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Nixon's .image
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Mrs . Mary Huush, Anne St., Pofn erOy, left, hrt $ wci1~ $:10.000 m t il ~ Mass.ae!i usctLs S! ;llt
lottery. Mrs. Roush, at the request of The Daily Sentinel, w Hs notified by the M:1 ssat !lu!'il' l t.-:
State Lotte ry Commissli&gt;rl by tc lephone.Wednesdn y afternoon uf he r prtzc S!w had in LhC' p~1s1
couple of weeks receivccl checks from the lottery commission tota ling $1 ,OOLI bu1 tlld nor know
what prize :;he had won. Mrs. Roush will receive $500 a month fo r t11e next f1 vc ~ea r~ . i\rl1T
being informed of her win while at her emploj1nent ~t Tl~ lm~c-~ i al E lectric ( 'tJ in :vlicldll' J&gt;ut'! .
Mrs. Roush was gtven the rest of the day off. " I cant bc iH'Vl' 1t , Mr s Htmsll ('tllllll H' nlt•d .S! Jt '
will continue her employrnenl.

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tarnished· again
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CULTURAL ART WINNERS - These wirming entries in
the Middleport PTA cultural arts competition will now be
placed in District 16 competition at the spring conference to
he held in Middleport on May 4. Holding their entries are left

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to right, Stephanie Houchins, primary division, written
work; Pam Crooks, intermediate division, written work and
music ; Steve Powell, primary division, visual arts; and
Danny Hysell, intermediate division, visual arts.

Versions
of loss
differ
I,

AN INVESTITtTRE SERVICE for a brand new Brownie Troop in Rutland, as yet unnumbered, was held at the gymnasium Tuesday evening. The four members from the left are
Paula Norman, Kristin Bailey, Tammy Haley and Christie Haley. Leaders with them are Mrs.
Kenneth Haley, left, and Miss Mona Johnson. Other members of the new group, unable to at·
tend the service due to illness, are Charlotte and Charlene J&gt;atterson. The new group plans to
visit the Columbus zoo in July.

Utilities can add synthetic gas cost
to adjustment clauses says PUCO
COLUMBUS (UP!) - A
. request _by five utility com.panies to include synthetic
natural gas cost in their "fuel
cost adjustment clauses" .has
been approved by the Public ·
Uiliitles Commission of Ohio
(PUCO) on the condition the
public Is made· fully aware of

MEIGS THEATRE
Tonight &amp; Thursday
April17-18
. NOT OPEN

Fri., Sat, Sun.
Apri 119·20·21
OKLAHOMA CRUDE
( Techn icolor)
George C. Scott
Faye Dunaway ·

Color cartoon:
Kra1y Kat
Show Starts 1 p.m.

( PG)

exactly what the fuel adjustment procedure is and what the
cost means to consumers on a
month-to-month bnsis.
The PUCO said Ttiesday teatimony from the Cincinnati
Gas &amp; Electric Co., Columbia
Gas of Ohio, Inc., the Dayton
Power &amp; Light Co., the Ohio
Valley Gas Co., and the West
Ohio Gas Co., indicated -it had
become necessary for the
. state's natural gas utilities to
bring in varlou&amp; fonns of ~d­
ditional gas supplies to prevent
injury to the public interest and
business and to meet demand
The five companies, all Columbia Gas Transmission
Corp., cus.tomers, jointly
requested fast June that they
be permitted to recover the
added cost of purchasing all
~as sources, including nonhistoric . sources such as

The MEIGS INN

DIVORCE FILED
Sharon Wise, 344 Pearl St.,
· Middleport, has filed for a
· divorce in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court from
Wesley Wise, 340 Page St.,
Middleport, on the grounds of
gross neglect of duty and extreme cruelty.

The most popular night club in
'

the tri-county area is proud to
present the ~eturn ~~

GEO. HALL

PRIVATE SCHOOLS
CLEVELAND (UP!) - Gov.
John J. Gilligan said here Monday Ohio will continue to seek a
legal way 'tq provide financial
support to private schools. Gil·
ligan said private Schools "tra- ·
ditionally have played a very
special role in our society."

AND THE HALLMARKS

:

liqulfled natural gas and
propane-air gas is substantially higher than the cost
of the historic supply, and
based on the long-term
practice of the present and past
commissions in allowing the
companies to recover those
costs, the PUCO has decided to
approve th.e request of the uili·
itles to reflect the additional
cost in .their . billings," PUCO
commissioner Sally W. Bloomfield said Ttiesday.
"Such adjustments must be
fulled explatned to the customers who receive the bills,
®wever, and we are requiring
that all future bills show the
exact cost of ' the added fuel
expense each month/' she
said.
The companies also were required to include in their bills
an insert explaining fully the
necessity for obtaining synth.etic gas and de!Biling the fuel
adjustment procedure, said the
·PUCO.

TONIGHT 10 TIL ·2

THE MEIGS COUNTY
'

ASCSOFFICE

SAGINAW,Mich. (UP!) - J .
Bob Traxler, who Tuesday
night scored a solid victory in a
congressional district that has
not gone Democratic since the
depression, said President
Nixon was an "albatross"
around the. neck of the
Republican party.
Traxler, a state representative for 13 years, defeated
Republican opponent James
M. Sparling Jr., a onetime
Nixon aide in the 6th
Congressional District in
Michigan's thumb area, by
58,153 votes to 55,-118 for
Sparling with 292 of 301
precincts reporting.
11
"Nixon," Traxler said, is a

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ASK TOWED
James Robert Grimm, 20,
Rutland, and Janice Kay
Smith, 22, Rt. 4, Pomeroy.
Help Wanted
.
BABYSITTER f or 2 preschool

somewhere in tMe Middlepor t
area , Ca ll992 ;2539 after 8 p . rn .
4-lJ ,Jtc

- -- -----~ - ----.

One

efficiency

apt.
Bathroom, kitchen, 1\v\ng
and bedroom. combination.

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ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

INfRODUCING
SUPP-HOSE
SUPER SHEERS PAN1YHOSE
WITH MONVELLE '

The busier your life. the more your
legs need support- no matter how young
you are. Ne'v\1 Supp· ho~e Super Sheers
Pantyhose was d ~signed JUSt for you. with
just the right touch of young support. In
Monsanto's great f)ew fiber- Monvelle. It
has beautiful stretch and recovery for
sensational fit. And it looks beautiful. too.
In a choice of fashion colors that go with
whatever you wear. The more you wear
them. the more you'll get the support you
need in that busy life of yours. $4.95.

__
. __ .KJ( _ ___ , --

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Free for the asking at
office.

1l1 N. 4th St.

.·

Cushionflor products by Congoleum

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Middleport

'J.!Jil~

Alter 6

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all in •k for immediate deliveiJ.

TIM Athens County
S.vlngs &amp; Loon Co:
2t6Second St.
POIIMiroy, Olllo

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.INGELS FURNITUR'E
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MIDOI.EPOin
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and comprehensive" answer

by early next week, but some
aides have indicated that
conversations dealing with national security and non-Watergate matters Wllu ld be
screened out.
Rodino was asked during an
interview on the NBC-TV
Today Show if the reported
White House editing strategy
was satisfactory \o the committee.
''No," he repHed. " This

would mean that the White
House would be making the
final determination. This could

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lie said that he also planned

to help hi s fcmu ly and don ate ~
"! bet illogica lly, n1J1 reall y some money to charities .
His greatest dream however
1s lu bc&lt;.:Orne a lawyer, and " ::t'i
soon ~~ s I put my life back in
order again I wlli try to get
ON AI'PKO\'E U LL'iT
myself accepted mto law
M ~ i gs Hi gh .School was
pla ced on the list of secondary school. "
Por tela siudie s business ad·
sc hools &lt;-~ppmvet.l for the l9i:lministration
in the Cniversity
1974 school yt:ar by the Nortll
Ce ntral A.ssuciation of Colleges of Bahia
Il e is marnt&gt;tl and htiS an 11 and Se l'O nclary Schoo ls ~t the
annual busineSs meetin g of the month-·olct son I lis wife works
assoc i ation 1n Ch i('agu un as a .seeretary and ea rns less
(han $100 a I!IOntll.

March 27 .

Now You Know
Th e Missou ri River is fiv e
rml es lon ger
than the
Mississippi Rin•r .

us1ness

areas, the evidence is not found
in a recent presidential report

be " vigorous " in gi ving top

receive trammg tor entry-level
employment.
According to the Ohio
Bureau of Employment Services, the West Virgi nia
Department of Employment
Security and the Belmon t
County Joint Vocational
School , which announced the
project, 480 trainees will go
through the training center in a
12-month period. Mines in
eastern Ohio and the
panhandle area of West
Virginia will provide em-ployment oppor tuniti es for
applicants completing the
\raining.

the co mmittee but with tile scree ning process.
Rodino would not speculate
House o{ Representa tives as
the sole oower to inquire m
impeachffient proceed in gs.''
He asse r ted : " We havr ·
issUed a su bpunca . It 's necccs-

on what action the committee

sary that .the White _House
comply because it's in the

tee members have note d
however that the committee
has no real power to enfo rce
the subpoena.

mteres t

an swering

of

a

nagging questi on that IS before
the Am enca n people Unless
th is ts done, (I is go ing to be
considered by the commi ttee
some agencies. especially the as a refusal on the part of the
Agriculture and Intenor White House and could be
Departments, appear to show considered as u possibl-J !:rime
they are . trymg to follow the of impeachment. ''
Rodino said "the only wa y
policy , NRECA satd.
But for the administration as that the committee inqui ry can
a whole, published reports he satisfied'' is if it has a hand
"don 't really show whether the in screening ou t irrelevant
federa l government is making material in the tapes.
progress
toward
the He ind1cated that it may be
Congressional goal of priority sattsfa etory if he, along with
for rural areas. And it is dif- Rep. ·Edward Hutchinson uf
ficult to determine from them Michiga n. the panel's ranking
if anybody is really trying or if Repubhcan, and the commit·
they are just going through the tee's impeachment counsel,
motions," NRECA spokesmen John Doar and Albert Jenner,
be given a hand in the
added.

Rural push lags
WASHINGTON (UP!) - If
the governme nt is doing
any thin g
about
a
Congressional mandate to
scatter its facilities in to rural

priority to rural areas when
siting new federal facilities,.
And regulations adopted by

might take if the White House
d1d not fully com ply with the
subponea. Some other commit.

Th e committee and he
Watergate special prosecutor's

offi ce both have asked lor large
numbers of White House tapes
c.md documen ts. The co m·
mittee demanded a response

by Ap ril· 25- &lt;me week from
today. The prosecutor's subpoena reques t

the mileage he gets.

lege in Buffal o. He was driving
Terry Donovan, owner of a back to Buffalo fr om Dayton.
men 's hairstyling shop in Wil" I usually try to. go 55 but I
loug hby, is one of them. He find that everybody passes me,
drives a tiny Japanese car including the trucks, " he said.
which is first cousin to a
0ne thing [ not1cied is that
motorcyle. He basks in the even though they're not obglory of getting better than 30 serving the speed limit, they 're
miles per gallon and sees the 55 not going 75 or 80. It 's a lot
m.p.h. limit as a cure for many safer driv ing.
ills.
'It's a reasonable law and
Hell"' Prevent Accidents
helpful," the priest added.
"SUre it helps," he sa id. "! "Going" 55 you get fantastic
think it helps prevent acci- mileage. I'm ge tting almost 30
dents.! think they should make miles per ga llon with my little
cars to go only 60 miles per car (a domestic compact)."
hour anyhow, but I'm a bug on
Truckers do not share his
enthusiasm. Bill Thompson or
ecology."
Another traveler of similar Ja ckson, Mo. drive r of a tra ctastes on Interstate 90 this tor trailer rig , is hoping ·that
week was ·Rev. Joseph higher speeds will be restored.
Angilella of St. Canisius Col·
Speed Limit Unsafe
11

IS

pending in

federa l court.
Charle. Colson , one of the
defendanls in the Watergate.
cove r-up case, .ttlso has
requested access to some of the
LOCAL TEMPS
Temperature in downtown
Pomeroy Thursday at 11 a.m.

was 59 degrees .under sunny
skies.

55~ mph

speed limit

Sta nsbery , laughed when
safe ," Thompso n said during a asked if drivers are actually
rest stop near here wh ile on his go ing 55 .
"I'd say they 're probably
way from niin ois to Canada . "I
settling
in close to 60 as an
used to drive for a company
that had its own 55 m.p.h. limit. average," he said . " With
I had more troub le staying something very new - goin g
fcom 70 to 55 overmght - we're
awake.
us
ing a lot of toleranc e, good
''11lings just don't happen
fast. Drive thai speed all day judgement and patience ."
Stansbery satd that while the
long and it gels you nuts ."
number
of arrests has dropped
Of course Thompson does not
the
accide
nt rate is also down
dri ve that speed ali day and
neither do many pthe rs. Fur- nearly 50 per cent since the
thermore, the authorities are new limit was imposed March
"Actually, I think it's un-

aware of it and take a position

close to benign neglect .
The comma nder of the Ohw
Highway Pat rol division
responstbie for patroling the
Ohio Turnpike, Capt. M. I..

Fish &amp; Grune
hearings set
The district fish and . 3ame
hearing will be at the District 4
office, 360 East State St ..
Athens , at I p. m. Sunday.
ReL"ornmendatJ ons

fo r

11

r eported

missin g

sin ce

Tuesday, notified The Dniiy
Sentinel today that het son
ha s

bee n

lo ca ted

evening reporting 'that th e

youth had

Friday, April 26, at 10 a. m.
fi na l hea nngs on the state level
will be he ld In the first floor

Baltimore an':l was with
friends.

Oh io

Departmen t · of Natural
Resources, fluiiJing C, l!i52
Belcher Dr ., Fountain Square,
Columbus. Any resident with
questions about either hearing

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extension

Baltimore. She received a
phone call Wedn esday
returned to

is launched

The Iamily moved here
£rum Baltimore last Friday.

Door.to-door canvassing for

cabl e

n:

instal lations ha s

begun in Sy racuse - Miners·

Thanks to them

ville , Richa rd Newell, general
rri'afiager for PoinTVicw ·eable ·
TV , said J oday .
· .
A.. .(e w· in ~tallation s have
al ready be en m"de. but
Wednesday marked the rea l
ki ckolf of the project to wire
·both Meigs Co unty co mmuniti ~s. This is the first
major ' eXte nsion of service
si nce PoinTVie1v added
Middlepor t and Pomeroy about

may con ta c t Gary . ~wope,
Wards of the Meigs County
Meigs game.proll&gt;ctor with the
BY AGNES HILL
Division of Wildlife', Mid - Children 's Home today
thanked the following for help
1 January 21, 1619 the General Assembly of Ohio ·passed an act to form the county of Meigs fron.' dleport .•
in making their Easter a happy
part.s or Athens and Gallia Counties.
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to'
o~ e : The Rutland Garden Club,
February 18, 1820, by joint resolution of the legtslat~re , Da\1d Mi tchell of Sctoto Co un t ~··
.
donating
candy ; Meigs Local
Jomithan .Schofield of Fairfield County and Joseph J . Mart\n of Plke. County were appomted co m- McARTHUR - The reguChapter
of
FHA, which gave a
missioners to locate the county seat of Meigs County. These comnusswnors selected a loca twn I lot lar meet~ the lOth
No. 313, in T 1, R 13,) now within the incorporated limits of Middleport. Benjamin Smith dona ted 20 c 0 n g res s i 0 n a 1 Di s 1ri c 1 party ; Noreen Mash , Rutland,
two years ago.
acres of land for public bu'ildings and village,iots. The deed was signt&lt;l, sealed, and ackn owledged Democratic Action Club will be donating eggs: Midwest Steel,
If an installer calls and no
Pomeroy,
Easter
baskels
;.
the
before James E. Phelps, one of the associate judges and v.:as recorded J uly 2, 1821 m Metgs Coun ty Frid ay at the e lementary
one
is home, a tag will be left
Rutland
Fire
Auxiliary
,
candy
;
Records, Vol. 1, pp 200, 201, 202. R. C. Barton, recorder. Eli Slgler was appomted dtractor of the seat school in McArthur.
on
the
door with instructions
Pome roy · Fire Dept., food;
of justice.
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Dinner will be served ·a t 6 p. Virgil ' Lewis and Peggy for c~Jting !!).~. ~able TV office
Upon considerable dlssatlsfactlon -~mg expressed for thls !oct10n, the legtsiat ure on Jun .. 31, m. at $2.50 per plate . The
1822, appointed a new comnuss1on of Wtl,lam Vance, Ross county ; John Barr, P1ckaway county, "nd meeting will start at 8 with a Seebaugh, pop: Mr . and Mrs. in Pt. Pleasant at the ·toil.free
William Dunn,' Belmont county, which relocated the .seat of justice on Sec 2~ . T 3, H 12 .. then tp program to follow . Ail mem- Dwight Milh oa n, Pomeroy, 992-2505 number. PoinTView operates ca ble
o,ange township (afterwards Gtester). Levt Stedm~n gave 30 acres of land forpubhc bwidmgs a nil- bers and interested persons are stuffed animals and clothing;
TV
systems in Pt. Pleasant,
and
MyMle
Clark,
Sonia
village lots. A brick courthouse, J6x38 feet, two stones htgh, was erected. A Jailtof llev.:n l og~ 20x20 invited to attend. Alva
Mason,
New Haven. Ravensfeet,.two stories, a,nd jailor's residence, of one story and a half {rame, I6x20 feet, ')I'd a bnck ~d iftce of Mahaffey, vinton Cou nty Parsons, Edith Rizer , Minni
small dimenslOns, for the county clerk s offtce rwere also bulit.
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• chairma n
is· hostin g the Miller ' Clara Phillips and wood - and Ripley in , :.Vest
Betty Van Meter, who made Virginia and' Pomeroy, 'Mid- ·
The whole of these buildings co~t probably no1 more than $5,000 os most butldtng nto ll'nal and meeting. '
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dleport and Galhpolis in Ohio. I
Easter 15askets.
. labor were much cheaPfr at that ti!Jle.

Ouh

meet

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.Cable TV

in

are welcome,

ro om,

L. Brown , 67, of Syrscuse, N.Y.

thinks drivers of modern truck
tractors are penalized by the
lower limit.
" I'm an oldtimer," Brown
said while passing through
truck scales on his way to
Boston. "I've been on the road
since 1945.
"These fe llows that got these
grea t big tractors, they can 't
keep 'em down . The trucks are
geared too high and that's why
they' re running so damned
fast.
"Mos~ 1drivers) are running
1.
"It could always be a coin- better than 55 and that's the
cidence, but I ~!tribute it to the truth," he added . "They're
lower speed limit, he said .
running between 60 and 65 if
Truckers Hurt Most
they ge t away with it, but they
Another truck dnver, Robert have to be awful ca reful
because they could lose their .
license if they got caught."
Stansbery said truckers are
usin g citizens band radios to
SON LOCATED
!Continued on page 8t
Mrs .. Maxin e' Bea lmer,
Pomeroy, whose son was

proposed rules and laws for the
1974-75 hunting season will be
made. Ali mterested persons

co nferen ce

the beginning of Meigs County

DISPLAYS BOTTLE - Eric Diddle, seventh grader at
the Meigs Junior High School, Middleport, would lik e to know
more about the bottle he holds. He found it on the riverbank
at Middleport and plans to add it to his collection . One side of
the bottle is inscribed "M C Kerns" , and the other side has
the inscription , "Pomeroy, Ohio" . Eric is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Pooler, 45 Riverview Dr ., Middleport.

ta pes.

Drivers ignoring nation's
By JOHN SPETZ
CLEVELAND (UP! ) - The
55 mile per hour speed limit
may take ils rightful place
some day alongside the hula
hoop and Davy Crockett Tshirts. For now, many drivers
are simply ignoring it.
Driving at 55 on a freeway is
like being a lame elephant in a
stampede for a water hole; the
desire to get there is as strong
ns ever but the progress is
painful.
Some complain that it takes
all the joy out of driving , However, since 1t became law in
Ohio earlier this year a new
breed of driver has emerged.
He drives the smallest car he
can buy and never lets an
opportunity pas~ to brag about

TEN CENTS

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PHON t 1!922156

THUR SDAY. APRIL 18. !97 4

not be a proper inquiry, a the committee was attempting
comprehensive inquiry unless to give the White House,
we were to make the determi- Rodino replied :
nttlion as to what is necessary.
"We have to indicate quite
The committee in the last in- strongly that we mean business
stance is the determing factor. and that the House has given us
That's the way it's going to this authority and therefore
be ."
thts would be a refusal not only
Asked what kind of message to comply with the request of

on the subject, a rural group
complains.
The National Hurai Electrical Cooperative Association
I NRECA ) said the administration has promised to

WASHINGTON- SUBPOENAS TO PRODUCE White Hou!;e
·tapes are coming at President Nixon froQJ all directions - the
latest from Charles Colson, one of the defendanls in the
Watergate cover-up case.
. . .. .
.
.Colson, a former presidential alde md'.Cted March 1 m the
Watergate cover-up along with seven other ex-Whtte House and
Nixon re-elf!ction officials, asked Wednesday that a subpoena be
issued for certain tapes and materials before his scheduled Sept.
9trial. The request, made in a two-par~g~aph motion flied wlth a
u.s. District Court, alSo asked thai COJso)l's lawyers be allowed
to inspect tile materilils.
.
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' The actio~ followed by one day a request for a s~nular subpoena by Watergate Special Prosec~tor ~on Jaworski.
Jaworski filed a lengthy affidavit TuesdaY' se:king the access to
tapes and other d(}(;uments Involving 64 meetmgs and telephone
conversatidns between Nixon and several former top aldes from
june 20, 1972 to June. 4, 1973.
· t ,,

Enhance
ev9ry
room in your home
with luxury car- .
peti ng . at · substantial . savings.

992·~35

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March and April of last year.
The White House has promised to supply a "conclusive

WASHINGTON - -n!E STAID, DRAB Treasury Department may be in for a change in style as energy chief William E.
Simon takes over as treasury secretary from George .P. Shultz.
-But litUe change in philosophy is expected. Both Shultz, who .is
returning to private life, and Simon, who was nominated by
President Nixon Wednsday to replace him, are staunch freemarketeers. Both favor the smallest possible government intrusion in the economy.
Nixon named Simon's deputy, John C. Sawhill, to succeed
him as head of the Federal Energy Office (FEO) . Like Shultz,
Simon sees the upward spiral in the cost of living as the biggest
economic problem facing the nation.
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"It's going to.be our No. I avenue of concentration," Simon
told UP!.
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sq. yd.

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allowed - two cru zctros
·altrw st 60 cents

enttne

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By United Press International
WASHINGTON -DESPITE THE REPUBlJCAN defeat in a
special election in Michigan's 8th Congressiona! District,
President Nixon's aides say he wlll C81Jlpalgn for other GOP
candidates whenever he is invited. Nixon addresses a gathering
of the Daughters of American Revolution today at 10 a .. m.EDT
in Constitution Hall, but White House aides gave no hint tf the
speech will dea) with impeachment, Watergate or Republican
chances in forthcoming congressional eiectlOns.
Presidential aides said he was not "dismayed or disheartened" ' by the defeat of James M. Sparling Jr., for whom he
campaigned in Michigan last week. Nll&lt;On sent Sparhng, &gt;yho lost
the iraditionally Republican seat to Democrat J . Bob Traxler, a
wire congratulating him on putting up "a good fight. " .

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He sa id bet the minimum

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1no means

CLARINGTON, Ohio (U~J )
- Ground was to be broken
today for a simulated coal
mine which will be a training
center for new miners in Ohio
and West Virginia.
Rep. Wayne Hays, R.Ohio,
whose district includes much of
the major coal producing areas
of the . state, was to turn the
first shovel of earth at the
construction site.
The project is a joint effort of
the coal industry, government
and the United Mine Workers
of America to provi&lt;!e a facility
which will enable applicants
for the mining industry to

Another frne product oiKoyser-Roth

All In Stock! -

' -(p

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Miner training
.
~ente·r started

·suPP-HOSE®

believing I had the sligl1test .
chanc4' &lt;:~t winning L bet ir1
favo r of thr.,_, e 'zcbfas~" ~the
t{·rm for \Veak teams that
usually lose .

Devoted To The lntere81.&amp; Of The Meigs- Mu.son Area

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

WASHINGTON (UP!) Rep. Peter W. Rodino, D-N.J.,
chairman of the House Judiciary Committee, said today "we
mean business" in demanding
tape recordings of 42 presiden•
tial conversations. A refusal to
fully honor the panel's subpoena could be considered an
impeachable offense, he
said.
The committee, which
Rodino said w\11 begin hearing
evidence in its impeachment
probe· about May 7, issued a
subpoena last week giving the
White House until April 25 to
turn over taped conversations
between President Nixon and
various top aides in Feburary,

\(Jrgcsl Jollcry pr i7.C -

lx·H ing less than 60 ccnl::; .
Afll'r two d&lt;Jy s uf hilUng uut.
P(Jr ll'IC:J acco mp.am ed by offl .
ends of the Fi nance Ministry
told new smen a t ~~ news cun-

J.rawn

at y

0

BtAUTIFULLY YOUNG SHEER SUPPORT
FOR LEGS 'IN A HURRY.

·Helpful hints on home
decorating ahd home
improvemeot ideas.

W('r ~.:

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POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT. OH IO

VOL. XXVI NO. 4

Low
As

w~1r]d ':-;

12.291.000. He managed it by

,
Hotel , where the winning l ott~ry !Jckct,:.;

Weather
Mostly sunny today, highs in
the 60s. Partly cloudy tonight
with a chance of showers
mainly north. Lows in 40s and
low 50s. Friday partly cloudy
with highs in the upper 50s and
60s.

Main Store and Warehouse
Open Thursday 9:30 to 5
Open Both
Friday and Saturday ·
9:30to9 P.M.

quttting~

Sheraton~Boston

1:1.1.;\ Wl'cke nd . ll got him the

Mary, who also works for Monsanto, said she is emba:rassed to go to work.
"They'd think I was crazy if I showed up," she sa td .

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was tlw only person
Jn Braztl who chose co rrectly
the rc:;ults of n soccer gH mcs
played throughout the country
Portr\~1

Tuesday night, with a horsesboe in one pocket and two sets of C&lt;i thuilr Rosary be&lt;~&lt;L&gt; _ 111 lht·
other. and left with the $1 million grand prize. Now tha t the Renys are tmlliun&lt;ll res. hts Wlft·

o~r

' Ph. 992·l86l- 91it 3 .

~

He showed up at the

BOOK

GRAY MANOR APTS.
992 -5844

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worked for 15 years, he was

BIGGEST SELECTION
IN MEIGS COUNTY

Mei&amp;s Co. Bnllch

FOR RENT

debts .

.S\(Jt~ .

BOSTON ( UPI J - LOuis M. Reny had a winmng fee ling about th e $lmillion Massachu::;L• tt~
lottery . The feeling got stron ger as the day of the drawmg approa ched. and Hc11y. 54 . lwc·;t tlll'
soconfider,t that he told his supervisor at the Monsa nto Co. of Springfield , Mass. wlll'J't' !H' !1 ; 1.~

A SINGING GROUP ·from Toledo who calls itself
"YATHUBHUTHA" will be at the Heath United Methodist
Church in Middleport Sunday from,2:30 to 5 p.m. ,A dinner
will follow the presentation. The group has a 'youthful
sound" with a Christian message. Advance sale of tickets!.
which are75cents, includes the dinner, may be purchased by .
calling the Rev. Steve Wilson at 949-2120 or -the Rev. Bill
Sydenstricker at 992-3317. Tickets at the door are $1.

SALE PLANNED
A rummage sale will be held
Friday from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. at
the Senior Citizens center,
East Main St., Pomeroy. The
sale, open to the public, will
feture an abundance of good
used clothing, including
children's wear. A thrift shop
will be located on the second
floor of the former Pomeroy ·
Junior High School.
·

Uvirag''

!t·s~

N'ow llc 1s \.~· u r th mor e tlmn $2

subpoena), we'll study it." He
said the White House will r.PIY
to the Judiciary Committee's
subpoena between Airlt 22 and
the April 25 deadline set by the
codnunittee. ·
Jaworski fUed an earlier
subpoena against the President
March 15, seeking material on
other subjects. The White
House agreed on that occasion ·
to turn over information.
The meetings and conversations now sought by Jaworski
all involved talks that Nixon
had with former White House
aides H. R. Haldeman, John D.
Ehrlichman, Charles W.
Colson and Dean.
Former Attorney General
John N. Mitchell, Haldeman,
Ehrlichman, Colson and three
others are scheduled to go on
trial Sept. 9 on charges involving conspiracy, obstruction of justice and lying to
cover up Watergate.

"Gracious

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APRIL. IS,

WASHINGTON (UP!) Special Prosecutor Leon
Jaworski and the House
Judiciary Committee want the
tapes of 17 of President Nixon's
Watergaie-related conversations that took place
during a four-day period over

t'11U l (l

Purt eln. 2:), w~1.~ c;u·n ing
than $200 a month working
as an accountant 's asststant in
Sai\'£Hinr, C'£l pital city of ~1hi;1

$1 million winner confident at drawing

h.: rcm.: e Wednesday that the

first thin~ he 1ntends to do with
the muncy ts pay uff some:

mil ion.

FREE

Bank &amp; Savings Company 211 W. Second St.,
Pomeroy, as. of

comment on the election from
the White House, but Press
Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler
said ·there would be a
statement later today. ·
Sparling, however, said,
"This was no Wat.ei'gate referendum. The Presidet~t did not
help me and he did not hurt
me."
Nixon today )lias expected to
appoint Federal Energy Office
chief William E. Sin)on as the
63rd secretary of Treasury,
replacing George B. Shultz.
Simon, a former New York
investment banker, had been
No. 2 man at Treasury while
also running the energy office.
Simon's FEO replacement is
expected to be his deputy, John
C. Sawhill.
Simon will be the fourth
Treasury secretary in Nixon's
two terms.
Nixon also turned his attention today to Latin America, .
getting ready for a black-tie
dinner this evening for the
foreign ministers of the
Organization of American
Slates (OAS) attending a
conference in Atlanta later this
week.
- His traditional toast is expected to include a poHcy
statement on U.S .-Latin
American relations.

17 talks wanted

Republican problem and not a Palm Sunday weekend, 1973.
Democratic one."
That was the weekend the
The 42-year-old Traxler, who Watergate cover-up unraveled,
has represented 'the area since and a list of the tapes shows
1962 at the state level, said it Nixon and this top aides held a
was a "mistake" for Nixon to fluX of talks, some late at
campaign last week on behalf rug t.
of Sparling.
The committee subpoenaed·a
"U I was a Republican, 1 total of 41 tapes Aprll II for its
would not want the Nixon impeachment inquiry.
albatross around my neck in Jaworski asked U.S. District
November," he said in a vic- Court Tuesday to subpoena
tory statement after Sparling tapes of 64 meetings and
conceded the race. "They (the conversations in preparation
GOP) are going · to have for the Watergate conspracy
trial that starts .Sept. 9·
problems this November."
The special election was
Twenty-four conversations
called after Rep. James are sought by lloth Ja\l'Or&amp;kl
Harvey resigned earHer to take and the conllnittee, Including
a federal judgeship.
17 talks that took place A(X'il
14
The Democratic victory was
"17 • 1973 ·
the fourth iri five special
It was on Saturday, Aprill4,
Congressional electioris this . that Jeb Stuart Magruder' the
year and was the last major deputy , campaign director,
went to federal prosecutors to
election before November.
Nixon personally intervened relate formally for the first
in the election last week when lime his knowledge of the
he toured along a 57-mile route Watergate affair, and then to
in the mostly rural seven the White House to say that he
county area.
was doing _so.
·
It was the first time since the
On Palm Sunday • Aprll 15,
President won re-election in Attorney General Richard G.
1972 ·that he campaigned on Kleindienst told Nixon the
behalf of a Republican can- Justice Department's indidate.
vestlgation had revealed involvement
of White House and
Sparling, 45 • making his first re-election committee aides in
political race, said Nixon's
visit did not have an impact on Watergate. That night, former
the outcome of the election.
White House Counsel John W.
Dean Ill has testified, Nixon
"I don't think he (Nixon) remarked to him in a low voice
helped or hurt me," Sparling
said in a news conference. "If that he, the President, should
this campaign was lost, it was not have discussed clemei)Cy
lost by Jim SparHng," he said. for one of the original .
tin
1so
Watergate defendants.
told Traxler
Jaworski went to court for
Spar g 8
"You'd better be a working
Congressman and you'd better the subpoena after unsuccessserve the district."
fully requestins the material
Traxler scored heavily in his from the White House in letters
own home Bay County and in dated Jan. 9. March 12 and
industrialized Saginaw but he April 11.
also
edl
Presidential Press Secretary
ran unespect y strong in Ronald L. Zi&amp;.ler said Toes06
the rural areas of the counties
near
Lake Huron on day: "When we receive It (the
Michigan's Eastern Shore.
Trazler had hit Watergate
hard during his campaign and
'!S th~ , vote count proceeded,
Democratic party workers attending a celebration chanted,
"Impeach, Impeach, Impeach.'.'
Traxler said his victory
came from a "new populist
movement" in the country.

children , prefer my home or

' .
. Will be in their new office
at the Farmers

WASHINGTON (UP!) President Nixon's prestige suffered another blow Tuesday
when the RepubHC!Ul congressional candidate he personally
campaigned for in Michigan
last week was upset by a
who
made
Democrat
Watergate and the President
the main issues.
Three hours after Nixon
returned from a five-day
respite in Florida, he learned
of the defeat of James M.
SparHng in Michigan's 8th
Congressional District special
election. \~fullY observers considered the race in the
traditionally Republican
district a referendum on the
President's popularity.
. Democrat J. Robert Traxler,
running better than expected in
the rural areas where Nixon
campaigned last week,
becomes only the second
member of his party to
represent Michigan's "thumb"
area this century.
Sparling's loss was the fourth
by a RepubHcan in the five
special elections this year and
may signal other GOP candidates that Nixon's campaign
help in he November elections
would be an albatross around
their necks.
There was no immediate

Stii.V fi!XJH, ll n1ztl t UP I1 '
A fc \\ clay s itgn, Fr~u1cisco

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3- t ho Datil Se 1 I
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n me M1ddlep()rt l'omero) 0 Api ill6 1'174
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2- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport Pomerov 0 API IIIII 1974

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Offal war building latest fuss

Apple Grove

Wildcats fall 3-1 to Falcons

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BRUSSElS (UP! ) - You
saw "The Great Ch1cken War "
You thrilled to "The InternatiOnal Carpel Caper "
Now make way for "The
Awful Offal Skirmish ," the
latest trade tempest to sour
relations between the Umted
Stales and lhe Europ ean
Conunon Market
Diplomats fr om both s1des
have spent more th an a year m
Geneva trymg to sort 11 out,
wtth no result Already 1t has
affected the admm1stration's
trade bill m Congress and
embittered preparations for

farm goods, to match those
which the other SIX nattons
already raised aga mst the
outs1de world
The Umted States clauned
the tariff increases cut Into
about one-thrrd of 1ts trade, or
about a billion dollars worth,
w1th the three nat10ns It
demanded compensatiOn from
the Europeans

The Europeans at fir st
refused any compensallon at
all They argued that tariffs
agamst U S farm exports to
Brllam, Ireland and Denmark
11
the Nixon Rotmd " of world may have gone up , but tariffs
trade talks
agalllSt Amencan mdustnal
The skirmish began back m exports were gomg down, and
January, 1973, when lhe Com- the two balanced each other
mon Markel expanded from SIX off
The Umted States rejected
to nine nations with lhe addillon of Bntam, Ireland and th1s The Europeans came up
mth mllllmal concess10ns The
Denmark
The Uruted States did about Umted Slates rejected this
$3 billion worth of trade each again and threatened to retailyear mth these three nations, ale -that IS, to rruse tariffs
espec18lly Bntam , and enJoyed agaiJISt an eqUlvalenl amowtl
favorable ta riffs on man y of European exports
exports 11 sent lo them
New demands have been
But when the three jomed the formally present ed lo th e
Conunon Market, they were Europeans, who are conforced to begm ra1smg many of stderlng unprovmg therr last
thell' tariffs, particularly on proposal, which they earlier

called a "final offer "
Both s1des have kepi their
exact negoliatm g sta nds
secret. But 11 1s known that the
Umted States wari'ts a better
deal fpr 1ts exports of offal, or
waste ammal mn ards, plus
such 1tems as oranges,
to bacco, sens1l!zed fi lms,
kraftl mer oa rdboard and
certam kinds or tractors
It all remmds diplomats here
of the "Chicken War," which
raged for some 18 months a
decade ago after the Common
Market tripled 1ts dulles on the
unport of Amencan chickens
The 1ssue went to mternallonal arbiters, who set
U S damage at $26 m1ll1on
The Umted Slates upped 11s
dulles on $26 mlll10n worth of
European brandy, trucks, dextrme and potato starch and the
war ended
At about the same tune, th e
Uruted Stales ra1sed Jls tariffs
on unports or European Wilton
and velvet carpets and on sheet
glass The Conunon Market
retahated by mcreasmg dut1es
on some Amencan synthetiC
fib ers
The mcreased U S tariffs
exp1red at the end of 1972, 10

years later, and the Europeans
dropped thm relaliatwn on
Am erican carpet at the same
tune
In each case, the total sum
mvolved was a drop m the $24
billion bucket of annual U S European trade Even m the
current dispute, th e Umted
States says th e European acts
only 'affect ' a b1lhon dollars
of U S exports -not thai 11 1s
actually cost mg Amenca $1
bilhon annually
Wilham D Eberle, President
Nixon's chief trade negotiator,
new here secretly last month to
warn Common Market offJcJals
th a t Am en can pat1ence 1s
wearmg thm and that retahatwn loomed
Earlier, Eberle told a newspaper that Washmgton would
begm reta!Jatory procedure by
March 10, a deadlme he let shp
by Without actiOn
Apart from the actual damage, the Uruted States clauns a
basic prmc1ple 1s mvolved
Many of the tar1ffs m quest10n
were' bound,' or firml)fftxed,
and Washmgton says a solemn
agreement was broken when
they were rrused

DR. LAWHENCE E. LAMB

Safe, sane way to lose weight
By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D
DEAR DR LAMB - ThiS IS
my gift to all your readers who
are trying to lose we1ght Some
time ago a woman wrote you
how she safely lost 20 pounds In
three monUts. I had tr1ed just
about everything, and this
woman 's adVICe SO ~nded
sensible, so I tried 1t Uke she
sa1d, I lost 20 pounds un three
months, from 140 to 120 pounds
I did nol count calones or stick
to high proteins, as many
protein foods conlaun some fat,
too I did not take any kind of
pill I sunply ate a well·
balanced meal three times a
day, but reduced lhe amount
I ate one servmg mstead of
two or three,' nothmg between
meals At bedlune I always
liked 1ce cream m swnmer and
hot chocolate m wmler Instead
of a diSh filled lo overflowmg
and heaped up, I cut down to
two scoops I reasoned mth
myself that I was eating
everythmg I wanted or needed,
only cutting the amount I
dldn 't rWI to lhe scales every
day as th1s IS a slow, sure
method I sunply took the
woman's word, followed her
advice and relaxed
Before I could we~gh myself
(I have no scales of my own),
fr1ends were remarking how I

•

NO. TILL PRACTICE
WILL BE SHOWN
A N~IW pasture planting
demolllllratlon will be held
Tuesday, April 23, at 3 p m
on the Glenn Lackey farm
located on Stale Rt. 329 between
Guysville
and
Stewart. The demoostratlon
area will be adjacent to lhe
New England road ju&amp;t north
of Rt. 329 'Ibis event is being
&amp;poosored by lhe Athens
SWCD, Alben&amp; Co. Ext.
Service, SCS, Chevron
Chemical and
Depoy
Garage. Light relreshmenlll
wUI be provided

must be losmg we1ght, or " D1d
you know you are losmg
weight'" I know this wlll hurt
some advertisers ' busmess ,
bul hke I sa1d, 1l's my g1ft to
your readers, and 1f they accept 11 and appreciate lhe
we~ght lost I hope they mil
wr1le you
DEAR READER - You are
another example of lhe msdom
of a good d1et program that
tnvolves a complete and
consistent correciJon of faulty
eatmg hab1ts Congratulalions
The problem most people
have w1lh a sens1ble d1et 1s that
they have no palience They
want to lose we1ght overmghl,
even though it took them
sometunes years to add all thai
fat to therr bodies As a result,
Utey go on a fad diet, with or
wtthoul success When they
have lost the we1ght, 1f they can
stand the d1et that long, they
commonly return to their old

CINCINNATI (UPI)- A new
type of "drive-In zoo" 1s nearmg completion here - and
bullders hope 1t will be more
sophlshcated than prev1ous attempts al sunulallng a Jaunt
through Africa.
They also hope 11 will be
safer 1 for bolh man and
beast
The anunal preserve - the
result of a year's work and a
$5 5 million mvestment - IS to
be unveiled April 'n al Kings
Island Amusement Park just
north of here
The 100-acre area 1s called
"Uon Country Safan," but 1t 19
different from several other
parks around the country that
bear the same name Sightseers will nde monorail trams
mstead of dr1vmg their automobiles through the park

~;... -

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"At a hundred bucks an hour tor my t1me, these are
going to be m1ghty expensive vegetables' ·

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pounds, but 1t would have been
just dandy 1f 1t had come off
even slower Anyone who needs
to lose 20 powtds could easlly
do Jt as a year's program,
averagillg less than two pounds
a month
The only precautwn I would
make 1s don't cut back on your
calones to the pomt that you
feel too t~red /,!most everyone
needs a m1mmurn of 1,200
calones a day Less Will
usuall y cause vttamm or
mmeral deftctenctes , unless
expert d1et planmng IS done by
someone fam11iar w1th the
v1tamm and milleral contents
of the var10us foods An overly
restriCted calone illtake for a
long per1od of tune can harm
anyon e's health For thts
reason I recommend sensible
calone control by sunply nol
overeatillg and addmg to your
livmg pattern enough sens1ble
exerc1se to help the process

Drive-in zoo designed for
sophis~ication, safety too

BERRY'S WORLD

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eatmg habits, lhe very ones
lhal caused them to ge t
overweight to begm w1th So,
what happens' A large percentage of people who do lose
wetght gam tl back
You have to learn to eat a
proper d1el as a way of life to
avoid obesity In many m·
stances lh1s can be solved by
sunply cuttillg back on the
amount of all the different
foods you eat, rather than
ehmmatmg parlicular foods It
IS not necessary to elimillate
carbohodrates to lose we1ght,
or for that matter to ehmmate
any food type Wbat you need
to elunmale 1s calones For
more mformatwn on losmg
we1ghl wr1te to me m care of
th1s newspaper, P 0 Box 1551,
Radw City Statwn, New York ,
N Y 10019, and ask for the
booklet on "losmg we1ght "
Enclose 50 cents to cover costs
I'm glad you lost the 29

The qutet-runnmg tralllS - preserve by a nme-fool h1gh
powered by electnc11y and cham link fence , which monomovung on rubber wheels - wlll rrul nders will hardly see becarry visitors through lhe m1d- cause 11 has been hidden m
die of the preserve roamed by most places by hills and treesome 400 anunals - mcluding lmes
lions, elephants, zebra, anteMore parhally-h1dden fenlope and rhmoceros
cmg ms1de lhe park diVIdes 11
No More Cars
mto three secllons
The concept of earlier parks
"ll's mamly to keep the lions
near Los Angeles, Dallas, AI- away from lhe other anunals
lanta and West Palm Beach, and to keep lhe big stuff like
Fla , called for visitors to driVe elephants and rhmos away
!herr own cars through the am- from the antelope and ostnch,"
mal area
explamed Taylor
Those parks are still operalFences Surround Uons
mg Wider that concept, but
The 70 lions are kept m place
there have been some prob- by a 14-foot h1gh cham link
!ems
fence and by another stx-fool
"We've had some InJuries - high fence just 10 feet mStde of
both to anunals and people,'' that
says Warren Taylor , sent here
" If the lion would happen to
a year ago by Uon Country clear the smaller control fence,
Safar1, Inc. lo superviSe con- he would only have a 10 foot
structlon of therr newest park. &lt;w1de area to try to get over the
'We've had lawsutls for bll- 14-foot h1gh fence ,' ' sa1d
ten lrres, elephants Silting on Taylor "Lions are nol good
Volkswagens and people bemg clunbers "
scratched. We had an employe
Each monorail tnp is expectkilled m Flonda He was main- ed to last between 2().25 mmtammg a gate where cars dr1ve utes, mth the tram edging
through and he and a cape aJong the two miles of twistmg
buffalo gol Into 11 "
steel track at six miles per
Taylo~ consld1l!_s- the_ cape bour
buffalo, which we1ghs up to
A guide will narrate the trip
4,000 poWids, the most danger- and can stop the tram to g1ve
ous animal of all
visitors a longer look al any
"Our employes should be unusual Sights
safer here becau~e they don't
Taylor sru&amp;the layout of the
have motonsts to worry park should keep most animals
about ,'' says Taylor
mthm easy vlewmg distance of
' You've always gol the 2 or 3 the trains 'I'Ile distances -perper cer\t that don't want to hapsasfaras125feelawaybul
follow the rules ," he explamed maybe as close as an anunal
"The employes tell them not lo nose pressed agamst the
roll down !herr ca1 wmdows, monorail wmdow
but they do anyway Accidents
Taylor, 31, has a college decan and have happened that gree m mternallonal market·
way
mg, bul fondly recalls hiS teenAnlulal Euvll't)nmenl Be11er age days In southern CalifornlB
"And mlbout the car the am- when he made money by calchmals" ertW'Onment IS much mg rattlesnakes and selling
better They don't ha,ve to them to spectallf houses.
Inhale any gasoline fumes "
"I used lo catch 10 or lain an
Taylor's breakdown of ani- afternoon," he remembered
~mals 10 be placed here
"I'd Jus! scoop 'em up by hand
Twelve e!epllanls, -- 25 Behind the heat! or any other
rhinoceros, f1ve grraffes, 10 place I could get hold of them I
lions, four hippopotamus, 20- d1dn 'I thtnk about any
ostriches, 20 zebra~. -150 an- - danger "
telope, a ca~ buffalo a.nd -15-~-~Taylor sa1d }!1s company Is
"cr1Hers," - hke monkey s, unp(oVing 11s resourc~:·by
swans apd elWitc birds
breedmg
The a.nunals are kepi m the
"OUr as§ets are m the form

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MASON - The Hannan
Trace Wildca ts fresh off theor
fi rst SVAC triumph of the
season, fell to the Wa hama
Wh ite Falcons 3·1 here
Wednesday afternoon
Tuesday , the Wildca t
dJamondmen of Tom Belville
slapped the Sl mmes Valle;
Vikmgs 6-1 to Improve their
SVAC reco1d to 1 2
Pa ul Montgomerl was the
sta rter In the Tuesda)
lnumph gomg four and one
th trd tnnmgs before be tn g
replaced by Wavne Hesson
Wi th one out m the fifth mmng
Hannan Trace wasted no
lime gethng on the Vikmg
Pilcher plahng three runs m
the first frame Kent Halley
opened With a smg te, followed
by a walk to Kevm Petne and
back to back smgtes by Mark
Swa1n and David Shaffe r
Th e Wildca ts upped the
margm to 4~ Ill the th1rd "hen
Shaffer reac hed safely-on an
error by tlie'th1rd baseman and
ta ter scored on an error by the
Viklllg shor tstop

News, Events
By Mrs Herbert Roush
Erwm Gloeckner and son
Dav id VISited Mr and Mrs
R1chard Nom s at Carroll, OhiO
Monday
Mrs Fern e B Ha yman
VISited Mrs Ada Norris Sunday aftern oon
Mr and Mrs Woodrow D1ls
of Ball!more, Md brought the
former 's mother, Mrs Magg1e
Roush to her home at Letart
Friday and VISited over the
weekend
Mr and Mrs George
Donohew and family of Circlev ille spent the weekend With
Mr and Mrs Roy Donohew
Mr and Mrs Gene Jewell of
Letart, W Va were Sunday
dmner guests of Mr and Mrs
Gerald Hayman
Walter McDade, grandda ughter Ktm and husband,
Cra 1g and daughter of Troy, 0
spent a recent weekend w1th
Mrs Gl adys Shields and
VISited otl\er relatives
Mrs Eileen Buck held a
cosmetic party at her home
Monday evemng
Mrs Allee Balser was an
Easter Day guest of Mr and
Mrs Jack Ables
Mrs Patty Starr and
children of Cuyahoga Falls, 0
were Easter weekend guests of
Mr and Mrs Ernest Gnmm
Easter weekend guests of
Mr and_ Mrs Vernon Donohue
were Mr and Mrs Robert
Harden and family, Mr and
Mrs Kearney W1ckhne and
family of Mar10n, 0 , Mr and
Mrs Lowell Burton and Sherry
of Columbus, Mr and Mrs
Charles Wmebrenner, ch!ldren
Ricky, V1ck1 and Jod1 or
Cheshire, 0
Mr and Mrs Don Hodge,
Mary Lou Wickersham of
Columbus were
Easter
weekend guests of Mrs June
Wickersham and son Jommg
them on Easter Sunday for
dmner was Mrs Ferne B
Hayman
Mr and Mrs Ray Russell of
Newark, 0 were Easter
weekend guests of Mr and
Mrs Bill Fox and Davtd
Mr and Mrs. Dun Riffle and
children of Lucasville, 0 were
Easter weekend guests of Mr
and Mrs Lester Roush and
fam1ly
Mr and Mrs Don Bell spent
Sunday w1th their daughter,
Lorna Bell m Columbus
VJSIImg Saturday evemng wtth
Mr and Mrs Bell were Mr
and Mrs Cecil Hill, children
Tern and Robm of Columbus,
Ernest Clark, Racme, and Mrs
Inez Hill, Racine
Mr
and Mrs
Erwm
Gloeckner spent Thursda y
through Saturday mth the1r
daughter, Mr and Mrs Lorry
Badgely and children at
Fairfax, Va
Mr and Mrs Kenneth Bass
and daughters of Columbus
spent Easter weekend with Mr
and Mrs Arnold Hupp and
Mrs Katie Bass at Clifton, W
Va
Easter Sunday dmner guests
of Mr. and Mrs Herbert
Shtelds were Mrs Bertha
Rob1nson, Mr and Mrs Bill
Robmson and children, Mrs
Marlene F1sher, children
Molly, Larry and Amy, Mrs
Jack Sargent, Racme, Paul
Sayre, Columbus Calling m
the afternoon were Mrs Philip
Radford
and daughter,
Stephame, of Pomeroy Rt
Easter Sunday guests of Mr
and Mrs Dana Lewis - at
Clifton, W Va were Mr and
Mrs Russell Roush, children
Sharon, Cmdy, David and
Edw&amp;rd, Mr and Mrs l{erbert
Roush, Mr and Mrs Roger
Roush, Mrs Iva Orr, Jeff
Miller, Mel Waldmg , Lon
Theiss, Mr and Mrs Isaac
LewiS, and Robert Waldnig
Mr and Mrs Edward Morr1s
and children of Charlesl\lii..,W
Va , Mr and Mrs Larry Foster
and children, Bill Wheeler of
Columbus were
Easter
weekend guesfll of Mr and
Mrs Alex Wheeler
Vtsltmg Mr and Mrs Roy

I

r~mncd

.. dit.:OI I i).Jfl H.HIIlOJl
But the p)lt h \\ 1s wt ld tt ncl got

ftrst for the fm.1 l out
But Shaffer s ti n O\\

EASTE RN HIGH SCHOOL
- " Too ma n) m1 stakes
aga m
Coach Larry Hemes, ob
VJOUS!y bothered by a lack O[
defensive consistency on the
part of 1s Eagle mfietders, for
the second hme m as many
days attnbuted an Eastern
baseball loss to cost!) f1eldmg
m1 scues
Tuesday, 11 wa~ five Eagle
errors ill a 5-3 loss to Trimble
and Wednesday 1t was seven
errors m a 15-5 thumpmg at the
hands of Miller m Pe rr y
Coun ty
Eastern starter Steve Holter
was tapped early for 11 runs
on seven hils, three walks and
two hit baiters, " h1le the JuniOr
fann ed
seven
M1ller
dJamondmen
Miller talhed two run s ill the
first on a walk, stolen base,
smgle , error by Holter, and an
error by f~rs t baseman Greg
Ba1ley
'
From that momemnt on,
every run M11ler scored came
after the first two batters " ere
reiJred
In lhe lh~rd , Miller plated
three runs on a double, hit
batter, error by Holter, walk
and an error by Rob Bar)ler at
second base

"Here's a spot right here we seem to have missed!"

1974-'75 calendar approved
PT PLEASANT - Fmal
approval was g1ven lhe f1scal
year budget and le vy
es timates, also for the school
calendar for 1974-75 and a
spec1al readmg program was
adopted for Mason Elementary
sc haul Ill Tuesday mght's
reconvened school board
mee ting
Approval was g1ven by the
board for a second R1 ght to
Read School for nexl year,
wh1ch ts to be Implemented at
Mason Supt Charles Withers
sa1d slate department offiCials
are so well pleas ed w1th
progress of the same program
at Leon the past year that they

recommended a second one
Next year's school calendar
IS se t up for teachers to report
August 26 and students to begill
the new term Sept 3
TheJr fi rst day out of school
wtll be Nov 5 Electwn Day, to
be followed by Records Day on
Nov 8 and two holidays the
same month, Nov 11 and 28
The day !ollowillg ThanksgJvmg will also be a free day
Chnstmas holidays wlll be
Dec 23 through Jan I
A Records Day 1s scheduled
Feb 24 and the next lime out of
classes w1ll be for Easte r
vacatiOn March 28 and 31 A

r------------------------~,

~\. I

I Beat...

~I

I

\ Of the Bend

I

By Bob Hoeflich

~: 1

!

~· !

