining 2 pieces just below
bowl, turning to grease top. the neck to form arms. Fold
· Cover; .let rise in warm phice, arms lbver egg .
free from draft, until doubled
in bulk, about I hour :
Italian F;aster Bread: Divide
(0)
~'E.C~LLIN6
· Combine frui Is, almonds and · dough in half. Roll each piece
THE NIGHT THE
of dough into a 24-inch rope ,
anise seed.
I I FL"ME 5 FR02E ~

POMEROY NATIONAL
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RITCHEY ELECTRIC
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Carts invited
for handouts

Inventor of Coney
Islands cut hot
dogs to five cents

TO

''· ...,....
!'Gtlpnal

Hats Off

POMEROY NATIONAL
BANK

Kissinger

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The Fa.rmers- Bank
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Insurance

@

Each Deoosllor

MfMAFr

rFDfF"~ i

f i [,O',I T

For

N~l'f!A~(f

---

---

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(Cil:PORAT I ON

·-

(Total Ekctric)

Ford

·I

C. HINDY ELECTRIC

President's '68
returns reviewed

POMEROY
NATIONAL
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ON YOUR OPENING
MARCH 27th

THE MEIGS INN
POMEROY, 0.

HATS OFF
TO

POMEROY
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AUTO BANK
KERM :S KORNER

NEW YORK
CLOTHING
HOUSE
POMEROY, 0.

.

SI' . Augustine, Fla. (UP! ) followed by cancer of the
Dr. Justin J. stein ssid one
Cancer
of !be stomach is the uterine cervix, skin, breast, out of three cancer deaths could have been prevented by
Federal Hocking added one who made the tag to end, the
earlier
better treatment.
Pitching
. and
'
IP R H BB SO moot common form of the lungs and esophagus among
more run in the sixth to inning.
Walker!WP )
7 o 6 3 ' 10 disease in Russia but it ranks women in Russia. Lung and
The Federal Hocking complete the scoring for the
Federal
Hocking
scored
an
CampiLP)
4 I ~ 3 2 far down the list of American breast cancers are increasing
Lancers snapped . the Wahama game.
WI earned run to take a 1-0 lead.
Goldsberry
1-3 2 0 2 0 cancers and a leading Soviet in Russia.
White Falcon string of conIn the nightcap Wahama 's
stiU
had
plenty
of
W
ahama
Belcher
I
2-3 2 4 2 1. scientist says the reason is a
secutive diamond wins Danny Harmon made his
In the United States, lung
time
to
take
the
lead
as
Harmystery.
Saturday afternoon by taking a pitching debut WJd hooked up
cancer
is most common among
mon was doing a fine job on the
twin ~ill.
"It's very hard to explain men and breast can~r is most
in a pitching duel with Federal mount but everything the
Federal Hocking helped the Hockings' Tom Ru.sseU.
and its very hard to un- common among women . Lung
Falcons
hit
went
right
to
a
derstand," said Dr. Vadim N. cancer is also increasing in the
Falcons scoreless throughout
Neither team managed to Lancer defender for WI easy
2ndGame 1234567-RHE Gerasimenko, deputy director U.S., but breast cancer cases
the fourteen innings that were cross the plate tliroughout the put out.
WHS
0000000-0~2 of the Institute of Explayed by winning out on first three innings but Federal
are showing no change.
Russell kept the White F-H
0
0 0 I 0 0 x - I ~ 0 perimental · and Clinical Onscores of lHl Wid 1-0.
Gerasimenko, repor.ting on
Hocking broke the ice in their Falcons from crossing the
cology in Moscow; in a report cancer control efforts in RusIn the first contest Federal half of the fourth.
plate during the remainder of
Hocking got on the board first
sia, said cancer is responsible
Jarvis led off with a single, the game to pick up the win. WHS Hitting : Lewis , single; released today.
by plating a run in the bottom
the next man hit a grounder to Harmon absorbed the loss even Belcher single, Harmon single; ' He.said at a science writers for 16 per cent of all deaths
seminar sponsored by the there and is second only to
half of the third inning,
short which should have been though he pitched a fine Camp single.
Amerlca'n Cancer Society that cardiovascular diseases. An
Wahama looked as though
converted into a double play ballgame.
PITCHING
IP
R
H
BB
SO
gastric
cancer is the leading almost identical situation
they were going to take the
but the ball skipped by for an
.J
The White Falcons now must RusseU(WPl
7 0 ~ 3 3 form of tlle disease in both men exists in the United States.
lead in the top of the fourth
error putting men on first and try and get back on the winning Harmon ( LP)
6 I~ 2 2 and women in Russia although
when they loaded the bases
second. ,.
In an earlier report, the
track
when
the
journey
Ill
its
incidence
is
decreaalng.
It
with no outs, but the Lancer
president of the American
The next Lancer batter fued
ranks ninth in the U.S. and also Cancer Society said an acpitcher managed to get out of out to right for the first out. Meigs. Wahama will sport a 4-2
record with one of those wins
the jam unscathed.
is decreasing, for unknown celerated effort is needed to
Harmon got the next batter to coming over the Mauraders a David 0. Haning
reasons.
Skip Camp, the startng pop out to second for the second
identify persons most likely to
Lung cancer ranks second develop cancer in an attempt to
Wahama hurler, left the after out. A sharp single to left week ago today, Game-time
among Soviet men followed by save more of the 100,000 peop.le
four innings Wid Mike Gold· loaded the bases with two out. thiseveningwillbearound~ :30 died on Saturday
p.m.
.
sberry took over the chores. Then Harmon got the next man
First Game 12 34 56 7 R HE O.ona 0. Hamng, 60, Lan- cancer of the skin and he said die needlessly of the
Goldsberry had control trouble to ground to second which WHS
0 0 0 no· 0 0 0 -0 6 1 cas ter, formerly of Meigs esophagus. Stomach cancer is disease each year.
WJd walked the first batter. He should have ended the inning. FH
oo 1 o 3 1 x -5 8 2 County, died Saturday at his
then got the next man out but The throw from second pulled
walked the third man he faced . the first baseman off the bag WHS Hitting : Hesson single, home. Th~ son ofthe late Clyde
Lewis single, Russell single, and Hallie Hanmg, . he sp~nt
Robbie Belcber then came in allowing the runner from third
Harmon single, Belcher single, most of his life m Meigs
and before he could set the to score. In all the commotion Davis silll(le.
299 PUTMAN ZANESVILLE, 0.
County. Mr. Hamng was forLan~rs down they had added
the runner from second tried to
merly employed as a cook in
three more nms.
score but Russell fired to Lewis
restaurants of the Athens area.
Surviving are his wife ,
Luella ; five brothers, Graham,
SAN FRANCISCO (UP!) of Columbus; Ray, of Urging needy Californians to was abducted Feb. 4.
After tbe kidnaping, the SLA
Pomeroy; Willis , Piqua; "bring shopping carts,'' a
demanded
Hearst give $70
Morris, Nelsonville, and Max bigger and better food give'
of Carpenter. Funeral services away was today reported worth of food to all California's
will be at I p.m. Tuesday at the ready to go in a bid to win poor, even before negotiations
Hughes Funeral Home in freedom for newspaper heiress for his daughter's releaae could
begin .
Athens with the Rev. Charles Patricia Hearst.
But the giveaway as
Norris officiating. Burial will
A. Ludlow Kramer, director originally set up carne to an
be in the Wells Cemetery at of the $2 million People in Need
Downington . Friends may call distribution program, an- abrupt halt two. weeks ago
TO THE
after the SLA kidnapers
NEW YORK (UPij had become a hit singing, at the funeral home after ~ p. nounced that food will be labeled it only "crumbs" for
Nathan Handwerker was "Nathan, Nathan, Why You m. today.
handed out at 17 places in the the people. They termed some
making ends meet slicing Waitin'?" at a nearby cafe.
San Francisco Bay Area of the free food as "hog feed"
bread rolls at Feltman's
beginning at 8 a.m. PDT.
On Saturday, he suffered a
and "unfit for human conGerman Gardens on Coney heart attack at his retirement
"Bring shopping carts of swnption."
Island, where the red hots cost home in North Port Charlotte.
something to carry the food, "
So far, about $1 million worth
10 cents.
Kramer said.
The body was retw-ne&lt;l. to
(Continued from page ll
ON THE OPENING OF THEIR
of food haa been given to
That was in 1916, and two New York lor funeral services
He said the program "now 120,000 persons.
Binging walters at FeltmWJ's, scheduled for 10:15 a.m . Tues- that. We have made a very has a quality food to disMeanwhile, the FBI sought
Eddie Cantor and Jimmy day at Riverside Chapel, good beginning on that process. tribute," thus meeting a major to determine the authenticity
REV. MR. GILL
nurante, challenged Nathan to Brooklyn, with bw-ial at Mt. The further we proceed from complaint of the Symbionese of a purported SLA letter
THE MONTHLY HoUness
start his own hotdog stand Wid L.ebanon Cemetery, ·Queens. the date (of the first SALT Liberation Army which kid- received by a San Francisco
agreement in 19721, people will
RaUy of the M.A.H.A. wlll be
charge only five cents a frank.
naped Patricia, 20, from near underground newspaper, the
really appreciate the imporheld Tuesday night at 7:30
Ten cents, they said, was too
the University of California at Phoenix. The letter claimed
tance of that significant step."
p.m. at the Racine Church of
much to pay.
Berkeley where she is enrolled that Patricia has learned
"That document speaks of as .a coed.
the Nazareae with the Rev.
There are many stories
"political consciousness"
(Continued from page I )
peace and good neighborliness
Eugene Gill of Warren as
about Nathan and how the
The
food
program
is
fiDWlced
during
her 48days in captivity.
speaker. Pastor of the
business began, but this is the only to her but to the chUdren." because the only other alterna- by Randolph Hearst, president
The
Hearst kidnaping wns
Ford left a slight opening for tive is war . There is no other
Warren Free Methodist
way he told it, how with his
and
editor
of
the
San
Francisco
the
ftrst
political abduction in
Church, the Rev. Mr. Glll
ELECTRICAL
bride Ida they sold coneys for a a draft as the GOP presidential alternative ."
Examiner,
in
an
effort
to
U.S. history.
nominee
two
years
from
now.
When
Kissinger
entered
the
was pastor of the Laurel Cliff
nickel and spiced them with
fmally free his daughter who
"If you were writing the room a moment later,
Free Methodist Church here
Ida's secret recipe.
for 12 years. Paul Hess,
When Nathan Handwerker, worst scenario, which I don't Brezhnev told him he had been
president of the assoclallon,
known for 50 years as "Mr. think is ever going to happen, talking to the press. "I told
Invites the public to ullend.
Coney Island", died at St. for me it would be a them I was optimistic and tbey
Joseph's Hospital in Port Republican convention dead- agreed with me that all want
Charlotte, F1a. Sunday at the locked. Reagan, Rockefeller, peace . That makes it easier to
age of 83, the llt'Je stand at Surf Connally-anyody else you start."
Brezhnev also expressed the
and Stillwell Avenues had want --completely deadlocked
after
a
series
of
votes.
opinion
that "relations at this
grown into Nathan's Famous
DIVORCES GRANTED
"What
happens
then
if
they
point (with the United States)
Inc., a chain of 18 restaurants
Two divorces granted in selling 12 million hotdogs a and the others come to me?
are good. There is much work
Meigs County Commori Pleas year.
BALTIMORE (UP!) - The inquiry was going beyond a
to do at this time."
Court, each on charges of gross
Teachers
reject
Baltimore
Sun said today the routine reexamination of tax
"You
do
want
it
better,
don't
Handwerker and Ida put in 18
neglect of duty and extreme to 20 hours of grinding work a
Revenue
Servi~ is return items previously made
Internal
you?" a newsman asked.
cruelty, are to Carl L. day but hts flair for promotion wage proposal
"There are such people who checking into the 1968 tax public by the White House.
Barringer from Frances E. had a part in their success, too.
would like to see things wor- returns of President Nixon to
The newspaper said only the
LOUISVILLE, Ohio (UP!)- se," Brezhnev replied .
Barringer, and Rolland C. He called the stand "NathWJ's"
see if tbere is any evidence of possibility that fraud might
Searles from Veva V. Searles. in 1921 because Sophie Tucker Members of the Louisville
Kissinger arrived Sunday fraoo.
exist would enable the IRS to
Education Association voted night for WI expected three
The newspaper said In Its go into returns for years prior
Sunday night to reject the days of talks with Brezhnev morning editions the inquiry to 1970. A three-year statute of
latest wage proposal on a new and other Soviet officials. The waa being conducted by the limitations prohibits routine
·contract from the city's school major issue before them is the Baltimore District Office of the checks for previous years, the
board and to strike the schools AALT negotiations that are IRS and it included the paper said.
beginning at 12:01 a.m. today. now stalemated in Geneva.
President's 1968 return, the
The newspaper said it had
David Augusta, president of
year
before he became the learned a key element in the
Kissinger said he also would
the association, said lack of discuss the controversy in the nation's chief executive.
deduction involving the vice
supervision at the schools United States over trade with
Sow-ces knowledgable about presidential papers was whethcould endanger the safety of the Soviet Union and his Middle the investigation, the San said, er the deed was backdated in
IN
reported the probe would focua order to circumvent the cut-off
the children and reconunended Eaat diplomacy.
on several key items, Including date when such donations no
parents keep their children at
home.
the $567,000 deduction Nixon longer would be deductible.
PLEASANT VALLEY
The strike will idle some 165 , Discharges: Mrs. Robert. took in 1969 for his vice
It said, in reference to the
teachers in the scholll system Hayes, New Haven; Mrs. Alvin presidential papers given the 1968 re!lD'Il, It centered on
and close the doors of six Powell , daughter , Racine ; goverment, and a 1968 deduc- three points-the deduction for
schools to about ~.ooo students. Mrs . Anthony Bonecutter, tion claimed for business use of use of the New York apartment
No negotiations to settle the Point Pleasant; Thomas Nixon's apartment in New for business purposes ; a
dispute were scheduled.
tranafer of stock in Fisher's j
Kaylor , Letart; Millard York City.
The
Sun
said
the
broadening
lllland,
near Miami, and a I
Loudermilt, Mason ; Mrs .
of
the
investigation
to
cover
the
deduction
for the gift of earlier
Merrill Clonch, Osborne
POMEROY, 0.
E. 2ND
1968
returns
was
the
first
papers not involved in the 1989
Stear!, Point Pleasant;
Virginia Snodgrass, Hen- visible evidence the IRS donation.
derson; Mrs. Decil Roush,
Point Pleasant; Mrs . Weldon
Wears, Pliny ; Freda Byus,
Point Pleasant; Mrs. Aldean
Miller, Crown City; Mervin
Deal·, Fraziers Bottom; Eddie
PT . PLEASANT
A Fish, Gallipolis Ferry .
Gallipolis woman, Linda Veterans Memorial Hospital
Louise Preston, was treated at
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS
Pleasant Valley Hospital in - Edward Martin, Pomeroy.
Point Pleasant for injuries
SATURDAY DISCHARGES
received in a single car .ac- - Amanda Morris, Ivan
cident Saturday evening. It Roush, Homer Cole, James
was · one of three weekend King, Edith Roush, Daniel
accidents investigated by the Davidson, Angie Brunty.
The Progressive Future of the Business Life of the
Mason County Sheriff's
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS Department.
Thomas Cook, Pomeroy;
Big Bend Area is Enhanced by the Addition of the New
Ms. Preston, released after George Clonch, Belpre ; Ralph
trealment, wa• identified by Stover, Gallipolis ; Mary
deputy James Craddock as the Wingett, Pomeroy; James
driver.
Pickens, Racine; · Brenda
Police said Ms. Preston was Taylor, Racine ; Elmer Still,
driving north on State Route 62 Pomeroy.
when the vehicle ran off the
SUNDAY DISCHARGES roadway on the right side, then Fannie Phillips, Camillia
back on to the left when she loot Lewis, Betty Willis, Carl Still,
control due to tHe icy road Stella Bush.
surfa~. Finally it went off the
I
D~U6
I roadway again on the right side
and into a fence.
\
20H l_.a.c,T MA'I\., S•&gt;-~FT
\
LOCAL TEMPS
'•
p .• ~ · l n..,-,
-,.-,
I
,_:~..__
L~.)·~b
F' . V f l ,
I
'". ... ,
I
Temperatw-e in downtown
The local beanery serves Pomeroy Monday at 11 a. m.
f A:,T F'Rf E DELIVER'
I
everything
with a dose of was 28 degrees under sunny
,,
,_.,
,.,,.,
,,_,
CANTON,
heartburn.
skies.

PNB
AUTO
BANK

•

POMEROY, OHIO

.

Cancer hits Russians in stomachs

BY GARY CLARK

MEETING CANCELLED
Regular March meeting of
the Past Matrons, Pomeroy
Chapter 186, Order of the
Eastern Star, has been cancelled. The April meeting will
be held at .the home of Mrs.
Alfred Crow, Racine .

MULLEN INS. AGENCY INC.

POMEROY
NATIONAL

.. . .

Falcons Drop Twin Bill

Connie Gibbs, Denise and Julie
Spires, Mrs. Patsy Spires and
Diana, J.D., Michael, and Beth
Ann, Brenda Yoi.ulg, Ro.berta
Youn g, Mrs. Annabelle Sisson,
Mrs. Amy Short, Mrs. Joyce
Wooten, Mrs. Betty Stewart.
Sending gifts were Mr. and
Mrs. Alex Shuler, Mrs. Muriel
Spire s,
Mrs .
Charlene
Spaulding and Cathy , Mr . and
Mrs. Jess Louden, Bonnie
Short, Mr. and Mrs. Oshel
Tribble, Mrs. Pat Bentz and
family, Mrs. Pauline Rife,
Mrs . Christine Napier, Ruby
Grueser, Mrs . Malinda
Bradbury, Mrs. Audrey
Bradbury, Mildred Phillips ,
Mr. and Mrs. Clinton Jones,
Mrs. Janice Swisher, Mr. and
Mrs. Ben Rupe, Mrs. Lucille
Mulford , Mrs. Amanda Van
Kirk, Mr . and Mrs. Jim Bentz ,
Mrs. William Rizer, Margaret
Persons and Rick Geiger, and
Mr. and Mrs . Kenny Rizer.

