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•

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. '

�,.

' .•

'

.

'

.

3- The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Po:neroy, U., Tues&lt;Iay, March II, 1975

,_.'

PLAY I!:KS. SIGN

•

•

PITTSBURGH ( UPI) - ·
Eight free agents and three
1975 draft choices,
fourth-round pick
Evans, a linebacker '""'~ ·
Houston, have signed with the
Pittsburgh Sleelers, 111e team
announced.
Joining Evans in becoming
the first 1975 draflees to sign
with the Super Bowl champions
were right end Randy Little, an
lith-round pick from West
Liberty (W.Va.) State and
15th round choice Jim Thatcher, a wide receiver from
Langston, Okla.

Hannan Trace's outstanding
senior guard, 6-0 Mark Swain
bas been named the Most
Valuable Player in the
Southern Valley Athletic
Conference for the 1974-75

season.

JN MASON SUNDAY- The "Pathway Quartet" above will be leatw-ed at Mason United
Methodist Chw-ch on March 16 at 7p.m. L to rare Sandy Douglas, lead; John Douglas, tenor;
Mike Douglas, bass; Don Lewis, bass guitar; Sandy Twell, alto and ~tano, and~~ shown, Mike
Pw-sley, piano. The Rev. Clarence McCloud, pastor of Mason Umted Methodist Chw-ch, extends a welcome to the public;

Free agents signed included
quarterback Bill Deery, William &amp; Mary; wide receiver
James
Jerome,
North
Carolina; defensive ends Mike
Daly of Miami, Fla., John
Banaszak of Eastern Michigan
and Re1 Hwnbarger of North
Texas; defensive backs Greg
Bankston , Eastern Michigan;
Cornelius Griffin, 4luisiana
Teeh, and Geoffrey Steger,
Michigan.

,,

RUNNERS-UP - The New Haven Suns, coached by Mel
Fry and Tim Thompson, in back, won the runnerup trophy in
the Mason County Biddy League Tournament that concludlxl
Saturday afternoon at the Pi. Pleasant Junior High School
gymnasium . The Suns finished the season with a 13-1 record
as the tow-ney loss was their only setback. Team members

and cheerleaders, are front row, from left, Joy Hoffman,
Terri Roush Bob Carson, Harold Hamrick, Darren Gilland,
David Jone~ Glenn Ferguson, Tanuny Allensworlh, Kim
Bash. Back r~w. Anna Parsons, Carl Dugan, Carlos Harris,
Larry Gibbs, Jay Hesson, York Ingels, Mike Buzzard and
Sherri Bumgarner. See Page 3 for account of Tow-ney.

Downing hero
as White Sox
defeat Cards

DR. LAMB
·:::=:::~---·- ----·- ·---·-----:

Scouting

Abdominal pain
is a symptom
..
•.

IIIV&gt;IIIII/

the

you over a period or time to
Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - I had an find out what the real problem
atta ck in my upper abdomen. is.
It was a squeezing, cramp-like
Such a pain can be caused by
pain . It did not go up to the the hearl, from gall bladder
neck or arm. but it did last disease, pancreas disease or a
longer than 24 hours. There host of other problems.
was also vomiting . The pain
Your tests failed to show any
wa s almOst constant.
evidence of anything but gall
Alter several tests and X bladder disease. Your doctor
rays the doctor said that my made the logical conclusion
heart wa s okay and that I had that your pain was caused by
an infected gall bladder and your gall bladder.
lhal
an operation was
It is true that gall bladder
necessary.
disease is more common in
I'm a 45-year.old married overweight women, but it can,
woman . 5 fee t 3, weigh 112 and often does, occur in women
pounds, ver)• careful about my who are thin. About one out of
diet, don 'l eat heavy, greasy every five American women
food, don't smoke or drink . eventually develop gall
Neither my husband nor l can bladder disease. Men get it too,
tmderstand how this could but about 75 per cent of all
happen . I feel fine now. it is cases are in women,
very hard for us to accep t the
The pain of a typical acute
doc tor 's statement. I would infection of the gall bladder is
appret'iate it very much if you more often under , the edge of
would discuss thi!i in your the righ t rib margin and
coJwnn .
nearby abdominal area . It is
DEAR READER - Pain in something like a red hot apthe upper abdomen with or pendix , except that the location
without vomiting is a symp. is higller. ~uch an acutely
tom. It can be caused by many infec ted gall bladder can
different things. That is why rupture just as an acute apthe doctor has to take so many pendix can .
tests and sometimes observe
Pain from gall bladder
disease l;Bn also occur when a
small stone passes through the
bile duct. This may cause in-

stone has passed, and if there
are no other stones in the bile
duct or other complications,
the severe pain may stop. You
might have passed a small.
When stones are present it is
almost certain that the gall
bladder is diseased. And, when
the gall bladder is diseased or
"non~fWictioning, ' 1 it usually
contains stones.
You can have recurrent
milder attacks from chronic
gall bladder disease, usually
causing gas and intolerance to
fatty and fried foods with mild
pain. As you see, gall bladder
disease can cause a variety of
symptoms and may even be
present with ar.y symptoms at
all. These latter cases are
found only by X ray studies of
the gall bladder.
Most doctors believe that is
the patient has no other serious
medical problems it is usually
best to remove a diseased gall
bladder or one with gall stones.
The recent work on dissolving
stones offers hope that when
the problem Is just stones that
one day these patients can be
treated medically and avoid
the surgery, but that choice is
not yet generally available.

TIP OF THE HAT' - It's only 38 spaces available and 12
nice to know that in the Meigs - of those already taken, time ts
Galtia - Mason District of the of the essenc~. Contact John
Boy Scouts - which includes Stewart at 882-2024 in New
some 42 units and over 925 Haven or Bob Matthews at 675youngsters - there are several 5773 in Point Pleasunt for
dedicated men and women additional details.
with as many as 35 years of
GETTING OUR HEADS
experience
in
scoutin g TOG E'rHE R! - Kyger Creek
leadership , With so much Plant's recreation center will
negative news about crime and be the setting for this Thursjuveniles, one can't help but da y's 7:30 p.m. Roundtable
feel relieved that these "career Meeting. Summer Camp and
volWlteers'' are organizing and the Spring and Summer Acplanning .the activities for the tivities will be topics of RoundCub Scouts, Boy Scouts and• table discussion . All unit
Explorers of our area. No leaders
and
assistants .
wonder that like the Marines. sh uldn 't miss this Qpportunity
I the Boy Scouts build men.
to get together for Scouting
LET'S
TAKE
THE fellowsl!ip . Something will be
PLUNGE ! - An organi zed ·•coming On Strong" fo•· those
swimming program for all who uttend .
district cubs and scouts starts
Saturday, March 29 and continues each of the nexl four
Saturdays . Here's an opportunity lor the scouts to earn
their swinuning merit badges
and sktll awards, Wcheios can
earn their Aquanaut award,
and cubs can learn swimming
By Helen
Sue Hottel
for sw-vival. The classes wilt
'
TUCSON. Ariz. ( UPI ) - The
be held from 4 to 5:30p.m. at toughest spring training task rookie Duane Kuiper are in a
New Reason for a Break Up
tight
battle
lor
the
number-two
the Rio Grande College pool for Frank Robinson, the new
Rap :
.
and wiil cost only 50 ce nts per manage r of the Cleveland job.
I was going with this girl for almost two years. I loved her
With versatile John Lowen-'
Saturday. Reservations must Indians, will be cutting his
and everything was cool. But she never went out with anybody
stein,
an outfielder, available else, even before she met me.
be in by Saturday , March t5. so present 38-tnan squad to the :IShave the unit representa tive player limt for the regular as a backup man lor Buddy
That's why I broke up with her, because if I married her I
Bell at third base, Robinson
contact Frank DiClemente. season .
would worry about her cheating on me to see what it was like
needs to carry only a reserve
Box 455, Gallipolis. Ohio 45631
"It's not going to be easy," shortstop. Ed Crrosby, a 1974 with some other guy.
as soon as possible.
Was I dumb• - B. H.
Robinson admits. "The nice reserve, and Jerry DaVanon, a
. NEW MEXICO OR BUST ! thing is the talent is here. but
The 1975 Philmont. New that makes it all the tougher." free agent who played for !he Dear B.:
St . Louis Cardinals last year,
Mexico Expedition is shaping
That depends on wh~ther this is your real reason or just an
Robinson has less than a are the candidates lor that job.
excuse.
up as a swnmer .dream or 38, monti1 to make his decisions
Rookies Tonuny Smith and
Boy ScOuts and Explorers in before lbe Tribe opens its
U you really like the girl - yes, you were dwnb to break up
Rick Manning are trying to win
the Tri.State Area Council. On American League schedule at
over a "future" that probably wouldn't happen. And if you doo't
squad berths as reserve outa first come, first served basis home Arpil 8 against the ~!ew
like the girl any more, you 'redumb to think an easy leklown will
fielders, but veterans Leron
for reservations. these lucky York Yankees.
be less hurt-causing. Why not level with her? - SUE AND
Lee, Ken Berry and coach Tom HELEN
boys will leave Huntington on
" We could go with an eight- McCraw are their competition
July 31 via Amtrak and return man pitching staff for the
+++
and have a big edge in ex- Rap :
on August 16. Other than month of April," Robinson pertence.
'
·
You hear so much about unfit mothers and their battered
spending moner. a fee of $320 said , pointing to a schedule
The Indians open spring children. But let me tell you that sometimes doc!Drs and judges
will co\,er train fa re. meals, that gi ves the team eight ·open training competition Thw-sday
guess wrong, especially in the case of unwed mothers.
acciden1 insurance. side tr ips. dates during the first 17 days of
against the San Francisco
Our daughter was bathing her baby in the tub with her. The
'
and board and program at the the season.
Giants.
water
seemed right for her but evidently it burned little John. He
• • ·'\ rugged Philmont Scout Ra nch
The top battles for squad
didn't
cry, but he played a long time in the water, and when she
' and Explorer Base in nor th- positions outside of the pitching
took him out, we noticed parts of his body were red. We called the
eastern New Mexico's Sangre staff are at the reserve infield
hospital right away and they said pack him in ice and bring him
de Cristo mountains. Imagine and outfield jobs. Veteran Jack
The earliest recorded traffi c over. My girl stayed with him the whole time. He was never in
fly fishing in a dea r mounlllin Brohamer appears set as a
accident
in the United States in real danger.
stream, hiking through the team startLryg second baseman,
which a pedestrian was hit by
Bul the doctor accused her of burning him out of meamess
towering peaks. panmng fur but Angel Hermoso, I'ISt year 's an aulomobile occurred in 1899
(she's 17, not married, and that's the way it goes at the county
gold, scaling a rocky cliff. With opening-day starter, and in New York City.
hospital ). Now Johnny is. in a foster home and a court c~ _IS
coming up. I know they 'll take him away from WI, and 11 will
break our hearts.
We aren 't rich enough to hire a good lawyer, and several
things are against us : we have (or had) two illegitimate babies in
the home, due to mistakes by both our daugbten. But ow- big
family is full of love, and we're able to take care of them all.
Nobody has a police record. This is the first trouble we've ever
been into with the law .
Do you have any advice on bow to get our baby back? ACCUSED BUT INNOCENT .

-,

Robby says cutting

Generation Rap

will be difficult

and

.

-

Dear Aceused :
•
Our only advice : tell yow- story in court just as you've told is
to us. We can't vouch for all juvenile court judges, but the ones
we know personally have a good deal of heart. -'- HElEN AND

SUE

+++

Dear Helen :
Please tell "Desperate" and other teens who love horses,
· that tliere is hope even if theirparentscan'taffordtobuyal!arsll.
Twelve is not too young to work in a stable. She'd not only enjoy
it' but would learn a lot about caring lor animals. Also she can
ride, learn about farms, etc.
·-, 1 did this, earned money for my horse, and then I arranged
for "rough board" where I did all my own work on my horse:
roueh ch~aper .
...
"
.
I'm now 19, working in a hone equipment store, but ·l .still
save mon ey by getting UP, at 5:30a.m. ~mulch out the s~&amp;~s .
Where there's a will ... - WAITED SIX ~ BUT IT WAS
WORTH IT
·
.
· .
t
.
.

GAVIN EMPLOYEES CITED - J . W. Lizon, second right, plantllllllager at Gavln Plan:,
)iresents a trophy to plant en1ployes, left to right, Paul .~one, nollllle~nce depar1rnen ;
Be 1y Kna administrative deparlment· James Prolf•ll (t;enter, holdmg the stgnl , permr:nce d.;!tment, and at right, Carl Milch, of the
_department.. The
ts
~tative of the best safety record lor generating plant tn the American ElectriC Power
Systerri/in 1974.
t'
I
.
J
.
&lt;

opera~ions

~ophy

By United Press lnternalional

Spencer hot
'

the fifth ...

U the Chicago White Sox are
Barry Foote and Mike Jortermittent crampy pain and it to make a serious run at the
gensen
helped the Montreal
can be quite severe. When the

stone.

Swain namedMVP
by SVAC coac!Jes

American League pennant this
year, youngsters like Bucky
Dent and Brian Downing are
going to have to make up lor
the departure of slugger Dick
Allen.
A hint of that rosy expects·
lion was evidenced Monday
when Dent and Downing
combined to drive in three runs
in the Chiaox' 8-3 victory over
the St. Louis Cardinals.
Downing, hoping to supplant
holdout Ed Herrmann as
Chicago's No. 1 catcher this
season, doubled home two runs
in a four-run eighth inning
against new Cardinal relief
pitcher Elias Sosa, while Dent
pounded out three hits, triggered a three-run third inning
rally with a leadoff double, and
drove in one run.
Another youngster who 's
being counted on heavily this
year to make up lor the loss of
a longtime reliable is James
Rodney Richard, Richard, the
6-foot-8 righthander who the
Houston· AslrO$ hope can ·fill
the starting ro.tation void
ereated with the off-season
death of Don Wilson, held the
Boston· Red Sox hitless over
three . innings in starting the
Astroa off to a 7-3 victory.
First. baseman Bob Watson
led Houston's 1~it attack with
two hils and two runs-battedIn, while southpaw Paul
Siebert, another candidate for
Wilson's job, also sbut out the
.Red Sox for two innings while
yielding two hits.
Elsewhere around the spring
training camps ...
Aurelio Rodriguez' two-run
double broke open a tie game in
the eighth inning•and sent the
Detroit Tigers off to a 7-4 win
over the Pittsbw-gh Pirates.

Expos to a 4-3 victory over
Japan's other visiting team,
the Tokyo Giants. Jorgensen
hit a two-run single in the
eighth that tied the score at 3-3,
while Foote lofted a 380-foot
single over the drawn in
centerfielder in the lOth inning
to win the game ...
Ron Blomberg pounded out
two hits and drove in two runs
-including the gane-winner as the New York Yankees beat
the Atlanta Braves 4-3. Larry
Gw-a and Dick Tidrow blanked
the Braves through live innings
while the Yankees were building up a W lead...
The Baltimore Orioles,
behind the combined eight-llit
pitching of Ross Grimsley,
Jesse Jefferson and Dyar
MlUer shut out the Texas
Rangers 1().0. Catcher Elrod
Hendricks paced the Orioles
with three hits, whUe Alonzo
Bumbry drove in a pair of runs.
"

IIOUTSELIS HIRED
BALTIMORE (UP!) -The
Baltimore Colts completed
their coaching staff Monday
with the appointment of
George Boutselis, 34, as special
teams coach.
·A native of Harrisburg, Pa.,
Boutselis was a quarterback at
the University of North Carolina before graduation in 1963.
He then served four seasons as
an assistant coach at North
Carolina.

FORT MYERS, Fla . .,
(UP I) - A makeshift CIDclnnati Reds team edged the
Kansas City Royals 2·1 here
Monday as rookie Arturo De
Frites slammed a groundrule pinchhlt double In the
eighth Inning to drive in Tom
Spencer who bad singled and
stole second. The Reds
scored the winning run on an n
error.
'·
The defeat was the third "
straight lor Kansas City and "
the first win for Cincinnati
alter two losses.
The Royals averted a
shutout in tile ninth Inning on
Jim WohUord's sale bunt, his
seventh hit In three games,
two outs and a single by
Hugh L. Washington.
H o c k e 'I Association
Standings
By United Press International ·.•,
East

World

San Die go
Baltimore

32 27 3 67 246 219
17 47 3 37 167 294
canadian
w. I. t. p1s gf ga
Quebec
4124 0 82 275 237
Toronto
36 28 2 74 287 255
Edmonton
31 27 l
65 225 206 ,
Vancouver
30 30 2 62 202 203

W inn ipeg
29 29 4 62 249 225
. x-frarichlse transferred from
Michiaan
·
(" "' Monday's Result
Ba ~tjmore 5 Edmonton 3
Tonight's Games
Winnipeg at New England
Edmonton at Ch icago
Phoen ix at Toronto
Minnesota at San Diego

Dai~

Sentinel

DEVOTED TO THE
lOITER EST OF
MEIGS -MASON AREA
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL
Exec . Ed.
ROBERT HOEFLICH
City Editor
Put-lisfted daii"Y except
Saturday by The Oh io Valley
Publish ing Company , 111
Court St. , Pom~roy , O.hiO
H769 . Busi ness Office Phone
99 ~ - 2156 . Ed itoria l P"hone 99 22157 .
Second c lass postage paid at
Pomeroy , •Onio .
National
ach.ert i sing
representat i ve
Bortinell i ·
Gallagher . Inc . , 12 East .. 2nd
St ,, New York . New York .
SUbscr i pt i on · rates :
Delivered by Carr ier where
available 75 cents per week ;
8y Motor RoUte where carr ier
serv ice , not av·a ilable, One
month , SJ. 2S . By ma il in Ot'lio
and· \IV . Va .. One Year , Sl:Z .OO ;
S ix mon tfls., 511.5Q ; Three
montns . 5 7 . oo ~ Elsewhere
126 . DO year ; Si )( -mon t hs
-1 13.50 ; three months , 17.50.
··Subscri pti on pri ce includes
Sunday T i mes -St:nt i_n~_l_
. ---'

tEAGUE TO MEET
The Middleport Boys'
baseball league will hold Its
first meeting to elect officers
and review Its program lor
the season Wednesday at
7:30p.m. at Middleport Fire
Station. The public is Invited.

Dream Team .

Others named to the first unit
by the league's seven cage
coaches were James, North
Gaiiia ; Wayne Hesson , Hannan
Trace: Myers, Symmes Valley
and Kevin Walker , Southwestern . James and Myers
were members of the SVAC
se cond team a year ago.
Hesson was picked on the
league 's third team in 1974 and
Walker received honorable
mention.
National Basketball Association
Standings
By United Press International
Eastern Conference
Atlantic Division
w. 1. pet . g . b .
Bo ston
46 20 .69 7
Buffa lo
42 26 .618
5
New York
3 1 36 .46 3 15 1 ~
Ph i ladlph i a
30 39 .43 5 17 1 2
central Division
w. 1. pet. g.b .
Washington
SO 18 73 5
Houston
37 32 .536 13 1 •
Cleveland
32 36 . 47 1 18
Atlanta
28 42 . 400 23
New Orleans
18 49 . 269 31 1 2
Western Conference
Midwest Division
w. 1. pet. g.b.
Chicago
40 27 .597
KC -Omal'1a
38 32 .543 3 1 2
Detroit
35 36 .493
7
Mi lwaukee
32 35 .47~
B
Pacific Division .
w. 1. pet.
Go ldenSta te 39 30 . 565
Seattle
32 36 . 471
61n
Portland
30 37 .448 6
Phoen ix
29 37 .439
8 1..1
Los Angeles
23 44 .343 15
Monday's Result
Milwaukee 103 KC -Omaha 96
Tonight's Games
New Orleans at Cleveland
Boston at Cl'1 icago
Los Angeles at Detroit
Seattleat KC ·Omaha
Golden State at Milwaukee
Seat tle at Houston
Washington at_AILanta

~

•
:

li
~

•
..

c

-=
.a
...

..
-._

Ill!'

..
IIIII
•
•

..:.
=
•

•

Henry Block has
17 reasons why you

should come to us
fur income tax help.
Reason 5. If the IRS should call you ·
in for an audit, H &amp; R Block will go .
with you, at no additional cost. Not
as legal representative' .. but we
can answer all questions about how
your taxes were prepared.

a

a

ERA LOST AGAIN
INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. (UP!)
- The Indiana Senate late
Monday defeated, 27-21, the
proposed ratification of the
Equal Rights Amendment to
the U. S. Constitution.

i..
i

:..
••

CM

:!

.

•

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I

.• r

league action
Li ll ie

Amer i can Bask etball Associa ·
titln Standinu
By United Pre ss International
Ea st
w . 1. pet . g .b.
New Yor k
49 71 700
Ke n l uck y
.H n .68 1 11 t
St . Lou is
26 47 356 24 1 l
M e mp h is
20 4 9 290 281 1
V irg in in
14 ss 20 3 34 1 1
west
w . 1. pet. g.b.
Denv er
53 17 757
San Anton io
42 29 592 11' &lt;
In d iana
37 J 1 .54 4 15
Ut a h
32 37 .464 20 1 1
San Di ego
30 4 2 41 7 24
Monday ' s Result s
No Gam. es Sch edul ed
Ton i ght ' s Game
Vi rgi n ia a t D enver

Bucks snap Kmgs
.hex, 103 to 96

POINT PLEASANT
Satw-day afternoon the North
Point Vikings won the 1975
PPJHS County Biddy League
Cage Tow-nament over the
New Haven Suns 33-17 and
Mason won the consolation
game 26-16 defeating the
·Sunnyside Cubs.
Mason held a commanding
lead of 16-4 at intermission. In
the second half, Mason kept
their scoring spree alive as
they net'ted 10 points while the
Cubs scored 12 points. Mason
received a third place trophy
presented to the team.
Steve Ohlinger led the Hawks
in points with seven, Scott
Barnitz added five, Bill Weese
and Grant Hysell both had
foUl', Estel Lavender, Todd
!(itchen and Kevin James all
pumped in two.
HAWKS 26- Steve Ohlinger,
3-1-7; Scott Barnltz 2-1-5; Grant
Hysell 2-j)..f; Bill Weese 1-2-4;
Estel · Lavender 144; Todd
Kitchen 1-0-2; Kevin James 1-02; Janice Weaver 0-M; Randy
Pierce O-M; Bob Mossman 0-00; ·Mike Sayre 0-0-0- Tim
Greene 0-M; Tolals 11-4-26.
Champiollllhip Game
The North Point Viking were
.crowned · Biddy League
·, Tow-ney Champions after they
ripped apart the New Haven ·
Suns, 33-17. North Point ended
the season with a perfect
•
record ·at 9-&lt;1.
'I)'oy Krebs. was the star of
game netting IS points and
stunning the Suns with his fine
talent. North Point led at the
·end of the. first hall 13-5.
Troy Krebs led the Vikings
with 15; Jeff Chambers scored
eigljt. Joey Sullivan and Rusty
Wood both netted five. Lali'y ·
Gibb,h ed his team with a fine

thermostatically controlled
Man's first fuel for heating was wood and it is more p ra c t i ca~ .
today than ever before . Now you . can en joy t~e same·
automatic heat ing comfort you get with the expensive fuels.
Just set the thermostat to the temperature deSired and the

PLAYER -SCHOOL
Mark Swain, Hannan Trace
Greg James, North Gallia
Wayne Hesson,Hannan Trace
Jaye Myers, Symmes Valley
Kevin Walker, Southwestern
(Second Team)
Mike Camden, North Gallia
Lloyd Wood, Southwestern
Tim Spencer, Eastern
Mike Roberts, Southern
Bill Hall, Hannan Trace
!Third Team)
Bill Metzner, Kyger Creek
Greg Brammer, Synunes Valley
Gene Payne, North Gallia
Greg Bailey, Eastern
Dan Brown, Southern
Honorable Mention
HANNAN TRACE -Charlie Cremeans and Kent Halley.
KYGER CREEK - Joe Stidham.
NORTH GALLIA - Fred Logan.
SOUTHWESTERN - Terry Carter.
SYMMES VAL.L.EY - Jim Myers.
EASTERN .- Randy Blake.
SOUTHERN - Paul Schultz.
MVP -Mark Swain, Hannan Trace.

MILWAUKEE , (UPI) - It
was left for Kansas City Coach
Phil Johnson to pot into words
what everybody in the Milwaukee Arena saw Monday
night.
"Dandridge doesn't hurt you.
None of them really hurt you.
Except that big guy. He kills
you. Actually kills you."
The "big guy/' of course, is
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, the
Milwaukee Bucks center who
put on a personal display that
destroyed the Kansas CityOmaha Kings 103-96 in the only
pro basketball game Monday
night.
With 9:28left in the game the
Bucks led 79-78.
Then Abdui..Jabbar hit nine
points in a row while the Kings
scored six; making the score
88-84. Abdui..Jabbar got a
rebound and threw a length··of
the court pass to Mickey Davis
lor a bucket.
Then the Bucks' center stole
the ball and moments later hit
another jump shot . Finally
Abdul.Jabbar found George
Thompson for a short jwnper
and the Bucks had a 94-86 lead
with just over four minutes
left.
Kansas City came within
three points a couple of times
but the Bucks thwarted every
effort and ended up with their
first win against the Kings in
seven games this year.