Jumor and seruor students working Wider the superviSion of
therr mstructors, Mrs Mary Powell and Mrs Polly Hysell, mil
hold a styling harr-a-thon from 7 a m to mulmght Fnday m the
cosmetology lab of Me~gs High School
Anyone wishing to attend ts mv1ted to do so and may even
calllhe department, 992-2158, for an appomtmenl Contributions
will be accepted and will be used for sending a seruor student to
an advanced h811' stylmg school

Records Day w1ll follow Apnl
1 g1vmg students a longer
sprillg vaca tJon than this yea r
An other sprmg hohday Will
be May 26, Memon al Day and
the last day for students m the
1974-75 school year will be June
6 an,t for teachers, Jun e 12
In other act10n the Board
- Discussed a letter read by
Sup t Withers co ncermng
alhlelics at Wahama H1gh
School, although there was no
offi cwl ac twn
- Hea rd a lette r from
Robert H K1dd concernmg
acceptance of Wahama In the
North Cen tral Aisoclalion In
turn the board asked that a
commi ttee, formed mos tly by
Wahama parents, be sent a
letter of commendatwn for
the1r effor ts m obtammg th1s
ratmg
- Direc ted that a letter be
sent to pollee agencies concermng unauthomed vehiCles
on area school grounds
- Approved a request fr om
Southweste rn
Commumty
Action Council Inc to use
Mason County school buses m
tra nsporting children to
Camden Park May 17 m the
Head Start Program

.

Ex-Twin socks three out of
park for big Cubs victory
By FRED DOWN
UPI Sports Writer
George M1t1erwald has no
regrets about his three-homer,

DID YAKNOW?
Tony Lucke retired Feb 1
Tony was 65 on Feb 9 He started work mth the Oh1o Power
Co on May 25, 1925 and was mth tl\e company until Feb 13, 1942
On Feb 16, 1942, he started work w1th the New York Central
Railroad, later becommg an electriCian foreman With the Penn
Central. He worked for the railroads until Feb I

BEFORE YOU
BUY
YOUR TIRES

RICHARll POUUN IS aboollo g1ve up on hiS 1973 car The
vehicle has been h1t four times m JUst a matter of a few weeks,
the last time by ah1tandrundriver
THOMAS McLAUGHLIN of Middleport IS a pahent at
Uruvers1ty Hospital m Columbus He's gettmg along fme, bul
would like to hear from home folks, especially hiS former coworkers at Texaco
MIDDLEPORT FIREMEN are holding a public fish fry at
their new headquarters begmnlng al 3 30 p m Fr1day Proceeds
go towards the department's equipment fund
Meantune, Pomeroy frremen, also al home m a new buildmg,
will hold a public open house from 1 to 5 on Sunday, April 28, to
giVe restden!.'3 a chance to look at the new quarters
Time draws near for the openmg of lhe Silver SUpper Saloon
al the Pomeroy Jumor High Auditorium Saturday mght There
seems to be a liltle confus1on on what tune the Big Bend · Minimustcals will be staged They will go at 6· 30 p m , 8 and 9 30
The doors for each mustcal will be operung one-half hour before
the shows a.nd there will be enlertamment gomg at all tunes
Dunooew over 'Easter weekend
were Jeff Donohew, Ray
Burdette, son Terry and Mr.
Burdette's father-m-law, aU of
Belpre, Mr and Mrs Eugene
Webster, daughter Anlla

Joining the above a t the
Dunohew home for Easter
Sunday dmner were Mrs
Sarah Philbnck Rolandus, and
s1ster, Mrs Frankie Droz of
Ainbrldge, Pa

.

,.

FOR YOUR
WHEELS

THOMAS O'CONNELL

CHECK

Professor will
speak at hand
banquet event

two more runs, folio" cd b)
another smgle scormg two
more rWl s '!hat Vwi:IS fo ll owed
by a walk and anoth er run
scon ng base hit
Eastern talli ed 1ts filla l nm
ill the se venth when llarns
rea ched on an error Spencer
reached on a fielder s ch01ce
Wipmg out Harns and Spencer
Y. ent to second when a ptckoff
attempt went aw ry T1m
Kuhn th en li ned a s1 ngte
bnngmg Spencer home
Holter was replaced wJ th two
out m the fifth by Spencer who
went one and one-third illmngs
)Je l~m g the fina l two runs on
four h1ts and one walk Junwr
soupaw Greg Ba1ley pi tched
th e fm al illnillg y1eldillg two
h1ts and a walk, but hotdmg
Miller scoreless
Dann y J ones " ent lhe
distance for Miller, y1eldillg s1x
hi ls and those f1ve runs "hJie
walkillg five and stnkillg out
only one
The Eastern record now
stands at 4-4 and the Eagles
Will host the Hannan Trace
Wildca ts today at 4 30 p m
M1ller
203 280 ll--15 14 3
Eastern
000 400 1- 5 6 7
Jones and Stmkdorn Hol ter
(LP), Spencer (5) , Bailey 17 ),
and Wmebrenner Bowen 14)

Miller made Jl ~
-0
the
fourth on a hit batte paJr of
stole n bases , and wo smgles
But Eastern ra llied a bit to
cut the defiCit to three at 7-4
w1th a fo ur run burst m the
bottom of the fourth
M1ke Harns opened w1th a
smgle, stole second and went to
third on a passed ball Short
stop Randy Blake "alked and
stole second , followed b) a
walk to Tim Spencer loadillg
the bases
Tim Kuhn then popped out to
the second baseman before
Dave Hannwn was aY. arded
f1rst base on a catcher Inte rference call when Hannum s
swm g was obstructed by the
catchers m1tt
Phil Bowen walked platillg
the seco nd r un before
soph omore Do n E1 chmger
Sillgled scormg the fmal two
r uns
But Miller came back w1th
e1ght big runs ill the fifth , when
wtth two outs and none on, the
th1rd batter of the mmng
reached safely on an error on
the ca tcher, making all e1ght
runs unearned
That was followed by a walk,
smgle to ,n ght and an error
sconng two rWls, a smgle
sconng another run , another
smgle, walk, and smgle scormg

·.,,

OUR PRICES

'•

GENERAL
TIRE SALES

,
~

Thomas O'Connell, Marshall
Umversily muSic liiStructor •
since 194a spectahzmg in :.
woodwmd mstruments and
theory, will be guest speaker at ~
the annual Eastern High ' ~
School Band Banquet Saturday
~.
night
'•
Band members and parents r
will enJOY a covered dish ~ ~
dinner at 7 p m The band
boosters Wlll proVIde meat !:
potatoes, rolls and beverage' ::
and parents lhe rernamder oi •,
the menu
~f
A native of Michigan Prof ; &lt;
O'Connell
rece~-,ed' hls ',
bachelor of JClence degree ~;
f~om Northern MIChigan
College of Education 111 1940
and 116 master's degree at lhe
Uruvers1ty of Michigan m 1947
He served four vears m the u
-8.~942;,46. He' playi
clarmel m the Charleston
Symphony Orcbestra, tbe West
Vrrgml8 Opera Co and lhe
Huntington- Chamber Orchestra He IS marrted and ''
father 9f 10 chlldren. , ,...

992-7161

w.ts setond \\t lh

W(j ~

IO\\.

ahead run
I he Falcons added "n 1n
surance run m the s1xth on d
stngle s a c nf1 ce bunt &lt;m d

smgle hl Lewis
The Wildcats managed JUst
two hils the enlire cia\ orr
Camp Halley s run scon ng
smgle m the four th £Jild d one
ba gger by Swam m th e fu st

In all Camp \la lked foul
to Sha ffer

p t~sses ~om g

and struck oul

seven while g1 \ tn g up th.1 t one

ea rned run
Sibley \\d iked JUSI one
ba tter stnkmg out hH anrl
) Jeld mg e1ght h1ts g11mg up
t\\o

earr: ~d

The most popular night club m
the a:;county area is proud to
present the return of

runs

1 op hitters for Wa hama \\ere
LeWIS three hits Ill four tllpS

travel to Eastern for ct

l ee~g uc

battle w1th the Eastern f:d gles
at 4 30 p m
!Iannan Trace 301 011 0- G 5 I
Sy Valley
()()() 010 0- t l 5
Hannan rrace 000 100 0- 1 2 4
Wahama
100 011 x- 3 8 I
Sibley and Shaffer Ca mp
1 WP ) and I.ew1
s

On

Memo tta l

Fteld

Mc tgs

F tn ctl 1csul ts we re
(,AilS 73 N01 th G,J!ha 45 and
Me1gs 41

Sports today:
I lL\ ( K - \1 t•Jgs ,It
ll l' ll s ln n I',IS lo' J II .11
I • dt•t ,1 ! ll tJt km ~ ,u1d
II llt'l tmtl
B\ SIB \11
l l.t nn ..u t

II ..Ht'

IGHT 10 IlL 2

.tl

I .Js li'J II ,So ullmcsll'rn
1t Snutht'l ll

DF:A IJII NE SE I
RACINI - Fml,1y Apn l !9
IS th e de.1dhne for an1
yow1gster v ashm g to s1gn up
fur Rct ctne pee 'l'iee httl e
leag ue or po n~ league baseba ll
An) mterestcd 'lOUth should
s1 ~ r1 up at the non Beegle
resHience F1fth St Hacme

G \ ME CANCEL! EO
rh e Me1gs South" ester n
do ubleheddt.: l
sc heduled
Wedn es da) afte rnoon tn

Middl cpo l t ""s postpo ned
bee a use of the gas shor tage

Today's

Sport Parade
Ill MU 1 ON RICHMAN
UPI Stlu r ts Ed itor

NEW YORK I Ul-1 1- Jun Bibb) ha s alll a}S kept an e)e on his
kid brother
He st1tl does
That's natural enough
Ever smce they were ktds growm g up tn Franklmton N C the
B1bb) boys have been close and they stilt are even though the)
all are makmg their liVI ngs In different "ays now Ill different
catles J am B1bbv 1s a startmg pttcher v. 1th the Texas Rangers
Hen r) 'Hank' Bibby IS a backup guard With the Ne" York
Kmcks and Fredertc B1bby, oldest of the three IS a school
teacher m R1chmond, Va
When Jun Bibby starts talkmg about Ius k1d brother Henry he
glows even more than he did when he pitc hed the first no hit let
ever for the Ra ngers aga1nst the Oakland A s last Jul} 30 and
you ca n tetl right off ho" he feels about his brother s abJiit;
He's Super
, 'He's a super basketba ll player," J1m Bibby , 29 says of h1s 24year-&lt;Jid brother , Hemy lle sgot a chance to establish himself
w1th the Kmcks Playmg behmd Ea rl Monroe and Wa lt Fraz1er
though can be a Iitle rough You H go tta be Super God or
something He 's ptaymg good though thiS)Car wheneve r he gets
a chance to play
In common with most young ballpla:ers who ha ve to s1t behmd
top-lmers, Hen ry B1bby would hke to play mo re Th iS IS no more
than natural particularly m th e case of someone hke Henry
B1bby who dur mg h1s three years at UCLA, started every game
One man Carl Scheer, pres1dent and general manage r of the
AHA's Carolina Cougars has been followmg Henry B1bby s
ca reer smce he was gomg to lngh school m Franklinton Scheer
was prac tJcmg law m GreensbOro, N C at the tune and tned to
recrmt Bibby for GUilford College
'
Henry B1bby mulled 11over awhile and decided to go to UCLA
mstead, imd after he ft mshed there Scheer de ~Jded he d g1ve 11
another try He draft ed Bibby for the Cougars m the ABA while
the Kmcks went for hun 1n the NBA
S1gns with Kni cks
1
"The Kmcksd1dn I seem to be that mterested,' Scheer recalls
' Sam Gilbert who represented Lew Alcmdor and others- at
UCLA , was representmg !lank and we reached a deal Sam
asked me to send the contract do11 n and I did Hank decided not
to s1gn 1t He s1g ned w1th lhe Knicks mstead They offered him a
no-cut proviSIOn I regret I didn't have the foresight to do Jt "
Sc heer always ke pt the f1le open on B1bby though
He liked h1m personatly
'Henry IS a qUiet, unassummg young man w1th [me upbrmgmg,' says Carl Scheer "He comes from a home where
there always was a great deal of lave;-affect10n and pnde I ve
always had the feeling he s not a big-town guy I always fe lt he'd
be happ1er back m North Carolina '
So Carl Scheer drafted Henry Bibby agam for the Couga rs
Wednesday m the ABA 's annual sprmg draft It was the fi rst lime
the ABA drafted NBA players, and that doesn t mean they'tl
succeed m s1gnmg them, but Carl Scheer feels 11s worth a
Chlji!Ce
Not Particularly Happy
'We have heard he 1sn't pa rtJCularly happy ptaymg behmd
Monroe and Fraz1er," Scheer says of Bibby 'He sa w1nner and
he plays our kmd of basketball - pressure defense "
Larry Brown the Couga rs coach , says
'I think he's very hungry to play and 1f he shows he can
contnbute, he ca n play for us because we platoon our guards It s
unportant we have four guards who can play "
Bill von Breda Kolff , general manager and coach of Charlie
Fmley's MemphiS Tams, one of the ABA clubs, ca tled Wednesday's draft "a joke" because he feels few of the NBA players
selected actually w1tl be s1gned smce the ABA has had all of them .
on their lists for years
Carl Scheer doesn't look at what he did as a Joke
He's gomg to make an honest effort to get B1bby who st1ll has
an est1mated $40,000 contract wi th the KmcJ&lt;:; that runs one more

5 gal. $5.39

AND THE HALLMARKS

tn

Calhpolis the Blue Devils
defea ted No r th (.,J!h a an d

ROOF PAINT

GEO. HALL

pitching go for naught
By

HIU

RICk Monday, Jerry Morales
and Bill Madlock also homered
for the Cubs wh1le Willie
Stargell, Riehle Hebner and
Riehle Z1sk connected for the
Pirates Burt Hooton staggered
the distance for the Cubs,
allowmg 16 h1ts, to wm hiS first
game of the season while Jerry
Reuss, hanunered for 10 runs
m two mrungs, was the loser
The Philadelphia Ph1lhes
swamped the St LoUis Cardinals, 12-0, the Los Angeles
Dodgers routed the Cmcmnati
Reds, 14-1, the Houston Astros
shaded the San Francisco
G1ants, 3-2, the Montreal Expos
defeated the New York Mets, 74, and the San D1ego Padres
downed the Allanla Braves, &amp;1, m other National League
games
In the Amencan League, 1t
was Boston 4 New York 3,
Milwaukee 5 Cleveland 4,
Ballunore 6 DetrOit 1, Texas 4
Kansas City 2, ealiforrua 5
Mmnesola 3, and Ch1cago 5
Oakland 3
Pbils 12 Cards 5·
'- M1ke Anderson drove m
three runs w1th two sil\gles, a
double and a · homer as the
Ph1lhes won their s1xlh
stra1ghl game, therr longest
w1nnmg s\reak smce April,
1970 The Philltes blew open the
game w1th a four-run th1rd
mnmg, pavmg the way for
m1ddle-mmng reliever George
Culver to wm h1s hrst game
and Sonny Siebert to take the
season
loss
Meanwhile , Jun Btbby 1s keepmg an eye on h1s k1d brother
Dodgers 14 Reds 1:
He always does
Steve Garvey hit lwo homers
and drove m four runs and
Jimmy Wynn h1t a three..-un
BLACK
homer to pace the [)Qdgers' 17~ I
hit attaCk which turned a 2-1
game mto a rout w1th four-run
ral11es m the seventh, e1ghth
and mnt¥ mnmgs George
Plam or F1ber
Foster homered for the Reds
~tros 3 G1ants 2:
Dave Kingman 's sLXth-uuung
throwmg error enabled Bob
Gallagher to score the w1nnmg
run m the Astros' triUmPh over
the Giants Claude Osteen won ,
his second game with relief
help from Ken Forsch Cesar
171-SSil
Cedeno lnt his second homer of
the season for lite Astros

e1ght-RBI game bul he w1shes
he hadn 't seen that "take Sign"
flashed by Manager Wh1tey
Lockman of the Chicago Cubs
If he hadn 't been on the alert,
he thmks he m1ght now be the
e1ghth player m modern based
ball history to hil four homers
m one game As 1t 1s he 1s one of
many, as they say m the record
books, to hlt three homers m a
game smce the turn of the
century
M11terwald, acquired by the
Cubs from the Mmnesota
Twms m a wmter trade, h1l
three homers, mcludmg a
grand slam, and drove m e1ghl
runs Wednesday as the Cubs
downed the Pittsburgh Pirates,
18-9
' I saw a good p1tch to hll
when the 'take s1gn' was on,"
sa1d M1tterwald "The frrsl
homer was on a hangmg curve
and lhe others on fast balls
After that I tr1ed not to think of
home runs but the last time I
was at bat I was thmking of 11
constantly Not too many guys
have hit four m one game "
Laid Off " Good Pitch"
M1tterwald lrud off "the good
p1tch" m the fourth mnmg
durmg whtch the Cubs scored
f1ve runs to bruld lhe1r lead to
15-4 He eventually walked,
forcmg m a run m that mnmg
and doubled m h1s final appearance at the plate

The MEIGS INN

'

Um\ctstt\

tllll e .mel three tmle l'Vt nts for

.mel wtde ~nd got past Swam c~t
fu sl base enabhng Hc~rmon to
redch ftrs t s.tfel y and sconng
Belche r from thud w1 th the Jo!O

three of those free

Perry's 15..innings of

hnrwr s \\ lth 7b pmn ts Mar sh-.tll

[ldSl Sh,ffcr "ho had ple nl v of fd 1 mdthe r{ct\ me n thud Wtlh
lime to tlu O\\ Hc~rm o n out 11 141 _ pmn ts J dck l'tnch won the

and Belcher \\ lth t\\;o m four

Eagles' mistakes continue

area.
that nol only are the comdors
Mrs Sarah Hendncks, who lined w1th boxes but even one of
heads lhe AdvenllSI Com- the rest rooms has been
munily Serv1ces m Pomeroy, pressed mto use for sortmg
sa1d tl\e supply of blankets has
Volunteer workers sort the
barely kept up with the clothing for men, women, or
demand bul the supply of children, and for condition and
• clothing has far exceeded II s1ze
"Americans have really
Blankets have been m big
demonstrated their concern for demand smce many of the
the unfortuuate," Mrs Hen- people are livmg m patched up
dncks said Churches and houses w1th no heat Other
'
other orgamzallons ha ve 1terns such as crtb mattresses
literally deluged the center and vanous hpusehold 1lems
w1th supphes, w1th one - ha:v~ alsQ...b!:en suppli~d lo
truckloaclcommg from as fer lal ml1es ' wh'"o" are trying " to
relilibilltalethe~l~s The
of anunals We can multiply away as Connecticut
Every
room
m
the
school
Is
distrtbutJOn
• center w11l corr"them' by breedfnt I'm sure
bemg
used,
some
bemg
pijed
to
tinue
lo
operate
as lang as the
IBM wishes il could operate
th1s way- br eeding ~om­ the ce1hng w1lh bpxes of need ex1sts, sa1d Mrs Hen1
clothmg Space is so scarce dncKsputers "

.

ncttt
It was a pitcher's duel most
of the wav \\lth Kevm Camp
hurlmg for the Falcons Hld
sophomm c n gh t handel I .arrv
S1blev on th e mound for
Ha nnan Trace
The Falcons touched Siblev
for a run tn the f1rst "'hen Mtke
I.e" IS smg ted, stole second and
went to thtrd on a throwmg
error b) Wildca t catcher David
Sha ffe r He later scored on a
smg le b) second base man Rob
Belcher
But Wahama was held at bav
most of the 11 ay and the
Wildca ts knotled the sc ore at II 1n the fourth when Shaffer
drew h1s second of three wa lks
on the day He then wen t to
second on a Wild pitch and
came home on Randy Halley s
smg te that fe ll m between the
Wahama first baseman and
ng ht fie lder near the hne
The turnmg pOint of the
battle came m the bottom of
the fifth when w1th two out and
a runner on th1rd Larry Siblev

Hanna n Trace made 1t 50 m
the f1fth when Swam, JUmor
hrs t baseman tnpled and
came home on a n oth~r error by
the shortstop
Symmes Valley retaliated
for a run m the home ha lf of the
fifth on a walk to Carpenter.
errpr oh tM;,M~.\,c:he r and run
scor mg stngleil)' Estep ••
The fmal run of the ganle
came m the s1xth on a walk
stolen base an error on the
catc her br1ngmg the runner all
the wa) around from second
I ead mg h1tte rs for the
Wildcats were Swam w1th two
h1 ts m three tnps Randy
Halle} \Hlh a hit m two at
tempts, Kent Halle) w1th a
safet} 1n four tr1ps and Shaffe r
With a hi t m three at bats
Eslep went two for three for
the V1kmgs an d Paul Brown
got the other V1ke safety Jn two
at bats
Wednesday the Wildcats
traveled to this Wes t V1rg1ma
tov.n to face the runmng •
Whi te Falcons of Grant Bat

In Wt'fhH.:~cl.t\ 's tJ trmgu l.u
lr.tck met: I .u Hto Gr dllde
ClC' \ elrmd St~tt4 ca ptU! cd top

This afte rnoon the Wi ldcats

Xenia victims are receiving aid supplies
XENIA - More than 2,500
tornado v1cllms here are
benefitting from free blankelll
and clothing given them at a
dlStrlbulion center set up m the
disaster-stricken town At the
request of the Amencan Red
Cross, the clothing operalion IS
directed by Seventh-day Adventist Community Service•, m
an elementary school located
on the edge of Ute devastated

'l't .II' I• rl's ult.~

VITO

SV~ L LI NO

Dubson but scored two ru ns m
lhat Jnrung and two more m tne
e1ghth to "m Call Yastr
zcmsk1 stC:Irted Boston s
co meback w\lh d home r m the

Pc1ry " 'mtcd to keep gomg
I wa nt ed to stay 1n
A'lpl omontc started askmg me
ho\1 I felt m the lOth but I felt
gredt .tnd as long dS l £ell T
could help the cl ub I wa nted to
stav...lfl He JU St took me out
He Sa id If I had a chance or
hurtmg mv &lt;1rm th1 s earl} m
t h c::~c a so n I d '.\ant to &lt;:ome out
but I clidn 1
Colucc 10 .,... hu bea t Sander~

UP! Sports Wnter

It wdS the kmd of marathon
performance that an old-timer

hke Chnsty Mathe" son \\ Ould
apprecia ted
C,aytord Perr) • worked 15
mmn gs Wedn escla} mght but
hc1d nothmg to show for 1t when
Bob ColucciO of the Milllaukee
H1c\\ ers- t.he f1rst batter to
fe~ce Perr) s replacemen t Ken
Sa nders, m UJC 16th mnmghomered 1 he result was a 5-4
Mt lwaukee triUmph ove1 the
lndtans
Back m the nmth mnmg
Perry v.as ]USt two outs away
from echpsmg one of the most
ce lebra ted base ball triVIa
questions
OK fans name the brothers
who hold th e maJor Ieat,'U e
recu1d for most "" 1ru; by a
brother duo
It s a tnck question of
course rhe Mathewson brot h
ers hold the rccm d Clu Jot v
won 173 games and his brother
Henry won none although he
did pitch Ill the maJ ors
(,a) lord ha s won 178 games
m the maJors and his brother
.hm also with the l nd aans has
195 I hat s 373 so the next
H&lt; Lory b) a Pe rry snaps the
mm k Gay'o1 d had a 4-2 lead
V. Jth one out m the mnth when
' Pedro GarCia slammed a tworun homer to se nd the game
' mto extra Jrinmgs
Pitches 6 More Scoreless
Pen y then pitched SIX more
scoreless mnmgs before bemg
lifted by Manager Ken Aspromonte "h o d1dn t want
Per ry to hurt Ius arm
have

S£lld

) Oll hdHlDg!Ve PCfl)

SC\'Crl lh rm the fu st Hed Sox
hll
Rangers 1 Huya ls 2
I ex ~1s S(Or ed three run s m
tht: eaghth to bectt Kansas C1ty

Jeff Burrougl" double and
I om
(,rJC\C s
tn pl e
lngh li ghted tile 1all\ J un
13tbb) t 1 got the \\ tn wh1le

,1

lot of c1 edll He had to ha H' &lt;:t
WI!Ole lot Of guts lO lhrO" 15 (, ene G,u bd took the loss m
mmngs th1 s e.1rlv m th e season reluJ of Nel~on B11les
Angt Is 5, Tv.ms 3
v.1th consistency He thr c\\ dS
Bob 011\cr htt t \w solo
good a I Vt.' e\er seen h11n '
ln the other games, Bosto n homers (.I !lei F1 onk Robmson
edged Ne11 York
4 I Jut the 1tJ5th homer of Ius
Ba ltunorc b~t1t Detroat 6-1
car ecr .:1 ~ t!tc Angl b topped thr
fexa s rupped Kans.~ City 4-2 f\\ ms 1\ \ 0 un cc~rned runs tn
Cahfo rma to pped M nncsota 5 the SC \ cnth pr O\Cd to be the
3 &lt;1nd Clucdgo beat akland 5 differe nc e
Wlutc !;ox 5 As 3
3
Bnan Dov. mn g s two·run
In t he Na tiOnal I eag ue
Phllacletphia downed St LoUis hon1er m the e1ghth mmng
12 5 t os Ange les 1oute d lifted Chicago past Odkland
Cmcmnatl 14 1 Houston beat Downmg was filling 1n for
San f ran&lt;:asco 3·2 Montreal HIJUI c:d Ed Herrmann I he
to pp~d Ne\\ York
7-4 San tnumph sna pped a th ree-game
D1ego beat Atlanta, 6-1 and White Sox tosmg strmg
Ch1cago routed Pittsburgh 1119
On oles 6, T igers 1
hm F ulle1 s tY.o-run homer

lughlighted a five run first
mn1ng "' h1ch ta rrted the
Orwtes past the T1gers Jun
Palmer got the v1ctory on a
h ve-hJtt er Woody Fryman
lasted two thi rds of an mmng
and took the loss
Red Sox 4, Yanks 3
Boston didn't get a lut until
the seventh mmng off Pat

Bass tournament
slated May 19th
GREENFIEI D - A good
turn out IS expected at the open
ba ss tour nament scheduled at
Rocky Fork Lake Sunday, May
19
Don Bla ke president of
Greenfield Ba ss Club sponsor
of the tourney s;:Hd nume rous
mqm n es have come from all
parts or OhiO reques tmg detailS
about the affair
Three pnzes wtll be g1ven $100, $50 and $25 - plus a

The

Da1~

trophv fo r the la,ges t bass
caught
The tournament Is a two man
team affair •v1th the tota l
poundage of fish de cJdmg
v.h ich team or boat fishermen
wall wt n the pnzes
A 12 mch hm1l \lit! be ob
se r\ied
More mforrnatwn abou t the
tournament can be obtained by
v.ntmg Greenfield Bass Club,
Box 132 Greenfield, OhiO 45123

Blue Grass
Circular
Saw Blades
Blades ar e mad e ot I he t n es t
qualdy chrome n1ckel saw
steel harr:jened i:l 1d !em
percd Hard c.._-"ne f1n1sh
sl ays sharp up to 5 times
longer'

STAR SUPPLY
Rac me, Oh1o

Sentinel

ZEN ITH
COLOR TV

llEVOTED TOTHE
INTERI'.:sT OF'
MEIGs-MASON AREA
t::HESrER L TANNEH U...L
Exec Ed

•

ROB ERT HOEFU CIJ
Ci ty Editor
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Second class postage paid at Pomeroy

e BlAC K &amp;
WH ITE TV

Oluo

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�•
3- t ho Datil Se 1 I
•
n me M1ddlep()rt l'omero) 0 Api ill6 1'174
;'

2- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport Pomerov 0 API IIIII 1974

1

'

Offal war building latest fuss

Apple Grove

Wildcats fall 3-1 to Falcons

I

•

BRUSSElS (UP! ) - You
saw "The Great Ch1cken War "
You thrilled to "The InternatiOnal Carpel Caper "
Now make way for "The
Awful Offal Skirmish ," the
latest trade tempest to sour
relations between the Umted
Stales and lhe Europ ean
Conunon Market
Diplomats fr om both s1des
have spent more th an a year m
Geneva trymg to sort 11 out,
wtth no result Already 1t has
affected the admm1stration's
trade bill m Congress and
embittered preparations for

farm goods, to match those
which the other SIX nattons
already raised aga mst the
outs1de world
The Umted States clauned
the tariff increases cut Into
about one-thrrd of 1ts trade, or
about a billion dollars worth,
w1th the three nat10ns It
demanded compensatiOn from
the Europeans

The Europeans at fir st
refused any compensallon at
all They argued that tariffs
agamst U S farm exports to
Brllam, Ireland and Denmark
11
the Nixon Rotmd " of world may have gone up , but tariffs
trade talks
agalllSt Amencan mdustnal
The skirmish began back m exports were gomg down, and
January, 1973, when lhe Com- the two balanced each other
mon Markel expanded from SIX off
The Umted States rejected
to nine nations with lhe addillon of Bntam, Ireland and th1s The Europeans came up
mth mllllmal concess10ns The
Denmark
The Uruted States did about Umted Slates rejected this
$3 billion worth of trade each again and threatened to retailyear mth these three nations, ale -that IS, to rruse tariffs
espec18lly Bntam , and enJoyed agaiJISt an eqUlvalenl amowtl
favorable ta riffs on man y of European exports
exports 11 sent lo them
New demands have been
But when the three jomed the formally present ed lo th e
Conunon Market, they were Europeans, who are conforced to begm ra1smg many of stderlng unprovmg therr last
thell' tariffs, particularly on proposal, which they earlier

called a "final offer "
Both s1des have kepi their
exact negoliatm g sta nds
secret. But 11 1s known that the
Umted States wari'ts a better
deal fpr 1ts exports of offal, or
waste ammal mn ards, plus
such 1tems as oranges,
to bacco, sens1l!zed fi lms,
kraftl mer oa rdboard and
certam kinds or tractors
It all remmds diplomats here
of the "Chicken War," which
raged for some 18 months a
decade ago after the Common
Market tripled 1ts dulles on the
unport of Amencan chickens
The 1ssue went to mternallonal arbiters, who set
U S damage at $26 m1ll1on
The Umted Slates upped 11s
dulles on $26 mlll10n worth of
European brandy, trucks, dextrme and potato starch and the
war ended
At about the same tune, th e
Uruted Stales ra1sed Jls tariffs
on unports or European Wilton
and velvet carpets and on sheet
glass The Conunon Market
retahated by mcreasmg dut1es
on some Amencan synthetiC
fib ers
The mcreased U S tariffs
exp1red at the end of 1972, 10

years later, and the Europeans
dropped thm relaliatwn on
Am erican carpet at the same
tune
In each case, the total sum
mvolved was a drop m the $24
billion bucket of annual U S European trade Even m the
current dispute, th e Umted
States says th e European acts
only 'affect ' a b1lhon dollars
of U S exports -not thai 11 1s
actually cost mg Amenca $1
bilhon annually
Wilham D Eberle, President
Nixon's chief trade negotiator,
new here secretly last month to
warn Common Market offJcJals
th a t Am en can pat1ence 1s
wearmg thm and that retahatwn loomed
Earlier, Eberle told a newspaper that Washmgton would
begm reta!Jatory procedure by
March 10, a deadlme he let shp
by Without actiOn
Apart from the actual damage, the Uruted States clauns a
basic prmc1ple 1s mvolved
Many of the tar1ffs m quest10n
were' bound,' or firml)fftxed,
and Washmgton says a solemn
agreement was broken when
they were rrused

DR. LAWHENCE E. LAMB

Safe, sane way to lose weight
By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D
DEAR DR LAMB - ThiS IS
my gift to all your readers who
are trying to lose we1ght Some
time ago a woman wrote you
how she safely lost 20 pounds In
three monUts. I had tr1ed just
about everything, and this
woman 's adVICe SO ~nded
sensible, so I tried 1t Uke she
sa1d, I lost 20 pounds un three
months, from 140 to 120 pounds
I did nol count calones or stick
to high proteins, as many
protein foods conlaun some fat,
too I did not take any kind of
pill I sunply ate a well·
balanced meal three times a
day, but reduced lhe amount
I ate one servmg mstead of
two or three,' nothmg between
meals At bedlune I always
liked 1ce cream m swnmer and
hot chocolate m wmler Instead
of a diSh filled lo overflowmg
and heaped up, I cut down to
two scoops I reasoned mth
myself that I was eating
everythmg I wanted or needed,
only cutting the amount I
dldn 't rWI to lhe scales every
day as th1s IS a slow, sure
method I sunply took the
woman's word, followed her
advice and relaxed
Before I could we~gh myself
(I have no scales of my own),
fr1ends were remarking how I

•

NO. TILL PRACTICE
WILL BE SHOWN
A N~IW pasture planting
demolllllratlon will be held
Tuesday, April 23, at 3 p m
on the Glenn Lackey farm
located on Stale Rt. 329 between
Guysville
and
Stewart. The demoostratlon
area will be adjacent to lhe
New England road ju&amp;t north
of Rt. 329 'Ibis event is being
&amp;poosored by lhe Athens
SWCD, Alben&amp; Co. Ext.
Service, SCS, Chevron
Chemical and
Depoy
Garage. Light relreshmenlll
wUI be provided

must be losmg we1ght, or " D1d
you know you are losmg
weight'" I know this wlll hurt
some advertisers ' busmess ,
bul hke I sa1d, 1l's my g1ft to
your readers, and 1f they accept 11 and appreciate lhe
we~ght lost I hope they mil
wr1le you
DEAR READER - You are
another example of lhe msdom
of a good d1et program that
tnvolves a complete and
consistent correciJon of faulty
eatmg hab1ts Congratulalions
The problem most people
have w1lh a sens1ble d1et 1s that
they have no palience They
want to lose we1ght overmghl,
even though it took them
sometunes years to add all thai
fat to therr bodies As a result,
Utey go on a fad diet, with or
wtthoul success When they
have lost the we1ght, 1f they can
stand the d1et that long, they
commonly return to their old

CINCINNATI (UPI)- A new
type of "drive-In zoo" 1s nearmg completion here - and
bullders hope 1t will be more
sophlshcated than prev1ous attempts al sunulallng a Jaunt
through Africa.
They also hope 11 will be
safer 1 for bolh man and
beast
The anunal preserve - the
result of a year's work and a
$5 5 million mvestment - IS to
be unveiled April 'n al Kings
Island Amusement Park just
north of here
The 100-acre area 1s called
"Uon Country Safan," but 1t 19
different from several other
parks around the country that
bear the same name Sightseers will nde monorail trams
mstead of dr1vmg their automobiles through the park

