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!he Daily Sentinel, Midd!~port-Pomeroy, 0., April.9, 1974 :...
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Ambulance fund :~~arns hined ·by
over the top ..

IRS .u sed

Wage hill signed

{Contillued from page 11
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. WASHINGTON (UPI) - ride the veto failed.
White House aide Tom Charles
When a president is particular-. The minimum wage will he Huston a's ked for an IRS.
ly pleased with a piece of raised to $2 an hour May 1, to progress ~eport on the review
· legislation, he throws open the $2.10 an hour Jan . 1, 1975, and of "operations of Ideological
A. two.fllonth fu~d drive by Paul Davis, Cindy Craig and
.doors to his Oval Office and to $2.30 an hour Jan. 1, 1976.
Organizations. ' '
the
Mtddleport Ftre Depart- Jackie and Diane Carsey,
Commented Weicker : "They
invites' congressional leaders,
Included in minimum wage
ment
to secur.e funds for a new Middleport area; Mrs. ·June
cabinet members and television coverage for the first time were lumped ideological together
emergency
ambulance has Thomas, Mrs. Pearl Edwards,
c~meras to record the historic domestic service employes _ . with activist and militant."
endedsuccessfully with a total Storys Run area; Mrs. Donald
stgnlng. .
'except babysitters and paid.
In the exhibit on the satirical
of
$16,499 - the goal was Karr, Leading Creek area;
He ~amputates dozens of ·companions ; all state and local movie "Millhouse: A White
$15,000.
·
· Ernest Van Inwagen, Bradpens wtth grand flourtshes, and gO.~rnment worke~s; and retail Comedy," Jack Caulfield
at
the
start
of
the
bury; Mrs . Glenna Fetty,
Firemen
the asse~bled onlookers eager- service workers employed by recommends to John W. Dean,
drtve
had
pledged
$3,000
in
Langsville;
Mrs. Gerald
ly awatt the gtft of the chain stores
m in a White House memo :
thetr department's operating Minor, Dexter; Mrs. Carl
presidential ballpoin,ts.
The law · also will extend "Release of (producer Emile)
fund
for the new ambulance. Hysell, Mrs. Harold Hysell,
He has a speech about the provisions requiring payment or de Antonio's F .B.!. derogatory
However,
due to the over-the· Rutland; Mrs. Barbara Offutt;
surpassing publtc good that wtll overtime in excess of 40 hours background to frie!IQI,¥. media"
top
respo~se
by the pubhc, Route 33 area; Marjorie
accrue from the legislation.
a week to 8 million workers not and "Discreet IRS 'aUdits of.
~erne~
wtll
not
have to gtve up Saunders, chairwoman, Erna
And it ~arely is a time for now covered - mostly in hotels, New Yorker Films, Inc ."
WAYfi&lt;E AD"MS
e entire $3,000.
Cornelius, Helen Preston,
parllS8nshtp. Accolades are restaurants , nursing homes,
The doctiments on the Brook·
MARlETT A - The Ohio
Offtctals
of
the
department
Gladys Rife, Mrs. Donald s.
. heaped equally upon the con- bowling alleys and similar ings Institute indicate that
Department of Trans· today extended their sincere Skaggs, O'Della Mack and
gresswnal guests, Democrat businesses.
Dean, then President Nixon's
portalion District Ten thanks to the
public, Erma! Cremeans Ch~shire
~nrt Republican alike. It is a
In his written statement lawyer, considered tax audiU!
Deputy Director, Max R. ~u~messes , organizations and area .
'
tin~e. for jolly good will, and the Nixon said, "On the whole: and " turning the spigot off" of
Farley, announc ed that mdtviduals for the wonderful
The final list of contributors
pohllcal differences are latd e-S2747 contains more gond than 'g overnment contracts and
Wayne Barry Adam s has response . The new vehicle has · included Mr. and Mrs. Charles
astde in ~e super abundance of bad and I have concluded that $500,000 in federal grants .
••sumed ihe position of been ordered.
.
Wise, Phyllis Hawley, Mr. and
cooperallon.
the best interests of the Weicker said the Institute was
P'ublic Information Officer
Volunteer, workers With the Mrs . William Reynolds,
. On Monday.' President Nixon American peopJe.will be served "A Democratic think-tank
for the nl~e-county district. department . greatly asststed Jonnie 's Beauty Shop, Mid·
Slg~ a bill he was no\ by signing it into law ."
sometimes called a . governwtth the drtve. The workers dleport Child Conservation
parttcularly pleased wtth. .
"AlthoUgh 1 have some n\ent-in-exile."
mcluded Mrs. Grace Pratt and League, Carl and Anne Taylor,
The doors on the Oval Offtce reservations about portions of
The Ford Foundation, which
Mrs.
Ruth Powers, co- Mr. and Mrs. Joe Turner,
ACTION DELAYED were opened, no members or !.his legislation, its basic pur. largely fUI)ds the institute, also
The State Board
of chatrWo~.en, and Donna Boyd, Amanda Murray, a con Congress were present. There pose - to Increase the mini- came under Dean's scrutiny,
Education Monday deferred Mrs. William Davts, the late tribution in memory of Mrs
wa_s . only one any cabinet mum wage for working men the exhibit indicates.
on
considering Betty Cline, Emma Wayland, Maude Scott, Marcella Fraser:
o!ftctal, Labor Secretary Peter and women of thts countr _
The ''Goldberg" file merely action
Besste Darst, Frances Roush, Ernie Fraser and Florence
Brennan .
deserves the support 0/ all indicates that one La~ence revocation of th e Trimble
Nan Moore, Mildred Hawley, Fraser Baker Carl Gardner
There was only one pen. Americans .. Nixon said ..
. Yale Goldberg of Provtdence, Local School District in Athens
Gemma
Casci, Unda Stobart, Mr. and Mrs. 'Paul Kloes, Mr:
Nixon affixed his signature
"The f~derally leglslated R.I. d~na";d $3,659.16 to Jew_lsh County . According . to a
Mrs.
L.
D. Ervm, Mona Lee and Mrs. Henry Davis, Mr. and
quickly, skidded ;the pen across minimum wage for most chart!tes m 1968, prompUng department spokesman, action
Patty
Kloes, Beth Mrs. Raymond Fife, Sr., Mr.
Neal
,
the presidential ilesk to Bren- American workers has re- Caulfteld to observe to Dean m was delayed because of the
Vaughan, Martanne Caruthers, and Mrs. Everett PlantZ, Mr.
nan, and flipped the completed mained static for six years, an Oct. 6, 1971 memo "it unsettled conditions ·On the
Mrs .. John Nash, Mrs. Curtis and Mrs. Art SI.Obart, Rich
bill like a frisbee into the out- despite a number of increases postures an extr~ely heavy Athens County Board of
Jenkmson,
Mrs. Ernest Valley Dairy, Ohio Eta Phi
box in the right hand corner of in the cost of living. raising the mv~lvement in JewiSh orgaru- c&amp;lucation. Should the Trimble Bowles, Mrs. Perry Hoffman, Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi
his desk.
minimum wage Is now a matter zahonal activity ...the ~ttorney charter be revoked, the Athens
Mrs. Bobby Payne , Mrs. Sorority, Chatholic Women's
The reporters let in moments of justice that .can no longor be General Should be discreetly County Board of Education
Shuler, Mrs. Roscoe Club
First
United
Emmett
would
need
to
make
made aware In this regard."
before were whisked out. There fairly delayed .,
l'owler,
Mrs.
William
KenPresbyterian
Church
and
had been no presidential
·
The tax exhibit indicates arrangements for the transfer
nedy.
Mrs.
Denver
Rice,
Jane
Charles
Burdette.
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apeech, although Nixon murm·
Two dollars an hour comes Whi!e Hous'e interest in audits of the district.
Gllkey , Mrs, Roscoe Fife, Mrs.
ered a few words as he signed, out to $80 a week, $4,ISO a year being run on Evangelist Billy
and the White House issued a - before taxes. .
.
· Graham and actor John
lukewarm statement afterBrennan, who said the Wayne, both friends of
Pl-esident Nixon .
wards .
signing "marks a great day for
th T~~kets for th.~ excursion on the caliope at last year's and · Southeastern Telephone
American working men and
FIVE FINED
The ~~ceremony" was over. women," put the presidential
e Chaperone on May 18 are Regatta , ha s agreed to par- Company on May 21 at
The provisions of the new law pen in a box embossed with a SYRACUSE - Five persons gm~g very well and are shU hl:tpate again this year at a Pomeroy Council Chambers at
said that in three weeq 1the presidential seal, and left the were fined in Syracuse Mayor avatlable.
cost of $450 for the three day 10 :30 a.m . Purpose of the
minimum wage for aboul 54 Oval Office,
~erman
London 's Court
meeting is to extend services,
That was th~ report by Earl even t. No action was taken.
Monday night. Fined were Ingels, prestdent of the
million Americans would be $2
Chamber members are toll- free between the two
per hour.
Daniel R. McCloud Mid· Pomeroy Chamber of C~m- seeking pictures of the bend compani~s. Approximately 985
The nation had its first new
MRS. ROUSH DIES
dleport,' · Brian E . ' Bass, ~erce to the group follow~ng area for a feature in Discovery residents would receive the
minimum wage bill since 196?. MASON, W. Va . - Mrs. Ed Syracuse, and Wildy D. uncheon Monday at the Metgs Magazine. Anyone having service.
About 7 to s· million new "Dolly" Roush, 99, Mason, died Oours, Racine, $15 and costs Inn ·
.
sut·tab! e pictures should conIngels also observed that the
workers were brought under lh}s morni~g at Pleasant each, speeding, Robert H.
.~n other bust~ess members tact the chamber office.
chamber did not endorse
the minimum wage umbrella. Valley H?spttal following an Roush, Racine, $10 and costs
Ingels reported
will be sponsoring a trade magazine in
dtscu ssed leastng a Xerox
And Congress had a political exte~ded tllness. Mrs. Roush is unsafe operation of a moto; copter. They as ked Mrs . going to Columbus in June to the area.
victory over a reluctant Presl- surviVed by a step..daughter, vehicle, Douglas J . Johnson
Car~lyn Thomas, secreta ry, to make a tape advertising the
Attending were Ingels, Dick
dent.
Mrs. Charles (Ada) Kenney, of Racine, $100 and costs, thre~ mqutre of local. business of. Regatta. Ingels also reported Pouhn , Fred Mprrow, Richard
It was just seven months ago- Virginia, grandchildren, and days confinement, operating a !tees,. orgamzatwns , or the that nig.htwa tchman John Chambers, c. E. Blakeslee
that Nixon vetoed as inflation. nieces and nephews. Mrs. motor vehicle while under the pubhc to see tf they would be Pickens is on duty.
Carolyn Thomas, Bill Grueser:
ary and too liberal an almost Roush was born Dec. 11, 1875. influence of alcohol. All were mterested m sharmg the copier
Ingels will represen t the Ralph
Graves,
Wendell
ldenUcal bill. Efforts to over- Funeral arrangements will be cited to court by Police Chief and the expense. Cost for chamber at a hearing by the Hoover, Jack Carsey, Ted
announced by . Foglesong Milton Varian.
:~~~~g the machine is $40 per Public Utilities Commission, Reed, Beulah Jones and Katie
Funeral Home pending arrival
·
General Telephone Company Crow .
of relatives .
Myron
Duffield,
who
played
THEATR~
Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED ~Madolyn
Tues., Wed., Thurs.
. CAR WASHSET
Salser,
Middleport; Patrick
April 9-11
The)rfeigs cheerleaders will
Clifford, Pomeroy; Mabel
sponsor a car wash Saturday
NOT OPEN
Beatty, Middleport; Bessie
from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. at
Stitt, Racine; Alpha Cotterill,
Welker's Ashland, Pomeroy.
Syracuse; David Napper, Jr.,
Rutland; Della Sauer, Point
Pleasant; Samuel Rairden,
Long Bottom; Sadie Trussell,
Long Bottom; Laurene Lewis
Clifton; Randy Smith, J!acine;
Judith Steinmetz, Pomeroy;
Ralph Rife, Cheshire.
DISCHARGED Mary
Ellen Dye, Demmett Welch,
Joyce White and Duane
Weaver.

Chaperone fares going well

he

MEIGS

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Metropolitan
representative proposed·
suring the health of
employes. The proposal ·
acce,pted: .
'
~ Glenn and Donald
asked that (or a plot for a
housing development to
knpwn as the Triple T E::t~:l
water lines be installed I&gt;
the paving of streets and befclre
construction gets underway .
Council assured ·the request
would be granted as soon as uie
weather permitted.
A traller permit was granted
to Mary Goodnite on Rollins St.
Council a~reed to notify
citizens of New Haven and
parents to keep children and
dogs out of gardens and lawns
during the garden plantllig
season and young lawns.

Your

Shopping

Headquarters
Select your E:aster outfit now
from our Second · Floor
Ready-to-Wear Department.

Big seledion of Spring Coats
featuring woven texturized
polyester and jacquard
polyester.

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PLEASANT VALLEY

Di~harges: '/•Irs . William
Roush, son, Hartford; James
Garrison,
Ravenswood;
'·Charles Connolly, Leon; Mary
Becky, Point Pleasant; Vula
Fry, West Columbia; Mrs.
Earl Robbins, !,eon, and Mrs.
W. E. Carter, Ripley.

,
. .. . of peac;e of mind when you have

a checking account. Whether .'I t be
personal or business. the records a
checking account gives you ~can help

.

know where you stand financially.

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WALK-UP TELLER WINDOW AND (
. AUTO TELLER .WINDOW OPEN

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F.or ~ent

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Main Store and Warehouse Open Weekdays 9:30 to ~5....
p-.m-.":'.- - - - - : : . . . - - - - - - J
Open Both Fric!av and Saturday 9':30 to 9 p.m.

I
M ·lfC
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ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Auto Sales
1
196_8 TOYOTA Jee p . Excellent
concm fon ~ Phone 949 :4761. ·

. Insurance ·

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adults' only . Phone 992 -5592:

~I!)QI.,EPORT, OHIO

. M1111ber Federal

MEN'S AND BOYS' ·.
DEPART1\'IENT .
SlACKS • SHIRTS • TIES ~
SPORTCOATS .• ACCESSORIES

erpertmenr

1FURNISHED

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Jewelry - Scarfs· Handbags Gloves · Lingerie · Hosiery in
our Second Floor Accessori~s Department.

SHOP THE FIRST FLOOR

LOCAL TEMPS
.The temperature in. downtown Pomeroy at 11 a·.m.
Tuesday was 3S degrees with
snow railing.

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Tr enching of Minersville.

The board an.d t he youtlts agreed to set a meeting date of
May 14 when the entire student council is to meet wi th the boa rd
to try and iron out differences.
In other action, 56 teaching contracts, 12 prin cipal a nd

Williams sa id the insta llation calls for 221! feet of pipe at
Bradbury Elemen tary , J60 at Salem Center and 4110 at
H" rri so nville. At $1.37 per foot , tha t would cost $394.56 ill
Bradbury , $21 9.20at Salem Center and $548 at Harrisonvi lle. The

assista nt princ ipal contra cts , 37 e xtra assignment recom-

2·inch pipe wo uld be the best, especia lly to protect aga inst wh&lt;Jl

mendations, and 24 contracts for non-certifi ca ted employees

Williams called "water surge," the boa rd agreed .

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In other boa r d action resignations were·accepted effect ive a t

were approved .

TI1ree extra assignment recommendations were tabled for the end of this school yea r from Mary Chapm;m , high school
furtl1er investiga tion , incl udin g the post of Adult Physic!'! Fit· teacher; Mary Virgini a Reibe l, elementary teacher ; .Juctith
ne ss Head and that of Athleti c Fa cilities Ca re. both presently :,.Gannaway , kindergar ten teacher ; Stephani e Niemtcc, high
belonging to Athletic Director and Head Football Coach Charley school teacher; Jo!tn Bentley as head wrestling coach ; Charles
Chan cey; The third was the post or safety patrol chiel for Downie as assistant varsity footba ll coach and as assistant. track
Pomeroy. That was tabled due to s u~estion s by several boa rd coach, and Mary C. Dunfee. elemenwry teacher.
members that there should also be safety patrol supervision at
Ray Goodman wa s appointed the new head wrestl ing coac h,

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Weather
not as cold tonight, lower 40s.
Cloudy and warmer ontThursday, highs in the upper 60s and
lower 70s in the south.

fJet,oted To The
POMEROY MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

VOL. XXV
. - NO. 252
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replacing B€ntley &gt;
Also appoint ed was Ja ck Slavin as an ar t teacher in the high
~ SL"hoo l .
.
'I11e scliooi calendar for the 1974-75 schpo l yea r was adopted
and Mrs . Eugene Hawkins was appointed a sub sti tute custod ian .
A one-yea r leave of absence was approved for Sharon.Rans·
dell. science teacher , and attendance at eleven meetings by
tea chers and administra tors were dpproved .
·n,e board also discussed the need for a ha ll monitoring
system a t the tugh sehoul du e to destruction and oth er acts of
va ndali sm by some students. Th e boa rd agreed to have
Hargra ves, Diehl and Taylor propose a worka ble hall monitoring
system for nex:t year .
The board also granted the request of the Community Action
Program to llliC rooms in the Sa lem Center, Hutland , Salisbury
and Middl eport Elemenwry schools for Head Start programs
thi s

S UilUilt!f .

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Th e board agreed to pay $260 to defe r the costs of new
aud itor ium curlll ins at Sa lisbury, with the Sa lisbury PTA to pay
th e rem e~ ini ng $4:HJ.
1 Contlllued 01 1

pa gL" 11 f

Now You Know

en tine

at y

Increasin g cloudiness and

Inter~~&amp;

t\l thoug h ct nthropoids tend to
he &lt;.Li nb id c x: t~ ro us , on ly about8
pet. of hum cms favor- tile left
hand .

OJ The Meig$-Mmon Area

TE N CE NTS

PHONE 992-21 56

WEDNESUAY, APRIL 10. 1974

Travel gas
"for summer
is assu·r ed
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WASHINGTON &lt;UP!) - Energ y chief William
E . Simon said today there will be enough gasoline
available for Americans to take their normal
• summer trips this year. Simon said that with ra pidly
· .j.
improving gasoline supplies - as oil is again
!-..
reaching this country from the Middle E a st - the
situation has returned to " near normal. "
• ' II
" As the supplies again begin to land on this
shore, we'll have a sufficiency of gasoline with the
ERECTION OF UNIT I turbine-generator at the Gavin Plant near Cheshire is progressing.
production levels that have been esta blished cer·
The equipment dwarfs workmen. This unii is scheduled for operation lat e this year . Picture
tainly by the end of May ," Simon said . Simon also
from the Ohi~ower News.
predicted that first quarter profits of major oil
companies will be so high as to be " embarrassing "
to them when compared to the first three months of
1973.

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Egg hrmt
is Srmday

»

By United Press International
WASHINGTON -PRESIDENT NIXON FLIES to Michigan
today to support a Republican congressional candidate and to
test his own political strength, which has eroded in the wake of
the Watergate scandals.
Nixon arranged a one-day motorcade swing through nine
rural conservative communities in Michigan's 8th Congressional
District to campaign for James M. Sparling'Jr., a Republican
running agsinst Democrat Robert Traxler in a special election
April 16.
·

The traditional Easter Egg
Hunt sponsored by the Mid·
dleport • Pomeroy Rotary will
be held Sunday at ! ' p.m. at
Middleport Park according to
James Roush .
The egg hunt is for young·
sters up 1.0 12 years of age . The
Rotary will be assisted by
members of Middleport Fire
I)epartment. Prizes will be
awarded by Middleport and
Pomeroy Merchants.
The finding of the gold egg
will offer a prize of $10 and the
silver egg, $5. In case of bad
weather the event will be postponed.

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Chance of showers and
thundershowers Friday and
Saturday ending on Sunday .
Highs in the 6Qs and lower
70s on Friday and lows in the
40s turning cooler by Sunday
with the highs in the 50s and
lows io the upper 30s and
lower 40s.
m.~m:.:.c

.r£&amp;.£ xz

Plans to build a aLittle
Th,tta ter" room in the present
kitchen of the Meigs Museum
in Pomeroy were made by the
board of Meigs County Pionee r
and Historica l Society Tuesday
night in its quarterly session at

well" . The commission will
meet again on April 30.
Mrs. Ge ra rd Hilfer ty is
hea ding publicity for an essay
contes t on Me igs County
history . The con test is open · to

U1e public with $100 to be&lt;v
awarded in prizes. The writers
or the bes t essays will be
prese n ~d their prizes at a
special ce remony during the
Rega tta at the museum 's
Heritage Sunday celebrati on
June 23.
Building requests included
use of the museum on April 22
for a committee mee ting or the
Meigs County Association ol
American University Women,
May 11 for an aucti on sale by
(Continued on page II )

The garage will bec ome a
workroom and two storage
areas will be crea ted as work
continues to get the museum
operating . Other work such as
roof repair , pain tin g a nd
drainag e at the museum
property on Butternut Ave. is
continuing.

JAYCEES TO MEET
~ Mr s.
Jennifer
Sheets
The Meigs County Jaycees reported plans for the bi·
will meet tonight at 8 p.m. at centennial observance 'in
Pomeroy Village Hail.
tleigs Coun ty are "progressing

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Damage to planf heavy
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Tornadoes wh ich ri pped the
midwes t Wednesday, Apri l 3
did considera ble damage to
Ohi o Valley E lectric Corporation's Clifty Creek Station
at Mad ison, In diana , a sister
plant of the Kyger Creek
Station in Ga llia Coun ty.
In a recent delayed pending
assessment of da mages, it was
disclosed the huge substation
adjacen t to the generating
station was com pletely leveled,
ca usi ng the plant' s six
ge nerating units to be shut
down , accor ding to Raymond
Blowers, assistant manager of

by Stewart

NEW YORK- WIRE SERVICE GtnLD members returned
to work at United Press. International today, ending a 23-day
strike, the first by editorial employes in the news agency's 67· · '
year history. Striking newsmen, newswomen, photographers,
editors and other Guild..:overed.employes returned .to work at
midlilght, six hoW's. after the Guild announced , that Guild '
members, lri a national referendum, approved a new ·two-year
(Continued on
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PRETTY PAPER FLOWERS , with the occasional accent of a bird or a bunny, give an
Easter look to the hall at the Middlepor t Ele!Tlentary School. The colorful nowers were made
by children of Miss Ba rbara Loga n's second grade and Mrs. Helen Maag 's first grade , in·
eluding these five, left to r i ~ t . Cha rles Davis , Lynn Epple, Lisa Sn yder , Billy Fink , and Beth ·
Ann Wolfe.

Plea made

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Museum to have
liule theater
the museum .

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alway of financial reporting as
compared to the first quarter
of last year that they're going
to be embarrassing (because)
of the gasoline shortfall and the
experience that the American
people have had. "But ...we
have to sit back and take a look
at how !.he oil company profits
(Continued on page II')

Simon · was asked to comment during an interview on
the NBC-TV Today Show on a
statement by Sen. Henry M.
Jackson, 0-Wash. that oil
company profits would be
''obscene.''
"I don't think that I'd use
that adjective," $imon said . " I
would say Ihat in the tradition-

WASHINGTON - SECRETARY OF STATE Henry A.
Kissinger returned Tuesday nigM . from his Ill-day Mexican
honeymoon to resume .the frantic diplomatic· schedule he has
maintained since adding the l!llbinet post to his White House
duties last September.
Kissinger will go io Ne.w York late Sunday to make an important speech Monday morning at the United Nations special
session on world resoprces. While there, he is expected to meet
with "several" foreign ministers attending the conference before
returning Monday night to Washington, ·Department spokesman
John F. King said.
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come a bove the r ib cage.

WASHINGTON- THE ARAB OIL EMBARGO may have
been a good thing, Federal energy chief William E . Simon said
Tuesday, because it crystallized concern for energy problems
that had been neglected for years .
"The embargo came at precisely the right time ... at a time
when the seriousness of the energy problem was a matter of debate - and it made all of us realize that it's a fact, not a
question," Sunon told the House legal and monetary affairs
subcomnnittee. Mew years earlier and we would have dismissed
'it as an unimportant inconvenience. A few years later and its
impact would have been too large for any federal program to
avoid or alleviate."
WASHINGTON ~ SENATE MAJORITY LEADER Mike
Mansfield expects a vote on the bill for publl~ financing of federal
election campaigns before the Easter recess Thursday, now tliat
the Senate has cut off debate on the measure .
The Senate voted, 64 I&amp; 30; for cloture Tuesday, one more
vote than the needed two-thirds· rna jority for ending talk about
th'e bill. It was only the 17th time since the Senate instituted
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cloture 57 years ago the chamber hail invoked It.

Complete
selection
of
dresses and pantsuits in
Misses, Juniors and Half
Sizes .

REPORT MADE
The Pomeroy Wesleyan
Hoi mess Church reports attenda_nce for ·April 8 at 104.
Offenngs and tithes tOtalled
$432.35. The Pastor,. Odell
Manley; would .like . to thank
everyone.

make tax time or any time ~asier to
It's o good feeling to bank -With

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Middleport an d J(utland .
The board also a pproved the sale of a sc hool bu s to Pomeroy
Boy Scout Troop 249 for $250 following di scussion with Henry
C.1eland , Jr .
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In other action. the board studi ed insu&lt;llation of new two-i nrh
water lines with Wendell Williams and Tom Crisp of Williams

XENIA, OHIO - GOV . JOHN J. GILLIGAN got another
first-hand look at the tornado-torn southwestern Ohio area
Tuesday 8s the joined with President Nixon and other federal
officials in surveying the destruction of last week's storm.
Gilligan, after conferring with the federal officials, said he
was assured federal funds would be available to rebuild Central
State University, heavily damaged in last Wednesday's tor·
nadoes.

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on trial at MeigS High

the council ;;,odeled the "pros and cons" of th ~ council 's'
propo sed dress code modifi ca tions . The student council mem·
be rs agreed wit.h the b~ard on some " mtdriff" questions I such as
no hip buggers wi th hqtter tops 1but the yo un ~ people sai d they
thought it would be all right to wea r halrer tops with high wa isted
pan ts . The studen t council also disapproved hailer tops tha.t

XENIA, OHIO - PRESIDENT NIXON TUESDAY praised
the people of Xenia for raising their city " on its feet spiritually"
after personally inspecting the des.truction of last week's tornado, the worst disaster area he said he has ever witnessed.
Nixon said he would trim red tape to a minimum and set a
Sunday deadline by which he wants the 1,000 or more people now
living in school .gymnas.iums and other shelters into betrer
quarters. "They raised my spirits," Nixon said of the people of
Xenia. "This is the worst devastation I've seen in a small ' area
and I've seen the earthquake in Anchorage (Alaska ), the
devastation of hurricane Camille and hurricane Agnes in Pennsylvania.''

,. E~ster

LAW SUIT FILED
One law suit was filed and
two cases were closed in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court
action Monday. Morse Eleclro
Products Corp., Solon, has file~
for a judgment of $844.90
against Bill and Lee's Music
Centpr, Pomeroy, charglnl!'
.that the music center owes
them that amount. Receiving
judgments were Roberta C.
O'Brien from Vivian Mo~gan ·
for a partition of real estate, '
ancJ. David R. Wells and Mary
E. Wells , from
H. Shumway, et. a!, for land valued at
$2,200 in Olive Twp.

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A student lounge will be established on a trial basis o: Meigs .
High Scho.ol it was decided Tuesda·y ~~ening by the Meigs ~a l
School Dtstn ct Board o( Education. The board IT'et , with
repre;;entatives from the Meigs High School ' Student Coun cil ,
Prmctpal James Diehl and Assistant Principal Fenton Tay lor in
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offices of Supt. George Hargrayes.
Student council president Peggy O'Brien and council
members Dave Wo lf~. Steve Walburn and Beth Burns prcsenU,d
their views on the lounge project which· will be in presently
unused areas of the cafeteria . It will be equ ipped w_i th a jukebox,
pmg pong tables and 'chess and checker sets.
According to the council, each student will be required to pay
$1 for an identification card, and any violation of the privilege
entrusted to each student will result in confiscation of the card
for a $till-to-be-determined time .
It was agreed that the loun~e will go into operation as. soon as
possible for a trial period of six weeks.
The students also discussed with the board the dress code for
the 1974-75 school year after the boa rd last month changed it to
read, "no midriff should be visible."
Under Miss O'Brien's direction, several boys and girls from

ordinance
(Continued from page I)
entrances of the community. A permit from the mayor is
required before any sqlicting or ped~llng can take place.
King lead a discussion on the placement of fire hydrants and
urged that a program be started to increase the number of
hydrants in the community. He will contact the fire department
to get recommendations as to priority locations for such
byd'rants. Council discussed at length the condition of Short
Fourth St. and other streets of the town. Maintenance supervisor
Harold Chase pointed out that weather conditions have not been
riglit for doing patching and that the financial condition of the
village is not conducive to employing more men and purchasing
materials needed for repair work. Councll members indicated
that they will ask Chase to outline his work at the first of each
meeting to let people know the program of work that is being
carried 9ut by his department.
King recommended the reactivating of the auxiliary pollee .
force in the community. However, Mayor John Zerkle said that
the vi~ge does have~ gond police force and that excellent help
IS available from fire department members in cases of
em~rgen~ies. The question of insurance coverage for auxiliary
pohce offtcers also arose andJt was indicated that this could be a
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problem.
Efforts to get rid of a property on Oliver St. appeared to be
stymied because taxes must be owed on the property totaling at
Io:ast $500 before a community can advertise such property for
btd. The taxes on the Oliver St. property in question have not
been paid for 14 years but the total tax due is only $249.
Council discussed the marina. While some felt that the
marina is only an expense to the village with no benefits derived
Clerk-Treasurer Grate pointed out that funds have been provided
for work at the marina to date and that it has not cost the village
·the first cent. Chase said that plans this year of the .corps of
engtneers call for dredging the creek at the marina arid for installation of docks. The village has accepted the marina for five
years.
. At the request of Chase, officials voted to purchase a used
ptckup truck for the street department at a cost of approximately
$1,300.
Attend.ing the lneeting were Mayor Zerkle, clerk-treasurer
Grate, mamtenance supervisor Chase, and councilmen William
Walt~rs. Fred Hoffman, Allen Lee King, Marvin Kelly, David
Jenkms and James Brewer.

lou~ge

Student

'r

NEW HAVEN - New Haven
Town Council Monday "ight
hired Mark Kearns for full
time i.n · tlie Water and
Sewerage Department ; a
J&gt;roposal for insuring town
employees' health was ac·
cepted; laying of water lines in
a new . housing development
and a trailer permit were
appr,oved and orders to keep
children and dogs out of spring
planted gardens were extended.
Attending were Mayor John
Thorne, Councilmen Charles
Smith, David Simonton, Wayne
C~rter , Harold Moxley, and
Recorder Jane Russell.
Kearns accepted the position
as full time employe of the
Water and Sewerage Depa'rt·
ment. James Seelback, Nitro ,

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

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ROAD SUI;&gt;!I...: A portion of SR 33 near the ·Pomeroy Corporation limits slipped down a ~ill
Monday evenlna due to water that had accumulated underneath It according to the Meigs
County State Highway Dept. The slip was discovered Mond&amp;y night by ;lherif!'s Deputy Rdbert
Beegle and SYI:acus.e Police Chief Milton Varian who were answei-ing a call at t,he ·t!me .·The
highway Dept. said it will begin driving piling today to remedy the problem.
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Brauer hired for park
R oger
Bra uer ,
hea d
basketba ll coach and freshma n
football coach ol Meigs High
School : ha s been employed as
direc'for of the Middlep or t
municipa l pa rk and pool this
summer .
Mee tin g in the town council
chambers Tuesday night, the
Recr ea tion commission also
empl oyed I..eann Sebo, 19, an
Ohio Umve'Sily sophomore, as
assistant 'director and swimmin g instructor under a .oew
salary schedule that will be
proposed to town council by
ordin a nce thr ough Dav e
Jenkins, chairman of council 's
recreation committee .
Brauer, who met with the
com mi ssion fo ll owin g his
employmen t, said he expects to
operate a program for all ages
at the park as public interest
permits. A trained phy sical
· education instructor. he will
. promote te[inis ·as . much· a~
poss ible and suml)ler ' in-

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Hubert Stewart, indicted by
th~M e igs County grand jury on
the charge of causing physical
harm by means of a deadly
weapon and carrying a concealed weapon in the Feb. 22
shootJPg of George .Hall, has
pleaded not guiity before Meigs
County Common Pleas Court
Judge John C. Bacon .
Bohd was set for Stewart at
$3,000.
In other law enforcement
action today, the Meigs County
Sheriff's Dept. said it has
l'CCQYer,OO
an
automobile
stolen March 18 in Pickaway
County. The blue Volkswagen,
belonging to . Barry D. Smith,
Rt. I, Stoutsville, was found
wreckee · In Columbia Twp.,
·,Tuesday oh CR 1, six-tenths of
a mile west of SR 143.
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Blowers said that Ivan 0 .
the Kyger plants.
No injuri es were reported, Hawk , vice president in cha rge
and some minor damage was of OVEC opera tions, along with
sustai ned at the huge building cor por a te en gineers a nd,
. hous ing
the
ge nera ti ng cons truction exper ts , were on'
{acihties at the sk1li on, which the sc ene imm ediat ely to
assess the damage and to
IS almost identical to the Kyger
initiate plans to ' r~store the
Creek Plant.
'The two planl'l team to Cli fty Plan t to an operating
supply electric power needs of conditi on a s quickly as
the AEC's Por tsmouth Area possible.
A t prese nt , th ere ' is no
gaseous diflusion plan t m Pike
County, Ohio. Kyger Creek . prediction as to the time that
plant c ontin ues to deli ve r will be required to rebuild the
power for the operati on of the switchyard, nor what the cost
will be , a ccord ing to· Hawk.
AEC faci lity.

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strudional play in basketball
at the elemen tary.school ages .
Miss Sebo. swimming instructor las t year, and a former lifeguard at the .pool, will
assist Brauer .
Acting in the matters were
r ec rea t i o n co mmi s sion
me mbe rs Che t Tannehill ,
chai rman ; Harold Chase, and
Guy Cowan , and Mayor John
Ze rkl e , ·. Wi lli am ( Bucky )
Wa lter s, ·an d Je nk ins , ob·servers .

DEFENDANT FINED
One defendant was lined and
another forfeited a bond in
Middl epor t Mayor J ohn
Zerkle's cour\ Tuesday night.
Kenneth W. Rife , 18, Mid·
d!epor t, was fined $5 and costs
on charges of speeding and
Donald Guinther, no address
rec ord!'&lt;~, forfeited a ' $30 bond
on charges of disturbing the
pea~e .
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2,-- Tl)e Daily Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , AprillO, 1974

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recalls Sctence News This approach was advanced by such
modern penitl reformers as psychtatnst Karl M•nmnger and
fonner attorney general Ramsey Clark.
By the 1960s, however, 11 began to become apparent that
psychotherapy, vocational counselmg, educauon programs and
the ltke were not working Crune was on the increase and the rate
of rectdivtsm was httle changed
Then came somethmg called behavior modiftcaUon Instead
of "coddhng'' crJminals wtth psychotherapy and trymg to understaN them, the tdea oow was to focus on Ute devtant behavtor
By Bruce Btossat
and, b}'i'tneans of sophtsttcated behavtor.a&gt;ntrol technology and
systematically applted rewards and puniShments, force them to
Last fall, a JUdge m Mtamt, F1a , made the news wtres when shape up ·
But now the future of thts youngest school of penology IS m
he proposed an unusual pumshment for a 19-year-&lt;&gt;ld selfdoubt
Last month two federal agencres, the Bureau of Prtsons
confessed murdeter
Rather than sentence Ute youth to life m prtson, where he and Ute Law Enforcement AssiStance Administration (I:.EAA),
would sunply be a burden to soctety, the JUdge suggested that he announced that they were ceasmg to fund projects JQVolvmg
be put on probatiOn and be reqwred to support his vtctun's wife behavtor modification Professional crtttctsm of this conand ftve children unttl the latter could earn thetr own livmgs.
troverstal approach to crune and punishment ts also mounting
"Bemg locked up should be suffictent pumshment," says
The public prosecutor labeled the tdea as "disgustmg,
Albert Bandura, president of the Amertcan Psychologtcal Assn
abhorrent and abommable."
If, some 7,000 years after the mventwn of wrttmg, we cannot "Soctety has no moral or legal right to force an tndtvtdual to
agree on what ts the best way to teach children how to read, let change If I am black and am put m pnson because I'm opposed
alone learn math aod other aspects of soctety's accumulated to the political and soctal system m this country, I sufe as hell
s tore of knowledge, tl ts not surprtsmg that after mtllenia of wouldn't want behaviOr modificaUon forced upon me "
At the other extreme ts James V McConnell, professor of
human htstory we cannot agree on how best to purush and-or
psychology at the Umverstty of Mtchtgan
rehabilitate those who break soctety's laws
"I don 't belteve the Conslltuuon of the Umted States gtves
There have been as many fads and fashions m penology m
recent years as there have been mUte classroom The prosecutor you the rtght to conumt a crune if you want to; therefore, the
quoted above, horrifted at anything less than the maxunum Constttuhon does not guarantee you the rtght to mamtam m·
punishment provtded by law, eVIdently belongs to the old school votable the personality tl forced on you m the ftrst place-if and
when the personahty manifests strongly aittiSoctal behaviOr "
of an eye for an eye, a life for a life
Unfortunately, for the one pomt of vtew, unpriSOnment ts
Thts school retgne&lt;t almost umversally unttl modern times
{though, strangely, each genera lion continued to produce a more very often not enough For the other, behavior modtftCation
or less constant percentage of crunmals no matter how many smacks too much of something like Btg Brother would hke to bse
"for our own good."
were put away or done away wtth).
In the meanttme, while the experts argue, crune marches
Then m the 1950s, the notton that most lawbreakers were m
one way or another "s1ck" became popular m pnson circles, on

-~'Heel!"

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. Bruce Biossat
President 'taxes'

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Land use
used for._

Sports
De·S k

the legal imit

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WASHINGTON WINDOW

Is foreign policy wavering?
acreage at hts San Clemente
"western Wlute House."
Nor was tl legal to defer a
capt tal gam on sale of hts New
York apartment, smce San
Clemente ts not hts "pnnctpal

Don Oakley
Crime and what

residence," and clearly he
have
two
maw
restdences-San Clemente and
Key Btscayne, Fla
It IS also rated fraudulent to
split capttal gams mcome, as
Mr Ntxon dtd wtlh hts
d~ughJer, Trtcta, on some
Flonda real estate.
All thts, he and hts lawyers

can't

punishment?
By Don Oakley

•

WASHINGTON (NEAl
My expert's word ts that if
Unpalatable reahty 1s any ordinary cittzen employed
always harder to bear than the the practices embodied in the
anticipation of that reality President's 1969-72 federal
This SW'ely can be said of the mcome tax retW'ns, he would
11
fmdlngs that President Nixon mdeed be wholly open to had to know-and lntend "
owes the United States charges of e1ther civil or
government somewhere crunmal fraud.
around $470,000 m back taxes
Disputes over taxes which
It will do h1m no good that he stop short of fraud are those
has announced he will not f1ght which mvolve dlffermg, though
the official judgments but Will mnocent and thus legitimately
pay The great political vanable, Interpretations of the
commonplace of 1974 IS that his tax laws.
generally small tax payments
What establishes fraud is
m h1s first fOW'·year tenn "mtent" that ts, deliberate
The proposed Fiscal Year
mtent
on
the
part
of
the
tax1975
Federal Budget imposes a
(twice totalmg less than $1,000
a year) have outraged the payer to misinterpret h1s tn· tax burden equal to $4,013 for
Amencan public more than coll)e, the stze or character of the
average
Amencan
anythmg he may have done or hts expenses and deductions, or household, so reports the Tax
not done about the great any other maJOr aspect of hts Foundalton. According to Ute
returns.
Foundalton, the per-family tax
Watergate scandal.
Significant in the highest
We must remember, in this burden in the coming fiscal
degree, of course, ts the ltnn mstance, that the President year will be $258 greater than
word that fmdings of the Jn. hunself-before ascending to m 1974 ... and $1,214 htgher per
lema! Revenue Servtce closely the WHite House- was prac- family than four years ago
comcide with the 210-page ttcmg some tax law in hts New
The biggest mcrease in the
report of the Joint Committee York fmn We must also tax liability over the past four
on Internal Revenue Tuation remember that he had at hts 'years has been in the field of
mcome
m Congress Mr NIXon had elbow, htgh-patd lawyers federal health,
mvited the committee's dealing with exceedmgly security,
and
welfare
,inq\J)ry last year when he made complex tax issues and that 1t programs. Defense costs .
his income tax returns pubhc. has to be a !oregon~ conclusion""- which had p~evtously been the
In aSserting that the that they were chosen for thetr most expeliSlve tlem m the per·
family tax burden . runs
Prestdent would pay the huge tax experltse
Yet the unproper pracltces constderablybehmd health and
sums owed, the Wh1te House
was at pains to note setforth m Mr. Ntxon •s returns welfare spendmg m the new
specifically that the IRS 1m- are of such an order that thetr tax projection
The Fiscal 1975 Federal
ding (not made public at thts mvalldtty ts made clear m
wntmg)
...ebuts
any elemental tax gwdebooks of Budget reflects a $29 8 btllion
suggesllon of fraud on the part the kind you can- buy for a mcrease over the previOus
of the Prestdent The com- dollar or tY"O m any bookstore
year, thus pushing the new
mittee's staff report offers no
The worst offense obviously
budget over the $3QO billton
facts which would support any 1s the now celebr~ted back: mark for the first time tn the
such charge "
dahng of documents to nation's htstory The Congress
We are on delicate ground "legttimize" hts taking as a ts now begmmng to wrestle
here But I have consulted a deduction $576 000 for donatton wtth the new budget, whtle
source h1ghly ewerienced m of hts vtce pre~ldential papers indt vtdual taxpayers are
wrestling with his or her taxes
the workings of the federal tax to the National Archtves
laws, and his judgments do not
Second m magmtude was hts at home
back up the utterances from failure to report 8 capttal gam
As the tax burden becomes
the Whtte House
of$1t7,000fromsaleofexcess heavier,
perhaps
Congresstonal spendthrifts will
think twice before pumpmg
btlhns of dollars mto
questionable spendtng
programs. As I have satd
before, nothing IS easter- for a
bureaucracy than to spend
money.
But beyond some pomt,
everything dished out by Uncle
Sam on one hand, wlll be taken
back in the other .. etther m
higher taxes or inflation or
both. The increasmg perfamily tax burden should
remmd the Congress that
Federal spending absolutely
must be cut back.

Miller in

Washington

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• By STEWART HENSLEY
WASHINGTON (UP!) Htgh administratiOn offtctals
are begmnmg to concede for
the first ttme Pres1dent
NIXon's domesbc troubles
may have so weakened him
that he no longer can conduct a
credttable and consistent
foretgn policy
Heretofore, the offtctal lme
as laid down by Secretary of
State Henry A ~mger has
been that the U.S. government
and the Amertcan people
ultunately would pay some
pnce for the Watergate
scandal, but that tl had not
damaged Nixon's abtlity m
international affatrs
But the revelation NIXon
owes and wlll pay almost half a

Cottontails fewer
.as habitat goes
.

By FllANK L. SPENCER
CHICAGO (UP!) - liFthis
season of the Easter Bunny,
offtctal notloe has been taken of
a dechne of rabbtts
But shucks, you say, tf there
IS a rabbtt shortage all we have
to do ts wa1t awhile, such ts
thetr reproducllve abiltty
Thts btologtcal truth, however, ts swiftly being reduced to
a theory. Your typtcal cotton·
tail doe can produce SIX to nme
bunmes every few weeks-the
gestatton pertod ts 30 days-but
she ts downnght particular
about where she produces
them
Accordmg to the Ilhnots
Natural History Survey, which
thts week brought the ra\Jbll
declme to public attention,
oottontails requtre "favorable
habttat" to mulbply m thetr
accustomed style And m
lllmol8, as everywhere else,'
the bulldozers have been
closmg m on the ra bbtt
warrens
In IllinoiS alone, accordmg to
the survey experts, there was a
decline of almost 5 mlllion
acres of '1avorable habitat" In
one recent four-year pertod.
Durmg this pertod, the experts said, the rabbit popula·

BERRY'S WORLD

The Dily S.llillfll

11J 197&lt;by N!'.A Inc
I

"Who1d have ever thought tha ole' poker gang would
tum Into a needlepoint group, ,eh. guys?"

t

mtllion dollars m back taxes could be brought to book for
and . mterest
appears unpatd taxes, even as an orprofoundly to have altered the dinary clltzen mtght, undiplomatic attitudes toward doubtly shocked leaders m
the admmtstrabon's ability to Russia-where tlus certainly
handle mternat10nal affatrs could not happen-and in
U.S. offtctals and foreign Europe, where tt would be
dtplomats stationed here highly unlikely.
During Kissinger's recent
seemed unable to believe a
and
relattvely unprOductive
congressional committee and
the Internal Revenue Servtce trtp to Moscow, Sovtet offtctals
actually IIUght label the Prest· engaged in tough bargaunng
dent a tax dodger on a massive and seemed to be testing
-even if unmtentional-!!CBle. NIXon's strength on the foretgn
Foretgn diplomats m par- frOilt. They gave litUe ground,
ticular tended to dtscount and the deciSion on Nixon's
Watergate as a domestic taxes likely wlll pursade them
political battle from which that further negotiations wtll
NIXon would emerge wtUt no be from a weakened posttton.
Whether Ktssmger would
more than routine political
acknowledge
thi;, ts another
scars
Howeyer, the fact that NIXon matter. However, when Kiss·
mger returns from his Mextcan
honeymoon next week, he faces
tough negoltations on two
fronts -and soon will learn if
NIXon's foreign policy can
mamtam momentum.
-He wlll meet shorUy before
the IIUddle of April in Washing·
tton dropped 69 per cent And ton wtUt Sov1et Ambassador
the trend lines m all parts of Antoly F. Dobrynin and Fothe country Indicate a con- reign Ministe~ Andret Gromeytinued rtse m bulldozmg, a ko to discuss nuclear arms
steady depletiOn of rabbtts.
limitallons and other ISSUes.
Surely, you say, some group
-About the same time, gtve
will dtscover the plight of the or take a few days, Kissinger
cottontail and rush to protect wtU hold his first session here
these creatures Don't bet on 1t wtth a high Syrtan official to
The ordinary rabbtt has few discuss the proposal for IIUli·
real frieods And practtcally - lary disengagement on the
everythmg ts hts enemy. Golan front that Israeh
Among predators, rabbtt ts a Defense Minister Moshe Dayan
favortte food. Coyotes, accord- brought here last week
mg to a Nebraska study a few
Unless he can achieve
years ago, prefer them to stgniflcant progress on arms
chicken. And whatever his limitation and trade matters
reputationforspeed dogsand durtng
Gromeyko's
oats seem to have ~o trouble Washmgton VISit and during
outflanking the. average cot- the trip Kissinger plans to
tonta~.
M~cow in May, Ute new ~a ?f.
It turns out that of all his SoVIet-Amertcan goodwill ts
en~tes, the one most danger- bound to suffer.
ou to the rabbit way of life ts
And if the Syrians stick to
th farmer. Nowadays fanners their demand for total Israeli
put every square tneh mto withdrawal from all territory
culttvatton. Thts means no taken m the 1967 war and the
patches of brush for the rab- conflict last October, chances
btts.
for progress in Mideast peace
The only people ;who have efforts are oonenstent.
expressed much mterest m ~With all Nixon's troubles,
pre.venting a complete rabbtt capped by the mcome tax
wtpeout are the hunters. They setback, tt IS difftcult to see
want· to keep a few around so why Ute PreSident continues to
they can kill Utem
insiSt he wlll go to Moscow as
scheduled in June.

It would appear he
ultimately would be more
mchned to follow the advtce of
those oongressmen who have
urged him not to go Into a
Situation where he may be
unable to achieve any progress
and where he may find an
adversary mtent only explottmg h1s present weakness.
NIXon and Kissinger may
have some diplomatic ace up
thetr sleeve which has not yet
been disclosed, but the belief
here IS that this is unlikely.

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB

Follicles detennine amount of hair
By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.

DEAR DR LAMB - - Please
settle a dtsagreement between
my fnend and me. I say that tf
a person shaves or removes
hatr wtth a depilatory then the
hatr doesn't grow back m a
greater amount or darker m
color. J thmk that tl only looks
darker because tl hasn't been
bleached by the sun yet and
that ts why it looks darker.
DEAR READER - The
number of hatrs depends entirely on the number of actwe
hatr folltcles wtthm Ute skin
The folltcle ts like the root to a
blade of grass. You can cut the
, \OP off and the root wlll allow
more grass, or ha1r, to gfown
nght back.
The stub of hair ts tougher,
and a shaved area wtll give
that 'brtstle-feel to touch. If you
ever walked over some cut
gr~q_stubble or stubble from a
wheat field you can see how
tough tl Is too at Ute base. The

,.

,_
\

.

shaving doesn't make the hatr
tougher, tl just leaves the
tougher stubble.
Cuttmg off or even' pulling
out the hatr still leaves an
active follicle, and the hatr wtll
return JUSt as it war, no darker
and m no greater' quantity. The
only way to solve the problem
ts to remove the follicle. This is
what electrolysis does. Using
an electrical needle the hair
follicle ts destroyed It usually
takes several treallnents to get
all the hatr follicles because
some of them hav~ not
sprouted thetr next hatr at the
time of one procedure and
can't be located By repeated
procedures, m tune all the hatr
'follicles can be destroyed, and
hence no more hair.
DEAR DR. LAMB - I have
thalassemia
Cooley's
Medtterranean anemia I
believe it ts a form of leukemta
(cancer). I am 59 years old. 1
~

."

'

I'm so tired constantly. It
gets progresstvely worse I
know t!lere ts research gomg
on Is there anything at all that
can relieve this terrtble ltred
fj!eting I do have so much work
that needs to be done. So,
ccon~tant rest Is out of the
question . I go around feeling so
tired Utat at tunes I'm like a
zombie.
DEAR READER- You may
well have thalassemia, but I
doubt you have Cooley's
Mediterranean anemia. That
parbcular type of anemia l8
usually confined to young
chtldren Most likely you have
another vartant of the
thalassemia type of anei!Uas.
The thalassemias are all
abnormalities m the fonnatton.
of hemoglobtn wbtch ts
associated wtth varying
degrees of anenua. Depending
on the severity of the problem,
the liver and. spleen
may be
.

.

.. ' I

.\

Rr Denny
Fobes

politics

•

enlarged, and there may even
be jaundtce. Since you don't
mention these things, I would
assume you do not have that
severe a form.
Probably your fahgue ts
related to an anenua Your
doctor would most certamly
know wtth a simple blood test
He may be able to rontrol your
anemta with medicines I do
want to asslll'e you that what
you have ts not leukenua, nor ts
tl cancer It is an mherited
condttion affectmg the
hemoglobin or iron-eontammg
pigment withm Ute red blood
cells
Send your questions to Dr.
Lamb In care of Ibis
I DeWSPJ!JMtr, P.O. Box 1551,
Radio City Station, New York,
N. Y. 10019. For a copy, nf Dr.
Lamb'• boatlet on low blood
sugar, oeud SO cents Ia 'lbe
wne addres• aDd uk f~

COLUMBUS (UPI ) - U.S.
Rep Morris K Udall, D-Ariz ;
chtef sponsor of the nahonal
land use plannmg blll, Tuesday
satd he felt Prestdent Nixon
was "grandstanding for the
nght wmg" and "playmg
unpeachment politics" wtth
the proposal.
" It ts my feeling the Prest·
dent has been playmg up to the
nght lflllg
playmg unpeachment politics," Udall told
the Governor's Conference on
Land Use Polley m Ohio
He said NIXon has fluctuated
m hiS support of the bill, which
has cleared the House Intertor
and Insular Affatrs Conuruttee
after more than three years of
study.
The Rules Conuruttee, which
once refused to authorne a
floor vote, has been asked to
consider the bill early m May.
Udall satd the Prestdent, m
1973, had called the land use
control blll "perhaps the most·
pressmg envtronmental ISSUe
before the nation."
The Rules Comnuttee, how· ever, refused to move the blll '
up after the President changed '
his mmd, Udall said.
"I predict mall likelihood we
wlll have a national land use
plamung blll thts year desptte
..
Ute setbacks," he satd.
The bill would allow indi•
vidual states to set their own·
land use policies wtth fmanctal
backmg from the federal government.
Ohto would be eligtble for
about $4 million a year under
the formula for divi!!jng $1100
million m federal lunda over an
etght-year pertod

"Blood Sugar" booklet.

'

..

One of the comments was
"Take steps pohttcally
V01ces come back to Gov," •
apparently referrmg to Gov
Wendell Anderson
Another was "Stem won't
take on Gov turn over to •
Mttchell " Starns satd the reference to Mtlchell apparently
meant then U.S. Atty. Gen
John Mttchell
As to the name Stem, Starns
sa1d they was Murry Stem, who ··
chatred the Lake Supertor '
forecment Conference.
It was durmg that confer-,
ence that state and federal offt..;,
ctais ftrst tned to halt
Reserve's dtscharge of tacomte
waste into Lake Supenor

NOTICE
Pursuant to Sec 4(c) (8) of
the Sank Holding Company Act '
and regulat1ons of the Board of ._
Governors at the Federal
Reserve .System, not .ce 1S given
that
CONTINENTAL
ILLINOIS
CORPORATION
Chicago, Illinois
a bank hold1ng company
proposes to ac(lu1re the Shares"
of
CAPITAL FINANCIAL
SERVICES INC
Whose prmc1pal office is at
Columbus Oh1o, and related
com pan 1es and thereby to
engage In the follOWing ac
tivlt les (1 ) making consumer
•nstaliment loans and pur "
chasmg consumer msta llment
sales fmance contracts , (2) the
bu smess of or bus mess m the
nature ot an •ndustrlal bank or
mdustnal loan company where
and as authorized by law in the
states
of
Iowa ,
Oh10.
Wash ington, and West V.rgm,a,
{3) making loans and the
prov1S1on of cred•t serv1ces In
connect1on W1th the fmancmg of
Inv entory of distributors of, and
dealers m, consumer products
and bus iness equ ipment , and
other mventory tmancmg {4)
with respect only ta 1nsurance
purchased by borrowers •n
connect1on Wllh cred1t act1t1t 1eS
of Cap1tal Financial Serv1ces
Inc and subS1dlanes , {1 J acting
as agent or broker for the sa le
of. and underwriting and ~·
remsuring , cred1t life acc1dent
and health Insurance, and (b)
acting as agent or broker for the
sale of property and casualty
Insurance protect1ng loan
collitterai
and
assurmg
repayment of an extens1on of
credit , and (5) at offices located
•n Grand Rap1dS, M1chlgan and ... ~
Columbus. Ohio , leasinQ P'er
sonal property an d equ1pment,
and acting as agent , broker, or
adviser In 'the leasmg thereof, ..-;
where at the Inception of the ......,
lnltllll lease the expectat 1on Is •
that the effect of the transaction , .
and reasonably anticipated ":.
future transactions w1th the u..
same lessee as to the same ~
property will be to compensate •
the lessor for not less than the
lessor's lull investment In the •
propertY Except as otherw1se 111!1
1nd leafed above, these act1v1t1es •~
will continue to be conducted at -),.;.·
offices of Capital F lnanclal ; :
Services Inc
(Also doing "'P
business In Ohio as Capital ...,
Savings and Loan Comfany ) or 4"'
of 1ts direct or lndlrec wholly . •
owned subsidiaries at the ::
follow.ng locatlon Ss l
...
P 0 Box 192
~
SOO West 2nd Street
JU~:
Pomeroy, Ohio 4756?
:,
Persons w1Shlng to comment ...;;
on this proposal should submit their views In wr 1t1ng wlthm 30
days of the sale of pu bllcat.on of $If
tt, ls no flce.. to
FEDER.AL
RESERVE ,.
BANK OF CLEVELAND
~

Bronco baseballer is
MAC Player-of-Week
four home runs m a four-game
senes at the Umverstty of LouISville He accounted for 18
total bases, batted m SIX runs
and scored six hunself to help
the Broncos to a four-game
sweep
He edged out Umverstty of
Toledo pttcher Roger Coe who
lwtrled a 2-0 shutout over Notre
Longshots pay
Dame, striking out m!le. Earll·
er m the week he struck out 10
off at Beulah
hatters m four innings agamst
COLUMBUS (UP!)- A patr Adrtan (Mtch ) He also has a
no.Jtitter to hts credit this
of longshots provtded a daily
sprmg
double worth $692 at Beulah
Park Tuesday afternoon
Royal Guardsman, a 32-1
chotce, won the ftrst race and
ELECTION FINANCING
Sweet Flavor, a 59-1 selectiOn,
TRENTON, N J. (UP!) took the second to produce the -Gov.- Brendan T Byrne has
pushed through the Assembly
WUUltng 1-li combinabon.
The featW'ed $3,000 etghth without maJor amendments his
race was won by Prlmego, who proposal to use public lunda \9
ran the six fW'longs m 1·12 3-5 fmance the next electton for
and returned $'l0.60, $11 and $5. governor.
The Assembly approved the
Seeond place Hereford patd
$16 and $4, while thtrd place btll by Sl-34 and sent tl to the
Senate after four hours of
Tucky Boy returned $2.60.
Attendance was 3,595 wtUt a debate and mtenstve lobbymg
by the Byrne admmtstration
handle of $362,117

COLUMBUS, Ohto (UP!) Western Michigan Umverstty
centerftelder Mark Orr was
named today as the Mid·
Amertcan Conferences spring
Athlete of the Week for his play
Utts past meekend.
Orr went Stx·for-14 and had

.

The MEIGS INN

\.

!'

Cltveltnd, Ohio 44101

W 10. ltc

.-

THE CENTRAL SCHOOL IN WELLSTON wtll be the stte for
yet another mdependent basketball tournament, begmnmg April
22 and Tllnnmg through the 27th
Trophies wtll be awarded to the champiOn and the wo
runnerup teams, wtth mdiv1dual awards bemg presented to the
champtonshtp team.
Entry fee ts the usual $30 per team, and the drawmg for
patrlngs wtll be made at Central School on April13, at 2p m
For further mformatton, call 384-2833 durmg the day and 384&amp;103 or ~274 dW'mg the evenmg and ask for Gary Stabler or
Joe Ramsey

..

1455 Eost Sixth Street

j

BtU Phtlltps, me ~ca•tern cage mentor who has·never had an
Eagle team ftmsh lower than second m the SV AC m hts fo ur
},ars at the dislrtcl school, has been selected a -counsetor-eoach
at the Tom "Saleh" Sanders Basketball Camp at Concord
College durmg the week of July 7
Phtlllps IS one Of JUS) SIX
coaches m Ohio, West Vtrgmta
apd Kentucky who have been
selected to parhctpate m this
camp, descrtbed by Philhps as
one of the best m this area
Concord College, m Athens,
W Va (tn the southern part of
the state) has been the stte of
the "Saleh" Sanders camp
smce 1971 It has been sponsored smce that tune by the
Eastern Assoclitted Coal Corp.,
(EACC), and has brought
Jerry West, along wtth Sanders, to help grade school,
JUmor htgh and high school
youngsters learn basketball
fundamentals
West, of course, ts the Los
Angeles Laker great and
former
West
Vtrgmta
Umverstty star Sanders ts
better known as the lanky
fonner forward of the Boston
Celhcs m the Celts' golden era
durmg the late '50s and early
'60s when he teamed wtth such
notables as Btll Russell, Tom
Hemsohn, Sam Jones and Bob
BD.,L PHIUJPS
Cousy to donunate professtonal
basketball
Phtllips satd, "I am lookmg forward to bemg at ConcorJ, a
olace I've never been before. It wtli be a real ~ood exoertence to
work with Saleh, who was one of the best defenstve players m the
NBA for a long tune."
Phtlltps, who will be an mstructor the enttre length of the
camp, one week, added, "I constder tl an honor and a pnvtlege to
have been chosen to be a counselor-eoach at this camp."
Sanders wtll be the camp dtrector, while Ira Blankenship,
head coach at Concord College, wtll be the camp coordmator
Phtlltps added that tt ts one of the least expenstve camps
avatlable, and satd he hopes some of his Eastern players and
others cagers of thts area wtll attend
"Jerry West mtght be there for a day , but that ts JUSt tentative rtght now," Phtlhps satd
The camp, sponsored by EACC, ts for all boys between the
ages of 9 and 19 Cha rge for the week wng stay which mcludes
room and board for the enttre week, ts not exacUy known at this
time, but tt wlll not be more than $50 (and proba bly less than
that, accordmg to EACC)
The camp ts approved by the West Vtrgtma Secondary
Schools AcltVIttes Comnusswn Phllltps srud tt would be best if
any mterested Ohio youths ftrst get approval from the Ohto Htgh
School Athlettc AsS'octatton
More Information wtll be forthconung on detatls for kids such
as appltcations, etc., accordmg to Phllhps

Judge got heartsick
ST PAUL, Mtnn. (UPI )
US Dtstrtct Court Judge Miles
Lord Tuesday ordered Reserve
Mming Co. off)cers to produce
records of every pohttcal
counlrtbullon made smce 1969.
Not only were mmmg company offtcers ordered to produce records, but Lord's order
mcluded the two steel compames that own Reserve Mtn·
mg - Armco Steel Co. and
Republic Steel.
The order was tssued after a
document was read to Lord
that mdtcated the ftnns had
plans for political moves. to
ftght pollution charges agamst
Reserve Mming.
Read to Lord were handwritten notes found on an
agenda for a Reserve meeting
held m Chicago on Feb 23,
1971
The document produce
from Armco Steel Co !ties, was
read to the JUdge by Byron E.
Starns , deputy Mtnnesota
attorney general
After Starns read the notes,
Lord called a qwck recess saymg he was not feeling well
When he returned to the
courtroom He said, "when I
satd I was tll 1t was m my
heart and not my stomach
Lord's order was to produce
campaign records, even if Utey
i&gt;ertamed to local school board
elections
The notes, the wnter unknown, were short and sketchy
Starns said, "essentially tl
seems to be some type of a
strategy meeting "

GiM.ts lose first game of year, 6-3

~

.