Indiana unanimous No.}

of basketball

The first nJund of the Meigs
League Bas ketball
I.eugue has been comleted with
t11e Middleport Lakers of
Coac h Woody Cali owning a
perfect 4-0 record.
In second position is U1e
Harmonville team of Greg
HT. YR. McCall with a 3-1 record. In
6-0 12 third place after the firs t round
6-4 II uf play is Salisbury at 2-2. The
6-2 12 Salisbur y coach is Ed Ken·
&amp;-2 12 nedy.
&amp;-2 12
Rev. PetTi p and his Pomeroy
team are in the fourth spot all6..1 12 3 and the Middleport Wildca ts
&amp;-2 12 of Dennis Ault Hre presently in
&amp;-I 12 the cellar at 0-4.
6-0 II
The second round of action
&amp;-1 12 begi ns Saturday , March 15,
with Harrisonville lllking on
II the Lakers at Middleport and
12 the Middleport Wildcats going
12 to Salisbury.
:&gt;-10 12
&amp;-2 II

Although, Johnson was awed
by Abdul.J'abbar's performance, it also caused him to get his
30th technical foul of the yeara record that leads the league
and has made him $1,500
poorer.
"I got my technical when I
was yelling at the refs about
the picks Kareem sets," Johnson said. "He picks you with
his elbow stuck way out-a
violation of the rules. But I
guess the rules are different for
him than for anyone else."
"I didn't deserve that technical," he added. Asked if his
league-leading performance
makes the official&lt;; more inclined to slap him with a
technical he replied, "It sure
does. It sure does."
Abdul.Jabbar finished with
34 points, 12 rebounds, !owassists and two blocked shots
lor the night. Bob Dandridge
scored 21 points for the Bucks.
Nate Archibald had 33 to lead
the Kings and Larry McNeill
added 19. .
The win gave the Bucks a 3235 record and moved them to
within one game o~ Detroit in
the battle for third place and a
playoff spot in the Midwest
Division. The Bucks lead ·
Detroit by one game in the loss
column and trail second place
Kansas City by just three
games in the loss column.

Suns lose in final;
.Hawks win 26-16

618 E. MAIN ST.
POMEROY, OHIO

41

The

Swain averaged nearly 30
points per game in leading the
Wildcats to their third straight
leagt•e championship .
The all-state candidate also
averaged 7.5 rebounds per
game and seven assists. Swain
was almost a one.man machine
ii. Satw-day's Class A District
Finals at Chillicothe. He
dumped in 34 of Hannan
Trace's 46 points.
Others nominated lor the
league's MVP award were
Greg James, 6-4 junior guard
from North Gallia and Jaye
Myers, 6-2 senior forward,
Symmes Valley .
Swain will be given a trophy
co-sponsored by the Sunday
Times-Sentinel and Radio
Station WJEH.
The presentation will be
made dw-ing the Annual SVAC
Sports Banquet slated Friday,
April4 at Rio Grande College's
Cafeteria. Vince Chickaerilla ,

w. I. t. piS 91 ga ,.

New Englnd 35 24 4 71. 21-t 217
Cleveland
28 34 3 59 186 216
Chicago
25 38 I
51 215 255
lndianapols 15463 33 169269
West
.
w 1. t. pts gt ga
Houston
43 22 0 86 303 208
Phoenix
13'4 25 6 74 248 214
Minnesota
34 28 2 70 256 224

The Tigers' 8" team wasn't
as fortunate, however, falling
14-7 to the visiting Chunichi
Dragons from Japan ...
Two-run dou\l)es by Greg
Luzinski and rookie Jerry
Martin helped the Philadelphia
Pbtllies kayo a pair of New
York Met rookie pitchers
Randy Tate and Nino Espinosa
en route to a 7-3 victory. After
Tate walked Dave Cash and
Larry Bowa, L.uzlnskl smacked
his two-run double, while
Martin highlighted a three-run,
live-bit seventh off Espinosa
with a double that blTOtlght
home Alan Bannister and
Terry Harmon ...
Rookie Arturo De Frites
slanuned a ground rule pinch
hit dOuble in the eighth inning
to drive in one run and scored
another on an error as a
''makeshift" Cincinnati Reds
team nipped Kansas City 21... The Minnesota Twins edged
the Los Angeles Dodgers on an
unejirned run In the eighth
inning and also got the game's
only home run -a pinch hit
shot from rookie Randy Bass in

--:~~

1974-75 AL.L.-8V AC DREAM TEAM
(First Team)

he ad basketbaii coach at
Capital Universi ty, will be the
featw-ed speaker.
Swain is the only ropeater
from las t year' s All SVAC

T.akers on top

National Hockey League Stand·
ing s
By United Press International
Division 1
w . 1. t . pis . gl . ga.
Pnilad elph i 40 18 9 89 236161
N Y Rang er s 32 22 13 77 '272 227
NY Island er s 26 22 17 73 222 162
Atlanta
26 27 13 65 18!1 192
Division 2
w
I. I . pt s. gf. ga .
Ch icago
32 29 7 71 2:2 5 203
Van couver
32 29 6 70 22-4 2 14
st. L ou is
26 27 13 65 219 22 6
Minn esota
19 41 6 44 186 '188
Kan sas Ci ty 14 44 9 37 159 280
Di vision 3
w. 1. t . pts . gf. ga .
Mont re al
40 11 16 96 323 196

'
NEW YORK (UPI) - Unbeaten and unanimous. And
almost totally unknown in the
public mind except for its
winning record and a dynamic
young coach ' named Bobby
Knight.
That's the way Indiana
finished its regular basketball
season and headed into the
NCAA championships as No. I
in the United Press International Board of Coaches
final ratings of 1974-1975,
Indiana was named first by
all 3S coaches participating in
the final balloting and outpointed UCLA, 350-306.
Louisville was a distant third
with 251, followed by Kentucky
with 205 and Maryla'nd with
169.
Bobby Knight's Hoosiers
raced through a 29-game
season without a loss and,
added to their three victories a
oyear ago in the Conunissioners
Tournament, today boast a
streak of 32 straight, longest in
major college basketball. Yet
how many people can name
even two players on this welldrilled, defense-oriented
squad?
The final week of regular

.

.

play shook up the rest of the top game- tops in the· nation
10, with John Wooden's UCL.A , among major teams.
Bruins, now intent on regaining
Indeed, at season's end, the
the NCAA crown, moving Into Hoosiers were No. 1 in one
second place behind Indiana catgory that no one could
while last week's runnerup, · match -most wins ·without a
Maryland, tumbled to fifth.
loss. All of 'em.
Louisville moved up from
fourth to third, and Kentucky
jumped from sixth to fow-th.
Rounding out the top 10 were
Marquette, Arizona State,
Alabama, North Carolina
State, and North Carolina.
North Carolina State, defending national champions,
shunned the National Invitation •fter being rejected
for inclusion in the NCAA
tourney .
Indiana may be compared to
the 1957 North Carolina team,
which also went through an
unbeaten season without any
one individual star. The Tarheels, coached by Frank
McGuire, epitomized the team
If car and home insurance
concept, especially since none
seem like a· big item in your
of their starters ever estabbudget. maylle it's because
lished themselves in the pro you 're wast ing money on the
ranks.
wrong kind or amount of cov·
None of this year's Indiana • erage. Too li1tle protec tio~. ts .
team is ranked among even the
just as wastefu l as buytng
top 40 scorers in the nation.
more prot ec tion than you acNone is ranked among the top tually need
10 rebounders, the top ten in
That's where the professional
field goal percentage, free
advice ol an independent ·
throw percentage.
agent can often save you
NEW Y.ORK fUPI ) The
fina l Unit ed Press Internat ional
None of the Hoosiers is ex- plenty . tn premium dollars Board ot Coa c hes top 20 major pected to be drafted on the first
and future regrets . We are the
college ba sketball team s for
independent
representat ive of
1974 -75 with f i rst pla ce vote s round of the pro drafts next
and won -lost record s in paren - month. Only Steve Green, a 6-7
several insurance companies,
theses
which lets us pick the one
(F inal Week)
senior or Scott May, a 6-7
Team
Points junior, are expected to be
company that has the best
1. Indiana ( 35) (2 9-0J
350
policy for you.
2 U CL A 123 ·31
306 selected in the early rounds.
3. Louisvi l l e (2 4-21
25 1
So tall us, or c ome in soon
As a team, the Hoosiers
4 . Kentucky 122 -4 )
205
and let's talk over your present
5 . Maryland ( 22 -4 )
169 ranked only 12th nationally on
6. Marquett e ( 22 -3&gt;
144
i! nrt future insurance needs. I
both
offense
and
defense.
7 , Arizona Stale (2 3- 3)
133
Knight's squad is distin8 . A l abama 02 -4)
100
9 . Nor th Carolina State ( 22 -6 1 78 guished statisically in only one
10 . North Carolina {2 1-7)
59
11. Pennsylvania (23 -4)
36 category-{lossibly the most
19 important category from a
12. Southern Cal (1 8-7!
13 . Utah Sta te ( 2 1-Sl
I?
William D. Childs
14 . Nevada -Las V egas ( 2 1-4 ) 8 coach's point of view- winning
Notre Dame ( 18-8)
8 margin. Indiana
breezed
16. Creighton { 20 -6)
7
17. Arizona 120-6 1
6 through its schedule this
18 . New M ex ico State 120 ·6 1
6 season with scarcely a pause,
19 . Clemson (17 -10)
4
20 . Te x as -E I Pa so 0 0-5)
3 w~ipplng opponents by an
average of almost 24 points per

~re you surJ
you're not
wasting
money on
your car and
home
insurance?

College ratings

~~

IDOWNING-CHILDS

L!~~~~. ~~

ZENITH

College Scores

COLOR TV

Los Ange le s 36 13 17 89 228 150 Mondav's College Buketball
Resulls
P itt sbur g h
30 23 14 74 17 3 2-42
Bv United Press International
Detroi t
19 38 10 d8 707 27 8
Wa shington 6 58 5 17 15 1 37 1 Marqu ett e 73 Tulane 65
·
Division 4
NAtA Tournament
w. 1. f . pi!&gt; . gf . ga .
Buffalo
4 11 2 14 96296 201 Marymount (Kan . ) 86 Mon mouth (N . J) 72
Bos ton
37 1911 85 303 204 Fairmont ( W .Va . J 94 Kearney
Toron to
28 29 11 67 238 258 St(Neb.) 86
California
17 40 11 ~ s 180 259 Norfolk St . ( Va .) 83 Wm Jewell
(Mo . ) 04
Mondav's Resutl s
Ill
Wesley an 76 Montevallo
No games scheduled
(A ia . J 67
Tonight's Games
Edinboro (Pa . ) 9 4 Palm Bcl'1
NY Rangers at Boston
All. ( F ia .J 86
Detroit at NY Is l anders
M i dw estern rTe x . l 89 U .S. Inti
At l anta at St . Louis
Buffalo at Los A ng el es
Al c orn { Mis s. l 88 Central Ark .
Kansas City at Vancouver
17
Millers vill e (Pa . ) 82 Ferr is
(Mi ch . J 8 1
0-().0; Totals 12-9-33.

•

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eSTER EO

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MASON FURNIIDRE
HERMAN GRATE
MASON, W.VA •

773-m2

Suns 17
Larry Gibbs 2-4·8· Mike
Buzzard 2·2-6 : York ln~els l·IJ..
2; Larry- Hesson 0-1-1; Bobby
Carson IJ..IJ..O; Glenna Ferguson
0-().0; Harold Hamrick 0-lkl;
Carl Dugan ~; David Jones
0·0-0: Dare! Gillan! 0-0-0;
Totals 5-7-17.
.

This Week's Special
VALUE

RATED

effort. Larry scored eight
points. Mike Buzzard added
five, Hork, Ingles tallied two,
and Larry Hesson had the lone
one pointer.
Both teams along with all the
others are to be thanked for
their fine sportsmanship and
for entering the tourney.
Thanks also go to the PPJHS
administration and to Virgil
Burris and Richard Workman,
David Bodkin, Jim Wilson and
Jim Reymond for officiating.
Vikings 33
Troy Krebs 6-3-15; Jeff
Cbambers 2-4-8; Joey Sullivan
2-1-5; Rusty Wood 2-1-5; David
Lucan O-M; Stan Weaver 0-0-0;
Mark Lucas 0-0-0 ; Paul
Randolph IJ..().O; Jim Wamsley

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If you 've owned your
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3- The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Po:neroy, U., Tues&lt;Iay, March II, 1975

,_.'

PLAY I!:KS. SIGN

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PITTSBURGH ( UPI) - ·
Eight free agents and three
1975 draft choices,
fourth-round pick
Evans, a linebacker '""'~ ·
Houston, have signed with the
Pittsburgh Sleelers, 111e team
announced.
Joining Evans in becoming
the first 1975 draflees to sign
with the Super Bowl champions
were right end Randy Little, an
lith-round pick from West
Liberty (W.Va.) State and
15th round choice Jim Thatcher, a wide receiver from
Langston, Okla.

Hannan Trace's outstanding
senior guard, 6-0 Mark Swain
bas been named the Most
Valuable Player in the
Southern Valley Athletic
Conference for the 1974-75

season.

JN MASON SUNDAY- The "Pathway Quartet" above will be leatw-ed at Mason United
Methodist Chw-ch on March 16 at 7p.m. L to rare Sandy Douglas, lead; John Douglas, tenor;
Mike Douglas, bass; Don Lewis, bass guitar; Sandy Twell, alto and ~tano, and~~ shown, Mike
Pw-sley, piano. The Rev. Clarence McCloud, pastor of Mason Umted Methodist Chw-ch, extends a welcome to the public;

Free agents signed included
quarterback Bill Deery, William &amp; Mary; wide receiver
James
Jerome,
North
Carolina; defensive ends Mike
Daly of Miami, Fla., John
Banaszak of Eastern Michigan
and Re1 Hwnbarger of North
Texas; defensive backs Greg
Bankston , Eastern Michigan;
Cornelius Griffin, 4luisiana
Teeh, and Geoffrey Steger,
Michigan.

,,

RUNNERS-UP - The New Haven Suns, coached by Mel
Fry and Tim Thompson, in back, won the runnerup trophy in
the Mason County Biddy League Tournament that concludlxl
Saturday afternoon at the Pi. Pleasant Junior High School
gymnasium . The Suns finished the season with a 13-1 record
as the tow-ney loss was their only setback. Team members

and cheerleaders, are front row, from left, Joy Hoffman,
Terri Roush Bob Carson, Harold Hamrick, Darren Gilland,
David Jone~ Glenn Ferguson, Tanuny Allensworlh, Kim
Bash. Back r~w. Anna Parsons, Carl Dugan, Carlos Harris,
Larry Gibbs, Jay Hesson, York Ingels, Mike Buzzard and
Sherri Bumgarner. See Page 3 for account of Tow-ney.

Downing hero
as White Sox
defeat Cards

DR. LAMB
·:::=:::~---·- ----·- ·---·-----:

Scouting

Abdominal pain
is a symptom
..
•.

IIIV&gt;IIIII/

the

you over a period or time to
Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - I had an find out what the real problem
atta ck in my upper abdomen. is.
It was a squeezing, cramp-like
Such a pain can be caused by
pain . It did not go up to the the hearl, from gall bladder
neck or arm. but it did last disease, pancreas disease or a
longer than 24 hours. There host of other problems.
was also vomiting . The pain
Your tests failed to show any
wa s almOst constant.
evidence of anything but gall
Alter several tests and X bladder disease. Your doctor
rays the doctor said that my made the logical conclusion
heart wa s okay and that I had that your pain was caused by
an infected gall bladder and your gall bladder.
lhal
an operation was
It is true that gall bladder
necessary.
disease is more common in
I'm a 45-year.old married overweight women, but it can,
woman . 5 fee t 3, weigh 112 and often does, occur in women
pounds, ver)• careful about my who are thin. About one out of
diet, don 'l eat heavy, greasy every five American women
food, don't smoke or drink . eventually develop gall
Neither my husband nor l can bladder disease. Men get it too,
tmderstand how this could but about 75 per cent of all
happen . I feel fine now. it is cases are in women,
very hard for us to accep t the
The pain of a typical acute
doc tor 's statement. I would infection of the gall bladder is
appret'iate it very much if you more often under , the edge of
would discuss thi!i in your the righ t rib margin and
coJwnn .
nearby abdominal area . It is
DEAR READER - Pain in something like a red hot apthe upper abdomen with or pendix , except that the location
without vomiting is a symp. is higller. ~uch an acutely
tom. It can be caused by many infec ted gall bladder can
different things. That is why rupture just as an acute apthe doctor has to take so many pendix can .
tests and sometimes observe
Pain from gall bladder
disease l;Bn also occur when a
small stone passes through the
bile duct. This may cause in-

stone has passed, and if there
are no other stones in the bile
duct or other complications,
the severe pain may stop. You
might have passed a small.
When stones are present it is
almost certain that the gall
bladder is diseased. And, when
the gall bladder is diseased or
"non~fWictioning, ' 1 it usually
contains stones.
You can have recurrent
milder attacks from chronic
gall bladder disease, usually
causing gas and intolerance to
fatty and fried foods with mild
pain. As you see, gall bladder
disease can cause a variety of
symptoms and may even be
present with ar.y symptoms at
all. These latter cases are
found only by X ray studies of
the gall bladder.
Most doctors believe that is
the patient has no other serious
medical problems it is usually
best to remove a diseased gall
bladder or one with gall stones.
The recent work on dissolving
stones offers hope that when
the problem Is just stones that
one day these patients can be
treated medically and avoid
the surgery, but that choice is
not yet generally available.

TIP OF THE HAT' - It's only 38 spaces available and 12
nice to know that in the Meigs - of those already taken, time ts
Galtia - Mason District of the of the essenc~. Contact John
Boy Scouts - which includes Stewart at 882-2024 in New
some 42 units and over 925 Haven or Bob Matthews at 675youngsters - there are several 5773 in Point Pleasunt for
dedicated men and women additional details.
with as many as 35 years of
GETTING OUR HEADS
experience
in
scoutin g TOG E'rHE R! - Kyger Creek
leadership , With so much Plant's recreation center will
negative news about crime and be the setting for this Thursjuveniles, one can't help but da y's 7:30 p.m. Roundtable
feel relieved that these "career Meeting. Summer Camp and
volWlteers'' are organizing and the Spring and Summer Acplanning .the activities for the tivities will be topics of RoundCub Scouts, Boy Scouts and• table discussion . All unit
Explorers of our area. No leaders
and
assistants .
wonder that like the Marines. sh uldn 't miss this Qpportunity
I the Boy Scouts build men.
to get together for Scouting
LET'S
TAKE
THE fellowsl!ip . Something will be
PLUNGE ! - An organi zed ·•coming On Strong" fo•· those
swimming program for all who uttend .
district cubs and scouts starts
Saturday, March 29 and continues each of the nexl four
Saturdays . Here's an opportunity lor the scouts to earn
their swinuning merit badges
and sktll awards, Wcheios can
earn their Aquanaut award,
and cubs can learn swimming
By Helen
Sue Hottel
for sw-vival. The classes wilt
'
TUCSON. Ariz. ( UPI ) - The
be held from 4 to 5:30p.m. at toughest spring training task rookie Duane Kuiper are in a
New Reason for a Break Up
tight
battle
lor
the
number-two
the Rio Grande College pool for Frank Robinson, the new
Rap :
.
and wiil cost only 50 ce nts per manage r of the Cleveland job.
I was going with this girl for almost two years. I loved her
With versatile John Lowen-'
Saturday. Reservations must Indians, will be cutting his
and everything was cool. But she never went out with anybody
stein,
an outfielder, available else, even before she met me.
be in by Saturday , March t5. so present 38-tnan squad to the :IShave the unit representa tive player limt for the regular as a backup man lor Buddy
That's why I broke up with her, because if I married her I
Bell at third base, Robinson
contact Frank DiClemente. season .
would worry about her cheating on me to see what it was like
needs to carry only a reserve
Box 455, Gallipolis. Ohio 45631
"It's not going to be easy," shortstop. Ed Crrosby, a 1974 with some other guy.
as soon as possible.
Was I dumb• - B. H.
Robinson admits. "The nice reserve, and Jerry DaVanon, a
. NEW MEXICO OR BUST ! thing is the talent is here. but
The 1975 Philmont. New that makes it all the tougher." free agent who played for !he Dear B.:
St . Louis Cardinals last year,
Mexico Expedition is shaping
That depends on wh~ther this is your real reason or just an
Robinson has less than a are the candidates lor that job.
excuse.
up as a swnmer .dream or 38, monti1 to make his decisions
Rookies Tonuny Smith and
Boy ScOuts and Explorers in before lbe Tribe opens its
U you really like the girl - yes, you were dwnb to break up
Rick Manning are trying to win
the Tri.State Area Council. On American League schedule at
over a "future" that probably wouldn't happen. And if you doo't
squad berths as reserve outa first come, first served basis home Arpil 8 against the ~!ew
like the girl any more, you 'redumb to think an easy leklown will
fielders, but veterans Leron
for reservations. these lucky York Yankees.
be less hurt-causing. Why not level with her? - SUE AND
Lee, Ken Berry and coach Tom HELEN
boys will leave Huntington on
" We could go with an eight- McCraw are their competition
July 31 via Amtrak and return man pitching staff for the
+++
and have a big edge in ex- Rap :
on August 16. Other than month of April," Robinson pertence.
'
·
You hear so much about unfit mothers and their battered
spending moner. a fee of $320 said , pointing to a schedule
The Indians open spring children. But let me tell you that sometimes doc!Drs and judges
will co\,er train fa re. meals, that gi ves the team eight ·open training competition Thw-sday
guess wrong, especially in the case of unwed mothers.
acciden1 insurance. side tr ips. dates during the first 17 days of
against the San Francisco
Our daughter was bathing her baby in the tub with her. The
'
and board and program at the the season.
Giants.
water
seemed right for her but evidently it burned little John. He
• • ·'\ rugged Philmont Scout Ra nch
The top battles for squad
didn't
cry, but he played a long time in the water, and when she
' and Explorer Base in nor th- positions outside of the pitching
took him out, we noticed parts of his body were red. We called the
eastern New Mexico's Sangre staff are at the reserve infield
hospital right away and they said pack him in ice and bring him
de Cristo mountains. Imagine and outfield jobs. Veteran Jack
The earliest recorded traffi c over. My girl stayed with him the whole time. He was never in
fly fishing in a dea r mounlllin Brohamer appears set as a
accident
in the United States in real danger.
stream, hiking through the team startLryg second baseman,
which a pedestrian was hit by
Bul the doctor accused her of burning him out of meamess
towering peaks. panmng fur but Angel Hermoso, I'ISt year 's an aulomobile occurred in 1899
(she's 17, not married, and that's the way it goes at the county
gold, scaling a rocky cliff. With opening-day starter, and in New York City.
hospital ). Now Johnny is. in a foster home and a court c~ _IS
coming up. I know they 'll take him away from WI, and 11 will
break our hearts.
We aren 't rich enough to hire a good lawyer, and several
things are against us : we have (or had) two illegitimate babies in
the home, due to mistakes by both our daugbten. But ow- big
family is full of love, and we're able to take care of them all.
Nobody has a police record. This is the first trouble we've ever
been into with the law .
Do you have any advice on bow to get our baby back? ACCUSED BUT INNOCENT .

-,

Robby says cutting

Generation Rap

will be difficult

and

.

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Dear Aceused :
•
Our only advice : tell yow- story in court just as you've told is
to us. We can't vouch for all juvenile court judges, but the ones
we know personally have a good deal of heart. -'- HElEN AND

SUE

+++

Dear Helen :
Please tell "Desperate" and other teens who love horses,
· that tliere is hope even if theirparentscan'taffordtobuyal!arsll.
Twelve is not too young to work in a stable. She'd not only enjoy
it' but would learn a lot about caring lor animals. Also she can
ride, learn about farms, etc.
·-, 1 did this, earned money for my horse, and then I arranged
for "rough board" where I did all my own work on my horse:
roueh ch~aper .
...
"
.
I'm now 19, working in a hone equipment store, but ·l .still
save mon ey by getting UP, at 5:30a.m. ~mulch out the s~&amp;~s .
Where there's a will ... - WAITED SIX ~ BUT IT WAS
WORTH IT
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GAVIN EMPLOYEES CITED - J . W. Lizon, second right, plantllllllager at Gavln Plan:,
)iresents a trophy to plant en1ployes, left to right, Paul .~one, nollllle~nce depar1rnen ;
Be 1y Kna administrative deparlment· James Prolf•ll (t;enter, holdmg the stgnl , permr:nce d.;!tment, and at right, Carl Milch, of the
_department.. The
ts
~tative of the best safety record lor generating plant tn the American ElectriC Power
Systerri/in 1974.
t'
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J
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opera~ions

~ophy

By United Press lnternalional

Spencer hot
'

the fifth ...

U the Chicago White Sox are
Barry Foote and Mike Jortermittent crampy pain and it to make a serious run at the
gensen
helped the Montreal
can be quite severe. When the

stone.