~;... -

~~~;...
.,

"At a hundred bucks an hour tor my t1me, these are
going to be m1ghty expensive vegetables' ·

I

r

pounds, but 1t would have been
just dandy 1f 1t had come off
even slower Anyone who needs
to lose 20 powtds could easlly
do Jt as a year's program,
averagillg less than two pounds
a month
The only precautwn I would
make 1s don't cut back on your
calones to the pomt that you
feel too t~red /,!most everyone
needs a m1mmurn of 1,200
calones a day Less Will
usuall y cause vttamm or
mmeral deftctenctes , unless
expert d1et planmng IS done by
someone fam11iar w1th the
v1tamm and milleral contents
of the var10us foods An overly
restriCted calone illtake for a
long per1od of tune can harm
anyon e's health For thts
reason I recommend sensible
calone control by sunply nol
overeatillg and addmg to your
livmg pattern enough sens1ble
exerc1se to help the process

Drive-in zoo designed for
sophis~ication, safety too

BERRY'S WORLD

II

eatmg habits, lhe very ones
lhal caused them to ge t
overweight to begm w1th So,
what happens' A large percentage of people who do lose
wetght gam tl back
You have to learn to eat a
proper d1el as a way of life to
avoid obesity In many m·
stances lh1s can be solved by
sunply cuttillg back on the
amount of all the different
foods you eat, rather than
ehmmatmg parlicular foods It
IS not necessary to elimillate
carbohodrates to lose we1ght,
or for that matter to ehmmate
any food type Wbat you need
to elunmale 1s calones For
more mformatwn on losmg
we1ghl wr1te to me m care of
th1s newspaper, P 0 Box 1551,
Radw City Statwn, New York ,
N Y 10019, and ask for the
booklet on "losmg we1ght "
Enclose 50 cents to cover costs
I'm glad you lost the 29

The qutet-runnmg tralllS - preserve by a nme-fool h1gh
powered by electnc11y and cham link fence , which monomovung on rubber wheels - wlll rrul nders will hardly see becarry visitors through lhe m1d- cause 11 has been hidden m
die of the preserve roamed by most places by hills and treesome 400 anunals - mcluding lmes
lions, elephants, zebra, anteMore parhally-h1dden fenlope and rhmoceros
cmg ms1de lhe park diVIdes 11
No More Cars
mto three secllons
The concept of earlier parks
"ll's mamly to keep the lions
near Los Angeles, Dallas, AI- away from lhe other anunals
lanta and West Palm Beach, and to keep lhe big stuff like
Fla , called for visitors to driVe elephants and rhmos away
!herr own cars through the am- from the antelope and ostnch,"
mal area
explamed Taylor
Those parks are still operalFences Surround Uons
mg Wider that concept, but
The 70 lions are kept m place
there have been some prob- by a 14-foot h1gh cham link
!ems
fence and by another stx-fool
"We've had some InJuries - high fence just 10 feet mStde of
both to anunals and people,'' that
says Warren Taylor , sent here
" If the lion would happen to
a year ago by Uon Country clear the smaller control fence,
Safar1, Inc. lo superviSe con- he would only have a 10 foot
structlon of therr newest park. &lt;w1de area to try to get over the
'We've had lawsutls for bll- 14-foot h1gh fence ,' ' sa1d
ten lrres, elephants Silting on Taylor "Lions are nol good
Volkswagens and people bemg clunbers "
scratched. We had an employe
Each monorail tnp is expectkilled m Flonda He was main- ed to last between 2().25 mmtammg a gate where cars dr1ve utes, mth the tram edging
through and he and a cape aJong the two miles of twistmg
buffalo gol Into 11 "
steel track at six miles per
Taylo~ consld1l!_s- the_ cape bour
buffalo, which we1ghs up to
A guide will narrate the trip
4,000 poWids, the most danger- and can stop the tram to g1ve
ous animal of all
visitors a longer look al any
"Our employes should be unusual Sights
safer here becau~e they don't
Taylor sru&amp;the layout of the
have motonsts to worry park should keep most animals
about ,'' says Taylor
mthm easy vlewmg distance of
' You've always gol the 2 or 3 the trains 'I'Ile distances -perper cer\t that don't want to hapsasfaras125feelawaybul
follow the rules ," he explamed maybe as close as an anunal
"The employes tell them not lo nose pressed agamst the
roll down !herr ca1 wmdows, monorail wmdow
but they do anyway Accidents
Taylor, 31, has a college decan and have happened that gree m mternallonal market·
way
mg, bul fondly recalls hiS teenAnlulal Euvll't)nmenl Be11er age days In southern CalifornlB
"And mlbout the car the am- when he made money by calchmals" ertW'Onment IS much mg rattlesnakes and selling
better They don't ha,ve to them to spectallf houses.
Inhale any gasoline fumes "
"I used lo catch 10 or lain an
Taylor's breakdown of ani- afternoon," he remembered
~mals 10 be placed here
"I'd Jus! scoop 'em up by hand
Twelve e!epllanls, -- 25 Behind the heat! or any other
rhinoceros, f1ve grraffes, 10 place I could get hold of them I
lions, four hippopotamus, 20- d1dn 'I thtnk about any
ostriches, 20 zebra~. -150 an- - danger "
telope, a ca~ buffalo a.nd -15-~-~Taylor sa1d }!1s company Is
"cr1Hers," - hke monkey s, unp(oVing 11s resourc~:·by
swans apd elWitc birds
breedmg
The a.nunals are kepi m the
"OUr as§ets are m the form

.

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·I

MASON - The Hannan
Trace Wildca ts fresh off theor
fi rst SVAC triumph of the
season, fell to the Wa hama
Wh ite Falcons 3·1 here
Wednesday afternoon
Tuesday , the Wildca t
dJamondmen of Tom Belville
slapped the Sl mmes Valle;
Vikmgs 6-1 to Improve their
SVAC reco1d to 1 2
Pa ul Montgomerl was the
sta rter In the Tuesda)
lnumph gomg four and one
th trd tnnmgs before be tn g
replaced by Wavne Hesson
Wi th one out m the fifth mmng
Hannan Trace wasted no
lime gethng on the Vikmg
Pilcher plahng three runs m
the first frame Kent Halley
opened With a smg te, followed
by a walk to Kevm Petne and
back to back smgtes by Mark
Swa1n and David Shaffe r
Th e Wildca ts upped the
margm to 4~ Ill the th1rd "hen
Shaffer reac hed safely-on an
error by tlie'th1rd baseman and
ta ter scored on an error by the
Viklllg shor tstop

News, Events
By Mrs Herbert Roush
Erwm Gloeckner and son
Dav id VISited Mr and Mrs
R1chard Nom s at Carroll, OhiO
Monday
Mrs Fern e B Ha yman
VISited Mrs Ada Norris Sunday aftern oon
Mr and Mrs Woodrow D1ls
of Ball!more, Md brought the
former 's mother, Mrs Magg1e
Roush to her home at Letart
Friday and VISited over the
weekend
Mr and Mrs George
Donohew and family of Circlev ille spent the weekend With
Mr and Mrs Roy Donohew
Mr and Mrs Gene Jewell of
Letart, W Va were Sunday
dmner guests of Mr and Mrs
Gerald Hayman
Walter McDade, grandda ughter Ktm and husband,
Cra 1g and daughter of Troy, 0
spent a recent weekend w1th
Mrs Gl adys Shields and
VISited otl\er relatives
Mrs Eileen Buck held a
cosmetic party at her home
Monday evemng
Mrs Allee Balser was an
Easter Day guest of Mr and
Mrs Jack Ables
Mrs Patty Starr and
children of Cuyahoga Falls, 0
were Easter weekend guests of
Mr and Mrs Ernest Gnmm
Easter weekend guests of
Mr and_ Mrs Vernon Donohue
were Mr and Mrs Robert
Harden and family, Mr and
Mrs Kearney W1ckhne and
family of Mar10n, 0 , Mr and
Mrs Lowell Burton and Sherry
of Columbus, Mr and Mrs
Charles Wmebrenner, ch!ldren
Ricky, V1ck1 and Jod1 or
Cheshire, 0
Mr and Mrs Don Hodge,
Mary Lou Wickersham of
Columbus were
Easter
weekend guests of Mrs June
Wickersham and son Jommg
them on Easter Sunday for
dmner was Mrs Ferne B
Hayman
Mr and Mrs Ray Russell of
Newark, 0 were Easter
weekend guests of Mr and
Mrs Bill Fox and Davtd
Mr and Mrs. Dun Riffle and
children of Lucasville, 0 were
Easter weekend guests of Mr
and Mrs Lester Roush and
fam1ly
Mr and Mrs Don Bell spent
Sunday w1th their daughter,
Lorna Bell m Columbus
VJSIImg Saturday evemng wtth
Mr and Mrs Bell were Mr
and Mrs Cecil Hill, children
Tern and Robm of Columbus,
Ernest Clark, Racme, and Mrs
Inez Hill, Racine
Mr
and Mrs
Erwm
Gloeckner spent Thursda y
through Saturday mth the1r
daughter, Mr and Mrs Lorry
Badgely and children at
Fairfax, Va
Mr and Mrs Kenneth Bass
and daughters of Columbus
spent Easter weekend with Mr
and Mrs Arnold Hupp and
Mrs Katie Bass at Clifton, W
Va
Easter Sunday dmner guests
of Mr. and Mrs Herbert
Shtelds were Mrs Bertha
Rob1nson, Mr and Mrs Bill
Robmson and children, Mrs
Marlene F1sher, children
Molly, Larry and Amy, Mrs
Jack Sargent, Racme, Paul
Sayre, Columbus Calling m
the afternoon were Mrs Philip
Radford
and daughter,
Stephame, of Pomeroy Rt
Easter Sunday guests of Mr
and Mrs Dana Lewis - at
Clifton, W Va were Mr and
Mrs Russell Roush, children
Sharon, Cmdy, David and
Edw&amp;rd, Mr and Mrs l{erbert
Roush, Mr and Mrs Roger
Roush, Mrs Iva Orr, Jeff
Miller, Mel Waldmg , Lon
Theiss, Mr and Mrs Isaac
LewiS, and Robert Waldnig
Mr and Mrs Edward Morr1s
and children of Charlesl\lii..,W
Va , Mr and Mrs Larry Foster
and children, Bill Wheeler of
Columbus were
Easter
weekend guesfll of Mr and
Mrs Alex Wheeler
Vtsltmg Mr and Mrs Roy

I

r~mncd

.. dit.:OI I i).Jfl H.HIIlOJl
But the p)lt h \\ 1s wt ld tt ncl got

ftrst for the fm.1 l out
But Shaffer s ti n O\\

EASTE RN HIGH SCHOOL
- " Too ma n) m1 stakes
aga m
Coach Larry Hemes, ob
VJOUS!y bothered by a lack O[
defensive consistency on the
part of 1s Eagle mfietders, for
the second hme m as many
days attnbuted an Eastern
baseball loss to cost!) f1eldmg
m1 scues
Tuesday, 11 wa~ five Eagle
errors ill a 5-3 loss to Trimble
and Wednesday 1t was seven
errors m a 15-5 thumpmg at the
hands of Miller m Pe rr y
Coun ty
Eastern starter Steve Holter
was tapped early for 11 runs
on seven hils, three walks and
two hit baiters, " h1le the JuniOr
fann ed
seven
M1ller
dJamondmen
Miller talhed two run s ill the
first on a walk, stolen base,
smgle , error by Holter, and an
error by f~rs t baseman Greg
Ba1ley
'
From that momemnt on,
every run M11ler scored came
after the first two batters " ere
reiJred
In lhe lh~rd , Miller plated
three runs on a double, hit
batter, error by Holter, walk
and an error by Rob Bar)ler at
second base

"Here's a spot right here we seem to have missed!"

1974-'75 calendar approved
PT PLEASANT - Fmal
approval was g1ven lhe f1scal
year budget and le vy
es timates, also for the school
calendar for 1974-75 and a
spec1al readmg program was
adopted for Mason Elementary
sc haul Ill Tuesday mght's
reconvened school board
mee ting
Approval was g1ven by the
board for a second R1 ght to
Read School for nexl year,
wh1ch ts to be Implemented at
Mason Supt Charles Withers
sa1d slate department offiCials
are so well pleas ed w1th
progress of the same program
at Leon the past year that they

recommended a second one
Next year's school calendar
IS se t up for teachers to report
August 26 and students to begill
the new term Sept 3
TheJr fi rst day out of school
wtll be Nov 5 Electwn Day, to
be followed by Records Day on
Nov 8 and two holidays the
same month, Nov 11 and 28
The day !ollowillg ThanksgJvmg will also be a free day
Chnstmas holidays wlll be
Dec 23 through Jan I
A Records Day 1s scheduled
Feb 24 and the next lime out of
classes w1ll be for Easte r
vacatiOn March 28 and 31 A

r------------------------~,

~\. I

I Beat...

~I

I

\ Of the Bend

I

By Bob Hoeflich

~: 1

!

~· !

Jumor and seruor students working Wider the superviSion of
therr mstructors, Mrs Mary Powell and Mrs Polly Hysell, mil
hold a styling harr-a-thon from 7 a m to mulmght Fnday m the
cosmetology lab of Me~gs High School
Anyone wishing to attend ts mv1ted to do so and may even
calllhe department, 992-2158, for an appomtmenl Contributions
will be accepted and will be used for sending a seruor student to
an advanced h811' stylmg school

Records Day w1ll follow Apnl
1 g1vmg students a longer
sprillg vaca tJon than this yea r
An other sprmg hohday Will
be May 26, Memon al Day and
the last day for students m the
1974-75 school year will be June
6 an,t for teachers, Jun e 12
In other act10n the Board
- Discussed a letter read by
Sup t Withers co ncermng
alhlelics at Wahama H1gh
School, although there was no
offi cwl ac twn
- Hea rd a lette r from
Robert H K1dd concernmg
acceptance of Wahama In the
North Cen tral Aisoclalion In
turn the board asked that a
commi ttee, formed mos tly by
Wahama parents, be sent a
letter of commendatwn for
the1r effor ts m obtammg th1s
ratmg
- Direc ted that a letter be
sent to pollee agencies concermng unauthomed vehiCles
on area school grounds
- Approved a request fr om
Southweste rn
Commumty
Action Council Inc to use
Mason County school buses m
tra nsporting children to
Camden Park May 17 m the
Head Start Program

.

Ex-Twin socks three out of
park for big Cubs victory
By FRED DOWN
UPI Sports Writer
George M1t1erwald has no
regrets about his three-homer,

DID YAKNOW?
Tony Lucke retired Feb 1
Tony was 65 on Feb 9 He started work mth the Oh1o Power
Co on May 25, 1925 and was mth tl\e company until Feb 13, 1942
On Feb 16, 1942, he started work w1th the New York Central
Railroad, later becommg an electriCian foreman With the Penn
Central. He worked for the railroads until Feb I

BEFORE YOU
BUY
YOUR TIRES

RICHARll POUUN IS aboollo g1ve up on hiS 1973 car The
vehicle has been h1t four times m JUst a matter of a few weeks,
the last time by ah1tandrundriver
THOMAS McLAUGHLIN of Middleport IS a pahent at
Uruvers1ty Hospital m Columbus He's gettmg along fme, bul
would like to hear from home folks, especially hiS former coworkers at Texaco
MIDDLEPORT FIREMEN are holding a public fish fry at
their new headquarters begmnlng al 3 30 p m Fr1day Proceeds
go towards the department's equipment fund
Meantune, Pomeroy frremen, also al home m a new buildmg,
will hold a public open house from 1 to 5 on Sunday, April 28, to
giVe restden!.'3 a chance to look at the new quarters
Time draws near for the openmg of lhe Silver SUpper Saloon
al the Pomeroy Jumor High Auditorium Saturday mght There
seems to be a liltle confus1on on what tune the Big Bend · Minimustcals will be staged They will go at 6· 30 p m , 8 and 9 30
The doors for each mustcal will be operung one-half hour before
the shows a.nd there will be enlertamment gomg at all tunes
Dunooew over 'Easter weekend
were Jeff Donohew, Ray
Burdette, son Terry and Mr.
Burdette's father-m-law, aU of
Belpre, Mr and Mrs Eugene
Webster, daughter Anlla

Joining the above a t the
Dunohew home for Easter
Sunday dmner were Mrs
Sarah Philbnck Rolandus, and
s1ster, Mrs Frankie Droz of
Ainbrldge, Pa

.

,.

FOR YOUR
WHEELS

THOMAS O'CONNELL

CHECK

Professor will
speak at hand
banquet event

two more runs, folio" cd b)
another smgle scormg two
more rWl s '!hat Vwi:IS fo ll owed
by a walk and anoth er run
scon ng base hit
Eastern talli ed 1ts filla l nm
ill the se venth when llarns
rea ched on an error Spencer
reached on a fielder s ch01ce
Wipmg out Harns and Spencer
Y. ent to second when a ptckoff
attempt went aw ry T1m
Kuhn th en li ned a s1 ngte
bnngmg Spencer home
Holter was replaced wJ th two
out m the fifth by Spencer who
went one and one-third illmngs
)Je l~m g the fina l two runs on
four h1ts and one walk Junwr
soupaw Greg Ba1ley pi tched
th e fm al illnillg y1eldillg two
h1ts and a walk, but hotdmg
Miller scoreless
Dann y J ones " ent lhe
distance for Miller, y1eldillg s1x
hi ls and those f1ve runs "hJie
walkillg five and stnkillg out
only one
The Eastern record now
stands at 4-4 and the Eagles
Will host the Hannan Trace
Wildca ts today at 4 30 p m
M1ller
203 280 ll--15 14 3
Eastern
000 400 1- 5 6 7
Jones and Stmkdorn Hol ter
(LP), Spencer (5) , Bailey 17 ),
and Wmebrenner Bowen 14)

Miller made Jl ~
-0
the
fourth on a hit batte paJr of
stole n bases , and wo smgles
But Eastern ra llied a bit to
cut the defiCit to three at 7-4
w1th a fo ur run burst m the
bottom of the fourth
M1ke Harns opened w1th a
smgle, stole second and went to
third on a passed ball Short
stop Randy Blake "alked and
stole second , followed b) a
walk to Tim Spencer loadillg
the bases
Tim Kuhn then popped out to
the second baseman before
Dave Hannwn was aY. arded
f1rst base on a catcher Inte rference call when Hannum s
swm g was obstructed by the
catchers m1tt
Phil Bowen walked platillg
the seco nd r un before
soph omore Do n E1 chmger
Sillgled scormg the fmal two
r uns
But Miller came back w1th
e1ght big runs ill the fifth , when
wtth two outs and none on, the
th1rd batter of the mmng
reached safely on an error on
the ca tcher, making all e1ght
runs unearned
That was followed by a walk,
smgle to ,n ght and an error
sconng two rWls, a smgle
sconng another run , another
smgle, walk, and smgle scormg

·.,,

OUR PRICES

'•

GENERAL
TIRE SALES

,
~

Thomas O'Connell, Marshall
Umversily muSic liiStructor •
since 194a spectahzmg in :.
woodwmd mstruments and
theory, will be guest speaker at ~
the annual Eastern High ' ~
School Band Banquet Saturday
~.
night
'•
Band members and parents r
will enJOY a covered dish ~ ~
dinner at 7 p m The band
boosters Wlll proVIde meat !:
potatoes, rolls and beverage' ::
and parents lhe rernamder oi •,
the menu
~f
A native of Michigan Prof ; &lt;
O'Connell
rece~-,ed' hls ',
bachelor of JClence degree ~;
f~om Northern MIChigan
College of Education 111 1940
and 116 master's degree at lhe
Uruvers1ty of Michigan m 1947
He served four vears m the u
-8.~942;,46. He' playi
clarmel m the Charleston
Symphony Orcbestra, tbe West
Vrrgml8 Opera Co and lhe
Huntington- Chamber Orchestra He IS marrted and ''
father 9f 10 chlldren. , ,...

992-7161

w.ts setond \\t lh

W(j ~

IO\\.

ahead run
I he Falcons added "n 1n
surance run m the s1xth on d
stngle s a c nf1 ce bunt &lt;m d

smgle hl Lewis
The Wildcats managed JUst
two hils the enlire cia\ orr
Camp Halley s run scon ng
smgle m the four th £Jild d one
ba gger by Swam m th e fu st

In all Camp \la lked foul
to Sha ffer

p t~sses ~om g

and struck oul

seven while g1 \ tn g up th.1 t one

ea rned run
Sibley \\d iked JUSI one
ba tter stnkmg out hH anrl
) Jeld mg e1ght h1ts g11mg up
t\\o

earr: ~d

The most popular night club m
the a:;county area is proud to
present the return of

runs

1 op hitters for Wa hama \\ere
LeWIS three hits Ill four tllpS

travel to Eastern for ct

l ee~g uc

battle w1th the Eastern f:d gles
at 4 30 p m
!Iannan Trace 301 011 0- G 5 I
Sy Valley
()()() 010 0- t l 5
Hannan rrace 000 100 0- 1 2 4
Wahama
100 011 x- 3 8 I
Sibley and Shaffer Ca mp
1 WP ) and I.ew1
s

On

Memo tta l

Fteld

Mc tgs

F tn ctl 1csul ts we re
(,AilS 73 N01 th G,J!ha 45 and
Me1gs 41

Sports today:
I lL\ ( K - \1 t•Jgs ,It
ll l' ll s ln n I',IS lo' J II .11
I • dt•t ,1 ! ll tJt km ~ ,u1d
II llt'l tmtl
B\ SIB \11
l l.t nn ..u t

II ..Ht'

IGHT 10 IlL 2

.tl

I .Js li'J II ,So ullmcsll'rn
1t Snutht'l ll

DF:A IJII NE SE I
RACINI - Fml,1y Apn l !9
IS th e de.1dhne for an1
yow1gster v ashm g to s1gn up
fur Rct ctne pee 'l'iee httl e
leag ue or po n~ league baseba ll
An) mterestcd 'lOUth should
s1 ~ r1 up at the non Beegle
resHience F1fth St Hacme

G \ ME CANCEL! EO
rh e Me1gs South" ester n
do ubleheddt.: l
sc heduled
Wedn es da) afte rnoon tn

Middl cpo l t ""s postpo ned
bee a use of the gas shor tage

Today's

Sport Parade
Ill MU 1 ON RICHMAN
UPI Stlu r ts Ed itor

NEW YORK I Ul-1 1- Jun Bibb) ha s alll a}S kept an e)e on his
kid brother
He st1tl does
That's natural enough
Ever smce they were ktds growm g up tn Franklmton N C the
B1bb) boys have been close and they stilt are even though the)
all are makmg their liVI ngs In different "ays now Ill different
catles J am B1bbv 1s a startmg pttcher v. 1th the Texas Rangers
Hen r) 'Hank' Bibby IS a backup guard With the Ne" York
Kmcks and Fredertc B1bby, oldest of the three IS a school
teacher m R1chmond, Va
When Jun Bibby starts talkmg about Ius k1d brother Henry he
glows even more than he did when he pitc hed the first no hit let
ever for the Ra ngers aga1nst the Oakland A s last Jul} 30 and
you ca n tetl right off ho" he feels about his brother s abJiit;
He's Super
, 'He's a super basketba ll player," J1m Bibby , 29 says of h1s 24year-&lt;Jid brother , Hemy lle sgot a chance to establish himself
w1th the Kmcks Playmg behmd Ea rl Monroe and Wa lt Fraz1er
though can be a Iitle rough You H go tta be Super God or
something He 's ptaymg good though thiS)Car wheneve r he gets
a chance to play
In common with most young ballpla:ers who ha ve to s1t behmd
top-lmers, Hen ry B1bby would hke to play mo re Th iS IS no more
than natural particularly m th e case of someone hke Henry
B1bby who dur mg h1s three years at UCLA, started every game
One man Carl Scheer, pres1dent and general manage r of the
AHA's Carolina Cougars has been followmg Henry B1bby s
ca reer smce he was gomg to lngh school m Franklinton Scheer
was prac tJcmg law m GreensbOro, N C at the tune and tned to
recrmt Bibby for GUilford College
'
Henry B1bby mulled 11over awhile and decided to go to UCLA
mstead, imd after he ft mshed there Scheer de ~Jded he d g1ve 11
another try He draft ed Bibby for the Cougars m the ABA while
the Kmcks went for hun 1n the NBA
S1gns with Kni cks
1
"The Kmcksd1dn I seem to be that mterested,' Scheer recalls
' Sam Gilbert who represented Lew Alcmdor and others- at
UCLA , was representmg !lank and we reached a deal Sam
asked me to send the contract do11 n and I did Hank decided not
to s1gn 1t He s1g ned w1th lhe Knicks mstead They offered him a
no-cut proviSIOn I regret I didn't have the foresight to do Jt "
Sc heer always ke pt the f1le open on B1bby though
He liked h1m personatly
'Henry IS a qUiet, unassummg young man w1th [me upbrmgmg,' says Carl Scheer "He comes from a home where
there always was a great deal of lave;-affect10n and pnde I ve
always had the feeling he s not a big-town guy I always fe lt he'd
be happ1er back m North Carolina '
So Carl Scheer drafted Henry Bibby agam for the Couga rs
Wednesday m the ABA 's annual sprmg draft It was the fi rst lime
the ABA drafted NBA players, and that doesn t mean they'tl
succeed m s1gnmg them, but Carl Scheer feels 11s worth a
Chlji!Ce
Not Particularly Happy
'We have heard he 1sn't pa rtJCularly happy ptaymg behmd
Monroe and Fraz1er," Scheer says of Bibby 'He sa w1nner and
he plays our kmd of basketball - pressure defense "
Larry Brown the Couga rs coach , says
'I think he's very hungry to play and 1f he shows he can
contnbute, he ca n play for us because we platoon our guards It s
unportant we have four guards who can play "
Bill von Breda Kolff , general manager and coach of Charlie
Fmley's MemphiS Tams, one of the ABA clubs, ca tled Wednesday's draft "a joke" because he feels few of the NBA players
selected actually w1tl be s1gned smce the ABA has had all of them .
on their lists for years
Carl Scheer doesn't look at what he did as a Joke
He's gomg to make an honest effort to get B1bby who st1ll has
an est1mated $40,000 contract wi th the KmcJ&lt;:; that runs one more

5 gal. $5.39

AND THE HALLMARKS

tn

Calhpolis the Blue Devils
defea ted No r th (.,J!h a an d

ROOF PAINT

GEO. HALL

pitching go for naught
By

HIU

RICk Monday, Jerry Morales
and Bill Madlock also homered
for the Cubs wh1le Willie
Stargell, Riehle Hebner and
Riehle Z1sk connected for the
Pirates Burt Hooton staggered
the distance for the Cubs,
allowmg 16 h1ts, to wm hiS first
game of the season while Jerry
Reuss, hanunered for 10 runs
m two mrungs, was the loser
The Philadelphia Ph1lhes
swamped the St LoUis Cardinals, 12-0, the Los Angeles
Dodgers routed the Cmcmnati
Reds, 14-1, the Houston Astros
shaded the San Francisco
G1ants, 3-2, the Montreal Expos
defeated the New York Mets, 74, and the San D1ego Padres
downed the Allanla Braves, &amp;1, m other National League
games
In the Amencan League, 1t
was Boston 4 New York 3,
Milwaukee 5 Cleveland 4,
Ballunore 6 DetrOit 1, Texas 4
Kansas City 2, ealiforrua 5
Mmnesola 3, and Ch1cago 5
Oakland 3
Pbils 12 Cards 5·
'- M1ke Anderson drove m
three runs w1th two sil\gles, a
double and a · homer as the
Ph1lhes won their s1xlh
stra1ghl game, therr longest
w1nnmg s\reak smce April,
1970 The Philltes blew open the
game w1th a four-run th1rd
mnmg, pavmg the way for
m1ddle-mmng reliever George
Culver to wm h1s hrst game
and Sonny Siebert to take the
season
loss
Meanwhile , Jun Btbby 1s keepmg an eye on h1s k1d brother
Dodgers 14 Reds 1:
He always does
Steve Garvey hit lwo homers
and drove m four runs and
Jimmy Wynn h1t a three..-un
BLACK
homer to pace the [)Qdgers' 17~ I
hit attaCk which turned a 2-1
game mto a rout w1th four-run
ral11es m the seventh, e1ghth
and mnt¥ mnmgs George
Plam or F1ber
Foster homered for the Reds
~tros 3 G1ants 2:
Dave Kingman 's sLXth-uuung
throwmg error enabled Bob
Gallagher to score the w1nnmg
run m the Astros' triUmPh over
the Giants Claude Osteen won ,
his second game with relief
help from Ken Forsch Cesar
171-SSil
Cedeno lnt his second homer of
the season for lite Astros

e1ght-RBI game bul he w1shes
he hadn 't seen that "take Sign"
flashed by Manager Wh1tey
Lockman of the Chicago Cubs
If he hadn 't been on the alert,
he thmks he m1ght now be the
e1ghth player m modern based
ball history to hil four homers
m one game As 1t 1s he 1s one of
many, as they say m the record
books, to hlt three homers m a
game smce the turn of the
century
M11terwald, acquired by the
Cubs from the Mmnesota
Twms m a wmter trade, h1l
three homers, mcludmg a
grand slam, and drove m e1ghl
runs Wednesday as the Cubs
downed the Pittsburgh Pirates,
18-9
' I saw a good p1tch to hll
when the 'take s1gn' was on,"
sa1d M1tterwald "The frrsl
homer was on a hangmg curve
and lhe others on fast balls
After that I tr1ed not to think of
home runs but the last time I
was at bat I was thmking of 11
constantly Not too many guys
have hit four m one game "
Laid Off " Good Pitch"
M1tterwald lrud off "the good
p1tch" m the fourth mnmg
durmg whtch the Cubs scored
f1ve runs to bruld lhe1r lead to
15-4 He eventually walked,
forcmg m a run m that mnmg
and doubled m h1s final appearance at the plate

The MEIGS INN

'

Um\ctstt\

tllll e .mel three tmle l'Vt nts for

.mel wtde ~nd got past Swam c~t
fu sl base enabhng Hc~rmon to
redch ftrs t s.tfel y and sconng
Belche r from thud w1 th the Jo!O

three of those free

Perry's 15..innings of

hnrwr s \\ lth 7b pmn ts Mar sh-.tll

[ldSl Sh,ffcr "ho had ple nl v of fd 1 mdthe r{ct\ me n thud Wtlh
lime to tlu O\\ Hc~rm o n out 11 141 _ pmn ts J dck l'tnch won the

and Belcher \\ lth t\\;o m four

Eagles' mistakes continue

area.
that nol only are the comdors
Mrs Sarah Hendncks, who lined w1th boxes but even one of
heads lhe AdvenllSI Com- the rest rooms has been
munily Serv1ces m Pomeroy, pressed mto use for sortmg
sa1d tl\e supply of blankets has
Volunteer workers sort the
barely kept up with the clothing for men, women, or
demand bul the supply of children, and for condition and
• clothing has far exceeded II s1ze
"Americans have really
Blankets have been m big
demonstrated their concern for demand smce many of the
the unfortuuate," Mrs Hen- people are livmg m patched up
dncks said Churches and houses w1th no heat Other
'
other orgamzallons ha ve 1terns such as crtb mattresses
literally deluged the center and vanous hpusehold 1lems
w1th supphes, w1th one - ha:v~ alsQ...b!:en suppli~d lo
truckloaclcommg from as fer lal ml1es ' wh'"o" are trying " to
relilibilltalethe~l~s The
of anunals We can multiply away as Connecticut
Every
room
m
the
school
Is
distrtbutJOn
• center w11l corr"them' by breedfnt I'm sure
bemg
used,
some
bemg
pijed
to
tinue
lo
operate
as lang as the
IBM wishes il could operate
th1s way- br eeding ~om­ the ce1hng w1lh bpxes of need ex1sts, sa1d Mrs Hen1
clothmg Space is so scarce dncKsputers "

.

ncttt
It was a pitcher's duel most
of the wav \\lth Kevm Camp
hurlmg for the Falcons Hld
sophomm c n gh t handel I .arrv
S1blev on th e mound for
Ha nnan Trace
The Falcons touched Siblev
for a run tn the f1rst "'hen Mtke
I.e" IS smg ted, stole second and
went to thtrd on a throwmg
error b) Wildca t catcher David
Sha ffe r He later scored on a
smg le b) second base man Rob
Belcher
But Wahama was held at bav
most of the 11 ay and the
Wildca ts knotled the sc ore at II 1n the fourth when Shaffer
drew h1s second of three wa lks
on the day He then wen t to
second on a Wild pitch and
came home on Randy Halley s
smg te that fe ll m between the
Wahama first baseman and
ng ht fie lder near the hne
The turnmg pOint of the
battle came m the bottom of
the fifth when w1th two out and
a runner on th1rd Larry Siblev

Hanna n Trace made 1t 50 m
the f1fth when Swam, JUmor
hrs t baseman tnpled and
came home on a n oth~r error by
the shortstop
Symmes Valley retaliated
for a run m the home ha lf of the
fifth on a walk to Carpenter.
errpr oh tM;,M~.\,c:he r and run
scor mg stngleil)' Estep ••
The fmal run of the ganle
came m the s1xth on a walk
stolen base an error on the
catc her br1ngmg the runner all
the wa) around from second
I ead mg h1tte rs for the
Wildcats were Swam w1th two
h1 ts m three tnps Randy
Halle} \Hlh a hit m two at
tempts, Kent Halle) w1th a
safet} 1n four tr1ps and Shaffe r
With a hi t m three at bats
Eslep went two for three for
the V1kmgs an d Paul Brown
got the other V1ke safety Jn two
at bats
Wednesday the Wildcats
traveled to this Wes t V1rg1ma
tov.n to face the runmng •
Whi te Falcons of Grant Bat

In Wt'fhH.:~cl.t\ 's tJ trmgu l.u
lr.tck met: I .u Hto Gr dllde
ClC' \ elrmd St~tt4 ca ptU! cd top

This afte rnoon the Wi ldcats

Xenia victims are receiving aid supplies
XENIA - More than 2,500
tornado v1cllms here are
benefitting from free blankelll
and clothing given them at a
dlStrlbulion center set up m the
disaster-stricken town At the
request of the Amencan Red
Cross, the clothing operalion IS
directed by Seventh-day Adventist Community Service•, m
an elementary school located
on the edge of Ute devastated

'l't .II' I• rl's ult.~

VITO

SV~ L LI NO

Dubson but scored two ru ns m
lhat Jnrung and two more m tne
e1ghth to "m Call Yastr
zcmsk1 stC:Irted Boston s
co meback w\lh d home r m the

Pc1ry " 'mtcd to keep gomg
I wa nt ed to stay 1n
A'lpl omontc started askmg me
ho\1 I felt m the lOth but I felt
gredt .tnd as long dS l £ell T
could help the cl ub I wa nted to
stav...lfl He JU St took me out
He Sa id If I had a chance or
hurtmg mv &lt;1rm th1 s earl} m
t h c::~c a so n I d '.\ant to &lt;:ome out
but I clidn 1
Colucc 10 .,... hu bea t Sander~

UP! Sports Wnter

It wdS the kmd of marathon
performance that an old-timer

hke Chnsty Mathe" son \\ Ould
apprecia ted
C,aytord Perr) • worked 15
mmn gs Wedn escla} mght but
hc1d nothmg to show for 1t when
Bob ColucciO of the Milllaukee
H1c\\ ers- t.he f1rst batter to
fe~ce Perr) s replacemen t Ken
Sa nders, m UJC 16th mnmghomered 1 he result was a 5-4
Mt lwaukee triUmph ove1 the
lndtans
Back m the nmth mnmg
Perry v.as ]USt two outs away
from echpsmg one of the most
ce lebra ted base ball triVIa
questions
OK fans name the brothers
who hold th e maJor Ieat,'U e
recu1d for most "" 1ru; by a
brother duo
It s a tnck question of
course rhe Mathewson brot h
ers hold the rccm d Clu Jot v
won 173 games and his brother
Henry won none although he
did pitch Ill the maJ ors
(,a) lord ha s won 178 games
m the maJors and his brother
.hm also with the l nd aans has
195 I hat s 373 so the next
H&lt; Lory b) a Pe rry snaps the
mm k Gay'o1 d had a 4-2 lead
V. Jth one out m the mnth when
' Pedro GarCia slammed a tworun homer to se nd the game
' mto extra Jrinmgs
Pitches 6 More Scoreless
Pen y then pitched SIX more
scoreless mnmgs before bemg
lifted by Manager Ken Aspromonte "h o d1dn t want
Per ry to hurt Ius arm
have

S£lld

) Oll hdHlDg!Ve PCfl)

SC\'Crl lh rm the fu st Hed Sox
hll
Rangers 1 Huya ls 2
I ex ~1s S(Or ed three run s m
tht: eaghth to bectt Kansas C1ty

Jeff Burrougl" double and
I om
(,rJC\C s
tn pl e
lngh li ghted tile 1all\ J un
13tbb) t 1 got the \\ tn wh1le

,1

lot of c1 edll He had to ha H' &lt;:t
WI!Ole lot Of guts lO lhrO" 15 (, ene G,u bd took the loss m
mmngs th1 s e.1rlv m th e season reluJ of Nel~on B11les
Angt Is 5, Tv.ms 3
v.1th consistency He thr c\\ dS
Bob 011\cr htt t \w solo
good a I Vt.' e\er seen h11n '
ln the other games, Bosto n homers (.I !lei F1 onk Robmson
edged Ne11 York
4 I Jut the 1tJ5th homer of Ius
Ba ltunorc b~t1t Detroat 6-1
car ecr .:1 ~ t!tc Angl b topped thr
fexa s rupped Kans.~ City 4-2 f\\ ms 1\ \ 0 un cc~rned runs tn
Cahfo rma to pped M nncsota 5 the SC \ cnth pr O\Cd to be the
3 &lt;1nd Clucdgo beat akland 5 differe nc e
Wlutc !;ox 5 As 3
3
Bnan Dov. mn g s two·run
In t he Na tiOnal I eag ue
Phllacletphia downed St LoUis hon1er m the e1ghth mmng
12 5 t os Ange les 1oute d lifted Chicago past Odkland
Cmcmnatl 14 1 Houston beat Downmg was filling 1n for
San f ran&lt;:asco 3·2 Montreal HIJUI c:d Ed Herrmann I he
to pp~d Ne\\ York
7-4 San tnumph sna pped a th ree-game
D1ego beat Atlanta, 6-1 and White Sox tosmg strmg
Ch1cago routed Pittsburgh 1119
On oles 6, T igers 1
hm F ulle1 s tY.o-run homer

lughlighted a five run first
mn1ng "' h1ch ta rrted the
Orwtes past the T1gers Jun
Palmer got the v1ctory on a
h ve-hJtt er Woody Fryman
lasted two thi rds of an mmng
and took the loss
Red Sox 4, Yanks 3
Boston didn't get a lut until
the seventh mmng off Pat

Bass tournament
slated May 19th
GREENFIEI D - A good
turn out IS expected at the open
ba ss tour nament scheduled at
Rocky Fork Lake Sunday, May
19
Don Bla ke president of
Greenfield Ba ss Club sponsor
of the tourney s;:Hd nume rous
mqm n es have come from all
parts or OhiO reques tmg detailS
about the affair
Three pnzes wtll be g1ven $100, $50 and $25 - plus a

The

Da1~

trophv fo r the la,ges t bass
caught
The tournament Is a two man
team affair •v1th the tota l
poundage of fish de cJdmg
v.h ich team or boat fishermen
wall wt n the pnzes
A 12 mch hm1l \lit! be ob
se r\ied
More mforrnatwn abou t the
tournament can be obtained by
v.ntmg Greenfield Bass Club,
Box 132 Greenfield, OhiO 45123

Blue Grass
Circular
Saw Blades
Blades ar e mad e ot I he t n es t
qualdy chrome n1ckel saw
steel harr:jened i:l 1d !em
percd Hard c.._-"ne f1n1sh
sl ays sharp up to 5 times
longer'

STAR SUPPLY
Rac me, Oh1o

Sentinel

ZEN ITH
COLOR TV

llEVOTED TOTHE
INTERI'.:sT OF'
MEIGs-MASON AREA
t::HESrER L TANNEH U...L
Exec Ed

•

ROB ERT HOEFU CIJ
Ci ty Editor
Published da ll} except Sat~y by The
Ohm Valley PubhshmK O:lropany 11 1
Court St Pomeroy Ohlo ~769 Busmess
Off ce Phone fm.-2156 EdJWJal Phone m
2157
Second class postage paid at Pomeroy

e BlAC K &amp;
WH ITE TV

Oluo

•

Natio nal ad vertt.s lng representative
Bottmelli-Ga llagher lnc 12 F..a~t 42nd S!
New York New York
&amp;bscnpli011 rBtcs Del vered b) coml!l'
where avo lla ble 60 cents per week By
Molor Route where carrier serm~ nol
ava Jiable One mon th n 60 By mall 1n
Oh10 and W \a

One Year U8

e STEREO

Sb

mon th s 19 50 Th ree m o nth ~ $6
F.lsewhere f22 00 year SUI months Sll Ml
three mont.ruJ 16 :10 Sub:'ICI" Jpbon pnce
inc ludes Sunday Times-sentll'lel

MASON FURNITURE

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Linescores
Mi\tOI' l C,Hf1Jl' ~~: ~u ll ~
By Un1l cd Prc !&gt;s lnl e nl.lli Onil l

N ,111011,1t lCiiQUl'
OOOOOJ OlJ I
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•

Garvcv.. .at home

111

.

(' IN('INNAT I i UI'IJ

Sh•w

_\' 1 ' :1!"~·: 11 Mir ·!1i r•:;t1 :-ll ;d1 ·

!u · w:i:.

~ U OI J.i o;
I 10 I (;arvt-y n · f~·rs 'i l !1is wimli111~ up
1ILd!t·i l ; 1 ~ ;1 l n •P ;lt~r·t•l b.v •!w
Sl un e,
McGri!w
j_fll
,;nrt
a
Los
i\ngl'lt•s
l&gt;ocl
gcr
pla
yer
I )ucl t~ns .
Grot e : Roqcr s ( ? Ol ,111d r-oot c .
LP ~ ton e 1U I ) HR s Schn eck w·; "orH' uf lht• gret:t t nu:;t;tl~ia
" .Iu s• th ink. :nw nd 1ls 1m t il; !I
? J l &lt;., l &amp; 7nd l. Ail iiPy l? nd l ,
. \tap,·tt·nin ).', Wt'l"l' :~· 1 - ! ," s ;11d
st 11ri es of t&gt;&lt;:~se'b&lt;tll ."
F- oo te (ls t J.
( :ar vcy 's da(.) is a btL&lt;; driver S 1 t'VC after l1is l.wnluJII II 'I"S ;111d
Pi tt sb gh
310 000 Oll5 q 16 2
and
has . chaufrered the one hy .Jimmy Wynn led IIH ·
52J 501 011&lt; 18 13 3
Ch i cago
Dodgers
around the Plorida Dodgcrt; lo &lt;1 11· 1 v i&lt;:Lury ;ind ;1
Reuss. Mor lan (),, Bla ss (4 )
an d Sangu i ll en , Hooton {1 ·0 ) Grapefruit League sint1! Steve sweep uf &lt;:1 l wu-garnc scr ie.;
and M i ttc rwtll d LP Reu ss (0
with the Cindnna li Hed s .
iJ. HR s S tar g e ll l2nd ~ . Hebner was s ix years old .
14th '· Mi'l lerwiild 3 li S!. ?nd 8.
111erc's a new look ahout
"G
il
Hodges
,.
Carl
Furillo
3rd l, Monday ( l si ) , Moral es
Wynn
this season and .1t's not
and
a
ll
the
oth
er
Oodger
ll nd J. Mad l oc k
lls t ~ .
Z 1:; k
( 2nd I .
because
he has exchanged
just
players of tha t era were my
Mot 1 tr~' t'll

• By United Press In ternational
National Lea~ue
·

..

•

Montr eal a t ~~ Lou is, niqh'
Sqn Fran at Lo s A ng , n ig ht
East
A tl anta at Hou ston , ni 9 hl
w . 1. pet . g .b . San Diego a t Ci n ci . night
Montreal
5
1 833 - Amencan l eague
Philadelph ia
7 3 ' 700 '"
E asJ
St. Lo ui s
7 5 .583
,
w . I . RCf . - g .b .
Ch icago
4
3 .57!
11 &lt;
6 3 .607
N e w Yor k.
41-. M ilwa ukee
7 7 .222
5 J .556
I
PitTSburgh
Balt imo r e
7 8 .200 5
1
s .! 55 6
Bos tOn
We st
f; 5 1 .545 ·I
w. L pet. g . b. New Yo r k
4 7 .36 4 3
Detroit
Los Angele s
9 3 . 750 7 . )6 J
3
Clevelanct
Ho u Ston
7
5 583 'l
W est
San Franc isc o 6 6 . 500 3
w . I. pet . g .b .
Atlanta
6 6 .soo 3
California
8 j .7 27
C incinnat i
A
6 .400
J
Minn eso t a
5 J .556 2
San Diego
3 9 .750 6
?
OaKland
6 5 .545
Wednesday 's Results
2
Tex as
6 5 .5.:15
Montr.ea l 7 New York 4
_
3
Kan
sa
s
Ci
t
y
3
5
.375
Ch icago 18 P i tt sburgh 9
51 ~
Chi cago
1 8 .?00
Ph il adelphia 12 St. Lou is 5
Wed ne sdav 's R es ult !.
San D iego 6 Atlanta 1
easton 4 N ew YorK 3
Hou ston 3 San F ran ciSCO 2
Milw· 5 Cleve 4 , 16 inns
los Ange l es 14 Cincinnat i 1
Ba 1t1m ore 6 Detro i t 1
Today's Probable Pitchers
Texa s 4 Kansas City 2
{ All Times EDT )
New York ( Malla c k 1 0 1 at Calif 5 Minnesota 3
Montreal (Torr ez 1 0 ), 3 : 15 Ch ic ago 5 Oak l and .J
p.m
Today 's Proba b le P1tchers
(Al l Times EDT ) 1
Pittsburgh (Rook er 0 11 at
Mmnesota ( Bly leven l 0 ) at
Ch icago (Fraillng 1-01 , 2: 30
p .m .
Californi a ( Tanana 2 Q), 4:0Q
St . Louis (McGlothen 1-0l at p .m .
Balt 1m or e (Mc N al l y 1 1) at
Phila delph i a { LonbQrg 0 -1 or
De troit (LO I ICh Q. J], 8 .00 p .m .
Scheu ler 0-ll . 7 :30p .m .
Boston (W ia e 1-0 ) at New
San Diego (G re i f 0-21 a t
At l anta ( Harrison 0-21 , 7 : 30 York (Medich . t ), 2: 00p.m .
p .m .
! Only game sc lledu l ed)
Friday 's Games
San Francisco (Bradl ey 1 1J
at Houston (Roberts 1-2) , B· JO Ca li f at Oakland, n ight
p .m .
Minn at T exas, night
K an City at Chicago, ni ght
( Only games sc t1eduled l
New York at Ba ltimre . night
Fridav 's Gam es
Cleve l and a t Boston
Pilfsburgt1 a t N ew York.
(Only game s sc llcd ~ l ed)
Chicago at Phila . ni gh t

·'

'

Major League
Leaders

'""':•

Major League Leade rs
Bv United Press Intern a tion a l
L ea ding Batters
(Based on 1S a'f bah)
National leagu e
g. ab r. h . pe t.
Mitrwld , Chi S 16
4 9 .563
Gross . Hou
9 24 5 12 .500
Krkptrck , P t 10 15
J
7 .467
Schneck . NY 7 28 3 13 .464
Uns.er , Phil
8 26
8 12 .462
Robin sn , Phil 9 28
5 12 .429
Hebn er , P i t 10 45 10 19 .422
Th omas , SD 11 39
3 16 ..no
Cey , LA
12 44
7 18 .409
Re i tz , St .L
12 45
5 18 .400
Beckeri,SQ 8 :20
0 8 400
Amel i can League
g . ab r . h . pet .
Oliva , Min
7 21
0 10 476
Gr i ch , Ba t
9 32 8 14 .438
12· 43 11 18 .419
Stan t n , Cal
Ca r ew , Min 10 41
8 17 .415
Darwin , M in 10 39
6 16 .410
Grieve. Tex 10 39
9 15 . 385
Yaz , Bos
9 34
7 13 . 382
Robinson , Cl 12 42
8 16 .381
Chmbl is , Cle 11 .u
6 16 .364
· Jacksn , Oak 11 44 10 16 .364
McRae. KC
7 22
4 8 .364
Hom e Run s '
Nati onal Leagu e: Wynn, LA
6 ; Garvey. LA and Hebner , Pitt
4; Aa r on , At l, Mit terwald , Chi
and Perez . Ci n 3.
American Leagu e: Nettles ,
NY and Jackson , Oak 6 ;
Duncan .. Ctev and Bu r roughs ,
Tex 5 ; Ya srrzemsk i, Bos and
Robinson , Cal~ Runs BatTed In
Na'fional League: Wy nn . LA
17 ; Ce d eno. Hou 14 ; Cey , LA
1J ; W illiam s. Chi )2 ; Ga rvey ,
LA 11.
Amerinn Leagu e: Jackson .
Oak 19; Robinson, Cal, Ellis ,
Clev and Burroughs , Tex 13 ;
His le , Minn and N ettl es , NY 12 .
Pi'fching
C Ba sed on most victories)
· National t.eague : P . Ni ekro.
Att , Jot1n 'and Su tton , L A 3-0 ;
Di €-r k er , Hou . Rogers . Mtl and
Garman , St . L 2-0 ; Reed , Art.
Gri ffin
an d
Osteen ,
Hou,
Scarce, Phi l , Caldwell
and
D 'AcQu isto. SF 2-1.
American League: B i bby ,
Te x 3-1; Palmer , Bait, Sing er
and T anana , Cat, Coleman and
Hiller , Det, Wright , Mil , Blyle ven , Minn , K line, NY, Fi!1gers
and Hun ter. Oak 2-0; Le e. Bos.
Busby , KC. Sto t tl emyre , N Y
and J en ki ns, Te x 2-1; Ryan , Cal
2-2.
.

Local Bowling
Eartv Ttlursday
Mhted League
April 4, 1914
S'fandings
Team
Pts .
Lucky Stri k er s
78
Mr . and Ms ..
74
A ll in th e Family
65
Quads + ?
50
Nuts ~n d Bo lts
48
The Bold On es
45
T ea.m h ig h series - The Bold
.Ones 2158 ; Lucky Strikers 21 19
T eam high game - • Lucky
St r i kers 735 ; The Botd Ones
729.
_ Wom en; s h igl'1 se r ies D iane Ht~w l ey 480 ; Isabell e
Couch 467 ,
. Women ' s high game - Diana
Hawley 187 ; Isabelle Couch
169 .
M en's high series. Bob
Couch 559 ; Paul Tay ior ..535.
Men ' s high gcm1e . Gene
Murray 212; Bob Couch 201.
M orning Glories Leagu e
April9. 1974
Standin~s

Team
Pfs .
Newell Sunoco
142
Excelsior Oil Co .
130
Gibbs Grocery
170
G. &amp; J . Auto Part s
170
Pock I ing ton Canst .
1 12
Spencer's Market
96
High ind.ividual game
Martene Wi lson 209 ,· Vicky
Gillilan 174,
·
H igh Se r i es Marlene
W i l son 509; Vicky G i lli l an 446 .
Team high game
Ex ce ls ior Oi l co . 849 .
1earri H igh ser i es Ex .
ce lsior Oil Co . 2260

'•
Pom er oy Bowling Lanes
. Early Sunday
Mixed league
March 31. 1974
Team
W. L.
Pullin s Excavat i ng
eo 40
Friendly Taverr .
68 52

Pro Standings
ABA Playoff Sta nd i ng s
By United Pre ss InternatiOnal
Eastern D iviso n F.inals
C B es t of Seven
w. I.
New York
3 0
Kentucky
0 3
We st ern Divi sio n F i na l s
j Bes t of Seve n )
w. I.
Utah
3 0
Indiana
0 3
Wednesday's Res ults
New York 89 Kent ucky 87
Utah 99 Indiana 90
Thur sday 's Games
Utah at I nd iana
(Only game s_che dul ed)

Indy field
down to 67
INDIANAPOLIS (UP!) -The 1974 Indiana polis 500 has
just 67 cars vying for the 33
starting positions in the May 26
classic - down from the 82
ma chines entere d lor last
year 's trQjlbled race.
Indiana polis Motor Speedway President Tony Hulman
said he believes the six entries
received in Wednesday mail
were·the las t to arrive bearin g
the acceptable postmark · of
before midnight Monday.
Four of the entries received
Wednesday were fr om Vel's
Parnelli Jones team, and all
four have Drake-OIIenhauser
power plants. AI Unser ,
Albuquerque •. N. M., the 1970
and 1971 winner here, and 1969
champ
Mario , Andretti,
Nazareth , Pa., were assigned
to two of the machines. The
other two are backups . .
Dan Murphy, Plymouth,
Wis.. entered a Drake-Offy
machine and assigned it to
driver " Jigge r " Sirois of
Hammond, Ind.
A backup car also was entered for Dick Simon, Salt Lake
City,
It was announced that rookie
Bruce Jacobi of Speedway
would drive a previously en- ·
tered car,

St. L oui s
too ? tt obo
s a?
Ph lla
034 10 ' 03x 12 15 0
Si ebe r t , G ar ma n 14 ). Thomp
son 15), Hr abo s Ky (6 l. Fo lker s
( 7) , and
::i 1m m ons . Farmer.
Cu l ver
(5 ), L in1y
(9) and
Boone . WP Cu lv er I I Ol LP
Sie bert ( 1 t ~ .
San Oi~qo
004 011 000 6 11 'J
Atlanta
100 000 000- 1 10 2
M cA ndrew (1 ?l and K en dall .
Morton . Ho u se 18 ) and Oates
LP - Mo r ton
( 1 2) . HR - W in
f ield ( 1st l
Sa n F r an
10 1 000000- 2 7 1
Houston
100 01 1 000- 3 4 0
O'Acqulsto,
Wil l iams
(61 ,
(7) ,
Moffitt
(8)
and
Sosa
Rudolph , Rader {7) , Osteen ,
Fo r sch (8) and Edwards . WP Osteen .(2 · 1J . L P- D ' AcQuisto
12 1) HR - Ce deno (2nd )
Lo s Ang
002 ooo 444 - 14 17 o
Ci nci nn ati
000 100 000- 1 4 1
Ra u , , Mar sha l l
(8 )
and
Ferguson. Nel son , Ca rroll (BJ.
McQueen (fj ), Osburn (9) and
Bench . WP ~ Rau (1 OJ LP Nel son 10 2l. HR s Foster
(lsi), Ga r vey 2 (3r d &amp; &lt;Hh ~ .
Wynn (6th )
American League
Boston
000 000 120 - 4 B 2
New York
020 000 001 - 3 52
L ee (2 -H and Mon tgomery,
Dob son , Ly le (8) and Mun son .
L P- Dobson (1 2 l . HR - Yast
rzem ski (4th l .

.

( 16 inni n gs )
Cleve land
000 002 200 000 LlOO 0Mi l waukee

J

10 I

000 000 022 000 000 1- 5 9 I
G . Perry , Sa nders { 16) and
Duncan ,· Staron . J
Be l l (6),
Rodriguez (9). Murphy I 15) and
Porte r , Moo r e
{ 13 ) .
WP Murphy ( 1 0) . LP - Sanders (0
1) . H Rs - Duncan (5J. Ga r cia
(JJ,C oluccio (1) .
Baltimore
500 010 000- 6 10 2
Detro i t
000 00 1 000- 1 50
Palmer · (2 .Q) and Etchebar ren ; Fryman , Sl ayback (1) and
Freell an . LP - Fryman (0 -2).
HRs - Fu l ler (1-).
Kan City
000 002 000 - 2 4 1
Te )( a S
01000003x - 4100
Br i les , Garber 17 ). M c Dan i el
(8 ) and Healy ; Bibby (J . J) and
Sundberg . LP - Briles (0 -2) .
M inn
000 210 000- 3 11 1
Calif
010 101 20x- 5 9 0
Woodson, Burgmeir (7) and
Borgma n ; Ston ema n , Se l l s (5l
and Rodriguez . WP - Se lls (1 -01
LP - Woodson C0 -1) , HR s- Oiiv
er ( lsi , 2nd ) , Ro.bin son (6th ) .
Ch icago
010 000 030 - 5 7 1
Oakland
100 020 000- 3 8 2
Bah n se n ( l -2) and Down ing ;
B lu e, Kn ow l es (8), Hoo t en (9)
and Foss e . LP - Biu e (0 -2) . HRs
- Downing l i s t ~.

GAHS cops
triangular
golf match

heroes, ' 1

recalled
Wednesday night.
Mter

Garvey

sophomore

Garvey's

a Houston Astro

.Bobcats thump
Glouster, ,ll-5
Visiting
Kyger
Creek
pounded . 12 hits Wednesday
evening to defeat non-league
opponent Glouster, -II:S: The
victory pushed Jhe Bobcat
record to 3-4 overall while the
Tomcats dropped to 5·2.
Coach Jim Sprague's Bobcats Jumped into a 1-0 lead in
the first inning on a leadoff
double by second baseman Tim
Lucas, a fi elder 's choice. walk
to Ron Roush a nd infield single
off the pitcher's glove by Clay
Hudson·,
Kyger Creek took command
of the game in the second by
sending 11 batters to the plate
including seven who circled the
bases.
Ben Arnett, Bobcat leftfielder , began the rally with a
line single to left. Shortstop
Terry Lucas drew a free pass
and first sacker Jeff Blazer
brought in Arnett with a sha rp
single to right. Tim Lucas
followed with a run producing
single to center Roush walked
and Hudson pl~ted two more
runs on a single up the middle.

Ripley wins on
links, 172-203
The Southern Tornado golf
learn went down to its second
defeat or the sea son against
one victory, dropping a 172-203
match to Ripley.
Ripley wa.s paced by Rick
Simmons with a 37, followed by
Jay Robin son 's 39, Mark
Starcher's 46, Steve Ludwig's
:;o and Ted Wallace's 51.
Bob Johnson again led the
Tornado swingers, carding a
44. Other Southern linksters.,
were Bob Roush with a 48,
Greg Dunning with a 52, Randy
Dudding with a :;g and Kenton
Holman a 61.
The next Southern match is
Friday afternoon at Ravenswood ,

Gallia Academy High School
defeated Athens and Meigs in a
REDWOMEN SPLIT
triangular match on the
Rio Grande College's women
Gallipolis links Wednesday.
softball team split a twinbill
Final score was GaJlipolis ' with Ohio Ulniversity Wed'' 155, Athens 159 and Meigs 184. nesday, losing the first game
For Gallipolis, Ken New and 15-8. Rio won the nightcap , 5-4.
Tom Young each had a 38. John Rio will host Ohio State
Saunders finished with 39. Dow Saturday.
Saunders and Brent Johnson
each had a 40 and Rusty
Tom •s Carrv Out
66 54
Saund~rs had a 5L
Sw 1sher &amp; Loh se Ph arm .
60 60
For Athens,' Jim France Start losing weight today or money
~agles Club
51 69
bac:k. MONADEX is a tiny tablet
·captured
medalist honors with and
Roseberry Pennzo i l
35 85
easy to take. MONADEX will
Team Hi Se r ies - Swisher's
a two-over -par 36. Mike help eurb your d8$ire for exr::ea
&amp; Lohse Pharm. 2125; Tom's
food. Eat less - weigh less, Contains
Blosser had a 39, Tim Lavelle no
Carry Out 2020 .
dangerous drugs and will not
Team H i Game - Swisher
41, Terry Hawk 43 and. Dean make you ·nervous. No strenuous
&amp; Loh se Ph a rm . 714; Sw isher &amp;
exercise. Change your life , • . start
Howe 47.
Loh se Ph arm . 713.
today, MONADEX cost $3.00 for
Ind . Men 's Series - Lar ry
For the Marauders, J, D. a 20 day supply. l.arge ec:onomy
Dugan 576 , Ed Voss 570 ; Ind .
is$5.00. Also trv AQUA TABS:
Story a nd John Thomas each size
Women 's Series Marlene
they work gently to help you lose
Wi lson 52 9 ; Betty Smith 484 .
had a 44. Bruce Blackston had water· bloat. AQUA TABS -a "water
Ind . Hi game - Ed Voss 21 4;
that works - $3.00. Both
a
46, J eff Warner 50 and Joe pill"!
Jr . Ph elps 200 ; Ma rl ene Wilson
k1Uaranteed and sold by:
209 ; Maxine Dugan 190.
Rosenbaum a :;1,
Swish er &amp; Loh se Pharmacy,
Gallipolis plays at Logan 112 E . Main, Pomeroy &amp; DuUon
Drug S'fore. Middleport. Mail
Early Sundav
Friday.
Order s Filled .

The Bobcats weren 't through
as Bruce Arnett and Dave Wise
walked to load the bases. Ben
Arnett lined a double down the
right field line scor ing two
runners, but Wise was na_bbed
al the plate.
KC m ade it 9-0 in the third on
a Lucas single, stolen base a nd
double by Roush . The Tomcats
solved
the
s la nts
of
righthander Clay Hudson in the
third inning.
Held to only one hit during
the first two frames, Glouster
stru ck for five big runs which
sent Hudson behind lhe plate
and forced freshma n righty
Steve Baird to put out the fire.
Relief ' hurler Jago sta rted
the rally with a one-&lt;Jut walk,
Mike Echstenkamper single
bring ing Jago to third . Bolh
runners sco"ed on a long triple
by Tim SikorskL
Sikorski's
smas h _ was
followed by walks to Stew
Patton and Wayne Lent which
filled the bases. Three more
runs scored on a single by
Charles Richards and two
more free passes, Baird came
in to strikeout catcher Mike
Brunton to end the threat.
The Gallians added two more
runs in the fourth on a double
by Dave Wise , a walk to Ben
Arnett, single by Lawrence
Tabor and sacrifice squeeze
bunt by Terry Lucas.
Glouster threate ned two
other times during the game,
but the Bobcat defense which
turned in two double plays,
came through in the clutch.
Baird wa s the winning pitcher
while Randy Trace took the ,
loss .
Baird and Hudson combined
to strike out seven Tomcats
and issued a total of six walks.
Trace and Jago walked nine
and fanned four.
The Bobcats travel to North
Gallia this evening in an SVAC
clash.
Line Score :
Kyger Creek 171 200 0-11 12 3
G!ouster
005 000 0- :; 5 I
Hudson, Baird (3) (W) and
Wise, Hudson (3). •
Trace (L) Jago (3) and
Brunton, Bokovitz ( 6).

Mi:x ed League
April7, 1974

·
__.._;~
Te am
W. ·L .
Pu ll ins Excavating
86 42
Tom ' s Carry Out
n 56
Friendly T ayern
66 60
Sw isher &amp; Lohse Ph arm .
62 66
Eag les Cl ub
53 75
Roseberry Pennzo i l
43 85
Team H i Series
Pull in s
Excavatin'g 2075 ; Swisher &amp;
Lohse .Ph arm . 2045
Team Hi Games - Pul l ins
Excavat i n~ 754; Swisher
&amp;
L ohse Pharm . 730 .•
Ind . H i Se r: i es - Dic k Dugan
633 ; John Tyree 570 ; Mar l ene
Wilson 531; Betty Smith 467 .
Ind . H i Game - Dick Dugan
237 ; Dick Dugan 235 ; Marlen e
Wilson 193 ; Marlene Wilson
187 .

bUJ ',I!HIJ',
S. un :-.•,11 .

!1:1 v t · , "

:.:11d

!1

W"V I!I I
'' I · : 1111 !!'I
J ' v,
Jt ls l 1 ', '~ ' !l w

l! tti;.; tadu· ;uul 1111' ll' '' lf'fl I ll'
l':t ll;.;e n1 y w t l ~" l1 k~· s 111f'tu ."

" Srx luJJJter!-i awl 17 I U'JI':-. ,"
rnuscd ( ~arvf~Y. " l f. •;ll 's :1 ~:ur 11 l

season for srm 1c ~'. u y ,c· "
( larvcy de serves il ptiL r,n th1~
back himself. Aflel' 1~ gc.11nes
his s latbl 1c.s a r c almust as
impressive as those of Wy nn.
Garvey's homers Wednesday
night were his third and fo urth
of 1he season. He added a
single and drove hom e four
runs to boost his total to 11.
Lefthander Doug Rau and
Mike Marshall teamed up to
limit the Reds to four hits, one
a homer by r.eorge Foster, as
the Dodgers completed the

W {ti l l

l h; 1l

..
• Each_week , $20 firs t prize, 510 se cond, SS third .
Reg_•sl er fr,ee. Winners wi ll b~ notified . Drawings
Aprtl6._ 13, 20f 27, MJy 6. Drive in , try this new
convement serv ice.
· .

'1.; 1' ,

ir f,. 'l l

· , , ,J ; r ~. ,

' !w

--Stans,~ :

j~

,&lt;..,ar l ·

NEW YORK lUPI ) - 'The
wants to present
, forme, Commerce Secreta ry
· Maur1ce H. Stans on his lrial
j~ry as a man so distraughl by
his Wife's critical illness that
he co uldQ 't lhink clearly when·
he testified before the grand
Jury .that indicted him.
Federal Court Jupge Lee P.
Gagliardi said he would rule
today as to " lbe extent I'll go"
in permitting that kind · of
testimony so far as " it bears on
Mr. Stans' state of mind. "
The mailer was argued, with
the jury dismissed, after Stans,
m day long testimony in his own
defense Wednesday , had

1\;.11,,.,

!• or

;1 1J 11·; r•.l ]

ARE STILl

~1·, , 1)1 ~1

W ·; n n lr: 1d Jll :,l •·••r!q d•·l ··•l ~ ~ r · .
111 '.1 Y ~" ; ll •1! f"'' l,; , •~ · l, : r ll ,
t,: riiJrll', I:~ HI Jqr· ~ I ll' ·1;111 1jr:1 ,

IN.

l·b , l;~r 111 r·l11l, 'I lw lt1 ·1l'. h:1•J
ld t h1111 lHifH r,ll ·dr·tl, 111 11 •rbVJ rru :-.l y

de f ense

SADDLES

jJIIII k• d ••II ' •If lho •n ' •l l '.:r1 11/:1
I IP &lt;!I Il l 1 ~ , , 111111' •1 J&lt; ·;q •IJI i) r ;d !
f1:1 • k I l l ] ' JI ,'/ l1 '( 1/ir· l/ t1q •, t• 1r1

FOR All AGES

h:1'i11 'I 1 rrr ' N•d

fin g1· rs fr rr ~ ~~~~ .d lu r·Y.
!\ I

! h r·

unk •P!JY

lurw

Wy r111

;dJir\1 1 tJ( : Jrl ~ 1•

ted

" Luter I re&lt;JI!ZI:rl 1!. wt~ :-. ;,
break fcrr rm: hec;IU sr: if I h:1d
stoyed w it h thl' Hed s I w•JulrJ
h ave neve r g11t len l 11 th •:
majors as quick ly as I did
TI1ey had Frank Robins rm ,

Vada Pinson and Tomm y
Harper in those days ."
Tll.e Reds tried to get Wynn
back
from the Aslros in the
sweep .
Altogether th e Dodgers winter of 1965, offering Robinta tooed Roger Nelson and his son as bait.
" I was aware of the proposed
th ree successors lor 17 hits.
trade
," said Wynn. '1And I was
" That was a 2-1 ballgame
until the 7lh inning, " muttered real flattered when Houston