:k"

The most popular mghl club in
the tri-countv area zs proud to
,present the return ot

G~O .

SAN FRANCISCO (UPI ) Tho- Cmcmnall Reds snapped
the San Franctsco Gtants' fourga me wm streak 6-3 Tuesday
mghl wtlh ltllle Joe Morgan
provadmg the wmmng rWl
The wtn wen t to Jack
Btlh ngham wtth rebel help
from Pedro Borbon
"We ll JUst have to get them
the nex: t tune, '' Manager
Cha rlte Fox of the Gt ants sa td
after the defeat 'They are a
very good team They have lots
of hatters \\oho can hurt you '
lromcally tt wasn l one ol
the btg sluggers who provtded
the wmmng htt ll was Morgan
th~ ltttle second baseman, who
smgledAo score Cesa r Gero:umo wtth what proved to be the

got enough of 1t to get 1t pltchmg for the

through the hole "
Bradley - arcordmg to Fox,
was behmd hitters all mght
long yet he struck out etght
bailers
"I was a hllle cold at the
start. · Bradley satd He gave
up a two-r un homer to l'ony
Perez m the ltrst mmn g, the
thtrd homer of the season for
Perez
'Brad ley \laS makm g good
pttches,' Rose sa td "He fool; d
me on t\\oo when I struck out

Rose collected three htts lo
gtve hun 11 m the ftrsl ftve
ga.mes of the season
Everyone was worrted when
Joe Morga n and I weren 't
htltmg m sprtng tratmng Thts
wmmng run 1n the seventh ts when tl counl•,'' he satd
mmn g
The Reds \\ho had 15 htts ,
Gerommo led off the seventh got thetr fmal two runs off
mmng wtlh a lnple to left ftcld Eha s Sosa m the mn th
Losmg pttcher Tom Bradley Gerommo drove m one run w1th
then struck out Btlhngham and a sacrtftce fl y and Borbon got
Pete Rose but Morgan slashed the other home \\tth an mfteld
a smgle to left
htt
"I thought I was out of The Gtant;;, now 4-1 , got 10
It oubte when I struck out htls mcludmg three by Bobby
Rose." Bradley sa td "And I Bonds
made a good pttch to MOt gan
The se n es concl udes today
It was "" ay from htm but lle wtlh lefty Mtke Caldwell

National League Roundup
By United Press International
It look a whtie but tn Ra)
Kroc, the NatiOnal League may
ftnall) have come up wtth tis
answet to Charles 0 i'mley
Kroc . the McDonald H(lm-

burger ktng who bought the San
Otego Padres earltet · thts
sprtng, pulled a Ftnley-ltke
move Tuesday mght wh en he
blasted hts \\tnless troops over
the publtc address syste m
dunng the etghth mmng of thetr
9-5 loss to the Houston Astr os
After Cesar Cedeno's thtrd htt
of the game drove m two run s
to gtve the Astros a 9-2 lead tn
the top of the seventh, Kroc got
on the public address s)stem
and shouted ' I've never seen
such s tuptd ballp1aytng tn m)

hfe '

Just

pnor

surpnsr remark

'
to Kroc 's Pttls hurgh \\ ere postponed due
a streaker to to Inclement weather

ATLANTA (UPI ) - i'&lt;u" ,;,at Hank Aaron has The Btg One
behind htm, there are a couple of smaller ones left, and what they
come nght down to about as much as anythmg else perhaps are a
patr of lottery ttckets for maybe two obscure pttchers to cash m
on
Before bowmg out for good, Hank Aaron sttll has two more
mtleslones commg up One wtll be his last home run ever, and
unless both turn out to be one and the same, he also has hts fmal
pttch ever etther to swmg at or take
Btg deal, you say? Well, maybe not necessartly to you personally, but they could turn out to be to whtchever pttchers are
responstble
Some shrewd merchandiser could promote hts product wtth an
endorsement by the pttcher who serves up Aaron's !mal home
ru1t or perhaps strtkes hun out m his last appearance at the plate
You've seen how some of those ads go
"
I gave up Hank Aaron's last home run on Sept 9, but
nothmg m the world could ever make me gtve up Uncle Charlie's
Corn Chewtes for breakfast
" or "
. I got the same
sattsfacUon strikmg out Hank Aaron as I d1d walkmg m
Shunefloor's Looseftt Leather Loafers "
Ruth's Last Homer
Chances are Aaron wtll make his last offtctal appearance for
the Atlanta Braves m late September, and tl's enttrely posstble
he may come up With )us !mal home run around that tune, too If
Utat happens, 1t's also wtthm the reaim of reason that some ktd
pttcher JUSt brought up ftlom the nunors may be hts last home run
Vlctun or th~ one who serves up Ute !mal deltvery to him.
Until all the pubhctty over Babe Ruth's record withm the past
two years, relattvely few could tell you Guy Bush, then \VJth
PittsbW'gh, was Ute pttcher whom Ruth tagged for his last homer
on May 25, 1935 Even knowmg that, Utere probably tsn't one in
10,000 who could tell you right thts mmute whtch pttcher was the
last one Babe ever faced
It was Johnny Sam
"That's nght," says the Uucago Whtte Sox' pttchtng coach, "I
pttched the last ball to Babe Ruth m an exhtbttion game at
Yankee Stadium m 1943."
Ruth was 48 at the time, had retired from baseball etght years
earlter and had five more years to live. Sam was 26, servmg m
the Navy and pttchmg for a Chapel Hill, N.C , Naval Pre-Flight
Umt
"Ruth's team was made up of players ptcked from the Yankees
and Indians," says Sam, who had pttched part of one season lor
the Boston Braves before entermg servtce "Our club was made
up of fellows like Ted Wtlliams, Harry Craft, Johnny Pesky,
Buddy Hassett, Dusty Cooke, Buddy Gremp and Joe
Coleman ..that's Joe Coleman, Semor, of course, not Juntor
Tbrew Fast Balls
"Anyway the gam~ moved along and Ruth came up as a ptneh
hitter m the late liUlmgs. 1 had never seen him before Hassett.
playmg ftrst base, came over to me and satd 'don't throw him
anycurveoalts!' I satd, okay.ldtdn't want hun to htt tt out of the
park 1 would've lost the game then. I wanted the people to see I
could pttch I had JUSt pttched relief Wlth the Braves m 1942 and
never had any success to speak of. What I did was throw Ruth
fast balls, b4t the umptres dtdn 't call any strikes on hun. So he
walked. I stlll remember when he got to ftrst base he jumped up
and clicked his heels together. The fans loved 11 I had some
satisfaction though because we won the game, 5-2 or ~ I never
realized that was Ruth's last appearance m a game of any kind
until I saw tt m a newspaper There was this ptcture of the ball
wtth a captiOn saymg 'thts was the last ball everpttched to Babe
Ruth and It was thrown by John Sam."'
Saln now ts 57 and there ts no better ptlching coach m the
busmess Bestdes bemg the last man ever to pttch to Ruth, he
holds still another distmction. He pttched to Jackie Robinson on
Opemng Day, 1947, the day RobUlSon actually broke baseball's
oolor lme
"He dtdn"t get.a base hit off me," says Sain, whose memory
rematns sharp, "but he got hts later He hit me pretty good. Oh
hell, he htt everybody the same way "

TRUST US

TO HANDLE
A LOAN OF
$500•.
People trust us to handle their savings.

CITY WAN

&amp;SAVINGS

What makes us a different
kind of loan wmpany
makes us a better kind of
I

I
r

the Cubs celebt ated thetr home
opener Bonham was treated to

tus 1 WJS an the fu st mmng
as the Cubs bunclted three
wa lks, two Phtllte errors and
Htck Monday's double
Dodgers 9, Braves 2
The furor of Hank Aaron s
715th homer now subsided ,
Braves p1tdnng reverted to
form as the Dod ge rs pounded
out II htts, tncludm g three b)
Wtllte Cra\\ ford Cra\\ford also
drove m twort.ms and Don
Sulton ptcked up the l\ tn wttlt
1chef help from Mtk e Marshall

both

'1o no one's su rptlse, Aar on

took the day off

Yanks have best
start in years

By MD., TON RICHMAN
UPI Sports F:rl•tor

1

iu ts to ptck up h1s shutout as-

In the Amen can League
da shed across the ft.etd
Mtnnesota
downed Ch icago 3·1,
promptmg the new owner to
New
York
blanked Detrot l 3-0,
shout ·Send htm to Jail '
l. arry Dterker who ptlched Texas bombed Caltforma 1().2,
seven strong mmngs after Oakland lopped Kansas Ctly 64
appeanng tn on ly 27 all last and Mtt\\aukee-Clevetand end
season, gamed the vrctory for Baltimore-Boston were sno"ed
the Aslros . "ht!e Cedeno had out
Reds 6, Gtants 3
loW' runs balled 111 As for
Joe
Morga n's run·sconng
Kroc qutte likely Marvm Mtller
wtll be heard from before lhtS' smgl~ m the slxth and Tony
mcrdent 1s forgo tten Move over Perez ' ttu rd homer of the
season enab led the Red s to
Charlt e
In other Na tt onal League kn ock the Gtants from the
games. Los Angeles whtpped unbeaten ranks Jack BtlltngAtlanl&lt;t 9 2, Chtcago blanked ham wttft relief help from
Phtladelphta 2-0. Ctnctnnatt Pedro Borbon was the wmn er
topped San Franctsco 6-3 and Pete Rose, Dan Dnessen and
Sl Louts-New York, Montreal- Mcrv Reltenmund .1 11 had three
htts for the Re&lt;ts

Sport Parade

TONIGHT 9 TIL 1"

Cubs 2, Phlllies 0
Btll Bonham scattered four

-

lodH ~ o, d p ~my

·I

Winless Padres blasted by Kroc

Today's

HALL

AND THE HALLMARKS

t~ 1 ants agamst ga me wmner for the Giants last team lOda) and wttl work out pttch unltl at least May l," he
Don Gullett
season but on the dtsa bled hst for the next two weeks
sa td
Pttcher Ron Bryant, a 24- because of InJury . re)Otned the "I don 't thmk I'll be ab le to

126 E 'Matn' St • 992·f.171
I

.\
HARVEY BROWN

Brown sets new
440 Rio mark
Sophomore Harvey Brown estabhshed another
Rw Grande College track record Tuesday afternoon
as the speedy North Galha product fimshed the 440yard dash in :49.9
.
Earher this year, the B1dwell niitl ve set a 100·
yard dash mark for the Redmen, running that event
tw1ce m .9.9 seconds
The Redmen, however, "ere
beaten by Cedarville's Yellow
Jackets , 9748 Rto ts now ().3 tn
dual meet compelttt on thts
sprtng
Next Rto outing ts Aprtl17, a

OHIO .LOST OUT
SOUTH BEND, IND (UP! )
- South Bend, Ind , was
named Tuesday to recetve a
federal experunental housmg
allowance program
Also vymg for the ewert·
mental program were Clark
County in Ohto and Sagmaw
County m Michigan. The program would mean several mil·
hon dollars m cash asSlStance

tnan gular meet at home
agatnst Cleveland State
Umvers1ty and Marshall
Umverstly, startmg at 3 30
p m at Evans Fteld,
Here 's Tuesday's results
440 r .e tay - Cedarvi lle. 45
Mile - J a c k F mch . RG . 4 21 2
H•gh
hurdles
Odom ,
Cedarville 16 5 440 - Brown ,
RG , 49 9 100 - Ga ul , RG ,
10 B 880 Be ck, Cedannll e,

1 58 4
440 hurdles Mitchell ,
Cedarvil le 57 5 220 - green,
Cedarville
23 o_ Three mi le
run - F• nch, RG 14 50 5 Mile
relay - Cedarville 3 26 3
Javelm - Book Cedarville ,
145 9 Long 1ump Luket1c
Cedarv ille , 28 l ift Tnple JUmp
Tanner , Cedarville , 42 0
Shot - Van Cur an , Cedarv11!e
41 I
D ISCUS Van Cu ran
Ce darvill€, 128 J0 1h Po le vault
- Payton RG ll 6 H 1gh 1ump
- Odom Cedarv111e . 6 o

American League Roundup
By United Press International
You've got to go back to 1945
- even befo re the Casey
Stengell().pennant era-to fmd
a faster New York Yankee
getaway than thts season
The Yankees, whom most
observers relegated to also-ran
status m the Amencan League
East, Tuesday reeled off thetr
"fourth stratght VIctory of the
young 1974 season, a 3-0
blanking of the Detroit Ttgers,
and now stand alone as the only
unbeaten team m the ctrcutt
Elsewhere, Minnesota
downed Chicago ~1. Texas
belted Caltforma from the
unbeaten ranks 10-2 and
Oakland bested Kansas Ctty 64
whtle snow forced postponement of the Mtlwaukee·
Cleveland and BalttmoreBoston ga mes
In Natwnal League games,
Houston defeated San Otego 95, Los Angeles whtpped Atlanta
9·2,
Chtcago
blanked
Phlladelphta 2·0, Cmcmnatt
topped San Franctsco 6-3 and
St Louis-New York, MontrealPittsburgh were postponed due
to inclement weather
In Utetr ftrst encounter wtth
ex-manager Ralph Houk, the
streakmg (pardon the expresston) Yankees touched starter
Mtckey Lollch for two runs m
the ftrst and coasted home
behi~ the combmed etght.Jut
pttchihg of Steve Kline and
Sparky Lyle. Klme , apparently
recovered from the elbow
miseries that plagued hun last
season, ptcked up the wm
Rangers 10, Angels 2
The Angels, only other unbeaten team m the AL gomg
mto Tuesday's action, saw
thetr ace Nolan Ryan bombed
for seven runs m one mnmg
pitched- includmg Jeff BW'·
roughs' grand slam homer m
the second as Texas raced off
to a 1().2 wm Ryan, who walked
ftve m the brtef appearance,
has now tssued 15 passes m
mne mnmgs of - work. Jun

Btbby was Ute "mner for the
Rangers
A's 6, Royals 4
Wtth the Angels' loss, Oak·
land clunbed mto tts famtliar
spot atop the AL West wtth tiS
wm over Kansas Ctty Joe
Rudt's two run double- his
thtrd of the game-came wtth
the bases loaded m the seventh
to snap a 44 tte and gtve the A's
the wtnnmg runs
Twins 3, White Sox I
Btll Campbell put down a
bases-loaded rally m the top of
Ute mnth as Mmnesota handed
the winless White Sox thetr
thtrd stratght defeat. Bert
Blyleven won for the Twtns
while another 2()..game WliUler
fr om a year ago, Wilbur Wood,
was saddled wtth the loss
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;

2,-- Tl)e Daily Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , AprillO, 1974

c

recalls Sctence News This approach was advanced by such
modern penitl reformers as psychtatnst Karl M•nmnger and
fonner attorney general Ramsey Clark.
By the 1960s, however, 11 began to become apparent that
psychotherapy, vocational counselmg, educauon programs and
the ltke were not working Crune was on the increase and the rate
of rectdivtsm was httle changed
Then came somethmg called behavior modiftcaUon Instead
of "coddhng'' crJminals wtth psychotherapy and trymg to understaN them, the tdea oow was to focus on Ute devtant behavtor
By Bruce Btossat
and, b}'i'tneans of sophtsttcated behavtor.a&gt;ntrol technology and
systematically applted rewards and puniShments, force them to
Last fall, a JUdge m Mtamt, F1a , made the news wtres when shape up ·
But now the future of thts youngest school of penology IS m
he proposed an unusual pumshment for a 19-year-&lt;&gt;ld selfdoubt
Last month two federal agencres, the Bureau of Prtsons
confessed murdeter
Rather than sentence Ute youth to life m prtson, where he and Ute Law Enforcement AssiStance Administration (I:.EAA),
would sunply be a burden to soctety, the JUdge suggested that he announced that they were ceasmg to fund projects JQVolvmg
be put on probatiOn and be reqwred to support his vtctun's wife behavtor modification Professional crtttctsm of this conand ftve children unttl the latter could earn thetr own livmgs.
troverstal approach to crune and punishment ts also mounting
"Bemg locked up should be suffictent pumshment," says
The public prosecutor labeled the tdea as "disgustmg,
Albert Bandura, president of the Amertcan Psychologtcal Assn
abhorrent and abommable."
If, some 7,000 years after the mventwn of wrttmg, we cannot "Soctety has no moral or legal right to force an tndtvtdual to
agree on what ts the best way to teach children how to read, let change If I am black and am put m pnson because I'm opposed
alone learn math aod other aspects of soctety's accumulated to the political and soctal system m this country, I sufe as hell
s tore of knowledge, tl ts not surprtsmg that after mtllenia of wouldn't want behaviOr modificaUon forced upon me "
At the other extreme ts James V McConnell, professor of
human htstory we cannot agree on how best to purush and-or
psychology at the Umverstty of Mtchtgan
rehabilitate those who break soctety's laws
"I don 't belteve the Conslltuuon of the Umted States gtves
There have been as many fads and fashions m penology m
recent years as there have been mUte classroom The prosecutor you the rtght to conumt a crune if you want to; therefore, the
quoted above, horrifted at anything less than the maxunum Constttuhon does not guarantee you the rtght to mamtam m·
punishment provtded by law, eVIdently belongs to the old school votable the personality tl forced on you m the ftrst place-if and
when the personahty manifests strongly aittiSoctal behaviOr "
of an eye for an eye, a life for a life
Unfortunately, for the one pomt of vtew, unpriSOnment ts
Thts school retgne&lt;t almost umversally unttl modern times
{though, strangely, each genera lion continued to produce a more very often not enough For the other, behavior modtftCation
or less constant percentage of crunmals no matter how many smacks too much of something like Btg Brother would hke to bse
"for our own good."
were put away or done away wtth).
In the meanttme, while the experts argue, crune marches
Then m the 1950s, the notton that most lawbreakers were m
one way or another "s1ck" became popular m pnson circles, on

-~'Heel!"

•

. Bruce Biossat
President 'taxes'

I'

Land use
used for._

Sports
De·S k

the legal imit

/

WASHINGTON WINDOW

Is foreign policy wavering?
acreage at hts San Clemente
"western Wlute House."
Nor was tl legal to defer a
capt tal gam on sale of hts New
York apartment, smce San
Clemente ts not hts "pnnctpal

Don Oakley
Crime and what

residence," and clearly he
have
two
maw
restdences-San Clemente and
Key Btscayne, Fla
It IS also rated fraudulent to
split capttal gams mcome, as
Mr Ntxon dtd wtlh hts
d~ughJer, Trtcta, on some
Flonda real estate.
All thts, he and hts lawyers

can't

punishment?
By Don Oakley

•

WASHINGTON (NEAl
My expert's word ts that if
Unpalatable reahty 1s any ordinary cittzen employed
always harder to bear than the the practices embodied in the
anticipation of that reality President's 1969-72 federal
This SW'ely can be said of the mcome tax retW'ns, he would
11
fmdlngs that President Nixon mdeed be wholly open to had to know-and lntend "
owes the United States charges of e1ther civil or
government somewhere crunmal fraud.
around $470,000 m back taxes
Disputes over taxes which
It will do h1m no good that he stop short of fraud are those
has announced he will not f1ght which mvolve dlffermg, though
the official judgments but Will mnocent and thus legitimately
pay The great political vanable, Interpretations of the
commonplace of 1974 IS that his tax laws.
generally small tax payments
What establishes fraud is
m h1s first fOW'·year tenn "mtent" that ts, deliberate
The proposed Fiscal Year
mtent
on
the
part
of
the
tax1975
Federal Budget imposes a
(twice totalmg less than $1,000
a year) have outraged the payer to misinterpret h1s tn· tax burden equal to $4,013 for
Amencan public more than coll)e, the stze or character of the
average
Amencan
anythmg he may have done or hts expenses and deductions, or household, so reports the Tax
not done about the great any other maJOr aspect of hts Foundalton. According to Ute
returns.
Foundalton, the per-family tax
Watergate scandal.
Significant in the highest
We must remember, in this burden in the coming fiscal
degree, of course, ts the ltnn mstance, that the President year will be $258 greater than
word that fmdings of the Jn. hunself-before ascending to m 1974 ... and $1,214 htgher per
lema! Revenue Servtce closely the WHite House- was prac- family than four years ago
comcide with the 210-page ttcmg some tax law in hts New
The biggest mcrease in the
report of the Joint Committee York fmn We must also tax liability over the past four
on Internal Revenue Tuation remember that he had at hts 'years has been in the field of
mcome
m Congress Mr NIXon had elbow, htgh-patd lawyers federal health,
mvited the committee's dealing with exceedmgly security,
and
welfare
,inq\J)ry last year when he made complex tax issues and that 1t programs. Defense costs .
his income tax returns pubhc. has to be a !oregon~ conclusion""- which had p~evtously been the
In aSserting that the that they were chosen for thetr most expeliSlve tlem m the per·
family tax burden . runs
Prestdent would pay the huge tax experltse
Yet the unproper pracltces constderablybehmd health and
sums owed, the Wh1te House
was at pains to note setforth m Mr. Ntxon •s returns welfare spendmg m the new
specifically that the IRS 1m- are of such an order that thetr tax projection
The Fiscal 1975 Federal
ding (not made public at thts mvalldtty ts made clear m
wntmg)
...ebuts
any elemental tax gwdebooks of Budget reflects a $29 8 btllion
suggesllon of fraud on the part the kind you can- buy for a mcrease over the previOus
of the Prestdent The com- dollar or tY"O m any bookstore
year, thus pushing the new
mittee's staff report offers no
The worst offense obviously
budget over the $3QO billton
facts which would support any 1s the now celebr~ted back: mark for the first time tn the
such charge "
dahng of documents to nation's htstory The Congress
We are on delicate ground "legttimize" hts taking as a ts now begmmng to wrestle
here But I have consulted a deduction $576 000 for donatton wtth the new budget, whtle
source h1ghly ewerienced m of hts vtce pre~ldential papers indt vtdual taxpayers are
wrestling with his or her taxes
the workings of the federal tax to the National Archtves
laws, and his judgments do not
Second m magmtude was hts at home
back up the utterances from failure to report 8 capttal gam
As the tax burden becomes
the Whtte House
of$1t7,000fromsaleofexcess heavier,
perhaps
Congresstonal spendthrifts will
think twice before pumpmg
btlhns of dollars mto
questionable spendtng
programs. As I have satd
before, nothing IS easter- for a
bureaucracy than to spend
money.
But beyond some pomt,
everything dished out by Uncle
Sam on one hand, wlll be taken
back in the other .. etther m
higher taxes or inflation or
both. The increasmg perfamily tax burden should
remmd the Congress that
Federal spending absolutely
must be cut back.

Miller in

Washington

•,

• By STEWART HENSLEY
WASHINGTON (UP!) Htgh administratiOn offtctals
are begmnmg to concede for
the first ttme Pres1dent
NIXon's domesbc troubles
may have so weakened him
that he no longer can conduct a
credttable and consistent
foretgn policy
Heretofore, the offtctal lme
as laid down by Secretary of
State Henry A ~mger has
been that the U.S. government
and the Amertcan people
ultunately would pay some
pnce for the Watergate
scandal, but that tl had not
damaged Nixon's abtlity m
international affatrs
But the revelation NIXon
owes and wlll pay almost half a

Cottontails fewer
.as habitat goes
.

By FllANK L. SPENCER
CHICAGO (UP!) - liFthis
season of the Easter Bunny,
offtctal notloe has been taken of
a dechne of rabbtts
But shucks, you say, tf there
IS a rabbtt shortage all we have
to do ts wa1t awhile, such ts
thetr reproducllve abiltty
Thts btologtcal truth, however, ts swiftly being reduced to
a theory. Your typtcal cotton·
tail doe can produce SIX to nme
bunmes every few weeks-the
gestatton pertod ts 30 days-but
she ts downnght particular
about where she produces
them
Accordmg to the Ilhnots
Natural History Survey, which
thts week brought the ra\Jbll
declme to public attention,
oottontails requtre "favorable
habttat" to mulbply m thetr
accustomed style And m
lllmol8, as everywhere else,'
the bulldozers have been
closmg m on the ra bbtt
warrens
In IllinoiS alone, accordmg to
the survey experts, there was a
decline of almost 5 mlllion
acres of '1avorable habitat" In
one recent four-year pertod.
Durmg this pertod, the experts said, the rabbit popula·

BERRY'S WORLD

The Dily S.llillfll

11J 197&lt;by N!'.A Inc
I

"Who1d have ever thought tha ole' poker gang would
tum Into a needlepoint group, ,eh. guys?"

t

mtllion dollars m back taxes could be brought to book for
and . mterest
appears unpatd taxes, even as an orprofoundly to have altered the dinary clltzen mtght, undiplomatic attitudes toward doubtly shocked leaders m
the admmtstrabon's ability to Russia-where tlus certainly
handle mternat10nal affatrs could not happen-and in
U.S. offtctals and foreign Europe, where tt would be
dtplomats stationed here highly unlikely.
During Kissinger's recent
seemed unable to believe a
and
relattvely unprOductive
congressional committee and
the Internal Revenue Servtce trtp to Moscow, Sovtet offtctals
actually IIUght label the Prest· engaged in tough bargaunng
dent a tax dodger on a massive and seemed to be testing
-even if unmtentional-!!CBle. NIXon's strength on the foretgn
Foretgn diplomats m par- frOilt. They gave litUe ground,
ticular tended to dtscount and the deciSion on Nixon's
Watergate as a domestic taxes likely wlll pursade them
political battle from which that further negotiations wtll
NIXon would emerge wtUt no be from a weakened posttton.
Whether Ktssmger would
more than routine political
acknowledge
thi;, ts another
scars
Howeyer, the fact that NIXon matter. However, when Kiss·
mger returns from his Mextcan
honeymoon next week, he faces
tough negoltations on two
fronts -and soon will learn if
NIXon's foreign policy can
mamtam momentum.
-He wlll meet shorUy before
the IIUddle of April in Washing·
tton dropped 69 per cent And ton wtUt Sov1et Ambassador
the trend lines m all parts of Antoly F. Dobrynin and Fothe country Indicate a con- reign Ministe~ Andret Gromeytinued rtse m bulldozmg, a ko to discuss nuclear arms
steady depletiOn of rabbtts.
limitallons and other ISSUes.
Surely, you say, some group
-About the same time, gtve
will dtscover the plight of the or take a few days, Kissinger
cottontail and rush to protect wtU hold his first session here
these creatures Don't bet on 1t wtth a high Syrtan official to
The ordinary rabbtt has few discuss the proposal for IIUli·
real frieods And practtcally - lary disengagement on the
everythmg ts hts enemy. Golan front that Israeh
Among predators, rabbtt ts a Defense Minister Moshe Dayan
favortte food. Coyotes, accord- brought here last week
mg to a Nebraska study a few
Unless he can achieve
years ago, prefer them to stgniflcant progress on arms
chicken. And whatever his limitation and trade matters
reputationforspeed dogsand durtng
Gromeyko's
oats seem to have ~o trouble Washmgton VISit and during
outflanking the. average cot- the trip Kissinger plans to
tonta~.
M~cow in May, Ute new ~a ?f.
It turns out that of all his SoVIet-Amertcan goodwill ts
en~tes, the one most danger- bound to suffer.
ou to the rabbit way of life ts
And if the Syrians stick to
th farmer. Nowadays fanners their demand for total Israeli
put every square tneh mto withdrawal from all territory
culttvatton. Thts means no taken m the 1967 war and the
patches of brush for the rab- conflict last October, chances
btts.
for progress in Mideast peace
The only people ;who have efforts are oonenstent.
expressed much mterest m ~With all Nixon's troubles,
pre.venting a complete rabbtt capped by the mcome tax
wtpeout are the hunters. They setback, tt IS difftcult to see
want· to keep a few around so why Ute PreSident continues to
they can kill Utem
insiSt he wlll go to Moscow as
scheduled in June.

It would appear he
ultimately would be more
mchned to follow the advtce of
those oongressmen who have
urged him not to go Into a
Situation where he may be
unable to achieve any progress
and where he may find an
adversary mtent only explottmg h1s present weakness.
NIXon and Kissinger may
have some diplomatic ace up
thetr sleeve which has not yet
been disclosed, but the belief
here IS that this is unlikely.

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB

Follicles detennine amount of hair
By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.

DEAR DR LAMB - - Please
settle a dtsagreement between
my fnend and me. I say that tf
a person shaves or removes
hatr wtth a depilatory then the
hatr doesn't grow back m a
greater amount or darker m
color. J thmk that tl only looks
darker because tl hasn't been
bleached by the sun yet and
that ts why it looks darker.
DEAR READER - The
number of hatrs depends entirely on the number of actwe
hatr folltcles wtthm Ute skin
The folltcle ts like the root to a
blade of grass. You can cut the
, \OP off and the root wlll allow
more grass, or ha1r, to gfown
nght back.
The stub of hair ts tougher,
and a shaved area wtll give
that 'brtstle-feel to touch. If you
ever walked over some cut
gr~q_stubble or stubble from a
wheat field you can see how
tough tl Is too at Ute base. The

,.

,_
\

.

shaving doesn't make the hatr
tougher, tl just leaves the
tougher stubble.
Cuttmg off or even' pulling
out the hatr still leaves an
active follicle, and the hatr wtll
return JUSt as it war, no darker
and m no greater' quantity. The
only way to solve the problem
ts to remove the follicle. This is
what electrolysis does. Using
an electrical needle the hair
follicle ts destroyed It usually
takes several treallnents to get
all the hatr follicles because
some of them hav~ not
sprouted thetr next hatr at the
time of one procedure and
can't be located By repeated
procedures, m tune all the hatr
'follicles can be destroyed, and
hence no more hair.
DEAR DR. LAMB - I have
thalassemia
Cooley's
Medtterranean anemia I
believe it ts a form of leukemta
(cancer). I am 59 years old. 1
~

."

'

I'm so tired constantly. It
gets progresstvely worse I
know t!lere ts research gomg
on Is there anything at all that
can relieve this terrtble ltred
fj!eting I do have so much work
that needs to be done. So,
ccon~tant rest Is out of the
question . I go around feeling so
tired Utat at tunes I'm like a
zombie.
DEAR READER- You may
well have thalassemia, but I
doubt you have Cooley's
Mediterranean anemia. That
parbcular type of anemia l8
usually confined to young
chtldren Most likely you have
another vartant of the
thalassemia type of anei!Uas.
The thalassemias are all
abnormalities m the fonnatton.
of hemoglobtn wbtch ts
associated wtth varying
degrees of anenua. Depending
on the severity of the problem,
the liver and. spleen
may be
.

.

.. ' I

.\

Rr Denny
Fobes

politics

•

enlarged, and there may even
be jaundtce. Since you don't
mention these things, I would
assume you do not have that
severe a form.
Probably your fahgue ts
related to an anenua Your
doctor would most certamly
know wtth a simple blood test
He may be able to rontrol your
anemta with medicines I do
want to asslll'e you that what
you have ts not leukenua, nor ts
tl cancer It is an mherited
condttion affectmg the
hemoglobin or iron-eontammg
pigment withm Ute red blood
cells
Send your questions to Dr.
Lamb In care of Ibis
I DeWSPJ!JMtr, P.O. Box 1551,
Radio City Station, New York,
N. Y. 10019. For a copy, nf Dr.
Lamb'• boatlet on low blood
sugar, oeud SO cents Ia 'lbe
wne addres• aDd uk f~

COLUMBUS (UPI ) - U.S.
Rep Morris K Udall, D-Ariz ;
chtef sponsor of the nahonal
land use plannmg blll, Tuesday
satd he felt Prestdent Nixon
was "grandstanding for the
nght wmg" and "playmg
unpeachment politics" wtth
the proposal.
" It ts my feeling the Prest·
dent has been playmg up to the
nght lflllg
playmg unpeachment politics," Udall told
the Governor's Conference on
Land Use Polley m Ohio
He said NIXon has fluctuated
m hiS support of the bill, which
has cleared the House Intertor
and Insular Affatrs Conuruttee
after more than three years of
study.
The Rules Conuruttee, which
once refused to authorne a
floor vote, has been asked to
consider the bill early m May.
Udall satd the Prestdent, m
1973, had called the land use
control blll "perhaps the most·
pressmg envtronmental ISSUe
before the nation."
The Rules Comnuttee, how· ever, refused to move the blll '
up after the President changed '
his mmd, Udall said.
"I predict mall likelihood we
wlll have a national land use
plamung blll thts year desptte
..
Ute setbacks," he satd.
The bill would allow indi•
vidual states to set their own·
land use policies wtth fmanctal
backmg from the federal government.
Ohto would be eligtble for
about $4 million a year under
the formula for divi!!jng $1100
million m federal lunda over an
etght-year pertod

"Blood Sugar" booklet.

'

..

One of the comments was
"Take steps pohttcally
V01ces come back to Gov," •
apparently referrmg to Gov
Wendell Anderson
Another was "Stem won't
take on Gov turn over to •
Mttchell " Starns satd the reference to Mtlchell apparently
meant then U.S. Atty. Gen
John Mttchell
As to the name Stem, Starns
sa1d they was Murry Stem, who ··
chatred the Lake Supertor '
forecment Conference.
It was durmg that confer-,
ence that state and federal offt..;,
ctais ftrst tned to halt
Reserve's dtscharge of tacomte
waste into Lake Supenor

NOTICE
Pursuant to Sec 4(c) (8) of
the Sank Holding Company Act '
and regulat1ons of the Board of ._
Governors at the Federal
Reserve .System, not .ce 1S given
that
CONTINENTAL
ILLINOIS
CORPORATION
Chicago, Illinois
a bank hold1ng company
proposes to ac(lu1re the Shares"
of
CAPITAL FINANCIAL
SERVICES INC
Whose prmc1pal office is at
Columbus Oh1o, and related
com pan 1es and thereby to
engage In the follOWing ac
tivlt les (1 ) making consumer
•nstaliment loans and pur "
chasmg consumer msta llment
sales fmance contracts , (2) the
bu smess of or bus mess m the
nature ot an •ndustrlal bank or
mdustnal loan company where
and as authorized by law in the
states
of
Iowa ,
Oh10.
Wash ington, and West V.rgm,a,
{3) making loans and the
prov1S1on of cred•t serv1ces In
connect1on W1th the fmancmg of
Inv entory of distributors of, and
dealers m, consumer products
and bus iness equ ipment , and
other mventory tmancmg {4)
with respect only ta 1nsurance
purchased by borrowers •n
connect1on Wllh cred1t act1t1t 1eS
of Cap1tal Financial Serv1ces
Inc and subS1dlanes , {1 J acting
as agent or broker for the sa le
of. and underwriting and ~·
remsuring , cred1t life acc1dent
and health Insurance, and (b)
acting as agent or broker for the
sale of property and casualty
Insurance protect1ng loan
collitterai
and
assurmg
repayment of an extens1on of
credit , and (5) at offices located
•n Grand Rap1dS, M1chlgan and ... ~
Columbus. Ohio , leasinQ P'er
sonal property an d equ1pment,
and acting as agent , broker, or
adviser In 'the leasmg thereof, ..-;
where at the Inception of the ......,
lnltllll lease the expectat 1on Is •
that the effect of the transaction , .
and reasonably anticipated ":.
future transactions w1th the u..
same lessee as to the same ~
property will be to compensate •
the lessor for not less than the
lessor's lull investment In the •
propertY Except as otherw1se 111!1
1nd leafed above, these act1v1t1es •~
will continue to be conducted at -),.;.·
offices of Capital F lnanclal ; :
Services Inc
(Also doing "'P
business In Ohio as Capital ...,
Savings and Loan Comfany ) or 4"'
of 1ts direct or lndlrec wholly . •
owned subsidiaries at the ::
follow.ng locatlon Ss l
...
P 0 Box 192
~
SOO West 2nd Street
JU~:
Pomeroy, Ohio 4756?
:,
Persons w1Shlng to comment ...;;
on this proposal should submit their views In wr 1t1ng wlthm 30
days of the sale of pu bllcat.on of $If
tt, ls no flce.. to
FEDER.AL
RESERVE ,.
BANK OF CLEVELAND
~

Bronco baseballer is
MAC Player-of-Week
four home runs m a four-game
senes at the Umverstty of LouISville He accounted for 18
total bases, batted m SIX runs
and scored six hunself to help
the Broncos to a four-game
sweep
He edged out Umverstty of
Toledo pttcher Roger Coe who
lwtrled a 2-0 shutout over Notre
Longshots pay
Dame, striking out m!le. Earll·
er m the week he struck out 10
off at Beulah
hatters m four innings agamst
COLUMBUS (UP!)- A patr Adrtan (Mtch ) He also has a
no.Jtitter to hts credit this
of longshots provtded a daily
sprmg
double worth $692 at Beulah
Park Tuesday afternoon
Royal Guardsman, a 32-1
chotce, won the ftrst race and
ELECTION FINANCING
Sweet Flavor, a 59-1 selectiOn,
TRENTON, N J. (UP!) took the second to produce the -Gov.- Brendan T Byrne has
pushed through the Assembly
WUUltng 1-li combinabon.
The featW'ed $3,000 etghth without maJor amendments his
race was won by Prlmego, who proposal to use public lunda \9
ran the six fW'longs m 1·12 3-5 fmance the next electton for
and returned $'l0.60, $11 and $5. governor.
The Assembly approved the
Seeond place Hereford patd
$16 and $4, while thtrd place btll by Sl-34 and sent tl to the
Senate after four hours of
Tucky Boy returned $2.60.
Attendance was 3,595 wtUt a debate and mtenstve lobbymg
by the Byrne admmtstration
handle of $362,117

COLUMBUS, Ohto (UP!) Western Michigan Umverstty
centerftelder Mark Orr was
named today as the Mid·
Amertcan Conferences spring
Athlete of the Week for his play
Utts past meekend.
Orr went Stx·for-14 and had

.

The MEIGS INN

\.

!'

Cltveltnd, Ohio 44101

W 10. ltc

.-

THE CENTRAL SCHOOL IN WELLSTON wtll be the stte for
yet another mdependent basketball tournament, begmnmg April
22 and Tllnnmg through the 27th
Trophies wtll be awarded to the champiOn and the wo
runnerup teams, wtth mdiv1dual awards bemg presented to the
champtonshtp team.
Entry fee ts the usual $30 per team, and the drawmg for
patrlngs wtll be made at Central School on April13, at 2p m
For further mformatton, call 384-2833 durmg the day and 384&amp;103 or ~274 dW'mg the evenmg and ask for Gary Stabler or
Joe Ramsey

..

1455 Eost Sixth Street

j

BtU Phtlltps, me ~ca•tern cage mentor who has·never had an
Eagle team ftmsh lower than second m the SV AC m hts fo ur
},ars at the dislrtcl school, has been selected a -counsetor-eoach
at the Tom "Saleh" Sanders Basketball Camp at Concord
College durmg the week of July 7
Phtlllps IS one Of JUS) SIX
coaches m Ohio, West Vtrgmta
apd Kentucky who have been
selected to parhctpate m this
camp, descrtbed by Philhps as
one of the best m this area
Concord College, m Athens,
W Va (tn the southern part of
the state) has been the stte of
the "Saleh" Sanders camp
smce 1971 It has been sponsored smce that tune by the
Eastern Assoclitted Coal Corp.,
(EACC), and has brought
Jerry West, along wtth Sanders, to help grade school,
JUmor htgh and high school
youngsters learn basketball
fundamentals
West, of course, ts the Los
Angeles Laker great and
former
West
Vtrgmta
Umverstty star Sanders ts
better known as the lanky
fonner forward of the Boston
Celhcs m the Celts' golden era
durmg the late '50s and early
'60s when he teamed wtth such
notables as Btll Russell, Tom
Hemsohn, Sam Jones and Bob
BD.,L PHIUJPS
Cousy to donunate professtonal
basketball
Phtllips satd, "I am lookmg forward to bemg at ConcorJ, a
olace I've never been before. It wtli be a real ~ood exoertence to
work with Saleh, who was one of the best defenstve players m the
NBA for a long tune."
Phtlltps, who will be an mstructor the enttre length of the
camp, one week, added, "I constder tl an honor and a pnvtlege to
have been chosen to be a counselor-eoach at this camp."
Sanders wtll be the camp dtrector, while Ira Blankenship,
head coach at Concord College, wtll be the camp coordmator
Phtlltps added that tt ts one of the least expenstve camps
avatlable, and satd he hopes some of his Eastern players and
others cagers of thts area wtll attend
"Jerry West mtght be there for a day , but that ts JUSt tentative rtght now," Phtlhps satd
The camp, sponsored by EACC, ts for all boys between the
ages of 9 and 19 Cha rge for the week wng stay which mcludes
room and board for the enttre week, ts not exacUy known at this
time, but tt wlll not be more than $50 (and proba bly less than
that, accordmg to EACC)
The camp ts approved by the West Vtrgtma Secondary
Schools AcltVIttes Comnusswn Phllltps srud tt would be best if
any mterested Ohio youths ftrst get approval from the Ohto Htgh
School Athlettc AsS'octatton
More Information wtll be forthconung on detatls for kids such
as appltcations, etc., accordmg to Phllhps

Judge got heartsick
ST PAUL, Mtnn. (UPI )
US Dtstrtct Court Judge Miles
Lord Tuesday ordered Reserve
Mming Co. off)cers to produce
records of every pohttcal
counlrtbullon made smce 1969.
Not only were mmmg company offtcers ordered to produce records, but Lord's order
mcluded the two steel compames that own Reserve Mtn·
mg - Armco Steel Co. and
Republic Steel.
The order was tssued after a
document was read to Lord
that mdtcated the ftnns had
plans for political moves. to
ftght pollution charges agamst
Reserve Mming.
Read to Lord were handwritten notes found on an
agenda for a Reserve meeting
held m Chicago on Feb 23,
1971
The document produce
from Armco Steel Co !ties, was
read to the JUdge by Byron E.
Starns , deputy Mtnnesota
attorney general
After Starns read the notes,
Lord called a qwck recess saymg he was not feeling well
When he returned to the
courtroom He said, "when I
satd I was tll 1t was m my
heart and not my stomach
Lord's order was to produce
campaign records, even if Utey
i&gt;ertamed to local school board
elections
The notes, the wnter unknown, were short and sketchy
Starns said, "essentially tl
seems to be some type of a
strategy meeting "

GiM.ts lose first game of year, 6-3

~

.

:k"

The most popular mghl club in
the tri-countv area zs proud to
,present the return ot

G~O .

SAN FRANCISCO (UPI ) Tho- Cmcmnall Reds snapped
the San Franctsco Gtants' fourga me wm streak 6-3 Tuesday
mghl wtlh ltllle Joe Morgan
provadmg the wmmng rWl
The wtn wen t to Jack
Btlh ngham wtth rebel help
from Pedro Borbon
"We ll JUst have to get them
the nex: t tune, '' Manager
Cha rlte Fox of the Gt ants sa td
after the defeat 'They are a
very good team They have lots
of hatters \\oho can hurt you '
lromcally tt wasn l one ol
the btg sluggers who provtded
the wmmng htt ll was Morgan
th~ ltttle second baseman, who
smgledAo score Cesa r Gero:umo wtth what proved to be the

got enough of 1t to get 1t pltchmg for the

through the hole "
Bradley - arcordmg to Fox,
was behmd hitters all mght
long yet he struck out etght
bailers
"I was a hllle cold at the
start. · Bradley satd He gave
up a two-r un homer to l'ony
Perez m the ltrst mmn g, the
thtrd homer of the season for
Perez
'Brad ley \laS makm g good
pttches,' Rose sa td "He fool; d
me on t\\oo when I struck out

Rose collected three htts lo
gtve hun 11 m the ftrsl ftve
ga.mes of the season
Everyone was worrted when
Joe Morga n and I weren 't
htltmg m sprtng tratmng Thts
wmmng run 1n the seventh ts when tl counl•,'' he satd
mmn g
The Reds \\ho had 15 htts ,
Gerommo led off the seventh got thetr fmal two runs off
mmng wtlh a lnple to left ftcld Eha s Sosa m the mn th
Losmg pttcher Tom Bradley Gerommo drove m one run w1th
then struck out Btlhngham and a sacrtftce fl y and Borbon got
Pete Rose but Morgan slashed the other home \\tth an mfteld
a smgle to left
htt
"I thought I was out of The Gtant;;, now 4-1 , got 10
It oubte when I struck out htls mcludmg three by Bobby
Rose." Bradley sa td "And I Bonds
made a good pttch to MOt gan
The se n es concl udes today
It was "" ay from htm but lle wtlh lefty Mtke Caldwell

National League Roundup
By United Press International
It look a whtie but tn Ra)
Kroc, the NatiOnal League may
ftnall) have come up wtth tis
answet to Charles 0 i'mley
Kroc . the McDonald H(lm-

burger ktng who bought the San
Otego Padres earltet · thts
sprtng, pulled a Ftnley-ltke
move Tuesday mght wh en he
blasted hts \\tnless troops over
the publtc address syste m
dunng the etghth mmng of thetr
9-5 loss to the Houston Astr os
After Cesar Cedeno's thtrd htt
of the game drove m two run s
to gtve the Astros a 9-2 lead tn
the top of the seventh, Kroc got
on the public address s)stem
and shouted ' I've never seen
such s tuptd ballp1aytng tn m)

hfe '

Just

pnor

surpnsr remark

'
to Kroc 's Pttls hurgh \\ ere postponed due
a streaker to to Inclement weather

ATLANTA (UPI ) - i'&lt;u" ,;,at Hank Aaron has The Btg One
behind htm, there are a couple of smaller ones left, and what they
come nght down to about as much as anythmg else perhaps are a
patr of lottery ttckets for maybe two obscure pttchers to cash m
on
Before bowmg out for good, Hank Aaron sttll has two more
mtleslones commg up One wtll be his last home run ever, and
unless both turn out to be one and the same, he also has hts fmal
pttch ever etther to swmg at or take
Btg deal, you say? Well, maybe not necessartly to you personally, but they could turn out to be to whtchever pttchers are
responstble
Some shrewd merchandiser could promote hts product wtth an
endorsement by the pttcher who serves up Aaron's !mal home
ru1t or perhaps strtkes hun out m his last appearance at the plate
You've seen how some of those ads go
"
I gave up Hank Aaron's last home run on Sept 9, but
nothmg m the world could ever make me gtve up Uncle Charlie's
Corn Chewtes for breakfast
" or "
. I got the same
sattsfacUon strikmg out Hank Aaron as I d1d walkmg m
Shunefloor's Looseftt Leather Loafers "
Ruth's Last Homer
Chances are Aaron wtll make his last offtctal appearance for
the Atlanta Braves m late September, and tl's enttrely posstble
he may come up With )us !mal home run around that tune, too If
Utat happens, 1t's also wtthm the reaim of reason that some ktd
pttcher JUSt brought up ftlom the nunors may be hts last home run
Vlctun or th~ one who serves up Ute !mal deltvery to him.
Until all the pubhctty over Babe Ruth's record withm the past
two years, relattvely few could tell you Guy Bush, then \VJth
PittsbW'gh, was Ute pttcher whom Ruth tagged for his last homer
on May 25, 1935 Even knowmg that, Utere probably tsn't one in
10,000 who could tell you right thts mmute whtch pttcher was the
last one Babe ever faced
It was Johnny Sam
"That's nght," says the Uucago Whtte Sox' pttchtng coach, "I
pttched the last ball to Babe Ruth m an exhtbttion game at
Yankee Stadium m 1943."
Ruth was 48 at the time, had retired from baseball etght years
earlter and had five more years to live. Sam was 26, servmg m
the Navy and pttchmg for a Chapel Hill, N.C , Naval Pre-Flight
Umt
"Ruth's team was made up of players ptcked from the Yankees
and Indians," says Sam, who had pttched part of one season lor
the Boston Braves before entermg servtce "Our club was made
up of fellows like Ted Wtlliams, Harry Craft, Johnny Pesky,
Buddy Hassett, Dusty Cooke, Buddy Gremp and Joe
Coleman ..that's Joe Coleman, Semor, of course, not Juntor
Tbrew Fast Balls
"Anyway the gam~ moved along and Ruth came up as a ptneh
hitter m the late liUlmgs. 1 had never seen him before Hassett.
playmg ftrst base, came over to me and satd 'don't throw him
anycurveoalts!' I satd, okay.ldtdn't want hun to htt tt out of the
park 1 would've lost the game then. I wanted the people to see I
could pttch I had JUSt pttched relief Wlth the Braves m 1942 and
never had any success to speak of. What I did was throw Ruth
fast balls, b4t the umptres dtdn 't call any strikes on hun. So he
walked. I stlll remember when he got to ftrst base he jumped up
and clicked his heels together. The fans loved 11 I had some
satisfaction though because we won the game, 5-2 or ~ I never
realized that was Ruth's last appearance m a game of any kind
until I saw tt m a newspaper There was this ptcture of the ball
wtth a captiOn saymg 'thts was the last ball everpttched to Babe
Ruth and It was thrown by John Sam."'
Saln now ts 57 and there ts no better ptlching coach m the
busmess Bestdes bemg the last man ever to pttch to Ruth, he
holds still another distmction. He pttched to Jackie Robinson on
Opemng Day, 1947, the day RobUlSon actually broke baseball's
oolor lme
"He dtdn"t get.a base hit off me," says Sain, whose memory
rematns sharp, "but he got hts later He hit me pretty good. Oh
hell, he htt everybody the same way "

TRUST US

TO HANDLE
A LOAN OF
$500•.
People trust us to handle their savings.

CITY WAN

&amp;SAVINGS

What makes us a different
kind of loan wmpany
makes us a better kind of
I

I
r

the Cubs celebt ated thetr home
opener Bonham was treated to

tus 1 WJS an the fu st mmng
as the Cubs bunclted three
wa lks, two Phtllte errors and
Htck Monday's double
Dodgers 9, Braves 2
The furor of Hank Aaron s
715th homer now subsided ,
Braves p1tdnng reverted to
form as the Dod ge rs pounded
out II htts, tncludm g three b)
Wtllte Cra\\ ford Cra\\ford also
drove m twort.ms and Don
Sulton ptcked up the l\ tn wttlt
1chef help from Mtk e Marshall

both

'1o no one's su rptlse, Aar on

took the day off

Yanks have best
start in years

By MD., TON RICHMAN
UPI Sports F:rl•tor

1

iu ts to ptck up h1s shutout as-

In the Amen can League
da shed across the ft.etd
Mtnnesota
downed Ch icago 3·1,
promptmg the new owner to
New
York
blanked Detrot l 3-0,
shout ·Send htm to Jail '
l. arry Dterker who ptlched Texas bombed Caltforma 1().2,
seven strong mmngs after Oakland lopped Kansas Ctly 64
appeanng tn on ly 27 all last and Mtt\\aukee-Clevetand end
season, gamed the vrctory for Baltimore-Boston were sno"ed
the Aslros . "ht!e Cedeno had out
Reds 6, Gtants 3
loW' runs balled 111 As for
Joe
Morga n's run·sconng
Kroc qutte likely Marvm Mtller
wtll be heard from before lhtS' smgl~ m the slxth and Tony
mcrdent 1s forgo tten Move over Perez ' ttu rd homer of the
season enab led the Red s to
Charlt e
In other Na tt onal League kn ock the Gtants from the
games. Los Angeles whtpped unbeaten ranks Jack BtlltngAtlanl&lt;t 9 2, Chtcago blanked ham wttft relief help from
Phtladelphta 2-0. Ctnctnnatt Pedro Borbon was the wmn er
topped San Franctsco 6-3 and Pete Rose, Dan Dnessen and
Sl Louts-New York, Montreal- Mcrv Reltenmund .1 11 had three
htts for the Re&lt;ts

Sport Parade

TONIGHT 9 TIL 1"

Cubs 2, Phlllies 0
Btll Bonham scattered four

-

lodH ~ o, d p ~my

·I

Winless Padres blasted by Kroc

Today's

HALL

AND THE HALLMARKS

t~ 1 ants agamst ga me wmner for the Giants last team lOda) and wttl work out pttch unltl at least May l," he
Don Gullett
season but on the dtsa bled hst for the next two weeks
sa td
Pttcher Ron Bryant, a 24- because of InJury . re)Otned the "I don 't thmk I'll be ab le to

126 E 'Matn' St • 992·f.171
I

.\
HARVEY BROWN

Brown sets new
440 Rio mark
Sophomore Harvey Brown estabhshed another
Rw Grande College track record Tuesday afternoon
as the speedy North Galha product fimshed the 440yard dash in :49.9
.
Earher this year, the B1dwell niitl ve set a 100·
yard dash mark for the Redmen, running that event
tw1ce m .9.9 seconds
The Redmen, however, "ere
beaten by Cedarville's Yellow
Jackets , 9748 Rto ts now ().3 tn
dual meet compelttt on thts
sprtng
Next Rto outing ts Aprtl17, a

OHIO .LOST OUT
SOUTH BEND, IND (UP! )
- South Bend, Ind , was
named Tuesday to recetve a
federal experunental housmg
allowance program
Also vymg for the ewert·
mental program were Clark
County in Ohto and Sagmaw
County m Michigan. The program would mean several mil·
hon dollars m cash asSlStance

tnan gular meet at home
agatnst Cleveland State
Umvers1ty and Marshall
Umverstly, startmg at 3 30
p m at Evans Fteld,
Here 's Tuesday's results
440 r .e tay - Cedarvi lle. 45
Mile - J a c k F mch . RG . 4 21 2
H•gh
hurdles
Odom ,
Cedarville 16 5 440 - Brown ,
RG , 49 9 100 - Ga ul , RG ,
10 B 880 Be ck, Cedannll e,

1 58 4
440 hurdles Mitchell ,
Cedarvil le 57 5 220 - green,
Cedarville
23 o_ Three mi le
run - F• nch, RG 14 50 5 Mile
relay - Cedarville 3 26 3
Javelm - Book Cedarville ,
145 9 Long 1ump Luket1c
Cedarv ille , 28 l ift Tnple JUmp
Tanner , Cedarville , 42 0
Shot - Van Cur an , Cedarv11!e
41 I
D ISCUS Van Cu ran
Ce darvill€, 128 J0 1h Po le vault
- Payton RG ll 6 H 1gh 1ump
- Odom Cedarv111e . 6 o

American League Roundup
By United Press International
You've got to go back to 1945
- even befo re the Casey
Stengell().pennant era-to fmd
a faster New York Yankee
getaway than thts season
The Yankees, whom most
observers relegated to also-ran
status m the Amencan League
East, Tuesday reeled off thetr
"fourth stratght VIctory of the
young 1974 season, a 3-0
blanking of the Detroit Ttgers,
and now stand alone as the only
unbeaten team m the ctrcutt
Elsewhere, Minnesota
downed Chicago ~1. Texas
belted Caltforma from the
unbeaten ranks 10-2 and
Oakland bested Kansas Ctty 64
whtle snow forced postponement of the Mtlwaukee·
Cleveland and BalttmoreBoston ga mes
In Natwnal League games,
Houston defeated San Otego 95, Los Angeles whtpped Atlanta
9·2,
Chtcago
blanked
Phlladelphta 2·0, Cmcmnatt
topped San Franctsco 6-3 and
St Louis-New York, MontrealPittsburgh were postponed due
to inclement weather
In Utetr ftrst encounter wtth
ex-manager Ralph Houk, the
streakmg (pardon the expresston) Yankees touched starter
Mtckey Lollch for two runs m
the ftrst and coasted home
behi~ the combmed etght.Jut
pttchihg of Steve Kline and
Sparky Lyle. Klme , apparently
recovered from the elbow
miseries that plagued hun last
season, ptcked up the wm
Rangers 10, Angels 2
The Angels, only other unbeaten team m the AL gomg
mto Tuesday's action, saw
thetr ace Nolan Ryan bombed
for seven runs m one mnmg
pitched- includmg Jeff BW'·
roughs' grand slam homer m
the second as Texas raced off
to a 1().2 wm Ryan, who walked
ftve m the brtef appearance,
has now tssued 15 passes m
mne mnmgs of - work. Jun

Btbby was Ute "mner for the
Rangers
A's 6, Royals 4
Wtth the Angels' loss, Oak·
land clunbed mto tts famtliar
spot atop the AL West wtth tiS
wm over Kansas Ctty Joe
Rudt's two run double- his
thtrd of the game-came wtth
the bases loaded m the seventh
to snap a 44 tte and gtve the A's
the wtnnmg runs
Twins 3, White Sox I
Btll Campbell put down a
bases-loaded rally m the top of
Ute mnth as Mmnesota handed
the winless White Sox thetr
thtrd stratght defeat. Bert
Blyleven won for the Twtns
while another 2()..game WliUler
fr om a year ago, Wilbur Wood,
was saddled wtth the loss
- . - - - - - - - - -...

lh%
INTEREST

On Certificates
Of Deposit

1,000 Minimum
·30 Mo. Term

5

Nm e ty day .n terest penalty
•f
Withdrawn
befor e
matur1t y date

Meigs Co. Branch

@·
The Athen s County
sav•ngs &amp; Loan Co
296 Se cond St

Pomerov . Oh 1o

GOODfY.EAII

TOP

QUALITY
LOW

PRICE!

IR

PIIUOR!
Thurs., Apr.ll, 7:30 p.m.

Ohio University
Convocation Center
Tickets $4.50 . '3.50
Avatlable
al
Memor1al
Audttonum Box Office. Phone
614·594 ·3471.

Choice seats wtll a I so be
available the ntght of the game
at the Convocation Center Box

TRIPLE RIB R/S

FRONT TRACTOR TIRE

$2195

• New Ruggea Rtm Sh1eld
' protec ts lowe r stdewall
• Deep w1de cen ter nb
for easy steenng

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tempered nylon cord

MEIGS TIRE CENTER
700 E. Main Si.
POMEROY, OHIO
992-2101

�4- Ttui Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Apri!IO, 1974

•

•

Bulls ·edge Pistons .zn
•
playoffs; Celtics wzn·

(

pa~es

Rookie

..

'·

5- The Dally Sentinel, Mlddle[IOrt-Porneroy, 0., ApriiJO, 197~

,..

}.

N -atio n al league Standings
United Pres s International
Eut
W L
Pet , G B
St . Lou is
2 0 1.000
t: h i cilgo
I
0 1.000
1(1
N ew Yo'r.k
"I
1 ,500 1
Montreal
0 0 .000
1
Philadel ph i a
1 2 .. 333
Jl/~
P itt sbur g h
0 2 .000 2
W est
San F ri'ln c isc o d
I .800
Lo s A ng eles
d
I .900
Cin ci nnat i
3 2 . 600 I
At la nta
2 J · . 490 2
Ho uston
1 3 . 250 2'h
San Diego
0
4 .000 3'h

American League Standings
By United Press Inter n ational
·
E&lt;~ s t
W L PCt . GB ,
New Y ork
4 0 1. 000
Balt i more
·2
2 . 500
Jlh
Boston
1 I .500
Jlh
Milwaukee
"1 1 .500
)1;,
Detroit
2 3 .400 2
Clev e land
0 3 .000 J'h
west
• oakl and
1 .t:~ u
3
C-a lifor nia
t
1 66 7
~~1
M i11oeso ta
· 2 1 .667
1 '1
T e~~:as
2 2 SOO 1
Ka nsas Ci~ y
1 2 . 33_3" ] If:,.
Ch icag o
0 3 ..000
21h

Flyers victory.