Congregation to formalize on April 21

.

' Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 ., March 25, 1974
7- The Daily Sentijlel,

(,

Founder
of
club
....
is recognized

.

~eJIO}f~M~

OPENING

PNB AUTO BANK

Pomeroy National
Auto Bank

OHIO VAllEY
PLUMBING &amp; HEATING

Gallipolis
woman hurl

G&amp;J AUTO PARTS
POMEROY, 0.

in mishap

TO

POMEROY NATIONAL

AUTO BANK

AUTO BANK OPENING

BJ

POMEROY NATIONAL
BANK

:NcLSON'
.
SPRESCRIPTIOll'
:
JJ
STOJ?E
___

___

__

DIEBOLD CO.

'

'"'

�9 - The Datly Sentmel Middleport Pomeroy 0 March 20 1974

8- The Datl) Sent mel Mtddlepo rt Pomeroy 0 Ma &lt;I '5 ll7l

. Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!!

BOYS OR
GIRLS

NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OH 0
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Co umbus Oil o
Marcil 8 1974
Con act Sales Leg I Coly
No 74 1 8
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT

11 OR OLDER

BE A

'

NEWSPAPER
CARRIER

.

1s

a

route open m your neighborhood

CALL 992-2156

THE

DAILY SENTINEL
CARRIER
WANTED
LINCOLJi HILL
AND POMEROY

THE
DAILY SENTINEL
PHONE 992 2156

mp ovemen s n
PEl ts
to J n c us ye a e
offered as on e con a a d w
be co ns dered on he bas so he
o a amoun b d
Parts 1 thru 17
Nob l e
M e gs
V non
Hock n g
Wash ng on and
Ga a Co un es Oh o o m
prov ng s uc u es on var ous
routes and se c ons by c ean ng
and pa n ng
Type o S uctu es
Va es
The da e se o
o p e o
ofthsworksha bea sse o h
n he b dd ng p oposa
Ea ch b dde sha be equ ed
o fewhh s bda e fd
check o cash e s c heck o an
amount equa o I ve per cent of
h s b d bu n no even mo e
than I y housand do a s o a
bond to ten per cent of n s b d
payab~e to he 0 rec or
B dde s mu s app y on ne
prope fo ms for qua I c a on
at eas en days p o o he
da e se t or open ng b ds n
a ceo dan e w h Chap e 5 25
Oh o Rev sed Code
P ans and spec f ca on a e
on
te n he Depa tmen o
Transporla on and he o I ceo
th e D s cl Depu y D e o
The 0 ec o
ese Yes he
r gh o
any and a b ds

PUBL C NOTICE
The

0 st

OF
QUALITY

Me gs

Loca
Sc h oo l
c Boa do Educa on w

3

PHL L PRC HEY
D REC OR
8 25 2 c

offer for sa le at pub c a uc on a
schoo house and school g ounds
N THE COURT OF
owned by
he
Boa rd
of
COMMON PLEAS
Educat on known as th e Coa
MEIGS COUNTY OH 0
Por School located on L berty
Avenue n Pome oy nea
h e BANNY BRANHAM
we s end approa ch
o
he Pome oy Oh o
P a nt ff
Pome oy Mason B dge
VS
The proper ty was acqu r ed by
deE!ds reco ded n Vo 44 pages JUDY BRANHAM

Cu s tom Ha chbc1ck Coupe da k g een f n s h I ke new
wh e wa I I es lu
whee cov e s p otect ve s de
nod ng s po wc b akcs ado 6 cy l nd e eng ne s an
da d I n m ss on Ave y popu a mode and p ced to go

95J CHEVROLET Ex ce ent
co nd 1 on Ca ll 992 '1967 a fi e 5

972 DOOGE DEMON
$2295
J.tO V 8 eng ne au toma t c I ansm ss on power s ee ng
back v ny nero
ed f n s h I ke new wh le wa l
es

972 VW bus exce len
d on S2695 00 Phone I
73 5867

and

c

3 10

ado

on
304

3 2

?69 DODGE Cha ge r
74'1 3722

doo
owne new c
ade n good sl ne t r es
s po less c ean n te r or s ma V 8 e ng ne au tom a t c ran s
m ss on The r ght s ze
he ght p ce Va ue $ 615

c

6

I

Stop In and See Our
Floor Dtsplay

3 21 6tp

EXPERIENCED

964
CHEVELLE
283
au om a c exce ent con
d on Phone La y H
985

970 FORD Custom e p ckup
ruck long bed and 6 c y nde
Ca l 949 28 5
3 24 Jlc

RATES

For Want Ad Serv ce
5 ce n s pe Word one nser; t o
M n mum ChargeS 00
4 cen s lte
wo d
nree
consecu ve nse ons
26 cen s pe wo d s )( con
sec ut ve nse ton s
25 Per Cen 0 scoun on pa d
ads and ads pa d w h n 0
days
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
S2 00 Ia
50 word m n
mum Each add t ana l wo 0

973

Notice
CAS H pad fo a 1 makes and
models of mob le homes
Phone a ea code 6 4 413 953
4 13 tc

MGB Conve be 7 500
m les Lo s of ex tra s Ca
304 773 .'i 23
) 24 3 c

For Rent
Ca t

3 24 3

c

3 24 3 c

2 X 50 MOB L E home 1
bed ooms ut t es pad Renl
by week o month Ca l 742
5980
) 22 61p
APARTMENT to
e nt
bedrooms Phone 992 5908

SMA LL FA RM 20 acres
B adbury Phone ?92 7275

3 21 4tc

3c

L1nes. and

Power
Ltne• All work done by the
foot or contrillcf Also dozer
work and sept c t1nks tn

See or Call
Bob or Roger Jeffers
Day 992 7089
Ntght 992 3525
or 992 5232

Pomeroy

OPEN Roger Hyse 1 s Ga age
nea C 055 cads on St Rou t e
124 B 30 o 6 p m Monday
11 ough Sa u day Phone 992
5682 0 992 7 21
2 22 '16 c
DON T fUSS Don t cuss turn
vour unk automob les over to
us R vers de Auto Wreck ng
Phone 1 ( 304 773 5890
3 7 26tc

3 20 6tc
AU1 OMOB LE Insuran ce been
c ancel ed.,
Los
your
operata s cense Ca 992

Gene's
Body Shop

98

232

Me gs Coun

v

Add ess Unknown
Defendant

Del vered to Job S1te

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN
MATERIALS CO
773 5554

Mason W Va

Painting ASpecialty

7 30- Bobby Goldsboro 3 Buck Owens 8 Lock Stock &amp; Bar e l
20 Wacky Word of Jonathan W nters 15 To Tell the Truth 6
Hollywood Squares 4 Episode Act1on 33 Mun ctpal Court 0

Beat the Clock 13

Not1ce

SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
REASONABLE rates Ph 446
4782 Gal po s John Russe
Owne and Operator
s 12 ttc

W L L TRIM or cu trees
sh ubbe y Also clean
basements 11 t cs e c
949 3221 or 742 4441
J 4

3035

and
o'ut
Ca ll
26tc

IDRICE CONSTRUCTION
Roof no spout no k tchens
and bathrooms Complete
remodel ng Phone 742 6273
12 3 tfc

10 4 ttc

____

-----.!!.---

I..oc&amp; Bowling
•

For Sale

Mob1le Homes for Sale

STEREO
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SOUTHEASTERN
OHIO POLLED

HEREFORD SALE

FRIDAY, MARCH 29
-7DOPM

57 LOTS OF
TOP PROSPECTS

PAPER CARRIER

CLIFJiON W VA.
pHONE 992·2156

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

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Better Of The Best"

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6 JO -

Rev Cieopllus Rob nson 13
6 35- Columbus Today 4.

6 45- Farmt me 10 Morn ng Report 3

00- Today 3

"7

5 CBS News 8 10 D ck Van Dyke 13

4

Osmonds 6
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Capt Kangaroo 8 10 New Zoo Revue 13 Sesame St 33

Jeffs Collie 6
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~ 00- Pa&gt;Sword 6 Jackpot 3 15 News 8 10 13 Bob Brauns
• 50 50 Club 4
oiJl 30 - Baffle 3 15 Sp 1 Second 6 Search for Tomorrow B 0
~ 45 - Elec Co 33
;IIi 55- News 3 15
""00- News 3 All My Ch ldren 6 13 Concentral on 8 Not For
"' Women Only 15 What s My Line&gt; 10
:3 30 - 3 On A Match 3 4 15 Lets Make A Deal 6 13 As lhe
Word Turns 8 10

2 00 - Days of Our Lives 3 4 15 Gu d ng L ght B 10 Newlywed
Game 6 13
~ 30-Doctors3 4 15 G~rl nMy L fe6 13 Edge of N ghtB 10
3 00 - Another World 3 4 15 General Hasp tal6 13 Pr ce s
R ght 8 10 Book Beat 20
3 30- One L fe to L ve 6 13 Ph I Donahue 4 How to Surv ve a
Marr age 3 15 Women 20 Match Game 8 lO
4 00- Mr Cartoon 3 Somer set 15 Sesame St 33 Sesame Sf
20 Love Amer ca n Sty le 13 Lucy Show 8 Huck and Vag 6
Move A Bullet Is Wa1t ng 10
J 30 Gill gan sIs 6 13 Green Acres 3 Bonanza 5 Jackpo
4 Haze 8
:5 00- Mr Rogers 20 33 Bonanza 3 Merv Gr ff n 4 Andy

WIN AT BRIDGE

Btddmg tmproved smce 1935
r------------, do you do now
NORTH

25

• 10

RUTLAND FURNITURE

Answer Tomorrow

Us.

By Helen Bottel

••

Get Even or Gel Out 7
Dear Helen
All through my two pregnanctes and afterwards when I was
overwetght and dowdy looking my husbl!nd went out on me I
loved hun a lot - then - and I was terrtbly hurt
Now that I ve slunmed down and am workmg part tune I
look better than before mamage and frankly I m gettmg offers
that are hard to refuse I keep thinkmg why not if only to pay
Jerry back'
Meanwhtle Jerry has added about 50 pounds and gtrls don t
throw themselves at hun any more Suddenly he s seemg me as
destrable but I remember all those lonely mghts and mean
words comparmg me to his gtrlfrtends
Since Utere s not much we share except the ktds gt ve me a
good reason why I shouldn t do to my husband as he dtd to me' WANTING TO GET EVEN
Dear WTGE
I can gtve TWO good reasons your cluldren
They don t deserve ftghtmg resentful unfattltful parents
whose atlltudes toward marnage - and each other - couldn t
help but make famtly life mtserable
Gettmg even lor past hurts won t solve anything If you can l
revtve love then don t prolong the dymg and tf you share
nothmg but the ktds any more you d better share them
separately
And if as I suspect my words rtle you perhaps love tsn t as
dead as you think Honest reappratsal and a lot of effort - m
eluding everythmg from your forgtveness to a diet for Jerry
trught still brmg back the spark ) - H

+++
Dear Helen
I thought my ladyfrtend and I were gettmg along great but
Ute other mght I noted a computer datmg servtce ad on her desk
Not only that but Ute pet sonahty mventory questwns were all
filled out as if she was about to malltt m
Should I ask her about thts or would she resent my
snoopmg 7
I can t understand why she d do such a thmk when she ought
to know 1 love her (I m rettcent about expressmg myself)
WIDOWER
Dear Wtdower
There s no harm m askmg It mtght lead to a more ex

Dear Helen
Hooray for Ute landlady who prohlbtted smokers m ber rerr
tals' I d hke to )Om her
Thts week we are cleanmg an apartment that we rented to
chain smokers and we are agam amazed at the filthy mess tbey
can make Walls and furniture were covered With a rucotine
restdue that made clearung and pamting much more difficult
Betge walls become off whtte after they are scrubbed

Make you wo d your bond
S tand by t even though I may
empo ar y nconven ence

you
SCORPIO (Oct 24 Nov 221

Today be ve y ca efu f us ng
too ls or work ng w th anothe
who has poo safety hab1ts
For Monday March 2 5

1974
ARIES (March 21 Apnl 19)
Do n I c ha ge nto the b eac h
today II you ve thought nat
te s though ca eful y You
I s t thoughts aren you best

TAURUS (April 20 May 20)
Take a mp e t me w th you

wo k pe form ng a se v ce lo
anothe The etu
o you
c ore w d m n s h
you e

s pshod
GEMINI IMay 21 June 20)

Act ons ot o ne whose con pany
you I sha e today w I cause
you to wonder about the va lue
o l th s e lat onsh p

CANCER (June 21 July 22)

Retu se o accep t deleat oo
ead y Your I stat emp s may
no bea I u I You later ones

LITILE

ofot0732
WEST

EAST (D)

• 864

·-

• Q532

_ ,. 7

,.K9852

:'+ Q732
"!ftAKJ54

"

ORPHAN ANN II!:

SWIATHII... sa:uBD

ofoQ986

SOUTH
.AKJ97

ANNIC UVEALS A

2•

Tra Is West 15 Hogan s Heroes 13
ABC News 3 Sesame St 20 News 3 4 Truth or Conseq
6 News 8 0 5 L as Yoga &amp; You 33
630
News68 0 NBC News3 4 5 YourFuturesNow33

Room 222 13
7 00 - What s My L ne 8 Dusty s Tra 13 E lec Co 20 Truth
or Con seq 3 Beat the Clock 4 News 6 10 Marco Sport I te
33 H gh Schoo TV Hono Soc ety 15 Local News 6
7 30 ToTe I the Truth 6 New P ce s R ght B 10 RF D 20
Hoi ywood Squares 3 Johnny Mann s Stand Up &amp; Cheer 4
Lass e 15 Read ng for the Clas s room Teolc he 33 Bea t th e

Clock 13 Wash ngton Debates 5

a 00 8
9
9
10

Happy Days 6 13 Maude 8 10 B I Moye s Journa133
Wmn e the Pooh and the Honey Tree 3 4 15 Mov e20
30 - Hawa F veOB 10 Tenafly3 4 5 Move A Cry nthe
WI derness 6 13 Gunsl ngers 5
00 - Back Journa l 33
30 - Mov e Double Troub le 8 0
00 - Marcus Welby MD 6 3 Wa s h ngton Si r a ght Ta k 33
Pol ce Sto y 3 4 15 News 20 Underworld 5

10 30
Day al N ghl 33
11 00 - News3 4 6 8 10 15 3 Janak 33

have Ia c hoose loday be ween
the adv ce ot one who oaks
fa s ho !cuts and an o d ex
pe e nced hand Be w se Fo
ow p oven methods
VIRGO IAug 23 Sept 221 A
s luat on you re nvo ved n ca
es some unexpected costs
Dec de whethe I s worth what
wou d be ga ned be lore pro
ceed ng

LlBRA (Sept 23 Oct 23)

------

THE MAP L.5:ADS TO T£N
M LL ON DOLl. AI.S

N

D AMD,... OS AN TH POL c.E

KNO'IAJ NOTH HC:I R800T T

l)y Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Jtm How about some artt
cles to show how brtdge has
c,hanged m the last 40 years•
Oswald The Culbertson
1\tms match of 1935 mtght be

worth usmg as an example

Of course expert 1935 btd
dmg was a trtfle better than
that of Ely and Jo Culbertson
a~d a lot better than that of
Hal and Dorothy Stms Doro
tlcy had never learned any
dt5ctphne m btddmg and
bqth teams used honor trtcks
rather than pomt count for
hand evaluatton
~1m Heres a hand where
Dorothy s lack of dtsctplme
pl\td off Her club openmg
was one of those gulptc btds
Sl\e had some cards but well
below opemng strength
I Oswald Ely s two club
bt&lt;l was a game force m the
Culbertson system Hal
d$bled and Jo Culbertson
went to two hearts Dorothy
ddubled that on the theorr,
that Jo had btd her best sutt
Jtm 1 see that Ely JUmped
to four dtamonds and Jo
passed How do you explam
that even tn 1935 btddmg
oswald Ely blamed Jo
b~t 1 blame Ely If he had JUSt
btd three dtamonds Jo would
h~ve recogmzed the contmu
mg force and btd However
when he JUmped to four Jo
d~tded that there was some
thing wrong wtth the whole
thing and passed For the
record Ely made stx
NEWSPAPER EN rERPRISE ASSN

You Soulh hold
.I08654,AKQ83 +AJ5·What do you do now
A-Double Vou want your
partner to bid

TODAY 8 QUESTION
You do double and your
uartner responds one spade What

a sharp
nt o buy
at th s
no

ITROGOT 1

I I

March 25 1974
An unelq)ected change w I
cause you to a tte your d rec
t on th s yea In the long run
th s w I pro11e to be of eal
benef t n ways you d dn t fo e

see

t
I I I
YENNJT

I&lt;EP1' PLA'IINIS
AL.THOU614 H&amp; SAW
H S C::APITAL GO

I

~

I I

Now arranp the circled lette...
to rorm the surprise answer u

~~·====·====~J~~·==~·~·=u:':'eo::ted~bytheabovecartoo~

.[L _

_:Prii .:.:::..::III=SIIIl=IIISI=-:A==IIIIt"---___.
HSWII
1 [

l

Jun II" CRANK

S• urtl•y •

t\ 1swer

ALWIWS
FOLLERIN
ME HOME

And the smell The stale smoke odor turns potential renters
away
Fire damage Is another threat to landlords Only last week
Ute build111g behmd us was damaged and one person suffered
from smoke mhalallon after someone dumped an ash tray Into a
wastebasket and nearby curtains caught ftre - ALL FOR IT
Dear AFI
Here s a suggesllon why not offer reduced rent to nonsmokers' If the 1dea catches on tt trught even be an added 11&gt;cenllve for those who are trying to lick the habit - H

~"tu(

b'f lHOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
3 King (Sp)
1 Boy
t Smtih
Scouts
so man
badge
for ex
6. Babble
ample
JJ Fteld of
(abbr)
conflict
5 Eugene
Ill. European
Onegln
blackbtrd
he rome
13 Weather
6 A Welk
mans
spcctalty
devtce 1
"' Scours
(2 wds)
8 Happy
15 T1111ely
-lark
BOUnds
(2wda)
16. DistaJI
9 Wire
rabbit
message
19 -stand
(abbr)
still
10 Buildmg
(2 wds )
extensiOn
20 Stocking
U Called to
mtshap
arms
23 Verdt
16.1ndian
opera
offictal
25 Words for
11 African
Nanette
antelope
26 So that
(4 wds )
28 Start of
anm

Ycsterday s Answer
18 - nous
20 Moun
tam
ash
Zl Loosen

22 Nota
saul
(2 wds)

24 Gotyou 1
25 Fmal

27 Repeat
31 Chnsof
tenms
33 Stmtlar

3t Wl!ened
35 OT
book
(abbr)
36. Full of

...

