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'

.

I

She:tlh', M.f&gt;. uf the C.allia
CotUlly Heallh Department,
· ria ~

l'Xprb;s t•d

l ' lHH"l'l'l l

l'eg;ll'clin~ lilt.• prl'\'t.dl.'riL'l' ·of
fal!&lt;.~cious : (If' ques ti onabl e
nulrillun jll'i.ll'll(·L'S.

The

Retirees honored
MIDDLEPORT
The
family of Pearl VanCooney
recently held a party honoring
their father, Mr. VanCooney,
and Wallace Russell, who
retired from the Middleport
Post Office after a combined 69
years ol service,
Russell was assistant to the
postmaster and had worked at
the post office for 35 years. He
had a remarkable sick leave

fOl'II S

uf

Nt~ ti unal

'

&lt;t!lcrllilliJ urJtil it is too la lt' fur
t&gt;fr~l' t i vt.· tn.:iltmcrJt t!J lx· 11 1~

deficiency CJ( a sinJ..( Ic null ienl.

st itutcd," said Dr· . Sh;_u~t•.
Avart frolll · tlu~ health

IIUirit•nl

ma y

~:x i ~ t.

anti

1

:!}

tlwl

h.t11.ard s
involvl!d ,
plemcrJI.;tl iun with t•xccssive
&lt;llllllU rll :-; of vil&lt;lmins and
mincrab or ust· of unneeded

&lt;.1

1nay

fJrthriti .~.··

-· Hculth claims made for
some rroducts sueh as sea sa lt,
lecithin , Vinegar and honey ,
etc. These have not been
~t· i enlifi cal ly
substantiated .
And rrP."' . . . mber the im portanl·c of a medical check-up
before making any radical
changes in your diet , and
ge tting nutrition facts {rom a
qualified source such as a
physit: ian or a re~isttred
dieti ti an .
It 's a fact, anyone can usc
fa11c y titles or write books

whi ch suggest they are
nutrition authorities, but don 't
be fouled! There is nothing
magic or glamorous about
choosin g a balanced diet from
a large variety of everyday
foods, eating in moderation
and exercising but " these" are
still the best ways to good
nutrition .

balance of over 2,774 hours. His
job was filled by Adrian
Carson, Route I Middleport.
Mr. VanCooney had 34 years
of service as custodia l fireman
and had accumulate 2,631
hours of sick leave, Both men
'! '
were honored by the United jl\=====::;:::::::::;:;:::;:;:::;:;:;:;:::;:;:::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::=:=:=:=::::::;:;::::::=:=:=::;:;:;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;,;:;:;:;,;,:,:,:,::::::::::::::::::::=:=============::;:;:;:;:;:;:;.,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,:!:r
States Postal Services and
presented with cer tificates for
meritorious services.

Unit went out

. . View from the Statehouse · ·

I

I

By Rep. Ronald Jamos

2 times Friday

COLUMBUS - The Ohio
General As.Sembly embraced
MIDDLEPORT
The
the first days of March in a
determined effort to deal
Middleport emergency squad
was called at 12 :17 p.m. Friday
definitely with four proposed
for Kelly Gilmore, a medical
constitutional amendments
concerning housing, tax breaks
patient, who was taken to the
lor manufacturing industry, a
Holzer Medical Center.
At 4:35 p.m, Friday the
general capital developments
bond issue and a transportation
squad was called Io !he
bond issue . But at midnight,
Riverside Apartments for
March
5, time ran ·out for
Martha Repp, a medi cal
patient, who was taken to
getting the four proposals on
the June ballot, I voted to put
Veterans Memorial Hospital
where she was admitted.
the Issues thai were before the
Saturday at 10:28 a .m., the
House on the ballot - I believe
the people should have a
squad went to 107 Park St, for
chance to vote on them. The
Gary Smith who was having
House worked very hard on the
stomach pains. He was taken to
MRS,
WEATHERBY
issues. We came up with some
Veterans Memorial Hospital .
Mrs, Lelah Weatherby of
good amendments, but the
Middleport Is resigning
Senate would not agree .
elfectlve April I as head of
The proposals are not en·
the services to lamllies of
tirely dead. They could be put
members of the armerl
HIT.SKIP PROBED
on the November ballot, but the
forces
for tqe Meigs County
GALLIPOLIS - Clty police
Governor will have to Qlake
Chapter of the American
here Friday lnvesllgated a hit·
sorne sort of decision as to
skip accident on Third Ave. Red Cross. Mrs. Weatherby
whe-ther 'he wants to pursue the
has held the posl fnr two
Officers said a car owned by
matter.
years, Anyone Interested In
VIckie Burrows, 19, Galllpolis,
The legislature has been
serving In the capacity may
was struck by an unknown
considering some other issues.
contact Chester V, King,
vehicle,
These include:
Rutland. new dlreclor of the
Tax breaks for outdoor
local Red Cross Chaptor.
recrenl.ional lands: For many
years Ohio's constitution held
lluit all real property in this
GILLIGAN .ALIVE
state had to be taxed at a
CINCINNATI I UPI I
tUliforrn rate according to its
Former Gov. John J . Gilligan true value, which is defined as
und Cincinnati businessman its market value. Recent Ohio
Marvin Warner were eleetcd Supreme Court cases have
Friday night to the Democratic affinned the principle that
National Committee. Gilligan, regardless of the use lo which
who made a personal ap- real estate is put, the conpearance at a meeting of the stituti on had to be followed and
Ohio Democratic Party had to be taxed uniformly
Executive Committee . won ucrording to its market value.
election to the DNC by a b1ire
In 1973 the Legislature put to
majority of 33 ou t of 65 possible the voters the question whether
votes on lhe first ballot.
real
estate
used
for
24 Stolt Street
Gilligan personall y had agricullural purposes should
Golllpolls .
written the stHte com- be exempted from this uniform
Phono 446-4290
Home446-4511
mitte emen seeking their requirement, ctnd thereby
supporl. Th~ victory is seen as taxed liccording to its market
keeping him alive as a pulilical value.
figure from Ohio.
At the November 1973
This is my Stale Farm offtee
election, the voters approved
where I can serve vou with the
the quesl;on, and so the Ohio
besl value in car. horne. itle
DECISION TESTED
anti heallh insurance. I invile
CINCINNATI (UPI ) - An consti tution was amended to
vou lo call 01 drop in any time.
Ohio Supreme Court decision allow the enactmen t of statutes
that only eight jurors, instead which would permit the taxing
of the usual 12, are needed to of agricultural lands at their
bear misdemeanor cases in agricultW'e use value, rather
which a person can be jailed is them simply at their market
being tested by a lawyer here. vnlue.
These sh1 tu tes enacted in
Attorney Terry Tranter has
1974,
were designed to provide filed a memorandum with
real es tate taxes for
lower
Hamilton County Municipal
Court J'udge Robert H.Gorman agricultural lands near urban
Carrol K, Snowden
contending the state Supren\e or commercially developed
Lilc•PJd~.
Court rule is unconstitutional. areas , and thereby . assist
Swto Farm is thrre.
The attorney wants a jury of certain rarmers in their efforts
12 for the upcoming trial or one to con tinue their farming
of his clients - a woman profession s.
It should be quickly noted
charged with drunk driving.
that in Il)any cases the value of,
some agricultural real e&lt;;tate
will be the same when judged
on its agricultural use value or
its market value .
Now the Legislature has
voted to put to the voters the
question whether Ohio's
constitution should be amend·
ed to provide a simi)ar real
'
estate tax break for "open
space land devoted exclusively
to outdoor recreational use ."
The supporters of this concept
argue that the residents of the
urban -i ndustrial portions of
our slate need the recreational
use of what open space land
U1ere is .available in their
urgan-industrial home ateas.
They further argue that the
AT
e xi s tin g real estate lax
st ru ct ure discoura ges
· recreation! land development,
and in fact. cnl'ourages the
owners of existing recreati onal
land to ·sell their land to
'·
residential and commercial
. Middleport, Ohio
developers, thereby depriving ·
urban dwellers of nc•&lt;•ded

recreational lands.
Opponents of the proposed
amendment counter tha t the
ubltgation
to
provide
recreational land For urban
dw ellers rests with the
government in the form of
providing public parks, public
picnic areas and public sports
facilities; no.t in the form of tax
breaks for owners of private
parks and private golf courses,
A$ a voter, you will soon be
asked to pa ss final judgment on
th is .proposed cons tituti onal
amendment. The House and
Senate have approved putting
the issue to you, It will be on
the J\Ule 3 ballot.
Makin g Ohio energy in dependent - Another measure
which the Legislative began to
initiate last week represents a A
effort to make OhiO "energy

indepencent. ''

While there ma y be some
who become immediately
suspicious at the shorl·phrase
sloganeering attached to any
governmental proposals , !here
is strong se ntimen t in the
Legislature to do something
now about diminishing energy
supplies and rising energy
prices.

REV , BEDWELL

Africa to
be shown
RACINE - The sights and
sounds of Africa, with its
complexities and challenges ,

will be presented at 7 p.m.
Thursday at a special service

at the Racine Church of the
Nazarene.

The Rev , and Mrs. Phillip
Bedwell, wh o have been in the
Republic of South Afri ca·
North , will be fea tured at the_
se rvice .
The four years of service by
the Rev. Mr. Bedwell reflects
the
professi onal
ski lls

servation, and utilization of the
sun's energy will be pushed by
the Legislature, as well as the
creation of an Ohio Energy
Development Center.
For the moment these ideas
are in the development state,
But soon, they will take shape.
Already .the Legislature is and will hopefull y put Ohio on
moving to create a legislative an energy independent basis,
study committee to examin e
Energy is the missing link in
the utili ty rate-ma~ing process the
Governor' s
recent
in th is sta te,
pronouncements on Ohio 's
Now, the Legislature will economy. Wit hout energy,
begin moving into the hard· buildi ng equipment cannot
ware area, the area of doing fun ction , and the factories
things wi th coal and the sun in which are built cannot operate.
an effort to respond to the need The Legislature is now moving
for more en·e rgy. Coa l to create the important link
gas ificatio n , ene rg y con - which is missing.

A

'hard line

GALLIPOLIS - The Ohio
Civil Service Employees
Associa ti on ha s announced
tha t Micha el Clifford of
Gallipolis ha s accepted th e
pos ition of District Field
Represe ntative in southea stern
Ohio. The OCSEA, with a
membersh.ip of over 34,000, is
MIKE CLIFFORD
the largest public employee
union in the s k1te.
Clifford will have jurisdic- Creek Road .
ti on over nine counties in
Members of the Ohio Civil
southeastern Ohi o including S e r v ice
Employees
Gallia,
Athens,
Meigs, Association who wish to conHocking, Vin t(l&lt;), Kobl e, tact Clifford can reacl1 him by
Monroe ,
Morgan
and ca lli ng OCSEA 's toll free watts
Wa shington .
line , 1-800-282-0543 .
A former resident of MidAny state, county or
dleport in Meigs Co unt y; muni cipal employees who are
Clifford has been employed by interested in joining the OC·
the Gallipolis State Institut e SEA may contac t him by
for the pas t nine years. During callin g 446-4324 or from 8 a.hl,
the past year lle ha s been to 5 p.m. at 1-800·282-0043.
preside nt and chief steward of
the local OCSEA union . He also RANGE CAUGHT
was a par ttime employee of the
WALDORF, Md. (UP!) Gallipolis Clinic on Fourth Chester L. Range , 28, wanted
Street prior to its closing. He for a Jan . IJ, 1974, bank roband his wife , Dor·a , and three bery in Marion, Ohio, couldn't
children, Mike, Tim and Terr i; escape the long computerized
make their residence on Mill arm of the law.
An FBI spokesman in Bal- - - - - -- - - -- · timore said Friday a state
demanded of a modern trooper stopped a driver here
missionary including tea cher, for a traffic violation and
radioed in for a routine check
advisor and evangelist.
His presentation in the · with the computerized national
community serv ice will em- crime information center in
ploy the "sights and sounds of Washington.
Within seconds, state police
Africa, " He will di splay
received
a printout identifying
severa l artifacts fr om the
the
driver,
Range, as a Jugitive
county and, there will be an
opportuni ty for the public to wanted for a bank holdup in
talk to the Rev. and Mrs. Marion, Ohio. Range was
arrested and a hearing before a
Bedwell.
Rev. Bedwell attended U.S. magistrate was pending,
British Isles Nazarene College the FBI said.
and the Nazarene Theological
Seminary. He served as a
pastor in Iowa prior to being
WATER CUT AT 8
appointed to the missionary
POMEROY - Water will be
service. The Bedwells who off from the pump station of the
have a daughter, Cheryl, are Pomeroy Water Department to
making their home in Iowa Syracuse about 8 a.m. Monday,
durin g their furl ough yea r .
\\o·eathcr permitting .

LYONS WINS - Mickey Lyons, wrestling In the 106lb.
division, won a berth in the state wrestlilig tournament this
weekend in the District A-AA matches last Friday and
Saturday at Athens. The Meigs High wrestler above defeated

~

You'll Find
Famous

FLEXSTEEL

FINE FURNITURE.

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

BAKER .fURNITURE
t

•

.

L

SAIGON - TANK-LED ~MMUNIST TROOPS stormed
into Ban Me Thuot provincial capital early today and seized the
military conunand post after fierce hand.t&lt;Hland fighting that
opened a major new battlefront in South Vietnam. "We can
consider that the city has been captured," military sources said.
Scattered pockets of government rangers and infantrymen
were stU! holding out on the rooftops of the battered Central
Highlands provincial capital 163 miles north of Saigon. At least-.
one regiment of North Vietnamese tro0ps led by tanks assaulted
the thinly defended city before dawn \Ulder cover of a I,OOCk'o\Uld
barrage of mortar, rocket and artillery fire, military sources
said.
A 3Q.rnan team of Communist sappers blew open defenses of
the government milil.IJry conunanlj center, which was tben
stormed in hand-to-lland fighting. '
MENTOR, OHIO - MEMBERS OF THE MENTOR
Teachers Association left !heir picket lines today to retW'Il to
classrooms after tentatively accepting an agreement with the
Mentor Board of Education, By a voice vote of about 70 per cent,
teachers agreed to reswne teaching today until the board meets
tonight and arrives at the [ina! wording for the package,
The 452 members ar.e expected to ratify the agreement
\Ulless the board reniges on its present position, MTA President
David Bosden said. "The association and the board have come to
agreement of mutuality and binding arbitration," Bowden ·said.
"A$ to negotiability, we are reluctantly side&lt;rtepping the issue ;,
Bosden said.
'
negotiability, we are reluctantly · side&lt;rtepping the issue,"
Bowsen said,

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'I

Devoted To The Interests of The Meigs-Mason Area
_VO_L_.X_XV_I_N_:.O_.2-:.3,;..
0 _ _ _P_O_M_ER_O_Y.M_I_DD_L.:__EP-=-OR.:__T.:....:,D
::_H.:::__
IO _ _ _ _ _ _
MO_N_DA_Y_
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Oswald denial
reported true

GIRL SCOUT WEEK PROCLAIMED- Pomeroy Mayor
Dale Smith signed a proclamation Saturday declaring the
week of March 9-15 as Girl Scout Week. Pictured with Mayor
'

Smith are Kathy Parker, Salisbury Junior Troop 100; Tina
Miller, Middleport Troop 39; and Suzan Thoma, Pomeroy
Brownie Troop 76, left to right.

'

Girl Scout Week marked
A proclamation designating volunteers and to the many
this week as Girl Scout Week in business , .civic, religious,
Meigs County , w~s signed educational and service
Saturday by Pomeroy Mayor organizations which provide
Dale Smith ..
girl scouts with leadership,
Told that this year marks the meeting places, troop spon63rd anniversary of the sorship and financial aid,
foWJding of Girl Seouts in the
He invited citizens of
U.S.A .,
the
mayor Pomeroy and the res! of Meigs
support
the
congratulated the girls on their County
organization's growth from a organization which has done so
group of 18 girls in 1912 in · much for youth and the com.
savannah, Ga. to its present mWlity by their continued
membership of more than interest, cooperation and
three million giris and men and support so that increasin g
women volunteers with 25,000 nwnbers of girls may benefit
in the Black Diamond Council from the program,
of which Meigs County is a
part.
'
Three aid calls
Mayor Smith told the girls
there to witness his signing logged
squad
that while the figure is imThe Middleport Emergency
pressive, tl:o true growth of
Squad
answered a call to the
Gir! Scouting can only be
American
Legion Hall in
measured by the valuable selfdevelopment opportunities it Middleport at 9:26 p.m.
gives to young people and the Saturday for Donna Me·
improved quality of com- Farland who was suffering
munity life that this has chest pains, She was taken to
Veterans Memorial HospitaL
brought about .
At 1:02 p.m. Sunday the
He added that much of the
squad
went to Ebenezer St. in
credit for the fine record set by
girl scouts over the years must Pomeroy, for Grace Mooney
go to the men and women was was dead on the squad's
arrival, and at 4:47 p.ni.
Sunday .to Sycamore St.,
Middleport, for Clarence
Frazier, who was taken to
Holzer Medico ! Center.
1

by

Ugly word 'depression'
,kicking around .nation
WASHINGTON (UP!) - 1be January's . The number of
ugly word "depression" Is available jobs fell to 84 million.
being heard in high places to The Labor Department says
describe the inunediate future the nation 's total civilian labor
force is 91.5 million ,
of the economy.
Inflation
Economist Arthur Okun, who
headed the eouncil of
The Conswner Price Index
Economic Advisers under rose 0,6 per cent for January,
President Lyndon Johnson, the least increase since last
told Congress' Joint Economic April and the fourth straight
Committee history may record month the price increase rate
the current situation as. a has slowed, Prices dropped for
depression. It would take a clothing, new cars, beef, sugar
miracle to keep WJempl~yment and home mortgages,
below 9per cent, he said, and it
Real Earnings
,nay go higher,
,
. Theaver~ge worker's "real 11
The ad'l'inistration cpmpensatlon -wages plus
disagrees, saymg the recession fringe benefits alter allowing
'lrill ''bottom out" late this for inflation --&lt;lec.Ilned by L2
summer, President Ford said per cent in January and is 5J
Thursday he did not think per cent below a year ago;
joblessness would rise above 9
Wholesale prices
per cent, although ''it might.''
Sharp drops in food price8
These latest government trough! February's wholesale
economic statistics give a price ·index down slightly for
picture of bow the economy the third consecutive month,
although prices for industrial
stands at nild-winter:
Unemployment
goods still rose, Felruary's
sec·ause o8u,tJOO workers wholesale price Index was 171,3
pve up looking for jobs, they --11.5 per cent lower than
no longer coWJted ·as "unem- January, but IU higher than a
ployed," said tbe BID'eau of year ago.
Productivity
LatJOr Statistics, 1That meant
Output per man.OOur was
February's unemployment
rat'l was 8,2 per cent ""'"me as down 2.2 per cent in 1974 Ff'e

Israeli negotiaUng team unW
arolllld noOn, when he 'lrilllly to
Ankara to confer with Turlt:lab
leaders about the Cyprus
crisis,
The Israeli newspaper Ha 'arelz said Egyptian PreSident
Anwar Sadat had submitted
demands for an hraell
pullback In the Sinal desert and
another lflthdrawal on the
Continued on page 10

en tine

DETROIT - PROFITS FOR THE AUTO INDUSTRY this
year will fall below $500 million for the first time since the
depression, a Wall Street analyst predicted today,
Hardest hit of the three largest - Chrysler Corp, - will lose
$147million, alulost three times the record loss it suffered in 1974,
David Eisenberg, vice president of research for Sanford Bernstein &amp; Co., said.
,
The prediction overshadowed the industry's best production
week since November, Three Ford plants will be closed, and
General Motors, Chrysler and American Motors will operate aU
their plants,
'

WASHINGTON - U.S. DISTRICT JUDGE JOHNJ. Sirica
today dismissed all charges against former White House aide
Gordon C, Strachan in the Watergate cover'l!p at the request of
the special prosecutor, Strachan thus became only the second
person charged with Watergate offenses to have gone free. The
other was Kenneth W. Parkinson, a lawyer for the Committee to
· Re-elect the President who was acquitted Jan. I in the Watergate
" cover'l!p trial,
Continued on page 10

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By United Press International
SPRING IS LESS THAN TWO WEEKS AWAY, BUT
DRIVERS, schools and budding flowers in the nation's midlands
are still taking a wintry beating. A powerful late winter snowstorm swept over the area SWlday night, dwnping a heaving
blanket of snow pn the budding jonquils, closing schools and
touching off a flurry of ~uto accidents. It was bidding to spread
more of the same further· east
The storm swirled across the middle Mississippi Valley,
piling up a foot of snow in H\Ulter, Kan., and dwnping the
heaviest snowfall of the season on far southern Illinois, Jonquils,
rushing to blossom in time for Easter, were covered by a six·
inch shroud of snow at DuQuoin, IlL

•

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· JERUSALEM (UP!) Secretary of State Henry
Kissinger IW'Iled his attention
to the Cyprus crisis today,
leaving Israel to ponder
Egypt's "surprisingly tough"
ideas for a new interim Mlddle
East peace agreement.
Kissinger breakfasted alone
with Prime Minister Yitzhak
Rabin and then was to meet
with Rabin and the rest of ·the

H. Bacon of Ironton In the llnaltl, "Mickey has a good shot at
becoming state champion of his division," said his coach,
Ray Goodman today. Lyons, IS.O this season, is paired
against Tim Dishong,Holland Springfield, 23-3 in the opening
round Friday. See page 3.
•

•

GHEEN CONGRATULATED - Carl Gheen, Freshman
Meigs High wrestler, is congratulated by High School
Principal James Diehl Saturday following ·his victory by pin
over Sa\Ul Floyd of Chesapeake in finals of their match in the
District A-AA wrestling tournament Saturday at Athens.
Gheen, 6-11, moves into the state finals paired against Loui
PanoWJdis,lf&gt;.2, of Millersburg West Holmes. See page 3,

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ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

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'

Egypt .bares

THIS1s

·····....

'

·Clifford
is made
field rep

h:Jve unusual
I ·lc.:-; S U&lt;"h CIS ·' IIICit body fctt, "
sup- "uil the bod y juin ts," or "cure

Nutr liH ill
Week
!as1 suppl('lllenko; can be very exweek wa s on fuud fculdi siiJ ttnd pensive . The following ~ uide­
nulrilion
mi s informati on. · lincs for l'OIIJbCJtling nutrition
TIJ(•st• were selected t&gt;L't&lt;JUse of mi sinformation have been
thC' wi(le .s prc&lt;Jd and in - developed by Gallia County
di scriminatP promo ti on and Hea lth Dcpl. in cooperati on
USl' uf so-called " health roods ,"
with the Nutritiort Divis ion ,
se lr -pr ('sc: r ibc ll vitan lin - Ohio Department of Hea lth .
minera! supplementation, and
Be skeptical of:
uvcr-lhe-euun ter "diet pilts."
- The accura cy of nutrition
1A recent ni:Jti onal study found iuformation
in
leaflet s.
that 30 pet. of the population pamphlets, etc . which arC'
surveyed had a general ten- available through the mail.
dency toward food faddism and over the counter in stores , fr om
Llll SO!llld. nutrition practices. ) d( JOr-tu-door salespeople, or at
" Bi zarre manipulati on of lectures tha t suggest self·
norma l dietary patterns in diagnosis and treatment.
order to ·feel belter' or ·cure
- Printed or word-Qf-mouth
diseu se symptoms ' is a information whkh suggests ( 1)
dangerous practice because it much greater amounts of
rnc:~y aggravate an existing
nutrients are beneficial than
disease con di tion or delay ·.are listed in the Recommimded
.seeking competent medical Daily Allowances, 12) tha t a

CITATIONS G'IVEN - Middleport Postmaster Paul
Casci, center, presents citations to Pearl VanCooney , left,
and Wallace Russell, right, upon their retirement from the
Middleport Post Office.

,

Food fads may be had
GALLIPOI.!S - Francis W.

•

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I

first calendar year decline
since the government started
keeping the statistics 17 years
ago. The Bureau of Labor
Statistics said \Ulit labor costs
rose 11 .2 per cent while
productivity dropped.
Trade
The U.S, · trade deficit in·
creased by $211 million in
January, with imports valued
at $9.62 billion and exports at
$9,41 billion. The deficit was
slightly smaller tban December's $387.6 milllon, It was
calculated by· a new method
and would have been much
higher for both 100nths under
the old one.
GNP
Overall economic output
represented by the Gross
National Product fell 9,1 per
cent during' the final three
months of. 1974, while prices
increased at a record 14.4 per
cent annual rate --inflation
even worse than the 13,7 per
cent rate estimated in January's preliminary data, Real
output of goods and services
declined in the fourth quarter
of 1974 at the second fastest
rate in '0 years, ·

Schools closed
All Meigs County Schools
were closed Monday due to
snow which fell overnight
creating a travel problem for
school buses.

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Wednesday through
Friday, mostly cloudy
Wednesdoy, Chance of .rain
Thursday ending Friday.
Highs ranging from the low
40s extreme north to low 50s
extreme south. Lows In the
20s and low 30s.

, Pomeroy unit
called 3 times
The Pomeroy Emergency
Squad was called to Nye Ave.
at 10:19 p. m. Saturday for
Barbara James who was taken
to Veterans Memorial Hospital
where she was admitted,
At 6:34 p. m. Sunday at the
squad went to Lincoln Hill
Road for Mrs. Tracy Whaley
who was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital and ad·
mitted as a medical patient,
and at 7:25 p. m. to the Cer·
tified Service Station on West
Main St., for an employe,
Roger Klein, taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
COLUMBUS (UP!) Robert M, Chiaramonte,
superintendent of the Ohio
Highway Patrol since 1965,
today
announced
his
retirement effective April 5,
" After nearly 10 years as
superintenden~ It's time to
move on and let younger
men take over," said the 54·
year-old Chiaramonte,
A Jormal letter of
retirement was submitted to
state Highway Safety
Director Donald Cook. Gov,
James A, Rhodes wlll name
a replacemen~

Image is ·failing
NEW YORK (UPI) - The
nwnber of persons indicating a
lack of confidence in President
Ford has increased significantly in the last three months,
according to a poll released
Sunday by Tinle Magazine ,
The poll, made quarterly by
Yankelovich, Skelly, and
White, showed an increase
from 19 to 21 per cent in the
number who said they have "a
lot" of confidence in Ford, But
the nwnber indicating "no con·
fidence" jwnped from 15 to 28
per cent.
Those saying they had
"some" confidence dro~d ·
from 60 per cent to 49 per cent.
'the poll also indicated
growing confidence in Congress. The , survey showed 20 per cent had
"a .lot" of con(idence in
Congress, compared with 12
per cent three months ago.
Those indicatinaJ "some"
'

confidence dropped from 60 per
cent to 54 per cent l!fld "no
confidence" fell from 25 per
cent to 22 per cent
· On other subjects :
-55 per cent favored gas
rationing over increased gas
taxes, compared with 34 per
cent preferring taxes,
-59 per cent feel charges
against the ciA bave been
"inflated out of proportion,"
and only 29 per cent believe the
agency has lroken the law,
-'--48 per cent no:ov regard
Ford as "an acceptable"
presidential candidate, cOm·
pared with 56 per cent last fall,
-59 per cent say they now
know who. Sen, Henry Jackson
is, compared to 48 per cent last
fall,
--Sen, Edward 'Kennedy, DMass.,
remains
the
presidential candidate with the
highest percentage of' SUi&gt;'
porters, 34 per cent.
I

Weather
Snow ending tonight followed
by partlal clea.r!vg, !.9.11'JijD )he
upper 20s and low 30s. Tuesday
cloudy, highs in the 40s.

LOCAL TEMPS
Temperature in downtown
Pomeroy today at II a.m. was
34 degrees under snowy skies.

HOUSE DESTROYED
HARRISONVILLE - The
home of Mr. and Mrs, Lee
Bing, SR 143, near Harrison.
ville, was destroyed by fire at
about 4:15 p. m. Friday, the
Rutland Fire Department
reported. Cause of the fire and .
loss had not been determined
this morning, the report stated.

WASHINGTON (UP!) - Lee Indication the speaker Ia IJI!nc,
:tarvey Oswald was telling the
"His (Oswald's) categorical
ruth when he said he did not denial that he ohot anyone
dU President Jolm F. Ken· pontalns almost no 1tnu at
:ll!dy, according to a former all,''O'Toolet18ld, "Sinal.l ·a
·::entral lntelllgence Agency necessary, but not 1\lffid..t, '
·lftlcial who used an advanced CQndillon of lyln8...
·
·ype of lie detector on the
"But the absence of lllre~~~l.l
i'ecordlngs of Oswald's a sufficient condition of trUth:Jtatements.
fulneu , , Oswald denied
In a book which contends shooting anybocly4he l'rlltil· •
lbat Oswald was "framed," dent, the policeman (J.D. '
IXISIIlbly by employes of the Tippitt), anybody, the peyciJO.
Dallas pollee force and the logical atras evaluator said Ill
FBI, author George O'Toole was telllng the truth,"
based his conclusion prlmarUy
O'Toole quoted polypJib
on the measurements. of a expert Uoyd H. Hitchcock, al .
device invented in 1970 known Lavonia, Ga,, aa saying:
as the psychological stress
"Asswnlng that he WM not ·
evaluator- or PSE,
suffering from a paycbopalbo"Presldent Kennedy was logical condition that llllde
killed by a conspiracy ,:• said him Ignorant
o:T~lh,,31l ••\V.I\O w~ phi~ of _ .o i.i&gt;;i il;i;i''t&lt;iii
flie I::!A prob em ana1ys 8 "'
branch from 1966 to 1969, ''The did not
President Kellmeclly
man who paid with hla life for and did not llhoot ll'l)'ooe alae."
that crime In the basement of
Hitchcock added lie had be
the DBnas City Hall was In- ruled out !he poulblllty Oswald
nocent,"
was a pathological Uar,
Advance copies of O'Toole's
O'Toole also reached the
book, "The Assassination "Inescapable" conclualon •
Tapes," were made available "that at · 111881 some bf the
today to the news media and an people who framed Lee Harvey
excerpt was published in the Oswald were members of the
AprU isstie of Penthouse.
Dallas pollee."
O'Toole said leading author!Using PSE on the tape ,
ties on. lie detection and the recorded commenta of other , ·
PSE wbo examliti!d Oswald's officials, he theorlletl that ·
statements agree that he told Oswald was an Ji'l'l ,lnformer,
the truth,
. that some FBI agent. may
The machine measures have been Involved. In an
changes in hwnan voice Ire- as•winatloo plot on their own
quencles, and when the and that some Warren Commodulation dlsawears, It Is as mission witnesses Ued In lrey
a result of stress and is a strong testlmqny,

CIA linked to Castro hit
NEW YORK (UP)) - The
Central Intelligence Agency
once hired Mafia gunmen to
attempt the assassination of
Cuban Premier Fidel Castro,
two articles published · today
alleged.
"Two former key aides to the

late Robert F, Kennedy say
that he told tbem in 1'"'7 that
agents of the CIA had con·
tracted with the f,Jafla in an
aborted plot to assassinate
(Castro) before the Bay of Pigs
invastlon of 1961," the New
York Times said in a front page

Miller proposes
to delay action
WASHINGTON - Tenth
District
Congress.man
Clarence Miller has Introduced
legislation in the 94th Congress
that would prevent the United
States Railway Association
from authorizing the abandonment of any rail service
prior to a determination by
Congress on a comprehensive
rail service plan,
The bill prohibits any USRA
abandonment
through
December 31, 1976.
In
submitting
this
legislat.ion , Miller slated:

story.
And Time Magazine said It
has been told by "credible
sources" the CIA was ·''Involved in aStl888ln~tllon plots"
against Castro and two other '
Caribbean leaders, Rafael ·
Trujillo of the Dominican
Republic and FrancoII (Papa
Doc) Duvalier of Haiti,
According to the New York
Times, Adam Wa!lnslt:y and
Peter Edelman, asslllants to
Kennedy when he was attome;y
general and U,S, senator,
talked of the assasainallon plot
in interviews last week,
"He (Kennedy) told 01 that
be had dlacovered that !he ClA
had made a cqntract with the
Marla to. hit' Castro," The
Times quoted W~ II
saying,
.,
Both salt! Kennedy told them
he had played a role In stoppJns
the assassination plot, according ta the 'rimes,
Time magazine said ita
"sources contend that the CIA
enlllled the expert lllnd«uD
help of u.s. :Mafia t1gurta In

''Retention of present .Jines is
vital to southeastern Ohio.
Without adequate rail services
to attract new industries and
promote the continued expansion of established ones, the
economic revival and growth
of Southeastern Ohio can be
irreparably damaged," '
Miller opposed the Rail
Reorganization Act when it
passed the 9~rd Congress
because of suspicions that
rural areas such as the Tenth several UIIStlccellful •tt•tti II
District would suf(er the most to ldU Qlban premier Callro
both before and shartJ;y afta'
under any reorganization,
.
the CJA.plamed Bay of Pip·
lnvtlsion of Ollta in IIIII."
n aa1t1 the .sourcee cllllmed
Street east of Pomeroy Street. the CIA had enUsted !be help al
Reitmire was released from Wldenrorld figunB Slm GlaD-'
jail S\Ulday after posting a $200 cana and Jolll RoaeJJIIn elfetrll
bond for appearance before to kill Castro by polaoo,
Magistrate Charles Musgrave shooting or bomlta, ·
'
this morning, Musgrave said
'
·,
.
Reiimire forfeited bond when
SEOEMS RUNS
,
·The Pomeroy· Untt· · of
he' did not appear, Damages ·to
the Reitmlre ·car were SEOEMS transferred Jack
estimated by Chief ROUBh to be! Fowler , from O'BienQI
$1,500 with $400 damages Hospital to Rou County
estimated to ~ 'Yo\Ulg car,
Medical lll.~nter at
p.m.
Satunlar:
.
,

Pomeroy man is arrested
MASON, W, Va, - Mason
police arrested an Ohio man
when the vehicle he was
driving struck a parked car in
Mason Sunday at 6: JO a. m, No
injuries were repOrted ..
Chief Delner Roush, III, said
Paul A:Rieimire, 24, Pomeroy,
was lodged in the Mason
County Jail after he was
cbarged with driving a car that
hit a car owned by Phyllis
Young, ' •son, 'on Second

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2- The Dailv Sent mel, Middleport-Pomerov. 0 .. Monday, March 10, 1975
~~&gt;G~~~O&lt;&gt;G~~~~&gt;G~~~~~M?~~~

Editori11-l comment,
opinion, features
Arab blacklist tests U. S.
Just how high a pr1ce are Americans Willing 10 pay for Arab o1l'
The Jewish cml rights organiZation, B'nai B'r1th , charges that two federl agenc1es, the Overseas
Investment Corp. and the Army Corps of Engineers, refuse Ill hrre Jews for JObs 1n the Middle Easl
In teetlmony before a Senate subcorruruttee the other day, Col. Wilham Durham confirmed tl\at
the Corps of Engineers does not aSSign Jewish off1cers to constructiOn proJects 10 Saudi Arabia
because of Arab demands.
According to Sen. Frank Olurch ([).Ida ), 1,500 U.S. firms are on an Arab boycott list because
they do busmess w1th Israel. Many of them have been on the list for years, but 1t didn't matter
because more money was to be made dealing With Israel than with the Arabs - until , that 1s, thmgs
changed and we learned that , contrary to Mao Tse-tung's famous d1ctum, all power flows not from
barrel of a gun but from barrels of oU.
Most recently, Western banking houses have acceded to Arab demands to blacklist JewiSh
bankers from partlclpallon Ill Arab mvestmenl programs
All of wh1ch has led President Ford to issue a vague warmng to the Arabs that "such
discrimination IS totally contrary to the American position and repugnant to American pr~nc1ples "
Does this mean thai unless the Arabs shape up we w1U reconsider our a1d programs, pull our
military and clvU1an personnel back borne or take other countermeasures' We 'll see.
In the meantime, it IS at least curious to be told by this same President that the pounng of
another half-billion dollars into the lndochma sinkhole Is necessary to preserve American honor and
credibility.

India vs. India
India Is riding a "Bombay High" and It has nothing to do with drugs.
Encouraging reports from exploratory drlllJng in the region known as the ll&lt;lmbay H1gh led the
minister of petroleum and chemicals, K. D. Malav1ya , to predict last month thai India could become
nearly seU-eufflclent in oU In the next six or seven years.
The prospect holds stupendous Implications for India, which has been hard hit by the quadrupmg
of world oU prices. SeU-BUfflclency In oil could not only help solve the nation's balance of payments
problem but provide It with the raw materlalfor fertilizer, which 11 desperately needs 1f 11 1s to be able
to feed its conttnuaUy expanding population.
If India's past record is a guide, unfortunately ,it wUI find some way of remaiJUng in poverty
This Is suggested by remarks made by Daniel P. Moynihan, recently returned after two years as
U. S. ambassador to India.
When India woolts Independence from Britain In 1947, he points out , lt was producmg I 2 nul11on
Ions of steel a year . Japan was producing only 800,000 tons.
'
Twenty.five years later, India's output had risen to 6 8 mlllioo tons but Japan's had soared to
106.8 million tons, despite the fact that Japan has to Import iron ore and coal while India has huge
deposits of both.
'''This lsn1 a question of luck," says Moynihan, "and It Isn't because the Japanese are any
smarter or harder working than the Indians . It's simply the result of a consc1ous deCISIOn made by
both countries."
The declslon made by India was to put steel production, along with most of its economy, under
direct government control.
Indian, says Moynihan, prefers stability or stagnation to a dynanuc economy. In protecting 1tsell
!rom receaalons, however, It has also protected itself from growth.
It Ia less than encouraging to learn that India has already informed the 011 companu!'s prospecting
in its territory that it Intends to take them over.

FUNNY BUSINESS

Tom Tiede
Women and
the presidency
By Tom Tiede
WASHINGTON - (NEA) - Ed1tors of Redbook magaz~ne are
askmg a number of pollt1cal observers to help find five women
who have the quallhcations to be president of the Umted States
I'm afra1d I must pass I've though! on 11 for hours but still draw a
blank I don't believe there Is a woman 1n the nation who according to the word " qualifiCations , ' ranks m the pres1denhal
category
Whoa• Watch the language . ladles. l shall explain
There are dozens of women whom I believe could be preSident .
even should be president Constance Baker Motley. as example.
the erud1te and wholly together US D1str1ct JUdge m New York.
1s one Dorothy Day. the agonizingly sens1tive and thoroughly
sensible Catholic poverty worker 1s another Also. Ella Grasso.
the new governor of Connechcul. Janet Gray Hayes . mayor of
San Jose. Clare Booth Luce. Elanor Holmes Norton and .Anne
Armstrong - they and many more. some buned 1n obscurity.
have the mtelllgence. compassion , energy and mental strength
to be president
But they don't have the traditional qualifiCations
Nor do any other women m Amenca My own news serv1ce has
recently compiled a first-draft list of wha! may be the 250 most
mfluentialladies 1n the land - everybody from Bella Abzug 10
N Y l to Margaret Bush Wilson (NAACP! - and though 11 IS an
mterestmg compilation of Individuals 11 1s as a general represen
tation of more than IOO.mdllon American women unimpresSIVe.
oot to say downnght d1scourag10g
Almost half the womon on the list are d1stmgulshed pnmanly
for careers as entertamers Th1s mcludes athletes such as Chr1s
Evert (Chris Evert for pres1dent?). wr1ters such as Marya
Mannes . and actresses such as Mae West They are stars , m
deed . but not leaders Ms West could g1ve a hell of a f~res1de
chat , no doubt , but the subject here IS Helmansh1p
quahiJcations for Pay attention
There are . to be sure . a dozen poht1c1ans. a dozen business
b1gg1es and 16 emment educalors on the list of 2SO But . sad to
say, sti ll no g1ants Barbara Jordon !O.Tex ) is a tough , fearless
leg1slalor but not a political force Nor does Martha Peterson
board member of Exxon . come 1mmed1ately to mind as an
earthmover Dr V1rgm~a Masters, of Masters and Johnson , has
the CIJUrage of her convlcuons but her other half does not qualify
for president e1ther
Beyond th1s , the list of the 2SO most Influential women IS quietly humorous Penny Tweedy is on 11 , she owns race horses Rona
Barrett Is named , she. gad , IS a Hollywood goss1p. Julia Child IS
among the elite for her cooking skills , Julia Nixon Eisenhower 1s
there for reasons unkoown, and Martha M1tchell , who has never
don~ much bul marry John , 1s added obviOusly as the sex group's
lead1ng coo-coo l apollg11e for the as1des. The point is , these people are named among womanhood's most Influential because SIP - they are Lack1ng more substantial candidates . the
margtnal characters have 10 be tapped.
What the femmists have been arug1ng , then , ts b1tterly true.
th01111h they do not put 11 thus Kept m the subservient roll .
women have been forbidden the nght to qualify for somethmg
like lhe pres1dency None In 200 years of the democracy has been
able to ~ulate the combination of presuge , power . mfluence
aad public aCCf!l!lance necessary for the uitimale office Many
hive gathered one or more ot the qualifications (Eleanor
Roosevelt ) but never, not once , the whole package
Too bad
Eventually this will change, probably No president of recent
'tunes bas .denied the ln,eVJiab1lity of a woman commander m
chief. And somewhere now .m this country. perhaps already
nuddle-aged, IS at least a future female Veep , probably more
than Uuit. Hanna Arend, Manan Edelman , Ci$sy, Farenthold.
Malina Horner, COrella Kmg. carol Lefcourl, Patsy Mink. Susie
Sharp, Jlll Vollner - who knows II Jerry ford can do 11. we
eoulll almost open the telephone book and choose at will
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Today's
Almanac ·

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Panthers capture Class A cage title

•

By Urited Press Intemallonal
Today 1~ Monday , March 10,
the 69th day of 1975 w1th 296 lo
follow
The moon 1s approaching its
new phase
The morntng stars are
Mercury and Mars
The evemng stars are Venus,
Jupiter and Saturn
Those born on this date are
under the s1gn of Pisces
Amencan orgamst and composer Dudley Buck was born
March 10, 1839
On th1s day m history
In 1862, the Umted States
Treasury 1ss ued the first
Amer1can currency, m denominatiOns from $5 to $1 ,000
In 1945, B29 bombers of the
U S Air Force began mce ndlary ra1ds on Japan 10 the
wan10g days of World War II
In 1964, Queen Elizabeth II
ga ve brrth to her fourth ch1ld,
Prmce Edward, lh1rd m line of
successwn to the Br1llsh throne
In 1969, James Earl Ray
OLD TIMERS BOTH, or so most tree experts would think
pleaded gwlty to the murder of
judgmg
by the s1zable grrth of these two Douglas Fir trees m
Dr Martm Luther King and
Oregon
But actually, the one at right 1s an unposter - only
was sentenced to 99 years 10
60 years old yet matching the 30-inch di•meler of the 400.
pr1son
year-old tree at lert The S1de-by.,;1de compariSOn was made

Rhodes' budget
likely $5.5 billion

'

....

~ Wildcats how out

••

Girls to play .

~ with
•

Girls age 10 to 14 in the
Syracuse area "lshing to
play un the Syracuse G~rls
Junlur Softball team th1s
summer should call R1ta
Sla&gt;en at 992·3710

••
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19-3 record

••

The Southern Valley Athletic Conference
: Hannan Trace Wildcats fell behind early m the
; contest, fought back gallantly for three quarters,
then hit one of their coldest streaks of the year
Saturday night as a tall Southeastern ftve won the
Class A District Tournament, 61·46, at Chtlhcothe
• High School

to illustrate dramatically the great str1des sCientists have
made 10 replacing lumber by accelerating tree growth. The
artifiCial "super trees" are created by chemically altermg
cells from an existmg tree to form roots and needles for
another

DR. LAMB
All liver ills aren't
from booze

ballot by itsell
Marsh said almost half the
state's 13,000 pollmg places
which would otherwise be
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - Gov. array of problems for the closed, would have to open to
James A. Rhodes will present Republican governor and the accomodate the smgle state·
By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR READER - From
his budget for the next two legislature
wide 1ssue
DEAR
DR
LAMB
time
to tune new mformation
years to tbe Oh1o General
The General Assembly, after
Marsh sa1d this would Recently my 7-year-old does become available about
Assembly Wednesday and It Is first mdicallng 11 would pass reqwre the state to pay for
expected to total about $5 5 enabl10g leg1slahon to put staff10g, rental , transportation grandson had an attack of mediCmes pallents may be
infectiOus hepatitis
taking The best course of
billton a year
Rhodes· four proposals for of vot10g equ1pment and
The
lhmg
that
wornes
me
action
to take in all such cases
State Budget Director How- economic r ecove ry on the cleanup as well as for prmtmg
now
1s
will
h1s
liver
go
back
lo
1s
to
go
back to your doctor and
ard L. Collier will present the ballot, last week, passed the and advertlsmg the connormal
or
Will
it
slay
fmd out what he wants you to
budget, which wUI be outlined deadlme Without putting any of stitutiOnal amendment
Also,
I
didn't
know
do
enlarged?
m a 500-page report and will them up for a vote of the
children
were
prone
to
get
th1s
There has been a reported
contain no new or added taxes, people.
disease.
I
thought
people
who
increased
risk of breast cancer
to a JOIDI meeting of the Senate
Earlier Ill the sesswn, durmg
The
Daily
Sentinel
drank
or
smoked
were
the
associated
w1th
taking
and House Fmance Com - the week Gilligan was still 10
DEVOTED T-0 THE
ones
I
would
appreciate
reserpme,
serpastl
or
raw
oUia
INTEREST OF
mittees on Thursday.
off1ce, the legislature passed
MEIGS
MASON
AREA
anythmg
you
have
to
say
on
serpenttna
preparatwns.
These
Rhodes spending document SIX partisan b1lls which are
CHESTER l TANNEHILL
lh1s matter
Exec Ed
med1cmes are commonly used
Will be about $1 billion above now lied up 10 the courts.
ROBERT HOEFLICH
DEAR
READER
I
am
m treating h1gh blood pressure
the budget for the current
Crty Edrtor
The failure to place the four
Pub
l
rshed
dall\1
exce
pt
constantly
amaze
d
at
how
and
may be mcluded in many
fiscal year and $2.5 billion to $3 economic 1ssues on the June J Saturday b y Til e Oh ro Val ley
many
people
thmk
thai
the
only
of
the
med1cmes that are
A thol18ht for the day billton less than that proposed primary ballot poses a problem Pub lrs hmg Company 111
Cou
r
t
St
Pome
roy
,
Ohro
way
you
can
get
hver
d1sease
IS
combmatwns of different
President Dwight D. Elsen- by former Gov. John J for the only co nstitutional 45769 Bus mess Offr ce Phone
from alcohol. It 1s true thai dr\18S
2 2 156 Edrtortal Phon e 992
hower , wh1le supreme com· GUilgan before Gilligan left amendment wh1ch d1d make 1t 99
2157
excess alcohol can lead to hver
Persistent h1gh blood
mander of Allied forces m office
Second class post age pa rd at
through the General Assembly P ome
r
oy
Oilro
damage,
but
there
are
many
pressure
can be a ser1ous
World War II, sa1d, "In the
The Democratic con trolled m t1me for the pnmary
Natro na ! advertrsrng
forms
of
liver
disease
other
disease and should not go
fmal choice, a soldier's pack is General Assembly will be balloting
r epresentatrve
Bottmell r
Ga lla gher In c, 12 East 42nd
Infectious
hepatitis
1s,
untreated The dangers of not
not so heavy a burden as a asked to enact the budget
The resolutiOn would allow St New York New York
S
ub
sc
rrpt
ro
n
~
ra
te
s
plamly
put,
infectious
It
IS
gettmg
treatment may far
prisoner's chains. "
before June 30, the end of the the legislature to wr1te tax De lrv er ed by carrrer where
caused
by
a
vrrus.
The
virus
outweigh the dangers of inpresent fiscal year
relief for owners of land used avarlab l e 75 ce nts per week
By Mot o r Rou t e where carrrer
can be gotten through blood creased fiSk of breast cancer
The budget wUI pose another exclusively for outdoor recrea- serv
rc e not avarlable , One
transfusiOns, and needle slicks
mon t h SJ 25 By ma d m Ohro
I know people are very
tion
and W V rt , One Year $22 00 ,
from
contammated
needles.
concerned
about cancer. But 11
Assistant Secretary of State Srx m onth s, $1 1 50 Thr ee
mon t hs
S7 00
Elsewhere
Drug
addicts
frequently
get
you think that 1s bad, thmk of
James R Mash srud 1t would S26 00 year S1x .rr'IOnths
hepallt1s
lh1s
way.
havmg a stroke and bemg
S1J
50
three
monthi
,
S7
SO
cost about $1 nulllon for the
Su bsc r1pl 10n pr1ce .ncludes
It
can
also
be
transmitted
partially diSabled, crippled or
state Ill put the Issue on the Sunday T 1mes Se ntmel
through food and water as a unable to speak Aga10, doctors
slig htly different form of the are m the pos1 lion of choosmg
disease. Contammated oyster between two poor cho1ces.
reefs may be a source of
Fortunately there are a
hepatitis m some communities. number of other med1emes that
Th1s 1s one reason why proper can be used 10 most cases of
samtation and sambzed water h1gh blood pressure when
are so Important to health. medicine IS heeded. Most
Both children and adults can doctors would like to have their
get the vrrus and develop m- pabents come 10 and If they
By David Poll Ill
fe ctwus hepatitis Viruses need'h!ore treaiment they may
(Firat ol Three Related Columna)
don 't care how old you are
want to change lhe1r
Many people have complete med1cmes. They will want to
Mention the Greeks and the man In the street thinks about a
By Ray Cromley
recovery from an attack of continue some form of ef·
Mediterranean cruise, general• until recently runrung a historic
democracy and a couple named Jack1e and Amtotle
vrral hepabt1s Others may be fective treatment for those
WASHINGTON - (NEAl - A few days ago I looked w1th some
Mention the Greeks and the lady next door remembers the
requ1rmg
chagrm
at a senes of charts and tables a highly respected semor left w1th some liver damage. pat1ents now
tragedy of the Greek Cypriots- now nearly 200,000 hungry and
the
liver
tends
to
Fortunately
h1gh
blood
medicmes
for
pohcy analyst had prepared for h1s boss a member of President
homeless on that tiny 1sland Hollywood gave us "Zorba the
regenerate
and
damaged
livers
Ford's
cabmet
pressure
Greek." so our nund is filled with danc1ng and dr1nkmg and
The figures md1cated that w1th1n five yea rs government can become normal when the
Send your quesbons to Dr.
sorrow and laupter
federa
l
sta
te
and
local
would
be
absorbmg
and
managmg
35
Ill
diSease IS over.
Put all this aside and consider the fact thai tbe direction and
Lamb, m care of this
40 to 42 to 45 percent of the gross nat1onai product dependmg on
DEAR DR. LAMB
energy of the world Christian commun1ty may be 10 the steady
newspaper, P 0 Box 1551,
wh1ch set of assumptions was used
hands ol the Greek Orthodox Church - and its Pr1mate
Recently there have been news Radw C1ty Station, New York,
The most hkely figure was m the m1ddle of th1s range
Archbishop Iakovos For 2, 000 years the Chmtian Church ha;
Thank
of what this w11l mean to m1ddle class taxes W1th lower· reports that reserpme used to N.Y 10019. For a copy of Dr.
been nurtured. counseled and comforted by the Orthodox tradimcome fam1hes excluded from a hefty share of the lev1es , and treat h1gh blood pressure Lamb's booklet on losmg
tion.
causes breast cancer. I'm we1ght, send 50 cents and a
With
superhtgh mcomes too few tn the aggregate to meet govern
The pa10ful , and at times combative, separation of the Chrisment
needs,
the
strongest
blows
will
fall
on
those
who
are
m
taking a reserpme mediCme for long sell-addressed stamped
tian Church at Rome and the Christian Cburch at Constant10ople
between
my blood pressure Please envelope to the same address
has weakened the thrust of the followers of St Peter and St Paul.
A vanety of Soc1al Secun ty welfare and health and med1cal advise me if I should continue
Yet Vatican II did much to restore the brotherhood, if not m
and ask for the "Losing
programs could absorb between 13 and 17 2 per cent of the 1980 taking the med1cat10n
church government. then certainly in mutual respect and affecWeight" booklet.
GNP But the story IS more than Socl81 Secunty and welfare
tion In 1975, the struule for Christians IS not 1ns1de the com·
Government subs1d1es for energy agnculture and env1ronmen
muruty, but the world beyond
tal protection are expected to run mto the hundreds of b1lllons
The Greek Christian community was born 10 a period of upTo take one example It'S estimated the petroleum and other
heaval and has survived centuries of political , military and
programs will reqUire between $700 billion and $820 bllhon
energy
social change In spite of the battering ofarmles, centunes of ocm pnvate and go\'ernment fmancmg over the next decade Some
cu~Uon and generations of anU.QlrisUan 1deologtes. the Greek
put the figure as h1gh as $1 tnlhon
QrUiodox tradition has kept the doors open and the lights on
It had been expected that pnvate Industry could put up $450
Because of its split with Rome, Ole Greek Cburch has always
b1lhon
of that total , leavmg a gap of $250 b1lhon to $370 bllhon or
had cord1al connections with ProtestanU&amp;m Yet Roman
even
$500 b1lhon, dependmg on wh1ch figure s were used Ills now
CathoDes and the Orthodox share so much in history , theoiOSY
believed the current stagflation w11l m one form or another b&lt;
and the nature of the sacraments that their strife IS esse tially a
With
us for years, w1th mdustnal growlh, mdustflal profits ~"'
lover's quarrel To one part of the family, they are an uncle by
GNP
not agam ach1evmg the1r former v1gor w1th1n· th1s tim&lt;
b1rth - to the other , an uncle by mamage Tbey attend both
period
ThiS would mean mdustry Will have less to mvest leavmt
family reuruons
the
government
a bon's share of the task
'
Several major shitts within the Christian Church - and m
Energy
1s
JUSt
one
problem
The
Umted
States
1s
runmng
out 01
world poUUcs - during the past 18 months have broucht spec1al
available
crop
land
Development
of
the
additional
acreag&lt;
attention. to the leadership skills of Archbishop Iakovos First ,
deemed necessary would re&lt;(Uire an mvestment of $30 b1ihon tc
the retirement of individuals such as World Council President
$40 bllhon The specialists expect a great share of th1s must com&lt;
EuJene Carson Blake and Michael Ramsey. Arcllbisl1w of from the government .,. that 1s, from the taxpayer
canterbury Because of age, noted ecumenical f~ su~h as
Then there's the env~ronment Other government experts laugh
Martin Nlemoellet ol Gennany, Payne of ~land and Malik of
at
the Environmental Protection Agency estimate of $200 billion
Lebanon are unable to utend their personal leadership that was
or
so
requ~red over the next decade They beheve the figure may
evident a decade ago Henry P Van Deuaen of the United States
be
double
or tr1ple that total Jn any event. they thmk the cost too
died 1n early February and will be keenly missed for his ingreat for U S mdustry to absorb and stay solvent Here. then. IS a
terchurch lrlerldshlps.
hkely Sinkhole for hundreds of bllhons more tax money
The Roman Catholic Church bas never really replaced Cardinal
By 1980, government mvolvement tn housmg and cons truction
Spellman With a personality ol similar enonnous political power.
IS
estimated at levels thiS writer fmds unbelievable
Pope Paul VI IS not C&lt;liiSidered to be m stronc health and suddenIn
the tortuous state of world affa1rs. w1th Sov1et m1lltary exly the Christian family keeps lootlnc 1o Archbishop lakovos as
penditures
and world tensions on the upswmg, world econom1cs
the man of the hour, and al just age 6S, the man for a whole
fac1ng
rough
sleddmg for a long time to come, U S ass1stance to
decade.
fore1gn
alhes
and other countries could flse strongly and defense
Consider these quaUIIcations : Born m Greece, he holds ad·
and
space
spendmg
could run to 8 percent of GNP 1n a bare five
vanced degrees from the '"""logical School of Haki , Istanbul ,
years
Turttey - as well as a Master's Decree from Harvard Divlnil)
Continued defiCit spend1ng could result m a nat1onal debt by
School. He~ lOIII' Jancuageund reads sut At a be was Ollf
1980
which would cost 2 percent of the GNP to finance
of the youncest bishops m the G.- OrtbodoJ: Cburcli, becornlnt
" This IS my ass1stant and the ather tel/ow is my
There
IS doubt whether private profits would be able to sus tam
Ardlbisbop before he was 50- the spiritual leader of 11lllre tbar
attorney!"
such an astronomical government overload
three_milliqn members In North aad South America. Twenl)
'
But even 1f the fmancmg IS possible, 11 IS clear such heavy
colleges and universities have ~ed him honorary degrees and
government mtervenhon could have senous and uncertam
he served lor a decade as eo.
dent of the World COUIICI! of
on our pr1vate competitive econom1c system Governeffects
Olurches This friOI!d and confidant of thousands of churcbmeo
ment
and
academic economists already are womed by the
around the world may now be the chief architect of the Christian
de.
t
rimental
results of current government spendmg and are
straletY within and withOut the church
shocked
by
studies wh1ch show how d1scouragmg too-large
(NEXT: ne Style ond Thought Oil Modem Greek ArellbiShop)
govetnment has affected 1ndustnal technolog1~al growth m some
~
other nauon&gt;li

David Poling, D.O.
A Greek Christian
for our times

. 3- The Dally Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, Mard1 10, 1975

Ray Cromley

Government becoming
America's business?