PHILADELPHIA (UPI) - bestof..,even-series. "He wast
Orest Kindrachuk didn't play have had an operation for
like a rookie with a kidney . kidney ailment, ~ut. he didn
ailment in the Philadelphia and he only got stroog la1
NBA Playoff Roundup
Like the Bulls, the Boston the defending playoff chamThe Bulls could wrap up the
Flyers' 4-1 victory over the week."
•
By United Press lnternallonat Celtics took a 3-2 lead in their
pion New York Knicks need series with a win at Detroit
Atlanta
Flames
Tuesday
night"
Kinderchuck,
1971-72 playe
The Detroit Piotons are only playoff against Buffalo by only a victory tonight over Thursday night and should .
in
the
quarterfinals
of
the
of
the
year
in
tbe Westei::
one defeat away from elimina- beaUng the Braves 100-117 while Capital to eliminate the Bullets Chicago win, it would open the
Nationa
l·
Hockey
League's
League who also 1!'&lt;1 the leagu·
tion in the National Basketball
.. TuP &lt;: tt::a\1 ' &lt;: g l'l &lt;:nlt&lt;:
'
To1 P c:t1~v ' &lt;: RPSUII S
in six games.
Western Conference playoff St • .L..P
Stanley
Cup
playoffs.
in
fights, was deprived of '
ui
s
at
N
.Y
.,
ppd
.
rain
l
eKas
10
Ca
lif
.
2,
night
Association playoffs but coach
The Bulls opened up a 25- championship at Milwaukee Mon tr eal at P i t tS.. ppd snow
Oak l and 6 K - ~ 4, n i gh t
The
Flyers
and
Flames
got
a
three-goal
hat trick late in U.
Ray Scott is still the picture of
2 Ph i la 0
M inneso t-a 3 Ch ica g o 1
point lead in their nationally Saturday afternoo n. If the LChosi cago
24-hour
jump
on
the
remaining
final
period
on a spectacula
Ang 9 A tl anta 2, night
New York 3 D etroit "O
confidence.
televised struggle before De- Pistons win Thursday, they Hou s lon 9 San D ieg o 5, ni gh t
Mi lw at Cl eve, ppd . snow
six
teams
in
contention
for
the
save by Atlanta goalie Phi
" I think the better team will
6 San Fran 3, niQht
Ba i t a t Bos ton . p pd , snuw
trait roared back in the final would meet the Bulls in the Ci nciToday
nley
Cup.
Quarterfinal
Sta
Myre.
'
s
Probable
P
i
t
chers
Wednesday
's
Probable
Pitchers
win in the end," said Scott after
quarter to make things close at decisive game of their seniifi- ( 1973 Won -l ost record s in ( 1973 Wo n -lost records i n series beginning tonight find
Gary Dornhoefer scored th• ·
the Pistons lost to the Chicago
ntheses)
parenthes e$)
the end.
nal series in Chicago Saturday St . Loui s pare
Toronto
at
Boston,
the
New
first
Flyer goal in the openin1
(C ur ti s o.oJ at N Y . Ba lte ( Pal m er I -OJ at Bos tu n
Bulls 98-9-1 Tuesday night to fail
Bulls Coach Dick Motta said "afternoon.
· I Koos man 0-0)
( W ise (0 OJ,
York
Rangers
at
Montreal
and
· period and Torn Blandon madr
behind 3-2 in the best-&lt;&gt;f-seven
Phila ( R uth ve n 0 -0) at Ch icago Chi cago ( Ba hn sen 0-1) a t M i nn
he was not surprised at the
Havlicek Led Celts
Los
Angeles
at
Chicago.
it 2-0 in the second stanza.
(Reu
sche
l
0
OJ.
(Hand
s
Q.
1J.
,
•
series. "I think we can win two
11
Pistons' comeback because, "I
Boston , despite holding NBA Cin c i ! Gul le tt 0·0 ) a t Sa n Fran Milw (Wr ig ht Q.OJ at Cl eve" tG .
He
had
a
tough
year,''
said
Atlanta was trailing~ whet
games in a row. I'm confident
Perr y 0-1) .
{ Ca ldw ell I -OJ .
felt it would he a dose game. scoring leader Bob MCAdoo to Mon
Flyers
coach
Fred
Shero
after
defensernan
Bob Murray pu:
t rea l ( Re nko 0."0 ) at Pi tt s Oakla nd { Holtz ma n O. l) at K .C .
we can win and the players are
They're
a
grea
t
team
and
you
16
points,
still
had
a
tough
time
Bre
tt
Q
.QJ.
(
Bu
sb
y
o.OJ.
n
ig
ht
(
Kinderchuck
rammed
home
the Flames on the scoreboan ·
Semifinal action in the first
confident."
Los Angs Uohn 1-0) a t Atl an ta Tex as (Je n k in s 0-1) at Ca lif
two goals in the third period to with an unassisted goal at 9:21
annual Rio Grande College know they're going to bust out. heating Buffalo.
(Ha rr i son O· l l.
( Ta n a na o.o), n ight .
The Celtics can end the Hous {R ob ert s 0· 1) a t San D. (O nly ga mes schedul ed )
put Philadelphia .one up in the of
the
thi rd
period
Independent Basketba ll They're going to"explode."
(G r ief 0 -1) , nig ht .
Nann's
18-footer
series
with
a
triumph
in
BufPhiladelphia goalie Berni•
Tournament this evening finds
The Bulls shot nearly .60 per falo Friday night. If Buffalo
Parent,
who
deflecte&lt;
Quaker State Service Center
battling Jim Marshall 's team cent from the field in the first wins at home-and both teams
Murray's shot into the Flyers
ne t, turned back 31 other shots
at 7:30p.m. and Jim Campers half for a 57-40 lead as Uie have been doing that since the
"A lot of our players neve~
taking on the Beach AC at 9 Pistons hit at a 3li.9 clip. But in playoff started two weeks
NBA Standing s
the
second
half,.
the
Bulls
agathe
seventh
and
deciding
By
United
P
r
ess
International
p.m.
played in .the Stanley CUI
Eastern Co nf e r e n ce Playoffs
Winners of tonig ht's ·games turned cold and the Pistons game would take . place in
· Rp-.t f ~ ur - n ut . nf c:"' v "'n
before and it showed," s.1c
W. L
Atlanta General Manager Clifl
will clash for the championship connected on 23 of 42 field goal Boston on Sunday.
J 2
attempts
to
whittle
the
margin
John
Havlicek
led
the
Celtics
N ew Yoc k
Capita l
on Thursday at Lyne Center.
Fletche~. "They didn't play II!
2J By United Press lnlernatlonal and Rosaire Paiement, Bob
Tuesday
night,
Jim to two points with 51 seconds to with 25 points, followed by Jo
Liddi
gto
d
J
p
·
as they can, but
aggressively
J2
It was waste not, want not for
Jo White with 20 and Dave ~~~~~~0
n n, an
an ople1 ' they'll improve and we'll 1M
Kiesenciek's 29 points paced play.
2 3 the Chicago Cougars TUesday. broke through a shaky Whaler · h
Th da "
Norm Van Lier gave the Cowens with 19.
CLEVELAND (UP! )- The Jim's Campers to an 82-71
t
k
"t
'"
bef
ere
urs
·d.f
night.
But the key to victory was .W~e_st_er !"l_c;onfere nce Playoff s
Cleveland Indians will send victory over Larry Howell 's Bulls their insurance when he
ore
It
th ly. 1 Sta 1 "·
e ense o ma e 1 ...-..
was e II"S
n ey v~r
B est four -ou t .of .s eVen
The Cougars took 12 shots in · the 17 minute mark.
hit an·l8 footer with 30 seconds Cowens' ability to contain the
Jim Perry to the mound in ro- squad.
.
appearance for Atlanta, while
w
·
,L;
the
opening
period
of
their
day's delayed home opener
previously unstoppable MeA· t;~~,;~ pto
New England ralhed _on Philadelphia was playingin its
In the nightcap, Beach AC to go.
23
World Hockey Associa tion second penod goals by Mike fifth playoff.
"We had the clock with us," doo, who entered the game
against the Milwaukee edged Beris Mor_gan's te1m:
, 1 playoff game against New
Byers, Don Blackburn, John
"W 1 d.
d
ukee
Brewers, with the Tribe and its 96-91. AI Martin had 18 fc. the Motta said. "We had a twopoint with a 33.5 playoff scoring xLo-MHwa
s A n ge les
"ff
.
d
J
h
h h"l
e
p
aye
a
very
goo
Cu
' ' England but con nected on five
x -c Hn c hed
Ialli! looking for the season's winners. Paul Michey had 24 lead and the ball. If Norm average.
nm ,an o oFrenc w 1 e
" · 'd Sh
"W
ero.
e
of them as they.rolled to an 11-6 Chicago managed scores by game, sal .
first victory.
mi88ed
that
shot,
and
they
tied
McAdoo
was
way
below
his
for the losers.
TuP. sda y•s results
Jim
Watson,
Bob
Sicinski
and
moved
the_
!'"ck
wen
and
.
victory over ·the Whalers. It
it up, we 'd have the ball and a shots per-game average. That,
CI,.eveland Mayor Ralph Perk
. Buffalo 97
Liddirigton
to
make
it
11-4
after
played
disc~plmed
hockey.
We
was Chicago's first win in the
chance to win or go into according to Cowens, turned Ch icag o 98 De troit 94
was to throw out the first bail in
. te of
t"
Tim were m theU" zone all mght.
only games Sc h edu led
hestbf-seven series which finds 40 mmu
overtime. Now we have to win the trick.
pre-game ceremonies with
s
ac wn.
. "W
, ha
lyle,
Wednesday's games
Sheehy not hed t
g Is .
e can 1 c nge our s ' .
the Whalers leading 2-1.
one of two and Detroit has to
"The statistics show he N .Y . at Cap i tal {9'05 pm l
Sen. Howard Metzenbaum be- Wilmington tops
. d c .od twob oa thm added the Philadelphia coach.
Onl y ga m e sc hed u led
In the only other game, Tom th e thII" pen
win both. Detroit can't make a didn't shoot as much as he
hind the plate and Gov. John J.
o rlng e "W '
t to tta k E
WHA Sta nd 1ngs
Whalers within reach of Chicae ·ve go a c ·. ven our
Martin
's
three-goal
hat
trick
Rio netters 6-3
GUUgan the batter.
mistake and we have the op- normally does - and if he By United
Pres s Interna t ion a l
go but the Co ar defense took defensemen.are requU"ed to do
doesn 1t shoot, he canjt score/' SPriP&lt;: A
w_ L L spa rk ed Toronto to a 4-3 vicCleveland dtopped the first
Wilmington's tenni s team pottunity to do so."
'
ug .
that. To wm, you've got to
Hou ston
1
0 tory over Cleveland as the
Scott said the Pistons "dug said the logically-sound W i nn i peg
three games of the season to defeated Rio Grande College 6over for the final seve n Ita k It' . to . the fir t
0 1
s
Taros hold a 2-0 lead in games minutes to give goalie Cam a c . s mc_e wm
the New York Yankees and 3 Tuesday.
our own hole" in falling so far Cowens. "We were playing him
. Series B
Newton
his
fi
1
If
·
_
game,
but
11
w11l
be
doubly
nice
over the Crusaders.
came home only to learn TuesM;nn es ora .
2 0
rs1 P ayo VIC to get the second game."
Today, Rio will host Malone behind. "We had too much to tough without the ball."
tory.
Chicago
got
power
play
goals
day's scheduled homeopener at Evans Field, starting at 1 make up. I was surprised they
White's jumper with 1:171eft Edm onton
0 2
Martin's third goal, on a
•from Don Gordon and Joe
bad been postponed because of p.m.
couldn't blow us out. I do11~!.....Yut the Celtics ahead for good se,; es c
2
power play with 3:11 Gault signs
1 Hardy within a six minute span
think
they
can
beat
us in a af 97-95 as Buffalo, in the N ew Engl and
heavy snow and freezing temRio winners Tuesday were
2
remaining ui the final period,
peratures.
seven game series."
playoffs for the first time, led Ch;cag o
Ted Chaffin, who beat Eric
NEW YORK (UP!)-Former
Series
D
enabled the Toros to beat the
Bob Love paced the Bulls most of the game, often by as
Tuesday's game may have Biassey 6-2 and 6-0 in singles
?
Cleveland
Browns quarterback
to
o Denison, OWU
Crusaders. Toronto' s other
been postponed not only be- play, and Bob Morrow, who with 32 points and Jerry Sloan much as seven points. Randy ClToron
eveland
'
goal came from Martin 's Don Gault signed Tuesday with
cause of the weather, but also beat Jim Price, 6-1 and 7-J;. In had 20 while Bob Lanier topped Smith, with 25, and Jim MeT uesday' s result s 0 '
;cago a N ew Eng land 6 .
ran. ked by UPI
linemate Wayne Carleton who the New York Stars of the new
possibly because the Indians doubles play, Steve Shaw - Detroit with 23 points and Dave Millian, with 18, led the Ch
To r onto 4 Clev eland 3
also earned a pair of assists. World Football League.
Braves' scoring.
had planned to fire a human Richard Craig downed Dave Bing added 22.
Only gam es sch e du-led
CHARLOTTESVILLE V
Gault was with the Browns in
Wedn esday' s games
•
a.
Cleveland scored three C&lt;Jncannonball in pregame activi- Vita and Bob Luatzy.
New Eng at Ch ;cago 1890 pm 1
(UP!)
Denison
and
Ohio
as backup to Bill Nelsen.
ties. ·
secutive goals in the second
H ou ston a t W i nn ipeg (9 p m J
Wesleyan
were
ranked
among
·
He
also
played in Canada and
M j nn at Edmonton (9 pm )
period thanks to Ron Ward,
Promoters learned that the
Onl y gam es sc h edu l ed
the top 15 small college teams Tom Edur, Paul Andrea.
in
the
Atlantic
Coast FootbaU
lmman cannonball "cannot be
NETS SIGN RICHEY
Major League Lines cores
League.
·
NHL stand;ngs
• in the United States Intercollefired when temperatures dtop
Press Interna tional
N"tional League
CLEVELAND (UP!) - The By United
By Unit ed Pres s Int erna ti onal
giate
Lacrosse
Association's
American L eag.ue
Pt1ila .
000 000 000- 0 4 4
P layoff s, bes 1 four .of .&lt;:. o:o v en :
below 45 degrees. It was 33 at Cleveland Nels of the World N ew York 200000 100- 3 81 Chi
cago
200 ooo oo x - 2 7 1
W. L. weekly· coaches poll released
. _tbe stadium early Tuesday.
o it
000 000 000- 0 8 2
Schu el er (0. 1) and Boon e ; Toronto
Team Tennis (WTT ) signed DetK rline
0 0 Tuesday.
, Beene (BJ. Lyle {9) Bon ham ( 1-0 ) and Mitterwald .
Boston
0 0
"What could-.. be • ·worse?""' (;!iff Richey Tuesday but did and Munson
·; Loli c h (0 -2) and
Denison was eighth witli 77
aaked million-&lt;loUar investor not disclose terms of his Freehan . WP - Kiine (l .QJ.
to·s' Ang
302 .000 - 130- 9 11 0 N .Y . Rgr s
0
9 points and Ohio Wesleyan 12th
At la n ta
000 - 100 -001 - 2 7 1 Montr eal
0 0
and treasurer Bun Blossom. contract.
Chicago
901 000 000- 1 9 2
Su tton , Marsha l l (9) and Fer with 30 points.
"Losing three in a row, a snow
19r001 OOx- 3 8 2 gusOn . Morton , Easterly ( 7J. Ph ~ l a
Richey joins his sister, Nancy Minn
THURSDAY - FRIDAY - SATURDAY
·
Towson College of Maryland
1
o
.
Wood (0 -2) and H err mann ; Frisella (8J and Oa tes . WP Atlan ta
storm and now the cannonball Gunter, husband..,nd-wife Clark Blyleven
0
1 · was on top with 129 poinls.
, Burg m e i e r [9 J. Sun on ( 2·0 ) . L P ~ Morton (0 -lJ .
might not go off."
0
0 .
and Carole Graebner, Peaches Campbel l (9) and H undley . W P HR - John son( l ) .
Los Ang
Chi c ago·
.
Hugo Sacchini, tbe bonum , Bartkowicz and Bob Uoyd, .who - Biyleven ( 1-01. H R- Hi sl e.
0 O· - - -- - - - - -- Cinci
20 1 00 1 002 - 6 15 0
' Tuesday's r es ulf s
canrionball, meanwhile or- have signed earlier.
the club said Tuesday.
T"e xas
090 000 100- JO 9 1 San Fran
210 000 000- 3 10 1
P\1 ila 4 A tl an ta 1
Ca
lif
000
100
1002
50
Billingham , Borbon · (7) and
Only game schedu l ed
dered blankets to keep the
.
Seghi will miss today's home
Nets owner Joe Zingale
Bibby
{1 - 1) and
Billing s.
W edn·es ctay 's games
ch ; Bradley , Will i am s (7) ,
cann_9n warm and bonfU"es traded his No. I draft pick for Ryan. Lo c kwood (2 ), May (41. Ben
. opener against Milwaukee. He
Sosa (8 1 and Rader . WPToron t o at Boston
F igueroa (9) an d Rodriguez . Billingham 1·0. LP - Bradley I ·. N .Y . Rgrs at Montreal
were suggested to keep the next year to Miami to get the LP
·:
was to be hospitalized about
- Ryan
(1 .1).
HR s- Bur . 1. H R- Perez q) .
los Angeles a t Chicago
tube in safe firing range:
roughs
(2nd
).
Stanton
(2nd).
.seven
to ten days at. Lutheran
righls to the 27-year-Old Richey,
On l y games scheduled
Hous ton
330 010 020 ~ 9 15 2
On top of ail the problems, one of the major figures in
-::Medical Center, according to
Oakland
010 201 00 2- 6 13 1 Sa n Di ego
011 000 030-- 5 9 3
advance sale for· the 'l)Jesday tournament tennis.
· Dr . .. John I'asalis, who will
002 011000 - 4 12 '1 . Di erke r , Sc:\1erman [8 ) and ·
K . C.
Hunte r , Knowles (7 ) and EdwardS ; Arl in , Garc i a (2 ),
game was 10,000 with only 25,TO
UNDERGO
SURGE!!_Y
_
&gt;perform the sur~ery .
Ricbey said he .would finish Fosse ; Sp l i tt or ff , Gairber ( 7L Troedson (2 ), McintOsh ( 3),
ALINE ·WEAVER'S
000expectedon a j'niceday,'' a the World Championship Tennis McDani e l (9) and Hea l y . WP - McAndrew
CLEVELAN~
(UP!)
Seghi's wife, Ella, was to
(S) , Cork i ns (8).
Kno wl es (l .QJ . LP - Garber (0 - Romo { 8) and Kendall. WP far cry from the 74,000 spec- tour in St. Louis . and join the 1)
Cleveland
lnd1ans
General
undergo
surgeryTuesday
but
. H R - Bando ( 1J.
D ierk er [ 1-0 ) .LP- Arli n (Q . J ).
tators that came to watch the Nets in Toronto for the first
Manager Phil Seghi was to her operation was postponed
B&amp;lt at Bost on , ppd , rain
Tribe on opening day last year. match.
· Sl . Louis at N .Y ., ppd , rain
undergo
surgery Thursday for until after her husband is
PH. 949-3584
RACINE, 0.
Milw at C leve, ppd , snow
Montreal at Pitts , ppd , ra in
the removal of kidney stones, home.

Setnis are

scheduled

I

tonight

Tribe eyes

·
C0 ugars
Score
• .t ory
I
ff
ayo
VIC
P

Pro Standings

first win

of season

car:•

.....

&gt;-

en

-i!:z
cnct

u.~u
....
ID;:)

:!...,.&gt;-0_
.....
.........

~

&gt;i

otl~
L&amp;J
N

-

en

'

z:

at::o

o
::::E_,

-

cat::
~

....
3r:

mo

. Linescores

·--------------------------PLEASE

Easter Parade Special!

)

C(

'

FOLD

HERE

REMOVE FROM PAPER AND USE AS A SHOPPING GUIDE

,

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.

-.

ALL DRESSES
AND.· PANT SUITS

h PRICE

1

r·.

.'

....I

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.

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i
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SMUCKER'S
"' ~

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UK~·
Right reserVed to limit quantities

Yo.u, WE

We Gladly Accept F~. Food Stamps

5 lb.
bag

THANK YOU

'

Cottage ·Cheese
..

49 oz.
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CELERY

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Large Bunch

16 oz. .bottles

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•
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Saturday 9 to 9

With ~10.00 or
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WYLER'S MIX 3 29¢

COlA OR PUNCH

Roast

SALAD DRESSING

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.. BYcor:;ttlouvE

·Monday Thru Friday
9:00 to 7:00

MIRACLE WHIP ·

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Prices Effective April 10-17

Sho·u lder

•

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5th and PEARL-STS., RACINE
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0

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�4- Ttui Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Apri!IO, 1974

•

•

Bulls ·edge Pistons .zn
•
playoffs; Celtics wzn·

(

pa~es

Rookie

..

'·

5- The Dally Sentinel, Mlddle[IOrt-Porneroy, 0., ApriiJO, 197~

,..

}.

N -atio n al league Standings
United Pres s International
Eut
W L
Pet , G B
St . Lou is
2 0 1.000
t: h i cilgo
I
0 1.000
1(1
N ew Yo'r.k
"I
1 ,500 1
Montreal
0 0 .000
1
Philadel ph i a
1 2 .. 333
Jl/~
P itt sbur g h
0 2 .000 2
W est
San F ri'ln c isc o d
I .800
Lo s A ng eles
d
I .900
Cin ci nnat i
3 2 . 600 I
At la nta
2 J · . 490 2
Ho uston
1 3 . 250 2'h
San Diego
0
4 .000 3'h

American League Standings
By United Press Inter n ational
·
E&lt;~ s t
W L PCt . GB ,
New Y ork
4 0 1. 000
Balt i more
·2
2 . 500
Jlh
Boston
1 I .500
Jlh
Milwaukee
"1 1 .500
)1;,
Detroit
2 3 .400 2
Clev e land
0 3 .000 J'h
west
• oakl and
1 .t:~ u
3
C-a lifor nia
t
1 66 7
~~1
M i11oeso ta
· 2 1 .667
1 '1
T e~~:as
2 2 SOO 1
Ka nsas Ci~ y
1 2 . 33_3" ] If:,.
Ch icag o
0 3 ..000
21h

Flyers victory.

PHILADELPHIA (UPI) - bestof..,even-series. "He wast
Orest Kindrachuk didn't play have had an operation for
like a rookie with a kidney . kidney ailment, ~ut. he didn
ailment in the Philadelphia and he only got stroog la1
NBA Playoff Roundup
Like the Bulls, the Boston the defending playoff chamThe Bulls could wrap up the
Flyers' 4-1 victory over the week."
•
By United Press lnternallonat Celtics took a 3-2 lead in their
pion New York Knicks need series with a win at Detroit
Atlanta
Flames
Tuesday
night"
Kinderchuck,
1971-72 playe
The Detroit Piotons are only playoff against Buffalo by only a victory tonight over Thursday night and should .
in
the
quarterfinals
of
the
of
the
year
in
tbe Westei::
one defeat away from elimina- beaUng the Braves 100-117 while Capital to eliminate the Bullets Chicago win, it would open the
Nationa
l·
Hockey
League's
League who also 1!'&lt;1 the leagu·
tion in the National Basketball
.. TuP &lt;: tt::a\1 ' &lt;: g l'l &lt;:nlt&lt;:
'
To1 P c:t1~v ' &lt;: RPSUII S
in six games.
Western Conference playoff St • .L..P
Stanley
Cup
playoffs.
in
fights, was deprived of '
ui
s
at
N
.Y
.,
ppd
.
rain
l
eKas
10
Ca
lif
.
2,
night
Association playoffs but coach
The Bulls opened up a 25- championship at Milwaukee Mon tr eal at P i t tS.. ppd snow
Oak l and 6 K - ~ 4, n i gh t
The
Flyers
and
Flames
got
a
three-goal
hat trick late in U.
Ray Scott is still the picture of
2 Ph i la 0
M inneso t-a 3 Ch ica g o 1
point lead in their nationally Saturday afternoo n. If the LChosi cago
24-hour
jump
on
the
remaining
final
period
on a spectacula
Ang 9 A tl anta 2, night
New York 3 D etroit "O
confidence.
televised struggle before De- Pistons win Thursday, they Hou s lon 9 San D ieg o 5, ni gh t
Mi lw at Cl eve, ppd . snow
six
teams
in
contention
for
the
save by Atlanta goalie Phi
" I think the better team will
6 San Fran 3, niQht
Ba i t a t Bos ton . p pd , snuw
trait roared back in the final would meet the Bulls in the Ci nciToday
nley
Cup.
Quarterfinal
Sta
Myre.
'
s
Probable
P
i
t
chers
Wednesday
's
Probable
Pitchers
win in the end," said Scott after
quarter to make things close at decisive game of their seniifi- ( 1973 Won -l ost record s in ( 1973 Wo n -lost records i n series beginning tonight find
Gary Dornhoefer scored th• ·
the Pistons lost to the Chicago
ntheses)
parenthes e$)
the end.
nal series in Chicago Saturday St . Loui s pare
Toronto
at
Boston,
the
New
first
Flyer goal in the openin1
(C ur ti s o.oJ at N Y . Ba lte ( Pal m er I -OJ at Bos tu n
Bulls 98-9-1 Tuesday night to fail
Bulls Coach Dick Motta said "afternoon.
· I Koos man 0-0)
( W ise (0 OJ,
York
Rangers
at
Montreal
and
· period and Torn Blandon madr
behind 3-2 in the best-&lt;&gt;f-seven
Phila ( R uth ve n 0 -0) at Ch icago Chi cago ( Ba hn sen 0-1) a t M i nn
he was not surprised at the
Havlicek Led Celts
Los
Angeles
at
Chicago.
it 2-0 in the second stanza.
(Reu
sche
l
0
OJ.
(Hand
s
Q.
1J.
,
•
series. "I think we can win two
11
Pistons' comeback because, "I
Boston , despite holding NBA Cin c i ! Gul le tt 0·0 ) a t Sa n Fran Milw (Wr ig ht Q.OJ at Cl eve" tG .
He
had
a
tough
year,''
said
Atlanta was trailing~ whet
games in a row. I'm confident
Perr y 0-1) .
{ Ca ldw ell I -OJ .
felt it would he a dose game. scoring leader Bob MCAdoo to Mon
Flyers
coach
Fred
Shero
after
defensernan
Bob Murray pu:
t rea l ( Re nko 0."0 ) at Pi tt s Oakla nd { Holtz ma n O. l) at K .C .
we can win and the players are
They're
a
grea
t
team
and
you
16
points,
still
had
a
tough
time
Bre
tt
Q
.QJ.
(
Bu
sb
y
o.OJ.
n
ig
ht
(
Kinderchuck
rammed
home
the Flames on the scoreboan ·
Semifinal action in the first
confident."
Los Angs Uohn 1-0) a t Atl an ta Tex as (Je n k in s 0-1) at Ca lif
two goals in the third period to with an unassisted goal at 9:21
annual Rio Grande College know they're going to bust out. heating Buffalo.
(Ha rr i son O· l l.
( Ta n a na o.o), n ight .
The Celtics can end the Hous {R ob ert s 0· 1) a t San D. (O nly ga mes schedul ed )
put Philadelphia .one up in the of
the
thi rd
period
Independent Basketba ll They're going to"explode."
(G r ief 0 -1) , nig ht .
Nann's
18-footer
series
with
a
triumph
in
BufPhiladelphia goalie Berni•
Tournament this evening finds
The Bulls shot nearly .60 per falo Friday night. If Buffalo
Parent,
who
deflecte&lt;
Quaker State Service Center
battling Jim Marshall 's team cent from the field in the first wins at home-and both teams
Murray's shot into the Flyers
ne t, turned back 31 other shots
at 7:30p.m. and Jim Campers half for a 57-40 lead as Uie have been doing that since the
"A lot of our players neve~
taking on the Beach AC at 9 Pistons hit at a 3li.9 clip. But in playoff started two weeks
NBA Standing s
the
second
half,.
the
Bulls
agathe
seventh
and
deciding
By
United
P
r
ess
International
p.m.
played in .the Stanley CUI
Eastern Co nf e r e n ce Playoffs
Winners of tonig ht's ·games turned cold and the Pistons game would take . place in
· Rp-.t f ~ ur - n ut . nf c:"' v "'n
before and it showed," s.1c
W. L
Atlanta General Manager Clifl
will clash for the championship connected on 23 of 42 field goal Boston on Sunday.
J 2
attempts
to
whittle
the
margin
John
Havlicek
led
the
Celtics
N ew Yoc k
Capita l
on Thursday at Lyne Center.
Fletche~. "They didn't play II!
2J By United Press lnlernatlonal and Rosaire Paiement, Bob
Tuesday
night,
Jim to two points with 51 seconds to with 25 points, followed by Jo
Liddi
gto
d
J
p
·
as they can, but
aggressively
J2
It was waste not, want not for
Jo White with 20 and Dave ~~~~~~0
n n, an
an ople1 ' they'll improve and we'll 1M
Kiesenciek's 29 points paced play.
2 3 the Chicago Cougars TUesday. broke through a shaky Whaler · h
Th da "
Norm Van Lier gave the Cowens with 19.
CLEVELAND (UP! )- The Jim's Campers to an 82-71
t
k
"t
'"
bef
ere
urs
·d.f
night.
But the key to victory was .W~e_st_er !"l_c;onfere nce Playoff s
Cleveland Indians will send victory over Larry Howell 's Bulls their insurance when he
ore
It
th ly. 1 Sta 1 "·
e ense o ma e 1 ...-..
was e II"S
n ey v~r
B est four -ou t .of .s eVen
The Cougars took 12 shots in · the 17 minute mark.
hit an·l8 footer with 30 seconds Cowens' ability to contain the
Jim Perry to the mound in ro- squad.
.
appearance for Atlanta, while
w
·
,L;
the
opening
period
of
their
day's delayed home opener
previously unstoppable MeA· t;~~,;~ pto
New England ralhed _on Philadelphia was playingin its
In the nightcap, Beach AC to go.
23
World Hockey Associa tion second penod goals by Mike fifth playoff.
"We had the clock with us," doo, who entered the game
against the Milwaukee edged Beris Mor_gan's te1m:
, 1 playoff game against New
Byers, Don Blackburn, John
"W 1 d.
d
ukee
Brewers, with the Tribe and its 96-91. AI Martin had 18 fc. the Motta said. "We had a twopoint with a 33.5 playoff scoring xLo-MHwa
s A n ge les
"ff
.
d
J
h
h h"l
e
p
aye
a
very
goo
Cu
' ' England but con nected on five
x -c Hn c hed
Ialli! looking for the season's winners. Paul Michey had 24 lead and the ball. If Norm average.
nm ,an o oFrenc w 1 e
" · 'd Sh
"W
ero.
e
of them as they.rolled to an 11-6 Chicago managed scores by game, sal .
first victory.
mi88ed
that
shot,
and
they
tied
McAdoo
was
way
below
his
for the losers.
TuP. sda y•s results
Jim
Watson,
Bob
Sicinski
and
moved
the_
!'"ck
wen
and
.
victory over ·the Whalers. It
it up, we 'd have the ball and a shots per-game average. That,
CI,.eveland Mayor Ralph Perk
. Buffalo 97
Liddirigton
to
make
it
11-4
after
played
disc~plmed
hockey.
We
was Chicago's first win in the
chance to win or go into according to Cowens, turned Ch icag o 98 De troit 94
was to throw out the first bail in
. te of
t"
Tim were m theU" zone all mght.
only games Sc h edu led
hestbf-seven series which finds 40 mmu
overtime. Now we have to win the trick.
pre-game ceremonies with
s
ac wn.
. "W
, ha
lyle,
Wednesday's games
Sheehy not hed t
g Is .
e can 1 c nge our s ' .
the Whalers leading 2-1.
one of two and Detroit has to
"The statistics show he N .Y . at Cap i tal {9'05 pm l
Sen. Howard Metzenbaum be- Wilmington tops
. d c .od twob oa thm added the Philadelphia coach.
Onl y ga m e sc hed u led
In the only other game, Tom th e thII" pen
win both. Detroit can't make a didn't shoot as much as he
hind the plate and Gov. John J.
o rlng e "W '
t to tta k E
WHA Sta nd 1ngs
Whalers within reach of Chicae ·ve go a c ·. ven our
Martin
's
three-goal
hat
trick
Rio netters 6-3
GUUgan the batter.
mistake and we have the op- normally does - and if he By United
Pres s Interna t ion a l
go but the Co ar defense took defensemen.are requU"ed to do
doesn 1t shoot, he canjt score/' SPriP&lt;: A
w_ L L spa rk ed Toronto to a 4-3 vicCleveland dtopped the first
Wilmington's tenni s team pottunity to do so."
'
ug .
that. To wm, you've got to
Hou ston
1
0 tory over Cleveland as the
Scott said the Pistons "dug said the logically-sound W i nn i peg
three games of the season to defeated Rio Grande College 6over for the final seve n Ita k It' . to . the fir t
0 1
s
Taros hold a 2-0 lead in games minutes to give goalie Cam a c . s mc_e wm
the New York Yankees and 3 Tuesday.
our own hole" in falling so far Cowens. "We were playing him
. Series B
Newton
his
fi
1
If
·
_
game,
but
11
w11l
be
doubly
nice
over the Crusaders.
came home only to learn TuesM;nn es ora .
2 0
rs1 P ayo VIC to get the second game."
Today, Rio will host Malone behind. "We had too much to tough without the ball."
tory.
Chicago
got
power
play
goals
day's scheduled homeopener at Evans Field, starting at 1 make up. I was surprised they
White's jumper with 1:171eft Edm onton
0 2
Martin's third goal, on a
•from Don Gordon and Joe
bad been postponed because of p.m.
couldn't blow us out. I do11~!.....Yut the Celtics ahead for good se,; es c
2
power play with 3:11 Gault signs
1 Hardy within a six minute span
think
they
can
beat
us in a af 97-95 as Buffalo, in the N ew Engl and
heavy snow and freezing temRio winners Tuesday were
2
remaining ui the final period,
peratures.
seven game series."
playoffs for the first time, led Ch;cag o
Ted Chaffin, who beat Eric
NEW YORK (UP!)-Former
Series
D
enabled the Toros to beat the
Bob Love paced the Bulls most of the game, often by as
Tuesday's game may have Biassey 6-2 and 6-0 in singles
?
Cleveland
Browns quarterback
to
o Denison, OWU
Crusaders. Toronto' s other
been postponed not only be- play, and Bob Morrow, who with 32 points and Jerry Sloan much as seven points. Randy ClToron
eveland
'
goal came from Martin 's Don Gault signed Tuesday with
cause of the weather, but also beat Jim Price, 6-1 and 7-J;. In had 20 while Bob Lanier topped Smith, with 25, and Jim MeT uesday' s result s 0 '
;cago a N ew Eng land 6 .
ran. ked by UPI
linemate Wayne Carleton who the New York Stars of the new
possibly because the Indians doubles play, Steve Shaw - Detroit with 23 points and Dave Millian, with 18, led the Ch
To r onto 4 Clev eland 3
also earned a pair of assists. World Football League.
Braves' scoring.
had planned to fire a human Richard Craig downed Dave Bing added 22.
Only gam es sch e du-led
CHARLOTTESVILLE V
Gault was with the Browns in
Wedn esday' s games
•
a.
Cleveland scored three C&lt;Jncannonball in pregame activi- Vita and Bob Luatzy.
New Eng at Ch ;cago 1890 pm 1
(UP!)
Denison
and
Ohio
as backup to Bill Nelsen.
ties. ·
secutive goals in the second
H ou ston a t W i nn ipeg (9 p m J
Wesleyan
were
ranked
among
·
He
also
played in Canada and
M j nn at Edmonton (9 pm )
period thanks to Ron Ward,
Promoters learned that the
Onl y gam es sc h edu l ed
the top 15 small college teams Tom Edur, Paul Andrea.
in
the
Atlantic
Coast FootbaU
lmman cannonball "cannot be
NETS SIGN RICHEY
Major League Lines cores
League.
·
NHL stand;ngs
• in the United States Intercollefired when temperatures dtop
Press Interna tional
N"tional League
CLEVELAND (UP!) - The By United
By Unit ed Pres s Int erna ti onal
giate
Lacrosse
Association's
American L eag.ue
Pt1ila .
000 000 000- 0 4 4
P layoff s, bes 1 four .of .&lt;:. o:o v en :
below 45 degrees. It was 33 at Cleveland Nels of the World N ew York 200000 100- 3 81 Chi
cago
200 ooo oo x - 2 7 1
W. L. weekly· coaches poll released
. _tbe stadium early Tuesday.
o it
000 000 000- 0 8 2
Schu el er (0. 1) and Boon e ; Toronto
Team Tennis (WTT ) signed DetK rline
0 0 Tuesday.
, Beene (BJ. Lyle {9) Bon ham ( 1-0 ) and Mitterwald .
Boston
0 0
"What could-.. be • ·worse?""' (;!iff Richey Tuesday but did and Munson
·; Loli c h (0 -2) and
Denison was eighth witli 77
aaked million-&lt;loUar investor not disclose terms of his Freehan . WP - Kiine (l .QJ.
to·s' Ang
302 .000 - 130- 9 11 0 N .Y . Rgr s
0
9 points and Ohio Wesleyan 12th
At la n ta
000 - 100 -001 - 2 7 1 Montr eal
0 0
and treasurer Bun Blossom. contract.
Chicago
901 000 000- 1 9 2
Su tton , Marsha l l (9) and Fer with 30 points.
"Losing three in a row, a snow
19r001 OOx- 3 8 2 gusOn . Morton , Easterly ( 7J. Ph ~ l a
Richey joins his sister, Nancy Minn
THURSDAY - FRIDAY - SATURDAY
·
Towson College of Maryland
1
o
.
Wood (0 -2) and H err mann ; Frisella (8J and Oa tes . WP Atlan ta
storm and now the cannonball Gunter, husband..,nd-wife Clark Blyleven
0
1 · was on top with 129 poinls.
, Burg m e i e r [9 J. Sun on ( 2·0 ) . L P ~ Morton (0 -lJ .
might not go off."
0
0 .
and Carole Graebner, Peaches Campbel l (9) and H undley . W P HR - John son( l ) .
Los Ang
Chi c ago·
.
Hugo Sacchini, tbe bonum , Bartkowicz and Bob Uoyd, .who - Biyleven ( 1-01. H R- Hi sl e.
0 O· - - -- - - - - -- Cinci
20 1 00 1 002 - 6 15 0
' Tuesday's r es ulf s
canrionball, meanwhile or- have signed earlier.
the club said Tuesday.
T"e xas
090 000 100- JO 9 1 San Fran
210 000 000- 3 10 1
P\1 ila 4 A tl an ta 1
Ca
lif
000
100
1002
50
Billingham , Borbon · (7) and
Only game schedu l ed
dered blankets to keep the
.
Seghi will miss today's home
Nets owner Joe Zingale
Bibby
{1 - 1) and
Billing s.
W edn·es ctay 's games
ch ; Bradley , Will i am s (7) ,
cann_9n warm and bonfU"es traded his No. I draft pick for Ryan. Lo c kwood (2 ), May (41. Ben
. opener against Milwaukee. He
Sosa (8 1 and Rader . WPToron t o at Boston
F igueroa (9) an d Rodriguez . Billingham 1·0. LP - Bradley I ·. N .Y . Rgrs at Montreal
were suggested to keep the next year to Miami to get the LP
·:
was to be hospitalized about
- Ryan
(1 .1).
HR s- Bur . 1. H R- Perez q) .
los Angeles a t Chicago
tube in safe firing range:
roughs
(2nd
).
Stanton
(2nd).
.seven
to ten days at. Lutheran
righls to the 27-year-Old Richey,
On l y games scheduled
Hous ton
330 010 020 ~ 9 15 2
On top of ail the problems, one of the major figures in
-::Medical Center, according to
Oakland
010 201 00 2- 6 13 1 Sa n Di ego
011 000 030-- 5 9 3
advance sale for· the 'l)Jesday tournament tennis.
· Dr . .. John I'asalis, who will
002 011000 - 4 12 '1 . Di erke r , Sc:\1erman [8 ) and ·
K . C.
Hunte r , Knowles (7 ) and EdwardS ; Arl in , Garc i a (2 ),
game was 10,000 with only 25,TO
UNDERGO
SURGE!!_Y
_
&gt;perform the sur~ery .
Ricbey said he .would finish Fosse ; Sp l i tt or ff , Gairber ( 7L Troedson (2 ), McintOsh ( 3),
ALINE ·WEAVER'S
000expectedon a j'niceday,'' a the World Championship Tennis McDani e l (9) and Hea l y . WP - McAndrew
CLEVELAN~
(UP!)
Seghi's wife, Ella, was to
(S) , Cork i ns (8).
Kno wl es (l .QJ . LP - Garber (0 - Romo { 8) and Kendall. WP far cry from the 74,000 spec- tour in St. Louis . and join the 1)
Cleveland
lnd1ans
General
undergo
surgeryTuesday
but
. H R - Bando ( 1J.
D ierk er [ 1-0 ) .LP- Arli n (Q . J ).
tators that came to watch the Nets in Toronto for the first
Manager Phil Seghi was to her operation was postponed
B&amp;lt at Bost on , ppd , rain
Tribe on opening day last year. match.
· Sl . Louis at N .Y ., ppd , rain
undergo
surgery Thursday for until after her husband is
PH. 949-3584
RACINE, 0.
Milw at C leve, ppd , snow
Montreal at Pitts , ppd , ra in
the removal of kidney stones, home.

Setnis are

scheduled

I

tonight

Tribe eyes

·
C0 ugars
Score
• .t ory
I
ff
ayo
VIC
P

Pro Standings

first win

of season

car:•

.....

&gt;-

en

-i!:z
cnct

u.~u
....
ID;:)

:!...,.&gt;-0_
.....
.........

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&gt;i

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L&amp;J
N

-

en

'

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cat::
~

....
3r:

mo

. Linescores

·--------------------------PLEASE

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Right reserVed to limit quantities

Yo.u, WE

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. 7- 'l'l}e DaUy Sent me"!, Middleport-Pomeroy, o., ApriiiO, 1974

Sews your old man
•

6-Tbe Dally Sentinel,Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Aprii'!O, 1974 ,

S_ewers' lib .no longer 'women only'

....

By JoallD.e Schreiber
working, and · is cQrrenlly
Honey, I need a new formal bUilding closets for a neighbor.
for the PTA dance."
Last summer, he installed a
Traditionally, this line is the swimming pool himself.
lead into a rousing family
There.'s just one item he
argument
and
budget wishes he could buy - a male
discussion. But today , Dad dress form , to help fit his suit
·may instead head for the jackets.
·
sewing machine and whip up a
The dress form problem was
home-se w n
or~ginal, solved by a ~year-&lt;Jid former
guaranteed . In dazzle the cabinetmaker, James B. Tripp
competition.
of !}arden Grove, Calif. When
Nor will be stop at making a he began to sew his own jacket- ·
dress for his wife. He's per. shirts about 10 years ago, he,
fec tly capa ble of making a too, needed a form. He put on
jacket, shirt and slacks for an old knit turtleneck; covered
himself, clothes for the kids, it with a layer of masking tape,
draperi~s for the living room, cut it off, taped it back
and a wmter cover for the boat . together, stuffed· the stiffened
Sewing is no longer labeled shirt and mounted it on a stand.
"for women only." Men have
What makes a man invade
equal opportunity to invade th e traditionally feminine
fabric shops, select patterns arena of home sewing?
and join the sewing spree.
Rela xation is the reason
Take the case of Burton given by Richard Washington
Gerke of Baltimore, Md. In less of Savannah, Ga., head football
than a year, he completed the coach lor the Johnson High
following items :
Atomsmashers. After a touch
3 suits, size 43 (two with practice session, ·he relaxes by •
extra pants)
stitching himself a flashy pair
2 sports jackets, size 36
of doubleknit bells . Working on
5 pairs slacks, '28" waist
a vintage Singer, with
I white bikini, girl's size 8
guidance from his wife, Clem;
I women 's fake fur coat
he has created jump suits,
I women's crushed velveteen dashikis, vest suits and lots of
blazer
slacks.
I women's polyester blazer
The male ego, or anything I women's white velvet you. can -do - 1 -can -do blazer
better syndrome, accounts for
....... ,, ..........:c .......... 1 man's all-weather topper . quite a bit of manly stitching.
Some of Gerke's creations ' F,orrest Hodge of Roanoke,
are for himself, some for hiS · Va ., made himself a pair of
w_ife Catherine, and som~ for yoked slacks - "just to prove
h1s youngsters, Dav1d, 17 , to my wife than a man can
Debbie, 13, and Linda, 11.
sew."
Accnrding to Mrs. Gerke, it
There are men who simply
1111 began just a year ago last enjoy the intricate machinery
Christmas when her husband of a sewing machine, which
had a week's _vacation. He can certainly do more tricks
spotted a pile of mending by than the most advanced power
the sewing machine, tackled it, drill, lawnmower or outboard
and discovered that sewing is motor. To Joe Sammons of
both easy and fun . Then he Norfolk, Va., " It's more
ventured into a local fabric complex and exciting than a
shop, discovered the wonderful spnrts car."
world of double-knits, and a
~ashion-conscious males
book which promised to set him turn to sewing just because ·
on the road to successful they can't find what they want
sewing for himself.
in the stores . Says Joe Winters
This book, a straightforward of Raleigh, N. C., "I want to
spiral- bound volume, is tilled make suits. Something dif"~wing Knits - Menswear,"
ferent. Mod. My own thing."
by Judy Lawrence of Boulder,
Economy is often mentioned.
Colo. It gave Gerke the basic As Coach Washington asks,
- information he needed con- "Why should I pay fourteen
cerning fabrics, patterns, dollars for a pair of slacks
sewing techniques and con- when I can invest a dollar in a
struction details for slacks, pattern and produce the same
·vests and golf shirts. Now, he thing for around five dollars?"
can· turn out a perfect pair of
Then there's the competitive
slacks for David (28 waist, 33 factor, which causes boys to
length) in four hours, and is enter and win sewing contests.
currently tailoring a suit for The Singer Company reports
himself.
,
that two boys sewed their way
Gerke does his sewing in the to the national semifinals of
"back room," which also holds their annual V{orld Stylemaker
the·TV, a piano and an organ. Competition, placing among'
He averages a day-and-&lt;1-half the top 75 in a -field of 71,000
per weekend, plus a couple of entries. Both are from North
evenings, at the machine. Mrs. Carolina - Charles Pruitt of
Gerke sews, too, and likes to Winston-Salem, and Gary
crochet and knit. Debbie is Smith of Concord.
learning_ to sew, and the family
Another Southern boy, 14works together on draperies year-&lt;Jid Nathan Kincaid of
and other household items.
Fairmont, W. Va., won in the
What makes Mr . Gerke such local level of the competition.
a sewing whiz? He says that his .
In high schools across the
work with a tool firm has country, boys are enrolling in
nothing to do with it. "It's not cooking and sewing classes,
the machine I enjoy - it's the while the girlS Jearn shop and
saving,
and
the
ac- metalwork. In St. Louis, Mo.,
complishment."
23 boys were enrolled in an allMrs. Gerke says that his male hnme ec. course. Mrs.
patience has a Jot to do with his Rosemary Seidel, their insuccess - "He loves little structor, plans to make all the
· tedious tllings." He applies the home ec. class co.ed, so boys
same precision to wood- and girls can learn together.

N

11

Fl

....
N

•

2
•

&lt;

...-··

; .

-&lt;
.....
' ;J:Io
:nr•
gg
• "'til •

.._...,

:::r..

CD
I

'

!

ARMOUR
STAR
,,

"

Ih Spearman , Tex .., sewing

instructor Beth Bourland says
this of her boy students : "They ··
are as good. as girls are when
first introdutect to sewing.
They 've shown..Jpemselves to
be every bit as il&lt;ixterous. And
the boys seem .to eateh · on
faster to the reasons why a
sewing operation must be done

•

•

,/

a certa in way ."
Do the boys take a ribbing

H someont&gt; wants to cry on

your shoulder. he most likely
hopes the tears will wak
through to yo ur wallt&gt;t.

HYDRANGEAS

'

FASHION
.Caravelle·
by Bulova

'

..

•

~·

., ~

"
••

-~·

•
•'
'
'
'
.., -

Treat yoursalf lo the
shapely naw look In
charmers keep your wrlit

·-......-

resistant with unbreak·

able mainsprings.

CLOSING OUT SALE! ! !
l.._ln_ge_ls_A_P_PI_ia_nc_es_A_t_1_71_N_.•_s_ec_o_nd_
ALL

SALE STARTS
THURSDAY

.111111®16

REDUCED

·&gt;.• ••••

FAMOUS BRANDS

BEFORE WE MOVE

Zero degree
Freezer with
separate

WESTINGHOUSE
GIBSON ·
HARDWICK
NORGE

COLD

Fresh
meat keeper
with i1s own
con trol

control

ZONE 3
Refrigerator

control for

fresh foods

We ·Would Rather
Cut The Prices
Than Move The Merchandise!

KITCHEN AID
AMANA

$319

AMANA 16 cu. ft . WAS $399
FROST-FREE .................. NOW.
NOW

14 cu. ft. Frost-Free ~ibso·n

5

NOW

5 Piece Green

. 40" Gibson

NOW

REFRIG·ERATOR .. ~~-~ -~~~~ .. 299~ · ELEC. RANGE ~~-i~~. -~~-s- -~~~: _$32goo
19 c~. ft. Frost-Free Side by Side ' AMANA
·.40'1 Gibson·
REFRIGERATOR.. :-y~~-~~??.. $54995 ·ELEC. RANGE~~~~--~-~~-~-~2.~. $32goo·

Brown or blue

7 Piece Brown

18 lb. Norge

Kitchenaid

18 lb. Nprge

30" Hardwick

00
GAS
RANGE
.......
~~~-~~:.~.$199
DRYER ;................. ~~~.~~:~..$19goo .
36" Hardwick

20 lb. Norge

. $24.Q

.DRYER ..................~~-~.~~~~- ..$19goo . GAS RANGE -~----~~-~-~~~~--$26995 .

Tran&amp;tucent frame.
Crimson rtd
dl1l1nd strip.

40" Gibson

. SZ4.11

Fedders 4,000 BTU .

70,000 BTU Gas

ELEC. RANGE~~~~-·--~~?__ s23goo AIR CONDITIONER ............~9goo SPACE HEATER.~~~.~~~::.s17cfo

,

•

J..._R_oo_M_m_s_E_occu_PI_Eo_s_v™_E_K_Io_mE-·SHO-PP_E___.I

_,J.

STORMOR®

PRICES

dial 1nd strap,

'

Middleport, 0.

59 N. Second St.

..

.•

ARRANGEMENTS

Dudley's .. Fiorist

~
.
.·
SEWING IS A NEW LEISURE-TIME hobby for men
such as Burton Gerke of Baltimore, at work on a skirt for his
wife. Son David wea rs pullover and slacks by Dad.

ELEC. RA.NGE ... ~~~-~-3•9.~ $29goo

'.
'
''

From ssoo ·

Cash
&amp; Carry

40" Westinghouse White

'

••

MUMS

ELEC.
RANGE
..
~~-s--~:~~ .....s26goo WASHER ................V:.~.~ .~~~~-. s25goo DISHWASHER .....~-~-5••~~~~ •.519goo
White, Green Goid

In high fashion. And always on time. Shock

~

From S]r:I.J

----------------------------CORSAGES
VASE

30" . Hardwick

watches. These Caravelle

AZALEAS

ALL MUM PLANTS 10% OFF CASH &amp; CARRY

FOR EASTER GIVING
The new shape of

''

. From ssoo

LILIES

from their nonsewing pals' Not
as much as you mi ght expect possi bly beca use the sewing
classes often number football
plaYI&gt;rs and track stars among
the students.
Women's Wear Daily, noting
the new phenomenon, predicts
that more arid more men will
joint the 45-million women who
sew. "Only the stigma of
femininity has kept more men
from sewing," observes WWD,
"and the younger generation
doesn't seem to have su ch
han gups."

•
.

INGELS

'
'' .

.
. . . ..
'

•

•

I

••••

•

RAN~

FURNITURE and APPLIANCES
MIDDLEPORT,
OHIO
..

RAT£ 1 ERMS

OPEN

I·

'

· .r:;;- -.......·, •

- ....
l
•

..

.

·~

· II:

-

'

.'

. ....

'

I

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.

.

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...

I

'.

..

'•

.

!

I ,

. •.

.. ,,

"

;

..

.

AND
'

,•

L •

FRIDAY

,

.

.

,.
•;·.

'

'' I

'•

SATURDAY

I

.

•

.
_,

-..

NIGHTS

•f ..

. :r

..
r

I,

I ..
'.

1

.,

•

�I

J

· ~

'

'· .

I " ...... .

I

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'.,, ,_,,_, ·•· "'"""""'" ! ,.,

.

4

••

,

•• •

.

.

•

.I.

-·

..

'

I,

•
. 7- 'l'l}e DaUy Sent me"!, Middleport-Pomeroy, o., ApriiiO, 1974

Sews your old man
•

6-Tbe Dally Sentinel,Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Aprii'!O, 1974 ,

S_ewers' lib .no longer 'women only'

....

By JoallD.e Schreiber
working, and · is cQrrenlly
Honey, I need a new formal bUilding closets for a neighbor.
for the PTA dance."
Last summer, he installed a
Traditionally, this line is the swimming pool himself.
lead into a rousing family
There.'s just one item he
argument
and
budget wishes he could buy - a male
discussion. But today , Dad dress form , to help fit his suit
·may instead head for the jackets.
·
sewing machine and whip up a
The dress form problem was
home-se w n
or~ginal, solved by a ~year-&lt;Jid former
guaranteed . In dazzle the cabinetmaker, James B. Tripp
competition.
of !}arden Grove, Calif. When
Nor will be stop at making a he began to sew his own jacket- ·
dress for his wife. He's per. shirts about 10 years ago, he,
fec tly capa ble of making a too, needed a form. He put on
jacket, shirt and slacks for an old knit turtleneck; covered
himself, clothes for the kids, it with a layer of masking tape,
draperi~s for the living room, cut it off, taped it back
and a wmter cover for the boat . together, stuffed· the stiffened
Sewing is no longer labeled shirt and mounted it on a stand.
"for women only." Men have
What makes a man invade
equal opportunity to invade th e traditionally feminine
fabric shops, select patterns arena of home sewing?
and join the sewing spree.
Rela xation is the reason
Take the case of Burton given by Richard Washington
Gerke of Baltimore, Md. In less of Savannah, Ga., head football
than a year, he completed the coach lor the Johnson High
following items :
Atomsmashers. After a touch
3 suits, size 43 (two with practice session, ·he relaxes by •
extra pants)
stitching himself a flashy pair
2 sports jackets, size 36
of doubleknit bells . Working on
5 pairs slacks, '28" waist
a vintage Singer, with
I white bikini, girl's size 8
guidance from his wife, Clem;
I women 's fake fur coat
he has created jump suits,
I women's crushed velveteen dashikis, vest suits and lots of
blazer
slacks.
I women's polyester blazer
The male ego, or anything I women's white velvet you. can -do - 1 -can -do blazer
better syndrome, accounts for
....... ,, ..........:c .......... 1 man's all-weather topper . quite a bit of manly stitching.
Some of Gerke's creations ' F,orrest Hodge of Roanoke,
are for himself, some for hiS · Va ., made himself a pair of
w_ife Catherine, and som~ for yoked slacks - "just to prove
h1s youngsters, Dav1d, 17 , to my wife than a man can
Debbie, 13, and Linda, 11.
sew."
Accnrding to Mrs. Gerke, it
There are men who simply
1111 began just a year ago last enjoy the intricate machinery
Christmas when her husband of a sewing machine, which
had a week's _vacation. He can certainly do more tricks
spotted a pile of mending by than the most advanced power
the sewing machine, tackled it, drill, lawnmower or outboard
and discovered that sewing is motor. To Joe Sammons of
both easy and fun . Then he Norfolk, Va., " It's more
ventured into a local fabric complex and exciting than a
shop, discovered the wonderful spnrts car."
world of double-knits, and a
~ashion-conscious males
book which promised to set him turn to sewing just because ·
on the road to successful they can't find what they want
sewing for himself.
in the stores . Says Joe Winters
This book, a straightforward of Raleigh, N. C., "I want to
spiral- bound volume, is tilled make suits. Something dif"~wing Knits - Menswear,"
ferent. Mod. My own thing."
by Judy Lawrence of Boulder,
Economy is often mentioned.
Colo. It gave Gerke the basic As Coach Washington asks,
- information he needed con- "Why should I pay fourteen
cerning fabrics, patterns, dollars for a pair of slacks
sewing techniques and con- when I can invest a dollar in a
struction details for slacks, pattern and produce the same
·vests and golf shirts. Now, he thing for around five dollars?"
can· turn out a perfect pair of
Then there's the competitive
slacks for David (28 waist, 33 factor, which causes boys to
length) in four hours, and is enter and win sewing contests.
currently tailoring a suit for The Singer Company reports
himself.
,
that two boys sewed their way
Gerke does his sewing in the to the national semifinals of
"back room," which also holds their annual V{orld Stylemaker
the·TV, a piano and an organ. Competition, placing among'
He averages a day-and-&lt;1-half the top 75 in a -field of 71,000
per weekend, plus a couple of entries. Both are from North
evenings, at the machine. Mrs. Carolina - Charles Pruitt of
Gerke sews, too, and likes to Winston-Salem, and Gary
crochet and knit. Debbie is Smith of Concord.
learning_ to sew, and the family
Another Southern boy, 14works together on draperies year-&lt;Jid Nathan Kincaid of
and other household items.
Fairmont, W. Va., won in the
What makes Mr . Gerke such local level of the competition.
a sewing whiz? He says that his .
In high schools across the
work with a tool firm has country, boys are enrolling in
nothing to do with it. "It's not cooking and sewing classes,
the machine I enjoy - it's the while the girlS Jearn shop and
saving,
and
the
ac- metalwork. In St. Louis, Mo.,
complishment."
23 boys were enrolled in an allMrs. Gerke says that his male hnme ec. course. Mrs.
patience has a Jot to do with his Rosemary Seidel, their insuccess - "He loves little structor, plans to make all the
· tedious tllings." He applies the home ec. class co.ed, so boys
same precision to wood- and girls can learn together.

N

11

Fl

....
N

•

2
•

&lt;

...-··

; .

-&lt;
.....
' ;J:Io
:nr•
gg
• "'til •

.._...,

:::r..

CD
I

'

!

ARMOUR
STAR
,,

"

Ih Spearman , Tex .., sewing

instructor Beth Bourland says
this of her boy students : "They ··
are as good. as girls are when
first introdutect to sewing.
They 've shown..Jpemselves to
be every bit as il&lt;ixterous. And
the boys seem .to eateh · on
faster to the reasons why a
sewing operation must be done

•

•

,/

a certa in way ."
Do the boys take a ribbing

H someont&gt; wants to cry on

your shoulder. he most likely
hopes the tears will wak
through to yo ur wallt&gt;t.

HYDRANGEAS

'

FASHION
.Caravelle·
by Bulova

'

..

•

~·

., ~

"
••

-~·

•
•'
'
'
'
.., -

Treat yoursalf lo the
shapely naw look In
charmers keep your wrlit

·-......-

resistant with unbreak·

able mainsprings.

CLOSING OUT SALE! ! !
l.._ln_ge_ls_A_P_PI_ia_nc_es_A_t_1_71_N_.•_s_ec_o_nd_
ALL

SALE STARTS
THURSDAY

.111111®16

REDUCED

·&gt;.• ••••

FAMOUS BRANDS

BEFORE WE MOVE

Zero degree
Freezer with
separate

WESTINGHOUSE
GIBSON ·
HARDWICK
NORGE

COLD

Fresh
meat keeper
with i1s own
con trol

control

ZONE 3
Refrigerator

control for

fresh foods

We ·Would Rather
Cut The Prices
Than Move The Merchandise!

KITCHEN AID
AMANA

$319

AMANA 16 cu. ft . WAS $399
FROST-FREE .................. NOW.
NOW

14 cu. ft. Frost-Free ~ibso·n

5

NOW

5 Piece Green

. 40" Gibson

NOW

REFRIG·ERATOR .. ~~-~ -~~~~ .. 299~ · ELEC. RANGE ~~-i~~. -~~-s- -~~~: _$32goo
19 c~. ft. Frost-Free Side by Side ' AMANA
·.40'1 Gibson·
REFRIGERATOR.. :-y~~-~~??.. $54995 ·ELEC. RANGE~~~~--~-~~-~-~2.~. $32goo·

Brown or blue

7 Piece Brown

18 lb. Norge

Kitchenaid

18 lb. Nprge

30" Hardwick

00
GAS
RANGE
.......
~~~-~~:.~.$199
DRYER ;................. ~~~.~~:~..$19goo .
36" Hardwick

20 lb. Norge

. $24.Q

.DRYER ..................~~-~.~~~~- ..$19goo . GAS RANGE -~----~~-~-~~~~--$26995 .

Tran&amp;tucent frame.
Crimson rtd
dl1l1nd strip.

40" Gibson

. SZ4.11

Fedders 4,000 BTU .

70,000 BTU Gas

ELEC. RANGE~~~~-·--~~?__ s23goo AIR CONDITIONER ............~9goo SPACE HEATER.~~~.~~~::.s17cfo

,

•

J..._R_oo_M_m_s_E_occu_PI_Eo_s_v™_E_K_Io_mE-·SHO-PP_E___.I

_,J.

STORMOR®

PRICES

dial 1nd strap,

'

Middleport, 0.

59 N. Second St.

..

.•

ARRANGEMENTS

Dudley's .. Fiorist

~
.
.·
SEWING IS A NEW LEISURE-TIME hobby for men
such as Burton Gerke of Baltimore, at work on a skirt for his
wife. Son David wea rs pullover and slacks by Dad.

ELEC. RA.NGE ... ~~~-~-3•9.~ $29goo

'.
'
''

From ssoo ·

Cash
&amp; Carry

40" Westinghouse White

'

••

MUMS

ELEC.
RANGE
..
~~-s--~:~~ .....s26goo WASHER ................V:.~.~ .~~~~-. s25goo DISHWASHER .....~-~-5••~~~~ •.519goo
White, Green Goid

In high fashion. And always on time. Shock

~

From S]r:I.J

----------------------------CORSAGES
VASE

30" . Hardwick

watches. These Caravelle

AZALEAS

ALL MUM PLANTS 10% OFF CASH &amp; CARRY

FOR EASTER GIVING
The new shape of

''

. From ssoo

LILIES

from their nonsewing pals' Not
as much as you mi ght expect possi bly beca use the sewing
classes often number football
plaYI&gt;rs and track stars among
the students.
Women's Wear Daily, noting
the new phenomenon, predicts
that more arid more men will
joint the 45-million women who
sew. "Only the stigma of
femininity has kept more men
from sewing," observes WWD,
"and the younger generation
doesn't seem to have su ch
han gups."

•
.

INGELS

'
'' .

.
. . . ..
'

•

•

I

••••

•

RAN~

FURNITURE and APPLIANCES
MIDDLEPORT,
OHIO
..

RAT£ 1 ERMS

OPEN

I·

'

· .r:;;- -.......·, •

- ....
l
•

..

.

·~

· II:

-

'

.'

. ....

'

I

'

.

.

.

I

'·

..

I

I

,

•'•'

'

...

I

'.

..

'•

.

!

I ,

. •.

.. ,,

"

;

..

.

AND
'

,•

L •

FRIDAY

,

.

.

,.
•;·.

'

'' I

'•

SATURDAY

I

.

•

.
_,

-..

NIGHTS

•f ..

. :r

..
r

I,

I ..
'.

1

.,

•

�.

. I'

..

.-

'

9- The Dal~vSentine1, Middleport-Pomeroy, 6., April tO,

..:.,....:.....:--,-'--T--

I

-

-

FIRST
BIG
WEEK!

Fancy Candy Filled Easter

BASKETS

Cre,) l &lt;&gt;c lcc l idn o f fan cy cel lo
wr,1p jJcd · b il Skef c; (l nd E r'l '&gt; IN
novl: ll ies l il ted with del iciou s :

Soft, cudd ly s·t ulled pl ush Easter
toy an im als e·ve r y child likes a t
Ec1s t er
tim e.
Big
speci al
&lt;Jssor t m ent to c hoose fr om .