(lull )

37 Japan
nver

38 Objee
hve
39 In the
past
to Moisture

cantalton

YENEDI

Wow• A MAP WORTH TEN

.K

Soulh

wou d be easy lo
sa lesman to hi k you
ng unneeded terns
t me Pract ce say ng

Unscramble these four Jumbles.
one leiter to each square to
form four ordanary wordt

M LL ON JV$T -.,AT" NG TO
BE REAC THE SUSPEN ... E
S UN8E~RABI.E
HoPE"
T LA~T$

South

'

PISCES IFeb 20 March 201

llV H f N IH AI!NOlO ·""' I ll )II I F l

I 11)

AGENT HAZARD BUCKET

Hhat son t people expect tot nd

cabaroi-A BARE ACT

UJt..:K J HAI;Y

Double 4+
Double
Pass Pass
Pass
Openmg lead

t.

AQUARIUS IJin 20 Feb 191

Take ca e of lh ngs n he
na tu al o der Jump I om one to
another and you have noth
ng to show fo your elforts at
days end

(An•wen lo ..orrow)

Johnny Carson 3 4 15 Murder lmposs ble6 3 Moves
The Dev I s Own 8
Affa r in Tr n dad 0
00 Tomo row3 4 News 3 Take F ve For L fe 15
200 - News4

£NitiMATIC MAP.

25

19) Expec l some unusua hap
pen ngs a ound the house and
you wont be too upset when
th ngs don 1 go as planned

JJlllJ~'llirn® lkd M&gt;-"'1.-J ,_.

1 30 -

.. 2.

The btddmg has been
Wesl
Norlh Easl

CAPRICORN (Dec 22 Jan

6 00 -

N etther vulnerable
East

he rug today by g v ng too
mu c h atlent on to f vo ous
matle s

Gr lith 8 Gomer Py le USMC 3 B g Va l ey 6

tAKJ10954

North

some respons b I I es unde

s 30 - Beverly H lb 1es 8 Elec Co 33 Hodgepodge Lodge 20

.MYsTIFYING A.f.(D

,.J

·-

• 2HI mm or Pllllf.

SAGGITARIUS INov 23 Oec
21) You e I kely to brush

wl
LEO IJuly 23 Aug 221 You I

,. AQI0643
• 86

176.95

.aa.

K sses fa

Sunr se Sem nar 4 Sacred Heart 10
Concern &amp; Comment 10
Farm Report 3
B1ble Answers 8 News 6 F ve M nutes to L ve By d

6 25 -

Real Estate For Sale

GREAT
COUNTRY

0

12 00 - News 6 13
1 00 - Tomorrow 3 4 Comedy Plot 8 Take F ve For Life 5
2 00
News 4

All work guaranteed

Real Estate For Sale

Wanted To Buy

10 00 - News 20 Paul Nuch m s 33 Med cal Center 8
11 00 News3 4 6 8 0 13 15 20 Janak 33
11 30- Johnny Carson J 4 15 Move S dek cks 8

6 00 6 15 -

DOZER and back hoe work
ponds and sept c tanks dit
ch ng ser¥1ce top so
fill
drt
t mesone
B&amp;K Ex
cavat ng Phone 992 5367 or
992 3861
9 1 tfc

SEPTIC TANKS
AROB C
SE WAGE
SYSTEMS
CLEANED
REPAIRED
M LLER
SA N TATION
STEWART OH 0 PH 662

3 NCAA

6

TUESDAY MARCH 26 1974

READY M X
CONCRETE
del vered r gh
to your
p o tec Fast and easy Free
est mates Phone 992 3284
Goeg leln Ready M x Co
M ddleport Oh o
6 30 fc

428

Real Estate For Sale

33
8 30
Dr Seuss Ca loon 8 10
9 00 - Heres Lucy 8 10 Move C eopatra
Ba•kelball 3 4 5
9 30- Book Beat 20 33 D ck Van DykeS 10

Area s Most
Reasonable Pnces

TEAFORD

sENTI NEL

the Clock 4 News 6 10 Read nct for the Classroom Teacher

33 Call of the West 5 C rcusr 13

My President 10

Bu It to tour Specs.

BLIND AC
Add t ona 25c Charge p e
Advert semen I
OFFICE HOURS
8 30 a m Ia 5 00 p m Oa y
8 3fi am
o 12 00 Noon
Satu day