, The loss ehmmated Coac h
; Paul Dillon 's Wildcats from
, further competition However,
• HT f1mshed the year w1th an
' outstandmg 19-3 record.
The Wildcat losses were to
Double A South Pmnt and
Gallipolis and to the stubborn
Panthers. wmners of the Scwto
Valley Conference.
Southeastern takes 1ts 19-4
record to the Class A Regwnals
Fnday mght agamst the
Zanesville Rosecrans
Although Southeastern
Jumped mlo an 18-12 lead at the
end of the first penod, the b1g
difference was Coach Larry
Jordan's man-to-man defense
wh1ch the Wildcats could not
overcome

two pomts
Southeas tern led 23-14
m1dway through the second
penod before the Wildcats put
on the mild comeback
S" am. Halley and Hesson
eac h scored, but the Panthers
kept the1r lead ·on a fastbreakmg offense provided by
Pumm1ll and the foul shootmg
of K1rk and Carroll. The half
ended w1th Southeastern on
top, 33-26
ActiOn picked up m the th~rd
quarter, as Swam 's basket w1th
7 37 left cut the score
to
35
28
Later
Swam h1t stx more pomts
and Hall canned one from
underneath to cut the lead to
40-38 w1th 1·58 left 10 the
quarter
Sou the as tern,
however ,
came back on two quick
baskels by Bolle and Kirk to
take a 44-38lead gomg into the
fmal stanza Afoul shot by
carroll pushed the score to 4538 before HT's Bill Hall existed
v1a five fouls w1th 6 52 left
Kirk's foul shootmg Pushed
the score to 49-38 before Swam
connected on a 15 fool jumper
cutlmg 1t to 49-40. Baskets by
Clemmons and Prater pushed
It IO 53-42 WIth 3 54 left
Southeastern, leadmg 54-44
w1th two mmutes left, put the
ball on 1ce. forcmg Hannan
Trace to come after the ball
and comm1t several fouls.
Hesson fouled out w1th I 55
left on a Pumm1U lay-up
Pwnm11l added the free throw
making the score 58-44.
Shootmg-w1se, Southeastern
hit 20 of 49 floor attempts for 49
and 21 of 31 at the foul line
Hannan Trace connected on 22
of 67 from the floor for 33 pet
and Just two of seven at the
char1 ty str1pe
Southeastern held a 39-30
rebounding edge WIth Kirk and
Bolte gettmg 11 rebounds each
Charlie Cremeans paced the
HT rebounders w1th 10
Box score
Hannan Trace (46) - Swam
17 0 34,
Hesson
1 2 4,
Cremeans I o 2, Hall 2 0 4,
Halley 1-0·2. Totals 22-2-46.
Southeastern (61) - Prater
3-3 9. Clemmons 5 1 II , Kork 5
II 21. Pummill 3 2 8, Bolle 4 0
8, Carroll 0 3 3, Bennett 0 1 1
Totals 20 21 ·61

Hannan Trace was unable to
work the ball ms1de aU rt1ght
long. The taller Panthers kept
pressure on the guards and
would not y1eld underneath.
The Wildcats b1ggest scormg
machme was all-stater Mark
Swam , the SVAC's Most
Valuable Player Swam, a
senwr, bowed out h1s bnlliant
h1gh school career with 34
pomls m an outstandmg offensive display Swam d1d not
y1eld to the pressure defense.
He connected from all over the
floor, an effort wh1ch earned a
standmg ovatiOn from both the
Hannan
Trace
and
Southeastern fans.
T1m
Clemmons,
Southeastern's semor guard,
playmg w1th a bandaged hand
and protective !ac1al mask
smce suffermg a broken nose a
week ago aga10st Crooksville.
opened the game scoring w1 th
an 18 footer w1th 7 17left m the
mtbal penod.
Swam countered w1th a 20
footer before Clemmons came
back w1th a 25 footer and a free
throw B1g 6-2 Craig Kirk
JOmed h1s teammate w1th a
short JUmper to g1ve the
Panthers a 7-2 lead w1th 6·00
remammg m the first stanza.
At that point, Coach D11lon
called tune to regroup h1s
forces K1rk, 6-3% Greg
Pummill, sophomore Coy
Prater and 6-2 season Butch
Bolle each canned two pOinters
to stretch tbe lead to 18-12 at
the end of the quarter Swam
By quarters
had e1ght po10ts while Wayne
Hannan
Trace 12 14 12 8- 46
Hesson and B1ll Hall each had Southeastern
18 15 11 17--&lt;11

Pro Standings
Nattonal Basketball Assoctatton
Standtngs
By Untfed Press Intern ational
Ea st er n Conference
Allanftc DtVt SIO n
w 1 pet g b
Boston
46 20 697
Bu ff al o
42 26 618 5
N ew York
J1 36 46J 1 5' :~
Phdadelphta JO J9 435 17 1 2
Central Dtvt ston
w I pel g b
Washmgton
50 18 7J5
HouStOt1
J7 32 536 lJ I :1
Cleve l and
J1 36 471 18
At lanta
28 42 400 13
New Orl eans 18 A9 269 Jl 1 l
western Conference
MtdWest Otvt s1on
w 1 pet g b
Chtca g o
40 27 597 KC Omaha
JB 31 551
3
Oe!ro 1l
J5 36 493 8
Milwaukee
Jl 35 47 0 9 1 1
Pactttc Dtvt ston
w I pet g b
Go ld en Sf
39 30 565
Seat li e
32 36 471
61 1
Port land
30 37 448 8
Phoen 1x
29 37 AJ 9 8 1 1
Los Angeles
2J A4 34J 15
Sunday's Res ults
1
Golden Stat e 10 2 Boston 101
Philad elph i a 113Wa shmgton 100
New Orleans 90 Cleveland 86
Detrott 106 K C Omaha 99
Los Angeles 116 Hou ston 95
Monday's Games
KC Oma ha at Milwaukee
Am encan Basketball Assoc1a
flon Standmgs
By Untied Press lnfernar•onal
East
w I. pet. g b
New York
49 21 700
Ken tucky
A1 22 681 l 1 1
Sf LO UI S
26 47 356 1A 1 1
Memphis
10 49 290 28 1 7
l A 55 203 34 1'7
V•rgm 1a
West
w I
pet g b
Den ver
53 17 757
SanAnton1o
A2 29 592 111 7
lnd•an e
37 31 54A 15
Utah
32 37 46A 10 112
San Otego
JO 42 41 7 24
Sunday's Results
New York. 112 VtrQtnta 82
Sf LOUIS 103 Kentucky 92
lndtana 14 1 San Anton to 107
San Diego 113 MemphiS 107
Monday's Games
(No Games Scheduled)
Nattonal Hockey League
Standmgs
By Untted Press tnlernaftonat
Otvtston 1
w 1 t pts gf ga
Phtlade lpht 40 18 9 B9 236 161
NY Rangers 32 22 13 77 272 227
NY Is landers 28 22 17 73 212 18 2
Atlanta
26 27 13 65 188 19 2
OtlltSIOn 2
w 1 t . pts gt ga
Ch rc ago
32 29 7 71 225 203
Vancouver
32 29 6 70 224 214
St Lour s
26 27 1J 65 219 226
M 1nnesota
19 41 6 4A 188 288
Kansas Ctty 14 44 9 37 159 280
Dtvlston 3
w I I pts gf ga
Mon treal
40 11 16 96313 196
Los Angeles 36 1J 17 89 228 150
Pi ttsburgh
30 2J \ A 74 273 242
Det ro tt
19 38 10 48 207 278
Wash1ngton 6 58 5 17 151 371
DIVISIOn 4
w 1 t pts gf ga
Buffalo
41 12 14 96 296 201
Boston
37 19 11 85 303 204
Toronto
28 29 11 67 238 258
Ca l tforn 1a
17 40 11 45 180 259
Sunday's Re sults
Montreal 5 NY Rang ers 3
NY Islanders 2 Cal1forn 1a 4
Phtlad el phia 8 Detrotl 4
Boston 5 Atlanta 2
Toronto 4 Wa sh 1ngton 1
Buffalo 8 Ptttsburgh A
St LOUI S 5 Minnesota A
Monday's Games
!No games scheduled)

Greenfield McCI•un 's '11gers
captured the 1975 Class ~A
Dts tnct Tournament \\l lh a
thnlhng 63-62 VIc tor y over
WheelersbUI g at Rw Grande
Saturday mght while the
Zanesville Blue Dev1ls f1m shed
strong l oelmunate Portsnwuth
67-51 fur the Class AAA D1sll1cl
IItle at Athens
Siever Willis tap-1n \\lth foUl
seconds
rema1nm g
gave

C1t'CIIf1eld the Cl.1ss AA eruwn

uve 1 Wh ee lers bUI ~
Th e
Pu &lt;l ies had !&lt;~ken the lcud 62~ 1
on Tom l'mne1 s t.apvm \\llh 25
seconds lefl but IVHS cuuldn t
hold !he led d
Greenfield \\Ill bdltlc Manon
R1 ve1 V,d lcy a l Ohw
UntvCJ s1t) on F11day, stat tmg
at 8 45p m The Ti gC I'S t~Ie 17-

5 on the
211-2

River

\CcH

Vt~lley Is

Tournament results.

• •

Oh10 H1gh School

(At Columbus)

Tournament Re sults
By Un1ted Press lnternatmnal

Rtv er Va ll ey 73 Ma rio n E lgtn

68
c ,.clev 1lle 62 Col Sl Charles 54
{At Troy)

CLASS AAA
(At Loram)

Elyna 60 Lor am Adm~ral Ktng

56

Spr1ngfteld
Shawnee
Be ll efonfa1 ne 46

(At Dayton )

(At Athen s)

Zanes v il le 67

Portsmouth 5 1

(At Toledo)

Toledo Ma comber 61

Scott 51

Dayton St1vers 75 Springboro

70

( At Steubenville )
R• verv1ew 62 Brt dgepor t 54
Cost10cton 58 Bu ckeye South 56

46

Nor

(At Cmcmnah)
Roger Bacon 45

{Atloledo)
Rossford 103 Eastwood 63
(AI Ashland)

Cm

W1llar d 76 M argare tta 66

thmonl 42

Ctn

Toledo

tAt Troy)

Trotwood

Madr son

Woodward 42
tAt Struthers)
!AI Canton)

(at ClnCinnalll
{At Elynal

Loratn

Barberton 73 Akron Kenmore

64

(at Cleveland)
Cle East Tech 76 Cle Lmcoln
West 72
Cle He1ghts 78 East Cle Shaw 52
!At Eastlake)
Eastlake North 50 Willoughby
South 49
tAt Columbus)
Col L1nden 62 Gahanna 47

Fall s 83

N,

r:lt~

'&lt;1w n

Tatawar,\.o

78

q~

Cu ya h oga

Norwayne 46 Sebrmg 34

tAl Gallon)

Mansf te ld
Wynford 63

St

P e te r s

67

(At Elida!

(At Fondlay)

R tverda le 76 Van Buren 5 1

(At Napoleon)

I At Dayton)
77

68

He&lt;ghts 67 (oil

Peff1svtlle 74 Tmora 62

CAt L•mal

Dayton

Manon Loca l 72 Mmster 43

CAt Dayton)

Oxford

n .. ss AA
(At RIO Grande)
Greenfield
McCia1n
Wheele rsburg 62

63

Ma con
Eastern
62
Mec han 1csburg 44
M lsstss mawa Valley 54 Wes t

L1berty 50 (oil
(At Chillicothe)

Southea5tern 61 Hannan Tra ce

45

for NCIT are
announced today

•••

Eastlake North

( 17 5)

vs Sti vers (13 8). Friday. 7 30

Cleveland Hetghts ( 21 1) , Fn p m . Sprlng f1 el d Shawnee ( 19
day 7 30 p m El yna ( 21 ll vs 1) vs Circleville (22 OJ, Friday ,
Toledo Macomber (18 2 ) Frl 9 30 p m
Finals Saturday
day 9 30 p m F 1na ls Sa turd ay 9 30 p m
7 30 p m
,
Class A
At Canton
At Canton
Youngstown Sout h ( 18 4) vs
Windham (1.1 1) vs Lora in
Can ton M cK mley (2 1 1) Wed Clearv1ew (19 3) Fnday, 7 30
nesday , 7 JO p m , Cleveland p m ,
Norwayne
( 18 4) vs
Eas t Tec h ( 20 1} vs Barber ton Manslleld St Peler's (22 21.

Thursday , 7 30

p m
pm

Finals

pm

Saturday ,

7 30

Middletown (22 01 vs Trot
wood MadiSon (20 2). Wednes
day 7 30 p m , Ke ttenng A l ter
(22 0)
vs C1nc mnafl
Roger

pm

F i nals

Saturday ,

1 30

pm
• • AI Steubenvolle
Frankfort Adena (16 6) vs
lnd1an Valley South 117 51.
Friday, 6
Rosecrans

pm ;
( 19 3)

Zanesville
vs
Ross

Bacon (20 21, Wednesday, 7 30 Southeastern ( 19-41. Friday 9
pm
Finals Saturday, 7 30
Fmal s Saturday , 1 30
pm
pm
Class AA
At Dayton
At Canton
Cardington (16 6) vs Frede
Lou1svllle St Thoma s Aqu1
ncktown (20·2). Thursday. 7 30
nas ( 14 8) vs Navarre Fa tr less p m , Mlsslss lnawa Valley (18
( 16 6), Fnday. 6 p m , Chag ri n 5) vs Ma con Eastern {21 2),
Fa ll s ( 18 4) vs Brookfield 118 Thursday. 9 30 p.m Finals
4)
Fnday, 9 p m
F1nals
Saturday, 7 30 p m
Saturday 7 30 p m
Pm

At Bowhng Green

Citrus
champ
ORLANDO, Fla. (UP!) - If
Lee Trevmo breaks out his red
sh1rt next week on the "Blue
Monster" at Doral Country
Cl ub, he smells another trophy.
" If you see me in a lrown
sh1rt, that means I'm
chokmg," explamed the Merry
Mex1can in the afterglow of
collectmg his 16th pro goU title
and the $40,000 check thai went
w1th 1t In the $200,000 Flonda
atrus Open.
Trevino had on that
specially-made red sh1rt
SUnday as he logged a 71 that
put him at 12-underi)llr 276 and
one stroke ahead of his former
World Cup teammate, U S.
Open champ Hale Irwin.
" I only wear it on Sunday
when I think I'm gomg to win,"
said the 35-yeaNid holder of
several of the world's most
prestigious titles.
"This gives me a tremendous
amount of confidence," he
said, "and I always do well the
week after I wm. And I'm going
to a golf course I like."
The two~lme British Open
Wl!lDer brought his earnings to
more than $54,400 for 1975 with
his first victory of the season.
Trevino, who had rounds of
69, 86 and 70 on his first three
tours of the par 72, 6,929-yard
Rio course, had two birdies and
v ~~~~7n and said, ''My
;,
ezcltlng.

Rossford 121 1) vs Willard
! 19 3), Fnday 6 p m , Loram
Catholic (20 2) vs Fa1rv1ew (20
2). Fnday 9 p m
Fmal s
Sa turd ay, 7 30 p m
At Ohto Umverstty
Coshocton ( 15 6) vs River
V1 ew (21 1). Fr1day, 7 30 p m

TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY
MARCH 11-12-13

8:30 TIL 12:30
Ass octalton
Standtng s
By Untied Pr ess Int ernational
Ea st
w 1 t pts gf ga
New E ng lnd 35 2~ 4 74 21 4 217
Cl eve land
28 34 3
59 186 216
Ch1 cago
:15 38 I I 5 1 115 255
lnd 1an apo 1s 15 A6 J
33 169 269
Wes t
w I I pts gf ga
Hous ton
43 22 0 86 303 208
Ph oenix
34 25 6 74 248 214
M1nn eso t a
34 28 1 70 256 224
Wo r ld

Thursday - Southern Ca l
(18-7 ) vs Drake (16-10) and
Eas t Carollnu ( 19-8 ) v s
AIIZona I 20-6)
Fr~day - Tennessee ( 16-7)
vs Bowling Green ( 17-9) dnd
M1ssour1 ( 18.JI I vs Purd ue 116101

The Southern Cal-Dra ke
w1nner w11l mee t the T ennessee

- Bowlmg G1 een wmner and the
M1ss our~-Purdue wmner will
play the Eas t Ca r olina Arizona victor m Sa turday 's
sem1fmals
The f10als are next Sunday
lnd1ana, th 1s }ear 's top ranked team, won the f1rst
tournament iast year at St
LOUI S

Rcgwna l

COL UMBUS !UPil - Pa1r Greenf ield McCla m ( 17 5 ) vs
tng s for tht s week 's Oh10 H1g h Ma rlon R1ver Valley (20 2).
Sch ool
Regtonal
Ba ske tbal l Fnda y
9 30 p m
F ma ls
Tournaments
Sa turday 7 30 p m
Clas s AAA
AI Dayton
At Kent State Umvers1ty
Rear:tmg (13 9) vs Dayton

Pairin~s

KANSAS CITY, Mo (UP!) B1g E1ght Com m1 sswner
Chuck Nemas, chairman of the
second annual Natwnal
CommiSSIOner~·
Inv1tatwnal
Tournament
baske tball
committee, sa1d Sunday
Bo" hog Green w1ll JOID seven
other teams for lh1s year 's
to urney Thursday through
Sunday at LoUisville, Ky
Eleventh-ranked Southern
Cahforma and 20th-ranked
Arizona Sunday accepted m·
v1tatwns to compete m the
event The rest of the f1eid 1s
made up of Drake, Tennessee,
M1ssoun, Purdue and East
Carolina.
The pamngs

Zanesv ille w11l battle league
11val Newar k !20-2) at 9 p m
~·nday at Columbus m the AAA

Regional pairings

At Dayton

Ka ltda 55 Cres tv 1ew 22

(At Bowling Green)
Lima Sen1or 62 Gal ton 52
Alter

89 Olms ted

CLASS A
(at Canton)

Clearv1 ew

Newark 70 Columbus East 59

Roosevelt 68
tAt Oxford)

Catholic

Z&lt;lnesvdle, 21-1, onl y six poml&lt;

Friday , 9 30 p m Fmals
Saturday, 7 30 p m
At Columbus
At Bow hng Green
Columbus L1nden M c Kinl ey
Ka l1da (16·6) vs Riverdale
( 14 B) vs Ltma Sen1or ( 16 6) , ( 17 5 ). Wednesday, 7 30 p m ,
Fnday 6 p m , Zanesvil le (2 1 Pettisville (23 Ol vs Marion
1) vs Newark (20 21 , Fr&lt;day, 9 Local (21 1). Thursday, 7 30

Rea dmg 62 Greenh ill s 56

CAt Copley)

uul

Steve W1lhs led li1 eenf1 cld
111th t5pmnts Bill F'lynn added
14 .md Steve Ha~·vey 12.
Po rt s m ou th
t r c11l e d

(20 2)

tAt Ada)

Canton M cKm ley 61 All tance 47

bow ed

w1th a 20-'J se ;:~ son reco1ct Tum 55-49, lai c m the second half
I'm ncr pa&lt;-cci the Pn dtcs w1t11 before gm ng down 67-51 The
20 pomts llnan Bu1 s added 19 'llu;ans bowed out w1 th a 12-tO
and .Joe R~ se 1!;
1ecord

F1na l s Saturday 1 30 p m

Fatrv tew 64 Van Wer t 49

Youngstown South 71 Salem 65

Dayton

47

Wh ee lcrsblll g

Trevino

H o c key

San D1 ego
Ba ll more

RON BRINKER
For Your Listening Pleasure
GUITAR&amp; PERCUSSION

The MEIGS INN
J&gt;h. 992-3629

J127 3 67 2A6 719
16 47 :1 J5 16?291
Canadian
- - - - - -- -- - - - - - - -w I t pts gf ga
Quebec
41 2A 0 62 275 237
Tor on to
36 28 1 7&lt;1 787 155
Ed mon 1on
31 26 J
65 22'1 20 1
Vancouver
30 30 2 62 202 203

w nn1peg

29 29 •I 62 2~9 225
tran sferr ed from

x fran ch •se
M tctugan
Sunday' s Res ult s
Wl nmp eg 6 Mtn n esol a 5 of
r oronlo 8 Ba lt1m ore 1
Vancouver 4 Phoen1lC 3
Quebec 7 Ch1cago 5
Monday' s Game
Edmont on at Ba i t mor e

Pomeroy
-

BY MEL CREMEANS
THE PLAINS - The mat
team of Ray Goodman and
Sam Crow fmiShed fourth m an
eleven-learn field at the A-AA
Southeastern
District
Wrestling Tournament at
Athens H1gh School on Friday,
March 7 and Saturday, March
8

On the1r way to the fourth
place fmish the Marauder
wrestlers captured two
champwnsh1ps, two runner-up
spots, and three fourth places.
The tournament ended in a cochampiOnship w1th Sheridan
H1gh School and Belpre
fmishing w1th 80% pomts
Iron llln followed in third place

service?
You get that
right
with
our low
'

II

Along w1th our fam ous low cos I auto pro1ect1on comes
a prom1se of prompt personal serv1ce So you don t
, have to g1ve up a th1ng lo gel ou r low rates You JUSI
have to take advanlage of them

STEVE SNOWDEN
: 1258 Powell St., Middleport

w1th 78% pomts and Me1gs was
next w1th 75
Roundmg out the field were
Warren Local 65, NelsonvilleYork 56, Chesapeake 40,
Fairland 16, Glouster and
Hillsboro each 13, and
Wellston, which had only one
wrestler competing ended the
tourney with 10 pomts
The wmners of the we1ght
classes at that tournament w1ll
advance to the state meet
wh1ch w1ll be held m Columbus
th1s comwg Fflday and
Saturday, March 14 and 15 The
Marauders Will be sendmg two
\\restlers to the stale meet
They are M1ck Lyons who
wrestles m the 105 lb we1ght
class and Freshman Carl
Gheen who wrestles for the
Marauders m the 112 ib we1ght
class
·
The followmg are the results
of all t11e we1ghl classes at the
li&gt;urnament.
Ir the 98lb. class Bill Hall of
Warren Local took f1rst plac&amp;
w1th Meigs wrestler Kevm
McLaughlin fmlshing m fourth
place. McLaughlin rece1ved an
IDJury to h1s hand durmg an
earlier consolation finals
match and was unable to
compete for the third place
spot, so he was awarded fourth
In the 100 lb. class, Mick
Lyons of Me1gs won the
champwnship by defeatmg H
Bacon of Ironton 1n the finals
by decision, 11-&lt;l. In the next

PHONE 992-7155

Uke a good neighbor,
.......". State Fann is there.

ASHE WSES
HARTFORD, Conn. (UPI)Rod Laver defeated Arthur
Ashe 6-2, 7~ Sunday to g1ve
Australia 1ts fourth consecutiVe win m the Aetna

STATE FARM MUTUAL
AUlOMOBILE INSURANCE COMPANY

=o~~ ~::Sc~~~=~

Home OffiCe Bloomrnglon 111Jf10IS

I

I
I

Bob Musser gave Me1gs a the tournament, 185 ibs , was
fourth place funsh 10 thiS captured by Karland Beebe of
event.
Warren Loca l He defeated S '
The 167 lb event was won by Coopen1der of Shendan 10 the
Dave Scwr of Ironton when he final ma tch to g1ve h1m the
defeated C. Hall of Warren VldOI y
Local. In the 175 lb contest
The fmal even t of the day,
Roger W1lhamson of Belpre the heavyweights , saw Ken
took the t1tle by wmmng ove r Fnlz of Ironllln wm 1t all by
T Allen of Ironton
defeatmg S Koehl er of
The next to the last class of Shendan 10 the f10al s

Maybe yoUI life's pretty
good nght now. But 1f you
want to keep 1t that way,
you've got to plan for1t And
one way you can do just that
IS by s1g mqg up for th e
Payroll Savmgs Plan where
you work An amount you
spec1fy will be set as1de from
each paycheck and used to
buy U.S Savmgs Bonds.
Then, when you're ready
to stop workmg, you'll still
be able to keep on living
Now E Bond11 fUIY 111'11 tnli!rt?llt when held
to umlun~y of 5 Yt.'ll rlll 4 ~ " the fi rst )'Ca r )
L011t stQ!I.'n or r.lestroyetl BorM:h1 Clln

be rcplarui tf rt..'Cnrd~ are pr011l(led When
n~...U t.ocl BonJs c11n 00 wsht.&gt;d nt you r
bank Interest IS not subJect W st.at.e cr Iota I
ft.'ii~ra l ~x may~

FOR ' EASTER
CHILDREN'S

POLL PARROT

·;a;

~-743&amp;

we1ght class a Marauder
wrestler came through the
champ agam Th1s hme 1t was
112 lb Carl Gheen who p10ned
h1s opponent, Saun Floyd ,
Chesapeakew1th I 05leftm the
second penod of the1r match
The 119lb. class was won by
J Adams of Belpre who
defeated T1m Cotterman of
Shendan . In th1s we1ght class
Marauder wrestler M1ke
Brahan f1mshed fourth by
dec1s1onmg Chauncey Darling
of Chesapeake 7-5 m the1r
consolatiOn fmals match.
Tim Powell of NelsonvilleYork won the 126 lb. event by
dec1swmng R Sm1lh of
Shet1dan 7-5. At 132 lbs., Edward J. While of Shendan beat
Jeff Musser of Me1gs 10 the
champwnshlp match to g1ve
h1m the title and leavmg
Musser 1n the runner-up spot.
In the 138 lb battle John
Brant of Warren Local
dec1s1oned D Shaffer 9-6 10 the
fmals to allow h1m to advance
to state compehtwn The next
we1ght class, 145 lb , saw
Marauder Roger Hysell beaten
m the fmal match by Bill Miller
of Fairland by a deciSIOn of 1511
AI 155 lbs , G Parson of
Belpre was the champ after he
pmned H Newhouser 10 the
second penod of the match.

FOR KIDS FUNMEAL. rtol

ADULT MEAL.

Bt9 She!
Reg French Frtes
Turnover &amp;
La rqe Soli Drtnk

•

SHOES

Black or
White Patent

heritage house

PT PLEASANT

GALLIPOLIS

Your Thom Me An Store

2325 Jackson Ave

1503 Eastern Ave

M1ddlepor 0

C~IS • •' "'

Join tbe Payroll Sa•ings Plan.
l~r

-----

When)'Ou're
turned out to pasture,
will it still be green?

Meigs' Lyons, Gheen in. State Mat Tournament

Berrys World

.,

··: lo:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:~·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::·:·:··

Pirates, Trojans are eliminated

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2- The Dailv Sent mel, Middleport-Pomerov. 0 .. Monday, March 10, 1975
~~&gt;G~~~O&lt;&gt;G~~~~&gt;G~~~~~M?~~~

Editori11-l comment,
opinion, features
Arab blacklist tests U. S.
Just how high a pr1ce are Americans Willing 10 pay for Arab o1l'
The Jewish cml rights organiZation, B'nai B'r1th , charges that two federl agenc1es, the Overseas
Investment Corp. and the Army Corps of Engineers, refuse Ill hrre Jews for JObs 1n the Middle Easl
In teetlmony before a Senate subcorruruttee the other day, Col. Wilham Durham confirmed tl\at
the Corps of Engineers does not aSSign Jewish off1cers to constructiOn proJects 10 Saudi Arabia
because of Arab demands.
According to Sen. Frank Olurch ([).Ida ), 1,500 U.S. firms are on an Arab boycott list because
they do busmess w1th Israel. Many of them have been on the list for years, but 1t didn't matter
because more money was to be made dealing With Israel than with the Arabs - until , that 1s, thmgs
changed and we learned that , contrary to Mao Tse-tung's famous d1ctum, all power flows not from
barrel of a gun but from barrels of oU.
Most recently, Western banking houses have acceded to Arab demands to blacklist JewiSh
bankers from partlclpallon Ill Arab mvestmenl programs
All of wh1ch has led President Ford to issue a vague warmng to the Arabs that "such
discrimination IS totally contrary to the American position and repugnant to American pr~nc1ples "
Does this mean thai unless the Arabs shape up we w1U reconsider our a1d programs, pull our
military and clvU1an personnel back borne or take other countermeasures' We 'll see.
In the meantime, it IS at least curious to be told by this same President that the pounng of
another half-billion dollars into the lndochma sinkhole Is necessary to preserve American honor and
credibility.

India vs. India
India Is riding a "Bombay High" and It has nothing to do with drugs.
Encouraging reports from exploratory drlllJng in the region known as the ll&lt;lmbay H1gh led the
minister of petroleum and chemicals, K. D. Malav1ya , to predict last month thai India could become
nearly seU-eufflclent in oU In the next six or seven years.
The prospect holds stupendous Implications for India, which has been hard hit by the quadrupmg
of world oU prices. SeU-BUfflclency In oil could not only help solve the nation's balance of payments
problem but provide It with the raw materlalfor fertilizer, which 11 desperately needs 1f 11 1s to be able
to feed its conttnuaUy expanding population.
If India's past record is a guide, unfortunately ,it wUI find some way of remaiJUng in poverty
This Is suggested by remarks made by Daniel P. Moynihan, recently returned after two years as
U. S. ambassador to India.
When India woolts Independence from Britain In 1947, he points out , lt was producmg I 2 nul11on
Ions of steel a year . Japan was producing only 800,000 tons.
'
Twenty.five years later, India's output had risen to 6 8 mlllioo tons but Japan's had soared to
106.8 million tons, despite the fact that Japan has to Import iron ore and coal while India has huge
deposits of both.
'''This lsn1 a question of luck," says Moynihan, "and It Isn't because the Japanese are any
smarter or harder working than the Indians . It's simply the result of a consc1ous deCISIOn made by
both countries."
The declslon made by India was to put steel production, along with most of its economy, under
direct government control.
Indian, says Moynihan, prefers stability or stagnation to a dynanuc economy. In protecting 1tsell
!rom receaalons, however, It has also protected itself from growth.
It Ia less than encouraging to learn that India has already informed the 011 companu!'s prospecting
in its territory that it Intends to take them over.

FUNNY BUSINESS

Tom Tiede
Women and
the presidency
By Tom Tiede
WASHINGTON - (NEA) - Ed1tors of Redbook magaz~ne are
askmg a number of pollt1cal observers to help find five women
who have the quallhcations to be president of the Umted States
I'm afra1d I must pass I've though! on 11 for hours but still draw a
blank I don't believe there Is a woman 1n the nation who according to the word " qualifiCations , ' ranks m the pres1denhal
category
Whoa• Watch the language . ladles. l shall explain
There are dozens of women whom I believe could be preSident .
even should be president Constance Baker Motley. as example.
the erud1te and wholly together US D1str1ct JUdge m New York.
1s one Dorothy Day. the agonizingly sens1tive and thoroughly
sensible Catholic poverty worker 1s another Also. Ella Grasso.
the new governor of Connechcul. Janet Gray Hayes . mayor of
San Jose. Clare Booth Luce. Elanor Holmes Norton and .Anne
Armstrong - they and many more. some buned 1n obscurity.
have the mtelllgence. compassion , energy and mental strength
to be president
But they don't have the traditional qualifiCations
Nor do any other women m Amenca My own news serv1ce has
recently compiled a first-draft list of wha! may be the 250 most
mfluentialladies 1n the land - everybody from Bella Abzug 10
N Y l to Margaret Bush Wilson (NAACP! - and though 11 IS an
mterestmg compilation of Individuals 11 1s as a general represen
tation of more than IOO.mdllon American women unimpresSIVe.
oot to say downnght d1scourag10g
Almost half the womon on the list are d1stmgulshed pnmanly
for careers as entertamers Th1s mcludes athletes such as Chr1s
Evert (Chris Evert for pres1dent?). wr1ters such as Marya
Mannes . and actresses such as Mae West They are stars , m
deed . but not leaders Ms West could g1ve a hell of a f~res1de
chat , no doubt , but the subject here IS Helmansh1p
quahiJcations for Pay attention
There are . to be sure . a dozen poht1c1ans. a dozen business
b1gg1es and 16 emment educalors on the list of 2SO But . sad to
say, sti ll no g1ants Barbara Jordon !O.Tex ) is a tough , fearless
leg1slalor but not a political force Nor does Martha Peterson
board member of Exxon . come 1mmed1ately to mind as an
earthmover Dr V1rgm~a Masters, of Masters and Johnson , has
the CIJUrage of her convlcuons but her other half does not qualify
for president e1ther
Beyond th1s , the list of the 2SO most Influential women IS quietly humorous Penny Tweedy is on 11 , she owns race horses Rona
Barrett Is named , she. gad , IS a Hollywood goss1p. Julia Child IS
among the elite for her cooking skills , Julia Nixon Eisenhower 1s
there for reasons unkoown, and Martha M1tchell , who has never
don~ much bul marry John , 1s added obviOusly as the sex group's
lead1ng coo-coo l apollg11e for the as1des. The point is , these people are named among womanhood's most Influential because SIP - they are Lack1ng more substantial candidates . the
margtnal characters have 10 be tapped.
What the femmists have been arug1ng , then , ts b1tterly true.
th01111h they do not put 11 thus Kept m the subservient roll .
women have been forbidden the nght to qualify for somethmg
like lhe pres1dency None In 200 years of the democracy has been
able to ~ulate the combination of presuge , power . mfluence
aad public aCCf!l!lance necessary for the uitimale office Many
hive gathered one or more ot the qualifications (Eleanor
Roosevelt ) but never, not once , the whole package
Too bad
Eventually this will change, probably No president of recent
'tunes bas .denied the ln,eVJiab1lity of a woman commander m
chief. And somewhere now .m this country. perhaps already
nuddle-aged, IS at least a future female Veep , probably more
than Uuit. Hanna Arend, Manan Edelman , Ci$sy, Farenthold.
Malina Horner, COrella Kmg. carol Lefcourl, Patsy Mink. Susie
Sharp, Jlll Vollner - who knows II Jerry ford can do 11. we
eoulll almost open the telephone book and choose at will
~

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Today's
Almanac ·

•'
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•

Panthers capture Class A cage title

•

By Urited Press Intemallonal
Today 1~ Monday , March 10,
the 69th day of 1975 w1th 296 lo
follow
The moon 1s approaching its
new phase
The morntng stars are
Mercury and Mars
The evemng stars are Venus,
Jupiter and Saturn
Those born on this date are
under the s1gn of Pisces
Amencan orgamst and composer Dudley Buck was born
March 10, 1839
On th1s day m history
In 1862, the Umted States
Treasury 1ss ued the first
Amer1can currency, m denominatiOns from $5 to $1 ,000
In 1945, B29 bombers of the
U S Air Force began mce ndlary ra1ds on Japan 10 the
wan10g days of World War II
In 1964, Queen Elizabeth II
ga ve brrth to her fourth ch1ld,
Prmce Edward, lh1rd m line of
successwn to the Br1llsh throne
In 1969, James Earl Ray
OLD TIMERS BOTH, or so most tree experts would think
pleaded gwlty to the murder of
judgmg
by the s1zable grrth of these two Douglas Fir trees m
Dr Martm Luther King and
Oregon
But actually, the one at right 1s an unposter - only
was sentenced to 99 years 10
60 years old yet matching the 30-inch di•meler of the 400.
pr1son
year-old tree at lert The S1de-by.,;1de compariSOn was made

Rhodes' budget
likely $5.5 billion

'

....

~ Wildcats how out

••

Girls to play .

~ with
•

Girls age 10 to 14 in the
Syracuse area "lshing to
play un the Syracuse G~rls
Junlur Softball team th1s
summer should call R1ta
Sla&gt;en at 992·3710

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19-3 record

••

The Southern Valley Athletic Conference
: Hannan Trace Wildcats fell behind early m the
; contest, fought back gallantly for three quarters,
then hit one of their coldest streaks of the year
Saturday night as a tall Southeastern ftve won the
Class A District Tournament, 61·46, at Chtlhcothe
• High School

to illustrate dramatically the great str1des sCientists have
made 10 replacing lumber by accelerating tree growth. The
artifiCial "super trees" are created by chemically altermg
cells from an existmg tree to form roots and needles for
another

DR. LAMB
All liver ills aren't
from booze

ballot by itsell
Marsh said almost half the
state's 13,000 pollmg places
which would otherwise be
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - Gov. array of problems for the closed, would have to open to
James A. Rhodes will present Republican governor and the accomodate the smgle state·
By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR READER - From
his budget for the next two legislature
wide 1ssue
DEAR
DR
LAMB
time
to tune new mformation
years to tbe Oh1o General
The General Assembly, after
Marsh sa1d this would Recently my 7-year-old does become available about
Assembly Wednesday and It Is first mdicallng 11 would pass reqwre the state to pay for
expected to total about $5 5 enabl10g leg1slahon to put staff10g, rental , transportation grandson had an attack of mediCmes pallents may be
infectiOus hepatitis
taking The best course of
billton a year
Rhodes· four proposals for of vot10g equ1pment and
The
lhmg
that
wornes
me
action
to take in all such cases
State Budget Director How- economic r ecove ry on the cleanup as well as for prmtmg
now
1s
will
h1s
liver
go
back
lo
1s
to
go
back to your doctor and
ard L. Collier will present the ballot, last week, passed the and advertlsmg the connormal
or
Will
it
slay
fmd out what he wants you to
budget, which wUI be outlined deadlme Without putting any of stitutiOnal amendment
Also,
I
didn't
know
do
enlarged?
m a 500-page report and will them up for a vote of the
children
were
prone
to
get
th1s
There has been a reported
contain no new or added taxes, people.
disease.
I
thought
people
who
increased
risk of breast cancer
to a JOIDI meeting of the Senate
Earlier Ill the sesswn, durmg
The
Daily
Sentinel
drank
or
smoked
were
the
associated
w1th
taking
and House Fmance Com - the week Gilligan was still 10
DEVOTED T-0 THE
ones
I
would
appreciate
reserpme,
serpastl
or
raw
oUia
INTEREST OF
mittees on Thursday.
off1ce, the legislature passed
MEIGS
MASON
AREA
anythmg
you
have
to
say
on
serpenttna
preparatwns.
These
Rhodes spending document SIX partisan b1lls which are
CHESTER l TANNEHILL
lh1s matter
Exec Ed
med1cmes are commonly used
Will be about $1 billion above now lied up 10 the courts.
ROBERT HOEFLICH
DEAR
READER
I
am
m treating h1gh blood pressure
the budget for the current
Crty Edrtor
The failure to place the four
Pub
l
rshed
dall\1
exce
pt
constantly
amaze
d
at
how
and
may be mcluded in many
fiscal year and $2.5 billion to $3 economic 1ssues on the June J Saturday b y Til e Oh ro Val ley
many
people
thmk
thai
the
only
of
the
med1cmes that are
A thol18ht for the day billton less than that proposed primary ballot poses a problem Pub lrs hmg Company 111
Cou
r
t
St
Pome
roy
,
Ohro
way
you
can
get
hver
d1sease
IS
combmatwns of different
President Dwight D. Elsen- by former Gov. John J for the only co nstitutional 45769 Bus mess Offr ce Phone
from alcohol. It 1s true thai dr\18S
2 2 156 Edrtortal Phon e 992
hower , wh1le supreme com· GUilgan before Gilligan left amendment wh1ch d1d make 1t 99
2157
excess alcohol can lead to hver
Persistent h1gh blood
mander of Allied forces m office
Second class post age pa rd at
through the General Assembly P ome
r
oy
Oilro
damage,
but
there
are
many
pressure
can be a ser1ous
World War II, sa1d, "In the
The Democratic con trolled m t1me for the pnmary
Natro na ! advertrsrng
forms
of
liver
disease
other
disease and should not go
fmal choice, a soldier's pack is General Assembly will be balloting
r epresentatrve
Bottmell r
Ga lla gher In c, 12 East 42nd
Infectious
hepatitis
1s,
untreated The dangers of not
not so heavy a burden as a asked to enact the budget
The resolutiOn would allow St New York New York
S
ub
sc
rrpt
ro
n
~
ra
te
s
plamly
put,
infectious
It
IS
gettmg
treatment may far
prisoner's chains. "
before June 30, the end of the the legislature to wr1te tax De lrv er ed by carrrer where
caused
by
a
vrrus.
The
virus
outweigh the dangers of inpresent fiscal year
relief for owners of land used avarlab l e 75 ce nts per week
By Mot o r Rou t e where carrrer
can be gotten through blood creased fiSk of breast cancer
The budget wUI pose another exclusively for outdoor recrea- serv
rc e not avarlable , One
transfusiOns, and needle slicks
mon t h SJ 25 By ma d m Ohro
I know people are very
tion
and W V rt , One Year $22 00 ,
from
contammated
needles.
concerned
about cancer. But 11
Assistant Secretary of State Srx m onth s, $1 1 50 Thr ee
mon t hs
S7 00
Elsewhere
Drug
addicts
frequently
get
you think that 1s bad, thmk of
James R Mash srud 1t would S26 00 year S1x .rr'IOnths
hepallt1s
lh1s
way.
havmg a stroke and bemg
S1J
50
three
monthi
,
S7
SO
cost about $1 nulllon for the
Su bsc r1pl 10n pr1ce .ncludes
It
can
also
be
transmitted
partially diSabled, crippled or
state Ill put the Issue on the Sunday T 1mes Se ntmel
through food and water as a unable to speak Aga10, doctors
slig htly different form of the are m the pos1 lion of choosmg
disease. Contammated oyster between two poor cho1ces.
reefs may be a source of
Fortunately there are a
hepatitis m some communities. number of other med1emes that
Th1s 1s one reason why proper can be used 10 most cases of
samtation and sambzed water h1gh blood pressure when
are so Important to health. medicine IS heeded. Most
Both children and adults can doctors would like to have their
get the vrrus and develop m- pabents come 10 and If they
By David Poll Ill
fe ctwus hepatitis Viruses need'h!ore treaiment they may
(Firat ol Three Related Columna)
don 't care how old you are
want to change lhe1r
Many people have complete med1cmes. They will want to
Mention the Greeks and the man In the street thinks about a
By Ray Cromley
recovery from an attack of continue some form of ef·
Mediterranean cruise, general• until recently runrung a historic
democracy and a couple named Jack1e and Amtotle
vrral hepabt1s Others may be fective treatment for those
WASHINGTON - (NEAl - A few days ago I looked w1th some
Mention the Greeks and the lady next door remembers the
requ1rmg
chagrm
at a senes of charts and tables a highly respected semor left w1th some liver damage. pat1ents now
tragedy of the Greek Cypriots- now nearly 200,000 hungry and
the
liver
tends
to
Fortunately
h1gh
blood
medicmes
for
pohcy analyst had prepared for h1s boss a member of President
homeless on that tiny 1sland Hollywood gave us "Zorba the
regenerate
and
damaged
livers
Ford's
cabmet
pressure
Greek." so our nund is filled with danc1ng and dr1nkmg and
The figures md1cated that w1th1n five yea rs government can become normal when the
Send your quesbons to Dr.
sorrow and laupter
federa
l
sta
te
and
local
would
be
absorbmg
and
managmg
35
Ill
diSease IS over.
Put all this aside and consider the fact thai tbe direction and
Lamb, m care of this
40 to 42 to 45 percent of the gross nat1onai product dependmg on
DEAR DR. LAMB
energy of the world Christian commun1ty may be 10 the steady
newspaper, P 0 Box 1551,
wh1ch set of assumptions was used
hands ol the Greek Orthodox Church - and its Pr1mate
Recently there have been news Radw C1ty Station, New York,
The most hkely figure was m the m1ddle of th1s range
Archbishop Iakovos For 2, 000 years the Chmtian Church ha;
Thank
of what this w11l mean to m1ddle class taxes W1th lower· reports that reserpme used to N.Y 10019. For a copy of Dr.
been nurtured. counseled and comforted by the Orthodox tradimcome fam1hes excluded from a hefty share of the lev1es , and treat h1gh blood pressure Lamb's booklet on losmg
tion.
causes breast cancer. I'm we1ght, send 50 cents and a
With
superhtgh mcomes too few tn the aggregate to meet govern
The pa10ful , and at times combative, separation of the Chrisment
needs,
the
strongest
blows
will
fall
on
those
who
are
m
taking a reserpme mediCme for long sell-addressed stamped
tian Church at Rome and the Christian Cburch at Constant10ople
between
my blood pressure Please envelope to the same address
has weakened the thrust of the followers of St Peter and St Paul.
A vanety of Soc1al Secun ty welfare and health and med1cal advise me if I should continue
Yet Vatican II did much to restore the brotherhood, if not m
and ask for the "Losing
programs could absorb between 13 and 17 2 per cent of the 1980 taking the med1cat10n
church government. then certainly in mutual respect and affecWeight" booklet.
GNP But the story IS more than Socl81 Secunty and welfare
tion In 1975, the struule for Christians IS not 1ns1de the com·
Government subs1d1es for energy agnculture and env1ronmen
muruty, but the world beyond
tal protection are expected to run mto the hundreds of b1lllons
The Greek Christian community was born 10 a period of upTo take one example It'S estimated the petroleum and other
heaval and has survived centuries of political , military and
programs will reqUire between $700 billion and $820 bllhon
energy
social change In spite of the battering ofarmles, centunes of ocm pnvate and go\'ernment fmancmg over the next decade Some
cu~Uon and generations of anU.QlrisUan 1deologtes. the Greek
put the figure as h1gh as $1 tnlhon
QrUiodox tradition has kept the doors open and the lights on
It had been expected that pnvate Industry could put up $450
Because of its split with Rome, Ole Greek Cburch has always
b1lhon
of that total , leavmg a gap of $250 b1lhon to $370 bllhon or
had cord1al connections with ProtestanU&amp;m Yet Roman
even
$500 b1lhon, dependmg on wh1ch figure s were used Ills now
CathoDes and the Orthodox share so much in history , theoiOSY
believed the current stagflation w11l m one form or another b&lt;
and the nature of the sacraments that their strife IS esse tially a
With
us for years, w1th mdustnal growlh, mdustflal profits ~"'
lover's quarrel To one part of the family, they are an uncle by
GNP
not agam ach1evmg the1r former v1gor w1th1n· th1s tim&lt;
b1rth - to the other , an uncle by mamage Tbey attend both
period
ThiS would mean mdustry Will have less to mvest leavmt
family reuruons
the
government
a bon's share of the task
'
Several major shitts within the Christian Church - and m
Energy
1s
JUSt
one
problem
The
Umted
States
1s
runmng
out 01
world poUUcs - during the past 18 months have broucht spec1al
available
crop
land
Development
of
the
additional
acreag&lt;
attention. to the leadership skills of Archbishop Iakovos First ,
deemed necessary would re&lt;(Uire an mvestment of $30 b1ihon tc
the retirement of individuals such as World Council President
$40 bllhon The specialists expect a great share of th1s must com&lt;
EuJene Carson Blake and Michael Ramsey. Arcllbisl1w of from the government .,. that 1s, from the taxpayer
canterbury Because of age, noted ecumenical f~ su~h as
Then there's the env~ronment Other government experts laugh
Martin Nlemoellet ol Gennany, Payne of ~land and Malik of
at
the Environmental Protection Agency estimate of $200 billion
Lebanon are unable to utend their personal leadership that was
or
so
requ~red over the next decade They beheve the figure may
evident a decade ago Henry P Van Deuaen of the United States
be
double
or tr1ple that total Jn any event. they thmk the cost too
died 1n early February and will be keenly missed for his ingreat for U S mdustry to absorb and stay solvent Here. then. IS a
terchurch lrlerldshlps.
hkely Sinkhole for hundreds of bllhons more tax money
The Roman Catholic Church bas never really replaced Cardinal
By 1980, government mvolvement tn housmg and cons truction
Spellman With a personality ol similar enonnous political power.
IS
estimated at levels thiS writer fmds unbelievable
Pope Paul VI IS not C&lt;liiSidered to be m stronc health and suddenIn
the tortuous state of world affa1rs. w1th Sov1et m1lltary exly the Christian family keeps lootlnc 1o Archbishop lakovos as
penditures
and world tensions on the upswmg, world econom1cs
the man of the hour, and al just age 6S, the man for a whole
fac1ng
rough
sleddmg for a long time to come, U S ass1stance to
decade.
fore1gn
alhes
and other countries could flse strongly and defense
Consider these quaUIIcations : Born m Greece, he holds ad·
and
space
spendmg
could run to 8 percent of GNP 1n a bare five
vanced degrees from the '"""logical School of Haki , Istanbul ,
years
Turttey - as well as a Master's Decree from Harvard Divlnil)
Continued defiCit spend1ng could result m a nat1onal debt by
School. He~ lOIII' Jancuageund reads sut At a be was Ollf
1980
which would cost 2 percent of the GNP to finance
of the youncest bishops m the G.- OrtbodoJ: Cburcli, becornlnt
" This IS my ass1stant and the ather tel/ow is my
There
IS doubt whether private profits would be able to sus tam
Ardlbisbop before he was 50- the spiritual leader of 11lllre tbar
attorney!"
such an astronomical government overload
three_milliqn members In North aad South America. Twenl)
'
But even 1f the fmancmg IS possible, 11 IS clear such heavy
colleges and universities have ~ed him honorary degrees and
government mtervenhon could have senous and uncertam
he served lor a decade as eo.
dent of the World COUIICI! of
on our pr1vate competitive econom1c system Governeffects
Olurches This friOI!d and confidant of thousands of churcbmeo
ment
and
academic economists already are womed by the
around the world may now be the chief architect of the Christian
de.
t
rimental
results of current government spendmg and are
straletY within and withOut the church
shocked
by
studies wh1ch show how d1scouragmg too-large
(NEXT: ne Style ond Thought Oil Modem Greek ArellbiShop)
govetnment has affected 1ndustnal technolog1~al growth m some
~
other nauon&gt;li

David Poling, D.O.
A Greek Christian
for our times

. 3- The Dally Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, Mard1 10, 1975

Ray Cromley

Government becoming
America's business?