Co1r1cf lf.'S

$1'00

TO

''

$399

EACH

Sugardale

$

BONELESS

HAM ____________

WITH.cltTHESE

EIIG ·VALUES!

rOUR FRIENDLY STORES~ WE ARE HERE TO SERVE YOU

~ (·

'

- PARADE IN FOR EASTE
BOBBY BROOKS-RUSS TOGS
NEW SPRING&amp; EASTER

Mrs. Fred Morrow, left, SyraCUlle, purcha~ the first
tickets to the "Silver Slipper Saloon" to .be operated Saturday; April20, at the Pomeroy Junior High School Auditorium
from Jane Walton, active member of the sponsoring
organization, Preceptor Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority.
The tickets went on sale Tuesday afternoon and will be sold
only at the New York Clothing House as a service to saloon
patrons who wish to avoid waiting in the entrance line April ·.
20. The $1 tickets include refreshments and a miili-musical to
be staged by the Big Bend Minstrel Association at 6:30,8 and
9:30p.m.

' '

SPORTSWEAR

UMW sponsors child

FROM

LETART FALLS - The UMW . She conducted th e
United Methodist Women of the progra111 which was a
Letart Falls Church voted at a "discussion of John I presented
recent meeting to sponsor the by Mrs. Inez Hill, Mrs·. Alice
care of a nine-year-old Korean Balser, Mrs. Erma Wilson,
girl. The name of the youngster Mrs. Marjorie Roush, Mrs.
-was secured through Com- Nora Cross, Mrs . Mary Louise
passion, Inc., Chicago.
Shuler, and a guest, Mrs. Edna
Meeting at the home of Mrs. Roush .
Gladys Shields, the UMW ' A note of thanks was read
made a donatioh to the Racine from Mrs. Lois Bell for flowers
. Emergency squad. Twenty-one while she was hospitalized. The
sick visits were made during May meeting will be at the
the past month, it was home of Mrs. Marjorie Roush
reported.
in Portland with a program on
Mrs. Betty Shiveley was St. John 2.
coordinator for the service of
Spring flowers decorated the
prayer and self-denial, opening refreshment table.
with a report on missions_of the

:·.:
•'

298 Second ·st.
Pomeroy, Ohio

- PARADE IN ...
EASTER VAL
:
LADIES' COLORFUL
(f~
NEW SPRING&amp; EASTER
~- -.,.

DRESSES

::

EASTER COATS

Shop now for y our new spring and

Eas te r dresses. Our selection is

Wonder i ng what to wear i n the Easter
Pr~radc? Select your new spri ng coal
now tram ou r fine collection . You ' ll find
&lt;1 11 th e newest style s in the finest -fabr ics
rlnd iri al l th e wan ted spr ing co lors a nd
pil l lerns .

$ 00

PRICED

'':•,:.

LADIES' DRESS &amp; CASUAL
•
NEW SPRING &amp; EASTER

Famous Bobb ie Brooks &lt;1nd Ru ss Toas
creation for spr ing . Choose fr om the
lat.est in fnshi on tops, ski rt s, and slack $.
Wide choice of l abrics , colors and
Prl tf er ns Smdrt spr ing dress begi ns a t
Sti ffl er.'s_
·

LADIES' TWO PIECE STYL E
SPR lNG AND EASTER

- PARADE IN FOR EASTER VALUEsLADIES ' CHARM STEP&amp; HI BROW
SPRING. AND EASTER

FOR SPRING AND EASTER
LADIES ' FAMOUS BRAND
NYLON TRICOT
LACE TRIMMED

\
'•

PANT SUITS

FOOTWEAR

FULL SLIPS

l adi es ' new Spring ·and Easter t wopi ece pant suj l s fo r your spring wardrobe . Assorted sty les to choose fro m in
smM t spring colors. Sho p ear ly for bes t
se lect ion .

ROUND ROAST.. :....... ~~:. $1

W.IENERS .......................... '.~·.. $1

~?:-lo\ks\

FAVORS FOR All

TOO ..

'

.

at A d carry
On long CUStOm

.

PRETTY NEW
SPRING&amp; EASTER

More savings timed for Ea ster from
.Stif11er's. Newest styles in children 's
spr ing and Easter footwear . Straps, ties
and slipons . A happy t:aster
all .

DRESSES

$ 99T0 $ 99

PAIR

- PARADE IN FOR EASTER VALUES
LADIES' PLAIN &amp; FANCY
BRIEF- OR BIKINI

iri s' new spring and Ea st er
dr esses pe r fect for Eas ter wea r and
thr ough the summ er . M any st y les to
choose from . Sizes 3 to 6x and 7 to 12 .

PANTIES

Men's vi nyl and leath er
dress bell s in assor ted
sty les. Save at Stiffl er 's.

$J50m$250
~
PAIR
- PARADE IN FOR EASTER
UE5LADIES SPR lNG .&amp; EASTER
LEATHER LIKE VINYL

~ SPORT

.

TO

$400

EACH
- PARADE IN FOR
MEN~S FANCY P RM PRESS
SHORT SLEEVE

'

SPORT SHIRTS

$1 Q99
.·

. ... TO .
.

,

-PARADE ' IN FOR EASTER VALut::.-MEN'S SANDY McGEE
LOAFERS AND .

You save a wee bit' more on
·every i)air of ,Sandy McGee ox.
'__ fords , l~fers and $lipons. Hop on
over ' n save at Stiffler ' s.

$899

.I

PAIR

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JUST •EGISTOI

~·•OTHtNG

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:.32 oz. !

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...

•

eGREEN. ONIONS

SAVE

1 LB.

23•

PKG.

With th is coupon
Redeem at Super Valu

..

29e

a~
00

Void

NY

DETERGENT

Fabric Softener
W~li thlo coupon

84

59'e .

330Z.
BTL--

after

v.~

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oz.

Pkg . .

r$119

@

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TO IUY! NOTHIN.G TQ · WttTEI
'

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• ...,...._;_.. I.

59e

With this coupon
Redeem '' SuPer Valu

.

'

~

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•CUCUMBERS .GREEN PEPPERS

· Bot.

I

&gt;

(.

1·0¢

YOUR CHOICE -.- .

DOVE LIQUID

·------------------------\
I
) .

------

,

SALTIN~S

-'----------:---~~--- ·-----:-- rHONE--~---.

.

. ZEST A

ADDRESS--------------------------~

.

Ca~z . 69~

POTATO CHIPS.. :.:.~.~-..39

NAME --------------~----------------

J

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40

YAMS. .... .-.................... .

TO

•

·

,

I

PAIR

J

Princi II a Cut

.ilflsllt fotFIEE PRIZE

$1599 '

. 30 oz.

COCKTAIL ............. ~~.~ ..49~

r~---~--------------------------·
.
I

.

$.15QQ'
.

CLIP
·THIS .
ENTRY
BLANK ·

. OXFORDS.

...

Hunt's Fruit

of

EACH

~ l.,arge selection to choose from Men 's
pol yester doubleknit slacks. New spring
colors. Parad e in and see your savings
mu ltiply at Stiffler ' s. The best look s of the
sea,son are at Sf'iffler' s.

'·

•

Fin e gr;-oup of boys ' P'Oiyester doubleknif ·
flare leg style sla ckS in - assorted new
spring color s. Sizes 4 to 7 and 8 to 18.

DRESS SLACKS

$399
.· . . EACH

52-lf2 Gallons of Borden's Ice Cream ·
52-1 lb. Cans of Super Valu Coffee
52-Packages of Flav-o-rite Cookies
52-Dozens of Valley Large Eggs
52-Gallons of Borden's Milk
52-8 Pack Cartons of Coke
52-8 Pack Cartons of Pepsi
52- 8 Pack Cartons of R.C.
52-9 oz . Bags of Snyders Potato Chips
52-Dozens of GTazed Donuts
52-l lb. Packages qf Pure Pork Sausage
5,2 -1 lb. Cartons of Borden's Cottage
Cheese
52-20 oz·. · Loaves of Bread
52· Issues
T.V. Guide
'52.-6lf2 oz. Cans of Chicken of the Sea
Tuna
52-32 oz. Bottles of Gatorade
104. 14 oz: Cans of Carnation Milk
52-1 lb. Packages of Parkay Margarine
52-Pairs of L:eggs Panty Hose
52-1 lb. Packages of Kahns Wieners ·
52-Heads of Lettuce
·
52-Fresh Baked Cakes
208-Tubes of E If Biscuits
.
52-1 lb. Boxes of Zesta Crac~ers .
52-6 Packs of Flav-o -'rite F~ozen
Orange Juice'
·

DRESS SLACKS

- PARADE iN FOR EASTER VALUEs.
MEN'S NEW SPRING
POLYESTER KNIT

M en's perm pres s short Sl!;!eve sport
sh irt s in sol id colors and fancy
PQtlerns·. Sizes S-M·L -XL. Have a
Happy Ea ster with these Big Values
frOm Stift'ler 's.

SHIRTS

-PARADE IN FOR EASTER VALUES
BOYS' EASY CARE
POLYESTER KNIT

Hand som e new n ~ck ties for spr irlg
and Easter wea ring . 4-in-hand , bows
and ~ ,--, ....l ..j: H o&lt;; .

$200

-One Of The following Items ...

· EACH

NECK TIES

Wide selection, smar t new style's in
fiSS ort ed s prin g co lor s. Budget
priced in lea ther lik e viny l.

You Could Win A Year's Supply Of

. Boys' short sleeve fancy permanent
pres s sport shi r ts in assorted colors and
patt erns .. long poilited collars .

fashi on
fas hion

- PARADE IN FOR EASTER VALUE$4 IN HANDS· BOWS - REDDI TIES
MEN'S NEW SPRING

HANDBAGS

• ',. .

POTATO CHIPS
7 oz.
39~
PKG.

NO PURCHASE NECESSARY

$450

TO

'\

1·

MISTER BEE

Register Often!'

PARADE IN FOR EASTER VALUEsBOYS' PERMANENT PRESS
FANCY SHORT SLEEVE

DRESS BELTS

La di es' new -spring dress gloves in
assorted st yles in w hite and colors . Ge t in
.on som e of th e many fin e Ea ster Trea l s.

$800

T.V.

PARADE IN FOR EASTER VALUEsSUPER COlLECTION OF LADIES'
SPRING AND SUMMER

- PARADE IN FOR EASTER VALUEsMADE BY BOSTON
NEW FASHION

DRESS GLOVES

TO

19 in. COLOR

A super collectipn of lad ies' new
Spring and Summer sanda ls in
a s~orted styles and fashion colors.
Stop in today for best selection.

- PARADE IN FOR EASTER VALUE5LADI5S'SPRING&amp; EASTER
FINE NYLON

$299 .

eoT PIES

SANDALS

Ladie s' bikin i and brie f style panties
in assorted solid colors anti fancy
patterns. Sizes 5 to 7. Your saving s
multiply at St iffler ' s.

.,.
~.*.J

BANQUET

.Brand Name

FOOTWEAR

GIRLS' FAMOUS BRAND

Lad ieS' fa mou s · Leda bran d ny lon
s1retch pan ty hose in sizes small ,
m ed ium , m edium ta ll and tall. Sol ar
Beige, Ta hit i and pecan shades.

Easter ServiceS

.

'- PARADE IN FOR EASTER VALUEs-

PANTY HOSE

$ 00

.

...

$159

THE
AI?OMA
~Is GI?EA T

PRIZE DRAWING.

- PARADEINFOREASTERVALUES
CHILDREN'S FAMOUS BRAND
SPR lNG AND EASTER

lb.

09

We're happy to announce our new
IN-STORE BAKERY! Come see Donuts,
Sweet Rolls, Pies, and Decorated Cakes
being prepared in our modern BAKE OFF BAKERY. Freshness is at Powell's
everyday!

AND A FABULOUS
PAIR

- PARADE IN FOR EASTER VALUES- :,
LEDA BRAND SEAMLESS
NYLON STRETCH

STEAK

49

KAHN'S ALL MEAT

IT'S A FRIENDLY FOLKS
GRAND OPENING

$1399

A potluck supper to welcome Brickles; May 12-:!:i, Katie
the Rev ." Fr. John Nadzam to Biron, Barbara Mullen; May
the Sacred Heart Parish was 26-June 8, Vera Buchanan and
planned when the Catholic Pat McKnight.
Women's Club met Thursday
On the refreshment com. night at the church.
mittee for May are Mrs. Sandi
The informal reception will Kovalchik, Mrs. Rita Hamm,
he held April 21 at 6 p.m. Also Mrs. Ann Colburn and Mrs.
planned during the meeting Bernadine Meier.
was a breakfast May 5 for the
first communicants ·and one
May 19honoring the graduates.
An observance of the !25th
year of the church was
/1&amp;
discussed and will .. be
':! f -e
celebrated June 9. The Rev.
Fr . Nadzam will meet with the
officers of the church council
and representatives of the
ALFRED - The Alfred
Catholic Women's Club and the church will have its usual
Men's Club to plan for this. It Easter Sunrise Service on
was noted that May Crowning . April 14 at 6:30 a :m. with
will take place May 12.
breakfast to follow in the
Read at the meeting were church basement.
thank-you notes from the Rev.
This has become traditional
Fr. Bernard Krajcovic, Sister with · this church, as the first
Mary Clare of St. John 's Villa Sunrise Service was sponsored
Orphanage, and the Horak- by the M.Y.F. group under the_
Zwilling families . Reported .·m leadership of Helen Woode in
were Tom Ables, Elizabeth 1954, and since then each
Horak and David Ohlinger.
' leader has followed it, assisted
The schedule for cleaning the by the Sunday School teachers
church was announced as and leaders. Since 19o7 or o8,
follows : April 14-27, Mrs. the breakfast has been served
Gemma • Casci and Teresa in the new church basement.
Gasci; April 28-May 11, Mary Other services are the usual
Kunzelman
and
Helen Sunday School at 9:4(;, an
Easter egg hunt at 10:4o, and
prayer and praise service at 11.

CUBE

HAM SLICES ............. ... ..'?...$1 39
BONELESS ROLLED

TO

'Welcome ' supper planned

TENDER

lENTER CUT

the
riend

t-...!JI

Gr ea t new "sty les f or Spring and Easter .
Dr ess, casual and spor t sty les at budget
pr ices. Visit St iffl er 's Shoe Departm ent
today and step lively thi s spring .

Ladies' famo us br and na m e lace
tr im m ed dnd tail or ed soft. sere ne and
~ump lu ou s ful l sl ips. Be lief hop over to
St iffl er's nnd see you r savi ng s mu lti pl y .
Hr1 pp y E.1ster to a ll .

HAMS :rh~'!u ....................... '.~ -.. 99~

Monday thru Saturday 8 AM to -10 PM
'
Sundays 10 AM to 10 PM

9910$2600
- PARADE IN FOR EASTER VALUE s-

SEMI-BONELESS

Store Hours:

great in a pr ice rang e that wi l l
pl ease you r bu dg et. F i ne new
fabr ics in a var iet y of spring color s
and pa tterns.

AND
UP

.
.
- PARADE IN FOR EASTER VALUE 5-

. WHOLE
OR HALF

• \ . .\10.

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9- The Dal~vSentine1, Middleport-Pomeroy, 6., April tO,

..:.,....:.....:--,-'--T--

I

-

-

FIRST
BIG
WEEK!

Fancy Candy Filled Easter

BASKETS

Cre,) l &lt;&gt;c lcc l idn o f fan cy cel lo
wr,1p jJcd · b il Skef c; (l nd E r'l '&gt; IN
novl: ll ies l il ted with del iciou s :

Soft, cudd ly s·t ulled pl ush Easter
toy an im als e·ve r y child likes a t
Ec1s t er
tim e.
Big
speci al
&lt;Jssor t m ent to c hoose fr om .

Co1r1cf lf.'S

$1'00

TO

''

$399

EACH

Sugardale

$

BONELESS

HAM ____________

WITH.cltTHESE

EIIG ·VALUES!

rOUR FRIENDLY STORES~ WE ARE HERE TO SERVE YOU

~ (·

'

- PARADE IN FOR EASTE
BOBBY BROOKS-RUSS TOGS
NEW SPRING&amp; EASTER

Mrs. Fred Morrow, left, SyraCUlle, purcha~ the first
tickets to the "Silver Slipper Saloon" to .be operated Saturday; April20, at the Pomeroy Junior High School Auditorium
from Jane Walton, active member of the sponsoring
organization, Preceptor Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority.
The tickets went on sale Tuesday afternoon and will be sold
only at the New York Clothing House as a service to saloon
patrons who wish to avoid waiting in the entrance line April ·.
20. The $1 tickets include refreshments and a miili-musical to
be staged by the Big Bend Minstrel Association at 6:30,8 and
9:30p.m.

' '

SPORTSWEAR

UMW sponsors child

FROM

LETART FALLS - The UMW . She conducted th e
United Methodist Women of the progra111 which was a
Letart Falls Church voted at a "discussion of John I presented
recent meeting to sponsor the by Mrs. Inez Hill, Mrs·. Alice
care of a nine-year-old Korean Balser, Mrs. Erma Wilson,
girl. The name of the youngster Mrs. Marjorie Roush, Mrs.
-was secured through Com- Nora Cross, Mrs . Mary Louise
passion, Inc., Chicago.
Shuler, and a guest, Mrs. Edna
Meeting at the home of Mrs. Roush .
Gladys Shields, the UMW ' A note of thanks was read
made a donatioh to the Racine from Mrs. Lois Bell for flowers
. Emergency squad. Twenty-one while she was hospitalized. The
sick visits were made during May meeting will be at the
the past month, it was home of Mrs. Marjorie Roush
reported.
in Portland with a program on
Mrs. Betty Shiveley was St. John 2.
coordinator for the service of
Spring flowers decorated the
prayer and self-denial, opening refreshment table.
with a report on missions_of the

:·.:
•'

298 Second ·st.
Pomeroy, Ohio

- PARADE IN ...
EASTER VAL
:
LADIES' COLORFUL
(f~
NEW SPRING&amp; EASTER
~- -.,.

DRESSES

::

EASTER COATS

Shop now for y our new spring and

Eas te r dresses. Our selection is

Wonder i ng what to wear i n the Easter
Pr~radc? Select your new spri ng coal
now tram ou r fine collection . You ' ll find
&lt;1 11 th e newest style s in the finest -fabr ics
rlnd iri al l th e wan ted spr ing co lors a nd
pil l lerns .

$ 00

PRICED

'':•,:.

LADIES' DRESS &amp; CASUAL
•
NEW SPRING &amp; EASTER

Famous Bobb ie Brooks &lt;1nd Ru ss Toas
creation for spr ing . Choose fr om the
lat.est in fnshi on tops, ski rt s, and slack $.
Wide choice of l abrics , colors and
Prl tf er ns Smdrt spr ing dress begi ns a t
Sti ffl er.'s_
·

LADIES' TWO PIECE STYL E
SPR lNG AND EASTER

- PARADE IN FOR EASTER VALUEsLADIES ' CHARM STEP&amp; HI BROW
SPRING. AND EASTER

FOR SPRING AND EASTER
LADIES ' FAMOUS BRAND
NYLON TRICOT
LACE TRIMMED

\
'•

PANT SUITS

FOOTWEAR

FULL SLIPS

l adi es ' new Spring ·and Easter t wopi ece pant suj l s fo r your spring wardrobe . Assorted sty les to choose fro m in
smM t spring colors. Sho p ear ly for bes t
se lect ion .

ROUND ROAST.. :....... ~~:. $1

W.IENERS .......................... '.~·.. $1

~?:-lo\ks\

FAVORS FOR All

TOO ..

'

.

at A d carry
On long CUStOm

.

PRETTY NEW
SPRING&amp; EASTER

More savings timed for Ea ster from
.Stif11er's. Newest styles in children 's
spr ing and Easter footwear . Straps, ties
and slipons . A happy t:aster
all .

DRESSES

$ 99T0 $ 99

PAIR

- PARADE IN FOR EASTER VALUES
LADIES' PLAIN &amp; FANCY
BRIEF- OR BIKINI

iri s' new spring and Ea st er
dr esses pe r fect for Eas ter wea r and
thr ough the summ er . M any st y les to
choose from . Sizes 3 to 6x and 7 to 12 .

PANTIES

Men's vi nyl and leath er
dress bell s in assor ted
sty les. Save at Stiffl er 's.

$J50m$250
~
PAIR
- PARADE IN FOR EASTER
UE5LADIES SPR lNG .&amp; EASTER
LEATHER LIKE VINYL

~ SPORT

.

TO

$400

EACH
- PARADE IN FOR
MEN~S FANCY P RM PRESS
SHORT SLEEVE

'

SPORT SHIRTS

$1 Q99
.·

. ... TO .
.

,

-PARADE ' IN FOR EASTER VALut::.-MEN'S SANDY McGEE
LOAFERS AND .

You save a wee bit' more on
·every i)air of ,Sandy McGee ox.
'__ fords , l~fers and $lipons. Hop on
over ' n save at Stiffler ' s.

$899

.I

PAIR

'

,..

I•
i' '

-~.

;

--,-

..

. J.

. .. ''
.

'

..

. '·
'

.,\
....

·. I· I'

'

\

~-

''
.

ig Bee

.

·' •
.'

'

. .

,·,'

'

,.

1~ --

'r

JUST •EGISTOI

~·•OTHtNG

: '

eRADISHES

:.32 oz. !

''

. • .

' ·I'

'' ,.
...

•

eGREEN. ONIONS

SAVE

1 LB.

23•

PKG.

With th is coupon
Redeem at Super Valu

..

29e

a~
00

Void

NY

DETERGENT

Fabric Softener
W~li thlo coupon

84

59'e .

330Z.
BTL--

after

v.~

lJih

S

oz.

Pkg . .

r$119

@

~

.

'

®

TO IUY! NOTHIN.G TQ · WttTEI
'

.I

• ...,...._;_.. I.

59e

With this coupon
Redeem '' SuPer Valu

.

'

~

~

•CUCUMBERS .GREEN PEPPERS

· Bot.

I

&gt;

(.

1·0¢

YOUR CHOICE -.- .

DOVE LIQUID

·------------------------\
I
) .

------

,

SALTIN~S

-'----------:---~~--- ·-----:-- rHONE--~---.

.

. ZEST A

ADDRESS--------------------------~

.

Ca~z . 69~

POTATO CHIPS.. :.:.~.~-..39

NAME --------------~----------------

J

"'

40

YAMS. .... .-.................... .

TO

•

·

,

I

PAIR

J

Princi II a Cut

.ilflsllt fotFIEE PRIZE

$1599 '

. 30 oz.

COCKTAIL ............. ~~.~ ..49~

r~---~--------------------------·
.
I

.

$.15QQ'
.

CLIP
·THIS .
ENTRY
BLANK ·

. OXFORDS.

...

Hunt's Fruit

of

EACH

~ l.,arge selection to choose from Men 's
pol yester doubleknit slacks. New spring
colors. Parad e in and see your savings
mu ltiply at Stiffler ' s. The best look s of the
sea,son are at Sf'iffler' s.

'·

•

Fin e gr;-oup of boys ' P'Oiyester doubleknif ·
flare leg style sla ckS in - assorted new
spring color s. Sizes 4 to 7 and 8 to 18.

DRESS SLACKS

$399
.· . . EACH

52-lf2 Gallons of Borden's Ice Cream ·
52-1 lb. Cans of Super Valu Coffee
52-Packages of Flav-o-rite Cookies
52-Dozens of Valley Large Eggs
52-Gallons of Borden's Milk
52-8 Pack Cartons of Coke
52-8 Pack Cartons of Pepsi
52- 8 Pack Cartons of R.C.
52-9 oz . Bags of Snyders Potato Chips
52-Dozens of GTazed Donuts
52-l lb. Packages qf Pure Pork Sausage
5,2 -1 lb. Cartons of Borden's Cottage
Cheese
52-20 oz·. · Loaves of Bread
52· Issues
T.V. Guide
'52.-6lf2 oz. Cans of Chicken of the Sea
Tuna
52-32 oz. Bottles of Gatorade
104. 14 oz: Cans of Carnation Milk
52-1 lb. Packages of Parkay Margarine
52-Pairs of L:eggs Panty Hose
52-1 lb. Packages of Kahns Wieners ·
52-Heads of Lettuce
·
52-Fresh Baked Cakes
208-Tubes of E If Biscuits
.
52-1 lb. Boxes of Zesta Crac~ers .
52-6 Packs of Flav-o -'rite F~ozen
Orange Juice'
·

DRESS SLACKS

- PARADE iN FOR EASTER VALUEs.
MEN'S NEW SPRING
POLYESTER KNIT

M en's perm pres s short Sl!;!eve sport
sh irt s in sol id colors and fancy
PQtlerns·. Sizes S-M·L -XL. Have a
Happy Ea ster with these Big Values
frOm Stift'ler 's.

SHIRTS

-PARADE IN FOR EASTER VALUES
BOYS' EASY CARE
POLYESTER KNIT

Hand som e new n ~ck ties for spr irlg
and Easter wea ring . 4-in-hand , bows
and ~ ,--, ....l ..j: H o&lt;; .

$200

-One Of The following Items ...

· EACH

NECK TIES

Wide selection, smar t new style's in
fiSS ort ed s prin g co lor s. Budget
priced in lea ther lik e viny l.

You Could Win A Year's Supply Of

. Boys' short sleeve fancy permanent
pres s sport shi r ts in assorted colors and
patt erns .. long poilited collars .

fashi on
fas hion

- PARADE IN FOR EASTER VALUE$4 IN HANDS· BOWS - REDDI TIES
MEN'S NEW SPRING

HANDBAGS

• ',. .

POTATO CHIPS
7 oz.
39~
PKG.

NO PURCHASE NECESSARY

$450

TO

'\

1·

MISTER BEE

Register Often!'

PARADE IN FOR EASTER VALUEsBOYS' PERMANENT PRESS
FANCY SHORT SLEEVE

DRESS BELTS

La di es' new -spring dress gloves in
assorted st yles in w hite and colors . Ge t in
.on som e of th e many fin e Ea ster Trea l s.

$800

T.V.

PARADE IN FOR EASTER VALUEsSUPER COlLECTION OF LADIES'
SPRING AND SUMMER

- PARADE IN FOR EASTER VALUEsMADE BY BOSTON
NEW FASHION

DRESS GLOVES

TO

19 in. COLOR

A super collectipn of lad ies' new
Spring and Summer sanda ls in
a s~orted styles and fashion colors.
Stop in today for best selection.

- PARADE IN FOR EASTER VALUE5LADI5S'SPRING&amp; EASTER
FINE NYLON

$299 .

eoT PIES

SANDALS

Ladie s' bikin i and brie f style panties
in assorted solid colors anti fancy
patterns. Sizes 5 to 7. Your saving s
multiply at St iffler ' s.

.,.
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BANQUET

.Brand Name

FOOTWEAR

GIRLS' FAMOUS BRAND

Lad ieS' fa mou s · Leda bran d ny lon
s1retch pan ty hose in sizes small ,
m ed ium , m edium ta ll and tall. Sol ar
Beige, Ta hit i and pecan shades.

Easter ServiceS

.

'- PARADE IN FOR EASTER VALUEs-

PANTY HOSE

$ 00

.

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$159

THE
AI?OMA
~Is GI?EA T

PRIZE DRAWING.

- PARADEINFOREASTERVALUES
CHILDREN'S FAMOUS BRAND
SPR lNG AND EASTER

lb.

09

We're happy to announce our new
IN-STORE BAKERY! Come see Donuts,
Sweet Rolls, Pies, and Decorated Cakes
being prepared in our modern BAKE OFF BAKERY. Freshness is at Powell's
everyday!

AND A FABULOUS
PAIR

- PARADE IN FOR EASTER VALUES- :,
LEDA BRAND SEAMLESS
NYLON STRETCH

STEAK

49

KAHN'S ALL MEAT

IT'S A FRIENDLY FOLKS
GRAND OPENING

$1399

A potluck supper to welcome Brickles; May 12-:!:i, Katie
the Rev ." Fr. John Nadzam to Biron, Barbara Mullen; May
the Sacred Heart Parish was 26-June 8, Vera Buchanan and
planned when the Catholic Pat McKnight.
Women's Club met Thursday
On the refreshment com. night at the church.
mittee for May are Mrs. Sandi
The informal reception will Kovalchik, Mrs. Rita Hamm,
he held April 21 at 6 p.m. Also Mrs. Ann Colburn and Mrs.
planned during the meeting Bernadine Meier.
was a breakfast May 5 for the
first communicants ·and one
May 19honoring the graduates.
An observance of the !25th
year of the church was
/1&amp;
discussed and will .. be
':! f -e
celebrated June 9. The Rev.
Fr . Nadzam will meet with the
officers of the church council
and representatives of the
ALFRED - The Alfred
Catholic Women's Club and the church will have its usual
Men's Club to plan for this. It Easter Sunrise Service on
was noted that May Crowning . April 14 at 6:30 a :m. with
will take place May 12.
breakfast to follow in the
Read at the meeting were church basement.
thank-you notes from the Rev.
This has become traditional
Fr. Bernard Krajcovic, Sister with · this church, as the first
Mary Clare of St. John 's Villa Sunrise Service was sponsored
Orphanage, and the Horak- by the M.Y.F. group under the_
Zwilling families . Reported .·m leadership of Helen Woode in
were Tom Ables, Elizabeth 1954, and since then each
Horak and David Ohlinger.
' leader has followed it, assisted
The schedule for cleaning the by the Sunday School teachers
church was announced as and leaders. Since 19o7 or o8,
follows : April 14-27, Mrs. the breakfast has been served
Gemma • Casci and Teresa in the new church basement.
Gasci; April 28-May 11, Mary Other services are the usual
Kunzelman
and
Helen Sunday School at 9:4(;, an
Easter egg hunt at 10:4o, and
prayer and praise service at 11.

CUBE

HAM SLICES ............. ... ..'?...$1 39
BONELESS ROLLED

TO

'Welcome ' supper planned

TENDER

lENTER CUT

the
riend

t-...!JI

Gr ea t new "sty les f or Spring and Easter .
Dr ess, casual and spor t sty les at budget
pr ices. Visit St iffl er 's Shoe Departm ent
today and step lively thi s spring .

Ladies' famo us br and na m e lace
tr im m ed dnd tail or ed soft. sere ne and
~ump lu ou s ful l sl ips. Be lief hop over to
St iffl er's nnd see you r savi ng s mu lti pl y .
Hr1 pp y E.1ster to a ll .

HAMS :rh~'!u ....................... '.~ -.. 99~

Monday thru Saturday 8 AM to -10 PM
'
Sundays 10 AM to 10 PM

9910$2600
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SEMI-BONELESS

Store Hours:

great in a pr ice rang e that wi l l
pl ease you r bu dg et. F i ne new
fabr ics in a var iet y of spring color s
and pa tterns.

AND
UP

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OR HALF

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10 -_:l'he Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Apri(JO, 1974

SEOGMAIplans singJ
Music by the Heavenly Highway Trill' from Meigs County
highlighted the April meeting
of the Southeastern Ohio
Gospel Music Association at
the Springfield Grange Hall.
The group voted to hold a
-'- b&lt;!ke sale at Kroger's in the
Sliver Bridge Plaza , Friday,
April12, beginning at 9:30a.m.
The LeFevres will be
featured group at the May sing
at Gallia Academy High
School. During April a special
meeting will he held to handle
publicity for that sing which
will be May 9 at 8 p.m. One
other group will be obtained to
sing at that concert.
Counselqrs for those wishing
to make Christian committments during the sings will
he provided by the group.
Volunteer counselors at the
May sing will lie' Tom Moore,

Social

'

Calendar~
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - MIDDLEPORT
Uons Club, Wednesday noon at
the Meigs Inn.
POMEROY CHAPTER 80,
Royal Arch Masons, 7:30p.m.
Wednesday followed by
Bosworth Council 46, Royal
and &amp;;Iect Masters, at 8:30
p.m., both at the Pomeroy
Masonic Temple.
FEENEY-BENNETT Post
128, American Legion, 7:30
p.m. at the hall.
·
WHITE ROSE LODGE 1:30
p.m. at Legion Hall in Middleport.
MIDDLEPORT Amateur
Gardeners, 8 p.m., home of
Mrs. Ferman Moore. Program
on antiquing flowers by Mrs.
Michael Fry. Scrapbook
memories by Mrs. Edgar
Reynolds and Mrs. Gtiy
Reynolds.

~Spring 'is

Bernadetta Heilman, Rev.
Charles Trotter,. Geraldine
Sexon and Betty Willis.
Rev. Charle"' Trotter and
Victoria
Adkins
were
welcomed as new members of
the organization .
The group will ·co-sponsor a
sing at the Addison Free Will
Baptist Church, Saturday,
June 8. Singers scheduled to
appear at that tiipe are the
Heavenly Highway Trio, the
.Gospel Echoes, Rev. and Mrs.
Trotter and the Jubilaires.
Other groups wishing to participate should contact Dorothy
8ountryman , 44&amp;-9586, after 5
p.m.
During the May meeting, the
Jubilaires will present special
music. A cookout will be held at
the grange hall beginning at 6
p.m.

Reseroations
deadline set
Reservations for the Senior
Citizens trip to Gallipolis and
Point Pleasant April 18 are to
be made at the Center not later
than Monday, Mrs. Eleanor
Thomas, director, Meigs
County Council on Aging,
_
announced.
Cost for the transportation
and tours is $1 ,per person.
Vislls wiD be made to Our
Hous~ . Riverby, and Fortifies lion Hill where a picnic
luncheon wiD be held, and then
In the afternoon the group will
go to Point Pleasant to vi•" the
Mansion House. Those ~oing
are to take a sack lunch. The
buses will leave the Center at 9
a.m. and return at 3 p.m.

Community
service set

-:H'"l;HIRE _ Election of
officers for the t974-75 year and
a · program on the theme
"Spring's Grand Opening·"
highlighted a meeting of the
Chester Garden Club at the
home of Mrs. Wyatt Chadwell.
Re-elected president of the
club was Mrs. Reid 1Young.
Other officers named were
Earl Ingels, Jr., ftrst vice
president ; Mrs. Robert Wood,
second vice president; Mrs.
Pearl Mora. 'secretary; Mrs .
Howard Knight , assistant
secretary; Mrs. Karl Krautter ,
treasurer; Mrs. Dale Kautz,
assistant secretary.
Comments on lawn problems
·
by the 22 mem bers
were gtven
in response to roll calL Ohio

Middleport and Pomeroy Fire Departments Tuesday nigbt. The money represented proceeds
of a rummage sale. A pickup truck of clothing lett over from the sale was taken to a Gallipolis
location for transfer to the tornado victims at Xenia by Howard Well and Tom Werry in a truck
donated by Herman Werry. The Xi Gamma Mu Chapter presented a check of $95 to the
Pomeroy firemen for their building fund last month. That money was raised through a bake
sale contributed to by all three chapters of Beta Sigma Phi. The checks last night were
presented by Texanna Well, left, to Bob Byer, Middleport fire chief, and by Judy Werry to
Charles Legar, Pomeroy fire chief. Mrs. Well and Mrs. Werry are co-chairwomen of the ways
and means committee of the chapter.

-1:.

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down-dilly" was .the tiUe of the
orrangement made by Mrs.
Dale Kautz for the meeting.
She . . used
daffodils
flowering plum for plant
material. Again this year the
club will furnish seeds to a 4-H
club of tfte comm unity. The
Five Point Junior Leader Club
was selected to receive the
seeds.
Flower arrangements and
specimens on exhibit were
judged by Mrs. Leonard Er- ,.
win, Mrs. Ginther and Mrs :
Walker who awarded seven
blue ribbons and five red ones.
Refreshments were served
by the hostesses, Mrs. Chad;
well and Mrs. Young.

In other action, a resolution of commendation was •PI· -vcd
for Bill Slack, the first Meigs High wrestler to win a district
championship and go on to state cofupetitwn at St Jolm Arena 1n
Columbus.
." ·
., · The board commended the Harnsonville PTO for its painting
?f the entire school bwlding, and Hargraves read a letter of
t.hanks for the board's help with the Mejgs Higb Band Boosters m
purchasing new equipment.
The board approved . the pam ling of the Harrisonv ille
gymnasium and worked on a settlement of a school bus aCCident
which resulted in the total loss of tHe 1970 International that had
52,000 miles on tt at the time of its mtshap.
Reports were presented on the senior ctltzens, who wtll pay
$200 out of their nutntion program toward th e-east of utilities at
the Pomeroy Junior Higb Building; a meeting was se t with the
Bradbury staff lor Tuesday, Aprill6, at 7:30p.m. ; a reporlwas
received on a visit by the state office of School Fooq Service; a
letter was received from Vic Brown of Brown's Trailer Park in
Minersville about a change in the availability of a turn-around
space for school buses; reports were read on bus cieanhness and
$Vacuation drills ; the supervision of loading and unloading of bus
@fudents at schools; interest in an activity bus, the sale of land to
iutland Village, the gasoline situatton, bus driver medical
fl!:aminations, and the EMR project at Pomeroy Elementary

new

a.m.

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"· YOUR .HEADQUARTERS

..~One

I

.. .

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i,

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i

Other Styles. 17.99 to 24.99

£!borah Roush, Aaron Sayre
and Kenda Ra iney ..
·~r incipal
and ass is tant
Pl,inc ipal contra cts were
grtanted to Russell_ Moore, 3
r:;ars ; Robert Morns, 3 years ;
R])berta Wilson , 3 year s;
Jal'fleS Vennari, 3 years ; Greg
~!!):Call, 1 year; Eric Hart . 1
~Qa( , Mae Young, 1 year, ~n
Htmn ing, 1 year ; Phyllis
1-fii'ckett, 1 year; John Lisle, 3
years; Earl Young, 1 year, and
Fj!tlton Taylor, 2 years.
; Extra ·assignment contracts
W'~re awarded t o football
,V.'I)-sity assistants Fenton

Hartley's Shoes
In Ttie Middle of the Upper Block
Pomeroy, Ohio
Open All Day Thursdays-Friday Night Til 9

t.,.ylor , Donald Di•on and John
~tley;

RUTlAND, 0.

coach Roger Brauer , his
a:_»istant. Sam Crow, and John
Ar:riott and Ron Logan for
gf.ade 7-8 footbal l.
.§fenton Taylor was confr"llcted as trainer, John Arnott,
vArsity basketball assistant;
David Jenkins grade 9; Ron
• L'tlgan reserve basketbal l; '

-· I

'ECIAL MEAT BUYS

.Bordens

CREAM ORA

SMOKED CAlliE

HAMS....~~~~~~-~ .. ~~:.
6-71b.

59~

l6·oz.

Jar

69~

"'!iirvin McKelvey grade 8 and
Delmar

PICKLES

HAM
;SALAD........ .

Dairy Specials

Head track Coach will again

be Donald Dixo n, with Donald
Wolfe head baseball coach an
Dale Harrison his assistant .
S~ m Crow will again be
assistant wrestling coach, thi s

28 oz.

Jar

a~~,;;~~~r head coach Ray

&lt;Nolan Swackhamer again I S
gdj f coach. with Swackhamer

7

32·0Z.

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MIXED .

61h

oi.

Can ·

l-Ib.

Crtn.

KRAFT

54-oz.
Qottle

ORANGE

Produce Buys

79

JUICE

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CORRECTION!

ALL FLAVORS

•'

PAR KAY
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MARGARINE
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;sHOULD HAVE BEEN
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with__couoon
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E_XIIi~;f"4i:i iS]t4ore

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MARK V

''' ·MIDDLEPORT
'

·~

49~

PKG.

'"

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Rodino's cormmltee has

asked Nixon to surrender 41
panel subpoena the While additiona l secret tapes and last
House to get the evidence Thursday demanded a reply no
N1xon has thus far refused to Ia ter than Tuesday .
surrender.
'' The President .. . has
Chairman Peter W. Rodino directed me to adv1se you that
Jr ., O..N.H. , refused immediate a review or the mB.terlals in
comment. But he was expected ques tion is under way ,"
to decide today whether to call NIXon's ch1eflawyer, James D
the coriumtlee together and St. Clair, wrote committee
make good on his threat last eounsel John Doar .

and why, St. Clair's Jetter gav~ evidence we require."
st. Clair's letter also seemed
no indicatwn 'Whether Nixon
to
couple the committee's
intends to surrender any or all
. demand for evidence with the
of the requested materials.
It appeared to tmply, howe- White House demand for the
ver, Ntxon intends to dectde for panel to g1ve him a role in their
himself what to give the inquiry --something the com·
mittee has not yet defmed .
committee.
1·we should no longer
tolerate his coontemptuous
VACUF.LO
attitude toward those seeking
Go qui e tly , co n ve ni ently
the truth of _his eon duct in ofmodern w1 lh buli, ·H'I Vac
fice,' ' said Rep. •Jerome
FOREMAN &amp; ABBOTT
Waldie, D-Calif , a member of
Middleport
PH 992 · 5231
E V124
the Rodmo committee. "We
musl now subpoena all

Tuesday that he ordered the
"Did yo u have anything to do
mur.dcr of his UMW archrival. wtth the killing of Joseph,
and "close fnend " Joseph A. Margaret and Charlotte
"Jock" Yablonski .
Yablonski'" asked defense
attorney Charles F. Moses.
" Absolutely not ," replied
Boyle, 72, charged with
originating a sc heme that
resulted in the 1969 Yablooski
murders three weeks after he
defeated the union reformer m
their own production adjust- a bitter presidential election.
ments in the present marketBoyle was accused of
oriented agriculture if they are suggesting to UMW Distri~t t9
to make a profit and the time to officials J . Turnblazer that
do it is now before we get into Yablonski "ought to be killed
real trouble this fail."
or done away with. n An in-

REAL LIVE

dictment also charged that
Boyle arranged for the transfer
of $20,000 m union money to the
Dtstnct 19 treasury to pay for
the contract killing.
"Did you ever talk to Pass
about the Yablonski killings•"
Moses asked Boyle after the
ousted labor chieftain took the
stand in his own defense.
"Certainly not, Quite the
contrary/' said Boyle, who has
a liearl condition and is
recovenng from a s uicid e
attempt. "As the years went
by, he (Yablonski 1 and I
became very'.., close friends."

II

EASTER BUNNIES
AND

BABY CHICKS
AND SUPPLIES
Pel Dish, Rabbit Pellets. Liller,
Remed•es. Bunnie Salt Spools .

Rabbit

MODERN SUPPI,. Y
399 W. Mam St .

992 ·2164

Pomeroy , 0 .

THE STORE WITH "ALL KIND S OF STUFF " ~ FOR
PETS. STABLE S, LARGE &amp; SMAL L ANIMAL S LAWNS
AND -GA RD ENS

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RPHY

CASH , CHAR G E,
LAY -AWAY

ll!lliiJil!ll
llliCiitti:III

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,aster
Candy
&amp;
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One Pound
SOLID

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PERFECT FOR THE EASTER BASKII·
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EASTER
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MANY LOVELY

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SIZES &amp; STVLES

T'NT 0.:

··E~H

('"t • .

0\Jr huge ccl lec 110n i5 per
fvcT lor Easter ba!okels and fo•

mdovodual gofl~ Choose yov•
lo von to mo v thwo te nng bun ·
n o e~ we•gh•ng o l ull 16 oz . o f
pure mdk chocolate s.n, ng
end stond, ng ~hopes

RE&lt;::"t:JLA"

'1.29
Al l agas mil en1cy rht~ hm wo y to dNorate
Eas te r eggs. Put on e of the fou r b11gh tly cb l
ored fel t t1p p en~ 111 ' '"' holder Turn egg or
m ove hundle to ma k e dolens of brrl l ran t de
signs

Travel gas

Fultzes safe,
home damaged
in tornadO
Mr. and Mrs . Aaron Kelton

(Continued fro,m page I )
have measured against all
other companies over a long
period of time and you'll see
that they fall in the middle
range."
As for gasoline supplies, he
said: "If the American people
continue to abide by norrilal
conservation practices, we'll
be able to live in a nonnal
fashion ."
.
Simon said he was "encouraging the American people
to take a normal summer
vacation, not to postpone going
to New England or down to
Florida if that has been their
traditional practice. There is
going to be gasoline out there."
But he cautioned that it is
going to cost mor~ to go on the
trips because "prices are going
to be higher, especially among
·gasoline stations that rely on
foreign imports."
Simon told the' House Legal
and Monetary Affairs subcommittee Tuesday that that oil
embargo may have been a
good thing because it
crystallized concern lor energy
problems that had been
neglected for years,
Clubs, was at Bergamo Center
near Dayton on Wednesday for
an 01\GC meeting and had
planned to spend the evening
with the Fultz hmily.
Col. Fultz also is the uncle of
John Fultz, of Middleport.

Thirty nine arrests were manner, and ' no operator's

••
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•

3 ~~s· 37e

Nabisco
WAFFLE CREAM
COOKIES ~:;,:~-

Mrs. Htlferty sa1d plans for
Heritage Day are progressing.
It was announced that Keith
Ashley will be speakmg at one
of several classes being held at
Ohio University on the history
and culture of Southeastern
Ohio and that Gerard Hilferty
will be one of the speakers at
the annual meeting of the Ohio
Historica l Soctety at the OhiO
Museum in Columbus Apnl 26
and 27.
Pilgrimage '74 observance at
Fairfield Coun ly on May 4 and
5 will include a tour of
historical homes. A re gion
eig ht association ,meeting of
historical societies was announced on June 15 at
Marietta. Seth Nicholson
presented a typewritten story
of his mother's family, Hunt, to
the society.

·Police make 39 arrests

; OUR TUESDAY AD

JELLo ·

5

tion.

learned by telEphone Monday
that her uncle, Col. Lyston
Fultz, U. S. Army IRe !. )
';;Joy Bentley was rehired as a·nd family of Xenia were
girls basketball and volleyba ll safe, in the first contact with
c&amp;ch .. with Kenda ' Rainey the
g_~ls gymnast ics coach and him since the tornado struck
.ll&amp;rnice Hoffman and Gary there Wednesday. Col. and
WBiker sharing yearbook Mrs . Fultz and two other
re5pon sibillt ies.
-relatives who reside at 288
llona id Wolfe will be in
.
charge of the ~ig~ school North Kmg St., JUSt two blocks
nol,wspaper, with Jeannie from the center of town which
Taylor coaching lhe hlg~ . was completely demolished
scfiool c~eerleaders and Ken &lt;fa.:..-! -. .
h h '
Roiney t~e junior high girls. were untnJured althoug t ere
~ohn Redovian , Martha
was extensive damage to their
V ~rmari and Harold . Sauer
home. The roof was torn off
were reh1red as gu1dance
.
cc~mselors, with
C~ar.les
and all of the :-vmdows broken
C!V'der in charge of dr~mat_1cs , by flymg debns.
Helen Sm1th head l1branan ,
)Vlrs Kelton said Col. Fultzx
Dtight.Goins band director f~r h ha. s suffered two heart
two years and Fred Ruth h1s
w O
as~isfant, also fcir two years .
attacks in recent months, and
~on tracts for non·certified
his wife rema ined in the house
certifi~ated emp_loyees went to
b0 th Wednesday and Thursday
cu~toclians Dav1d Jacks and
.
.
Paul McDaniel and cook Grace nigh Is due to the looting. Mrs .
Ali,bott. Director of Iran · Kelton, Region II director for
•
the r&gt;hio Association of Garden

59~

10 oz.
Jar

1)

the university women with
proceeds to be used for the

also servi ng as assistant
athletic dire ctor. while Donald
WOlfe will again be the athletic
boa•d's secretary·trea surer

PLANTERS

BROUGHTON

7

· Roger Brauer also was
contracted as elemen tar y

MIRACLE WHIP

SALAD
DRESSING

grade

bilsketball , coach .

SMUCKERS
BLACKBERRY

JELLY

Haynes,

bas ketball.

GOLDEN ISLE
KOSHER DILL

HOME MADE

reserve grid coach

F:enton Taylor , grade 9 footbal l

PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU APRIL 1-3

'

\

CUrry, in a statement issued
at the national headquarters
here, said the drop of $1 a
bushel from the high prices
made the last week of Fe t&gt;ruary should prove to farmers
that there are adequate sup.
P.lies to meet present demand.
He said if they plant at "present intentions" the market
price eould drop another 50
cents a bushel.
He sa id with average
weather even a 5 per cent lll·
crease in acreage would increase production 282 million
bushels, and a 10 per cent increase would result in production boost of 564 million
bushels.
"With skyrocketing costs of
production now being experienced by eorn farmers, especially for fuel, machinery and
fertilizer ,'
the
corri
association's latest figures
show that it presently costs
$2.09 per bushel to produce a
bushel of corn," he. said.
He said farmers must "make

Museum
(Con tmued from page

must."

"We expect that the review
can be completed by the end of
the Easter recess and that the
addtttonal materials fu rnished
at that time wiil permit the
com1mttee to complete 1tS
inquiry promptly ."
Congress is scheduled to
recess for the Easter holiday '
this Thursday and not return
until April 22.
Though Rodino's committee
has specifically set forth what
it wants from the Wh1te House

age."

Me Daniel. Win if red purchase of a locator umt at
Barbara
Nibert ,
Petr ic ia O' Connor , Carol the museum. Contributions of
Q,lllinger , Susan Ornstein , all sorts of ttems are needed by
Je,anne Parsons, Gay Pern n, the organization for the auc·

Wild Heels : To come out on top.

742-5543

ok, Jani ce Enslen, Carol

'

'··

Floyd , Ella Mae Southern,

were

J~n ice
~as.

shce fash•on , today. Do your th1ng'. Try o u r thmg

'

MIDDLEpORT

contracts

ans , Gladys Foley, Beverly
Ray
Goodman ,
ul,
Ci!ltherine Haggerty , Vi cki
lii:Jghe s, Rose Ann Jenkins ,
CQurtney Kn1ght, Ron Logan ,

RUTLAND DEPARTMENT STORE

oz.

year

!!(.anted to Kay Barr. Ladona
~yd. Leota Chaney. Da isy

ATTEND REVUE
MASON, W. VA. - Mrs .
Curtis McDaniel, Mrs. Reuben
Stewart of Mason; Mrs.
Maxine Arnold , Hartford, ·
attended the Black Knight
Revue at Point Pleasant Senior
High School recently. Mrs.
McDaniel's
granddaughter
Denise McDaniel was a par:
ticipant.

Strawberries .

, I

were Judith Brostrom, S;&gt;m
Ct&gt;ow.- Emma Finch. C~arles

anym ore. And. we've got 'em Our Wild Heels Buil t tall
.. to put you up where it's at in the world of men 's

16

' ·~ BAKER FURNITURE ·

:: Awarded two year con tracts

sportaf ion is John Bea ver;
maintenance. Eugene Hawk1ns
and Joe Shavorinsky ; bus
mechanic
John
Scragg,
custodian s Earie Wood and
Louie Chr1sfian ; bus drivers
Teresa Cremeans, Naomi

\Nhitley .

y

.

••d Mary Hysell.

to get up 1n the world

. Fnmy Acre

BC'ONE, Iowa (UP!) Warning of a potential significa nt drop in market prices. the
new ley elected president of the
Nationa l Corn Growers
Association Tuesday cautioned
farmers against major increases in 1974 production.
John CUrry of Victoria, ill.,
asked farmers to hold their
1974 corn plantings down to
"not more than a 5 per cent
increase over their 1973 acre-

De lo res
Lynch ,
M1nn 1e
~ecker, Wendy
Frieder , Thornton , Esther Black , cooks
Mildred Long, Marjorie Davis,
~nise Gibson, Dw ight Goins,
Karen Goins , Cecil ia Golden , Virginia Wear s, Vivian Pierce,
~rgaret Goodman , Delma r Helen Hood and Florence
B&amp;ynes,
David . Jenkins, Barrett .
Secretaries are Apnl Smith
Willard Miller. Margaret
F'arsons. Ga ry Reed . Fred and Barbar a Archer, w1th
Ruth, Janis Schmoll , Dorsel · Harry Graham given a one
$ln ith , Rebecca Tate, Victoria year bu s driving contract
Vi)nek, Lucy White and Wykle

Frozen Foods

'

I

RAND:

IDAHO ~~b:$17
POTATOES .

FOR···

eent!ey, Jeanne Bowen , Sabra
~urr i son , and Kathleen Scott.
Three year contracts went to
~n n ie Fisher , Dale Harrison

week to "Subpoena if we

Corn may drop
•
•
mpnce

t Given 5 year teaching con

tracts were John Arnott, Joy

It takes a real heel

COTTAGE
'- CHEESE

MEDIA, Pa. (U Pi) - Pale
and ailing, former United Mine
Wor kers president W. A.
"Tony " Boyle emphatically
deni ed for an mtent jury

t)onsider the membership of the athletic board , "tts roles and
l'jisponsibiti ties.
;. Finally, the board co nsidered a request from the
Harrisonville PTO that a first aid course be established, and all
ag reed that it was a good idea .
·'
; : Attending were Supt. Hargraves, Clerk Lee McComas, board
ijlembers Virgil King. uresident: Robert Snowden, Joe Sayre,
~rol Pierce, Wendell Hoover:. Wendell Williams and Tom Crisp
ef Williams Trenching ; Fenton Taylor, Sam Crow, and James
!liehl of Meigs High School; Henry Cleland, Jr. , of Pomeroy Boy
~out Troop 249, and student council members Peggy O'Brien,
:tJave Wolfe, Steve Walburn, and Beth Burns.

"Young-

His position was denounced
nmnediately by one committee
Democrat as "contemptuous"
and makmg it lfllperatlve the

Boyle claims total innocence

•: The board also set May 4for the date for the auctwn of the old

·Fire ladies
have meeting

Bob Bumgarner will beein bv
preaching on "Perv~rsity. ," as
shown by Pilate's situation .
Dwight Zavitz will discuss the
SYRACUSE - The Syracuse
"Criticism of the Crowd ." The Ladies Auxiliary of the
contrasting views of the two Volunteer Fire Department
thieves will be presented by meeting at the municipal
Tom Weaver and George building, was conducted by the
Glaze. Weaver•s· subject is president, Nancy Neutzling.
"Selfishness," the first tliief, Mary Pickens used Psalm 100
and Glaze's subject ' is lor devotions. Fourteen
"Repentance," the second members answered roll call
thief.
with their favQI'ite foods.
J eff Ranson will preach
The secretary's report given
about "Love," as exhibited by by Janice Lawson and the
Mary, and Steve Skaggs will treasurer's report by Agnes
speak of "Responsibility," as White were accepted. The
demonstrated by John , Henry flower fund report was given
Key will wind ·up the program by Mildred Pierce and · the
on the positive note of "Belief," special project fund report by
as stated by the centurion.
Mary Pickens.
· The First Baptist Choir, the
Sue Rice was welcomed as a
Heath United Methodist Choir, new member. The candy
and the Church of Christ Choir Easter eggs project was
will be presenting special tliSCussed. There are still eggs
messages in song.
for sale. Other projects also
Dorothy Anthony, organist were discussed and a thankwith the First Baptist Church, you card was read from the
will be playing.
. Decker family.
The service will be ·divided
At the ne&lt;t meeting the roll
into six one-half hour segments call wlill be a Easter verse with
and is to'conclude at 3 p.m. The devotions by Clara Lavender.
public is invited to visit the The hostesses will be Clara
church and worship at any Lavender and Mary Pickens.
time during the three hour
Refreshments of sloppy joes,
period.
cupcakes, chips, coffee and tea
were served by the hostess,
Jean Hall, to Vicki Rizer, Clara
Lavender, Mary Pickens,
Janice Lawson, Charlotte
Nease, Nancy Neutzling,
DAUGHTER BORN
Eleanor Bohram, Elizabeth
RACINE - Mr. and Mrs. Rice, Agnes White , Marie
Michael Elmore (Kathleen Rizer, Mildred Pierce, Thehna
Lewis), ·Millersville , Md., , Grueser: Sue Rice and guests
announce the birth of their first Eber Ptckens, Jr. and Tina
child, a daughter, Jennifer Pierce.
Jan, March 30. Maternal
SERVICE SET
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
There
will be · an Easter
Robert Lewis, Racine, and
Sunrise
Service at the
paternal grandparents are Mr.
Wesleyan
Holiness
Pomeroy
and Mrs. Elton M. Elmore,
Church Sunday, morning at 6
Glen Burnie, Md.

WASHINGTON (UP! ) Pres1dcnl Nixon has met the
House Judid~ry Commtttee 's
dema nd for , more
impeachment evidence by saying
he will decide what td give up
and when.
Nixon sent word lo Capitol
Hill late Tuesday afternoon
that the committee ·- which
had insisted on , knowing his
inlentwns by then - would just
have to wait. unllll~te April to
find out what he plans to do.

~alport school an~ agreed to meet with the athletic board to

Mason UMW has meeting

Holy Week observance is planned

;

a

Nix0n challenges tapes subpoenas

(Continued from page 1l

~hoot.

Marrieds" Sunday Scfiool class
which was to meet at the home
of Mr . and Mrs . Lansing
Adams Saturday night, April 6.
Other issues 'concerned the
MASON, W.Va.- Mrs. Ray Daughter Banquet will be May back Mrs. Gladys . Thomas, collection of botile caps,
Proffitt, program leader when 13 at Mason United Methodist · who had spent the winter in Sunday School literature and
the Mason United Methodist Church. Reservations should Florida.
possibly a revival soon.
Women met April 8 at the be made by May 7 for the
Attending were Rev. and
church, showed slides and covered di sh dinner. Mrs.
Attending were Mrs. Howard Mrs. Robert .Smith, Sr.; Leo,
narrated the "Cruciff&gt;&lt;ion" by Maxine Arnold is chairman. VanMatre, Mrs . Clarence Helen, Sharon, Connie, Tobey
Jan ·styka.
The group voted to help the McCloud, Mrs. Reuben and Richard Hili; Lewis and
Mrs. Roy Test, president of Youth Fellowship with its Stewart,
Mrs.
Earlene Clarice Callicoat, Ernie,
United Methodist Women , spaghetti dinner to be helcj on Bumgardner, Mrs . Charles Shirley, David and Jason
announced that (Day Apart) Friday, May 10 in the church Yeager, Mrs. John Chattin, Smith; Lansing, Garcia and
meeting will be at the High. basement. Mrs. Test thanked Mrs. Gladys Thomas, Mrs. Cristy Adams; Maude Smith,
lawn Methodist Church in the women lor attending the Fred Spencer, Mrs. Margaret Tony Adams, Gloria Decker,
Huntington, Tuesday, April 30, covered dish dinner recently at Pickens, Mrs. William Zerkle, Richard, Glenda, Betty, Richie ·
from 10. a.m. until 2 p.m. She Clifton United Methodist Mrs . Ray Proffitt, Mrs. Roy and Keith Hunt; Melvin, Hope,
also announced the Mother- Church. The ladies welcomed Test and Mrs. Maxine Arnold. Darrell, Drake and Eddie
Adams, and Luke, Kathy and
James McDanieL

Easter cantata enjoyed

&lt;' ~

wildflower booklets were given
as favors and Mrs. Ingels
presented . "Vi~!ets, Blue Eyes
· of Spnngttme, the myth _that
has developed w vanous
countries about violets .
Topic of Mrs . I.. B. Walker
and Mrs. Rose Gmther was
"The Many Ways to Easy
Lawn Maintenance." They
discussed how to plan,prepare.
and mamtam a beaultfullawn,
diseases and weed control , and
gave 40 ltps to make 1t all
easier.
Mrs . Paul Baer demonstra ted how to make a
terrarium and had on display
several which she had made
prt·or to the , .. :;. . · "Daffy.