THE DAILY

7 00 - Truth or Cortseq 3 Whal s My L ne 8 Elec Co 20 Beat

808 W Ma n Pomeroy

F UL L gaspe ev va w
be
6 15 lfc SEPT c
TANKS cleaned
he d a t1e Me gs. Jun or H gh
Modern San tat on 992 3954 or
Deed
Reco ds
o
wh ell
M dd epo t Oh o March 29
992 7349
No 5 487
reference s hereb y made A
30 and 3 a 7 30 p m each
10 23 ff c
NOTICE BY
survey descr p on s on f le n
even ng and Sunday at
32 4c
PUBLICATION
the off ce of the c e k of he
e rnoon 2 p m Evang e st
3 I 26 c
To Judy Branham whOse as
C BRADFORD Auctioneer
Board of Education
Che5 e r Estep Ch II co he 2 BEDROOM mob le home
known
address
was
Ly
h
a
Com):)lete Serv ce
The auc on w
ake pla ce on
Oh o Sp ec a s ng ng each
V1r qll B T· ,If, 1d ',,
a so
ra te r s pa ce Pnone
Geo g a
c o E mo
Phone 949 382 or 949 316
the p em ses of the to mer Coa l Sp ngs
even ng by Gospe Tones and
94?
226
Brok
RacneOho
Por SchOo l and w I be he d at Underwood
o he 5 nge s Everybody
3 10 6tp
You are he eby not fed ha
Cr tt Bradford
10 oo AM on the 4 t day of
we lcome
II(J
Mi•(
h ,ll'l " '-ll• I ' I
---you have been named De en
HAR R SON S TV and Se rv ce
5 I tfc
May 974
___.,.__
3 20 0 c
2
BEDROOM
house
n
MiJ;J
PDilH
'
I
oy,
0/11 '; . ·J .'O'I
dan
n
a
ega
ac
on
en
!
ed
3
AND
4
ROOM
calls Phon e 992 2522
fu r n shed and
Terms of sa le Cash
d eport
New k tchen al'i"d EXCAVATING dozer
Judy
unturn shed
oader
apa
tments
2 22 26 c KO SC OT
The gh s ese ved by th e Benny B anham vs
KO SMET CS
&amp;
ba h app ances nclud ed
Branham Th s acl on has been
Pt1one 992 5434
and backhoe work.
sept c MIDDLE PORT- 5 bedrooms
Me gs Loca
School D str c
w G S l-o r a good ln e of
Ca 992 53 o
ass
gn
ed
Case
No
5
487
pen
tanks nsta led dump trucks gas
RUMMAGE
Sa
e
MOnday
4
12
tfc
furnace
n ce
ful
Boa d o l Educat on o e ec
Cosme
cs
f
end
y
se
v
ce
3 9 26 tc
d ng n he Cou
of Common
and o boys for h re w II hau
th ough Sa urday
0
3
any and at b ds
basement 2 lull baths 2
and sam eo ne o lla w h -PR--------------Pleas Me gs Coun y Pome oy
VATE
mee
ng
room
for
f
d t top so
mestone porches and garage Now on ly
So me 11 ng d fferen eve y
g ve me a ca I He len a ne
Oh o 45769
any organ zat on phone 992 S ROOM house and bath two
and gravel Ca I Bob or Roger $20 000 00
day
F y Bu d ng
M d
L W McCom as
B
own
9?1
5
3
The ob ee l of the comp la n s
3975
ca garage 2 so yon Carson
Jeffers day phone 992 7089
d epo
Phone 992 5335
Clerk Me gs
3 9 c
TUPPERS PLAINS - Neat 2
Road n Mason
Contac
n ght phone 992 3525 or 992
3 1 tfc
3 24 6 c
Lo ca Sc noo D s t c to d vo ce and ca re cus ody
of
he m no
bedrooms
large bath out
Russe Ba t 773 5606
5232
Board of Educat on and con ro
ch d en of the part es You are BA SE MENT Sa e Monday
J 2 lfc
O NE 2 room and bath turn shed
2 11 fc bu ld ngs and bock garage
requ ed o an s we
he com
a par men u 1 t es pa d One
Ask ng JUSt $8500 00
(3) 25 (')
8 5 4fc
Tuesday Wednesday
on
pta nt w th n 28 days afte he
3 rooms showe apa rtm en
Ro
u
e
43
m
e
o ff Rou te 7
BLOCK BUILDING
72&lt;120
70 ACRES of pas ure land on DOZER wok and ce•a ng by
last pub ca on ot h s no ce
th e acre hour y or contract
u
t e~ fu n shed n Mason
Phone 992 28
U s Rou e 33 S300 per ac e
w th steel trusse
Hurricane
wh ch w
be pub shed once
ANT
QUE
qu
sand
ewe
l
y
fa
m
ponds
road
s
etc
Large
W
Va
Reyno
ds
AP.artmen
ts
) 22 3 c
No bu d ngs Fo add ona
each wee k to s x conse ut ve
A so nteres ed n fu n ure
dozer and operator w th over le nced yard w1th 2nd bu1ld ng
Phone
304 773 5hrl on R
nfo ma on phon e 992 2720
weeks The last pub cat on w I
and d shes Ca
992 5262
20 yea s ex per ence Pull ns 26x72 and stee l monora I for
3J Mason
3 24 3fc
bemadeon Ap 11 974 and ne
load ng The ma n bu d ng S
even ngs o mo n ngs
3 24 6tp
Excavat ng Pomeroy Oh o
NOTICETOB DOERS
28 days for answer w I com
Pt1one 992 2478
one large room w th no posts
2 20 lf c
The Ease n Loca Boa d of
IN G ots Phone A bert
WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON
mence on that date
APARTMENT Co ne of L n BUILD
2 19 tfc
SMALL DOWN PAYMENT ~
Ed ucat on w
ece ve b ds
H
Ra ne 949226 1
BOWLING LEAGUE
con S reel and Sec ond
unt 12 00 0 Clock. Noon Ap r
NO
copper 80c rad a to s
3
bedroom ranch type home
3 20 6tp S EW NG MACHINES Repa r
March 6 1974
a ry Speoce Clerk 9 1974 a the off ce ocated n
Avenue
n
M dd eport
35c r ed brass 40c ba er es
Closets
natural gas furnace
won Lost
Co ur of Com man P eas o
he Eas e n H gil Schoo
tor
se v ce a I makes 992 2284
$ 1 20 M A Ha l Reedsv e
P va e en ance bedroom 2 BEDROOM house n M d
n ce k tchen v ng room 12x19
Me gs Coun y
El s &amp; Sons Soh o
5
29
wo schoo l bus chass s su abe
The
Fabr
c
Shop
Pomeroy
Oh o Phone 379 6249
and ba h Men on Y No one
d epor t Se by owner pr ced
Swee Peas
44
36
Pomeroy Oh o 45 69
o
66 passenge
s hoo bus
Au thor zed S nger Sa les and Copper plumb ng large garage
J 24 c
upsta rs Ava lab e after 24th
o se 1 P hone 949 3832
and n ce ot Asking $19 500 00
Waid Cross Sons
42
38
bod es
of March Phone 992 5508
3 20 6tc
Serv ce We Sharpen Sc sso s
2 25 ( 3 I 4 I
8 25 ( 4
Team 6
42
38
6tc
45 ACRES
In Rutland
3
24
3t
c
2 66 passenger s chool bus
3
29
tfc
UNK
AUTOS
complete
Team 4 ,
40
40
- ---- bod es
Townsh p a t on y S12S 00 per
de
ve
ed
oou
yard
We
p
ck
Team J
2
59
NVESTMENT PROPERTY Spec t ca ons are on f e n
ac re
up auto bodes and buy a I
PUBLIC NOTICE
High team 3 games - Team
0 ac es. of and n Rock
he C erk. s Off ce toea ed n he
IF YOU HESITATE YOU
k
nds
of
scrap
meta
s
and
am offer ng for sa e
4 828 El is &amp; Sons Soh o 774
Spr
ngs
Oh
o
Th
s
and
s
Eas le n H gh Sc hool
R
OWE
ANOTHER MONTHS
ron
R
ders
Sa
lvage
State
res dence ol the late Be ty C ne Ree dsv e
H gh team Game - Team 4
pa t of an area subd v ded for
uROCERY bus ness for sa le
Oh o
45772
Rou
e
24
Roue
4
Pomeroy
locat ed a 224 Wa nut S ree
RENT
MAKE YOUR MONEY
304 Team 6 277
new houses but due to the
Te ephone 6 4 985 3329 or 614
Bu d ng fo sa le or lease
Oh o Phone 992 5468
M ddlepor Oh o House n n ce 985 4292
BEAUTIFUL new homes now
COUNT BY BUY NG
H gh lnd 3 games - Joy
Me
gs
County
P
ann
ng
Phone
773
56
8
from
8
30
p
m
3 14 2 p
es den a d str ct Ask ng
under construct on n p me
M tch e I 452 J ane Garnes 438
Com m s.s on regulat ons and
to 0 p m for appointment
p ce $ 5 000 00 Sa le s ub ec o
local
on on c ity water and
H gh tnd game
Jane
myheath
mustsel
t
WI
3 20 fc
C 0 N ew and
the approva of he Proba e
sewer Cho ceof des gns Wall
Garnes 178 May M tche l 161
se I at or any part B II W tte
c
e
k OLD furn rure
oak
tab
les.
Cou
M e gs Coun y Oh o
to wal carpet ng and a r
March 13 1974
Rock Spr ngs 992 2789
3
B 25 4 1 8 4tc
c locks ce boxes brass beds GOOD qual ty hay Also 2
n erested pease co nta c
cond ton ng ncluded
W II
won Lost
J
24
8tc
dishes
desks
or
camp
e
e
Reg ste re d Beag es Ca I 992
help
arrange
f nanclng
Ell s &amp; Sons Soh o
53
35 unders gned
househo ds Wr le M
D
720 af er 5 p m
convent anal oans w th down
Wad Cross Sons
48
40
M ler R 4 Pomeroy Oh o
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
3 24 12tc N"EW 3 bedroom home 1r.1 bath
Jo hn W ze k e
paymen ow as 5 pet Other
Team 6
48
40
I
992
7760
ca
garage
basement
on
Gravel
The Eas e n Loca Board of
Adm n s a or of
new home s ava lab e to
Team 4
46
42
5
3
fc
H
I
M
dd
epo
t
Natura
gas
ADM IR AL Refr gera tor 16 CU
ece ve b ds
Esateof Educat on w
qua fed buyers w th NO
Sweet Peas
46
42
a l eadv
n
Phone Dale
2 00 o c ock noon Ap
9
feet no defros
F eezer n
Ma be Cl ne Dec e ased un t
DOWN PAYMENT
Call
Team 3
23
65
Dutton 992 3369 evening s
p anos
Any
3 22 24 25 3 c
op
Ca
Dora hy
974 a he oft ce ocated n OLD Upr gh
col ect 614 837 6540 or 239 0785
H gh team 3 games - Team
992
2534
co nd on Pay ng SID cash
W nebrenne
992 3982
the Eastern H gh S hoot for the
or wr te
Great American
4 814 Wa d c oss Sons 787
1 17 tfc
Wr e g ve d ec ons
to
emova of he ex s ng bu
up
3 24 3tc
Homes Inc P o BoK 687
H gh team game - Team
W TTEN P ANO CO P 0
oof ng and he nsta at on of a
Pome oy Oh o 45769
3 6 Team 3 28
BOX 8 Sa rd s Oh o 43946 SEW NG Mach nes B and New
new ool over the Gymnas um
H gh tnd 3 games - Joy
3 1 tfc
a
the Eas e n Local H gh
3 13 30 c
M tche I 458 Jane Garnes 405
Z
g
Zag
n
n
ce
wa
nut
abe
Sc
hoo
H gh Team 3 games - Team
H gh lnd
Game
Joy
n or g nat car ton s
Never BERRY M LLER Mob e Hom e
4 859 E t s &amp; Sons Soh o 797
Spec f ca ons a e on f e n
ET US se l t fa you at auc
M tche 187 Se lby Manley 59
used
Clea ance on
74
Sales has a lo t to offer wtten
H
gh
Team
Game
Team
4
he
Cle
k
s
off
ce
located
n
th
e
on
w
I
buy
a
I
turn
ture
o
March JO Hl74
Models
On y
a
few
you sta rt st10pp ng for your
302
Team
6
298
Eas
e
rn
H
gh
Schoo
R
1
househo d goods
Po y s
Won Lost
ava abe) S63 40 cash or
Mob e Home You can beat
Oh o
45772
High nd 3 games oy Reedsv le
Auc on House Open 9 JO to
El s &amp; Sons Soh o
6
35
te
ms
ava
tab
e
Phone
992
he h gh dep ec at on you 11
M tchel 505 Betty Wh ach Te lephone 6 4 985 3329 o 6 4
5 30 da ty Phone 992 3509 537
Team 4
52
44
2653
have on your home the I rst
985 4292
H gh S
M dd eport 011 o
Team 6
50
46 409
J 20 fc
two years by s hopp ng for a
H gh lnd Game
Joy
48
48
2 26 30 c
Wad Cross Sons
late
mode used Mob e Home
M
tchel
186
The
lma
CoIns
c
0
New
land
Sweet Peas
48
48
ELECTROLUX
Vacuum
608 E
Here a e some every day ow
170
Team 3
C e k
29
67
C eaners complete w tt1 at
pr
ces
8 4 c
MAIN
tacllments cordw nder and Supe Spec a of the Week pant s pray Used but n I ke
new 65x 12 Detro er
3
new cond to
Pay 534 45
M1dd\eporf Pomeroy
bed oom 1 2 baths reduced
(Amended Senate Joint Reso utton
It a majority o:t the electol'IJ vot
The ballot language and
c ash or budg e pan ava I able
Sl
00000
to
5649500
Th
s
No 15)
tng on the foreroing propoaed election
the explana lun 11hall be avaUable
Phone 992 2653
Mob te Home s oaded w h
lOINT RESOLUTION
amendmentJ at the prlmar;y elec for public nspectlon !n the OffiC\111
LLIVELY BRICK
Ranch
a n gh s
3 20 fc
extras)
tion to be held. on the first Tuesday of the secretary of state
type
3
BR
Bath
0
n
ng R
more
n
Pl'opoeiDg to amend uctlou 20 and after the first Mond.ay in May 1974
1971
64xl2
Champ
on
2
The supreme court shall have
K
tchen
has
24
ft
cab
nets
11 ot Article IL aDd. proposJaf .to adopt the same they shall become exclusive orlg nal juri8dlction in all
EXCELS OR Sat Works E
bedroom 1 bath extra good
aad 18Cilon lOa of A:rtl.cle 1 at part of the Constitution of the State a.ses challene1n1 the adoption or
sta ness stee l range oven
3 24 3 c Ma n St Pomeroy AI k nds
buy
at
$4 995 00
.the COaatUullo:a. of ih• State of of Ohio and extsttna sections 20 and rubm sslon of a proposed consUtu
of salt water pe lets water 60x 2 Ct1amp on 2 bed room
and s nk 0 n ng area and
Oblo to tqlll11u the c:om.peuallon 31 of Article II of 'the ConaUtuUon uona l ame dment to the electon
MMED IATE
NCOME
nuggets block sat and own
$4 495 00
bar Hardwood floors car
ol pubUc ofllce:rs and me}Qbers of of the State of Ohio &amp;hall be re No such case cha eneJn.- the ballot
D s r bv or
part or fu It me Oh o R ver Sa 1 Phone 992
60x12 Globemaster 3 bedroom
tile O.utral A... mly
pealed
peted Basement Garage 1
language tl e explanation or the
o
supp v
Company 3891
g lass s l d ng doo s on y
Be it resolved by the General As
actions or p occdures of the gen
leve acre w th plenty of
es
tab
shed
accounts
w
th
6
5
tf(.
$4 495 00
Amended House Joint Resolution eral assembly In adopting and sub
Hmbly of the State o1 Ohio three
garden space Electr c heat
RCA CBS D sney Records ----- - --- No 61)
flfthl of the membe rs c ected to
mlttlng a const tutional amendment
60x 12
Homette
exce ent
$23 500 00
ueh howe concurrlnr the eln that
shall be tued ate r- than sixty four
cond t on $4 495 00
ncome poss bItes up
OSINGER sew ng mach nes 1972
JOINT RESOLUTION
there shall be submitted to the elec
BUY OF THE YEAR days before the e ection The ballot
$1 000 per mon h w h on Y mode
In beaut fu
wa nut 60x 12 L berty deluxe $4 995 00
ton of the ~State ln the manner pre
anguage shall not be held lnWid
Ranch type 3 BR Bath
S3 500 requ red for nvento Y cab net Makes des gn st t
60xl2 P M C '1 bed oom
lcribed by law at the p ma y elcc To amend Sec:Uon I of Article XVI un ess t ls such ns to mislead de
Love y k tchen
lots of
and tra n ng Ca l COLLECT ches zrg zag buttonho es
$4 995 00
Uon to be held on the first Tuesday of llle Conall.luUan of tho Slate eel e o defraud the voters
Un less the general assembly
tor M James (2 14 66 1 9208
bl nd hems e c L ke new
60x 2 E cona ClJS om cost
ca b nets and ange Ut I ty
after the first Monday In May 1974. ol Ohio io provide for prepara
57 995 00 new
now on y
• proposal to amend sections 20 and tlon o1 the laoguag• which •P- o hen lse provides by Jaw lor the
3 24 4tp Only 589 95 Cal Ravenswood
R Carpo t Car peted
1
31 of Article II and a proposal to peara on lho ballot when ihe Cen prepara ion of arguments for and
ss 795 00
Rock Sprmgs
-·----273
9521
or
273
9893
after
5
00
acre $17 000 00
ened section 20a of Article II of eral Al!i\l'mbly propoaas a consH t1 any agalnst a proposed amend
We
also
hav
e
a
good
se
lec
t
on
of
App
y
n
person
2
7
tfc
FOR MOBILE HOMES or
Fatrgrounds
the Constitution of the State of iullo.ual amendment ao that U wUl ment the board may prepare such
8 and 0 w de Mob le Homes n
S eak
House---- properlJ lclentlfy lhe aubstance of a guments
Ohio to read as .follows
HOMES - Gas water and
stock
Pomeroy
Ohto
lhe propolal io pravlde race•
Such propc~sed amendments the
3 24 6 cA.M FM stereo rad o 8 t rac k. These are most y a I a te model
electr c on 1 • acres 200 ft
ARTICLE 11
d.dour•• for limelr challaag" c the bal ot language the explanation~
- -- - -_
tape player 4 speaker sound
frontage
In
Pomeroy
hom es and the pr ces nc ude
•amendment•
ptloo uad. IUld
luhmlnlcn of .uch and the arguments it any shall be
t
Ba 1ance $109 '6 or
SecUon 20 The General Assembly
to auu:re lnlcr published once 8 week for three ·(- - -- - - - - - - - - - - 1 sys em
your del very and complete
$3 000 00
in cues not provided tor tn this
mailon .to lbe volen about such co lSecuUve weeks preceding .liUch
use our budget terms Call
set up So for an honest to
CLOSE TO MINE NO 3 elec tion 1n at least one newspaper
WANTED
992 396S
coru:Ututton shall fix by law the ameadmenil
goodness good dea stop n
About
2 acres 2 story frame
"term of office and the compensation Be it reso lved by the GeneraJ As of g nera l circulation 1n each
3 18 lfc
today at Berry M I er Mob e
'
B
R
1 , baths Din ng R
of all public officers but no chanre aembly o1 the StAte o1 Oh o three
ounty o1 the state where a news
- - - - --·Homes Sa tes 705 Farson
therein shall affect the compensa fl1ths o! the members elec ed to paper Is published The general
Porches
2 garages Con
Sl
ee
Belpre
01"1
o
Phone
971 4 WHEEL dr ve J ton
tlon of any officer dur ng his exist each house con urr ng there n that assembiLahell provide by law for
crete block s torage bldg
423 953 c losed Sunday
lni tenn un est:~ the office be abo l there 11ha 1 be submitted to the other d em nation o! ln1ormat1on
F
Ford p ckup truck S20 600
Recently
renovated
l.lhed provided however that 1f an electors of the state in the manner n o der to I.J. tonn the electors con
Or
J 22 6tc
m les
0
ft
cab over
For 1nformataon
oftlcer elected to the same office prescr bed by law at a special elec cernlng proposed amendments An
$1050000
camper se f conta ned Also
!rom t.he same district on taking tton to be held the first Tuesday c ection on a proposed constitu
60x 2 ALL e lectr c H I crest
topper
W
se
l
separate
v
Mrs
V1rgm1a Anderson
DON
T
WASTE
PRECIOUS
office receives a greater compensa after the first Monday In May 1974. ional amendment submitted by the
p
•
mob e home w h o Water
Cal 985 3554 after 6 p m
Rl 2 Box 169
TIME
TO
BUY
OR
SELL
tlon auch rate o1 compensation a proposal to amend Section 1 of feneral assembly ahall not be rn
ap pad Phone 742 3123
weekdays
Ha o d Brew
CONTACT
OUR
OFFICE
lhall thereupon be payable to each Article XVI of the Constltu ion o1 o cd nor 1pval1dated because the
Oak
Htll Ohto45656
3 21 6tc
er Long Bottom Oh o
of the other office s ho dtng the Ohio to read as follows
explanation arguments or other in
3 15 tfc
.ame OffiC1! in that dfatr1ct
formation is faulty In any way U
HENRY E CLELAND
An officer who is appo n ed to tlll
ARTtCLE XVI
the maj ority of the electon voting
a vacancy In an elective office shall
o
t e same llhall adopt sue&amp;
BROKER
TRUCK topper for 8 ft bed
not be ent tied to receive more Section 1 Either branch of the a nendments the same shall become
992 2259
Factory
made
Phone
992
compensation than any elected offl gene al assemb Y may propose a part ot the constttuUon When
7132
eer holding the aame office In the amendments to thb constitution no e than one amendment shall be
If no answer 992 2568
same district ts receiving at the a d 11 the same shall be agreed to subm tted at the same time they
Pomeroy OhiO
3 19 6tc
lime such appointed officer takes by three fifths of the membera shal be .so submitted as to enable
Buy'Em Nowl
olftce
elected a each house such pro the electors to vote on eacfl amend. '-~----------1
Section 31 The members and offl posed amendments shall be en tered ment separately
·
OAL: FOR SAb.E JAYMAR
20
Turf Trtm J HP
cera of the Gene al Assembly shall on the journa s with the yeas and
COAL
COMPANY
THE
receive a fixed compensation to be nays and sha 1 be died wl h the
Big Capacity
ED P Data Entry Operator MEIGS &amp; GALL A LINE
POWER MOWERS
Dretcrlbed by law and no other 11ecretary of sta e at least ninety EFFECTIVE DATE AND REPEAL
Maytag
(Keypunch) start ng sa a y STATE
ROUTE 7 AT
allowance or perquisites either b days before the da e of the e ec ton lf adopted by a majority of the
Autom111cs
S2 88 hour Hou s I om 4 p m
1
CHESHIRE
OPEN
7
AM
the payment o1 postage or other at which they Are to be submitted t: ectors vo g on this amendment
2 speed operation
m dn ght Call Jan e
T LL 6 30 P M 5 DA VS A
wtae and no change in their com o the electors lor hetr approva l the amendme t shall take irnmedi
Choice of water
Barnett Oh o Un vers ty WEEK PHONE 992 5693
1h HP
26
Turf
Ttl3
l)ensatian shall take effect du ing or reJection They aha 1 be sub ate effect and ex sUng Section 1 of
Pte r sonne Off ce 594 5387
temps Auto water
the l~rlslatlve b ennlum within mitted on a sepa ate baUot without Article XVl of the C"onstltutlon of
3255tc
TILLERS
level control Lint
Equal Oppor tun ty Employer
whtch it was made
party destgnat on ol any kind at Ohio shall be repealed
s~tton 20a Notwlthstand ng s~c either a special or a general c ec
F Iter or Power Fin
3 22 3 c:
Wtth Reverse
tion 20 of Article II of the Constllu tton as the general ass embly may
1- - ·- - - - - - Agitator
8 YEARL NG Angus he fe rs
Uon of Ohio any increase in com prescribe
Perm• Pren
500 lb
average
Phone
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
penaatJon flxed by th.e General A11
The ballot language for such pro
1
Maytag
STATE OF OHIO
Thomas Sayre Great Bend
sembly !or any public officer which posed amenaments shall be p e
Halo of Heat
Portland 843 2491
*•use of Its beinll made during scribed by a majdrlty of the Oh o
OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY
WANTED TO RENT a 2 or 3
3 22 3tp
Dr yen
POMEROY LANDMARK
btl term of office does not become ballot board consl.lting of the sec
OF STATE
bedroom home or apartm ent - - - - - - - - - - - - - Surround
clothes
DIYible to such officer untn after retary o1 state and four other
... _ Jack W Carsey Mgr
two years from the date of I 11 en members who shall be designated I TED W BROWN Secretary of
furn shed o unfurn shed for a WE HAVE a 1 your upho s t ery
With gentle even
Phone 9?2 2181
acunent shall neverthele11s become 1n a manner prescribed by law and S1tare Indo hereby certuy that the
m ddle aged co uple Must needs
bur ap
denim
heat No hot spots
effective A*~ payable on and after not more than twa of whom shall orcgo g is a true copy a:t Amended
have washer and dryer and cambric foam glue zippers
n01overdrylno F ne
the etreeUve date of the enactment be members of th.e same pa Ileal Sena e Joint Reso utian No 15 and
a r cond ton ng Can prov de tack ng str ps spr ngs and
Mesh Lint Filter
of aueh lncrtase 1n eompensat on
part) The ba lot language sha 1 A end ed House Joint Resolution
eferences Phone 992 5791
cl ps
ch pboard
button f-OAM to f I you old co ucn and
We Spe~lalizeln
properly
tdent
fy
the
substance
of
N"o
61
flied
In
the
office
of
the
Sc HEDULE
MAYTAG
3 21 4 P tw ne sew ng thread
egs
the propc~sa l to be voted upon The Secrc ary of Sta e proposing to
chafr cush ons as ow as
Red Cttrptt
Tfle secretary of state shall pace ba lot need not conta n he full tex
ne nd the Const1tut on of Ohio
----- upho s e y books dacron
s
o
95
Upholst~ry books on v
UJ)On the ballot as separate issues nor a condensed tex t o! the pro
IN TESTIMONY WHEREOF I
StrYice
o rent a fun shed webb ng sp ng tw ne tacks
SOc 4 nell covered foam
the proposal to amend sectiont 20 posal The board sha 1 a so p epare h c hereunto subscr bed my name WANTED
1
a
er
or
sma
1
hou
se
n
he
wet
cord
cotton
sw
vel
mattresses
for
standard
s
ze
and 31 of ArUcle II and the pro an explanatt on of the proposal and affixed my official seal at Co
coun ry n Pome oy Ru and bases foam foam
foam
bed
529 95
Pomerov
poul to enact seeliona 20a of ArU wh ch may inc ude its: purpose an u nbus thia 1st day of March 19'74
a ea Cbntac Dean Sch o c k
Pomeroy Recovery 622 E
Recovery 622 E Main Street
de 11 cf the Constitution of Ohio effects and shall certify the bal o
TED W BROWN
Hunts Tra er Park Jackson
Man St
Pomeroy
Ohio
eo ea to permit the electorate to languan and the explanation to
Pomeroy Ohio Pt1one 992
vote M~rately on ..ch aucfl pro the s.ecret+.ry of ltate not Iuter
Secretary of State
011 o
phone 992 7554
7554
742-4211
Arnold Grate
3 20 61p
3 5 26tc
))OM).
than 10eventy ftve days before the Seal) 3 25 4
a 5 72 Stc
Rutland
3 5 26fc
139 4

Trails West 15 Hogans Heroes 13
6 00- News 3 4 8 10 15 Sesame St 20 ABC News 13 Pe
sonallty &amp; Behavioral Developme t 33 Truth or Con
sequences 6
6 30 - NBC News 3 4 15 CBS News 8 10 Room 222 13 AB C
News 6

•tailed

Ph 992 5271

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

2

a

ASK US ABOUT
PRE FABRICATED

From th e largest Truck or
Bulldozer Rad afar to the
sma les t Heater Core
Nathan 8 ggs
Rad1ator Soec1ahst

3 9 6 c

3 9 6 p

Water

8 00 - Nat anal Geograph c 6 Mag c an 3 4 15 Rook es 3
TheSe f sh G ant 8 10 Ra c heal La Cabana 0 La Rand ne

WOOD TRUSSES

Ph ?92 2174

TRA LER o n Rae ne
9?2 2 29 0 992 2838

CALL Po y s Auc on o s lop by
o ge
d of those unwanted
ems Se t I he auc on ~,;ay
SJ J H g h S r ee l M dd epo
992 3509 Open 9 am to 5 p m
Monday Wednesday Thu s
day F r day unt noon
3 13 JOtc

Open 8 TtiS
Monday thru Saturday
61M E Man, Pomeroy , 0 .

4 Harel 8
S 00 - Mr RQgers 20 33 Bonanza 3 Merv Gr It n 4 Andy
Grlffllh 8 Gomer Pyle 13 Big Valley 6
5 30 - Beverly Hi lib Illes 8 Elec Co 33 Hod9epodge Lodge 20

DITCHING SERVICE

Phone

3 24 61

INFORMA:TION
DEADLINES
5 PM Day Before Pub I ca1 c
Monday Dead ne 9 a m
Cance l at on
Cor ec ons
w be accep ed unt 9 a m lo
Day of P.ub t ca on
REGULAHONS
Th e Pub s he rese ves he
gh to !d o
etec any ads
deemed ob 1ect ona
The
pub sher w
no be espon
s ble to mo e han one n
co ec nse ton

-GUARANTEEDPHONE 992 2094

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

FURNITURE

33]5

WANT ADS

'5.55
On Most Amertca n Cars

OFFICE SUPPLIES

pm

S14~

Wheel Alignment

992 2094
606 E Mam Pomeroy

-.