, The loss ehmmated Coac h
; Paul Dillon 's Wildcats from
, further competition However,
• HT f1mshed the year w1th an
' outstandmg 19-3 record.
The Wildcat losses were to
Double A South Pmnt and
Gallipolis and to the stubborn
Panthers. wmners of the Scwto
Valley Conference.
Southeastern takes 1ts 19-4
record to the Class A Regwnals
Fnday mght agamst the
Zanesville Rosecrans
Although Southeastern
Jumped mlo an 18-12 lead at the
end of the first penod, the b1g
difference was Coach Larry
Jordan's man-to-man defense
wh1ch the Wildcats could not
overcome

two pomts
Southeas tern led 23-14
m1dway through the second
penod before the Wildcats put
on the mild comeback
S" am. Halley and Hesson
eac h scored, but the Panthers
kept the1r lead ·on a fastbreakmg offense provided by
Pumm1ll and the foul shootmg
of K1rk and Carroll. The half
ended w1th Southeastern on
top, 33-26
ActiOn picked up m the th~rd
quarter, as Swam 's basket w1th
7 37 left cut the score
to
35
28
Later
Swam h1t stx more pomts
and Hall canned one from
underneath to cut the lead to
40-38 w1th 1·58 left 10 the
quarter
Sou the as tern,
however ,
came back on two quick
baskels by Bolle and Kirk to
take a 44-38lead gomg into the
fmal stanza Afoul shot by
carroll pushed the score to 4538 before HT's Bill Hall existed
v1a five fouls w1th 6 52 left
Kirk's foul shootmg Pushed
the score to 49-38 before Swam
connected on a 15 fool jumper
cutlmg 1t to 49-40. Baskets by
Clemmons and Prater pushed
It IO 53-42 WIth 3 54 left
Southeastern, leadmg 54-44
w1th two mmutes left, put the
ball on 1ce. forcmg Hannan
Trace to come after the ball
and comm1t several fouls.
Hesson fouled out w1th I 55
left on a Pumm1U lay-up
Pwnm11l added the free throw
making the score 58-44.
Shootmg-w1se, Southeastern
hit 20 of 49 floor attempts for 49
and 21 of 31 at the foul line
Hannan Trace connected on 22
of 67 from the floor for 33 pet
and Just two of seven at the
char1 ty str1pe
Southeastern held a 39-30
rebounding edge WIth Kirk and
Bolte gettmg 11 rebounds each
Charlie Cremeans paced the
HT rebounders w1th 10
Box score
Hannan Trace (46) - Swam
17 0 34,
Hesson
1 2 4,
Cremeans I o 2, Hall 2 0 4,
Halley 1-0·2. Totals 22-2-46.
Southeastern (61) - Prater
3-3 9. Clemmons 5 1 II , Kork 5
II 21. Pummill 3 2 8, Bolle 4 0
8, Carroll 0 3 3, Bennett 0 1 1
Totals 20 21 ·61

Hannan Trace was unable to
work the ball ms1de aU rt1ght
long. The taller Panthers kept
pressure on the guards and
would not y1eld underneath.
The Wildcats b1ggest scormg
machme was all-stater Mark
Swam , the SVAC's Most
Valuable Player Swam, a
senwr, bowed out h1s bnlliant
h1gh school career with 34
pomls m an outstandmg offensive display Swam d1d not
y1eld to the pressure defense.
He connected from all over the
floor, an effort wh1ch earned a
standmg ovatiOn from both the
Hannan
Trace
and
Southeastern fans.
T1m
Clemmons,
Southeastern's semor guard,
playmg w1th a bandaged hand
and protective !ac1al mask
smce suffermg a broken nose a
week ago aga10st Crooksville.
opened the game scoring w1 th
an 18 footer w1th 7 17left m the
mtbal penod.
Swam countered w1th a 20
footer before Clemmons came
back w1th a 25 footer and a free
throw B1g 6-2 Craig Kirk
JOmed h1s teammate w1th a
short JUmper to g1ve the
Panthers a 7-2 lead w1th 6·00
remammg m the first stanza.
At that point, Coach D11lon
called tune to regroup h1s
forces K1rk, 6-3% Greg
Pummill, sophomore Coy
Prater and 6-2 season Butch
Bolle each canned two pOinters
to stretch tbe lead to 18-12 at
the end of the quarter Swam
By quarters
had e1ght po10ts while Wayne
Hannan
Trace 12 14 12 8- 46
Hesson and B1ll Hall each had Southeastern
18 15 11 17--&lt;11

Pro Standings
Nattonal Basketball Assoctatton
Standtngs
By Untfed Press Intern ational
Ea st er n Conference
Allanftc DtVt SIO n
w 1 pet g b
Boston
46 20 697
Bu ff al o
42 26 618 5
N ew York
J1 36 46J 1 5' :~
Phdadelphta JO J9 435 17 1 2
Central Dtvt ston
w I pel g b
Washmgton
50 18 7J5
HouStOt1
J7 32 536 lJ I :1
Cleve l and
J1 36 471 18
At lanta
28 42 400 13
New Orl eans 18 A9 269 Jl 1 l
western Conference
MtdWest Otvt s1on
w 1 pet g b
Chtca g o
40 27 597 KC Omaha
JB 31 551
3
Oe!ro 1l
J5 36 493 8
Milwaukee
Jl 35 47 0 9 1 1
Pactttc Dtvt ston
w I pet g b
Go ld en Sf
39 30 565
Seat li e
32 36 471
61 1
Port land
30 37 448 8
Phoen 1x
29 37 AJ 9 8 1 1
Los Angeles
2J A4 34J 15
Sunday's Res ults
1
Golden Stat e 10 2 Boston 101
Philad elph i a 113Wa shmgton 100
New Orleans 90 Cleveland 86
Detrott 106 K C Omaha 99
Los Angeles 116 Hou ston 95
Monday's Games
KC Oma ha at Milwaukee
Am encan Basketball Assoc1a
flon Standmgs
By Untied Press lnfernar•onal
East
w I. pet. g b
New York
49 21 700
Ken tucky
A1 22 681 l 1 1
Sf LO UI S
26 47 356 1A 1 1
Memphis
10 49 290 28 1 7
l A 55 203 34 1'7
V•rgm 1a
West
w I
pet g b
Den ver
53 17 757
SanAnton1o
A2 29 592 111 7
lnd•an e
37 31 54A 15
Utah
32 37 46A 10 112
San Otego
JO 42 41 7 24
Sunday's Results
New York. 112 VtrQtnta 82
Sf LOUIS 103 Kentucky 92
lndtana 14 1 San Anton to 107
San Diego 113 MemphiS 107
Monday's Games
(No Games Scheduled)
Nattonal Hockey League
Standmgs
By Untted Press tnlernaftonat
Otvtston 1
w 1 t pts gf ga
Phtlade lpht 40 18 9 B9 236 161
NY Rangers 32 22 13 77 272 227
NY Is landers 28 22 17 73 212 18 2
Atlanta
26 27 13 65 188 19 2
OtlltSIOn 2
w 1 t . pts gt ga
Ch rc ago
32 29 7 71 225 203
Vancouver
32 29 6 70 224 214
St Lour s
26 27 1J 65 219 226
M 1nnesota
19 41 6 4A 188 288
Kansas Ctty 14 44 9 37 159 280
Dtvlston 3
w I I pts gf ga
Mon treal
40 11 16 96313 196
Los Angeles 36 1J 17 89 228 150
Pi ttsburgh
30 2J \ A 74 273 242
Det ro tt
19 38 10 48 207 278
Wash1ngton 6 58 5 17 151 371
DIVISIOn 4
w 1 t pts gf ga
Buffalo
41 12 14 96 296 201
Boston
37 19 11 85 303 204
Toronto
28 29 11 67 238 258
Ca l tforn 1a
17 40 11 45 180 259
Sunday's Re sults
Montreal 5 NY Rang ers 3
NY Islanders 2 Cal1forn 1a 4
Phtlad el phia 8 Detrotl 4
Boston 5 Atlanta 2
Toronto 4 Wa sh 1ngton 1
Buffalo 8 Ptttsburgh A
St LOUI S 5 Minnesota A
Monday's Games
!No games scheduled)

Greenfield McCI•un 's '11gers
captured the 1975 Class ~A
Dts tnct Tournament \\l lh a
thnlhng 63-62 VIc tor y over
WheelersbUI g at Rw Grande
Saturday mght while the
Zanesville Blue Dev1ls f1m shed
strong l oelmunate Portsnwuth
67-51 fur the Class AAA D1sll1cl
IItle at Athens
Siever Willis tap-1n \\lth foUl
seconds
rema1nm g
gave

C1t'CIIf1eld the Cl.1ss AA eruwn

uve 1 Wh ee lers bUI ~
Th e
Pu &lt;l ies had !&lt;~ken the lcud 62~ 1
on Tom l'mne1 s t.apvm \\llh 25
seconds lefl but IVHS cuuldn t
hold !he led d
Greenfield \\Ill bdltlc Manon
R1 ve1 V,d lcy a l Ohw
UntvCJ s1t) on F11day, stat tmg
at 8 45p m The Ti gC I'S t~Ie 17-

5 on the
211-2

River

\CcH

Vt~lley Is

Tournament results.

• •

Oh10 H1gh School

(At Columbus)

Tournament Re sults
By Un1ted Press lnternatmnal

Rtv er Va ll ey 73 Ma rio n E lgtn

68
c ,.clev 1lle 62 Col Sl Charles 54
{At Troy)

CLASS AAA
(At Loram)

Elyna 60 Lor am Adm~ral Ktng

56

Spr1ngfteld
Shawnee
Be ll efonfa1 ne 46

(At Dayton )

(At Athen s)

Zanes v il le 67

Portsmouth 5 1

(At Toledo)

Toledo Ma comber 61

Scott 51

Dayton St1vers 75 Springboro

70

( At Steubenville )
R• verv1ew 62 Brt dgepor t 54
Cost10cton 58 Bu ckeye South 56

46

Nor

(At Cmcmnah)
Roger Bacon 45

{Atloledo)
Rossford 103 Eastwood 63
(AI Ashland)

Cm

W1llar d 76 M argare tta 66

thmonl 42

Ctn

Toledo

tAt Troy)

Trotwood

Madr son

Woodward 42
tAt Struthers)
!AI Canton)

(at ClnCinnalll
{At Elynal

Loratn

Barberton 73 Akron Kenmore

64

(at Cleveland)
Cle East Tech 76 Cle Lmcoln
West 72
Cle He1ghts 78 East Cle Shaw 52
!At Eastlake)
Eastlake North 50 Willoughby
South 49
tAt Columbus)
Col L1nden 62 Gahanna 47

Fall s 83

N,

r:lt~

'&lt;1w n

Tatawar,\.o

78

q~

Cu ya h oga

Norwayne 46 Sebrmg 34

tAl Gallon)

Mansf te ld
Wynford 63

St

P e te r s

67

(At Elida!

(At Fondlay)

R tverda le 76 Van Buren 5 1

(At Napoleon)

I At Dayton)
77

68

He&lt;ghts 67 (oil

Peff1svtlle 74 Tmora 62

CAt L•mal

Dayton

Manon Loca l 72 Mmster 43

CAt Dayton)

Oxford

n .. ss AA
(At RIO Grande)
Greenfield
McCia1n
Wheele rsburg 62

63

Ma con
Eastern
62
Mec han 1csburg 44
M lsstss mawa Valley 54 Wes t

L1berty 50 (oil
(At Chillicothe)

Southea5tern 61 Hannan Tra ce

45

for NCIT are
announced today

•••

Eastlake North

( 17 5)

vs Sti vers (13 8). Friday. 7 30

Cleveland Hetghts ( 21 1) , Fn p m . Sprlng f1 el d Shawnee ( 19
day 7 30 p m El yna ( 21 ll vs 1) vs Circleville (22 OJ, Friday ,
Toledo Macomber (18 2 ) Frl 9 30 p m
Finals Saturday
day 9 30 p m F 1na ls Sa turd ay 9 30 p m
7 30 p m
,
Class A
At Canton
At Canton
Youngstown Sout h ( 18 4) vs
Windham (1.1 1) vs Lora in
Can ton M cK mley (2 1 1) Wed Clearv1ew (19 3) Fnday, 7 30
nesday , 7 JO p m , Cleveland p m ,
Norwayne
( 18 4) vs
Eas t Tec h ( 20 1} vs Barber ton Manslleld St Peler's (22 21.

Thursday , 7 30

p m
pm

Finals

pm

Saturday ,

7 30

Middletown (22 01 vs Trot
wood MadiSon (20 2). Wednes
day 7 30 p m , Ke ttenng A l ter
(22 0)
vs C1nc mnafl
Roger

pm

F i nals

Saturday ,

1 30

pm
• • AI Steubenvolle
Frankfort Adena (16 6) vs
lnd1an Valley South 117 51.
Friday, 6
Rosecrans

pm ;
( 19 3)

Zanesville
vs
Ross

Bacon (20 21, Wednesday, 7 30 Southeastern ( 19-41. Friday 9
pm
Finals Saturday, 7 30
Fmal s Saturday , 1 30
pm
pm
Class AA
At Dayton
At Canton
Cardington (16 6) vs Frede
Lou1svllle St Thoma s Aqu1
ncktown (20·2). Thursday. 7 30
nas ( 14 8) vs Navarre Fa tr less p m , Mlsslss lnawa Valley (18
( 16 6), Fnday. 6 p m , Chag ri n 5) vs Ma con Eastern {21 2),
Fa ll s ( 18 4) vs Brookfield 118 Thursday. 9 30 p.m Finals
4)
Fnday, 9 p m
F1nals
Saturday, 7 30 p m
Saturday 7 30 p m
Pm

At Bowhng Green

Citrus
champ
ORLANDO, Fla. (UP!) - If
Lee Trevmo breaks out his red
sh1rt next week on the "Blue
Monster" at Doral Country
Cl ub, he smells another trophy.
" If you see me in a lrown
sh1rt, that means I'm
chokmg," explamed the Merry
Mex1can in the afterglow of
collectmg his 16th pro goU title
and the $40,000 check thai went
w1th 1t In the $200,000 Flonda
atrus Open.
Trevino had on that
specially-made red sh1rt
SUnday as he logged a 71 that
put him at 12-underi)llr 276 and
one stroke ahead of his former
World Cup teammate, U S.
Open champ Hale Irwin.
" I only wear it on Sunday
when I think I'm gomg to win,"
said the 35-yeaNid holder of
several of the world's most
prestigious titles.
"This gives me a tremendous
amount of confidence," he
said, "and I always do well the
week after I wm. And I'm going
to a golf course I like."
The two~lme British Open
Wl!lDer brought his earnings to
more than $54,400 for 1975 with
his first victory of the season.
Trevino, who had rounds of
69, 86 and 70 on his first three
tours of the par 72, 6,929-yard
Rio course, had two birdies and
v ~~~~7n and said, ''My
;,
ezcltlng.

Rossford 121 1) vs Willard
! 19 3), Fnday 6 p m , Loram
Catholic (20 2) vs Fa1rv1ew (20
2). Fnday 9 p m
Fmal s
Sa turd ay, 7 30 p m
At Ohto Umverstty
Coshocton ( 15 6) vs River
V1 ew (21 1). Fr1day, 7 30 p m

TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY
MARCH 11-12-13

8:30 TIL 12:30
Ass octalton
Standtng s
By Untied Pr ess Int ernational
Ea st
w 1 t pts gf ga
New E ng lnd 35 2~ 4 74 21 4 217
Cl eve land
28 34 3
59 186 216
Ch1 cago
:15 38 I I 5 1 115 255
lnd 1an apo 1s 15 A6 J
33 169 269
Wes t
w I I pts gf ga
Hous ton
43 22 0 86 303 208
Ph oenix
34 25 6 74 248 214
M1nn eso t a
34 28 1 70 256 224
Wo r ld

Thursday - Southern Ca l
(18-7 ) vs Drake (16-10) and
Eas t Carollnu ( 19-8 ) v s
AIIZona I 20-6)
Fr~day - Tennessee ( 16-7)
vs Bowling Green ( 17-9) dnd
M1ssour1 ( 18.JI I vs Purd ue 116101

The Southern Cal-Dra ke
w1nner w11l mee t the T ennessee

- Bowlmg G1 een wmner and the
M1ss our~-Purdue wmner will
play the Eas t Ca r olina Arizona victor m Sa turday 's
sem1fmals
The f10als are next Sunday
lnd1ana, th 1s }ear 's top ranked team, won the f1rst
tournament iast year at St
LOUI S

Rcgwna l

COL UMBUS !UPil - Pa1r Greenf ield McCla m ( 17 5 ) vs
tng s for tht s week 's Oh10 H1g h Ma rlon R1ver Valley (20 2).
Sch ool
Regtonal
Ba ske tbal l Fnda y
9 30 p m
F ma ls
Tournaments
Sa turday 7 30 p m
Clas s AAA
AI Dayton
At Kent State Umvers1ty
Rear:tmg (13 9) vs Dayton

Pairin~s

KANSAS CITY, Mo (UP!) B1g E1ght Com m1 sswner
Chuck Nemas, chairman of the
second annual Natwnal
CommiSSIOner~·
Inv1tatwnal
Tournament
baske tball
committee, sa1d Sunday
Bo" hog Green w1ll JOID seven
other teams for lh1s year 's
to urney Thursday through
Sunday at LoUisville, Ky
Eleventh-ranked Southern
Cahforma and 20th-ranked
Arizona Sunday accepted m·
v1tatwns to compete m the
event The rest of the f1eid 1s
made up of Drake, Tennessee,
M1ssoun, Purdue and East
Carolina.
The pamngs

Zanesv ille w11l battle league
11val Newar k !20-2) at 9 p m
~·nday at Columbus m the AAA

Regional pairings

At Dayton

Ka ltda 55 Cres tv 1ew 22

(At Bowling Green)
Lima Sen1or 62 Gal ton 52
Alter

89 Olms ted

CLASS A
(at Canton)

Clearv1 ew

Newark 70 Columbus East 59

Roosevelt 68
tAt Oxford)

Catholic

Z&lt;lnesvdle, 21-1, onl y six poml&lt;

Friday , 9 30 p m Fmals
Saturday, 7 30 p m
At Columbus
At Bow hng Green
Columbus L1nden M c Kinl ey
Ka l1da (16·6) vs Riverdale
( 14 B) vs Ltma Sen1or ( 16 6) , ( 17 5 ). Wednesday, 7 30 p m ,
Fnday 6 p m , Zanesvil le (2 1 Pettisville (23 Ol vs Marion
1) vs Newark (20 21 , Fr&lt;day, 9 Local (21 1). Thursday, 7 30

Rea dmg 62 Greenh ill s 56

CAt Copley)

uul

Steve W1lhs led li1 eenf1 cld
111th t5pmnts Bill F'lynn added
14 .md Steve Ha~·vey 12.
Po rt s m ou th
t r c11l e d

(20 2)

tAt Ada)

Canton M cKm ley 61 All tance 47

bow ed

w1th a 20-'J se ;:~ son reco1ct Tum 55-49, lai c m the second half
I'm ncr pa&lt;-cci the Pn dtcs w1t11 before gm ng down 67-51 The
20 pomts llnan Bu1 s added 19 'llu;ans bowed out w1 th a 12-tO
and .Joe R~ se 1!;
1ecord

F1na l s Saturday 1 30 p m

Fatrv tew 64 Van Wer t 49

Youngstown South 71 Salem 65

Dayton

47

Wh ee lcrsblll g

Trevino

H o c key

San D1 ego
Ba ll more

RON BRINKER
For Your Listening Pleasure
GUITAR&amp; PERCUSSION

The MEIGS INN
J&gt;h. 992-3629

J127 3 67 2A6 719
16 47 :1 J5 16?291
Canadian
- - - - - -- -- - - - - - - -w I t pts gf ga
Quebec
41 2A 0 62 275 237
Tor on to
36 28 1 7&lt;1 787 155
Ed mon 1on
31 26 J
65 22'1 20 1
Vancouver
30 30 2 62 202 203

w nn1peg

29 29 •I 62 2~9 225
tran sferr ed from

x fran ch •se
M tctugan
Sunday' s Res ult s
Wl nmp eg 6 Mtn n esol a 5 of
r oronlo 8 Ba lt1m ore 1
Vancouver 4 Phoen1lC 3
Quebec 7 Ch1cago 5
Monday' s Game
Edmont on at Ba i t mor e

Pomeroy
-

BY MEL CREMEANS
THE PLAINS - The mat
team of Ray Goodman and
Sam Crow fmiShed fourth m an
eleven-learn field at the A-AA
Southeastern
District
Wrestling Tournament at
Athens H1gh School on Friday,
March 7 and Saturday, March
8

On the1r way to the fourth
place fmish the Marauder
wrestlers captured two
champwnsh1ps, two runner-up
spots, and three fourth places.
The tournament ended in a cochampiOnship w1th Sheridan
H1gh School and Belpre
fmishing w1th 80% pomts
Iron llln followed in third place

service?
You get that
right
with
our low
'

II

Along w1th our fam ous low cos I auto pro1ect1on comes
a prom1se of prompt personal serv1ce So you don t
, have to g1ve up a th1ng lo gel ou r low rates You JUSI
have to take advanlage of them

STEVE SNOWDEN
: 1258 Powell St., Middleport

w1th 78% pomts and Me1gs was
next w1th 75
Roundmg out the field were
Warren Local 65, NelsonvilleYork 56, Chesapeake 40,
Fairland 16, Glouster and
Hillsboro each 13, and
Wellston, which had only one
wrestler competing ended the
tourney with 10 pomts
The wmners of the we1ght
classes at that tournament w1ll
advance to the state meet
wh1ch w1ll be held m Columbus
th1s comwg Fflday and
Saturday, March 14 and 15 The
Marauders Will be sendmg two
\\restlers to the stale meet
They are M1ck Lyons who
wrestles m the 105 lb we1ght
class and Freshman Carl
Gheen who wrestles for the
Marauders m the 112 ib we1ght
class
·
The followmg are the results
of all t11e we1ghl classes at the
li&gt;urnament.
Ir the 98lb. class Bill Hall of
Warren Local took f1rst plac&amp;
w1th Meigs wrestler Kevm
McLaughlin fmlshing m fourth
place. McLaughlin rece1ved an
IDJury to h1s hand durmg an
earlier consolation finals
match and was unable to
compete for the third place
spot, so he was awarded fourth
In the 100 lb. class, Mick
Lyons of Me1gs won the
champwnship by defeatmg H
Bacon of Ironton 1n the finals
by decision, 11-&lt;l. In the next

PHONE 992-7155

Uke a good neighbor,
.......". State Fann is there.

ASHE WSES
HARTFORD, Conn. (UPI)Rod Laver defeated Arthur
Ashe 6-2, 7~ Sunday to g1ve
Australia 1ts fourth consecutiVe win m the Aetna

STATE FARM MUTUAL
AUlOMOBILE INSURANCE COMPANY

=o~~ ~::Sc~~~=~

Home OffiCe Bloomrnglon 111Jf10IS

I

I
I

Bob Musser gave Me1gs a the tournament, 185 ibs , was
fourth place funsh 10 thiS captured by Karland Beebe of
event.
Warren Loca l He defeated S '
The 167 lb event was won by Coopen1der of Shendan 10 the
Dave Scwr of Ironton when he final ma tch to g1ve h1m the
defeated C. Hall of Warren VldOI y
Local. In the 175 lb contest
The fmal even t of the day,
Roger W1lhamson of Belpre the heavyweights , saw Ken
took the t1tle by wmmng ove r Fnlz of Ironllln wm 1t all by
T Allen of Ironton
defeatmg S Koehl er of
The next to the last class of Shendan 10 the f10al s

Maybe yoUI life's pretty
good nght now. But 1f you
want to keep 1t that way,
you've got to plan for1t And
one way you can do just that
IS by s1g mqg up for th e
Payroll Savmgs Plan where
you work An amount you
spec1fy will be set as1de from
each paycheck and used to
buy U.S Savmgs Bonds.
Then, when you're ready
to stop workmg, you'll still
be able to keep on living
Now E Bond11 fUIY 111'11 tnli!rt?llt when held
to umlun~y of 5 Yt.'ll rlll 4 ~ " the fi rst )'Ca r )
L011t stQ!I.'n or r.lestroyetl BorM:h1 Clln

be rcplarui tf rt..'Cnrd~ are pr011l(led When
n~...U t.ocl BonJs c11n 00 wsht.&gt;d nt you r
bank Interest IS not subJect W st.at.e cr Iota I
ft.'ii~ra l ~x may~

FOR ' EASTER
CHILDREN'S

POLL PARROT

·;a;

~-743&amp;

we1ght class a Marauder
wrestler came through the
champ agam Th1s hme 1t was
112 lb Carl Gheen who p10ned
h1s opponent, Saun Floyd ,
Chesapeakew1th I 05leftm the
second penod of the1r match
The 119lb. class was won by
J Adams of Belpre who
defeated T1m Cotterman of
Shendan . In th1s we1ght class
Marauder wrestler M1ke
Brahan f1mshed fourth by
dec1s1onmg Chauncey Darling
of Chesapeake 7-5 m the1r
consolatiOn fmals match.
Tim Powell of NelsonvilleYork won the 126 lb. event by
dec1swmng R Sm1lh of
Shet1dan 7-5. At 132 lbs., Edward J. While of Shendan beat
Jeff Musser of Me1gs 10 the
champwnshlp match to g1ve
h1m the title and leavmg
Musser 1n the runner-up spot.
In the 138 lb battle John
Brant of Warren Local
dec1s1oned D Shaffer 9-6 10 the
fmals to allow h1m to advance
to state compehtwn The next
we1ght class, 145 lb , saw
Marauder Roger Hysell beaten
m the fmal match by Bill Miller
of Fairland by a deciSIOn of 1511
AI 155 lbs , G Parson of
Belpre was the champ after he
pmned H Newhouser 10 the
second penod of the match.

FOR KIDS FUNMEAL. rtol

ADULT MEAL.

Bt9 She!
Reg French Frtes
Turnover &amp;
La rqe Soli Drtnk

•

SHOES

Black or
White Patent

heritage house

PT PLEASANT

GALLIPOLIS

Your Thom Me An Store

2325 Jackson Ave

1503 Eastern Ave

M1ddlepor 0

C~IS • •' "'

Join tbe Payroll Sa•ings Plan.
l~r

-----

When)'Ou're
turned out to pasture,
will it still be green?

Meigs' Lyons, Gheen in. State Mat Tournament

Berrys World

.,

··: lo:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:~·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::·:·:··

Pirates, Trojans are eliminated

�·5- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, Mard1lO, 1975

4- The Dail)r Se~tlnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday. March 10, 1975

I

Bucks end season

Today's

'

Sport Parade

Uolted Press International
Ohio State basketball coach
~d Taylor says the Michigan
Wolverines had more at stake
than his team Saturday night,
"and they played like it."
The Buckeyes wound up their
third-worst season In 17 years
of Taylor-taught roundball
with an 83-64 1098 to Michigan.
OSU now has an 8-10 Big Ten
record and a 14-14 overall mark
to ponder at its basketball
,awards banquet Tuesday
night.
"No question about it;
they're a good basketball
team," Taylor said of the
Wolverines, who gained a
second-place finish In the
league with a 12-6 log and
nabbed a berth against the
Pacific 8 champion In the
NCAA Far West Regional
Basketball Tournament.
"We never established anything offensively," said Taylor.
"They kind of manhandled
By

80.

''Take Singleton," he said, pointing toward his new outfielder.
"He's a guy who gets things rl~ht without being told. For
example, we told hlrn once how it should be done. When he's in
gro"' one, the batting cage Is avaitsble to that group. The other
gro"' is shagging. He can be In that cage out there behind the
foulllne hiUing off 'Iron Mike' or he should be at home plate
hitting Uve pitching and running the bases.
"If he Isn't doing any of these three things, he's supposed to be
in a pepper game. This keeps the guys from just stalnding around
doing nothing. Now this is what impresses me about Singleton :
We went over this with hlrn just once. He's a new guy on the ball
dub and II would seem he'd get confused and ask somebody
where he was supposed to go.
'
"I've been waiting for him to do that, but so far he has been
every place he was supposed to be. Consequentiy I haven't talked
to hlrn yet. That gets back to your communication. If this keeps
up,Imay not say 10wordsto him all spring. l'veonly seen Torrez
a few days, but it looks Uke it'll be the same thing with him. This
Is a tribute to Mauch."
All cases aren 1 the same.
When Earl Williams came to the Orioles from the Braves two
years ago, he required ema help.
"I don1 wanna knock the guy, but Earl took special attention
and we gave It to hlrn," said Weaver. "He got a llttie confused
with my program. He wanted to do all the things, but we found
out we had to tell hiJ!I. Again, there's your communication ."
Earl Weaver looked out toward the field again .
"If everything stays this way with Torrez and Singleton," he
said, "I'm going to make It a point to have a conversation with
them in two weeks and tell them I'm not neglecting them."

MEIGS GJRLSGYMNASTICTEAM - Front row, l-r, Becky Thomas, Joni Murray, Cathy
Blaettnar, Mary Blaettnar, and Mrs . Kenda Rainey, coach; second row, Rhonda Hudson, Sally
Walters, and Jackie Brown; third row top, l.AJri Wyne, Debbie McLaughlin and Lisa Thomas.
TI1e girls are competing against southeastern Ohio teams that are available.

turn down the bid because,
UPI Sporu Writer
according to Thompson, the
The Atlantic Q&gt;ast Conferen· Nrr "just seems like such a
ce's polll-ee880n tournament loser's tournament."
has driven Tobacco Road
Maryland
will
meet
basketbaU fans 1o Insanity fiX' Oelghton In the first round of
years now, but Saturday it the Midwest Region at Lubadded the NCAA to its list of bock, Tex., Saturday In the
victims.
first round of the NCAA
'lbe ACC, an avowed basket- playoffs.
ball titan, always has deterWhile the NCAA was Inconmined Its conference·champion venienced by Saturday's rewith Its post-aeason tour- sults, Marquette coach AI
nament and not by regular McGuire had hls fondest hopes
seaaon standings. • Con· fulfille&lt;1. Paired against the
aequenlly, there have been Southeastern Conference
yeara ·when an ACC school, champion In a first-round
conaldered among the top two game at Tuscaloosa, it ap01: three In the nation, has had peared the Warriors were
to sat out the NCM tour- going to have to play Alabama
nament because it fai!ed to on its home court.
survive the ACC tourney
But the 'Crimson Tide were
madness.
upset by Auburn, 76-70, SaturHowever, with the ACC as day , while Kentucky topped
the chief proponent, the NCAA Mississippi State, 118-&amp;l, to
last year decided to increase finish In a tie with Alabama
its championship tournament atop the SEC standings. Howfrom 2li to 32 teams and to ever, on the basis of 2 regular
allow a second team from a season wins over the ·nae, tne
conference to participate.
Wildcats won the conference
North 'Carolina's Tar Heels titie.
threw the monkey wrench IntO
So McGuire will be facing
the NCAA tournament machi- Kentucky
in
Alabama
nery Saturday night with a ro. Saturday, while the Q-lrnson
86 vtc!Ory over North Carolina Tide goes against Arizona
Slate.
State on the Sun Devils home
With Dean·Smith's Tar Heels court.
guaranteed the ACC's primary
NBC-TV will televise three
berth in the NCAA.tournament,
games
Saturday, starting with
NCM officials were left to
,
Indiana-UTEP
at 12:10 p.m.
choole between second-ranked
Maryland and the defending (EDT) and following with •
national champions , North Kentucky-Marquette at 2:10
and Arizona State-Al'abama at
Carolina Slate.
Maryland's higher ranking, 4:10.
First-round winners will adtbe regular ll!8liOII ACC cham·
pionlblp and a pair of wills vance to the March 20-22
over the Wolfpact during the regionals ·a t Providence, Dayreplar recommended ton, New Mexico State and
!be Terpe for the berth iii the Pl&gt;rtland, Ore. Regional cham·
pions will move into the
M1dWat region.
national
finals In San Diego
bitterly disappointed
Wolfpack was 'left with only a March 29-.'!1.
First-round NCAA pairings :
bid to the National Invitation
Tounwnent, wjlich was ec- EAS;I' -LaSalle (21-8) vs.
llatleally enning of David Syracuse (19:-7) and Penn. (23- ·
'11H"•i••• and full ' houses. 4) vs. Kansas ·State (111-8) at
N.C. Slatf'• players vtted to Penn ; North carolina (21-7) vs.

The

•

'

..

By GIL PETERS
UP! Sports Writer
Rick Barry has the strangest
way of showing his appreciation .
The shaggy blond supershooter for the Golden State
Warriors first buried the
Celtics then praised them
Sunday after scoring 31 points
in a nationally televised 102·101
victory .
"I love to play the Celtics,"
said Barry who shoveled home
II of his points in the last 6:29
of play to bring the Warriors
from an early 16-point deficit.
"! love to watch them play.
"To me, they epitomize the

game of basketball."
The Celtics team Barry was
discussing only appeared In the
first half of play. In the second
half, the defending National
Basketball Association champions were just another lackadaisical outfit, according to

New Mexico State (20-8 ) and
Furman ( 23-6) vs. Boston
Q&gt;llege (20-7) at Charlotte
(N.C.) Q&gt;liseum .
MIDEAST -Central Michigan (20-S) vs. Georgetown (179) and Kentucky ( 22-4 ) vs.
Marquette (22-3) at Alabama;
Indiana ( 29-0) vs. Texas-Ei
Paso (2Q.S) and Middle Tennessee (26-4 ) vs. Oregon State
(1&amp;-10 ) at Kentucky.
MIDWEST -Texas A&amp;M
(20-8 ) vs. Cincinnati (2l..'i) and
Maryland (23-1) vs. Creighton
(20-8 ) at Texas Tech:
Louisville (24-2) vs. Rutgers
(22-8) and Notre Dame (18-8)
vs. Kansas (19-7 ) at Oral
Roberts.
WEST - Arizona State (24-3 )
vs. Alabama (22-4 ) and Nevada-Las Vegas (22-'1 ) vs. San
Diego State (14-12) at Arizona
State; UCLA ( 23-3) vs. Michigan (19-7) and Montana (20-8)
vs. Utah State (21-ii ) at
Washington State.
In addition to losing N.C.
State, the NIT lost Tennessee,
led by New York natives
Bernard King and Ernie
Grunfeld, and Purdue, last
year's ~ hampton , to the
National
Commissioners' ,
Invitational Tournament in
Louisvllle, Ky.
So the NIT turned to Memphis State and a half-&lt;iozen
Eastern
teams,
which
hopefully will bring fans with
them, Sunday to complete its
16-leam field.

Boston Coach Tom Heinsohn .
"We gave them the game,
that 's all I ca n tell you. We
stopped running and pushing it
(the ball) up. We stopped our
pressing defense," said Heinsohn.
The Celhcs started off typi cally enough, netting the first
eig ht points and.amassing a ISpoint lead, 51-30, by tate In the
second period. Their play was
so smooth and effortless, it was
hard for onlookers to determine just how Boston had built
the bulge.
But the Warriors countered
w1th sharp shooting to score
eight of the final 10 points
before mtermission and closed
to 53-43 at the half.
Barry, held to 10 points in the
first half, had eight in the third
period to go with 10 for Charlie
Johnson (24 overall) and eight
fo r impressive rookie Keith
Wilkes as Golden State narrowed the edge to four , 91~7
after three periods.
Then the Boston fast break
shut down while Barry and
Wilkes took over. The two
brought the W&lt;ll"riors from a
00-85 deficit at 5:31 of the final
quarter, to the one-point victory by accounting for the rinal
17 points between them. Barry
scored II and Wilkes, the
freshman from UCLA. had six
of his 18 points in the stretch.
Elsew here, Philadelphia
broke Washington's 22-game
home court winning streak
with a 113-100 win, Detroit beat
Kansas City-O maha 106-99,
New
Orleans
downed
Cleve land 90-86 and Los
Angeles ripped Houston 116-95.
Wilkes, battling Atlanta's
John Drew for Rookie of the
Year la urel s, said th e
Warriors' surge came late
because "sometimes thin gs
take a hall to get going. We just
started concentrating in the
second hall, that 's all , and I
think it helped that they
(Celtics) didn 't play too well in
the second half."
76ers 113, Bullets 100
Doug Collins scored a
.. career-high 39 points to _pace
Philadelphia and kee p the
Bullets from winning their
ninth In a row. Q&gt;llins, a IHl
seco nd-year guard from
Dtinois State, made 13 of 17
shots from the floor, including
II Straight in the middle two
periods, and 13 of 14 free
throws .
Pistous 106, Klugs 99
John Mengelt's 30 points
JI'Opelled Detroit and raised
the Pistons' cushion for a fmal
playoff spot to I ~ games over
the Milw11ukee Bucks. Playing
without aU-&amp;ar center Bob

us."
Cintinnati native Steve
Grote paced Michigan with 25
points. Ol)jo State captain Bill
Andreas, ~who led the Bucks
with 19 markers, was the only
OSU senior to see action.
The Wolverines ran up a 4738 halftime advantage, on the
strength of 61.8 per cent
shooting accuracy, and the
Buckeyes never threatened
after that.
Center C. J. Kupec added 20
points for Michigan, which
came away with a .486 shooting
mark for the entire game.
Ohio State outrebounded the
visitors 42-41 but hit only 40.9
per cent from the floor.
Also Saturday, James -McElroy scored Central Michigan's
five overtime points to help the
Olippewas to an BUD victory
over Bowling Green and the
Mid-American Q&gt;nference
championship.
Kent State, headed by Ricky

Gates with 20 points, rallied
from a 41-35 halftime deficit to
a season-ending ~ MAC
victory
over
Eastern
Michigan.
Miami Wios

- Grei Olson dropped in two
free throws with four seconda
left to assure Miami of an 81-80
MAC win over Ohio University
and reverige for an earlier onepoint loss to the Bobeats.
Jeff Tysoon scored 211 points
to lead Western Michigan to an
85-68 MAC triumph over
Toledo. The loss knocked the
Rockets out of at least a tie for
the league championsbip.
Greg Parham scored I~
points and picked off 24
rebounds to lead Akron to a 5852wln over St. J!lliOJlh (Ind.) in
the finals of the NCAA Division
II Great Lakes Basketball
Tournament. In the consolation
game, Eastern I!Unois
defeated Youngstown State Ill&gt; ·

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP! ) Ohio State football coach
Woody Hayes says he willswitch running back,.Ray
Griffin, brother of Buckeye
All-America and Heisman
Trophy winner Archie Griffin,
to defensive back when the
team opens spring practice
here March 31.
"Ray is a great running
back, 11 said Hayes, "but he's
Lanier, starling forward How- gomg to be a defensive back
ard Porter and Willie Norwood, until his brother graduates.
all out with injuries, the He's too good a football player
Pistons rallied !rom a 14-pqlnt to sit on the bench, and we
dericit In the second quarter to · think he can be a fine defensive
pull ahead, 86-74, at the end of back."
the third period.
Last season, as a member of
Jazz 90, Cavs 8&amp;
the kickoff specialty team, Ray
A 25-pOint scoring perfor- caught the attention of Ohio
mance by Pete Mjll"avich led State defensive coaches with
New Orleans to its 18th victory several fine tackles.
The switch is being made,
against 49 losses.
Lakers 116, Rockets 95
Hayes said, because he already
Gail Goodrich scored 34 has a solid cushion behind
points and handed off 14 assists . Archie without Ray and be·
as Los Angeles snapped a four- , cause the defensive backfield
game losing streak and ended a 'could use added strength.
six-game Houston winning
Woody Roach, Archie's unstreak . The triumph was derstudy for two years, freshachieved even though two Los man Jeff Logan, who saw little
Angeles starters, Brian action last fall but is conWinters and Lucius Allen, were sidered a promising prospect,
sidelined with injuries.
and Jim Harrell and Larry
Molls, both sidelined early last

season with knee operations,
will back up the senior great.
Anchoring an OSU defensive
rebulldlng program will be
Tim Fox, who can play either
safety or cornerback. OhioState lost three of lour
defensive deep backs to
graduation last year.

I

BELLEFONTAINE - Mrs.
James (Marie H.) Norris, 76,
Bellefontaine, died Saturday in
Lansing, Mich.
Mrs. Norris was born at
Bridgeport, Aug. 20, 1898, the
daughter o(uie late Lambert
and Viola Cale. She married
James Norris, May 24, 1942,
and he preceded her In death
De&lt;:. 17, 1974.
They operated an antique
shop in Bellefontaine.
She is survived by two sons,
George Wells, Ft. Wayne, Ind.,
and Charles Wells, Phoenix,
Ariz.; one daughter, Mrs .
George (Ada Marie) Coulson,
Lansing, Mich., and one grandchild.

80.

Exhibition Baseball Roundup
By Uolted Press International
Charlie Hough likes the
bullpen, but he likes the pitcher 's mound at Dodger
Stadium a lot better.
With Mike Marshall sitting
next to him on the bench during
Los Angeles games last season,
Hough saw a lot more of the
bullpen than he did of the
mound - which is why the
knuckleballing Hawaiian has
put in a bid for the No. 4spot In
the Dodger rotation this spring.
Hough took a step closer to
earning that spot Sunday with
a sharp three inning stint
against the Atianta Braves. He
allowed just three singles as
the Dodgers pieced out a 3-2
win.

Los Angeles scored all its
runs in the fmal two innings,
capped by Steve Garvey's
singling In of pinch runner
Glenn Burke in the bottom of
the runth.
Hough was 9-4 coming out of
the Dodger bullpen last season
but appeared In only 49 games.
Marshall was IS-12 In a major
league record 106 appearances.
"You het," Hough responded
when asked if a slarter 's role ·
would be more appealing to
him than that of a mop-up man.
"With Mike Marshall In the
bullpen, you don't get to many
chances to relieve ." Dave
Kingman hit his second hoo;~

run In as many games to lead
the New York Mets to 5-4 win
over the St. l.AJuis Cardinals
and Ken Boswell ripped a twol'un tie-breeaklng double to
give Houston a 7-ii win over
Montreal.
Jerry Reuss, Wayne Simpson
and Larry Demery combined
to limit the Cincinnati Reds to
just four hits In Pittsburgh's 7-1
win, but the Pirates B team
was not as fortunate as the
0\unichii Dragons jumped on
relief pitcher Rammon Hernandez for seven runs In one
inning en route to a 9-2 win.
Bill Campbell struck out
seven Detroiters in the game's
final three innings as the
Minnesota Twins blanked the
Tigers 3-0 and Boston collected
12. hits In posting its third
straight spring win with an 8-ll
whitewash of the Chicago
White Sox.

Cabbage Plants
~ow

JAMES Hill

Bruce Ruhl is I!%Jli!Cied to
assume full-time safety duties.
Other defensive hopefuls 'nelude Jerome Davis, Max
MicDam, Q-aig Cassady and
Tom Roche.
Tailback Archie carried the
ball 256 times last season and
tailback Ray 43 times.

PROTECTION
YOU NEED-

1 don't have the answers but Jesus
Christ does. Why not see for ·yourself?
Bring your friends .

. THIS WEEK AT 7:30 EACH EVENING
'

'

MIDDLEPORT OiUROi OF OfRIST

Play it .Ue and' oore. ,

It may be time to
have your preoeD&amp;
policy updated.

Akron faces TS
in II opener
MISSION, Kan . (UPI) First round pa1rmgs WedAkron takes on Tennessee nesday (all times EDT):
State In the opening round of
Assumption vs. Gannon, I :35
the NCAA Division II p.m.; New Orleans vs. Calbasketball championship at Riverside, 3:35 p.m.; North
Evansville, Ind., Wednesday. Dakota vs. Old Dominion, 8:06
The eight-team tournament p.m.; Tennessee State vs .
pairs teams which won Akron, 10:06 p.m.
regional championships . Wednesday afternoon's winSaturday night. Also qualifying ners will meet in one semifinal
were Assumption, Gannon, the and the night game winners In
University of New Orleans, the other, both Thursday night.
Cal-Riverside, North Dakota The championship game is set
and Old Dominion.
for Friday night.

Sears

Don't miss out!

er by March 12

102 W. Main

'hampionship
No Car 70 No Car St 66
ECAC Reg1onats
Championships

Bos t on Co l l69 Holy Cross 55
Georgetown 62 W Virginia 61

Rutgers 79 StJohn's 77 ot
Syrcuse HJO St Bonvntr 81

Consolations

Niagara 72 Fa irfield 67
PittSburgh 89 Geo. wash 64
Prov idnce JOB Conn 83

St Ptr 's 79 Sin Hall 75

Oh10 Valley Tournament
Championship
Midl e Ten 89 Astin Peay 75

NCAA College Divrsion
Regionals
Di vision 2
ChampionshIps

Akron 58 St Joseph 's 52
Assumption 87 Bentley 82
Ca t -Rivrsd 59 Puget Snd 58
Gannon 67 C W Post 60
New Orleans 84 Lmcotn 83

N . Dkote 84 Nbraski!I -Omah 71

Divis1on 3
Championships
Brandeis 89 Suffolk 77
Cheyny St 86 Blomsbrg Sf 81

Coe 83 Knox 72

G l asboro St 62 Wm Pte rson 59
Lemoyne -Owen 92 Miles 76
Mansf i eld Sf. 80 Scranton 65
No Car Meth 71 wash . Lee 58
August ana 62 Wartburg 61

Consola-tions

RP I 72 Albany St. 55
Bstn St 114 Rhde lslnd Coli 96
Transylvania 68 ·Sewanee 66
Widener 69 Frank &amp; Ma~sh 50

Other Games
Amn thristn 83 Bethny Nazrn
76

Arkansas 83 Baylor 64
Arizona St. Hl7 Ari zona 92
Auburn 76 Al abama 70
Brockprt St 103 St Lawrnce 79
Cent M ich 82 Bowing Green 80
Colorado 106 M issouri 97
ColoradO St . 91 BYU 81
Indiana 94 Michigan St. 79
Iowa 73 Il linois 70
Iowa St. 82 Nebraska 69
Kansas 74 Oklahoma 63
Kansas St 72 Oklahoma St. 63
Ken t St . 75 E. Michigan 69
Ken t ucky 118 Miss St 80
LSU 91 Mississippi 86
Marquette 64 Creighton 60
Miami (Ohio) 61 Ohio U. 80
Michigan 83 Ohio St . 64
Mid Am rca Nazrn 103 Cent Bibl

80

Oregon 82 Oregon Sf . 80
Purdue 100 M innesota 72
Rice 84 SMU 82, 2 ot
Texas A&amp;M 74 Texas 63
Texas-EI Paso 66 New Mex 59
Texas Tech 103 TCU 78
Tennessee 95 Georgia 74

UCLA

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Credit Plan to Suit Most Every NHCI
Prices Are Catalot Prices

'

i

992-2·1 78 .

992-21 43

Pomiroy

..

68

Wiscons i n 94 Northwestern 70

MtCIWtSt
A l ma 92 Albion 76
Ash land 93 Alberfrc 68
Ball St 81 No Ill 68

Bethel 83 Huntington 66
Bowing Grn 88 Wise -Mil. 55
Butler 69 Evansvill 67, ot
C . Michigan 107 Ohio u . 88
Calvin 74 Adrian 67
Coe 68 Knox 1111 l 66
Creighton 76 Air Force 53
DePaul 75 Notre Dame 70
Detroit 70 Xavier 59
DePauw 76 MacMurray 54
Esn . Ill 87 St. Cloud 62
Franklin 85 Marion 76
Grnd Valey 63 Lk Sperior St 60
Hanover 80 Defian ce 70
llltnois 83 Oh io st 78 , ot
Ill Wesl eyan 91 Carthage 82
Illinois St. 129 Lewis 80

Hope 66 Olivet 63
Detroit 70 Xavier 59
Tr !ni ty 82 Rockford 64
Bowing Green 88 UW MJiwauk
55
Ferris St . 74 Oakland 61
Augsburg 77 Ham line 56
Wayne St 94 Hast ings 86
Gustavus 75 Maca l ester 63
St. Joseph's 98 Wabash 65
Valparaiso 90 Ind iana Cent 82
St Olaf 76 St . Thoma s 73
La Crosse 77 Stevens Pt 64
Cleveland St 68 E Michigan 64
Ohio Northrn 67 Hdelberg 63
(ot J

Capital 54 Marietla 46
Wisconsin St. 69 Eau Cta1re 68
Whitewater 83 Oshkosh 60
Nebraska 80 Missouri 77
Southwest
Baylor 81 TCU 64
Texas Tech 63 Arkansas 55
Kansas 91 Kansas St . .53
No Texas St 86 W1ch1ta St 80
Oral Rober ts 93 Va Tech 68
Oklahoma 75 Ok lahoma St . 67
Te)laS A&amp;M 99 Rice 69
Texas-Et Paso 75 Ariz St 70
New Mexico St. 85 Drake 74
Arizona 58 New Mexico 56
McMurry 92 Okta Christn 93, ot
Okla . Lberal Arts 94 Lngstn 88
Fort Hays St . 76 washburn 74
Drury 86 Marymoun l 69
Rockhurst 79 Benedictine 69
Wsn . New Mexico 71 Regis 62
No . Texas 86 Wichita 80
Bradley 78 W Texas 75
Houston 103 Lamar 77
E Tex Baptist 81 Letourn~au 70
Missor i -RIIa 93 Cen t Missori 85
Henderson 55 Ouachita 49

West
washing ton 103 UCLA 81

Seat t le 88 San Franc isco 75
Oregon St. 68 California 54
So . Utah 93 Fort Lewis St . 75
Emporia St. 77 So. Co lorado 64
Wyoming 65 Co lorado St 61
Utah 79 BYU 73
Montana 67 ldallO St . 36
Gonzaga 67 Weber St . 60
Colorado Weor;.t 96 Wstm instr 76
Cal -lrvne 73 Lewis &amp; Clark 63
Cal -Davis 114 Humbo ldt 58
Montana 81 Boise St. 71
So. Calif 81 Washington St 68
Stanford 71 Oregon 70
Fullerton Sl. 72 San Diego 71
Fresno St 73 San Jose St. 69
long Beach St . 70 Pacific 61

I•

-

. ..

COLUMBUS (UP!)
Marietta basketball coach Phil
Roach and Miami football
coach Dick Q-um are to be
honored at the 21st annual
Q))WnbUS Dispatch All-High
sports dinner here March 17 as
the year's outstanding Ohio
college coaclles.
The two will receive plaques
and their schools llrill get 8
large, rotating trophy for
display purpol!eS during the
coming year.
Roach led Marietta to its best
sea1011 in 20 years and the Ohio
Conference championship, and
Saturday night was named the
1975 Ohio Q&gt;Dege llaaketball
Q&gt;acll ~ the Year. o-um led
the Miami footba1i team to a
feCond straight undefeated
and victory in the
~er!ne

a

llowl.

Roach said it was ''lremen,
dous honor" and a highlight of
hla coacling career.
· SeanaCJwnps
The Pioneers won . the
regular oc lle8IOO crown with
a ll-2'1 record but was

eliminated .In the post-aeason
conference tournament .
Marietta, however, earned an
at..large berth In the NCAA
Great Lakes Division 111
r~ional where it wa~ beaten
by Wittenberg In the finals.
That ended a 19-4 campaign
for Roach's squad, the best
since 1955 when the Pioneers
had a 20-ii sea80n that earned
Bill Whelsell the Ohio Coach of
the Year honors.
Roach, a 30-yeal'-old native
of London, easily won the
award In the 2:1nd annual
Q&gt;lwnblis Dispatch poll, by
outdistancing a field of 44
Buckeye college coaches. His
only cl011e challengers were
Jay Bowerman of Malone,
which won a place in the NAIA
national tournament at Kansas
City; Dom Rosse!H of
Youngstown, an
NCAA
Division 11 entry; and Darrell
Hedric of Miami, the 1971
award winner.
Roach received 15 first place
wtes and was mentioned on '!I
ballots of coaches for 67 total'

•

252 listed for honors ··
at Meigs High School
JUNIORS - Rhonda Abies,

Two hundred and fifty -two
students have been named to
fourth six weeks honor roll at

James Anderson,

Students must maintain a
grade of B or better to be
named to the roll. Named
were :

Sandra Carleton, George
Carper, Kar en Co leman ,

Meigs High School.

NINTH GRADE - Jeff
Arnold, Cathy Blaellnar , Rory

Bartrum , Rory Col e, Patri cia
Corsi, Jeffrey Couch, Tammie
De Board , Marsha Dillard ,

R~er

Arlx,

Merrl Auit, Rodney Bail ey,
Robert Ball. Richard Berry.
John Blake, Brenda Bolin,
Ginger Cullums, Tim Cundllf,
Peggy Cunningham, Mick
Da venport, Pam Davis. Cindy

Eads, ·Gary Fife, Elaine Fish.

Scott Fraser , Crystal Glaze,

Cynthia Gl'aze, William Gloyd,
Pam Evans, Barbara Felly, Georgene Grate , Julie Hamm ,
Anna Filch. Chuck Foilrod. Raipn Haning. Darla Harper,
Tr lna Gibbs . . Judy Gilkey , Jellrey Hillary. Taml Hoff.
Randy Houdashelt, Laura
Hoover, Kathy Howard, Penny

Hysell , VIc ky Hysel l, Ra y

Janey,

Sue

Kennedy; Helen

man , Pamela Holcomb, Laura
Hoover, James Hutton , Debbie
Janey, Bon ita Johnston, James
Jones, Joseph Justis, Mona

King. Martha Jo Krawsczyn. King, Neal Knight, Sammy
Valerie Lewis, Danny Morris. Little, Glen Kennedy. Debbie
Robert Nakamoto, Randy Lawrence, Esther Lowery , Jeff
Randolph, Stephanie Rought, M cK inn ey, Mike Magnotta ,

Diane Smith, Melodv Snoufer .

Kenny

Wayland , Jennifer Wise .