Swain namedMVP
by SVAC coac!Jes

American League pennant this
year, youngsters like Bucky
Dent and Brian Downing are
going to have to make up lor
the departure of slugger Dick
Allen.
A hint of that rosy expects·
lion was evidenced Monday
when Dent and Downing
combined to drive in three runs
in the Chiaox' 8-3 victory over
the St. Louis Cardinals.
Downing, hoping to supplant
holdout Ed Herrmann as
Chicago's No. 1 catcher this
season, doubled home two runs
in a four-run eighth inning
against new Cardinal relief
pitcher Elias Sosa, while Dent
pounded out three hits, triggered a three-run third inning
rally with a leadoff double, and
drove in one run.
Another youngster who 's
being counted on heavily this
year to make up lor the loss of
a longtime reliable is James
Rodney Richard, Richard, the
6-foot-8 righthander who the
Houston· AslrO$ hope can ·fill
the starting ro.tation void
ereated with the off-season
death of Don Wilson, held the
Boston· Red Sox hitless over
three . innings in starting the
Astroa off to a 7-3 victory.
First. baseman Bob Watson
led Houston's 1~it attack with
two hils and two runs-battedIn, while southpaw Paul
Siebert, another candidate for
Wilson's job, also sbut out the
.Red Sox for two innings while
yielding two hits.
Elsewhere around the spring
training camps ...
Aurelio Rodriguez' two-run
double broke open a tie game in
the eighth inning•and sent the
Detroit Tigers off to a 7-4 win
over the Pittsbw-gh Pirates.

Expos to a 4-3 victory over
Japan's other visiting team,
the Tokyo Giants. Jorgensen
hit a two-run single in the
eighth that tied the score at 3-3,
while Foote lofted a 380-foot
single over the drawn in
centerfielder in the lOth inning
to win the game ...
Ron Blomberg pounded out
two hits and drove in two runs
-including the gane-winner as the New York Yankees beat
the Atlanta Braves 4-3. Larry
Gw-a and Dick Tidrow blanked
the Braves through live innings
while the Yankees were building up a W lead...
The Baltimore Orioles,
behind the combined eight-llit
pitching of Ross Grimsley,
Jesse Jefferson and Dyar
MlUer shut out the Texas
Rangers 1().0. Catcher Elrod
Hendricks paced the Orioles
with three hits, whUe Alonzo
Bumbry drove in a pair of runs.
"

IIOUTSELIS HIRED
BALTIMORE (UP!) -The
Baltimore Colts completed
their coaching staff Monday
with the appointment of
George Boutselis, 34, as special
teams coach.
·A native of Harrisburg, Pa.,
Boutselis was a quarterback at
the University of North Carolina before graduation in 1963.
He then served four seasons as
an assistant coach at North
Carolina.

FORT MYERS, Fla . .,
(UP I) - A makeshift CIDclnnati Reds team edged the
Kansas City Royals 2·1 here
Monday as rookie Arturo De
Frites slammed a groundrule pinchhlt double In the
eighth Inning to drive in Tom
Spencer who bad singled and
stole second. The Reds
scored the winning run on an n
error.
'·
The defeat was the third "
straight lor Kansas City and "
the first win for Cincinnati
alter two losses.
The Royals averted a
shutout in tile ninth Inning on
Jim WohUord's sale bunt, his
seventh hit In three games,
two outs and a single by
Hugh L. Washington.
H o c k e 'I Association
Standings
By United Press International ·.•,
East

World

San Die go
Baltimore

32 27 3 67 246 219
17 47 3 37 167 294
canadian
w. I. t. p1s gf ga
Quebec
4124 0 82 275 237
Toronto
36 28 2 74 287 255
Edmonton
31 27 l
65 225 206 ,
Vancouver
30 30 2 62 202 203

W inn ipeg
29 29 4 62 249 225
. x-frarichlse transferred from
Michiaan
·
(" "' Monday's Result
Ba ~tjmore 5 Edmonton 3
Tonight's Games
Winnipeg at New England
Edmonton at Ch icago
Phoen ix at Toronto
Minnesota at San Diego

Dai~

Sentinel

DEVOTED TO THE
lOITER EST OF
MEIGS -MASON AREA
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL
Exec . Ed.
ROBERT HOEFLICH
City Editor
Put-lisfted daii"Y except
Saturday by The Oh io Valley
Publish ing Company , 111
Court St. , Pom~roy , O.hiO
H769 . Busi ness Office Phone
99 ~ - 2156 . Ed itoria l P"hone 99 22157 .
Second c lass postage paid at
Pomeroy , •Onio .
National
ach.ert i sing
representat i ve
Bortinell i ·
Gallagher . Inc . , 12 East .. 2nd
St ,, New York . New York .
SUbscr i pt i on · rates :
Delivered by Carr ier where
available 75 cents per week ;
8y Motor RoUte where carr ier
serv ice , not av·a ilable, One
month , SJ. 2S . By ma il in Ot'lio
and· \IV . Va .. One Year , Sl:Z .OO ;
S ix mon tfls., 511.5Q ; Three
montns . 5 7 . oo ~ Elsewhere
126 . DO year ; Si )( -mon t hs
-1 13.50 ; three months , 17.50.
··Subscri pti on pri ce includes
Sunday T i mes -St:nt i_n~_l_
. ---'

tEAGUE TO MEET
The Middleport Boys'
baseball league will hold Its
first meeting to elect officers
and review Its program lor
the season Wednesday at
7:30p.m. at Middleport Fire
Station. The public is Invited.

Dream Team .

Others named to the first unit
by the league's seven cage
coaches were James, North
Gaiiia ; Wayne Hesson , Hannan
Trace: Myers, Symmes Valley
and Kevin Walker , Southwestern . James and Myers
were members of the SVAC
se cond team a year ago.
Hesson was picked on the
league 's third team in 1974 and
Walker received honorable
mention.
National Basketball Association
Standings
By United Press International
Eastern Conference
Atlantic Division
w. 1. pet . g . b .
Bo ston
46 20 .69 7
Buffa lo
42 26 .618
5
New York
3 1 36 .46 3 15 1 ~
Ph i ladlph i a
30 39 .43 5 17 1 2
central Division
w. 1. pet. g.b .
Washington
SO 18 73 5
Houston
37 32 .536 13 1 •
Cleveland
32 36 . 47 1 18
Atlanta
28 42 . 400 23
New Orleans
18 49 . 269 31 1 2
Western Conference
Midwest Division
w. 1. pet. g.b.
Chicago
40 27 .597
KC -Omal'1a
38 32 .543 3 1 2
Detroit
35 36 .493
7
Mi lwaukee
32 35 .47~
B
Pacific Division .
w. 1. pet.
Go ldenSta te 39 30 . 565
Seattle
32 36 . 471
61n
Portland
30 37 .448 6
Phoen ix
29 37 .439
8 1..1
Los Angeles
23 44 .343 15
Monday's Result
Milwaukee 103 KC -Omaha 96
Tonight's Games
New Orleans at Cleveland
Boston at Cl'1 icago
Los Angeles at Detroit
Seattleat KC ·Omaha
Golden State at Milwaukee
Seat tle at Houston
Washington at_AILanta

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Henry Block has
17 reasons why you

should come to us
fur income tax help.
Reason 5. If the IRS should call you ·
in for an audit, H &amp; R Block will go .
with you, at no additional cost. Not
as legal representative' .. but we
can answer all questions about how
your taxes were prepared.

a

a

ERA LOST AGAIN
INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. (UP!)
- The Indiana Senate late
Monday defeated, 27-21, the
proposed ratification of the
Equal Rights Amendment to
the U. S. Constitution.

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THI! INCOMI! TAX PI!OPLE

Open 9 A.M. to 5 P.M. Mon.-Sal.
Ph. 992-3795
NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY

OUR HUFFY
MOWERS
ltRE
HERE!

,·

WOOD HOME HEATER
18"
20"

c omfor t is you rs a utomatical ly! Load tl'1 e Monl?gram ~ood
Heater at nigh t and turn the :hermos tat d ~wn-tur n 11 Up
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.• r

league action
Li ll ie

Amer i can Bask etball Associa ·
titln Standinu
By United Pre ss International
Ea st
w . 1. pet . g .b.
New Yor k
49 71 700
Ke n l uck y
.H n .68 1 11 t
St . Lou is
26 47 356 24 1 l
M e mp h is
20 4 9 290 281 1
V irg in in
14 ss 20 3 34 1 1
west
w . 1. pet. g.b.
Denv er
53 17 757
San Anton io
42 29 592 11' &lt;
In d iana
37 J 1 .54 4 15
Ut a h
32 37 .464 20 1 1
San Di ego
30 4 2 41 7 24
Monday ' s Result s
No Gam. es Sch edul ed
Ton i ght ' s Game
Vi rgi n ia a t D enver

Bucks snap Kmgs
.hex, 103 to 96

POINT PLEASANT
Satw-day afternoon the North
Point Vikings won the 1975
PPJHS County Biddy League
Cage Tow-nament over the
New Haven Suns 33-17 and
Mason won the consolation
game 26-16 defeating the
·Sunnyside Cubs.
Mason held a commanding
lead of 16-4 at intermission. In
the second half, Mason kept
their scoring spree alive as
they net'ted 10 points while the
Cubs scored 12 points. Mason
received a third place trophy
presented to the team.
Steve Ohlinger led the Hawks
in points with seven, Scott
Barnitz added five, Bill Weese
and Grant Hysell both had
foUl', Estel Lavender, Todd
!(itchen and Kevin James all
pumped in two.
HAWKS 26- Steve Ohlinger,
3-1-7; Scott Barnltz 2-1-5; Grant
Hysell 2-j)..f; Bill Weese 1-2-4;
Estel · Lavender 144; Todd
Kitchen 1-0-2; Kevin James 1-02; Janice Weaver 0-M; Randy
Pierce O-M; Bob Mossman 0-00; ·Mike Sayre 0-0-0- Tim
Greene 0-M; Tolals 11-4-26.
Champiollllhip Game
The North Point Viking were
.crowned · Biddy League
·, Tow-ney Champions after they
ripped apart the New Haven ·
Suns, 33-17. North Point ended
the season with a perfect
•
record ·at 9-&lt;1.
'I)'oy Krebs. was the star of
game netting IS points and
stunning the Suns with his fine
talent. North Point led at the
·end of the. first hall 13-5.
Troy Krebs led the Vikings
with 15; Jeff Chambers scored
eigljt. Joey Sullivan and Rusty
Wood both netted five. Lali'y ·
Gibb,h ed his team with a fine

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PLAYER -SCHOOL
Mark Swain, Hannan Trace
Greg James, North Gallia
Wayne Hesson,Hannan Trace
Jaye Myers, Symmes Valley
Kevin Walker, Southwestern
(Second Team)
Mike Camden, North Gallia
Lloyd Wood, Southwestern
Tim Spencer, Eastern
Mike Roberts, Southern
Bill Hall, Hannan Trace
!Third Team)
Bill Metzner, Kyger Creek
Greg Brammer, Synunes Valley
Gene Payne, North Gallia
Greg Bailey, Eastern
Dan Brown, Southern
Honorable Mention
HANNAN TRACE -Charlie Cremeans and Kent Halley.
KYGER CREEK - Joe Stidham.
NORTH GALLIA - Fred Logan.
SOUTHWESTERN - Terry Carter.
SYMMES VAL.L.EY - Jim Myers.
EASTERN .- Randy Blake.
SOUTHERN - Paul Schultz.
MVP -Mark Swain, Hannan Trace.

MILWAUKEE , (UPI) - It
was left for Kansas City Coach
Phil Johnson to pot into words
what everybody in the Milwaukee Arena saw Monday
night.
"Dandridge doesn't hurt you.
None of them really hurt you.
Except that big guy. He kills
you. Actually kills you."
The "big guy/' of course, is
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, the
Milwaukee Bucks center who
put on a personal display that
destroyed the Kansas CityOmaha Kings 103-96 in the only
pro basketball game Monday
night.
With 9:28left in the game the
Bucks led 79-78.
Then Abdui..Jabbar hit nine
points in a row while the Kings
scored six; making the score
88-84. Abdui..Jabbar got a
rebound and threw a length··of
the court pass to Mickey Davis
lor a bucket.
Then the Bucks' center stole
the ball and moments later hit
another jump shot . Finally
Abdul.Jabbar found George
Thompson for a short jwnper
and the Bucks had a 94-86 lead
with just over four minutes
left.
Kansas City came within
three points a couple of times
but the Bucks thwarted every
effort and ended up with their
first win against the Kings in
seven games this year.

Indiana unanimous No.}

of basketball

The first nJund of the Meigs
League Bas ketball
I.eugue has been comleted with
t11e Middleport Lakers of
Coac h Woody Cali owning a
perfect 4-0 record.
In second position is U1e
Harmonville team of Greg
HT. YR. McCall with a 3-1 record. In
6-0 12 third place after the firs t round
6-4 II uf play is Salisbury at 2-2. The
6-2 12 Salisbur y coach is Ed Ken·
&amp;-2 12 nedy.
&amp;-2 12
Rev. PetTi p and his Pomeroy
team are in the fourth spot all6..1 12 3 and the Middleport Wildca ts
&amp;-2 12 of Dennis Ault Hre presently in
&amp;-I 12 the cellar at 0-4.
6-0 II
The second round of action
&amp;-1 12 begi ns Saturday , March 15,
with Harrisonville lllking on
II the Lakers at Middleport and
12 the Middleport Wildcats going
12 to Salisbury.
:&gt;-10 12
&amp;-2 II

Although, Johnson was awed
by Abdul.J'abbar's performance, it also caused him to get his
30th technical foul of the yeara record that leads the league
and has made him $1,500
poorer.
"I got my technical when I
was yelling at the refs about
the picks Kareem sets," Johnson said. "He picks you with
his elbow stuck way out-a
violation of the rules. But I
guess the rules are different for
him than for anyone else."
"I didn't deserve that technical," he added. Asked if his
league-leading performance
makes the official&lt;; more inclined to slap him with a
technical he replied, "It sure
does. It sure does."
Abdul.Jabbar finished with
34 points, 12 rebounds, !owassists and two blocked shots
lor the night. Bob Dandridge
scored 21 points for the Bucks.
Nate Archibald had 33 to lead
the Kings and Larry McNeill
added 19. .
The win gave the Bucks a 3235 record and moved them to
within one game o~ Detroit in
the battle for third place and a
playoff spot in the Midwest
Division. The Bucks lead ·
Detroit by one game in the loss
column and trail second place
Kansas City by just three
games in the loss column.

Suns lose in final;
.Hawks win 26-16

618 E. MAIN ST.
POMEROY, OHIO

41

The

Swain averaged nearly 30
points per game in leading the
Wildcats to their third straight
leagt•e championship .
The all-state candidate also
averaged 7.5 rebounds per
game and seven assists. Swain
was almost a one.man machine
ii. Satw-day's Class A District
Finals at Chillicothe. He
dumped in 34 of Hannan
Trace's 46 points.
Others nominated lor the
league's MVP award were
Greg James, 6-4 junior guard
from North Gallia and Jaye
Myers, 6-2 senior forward,
Symmes Valley .
Swain will be given a trophy
co-sponsored by the Sunday
Times-Sentinel and Radio
Station WJEH.
The presentation will be
made dw-ing the Annual SVAC
Sports Banquet slated Friday,
April4 at Rio Grande College's
Cafeteria. Vince Chickaerilla ,

w. I. t. piS 91 ga ,.

New Englnd 35 24 4 71. 21-t 217
Cleveland
28 34 3 59 186 216
Chicago
25 38 I
51 215 255
lndianapols 15463 33 169269
West
.
w 1. t. pts gt ga
Houston
43 22 0 86 303 208
Phoenix
13'4 25 6 74 248 214
Minnesota
34 28 2 70 256 224

The Tigers' 8" team wasn't
as fortunate, however, falling
14-7 to the visiting Chunichi
Dragons from Japan ...
Two-run dou\l)es by Greg
Luzinski and rookie Jerry
Martin helped the Philadelphia
Pbtllies kayo a pair of New
York Met rookie pitchers
Randy Tate and Nino Espinosa
en route to a 7-3 victory. After
Tate walked Dave Cash and
Larry Bowa, L.uzlnskl smacked
his two-run double, while
Martin highlighted a three-run,
live-bit seventh off Espinosa
with a double that blTOtlght
home Alan Bannister and
Terry Harmon ...
Rookie Arturo De Frites
slanuned a ground rule pinch
hit dOuble in the eighth inning
to drive in one run and scored
another on an error as a
''makeshift" Cincinnati Reds
team nipped Kansas City 21... The Minnesota Twins edged
the Los Angeles Dodgers on an
unejirned run In the eighth
inning and also got the game's
only home run -a pinch hit
shot from rookie Randy Bass in

--:~~

1974-75 AL.L.-8V AC DREAM TEAM
(First Team)

he ad basketbaii coach at
Capital Universi ty, will be the
featw-ed speaker.
Swain is the only ropeater
from las t year' s All SVAC

T.akers on top

National Hockey League Stand·
ing s
By United Press International
Division 1
w . 1. t . pis . gl . ga.
Pnilad elph i 40 18 9 89 236161
N Y Rang er s 32 22 13 77 '272 227
NY Island er s 26 22 17 73 222 162
Atlanta
26 27 13 65 18!1 192
Division 2
w
I. I . pt s. gf. ga .
Ch icago
32 29 7 71 2:2 5 203
Van couver
32 29 6 70 22-4 2 14
st. L ou is
26 27 13 65 219 22 6
Minn esota
19 41 6 44 186 '188
Kan sas Ci ty 14 44 9 37 159 280
Di vision 3
w. 1. t . pts . gf. ga .
Mont re al
40 11 16 96 323 196

'
NEW YORK (UPI) - Unbeaten and unanimous. And
almost totally unknown in the
public mind except for its
winning record and a dynamic
young coach ' named Bobby
Knight.
That's the way Indiana
finished its regular basketball
season and headed into the
NCAA championships as No. I
in the United Press International Board of Coaches
final ratings of 1974-1975,
Indiana was named first by
all 3S coaches participating in
the final balloting and outpointed UCLA, 350-306.
Louisville was a distant third
with 251, followed by Kentucky
with 205 and Maryla'nd with
169.
Bobby Knight's Hoosiers
raced through a 29-game
season without a loss and,
added to their three victories a
oyear ago in the Conunissioners
Tournament, today boast a
streak of 32 straight, longest in
major college basketball. Yet
how many people can name
even two players on this welldrilled, defense-oriented
squad?
The final week of regular

.

.

play shook up the rest of the top game- tops in the· nation
10, with John Wooden's UCL.A , among major teams.
Bruins, now intent on regaining
Indeed, at season's end, the
the NCAA crown, moving Into Hoosiers were No. 1 in one
second place behind Indiana catgory that no one could
while last week's runnerup, · match -most wins ·without a
Maryland, tumbled to fifth.
loss. All of 'em.
Louisville moved up from
fourth to third, and Kentucky
jumped from sixth to fow-th.
Rounding out the top 10 were
Marquette, Arizona State,
Alabama, North Carolina
State, and North Carolina.
North Carolina State, defending national champions,
shunned the National Invitation •fter being rejected
for inclusion in the NCAA
tourney .
Indiana may be compared to
the 1957 North Carolina team,
which also went through an
unbeaten season without any
one individual star. The Tarheels, coached by Frank
McGuire, epitomized the team
If car and home insurance
concept, especially since none
seem like a· big item in your
of their starters ever estabbudget. maylle it's because
lished themselves in the pro you 're wast ing money on the
ranks.
wrong kind or amount of cov·
None of this year's Indiana • erage. Too li1tle protec tio~. ts .
team is ranked among even the
just as wastefu l as buytng
top 40 scorers in the nation.
more prot ec tion than you acNone is ranked among the top tually need
10 rebounders, the top ten in
That's where the professional
field goal percentage, free
advice ol an independent ·
throw percentage.
agent can often save you
NEW Y.ORK fUPI ) The
fina l Unit ed Press Internat ional
None of the Hoosiers is ex- plenty . tn premium dollars Board ot Coa c hes top 20 major pected to be drafted on the first
and future regrets . We are the
college ba sketball team s for
independent
representat ive of
1974 -75 with f i rst pla ce vote s round of the pro drafts next
and won -lost record s in paren - month. Only Steve Green, a 6-7
several insurance companies,
theses
which lets us pick the one
(F inal Week)
senior or Scott May, a 6-7
Team
Points junior, are expected to be
company that has the best
1. Indiana ( 35) (2 9-0J
350
policy for you.
2 U CL A 123 ·31
306 selected in the early rounds.
3. Louisvi l l e (2 4-21
25 1
So tall us, or c ome in soon
As a team, the Hoosiers
4 . Kentucky 122 -4 )
205
and let's talk over your present
5 . Maryland ( 22 -4 )
169 ranked only 12th nationally on
6. Marquett e ( 22 -3&gt;
144
i! nrt future insurance needs. I
both
offense
and
defense.
7 , Arizona Stale (2 3- 3)
133
Knight's squad is distin8 . A l abama 02 -4)
100
9 . Nor th Carolina State ( 22 -6 1 78 guished statisically in only one
10 . North Carolina {2 1-7)
59
11. Pennsylvania (23 -4)
36 category-{lossibly the most
19 important category from a
12. Southern Cal (1 8-7!
13 . Utah Sta te ( 2 1-Sl
I?
William D. Childs
14 . Nevada -Las V egas ( 2 1-4 ) 8 coach's point of view- winning
Notre Dame ( 18-8)
8 margin. Indiana
breezed
16. Creighton { 20 -6)
7
17. Arizona 120-6 1
6 through its schedule this
18 . New M ex ico State 120 ·6 1
6 season with scarcely a pause,
19 . Clemson (17 -10)
4
20 . Te x as -E I Pa so 0 0-5)
3 w~ipplng opponents by an
average of almost 24 points per

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College ratings

~~

IDOWNING-CHILDS

L!~~~~. ~~

ZENITH

College Scores

COLOR TV

Los Ange le s 36 13 17 89 228 150 Mondav's College Buketball
Resulls
P itt sbur g h
30 23 14 74 17 3 2-42
Bv United Press International
Detroi t
19 38 10 d8 707 27 8
Wa shington 6 58 5 17 15 1 37 1 Marqu ett e 73 Tulane 65
·
Division 4
NAtA Tournament
w. 1. f . pi!&gt; . gf . ga .
Buffalo
4 11 2 14 96296 201 Marymount (Kan . ) 86 Mon mouth (N . J) 72
Bos ton
37 1911 85 303 204 Fairmont ( W .Va . J 94 Kearney
Toron to
28 29 11 67 238 258 St(Neb.) 86
California
17 40 11 ~ s 180 259 Norfolk St . ( Va .) 83 Wm Jewell
(Mo . ) 04
Mondav's Resutl s
Ill
Wesley an 76 Montevallo
No games scheduled
(A ia . J 67
Tonight's Games
Edinboro (Pa . ) 9 4 Palm Bcl'1
NY Rangers at Boston
All. ( F ia .J 86
Detroit at NY Is l anders
M i dw estern rTe x . l 89 U .S. Inti
At l anta at St . Louis
Buffalo at Los A ng el es
Al c orn { Mis s. l 88 Central Ark .
Kansas City at Vancouver
17
Millers vill e (Pa . ) 82 Ferr is
(Mi ch . J 8 1
0-().0; Totals 12-9-33.

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Suns 17
Larry Gibbs 2-4·8· Mike
Buzzard 2·2-6 : York ln~els l·IJ..
2; Larry- Hesson 0-1-1; Bobby
Carson IJ..IJ..O; Glenna Ferguson
0-().0; Harold Hamrick 0-lkl;
Carl Dugan ~; David Jones
0·0-0: Dare! Gillan! 0-0-0;
Totals 5-7-17.
.

This Week's Special
VALUE

RATED

effort. Larry scored eight
points. Mike Buzzard added
five, Hork, Ingles tallied two,
and Larry Hesson had the lone
one pointer.
Both teams along with all the
others are to be thanked for
their fine sportsmanship and
for entering the tourney.
Thanks also go to the PPJHS
administration and to Virgil
Burris and Richard Workman,
David Bodkin, Jim Wilson and
Jim Reymond for officiating.
Vikings 33
Troy Krebs 6-3-15; Jeff
Cbambers 2-4-8; Joey Sullivan
2-1-5; Rusty Wood 2-1-5; David
Lucan O-M; Stan Weaver 0-0-0;
Mark Lucas 0-0-0 ; Paul
Randolph IJ..().O; Jim Wamsley

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· 4-1'he Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., '1\tesday, March 11, 197~

'
''
I

'

MARCH RIGHT IN FOR

Inspection set for lodge
Inspection was announced
for April24 at7:30 p.m. at the
Middleport Masonic Temple
when Evangeline Chapter 172,
Order of the Eastern Star. met
Thursday night at the temple.
Presenled by Farie Ken·
nedy, ·worthy matron , and
Harry Chesher, worthy patron,
was Donna Spring, deputy
grand matron of District 25
who reporled that Bob Ham.
mond, Valley Chapter 19,
McConnelsville, is a patient at
the Zanesville Hospil&lt;lL
Also
presen ted
were
Florence Well, worthy matron
of Pomeroy Chapter t86 ; and

.DUTTON-'S

Grace Fre~ch, . Bernice Hen- Branch 25t; Duncan Falls; and
derson, Mary Hughes and for Friendship Night at the
~aomi King.. former gr(.tnd
Point Pleasant Chapter.
a ppoin!men ts .
Also read was an inVitaticm
Initiation was held for two . tu the Roberta Circle meeting
candidates. Mrs. Evelyn Lewis April 17 at 6:30 p.m. at the
reported that Pearl Bunce is a Reinersv ille Chapter at 6:30
patient at .the Pleasant Valley p.m. beginning with a potluck
Hospi tal and that Lettie Roush dinner . In conjWlction wi th the
is now at home .
meeting an auction will be held
· Inspection for Pomeroy wi th the proceeds to go to the
Chapter was announced for districl association .
April 18, 7:4~ p.m.
A lhank·you note was read
Refreshments were served
from the Mattie Bush family by Mr. and Mrs. Bill King.
and inspection invita tions we re They presented their daughter,
read from Valley Chapter, Me KaMiy, with a . cake in obCon nelsville ; Collin gwood servance of her birthday anChapter 184, Toledo; Kokosing niversa ry. The &lt;'ake was

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l..