Auto Sales

4 30-GreenAcresJ G llgans s 6 13 Bonanza 15 J ackpo t

EXPERT

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO

Helen Help

MONDAY MARCH 24 1974

-

ST EREO
Walnut
AM FM
Rad o I! ra c k tape com
b na on Ba a nee 5 10 73 or
le ms ava a bl e Phone 992
]965
2 4 tc

S2695

197 OODGECORONET

Business Services

for Sale

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

197 3 CHEVROLET NOVA

Sea ed p
ece ved a
D ec o o
men
of
Co um bus

You have a good chance to
earn btg money and prizes,
too To find out 11 there

2 SIGNS

Television Log

presstve relallonship which may even be the reason your
ladyfrtend left the datmg servtce ad open on ber desk - H

I

a

29 Reach
30 Never

(Ger)

31 Man

lands
summer

32 Born
33 Ward off
35 Anltct
pated
(2 wds)
•1 In full
owing
.Z.Imbue
•s Signified
•t FurniSh
with a
dowry
DOWN
1 Sonof
(Scot- )
2 Fall mto
sm

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-Heres how to work It
AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW
One letter Stmply stands for another In this sample A is
used for the three L s X for the two 0 s etc Single letters,
apostrophes the length and formation of the words are all
hints Each day the code letters are different
CRYPTOQUOTES
JVK

XYKUJKOJ

QUOJKYNWKLKO

MKYK PBLK PBAD NWXQKBJO PB U
NUAKJJK

-V~BYD

0

VUORWBO

Yelterday a Ceyptoqaote THREE THINGS ARE GOOD IN
LITI'LE MEASURE AND EVIL lN LARGE YEAST SAL1
AND HESITATION -TALMUD

�9 - The Datly Sentmel Middleport Pomeroy 0 March 20 1974

8- The Datl) Sent mel Mtddlepo rt Pomeroy 0 Ma &lt;I '5 ll7l

. Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!!

BOYS OR
GIRLS

NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OH 0
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Co umbus Oil o
Marcil 8 1974
Con act Sales Leg I Coly
No 74 1 8
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT

11 OR OLDER

BE A

'

NEWSPAPER
CARRIER

.

1s

a

route open m your neighborhood

CALL 992-2156

THE

DAILY SENTINEL
CARRIER
WANTED
LINCOLJi HILL
AND POMEROY

THE
DAILY SENTINEL
PHONE 992 2156

mp ovemen s n
PEl ts
to J n c us ye a e
offered as on e con a a d w
be co ns dered on he bas so he
o a amoun b d
Parts 1 thru 17
Nob l e
M e gs
V non
Hock n g
Wash ng on and
Ga a Co un es Oh o o m
prov ng s uc u es on var ous
routes and se c ons by c ean ng
and pa n ng
Type o S uctu es
Va es
The da e se o
o p e o
ofthsworksha bea sse o h
n he b dd ng p oposa
Ea ch b dde sha be equ ed
o fewhh s bda e fd
check o cash e s c heck o an
amount equa o I ve per cent of
h s b d bu n no even mo e
than I y housand do a s o a
bond to ten per cent of n s b d
payab~e to he 0 rec or
B dde s mu s app y on ne
prope fo ms for qua I c a on
at eas en days p o o he
da e se t or open ng b ds n
a ceo dan e w h Chap e 5 25
Oh o Rev sed Code
P ans and spec f ca on a e
on
te n he Depa tmen o
Transporla on and he o I ceo
th e D s cl Depu y D e o
The 0 ec o
ese Yes he
r gh o
any and a b ds

PUBL C NOTICE
The

0 st

OF
QUALITY

Me gs

Loca
Sc h oo l
c Boa do Educa on w

3

PHL L PRC HEY
D REC OR
8 25 2 c

offer for sa le at pub c a uc on a
schoo house and school g ounds
N THE COURT OF
owned by
he
Boa rd
of
COMMON PLEAS
Educat on known as th e Coa
MEIGS COUNTY OH 0
Por School located on L berty
Avenue n Pome oy nea
h e BANNY BRANHAM
we s end approa ch
o
he Pome oy Oh o
P a nt ff
Pome oy Mason B dge
VS
The proper ty was acqu r ed by
deE!ds reco ded n Vo 44 pages JUDY BRANHAM

Cu s tom Ha chbc1ck Coupe da k g een f n s h I ke new
wh e wa I I es lu
whee cov e s p otect ve s de
nod ng s po wc b akcs ado 6 cy l nd e eng ne s an
da d I n m ss on Ave y popu a mode and p ced to go

95J CHEVROLET Ex ce ent
co nd 1 on Ca ll 992 '1967 a fi e 5

972 DOOGE DEMON
$2295
J.tO V 8 eng ne au toma t c I ansm ss on power s ee ng
back v ny nero
ed f n s h I ke new wh le wa l
es

972 VW bus exce len
d on S2695 00 Phone I
73 5867

and

c

3 10

ado

on
304

3 2

?69 DODGE Cha ge r
74'1 3722

doo
owne new c
ade n good sl ne t r es
s po less c ean n te r or s ma V 8 e ng ne au tom a t c ran s
m ss on The r ght s ze
he ght p ce Va ue $ 615

c

6

I

Stop In and See Our
Floor Dtsplay

3 21 6tp

EXPERIENCED

964
CHEVELLE
283
au om a c exce ent con
d on Phone La y H
985

970 FORD Custom e p ckup
ruck long bed and 6 c y nde
Ca l 949 28 5
3 24 Jlc

RATES

For Want Ad Serv ce
5 ce n s pe Word one nser; t o
M n mum ChargeS 00
4 cen s lte
wo d
nree
consecu ve nse ons
26 cen s pe wo d s )( con
sec ut ve nse ton s
25 Per Cen 0 scoun on pa d
ads and ads pa d w h n 0
days
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
S2 00 Ia
50 word m n
mum Each add t ana l wo 0

973

Notice
CAS H pad fo a 1 makes and
models of mob le homes
Phone a ea code 6 4 413 953
4 13 tc

MGB Conve be 7 500
m les Lo s of ex tra s Ca
304 773 .'i 23
) 24 3 c

For Rent
Ca t

3 24 3

c

3 24 3 c

2 X 50 MOB L E home 1
bed ooms ut t es pad Renl
by week o month Ca l 742
5980
) 22 61p
APARTMENT to
e nt
bedrooms Phone 992 5908

SMA LL FA RM 20 acres
B adbury Phone ?92 7275

3 21 4tc

3c

L1nes. and

Power
Ltne• All work done by the
foot or contrillcf Also dozer
work and sept c t1nks tn

See or Call
Bob or Roger Jeffers
Day 992 7089
Ntght 992 3525
or 992 5232

Pomeroy

OPEN Roger Hyse 1 s Ga age
nea C 055 cads on St Rou t e
124 B 30 o 6 p m Monday
11 ough Sa u day Phone 992
5682 0 992 7 21
2 22 '16 c
DON T fUSS Don t cuss turn
vour unk automob les over to
us R vers de Auto Wreck ng
Phone 1 ( 304 773 5890
3 7 26tc

3 20 6tc
AU1 OMOB LE Insuran ce been
c ancel ed.,
Los
your
operata s cense Ca 992

Gene's
Body Shop

98

232

Me gs Coun

v

Add ess Unknown
Defendant

Del vered to Job S1te

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN
MATERIALS CO
773 5554

Mason W Va

Painting ASpecialty

7 30- Bobby Goldsboro 3 Buck Owens 8 Lock Stock &amp; Bar e l
20 Wacky Word of Jonathan W nters 15 To Tell the Truth 6
Hollywood Squares 4 Episode Act1on 33 Mun ctpal Court 0

Beat the Clock 13

Not1ce

SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
REASONABLE rates Ph 446
4782 Gal po s John Russe
Owne and Operator
s 12 ttc

W L L TRIM or cu trees
sh ubbe y Also clean
basements 11 t cs e c
949 3221 or 742 4441
J 4

3035

and
o'ut
Ca ll
26tc

IDRICE CONSTRUCTION
Roof no spout no k tchens
and bathrooms Complete
remodel ng Phone 742 6273
12 3 tfc

10 4 ttc

____

-----.!!.---

I..oc&amp; Bowling
•

For Sale

Mob1le Homes for Sale

STEREO
92.1

WMPO-FM

SOUTHEASTERN
OHIO POLLED

HEREFORD SALE

FRIDAY, MARCH 29
-7DOPM

57 LOTS OF
TOP PROSPECTS

PAPER CARRIER

CLIFJiON W VA.
pHONE 992·2156

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

''We've Got The
Better Of The Best"

For Sale

52.95

Wanted

6 JO -

Rev Cieopllus Rob nson 13
6 35- Columbus Today 4.

6 45- Farmt me 10 Morn ng Report 3

00- Today 3

"7

5 CBS News 8 10 D ck Van Dyke 13

4

Osmonds 6
7 30 - Rocky &amp; Bullw nkle 13 New Zoo Revue6

•

'a 00 Jl
6

6

'II

9
9

Jp

to

11

Capt Kangaroo 8 10 New Zoo Revue 13 Sesame St 33

Jeffs Collie 6
25- Jack LaLanne 13
30 - Brady Bunch 6
55 - News 13
00 - Paul D xon 4 Friendly Juncl on 10 AM 3 Ph I Donahue
15 Abbott &amp; Co•lello 8 W ld W1 d West 6 Mov•e The
Matchmaker 13
30- To Tell the Truth 3 Secret Storm 8
55 - Chuck Whtte Reports 10
OO - DnahShore3 15 Company6 Joker s W dB 10
30- Jeopardy 3 4 15 SIO 000 Pyram d 8 0
00- w zard of Odds 3 4 15 Gambit 8 10 M ke Douglas 6

Password 13
11 30 - Brady Bunch 13 Holl ywood Squares 3 4 15 Love of L fe

8 10
.C 55-CBSNew•8 DanlmelsWorldiO
~ 00- Pa&gt;Sword 6 Jackpot 3 15 News 8 10 13 Bob Brauns
• 50 50 Club 4
oiJl 30 - Baffle 3 15 Sp 1 Second 6 Search for Tomorrow B 0
~ 45 - Elec Co 33
;IIi 55- News 3 15
""00- News 3 All My Ch ldren 6 13 Concentral on 8 Not For
"' Women Only 15 What s My Line&gt; 10
:3 30 - 3 On A Match 3 4 15 Lets Make A Deal 6 13 As lhe
Word Turns 8 10

2 00 - Days of Our Lives 3 4 15 Gu d ng L ght B 10 Newlywed
Game 6 13
~ 30-Doctors3 4 15 G~rl nMy L fe6 13 Edge of N ghtB 10
3 00 - Another World 3 4 15 General Hasp tal6 13 Pr ce s
R ght 8 10 Book Beat 20
3 30- One L fe to L ve 6 13 Ph I Donahue 4 How to Surv ve a
Marr age 3 15 Women 20 Match Game 8 lO
4 00- Mr Cartoon 3 Somer set 15 Sesame St 33 Sesame Sf
20 Love Amer ca n Sty le 13 Lucy Show 8 Huck and Vag 6
Move A Bullet Is Wa1t ng 10
J 30 Gill gan sIs 6 13 Green Acres 3 Bonanza 5 Jackpo
4 Haze 8
:5 00- Mr Rogers 20 33 Bonanza 3 Merv Gr ff n 4 Andy

WIN AT BRIDGE

Btddmg tmproved smce 1935
r------------, do you do now
NORTH

25

• 10

RUTLAND FURNITURE

Answer Tomorrow

Us.

By Helen Bottel

••

Get Even or Gel Out 7
Dear Helen
All through my two pregnanctes and afterwards when I was
overwetght and dowdy looking my husbl!nd went out on me I
loved hun a lot - then - and I was terrtbly hurt
Now that I ve slunmed down and am workmg part tune I
look better than before mamage and frankly I m gettmg offers
that are hard to refuse I keep thinkmg why not if only to pay
Jerry back'
Meanwhtle Jerry has added about 50 pounds and gtrls don t
throw themselves at hun any more Suddenly he s seemg me as
destrable but I remember all those lonely mghts and mean
words comparmg me to his gtrlfrtends
Since Utere s not much we share except the ktds gt ve me a
good reason why I shouldn t do to my husband as he dtd to me' WANTING TO GET EVEN
Dear WTGE
I can gtve TWO good reasons your cluldren
They don t deserve ftghtmg resentful unfattltful parents
whose atlltudes toward marnage - and each other - couldn t
help but make famtly life mtserable
Gettmg even lor past hurts won t solve anything If you can l
revtve love then don t prolong the dymg and tf you share
nothmg but the ktds any more you d better share them
separately
And if as I suspect my words rtle you perhaps love tsn t as
dead as you think Honest reappratsal and a lot of effort - m
eluding everythmg from your forgtveness to a diet for Jerry
trught still brmg back the spark ) - H

+++
Dear Helen
I thought my ladyfrtend and I were gettmg along great but
Ute other mght I noted a computer datmg servtce ad on her desk
Not only that but Ute pet sonahty mventory questwns were all
filled out as if she was about to malltt m
Should I ask her about thts or would she resent my
snoopmg 7
I can t understand why she d do such a thmk when she ought
to know 1 love her (I m rettcent about expressmg myself)
WIDOWER
Dear Wtdower
There s no harm m askmg It mtght lead to a more ex

Dear Helen
Hooray for Ute landlady who prohlbtted smokers m ber rerr
tals' I d hke to )Om her
Thts week we are cleanmg an apartment that we rented to
chain smokers and we are agam amazed at the filthy mess tbey
can make Walls and furniture were covered With a rucotine
restdue that made clearung and pamting much more difficult
Betge walls become off whtte after they are scrubbed

Make you wo d your bond
S tand by t even though I may
empo ar y nconven ence

you
SCORPIO (Oct 24 Nov 221

Today be ve y ca efu f us ng
too ls or work ng w th anothe
who has poo safety hab1ts
For Monday March 2 5

1974
ARIES (March 21 Apnl 19)
Do n I c ha ge nto the b eac h
today II you ve thought nat
te s though ca eful y You
I s t thoughts aren you best

TAURUS (April 20 May 20)
Take a mp e t me w th you

wo k pe form ng a se v ce lo
anothe The etu
o you
c ore w d m n s h
you e

s pshod
GEMINI IMay 21 June 20)

Act ons ot o ne whose con pany
you I sha e today w I cause
you to wonder about the va lue
o l th s e lat onsh p

CANCER (June 21 July 22)

Retu se o accep t deleat oo
ead y Your I stat emp s may
no bea I u I You later ones

LITILE

ofot0732
WEST

EAST (D)

• 864

·-

• Q532

_ ,. 7

,.K9852

:'+ Q732
"!ftAKJ54

"

ORPHAN ANN II!:

SWIATHII... sa:uBD

ofoQ986

SOUTH
.AKJ97

ANNIC UVEALS A

2•

Tra Is West 15 Hogan s Heroes 13
ABC News 3 Sesame St 20 News 3 4 Truth or Conseq
6 News 8 0 5 L as Yoga &amp; You 33
630
News68 0 NBC News3 4 5 YourFuturesNow33

Room 222 13
7 00 - What s My L ne 8 Dusty s Tra 13 E lec Co 20 Truth
or Con seq 3 Beat the Clock 4 News 6 10 Marco Sport I te
33 H gh Schoo TV Hono Soc ety 15 Local News 6
7 30 ToTe I the Truth 6 New P ce s R ght B 10 RF D 20
Hoi ywood Squares 3 Johnny Mann s Stand Up &amp; Cheer 4
Lass e 15 Read ng for the Clas s room Teolc he 33 Bea t th e

Clock 13 Wash ngton Debates 5

a 00 8
9
9
10

Happy Days 6 13 Maude 8 10 B I Moye s Journa133
Wmn e the Pooh and the Honey Tree 3 4 15 Mov e20
30 - Hawa F veOB 10 Tenafly3 4 5 Move A Cry nthe
WI derness 6 13 Gunsl ngers 5
00 - Back Journa l 33
30 - Mov e Double Troub le 8 0
00 - Marcus Welby MD 6 3 Wa s h ngton Si r a ght Ta k 33
Pol ce Sto y 3 4 15 News 20 Underworld 5

10 30
Day al N ghl 33
11 00 - News3 4 6 8 10 15 3 Janak 33

have Ia c hoose loday be ween
the adv ce ot one who oaks
fa s ho !cuts and an o d ex
pe e nced hand Be w se Fo
ow p oven methods
VIRGO IAug 23 Sept 221 A
s luat on you re nvo ved n ca
es some unexpected costs
Dec de whethe I s worth what
wou d be ga ned be lore pro
ceed ng

LlBRA (Sept 23 Oct 23)

------

THE MAP L.5:ADS TO T£N
M LL ON DOLl. AI.S

N

D AMD,... OS AN TH POL c.E

KNO'IAJ NOTH HC:I R800T T

l)y Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Jtm How about some artt
cles to show how brtdge has
c,hanged m the last 40 years•
Oswald The Culbertson
1\tms match of 1935 mtght be

worth usmg as an example

Of course expert 1935 btd
dmg was a trtfle better than
that of Ely and Jo Culbertson
a~d a lot better than that of
Hal and Dorothy Stms Doro
tlcy had never learned any
dt5ctphne m btddmg and
bqth teams used honor trtcks
rather than pomt count for
hand evaluatton
~1m Heres a hand where
Dorothy s lack of dtsctplme
pl\td off Her club openmg
was one of those gulptc btds
Sl\e had some cards but well
below opemng strength
I Oswald Ely s two club
bt&lt;l was a game force m the
Culbertson system Hal
d$bled and Jo Culbertson
went to two hearts Dorothy
ddubled that on the theorr,
that Jo had btd her best sutt
Jtm 1 see that Ely JUmped
to four dtamonds and Jo
passed How do you explam
that even tn 1935 btddmg
oswald Ely blamed Jo
b~t 1 blame Ely If he had JUSt
btd three dtamonds Jo would
h~ve recogmzed the contmu
mg force and btd However
when he JUmped to four Jo
d~tded that there was some
thing wrong wtth the whole
thing and passed For the
record Ely made stx
NEWSPAPER EN rERPRISE ASSN

You Soulh hold
.I08654,AKQ83 +AJ5·What do you do now
A-Double Vou want your
partner to bid

TODAY 8 QUESTION
You do double and your
uartner responds one spade What

a sharp
nt o buy
at th s
no

ITROGOT 1

I I

March 25 1974
An unelq)ected change w I
cause you to a tte your d rec
t on th s yea In the long run
th s w I pro11e to be of eal
benef t n ways you d dn t fo e

see

t
I I I
YENNJT

I&lt;EP1' PLA'IINIS
AL.THOU614 H&amp; SAW
H S C::APITAL GO

I

~

I I

Now arranp the circled lette...
to rorm the surprise answer u

~~·====·====~J~~·==~·~·=u:':'eo::ted~bytheabovecartoo~

.[L _

_:Prii .:.:::..::III=SIIIl=IIISI=-:A==IIIIt"---___.
HSWII
1 [

l

Jun II" CRANK

S• urtl•y •

t\ 1swer

ALWIWS
FOLLERIN
ME HOME

And the smell The stale smoke odor turns potential renters
away
Fire damage Is another threat to landlords Only last week
Ute build111g behmd us was damaged and one person suffered
from smoke mhalallon after someone dumped an ash tray Into a
wastebasket and nearby curtains caught ftre - ALL FOR IT
Dear AFI
Here s a suggesllon why not offer reduced rent to nonsmokers' If the 1dea catches on tt trught even be an added 11&gt;cenllve for those who are trying to lick the habit - H

~"tu(

b'f lHOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
3 King (Sp)
1 Boy
t Smtih
Scouts
so man
badge
for ex
6. Babble
ample
JJ Fteld of
(abbr)
conflict
5 Eugene
Ill. European
Onegln
blackbtrd
he rome
13 Weather
6 A Welk
mans
spcctalty
devtce 1
"' Scours
(2 wds)
8 Happy
15 T1111ely
-lark
BOUnds
(2wda)
16. DistaJI
9 Wire
rabbit
message
19 -stand
(abbr)
still
10 Buildmg
(2 wds )
extensiOn
20 Stocking
U Called to
mtshap
arms
23 Verdt
16.1ndian
opera
offictal
25 Words for
11 African
Nanette
antelope
26 So that
(4 wds )
28 Start of
anm

Ycsterday s Answer
18 - nous
20 Moun
tam
ash
Zl Loosen

22 Nota
saul
(2 wds)

24 Gotyou 1
25 Fmal

27 Repeat
31 Chnsof
tenms
33 Stmtlar

3t Wl!ened
35 OT
book
(abbr)
36. Full of

...