Mow ery ,

Mankin ,

Charl es

Carmel

Murph y,

Robin )nowden. Brent Stanley. Marshall, D~bra Mat son ,
Velvet Swisher . Don Tillis, Tammy Micluiei , Jell Miller,
Morris, Tam my
Teresa Van Meter, Michael Krls Ia
TENTH GRADE - Darlene Rober t Musser, Judllh Rad·
Barrett, Debra Birchlleld, Rita ford , Steve Nease, Kimberly
Birchfie ld. Mary Blaettnar , Ohlinger , Larry Pickens,
Tamra Blake. Mary Boggs. James Qualls, Scott Reuter,
Teresa Brown, Da le Browning, Darlene Roush , Kathy Rupe.
Kellee Burdette, Rick Cadle, Mary Rusche!, Bop Schneider.
Sandy Christian, Terry Clark, Tammy Schoonover, Chris
Kathy Coleman, Elaine Corsi. Schuler, Ralph Searles, Carol
Mark Davis, Robin Dewhurst, Sigman, Tamra Stanley, Coy
Barbara Doualas, ()pal Over, Starcher . George Stewart.
Paula Eichinger. Teresa Ellis. Mike Swick. Douglas Taylor,
Lori Faulk, Connie Fish , Usa Thomas. Donna Thornton,
Theressa Fish, Becky Fultz, Greg Van Meter, Jell Warner,
Sandy Garnes, Crystal Hall, Brenda Willis, Earl Wood,
Trudy Hall, Ronald ' Hawkins, Kenneth Wyant.
SENIORS - Vickie Abbott,
Vicki Johnston, Cheryl Ken.
nedy, Jacqueline King. Lora ine Gail Bailey, Sharon Bing, Mike
McElheney.
Duane Braun. Kim Browning. Julia
McLaughl i n,
Eugene Capehart, Rodney Carr. Candy
Morrison, Scott Napper, Pam Carmichael, Marcella Charles,
Offenberger, Faith Perrin ,

David

Christian ,

Rayanna

James Pockllnglon, Gregory Cole, Rose Colburn , Tim
Ra,wson , Suzy Samuels, Du~ ty Colbun, Ann Colwell, Richard
Smith, Tim Smith, Wllllom Couch , Carla Crisp, Ernie
Snyder, Stanley Starcher. Davis, Bonne Dillon. Jo
Deborah Taylor , ..Rebecca Engles, Belinda Friend. Cherie
Thomas , Wheeler Thomas ,

Fry ,

Clndl

Gerard, Nancy Gillispie, Mike
Gilmore, Mike Haley, Cheryl

College Basketball
Resulls
By United Press International
Mary land 103 Duquesne 82
Southwstn{Tenn) 82 Prncipia 80

Sewanee 82 Centre 70
St . Lou i s 78 Memph i s St . 7S

points on the 3-2-1 point system.
Bowerman got 38·polnts, while
Rosselli and Hedric had 20
each.
Roach previously was selected 8s the Ohio Conferertce
Q&gt;acll of the Year by league
mentors.
Career Hlgbllgbt
"thfs Is a tremendous
honor," Roach said when told
of hla win. "It is the hlghllght of
my coaching career. The
award Is a tribute to our
players, coaches and Marietta
College.
"Of course, I am extremely
happy for the players in our
JI'Ogram. · This year's team
·came from I0-131o 19-fwith the
same people in the JI'Ogram for
those three years. They have
worked with greater Intensity
than any team I have coached.
"And I have been fortunate
to have worked under some
great coaches !Ike J'rank
Shannon, Eldon Miller and .run
Snyder. '!'hey too must share in
the a'Yard."
I

.
I

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1975

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Jr. High

Anita King , Danny Ki ng , Sonia
Kiser, Scherry Lane, Carol

honors

M cMillin, Irene Malone, Ruth

Beverly Wilcox. Robert Will, Han ing , Dan Harrison, Teresa
Hayes. Joyce Hutchison.
Candv Bea Wood.
Christy Hysell, Donald Hysell.
Roger Hysell, David Jones,
Sonia Justice, Sherrl Kauff,
Lewis, Diana Lynch; Diana
Lewis, Virg inia McCune.
Debbie McLaughlin. Ralph

Marlin, Peggy Murphy, David

Moore, Josie Morton, Jeffrey

announced

Musser. Sandy Neigler, Roger
· Nelson. Vicki Newell. Jack
Oiler. Cathy Osborne, Judy
Owen, Becky Painter. Jo Ann

Peyton, Doug Pope, Barbara

Price, Debbie Priddy, Rose
Ramsburg, Jeff . Ridgway,
High School who have main- Jerry Rough, Marty Seelig, 1
tained a "B" or better In all Randy Shamblin
Bryan
subjects for the fourth six ·shank, Diana Smith, Brenda
weeks grading period :
Spires, Danny Taylor , Susan
SEVENTH - Kevin Angel. Ti ll is, Vicki VauQhan, GreQ
Beth Bartrum ~ Scott Bartrum. Wa lburn, Steve Walburn, Joy
Rick Birchfield, Jul ie Biron, White, Terry Whitlatch, Linda
Brynda Black, Keith Black, Williams, Babs Witte, Randy
Student. of Meigs Junior

Rick Blaettnar, John Byer,
Dannie
Carman,
Sharon

Yates .

Covert, Ron Cullums. Christine

Ebersbach, Steven Fife, James

Fish, Charlene Goeg lein, Tim

Herdman , Vicki Hood, Janet

Horkey, Jack Humphreys,

Rick Icenhower, John Jacobs,

Tracey Jeffers. Gary Jones.
Cl ifford Kennedy , Robert

Eastern High

Klein, Rena Lefebre, Cherie

Lightfoot, Dede McEwen, Scott
McKinney, Sandra Miller ,
Todd Morrison , Karen Mould,

honor pupils

Ray Mowery, Anita Musser,

Craig Nicinsky, Wes ley
Perkins . Barbara Peyton .
Kathy Qulvey, Linda ROS\'n·
baum, Tina Randol, Kellle.·

are announced

R'ough, Vicki Sheets, Tina
Smith, Dan Thomas, Greg

Tackett, .Oorsel Thomas, Mark

Sunday's

DIRECT FROM THE DISTRIBUTOR TO YOUI

Garnes , Linda

Tom Tucker, Janie Van Meter,
June Wamsley , Duane Weber,

EASTERN - The Eastern
Walker, Carla Whaley, Lynetta
Whittington, Ricky William. High School honor roll for the
4th grading period :
son. Terri Yeauger.
7th Grade - (AI-Tim
EIGHTH - Raymond An·
drews. Randy Arnold, Elaine Enevoldsen . Jeff Kimes,
Barnhart, Jar. Beaver, Greg Teresa Spencer; ( Bl -Brian
Becker, Dav d Blake, Vicki Bissell, Tddd Bissell, Jeanine
Blankenship, Pam Brauer, Craft, Rebecca Edwards,
Sherry Burchett. John Burdge. Steve Griffin, Ed Ho ller,
Jana Burson, Bruce Carman, Kaleen Millhone, Mark Norton,
Brenday Christian, Mary Lucy Shook. Randy VanMeter,
Colwell, Joyce Cook, Diana Blair Windon, Lila Young.
8th Grade - (A) - Karen
Davidson, Patty Dyer, Deloris
Elliott, Beverly Faulkner, Probert, Dawn Sorden, Debbie
Johnson, Tammy Spencer, Rusty Wiger; (B)Grand Canyon 64 Point loma Debbie
63
Johnson. Don Karr. Chuck Kay Balderson, Joe Boyles,
Ca i -Rvrside 75 Northrdg St 64
Brown,
Barbara
Kennedy. Julie Kitchen, Keith Terry
Bio la 96 Cal Lutheran 78
Buchanan, Sherrl Buchanan.
Landers.
Joe
McCloud,
Valerie
Cal Poly SLO 85 Occidental 66
Matson, Tina Miller , Shari Jeff Goebel. Susan Hannum,
Ctaremont .Mudd 51 Redlands 44
Keller,
Valerie
Mitch,
Jim Morrison, Tod Randy
Sacramnto St 78 Hayward St 75
MOf"row, Usa Nash, Sherri LaBonte, Laurie Matthews,
G Fox 98 Warner Pacific 76
Osborne, Kimberly Payne, Jeb Cynthia Pitzer, Lawrence
Chico St 81 SF . St. 70
LASt 71 cat Poly Pomona 70
Prater. Dwayne Priddy, Pooler, Roger Riebel, Sherri
Cai -Snta Barbra97 Wstmont 83
Stephanie Radford, Bobby StarchE . Wash . 70 c Wash 67
Freshman - IAI - Sonia
Rathburn, Rita Rousey, Mandy
Hawall95 Centenary 89
Sisson, Craig Swick, Randy Beaver, David Brown, Cathy
Puget Sound 87 Portland St 69

Roach 'Coach-of-Year'

Over 6000 sale prices
in Sears Winter Sale
Catalog now

..

USC

Vanderbjlt 102 Florida 83
Wash. St. 81 Wash 73
Wsn M ich igan 85 Toledo 66

SOCIETY TO MEET
The Meigs County Humane
SocietY. will meet Thursday,
' 'March 14 at 7:30 p. m. at
Middleport Village Hall. All
members are urged to attend
· and the public is welcome.

AulhDrized CATALOG SALES MERCHANT

72

Ill Benedict ine 88 Concordia 86
Olivt Nzrn 129 M t Vrnon Nazrn
70
Chicago St. 77 Wayne St. 76

Esn Ill 87 St Cloud St. 62
1- 111 Coli 81 Grenvll (Ill.) 68
Ashland 93 Wilberforce 67
Hanover 80 Defiance 70
Wsn Ill 93 Lores 76
Il l inois Tech 71 St Xavier 64
V incennes 82 Mineral Area 73
Grand Va l y St 63 Lk Superior
60
Millik i n 115 Wh eaton 99

Old Domin 83 Rndlph Macon 76
Tenn St 82 Tenn -Chattnoga 81
Consolations
Armstrng St 11 0 Alabama St 78
Augustan a 7 1 Mo .-Rol la 64
Baltimore 77 Morgan St 76
Cat-Davis 84 Cal -Irv ine 79
Esn . Ill 86 Yngstown St 80
Harlfrd 102 Sacrd Heart 91
Phila Te)ltle 60 Hrtwick 75
Southern U 103 W Georg a 98

TOHAVESURGERY
. Helena Baker, Middleport,
will undergo surgery at Holzer
" Medical Center this week.

..

deserted by its 5,000 civilian
residents.
"It's very bad," a Cambodian soldier at Prek Phneou
said. Asked if his unlt could
hold on, he said, "It's difficult
to say."
The rebels also laWIChed
several heavy infantry
assaults against Doeum Ampil,
a 7th division base near Prek
Phneou. The defending troops,
former U.S. mercenaries In
South Vietnam, repulsed the
attacks.
Cambodian President l.AJn
No! appeared before seven
foreign newsmen at his Phnom
Penh palace Sunday, ap·
parentiy to dispel rumors of his
ffight from the capital.
Rebel rockets and artillery
ripped Into Phnom Penh and
nearby Pochentong airport,
but failed to ball the massive
American airlift of supplies.
UPI photographer Chey
Sarun saw a rebel artillery
round explode near the airport,
killing five civlHans and
wounding seven.
Civlllan"!liloted U.S. planes
flew 13 missions into Pochenlong Sunday, carrying a total
of 613 tons of rice and 714 tons
of ammunition and fuel into the
war-tom city.
Foreign residents, fearful of
the city's possible fall to the
Q&gt;nununist..led Khmer Rouge
insurgents, fled the Cambodian
capital in Increasing nmnbers.

Championship

La Salle 92 Lafayette 85

..

Let's .rallc Soon

DAL£ (, WARNER

Result s

Bv United Press International
ACC Tournament

" Mrs. Goldie Marie Story, 66,
·" ·died Saturday at her Rt. 2,
Pomeroy residence.
She was preceded in death by
her father, Clyde Norris, and
an infant son, Clarence Story,
. .. Jr.
Mrs. Story was a member of
the Bearwallow Church. of
Christ, Hemlock Grove
Grange, the Walk-In Garden
Club and Alpha Delta Kappa
Teacher Sorority. She received
the Martha Holden Jennings
teacher award and was a 4-H
advisor for 10 years. She was a
member of the Teacher
'Associations of Eastern Local,
Meigs Q&gt;unty, Southeast Ohio,
Ohio, and the National
Association. She spent '!/ years
teaching in Meigs County, the
last 19 as fourth grade teacher
at the Tuppers Plains
, ,Elementary School In the
Eastern Local School District.
Surviving are her husband,
Clarence Story; a daughter,
Miss Rosalie Story, Rt. 2,
Pomeroy, also a school
teacher; her mother, Mrs. ;\da
Norris, Rt. 2, Racine; four
sisters, Mrs. Mlldred Le
Guollon, Pass Christian, Miss.;
Mrs. Erwin (Margaret)
Gloeckner, Racine; Mrs. Paul
· (Elsie) Davis, Parkersburg,
, and Mrs. Mary Ellen Moran,
Lomita, Calif.; two brothers,
'' ·ruchard Norriss, Carroll, and
• Alonzo Norris, Piqua; several '
· ' nieces and nephews, aunts and
" ·uncles also survive.
Funeral services will he at I
p.m. Wednesday at the Ewing
·' Funeral Home with Edward
White officiating. Burial will be
"' in Lelart Cemetery. Friends
· !"BY call at the funeral home at
any time.

Expires Midnight, March 12,1975

HAVE ANY PROBLEMS?

Saturday ' s College Basketball

Pomeroy dies

Phone: 247-2961

FOR THE

College Scores

ECC Tournament

Order Your
Southern

Services will be/ Wednesday
at II a.m. at Elcl\Jioltz Funeral
Home , Bellef~ntaine, and
burial will be' in Highland
Memorial
Gardens,
Bellefontaine; Calling hours
are Tuesdaxlrom 3 to 5 and 7 to
9 p.m.

Mrs. Story of

Dodgers win 3-2 but
Reds lose again, 7-1

Field officers reported heavy
infantry and mortar clashes
Sunday near the town of ~k
Phneou, six miles north of
Phnom Penh .
The government's crack 7th
infantry division stopped a
series of Insurgent assaults
against the town's western
defense line, the officers said.
Ambulances sped southward
with wounded during th~ day
while incoming mortar rounds
fell around the town, long

Mrs. James Morris, 76, dies/

Ray Griffin to defense

Barry scores 31 as
.Warriors nip Celts

·Tar Heels will represent
ACC in. NCAA Tournament
By .CIIIWl SCHERF

PHNOM PENH (UP!) Government forces held
Phnom Penh's perimeter
against rebel assaults, but
falled In a drive to expand the
besieged Cambodian capital 's
defense lines, field commanders said today.
U.S. planes dodged rockets
and artlliery to keep up a
round-the-clock airlift of rice,
ammunition and fuel, but
foreign residents fled the
capital in Increasing numbers.

on 14-14 overall

By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sporll Editor
MIAMI (UPI)- Weaver was sitting on the bench, taking a
momentary break without taking his eye off his ballplayers.
Some were going into the clubhouse to change their shirts
which had become soaked through .
Weaver's attention suddenly was attracted by a loud clumpclump on the dugout steps where one of the Baltimore Orioles'
newer members , pitcher Mike Torrez, was running up them
quickly on his way back to the field again . The Orioles obtained
Torrez and ouUielder Ken Singleton over the winter in the Dave
McNally deal with Montreal .
''Now there's a guy wbo was broken in ri~ht ." Weaver said,
watclling the retreating Torrez. "Generally when they go Into the
clu~Oillle to change their sweatshirt, they· sit in there 5-10
minutes. He got in there and got right out though. What it shows
is that (Gene) Mauch must have taught him right.
"Ballplayers are like anybody else. You gotta keep after most
of them. Not all, but most. I gotta go In there two-three times a
day sometimes, for example, and say, 'Okay, Blair, c'mon,
you've been In here five minutes already and you're breaking in
~gleton wrong! You're giving him bad habits."'
Not all of the Baltimore Orioles, perhaps none, are In love with
their manager, Earl Weaver, but respect him . He demands their
respect, and he gets it from them because of the way he
manages.
Earl Weaver's big thing Is communication .
The word everybody talks about today is communicate. You
hear it everywhere, not only In baseball. Jerry Ford is doing his
best to communicate with Q&gt;ugress and Henry Kissinger is
trying to get all parties In the Middle East to communicate with
each other.
Few individuals communicate any better than Earl Weaver.
You may not always agree with the ideas he communicates, but
he never leave you In the dark about them. Whether he's happy
or upset, Earl Weaver always lets you know it. Frank Robinson
says Weaver communicates better than any manager he has
ever played for and among those he did were Birdie Tebbetts,
Fred Hutchinson, Walt Alston, Bobby Winkles and Dick
Williams.
Earl Weaver is apJI'eciative of the compliment but claims the
Irick to all this business of communicating is knowing when to do

Perimeter line is held

F4756M

Collins, Ken Enevoldsen, Vicki

Epple, Cheryl Grilfln, Diana
Wagner, Danny WilT. Pamela Massar , Tammy Pitzer,
Willis, Tim WyanL Chris Dorothy Runyon. Becky
Windon, Lori Young; (Bl Yeauger.
Sheila Buchanan. Debbie
Veney,

Rita

Vining,

Jackie

Grade school
honors listed

Davis , Karen

Flck,

Brian

Matthews, Mark Moore, Jim

Steele, Rocky Van Meter, Nile
Wilson .

Sophomore - (A)- Kevin
Barton, Teresa Buckley ,
Teresa Carr, Teresa Edwards,
RACINE - The Racine Tammy Fitch, Kathy Follrod,
Elementary School honor roll Suzy Goebel, Carolyn Harper,
for the 4th six weeks period : Rachel Hunter, Jayne Smith,
Grade I - Lori Adams, Kerrl Jull Whitehead ; (B) - Janet
Beegle, Tracy Cleland, Tina Ambrose . Diana Benedum.
Forester, Mandy Hill, Melissa Patricia Boston, Julia Car·
lhle, Alana Lyons. Kelly Rizer, penter , Pam Congrove, Ellen
Kenda Rizer, Brad Robinson. Darst, Belinda Deeter, Robin
Robin Savage. Chad Sayre. Elkins, Melanle Enevoldsen,
Becky VanMeter.
Diana Epple, Cindy Dill.
Grade 2 - Rodney Beegle, Barbara Henderson, Susan
Alan Crisp, Ralph Fisher, Henderson, Mark Lawson,
Sandra Harden, Lois lhle, Larry Longenette, Tammy
David Powell, Dorset Ran- Nice, M ichael Smith, Bonnie
dolph. Lori Simpson, Lori Wood.
Wolfe. Sandra Deem.
Sonya
Junior · - (AI
Grade 3 - James Bush, Adams. Diana Atherton. Tom
Kevin Curfman, Teresa {,Hill, Avis, E;dna Boggs, Jeff Holler,
Vickie Holsinger , Rebecca

Cathy Maxer, Crissy Morlan,

Johnson , Linda Proffitt, Kathy Newel , George Pickens,
Katrina Snodgrass, Laren Diana Pullins, Diana Root,
Wolfe. Terri Wood.
Debbie Sanders, Patr icia
Grade 4 - Kathy Baker, Windon; (Bl - Betsy AmsZane, Beegle, Scott Justis, barv, Barbara Andrews,
Becky Lee, Clair Morris, David 'Tammy
Bah'-• ' Cheryl
Salmons, Tonja Salser, Lori B~nedum , Joe , Buchanan ,
Warden , Terry Patterson. Oenlse Dean, Niesel Duval,
David Parsons, Melanie Tim Kuhn, Melinda Evans,
Sherry Epple, Mark Mora,
Weese.
Grade 5 ~ Kim Bickers, Kim Diana Morris. Tom Reed.
Follrod, Allen Pape, jay Rees, Nancy Rldneour, Julia Schultz,
Melinda Salmons, Rita Stoler, Jan Wilson, Debbie Windon,
Kent Wolfe.
Lola Walker, Pa111 Millhone.
Grade 6- Peoav Bush. P"ul
Debbie
Senior • (A)
Cardone. Steve Circle, Sonja Boatright, Cathy Davis, Homer
Hill, Della Johnson. Bob B11i DeLong, Vicki Gaul, Marsha
Lee, Carl Morris, Becky Kimes, Regina Kimes. Marylu
Rhodes, Berta Rob inson , Mills , Karen Reed , Becky
Tammy Smith, Bryan Wolfe, Root. Mandi e Rose , ' Pam
Sams, Rhonda Savel , Boflnie
Paula Wolfe.
The above students r~ce l ved Welsh ; (B) - Doug Holsinger,
" B'' •or higher in each sUbject. Jim Lodwich, Craig Reed.

'

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HURRY IN TODAY!

••
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$50.00 CASH REBATE!
1. Only Zen1th color TV inodels in this ad are ehg1ble and must be
del1vered from March 10 through . March 31, 1975, and are new
and un used
2. lhe Tracy-Wells Com pany reserves the right to make final
Judgement concerning application of the rules of this program .
3. The sale and del1very of each Zenith color TV cla1med is subject

to

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MIDDLEPORT

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�·5- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, Mard1lO, 1975

4- The Dail)r Se~tlnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday. March 10, 1975

I

Bucks end season

Today's

'

Sport Parade

Uolted Press International
Ohio State basketball coach
~d Taylor says the Michigan
Wolverines had more at stake
than his team Saturday night,
"and they played like it."
The Buckeyes wound up their
third-worst season In 17 years
of Taylor-taught roundball
with an 83-64 1098 to Michigan.
OSU now has an 8-10 Big Ten
record and a 14-14 overall mark
to ponder at its basketball
,awards banquet Tuesday
night.
"No question about it;
they're a good basketball
team," Taylor said of the
Wolverines, who gained a
second-place finish In the
league with a 12-6 log and
nabbed a berth against the
Pacific 8 champion In the
NCAA Far West Regional
Basketball Tournament.
"We never established anything offensively," said Taylor.
"They kind of manhandled
By

80.

''Take Singleton," he said, pointing toward his new outfielder.
"He's a guy who gets things rl~ht without being told. For
example, we told hlrn once how it should be done. When he's in
gro"' one, the batting cage Is avaitsble to that group. The other
gro"' is shagging. He can be In that cage out there behind the
foulllne hiUing off 'Iron Mike' or he should be at home plate
hitting Uve pitching and running the bases.
"If he Isn't doing any of these three things, he's supposed to be
in a pepper game. This keeps the guys from just stalnding around
doing nothing. Now this is what impresses me about Singleton :
We went over this with hlrn just once. He's a new guy on the ball
dub and II would seem he'd get confused and ask somebody
where he was supposed to go.
'
"I've been waiting for him to do that, but so far he has been
every place he was supposed to be. Consequentiy I haven't talked
to hlrn yet. That gets back to your communication. If this keeps
up,Imay not say 10wordsto him all spring. l'veonly seen Torrez
a few days, but it looks Uke it'll be the same thing with him. This
Is a tribute to Mauch."
All cases aren 1 the same.
When Earl Williams came to the Orioles from the Braves two
years ago, he required ema help.
"I don1 wanna knock the guy, but Earl took special attention
and we gave It to hlrn," said Weaver. "He got a llttie confused
with my program. He wanted to do all the things, but we found
out we had to tell hiJ!I. Again, there's your communication ."
Earl Weaver looked out toward the field again .
"If everything stays this way with Torrez and Singleton," he
said, "I'm going to make It a point to have a conversation with
them in two weeks and tell them I'm not neglecting them."

MEIGS GJRLSGYMNASTICTEAM - Front row, l-r, Becky Thomas, Joni Murray, Cathy
Blaettnar, Mary Blaettnar, and Mrs . Kenda Rainey, coach; second row, Rhonda Hudson, Sally
Walters, and Jackie Brown; third row top, l.AJri Wyne, Debbie McLaughlin and Lisa Thomas.
TI1e girls are competing against southeastern Ohio teams that are available.

turn down the bid because,
UPI Sporu Writer
according to Thompson, the
The Atlantic Q&gt;ast Conferen· Nrr "just seems like such a
ce's polll-ee880n tournament loser's tournament."
has driven Tobacco Road
Maryland
will
meet
basketbaU fans 1o Insanity fiX' Oelghton In the first round of
years now, but Saturday it the Midwest Region at Lubadded the NCAA to its list of bock, Tex., Saturday In the
victims.
first round of the NCAA
'lbe ACC, an avowed basket- playoffs.
ball titan, always has deterWhile the NCAA was Inconmined Its conference·champion venienced by Saturday's rewith Its post-aeason tour- sults, Marquette coach AI
nament and not by regular McGuire had hls fondest hopes
seaaon standings. • Con· fulfille&lt;1. Paired against the
aequenlly, there have been Southeastern Conference
yeara ·when an ACC school, champion In a first-round
conaldered among the top two game at Tuscaloosa, it ap01: three In the nation, has had peared the Warriors were
to sat out the NCM tour- going to have to play Alabama
nament because it fai!ed to on its home court.
survive the ACC tourney
But the 'Crimson Tide were
madness.
upset by Auburn, 76-70, SaturHowever, with the ACC as day , while Kentucky topped
the chief proponent, the NCAA Mississippi State, 118-&amp;l, to
last year decided to increase finish In a tie with Alabama
its championship tournament atop the SEC standings. Howfrom 2li to 32 teams and to ever, on the basis of 2 regular
allow a second team from a season wins over the ·nae, tne
conference to participate.
Wildcats won the conference
North 'Carolina's Tar Heels titie.
threw the monkey wrench IntO
So McGuire will be facing
the NCAA tournament machi- Kentucky
in
Alabama
nery Saturday night with a ro. Saturday, while the Q-lrnson
86 vtc!Ory over North Carolina Tide goes against Arizona
Slate.
State on the Sun Devils home
With Dean·Smith's Tar Heels court.
guaranteed the ACC's primary
NBC-TV will televise three
berth in the NCAA.tournament,
games
Saturday, starting with
NCM officials were left to
,
Indiana-UTEP
at 12:10 p.m.
choole between second-ranked
Maryland and the defending (EDT) and following with •
national champions , North Kentucky-Marquette at 2:10
and Arizona State-Al'abama at
Carolina Slate.
Maryland's higher ranking, 4:10.
First-round winners will adtbe regular ll!8liOII ACC cham·
pionlblp and a pair of wills vance to the March 20-22
over the Wolfpact during the regionals ·a t Providence, Dayreplar recommended ton, New Mexico State and
!be Terpe for the berth iii the Pl&gt;rtland, Ore. Regional cham·
pions will move into the
M1dWat region.
national
finals In San Diego
bitterly disappointed
Wolfpack was 'left with only a March 29-.'!1.
First-round NCAA pairings :
bid to the National Invitation
Tounwnent, wjlich was ec- EAS;I' -LaSalle (21-8) vs.
llatleally enning of David Syracuse (19:-7) and Penn. (23- ·
'11H"•i••• and full ' houses. 4) vs. Kansas ·State (111-8) at
N.C. Slatf'• players vtted to Penn ; North carolina (21-7) vs.

The

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By GIL PETERS
UP! Sports Writer
Rick Barry has the strangest
way of showing his appreciation .
The shaggy blond supershooter for the Golden State
Warriors first buried the
Celtics then praised them
Sunday after scoring 31 points
in a nationally televised 102·101
victory .
"I love to play the Celtics,"
said Barry who shoveled home
II of his points in the last 6:29
of play to bring the Warriors
from an early 16-point deficit.
"! love to watch them play.
"To me, they epitomize the

game of basketball."
The Celtics team Barry was
discussing only appeared In the
first half of play. In the second
half, the defending National
Basketball Association champions were just another lackadaisical outfit, according to

New Mexico State (20-8 ) and
Furman ( 23-6) vs. Boston
Q&gt;llege (20-7) at Charlotte
(N.C.) Q&gt;liseum .
MIDEAST -Central Michigan (20-S) vs. Georgetown (179) and Kentucky ( 22-4 ) vs.
Marquette (22-3) at Alabama;
Indiana ( 29-0) vs. Texas-Ei
Paso (2Q.S) and Middle Tennessee (26-4 ) vs. Oregon State
(1&amp;-10 ) at Kentucky.
MIDWEST -Texas A&amp;M
(20-8 ) vs. Cincinnati (2l..'i) and
Maryland (23-1) vs. Creighton
(20-8 ) at Texas Tech:
Louisville (24-2) vs. Rutgers
(22-8) and Notre Dame (18-8)
vs. Kansas (19-7 ) at Oral
Roberts.
WEST - Arizona State (24-3 )
vs. Alabama (22-4 ) and Nevada-Las Vegas (22-'1 ) vs. San
Diego State (14-12) at Arizona
State; UCLA ( 23-3) vs. Michigan (19-7) and Montana (20-8)
vs. Utah State (21-ii ) at
Washington State.
In addition to losing N.C.
State, the NIT lost Tennessee,
led by New York natives
Bernard King and Ernie
Grunfeld, and Purdue, last
year's ~ hampton , to the
National
Commissioners' ,
Invitational Tournament in
Louisvllle, Ky.
So the NIT turned to Memphis State and a half-&lt;iozen
Eastern
teams,
which
hopefully will bring fans with
them, Sunday to complete its
16-leam field.

Boston Coach Tom Heinsohn .
"We gave them the game,
that 's all I ca n tell you. We
stopped running and pushing it
(the ball) up. We stopped our
pressing defense," said Heinsohn.
The Celhcs started off typi cally enough, netting the first
eig ht points and.amassing a ISpoint lead, 51-30, by tate In the
second period. Their play was
so smooth and effortless, it was
hard for onlookers to determine just how Boston had built
the bulge.
But the Warriors countered
w1th sharp shooting to score
eight of the final 10 points
before mtermission and closed
to 53-43 at the half.
Barry, held to 10 points in the
first half, had eight in the third
period to go with 10 for Charlie
Johnson (24 overall) and eight
fo r impressive rookie Keith
Wilkes as Golden State narrowed the edge to four , 91~7
after three periods.
Then the Boston fast break
shut down while Barry and
Wilkes took over. The two
brought the W&lt;ll"riors from a
00-85 deficit at 5:31 of the final
quarter, to the one-point victory by accounting for the rinal
17 points between them. Barry
scored II and Wilkes, the
freshman from UCLA. had six
of his 18 points in the stretch.
Elsew here, Philadelphia
broke Washington's 22-game
home court winning streak
with a 113-100 win, Detroit beat
Kansas City-O maha 106-99,
New
Orleans
downed
Cleve land 90-86 and Los
Angeles ripped Houston 116-95.
Wilkes, battling Atlanta's
John Drew for Rookie of the
Year la urel s, said th e
Warriors' surge came late
because "sometimes thin gs
take a hall to get going. We just
started concentrating in the
second hall, that 's all , and I
think it helped that they
(Celtics) didn 't play too well in
the second half."
76ers 113, Bullets 100
Doug Collins scored a
.. career-high 39 points to _pace
Philadelphia and kee p the
Bullets from winning their
ninth In a row. Q&gt;llins, a IHl
seco nd-year guard from
Dtinois State, made 13 of 17
shots from the floor, including
II Straight in the middle two
periods, and 13 of 14 free
throws .
Pistous 106, Klugs 99
John Mengelt's 30 points
JI'Opelled Detroit and raised
the Pistons' cushion for a fmal
playoff spot to I ~ games over
the Milw11ukee Bucks. Playing
without aU-&amp;ar center Bob

us."
Cintinnati native Steve
Grote paced Michigan with 25
points. Ol)jo State captain Bill
Andreas, ~who led the Bucks
with 19 markers, was the only
OSU senior to see action.
The Wolverines ran up a 4738 halftime advantage, on the
strength of 61.8 per cent
shooting accuracy, and the
Buckeyes never threatened
after that.
Center C. J. Kupec added 20
points for Michigan, which
came away with a .486 shooting
mark for the entire game.
Ohio State outrebounded the
visitors 42-41 but hit only 40.9
per cent from the floor.
Also Saturday, James -McElroy scored Central Michigan's
five overtime points to help the
Olippewas to an BUD victory
over Bowling Green and the
Mid-American Q&gt;nference
championship.
Kent State, headed by Ricky

Gates with 20 points, rallied
from a 41-35 halftime deficit to
a season-ending ~ MAC
victory
over
Eastern
Michigan.
Miami Wios

- Grei Olson dropped in two
free throws with four seconda
left to assure Miami of an 81-80
MAC win over Ohio University
and reverige for an earlier onepoint loss to the Bobeats.
Jeff Tysoon scored 211 points
to lead Western Michigan to an
85-68 MAC triumph over
Toledo. The loss knocked the
Rockets out of at least a tie for
the league championsbip.
Greg Parham scored I~
points and picked off 24
rebounds to lead Akron to a 5852wln over St. J!lliOJlh (Ind.) in
the finals of the NCAA Division
II Great Lakes Basketball
Tournament. In the consolation
game, Eastern I!Unois
defeated Youngstown State Ill&gt; ·

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP! ) Ohio State football coach
Woody Hayes says he willswitch running back,.Ray
Griffin, brother of Buckeye
All-America and Heisman
Trophy winner Archie Griffin,
to defensive back when the
team opens spring practice
here March 31.
"Ray is a great running
back, 11 said Hayes, "but he's
Lanier, starling forward How- gomg to be a defensive back
ard Porter and Willie Norwood, until his brother graduates.
all out with injuries, the He's too good a football player
Pistons rallied !rom a 14-pqlnt to sit on the bench, and we
dericit In the second quarter to · think he can be a fine defensive
pull ahead, 86-74, at the end of back."
the third period.
Last season, as a member of
Jazz 90, Cavs 8&amp;
the kickoff specialty team, Ray
A 25-pOint scoring perfor- caught the attention of Ohio
mance by Pete Mjll"avich led State defensive coaches with
New Orleans to its 18th victory several fine tackles.
The switch is being made,
against 49 losses.
Lakers 116, Rockets 95
Hayes said, because he already
Gail Goodrich scored 34 has a solid cushion behind
points and handed off 14 assists . Archie without Ray and be·
as Los Angeles snapped a four- , cause the defensive backfield
game losing streak and ended a 'could use added strength.
six-game Houston winning
Woody Roach, Archie's unstreak . The triumph was derstudy for two years, freshachieved even though two Los man Jeff Logan, who saw little
Angeles starters, Brian action last fall but is conWinters and Lucius Allen, were sidered a promising prospect,
sidelined with injuries.
and Jim Harrell and Larry
Molls, both sidelined early last

season with knee operations,
will back up the senior great.
Anchoring an OSU defensive
rebulldlng program will be
Tim Fox, who can play either
safety or cornerback. OhioState lost three of lour
defensive deep backs to
graduation last year.

I

BELLEFONTAINE - Mrs.
James (Marie H.) Norris, 76,
Bellefontaine, died Saturday in
Lansing, Mich.
Mrs. Norris was born at
Bridgeport, Aug. 20, 1898, the
daughter o(uie late Lambert
and Viola Cale. She married
James Norris, May 24, 1942,
and he preceded her In death
De&lt;:. 17, 1974.
They operated an antique
shop in Bellefontaine.
She is survived by two sons,
George Wells, Ft. Wayne, Ind.,
and Charles Wells, Phoenix,
Ariz.; one daughter, Mrs .
George (Ada Marie) Coulson,
Lansing, Mich., and one grandchild.

80.

Exhibition Baseball Roundup
By Uolted Press International
Charlie Hough likes the
bullpen, but he likes the pitcher 's mound at Dodger
Stadium a lot better.
With Mike Marshall sitting
next to him on the bench during
Los Angeles games last season,
Hough saw a lot more of the
bullpen than he did of the
mound - which is why the
knuckleballing Hawaiian has
put in a bid for the No. 4spot In
the Dodger rotation this spring.
Hough took a step closer to
earning that spot Sunday with
a sharp three inning stint
against the Atianta Braves. He
allowed just three singles as
the Dodgers pieced out a 3-2
win.

Los Angeles scored all its
runs in the fmal two innings,
capped by Steve Garvey's
singling In of pinch runner
Glenn Burke in the bottom of
the runth.
Hough was 9-4 coming out of
the Dodger bullpen last season
but appeared In only 49 games.
Marshall was IS-12 In a major
league record 106 appearances.
"You het," Hough responded
when asked if a slarter 's role ·
would be more appealing to
him than that of a mop-up man.
"With Mike Marshall In the
bullpen, you don't get to many
chances to relieve ." Dave
Kingman hit his second hoo;~

run In as many games to lead
the New York Mets to 5-4 win
over the St. l.AJuis Cardinals
and Ken Boswell ripped a twol'un tie-breeaklng double to
give Houston a 7-ii win over
Montreal.
Jerry Reuss, Wayne Simpson
and Larry Demery combined
to limit the Cincinnati Reds to
just four hits In Pittsburgh's 7-1
win, but the Pirates B team
was not as fortunate as the
0\unichii Dragons jumped on
relief pitcher Rammon Hernandez for seven runs In one
inning en route to a 9-2 win.
Bill Campbell struck out
seven Detroiters in the game's
final three innings as the
Minnesota Twins blanked the
Tigers 3-0 and Boston collected
12. hits In posting its third
straight spring win with an 8-ll
whitewash of the Chicago
White Sox.

Cabbage Plants
~ow

JAMES Hill

Bruce Ruhl is I!%Jli!Cied to
assume full-time safety duties.
Other defensive hopefuls 'nelude Jerome Davis, Max
MicDam, Q-aig Cassady and
Tom Roche.
Tailback Archie carried the
ball 256 times last season and
tailback Ray 43 times.

PROTECTION
YOU NEED-

1 don't have the answers but Jesus
Christ does. Why not see for ·yourself?
Bring your friends .

. THIS WEEK AT 7:30 EACH EVENING
'

'

MIDDLEPORT OiUROi OF OfRIST

Play it .Ue and' oore. ,

It may be time to
have your preoeD&amp;
policy updated.

Akron faces TS
in II opener
MISSION, Kan . (UPI) First round pa1rmgs WedAkron takes on Tennessee nesday (all times EDT):
State In the opening round of
Assumption vs. Gannon, I :35
the NCAA Division II p.m.; New Orleans vs. Calbasketball championship at Riverside, 3:35 p.m.; North
Evansville, Ind., Wednesday. Dakota vs. Old Dominion, 8:06
The eight-team tournament p.m.; Tennessee State vs .
pairs teams which won Akron, 10:06 p.m.
regional championships . Wednesday afternoon's winSaturday night. Also qualifying ners will meet in one semifinal
were Assumption, Gannon, the and the night game winners In
University of New Orleans, the other, both Thursday night.
Cal-Riverside, North Dakota The championship game is set
and Old Dominion.
for Friday night.

Sears

Don't miss out!

er by March 12

102 W. Main

'hampionship
No Car 70 No Car St 66
ECAC Reg1onats
Championships

Bos t on Co l l69 Holy Cross 55
Georgetown 62 W Virginia 61

Rutgers 79 StJohn's 77 ot
Syrcuse HJO St Bonvntr 81

Consolations

Niagara 72 Fa irfield 67
PittSburgh 89 Geo. wash 64
Prov idnce JOB Conn 83

St Ptr 's 79 Sin Hall 75

Oh10 Valley Tournament
Championship
Midl e Ten 89 Astin Peay 75

NCAA College Divrsion
Regionals
Di vision 2
ChampionshIps

Akron 58 St Joseph 's 52
Assumption 87 Bentley 82
Ca t -Rivrsd 59 Puget Snd 58
Gannon 67 C W Post 60
New Orleans 84 Lmcotn 83

N . Dkote 84 Nbraski!I -Omah 71

Divis1on 3
Championships
Brandeis 89 Suffolk 77
Cheyny St 86 Blomsbrg Sf 81

Coe 83 Knox 72

G l asboro St 62 Wm Pte rson 59
Lemoyne -Owen 92 Miles 76
Mansf i eld Sf. 80 Scranton 65
No Car Meth 71 wash . Lee 58
August ana 62 Wartburg 61

Consola-tions

RP I 72 Albany St. 55
Bstn St 114 Rhde lslnd Coli 96
Transylvania 68 ·Sewanee 66
Widener 69 Frank &amp; Ma~sh 50

Other Games
Amn thristn 83 Bethny Nazrn
76

Arkansas 83 Baylor 64
Arizona St. Hl7 Ari zona 92
Auburn 76 Al abama 70
Brockprt St 103 St Lawrnce 79
Cent M ich 82 Bowing Green 80
Colorado 106 M issouri 97
ColoradO St . 91 BYU 81
Indiana 94 Michigan St. 79
Iowa 73 Il linois 70
Iowa St. 82 Nebraska 69
Kansas 74 Oklahoma 63
Kansas St 72 Oklahoma St. 63
Ken t St . 75 E. Michigan 69
Ken t ucky 118 Miss St 80
LSU 91 Mississippi 86
Marquette 64 Creighton 60
Miami (Ohio) 61 Ohio U. 80
Michigan 83 Ohio St . 64
Mid Am rca Nazrn 103 Cent Bibl

80

Oregon 82 Oregon Sf . 80
Purdue 100 M innesota 72
Rice 84 SMU 82, 2 ot
Texas A&amp;M 74 Texas 63
Texas-EI Paso 66 New Mex 59
Texas Tech 103 TCU 78
Tennessee 95 Georgia 74

UCLA

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'

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992-2·1 78 .

992-21 43

Pomiroy

..

68

Wiscons i n 94 Northwestern 70

MtCIWtSt
A l ma 92 Albion 76
Ash land 93 Alberfrc 68
Ball St 81 No Ill 68

Bethel 83 Huntington 66
Bowing Grn 88 Wise -Mil. 55
Butler 69 Evansvill 67, ot
C . Michigan 107 Ohio u . 88
Calvin 74 Adrian 67
Coe 68 Knox 1111 l 66
Creighton 76 Air Force 53
DePaul 75 Notre Dame 70
Detroit 70 Xavier 59
DePauw 76 MacMurray 54
Esn . Ill 87 St. Cloud 62
Franklin 85 Marion 76
Grnd Valey 63 Lk Sperior St 60
Hanover 80 Defian ce 70
llltnois 83 Oh io st 78 , ot
Ill Wesl eyan 91 Carthage 82
Illinois St. 129 Lewis 80

Hope 66 Olivet 63
Detroit 70 Xavier 59
Tr !ni ty 82 Rockford 64
Bowing Green 88 UW MJiwauk
55
Ferris St . 74 Oakland 61
Augsburg 77 Ham line 56
Wayne St 94 Hast ings 86
Gustavus 75 Maca l ester 63
St. Joseph's 98 Wabash 65
Valparaiso 90 Ind iana Cent 82
St Olaf 76 St . Thoma s 73
La Crosse 77 Stevens Pt 64
Cleveland St 68 E Michigan 64
Ohio Northrn 67 Hdelberg 63
(ot J

Capital 54 Marietla 46
Wisconsin St. 69 Eau Cta1re 68
Whitewater 83 Oshkosh 60
Nebraska 80 Missouri 77
Southwest
Baylor 81 TCU 64
Texas Tech 63 Arkansas 55
Kansas 91 Kansas St . .53
No Texas St 86 W1ch1ta St 80
Oral Rober ts 93 Va Tech 68
Oklahoma 75 Ok lahoma St . 67
Te)laS A&amp;M 99 Rice 69
Texas-Et Paso 75 Ariz St 70
New Mexico St. 85 Drake 74
Arizona 58 New Mexico 56
McMurry 92 Okta Christn 93, ot
Okla . Lberal Arts 94 Lngstn 88
Fort Hays St . 76 washburn 74
Drury 86 Marymoun l 69
Rockhurst 79 Benedictine 69
Wsn . New Mexico 71 Regis 62
No . Texas 86 Wichita 80
Bradley 78 W Texas 75
Houston 103 Lamar 77
E Tex Baptist 81 Letourn~au 70
Missor i -RIIa 93 Cen t Missori 85
Henderson 55 Ouachita 49

West
washing ton 103 UCLA 81

Seat t le 88 San Franc isco 75
Oregon St. 68 California 54
So . Utah 93 Fort Lewis St . 75
Emporia St. 77 So. Co lorado 64
Wyoming 65 Co lorado St 61
Utah 79 BYU 73
Montana 67 ldallO St . 36
Gonzaga 67 Weber St . 60
Colorado Weor;.t 96 Wstm instr 76
Cal -lrvne 73 Lewis &amp; Clark 63
Cal -Davis 114 Humbo ldt 58
Montana 81 Boise St. 71
So. Calif 81 Washington St 68
Stanford 71 Oregon 70
Fullerton Sl. 72 San Diego 71
Fresno St 73 San Jose St. 69
long Beach St . 70 Pacific 61

I•

-

. ..

COLUMBUS (UP!)
Marietta basketball coach Phil
Roach and Miami football
coach Dick Q-um are to be
honored at the 21st annual
Q))WnbUS Dispatch All-High
sports dinner here March 17 as
the year's outstanding Ohio
college coaclles.
The two will receive plaques
and their schools llrill get 8
large, rotating trophy for
display purpol!eS during the
coming year.
Roach led Marietta to its best
sea1011 in 20 years and the Ohio
Conference championship, and
Saturday night was named the
1975 Ohio Q&gt;Dege llaaketball
Q&gt;acll ~ the Year. o-um led
the Miami footba1i team to a
feCond straight undefeated
and victory in the
~er!ne

a

llowl.

Roach said it was ''lremen,
dous honor" and a highlight of
hla coacling career.
· SeanaCJwnps
The Pioneers won . the
regular oc lle8IOO crown with
a ll-2'1 record but was

eliminated .In the post-aeason
conference tournament .
Marietta, however, earned an
at..large berth In the NCAA
Great Lakes Division 111
r~ional where it wa~ beaten
by Wittenberg In the finals.
That ended a 19-4 campaign
for Roach's squad, the best
since 1955 when the Pioneers
had a 20-ii sea80n that earned
Bill Whelsell the Ohio Coach of
the Year honors.
Roach, a 30-yeal'-old native
of London, easily won the
award In the 2:1nd annual
Q&gt;lwnblis Dispatch poll, by
outdistancing a field of 44
Buckeye college coaches. His
only cl011e challengers were
Jay Bowerman of Malone,
which won a place in the NAIA
national tournament at Kansas
City; Dom Rosse!H of
Youngstown, an
NCAA
Division 11 entry; and Darrell
Hedric of Miami, the 1971
award winner.
Roach received 15 first place
wtes and was mentioned on '!I
ballots of coaches for 67 total'

•

252 listed for honors ··
at Meigs High School
JUNIORS - Rhonda Abies,

Two hundred and fifty -two
students have been named to
fourth six weeks honor roll at

James Anderson,

Students must maintain a
grade of B or better to be
named to the roll. Named
were :

Sandra Carleton, George
Carper, Kar en Co leman ,

Meigs High School.

NINTH GRADE - Jeff
Arnold, Cathy Blaellnar , Rory

Bartrum , Rory Col e, Patri cia
Corsi, Jeffrey Couch, Tammie
De Board , Marsha Dillard ,

R~er

Arlx,

Merrl Auit, Rodney Bail ey,
Robert Ball. Richard Berry.
John Blake, Brenda Bolin,
Ginger Cullums, Tim Cundllf,
Peggy Cunningham, Mick
Da venport, Pam Davis. Cindy

Eads, ·Gary Fife, Elaine Fish.

Scott Fraser , Crystal Glaze,

Cynthia Gl'aze, William Gloyd,
Pam Evans, Barbara Felly, Georgene Grate , Julie Hamm ,
Anna Filch. Chuck Foilrod. Raipn Haning. Darla Harper,
Tr lna Gibbs . . Judy Gilkey , Jellrey Hillary. Taml Hoff.
Randy Houdashelt, Laura
Hoover, Kathy Howard, Penny

Hysell , VIc ky Hysel l, Ra y

Janey,

Sue

Kennedy; Helen

man , Pamela Holcomb, Laura
Hoover, James Hutton , Debbie
Janey, Bon ita Johnston, James
Jones, Joseph Justis, Mona

King. Martha Jo Krawsczyn. King, Neal Knight, Sammy
Valerie Lewis, Danny Morris. Little, Glen Kennedy. Debbie
Robert Nakamoto, Randy Lawrence, Esther Lowery , Jeff
Randolph, Stephanie Rought, M cK inn ey, Mike Magnotta ,

Diane Smith, Melodv Snoufer .

Kenny

Wayland , Jennifer Wise .

Mow ery ,

Mankin ,

Charl es

Carmel

Murph y,

Robin )nowden. Brent Stanley. Marshall, D~bra Mat son ,
Velvet Swisher . Don Tillis, Tammy Micluiei , Jell Miller,
Morris, Tam my
Teresa Van Meter, Michael Krls Ia
TENTH GRADE - Darlene Rober t Musser, Judllh Rad·
Barrett, Debra Birchlleld, Rita ford , Steve Nease, Kimberly
Birchfie ld. Mary Blaettnar , Ohlinger , Larry Pickens,
Tamra Blake. Mary Boggs. James Qualls, Scott Reuter,
Teresa Brown, Da le Browning, Darlene Roush , Kathy Rupe.
Kellee Burdette, Rick Cadle, Mary Rusche!, Bop Schneider.
Sandy Christian, Terry Clark, Tammy Schoonover, Chris
Kathy Coleman, Elaine Corsi. Schuler, Ralph Searles, Carol
Mark Davis, Robin Dewhurst, Sigman, Tamra Stanley, Coy
Barbara Doualas, ()pal Over, Starcher . George Stewart.
Paula Eichinger. Teresa Ellis. Mike Swick. Douglas Taylor,
Lori Faulk, Connie Fish , Usa Thomas. Donna Thornton,
Theressa Fish, Becky Fultz, Greg Van Meter, Jell Warner,
Sandy Garnes, Crystal Hall, Brenda Willis, Earl Wood,
Trudy Hall, Ronald ' Hawkins, Kenneth Wyant.
SENIORS - Vickie Abbott,
Vicki Johnston, Cheryl Ken.
nedy, Jacqueline King. Lora ine Gail Bailey, Sharon Bing, Mike
McElheney.
Duane Braun. Kim Browning. Julia
McLaughl i n,
Eugene Capehart, Rodney Carr. Candy
Morrison, Scott Napper, Pam Carmichael, Marcella Charles,
Offenberger, Faith Perrin ,

David

Christian ,

Rayanna

James Pockllnglon, Gregory Cole, Rose Colburn , Tim
Ra,wson , Suzy Samuels, Du~ ty Colbun, Ann Colwell, Richard
Smith, Tim Smith, Wllllom Couch , Carla Crisp, Ernie
Snyder, Stanley Starcher. Davis, Bonne Dillon. Jo
Deborah Taylor , ..Rebecca Engles, Belinda Friend. Cherie
Thomas , Wheeler Thomas ,

Fry ,

Clndl

Gerard, Nancy Gillispie, Mike
Gilmore, Mike Haley, Cheryl

College Basketball
Resulls
By United Press International
Mary land 103 Duquesne 82
Southwstn{Tenn) 82 Prncipia 80

Sewanee 82 Centre 70
St . Lou i s 78 Memph i s St . 7S

points on the 3-2-1 point system.
Bowerman got 38·polnts, while
Rosselli and Hedric had 20
each.
Roach previously was selected 8s the Ohio Conferertce
Q&gt;acll of the Year by league
mentors.
Career Hlgbllgbt
"thfs Is a tremendous
honor," Roach said when told
of hla win. "It is the hlghllght of
my coaching career. The
award Is a tribute to our
players, coaches and Marietta
College.
"Of course, I am extremely
happy for the players in our
JI'Ogram. · This year's team
·came from I0-131o 19-fwith the
same people in the JI'Ogram for
those three years. They have
worked with greater Intensity
than any team I have coached.
"And I have been fortunate
to have worked under some
great coaches !Ike J'rank
Shannon, Eldon Miller and .run
Snyder. '!'hey too must share in
the a'Yard."
I

.
I

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1975

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Jr. High

Anita King , Danny Ki ng , Sonia
Kiser, Scherry Lane, Carol

honors

M cMillin, Irene Malone, Ruth

Beverly Wilcox. Robert Will, Han ing , Dan Harrison, Teresa
Hayes. Joyce Hutchison.
Candv Bea Wood.
Christy Hysell, Donald Hysell.
Roger Hysell, David Jones,
Sonia Justice, Sherrl Kauff,
Lewis, Diana Lynch; Diana
Lewis, Virg inia McCune.
Debbie McLaughlin. Ralph

Marlin, Peggy Murphy, David

Moore, Josie Morton, Jeffrey

announced

Musser. Sandy Neigler, Roger
· Nelson. Vicki Newell. Jack
Oiler. Cathy Osborne, Judy
Owen, Becky Painter. Jo Ann

Peyton, Doug Pope, Barbara

Price, Debbie Priddy, Rose
Ramsburg, Jeff . Ridgway,
High School who have main- Jerry Rough, Marty Seelig, 1
tained a "B" or better In all Randy Shamblin
Bryan
subjects for the fourth six ·shank, Diana Smith, Brenda
weeks grading period :
Spires, Danny Taylor , Susan
SEVENTH - Kevin Angel. Ti ll is, Vicki VauQhan, GreQ
Beth Bartrum ~ Scott Bartrum. Wa lburn, Steve Walburn, Joy
Rick Birchfield, Jul ie Biron, White, Terry Whitlatch, Linda
Brynda Black, Keith Black, Williams, Babs Witte, Randy
Student. of Meigs Junior

Rick Blaettnar, John Byer,
Dannie
Carman,
Sharon

Yates .

Covert, Ron Cullums. Christine

Ebersbach, Steven Fife, James

Fish, Charlene Goeg lein, Tim

Herdman , Vicki Hood, Janet

Horkey, Jack Humphreys,

Rick Icenhower, John Jacobs,

Tracey Jeffers. Gary Jones.
Cl ifford Kennedy , Robert

Eastern High

Klein, Rena Lefebre, Cherie

Lightfoot, Dede McEwen, Scott
McKinney, Sandra Miller ,
Todd Morrison , Karen Mould,

honor pupils

Ray Mowery, Anita Musser,

Craig Nicinsky, Wes ley
Perkins . Barbara Peyton .
Kathy Qulvey, Linda ROS\'n·
baum, Tina Randol, Kellle.·

are announced

R'ough, Vicki Sheets, Tina
Smith, Dan Thomas, Greg

Tackett, .Oorsel Thomas, Mark

Sunday's

DIRECT FROM THE DISTRIBUTOR TO YOUI

Garnes , Linda

Tom Tucker, Janie Van Meter,
June Wamsley , Duane Weber,

EASTERN - The Eastern
Walker, Carla Whaley, Lynetta
Whittington, Ricky William. High School honor roll for the
4th grading period :
son. Terri Yeauger.
7th Grade - (AI-Tim
EIGHTH - Raymond An·
drews. Randy Arnold, Elaine Enevoldsen . Jeff Kimes,
Barnhart, Jar. Beaver, Greg Teresa Spencer; ( Bl -Brian
Becker, Dav d Blake, Vicki Bissell, Tddd Bissell, Jeanine
Blankenship, Pam Brauer, Craft, Rebecca Edwards,
Sherry Burchett. John Burdge. Steve Griffin, Ed Ho ller,
Jana Burson, Bruce Carman, Kaleen Millhone, Mark Norton,
Brenday Christian, Mary Lucy Shook. Randy VanMeter,
Colwell, Joyce Cook, Diana Blair Windon, Lila Young.
8th Grade - (A) - Karen
Davidson, Patty Dyer, Deloris
Elliott, Beverly Faulkner, Probert, Dawn Sorden, Debbie
Johnson, Tammy Spencer, Rusty Wiger; (B)Grand Canyon 64 Point loma Debbie
63
Johnson. Don Karr. Chuck Kay Balderson, Joe Boyles,
Ca i -Rvrside 75 Northrdg St 64
Brown,
Barbara
Kennedy. Julie Kitchen, Keith Terry
Bio la 96 Cal Lutheran 78
Buchanan, Sherrl Buchanan.
Landers.
Joe
McCloud,
Valerie
Cal Poly SLO 85 Occidental 66
Matson, Tina Miller , Shari Jeff Goebel. Susan Hannum,
Ctaremont .Mudd 51 Redlands 44
Keller,
Valerie
Mitch,
Jim Morrison, Tod Randy
Sacramnto St 78 Hayward St 75
MOf"row, Usa Nash, Sherri LaBonte, Laurie Matthews,
G Fox 98 Warner Pacific 76
Osborne, Kimberly Payne, Jeb Cynthia Pitzer, Lawrence
Chico St 81 SF . St. 70
LASt 71 cat Poly Pomona 70
Prater. Dwayne Priddy, Pooler, Roger Riebel, Sherri
Cai -Snta Barbra97 Wstmont 83
Stephanie Radford, Bobby StarchE . Wash . 70 c Wash 67
Freshman - IAI - Sonia
Rathburn, Rita Rousey, Mandy
Hawall95 Centenary 89
Sisson, Craig Swick, Randy Beaver, David Brown, Cathy
Puget Sound 87 Portland St 69

Roach 'Coach-of-Year'

Over 6000 sale prices
in Sears Winter Sale
Catalog now

..