.Student Lo.u nge

LONG BOTTOM - The
monthly business meeting of
the United Faith Church was
held Thursday night, April4, at
the home of Mr. and Mrs·.
Melvin Drake here .
A potluck dinner highlighted
the evening. Several issues
were discussed including
having

Church service set

I

garden club topic

Church business
meeting held

Xi Gamma Mu Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority presented checks of $75 each to the

SYRACUSE- The Syracuse
Good Friday
community
THURSDAY
MISSIONARY Society, services will be held at the
Pomeroy Baptist Church, 7:30 Syracuse Asbury United
"Faces Around the Cross" is
p.m. at the church. Mrs. Ellen Methodist Church with the
Couch to have the program. Rev. Richard E. Jarvis the theme of the community
Mrs. I. B. Walker and Mrs. speaking.
Good Friday program to be
Churches of the community held this Friday, 12 noon, at the
Rebert Kuhn, h&lt;istesses.
• PRECEPTOR Beta Beta will participate in the services First Baptist Church in Middleport. 'Seven ministers and
Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi which begin at 7:30 p.m.
Sorority, 8:30p.m. at the home The week of crusade-revival three ' church choirs will be
of Mrs. Jane Walton. Clarice services will be Apr-il 15 participating.
The theme will be developed
Krautter, hostess. Members to through April 19 al 7:30 p.m.
The pastors will be speaking by discussing the persons who
take sciJsors.
present at
the
REVIVAL now in progress at and special singing will be were
by
the
participating
crucifixion;
what
they
were
featured
Pomeroy Church of the
Nazarene, corner of Union and churches. These services will doing there, what they were
Mulberry, through Sunday. also be held at the Asbury thinking, and th&lt;~.. effect the
. crucifixion had upon them.
The Rev. Clell· Elliot, United Methodist Church.
Gallipolis, will be guest
speaker. The New Newsmen
Quartet from Ch8rleston will
he present on Saturday
evening. Other singers will be
l
featured during the week. The
MASON, W. Va.- The many Jerusalem, the Last Supper,
Rev. Clyde Henderson invites persons from the bend area the trial, crucifixion and
the public to attend.
attending John W. Peterson's resurrecton.
ORDINANCE Service with Easter Cantata )Vere imOpal Vaughn as narrator
communion and feel washing pressed with the beauty of the read scripture at intervals;
at, First Church · of God, cantata • titled, "The Last Mrs. Armo Morrison was in
Syracuse. The Rev. George Week." Gerald Stewart, for- c~rge of the opening worship
Oiler extends an invitation to merly of Mason, and now of Pt. and concluded with the
all Christiana to participate. Pleasant, directed the adult benediction.
REGULAR Meeting of Shade· choir at the Pt. Pleasant
Those having solo parts were
River Lodge F&amp;AM 453, 7:30 Presbyterian church in the Pam Niles, Janet Garrison,
p.'m. at Temple in Chester.
cantata · and his wife was John Leighty, Opal Vaughn,
organist. The story unfolds Lynn Sayre and the director.
MEiGSCOUNTY Humane telling
of Jesus' entry into
Society, 7:30 Thursday at the
Thrift •Shop in Pomeroy.
Preparations to be made for
opening the shop, April 19.
PLAN SERVICE
LAUREL CLIFF Better
REVIYAL OPENS
RACINESunrise services
Health Club, 7:30 p.m. ThursThe
Rev. and Mrs. Michael
will he held at the Bethlehem
day home of Mrs. Bertha
Bingham.
of England are
Baptist Church, Racine, Rt. 2,
Parker.
at 6:30a.m. followed by a light conducting revival services at
NIFTY STITCHERS 7:30 breakfast. Worship service will 7:30 each evening at the
p.m. home of Grace Warner. be held at 9:30 and Sunday Middleport United Pentecostal
SOUTHERN Local School School at 10:30.
Church through April 14. The
Board 7:30p.m. al high school.
pastor, William Knittel, invites
the .public to attend.
LAUREL CLIFF Better
Health Club, 7:30p.m., home of '
SERVICE SET
Mrs. Bertha Parker.
Sunrise
service at the
FRIDAY
PROG!tAM SLATED
SYRACUSE - The Syracuse
YOUNG ADULT . Class, Bradford Church of Christ will
Bradbury Church of · Christ, 7 be held .at 6 a.m. Easter Church of the Nazarene will
mornipg . Clifford Smith, have an Easter sunrise service
p.m. at the church.
pastor, invites the public .
at 6 p.m.
SOUTHEASTERN Ohio
Gospel Music Association bake
sale in front of Kroger's in the
Silver Bridge Plaza, Kanauga,
beginning at 9:30a.m.
REGISTERED Nurses
Special services have been led by the men of the HearthAssociation of the Holzer planned for Holy Week and stone Sunday school class. A
Medical Center, bake sale, 9 Easter at the Middleport First breakfast will follow prepared
·
a.m. to 3 p.m. in the old Bob BaptiSt Church.
.by women of the same class. '
Rees Pontiac Bldg., Galtipolls. On Maundy Thursday a
There 'will be no Wednesday
SATURDAt
communion service wiD be evening prayer service and no
BAKE SALE In old bank held at 7:30 p.m. The Upper Sunday evening Bibl.e study to
building at Rutland from 9 a.m. . Room-Last Supper tradition allclw further participation in
to noon. Sponsored by . Silver will be progressively fgllowed. these and other special church
Circle Senior Ptlzens, Still An Easter sunrise service will events being held dl\l'ing the
available are filled and unfilled begin at 8:30a.m. with worship · week.
Eulef ba811eta.
The Rev. Steve Skaggs,
CAR WASH at Welker's
pastor, invites the public to the
Ashland from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.
BIRTHDAY MARKED
set ".~.ces.
spo.naored
by
Meigs
CHESTER - The 18th anCheerleaders.
nlversary of the Skate-A-Way
SUNDAY
Roller Rink was celebrated.
sUNRISE SERVICES at recently with all those atUGHT SERVICE SET
Belblehem Baptlat Church, Rt. tending being served Ice cream
The Feast or the Light
2, Racine, 8:30 a.m., light free of charge. Two ladles Service will he held Saturday
brelkfut to follow. Worship among those attending were at 7:30p.m. at Grace Episcopal
service at 9:30 allti Sunday the first to attend opening night Churth, Pomeroy. AI that time
School at 10:30..
and are skating there now with Mr. and 1\trs. Aaron Kelton will
. INROSPrrAL
·, their children. Free RAases'
present ~ Pascal candle and
~on Weeki was readmitted ,were awar4ed lo Mrs. Marjorie candelatira to the church in
ID tlie H!llrer ~I Center Wolfe, Mrli. · Sandra Kenney
.Jut
I. .'
and chUdren.
,
,
' memory of their ~on, Jay1 The
1
public ls invited. 1,
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'. '
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II - ')'he DatlySentinel, M1ddioport-Pomcro)·, o.. Apnllr I97~

made by the Middleport Police · license, and three failed to
Department in March ac- yield right of way. There was
cordin'g tb the report of Chief of one arrest each for assured
P-11lice J. J. Cremeans to town clear distance ; spinning tires;
council Monday night.
passing in, a no, passing zone,
Of the total; seven were running a stop sign, assault .
charged with disorderly and battery , violation of
conduct and four each with , probation, illegal license and
drivlng while intoxicated and fightin~ and petty larceny.
The department investiga~d
disturbing the peace. There
were . three charged with seven accidents during the
permitting an unlicensed month and coiiected $1011 from
. person
drive and thre~ for tpe parking meters .. The police
resisting arr&lt;;lll.
cruiser was driven 4:461 miles
· Two each were arrested fori during the month .
running a red Ught; unsafe
.
I

LUSCIOUS PECAN
NOUGAT EGGS

TO

$498

EASTER BASKETS

·59c 89c
to

97c

30Z.-53'
Great fam i ly treat . . . creamy noug::Jt

Trodrt oonol Easter surpr is e 1 Each •s Idled to ove rflowr ng w 1t h Eo~ter
nove ltoes IO '( S an d Easter candy .
cho colate bunn oes , ch rdu , ducks,
marshmallow egg s, ielly bo rd eggs
lot s more 1 Man'( dd l erent
style'&gt; All br~g l11ly wrapp ed and read y to g• ve ,;

FILL TOUR OWN

fill ing is hand ro lled in caramel , then
quickly covered with crunchy f resh pe-

cans. Three handy gilt sizes.

MURPHY SOWN ~ .

?Haid'

Deligh t '(Our '(Ou ngsters w1th .!ne~p bCouri l ul
waver• bamboo baske ts you co n ldl w rtl1 t hen
tavo r •le treolst All sno pes and srz es m natural
snode wrtn broghtly (Qiored bonds

REGU
99c

POUND

COATED

REG. SJc

TASTY
HEN EGGS
;, lhe ,,!~'E';,~~~
C

43

RICH &amp;
CREAMY

Peanut
BuHer
EGGS

FOIL WRAPPED
CHOCOLATE EGGS

SUGAR

baskets .. oo.~r rom bow
selec tion of colorful sugor
coa ted panned morsnmol ·
low eggs 81 9 fovo ntes!

6 oz.
SIZE

Sol id m1l k chaco·

Ea ch ta sty egg i s 2

lates wrapped 1n
stay -fr esh , Easter

covered in del icio u s

milk chp colate. 1.5
ounces each.

egg colo red foil .

for

25C

13c E:ACH

POUND
BAG OR BU LK

· BAG
OR

FOIL
.WRAPPED

Creamy
fresh
marshmallow

CARTON
OF EGGS

Every wanteci flavor
red, pink , orange, yellow , ·
green , violet ontl white
... plus dozens of speckled
·and popular spiced flavors .

47c

. CARTON OF 12

with,
caramel fillec
fudge
butter-cream, cherry ,
coconut.

6

CREAM
EGGS
29c

for

maple or

fruit and nut.

Sc EACH

SAVE--THE

to

"'

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I

.I

SILVER BRIDGE .PLAZA

BOTH DOWNTON GAI!IPOUS
\

STO~ES •

··PT. PLEASANT

I
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10 -_:l'he Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Apri(JO, 1974

SEOGMAIplans singJ
Music by the Heavenly Highway Trill' from Meigs County
highlighted the April meeting
of the Southeastern Ohio
Gospel Music Association at
the Springfield Grange Hall.
The group voted to hold a
-'- b&lt;!ke sale at Kroger's in the
Sliver Bridge Plaza , Friday,
April12, beginning at 9:30a.m.
The LeFevres will be
featured group at the May sing
at Gallia Academy High
School. During April a special
meeting will he held to handle
publicity for that sing which
will be May 9 at 8 p.m. One
other group will be obtained to
sing at that concert.
Counselqrs for those wishing
to make Christian committments during the sings will
he provided by the group.
Volunteer counselors at the
May sing will lie' Tom Moore,

Social

'

Calendar~
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - MIDDLEPORT
Uons Club, Wednesday noon at
the Meigs Inn.
POMEROY CHAPTER 80,
Royal Arch Masons, 7:30p.m.
Wednesday followed by
Bosworth Council 46, Royal
and &amp;;Iect Masters, at 8:30
p.m., both at the Pomeroy
Masonic Temple.
FEENEY-BENNETT Post
128, American Legion, 7:30
p.m. at the hall.
·
WHITE ROSE LODGE 1:30
p.m. at Legion Hall in Middleport.
MIDDLEPORT Amateur
Gardeners, 8 p.m., home of
Mrs. Ferman Moore. Program
on antiquing flowers by Mrs.
Michael Fry. Scrapbook
memories by Mrs. Edgar
Reynolds and Mrs. Gtiy
Reynolds.

~Spring 'is

Bernadetta Heilman, Rev.
Charles Trotter,. Geraldine
Sexon and Betty Willis.
Rev. Charle"' Trotter and
Victoria
Adkins
were
welcomed as new members of
the organization .
The group will ·co-sponsor a
sing at the Addison Free Will
Baptist Church, Saturday,
June 8. Singers scheduled to
appear at that tiipe are the
Heavenly Highway Trio, the
.Gospel Echoes, Rev. and Mrs.
Trotter and the Jubilaires.
Other groups wishing to participate should contact Dorothy
8ountryman , 44&amp;-9586, after 5
p.m.
During the May meeting, the
Jubilaires will present special
music. A cookout will be held at
the grange hall beginning at 6
p.m.

Reseroations
deadline set
Reservations for the Senior
Citizens trip to Gallipolis and
Point Pleasant April 18 are to
be made at the Center not later
than Monday, Mrs. Eleanor
Thomas, director, Meigs
County Council on Aging,
_
announced.
Cost for the transportation
and tours is $1 ,per person.
Vislls wiD be made to Our
Hous~ . Riverby, and Fortifies lion Hill where a picnic
luncheon wiD be held, and then
In the afternoon the group will
go to Point Pleasant to vi•" the
Mansion House. Those ~oing
are to take a sack lunch. The
buses will leave the Center at 9
a.m. and return at 3 p.m.

Community
service set

-:H'"l;HIRE _ Election of
officers for the t974-75 year and
a · program on the theme
"Spring's Grand Opening·"
highlighted a meeting of the
Chester Garden Club at the
home of Mrs. Wyatt Chadwell.
Re-elected president of the
club was Mrs. Reid 1Young.
Other officers named were
Earl Ingels, Jr., ftrst vice
president ; Mrs. Robert Wood,
second vice president; Mrs.
Pearl Mora. 'secretary; Mrs .
Howard Knight , assistant
secretary; Mrs. Karl Krautter ,
treasurer; Mrs. Dale Kautz,
assistant secretary.
Comments on lawn problems
·
by the 22 mem bers
were gtven
in response to roll calL Ohio

Middleport and Pomeroy Fire Departments Tuesday nigbt. The money represented proceeds
of a rummage sale. A pickup truck of clothing lett over from the sale was taken to a Gallipolis
location for transfer to the tornado victims at Xenia by Howard Well and Tom Werry in a truck
donated by Herman Werry. The Xi Gamma Mu Chapter presented a check of $95 to the
Pomeroy firemen for their building fund last month. That money was raised through a bake
sale contributed to by all three chapters of Beta Sigma Phi. The checks last night were
presented by Texanna Well, left, to Bob Byer, Middleport fire chief, and by Judy Werry to
Charles Legar, Pomeroy fire chief. Mrs. Well and Mrs. Werry are co-chairwomen of the ways
and means committee of the chapter.

-1:.

• 'o

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down-dilly" was .the tiUe of the
orrangement made by Mrs.
Dale Kautz for the meeting.
She . . used
daffodils
flowering plum for plant
material. Again this year the
club will furnish seeds to a 4-H
club of tfte comm unity. The
Five Point Junior Leader Club
was selected to receive the
seeds.
Flower arrangements and
specimens on exhibit were
judged by Mrs. Leonard Er- ,.
win, Mrs. Ginther and Mrs :
Walker who awarded seven
blue ribbons and five red ones.
Refreshments were served
by the hostesses, Mrs. Chad;
well and Mrs. Young.

In other action, a resolution of commendation was •PI· -vcd
for Bill Slack, the first Meigs High wrestler to win a district
championship and go on to state cofupetitwn at St Jolm Arena 1n
Columbus.
." ·
., · The board commended the Harnsonville PTO for its painting
?f the entire school bwlding, and Hargraves read a letter of
t.hanks for the board's help with the Mejgs Higb Band Boosters m
purchasing new equipment.
The board approved . the pam ling of the Harrisonv ille
gymnasium and worked on a settlement of a school bus aCCident
which resulted in the total loss of tHe 1970 International that had
52,000 miles on tt at the time of its mtshap.
Reports were presented on the senior ctltzens, who wtll pay
$200 out of their nutntion program toward th e-east of utilities at
the Pomeroy Junior Higb Building; a meeting was se t with the
Bradbury staff lor Tuesday, Aprill6, at 7:30p.m. ; a reporlwas
received on a visit by the state office of School Fooq Service; a
letter was received from Vic Brown of Brown's Trailer Park in
Minersville about a change in the availability of a turn-around
space for school buses; reports were read on bus cieanhness and
$Vacuation drills ; the supervision of loading and unloading of bus
@fudents at schools; interest in an activity bus, the sale of land to
iutland Village, the gasoline situatton, bus driver medical
fl!:aminations, and the EMR project at Pomeroy Elementary

new

a.m.

·.

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"· YOUR .HEADQUARTERS

..~One

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.. .

I -· , /' ..
i,

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Other Styles. 17.99 to 24.99

£!borah Roush, Aaron Sayre
and Kenda Ra iney ..
·~r incipal
and ass is tant
Pl,inc ipal contra cts were
grtanted to Russell_ Moore, 3
r:;ars ; Robert Morns, 3 years ;
R])berta Wilson , 3 year s;
Jal'fleS Vennari, 3 years ; Greg
~!!):Call, 1 year; Eric Hart . 1
~Qa( , Mae Young, 1 year, ~n
Htmn ing, 1 year ; Phyllis
1-fii'ckett, 1 year; John Lisle, 3
years; Earl Young, 1 year, and
Fj!tlton Taylor, 2 years.
; Extra ·assignment contracts
W'~re awarded t o football
,V.'I)-sity assistants Fenton

Hartley's Shoes
In Ttie Middle of the Upper Block
Pomeroy, Ohio
Open All Day Thursdays-Friday Night Til 9

t.,.ylor , Donald Di•on and John
~tley;

RUTlAND, 0.

coach Roger Brauer , his
a:_»istant. Sam Crow, and John
Ar:riott and Ron Logan for
gf.ade 7-8 footbal l.
.§fenton Taylor was confr"llcted as trainer, John Arnott,
vArsity basketball assistant;
David Jenkins grade 9; Ron
• L'tlgan reserve basketbal l; '

-· I

'ECIAL MEAT BUYS

.Bordens

CREAM ORA

SMOKED CAlliE

HAMS....~~~~~~-~ .. ~~:.
6-71b.

59~

l6·oz.

Jar

69~

"'!iirvin McKelvey grade 8 and
Delmar

PICKLES

HAM
;SALAD........ .

Dairy Specials

Head track Coach will again

be Donald Dixo n, with Donald
Wolfe head baseball coach an
Dale Harrison his assistant .
S~ m Crow will again be
assistant wrestling coach, thi s

28 oz.

Jar

a~~,;;~~~r head coach Ray

&lt;Nolan Swackhamer again I S
gdj f coach. with Swackhamer

7

32·0Z.

Jar

MIXED .

61h

oi.

Can ·

l-Ib.

Crtn.

KRAFT

54-oz.
Qottle

ORANGE

Produce Buys

79

JUICE

4

&lt;'

CORRECTION!

ALL FLAVORS

•'

PAR KAY
.
MARGARINE
•

I
I

'

'

;sHOULD HAVE BEEN
•
•' l~B.

•'

.'
•
•

with__couoon
' I

E_XIIi~;f"4i:i iS]t4ore

'
'

'
'

''
' ''

·,

\

.

'

MARK V

''' ·MIDDLEPORT
'

·~

49~

PKG.

'"

•

/.

'

Rodino's cormmltee has

asked Nixon to surrender 41
panel subpoena the While additiona l secret tapes and last
House to get the evidence Thursday demanded a reply no
N1xon has thus far refused to Ia ter than Tuesday .
surrender.
'' The President .. . has
Chairman Peter W. Rodino directed me to adv1se you that
Jr ., O..N.H. , refused immediate a review or the mB.terlals in
comment. But he was expected ques tion is under way ,"
to decide today whether to call NIXon's ch1eflawyer, James D
the coriumtlee together and St. Clair, wrote committee
make good on his threat last eounsel John Doar .

and why, St. Clair's Jetter gav~ evidence we require."
st. Clair's letter also seemed
no indicatwn 'Whether Nixon
to
couple the committee's
intends to surrender any or all
. demand for evidence with the
of the requested materials.
It appeared to tmply, howe- White House demand for the
ver, Ntxon intends to dectde for panel to g1ve him a role in their
himself what to give the inquiry --something the com·
mittee has not yet defmed .
committee.
1·we should no longer
tolerate his coontemptuous
VACUF.LO
attitude toward those seeking
Go qui e tly , co n ve ni ently
the truth of _his eon duct in ofmodern w1 lh buli, ·H'I Vac
fice,' ' said Rep. •Jerome
FOREMAN &amp; ABBOTT
Waldie, D-Calif , a member of
Middleport
PH 992 · 5231
E V124
the Rodmo committee. "We
musl now subpoena all

Tuesday that he ordered the
"Did yo u have anything to do
mur.dcr of his UMW archrival. wtth the killing of Joseph,
and "close fnend " Joseph A. Margaret and Charlotte
"Jock" Yablonski .
Yablonski'" asked defense
attorney Charles F. Moses.
" Absolutely not ," replied
Boyle, 72, charged with
originating a sc heme that
resulted in the 1969 Yablooski
murders three weeks after he
defeated the union reformer m
their own production adjust- a bitter presidential election.
ments in the present marketBoyle was accused of
oriented agriculture if they are suggesting to UMW Distri~t t9
to make a profit and the time to officials J . Turnblazer that
do it is now before we get into Yablonski "ought to be killed
real trouble this fail."
or done away with. n An in-

REAL LIVE

dictment also charged that
Boyle arranged for the transfer
of $20,000 m union money to the
Dtstnct 19 treasury to pay for
the contract killing.
"Did you ever talk to Pass
about the Yablonski killings•"
Moses asked Boyle after the
ousted labor chieftain took the
stand in his own defense.
"Certainly not, Quite the
contrary/' said Boyle, who has
a liearl condition and is
recovenng from a s uicid e
attempt. "As the years went
by, he (Yablonski 1 and I
became very'.., close friends."

II

EASTER BUNNIES
AND

BABY CHICKS
AND SUPPLIES
Pel Dish, Rabbit Pellets. Liller,
Remed•es. Bunnie Salt Spools .

Rabbit

MODERN SUPPI,. Y
399 W. Mam St .

992 ·2164

Pomeroy , 0 .

THE STORE WITH "ALL KIND S OF STUFF " ~ FOR
PETS. STABLE S, LARGE &amp; SMAL L ANIMAL S LAWNS
AND -GA RD ENS

·

~

3 EASY WAYS TO IUY.

RPHY

CASH , CHAR G E,
LAY -AWAY

ll!lliiJil!ll
llliCiitti:III

E
,aster
Candy
&amp;
la's
~ .L
,.......

One Pound
SOLID

Chocolate

PERFECT FOR THE EASTER BASKII·
,~ ::.=__ _____,~~

EASTER
BUNNIES

I

., / ' .. •.. ,1

MANY LOVELY

~

SIZES &amp; STVLES

T'NT 0.:

··E~H

('"t • .

0\Jr huge ccl lec 110n i5 per
fvcT lor Easter ba!okels and fo•

mdovodual gofl~ Choose yov•
lo von to mo v thwo te nng bun ·
n o e~ we•gh•ng o l ull 16 oz . o f
pure mdk chocolate s.n, ng
end stond, ng ~hopes

RE&lt;::"t:JLA"

'1.29
Al l agas mil en1cy rht~ hm wo y to dNorate
Eas te r eggs. Put on e of the fou r b11gh tly cb l
ored fel t t1p p en~ 111 ' '"' holder Turn egg or
m ove hundle to ma k e dolens of brrl l ran t de
signs

Travel gas

Fultzes safe,
home damaged
in tornadO
Mr. and Mrs . Aaron Kelton

(Continued fro,m page I )
have measured against all
other companies over a long
period of time and you'll see
that they fall in the middle
range."
As for gasoline supplies, he
said: "If the American people
continue to abide by norrilal
conservation practices, we'll
be able to live in a nonnal
fashion ."
.
Simon said he was "encouraging the American people
to take a normal summer
vacation, not to postpone going
to New England or down to
Florida if that has been their
traditional practice. There is
going to be gasoline out there."
But he cautioned that it is
going to cost mor~ to go on the
trips because "prices are going
to be higher, especially among
·gasoline stations that rely on
foreign imports."
Simon told the' House Legal
and Monetary Affairs subcommittee Tuesday that that oil
embargo may have been a
good thing because it
crystallized concern lor energy
problems that had been
neglected for years,
Clubs, was at Bergamo Center
near Dayton on Wednesday for
an 01\GC meeting and had
planned to spend the evening
with the Fultz hmily.
Col. Fultz also is the uncle of
John Fultz, of Middleport.

Thirty nine arrests were manner, and ' no operator's

••
•
•

3 ~~s· 37e

Nabisco
WAFFLE CREAM
COOKIES ~:;,:~-

Mrs. Htlferty sa1d plans for
Heritage Day are progressing.
It was announced that Keith
Ashley will be speakmg at one
of several classes being held at
Ohio University on the history
and culture of Southeastern
Ohio and that Gerard Hilferty
will be one of the speakers at
the annual meeting of the Ohio
Historica l Soctety at the OhiO
Museum in Columbus Apnl 26
and 27.
Pilgrimage '74 observance at
Fairfield Coun ly on May 4 and
5 will include a tour of
historical homes. A re gion
eig ht association ,meeting of
historical societies was announced on June 15 at
Marietta. Seth Nicholson
presented a typewritten story
of his mother's family, Hunt, to
the society.

·Police make 39 arrests

; OUR TUESDAY AD

JELLo ·

5

tion.

learned by telEphone Monday
that her uncle, Col. Lyston
Fultz, U. S. Army IRe !. )
';;Joy Bentley was rehired as a·nd family of Xenia were
girls basketball and volleyba ll safe, in the first contact with
c&amp;ch .. with Kenda ' Rainey the
g_~ls gymnast ics coach and him since the tornado struck
.ll&amp;rnice Hoffman and Gary there Wednesday. Col. and
WBiker sharing yearbook Mrs . Fultz and two other
re5pon sibillt ies.
-relatives who reside at 288
llona id Wolfe will be in
.
charge of the ~ig~ school North Kmg St., JUSt two blocks
nol,wspaper, with Jeannie from the center of town which
Taylor coaching lhe hlg~ . was completely demolished
scfiool c~eerleaders and Ken &lt;fa.:..-! -. .
h h '
Roiney t~e junior high girls. were untnJured althoug t ere
~ohn Redovian , Martha
was extensive damage to their
V ~rmari and Harold . Sauer
home. The roof was torn off
were reh1red as gu1dance
.
cc~mselors, with
C~ar.les
and all of the :-vmdows broken
C!V'der in charge of dr~mat_1cs , by flymg debns.
Helen Sm1th head l1branan ,
)Vlrs Kelton said Col. Fultzx
Dtight.Goins band director f~r h ha. s suffered two heart
two years and Fred Ruth h1s
w O
as~isfant, also fcir two years .
attacks in recent months, and
~on tracts for non·certified
his wife rema ined in the house
certifi~ated emp_loyees went to
b0 th Wednesday and Thursday
cu~toclians Dav1d Jacks and
.
.
Paul McDaniel and cook Grace nigh Is due to the looting. Mrs .
Ali,bott. Director of Iran · Kelton, Region II director for
•
the r&gt;hio Association of Garden

59~

10 oz.
Jar

1)

the university women with
proceeds to be used for the

also servi ng as assistant
athletic dire ctor. while Donald
WOlfe will again be the athletic
boa•d's secretary·trea surer

PLANTERS

BROUGHTON

7

· Roger Brauer also was
contracted as elemen tar y

MIRACLE WHIP

SALAD
DRESSING

grade

bilsketball , coach .

SMUCKERS
BLACKBERRY

JELLY

Haynes,

bas ketball.

GOLDEN ISLE
KOSHER DILL

HOME MADE

reserve grid coach

F:enton Taylor , grade 9 footbal l

PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU APRIL 1-3

'

\

CUrry, in a statement issued
at the national headquarters
here, said the drop of $1 a
bushel from the high prices
made the last week of Fe t&gt;ruary should prove to farmers
that there are adequate sup.
P.lies to meet present demand.
He said if they plant at "present intentions" the market
price eould drop another 50
cents a bushel.
He sa id with average
weather even a 5 per cent lll·
crease in acreage would increase production 282 million
bushels, and a 10 per cent increase would result in production boost of 564 million
bushels.
"With skyrocketing costs of
production now being experienced by eorn farmers, especially for fuel, machinery and
fertilizer ,'
the
corri
association's latest figures
show that it presently costs
$2.09 per bushel to produce a
bushel of corn," he. said.
He said farmers must "make

Museum
(Con tmued from page

must."

"We expect that the review
can be completed by the end of
the Easter recess and that the
addtttonal materials fu rnished
at that time wiil permit the
com1mttee to complete 1tS
inquiry promptly ."
Congress is scheduled to
recess for the Easter holiday '
this Thursday and not return
until April 22.
Though Rodino's committee
has specifically set forth what
it wants from the Wh1te House

age."

Me Daniel. Win if red purchase of a locator umt at
Barbara
Nibert ,
Petr ic ia O' Connor , Carol the museum. Contributions of
Q,lllinger , Susan Ornstein , all sorts of ttems are needed by
Je,anne Parsons, Gay Pern n, the organization for the auc·

Wild Heels : To come out on top.

742-5543

ok, Jani ce Enslen, Carol

'

'··

Floyd , Ella Mae Southern,

were

J~n ice
~as.

shce fash•on , today. Do your th1ng'. Try o u r thmg

'

MIDDLEpORT

contracts

ans , Gladys Foley, Beverly
Ray
Goodman ,
ul,
Ci!ltherine Haggerty , Vi cki
lii:Jghe s, Rose Ann Jenkins ,
CQurtney Kn1ght, Ron Logan ,

RUTLAND DEPARTMENT STORE

oz.

year

!!(.anted to Kay Barr. Ladona
~yd. Leota Chaney. Da isy

ATTEND REVUE
MASON, W. VA. - Mrs .
Curtis McDaniel, Mrs. Reuben
Stewart of Mason; Mrs.
Maxine Arnold , Hartford, ·
attended the Black Knight
Revue at Point Pleasant Senior
High School recently. Mrs.
McDaniel's
granddaughter
Denise McDaniel was a par:
ticipant.

Strawberries .

, I

were Judith Brostrom, S;&gt;m
Ct&gt;ow.- Emma Finch. C~arles

anym ore. And. we've got 'em Our Wild Heels Buil t tall
.. to put you up where it's at in the world of men 's

16

' ·~ BAKER FURNITURE ·

:: Awarded two year con tracts

sportaf ion is John Bea ver;
maintenance. Eugene Hawk1ns
and Joe Shavorinsky ; bus
mechanic
John
Scragg,
custodian s Earie Wood and
Louie Chr1sfian ; bus drivers
Teresa Cremeans, Naomi

\Nhitley .

y

.

••d Mary Hysell.

to get up 1n the world

. Fnmy Acre

BC'ONE, Iowa (UP!) Warning of a potential significa nt drop in market prices. the
new ley elected president of the
Nationa l Corn Growers
Association Tuesday cautioned
farmers against major increases in 1974 production.
John CUrry of Victoria, ill.,
asked farmers to hold their
1974 corn plantings down to
"not more than a 5 per cent
increase over their 1973 acre-

De lo res
Lynch ,
M1nn 1e
~ecker, Wendy
Frieder , Thornton , Esther Black , cooks
Mildred Long, Marjorie Davis,
~nise Gibson, Dw ight Goins,
Karen Goins , Cecil ia Golden , Virginia Wear s, Vivian Pierce,
~rgaret Goodman , Delma r Helen Hood and Florence
B&amp;ynes,
David . Jenkins, Barrett .
Secretaries are Apnl Smith
Willard Miller. Margaret
F'arsons. Ga ry Reed . Fred and Barbar a Archer, w1th
Ruth, Janis Schmoll , Dorsel · Harry Graham given a one
$ln ith , Rebecca Tate, Victoria year bu s driving contract
Vi)nek, Lucy White and Wykle

Frozen Foods

'

I

RAND:

IDAHO ~~b:$17
POTATOES .

FOR···

eent!ey, Jeanne Bowen , Sabra
~urr i son , and Kathleen Scott.
Three year contracts went to
~n n ie Fisher , Dale Harrison

week to "Subpoena if we

Corn may drop
•
•
mpnce

t Given 5 year teaching con

tracts were John Arnott, Joy

It takes a real heel

COTTAGE
'- CHEESE

MEDIA, Pa. (U Pi) - Pale
and ailing, former United Mine
Wor kers president W. A.
"Tony " Boyle emphatically
deni ed for an mtent jury

t)onsider the membership of the athletic board , "tts roles and
l'jisponsibiti ties.
;. Finally, the board co nsidered a request from the
Harrisonville PTO that a first aid course be established, and all
ag reed that it was a good idea .
·'
; : Attending were Supt. Hargraves, Clerk Lee McComas, board
ijlembers Virgil King. uresident: Robert Snowden, Joe Sayre,
~rol Pierce, Wendell Hoover:. Wendell Williams and Tom Crisp
ef Williams Trenching ; Fenton Taylor, Sam Crow, and James
!liehl of Meigs High School; Henry Cleland, Jr. , of Pomeroy Boy
~out Troop 249, and student council members Peggy O'Brien,
:tJave Wolfe, Steve Walburn, and Beth Burns.

"Young-

His position was denounced
nmnediately by one committee
Democrat as "contemptuous"
and makmg it lfllperatlve the

Boyle claims total innocence

•: The board also set May 4for the date for the auctwn of the old

·Fire ladies
have meeting

Bob Bumgarner will beein bv
preaching on "Perv~rsity. ," as
shown by Pilate's situation .
Dwight Zavitz will discuss the
SYRACUSE - The Syracuse
"Criticism of the Crowd ." The Ladies Auxiliary of the
contrasting views of the two Volunteer Fire Department
thieves will be presented by meeting at the municipal
Tom Weaver and George building, was conducted by the
Glaze. Weaver•s· subject is president, Nancy Neutzling.
"Selfishness," the first tliief, Mary Pickens used Psalm 100
and Glaze's subject ' is lor devotions. Fourteen
"Repentance," the second members answered roll call
thief.
with their favQI'ite foods.
J eff Ranson will preach
The secretary's report given
about "Love," as exhibited by by Janice Lawson and the
Mary, and Steve Skaggs will treasurer's report by Agnes
speak of "Responsibility," as White were accepted. The
demonstrated by John , Henry flower fund report was given
Key will wind ·up the program by Mildred Pierce and · the
on the positive note of "Belief," special project fund report by
as stated by the centurion.
Mary Pickens.
· The First Baptist Choir, the
Sue Rice was welcomed as a
Heath United Methodist Choir, new member. The candy
and the Church of Christ Choir Easter eggs project was
will be presenting special tliSCussed. There are still eggs
messages in song.
for sale. Other projects also
Dorothy Anthony, organist were discussed and a thankwith the First Baptist Church, you card was read from the
will be playing.
. Decker family.
The service will be ·divided
At the ne&lt;t meeting the roll
into six one-half hour segments call wlill be a Easter verse with
and is to'conclude at 3 p.m. The devotions by Clara Lavender.
public is invited to visit the The hostesses will be Clara
church and worship at any Lavender and Mary Pickens.
time during the three hour
Refreshments of sloppy joes,
period.
cupcakes, chips, coffee and tea
were served by the hostess,
Jean Hall, to Vicki Rizer, Clara
Lavender, Mary Pickens,
Janice Lawson, Charlotte
Nease, Nancy Neutzling,
DAUGHTER BORN
Eleanor Bohram, Elizabeth
RACINE - Mr. and Mrs. Rice, Agnes White , Marie
Michael Elmore (Kathleen Rizer, Mildred Pierce, Thehna
Lewis), ·Millersville , Md., , Grueser: Sue Rice and guests
announce the birth of their first Eber Ptckens, Jr. and Tina
child, a daughter, Jennifer Pierce.
Jan, March 30. Maternal
SERVICE SET
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
There
will be · an Easter
Robert Lewis, Racine, and
Sunrise
Service at the
paternal grandparents are Mr.
Wesleyan
Holiness
Pomeroy
and Mrs. Elton M. Elmore,
Church Sunday, morning at 6
Glen Burnie, Md.

WASHINGTON (UP! ) Pres1dcnl Nixon has met the
House Judid~ry Commtttee 's
dema nd for , more
impeachment evidence by saying
he will decide what td give up
and when.
Nixon sent word lo Capitol
Hill late Tuesday afternoon
that the committee ·- which
had insisted on , knowing his
inlentwns by then - would just
have to wait. unllll~te April to
find out what he plans to do.

~alport school an~ agreed to meet with the athletic board to

Mason UMW has meeting

Holy Week observance is planned

;

a

Nix0n challenges tapes subpoenas

(Continued from page 1l

~hoot.

Marrieds" Sunday Scfiool class
which was to meet at the home
of Mr . and Mrs . Lansing
Adams Saturday night, April 6.
Other issues 'concerned the
MASON, W.Va.- Mrs. Ray Daughter Banquet will be May back Mrs. Gladys . Thomas, collection of botile caps,
Proffitt, program leader when 13 at Mason United Methodist · who had spent the winter in Sunday School literature and
the Mason United Methodist Church. Reservations should Florida.
possibly a revival soon.
Women met April 8 at the be made by May 7 for the
Attending were Rev. and
church, showed slides and covered di sh dinner. Mrs.
Attending were Mrs. Howard Mrs. Robert .Smith, Sr.; Leo,
narrated the "Cruciff&gt;&lt;ion" by Maxine Arnold is chairman. VanMatre, Mrs . Clarence Helen, Sharon, Connie, Tobey
Jan ·styka.
The group voted to help the McCloud, Mrs. Reuben and Richard Hili; Lewis and
Mrs. Roy Test, president of Youth Fellowship with its Stewart,
Mrs.
Earlene Clarice Callicoat, Ernie,
United Methodist Women , spaghetti dinner to be helcj on Bumgardner, Mrs . Charles Shirley, David and Jason
announced that (Day Apart) Friday, May 10 in the church Yeager, Mrs. John Chattin, Smith; Lansing, Garcia and
meeting will be at the High. basement. Mrs. Test thanked Mrs. Gladys Thomas, Mrs. Cristy Adams; Maude Smith,
lawn Methodist Church in the women lor attending the Fred Spencer, Mrs. Margaret Tony Adams, Gloria Decker,
Huntington, Tuesday, April 30, covered dish dinner recently at Pickens, Mrs. William Zerkle, Richard, Glenda, Betty, Richie ·
from 10. a.m. until 2 p.m. She Clifton United Methodist Mrs . Ray Proffitt, Mrs. Roy and Keith Hunt; Melvin, Hope,
also announced the Mother- Church. The ladies welcomed Test and Mrs. Maxine Arnold. Darrell, Drake and Eddie
Adams, and Luke, Kathy and
James McDanieL

Easter cantata enjoyed

&lt;' ~

wildflower booklets were given
as favors and Mrs. Ingels
presented . "Vi~!ets, Blue Eyes
· of Spnngttme, the myth _that
has developed w vanous
countries about violets .
Topic of Mrs . I.. B. Walker
and Mrs. Rose Gmther was
"The Many Ways to Easy
Lawn Maintenance." They
discussed how to plan,prepare.
and mamtam a beaultfullawn,
diseases and weed control , and
gave 40 ltps to make 1t all
easier.
Mrs . Paul Baer demonstra ted how to make a
terrarium and had on display
several which she had made
prt·or to the , .. :;. . · "Daffy.

.Student Lo.u nge

LONG BOTTOM - The
monthly business meeting of
the United Faith Church was
held Thursday night, April4, at
the home of Mr. and Mrs·.
Melvin Drake here .
A potluck dinner highlighted
the evening. Several issues
were discussed including
having

Church service set

I

garden club topic

Church business
meeting held

Xi Gamma Mu Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority presented checks of $75 each to the

SYRACUSE- The Syracuse
Good Friday
community
THURSDAY
MISSIONARY Society, services will be held at the
Pomeroy Baptist Church, 7:30 Syracuse Asbury United
"Faces Around the Cross" is
p.m. at the church. Mrs. Ellen Methodist Church with the
Couch to have the program. Rev. Richard E. Jarvis the theme of the community
Mrs. I. B. Walker and Mrs. speaking.
Good Friday program to be
Churches of the community held this Friday, 12 noon, at the
Rebert Kuhn, h&lt;istesses.
• PRECEPTOR Beta Beta will participate in the services First Baptist Church in Middleport. 'Seven ministers and
Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi which begin at 7:30 p.m.
Sorority, 8:30p.m. at the home The week of crusade-revival three ' church choirs will be
of Mrs. Jane Walton. Clarice services will be Apr-il 15 participating.
The theme will be developed
Krautter, hostess. Members to through April 19 al 7:30 p.m.
The pastors will be speaking by discussing the persons who
take sciJsors.
present at
the
REVIVAL now in progress at and special singing will be were
by
the
participating
crucifixion;
what
they
were
featured
Pomeroy Church of the
Nazarene, corner of Union and churches. These services will doing there, what they were
Mulberry, through Sunday. also be held at the Asbury thinking, and th&lt;~.. effect the
. crucifixion had upon them.
The Rev. Clell· Elliot, United Methodist Church.
Gallipolis, will be guest
speaker. The New Newsmen
Quartet from Ch8rleston will
he present on Saturday
evening. Other singers will be
l
featured during the week. The
MASON, W. Va.- The many Jerusalem, the Last Supper,
Rev. Clyde Henderson invites persons from the bend area the trial, crucifixion and
the public to attend.
attending John W. Peterson's resurrecton.
ORDINANCE Service with Easter Cantata )Vere imOpal Vaughn as narrator
communion and feel washing pressed with the beauty of the read scripture at intervals;
at, First Church · of God, cantata • titled, "The Last Mrs. Armo Morrison was in
Syracuse. The Rev. George Week." Gerald Stewart, for- c~rge of the opening worship
Oiler extends an invitation to merly of Mason, and now of Pt. and concluded with the
all Christiana to participate. Pleasant, directed the adult benediction.
REGULAR Meeting of Shade· choir at the Pt. Pleasant
Those having solo parts were
River Lodge F&amp;AM 453, 7:30 Presbyterian church in the Pam Niles, Janet Garrison,
p.'m. at Temple in Chester.
cantata · and his wife was John Leighty, Opal Vaughn,
organist. The story unfolds Lynn Sayre and the director.
MEiGSCOUNTY Humane telling
of Jesus' entry into
Society, 7:30 Thursday at the
Thrift •Shop in Pomeroy.
Preparations to be made for
opening the shop, April 19.
PLAN SERVICE
LAUREL CLIFF Better
REVIYAL OPENS
RACINESunrise services
Health Club, 7:30 p.m. ThursThe
Rev. and Mrs. Michael
will he held at the Bethlehem
day home of Mrs. Bertha
Bingham.
of England are
Baptist Church, Racine, Rt. 2,
Parker.
at 6:30a.m. followed by a light conducting revival services at
NIFTY STITCHERS 7:30 breakfast. Worship service will 7:30 each evening at the
p.m. home of Grace Warner. be held at 9:30 and Sunday Middleport United Pentecostal
SOUTHERN Local School School at 10:30.
Church through April 14. The
Board 7:30p.m. al high school.
pastor, William Knittel, invites
the .public to attend.
LAUREL CLIFF Better
Health Club, 7:30p.m., home of '
SERVICE SET
Mrs. Bertha Parker.
Sunrise
service at the
FRIDAY
PROG!tAM SLATED
SYRACUSE - The Syracuse
YOUNG ADULT . Class, Bradford Church of Christ will
Bradbury Church of · Christ, 7 be held .at 6 a.m. Easter Church of the Nazarene will
mornipg . Clifford Smith, have an Easter sunrise service
p.m. at the church.
pastor, invites the public .
at 6 p.m.
SOUTHEASTERN Ohio
Gospel Music Association bake
sale in front of Kroger's in the
Silver Bridge Plaza, Kanauga,
beginning at 9:30a.m.
REGISTERED Nurses
Special services have been led by the men of the HearthAssociation of the Holzer planned for Holy Week and stone Sunday school class. A
Medical Center, bake sale, 9 Easter at the Middleport First breakfast will follow prepared
·
a.m. to 3 p.m. in the old Bob BaptiSt Church.
.by women of the same class. '
Rees Pontiac Bldg., Galtipolls. On Maundy Thursday a
There 'will be no Wednesday
SATURDAt
communion service wiD be evening prayer service and no
BAKE SALE In old bank held at 7:30 p.m. The Upper Sunday evening Bibl.e study to
building at Rutland from 9 a.m. . Room-Last Supper tradition allclw further participation in
to noon. Sponsored by . Silver will be progressively fgllowed. these and other special church
Circle Senior Ptlzens, Still An Easter sunrise service will events being held dl\l'ing the
available are filled and unfilled begin at 8:30a.m. with worship · week.
Eulef ba811eta.
The Rev. Steve Skaggs,
CAR WASH at Welker's
pastor, invites the public to the
Ashland from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.
BIRTHDAY MARKED
set ".~.ces.
spo.naored
by
Meigs
CHESTER - The 18th anCheerleaders.
nlversary of the Skate-A-Way
SUNDAY
Roller Rink was celebrated.
sUNRISE SERVICES at recently with all those atUGHT SERVICE SET
Belblehem Baptlat Church, Rt. tending being served Ice cream
The Feast or the Light
2, Racine, 8:30 a.m., light free of charge. Two ladles Service will he held Saturday
brelkfut to follow. Worship among those attending were at 7:30p.m. at Grace Episcopal
service at 9:30 allti Sunday the first to attend opening night Churth, Pomeroy. AI that time
School at 10:30..
and are skating there now with Mr. and 1\trs. Aaron Kelton will
. INROSPrrAL
·, their children. Free RAases'
present ~ Pascal candle and
~on Weeki was readmitted ,were awar4ed lo Mrs. Marjorie candelatira to the church in
ID tlie H!llrer ~I Center Wolfe, Mrli. · Sandra Kenney
.Jut
I. .'
and chUdren.
,
,
' memory of their ~on, Jay1 The
1
public ls invited. 1,
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II - ')'he DatlySentinel, M1ddioport-Pomcro)·, o.. Apnllr I97~

made by the Middleport Police · license, and three failed to
Department in March ac- yield right of way. There was
cordin'g tb the report of Chief of one arrest each for assured
P-11lice J. J. Cremeans to town clear distance ; spinning tires;
council Monday night.
passing in, a no, passing zone,
Of the total; seven were running a stop sign, assault .
charged with disorderly and battery , violation of
conduct and four each with , probation, illegal license and
drivlng while intoxicated and fightin~ and petty larceny.
The department investiga~d
disturbing the peace. There
were . three charged with seven accidents during the
permitting an unlicensed month and coiiected $1011 from
. person
drive and thre~ for tpe parking meters .. The police
resisting arr&lt;;lll.
cruiser was driven 4:461 miles
· Two each were arrested fori during the month .
running a red Ught; unsafe
.
I

LUSCIOUS PECAN
NOUGAT EGGS

TO

$498

EASTER BASKETS

·59c 89c
to

97c

30Z.-53'
Great fam i ly treat . . . creamy noug::Jt

Trodrt oonol Easter surpr is e 1 Each •s Idled to ove rflowr ng w 1t h Eo~ter
nove ltoes IO '( S an d Easter candy .
cho colate bunn oes , ch rdu , ducks,
marshmallow egg s, ielly bo rd eggs
lot s more 1 Man'( dd l erent
style'&gt; All br~g l11ly wrapp ed and read y to g• ve ,;

FILL TOUR OWN

fill ing is hand ro lled in caramel , then
quickly covered with crunchy f resh pe-

cans. Three handy gilt sizes.

MURPHY SOWN ~ .

?Haid'

Deligh t '(Our '(Ou ngsters w1th .!ne~p bCouri l ul
waver• bamboo baske ts you co n ldl w rtl1 t hen
tavo r •le treolst All sno pes and srz es m natural
snode wrtn broghtly (Qiored bonds

REGU
99c

POUND

COATED

REG. SJc

TASTY
HEN EGGS
;, lhe ,,!~'E';,~~~
C

43

RICH &amp;
CREAMY

Peanut
BuHer
EGGS

FOIL WRAPPED
CHOCOLATE EGGS

SUGAR

baskets .. oo.~r rom bow
selec tion of colorful sugor
coa ted panned morsnmol ·
low eggs 81 9 fovo ntes!

6 oz.
SIZE

Sol id m1l k chaco·

Ea ch ta sty egg i s 2

lates wrapped 1n
stay -fr esh , Easter

covered in del icio u s

milk chp colate. 1.5
ounces each.

egg colo red foil .

for

25C

13c E:ACH

POUND
BAG OR BU LK

· BAG
OR

FOIL
.WRAPPED

Creamy
fresh
marshmallow

CARTON
OF EGGS

Every wanteci flavor
red, pink , orange, yellow , ·
green , violet ontl white
... plus dozens of speckled
·and popular spiced flavors .

47c

. CARTON OF 12

with,
caramel fillec
fudge
butter-cream, cherry ,
coconut.

6

CREAM
EGGS
29c

for

maple or

fruit and nut.

Sc EACH

SAVE--THE

to

"'

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SILVER BRIDGE .PLAZA

BOTH DOWNTON GAI!IPOUS
\

STO~ES •

··PT. PLEASANT

I
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�.t,

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12- The D~ily Senlinel; Middlepor t-~omeroy ,O ., Aprill0,_1974

OSU Jist's ·8

7....~
Sousa awards ·received by 2 musicians
ate s[:[.
~peclal
All" n~l ng
B 'Ahn M hall
y . . a ars

:..

•

_

•

HACINF: - 'l'he .John Phi llip
St)usu tnva rd was pre$ented to '
Della Cross &lt;llld Beve rly Ha rt
a t the rece 11 t ba nd ua nqu ~t held
at Southern ~lig \1 School _in·
Rac me. prese nt ed uy J uy
Big ler.
So uthern
Ba nd
director.
Dw igh t Goin s, ban d in s tructor at Meigs High Scli'uul
wastheg uest spea ker . Goins in
his sta teme nt&gt; sa id "when you
honor s tudents in the band, you
are honoring one of the finest
groups in the sc hool. Band
members beg in before school
sta rts with ba nd ca mp and
practice sess ion's fo r th e
fo otball season. Students and
pare n.ts sacrifi ce to be par t of
the band . You go to win, either
in compe tition or half-time
shows, bu t if you do your best
tha t is the most importan t
thing." Goi ns also commented
on the importa nce of a good
booster organiza tion.
Jam es Ray Lawrence served
~ s ma s te r of ce re monies.
Lawrence 111lroduced the copresidents or'the band, Beverly

;;~;

' ..

PI'. PLEASANT - The Mason County Homema kers spring
luncheon wiD be held May 23 at the Moose Hall in Pt . Pleasant
with registration starling at 9 a.m. and the program conti nuing
untU 2: 30 p.m.
The buffet luncheon will be $3.25 and reserva:tions should be
made by May 20. Checks sbould be rna® payable to Mason
County Homemakers Council, c-o' Mrs . Jesse Brown, Rou te I,
Letart, W. Va.
The committee in charge of the spring luncheon has announced that prizes will be awarded. Garments which the lad_ies
have made arerobe modeled by the participants. lf theladies do
not sew, perhaps tbey have 'put together a hat, purse, scarf or
other a=ssories. Crocheted or a knitted cape, shawl, hat, or
purse, etc. can be among the items modeled.
A fresb floral arrangement to decorate the table will also be
judged. All categories will be judged for prizes.
Let the Extension Office know what you plan to have judged
by May 20.
WITH SO MANY BEAliTIFUL mate rials available, better
get busy, ladies, and sew that spring dress or coat. There are so
many good buys in material now, itis hard to pass them up. Did
you ever see a piece of material and visualize it made into a coat
or dress ? Well, I just saw a beautiful piece at the Kut and Sew
here in New Haven -'- keep thinking about it - but with craft
fairs coming up, I don't have time wsew. One good thing about
making a polyester coat, you don 't have wline it. Once one gets
used wthe idea of a coat not having a lining, it is OK.
After all, we hope it soon will be nice and warm and. we won't
need a coat with or without a lining.

H;tl'l ;; nd Da vid Smith.
se nior &lt;n\•.:H ·d~ will be g.iven ull
Awards Day lo be held m Mily.
Southern's ila nd instructor,
Joy .Bigler c;ungra tulaled band
members and exte nded tha nks
to band bus dri ve rs, Patti lhle,
a nd Bill Whee ler for an11 uun ci n ~ u1e shows, Keith
Ashley for Jus assistit nce. Mrs.
Connee And rews and Ja mes
l:awr ence for he lpi11 g the
ma jorettes.
Miss Bigler presented the
ce nterpiece to Mrs. Hamson
Smith, booster pres ident on
behalf of the boosters. Band
members prese nted MiS&gt;
Bigler with a gift and corsage.
Booster offi ce rs al'e Mrs.
Smi th, presi den t, Mrs. Jerry
J ohnson, vice presiden t, Mrs.
Hobert Ctla pman, secreta ry
and Mr s . Andre w Cross,
treasurer .
) Others rece iyin g awar ds
were;
Letters, Debbi e Brown , Janis
Ca rn a han, Becky Cr ow, Gail
Evans , Teresa Erv in, Cindy
Pa tters un, Penn y Smith .

Bar bar a 'l'lielss.
Service b~l rs . . Luis B~:~ ilcy.
Sherry Forlun c., Stephanie
Ord, Jea ni e Sellers, Oavid
Smith , Vi ckie Wolfe. ·Glenn
Si mpson, Mary Biggs, Della
Cwss, Beverly H&lt;.~rt, Vcdcri c
Johnson, Roma Nease, F. than
Stearns, Lori Gu inther, Jaye
Ord , Patty Hobi ns&lt;m , Ki m
Toylor , Hei di Ashley, Sharon

':!.:~~:, ..

R 11ddigore'excerpts perfOrmed
.

B&lt;i kcr , Bobbl Cha pma n.,
Drl'i:.i!Yla. Jer lkins, .Anrl(:l Fra ~k, .
Ca rol Glen n; Alissa Harns,
J im
Holma·n, . Brend a
L&lt;lw rellce , Traci Weese_, Kei.th
Cll'cle. I'a ul Cross, Moil y
Fisher, Becky Harris, Detfise
Hendr icks, Kusle Hyse ll ,
Corena Rhodes, J.ori Theiss,
Hope Bird, Megan Brown and
Susa n Gooc h.

In addi tion to b;;nd Oh io Slate Un ivers ity has
m~mbers anU par.enl&lt;J \~c r.~ issued its honor roll ror the
bo.a rd members and t el
win ter. quarter , listi ng names
w1ves, Mr . ~ nd Mrs. Ja ~k of undergraduate students -wh o
Bos ti c,' ~r. and Mrs. Da~~ ac hiev ed hi gh a cademi c
Nease_ and Den ny H1 • averages for that peri!ld .
s u pe rmte nd e~ t . a nd· Mr~. honored received an average-of
Ho ber~Ord , pl'l llCi pal and Mrs. at leas t 3.5 and were enrolled
James Ad ams, Mrs. James ·. for at least 12 credit hours.
Andrews, Mrs: James Ray
Listed were Douglas Uttle
~ w rence, Patti Ihle and Mtss and 1 Jan Long, Mid·d ~eport ;
Bigler's parents.
J ohn Lohse and Rich ard
~erner , Pomer oy (all 4.0 );
Anderson , Pomeroy;
Lawrence Wilcoxen; Hactne.
.
Bruce Hart, Hacrne, and Kane
rece ipts, no dis burse ments, Humphrey, Reedsville.
$5, t23; fir e house constru ctiOn ,
no rece ip ts, no disbursements,
TO MARK FRIDAY
$11_-99;
ge neral . bond
ANTIQUITY - Good Friday
· retirement, no receipts, no se rvices wiil be held at the
disbursements , $19,139.57.
An tiquity Baptist Church from
1 to 2 p.m. with the Rev.
OJiiE KILLED
Free land ,.Norris officiating.
DAYTON (UP! ) - Delbert . Special singing by the Norris
Aikins, 21, Dayron, was killed quarte t. Th e public is invited to
Tuesday in an explosion ~t the attend.
Monsanto. Cehmical plant near
here which injured four others·. · lion of plaint was being transAuthorities said the blast ferred from one plant to anoccurred while-the liquid por- other.

'

BY CHARLENE HOEFI,.ICH
F.xcerpts from Gil bcrl ~md
Sull ivan ·e deliglilfu l operetta,
before severa l"hund red Meigs
County ~l udent.c; Tuesday os &lt;:~
part of ;1 lecture - denwrlstration series p rcpnr:~tory to a
full pcrf orrmmce at Ohi o
Universi ty on Aprll 25.
Youn g singers · a nd instn une ntali sts from the Ohio
Uni vcrsily School of Mu sic
participate d in yes terd ay's
prog rams at the Chester and
,,Tuppers Pl\lins · Elementa ry
&amp;hools " '" ' fur lhe band
sludenl' of Meigs l-li gh Schoo l.
They were accom pan ied by

•
•
Marc h expendztures
exceed ed . zncome
Don
.
.
.
M1ddlepdrt Village .to?k '"
$20,116.34 and- spent $24,294.90
Ill Ma rc h according to ClerkTr,easurer Gene Gra te.
The village as of March 31
had $201,646.21 in all funds,
Grate to ld tow n council on its
reg ula r mee ting Monday night .
Receipts and disburseme nts
from eac h fun d respective ly
and the balance in each as of
March 31 were:
General, $4,:Hl.40, $8,061. 24,
$44 ,157. 98 ; cemetery, $142-79 ·
$1 ,149 · 85, $1'77 0.1 3; fire

eq u1pment, $!,5UU, $1,2:12.66,
$464.:12; swimming pool, no
rece ipt s, $6.65, $2,572.33;
plannin g co mmiss ion, no
receipts, $2.65, $211 .84; stree t
mainte na nce,
$2,7 08 .11,
$2,598:50, $331.24.
Sa ni tar y sewer , $3, 930.72,
$3,769 .16, $43,007.59; wate r ,
$6 ,:135.32, $7,314.19, $24,373.03;
water meter deposit trusts,
$175, $160, -$6,407.8:J; sanitary
se we r escro w, $975, no
disbursements , $65,075. 36;
federal revenue sharing, no

Ma r ~' J ~1gernan and Peg 'Mc-

Dm g ~

KimD~~ONSTRATING THE VERSATILITY of the tromhoneal the programs Tuesday we re
Oh ' U tzer,left, and Nanette Oatney, botlr senwr Instrymental music educa tion maJors al
IO ~I~ers1ty. Between the two trom bonists is Keith Ashley, who commented on the &amp; hool
of Mus1c s 1nsti umental program.

professional advancement, and

the therapy of music for sound
me nta l and emotional hea lth.
The hour program presented
not onl y excer pt s fr om
' ~ Ru d di gore," but also other
facets of music offered through
the &amp; hool of Mu sic at Ohi o
Un ive l'sity.
Three of the perform ing
artis ts in the uperetta - a
so pr ano, a tenor , and a

MY DAUGHTER AND HER HUSBAND, Mr. and Mrs.
Phillip Smith and Stephanie, were in a motel at Lexington, Ky.
when the rornado hit Louisville and the surrounding ru:eas. Mrs.
Smith said it was a horrifying experience as the people all
crowded into a dark room on the first floor of the motel. Many of
the people at the motel were very much concerned about their
loved ones in nearby towns . Phones were tied up, there. was no
electricity, and with no electricity, they could not get gas to
travel. All of the coronors and docrors were called out of
Lexington to help in the disaster areas.
They and others staying in Lexingron were .not injured, but
the horrifying experience will long be remembered.

. RUDDIGORE VOCALISTS, Mark Bitikofer, baritone, Sally Howell, soprano, a nd Greg
Little, tenor, I to r, sang excerpts from the· operetta score for students in three schools her~
Tue~day . The program was in promotion of the operetta to be presented at Ohi o University on
Apn l 25as part of the Young People's Concerts . Becky Smith, a 13-year-piano student, is accomparust for the operetta .

39
lb.
ECK RICH'S

lb~1

Kielhaaai, ••••

ARE GUESTS
Roger Dixon and his room-

FRESH ROASTING

49

mate,

CltieAtew l1:::.••

SWIFT BUTTERBALL

" SUPER-RIGHT"

Tunheya ••••
FULL RIS HALF PORk

.

FILLETS

LcMM,"Rooat

$,1 29

Leg 0~ Lf.bfth • •• lb.

lb.79¢
lb.9 9 ¢

Fresh Beltsville Turkeys :..'b'
Sliced Bacon :!!.',~ • • • • •
Swift All Meat Wieners • •
Treat Sausage • • •

• •

'

Oeeo"' ?f!ll.eh, lb.7 9 ¢ ·
.
$149
Fresh Ground Chuck. . . .
• • •
Braunschweiger ·~~~~" . • • •
5 $699 Turbot
Fillets ~i~:\,~, . . • • •
Cap'n John's Fish Sticks . • • •

EXTRA

.

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lb.
oan

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With This
Coupon

AI

10 ~· 39"

• pk( .

g
~
4 lb.

Red Beets • •

Pineapple ......
..
SUG ... l SWEET

Malted Milk Eggs

~

I

BIIDell19c

. . ... 49c

$269 ,...

Muffin Mix 0 ~~~.1"

....

~~ HAPPY ~,

tY EAST.ER ·~j .
Let Us Rejoice In Thi s
Glorio u s Se a s o n o f
Ea st ertime! .
Eas ter is truly a time o f jay
tor all Chri s1ians , for it
celebrat es th e Resurrection
of our Lord and Saviour .
Ma y ever y blessing be yours I
lh 1s

Univ e r s it ~- They were accom panied by Becky Smil11, a
music education maj or with 13
years of piano instruction , who
will be acco mpani st for

se.1son!

WE WI-LL
CLOSE

CELIA HOLLENDER, Ohio University senior , played
the harp durrng the lecture - demonstration progra m
Tuesday promotmg the Ohio University Young People's ·
Concerts.

'•

AT NOON

'~ R uddigor e . "

Also participating in the of La ncas ter, an ins trumenta l
lecture - demonstra ti on was music educati on major , who
Eelia Holiender of Cleveland played a solo and was joined by
who explained the troubadour Kim Pretzer of Westcheste r in
harp and then played, "Tag a duet.
Around the Windmil l. " She
Keith A5hley, a graduate of
spoke on music therapy So uth er n
High
Sc hool,
describi ng it as a new field described the marching ba nd
pr ovid ing rehabili tat ion in at Ohi o University. He stressed
menta l insti tutions and that wh ile it now all-mal e a
hosp itals, and more recently change ma y be comi ng so~n .
bein g tak en into the schools. He discussed the marching
A history of the trombone technique and tempo and the
was given by Na n~ tle Oatney ki nds of music played by the

GOOD F RlD AY

prim arily brass ba nd.
He also commented on til e
va r ious activit ies of ban d, the
concert program, bcmd day
&lt;md the varsity sl10w, ami tfJ lt.l

Reuter-Brogan
Insurance Senrices

of the other bands on ca mpus,

sy mphony, varsity, the win&lt;l
ense mble, the brass ensemble
and noted. that girls arc m:.
ce pted into every ban d except
the marching band .
Concluding the prog ram.
Mrs. M c Dar gh a nd Mrs.

LARRY BROG AN
EDNA SC HO ENLEB
GERAL D REU TE R

Phon e 992-5130
107 Syca more

Pomeroy

PILLSBU RY

Biscuits.'~';W •

! -lb . ....

$199

pk . .

2 79C
Cream Cheese :;:;.

Orchid Corsages
Only

2

~,k. ggc

...

E..h

pkg.

PORK· STEAK

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NESCAFE
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USDA CHOICE ·

KR AFT PHIL A.OI!LPHIA

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BACON
lb.

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BREAD

12 oz.
13'

4

,$179

for

$100

SIDES BEEF
T-SGT. GRAHAM
Technical Sergeant Darol
G. G~aham, son of Mrs.
Bessie M. Graham of Rl. 4,
Pom eroy, has gr aduated
from the U. S. Air Force
recruiter school at Lackland
AFB, Tex. Sergeant Graham
will be an olficial Air Force
recruiter In Covington, Ky. '
. He was selected lor the
special school and recruiting
duty as a voluo.teer with an
outstanding mflltary' record •
Sergeant Graham has
completed 22 months duty in
Vie.tn'am . He is a 1961
graduate of Al~Ji!ny High
School. His wile, Betty, is the
da ughter of Mrs. Freda
Carsey of Rl. 4, Pomeroy.

..
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'

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I

-' . "i. ,; :

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Bu .. .. ng I he cand le at both
e n d s d e l ig h t s c an dl e

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(436) J lb. CA NNED. HAM

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J lb. PORK STEAK
2 lb. BULK SA USAGE
2 lb. ~ O UND STEAK

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(437)

LB. $-1.05

BOYS OR

GIRLS
11 OR OL.DER

BE.A

NEWSPAPER
CARRIER
We need a carrier in
Reedsville and one in
Tuppers Plains.

HQSTS VISITOR
Mrs. Ann McCroba j\edd,
Grand , Rapid~ , Mich., was a
visi liJP this week .of Mrs .
Norma ·Goodwfn ·. and otbe r
f riends of the Bend area.

lHE
.· DAILY SENTINEL
I

1

1&gt; SEMI -BQ NLESS HAM
17-9

lb.

avg.J

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$
$.