Reds' Manager Sparky Ander· didn 'l trade me because at th~
lime I wasn't an established
son.
and Robinson had been
player
Memory of the Dodgers.
do ing his thing for years and
.scoring four runs in each of'lhe

denied all charges against him.
He swore that he kept financier
Robert 1.. Vesco 's $200,000 cash
contribution to the 1972 Nixon
campa1gn a secret, along with
$40 million from others , as a
malter of duty .
" Privacy

is a

co nstitutional

right, and it had been given to
him by Congress in legislation
which was in eflecl until April 7
I 1972 '1," Stans said . " I 'was
do'in g my best to protec t
Robert Vesco and every other

contributor ."
Stans, who resigned as
commerce
sec retary
to
become the 1972 finance
committee chairman , and John

N. Mitchell,

who fesignrfl :-~&lt;;

general to !wad the
Nixon campaign committee,
are accused of trying to impede
a f&lt;)deral investigation of Vesco
in return lor his gift and of
lying to the grand jury ,about it.
Stans •vas ihe last imporlant
witness. The trial was expected
to be in .the jury's hands next
week, the lOth trial week.
The illness of Kathleen Stans
came up at the end of the day
when defenie attorney Walter ,
J . Bonner ,a ttempted to ask
Slans about it. Prosecu lor J ohn
R . Wing objected. Judge
Gagliardi dismissed the jury
for the day to hear arguments
attorney

Navy
Bla c k Wh,i le

United Press International
when she was killed by guardsDean Kah ler, paralyzed men during an anti·war
from the . waist down after he demonstration on the Kent
and eight olher Kent Stale ca mpus May 4, 1970.
students were wounded in a
" We have never been
1970 hail of Oh io National allowed to get this oJ l free and
Guard bullets which claimed open in a courtroom," Krause
the lives of four students , said, " The state of Ohio spent
ca lled Wednesday 's U.S . $70,000 to keep it out of the
Supreme Cour l r uling that . courts .''
families of the .injured could
The mother of Wi lliam
sue the state and guard officers Schroeder, the Lorain, Ohio ,
a 11 histor ic judicial ac t. "
youth who also was 19 when
" It means that the state or killed by guardsmen, sa id she
Ohio will have to affect a knew the cou rt decision event- '
marked change in the way it ually would come.
conducts its affairs," said Kali"I had faith we would get our
ler, "This also means that peo- day in cou r t," said Mrs.,
ple no longer have to blindly
follow the decisions of some
state and federal leaders."
Steve Sindell , one of the attorneys for students and their
parents in a pair of civil suils
seeking a total of $11 million
damages, said the unanimous
high court decision marked
" an
important da y in
Sen . Howard · M, MetAmerican jurisprudence!'
zenbaum, D-Ohio, admitted in
Principle defendants in the
Columbus Wednesday he had
. two suits are former Ohio Gov.
"made some bread " but said
James A. Rhodes ; former Oh io
his Democratic primary
Adjutant General S,T , Del Corelection
opponent , former
so ; Brig , Gen, Robert Ca nterastronaut John Glenn, a lso was
bury , in charge of the troops at
the time of the incident ; for- a wealthy man.
~&lt;J 've made some bread,"
mer KSU President Robert
conceded Metzenbaum , " but I
White; and certain guard ofworked f or it ."
ficers and troops on the firing
Melzenbawn said he had
line,
used his money f or 11 Causes"
" Now for the firs t time we
such as helping to organize
can get Gov. Rhodes and the
prison reform a t the federal
generals in an open courtpenitentiary in Leavenworth,
room," said Arthur Krause , Ia, ther of Allison Kraw;e , the Kans., and civil rights efforts
in the south ,
Pittsburgh native who was 19
"Nobody seems to ask my
opponent about his wealth,"
said Metzenbawn. "Overnight
he 's become a millionaire in
two year s . The question is what
Mrs. Alma Miller hostert a
have we done with our lives ?
pre-holiday party Saturday at I've donated m ine to causes.
her Middleport home.
rvir. Glen n has been 'm y
Her guests were Mr . and
Mrs .. Frank Whited, Melissa,
Tammy and Danny, Mrs.
Orvetta Weaver , and Mrs .
'
Pain
Webe r , /Co lumbu s.
The annual American Legion
Joining them for a wiener roast Auxiliary Buckeye Girls' State
in the evening wer e Mrs . information tea for delegates ,
Dianne George, sons, Brian. alternates , their mothers ,
Brent, David and Christopher . presidents and Americanism
Mrs. Lee McComas and Missy chairwome n of spon sorin g
McMillion .
a uxiliary units will be fr om 3 to
The children played games 5 p .m . Sunday, May :; al the
and were given balloons as Logan Federal Savings and
favor s. Mr . and Mrs, Whited Loan Bldg ., 61 North Market
and children were overnight SL, Logan .
guests of Mrs. Miller, grandHosting lhe tea this year is
mother of Mrs. Whited . the unit of Post 78, Logan ,
Melissa, who had spent the Those planning to atlend are to
past three weeks here with her advise Mrs . Barton F. Holl, 747
great-grandmother. returned North Wood St., Logan , by May
hom e with her parents,
L

THE SHOE BOX
Whe r e Shoes are
Sti ll Sensibly Pric ed

Middleport. Q,

OFF
Seniors, This Is For You!
Get Your Spring and
Graduation Outfit
Now and Save 10%.

Hosts party

WHY WAIT?
'

KERM'S KORNER

Tea planned

New York .Clothing HQuse
POMEROY, OHIO

21" Self Propelled
With Gr8 Catcher

155.50

Sat., SUn .
April 19-20-2 1
OKLAHOMA CRUDE
Fri .,

(Tec hni Color )
~eo rge C. Scott
Fa ye C?unaway

I PG J
Colorcartoon:
Krazy Kat

S.how Starts 7 p.'m.

'•

Schroder. "! feel relieved lhat
lhe country is going to live up
to the constilu tion. ''
Mrs . Sarah Scheuer, mother
of Sandra Scheuer, a 20-yearold Young&gt;town, Ohio, girl killed by guardsmen, said she was
relieved by the decision,
" I was discouraged before,
but now I feel a,liltle relieved,"
she said. " Now I believe our
system of justice is working."
Benson Wolman, director ol
the Ohio Civil Liberties Union,
said the decision was "a good
sign that at long last the nation
may be on the mend."
Also kill ed was Jeffrey

favor ite astronaut ' a nd a
Marine

colonel.''

Metzenbawn said Glenn's
refusal to debate him until the
senator publicizes his 196f&gt;.72
income tax returns was "like
say ing to htm (Glenn) , I won 't
debate him unless he takes off
his space suit."
State Rep. Tony Hall , D-Dayton, sa id in Cleveland Wednesday Ohio Secretary of State
Ted Brown had mismanaged
his office for 24 years.
Hall, seeking the Democratic
nomination

as

Sears·.

1

'I am not here on an ego

trip ," said Fry, '"My public
career and my private life
have been quite rewarding· and
satisfying. I want to help Republicans to . win, but they
won't w~ with former Gov.

PRI. • SAT . • SUN. APR •. 19 · '20 • 21
DOUBLE FEATURE PROGRAM

'·
•

I

. ..

.
.)

\.

I

'
'

I
''

I .

.I
,I

.

.' ·

.

~

,"

'.

..

'

.

J

,,

I.

', I

f.

Will be in their new office at the

Bank &amp; Savings Company 211 W. Second St ,,
Pomeroy, as of

APRIL 15, ' 1974

'

,I
I

THURSDAY
FRIDAY
SATURDAY
SUNDAY

SUNG.LASSES
1/2 PRICE

PAMPERS

ALCO-REX

RUBBING ALCOHOL
16 ounce
Reg.

82~

DAYTIME 30's

¢

ONLY

POLAROID
COLORPACK REG.
FILM 108

JOIN CHURCH
Mr. and Mrs. Kendell Dunfee
were taken into membership of
the Pomeroy First Baptist
C.'h urch Easter morning. Their
da ug hte rs, Wendi a nd Kenda ,
were dedicaled during the
service by •·the Rev. Robert
K,uhn.
IN HOSPITAL
Harry Walburn , formerly of
Middleport, has been a patient
at Mercy Hospital in Colwnbus
lor the past two weeks due to
an industrial accident.

HOSTS GUESTS
Mr. and Mrs, Lewis A. White,
Cincinnati , were the Easter
weekend gues ts of Mr. and
Mrs . Virgil Roush , Rt, 3,
Pomeroy. Mrs. While ang Mrs.
Roush are siste rs. Friday
evening their brother · and
sister-in-Jaw. Mr. and Mrs.
William Matlack visited at the
Roush home, and Sunday they
were joi ned for din ner by Mr.
and Mrs, Don Roush and Jeff,
Rt. 3, . Pomeroy, and Mrs . ·
Ronnie Pooler, Jimmy and
Susie, Middleport,

ANACIN

CONTAC

Fast Pain Relief
100 Tablets
Regular '1.67

10 Capsules
Reg. '1.79

TUSSY

SUDDEN TAN
BY COPPERTONE

SPRAY DEODORANT
7 Ounce

Bronzing Foam
3.75 ounces . ONLY
Reg. $3.00

Reg. 7fJ
'

VI SINE

-Sergeant's
.

EYE DROPS
'-h Ounce
Reg. $1.65

SENTRY ·COLLAR

Cat$

~or
Reg. '1.98 ·
ONLY

¢

ONLY

GRADS

THERAGRAN-M

It's our annual gift to
honor graduates . Stop in
now a'nd select ·' ,vour
footwear .

High P.otency Vitai;I~in Formula W~h Minerals

.Chapma~'s . Shoes

'·

·' I

.

'

.

36 Tablets
Reg. 43'
ONLY

. t&lt;en ft\'fh .McCullouth, R. Ph.

ONLY

, ChArles Ri ff le, R: Ph. '

to

, ,

Opon Dolly .1 , 111 o.ni.
lUG p,m
Sunday 10:30 112:_30 •nd s tot p.fT'

PRESCRIPTIONS
Friendly
112 E. MAl N

POMEROY

"·

Children's Aspirin

19

30 Free With 100
Reg. '7.89

$159

BAYER

'

e PLUS e

·•

•1.44

ONLY

1974

1,

'' \ .'

AND POLAROID

TO ALL

'

..I.. .:...

FOSTER-GRANT

the utility later finds out that it
does not have to pay that
corporate income tax, that utility clearly owes its customers a
refund for past collections of
the tax 'and a reduction in their
future monthly bills for the
amount of future taxes which
will not be paid," Eckhart said ..

I '

.

Sale! ALL

cent corporate income tax, and

20% Discount

•''

Farmer~

is gra nted assuming a 48 per

I, .
\

I

"When a large rate increase

MAIN ST.
\

ASCS OFFICE

PG

PH. 992-2178 1
.

Henry
Eckhart,
a
Democratic candidat e for
nomination as lieutenant
gove rn or , Wednesday said
utility companies in Oltio "owe
their customers millions of
dollars in refunds and red•1ced
rates. "
Eckhart said the companies
had vigorously campa igned lor
rate increases lhey did not
need. In ihe process ol obtainin g the increases, sa1d
Eckhart, the compa nies were
allowed rates which assumed a
48 per cent corporate income
tax .

_Elite Army of Female Assassins
In e Race Against Time end Deeth
to Seve the Worldl

$517,50

:

James A. Rhodes ."
Rhodes also is seeking the
Republican nomination for
eovernor .

~n

Riding Mower

LOP~~!:~~NE

THE MEIGS COUNTY

)

AUTHORIZED CATALOG MERCHANT
220 E. MAI.N

of

State Rep. Charles Fry, R·
Springfield, said Wednesday
the Democratic win in this
week's congressional election
in Michigan, in which
President Richard M. Nixon
had campaigned for the
Republican candidate, was a
" further indication that the
American people will no longer
tolerate either suspicion or
ques}ioned integrity in public
officials.''
A candidate for the Republican gubernatorial nomination,
Fry said he was in the race to
give members of his party an
alternative.

''

REG. 1
ONLY

secretar y

state, said· Brown had "done
nothing to bring Ohio election
procedure into the 20th Century.
11
\Vhile other states have
been modernizing election processes - standardizing voting
machines, bringing all counties
under uniform registration and
voting requirements, setting
up adequate training programs
for booth workers - Ohio has
continued to plod along with
outdated practices which have
been perpetuated by the s tale 's
chief election officer," said
HaiL .
Hall said if he were elected
he would create a bi-partisan
Ohio Election Commission to
study electio n problems,
develop uniform practices and
provide help to local boards of
election.
The secretary of state would
serve as a voting member of
the corrunission, said Hall .

''THE DOLL SQUAD"

36'' Cut, 8 HP
NOW

BIRTH ANN0l1NC'ED
RACINE - Mr, and Mrs,
Gary Roush , Rt. 2, Racine , a re
announcing the birth of their
first child, a son, at Holzer
Medical Center, Monday , April
8, weighing 7 lbs., II oz.; and
nam ed
Jeremy
Le oter ,
Grandparents are ML and
Mrs. Charles Findley and Mr ,
and Mr5, Lester Roush . Greatgrandparents are Mr. and Mrs .
Carl Shul tz, Sr,, Mr. and Mrs,
Russell Findley·. Mrs . .I,illian
Duffy, Syracuse and Mrs,
Edna Roush, Racine.

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NOW

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'.154:95

Efficient 2-speed, chain -to -gear dri ve lets you
"- match t raveling sp eed to "mowing tondit lons.
Drive and ne utral cont r o l on. handle . Gea r assisted pull -up recoil starter and com pression r e lease in cyl in~r head h~d for
~age r starting . Self-pr i ming fuel syStem wjth,
governor control for prompt power response ·
from 16.4 engine. Lightweight • .spi ra l-sweep
magnesi um h ousi~g with quiet, below-deCk
exhaust. Rust -proo·f plastic l'h-qt . fuel tan k .
Six-lever-ad justable c ut ting heights ... f rom 1
to oiJ 1h in . Rubber t i re s: 8.5- in . diam . front. 7.5·
in. diam . rear. Austempered steel blade.
~onve n ient toggl~ switc_h , t urns mo wer of f
mstantly . Meets all appl1cable · safe ty sandards of American National ' Standards In st i tute .

Model No. 9NB9738 '

Model 9 T 9048

5 65

by Bonner.
hrnwrrhagi ng fr om the rtwuth
Tile a ttorney saill Stans' wile • and ears., dying in fr ont of his
of 38 yea rs, at that time. went eyes . He had to tell his
inlo the hospit.a l in Augusl, ch ildren . He was calied before
1972, and remained until the gra nd jury. ' The man
December. Stans was active in couldn 't think . He couldn't do
the campaign until the Novem. anything . At a critical period in
ber elt'Ction in 1972 and th is man 's ·life he is called
testified to the grand jury in before a grand jury, and he is
March a nd April, 1973.
supposed to hav e a crystal
"Noone in his life was dearer dear reC&lt;Jiieclion of lhings that
tO him than that woman ," went op."
Bonner sa id. "She had a rare
Stans closed 'his eyes tightly
blood disease, so rare that on ly at this point and put his head in
100 cases have been diagnosed. his hands. Bonner went on that
While he was Inaking speeches , Mrs. Stans went back into the
traveling widely, he spent hospital in January and F eb· .
every night, every weekend , ruary . 197:1, with infectious
with her .
hepatitis and again in May wllh
.: For 10 day s she was serum hepatitis. In November,
1972 , he said, she had 17
transfusions in three days .
Stans told the judge that now
"she is in remission and her
blood is normal. "
Miller, 20, Plainview, N.Y .
In the opinion of Chief Justice Warren E . Burger. the
documems before the trial
court " specifically placed in issue whether the governor 'a nd
his subordinate officers were
acting within the scope of their
duties under the constitution
and laws of Ohio, whether they
acted within the range of discr etion permitled the holders
of such office under Ohio- law
and whether they acted in good
fa ith in both proclaiming an
emer gency and as to the actions taken to cope with the
emergency so declared ."

Senatorial race turning to
who made most bread &amp; how

AND SAT. FOR STOCK ON HAND

NOW

shows hand' on .·deferise

Kent ruling cited as historic

Cr eam

Specml! ...FOR GRADS

SPECIAL SALE IS THURS., FRI.

'.

·.· .

I

;.tr,·;p l y

I

I ' ' ll.l l ' fl l l,l •f II II'

122-INCH CUT}

USTRE CREAM
, SHAMPOO
11 oz.

CASH GIVEAWAY

·''

" 1\11 1 l! 1;1l ',&gt;1!'11 l h• · ro ·; l,c,111 1 !&lt; ,r
!111 · .'i l x ho'tlll'l" ~ .; : 111d ll w 1'1 HI: I ',.

was

SUBSTITUTED •••

Mon . lo Thurs. 9 lo 3-Fnday ~ to 7
Saturday 'il ro 12.

1•:!•

' ' II'" '·.~ ~ ~ ~ ~

MEIGS THEATRE .

THE PRELL SHAMPOO SHIPMENT

DR IVE -IN HOURS ,

11 .·1 '1•'

'1. 111&lt;' ..

'

·fit, AUTO BANK

•1

J/ lr i• · ~

MA-9

It's So Easy. Try . ..

../ . "

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Mower alone

FAILED TO ARRIVE. WE HAVE

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1111 : ;, l lll l ',l.lt )w ;1111) ;, lw:11 d

, • .II

Sears~~~"'~" 4-Day Sale

LOSE UGLY FAT

~-

Wliform for

thai of the Dodgers.
The former Cincinnati Taft

Oodger uniform

· 5 · T!w Daily &amp;ntim•l. Middlt•por' -Pt~JillTI ' \', U .. i\pri\IH, 1(1';'-1

.'

PH. 9V" ·2955

Service
POMEROY, O.

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Linescores
Mi\tOI' l C,Hf1Jl' ~~: ~u ll ~
By Un1l cd Prc !&gt;s lnl e nl.lli Onil l

N ,111011,1t lCiiQUl'
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(' IN('INNAT I i UI'IJ

Sh•w

_\' 1 ' :1!"~·: 11 Mir ·!1i r•:;t1 :-ll ;d1 ·

!u · w:i:.

~ U OI J.i o;
I 10 I (;arvt-y n · f~·rs 'i l !1is wimli111~ up
1ILd!t·i l ; 1 ~ ;1 l n •P ;lt~r·t•l b.v •!w
Sl un e,
McGri!w
j_fll
,;nrt
a
Los
i\ngl'lt•s
l&gt;ocl
gcr
pla
yer
I )ucl t~ns .
Grot e : Roqcr s ( ? Ol ,111d r-oot c .
LP ~ ton e 1U I ) HR s Schn eck w·; "orH' uf lht• gret:t t nu:;t;tl~ia
" .Iu s• th ink. :nw nd 1ls 1m t il; !I
? J l &lt;., l &amp; 7nd l. Ail iiPy l? nd l ,
. \tap,·tt·nin ).', Wt'l"l' :~· 1 - ! ," s ;11d
st 11ri es of t&gt;&lt;:~se'b&lt;tll ."
F- oo te (ls t J.
( :ar vcy 's da(.) is a btL&lt;; driver S 1 t'VC after l1is l.wnluJII II 'I"S ;111d
Pi tt sb gh
310 000 Oll5 q 16 2
and
has . chaufrered the one hy .Jimmy Wynn led IIH ·
52J 501 011&lt; 18 13 3
Ch i cago
Dodgers
around the Plorida Dodgcrt; lo &lt;1 11· 1 v i&lt;:Lury ;ind ;1
Reuss. Mor lan (),, Bla ss (4 )
an d Sangu i ll en , Hooton {1 ·0 ) Grapefruit League sint1! Steve sweep uf &lt;:1 l wu-garnc scr ie.;
and M i ttc rwtll d LP Reu ss (0
with the Cindnna li Hed s .
iJ. HR s S tar g e ll l2nd ~ . Hebner was s ix years old .
14th '· Mi'l lerwiild 3 li S!. ?nd 8.
111erc's a new look ahout
"G
il
Hodges
,.
Carl
Furillo
3rd l, Monday ( l si ) , Moral es
Wynn
this season and .1t's not
and
a
ll
the
oth
er
Oodger
ll nd J. Mad l oc k
lls t ~ .
Z 1:; k
( 2nd I .
because
he has exchanged
just
players of tha t era were my
Mot 1 tr~' t'll

• By United Press In ternational
National Lea~ue
·

..

•

Montr eal a t ~~ Lou is, niqh'
Sqn Fran at Lo s A ng , n ig ht
East
A tl anta at Hou ston , ni 9 hl
w . 1. pet . g .b . San Diego a t Ci n ci . night
Montreal
5
1 833 - Amencan l eague
Philadelph ia
7 3 ' 700 '"
E asJ
St. Lo ui s
7 5 .583
,
w . I . RCf . - g .b .
Ch icago
4
3 .57!
11 &lt;
6 3 .607
N e w Yor k.
41-. M ilwa ukee
7 7 .222
5 J .556
I
PitTSburgh
Balt imo r e
7 8 .200 5
1
s .! 55 6
Bos tOn
We st
f; 5 1 .545 ·I
w. L pet. g . b. New Yo r k
4 7 .36 4 3
Detroit
Los Angele s
9 3 . 750 7 . )6 J
3
Clevelanct
Ho u Ston
7
5 583 'l
W est
San Franc isc o 6 6 . 500 3
w . I. pet . g .b .
Atlanta
6 6 .soo 3
California
8 j .7 27
C incinnat i
A
6 .400
J
Minn eso t a
5 J .556 2
San Diego
3 9 .750 6
?
OaKland
6 5 .545
Wednesday 's Results
2
Tex as
6 5 .5.:15
Montr.ea l 7 New York 4
_
3
Kan
sa
s
Ci
t
y
3
5
.375
Ch icago 18 P i tt sburgh 9
51 ~
Chi cago
1 8 .?00
Ph il adelphia 12 St. Lou is 5
Wed ne sdav 's R es ult !.
San D iego 6 Atlanta 1
easton 4 N ew YorK 3
Hou ston 3 San F ran ciSCO 2
Milw· 5 Cleve 4 , 16 inns
los Ange l es 14 Cincinnat i 1
Ba 1t1m ore 6 Detro i t 1
Today's Probable Pitchers
Texa s 4 Kansas City 2
{ All Times EDT )
New York ( Malla c k 1 0 1 at Calif 5 Minnesota 3
Montreal (Torr ez 1 0 ), 3 : 15 Ch ic ago 5 Oak l and .J
p.m
Today 's Proba b le P1tchers
(Al l Times EDT ) 1
Pittsburgh (Rook er 0 11 at
Mmnesota ( Bly leven l 0 ) at
Ch icago (Fraillng 1-01 , 2: 30
p .m .
Californi a ( Tanana 2 Q), 4:0Q
St . Louis (McGlothen 1-0l at p .m .
Balt 1m or e (Mc N al l y 1 1) at
Phila delph i a { LonbQrg 0 -1 or
De troit (LO I ICh Q. J], 8 .00 p .m .
Scheu ler 0-ll . 7 :30p .m .
Boston (W ia e 1-0 ) at New
San Diego (G re i f 0-21 a t
At l anta ( Harrison 0-21 , 7 : 30 York (Medich . t ), 2: 00p.m .
p .m .
! Only game sc lledu l ed)
Friday 's Games
San Francisco (Bradl ey 1 1J
at Houston (Roberts 1-2) , B· JO Ca li f at Oakland, n ight
p .m .
Minn at T exas, night
K an City at Chicago, ni ght
( Only games sc t1eduled l
New York at Ba ltimre . night
Fridav 's Gam es
Cleve l and a t Boston
Pilfsburgt1 a t N ew York.
(Only game s sc llcd ~ l ed)
Chicago at Phila . ni gh t

·'

'

Major League
Leaders

'""':•

Major League Leade rs
Bv United Press Intern a tion a l
L ea ding Batters
(Based on 1S a'f bah)
National leagu e
g. ab r. h . pe t.
Mitrwld , Chi S 16
4 9 .563
Gross . Hou
9 24 5 12 .500
Krkptrck , P t 10 15
J
7 .467
Schneck . NY 7 28 3 13 .464
Uns.er , Phil
8 26
8 12 .462
Robin sn , Phil 9 28
5 12 .429
Hebn er , P i t 10 45 10 19 .422
Th omas , SD 11 39
3 16 ..no
Cey , LA
12 44
7 18 .409
Re i tz , St .L
12 45
5 18 .400
Beckeri,SQ 8 :20
0 8 400
Amel i can League
g . ab r . h . pet .
Oliva , Min
7 21
0 10 476
Gr i ch , Ba t
9 32 8 14 .438
12· 43 11 18 .419
Stan t n , Cal
Ca r ew , Min 10 41
8 17 .415
Darwin , M in 10 39
6 16 .410
Grieve. Tex 10 39
9 15 . 385
Yaz , Bos
9 34
7 13 . 382
Robinson , Cl 12 42
8 16 .381
Chmbl is , Cle 11 .u
6 16 .364
· Jacksn , Oak 11 44 10 16 .364
McRae. KC
7 22
4 8 .364
Hom e Run s '
Nati onal Leagu e: Wynn, LA
6 ; Garvey. LA and Hebner , Pitt
4; Aa r on , At l, Mit terwald , Chi
and Perez . Ci n 3.
American Leagu e: Nettles ,
NY and Jackson , Oak 6 ;
Duncan .. Ctev and Bu r roughs ,
Tex 5 ; Ya srrzemsk i, Bos and
Robinson , Cal~ Runs BatTed In
Na'fional League: Wy nn . LA
17 ; Ce d eno. Hou 14 ; Cey , LA
1J ; W illiam s. Chi )2 ; Ga rvey ,
LA 11.
Amerinn Leagu e: Jackson .
Oak 19; Robinson, Cal, Ellis ,
Clev and Burroughs , Tex 13 ;
His le , Minn and N ettl es , NY 12 .
Pi'fching
C Ba sed on most victories)
· National t.eague : P . Ni ekro.
Att , Jot1n 'and Su tton , L A 3-0 ;
Di €-r k er , Hou . Rogers . Mtl and
Garman , St . L 2-0 ; Reed , Art.
Gri ffin
an d
Osteen ,
Hou,
Scarce, Phi l , Caldwell
and
D 'AcQu isto. SF 2-1.
American League: B i bby ,
Te x 3-1; Palmer , Bait, Sing er
and T anana , Cat, Coleman and
Hiller , Det, Wright , Mil , Blyle ven , Minn , K line, NY, Fi!1gers
and Hun ter. Oak 2-0; Le e. Bos.
Busby , KC. Sto t tl emyre , N Y
and J en ki ns, Te x 2-1; Ryan , Cal
2-2.
.

Local Bowling
Eartv Ttlursday
Mhted League
April 4, 1914
S'fandings
Team
Pts .
Lucky Stri k er s
78
Mr . and Ms ..
74
A ll in th e Family
65
Quads + ?
50
Nuts ~n d Bo lts
48
The Bold On es
45
T ea.m h ig h series - The Bold
.Ones 2158 ; Lucky Strikers 21 19
T eam high game - • Lucky
St r i kers 735 ; The Botd Ones
729.
_ Wom en; s h igl'1 se r ies D iane Ht~w l ey 480 ; Isabell e
Couch 467 ,
. Women ' s high game - Diana
Hawley 187 ; Isabelle Couch
169 .
M en's high series. Bob
Couch 559 ; Paul Tay ior ..535.
Men ' s high gcm1e . Gene
Murray 212; Bob Couch 201.
M orning Glories Leagu e
April9. 1974
Standin~s

Team
Pfs .
Newell Sunoco
142
Excelsior Oil Co .
130
Gibbs Grocery
170
G. &amp; J . Auto Part s
170
Pock I ing ton Canst .
1 12
Spencer's Market
96
High ind.ividual game
Martene Wi lson 209 ,· Vicky
Gillilan 174,
·
H igh Se r i es Marlene
W i l son 509; Vicky G i lli l an 446 .
Team high game
Ex ce ls ior Oi l co . 849 .
1earri H igh ser i es Ex .
ce lsior Oil Co . 2260

'•
Pom er oy Bowling Lanes
. Early Sunday
Mixed league
March 31. 1974
Team
W. L.
Pullin s Excavat i ng
eo 40
Friendly Taverr .
68 52

Pro Standings
ABA Playoff Sta nd i ng s
By United Pre ss InternatiOnal
Eastern D iviso n F.inals
C B es t of Seven
w. I.
New York
3 0
Kentucky
0 3
We st ern Divi sio n F i na l s
j Bes t of Seve n )
w. I.
Utah
3 0
Indiana
0 3
Wednesday's Res ults
New York 89 Kent ucky 87
Utah 99 Indiana 90
Thur sday 's Games
Utah at I nd iana
(Only game s_che dul ed)

Indy field
down to 67
INDIANAPOLIS (UP!) -The 1974 Indiana polis 500 has
just 67 cars vying for the 33
starting positions in the May 26
classic - down from the 82
ma chines entere d lor last
year 's trQjlbled race.
Indiana polis Motor Speedway President Tony Hulman
said he believes the six entries
received in Wednesday mail
were·the las t to arrive bearin g
the acceptable postmark · of
before midnight Monday.
Four of the entries received
Wednesday were fr om Vel's
Parnelli Jones team, and all
four have Drake-OIIenhauser
power plants. AI Unser ,
Albuquerque •. N. M., the 1970
and 1971 winner here, and 1969
champ
Mario , Andretti,
Nazareth , Pa., were assigned
to two of the machines. The
other two are backups . .
Dan Murphy, Plymouth,
Wis.. entered a Drake-Offy
machine and assigned it to
driver " Jigge r " Sirois of
Hammond, Ind.
A backup car also was entered for Dick Simon, Salt Lake
City,
It was announced that rookie
Bruce Jacobi of Speedway
would drive a previously en- ·
tered car,

St. L oui s
too ? tt obo
s a?
Ph lla
034 10 ' 03x 12 15 0
Si ebe r t , G ar ma n 14 ). Thomp
son 15), Hr abo s Ky (6 l. Fo lker s
( 7) , and
::i 1m m ons . Farmer.
Cu l ver
(5 ), L in1y
(9) and
Boone . WP Cu lv er I I Ol LP
Sie bert ( 1 t ~ .
San Oi~qo
004 011 000 6 11 'J
Atlanta
100 000 000- 1 10 2
M cA ndrew (1 ?l and K en dall .
Morton . Ho u se 18 ) and Oates
LP - Mo r ton
( 1 2) . HR - W in
f ield ( 1st l
Sa n F r an
10 1 000000- 2 7 1
Houston
100 01 1 000- 3 4 0
O'Acqulsto,
Wil l iams
(61 ,
(7) ,
Moffitt
(8)
and
Sosa
Rudolph , Rader {7) , Osteen ,
Fo r sch (8) and Edwards . WP Osteen .(2 · 1J . L P- D ' AcQuisto
12 1) HR - Ce deno (2nd )
Lo s Ang
002 ooo 444 - 14 17 o
Ci nci nn ati
000 100 000- 1 4 1
Ra u , , Mar sha l l
(8 )
and
Ferguson. Nel son , Ca rroll (BJ.
McQueen (fj ), Osburn (9) and
Bench . WP ~ Rau (1 OJ LP Nel son 10 2l. HR s Foster
(lsi), Ga r vey 2 (3r d &amp; &lt;Hh ~ .
Wynn (6th )
American League
Boston
000 000 120 - 4 B 2
New York
020 000 001 - 3 52
L ee (2 -H and Mon tgomery,
Dob son , Ly le (8) and Mun son .
L P- Dobson (1 2 l . HR - Yast
rzem ski (4th l .

.

( 16 inni n gs )
Cleve land
000 002 200 000 LlOO 0Mi l waukee

J

10 I

000 000 022 000 000 1- 5 9 I
G . Perry , Sa nders { 16) and
Duncan ,· Staron . J
Be l l (6),
Rodriguez (9). Murphy I 15) and
Porte r , Moo r e
{ 13 ) .
WP Murphy ( 1 0) . LP - Sanders (0
1) . H Rs - Duncan (5J. Ga r cia
(JJ,C oluccio (1) .
Baltimore
500 010 000- 6 10 2
Detro i t
000 00 1 000- 1 50
Palmer · (2 .Q) and Etchebar ren ; Fryman , Sl ayback (1) and
Freell an . LP - Fryman (0 -2).
HRs - Fu l ler (1-).
Kan City
000 002 000 - 2 4 1
Te )( a S
01000003x - 4100
Br i les , Garber 17 ). M c Dan i el
(8 ) and Healy ; Bibby (J . J) and
Sundberg . LP - Briles (0 -2) .
M inn
000 210 000- 3 11 1
Calif
010 101 20x- 5 9 0
Woodson, Burgmeir (7) and
Borgma n ; Ston ema n , Se l l s (5l
and Rodriguez . WP - Se lls (1 -01
LP - Woodson C0 -1) , HR s- Oiiv
er ( lsi , 2nd ) , Ro.bin son (6th ) .
Ch icago
010 000 030 - 5 7 1
Oakland
100 020 000- 3 8 2
Bah n se n ( l -2) and Down ing ;
B lu e, Kn ow l es (8), Hoo t en (9)
and Foss e . LP - Biu e (0 -2) . HRs
- Downing l i s t ~.

GAHS cops
triangular
golf match

heroes, ' 1

recalled
Wednesday night.
Mter

Garvey

sophomore

Garvey's

a Houston Astro

.Bobcats thump
Glouster, ,ll-5
Visiting
Kyger
Creek
pounded . 12 hits Wednesday
evening to defeat non-league
opponent Glouster, -II:S: The
victory pushed Jhe Bobcat
record to 3-4 overall while the
Tomcats dropped to 5·2.
Coach Jim Sprague's Bobcats Jumped into a 1-0 lead in
the first inning on a leadoff
double by second baseman Tim
Lucas, a fi elder 's choice. walk
to Ron Roush a nd infield single
off the pitcher's glove by Clay
Hudson·,
Kyger Creek took command
of the game in the second by
sending 11 batters to the plate
including seven who circled the
bases.
Ben Arnett, Bobcat leftfielder , began the rally with a
line single to left. Shortstop
Terry Lucas drew a free pass
and first sacker Jeff Blazer
brought in Arnett with a sha rp
single to right. Tim Lucas
followed with a run producing
single to center Roush walked
and Hudson pl~ted two more
runs on a single up the middle.

Ripley wins on
links, 172-203
The Southern Tornado golf
learn went down to its second
defeat or the sea son against
one victory, dropping a 172-203
match to Ripley.
Ripley wa.s paced by Rick
Simmons with a 37, followed by
Jay Robin son 's 39, Mark
Starcher's 46, Steve Ludwig's
:;o and Ted Wallace's 51.
Bob Johnson again led the
Tornado swingers, carding a
44. Other Southern linksters.,
were Bob Roush with a 48,
Greg Dunning with a 52, Randy
Dudding with a :;g and Kenton
Holman a 61.
The next Southern match is
Friday afternoon at Ravenswood ,

Gallia Academy High School
defeated Athens and Meigs in a
REDWOMEN SPLIT
triangular match on the
Rio Grande College's women
Gallipolis links Wednesday.
softball team split a twinbill
Final score was GaJlipolis ' with Ohio Ulniversity Wed'' 155, Athens 159 and Meigs 184. nesday, losing the first game
For Gallipolis, Ken New and 15-8. Rio won the nightcap , 5-4.
Tom Young each had a 38. John Rio will host Ohio State
Saunders finished with 39. Dow Saturday.
Saunders and Brent Johnson
each had a 40 and Rusty
Tom •s Carrv Out
66 54
Saund~rs had a 5L
Sw 1sher &amp; Loh se Ph arm .
60 60
For Athens,' Jim France Start losing weight today or money
~agles Club
51 69
bac:k. MONADEX is a tiny tablet
·captured
medalist honors with and
Roseberry Pennzo i l
35 85
easy to take. MONADEX will
Team Hi Se r ies - Swisher's
a two-over -par 36. Mike help eurb your d8$ire for exr::ea
&amp; Lohse Pharm. 2125; Tom's
food. Eat less - weigh less, Contains
Blosser had a 39, Tim Lavelle no
Carry Out 2020 .
dangerous drugs and will not
Team H i Game - Swisher
41, Terry Hawk 43 and. Dean make you ·nervous. No strenuous
&amp; Loh se Ph a rm . 714; Sw isher &amp;
exercise. Change your life , • . start
Howe 47.
Loh se Ph arm . 713.
today, MONADEX cost $3.00 for
Ind . Men 's Series - Lar ry
For the Marauders, J, D. a 20 day supply. l.arge ec:onomy
Dugan 576 , Ed Voss 570 ; Ind .
is$5.00. Also trv AQUA TABS:
Story a nd John Thomas each size
Women 's Series Marlene
they work gently to help you lose
Wi lson 52 9 ; Betty Smith 484 .
had a 44. Bruce Blackston had water· bloat. AQUA TABS -a "water
Ind . Hi game - Ed Voss 21 4;
that works - $3.00. Both
a
46, J eff Warner 50 and Joe pill"!
Jr . Ph elps 200 ; Ma rl ene Wilson
k1Uaranteed and sold by:
209 ; Maxine Dugan 190.
Rosenbaum a :;1,
Swish er &amp; Loh se Pharmacy,
Gallipolis plays at Logan 112 E . Main, Pomeroy &amp; DuUon
Drug S'fore. Middleport. Mail
Early Sundav
Friday.
Order s Filled .

The Bobcats weren 't through
as Bruce Arnett and Dave Wise
walked to load the bases. Ben
Arnett lined a double down the
right field line scor ing two
runners, but Wise was na_bbed
al the plate.
KC m ade it 9-0 in the third on
a Lucas single, stolen base a nd
double by Roush . The Tomcats
solved
the
s la nts
of
righthander Clay Hudson in the
third inning.
Held to only one hit during
the first two frames, Glouster
stru ck for five big runs which
sent Hudson behind lhe plate
and forced freshma n righty
Steve Baird to put out the fire.
Relief ' hurler Jago sta rted
the rally with a one-&lt;Jut walk,
Mike Echstenkamper single
bring ing Jago to third . Bolh
runners sco"ed on a long triple
by Tim SikorskL
Sikorski's
smas h _ was
followed by walks to Stew
Patton and Wayne Lent which
filled the bases. Three more
runs scored on a single by
Charles Richards and two
more free passes, Baird came
in to strikeout catcher Mike
Brunton to end the threat.
The Gallians added two more
runs in the fourth on a double
by Dave Wise , a walk to Ben
Arnett, single by Lawrence
Tabor and sacrifice squeeze
bunt by Terry Lucas.
Glouster threate ned two
other times during the game,
but the Bobcat defense which
turned in two double plays,
came through in the clutch.
Baird wa s the winning pitcher
while Randy Trace took the ,
loss .
Baird and Hudson combined
to strike out seven Tomcats
and issued a total of six walks.
Trace and Jago walked nine
and fanned four.
The Bobcats travel to North
Gallia this evening in an SVAC
clash.
Line Score :
Kyger Creek 171 200 0-11 12 3
G!ouster
005 000 0- :; 5 I
Hudson, Baird (3) (W) and
Wise, Hudson (3). •
Trace (L) Jago (3) and
Brunton, Bokovitz ( 6).

Mi:x ed League
April7, 1974

·
__.._;~
Te am
W. ·L .
Pu ll ins Excavating
86 42
Tom ' s Carry Out
n 56
Friendly T ayern
66 60
Sw isher &amp; Lohse Ph arm .
62 66
Eag les Cl ub
53 75
Roseberry Pennzo i l
43 85
Team H i Series
Pull in s
Excavatin'g 2075 ; Swisher &amp;
Lohse .Ph arm . 2045
Team Hi Games - Pul l ins
Excavat i n~ 754; Swisher
&amp;
L ohse Pharm . 730 .•
Ind . H i Se r: i es - Dic k Dugan
633 ; John Tyree 570 ; Mar l ene
Wilson 531; Betty Smith 467 .
Ind . H i Game - Dick Dugan
237 ; Dick Dugan 235 ; Marlen e
Wilson 193 ; Marlene Wilson
187 .

bUJ ',I!HIJ',
S. un :-.•,11 .

!1:1 v t · , "

:.:11d

!1

W"V I!I I
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J ' v,
Jt ls l 1 ', '~ ' !l w

l! tti;.; tadu· ;uul 1111' ll' '' lf'fl I ll'
l':t ll;.;e n1 y w t l ~" l1 k~· s 111f'tu ."

" Srx luJJJter!-i awl 17 I U'JI':-. ,"
rnuscd ( ~arvf~Y. " l f. •;ll 's :1 ~:ur 11 l

season for srm 1c ~'. u y ,c· "
( larvcy de serves il ptiL r,n th1~
back himself. Aflel' 1~ gc.11nes
his s latbl 1c.s a r c almust as
impressive as those of Wy nn.
Garvey's homers Wednesday
night were his third and fo urth
of 1he season. He added a
single and drove hom e four
runs to boost his total to 11.
Lefthander Doug Rau and
Mike Marshall teamed up to
limit the Reds to four hits, one
a homer by r.eorge Foster, as
the Dodgers completed the

W {ti l l

l h; 1l

..
• Each_week , $20 firs t prize, 510 se cond, SS third .
Reg_•sl er fr,ee. Winners wi ll b~ notified . Drawings
Aprtl6._ 13, 20f 27, MJy 6. Drive in , try this new
convement serv ice.
· .

'1.; 1' ,

ir f,. 'l l

· , , ,J ; r ~. ,

' !w

--Stans,~ :

j~

,&lt;..,ar l ·

NEW YORK lUPI ) - 'The
wants to present
, forme, Commerce Secreta ry
· Maur1ce H. Stans on his lrial
j~ry as a man so distraughl by
his Wife's critical illness that
he co uldQ 't lhink clearly when·
he testified before the grand
Jury .that indicted him.
Federal Court Jupge Lee P.
Gagliardi said he would rule
today as to " lbe extent I'll go"
in permitting that kind · of
testimony so far as " it bears on
Mr. Stans' state of mind. "
The mailer was argued, with
the jury dismissed, after Stans,
m day long testimony in his own
defense Wednesday , had

1\;.11,,.,

!• or

;1 1J 11·; r•.l ]

ARE STILl

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111 '.1 Y ~" ; ll •1! f"'' l,; , •~ · l, : r ll ,
t,: riiJrll', I:~ HI Jqr· ~ I ll' ·1;111 1jr:1 ,

IN.

l·b , l;~r 111 r·l11l, 'I lw lt1 ·1l'. h:1•J
ld t h1111 lHifH r,ll ·dr·tl, 111 11 •rbVJ rru :-.l y

de f ense

SADDLES

jJIIII k• d ••II ' •If lho •n ' •l l '.:r1 11/:1
I IP &lt;!I Il l 1 ~ , , 111111' •1 J&lt; ·;q •IJI i) r ;d !
f1:1 • k I l l ] ' JI ,'/ l1 '( 1/ir· l/ t1q •, t• 1r1

FOR All AGES

h:1'i11 'I 1 rrr ' N•d

fin g1· rs fr rr ~ ~~~~ .d lu r·Y.
!\ I

! h r·

unk •P!JY

lurw

Wy r111

;dJir\1 1 tJ( : Jrl ~ 1•

ted

" Luter I re&lt;JI!ZI:rl 1!. wt~ :-. ;,
break fcrr rm: hec;IU sr: if I h:1d
stoyed w it h thl' Hed s I w•JulrJ
h ave neve r g11t len l 11 th •:
majors as quick ly as I did
TI1ey had Frank Robins rm ,

Vada Pinson and Tomm y
Harper in those days ."
Tll.e Reds tried to get Wynn
back
from the Aslros in the
sweep .
Altogether th e Dodgers winter of 1965, offering Robinta tooed Roger Nelson and his son as bait.
" I was aware of the proposed
th ree successors lor 17 hits.
trade
," said Wynn. '1And I was
" That was a 2-1 ballgame
until the 7lh inning, " muttered real flattered when Houston
Reds' Manager Sparky Ander· didn 'l trade me because at th~
lime I wasn't an established
son.
and Robinson had been
player
Memory of the Dodgers.
do ing his thing for years and
.scoring four runs in each of'lhe

denied all charges against him.
He swore that he kept financier
Robert 1.. Vesco 's $200,000 cash
contribution to the 1972 Nixon
campa1gn a secret, along with
$40 million from others , as a
malter of duty .
" Privacy

is a

co nstitutional

right, and it had been given to
him by Congress in legislation
which was in eflecl until April 7
I 1972 '1," Stans said . " I 'was
do'in g my best to protec t
Robert Vesco and every other

contributor ."
Stans, who resigned as
commerce
sec retary
to
become the 1972 finance
committee chairman , and John

N. Mitchell,

who fesignrfl :-~&lt;;

general to !wad the
Nixon campaign committee,
are accused of trying to impede
a f&lt;)deral investigation of Vesco
in return lor his gift and of
lying to the grand jury ,about it.
Stans •vas ihe last imporlant
witness. The trial was expected
to be in .the jury's hands next
week, the lOth trial week.
The illness of Kathleen Stans
came up at the end of the day
when defenie attorney Walter ,
J . Bonner ,a ttempted to ask
Slans about it. Prosecu lor J ohn
R . Wing objected. Judge
Gagliardi dismissed the jury
for the day to hear arguments
attorney

Navy
Bla c k Wh,i le

United Press International
when she was killed by guardsDean Kah ler, paralyzed men during an anti·war
from the . waist down after he demonstration on the Kent
and eight olher Kent Stale ca mpus May 4, 1970.
students were wounded in a
" We have never been
1970 hail of Oh io National allowed to get this oJ l free and
Guard bullets which claimed open in a courtroom," Krause
the lives of four students , said, " The state of Ohio spent
ca lled Wednesday 's U.S . $70,000 to keep it out of the
Supreme Cour l r uling that . courts .''
families of the .injured could
The mother of Wi lliam
sue the state and guard officers Schroeder, the Lorain, Ohio ,
a 11 histor ic judicial ac t. "
youth who also was 19 when
" It means that the state or killed by guardsmen, sa id she
Ohio will have to affect a knew the cou rt decision event- '
marked change in the way it ually would come.
conducts its affairs," said Kali"I had faith we would get our
ler, "This also means that peo- day in cou r t," said Mrs.,
ple no longer have to blindly
follow the decisions of some
state and federal leaders."
Steve Sindell , one of the attorneys for students and their
parents in a pair of civil suils
seeking a total of $11 million
damages, said the unanimous
high court decision marked
" an
important da y in
Sen . Howard · M, MetAmerican jurisprudence!'
zenbaum, D-Ohio, admitted in
Principle defendants in the
Columbus Wednesday he had
. two suits are former Ohio Gov.
"made some bread " but said
James A. Rhodes ; former Oh io
his Democratic primary
Adjutant General S,T , Del Corelection
opponent , former
so ; Brig , Gen, Robert Ca nterastronaut John Glenn, a lso was
bury , in charge of the troops at
the time of the incident ; for- a wealthy man.
~&lt;J 've made some bread,"
mer KSU President Robert
conceded Metzenbaum , " but I
White; and certain guard ofworked f or it ."
ficers and troops on the firing
Melzenbawn said he had
line,
used his money f or 11 Causes"
" Now for the firs t time we
such as helping to organize
can get Gov. Rhodes and the
prison reform a t the federal
generals in an open courtpenitentiary in Leavenworth,
room," said Arthur Krause , Ia, ther of Allison Kraw;e , the Kans., and civil rights efforts
in the south ,
Pittsburgh native who was 19
"Nobody seems to ask my
opponent about his wealth,"
said Metzenbawn. "Overnight
he 's become a millionaire in
two year s . The question is what
Mrs. Alma Miller hostert a
have we done with our lives ?
pre-holiday party Saturday at I've donated m ine to causes.
her Middleport home.
rvir. Glen n has been 'm y
Her guests were Mr . and
Mrs .. Frank Whited, Melissa,
Tammy and Danny, Mrs.
Orvetta Weaver , and Mrs .
'
Pain
Webe r , /Co lumbu s.
The annual American Legion
Joining them for a wiener roast Auxiliary Buckeye Girls' State
in the evening wer e Mrs . information tea for delegates ,
Dianne George, sons, Brian. alternates , their mothers ,
Brent, David and Christopher . presidents and Americanism
Mrs. Lee McComas and Missy chairwome n of spon sorin g
McMillion .
a uxiliary units will be fr om 3 to
The children played games 5 p .m . Sunday, May :; al the
and were given balloons as Logan Federal Savings and
favor s. Mr . and Mrs, Whited Loan Bldg ., 61 North Market
and children were overnight SL, Logan .
guests of Mrs. Miller, grandHosting lhe tea this year is
mother of Mrs. Whited . the unit of Post 78, Logan ,
Melissa, who had spent the Those planning to atlend are to
past three weeks here with her advise Mrs . Barton F. Holl, 747
great-grandmother. returned North Wood St., Logan , by May
hom e with her parents,
L

THE SHOE BOX
Whe r e Shoes are
Sti ll Sensibly Pric ed

Middleport. Q,

OFF
Seniors, This Is For You!
Get Your Spring and
Graduation Outfit
Now and Save 10%.

Hosts party

WHY WAIT?
'

KERM'S KORNER

Tea planned

New York .Clothing HQuse
POMEROY, OHIO

21" Self Propelled
With Gr8 Catcher

155.50

Sat., SUn .
April 19-20-2 1
OKLAHOMA CRUDE
Fri .,

(Tec hni Color )
~eo rge C. Scott
Fa ye C?unaway

I PG J
Colorcartoon:
Krazy Kat

S.how Starts 7 p.'m.

'•

Schroder. "! feel relieved lhat
lhe country is going to live up
to the constilu tion. ''
Mrs . Sarah Scheuer, mother
of Sandra Scheuer, a 20-yearold Young&gt;town, Ohio, girl killed by guardsmen, said she was
relieved by the decision,
" I was discouraged before,
but now I feel a,liltle relieved,"
she said. " Now I believe our
system of justice is working."
Benson Wolman, director ol
the Ohio Civil Liberties Union,
said the decision was "a good
sign that at long last the nation
may be on the mend."
Also kill ed was Jeffrey

favor ite astronaut ' a nd a
Marine

colonel.''

Metzenbawn said Glenn's
refusal to debate him until the
senator publicizes his 196f&gt;.72
income tax returns was "like
say ing to htm (Glenn) , I won 't
debate him unless he takes off
his space suit."
State Rep. Tony Hall , D-Dayton, sa id in Cleveland Wednesday Ohio Secretary of State
Ted Brown had mismanaged
his office for 24 years.
Hall, seeking the Democratic
nomination

as

Sears·.

1

'I am not here on an ego

trip ," said Fry, '"My public
career and my private life
have been quite rewarding· and
satisfying. I want to help Republicans to . win, but they
won't w~ with former Gov.

PRI. • SAT . • SUN. APR •. 19 · '20 • 21
DOUBLE FEATURE PROGRAM

'·
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.)

\.

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'

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''

I .

.I
,I

.

.' ·

.

~

,"

'.

..

'

.

J

,,

I.

', I

f.

Will be in their new office at the

Bank &amp; Savings Company 211 W. Second St ,,
Pomeroy, as of

APRIL 15, ' 1974

'

,I
I

THURSDAY
FRIDAY
SATURDAY
SUNDAY

SUNG.LASSES
1/2 PRICE

PAMPERS

ALCO-REX

RUBBING ALCOHOL
16 ounce
Reg.

82~

DAYTIME 30's

¢

ONLY

POLAROID
COLORPACK REG.
FILM 108

JOIN CHURCH
Mr. and Mrs. Kendell Dunfee
were taken into membership of
the Pomeroy First Baptist
C.'h urch Easter morning. Their
da ug hte rs, Wendi a nd Kenda ,
were dedicaled during the
service by •·the Rev. Robert
K,uhn.
IN HOSPITAL
Harry Walburn , formerly of
Middleport, has been a patient
at Mercy Hospital in Colwnbus
lor the past two weeks due to
an industrial accident.

HOSTS GUESTS
Mr. and Mrs, Lewis A. White,
Cincinnati , were the Easter
weekend gues ts of Mr. and
Mrs . Virgil Roush , Rt, 3,
Pomeroy. Mrs. While ang Mrs.
Roush are siste rs. Friday
evening their brother · and
sister-in-Jaw. Mr. and Mrs.
William Matlack visited at the
Roush home, and Sunday they
were joi ned for din ner by Mr.
and Mrs, Don Roush and Jeff,
Rt. 3, . Pomeroy, and Mrs . ·
Ronnie Pooler, Jimmy and
Susie, Middleport,

ANACIN

CONTAC

Fast Pain Relief
100 Tablets
Regular '1.67

10 Capsules
Reg. '1.79

TUSSY

SUDDEN TAN
BY COPPERTONE

SPRAY DEODORANT
7 Ounce

Bronzing Foam
3.75 ounces . ONLY
Reg. $3.00

Reg. 7fJ
'

VI SINE

-Sergeant's
.

EYE DROPS
'-h Ounce
Reg. $1.65

SENTRY ·COLLAR

Cat$

~or
Reg. '1.98 ·
ONLY

¢

ONLY

GRADS

THERAGRAN-M

It's our annual gift to
honor graduates . Stop in
now a'nd select ·' ,vour
footwear .

High P.otency Vitai;I~in Formula W~h Minerals

.Chapma~'s . Shoes

'·

·' I

.

'

.

36 Tablets
Reg. 43'
ONLY

. t&lt;en ft\'fh .McCullouth, R. Ph.

ONLY

, ChArles Ri ff le, R: Ph. '

to

, ,

Opon Dolly .1 , 111 o.ni.
lUG p,m
Sunday 10:30 112:_30 •nd s tot p.fT'

PRESCRIPTIONS
Friendly
112 E. MAl N

POMEROY

"·

Children's Aspirin

19

30 Free With 100
Reg. '7.89

$159

BAYER

'

e PLUS e

·•

•1.44

ONLY

1974

1,

'' \ .'

AND POLAROID

TO ALL

'

..I.. .:...

FOSTER-GRANT

the utility later finds out that it
does not have to pay that
corporate income tax, that utility clearly owes its customers a
refund for past collections of
the tax 'and a reduction in their
future monthly bills for the
amount of future taxes which
will not be paid," Eckhart said ..

I '

.

Sale! ALL

cent corporate income tax, and

20% Discount

•''

Farmer~

is gra nted assuming a 48 per

I, .
\

I

"When a large rate increase

MAIN ST.
\

ASCS OFFICE

PG

PH. 992-2178 1
.

Henry
Eckhart,
a
Democratic candidat e for
nomination as lieutenant
gove rn or , Wednesday said
utility companies in Oltio "owe
their customers millions of
dollars in refunds and red•1ced
rates. "
Eckhart said the companies
had vigorously campa igned lor
rate increases lhey did not
need. In ihe process ol obtainin g the increases, sa1d
Eckhart, the compa nies were
allowed rates which assumed a
48 per cent corporate income
tax .

_Elite Army of Female Assassins
In e Race Against Time end Deeth
to Seve the Worldl

$517,50

:

James A. Rhodes ."
Rhodes also is seeking the
Republican nomination for
eovernor .

~n

Riding Mower

LOP~~!:~~NE

THE MEIGS COUNTY

)

AUTHORIZED CATALOG MERCHANT
220 E. MAI.N

of

State Rep. Charles Fry, R·
Springfield, said Wednesday
the Democratic win in this
week's congressional election
in Michigan, in which
President Richard M. Nixon
had campaigned for the
Republican candidate, was a
" further indication that the
American people will no longer
tolerate either suspicion or
ques}ioned integrity in public
officials.''
A candidate for the Republican gubernatorial nomination,
Fry said he was in the race to
give members of his party an
alternative.

''

REG. 1
ONLY

secretar y

state, said· Brown had "done
nothing to bring Ohio election
procedure into the 20th Century.
11
\Vhile other states have
been modernizing election processes - standardizing voting
machines, bringing all counties
under uniform registration and
voting requirements, setting
up adequate training programs
for booth workers - Ohio has
continued to plod along with
outdated practices which have
been perpetuated by the s tale 's
chief election officer," said
HaiL .
Hall said if he were elected
he would create a bi-partisan
Ohio Election Commission to
study electio n problems,
develop uniform practices and
provide help to local boards of
election.
The secretary of state would
serve as a voting member of
the corrunission, said Hall .

''THE DOLL SQUAD"

36'' Cut, 8 HP
NOW

BIRTH ANN0l1NC'ED
RACINE - Mr, and Mrs,
Gary Roush , Rt. 2, Racine , a re
announcing the birth of their
first child, a son, at Holzer
Medical Center, Monday , April
8, weighing 7 lbs., II oz.; and
nam ed
Jeremy
Le oter ,
Grandparents are ML and
Mrs. Charles Findley and Mr ,
and Mr5, Lester Roush . Greatgrandparents are Mr. and Mrs .
Carl Shul tz, Sr,, Mr. and Mrs,
Russell Findley·. Mrs . .I,illian
Duffy, Syracuse and Mrs,
Edna Roush, Racine.

MASON DRIVE-IN

Now$139 .88

Model No . .9NB9636N

$149.88

NOW

NOT OPEN

$13988

9 T9733N

22" . 3 Speed
Self Propelled

5

Tonight, Thurs . Apr. 18

'.154:95

Efficient 2-speed, chain -to -gear dri ve lets you
"- match t raveling sp eed to "mowing tondit lons.
Drive and ne utral cont r o l on. handle . Gea r assisted pull -up recoil starter and com pression r e lease in cyl in~r head h~d for
~age r starting . Self-pr i ming fuel syStem wjth,
governor control for prompt power response ·
from 16.4 engine. Lightweight • .spi ra l-sweep
magnesi um h ousi~g with quiet, below-deCk
exhaust. Rust -proo·f plastic l'h-qt . fuel tan k .
Six-lever-ad justable c ut ting heights ... f rom 1
to oiJ 1h in . Rubber t i re s: 8.5- in . diam . front. 7.5·
in. diam . rear. Austempered steel blade.
~onve n ient toggl~ switc_h , t urns mo wer of f
mstantly . Meets all appl1cable · safe ty sandards of American National ' Standards In st i tute .

Model No. 9NB9738 '

Model 9 T 9048

5 65

by Bonner.
hrnwrrhagi ng fr om the rtwuth
Tile a ttorney saill Stans' wile • and ears., dying in fr ont of his
of 38 yea rs, at that time. went eyes . He had to tell his
inlo the hospit.a l in Augusl, ch ildren . He was calied before
1972, and remained until the gra nd jury. ' The man
December. Stans was active in couldn 't think . He couldn't do
the campaign until the Novem. anything . At a critical period in
ber elt'Ction in 1972 and th is man 's ·life he is called
testified to the grand jury in before a grand jury, and he is
March a nd April, 1973.
supposed to hav e a crystal
"Noone in his life was dearer dear reC&lt;Jiieclion of lhings that
tO him than that woman ," went op."
Bonner sa id. "She had a rare
Stans closed 'his eyes tightly
blood disease, so rare that on ly at this point and put his head in
100 cases have been diagnosed. his hands. Bonner went on that
While he was Inaking speeches , Mrs. Stans went back into the
traveling widely, he spent hospital in January and F eb· .
every night, every weekend , ruary . 197:1, with infectious
with her .
hepatitis and again in May wllh
.: For 10 day s she was serum hepatitis. In November,
1972 , he said, she had 17
transfusions in three days .
Stans told the judge that now
"she is in remission and her
blood is normal. "
Miller, 20, Plainview, N.Y .
In the opinion of Chief Justice Warren E . Burger. the
documems before the trial
court " specifically placed in issue whether the governor 'a nd
his subordinate officers were
acting within the scope of their
duties under the constitution
and laws of Ohio, whether they
acted within the range of discr etion permitled the holders
of such office under Ohio- law
and whether they acted in good
fa ith in both proclaiming an
emer gency and as to the actions taken to cope with the
emergency so declared ."

Senatorial race turning to
who made most bread &amp; how

AND SAT. FOR STOCK ON HAND

NOW

shows hand' on .·deferise

Kent ruling cited as historic

Cr eam

Specml! ...FOR GRADS

SPECIAL SALE IS THURS., FRI.

'.

·.· .

I

;.tr,·;p l y

I

I ' ' ll.l l ' fl l l,l •f II II'

122-INCH CUT}

USTRE CREAM
, SHAMPOO
11 oz.

CASH GIVEAWAY

·''

" 1\11 1 l! 1;1l ',&gt;1!'11 l h• · ro ·; l,c,111 1 !&lt; ,r
!111 · .'i l x ho'tlll'l" ~ .; : 111d ll w 1'1 HI: I ',.

was

SUBSTITUTED •••

Mon . lo Thurs. 9 lo 3-Fnday ~ to 7
Saturday 'il ro 12.

1•:!•

' ' II'" '·.~ ~ ~ ~ ~

MEIGS THEATRE .

THE PRELL SHAMPOO SHIPMENT

DR IVE -IN HOURS ,

11 .·1 '1•'

'1. 111&lt;' ..

'

·fit, AUTO BANK

•1

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It's So Easy. Try . ..

../ . "

I· , 1:, ,I
'

Mower alone

FAILED TO ARRIVE. WE HAVE

:/ '

111 t'.n .',;, !1•".! ;ll !r ll'l r· 1'. ·.!! J'i " '' !
1111 : ;, l lll l ',l.lt )w ;1111) ;, lw:11 d

, • .II

Sears~~~"'~" 4-Day Sale

LOSE UGLY FAT

~-

Wliform for

thai of the Dodgers.
The former Cincinnati Taft

Oodger uniform

· 5 · T!w Daily &amp;ntim•l. Middlt•por' -Pt~JillTI ' \', U .. i\pri\IH, 1(1';'-1

.'

PH. 9V" ·2955

Service
POMEROY, O.

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�6 - The Daily &amp;niinel. Middleport-J'&lt;&gt;mt·n&gt;J'. 0 .. April 18, 1974

'

·'Rucfdigore·'
staged
.
'

.

'

ATHENS - II Gilbert anri
Sullivan purists detect the
authentic stamp of the 'D'Oyly
· Carte Opera Company in the
forthcoming Ohio Universit v
Theater-Music School's joi~t
production of " Ruddigore ,"
director Robert Winters will
most likely be very pleased.
For, during his sabbatical in
England a few years ago,
Winters spent a great cteal of
time with the origina l Gilbert
and Sullivan
produci ng
company, talking with actors,
directors and musicians, and
gathering material for his own
production, playing · April 26
a nd
27
in
Memo rial
Auditorium .
• Winters, a member of the
School of Thea te r facultv
whose office walls ar~
decorated with 40-year-old
D'Oy ly Carte posters, talks
about his experience with the
company with great pleasure.
" They are just a bunch of
unpretentious singers and
actors and musicians,'' he says
of the opera company founded
over 100 years ago ,by producer
..-Richard D'Oyly Carte, lyricist
William S. Gilbert and composer Arthur Sullivan. "To this
day," Winters explains, ''they
exist $01ely for the purpose of
producing Gilbert and Sullivan
operettas."
Winters first met some of the
D'Oyly Carte people while he
was in London and began discussing their company, their
productions and their music
with them. He worked with
them; too, in Manchester, then
rejoined them in the English
resort city of Brighton, soaking
in as much of the expertise of a
strictly Gilbert and Sullivan
company that he could .
" Interestingl y enough,"
Winters relates, "Gilbert and
Sullivan did not get along well
at all. In fact, they didn 't even
speak to each other mainly
because Sullivan was resentful
that he had to write popular
music . Due to pressure· from
his friends, he thought he
should be a classical composer .''
Richard D'Oyley Carte, then,
came along as the catalyst
needed to keep\he two writers
together and writing. He was
the producer for all the shows,
Sullivan, the conductor, and
Gilbert, the director. Beginning with "Trial By Jury" in
1871 and ending in 1896· with
" The Grande Duke," th ey

wrote a total uf 14 npereltas.
" The company, noW run by

Bridget

D'Oyly

Carte,

prJ)duces the shows very much

the way they were dune
orig ina lly ," Winters says.
''Some of their scenery and

" And the vuites, '' Winters

adds, "are extraordinary.''
The time Winters spent with
the D'Oy ly Carle - watching
rehearsals I " It was great fun
to listen lo them work:");
talking shop with some of the 60
actors and dozen technica l
people; viewing the backstage
workings of the company
during production ; taking
slides of the casts and sets Winters must sorely regard as
invaluable as he mounts his
own production of the operetta.
" Ruddigore. "

Circle has
meeting
Plans for a cafeteria dinner
with proceeds to go to the
Pome r oy Fire Departmen t
were disc ussed during a
meeting of the Friendly Circle
of Trinity Church Tuesday

evening.
Mrs. Roy Mayer, Mrs.
Thomas Young and Mrs. David
Russell were appointed to the
ways and means committee
and will work with committees