USC

Vanderbjlt 102 Florida 83
Wash. St. 81 Wash 73
Wsn M ich igan 85 Toledo 66

SOCIETY TO MEET
The Meigs County Humane
SocietY. will meet Thursday,
' 'March 14 at 7:30 p. m. at
Middleport Village Hall. All
members are urged to attend
· and the public is welcome.

AulhDrized CATALOG SALES MERCHANT

72

Ill Benedict ine 88 Concordia 86
Olivt Nzrn 129 M t Vrnon Nazrn
70
Chicago St. 77 Wayne St. 76

Esn Ill 87 St Cloud St. 62
1- 111 Coli 81 Grenvll (Ill.) 68
Ashland 93 Wilberforce 67
Hanover 80 Defiance 70
Wsn Ill 93 Lores 76
Il l inois Tech 71 St Xavier 64
V incennes 82 Mineral Area 73
Grand Va l y St 63 Lk Superior
60
Millik i n 115 Wh eaton 99

Old Domin 83 Rndlph Macon 76
Tenn St 82 Tenn -Chattnoga 81
Consolations
Armstrng St 11 0 Alabama St 78
Augustan a 7 1 Mo .-Rol la 64
Baltimore 77 Morgan St 76
Cat-Davis 84 Cal -Irv ine 79
Esn . Ill 86 Yngstown St 80
Harlfrd 102 Sacrd Heart 91
Phila Te)ltle 60 Hrtwick 75
Southern U 103 W Georg a 98

TOHAVESURGERY
. Helena Baker, Middleport,
will undergo surgery at Holzer
" Medical Center this week.

..

deserted by its 5,000 civilian
residents.
"It's very bad," a Cambodian soldier at Prek Phneou
said. Asked if his unlt could
hold on, he said, "It's difficult
to say."
The rebels also laWIChed
several heavy infantry
assaults against Doeum Ampil,
a 7th division base near Prek
Phneou. The defending troops,
former U.S. mercenaries In
South Vietnam, repulsed the
attacks.
Cambodian President l.AJn
No! appeared before seven
foreign newsmen at his Phnom
Penh palace Sunday, ap·
parentiy to dispel rumors of his
ffight from the capital.
Rebel rockets and artillery
ripped Into Phnom Penh and
nearby Pochentong airport,
but failed to ball the massive
American airlift of supplies.
UPI photographer Chey
Sarun saw a rebel artillery
round explode near the airport,
killing five civlHans and
wounding seven.
Civlllan"!liloted U.S. planes
flew 13 missions into Pochenlong Sunday, carrying a total
of 613 tons of rice and 714 tons
of ammunition and fuel into the
war-tom city.
Foreign residents, fearful of
the city's possible fall to the
Q&gt;nununist..led Khmer Rouge
insurgents, fled the Cambodian
capital in Increasing nmnbers.

Championship

La Salle 92 Lafayette 85

..

Let's .rallc Soon

DAL£ (, WARNER

Result s

Bv United Press International
ACC Tournament

" Mrs. Goldie Marie Story, 66,
·" ·died Saturday at her Rt. 2,
Pomeroy residence.
She was preceded in death by
her father, Clyde Norris, and
an infant son, Clarence Story,
. .. Jr.
Mrs. Story was a member of
the Bearwallow Church. of
Christ, Hemlock Grove
Grange, the Walk-In Garden
Club and Alpha Delta Kappa
Teacher Sorority. She received
the Martha Holden Jennings
teacher award and was a 4-H
advisor for 10 years. She was a
member of the Teacher
'Associations of Eastern Local,
Meigs Q&gt;unty, Southeast Ohio,
Ohio, and the National
Association. She spent '!/ years
teaching in Meigs County, the
last 19 as fourth grade teacher
at the Tuppers Plains
, ,Elementary School In the
Eastern Local School District.
Surviving are her husband,
Clarence Story; a daughter,
Miss Rosalie Story, Rt. 2,
Pomeroy, also a school
teacher; her mother, Mrs. ;\da
Norris, Rt. 2, Racine; four
sisters, Mrs. Mlldred Le
Guollon, Pass Christian, Miss.;
Mrs. Erwin (Margaret)
Gloeckner, Racine; Mrs. Paul
· (Elsie) Davis, Parkersburg,
, and Mrs. Mary Ellen Moran,
Lomita, Calif.; two brothers,
'' ·ruchard Norriss, Carroll, and
• Alonzo Norris, Piqua; several '
· ' nieces and nephews, aunts and
" ·uncles also survive.
Funeral services will he at I
p.m. Wednesday at the Ewing
·' Funeral Home with Edward
White officiating. Burial will be
"' in Lelart Cemetery. Friends
· !"BY call at the funeral home at
any time.

Expires Midnight, March 12,1975

HAVE ANY PROBLEMS?

Saturday ' s College Basketball

Pomeroy dies

Phone: 247-2961

FOR THE

College Scores

ECC Tournament

Order Your
Southern

Services will be/ Wednesday
at II a.m. at Elcl\Jioltz Funeral
Home , Bellef~ntaine, and
burial will be' in Highland
Memorial
Gardens,
Bellefontaine; Calling hours
are Tuesdaxlrom 3 to 5 and 7 to
9 p.m.

Mrs. Story of

Dodgers win 3-2 but
Reds lose again, 7-1

Field officers reported heavy
infantry and mortar clashes
Sunday near the town of ~k
Phneou, six miles north of
Phnom Penh .
The government's crack 7th
infantry division stopped a
series of Insurgent assaults
against the town's western
defense line, the officers said.
Ambulances sped southward
with wounded during th~ day
while incoming mortar rounds
fell around the town, long

Mrs. James Morris, 76, dies/

Ray Griffin to defense

Barry scores 31 as
.Warriors nip Celts

·Tar Heels will represent
ACC in. NCAA Tournament
By .CIIIWl SCHERF

PHNOM PENH (UP!) Government forces held
Phnom Penh's perimeter
against rebel assaults, but
falled In a drive to expand the
besieged Cambodian capital 's
defense lines, field commanders said today.
U.S. planes dodged rockets
and artlliery to keep up a
round-the-clock airlift of rice,
ammunition and fuel, but
foreign residents fled the
capital in Increasing numbers.

on 14-14 overall

By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sporll Editor
MIAMI (UPI)- Weaver was sitting on the bench, taking a
momentary break without taking his eye off his ballplayers.
Some were going into the clubhouse to change their shirts
which had become soaked through .
Weaver's attention suddenly was attracted by a loud clumpclump on the dugout steps where one of the Baltimore Orioles'
newer members , pitcher Mike Torrez, was running up them
quickly on his way back to the field again . The Orioles obtained
Torrez and ouUielder Ken Singleton over the winter in the Dave
McNally deal with Montreal .
''Now there's a guy wbo was broken in ri~ht ." Weaver said,
watclling the retreating Torrez. "Generally when they go Into the
clu~Oillle to change their sweatshirt, they· sit in there 5-10
minutes. He got in there and got right out though. What it shows
is that (Gene) Mauch must have taught him right.
"Ballplayers are like anybody else. You gotta keep after most
of them. Not all, but most. I gotta go In there two-three times a
day sometimes, for example, and say, 'Okay, Blair, c'mon,
you've been In here five minutes already and you're breaking in
~gleton wrong! You're giving him bad habits."'
Not all of the Baltimore Orioles, perhaps none, are In love with
their manager, Earl Weaver, but respect him . He demands their
respect, and he gets it from them because of the way he
manages.
Earl Weaver's big thing Is communication .
The word everybody talks about today is communicate. You
hear it everywhere, not only In baseball. Jerry Ford is doing his
best to communicate with Q&gt;ugress and Henry Kissinger is
trying to get all parties In the Middle East to communicate with
each other.
Few individuals communicate any better than Earl Weaver.
You may not always agree with the ideas he communicates, but
he never leave you In the dark about them. Whether he's happy
or upset, Earl Weaver always lets you know it. Frank Robinson
says Weaver communicates better than any manager he has
ever played for and among those he did were Birdie Tebbetts,
Fred Hutchinson, Walt Alston, Bobby Winkles and Dick
Williams.
Earl Weaver is apJI'eciative of the compliment but claims the
Irick to all this business of communicating is knowing when to do

Perimeter line is held

F4756M

Collins, Ken Enevoldsen, Vicki

Epple, Cheryl Grilfln, Diana
Wagner, Danny WilT. Pamela Massar , Tammy Pitzer,
Willis, Tim WyanL Chris Dorothy Runyon. Becky
Windon, Lori Young; (Bl Yeauger.
Sheila Buchanan. Debbie
Veney,

Rita

Vining,

Jackie

Grade school
honors listed

Davis , Karen

Flck,

Brian

Matthews, Mark Moore, Jim

Steele, Rocky Van Meter, Nile
Wilson .

Sophomore - (A)- Kevin
Barton, Teresa Buckley ,
Teresa Carr, Teresa Edwards,
RACINE - The Racine Tammy Fitch, Kathy Follrod,
Elementary School honor roll Suzy Goebel, Carolyn Harper,
for the 4th six weeks period : Rachel Hunter, Jayne Smith,
Grade I - Lori Adams, Kerrl Jull Whitehead ; (B) - Janet
Beegle, Tracy Cleland, Tina Ambrose . Diana Benedum.
Forester, Mandy Hill, Melissa Patricia Boston, Julia Car·
lhle, Alana Lyons. Kelly Rizer, penter , Pam Congrove, Ellen
Kenda Rizer, Brad Robinson. Darst, Belinda Deeter, Robin
Robin Savage. Chad Sayre. Elkins, Melanle Enevoldsen,
Becky VanMeter.
Diana Epple, Cindy Dill.
Grade 2 - Rodney Beegle, Barbara Henderson, Susan
Alan Crisp, Ralph Fisher, Henderson, Mark Lawson,
Sandra Harden, Lois lhle, Larry Longenette, Tammy
David Powell, Dorset Ran- Nice, M ichael Smith, Bonnie
dolph. Lori Simpson, Lori Wood.
Wolfe. Sandra Deem.
Sonya
Junior · - (AI
Grade 3 - James Bush, Adams. Diana Atherton. Tom
Kevin Curfman, Teresa {,Hill, Avis, E;dna Boggs, Jeff Holler,
Vickie Holsinger , Rebecca

Cathy Maxer, Crissy Morlan,

Johnson , Linda Proffitt, Kathy Newel , George Pickens,
Katrina Snodgrass, Laren Diana Pullins, Diana Root,
Wolfe. Terri Wood.
Debbie Sanders, Patr icia
Grade 4 - Kathy Baker, Windon; (Bl - Betsy AmsZane, Beegle, Scott Justis, barv, Barbara Andrews,
Becky Lee, Clair Morris, David 'Tammy
Bah'-• ' Cheryl
Salmons, Tonja Salser, Lori B~nedum , Joe , Buchanan ,
Warden , Terry Patterson. Oenlse Dean, Niesel Duval,
David Parsons, Melanie Tim Kuhn, Melinda Evans,
Sherry Epple, Mark Mora,
Weese.
Grade 5 ~ Kim Bickers, Kim Diana Morris. Tom Reed.
Follrod, Allen Pape, jay Rees, Nancy Rldneour, Julia Schultz,
Melinda Salmons, Rita Stoler, Jan Wilson, Debbie Windon,
Kent Wolfe.
Lola Walker, Pa111 Millhone.
Grade 6- Peoav Bush. P"ul
Debbie
Senior • (A)
Cardone. Steve Circle, Sonja Boatright, Cathy Davis, Homer
Hill, Della Johnson. Bob B11i DeLong, Vicki Gaul, Marsha
Lee, Carl Morris, Becky Kimes, Regina Kimes. Marylu
Rhodes, Berta Rob inson , Mills , Karen Reed , Becky
Tammy Smith, Bryan Wolfe, Root. Mandi e Rose , ' Pam
Sams, Rhonda Savel , Boflnie
Paula Wolfe.
The above students r~ce l ved Welsh ; (B) - Doug Holsinger,
" B'' •or higher in each sUbject. Jim Lodwich, Craig Reed.

'

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•&lt;

..-

HURRY IN TODAY!

••
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1. Only Zen1th color TV inodels in this ad are ehg1ble and must be
del1vered from March 10 through . March 31, 1975, and are new
and un used
2. lhe Tracy-Wells Com pany reserves the right to make final
Judgement concerning application of the rules of this program .
3. The sale and del1very of each Zenith color TV cla1med is subject

to

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7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy,O., Monday , March.IO, 1975
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Helen Help

Us.

featured at meet

By Helen llottd

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They'rt' Frirnds '""t'" Not I. elvers

Dear Helen:
Yes 1 A new narnt• for livc-t o~ethc rs or sl&amp; p·toge thers is
needed ! (1 hkc your stij..tgesuo n: •· (.ond" or "].ct tu' for loverfriend . I
Jerr y and 1 are the best of frtends - !hut's ull . We' re m our
late 40s, have no morality hang 1l S , but l'rn recovermg from a
divorce,and he's a patient wtdower . Neither of us wa nts a sexual
thing at present .
We go everywhere together an d are considered a co uple.
Our crowd e njoys weekend tri ps. Smce th ey " assume ," and

we feel silly telling them otherwise, we rent a motel room wtth
twtn beds on these sma ll vacatwns - and mana ge ve ry well with

a casual goodnight kiss. It's nice for a single-a gam person to
learn that man, plus woman , plus overmght bedroo m doesn't
need to mean sex . until we want it. (Funny - MARRIED
people discovered lhts long ago.)
Now, the problem. One of our coup les has bought a mountam
cabin, and wants six of us I the others arc ail married) to come up
for weekends . But they only have three double beds.
At tltis late date. having sllared a mote l room frequently,
how cnt. we ruin their sleep plan (and risk disbelief, guffaws,
etc .) by confession that we don't actually .. well, you can see the
spot we're m.
If we reruse the mvitations, we risk rrlendshlps and closeness
with a group we like. What to do ? - NOT "LONDS" 1But wh&lt;l
will believe us now' I
Dear Not Londs:
II neither of you has the urge , what 's the difference between
twin bed c.: in a mvtel r n.~m and a double ln a moun tam cabin ? The
same t hinr happet". (You satd so yourself ·- "man, plus
woman, piu&gt;, vernight 1room doesn't need lo mean sex." I
II Jerry is mc:ely J' lt tient and you still aren 'I ready (as 1
suspect ), then conftde ir ::our hostess privately. Even though U
disturbs her d eep-plar&gt;, she'll ,underst&lt;lnd. Really, no-sex
arrangements aren't unheard-of, you lrnow.

But if you're BOT'-1 wavering and wanting, well , this may be
the start 01 a l•e~t utiful Londsh ip. (As a liberated semi-square,
I'm hoping it lead• to a lovely marriage.) - H.

Arr ange ments of forced
branches mcluding flowering
almond , qum ce, jonquils ,
cherry branches, forsythia,
pussy wtli ow, and fan tat!
willow were displayed by
members of the Pomeroy
Garden Club meeting recently
at the home of Mrs. J 0
Roedel.
Mrs . Ro edel opened the
meetmg
with devotions
followed by the Lord's Prayer.
An invitation to the Winding
Trail Garden Cl ub 's open
meeting March 11 at 8p.m. was
announced a long with the
Region 11 meeting of the Ohio

A.ssociatton of Garden Clubs in
Mariett&lt;l, April 19, at the
Ba~tist Church .
Mrs. Roy Betzing reviewed
articles written by Katherine
B. Welker on caladiums, coleus
and wild foods .
She said caladiums grow
from tubers and unlike the

Competition is·theme less
Vtsuai arts. literature and
music will again be the
ca tegories fea tured in the
annual PTA cultural arts
competition .
This year there is no theme.
Judging on the local PTA unit
level should be completed the
middle of April with the win-

+++
Dear Helen:
You seem to like amusing anecdotes. Here's one taken from
the Hartford (Conn .) Times.
A local widow of English descent made reservations at a
Spanish inn vilj..mail, and inquired whether or not there was a
W.C. (water closet) near her bedroom.
'The proprietress hadn't heard the term "W.C." so she
consulted with the Parish priest, who told her it must mean a
"Wayside Chapel. " From Spain, the O)l1ler wrote:
"'The W.C. of which you inquire ts located about nine miles
from our pension and is open three times a wee k and is in a love ly
grove of trees. It seats 50 people and, in fact, my daughter met
her husband there. You are for tunate in having it so close fo r
many people live so far away that they can only get there once in
six months which upsets th em greatly. They are at present
making a collection for new plush seats as the present ones, while
quite good do have holes in them. The acoustics are excellent and
the slightest sound can be hea_rd. Trusting this is the information
you desire.." - READER
Dear Reader :
Seems to me I've heard this stot·y before. but from a different location. Anyway, it's good enough to repeat. Thanks for
brightening up the column . - H.

+++
Dear Helen :
I disagree with those women who say it's inunodest to
breast.feed a baby In public . I say they aren't modest about
looking! 'They're too thick-headed to accept something that is
natural and normal, so why don 't they just turn their heads in·
slead of complaining to an advice eol wm 'I
What would they have done if they had Jived next door to
Adam and Eve• My only advice is "Stop staring!'' - D. W. (age
17)

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P0 11y' S p Olll
8V POLLY CRAMER

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Rust on clothes
resists a remedy
POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - ·n,ere are
' small rust spots on .nearly all
my clothes, especially on the
sheets. Is there something I
'could use to remove them?
Lemon juice did no good. Many
thanks. - LENA
DEAR LENA-If the lemoo
jui ce, salt aod suoshioe
treatment ha s not helped ,
aoother old remedy for suc h
spots is boiling white things iu
a solution of cream of tartar
aod water. Maybe there is irou
in your water and using a
water softener would help ia
the luture.-POLL Y.
DEAR POLLY - During
these days when energy co nservation is mandatory use an
old-fashioned broom or dust
mop for small clean-up jobs .
'This will save the energy used
by the vacuum and you, too,
will be saved the tin1e and
effort necessary to get out the
sweeper . Gives you some
exercise, too. Beat a small (one
egg) cake mix by hand to save
time and electricity and dishwashing, too. An extra bonus !)lis helps firm' up those
muscles in your upper arm. MRS. R. J . S.
DEAR POLLY - I hope my
Pointer will be helpful to

economical. Due~ lln~ frk k fur
me. Ha ppy s havin ~ lo a ll. -

MAURICE.
DEAR POL LY - Wh en
running water from the hot
water tap and waiting for tt to
be hot I save \he first. cool
water in an -attractive pitcher
and leave it on the counter to
use for watering my house
plants. The water is the
correct temperalure for this
(whi ch may not be done Wltil
the next morning) and 1 am
(.'O ilSCl'ving n natura l resource.
- N.W.S.
DEAR POLLY - With sugar
the price "'it 'is today I was
thrilled over a rece nt
discovery . I had some bro\111
sugar that had been on hand
quite a while and was hard as a
rock. My husband suggested
putting t! in a plastic container.
covering the sugar with a
double paper towel that had
been soaked in water, put ling
the lid 011 tightly and storing it
in the refrigerator. I resoaked
the paper towel twice, as the
water evaporated, and the
sugar soon became as soft as
when bought.- MARIE .
You will receive a dollar U
l'olly uses you~ lavorile
homemaking idea, Pet Pee••e,
Polly's Problem nr solution to a
problem . Write Polly in care of

"hubbies" and olher shavers. · this nrwspaper.

For years I used inexpensive
old-fashioned round m ug
shaving clocks but the stores
no longer sell them due to the
lack of demand. There are
other fancier, sweeter smelling
but more expensive brands but
every cent counts with us these
days, Now I cut 'l ~;lath-size
,cake of soft white ~ in half
and use . this in my mug.
E'erhaps it is not as fragrant as
• some but used with hot water it
Is just as &lt;udsy, if not sndsier,
and ~ ~ertainly '
more

SHRINER TO MEET
Mary Shrine 37, White Shrine
of Jerusalem, will meet at 8
p.m . Friday at the Pomeroy
Masonic Temple. Members are
reminded
th at
rituals
belo ['ing to ti1P .&lt;hrine are to
bt, lill.lC!; Hl [t,

,ht.:

\\Ufth:

scribe that night. New officers
will be elected and all reports
are to be given . Potlu ck
refreshments' will be served.

majority of indoor foliage
plants they must be allowed to
rest. Forcing growth past its
normal time usually results in
the death of the tuber, she
noted.
The new coleus hybrids of
today are being used as
specimen plants in the most
elegant locations, Mrs. Betzing
pointed out. 'There are the erect
growing plants as well as the
trailing types, she said, and the
foliage of some are brilliant
red centered with rosy pink.
Coleus cuttings root quickly
in plain water and full sun is
being recommended lor
compact growth , Mrs. Betzing
reported.
During tbe social hour , a
salad course was served by the
hostess to the members and
four guests, Mrs. Charles
Neuman, Mrs. Edward Foster,
Mrs. Dana Swift and Mrs.
Lorain Sterrett.

MONDAY
FATHERS to be honored
when Pomeroy Ele mentary
PTA meets at 7:30p.m. at the
school. Pubitc invited .
SAFF.TY program on "Safe
!Jf!tng" by Wayne Upton and
"Lifty," the ltttle wooden man,

mng entries in the three
ca tegories to .be turned into
either Wilma Parker, Chester,
Charlene
Hoeflich ,
or
Pomeroy, co-chairwomen.
Only schools where there is
an active PTA or PTSA are
eligible to enter the competition.
The grade categories are
primary, grades one, two and
three ; intermediate, four , five
and six ; junior high, seventh,
eighth and ninth; and senior
high, lOth, lith and 12th.
The divisions of competition
are visual arts, including
paintings, drawings, collages
and sculpture ; literature including poetry, essay, short
story or drama; and music 1

scores of original composition
with or without words.
The rules specify that all
entries must be tbe original
work of the student and that all
entries must be the work of one
when Riverview PTA meets at student since gro up co m7:30 p.m. at the sc hool.
positions will not be accepted.
UN ITED Method ist Women None of the entries, art,
ul Hea th United Methodtst literature or music need be
Church for 6:30 p.m . potluck produced in the classroom.
dinn er. Me 1:1t , desser t and
The objective of the cultural
coffee to be provided. Those arts program is to provide an
attending should ta ke their own opportunity for children to use
table se rvtce. Hostesses are their t&lt;lients and creativity to
Emma Wayland, Frteda express their beliefs and
M&lt;ldt, and Beulah Hayes.
portray their emotions through
their own o,riginal works of art,
TUESDAY
to emphasize the value of and
KYGER Creek Band Boos ters to encourage cultural arts
meet at 7:30p.m. in the band education in the schools.
room. Ali parents are urged to
attend.
ME IGS CHAPTc;H ~J VtiV.
Tuesday 7:30 p.m. at chapter
hom e on Butternut Ave .
Mrs. Elizebeth Cloud was
Refreshments. All members recent Sunday dinner guest of
urged to attend.
Mr. and Mrs. Forrest Thomas,
AM E R 1 CAN
Legion Gallipolis.
Auxiliary, Lewis Manley Post
Riley Perdue called on
263, 7 p.m. home of Mrs. Willard Woodruff recently .
Sherman Butler, Rutland.
Mr. and Mrs. Earnest Welch
spent
a day with Mrs. Myrtle
ANNUAL open
house
Chrislin,
Chesapeake, 0. They
meetin g of Windin g Tra il
(Jardt&gt;n Club 8 p.m. at Grace were accompanied by Mrs.
F.pisco jJal Churoh parish Elsie Oiler and son.
Mrs . Verla Knight returned
house. Pomeroy. Mrs. Nan
Moore will show slides end home after a week's visit with
speak on Hawaiian triv : relatives in Columbus.
Eulaiah
Bennett
has
refreshments. All clubs and
home
from
a
month's
returned
public invited .
vacation in Texas. She visited
RACiNE Lodge No. 461 , F her brothe r , Wilbur Parsons,
and AM wtli meet on Tuesday Pasadena and sister, Ruth
eYemng at 7: 30. All master Chenoweth and family, Pecos,
masons arc mvitcd.
Tex . while there.
LADIES AuKtltary , Olive
Mrs. Ted Harder and lady
Township Fire Department, fr iend, Columbus, called on her
mec !.&lt; at ftre butiding in Reeds- pa rents, Mr. and Mrs. Dale
ville. 7 p.m. Tuesday . Ali wtves Gleason recently .
of fir emen and interest ed
residents of Olive Township President Elected
im·ited . Future meetings will
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - Lawbe held the second Tuesday of rence Purdy of Akron will head

Vinton

ea ch month,

COUNTYWIDE Meettng of
Meigs Bi ce nt ennia l Com mtsston, 7:30p.m. Tuesday in
the cou rtrOom . Repre sen .
t.u!tvrs from all orgamzati ons
urged to allend
OHIO ETA PH I Chapter,
Beta Sig ma Phi Sorority ,
theater party at Athens.
Members to meet at 6:15 on the
upper parking tot in Pomeroy.
XI GAMMA Mu Chapter,
Bela Sigma Phi, 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday, home or Beverly
Long, Middleport . Cultural
report on friendship by Linda
Riffle. Annie Chapman .
Hostesses, . Mrs. Long and
Donna Byer.
MEIGS Tops Club, 7 p.m.
Tuesday at the Amertcan
Legion Hail, Midd leport.
WEDNESDAY
WHITE Rose Lodge Wednesday, 1:30 p.m. American
Legion Hall, Middleport.
POMERO~ Lions Club, noon
Wed nesdo v at the Meigs Inn.
PO :tlF:ROY Ch ap ter 80,
Royal Arch Masons, 7:30p.m.
Pomeroy Masonic Temple,
loll owed by Boswqrth Council
46, 8:30p.m.
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.Green Thumb
Notes.

• • •

A weekly feature of Metgs
County Garden Club members

Ferns making a comeback
By Mrs. Karl Grueser
Wlldwood Garden Club
Ferns are a flowerless plant but they are making a strong
oomeback after being forgotten for many years.
'The green foliage of the fern last much longer than the plant
that has a blossom and can be as equally decorative. Our native
kinds are hardy in a wide-range of climates and exposures. 'The
best are widely available from nurseries specializing in wild
plants. Early spring is by far the most successful time to transplant.
Ferns make superb ground covers although you should not
limit their use lor just this purpose. 'They do much lor a summer
garden, given adequate moisture and some shade. In such spots
where ali season appearance is so important, evergreen ferns
are the best choices.
Deciduous ferns are good late season plants lor gardens
where early spring bulbs have been planted in quantity. Groups
of ferns behind the bulb plantings revel in the developing shade
and helps hide the bare ground when the bulb foliage has
withered away. All ferns must have a good supply of water,
particularly where they are hit by sunshine.
H you want ferns in drier areas, you must hose faithfully
during dry seasons. Most ferns want humus in the soil so add peat
moss or leaf mold freely when planting. Some ferns like a touch
of limestone. 'They will be happy near the house foundation where
lime seeps out of the mortar creating a mini-world of basic soil.
Those that like crevices may be planted between two rocks.
Make sure the spot is well drained. A mulch of small rocks or
even pebbles helps the surrounding soil stay moist and in a woodland garden you can help them along by burying limestone.
A.s for house ferns, probably the most common is the Boston
(Neproiepis) still found in many homes. It likes a bright room but
no direct sunlight. Too much light causes the leaves to turn pale
green. It likes plenty of water and elbow room. One of the
toughest ferns to grow indoors is the maidenhair !em. It
resembles tbe leaves of the ginkgo tree . It caMot st&lt;lnd dry hot
rooms, but likes damp shady places.
'The rabbit's foot fern gets its name from the fact that its
leaves and rhizomes are furry like a rabbit's foot .
'The bird's next !em has a strap-like foliage and gets name
from brown nest like appearance of the growth.
Syringe your ferns once a week. Handpick and destroy any
seale, mealy bugs or slugs present. Give them a cool room and
high hwnidity.
A few other ferns are the Christmas fern which requires a
good soil, the walking fern which requires shade,the rattlesnake
fern which requires shade in a rich moist woodland soil and has a
succulent look. Another attractive fern is called the purple cliff.
It requires semi-shade, limestone soil, and grows about 15 inches
high. It has leathery blue-green leaves which resemble the
evergreen fern .
Ferns are easily propagated by division. Ferns which grow
from crowns usually spread slowly and can be carefully pried
·apart. Do buth jobs as early in spring as possible. The center of
the clump eventually dies but new plants will form around it.

Historical tour planned
A tour of the Ohio Historical
Museum and the restored
village has been planned for
the Meigs County senior
citizens by the Council on
Aging.
The tour is scheduled for
March 20 and the cost of the
trip is $10 which includes the
bus fare, tour of the museum
and dinner at the hotel in the
restored village. 'The buses will
leave the Center at 8 a.m. and
will leave Columbus to return
home at 3:30 p.m. in the af.
ternoon.

• Several seats are still
available and anyone interested ·in making Ule trip is
asked to calliJie center.

BY MARIE ALEXANDER
•Steven Payne, l"ho is
stationed at Ft. Knox, Ky.
spent a weekend with his
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Beecher Davis and brother,
Gorden Payne. He also visited
his other grandparents, Mr.
and Mrs. E. C. Payne and other
relatives.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Ewing,
Columbus, spent Saturday
recently with her parents, Mr .
and Mrs. W. G. Casto.
Ronald Bobo, Jr., sister Mrs.
Norma Waites, Canal Winchester ,

were

here

recent Sunday dinner guests of
Mrs. Frances Courtright,
Laurelville. 'They were joined
there by Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Schultz, Columbus.
.
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Isaac spent
a weekend with their daughter,
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hudson,
Nitro, W. Va .
Mr. and Mrs. John Stevens
attended the "Grand Ole
Opry" at Nashville, Tenn.
recently.

DRY
CLEAI\~ING

DR. SELIM BLAZEWICZ M.D.

(ON REQUEST)

•
DAY

1

SERVICE ON

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SHIRT

JOHN RIDGWAY D. 0.

DALE DUTI'ON

In by 10, Out at !i

Robinson's
DRY CLEANING
LAUNDRY

m;::::r.o~n;o~:o:;..-.

'•

The Board of Health speaks for you, Meigs Countians, in
health department affairs. Its members are your feliow' citizens,
men from all walks of community life. They know your community's health needs.
These men are indirectly chosen by the people. The District
Advisory Council, which consists of the 12 presidents of the
township trustees, and five mayors of the municipalities, meet
the first part of March to choose a member of the board. Each
board member represents a section of the county.
In a General Health Dtstrict, one of the members must be a
physician for a total of six, four members, one physician, and one
health commissioner.
The board of health can be compared to the directors of a

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ARRIVING DAILY ...

Health department personnel
have varied, important duties

·:

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"l
~.

~:

she is the liaison between the
BEULAH STRAUSS
Adm inistrative Ass ista nt- state departments and the
Secretary to the board of public for the commissioner
Health and Registrar of Vit&lt;ll and the board; prepares and
Statistics. It is her respon- maintains the budget, does the
sibility to maintain the office secretarial work for the
and supervise the personnel. commissioner and the board.
Working under the board of Attends stale, county and
health and the health com- group meetin gs at the
missioner, Mrs. Stra uss acts as recommendation of the board
fis cal offtcer of all fund s and commissioner; acts as
(county, ·state and federal): receptionist in th e health
department, issues licenses,
issues birth and death certificates requested, co nrers
with county officials as the
need arises and as registrar
Ambulance fees
maintains the vital statistics.
GENE LYONS - Deputy
Clerk-Deputy Registrar is one
often covered
of the clerical st&lt;lff assisting
Mrs. Strauss and other staff
Residents of Southeast Ohio members with reports and
Assists
the
should read their health in- licensing.
Sanitarian
with
routine
surance policies to see if
emergency ambulance fees are correspondence. Has contact
covered, according to the with the public. Her duties are
Southeast Ohio Emergency varied and many. A.s Deputy
Medi cal Service. Since in- Registrar she assists and fills
surance poltc&lt;es vary greatly in for the registrar.
HILTON WOLFE - Meigs
in the services they cover, each
County
Sanitarian, collects
individual policy must be
public
and
private wat er
evailated on its own merit.
Mos t EMS ambulance samples, provides guidance to
charges are paid by some persons needing assist&lt;lnce on
source other than the con- sanitary problems ; inspects
sumer. It has been SEOEMS food service operations, inexperience that 32.9 pet. of spects school buildings, inbillings are paid by the con- vestigates animal bites, insumer; 26.7 pet. by pnvate vestigates and seeks to rectify
in surance ; 26.4 pet. by nuisance ccmplaints, works
med icare; ll.4 pet. by Welfare with st&lt;lte personnel on dumps;
and 2.6 pet. by Workman's lays out and inspects septic
ta nks and leac hing fields;
Compensation.
makes inspections requested

!~

Quality Furniture
at Reasonable Prices

::k

BAKER FURNITURE

:~

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,~:~
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Jf

Middleport, Ohio

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~;;::~::::::::.-;:::::::::::::::::=:::~;::::::;::;:::::::::::::~:;:.-::::::::::::::::::::::?~:=::::::m~::w::~-=:;::.;::::..v.:::

HILTON WOLFE SR.

DORIS BAILEY

.·:·;,

'The Senior Citizens Chorus
under tbe direction of Mrs. Ben
Neutzling will present an
Easter Cantata at. the Heatlj
United Me\hodist ChtD'ch in
Middleport Palm Sunday,
March 23, at 3 p.m.
'The cantata is "'The Story of
Jesus" and includes songs of
Calvary, songs of the
crucifn&lt;ion and songs of the
resurrection. 'The public is
invited to attend.
TO HAVE SURGERY

can't work,
P. J. PAULEY

307 Spring Ave., Pomeroy
d

PH. 992-2318

ltJlliNATIONWIDE

u~~~~'!c.!

fiMIOI\Wio. lrilwl wl l U\llora/ICI CO IIIIIM f
flll tOIIWt lla l ot. I IIMi fi i\C I C~lll)
~~ Co h• lfltlolt, Olho

"011!•

OPTOMETRIST '

• D.

OFFICE HOURS9:3010I2, 2 TOS(CLOSE AT
NOON ON THURS.)- EAST COURT 'ST.,
P()MEROY.
' '

CARY GORBY

But, there's another tremendously valuable natural resource over the horizon along
needed to
ease
the Atlantic Coast. Energy. Energy that is

our nation·s worsenmg energy crisis.
We must not sacrifice one resource for

the other.

Smce 1968,
Columbia..G.as has
been pa rticipating m
costl y geo physica l surveys
off the Atlantic Coast. The tests
range from Nonh Carolina to Nova
Scotia . We've also joined a 25 million
c..l ollar dn lling exploration
program off Canada's east coast
a promi~ing sc urce o f clean, naturai
gas to help case the energy crisis:

Tuberculosis division

Two major functions of the human body often neglected for
various reasons, especially in small children are eyes and ears.
Since the P.O.D. and D.O.P clinics were initiated in 1969
approximately 38,513 school age children were screened for
hearing and vision .
.
· Out of these screenings approximately 300 were referred for
eye surgery and approximately 325 for ear surgery. In the year
197., 6,695 children were screened in hearing and vision. Ont of
that total, 27 were referred for surgery for ears and 7 were
referred for surgery for eyes . Four P.O.D. clinics were held
during the year; 22 were referred for speech therapy, lour
referred to Ohio University lor further evaluations, four referred
to pediatriciajlS, 21 medication,s were· given, three referred' to
speech clinic, one cyst found on a vocal cord, one dental relertal,
one vocal nodule, five post op check up, and live mixed hearing
losses vvere found .
Tliere were 3 D.O.P. clinics held, 14 were referred for
glasses, 8 normal exams, medication lor infection, one referred
for pediatric exam, and three amblyopia patches were
recommended.
,
The technician, Marge Manuel, refers all children with
suspected hearing and vision defects to Mrs. Bailey, L,.P.N. lor
follow up visits. She also gets referrals from private physicians
and speech therapists of the Meigs County School System.
The aim af the program is to detect children with ear infections and-&lt;&gt;r hearing losses or eye defects as earl.y as possible
and restore or preserve hearing and vision by using all available
legitimate resources .

c&lt;\.uMBIAGAS

by the State Liquor Control and other services, establishes
Board ; checks fair booths, con tinuou s care for the
takes periodic samples of alcoholic offender, establishes
water at Middleport Municipal good cooperation with police
Swimming Pool , and inspects departments, courts and other
privately owned parks and agenctes wh o assist in
campsites as well as trailer rehabilitation of th e alcoholic
parks.
and advtses alcoholics of the
CATHERINE E. I.OWERY, laws and responsibilities. He
RN - Public health nurse, now works with the families of
resigned , visi ted the homes of alcoholics.
the til where she carried out the
DORIS BAILEY, L.P.N.
recommendations of private Comprehensive Hearing and
physicians guided the family Vision Nurse, works out of the
on the care of the patten!, local health department. She is
conducted the immunization in charge of se tting up P.O.D.
program in the schools , (Hearing &amp; Speec h) and
coun seled with school officials, D.O.P. (Vision ) clinics. She
carried out the directives of the co ntacts parents by home
state agenctes, and offered vtstts, phone or letter. Follows
services in nursing and rest up wlth doctors, optometrists
homes. As of this time the and state personnel, issues
health department is without authorizations lor assistance to
the services of the nurse.
famih es requiring financial
REV. w. H. PERRIN help, works with the technician
Director Counselor of th e who is doing heanng and vision
Meigs County Alcoholic and f- screenings in the school~. She
Drug Abuse Program. 'This also works wtth the denttst by
program is sponsored by the referring children who have
local health department but been Sfen in one of the P.O. D.
funded through the Ohio or D.O.P. clinics that need
Department of Health. Rev . dental work done.
Perrin works with a chosen
MARJORIE MANUEL committee to assist persons Hearing and Vision Technician
and families of these people works along with Mrs. Bailey.
having an alcoholic or drug She is the 'technician that goea
problem.
into the Meigs County Schools
WILLIAM BAER - Court and screens the children in
Field Worker under the Meigs vision and hea rin g .. Mrs .
Co unty Alcoholic Program . Manuel was tratned by the
The
Program provides O.D.H. to detect hearing and
rehabi'litative serv&lt;ee rather vision defects and to refer
than punitive incarceration. these children to Mrs. Bailey
Cases are referred to the field lor follow up visit.
worker who conducts classes

Jane Brown, R. N., tuberculosis nurse, is paid from the
Tuberculosis levy fund. She does ali the skin testing in the
county, provides therapy and guidance to ali tuberculosis
patients, cont&lt;lcts and s~pects. She visits the homes, nursing
bomes, jail, infirmary and hospital wben necessary; wor)&lt;s w1th
Roy Donnerberg, M. D., chest clinician from Columbus, on the
chest clinics ; maintains Ule coonty wide Tuberculosis ~ister
and is the liaison between the doctors and the public. Please
notice the tuberclilosis clinic is now lOcated in the former
children's home building, Pomeroy, with the county board of
education.
Ruth Grindstaff. is employed as the secretary of the
Tuberculosis Division. Working for M~s , Brown, she maintains
files, assists in notifying people of Chest Clinics, assists during
the clinics, her duties are many and varied during the year. She
transcribes the clinicians impressions of patients after each
clinic; she handles all records; her office is in the old children's
borne building on Mulberry Heights. She is also paid out of the
Tuberculosis levy fund.

'

RUTH GRINDSTAFF

...'

\
WILLIAM BAER

MARJORIE MANUEL

R esponse time vital, important
JANE BROWN
•

Deaths - Total 155 : Male 86, Female 69.
No births in county due to no rna ternity ward.
Causes of death:
Cardiac Complex
64
Cerebral Vascular Accident
18
Cancer
14
Shock
39
Drowning
2
Se.
5
Uremia
1
Pnewnonia
7
Meningitis
I
Accident
I
SUicide
I
Other
2
TOTAL
155
Health Department FlnancW Statement
The Department worked under a budget' of $33,3Q3.6(1,.1or the
year ol1974.
·

.~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::*:~:~:::::::::::::::::::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::~~:::::::::::;:~::::::::8:::::::~:::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;::::;:;;:::::::::--:::::::::::~::::::.::::::::::::::::::;;;;:;:;;:;w~::::,

~

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~

(!!!!: : A verage SEO'v
n1r~iS bz.llzs· $37.07
•
111

~

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~~

"Response time ' ' during a ambulance statw n, If not i:i:
An emergency ambulance bill from Southeast Ohio's Emergency
~
medical emerge ncy ts the already there, starting and
:~
length of time it takes the moving the vehicle and time on !l!l Medical Service ISEOEMSl costs the average consumer S3d7.07. Rat0es
the
road.
..
are $25 with an additional one dollar a mile added beyon . 11 15 m e
lll
squad (technicians and amResponse
ltme
totals
for
limit.
not
tocxceed
a
maxi
mum
of$50
as
long
as
the
patient
stays
In
the
~
bulance ) to arrive at the
SEOEMS
average
fr
om
10.1
patient's side after the call for
:::: seven-county re gion.
· ,
,
·
\:'\
. minutes from station with staff ::;:
help is placed.
Co mpare the average cost of $47.07 for emergency medlc.a l care to
With the Southeast Ohio full-ltme around the clock, to !ill , the average $20 to $25 to have a permanent waver, $25 to have a car
•
Emergency Medical Servic~, a 16 .3 minu tes for stations
j;: towed , or $30 to have one tuned.
•
~
normal res ponse entail s stalled by part-time volun~:::..
...~-:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·
:·:·:·:·::::::::::::::::::::::::::--:::::::~~::::9·~::::::::::::::..-.:.:::~::::
:.-::::::~)~ .• ~· . , '! ~,..,
techn icians arriving a t the teers .
..:&lt;"_._......
•••·.······:·:·:·:•!•!•!•!·:·:
•••••••• .... . . ........
. ..........
.

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Gu is p,..dous, pun •nerv .. _1150 11 wiRIJ.

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CATHERINE WWi!:RY

BEULAH STRAUSS

Vital statistics of 1974

clinics begun ill 1969

Some of America's most beautiful resort areas lie along th e Atlantic Coast. And no
one wants to mar their beau ty. It's much too valuable a natural resource.

Ail domestic so urces of energ¥ must be
developed to meet our growing nati onal
fuel needs. The potential of the Atl antic outer
continental shelf is great and can be real ized
in an en vironmentally safe manner. The
Atlantic coast ~reas depend on a prosperous
~me rica . And a prosperous America
depends on energy.

GENE LYONS

Eyes, ears checked by

Keep·America
beautiful, but keep
America alive! ·

And we needn't. Modern techniques for
under-water drilling and deii,ery of fuel have
dimiAated the danger of permanent
environmental damage. An offshore drilling
rig won't even be seen from the shore.
And offshore production will reduce the
need for increased tanker tranlc.

board to fill the vaca ncy created by the death of Virgil Atkins.
The medical gwdance and community health programs are the
responsibility of a health commissioner, if one is available. The
doctor on the board of health is the medical advisor in the absence of a commissioner .
Rich or poor, you are eligible for the department's services.
The nurse strives for better health for the community. The
sanitarian's aim is the best possible community cleanliness and
safety, abatement of all undesirable health hazards. The administrative assistant and deputy clerk handles health records
licenses, clerical duties and gives and receives health statistics.
The registrar and deputy registrar handles vital statistics.
The Meigs County Board of Health and Health Department

large enterprise. They hire health department personnel,
determine the duties, fix the salaries (within the limitation of the
budget which is approved by the Budget Commission), make
decisions on health programs, develop programs which can
improve county health conditions, work with other agencies
toward betterment of community health, through the workings of
the staff of the health department.
The board of health endeavors to seek the cooperation of
citizens groups to work toward improvement of community
health.
During the past year Selim J. Blazewicz, M. D., resumed
duties of Health Commissioner which was being temporarily
held by John Ridgway, D. 0. Carl Gorby was appointed to the

are and should continue to be the principal source of health information and education lor Meigs Countians. Public health
means working wiiJI people . A satisfactory healtl) education
program is designed for all types and classes of people, eaeh with
his own problem, sueh as prenatal, school health problem,
contagious disease, handicapped children and adulls, adequate
!lousing, care of disease, Industrial problems, disposal of
sewage, water purification and public safety.
The personnel of your local health department are people
well trained in their jobs to meet various oncoming situations.
However, there is one thing the board of health and the beallh
department can.1ot predict, Ule health of our community in the
future. Health' is affected by the way we work, our environment
and the kind of society in which we live.
We, the Board of Health and Health Department, in the
public health field, wiD continue to work to find solutions for
every mounting health problem of a changing society.

VI
H."""'

j

~~:

ROBERT BEEGLE

».~" --v·~

Fresh new
, merchandise,
beautiful sofas,
chairs, bedroom
suites.

~

KERMIT WALTON

W. H. PERRIN

FINISHING

....•.-.•.......•n.•l'.w.•,•,•
.,. .,.,.,.,.,•.;.·,•8.o'
"«·······-.····
_•.,...... o•NA·
r.: _.__,_.;oxo;o~.o;o;o.-.:•. ,•,•,•l';,•,o;•,•.v.'.•.•,•:O.".,
y,•,•,.,-.,,:;,.,•,•&amp;o,
!o'•'•'o'o"o'•.'•'•'N./',

'.

Annual report of the Meigs County Health Department

2 HR.

on

Saturday recently to visit their
father, Ronald Bobo, a patient
in Holzer Medical Center. They
also visited their mother and
aunt, Mrs. Bell Terry and
Patty of Ewington. Their
mother is staying with Mrs.
Terry while her husband is in
the hospital.
Mr. and Mrs. Victor Casto
have returned home after
visiting their daughter, Mr.
and Mrs. Fred Pitts and
daughter, Carrolton, Ga.
Mrs . Virgie Houck and
several women from Gallipolis
attended the Ohio Missionary
Society at Xenia , 0 ., a recent
Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. Ronnie Knoble,
Lima and Mr. and Mrs. Ro!Ulie
Lanier , and son, Lancaster 1
spent a weekend here with
their parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Leo Lanier.
The piano students of Mrs.
Kathleen Green presented a
piano recital at the Fellowship
Chapel recently.
Mr. and Mrs . George
Johnson , Gallipolis, and Mrs.
Cora McGhee , iocai, were

board of one doctor, four members

Chorus to sing
Easter cantata

Tracy Lynn Smith, five year
old daughter of Mr. and Mrs .
Howard Smith , Lincoln Hill,
Pomeroy, will be admitted to
O'Bieness
Memorial Hospital ,
the Ohio Council of Fraternal
Athens,
Tuesday,
and will
and Service Organizations lor
undergo eye surgery there on
the next year.
Wednesday.
He was elected preSident at
the gr oup's 20th annual
meeting here Saturday to
succeed Myron Fisher of
When you
Wapakoneta.
One of the featured speakers
was E. Gene Fournace of
we can help
Canton , past Elks national
pay
the'bifls!
commander and senior vice
president of tbe Ohio Power
Ash yo vr Nat1on wiOa .-gent
lor the prescri pt ion . A
Co., who was named fraternal" d1tab1hty 1nc ome p!1n ·
is! of the year.

Restaurant Fire
DAYTON (UPI)- A fire at .
Anions Restaurant in subtD'ban
Mad River.Township Saturday
caused an estimated $3)0,000
damage to the restaurant and
adjoining Sheridan Gateway
Motel.
Authrlties said no one was
injured in lbe blaze.

Community's health needs served by

·Vinton

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7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy,O., Monday , March.IO, 1975
''

.

Helen Help

Us.

featured at meet

By Helen llottd

• •

They'rt' Frirnds '""t'" Not I. elvers

Dear Helen:
Yes 1 A new narnt• for livc-t o~ethc rs or sl&amp; p·toge thers is
needed ! (1 hkc your stij..tgesuo n: •· (.ond" or "].ct tu' for loverfriend . I
Jerr y and 1 are the best of frtends - !hut's ull . We' re m our
late 40s, have no morality hang 1l S , but l'rn recovermg from a
divorce,and he's a patient wtdower . Neither of us wa nts a sexual
thing at present .
We go everywhere together an d are considered a co uple.
Our crowd e njoys weekend tri ps. Smce th ey " assume ," and

we feel silly telling them otherwise, we rent a motel room wtth
twtn beds on these sma ll vacatwns - and mana ge ve ry well with

a casual goodnight kiss. It's nice for a single-a gam person to
learn that man, plus woman , plus overmght bedroo m doesn't
need to mean sex . until we want it. (Funny - MARRIED
people discovered lhts long ago.)
Now, the problem. One of our coup les has bought a mountam
cabin, and wants six of us I the others arc ail married) to come up
for weekends . But they only have three double beds.
At tltis late date. having sllared a mote l room frequently,
how cnt. we ruin their sleep plan (and risk disbelief, guffaws,
etc .) by confession that we don't actually .. well, you can see the
spot we're m.
If we reruse the mvitations, we risk rrlendshlps and closeness
with a group we like. What to do ? - NOT "LONDS" 1But wh&lt;l
will believe us now' I
Dear Not Londs:
II neither of you has the urge , what 's the difference between
twin bed c.: in a mvtel r n.~m and a double ln a moun tam cabin ? The
same t hinr happet". (You satd so yourself ·- "man, plus
woman, piu&gt;, vernight 1room doesn't need lo mean sex." I
II Jerry is mc:ely J' lt tient and you still aren 'I ready (as 1
suspect ), then conftde ir ::our hostess privately. Even though U
disturbs her d eep-plar&gt;, she'll ,underst&lt;lnd. Really, no-sex
arrangements aren't unheard-of, you lrnow.

But if you're BOT'-1 wavering and wanting, well , this may be
the start 01 a l•e~t utiful Londsh ip. (As a liberated semi-square,
I'm hoping it lead• to a lovely marriage.) - H.

Arr ange ments of forced
branches mcluding flowering
almond , qum ce, jonquils ,
cherry branches, forsythia,
pussy wtli ow, and fan tat!
willow were displayed by
members of the Pomeroy
Garden Club meeting recently
at the home of Mrs. J 0
Roedel.
Mrs . Ro edel opened the
meetmg
with devotions
followed by the Lord's Prayer.
An invitation to the Winding
Trail Garden Cl ub 's open
meeting March 11 at 8p.m. was
announced a long with the
Region 11 meeting of the Ohio

A.ssociatton of Garden Clubs in
Mariett&lt;l, April 19, at the
Ba~tist Church .
Mrs. Roy Betzing reviewed
articles written by Katherine
B. Welker on caladiums, coleus
and wild foods .
She said caladiums grow
from tubers and unlike the

Competition is·theme less
Vtsuai arts. literature and
music will again be the
ca tegories fea tured in the
annual PTA cultural arts
competition .
This year there is no theme.
Judging on the local PTA unit
level should be completed the
middle of April with the win-

+++
Dear Helen:
You seem to like amusing anecdotes. Here's one taken from
the Hartford (Conn .) Times.
A local widow of English descent made reservations at a
Spanish inn vilj..mail, and inquired whether or not there was a
W.C. (water closet) near her bedroom.
'The proprietress hadn't heard the term "W.C." so she
consulted with the Parish priest, who told her it must mean a
"Wayside Chapel. " From Spain, the O)l1ler wrote:
"'The W.C. of which you inquire ts located about nine miles
from our pension and is open three times a wee k and is in a love ly
grove of trees. It seats 50 people and, in fact, my daughter met
her husband there. You are for tunate in having it so close fo r
many people live so far away that they can only get there once in
six months which upsets th em greatly. They are at present
making a collection for new plush seats as the present ones, while
quite good do have holes in them. The acoustics are excellent and
the slightest sound can be hea_rd. Trusting this is the information
you desire.." - READER
Dear Reader :
Seems to me I've heard this stot·y before. but from a different location. Anyway, it's good enough to repeat. Thanks for
brightening up the column . - H.

+++
Dear Helen :
I disagree with those women who say it's inunodest to
breast.feed a baby In public . I say they aren't modest about
looking! 'They're too thick-headed to accept something that is
natural and normal, so why don 't they just turn their heads in·
slead of complaining to an advice eol wm 'I
What would they have done if they had Jived next door to
Adam and Eve• My only advice is "Stop staring!'' - D. W. (age
17)

.

• tefS ::~):: : .
P0 11y' S p Olll
8V POLLY CRAMER

· ::

Rust on clothes
resists a remedy
POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - ·n,ere are
' small rust spots on .nearly all
my clothes, especially on the
sheets. Is there something I
'could use to remove them?
Lemon juice did no good. Many
thanks. - LENA
DEAR LENA-If the lemoo
jui ce, salt aod suoshioe
treatment ha s not helped ,
aoother old remedy for suc h
spots is boiling white things iu
a solution of cream of tartar
aod water. Maybe there is irou
in your water and using a
water softener would help ia
the luture.-POLL Y.
DEAR POLLY - During
these days when energy co nservation is mandatory use an
old-fashioned broom or dust
mop for small clean-up jobs .
'This will save the energy used
by the vacuum and you, too,
will be saved the tin1e and
effort necessary to get out the
sweeper . Gives you some
exercise, too. Beat a small (one
egg) cake mix by hand to save
time and electricity and dishwashing, too. An extra bonus !)lis helps firm' up those
muscles in your upper arm. MRS. R. J . S.
DEAR POLLY - I hope my
Pointer will be helpful to

economical. Due~ lln~ frk k fur
me. Ha ppy s havin ~ lo a ll. -

MAURICE.
DEAR POL LY - Wh en
running water from the hot
water tap and waiting for tt to
be hot I save \he first. cool
water in an -attractive pitcher
and leave it on the counter to
use for watering my house
plants. The water is the
correct temperalure for this
(whi ch may not be done Wltil
the next morning) and 1 am
(.'O ilSCl'ving n natura l resource.
- N.W.S.
DEAR POLLY - With sugar
the price "'it 'is today I was
thrilled over a rece nt
discovery . I had some bro\111
sugar that had been on hand
quite a while and was hard as a
rock. My husband suggested
putting t! in a plastic container.
covering the sugar with a
double paper towel that had
been soaked in water, put ling
the lid 011 tightly and storing it
in the refrigerator. I resoaked
the paper towel twice, as the
water evaporated, and the
sugar soon became as soft as
when bought.- MARIE .
You will receive a dollar U
l'olly uses you~ lavorile
homemaking idea, Pet Pee••e,
Polly's Problem nr solution to a
problem . Write Polly in care of

"hubbies" and olher shavers. · this nrwspaper.