_,C:.:a::.n:.::...___

Birthday
observed
Tnmmi Lynette Eblin
celebrated her fifth birthday
recently with a party at the
home of her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Richard Eblin , Pomeroy.
Games were played with
prizes going to Dixie Eblin and
Jay Evans. Refreshments of
ice cream, cupcakes, and KoolAid were served to Trina
Reeves, Jimmie Snider, Davy·
Leach, Pam, Christie and Jay
Evans, Don and Richard
Icenhower, Angle Triplett,
Dixie, Kim and Tracy Eblin,
Mrs. Ann Evans, Mrs. !Ietty
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with Laurel Grange as host.
One contribution was made
to the national grange youth
fund . It was noted that Mendal
Jordan and Earl Starkey attended leg islative meetings in
Chillicothe and Columbus.
Refreshments were served
by the · Hemlock Grange.

stars

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Mercury and Mars.
The evening stars are Venus,
Jupiter and Saturn.
Those born on this date are
under the sig n of Pisces.
King Frederick IX of Denmark was born March 11, 1899.
On this day in history:
In 1888, more than 200
persons died as a violent four·
day snow storm crippled New
York City.
In 1930, William Howard Taft
became the first president of
the United Stales to he buried
in the National Cemetery in
Arlington, Va.
In 1959, the Senate approved
Hawaii as the 50th state of the

~ died at the a•e of 80.

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24

comfort~~!~s~n~ napkins.

with COUpOn

REG. $1.88

Stflllljll)\1.

Mr. and Mrs. Brian johnson
WEDDING ANNOUNCED - Miss Brenda Nelson,
da ughter of Mr. and Mrs. Carl Nelson, Middleport, and Brian
Johnson, son of Mr. and Mrs . Earl Johnson, Mason, W. Va.,
were married Dec. 24. Clifford Smith performed the
ceremony in the Bradford Church of Christ. Wedding music
was provided by Miss Diana Painter. The couple resides in
Middleport.

4 QT. .

Limit 2

with coupon

:

COUPON

I

SUGAR TWIN

DOMINION CORN POPPER : •Concentrated sugar replacement.

IHeat.proof
REG $5 98
•See·lhrough glass cover
· '
•• qt. capacity
with
Lim it 2
coupon

I

CRAYOLA CRAYONS

!

'3"

• 100 packets

REG. $1.19

1

1

. .
L1m1t

1

79e

2

.
with coupon

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'

PTA holds open house

.

Ricker lADIES SHAVER

1 S rotating blades insure closeness and
comfort. ·

1 24 brilliant colors
• Non -to xic

1

REG. $1.69

REG. 59c

I

33e

l

99e

Plans were made for the
Limit 2 '·
with coupon
Limt 2
with coupon
March 15 pancake supper to be
held at the school from 5 to 8 ~J- -- ------·--------------L-------------------1
p.m. Price will be $1.7~ for
UPON
COUPON
I
adults, and $1 for children.
I
3 OZ. PRELL
Purchase of filing cabinets and
I
1
calculators was approved.
I
REG. 59c
Entertainment by the Grate
REG. $1.14
I
Family Singers included Ar·
I
nold Grate leading ih "Sweet
20c OFF
1
Limit 2
with coupon 1
Limit 2 .
.. witJJ coupon
Bye and Bye" with Arnold
Grate pl ayin g the violih,
--------------------~--------------------1
Wendell Grate the mandolin,
UPON
COUPON
1
school supervisor ; Mr. and Mike Grate, the harmonica,
1
12 OUNCE
Mrs. Arnold Grate, Mr. and Bill Hall and Arn old Grate the
1 6
Mrs. Wendell Grate, Mr. and gUi tars, and Jenny Grate, the
Mrs. Mike Nicholson, Mr. and pian o.
A quartet of Wendell, Donna
REG. $1.24
1
Mrs. Mike Grate, Mr. and Mrs.
REG. $1.00
and
Dave
Grate,
and
Connie
David Grate, Miss Jenn ie
12c OFF
l
Grate, Melvin Cremeans, Dale Nicho lson sa ng "Ready to
Limit 2
'
with coupon
Limit 2
with coupon
Hall , Harold Roush, Meigs Leave", "Yes. I'm Different
----~-----~---------~--------------------County Board of Education Now", " Tum Your Radio On ' ',
1
COUPON
member, and Mrs. Roush; "Just a Little Talk with
I
Vaporette
1 ~MINION
Virgil Kin g, Meigs Local Board Jesus", "Thanks to Calvary"
I
and
"I
Come
to
the
Garden
of Education member.
1
During the business meeting Alone ". Mildred and Arnold
1
Ki i"ls f leas for thr ee months
new officers elecled were Mrs. Grate sang " The Ufe Boat",
I
· R'EG: 515.99
Eari ,Riggs, president; Mrs. "Over Yonder" and " Roll the
REG. $1.19
1
••
.• •
Larry Barr , vice president ; Clouds Away" . Mrs . Roberta
Limit 2
with coupon I
Limit 2
with coupon
Mrs.
William
Willford, Wilson than ks th e Grate
I
.
secrel&lt;lry ; Mrs . Frank Gilkey, Fami ly Singers for th e
OUPON
I
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program.
treasurer.
I
I WOODBURY
I
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PLUS FREE DEODORANT
I
Bath Size
Lime and Reg ular
I

12 VENUS PENCILS

CONCENTRATE SHAMPOO

•

33.,

59e

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l

SCOPE MOUTHWASH

DESITIN LOTION

l

69e

49e

flEA COLLAR FOR 'OOGS

•BONNET DRYER

69e

•1 Q99

---------------------r--------------------·

Club convenes

OLD SPICE AFTER SHAVE

The Kyler Creek Hi gh School
The plebeians (first and
S.P.Q.R. Latin Club held its second yea r Latin studentS)
reg ul ar monthly meetin g will hold a bake ·sale Thursday,
March 4. Seventeen members March 13, after school in the
attended the meeting which lobby of the high school.
was held in the Latin room. Stephen Roush was put in
M 1nutes of the last meeting charge of the sale. The
were read and the treasurer 's senators (students who have
report was given. Consul Marie already completed two years of
Grose presided.
Latin) will hold a bake sale
The two bake sales. one held after school in the lobby Th urs.
by the plebeians and the other day. March 20. Chairperson of
held by the senators, were this sale is Fred Westfall. All
successful. Each sale made support will be greatly ap·
about S20 for the Latin Club. predated.
Club members would like to
Marie passed out sheets
express their apprecia tion to listing the committees for the
everyone who helped make Roman
banquet.
The
both sales a success.
deco rating commi ttee is
Since the money raised by composed of Mark Waller,
the bake sales will be used to Stephen Roush, Tony Shampay debts , club members · blin, and Pauline White ,
discussed ways to earn money chairperson. Members of the
for the annual Roman banquet. · food committee are Cynthia
Because the bake sales were so Clarke, chairperson; Arthur
profil&lt;l ble it was agreed to hold Leach, Steve Harrison, and Sue
two more.
Hughes . The chairperson of the

REG. $2.00
Limit 2

. - - - - - - - - - . enterl&lt;linmenl committee is
George Thompson. The other
members of that committee
are Carl Myers, Oliver Taylor
and Kim Reynolds .
5TH ANNUAL
Possible dates for the Roman
banque t were discussed. The
date was set for April at 6:30
p.m. in the high school.
MARCH
Latin Club members that
52,000.00 in Prizes to be attended the meeting ·were
given'' away
this Marie Grose, Liz Hood , CynSpring!!
thia Clarke, Kim Reynolds,
Be Sure To
Anna , Jarrell, Arthur Leach,
Stephen
Roush ,
Rick
Winebrenner , Raymond
Pennington, Semaki Corfias,
Susan Swisher, Fred Westfall,
Jody F ox. Debbie Baird ,
George Thompson, Oliver
2419 Dudley Ave .
Parkersbu'rg
Taylor and Tony Shamblin.

2

DUDLEY'S ·

SPRING FLING
lS

~~

1-----..

'133 with coupon Limit
25 e with coupon
--------------------r---...,,...--------------COUPON
OUPON
1

CURAD BANDAGE BONUS BOX
80

plasllc bandages

R.EG. $1.29

49e with coupon I . Limit
79e with coupon
--------------------L-----------------·-··-•
COUPON
OUPON.
2•

1

I

COLGATE TOOlHB~USHES
Soft ,

:
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Medium, and hard brislles.
·
REG. 69c

e

Limit

19

2

with coupon

COUPON

o Pockel·size
o
Easy-lo·read dial
1
I
L. .t •Carrying strap
1 R~~~ : 3:95
' with coupon

'2"

I 13.5 oz. lADY ESTHER
COMPLETE MAKE-UP KIT l
4-Purpose Face Cream
REG. $2.50
1
REG. $2.10
Limit
$149 with .c oupon . I Limit
99~ with coupon

'

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2

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COUPON
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Parker BIG RED BALL PEN
REG. $2 .98

REG. $4.50

1

99e with coupon l

limit 2

AVOS REDUCING CANDY
"i·

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•229 with coupon

Limit 2

----------·' ---~--------'---------- -- - .

COUPON

OUP N

TOY ASSORTMENT

MOPPET COIN BANKS

·$1.00 to $1.29 Value

Assorted .styles
REG. 98c

6·9~ witl\ coupon

I.

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Brews 2 to 8 cups in 40 seconds per cup.

No. 5850

I

· .

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REG. $39;95

•19"

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with coupon I

is. confined to the Ohio Valley
Hospital,
Rooni · · 227,
Steubenville, Cards from
friends and relatives may be
sent to her there,
·

.
Beaded tabi'it·
•
.
with coupon

69.$

RL~; : 8c

-----------------~--t-------------------COUPON
1

l

POwDER DEOOORANT

W.VA.

II

REG. $1.44

with coupon I

Limit" 2

· Credit c.nl hOlder .

Merllo book

~~~rt!k

hotde

REG. S2.50

r

c~~ange pocket
J

•179 with

COUpDfl, .

. I

•
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.

~

.

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Stamp.~

·ROUND ·STEAK

M

USDA Choice Full Cut .
· Boneless Round Steak,

GROUND CHUCK

GROUND ROUND

lb.

99e .

lb.

lb. 1.29

USDA Choice Rolled

RUMP
ROAST
lb.
09

•1

69¢

USDA Choice Rolled
SIRLOIN TIP R()AST
USDA CHOICE

ALL MEAT
BOLOGNA

lb.

CUBE STEAK

__ 9e

..._

.,,,

lb.

USDA Choice Beef

USDA Choice Beef

SUPERIORS

ARCHWAY
COOKIES

•

'119

••

-•
•

.

..

USDA CHOICE
lb $1 Ot
SWISS STEAK ................
~

lb.

lb.

I '

I

COOKIE SPECIAL

COK.E

DESSERT SPECIAL

10%

BIRDS EYE
COOL WHIP

OFF

9 ounce
container

69~

16

•

•

' 49 ~
...

pak

Sunshine Hi-Ho

PRODUCE

CRACKE~S

POTATOES

7-UP
l-Ib.

DAIRY BUYS

Instant Coffee
ALL WEEI&lt;

FOLGER'S

lh gal.
only

SOLB. BAG

for

Returnable Bottles

ICE MILK
UNCLASSIFIED

qts.

3

box

SCOT LAD

BROUGHTON'S

10 oz.

CHOCOLATE MILK

Jlr

2

qts.

RC COLA

.99

8 1:•119

•

89C

Everyday Price -8 Pak '1.59

FAIRMONT

PRINGLES

2% MILK
gallon

$129

Potato
Chips

GRADE A MEDIUM

doz.49c

YELLOW

DIET RITE

c

2
pak

EGGS

FLAVORS

00

quarts$
for

ONIONS

plus

dep.

. Daytime Toddler

KIMBIES
3-lb.

lge.

Pepperoni

Fro ~~ll HOUSE
99 C

can

Regular sge

AIRWICK

Solid.

SCOT LAD FROZEN

- '.I

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t

-

.

.

ll

DAD'S ROOT BEER
OR NEW DIET RITE CQii
(SUGAR FREE)
··

ORANGE JUICE'

With
Coupon

large

53

~

8 16oz.·l· 49

16 oz. can · ,

·
·

·

-

•

.

each

•

. :: . ·:.·::::: . ·. · : .· :::::::. · :: .~

tl

79

bqx

p~g.

Limit 1 ·coupon-.,er customer

• GOOd 011ty at Mark V
• • Offer EJ~:pires: 3-29-75

24 ct.

32. oz.

COFFEE
Hb

SIZe

6·9¢

&amp; Sausage
GORTON'S BREADED
PORTIONS

COU P ON

l,

'DiapeiS

JENO'S PIZZA

bag

Now you bave observed my
teacblllg, my conduct, my aim
Ill life, my fait.b, my patience,
my love, my steadluiDeu, my
penecatloos, my · sollerlags,
"ltat befell me at Alltiacb, ..ltat
persecutions I endured; yet
from t.bem aU. t.b.e Lord uscued
me. - U Tlmot.by ·3:Jt,ll.

l.DELUXE OfECKI)OI( WALLET

Sun. 10 to .10

'to l.imit

12 oz.
pkg.

Mrs. H. C. (Cora ) Cwnmiitgs

OOSMmc
BAG
Bright colors

.

We Accept Federlfl Food
· PHONE 992 3480

IS Hp!!PITALIZED

SINGLE FRAME

lO

WIENERS

THURSDAY
REGULAR meeting, Shade
Lodge 453, F&amp;AM, 7:30p.m. at
temple in Chester. All. master,
masons inviled.

Limit 2

II

SUPER MARKET - Open .Daily 9 to

SUPERIORS

RACINE Lodge No. 461, F
and AM will meet on Tuesday
evening at 7:30. All master
masons are lnvited.
LADIES Auxiliary , Olive
Township Fire Departmen t,
meets at fire building in Reedsville, 7 p.m. '1\tesday. All wives
of firemen and interested
residents of Olive Township
inviled. Future meetings will
he held the s~ond '1\tesday of
each month.
COUNTYWIDE Meeting of
Meigs Bicentennial Commission, 7:30p.m. '1\tesday in
the courtroom. Repre sentatives from all organizations
urged to attend.
OHIO ETA PHI Chapter,
Bela Sigma Phi Sorority,
theater party at Athens.
Members to meet at 6:15 on the
upper parking JoLin Pomeroy .
XI GAMMA Mu Chapter,
Beta Sigrjla . Phi; 7:30 ,p.m.
'1\teSday, home of Beverly
Long, Middleport. Cultural
report on friendship by Unda
Riffle, Annie Chapman.
HoStesses, Mrs. Long and
Donna Byer .
MEIGS Tops Club, 7 p.m.
Tuesday at the American
Legion Hall, Middlepor·t,
WEDNESDAY ,
WHITE Rose· Lodge .. ·Wednesday, 1:30 p.m. American
Legion Hall, Middlepor t:'
POMEROY Lions Club, noon
Wednesday at the Meigs Inn .
POMEROY Chapter 80,
Royal Arch Masons, 7:3Qp.m.
Pomeroy Masonic Temple,
followed by Bosworth Council
46, 8:30 p.m.
RON NATHAN, public
counselor !rom Washington, D.
C., to be at Middleport Village
Hall old council chambers, 2
p.m. to confer and offer assist·
ance to the public interested in
testifying at the public hearing_
in Akron on the abandonment
of the Penn Central Line from
Nitro to Corning.
MIDDLEPORT Amateur
Gardeners; 8 p.m. home of
Mrs. Pearl Reynolds.
MIDDLE:POR T Boys '
Baseball League 7:30 p.m. a t
Middleport Fire Station. 01ficers to be elected. Public
inviled.
THURSDAY
. ROCK Springs Grange, 7:30
p.m. at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. William Grueser.
LAUREL Cliff Beller Health
Club, 7:30p.m. home of Mrs:
Jean Wright.
ELEANOR Circle, Heath
Uniled Methodist Church, 7:30
p.m. at the church, Members to
take one wrapped and one
unwrapped auction item.
Hostesses,
Mrs .
John
Krawsczyn and Mrs. Steve
Houchins.
LAY Visitation Seminar
(second session) 7:30 p.m. at
Racine Wesleyan United
Methodist Church with Rev.
Gerald Erler:
MEIGS County Humane
Society at Middleport Village
Hall. All m~mbe~s urged to
attend and pu.blic 1S welcome.
Time is 7:-3 0p.m.

59$ with coupon
•;..~r.;:rr.;:r.~n;•:-- -- -- r--:--------------- ~ --I
COUPON

Limit 2

6 OZ. DIAL SCENTED

882-2$25

TRANSISTOR RADIO

DURA GLOSS

~· ~·

NEW HAVEN

.· '

I

WEST BEND COFFEE MAKER .

HARDWARE

AM PORTABtE '

--------------------L--------------~--- -·
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COUPON

Limit 2 •

•

Twin blades on two sides

I
I
I

Limit 2

- u ..... eo,.· oo-.a DrOCivC'IS

SAYR~

•·

Double II Refills
l Personna
WITH FREE RAZOR

I

. POWIUIJ.PIOI

2

I
I

REG. 99c

_ l ~~or Oul bOII'II 11111111'111 Co&lt;POr~~t-.

,...... ,o/ev..,~·

NATURE, SCENTS

1
I

USDA Choice Full Cut

ANNUAL open
house
meeting of Winding Trail
Garden Club 8 p.m. at Grace
Episcopal Church parish
house, Pomeroy. Mrs. Nan
Moore will show slides wd
speak on Hawaiian tri~:
refreshments. All clubs and
public invited.

sse
---------------------L-----------------·--·-·

~ PIONEER· ·

•

.

Hair color lotion that wa shes away only
th e, gray. Assorted colors.

99e with coupon l

2

Limit 2

SALEM CENTER - The
annual open house of the Salem
Center PTA held recently at
the Salem Ce nter Elementary
School featured a program of
music by the Grate Family
The Almanac
Singers.
By United !Jress International
A potluck dinner opened the
Toda y is Tuesday, March 11, mee ting with special guesls
the 70th day of 197~ with 295 to Carroll Pierce, Me igs Local
follow .
School Board member, and
The moon is approaching its Mrs. Pierce: Mrs . Nellie Vale,
new phase.
Mei gs County eleme ntary

~

~

Middleport, Ohio

IJ!!•IIIil•WII

Beau.t ifullife- like 8" dolls of many nations .
. Your choice
, ,

., novelist
u~~on 1970,Erie. famed
mystery Latz'n
Stanley Gardner

I

1
1

clAIROL FINAL NET

at the. next meeting, in May,

For The

lltielllil•lf•

a oz

Wells, sl&lt;lte chaplain of the
Ohio Stale Grange, is confined
to
Unive rs it y Hos pital,
Columbus.
It was announced tha t the
national sewing contest will be

·~
~

'

Pri ces valid through

----------------------r-------------. --~~- ---

recovering from a fall. Robert

i

Of The Greet.

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

ALLHERE) f,?7'1

Quality Furniture

TUESDAY
. MIDDLEPORT Lodge 363, F
and AM, 7 p .m, .at the Mid• ·
dleport Masonic Tem~le : Work
will be given in the fellowcrafl
degree. All master masons are
inviled.
KYGER Creek Band Boosters
meet at 7:30p.m. in the band
room . All parents are urged to
at lend .
MEIGS CHAPTEK ~J u" v,
'1\tesda y 7:30 p.m. at chapter.
home on · Buttern ut Ave.
Refreshmen Is. All members
urj;(cd to attend.
AMERICAN
Legion
Auxiliary, Lewis Manley Post
263, 7 p.m. home o! Mrs.
Sherman Buller, Rutland.

·'

March 17, tP75

co nferred on Mrs . Shir ley

morning

For The Savings

OHIO

Sayre .
It was reported tha t Mrs.
J ordan,
home
Mendel
economi cs chairwoman, is

The

fOOD
~

'

SPECIAlS

PRESCRIPTION ·
••••
D.RMIDDLEPORT,
UG STORE

~Cf0/J1c ~;~:;;· ~;n;~;;'~'t
Plans for the a9nual Meigs
County Grange banquet were
made during the Friday night
meeting of the Pomona Grange
he ld at the Rock Springs hall.
The banquet will he at 7: 15
p.m. April 4 at the Salisbury
Elcmenl&lt;lry SchooL Following
the steak dinner, the 1973 sl&lt;lte
prin cess, Diana Wayne,
Co lu mbiana Co unty , will
spea k.
No rm an Will, ma ster,
presided at the mee ting during
wh ich lime the fifth degree was

ST. PATRICKS DAY

, .I

'

I

'

btls.

.

•

\

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•
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..
•

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· 4-1'he Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., '1\tesday, March 11, 197~

'
''
I

'

MARCH RIGHT IN FOR

Inspection set for lodge
Inspection was announced
for April24 at7:30 p.m. at the
Middleport Masonic Temple
when Evangeline Chapter 172,
Order of the Eastern Star. met
Thursday night at the temple.
Presenled by Farie Ken·
nedy, ·worthy matron , and
Harry Chesher, worthy patron,
was Donna Spring, deputy
grand matron of District 25
who reporled that Bob Ham.
mond, Valley Chapter 19,
McConnelsville, is a patient at
the Zanesville Hospil&lt;lL
Also
presen ted
were
Florence Well, worthy matron
of Pomeroy Chapter t86 ; and

.DUTTON-'S

Grace Fre~ch, . Bernice Hen- Branch 25t; Duncan Falls; and
derson, Mary Hughes and for Friendship Night at the
~aomi King.. former gr(.tnd
Point Pleasant Chapter.
a ppoin!men ts .
Also read was an inVitaticm
Initiation was held for two . tu the Roberta Circle meeting
candidates. Mrs. Evelyn Lewis April 17 at 6:30 p.m. at the
reported that Pearl Bunce is a Reinersv ille Chapter at 6:30
patient at .the Pleasant Valley p.m. beginning with a potluck
Hospi tal and that Lettie Roush dinner . In conjWlction wi th the
is now at home .
meeting an auction will be held
· Inspection for Pomeroy wi th the proceeds to go to the
Chapter was announced for districl association .
April 18, 7:4~ p.m.
A lhank·you note was read
Refreshments were served
from the Mattie Bush family by Mr. and Mrs. Bill King.
and inspection invita tions we re They presented their daughter,
read from Valley Chapter, Me KaMiy, with a . cake in obCon nelsville ; Collin gwood servance of her birthday anChapter 184, Toledo; Kokosing niversa ry. The &lt;'ake was

7}~7.j

L&lt;·)\,
J( \

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""-Do your huubles
come in hunches?
Never fea r.
You can set them
right in a hurry. By
making sure you're
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We're experts on
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107 Svcamore
Pomeroy

If we Can't
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___
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_,C:.:a::.n:.::...___

Birthday
observed
Tnmmi Lynette Eblin
celebrated her fifth birthday
recently with a party at the
home of her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Richard Eblin , Pomeroy.
Games were played with
prizes going to Dixie Eblin and
Jay Evans. Refreshments of
ice cream, cupcakes, and KoolAid were served to Trina
Reeves, Jimmie Snider, Davy·
Leach, Pam, Christie and Jay
Evans, Don and Richard
Icenhower, Angle Triplett,
Dixie, Kim and Tracy Eblin,
Mrs. Ann Evans, Mrs. !Ietty
Triplett, Mrs. Susan Tracy and
Mrs Walter Wears, grand·
mo 1 r.
h
. e

-

n·~A1JLY •
ARRITJ"TI\.T.G
P' .l1 ,.,

• •

Fresh new
•
h
d
mere an ISe,

beautiful sofas,
cha•tIrs, be cl room
su1 es.

~·

at

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~

Reasonable Prices

BAKER FUR. N
. ITURE

~
~

~

~•

with Laurel Grange as host.
One contribution was made
to the national grange youth
fund . It was noted that Mendal
Jordan and Earl Starkey attended leg islative meetings in
Chillicothe and Columbus.
Refreshments were served
by the · Hemlock Grange.

stars

"
~ ....
~
~
EAMR ·:~ · ·

~.

T•H•E•Y•'R•E. . . . . . .

SHOES \ ;
I

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heritage house

~

Your Thorn MeAn Store
Middteoort. 0 .

If you 're male, married
and over twenty, your
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We want your business
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MUlliN INSURANCE AGENCY, INC.
113

E. Second

\1

ENTIREFAMILY \

.
·Lo"' auto
lnsuran
rates
young ..
·marrteds
•

are

Mercury and Mars.
The evening stars are Venus,
Jupiter and Saturn.
Those born on this date are
under the sig n of Pisces.
King Frederick IX of Denmark was born March 11, 1899.
On this day in history:
In 1888, more than 200
persons died as a violent four·
day snow storm crippled New
York City.
In 1930, William Howard Taft
became the first president of
the United Stales to he buried
in the National Cemetery in
Arlington, Va.
In 1959, the Senate approved
Hawaii as the 50th state of the

~ died at the a•e of 80.