of the Happy Harvesters Class
and the Busy Bees in finalizing
plans for the benefit . The
dinner will be served in the
church ·social room both
Friday and Saturday, May 17
and 18.
Also discussed during the
meeting,. conducted by Mrs.
Lawrence Stewa rt , was a
mother-daughter reception
May 10.
· ~~Momentous Decision" was
the program topic presented by
Mi ss· Elizabeth Fick and Miss
Mary Virginia Reibel. Mrs.
Young and Mrs. James Fugate
served a dessert course from a
table decorated in 'yell_ow with
a sp ring floral centerpeice.

:c

A mother-daughter. banquet
was planned lor May li at
meetings of the circles of th e B.
H. Sanbom Missionary Society

r I •d :r:
: : a en ar:;;
,.,.

·
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Tf1UIISDAY
HOCK SPH JNc;s Be tter
Health Cluh, 1:15 p.m. home of

Mrs . George Skinner. Program

Church Tuesday ·nighl.
~l' Mrs. Wendell Jeffer s with
A potluck dinner preceded . the contest· by Mrs. William
the meetings . At the May Hadford.
meeting of the Sanborn Society
ME I GS
C HAp T E H
new officers will be elec ted and American Hed Cross 7:30 p.m.
new ehairwomen of the circles m c;lfctcria at Vetera ns
named.
Memoria l Hospital.
LOVE JOY CIRCLE
YOUNG · HEPUBI.lCAN
Love Joy Cir'Clc members Meeting 8 p:m. at Meig!:i Inn.
heanl a letter from Mrs. Roy Shinabery, represenl2tive
Lucin da Dain es . Columbus, sta te hea dquarters and Roger
expressing h,er appreciation Yurc huck , chairman Oh io
for ccrrespondem:e dw·ing.the Lea gue of Young Republican
year . It was noted that shut-ins Clubs will bepr~sent . All young
had been visited Easler. Smce Republicans -urged to attend .
the ci rcles ,.., ,·II be reorgan ·,zed
BRA
. DBUHY PTA Thursday
next month, the money in the at the school. Election and
trea:mry Was turned into the installation of new officers.
love gift for mission projects. Program hy the fo lk dance
ELECT A CIRCLE
class of students and reports by
Members of the EJecta Circle the children of the recent trip
voted to give the remainder of to Michigan.
money in their treasury to
HOCK Springs Grange, B
Barba1·a Anthony who will be p.m. a t th e ha11 .
repre se ntin g Ohio Baptist
MIDDLEPORT
ChJ id
Youth at th e international Conservation League, annual
conventio n in oregon this dinner, 6::!0 p.m. at the Meigs
summer. Children with birth- 1nn .
d~ys at the Meigs C,Sunty home .
E p 1s C 0 pAL C hurch
w11l be remembered.
Mrs.
John
Women , 12:30 · p.m. , Grace
.
Werner gave a report on Church parisH house . Mr. and
projects carried out during the Mrs.'Jerry Hilferly to speak on
year.
the Meigs County Museum .
DORCAS CIR CLE
Mrs. Nancy Reed and comThe Dorcas Circle members mittee to serve as hostesses.
CLASS 12, Heath United
divided the balance of their
money between the scholarshi p Methodist Church, 7:30 p.m.
girl and ' the special interest Members to model Easter
hats.
missionaries.
Attendin g the joint potluck
WOMEN'S
Auxiliary
dinner were Mrs. Milton Hood, Veterans Memorial Hospiwl ,
Mrs. Harold Hubbard, Mrs. 6 :.30 p.m. po tl uc k d.mn er.
James Brewer, Mrs. Dale Meeting to follow . Reports on
Walburn , Mrs. Tony Fowler, confere nce held in Cincinnati
Mrs. Arland King and to be given.
CRUSADE R'evival now in
daughter , Marsha, Mrs. Ethel
Hughes, Mrs. Louise Skaggs . progress through Friday at
Miss Rhoda Hall, Mrs . Richard . Syracuse Asbury Uni ted
Owen , Mrs. David Darst, Mrs. Method ist Church 7;30 p.m.
Fr ed Lewis , Mrs . Beulah nightly . Sponsored by all
White. Mrs. Bert Bodimer, chur ches in community.
Mrs . Fielding Hawkins, Mrs. Pastors from participating
John Werner, Mrs. Will is c hur c ~ es will speak each
Anthony, Miss Judy Owen, ·· evening.
Mrs . Leora Sigman, Mrs.
REVIVAL at First Church of
Manning Kloes, Mrs. Elizabeth God Syracuse, now in progress
Slavin , Mrs. Eloise Wilson, through Saturday 7:30 p.m.
Mrs. Char les Edwards and nightly. Special singing group
Mrs. Charles Searles.
Tuesday
evening
from
Gallipolis. Singing each
evening.
TWIN CITY Shrine Club,
7:30 p.m. at club house in
_Radne . Refreshments.

Celebrate
birthdays

RUTLAND - T\le birthday

anniversaries o£ Clarence

E~~c'cn Butk

Si11;ned by

STAN SMITH
BILLIE JEAN KING
JACK KRAMER
CHRIS EVERT

Also
Wilson Championship Optic Yellow
Extra Duty

TENNIS BALLS

MIDDLEPORT DEPT. STORE
MI~DLEPORT, 0.

Fellowship din_ne~. beld .

was

~lc&lt;.:~ed

Huck, MaXine

Winge~t, ., Firn

p_res Jden l of Alph;&gt; LrsJion C Gaul , .Jean Alkire, and Edna
Pnce.
I ~~~::;day ( ngl!l i.l t lh e ~c1 gs
Next meeting wa~ set for
Hi gh S&lt;;Jllt(Jl l,Jbrary .
~·
May 28 with a dinner at Crow's
Other of! Jeer s named for the Steak. House to precede in1974 ·75 year were Marlene slallati on of the officers and a
F'is,her, vice president ; A~zTw ineeting, in the Meigs Hi ~ h
Looks.
co rre s pon~lllg School . library . The · insecre tary' Jun e Lee, recording lernalional meeting at !Jls
sec retary; Helen Sm ith , Angeles in 1975 was announced.
chaplain; Nonga Rohe~·ts, Devotion s were by Mrs.
treasurer; Ida DJelil, hJstonan . Sw,11ckhainer.
and Daisy Blakeslee, sergeant
Ruth Stearns ga : ~ the
at arms.
program on Ohio entertainers
Plans were made for at- using a quiz show formal with
tending the state convention Mrs . Price, Mrs. Swackhamer,
May 3-5 allhc Imperial House, Mrs. Nonga Roberts , Mrs .
Columbus . The Friday and Fran ces
Hobcrls,
Mrs .
S&lt;:~tw·day even ing reception s Blakes lee, Mrs. Fisher and
will be hosted by local chapter Mrs. Buck as Con testants.
mcm!Jcrs. Attending from the
Mrs . Wing ett ·served a
chapter will be Miss Smith, dessert course.
J.ucille Swackhamer ' Mrs.
Roberts. Mrs . Fisher, Mrs.

SON BORN
Wilson at 949-2120 or the Rev. · .
LONG BOTTOM - Mr. and
Bill Sydenstricker at 992-3317 .
Mrs.
Henry Paul Pri ce, Rt. I,
All ages welcome.
Long Bottom , are announcing
DR. SYLVESTER Pratt of
Sierr a Leone, West Africa, will .
be guest speaker at 7:30p.m. at
the Ml. Hermon Uni ted
Brethren in Christ Church.
SLdes will be shown . Everyone
is invited to attend .
WEEK END Preaching
Saturday and Sunday at Red
Bush Churc h of Christ
Saturday at 8 p.m. and Sunday
at 10 a.m. Denver Hill, Fo.ster,
W. Va., will be guest speaker.
Everyone welcome.
MONDAY
SOUTHERN
Athlet ic
Boosters 7:30p.m. at the high
school.
TUESDAY
RACINE American Legion
Auxiliary at Legion Hall at 7:30
p.m.

CHESTER
Several
members were reported ill
during a meeting of Chester
Council 323, · Daughters of
America , Tuesday night at the
hall.
.Mrs . 'Sadie Trussell remains
hospitalized, and Mrs. Letha
Wood and Mrs. Ada Van Meter
are confined to their homes.
Mrs. Leona Hensley thanked
the council for cards and gifts
het
recent
during
ho sp it~lization . Mrs. Erma
Cleland, councilor, presided at .
the meeting when a final
practice
was
held
in
preparation for the District 13
rally today in Gallipolis.
Attending the meeting were
Mrs. Mary Showalter, Mrs.
Inzy Newell, Mrs. Marci•
~ller, Mrs. Leona Hensley,
Mrs. Goldie Frederick, Mrs.
Pat Thomas, Mrs. Zona Biggs,
Mrs . Doris Grueser, Mrs .
Mabel Van Meier, Mrs. Mary
Jo Pooler, Mrs. Mary K.
Holter, Mrs. Thelma White,
Mrs. Ethel Orr, ·Mrs. Zelda

.,'•

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FLEXSTEEC
... the longer you own it

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the more you'll like the name

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Middleport, Ohio

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·'·'
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AGE CHEVROLET
BRINGS YOU

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"COUNTRY
SALE TIME"

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COMING APRIL 19th THRU 20th

uve . en'
t.n'ertomlfl

,.'

OLD FASHIONED PRICES
FARM TRUC~ SPECIAlS
PASSENGER CAR
SPECIALS
NEW CHEVROLETS

(oulllr~

Qond

'•

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TRUCKS
TO

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CHOOS£
FROM

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PUPS&amp;

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HIGH HEEL,
PLATFORM STAX
FROM~1\tcAn_

ANYTHING
IF lltl WALK, CRAWL
OR FLY ON OUR
LOT
WE'LL TAKE
IT .ON TRADE

HURRY WHILE WE HAVE
A GOOD SELECTION
:!.
IN THI S STYLE.

.·

,.•.•.

REGISTER
FOR
FREE
PONY

WE'LL TRADE FOR

AND MANY
OTHER PRIZES

'•
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No Pl.!rd\Oie ~e(·e~scu~ ' o~d no
obligation

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. Your Thom Mc·An Store
MIDQLEPQRT, OHIO
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STAY
FREE

PADS

.· - ;'

. SCOPE

BABY
SHAMPOO

PADS

JO 's

·nwse present were : Tim
Hill, Debbie Harden, Molly
Fisher, Paul Cross, Gene
Shiveley and Bill Shiv2ley.
The · last breakfast of the
sc hool year will be held next
Wednesday and all i ighth
grade students , as well as all
Sout hern High School students
are invited and encouraged to
attend .

NESTLE

MAXI

Super Size
24 oz .

16 oz .

30's

$2.05 Value

$1.25 Value

1:

USTERINE
....... .
~

'"~""'

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RIVAL

REMINGTON
600 SUPER

3¥2 QT..CROCK

HANO ~ HELO

The Newest Way to lOOKI
Slow electric cooking in
genu ine stoneware. Coo~ s
sl owly up to 12 'hours on
safe 70 - 1&lt;10 watts . Grea t for
stews, soups, chi li, roasts .
Heat · encircles entire pot.
no t jU st bottom .

STYLER DRYER

600 watts of power for
entire fam ily. 2 speed,
brush and 2 com b sty ling
a t tachments, · won' t
overhea t

Mode l JJ OO
$22 .50 Value

CLAIROL
MOISTURE

GAY LAWN
~::;;. FURNITURE

MAKE-UP
$1.75 Value
as~
I

WESTCLOX

BULLE EYE"
POCKET WATCH
11

00

NO. 777 CHAIR .... , ........ :: ~ • .Y.•.'."~... •2.99
NO. 377 CHAISE LOUNGE ~ ~~-~~.~?!~••7.99

S4.98 VALUE

SHULTON SU
SPECIALS
Blue Jeans
De.sert Flower
Wild Meadow
Fragrances

ELECTRIC ALARM
Buz zer Alarm

Cologne Mist : Splash Cologne
Ousting Powder

•1.50

ShaHerproof Crystal

, $5.98 Value

e~ch

TUSSY

Proctor Silex

DEODORANT
SALEJ

Slide Color Control

Super Smooth
Shave

$13 .95
Val.ue

6 oz.

rl

SPRAY

79~
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Turner,
Gary and Sandy, ~d ·Travis
Gracely, Bucyrus, were
weekend guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Joe Turner and Connie

OLD
SPICE

2 SLICE TOASTER

59~

$1.00
.

Value .

WINDEX

FEMININE
DRY-MIST

GLASS

•159

CLEANER

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Our Love. " ffl ev. Howard
Shiveley led in prayer. made
annoWlcemen ts, and sho wCd a
film strip tilled , "Youth Can ·
Witness."
Breakfast was prepared by
Mrs . Curtis JohnsOn. and Mrs.
Howard Shiveley and consisted
Whaley , were Easter guests of · of scrambled eggs, ba con.
Mr. and Mrs. Ka,l Gruese r, blu eberry muffin s, toast,
orange juice and coffee.
Forest Hun Rd .

Fruit of the Loom

20 oz .

.PANTY HOSE

59c Value

Sandal Foot
Sheer to the Waist

'I

39~

No. 1301
Reg . 79c a pair

CAN CARE

Insecticide
Deodorant
$1.49 Value

99~

SWEET 'N LOW
•
100
B9c

Packs
Value

. .:ffi.

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RAC INE - Prayer breakfa s t wa ~ . held at Radn e
Wesleyan Un,ited ,Methodi st
Church Wednesday morn ing .
The group sang "They Will
Know We Are Chri stians By

REE

Anti -Stain
Antiperspirant
Unscented
5 oz.
$1.25 Value

Deferg e!lt
Giant Size
98c Va lu e

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GUESTS HERE
Mr . and ~rs . Patrick Quinn
and children, Cindy and Pat.
Columbus, Mr . and Mrs .
Robert Grueser, daughter.
Kim, Caldwell, and Mrs . Welby

Racine prayer breakfast held

MINI

'·

·heritage _hou~e
-

TIDE

Mr. and Mrs. John Bowman
daughter, Miss Susan
'and
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'·.
Bowman,
Pataskla, Mrs. John
'•
'· Goodrich, Dayton, and Mr. and
'·'• Mrs . Pau.I Winebrenner,
•, ' Colwnbus, were East~r guests
::
of Mr. and Mrs. Karl Owens.
•,
Mr . and Mrs . Charles
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Bradbury, Mary Bradbury and
::
·Mrs. Carl Wolfe and daughters,
~
Wendy and Tricia, were Easter,
"
•visitors ·of Mr. ~nd Mrs. Asa
~
~Bradbury and daughter,
~
, N~cole, Circleville. The second
•I , birthday anniversary of Nicole .
~ . . was observed. The .family was
,, joined there by Pat ·O'Brien.
Mr. and Mrs. C. p , Bradbury
'·
have returned home following ·
,. a winter in Petersbutg,_,;:!!l,.
~.

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STA

RIGHT
·GUARD

The Homebuilders Class of
the Middleport Church of
Christ meeting Tuesday night
at the church agreed to purchase three mattress covers
for beds at the Ohio Valley
Christian Assembly Camp,
Darwin .
The class also made
arrangements to check cost on
the installation of carpeting in
the hallway and in several
classrooms. A wiener roast
was set for June 18 \vith
Lawrence Stewart to check
possible use of the Kyger Park.
Devotions were given by
Mrs. Denver Rice ·and Mrs .
Carl Roach . Mrs. Rice read "I
Shall Not Want" from "Tiie
Leaves of God", and Mrs.
Roach read "Easter, Time of
.Hope 11 •·
Refreshments were served
by Mrs . Rice and Mrs. Roach
to Ed Evans, Mr. and Mrs. Bud
Wilson, Mrs . William Grueser,
Mrs. Raymond Cole, Mr,. and
Mrs. Lawrence Stewart, Mrs.
Coleen Van Meter and Mr . and
Mrs. Hennan Kincaid .

See.

TO ALL GRADS

I

Valuable Coupon

'••

cALl ROADS
LEAD TO _PAG£ CHlVROlfT
YOUR KIND OF
DEALER FOR
THE ENTIR£

20% OFF

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Dorothy Myers won the door
prize . C~ke and ice c r~am were
se rved by Mrs. Ridenour to
tho~e nam~d ;md Mrs. 'Enna
Cle land , Mrs . Ethel Orr , Mr s.
Ada Neutz lin g. Mrs . Mae
Sprncer.
Mr s.
· Goldi e
Frederic k, Mrs. Laura Mae
Nice , Mrs .' Betly Roush, Mrs.
Mabel Van Meter. Mrs. Ada

,.

'·I,

·II!IMON'M' DIUG PIIC:W

xu

the P" sl Coun cilor's Club of
Chester Council , Daughters of
All)Cri ca. Wednesday night.
Presiding at the meeting \\•as
Mrs. Mary Showalter. ll was
r epor ted that Mrs . Sattie
'Ji·ussell is hospita lized and
cnrds wer ~ signed fur her .
Members dis cussed their
Easter re membrances for the

'Morns. Mrs. Ma;y Jo Pooler.
Mrs. Zona Riggs, Mrs. IXtruthy
Law_so n.
Mrs .
Hatti e
~'rederic k. 'Mrs. Leth1,1 W.oods.
Mrs . Pauline Hid en our, and
Mrs.
Elizabeth
guests.
Wickham, )Mrs . Li lliun Frost
and John Pairlenour .

CREAM STICK
or ROLL-ON

SEE ANY OF
THE PAGE
COUNTRY
GENTLEMEN

' 211M;.

Mr ~. Pa.ul irw sh ut-ins and lone ly residents .
Ridenour hosted a meeting of
Games were played: ' Mrs.
CHESTER -

AND MANY OTHER
PRIZES

I,

PilOte 992-5759

A Snow White and Seven
Dwarf theme was carried out
at the fifth birthda y observance Tuesday afternoon
honoring Amy Rochelle Satterfield, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Jack Satterfield.
The cake, as well as the
napkins and plates, carried out
the theme. Favors were party
hats, blowouts, airplanes ,
watches and sacks of candy.
Games were played with prizes
going ' to Cindy Riffle, Jill
Nease and Scott Hanning.
Mrs. Satterfield served cake
and ice cream to Mrs. Sandy
Hanning, Kim arid ScJtt, Mrs.
Ruth Ann Riffle and Cindy,
Mrs. Charlotte Hanning, Mrs.
Donna Nease, Jill and Travis,
Mrs. JUdy Crooks, Eddie, Jr. ,
Mrs. Nancy Collins and
Tommy, Mrs. Janet Downie
and Debbie, Mrs . Edie Zirkle
and Michele and Pammy.
Sending gifts were Greg,
Lori and Tricia Michael, Mrs.
C. H. Burt 311d Marjorie Burt.
Tuesday evening a family
party was held for Amy.

Weber . Mrs. Doris Koeni g.
Mrs .' Dorothy Ritchie . Mrs.
Cleland. Mrs . Opal Hollon.
Mrs. Esther Ridenour. Mrs. ·
Hattie Frederi~k. Mrs . Ada
Ne utzling. Mrs . Do rolt1y
Lawson , Mrs. Margaret Tuttl e.
Mrs. Ada Morns. Mr s.
Mr s. .
Elizabeln
Hayes,
Charlotte Grant , Mrs. A(Ia·
Bissell and Mrs. Belly Roush.

Past councilors meet

't,

"'ltr•CIIIA'IOII 01

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Homebuilders
have meeting

0V£R

REGISTER
FOR .
FREE
PONY

Observes
birthday

'

Baker Furniture

FRIDAY
REVIVAL now ·in progress at
Laurel Cliff Free Methodist
Church, 7:30 nightly thro ugh
Sunday . Sunday se rvices at
9:30 a.m. The Rev. James
Perry, evangelist. Youth of the
church in charge of services.
SIGN-UP Pee Wee Li ttle
League in the Letart Falls area
at 7:30p.m. at Let 0rt school.
Parents urged to attend .

,

D of A has meeting

lETART FALLS - The W1lh You by Betty S~tveley ;
J.e~rt Falls United Methodist · "Sacred Flower" by · Robin
Church held its fellow ship Hill; "The Last Supper'.' by
dinner at the community hall Don Bell ; " It 's Easter Morn "
Saturday night. The hal[, was by M~r~, Hill ; ·:The Legend of
de cor.aled with the table s the Ins by LOJs Bell.
The children recited their
arranged in the shape of a
cross which were decorated Easter p~eces4!nd sang songs.
with arrangements of live
The group en joyed an old
flowers .
fa shioned hymn sing. "In the
Mary Loui se Shuler was Garden" was sung by Cathi
program leader for thi s month Wood .
with Carla Shuler at the piano.
The Lord's Prayer was
Scripture, Ma lt. 28:1-10 was prayed in unison~
read by the Rev . Howard
Those attending were John,
Shiveley.
Erma and Linda Hill, Bob,
Readings induded "God Be Calhi, Teri, Pat and MQnte
Wood , Cecil, Marlene, Terri
and Robin Hill, Roger, Jane
Ann and Scott Hill, Mary
the-birth of a son, Shawn Paul, Louise, Ernet, T~rri Shuler,
Mar c~ 28 at the Holzer Medica l Howa rd and Betty Shiveley,
Center. The baby weighed 7 Coulte r a nd Elsie Shuler., ·
lbs., 15 ozs. Maternal grand - Ernes t Clark , Paul Beegle,
parents are Mr. and Mrs. In ez Hill, David, ·Carla and
Charles Bissell, Rt. I, Long Heather Shuler, Don , Mary;
Bottom, and the paternal Heath and Carissa Hill, Don
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. and Lois· Bell.
The dinner is held every
Virgil Pri ce, Rt. I, Lon g
Bottom . Mrs. Maude ·work- second Saturday of the month.
man, Madison, W. Va .. is a Everyone in the community is
paternal great-grandm other . welcome.

~hapter of Alpha Delta Kappa

Ogdin, 84, April 14, and his
wife, Anna Ogdin, 79, April 10,
were observed Easter Sunday
with a dinner party at their Rl.
I, Rutland, residence.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Emmett McCaskey , Mrs. Betty
Oliver, Vincent and Randy
Oliver, Rl. I, Rutland; John
While, Circleville; Hurley
SATURDAY
Hutton, Dexter; Mr. and Mrs.
EASTERN BAND Banquet 7
Walter Swett, Mr. and Mrs.
at Eastern High School.
p.m.
Everett Hutton, Gary and
Band
members, parents and
David, Rt. 3. Albany . AI·
ternoon visitors were Mr. and friends are invited. Riverview
Mrs. Lloyd · Peyto n and area to furnish dessert, Tuppers Plains area vegel2bles,
daughter , Rl. I, Dexter.
Chester area salads with the
HOSTS FRIENDS
band booster to fur nish the
SYRACUSE _ Mrs. Roy balance of the meal. Please
Winebrenner enter tai ned at bring serving spoons. There is
her Syracuse home Sunday. no admission.
Her guests were Mrs. Harold ·
SUNDAY
Weaver, daughter , Peggy, St.
"YATHUBHUTH A" singing
Louisville; Mr. and Mrs. Garry gro.up from Toledo at Heath
French, Chip and Andy, U~tted Melhodtst Church,
Columbus; Mr . ail d Mrs. Middleport, 2:30 to 5 p.m. w1th
William G. Winebrenner, Mary dmner to follow. Admission is
Ann,PaulaandBecky,andMr. 75 cents in advance and $1 at
and Mrs. Thomas Weaver and the door. For tickets in adChris. Svracuse.
vance conl2ct the Rev . Steve

WILSON .TENNIS
RACKETS

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i .::. !he Daily Senfinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 .. April IH. 1~74

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'i ["' ' ' ' '·'soc'r~r &gt;· ,1~' Officers elected

Banquet
planned

cost wnes are very, Very~.., very · of lhe Middlepurl J&lt;, irs l Bapti st

old."
·
And their r productions. according to Winters, are very
good. "The acting level of the
company is, all in all, quite
high. The acting is irregular,
but the lead actors are reallv
brilliant _romedians.
·

ENJOY THE SPORT
OF TENNIS

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�6 - The Daily &amp;niinel. Middleport-J'&lt;&gt;mt·n&gt;J'. 0 .. April 18, 1974

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·'Rucfdigore·'
staged
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ATHENS - II Gilbert anri
Sullivan purists detect the
authentic stamp of the 'D'Oyly
· Carte Opera Company in the
forthcoming Ohio Universit v
Theater-Music School's joi~t
production of " Ruddigore ,"
director Robert Winters will
most likely be very pleased.
For, during his sabbatical in
England a few years ago,
Winters spent a great cteal of
time with the origina l Gilbert
and Sullivan
produci ng
company, talking with actors,
directors and musicians, and
gathering material for his own
production, playing · April 26
a nd
27
in
Memo rial
Auditorium .
• Winters, a member of the
School of Thea te r facultv
whose office walls ar~
decorated with 40-year-old
D'Oy ly Carte posters, talks
about his experience with the
company with great pleasure.
" They are just a bunch of
unpretentious singers and
actors and musicians,'' he says
of the opera company founded
over 100 years ago ,by producer
..-Richard D'Oyly Carte, lyricist
William S. Gilbert and composer Arthur Sullivan. "To this
day," Winters explains, ''they
exist $01ely for the purpose of
producing Gilbert and Sullivan
operettas."
Winters first met some of the
D'Oyly Carte people while he
was in London and began discussing their company, their
productions and their music
with them. He worked with
them; too, in Manchester, then
rejoined them in the English
resort city of Brighton, soaking
in as much of the expertise of a
strictly Gilbert and Sullivan
company that he could .
" Interestingl y enough,"
Winters relates, "Gilbert and
Sullivan did not get along well
at all. In fact, they didn 't even
speak to each other mainly
because Sullivan was resentful
that he had to write popular
music . Due to pressure· from
his friends, he thought he
should be a classical composer .''
Richard D'Oyley Carte, then,
came along as the catalyst
needed to keep\he two writers
together and writing. He was
the producer for all the shows,
Sullivan, the conductor, and
Gilbert, the director. Beginning with "Trial By Jury" in
1871 and ending in 1896· with
" The Grande Duke," th ey

wrote a total uf 14 npereltas.
" The company, noW run by

Bridget

D'Oyly

Carte,

prJ)duces the shows very much

the way they were dune
orig ina lly ," Winters says.
''Some of their scenery and

" And the vuites, '' Winters

adds, "are extraordinary.''
The time Winters spent with
the D'Oy ly Carle - watching
rehearsals I " It was great fun
to listen lo them work:");
talking shop with some of the 60
actors and dozen technica l
people; viewing the backstage
workings of the company
during production ; taking
slides of the casts and sets Winters must sorely regard as
invaluable as he mounts his
own production of the operetta.
" Ruddigore. "

Circle has
meeting
Plans for a cafeteria dinner
with proceeds to go to the
Pome r oy Fire Departmen t
were disc ussed during a
meeting of the Friendly Circle
of Trinity Church Tuesday

evening.
Mrs. Roy Mayer, Mrs.
Thomas Young and Mrs. David
Russell were appointed to the
ways and means committee
and will work with committees
of the Happy Harvesters Class
and the Busy Bees in finalizing
plans for the benefit . The
dinner will be served in the
church ·social room both
Friday and Saturday, May 17
and 18.
Also discussed during the
meeting,. conducted by Mrs.
Lawrence Stewa rt , was a
mother-daughter reception
May 10.
· ~~Momentous Decision" was
the program topic presented by
Mi ss· Elizabeth Fick and Miss
Mary Virginia Reibel. Mrs.
Young and Mrs. James Fugate
served a dessert course from a
table decorated in 'yell_ow with
a sp ring floral centerpeice.

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A mother-daughter. banquet
was planned lor May li at
meetings of the circles of th e B.
H. Sanbom Missionary Society

r I •d :r:
: : a en ar:;;
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Tf1UIISDAY
HOCK SPH JNc;s Be tter
Health Cluh, 1:15 p.m. home of

Mrs . George Skinner. Program

Church Tuesday ·nighl.
~l' Mrs. Wendell Jeffer s with
A potluck dinner preceded . the contest· by Mrs. William
the meetings . At the May Hadford.
meeting of the Sanborn Society
ME I GS
C HAp T E H
new officers will be elec ted and American Hed Cross 7:30 p.m.
new ehairwomen of the circles m c;lfctcria at Vetera ns
named.
Memoria l Hospital.
LOVE JOY CIRCLE
YOUNG · HEPUBI.lCAN
Love Joy Cir'Clc members Meeting 8 p:m. at Meig!:i Inn.
heanl a letter from Mrs. Roy Shinabery, represenl2tive
Lucin da Dain es . Columbus, sta te hea dquarters and Roger
expressing h,er appreciation Yurc huck , chairman Oh io
for ccrrespondem:e dw·ing.the Lea gue of Young Republican
year . It was noted that shut-ins Clubs will bepr~sent . All young
had been visited Easler. Smce Republicans -urged to attend .
the ci rcles ,.., ,·II be reorgan ·,zed
BRA
. DBUHY PTA Thursday
next month, the money in the at the school. Election and
trea:mry Was turned into the installation of new officers.
love gift for mission projects. Program hy the fo lk dance
ELECT A CIRCLE
class of students and reports by
Members of the EJecta Circle the children of the recent trip
voted to give the remainder of to Michigan.
money in their treasury to
HOCK Springs Grange, B
Barba1·a Anthony who will be p.m. a t th e ha11 .
repre se ntin g Ohio Baptist
MIDDLEPORT
ChJ id
Youth at th e international Conservation League, annual
conventio n in oregon this dinner, 6::!0 p.m. at the Meigs
summer. Children with birth- 1nn .
d~ys at the Meigs C,Sunty home .
E p 1s C 0 pAL C hurch
w11l be remembered.
Mrs.
John
Women , 12:30 · p.m. , Grace
.
Werner gave a report on Church parisH house . Mr. and
projects carried out during the Mrs.'Jerry Hilferly to speak on
year.
the Meigs County Museum .
DORCAS CIR CLE
Mrs. Nancy Reed and comThe Dorcas Circle members mittee to serve as hostesses.
CLASS 12, Heath United
divided the balance of their
money between the scholarshi p Methodist Church, 7:30 p.m.
girl and ' the special interest Members to model Easter
hats.
missionaries.
Attendin g the joint potluck
WOMEN'S
Auxiliary
dinner were Mrs. Milton Hood, Veterans Memorial Hospiwl ,
Mrs. Harold Hubbard, Mrs. 6 :.30 p.m. po tl uc k d.mn er.
James Brewer, Mrs. Dale Meeting to follow . Reports on
Walburn , Mrs. Tony Fowler, confere nce held in Cincinnati
Mrs. Arland King and to be given.
CRUSADE R'evival now in
daughter , Marsha, Mrs. Ethel
Hughes, Mrs. Louise Skaggs . progress through Friday at
Miss Rhoda Hall, Mrs . Richard . Syracuse Asbury Uni ted
Owen , Mrs. David Darst, Mrs. Method ist Church 7;30 p.m.
Fr ed Lewis , Mrs . Beulah nightly . Sponsored by all
White. Mrs. Bert Bodimer, chur ches in community.
Mrs . Fielding Hawkins, Mrs. Pastors from participating
John Werner, Mrs. Will is c hur c ~ es will speak each
Anthony, Miss Judy Owen, ·· evening.
Mrs . Leora Sigman, Mrs.
REVIVAL at First Church of
Manning Kloes, Mrs. Elizabeth God Syracuse, now in progress
Slavin , Mrs. Eloise Wilson, through Saturday 7:30 p.m.
Mrs. Char les Edwards and nightly. Special singing group
Mrs. Charles Searles.
Tuesday
evening
from
Gallipolis. Singing each
evening.
TWIN CITY Shrine Club,
7:30 p.m. at club house in
_Radne . Refreshments.

Celebrate
birthdays

RUTLAND - T\le birthday

anniversaries o£ Clarence

E~~c'cn Butk

Si11;ned by

STAN SMITH
BILLIE JEAN KING
JACK KRAMER
CHRIS EVERT

Also
Wilson Championship Optic Yellow
Extra Duty

TENNIS BALLS

MIDDLEPORT DEPT. STORE
MI~DLEPORT, 0.

Fellowship din_ne~. beld .

was

~lc&lt;.:~ed

Huck, MaXine

Winge~t, ., Firn

p_res Jden l of Alph;&gt; LrsJion C Gaul , .Jean Alkire, and Edna
Pnce.
I ~~~::;day ( ngl!l i.l t lh e ~c1 gs
Next meeting wa~ set for
Hi gh S&lt;;Jllt(Jl l,Jbrary .
~·
May 28 with a dinner at Crow's
Other of! Jeer s named for the Steak. House to precede in1974 ·75 year were Marlene slallati on of the officers and a
F'is,her, vice president ; A~zTw ineeting, in the Meigs Hi ~ h
Looks.
co rre s pon~lllg School . library . The · insecre tary' Jun e Lee, recording lernalional meeting at !Jls
sec retary; Helen Sm ith , Angeles in 1975 was announced.
chaplain; Nonga Rohe~·ts, Devotion s were by Mrs.
treasurer; Ida DJelil, hJstonan . Sw,11ckhainer.
and Daisy Blakeslee, sergeant
Ruth Stearns ga : ~ the
at arms.
program on Ohio entertainers
Plans were made for at- using a quiz show formal with
tending the state convention Mrs . Price, Mrs. Swackhamer,
May 3-5 allhc Imperial House, Mrs. Nonga Roberts , Mrs .
Columbus . The Friday and Fran ces
Hobcrls,
Mrs .
S&lt;:~tw·day even ing reception s Blakes lee, Mrs. Fisher and
will be hosted by local chapter Mrs. Buck as Con testants.
mcm!Jcrs. Attending from the
Mrs . Wing ett ·served a
chapter will be Miss Smith, dessert course.
J.ucille Swackhamer ' Mrs.
Roberts. Mrs . Fisher, Mrs.

SON BORN
Wilson at 949-2120 or the Rev. · .
LONG BOTTOM - Mr. and
Bill Sydenstricker at 992-3317 .
Mrs.
Henry Paul Pri ce, Rt. I,
All ages welcome.
Long Bottom , are announcing
DR. SYLVESTER Pratt of
Sierr a Leone, West Africa, will .
be guest speaker at 7:30p.m. at
the Ml. Hermon Uni ted
Brethren in Christ Church.
SLdes will be shown . Everyone
is invited to attend .
WEEK END Preaching
Saturday and Sunday at Red
Bush Churc h of Christ
Saturday at 8 p.m. and Sunday
at 10 a.m. Denver Hill, Fo.ster,
W. Va., will be guest speaker.
Everyone welcome.
MONDAY
SOUTHERN
Athlet ic
Boosters 7:30p.m. at the high
school.
TUESDAY
RACINE American Legion
Auxiliary at Legion Hall at 7:30
p.m.

CHESTER
Several
members were reported ill
during a meeting of Chester
Council 323, · Daughters of
America , Tuesday night at the
hall.
.Mrs . 'Sadie Trussell remains
hospitalized, and Mrs. Letha
Wood and Mrs. Ada Van Meter
are confined to their homes.
Mrs. Leona Hensley thanked
the council for cards and gifts
het
recent
during
ho sp it~lization . Mrs. Erma
Cleland, councilor, presided at .
the meeting when a final
practice
was
held
in
preparation for the District 13
rally today in Gallipolis.
Attending the meeting were
Mrs. Mary Showalter, Mrs.
Inzy Newell, Mrs. Marci•
~ller, Mrs. Leona Hensley,
Mrs. Goldie Frederick, Mrs.
Pat Thomas, Mrs. Zona Biggs,
Mrs . Doris Grueser, Mrs .
Mabel Van Meier, Mrs. Mary
Jo Pooler, Mrs. Mary K.
Holter, Mrs. Thelma White,
Mrs. Ethel Orr, ·Mrs. Zelda

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FLEXSTEEC
... the longer you own it

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the more you'll like the name

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Middleport, Ohio

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AGE CHEVROLET
BRINGS YOU

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"COUNTRY
SALE TIME"

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COMING APRIL 19th THRU 20th

uve . en'
t.n'ertomlfl

,.'

OLD FASHIONED PRICES
FARM TRUC~ SPECIAlS
PASSENGER CAR
SPECIALS
NEW CHEVROLETS

(oulllr~

Qond

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TRUCKS
TO

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CHOOS£
FROM

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PUPS&amp;

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HIGH HEEL,
PLATFORM STAX
FROM~1\tcAn_

ANYTHING
IF lltl WALK, CRAWL
OR FLY ON OUR
LOT
WE'LL TAKE
IT .ON TRADE

HURRY WHILE WE HAVE
A GOOD SELECTION
:!.
IN THI S STYLE.

.·

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REGISTER
FOR
FREE
PONY

WE'LL TRADE FOR

AND MANY
OTHER PRIZES

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No Pl.!rd\Oie ~e(·e~scu~ ' o~d no
obligation

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. Your Thom Mc·An Store
MIDQLEPQRT, OHIO
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STAY
FREE

PADS

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. SCOPE

BABY
SHAMPOO

PADS

JO 's

·nwse present were : Tim
Hill, Debbie Harden, Molly
Fisher, Paul Cross, Gene
Shiveley and Bill Shiv2ley.
The · last breakfast of the
sc hool year will be held next
Wednesday and all i ighth
grade students , as well as all
Sout hern High School students
are invited and encouraged to
attend .

NESTLE

MAXI

Super Size
24 oz .

16 oz .

30's

$2.05 Value

$1.25 Value

1:

USTERINE
....... .
~

'"~""'

........ ..
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RIVAL

REMINGTON
600 SUPER

3¥2 QT..CROCK

HANO ~ HELO

The Newest Way to lOOKI
Slow electric cooking in
genu ine stoneware. Coo~ s
sl owly up to 12 'hours on
safe 70 - 1&lt;10 watts . Grea t for
stews, soups, chi li, roasts .
Heat · encircles entire pot.
no t jU st bottom .

STYLER DRYER

600 watts of power for
entire fam ily. 2 speed,
brush and 2 com b sty ling
a t tachments, · won' t
overhea t

Mode l JJ OO
$22 .50 Value

CLAIROL
MOISTURE

GAY LAWN
~::;;. FURNITURE

MAKE-UP
$1.75 Value
as~
I

WESTCLOX

BULLE EYE"
POCKET WATCH
11

00

NO. 777 CHAIR .... , ........ :: ~ • .Y.•.'."~... •2.99
NO. 377 CHAISE LOUNGE ~ ~~-~~.~?!~••7.99

S4.98 VALUE

SHULTON SU
SPECIALS
Blue Jeans
De.sert Flower
Wild Meadow
Fragrances

ELECTRIC ALARM
Buz zer Alarm

Cologne Mist : Splash Cologne
Ousting Powder

•1.50

ShaHerproof Crystal

, $5.98 Value

e~ch

TUSSY

Proctor Silex

DEODORANT
SALEJ

Slide Color Control

Super Smooth
Shave

$13 .95
Val.ue

6 oz.

rl

SPRAY

79~
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Turner,
Gary and Sandy, ~d ·Travis
Gracely, Bucyrus, were
weekend guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Joe Turner and Connie

OLD
SPICE

2 SLICE TOASTER

59~

$1.00
.

Value .

WINDEX

FEMININE
DRY-MIST

GLASS

•159

CLEANER

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Our Love. " ffl ev. Howard
Shiveley led in prayer. made
annoWlcemen ts, and sho wCd a
film strip tilled , "Youth Can ·
Witness."
Breakfast was prepared by
Mrs . Curtis JohnsOn. and Mrs.
Howard Shiveley and consisted
Whaley , were Easter guests of · of scrambled eggs, ba con.
Mr. and Mrs. Ka,l Gruese r, blu eberry muffin s, toast,
orange juice and coffee.
Forest Hun Rd .

Fruit of the Loom

20 oz .

.PANTY HOSE

59c Value

Sandal Foot
Sheer to the Waist

'I

39~

No. 1301
Reg . 79c a pair

CAN CARE

Insecticide
Deodorant
$1.49 Value

99~

SWEET 'N LOW
•
100
B9c

Packs
Value

. .:ffi.

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RAC INE - Prayer breakfa s t wa ~ . held at Radn e
Wesleyan Un,ited ,Methodi st
Church Wednesday morn ing .
The group sang "They Will
Know We Are Chri stians By

REE

Anti -Stain
Antiperspirant
Unscented
5 oz.
$1.25 Value

Deferg e!lt
Giant Size
98c Va lu e

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GUESTS HERE
Mr . and ~rs . Patrick Quinn
and children, Cindy and Pat.
Columbus, Mr . and Mrs .
Robert Grueser, daughter.
Kim, Caldwell, and Mrs . Welby

Racine prayer breakfast held

MINI

'·

·heritage _hou~e
-

TIDE

Mr. and Mrs. John Bowman
daughter, Miss Susan
'and
'•
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Bowman,
Pataskla, Mrs. John
'•
'· Goodrich, Dayton, and Mr. and
'·'• Mrs . Pau.I Winebrenner,
•, ' Colwnbus, were East~r guests
::
of Mr. and Mrs. Karl Owens.
•,
Mr . and Mrs . Charles
••
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Bradbury, Mary Bradbury and
::
·Mrs. Carl Wolfe and daughters,
~
Wendy and Tricia, were Easter,
"
•visitors ·of Mr. ~nd Mrs. Asa
~
~Bradbury and daughter,
~
, N~cole, Circleville. The second
•I , birthday anniversary of Nicole .
~ . . was observed. The .family was
,, joined there by Pat ·O'Brien.
Mr. and Mrs. C. p , Bradbury
'·
have returned home following ·
,. a winter in Petersbutg,_,;:!!l,.
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RIGHT
·GUARD

The Homebuilders Class of
the Middleport Church of
Christ meeting Tuesday night
at the church agreed to purchase three mattress covers
for beds at the Ohio Valley
Christian Assembly Camp,
Darwin .
The class also made
arrangements to check cost on
the installation of carpeting in
the hallway and in several
classrooms. A wiener roast
was set for June 18 \vith
Lawrence Stewart to check
possible use of the Kyger Park.
Devotions were given by
Mrs. Denver Rice ·and Mrs .
Carl Roach . Mrs. Rice read "I
Shall Not Want" from "Tiie
Leaves of God", and Mrs.
Roach read "Easter, Time of
.Hope 11 •·
Refreshments were served
by Mrs . Rice and Mrs. Roach
to Ed Evans, Mr. and Mrs. Bud
Wilson, Mrs . William Grueser,
Mrs. Raymond Cole, Mr,. and
Mrs. Lawrence Stewart, Mrs.
Coleen Van Meter and Mr . and
Mrs. Hennan Kincaid .

See.

TO ALL GRADS

I

Valuable Coupon

'••

cALl ROADS
LEAD TO _PAG£ CHlVROlfT
YOUR KIND OF
DEALER FOR
THE ENTIR£

20% OFF

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Dorothy Myers won the door
prize . C~ke and ice c r~am were
se rved by Mrs. Ridenour to
tho~e nam~d ;md Mrs. 'Enna
Cle land , Mrs . Ethel Orr , Mr s.
Ada Neutz lin g. Mrs . Mae
Sprncer.
Mr s.
· Goldi e
Frederic k, Mrs. Laura Mae
Nice , Mrs .' Betly Roush, Mrs.
Mabel Van Meter. Mrs. Ada

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·II!IMON'M' DIUG PIIC:W

xu

the P" sl Coun cilor's Club of
Chester Council , Daughters of
All)Cri ca. Wednesday night.
Presiding at the meeting \\•as
Mrs. Mary Showalter. ll was
r epor ted that Mrs . Sattie
'Ji·ussell is hospita lized and
cnrds wer ~ signed fur her .
Members dis cussed their
Easter re membrances for the

'Morns. Mrs. Ma;y Jo Pooler.
Mrs. Zona Riggs, Mrs. IXtruthy
Law_so n.
Mrs .
Hatti e
~'rederic k. 'Mrs. Leth1,1 W.oods.
Mrs . Pauline Hid en our, and
Mrs.
Elizabeth
guests.
Wickham, )Mrs . Li lliun Frost
and John Pairlenour .

CREAM STICK
or ROLL-ON

SEE ANY OF
THE PAGE
COUNTRY
GENTLEMEN

' 211M;.

Mr ~. Pa.ul irw sh ut-ins and lone ly residents .
Ridenour hosted a meeting of
Games were played: ' Mrs.
CHESTER -

AND MANY OTHER
PRIZES

I,

PilOte 992-5759

A Snow White and Seven
Dwarf theme was carried out
at the fifth birthda y observance Tuesday afternoon
honoring Amy Rochelle Satterfield, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Jack Satterfield.
The cake, as well as the
napkins and plates, carried out
the theme. Favors were party
hats, blowouts, airplanes ,
watches and sacks of candy.
Games were played with prizes
going ' to Cindy Riffle, Jill
Nease and Scott Hanning.
Mrs. Satterfield served cake
and ice cream to Mrs. Sandy
Hanning, Kim arid ScJtt, Mrs.
Ruth Ann Riffle and Cindy,
Mrs. Charlotte Hanning, Mrs.
Donna Nease, Jill and Travis,
Mrs. JUdy Crooks, Eddie, Jr. ,
Mrs. Nancy Collins and
Tommy, Mrs. Janet Downie
and Debbie, Mrs . Edie Zirkle
and Michele and Pammy.
Sending gifts were Greg,
Lori and Tricia Michael, Mrs.
C. H. Burt 311d Marjorie Burt.
Tuesday evening a family
party was held for Amy.

Weber . Mrs. Doris Koeni g.
Mrs .' Dorothy Ritchie . Mrs.
Cleland. Mrs . Opal Hollon.
Mrs. Esther Ridenour. Mrs. ·
Hattie Frederi~k. Mrs . Ada
Ne utzling. Mrs . Do rolt1y
Lawson , Mrs. Margaret Tuttl e.
Mrs. Ada Morns. Mr s.
Mr s. .
Elizabeln
Hayes,
Charlotte Grant , Mrs. A(Ia·
Bissell and Mrs. Belly Roush.

Past councilors meet

't,

"'ltr•CIIIA'IOII 01

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Homebuilders
have meeting

0V£R

REGISTER
FOR .
FREE
PONY

Observes
birthday

'

Baker Furniture

FRIDAY
REVIVAL now ·in progress at
Laurel Cliff Free Methodist
Church, 7:30 nightly thro ugh
Sunday . Sunday se rvices at
9:30 a.m. The Rev. James
Perry, evangelist. Youth of the
church in charge of services.
SIGN-UP Pee Wee Li ttle
League in the Letart Falls area
at 7:30p.m. at Let 0rt school.
Parents urged to attend .

,

D of A has meeting

lETART FALLS - The W1lh You by Betty S~tveley ;
J.e~rt Falls United Methodist · "Sacred Flower" by · Robin
Church held its fellow ship Hill; "The Last Supper'.' by
dinner at the community hall Don Bell ; " It 's Easter Morn "
Saturday night. The hal[, was by M~r~, Hill ; ·:The Legend of
de cor.aled with the table s the Ins by LOJs Bell.
The children recited their
arranged in the shape of a
cross which were decorated Easter p~eces4!nd sang songs.
with arrangements of live
The group en joyed an old
flowers .
fa shioned hymn sing. "In the
Mary Loui se Shuler was Garden" was sung by Cathi
program leader for thi s month Wood .
with Carla Shuler at the piano.
The Lord's Prayer was
Scripture, Ma lt. 28:1-10 was prayed in unison~
read by the Rev . Howard
Those attending were John,
Shiveley.
Erma and Linda Hill, Bob,
Readings induded "God Be Calhi, Teri, Pat and MQnte
Wood , Cecil, Marlene, Terri
and Robin Hill, Roger, Jane
Ann and Scott Hill, Mary
the-birth of a son, Shawn Paul, Louise, Ernet, T~rri Shuler,
Mar c~ 28 at the Holzer Medica l Howa rd and Betty Shiveley,
Center. The baby weighed 7 Coulte r a nd Elsie Shuler., ·
lbs., 15 ozs. Maternal grand - Ernes t Clark , Paul Beegle,
parents are Mr. and Mrs. In ez Hill, David, ·Carla and
Charles Bissell, Rt. I, Long Heather Shuler, Don , Mary;
Bottom, and the paternal Heath and Carissa Hill, Don
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. and Lois· Bell.
The dinner is held every
Virgil Pri ce, Rt. I, Lon g
Bottom . Mrs. Maude ·work- second Saturday of the month.
man, Madison, W. Va .. is a Everyone in the community is
paternal great-grandm other . welcome.

~hapter of Alpha Delta Kappa

Ogdin, 84, April 14, and his
wife, Anna Ogdin, 79, April 10,
were observed Easter Sunday
with a dinner party at their Rl.
I, Rutland, residence.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Emmett McCaskey , Mrs. Betty
Oliver, Vincent and Randy
Oliver, Rl. I, Rutland; John
While, Circleville; Hurley
SATURDAY
Hutton, Dexter; Mr. and Mrs.
EASTERN BAND Banquet 7
Walter Swett, Mr. and Mrs.
at Eastern High School.
p.m.
Everett Hutton, Gary and
Band
members, parents and
David, Rt. 3. Albany . AI·
ternoon visitors were Mr. and friends are invited. Riverview
Mrs. Lloyd · Peyto n and area to furnish dessert, Tuppers Plains area vegel2bles,
daughter , Rl. I, Dexter.
Chester area salads with the
HOSTS FRIENDS
band booster to fur nish the
SYRACUSE _ Mrs. Roy balance of the meal. Please
Winebrenner enter tai ned at bring serving spoons. There is
her Syracuse home Sunday. no admission.
Her guests were Mrs. Harold ·
SUNDAY
Weaver, daughter , Peggy, St.
"YATHUBHUTH A" singing
Louisville; Mr. and Mrs. Garry gro.up from Toledo at Heath
French, Chip and Andy, U~tted Melhodtst Church,
Columbus; Mr . ail d Mrs. Middleport, 2:30 to 5 p.m. w1th
William G. Winebrenner, Mary dmner to follow. Admission is
Ann,PaulaandBecky,andMr. 75 cents in advance and $1 at
and Mrs. Thomas Weaver and the door. For tickets in adChris. Svracuse.
vance conl2ct the Rev . Steve

WILSON .TENNIS
RACKETS

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i .::. !he Daily Senfinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 .. April IH. 1~74

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'i ["' ' ' ' '·'soc'r~r &gt;· ,1~' Officers elected

Banquet
planned

cost wnes are very, Very~.., very · of lhe Middlepurl J&lt;, irs l Bapti st

old."
·
And their r productions. according to Winters, are very
good. "The acting level of the
company is, all in all, quite
high. The acting is irregular,
but the lead actors are reallv
brilliant _romedians.
·

ENJOY THE SPORT
OF TENNIS

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~~1*1~t:~;~;~*~§~~I~~~~i!~iiilil]~;i:~:~fl!f;l:~~=i:;:~:~j~:~;~:;;Jii;l;~~iii;;;~;;~~;f:~~i!lllll!!~ji!~j~~~;r:~:m~~~m;~~i~~!·

Budget increase
of $40,000 noted

Struis swears to irmocense ·
NEW VOKK 1UP II -

l'urmer t:ommer('e Sefrelary

"
was . passed supporting the were Frank
Vaughan, ComState's decision to pay !or rna·ndcr. George Nesselroad,
counse l defendin g Natio na l

He Hally derued I hat he had' consplr&lt;-d with forme~ AllonJey General John N. Mitchell to impede a federal iuvesLigation of the international financier Jn return ror a
$200 oeo cash contribution by Vesco lo the 1972 Nixon cam·
palg'n. He also denied lying to the grand jury that indl~ted the
1wo former Nixon cabinet members.

GAL!JPOLIS - A $40,000 ment' of the patients dur ing the
increase in the total budget of . time that a new location is
the Community Menk1 l Health qeing located for the Clinic.
and Mental Retardation Board Meigs County has a ca:;e load
was announced for the fiscal of a pproximately one hundred
year 1975 during a meeting of fifty ( 150) patients.
the board Monday .
The Center Board has been
The new budget totals look ing for Clinic space in
$223,317 and is designed to Pomeroy or Middleport for ·
provide mental
health several months and at the
professional staff and services present time is negotiating for
" including psychiatrists, mental space. The Clini c will be
health technicians, social staffed and open every d~y
workers and other staff to the when suitable space is located.
three county area served by
The Board made a refommendation that the District •
the board.
The meeting was conducted Manager of the Department of
by Dr. G. Wilson Bowers, Mental Health and Mental
chairman of the board.
Retardation for this area, have
Dr.
Bernard
Niehm, full responsibility for review
chair man of the personnel and fundin g of the Community
committee, gave a report for Plan for Fiscal Year 1975.
his committee which included
Dr. Roger M. Gove was a
recommendations on sta,ff guest of the Board. Dr. Gove
classifications. There was a rece ntly reti red as Cernlengthy discussion on the missioner or 'the Division . of
refusal from Don Diener , Mental Re'tardation and
Administrator of Vetera ns Developmental Disabilities for
Memorial Hospital, that space . Ohio.
for the Mental Health Clinic
The next regu lar meeting
was no longer available at the will be a dinner meeting May
hospital . The ~taff and Board 20, 1974.
'. ·
was concerned about treat-

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Atl d.
th e district
Memorial Day observances.
en mg
he re were planned , a resolution mee tinu frorri the local post

anyunr tu do anything lo help Robert. Vesco. u

Guardsmen indicted in the •

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: Parade of Values
· Reg. 99c pr . Ultrasheer Panty Hose__2 pr. 99c
Reg. $1.39 Wintul&lt; Knitting Worsted
97c
Reg. 79c Plastic Housewares
any 2 tor $1.00
Reg. 39c 80 Totem Sandwich Bags
18c pkg.
Sell Stacking Shoe Boxes
3 lor 99c
Reg. $3.99 Trash Cans, 20 gal.
$1.92
Reg . $4.69 Honiecrest Latex Wall Paint--S2 .97
gal.
Reg . $1.77 Storage Chests; _ _ _ _ _ _ $1.17
Reg . 69c up Paint Brushes
S7c
Easy Grip Sponges
44c
Reg . 98c. Rubbermaid Shelf Liner
84c
Reg. $1.49 Avery L~bel Makers
88c
Refill Tapes - 77c
·
Reg . 89c Nylon Rug &amp; Craft Yarn - - - 67c
Reg . 97c Liquid Plumr, 32-o!. _ _ _ _ _ 68c

Uni versity

campus

.

O.allie Greer died Wednesday

Skating against Cancer

scheduled on April 21st

Cantata to be

given Sunday

: &amp;1~.~~-P.g'-".~~~,~~Y~~~J!t.~~::JNG ~J!!
BEN~FRANK~IW
PHONE
200-202 East Matll St.
992-3498

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POMEROY, OHIO

OPEN FRtOAY&amp;SATURDAY NtGHTSTILf

.........

Use Our Convenient Lav-fi.:Wav Plan .

............... ....-~-·~·~·,...·~.,.

Eddy's schedule·

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~%gr~~ h~:n~~ne wt~o a2~~~

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POMEROY
PASTRY

services.

Speaker for the post will be
Chet Stellar, a past department .
commander. The Legion will
go to Beech Grove Cemetery
for brief services and to
Chester in the afternoon.
The post approved a
resolution in support of the
state providing legal support
for the National Guardsmen
involved in the Kent State
deaths. The resolution sta ted
the National Guard shouid
receive such support since it
has a duty to protect life and
property whether it · be from
flood or tornado or from civil
uprisings which threaten state
property or lives.
The resolution also said·,
however, that it does not
condone the shootings.
The post will sponsor a profootball tour to Cincinnati on

MAIN ST. POMEROY, o1
WEEKEND
II
SPECIAL

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FRI. &amp; SAT.,
APRIL 19-20

BANANA
LOAF CAKE
REG. 89' .

I ONLY
L
___49~
._

(3«4~-~ 1Jtade
For

MOTHER

Drivers

.

Rin9 Style
No. qo

Set with rad iant birthstones-one stone for
each . member of the
family .
In preeious lOki. yellow
. or white gold. ·

,....
$3.00 ~dditi Gna l
for eaeh
birthstone

'

GOESSLER'S JEWELRY STORE
Pomeroy

Court St.

With or without an embargo the world has
a fuel crisis.
Because the world supply of oil' and gas which we depend on today for so much of
our energy-is limited.
We can't go blithely along thinking that we
' can use oil and gas the way we have.

BETTY OHLINGER
POMEROY, OHIO

or that the world has an endless supply of
oil and gas. They must be conserved to do
·the jobs only they can do.
. We are depending upon oil and gas to do
too m11ny things . .

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PHILCO 19" diagonal
Port~ble Color TV

lOLA

85% solid staie chassis • 70-position "Channel-Set"

UHF selector for iast, positive selection of any ·70
possible UHF channels • Memory-Matic Vf-IF pres.e t
fine tuning • Solid state signal and sound systems ·
, Cosmetic Color Circuit • Dipole VHF; lo'op UHF an tennas • Beige ca binet
•

.

Only •299

FO~EMAN
&gt;

95

&amp;·ABBOTT
&lt;}

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America is lucky. We own half the world's
known supply of coal. All we have to do is
dig it and put it to worl&lt;.

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Coal and electricity generated by coalused wisely, not wasted - is the most
sensible answer to the fuel and energy crisis.

With it we can generate electricity that can
take the place of precious oil and gas
' '
m
so many ways.,
.

And that's no baloney!

But all that coal can't be used properly and·
fully ~riless our representatives begin to act:

America has more coal
than the Middle fast
has oil. Let's dig It!

1. To amend the Clean Air Act so that
more of our coals can be burned.

2. . Release the vast reserves of U.S.
government-owned low sulfur coal
· in the west.

·~

BEAUTY SALON
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NOW OPEN

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IN SYRACUSE

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How do we get out.of this box? We dig our
way out. Literally.

Ohio Power Company

Call It a' clog .. or a sandil ... or just a slip.on. However you
ca ll it , it's th e Clsual everyone loves! Under it all is. a crepe
sole with bounce·ability, foll owed by a wedge of cork •
Uptop , !1Verall woven l eatne~ comfort.
White or caine!

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Na~!lW &amp; Medium Widths

Tbll adverl:llezi,ent prepared by

· . Byrne, 'Slattery, E~1, Inc.

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A vital part of the 7-state American Electric Power System.

PHONE 992..2549

', .MJPDLEPORT, 0. ·

I

Together they .represent only ·5% of our ·
nation's energy sources. Yet we're making

The State of Ohio and the booklets will be issued with all possible dispatch.
Ohio Blue Cross and · Blue I
Shield Plans announced this
week the way has been cleared
~s
to permit the Plans to assume
'the health and hospitalization
program 'tor ~tate employees
beginning May 1· and running
through June 30, 1975.
· The Blue Cross &amp; Blue Shield
benefits will be identical to
those presently in effect. While
lola's Beauty Salon, your Merle Norman
the coot will be slightly higher
Cos metic Studio, is now open in Syracuse,
to the state as the result of the
0 .. at the CORNER OF JOHN &amp; MAY
difference between the two
STREETS, close to Syracuse Grade
bids, the employees' share qf
School..
the cost for this outstanding
health benefit package will
Oper.ators : lola D~ "i'ewood &amp; ~aren Lyon s
remain the ~me .
About 44,000 of the state 's
·./
56,000 tql&lt;!J employe~s ·were
•.
enrolled .in the program . New
identifica ti on ca rd ~ and herierit

With coal representing nearly 90% of our
fossil fuel resources and abundant enough
to fill our energy needs for abbut .500 years,
aren't we foolish if we don't put it to work?

that 5% fulfill over 75% of our need s.

The.oil embargo is ended . ·.. for now.
But the fuel crisis is as grave as ever.

_State employees ge~ Blue Cross
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time high this year withTh$88,686
being raised in. Ohio. is insures
rem embrancesd ror
,
servicemen confine
to
hospitals as well as orphans in
the sailors and soldiers
, homes
not only at Christmas-time but
year 'ro und . The Eighth
District of which Meigs County
posts are a part lead the state
with $7,774 raised .
Paul Casci, a member of
Drew Webster Post and state
department chairman of the
program, extended thanks to
the public for its support.
Refreshments were served by
vices.
• The Pomeroy Fire Depart- Paul Taylor.
men t and Emergency Squad
w(ll participate and other ~-groups are asked to ta k ~ part
in the parade and to attend the

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Nov. 24 !or the Bengel-Kansas
·
Ch 1 ·
City Chi ef game.
are s
swat ze.1 'w1'll· acce pL. rese
--- r vations.
h Gf
It was reported that t e i t

group at 7 ' 30 p. m.
All members were asked to
give blood to the bloodmobile
which will he at the Pomeroy
Elementary School on April 29
for Tom Ables who is a patient
at Unive rsity Hos pital '"
Columbus.
It was voted to sponsor Boy
Scout Troop 249 w1t· h th e t roop
t
to be responsi bl e to ·ptos
tr ustees for any act1v1 1es
requiring the use or th e pos t
home.
Memorial Day observance
activities will include services
at Hemlock Grove and Roc k
Springs ·on the Sunday
preceding Memorial Day . A
parade will be held in Pomeroy
at 9 a. m. on Memorial Day
moving to the Pomeroy Junior
High School for special ser-

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NOW IN PROGRESS

.f