2 FR ES H CH iCI&lt;ENS
2 lb. GROUND B EEF
2 lb. SLICE D BACON
2 lb. SI RLOIN ST EAK
I Jb. HAM SA LAD

FRONTS

lb. . 791
Prices
. .Include
Culling .
Wrapping
and
Freezing
Beef SOld at
Hanging Weight.

Phone

% or Whole

14-20 lb.

ma nufactu re rs.

CALL 992-2156

\'
'l

LAU BONTOP
AKRON, Oh io lU PI 1- La rry
Laub of Sa nta Hosa. Calif., ha s
su rpassed prev ious lea der Jim
Stefanich of Joliet, Ill. , on the
money winnings list on the
Professional Bow,lers Assoc iation tour:
La ub jum ped in to the lead in
the final stop on the winte r tour
by picking up $4,000 in the
Akron F irestone Tourn amen t of
Champions. He has earned
$49,260, dropping Stefa nich to
second wi th $47,505 .
Tournament winner Earl Anthony of Tacoma, Wash. , picked
up the $25,000 fi rs t prize and
WAR I VETERANS
vaulted in to third w(th tof&lt;! l
TO MEET APRIL 20
earnings of $44,110. ·
World War I vete rans and
The bowlers were to roll in their Auxiliary will host tpe
the ABC M~sters tour nament at Eighth District meeting at the
Ind1anapohs, Ind ., later th1s Jackson County Barracks No.
month , then take a break 1964 at Coalton on Saturday ,
be[ore the $75,000 B~UilS\':ICk April 20. The district consists of
PBA Na llonal ChampiOnships, nine co nlie Athens Ga llia
the ·start of the sum~er tour, Jacks o~ , L:~rence ,' Meigs:
J une 2 at Downey, Cthf.
Pike, Ross, Scioto-and Vinton .
-'&lt;
All W. W. I veterans and wives
and widow s are in vited.
Registration will sl&lt;lrt at noon
and a program is be ing
MAY HURT CROPS
..:OLUMBUS (UP! ) - Frank- planned . Lunch will be served
lin County Cooperative Exten- by the Barracks and Auxiliary ,
sion Agent Thomas McNutt said Aud rey Gilliland of the
said Tuesday a good thaw Auxi liary.
would allow fo r a better assessment of how the apple crop
fared in Central .Ohio after this
week's last blast of winter.
McNutt said he thought the
wheat crops may have endured
the freezing weather , but felt ·
the cold weather after high
temperatures may hurt the
apples. He said it was roo early
w predict how severe a loss
could be.

CHOICE ,

.

lb.a9~

, Folger's Coffee

ea rned a grade point a verage
of 3. 3 and over for the quarter
and mu st have ea rn ed 15 hour ,
12 nf which were ta ken for a
letter · grade. Area students
listed were:
Rosa lie Reese and Da vid
Wh ite, Ches hire; Th omas
Gumpf, Chester ; Vicki Car r.
Myla Engli sh, Jerry Weave r,
Coo lvi lle ; Ma rlin Osborn e,
Long Bottom ; Daniel Nease,
Minersv ille ; J ohn Gi ll iam,
J ulia Holter , Lucy Holter , John
Johnson, Robert McDonnell,
Linda Rupe, Barbara Shultz,
Steven_ Stanley, Dan iel Will,
Pomer oy ; Sa ndra Sayre,
Por tl an d ; . Keith Ashley,
Racine ; Debra May , Donna
Weber, Rutland and Pamela
Crow'· Syracuse.

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Easter Lilies, Tulips &amp; Mums
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Orange Drink •

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WAGNER'S

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Marshmallow Peeps

Cool Whip •

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ROOT BEER

tlapcmagua•

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Yellow Bunnies
Marshmallow Eggs

ya..

DENNIS GLAZE
Denni s E. Glaze, son of
Belva Glaze and the late Ray
Glaze enlisted·in the U. S. Air
Force on M_a rch 29 and Is
presently undergo ing basic
military · orientatio n at
La ekland Air Force Base in
Texas. Glaz e enlisted in the
Air Force under the Delayed
EnlistmCJJ t program in
December . He will be under
the Air Force Guaranteed
Enlistment p(ogram and will
a tt end n 31 week co m·
mtinication and relay center
equipment repairman school
at Sheppard Air Force Base,
Texas . Glaz e is a 1973
graduate of Meigs Hi gh
School.

89¢
01~~~~~- ~6r.~.....994

Handi Whip ••~'!'"
Strawberries ••~'!'"
Land 0 Lakes Butter~~agc

Good Thru Sat., April 13th at
A&amp;P WEO. limit one .
coupon per fam ily.

RODDA

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5 9do:~.

Easter Candies

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Onl..-

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" NN PAGE

ROYAL
16 oz.
CROWN ....:.......~.~~~............

Holiday Helpers

Stuffing Mix •:.::41•
Angel Food Cake !!:::~ 59•
Dinner Rolls ~·8~~ 2 :.'~ 85•
Easter Layer Cake ~~ slz,
Hot Cross Buns ·;:.~ 69·
Pie

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lb.

Jane Parker Bakery

r

.

Clara Smith were Mr . and Mrs.
Basi l Da rst of Colum bus; Mrs.
Smith 's son and fa mily, Mr.
and Mrs. Kenneth Smith and
daughter of Dunnellon, Fla.,
and her s tepson and ramily,
FAMILY COMES
MASON , W. VA .-Rece nt Mr. and Mrs. Rober t Sa unders
visitors in the·--home ·or Mrs. and ch ildren of Ctiarles ton.

THURSDAY • FRIDAY • SATURDAY

By Joanne aud Lew Koch ·
(Note : Today's collmm Is written by Joanne)
Toilet training Is serious business. In spite of the humor that has
always surrounded bathroom, chamber pot and out-house,
peychiatrlsts starting with Freud and mothers of untrained
children hilve ceased w regard training as a laughing ma tter .
According wFreudian theory, if tr11ining Is too harsh, if the
parents' attitude towards the child's failure to remain clean Is
too Sellere, the child might I) become a miser ; 2) regard his body
as unclean, therefore 'SOmething w be ashamed of; 3) become
compulsive about order, insisting that \!lings always be in their
proper place; 4) growup wile compulsive ahoutcontrol, insisting
that people always be in their right place. The making of a tyrant
could be traced right back to the bathroom.
Now comes a book called "Toilet Training in Less than a
-Day" by Nathan Aztin and Richard Foxx, two researchers in the
lieldofbehaviormodilication. They also believe roilet·training is
hnportant business. But they claim children can be trained in
less than i4 hours if the parent uses tbe right tools, encourages
and rewards success. amd waits until the child is ready wmake
a break with diapers. _
Basically what pappens ls thls. The child of approximately 2
trains hio-ller hoUow doD 'ro wet, under the parent's supervision.
· The child Is in training pants, preferably for the first time.' Heshe Is given a quantity of salty snacks and plenty of juice or soda
pop..
'
Wearing pants that are large enough wpull down and pull up
and using an on-the-floor mode l j)otty chair !roll) which the pot
can be removed from the t&lt;!J), the child Is encouraged to go wthe
bathroom, empty and rinsJ; the pot and replace it. The child Is
rewarded with praise every time hHbe completes the process,
but never punished when an accident OCCl)fS . The day of training
is completely and cheerfully devoted to the child. When he-she
reinains dry, the good news Is ann.DI!nced wpeople from a list. which the child has helPed compose-of those who care.
Solne psychiatrists I have spoken · w question the. effectiveness of this system. Others PQint out that the key factor is
the readiness of the child. But let's assume that every child in
Ainerti:a could be trained in one day . What would happen ? If
Freudian theory io correct, nothing sbort of a revolution!
First, there would be the time saved...,.one quar~er of a fulltime work week is what Azrin and Foxx estimate the mother of
111 m~trained child spends ~hanging diapers.
More important would be the boost w the econ~y , as aU the
lillJiw.SS dlaappear and the big spenders come of age. The
diYOrCe rate would go down )!ecause people would grow up
·feelq gocld about their bodies and leas inclined wput down their
mala lor dlllorderllneas Iand · elrtra spending. The desire w
CODtrol would flag, aiid by the year 2000 our main problem would
DOl be war, but lack of leadersljlp and bankruptcy.
·
What one thinks of the jlrospeclli for America, one can
.
Clllly hope !hat Azrin ~nd F~ quickly write a sequel to.
lheir current book : "Unlearning your-olfl trl!lnilig in less than a

. .6

gues ts for a turkey dinner on
Sunday were Mrs. Hay Pullins:
Lisa and Scott, and Mrs. Wilma
Stobart.

PRICES

the Puritan ·ethic

,,

Abr'ams,

Manha ss et, N. Y., both
soph omores a t Mar ietta
College , were weekend guests
_of Roge r's parents, Mr . and
Mrs . Herbert Dixon. Other

lb. 5 9 ¢

.

Alan

Toilet training and

~

University SchotjJ of Music .

music-theater maj or s at Ohi o

ATHENS - Ohio Uni versity
ha s·announ ced its 1974 win ter
quarter dean 's list. To be
listed, a s tud ent must have

Family Lib

'

i\lher1s Music Club and the

baritone - relaled lhe sto ry of
the curse of the witch, the love
of a gir l and two brothers, and
the happy ending, and then
prese nted severa l li ve ly
se lections.
Sally Howell of Oak Hill , the
sopran o. fa kes the role of Hose
in the ope re tt&lt;1 . Sh e had a solo,
the n was joined by Mark
Bitekafer, a baritone, who
plays Hobin , in a dueL Greg '
Li ttle ·Of Westerville, a tenor
singing .the role of Ri chard ,
joi ned Mi ss Howell . and
Bitekafer for one of the rousing
concluding voca l numbers of
the operetta. The three are

22 on dean's list

MASON - AN IMPRESSIVE CANDLELIGHT ceremony
was the setting for a Court of .Awards program at a. recent
meeting of the Mason Junior Gir!Scouls, Troop487.
The scouts were presented the "World Neighbor " and the
"My Troop" badges which were' earned as a troop during
February and March. Badges for individual accomplislunents
were also !ft&amp;ented to Karen Brown, Tanya Cundiff, Connie
Elllson,Nellie Esque, Patty Estep, Susie James, Terri Johnson,
Angie Proffitt, Britta VanMeter, Georgeinna VanMeter, !lena
VanMeter, Toni Siok, Lisa Stewart, Debbie Smith , Usa and Lora
McCauley, and Cindy.Weaver.
FoUowing the program, the scouts walked to the Mason
Village_Green where they played a game of kick balL The People
defeated the Kids by a score of 15 to 11. Participating in a team
·blin game Is a requirement for the "World Games" badge which·
the girls are now working on.
Activities planned forApril include : crafts for Easter, a rour
of the Ohio Publishing Co. and.]'u·Endie-Wei, a Girl Scout field
day, a magician sbow, participation in Bike Safety Week April
22-28, and "Keep AmeJ:ican Beautiful Day," April27. Badge work
for the m&lt;inth include "Cyclist," "World Games," and completion of "My Conununity ."
·

i

of !he Amer ican
Association of Un ive rsit y
Women, Athens Branch, cospon,ors with the Middleport Pomeroy Branch, and were
presented through lhe support
f a gr1 nt fr om the Ohi o Arts
oun cil.
In
their
intr odu cto r y
remarks, Mrs. McDargh a nd
Mrs . J age man e mph ~s i ze d
enric hmen t through music
ex per iences, the opportun ities
offered fu r perso nal and

Ja~eman inv1ted the students
lo attend one of the April 25
perfurmant.:es, 10 a .m . and
12::10 p.m ., of " Hudd igore"
prese nt ed by the Oh io .
Univ ers ity Young People's
Conce rts, co-sponsored by the

Lectures,.
d emonstrt1tions
featured

" Huddigurc '' were prcsen tod

MASON - MR. AND MRS. KENNETH REYNOLDS, Mason,
and Mr. and Mrs. Danny Kearns, Clifton, had a wonderful time ·
on their expense paid trip by jet to Spain. While they toured
Toledo, Valley of the Fallen, and the city of Madrid. The trip was
sponsored by National Life Insurance. One hundred and seventylive persons made the trip.
On their return trip home they flew into Louisville about the
time of the rornado.- According wReynolds the plane.shook "all
over the place." Some of the passengers became ill and one lady
was given oxygen.
The pilot reportedly said "We were all worried on trus
flight. "

day."

'

Vs ·

Your Orderl
992-3502'

$·

(438) 4 lb. CHUC K ROAST
J lb. SIRLOIN ST EAK
2 lb. ROUND STEAK
J.lb. GROUND BEEF
2 lb. CUBE STEAK
2 lb. BULK 'SAUSAGE

'

(439).lf, (7-9
SEMI-BON E LESS
lb. avg .),

$

HAM
.