~~~~,--~~~~'''~'*-"%-~"&amp;.~·s·~~~~"~'~
'

•

St., Pomeroy, 45769, Ph : 992-3381

PIN CUSHION DOLL

1
1

ClAIROL LOVING CARE

REG. $1.49

Limit

I

.

.

.·

I
1
1

REG. 52.20

'1''

Limit 2

with coupon

.

Kt{•llljl•h1'

••mmr.-w-

1

·

1

,

Holds three times Ianger than the leading

!1

hair spray .

REG. 52 .45

I

.• 119

:

24

comfort~~!~s~n~ napkins.

with COUpOn

REG. $1.88

Stflllljll)\1.

Mr. and Mrs. Brian johnson
WEDDING ANNOUNCED - Miss Brenda Nelson,
da ughter of Mr. and Mrs. Carl Nelson, Middleport, and Brian
Johnson, son of Mr. and Mrs . Earl Johnson, Mason, W. Va.,
were married Dec. 24. Clifford Smith performed the
ceremony in the Bradford Church of Christ. Wedding music
was provided by Miss Diana Painter. The couple resides in
Middleport.

4 QT. .

Limit 2

with coupon

:

COUPON

I

SUGAR TWIN

DOMINION CORN POPPER : •Concentrated sugar replacement.

IHeat.proof
REG $5 98
•See·lhrough glass cover
· '
•• qt. capacity
with
Lim it 2
coupon

I

CRAYOLA CRAYONS

!

'3"

• 100 packets

REG. $1.19

1

1

. .
L1m1t

1

79e

2

.
with coupon

-----li~~urg~Yi------:------------COUPON
'

PTA holds open house

.

Ricker lADIES SHAVER

1 S rotating blades insure closeness and
comfort. ·

1 24 brilliant colors
• Non -to xic

1

REG. $1.69

REG. 59c

I

33e

l

99e

Plans were made for the
Limit 2 '·
with coupon
Limt 2
with coupon
March 15 pancake supper to be
held at the school from 5 to 8 ~J- -- ------·--------------L-------------------1
p.m. Price will be $1.7~ for
UPON
COUPON
I
adults, and $1 for children.
I
3 OZ. PRELL
Purchase of filing cabinets and
I
1
calculators was approved.
I
REG. 59c
Entertainment by the Grate
REG. $1.14
I
Family Singers included Ar·
I
nold Grate leading ih "Sweet
20c OFF
1
Limit 2
with coupon 1
Limit 2 .
.. witJJ coupon
Bye and Bye" with Arnold
Grate pl ayin g the violih,
--------------------~--------------------1
Wendell Grate the mandolin,
UPON
COUPON
1
school supervisor ; Mr. and Mike Grate, the harmonica,
1
12 OUNCE
Mrs. Arnold Grate, Mr. and Bill Hall and Arn old Grate the
1 6
Mrs. Wendell Grate, Mr. and gUi tars, and Jenny Grate, the
Mrs. Mike Nicholson, Mr. and pian o.
A quartet of Wendell, Donna
REG. $1.24
1
Mrs. Mike Grate, Mr. and Mrs.
REG. $1.00
and
Dave
Grate,
and
Connie
David Grate, Miss Jenn ie
12c OFF
l
Grate, Melvin Cremeans, Dale Nicho lson sa ng "Ready to
Limit 2
'
with coupon
Limit 2
with coupon
Hall , Harold Roush, Meigs Leave", "Yes. I'm Different
----~-----~---------~--------------------County Board of Education Now", " Tum Your Radio On ' ',
1
COUPON
member, and Mrs. Roush; "Just a Little Talk with
I
Vaporette
1 ~MINION
Virgil Kin g, Meigs Local Board Jesus", "Thanks to Calvary"
I
and
"I
Come
to
the
Garden
of Education member.
1
During the business meeting Alone ". Mildred and Arnold
1
Ki i"ls f leas for thr ee months
new officers elecled were Mrs. Grate sang " The Ufe Boat",
I
· R'EG: 515.99
Eari ,Riggs, president; Mrs. "Over Yonder" and " Roll the
REG. $1.19
1
••
.• •
Larry Barr , vice president ; Clouds Away" . Mrs . Roberta
Limit 2
with coupon I
Limit 2
with coupon
Mrs.
William
Willford, Wilson than ks th e Grate
I
.
secrel&lt;lry ; Mrs . Frank Gilkey, Fami ly Singers for th e
OUPON
I
COUPON
program.
treasurer.
I
I WOODBURY
I
I
PLUS FREE DEODORANT
I
Bath Size
Lime and Reg ular
I

12 VENUS PENCILS

CONCENTRATE SHAMPOO

•

33.,

59e

oz.

l

SCOPE MOUTHWASH

DESITIN LOTION

l

69e

49e

flEA COLLAR FOR 'OOGS

•BONNET DRYER

69e

•1 Q99

---------------------r--------------------·

Club convenes

OLD SPICE AFTER SHAVE

The Kyler Creek Hi gh School
The plebeians (first and
S.P.Q.R. Latin Club held its second yea r Latin studentS)
reg ul ar monthly meetin g will hold a bake ·sale Thursday,
March 4. Seventeen members March 13, after school in the
attended the meeting which lobby of the high school.
was held in the Latin room. Stephen Roush was put in
M 1nutes of the last meeting charge of the sale. The
were read and the treasurer 's senators (students who have
report was given. Consul Marie already completed two years of
Grose presided.
Latin) will hold a bake sale
The two bake sales. one held after school in the lobby Th urs.
by the plebeians and the other day. March 20. Chairperson of
held by the senators, were this sale is Fred Westfall. All
successful. Each sale made support will be greatly ap·
about S20 for the Latin Club. predated.
Club members would like to
Marie passed out sheets
express their apprecia tion to listing the committees for the
everyone who helped make Roman
banquet.
The
both sales a success.
deco rating commi ttee is
Since the money raised by composed of Mark Waller,
the bake sales will be used to Stephen Roush, Tony Shampay debts , club members · blin, and Pauline White ,
discussed ways to earn money chairperson. Members of the
for the annual Roman banquet. · food committee are Cynthia
Because the bake sales were so Clarke, chairperson; Arthur
profil&lt;l ble it was agreed to hold Leach, Steve Harrison, and Sue
two more.
Hughes . The chairperson of the

REG. $2.00
Limit 2

. - - - - - - - - - . enterl&lt;linmenl committee is
George Thompson. The other
members of that committee
are Carl Myers, Oliver Taylor
and Kim Reynolds .
5TH ANNUAL
Possible dates for the Roman
banque t were discussed. The
date was set for April at 6:30
p.m. in the high school.
MARCH
Latin Club members that
52,000.00 in Prizes to be attended the meeting ·were
given'' away
this Marie Grose, Liz Hood , CynSpring!!
thia Clarke, Kim Reynolds,
Be Sure To
Anna , Jarrell, Arthur Leach,
Stephen
Roush ,
Rick
Winebrenner , Raymond
Pennington, Semaki Corfias,
Susan Swisher, Fred Westfall,
Jody F ox. Debbie Baird ,
George Thompson, Oliver
2419 Dudley Ave .
Parkersbu'rg
Taylor and Tony Shamblin.

2

DUDLEY'S ·

SPRING FLING
lS

~~

1-----..

'133 with coupon Limit
25 e with coupon
--------------------r---...,,...--------------COUPON
OUPON
1

CURAD BANDAGE BONUS BOX
80

plasllc bandages

R.EG. $1.29

49e with coupon I . Limit
79e with coupon
--------------------L-----------------·-··-•
COUPON
OUPON.
2•

1

I

COLGATE TOOlHB~USHES
Soft ,

:
I
:

Medium, and hard brislles.
·
REG. 69c

e

Limit

19

2

with coupon

COUPON

o Pockel·size
o
Easy-lo·read dial
1
I
L. .t •Carrying strap
1 R~~~ : 3:95
' with coupon

'2"

I 13.5 oz. lADY ESTHER
COMPLETE MAKE-UP KIT l
4-Purpose Face Cream
REG. $2.50
1
REG. $2.10
Limit
$149 with .c oupon . I Limit
99~ with coupon

'

I

·'

2

-------------------~-----------------·--·-·
I
COUPON
I
I
I

Parker BIG RED BALL PEN
REG. $2 .98

REG. $4.50

1

99e with coupon l

limit 2

AVOS REDUCING CANDY
"i·

I

•229 with coupon

Limit 2

----------·' ---~--------'---------- -- - .

COUPON

OUP N

TOY ASSORTMENT

MOPPET COIN BANKS

·$1.00 to $1.29 Value

Assorted .styles
REG. 98c

6·9~ witl\ coupon

I.

,
'

Brews 2 to 8 cups in 40 seconds per cup.

No. 5850

I

· .

·

REG. $39;95

•19"

I
.
I
with coupon I

is. confined to the Ohio Valley
Hospital,
Rooni · · 227,
Steubenville, Cards from
friends and relatives may be
sent to her there,
·

.
Beaded tabi'it·
•
.
with coupon

69.$

RL~; : 8c

-----------------~--t-------------------COUPON
1

l

POwDER DEOOORANT

W.VA.

II

REG. $1.44

with coupon I

Limit" 2

· Credit c.nl hOlder .