For years I used inexpensive
old-fashioned round m ug
shaving clocks but the stores
no longer sell them due to the
lack of demand. There are
other fancier, sweeter smelling
but more expensive brands but
every cent counts with us these
days, Now I cut 'l ~;lath-size
,cake of soft white ~ in half
and use . this in my mug.
E'erhaps it is not as fragrant as
• some but used with hot water it
Is just as &lt;udsy, if not sndsier,
and ~ ~ertainly '
more

SHRINER TO MEET
Mary Shrine 37, White Shrine
of Jerusalem, will meet at 8
p.m . Friday at the Pomeroy
Masonic Temple. Members are
reminded
th at
rituals
belo ['ing to ti1P .&lt;hrine are to
bt, lill.lC!; Hl [t,

,ht.:

\\Ufth:

scribe that night. New officers
will be elected and all reports
are to be given . Potlu ck
refreshments' will be served.

majority of indoor foliage
plants they must be allowed to
rest. Forcing growth past its
normal time usually results in
the death of the tuber, she
noted.
The new coleus hybrids of
today are being used as
specimen plants in the most
elegant locations, Mrs. Betzing
pointed out. 'There are the erect
growing plants as well as the
trailing types, she said, and the
foliage of some are brilliant
red centered with rosy pink.
Coleus cuttings root quickly
in plain water and full sun is
being recommended lor
compact growth , Mrs. Betzing
reported.
During tbe social hour , a
salad course was served by the
hostess to the members and
four guests, Mrs. Charles
Neuman, Mrs. Edward Foster,
Mrs. Dana Swift and Mrs.
Lorain Sterrett.

MONDAY
FATHERS to be honored
when Pomeroy Ele mentary
PTA meets at 7:30p.m. at the
school. Pubitc invited .
SAFF.TY program on "Safe
!Jf!tng" by Wayne Upton and
"Lifty," the ltttle wooden man,

mng entries in the three
ca tegories to .be turned into
either Wilma Parker, Chester,
Charlene
Hoeflich ,
or
Pomeroy, co-chairwomen.
Only schools where there is
an active PTA or PTSA are
eligible to enter the competition.
The grade categories are
primary, grades one, two and
three ; intermediate, four , five
and six ; junior high, seventh,
eighth and ninth; and senior
high, lOth, lith and 12th.
The divisions of competition
are visual arts, including
paintings, drawings, collages
and sculpture ; literature including poetry, essay, short
story or drama; and music 1

scores of original composition
with or without words.
The rules specify that all
entries must be tbe original
work of the student and that all
entries must be the work of one
when Riverview PTA meets at student since gro up co m7:30 p.m. at the sc hool.
positions will not be accepted.
UN ITED Method ist Women None of the entries, art,
ul Hea th United Methodtst literature or music need be
Church for 6:30 p.m . potluck produced in the classroom.
dinn er. Me 1:1t , desser t and
The objective of the cultural
coffee to be provided. Those arts program is to provide an
attending should ta ke their own opportunity for children to use
table se rvtce. Hostesses are their t&lt;lients and creativity to
Emma Wayland, Frteda express their beliefs and
M&lt;ldt, and Beulah Hayes.
portray their emotions through
their own o,riginal works of art,
TUESDAY
to emphasize the value of and
KYGER Creek Band Boos ters to encourage cultural arts
meet at 7:30p.m. in the band education in the schools.
room. Ali parents are urged to
attend.
ME IGS CHAPTc;H ~J VtiV.
Tuesday 7:30 p.m. at chapter
hom e on Butternut Ave .
Mrs. Elizebeth Cloud was
Refreshments. All members recent Sunday dinner guest of
urged to attend.
Mr. and Mrs. Forrest Thomas,
AM E R 1 CAN
Legion Gallipolis.
Auxiliary, Lewis Manley Post
Riley Perdue called on
263, 7 p.m. home of Mrs. Willard Woodruff recently .
Sherman Butler, Rutland.
Mr. and Mrs. Earnest Welch
spent
a day with Mrs. Myrtle
ANNUAL open
house
Chrislin,
Chesapeake, 0. They
meetin g of Windin g Tra il
(Jardt&gt;n Club 8 p.m. at Grace were accompanied by Mrs.
F.pisco jJal Churoh parish Elsie Oiler and son.
Mrs . Verla Knight returned
house. Pomeroy. Mrs. Nan
Moore will show slides end home after a week's visit with
speak on Hawaiian triv : relatives in Columbus.
Eulaiah
Bennett
has
refreshments. All clubs and
home
from
a
month's
returned
public invited .
vacation in Texas. She visited
RACiNE Lodge No. 461 , F her brothe r , Wilbur Parsons,
and AM wtli meet on Tuesday Pasadena and sister, Ruth
eYemng at 7: 30. All master Chenoweth and family, Pecos,
masons arc mvitcd.
Tex . while there.
LADIES AuKtltary , Olive
Mrs. Ted Harder and lady
Township Fire Department, fr iend, Columbus, called on her
mec !.&lt; at ftre butiding in Reeds- pa rents, Mr. and Mrs. Dale
ville. 7 p.m. Tuesday . Ali wtves Gleason recently .
of fir emen and interest ed
residents of Olive Township President Elected
im·ited . Future meetings will
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - Lawbe held the second Tuesday of rence Purdy of Akron will head

Vinton

ea ch month,

COUNTYWIDE Meettng of
Meigs Bi ce nt ennia l Com mtsston, 7:30p.m. Tuesday in
the cou rtrOom . Repre sen .
t.u!tvrs from all orgamzati ons
urged to allend
OHIO ETA PH I Chapter,
Beta Sig ma Phi Sorority ,
theater party at Athens.
Members to meet at 6:15 on the
upper parking tot in Pomeroy.
XI GAMMA Mu Chapter,
Bela Sigma Phi, 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday, home or Beverly
Long, Middleport . Cultural
report on friendship by Linda
Riffle. Annie Chapman .
Hostesses, . Mrs. Long and
Donna Byer.
MEIGS Tops Club, 7 p.m.
Tuesday at the Amertcan
Legion Hail, Midd leport.
WEDNESDAY
WHITE Rose Lodge Wednesday, 1:30 p.m. American
Legion Hall, Middleport.
POMERO~ Lions Club, noon
Wed nesdo v at the Meigs Inn.
PO :tlF:ROY Ch ap ter 80,
Royal Arch Masons, 7:30p.m.
Pomeroy Masonic Temple,
loll owed by Boswqrth Council
46, 8:30p.m.
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.Green Thumb
Notes.

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A weekly feature of Metgs
County Garden Club members

Ferns making a comeback
By Mrs. Karl Grueser
Wlldwood Garden Club
Ferns are a flowerless plant but they are making a strong
oomeback after being forgotten for many years.
'The green foliage of the fern last much longer than the plant
that has a blossom and can be as equally decorative. Our native
kinds are hardy in a wide-range of climates and exposures. 'The
best are widely available from nurseries specializing in wild
plants. Early spring is by far the most successful time to transplant.
Ferns make superb ground covers although you should not
limit their use lor just this purpose. 'They do much lor a summer
garden, given adequate moisture and some shade. In such spots
where ali season appearance is so important, evergreen ferns
are the best choices.
Deciduous ferns are good late season plants lor gardens
where early spring bulbs have been planted in quantity. Groups
of ferns behind the bulb plantings revel in the developing shade
and helps hide the bare ground when the bulb foliage has
withered away. All ferns must have a good supply of water,
particularly where they are hit by sunshine.
H you want ferns in drier areas, you must hose faithfully
during dry seasons. Most ferns want humus in the soil so add peat
moss or leaf mold freely when planting. Some ferns like a touch
of limestone. 'They will be happy near the house foundation where
lime seeps out of the mortar creating a mini-world of basic soil.
Those that like crevices may be planted between two rocks.
Make sure the spot is well drained. A mulch of small rocks or
even pebbles helps the surrounding soil stay moist and in a woodland garden you can help them along by burying limestone.
A.s for house ferns, probably the most common is the Boston
(Neproiepis) still found in many homes. It likes a bright room but
no direct sunlight. Too much light causes the leaves to turn pale
green. It likes plenty of water and elbow room. One of the
toughest ferns to grow indoors is the maidenhair !em. It
resembles tbe leaves of the ginkgo tree . It caMot st&lt;lnd dry hot
rooms, but likes damp shady places.
'The rabbit's foot fern gets its name from the fact that its
leaves and rhizomes are furry like a rabbit's foot .
'The bird's next !em has a strap-like foliage and gets name
from brown nest like appearance of the growth.
Syringe your ferns once a week. Handpick and destroy any
seale, mealy bugs or slugs present. Give them a cool room and
high hwnidity.
A few other ferns are the Christmas fern which requires a
good soil, the walking fern which requires shade,the rattlesnake
fern which requires shade in a rich moist woodland soil and has a
succulent look. Another attractive fern is called the purple cliff.
It requires semi-shade, limestone soil, and grows about 15 inches
high. It has leathery blue-green leaves which resemble the
evergreen fern .
Ferns are easily propagated by division. Ferns which grow
from crowns usually spread slowly and can be carefully pried
·apart. Do buth jobs as early in spring as possible. The center of
the clump eventually dies but new plants will form around it.

Historical tour planned
A tour of the Ohio Historical
Museum and the restored
village has been planned for
the Meigs County senior
citizens by the Council on
Aging.
The tour is scheduled for
March 20 and the cost of the
trip is $10 which includes the
bus fare, tour of the museum
and dinner at the hotel in the
restored village. 'The buses will
leave the Center at 8 a.m. and
will leave Columbus to return
home at 3:30 p.m. in the af.
ternoon.

• Several seats are still
available and anyone interested ·in making Ule trip is
asked to calliJie center.

BY MARIE ALEXANDER
•Steven Payne, l"ho is
stationed at Ft. Knox, Ky.
spent a weekend with his
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Beecher Davis and brother,
Gorden Payne. He also visited
his other grandparents, Mr.
and Mrs. E. C. Payne and other
relatives.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Ewing,
Columbus, spent Saturday
recently with her parents, Mr .
and Mrs. W. G. Casto.
Ronald Bobo, Jr., sister Mrs.
Norma Waites, Canal Winchester ,

were

here

recent Sunday dinner guests of
Mrs. Frances Courtright,
Laurelville. 'They were joined
there by Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Schultz, Columbus.
.
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Isaac spent
a weekend with their daughter,
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hudson,
Nitro, W. Va .
Mr. and Mrs. John Stevens
attended the "Grand Ole
Opry" at Nashville, Tenn.
recently.

DRY
CLEAI\~ING

DR. SELIM BLAZEWICZ M.D.

(ON REQUEST)

•
DAY

1

SERVICE ON

'

.

SHIRT

JOHN RIDGWAY D. 0.

DALE DUTI'ON

In by 10, Out at !i

Robinson's
DRY CLEANING
LAUNDRY

m;::::r.o~n;o~:o:;..-.

'•

The Board of Health speaks for you, Meigs Countians, in
health department affairs. Its members are your feliow' citizens,
men from all walks of community life. They know your community's health needs.
These men are indirectly chosen by the people. The District
Advisory Council, which consists of the 12 presidents of the
township trustees, and five mayors of the municipalities, meet
the first part of March to choose a member of the board. Each
board member represents a section of the county.
In a General Health Dtstrict, one of the members must be a
physician for a total of six, four members, one physician, and one
health commissioner.
The board of health can be compared to the directors of a

~ IQ;;

.

ARRIVING DAILY ...

Health department personnel
have varied, important duties

·:

!il
"l
~.

~:

she is the liaison between the
BEULAH STRAUSS
Adm inistrative Ass ista nt- state departments and the
Secretary to the board of public for the commissioner
Health and Registrar of Vit&lt;ll and the board; prepares and
Statistics. It is her respon- maintains the budget, does the
sibility to maintain the office secretarial work for the
and supervise the personnel. commissioner and the board.
Working under the board of Attends stale, county and
health and the health com- group meetin gs at the
missioner, Mrs. Stra uss acts as recommendation of the board
fis cal offtcer of all fund s and commissioner; acts as
(county, ·state and federal): receptionist in th e health
department, issues licenses,
issues birth and death certificates requested, co nrers
with county officials as the
need arises and as registrar
Ambulance fees
maintains the vital statistics.
GENE LYONS - Deputy
Clerk-Deputy Registrar is one
often covered
of the clerical st&lt;lff assisting
Mrs. Strauss and other staff
Residents of Southeast Ohio members with reports and
Assists
the
should read their health in- licensing.
Sanitarian
with
routine
surance policies to see if
emergency ambulance fees are correspondence. Has contact
covered, according to the with the public. Her duties are
Southeast Ohio Emergency varied and many. A.s Deputy
Medi cal Service. Since in- Registrar she assists and fills
surance poltc&lt;es vary greatly in for the registrar.
HILTON WOLFE - Meigs
in the services they cover, each
County
Sanitarian, collects
individual policy must be
public
and
private wat er
evailated on its own merit.
Mos t EMS ambulance samples, provides guidance to
charges are paid by some persons needing assist&lt;lnce on
source other than the con- sanitary problems ; inspects
sumer. It has been SEOEMS food service operations, inexperience that 32.9 pet. of spects school buildings, inbillings are paid by the con- vestigates animal bites, insumer; 26.7 pet. by pnvate vestigates and seeks to rectify
in surance ; 26.4 pet. by nuisance ccmplaints, works
med icare; ll.4 pet. by Welfare with st&lt;lte personnel on dumps;
and 2.6 pet. by Workman's lays out and inspects septic
ta nks and leac hing fields;
Compensation.
makes inspections requested

!~

Quality Furniture
at Reasonable Prices

::k

BAKER FURNITURE

:~

I:J

,~:~
~.

Jf

Middleport, Ohio

•'•'

~;;::~::::::::.-;:::::::::::::::::=:::~;::::::;::;:::::::::::::~:;:.-::::::::::::::::::::::?~:=::::::m~::w::~-=:;::.;::::..v.:::

HILTON WOLFE SR.

DORIS BAILEY

.·:·;,

'The Senior Citizens Chorus
under tbe direction of Mrs. Ben
Neutzling will present an
Easter Cantata at. the Heatlj
United Me\hodist ChtD'ch in
Middleport Palm Sunday,
March 23, at 3 p.m.
'The cantata is "'The Story of
Jesus" and includes songs of
Calvary, songs of the
crucifn&lt;ion and songs of the
resurrection. 'The public is
invited to attend.
TO HAVE SURGERY

can't work,
P. J. PAULEY

307 Spring Ave., Pomeroy
d

PH. 992-2318

ltJlliNATIONWIDE

u~~~~'!c.!

fiMIOI\Wio. lrilwl wl l U\llora/ICI CO IIIIIM f
flll tOIIWt lla l ot. I IIMi fi i\C I C~lll)
~~ Co h• lfltlolt, Olho

"011!•

OPTOMETRIST '

• D.

OFFICE HOURS9:3010I2, 2 TOS(CLOSE AT
NOON ON THURS.)- EAST COURT 'ST.,
P()MEROY.
' '

CARY GORBY

But, there's another tremendously valuable natural resource over the horizon along
needed to
ease
the Atlantic Coast. Energy. Energy that is

our nation·s worsenmg energy crisis.
We must not sacrifice one resource for

the other.

Smce 1968,
Columbia..G.as has
been pa rticipating m
costl y geo physica l surveys
off the Atlantic Coast. The tests
range from Nonh Carolina to Nova
Scotia . We've also joined a 25 million
c..l ollar dn lling exploration
program off Canada's east coast
a promi~ing sc urce o f clean, naturai
gas to help case the energy crisis:

Tuberculosis division

Two major functions of the human body often neglected for
various reasons, especially in small children are eyes and ears.
Since the P.O.D. and D.O.P clinics were initiated in 1969
approximately 38,513 school age children were screened for
hearing and vision .
.
· Out of these screenings approximately 300 were referred for
eye surgery and approximately 325 for ear surgery. In the year
197., 6,695 children were screened in hearing and vision. Ont of
that total, 27 were referred for surgery for ears and 7 were
referred for surgery for eyes . Four P.O.D. clinics were held
during the year; 22 were referred for speech therapy, lour
referred to Ohio University lor further evaluations, four referred
to pediatriciajlS, 21 medication,s were· given, three referred' to
speech clinic, one cyst found on a vocal cord, one dental relertal,
one vocal nodule, five post op check up, and live mixed hearing
losses vvere found .
Tliere were 3 D.O.P. clinics held, 14 were referred for
glasses, 8 normal exams, medication lor infection, one referred
for pediatric exam, and three amblyopia patches were
recommended.
,
The technician, Marge Manuel, refers all children with
suspected hearing and vision defects to Mrs. Bailey, L,.P.N. lor
follow up visits. She also gets referrals from private physicians
and speech therapists of the Meigs County School System.
The aim af the program is to detect children with ear infections and-&lt;&gt;r hearing losses or eye defects as earl.y as possible
and restore or preserve hearing and vision by using all available
legitimate resources .

c&lt;\.uMBIAGAS

by the State Liquor Control and other services, establishes
Board ; checks fair booths, con tinuou s care for the
takes periodic samples of alcoholic offender, establishes
water at Middleport Municipal good cooperation with police
Swimming Pool , and inspects departments, courts and other
privately owned parks and agenctes wh o assist in
campsites as well as trailer rehabilitation of th e alcoholic
parks.
and advtses alcoholics of the
CATHERINE E. I.OWERY, laws and responsibilities. He
RN - Public health nurse, now works with the families of
resigned , visi ted the homes of alcoholics.
the til where she carried out the
DORIS BAILEY, L.P.N.
recommendations of private Comprehensive Hearing and
physicians guided the family Vision Nurse, works out of the
on the care of the patten!, local health department. She is
conducted the immunization in charge of se tting up P.O.D.
program in the schools , (Hearing &amp; Speec h) and
coun seled with school officials, D.O.P. (Vision ) clinics. She
carried out the directives of the co ntacts parents by home
state agenctes, and offered vtstts, phone or letter. Follows
services in nursing and rest up wlth doctors, optometrists
homes. As of this time the and state personnel, issues
health department is without authorizations lor assistance to
the services of the nurse.
famih es requiring financial
REV. w. H. PERRIN help, works with the technician
Director Counselor of th e who is doing heanng and vision
Meigs County Alcoholic and f- screenings in the school~. She
Drug Abuse Program. 'This also works wtth the denttst by
program is sponsored by the referring children who have
local health department but been Sfen in one of the P.O. D.
funded through the Ohio or D.O.P. clinics that need
Department of Health. Rev . dental work done.
Perrin works with a chosen
MARJORIE MANUEL committee to assist persons Hearing and Vision Technician
and families of these people works along with Mrs. Bailey.
having an alcoholic or drug She is the 'technician that goea
problem.
into the Meigs County Schools
WILLIAM BAER - Court and screens the children in
Field Worker under the Meigs vision and hea rin g .. Mrs .
Co unty Alcoholic Program . Manuel was tratned by the
The
Program provides O.D.H. to detect hearing and
rehabi'litative serv&lt;ee rather vision defects and to refer
than punitive incarceration. these children to Mrs. Bailey
Cases are referred to the field lor follow up visit.
worker who conducts classes

Jane Brown, R. N., tuberculosis nurse, is paid from the
Tuberculosis levy fund. She does ali the skin testing in the
county, provides therapy and guidance to ali tuberculosis
patients, cont&lt;lcts and s~pects. She visits the homes, nursing
bomes, jail, infirmary and hospital wben necessary; wor)&lt;s w1th
Roy Donnerberg, M. D., chest clinician from Columbus, on the
chest clinics ; maintains Ule coonty wide Tuberculosis ~ister
and is the liaison between the doctors and the public. Please
notice the tuberclilosis clinic is now lOcated in the former
children's home building, Pomeroy, with the county board of
education.
Ruth Grindstaff. is employed as the secretary of the
Tuberculosis Division. Working for M~s , Brown, she maintains
files, assists in notifying people of Chest Clinics, assists during
the clinics, her duties are many and varied during the year. She
transcribes the clinicians impressions of patients after each
clinic; she handles all records; her office is in the old children's
borne building on Mulberry Heights. She is also paid out of the
Tuberculosis levy fund.

'

RUTH GRINDSTAFF

...'

\
WILLIAM BAER

MARJORIE MANUEL

R esponse time vital, important
JANE BROWN
•

Deaths - Total 155 : Male 86, Female 69.
No births in county due to no rna ternity ward.
Causes of death:
Cardiac Complex
64
Cerebral Vascular Accident
18
Cancer
14
Shock
39
Drowning
2
Se.
5
Uremia
1
Pnewnonia
7
Meningitis
I
Accident
I
SUicide
I
Other
2
TOTAL
155
Health Department FlnancW Statement
The Department worked under a budget' of $33,3Q3.6(1,.1or the
year ol1974.
·

.~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::*:~:~:::::::::::::::::::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::~~:::::::::::;:~::::::::8:::::::~:::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;::::;:;;:::::::::--:::::::::::~::::::.::::::::::::::::::;;;;:;:;;:;w~::::,

~

.

~

(!!!!: : A verage SEO'v
n1r~iS bz.llzs· $37.07
•
111

~

«

~~

"Response time ' ' during a ambulance statw n, If not i:i:
An emergency ambulance bill from Southeast Ohio's Emergency
~
medical emerge ncy ts the already there, starting and
:~
length of time it takes the moving the vehicle and time on !l!l Medical Service ISEOEMSl costs the average consumer S3d7.07. Rat0es
the
road.
..
are $25 with an additional one dollar a mile added beyon . 11 15 m e
lll
squad (technicians and amResponse
ltme
totals
for
limit.
not
tocxceed
a
maxi
mum
of$50
as
long
as
the
patient
stays
In
the
~
bulance ) to arrive at the
SEOEMS
average
fr
om
10.1
patient's side after the call for
:::: seven-county re gion.
· ,
,
·
\:'\
. minutes from station with staff ::;:
help is placed.
Co mpare the average cost of $47.07 for emergency medlc.a l care to
With the Southeast Ohio full-ltme around the clock, to !ill , the average $20 to $25 to have a permanent waver, $25 to have a car
•
Emergency Medical Servic~, a 16 .3 minu tes for stations
j;: towed , or $30 to have one tuned.
•
~
normal res ponse entail s stalled by part-time volun~:::..
...~-:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·
:·:·:·:·::::::::::::::::::::::::::--:::::::~~::::9·~::::::::::::::..-.:.:::~::::
:.-::::::~)~ .• ~· . , '! ~,..,
techn icians arriving a t the teers .
..:&lt;"_._......
•••·.······:·:·:·:•!•!•!•!·:·:
•••••••• .... . . ........
. ..........
.

ii

'I

~

I

Gu is p,..dous, pun •nerv .. _1150 11 wiRIJ.

'

CATHERINE WWi!:RY

BEULAH STRAUSS

Vital statistics of 1974

clinics begun ill 1969

Some of America's most beautiful resort areas lie along th e Atlantic Coast. And no
one wants to mar their beau ty. It's much too valuable a natural resource.

Ail domestic so urces of energ¥ must be
developed to meet our growing nati onal
fuel needs. The potential of the Atl antic outer
continental shelf is great and can be real ized
in an en vironmentally safe manner. The
Atlantic coast ~reas depend on a prosperous
~me rica . And a prosperous America
depends on energy.

GENE LYONS

Eyes, ears checked by

Keep·America
beautiful, but keep
America alive! ·

And we needn't. Modern techniques for
under-water drilling and deii,ery of fuel have
dimiAated the danger of permanent
environmental damage. An offshore drilling
rig won't even be seen from the shore.
And offshore production will reduce the
need for increased tanker tranlc.

board to fill the vaca ncy created by the death of Virgil Atkins.
The medical gwdance and community health programs are the
responsibility of a health commissioner, if one is available. The
doctor on the board of health is the medical advisor in the absence of a commissioner .
Rich or poor, you are eligible for the department's services.
The nurse strives for better health for the community. The
sanitarian's aim is the best possible community cleanliness and
safety, abatement of all undesirable health hazards. The administrative assistant and deputy clerk handles health records
licenses, clerical duties and gives and receives health statistics.
The registrar and deputy registrar handles vital statistics.
The Meigs County Board of Health and Health Department

large enterprise. They hire health department personnel,
determine the duties, fix the salaries (within the limitation of the
budget which is approved by the Budget Commission), make
decisions on health programs, develop programs which can
improve county health conditions, work with other agencies
toward betterment of community health, through the workings of
the staff of the health department.
The board of health endeavors to seek the cooperation of
citizens groups to work toward improvement of community
health.
During the past year Selim J. Blazewicz, M. D., resumed
duties of Health Commissioner which was being temporarily
held by John Ridgway, D. 0. Carl Gorby was appointed to the

are and should continue to be the principal source of health information and education lor Meigs Countians. Public health
means working wiiJI people . A satisfactory healtl) education
program is designed for all types and classes of people, eaeh with
his own problem, sueh as prenatal, school health problem,
contagious disease, handicapped children and adulls, adequate
!lousing, care of disease, Industrial problems, disposal of
sewage, water purification and public safety.
The personnel of your local health department are people
well trained in their jobs to meet various oncoming situations.
However, there is one thing the board of health and the beallh
department can.1ot predict, Ule health of our community in the
future. Health' is affected by the way we work, our environment
and the kind of society in which we live.
We, the Board of Health and Health Department, in the
public health field, wiD continue to work to find solutions for
every mounting health problem of a changing society.

VI
H."""'

j

~~:

ROBERT BEEGLE

».~" --v·~

Fresh new
, merchandise,
beautiful sofas,
chairs, bedroom
suites.

~

KERMIT WALTON

W. H. PERRIN

FINISHING

....•.-.•.......•n.•l'.w.•,•,•
.,. .,.,.,.,.,•.;.·,•8.o'
"«·······-.····
_•.,...... o•NA·
r.: _.__,_.;oxo;o~.o;o;o.-.:•. ,•,•,•l';,•,o;•,•.v.'.•.•,•:O.".,
y,•,•,.,-.,,:;,.,•,•&amp;o,
!o'•'•'o'o"o'•.'•'•'N./',

'.

Annual report of the Meigs County Health Department

2 HR.

on

Saturday recently to visit their
father, Ronald Bobo, a patient
in Holzer Medical Center. They
also visited their mother and
aunt, Mrs. Bell Terry and
Patty of Ewington. Their
mother is staying with Mrs.
Terry while her husband is in
the hospital.
Mr. and Mrs. Victor Casto
have returned home after
visiting their daughter, Mr.
and Mrs. Fred Pitts and
daughter, Carrolton, Ga.
Mrs . Virgie Houck and
several women from Gallipolis
attended the Ohio Missionary
Society at Xenia , 0 ., a recent
Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. Ronnie Knoble,
Lima and Mr. and Mrs. Ro!Ulie
Lanier , and son, Lancaster 1
spent a weekend here with
their parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Leo Lanier.
The piano students of Mrs.
Kathleen Green presented a
piano recital at the Fellowship
Chapel recently.
Mr. and Mrs . George
Johnson , Gallipolis, and Mrs.
Cora McGhee , iocai, were

board of one doctor, four members

Chorus to sing
Easter cantata

Tracy Lynn Smith, five year
old daughter of Mr. and Mrs .
Howard Smith , Lincoln Hill,
Pomeroy, will be admitted to
O'Bieness
Memorial Hospital ,
the Ohio Council of Fraternal
Athens,
Tuesday,
and will
and Service Organizations lor
undergo eye surgery there on
the next year.
Wednesday.
He was elected preSident at
the gr oup's 20th annual
meeting here Saturday to
succeed Myron Fisher of
When you
Wapakoneta.
One of the featured speakers
was E. Gene Fournace of
we can help
Canton , past Elks national
pay
the'bifls!
commander and senior vice
president of tbe Ohio Power
Ash yo vr Nat1on wiOa .-gent
lor the prescri pt ion . A
Co., who was named fraternal" d1tab1hty 1nc ome p!1n ·
is! of the year.

Restaurant Fire
DAYTON (UPI)- A fire at .
Anions Restaurant in subtD'ban
Mad River.Township Saturday
caused an estimated $3)0,000
damage to the restaurant and
adjoining Sheridan Gateway
Motel.
Authrlties said no one was
injured in lbe blaze.

Community's health needs served by

·Vinton

I

\

�1.- 'ftle ~ Sentljtel, MidcDeport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday,\March 10, 1975

f'or Fast ResUlts Use Sentinel CiassifielisL__,_,~B-=-u==-:..s~in=e~s~s~S~e;;,.;;;;r~v~ic~e=s~,

I' .

•.

•

by Gill Fox

SIDE GLANCES

Auto Sales

Not.:e
AUCTION . Thurs&lt;Jay n•gtlt . 1
p m . at ~uon Auction ,
Hor ton st In Mason, w va .
Co n s ignments welcome .
PhOne (30 41 7735471

r

2 SIGNS
OF
QUALITY

2 2 lfC

'

ATHE N S Flea Market at Jr
F a1r Bldg . , March 2 and 16
Spaces available Phone 591
8~60 H1ghly advertised
2 18 18tc
·FoR vour "Oil of Mink"
CosmetiC!. Phone BROWN 'S
992 5 113 •
1 7 He

Pomeroy
Mbtor Co.

1972 CHEVROLET KINGSWOOD ESTATE

/

ORDINA NCE

PROVIDING

F OR

OF

SALARY

VILLAGE

MAYOR .

CLERK

AND

MEMBERS OF COUNCIL OF

THE VILLAGE OF POMEROY
EFFECTIVE January at. 1970 .

/

BE

the

v.uage

or

Pomeroy, all members thereto
concurring ·

1. That the sa l ary of the
Mayo r ol the Village of
annum .
2. That the salary tor the
Cler k of the VIllage of Pomeroy ,

~~
3· 10

"What's this about my accounl being overdrswn has your compuler no shame?!"

Wolfpen News, Notes
&amp;lnday guests of Mr. and
Mrlt. Lincoln Russell were Mr.
and Mrlt. Dale Russell of
Columbus, Mrs. J:larold
Gillogly, VIcki and Bruce,
Karen GUkey, Albany, Mr.
Ow'les Knapp, Johmle Capp,
Dol'! Knapp of West Colwnbla.
Mr. and Mrs. Franklln
RulleU of Middleport were
Monday vlsltors of Mr. and
Mrlt. Uncoln RUJSeU.
&amp;lnday diMer guests of Mr.
and Mrlt. Harley T. Johnson
were Mla8 Patricia Tboma of
Kentucky and Mr. and Mrs.
Howard Thoma, local.
Miss Patricia Thoma of
LoullvWe, K,y. was a weekend
vl.lltorof Mr. and Mn. Howard

'11Kima.
Mr. James Reeves was a
recent dinner guest of Mr. and
Mn. Fred Tackerman.
Mr. and Mrlt. Larry BRIT,
DIIVId and Michelle, were
&amp;mdly vlalton of Mrlt. J. R.
Murphy .00 family .
Mrlt. John R. Murphy and
Mn. John Downs were Wednetdly evening visitors of Mr . .
-sMn.
Mn. Harley T. Johnson.
John . R. Murphy and
Mn. John Downs visited Mr.
end Mn. Larr1 Barr and
chllchn of Rutland Tuesday
evening.
Mr. .nd Mrlt. Ric Morrison,
Rllllceverte, W. Va., and Mla8
Alicia Smith, Covington, Va.,
were Thunday evening diMer
peeta of Mrs. John R. Murphy
ltld family.
Mlu
Alicia
Smith,
~vlngton, Va., was an
overnight guest of Barbara
Murphy 'lbUI"IIday night.
Linda Rosenbawn and Tam!
Holfman .were Saturday night
pests of Barbara and Caqnel
Murphy.
Mn. John R. Murphy, Mrs.
John Downs, Robert Murphy
and daughter Debbie and
Carmel Murphy were Sunday
dinner pte~~~ of Mr. and Mrs.
Jolin E . Murpl!y and Olrls of

Middleport.
"''Debbie Murpl!y, Middleport,
~

Salurday nJ&amp;hl with her
pndmolher, Mrs. John R.
ibpby and family.
.
;,."Barbara Murphy was a
Sllnday afternoon guest of
l.4hdl Roeenbawn of Pomeroy.
"The wedding of Julla
~.daughter of Mr. and
Mn. Cecil Maynard of Racine
IIIII John Edward Murphy, son
Ill Mr. and Mrs. John R.
~urphy, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, was
held Friday, Feb. 28 at 1:30

..

:.- u

CARNIVAL

p.m. in the living room of the
Murphy home. Ric Morrison,

commencing Ja nuary 1st . 1976,
sha l l b~ 53 .000.00 per annum .
3 That each duly elected and
qualifi~d m~mber of the Vlllagt'
Council shal l, tffective Januarv
I st . 1~76 . re ce ive 510 .00 for each
reglJ!ar council m~et l ng at
tended, and the sum of S5.00 for
each spec i al meetmg attended .
4 That all 01-dlnances or
parts of Ordinances in conflict
w1th this Ord t nanc~ are hereby
amended eftecttve January 1st ,
1976
This Ord tnance shall be in
force and effect from and after
the earliest period allowed by

lew

Ph~992-3f93

LARRY LAVENDER
Syracuse, Ohio

MATADOR

$1595

t

pull

RD No.1

POMEROY
MOTOR
CO.
OPEN EVES.
P.M.
POMEROY, OHIO
19708UICK Skylark . Phone992
5460 Owner lea1.1ing town ,
must sell .
•
2 BEDROOM t railer . Brown 's
J-9 3tp
Trader Court. Phone 992 3324
3 4 tfc TWO 1968 Chevelles . Both S7S0.
Phone 742 6205
FURNISHED apt . , air con
J 9-6t c
ditioning , ele-c heat. 12 miles
from Pomeroy on Rt
33 ONE 19 72 Pontiac Catalina, A -1
Adults onty . Phone D04 J 77J
condition . One 1966 Buick
5118
WitdcaL One- two wheel
3 4 6tc
trader , facto ry built Phone
992 -3165
3 BEDROOM mobtle home .
3 9 3tc
washer and dryer . 1' 1 baths ,
utiltt tes paid , S4'2 50 week 308 1970 DODGE Challenger , Rt.
Page St , Middleport , OhtO
383 illJtomatic, good condition.
3-4 lfc
S1.400or bHto.ffer . Phone 992

For Rent

992-2067
o'jlinersville. 0.

p.J
Home Maintenance

'

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

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

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

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

WILL trim or cut trees 0-r
shrubbery.
clean
out
basements , attics, etc Phone
949 -322 1 or 742-4441 .

Pets For Sale

Mobile Homes For Sale

TRAILER-WAD

BALER
TWINE

Employment Wanted

CARRIER
WANTED

by Dick Turner

- -------------For Sale

FOR

MONKEY RUN AREA
Pomeroy, 0.

The

Dai~

2 GRAVE lot, Meigs Memorial
Gardrns , cheap Phone 9-494962 .
3-5-6tc

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

A GOOD buy ... give ir a try .

Sentinel

B tue
Lustre .
America ' s
favorite carpet shampoo .
Baker Furniture Co .
J-7 3tc

.

.

MODERN
Walnut
stereo .
console ,
AM -FM
radio,
separate controls . Balance
5107 .10 or budget terms . Call

992 -396S.

3-3 He

PH. 992·2156

NEW and used cha in saws , IN OUSTR IAL 6 inch stroke saw
t illers and mowers . Also,
575 ; 18 inch metal tatag 6/ricn
repa 1rs . 498 Locust St .•
sw ing ,
c"o mplrtr
with
Middleport . Phone 992 -3092 .
threading gears motor and
2·28 ·26tc
bits, SIOO. 2 h .p. 220 bolt single
PIANO tuning . Phone- 949 4811. - - - -- - - - - - - - - - Phlse motor, industrial type
3-4-tfc
w ith pulley, SSO. air com .
- ------ - ------GOOD hay for sate . Franc i!.
pressor motor and tank, S25 . .
I WILL do roofing , heating .
Andrew, Long Bottom . Phone
Lin• shaft 3 pulleys, bearlnos
repair , plumbing and eiec 985 -3593 .
ana belt, $15 . Phone 915-•118.
trrcai work . Phone Charles
3-7-Jip
·
,
2-1J-261c
\ Sinc la i r , 985 -4121
- - - - - - - - - - -- -- Pomeroy lowl int Lanrs
3-4·12tp ' GROCERY business tor sate
MORNtflG GLORIES
----- - - - - - - - - - - - SuHd ing for sate or Ieese.
Feb. 25 • a'S
f\1 EASE SETT LEMENT Chepet
Phone 713 -5618from 8: 30p . m .
Stand ings
Ctlurch will be open tor
to 10 p . m . for appointment .
INDIAN Joe 's Sporting GoOds,
Tum
ser~o~ius this Sunday , at 10 a.
3-10-tfc
buy and se-ll guns, ammo,
141
Excels ior Oil Co
m . and ~vening services at 7 ·- - - - - - - - - - - - - - fishing equ ipment , and after
G &amp; J Au,to Parts
112
w
Aprill , Wt Will hive fiSh b.lif.
Gi bbs Grocery
10•
P. m
eds. prayer meeHng , USED pans. Frye's Truck and
1
Stop by at 308 Page Sl .•
30
·
Newell Sunoco
90
p . m Everyone welcome .
Auto Parts, Rutland , Ohio .
Middleport . Phon~ 992-3509.
WMPO
82
f3 6·61c
Phone (614 ) 742-60'94.
l ·2·301C
Spencer's Market
47
· - -·1-22 -78tp.
H i gh In d . Gme - Thelma ' F '... ON ERSfor East er . Baskets . - - - - -- - - - -- , - - - Osborne 194, A . Pooler and M .
pots , sprays, etc. Phone 98.5 - CLOSe OUT on new Zi;t -Zag ·
Foflrod 175
3537 Sm alley •, Gift Shop ,
sewrng machines. For sewing
High serifS - Donna Me CP'tnter . Ohio .
stretch fabrics , buttonholes .. 1957 CHEVY parts : NEW
Farland 472. Thelma Osborne
3-4 12tc
fancy dtSigns , etc . Pllnt
Lakewood traction bars, hi··
A6.t .
- -·-·-- - - - - - - - - - slightly blemished . c.,olct of
lacktr air st.ocks, tlooktr
Team High Game - Gibbs
carryinO case or sewing
htldt-r! , with 3" collectors tor ·
Grocery 810
NOW !ell lng Fuller Brusl'l
stand . SA9.80 USh or termt
small bla&lt;k, Call H2-3494·
Team High Series - Glbb!
Products , phone 992 -3410.
av~tlleble . Phont tf2 -7155.
after 6 p, m. BEST OFFER .
Grocery 2281.
1 7• -ttc
12.-18 -tfc:
" .__
10-17 -ttc

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

have sens~. enough to
stay home on a night like th1s!

"YOu're right, Pa! They DION'T

CB SALES &amp; PARTS
308 Page St.
Middleport, 0. 992-3509
Radios, Antennas. Tower&amp;,
Used T. v .' s. Buy from the
"Indian" and save "Wam
Pum". we buy used Radios
and Towers. Radios repaired
by FCC licensed service
P.ersonnel . Stop and see the
'Indian" and
Bubbles.
Monitor Channel 10 and 20.

TattiPt~l-.!'l. 10: New Zoo Revue 13.
.
IO : ~Celebrlly Sweepstakes 3.4, 15; Jol&lt;er's Wild 8,10; Pinah

10·3Q-Wheel Of Forlune 3,4,15; Gambit 8,10.
11 :QO-High Rollers 3,4,15; One Life to Live 6; Now You SHIt
8.10; E lectrlc Comp•ny 20.

JJlY~M®!:'=!t!...Jc:

D&amp;D
CONSTRUCTION

IO'o' Ill 1\1!11 /\It NOH L I

ALLEY OOP

3 bedroom home near
33
These homes are needed by

prospects who are wailing to
BUY. CALL TODAY

992·2259
-FOR SALERUTLAND- CLOSE TO
SHOPP ING - 2 BR, bath,
fireplace,

carpeting,

paneling, tile, porch, garage.
$9,500.00.
POMEROY- Lincoln His. 2
BR, bath, H.W. floors. utility

ELUSO

From a. shelf to a house.
Painting, siding, roofing,
paper hanging, kitchen

expert carpeting,

R., basement, porch, large

~-10

THORN KING'S CASTLE.

kitche-n , utility room on
100x200 tot . 515,500 Call after
5 p m tor information, 667 -

3739.

3-9-6tc

--------------6 ROOM house with bath , 3
bedroom , full basement, gas
heat , h .w . floor , wall to wall
carpet. Close to school in
Pomeroy . Phone 992 -3097
3-9-52tc

--------------l BEDROOM house with bath ,

-=----------

BEAUTIFUL wooded 5 acre
lots in Riggs Crest Manor ,
reasonable oriced between
Tuppers Plains -Chester Ca ll
Joe Boyles , 667 .3829 . Affolter
Realty Broker .
3-9-Jtc

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

r J rxJ

1

AT FACT01'1:11!:5.

I

..\nBwf'r:

Hhat da

NfJU

l4tlg u•hcn

IJOU

aomeona doing work lor you

will gelthinga loulod up and It
will have to be done over.

b.y THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS

1 Diplomat's

E)t,CAVA:T I NG , aozer , loader
5nd backhoe work; septic
finks installed; dump trucks
·'and to-boys for hire ; will haul
flll'tirt. top soli, limestone &amp;
gravel; Cal l Bob or Roger
Jeffers , day phone 992 7089,
night phone 992 -3525 or 992 2-11 -lfc

---.- 4--------- -

•
•

ULABNER
AND YOU HAVE G"SOL INE'i OF THE HIGHE"GT
0\IE FLAPALOO E::66
Qi-IA.LITY AND L.~ PRICJiS- WHAT A BLESSING)-DISSOLVED INTO A _::::::~TO ALL HUMANITY.' WHAT A CREDIT' TO SUCH
MILLION 0ALLONS &lt;:HUMANITARIAN$ AS THE
OF WATERFLIMFL.AM.FLJND r!-

instrurnenl

North. Excellent home sites
and spring. T . P. water close.

31 Preachment

ROUTE 143- Far Out large II

(abbr.)
:12 Suffix for
coward
:~1 Incarnadine
:w Garment part
:16 Nobleman
:17 Overjoyed
:11 Semicircular
room
:19 Unruffled
10 Its flesh

I

!J

,,l!

HOUSING SITES- 2'h Acres

'

in Pomeroy out of high water.
Near sewer and water.

WINNIE

OUR PURPOSE IN BUSINESS
IS TO HELP YOU GET A
GOOD PRICE FOR YOUR
PROPERTY. LIST IT 'f'ITH
US. CALL 992-3J25.

DID I KNOW
HON MANY Pf(O{fJ.eMS
IT WOULD ENTAIL.
~liTLE

is

i

'

lOW LOW DOWN PAYMENT .'

'I

Lo\lely ne-w homes in three
locat ions in Meigs County .
Some with wooded lots We
will built on your lot or ours.
Call 992-S976 or 992 -584• for
more information .

methodaiHet you hoped lo uaa
In a bualnen altuaUon won't

produce the daalred rosulto.

Be mora firm , bul remain lair.

VIIIQO (Alii• 21-. .pt. 211
Your mate or plf1n1r will have

1 more praotlcol aolullon lo a
problem 1oday than you will.
Toke 1 back nat Llaton.
UIIIA (lltpt. :ti-OoL :12) The
9 Barren

10 Calm
16 Clearance 19 Unconunon
22 Still
2:. German
wine
24 Chest

sound

25 Populace
26 Withdraw
28 African
cat
29 Succinct
30 Snake
35 Greek
letter
36 YOW18811H'

'

BARNEY

WKEY!! WHAT IN :'
THUfllDER HAPPEI\lT

•· '

10 'IOU?

--WHEN
TH'OADBURN

BELL RANG

EAST

.5

•QJ874
•AQ85
•KQIOU
o!oJ15
"SOUTH CD!
•AK852
•AK52
.106 2

•K9J

Both vulnerable

West

Norlh

Eon

Sout~

!;.,+-1Pass
Pau

Pass
Pass

Opeoln&amp;lead - K •

PN '

QEY

CGKA

GK

PIWG,

CDGB

HEK . - DGSBT

I WUZJEST
MOSEVIN' PAST TH'
·scHOOLHOUSE,
SNUFFY

•u
.A

.106

AE
PA

JWA
YB

PK

lly Oawald II James Jacoby
Jim: "How about showing
some of Terence Reese's hands.
'lbere is plenty to be learned

GXDEHH
BWD-

G

RYKXTW

Yesterday's CryptoqDole: "MAti'ITAIN YOUR RANI.,
VULGARITY DESPISE. TO SWEAR IS NErmER BRAVE,
POUTE, NOR WISE.-WIWAM COWPER

'"

PISC!I (Pob. 20·111rofl :101•
One who now wants to hetp yo\.1 '

Is confuaed b{ your melhoda.:H
Clarify your alms so you bolh "~
work . In

harmony.iJw

~~
March 11, 1175

f

Much good will come to you 1
this year through an lnfluenllal )l!
social contact you'll develop. tm
He will be one who Is older than 11 ~

you. His word Is his bond.

ot
r.::
1ih

·Ui,
JUSt makes a preparatory pUf
he can still bring ten tri&lt;:ks
home."
·
·~
The preparatpry play Is .Jii
ruff one or dummy's clubs 'il
trick two. Then cash lhe ~
and king of spades and ace aitd
king or hearts. Next comes lbll
play of a low heart. West can:t
afford to rufr and chucks a cl~ll.
South rulls in dummy. ruff~.J
club in his own hand and. lea~
his last heart. Once more WHI
can't afford to ruff and Sou*
uses dummy's last trump. NOli!
he leads dummy's last club,1M
West has discarded his ~
club, that club in dummy is a
winner; if West hasn't discard·
ed that club, South scores his
last trump.
)

u:e ;1 :11'rZJ.01 ~
Th~
i
bidding has been: :

West

North

East

SCMith

~:~ ~! ~:: ~: l

Pass

come from actual play and

.KJ94.AQ2 •H3. 'KIO~
What do you do now? ·. .. I

show declarer struggling with
an opUmlstic contract that he
can make, but usually doesn't."
Jim : "Today's hand is
typical. South's JUmp to game
Ia a alllht overbid. He would
have no play a1ainst a diamond
openi!ll, but West makes bis
normallead.of the king of clubs.
Now South is In business, If he
knows what do do. "
Oswald : "At some stage of
the early play · he will bang
down the ace and king of
trumps to see if the queen
drops. It doesn' t but if South

2 N T. Pass

I
j

from them."

Oswald: "M01t of his hands

CRYPTOQUOTE

•

10

NORTH
' 6HO

WEST

One letter aimply atanclt ror another. In lhla 11111ple A Is
used for the three 'L's, X for lhe two O's, etc. Sln11e Jetton,
apostrophes, the length and formolion of tho warda an oil
blnts. Each day the code !ellen are different.

•
(~ ... 20·Feb. 11)· ,
A situation will arise that MIU~1
require some shrewd thinking rt!il'
on your part: II you use your i·
head you'll profit from II.
' ·'
AQUARIUB

Good play can solve overbid

.g

Is

fact a sensitive friend wanta·::'u
kept confidential.
~"'

~')

.QI07

AXYDLIAAXI
LONGFELLOW

11) Be very careful or you m1y rv
1 1
SB'I something concerning a

WIN AT BRIDGE

•J 74
862

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here'a how to work It:

'

ne,;t few days meaningful

lr'T.:-1'1"""1r',.....'l=:"""l

venison

buck.
·M
CAPRICORN (Doc. 22·Jon;,

can

LIO (JuiJ 23-Aug. 21) Ganlla

'!'/ Lava
21 Keyboard

70 ACRES - On new Route 33

room 2 bath home with
bvsiness room. and drilled well
and plenty of park in g.

DOWN
I Tossed 2 Resin
J Interrupt
(3 wds.)
1 Possessive
pronoun
5 Do a
film
editor's
job
6 Clink
glasses
7 Disencwn·
ber
1 At lhe _
(hard
pressed)
( 4 wds.)

garb
5 Emphasize
11 Quebec's
patron saint
t2 Ballet
position
13 Equivocator
14 Carpenter's
need
15 Fuse
abbreviation
16 Utile lady's
nickname
17 Rich rock
II Abate; lessen
20 Ne1ghbor
of Nor.
~1 Famed
patriot
22 Burrowing
beast
23 Bare
24 Mystic wntmg 1-=-+-+25 Speck
26 Scold

GASOUNE AILEY

G!MINI (MIJ 21-~uno 20)
Don'l benk too heavily upon an
ally who hu let 'you down
before. What needs doing you

ntomlt,•r!-HELLO HELLO

.,

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. U·Deo• ••
21) A Iemily matter will be pop.'~"
ping up. II will require your cooll .
hoed and firm hand lo,a
straighten out. Don't pass thl ~

can do alone. II wllljustlake a
lillie longer.
CANC Ill (J..,. 21-.I"'J 22) Be
very axptlcll wllh dlractlona. or

mf.'t!l a lrH-hnHIH

&amp;u..""'

stream and a 3 bec:froom
modern home w ith city water.

youraell to believe . Be
prepared to treat It more

the locts
through additional sources.

•

33ACRES- Small freshwaler

will not be aa easy aa you loci

lully accurate. Verily

Jurnbl"'" OLDER LITHE HOURLY ALMOST

houses with baths, in town near
stores. Want an investment,
this is it.

plan you hope to Implement

on to you by a lrtend won't be

S•lunla' '"

2

Por Tlllllllr, !larch 11, 1175
1111111 ( M - 21·Aprf1 ttl A

aerloualy.

{Aiuwere tOIIlO,.W)

control at all times today yo~tv
could Impulsively gel lnvolved1
In something that will cos{
more than It's wor1h.

rr

tAUIIUI (April :IO·MIJ :10) In·
lormallon that will be paasod

992-2259

--------------3 BEDROOM home , large

NOWAD\YS lT COULD
BE A6AIN6i "Tl-IE LAW
'TO DI~AR6E THEM

LITTLE ORPHAN . ANNIE-WHO DID THAT!
~~~~
~~~~~

DOZ-ER work, land clearing by
the acre, hourly or contract.
Farm ponds, roads, etc.
Large dozer and operator
with over 20 years ex perience . Pulims Exca1.1ating,
Pomeroy. Ohio . Phone 9922478 .
12 -19 -tfc

HOME WITH INCOME -

...,

I

I NJNITE I

new trees - walnut, poplar,
pine and others.

ROOM house on Union
Avenue. Large lot , full
basement and new furnace .
Call 992 -385-4 .
3-9-lltc

I

LITILE ORPHAN ANNIE

lot. SIO,OOO.OO.
68ACRES- Just off new Rl.
33 - Barn. fenced. 19,500

S

H 8,10; Ascent of Man 20,33.
,,J
9:-Famlly Theotre "The Cantervlll.e Ghost" 15; Billy ."
'"
Graham Cruude 8; Hawaii Flve-0 10.
9:30-Woman 20; Witness to Y8$terdoy 3J.
;}!
10:~'!11t• Story 3,4,15; Marcus Welby. M.D. 6,13; Barnabyi'J
Jonas 8; Billy Graham Crusage 10; News 20 ; Interlace 3J.)( I
10 :30-Your Fulurels Now 20; Asalgnmont Amerlco 33.
11 :Of-News 3,A,6,7,8,10, 13, 15; ABC News 33.
~,fl
11!30-Johnny Car1011 3,4,15; Wide World Mystery 13; FBI 6; ,.
Movie" Class of '63"; Movie "Anything Can H•ppen" 10/'~
Jankl 33.
.k
12;30-Widt World Mystery 6.
'
I !C»-Tamorrow 3.4: Ntwl 13.
no
yoursoll dollnile goala.
:ll
'
SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov, 21) II' '
your boner ludgment lon'l' IIY I

10 t j

... ALLE'I' OOP
ANI&gt; HIS NI!WFOUND FR.I&amp;;NDS
IN "THE LAND OF
NE~ I\IAI&lt;E ~­
PAAArlONS "10 LAUNCH
AN ATTACK ON THE 1

SEWING MACHINE, Repairs
service , all makes, 992-2284
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy ,
Authorized Singer Sales and
Service . we sharpen Scissors
3-29 -tfc

5232. .

n~

1:30--Movle "The Big RIPoff"; Movie "Killer Bees" 6,13;

strides tan be made wheret~
your career Ia concerned . SePJ•

All Types of
BUILDING
and REMODELING

l i ver1ed right to your' project .
Fas
and
easy.
Free
estimates. Phone 992 -328-4
Goeglein Ready Mix co .,
Mtddleport. Ohio .
6-30-tfc:

TODAY WE NEED'
3bedroom home on large

o '" "'I I I

form four ordinary word1.

PHONE
949-3832 or 843-2667

READY MIX CONCRETE "o•-

JUST SOLD
4 PROPERTIES
IN5 DAYS

"

Unscramble these four Jumbles.
one letter to each squue, to

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

Local Bowling

, S·IO

BORN LOSER

{OME
Improvement
and
Repair Service -· Anything
fldd around the home, from
roof to basement. You will
like our work and rates
Phone 742-.5081 .
12 29 -tfc

3 - ~ - 6tc

Notice

1~~)

INDIAN JOE'S

etc.

large vard and garden , city
water Phone 742 -4782.