lb. SL!C ED BA CON
lb. RIB STEA KS
S lb. CHU CK ROAST .
· J lb. GROUND CHU CK
2
J

1 DOZ LARG E EGGS

One Dozen Large Eggs
·.· Free
Each Deal.

~~~~~

,.

',

I
'

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'·

..

.

•

'.

�.t,

I

'

•

'

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'.

'I

12- The D~ily Senlinel; Middlepor t-~omeroy ,O ., Aprill0,_1974

OSU Jist's ·8

7....~
Sousa awards ·received by 2 musicians
ate s[:[.
~peclal
All" n~l ng
B 'Ahn M hall
y . . a ars

:..

•

_

•

HACINF: - 'l'he .John Phi llip
St)usu tnva rd was pre$ented to '
Della Cross &lt;llld Beve rly Ha rt
a t the rece 11 t ba nd ua nqu ~t held
at Southern ~lig \1 School _in·
Rac me. prese nt ed uy J uy
Big ler.
So uthern
Ba nd
director.
Dw igh t Goin s, ban d in s tructor at Meigs High Scli'uul
wastheg uest spea ker . Goins in
his sta teme nt&gt; sa id "when you
honor s tudents in the band, you
are honoring one of the finest
groups in the sc hool. Band
members beg in before school
sta rts with ba nd ca mp and
practice sess ion's fo r th e
fo otball season. Students and
pare n.ts sacrifi ce to be par t of
the band . You go to win, either
in compe tition or half-time
shows, bu t if you do your best
tha t is the most importan t
thing." Goi ns also commented
on the importa nce of a good
booster organiza tion.
Jam es Ray Lawrence served
~ s ma s te r of ce re monies.
Lawrence 111lroduced the copresidents or'the band, Beverly

;;~;

' ..

PI'. PLEASANT - The Mason County Homema kers spring
luncheon wiD be held May 23 at the Moose Hall in Pt . Pleasant
with registration starling at 9 a.m. and the program conti nuing
untU 2: 30 p.m.
The buffet luncheon will be $3.25 and reserva:tions should be
made by May 20. Checks sbould be rna® payable to Mason
County Homemakers Council, c-o' Mrs . Jesse Brown, Rou te I,
Letart, W. Va.
The committee in charge of the spring luncheon has announced that prizes will be awarded. Garments which the lad_ies
have made arerobe modeled by the participants. lf theladies do
not sew, perhaps tbey have 'put together a hat, purse, scarf or
other a=ssories. Crocheted or a knitted cape, shawl, hat, or
purse, etc. can be among the items modeled.
A fresb floral arrangement to decorate the table will also be
judged. All categories will be judged for prizes.
Let the Extension Office know what you plan to have judged
by May 20.
WITH SO MANY BEAliTIFUL mate rials available, better
get busy, ladies, and sew that spring dress or coat. There are so
many good buys in material now, itis hard to pass them up. Did
you ever see a piece of material and visualize it made into a coat
or dress ? Well, I just saw a beautiful piece at the Kut and Sew
here in New Haven -'- keep thinking about it - but with craft
fairs coming up, I don't have time wsew. One good thing about
making a polyester coat, you don 't have wline it. Once one gets
used wthe idea of a coat not having a lining, it is OK.
After all, we hope it soon will be nice and warm and. we won't
need a coat with or without a lining.

H;tl'l ;; nd Da vid Smith.
se nior &lt;n\•.:H ·d~ will be g.iven ull
Awards Day lo be held m Mily.
Southern's ila nd instructor,
Joy .Bigler c;ungra tulaled band
members and exte nded tha nks
to band bus dri ve rs, Patti lhle,
a nd Bill Whee ler for an11 uun ci n ~ u1e shows, Keith
Ashley for Jus assistit nce. Mrs.
Connee And rews and Ja mes
l:awr ence for he lpi11 g the
ma jorettes.
Miss Bigler presented the
ce nterpiece to Mrs. Hamson
Smith, booster pres ident on
behalf of the boosters. Band
members prese nted MiS&gt;
Bigler with a gift and corsage.
Booster offi ce rs al'e Mrs.
Smi th, presi den t, Mrs. Jerry
J ohnson, vice presiden t, Mrs.
Hobert Ctla pman, secreta ry
and Mr s . Andre w Cross,
treasurer .
) Others rece iyin g awar ds
were;
Letters, Debbi e Brown , Janis
Ca rn a han, Becky Cr ow, Gail
Evans , Teresa Erv in, Cindy
Pa tters un, Penn y Smith .

Bar bar a 'l'lielss.
Service b~l rs . . Luis B~:~ ilcy.
Sherry Forlun c., Stephanie
Ord, Jea ni e Sellers, Oavid
Smith , Vi ckie Wolfe. ·Glenn
Si mpson, Mary Biggs, Della
Cwss, Beverly H&lt;.~rt, Vcdcri c
Johnson, Roma Nease, F. than
Stearns, Lori Gu inther, Jaye
Ord , Patty Hobi ns&lt;m , Ki m
Toylor , Hei di Ashley, Sharon

':!.:~~:, ..

R 11ddigore'excerpts perfOrmed
.

B&lt;i kcr , Bobbl Cha pma n.,
Drl'i:.i!Yla. Jer lkins, .Anrl(:l Fra ~k, .
Ca rol Glen n; Alissa Harns,
J im
Holma·n, . Brend a
L&lt;lw rellce , Traci Weese_, Kei.th
Cll'cle. I'a ul Cross, Moil y
Fisher, Becky Harris, Detfise
Hendr icks, Kusle Hyse ll ,
Corena Rhodes, J.ori Theiss,
Hope Bird, Megan Brown and
Susa n Gooc h.

In addi tion to b;;nd Oh io Slate Un ivers ity has
m~mbers anU par.enl&lt;J \~c r.~ issued its honor roll ror the
bo.a rd members and t el
win ter. quarter , listi ng names
w1ves, Mr . ~ nd Mrs. Ja ~k of undergraduate students -wh o
Bos ti c,' ~r. and Mrs. Da~~ ac hiev ed hi gh a cademi c
Nease_ and Den ny H1 • averages for that peri!ld .
s u pe rmte nd e~ t . a nd· Mr~. honored received an average-of
Ho ber~Ord , pl'l llCi pal and Mrs. at leas t 3.5 and were enrolled
James Ad ams, Mrs. James ·. for at least 12 credit hours.
Andrews, Mrs: James Ray
Listed were Douglas Uttle
~ w rence, Patti Ihle and Mtss and 1 Jan Long, Mid·d ~eport ;
Bigler's parents.
J ohn Lohse and Rich ard
~erner , Pomer oy (all 4.0 );
Anderson , Pomeroy;
Lawrence Wilcoxen; Hactne.
.
Bruce Hart, Hacrne, and Kane
rece ipts, no dis burse ments, Humphrey, Reedsville.
$5, t23; fir e house constru ctiOn ,
no rece ip ts, no disbursements,
TO MARK FRIDAY
$11_-99;
ge neral . bond
ANTIQUITY - Good Friday
· retirement, no receipts, no se rvices wiil be held at the
disbursements , $19,139.57.
An tiquity Baptist Church from
1 to 2 p.m. with the Rev.
OJiiE KILLED
Free land ,.Norris officiating.
DAYTON (UP! ) - Delbert . Special singing by the Norris
Aikins, 21, Dayron, was killed quarte t. Th e public is invited to
Tuesday in an explosion ~t the attend.
Monsanto. Cehmical plant near
here which injured four others·. · lion of plaint was being transAuthorities said the blast ferred from one plant to anoccurred while-the liquid por- other.

'

BY CHARLENE HOEFI,.ICH
F.xcerpts from Gil bcrl ~md
Sull ivan ·e deliglilfu l operetta,
before severa l"hund red Meigs
County ~l udent.c; Tuesday os &lt;:~
part of ;1 lecture - denwrlstration series p rcpnr:~tory to a
full pcrf orrmmce at Ohi o
Universi ty on Aprll 25.
Youn g singers · a nd instn une ntali sts from the Ohio
Uni vcrsily School of Mu sic
participate d in yes terd ay's
prog rams at the Chester and
,,Tuppers Pl\lins · Elementa ry
&amp;hools " '" ' fur lhe band
sludenl' of Meigs l-li gh Schoo l.
They were accom pan ied by

•
•
Marc h expendztures
exceed ed . zncome
Don
.
.
.
M1ddlepdrt Village .to?k '"
$20,116.34 and- spent $24,294.90
Ill Ma rc h according to ClerkTr,easurer Gene Gra te.
The village as of March 31
had $201,646.21 in all funds,
Grate to ld tow n council on its
reg ula r mee ting Monday night .
Receipts and disburseme nts
from eac h fun d respective ly
and the balance in each as of
March 31 were:
General, $4,:Hl.40, $8,061. 24,
$44 ,157. 98 ; cemetery, $142-79 ·
$1 ,149 · 85, $1'77 0.1 3; fire

eq u1pment, $!,5UU, $1,2:12.66,
$464.:12; swimming pool, no
rece ipt s, $6.65, $2,572.33;
plannin g co mmiss ion, no
receipts, $2.65, $211 .84; stree t
mainte na nce,
$2,7 08 .11,
$2,598:50, $331.24.
Sa ni tar y sewer , $3, 930.72,
$3,769 .16, $43,007.59; wate r ,
$6 ,:135.32, $7,314.19, $24,373.03;
water meter deposit trusts,
$175, $160, -$6,407.8:J; sanitary
se we r escro w, $975, no
disbursements , $65,075. 36;
federal revenue sharing, no

Ma r ~' J ~1gernan and Peg 'Mc-

Dm g ~

KimD~~ONSTRATING THE VERSATILITY of the tromhoneal the programs Tuesday we re
Oh ' U tzer,left, and Nanette Oatney, botlr senwr Instrymental music educa tion maJors al
IO ~I~ers1ty. Between the two trom bonists is Keith Ashley, who commented on the &amp; hool
of Mus1c s 1nsti umental program.

professional advancement, and

the therapy of music for sound
me nta l and emotional hea lth.
The hour program presented
not onl y excer pt s fr om
' ~ Ru d di gore," but also other
facets of music offered through
the &amp; hool of Mu sic at Ohi o
Un ive l'sity.
Three of the perform ing
artis ts in the uperetta - a
so pr ano, a tenor , and a

MY DAUGHTER AND HER HUSBAND, Mr. and Mrs.
Phillip Smith and Stephanie, were in a motel at Lexington, Ky.
when the rornado hit Louisville and the surrounding ru:eas. Mrs.
Smith said it was a horrifying experience as the people all
crowded into a dark room on the first floor of the motel. Many of
the people at the motel were very much concerned about their
loved ones in nearby towns . Phones were tied up, there. was no
electricity, and with no electricity, they could not get gas to
travel. All of the coronors and docrors were called out of
Lexington to help in the disaster areas.
They and others staying in Lexingron were .not injured, but
the horrifying experience will long be remembered.

. RUDDIGORE VOCALISTS, Mark Bitikofer, baritone, Sally Howell, soprano, a nd Greg
Little, tenor, I to r, sang excerpts from the· operetta score for students in three schools her~
Tue~day . The program was in promotion of the operetta to be presented at Ohi o University on
Apn l 25as part of the Young People's Concerts . Becky Smith, a 13-year-piano student, is accomparust for the operetta .

39
lb.
ECK RICH'S

lb~1

Kielhaaai, ••••

ARE GUESTS
Roger Dixon and his room-

FRESH ROASTING

49

mate,

CltieAtew l1:::.••

SWIFT BUTTERBALL

" SUPER-RIGHT"

Tunheya ••••
FULL RIS HALF PORk

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FILLETS

LcMM,"Rooat

$,1 29

Leg 0~ Lf.bfth • •• lb.

lb.79¢
lb.9 9 ¢

Fresh Beltsville Turkeys :..'b'
Sliced Bacon :!!.',~ • • • • •
Swift All Meat Wieners • •
Treat Sausage • • •

• •

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Oeeo"' ?f!ll.eh, lb.7 9 ¢ ·
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$149
Fresh Ground Chuck. . . .
• • •
Braunschweiger ·~~~~" . • • •
5 $699 Turbot
Fillets ~i~:\,~, . . • • •
Cap'n John's Fish Sticks . • • •

EXTRA

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oan

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With This
Coupon

AI

10 ~· 39"

• pk( .

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~
4 lb.

Red Beets • •

Pineapple ......
..
SUG ... l SWEET

Malted Milk Eggs

~

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BIIDell19c

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$269 ,...

Muffin Mix 0 ~~~.1"

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~~ HAPPY ~,

tY EAST.ER ·~j .
Let Us Rejoice In Thi s
Glorio u s Se a s o n o f
Ea st ertime! .
Eas ter is truly a time o f jay
tor all Chri s1ians , for it
celebrat es th e Resurrection
of our Lord and Saviour .
Ma y ever y blessing be yours I
lh 1s

Univ e r s it ~- They were accom panied by Becky Smil11, a
music education maj or with 13
years of piano instruction , who
will be acco mpani st for

se.1son!

WE WI-LL
CLOSE

CELIA HOLLENDER, Ohio University senior , played
the harp durrng the lecture - demonstration progra m
Tuesday promotmg the Ohio University Young People's ·
Concerts.

'•

AT NOON

'~ R uddigor e . "

Also participating in the of La ncas ter, an ins trumenta l
lecture - demonstra ti on was music educati on major , who
Eelia Holiender of Cleveland played a solo and was joined by
who explained the troubadour Kim Pretzer of Westcheste r in
harp and then played, "Tag a duet.
Around the Windmil l. " She
Keith A5hley, a graduate of
spoke on music therapy So uth er n
High
Sc hool,
describi ng it as a new field described the marching ba nd
pr ovid ing rehabili tat ion in at Ohi o University. He stressed
menta l insti tutions and that wh ile it now all-mal e a
hosp itals, and more recently change ma y be comi ng so~n .
bein g tak en into the schools. He discussed the marching
A history of the trombone technique and tempo and the
was given by Na n~ tle Oatney ki nds of music played by the

GOOD F RlD AY

prim arily brass ba nd.
He also commented on til e
va r ious activit ies of ban d, the
concert program, bcmd day
&lt;md the varsity sl10w, ami tfJ lt.l

Reuter-Brogan
Insurance Senrices

of the other bands on ca mpus,

sy mphony, varsity, the win&lt;l
ense mble, the brass ensemble
and noted. that girls arc m:.
ce pted into every ban d except
the marching band .
Concluding the prog ram.
Mrs. M c Dar gh a nd Mrs.

LARRY BROG AN
EDNA SC HO ENLEB
GERAL D REU TE R

Phon e 992-5130
107 Syca more

Pomeroy

PILLSBU RY

Biscuits.'~';W •

! -lb . ....

$199

pk . .

2 79C
Cream Cheese :;:;.

Orchid Corsages
Only

2

~,k. ggc

...

E..h

pkg.

PORK· STEAK

'

FAVORITE

NESCAFE
...

.•
'

89~

USDA CHOICE ·

KR AFT PHIL A.OI!LPHIA

.

99e

BACON
lb.

'

INSTANl COFFEE

BREAD

12 oz.
13'

4

,$179

for

$100

SIDES BEEF
T-SGT. GRAHAM
Technical Sergeant Darol
G. G~aham, son of Mrs.
Bessie M. Graham of Rl. 4,
Pom eroy, has gr aduated
from the U. S. Air Force
recruiter school at Lackland
AFB, Tex. Sergeant Graham
will be an olficial Air Force
recruiter In Covington, Ky. '
. He was selected lor the
special school and recruiting
duty as a voluo.teer with an
outstanding mflltary' record •
Sergeant Graham has
completed 22 months duty in
Vie.tn'am . He is a 1961
graduate of Al~Ji!ny High
School. His wile, Betty, is the
da ughter of Mrs. Freda
Carsey of Rl. 4, Pomeroy.

..
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Bu .. .. ng I he cand le at both
e n d s d e l ig h t s c an dl e

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SUPERIOR

SEMI BONELESS HAMS 95' lb.
(436) J lb. CA NNED. HAM

2 lb. GROUND BEEF
J lb. PORK STEAK
2 lb. BULK SA USAGE
2 lb. ~ O UND STEAK

8~

HINDS

(437)

LB. $-1.05

BOYS OR

GIRLS
11 OR OL.DER

BE.A

NEWSPAPER
CARRIER
We need a carrier in
Reedsville and one in
Tuppers Plains.

HQSTS VISITOR
Mrs. Ann McCroba j\edd,
Grand , Rapid~ , Mich., was a
visi liJP this week .of Mrs .
Norma ·Goodwfn ·. and otbe r
f riends of the Bend area.

lHE
.· DAILY SENTINEL
I

1

1&gt; SEMI -BQ NLESS HAM
17-9

lb.

avg.J

.

.

$
$.

2 FR ES H CH iCI&lt;ENS
2 lb. GROUND B EEF
2 lb. SLICE D BACON
2 lb. SI RLOIN ST EAK
I Jb. HAM SA LAD

FRONTS

lb. . 791
Prices
. .Include
Culling .
Wrapping
and
Freezing
Beef SOld at
Hanging Weight.

Phone

% or Whole

14-20 lb.

ma nufactu re rs.

CALL 992-2156

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LAU BONTOP
AKRON, Oh io lU PI 1- La rry
Laub of Sa nta Hosa. Calif., ha s
su rpassed prev ious lea der Jim
Stefanich of Joliet, Ill. , on the
money winnings list on the
Professional Bow,lers Assoc iation tour:
La ub jum ped in to the lead in
the final stop on the winte r tour
by picking up $4,000 in the
Akron F irestone Tourn amen t of
Champions. He has earned
$49,260, dropping Stefa nich to
second wi th $47,505 .
Tournament winner Earl Anthony of Tacoma, Wash. , picked
up the $25,000 fi rs t prize and
WAR I VETERANS
vaulted in to third w(th tof&lt;! l
TO MEET APRIL 20
earnings of $44,110. ·
World War I vete rans and
The bowlers were to roll in their Auxiliary will host tpe
the ABC M~sters tour nament at Eighth District meeting at the
Ind1anapohs, Ind ., later th1s Jackson County Barracks No.
month , then take a break 1964 at Coalton on Saturday ,
be[ore the $75,000 B~UilS\':ICk April 20. The district consists of
PBA Na llonal ChampiOnships, nine co nlie Athens Ga llia
the ·start of the sum~er tour, Jacks o~ , L:~rence ,' Meigs:
J une 2 at Downey, Cthf.
Pike, Ross, Scioto-and Vinton .
-'&lt;
All W. W. I veterans and wives
and widow s are in vited.
Registration will sl&lt;lrt at noon
and a program is be ing
MAY HURT CROPS
..:OLUMBUS (UP! ) - Frank- planned . Lunch will be served
lin County Cooperative Exten- by the Barracks and Auxiliary ,
sion Agent Thomas McNutt said Aud rey Gilliland of the
said Tuesday a good thaw Auxi liary.
would allow fo r a better assessment of how the apple crop
fared in Central .Ohio after this
week's last blast of winter.
McNutt said he thought the
wheat crops may have endured
the freezing weather , but felt ·
the cold weather after high
temperatures may hurt the
apples. He said it was roo early
w predict how severe a loss
could be.

CHOICE ,

.

lb.a9~

, Folger's Coffee

ea rned a grade point a verage
of 3. 3 and over for the quarter
and mu st have ea rn ed 15 hour ,
12 nf which were ta ken for a
letter · grade. Area students
listed were:
Rosa lie Reese and Da vid
Wh ite, Ches hire; Th omas
Gumpf, Chester ; Vicki Car r.
Myla Engli sh, Jerry Weave r,
Coo lvi lle ; Ma rlin Osborn e,
Long Bottom ; Daniel Nease,
Minersv ille ; J ohn Gi ll iam,
J ulia Holter , Lucy Holter , John
Johnson, Robert McDonnell,
Linda Rupe, Barbara Shultz,
Steven_ Stanley, Dan iel Will,
Pomer oy ; Sa ndra Sayre,
Por tl an d ; . Keith Ashley,
Racine ; Debra May , Donna
Weber, Rutland and Pamela
Crow'· Syracuse.

US-DA ·

J

FRENCH CITY OHIO VALLEY

WIENERS

pkr.

VAbU UM J'j,CKEO

CARROTS

DOUBLE
C:YMIIDIUM

.

.. . as·

BLUEBE RRY

Salad Tom.atots Tu Y

Easter Lilies, Tulips &amp; Mums
()nly

Orange Drink •

,ai cal Celery ~:
'

FRENCH CITY.

WAGNER'S

r::::

Head Lettuce

Flt&gt;H

Marshmallow Peeps

Cool Whip •

Mir or Mafd S•l• !

Grapefruit •

RODDA

16 oz.
8 PAK

BIR DS EH FROZEN

'

IMDIA N l i VU WH ITE

'

DAD'S
ROOT BEER

tlapcmagua•

19~1b.

Yellow Bunnies
Marshmallow Eggs

ya..

DENNIS GLAZE
Denni s E. Glaze, son of
Belva Glaze and the late Ray
Glaze enlisted·in the U. S. Air
Force on M_a rch 29 and Is
presently undergo ing basic
military · orientatio n at
La ekland Air Force Base in
Texas. Glaz e enlisted in the
Air Force under the Delayed
EnlistmCJJ t program in
December . He will be under
the Air Force Guaranteed
Enlistment p(ogram and will
a tt end n 31 week co m·
mtinication and relay center
equipment repairman school
at Sheppard Air Force Base,
Texas . Glaz e is a 1973
graduate of Meigs Hi gh
School.

89¢
01~~~~~- ~6r.~.....994

Handi Whip ••~'!'"
Strawberries ••~'!'"
Land 0 Lakes Butter~~agc

Good Thru Sat., April 13th at
A&amp;P WEO. limit one .
coupon per fam ily.

RODDA

•
'

5 9do:~.

Easter Candies

·.- I

'

¢

Onl..-

s~

" NN PAGE

ROYAL
16 oz.
CROWN ....:.......~.~~~............

Holiday Helpers

Stuffing Mix •:.::41•
Angel Food Cake !!:::~ 59•
Dinner Rolls ~·8~~ 2 :.'~ 85•
Easter Layer Cake ~~ slz,
Hot Cross Buns ·;:.~ 69·
Pie

'!

_.

LO~

lb.

Jane Parker Bakery

r

.

Clara Smith were Mr . and Mrs.
Basi l Da rst of Colum bus; Mrs.
Smith 's son and fa mily, Mr.
and Mrs. Kenneth Smith and
daughter of Dunnellon, Fla.,
and her s tepson and ramily,
FAMILY COMES
MASON , W. VA .-Rece nt Mr. and Mrs. Rober t Sa unders
visitors in the·--home ·or Mrs. and ch ildren of Ctiarles ton.

THURSDAY • FRIDAY • SATURDAY

By Joanne aud Lew Koch ·
(Note : Today's collmm Is written by Joanne)
Toilet training Is serious business. In spite of the humor that has
always surrounded bathroom, chamber pot and out-house,
peychiatrlsts starting with Freud and mothers of untrained
children hilve ceased w regard training as a laughing ma tter .
According wFreudian theory, if tr11ining Is too harsh, if the
parents' attitude towards the child's failure to remain clean Is
too Sellere, the child might I) become a miser ; 2) regard his body
as unclean, therefore 'SOmething w be ashamed of; 3) become
compulsive about order, insisting that \!lings always be in their
proper place; 4) growup wile compulsive ahoutcontrol, insisting
that people always be in their right place. The making of a tyrant
could be traced right back to the bathroom.
Now comes a book called "Toilet Training in Less than a
-Day" by Nathan Aztin and Richard Foxx, two researchers in the
lieldofbehaviormodilication. They also believe roilet·training is
hnportant business. But they claim children can be trained in
less than i4 hours if the parent uses tbe right tools, encourages
and rewards success. amd waits until the child is ready wmake
a break with diapers. _
Basically what pappens ls thls. The child of approximately 2
trains hio-ller hoUow doD 'ro wet, under the parent's supervision.
· The child Is in training pants, preferably for the first time.' Heshe Is given a quantity of salty snacks and plenty of juice or soda
pop..
'
Wearing pants that are large enough wpull down and pull up
and using an on-the-floor mode l j)otty chair !roll) which the pot
can be removed from the t&lt;!J), the child Is encouraged to go wthe
bathroom, empty and rinsJ; the pot and replace it. The child Is
rewarded with praise every time hHbe completes the process,
but never punished when an accident OCCl)fS . The day of training
is completely and cheerfully devoted to the child. When he-she
reinains dry, the good news Is ann.DI!nced wpeople from a list. which the child has helPed compose-of those who care.
Solne psychiatrists I have spoken · w question the. effectiveness of this system. Others PQint out that the key factor is
the readiness of the child. But let's assume that every child in
Ainerti:a could be trained in one day . What would happen ? If
Freudian theory io correct, nothing sbort of a revolution!
First, there would be the time saved...,.one quar~er of a fulltime work week is what Azrin and Foxx estimate the mother of
111 m~trained child spends ~hanging diapers.
More important would be the boost w the econ~y , as aU the
lillJiw.SS dlaappear and the big spenders come of age. The
diYOrCe rate would go down )!ecause people would grow up
·feelq gocld about their bodies and leas inclined wput down their
mala lor dlllorderllneas Iand · elrtra spending. The desire w
CODtrol would flag, aiid by the year 2000 our main problem would
DOl be war, but lack of leadersljlp and bankruptcy.
·
What one thinks of the jlrospeclli for America, one can
.
Clllly hope !hat Azrin ~nd F~ quickly write a sequel to.
lheir current book : "Unlearning your-olfl trl!lnilig in less than a

. .6

gues ts for a turkey dinner on
Sunday were Mrs. Hay Pullins:
Lisa and Scott, and Mrs. Wilma
Stobart.

PRICES

the Puritan ·ethic

,,

Abr'ams,

Manha ss et, N. Y., both
soph omores a t Mar ietta
College , were weekend guests
_of Roge r's parents, Mr . and
Mrs . Herbert Dixon. Other

lb. 5 9 ¢

.

Alan

Toilet training and

~

University SchotjJ of Music .

music-theater maj or s at Ohi o

ATHENS - Ohio Uni versity
ha s·announ ced its 1974 win ter
quarter dean 's list. To be
listed, a s tud ent must have

Family Lib

'

i\lher1s Music Club and the

baritone - relaled lhe sto ry of
the curse of the witch, the love
of a gir l and two brothers, and
the happy ending, and then
prese nted severa l li ve ly
se lections.
Sally Howell of Oak Hill , the
sopran o. fa kes the role of Hose
in the ope re tt&lt;1 . Sh e had a solo,
the n was joined by Mark
Bitekafer, a baritone, who
plays Hobin , in a dueL Greg '
Li ttle ·Of Westerville, a tenor
singing .the role of Ri chard ,
joi ned Mi ss Howell . and
Bitekafer for one of the rousing
concluding voca l numbers of
the operetta. The three are

22 on dean's list

MASON - AN IMPRESSIVE CANDLELIGHT ceremony
was the setting for a Court of .Awards program at a. recent
meeting of the Mason Junior Gir!Scouls, Troop487.
The scouts were presented the "World Neighbor " and the
"My Troop" badges which were' earned as a troop during
February and March. Badges for individual accomplislunents
were also !ft&amp;ented to Karen Brown, Tanya Cundiff, Connie
Elllson,Nellie Esque, Patty Estep, Susie James, Terri Johnson,
Angie Proffitt, Britta VanMeter, Georgeinna VanMeter, !lena
VanMeter, Toni Siok, Lisa Stewart, Debbie Smith , Usa and Lora
McCauley, and Cindy.Weaver.
FoUowing the program, the scouts walked to the Mason
Village_Green where they played a game of kick balL The People
defeated the Kids by a score of 15 to 11. Participating in a team
·blin game Is a requirement for the "World Games" badge which·
the girls are now working on.
Activities planned forApril include : crafts for Easter, a rour
of the Ohio Publishing Co. and.]'u·Endie-Wei, a Girl Scout field
day, a magician sbow, participation in Bike Safety Week April
22-28, and "Keep AmeJ:ican Beautiful Day," April27. Badge work
for the m&lt;inth include "Cyclist," "World Games," and completion of "My Conununity ."
·

i

of !he Amer ican
Association of Un ive rsit y
Women, Athens Branch, cospon,ors with the Middleport Pomeroy Branch, and were
presented through lhe support
f a gr1 nt fr om the Ohi o Arts
oun cil.
In
their
intr odu cto r y
remarks, Mrs. McDargh a nd
Mrs . J age man e mph ~s i ze d
enric hmen t through music
ex per iences, the opportun ities
offered fu r perso nal and

Ja~eman inv1ted the students
lo attend one of the April 25
perfurmant.:es, 10 a .m . and
12::10 p.m ., of " Hudd igore"
prese nt ed by the Oh io .
Univ ers ity Young People's
Conce rts, co-sponsored by the

Lectures,.
d emonstrt1tions
featured

" Huddigurc '' were prcsen tod

MASON - MR. AND MRS. KENNETH REYNOLDS, Mason,
and Mr. and Mrs. Danny Kearns, Clifton, had a wonderful time ·
on their expense paid trip by jet to Spain. While they toured
Toledo, Valley of the Fallen, and the city of Madrid. The trip was
sponsored by National Life Insurance. One hundred and seventylive persons made the trip.
On their return trip home they flew into Louisville about the
time of the rornado.- According wReynolds the plane.shook "all
over the place." Some of the passengers became ill and one lady
was given oxygen.
The pilot reportedly said "We were all worried on trus
flight. "

day."

'

Vs ·

Your Orderl
992-3502'

$·

(438) 4 lb. CHUC K ROAST
J lb. SIRLOIN ST EAK
2 lb. ROUND STEAK
J.lb. GROUND BEEF
2 lb. CUBE STEAK
2 lb. BULK 'SAUSAGE

'

(439).lf, (7-9
SEMI-BON E LESS
lb. avg .),

$

HAM
.

lb. SL!C ED BA CON
lb. RIB STEA KS
S lb. CHU CK ROAST .
· J lb. GROUND CHU CK
2
J

1 DOZ LARG E EGGS

One Dozen Large Eggs
·.· Free
Each Deal.

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:~~~~;:~;~:~::~S;~'ii;;l Classifieds Get lResults! f__ Business Servic,e s.__
cHoked guns only Asso,ted
meals
3

sweiPERRep-;,-;:--p-:;~~. ::

Sup ples
Dav s Vacuum
1 mile up
Cleaner Store
Georges Creek Road off s tale

route 7

to r ent farm w th
house and l ew ac r es Wou d
c on s 1der
ng un der land

bi.Jr

~hone4 460294

c ontra ct

4 10 li e
- - - - - - - - - - - -- A TO z Mart used turn.shed

!!ippl
c lolh•ng
d shes
and ances
m•sc
Rt
JJ oppos
te
traler cou rt Hartford w

va

41 0 1f c
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - 15
REVIVAL beg nntng Aprt
Beg1n s 7 30
eac
h even
at
Pomeroy
Wes
leyan
Hoing
ness
Chun; h on Rou te 143 one half
mile t'rom Rt 7 bypass Tl1e
evangelist
s Dav d L ght
from Chambers
Ar1zona
There w1l l be spec1al SlnQ'Ing
and playmg and everyone 1s
welcome The pastor 1s 0 Dell
Man ley
4 10 9tc
AUCTION Si!ll~ Thursday 7
p m
Housefu l of ant1que
turn lure dresse r s poster
bed chests lamp table s
n1gh t stands old No 2 d nner
bell good Ch.na dol l many
co l lector s 1fems TV s ap
pi ances more arnvmg to be
sold at th s sale good m er
chand se Po lly s Auct on
corner of Pi:irk and H gh
Street Middleport Btll Wade
Auct1oneer Not responstble
for ace dents
4 10 2t c

__ _ _

------::---"""""' -

PARA SOL Bout que Beaut y
Salon next to Skate A Wa y
Roller Rmk
Announced
spring spec1a1s l Oper cent off
on all permanents and
fros tings
from
A pr I 9
through April JO Call 985 4141
for appomtment
Sandr a
Kerns operator
4 7 12tc
KOSCOT
KOSMETICS
&amp;
wI GS
For a good I ne of
Cosmet •cs fr endl y serv ce
and so m eon e to cha t w th
g ive me a ca ll Helen J ane
Brown 992 5113
3 19 tfC

1971 ELd)NA 3 bedroom 1'2
bath tiD out In L R all new
delu)(e furniture Mlntmvm
down paym ent Can be seen a t
Kingsbury Hom e Sales Lot on
1100 East Mam from 2 p m to
7 p m dall y
4 10 7tc

Busm~

OpportUnities

SERVICE STATION

FOR LEASE
.

T.red of worktng for the
other man be your own boss
With unlimited opportunity.
Th1s 3 bay brtck serv1ce
stahon 1s located 1n Mid-

dleport

Ohto

Altractove

rental, pa1d tra1n1ng school.

Phone collect (614) 373 8411
or 992 5111
RESPONSIBLE
PERSON
Wanted to own and operate
candy &amp; confect1on vendmg
route Metgs County and
surroundmg area Pleasant
bustness H1gh prof1t 1tems.
Can start part flme Age or
tell penence not •mportant .
Requtres car and $1 195 to
Sl 7.50 cash Investment For
defa1ls wnte and mclude
your phone number

l

l·

owner

s tat e

V8engne a utorn at .c lr ans p s tee nng factoryar l ik e
new t.r es rad o c l ean mt er or loca l I owner Cl ~ &amp; a mce

on e

1972 CHEV P ICKU P
8 Fleets 1d e w h •te over bl ue lin

std tr an s

$2~95

PERSON TO STA¥
WITH SICK LADY A
FEW HOURS A DAY

PHONE
992-2358
WA I TRESSE S car hops and
kitchen help Apply n person
Crow s
Ste ak
Hou se
Pom eroy
~ 4 tfc

$1495

std tran s good I r es rad1o step
bumper green fm1 sh clea n 1ns 1de &amp; ou t

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

1970 FOR 0 t ruck F 500 ex
ce llent con d 1t1on 12 ff gram
tight bed 25 000 actua l m1les
Phone 985 3988 Henry Bahr
Long Bottom Oh 10
4 9 3t p

1970 OLDS 'i'8 Lu xury Sedan fu l l
power equ pmenl e~&lt;ce ll e nt
co nd 1t1on
Low mileage
S1 625 Ph one 992 38 63
4 10 4tc
1967 CAMARO small v 8 ex
cellent r:::ond•flon Phone 949
3all
4 10 6f1J

Employment Wanted
GRAVEl. and f eld d rt haul ng
Contact Dale Teaford 992
3224
4 S 6tc

Wanted To Buy
AN TI QUE qu 11s e1 1 u lt!Wt: 1 11
A l so Interested 1n furn•ture
and d shes
Call 991 5262
eventngs or morn•ngs
2 20 tfc
OLD au us o or more cars
II
g1ve $300 p1ece 18 cars , r
more w111 o•ve better pr ce
Ca ll 985 4297
3 2B ttc
tAS I:t pa1.d for all makes an&lt;r
mod els of mobile homes
Phone area code 614 423 9531
4 13 tfc
N u 1 copper MJC raa arors
3Sc red brass 40c battenes
$1 20 M A Hall Reedsv tll e
Oh o "hone 378 6249
3 2.:1 tfc

OR 7

F S1

For Sale

For Rent

YEAR OL D mo b le home 2
bedroom ult l t es fun sh ed
Phone 142 59aO
4 7 61c

) ROOM h~~ o;i60 Butie rnut
Ave nu e n Pom eroy F urn ace
bath
and
ba se m en 1
Phon e
r efer ences r eq u red
992 2258
1 7 61c
FURN I SHED two b ed r oom
mob•le hom e 12x 44 1n back
yard on Spr ng Avenue Ca I
992 3429 Sunday or even ng s
4 10 6tp
H OU SE
5693

n Chesh r e

Ca I 99 2

•
4 10 tf c

FOR RENT
Two offoc es on East
Maon St on Pome roy
Wtll remodel for long
te rm lease Plenty of
off sln~el parkmg and
very good loca toon

INROW CO.
992-3863
or after 6 00-992-5844
2

BEDROOM
fu r ni shed
apa rtm en t utll lt es pad
deposi t
and
r efe r en ces
r equ• r ed No ch ldren or p et s
lnqu re at Ba rleys Stor e

~1dd l eport

1- Three
b e droom
furno s hed apartment on
Pomeroy
Ntce yard
and plenty of parkong
.

INROW CO.
992-3863
or afler 6 Ull-992·5844

For Rent or Lease
BUSINESS bu ld ng n down
town Pomeroy Oh o Call 99 2
J97S or 9q 2 5786
4 2 26 tc

BULLS C""~rn lor sa l e Phone
Char es ~ Harns 843 2693
4 a 7tc

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

3

S bath fu 1 basemen t
SEWIN G Mach n es Br and New 4 ROOM
sto rm door s and w ndows
Z g Zag n n ce walnu t tabl e
h-ome fu ly ca rp ete d Loca t ed
n or g nal carlon s Neve r
773 S rant Stre et M d
on
us ed
Cl ea ran ce
on
74
dlepor t Phon e 992 7240
Mode ls
(O n y
a
f ew
4 9 6tp
ava labl e)
$63 40 c ash or
terms ava I ab l e P hon e 992
BEAUT F UL new ho m es now
2653
under c onstru ct on n pr m e
3 20 lie
oca l on on c t y w a t er and
sew er Cho •ceo f des•gns Wall
ELECTROLU X
Va c u um
to wa ll ca rp el ng a nd a r
Cl eane r s com p lete w th a t
WIt
cond 1 on ng trtcl uded
ta c hm ents cordw nder and
help
arrange
f
nan
c
•n
g
pant spra y Used but Ill I ke
convent ona l oa n s w1fh down
new con d1 1fon
Pay 1.3 4 4S
paym ent low .;~ s 5 pet Oth er
ca sh or budge t pl an av a fab l e
n ew homes availab l e t o
Phone 991 2651
oua l f ed buvers Wtltl N O
3 20 lf c:
DOWN
P AYM ENT
Bu lder s o f W
G
Best
STEREO
Walnut
AM FM
Hom es
Call collec t 614 837
Rad•o 8 tra c k tape com
6540 or 239 0785 or w r te
b nat on Ba l anc e $110 73 or
Grea t Amer1can Hom es In c
term s ava • abe Phone 992
P 0 Box 687 Pomer oy Oh o
3965
45769
2 1.t lf c
3 1 tf c

AM F M stereo r ad ro a ra ck
co mb nat on tap e player oi
s p eaker
sound
s y stem
Balance $108 63 or budg et
terms Ca ll 99 2 3965
4 3 ti c

- -- - -

THE

WISEMAN

----- ---

TW I N
N EEDLE
SEW IN G
MACHINES 19 74 Model n
walnut s l and All f eature s
bu II 1n to make fan cy des 1gns
and do str e tch Sf w ng A ~ u
buttonhol es bl nd h em s etc
cash
or
term s
$63 35
av arlab l e Phone 992 2653
4 3 tf c

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

VACUUM CLEA NE RS Elec t ro
Hyg1ene New D emonstrat or s
has a l c lean1ng atta chments
plu s th e new E l ec tro Suds tor
sham poo1ng c urpet
On l y
cas h
or
te rm s
!i27 SO
ava fable Phon e 99:2 2653
4 3 tf c

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

F LOWER S for Ea ster· large
selec t •on Very cheap mu st
see to bel1eve Smalley s G1ft
Shop Chester OhiO Phon e

985 3537

-AM-----------FM ster eo rad o 8 t ra c k

tape player 4 spe aker sound
system Balance !i109 46 or
use our budg et terms Ca I
992 3965
~
3 1a tt c

MOWERS
SPECIAL

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

AGENt:'\
GallipO li S

RACINE
2STORYPERMASTONE 3
BR
LARGE
MODERN
KITCHEN
I 2
BAT H S
CAR PET
THRO U GH O UT
F ULL BASEMENT 2 CAR
GA RAGE
ALL
O NE
LARGE
F LAT
WELL
LAND SCA PE D
LOT
P R ICED MID TWENTIE S

RUTLAND
L A~GE

3 BEDROOM S
LIKE
NEW

KIT
CARPET

A L UM SIDI NG
OWNER
WIL L HELP
!== !N A NC E
FOR QUA LIF IE D BUYER
PRI CE D
BELOW
MARKET $12 000
OFFICE 446 3643
EVENINGS
Bud McGhee- 446 1255
E M
Ike Wl se m a n- 446

20", 3 H.P.
TURF T RIM

MIDDLEPORT -

4 or 5

All WEATHER
HARDWARE
Under New Management
M~porl

N 2nd

DITCHING SERVICE
W a ter lmes and Power
L m es All work done by the
fool or contract Also dozer
work a nd sepf 1c tanks tn ·
stalled

See or Call
Bob or Roger Jeffers
Day 992 7089
Ntght992 3525
or 992 5232

Wc1l er Electnc Gas Sewer
L1nes
m stall ed
Work
guaranteed
Dozer Backhoe Trucks
Limestone &amp; F1ll Dtrt
CommerCial Res1dent1al
Con struct1on &amp; Remodel

B-K EXCAVATING
COMPANY
777 Pear l Street
Mtdd leport Oh1o
Phone 992 5367 or 992 3861

push typ e

ro tary mower Has Brtggs &amp;
St r atton eng 1ne
7 mch
plast•c wheel s l oop s tyl e
tubu lar handle (22 1982)

b

- --------

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

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

Real Estate For Sale

SIOOOOOO

157 ACRES N1 ce lavmg
Some n1ce t 1mber large barn
for cattle La r ge 4 bedroom
home $360 00 per ac re

ITS TIME FOR MOVIN G
THE BEST RESULTS WILL
BE OBTAINED WITH US IN
SELLING OR BUYING
Il l l I N •
,, , J Pf)(l'\j f'.

t

i

,,1 '•I: I,
I :- ,1 • 11 &lt; 1•

1\ ·,·, o r 11. 11 ·

992-3325 o r
992-3615

POMEROY - Ran ch type 2
bedrooms bath n1 ce krtche n
w1th l ots of cabm et s range &amp;
oven
Ca r peted
ftreplace
garage fu ll basement gas
F A
f urnace
porch

$15 000 00 !I ke new )
MIDDLEPORT - 63acre 2

a YEAR OLD BRICK - Has

1 acre (I eveii
basement

ultl1ty R

( new

$22 500 00
3 YEARS OLD -

add 1f1on)

addot10n) S17 000
INVESTMENT -

YOUR IN SPECTION IN
VITED FOR COMFORT
PLUS PLEASAN T LIVING
SEE THE ABOV E TO BUY
OR SEL L CONTACT US
TODAY
HENRY E CLELAND
BROKER
992 2259
"2 2S68

B1g Capattty
Maytag
A~tomaflcs

2 Speed operatron
Choice of water
t emps Auto water
level control L•nt
F11ter or Power Fm
Ag ltator
Perma Press
Maytag
Halo of Heat

Orvers

Surround
c lothe!
With gentle
ever
heat No hot spots
no overdryl ng F i ne
Mesh Lint F tIter
We Specialize in

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment
'5.55
On Most Amertean Cars

BOB

Arnold Grate

\

Mornmg Report 3

8 30 - Brady Bunch 6
8 55 - News 13

Paul D1xon 4 AM 3 Phil Donahue 15 Abbott &amp; Cos fe flo
8 Fnendly Junchon 10 Wild W1ld West 6 Biograph y 33
f:/lov1e A Gu1de to the Married M an 13

10 30- Jeopardy 3 415 Gambtt8 10

Pomerov

11 30 -

.

'

12 00 -

Pa sswor~ 6 Bob Brauns 50 50 Club 4 News 8 10 13

12 30 -

Spl 1t Second 6 Searc h for Tomorrow 8 10

1 00 - All My Ch 1l dren 6 13 Concen t ra tton 8 News 3 Not For
Women Only 15 What s My L1ne' 10

1 30 - 3 On A Match 3 4 15 As the World Turns 8 10 Lets
Make A Deal 6 13

NELSON

YES!
Now wh1le th e weather 1s
sltll cool ts the best l1me It
can be 1nstall ed at your
conve m ence w1th no wa1tmg
around
tn
hot
muggy
weath er
Phone 992 2550

2 00 - Days of Our L1vesJ 4 15 Gu1dmg L1gh t 8 10 New lywed
Ga m e 6 13

2 30 - Doctors 3 4 15 Edge of Ntghl 8 10 Gtrl tn My Ltfe 6 13

INTERIOR EXTERIOR

J 00 -

4 OD-Sesame Sl 20 33 Mr Cartoon &amp; The Banana Spltls 3

Love A.mencan ~lyle IJ Lucy Show 8 H uck and Yog1 6
M ov 1e Masters of the Congo Jungle 10
4 30 - G1 ll1g an s Is 6 13 Green Acres 3 Bonanza 15 Jackpot

4

CALL CARL NELSON
PHONE 992-5083

SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
REASO NABL E rates Ph 446
4782 Ga ll•pol•s John Russe ll
Owner and Operato r
5 12 tf c

Hazel 8

5 00 -

MISter Rogers20 33

Andy Gnff1th 8 Bonanza J M erv

Grolftn 4 Gomer Pyle USMC 13 Btg Valley 6
5 30 - Hodgepodge Lodge 20 Beverly Hill btl lies B Elec Co 33
Trails West 15

Hogan s Heroes 13

6 00 - NewsB 10 SesameS! 20 ABC Newsl3 News3 4 15

HAM s Au to Rad1o Serv ce
Am Fm ste r eo and tape
players Ou 1ck rei able ser
v1ce Georges Creek Road
Gall i pOliS Oh 0 Phone 446
9304
4 9 7tc

Truth or Con seq 6 Lilias Yoga &amp; You 33

WIN AT BRIDGE

Think Tank is only half full

.-------------DON T fuss don t cuss turn

NORTH IDl
• 86
83

over 1unk automob les over to
us w II pay $5 for o ld 1unk
cars Phon e 1 (304) 773 5890
R vers de Au to Wre c krng
4 9 26t c

10

'+ J

DOZER work lan-d c iarmg b y
the ac r e hou r ly or c ontract
farm ponds roads et c La rge
dozer and op er at or w1th over
20 years expen ence Pullins
Excavat ng Pomeroy Oh10
Phone 992 2478
•
12 19 tfc

WEST

your partner Is

TODAY S QUESTIO N
Instead of passmg West b1d s
three clubs over you r double
Your partner passes What do you
do now"

EAST

l' .QJJ094

What do you do now?
A-BJd fhe or six spade s It

de pen ds on how conservative

A9
&lt;fo AK7532

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

• • 7532

¥KQ4

¥ 652

+862
&lt;foJ08

t74 3
&lt;foQJ 9

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

For Thu rsday April 11

1974
ARIES (March 21 Apotl 19)

By Helen Bollt·l

• •

Plans w 11 not go as smoothly
as~ 1t c pa le d toda y but do I
be rnt ated w th o thers b e
c ause you can 1 molle as
lreely as you d I ke

An Often Unanswered Question

SCORPIO (Oct 24 No' 22)
Do uble c hec k your recmds to
see t lhere s so n e paymenl
you ve ove rlooked I so at
le ld to I promptly

Dear Helen
Our son a handsome clean pohte and thoughtful 25-)Cao TAURUS (Apot l 20 May 20)
SAGITTARIUS (No' 23
old wtll never progress beyond the mentahty of a tlurd grader Ma t er a l demand s w111 b e
Dec 2 1) Be sure the plans
hea .. Jer than usual today You
you ve made for th• s e vemng
due to bram damage
ma y get a I tile peeved w th
are acct plr~b le to your mate
He can functiOn tn a sheltered workshop but he Will a lways ones NhO look to you 10 come
Don t pull any las t m nu l e
up w th what s needed
need someone to care for hlm He !Jves w1th us
surpnse
CAPRI CO RN (Dec 22 Jan
Though he has never had sexual relatwnshops he ts ma tu re GEM INI (May 21 June 20)
Tile o111er parly to,an agree
19) Try no t Ia du ck any 1e
m thts respec t a nd has expressed the hope of ge ttmg marned He nen t •s no t hold ng up h s end
spons b 11 1 es you have today
has met a g~rl at the workshop who os happy to go out wtlh hoon o l the b arga 1n Th s cou ld lead
It wont wo rk They w 1 ca tch
1p w II you aj I he ast m nu te
when my husband and !arra nge a doub le date or ask her over for to heate d wo rd s
CANCER (June 21 July 22 1
AQUARIUS (J an 20 Feb
dinner a t our home Her retardatoon IS s1m1lar to hts They rc t s best you pul ott do ng a
19) At ou t s1de acl v ty 1ha t
chlld-adults, capable of much love
ta sk for anothe 1 th at yo u re
you usual y look up on as tun
My questiOn os should we stone thiS love depnve our son of a sent do ng No one w II be
and games w II be anyth ng
pleased w th the ' esu lt s
bu
t tha i today
nor mal sex life Simply because he IS a menta! cluld ' Should llus LEO (July 23 Aug 22) Keep
PISCES (Feb 20 March 20)
1
g1rllead a barren Jovele&gt;S life when she croes out for affechon
you• 1empc 1 1n c hec k w lh
Be su1e you 1 energ1es and
It's strange how the experts avo1d this ISsue of sex.among the thO se w •lh whom you ~ be
c l lo rts are cha nne ed n a
soc a l •z ng tht S even 1ng
spec hG d ect•on else mu ch o !
retarded A munster suggested a vasectomy for our son Just m Someone
w •ll ru b you the
tod ay s hard work w II be 111
case, ' but d1d not comment on h1s sexual needs or how t he} WI OI Q W'JY
'" I
should he fulftlled Others say Yes retarded people have VIRGO (Aug 23 Sect 22 1
natural sex 101pulses but there tt ends Do theJ mea n the
loveless servtces of a prostttule or masturbation or would the)
rather the whole problems of sexuality he suppressed'
And 1f Jt IS suppressed mtght not th os create further
of keep1ng people off the road, a nd encouragong them to go to bed
problems? - TEXAS FATHER
fot warmth should do something to our ZPG (Zero Populatoon
Growth ) birth rate
Dear Father
l predict we II see a rash of pregnant women thJS s ummer
Why shouldn t the retarded have normal sex ltves - a nd woth
for lets face tt everyone doesn t use the pill And a nse m
people they love, who can return that love '
populallon IS JUSt what we don t need n ghl now wtth a lmost all
A vasectomy (or a tubal ligatwn) should be consodered tn conunoditoes m short supply
cases of severe relardatwn Also the mentall) slo\\ must be
What do you thmk ? - NOT KIDDING (HOPEFULLY )
protected agalllSt explmtatwn or seductwn
Seems to me Ute hest protection" ould be to encourage lovtng Dea r NKH
relatwnshtps between persons ltke your son and his froend
You forget one thing Ru nawaJ mflatJon keeps the stork
Cons1der this U these two could both work and hve at the shelter
from the door Couples aren t apt to he careless about conor m another stmtlar envtronment, then why not marrtage') to acept10n when they remembe r ot \\ Ill cost them some $100,000 to
Perhaps they're more able thap )OU thmk to fun ctoon on thetr rmse another chtld - H
own - II

+++

Dear Helen
Gasolme shortages have been With us now for severa l
monUts together with lowered heat for homes The combmallon
6 30 - New s3 4 CBS News B 10 Your Fufure I s Now 33 N BC
News 15 ABC News 6 Room 222 13
7 00 - Beat the Clock 4 What s My L me 8 News 6 10 Elec Co
20 Truth or Conse quen ces 3 Lets Make A Deal 13 Sport s
Desk 15 Th e Curta us Case o f V1lam n E 33
7 30 - Hollywood Squares 3 W ld Kmgdom 10 To Te ll the
lruth6 0zZiesGrls8 Bea l l heCiock 13 Zoom20 Dea ler s
Cho1ce &lt;1 Johnny Mann s Stand Up and Cheer IS Read•ng
For The Classroom Teac her J3
8 00 - The Walton s 10 Fl1p Wtl son 3 4 15 Chopper One 6 13
Advoca tes 20 33 Billy Graham Cr u sade 8
8 30 - Ftrehou se 6 1J
9 00 - Ironside 3 4 Kung Fu 6 Black Journa l 20 Conll• ds ol
Harry S Trum an 33 Ea st er W1th Ora l Roberts 3 5 M ov 1e
Call Me Madam 8 20t h Anm ve r sa r y ol Rock and Roll 0
Black Journa l 20
10 OG - New s 20 What Is Man 33 Str ee t s of Sa n F r anc sco 13
Mu s1c Country U SA 3 4 15 An Even• ng Wdh Edgar A ll en

Poe 10
10 30 - Day AI Ntghl 33

II OO ~ New s13 Janaki 3J News3 &lt;1 6 15
11 30 - Johnny Ca r son 3 15 4 College G~r l o r the Yea r 6 13
M ov1es Twil i gh t of Honor 8
That Lady 10
1 00 - Tomorrow3 4 News13 TakeFrveForlll e 15
2 00 - News d

7 00 p m
7 30 p m

8 30 p m 9 30 p m -

t..able Channel Ftve
Loca l N ews
Com edy
Gunslingers
Underwor ld

JI&amp;MID~;tk.l ~··-IIJ ,_, 9"Unscramble these four Jumbles.
one letter to each square, to
form four ordtnary words

I TENKO

!

srn(lller

than

m

ht ~ t

pe n od

the

J ea r

Agn~,;u llUI c Depa r t m ent r eport
s ll o \,cd
toda,

loo

~
by THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS

DOWN

1 Spa n1 sh

or

belle
5 Pamter

s

ne ed
11 Wmf,!hkt
12 Unwillin g
13 12 pomt
t\' pe
14 Precepts

15 Net her

~

1 Kmd
S} rup
2 Pros pcc
IJVC
ut1zcn

3 La tt d

Cregar
role
(3 II&lt;IS I

lands

4 All ar con

nver

5 Paten

16 Apt ecc
17 Old
Chmcsc

km gdom

18 Con test
JOiner

20 Son of
Noah
21 Sea rch
22 French
port
23 Super

Yesterd ay

stc ll atJon

t 1ally

&lt;tel n c
GW :nd oiT
7 Snu gger)
8 In one s

brsl
duds

(3\\dS)
9 Lover of

beauty

10 Summ u 1

s Answer
26 Th1ck

zat wn

soups

16 Dreall c

28 Molococ s

heav1lv
19 1 cutomc

29 Cornell

2•1•

North

East
Pass
Pass

South
I+

" ' u ua c 11. noe wo rk
ponds and sepl•c tanks dtt
cllmg servrce top soil ft ll
d 1rt
limestone
B&amp;K E x
cavat ln g Phone 992 53 67 or
99 2 J861
9 1 tfc

3.t.

Pass

5'

Pas.s

Pass

Pass
Pass

6+
Pass

4NT.
SNT.
6NT.

uut.tK

Pass
Pass

s1gn

22 l't ophct
23 \\ ISCO n
s II Ci tY
24 J\ u c lcu~
25 T :1 stc •clls h

30 Go by
Sh ip
35 Hostelry

36 Lnmb
k1n s cr)

man s
nom de

plume

24 Y1eld
25 French
lather
26 V ers1flet
27 Black
cuckoo
28 Wronkles
31 Cut off
32 Metroc
land
measure

33 Toolbox
34 Be
amb1ttous
36 1,760
)ards
37 Hence
forth
38 Robert

~LESJNG
] I

I [j
I

[J I

AXYDLBAAXR
Is LOI'iGFELLOW
-40

PA'I ATll::NTION - II
\ CC:;JUL..D 1!!5E.COME 5 1LEN'T

CRYPTOQUOTES

I;::::f&gt;.:=::.A:=:::==·
FIRMON
V1

the
the above eartoon.
"t r 1 I I I J"

Now.......,.
cln:led letten
J
J
to form lhe IIUJiriH anawer, u
==·==-~••uneated by

I rr.r ._ Sllll'lliSI UISYI1Il~at

(Aa.wen toa:turnnt".l
Yetlent.,. •

Jumbko•

I

One letter Simply &gt;lands 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 \\ Ortis are al l
htnts Each day the code letters aoe dolfeocn t

PUPPY AGILE SQUIRM CAUGHT

Annrerr What 1/0U m1ght find

A STAR PUPIL

1n

lUI a.trorwm11 cltu&amp;-

MSD

MDBDVEGWD

KNRDV

MSD

IGJBH VKNBBDJ, FM FV GABC MSD
KFEJGVEGWD
BNJXDJ -X
R

MSNM

KNRDV

DI CK fRACY
BUT. UNFORTUNATE!
LAWOING 141M NEA

LI'ZZ'S 5 HOE!

..;

Openong lead- •Q

GREAT
COUNTRY

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
CA P1 AIN E ASY

A little knowledge ts ltkely
to be a dangerous t hong to
possess
The ordonary bndge player
would count 10 tncks m top
cards and see that the club
suot would gtve htm hts slam
as long as ot broke 3 2 He
knows that su1ts are s upposed
to break 3 2 and after wm
mng the spade lead our or
donary player would ba ng
down dummy's ace and kong
of clubs and take the slam to
the bank
A man With a little
knowledge would know that
sutts break 3 2 68 per cent of
the lime He would also note
thattf East s hould hold eother
the kmg or queen of hearts or
both of those cards that two
heart fmesses would lead to
12 tncks wtthout havmg to
try the clubs and that the
chance of that play succeed
ong would by 76 pe r cent
He would say to h•mself a
76 per ce nt chance os be tter
than a 68 per cent chance and
try two heart fonesses Thos
ttme he would lose both
fonesses and h1s slam
An expert would use the
same line of play as the or
donary player He would cash
one cluti and when both oppo
n'e nts followed he would
know that the chance of a 3 2
break had rosen to 71 per
cent Then he would cash the
second htgh club
The reason •• that 1f clubs
fa1led to break all mtght not
be lost lle' could s!JIItry the
hearts If East held the four
clubs the slam would sttll
make tf the heart honors
were d1v1ded If West held the
four clubs the slam would
make 1f East held both heart
honors All m all lhe chance
for success on the combona
!Jon play would by 82 per
cent

STEREO
92.1
WMPO-FM

f

7;.01 OMOBILE Insu ra nce bl!en
cancelled?
Lo st
your
oper ato r s I cense Call 9'92
7428
6 15 tfc

---------------=W ILL TR lM or cu t trees and
shrubbery A l so cl ean out
basements att1cs etc Call
949 322 1 or 742 444 1
3 14 26tc

Mtdd l~porf Pomerov

We Have Family Size
Used Cars
That Deliver
BIG GAS MILEAGE
THI~

IS A

Fi1\E 1lJI\e
USED CAR

'111
IGNITION SYST€M M€€TS
OUININ€ TUN€
SPECIFICATION FOR
GA50UN€

ECOOOMY

4 Dr atr cond vmyl top, power steenng &amp; brakes Only 1431
easy m1les Showroom clean

1971 Uncoln Continental ................. '4995
Mark Ill Fully equopped Ortgtnal black llnlsh like new
Extra sharp

1972 Ford Gran Torino .....................'1995
4 Dr sedan 302 V 8 eng•ne power stee ring one loca l owner

1973 Ford FIOO lh ton................ ::-..'2695
Pickup 302 V 8 enalne Low m1leage One owner

•

LZ,B;I:l•!MiQU
The b•ddmg has been

West

North

East

•

I

'fYYOU

00 ~

T

)

E IJoLI:SH

new

outfit'

THE BORN LOSER
FOR YOU~ INFORMATION ;tHAT ' O
:OlAND
PARADISE' NON HA5 POLLUTIO~SLUMS,

tJ0 THIS IS WI
DIAL-A- PRA'i6R
BUT I R)i&lt;01V£

WHATEVER IT I&lt;"
~()J'VE CD-If

ALLEY OOP
NOTONL'i DtClWEG ITA
GOOD PR.ICf;. F0 DOGPATCH
-BUT WE. GITS A FREE
TRIP TO &lt;.JAPAN ~, ~--'

GLORV BE II IT'S
FEEL THAT
THAR

SHARPER'N A
RAi:ORBACK HOG

KEERFOL 11

•• 2.
,
'

..._____

AOOr&lt;A LOO k

TEACH YOU

a

South

s•

OLITE 50 ? M00THLY FOR EASY

UND E!&lt;5 TAPJ D

10

Dble
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass
You South hold
tiD, 54 'A)&lt;Q83 t AJ

Kutland

ntce

\5 THE S E~ MVMPH PL OW-5 M00THL'r ~) C I.Z 0 $5 THE SOUTH
PAC Fl( TH NG5 ARE;f.J T GOI'-iG

TM TIZ.'/1 '-JG TO

A'l( BLADE, MAW

{N EWSPAPER Eo"iTERPRISE ASSN I

MANY MORE

Mt.l
fee t
feels
naked '

so I
bouc)ht
~ou

I

FM

ESDVMDJMGA
Yeslerday's Cryploquote THE WHOLE CONCEP I OF
DEMOCRATIC SOCIETY RESTS UPON AN INFORMED
PEOPLE -HENRY T HEALD
&lt;C 187' Klnr Featureo Syndlutt,1ne)

2'

Pass
Pass

nrc

f orte

No ne vulnerable

WeSI

s(une
an

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- He1e's how to work 1t

t~VE G-OT TO

+

Apnl11 1974
fh s year w I nd you explor
r g new 1 llerests and neet ng
types o l peop e th 1\ you
hav e n 1 assoc ated wtlh
be fore Trave l s I ke l y lor you

or A l an

OF HO:O.E"
MY HIPS ARE
IN RATHE~

&lt;fo6 4

SHORTER SUPPLIES
WAS HI NGTON IU PI )
Cons umer supphes of fres h
'egct&lt;Ibles fr om Aprol th rough
J une w1 1l be about 5 per cent

39 Deserved
40 Turkish
flag

·- - - ··--

SOUTH
• AK
¥ A 10 9 7
KQJ105

Rl::ADY M l )(
c ....... RETE
del1vered r1ght to
your
pro1ect Fas t and easy Fr ee
est1ma t es Phone 99 2 J284 ,
Goeg l e n Ready M1X Co
M iddl epor t Oh o
6 30 tfc

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

Pnce 1s

3 30- One L1fe to L1 ve 6 13 Ph1f Dona hue 4 How to Surv•ve A
Mar.naoP 3 15 Match Ga me 8 10

ROOF PAINTING

Mtddlep ort 0

Another World 3 4 15 Gener a l Hosp ital 6 13

Roght 8 10 Ltltas Yogt and You 20

PAINTING

All WEATHER
HARDWARE

Celebnty

Sweepstakes 3 15
12 45 - Elec Co 33
12 55 - NBC News 3 15

All work guaranteed

AIR CONDITION NOW?

Only 31 467 loc.:rl mll~:~e;

Br-ady Bunch 13 Hollywood Squares 3 4 15 love of L1fe

10
11 55 - CBS Ne w~ 8 Dan Imel s World 10

Area s M os t
Reasonable Pnce s

Monday thru Saturday
606 E Mam Pomeroy 0

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

11 00 - W1 zard of Odds 3 4 15 Password 13 M 1k e DoUglas 6
Now You See II a 10

Jackpot 3 15

Open 8 Ttl s

-

9 30- Jo Telllhe Truth 3 Tattletales a
9 55 - Chuck Wh1te Reports 10
10 00 - D 1nah Shore 3 15 Joker s W tld 8 10 Com pan y 6

Pamting A Specialty

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

N 2nd Ave

w Mam

RUTLAND FURNITURE
I

Farmt1me 10

8

- GUARANTEEDPHONE 'l92 2094

Carv•ce

'

Co lumbus Today 4

Wrsh 6
7 30 Rocky&amp;. Bu llw• nk le 13 New Zoo Revue6
8 00 - Capt Kangaroo 8 10 Sesame St 33 New Zoo Revue IJ
J efl s Coll1e 6
8 25 - J ack Lala nne 13

Ph 992 5271

Red Car:pet

!

F1ve

7 00 - Today 3 &lt; 15 News 8 10 Dtck Van Dyke 13 Make A

Gene's
Body Shop

MAY TAG

742 4211

11 1974
00 - Sunnse Semmar 4 Sacred Heart 10
15 - Ame n ca s Problems 10
25 - Farm Report 13
30 - B1ble Answers 8 Pattern for Ltvmg 13 News 6
M1nutes t o L•ve By 4

6 35 6 45 -

1974 Chevrolet V8 Malibu ................ '3695

--~------- ~ - - -,------

•

6
6
6
6

VW AND UAISLJ
SPECIALIST

Stop m and say Hello Brmg
rn thi S ad for a Free Gift

2 story

frame
tra 1le r
hoo k u p
severa l lot s on Ma ln St
(food fu tur e} Make an o ffer

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

..

THURSDAY APRIL

Frame

kJfchen has lot s of c~bmets &amp;
range lar ge dm1 ng 3 SR
bath ut l 1fy R ca rport 1/ 2
ac re
all elecfr t c
(new

For Rent-

'

RON AND
KAREN THOMAS

-------

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

~

13

Phone Stanley 949 2789
Bumper to Bumper
Servtce
Foretan Cars We lcome

EXCAVATING do zer l oa~er
and bac kh oe work
septic
tank s 1nStj!llled dump frucks
and lo boys for h 1re Will ha ul
fil l d r t top so I I m estone
and gravel Call Bob or Roger
Jeffers da y phone 992 7089
ntght phone 992 3525 or 992
5232
._ 2 11 tfc

BARBS

-----------~-L

Now under new
management

---- -------

For Sale or Trade

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

Mtddleport 0

- - ----------;:---

eve rythmg
3 BR
bath
l ove l y kitc h en
bu 11t n
dmmg R HW fl oor s and
ca r pe t mg Det garage over

POMEROY - Renovating fh1 s
2 bedroom home Na t gas
furnac e and fu l l ba sement

Open M nd 20

10 OO - Do c EI I •ol6 13" Ko1ak8 10 News20
11 00 - News 3 4 6 8 10 13 15 Day A t N1ght JJ
1 JO - JohnnyCarsonJ 415 Gu •nnesBooko fWorldR ecords6

DON'T DRIVE A
GAS GULPER
OR A GAS HOG

BUILD I NGS FOR SALE Sea led
b1ds wil l be r ece•ved on
----~
certat n build ngs t o be ----- ~AROBIC
r emoved from the prem 1ses SE PTIC TA NKS
on t h e followmg farm s Ida E
S EWAGE
S YSTEMS
Den1son
Guy L
Swadley
CLEANED
REP AIR ED
M IL LER
SA NITATION
Ja c k E P ckens Clarence E
STEW AR T OHIO PH 662
Grover B1dS to be mailed to
Oh10 Power Company P 0
3035
Bo x 328
M c Connelsville
I 0 4 He
Oh o
bef o r e
m 1dn1ght
TANK S c leaned
Sa turday Apnl 21 19 " Th e SEPTIC
Company reserve "' ltlf&gt; r g! t
Moder n San 1tatlon 992 39S4 or
992 7349
to accept or re,ec " 1y t:J o or
10 23 tf c
any part o f any
d
- "'r
further mformallo r "' nd b
at 2a6
II pan r ~,. r!) a u nouses
sh eet s ca l Joe Ram s
5051 Me •g s M•ne of So uTI ern
ree e~ nitl
~"all 992 2532
Oh•o Coal Compa ny L angs
or 992 5482
v1 l e O h 10 Monday thru
4 4 7tp
Fr day 8 am to 4 p m or ----- - ------ ~ -phone Oh10 Power Company
SEW IN t:. MACHI N ES Repa 1r
M cC onne l sv li e Oh o 962
serv1ce all makes 992 2284
452 5
The Fabrtc Shop Pomeroy
4 10 lie ..-J Au.thor zed S•nger Sales and
Serv1ce We Sha rp en Sc sso r s
HOUSE n Syracuse J r ooms
3 29 tf c
and bath upsta trs over acre
of l and Remode l ed on ns1de
C BRADFOW.D Auct iOneer
Worksh op n back Phone 992
Comp lete Serv1ce
3135
Phone 949 3821 or 9A9 3161
4 10 6tc
R acme Oh o
Cntt Bradford
S 1 tfc

bu sm ess bulldmg on R t 7
Excellen t loca l on for t he
future Nat ga s furna ce 2
farge olfJCes (a 1r cond1f 1oned)
and 2 l arge storag e rooms 2900

Sq Ft $1250000

AU WEATHER
HAROWARE
N 2nd Ave

33
10
13
10

1 00 - Tomorrow) 4 N ews 13 Titke F ve For L rle 15
2 00 - News 4

und er New Management

New brtck

$1800000
VERY NICE -

•

the

9 00 -

story f rame 4 8 R bath
dtnmg R part ba sement
porches trailer h ookup
large garden space gas F A
fu r nace
out
buildtng
prtvate loca t ion $12 900 00

bedrooms lots of c loset s n1ce
large l 1v ng a nd d1n m g room s
Na ~
ga s
furnace
Fu ll
b ase men t and 2 garages

$52~D

1971 KAWASAKI 350 Endu r o
Good con d1 t1on Phone 992
6165
4103tc

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

J;or Free Est1mate mqu1re
now about a beaultful ne w
roof m tash1on colors

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

HAY tor sa l e SOc per ba te
Phone 985 3539
4 4 12tp

moto r

IS YOUR ROOF
LEAKING?
IS IT COLOR FADEO?

9 ?6 1C

CLELA N D
FARM S
A ND
GREEN H OUSE A va r ety of
WE ARE p1ck ng up a p1ano n
319 6
cabbage and tomato plan ts
your area an d wou ld like
for sa l e A so broccol and -L-~------'----...1
so m e respons•b l e par t y to
cau l rflowe r
swee t pepper s
take over payments
Cal l
ho t pepper s eggplants heaa
Cred t Man ager (614) 77 2
l e ttu ce
and
EA STER
5669 or w r t e 260 East Ma1n
FLOWERS
pa nsy
mum s
Str eet Ch III COthe Oh 0 45601
aza l ea
hydrangea
4 7 lie
geran ums petun1a s sev eral
k•n d s of hang ng ba sket s
2 YEAR old ut i ty bed for
Gera drne Cl el an d
Racme
p1ck u p
truck
Exce lent
Oh10
cond•t•on Phone 1 (304 ) 773
3 29 tf c
S503
4 7 6t c

HOOVER por table washer $75
Phone 992 5514
4 10 4tc

Ph 992 2174

Poltee Su rg eon J On t he Money 4 Ant1q ues 20 Beat
Clock. 13 Ep1 sode Act 1on 33
8 00 - B •l l y Moyers Journal 20 Wa sh•ngton Connect on
The Cowboys 6 13 Chase 3 .t 15 Sr~ndy tn Dt sney litnd 8
8 30 - Theater rn Am e fl ca 33 Mov 1e Murder or Mercy 6
9 00 - Mov1e Ass1gnment to Kil l 3 4 IS Perry Como 8

'
Stop In and See
Our
Floor Dosplay

Ma son W Va

Us.

7 30 - To Tell the Truth 6 Sale of th e Century a The Judqe 10

FURNITURE

MATER IAL S CO
771 5554

'

13 I Spy 15

and

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.
Pomerot

WEDNESDAY APIUL 1D 1974

6 00
NE&gt;ws 3 ~ 8 10 15 ABC News \ 3 Sesilme St 'l0 Per
sona l •ty &amp; Behn v ora l Developmen t 33 Truth or Con seq 6
6 30
News 3 .J 6 8 10 15 Room ')'}2 I J
7 00 - What s My Lrne 8 Truth or Con se q 3 Bent the Clock 1
.. Elec Co ?0 News 6 10 Know Your School s 3D J•mmy Den n

OFFICE SUPPLIES

Bu 11t to Your Specs
De l1vere d t o Job S1te

Nathan BI""S
.,

BEDROOM hou se m M d
d l eport
New k tr:t en il r d
b::~th
a pp l anc c s n c uded
C'l ll 991 5J 0

CLOSE O U T on n ew Z g Zag
Se w ng Ma ch1n es For sew ng
s tr el cll fabr cs bu ttonhol es
fan c y des gn s et c Pan
s ghtty blemt shed CllO ce of
c arry 1ng c as e or sew n g
stand $69 80 c a sh or tern s MODERN hou se , 11 l e fr om
av a ta bl e Phon e 992 26SJ
Pome ro y 3 bedroom s wall to
4 7 ti c
wal c:1rpe t arge r ec room
l arge pa t o ca l 992 52 48
E L E CTR OLUX Swe ep er del ux e
b efor e 3 p m a lt er 3 ca l l 992
model
Compl et e w th ull
343 6
c l ea n ng at ta c h me nt s and
4 7 12tc
u s e s pap er b a~s 51 gh l y used
but c l eans and look s like new 4 ACRES o f l and on Sta t e 1A3
W 11 se l for $37 25 or ter ms
Ph on e 99? 3640
available Phon e 992 2653
4 9 nc
&lt;1 7 lf c

1 5 7tc

For Sale

Bu lldoze r Rad ator to the
smallest Hea ter1 Core

You won 1 lake kmdly to an
ou ts der who 11 t ry to tell you
ho w to run your lam•ly
Frankly I s none ol he1 bus
ness
LIBRA (S ept 23 Oct 23)
Be ng o verly mpul s ve and
IIY ng 10 gel QUICk CO nrr I
ments a1 th s I me w ll get you
more re]ec l •ons than ac ccp
lance Be p atten!

Television Log

__,l.

992 2094
606 E Mam
Pomeroy

RadlaforSpectaltsl

I 7 5 C

15 - The Daily Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , ApraliO, 1974

POMEROY
•
HOME &amp; AUTCS

F r om the largest Truck or

Rea state or ae

VER N A Dav s 5J4 acres n
Rutland To wnsh p on Sa ndh 11
Road t ve r oom hou se barn
an d two oulbu ld ngs w I b e
sold to the h rg hest b dder at
9 30 a m Sat urday Apr I 13
974 a t th e off ce of 0 Br en &amp;
0 Br en attorney 100 Cour t
Pomerov
Oh o
St ree t
Canno t be so ld tor less t han
app r a sed v alu e of $2 000 00
For furth er nf or m il t on ca ll
992 2720
4 S Me:

h p used outb oar d
Cal l 985 3989 after 6 1970 BSA Starftre exce llent
pm
cond t 1on H er eford bull and
4 9 3tp
corn p lanter Phon e 14 2 3941
4 10 5tc
,..O LD furnit Ure"" oak tab l es
POMEROY LANDMARK
c locks tee boxes brass beds STARCR AFT trail ers and fold
d•shis
desks
or
comp
lete
Jack W Carsey Mgr
downs
25
pet
off
on
Reese
Department BIIV
hou seholds Wrtte M
D
~ tcheS
20 pet
off on
Phone 992 2181
3'38 Meadowbrook Rd
M tier Rt 4 Pomeroy Dh tO
aulomat c awnm gs 14 11 feet
St Louos Park MN SS426
call ~92 7760
Camp Conley Star craff Sales
.
5 1J tfc
Rt 62 North of Pt Pleasan t 1974
ZIG ZAG
SEW I NG
beh nd Red Carpet In n
-~ T"""~- ------ ---'MACHINE S left n l ayaway
bLu upr gn T ptanos
Any
4 10 3tc
All built n to buttonho le do
con d tton Pay ng $10 cas h
stre tc h sew1 ng and fan cy
- -- NOTICE OF SALE
st •tch ng Pay j ust S68 75 cash
Wr te
g tve dlrectrons
to STRAWBERRY. plants Char i e
Offers will be rece1ved for the
WITTE N PIANO CO
P 0
or terms ava1 a~le Tr ade ns
Foster
Rt
2
Racme
Otno
real estate owned by th e l ate
accepted Phone 992 2653
BOX 18 Sard1S Oh o 43946
Phone 247 2309
Carrie Me inhart known as 124
3 13 30tc
3 27 ti c
3
31
12tc
Locust Street Pomeroy Oh 1o -------------=--If the Offices of Crow Cro w &amp; JUNK
Autos
comp l ete
VACUUM Cl eaners Br and new
Porter Attorneys at Law
del•vered to our yard We p1 c k PONIE S bgandsmalt N1 c e
tank type mode l s w th s
var
e
l
y
good
fo
r
k
ds
See
Pomeroy Ohio at 10 00 AM on
up a uto bOd1es and buy all
attachments Only S24 40 cash
them
anyttme
Syracuse
Call
Saturday Aprtl 20th 1974 Any
kinds of sc rap metals and
or t erms ava1 lab le
New
Ralph Lavenda r 992 saa8
person WIShing to v!ew th e
1ron R 1der s Salvage State
Upr gh f models $29 90 c ash or
property may do so by ap
4 4 6tc
Route 124 Route 4 Pomeroy
terms ava !ab l e
Tr ad e ms
polntmel'} t by callmg 992·5132
OhiO Phone 992 5468
accoepted Phone 992 2653
Charles Jacob Me nhart
3 28 12tp -v ROCERY busmess for sale
3 27 ttc
Executor of the Last W111
-~-- -----~ ---Build ng for sa l e or lease
and Testament of Carr e
NOW ready c abbage l ettuc e
Phone 773 5618 from 8 30 p m
Me!nhart Deceased
and pans es
potted and
to 10 p m for ap porntment
(~) 10 11 2tc
baskets of Easter flowers now
~
320tfc
1969C"REVRO LE t ~door hard ----- ~ ---- --- ~bloom•ng Hubbard s Green
top Impala Good Gond lt•on
house Syrac use OhiO
FERGUSON 30W it h two 12 mch
new t~res battery no rust
3 31 ffc
plows
E ~c ellent
cond1tlon
$695
Char l es Bissell Long
Phon e 949 5953
Bottom Ohto 949 5 182
4 9 6tc EXCE L SIOR Sa lt Works E
II' PHIL PASTORET
4 10 4tc
Marn St Pomeroy All kin ds
cuB 154 Low Boy l•ke new w1th
of sa lt water. pellets water
Summer s comtng - the
60 •nch mower Phone 949
nuggets block salt and own
ttme you can see all the TV
59~'"'1
Oh o R1ver Salt Pt'lone 992
shows you mtssed last "tnleo TRAILER space for rent •n
4 9 6tc
3a91
Racrne Phone 992 2429 or 992
SO L EN S
Husky
1250
Anyo~• with a new bab y o&lt;o 2838
Hydrastat 1c lawn tractor wtfh SI NGER sewmg machtnes 1972
the house IS apt to be a sleep·
3 29 tfc
48 rnch blade and mower
model rn beaut1ful walnut
-----------------~
walker
Phone 949 5~5 3
cab1net Makes desrgn st 1t
!I" AND ~ ROOM furni'shed and
4 9 6tc
ches zig zag
buttonholes
unfurnished
apar t ments
blmd hems etc L1ke new ...
Phone 992 5434
BEAUT'IFUL wa l nut ste reo
Only S89 95 C,all Ravenswood
A 12tfc
rad•o am fm 8 track tape
273 9521 or 273 9893 after 5 00
comb1nat on Balance 5109 36
12 7 tfc
PRIVATE meetn g room for
or terms availab l e Phone 992
any orgl!ln rzalion phone 992
3965
"NI:::W ~ te droom home l'71b8 1h
3915 ~
4 9 tfc
garage basement on Gravel
3 11 trc
Hil l Middleport Natural gas
LOSE we1ght With New Shape
arready rn
Phone Da le
Newest fad foo the young FURNISHED apartment
:r ablets an~ Hydrex water
Dutton 9-92 3369 evenlng6
adults
only
Phone
992
5592
sel gomg to the gas sta roon to
Pill s Dutton Drugs
9•2 2534
I
4 9 tfc
4 9 3t c
wafch !he pumps go dry
'

5

10 lt c

ROOM house and bath two
car qa r age 2 story on Ca r son
Road
n Me~:)on
Contac t
Ru sse l Ball 773 S606
3 12 lfc

FOR RENT .

1968 TOYO TA J eep Excellen t
condt t on Phone 949 ~761
4 9 7tc

of

H 0u s E
n
Monk I y
Run
Pomeroy
Par
ally
1
rem ode ed new qas f u rnace
Phone 992 2201

1

8 F lee ts1de V 8 eng

NE ED babystter rtght away
tor 2 small g rl s ages 2 and 4
to babys1t •n home Rus t1 c
HillS 7 45 to 5 15 Call 992
7018 after 5 30
4 9 3tp

Auto Sales

oul

rad o good

1969 CHEVROLET PICKUP

4 9 3tc

ONE female some bookkeepmg
ex per.en ce typ1ng one who
meets publ c well excel lent
work ng c ondllr on weeks
pa i d va c at•on per year
Ho sp tal •zatlon and ltfe n
sur an ce prov i ded along w tth
working Lrn! form s Please
se nd p er sonal resume to BOx
72rJA c o The Oa ly Sentin el
Pomeroy Ohio
4. 10 4tc

transl e rrurl

Phom 997 5071

IE

EXPERIENCED
Rad•·a

U nfur1 s ted

w s w l 1r es w hee l cove r s r ear step bumper A n •ce one

TIGHT BUDGET ? Add to th e
fam ly
Income
s erv ng
cus to mers n ear your home
Excell ent •ncome potent al
F l eX Ibl e hou r s Wr te Per
sonal Shopper Department
Bo~&lt;
10 Watkms Products
In c
W nona
M nnesota

559a7

Old

J

1795
$

HELP WANTED

1969 FORD P 1ckup truc k Phone
992 3640
497tc

Mob1le Homes For Sale

month s

------- - - Help Wanted

-----------VARO Sa te a t 143 Harr sonv1lle

CA L:. L Poll y s Aud 10n or s top by
to get r 1d of those un wanted
ttem s Se ll It th e auction way
537 H lgh Str eet M•ddleport
99 2 3509 Open 9 a m to 5 p m
MQndey Wednesday Thurs
day Friday unt11 noon
3 13 30tc

larcH! i'lun d r; room 1 pou t on
1 v1ng room 12 x :t 4 Add A
Room 9 r&lt;&gt;OIY1 S total Only 3

A

---------

CHILD Ss ze 14 milrOOnplad
CP O 1a c ket co nt a.n ng pa1r ot
gold wre r1m glasses n
pocket Los t at Forest Acre
Par .k
Ph on e " 99 2 J6 40
Reward
4 9 St c
- --- - -- --r- - WILL the peop le whO gave me a
nde from A then s to Pome r oy
w th th e re d GTO
baby
named T eddy and th e dog
named Shaggy pl ea se phone
Glen
Ca laway
40 We st
Carpenter At hens OhiO S93
363 2 Be l ieved to have left
gla sses n your au tomob1l e
4 9 6t c

4 10 3tc

GET YOUR handsaws sharp
ened or keys made at Eddte s
Workshop 1'h mtles west of
Rout ~ 33 at Darw1n on State
Route 681 Phone 992 2386
4 9 3tc

M0f or co.

au•LITY

4 10 6tc

9~~mec 0 ':":',;'"/bcd~o~':n:

Pomeroy

2 SIGNS
Of

1970 CHEV E LLE STA WAGON

pm

ELIZABETH Sm th Route 1
Reed svi ll e Oh io w II be
married at fhe Bald Kn ob s
Church
Me1gs
County
Saturday
n •ght
7 30
Recept1on to be held after
m~rrlag e
All
fr~ ends
welcome
4 9 3tc

ca

2471ll 4

lost

SHOOTIN G
Mat ch
Corn
Hollow G un Club turn f rst
r•oht after Mtles Cemetery
Rutland
F a ctory choked
guns only Su ndi!ly Ap n l 14 1

Road Chi ld r en s c l o th.n g
mens and women s old
record s from the SO s 60s
Ann1versary clock
sewmg
mi!l c h n e Wednesday and
Thur sdav Dhon e 992 7187 I f
•n case of nun w II be held
ms•de
4 9 2tc

®~

Wanted
WANTED

F R f SI
or en or ae

•

'IOU AlliE HOME. ESTEEMED
HARRIDAN -AND WHE:N 'IOU
GET TO JAPAN, YOU L..L STII.L
BE HOME'(

AN 'fOU
THOUGHT
I FERGOT
'lORE
BIRFDAY

l'"

UMPA
J U&lt;&gt;T TOLD IM TGO JUMP

TO TAKE A BATH

IN TH LAKE:

�•

\

•

:~~~~;:~;~:~::~S;~'ii;;l Classifieds Get lResults! f__ Business Servic,e s.__
cHoked guns only Asso,ted
meals
3

sweiPERRep-;,-;:--p-:;~~. ::

Sup ples
Dav s Vacuum
1 mile up
Cleaner Store
Georges Creek Road off s tale

route 7

to r ent farm w th
house and l ew ac r es Wou d
c on s 1der
ng un der land

bi.Jr

~hone4 460294

c ontra ct

4 10 li e
- - - - - - - - - - - -- A TO z Mart used turn.shed

!!ippl
c lolh•ng
d shes
and ances
m•sc
Rt
JJ oppos
te
traler cou rt Hartford w

va

41 0 1f c
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - 15
REVIVAL beg nntng Aprt
Beg1n s 7 30
eac
h even
at
Pomeroy
Wes
leyan
Hoing
ness
Chun; h on Rou te 143 one half
mile t'rom Rt 7 bypass Tl1e
evangelist
s Dav d L ght
from Chambers
Ar1zona
There w1l l be spec1al SlnQ'Ing
and playmg and everyone 1s
welcome The pastor 1s 0 Dell
Man ley
4 10 9tc
AUCTION Si!ll~ Thursday 7
p m
Housefu l of ant1que
turn lure dresse r s poster
bed chests lamp table s
n1gh t stands old No 2 d nner
bell good Ch.na dol l many
co l lector s 1fems TV s ap
pi ances more arnvmg to be
sold at th s sale good m er
chand se Po lly s Auct on
corner of Pi:irk and H gh
Street Middleport Btll Wade
Auct1oneer Not responstble
for ace dents
4 10 2t c

__ _ _

------::---"""""' -

PARA SOL Bout que Beaut y
Salon next to Skate A Wa y
Roller Rmk
Announced
spring spec1a1s l Oper cent off
on all permanents and
fros tings
from
A pr I 9
through April JO Call 985 4141
for appomtment
Sandr a
Kerns operator
4 7 12tc
KOSCOT
KOSMETICS
&amp;
wI GS
For a good I ne of
Cosmet •cs fr endl y serv ce
and so m eon e to cha t w th
g ive me a ca ll Helen J ane
Brown 992 5113
3 19 tfC

1971 ELd)NA 3 bedroom 1'2
bath tiD out In L R all new
delu)(e furniture Mlntmvm
down paym ent Can be seen a t
Kingsbury Hom e Sales Lot on
1100 East Mam from 2 p m to
7 p m dall y
4 10 7tc

Busm~

OpportUnities

SERVICE STATION

FOR LEASE
.

T.red of worktng for the
other man be your own boss
With unlimited opportunity.
Th1s 3 bay brtck serv1ce
stahon 1s located 1n Mid-

dleport

Ohto

Altractove

rental, pa1d tra1n1ng school.

Phone collect (614) 373 8411
or 992 5111
RESPONSIBLE
PERSON
Wanted to own and operate
candy &amp; confect1on vendmg
route Metgs County and
surroundmg area Pleasant
bustness H1gh prof1t 1tems.
Can start part flme Age or
tell penence not •mportant .
Requtres car and $1 195 to
Sl 7.50 cash Investment For
defa1ls wnte and mclude
your phone number

l

l·

owner

s tat e

V8engne a utorn at .c lr ans p s tee nng factoryar l ik e
new t.r es rad o c l ean mt er or loca l I owner Cl ~ &amp; a mce

on e

1972 CHEV P ICKU P
8 Fleets 1d e w h •te over bl ue lin

std tr an s

$2~95

PERSON TO STA¥
WITH SICK LADY A
FEW HOURS A DAY

PHONE
992-2358
WA I TRESSE S car hops and
kitchen help Apply n person
Crow s
Ste ak
Hou se
Pom eroy
~ 4 tfc

$1495

std tran s good I r es rad1o step
bumper green fm1 sh clea n 1ns 1de &amp; ou t

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

1970 FOR 0 t ruck F 500 ex
ce llent con d 1t1on 12 ff gram
tight bed 25 000 actua l m1les
Phone 985 3988 Henry Bahr
Long Bottom Oh 10
4 9 3t p

1970 OLDS 'i'8 Lu xury Sedan fu l l
power equ pmenl e~&lt;ce ll e nt
co nd 1t1on
Low mileage
S1 625 Ph one 992 38 63
4 10 4tc
1967 CAMARO small v 8 ex
cellent r:::ond•flon Phone 949
3all
4 10 6f1J

Employment Wanted
GRAVEl. and f eld d rt haul ng
Contact Dale Teaford 992
3224
4 S 6tc

Wanted To Buy
AN TI QUE qu 11s e1 1 u lt!Wt: 1 11
A l so Interested 1n furn•ture
and d shes
Call 991 5262
eventngs or morn•ngs
2 20 tfc
OLD au us o or more cars
II
g1ve $300 p1ece 18 cars , r
more w111 o•ve better pr ce
Ca ll 985 4297
3 2B ttc
tAS I:t pa1.d for all makes an&lt;r
mod els of mobile homes
Phone area code 614 423 9531
4 13 tfc
N u 1 copper MJC raa arors
3Sc red brass 40c battenes
$1 20 M A Hall Reedsv tll e
Oh o "hone 378 6249
3 2.:1 tfc

OR 7

F S1

For Sale

For Rent

YEAR OL D mo b le home 2
bedroom ult l t es fun sh ed
Phone 142 59aO
4 7 61c

) ROOM h~~ o;i60 Butie rnut
Ave nu e n Pom eroy F urn ace
bath
and
ba se m en 1
Phon e
r efer ences r eq u red