Merllo book

~~~rt!k

hotde

REG. S2.50

r

c~~ange pocket
J

•179 with

COUpDfl, .

. I

•
,,

\_

' I .

r

j

.

~

.

,.

Stamp.~

·ROUND ·STEAK

M

USDA Choice Full Cut .
· Boneless Round Steak,

GROUND CHUCK

GROUND ROUND

lb.

99e .

lb.

lb. 1.29

USDA Choice Rolled

RUMP
ROAST
lb.
09

•1

69¢

USDA Choice Rolled
SIRLOIN TIP R()AST
USDA CHOICE

ALL MEAT
BOLOGNA

lb.

CUBE STEAK

__ 9e

..._

.,,,

lb.

USDA Choice Beef

USDA Choice Beef

SUPERIORS

ARCHWAY
COOKIES

•

'119

••

-•
•

.

..

USDA CHOICE
lb $1 Ot
SWISS STEAK ................
~

lb.

lb.

I '

I

COOKIE SPECIAL

COK.E

DESSERT SPECIAL

10%

BIRDS EYE
COOL WHIP

OFF

9 ounce
container

69~

16

•

•

' 49 ~
...

pak

Sunshine Hi-Ho

PRODUCE

CRACKE~S

POTATOES

7-UP
l-Ib.

DAIRY BUYS

Instant Coffee
ALL WEEI&lt;

FOLGER'S

lh gal.
only

SOLB. BAG

for

Returnable Bottles

ICE MILK
UNCLASSIFIED

qts.

3

box

SCOT LAD

BROUGHTON'S

10 oz.

CHOCOLATE MILK

Jlr

2

qts.

RC COLA

.99

8 1:•119

•

89C

Everyday Price -8 Pak '1.59

FAIRMONT

PRINGLES

2% MILK
gallon

$129

Potato
Chips

GRADE A MEDIUM

doz.49c

YELLOW

DIET RITE

c

2
pak

EGGS

FLAVORS

00

quarts$
for

ONIONS

plus

dep.

. Daytime Toddler

KIMBIES
3-lb.

lge.

Pepperoni

Fro ~~ll HOUSE
99 C

can

Regular sge

AIRWICK

Solid.

SCOT LAD FROZEN

- '.I

I

t

-

.

.

ll

DAD'S ROOT BEER
OR NEW DIET RITE CQii
(SUGAR FREE)
··

ORANGE JUICE'

With
Coupon

large

53

~

8 16oz.·l· 49

16 oz. can · ,

·
·

·

-

•

.

each

•

. :: . ·:.·::::: . ·. · : .· :::::::. · :: .~

tl

79

bqx

p~g.

Limit 1 ·coupon-.,er customer

• GOOd 011ty at Mark V
• • Offer EJ~:pires: 3-29-75

24 ct.

32. oz.

COFFEE
Hb

SIZe

6·9¢

&amp; Sausage
GORTON'S BREADED
PORTIONS

COU P ON

l,

'DiapeiS

JENO'S PIZZA

bag

Now you bave observed my
teacblllg, my conduct, my aim
Ill life, my fait.b, my patience,
my love, my steadluiDeu, my
penecatloos, my · sollerlags,
"ltat befell me at Alltiacb, ..ltat
persecutions I endured; yet
from t.bem aU. t.b.e Lord uscued
me. - U Tlmot.by ·3:Jt,ll.

l.DELUXE OfECKI)OI( WALLET

Sun. 10 to .10

'to l.imit

12 oz.
pkg.

Mrs. H. C. (Cora ) Cwnmiitgs

OOSMmc
BAG
Bright colors

.

We Accept Federlfl Food
· PHONE 992 3480

IS Hp!!PITALIZED

SINGLE FRAME

lO

WIENERS

THURSDAY
REGULAR meeting, Shade
Lodge 453, F&amp;AM, 7:30p.m. at
temple in Chester. All. master,
masons inviled.

Limit 2

II

SUPER MARKET - Open .Daily 9 to

SUPERIORS

RACINE Lodge No. 461, F
and AM will meet on Tuesday
evening at 7:30. All master
masons are lnvited.
LADIES Auxiliary , Olive
Township Fire Departmen t,
meets at fire building in Reedsville, 7 p.m. '1\tesday. All wives
of firemen and interested
residents of Olive Township
inviled. Future meetings will
he held the s~ond '1\tesday of
each month.
COUNTYWIDE Meeting of
Meigs Bicentennial Commission, 7:30p.m. '1\tesday in
the courtroom. Repre sentatives from all organizations
urged to attend.
OHIO ETA PHI Chapter,
Bela Sigma Phi Sorority,
theater party at Athens.
Members to meet at 6:15 on the
upper parking JoLin Pomeroy .
XI GAMMA Mu Chapter,
Beta Sigrjla . Phi; 7:30 ,p.m.
'1\teSday, home of Beverly
Long, Middleport. Cultural
report on friendship by Unda
Riffle, Annie Chapman.
HoStesses, Mrs. Long and
Donna Byer .
MEIGS Tops Club, 7 p.m.
Tuesday at the American
Legion Hall, Middlepor·t,
WEDNESDAY ,
WHITE Rose· Lodge .. ·Wednesday, 1:30 p.m. American
Legion Hall, Middlepor t:'
POMEROY Lions Club, noon
Wednesday at the Meigs Inn .
POMEROY Chapter 80,
Royal Arch Masons, 7:3Qp.m.
Pomeroy Masonic Temple,
followed by Bosworth Council
46, 8:30 p.m.
RON NATHAN, public
counselor !rom Washington, D.
C., to be at Middleport Village
Hall old council chambers, 2
p.m. to confer and offer assist·
ance to the public interested in
testifying at the public hearing_
in Akron on the abandonment
of the Penn Central Line from
Nitro to Corning.
MIDDLEPORT Amateur
Gardeners; 8 p.m. home of
Mrs. Pearl Reynolds.
MIDDLE:POR T Boys '
Baseball League 7:30 p.m. a t
Middleport Fire Station. 01ficers to be elected. Public
inviled.
THURSDAY
. ROCK Springs Grange, 7:30
p.m. at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. William Grueser.
LAUREL Cliff Beller Health
Club, 7:30p.m. home of Mrs:
Jean Wright.
ELEANOR Circle, Heath
Uniled Methodist Church, 7:30
p.m. at the church, Members to
take one wrapped and one
unwrapped auction item.
Hostesses,
Mrs .
John
Krawsczyn and Mrs. Steve
Houchins.
LAY Visitation Seminar
(second session) 7:30 p.m. at
Racine Wesleyan United
Methodist Church with Rev.
Gerald Erler:
MEIGS County Humane
Society at Middleport Village
Hall. All m~mbe~s urged to
attend and pu.blic 1S welcome.
Time is 7:-3 0p.m.

59$ with coupon
•;..~r.;:rr.;:r.~n;•:-- -- -- r--:--------------- ~ --I
COUPON

Limit 2

6 OZ. DIAL SCENTED

882-2$25

TRANSISTOR RADIO

DURA GLOSS

~· ~·

NEW HAVEN

.· '

I

WEST BEND COFFEE MAKER .

HARDWARE

AM PORTABtE '

--------------------L--------------~--- -·
I
COUPON

Limit 2 •

•

Twin blades on two sides

I
I
I

Limit 2

- u ..... eo,.· oo-.a DrOCivC'IS

SAYR~

•·

Double II Refills
l Personna
WITH FREE RAZOR

I

. POWIUIJ.PIOI

2

I
I

REG. 99c

_ l ~~or Oul bOII'II 11111111'111 Co&lt;POr~~t-.

,...... ,o/ev..,~·

NATURE, SCENTS

1
I

USDA Choice Full Cut

ANNUAL open
house
meeting of Winding Trail
Garden Club 8 p.m. at Grace
Episcopal Church parish
house, Pomeroy. Mrs. Nan
Moore will show slides wd
speak on Hawaiian tri~:
refreshments. All clubs and
public invited.

sse
---------------------L-----------------·--·-·

~ PIONEER· ·

•

.

Hair color lotion that wa shes away only
th e, gray. Assorted colors.

99e with coupon l

2

Limit 2

SALEM CENTER - The
annual open house of the Salem
Center PTA held recently at
the Salem Ce nter Elementary
School featured a program of
music by the Grate Family
The Almanac
Singers.
By United !Jress International
A potluck dinner opened the
Toda y is Tuesday, March 11, mee ting with special guesls
the 70th day of 197~ with 295 to Carroll Pierce, Me igs Local
follow .
School Board member, and
The moon is approaching its Mrs. Pierce: Mrs . Nellie Vale,
new phase.
Mei gs County eleme ntary

~

~

Middleport, Ohio

IJ!!•IIIil•WII

Beau.t ifullife- like 8" dolls of many nations .
. Your choice
, ,

., novelist
u~~on 1970,Erie. famed
mystery Latz'n
Stanley Gardner

I

1
1

clAIROL FINAL NET

at the. next meeting, in May,

For The

lltielllil•lf•

a oz

Wells, sl&lt;lte chaplain of the
Ohio Stale Grange, is confined
to
Unive rs it y Hos pital,
Columbus.
It was announced tha t the
national sewing contest will be

·~
~

'

Pri ces valid through

----------------------r-------------. --~~- ---

recovering from a fall. Robert

i

Of The Greet.

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

ALLHERE) f,?7'1

Quality Furniture

TUESDAY
. MIDDLEPORT Lodge 363, F
and AM, 7 p .m, .at the Mid• ·
dleport Masonic Tem~le : Work
will be given in the fellowcrafl
degree. All master masons are
inviled.
KYGER Creek Band Boosters
meet at 7:30p.m. in the band
room . All parents are urged to
at lend .
MEIGS CHAPTEK ~J u" v,
'1\tesda y 7:30 p.m. at chapter.
home on · Buttern ut Ave.
Refreshmen Is. All members
urj;(cd to attend.
AMERICAN
Legion
Auxiliary, Lewis Manley Post
263, 7 p.m. home o! Mrs.
Sherman Buller, Rutland.

·'

March 17, tP75

co nferred on Mrs . Shir ley

morning

For The Savings

OHIO

Sayre .
It was reported tha t Mrs.
J ordan,
home
Mendel
economi cs chairwoman, is

The

fOOD
~

'

SPECIAlS

PRESCRIPTION ·
••••
D.RMIDDLEPORT,
UG STORE

~Cf0/J1c ~;~:;;· ~;n;~;;'~'t
Plans for the a9nual Meigs
County Grange banquet were
made during the Friday night
meeting of the Pomona Grange
he ld at the Rock Springs hall.
The banquet will he at 7: 15
p.m. April 4 at the Salisbury
Elcmenl&lt;lry SchooL Following
the steak dinner, the 1973 sl&lt;lte
prin cess, Diana Wayne,
Co lu mbiana Co unty , will
spea k.
No rm an Will, ma ster,
presided at the mee ting during
wh ich lime the fifth degree was

ST. PATRICKS DAY

, .I

'

I

'

btls.

.

•

\

\

r

•
..
..
•

�•

•'
1- The llally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy,

•

Polly's Poin
IIY POU.Y CRAMER

Iron and blot
grease off panels
POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - My kttchen
1.! paneled tn antique btrch and
the wall back of my garbage
can has grease on tl How can I
safely remove thts grease
wt thou! rwmng my paneling'
-MRS W S
DEAR MRS. W. S.- A lot of
tbe ouccess of any treatment
would depend on how your wall
Is finished. A cleaning nuld
IISed lor removing grease spots
might do tbe job but II tbe wood
has had no protective finish the
grease has doubtless snaked
Into tbe wood.
If so, try holding a blotter
over tbe spots Tben use a
warm Iron to transfer the
grease from the wa U to the
blotter. When, and If, the apots
an: removed protect your wood
panel against further spotting
wltb wax. Hao any reader
succeaslully removed such
spots from wood paneling? II
ao, do let us know how you did
lt. - POLLY.
DEAR POL!.Y - My Pet
Peeve Is wtth those people who
lack the courtesy to telephone
and let you know they are
wtable to do a job at the time
previously agreed on
EUiiE
DEAR POLLY - I am answenng Mary MeN who
wanted mlurmalton about an
old Dr Thomas Eleclrtc Otl
bottle that was unearthed on
' her property We used that

FIRST CHILD !lORN
WINTERSVILLE - Mr. and
Mrs Jack Kane, 1~3 Beechwood Dr , Wmlersvtlle, are
announcmg the btrlh of thetr
first child, Heather Mtchelle,
March 8 at the Ohio Valley
Hospttal , SteubenVIlle She
weighed 8 lbs., 2 ozs Grandparents are Mr and Mrs
Harold Blackston, Pomeroy
and Mr and Mrs Frank Kane,
Parma . Mr. and Mrs William
Grueser of Rt 2, Pomeroy, Mr
and Mrs . F. E. Shaeffer,
Columbus, and Herbert Burdorff, Parma are greatgrandparents Mrs Sophie
Burdorff of Parma, 99 'years
old, is a great-great.
grandmother

PARTY ENJOYED
A birthday party honormg
Audrey Arnold was held
Saturday at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Ronnie Casto, 103
LaiD'el Sl , Pomeroy Refreshments were served Allendmg
were Mr and Mrs. Casto, Billy
Jeffers, Mrs Delores Beach,
Mrs Gladys Ftfe, Mr and Mrs
Robert Fife, Jr and son,
Jason, Mr and Mrs Charles
Whittington and lamtly,
Ronnie and Trenta Bachtel.
SUPPER SET
SALEM CENTER - The
annual pancake supper of the
Salem Center PI" A wtll be held
at the school Saturday mght
Serving wtll begm at 5 p m and
continue until 8 p m Price will
be $1.75 for adults and $1 lor
children
YOUTH CONVENE
There will be a meeting of
the Living Light Youth Group
ol the Pomeroy Church of
Christ Monday mght, March 17
at the home of Sharon and
Terry Gromnger, Lincoln Htll
The meeting wtll start at 7 p m

VISrTS SISTER
Mrs Ntna Bland, Akron, ts
here for an extended vtstl wtth
her sister , Mrs
Pearl
Reynolds. She was brought to
Middleport over the weekend
by Mr and Mrs Wtlltam
Bland

HONOR ELDERS
CHESTER - Grandparents
night wtll be observed at a
meeting of the Chesler PI"A
Mooday at 7:30 p.m. at the
school.

Hor ton St In Ma so n

w

va

2 SIGNS

of

The

Noti ce 10 H ea vy E(llJ tpm enl
Dealers
In accor den c e w i th Sec 307 86
of The Oh io Rev is ed Cod e
s.ealed bids wd l be r ece1 ved by
Th e Meigs
County
Co m
m !ss •oners .n the i r off ic e In Tne
Court House Pomeroy Oh•o
45769 , unt i l 10 00 AM
on
Tuesday Marc h 25th 1975 at
Whtch l1me and p lace th e b•d s
will b e op ened and r ead a loud
for a new or uud Cl lese l eng,ne
dr iven crawl er t ra c tor equ1pped
w 1th " do zer and w •nch c om
plete w •th manufa ctu rer s
standar d ac cessor. es
A dealer s repr esentat i ve
snail provid e m s tru c t ton s m th e
proper operatron and m a m
tenanc e of the , new or used
dozer , at tt1e 11me of d el rv ery
One complele se t of parts
serv•ce
and
repa 1r
and
opera tor 's manua l shall be
provid ed w th ea ch new or us ed
un1t
The su c cessful b idder shall
prov•dc a one y ear w arranty fo r
the new tractor and attac h
men t s suppl •es
or !he sue
cesstul b1dd er shall prov ide a 30
wortl; lng dav warranty fo r th e
u sed tractor and attacllm ent s
supplied The warrant y shalt
not limit operat ing hou r s
The fo l lowm g spec •f• catton s
to be c onstder ed as m In mum
requirements for e 1th er th e n ew
or used Dozer
Engine
To be a 39 sA E net horse
power d•esel en g m e or g r eater
Wl lh a dry type a 1r cl ean er and
ether star t 1ng a 1d fo r cot d
w e'a.tller start.n g
Electrical System
Shall be a 12 vo ll 90 it m P
electr 1ca 1 syst em w 1th art er
nator and voltag e r egu la t or
Also equ1pped w•th hourm eter
and la chometer
Transm•ss•on
M ust be four speed for ward
a n d rev erse
t ransm1 SS10n
c apable of shtft1ng on the go
wtthout c lut ch.ng
We1ght
Dozer oper a 11ng wc• g h t to be
m •n•mum of 12 000 lbs and
ma x tmu m of 14 000 lb s w tl h
w 1nc; tt and blade
Tracks
T h ey sha l l be m1 nnn um of l J
1n c h es
1n
w1dth
and
hy draul •c ally adtustable A lso
eq u 1pped wtfh f tve bollo m
li fetim e roll er s and one top
ll f et •m e r oll er on r 1Qht and le ll
s1 d es
L1ghh
Shall be e&lt;IU !pp ed w ith two
fro n t mounted headl •ghts and
r ear w ork1ng ltght
canopv
Ca nop y to be app rov ed
R 0 P S c anop y w 1th scr ee n 1ng
to r brus.h protec1 10n
Vandal Protection
Ma ch ine to be equ,pped w •rh
eng •n e S• Cie Shi elds a nd lod.. abte
dash board cov er for vanda l
pro lec t •on
Blade
Sha ll b e 80 1nch es 1n w i dt h
Shal l be power angle lett or
r ight and power tilt Blad e shall
be c apabl e of l tftmg 38 1nches
above ground and 13 In ches
below groun d teve l
w.nch
snail be d ir ect d rive w inch
capable of 10 600 bare Clru m I me
pull To be equ•pped w tth th ree
roller fa1rteads W •ncll to be
eQu i pped W!lh 100 of 'r~ m ch
cab le (new ) and tatl cha m

Any u sed eq u 1pm ent sub
m 1tled for b•d shalf be no older
tt1an
f •v e
ye ars
s tnc e
manuta c tv rmg dal e
Trade In
One 19 56 m ode l AC HO ll
Dozer
Deal er to furn 1sh t hetr own
b•d forms Th e fron t of tile
en v elopes enc los mg the b1 ds
m ust be marked ' Do ze r B •d '
The Me,gs Count y Com
m 1SS 1oners m a y acc ep t the
lowest b 1d or selec t th e best b1d
for the •nlended purpose, and
reserve the r 1ght to rete c t any
or all b 1ds or an y par t ther eof
Board ot Count y
Comm •ss1 on er s
M artha Chambers
Cler k
111 11

18, 1t c

t

Sentinel

Clel •ver ed to our y ard We p1ck
up auto bodies and buy all
~•nds of screp metals and
tron R1der s Salvag e, St Rt
12A Rt 4, Pomeroy Ohto
Ca ll 992 5&lt;468
10 17 1fc
CA SH pa•d for all makes and
model s ot mob t l e homes
Ph on e area c ode 614 A23 9531
4 13 tr c

Mobile Homes For Sale
~E LL

your mob• te hom e for
ca sh 15 hom es wanted 19 58
hr u 1972 m od Pis Ph on e (61 11 )
44 6 142 5 Ga ll•p ol s •
3 9 78t c

- --

OF
QUALITY

Mt n k '

CARRIER
WANTED

~-------M--- -

NOTICE ON FILING
OF INVENTORY
AND APPRAISEMENT
The State of Oh•o , Me•gs
&lt;;ount.,., courl of Common
Pleas. Provate DIVISIOn

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

1974 CHEVROLET IMPALA
4 Or only 10 400 miles fully equipped Inc
1974 CHEVELLE MALIBU

a•r dark red A

tomplete plumbing &amp;
heating service and
general sheet metal
works.
F r ,e e
Eshmates.
Phone 949-5961
; mergency 992.3995
or 992-5700

53095

1974 MONTE CARLO LANDAU

..

V 8 P steenng,

$4695

(Demo ) loaded w1th options

1971 CHEVROLET 2 TON
$3495
C&amp; E 102 ' C A, 4 speed trans , 2 speed 15,000 rea' axle,

TEi.t. GERTIE. Nf.XT

HANG UP!''

TUESDAY , MARCH 11, 1975
l DO- FBI 3, Andy G,lffrth 8, Mrster Rogers· Neighborhood
20 33 I'on side 13
l 30-J'fews 4, Beve,ty Hillbillies 8, Hodgepodge Lodge 20. Get

Fire Retardant
Insulation
Blown Into Walls
and Attic,.
Free Estimates

Lanylavender
Phone 992-3993
Daily After 5: oo

Sm art 15, Electrtc Company 33

FOREST RUN
BLOCK CO.

WILKINSON
SMALL ENGINE
SALES&amp; SERVICE
992-3092

POMEROY, OHIO

fiA

1972 OLD SMOBILE Cut laSS 350
V 8 1 dr coupe Call 992 3293
or see at 105 Union Avenue
Pomeroy
R EMOO E LING
p l umbing ,
3 11 6tc
healing
and all types Of
g eneral
repa•r
Work 1970 BUICK Skylt~rk Phone 992
5460 Owner leavmg town
gu aranteed 10 years ex.
must sen
per• ence Phone 99 2 2409
3 9 3tp
1 19 tfc

'Employment Wanted

Chain
Precision
Ground
498 Locust S!
Mrddleport, Ohro

992·2067
Mintl'lvllle, 0.
RDNo. t
Blocks
Cement and Mortar
Wood Burning Stov.es
Heatilators
and
Fireplace Accessories
1-19-L.oio.

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

TWO 1968 Chevelles Both S750
Phone 742 6205
3 9 6tc

For Rent
3 BE D ROO M t r ailer with t1p
out UnfurniShed , washer
dry er air condtl1oned Phone
99 2 33 88
Or
L ee
Ray
L audermi!t at F 1ve FJomts
J 11 Otc
T RAI L ER apar-lmenls for renl
Phon e 9C12 5148
J 11 5tc
2 BED ROOM mob i le home tn
Syra cu se No ch• ldrtn or pets
Call 99 2 :2441 after 6 p m
0 €p OSI I requ 1r ed
3 11 He

-- --- - - --- -4---

J BEDRO OM mobile home air
cond1t1onmg
corner
of
BroaCiwa y 8. Elm FJhone 99:2
2580 aHer 6 p m
3 11 He

t -aEORoO M - ,-;a-;-;;;:- ;r; ;;, s
Tra de r Courl Phone 992 33211
3 4 rrc
---------F URN IS HED apt
a.r con
Cl 1f1onmg , elec heat 12 m11es
from Pomeroy on Rt
33
Adu l ts only PtlOne 1304 ) 77)
5118
3 .t1 Otc
3 B EDROOM mob il e home
wa sher and dryer 1' ~ baths,
u lilrl• es pa 1d 542 50 week 308
Page s t
M•ddl eport Ol'l10
3 4 ft c
F URN IS HED apartment
3
r m s and bath Phone 992
/937
3 4 6tc

1972 OODG E Colt new rad•al
t ires , very good cond• t •on
$1 200 Also, 1966 Nova A 1
shape, must sell Phone 992

1975 MONTE Carlo 4 000 m11es
all power a~r . AM stereo
tape Call 992 7036 after s p m
3 S tfc

·i91J-F0RD-C;,~t7;S;u:;.e
wagon , 20 000 miles , all
equ1pmtnt 53,500 Phone 992
3493 or '192 2720

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

1973 VEGA Hatchback 11 speed
transm tS$tOn new t1res. rape
player excellent cond1tton
Will sell reasonable Phone
(6111 1 992 2377 or 992 2732 after
4 ~ m
2 28 12tc

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

1969MERCURY Montego MX , A
dr
v1ny1 roof
302 VB,
automatiC
transmrss.on
S60D 95 Phone 378 634 7

For Sale
NEW Whe el cha ir and walker
never used Phone 742 .tl461
3 6 6tc
------~--- -----

INDUSTRIAL 6 tnch stroke saw
$75 , 18 Inch metal latag 6 inch
swmg ,
complete
with
threading gears motor and
b tts, $100 2 h p 220 bolt s1ng1e
Phase motor , Industrial type
w.th pulley, $50 air com
pressor motor and tank , S25
L 1ne shaft 3 pulleys bearmgs
and belt, SIS Phone 985 .tlll8
2 13 26tc

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

SEED IN ALL VARIETIES
AND MATURITIES, BUT
KERNEL
SIZES
ARE
LIMITED
CASH
PLUS
VOLUME
DISCOUNTS

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

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

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

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

Radford, Ann S Radford,
PORTABLE automat rc washer
George R Stsson, Slurley A 2 BEDROOM mobile home
phone 992 7066
Ph one 949 2261 Albert Hill
3 9 6tc
Stsson, 2 A , Chesler
3 10 6tc
Lyle W Hysell, Leona Hysell
GIBSON automat•c washer , 4
yeersold 181b capac1ty Call
to Marcus R Johnson, Mollte
991 390 I
For
Sale
Johnson, .80 A., Sahsbury
3 9 ltc
Byron Batley to Wtlham SU L KEY for Gravely tractor ,
S3S A lso, B lack D1amond FABRICS Polytster screen
Markham , 100 A
l •na m ent
Pt1one 592 2158
pnnts for Enter just arr•ved
Betty V Van Meter, Wtlltam
A tnens , 33 Town send
Also we now have cotton
3 10 3tc
kn •ts
Sew1ng notions at
Thomas Carleton, Cathy
d•scount Ten percent off to 4
Carle ton to Margar et Ann 2 G R A VE l ot , Mt !QS Memor•al
H and t1ome ec student s
Garden!t cheap Phone 949
Carolina Fabrics , Routt 7,
Johnson , 4 A. , Sulton
4962
one halt m 1\e north of Chester ,
Margaret Ann Johnson ,
3 5 6tc
Oh•o Open 9 1 m to 7 p m
Mondey through Friday lind 9
Arthur E JQhnson to Arthur E
a m to s p m
Saturday.
and und cham saws .
J ohnson, Margaret Ann NEW
Henry and Mary Hunter ,
hllers and mowers
Also.
owners
Johnson , 4 A , Sutton
r e pa.rs
&lt;498 Locust St ,
3 9 JIC
M
tddleport
Phone
992
3092
Reed Jeffers, Helen Jeffers,
2 28 Ute
Gene L Jeffers , Maetha - _____ _.. --------- 1965 JOHN Deere dozer , 4
cylinder, d1eset , 8 fl blade
Jeffers to George Caldwell, G ROCERY t&gt;uslness tor sale
new pamt, clutches tracks
Surldmg for sa le or ltase
brakes , and canopy 56,000
Parcels, Colwnbta
Phone773 S618from 8 lOp m
Phone 915 359-t
to 10 p m for appolntmtnl
Augustine Follrod to John
7 t~
3 10 II&lt; ---- -------~- 3'
Phthp Follrod, Lot, Pomeroy
-1953 FERGUSON 30 , new
Alva J . Coates. Mary J USED parts. Ffyt' s Truck end
motor pa1nt and good rubber
Auto Parts , Rutland , Ohio
Sl 250 Phone 915 JSU
Coates to John T, Wolfe, Joan
Phone (014 ) 7ot2 609-t
3 9 71~
1 22 78tp - - -.-------------Wolfe, Mtnerals, 66'' A.,
-MM
·-·--------1950 FERGUSON , 20. all
Chesler.
CL OS EMoUT on new Z•v Zag
or 1g1na1 exc:tpt new pa int and
Albert Htll Jr , Ora E. Htll to
sewmg machtnts For sew •no
I ~res SI.SSO Phone 985 359.tl
stret ch fabncs , buttont1olts.
3 9 7tp
Russell Jackson , 4 89 A ,
lan e y designs, ttc Pamt
Sutton
sl •gl'ltly blem,shed Cl\o1ce of TWO mowers , to fit Ford or
carry1ng case or se-w•ng
Ferquson , 3 pt h 1lch One
Farmers Bank &amp; Sav. Co , to
s•and U9 80 cash or t•rms
5125 o thtf S175 Phone 985
ava d ebl e Phone Pn 7155
Warren E. Baker, Wtlma F
~~ 1 ..
12 18 tfc
) 9 1tp
Baker. Parcels, Ohve
----------------

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

_ _ _

M

_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _

INDIAN JOE'S
CB SALES &amp; PARTS
308 Page St.
Middleport, 0. 992-3509
Radios, Antenn1s, Towers,
Used Tv 's. Buy from tile
"lnd1an" and save "Wam
Pum". We buy uud Radios
and Towers Radios repa.red
by FCC lrcensed serv1tt
p,ersonnel Stop ilnd see the
'lnd•an" and
Bubbles
Moniter Channel 10 and 20

BALER

TWINE
- 10.000 feet bales

_

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

-Ask for our ca~ and carry
pr1ce
!POMEROY LANDMARK!
Jack W Carsey, Mgr
Phone 992·2111

I

WILL tnm or cut trees or
shrubbery,
clean
out
basements. attiCS , etc Phone
949 3221 or 742 4.tl41
2 28 26tc

Real Estate For Sile

A MODERN all electnc home
w•th 3 bedrooms, kitchen and
drn1ng area. I1V1ng room and
bath
Full s•ze basement,
parl!ally
fmlshed
With
laundry area
recreation
room. storage, and workshop
area 1,080 sq ft of floor
space on ma tn floor and three
and two thirds acres of land
Located tn Racme area on
c R 28 between Dorcas &amp;
Apple Grove Phone 949 3.tl57

Wooded

CAP!"AIN EASY
THEY R:E NAV Y
PLANE5, ALL ~16 H T- ­
Pil0BASLY FROM THAr
TA5 K FORCE NE Al&lt;.
DJIB OUT I!

Avenue
LarQe lot
full
basement and new furnace
Call 992 3854
3 9 6tc

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

-3

JUST SOLU
4 PROPERTIES
INS DAYS
TOOAY WE NEED.
3 bedroom home on large

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

ROOM nouse w1th bath, 3
bedroom full basement, gliS
heat. h w floor wall to wall
c arpet Close to school tn
Pomeroy Phone 992 3097
3 9 52tc

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

3 BEDROOM house w ith bath
large ya r d and garden c tfY
water Phone 742 4782
3 9 6tc

--------------BEAUTIFUL wooded 5 acrt
lots 1n R1ggs Crest Manor,
reasonable cmced between
Tuppers Plams Chester Call
Joe Boyles 667 3829 Affolter
Really Broker
3 9 3tc

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

These homes ore needed by
prospeds who or• walttng to
BUY
CALL TODAY
992-2259
-FOR SALERUTLAND- CLOSE TO
SHOPPING - 2 BR, balh,
fireplace, carpeting,