(lull )

37 Japan
nver

38 Objee
hve
39 In the
past
to Moisture

cantalton

YENEDI

Wow• A MAP WORTH TEN

.K

Soulh

wou d be easy lo
sa lesman to hi k you
ng unneeded terns
t me Pract ce say ng

Unscramble these four Jumbles.
one leiter to each square to
form four ordanary wordt

M LL ON JV$T -.,AT" NG TO
BE REAC THE SUSPEN ... E
S UN8E~RABI.E
HoPE"
T LA~T$

South

'

PISCES IFeb 20 March 201

llV H f N IH AI!NOlO ·""' I ll )II I F l

I 11)

AGENT HAZARD BUCKET

Hhat son t people expect tot nd

cabaroi-A BARE ACT

UJt..:K J HAI;Y

Double 4+
Double
Pass Pass
Pass
Openmg lead

t.

AQUARIUS IJin 20 Feb 191

Take ca e of lh ngs n he
na tu al o der Jump I om one to
another and you have noth
ng to show fo your elforts at
days end

(An•wen lo ..orrow)

Johnny Carson 3 4 15 Murder lmposs ble6 3 Moves
The Dev I s Own 8
Affa r in Tr n dad 0
00 Tomo row3 4 News 3 Take F ve For L fe 15
200 - News4

£NitiMATIC MAP.

25

19) Expec l some unusua hap
pen ngs a ound the house and
you wont be too upset when
th ngs don 1 go as planned

JJlllJ~'llirn® lkd M&gt;-"'1.-J ,_.

1 30 -

.. 2.

The btddmg has been
Wesl
Norlh Easl

CAPRICORN (Dec 22 Jan

6 00 -

N etther vulnerable
East

he rug today by g v ng too
mu c h atlent on to f vo ous
matle s

Gr lith 8 Gomer Py le USMC 3 B g Va l ey 6

tAKJ10954

North

some respons b I I es unde

s 30 - Beverly H lb 1es 8 Elec Co 33 Hodgepodge Lodge 20

.MYsTIFYING A.f.(D

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·-

• 2HI mm or Pllllf.

SAGGITARIUS INov 23 Oec
21) You e I kely to brush

wl
LEO IJuly 23 Aug 221 You I

,. AQI0643
• 86

176.95

.aa.

K sses fa

Sunr se Sem nar 4 Sacred Heart 10
Concern &amp; Comment 10
Farm Report 3
B1ble Answers 8 News 6 F ve M nutes to L ve By d

6 25 -

Real Estate For Sale

GREAT
COUNTRY

0

12 00 - News 6 13
1 00 - Tomorrow 3 4 Comedy Plot 8 Take F ve For Life 5
2 00
News 4

All work guaranteed

Real Estate For Sale

Wanted To Buy

10 00 - News 20 Paul Nuch m s 33 Med cal Center 8
11 00 News3 4 6 8 0 13 15 20 Janak 33
11 30- Johnny Carson J 4 15 Move S dek cks 8

6 00 6 15 -

DOZER and back hoe work
ponds and sept c tanks dit
ch ng ser¥1ce top so
fill
drt
t mesone
B&amp;K Ex
cavat ng Phone 992 5367 or
992 3861
9 1 tfc

SEPTIC TANKS
AROB C
SE WAGE
SYSTEMS
CLEANED
REPAIRED
M LLER
SA N TATION
STEWART OH 0 PH 662

3 NCAA

6

TUESDAY MARCH 26 1974

READY M X
CONCRETE
del vered r gh
to your
p o tec Fast and easy Free
est mates Phone 992 3284
Goeg leln Ready M x Co
M ddleport Oh o
6 30 fc

428

Real Estate For Sale

33
8 30
Dr Seuss Ca loon 8 10
9 00 - Heres Lucy 8 10 Move C eopatra
Ba•kelball 3 4 5
9 30- Book Beat 20 33 D ck Van DykeS 10

Area s Most
Reasonable Pnces

TEAFORD

sENTI NEL

the Clock 4 News 6 10 Read nct for the Classroom Teacher

33 Call of the West 5 C rcusr 13

My President 10

Bu It to tour Specs.

BLIND AC
Add t ona 25c Charge p e
Advert semen I
OFFICE HOURS
8 30 a m Ia 5 00 p m Oa y
8 3fi am
o 12 00 Noon
Satu day