~~~~~~~i~~n~:~~ t~~r~~:.s~~~

Paul easel·. Charles Swatzel,
'deaths. and reports or th e rl· nan ce · offl·cer, gave the
district conference at Murray quarterly rl·nancl' al report . A
City in Athens County on April meetl.ng of post trustees and
~;j;~~~~f~~~;~~~mliim~;~;~~;~;l;~;mm~;mt;~;~~~l;m;§mm;ili;ilif:;~ummr:~~m~~~m~~f:iml~;~l~~~lm~f:~ 7 were given Tu~sday . night past commanders was an; when Drew Webster Post 39, nounced for 'pril 30 with Roy
M
American Legion, met at the Reuter to serve dinner to the
post homP.
·
SYRACUSE - Challie G. (Geraldine) Clonch, Bremen.
Greer, 68 , College Rd ., Also surviving are a brother,
Syracuse , di ed Wednesday Doy~ll. Michigan ; five sisters,
afternoo n
at
Veterans Mrs . Stella Sizemore, MiamisMemorial Hospital foll owing a burg, Mrs . Clara Haines,
Detroit, Mi ch.. Mrs. Belva
short illness.
Greer was born June 11, 1905, Wright, Mayberry, Ky., Mrs.
at Byra , Ky., the son o! the late Alma Peterson and Mrs. Edna
Apri l 21 has been proclailfled Ca ncer Crusade, open skating
Morgan L. and Cosby Mullens Sizemore, both of Rutland ; 11· "Skate - Against - Ca ncer will be held at the Skate-A-Way
Greer. Mr. Greer had been a grandchildr en, six great- Sund ay" by Mrs . Brenda in Chester from 2~ p.m. with
coal miner and had worked gran childre n and se vera l Roush , Meigs County Chapte r free transportation provided.
·
with · the s tat e . hig hway nieces a nd nephews.
president of the Ameri can The skating rink 's bus will stop
Funeral se rvices will be held Cancer Society.
departmen t in Meigs County.
at Dutton 's Drug Store in
He was preceded in dea th by at 2 p.m. Saturday at the
As a par t of thi s year's Middlepor t at 1:30 p.m. and at
th ree brothers and two sisters. Rutland Church o! Christ with
the Blue &amp; Grey Restaurant in
He was marr ied to the for- John Wyatt and Keith Wise
Pomeroy at i:40p.m. The bus
mer ·Grace Sowards who officiating. Burial will he in
will make a return trip after 5
survives along with a son, Miles Cemetery . Friends may
p.m.
.
Lowell, Rt. 1, Long Bottom, call at the Walker Funeral
Thi! cos t ·of admission is $1
two daughters, Mrs. James S. Home after 2 p.m.· Friday until
without skates and 75 cents
(Daryl) John son, Rt. 4, 12:30 p.m. Saturday . The body
with skates. All proceeds will
Marie tta, and Mrs. Clyde will be taken to the church one
Hea th United Methodist go to the 1974 Cancer Crusade
hour before se rvices to lie in
under the co-chairmanship or
state. The family will receive Chur ch choir directed by Ben Mr. and Mrs. James Roush.
friends from 2 to 4and !rom 7 to Philson will present the can9 p.m. Friday at the funeral tata, " Easterlide" by David
1
Protheroe Sunday during the
ho)'Tie.
morning worship service.
Soloists are Martha Hoover,
.
April Fraser, Judy Fraser, Mr.
Mr . Eddy Educator's
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Chance of showers Sunday Philson, John Compton, and schedule for week of April 22
and Monday. Above normal Andrew Hoover . Laura through 26th in Meigs Coun.ty:
'
temperatures through the Hoover, Barbara Archer and
compete in the national
McKinney
make
up
an
alto
Jo
MONDAY
School
Lot, &amp;period with daytime highs in
tourney at the end of the
trio
and
the
Rev.
Robert
6:30 p.m.; Carpenter, . 6:40the 70s and upp er 60s.
summer.
Bumgarner has incidental 7:10; Wol! Pen, 8-8 :30.
Nighttime
lows
mostly
In
the
National little league offitenor solos. Newman Burdette
THURSDAY
Port50s.
cials are awaiting a decision on
is organist..
land Ele., 9: 30-11 a.m.; Port·
Miss King's court case before
land Community, 11 :15-11:30;
acting on a new Ypsilanti charRiverview Ele ., 12:45 - 2:15
ter application this year.
TWO ACCEPTED
p.m.; Reedsville, 2:30-3; Eden
Little league lawyer John
SUITFILED
RIO GRANDE - Barbara Church, 3:J0..4; Long Bottom,
Norris said the organization
Mildred E. Arnold, Rt. 2, Anthony. daughter of Mr . and
was only "seeking safety lor its Pomeroy, and Dores Arnold, Mrs. Gerald Anthony, Mid- 4:30-5 ; Stiversville, 5:30-9:30;
participants" in its no girl rule. same address, have filed suit dleport, and Miss Lori Seth, Grea t Bend, 7:30-&lt;i.
FRIDAY - Racine Ele., 10 He said he thought of the rule for damages in Meigs County daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
noon
; Southern, 12:30 - 1:30
not as ''sexual discrimination'' Common Pleas Court against Herbert Seth, Pomeroy, have
p.m.
;
Krogers Parking Lot, 4but as "sexual classification." Everett Calaway , Tuppers been accepted for enrollment
8.
Separation Of Sexes
Plains. The Arnolds claim that at Rio Grande College starting
Please return all overdues to
"In little league we're only Calaway failed to yield the the fall quarter of this year.
the
bookmobile or to the book·
ta'Iking about separation of the right of way in an Oct. 24, 1972 Miss Anthony is oriented
mobile
office. Appreciation is
sexes-for a few hours during a auto accident on SR 7 in toward elementary education,
extended (o Mrs. Charles Fick
few days of the year," he add· · Tuppers
Plains
which Miss Se th in the medical for
over 300 nice paper back ·
eil .
allegedly ca used head, neck Iaoorator y tec hni c ian books she dona ted to the bookNorris said tha t in the long and shoulder injuries to Mrs. program.
mobile.
ruri the no girl rule " is in the Arnold . The Arnolds seek ·
hest interest of all women ath- $45,000 in medical damages
letes."
and medical expenses.
ATTEND FUNERAL
"U We lose this case, that
Mrs. Laura Byers, Tanners
(Continued from page I l
means that boys and men must
Run; Mrs. Betty VanMeter and · avoid the police .
be allowed to compete in womMrs. Eunice Brinker attended
"They haven't done much
en's events of all sports," he
HOSPITAL CARE
the funeral of Rohert Lee changing," he ssid, "but their
figured. "What's that going to
XENIA, Ohio (UP!) - Be- VanMeter in Parkersburg, W. accident rate is also better."
do to women 's tennis?
tween $200,000 and $300,000 in Va. on Monday at the Franklin
As for how long Ohioans and
"If men came into the worn- free medical care given and Son Memorial Chapel. He
those
using the state's roaden's events in 01yn\pic compe- residents of Xenia after a was the son of the late Francis
tition, the women wouldn't tornado whipped through the VanMeter and gra ndson of ways will have to hold it down,
the answer is still up in the air,
even be able to qualify lor most city April 3, may inde!initely Mrs. Laura Byers.
One
official in Columbus said,
events hecause their times and delay Greene Memorial
"ask the politicians" and then
distances wouldn't match the Hospital's building program,
noted
that the current law
men ."
HermanN. Menapace, hospital
expires
on July 1, 1975.
Egnor called Norris' argu- administrator , said WedThe
end
could come sooner if
Veterans Memorial Hospital
ment ''a sexist viewpoint."
nesday. Menepace said no Admissions - Floyd Rupe, the gasoline shortage evapor"Who is to say what girls can
charges could be made for the
or can't do once they're freed hundreds or people given Dexter; Mildred Blevins , ates as quickly as it seemed to
from the dollhouse stereotype emergency treatment after the Pomeroy; Diana Hubbard , arrive. Then, no doubt, the
that they're now brought up tornado because "we don 't Pomeroy; Charl es Moore , bragging would turn away
under ," he said. "Who is to say even know most of th eir California, Ky .; George from miles per · gallon and
return once again to such
Clonch , Rutland .
that girls should he made names.''
American
staples as horDischarges - Tracey Mcsecond class citizens by not beMahon, Donna Co nnolly , sepower and engine dising allowed 1(/ compete openly
Marlene Smith, Randy Smith, placement.
with boys? "
Charles Jones, Mary Durst •.
Daniel Davidson .
Holzer Medical Center
NEW SUGGESTION
TAGDAYSET
(Discharges, April 17)
AUSTIN , Tex. (UPJ )
Cheerleaders of Meigs High
Kermit Adkins, Saundra Texas highway officials have
NUPTIALS SET
School will have tag day
Allman, Melissa l;handler , come up with a new suggestion
The open church wedding of Saturday on the streets of
Shirley Coburn, Sharon for alleviating the energy Miss Mary Jane Smith to
Middleport and Rutland.
Conger, Cecil Elliott, Myrl shortage - harnessing cow Joseph Allan McCarty will be
Gibbs, Amy Glassburn, Jane burps.
Friday , April 19 at th e
Glassburn, Rosia Hale, Gladys
Putting bovine burp power to Wesleyan Holiness Church
Haner, James Haskins, Edwin use, the APril issue of Texas instead Qf the Wiseman
Hixson, Arlene Hornsby, Okey Highways suggested , would Holiness Church as was
Howard, Kenneth Maynard, curb air pollution as well as previously announced. The
Mary McQuaid , Randy helping the nation's energy Rev. O'Dell Manley will read
·Montgomery , Judith Mora, problems.
l the vows .
Mrs . John Owens and son,
"Career ecologists have
William P~trey, Charles figured out that cows burp 50
REVIVAL BEGINS
Phillips, Jr. , Gene Reed, million tons of hydrocarbons
RUTLAND
Revival
Teresa Riley, Martha Robie, into the atmosphere every · services will hegin this evening
·Jeffrey Sayre, Hazel Sellers, year," the magazine said. at the First Baptist Church
Cora Sn'Jith , Genevieve "They have even calculated here and ruil through Sunday
Starcher , . James Sturgill, that 10 cows burp enough gas in at 7:30p.m. nightly. The Rev.
South Estil · Swann, William one year to prQvide all the Edward Buffington, pastor of
Tackett, Roma Walters, Betty space heating, water heating · Forest Ruil Baptist Church,
Webb,
John Wood, Thelma and cooking requirements for a will be the speaker. The public
I
small house."
Woodward.
is invited .
Kent

Landmark case expected in
girls playjng little league
CINCINNATI (UPI)- A law- case, but Egnor said the case
yer says he expects a "land- here was more important in
mark· and precedent-setting terms of setting a precedent.
decision" from a federal apEarlier Case Different
peals court on little league
"The New Jerlljly case was a
baseball's "no girls " ru.Je.
public accommodation case,"
The U.S. Sixth Circuit Court he said. "They decided it was
of Appeals - the highest court against the law to discriminate
yet to become involved in the in using public recreation
girls vs. little league struggle areas.
- heard oral arguments Wed"This is civil rights case.
nesday in the case of 13-yearold We allege ·violation of the 14th
Carolyn Ann King of Ypsilanti, Amendment - discrimination
Mich.
on the basis of sex. We think
Ronald Egnor, Miss King's sex discrimination should be
lawyer, said he anticipated the treated in the same manner as
nlllng from the three judge racial discrimination. "
panel to be a "landmark and
Although now too old to play
prccedent-oetting" decision for li ttle league baseball, Miss
. the country. The judges' deci- King participated last year for
" sion is not expecled for several a Ypsilanti team.
weeks.
But by allowing a girl to play
A New Jersey state appellate - a violation of national little
court recenUy ruled in favor of .league rules - the local league
a girl in another little league lost its charter and couldn't

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Memorial Day observances' planned
1

Maurice H. Staus tcstifii'd today that "ou my ualh I never did
anything to help Robert Vesco in any way and I never asked

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Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. April 18. J9iq·
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~~1*1~t:~;~;~*~§~~I~~~~i!~iiilil]~;i:~:~fl!f;l:~~=i:;:~:~j~:~;~:;;Jii;l;~~iii;;;~;;~~;f:~~i!lllll!!~ji!~j~~~;r:~:m~~~m;~~i~~!·

Budget increase
of $40,000 noted

Struis swears to irmocense ·
NEW VOKK 1UP II -

l'urmer t:ommer('e Sefrelary

"
was . passed supporting the were Frank
Vaughan, ComState's decision to pay !or rna·ndcr. George Nesselroad,
counse l defendin g Natio na l

He Hally derued I hat he had' consplr&lt;-d with forme~ AllonJey General John N. Mitchell to impede a federal iuvesLigation of the international financier Jn return ror a
$200 oeo cash contribution by Vesco lo the 1972 Nixon cam·
palg'n. He also denied lying to the grand jury that indl~ted the
1wo former Nixon cabinet members.

GAL!JPOLIS - A $40,000 ment' of the patients dur ing the
increase in the total budget of . time that a new location is
the Community Menk1 l Health qeing located for the Clinic.
and Mental Retardation Board Meigs County has a ca:;e load
was announced for the fiscal of a pproximately one hundred
year 1975 during a meeting of fifty ( 150) patients.
the board Monday .
The Center Board has been
The new budget totals look ing for Clinic space in
$223,317 and is designed to Pomeroy or Middleport for ·
provide mental
health several months and at the
professional staff and services present time is negotiating for
" including psychiatrists, mental space. The Clini c will be
health technicians, social staffed and open every d~y
workers and other staff to the when suitable space is located.
three county area served by
The Board made a refommendation that the District •
the board.
The meeting was conducted Manager of the Department of
by Dr. G. Wilson Bowers, Mental Health and Mental
chairman of the board.
Retardation for this area, have
Dr.
Bernard
Niehm, full responsibility for review
chair man of the personnel and fundin g of the Community
committee, gave a report for Plan for Fiscal Year 1975.
his committee which included
Dr. Roger M. Gove was a
recommendations on sta,ff guest of the Board. Dr. Gove
classifications. There was a rece ntly reti red as Cernlengthy discussion on the missioner or 'the Division . of
refusal from Don Diener , Mental Re'tardation and
Administrator of Vetera ns Developmental Disabilities for
Memorial Hospital, that space . Ohio.
for the Mental Health Clinic
The next regu lar meeting
was no longer available at the will be a dinner meeting May
hospital . The ~taff and Board 20, 1974.
'. ·
was concerned about treat-

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Atl d.
th e district
Memorial Day observances.
en mg
he re were planned , a resolution mee tinu frorri the local post

anyunr tu do anything lo help Robert. Vesco. u

Guardsmen indicted in the •

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: Parade of Values
· Reg. 99c pr . Ultrasheer Panty Hose__2 pr. 99c
Reg. $1.39 Wintul&lt; Knitting Worsted
97c
Reg. 79c Plastic Housewares
any 2 tor $1.00
Reg. 39c 80 Totem Sandwich Bags
18c pkg.
Sell Stacking Shoe Boxes
3 lor 99c
Reg. $3.99 Trash Cans, 20 gal.
$1.92
Reg . $4.69 Honiecrest Latex Wall Paint--S2 .97
gal.
Reg . $1.77 Storage Chests; _ _ _ _ _ _ $1.17
Reg . 69c up Paint Brushes
S7c
Easy Grip Sponges
44c
Reg . 98c. Rubbermaid Shelf Liner
84c
Reg. $1.49 Avery L~bel Makers
88c
Refill Tapes - 77c
·
Reg . 89c Nylon Rug &amp; Craft Yarn - - - 67c
Reg . 97c Liquid Plumr, 32-o!. _ _ _ _ _ 68c

Uni versity

campus

.

O.allie Greer died Wednesday

Skating against Cancer

scheduled on April 21st

Cantata to be

given Sunday

: &amp;1~.~~-P.g'-".~~~,~~Y~~~J!t.~~::JNG ~J!!
BEN~FRANK~IW
PHONE
200-202 East Matll St.
992-3498

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POMEROY, OHIO

OPEN FRtOAY&amp;SATURDAY NtGHTSTILf

.........

Use Our Convenient Lav-fi.:Wav Plan .

............... ....-~-·~·~·,...·~.,.

Eddy's schedule·

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POMEROY
PASTRY

services.

Speaker for the post will be
Chet Stellar, a past department .
commander. The Legion will
go to Beech Grove Cemetery
for brief services and to
Chester in the afternoon.
The post approved a
resolution in support of the
state providing legal support
for the National Guardsmen
involved in the Kent State
deaths. The resolution sta ted
the National Guard shouid
receive such support since it
has a duty to protect life and
property whether it · be from
flood or tornado or from civil
uprisings which threaten state
property or lives.
The resolution also said·,
however, that it does not
condone the shootings.
The post will sponsor a profootball tour to Cincinnati on

MAIN ST. POMEROY, o1
WEEKEND
II
SPECIAL

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FRI. &amp; SAT.,
APRIL 19-20

BANANA
LOAF CAKE
REG. 89' .

I ONLY
L
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(3«4~-~ 1Jtade
For

MOTHER

Drivers

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Rin9 Style
No. qo

Set with rad iant birthstones-one stone for
each . member of the
family .
In preeious lOki. yellow
. or white gold. ·

,....
$3.00 ~dditi Gna l
for eaeh
birthstone

'

GOESSLER'S JEWELRY STORE
Pomeroy

Court St.

With or without an embargo the world has
a fuel crisis.
Because the world supply of oil' and gas which we depend on today for so much of
our energy-is limited.
We can't go blithely along thinking that we
' can use oil and gas the way we have.

BETTY OHLINGER
POMEROY, OHIO

or that the world has an endless supply of
oil and gas. They must be conserved to do
·the jobs only they can do.
. We are depending upon oil and gas to do
too m11ny things . .

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PHILCO 19" diagonal
Port~ble Color TV

lOLA

85% solid staie chassis • 70-position "Channel-Set"

UHF selector for iast, positive selection of any ·70
possible UHF channels • Memory-Matic Vf-IF pres.e t
fine tuning • Solid state signal and sound systems ·
, Cosmetic Color Circuit • Dipole VHF; lo'op UHF an tennas • Beige ca binet
•

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Only •299

FO~EMAN
&gt;

95

&amp;·ABBOTT
&lt;}

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America is lucky. We own half the world's
known supply of coal. All we have to do is
dig it and put it to worl&lt;.

j .\

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Coal and electricity generated by coalused wisely, not wasted - is the most
sensible answer to the fuel and energy crisis.

With it we can generate electricity that can
take the place of precious oil and gas
' '
m
so many ways.,
.

And that's no baloney!

But all that coal can't be used properly and·
fully ~riless our representatives begin to act:

America has more coal
than the Middle fast
has oil. Let's dig It!

1. To amend the Clean Air Act so that
more of our coals can be burned.

2. . Release the vast reserves of U.S.
government-owned low sulfur coal
· in the west.

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BEAUTY SALON
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NOW OPEN

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IN SYRACUSE

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How do we get out.of this box? We dig our
way out. Literally.

Ohio Power Company

Call It a' clog .. or a sandil ... or just a slip.on. However you
ca ll it , it's th e Clsual everyone loves! Under it all is. a crepe
sole with bounce·ability, foll owed by a wedge of cork •
Uptop , !1Verall woven l eatne~ comfort.
White or caine!

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Na~!lW &amp; Medium Widths

Tbll adverl:llezi,ent prepared by

· . Byrne, 'Slattery, E~1, Inc.

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A vital part of the 7-state American Electric Power System.

PHONE 992..2549

', .MJPDLEPORT, 0. ·

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Together they .represent only ·5% of our ·
nation's energy sources. Yet we're making

The State of Ohio and the booklets will be issued with all possible dispatch.
Ohio Blue Cross and · Blue I
Shield Plans announced this
week the way has been cleared
~s
to permit the Plans to assume
'the health and hospitalization
program 'tor ~tate employees
beginning May 1· and running
through June 30, 1975.
· The Blue Cross &amp; Blue Shield
benefits will be identical to
those presently in effect. While
lola's Beauty Salon, your Merle Norman
the coot will be slightly higher
Cos metic Studio, is now open in Syracuse,
to the state as the result of the
0 .. at the CORNER OF JOHN &amp; MAY
difference between the two
STREETS, close to Syracuse Grade
bids, the employees' share qf
School..
the cost for this outstanding
health benefit package will
Oper.ators : lola D~ "i'ewood &amp; ~aren Lyon s
remain the ~me .
About 44,000 of the state 's
·./
56,000 tql&lt;!J employe~s ·were
•.
enrolled .in the program . New
identifica ti on ca rd ~ and herierit

With coal representing nearly 90% of our
fossil fuel resources and abundant enough
to fill our energy needs for abbut .500 years,
aren't we foolish if we don't put it to work?

that 5% fulfill over 75% of our need s.

The.oil embargo is ended . ·.. for now.
But the fuel crisis is as grave as ever.

_State employees ge~ Blue Cross
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time high this year withTh$88,686
being raised in. Ohio. is insures
rem embrancesd ror
,
servicemen confine
to
hospitals as well as orphans in
the sailors and soldiers
, homes
not only at Christmas-time but
year 'ro und . The Eighth
District of which Meigs County
posts are a part lead the state
with $7,774 raised .
Paul Casci, a member of
Drew Webster Post and state
department chairman of the
program, extended thanks to
the public for its support.
Refreshments were served by
vices.
• The Pomeroy Fire Depart- Paul Taylor.
men t and Emergency Squad
w(ll participate and other ~-groups are asked to ta k ~ part
in the parade and to attend the

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Nov. 24 !or the Bengel-Kansas
·
Ch 1 ·
City Chi ef game.
are s
swat ze.1 'w1'll· acce pL. rese
--- r vations.
h Gf
It was reported that t e i t

group at 7 ' 30 p. m.
All members were asked to
give blood to the bloodmobile
which will he at the Pomeroy
Elementary School on April 29
for Tom Ables who is a patient
at Unive rsity Hos pital '"
Columbus.
It was voted to sponsor Boy
Scout Troop 249 w1t· h th e t roop
t
to be responsi bl e to ·ptos
tr ustees for any act1v1 1es
requiring the use or th e pos t
home.
Memorial Day observance
activities will include services
at Hemlock Grove and Roc k
Springs ·on the Sunday
preceding Memorial Day . A
parade will be held in Pomeroy
at 9 a. m. on Memorial Day
moving to the Pomeroy Junior
High School for special ser-

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Paul easel·. Charles Swatzel,
'deaths. and reports or th e rl· nan ce · offl·cer, gave the
district conference at Murray quarterly rl·nancl' al report . A
City in Athens County on April meetl.ng of post trustees and
~;j;~~~~f~~~;~~~mliim~;~;~~;~;l;~;mm~;mt;~;~~~l;m;§mm;ili;ilif:;~ummr:~~m~~~m~~f:iml~;~l~~~lm~f:~ 7 were given Tu~sday . night past commanders was an; when Drew Webster Post 39, nounced for 'pril 30 with Roy
M
American Legion, met at the Reuter to serve dinner to the
post homP.
·
SYRACUSE - Challie G. (Geraldine) Clonch, Bremen.
Greer, 68 , College Rd ., Also surviving are a brother,
Syracuse , di ed Wednesday Doy~ll. Michigan ; five sisters,
afternoo n
at
Veterans Mrs . Stella Sizemore, MiamisMemorial Hospital foll owing a burg, Mrs . Clara Haines,
Detroit, Mi ch.. Mrs. Belva
short illness.
Greer was born June 11, 1905, Wright, Mayberry, Ky., Mrs.
at Byra , Ky., the son o! the late Alma Peterson and Mrs. Edna
Apri l 21 has been proclailfled Ca ncer Crusade, open skating
Morgan L. and Cosby Mullens Sizemore, both of Rutland ; 11· "Skate - Against - Ca ncer will be held at the Skate-A-Way
Greer. Mr. Greer had been a grandchildr en, six great- Sund ay" by Mrs . Brenda in Chester from 2~ p.m. with
coal miner and had worked gran childre n and se vera l Roush , Meigs County Chapte r free transportation provided.
·
with · the s tat e . hig hway nieces a nd nephews.
president of the Ameri can The skating rink 's bus will stop
Funeral se rvices will be held Cancer Society.
departmen t in Meigs County.
at Dutton 's Drug Store in
He was preceded in dea th by at 2 p.m. Saturday at the
As a par t of thi s year's Middlepor t at 1:30 p.m. and at
th ree brothers and two sisters. Rutland Church o! Christ with
the Blue &amp; Grey Restaurant in
He was marr ied to the for- John Wyatt and Keith Wise
Pomeroy at i:40p.m. The bus
mer ·Grace Sowards who officiating. Burial will he in
will make a return trip after 5
survives along with a son, Miles Cemetery . Friends may
p.m.
.
Lowell, Rt. 1, Long Bottom, call at the Walker Funeral
Thi! cos t ·of admission is $1
two daughters, Mrs. James S. Home after 2 p.m.· Friday until
without skates and 75 cents
(Daryl) John son, Rt. 4, 12:30 p.m. Saturday . The body
with skates. All proceeds will
Marie tta, and Mrs. Clyde will be taken to the church one
Hea th United Methodist go to the 1974 Cancer Crusade
hour before se rvices to lie in
under the co-chairmanship or
state. The family will receive Chur ch choir directed by Ben Mr. and Mrs. James Roush.
friends from 2 to 4and !rom 7 to Philson will present the can9 p.m. Friday at the funeral tata, " Easterlide" by David
1
Protheroe Sunday during the
ho)'Tie.
morning worship service.
Soloists are Martha Hoover,
.
April Fraser, Judy Fraser, Mr.
Mr . Eddy Educator's
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Chance of showers Sunday Philson, John Compton, and schedule for week of April 22
and Monday. Above normal Andrew Hoover . Laura through 26th in Meigs Coun.ty:
'
temperatures through the Hoover, Barbara Archer and
compete in the national
McKinney
make
up
an
alto
Jo
MONDAY
School
Lot, &amp;period with daytime highs in
tourney at the end of the
trio
and
the
Rev.
Robert
6:30 p.m.; Carpenter, . 6:40the 70s and upp er 60s.
summer.
Bumgarner has incidental 7:10; Wol! Pen, 8-8 :30.
Nighttime
lows
mostly
In
the
National little league offitenor solos. Newman Burdette
THURSDAY
Port50s.
cials are awaiting a decision on
is organist..
land Ele., 9: 30-11 a.m.; Port·
Miss King's court case before
land Community, 11 :15-11:30;
acting on a new Ypsilanti charRiverview Ele ., 12:45 - 2:15
ter application this year.
TWO ACCEPTED
p.m.; Reedsville, 2:30-3; Eden
Little league lawyer John
SUITFILED
RIO GRANDE - Barbara Church, 3:J0..4; Long Bottom,
Norris said the organization
Mildred E. Arnold, Rt. 2, Anthony. daughter of Mr . and
was only "seeking safety lor its Pomeroy, and Dores Arnold, Mrs. Gerald Anthony, Mid- 4:30-5 ; Stiversville, 5:30-9:30;
participants" in its no girl rule. same address, have filed suit dleport, and Miss Lori Seth, Grea t Bend, 7:30-&lt;i.
FRIDAY - Racine Ele., 10 He said he thought of the rule for damages in Meigs County daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
noon
; Southern, 12:30 - 1:30
not as ''sexual discrimination'' Common Pleas Court against Herbert Seth, Pomeroy, have
p.m.
;
Krogers Parking Lot, 4but as "sexual classification." Everett Calaway , Tuppers been accepted for enrollment
8.
Separation Of Sexes
Plains. The Arnolds claim that at Rio Grande College starting
Please return all overdues to
"In little league we're only Calaway failed to yield the the fall quarter of this year.
the
bookmobile or to the book·
ta'Iking about separation of the right of way in an Oct. 24, 1972 Miss Anthony is oriented
mobile
office. Appreciation is
sexes-for a few hours during a auto accident on SR 7 in toward elementary education,
extended (o Mrs. Charles Fick
few days of the year," he add· · Tuppers
Plains
which Miss Se th in the medical for
over 300 nice paper back ·
eil .
allegedly ca used head, neck Iaoorator y tec hni c ian books she dona ted to the bookNorris said tha t in the long and shoulder injuries to Mrs. program.
mobile.
ruri the no girl rule " is in the Arnold . The Arnolds seek ·
hest interest of all women ath- $45,000 in medical damages
letes."
and medical expenses.
ATTEND FUNERAL
"U We lose this case, that
Mrs. Laura Byers, Tanners
(Continued from page I l
means that boys and men must
Run; Mrs. Betty VanMeter and · avoid the police .
be allowed to compete in womMrs. Eunice Brinker attended
"They haven't done much
en's events of all sports," he
HOSPITAL CARE
the funeral of Rohert Lee changing," he ssid, "but their
figured. "What's that going to
XENIA, Ohio (UP!) - Be- VanMeter in Parkersburg, W. accident rate is also better."
do to women 's tennis?
tween $200,000 and $300,000 in Va. on Monday at the Franklin
As for how long Ohioans and
"If men came into the worn- free medical care given and Son Memorial Chapel. He
those
using the state's roaden's events in 01yn\pic compe- residents of Xenia after a was the son of the late Francis
tition, the women wouldn't tornado whipped through the VanMeter and gra ndson of ways will have to hold it down,
the answer is still up in the air,
even be able to qualify lor most city April 3, may inde!initely Mrs. Laura Byers.
One
official in Columbus said,
events hecause their times and delay Greene Memorial
"ask the politicians" and then
distances wouldn't match the Hospital's building program,
noted
that the current law
men ."
HermanN. Menapace, hospital
expires
on July 1, 1975.
Egnor called Norris' argu- administrator , said WedThe
end
could come sooner if
Veterans Memorial Hospital
ment ''a sexist viewpoint."
nesday. Menepace said no Admissions - Floyd Rupe, the gasoline shortage evapor"Who is to say what girls can
charges could be made for the
or can't do once they're freed hundreds or people given Dexter; Mildred Blevins , ates as quickly as it seemed to
from the dollhouse stereotype emergency treatment after the Pomeroy; Diana Hubbard , arrive. Then, no doubt, the
that they're now brought up tornado because "we don 't Pomeroy; Charl es Moore , bragging would turn away
under ," he said. "Who is to say even know most of th eir California, Ky .; George from miles per · gallon and
return once again to such
Clonch , Rutland .
that girls should he made names.''
American
staples as horDischarges - Tracey Mcsecond class citizens by not beMahon, Donna Co nnolly , sepower and engine dising allowed 1(/ compete openly
Marlene Smith, Randy Smith, placement.
with boys? "
Charles Jones, Mary Durst •.
Daniel Davidson .
Holzer Medical Center
NEW SUGGESTION
TAGDAYSET
(Discharges, April 17)
AUSTIN , Tex. (UPJ )
Cheerleaders of Meigs High
Kermit Adkins, Saundra Texas highway officials have
NUPTIALS SET
School will have tag day
Allman, Melissa l;handler , come up with a new suggestion
The open church wedding of Saturday on the streets of
Shirley Coburn, Sharon for alleviating the energy Miss Mary Jane Smith to
Middleport and Rutland.
Conger, Cecil Elliott, Myrl shortage - harnessing cow Joseph Allan McCarty will be
Gibbs, Amy Glassburn, Jane burps.
Friday , April 19 at th e
Glassburn, Rosia Hale, Gladys
Putting bovine burp power to Wesleyan Holiness Church
Haner, James Haskins, Edwin use, the APril issue of Texas instead Qf the Wiseman
Hixson, Arlene Hornsby, Okey Highways suggested , would Holiness Church as was
Howard, Kenneth Maynard, curb air pollution as well as previously announced. The
Mary McQuaid , Randy helping the nation's energy Rev. O'Dell Manley will read
·Montgomery , Judith Mora, problems.
l the vows .
Mrs . John Owens and son,
"Career ecologists have
William P~trey, Charles figured out that cows burp 50
REVIVAL BEGINS
Phillips, Jr. , Gene Reed, million tons of hydrocarbons
RUTLAND
Revival
Teresa Riley, Martha Robie, into the atmosphere every · services will hegin this evening
·Jeffrey Sayre, Hazel Sellers, year," the magazine said. at the First Baptist Church
Cora Sn'Jith , Genevieve "They have even calculated here and ruil through Sunday
Starcher , . James Sturgill, that 10 cows burp enough gas in at 7:30p.m. nightly. The Rev.
South Estil · Swann, William one year to prQvide all the Edward Buffington, pastor of
Tackett, Roma Walters, Betty space heating, water heating · Forest Ruil Baptist Church,
Webb,
John Wood, Thelma and cooking requirements for a will be the speaker. The public
I
small house."
Woodward.
is invited .
Kent

Landmark case expected in
girls playjng little league
CINCINNATI (UPI)- A law- case, but Egnor said the case
yer says he expects a "land- here was more important in
mark· and precedent-setting terms of setting a precedent.
decision" from a federal apEarlier Case Different
peals court on little league
"The New Jerlljly case was a
baseball's "no girls " ru.Je.
public accommodation case,"
The U.S. Sixth Circuit Court he said. "They decided it was
of Appeals - the highest court against the law to discriminate
yet to become involved in the in using public recreation
girls vs. little league struggle areas.
- heard oral arguments Wed"This is civil rights case.
nesday in the case of 13-yearold We allege ·violation of the 14th
Carolyn Ann King of Ypsilanti, Amendment - discrimination
Mich.
on the basis of sex. We think
Ronald Egnor, Miss King's sex discrimination should be
lawyer, said he anticipated the treated in the same manner as
nlllng from the three judge racial discrimination. "
panel to be a "landmark and
Although now too old to play
prccedent-oetting" decision for li ttle league baseball, Miss
. the country. The judges' deci- King participated last year for
" sion is not expecled for several a Ypsilanti team.
weeks.
But by allowing a girl to play
A New Jersey state appellate - a violation of national little
court recenUy ruled in favor of .league rules - the local league
a girl in another little league lost its charter and couldn't

'

Memorial Day observances' planned
1

Maurice H. Staus tcstifii'd today that "ou my ualh I never did
anything to help Robert Vesco in any way and I never asked

·'

Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. April 18. J9iq·
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Apllll~ JIJ71

Sentinel Classifieds Get Results
In Memory
IN

LOVIN G

Gordon

H

passed

NotiCe
MEMORY
Chevalier

away

of

who

5 vears

ago

today Apr 1 18 1969
There 1S a lmk deMh cannot

sever 1
L ove

and

remembran ce

last

forever
Sa dly m1ssed by wtte Betty
Sons Rodney and K1rk
4 18 ltp

Notice
PARASOL Bout,que Beauty
1 Sa lon
next to Skare A Way
Rolle r
R rnk
Announ c ed
spr tng spec1als l Oper cent off
on all permanents
and
frostrngs
trorn
Aprtl
9
through Apr. I 30 Cal l 985 414 1
for appo1ntment
Sandra

Kerns operator

4 1 12tc
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SHOOTING Match Forked Run
Sportsman Club noon Sun
day
Fac tory c hoked guns

only
4 18 3tc

YARD

SALE

F r 1day

and

Saturday on Larkms Stree t
Rutland , Ohro Baby stro l l er
lawn mower r ecord player
h tg h chatr
somelhrng for
everyone
4 18 2tc

SHOOTING MATCH
Corn
Hol low Gun Club turn f rrst
rtght after Miles Cemetery
Rutland
Factory choked
guns only Sunday Aprrl 14 1
p m
4 18 3tc
A TO Z Mart used fu r nt s hed
appliances c lothrng d shes
&amp;fld mrsc Rt JJ opposrte
trader cour t Hartford , w

________
va
I
•

......._

____410tfc
_

REVIVAL begtrntng Aprrl 15
dlegms 7 30 each evenmg at
Flomeroy Wesleyan Holmess
C!hurch on Route t43 , one half
m lie from Rt 7 bypass The
e.vange11st 1S Davrd L ight
lrom Ctlambers Ar rzona
Tt-ere will be spec1al stngmg
a.nd play ing and everyone rs
elcome The pastor ts 0 Dell
an ley
4 10 9tc

~

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

'

4 FAMILY yard sade ant •Ques
fvrnrture and drshes 2 miles
SQ.Uih of M tddleport off Route
7 on Story's Run Road A._,nl
211 and 21
1
4196tc

--J-----------GU~ Shoot 7 p m Fr tday at the
R;lc1ne Gun Club , factory
choked guns only Assorted
meats
4 17 3tc
'
-

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

'

Laurel Cliff
News Notes
ltV BERTHA PARKER

•

Sabbath School Easter
mormpg was 182. There were
'!/ chotr members present
Offering was $168.55. Attendance at worship service
was 101. The church bus made
1ts flr:Jt lrtp Easter mornmg.
Anyone wishing to ride the bus
is welcome
Mrs. Norman Schaefer, Mrs
Vern Story visited recently
with ,Mrs Nellle Tracy, Ball
Run •
Mt. and Mrs Larry Walker,
lndiiina, VlSlted recently w1th
relapves here
Mr and Mrs Wilham
Jacobs, Colwnbus, spent the
weekend with Mr and Mrs
Pearl Jacobs Mrs. Pearl
Jacobs 1s not so well at lhi£
wrttlng,
Mr, and Mrs. Ed Bauer,
Cleveland, spent the weekend
with Mr and Mrs Charles
•
Karr, Sr.
Mrs Thomas Dorst, Milan,
spent the weekend with Mr
and Mrs James Gibnor.. and
DeniSe
Mrs Ruth Douglas, Albany,
Mrs. Lenrue Lyons and Lestie
Nicole, Rock Spnngs, VJSi ted
recently w1th Mr. and Mrs
Harmon Fox
Mrs Georgia D1ehl and
Charles Anthony Dtehl VlSited
Sunday with Olin Rife,
Rutland, and Mr Ed Russell,
Bradbury .
Twenty-one members of the
local church held Eastern
mormng early serv1ce bn the
Burdette hill
The Ehster egg hunt which
was held Saturday afternoon
was attended by 75 persons.
Mrs ~rtha Parker was
hostess to 10 members of the
Laurel Cliff Health Club. The
meetlng was opened by
repeatmg the Lord's Prayer m
unison Katy Parker, Sharon
and Christen Buckley were
guests. Door prize was won by
Katy Parker and Chnstm
Buckley. Mrs Doris Buckley's
bll'thday was celebrated w1th a
btrthday cake which wa s
served With Jello and punch

no

.)
•

J

• ,

EAUT trUL n ew homes now
unde r constructiOn 1n prtm c
to ca t•on on cr ty wa ter anti
sewe(,....Cho rcc of d es• gns Wall
to wall ca rp etrnq and a~r
cond t10n1n g 1n c tu ded
Wtll
help
arrange
t1n anct ng
convent1ona1 loan s wrth down
payment lpw as 5 pet Oth er
new horn es ava tl able to
Oual•l•ed buver s wltr, NO
DOWN
PAYMENT 1
Budders of W G
Best
Homes
Call collect 614 837
65&lt;10 or 239 0785 or wr~te
Great Amer1can Hom es , Inc
P 0 Box 687 Pomeroy Oh ro
45769
3 1 lf c

K OSMETICS
&amp;
WIG ~
f-or a good line of
Cosm etr cs t rre ndly se rv iCe
and so m eone to c hat Wt th
g rv e n1e a ca ll He l en Jrme
Br own 99 2 Sl 13

-~---.....-

BROWN'S FIRE &amp; I I
SAFETY EQUIPMENT

Pets For Sale

OPEN tO T1l 4 30
Every Fnday &amp; Saturday
Treasures and Junque
Clo thtng book s records
lamps prctures furn rture
d1shes, toys collectab les
Across from Pomeroy Post
Offtce

For Rent or lease
BUSINESS butldtng 1n down
town Pomeroy OhtO Call 992
1975 or 992 5786
4 2 26tc

For Sale or Trade
4 •6

5tc

Help Wanted
BABYSITTER fo~ 2 preschool
children prefer my home or
somewtlere rn the Middleport
area Call 992 2539 after 8 p m
4 11 3tc
BABYSITTER needed fQr 3
Childre n 4 or 5 days a week
Call 992 3645 after 7 p m
4 15 6tc
EXPERIENCED painter , call
992 5502
4 16 3tc
LIVE IN housekeeper , 5 days a
week to take care of elderly
couple L1ght cookmg and
housekeeptng Call 992 6714
from 8 00 to 3 00 at 26 Pearl
St M ddleport
4 16 3tc
APPLICATIONS only for meter
patrolmen and extra pollee
Please contact Pomeroy
Pol•ce Department 992 2427
4 16 tfc
-- -~~------ ---

WOMAN to stay w1th elderly
lady l1ttle housework and
COOking
Call
992 2403
evenrngs
4 16 3tc
to

For Sale

MOWERS

live

:;- SALE s of redwood
Phon e 949 4703

fence

NEW 1974 ZIG ZAG SEW ING
MACHINES
tn
or rg•nal
factory carton
Ztg zag to
make buttonholes sew on
buttons monogram s and
make fancy des,gns w1th tust
the tw1st of a s ~ngte d1a1 Left
n lay away and never been
used Wtll se ll for only S67
cash
or term s available
Phone 992 2653
4 16 tfc
ELE C TR O LUX
vacuum
cleaner A 1 conditiOn vses
paper bags haS cordw ln der
and many atta chments Also
sham pooer attachment rn
elu ded (Only 4 avarlable ) at
S37 70
cash
or
terms
avatlable Phone 992 2653
4 16 tfc
LOSE werght with New Shape
Tablets and Hydre~&lt; Water
P1ll s Dutton Drug rn Mtd
d leport and Nelson Drug
4 16 3tc

-

T1re Pnces
in the Area

SOMEONE needed to cut grass
on my property Phone 992
4 17 3tp

It's

------------car hops and
WAITRES SE~

--------------lost

pu s h type

rolo ry mower Has Bngg s &amp;
Stratton eng me
7 mch
piastre wheels loop style

tubular handle 112 19811

'~;.