,POMEROY LANDMAR"K
ll!P.:
Jack w. Carsey. Mgr.
~
Phone m-2111 ·

2-17-7Sc

cabinets,

Real Estate For Sile

Wanted To Buy

For Rtnt
2 BEDROOM mob ile- home .
Phon~ 9ol9 -2l61 ,' Albert Hill
3-10 -61C

You, South, hold :

?· "

.

.

1

bj

A - Pau, or bid tbreo ....._,
II depends oa wllal lOri of
your panaer ·is. .
~
· _

TOiiAY'S QUESTION '
Instead of bidding two .'Ctubs you
partner has jumped to tllree clubo(
over your one spade. What dO ~

do now?
Aaswer Tomorrow

Send $1 for J!&lt;COBY MO
boo!&lt; lo: "Win II Blldf/0," (tlo

newspaper). P.O. Box 4111, R
CltyStotlon. New Yorl&lt;, H.Y. 1001

I 'I \ ' I I._,

'

--------------'

I

..S'EPTIC
TANKS
cleaned .
Modern San ttat ion, 992 -3954 or
992 -1349
...._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ..!,. _
_
9_
18_-tfc

Carmel News

Help Wanted

TO SHI'IK HAJI ':5 P~J:;A
TO WA?H INGTON!

YEAH? ...NOW
lET'S GET DOWN
TO THE. 1&lt;1'1\llY
BIG QU~5TIOIJ!

BRAO~OR

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

By the Day

TH.EY COULD BE PLANSS
FI&lt;:OM THAT '-JAVY TA?K
FOI&lt;:CE .. 1~1 RESPO~!S

1 (614) 247-3644

O, Auctioneer
Complete Service
Phont' 949-3821 or 949-3161
Racine, Ohio
Critt Bradford
5-1 -tfc

..

For Sale

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

I

C.

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

For Sate
SULKEY for Gravely tractor .
SJ5. Also. Black ~iamond
Iinam ent. Phone .592 -2158
Ath~ns , 33 Townund .
3-10 -Jtc

·

JDI Page, Middleport
Heating
•
Cooling
•
Refrigerllion · Roof Repairs
• Gutters - Plumbing •
Electrical Rep-airs and
Service.
Call 992-3509 and
Save on your repairs : also
repair mowers. compressors
and outboards. Bring it in
1nd save .

8-K EXCAVATING
COMPANY

--------------- Real Estate For Sale ·

Professional
WEDDING
Photuglaphy

Middlepori,Ohio 1.2-1 Mo .

W1f1r'. E ll:ctric, G1s, S.w1r
Lints, inllollod. Work
gu1rontttd.
Dot"·, Backhoe, Trucks
Limestone&amp; Fill,Dirt
Commtrclol- Rosldonllol
Construction &amp; Romodol

7423 .

. ..

11 :30-Hollywood Squores 3.15; Brody Bunch 6,13; News 4;
Love 01 Lifo 8, 10. Sesame Street 20.
:
1
11 :s.s-Grahom Kerr 8; Dan lmel'sWorld 10.
12:-Jockpotl 3,15; Password 6,13; Bob Braun's 50-50 Club 4;
1
Nows 8,10.
12 :30-Biank Check 3,15; Spill Second 6,13; Search For 1

I

For Information
Cnll

498Locust St.

•

7 oo-Truth or Cons. 3,4; Bowling for Dollars 6; What's My Line
8: News 10; New Candid Camera 13; Wally's Workshop 15;
Ohio This Week 20; Lilias Yoga &amp; You 33.
7:3o-That Good Ole Nashville Music 3; Masquerade Party •:
Hollywood Squares 6: Pollee Surg110n 6; S25,000 Pyramid I;
Tomorrow a, 10.
:
Municipal CourllO; To Telllhe Truth 13; Untomed World 15;
12!U-Eioctrlc
Company
33.
•
Washington Slralghl Tolk 20; Episode Acllon 33.
12:55-NBC
News
3,15.
I
8:1Xh-Famlly Thealre 3,4; John Denver 6.13; Billy Graham
1:oo-New• 3; All My Children ,6, 13.; Phil Don•hue 8; Young
Crusade 8.10.15; Hollywood Television 20,3J.
•nd the Restless 10; Not For Women Only 15.
9:QO-Movle " A Big Hand lor the LIHie Lady" 3,6,15; SWAT
1:30-How
To Survive A Morrlage 3.4,15; Lei's Make A Daal :
6,13; Mvovle " The Balled of Josle" 4 Moude8, 10.
6,
13;
As
The World Turns 8, 10.
1
9:30-Rhoda 8,10; Romanllc Rebellion 20,3J.
IO ·QO-Carlbe 6,13; Medical Center 8,10; News 20; Washington 2:-l&gt;oys of our Lives 3,43.15; S10,000 Pyramid 6. 13; Guiding i
Light 8, 10.
.
Slralght Talk 33.
30-Doctors
3.4,
15;
Big
Showdown
6.
13;
Edge
of
Night8,10.
2:
10 3D- Behind lhe Lines 33.
3:-Another World 3,4, 15; General Hospital 6,13; Price Is
11 :()()-Johnny Carson 3,4, IS; Wide World Mystery 13; FBI 6;
Rloht 8.10; Lilias, Yogo and You 20.
Movie " Whlslle Stop" 8; Movie "The Nulty Professor" 10;
3:30-Cno Life lo Live 13; Lucy Show 6; Match Game 8,10;
Janakl 33.
Your Future Is Now 20.
12 :3D-Wide World Myslery 6.
4:0G-Mr.
Cartoon 3; I Dream ol Jeannie 4; Somerset 15;
1·0()- Tomorrow 3,4; News 13.
Gilligan's lslan~ 6; Tattletales 8; Sesame Street · 20,3J;
Movie "Donclng In the Dark" 10; Mike Oouglos 13.
TUESDAY, MARCH 11, 1975
4:30-Bewllched 3; Merv Grilling 4; Mod Squad6; Lucy Show 8;
Bononra 15.
6 :QO-Sunrlse Seminar 4; Sunrise Semester 10.
5:-FBI 3; Andy Griffith 8; Mlsler Rogers' Neighborhood
6:25-Farm Report 13.
20.3J; Ironside 13.
1
6:3Q-Five Minutes lo live By 4; News 6; Bible An1wor1 I;
5:30-News 6; Beverly Hillbillies 8; Hodgepodge Lodge 20; Get:
Concerns &amp; Comments 10; Rev . Cleophus Robinson 13.
Smort 15; Electric Company 33.
,
6:35-Columbus Today 4.
,
6:-News 3,4,1,10, 13, IS; ABCA News 6 ; Electric Company 20; :
6:45 - Morning Reporl 3; Formllme 10.
lTV Utilization 33.
·1
7:()()-Today 3.•. 15; A.M. America 13; A. M Amerlco 6; CBS
6:30-NBC News 3,4,153; ABC News 13; Bewitched 6; CBS New•'.
News e,10 .
8,10; Zoom 20; Your Future Is Now 33.
8:oo-Lassle 6; Caplaln Kang•roo 8; Popeye 1; Sesame StrHt
1 : -Truth or Con110&lt;1uences 3,4; Bowling For Dollars 6; What's
33.
My Line? I; News10; Name That Tune13; High School T. V.
8·1()-Your Future Is Now 20.
Honor Society 15; Anllque120; Llll•s. Yoga and You 3J.
8.25-Caplaln Kangaroo 10.
7:30-Hollywood Squares 3; Hollywood Squares 4; Wild, Wild
8·3()-Big Valley 6.
World of Animo Is 6; Buck Owens 8; New Price Is Right 10;
9.oo-A.M. 3; Phil ~nahue4 ; Collee Break 6; Phil Donohue 15;
To Tell The Trulh 13; Spring Streel USA 15; The Lulhler 20;
Rocky and Friends8; Morning With D. J . 13.
Marco Snortllte 3J.
9.25-Chuck White Reports 10.
t:-Adam-12 3,4; Happy Days 6, 13; Billy Grohom Crusade 15;'
9:3Q-Not For Women Only 3; Dinah! 6; G•lloplng Gourmet I;
Goad Times 8,10; America 20,33.
·"'

Phone 992-3993 ·
Daily After 5:00

Chain
Precision
Ground

2-19· Lmo.

Dale E . Sm tth
Mayor

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

MONDAY, MARCH 10,1975

.Lany !avender

SALES &amp; SERVICE
992-3092

Biocks
Cement and Mortar
Wood Burning Stoves
Healilators
and
Fireplace Accessories

8!00

man

~;::_;.:,MEET~;:.:j--1~/

BICIWn Into Walls
and AtticS'
Free Estimates

WILKINSON
SMALL .NGJNE

FOREST RUN
BLOCK CO.

FURNI SHED apartment. 3
J-9 6tc
rms and bath Phone 992
2937
777 Purl Stroot
pastor of Zion Church of Christ,
1972 DODGE Colt , new radial
3 4 61C
tires , very good condition .
Ohio
Mlddltport,
performed the ceremony. Mrs.
Ralph H Werry
S1 ,200 Also, 1966 Nova, A 1
Phone H2-5367 or 992-JN 1
Prestdent
of
Council
John Downs, sister of ·· the •
shape, must sel l. Phone 992 TWO bedroom mobile home
L! w.l... . ,, Aflest Jane Walton
7066
corne r Broadway and Elm in
groom, was malron of uouvr ' '
Middl&amp;port.
Phone
992
-2580
3-9·61C
Clerk
and John Downs was besl'
after 6 p .m
2 16 -tfc 1975 MONTE Carlo, 4.000 mit;$,
for his brother4n-law.
Th is Ordlnancr paned · 3-3-75 .
all power . a ir . AM stereo COUNTRY HOME - 6 ·r~s
Following the wedding a
tape . Call992 7036 after s p .m .
bath , 3 bedroom, vrn)'l siding,
3 BEDROOM trai l er, partly
(31 10, 17, 21c
J-5-ttc
receptlon was held for the
furni shed , utilities pa•d
storm w indows and doors ,
Located in Burlin.Qham
new furnace on paved road .
couple. The three-tiered - - - - - - - - - Chestrr water d istrict, 1 acre
trailer park . Phone 992 -7751. 1970 , 1 TON Chevrolet V -8
PUBLIC NOTICE
land . Phone 949 595J.
2-15-tfc
flatbed, 4 speed , dual wheels ,
wedding cake, ba ked bY Mrs.
sealed bids will be rece ived
runs good , good body Phone
2 26-12tc
Sharon Barr, Rutland, was In the otftce of the Village
Harold Brewer , Long Bottom ,
served wllh sherbet punch and Cler k. Second Streel, VIllage of TRAILER SPACE. Jf.- mile
985 -3554 .
2 16-tfc
north of Meigs High School on
Pomeroy, OhiO, until 12 o'clock
ACREAGE for sate: Wooded
old Rt 33 Phon~ 992 -2941.
nuts and mints. Attending were noon on Mondoy . March 17 .
tots at Rock Springs to be
1-23 -tfc ·1913 FORD Country Squire
used for residential home use
Mr. and Mrs. Ric Morrlson, 1975, ror the lotlowtng proposal.
wa~on,
20.000 miles , all
For a 80 gallon tar kettle
only . Bill Witte. 992 -2789 .
equipment, $3 ,500 Phone 992 ·
Conceverte, W. Va.; Alicia
Each bid must contain the DUPieX :-2j8•--;-waln~tSt .
2-11 -26tc
Middleport
,
Oh
io.
Phone
992
3493 or 992 -2720
full name of every J)~rson or
Smith • CovingtOn, V&amp; ,j She1ba co
2780
or
992
3432
.
mpany i nterested In the
2 19 .tfc 1973 VEGA Hatchback, 4 speed
Maynard, sister of the bride same. and be accompanied by
and Bernard LaValley of a bond or certified check In the AVAILABLE th i s week , small 2 transm i ssion , new tires. tape
player . excellent condition . NEW Wheel chair and walker,
su m
of
SIOO 00
to
the
bedroom , double wide mobil!!'
Wi ll sell reasonable Phonr
Racine, Mr. and Mrs. Harley sattsfactlon of the Vlllage
never used . Phone 742 -4461
home
near
Pomeroy
.
Off
Rt
.
7
C614 J 992 2311 or 992 2732 after
3-6-lltc
T. Johnson, local"; Robert Council as a guaranty that if
by pass No ch ildren or pets
4 p .m .
the bid tS accepted, contract
Phone 992 7017 or 992 -7666
Murphy, Peggy, cannel and will be enterrd Into and its
22B -12tc
STANLEY Products for sate
3-9 ltc
Barbara Murphy, Mr. and Mrs. performance properly secured .
Phone 742 3762 .
1968 200 CUBIC Inch, 6 cyl,
These checks or bonds will be
J-9 26tc
John Downs, and Mr. and Mrs. returned at on ce to all e)tcept 5 ROOMS . 11 ' bath , furn i shed Comet Automatic , new
brakes,
and
brake
drums,
hn
E
M
by
the
successful
bidder
.
H
i
s
on Secon d Avenue in Mid J0
• • urp ·
check or bond will be htld unt tl
priced to sell . Phone Albert CAMPER: top for pickup truck,
dlepor t. rede corated Call 992 $200 Phone 992 -7127
Hill , 949 -?261.
The couple now resides at lh e contract or bid is properly
5262 , morn ings or e\lentngs .
3 9-2tc
3-1 Jtc
270"" Walnut St., Mlddlep&lt;Jrt, executed by him
3 5 lfc
The riOhl Is re-served to
-· -~- -- ------- -- --FABRICS, Polyester screen
Ohio.
reject any and all bids .
CO UNTRY Mobile Home" Park, 1969 MERCURY Montego MX , 4
prints for Easter just arr tv ed
dr
\linyl
roof,
302
VB
,
R t. 33 , ten m rles north of
Also we now ha\le cotton
Jane Walton. Clerk
automattc
tr5nsm isst on ,
Pomeroy
Large lol.s with
knits
Sewmg notions at
VILLAGE OF POMEROY
S600 95 Phone 378 -6347 .
co ncrete pat ios . sidewa lks,
discount . Ten percent oft to &lt;1
6
6tc
3
runners
and
ofl
street
H and home -ec students
' (3) 9, 10 . 2tc
parking Pl'lone 992 7479 .
Carolina Fabrics , Route 7,
12JIIfc
one h&amp;lf mile north of Chester ,
Ohio Open 9 a.m . to 1 p .m.
HOU SE FOR RENT. 163i
Monday through Friday and 9
lincoln Hgts ., Pomeroy ,
GALLON water fountains with
a .m. to .5 p .m
Saturday,
PUBLIC NOTICE
Phone Pomeroy 992-3575 or
lids . For poultry . Phone (6UI
Henry and Mary Hunter .
Public he-arings will be held at
Gallipolis 446 27-49 .
696 1105
owners .
1 p m Tuesday , March 4th, and
2 2-tfc
3-9-Jtc
3-9-Jtc
Tuesday, 2 l) .m . March 2$th , at
Rev . and Mrs. Richard the former Pomeroy Junior
High
School
Build i ng
to 3 and .t6 ROOM furnished and .OLD flJrnlture , ice boxes , bi-ass 1965 JOHN Deere- dozer, 4
YoWlg and family of Sidney, determ
cyltnder, diesel, 8 ft b lade,
ine Meigs County's
unfurnished
apartments · beds , or complete households .
Ohio spent .the weekend with find ing under the new Housing
new paint , clutches, tracks,
Phone 9~2 - S434 .
Write M . o Miller , Rt. -4,
brakes, and canopy . 56.000 .
lind Community Development
4-12 -tfc
Pomeroy , Oh io Call 992-7760.
Mr. _and Mrs. Edson Roush.
Phone 985 - 35~4
Act of 191.4.
- - - - - - - - -- - - ---10 -7-74
Mr . and Mrs. Melvin Circle
3-9-llp
PRIVATE meetlno room tor
--------------Meigs County
anv organization . phone 992 JUNK autos, comp lete and
and family of Worthington,
Com m lssioners
3975 .
deltvered to our yard. We pick 1953 F=ERGUSON 30, new
Ohio, Mr. and Mrs. James
motor , paint and good rubber .
Henry Wells
3-11 -tfc
up auto bodies and buy all
S1,2SO Phone 9~5 - 3594.
kinds of scrap metals and
Circle of New Haven, W. Va., (JI 3, 14 , 21 ,_3tc Ralph w. Ours - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 3·9 7tp
APT . J rooms , ' " el ectric: , has
Iron . Ri der's Salvage , St. Rt
visited with Mary Circle over
t"bie top range , wall oven ,
124, Rl 4, Pomeroy , Oh.io.
1950 FERGUSON, 20. all
real n ice and clean, modern .
Call 992-5468.
the weekend .
PUBLIC NOTICE
orig i nal except new paint and
Located
in
Pomeroy
1017 tfc
SHERIFF ' S SALE OF
Mr. and Mrs . Shelby
tires . SI ,5.SO . Phone 98.5 -3S94 .
overlooking the Ohio River . - - - - - -- - -- - - - - CHATTEL PROPERTY
3-9-71p
Phone Gallipolis , day 446 · CASH paid for all makes and
Pickens, Jay and Joyce, of
7699, evenings 446-9539 .
models
of
mobile
homes
Pomeroy, Mr. and Mrs. Gene Syln1 Roudl , Plaintiff
mowers, to fit Ford or
I 26 -tfn
Phone 'area code 614-423 -9531 . TWO
vs.
Ferguson, J pt. hitch . One
Hudson, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Edna StObart, Defendant
4·13 -tfc
SUS, other S175 . Phone 985 Cue No. X - (1 , 144
Hudson of Racine. visited with
35~4 .
3-9-7tp
Mr. and Mrs. Allan Taylor on
In pursuance to an Execution
tssue d from the County Court of PROJECT IONIST for Mason
SWlday.
NICE Beegle pups for sate,
Meigs County , Pomeroy , Ohio,
Or i1.1e In Theatre Call Point NICE Easter gift! AKC black
reasonab l y pr iced. Phone 992Mr , and Mrs. Arthur Earl on the 15th day of January , 1915
Pleasant, 675 -3742 or 615 -5661
5302.
m iniature poodle , female . 3'h
2-27
uc
Johnson and Patrick, Sheryl and to me directed in the case
3-7 3tc
months
old
.
housebroken
.
above named , I w i ll expose to
w111
do
poodle
grooming
Also.
l.eAnn called al the home of sale
at Public Auction at th e RESPONSIBLE lady to l tve in
ror S5 . Call Coolville , 667 3915. PORTABLE automatic washer ,
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Johnl"n front door of the Court House .
phone 992 -1066.
with elderly lady . Phone { 1)
3-7 Jtc
Pomeroy , Oh io . Meigs Countv
3-9 6tc
667 -3l05 .
of Racine.
. .,.
on Thursday , the 20th day cf
J-4 12tc
Willlam Carleton of Racine March , 1915 at 10 .00 a .m . the
GIBSON automat 1c washer. A
ooods and ch attel s. to
years old, 18 lb . capac i ty Call
MEAT Department manager,
was a dinner guesl of Arthtlr followlno
wit
992-3901
must be exper i enced i n
I 1969 Pontia c catalma, 4
Earl Johnson on SWlday in
3-9-3tc
buying , pri cmg, and mer SELL your mobile home for
cash 15 homes wanted . 1958
door , color green wifh blllck
chandising of total reta il.
honor of his birthday.
thru
1972
models
Phone
(614)
vinyl
top ,
Serial
No
meal
progrllm ,
salary
.
446 1425, Gallipolis .
There were 22 present at 252699E 141075. Terms of Sa le
negotiable . bonus plan, good
Cash In hand on day of sat&amp; .
3
9-78tc
benef i ts with chance of ad
Sunday School March 2.
vancement for the rigt11 man , --~ -- --- ------Taken
as
the
property
of
Mr. and Mrs , Bernard
small young, progresstve
Edna Stobart to satisfy an
company . Send resume to Mr
Gainer of Barherlon, 0 ., Mrs. Execullon in favor of Sylvia
Bla c k . P
0
Box 807 ,
Erma! Schreckenyosl of Roush
Gallipolis , Ohio 45631 . All
R EMOOEL IN G .
plumbing,
replies confidential.
Parkersburg , W. Va ., called at
Robert C. Hartenbach .
heating , and a l l types of
3 4 6tc
Stlrrlfl
general
repair
Work
the home of Mrs. Dean Brinker
Mr igs County ,
-10.000 IHI bales
guaranteed 20 years ex
Saturday and lhey all visiled
Pomeroy, Ohio
perience. Phone 992 -2409 .
Jesse Gainer of Pomeroy.
-Ask for our cash and carry.
1-19-tfc
(51 10, He
price •.

Ronceverte, W. Va., former

Television log for easy viewing

CAP!' AIN EASY

4 Door . fully equipped inc . air. dark red . A real cream

Pomeroy commencing Jan 1st.
1976, sh.!llt be Sl ,.tOG 00 per

• lt,.,flll. IOc , flol ... Ul "' 0!1

,.

HEI,L

heating service and
general sheet metal
works.
Free
Estimates.
Pllone 949-5961
Emergency 992-3995
or 992-5700

Siding - Soffitt
Gutters· Awnings
Free Estim1te"

'
HE CI&gt;,LLED ME BABY AND
JH&lt;JNE,Y ANO SOME OTHER
STIJOOAND ASKED ME

Fire Retardant
lnsulatioo

RACINE PWMBING
·tomplete
&amp; HEATING
plumbing &amp; ·

$2795

Suburban 3 Seat, V-8 engine, auton:"~atic lrf!ns .. power
steering &amp; brakes, factory a ir conditioning, luggage rack ,
green fin1sh, radio . Like new w-w tires

1971

. .

Blown 1nto W•lls &amp; AHles.
STORM
Windows &amp;"""lloors
ALUMINUM

I T ORO.r..INEO by the

Co un ci l ot

•

$2195

3 seat wagon . Less than 30,000 miles by local owner, 400 V8, P . steering, brakes, automatic power door locks,
luggage rack , rad1o. dark green f in ish . like new &amp; loaded
wdh extras .

197J PLY. STA. WAGON

ORDINANCE 457

Blown
Insulation Services

l

9- The Daily Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, March 10, 1975
DICK TRAC~
.
·

J

---·-----------

•

________ ______ _

'"

•

'

• •
•'

.

'

•:

'"
•

·,

I

·I

,

�1.- 'ftle ~ Sentljtel, MidcDeport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday,\March 10, 1975

f'or Fast ResUlts Use Sentinel CiassifielisL__,_,~B-=-u==-:..s~in=e~s~s~S~e;;,.;;;;r~v~ic~e=s~,

I' .

•.

•

by Gill Fox

SIDE GLANCES

Auto Sales

Not.:e
AUCTION . Thurs&lt;Jay n•gtlt . 1
p m . at ~uon Auction ,
Hor ton st In Mason, w va .
Co n s ignments welcome .
PhOne (30 41 7735471

r

2 SIGNS
OF
QUALITY

2 2 lfC

'

ATHE N S Flea Market at Jr
F a1r Bldg . , March 2 and 16
Spaces available Phone 591
8~60 H1ghly advertised
2 18 18tc
·FoR vour "Oil of Mink"
CosmetiC!. Phone BROWN 'S
992 5 113 •
1 7 He

Pomeroy
Mbtor Co.

1972 CHEVROLET KINGSWOOD ESTATE

/

ORDINA NCE

PROVIDING

F OR

OF

SALARY

VILLAGE

MAYOR .

CLERK

AND

MEMBERS OF COUNCIL OF

THE VILLAGE OF POMEROY
EFFECTIVE January at. 1970 .

/

BE

the

v.uage

or

Pomeroy, all members thereto
concurring ·

1. That the sa l ary of the
Mayo r ol the Village of
annum .
2. That the salary tor the
Cler k of the VIllage of Pomeroy ,

~~
3· 10

"What's this about my accounl being overdrswn has your compuler no shame?!"

Wolfpen News, Notes
&amp;lnday guests of Mr. and
Mrlt. Lincoln Russell were Mr.
and Mrlt. Dale Russell of
Columbus, Mrs. J:larold
Gillogly, VIcki and Bruce,
Karen GUkey, Albany, Mr.
Ow'les Knapp, Johmle Capp,
Dol'! Knapp of West Colwnbla.
Mr. and Mrs. Franklln
RulleU of Middleport were
Monday vlsltors of Mr. and
Mrlt. Uncoln RUJSeU.
&amp;lnday diMer guests of Mr.
and Mrlt. Harley T. Johnson
were Mla8 Patricia Tboma of
Kentucky and Mr. and Mrs.
Howard Thoma, local.
Miss Patricia Thoma of
LoullvWe, K,y. was a weekend
vl.lltorof Mr. and Mn. Howard

'11Kima.
Mr. James Reeves was a
recent dinner guest of Mr. and
Mn. Fred Tackerman.
Mr. and Mrlt. Larry BRIT,
DIIVId and Michelle, were
&amp;mdly vlalton of Mrlt. J. R.
Murphy .00 family .
Mrlt. John R. Murphy and
Mn. John Downs were Wednetdly evening visitors of Mr . .
-sMn.
Mn. Harley T. Johnson.
John . R. Murphy and
Mn. John Downs visited Mr.
end Mn. Larr1 Barr and
chllchn of Rutland Tuesday
evening.
Mr. .nd Mrlt. Ric Morrison,
Rllllceverte, W. Va., and Mla8
Alicia Smith, Covington, Va.,
were Thunday evening diMer
peeta of Mrs. John R. Murphy
ltld family.
Mlu
Alicia
Smith,
~vlngton, Va., was an
overnight guest of Barbara
Murphy 'lbUI"IIday night.
Linda Rosenbawn and Tam!
Holfman .were Saturday night
pests of Barbara and Caqnel
Murphy.
Mn. John R. Murphy, Mrs.
John Downs, Robert Murphy
and daughter Debbie and
Carmel Murphy were Sunday
dinner pte~~~ of Mr. and Mrs.
Jolin E . Murpl!y and Olrls of

Middleport.
"''Debbie Murpl!y, Middleport,
~

Salurday nJ&amp;hl with her
pndmolher, Mrs. John R.
ibpby and family.
.
;,."Barbara Murphy was a
Sllnday afternoon guest of
l.4hdl Roeenbawn of Pomeroy.
"The wedding of Julla
~.daughter of Mr. and
Mn. Cecil Maynard of Racine
IIIII John Edward Murphy, son
Ill Mr. and Mrs. John R.
~urphy, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, was
held Friday, Feb. 28 at 1:30

..

:.- u

CARNIVAL

p.m. in the living room of the
Murphy home. Ric Morrison,

commencing Ja nuary 1st . 1976,
sha l l b~ 53 .000.00 per annum .
3 That each duly elected and
qualifi~d m~mber of the Vlllagt'
Council shal l, tffective Januarv
I st . 1~76 . re ce ive 510 .00 for each
reglJ!ar council m~et l ng at
tended, and the sum of S5.00 for
each spec i al meetmg attended .
4 That all 01-dlnances or
parts of Ordinances in conflict
w1th this Ord t nanc~ are hereby
amended eftecttve January 1st ,
1976
This Ord tnance shall be in
force and effect from and after
the earliest period allowed by

lew

Ph~992-3f93

LARRY LAVENDER
Syracuse, Ohio

MATADOR

$1595

t

pull

RD No.1

POMEROY
MOTOR
CO.
OPEN EVES.
P.M.
POMEROY, OHIO
19708UICK Skylark . Phone992
5460 Owner lea1.1ing town ,
must sell .
•
2 BEDROOM t railer . Brown 's
J-9 3tp
Trader Court. Phone 992 3324
3 4 tfc TWO 1968 Chevelles . Both S7S0.
Phone 742 6205
FURNISHED apt . , air con
J 9-6t c
ditioning , ele-c heat. 12 miles
from Pomeroy on Rt
33 ONE 19 72 Pontiac Catalina, A -1
Adults onty . Phone D04 J 77J
condition . One 1966 Buick
5118
WitdcaL One- two wheel
3 4 6tc
trader , facto ry built Phone
992 -3165
3 BEDROOM mobtle home .
3 9 3tc
washer and dryer . 1' 1 baths ,
utiltt tes paid , S4'2 50 week 308 1970 DODGE Challenger , Rt.
Page St , Middleport , OhtO
383 illJtomatic, good condition.
3-4 lfc
S1.400or bHto.ffer . Phone 992

For Rent

992-2067
o'jlinersville. 0.

p.J
Home Maintenance

'

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

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

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

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

WILL trim or cut trees 0-r
shrubbery.
clean
out
basements , attics, etc Phone
949 -322 1 or 742-4441 .

Pets For Sale

Mobile Homes For Sale

TRAILER-WAD

BALER
TWINE

Employment Wanted

CARRIER
WANTED

by Dick Turner

- -------------For Sale

FOR

MONKEY RUN AREA
Pomeroy, 0.

The

Dai~

2 GRAVE lot, Meigs Memorial
Gardrns , cheap Phone 9-494962 .
3-5-6tc

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

A GOOD buy ... give ir a try .

Sentinel

B tue
Lustre .
America ' s
favorite carpet shampoo .
Baker Furniture Co .
J-7 3tc

.

.

MODERN
Walnut
stereo .
console ,
AM -FM
radio,
separate controls . Balance
5107 .10 or budget terms . Call

992 -396S.

3-3 He

PH. 992·2156

NEW and used cha in saws , IN OUSTR IAL 6 inch stroke saw
t illers and mowers . Also,
575 ; 18 inch metal tatag 6/ricn
repa 1rs . 498 Locust St .•
sw ing ,
c"o mplrtr
with
Middleport . Phone 992 -3092 .
threading gears motor and
2·28 ·26tc
bits, SIOO. 2 h .p. 220 bolt single
PIANO tuning . Phone- 949 4811. - - - -- - - - - - - - - - Phlse motor, industrial type
3-4-tfc
w ith pulley, SSO. air com .
- ------ - ------GOOD hay for sate . Franc i!.
pressor motor and tank, S25 . .
I WILL do roofing , heating .
Andrew, Long Bottom . Phone
Lin• shaft 3 pulleys, bearlnos
repair , plumbing and eiec 985 -3593 .
ana belt, $15 . Phone 915-•118.
trrcai work . Phone Charles
3-7-Jip
·
,
2-1J-261c
\ Sinc la i r , 985 -4121
- - - - - - - - - - -- -- Pomeroy lowl int Lanrs
3-4·12tp ' GROCERY business tor sate
MORNtflG GLORIES
----- - - - - - - - - - - - SuHd ing for sate or Ieese.
Feb. 25 • a'S
f\1 EASE SETT LEMENT Chepet
Phone 713 -5618from 8: 30p . m .
Stand ings
Ctlurch will be open tor
to 10 p . m . for appointment .
INDIAN Joe 's Sporting GoOds,
Tum
ser~o~ius this Sunday , at 10 a.
3-10-tfc
buy and se-ll guns, ammo,
141
Excels ior Oil Co
m . and ~vening services at 7 ·- - - - - - - - - - - - - - fishing equ ipment , and after
G &amp; J Au,to Parts
112
w
Aprill , Wt Will hive fiSh b.lif.
Gi bbs Grocery
10•
P. m
eds. prayer meeHng , USED pans. Frye's Truck and
1
Stop by at 308 Page Sl .•
30
·
Newell Sunoco
90
p . m Everyone welcome .
Auto Parts, Rutland , Ohio .
Middleport . Phon~ 992-3509.
WMPO
82
f3 6·61c
Phone (614 ) 742-60'94.
l ·2·301C
Spencer's Market
47
· - -·1-22 -78tp.
H i gh In d . Gme - Thelma ' F '... ON ERSfor East er . Baskets . - - - - -- - - - -- , - - - Osborne 194, A . Pooler and M .
pots , sprays, etc. Phone 98.5 - CLOSe OUT on new Zi;t -Zag ·
Foflrod 175
3537 Sm alley •, Gift Shop ,
sewrng machines. For sewing
High serifS - Donna Me CP'tnter . Ohio .
stretch fabrics , buttonholes .. 1957 CHEVY parts : NEW
Farland 472. Thelma Osborne
3-4 12tc
fancy dtSigns , etc . Pllnt
Lakewood traction bars, hi··
A6.t .
- -·-·-- - - - - - - - - - slightly blemished . c.,olct of
lacktr air st.ocks, tlooktr
Team High Game - Gibbs
carryinO case or sewing
htldt-r! , with 3" collectors tor ·
Grocery 810
NOW !ell lng Fuller Brusl'l
stand . SA9.80 USh or termt
small bla&lt;k, Call H2-3494·
Team High Series - Glbb!
Products , phone 992 -3410.
av~tlleble . Phont tf2 -7155.
after 6 p, m. BEST OFFER .
Grocery 2281.
1 7• -ttc
12.-18 -tfc:
" .__
10-17 -ttc

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

have sens~. enough to
stay home on a night like th1s!

"YOu're right, Pa! They DION'T

CB SALES &amp; PARTS
308 Page St.
Middleport, 0. 992-3509
Radios, Antennas. Tower&amp;,
Used T. v .' s. Buy from the
"Indian" and save "Wam
Pum". we buy used Radios
and Towers. Radios repaired
by FCC licensed service
P.ersonnel . Stop and see the
'Indian" and
Bubbles.
Monitor Channel 10 and 20.

TattiPt~l-.!'l. 10: New Zoo Revue 13.
.
IO : ~Celebrlly Sweepstakes 3.4, 15; Jol&lt;er's Wild 8,10; Pinah

10·3Q-Wheel Of Forlune 3,4,15; Gambit 8,10.
11 :QO-High Rollers 3,4,15; One Life to Live 6; Now You SHIt
8.10; E lectrlc Comp•ny 20.

JJlY~M®!:'=!t!...Jc:

D&amp;D
CONSTRUCTION

IO'o' Ill 1\1!11 /\It NOH L I

ALLEY OOP

3 bedroom home near
33
These homes are needed by

prospects who are wailing to
BUY. CALL TODAY

992·2259
-FOR SALERUTLAND- CLOSE TO
SHOPP ING - 2 BR, bath,
fireplace,

carpeting,

paneling, tile, porch, garage.
$9,500.00.
POMEROY- Lincoln His. 2
BR, bath, H.W. floors. utility

ELUSO

From a. shelf to a house.
Painting, siding, roofing,
paper hanging, kitchen

expert carpeting,

R., basement, porch, large

~-10

THORN KING'S CASTLE.

kitche-n , utility room on
100x200 tot . 515,500 Call after
5 p m tor information, 667 -

3739.

3-9-6tc

--------------6 ROOM house with bath , 3
bedroom , full basement, gas
heat , h .w . floor , wall to wall
carpet. Close to school in
Pomeroy . Phone 992 -3097
3-9-52tc

--------------l BEDROOM house with bath ,

-=----------

BEAUTIFUL wooded 5 acre
lots in Riggs Crest Manor ,
reasonable oriced between
Tuppers Plains -Chester Ca ll
Joe Boyles , 667 .3829 . Affolter
Realty Broker .
3-9-Jtc

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

r J rxJ

1

AT FACT01'1:11!:5.

I

..\nBwf'r:

Hhat da

NfJU

l4tlg u•hcn

IJOU

aomeona doing work lor you

will gelthinga loulod up and It
will have to be done over.

b.y THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS

1 Diplomat's

E)t,CAVA:T I NG , aozer , loader
5nd backhoe work; septic
finks installed; dump trucks
·'and to-boys for hire ; will haul
flll'tirt. top soli, limestone &amp;
gravel; Cal l Bob or Roger
Jeffers , day phone 992 7089,
night phone 992 -3525 or 992 2-11 -lfc

---.- 4--------- -

•
•

ULABNER
AND YOU HAVE G"SOL INE'i OF THE HIGHE"GT
0\IE FLAPALOO E::66
Qi-IA.LITY AND L.~ PRICJiS- WHAT A BLESSING)-DISSOLVED INTO A _::::::~TO ALL HUMANITY.' WHAT A CREDIT' TO SUCH
MILLION 0ALLONS &lt;:HUMANITARIAN$ AS THE
OF WATERFLIMFL.AM.FLJND r!-

instrurnenl

North. Excellent home sites
and spring. T . P. water close.

31 Preachment

ROUTE 143- Far Out large II

(abbr.)
:12 Suffix for
coward
:~1 Incarnadine
:w Garment part
:16 Nobleman
:17 Overjoyed
:11 Semicircular
room
:19 Unruffled
10 Its flesh

I

!J

,,l!

HOUSING SITES- 2'h Acres

'

in Pomeroy out of high water.
Near sewer and water.

WINNIE

OUR PURPOSE IN BUSINESS
IS TO HELP YOU GET A
GOOD PRICE FOR YOUR
PROPERTY. LIST IT 'f'ITH
US. CALL 992-3J25.

DID I KNOW
HON MANY Pf(O{fJ.eMS
IT WOULD ENTAIL.
~liTLE

is

i

'

lOW LOW DOWN PAYMENT .'

'I

Lo\lely ne-w homes in three
locat ions in Meigs County .
Some with wooded lots We
will built on your lot or ours.
Call 992-S976 or 992 -584• for
more information .

methodaiHet you hoped lo uaa
In a bualnen altuaUon won't

produce the daalred rosulto.

Be mora firm , bul remain lair.

VIIIQO (Alii• 21-. .pt. 211
Your mate or plf1n1r will have

1 more praotlcol aolullon lo a
problem 1oday than you will.
Toke 1 back nat Llaton.
UIIIA (lltpt. :ti-OoL :12) The
9 Barren

10 Calm
16 Clearance 19 Unconunon
22 Still
2:. German
wine
24 Chest

sound

25 Populace
26 Withdraw
28 African
cat
29 Succinct
30 Snake
35 Greek
letter
36 YOW18811H'

'

BARNEY

WKEY!! WHAT IN :'
THUfllDER HAPPEI\lT

•· '

10 'IOU?

--WHEN
TH'OADBURN

BELL RANG

EAST

.5

•QJ874
•AQ85
•KQIOU
o!oJ15
"SOUTH CD!
•AK852
•AK52
.106 2

•K9J

Both vulnerable

West

Norlh

Eon

Sout~

!;.,+-1Pass
Pau

Pass
Pass

Opeoln&amp;lead - K •

PN '

QEY

CGKA

GK

PIWG,

CDGB

HEK . - DGSBT

I WUZJEST
MOSEVIN' PAST TH'
·scHOOLHOUSE,
SNUFFY

•u
.A

.106

AE
PA

JWA
YB

PK

lly Oawald II James Jacoby
Jim: "How about showing
some of Terence Reese's hands.
'lbere is plenty to be learned

GXDEHH
BWD-

G

RYKXTW

Yesterday's CryptoqDole: "MAti'ITAIN YOUR RANI.,
VULGARITY DESPISE. TO SWEAR IS NErmER BRAVE,
POUTE, NOR WISE.-WIWAM COWPER

'"

PISC!I (Pob. 20·111rofl :101•
One who now wants to hetp yo\.1 '

Is confuaed b{ your melhoda.:H
Clarify your alms so you bolh "~
work . In

harmony.iJw

~~
March 11, 1175

f

Much good will come to you 1
this year through an lnfluenllal )l!
social contact you'll develop. tm
He will be one who Is older than 11 ~

you. His word Is his bond.

ot
r.::
1ih

·Ui,
JUSt makes a preparatory pUf
he can still bring ten tri&lt;:ks
home."
·
·~
The preparatpry play Is .Jii
ruff one or dummy's clubs 'il
trick two. Then cash lhe ~
and king of spades and ace aitd
king or hearts. Next comes lbll
play of a low heart. West can:t
afford to rufr and chucks a cl~ll.
South rulls in dummy. ruff~.J
club in his own hand and. lea~
his last heart. Once more WHI
can't afford to ruff and Sou*
uses dummy's last trump. NOli!
he leads dummy's last club,1M
West has discarded his ~
club, that club in dummy is a
winner; if West hasn't discard·
ed that club, South scores his
last trump.
)

u:e ;1 :11'rZJ.01 ~
Th~
i
bidding has been: :

West

North

East

SCMith

~:~ ~! ~:: ~: l

Pass

come from actual play and

.KJ94.AQ2 •H3. 'KIO~
What do you do now? ·. .. I

show declarer struggling with
an opUmlstic contract that he
can make, but usually doesn't."
Jim : "Today's hand is
typical. South's JUmp to game
Ia a alllht overbid. He would
have no play a1ainst a diamond
openi!ll, but West makes bis
normallead.of the king of clubs.
Now South is In business, If he
knows what do do. "
Oswald : "At some stage of
the early play · he will bang
down the ace and king of
trumps to see if the queen
drops. It doesn' t but if South

2 N T. Pass

I
j

from them."

Oswald: "M01t of his hands

CRYPTOQUOTE

•

10

NORTH
' 6HO

WEST

One letter aimply atanclt ror another. In lhla 11111ple A Is
used for the three 'L's, X for lhe two O's, etc. Sln11e Jetton,
apostrophes, the length and formolion of tho warda an oil
blnts. Each day the code !ellen are different.

•
(~ ... 20·Feb. 11)· ,
A situation will arise that MIU~1
require some shrewd thinking rt!il'
on your part: II you use your i·
head you'll profit from II.
' ·'
AQUARIUB

Good play can solve overbid

.g

Is

fact a sensitive friend wanta·::'u
kept confidential.
~"'

~')

.QI07

AXYDLIAAXI
LONGFELLOW

11) Be very careful or you m1y rv
1 1
SB'I something concerning a

WIN AT BRIDGE

•J 74
862

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here'a how to work It:

'

ne,;t few days meaningful

lr'T.:-1'1"""1r',.....'l=:"""l

venison

buck.
·M
CAPRICORN (Doc. 22·Jon;,

can

LIO (JuiJ 23-Aug. 21) Ganlla

'!'/ Lava
21 Keyboard

70 ACRES - On new Route 33

room 2 bath home with
bvsiness room. and drilled well
and plenty of park in g.

DOWN
I Tossed 2 Resin
J Interrupt
(3 wds.)
1 Possessive
pronoun
5 Do a
film
editor's
job
6 Clink
glasses
7 Disencwn·
ber
1 At lhe _
(hard
pressed)
( 4 wds.)

garb
5 Emphasize
11 Quebec's
patron saint
t2 Ballet
position
13 Equivocator
14 Carpenter's
need
15 Fuse
abbreviation
16 Utile lady's
nickname
17 Rich rock
II Abate; lessen
20 Ne1ghbor
of Nor.
~1 Famed
patriot
22 Burrowing
beast
23 Bare
24 Mystic wntmg 1-=-+-+25 Speck
26 Scold

GASOUNE AILEY

G!MINI (MIJ 21-~uno 20)
Don'l benk too heavily upon an
ally who hu let 'you down
before. What needs doing you

ntomlt,•r!-HELLO HELLO

.,

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. U·Deo• ••
21) A Iemily matter will be pop.'~"
ping up. II will require your cooll .
hoed and firm hand lo,a
straighten out. Don't pass thl ~

can do alone. II wllljustlake a
lillie longer.
CANC Ill (J..,. 21-.I"'J 22) Be
very axptlcll wllh dlractlona. or

mf.'t!l a lrH-hnHIH

&amp;u..""'

stream and a 3 bec:froom
modern home w ith city water.

youraell to believe . Be
prepared to treat It more

the locts
through additional sources.

•

33ACRES- Small freshwaler

will not be aa easy aa you loci

lully accurate. Verily

Jurnbl"'" OLDER LITHE HOURLY ALMOST

houses with baths, in town near
stores. Want an investment,
this is it.

plan you hope to Implement

on to you by a lrtend won't be

S•lunla' '"

2

Por Tlllllllr, !larch 11, 1175
1111111 ( M - 21·Aprf1 ttl A

aerloualy.

{Aiuwere tOIIlO,.W)

control at all times today yo~tv
could Impulsively gel lnvolved1
In something that will cos{
more than It's wor1h.

rr

tAUIIUI (April :IO·MIJ :10) In·
lormallon that will be paasod

992-2259

--------------3 BEDROOM home , large

NOWAD\YS lT COULD
BE A6AIN6i "Tl-IE LAW
'TO DI~AR6E THEM

LITTLE ORPHAN . ANNIE-WHO DID THAT!
~~~~
~~~~~

DOZ-ER work, land clearing by
the acre, hourly or contract.
Farm ponds, roads, etc.
Large dozer and operator
with over 20 years ex perience . Pulims Exca1.1ating,
Pomeroy. Ohio . Phone 9922478 .
12 -19 -tfc

HOME WITH INCOME -

...,

I

I NJNITE I

new trees - walnut, poplar,
pine and others.

ROOM house on Union
Avenue. Large lot , full
basement and new furnace .
Call 992 -385-4 .
3-9-lltc

I

LITILE ORPHAN ANNIE

lot. SIO,OOO.OO.
68ACRES- Just off new Rl.
33 - Barn. fenced. 19,500

S

H 8,10; Ascent of Man 20,33.
,,J
9:-Famlly Theotre "The Cantervlll.e Ghost" 15; Billy ."
'"
Graham Cruude 8; Hawaii Flve-0 10.
9:30-Woman 20; Witness to Y8$terdoy 3J.
;}!
10:~'!11t• Story 3,4,15; Marcus Welby. M.D. 6,13; Barnabyi'J
Jonas 8; Billy Graham Crusage 10; News 20 ; Interlace 3J.)( I
10 :30-Your Fulurels Now 20; Asalgnmont Amerlco 33.
11 :Of-News 3,A,6,7,8,10, 13, 15; ABC News 33.
~,fl
11!30-Johnny Car1011 3,4,15; Wide World Mystery 13; FBI 6; ,.
Movie" Class of '63"; Movie "Anything Can H•ppen" 10/'~
Jankl 33.
.k
12;30-Widt World Mystery 6.
'
I !C»-Tamorrow 3.4: Ntwl 13.
no
yoursoll dollnile goala.
:ll
'
SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov, 21) II' '
your boner ludgment lon'l' IIY I

10 t j

... ALLE'I' OOP
ANI&gt; HIS NI!WFOUND FR.I&amp;;NDS
IN "THE LAND OF
NE~ I\IAI&lt;E ~­
PAAArlONS "10 LAUNCH
AN ATTACK ON THE 1

SEWING MACHINE, Repairs
service , all makes, 992-2284
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy ,
Authorized Singer Sales and
Service . we sharpen Scissors
3-29 -tfc

5232. .

n~

1:30--Movle "The Big RIPoff"; Movie "Killer Bees" 6,13;

strides tan be made wheret~
your career Ia concerned . SePJ•

All Types of
BUILDING
and REMODELING

l i ver1ed right to your' project .
Fas
and
easy.
Free
estimates. Phone 992 -328-4
Goeglein Ready Mix co .,
Mtddleport. Ohio .
6-30-tfc:

TODAY WE NEED'
3bedroom home on large

o '" "'I I I

form four ordinary word1.

PHONE
949-3832 or 843-2667

READY MIX CONCRETE "o•-

JUST SOLD
4 PROPERTIES
IN5 DAYS

"

Unscramble these four Jumbles.
one letter to each squue, to

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

Local Bowling

, S·IO

BORN LOSER

{OME
Improvement
and
Repair Service -· Anything
fldd around the home, from
roof to basement. You will
like our work and rates
Phone 742-.5081 .
12 29 -tfc

3 - ~ - 6tc

Notice

1~~)

INDIAN JOE'S

etc.

large vard and garden , city
water Phone 742 -4782.

,POMEROY LANDMAR"K
ll!P.:
Jack w. Carsey. Mgr.
~
Phone m-2111 ·

2-17-7Sc

cabinets,

Real Estate For Sile

Wanted To Buy

For Rtnt
2 BEDROOM mob ile- home .
Phon~ 9ol9 -2l61 ,' Albert Hill
3-10 -61C

You, South, hold :

?· "

.

.

1

bj

A - Pau, or bid tbreo ....._,
II depends oa wllal lOri of
your panaer ·is. .
~
· _

TOiiAY'S QUESTION '
Instead of bidding two .'Ctubs you
partner has jumped to tllree clubo(
over your one spade. What dO ~

do now?
Aaswer Tomorrow

Send $1 for J!&lt;COBY MO
boo!&lt; lo: "Win II Blldf/0," (tlo

newspaper). P.O. Box 4111, R
CltyStotlon. New Yorl&lt;, H.Y. 1001

I 'I \ ' I I._,

'

--------------'

I

..S'EPTIC
TANKS
cleaned .
Modern San ttat ion, 992 -3954 or
992 -1349
...._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ..!,. _
_
9_
18_-tfc

Carmel News

Help Wanted

TO SHI'IK HAJI ':5 P~J:;A
TO WA?H INGTON!

YEAH? ...NOW
lET'S GET DOWN
TO THE. 1&lt;1'1\llY
BIG QU~5TIOIJ!

BRAO~OR

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

By the Day

TH.EY COULD BE PLANSS
FI&lt;:OM THAT '-JAVY TA?K
FOI&lt;:CE .. 1~1 RESPO~!S

1 (614) 247-3644

O, Auctioneer
Complete Service
Phont' 949-3821 or 949-3161
Racine, Ohio
Critt Bradford
5-1 -tfc

..

For Sale

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

I

C.

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

For Sate
SULKEY for Gravely tractor .
SJ5. Also. Black ~iamond
Iinam ent. Phone .592 -2158
Ath~ns , 33 Townund .
3-10 -Jtc

·

JDI Page, Middleport
Heating
•
Cooling
•
Refrigerllion · Roof Repairs
• Gutters - Plumbing •
Electrical Rep-airs and
Service.
Call 992-3509 and
Save on your repairs : also
repair mowers. compressors
and outboards. Bring it in
1nd save .

8-K EXCAVATING
COMPANY

--------------- Real Estate For Sale ·

Professional
WEDDING
Photuglaphy

Middlepori,Ohio 1.2-1 Mo .

W1f1r'. E ll:ctric, G1s, S.w1r
Lints, inllollod. Work
gu1rontttd.
Dot"·, Backhoe, Trucks
Limestone&amp; Fill,Dirt
Commtrclol- Rosldonllol
Construction &amp; Romodol

7423 .

. ..

11 :30-Hollywood Squores 3.15; Brody Bunch 6,13; News 4;
Love 01 Lifo 8, 10. Sesame Street 20.
:
1
11 :s.s-Grahom Kerr 8; Dan lmel'sWorld 10.
12:-Jockpotl 3,15; Password 6,13; Bob Braun's 50-50 Club 4;
1
Nows 8,10.
12 :30-Biank Check 3,15; Spill Second 6,13; Search For 1

I

For Information
Cnll

498Locust St.

•

7 oo-Truth or Cons. 3,4; Bowling for Dollars 6; What's My Line
8: News 10; New Candid Camera 13; Wally's Workshop 15;
Ohio This Week 20; Lilias Yoga &amp; You 33.
7:3o-That Good Ole Nashville Music 3; Masquerade Party •:
Hollywood Squares 6: Pollee Surg110n 6; S25,000 Pyramid I;
Tomorrow a, 10.
:
Municipal CourllO; To Telllhe Truth 13; Untomed World 15;
12!U-Eioctrlc
Company
33.
•
Washington Slralghl Tolk 20; Episode Acllon 33.
12:55-NBC
News
3,15.
I
8:1Xh-Famlly Thealre 3,4; John Denver 6.13; Billy Graham
1:oo-New• 3; All My Children ,6, 13.; Phil Don•hue 8; Young
Crusade 8.10.15; Hollywood Television 20,3J.
•nd the Restless 10; Not For Women Only 15.
9:QO-Movle " A Big Hand lor the LIHie Lady" 3,6,15; SWAT
1:30-How
To Survive A Morrlage 3.4,15; Lei's Make A Daal :
6,13; Mvovle " The Balled of Josle" 4 Moude8, 10.
6,
13;
As
The World Turns 8, 10.
1
9:30-Rhoda 8,10; Romanllc Rebellion 20,3J.
IO ·QO-Carlbe 6,13; Medical Center 8,10; News 20; Washington 2:-l&gt;oys of our Lives 3,43.15; S10,000 Pyramid 6. 13; Guiding i
Light 8, 10.
.
Slralght Talk 33.
30-Doctors
3.4,
15;
Big
Showdown
6.
13;
Edge
of
Night8,10.
2:
10 3D- Behind lhe Lines 33.
3:-Another World 3,4, 15; General Hospital 6,13; Price Is
11 :()()-Johnny Carson 3,4, IS; Wide World Mystery 13; FBI 6;
Rloht 8.10; Lilias, Yogo and You 20.
Movie " Whlslle Stop" 8; Movie "The Nulty Professor" 10;
3:30-Cno Life lo Live 13; Lucy Show 6; Match Game 8,10;
Janakl 33.
Your Future Is Now 20.
12 :3D-Wide World Myslery 6.
4:0G-Mr.
Cartoon 3; I Dream ol Jeannie 4; Somerset 15;
1·0()- Tomorrow 3,4; News 13.
Gilligan's lslan~ 6; Tattletales 8; Sesame Street · 20,3J;
Movie "Donclng In the Dark" 10; Mike Oouglos 13.
TUESDAY, MARCH 11, 1975
4:30-Bewllched 3; Merv Grilling 4; Mod Squad6; Lucy Show 8;
Bononra 15.
6 :QO-Sunrlse Seminar 4; Sunrise Semester 10.
5:-FBI 3; Andy Griffith 8; Mlsler Rogers' Neighborhood
6:25-Farm Report 13.
20.3J; Ironside 13.
1
6:3Q-Five Minutes lo live By 4; News 6; Bible An1wor1 I;
5:30-News 6; Beverly Hillbillies 8; Hodgepodge Lodge 20; Get:
Concerns &amp; Comments 10; Rev . Cleophus Robinson 13.
Smort 15; Electric Company 33.
,
6:35-Columbus Today 4.
,
6:-News 3,4,1,10, 13, IS; ABCA News 6 ; Electric Company 20; :
6:45 - Morning Reporl 3; Formllme 10.
lTV Utilization 33.
·1
7:()()-Today 3.•. 15; A.M. America 13; A. M Amerlco 6; CBS
6:30-NBC News 3,4,153; ABC News 13; Bewitched 6; CBS New•'.
News e,10 .
8,10; Zoom 20; Your Future Is Now 33.
8:oo-Lassle 6; Caplaln Kang•roo 8; Popeye 1; Sesame StrHt
1 : -Truth or Con110&lt;1uences 3,4; Bowling For Dollars 6; What's
33.
My Line? I; News10; Name That Tune13; High School T. V.
8·1()-Your Future Is Now 20.
Honor Society 15; Anllque120; Llll•s. Yoga and You 3J.
8.25-Caplaln Kangaroo 10.
7:30-Hollywood Squares 3; Hollywood Squares 4; Wild, Wild
8·3()-Big Valley 6.
World of Animo Is 6; Buck Owens 8; New Price Is Right 10;
9.oo-A.M. 3; Phil ~nahue4 ; Collee Break 6; Phil Donohue 15;
To Tell The Trulh 13; Spring Streel USA 15; The Lulhler 20;
Rocky and Friends8; Morning With D. J . 13.
Marco Snortllte 3J.
9.25-Chuck White Reports 10.
t:-Adam-12 3,4; Happy Days 6, 13; Billy Grohom Crusade 15;'
9:3Q-Not For Women Only 3; Dinah! 6; G•lloplng Gourmet I;
Goad Times 8,10; America 20,33.
·"'

Phone 992-3993 ·
Daily After 5:00

Chain
Precision
Ground

2-19· Lmo.