THE DAILY

7 00 - Truth or Cortseq 3 Whal s My L ne 8 Elec Co 20 Beat

808 W Ma n Pomeroy

F UL L gaspe ev va w
be
6 15 lfc SEPT c
TANKS cleaned
he d a t1e Me gs. Jun or H gh
Modern San tat on 992 3954 or
Deed
Reco ds
o
wh ell
M dd epo t Oh o March 29
992 7349
No 5 487
reference s hereb y made A
30 and 3 a 7 30 p m each
10 23 ff c
NOTICE BY
survey descr p on s on f le n
even ng and Sunday at
32 4c
PUBLICATION
the off ce of the c e k of he
e rnoon 2 p m Evang e st
3 I 26 c
To Judy Branham whOse as
C BRADFORD Auctioneer
Board of Education
Che5 e r Estep Ch II co he 2 BEDROOM mob le home
known
address
was
Ly
h
a
Com):)lete Serv ce
The auc on w
ake pla ce on
Oh o Sp ec a s ng ng each
V1r qll B T· ,If, 1d ',,
a so
ra te r s pa ce Pnone
Geo g a
c o E mo
Phone 949 382 or 949 316
the p em ses of the to mer Coa l Sp ngs
even ng by Gospe Tones and
94?
226
Brok
RacneOho
Por SchOo l and w I be he d at Underwood
o he 5 nge s Everybody
3 10 6tp
You are he eby not fed ha
Cr tt Bradford
10 oo AM on the 4 t day of
we lcome
II(J
Mi•(
h ,ll'l " '-ll• I ' I
---you have been named De en
HAR R SON S TV and Se rv ce
5 I tfc
May 974
___.,.__
3 20 0 c
2
BEDROOM
house
n
MiJ;J
PDilH
'
I
oy,
0/11 '; . ·J .'O'I
dan
n
a
ega
ac
on
en
!
ed
3
AND
4
ROOM
calls Phon e 992 2522
fu r n shed and
Terms of sa le Cash
d eport
New k tchen al'i"d EXCAVATING dozer
Judy
unturn shed
oader
apa
tments
2 22 26 c KO SC OT
The gh s ese ved by th e Benny B anham vs
KO SMET CS
&amp;
ba h app ances nclud ed
Branham Th s acl on has been
Pt1one 992 5434
and backhoe work.
sept c MIDDLE PORT- 5 bedrooms
Me gs Loca
School D str c
w G S l-o r a good ln e of
Ca 992 53 o
ass
gn
ed
Case
No
5
487
pen
tanks nsta led dump trucks gas
RUMMAGE
Sa
e
MOnday
4
12
tfc
furnace
n ce
ful
Boa d o l Educat on o e ec
Cosme
cs
f
end
y
se
v
ce
3 9 26 tc
d ng n he Cou
of Common
and o boys for h re w II hau
th ough Sa urday
0
3
any and at b ds
basement 2 lull baths 2
and sam eo ne o lla w h -PR--------------Pleas Me gs Coun y Pome oy
VATE
mee
ng
room
for
f
d t top so
mestone porches and garage Now on ly
So me 11 ng d fferen eve y
g ve me a ca I He len a ne
Oh o 45769
any organ zat on phone 992 S ROOM house and bath two
and gravel Ca I Bob or Roger $20 000 00
day
F y Bu d ng
M d
L W McCom as
B
own
9?1
5
3
The ob ee l of the comp la n s
3975
ca garage 2 so yon Carson
Jeffers day phone 992 7089
d epo
Phone 992 5335
Clerk Me gs
3 9 c
TUPPERS PLAINS - Neat 2
Road n Mason
Contac
n ght phone 992 3525 or 992
3 1 tfc
3 24 6 c
Lo ca Sc noo D s t c to d vo ce and ca re cus ody
of
he m no
bedrooms
large bath out
Russe Ba t 773 5606
5232
Board of Educat on and con ro
ch d en of the part es You are BA SE MENT Sa e Monday
J 2 lfc
O NE 2 room and bath turn shed
2 11 fc bu ld ngs and bock garage
requ ed o an s we
he com
a par men u 1 t es pa d One
Ask ng JUSt $8500 00
(3) 25 (')
8 5 4fc
Tuesday Wednesday
on
pta nt w th n 28 days afte he
3 rooms showe apa rtm en
Ro
u
e
43
m
e
o ff Rou te 7
BLOCK BUILDING
72&lt;120
70 ACRES of pas ure land on DOZER wok and ce•a ng by
last pub ca on ot h s no ce
th e acre hour y or contract
u
t e~ fu n shed n Mason
Phone 992 28
U s Rou e 33 S300 per ac e
w th steel trusse
Hurricane
wh ch w
be pub shed once
ANT
QUE
qu
sand
ewe
l
y
fa
m
ponds
road
s
etc
Large
W
Va
Reyno
ds
AP.artmen
ts
) 22 3 c
No bu d ngs Fo add ona
each wee k to s x conse ut ve
A so nteres ed n fu n ure
dozer and operator w th over le nced yard w1th 2nd bu1ld ng
Phone
304 773 5hrl on R
nfo ma on phon e 992 2720
weeks The last pub cat on w I
and d shes Ca
992 5262
20 yea s ex per ence Pull ns 26x72 and stee l monora I for
3J Mason
3 24 3fc
bemadeon Ap 11 974 and ne
load ng The ma n bu d ng S
even ngs o mo n ngs
3 24 6tp
Excavat ng Pomeroy Oh o
NOTICETOB DOERS
28 days for answer w I com
Pt1one 992 2478
one large room w th no posts
2 20 lf c
The Ease n Loca Boa d of
IN G ots Phone A bert
WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON
mence on that date
APARTMENT Co ne of L n BUILD
2 19 tfc
SMALL DOWN PAYMENT ~
Ed ucat on w
ece ve b ds
H
Ra ne 949226 1
BOWLING LEAGUE
con S reel and Sec ond
unt 12 00 0 Clock. Noon Ap r
NO
copper 80c rad a to s
3
bedroom ranch type home
3 20 6tp S EW NG MACHINES Repa r
March 6 1974
a ry Speoce Clerk 9 1974 a the off ce ocated n
Avenue
n
M dd eport
35c r ed brass 40c ba er es
Closets
natural gas furnace
won Lost
Co ur of Com man P eas o
he Eas e n H gil Schoo
tor
se v ce a I makes 992 2284
$ 1 20 M A Ha l Reedsv e
P va e en ance bedroom 2 BEDROOM house n M d
n ce k tchen v ng room 12x19
Me gs Coun y
El s &amp; Sons Soh o
5
29
wo schoo l bus chass s su abe
The
Fabr
c
Shop
Pomeroy
Oh o Phone 379 6249
and ba h Men on Y No one
d epor t Se by owner pr ced
Swee Peas
44
36
Pomeroy Oh o 45 69
o
66 passenge
s hoo bus
Au thor zed S nger Sa les and Copper plumb ng large garage
J 24 c
upsta rs Ava lab e after 24th
o se 1 P hone 949 3832
and n ce ot Asking $19 500 00
Waid Cross Sons
42
38
bod es
of March Phone 992 5508
3 20 6tc
Serv ce We Sharpen Sc sso s
2 25 ( 3 I 4 I
8 25 ( 4
Team 6
42
38
6tc
45 ACRES
In Rutland
3
24
3t
c
2 66 passenger s chool bus
3
29
tfc
UNK
AUTOS
complete
Team 4 ,
40
40
- ---- bod es
Townsh p a t on y S12S 00 per
de
ve
ed
oou
yard
We
p
ck
Team J
2
59
NVESTMENT PROPERTY Spec t ca ons are on f e n
ac re
up auto bodes and buy a I
PUBLIC NOTICE
High team 3 games - Team
0 ac es. of and n Rock
he C erk. s Off ce toea ed n he
IF YOU HESITATE YOU
k
nds
of
scrap
meta
s
and
am offer ng for sa e
4 828 El is &amp; Sons Soh o 774
Spr
ngs
Oh
o
Th
s
and
s
Eas le n H gh Sc hool
R
OWE
ANOTHER MONTHS
ron
R
ders
Sa
lvage
State
res dence ol the late Be ty C ne Ree dsv e
H gh team Game - Team 4
pa t of an area subd v ded for
uROCERY bus ness for sa le
Oh o
45772
Rou
e
24
Roue
4
Pomeroy
locat ed a 224 Wa nut S ree
RENT
MAKE YOUR MONEY
304 Team 6 277
new houses but due to the
Te ephone 6 4 985 3329 or 614
Bu d ng fo sa le or lease
Oh o Phone 992 5468
M ddlepor Oh o House n n ce 985 4292
BEAUTIFUL new homes now
COUNT BY BUY NG
H gh lnd 3 games - Joy
Me
gs
County
P
ann
ng
Phone
773
56
8
from
8
30
p
m
3 14 2 p
es den a d str ct Ask ng
under construct on n p me
M tch e I 452 J ane Garnes 438
Com m s.s on regulat ons and
to 0 p m for appointment
p ce $ 5 000 00 Sa le s ub ec o
local
on on c ity water and
H gh tnd game
Jane
myheath
mustsel
t
WI
3 20 fc
C 0 N ew and
the approva of he Proba e
sewer Cho ceof des gns Wall
Garnes 178 May M tche l 161
se I at or any part B II W tte
c
e
k OLD furn rure
oak
tab
les.
Cou
M e gs Coun y Oh o
to wal carpet ng and a r
March 13 1974
Rock Spr ngs 992 2789
3
B 25 4 1 8 4tc
c locks ce boxes brass beds GOOD qual ty hay Also 2
n erested pease co nta c
cond ton ng ncluded
W II
won Lost
J
24
8tc
dishes
desks
or
camp
e
e
Reg ste re d Beag es Ca I 992
help
arrange
f nanclng
Ell s &amp; Sons Soh o
53
35 unders gned
househo ds Wr le M
D
720 af er 5 p m
convent anal oans w th down
Wad Cross Sons
48
40
M ler R 4 Pomeroy Oh o
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
3 24 12tc N"EW 3 bedroom home 1r.1 bath
Jo hn W ze k e
paymen ow as 5 pet Other
Team 6
48
40
I
992
7760
ca
garage
basement
on
Gravel
The Eas e n Loca Board of
Adm n s a or of
new home s ava lab e to
Team 4
46
42
5
3
fc
H
I
M
dd
epo
t
Natura
gas
ADM IR AL Refr gera tor 16 CU
ece ve b ds
Esateof Educat on w
qua fed buyers w th NO
Sweet Peas
46
42
a l eadv
n
Phone Dale
2 00 o c ock noon Ap
9
feet no defros
F eezer n
Ma be Cl ne Dec e ased un t
DOWN PAYMENT
Call
Team 3
23
65
Dutton 992 3369 evening s
p anos
Any
3 22 24 25 3 c
op
Ca
Dora hy
974 a he oft ce ocated n OLD Upr gh
col ect 614 837 6540 or 239 0785
H gh team 3 games - Team
992
2534
co nd on Pay ng SID cash
W nebrenne
992 3982
the Eastern H gh S hoot for the
or wr te
Great American
4 814 Wa d c oss Sons 787
1 17 tfc
Wr e g ve d ec ons
to
emova of he ex s ng bu
up
3 24 3tc
Homes Inc P o BoK 687
H gh team game - Team
W TTEN P ANO CO P 0
oof ng and he nsta at on of a
Pome oy Oh o 45769
3 6 Team 3 28
BOX 8 Sa rd s Oh o 43946 SEW NG Mach nes B and New
new ool over the Gymnas um
H gh tnd 3 games - Joy
3 1 tfc
a
the Eas e n Local H gh
3 13 30 c
M tche I 458 Jane Garnes 405
Z
g
Zag
n
n
ce
wa
nut
abe
Sc
hoo
H gh Team 3 games - Team
H gh lnd
Game
Joy
n or g nat car ton s
Never BERRY M LLER Mob e Hom e
4 859 E t s &amp; Sons Soh o 797
Spec f ca ons a e on f e n
ET US se l t fa you at auc
M tche 187 Se lby Manley 59
used
Clea ance on
74
Sales has a lo t to offer wtten
H
gh
Team
Game
Team
4
he
Cle
k
s
off
ce
located
n
th
e
on
w
I
buy
a
I
turn
ture
o
March JO Hl74
Models
On y
a
few
you sta rt st10pp ng for your
302
Team
6
298
Eas
e
rn
H
gh
Schoo
R
1
househo d goods
Po y s
Won Lost
ava abe) S63 40 cash or
Mob e Home You can beat
Oh o
45772
High nd 3 games oy Reedsv le
Auc on House Open 9 JO to
El s &amp; Sons Soh o
6
35
te
ms
ava
tab
e
Phone
992
he h gh dep ec at on you 11
M tchel 505 Betty Wh ach Te lephone 6 4 985 3329 o 6 4
5 30 da ty Phone 992 3509 537
Team 4
52
44
2653
have on your home the I rst
985 4292
H gh S
M dd eport 011 o
Team 6
50
46 409
J 20 fc
two years by s hopp ng for a
H gh lnd Game
Joy
48
48
2 26 30 c
Wad Cross Sons
late
mode used Mob e Home
M
tchel
186
The
lma
CoIns
c
0
New
land
Sweet Peas
48
48
ELECTROLUX
Vacuum
608 E
Here a e some every day ow
170
Team 3
C e k
29
67
C eaners complete w tt1 at
pr
ces
8 4 c
MAIN
tacllments cordw nder and Supe Spec a of the Week pant s pray Used but n I ke
new 65x 12 Detro er
3
new cond to
Pay 534 45
M1dd\eporf Pomeroy
bed oom 1 2 baths reduced
(Amended Senate Joint Reso utton
It a majority o:t the electol'IJ vot
The ballot language and
c ash or budg e pan ava I able
Sl
00000
to
5649500
Th
s
No 15)
tng on the foreroing propoaed election
the explana lun 11hall be avaUable
Phone 992 2653
Mob te Home s oaded w h
lOINT RESOLUTION
amendmentJ at the prlmar;y elec for public nspectlon !n the OffiC\111
LLIVELY BRICK
Ranch
a n gh s
3 20 fc
extras)
tion to be held. on the first Tuesday of the secretary of state
type
3
BR
Bath
0
n
ng R
more
n
Pl'opoeiDg to amend uctlou 20 and after the first Mond.ay in May 1974
1971
64xl2
Champ
on
2
The supreme court shall have
K
tchen
has
24
ft
cab
nets
11 ot Article IL aDd. proposJaf .to adopt the same they shall become exclusive orlg nal juri8dlction in all
EXCELS OR Sat Works E
bedroom 1 bath extra good
aad 18Cilon lOa of A:rtl.cle 1 at part of the Constitution of the State a.ses challene1n1 the adoption or
sta ness stee l range oven
3 24 3 c Ma n St Pomeroy AI k nds
buy
at
$4 995 00
.the COaatUullo:a. of ih• State of of Ohio and extsttna sections 20 and rubm sslon of a proposed consUtu
of salt water pe lets water 60x 2 Ct1amp on 2 bed room
and s nk 0 n ng area and
Oblo to tqlll11u the c:om.peuallon 31 of Article II of 'the ConaUtuUon uona l ame dment to the electon
MMED IATE
NCOME
nuggets block sat and own
$4 495 00
bar Hardwood floors car
ol pubUc ofllce:rs and me}Qbers of of the State of Ohio &amp;hall be re No such case cha eneJn.- the ballot
D s r bv or
part or fu It me Oh o R ver Sa 1 Phone 992
60x12 Globemaster 3 bedroom
tile O.utral A... mly
pealed
peted Basement Garage 1
language tl e explanation or the
o
supp v
Company 3891
g lass s l d ng doo s on y
Be it resolved by the General As
actions or p occdures of the gen
leve acre w th plenty of
es
tab
shed
accounts
w
th
6
5
tf(.
$4 495 00
Amended House Joint Resolution eral assembly In adopting and sub
Hmbly of the State o1 Ohio three
garden space Electr c heat
RCA CBS D sney Records ----- - --- No 61)
flfthl of the membe rs c ected to
mlttlng a const tutional amendment
60x 12
Homette
exce ent
$23 500 00
ueh howe concurrlnr the eln that
shall be tued ate r- than sixty four
cond t on $4 495 00
ncome poss bItes up
OSINGER sew ng mach nes 1972
JOINT RESOLUTION
there shall be submitted to the elec
BUY OF THE YEAR days before the e ection The ballot
$1 000 per mon h w h on Y mode
In beaut fu
wa nut 60x 12 L berty deluxe $4 995 00
ton of the ~State ln the manner pre
anguage shall not be held lnWid
Ranch type 3 BR Bath
S3 500 requ red for nvento Y cab net Makes des gn st t
60xl2 P M C '1 bed oom
lcribed by law at the p ma y elcc To amend Sec:Uon I of Article XVI un ess t ls such ns to mislead de
Love y k tchen
lots of
and tra n ng Ca l COLLECT ches zrg zag buttonho es
$4 995 00
Uon to be held on the first Tuesday of llle Conall.luUan of tho Slate eel e o defraud the voters
Un less the general assembly
tor M James (2 14 66 1 9208
bl nd hems e c L ke new
60x 2 E cona ClJS om cost
ca b nets and ange Ut I ty
after the first Monday In May 1974. ol Ohio io provide for prepara
57 995 00 new
now on y
• proposal to amend sections 20 and tlon o1 the laoguag• which •P- o hen lse provides by Jaw lor the
3 24 4tp Only 589 95 Cal Ravenswood
R Carpo t Car peted
1
31 of Article II and a proposal to peara on lho ballot when ihe Cen prepara ion of arguments for and
ss 795 00
Rock Sprmgs
-·----273
9521
or
273
9893
after
5
00
acre $17 000 00
ened section 20a of Article II of eral Al!i\l'mbly propoaas a consH t1 any agalnst a proposed amend
We
also
hav
e
a
good
se
lec
t
on
of
App
y
n
person
2
7
tfc
FOR MOBILE HOMES or
Fatrgrounds
the Constitution of the State of iullo.ual amendment ao that U wUl ment the board may prepare such
8 and 0 w de Mob le Homes n
S eak
House---- properlJ lclentlfy lhe aubstance of a guments
Ohio to read as .follows
HOMES - Gas water and
stock
Pomeroy
Ohto
lhe propolal io pravlde race•
Such propc~sed amendments the
3 24 6 cA.M FM stereo rad o 8 t rac k. These are most y a I a te model
electr c on 1 • acres 200 ft
ARTICLE 11
d.dour•• for limelr challaag" c the bal ot language the explanation~
- -- - -_
tape player 4 speaker sound
frontage
In
Pomeroy
hom es and the pr ces nc ude
•amendment•
ptloo uad. IUld
luhmlnlcn of .uch and the arguments it any shall be
t
Ba 1ance $109 '6 or
SecUon 20 The General Assembly
to auu:re lnlcr published once 8 week for three ·(- - -- - - - - - - - - - - 1 sys em
your del very and complete
$3 000 00
in cues not provided tor tn this
mailon .to lbe volen about such co lSecuUve weeks preceding .liUch
use our budget terms Call
set up So for an honest to
CLOSE TO MINE NO 3 elec tion 1n at least one newspaper
WANTED
992 396S
coru:Ututton shall fix by law the ameadmenil
goodness good dea stop n
About
2 acres 2 story frame
"term of office and the compensation Be it reso lved by the GeneraJ As of g nera l circulation 1n each
3 18 lfc
today at Berry M I er Mob e
'
B
R
1 , baths Din ng R
of all public officers but no chanre aembly o1 the StAte o1 Oh o three
ounty o1 the state where a news
- - - - --·Homes Sa tes 705 Farson
therein shall affect the compensa fl1ths o! the members elec ed to paper Is published The general
Porches
2 garages Con
Sl
ee
Belpre
01"1
o
Phone
971 4 WHEEL dr ve J ton
tlon of any officer dur ng his exist each house con urr ng there n that assembiLahell provide by law for
crete block s torage bldg
423 953 c losed Sunday
lni tenn un est:~ the office be abo l there 11ha 1 be submitted to the other d em nation o! ln1ormat1on
F
Ford p ckup truck S20 600
Recently
renovated
l.lhed provided however that 1f an electors of the state in the manner n o der to I.J. tonn the electors con
Or
J 22 6tc
m les
0
ft
cab over
For 1nformataon
oftlcer elected to the same office prescr bed by law at a special elec cernlng proposed amendments An
$1050000
camper se f conta ned Also
!rom t.he same district on taking tton to be held the first Tuesday c ection on a proposed constitu
60x 2 ALL e lectr c H I crest
topper
W
se
l
separate
v
Mrs
V1rgm1a Anderson
DON
T
WASTE
PRECIOUS
office receives a greater compensa after the first Monday In May 1974. ional amendment submitted by the
p
•
mob e home w h o Water
Cal 985 3554 after 6 p m
Rl 2 Box 169
TIME
TO
BUY
OR
SELL
tlon auch rate o1 compensation a proposal to amend Section 1 of feneral assembly ahall not be rn
ap pad Phone 742 3123
weekdays
Ha o d Brew
CONTACT
OUR
OFFICE
lhall thereupon be payable to each Article XVI of the Constltu ion o1 o cd nor 1pval1dated because the
Oak
Htll Ohto45656
3 21 6tc
er Long Bottom Oh o
of the other office s ho dtng the Ohio to read as follows
explanation arguments or other in
3 15 tfc
.ame OffiC1! in that dfatr1ct
formation is faulty In any way U
HENRY E CLELAND
An officer who is appo n ed to tlll
ARTtCLE XVI
the maj ority of the electon voting
a vacancy In an elective office shall
o
t e same llhall adopt sue&amp;
BROKER
TRUCK topper for 8 ft bed
not be ent tied to receive more Section 1 Either branch of the a nendments the same shall become
992 2259
Factory
made
Phone
992
compensation than any elected offl gene al assemb Y may propose a part ot the constttuUon When
7132
eer holding the aame office In the amendments to thb constitution no e than one amendment shall be
If no answer 992 2568
same district ts receiving at the a d 11 the same shall be agreed to subm tted at the same time they
Pomeroy OhiO
3 19 6tc
lime such appointed officer takes by three fifths of the membera shal be .so submitted as to enable
Buy'Em Nowl
olftce
elected a each house such pro the electors to vote on eacfl amend. '-~----------1
Section 31 The members and offl posed amendments shall be en tered ment separately
·
OAL: FOR SAb.E JAYMAR
20
Turf Trtm J HP
cera of the Gene al Assembly shall on the journa s with the yeas and
COAL
COMPANY
THE
receive a fixed compensation to be nays and sha 1 be died wl h the
Big Capacity
ED P Data Entry Operator MEIGS &amp; GALL A LINE
POWER MOWERS
Dretcrlbed by law and no other 11ecretary of sta e at least ninety EFFECTIVE DATE AND REPEAL
Maytag
(Keypunch) start ng sa a y STATE
ROUTE 7 AT
allowance or perquisites either b days before the da e of the e ec ton lf adopted by a majority of the
Autom111cs
S2 88 hour Hou s I om 4 p m
1
CHESHIRE
OPEN
7
AM
the payment o1 postage or other at which they Are to be submitted t: ectors vo g on this amendment
2 speed operation
m dn ght Call Jan e
T LL 6 30 P M 5 DA VS A
wtae and no change in their com o the electors lor hetr approva l the amendme t shall take irnmedi
Choice of water
Barnett Oh o Un vers ty WEEK PHONE 992 5693
1h HP
26
Turf
Ttl3
l)ensatian shall take effect du ing or reJection They aha 1 be sub ate effect and ex sUng Section 1 of
Pte r sonne Off ce 594 5387
temps Auto water
the l~rlslatlve b ennlum within mitted on a sepa ate baUot without Article XVl of the C"onstltutlon of
3255tc
TILLERS
level control Lint
Equal Oppor tun ty Employer
whtch it was made
party destgnat on ol any kind at Ohio shall be repealed
s~tton 20a Notwlthstand ng s~c either a special or a general c ec
F Iter or Power Fin
3 22 3 c:
Wtth Reverse
tion 20 of Article II of the Constllu tton as the general ass embly may
1- - ·- - - - - - Agitator
8 YEARL NG Angus he fe rs
Uon of Ohio any increase in com prescribe
Perm• Pren
500 lb
average
Phone
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
penaatJon flxed by th.e General A11
The ballot language for such pro
1
Maytag
STATE OF OHIO
Thomas Sayre Great Bend
sembly !or any public officer which posed amenaments shall be p e
Halo of Heat
Portland 843 2491
*•use of Its beinll made during scribed by a majdrlty of the Oh o
OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY
WANTED TO RENT a 2 or 3
3 22 3tp
Dr yen
POMEROY LANDMARK
btl term of office does not become ballot board consl.lting of the sec
OF STATE
bedroom home or apartm ent - - - - - - - - - - - - - Surround
clothes
DIYible to such officer untn after retary o1 state and four other
... _ Jack W Carsey Mgr
two years from the date of I 11 en members who shall be designated I TED W BROWN Secretary of
furn shed o unfurn shed for a WE HAVE a 1 your upho s t ery
With gentle even
Phone 9?2 2181
acunent shall neverthele11s become 1n a manner prescribed by law and S1tare Indo hereby certuy that the
m ddle aged co uple Must needs
bur ap
denim
heat No hot spots
effective A*~ payable on and after not more than twa of whom shall orcgo g is a true copy a:t Amended
have washer and dryer and cambric foam glue zippers
n01overdrylno F ne
the etreeUve date of the enactment be members of th.e same pa Ileal Sena e Joint Reso utian No 15 and
a r cond ton ng Can prov de tack ng str ps spr ngs and
Mesh Lint Filter
of aueh lncrtase 1n eompensat on
part) The ba lot language sha 1 A end ed House Joint Resolution
eferences Phone 992 5791
cl ps
ch pboard
button f-OAM to f I you old co ucn and
We Spe~lalizeln
properly
tdent
fy
the
substance
of
N"o
61
flied
In
the
office
of
the
Sc HEDULE
MAYTAG
3 21 4 P tw ne sew ng thread
egs
the propc~sa l to be voted upon The Secrc ary of Sta e proposing to
chafr cush ons as ow as
Red Cttrptt
Tfle secretary of state shall pace ba lot need not conta n he full tex
ne nd the Const1tut on of Ohio
----- upho s e y books dacron
s
o
95
Upholst~ry books on v
UJ)On the ballot as separate issues nor a condensed tex t o! the pro
IN TESTIMONY WHEREOF I
StrYice
o rent a fun shed webb ng sp ng tw ne tacks
SOc 4 nell covered foam
the proposal to amend sectiont 20 posal The board sha 1 a so p epare h c hereunto subscr bed my name WANTED
1
a
er
or
sma
1
hou
se
n
he
wet
cord
cotton
sw
vel
mattresses
for
standard
s
ze
and 31 of ArUcle II and the pro an explanatt on of the proposal and affixed my official seal at Co
coun ry n Pome oy Ru and bases foam foam
foam
bed
529 95
Pomerov
poul to enact seeliona 20a of ArU wh ch may inc ude its: purpose an u nbus thia 1st day of March 19'74
a ea Cbntac Dean Sch o c k
Pomeroy Recovery 622 E
Recovery 622 E Main Street
de 11 cf the Constitution of Ohio effects and shall certify the bal o
TED W BROWN
Hunts Tra er Park Jackson
Man St
Pomeroy
Ohio
eo ea to permit the electorate to languan and the explanation to
Pomeroy Ohio Pt1one 992
vote M~rately on ..ch aucfl pro the s.ecret+.ry of ltate not Iuter
Secretary of State
011 o
phone 992 7554
7554
742-4211
Arnold Grate
3 20 61p
3 5 26tc
))OM).
than 10eventy ftve days before the Seal) 3 25 4
a 5 72 Stc
Rutland
3 5 26fc
139 4

Trails West 15 Hogans Heroes 13
6 00- News 3 4 8 10 15 Sesame St 20 ABC News 13 Pe
sonallty &amp; Behavioral Developme t 33 Truth or Con
sequences 6
6 30 - NBC News 3 4 15 CBS News 8 10 Room 222 13 AB C
News 6

•tailed

Ph 992 5271

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

2

a

ASK US ABOUT
PRE FABRICATED

From th e largest Truck or
Bulldozer Rad afar to the
sma les t Heater Core
Nathan 8 ggs
Rad1ator Soec1ahst

3 9 6 c

3 9 6 p

Water

8 00 - Nat anal Geograph c 6 Mag c an 3 4 15 Rook es 3
TheSe f sh G ant 8 10 Ra c heal La Cabana 0 La Rand ne

WOOD TRUSSES

Ph ?92 2174

TRA LER o n Rae ne
9?2 2 29 0 992 2838

CALL Po y s Auc on o s lop by
o ge
d of those unwanted
ems Se t I he auc on ~,;ay
SJ J H g h S r ee l M dd epo
992 3509 Open 9 am to 5 p m
Monday Wednesday Thu s
day F r day unt noon
3 13 JOtc

Open 8 TtiS
Monday thru Saturday
61M E Man, Pomeroy , 0 .