POMEROY LANDMARK
Jack W Carsey Mgr
Phone 992 2181

C LELAND
FARMS
AND
GREENHOUSE A vanety of
cabbage and tomato plants
for sale Also broccot r and
caul•flower, swee t peppers,
hot peppers eggplants , heaa
lettuce
and
EASTER
FLOWERS
pansy
mums
azalea
hydrangea
geran 1ums petunras , several
k. nds ot hang rng baskets
Geraldrne Cleland , Ractne
OhiO
3 29 tt c
sTERJi:O
Walnut
AM FM
Radro 8 track tape com
bmat on Balance $110 73 or
terms ava rlable Phone 992

BEND TIRE CENTER
772 5881

Mason 1 W Va

Auto Sales

PLYMOU TH
Stat 10n
1968
wagon A 1 cond t ron $350
Phone 992 5389
4 16 3tc

1968 327 CAMARO Good co n
d1t1on Phone 773 5706

I

MALE cream color toy poodle,
answers to the name . of
Teddy '
Lost
m
the
Pomeroy
park.rng
lot
Saturday S50 reward or
puppy Call collect 696 1297
4 15 Ate

Wanted To Buy

NOW ready cabbage- lettuce
and pans1es
pot te d and
baskets of Easter flowers now
bloommg Hubbard s Green
house , Sy racuse Ohro
3 J 1 tfc

OLD auto's 6 or more cars Y(lll
give 53 00 piece 1B ca rs or
more wrll grve better prrce
Ca II 985 4297
3 28 tfc

-CAS!-:1
- ------------pard for all makes and
models of mobile homes
Phone area code 61.4 423 9531
4 1J tfc
ANTIQUE quilts and jewelry
Also , Interested 1n furniture
and d rshes
Call 992 5262
eventnos or mornrngs
2 20 tfc
JUNK Autos
complete and
del1vered to our Yi!rd We p1ck.
up aut o bod•es and buy atl
k•nds of scrap meta ls and
rron R1der's Salvage Sta te
Route 124 Rt 4 Pomeroy,
Ohio ~hone 992 54 68
4 16 261p
OLO furniture , oak tables,
clocks, tee boxes, brass beds
dtsht~. desks
or complete
households wr 1te M
0
M rller 1 Rt 4, Pomeroy Ohio/
c;..Jt ~92 7760
13 tfc

s

AM FM stereo radro 8 track 1959 CHEVROLET 314 ton
combmatton tape player &lt;1
prckup truck Call 992 5907
speaker
sound
system
4 18 3tp
Balance SlOB 63 or budget
terms Call 992 3965
1969 Z28 CAMARO 10 excellent
4 3 tfc
cond1tron
1964 Malrbu SS
-- -~ ------ ---good cond1t ron
Phone 949
5182
4 18 3tc

SHULER'S
MARKET

1965 IM~A LA Chevrolet 127
engme, good condtt1on vVrll
sell reasonable pnce Ca\1 949
4411 after 4 p m
4 18 3t c

Pomeroy, Ohio
Vetegable and Flower
Plants of All Kmd.
Rose Bushes, Seeds
&amp; Ferl1hzer
Open 7 Days a Week

kitchen,

apt
hvmg

and bedroom comblnatoan.

GRAY MANOR APTS.
111 N 4th St

Mu:klleport

Ph 992 3863-9 to I 3
992 15844 Aller 6

brr ck home Has 3 apar t
m enl s alwuy s r ented (good
ntcome ) Lovely krt chen rn
mtt n aparlment has r ange
ref
dtsposa l d shwasher
cen ter type srnk Has new
get s hot water sys te m part
ba sem ent Lots of park rng
rtrc~l $12 500
frontilg e • good 2 st ory
buddmg
apartment over
garage old house all for
about th e pr~c e of th e
frontage $16 500
CLOSE IN
Over 4 acres
lurnt shed nome 3 BR bath
Niltur a l gos heat c:1ty woter
porche s
many
otner
features $7 100

OPEN Roger Hysell 's Garage
near Crossroads on State
Route 124 8 30 to 6 p m
Monday through Saturday,
Phone 992 5682 or 992 712 1
4 12 26tc

Real Estate For Sale

From the largest Truck or
Bulldozer Radiator to tne
sma llest Heater Core

Nalhan B1ggs
Rad1ator Spet1ahst

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.
Ph 992 2174

Pomeroy

YES!
Now wh1le the weather •s
st tll cool ts the best t1me It
can be mstalled at your
convenience w1th no wa1hng
.Hound
1r1
hot
muggy
weather
Phone 992 2SSO

SYRACUSE - Almost new
3 BR co lor ed bath love ly
k1t cn en w1 th range utll1ty
room HW floor s carpe t •ng
10 hall and l 1v1ng R carport
w 1th storage $19 900

All WEATHER

BE JUST TO YOURSELF
FEAR NOT TO BUY THE
ANSWER TO ALL YOUR
REAL
ESTATE
PROBLEMS CA N BE
FOUND HERE
HENRY E. CLELAND
BROKER
992 2259- 992 2568

HARDWARE

N lnd Ave
M1ddleport 0
Under New Management

IS YOUR ROOF
LEAKING?
IS IT COLOR FADED?
J'or Free Esl1mat~ 1nqu1re
now about a beautiful new
rool m fash•on colors.

TEAFORD
Vrrq1l B. T1·,rford Sr
Brok•'r
110 MC'ctl,lntc S!rt' ;· t
Purneroy, Ohro 15169

ALL WEATHER
HARDWARE
2

bedrooms large bath lots of
clo sets N1ce krtchen, dtntng
il nd basement Gas f urnace
concrete porcn wrth wrougnt
~ron posts and rails $15 000 00

INVESTMENT -

Rent wrll

N l&gt;ld

Middleport

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO

soon pay for th1s one 4 apart
m ents all rent ed tn good
locat1on of town

992-2094
606 E . Main Pomeroy

4 BEDROOMS - Nrce k1tchen,

OFFICE SUPPLIES

gas furnace , family room
garage w1th lar ge lot
All
ut1l1t1es

and

FURNITURE

HOUSE WITH RENTAL - 9
room s plus 3 room efficiency

All for only $17 500 00
SMALL FARMS or ACREAGE
NEEDED
FOR
OUR
CLIENTS NEW AND GOOD
OLDER HOMES ALSO IN
GREAT DEMAND CALL US
NOW TO GET YOURS SOLD
THIS SPACE IS RESERVED
FOR YOUR AD

Stop In and See Our
Floor D1splay .

WOOD TRUSSES

dS?&gt;,

IF YOU DON T MAKE YOUR
INVEST MENT NOW , YOU
MAY
BE
CHEATING
YOURSELF OUT OF A VERY
GOOD FUTURE
(,(Jh'UON h

Bu1ltto Your 'Specs
Delivered to Job Stte

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN

if /'lf.Ok'D

___ __________ _

l 'h

BATHS

CARPET THROUGHOUT
FULL BASEMENT 2 CAR
GARAGE
ALL
ONE
lARGE
FLAT
WELL
LANDSCAPED
LOT
PRICED MID TWENTIES
RUTLAND

COUNTRY

STEREO
92.1
WMPO-FM
M1ddleporl Pomeroy

•

3 BEDROOMS LARGE KIT
LIKE NEW CARPET ,
ALUM SIDING
OWNER
WILL HELP ~!NANCE
FOR QUALIFIED BUYER
PRICED

BELOW

MARKET 512 000

OFFICE H6 ,J643

EVENINGS

Bud McGhe~446 1155
e ' M "Ike" W1seman- U6
3796

Open 8 Til S

DON'T DRtV(. A
GAS.GULPER
OR A GAS HOG

Now under new
management

Phone Stanley 949 2789
Bumper to Bumper
Servtce
ForeiQn Cars Welcome

RON AND
KAREN THOMAS
Stop '" and sa v Hello Brmg
m th1s ad for a Free Gift
C BRAOFORO,Auct oneer
Complete Serv1ce
Phone 949 3821 or 949 3161
Racme Ohio
Crttt Bradford
s 1 tfc
EXCAVATING, dozer loader
and backhoe work , sept 1c
tanks rnsta\led dump trucks
and lo boys tor hire w111 haul
ftll drrt. top sot! I m es tone
and gravel Call Bob or Roger
Jeffers , day ptlone 992 7089 ,
n1ght phone 992 3525 or 9~2

2 11 tfc

77l-SS54

Ma'ion, W Va

~Ul

OMOBILE Insurance b~en
cancelled?
Lost
your
operator's license Call 992
7428
6 15 tf(

992-3325 or
992-2378

\

LIBRA (Sept 23 Oct 23] Be
very care fu l tl you re workmg
wrth tools Keep you ( mtnd on
Wha t you re do mg Don I try to
do two lhmg s at once

SCORPIO (Ocl 24 No• 221
Take a back seat 111 any soc tal
nwotvement today II you re
aggrcssn1e you II mak e waves
and a nasty s tua t ron wtll
resul t

SAGITTARIUS (No•

4

E lec

I Spy IS

Co 20

Av 1atron Weather 33

Beat tn e

23

21) Yesterday whe re
peace pr evntled domestrcally
con dll to n s h&lt;Jve done an
abou t lace Do all you can to
rnn1 mtze !ne t on at home

Th s tS one o l those days wh en
you It I eel you re a large! lor
o ttlers to take a IJOtshot at Try
no T to g ve lhen lhe ammun
1 on
CANCER (June 21 July 22]
An other !eels JU S! a s stro ngly
about h1 s opu1 o ns as you do II
you try to overpower 1:1 rn he II
erupt hostrlely

CAPRICORN (Dec 22-Jan
19) Don t put your s1gna ture to
any tltlllg btndmg unless you re
absolu tely sure you under s
tand t\ to the tett er

one leUer to each square, to
form four ord1nary words.

SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
&lt;EASONABLE rates Ph 446
4782 GaiiiPOirs Jot1n Russell
Owner and Operator
s 12 tfc

9
10

SEPTIC TANK S AROBIC
SEWAGE SYSTEMS
CLEANED
REPAIRED
MILLER SAN ITATION
STEWART OH 10 PH 662
SE PT I C
TANKS
c l eaned
Modern San1tat10n 992 3954 or
992 7349
10 23 tfc

WIN AT BRIDGE

NORTH

MODELS

t8

• 83
• A6
9 7 52
.98542

7 00 p m 7 30 p m 9 30 p m -

YOU CAN AFFORD PRICES

• 10 7 6 4

'8 3

•• I 9 5
¥KQ942

.K 76

.103

+ K QJ 10

1974 CHEVEu.E ClASSIC........... !3995

DOWN ~

1. Food

pamter

lZ.- Francts

13. Oriental

nurse

lf, Sense of
taste

15 Black

mark

11. lncarna

fish
Z. Soprano,

Emma 3. Censure
4. Yawn

1ng

5 Speechofy
6.

Badly

7. Sunder

mg

dine
18. Greek
moon

goddess

19, Sulli&lt; m

zoology

ZO. Designate

8 Covenant
' belween
nahons
9 Frader
11. Refuge

16 Construct

21. Poker
term
22 Mother

Yesterday's Aaswer
21. Weather
25. Amphlbllll
man's
27 Alter
concern
29.Tea
(2 wds )
22 White
grapes
23 Oregon
City

cake
30. Grape preserve
31. CUI'
34. Net
work

24 B rew1 ng

device

'36. Vamoollol

(Lat)

Z5 Boxer's
ntckname
perhaps
26. Consumer
!'1. Constella

bon's
matn star
28. As Written

(mus)
29. Pnvale
eye
3%. Short
legged
horse

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

lJ
I

WHAT TO &lt;:&gt;E.T ON
1N ORDI:R TO
MAKE PI':06RE.$S

I

I /"

Now arrangt Lht meted tellers
to form the surprtse answer, as

~

;:==~·===·========b,==~~~~_:·u~g~g~t~s~dbytheabovecartoon.
_...:..:
Pri=nl.=lhe:=
SURc..::
PR::c:.
ISI .:::.:
ANSW
-:-111 heR
_

Ll

__JI D [ I I

CABLE CHANNEL FIVE

~E"PJ.JWHlLE 1 T'!-IE POl i CE:
ARRIVE AND Sf'l.NDY RACE:S
AHEAD TO t#UAAD THE: SITE

EAST

[]

1

CAn•w~ ...

I

Jurnhl r&amp;

Veeter1la~·R

rJ

tomorro'-J

PAGAN CLOTH BRONCO UPWARD

A.newer Just enougl1 lo uter the rent - A PATCH

~~;;:;_~U:::K:::_PHAN AN!m;

+

WEST

r)I
II

Local News
Hollywood Old1es
lntngue

Dulch

directton

CORRAN

2 30 - Mov1e " The Evil of Frankenstein '4 News 13
4 00 - Mov1e ' Counterplot ' 4
5 30 - Movte ' I nstde th e Maf1a 4

problem

10.

readmg

1

• The Bamboo Saucer' 10

10 4 tf c

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACR%8
40. Prnny
1. Egypllan
(Eng sl )
dCily
41 Before
f. Thyrood

matertal
39. Proof

MABOOBr

11 30 - Johnny Carson 3 4 15 Sa lute to the Tony Award s 6
Hangove r Squa r e 10
Mov1e s Where tne Boys Are ' 8
The Raven' 13
1 00 - M1dn 1ght Sr;eCial 3 4 Don Ktrshne r s Rock Concert 6
Take F1 ve For L1fe 15 Salute to the Ton y Awards Movr e

~

Spam
37. E&lt;cepl
38. Floor

Son 3 4, 15 Brady Bunch 6 13
30 - Wash1ngton Connec t ion 20 Good T1m es 8 10 , Campus
Scene 33, Bob Hope 3 4 15 S1x M1ll10n Dollar Man 6 13
00 - Mast€rp1ece Theater 33 Brcentennr a l L ect ur e Sertes 20
Mov1es ' It Started 1n Napl es' 8 ' The An9 r y Hill s' 10
30 - Bnan Ke1tt1J 4 15 OddCouple13 Ozzre sGtrls6
00 - Ne ws 20 Reltg1ous America 33 De an Martin 3 l 5 4
Portra1t A Man Whose Name wa s John Tom a 6 13

10 30 - Day AI N ght 33
10 45 - Farm, Home and Garden 20
ll 00 - News Weather, Sports 3 &lt;1 6 8 10 13 15 Janakr 33

"t don't want lose• any more af
Olose sloppy catchos."

33. Corpse
15. Region of

Week 20. 33 Beal lhe Clock IJ
8 00 - Washrngton Rev tew20 33 D1rt y Sa ll y a 10 Sa nford and

9

Apnl 19, 1974
M uC t1 OPPOr1lJnt\y Wtll be
o tl e (ed you t h•S year
However rt carr~es w•t h tl cer
tan condttrons that warn you
not to be wa stelut or t9 take
thmg s fOr-granted
"'

Dec

Por ter Wag oner 3 Hollywood Squa res 4 New Tr e asure
Hunt 10 To Tell the T r ut h 6 Conc:entratmn 8 Wall Street

8

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

One letter simply stands for another In this sample A II
used for lhe three L'&lt;, X for the two O's, etc Smgle !etten,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
htnts Each day the code lette rs .lre different
CRYPTOQUOTES

SPP LNSP CALZJ AB SLV PAAZ Sl
RB VDNM CNLN
LAENLV DNILR

UAIN

RI

XAM.-

Y01terda1'1 Cr)'ploquate: THERE CAN BE NO HAPPINESS
IF THE THINGS WE BELIEVE IN ARE DIFFERENT FROM
THE THINGS WE DO. - F. STARK
(CJ 1974 lUna Futuroa s,ndleato, lne.)

L.OOto:. OUT ETHEL

OoG

1

+86 4

SOUTH 101

4 Door , less than 3500 miles, green v tnyl top &amp; l 1ght green
fm 1sh , green v1nyl 1ntenor tnm 350 V 8 2 bbl, trnted
glass. factory a1r cond1t1oned, AM rad 1o1 floor mats body
protect1ve mldg
power steerrng &amp; brakes, turbo
hydramattc, ext decor package com fort11t steer1ng
wneel wh covers &amp; w w trres Very n1ce &amp; 1fs loaded w1tt1
extras

• AKQ2
• J 10 7 5
A3
.AQJ

+

Nelther vulnerable

1973 CHEV. IMPAlA 4 OOOR.... !3495
Factory a1r tmt glass while over green gold fm1 sh
vmyl1ntenor, 350 VB engrne, wh covers, whtte wall ttres
E clock bumper guards, AM rad10 A sharp ca r &amp; less
than 9,000 m1les

West

North

East

Pass
Pass

3N T

Pass

South

When Merlm the magtctan
played m the brtdge games at
Kmg Arthurs court, there
was a special rule for htm He
could not shuffle, deal or
even cut the cards This
dtdn't keep Merhn from mak '
mg some reall) astoundmg
plays
There was nothmg astoundmg about hts k10g of
dtamonds lead agatpst three
~IRDIEN~
SINCE LEAVIN&amp; nJTV, SHE roESN'T NEED
notrurnp Anyone hkes to
NEEDED AN EXCUSE
HONEVERr. HER WILL WILL fOWER .5HE
lead from king-queenFOR EAn~s;-~BliT IN FOM:R wENT OUT NEED.? WON7
RECENT &gt;""&lt;5 SHES
THE WINDON.
POWER •
Jack-10
TRIED m CONTROlLancelot ducked Merhn
HERSELF.
cont10ued the su1t and Lancelot had to wm He promptly
played the ace of clubs and
cont10ued wtth the Jack
Now Merhn went mto a
trance When he came out of
the trance he had ftgured out
what to do He went up w1th
hts k10g and led a heart
This hne of pla) was the
only way to defeat the contract It showed that Merhn
HIGH-RISES
WE HAVE SENT OUR
had ftgured out exactly what
WEARE
MOST EFFICIENT
Lance lot was trymg to do or
THE GOVERNMENT
ERECTING ON
WORKERS THERE
had seen the peerless kmght's
AWARDS 'IOU
DOGPATCH, WILL
hl!.Ud 10 h1 ~Jra nce
ITS HIGHEST
HOUSE A MILLION
Ha d Merlm ducked the secHSNORFOR
OF US WE DON'T
ond club, a thtrd club lead
TAKE MUCH
·- would have set up two lrtcks
ROOM10 dummy Had he cashed hts
dtamonds, Lancelot would
have discarded hts queen of
clubs and unblocked the su1t
for dummy

Custom Hatchback Cpe dark green fmlsn l1ke new
whtfe wall fires full wh covers protective stde mldgs ,
P B , radio 6 cyl eng 1ne w1th standard trans A very
popular model &amp; one that w1ll please you

1971 DODGE OORONET.............51495
4 door l owner new car: trade 1n, good 1st I me trres
spotless clean lntenor small V 8 engine automatic tran s
m1ss1on Tt1e r 1ght s1ze - the r1gh t pnce Value $1675

1970 FORD MAVERICIL ..........~1445
Local 1 owner car w1th good w w ttres deluxe 1ntenor
tnm wh covers rad1o 6 cyl for good economy w1th std
trans • blue f1n1sh Nrce
J

OUTSTANDING TRUCK BUYS

1972 DiEVROLET PICKUP. .... ~2495
6 cylinder standard transm1sslpn, whrte over blue
v1nyl 1ntenor', appearance of new truck, rad1o , l tke
new whrte wall tires, wheel cover,s~ 8 w1de body
step bumper

1969 atEVROLEl P_ICKUP. ... }1445
8' Fleets1de V 8 eng1ne, std""' trans, good ttres,
radiO, step bumper , green fm1st1 &amp; vE:ry n1ce vtnyl

Large Inventory of light Duly New 74
Chevrolet Trucks.
We Have the Right Deal for You

SAVE UP TO 60% BY HAVING
YOUR HOME INSULATED

lnsulattOn can be blown into the walls and
'
ceilmg at a low cost.
Save on the insulating cost by doing part of
the work yourself.

"WWI'UO~
SlmDie IIUSiheu
WI SIU &amp; SERVICE CIIVIOUT CAIS &amp; YIUCd,

PHONE 992-7320

FOR FREE ESTIMATE

-'

992-2126

Open Eves Till 8

POMEROY

••

1•

'I'•

'

'

Wesl

"Your Chevy Dt3fJler"

~

!N EWSPAPER ENTERPR ISE ASSN)

The b1ddmg has been

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

'Crost.
t.h' ol'
brtdqe?

By Oswald &amp; James Jaruby

mte~ 1or

The Energy Crisis Is A Good Time
To Cut Fuel Costs

Pass

Opentng lead-+ K

1973-CHEV. NOVA ................... ~2695

North

East

1+
Pass
Pass
1•
Pass
You, South, hold

I.

18
South

BE SHORE Al\1'
PUT IT UIIIDER
'lORE PILLER

DID Ol' DOC PRITCHART
GIT 'lORE TOOTH PULLED OUT,
JUGflAID'

ITC)I'J1&lt;5Hi FER TH'

TOOTH FAIRY

DOC
NEVER
GIVE IT
TOME

'I·

outho1 tty on Egyptian
and Babyloman culture

?

•K2 'AJ 765 t864 ... Q94

What do you do now'~
A-Bid eilher one notrump or
two clubs. We ha\le a slight
preference far the two club call

i

J oe Anthro was an

,,,.•
I

~

"'I

.'

TODAY'S QUESTION
You do bod Lwo clubs and your

-- j

~~·-- ~ , ~-'1

I

partner b1ds three club&amp; What do

'·
' I

t &lt;ll fll

7 30 -

r

Merlin retains the old magic

LATE

Is 'In
For Frtday Ap!.!l..!.!_!!_~
ARIES (March 21-Aprll t 9]
It ::; best you k eep opr mons to
vou rset l today srnce you re
apt lo tudge others loo harshly
wrthout kn owtng all th e rac ts

K1ngdom 13

y ·

PISCES (Feb 20 March 201
Rrsky or specul a\lve s tua ltons
w1 1t baCkll re rt you rnvo lve
yourself n them toda y Don t
do anyt hrng chancy

down an agreement wa,ll tll all
pa rt •es are more anuable t~nd

e!BTP
ADUARlUS (Jan 20 l'eb
You could be part of the problem Hasn t anyone eyer told
19) Fuw ncral mailers have to
LEO
(July
23-Aug
221
You
you that ruce guys
' get walked on' 1But don t you dare change - tend to be possess. ve toda y
be t a ~en ser ously today tm
smcere, open expresstve people are the best kmd )
Duls1ve moves or poor tudg
and soml! Nhnt rea lous Th1s at
Since your g f knows she won't lose you, no matter how she
teases, It's easy for her to play games that make her fe el Ron to help me with them, and I pretend I'm haVIng a ball, whon
superiOr Maybe 1f you rea lly DID take off for a while, she 'd I'm really ready to cry How can I slop feelmg so dependent on
reahze what she's lost If not, well , I'm sure there 's a gtrl someone wh o ts gone? - " 16"
somewhere who wtll treat you better - SUE
+++
•
Dear 16
Dear CIBTP
A fellow who 1s away at college tsn 't really "gone" from your
Your fnend soundshke a throw-back to my genera tton, when hfe Look forward to summer vacation, and write hli!l a letter or
gtrls were taught that 1f you keep a man guessmg, you'll keep two m between
him - p.&gt;rtod 1
1\nd face 1t he's not the "b1g brother" you depend on any
Thank goodness that dishonest approach went out of styl e' more - he's_the man you'd hke most to dale You've got the
Maybe she can't express her real feehngs for feat of bemg mstde track , because you 're best-friends already Now, all you
hurt - or maybe she doesn't have any rea l feelmgs yet An all- need do 1s show Ron you've grown up That shouldn't be hard
out fhrt 1s either msecure or shallow, and you'd better fmd out HELEN
which before you go much further m this romance - HELEN
+++
+++
Dear 16
Dear Rap
Meanwhile, don 't JUSt Sll there and mourn for Ron Keep up
Ron, who hved next door was hke an older brother to me
your school fnenclships and outstde mterests - and If you run
came to hlfll with my problems, and when I was 14, he look me to mto a problem, wr1te him a letter t.'ven if you don l run mto a
an expens1ve restaurant as a " pra'Chce date ," so I wouldn't be problem, write hli!l a letter , and look forward to June'- SUE
nervous on my first real dale
After I started gomg out, he'd adVIse me on the guys I should
choose We were real close fnends, and I didn't know how much
I'd miss him until he went off to college (He's 19)
Now I'm lost I keep my problems mstde because there's no Unscramble these four Jumbles,

VW AND DATSU
SPECIALIST

303.5

Uy B clt•n and Sue Uottd

Clock

MATERIALS CO

HltiNI 11/'l~()h'f)
[\',')()(If\[!')

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

KITCHEN

On Most Amen can Cars

Monday thru Saturday
606 E Mam , Pomeroy , O

Middleport, 0

5232

,

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

All WEATHER
HARDWARE
N 2nd Ave

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment
'5.55
-G_UARANTEEOPHONE 992-2094

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

VIRGO (Aug 23-Sept 221
T ht s IS 1101 " good da y lor you
to try t o make dea ls or l te

men t wtll put you In the red

2N T

ASK US ABOUT
PRE-FABRICATED

Business Services

RACINE
STORY
PE'RMA STONE 3
2
BR
LARGE MODERN

stalled

Rap

Illude w111 creal c needless ten
S'10 ns 111 an uns lahlc reta i•On
Ship

'•'

assurance I wouldn 't have to Smce we' ve been gmng together for
over 14 months, 1sn't 1t time she got honest With me ' - COULD l
BE THE PROBLEM '

777 P ee~rl Street
Middleport , Oh10
Phone .99l 5367 or 992 1861

Water L1ne~ and Power
Lmes All work done by the
loot or contract Also dozer
work and sept1c tanks m

'

ness, she says , Go .Jh1ead ' l kn o\\tng f \\f11l t
Maybe I ask stug1d questions, but 1f she d g1vc me some

8-K EXCAVATING
COMPANY

DITCHING SERVICE

:·:·:;::·:-:·:;:--:.:·:·:;:..·

My g~rlfqcnd and I are both 18 I love her " Jot but l am
unsure of myself, and her teasm_g doesn l help
She tells me about the guvs at work \\ho make passes at her
I ask her if she's happy wtlh me and she says, ' Oh maybe
'
She ll never give a slratght answer When I ask, " Do you love TAURUS (Aprol 20 May 201
An 11r tatmg Stlualton wtll arrse
me ' ' s~e says, 'What for '' 1\nd often she starts fitrlln g with because o f a lrr e11d ~
somebody else
umeasonable demands Mak e
She never lets me kno\\ how she really feels, and when l call yourself sca rce when you see
the wai-n. ng s•gnal s
her on 11 and say I mtght break up, what wllh all thi s uncertam- GEMINI (May 21 June 201

Water , Electnc Gas, Sewer
L 1nes
In sta lled
Work
guaranteed
Dozer. Backhoe Truck s
Limestone&amp; Fill 01rt
Commercial Res1denhal
ConstructiOn &amp; Remodel

CALL CARL NELSON
PHONE 992·5083

;.;.;.;.;.;.;...;· ;;.

~eneration

'

Honesty

Under New Management

AGENCY

6 5 1ft

'

·..:.:::: ...,:.;·::::::::::::::·::·:·:,,,,,,,,,::::::::;:.;;:;::::·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:-:-:-:--:··

Rap

RACINE . OHIO

ROOF PAl NTING

AIR CONDITION NOW?

WISEMAN

GREAT

efficiency

Bathroom ~

Large

THE

F UI-lNISHEO
apartment.
adults only Phone 992 5592
4 9 ttc Nt:::W 3 bedroom home Ph bath ,
garage ba:;emenr on Gravel
H1ll Mtddleport Natural gas
2 BEDROOM mobile home air
already rn
Phone Dale
condttlonl ng and rn t he
Dutton 992 3369, f!ven rngs
Racrne ares Phone 992 5858
992 253&lt;1
415tfc
....._.
1 17 tft

FOR RENT

MIDDLEPORT -

MODERN house •n m11e from
-DOZ ER work land clear•ng by
Pomeroy, 3 beelrooms wall to
tt1e acre hourly or ct~ntract
wall carpet large rec room
DOZER and back hoe work
STA RCRA FT t railers and fo l d
farm ponds roads etc Large
large pa tro ca ll 992 52~8
ponds and septrc tank.s d •t
downs 25 pet off on Reese
dozer and operator w1th over
before 3 p m , after 3, call 992
chrng servtce, top soli, f1ll
H1tches and a1r cond1t oners
20 years expenence Pullms
3436
d rr t, limestone
B&amp;K Ex
Excavat~ng , Pomeroy, Oh,ro
20 pet off on automatiC
4 7 12tc
cavatrng Phone ~92 5367 or
awnmgs 14 through 17 ft
Phone 992 2478
9~2 3861
12 19 tfc
Camp tEontey Starcraft Sa les
9 1 tfc
Rt 62 north ot PI Pleasa nt HOUSE rn Syrd&lt;.:Use J rooms
and bath upsta•rs over acre -==--:::=-_j;:-_- - - - - - -uoWTtu-;-s--:a-001~uts~t urn
behrnd the Red Carpe t Inn
of land Par t tally remodeled SE WING MACHINES Repair
over tun k automobrles over to
4 16 4fc
on ms1de Workshop 1n back.
servrce all makes, 992 2284
us W1ll pay S5 for old 1unk
-- -~--------- --....J
Pt1one 992 3135
The Fabrrc Shop Pomeroy
cars Phone I (304) 773 5890,
REGISTERED Angus bulls /1
4 10 Btc
Authorized Singer Sales anc
R1vers1de Auto Wreckmg
months to 21h years Pnce
----------- - - service We Sharpen Sctssors
4 9 26tc
range from S400 to $1 200
329tfc
Wve Marshall and Clossal Rl::AOY MIX
I...ONCRETt:
blood lines Phone Bill W1tte ,
delrv~red
rrght to your
992 2789
-BUILDING consrrucHon Room
prolec;t Fast and easy Free
add rt rons and remodeling ,
4 16 5tc
est1mates Phone 992 328 .4
floor sandrng and refrntshrng
-~ ---------- -Goeglefn Ready M tx Co
A l so concrete work Phone
EXCELSIOR Salt Works E
M1cldleport , Oh10
949 3933 Brssell Construction
Matn St , Pomeroy All k1nds
6 30 tf c
4 16 7tp
Gallipolis
of salt water pellets, water
nuggets , block salt .1nd own
Oh10 R lver Salt Phone 992

3891

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

1970 OLDSMOBILE 98
low
m1leage, excellent condrt1on
Se llrng
several hundr ed
dollars below local dea ler
prrce Phone 992 3863 after 6
p m call 992 5844
4 17 6tc
--- ---- ------~

NO 1 Copper soc rad1ators
40c , red brass 40c baftertes
$1 40 M A Hall , ReedSVIlle
Oh10 Phone 37 8 62-49
3 24 tfc

EXPERIENCED

POMEROY, O.

NICE OLDER HOME -

1957 CHEVROLET Excellent
condtfton
Wtl\
se ll
reasonable Call 99"2 2967 after
5 p m
&lt;1 14 6tc

DAY OR NIGHT

AUTOMOTIVE
REPAIR

RACINE GARAGE

INTERIOR EXTERIOR
PAINTING

Pomeroy

~~~

PH. 949-3611

NELSON

PHONE 992-5271

608 E .
MAIN

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

4 17 5tc

SUBSTANTIAL rew,ard tor lost
male whrte hounCt w th red
head and ears Lost rn Forked
Run Lake area
Contact
Harry Salmons Chesapeake
Oh 10 Phone 867 4535
4 1a Jtc

One

T URF TRIM

Sl

Free Garage
Esltmates

POMEROY - Morn St 75ft

BEAUTIFUL walnut ~tereo
3965
rad•o am fm a tra ck tape
2 1&lt;1 ttc
combrnat1on Balance 5110 92
or terms available Cal l 992 WE ARE p1ckrng up a ptano rn
3965
your area and would l1ke
4 16 tfc
some responstble party to
-~-----------take over payments
Call
Cred1t Manager (614 1 772
5669 or wnte 260 East Marn
For the Lowest
St reet Chtllrcothe OhtO 45601
4 7 tfc

1n

kttchen t1elp Apply rn person
Crow s
Steak
House,
Pomeroy
4 4 tfc

$52~o
20", 3 H.P.

&lt;I 17 4t C

I NCH electn c range wrth
bl ower good cond t •on Call
991 3401 after 5 p m
4 16 6tc

4 14 61p

777~

SPECIAL

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

27

1969 CHEVELLE A 1 cond tfton
wtll sell or trade for ptckup of
equal value Phon e 992 7644

HOUSEKEEPER
Ph one 992 2916

DACH SHUN D puppte5 Cal 1742 1965 SK IF FCRAFT Model 190
5092 after 6 p m anyt•me on
cab •n crutser 1964 Evtnrude
Sunday
Star Fl rght motor 75 h p w th
&lt;I 18 Jtp
trailer and canvas top 1n
eluded
See at 105 Un ron
Avenue or call 992 3293
2 FEMA L E Whtle toy pood l es
&lt;1 14 6tc
Phone 882 3190
4 14 6tp
TROPICAL ftsh for sa le
Frankltn and PhylliS Hend
r•cks Syrac use Thtrd Str ee t
4 u 6tc
PROM Dress m •nf green s1ze
7 8 also Catalina swrmsu1t
new s 1ze 10 Phone 992 5271
4 17 5271
&lt;1 17 3tc

GENE WOLfE'S
BODY SHOP

:::

We r epatr lawn mowers and
g~rden tractors

P~one 742 4673
742-5595
Boll Brown . Owner
Rutland. Ohto

~:

t....

•

FIRE DEPARTMENT
EQUIPMENT
EXTINGUISHER
SALES &amp; SERVICE
HOME ALARMS

808 W Mam

Television Log

~MPLETE

W1lkmson Small Engme
992 3092
399 w Ma1r1
Pome-roy , 0
Located at Modern Supplv
Small Eng•ne Repatr "

FMr CLAIM SERVICE

MEIGS COUNTY
HUMANE
SOCIETY
THRIFT SHOP

II - 1 1lf IJaily ~nllnel Mtddlepllrt-Pomero), 0 , 1\pnl t8, 1'17l

Busin.e ss Services

I 17 ) I (

NEW tvr n •Shed apar tmen t 3 \,7ROCERY bus1ness for sa le
room s and bath Real nt ce
Butldtng tor sale or teas e
R~ynolds
Apartment s
Phone 773 5618 from 8 30 p m
Ma son W Va
phone 77 3
to 10 p m tor appo1ntment
5141 on good road
3 20 tfc
4 1I! 7tc
3 19 He
SINGER sewmg mach 1nes 1972
T RAILER
Brown s Tr cole r
model 1n beautifUl walnut
Par k. Phon e 992 3324
cab1 net Makes destgn st 1l
4 1&lt;1 tfc
c tles ztg zag
buttonholes
$150 REWARD fo r the arr es t
bllnel hem s, etc L•ke new
and convrctron of person or
On l y S89 95 Call Ravenswood
persons who stole rny Gravely J AND 4 ROOM furn iShed and
unrurntshed
apartments
273 9521 or 273 9893 after 5 00
trac tor Tuesday nrgh t Phone
Phone 992 5434
12 7 lfc
Bob Grueser 992 7.J65 Rt 3
4 12 ttc - ---- - ---~----Pom eroy
4 18 ltc
10
HOR SEPO WER
A l lt S
PRIVATE me~rng room tor
Chalmers tractor Wt f h ~2 •nch
any organ ,zatron . phone 992
mower E~&lt; ce !l e nt co ndrt&lt;•on
3975
Con ~act Mnrvm K eebaugh 6 RO OM 1 floor plan hou se w1th
3 11 tfc
bath An tce d eta ch&lt;&gt; d g arage
d ays 99'1 53 41 985 39 13 af1cr 7
exc ellent loca t•on 1n M 1d
P m
M O BI LE HOME 1 bt:droom
dleporl
Phor; e 992 J904 or
~ 16 Jt c
lUll ,.1M.
Co li
a rr cond•lron cable TV good
c onta c t
Charl es
L1 s te
local ron Phone 992 5623
Syr ac use
ELECTRI C g uitar G1bson L 5
Steve Snowden
4 16 6t c
4 18 2tc
w lh case and ampl ft er lik e
new Pn ce :5.500 00 Phone 992
PH. 992-7155
ONE J bedroom tr ailer con
2732
2 BEDROOM hoLJse tn M1d
struc l •on workers preferred
4 18 31p
dt eport
New k1fchen and
STATE FARM IN SU RAN CF CO MP~ IES
Ca ll 992 744 8 after 5 p rn
bath appttan ces •nc l uded
. 418Jtc STRAWBERRY plants Cha rl•e
Call 992 5310
Fos ter Rt 2 Ra c rne Ohto
J 19 261 c
T.R AILER Utl ldiE.' 5 turn 1Shed
Phone 247 2309
Phon e 742 5980
4 18 121 c
4 18 6tc
TRAILER e'&lt; cellent cond11ion
Phone 992 2987
4 14 6tp

KQSCOT

For Rent
FIGHT LOST
NEW YORK (UP!) - Residents of the Croyden Hotel,
who tried to prevent the hotel's.
owners from rnakmg Improvements becauae they s~id they
would not be able to afford the
higher rents that would follow,
have lost their ftght
Manhattan SUpreme Court
Justice Margaret Mangan
ruled Tuesday the owners were
doing nothing lllegal by
renovating the
17-story
Manhattan hotel.
The tenants had argued •
cutbacks In service were
deligned to drlw them out, but
the court said despite some
cutbacks, services fo~ the
mldents were adequ•te

Sale

' 1\FOR (J f \' '""" un l&gt;,ou &lt;&gt;
r'lf'U R uttm.t Phon t I ll? t. 1t.l

for Sa;e

For Rent

RP.ai ~ state For

,

you do now ~

I

I

)

\

'I

'

'

•

' '

'

• •
(

'•

'

I

'
'

'

�,_

lhl D.ul) ,':,t•ntm~l.;\:utt1ltport l'tlllll1rt \ 0

HI

i '

Apllll~ JIJ71

Sentinel Classifieds Get Results
In Memory
IN

LOVIN G

Gordon

H

passed

NotiCe
MEMORY
Chevalier

away

of

who

5 vears

ago

today Apr 1 18 1969
There 1S a lmk deMh cannot

sever 1
L ove

and

remembran ce

last

forever
Sa dly m1ssed by wtte Betty
Sons Rodney and K1rk
4 18 ltp

Notice
PARASOL Bout,que Beauty
1 Sa lon
next to Skare A Way
Rolle r
R rnk
Announ c ed
spr tng spec1als l Oper cent off
on all permanents
and
frostrngs
trorn
Aprtl
9
through Apr. I 30 Cal l 985 414 1
for appo1ntment
Sandra

Kerns operator

4 1 12tc
- ~- ------ -- ---

SHOOTING Match Forked Run
Sportsman Club noon Sun
day
Fac tory c hoked guns

only
4 18 3tc

YARD

SALE

F r 1day

and

Saturday on Larkms Stree t
Rutland , Ohro Baby stro l l er
lawn mower r ecord player
h tg h chatr
somelhrng for
everyone
4 18 2tc

SHOOTING MATCH
Corn
Hol low Gun Club turn f rrst
rtght after Miles Cemetery
Rutland
Factory choked
guns only Sunday Aprrl 14 1
p m
4 18 3tc
A TO Z Mart used fu r nt s hed
appliances c lothrng d shes
&amp;fld mrsc Rt JJ opposrte
trader cour t Hartford , w

________
va
I
•

......._

____410tfc
_

REVIVAL begtrntng Aprrl 15
dlegms 7 30 each evenmg at
Flomeroy Wesleyan Holmess
C!hurch on Route t43 , one half
m lie from Rt 7 bypass The
e.vange11st 1S Davrd L ight
lrom Ctlambers Ar rzona
Tt-ere will be spec1al stngmg
a.nd play ing and everyone rs
elcome The pastor ts 0 Dell
an ley
4 10 9tc

~

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

'

4 FAMILY yard sade ant •Ques
fvrnrture and drshes 2 miles
SQ.Uih of M tddleport off Route
7 on Story's Run Road A._,nl
211 and 21
1
4196tc

--J-----------GU~ Shoot 7 p m Fr tday at the
R;lc1ne Gun Club , factory
choked guns only Assorted
meats
4 17 3tc
'
-

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

'

Laurel Cliff
News Notes
ltV BERTHA PARKER

•

Sabbath School Easter
mormpg was 182. There were
'!/ chotr members present
Offering was $168.55. Attendance at worship service
was 101. The church bus made
1ts flr:Jt lrtp Easter mornmg.
Anyone wishing to ride the bus
is welcome
Mrs. Norman Schaefer, Mrs
Vern Story visited recently
with ,Mrs Nellle Tracy, Ball
Run •
Mt. and Mrs Larry Walker,
lndiiina, VlSlted recently w1th
relapves here
Mr and Mrs Wilham
Jacobs, Colwnbus, spent the
weekend with Mr and Mrs
Pearl Jacobs Mrs. Pearl
Jacobs 1s not so well at lhi£
wrttlng,
Mr, and Mrs. Ed Bauer,
Cleveland, spent the weekend
with Mr and Mrs Charles
•
Karr, Sr.
Mrs Thomas Dorst, Milan,
spent the weekend with Mr
and Mrs James Gibnor.. and
DeniSe
Mrs Ruth Douglas, Albany,
Mrs. Lenrue Lyons and Lestie
Nicole, Rock Spnngs, VJSi ted
recently w1th Mr. and Mrs
Harmon Fox
Mrs Georgia D1ehl and
Charles Anthony Dtehl VlSited
Sunday with Olin Rife,
Rutland, and Mr Ed Russell,
Bradbury .
Twenty-one members of the
local church held Eastern
mormng early serv1ce bn the
Burdette hill
The Ehster egg hunt which
was held Saturday afternoon
was attended by 75 persons.
Mrs ~rtha Parker was
hostess to 10 members of the
Laurel Cliff Health Club. The
meetlng was opened by
repeatmg the Lord's Prayer m
unison Katy Parker, Sharon
and Christen Buckley were
guests. Door prize was won by
Katy Parker and Chnstm
Buckley. Mrs Doris Buckley's
bll'thday was celebrated w1th a
btrthday cake which wa s
served With Jello and punch

no

.)
•

J

• ,

EAUT trUL n ew homes now
unde r constructiOn 1n prtm c
to ca t•on on cr ty wa ter anti
sewe(,....Cho rcc of d es• gns Wall
to wall ca rp etrnq and a~r
cond t10n1n g 1n c tu ded
Wtll
help
arrange
t1n anct ng
convent1ona1 loan s wrth down
payment lpw as 5 pet Oth er
new horn es ava tl able to
Oual•l•ed buver s wltr, NO
DOWN
PAYMENT 1
Budders of W G
Best
Homes
Call collect 614 837
65&lt;10 or 239 0785 or wr~te
Great Amer1can Hom es , Inc
P 0 Box 687 Pomeroy Oh ro
45769
3 1 lf c

K OSMETICS
&amp;
WIG ~
f-or a good line of
Cosm etr cs t rre ndly se rv iCe
and so m eone to c hat Wt th
g rv e n1e a ca ll He l en Jrme
Br own 99 2 Sl 13

-~---.....-

BROWN'S FIRE &amp; I I
SAFETY EQUIPMENT

Pets For Sale

OPEN tO T1l 4 30
Every Fnday &amp; Saturday
Treasures and Junque
Clo thtng book s records
lamps prctures furn rture
d1shes, toys collectab les
Across from Pomeroy Post
Offtce

For Rent or lease
BUSINESS butldtng 1n down
town Pomeroy OhtO Call 992
1975 or 992 5786
4 2 26tc

For Sale or Trade
4 •6

5tc

Help Wanted
BABYSITTER fo~ 2 preschool
children prefer my home or
somewtlere rn the Middleport
area Call 992 2539 after 8 p m
4 11 3tc
BABYSITTER needed fQr 3
Childre n 4 or 5 days a week
Call 992 3645 after 7 p m
4 15 6tc
EXPERIENCED painter , call
992 5502
4 16 3tc
LIVE IN housekeeper , 5 days a
week to take care of elderly
couple L1ght cookmg and
housekeeptng Call 992 6714
from 8 00 to 3 00 at 26 Pearl
St M ddleport
4 16 3tc
APPLICATIONS only for meter
patrolmen and extra pollee
Please contact Pomeroy
Pol•ce Department 992 2427
4 16 tfc
-- -~~------ ---

WOMAN to stay w1th elderly
lady l1ttle housework and
COOking
Call
992 2403
evenrngs
4 16 3tc
to

For Sale

MOWERS

live

:;- SALE s of redwood
Phon e 949 4703

fence

NEW 1974 ZIG ZAG SEW ING
MACHINES
tn
or rg•nal
factory carton
Ztg zag to
make buttonholes sew on
buttons monogram s and
make fancy des,gns w1th tust
the tw1st of a s ~ngte d1a1 Left
n lay away and never been
used Wtll se ll for only S67
cash
or term s available
Phone 992 2653
4 16 tfc
ELE C TR O LUX
vacuum
cleaner A 1 conditiOn vses
paper bags haS cordw ln der
and many atta chments Also
sham pooer attachment rn
elu ded (Only 4 avarlable ) at
S37 70
cash
or
terms
avatlable Phone 992 2653
4 16 tfc
LOSE werght with New Shape
Tablets and Hydre~&lt; Water
P1ll s Dutton Drug rn Mtd
d leport and Nelson Drug
4 16 3tc

-

T1re Pnces
in the Area

SOMEONE needed to cut grass
on my property Phone 992
4 17 3tp

It's

------------car hops and
WAITRES SE~

--------------lost

pu s h type

rolo ry mower Has Bngg s &amp;
Stratton eng me
7 mch
piastre wheels loop style

tubular handle 112 19811

'~;.

POMEROY LANDMARK
Jack W Carsey Mgr
Phone 992 2181

C LELAND
FARMS
AND
GREENHOUSE A vanety of
cabbage and tomato plants
for sale Also broccot r and
caul•flower, swee t peppers,
hot peppers eggplants , heaa
lettuce
and
EASTER
FLOWERS
pansy
mums
azalea
hydrangea
geran 1ums petunras , several
k. nds ot hang rng baskets
Geraldrne Cleland , Ractne
OhiO
3 29 tt c
sTERJi:O
Walnut
AM FM
Radro 8 track tape com
bmat on Balance $110 73 or
terms ava rlable Phone 992

BEND TIRE CENTER
772 5881

Mason 1 W Va

Auto Sales

PLYMOU TH
Stat 10n
1968
wagon A 1 cond t ron $350
Phone 992 5389
4 16 3tc

1968 327 CAMARO Good co n
d1t1on Phone 773 5706

I

MALE cream color toy poodle,
answers to the name . of
Teddy '
Lost
m
the
Pomeroy
park.rng
lot
Saturday S50 reward or
puppy Call collect 696 1297
4 15 Ate

Wanted To Buy

NOW ready cabbage- lettuce
and pans1es
pot te d and
baskets of Easter flowers now
bloommg Hubbard s Green
house , Sy racuse Ohro
3 J 1 tfc

OLD auto's 6 or more cars Y(lll
give 53 00 piece 1B ca rs or
more wrll grve better prrce
Ca II 985 4297
3 28 tfc

-CAS!-:1
- ------------pard for all makes and
models of mobile homes
Phone area code 61.4 423 9531
4 1J tfc
ANTIQUE quilts and jewelry
Also , Interested 1n furniture
and d rshes
Call 992 5262
eventnos or mornrngs
2 20 tfc
JUNK Autos
complete and
del1vered to our Yi!rd We p1ck.
up aut o bod•es and buy atl
k•nds of scrap meta ls and
rron R1der's Salvage Sta te
Route 124 Rt 4 Pomeroy,
Ohio ~hone 992 54 68
4 16 261p
OLO furniture , oak tables,
clocks, tee boxes, brass beds
dtsht~. desks
or complete
households wr 1te M
0
M rller 1 Rt 4, Pomeroy Ohio/
c;..Jt ~92 7760
13 tfc

s

AM FM stereo radro 8 track 1959 CHEVROLET 314 ton
combmatton tape player &lt;1
prckup truck Call 992 5907
speaker
sound
system
4 18 3tp
Balance SlOB 63 or budget
terms Call 992 3965
1969 Z28 CAMARO 10 excellent
4 3 tfc
cond1tron
1964 Malrbu SS
-- -~ ------ ---good cond1t ron
Phone 949
5182
4 18 3tc

SHULER'S
MARKET

1965 IM~A LA Chevrolet 127
engme, good condtt1on vVrll
sell reasonable pnce Ca\1 949
4411 after 4 p m
4 18 3t c

Pomeroy, Ohio
Vetegable and Flower
Plants of All Kmd.
Rose Bushes, Seeds
&amp; Ferl1hzer
Open 7 Days a Week

kitchen,

apt
hvmg

and bedroom comblnatoan.

GRAY MANOR APTS.
111 N 4th St

Mu:klleport

Ph 992 3863-9 to I 3
992 15844 Aller 6

brr ck home Has 3 apar t
m enl s alwuy s r ented (good
ntcome ) Lovely krt chen rn
mtt n aparlment has r ange
ref
dtsposa l d shwasher
cen ter type srnk Has new
get s hot water sys te m part
ba sem ent Lots of park rng
rtrc~l $12 500
frontilg e • good 2 st ory
buddmg
apartment over
garage old house all for
about th e pr~c e of th e
frontage $16 500
CLOSE IN
Over 4 acres
lurnt shed nome 3 BR bath
Niltur a l gos heat c:1ty woter
porche s
many
otner
features $7 100

OPEN Roger Hysell 's Garage
near Crossroads on State
Route 124 8 30 to 6 p m
Monday through Saturday,
Phone 992 5682 or 992 712 1
4 12 26tc

Real Estate For Sale

From the largest Truck or
Bulldozer Radiator to tne
sma llest Heater Core

Nalhan B1ggs
Rad1ator Spet1ahst

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.
Ph 992 2174

Pomeroy

YES!
Now wh1le the weather •s
st tll cool ts the best t1me It
can be mstalled at your
convenience w1th no wa1hng
.Hound
1r1
hot
muggy
weather
Phone 992 2SSO

SYRACUSE - Almost new
3 BR co lor ed bath love ly
k1t cn en w1 th range utll1ty
room HW floor s carpe t •ng
10 hall and l 1v1ng R carport
w 1th storage $19 900

All WEATHER

BE JUST TO YOURSELF
FEAR NOT TO BUY THE
ANSWER TO ALL YOUR
REAL
ESTATE
PROBLEMS CA N BE
FOUND HERE
HENRY E. CLELAND
BROKER
992 2259- 992 2568

HARDWARE

N lnd Ave
M1ddleport 0
Under New Management

IS YOUR ROOF
LEAKING?
IS IT COLOR FADED?
J'or Free Esl1mat~ 1nqu1re
now about a beautiful new
rool m fash•on colors.

TEAFORD
Vrrq1l B. T1·,rford Sr
Brok•'r
110 MC'ctl,lntc S!rt' ;· t
Purneroy, Ohro 15169

ALL WEATHER
HARDWARE
2

bedrooms large bath lots of
clo sets N1ce krtchen, dtntng
il nd basement Gas f urnace
concrete porcn wrth wrougnt
~ron posts and rails $15 000 00

INVESTMENT -

Rent wrll

N l&gt;ld

Middleport

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO

soon pay for th1s one 4 apart
m ents all rent ed tn good
locat1on of town

992-2094
606 E . Main Pomeroy

4 BEDROOMS - Nrce k1tchen,

OFFICE SUPPLIES

gas furnace , family room
garage w1th lar ge lot
All
ut1l1t1es

and

FURNITURE

HOUSE WITH RENTAL - 9
room s plus 3 room efficiency

All for only $17 500 00
SMALL FARMS or ACREAGE
NEEDED
FOR
OUR
CLIENTS NEW AND GOOD
OLDER HOMES ALSO IN
GREAT DEMAND CALL US
NOW TO GET YOURS SOLD
THIS SPACE IS RESERVED
FOR YOUR AD

Stop In and See Our
Floor D1splay .

WOOD TRUSSES

dS?&gt;,

IF YOU DON T MAKE YOUR
INVEST MENT NOW , YOU
MAY
BE
CHEATING
YOURSELF OUT OF A VERY
GOOD FUTURE
(,(Jh'UON h

Bu1ltto Your 'Specs
Delivered to Job Stte

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN

if /'lf.Ok'D

___ __________ _

l 'h

BATHS

CARPET THROUGHOUT
FULL BASEMENT 2 CAR
GARAGE
ALL
ONE
lARGE
FLAT
WELL
LANDSCAPED
LOT
PRICED MID TWENTIES
RUTLAND

COUNTRY

STEREO
92.1
WMPO-FM
M1ddleporl Pomeroy

•

3 BEDROOMS LARGE KIT
LIKE NEW CARPET ,
ALUM SIDING
OWNER
WILL HELP ~!NANCE
FOR QUALIFIED BUYER
PRICED

BELOW

MARKET 512 000

OFFICE H6 ,J643

EVENINGS

Bud McGhe~446 1155
e ' M "Ike" W1seman- U6
3796

Open 8 Til S

DON'T DRtV(. A
GAS.GULPER
OR A GAS HOG

Now under new
management

Phone Stanley 949 2789
Bumper to Bumper
Servtce
ForeiQn Cars Welcome

RON AND
KAREN THOMAS
Stop '" and sa v Hello Brmg
m th1s ad for a Free Gift
C BRAOFORO,Auct oneer
Complete Serv1ce
Phone 949 3821 or 949 3161
Racme Ohio
Crttt Bradford
s 1 tfc
EXCAVATING, dozer loader
and backhoe work , sept 1c
tanks rnsta\led dump trucks
and lo boys tor hire w111 haul
ftll drrt. top sot! I m es tone
and gravel Call Bob or Roger
Jeffers , day ptlone 992 7089 ,
n1ght phone 992 3525 or 9~2

2 11 tfc

77l-SS54

Ma'ion, W Va

~Ul

OMOBILE Insurance b~en
cancelled?
Lost
your
operator's license Call 992
7428
6 15 tf(

992-3325 or
992-2378

\

LIBRA (Sept 23 Oct 23] Be
very care fu l tl you re workmg
wrth tools Keep you ( mtnd on
Wha t you re do mg Don I try to
do two lhmg s at once

SCORPIO (Ocl 24 No• 221
Take a back seat 111 any soc tal
nwotvement today II you re
aggrcssn1e you II mak e waves
and a nasty s tua t ron wtll
resul t

SAGITTARIUS (No•

4

E lec

I Spy IS

Co 20

Av 1atron Weather 33

Beat tn e

23

21) Yesterday whe re
peace pr evntled domestrcally
con dll to n s h&lt;Jve done an
abou t lace Do all you can to
rnn1 mtze !ne t on at home

Th s tS one o l those days wh en
you It I eel you re a large! lor
o ttlers to take a IJOtshot at Try
no T to g ve lhen lhe ammun
1 on
CANCER (June 21 July 22]
An other !eels JU S! a s stro ngly
about h1 s opu1 o ns as you do II
you try to overpower 1:1 rn he II
erupt hostrlely

CAPRICORN (Dec 22-Jan
19) Don t put your s1gna ture to
any tltlllg btndmg unless you re
absolu tely sure you under s
tand t\ to the tett er

one leUer to each square, to
form four ord1nary words.

SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
&lt;EASONABLE rates Ph 446
4782 GaiiiPOirs Jot1n Russell
Owner and Operator
s 12 tfc

9
10

SEPTIC TANK S AROBIC
SEWAGE SYSTEMS
CLEANED
REPAIRED
MILLER SAN ITATION
STEWART OH 10 PH 662
SE PT I C
TANKS
c l eaned
Modern San1tat10n 992 3954 or
992 7349
10 23 tfc

WIN AT BRIDGE

NORTH

MODELS

t8

• 83
• A6
9 7 52
.98542

7 00 p m 7 30 p m 9 30 p m -

YOU CAN AFFORD PRICES

• 10 7 6 4

'8 3

•• I 9 5
¥KQ942

.K 76

.103

+ K QJ 10

1974 CHEVEu.E ClASSIC........... !3995

DOWN ~

1. Food

pamter

lZ.- Francts

13. Oriental

nurse

lf, Sense of
taste

15 Black

mark

11. lncarna

fish
Z. Soprano,

Emma 3. Censure
4. Yawn

1ng

5 Speechofy
6.

Badly

7. Sunder

mg

dine
18. Greek
moon

goddess

19, Sulli&lt; m

zoology

ZO. Designate

8 Covenant
' belween
nahons
9 Frader
11. Refuge

16 Construct

21. Poker
term
22 Mother

Yesterday's Aaswer
21. Weather
25. Amphlbllll
man's
27 Alter
concern
29.Tea
(2 wds )
22 White
grapes
23 Oregon
City

cake
30. Grape preserve
31. CUI'
34. Net
work

24 B rew1 ng

device

'36. Vamoollol

(Lat)

Z5 Boxer's
ntckname
perhaps
26. Consumer
!'1. Constella

bon's
matn star
28. As Written

(mus)
29. Pnvale
eye
3%. Short
legged
horse

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

lJ
I

WHAT TO &lt;:&gt;E.T ON
1N ORDI:R TO
MAKE PI':06RE.$S

I

I /"

Now arrangt Lht meted tellers
to form the surprtse answer, as

~

;:==~·===·========b,==~~~~_:·u~g~g~t~s~dbytheabovecartoon.
_...:..:
Pri=nl.=lhe:=
SURc..::
PR::c:.
ISI .:::.:
ANSW
-:-111 heR
_

Ll

__JI D [ I I

CABLE CHANNEL FIVE

~E"PJ.JWHlLE 1 T'!-IE POl i CE:
ARRIVE AND Sf'l.NDY RACE:S
AHEAD TO t#UAAD THE: SITE

EAST

[]

1

CAn•w~ ...

I

Jurnhl r&amp;

Veeter1la~·R

rJ

tomorro'-J

PAGAN CLOTH BRONCO UPWARD

A.newer Just enougl1 lo uter the rent - A PATCH

~~;;:;_~U:::K:::_PHAN AN!m;

+

WEST

r)I
II

Local News
Hollywood Old1es
lntngue

Dulch

directton

CORRAN

2 30 - Mov1e " The Evil of Frankenstein '4 News 13
4 00 - Mov1e ' Counterplot ' 4
5 30 - Movte ' I nstde th e Maf1a 4

problem

10.

readmg

1

• The Bamboo Saucer' 10

10 4 tf c

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACR%8
40. Prnny
1. Egypllan
(Eng sl )
dCily
41 Before
f. Thyrood

matertal
39. Proof

MABOOBr

11 30 - Johnny Carson 3 4 15 Sa lute to the Tony Award s 6
Hangove r Squa r e 10
Mov1e s Where tne Boys Are ' 8
The Raven' 13
1 00 - M1dn 1ght Sr;eCial 3 4 Don Ktrshne r s Rock Concert 6
Take F1 ve For L1fe 15 Salute to the Ton y Awards Movr e

~

Spam
37. E&lt;cepl
38. Floor

Son 3 4, 15 Brady Bunch 6 13
30 - Wash1ngton Connec t ion 20 Good T1m es 8 10 , Campus
Scene 33, Bob Hope 3 4 15 S1x M1ll10n Dollar Man 6 13
00 - Mast€rp1ece Theater 33 Brcentennr a l L ect ur e Sertes 20
Mov1es ' It Started 1n Napl es' 8 ' The An9 r y Hill s' 10
30 - Bnan Ke1tt1J 4 15 OddCouple13 Ozzre sGtrls6
00 - Ne ws 20 Reltg1ous America 33 De an Martin 3 l 5 4
Portra1t A Man Whose Name wa s John Tom a 6 13

10 30 - Day AI N ght 33
10 45 - Farm, Home and Garden 20
ll 00 - News Weather, Sports 3 &lt;1 6 8 10 13 15 Janakr 33

"t don't want lose• any more af
Olose sloppy catchos."

33. Corpse
15. Region of

Week 20. 33 Beal lhe Clock IJ
8 00 - Washrngton Rev tew20 33 D1rt y Sa ll y a 10 Sa nford and

9

Apnl 19, 1974
M uC t1 OPPOr1lJnt\y Wtll be
o tl e (ed you t h•S year
However rt carr~es w•t h tl cer
tan condttrons that warn you
not to be wa stelut or t9 take
thmg s fOr-granted
"'

Dec

Por ter Wag oner 3 Hollywood Squa res 4 New Tr e asure
Hunt 10 To Tell the T r ut h 6 Conc:entratmn 8 Wall Street

8

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

One letter simply stands for another In this sample A II
used for lhe three L'&lt;, X for the two O's, etc Smgle !etten,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
htnts Each day the code lette rs .lre different
CRYPTOQUOTES

SPP LNSP CALZJ AB SLV PAAZ Sl
RB VDNM CNLN
LAENLV DNILR

UAIN

RI

XAM.-

Y01terda1'1 Cr)'ploquate: THERE CAN BE NO HAPPINESS
IF THE THINGS WE BELIEVE IN ARE DIFFERENT FROM
THE THINGS WE DO. - F. STARK
(CJ 1974 lUna Futuroa s,ndleato, lne.)

L.OOto:. OUT ETHEL

OoG

1

+86 4

SOUTH 101

4 Door , less than 3500 miles, green v tnyl top &amp; l 1ght green
fm 1sh , green v1nyl 1ntenor tnm 350 V 8 2 bbl, trnted
glass. factory a1r cond1t1oned, AM rad 1o1 floor mats body
protect1ve mldg
power steerrng &amp; brakes, turbo
hydramattc, ext decor package com fort11t steer1ng
wneel wh covers &amp; w w trres Very n1ce &amp; 1fs loaded w1tt1
extras

• AKQ2
• J 10 7 5
A3
.AQJ

+

Nelther vulnerable

1973 CHEV. IMPAlA 4 OOOR.... !3495
Factory a1r tmt glass while over green gold fm1 sh
vmyl1ntenor, 350 VB engrne, wh covers, whtte wall ttres
E clock bumper guards, AM rad10 A sharp ca r &amp; less
than 9,000 m1les

West

North

East

Pass
Pass

3N T

Pass

South

When Merlm the magtctan
played m the brtdge games at
Kmg Arthurs court, there
was a special rule for htm He
could not shuffle, deal or
even cut the cards This
dtdn't keep Merhn from mak '
mg some reall) astoundmg
plays
There was nothmg astoundmg about hts k10g of
dtamonds lead agatpst three
~IRDIEN~
SINCE LEAVIN&amp; nJTV, SHE roESN'T NEED
notrurnp Anyone hkes to
NEEDED AN EXCUSE
HONEVERr. HER WILL WILL fOWER .5HE
lead from king-queenFOR EAn~s;-~BliT IN FOM:R wENT OUT NEED.? WON7
RECENT &gt;""&lt;5 SHES
THE WINDON.
POWER •
Jack-10
TRIED m CONTROlLancelot ducked Merhn
HERSELF.
cont10ued the su1t and Lancelot had to wm He promptly
played the ace of clubs and
cont10ued wtth the Jack
Now Merhn went mto a
trance When he came out of
the trance he had ftgured out
what to do He went up w1th
hts k10g and led a heart
This hne of pla) was the
only way to defeat the contract It showed that Merhn
HIGH-RISES
WE HAVE SENT OUR
had ftgured out exactly what
WEARE
MOST EFFICIENT
Lance lot was trymg to do or
THE GOVERNMENT
ERECTING ON
WORKERS THERE
had seen the peerless kmght's
AWARDS 'IOU
DOGPATCH, WILL
hl!.Ud 10 h1 ~Jra nce
ITS HIGHEST
HOUSE A MILLION
Ha d Merlm ducked the secHSNORFOR
OF US WE DON'T
ond club, a thtrd club lead
TAKE MUCH
·- would have set up two lrtcks
ROOM10 dummy Had he cashed hts
dtamonds, Lancelot would
have discarded hts queen of
clubs and unblocked the su1t
for dummy

Custom Hatchback Cpe dark green fmlsn l1ke new
whtfe wall fires full wh covers protective stde mldgs ,
P B , radio 6 cyl eng 1ne w1th standard trans A very
popular model &amp; one that w1ll please you

1971 DODGE OORONET.............51495
4 door l owner new car: trade 1n, good 1st I me trres
spotless clean lntenor small V 8 engine automatic tran s
m1ss1on Tt1e r 1ght s1ze - the r1gh t pnce Value $1675

1970 FORD MAVERICIL ..........~1445
Local 1 owner car w1th good w w ttres deluxe 1ntenor
tnm wh covers rad1o 6 cyl for good economy w1th std
trans • blue f1n1sh Nrce
J

OUTSTANDING TRUCK BUYS

1972 DiEVROLET PICKUP. .... ~2495
6 cylinder standard transm1sslpn, whrte over blue
v1nyl 1ntenor', appearance of new truck, rad1o , l tke
new whrte wall tires, wheel cover,s~ 8 w1de body
step bumper

1969 atEVROLEl P_ICKUP. ... }1445
8' Fleets1de V 8 eng1ne, std""' trans, good ttres,
radiO, step bumper , green fm1st1 &amp; vE:ry n1ce vtnyl

Large Inventory of light Duly New 74
Chevrolet Trucks.
We Have the Right Deal for You

SAVE UP TO 60% BY HAVING
YOUR HOME INSULATED

lnsulattOn can be blown into the walls and
'
ceilmg at a low cost.
Save on the insulating cost by doing part of
the work yourself.

"WWI'UO~
SlmDie IIUSiheu
WI SIU &amp; SERVICE CIIVIOUT CAIS &amp; YIUCd,

PHONE 992-7320

FOR FREE ESTIMATE

-'

992-2126

Open Eves Till 8

POMEROY

••

1•

'I'•

'

'

Wesl

"Your Chevy Dt3fJler"

~

!N EWSPAPER ENTERPR ISE ASSN)

The b1ddmg has been

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

'Crost.
t.h' ol'
brtdqe?

By Oswald &amp; James Jaruby

mte~ 1or

The Energy Crisis Is A Good Time
To Cut Fuel Costs

Pass

Opentng lead-+ K

1973-CHEV. NOVA ................... ~2695

North

East

1+
Pass
Pass
1•
Pass
You, South, hold

I.

18
South

BE SHORE Al\1'
PUT IT UIIIDER
'lORE PILLER

DID Ol' DOC PRITCHART
GIT 'lORE TOOTH PULLED OUT,
JUGflAID'

ITC)I'J1&lt;5Hi FER TH'

TOOTH FAIRY

DOC
NEVER
GIVE IT
TOME

'I·

outho1 tty on Egyptian
and Babyloman culture

?

•K2 'AJ 765 t864 ... Q94

What do you do now'~
A-Bid eilher one notrump or
two clubs. We ha\le a slight
preference far the two club call

i

J oe Anthro was an

,,,.•
I

~

"'I

.'

TODAY'S QUESTION
You do bod Lwo clubs and your

-- j

~~·-- ~ , ~-'1

I

partner b1ds three club&amp; What do

'·
' I

t &lt;ll fll

7 30 -

r

Merlin retains the old magic

LATE

Is 'In
For Frtday Ap!.!l..!.!_!!_~
ARIES (March 21-Aprll t 9]
It ::; best you k eep opr mons to
vou rset l today srnce you re
apt lo tudge others loo harshly
wrthout kn owtng all th e rac ts

K1ngdom 13

y ·

PISCES (Feb 20 March 201
Rrsky or specul a\lve s tua ltons
w1 1t baCkll re rt you rnvo lve
yourself n them toda y Don t
do anyt hrng chancy

down an agreement wa,ll tll all
pa rt •es are more anuable t~nd

e!BTP
ADUARlUS (Jan 20 l'eb
You could be part of the problem Hasn t anyone eyer told
19) Fuw ncral mailers have to
LEO
(July
23-Aug
221
You
you that ruce guys
' get walked on' 1But don t you dare change - tend to be possess. ve toda y
be t a ~en ser ously today tm
smcere, open expresstve people are the best kmd )
Duls1ve moves or poor tudg
and soml! Nhnt rea lous Th1s at
Since your g f knows she won't lose you, no matter how she
teases, It's easy for her to play games that make her fe el Ron to help me with them, and I pretend I'm haVIng a ball, whon
superiOr Maybe 1f you rea lly DID take off for a while, she 'd I'm really ready to cry How can I slop feelmg so dependent on
reahze what she's lost If not, well , I'm sure there 's a gtrl someone wh o ts gone? - " 16"
somewhere who wtll treat you better - SUE
+++
•
Dear 16
Dear CIBTP
A fellow who 1s away at college tsn 't really "gone" from your
Your fnend soundshke a throw-back to my genera tton, when hfe Look forward to summer vacation, and write hli!l a letter or
gtrls were taught that 1f you keep a man guessmg, you'll keep two m between
him - p.&gt;rtod 1
1\nd face 1t he's not the "b1g brother" you depend on any
Thank goodness that dishonest approach went out of styl e' more - he's_the man you'd hke most to dale You've got the
Maybe she can't express her real feehngs for feat of bemg mstde track , because you 're best-friends already Now, all you
hurt - or maybe she doesn't have any rea l feelmgs yet An all- need do 1s show Ron you've grown up That shouldn't be hard
out fhrt 1s either msecure or shallow, and you'd better fmd out HELEN
which before you go much further m this romance - HELEN
+++
+++
Dear 16
Dear Rap
Meanwhile, don 't JUSt Sll there and mourn for Ron Keep up
Ron, who hved next door was hke an older brother to me
your school fnenclships and outstde mterests - and If you run
came to hlfll with my problems, and when I was 14, he look me to mto a problem, wr1te him a letter t.'ven if you don l run mto a
an expens1ve restaurant as a " pra'Chce date ," so I wouldn't be problem, write hli!l a letter , and look forward to June'- SUE
nervous on my first real dale
After I started gomg out, he'd adVIse me on the guys I should
choose We were real close fnends, and I didn't know how much
I'd miss him until he went off to college (He's 19)
Now I'm lost I keep my problems mstde because there's no Unscramble these four Jumbles,

VW AND DATSU
SPECIALIST

303.5

Uy B clt•n and Sue Uottd

Clock

MATERIALS CO

HltiNI 11/'l~()h'f)
[\',')()(If\[!')

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

KITCHEN

On Most Amen can Cars

Monday thru Saturday
606 E Mam , Pomeroy , O

Middleport, 0

5232

,

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

All WEATHER
HARDWARE
N 2nd Ave

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment
'5.55
-G_UARANTEEOPHONE 992-2094

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

VIRGO (Aug 23-Sept 221
T ht s IS 1101 " good da y lor you
to try t o make dea ls or l te

men t wtll put you In the red

2N T

ASK US ABOUT
PRE-FABRICATED

Business Services

RACINE
STORY
PE'RMA STONE 3
2
BR
LARGE MODERN

stalled

Rap

Illude w111 creal c needless ten
S'10 ns 111 an uns lahlc reta i•On
Ship

'•'

assurance I wouldn 't have to Smce we' ve been gmng together for
over 14 months, 1sn't 1t time she got honest With me ' - COULD l
BE THE PROBLEM '

777 P ee~rl Street
Middleport , Oh10
Phone .99l 5367 or 992 1861

Water L1ne~ and Power
Lmes All work done by the
loot or contract Also dozer
work and sept1c tanks m

'

ness, she says , Go .Jh1ead ' l kn o\\tng f \\f11l t
Maybe I ask stug1d questions, but 1f she d g1vc me some

8-K EXCAVATING
COMPANY

DITCHING SERVICE

:·:·:;::·:-:·:;:--:.:·:·:;:..·

My g~rlfqcnd and I are both 18 I love her " Jot but l am
unsure of myself, and her teasm_g doesn l help
She tells me about the guvs at work \\ho make passes at her
I ask her if she's happy wtlh me and she says, ' Oh maybe
'
She ll never give a slratght answer When I ask, " Do you love TAURUS (Aprol 20 May 201
An 11r tatmg Stlualton wtll arrse
me ' ' s~e says, 'What for '' 1\nd often she starts fitrlln g with because o f a lrr e11d ~
somebody else
umeasonable demands Mak e
She never lets me kno\\ how she really feels, and when l call yourself sca rce when you see
the wai-n. ng s•gnal s
her on 11 and say I mtght break up, what wllh all thi s uncertam- GEMINI (May 21 June 201

Water , Electnc Gas, Sewer
L 1nes
In sta lled
Work
guaranteed
Dozer. Backhoe Truck s
Limestone&amp; Fill 01rt
Commercial Res1denhal
ConstructiOn &amp; Remodel

CALL CARL NELSON
PHONE 992·5083

;.;.;.;.;.;.;...;· ;;.

~eneration

'

Honesty

Under New Management

AGENCY

6 5 1ft

'

·..:.:::: ...,:.;·::::::::::::::·::·:·:,,,,,,,,,::::::::;:.;;:;::::·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:-:-:-:--:··

Rap

RACINE . OHIO

ROOF PAl NTING

AIR CONDITION NOW?

WISEMAN

GREAT

efficiency

Bathroom ~

Large

THE

F UI-lNISHEO
apartment.
adults only Phone 992 5592
4 9 ttc Nt:::W 3 bedroom home Ph bath ,
garage ba:;emenr on Gravel
H1ll Mtddleport Natural gas
2 BEDROOM mobile home air
already rn
Phone Dale
condttlonl ng and rn t he
Dutton 992 3369, f!ven rngs
Racrne ares Phone 992 5858
992 253&lt;1
415tfc
....._.
1 17 tft

FOR RENT

MIDDLEPORT -

MODERN house •n m11e from
-DOZ ER work land clear•ng by
Pomeroy, 3 beelrooms wall to
tt1e acre hourly or ct~ntract
wall carpet large rec room
DOZER and back hoe work
STA RCRA FT t railers and fo l d
farm ponds roads etc Large
large pa tro ca ll 992 52~8
ponds and septrc tank.s d •t
downs 25 pet off on Reese
dozer and operator w1th over
before 3 p m , after 3, call 992
chrng servtce, top soli, f1ll
H1tches and a1r cond1t oners
20 years expenence Pullms
3436
d rr t, limestone
B&amp;K Ex
Excavat~ng , Pomeroy, Oh,ro
20 pet off on automatiC
4 7 12tc
cavatrng Phone ~92 5367 or
awnmgs 14 through 17 ft
Phone 992 2478
9~2 3861
12 19 tfc
Camp tEontey Starcraft Sa les
9 1 tfc
Rt 62 north ot PI Pleasa nt HOUSE rn Syrd&lt;.:Use J rooms
and bath upsta•rs over acre -==--:::=-_j;:-_- - - - - - -uoWTtu-;-s--:a-001~uts~t urn
behrnd the Red Carpe t Inn
of land Par t tally remodeled SE WING MACHINES Repair
over tun k automobrles over to
4 16 4fc
on ms1de Workshop 1n back.
servrce all makes, 992 2284
us W1ll pay S5 for old 1unk
-- -~--------- --....J
Pt1one 992 3135
The Fabrrc Shop Pomeroy
cars Phone I (304) 773 5890,
REGISTERED Angus bulls /1
4 10 Btc
Authorized Singer Sales anc
R1vers1de Auto Wreckmg
months to 21h years Pnce
----------- - - service We Sharpen Sctssors
4 9 26tc
range from S400 to $1 200
329tfc
Wve Marshall and Clossal Rl::AOY MIX
I...ONCRETt:
blood lines Phone Bill W1tte ,
delrv~red
rrght to your
992 2789
-BUILDING consrrucHon Room
prolec;t Fast and easy Free
add rt rons and remodeling ,
4 16 5tc
est1mates Phone 992 328 .4
floor sandrng and refrntshrng
-~ ---------- -Goeglefn Ready M tx Co
A l so concrete work Phone
EXCELSIOR Salt Works E
M1cldleport , Oh10
949 3933 Brssell Construction
Matn St , Pomeroy All k1nds
6 30 tf c
4 16 7tp
Gallipolis
of salt water pellets, water
nuggets , block salt .1nd own
Oh10 R lver Salt Phone 992

3891

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

1970 OLDSMOBILE 98
low
m1leage, excellent condrt1on
Se llrng
several hundr ed
dollars below local dea ler
prrce Phone 992 3863 after 6
p m call 992 5844
4 17 6tc
--- ---- ------~

NO 1 Copper soc rad1ators
40c , red brass 40c baftertes
$1 40 M A Hall , ReedSVIlle
Oh10 Phone 37 8 62-49
3 24 tfc

EXPERIENCED

POMEROY, O.

NICE OLDER HOME -

1957 CHEVROLET Excellent
condtfton
Wtl\
se ll
reasonable Call 99"2 2967 after
5 p m
&lt;1 14 6tc

DAY OR NIGHT

AUTOMOTIVE
REPAIR

RACINE GARAGE

INTERIOR EXTERIOR
PAINTING

Pomeroy