paneling, tile, porch, garage
$9,500.00.
POMEROY - Lincoln His. 2
BR. both, H. W floors , u!litty
R , basement, porch , large

lol. $10,000 00
61 ACRES - Just off new Rt
pine and olhers
992·2259

2

houses wtth baths, '" town near
stores Want an Investment ,
thiS IS It

70 ACRES - On new Route 33
North Excellent home sites
and spring T P water ctose.
ROUTE 143- Fa' Out large II
room 2 bath ho111e w rlh
busrness room , and d'llted welt
and plenly of parkrng
HOUSING SITES - 2'12 Acres

8 Jo--Movl e " The B1g Ripoff '
H 8,10 Ascent of M an 20,33
9 OO- Fam 1ly

Theatre " The Cantervllle G host '
Graham Crusade 8, Hawa ii Five 0 10
9 30-Woman 20 W i tness to Yes terday 33

B11ty

oo-Tomor r ow

3 4 News 13

BORN LOSER

MlddtoPorf, Ohio

"'- m.sw or m.a.1 -,
WEONESDAY, MARCH t!, 1975

D&amp;D
CONSTRUCilON

6 CIO--Sunnse Semmar 4, Sunrise Semester 10

4 ls-Englrsh SOl 3

•

94,· 3131 or 843-2667

Blown
Insulation Services
Blown rnto Walls&amp; AHles
STORM
Windows &amp;Dool'l
ALUMINUM
Siding · Sofllff
Gutters Awnings
Free Estimates
Ph."2·3f93

6 Jo-F i ve Minutes to Live By 4 New s 6, Bible An swer s 8,

•'

PHONE

All Types of
BUILDING
and REMODELING
From • shelf to a houn.
Parntrng, siding, roofing,
paper honglng, kitchen
coblnots, expert carpeting,
etc.

6 25-- Fa rm Report 13

School Scene 10, The Story 13
6 Js-Coiumbus today 4

•

!;

CBS News 8,10
8 DO-Lassle6, Capt Kangaroo 8: Popeye 10, Sesame St 33

~11rf!OOID!1~@ 1kJ ~tdm41.J -J 'f"'N
t

JnsC'~t hese four Jumbles.

FINisHED,

CU88LI:?'

rJ

I

IJ

tj J

LARRY LAVENDER
Syracuse, Ohio

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR
- sweepers, toasters, 1ron1,
all small appl1ances Lawn
mowers next to State High
way Garage on Route 7
Phone 985 3825
3 11 26tc

L!Tn.E ORPHAN ANNIE

-

HUH I 'fi)U NMR W!R.E

Ll

A.wt 1CO SMART ... MD I GUESS
S~PfNEC&gt;

(Auwen to•orrow)

'101.1 UP ANY -

SOMEiJODY t&gt;IO IT

M

IF

Ju,r.bJ,.., ALBUM LOUSE INTENT UPLIFT
1

'SOMt N!W MO&amp; WE

\ Am""'" \ tm arft•!J&gt;4

rtml.i be ngfWIHI llu Iau
tlu m al ftu tuutx - POLLUTANTS
,1

GASOLINE ALLEY

He's hold1nQ
her hand'

1t ever s 1nce
theL.I qot on
the bus'

work, land clearing by
tht acre, hourly or contract
Farm ponds, roads, etc
Large dozer and oper1tor
w1th over 20 years eK
perlence Pullins Excavating,
Pomeroy, Ohio Phone 992
2.tl78

1119tfc

E"CAVATING, dozer, loadtr
and backhot work, septic
ttnks Installed, dump truck'
·and lo boys tor hire, will haul
fill dirt, top soiL limestone &amp;
gravel, Call Bob or Roger
Jeffers, day phone 9927089,
night phone 992·3S25 or 992

.

I 10/H

01( .. ,, . , .. M..

~"" ' " """"

L!L ABNER

Modern San 1tatton. 992 3954 or

Order Yaur

THE
Fl..APALOO WILL
13RIN6 eA60LJN,;;:
PRICEG
CRASHING

STRANGLE
li!!

WHERE DO YOIJ THINK THE

1

12 wds)
31 Frtend, tn
Ypres
32 Laurel
33 Rtver to
llle Volga
34 Trmket,
gadget
36 Russtan
ruler
37 Insttncttve
38 Bactert&lt;&gt;logtst's
wtre
39 Hotbeds
40 Tend the
garden

THE AJBUC FOR 64SOU~E,
YOU TRAIIDRrr

Cabbage Planta
Now

JAMES HIU.
Phone: 247-2961
THifl :;HIP WILL
ACTAflMY
BA5E O F

AND WINNIE
WINK LE WILL NEVER
KNOIN WHO HER
I I

xu

Wednesday Is Healt Fund 75 Day

AstroFor Wodnttdoy, Morch 12,
1975
ARIES !March 21-Aprlt 19)

SCORPIO ( Oct. 2e-Nov. 22)

~

One with whom you ve had
differences should be avoided
socially today This person may
pull one of her old tricks

w
, 11

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·0...,
21) Don I walt too long to wrap

CAPRICORN (D..:. 22·Jon. ·••
It) You could easil¥, be talke; • H

Somethmg you re prese ntly
h o pmg lor w1ll b e delayed
through 110 fault of your own
The delay rs temporary and wll/
be rec tifi ed

GEMtNt (Morr 2t-Juno 20)
Don 1 s tand In another s
shadow loday or the cred •l you
should recei ve lor an ach leveJ
m en! w1ll be stolen by the
gr andstander Speak up

CANCER (Juno 21-Juty 22) An
embarrassing s1tyat1on can be
avo1ded It you don t pretend to
kn ow about something you
d o n t k now of

out of a good Idee by one who
wil l plant doubts In your mind
w1th her negat1ve comments

UH·· I WUZ
HOME ALL NIGHT
LRST NIGHT.
SHERIFF ·

VIRGO (Aug 23-Sept. 22) An
agreement with another will be
broken unless you re both very
fa~r reg arding 1ts terms Com M 1
prom ise Is called for

liBRA (Sept 23-0ct. 23) Don I
a llow

m i nor

Your mtentlons will be good
but you r drive will be mi nimal
Tllmg s yo~ plan to do today are
likely
to
be
postponed

, 1..,

March 12, 1875

...

You will chart for yourself a
tra sh new course th•s year It
will separate you from several
old unproductive lies to the
pa s t The new direction
appears prom1slng
tN F.W S I' A Pt H ~ N TEitPRI S~~ A SSJII

II

.i\ K 73

¥8 4 2
• 75
o1o A Q 6 4
~.AST

• Q 62

•J 106 5

¥9 I
t K 8 62
o1o I 9 5 J

¥Kill
tQJ
o1o

North

tO ~

tO H

I ""

I•

F.ust

South

Pass

!•

Pass
Pass

Pass

Pass

1•

I

2N
4•

1t 1s

and ktng of spades and runs a • ,
spade East has to follow, but tl
makes no dtflerence If East
ruffs m any It me, there wtll be
no way for him to lead a th1rd
trump to draw dummy's last "'
trump
11
South s next play ts to take _
hts kmg of clubs Then he leads a "'
club to dummy 's queen and ·•
ruffs dummy 's last spade Now _'!'
he leads a club to dummy 's ace , !
and ruffs dummy's last club
Here agam East ts helpless tf
he ruffs m on dummy s club ace
or stx South scores hts lOth
tnck and contract wtth the ace ,
or dtamonds

r

Four hearts wheels tn eastly
agamst any lead but a heart
However West dtd lead a heart
East held the ltrst trtck and
contmued the sutt South went
up wtth the ace
Terence Reese asks, 'What
should South do next ' "
Hts answer IS a surpnsmg
one He says, 'He should lay
down hts hand and clatm the
contract before he can make a
mt stake "
Before you go any further see
tf you can ltgure out the play
whtch must win agamst any
combtnatton of adverse cards

" ""h1

~

South cashes dummy s ace '' 1

I U l.

The btddmg has been
West

North.

East

P01 ss

I

t

Pass

I •

Pass

3•

Pass

'

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

t

'"
.u

Here
NOIITII lilt

WM PO AM.fM 9 AM TO I PM
Entertainment AU Day--~

.

I

Claim contract before you goof

HEART FUND DAY-75 IS WEDS. MMQI 12 Oft

'

••

PISCES (Fob. 20-Morch 20) ' '

setback s

tbJ'RE ALSO WEAI?iNG
A GlOVE .

'

..

Be·careful In financial dealings
today or you II surfer some loss
th at could be averted Counl
your change Get receipts

...

II ,_

South

1.

You South hold

"
,,.

"K J 9 4. AQ2 • J4 3. K 10 5N
What do you do now'
'if
A - Bid three notrump Vou are~
very well prepared for r&amp;eart lead • .,

TODAV'S QUESTII:Jlli

••

Your partner continues to four"' '
d1amonds What do you do now"

Send $1 lo' JACOBY MODERN ,.,
book tb Wrn at 8r1dge, '(clo this , ,1
newspape,), P 0 Box 489 Radio
ClfyStarron, Now YOfk, NY 10019 ;~
!NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN I

NIGHT?

'"

•v

AQUARIUS tJon. 20-Fob. 19)

Opcn1ng lead - 3 .,

f(D 1$7&amp; Kina Fe1twca Syndicate Inc l

1" 1

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Be very
car efu l w1 th anything mater ial
belonging to another Don t
lend without the owners conM
sent wh at was entrusted to you

Pass

WUPQ. - XNPQUJ
LFBQQ
Yesterday'l Cryptoquote: IF YOU WANT TO GET ACROSS
AN IDEA, WRAP IT UP IN A PERSON - RALPH BUNCHE

y

TAURUS (Aprlt 20·M•y 20)

Pa ss
Pass

NIA

•

up a delicate situation or the
control will sllp from you
Someone else will be calling
the shots

We st

LQNQMUL
BMQ
BY
•
XUUD QB
LUU
QOUW

"'w'

You ll awak en 1nteres t regardmg your plans 11 you re a bit
mysteriou s about them Reveal
JUSt enough to whet oth ers
appet1tes

Neither \ Ui ncrabl c

GMS P A

LIB X,
BARNEY

?

"

careerwlse to upset you They
Will be overcome shortly by
more fortunate clrcumst9nces
Just hang lh there

t A 94
o1o K 7 2

CRYPTOQUOTE

lBOO

Israelis 20, Know Your Schools 33

3D-Police Surgeon 3, Name That Tune 4, Lei's Make a Deal
6 Wilburn Brothers, The Judge 10, To Tell the Truth 13. "
Book Beat 20, Episode Action 3J
8 00-Llltle Hovse on lhe p,olrle 3,4, That's My Mama 6,13, '
Billy Graham 8, IS, Tony Orlando &amp; Dawn 10, Theater In
Ameri ca 20; Sinners 33
,
8 30-Movle " Scream of the Wolf",. Movte "Wild Women" 6 N
9 DO-Lucas Tonner 3.4, 15. Cannon 8, 10, Masterpiece Theatre

¥A 10 765

112·2525

.

l 3()-News6. Bevedy Hillbillies 8, Hodgepodge Lodge 20. Get '
Sma't 15, Elee Co 33
,
6 DO-News 34,8, to, 13, 15, ABC News 6, Etec Co 2C: lTV
Utilization JJ
6 30-NBC New s J,4, 15, ABC News 13, Bewitched 6, CBS News
8. 10. Zoom 20 Your Futu'e Is Now 33
7 DO-Truth or Cons J,4, Bowling for Dollars 6: What's My Line
8. News 10 Country Music ~ubllee 13, I Spy 15, Mabs &amp;

• 94

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW
One letter limply stands lor another. In thta sample A Is
used for the three L's, X lor the two O's, etc Stnsle letters,
apostrophes, the length and lormatton of the words are all
biDis Eaeh day the eode letters are different

SNUFFV-- WI;lZ 'IOU· ·
ENI\)IIWHARS NEAR
LUKEV'S HENHOOSE
LAST

lucy Show 8, Bonanza 15

5 DO-FBI 3. ABC Afterschool Special 13, Andy Griffith 8;
Mister Rogers ' Neighborhood 20,JJ

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:

W.VA.

Stop In At the Grice Eplscopai"Oiurch
·Parish House In Pomeroy
OR
Phone in your pledge at 992-3339 or 992-

4

I Dream of Jeannie 4, Somerset 15, .

Gilligan's Is 6, Talttetales 8, Ssame St 20,33, Mike Douglas
13
30-Bewttched 3. ABC At!erschool Spec ial 6, Merv Grifftn 4,

SOUTH

Is

on WMPO AM.fM

4 00-Mr Cartoon 3

wt:sr

a score

FLIMFLAM FUND GETS ITS
BILLIONS '2 - FROM GOUGI NG

DO'M'-)-

Southern

NEW HAVEN

t" d1~cl1argt

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
DOWN
I Reverberate I A Kennedy
5 Early
2 Neighbor
of Peru
phystctan
10 Melt
3 Undergomg
U Funny roke
a mysttcal
(colloq ,
expenence
2 wds.)
(2 wds I
12 Busy place 4 Be tn
13 Proceedings
debt
Yesterday's Answer
14 Samuel's
s Kmd of
IS
Expenstve
26 Ctvtl War
teacher
dancer
18
of
general
IS Couple
6 Consumed
the trade 29 Offtetal
16 Understood 7 Frtendly
19
Ham tt up
decree
17 Plam,
greetmg
22
The
30
Dtd KP work
meager
( 4 was )
Crusaders'
32
Belfry
19 Ratson d'8 Guarantee
demzens
great foe
20 Capricorn"s 9 Most
symbol
unmaculate 23 Wtndflower 35 Grammattcal
21 Fatl the
11 Frequent
24 S Am,
case (abbr 1
mark
frequently
rodent
36 Haul
22 Taste
24 Halley's 2S Indigo dye
26 Petty offtcer
27 Mtnus
!,.,--+-1-+28 Tted, as

4·30 If&lt;

9 18 tfc
----

(

11

~

llver;_ed right to your proJect.
FasJ
and
easy
Free
estimates Phone f92.J2H
Gotgltln Read',! MIX Co.,
Maddleport Ohto

---- ---- --~

r 1 q ), 1.

l'ulrrd•,."•

&amp;OTTA F!Nb OLIT-

News 8, 10

2 D0-2 DO-Days of Our Lives 3,4, IS, $10,000 Pyramid 6,13, .
Guiding Light B. 10
2 3D-Doctors 3,4,15, Big Showdown 6,13; Edge ofNight 8,10
3 DO-Another Wo,td 3,4,15, Geoerai Hospllal 6,13. Price Is
Rrght 8 10, The Luthter 20
3 JD-One Life to Live 13, Lvcy Show 6: Match Game 8,10, On
Aging 2C

A Rt.JNNE R I'-J
THE 6AF:DEN.

TW BHTH.I' YOU TOOK AIN T

11 29 tit
-READY
M
-----------MiX CONCRE Ft de:-'

992 7349

• «'

Now arran~re the circled )etten
to fonn the aurpriH anawer, u

~:::!~:::!:1\,~~==·

Repair Serv•ce Anything
fixed around the home, from
root to basement Vou will
ltke our work and rltll
Phone 742 5081

~-= p TIC - rAN-Ks-~~;:;;;;,

I I

V

12 00-Ja&lt;:kpot 3. tl. Password 6,13 Bob Braun's 50 50 Club 4.

'"

==·=::__:•:•r~r~•:•:;ted by the above cartoon.
-~Prilt~~~~SMISE==·NSW!R=hlt~t':...__.JI D ( 1 I 1]

LITTLE

-------------1nd
.fOME
Improvement

21111&lt;

C'AJNAJJI~
_

II
.

ll 55-Graham Kerr 8, Dan Imel' s World 10

33

ARE "THE
Uf'fiFORMS

c~NAJJJl

10 DO-Celebrity Sweepstakes 3,4,1 5, Joker's Wild 8,10, Dinah •
13
tO 30-Wheel of Fortune 3,4, 15, Gambit 8,10
11 DO-Hrgh Rollers J 4,15, One Life !oLive 6, Now You See It
8,10, Elec Co 2C
11 3D-Hollywood Squa,es J.tl, Brady Bunch 6,13 News 4,
Love of Lite 8 10, Sesame St 2C,33

tO DO-Petrocelli 3.4. 15. Gel Chrlslle Love 6, 13, Man hunter 8;
Billy Graham Crusade tO, News 20, Family al War 33
10 30-Your Future Is Now 20
11 DO-News 3,4,6,8,10,!3,15, ABC News 33
lt 30-Johnny Carson 3,4,tS, Wide World Special 13, FBI 6;
Movie "The Woman Who Wouldn't Ole" 8, 'movte "Ride the
Tiger" 10. Janak! 33.
12 30-Wide Wodd Special 6
I 00-Tomorrow 3.4, J'fews 13

one letter to each square, to
form four ord1nary words

ALLEY OOP

8 2s-Capt Kanga'oo tO
'
B 30- Brg Valley 6
9 DO-AM 3. Phil Donahue ~ . 15 , Bullw1nkle 8, Morning wllh
0 J 13
9 25-Chuck While Repo,ts 10
9 30-Nct FD" Women Only 3. Dinah 6, Galloping Gourmet 8, .
Taltletates to. New Zoo Revue 13

7

6 4S- Mornmg Report 3; Farmtlme 10
7 DO-Today 3,4, 15, AM , America IJ,6,

•

,..,.....-

SAYRE HARDWARE

OUR PURPOSE IJ'f BUSIJ'fESS
IS TO HELP YOU GET A
GOOD PRICE FOR YOUR
PROPERTY. LIST IT WITH
US CALL 992 3325.

15 ,

11 DO-News 3 4 6,7.8 10, 13, IS ABC News 33
11 3D-Johnny Ca'5on 3,4, 15, Wrde World Mystery 13. FBI 6,
Movie Class ot '63" Movre ' Anythin9 Can Happen" 10
Jankl J3
12 30-Wrde World Mystery 6

The name to remember for jobs you'd ltke to forget.

•n Pomeroy out of h1gh water
Near sewer and water

Movie " Killer Bees" 6 13

Jones 8, Billy G r aham Crusage 10, News 20 Interface 33
10 3()--- Your Future Is Now 20 , Assignment Amer ica 33

IN·SINK·E~i DR•

33 ACRES- Small fresh water
stream and a 3 bedroom
modern home with City water

J()- Hotlywood Squares 3. Hollywood Squa,es 4 Wild Wrtd
World ot Anlmats 6, Bvck Owens 8, New Price Is Righi tO.
To Tell The Truth 13. Spring Street USA IS, The Luthle' 20,

1

5231

3J - Barn, fenced, 19,500
new trees
walnut. poplar,

HOME WITH INCOME -

7

What s
My Lm e'&gt; 8 News 10. Name That Tun e 13, H 1gh School T V
Honor Soc iety IS Antiqu es 20 Lilias Yoga and You 33

10 DO-Polrce Story 3,4, 15 Ma'&lt;vs Wetby, M 0 6,13 Barnaby

oo:z-eR

k !chen , utility 'room on
100x 200 lot Sl5 500 Call after
5 p m for 1nforma t 1on , 667
3739
3 9 61c

6

oo- Truth or Consequences 3,4, Bowl1ng For Dollars 6

8 DO-Adam 12 3,4, Happy Days 6,13 Billy G'aham Crusade IS
Good Times 8, 10, America 20,33

Construction a Rtmollel

COMPNtY
m I'Qrl Strtet

7

Marc o Soortllte 33

MES5Ae&gt; f',
.. THI: NAVY
SAYS PROT ECTIVE AIR
COVEF&gt;. WILL BE MAIN·
TAINED TILl A DE,T~OYE~
ESCORT CAN REACH u,!
RADIO

CAPTAIN~

Commtrclo~ltHidtntltl

SEWING MACHINE, Repalra,
service, all makes, 992·221ot
The Fabric Shop , Pomeroy,
Author1zed Smger Sales end
Service We shllrpen Scissors
3 29 ttc

lots at Rock Sprmgs to be
used for residential home use
on ly B1ll Wrtte 992 1789
2 11 26tc

--------------s ROOM house on Un 1oM

.

Doror, ta.ckhot, Trucks
LimHtont a Fill Dirt

'OW LOW DOWN PAYMENT

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

COUNTRY HOME ~ 6 rms
bath 3 bedroom vmv! srdtng
storm Windows and doors
new furnace on paved road
Chester water dtstnct. I acre
land Phone 9119 595 3
2 26 12tc

~

M

3 11 4tp

Real Estate For Sale
ACREAGE for sale

C BRADF'OkO. Aucttoneer
Complete Service
Phone 949 3821 or 949 3161
Racine, Ohio
Cr•tt Bradford
5 1 ttc

Lovely new homes 1n three
locat ions m Me1gs County
Some with wooded tots we
Will built on your lot or ours
Call 992 5970 or 992 5844 for
more 1nformlt1on
2 27 26tr'

TRAILER-LOAD

3 6 6tc

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

Transfers

a.K EXCAVAnNG

2·17·75c

.. ... ' ' . . .

guar1ntetd.

3 9 6tc

For Sale

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

For lnfonnation

•

1 Mo

7066

TWO bedroom mobile home
corner Broadway and Elm In PIGS for sale Phone 992 7106
M1Cidleport
Phon e 992 2580
) 11 )tp
aft er 6 p m
2 16 lfc 4 GRAVE Jots, MetgS Memory
- - - - - - -- - - - - - - Gardens. clleap Phone 949
'2179
3 BE D RO OM trader , partly
furn tshed
uttl 1!1es paid
3 11 Jfc
Located 1n Burlingham
lrail er park Phone 992 77S1 ONE pa.r corl sprmQ spacers
2 25 tfc
31? " high phone 992 2418 afler
Sp m
3 11 3tp
TRAILER SPA C E J 4 milt
nortll of Me 1gs H 1gh School on
PIONEER SEED CORN - WE
old Rt 33 Phone 99:2 29&lt;41
HAVE AN AMPLE SUPPLY
1 23 ttc
OF HIGH GERMINATING

O UPiEX-23s •-;-waln~f St

l 2

308 Page, Mrddleport
Heat1ng
COOling
Refragerat1on Roof Repa1rs
Gutters
Plumbing •
Electr1ca1 Repa.rs
and
Serv1ce
Caii992-3S09 and
Save on your repa.rs alu
repa1r mowers, co~ pressors
and outboards. Brrnv at In
and save

1970 DODGE Challenger Rt
383 automat 1c, good cond 1t1on
Sl 400or best offer Phone 992
7.tl23
3 9 6tc

Wot.r, Eltdrlc, Goa, Sewor
1.1nta, ln,tolltd. Work

Call

p.J
Home Maintenance

ONE 1972 Ponlrac Cata l ma A 1
condtt1on
One 1966 BuiCk
Wildcat
One two whee l
tra11er, factory buil t Phone
"'2 3165
3 9 Jtc

Professional
WEDDING
Photography

1 (614) 247-3644

6 DO- News 3 4 8, 10, 13, IS, ABCA News 6, Etectrrc Company 20
!TV Utltrzation 33
6 30-NBC News J,4, ISJ, AB C News 13 , Bewrtched 6, CBS News
B. tO Zoom 20, Your Future Is Now 33

~

~

good f1res

POMo~~9lvE~~!9.~. CO. @)

Television log for easy viewing

TIME HE CALLS 1"0

.

HEI,L
RACINE PWMBING
&amp;HEATING

\r eal c ream puff

G M 0 1v 1SIOn car, a1r condltiorung. 350
da r k grey fm 1sh, rad1o

-

'••

TRAC~

Business SP-rvices

.

S4m

Middleport , Oh10 Phone 992
To the Co Ex ecutors of the
2780 or 992 3432
eslate to su c h of the fol low ng
2 19 lfc
as ar e re s •d ents ol the State of
Oh•o
v 1z
the survtvmo
THRU MARCH IS AND
spou se th e ned of k1n , the AV A ILABLE thiS week small 2
APRIL IS FERTILIZER bedroom , double w•de mobtle
benefi Ci aries under the will
SEEDS - TWINE - HER
home near Pomeroy Off Rt 1
and to th e attorney or attorneys
BICIDES
CHESTER
by pa ss No children or oets
repr ese ntmg
any
of
the
AGRICO SERV I CE CEN
afore m ent oned persons
Phone 9~ 1 7017 or 992 7666
TER PHONE 985 3831
3 9 3tc
John C Proff itt De ceased
3 11 3tp
Oh 10 ,
L ebanon
Po rtland ,
Townsh i p, No 21 396
5 RO OMS 111 bath furniShed
You ar e hereb.,. not1f1eCI tllat
on Second Avenue •n M id MASSEY Ferguson 65 D1esel
tractor and loader , $3 200
the
Inventory
and
Ap
d l eport redecorated Call 992
Ford 9N tractor $950 . Two
pre lse m en t of the estat e of !he
52 6/ morn •ngs or even1ngs
Allrs Chalmers WD WD 45
afor em entioned decea seCI la t e
3 S ttc
tractors , 51 ,550, other S1 250
of Sllld Counly wa s f1l ed 1n ttu s
Case VAC tractor S650 , 11 sets
Co u rt
Sa •d In v entory and CO UN T RY Mob1le Home Park
3 pt plows $200 to 5350 each 4
Ap p ra1sement will b e ror
R t 33 , ten m 1les north of
new
lmco 611 tt 3 pt diSc
h ea rmg before lh1 s Co ur t on the
Pomeroy
Large lots With
5300
each
One 8 fl Dunham
24th d ay of M arch 1975 at 10 00
concrete patros
s•dewalks
wheel drsc 5300 each , One
ocl ock AM
r vnn ers
and
off
street
Massey Ferguson No 3 hay
A n y per son d es ~rmg to l i te
park ing PtJone 992 711 79
baler Sl 250 two new 3 pt
exce pt 1ons ther eto must f le
12 Jl ffc
rotary mowers $360 each
th em at l east fiv e da y s pr 1or to
Ermel
Luckett ,
west
the date se t for hear.ng
1634
Washington St
Bo x 95
Gt v en under my hand Brd HOUSE FOR RENT
Lmcoln Hgts
Pomeroy
Albany, Oh10 Phone 698 3032
seal of sa•d Court lh•s 8th day of
Phone Pomeroy 992 3575 or
or 098 7881
Mar c h 1975
GalliPO liS 440 2749
3 11 3tc
2 2 lf c
M an nm g D W ebs ter
MODERN
Walnut
stereo
Judg e -~---:-----console
AM F M
rad 1o
3 and 4 ROOM turn 1snea and
separa t e controls
Balan c e
unfurn tshed
apartments
By Ann B W atson
$107 10 or budget term s Call
Phone 99 2 5434
Depu ty Cl erk
99 2 3965
4 12 lf c
3 3 tfc
()) 11 18 2tc
-- -- --------~ - -PRIVATE meetmg r oom for
aft y organ•zat •on phone 992 IN DIAN Joe s Sport mo Goods397S
buy and sell guns ammo J
3 11 ttc
f•shmg equ•pment, and afte r {
Apr• II. we will have f!St1 ba1t
Stop by at 308 Page s t
APT 3 rooms , ~11 elec t rtc , has
M•ddleport Phone 992 3509
!abl e top r ang e, wall oven
rea l ntce and c lean modern
3 2 30tc
Lo c ated
m
Pomeroy - ove r l ook 1ng""'the Oh io R1ver
STAN L EY Produc t s for sale
Phone Gai i •POI •s day 4&lt;46
Phone 74 2 3762
7699
even.ngs
44.6
9539
Sybtl Ebersbach to Phthp D
l 9 26tc
I 26 tfn

Property

--

7,. Tge Dally Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Tuesday, March 11, 1975

.
I

"

'

F i e!!~ Ma rke t at Jr
F a1 r Bl dg Ma rch 2 and 16
Spaces avatlab l c P hOn e 593
8160 Htghly adverttS e d
1 18 18tc

Otl

)

Classifi~ds

Auto Sales

remedy when I was a child
P h one BROW N 5
over 70 years ag o As she S&lt;l ) s,
99~ 5 11)
1 7 lf c
the glass was not clear but ha s
a clouded effect and the bottl e F ~ EE k. •ll e ns to a n 1CC llome
L oi t er t r a 1n ed Phone 99133 11
was long and thm wtth rounded
J 11 J tp
shoulders I suppose such
bottles could be constdered PJ,\NO t un1ng P hone 9.:19.:18 11
3 " He
anUques We alwa) s spoke of
lhts as Electrtc Otl bu t my 1 WILL do r oolin9 heat ng
r epa r pt um b •n g a n d e lec
mother potnled ou t to me that tt
tr~ c al work
Phone Cha r les
S• nc la•r 985 J 11 1
was "EleNrtc" Otl Check on
3 4 12 tp
your bottle and sec whtch 11 •
says and do correct me tf I am NEA S E S ET T L E ME NT Chap e l
Churc t• will be o pen tor
wrong - GRAC E
ser v .ces l h •s Sun da y at 10 a
DEAR READERS - All the
m an d even. ng serv ,ces at 7
p m We d s p ra yer mee h ng
many answers we received
l 30 p m E ve r yo n e w elc om e
concerning this were from
3 6 61 C
Canada Many said, us did F LOWER S for Eas t er Ba skets
po ts sprays e t c P hon e 985
Mrs. K. A., that the compan)
JSJ7 Sm alley s G fl Sh op
1NorthroP"McGlllwrary, Ltd. 1
Chester Oh10
J 4 1?t c
was established In 185-1 In
Toronto Old Bottles seem to be
N OW se ll 1n9 ~ u l l er B r u sh
In favor with many collectors
Pr od uc ts phon e 99? 3111 0
1 24 tfc
and I would take this bottle to
an antique shop to see U It has
Help Wanted
any value. Mrs. K. A also told
us that this medicine iB stlll R E SPON SIBL E l ael y to l ve tn
W1fh e! Ci erl y lady Ph one ( 1)
being sold so Mary MeN may
66 7 JJOS
have a comparatively new
J 4 l'ltc
bottle but, we hope, hers may
be an old one. -POLLY.
DEAR POLLY - Lookmg
through my closet I found
several dresses I will never
wear any more They were too
FOR
good to throw away so I cut
them off at blouse length,
MONKEY RUN AREA
allowmg one tnch for the hems.
Several were a bt t snug
Pomeroy, 0. dl&lt;
through the htps so I shd the
stde seams up about four InDai~
ches and whtpped down the
raw edges Now I have some
PH. 992-2156
mce over-blouses to wear with
the pants I seem to wear most
Wanted To Buy
of the time This also works
G AL LO N wat er founl a1n s w1lh
well for !title gtrls' clothes l td$ For poultry Phone (6111 )
696 1105
ANNA
3 9 31C
You wlll receive a dollar II
Polly uses your favorite OL D furniture 1c e bo xes. brass
beds , or complete hou seho l ds
homemaking Idea, Pet Peeve,
Wnte M 0 M iller . Rt 4,
Polly's Problem or solution to a
Pomeroy Oh10 Ca l l 992 7760
10 7 74
problem. Write Polly In care of
this newspaper
JUNK autos
c omplete and

COMMISSIONERS

•

~\THE N S

your
Cos m eti CS

BOAR 0 OF
MEIGS COUNTY

Fast Results Use Senti.n el

co n s.gnme nt s w eJcom r
P h one (JO.H 773 547 1
l 2 ttc

roR

WDGETOMEET
A remembrance basket for
Mrs Helen Lewts wtll be
prepared at a meeting of the
White Rose Lodge at t 30
Wednesday at the Amertcan
Legioo Hall m Mtddleport
Members are renunded to lake
tlems for the baskela.
Age
MEETING SLATED
CHESTER- A countywide
prayer meeting will be held at 2
p.m. Sunday at the Chester
Olurch of the Nazarene wtth
Glen BISSell as class leaders

A~C~I o~. T~",':~~y:~~~:on'For

•

,. .

�•

•'