4 Harel 8
S 00 - Mr RQgers 20 33 Bonanza 3 Merv Gr It n 4 Andy
Grlffllh 8 Gomer Pyle 13 Big Valley 6
5 30 - Beverly Hi lib Illes 8 Elec Co 33 Hod9epodge Lodge 20

DITCHING SERVICE

Phone

3 24 61

INFORMA:TION
DEADLINES
5 PM Day Before Pub I ca1 c
Monday Dead ne 9 a m
Cance l at on
Cor ec ons
w be accep ed unt 9 a m lo
Day of P.ub t ca on
REGULAHONS
Th e Pub s he rese ves he
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etec any ads
deemed ob 1ect ona
The
pub sher w
no be espon
s ble to mo e han one n
co ec nse ton

-GUARANTEEDPHONE 992 2094

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

FURNITURE

33]5

WANT ADS

'5.55
On Most Amertca n Cars

OFFICE SUPPLIES

pm

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Wheel Alignment

992 2094
606 E Mam Pomeroy

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Auto Sales

4 30-GreenAcresJ G llgans s 6 13 Bonanza 15 J ackpo t

EXPERT

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO

Helen Help

MONDAY MARCH 24 1974

-

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S2695

197 OODGECORONET

Business Services

for Sale

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

197 3 CHEVROLET NOVA

Sea ed p
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D ec o o
men
of
Co um bus

You have a good chance to
earn btg money and prizes,
too To find out 11 there

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Oailv Sentinel, Mirldleoort-Pomeroy. o .. Mnroh 25. 1974 ·

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BEE CONTESTANTS - Fourteen Meigs County fifth,
sixth, seventh and eighth graders took part in the Meigs

.

Sonia Ash wins

.....

County Spelling Bee Monday evening at Eastern High School
in Reedsville. Contestants were, front row,!..-, Marty Foley
(3rd), John Jacobs,_Linda Kovalchik, Greg Walker, Janel
Horky, James Meadows, Christopher Wolfe; second row,
Kathy Quivey, Sonia Ash, Susan Hannum (4th), Debbie
Spencer, Laura Hoover, Dorothy Runyon , Garvllowar,d.

THE CHAMP - Sonia Ash, 12, a sixth grader at Syracuse
Elementary, won the Meigs County Spelling Bee .Monday
evening in the Eastern High cafeteria . Sonia, middle, is

• J

•

Meigs spelldown
Sonia Ash, 12, sixth grader at
Syracuse Elementary School,
became the second member of
her family to capture the
championship of the Meigs
County Spelling Bee Monday
evening in the Eastern High
cafeteria.
Sonia's sister, Demaris, won
the county bee in 1970 when she
was a sixth grader at Syracuse.
Sonia is the ·daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Richard Ash,
Syracuse.
Runner-up in the bee, Kathy
Quivey, of Salisbury, the
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
James Quivey, Shade, missed
the word, "lease," spelling it

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Sonia then spelled it
correctly, and correctly
spelled "lectern" to win the
bee.
The third place finisher was
Marty Foley, an eighth grader
at Southern Junior High, the
son of Mr. and Mrs. Gary
Foley.
Fourth place went to Susan
Hannum, seventh grader at
Riverview and the daughter of

Drive-In
Hours
Monday • Thursday ...... 9 to 3
Friday............................. 9 to 7
SaturdaY. ....:................. 9 to 12

•-

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By United Press International
WASHINGTON- THE HOUSE COMMITTEE which may
advise Congress to impeach President Nixon receives secret
information today from the Watergate grand jury which indicted
seven of his closest aides .or campaign workers.
Attorneys for two of those indicted, who last week had
challenged the transfer of the grand jury report on Nixon's handling of Watergate, let a 5 p.m. EDT Monday deadline pass
without appealing to the Supreme Court. Transfer of the report
was set for 9:30a.m. EDT today.
Before going to the House Judiciary Committee, which is
studying whether grounds exist for impeaching Nixon, the
material was held in the safe ofU. S. District Court Judge John J.
Sirica.

'•

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-

Friendly, Convenient
Service At The New

PNB AUTO BANK
1. Checking Accounts

4. Loan Payments

2. Savings Accounts

5. Christmas Club

3. Time Certificates of Deposn

6. Money Orders

Favors For All Visitors

,,'

Favors For All Of The Children

•

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.,

,.p omeroy
national
bank
.
.

the bank of
thP. century
established 1872

--

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FDIC

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

... ...... ........ ...
~

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MOSCOW - U. S. SECRETARY OF STATE Henry A.
Kissinger and Soviet Communist party general secretary Leonid
I. Brezhnev today discussed the delicate question of the Middle
East where Kissinger's personal diplomacy has annoyed the
Soviets.
State Department spokesman George Vest said the tv•o men
discussed Middle East in a three and one.!Jalf hour meeting at the
Kremlin on the second day of Kissinger's visit here.

Dean tells
on Mitchell
NEW YORK (UPI)-Form- rat, and tell him what's going
er White House Counsel John on in the southern district."
"So I called Kleindienst and
W. Dean Ill testified Monday
told
him Mitchell said it was a
that he called U.S. Attorney
General Richard Kleindienst in runaway grand jury."
The result of the grand jury
1972 on behaH of John N.
investigation
was the indictMitchell to complain about the
ment
of
Mitchell
and Stans on
way federal prosecutors were
charges of conspiring to imtreating Mitchell.
Appearing as key govern- pede a Securities and Exment witness at the federal change Commission (SEC)
court conspiracy trial of for- investigation of Vesco in return
mer Attorney General Mitchell for a $200,000 Nixon re-election
and former Commerce campaign contribution from
Secretary . Maurice H. Stans, the financier. Vesco also was
Dean sail/- Mitchell phoned him indicted but has fled the
to say he had undergone "one country, and Dean was named
hell of a grilling" before a co-conspirator but was not
-federal grand. jury in- indicted.
Dean answered questions put
vestigating an alleged attempt
to fix a case againSt financial to him by federal prosecutor
martipulator Robert L. Vesco. · James Rayhill with cool dis''Those llttle bastards in the patch and refused to be ruffled
southern district (New York) . in sharp cross-examination by
were all over mel" Dean Mitchell's attorney, Peter Flequoted Mitc~ll as saying. ming. Fleming dwelled mainly 1
''They asked questions all over on discrepancies between
the lot about (John) Erhllcb- Dean's testimony before the
man (President Nixon's a.sssls- grand jury and before the
tant) and about you. John, you current federal court jury in
had better call your friend regard to dates of meetings
Kleindienst, the attorney gene- and phone calls.

~

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enttne

Devoted To The Interest, Of The Meigs-Mason Area

VOL. XXV NO. 241

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

as rate
The resignation of a board of
public affairs member was
received, a first reading was
given an ordinance requiring
licensing of coin-operated
amusement machines and a

proposed natural gas contract,
providing for an approximate
30 pet. rate increase, was
tabled.
These were among the
matters which came before
Middleport Village Council
when it met in regular session
Monday night.
Resigning from the board of

•

public affairs was Jack M. replacement.
Council approved the first
Hawley who said in a letter
that his resignation had been reading or a new ordinance
brought about
because which will require that coinamu se ment
" complaints of irresponsible operated
in
business
citizens have invaded the machines
esta
blishments
must
be
privacy of my home and I
cannot make future decisions licensed through village hall.
without allowing prejudice to The ordinance provides a $50
charge for machines which
enter therein."
The acceptance of the accept 25 cenl~ or more and $25
resignation submitted as of for machines which take less
March 20 will be up to the than 25 cents. The license fee
board of public affairs and for a juke box will be $50. Fines
Mayor John Zerkle will be for failure to pay the fee range
responsible for naming a from $100 to $200 and each day

Regatta reviewed
Plans for the Big Bend
Regatta were reviewed by the
Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce Monday at noon at the
Meigs Inn. Discussion and
action centered on:
Earl Ingels, president, appointed Fred Morrow and Don
Thomas to lake charge of
selling display space on the
parking lot; the sky diving
exhibition will be held on
Sunday at I p.m. on Regatta
weekend instead of Saturday
as was planned earlier, and
due to an apparent lack of

interest in crew races, regattc:l
power boat racing is back in, to
be held on Sunday.
Dottie Musser, representing
the Ohio Eta Phi Sorority, met
with the chamber in regard to
the annual Regatta Queen
contest. The sorority will
sponsor the event, the date and
time to be announced.
Ingels observed that due to
rising costs the chamber will
welcome financial assistance
from all organizations participating in this year's
Regatta.

e reta

l

Dale Warner stated there is a
possibility that Willie Sutton,
the notorious ex.bank robber,
may make a n appearance on
Friday night at the Regatta.
There is nothin g definite,
however .
Attending were Ingels, Bob
Jacobs , Dale Warn er, Bill
Grueser, Richard Chambers,
C. E. Blakeslee, Jack Carsey,
Don Thomas, Wendell Hoover,
Virgil Teaford , Ted Reed, N.
W. Compton, Mrs . Musser,
Mrs. Carolyn Thomas and
Beulah Jones.

TEN CENTS

PHONE 992·2156

TUESDAY, MARCH 26. 1974

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

of violation is a separate offense. Funds raised through
the sale of the licenses will be
earmarked for rec reation .
For the second time in two
weeks. John Koebel of The

Columbia Gas Co. of Ohio,
appeared before council to
discuss a new four-year contract between the village and
the company for natural gas.
Koebel said that the actual

e
increase being sought for the
company is 21.1 pet. and that
request is based on expenses of
the company in the community. The addi ti onal per(Continued on page 10)

•

1
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B

Pomeroy
national
bank

A

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K

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.

POMEROY MAYOR DALE SMITH, second from left, congratulated Edison Hobstetter,
president of the Pomeroy National Bank, Mondsy afternoon when the bank's new auto bank
facility on E. Second St. was informally dedicated. On the left is Mrs. Joan Wolfe and on the
right is Mrs. Lera Jones who will stall the new facility .

WASHINGTON - THE CHAIRMAN OF THE HOUSE
committee that reported President Nixon spent .$17 million to
maintain his vacation homes says despite blistering White House
criticism the report is "objective and straightforward."
Rep. Jack Brooks, D-Tex., said Monday the re~rt, ~e
specifics of which are still supposed to be confidential,
documents, "hOW $17mllllon of taxpayers' money was spent that
would not have been spent but for the Pr •ident's desire to
(Continued on page 10)

a

pomeroy
rutland

Mr. and Mrs. Roy Hannon,
Long Bottom; while Dorothy
Runyon, an eighth grader at
Tuppers Plains, and the
daughter of Mr. Don Runyon,
Coolville, took fifth place .
Miss Ash, whose hobbies
besides
spelling
are
cheerleading and playing
softball, will now go on to the
47th Annual State Spelling Bee,
sponsored by the Columbus
City Journal, in Columbus on
May 4.
Judges for the contest were
. John Riebel, Superintendent of
the Eastern School District;
George Hargraves, superintendent of the Meigs School
District, and Bob Ord,
superintendent of the Southern
School District.
Chairman of the event was
county supervisor Nellie Vale,
assisted by Greta Suttle. Meigs
County School Superintendent
Robert E. Bowen, presented
the awards, and Carol
Swog~er, English teacher at
Eastern
High
School,
pronounced the words.

Oanked by (left) Nellie Vale, Meigs County Supervisor, her
father; Richard Ash, (right) her mother Betty Ash and
Robert E. Bowen, Meigs County Superintendent of Schools .

Auto hank opens Wednesday

I
/

DR. JOHN IJGHT, president of Hocking Technical College, Nelsonville, center, was
keynote speaker Monday when the Meigs High School sixth annual vocational conference week
got underway. With Dr. Light are, James Diehl, principal, left, who introduced the keynote
speaker, and Harold Sauer, a guidance counselor at the school.

Pomeroy's newest business
- the Pome roy Auto Bank owned by th e Pomeroy
National Bank will open
Wednesday.
Located on East Second St.,
the new facility was built by
the Karr ConStruction Co.,
Pomeroy Route 3, on property
formerly owned by the late Mr.
and Mrs. P. K. Smith.
Staffed by Mrs. Joan Wolfe
and Mrs. Lcra Jones, the drivein bank will be open from 9
a.m. to 3 p.m. Monday through
Thursday; fr om 9 a.m. to 7

. ompli.shme·nt ~~~D~~:l~ickguct~~eu;~~~~~s
:0~~i~~\':,~~:~:; a.m.
Goal IS ace
•

"Degrees are not important
but accomplishment is," Dr.
John Light, president of
Hocking Technical College,
Nelsonville, said Monday when
he addressed Meigs High
School ·students as keynote
speaker of the sixth annual
vocational conference week.
Speaking on the topic, "You
and Your Career," Dr: Light
said he expects the "career
scene" in southeastern Ohio
will change so that young
people do not ~~live to leave it
for their gainful employment.
"Good advice is fine, ·but
somewhere along the line, you
will have to make decisions for
yourselves," Dr. Light commented and urged students to
have a career [llan to follow.
"One who follOws a plan gets
results," the guest speaker
said.
Pointing out . the opportunities students will have
this week as represents lives of
numerous
trades
and

20

professions visit the school, Dr.
Light urged students to be
serious but to remember that
decisions made during the
week as to a career are not
finn!. Students should allow !01:
r peelable alternatives such
a~~oing into on the job tr~ining
d !tending a two year
~~lleg:; to ask themselves
questions as to their likes, their
aims such as service or money,
and what life style they seek ;
explore other areas than the
careers just in their iminediate
. te Is· to use their own
m res , not attending a
judgment,
certain school or entering a
certain "profession because a
friend did, and to seek out all of
the information that is
available through the speakers
who will be at the school this
k
wee ·
"Do~ ' t be afraid to make a
decision, set a goa l, and go for
it," Dr. Light concluded.
Speakers during the Wedl,

nesday sessions which start at
10:05 a.ll_l. e~ch mormng thiS
week will mclude : A. M.
,Blythe, aJrp!ane mechamc,
Pittsburgh
Institute _of
Aeronau!Jcs; Mack Eilts,
Federal Bureau of In'vestigation, . Athens; Bert L.
Walter, d1rec1Jon of admissions, Mountain State
College; J_ack L. Walker,
funeral dtrector, Walker
Funeral Home , Rutland;
Paul. L. Cas~1, U. S. Postal
Serv 1ce, Middleport . Postmaster; Dean Brown, dtrector
of admtsstons,
· ·
R'to Gran de
College ; Dr. Kenneth Meyers,
elem~ntary and secondary
teachmhg,KRikO Grandde College;
Josep
u oy ,_ a mtssoons
department, Toffm Umve~soty;
Dr. J. K . Bratton, vetennary
medocone , Athens; Bernard
Fultz, law, Pomeroy; Everett
Holcomb. agriculture, farmerteacher; Gary Swope, game
proector, Ohio Department of
Wildlife .

9

Wind ows are bullet proof and
the entire setup is hooked to an
extensive burglar alarm
system. The drive-in facility
will offer loan payment,
checking, saving, time cer-

Suspicion of

theft probed
The Pomeroy Fire Department was called at 4:05 a.m.
tOday to the Charles Conner
residence near the Logan
Monuffient Co. , where a car,
owne~ by Conner, was on fire.
The 1972 Ford LTD was
damaged in the amoun t of
$1,000. According to Charles
Legar, Pomeroy Fire Chief,
evidence was found that
someone was attempting to
steal gasoline from the car
when the fire started. A hose
was found in ttie lank as was a
gasoline can nearby . The incident is under investigation.

tificate of deposit, Christmas
club and money order services.
The bank , which has
maintained a drive up facility
at the side of the present
s tructure, will cOntinue to
maintain that walkup service.
A snor kel setup, however, for
use at the drive-up window at
the· present bank will not be
used in the future.
During the next few days
children and adults visiting the
new auto bank will receive
favors and for the next five
weeks, each Saturday from
April 6 through May 4, grand
opening prizes of $20, $10 and $5
will be offered those who have
registered during the week.
In brief ceremonies Monday,
the new establishment was

officially dedicated
by
Pomeroy Mayor Dale Smith,
Bank President Edison Hob·
stetter, and the new employes,
Mrs. Wolfe and Mrs. Jones.
Mayor Smith said the new
facility is an improvement to
the town as it replaces older
property which was razed to
make room ror the new auto
bank.

Junior hand
is rated I

The Meigs Junior High Band,
under the direction of Fred
Ruth, received a superior
rating of I at the Ohio
Educators Music Association
District XV Band and Chorus
Competition at Minford on
Saturday, March 23.
· The band received straight I
The Meigs County Sheriff's ratings from all three judges.
Departp1ent investigated a The selections played by the
two -car accident at 7:15 band were "At the Summit" by
Monday on SR 124 in Olive Jerry Nowak, "Passacaglis In
Eflat" by M. Frank, and
Twp.
According to the report, "Balladair" by Frank Erikson.
Ruth said that the band
Harding Max Long, 17,, Tempe,
Ariz., had stopped his car on members did an outstanding
the roadway, just over the job especially considering that
crest of a hill when a car this was the very first effort in
traveling east struck the such competition.
parked vehicle in the rear. ·.
Ruth .an~ band members
·· Driver ol the second car, · thank Charles Wolls of Eastern
Robert W. Osborne, Reeds· Hi gh School and John
ville, reported he was blinded Brunicardi for their assistan~e
by the sun and failed to see on preparong the band for this
Long's vehicle .
competitoon and parents who
There were no personal accompanied the band on this
injuries and no citati.ons successful venture. The band is
issued. There was moderate now Rreparing for its annual
property damage.
spring conceot on late Apnl.

Driver blinded
by bright sun

)

•

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