~~~

PH. 949-3611

NELSON

PHONE 992-5271

608 E .
MAIN

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

4 17 5tc

SUBSTANTIAL rew,ard tor lost
male whrte hounCt w th red
head and ears Lost rn Forked
Run Lake area
Contact
Harry Salmons Chesapeake
Oh 10 Phone 867 4535
4 1a Jtc

One

T URF TRIM

Sl

Free Garage
Esltmates

POMEROY - Morn St 75ft

BEAUTIFUL walnut ~tereo
3965
rad•o am fm a tra ck tape
2 1&lt;1 ttc
combrnat1on Balance 5110 92
or terms available Cal l 992 WE ARE p1ckrng up a ptano rn
3965
your area and would l1ke
4 16 tfc
some responstble party to
-~-----------take over payments
Call
Cred1t Manager (614 1 772
5669 or wnte 260 East Marn
For the Lowest
St reet Chtllrcothe OhtO 45601
4 7 tfc

1n

kttchen t1elp Apply rn person
Crow s
Steak
House,
Pomeroy
4 4 tfc

$52~o
20", 3 H.P.

&lt;I 17 4t C

I NCH electn c range wrth
bl ower good cond t •on Call
991 3401 after 5 p m
4 16 6tc

4 14 61p

777~

SPECIAL

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

27

1969 CHEVELLE A 1 cond tfton
wtll sell or trade for ptckup of
equal value Phon e 992 7644

HOUSEKEEPER
Ph one 992 2916

DACH SHUN D puppte5 Cal 1742 1965 SK IF FCRAFT Model 190
5092 after 6 p m anyt•me on
cab •n crutser 1964 Evtnrude
Sunday
Star Fl rght motor 75 h p w th
&lt;I 18 Jtp
trailer and canvas top 1n
eluded
See at 105 Un ron
Avenue or call 992 3293
2 FEMA L E Whtle toy pood l es
&lt;1 14 6tc
Phone 882 3190
4 14 6tp
TROPICAL ftsh for sa le
Frankltn and PhylliS Hend
r•cks Syrac use Thtrd Str ee t
4 u 6tc
PROM Dress m •nf green s1ze
7 8 also Catalina swrmsu1t
new s 1ze 10 Phone 992 5271
4 17 5271
&lt;1 17 3tc

GENE WOLfE'S
BODY SHOP

:::

We r epatr lawn mowers and
g~rden tractors

P~one 742 4673
742-5595
Boll Brown . Owner
Rutland. Ohto

~:

t....

•

FIRE DEPARTMENT
EQUIPMENT
EXTINGUISHER
SALES &amp; SERVICE
HOME ALARMS

808 W Mam

Television Log

~MPLETE

W1lkmson Small Engme
992 3092
399 w Ma1r1
Pome-roy , 0
Located at Modern Supplv
Small Eng•ne Repatr "

FMr CLAIM SERVICE

MEIGS COUNTY
HUMANE
SOCIETY
THRIFT SHOP

II - 1 1lf IJaily ~nllnel Mtddlepllrt-Pomero), 0 , 1\pnl t8, 1'17l

Busin.e ss Services

I 17 ) I (

NEW tvr n •Shed apar tmen t 3 \,7ROCERY bus1ness for sa le
room s and bath Real nt ce
Butldtng tor sale or teas e
R~ynolds
Apartment s
Phone 773 5618 from 8 30 p m
Ma son W Va
phone 77 3
to 10 p m tor appo1ntment
5141 on good road
3 20 tfc
4 1I! 7tc
3 19 He
SINGER sewmg mach 1nes 1972
T RAILER
Brown s Tr cole r
model 1n beautifUl walnut
Par k. Phon e 992 3324
cab1 net Makes destgn st 1l
4 1&lt;1 tfc
c tles ztg zag
buttonholes
$150 REWARD fo r the arr es t
bllnel hem s, etc L•ke new
and convrctron of person or
On l y S89 95 Call Ravenswood
persons who stole rny Gravely J AND 4 ROOM furn iShed and
unrurntshed
apartments
273 9521 or 273 9893 after 5 00
trac tor Tuesday nrgh t Phone
Phone 992 5434
12 7 lfc
Bob Grueser 992 7.J65 Rt 3
4 12 ttc - ---- - ---~----Pom eroy
4 18 ltc
10
HOR SEPO WER
A l lt S
PRIVATE me~rng room tor
Chalmers tractor Wt f h ~2 •nch
any organ ,zatron . phone 992
mower E~&lt; ce !l e nt co ndrt&lt;•on
3975
Con ~act Mnrvm K eebaugh 6 RO OM 1 floor plan hou se w1th
3 11 tfc
bath An tce d eta ch&lt;&gt; d g arage
d ays 99'1 53 41 985 39 13 af1cr 7
exc ellent loca t•on 1n M 1d
P m
M O BI LE HOME 1 bt:droom
dleporl
Phor; e 992 J904 or
~ 16 Jt c
lUll ,.1M.
Co li
a rr cond•lron cable TV good
c onta c t
Charl es
L1 s te
local ron Phone 992 5623
Syr ac use
ELECTRI C g uitar G1bson L 5
Steve Snowden
4 16 6t c
4 18 2tc
w lh case and ampl ft er lik e
new Pn ce :5.500 00 Phone 992
PH. 992-7155
ONE J bedroom tr ailer con
2732
2 BEDROOM hoLJse tn M1d
struc l •on workers preferred
4 18 31p
dt eport
New k1fchen and
STATE FARM IN SU RAN CF CO MP~ IES
Ca ll 992 744 8 after 5 p rn
bath appttan ces •nc l uded
. 418Jtc STRAWBERRY plants Cha rl•e
Call 992 5310
Fos ter Rt 2 Ra c rne Ohto
J 19 261 c
T.R AILER Utl ldiE.' 5 turn 1Shed
Phone 247 2309
Phon e 742 5980
4 18 121 c
4 18 6tc
TRAILER e'&lt; cellent cond11ion
Phone 992 2987
4 14 6tp

KQSCOT

For Rent
FIGHT LOST
NEW YORK (UP!) - Residents of the Croyden Hotel,
who tried to prevent the hotel's.
owners from rnakmg Improvements becauae they s~id they
would not be able to afford the
higher rents that would follow,
have lost their ftght
Manhattan SUpreme Court
Justice Margaret Mangan
ruled Tuesday the owners were
doing nothing lllegal by
renovating the
17-story
Manhattan hotel.
The tenants had argued •
cutbacks In service were
deligned to drlw them out, but
the court said despite some
cutbacks, services fo~ the
mldents were adequ•te

Sale

' 1\FOR (J f \' '""" un l&gt;,ou &lt;&gt;
r'lf'U R uttm.t Phon t I ll? t. 1t.l

for Sa;e

For Rent

RP.ai ~ state For

,

you do now ~

I

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•

' '

'

• •
(

'•

'

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'

�•

.
Tht• na ily Sf.&gt;Qt in~l . Middll'port-l'ullll'l"\1y, U., .\1 Jn!

12

Operi h ous·e -to ·

w:I~l'i-1

show training

·---- ·

._... ........._.._.._.._...___.
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....

TilE MEIGS COUNTY AGRICULTURALStabilization and Conservation Ofrice, located m
the Pom~roy Ma soni c Temple building since 1944, has completed its move to a new suite of
offices in the Farmers Bank and Savings Co. building. The suite includes the sta ff office, office
of the supervisor, H. E. (Pete) Shields, a kitchenette , a machine-equipment room and a board
meeting room . With Shields in his office at the new location are M»&gt;Yiolet Morarily, left, and
Mrs. Phyllis McDaniel. All of the federa l farm service agencies of the county are now loca ted
in the Farmers Bank and Savings Co. building .

·--~,

~

BARGAINS ON THE SECOND FLOOR
Girl s Spor t swear. ~e l ected from sto ck.
4- 6x, 7-14, Pret een. Sale 112 Pri ce .

l

Economy -in
deep falloff

1

I
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Worn ens Shi rts · an d Bl ouses
selected f rom stock . SALE '12
PRICE.

!
!I

Wom ens Daytime Dresses . Our
entire sto ck included. Sizes to 52.
Sale Prices .

I

Wom ens Knit Tops sel ec ted f rom
::~ur · regular stock . Sale •12 Price .

I

Spring Maternity Wear. Our entire
stock of Pants and Tops in cluded.
Sale Prices .

l
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Womens Sleepwear . Our entire
stock of nylon or permanent press
gowns included. Save 25 Pet.
Famous maker Bras and Girdles.
Discontinued styl es. Sa!e •12 Price .
Reg . . $1.00 Womens Pantyhose.
Bas ic C!nd fa shion colors . Sale 5
pairs $2.88.

•

WASHINGTON tUPI I -- The nat ion's economic
growth rate fell by the biggest margin in 16 year~ between January and March, the Commerce Department reported Thursday. Inflation in the same
period soared at a 10.8 per cent annual rate, a 23year high, a spokesman 0aid .
The doub l e-~arre l ed bad news, largely the res ult
of the energy · shortage, was anticipated widely
a lthough the fall -off was steeper than some experts
had predicted. Few economists expect the slump to
last long, but unless a mark ed upswing occurs in the
current April-June quarter, the country could be
faced with six months of nega tive economic growth
·
- the technica l definition of a recess ion.

\

Boys Su its and Jackets . Infants
si zes 0 to size 6. Sale 112 Price .

SPRING DRESSES

GIRLS DRESSES

SPRING COATS

Si zes 6 to 20. Selected fr om stock. Reg. $23.00
to $noo.

M isses - Juniors . Halt Sizes. Selected from
stock. Reg . $12 .00 to $50. 00.

SALE '12 65 to '3960.

SALE '6 60 to •27 50

President
Nixon
ha s
promised on several o~casions
to take whatever steps he
deems necessa ry to avoid this
condition.
The latest figures also could
accelerate calls in Congress for
a tax cut as a means of putting
more money in the pockets of
Americans
and
thus
st imul at ing ·the economy.
Administration officiats have
argued that such a move only
would compound the present
inflationary dilemma.
As measured by the Gross
National Product (GNP) , the
most comphrensive barometer

Inf ants. toddler s and girls 4 to 14. Reg. $6 .00 to
$18.00 .

90
30
SALE
'3
to
'9
.
"

Famous maker Womens Slippers.
Our entire stock is Reduced fo r
this Sale .
Cari lite Luggage. Choose blue or
green. Mens and womens . Sale 112
Price .

..

MEN'S DOUBLE KNIT DRESS SLACKS

-~-~~--·-':""' ~----~---1
BARGAINS ON THE FIRST FLOOR
\
Cannon
Bath
En semble s.
Discontinued patterns . Bath and
hand towels, wa sh cloth s. Sale 112
Price.

Si zes 29 to 42, 44 to 50. Solid colors, stripes, plaids. Exc ell ent selection of t he
season's best style s. Regular $9 .95 to $18 .95.

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MEN'S SHORT SLEEVE SPORT ANDDRESS SHIRTS
Ou r enti r e stock of no-i ron sh irt s. Sizes· small. medium, larg e and ext ra large.
Solid colors, stripes, plaids, patterns. Regular ly $3 .95 to $10.95.
.

No-1r on Sheets. Ameri can made
by Thomaston Mills. Denim look
or calico. Sale Prices.

SALE •2.94 to '8.24 SALE

'

Decorative Wall Plaques. Reg .
$4.00 and $5.00. Sale 112 Price .

I

MEN'S DOUBLEKNIT SPORT COATS

I
I
I

Hot Dipped Galvan ized Bucket s
and Scrub Tubs. Sale Prices .

REG.-•49

By United Press International
WASHINGTON - QUIETLY, WITIIOUT DEBATE. the
United States has assented to a Latin American diplomatic
gambit aimed at bringing Cuba in from the cold. Without
di scussion, Secretary of Slate Henry- A. Kissinger consented
Tuesday to a Mexica n proposal that hemisphere goverrunents be
polled on whet her they want Cuba invited .to the ir next foreign
·
.
ministers conference.
U everyone agrees, Fidel Castro will send his representa tive
to a parley of American slates - this one In Buenos Aires next
March - for the first time since the Organization of American
Statts (OAS ) impo~ed a diplomatic and economic quarantine
1964. ·'' . .
' . .
against his gover!Ull"nt
This quiet littl~ piece of bus mess dtd not even rate menhon m
th e eight-page coljlffiunique that ended the two-day Washington ·
meeting of hemisphere foreign ministers Tuesday. But enthused
Lailn diplomats made clear they viewed it as a major ·breakthrough .

MEN'S KNIT SPORT SHIRTS 'ALE
Sizes small. medium, large and ext ra large. Short sleeve siTlrts - t a ~k lop s
pullovers . Solid color-s- white· patterns . Reg ularly $3. 98 to $11 .95 .

Kodak and Pol aroid Fi l m ~. Al l
popular sizes for pri nts, slides ,
mov ies. Sale Prices.

f.

SALE •2.88 to "'w&amp;.88

Boys and Girls Bicycles.· Po~u lar
brands and styles. At S.ale Pnces.

.

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MEN'S &amp; BOYS' LIGHTWEIGHT JACKETS

. JOHANNESBURG, South. Africa- A black miner rescued
what tw-ned .out·to be the world's ninth largest diamond from a
rock crusher, a spokesman for th·e De Beers Mining Group said
Thiu-sday . The offiCia l put no price on the stone- a yellow OC·
tahedron weighing 616 carats- which was pulled off a conveyor
belt leading to the rock crusher at the Du loitspan mine in
Kimberley on Wednesday. He said it has "several flaws" and
will be photographed later.
.
.
.
Officials said they would not tdenlify the Afrtcan cutter who
found it, but said he would be given a ~ew':!"d. It is cus,tomery to
withhold names for ."their own prote~tiQ!l, they said. The stone.
is the second major fmd at the mine in seven months and the
largest ro1111 d at Kimberiey since 1896. Last October, a worker
discovered a 223 carat gem, also a yellow octahedron. rA
Johannesburg company polished and cut it at\d subsequently
(Continued on p~ ge 10)

Men s si ze s 36 to 48, boys sizes 4 to 20. Nylons - c:ottons - polyesti!r ·cotton blends .

OUR ENTIRE STOCK AT SALE PRICES
·'·

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Po m ~roy

se r ved

by

the

volunteer emergency

squad. The Pome r oy psquad is

partici pating in the prog ram to
upgn:tde

U1e

overa ll

squ::1 d

operation in additio n tu the
man y hours of tro inmg in first
&lt;lid

and

r egional

seminars

pr evitltJ.'I Iy uncle&gt;rta ken.
The, co ur se includ e~ care of
fru cturcs and proper splinting,

usc uf all
pllCJ Se:.; u£
res usciUlt io,n from mouth to
I IH!Ulll to the drmand type

resusr·i tat or , learnin g
proper

tel' hn iq ue

dwpulmon ary

of

th~

ca r -

resu sci ta tion,

ep1crgrncy care·.uf dJi:lbe tics ,
f.'m e r gcncy ca re of stro k e'"

\'Jctims , emergency childbirth.
con troll ing blcctling, extrication
fr om
wrecked
automob iles, problems de;:~ ling
with the various types of ·shock.
drug aiJuse, &lt;:~nd rn&lt;my othi'r
a!o:isocit~tecl rtr eas uf ~llllTge n cy
!Continu ed on J)age lO i

•
POMEilOY EMERGENCY SQUAD MEMBERS , as part of a GO hour course in emer~cney
mediccll servit'e, demonstrate proper technique of cardJOpuln;on&lt;.li"Y res uscitati on using a
dem and r·esuscitator. The "victlm" is Steve Hartenbtu.:h : other$, l-r, are, John ManlL-~. T(Jill
f Pre Wee 1Werry, cmd Jim Sisson. Joe Struble is in stru cto r.

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enttne

l.kvoted To The lntere.~t.~ Of The Me~.~-Mmon Area

VOL. XXVI NO. 5

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORl OHIO

FRIDAY, APRIL 19, 1974

PHONE 992-2 156

TEN CENTS

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GET EM OFF
All au tomobiles sti ll
havi ng 1973 tags on them
must be off the streets of
Middlepo rt by m idnight,
Saturday Chief of Police J. J .
Cre means sa id today .
Failu r e to remove the
vehi cles
will
br in g
proseeution of the owners •.
Chief Cremeans warned.
Pomero)· Poli ce Chi ef Jed
J. Webs ter a lso warned
today that all cars parked in
the corporation limits must
eith er have 1914 tags or be
removed fro m the streets.
Failure to do so will lead to
the arres t of the ow ners and
the vehicles will be lowed
away, he said.

Tourism Project blackballed
The Buckeye Hills - Hocking
Valley Regiona l Developm ent
Distric t I BH-HVRDD J and the
Tuscara was Vall ey Regional
Advisory Committee iTVIlAC!
disclosed the App alac hian
Regional Commiss ion ha s
denied a request for $150,000 in
specia l demonstration fun ds
that would have launch ed a
major tourism promoti on and
development pr oject in 17
counties in southeastern and
eastern Ohio including Meigs
County .
The action by the 13 states in
the Appa lachian Commi ssion
came as a complete sur prise to
involved parties al both the
local and Sta te level in Ohio .
The project had received U1e
complete endorsement of both
the State of Ohio and the staff
of the Appalachian Regional
Commission and had seemed
assured of appro val until
earlier this week.
The project was tl1e only
special demonstration project
submitted from Ohio this year
and was being viewed by a
number of people as an opportun ity to place southeastern
Ohio, and perhaps utlimately
the entire Stale of Ohio, on the
map in the area of touri sm
devel opment.
Opposilion lo th e Ohio
project was apparent by the
Slate of Pennsylvania , one of
the 13 voting members of the
Appala chian Regional Commi ss ion . Pennsylvania ob-

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
A cha nce nf s howers
Sunday
and
Mu nday,
clearing Tuesday. Highs in
the 70s and low 80s S~ n day
and in the 60s Monday and
Tues day. Lows in the 50s.

the BPO Elks Lodge 107,
Gallipolis.
Mr. Goble began in the
automobile busine ss ·as a
salesman for Colonial Motors
Co. in Huntin gton , and became
a ca-owner of the Pikeville
Motor Co . in Kentucky. For
eight years he was manager of
the Gillan Motor Sales Co. in
Ga lli polis. For the past 12
years he was owner of the
Goble Motor Co. in Middleport.
Funeral services will be held
at 2 p.m. Sunday at the
Rawlings-Coats F uneral Home
with
the Rev . Robert
Bumgar ner officiating . Burial
will be in Kirkland Memoria l
Gardens near Point P leasant.
Friends may call at the funeral
home from 12 noon until 9 p.m.
Saturday . The fami ly will
receive friends at the funeral
home from 7 to 9 p.m. Saturday .

jected to the fact that the
project would put Oh io in a
positi on to lure tD urist and
tourism clol!&lt;1rs from Pennsy lvania and other slcJtc:-; neighb urin ~ Ohio. It wa s eo ntended
that Ohio would be given an
unfa ir e01 11pan1t i\'C adv::mU1ge
if the projec t were deve loped.
Desp ite eff orl' by tl1e Stale
of Ohi o to point out that the

pro jec t was prim&lt;lrily direc ted

today that the action by AHC HVRDD and TVRAC indicated
that a meeting of local inOh io's large ci ties in 0t1 io, the Beasley commented that votes dividual s in volved in the
pro ject w~1 s defeated by a vote by the Commission are " rarely prop osed project 1s sched uled
of eig ht to three by the full divided in such a man ner and for next week to focu s on finCommi ssion. All of lhe states almost a lways ref lect a cling alterna ti ve soun·es of
border ing Ohio in the 1\p- broa der and more reg ion a I support for the proposed
p ~ l ac hitHJ
Region voted atti tude towa rd meeting th e project in a move to capitalize
against the p(ojec t.
potentials of the Appala c hia~ on the cooperation and en*
John H. Beasley, Executive part of the United States."
Umsiasm generated by the
Direc tor of BH-HVHDD swd
Represe ntatives of both Bll - effort to obtain ARC funds.
to ward keeping tourisl'i from

College hikes tuition, hoard rates
HIO GRANDF: -- The Rio
Grande College Board of
Tr ustees have voted the fir st
substantial increase in tuitio n,
room and board at the r;oll ege
in three yea rs. Following the
action, ltliti on at nio GrandP
will b~ increased frum $1 ,710 to
$1,890 a year , and room and
board cha rges wi ll go to $1,275
from $1,1 25 a year.
In the past threr yrars. until
this mos t recent acti on. tu1 tion
at the College has on ly been
in creased· a tota l of. $lu, and
room and board has gone 11!
on ly $150. Continuin g i n crfl ~1.1cs
in cost were cited w;; the
reaso ns f or the 80 drd 's
decision .

"While Ri o Grande College
has im tated littl e or no " Increases in tuition. room and
board in the past three yea rs,"
Dr . Alphus R. Chris tense n,
president of the Co llege sa id ,

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" uti li t tes, food cos ts , in - from llG cents to $1.15 a ga ll on
su ra nee,
postage,
the and the college uses 48 ga ll ons
minimum wage an d oth er each day. Roast beef has gone
ex penses have conti nued to from 86 cents a pound to $1.55
climb. "
in tile past year; tuna' fis h has
Accordtng to the College nearly doubled in price and
Pinance Office. three yea rs plastic spoons skyroc keted
ago Hio Grande paid out $66,000 fr om $1. 70 a thousand to $t9.50.
in utilities. La st yea r , this
In addition to food and
fig ure had jumped to $82 ,000, utilities , other ir.oms, including
and by the end of this fiscal . printing supplies and toilet
yea r June 30. it will be $104 ,000. paper have also increased in
\1\illiam 0. Smeltzer, vtcc pri ce. Last year , fo r example,
president for finance at the mimeograph paper went fr om
College, sa id , "O ur electri c bi ll $1.30 a ream to $2.4U a ream ,
"-· ill increase approximtJ tely and the college uses. nearly
$10,o00 th1s yea r ; our na tural 3,000 rea ms annually. Toi let
gas will go up $12,007; and the paper in creased from $12.05 a
in crea~C!:i gran te d lu the case a year ago to Sl3.90 a case
te lephone company will cost this year .
the College an additional
Faced with the ever in.
$5,600."
creasing costs and declin ing
Othe r items affecting the number of students who live on
college budget that ha ve gone camp us, the Ri o Grande
up drastically in the past year Co ll ege Board of Tru stees
include mi lk, which &lt;:imbed voted the increase in tuitibn
and room and board eharges."
Even with the increase in
tuition to $1,890 a year~
yotir sha re, love your st.:J te, begin ning in t11e fall qu a'r ter
1974 1 Rio Grande stm ran ks in
drive with care\ "
the
lower percentiles of priv ~1 te
Th e juven il~ winner was
accredited
~
four ·year inJimmer Soulsby, 1:1, Union
Ave., Pomeroy, son of Mr . and stitutions in OhJO. Of the 36
Mrs J ames Sou lsby. Hi s private colleges listed in the
slogan was "Use your 'snap' Ohio Foundation of In judgment, fa sten sea tbe lt:.." dependent Colleges, only · 13
He will receive a $5 cash prize. have a tui tion cha rge !lllder
$1.890. El.even Qf these are
church-affJialed
and receive
,~,.-.
financia l suppor t from the ir

Safety slogan winners named

VOTING NOW
The Me igs County Board of
Elections is ·accepting a bsentee, disabled and armed
forces voting fo r the May 7
primary elections . The board
office is open from I to 4· p.m.
Monday through Saturda y until
May 2 lor. the convenience of
such .voters.

Meigs County winners in the
all(lual Ohio Department of
Hi g'hwa y Safe ty slogan-&lt;Ossay
contes t were announced tod ;:~ y.
Winner of the ad ult division
who will rece ive a transistor
rad io, · was Na nc y Louise
Morrissey, Rt. 3, Pomeroy wi th
her slogan "Be a Buckeye, do

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Poster winners

Pastoral team
will operate

will he .tapp~d

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children 's home

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was almost unpre ce dented .

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It was an nounced today by '
the Me igs County Commissioners tha t the Rev . arid
Mrs. Thomas Weaver have
been named. s up erintende nt
I
and ma tron of the Meigs
Co1111 ty Children 's Home . They
will assume 'their duties at the
'
home begin ning today.
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The Rev . Weaver, pastor of
the Nazar ene Chu rch in
Middlepor t, ·and Mrs. Weaver
fill the vacancy created by the
resignation of Mr. and 1\irs.
Ra lph Harvey.
. -An nouncement of the appoinlments, . made by the
"CULTURAL ARTS WINNERS at C.hester Elementary who will be competing in county
commissioners earlier th is
competition are, fro nt, 1-r, Aaron Parker, primary for essay; Becky Eichinger, primary for
week ih their regular meeting.
visual arts; April Pa rker, intermediate, lor essay ; Brice Buckley, intermediate, for visual
was delayed . pending the
arts;
Cheryl Folm•r, primary. forpoe lry ; back row, Cynthia Pitzer; junior group, essay; Gary
1
Wea vers making needed
Nelson, junior, visual arts: Tanuny Pitzer, junior, poetry; an!l Marcy Sexson, inte rmediate,
. poetry . Miss Melanie Beegle was the teacher in charge of the cultural artS program.
1 personal arra ngements.

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tow nshi ps

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improve a~l:idcnt prevention
ami life sa\' ing techniqu~s in
Pomeroy and th e surrou11ding

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home, and a brother, James A.
Goble, Largo, Fla .
Mr. Goble was a member of
Heath Uni ted Methodist
Church in Midd leport and was
a vetera n of World War II
having served in the navy . He
was a member of Drew
Webster Post 39, American
Legion, Pomeroy ; of the Hugh
c. Boyd Lodge 199, Free and
Accepted Masons al Matewan, ·
Royal Arch Masons Chapter 79,
Gallipolis ; Rose Commandery
43,
Knights
Templa r ,
Gal li polis; Aladdin Temp le
A.A.9.N.M.S. Columbus, and

.INews~ . in Briefs.i:

SALI '31.50

95

of a co untry 's economic health ,
output fell at a 5.8 per cent
annual rate in the first quarter
- the biggest three -month drop
since a 9.2 per cent decline in
the first quarter of 1958.
Severe cutbacks in the auto
industry .plus a cont inued
recession in the home con~
struction industry were
blamed for most of the decline ,
the department said.
The inflationary spurt in the
same peri od was the biggest
since a 13 per cent rise in the
first quarter of 1951, during the
Korean war boom.

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Si zes 36 to 46, regular and long. Excellent qual ity. Sol id color s and colorful
plafds.

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Revere Copper bottom Tea Ketti es . Houseware s Dept . Sale $8.99.
Furniture throw s. Our entire stock
is inc.luded. Sale Pr ices.

Ke ith E. Goble, 51, Powell
St., Middleport, well known
Middleport businessman , died
. Friday morning a t the Holze r
Med ica l Center following a
lingering illness . Mr . Goble
was born on March 2, 1923 at
Matewan , W. Va ., the son of the
late James and Sadie Smith
Goble . He was also preceded in
death two years ago by a sister,
Gwendolyn Vaughan .
Surviving are his wife , Opal;
two daughters, Jennifer Keith
Gob le, attending Morehead
State University, Morehead,
Ky .. and Bridget Diane, at

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General Electri c Alarm Clocks.
Several colors in selection . Sale
$2.99 .

Clearing north , cloudy s.outh
today, high in the 60s south.
Cloudy south tonight . low
around 40. Cloudy Saturday,
1-ligh in the 60s south.

Keith Goble dies

SALE •7.49 to •13.69

II

100 Pet. Polyester Doubl e Knit
Dress Fabrics . This sale 112 Price .

Weather

WASHINGTON (UPI) - The worst infi'atiun in nearly a
quarter centu ry continued unabated in March, with the cost
of living risb1g 1.1 per cent, the government reported today .
Higher prices were recorded for a wide range of items from
food to doctors' fees.
The 1.1 per cent jump in the Consumer Price Index {CPI )
was the third largest mouthly increase since 1947, exceeded
only by the L3 per cent advance in February and a 1.8 per
cent increase last August.

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Womens Uniform s. Big selection
of popular styl es : All at Sale
Prices.

Twenty -five members of the
Pomeroy
Volunt ee r
Emergency Squad will let it all
hang out Sunday, April 28 from
1 to 5 p.m. al thei r n~·w
headquarte rs on Butternu t
Ave .
They 'll be showing off the
results of 60 hours of intensive
training in emer g('ncy vict im
care skills ltJUgli t by licensed
EMS instru ctor J oe Struble.
The p~blic is in Vited to the open
hr "se where the unit 's entirC'
operation will be on di splay.
Th e 12 weeks of train in g, is
being provided through the
publi c scrvi ec program of the
Trade
and
In dustria l
Vocational Education ServicP
of the Oh10 Sta te Department
of Edu catio n, Ohio State
University, in cooperation with
the Meigs IJJca l Schoo l District
and the .•,ill age of Pomeroy.
All the men are a ttending
classes on their ow n time,
being volunteer s se rvi ng
people in the community
Th e course is designed to

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Members of the staff of the
M~igs So il and Water Conservation Distr ict office will
visit 12 elementary schools in
Meigs Count·y next week to
presen t ribbons and cash
awards, to winnerS in the
district's annual poster con·
test .
The contest is for fourth , fift h
and s ix th graders with the top
wjnner in each class r~ceiVin g
a $3 cash prize, and a blu e
ribb on; the second pla ce
winner receiving a $2 cash
prize and red ribbon and the
third place winner receiving a
$1 cash prize and a white
ribbon.
The best two in each class
from ea ch . school will be
brought io the district office in
.·Pomeroy ·for judging on the
county leveL The winners from
.this judging wHlreceivea cash
prize .plus a -rosette;

churc/1es.
Com men t1ng on th€ new
ra tes, Dr. Christensen !3ald :
"For three years, Rio
Grande College has l1elcl the
line and c1 bsorbed the in ~
creasing cos ts or ope ration
without an increase; however
faced with the expenses of
today and predicted 10 pet.
increa se in cos t- of-liv ing
expenses wt thin the next year,
we had no a lternative but to
increase our tuition and room
and board rates."
Al so in a recent meeting,
tuition ~mrl gener:J! fees for the
new Comm un ity Col lc gl' fo r
next year were established by
the C&lt;Jmm unity College Boa rd
of Trustees.
Th e tuition, or instructiona l
fee, is based on $10 " credi t
hour . This means :1 normal 15hour quar te r at Community
College next year will cos t
students who live in the four~
county Co mmunity Co ll ege
di strict $150c00 tuition. The
lotol tuition for the year will be
!Continued on page 10 )

G-T laying
new cables

RA CINE - Constructi on is
under way on a major cable
additi on for grow th in th.e
northea st section of the Racine
exchange , Genera l Telepho"e
Co . of Ohio ann ounced today.
Donald H. Pearch, Jr.,
Porri er oy c·us tomer se rvi ce
supervisor , sa id the $106,600
· pro ject will upgrade prese nt
services ·an d al low fu~ure ·
growth in the area. Portions of
the new ca ble will replace
existing facilities for main,
te nan ce reaso ns . Whe re
possible the cable will be
buried .
"Burying cable enhances the
• 'natural beauty of the Iandscape and r~du ceS . service
outages from -severe weather
-condition s and autom obile
accidents, " Pearch sa id. The
Racine exchange serves 812
telephones in a 42-square-mile
area of Meigs county. ·.

MEETING DEL\ YEO
The Pomeroy Chamber of
Co mmerce · wl!ic·h
wa s
sched.uled to meet Monday will
meet Monday , Ap~il29, at noon
at the Meigs Inn.

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