Dale E . Sm tth
Mayor

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

MONDAY, MARCH 10,1975

.Lany !avender

SALES &amp; SERVICE
992-3092

Biocks
Cement and Mortar
Wood Burning Stoves
Healilators
and
Fireplace Accessories

8!00

man

~;::_;.:,MEET~;:.:j--1~/

BICIWn Into Walls
and AtticS'
Free Estimates

WILKINSON
SMALL .NGJNE

FOREST RUN
BLOCK CO.

FURNI SHED apartment. 3
J-9 6tc
rms and bath Phone 992
2937
777 Purl Stroot
pastor of Zion Church of Christ,
1972 DODGE Colt , new radial
3 4 61C
tires , very good condition .
Ohio
Mlddltport,
performed the ceremony. Mrs.
Ralph H Werry
S1 ,200 Also, 1966 Nova, A 1
Phone H2-5367 or 992-JN 1
Prestdent
of
Council
John Downs, sister of ·· the •
shape, must sel l. Phone 992 TWO bedroom mobile home
L! w.l... . ,, Aflest Jane Walton
7066
corne r Broadway and Elm in
groom, was malron of uouvr ' '
Middl&amp;port.
Phone
992
-2580
3-9·61C
Clerk
and John Downs was besl'
after 6 p .m
2 16 -tfc 1975 MONTE Carlo, 4.000 mit;$,
for his brother4n-law.
Th is Ordlnancr paned · 3-3-75 .
all power . a ir . AM stereo COUNTRY HOME - 6 ·r~s
Following the wedding a
tape . Call992 7036 after s p .m .
bath , 3 bedroom, vrn)'l siding,
3 BEDROOM trai l er, partly
(31 10, 17, 21c
J-5-ttc
receptlon was held for the
furni shed , utilities pa•d
storm w indows and doors ,
Located in Burlin.Qham
new furnace on paved road .
couple. The three-tiered - - - - - - - - - Chestrr water d istrict, 1 acre
trailer park . Phone 992 -7751. 1970 , 1 TON Chevrolet V -8
PUBLIC NOTICE
land . Phone 949 595J.
2-15-tfc
flatbed, 4 speed , dual wheels ,
wedding cake, ba ked bY Mrs.
sealed bids will be rece ived
runs good , good body Phone
2 26-12tc
Sharon Barr, Rutland, was In the otftce of the Village
Harold Brewer , Long Bottom ,
served wllh sherbet punch and Cler k. Second Streel, VIllage of TRAILER SPACE. Jf.- mile
985 -3554 .
2 16-tfc
north of Meigs High School on
Pomeroy, OhiO, until 12 o'clock
ACREAGE for sate: Wooded
old Rt 33 Phon~ 992 -2941.
nuts and mints. Attending were noon on Mondoy . March 17 .
tots at Rock Springs to be
1-23 -tfc ·1913 FORD Country Squire
used for residential home use
Mr. and Mrs. Ric Morrlson, 1975, ror the lotlowtng proposal.
wa~on,
20.000 miles , all
For a 80 gallon tar kettle
only . Bill Witte. 992 -2789 .
equipment, $3 ,500 Phone 992 ·
Conceverte, W. Va.; Alicia
Each bid must contain the DUPieX :-2j8•--;-waln~tSt .
2-11 -26tc
Middleport
,
Oh
io.
Phone
992
3493 or 992 -2720
full name of every J)~rson or
Smith • CovingtOn, V&amp; ,j She1ba co
2780
or
992
3432
.
mpany i nterested In the
2 19 .tfc 1973 VEGA Hatchback, 4 speed
Maynard, sister of the bride same. and be accompanied by
and Bernard LaValley of a bond or certified check In the AVAILABLE th i s week , small 2 transm i ssion , new tires. tape
player . excellent condition . NEW Wheel chair and walker,
su m
of
SIOO 00
to
the
bedroom , double wide mobil!!'
Wi ll sell reasonable Phonr
Racine, Mr. and Mrs. Harley sattsfactlon of the Vlllage
never used . Phone 742 -4461
home
near
Pomeroy
.
Off
Rt
.
7
C614 J 992 2311 or 992 2732 after
3-6-lltc
T. Johnson, local"; Robert Council as a guaranty that if
by pass No ch ildren or pets
4 p .m .
the bid tS accepted, contract
Phone 992 7017 or 992 -7666
Murphy, Peggy, cannel and will be enterrd Into and its
22B -12tc
STANLEY Products for sate
3-9 ltc
Barbara Murphy, Mr. and Mrs. performance properly secured .
Phone 742 3762 .
1968 200 CUBIC Inch, 6 cyl,
These checks or bonds will be
J-9 26tc
John Downs, and Mr. and Mrs. returned at on ce to all e)tcept 5 ROOMS . 11 ' bath , furn i shed Comet Automatic , new
brakes,
and
brake
drums,
hn
E
M
by
the
successful
bidder
.
H
i
s
on Secon d Avenue in Mid J0
• • urp ·
check or bond will be htld unt tl
priced to sell . Phone Albert CAMPER: top for pickup truck,
dlepor t. rede corated Call 992 $200 Phone 992 -7127
Hill , 949 -?261.
The couple now resides at lh e contract or bid is properly
5262 , morn ings or e\lentngs .
3 9-2tc
3-1 Jtc
270"" Walnut St., Mlddlep&lt;Jrt, executed by him
3 5 lfc
The riOhl Is re-served to
-· -~- -- ------- -- --FABRICS, Polyester screen
Ohio.
reject any and all bids .
CO UNTRY Mobile Home" Park, 1969 MERCURY Montego MX , 4
prints for Easter just arr tv ed
dr
\linyl
roof,
302
VB
,
R t. 33 , ten m rles north of
Also we now ha\le cotton
Jane Walton. Clerk
automattc
tr5nsm isst on ,
Pomeroy
Large lol.s with
knits
Sewmg notions at
VILLAGE OF POMEROY
S600 95 Phone 378 -6347 .
co ncrete pat ios . sidewa lks,
discount . Ten percent oft to &lt;1
6
6tc
3
runners
and
ofl
street
H and home -ec students
' (3) 9, 10 . 2tc
parking Pl'lone 992 7479 .
Carolina Fabrics , Route 7,
12JIIfc
one h&amp;lf mile north of Chester ,
Ohio Open 9 a.m . to 1 p .m.
HOU SE FOR RENT. 163i
Monday through Friday and 9
lincoln Hgts ., Pomeroy ,
GALLON water fountains with
a .m. to .5 p .m
Saturday,
PUBLIC NOTICE
Phone Pomeroy 992-3575 or
lids . For poultry . Phone (6UI
Henry and Mary Hunter .
Public he-arings will be held at
Gallipolis 446 27-49 .
696 1105
owners .
1 p m Tuesday , March 4th, and
2 2-tfc
3-9-Jtc
3-9-Jtc
Tuesday, 2 l) .m . March 2$th , at
Rev . and Mrs. Richard the former Pomeroy Junior
High
School
Build i ng
to 3 and .t6 ROOM furnished and .OLD flJrnlture , ice boxes , bi-ass 1965 JOHN Deere- dozer, 4
YoWlg and family of Sidney, determ
cyltnder, diesel, 8 ft b lade,
ine Meigs County's
unfurnished
apartments · beds , or complete households .
Ohio spent .the weekend with find ing under the new Housing
new paint , clutches, tracks,
Phone 9~2 - S434 .
Write M . o Miller , Rt. -4,
brakes, and canopy . 56.000 .
lind Community Development
4-12 -tfc
Pomeroy , Oh io Call 992-7760.
Mr. _and Mrs. Edson Roush.
Phone 985 - 35~4
Act of 191.4.
- - - - - - - - -- - - ---10 -7-74
Mr . and Mrs. Melvin Circle
3-9-llp
PRIVATE meetlno room tor
--------------Meigs County
anv organization . phone 992 JUNK autos, comp lete and
and family of Worthington,
Com m lssioners
3975 .
deltvered to our yard. We pick 1953 F=ERGUSON 30, new
Ohio, Mr. and Mrs. James
motor , paint and good rubber .
Henry Wells
3-11 -tfc
up auto bodies and buy all
S1,2SO Phone 9~5 - 3594.
kinds of scrap metals and
Circle of New Haven, W. Va., (JI 3, 14 , 21 ,_3tc Ralph w. Ours - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 3·9 7tp
APT . J rooms , ' " el ectric: , has
Iron . Ri der's Salvage , St. Rt
visited with Mary Circle over
t"bie top range , wall oven ,
124, Rl 4, Pomeroy , Oh.io.
1950 FERGUSON, 20. all
real n ice and clean, modern .
Call 992-5468.
the weekend .
PUBLIC NOTICE
orig i nal except new paint and
Located
in
Pomeroy
1017 tfc
SHERIFF ' S SALE OF
Mr. and Mrs . Shelby
tires . SI ,5.SO . Phone 98.5 -3S94 .
overlooking the Ohio River . - - - - - -- - -- - - - - CHATTEL PROPERTY
3-9-71p
Phone Gallipolis , day 446 · CASH paid for all makes and
Pickens, Jay and Joyce, of
7699, evenings 446-9539 .
models
of
mobile
homes
Pomeroy, Mr. and Mrs. Gene Syln1 Roudl , Plaintiff
mowers, to fit Ford or
I 26 -tfn
Phone 'area code 614-423 -9531 . TWO
vs.
Ferguson, J pt. hitch . One
Hudson, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Edna StObart, Defendant
4·13 -tfc
SUS, other S175 . Phone 985 Cue No. X - (1 , 144
Hudson of Racine. visited with
35~4 .
3-9-7tp
Mr. and Mrs. Allan Taylor on
In pursuance to an Execution
tssue d from the County Court of PROJECT IONIST for Mason
SWlday.
NICE Beegle pups for sate,
Meigs County , Pomeroy , Ohio,
Or i1.1e In Theatre Call Point NICE Easter gift! AKC black
reasonab l y pr iced. Phone 992Mr , and Mrs. Arthur Earl on the 15th day of January , 1915
Pleasant, 675 -3742 or 615 -5661
5302.
m iniature poodle , female . 3'h
2-27
uc
Johnson and Patrick, Sheryl and to me directed in the case
3-7 3tc
months
old
.
housebroken
.
above named , I w i ll expose to
w111
do
poodle
grooming
Also.
l.eAnn called al the home of sale
at Public Auction at th e RESPONSIBLE lady to l tve in
ror S5 . Call Coolville , 667 3915. PORTABLE automatic washer ,
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Johnl"n front door of the Court House .
phone 992 -1066.
with elderly lady . Phone { 1)
3-7 Jtc
Pomeroy , Oh io . Meigs Countv
3-9 6tc
667 -3l05 .
of Racine.
. .,.
on Thursday , the 20th day cf
J-4 12tc
Willlam Carleton of Racine March , 1915 at 10 .00 a .m . the
GIBSON automat 1c washer. A
ooods and ch attel s. to
years old, 18 lb . capac i ty Call
MEAT Department manager,
was a dinner guesl of Arthtlr followlno
wit
992-3901
must be exper i enced i n
I 1969 Pontia c catalma, 4
Earl Johnson on SWlday in
3-9-3tc
buying , pri cmg, and mer SELL your mobile home for
cash 15 homes wanted . 1958
door , color green wifh blllck
chandising of total reta il.
honor of his birthday.
thru
1972
models
Phone
(614)
vinyl
top ,
Serial
No
meal
progrllm ,
salary
.
446 1425, Gallipolis .
There were 22 present at 252699E 141075. Terms of Sa le
negotiable . bonus plan, good
Cash In hand on day of sat&amp; .
3
9-78tc
benef i ts with chance of ad
Sunday School March 2.
vancement for the rigt11 man , --~ -- --- ------Taken
as
the
property
of
Mr. and Mrs , Bernard
small young, progresstve
Edna Stobart to satisfy an
company . Send resume to Mr
Gainer of Barherlon, 0 ., Mrs. Execullon in favor of Sylvia
Bla c k . P
0
Box 807 ,
Erma! Schreckenyosl of Roush
Gallipolis , Ohio 45631 . All
R EMOOEL IN G .
plumbing,
replies confidential.
Parkersburg , W. Va ., called at
Robert C. Hartenbach .
heating , and a l l types of
3 4 6tc
Stlrrlfl
general
repair
Work
the home of Mrs. Dean Brinker
Mr igs County ,
-10.000 IHI bales
guaranteed 20 years ex
Saturday and lhey all visiled
Pomeroy, Ohio
perience. Phone 992 -2409 .
Jesse Gainer of Pomeroy.
-Ask for our cash and carry.
1-19-tfc
(51 10, He
price •.

Ronceverte, W. Va., former

Television log for easy viewing

CAP!' AIN EASY

4 Door . fully equipped inc . air. dark red . A real cream

Pomeroy commencing Jan 1st.
1976, sh.!llt be Sl ,.tOG 00 per

• lt,.,flll. IOc , flol ... Ul "' 0!1

,.

HEI,L

heating service and
general sheet metal
works.
Free
Estimates.
Pllone 949-5961
Emergency 992-3995
or 992-5700

Siding - Soffitt
Gutters· Awnings
Free Estim1te"

'
HE CI&gt;,LLED ME BABY AND
JH&lt;JNE,Y ANO SOME OTHER
STIJOOAND ASKED ME

Fire Retardant
lnsulatioo

RACINE PWMBING
·tomplete
&amp; HEATING
plumbing &amp; ·

$2795

Suburban 3 Seat, V-8 engine, auton:"~atic lrf!ns .. power
steering &amp; brakes, factory a ir conditioning, luggage rack ,
green fin1sh, radio . Like new w-w tires

1971

. .

Blown 1nto W•lls &amp; AHles.
STORM
Windows &amp;"""lloors
ALUMINUM

I T ORO.r..INEO by the

Co un ci l ot

•

$2195

3 seat wagon . Less than 30,000 miles by local owner, 400 V8, P . steering, brakes, automatic power door locks,
luggage rack , rad1o. dark green f in ish . like new &amp; loaded
wdh extras .

197J PLY. STA. WAGON

ORDINANCE 457

Blown
Insulation Services

l

9- The Daily Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, March 10, 1975
DICK TRAC~
.
·

J

---·-----------

•

________ ______ _

'"

•

'

• •
•'

.

'

•:

'"
•

·,

I

·I

,

�,·

•

10-The Daily Sentinel, M1ddleport-Pomeroy, 0. , Mood• Y· Ma•ch.lO, 1975

Fwteral services amtmmced

HOSPITAL NEWS
Vt•h•ratLII Mt.•morial Hospital

for Purley KaiT of Otester
CHESTER - Funeral services for Purley T. Karr , 80,
Chester, who died Friday at
Bradenton, Fla ., will be at 2 p
m. Tuesday at the Ewmg
Funeral Home .
Mr. Karr was a son of the
late Thomas and fda Carson
Karr and was preceded m
death by two brothers, Horace
and Irving Karr. Sr , and two
sisters, Clara Probts and
Florence White.
A member of the Chester
United Methodist Church, Mr.
Karr Is survived by h1s wife,
AI tona Baer Karr : two sons,

1

LUNCHEON SET
The annual charter day
luncheon of Return Jonathan
Meigs Chapter, Baughters of
the American Revolution, will
be at I p.m. Fnday at the
Trinity Church Clara Lochary
w11l present a muSical program
and the three representatives
from the three high schools of
the coonty who won the good
citizenship contest will be
hooored. Reservations are to
be made with Mrs. Pearl Mora
or Mrs. Wilma Sargent.

"KMP your chm up and

your chest out, but don't Jet

it throw you oft balance."

Does your old wood stepladder throw you off
balance whef1 you're doing
an Important job? Maybe
It' s time to switch to a
sturdy, dependable
WERNER
ALUMINUM
LADDER
from
!he
" FRIENDLY ONES"

POMEROY CEMENT
BLOCK CO.

Pa ul R Karr , Chester. a net
Horace W Karr, Rt 3,
Pomeroy; a daughl&lt;'r, Mrs
Woodrow 1Kathryn ) Mora, Rt
3, Pomeroy; two ststcr:;, Mrs
Glenroy Ewmg. Columbus, &lt;Jnd
Mrs l.uciiie Naylor, Franklin .
Ind .; a brother, Haro ld Karr,
Oberlin, 13 grandchildren, four
great-gr and childr en a nd
&amp;everal meces and nephews
Offic1atmg at services w11i be
Rev. Carl H1cks. Bur1ai w11i be
m Meigs Memorutl Garden.
The fanuly wlli rece1vc friends
from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p m.
today at the fun eral home .

f

'$ no~~::::&gt;::
l-,:;:·w

S OCia

[

Calendarl
WEDNESDAY
RON NATHAN, public
counselor from Washmgton, D.
C., to be al Mtddleport ViUage
Hall old council chambers, 2
p.m. to confer and offer assistance to the pubhc interested m
testifying at the public hearing
in Akron on the abandonment
of the Penn Central Lme from
Nitro to Cornmg

Appolnlments Anllouneed
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Five
persons have been appointed
and another has been reappointed by Gov. James A.
Rhodes, includmg Charles F.
Axtmann Jr. of Youngstown
and Leonard L. Hopkins of·
Columbus to lhe'state Accountancy Bonrd.
Rhodes also appointed Pa·
tricia Ann Alessi, Youngstown,
and Walter F . Heer Jr"
Columbus, to the Ohio Air
Quality Development
Authority and George A.
Smith, Dayton, to the Ohio
Thoroughbred Race Fund
Advisory Committee.

MEIGS THEATRE
Tonight thru Thursday
March 10-13

NOT OPEl.

Sc11unlay Adtm ~s i un ~ Marllw Anderso n, H~.u: w c,
Clear sre (ilbsun, Lung Bottom ;
Sully Goldsberry. New Ha ven,
B~1r ba ra James, Pomeroy
S.at urday Dischar ges Ralph Bruuks, William Wolfe.
Margaret Btssell, Jua nit;1
Spencer, Rubert Rous h,
George Conde, Martha Slater,
Susan Baxter, Brenda Dye,
Crysta l McCo rd , Robert
Ww·rcn
Sunday Adrmsswns - Jerry
Grueser, Jr ., Mmersv11le ;
Barbara McQuaid, Lorai n:
Wtlh e Cross, Ractne ; Vivtan
J oh nson, Hac me; Freda
Buchanan , Coolville: Paul
Rettm tre, Pomeroy ; Roger
Ki e1n , Middlepor t; Gra ce
Whaley, Pomeroy.
Sunday Discharges - None

Holzer Medical Center
1Discharged, March 91

Mrs Thomas Bailes and son,
Jenmfer Carter, Paul Carter,
Denvd Coburn, Ruth Daniels,
Nclhe Dillon, Wayne Hamson,
Mr s Thomas Moore and
daughter, Teena Stamper, Ada
Tnmbie, John Varney , Jr ,
Mrs Dav 1d Ward and
daughter, Dorothy White.
1Births, March 7I
Mr . and Mrs . Dav1d B1as, a
daughter, Vinton; Mr. and
M._. Dor Coates, a daughter,
Middleport ; Mr . and Mrs.
Alv1n Curti s, a daughter,
Jackson; Mr. and Mrs. Donald
Funk, a son, Wellston; Mr . and
Mrs. Lew1s Smith, a daughter,
Middleport; Mr. and Mrs .
Melvin Stone, a son, McArthur.
tMarch)
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Butler,
Jr ., a son, Crown City; Mr and
Mrs . Michael Dillon , a
daughter, Wellston ; Mr. and
Mrs. Everett Kiger, a
daughter, Gallipolis , Mr. and
Mrs. M•chael McGhee, a son,
Jackson .
(March9)
Mr . and Mrs. David Ousley,
a daughter , Wellston ; Mr. and
Mrs . David Wilhams , a
daughter, Jackson.

STEVENS DIES
LANCASTER, Cahf ( UPI)
- George Stevens, Academy
Award -winmng director of
such ftlm classics as ''Giant"
and "Shane," died of a heart
attack Saturday mght. He was
74

Flood insurance bill offered by Miller
any community in its floodprone area unless the commumty J) artl ctpates in the

\~

IISHINGTON - The Flood protected by federal flood
D1sustt:r Protection Act of 1973 · tn sur ance In addtlton , no
was designed tr1 be a two- fedt!ral fund s can be used by
pronged effort to cu t flood
los.ses around tilt" nation . On
the one hand it Improved and
expanded the bas1c flood
protection program, giving the
owner of floodi&gt;r one property
a new measure of fmanctal
protectron
How eve r, the Ia w also
WASHINGTON (UP! ) requires local governments to Congress will approve an inundertake fl ood preventiOn come tax rebate and reduction
measures and to implement package by the end of the
bUildin g codes a1med at month, Sen . Hubert H Humreducmg flood dama ge 1n phrey, D-MiM., pred•cted Sunhazardous areas
day .
Bcca use of the compulsory
The chairman of the Joint
features of th1s 1973 Act, Tenth Economi c Comm1ttee said
Dlstr~ct
Congressman Congress, the admmistration
Clarence Miller Ia~• week re- and the Federal Reserve had
mtroduced legisla twn which all delayed moving to ease the
would re-instate the old federal recessiOn, but that President
flood insurance program.
Ford's economic proposals
The Federal Ins uran ce were "too little, too late,
Admm1strat10n has estimated ineflectual, poorly conceived
that 90 percent of the properly and madequate."
damage resulting from natural
"It 's terribly important that
d1sasters is ca used by fl ooding we act promptly," Humphrey
In OhiO alone there are 549 said, "and I'm hopeful I bat
fl ood-prone commun1hes. At we 'II be able to act before the
the present ttme 444 are not tn Easter recess . If we don 't act
the msurance
program before the recess, I suggest we
because of the compulsory and don't have a recess. Any
oppressive fea tures of the 1973 amoWlt of time that 's wasted IS
very costly to this country."
Act.
Humphrey 's committee has
According to M1iier , the
obJectwnable features of the proposed a $35 billion tax cut.
present law stale that no Ten billion dollars would be
lending mstituuon covered by rebates on 1974 taxes, and the
FDIC, FSLIC or sim1lar rest in reduced 1975 taxes.
government guarantees will be Humphrey said 75 per cent of
able to make loans ID fl ood- the money would go to persons
prone areas unless the loan IS earning under $20,000.
Simon and Ford have urged
that the tax cut be only $16.5
billion with greater advantages
for the upper middle class to
encourage purchase of "big
ticket" items such as
Continued from page I
refrigerators and dishwashers
Golan Heights front with Syria
immediately afterwards "that
surprised the secretary of slate
by its tough line."
In return , Egypt was willing
only to extend the IJiandate of
the U.N. buffer troops in the
Sinai for 18 months and open
POINT PLEASANT - Not
the Suez Canal irrunediateiy,
also to Israeli cargo, the press only new fallen snow added to
confusion today in the Mason
report said.
County
School System, but
"Sadat apparently has forcefully clarified to Kissinger prank telephone calls to two
Egypt's Wlwillingness to com- local radio sta tions commit itself to ending the stale of pounded it
School Supt . Charles R.
war by a declaration, "
Withers this morning said
Ha'aretz said.
The newspaper Davar an telephone ca lls to radiO
organ of Rabin's ruling Labor stations Ill Gallipolis and
party, said the proposal is Middleport announcing that no
unacceptable to Israel and classes would be held in Mason
lsraeh leaders will not even County were unauthorized. An
respond to it "until Kissinger mvestigation will be made.
Because of the rad1o anbears down on narrowing the
nouncement, many school bus
gap."
Kissinger, on his 11th Middle drivers, as well as students
East mission, will return from who were on their way to area
Cyprus to Jerusalem Tuesday sc hools, returned home
and lake any Israeli reponse NotificatiOn followed from
with him to the Upper Nile Supt. W1thers that classes
resort of Aswan for further
talks with Sadat.
Foreign Minister Yigal Allon
asked newsmen Sunday night
to avoid speculation about the
peace mission, saying Israel
wants to give Kissinger the
best possible chance to suc-

Congress should
act by March end Lakers stay alive . ·
in Belpre tourney

Egypt

which the poor would not
readily buy even w1th tax
breaks.
"What Mr Simon is talking
about is the old lncl&lt;le down
theory of economics," Hwn~
phrey said. " In other words,
put the benefits up With the
high and the mighty, fill the
banquet table of the rich and
see if any of the crumbs fall off
to the poor... There are two
kinds of economic theory trickle down or percolate up and I'm a percolator, not a
triculator."
The Minnesota senator was
mterviewed IH1 CBS' "Face the
Nation.''
Humphrey, who is on the
Senate Foreign Relations Committee , sa1d he will vote
agamst giving Cambodia $222
million in additional rmiitary
aid requested by Ford. He said
based on intelligence information he has received, ..I
do not believe the Lon No!
govenunent can survive."
He added that the only hope
of keeping the country out of
Communist hands was to fonn
a new government and attempt
to negotiate a settlement.
He specifically rejected a
proposal for giving cambodia
$125 milliOn in military aid, but
said he would not rule out aid
for "humanttartan " goals,
such as providing food to the
ravaged COWl try.

Snow, prank calls
confuse schools

1

Friday thru Tuesday
~rch

14- 18

THE STING
ITechnlcolor)
Robert Fedford
I PGI
Show Starts 7 p.m .

NOW YOU KNOW
Wilham Howard Taft, buried
March 11, 1930, was the first
President of the United States
interred m Arlington National
Cemetery.

difficult and compl~ problem.
program.
In mtroducing th1s relief Areturn to the 1968 Act and an
end to the bureaucratic
legislation , Miller staled:
"The Flood Insurance Act of compiy-&lt;Jr-else philosophy will
1973 1s an unfair and heavy- ben eli t flood-prine comhanded way to deal w1th a very munities throughout Ohio and
the nation."

would be held as usual so at
midmorning bus drivers ,
schoo l admi ni stra tors ,
teachers and students were
makmg second attempts to
reach their destinations.
Jack Crank, Transportation
Director, sa Id 11 SOme buses did
rw1."
Meanwhile, the Mason
County Sheriff's Department
and State Police were plagued
with calls of vehicles leaving
roads in stng le vehicle accidents . No mjunes were
reported.
A Mason County school bus,
with 13 children abaord, was
mvoived in a mishap on State
Route 2 south of Point
Pleasant. Crank said Bob
Lance, bus driver, pulled mto

Athens Landmark, Gallipolis
Lakers, Churchtown Braves
and the Athens Bobcats
remained ahve m the Belpre
M1dget League Basketball
Tournament following
tr1umphs in the loser's bracket
Sunday afternoon.
In the first game, Athens
Landmark
e liminated
Manella Oak Grove, 25-19. The
Gaihpohs Lakers ousted
Parkersburg Hamilton 40-32 in
the second contest. Churchtown won a 2-0 forfeit victory
over the St. Albans Bears who
failed to show and m the nightcap , the Athens Bobcats
downed St . Albans Htlitoppers,
33-16.
Second round action m both
brackets w11l begin 9 a.m.
Saturday, March 15m Belpre's
Middle School Gym. Twelve
teams remam out of an origmal
field of 16 in the double
elimmation event.
In the wmner's bracket at 9
a.m. Saturday, Parkersburg
Edison battles the St. Albans
Sixth Grade All-Stars . At 10
a.m. the Belpre South Ali Stars
bat tle Vtenna. At Ua.m. 11 will
be Parkersburg Madison vs.
the Belpre North All-Stars and
at 12 noon the Marietta Cadets
will take on Parkersburg
Washington .
In the loser 's bracket
Saturday, the Gallipolis Lakers
will play the loser of the
Parkersburg Edison-St. Albans
contest. At 3 p.m. Athens Land-

mark w1ll battle the loser of the
Belpre South-Vienna game . At
4 p.m the Athens Bobcats w11i
take on the loser of the
Parkersburg MadiSon-Belpre
North encoun ter and in the
mghtcap at 5 p.m. Churchtown
w11i play the loser of the
Marietta Cadets - Parkersburg
Washmgton tilt.
Should the Galiipohs Lakers
win their 2 p.m. tilt Saturday,
they will play again on Sunday,
March 16, at 1 p.m.
[n Sunday's victory over
Wood County Tournament
runnerup Parkersburg
Hamilton (Vienna, which put
Gallipolis m the loser's bracket
Saturday was Wood County
champiOn) the Lakers jumped
out in front 13-4 after one
period and were never headed.
Galhpohs led 19-11 during the
haifhme intermissiOn and 34-20
going into the final period.
Robbie Goble led the winners
attack with II points. Boo
Weaver had 10 and Todd Nibert
e1ght. Greg Cuthp led Parkersburg w1th 10 points. Jeff Evans
added eight.
Box score:
PARKERSBURG HAM
tLTON (32) - Evans 3 2·
8; Maszcak 1·0-2; Montgomery
1·0-2; Dunn 0-0-0; Fahlgren 1·0·
2; Vincent o.o.o, Heath 1-0.2 ;
Eddy 0 o.o, Cutlip 5-0 10 ; Gibbs
2 0 4; Van Scoik l 0 2. TOTALS
15-2-32.
GALLIPOLIS LAKERS 1401
- K1ng 1·0-2; Caudill 0·0-0;
Gillespie 1-0-2; Allen 0-0-0;
Sanders 0-0-0. Goble 5·1-11;
Nibert 4·0 e. Pr~ce 1 0 2;
Wilson 0-0-0 ; Sk1dmore 2 1 .S ;
Weaver4-2-10. TOTALS 18-4-40.
Score by quarters:

Prtce 's Service Station to Parkersburg
4 7 9 12- 32
13 6 15 6-.W
remove chains when another Gaili~Olis
veh1cle went out of control on
the main highway and slid into
the bus.
LODGE TO MEET
A spokesman at the Mason
CHESTER - Shade River
County garage for the Lodge 453, F and AM, will meet
Department of Highways said at the Temple m Chester at
work crews were clearmg the 7:30 p.m. All Master Masons
highways as fast as possible. are invited.

News.

in Briefs
•
•
Continued from page
I

The Watergate prosecutors ''reluctantly" asked the court in
a petition iiled Friday to drop the charges against Strachan.
They cited a "significant possibility" that Strachan's claims of
immwlity would prevail on appeal, and added that he was
charged with "a more limited role" than others tried in the
Watergate cover-up coospiracy.

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

Sharpen dull blades
on scissors free!
Just cut through a
sheet of ftne sandpaper several times.

•

&gt;

•

Here are more sharp savings ideas- deposit money
regularly in a Savings Account here. Dollars will earn
•

high returns with ab-solute safety. Or take advantage

•

of our Savings Certificates with a guaranteed interest
rate for the life of each certificate. Get the facts

•

•

•

from us soon.

•

Note to Senior Citize'ns
All Senior Citizens 65 and over qualify for our
FREE Checking Account Service. May we serve
you!

••' .
•'

•

Farmers Bank &amp; Savings Co.
POMEROY, OHIO
•
•'
••

•''
'

....
•
•
'•
•

MEMBER FDIC
MEMBER ,
FEDERAl RESERVE
-SYSTEM

,

I

Lifeline to ~
Phnom Penh ~
~
.
.
d
::&lt;
· rs conhnue ~t
~
PHNOM PENH I UP I) - i
~

Commwlist-led insurgents
stepped up the two-monthold siege of Phnom Penh
today but failed to halt
America's llfellfle airlift of
food, fuel and ammunition
to the war-turn Cambodian
capital.
. The Cambodian national
; legislature , called on
Congress
to
grant
emergency aid to the
Phnom Penh government,
but Senate leaders in
Washington urg ed the

~

~

ili;
~

~!

~~

~}
:~

]

:;!
~

Best safety records set hr
2 local Ohio Power groups
"

Safety 4U.'Complt::; hnlt'n ts of
two Ohw P ower Company
groups w the Mrl gS~illlia
area ht~Vl' ecJ rucd ret·og mtwn.
Empl oyes of Portsnwutil
Divlston, mcludmg the 18 ~11
Pumcroy, reccn.ed twu ee r·
tiftl'ales und a troph) Another
trophy '\ en! to employc!i\ of tlw
Generul Jame s Gavm Pl:mt
near Chesht rc.
The trophtes reeog mz('d the

~

&lt;'
"'

IH LAYS OFF 1,800
FORT WAYNE, Ind. 1 UPil
~ - Citmg slwnpm g sales. In ~ rcmova I of President Len :::&gt; ternatiOnal Harvester Monday
~ Nol.
!;l ann ounced 11 has imd off 1,800
!1 U. S. officials in Phnom ;:;: employees from 1ts heaVJ duty
~
.:~
truck assembly plant m For t
Wayne, effectrve unmedtat ely.
·~
~

~~:::~::::::::::~:~~::~~!:i~:;;::~·

AH /.! U ~d

~6 .

lw() grnups fvr huvmg lhL• best

f1 11111

reeurd.s uf ;;JII Alllerit·o.!H
El~t· ll' l &lt;'
PowL•r System
opt:ntllng
div isions and
gL•nrrattng plun1 s, rcspce·
I!Vl'h . fo r 1974 The trophies
~H.: rc prl'Se nted rel'ently to
Pot lsmouth Drvtswn M~m cu~cr
C 0 C. Lrhm &lt;HHl Gavin Plan t
M.ultlger J W. I.tzon
ln mldrtwn , Portsmouth ·
Dt\'ts ion t&gt;mp iO)'CS rect&gt;ived
tn oeertJfu:ates - one fr om the
urilal) llldus fr) 's Edt so n
Elec tnc In s tttut c and Ihe other
from the American Electnc
Powe r
Company .
Both
recognized dtvtston employes
fur cumple ling a million manlwurs of operatiOn withou t a
dr sa bhng tn]ury
The nulhon manhours or safe
operatwns covered the penod

D&lt;•ccmiJcr ti. l!Ji~
In avt·cp!i ng tJ1c

Nlff'ly

beh&lt;~lf

El72

lo

mv~mt s

on

Por l s m outh
Dtvtswr t's ~18 emplo)cs fr om
r·rank N Ba:n, Otu o Power

nf

l'X eeurivt· vtre prestdcnt. Mr.
Ca rhru !-Wlld two things lwve
tmpr e~:sed l11m :s rnl'C he
bt•(·a mc divtsllln manager in
1972

"One ts the overall , fme
att11ude to\\ ard safet y by all
our employes The other IS the
guud , strung fu st-line supervtswn and the very fme efrect 1t
has on our safety consc10usness," he sa1d
" The
a ward s
are
recogmhon, I believe, for thts
attllud e a nd sup ervts ion.
That's what the awards stgmfy
to us." Mr. Carhm scud . "As a

cloudmess
tomght, chance of rain southwest. Lows in the upper 20s and
low 30s north and m1ddle and
upper 30s south. Wednesday
rain likely and warmer

en tine

POMEROY ·M IDDLEPORT, OHIO

THURSDAY, MARCH.J' 1975

Pueblo
a goner
anyhow

PHONE' 992-2156

.a

. ..
-.

•
WINTER WONDERLAND - Mr. and Mrs. Ed Neulzling, Syracuse, and smafi daughter,
Cindy, took advantage of the snowfall Monday and really lived it up. They were celebrating, a
little early, the couple's mnth wedding anniversary which will fafi on March 17. In addition to
the snowman they made they enjoyed a snowball fight, but ali in IWI of course.

BY BOB HOEFLICH
Increased. Henc e, their
Mlddlepol't Village Council nega tive votes. Both, however,
voted unanimously to mcrease md1cated lha t the mayo,. and
the salaries of the mayor and the clerk-trea smer have much
the clerk-treasurer by $1 ,000 a more time mvolved m their
year begmmng 111 1976 at a I'Oies m town government and
regular meetmg held Monday md1 cated the1r support of
mgh t.
salary increases for those two
The mcreases had to be officials
passed via an ordmance under
Brewer then moved to ma
the emergency regulations in crease lhe salan es of the
order to become effec tive in mayor and the clerk-treasurer
1976.
to $2,500 cad1, compa red to
Following a di scussion, $1,500 they each get now, and
Councllman Marvin Kell y made nu prov tsto n tn his
moved that the salaries of the measure for increases m the
lp8Yil\ and .cle•k,treasurer be , c o u n c i I m e m b e r s
increased from $1,500 eac h to remun cn.dJOn. The council
$2,200 an d that counc1l . ~voted unammousiy in favor of
members receiv e $7 f &amp;r those salary increases.
reg ular meetings in comKing also objected to the
parison to $4 now paid , and water contrac t between
$2.50 for special sess1ons.
Pomeroy and Middlcpol't. He
However, when the motion sa1d that Middleport is paying
came to a vote, Councilmen Pomeroy $1,000 a month for
Allen Lee King and James water and was not gelli ng the
Brewer vo ted against the gallonage provided for m the
measure and 1t could not be contract. ' He moved that the
passed under emergency contrac t between the two
mea sures stnce such a commumtJes be terminated
procedure would require fiv e However, the motwn died for
affirmative votes
the lack of a second ,
Km g and Brewer said that
Mayor ~' red Hoffman and
they fe lt that the commumty Main te nan ce Super visor
service sallsfac hon involved Harold Chase sa1d tl1e water
for counc1i members was from Pomeroy is avmlable but
adequate and that the pay for tha'lllls muddy, although safe,
counci l members should not be and that Middleport for some

time has chosen not to accept
the gallonage provtded by the
co ntract between the two
'l
towns.
Chase , however, said that
when Pomeroy gets its new
system it will be able to
provide plenty of good water to
Middleport. It was also pointed
out that the matter of the
contract and water from one

BY United Press International

ironing.

--

PHILADELPIDA - TREASURY SECRETARY William
Simon says the recession will "bottom out" by the middle to
latter part of this year - but the economy will still face ''serious
long.f'ange threats."
Simon told the 15th annual luncheon of Girard Bank Monday
he was confident the Ford administration would overcome the
"problems of the moment," but emphasized the need to "awaken
in time to the more serious long.f'ange threats to our economy.''
He defined these as a massive growth of government, the
weakening of the nation's economic foundations and
progressively higher rates of inflation. Simon said the natural
cyclical forces of the economy would bring about a softenin g in
the recession.
WASIUNGTON - PRESIDENT FORD summoned his chief
energy and economic advisers to a meeting today to discuss a
possible compromise between his own anti-f'ecession program
and proposals set forth by Rep. AI Ullman, D&lt;lre ., chairman of
the House Ways and Means Committee.
Federal Energy Administration head Frank Zarb and his
aides already are negotiating with mlman in an effort to merge
key points in the alternate plans. The President also will discuss
with his aides tho:, HoiJSCilassed $21.3 billion tax cut bill. Ford
asked for Only $16 billion in tax cuts. But there were indications
he would accept the House version if a !"'Ovision repealing the oil
depletion allowance, a $2.6 billion tax benefit for oil and gas
companies, were eliminated.

Today·s lunc heon table bec omes tomor row 's

Av ai la ble in lhe
following Sizes:

. formal d1nner settmg Leaco~k·s permanen t press
Tablecloth never needs 1ronmg and be cause it

' •. ' '/0

•s trea ted w•th Scatl:llganHotus common

•aiL/.1' ..1N "•L••••

t-~O

.fn
h /J ~ 83 n ... 11
t)O , I V.'

h{)

was h out in regular home washin gs e1ther by mach1ne

10~' {lv.d
60 ~ !. 'lo
fJO • 1:-'60..,, 1
136'" fm t~ed Rou nd~
~

M.lh

or hand Select from 8 new House and Garden Colors.
An t1que Gold -Avocado - Bl ueberry . Cjtron •
Ecru- Tangenne- L1me- White

tu ne N.Jplo.ms

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY
,.

Capt. Jack Randolph and his brine-laden barges loose and
wife, Pt. Pleasant, and rode them downstream.
crewman Gene Jeffers
The barges struck p1ers of
Pomeroy, escaped seno u~ the Nitro - St. Albans bridge
inJury Monday when an ex- before
reachmg
s hore .
piosion and fire board a Department of H1ghway ofKanawha River towboat forced hc•als closed the bridge for a
them to abandon ship at st. safety inspection , but reopened
Albans, W. Va.
1t about noon,
One man was injured slightly
Steersman Guy Stewart, 44,
as he Jumped to a lower deck to of Point Pleasant was treated
awaken sleepmg crew mem- at a hospital for mmor mjuries
bers.
suffered when he landed on his
Capt. Randolph , h1s wife back as he leaped from the
· Lorena, and seven crew- towboat's upper deck. Only two
members leaped to the four
barges bemg pushed by the

other men were on duty at the
hme, both work1ng on the

Pomeroy boys to
sign up Saturday
'

The Pomeroy Boys ' League
met rece ntly and have
designated Saturday, March 15
as "s1gnup da y" for all boys
COLUMBUS ..:: THE KROGER CO., OPERATOR of the interested in playing Pee Wee,
nation's third largest chain of supennarkets, announce today it Boys, or Pony League baseball
will cease giving Top Value Stamps with food purchases at the lhts swnmer
The signup will be conducted
central Ohio stores at the close of business March 22.
al
the c1ty hail m Pomeroy
Harold P. Templeton, a Kroger vice president, said
newspaper ads during the next two weeks wiU carry coupons for , beg inm ng at I p m . this
thousands of extra Top Value Stamps so customers can fill any · Saturday. All boys who intend
saver books they still have. "The stamps are still good and can be to play th1s swnmer should be
redeemed at anytime in the future even though we won't present and should bring the1r
dispense them," he said. "Our customers tell us, through regts:ratwn (insurance ) fee
research surveys made in the past 24 months, that they want the ~ 1th them to the meetmg. The
fees have been increased this
lowest prices possible.
year because like everythinl{
CLEVELAND - THE STANDARD OIL CO . of Ohio plans to else, mflahon has hit the
spend about $1.2 billion of its estimated $1.4 billion in capital program. New fees will be as
expenditures for 1975 on Trans-Alaska pipeline construction and follows: fo r Pee Wee League
development of its reserves in the Prudhoe Bay oil field. "These and Little League players it
high ca(Xtal eiJl'!'ldilures make it obvious we are investing our will be $4 and for the Pony
profits after dividends, plus substantial borrowed fuixis," board Leaguers, $5.
chainnan Charles E. Spahr and president Alton W. Whitehouse
Age bracke ts for the league;
· (Conti nued on page 8)
·,
are pee wee 7-9, boys league It).
1

HOME FURNISHINGS ANNEX

r

slain~

15 CENTS

"

funding aired

BYKATIECROW
Jeff Burt, representing the
Buckeye Hills-Hocking Valley
Development District, and
Eleanor Thomas answered
questions the Me1gs County
commissioners had today on
pre-apphcation for funds for a
scmor citizens center.
The pre-application was filed
through the Federal Housing
and Community Development
Act of 1974 to purchase and
ren ovate property to be used as
a Senior Citizens Cente r m
Meigs County.
The first of two public
mee tings was held March 4 to
mform people of the permissible uses of the funds and
to determine for what use the
The f1re aboard the
The four -year-old Harewood, application should be made.
The second pubhc meetmg
Harewood, owned by M. G va lued at $1.5 million, drilled
will
be March 25 at 2p.m. at the
Transport Service, Inc., of about one and one-ha lf m1les
former
Pomeroy Jumor Htgh
Galhpohs, apparently started downstream before beaehmg
wtth an explosion m the engine where area riremen could Sc hool.
A survey of the county 's
room. "The blast blew the reach 11
housmg
needs w1 fi be made
engme room door off," Stewart
The barges were loaded w1 th
during
the
preparahon of the
said.
sal t brine dest1ned for the FMC
final application which is due
"There wasn 't any chance of pian! at South Charleston
savmg the Harewood," RanThe captam , a veteran of 18 Apnll. The application w11i be
dolphsa1d. "She was ali flames years on towb oa ts, said 11 was reviewed by var1ous state and
m an mstan t Thank God, we one of the "scariest" t1mes he fed eral agencies before gmng
to the U. S Department of
weren 't pushing gasoline in had ever had on the nver.
Houswg
and
Urban
::;::~:::::::::=~:::=:w.::;:::=~=~::::::::w. ..: ••• :·:·:--:::::;:::·&amp;'7..:·:·:·&amp;&gt;.".-x.::~::::::::::~-::::::::::7.::::~::;;
Development
(
HUD
I 111
~~
[.
Washington, D C.
Also meeting w1th the
:.
co mmiss ioners were Da vid
»
, Vaughan, executive director of
the Appalachian OhiO Reg1onai
TranSit AssociatiOn , I AORR
.. TA) ; Ted Reed , and Rev.
COI,UMBUS (UP!) - AU . S. neglected transportation prob- Robert Bumgardner m regard
Senate Transportation Sub- lems of •our less populated to bus serv1ce that is presently
being operated m Athens and
committee will hold a hearmg regions," said Bentsen.
He said solutiOns need to be
here Friday to rece1ve
testimony
concer ning found for the problems of
problems of rur al trans- future financing of highway
construction, maintenance of
portation .
Scheduled to appear at the rural roads, increasing rail
DETROIT (UP!) - The
hearing are representatives of abandonment and the growing
success of American Moton'
the Ohio Department of High- number of federal-11tale highnew
small, wide Pacer In
way Safety, various farmer's way programs competing for
just
two
weeks has resulted
organizations, the elderly and federal aid.
in
a
32
per
cent increase In
Slated to testify are Ohio
poor , along with other witproduction aod possibly no
nesses from three Midwest Highway Safety Director RIChmore
plant shutdowns for tbe
ard Jackson ; James Ross ,
states.
smallest
~ the major
"For the past 20 years the master of th e Ohio State
automakcrs.
'
fed eral gov~rnment has Grange and chairman of the
AMC President William
focused much of its resources Ohio Highway Users Conferen·
Luucburg
said Monday there
on completion of the interstate ce; Charles Bucher, dtrector of
has
been
a flood of orders
highway system said Sen. the Adams-Brown County,
from dealers since the car
, lloyd .Bentsen, D-Tex., chair- Ohio, Economic Opportunity
was introduced Feb. 211 and
man of the subcommittee . Agency ; Beulah Skinner,
dealers
report the " heaviest
"Last ·year a comprehensive mayor of Winchester, Ohio ;
floor
traffic
in more than a
mass trasnsit bill was ' pas~d and Hargid Michael, professor
decade." The first sales
addressed specifically to the of highway engmeering at
figures
for the new small car
transportation needs of our Purdue University and inwon't
be available until
ternational president of the
nabon's "'citles .
Thursday.
"This year Congress must ·Institute- ~f~~Trafftc Engineers .
~·:s:·:l!J.w rc
turn 1ts attention to the
I

12, and pony, 13-15. Cut-off date
determming age is Aug. 1.
Managers for this year's
teams have been chosen and
are as foll ows. For the pee wee
league , mana ge rs of the
Redlegs will be George Korn
and Ja ck Weiker and the
manager of the Angels w1ll be
Don Hun neil. .
Boys league managers are
Dick Ebhn fo r the Gia nts, Jim
Morri s for the P1rates, Bill
Ohhnger fo r the T1gers and
Hw ian Whitla tc h for the
Yankees.
Managers for the pony
lce~gue team this season are
Tom Grueser, Gene M1tch, and
Charhe Hamilton. The team's
name 1s the Athletics.
President of the Pomeroy's
Boys League ts T01t1 Grueser
and 1he secretary-lr\asurer 1s
B1il Ohlinger
'

~,:'·,_:

Rural transport .~1..~ ,

I hearing set up I

Pacer popular

1"

town to the other Is the concern
of the Middleport Board of
Public Affairs, not council's.
READING APPROVED
Council approved the first of
three readings providing for
acceptance of the new rates of
tl1e Coiwnbus and Southern
Ohio Electric Co. for sireet
lighting in the town.
IContinued on page 8)

Application on

ews .. in Brie/~ c~?~Ln~~c~~~~~ H~!f.~~~~a?.~ on Ha~~~~~od

that never needs

The Bible got its name from
the anc1ent Phoenician ctty of
Byblos, just north of today's
Beiru t,
Lebanon .

.Mayor, clerk pay checks
raised $1,000 per year

Jllll'lllltl'llllt~fllllfllllf®~'~:::: .Jt, " " Q! T" W .~":-.-.:::_%.~».»;:X:.,

A tablecloth

Now You Know

Devoted 1'o The lnterest.~ Of The Meigs-M11so11 Are11

VOL XXVI NO. 228

"I know of no other person
who spoke against my cap.
(Continued on page 8)

mouth Division having the best safety record for operating
divisions of tl1e American Electric Power system in 1974,
Mrs .Bentz is the accountmg clerk; Deemer the working
forem~n, substa tion, and Nesselroad, working foreman, line
crew, of the Pomeroy off1ce.

'

at y

Con~ 1derabi e

CLEVELAND (UPI) -The
chief radioman aboard the USS
Pueblo when it was captured
by North Korea in 1968 said
Monday the ship would have
been captured no matter who
had been in command .
Lee Hayes of Minerva, Ohio,
discounted a recen1 charge by
U. Edward R. Murphy, Commander Uoyd H. Bucher's
executive officer, that the
Pueblo could have escaped.
"No matter! who was in
charge, the ship would have
been taken," said Hayes, now a
representative of the American
Independent Party in Ohio.
"I feel my captain is a·:fine
fellow."' said Hayes in an
address to a group of Cleveland
advertising' salesmen. "I'd
serve with him again gladly,
and so would the vast majority
of men with him on the
Pueblo. 11
Hayes said the Pueblo could
not have escaped because It
was a converte&lt;! cargo ship,
unanned with a top speed of 12
I&gt; knots and was circled by
North Korean vessels sup.
ported by MIGs.
Hayes said the differences
between Murphy and Bucher

'
SAFE7Y AWARDS
MADE - Fred Morrow, right,
manager of the Pomeroy office of Ohio Power Co. is
propostng a coffee toast with Mary Bentz, left ; Bob Deemer,
center, and George Nesseiroad in recognitiOn of the Ports-

•

Weather

were "personal.

ceed.
Kissinger flew to j\Swan
Friday night, starting shuttle
peace talks between Israel and
Egypt on a new troop separation agreement in the Sinai
Desert.
Kissinger and Sadat conferred over the weekend and
informed sources said the
Egyptian leader offered concrete, concise ideas on a new
disengagement agreement.
Egypt wants Israel to abandon the strategic Gidi and
Milia passes and the Abu
Rudeis oil fields m the SinBI
Desert. Israel wants Egypt to
end the state of war between
the two COWltrleS.
Kissinger flew to Damascus
Sunday to sound out Syrta on
the Sinai disengagement talks
before traveling to Jerusalem
to confer with Israeli leaders.
The Damascus goverrunent
repealed its opposition to any
interim peace agreement failing to take into account Syria's
demand for a return of the
Golan Heights and guerrilla
calls for a Palestinian state on
the Jordanian West Bank.
Israel captured the l&gt;'inai,
Golan Heights and West Bank
'" the 1967 Middle East war,
but agreed to give back part of
the heights and the desert in
disengagement accords last
year.
Kissinger headed for Ankara
to revive talks between the
Turkish and Greek Cypriots on
the future of Cypl-u.. Negotiations broke down Feb. 14 when
the TurkiSh Cypriots declared
a state on terri\OI'y caplureil by
Turkey last smnmer.
A complicating factor l!fS
last month's cutoff of U.S.
anns aid lo Turkey , The
Ankara government has been
reluctant to talk to the United
States since then ind has
reconsidered membership in
the North Atlantic Treaty
Organization.

~"'"'-------~'*'~'·"'~"

Hocking counties.
Vaughan spoke of a federal
grant for 1975 for such service
in Meigs County. It has been
sugges led that bus service
could be restored from
Pomeroy to Athens under the
program. Also, bus service
may be slarted from Racine to
Mtddleport and the Salem
(Continued on page 8)
7

Ten fined,
•
•
nme
g~ve
up bonds
Ten defendants were fined
and mne others forfeited bonds
m Meigs County Court Monday . ,
Fmed by Judge Robert E.
Buck
were
Paige A.
Humphreys, Jr ., Gallipolis,
$12
and
cos ts,
speedmg;
R1ck Morri s,
Mmersville, and Michael L.
Hughes, Gallipolis, $11 and
cost£ each, speeding ; Boone
Arnold, Pomeroy, $10 and
costs, disorderly conduct;
Woodrow W Engle, Rt. I,
Middleport, $5 and costs,
failure to yield; Edward M:
Provast, Jr., Parkersburg, $8
and costs, speeding; Betty
Walibrown, Gallipolis, $5 and
costs, parking on roadway;
•
Curtis Smith, Rutland, $15 and
costs, disturbing the peace;
Bartou E. Pearson, Gallipolis
Ferry, W. Va., $150 and costs,
three days of confinement,
license suspended for 30 days,
driving wh1le intoxicated;
Denms C. Clark , Rt. 3,
Pome roy , $10 and costs, ·•
destruction of property, {$10
and costs, destruction of traffic
devices.
.
Forfeiting bonds were Daniel
J. Shmigal, Gallipolis, Kenneth
E. Turley, Gallipolis, George
W. Young, Rt. 3, Pomeroy and
Dan P. Bruc~. Huntington,
$27.50 each, ' speeding; Dottie '
Sommers, Pomeroy, $100,
conce~ied weapon; William D.
White, Mogadore, Ohio, and
George e. Cooper, Rt. 2, ,
Racme, $357.50 each, drivinl!
while mtoxicaled; William M,
Howard, Jr., South Point,
$33.50, speedi ng ; Burford
Capehart Coolville , I3UO
speedmg. '

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