992 2258
1 7 61c
FURN I SHED two b ed r oom
mob•le hom e 12x 44 1n back
yard on Spr ng Avenue Ca I
992 3429 Sunday or even ng s
4 10 6tp
H OU SE
5693

n Chesh r e

Ca I 99 2

•
4 10 tf c

FOR RENT
Two offoc es on East
Maon St on Pome roy
Wtll remodel for long
te rm lease Plenty of
off sln~el parkmg and
very good loca toon

INROW CO.
992-3863
or after 6 00-992-5844
2

BEDROOM
fu r ni shed
apa rtm en t utll lt es pad
deposi t
and
r efe r en ces
r equ• r ed No ch ldren or p et s
lnqu re at Ba rleys Stor e

~1dd l eport

1- Three
b e droom
furno s hed apartment on
Pomeroy
Ntce yard
and plenty of parkong
.

INROW CO.
992-3863
or afler 6 Ull-992·5844

For Rent or Lease
BUSINESS bu ld ng n down
town Pomeroy Oh o Call 99 2
J97S or 9q 2 5786
4 2 26 tc

BULLS C""~rn lor sa l e Phone
Char es ~ Harns 843 2693
4 a 7tc

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

3

S bath fu 1 basemen t
SEWIN G Mach n es Br and New 4 ROOM
sto rm door s and w ndows
Z g Zag n n ce walnu t tabl e
h-ome fu ly ca rp ete d Loca t ed
n or g nal carlon s Neve r
773 S rant Stre et M d
on
us ed
Cl ea ran ce
on
74
dlepor t Phon e 992 7240
Mode ls
(O n y
a
f ew
4 9 6tp
ava labl e)
$63 40 c ash or
terms ava I ab l e P hon e 992
BEAUT F UL new ho m es now
2653
under c onstru ct on n pr m e
3 20 lie
oca l on on c t y w a t er and
sew er Cho •ceo f des•gns Wall
ELECTROLU X
Va c u um
to wa ll ca rp el ng a nd a r
Cl eane r s com p lete w th a t
WIt
cond 1 on ng trtcl uded
ta c hm ents cordw nder and
help
arrange
f
nan
c
•n
g
pant spra y Used but Ill I ke
convent ona l oa n s w1fh down
new con d1 1fon
Pay 1.3 4 4S
paym ent low .;~ s 5 pet Oth er
ca sh or budge t pl an av a fab l e
n ew homes availab l e t o
Phone 991 2651
oua l f ed buvers Wtltl N O
3 20 lf c:
DOWN
P AYM ENT
Bu lder s o f W
G
Best
STEREO
Walnut
AM FM
Hom es
Call collec t 614 837
Rad•o 8 tra c k tape com
6540 or 239 0785 or w r te
b nat on Ba l anc e $110 73 or
Grea t Amer1can Hom es In c
term s ava • abe Phone 992
P 0 Box 687 Pomer oy Oh o
3965
45769
2 1.t lf c
3 1 tf c

AM F M stereo r ad ro a ra ck
co mb nat on tap e player oi
s p eaker
sound
s y stem
Balance $108 63 or budg et
terms Ca ll 99 2 3965
4 3 ti c

- -- - -

THE

WISEMAN

----- ---

TW I N
N EEDLE
SEW IN G
MACHINES 19 74 Model n
walnut s l and All f eature s
bu II 1n to make fan cy des 1gns
and do str e tch Sf w ng A ~ u
buttonhol es bl nd h em s etc
cash
or
term s
$63 35
av arlab l e Phone 992 2653
4 3 tf c

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

VACUUM CLEA NE RS Elec t ro
Hyg1ene New D emonstrat or s
has a l c lean1ng atta chments
plu s th e new E l ec tro Suds tor
sham poo1ng c urpet
On l y
cas h
or
te rm s
!i27 SO
ava fable Phon e 99:2 2653
4 3 tf c

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

F LOWER S for Ea ster· large
selec t •on Very cheap mu st
see to bel1eve Smalley s G1ft
Shop Chester OhiO Phon e

985 3537

-AM-----------FM ster eo rad o 8 t ra c k

tape player 4 spe aker sound
system Balance !i109 46 or
use our budg et terms Ca I
992 3965
~
3 1a tt c

MOWERS
SPECIAL

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

AGENt:'\
GallipO li S

RACINE
2STORYPERMASTONE 3
BR
LARGE
MODERN
KITCHEN
I 2
BAT H S
CAR PET
THRO U GH O UT
F ULL BASEMENT 2 CAR
GA RAGE
ALL
O NE
LARGE
F LAT
WELL
LAND SCA PE D
LOT
P R ICED MID TWENTIE S

RUTLAND
L A~GE

3 BEDROOM S
LIKE
NEW

KIT
CARPET

A L UM SIDI NG
OWNER
WIL L HELP
!== !N A NC E
FOR QUA LIF IE D BUYER
PRI CE D
BELOW
MARKET $12 000
OFFICE 446 3643
EVENINGS
Bud McGhee- 446 1255
E M
Ike Wl se m a n- 446

20", 3 H.P.
TURF T RIM

MIDDLEPORT -

4 or 5

All WEATHER
HARDWARE
Under New Management
M~porl

N 2nd

DITCHING SERVICE
W a ter lmes and Power
L m es All work done by the
fool or contract Also dozer
work a nd sepf 1c tanks tn ·
stalled

See or Call
Bob or Roger Jeffers
Day 992 7089
Ntght992 3525
or 992 5232

Wc1l er Electnc Gas Sewer
L1nes
m stall ed
Work
guaranteed
Dozer Backhoe Trucks
Limestone &amp; F1ll Dtrt
CommerCial Res1dent1al
Con struct1on &amp; Remodel

B-K EXCAVATING
COMPANY
777 Pear l Street
Mtdd leport Oh1o
Phone 992 5367 or 992 3861

push typ e

ro tary mower Has Brtggs &amp;
St r atton eng 1ne
7 mch
plast•c wheel s l oop s tyl e
tubu lar handle (22 1982)

b

- --------

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

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

Real Estate For Sale

SIOOOOOO

157 ACRES N1 ce lavmg
Some n1ce t 1mber large barn
for cattle La r ge 4 bedroom
home $360 00 per ac re

ITS TIME FOR MOVIN G
THE BEST RESULTS WILL
BE OBTAINED WITH US IN
SELLING OR BUYING
Il l l I N •
,, , J Pf)(l'\j f'.

t

i

,,1 '•I: I,
I :- ,1 • 11 &lt; 1•

1\ ·,·, o r 11. 11 ·

992-3325 o r
992-3615

POMEROY - Ran ch type 2
bedrooms bath n1 ce krtche n
w1th l ots of cabm et s range &amp;
oven
Ca r peted
ftreplace
garage fu ll basement gas
F A
f urnace
porch

$15 000 00 !I ke new )
MIDDLEPORT - 63acre 2

a YEAR OLD BRICK - Has

1 acre (I eveii
basement

ultl1ty R

( new

$22 500 00
3 YEARS OLD -

add 1f1on)

addot10n) S17 000
INVESTMENT -

YOUR IN SPECTION IN
VITED FOR COMFORT
PLUS PLEASAN T LIVING
SEE THE ABOV E TO BUY
OR SEL L CONTACT US
TODAY
HENRY E CLELAND
BROKER
992 2259
"2 2S68

B1g Capattty
Maytag
A~tomaflcs

2 Speed operatron
Choice of water
t emps Auto water
level control L•nt
F11ter or Power Fm
Ag ltator
Perma Press
Maytag
Halo of Heat

Orvers

Surround
c lothe!
With gentle
ever
heat No hot spots
no overdryl ng F i ne
Mesh Lint F tIter
We Specialize in

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment
'5.55
On Most Amertean Cars

BOB

Arnold Grate

\

Mornmg Report 3

8 30 - Brady Bunch 6
8 55 - News 13

Paul D1xon 4 AM 3 Phil Donahue 15 Abbott &amp; Cos fe flo
8 Fnendly Junchon 10 Wild W1ld West 6 Biograph y 33
f:/lov1e A Gu1de to the Married M an 13

10 30- Jeopardy 3 415 Gambtt8 10

Pomerov

11 30 -

.

'

12 00 -

Pa sswor~ 6 Bob Brauns 50 50 Club 4 News 8 10 13

12 30 -

Spl 1t Second 6 Searc h for Tomorrow 8 10

1 00 - All My Ch 1l dren 6 13 Concen t ra tton 8 News 3 Not For
Women Only 15 What s My L1ne' 10

1 30 - 3 On A Match 3 4 15 As the World Turns 8 10 Lets
Make A Deal 6 13

NELSON

YES!
Now wh1le th e weather 1s
sltll cool ts the best l1me It
can be 1nstall ed at your
conve m ence w1th no wa1tmg
around
tn
hot
muggy
weath er
Phone 992 2550

2 00 - Days of Our L1vesJ 4 15 Gu1dmg L1gh t 8 10 New lywed
Ga m e 6 13

2 30 - Doctors 3 4 15 Edge of Ntghl 8 10 Gtrl tn My Ltfe 6 13

INTERIOR EXTERIOR

J 00 -

4 OD-Sesame Sl 20 33 Mr Cartoon &amp; The Banana Spltls 3

Love A.mencan ~lyle IJ Lucy Show 8 H uck and Yog1 6
M ov 1e Masters of the Congo Jungle 10
4 30 - G1 ll1g an s Is 6 13 Green Acres 3 Bonanza 15 Jackpot

4

CALL CARL NELSON
PHONE 992-5083

SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
REASO NABL E rates Ph 446
4782 Ga ll•pol•s John Russe ll
Owner and Operato r
5 12 tf c

Hazel 8

5 00 -

MISter Rogers20 33

Andy Gnff1th 8 Bonanza J M erv

Grolftn 4 Gomer Pyle USMC 13 Btg Valley 6
5 30 - Hodgepodge Lodge 20 Beverly Hill btl lies B Elec Co 33
Trails West 15

Hogan s Heroes 13

6 00 - NewsB 10 SesameS! 20 ABC Newsl3 News3 4 15

HAM s Au to Rad1o Serv ce
Am Fm ste r eo and tape
players Ou 1ck rei able ser
v1ce Georges Creek Road
Gall i pOliS Oh 0 Phone 446
9304
4 9 7tc

Truth or Con seq 6 Lilias Yoga &amp; You 33

WIN AT BRIDGE

Think Tank is only half full

.-------------DON T fuss don t cuss turn

NORTH IDl
• 86
83

over 1unk automob les over to
us w II pay $5 for o ld 1unk
cars Phon e 1 (304) 773 5890
R vers de Au to Wre c krng
4 9 26t c

10

'+ J

DOZER work lan-d c iarmg b y
the ac r e hou r ly or c ontract
farm ponds roads et c La rge
dozer and op er at or w1th over
20 years expen ence Pullins
Excavat ng Pomeroy Oh10
Phone 992 2478
•
12 19 tfc

WEST

your partner Is

TODAY S QUESTIO N
Instead of passmg West b1d s
three clubs over you r double
Your partner passes What do you
do now"

EAST

l' .QJJ094

What do you do now?
A-BJd fhe or six spade s It

de pen ds on how conservative

A9
&lt;fo AK7532

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

• • 7532

¥KQ4

¥ 652

+862
&lt;foJ08

t74 3
&lt;foQJ 9

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

For Thu rsday April 11

1974
ARIES (March 21 Apotl 19)

By Helen Bollt·l

• •

Plans w 11 not go as smoothly
as~ 1t c pa le d toda y but do I
be rnt ated w th o thers b e
c ause you can 1 molle as
lreely as you d I ke

An Often Unanswered Question

SCORPIO (Oct 24 No' 22)
Do uble c hec k your recmds to
see t lhere s so n e paymenl
you ve ove rlooked I so at
le ld to I promptly

Dear Helen
Our son a handsome clean pohte and thoughtful 25-)Cao TAURUS (Apot l 20 May 20)
SAGITTARIUS (No' 23
old wtll never progress beyond the mentahty of a tlurd grader Ma t er a l demand s w111 b e
Dec 2 1) Be sure the plans
hea .. Jer than usual today You
you ve made for th• s e vemng
due to bram damage
ma y get a I tile peeved w th
are acct plr~b le to your mate
He can functiOn tn a sheltered workshop but he Will a lways ones NhO look to you 10 come
Don t pull any las t m nu l e
up w th what s needed
need someone to care for hlm He !Jves w1th us
surpnse
CAPRI CO RN (Dec 22 Jan
Though he has never had sexual relatwnshops he ts ma tu re GEM INI (May 21 June 20)
Tile o111er parly to,an agree
19) Try no t Ia du ck any 1e
m thts respec t a nd has expressed the hope of ge ttmg marned He nen t •s no t hold ng up h s end
spons b 11 1 es you have today
has met a g~rl at the workshop who os happy to go out wtlh hoon o l the b arga 1n Th s cou ld lead
It wont wo rk They w 1 ca tch
1p w II you aj I he ast m nu te
when my husband and !arra nge a doub le date or ask her over for to heate d wo rd s
CANCER (June 21 July 22 1
AQUARIUS (J an 20 Feb
dinner a t our home Her retardatoon IS s1m1lar to hts They rc t s best you pul ott do ng a
19) At ou t s1de acl v ty 1ha t
chlld-adults, capable of much love
ta sk for anothe 1 th at yo u re
you usual y look up on as tun
My questiOn os should we stone thiS love depnve our son of a sent do ng No one w II be
and games w II be anyth ng
pleased w th the ' esu lt s
bu
t tha i today
nor mal sex life Simply because he IS a menta! cluld ' Should llus LEO (July 23 Aug 22) Keep
PISCES (Feb 20 March 20)
1
g1rllead a barren Jovele&gt;S life when she croes out for affechon
you• 1empc 1 1n c hec k w lh
Be su1e you 1 energ1es and
It's strange how the experts avo1d this ISsue of sex.among the thO se w •lh whom you ~ be
c l lo rts are cha nne ed n a
soc a l •z ng tht S even 1ng
spec hG d ect•on else mu ch o !
retarded A munster suggested a vasectomy for our son Just m Someone
w •ll ru b you the
tod ay s hard work w II be 111
case, ' but d1d not comment on h1s sexual needs or how t he} WI OI Q W'JY
'" I
should he fulftlled Others say Yes retarded people have VIRGO (Aug 23 Sect 22 1
natural sex 101pulses but there tt ends Do theJ mea n the
loveless servtces of a prostttule or masturbation or would the)
rather the whole problems of sexuality he suppressed'
And 1f Jt IS suppressed mtght not th os create further
of keep1ng people off the road, a nd encouragong them to go to bed
problems? - TEXAS FATHER
fot warmth should do something to our ZPG (Zero Populatoon
Growth ) birth rate
Dear Father
l predict we II see a rash of pregnant women thJS s ummer
Why shouldn t the retarded have normal sex ltves - a nd woth
for lets face tt everyone doesn t use the pill And a nse m
people they love, who can return that love '
populallon IS JUSt what we don t need n ghl now wtth a lmost all
A vasectomy (or a tubal ligatwn) should be consodered tn conunoditoes m short supply
cases of severe relardatwn Also the mentall) slo\\ must be
What do you thmk ? - NOT KIDDING (HOPEFULLY )
protected agalllSt explmtatwn or seductwn
Seems to me Ute hest protection" ould be to encourage lovtng Dea r NKH
relatwnshtps between persons ltke your son and his froend
You forget one thing Ru nawaJ mflatJon keeps the stork
Cons1der this U these two could both work and hve at the shelter
from the door Couples aren t apt to he careless about conor m another stmtlar envtronment, then why not marrtage') to acept10n when they remembe r ot \\ Ill cost them some $100,000 to
Perhaps they're more able thap )OU thmk to fun ctoon on thetr rmse another chtld - H
own - II

+++

Dear Helen
Gasolme shortages have been With us now for severa l
monUts together with lowered heat for homes The combmallon
6 30 - New s3 4 CBS News B 10 Your Fufure I s Now 33 N BC
News 15 ABC News 6 Room 222 13
7 00 - Beat the Clock 4 What s My L me 8 News 6 10 Elec Co
20 Truth or Conse quen ces 3 Lets Make A Deal 13 Sport s
Desk 15 Th e Curta us Case o f V1lam n E 33
7 30 - Hollywood Squares 3 W ld Kmgdom 10 To Te ll the
lruth6 0zZiesGrls8 Bea l l heCiock 13 Zoom20 Dea ler s
Cho1ce &lt;1 Johnny Mann s Stand Up and Cheer IS Read•ng
For The Classroom Teac her J3
8 00 - The Walton s 10 Fl1p Wtl son 3 4 15 Chopper One 6 13
Advoca tes 20 33 Billy Graham Cr u sade 8
8 30 - Ftrehou se 6 1J
9 00 - Ironside 3 4 Kung Fu 6 Black Journa l 20 Conll• ds ol
Harry S Trum an 33 Ea st er W1th Ora l Roberts 3 5 M ov 1e
Call Me Madam 8 20t h Anm ve r sa r y ol Rock and Roll 0
Black Journa l 20
10 OG - New s 20 What Is Man 33 Str ee t s of Sa n F r anc sco 13
Mu s1c Country U SA 3 4 15 An Even• ng Wdh Edgar A ll en

Poe 10
10 30 - Day AI Ntghl 33

II OO ~ New s13 Janaki 3J News3 &lt;1 6 15
11 30 - Johnny Ca r son 3 15 4 College G~r l o r the Yea r 6 13
M ov1es Twil i gh t of Honor 8
That Lady 10
1 00 - Tomorrow3 4 News13 TakeFrveForlll e 15
2 00 - News d

7 00 p m
7 30 p m

8 30 p m 9 30 p m -

t..able Channel Ftve
Loca l N ews
Com edy
Gunslingers
Underwor ld

JI&amp;MID~;tk.l ~··-IIJ ,_, 9"Unscramble these four Jumbles.
one letter to each square, to
form four ordtnary words

I TENKO

!

srn(lller

than

m

ht ~ t

pe n od

the

J ea r

Agn~,;u llUI c Depa r t m ent r eport
s ll o \,cd
toda,

loo

~
by THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS

DOWN

1 Spa n1 sh

or

belle
5 Pamter

s

ne ed
11 Wmf,!hkt
12 Unwillin g
13 12 pomt
t\' pe
14 Precepts

15 Net her

~

1 Kmd
S} rup
2 Pros pcc
IJVC
ut1zcn

3 La tt d

Cregar
role
(3 II&lt;IS I

lands

4 All ar con

nver

5 Paten

16 Apt ecc
17 Old
Chmcsc

km gdom

18 Con test
JOiner

20 Son of
Noah
21 Sea rch
22 French
port
23 Super

Yesterd ay

stc ll atJon

t 1ally

&lt;tel n c
GW :nd oiT
7 Snu gger)
8 In one s

brsl
duds

(3\\dS)
9 Lover of

beauty

10 Summ u 1

s Answer
26 Th1ck

zat wn

soups

16 Dreall c

28 Molococ s

heav1lv
19 1 cutomc

29 Cornell

2•1•

North

East
Pass
Pass

South
I+

" ' u ua c 11. noe wo rk
ponds and sepl•c tanks dtt
cllmg servrce top soil ft ll
d 1rt
limestone
B&amp;K E x
cavat ln g Phone 992 53 67 or
99 2 J861
9 1 tfc

3.t.

Pass

5'

Pas.s

Pass

Pass
Pass

6+
Pass

4NT.
SNT.
6NT.

uut.tK

Pass
Pass

s1gn

22 l't ophct
23 \\ ISCO n
s II Ci tY
24 J\ u c lcu~
25 T :1 stc •clls h

30 Go by
Sh ip
35 Hostelry

36 Lnmb
k1n s cr)

man s
nom de

plume

24 Y1eld
25 French
lather
26 V ers1flet
27 Black
cuckoo
28 Wronkles
31 Cut off
32 Metroc
land
measure

33 Toolbox
34 Be
amb1ttous
36 1,760
)ards
37 Hence
forth
38 Robert

~LESJNG
] I

I [j
I

[J I

AXYDLBAAXR
Is LOI'iGFELLOW
-40

PA'I ATll::NTION - II
\ CC:;JUL..D 1!!5E.COME 5 1LEN'T

CRYPTOQUOTES

I;::::f&gt;.:=::.A:=:::==·
FIRMON
V1

the
the above eartoon.
"t r 1 I I I J"

Now.......,.
cln:led letten
J
J
to form lhe IIUJiriH anawer, u
==·==-~••uneated by

I rr.r ._ Sllll'lliSI UISYI1Il~at

(Aa.wen toa:turnnt".l
Yetlent.,. •

Jumbko•

I

One letter Simply &gt;lands 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 \\ Ortis are al l
htnts Each day the code letters aoe dolfeocn t

PUPPY AGILE SQUIRM CAUGHT

Annrerr What 1/0U m1ght find

A STAR PUPIL

1n

lUI a.trorwm11 cltu&amp;-

MSD

MDBDVEGWD

KNRDV

MSD

IGJBH VKNBBDJ, FM FV GABC MSD
KFEJGVEGWD
BNJXDJ -X
R

MSNM

KNRDV

DI CK fRACY
BUT. UNFORTUNATE!
LAWOING 141M NEA

LI'ZZ'S 5 HOE!

..;

Openong lead- •Q

GREAT
COUNTRY

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
CA P1 AIN E ASY

A little knowledge ts ltkely
to be a dangerous t hong to
possess
The ordonary bndge player
would count 10 tncks m top
cards and see that the club
suot would gtve htm hts slam
as long as ot broke 3 2 He
knows that su1ts are s upposed
to break 3 2 and after wm
mng the spade lead our or
donary player would ba ng
down dummy's ace and kong
of clubs and take the slam to
the bank
A man With a little
knowledge would know that
sutts break 3 2 68 per cent of
the lime He would also note
thattf East s hould hold eother
the kmg or queen of hearts or
both of those cards that two
heart fmesses would lead to
12 tncks wtthout havmg to
try the clubs and that the
chance of that play succeed
ong would by 76 pe r cent
He would say to h•mself a
76 per ce nt chance os be tter
than a 68 per cent chance and
try two heart fonesses Thos
ttme he would lose both
fonesses and h1s slam
An expert would use the
same line of play as the or
donary player He would cash
one cluti and when both oppo
n'e nts followed he would
know that the chance of a 3 2
break had rosen to 71 per
cent Then he would cash the
second htgh club
The reason •• that 1f clubs
fa1led to break all mtght not
be lost lle' could s!JIItry the
hearts If East held the four
clubs the slam would sttll
make tf the heart honors
were d1v1ded If West held the
four clubs the slam would
make 1f East held both heart
honors All m all lhe chance
for success on the combona
!Jon play would by 82 per
cent

STEREO
92.1
WMPO-FM

f

7;.01 OMOBILE Insu ra nce bl!en
cancelled?
Lo st
your
oper ato r s I cense Call 9'92
7428
6 15 tfc

---------------=W ILL TR lM or cu t trees and
shrubbery A l so cl ean out
basements att1cs etc Call
949 322 1 or 742 444 1
3 14 26tc

Mtdd l~porf Pomerov

We Have Family Size
Used Cars
That Deliver
BIG GAS MILEAGE
THI~

IS A

Fi1\E 1lJI\e
USED CAR

'111
IGNITION SYST€M M€€TS
OUININ€ TUN€
SPECIFICATION FOR
GA50UN€

ECOOOMY

4 Dr atr cond vmyl top, power steenng &amp; brakes Only 1431
easy m1les Showroom clean

1971 Uncoln Continental ................. '4995
Mark Ill Fully equopped Ortgtnal black llnlsh like new
Extra sharp

1972 Ford Gran Torino .....................'1995
4 Dr sedan 302 V 8 eng•ne power stee ring one loca l owner

1973 Ford FIOO lh ton................ ::-..'2695
Pickup 302 V 8 enalne Low m1leage One owner

•

LZ,B;I:l•!MiQU
The b•ddmg has been

West

North

East

•

I

'fYYOU

00 ~

T

)

E IJoLI:SH

new

outfit'

THE BORN LOSER
FOR YOU~ INFORMATION ;tHAT ' O
:OlAND
PARADISE' NON HA5 POLLUTIO~SLUMS,

tJ0 THIS IS WI
DIAL-A- PRA'i6R
BUT I R)i&lt;01V£

WHATEVER IT I&lt;"
~()J'VE CD-If

ALLEY OOP
NOTONL'i DtClWEG ITA
GOOD PR.ICf;. F0 DOGPATCH
-BUT WE. GITS A FREE
TRIP TO &lt;.JAPAN ~, ~--'

GLORV BE II IT'S
FEEL THAT
THAR

SHARPER'N A
RAi:ORBACK HOG

KEERFOL 11

•• 2.
,
'

..._____

AOOr&lt;A LOO k

TEACH YOU

a

South

s•

OLITE 50 ? M00THLY FOR EASY

UND E!&lt;5 TAPJ D

10

Dble
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass
You South hold
tiD, 54 'A)&lt;Q83 t AJ

Kutland

ntce

\5 THE S E~ MVMPH PL OW-5 M00THL'r ~) C I.Z 0 $5 THE SOUTH
PAC Fl( TH NG5 ARE;f.J T GOI'-iG

TM TIZ.'/1 '-JG TO

A'l( BLADE, MAW

{N EWSPAPER Eo"iTERPRISE ASSN I

MANY MORE

Mt.l
fee t
feels
naked '

so I
bouc)ht
~ou

I

FM

ESDVMDJMGA
Yeslerday's Cryploquote THE WHOLE CONCEP I OF
DEMOCRATIC SOCIETY RESTS UPON AN INFORMED
PEOPLE -HENRY T HEALD
&lt;C 187' Klnr Featureo Syndlutt,1ne)

2'

Pass
Pass

nrc

f orte

No ne vulnerable

WeSI

s(une
an

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- He1e's how to work 1t

t~VE G-OT TO

+

Apnl11 1974
fh s year w I nd you explor
r g new 1 llerests and neet ng
types o l peop e th 1\ you
hav e n 1 assoc ated wtlh
be fore Trave l s I ke l y lor you

or A l an

OF HO:O.E"
MY HIPS ARE
IN RATHE~

&lt;fo6 4

SHORTER SUPPLIES
WAS HI NGTON IU PI )
Cons umer supphes of fres h
'egct&lt;Ibles fr om Aprol th rough
J une w1 1l be about 5 per cent

39 Deserved
40 Turkish
flag

·- - - ··--

SOUTH
• AK
¥ A 10 9 7
KQJ105

Rl::ADY M l )(
c ....... RETE
del1vered r1ght to
your
pro1ect Fas t and easy Fr ee
est1ma t es Phone 99 2 J284 ,
Goeg l e n Ready M1X Co
M iddl epor t Oh o
6 30 tfc

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

Pnce 1s

3 30- One L1fe to L1 ve 6 13 Ph1f Dona hue 4 How to Surv•ve A
Mar.naoP 3 15 Match Ga me 8 10

ROOF PAINTING

Mtddlep ort 0

Another World 3 4 15 Gener a l Hosp ital 6 13

Roght 8 10 Ltltas Yogt and You 20

PAINTING

All WEATHER
HARDWARE

Celebnty

Sweepstakes 3 15
12 45 - Elec Co 33
12 55 - NBC News 3 15

All work guaranteed

AIR CONDITION NOW?

Only 31 467 loc.:rl mll~:~e;

Br-ady Bunch 13 Hollywood Squares 3 4 15 love of L1fe

10
11 55 - CBS Ne w~ 8 Dan Imel s World 10

Area s M os t
Reasonable Pnce s

Monday thru Saturday
606 E Mam Pomeroy 0

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

11 00 - W1 zard of Odds 3 4 15 Password 13 M 1k e DoUglas 6
Now You See II a 10

Jackpot 3 15

Open 8 Ttl s

-

9 30- Jo Telllhe Truth 3 Tattletales a
9 55 - Chuck Wh1te Reports 10
10 00 - D 1nah Shore 3 15 Joker s W tld 8 10 Com pan y 6

Pamting A Specialty

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

N 2nd Ave

w Mam

RUTLAND FURNITURE
I

Farmt1me 10

8

- GUARANTEEDPHONE 'l92 2094

Carv•ce

'

Co lumbus Today 4

Wrsh 6
7 30 Rocky&amp;. Bu llw• nk le 13 New Zoo Revue6
8 00 - Capt Kangaroo 8 10 Sesame St 33 New Zoo Revue IJ
J efl s Coll1e 6
8 25 - J ack Lala nne 13

Ph 992 5271

Red Car:pet

!

F1ve

7 00 - Today 3 &lt; 15 News 8 10 Dtck Van Dyke 13 Make A

Gene's
Body Shop

MAY TAG

742 4211

11 1974
00 - Sunnse Semmar 4 Sacred Heart 10
15 - Ame n ca s Problems 10
25 - Farm Report 13
30 - B1ble Answers 8 Pattern for Ltvmg 13 News 6
M1nutes t o L•ve By 4

6 35 6 45 -

1974 Chevrolet V8 Malibu ................ '3695

--~------- ~ - - -,------

•

6
6
6
6

VW AND UAISLJ
SPECIALIST

Stop m and say Hello Brmg
rn thi S ad for a Free Gift

2 story

frame
tra 1le r
hoo k u p
severa l lot s on Ma ln St
(food fu tur e} Make an o ffer

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

..

THURSDAY APRIL

Frame

kJfchen has lot s of c~bmets &amp;
range lar ge dm1 ng 3 SR
bath ut l 1fy R ca rport 1/ 2
ac re
all elecfr t c
(new

For Rent-

'

RON AND
KAREN THOMAS

-------

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

~

13

Phone Stanley 949 2789
Bumper to Bumper
Servtce
Foretan Cars We lcome

EXCAVATING do zer l oa~er
and bac kh oe work
septic
tank s 1nStj!llled dump frucks
and lo boys for h 1re Will ha ul
fil l d r t top so I I m estone
and gravel Call Bob or Roger
Jeffers da y phone 992 7089
ntght phone 992 3525 or 992
5232
._ 2 11 tfc

BARBS

-----------~-L

Now under new
management

---- -------

For Sale or Trade

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

Mtddleport 0

- - ----------;:---

eve rythmg
3 BR
bath
l ove l y kitc h en
bu 11t n
dmmg R HW fl oor s and
ca r pe t mg Det garage over

POMEROY - Renovating fh1 s
2 bedroom home Na t gas
furnac e and fu l l ba sement

Open M nd 20

10 OO - Do c EI I •ol6 13" Ko1ak8 10 News20
11 00 - News 3 4 6 8 10 13 15 Day A t N1ght JJ
1 JO - JohnnyCarsonJ 415 Gu •nnesBooko fWorldR ecords6

DON'T DRIVE A
GAS GULPER
OR A GAS HOG

BUILD I NGS FOR SALE Sea led
b1ds wil l be r ece•ved on
----~
certat n build ngs t o be ----- ~AROBIC
r emoved from the prem 1ses SE PTIC TA NKS
on t h e followmg farm s Ida E
S EWAGE
S YSTEMS
Den1son
Guy L
Swadley
CLEANED
REP AIR ED
M IL LER
SA NITATION
Ja c k E P ckens Clarence E
STEW AR T OHIO PH 662
Grover B1dS to be mailed to
Oh10 Power Company P 0
3035
Bo x 328
M c Connelsville
I 0 4 He
Oh o
bef o r e
m 1dn1ght
TANK S c leaned
Sa turday Apnl 21 19 " Th e SEPTIC
Company reserve "' ltlf&gt; r g! t
Moder n San 1tatlon 992 39S4 or
992 7349
to accept or re,ec " 1y t:J o or
10 23 tf c
any part o f any
d
- "'r
further mformallo r "' nd b
at 2a6
II pan r ~,. r!) a u nouses
sh eet s ca l Joe Ram s
5051 Me •g s M•ne of So uTI ern
ree e~ nitl
~"all 992 2532
Oh•o Coal Compa ny L angs
or 992 5482
v1 l e O h 10 Monday thru
4 4 7tp
Fr day 8 am to 4 p m or ----- - ------ ~ -phone Oh10 Power Company
SEW IN t:. MACHI N ES Repa 1r
M cC onne l sv li e Oh o 962
serv1ce all makes 992 2284
452 5
The Fabrtc Shop Pomeroy
4 10 lie ..-J Au.thor zed S•nger Sales and
Serv1ce We Sha rp en Sc sso r s
HOUSE n Syracuse J r ooms
3 29 tf c
and bath upsta trs over acre
of l and Remode l ed on ns1de
C BRADFOW.D Auct iOneer
Worksh op n back Phone 992
Comp lete Serv1ce
3135
Phone 949 3821 or 9A9 3161
4 10 6tc
R acme Oh o
Cntt Bradford
S 1 tfc

bu sm ess bulldmg on R t 7
Excellen t loca l on for t he
future Nat ga s furna ce 2
farge olfJCes (a 1r cond1f 1oned)
and 2 l arge storag e rooms 2900

Sq Ft $1250000

AU WEATHER
HAROWARE
N 2nd Ave

33
10
13
10

1 00 - Tomorrow) 4 N ews 13 Titke F ve For L rle 15
2 00 - News 4

und er New Management

New brtck

$1800000
VERY NICE -

•

the

9 00 -

story f rame 4 8 R bath
dtnmg R part ba sement
porches trailer h ookup
large garden space gas F A
fu r nace
out
buildtng
prtvate loca t ion $12 900 00

bedrooms lots of c loset s n1ce
large l 1v ng a nd d1n m g room s
Na ~
ga s
furnace
Fu ll
b ase men t and 2 garages

$52~D

1971 KAWASAKI 350 Endu r o
Good con d1 t1on Phone 992
6165
4103tc

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

J;or Free Est1mate mqu1re
now about a beaultful ne w
roof m tash1on colors

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

HAY tor sa l e SOc per ba te
Phone 985 3539
4 4 12tp

moto r

IS YOUR ROOF
LEAKING?
IS IT COLOR FADEO?

9 ?6 1C

CLELA N D
FARM S
A ND
GREEN H OUSE A va r ety of
WE ARE p1ck ng up a p1ano n
319 6
cabbage and tomato plan ts
your area an d wou ld like
for sa l e A so broccol and -L-~------'----...1
so m e respons•b l e par t y to
cau l rflowe r
swee t pepper s
take over payments
Cal l
ho t pepper s eggplants heaa
Cred t Man ager (614) 77 2
l e ttu ce
and
EA STER
5669 or w r t e 260 East Ma1n
FLOWERS
pa nsy
mum s
Str eet Ch III COthe Oh 0 45601
aza l ea
hydrangea
4 7 lie
geran ums petun1a s sev eral
k•n d s of hang ng ba sket s
2 YEAR old ut i ty bed for
Gera drne Cl el an d
Racme
p1ck u p
truck
Exce lent
Oh10
cond•t•on Phone 1 (304 ) 773
3 29 tf c
S503
4 7 6t c

HOOVER por table washer $75
Phone 992 5514
4 10 4tc

Ph 992 2174

Poltee Su rg eon J On t he Money 4 Ant1q ues 20 Beat
Clock. 13 Ep1 sode Act 1on 33
8 00 - B •l l y Moyers Journal 20 Wa sh•ngton Connect on
The Cowboys 6 13 Chase 3 .t 15 Sr~ndy tn Dt sney litnd 8
8 30 - Theater rn Am e fl ca 33 Mov 1e Murder or Mercy 6
9 00 - Mov1e Ass1gnment to Kil l 3 4 IS Perry Como 8

'
Stop In and See
Our
Floor Dosplay

Ma son W Va

Us.

7 30 - To Tell the Truth 6 Sale of th e Century a The Judqe 10

FURNITURE

MATER IAL S CO
771 5554

'

13 I Spy 15

and

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.
Pomerot

WEDNESDAY APIUL 1D 1974

6 00
NE&gt;ws 3 ~ 8 10 15 ABC News \ 3 Sesilme St 'l0 Per
sona l •ty &amp; Behn v ora l Developmen t 33 Truth or Con seq 6
6 30
News 3 .J 6 8 10 15 Room ')'}2 I J
7 00 - What s My Lrne 8 Truth or Con se q 3 Bent the Clock 1
.. Elec Co ?0 News 6 10 Know Your School s 3D J•mmy Den n

OFFICE SUPPLIES

Bu 11t to Your Specs
De l1vere d t o Job S1te

Nathan BI""S
.,

BEDROOM hou se m M d
d l eport
New k tr:t en il r d
b::~th
a pp l anc c s n c uded
C'l ll 991 5J 0

CLOSE O U T on n ew Z g Zag
Se w ng Ma ch1n es For sew ng
s tr el cll fabr cs bu ttonhol es
fan c y des gn s et c Pan
s ghtty blemt shed CllO ce of
c arry 1ng c as e or sew n g
stand $69 80 c a sh or tern s MODERN hou se , 11 l e fr om
av a ta bl e Phon e 992 26SJ
Pome ro y 3 bedroom s wall to
4 7 ti c
wal c:1rpe t arge r ec room
l arge pa t o ca l 992 52 48
E L E CTR OLUX Swe ep er del ux e
b efor e 3 p m a lt er 3 ca l l 992
model
Compl et e w th ull
343 6
c l ea n ng at ta c h me nt s and
4 7 12tc
u s e s pap er b a~s 51 gh l y used
but c l eans and look s like new 4 ACRES o f l and on Sta t e 1A3
W 11 se l for $37 25 or ter ms
Ph on e 99? 3640
available Phon e 992 2653
4 9 nc
&lt;1 7 lf c

1 5 7tc

For Sale

Bu lldoze r Rad ator to the
smallest Hea ter1 Core

You won 1 lake kmdly to an
ou ts der who 11 t ry to tell you
ho w to run your lam•ly
Frankly I s none ol he1 bus
ness
LIBRA (S ept 23 Oct 23)
Be ng o verly mpul s ve and
IIY ng 10 gel QUICk CO nrr I
ments a1 th s I me w ll get you
more re]ec l •ons than ac ccp
lance Be p atten!

Television Log

__,l.

992 2094
606 E Mam
Pomeroy

RadlaforSpectaltsl

I 7 5 C

15 - The Daily Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , ApraliO, 1974

POMEROY
•
HOME &amp; AUTCS

F r om the largest Truck or

Rea state or ae

VER N A Dav s 5J4 acres n
Rutland To wnsh p on Sa ndh 11
Road t ve r oom hou se barn
an d two oulbu ld ngs w I b e
sold to the h rg hest b dder at
9 30 a m Sat urday Apr I 13
974 a t th e off ce of 0 Br en &amp;
0 Br en attorney 100 Cour t
Pomerov
Oh o
St ree t
Canno t be so ld tor less t han
app r a sed v alu e of $2 000 00
For furth er nf or m il t on ca ll
992 2720
4 S Me:

h p used outb oar d
Cal l 985 3989 after 6 1970 BSA Starftre exce llent
pm
cond t 1on H er eford bull and
4 9 3tp
corn p lanter Phon e 14 2 3941
4 10 5tc
,..O LD furnit Ure"" oak tab l es
POMEROY LANDMARK
c locks tee boxes brass beds STARCR AFT trail ers and fold
d•shis
desks
or
comp
lete
Jack W Carsey Mgr
downs
25
pet
off
on
Reese
Department BIIV
hou seholds Wrtte M
D
~ tcheS
20 pet
off on
Phone 992 2181
3'38 Meadowbrook Rd
M tier Rt 4 Pomeroy Dh tO
aulomat c awnm gs 14 11 feet
St Louos Park MN SS426
call ~92 7760
Camp Conley Star craff Sales
.
5 1J tfc
Rt 62 North of Pt Pleasan t 1974
ZIG ZAG
SEW I NG
beh nd Red Carpet In n
-~ T"""~- ------ ---'MACHINE S left n l ayaway
bLu upr gn T ptanos
Any
4 10 3tc
All built n to buttonho le do
con d tton Pay ng $10 cas h
stre tc h sew1 ng and fan cy
- -- NOTICE OF SALE
st •tch ng Pay j ust S68 75 cash
Wr te
g tve dlrectrons
to STRAWBERRY. plants Char i e
Offers will be rece1ved for the
WITTE N PIANO CO
P 0
or terms ava1 a~le Tr ade ns
Foster
Rt
2
Racme
Otno
real estate owned by th e l ate
accepted Phone 992 2653
BOX 18 Sard1S Oh o 43946
Phone 247 2309
Carrie Me inhart known as 124
3 13 30tc
3 27 ti c
3
31
12tc
Locust Street Pomeroy Oh 1o -------------=--If the Offices of Crow Cro w &amp; JUNK
Autos
comp l ete
VACUUM Cl eaners Br and new
Porter Attorneys at Law
del•vered to our yard We p1 c k PONIE S bgandsmalt N1 c e
tank type mode l s w th s
var
e
l
y
good
fo
r
k
ds
See
Pomeroy Ohio at 10 00 AM on
up a uto bOd1es and buy all
attachments Only S24 40 cash
them
anyttme
Syracuse
Call
Saturday Aprtl 20th 1974 Any
kinds of sc rap metals and
or t erms ava1 lab le
New
Ralph Lavenda r 992 saa8
person WIShing to v!ew th e
1ron R 1der s Salvage State
Upr gh f models $29 90 c ash or
property may do so by ap
4 4 6tc
Route 124 Route 4 Pomeroy
terms ava !ab l e
Tr ad e ms
polntmel'} t by callmg 992·5132
OhiO Phone 992 5468
accoepted Phone 992 2653
Charles Jacob Me nhart
3 28 12tp -v ROCERY busmess for sale
3 27 ttc
Executor of the Last W111
-~-- -----~ ---Build ng for sa l e or lease
and Testament of Carr e
NOW ready c abbage l ettuc e
Phone 773 5618 from 8 30 p m
Me!nhart Deceased
and pans es
potted and
to 10 p m for ap porntment
(~) 10 11 2tc
baskets of Easter flowers now
~
320tfc
1969C"REVRO LE t ~door hard ----- ~ ---- --- ~bloom•ng Hubbard s Green
top Impala Good Gond lt•on
house Syrac use OhiO
FERGUSON 30W it h two 12 mch
new t~res battery no rust
3 31 ffc
plows
E ~c ellent
cond1tlon
$695
Char l es Bissell Long
Phon e 949 5953
Bottom Ohto 949 5 182
4 9 6tc EXCE L SIOR Sa lt Works E
II' PHIL PASTORET
4 10 4tc
Marn St Pomeroy All kin ds
cuB 154 Low Boy l•ke new w1th
of sa lt water. pellets water
Summer s comtng - the
60 •nch mower Phone 949
nuggets block salt and own
ttme you can see all the TV
59~'"'1
Oh o R1ver Salt Pt'lone 992
shows you mtssed last "tnleo TRAILER space for rent •n
4 9 6tc
3a91
Racrne Phone 992 2429 or 992
SO L EN S
Husky
1250
Anyo~• with a new bab y o&lt;o 2838
Hydrastat 1c lawn tractor wtfh SI NGER sewmg machtnes 1972
the house IS apt to be a sleep·
3 29 tfc
48 rnch blade and mower
model rn beaut1ful walnut
-----------------~
walker
Phone 949 5~5 3
cab1net Makes desrgn st 1t
!I" AND ~ ROOM furni'shed and
4 9 6tc
ches zig zag
buttonholes
unfurnished
apar t ments
blmd hems etc L1ke new ...
Phone 992 5434
BEAUT'IFUL wa l nut ste reo
Only S89 95 C,all Ravenswood
A 12tfc
rad•o am fm 8 track tape
273 9521 or 273 9893 after 5 00
comb1nat on Balance 5109 36
12 7 tfc
PRIVATE meetn g room for
or terms availab l e Phone 992
any orgl!ln rzalion phone 992
3965
"NI:::W ~ te droom home l'71b8 1h
3915 ~
4 9 tfc
garage basement on Gravel
3 11 trc
Hil l Middleport Natural gas
LOSE we1ght With New Shape
arready rn
Phone Da le
Newest fad foo the young FURNISHED apartment
:r ablets an~ Hydrex water
Dutton 9-92 3369 evenlng6
adults
only
Phone
992
5592
sel gomg to the gas sta roon to
Pill s Dutton Drugs
9•2 2534
I
4 9 tfc
4 9 3t c
wafch !he pumps go dry
'

5

10 lt c

ROOM house and bath two
car qa r age 2 story on Ca r son
Road
n Me~:)on
Contac t
Ru sse l Ball 773 S606
3 12 lfc

FOR RENT .

1968 TOYO TA J eep Excellen t
condt t on Phone 949 ~761
4 9 7tc

of

H 0u s E
n
Monk I y
Run
Pomeroy
Par
ally
1
rem ode ed new qas f u rnace
Phone 992 2201

1

8 F lee ts1de V 8 eng

NE ED babystter rtght away
tor 2 small g rl s ages 2 and 4
to babys1t •n home Rus t1 c
HillS 7 45 to 5 15 Call 992
7018 after 5 30
4 9 3tp

Auto Sales

oul

rad o good

1969 CHEVROLET PICKUP

4 9 3tc

ONE female some bookkeepmg
ex per.en ce typ1ng one who
meets publ c well excel lent
work ng c ondllr on weeks
pa i d va c at•on per year
Ho sp tal •zatlon and ltfe n
sur an ce prov i ded along w tth
working Lrn! form s Please
se nd p er sonal resume to BOx
72rJA c o The Oa ly Sentin el
Pomeroy Ohio
4. 10 4tc

transl e rrurl

Phom 997 5071

IE

EXPERIENCED
Rad•·a

U nfur1 s ted

w s w l 1r es w hee l cove r s r ear step bumper A n •ce one

TIGHT BUDGET ? Add to th e
fam ly
Income
s erv ng
cus to mers n ear your home
Excell ent •ncome potent al
F l eX Ibl e hou r s Wr te Per
sonal Shopper Department
Bo~&lt;
10 Watkms Products
In c
W nona
M nnesota

559a7

Old

J

1795
$

HELP WANTED

1969 FORD P 1ckup truc k Phone
992 3640
497tc

Mob1le Homes For Sale

month s

------- - - Help Wanted

-----------VARO Sa te a t 143 Harr sonv1lle

CA L:. L Poll y s Aud 10n or s top by
to get r 1d of those un wanted
ttem s Se ll It th e auction way
537 H lgh Str eet M•ddleport
99 2 3509 Open 9 a m to 5 p m
MQndey Wednesday Thurs
day Friday unt11 noon
3 13 30tc

larcH! i'lun d r; room 1 pou t on
1 v1ng room 12 x :t 4 Add A
Room 9 r&lt;&gt;OIY1 S total Only 3

A

---------

CHILD Ss ze 14 milrOOnplad
CP O 1a c ket co nt a.n ng pa1r ot
gold wre r1m glasses n
pocket Los t at Forest Acre
Par .k
Ph on e " 99 2 J6 40
Reward
4 9 St c
- --- - -- --r- - WILL the peop le whO gave me a
nde from A then s to Pome r oy
w th th e re d GTO
baby
named T eddy and th e dog
named Shaggy pl ea se phone
Glen
Ca laway
40 We st
Carpenter At hens OhiO S93
363 2 Be l ieved to have left
gla sses n your au tomob1l e
4 9 6t c

4 10 3tc

GET YOUR handsaws sharp
ened or keys made at Eddte s
Workshop 1'h mtles west of
Rout ~ 33 at Darw1n on State
Route 681 Phone 992 2386
4 9 3tc

M0f or co.

au•LITY

4 10 6tc

9~~mec 0 ':":',;'"/bcd~o~':n:

Pomeroy

2 SIGNS
Of

1970 CHEV E LLE STA WAGON

pm

ELIZABETH Sm th Route 1
Reed svi ll e Oh io w II be
married at fhe Bald Kn ob s
Church
Me1gs
County
Saturday
n •ght
7 30
Recept1on to be held after
m~rrlag e
All
fr~ ends
welcome
4 9 3tc

ca

2471ll 4

lost

SHOOTIN G
Mat ch
Corn
Hollow G un Club turn f rst
r•oht after Mtles Cemetery
Rutland
F a ctory choked
guns only Su ndi!ly Ap n l 14 1

Road Chi ld r en s c l o th.n g
mens and women s old
record s from the SO s 60s
Ann1versary clock
sewmg
mi!l c h n e Wednesday and
Thur sdav Dhon e 992 7187 I f
•n case of nun w II be held
ms•de
4 9 2tc

®~

Wanted
WANTED

F R f SI
or en or ae

•

'IOU AlliE HOME. ESTEEMED
HARRIDAN -AND WHE:N 'IOU
GET TO JAPAN, YOU L..L STII.L
BE HOME'(

AN 'fOU
THOUGHT
I FERGOT
'lORE
BIRFDAY

l'"

UMPA
J U&lt;&gt;T TOLD IM TGO JUMP

TO TAKE A BATH

IN TH LAKE:

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1.6 - Th~ Daily Sent~l. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. April!O, 1974

PUCO looking
over coal plan
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
Pnblic Utilities Commission of
Ohw is looktn g mto lhe plan of
Amencan ' Electn~ Power
whtch wants to shi p low sulphur coal to Ohw from the
western states.
PUCO utilities chief John
Borrows said he wants to check
closely the best way to handle
the expense of movmg the coal
American Electnc Power,
the parent company of the Ohio
Power Co. plans to acquire the
low-sulphur coal from Mon.
lana, Wyommg, Utah and
Colo&lt;ado to use in Ohw and
Indtana .
The company tndicated in tis
1973 annual report the coal
would be shtpped by ratl and
river barge by late 1975 or 1976
Ohio has very little low-sulphur
coal which can be burned
without violating the state's air
pollution requiremen Is
Borrows said he doubts tf the
expense of shipping coal from
the western states could be
routinely passed on to Ohto
consumers as an increase in
fuel expenses.
"Our fuel adjustment clause
is designed to handle routine
changes in fuel costs, but I
would view this as a
significantly different
situatwn," he said.
"Right now, apparently they

could just pass these costs on to
the consumers, but I would
suspect there ts a good cbance
that before any Wyommg coal
came through, there would be
an mtens1ve sta ff rev1ew and
maybe a recomnlendatton to
the commission for a formal
investigation,"

Borrows ad-

ded
It was esttmated the Im-

ported fuels would cos t $19 to
$22 a ton dehvered , compared
wt!h $16 to $17 per ton for coal
from the Appalachian regwn.

Fire, E-R units
answer 43 calls
The
Middl eport
!'Ire
Department answered 43 calls
durmg March, Ftre Chtel Bob
E. Byer reported to town
council Monday mght.
Of the total. II were to fires
and 32 for hrst atd Twenty of
the first atd calls were in town
and 12 were out of town, six
being to scenes of vehtcle
accidents. The departmen t
traveled 871 .5 111iies and spent
111.3 man hours on fires and
128.2 on flrst aid. The average
men per call was 12.

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMISSIONS
Dana
Hamm , Middleport ; Paul
Goodnite,
Mason;
Sue
Goeglein, Pomeroy; Lena Roe,
Middleport; Chester Wigal,
Middleport; Clara Adams,
The Meigs County Com- Racine; Sonja Clonch, Middleport.
missioners Tuesday opened
DISCHARGES - Edna
bids on aggregates but the bids
Stiles, Maude Young, Chnton
will be awarded later . Sub· Douglas, David 'Napper, Jr .,
mitting bids were Dl8mond
Christine Freeman , Opal
Stone Quarry, Albany; TriTaylor, Patrick Clifford, Eric
State Materials, Parkersburg;
Walker, Betty Bailey, Charles
James Merry Stone Company,
Frye.
Bidwell, and Rtchards and
Sons, Pomeroy.
In other business the comRETURN HOME
mtsstoners approved an
Mr.
and Mrs. Miles Dice,
animal claim 10 the amount of
Middleport,
who have both
$200 for the loss of four sheep
been
patients
at Holzer
submitted
by
Victor
Genheimer. Attending were Medical Center are now at
Robert Clark, Warden Ours, their home on Beech S(
Henry Wells, conunissioners,
and Martha Chambers, clerk.
GRANGE TO MEET
LETART FALLS - Valley
DEADLINE SET
Grange 2612, Letart Falls, will
The deadline for Meigs meet at !lie hall Thursday at
resident to contribute food, 7:30 p.m. Potluck refreshbedding and clothing to the ments will be served.
Xenia disaster area is 8:30
p.m. tomorrow night, Thursday. The articles are to be
.... LOCAL TEMPS
taken to the home of Mr. and
Temperature in downtown
Mrs. Robert Miller, 100 Legion Pomeroy Wednesday at 11 a.m.
Terrace, at the rear of the Karr was 44 degrees under sunny
and Van Zandt Motor Co . skies.
Money and check contributions
for aiding Xenia are still acceptable until April 19 and
CAR WASH SET
should be sent to Mrs. Alwilda
Car wash Saturday at the
Werner, 180 North Second new municipal building in ,
Ave., Middleport.
Syracuse from !Oa.m. to~ p.m.
sponsored by SyracuseMinersville Pony League.

Aggregate bids
to he awarded

SERVICES SET
SYRACUSE - Dedication
services of the First Church or
God, Syracuse, will be held
Sunday at 2:30 p.m.
A revtval will be held at the
church ·beginning Sunday
through April20 a\ 7:30 nightly .
The Rev. Chalmer Conley,
Gallipolis evangelist, will be
the guest speaker. There will
be spectal smging each
evening. The public ts invited
to the church services.

MEIGS THEATRE
Tonight &amp; Thursday
April lO-ll
NOT OPEN

BLACKWELL ILL
Charlie Blackwell , Cincinnati, Pomeroy high school
football star of the 1940., is
critically ill ~t Bethesda
Hospttal in Cincinnati.

Hair·a·thon to
he
April 19

on

United Press lnlcrnaUonal

A hatr s tylmg " Haii'· A·
Thon" will be staged by Juntor
and se mor cosmetology
studen ts or Metgs Htgh School
begmntng at 7 a.m. Frtday,
Aprtl.l9, and continumg un til 12
mtdnight
The public is mvt!ed to vtstt
the cosmetology departm en t
laboratory where stud ents wtll
be workm g under the superVISIOn or Instruc tors, Mary
Powell and Polly Hyselj. There
is no charge lor ladtes who take
advantage or the free styhn g
projec t but donatwns will be
accepted. Donations wtll go
mto ~ fund to provide a
scholarship to an adva nced
styling school for a senior
student Anyone interested m
attending may call the lugh
school, 992-2158, fur an ap·
pomtment or may just report to
the department during the
designated hours.

Dolly Roush of
Mason, 99, dies
MASON, W. Va . - Funeral
services for Mrs. J. E. "Dolly"
Greene Roush, 99, Mason, who

died Tuesday wtll be held
Thursday at II a.m at the
Foglesong Funeral Home with
the Rev. Clarence McCloud
officiating
Mrs: Roush was born Dec. 11,
1874 at Kenna, W. Va ., the
daughter of the late Smith and
Igoletta Winters Greene Her
husband, J. E. "Ed" Roush
died in 1956.
Mrs. Roush is survived by a
step-daughter, Mrs . Ada
Kinney, Roanoke, Va.; one
step-granddaughter, Mrs .
Rosemary Brandus, Rockvtlie,
Md.; a step-grandson, Warren
Kinney. Silver Springs, Md .; a
neQhew \ Carroll Greene,
Rtpley; a grand-nepnew,
" Doc"
Smith,
Vaught
Gallipolis; a niece, Mrs. Earl
"Milhe" Keith, Ripley.
Burial will be m Suncrest
Memonal Park. Frtends may
call at the Foglesong E'uneral
Home this evening from 7 to 9.

Route 266 out
,MARlETT A - State Route
266 between Stockport and the
junction wtth State Route 60
has been closed due to a severe
slip that has cut across the
entire pavement.
District 10 Deputy Director
Max R. Farley warned all
motonsts that the ~arth shp·
page beneath the road is stili
active and driving conditwns
remain hazardous.
Farley said the road may be
closed ,up to five days and that
repairs would begin as soon as
the cause of the slip is deter- ·
mined and the proper
materials for repairing it are
obtained.
PLAN SERVICE
Evemng Good Frtday ser·
vices will be held at 7:30p.m.,
at St. Paul's Lutheran Church,
Pomeroy.
~

News.

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LU DINGTON , Mtch There's nothing hke " brush
with death to make an outdoorsman a believ~ in safety
·
rules.
I was in a party of three trout
fishermen who very nearly
drowned last week heca use we
blatantly ignored three basic
rules for safety in a canoe .
Charhe _Cannon , \(andaha,
Bob Dally of Dayton and I
visited !hts western Mtchigan
community to ftsh for steelhead trout in the Pere Marquette River, near the small
town of Custer.
Daily took his 17-foot fiberglass canoe, outfitted with an
antiquated I ,. ,-ltorse outboard
strapped to a homemade outrtgger.
The three rules we tgnored
were those even neophyte outdoorsmen should know : Never
pUt three men in a canoe;
never tackle a flood-swollen
river without prtor knowledge
of what to expect; and never,
never go afloat while wearmg
waders.
We ignored each of these
rules, and all but died from the
experience.
River Current Fast
Dmiy handled the steertng
chores, Cannon sat anudships,
and I took the bow seat. We
moved swiftly downstream,
the rtver's strong, flooded
current doubling the normal
speed of the outboard.
No more than a quarter-mile
from where we 'd launched, we
spotted a steep bluff along
which a deep shck of last water
chw-ned.
It looked like an ideal holding
spot lor steelhead to hold
enroute to gravel spawning
he&lt;b upstream, so Daily moved
10to a good casting position and
eased the two mushroom anchors overboard.
The canoe, already overload·
ed and made erractic by the
current ,
wobbled
threateningly . Daily quickly
retrieved the anchors, and the
canoe wavered once more to
level.
"Take it easy back there," I
remarked. "We darned near
lost it that time. Let's move
downstream a little and try to
get out of this current."
A few paddle strokes sent us
several hundred y.ards down
the river until another deep
pool below a bluff attracted
us. Amorning spent wading lor
trout had proved unproductive;
and we'd hoped to locate better
trout water in the canoe.
This tlme, Daily maneuvered
the slender craft to what we
thought was fairly quiet water
before lowering the anchors
!rom the rear . The anchors
touched, dragged a few feet,
thenlod~edfirmlyon a snag .
Swept Out Of Canoe
Immediately the canoe's
stern turned at an angle to the
current. The thick yellow
anchor rope tightened, the ew-rent pushed harder, and then
the three of us were spilled mto
the dark waters of the Pere
Marquette as the canoe turned
belly up and .hegan to sink.

contract.
The approval, on a vote of 323 to 245, came just one day after
58 pet. of striking Guild members voted to reject the same "
proposed . contract. But the four-member Guild negotiating
committee, which had unanimously asked memhers to reJect the
UNION BACKS GLENN
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The offer, resubmitted the propoSal with a unanimous recom·
Teamsters Union Local 957 in mendation that it be approved. The committee said a 58 pet.
Dayton has endorsed Jolm H. rejection vote was not strong enough to maintain a hard
Glenn in his bid for the Demo- bargaining position.
cratic nomination to the U.S.
The settlement provides pay raises of 5.67 pet. in each year,
Seriate, Glenn's campaign raising minlmwn salaries lor the most experienced editorial
headquarters announced employes from the $300 provided in the contract \l)at expired at
Tuesday.
midnight March 15 to $317 inunediately and to $335 on Jan. 1,
Union President Gary Legg 1975.
said the ·action was the unanimous vote of the 5,000 rankandfiie members, not an endorsement of the union's
· exe&lt;'utive board.
•

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Peter Finch
(G)

Show starts 7 p.m.

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WASHINGTON (UP! ) Herbert L. "Bart" Porter Jr. ,
described by his Jl!wyer as " the
first victim" of Watergate, was
sentenced today to 30 days in
jail for lying to the FBf about
the bugging scaridal.
"! am absolu)ely positive in
my heart - all the way down to
my toes - that I will never get
into trouble •again," Porter

THURSDAY, APRIL II, 1974

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

vOL. XXV NO 253

j

PHONE 992 2156

TEN CENTS

I

Prest dent Ntxon 's re-electwn
campaign, forcefully derued
trymg to tampe r wtth the tn·
vesttgatwn by the Secun!tes
and Exc hange Co mmi ss ion
!SEC ).
Testtfymg at hts tnal m U S
Dtstrict Court, Mitchell sa td
his only connectton with the
Vesco case was a telephone
call to SEC Cluurman Wtlltam
Casey to arran ge a mee tmg
with Harry Sears, a gobetwee n for Vesco and former

said just hefore Judge William
B. Bryant sentenced hun.
The boyish • lookmg Porter,
35; testifted at Senate
Watergate hearings last
summer that he lied about
what he knew of Watergate for
lear other Nt&lt;on campaign
officials would accuse him or
not bemg a team player tf he
didn 't
'

New Jersey state senator
" Dtd you at any ttme ask
Casey to do anythmg but what
you just descnbed ?" Mttchell's
defense attorney, Peter Fle·mmg, asked
"No, not ,at any tune,"
Mttchell answered
"Did you feel you were
impeding the SEC mvesttgatwn ?"
" On the contrary," Mitchell
satd " I thought I might further
lt."

Pickets are.gone.
One of the longest slrtkes 10 ptcket line ts gone," Gloss
the lrt-county area ended at 10 conti nued
The stnke lasted n1 ne
a. m. Wed nesday.
mun ths and 10 days
Ca rl Searls, unwn pres tdent,
Gene Gloss, manager of the
could
not be reac hed at hts
Phtiltp Sporn Plant, New
home
at
484 Pearl St. , Midjlaven, W. Va., announced
'Today that the umon aband oned dleport
Gloss sa td pla nt operati ons
tt s stnk e yes terday . " Th e

are norm• I. One-h undred "nd
twelve employees returned tu
work at Sporn over a pc n od ol
months One-h undred and
seve n replace ments were
htred. Gloss sa td
Sup er vtsory perso nn el
operated the plant dunng the
peak of the strike last fall

Historical articles coming
Suggested arti cles are on
fam tly hi sto ry, build tngs,
a reas, legends, pecu li ar lnctdents or anyt hmg that ha s
human mte res t tn the last 200
year.s.
Mrs
Jenmler Shee ts,
chatrman of the B1cent.e nmal
Commtss ton, said pubhcation
of these articles ts one or many
activtttes Mei gs County
cttizens wtll be encouraged ·to
par !tctpat e tn She has
FOUR FILE
Four persons have filed for
divor ce 1n Me1gs Co unty
Common Plea s Co urt, all on
lhe ground s of gross neglec t of
duty and extreme cruelty.
They "ere Sharon K Callahan,
741 Short Fourth St., Mtd·
dieport, vs Ronald Wtlham
Callahan , Shamokin , Pa.;
Crysta l Sue McCourt, 741 Shor t
Fourth St. , Middl eport, vs
Larry Wayne McCo urt ,
Irondale ; Janet Ttihs, Rutland,
vs Mark A. Tilhs, Rutland, and
Jane Harmon, Middleport, vs
Roy E. Harmon , Galhpohs.

suggested tt ts better to keep
the local cc lebra tton ''sma ll ,"
wv olvmg as many loca l people
as poss tble
Mrs Sheets is encouragmg
groups of eve n a township or
smaller to sta rt a contmutng
proJect
For
example,
some thtng one looked back on
m another 100 years and

.~.1 ~,

"We started that tn 1976 "

The SEC mqutry eventually
resulted m a cmi sutt accus10g
Vesco of ioo!tng Inves tors
Overseas Services, a mutual
fund empi&lt;e Vesco had wrested
control of from Bernard Cornfeld , or $224 mtllion.
Mtlc hell co ntradtcted the
testimony of former White
House counsel John W Dean,
who said the quashmg or
delay10g ol SEC subpoenas
aga UISt Vesco and some of his
employes was discussed in a
N.e w York meetmg in late
November, 1972.
" I have no recollectiOn

The
REEDSVILLE
restgnatwn
of
Char les
Swogger, htgh school prtnctpal
for the past two years, and
granting of a number of contracts to teachers were among
actions taken by the Eastern
Local School Dtstrtct Board of
Educatt on Tuesday and
Wednesday mghts.
The restgnatwn of Swogger
was accepted effec!tve the end
of the current sc hool year
Gtvcn one yea r contracts
were Nancy Arnold, htgh
school .math teacher ; Aaron
Sayre, part-time agriculture
teacher; Charles Wills, band
instr uctor, and Patncta
Shrivers , Tuppers Plams
elementary
Gtven two years contracts
were LewiS 'Burkhetmer, htgh
school health , phystcal
educa ti on and btology teacher;
Carol Swogger, hi gh school
English, and Duane W~lfe ,
Melanie Beegle, Roberta
Mtiler and Carolyn L. Smith,

.

Lou Osborne wa s elected In n
Other offt cers elected were
pres ident of the Pomer oyMtddleport Lwns Club Wed- Richard Chambers, first VICe
nesday at noon at lhe Metgs pres td ent , Rober t Miller ,
second vtce prestdent; James
E Roush, lhtrd vice preSident;
the Rev Wtlliam Middleworth,
Tie up the dogs
lion tamer; Karl Krautter , !ail
Tie up the dogs, Pomeroy
twister, and Clarence Struble,
Police Chief Jed 'Webster
"arned today.
Dogs must be kept tied or
VAN DAMAGED
thel\_Will be picked up by the
The Pomeroy Fire Depart·
dog 'II arden, Webster said. men! was called at 7·42 p.m. to
The owner of any dog Ftve Pomts where a rental van
causihg damage to another was on fire . The truck was
person's property "ill be lo~ded with furniture and
held responsible he said. clothing. Driver of the van ts
Dogs running loose In the unknown. There was damage
Lincoln Heights area arc to the rear porllon of the truck,
causing es pecially serious Tom Werry reported. Damage
damage and must be stop- , to the truck and contents was
ped, Webster said.
estimated at $5ii0. The ltre is
::::::::::::::::::·:·:::::·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:,:·::::::::::::::::::::::::::. still under mvestiga lion.

all of the Chester Elementary
School staff.
Gtven three year contracts
were Davtd Chadwell, Fred
Kessmger, both at Rivervtew
School, and Robert Sanders of
the Tuppers Platns School. A
live year contract went to
Howard Parker, htgh school
science teacher.
Supplemental conlracts lor
one ;ear wen t to Lewts
Burkhetmer head football
coach; Btil Phtllips and Archie
Rose, asststant football
coaches and Tom Kelly. Jumor
high football coach; Btil
Phillips, head basketball
coach; Duane Wolfe, reserve
basketball coach; Larry
Hemes, freshman coach, and
Archie Rose, jumor ht gh ,
Larry Heines, head baseball
coac h; Burkheimer, head
track coach; Rober!'! Miller,
head of the Girls Athle!tc
Assoctation; Nancy Arnold ,
chee rl eader advtsor , and
Norman Bahr. yearbook ad-

FIRING AWAY - Paul Michael, 10, Hysell Run,
prepares to frre during Tuesday everung's shooter's
education lesson at the Middleport Junior High Bldg. The
education program, a community service project of the
Meigs CotlOty Jaycees, has drawn approximately iiO area
The program will
youngsters into tbe gun safety
next week with the =~~~=

SHOOTER'S EDUCATION- The Meigs County Jaycee
public service project, the annual shooter's education
program , has been underway for several weeks in the
Middleport .Junior High Bldg. Here, Jaycee shooter's
education chairman Barry McCoy assists Dave Davts, 12,
Rutland ;with the iearnmg techniqufs of firm g a rifle.

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whatsoever of such a discusSIOn," Mitchell satd .
Mttchell also denied knowing
Nixon's nephew, F . Donald
Nixon Jr Dean had characterIZed Mitchell as one of the
nephew's "keepers "
Mttehell said he had met
Vesco, · who "renunded me of
my older brother," only once
briefly and never talked to him
by telephone
Mttchell, who was manager
or NIXon' s re--eiectwn campaign, derued the testunony of
Sears that he learned on Apnl
10, 1972, that Vesco's contrtbu·

twn had been dehvered on that
day . Mttchell said he ftrst
learned of the cash dehvery
about a month after it was
made
Sears was mdi cted along
with Mitchell and Stans, but
has become a prosecution
witness. Vesco, also mdicted,
fl ed the country and is lfl Costa
Rica.
11
Dld you in your three years
10 the cabmet recetve one red
cent from anyone in connection
with anything except your
salary ?" Fleming asked.
Mttchell replied "No, str."

Osl;lorne to lead Lions in Pomeroy

Swogger resigns as

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First
Watergater gets 30 days.
.

Elberfelds 2nd Aoor For Easter
Fashions For Girls and Women

FOR MEN

enttne

IJevoted To The lnteres~ Of The Meigs-Mason Area

TOKYO - AN ESTIMATED 6.5 MILUON WORKERS
carried out the biggest series of strikes in Japan's history today,
shutting down train and air services and slowing the world's
third largest economy. Tbe strikers were demanding pay 10·
creasesaveragingabout30per cent to meet an inflation rate of 24
tier cent over the past year. They also wanted to legalize strikes
against government-controlled industries.
The 280,000 employes of the government-controlled Japan
National Railways (JNR) shut down ail service on the nation- ·
wide system that carries about iiO per cent of the country's
commuters and 75 per cent of its freight.

colors

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at y

WASHINGTON - ,DESPITE LAST-MINUTE efforts to
Metgs County wt ll start its
rewnte the bill, the Senate today headed for final passage of
celebratiOn
of th e 1976
landmark legislation which would finance presidential and
Btce ntenmal of the Declaratwn
congressional elections lh)'ough federal substdtes. Eager to
ol Independence wtth a sertes
break away for the Easter recess, the Senate hoped to fmish the
bill by mid-afternoon, but a long string of amendments and m- . of short htstoncaily Slgmftcan t
arttcles to be published weekly
. creasing absenteeism couJ.d alter those plans .
tn The Dati; Sentmel, acDespite an 11-day ltlibuster - cracked Tuesday - and
co
rdin g to Gera ld Powe ll ,
numerous amendmenis, the wide-rangmg package of campaign
pubhc
relatiOns coordmator lor
reforms remained virtually intact. Despite tis strong support m
the Co unt y Btcentenntal
the Senate , the bill faces deep resistance in the House and
Commiss
lon
probably a veto by President Nixon .
Powell extends an mvttation
to ail Meigs County restdents
A GROUP OF ARAB GUERRILLAS STORMED an Israeli
town near the Lebanese border today a~d seized two buildmgs . or mterested people to submtt
Witnesses said at least 16 persons were beheved killed. The ar!teles at any lime to Pos t
national radio said the guerr_i!las occupied a house and a vacant Office Box 1776, Pomeroy
Arlt cles submitted should be
school buildmg in the town of Kiryat Shemona and fought off
approxunateiy
one page 111
counterattacking Israeli forces with the belp or gunlrre from
length,
typed
double
space. If
Lebanese territory.
typmg
ts
tmposstble,
arltcles
Israeli troops surrounded the town of 18,000 persons- a mile
and a half from the !Jzbanese border - in an effort to ·force the may be submitted m longhand
Mrs . Jeanne Bowen, Met gs
guemllas out of !be buildings. The death toll at Ktryat Shemona,
the largest town in the northern Galilee region, marked the Ht gh School' Enghsh teacher,
has volunteered to proof read
highest in a guerrilla raid in Israel smce 28 persons were killed
ar
ticles and make corrections
on May 30, 1972, during the Lodi airport massacre.
tl needed
WASHINGTON - STEEL INDUSTRY AND UNION
negotiators were reported near agreement today On new conLOCAL TEMPS
tracts covering 350,000 workers in the basic steel industry, with
The temperature m downthe settlement expected to follow the pattern set earlier in the town Pomeroy at II a.m.
aluminwn and can industries. Sources close to the talks said a Thursday was 56 degrees under
final agreement could come as early as today, wel110 advance of cloudy skies.
Monday's deadline calling for subrrussion of unresolved ISSues to
bindmg arbttration if agreement is not reached by that date.
,The present contra,cts expire Aug. I, but under the "Experimental Negotiating Agreement" (ENA) worked out last
year, the United Steel Workers (USW) agreed to give up the right
to strike over national bargaining issues in return for arbttration
of any ,unsettled issues.

of Wemble y t 1es for
m en. for boys and

All arranged p13ml y marked and we mvtte you to .brouse
around through the mens department and pick out the shirt

CASH GIVEAWAY

'.

By United Press Ioternatlonal
NEW YORK -SEVERAL MORE OF THE country 's biggest
banks Wednesday -raised prune 10terest rates to 10 per cent
Wednesday, the highest rate ever charged on pnme busmess
' loans to larger customers. Bankers Trust Co. of New York ratsed
the prlme rate from 9% per cent on Monday and a few banks
followed on Tuesday.
Those going to 10 per cent Wednesday included Chemtcal
· Bank and Franklin Nahonal of New York, Detroit Bank &amp; Trust
Co., First National of Boston, Continental Illinois Bank and
Harris Bank &amp; Trust of Chicago, Ilank of America ol San
Franctsco, Umted California Bank and First National Bank of
Oregon.

Tee Shirts · Briefs · Athletic Shorts . Boys sizes 2
to 20 · mens sizes 30 to 54.

WEMBLEY

•

traditwnal, mlormal campatgn
style.
He chtded Congress for
refusing to approve 17 of his
proposals, particularly energy
legislation . "We have moved,"
satd Ntxon , " .. but the boltleneck ts m the Congress."
State GOP charrman Wiltiam
McLaughlin said the vtsit "wt
a definite plus. It created a lot
or interest and I think we can
translate that into votes Tuesday."
But Uruted Auto Workers
prestdent Leonard Woodcock,
who has called lor NIXon's
restgnaUon, noted that the
Prest de nt avotded Sagma" '
and Bay City, whi ch both have
1Contmued on page 12 )

Mitchell professes innocence

Light and dark
shades

-

,. . .. .

Program. The over 50 Easter
baske ts will be delivered either
today or Frida y
Mrs. Moon and her vol untee rs prepared bas kets
Tuesday at the home of Mrs
NEW YORK (UP!l - ForI)aisy Taylor, Nye Ave .
mer
Attorney General John N.
Pomeroy ~ Assistmg were Mrs
Mitchell
testthed Wednesday
Elmse Lawrence, Mrs. Robbte
Brown ,
Mrs.
Ma gg te that he did not try to fix a
Ca ruthers, and Mrs Mane -go vernment mvesttgatton of
ftnan cter Robert L Vesco tn
Cyr us Wor ktng with Mrs
Clark at the home ol Mrs. retu rn for a campaign co nSonja Parsons or contnbutmg trtbutwnm
Mtlchell, who along wtth
to the project were Mrs Clara
Commerce Secretary
former
Philhps, Mrs . Betty Van
Maurice
Stans ts charged with
Meter, Mrs. Edtth R1zer , and
consp tr acy and perJ ury tn
Mrs. Loutse Epperson
connectton w1th Vesco's
$200,000 con tribution to

'

BELTS

·

Easter baskets for chtidren
of low-i ncome families parbclpatmg m the Extension
Servtce Expanded Nutn twn
Program and those at the
Mei gs Coun ty Children's
Home, have been prepared by
the atdes, Ann Moon and
Myrtle Clark, wtth th e
ass istance of volunteers..
The baske ts, made from
plas!tc JUgs and decorated wtth
colorful felt ammais, fl oral
designs and sequins, contam a
coloring book on nutrttion and
crayons m addi tion to the
Easter good tes. Funds for the
project were provtded through
the Expanded Nutril ton

SPORT
COATS

DRESS
SLACKS·

Solid colors pla 1ds
your select1on.

Val. to 9.99

Register free. Winners w1ll be notified. Drawings
Apr114 , 13, 20, 27, May 6. Drive in, trv this new

Bask-ets prepared
for poor families

Jackets · Trousers · Socks · Underwear · Ties · Sport Coats . Bells • Shirts •
Handkerchiefs - Any of the salespeople will gladly help you find the size, style or
color
u prefer .

Sizes sma ll (14-l41f2 L med 1um ( 15 l5 1J'2). large (16-16112). and
extra large (l\17 lf'2l.
,

DRIVE -IN HOURS :
Mon. to Thurs. 9 to 3-Friday 9to 7
Saturday 91o 12. •

..

Ytsil Elberfelds busy mens and boys department on the lsi floor. See the fine
selection of Easter wear.
·

type cut and sewn
boys
shirts

AUTO BANK

·.'•

saturday 9:30 to 9 PM

· In knits or dressy

Our Regular' Stock
Of Famous Brands

U's So Easy, Try

convenient service.

Open Thursday 9:30 to 5 PM-Shop Friday and

.

UPI Whllt' House Reporter
by·more than 20,000 wh o turned There,. "
WASHINGTON ( UP! ) out along the sparsely populatNixon
returned
to
Presiden t Ntxon ts pleased ed 57-mile rural and small- Washtn gto n We dnesd~y af·.
wtth the receptton he got town route.
te rnoon, and the White House
Wednesday campatgmng for a
Asked tl there would be more awaited word. !rom the House
congress iOnal candidate m such tnps, Ztegler smtied and Judiciary Committee. whtch ts
Micht ga n and may make said, " he'll be out."
decidmg whether to subpoena
further tests or hiS popuianty,
Speakmg four bmcs tn tl1e 4 I Wa t erg a te · r e l a t e d
his chief spokesman says
five-hour trip on behalf of presidenttai tapes
Returning
fr om
a candidate James M Sparling,
"We're gomg to turn over ali
pr esid entia l motorc ad e Ntxo n heard Jeers and chants mater tals St. Clatr deems
through Mt chtgan 's Eighth or "Impeach Nixon Now " relevant ," said Whtte House
DtS tnct - a tra dtltonall y Near Sagmaw , wh,ere hts plane atde Dean Burch on the return
Repubhcan pemnsula JUltmg landed, some stgns read " Re- fltght to Wash mgton
mto Lake Huron north of stgn Wtth Honor" and " If You
The Miclu ga n tnp was
Detrotl - Whtte House Press Love Us- Leave Us."
Ntxon's first stn ctly pohttcal
Secretary Ronald L Ztegler
But most of the placard. camp!l tgn smce the Waterga te
indicated Nixon might do more along the motorcade supporte8 scandal tiroke open a year ago
campaigrung this year He satd NIXon- "We 're lor You Mr. But he never menttoned
Ntxon was "very pleased" by Prestd ent ,""Th is is Ntxon scandal or his own political
the warm reception a'ccorded Country" and "Hang tn troubl es, stickmg tnstead to a

EASTER BASKETS - Mrs. Ann Moon, Expa nded
Nutrition Program aide, was assts!ed Tuesday m preparmg
Easter baskets by several volunteers . Takmg tune !rom therr
work lor this picture are Mrs. Elotse Lawrence, Mrs. Moon,
Mrs. Robbie Brown, Mrs. Mag gte Caruthers , Mrs. Daisy
Taylor and Mrs. Marie Cyrus. Left to nght

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

DRESS &amp; SPORT

18 FT SHASTA Cahlper With
h 1fch V Irgil Wal~er , 9.49 2599
__._
- - -- 4 10 6tc

- r,:-

polyester
and
cotton blendS. •

SHOE SALE

4 ROOM furnished apartment,
close to town Phone 992 3658
4 10 tfc

L1v Ullmann

"You can't swm m waders,"
I recall thinking . But somethmg more basic than co~­
sctous thougliflilade me start
moving arms and legs 10
somethin g vaguely like a
sidestroke.
My legs, in their ' COCOOD or
halast, 1f!811aged to ktck. Arms
heavy with down-filled jacket
over a beavy shirt over thermal underwear somehow managed to reach into the current
an d paddle lor shoreline
willows.
Momentary amazement
gripped me as I haif.,.ealized I
was actually making progress
towards the willows. I really
was moving perpendicular to

that decettfully smooth
current, three feet above normal level for this river in April.
There I My hand clutched a
few fragile branches or the
willows, and with hwnan joy I
saw they carneq green bu&lt;b,
were live 't.nd therefore on!"
·
wouldn't break' and set me
Daily, able to use the fire of
hack into the river.
his profanity to reach shore
Not safe yet, though. I tried sooner than I, was thrashing
to find bottom with my feet, but through the waters of the
felt only that relentless drowned shoreline towards
current, teasing, urging me where I h'ung .
back into its frigtd depths.
He waaed . as close as he
Until that moment, never m dared, then reached a most
my lile and I called for help. It welcome hand where I could
always had sounded so melo- grasp it. Tbe willow branches
dramallc when heard in films. scratched hands and face, but I
But at that moment I called for was pulled through the bushes
help !hree tlmes.
to safety, and didn't care,

(Continued from page I)

For Rent

(lechnicolor)

stream and oul of reach.

in Briefs

Children's.

Fri. - Sat.- Sun . ·
Apnl12-13-14
THE LOST
HORIZON

I suppose pure love ol living
kept all or us from drowning
right there. We all wore chesthigh waders, and these of
course filled completely with
water, dragging us down with
the md of the curt'l!nt. Strangely, none of us went completely
under; perhaps the fight to
keep heads above water , to
breathe, gave us th e spark
needed to survtve.
I remember glancing downstream whtle chngmg to the
fas t-disa ppear ing ca noe.
Daily, his hat stili in place, was
flailmg the murky water and
swearing at the top of his lungs.
Cannon, caught 10 th e
strongest•flow of current, was
quickly being swept down-

'

~ixon liked ca)]}paigning

'

Yet even as I called I he~rd
the drowned woods and river
suck up the sound as tf to keep
me where I was. My handS
clutched the wtllow branch as
if to never let go, but the cold
was gnawing at their strength
and I only half-felt the willow
as I hung suspended hetween
life and death.
Hang on 1 I'm coming, hang

Safety rules a must for outdoorsmen

I

prh:~cipal

secretary· treasurer
Elected to the board ol
directors for one year were
Paul Kloes and fuliph Graves,
and lor two years, Donald
Pearch and Robert Htll They
wtll take olltce July 1.
Wendell Hoover, prestdent,
who prestded, announced the
annual Hole-In-One contest will
be held July I.
Marton Rtggs of Logan 10·
traduced Sen Harry Armstrong, .. ho spoke briefly to the
21 persons attendmg. Servmg
on the nominating comrmttee

were N. W. Compton, chairma n; fullph Graves, and Bob
Jacobs.

lfoliday
extended

visor

Pnncipals reappmnted include Grace Weber, Rtvervtew Duane Wolle, Chester;
and 'Bea Douglas, Tuppers
~ Ptams.

The board discussed the
classrooms being added lor the
new jun iOr htgh school
program It was agreed to
purchase 100 ne" desks and 100
new lockers from Doug Carr
Sales m LOgan II· was also
agreed to extend the present
public address system into the
Junior hi gh addition. PermJsswn was given for the
Chester and Rtverview Schools
to be used for Bible schools m
J une.
Supt John Riebel and Clerk
C. 0. Newland were aut~ot ized
to attend a sc hool lun ch
program meeting m Athens,
May 8 and a clerk-ll'easurer's
chnic m Athens, May 16. Plans
were made for repair or
replacement of some gym(Gontmued on page 12)

for 1975
Meigs County
school
students apparently are in lor
extra tune off in the way of a
spring vacation in March, 1975,
according to the annual school
calendlir recommended by the
Meigs County Board ol
Educatton to the three local
boards.
According to_ the calendar,
already adop~ by the Meigs
Local and the Eastern Local
Boards, students will be
dismissed from school Wednesday, March 26, and their
vacation will continue for six
days until April! when classes
resume . This wtll be the frrst
tune Meigs County students
have had an extended vacation
over the Easter holiday.
According to the calendar,
·teachers will meet Aug. 26 and
the first day of school for the
1974-75 year will be Aug. 27.
There will be no school Labo,r
Day, Sept . 2, and the fli'St six
weeks will end Oct. 4.'
During the second six weeks
period, students will have a
Thanks gi ving vacation
beginning Nov.' 21 and extending through the weekend.' During the. third six wee,ks,
students will attend school
Dec. 20, before beginning their
Christmas vacation with
classes resuming Jan. 2.
The fourth six weeks is
without any vacation time. The
new Easter vacation period is
included in the filth six weeks
period. During the final six
weeks students ' will have
Decoration Day off May 26.
The final day of scl\ool will be
May 28 for the next school
year.

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