1- The llally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy,

•

Polly's Poin
IIY POU.Y CRAMER

Iron and blot
grease off panels
POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - My kttchen
1.! paneled tn antique btrch and
the wall back of my garbage
can has grease on tl How can I
safely remove thts grease
wt thou! rwmng my paneling'
-MRS W S
DEAR MRS. W. S.- A lot of
tbe ouccess of any treatment
would depend on how your wall
Is finished. A cleaning nuld
IISed lor removing grease spots
might do tbe job but II tbe wood
has had no protective finish the
grease has doubtless snaked
Into tbe wood.
If so, try holding a blotter
over tbe spots Tben use a
warm Iron to transfer the
grease from the wa U to the
blotter. When, and If, the apots
an: removed protect your wood
panel against further spotting
wltb wax. Hao any reader
succeaslully removed such
spots from wood paneling? II
ao, do let us know how you did
lt. - POLLY.
DEAR POL!.Y - My Pet
Peeve Is wtth those people who
lack the courtesy to telephone
and let you know they are
wtable to do a job at the time
previously agreed on
EUiiE
DEAR POLLY - I am answenng Mary MeN who
wanted mlurmalton about an
old Dr Thomas Eleclrtc Otl
bottle that was unearthed on
' her property We used that

FIRST CHILD !lORN
WINTERSVILLE - Mr. and
Mrs Jack Kane, 1~3 Beechwood Dr , Wmlersvtlle, are
announcmg the btrlh of thetr
first child, Heather Mtchelle,
March 8 at the Ohio Valley
Hospttal , SteubenVIlle She
weighed 8 lbs., 2 ozs Grandparents are Mr and Mrs
Harold Blackston, Pomeroy
and Mr and Mrs Frank Kane,
Parma . Mr. and Mrs William
Grueser of Rt 2, Pomeroy, Mr
and Mrs . F. E. Shaeffer,
Columbus, and Herbert Burdorff, Parma are greatgrandparents Mrs Sophie
Burdorff of Parma, 99 'years
old, is a great-great.
grandmother

PARTY ENJOYED
A birthday party honormg
Audrey Arnold was held
Saturday at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Ronnie Casto, 103
LaiD'el Sl , Pomeroy Refreshments were served Allendmg
were Mr and Mrs. Casto, Billy
Jeffers, Mrs Delores Beach,
Mrs Gladys Ftfe, Mr and Mrs
Robert Fife, Jr and son,
Jason, Mr and Mrs Charles
Whittington and lamtly,
Ronnie and Trenta Bachtel.
SUPPER SET
SALEM CENTER - The
annual pancake supper of the
Salem Center PI" A wtll be held
at the school Saturday mght
Serving wtll begm at 5 p m and
continue until 8 p m Price will
be $1.75 for adults and $1 lor
children
YOUTH CONVENE
There will be a meeting of
the Living Light Youth Group
ol the Pomeroy Church of
Christ Monday mght, March 17
at the home of Sharon and
Terry Gromnger, Lincoln Htll
The meeting wtll start at 7 p m

VISrTS SISTER
Mrs Ntna Bland, Akron, ts
here for an extended vtstl wtth
her sister , Mrs
Pearl
Reynolds. She was brought to
Middleport over the weekend
by Mr and Mrs Wtlltam
Bland

HONOR ELDERS
CHESTER - Grandparents
night wtll be observed at a
meeting of the Chesler PI"A
Mooday at 7:30 p.m. at the
school.

Hor ton St In Ma so n

w

va

2 SIGNS

of

The

Noti ce 10 H ea vy E(llJ tpm enl
Dealers
In accor den c e w i th Sec 307 86
of The Oh io Rev is ed Cod e
s.ealed bids wd l be r ece1 ved by
Th e Meigs
County
Co m
m !ss •oners .n the i r off ic e In Tne
Court House Pomeroy Oh•o
45769 , unt i l 10 00 AM
on
Tuesday Marc h 25th 1975 at
Whtch l1me and p lace th e b•d s
will b e op ened and r ead a loud
for a new or uud Cl lese l eng,ne
dr iven crawl er t ra c tor equ1pped
w 1th " do zer and w •nch c om
plete w •th manufa ctu rer s
standar d ac cessor. es
A dealer s repr esentat i ve
snail provid e m s tru c t ton s m th e
proper operatron and m a m
tenanc e of the , new or used
dozer , at tt1e 11me of d el rv ery
One complele se t of parts
serv•ce
and
repa 1r
and
opera tor 's manua l shall be
provid ed w th ea ch new or us ed
un1t
The su c cessful b idder shall
prov•dc a one y ear w arranty fo r
the new tractor and attac h
men t s suppl •es
or !he sue
cesstul b1dd er shall prov ide a 30
wortl; lng dav warranty fo r th e
u sed tractor and attacllm ent s
supplied The warrant y shalt
not limit operat ing hou r s
The fo l lowm g spec •f• catton s
to be c onstder ed as m In mum
requirements for e 1th er th e n ew
or used Dozer
Engine
To be a 39 sA E net horse
power d•esel en g m e or g r eater
Wl lh a dry type a 1r cl ean er and
ether star t 1ng a 1d fo r cot d
w e'a.tller start.n g
Electrical System
Shall be a 12 vo ll 90 it m P
electr 1ca 1 syst em w 1th art er
nator and voltag e r egu la t or
Also equ1pped w•th hourm eter
and la chometer
Transm•ss•on
M ust be four speed for ward
a n d rev erse
t ransm1 SS10n
c apable of shtft1ng on the go
wtthout c lut ch.ng
We1ght
Dozer oper a 11ng wc• g h t to be
m •n•mum of 12 000 lbs and
ma x tmu m of 14 000 lb s w tl h
w 1nc; tt and blade
Tracks
T h ey sha l l be m1 nnn um of l J
1n c h es
1n
w1dth
and
hy draul •c ally adtustable A lso
eq u 1pped wtfh f tve bollo m
li fetim e roll er s and one top
ll f et •m e r oll er on r 1Qht and le ll
s1 d es
L1ghh
Shall be e&lt;IU !pp ed w ith two
fro n t mounted headl •ghts and
r ear w ork1ng ltght
canopv
Ca nop y to be app rov ed
R 0 P S c anop y w 1th scr ee n 1ng
to r brus.h protec1 10n
Vandal Protection
Ma ch ine to be equ,pped w •rh
eng •n e S• Cie Shi elds a nd lod.. abte
dash board cov er for vanda l
pro lec t •on
Blade
Sha ll b e 80 1nch es 1n w i dt h
Shal l be power angle lett or
r ight and power tilt Blad e shall
be c apabl e of l tftmg 38 1nches
above ground and 13 In ches
below groun d teve l
w.nch
snail be d ir ect d rive w inch
capable of 10 600 bare Clru m I me
pull To be equ•pped w tth th ree
roller fa1rteads W •ncll to be
eQu i pped W!lh 100 of 'r~ m ch
cab le (new ) and tatl cha m

Any u sed eq u 1pm ent sub
m 1tled for b•d shalf be no older
tt1an
f •v e
ye ars
s tnc e
manuta c tv rmg dal e
Trade In
One 19 56 m ode l AC HO ll
Dozer
Deal er to furn 1sh t hetr own
b•d forms Th e fron t of tile
en v elopes enc los mg the b1 ds
m ust be marked ' Do ze r B •d '
The Me,gs Count y Com
m 1SS 1oners m a y acc ep t the
lowest b 1d or selec t th e best b1d
for the •nlended purpose, and
reserve the r 1ght to rete c t any
or all b 1ds or an y par t ther eof
Board ot Count y
Comm •ss1 on er s
M artha Chambers
Cler k
111 11

18, 1t c

t

Sentinel

Clel •ver ed to our y ard We p1ck
up auto bodies and buy all
~•nds of screp metals and
tron R1der s Salvag e, St Rt
12A Rt 4, Pomeroy Ohto
Ca ll 992 5&lt;468
10 17 1fc
CA SH pa•d for all makes and
model s ot mob t l e homes
Ph on e area c ode 614 A23 9531
4 13 tr c

Mobile Homes For Sale
~E LL

your mob• te hom e for
ca sh 15 hom es wanted 19 58
hr u 1972 m od Pis Ph on e (61 11 )
44 6 142 5 Ga ll•p ol s •
3 9 78t c

- --

OF
QUALITY

Mt n k '

CARRIER
WANTED

~-------M--- -

NOTICE ON FILING
OF INVENTORY
AND APPRAISEMENT
The State of Oh•o , Me•gs
&lt;;ount.,., courl of Common
Pleas. Provate DIVISIOn

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

1974 CHEVROLET IMPALA
4 Or only 10 400 miles fully equipped Inc
1974 CHEVELLE MALIBU

a•r dark red A

tomplete plumbing &amp;
heating service and
general sheet metal
works.
F r ,e e
Eshmates.
Phone 949-5961
; mergency 992.3995
or 992-5700

53095

1974 MONTE CARLO LANDAU

..

V 8 P steenng,

$4695

(Demo ) loaded w1th options

1971 CHEVROLET 2 TON
$3495
C&amp; E 102 ' C A, 4 speed trans , 2 speed 15,000 rea' axle,

TEi.t. GERTIE. Nf.XT

HANG UP!''

TUESDAY , MARCH 11, 1975
l DO- FBI 3, Andy G,lffrth 8, Mrster Rogers· Neighborhood
20 33 I'on side 13
l 30-J'fews 4, Beve,ty Hillbillies 8, Hodgepodge Lodge 20. Get

Fire Retardant
Insulation
Blown Into Walls
and Attic,.
Free Estimates

Lanylavender
Phone 992-3993
Daily After 5: oo

Sm art 15, Electrtc Company 33

FOREST RUN
BLOCK CO.

WILKINSON
SMALL ENGINE
SALES&amp; SERVICE
992-3092

POMEROY, OHIO

fiA

1972 OLD SMOBILE Cut laSS 350
V 8 1 dr coupe Call 992 3293
or see at 105 Union Avenue
Pomeroy
R EMOO E LING
p l umbing ,
3 11 6tc
healing
and all types Of
g eneral
repa•r
Work 1970 BUICK Skylt~rk Phone 992
5460 Owner leavmg town
gu aranteed 10 years ex.
must sen
per• ence Phone 99 2 2409
3 9 3tp
1 19 tfc

'Employment Wanted

Chain
Precision
Ground
498 Locust S!
Mrddleport, Ohro

992·2067
Mintl'lvllle, 0.
RDNo. t
Blocks
Cement and Mortar
Wood Burning Stov.es
Heatilators
and
Fireplace Accessories
1-19-L.oio.

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

TWO 1968 Chevelles Both S750
Phone 742 6205
3 9 6tc

For Rent
3 BE D ROO M t r ailer with t1p
out UnfurniShed , washer
dry er air condtl1oned Phone
99 2 33 88
Or
L ee
Ray
L audermi!t at F 1ve FJomts
J 11 Otc
T RAI L ER apar-lmenls for renl
Phon e 9C12 5148
J 11 5tc
2 BED ROOM mob i le home tn
Syra cu se No ch• ldrtn or pets
Call 99 2 :2441 after 6 p m
0 €p OSI I requ 1r ed
3 11 He

-- --- - - --- -4---

J BEDRO OM mobile home air
cond1t1onmg
corner
of
BroaCiwa y 8. Elm FJhone 99:2
2580 aHer 6 p m
3 11 He

t -aEORoO M - ,-;a-;-;;;:- ;r; ;;, s
Tra de r Courl Phone 992 33211
3 4 rrc
---------F URN IS HED apt
a.r con
Cl 1f1onmg , elec heat 12 m11es
from Pomeroy on Rt
33
Adu l ts only PtlOne 1304 ) 77)
5118
3 .t1 Otc
3 B EDROOM mob il e home
wa sher and dryer 1' ~ baths,
u lilrl• es pa 1d 542 50 week 308
Page s t
M•ddl eport Ol'l10
3 4 ft c
F URN IS HED apartment
3
r m s and bath Phone 992
/937
3 4 6tc

1972 OODG E Colt new rad•al
t ires , very good cond• t •on
$1 200 Also, 1966 Nova A 1
shape, must sell Phone 992

1975 MONTE Carlo 4 000 m11es
all power a~r . AM stereo
tape Call 992 7036 after s p m
3 S tfc

·i91J-F0RD-C;,~t7;S;u:;.e
wagon , 20 000 miles , all
equ1pmtnt 53,500 Phone 992
3493 or '192 2720

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

1973 VEGA Hatchback 11 speed
transm tS$tOn new t1res. rape
player excellent cond1tton
Will sell reasonable Phone
(6111 1 992 2377 or 992 2732 after
4 ~ m
2 28 12tc

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

1969MERCURY Montego MX , A
dr
v1ny1 roof
302 VB,
automatiC
transmrss.on
S60D 95 Phone 378 634 7

For Sale
NEW Whe el cha ir and walker
never used Phone 742 .tl461
3 6 6tc
------~--- -----

INDUSTRIAL 6 tnch stroke saw
$75 , 18 Inch metal latag 6 inch
swmg ,
complete
with
threading gears motor and
b tts, $100 2 h p 220 bolt s1ng1e
Phase motor , Industrial type
w.th pulley, $50 air com
pressor motor and tank , S25
L 1ne shaft 3 pulleys bearmgs
and belt, SIS Phone 985 .tlll8
2 13 26tc

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

SEED IN ALL VARIETIES
AND MATURITIES, BUT
KERNEL
SIZES
ARE
LIMITED
CASH
PLUS
VOLUME
DISCOUNTS

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

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

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

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

Radford, Ann S Radford,
PORTABLE automat rc washer
George R Stsson, Slurley A 2 BEDROOM mobile home
phone 992 7066
Ph one 949 2261 Albert Hill
3 9 6tc
Stsson, 2 A , Chesler
3 10 6tc
Lyle W Hysell, Leona Hysell
GIBSON automat•c washer , 4
yeersold 181b capac1ty Call
to Marcus R Johnson, Mollte
991 390 I
For
Sale
Johnson, .80 A., Sahsbury
3 9 ltc
Byron Batley to Wtlham SU L KEY for Gravely tractor ,
S3S A lso, B lack D1amond FABRICS Polytster screen
Markham , 100 A
l •na m ent
Pt1one 592 2158
pnnts for Enter just arr•ved
Betty V Van Meter, Wtlltam
A tnens , 33 Town send
Also we now have cotton
3 10 3tc
kn •ts
Sew1ng notions at
Thomas Carleton, Cathy
d•scount Ten percent off to 4
Carle ton to Margar et Ann 2 G R A VE l ot , Mt !QS Memor•al
H and t1ome ec student s
Garden!t cheap Phone 949
Carolina Fabrics , Routt 7,
Johnson , 4 A. , Sulton
4962
one halt m 1\e north of Chester ,
Margaret Ann Johnson ,
3 5 6tc
Oh•o Open 9 1 m to 7 p m
Mondey through Friday lind 9
Arthur E JQhnson to Arthur E
a m to s p m
Saturday.
and und cham saws .
J ohnson, Margaret Ann NEW
Henry and Mary Hunter ,
hllers and mowers
Also.
owners
Johnson , 4 A , Sutton
r e pa.rs
&lt;498 Locust St ,
3 9 JIC
M
tddleport
Phone
992
3092
Reed Jeffers, Helen Jeffers,
2 28 Ute
Gene L Jeffers , Maetha - _____ _.. --------- 1965 JOHN Deere dozer , 4
cylinder, d1eset , 8 fl blade
Jeffers to George Caldwell, G ROCERY t&gt;uslness tor sale
new pamt, clutches tracks
Surldmg for sa le or ltase
brakes , and canopy 56,000
Parcels, Colwnbta
Phone773 S618from 8 lOp m
Phone 915 359-t
to 10 p m for appolntmtnl
Augustine Follrod to John
7 t~
3 10 II&lt; ---- -------~- 3'
Phthp Follrod, Lot, Pomeroy
-1953 FERGUSON 30 , new
Alva J . Coates. Mary J USED parts. Ffyt' s Truck end
motor pa1nt and good rubber
Auto Parts , Rutland , Ohio
Sl 250 Phone 915 JSU
Coates to John T, Wolfe, Joan
Phone (014 ) 7ot2 609-t
3 9 71~
1 22 78tp - - -.-------------Wolfe, Mtnerals, 66'' A.,
-MM
·-·--------1950 FERGUSON , 20. all
Chesler.
CL OS EMoUT on new Z•v Zag
or 1g1na1 exc:tpt new pa int and
Albert Htll Jr , Ora E. Htll to
sewmg machtnts For sew •no
I ~res SI.SSO Phone 985 359.tl
stret ch fabncs , buttont1olts.
3 9 7tp
Russell Jackson , 4 89 A ,
lan e y designs, ttc Pamt
Sutton
sl •gl'ltly blem,shed Cl\o1ce of TWO mowers , to fit Ford or
carry1ng case or se-w•ng
Ferquson , 3 pt h 1lch One
Farmers Bank &amp; Sav. Co , to
s•and U9 80 cash or t•rms
5125 o thtf S175 Phone 985
ava d ebl e Phone Pn 7155
Warren E. Baker, Wtlma F
~~ 1 ..
12 18 tfc
) 9 1tp
Baker. Parcels, Ohve
----------------

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

_ _ _

M

_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _

INDIAN JOE'S
CB SALES &amp; PARTS
308 Page St.
Middleport, 0. 992-3509
Radios, Antenn1s, Towers,
Used Tv 's. Buy from tile
"lnd1an" and save "Wam
Pum". We buy uud Radios
and Towers Radios repa.red
by FCC lrcensed serv1tt
p,ersonnel Stop ilnd see the
'lnd•an" and
Bubbles
Moniter Channel 10 and 20

BALER

TWINE
- 10.000 feet bales

_

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

-Ask for our ca~ and carry
pr1ce
!POMEROY LANDMARK!
Jack W Carsey, Mgr
Phone 992·2111

I

WILL tnm or cut trees or
shrubbery,
clean
out
basements. attiCS , etc Phone
949 3221 or 742 4.tl41
2 28 26tc

Real Estate For Sile

A MODERN all electnc home
w•th 3 bedrooms, kitchen and
drn1ng area. I1V1ng room and
bath
Full s•ze basement,
parl!ally
fmlshed
With
laundry area
recreation
room. storage, and workshop
area 1,080 sq ft of floor
space on ma tn floor and three
and two thirds acres of land
Located tn Racme area on
c R 28 between Dorcas &amp;
Apple Grove Phone 949 3.tl57

Wooded

CAP!"AIN EASY
THEY R:E NAV Y
PLANE5, ALL ~16 H T- ­
Pil0BASLY FROM THAr
TA5 K FORCE NE Al&lt;.
DJIB OUT I!

Avenue
LarQe lot
full
basement and new furnace
Call 992 3854
3 9 6tc

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

-3

JUST SOLU
4 PROPERTIES
INS DAYS
TOOAY WE NEED.
3 bedroom home on large

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

ROOM nouse w1th bath, 3
bedroom full basement, gliS
heat. h w floor wall to wall
c arpet Close to school tn
Pomeroy Phone 992 3097
3 9 52tc

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

3 BEDROOM house w ith bath
large ya r d and garden c tfY
water Phone 742 4782
3 9 6tc

--------------BEAUTIFUL wooded 5 acrt
lots 1n R1ggs Crest Manor,
reasonable cmced between
Tuppers Plams Chester Call
Joe Boyles 667 3829 Affolter
Really Broker
3 9 3tc

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

These homes ore needed by
prospeds who or• walttng to
BUY
CALL TODAY
992-2259
-FOR SALERUTLAND- CLOSE TO
SHOPPING - 2 BR, balh,
fireplace, carpeting,
paneling, tile, porch, garage
$9,500.00.
POMEROY - Lincoln His. 2
BR. both, H. W floors , u!litty
R , basement, porch , large

lol. $10,000 00
61 ACRES - Just off new Rt
pine and olhers
992·2259

2

houses wtth baths, '" town near
stores Want an Investment ,
thiS IS It

70 ACRES - On new Route 33
North Excellent home sites
and spring T P water ctose.
ROUTE 143- Fa' Out large II
room 2 bath ho111e w rlh
busrness room , and d'llted welt
and plenly of parkrng
HOUSING SITES - 2'12 Acres

8 Jo--Movl e " The B1g Ripoff '
H 8,10 Ascent of M an 20,33
9 OO- Fam 1ly

Theatre " The Cantervllle G host '
Graham Crusade 8, Hawa ii Five 0 10
9 30-Woman 20 W i tness to Yes terday 33

B11ty

oo-Tomor r ow

3 4 News 13

BORN LOSER

MlddtoPorf, Ohio

"'- m.sw or m.a.1 -,
WEONESDAY, MARCH t!, 1975

D&amp;D
CONSTRUCilON

6 CIO--Sunnse Semmar 4, Sunrise Semester 10

4 ls-Englrsh SOl 3

•

94,· 3131 or 843-2667

Blown
Insulation Services
Blown rnto Walls&amp; AHles
STORM
Windows &amp;Dool'l
ALUMINUM
Siding · Sofllff
Gutters Awnings
Free Estimates
Ph."2·3f93

6 Jo-F i ve Minutes to Live By 4 New s 6, Bible An swer s 8,

•'

PHONE

All Types of
BUILDING
and REMODELING
From • shelf to a houn.
Parntrng, siding, roofing,
paper honglng, kitchen
coblnots, expert carpeting,
etc.

6 25-- Fa rm Report 13

School Scene 10, The Story 13
6 Js-Coiumbus today 4

•

!;

CBS News 8,10
8 DO-Lassle6, Capt Kangaroo 8: Popeye 10, Sesame St 33

~11rf!OOID!1~@ 1kJ ~tdm41.J -J 'f"'N
t

JnsC'~t hese four Jumbles.

FINisHED,

CU88LI:?'

rJ

I

IJ

tj J

LARRY LAVENDER
Syracuse, Ohio

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR
- sweepers, toasters, 1ron1,
all small appl1ances Lawn
mowers next to State High
way Garage on Route 7
Phone 985 3825
3 11 26tc

L!Tn.E ORPHAN ANNIE

-

HUH I 'fi)U NMR W!R.E

Ll

A.wt 1CO SMART ... MD I GUESS
S~PfNEC&gt;

(Auwen to•orrow)

'101.1 UP ANY -

SOMEiJODY t&gt;IO IT

M

IF

Ju,r.bJ,.., ALBUM LOUSE INTENT UPLIFT
1

'SOMt N!W MO&amp; WE

\ Am""'" \ tm arft•!J&gt;4

rtml.i be ngfWIHI llu Iau
tlu m al ftu tuutx - POLLUTANTS
,1

GASOLINE ALLEY

He's hold1nQ
her hand'

1t ever s 1nce
theL.I qot on
the bus'

work, land clearing by
tht acre, hourly or contract
Farm ponds, roads, etc
Large dozer and oper1tor
w1th over 20 years eK
perlence Pullins Excavating,
Pomeroy, Ohio Phone 992
2.tl78

1119tfc

E"CAVATING, dozer, loadtr
and backhot work, septic
ttnks Installed, dump truck'
·and lo boys tor hire, will haul
fill dirt, top soiL limestone &amp;
gravel, Call Bob or Roger
Jeffers, day phone 9927089,
night phone 992·3S25 or 992

.

I 10/H

01( .. ,, . , .. M..

~"" ' " """"

L!L ABNER

Modern San 1tatton. 992 3954 or

Order Yaur

THE
Fl..APALOO WILL
13RIN6 eA60LJN,;;:
PRICEG
CRASHING

STRANGLE
li!!

WHERE DO YOIJ THINK THE

1

12 wds)
31 Frtend, tn
Ypres
32 Laurel
33 Rtver to
llle Volga
34 Trmket,
gadget
36 Russtan
ruler
37 Insttncttve
38 Bactert&lt;&gt;logtst's
wtre
39 Hotbeds
40 Tend the
garden

THE AJBUC FOR 64SOU~E,
YOU TRAIIDRrr

Cabbage Planta
Now

JAMES HIU.
Phone: 247-2961
THifl :;HIP WILL
ACTAflMY
BA5E O F

AND WINNIE
WINK LE WILL NEVER
KNOIN WHO HER
I I

xu

Wednesday Is Healt Fund 75 Day

AstroFor Wodnttdoy, Morch 12,
1975
ARIES !March 21-Aprlt 19)

SCORPIO ( Oct. 2e-Nov. 22)

~

One with whom you ve had
differences should be avoided
socially today This person may
pull one of her old tricks

w
, 11

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·0...,
21) Don I walt too long to wrap

CAPRICORN (D..:. 22·Jon. ·••
It) You could easil¥, be talke; • H

Somethmg you re prese ntly
h o pmg lor w1ll b e delayed
through 110 fault of your own
The delay rs temporary and wll/
be rec tifi ed

GEMtNt (Morr 2t-Juno 20)
Don 1 s tand In another s
shadow loday or the cred •l you
should recei ve lor an ach leveJ
m en! w1ll be stolen by the
gr andstander Speak up

CANCER (Juno 21-Juty 22) An
embarrassing s1tyat1on can be
avo1ded It you don t pretend to
kn ow about something you
d o n t k now of

out of a good Idee by one who
wil l plant doubts In your mind
w1th her negat1ve comments

UH·· I WUZ
HOME ALL NIGHT
LRST NIGHT.
SHERIFF ·

VIRGO (Aug 23-Sept. 22) An
agreement with another will be
broken unless you re both very
fa~r reg arding 1ts terms Com M 1
prom ise Is called for

liBRA (Sept 23-0ct. 23) Don I
a llow

m i nor

Your mtentlons will be good
but you r drive will be mi nimal
Tllmg s yo~ plan to do today are
likely
to
be
postponed

, 1..,

March 12, 1875

...

You will chart for yourself a
tra sh new course th•s year It
will separate you from several
old unproductive lies to the
pa s t The new direction
appears prom1slng
tN F.W S I' A Pt H ~ N TEitPRI S~~ A SSJII

II

.i\ K 73

¥8 4 2
• 75
o1o A Q 6 4
~.AST

• Q 62

•J 106 5

¥9 I
t K 8 62
o1o I 9 5 J

¥Kill
tQJ
o1o

North

tO ~

tO H

I ""

I•

F.ust

South

Pass

!•

Pass
Pass

Pass

Pass

1•

I

2N
4•

1t 1s

and ktng of spades and runs a • ,
spade East has to follow, but tl
makes no dtflerence If East
ruffs m any It me, there wtll be
no way for him to lead a th1rd
trump to draw dummy's last "'
trump
11
South s next play ts to take _
hts kmg of clubs Then he leads a "'
club to dummy 's queen and ·•
ruffs dummy 's last spade Now _'!'
he leads a club to dummy 's ace , !
and ruffs dummy's last club
Here agam East ts helpless tf
he ruffs m on dummy s club ace
or stx South scores hts lOth
tnck and contract wtth the ace ,
or dtamonds

r

Four hearts wheels tn eastly
agamst any lead but a heart
However West dtd lead a heart
East held the ltrst trtck and
contmued the sutt South went
up wtth the ace
Terence Reese asks, 'What
should South do next ' "
Hts answer IS a surpnsmg
one He says, 'He should lay
down hts hand and clatm the
contract before he can make a
mt stake "
Before you go any further see
tf you can ltgure out the play
whtch must win agamst any
combtnatton of adverse cards

" ""h1

~

South cashes dummy s ace '' 1

I U l.

The btddmg has been
West

North.

East

P01 ss

I

t

Pass

I •

Pass

3•

Pass

'

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

t

'"
.u

Here
NOIITII lilt

WM PO AM.fM 9 AM TO I PM
Entertainment AU Day--~

.

I

Claim contract before you goof

HEART FUND DAY-75 IS WEDS. MMQI 12 Oft

'

••

PISCES (Fob. 20-Morch 20) ' '

setback s

tbJ'RE ALSO WEAI?iNG
A GlOVE .

'

..

Be·careful In financial dealings
today or you II surfer some loss
th at could be averted Counl
your change Get receipts

...

II ,_

South

1.

You South hold

"
,,.

"K J 9 4. AQ2 • J4 3. K 10 5N
What do you do now'
'if
A - Bid three notrump Vou are~
very well prepared for r&amp;eart lead • .,

TODAV'S QUESTII:Jlli

••

Your partner continues to four"' '
d1amonds What do you do now"

Send $1 lo' JACOBY MODERN ,.,
book tb Wrn at 8r1dge, '(clo this , ,1
newspape,), P 0 Box 489 Radio
ClfyStarron, Now YOfk, NY 10019 ;~
!NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN I

NIGHT?

'"

•v

AQUARIUS tJon. 20-Fob. 19)

Opcn1ng lead - 3 .,

f(D 1$7&amp; Kina Fe1twca Syndicate Inc l

1" 1

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Be very
car efu l w1 th anything mater ial
belonging to another Don t
lend without the owners conM
sent wh at was entrusted to you

Pass

WUPQ. - XNPQUJ
LFBQQ
Yesterday'l Cryptoquote: IF YOU WANT TO GET ACROSS
AN IDEA, WRAP IT UP IN A PERSON - RALPH BUNCHE

y

TAURUS (Aprlt 20·M•y 20)

Pa ss
Pass

NIA

•

up a delicate situation or the
control will sllp from you
Someone else will be calling
the shots

We st

LQNQMUL
BMQ
BY
•
XUUD QB
LUU
QOUW

"'w'

You ll awak en 1nteres t regardmg your plans 11 you re a bit
mysteriou s about them Reveal
JUSt enough to whet oth ers
appet1tes

Neither \ Ui ncrabl c

GMS P A

LIB X,
BARNEY

?

"

careerwlse to upset you They
Will be overcome shortly by
more fortunate clrcumst9nces
Just hang lh there

t A 94
o1o K 7 2

CRYPTOQUOTE

lBOO

Israelis 20, Know Your Schools 33

3D-Police Surgeon 3, Name That Tune 4, Lei's Make a Deal
6 Wilburn Brothers, The Judge 10, To Tell the Truth 13. "
Book Beat 20, Episode Action 3J
8 00-Llltle Hovse on lhe p,olrle 3,4, That's My Mama 6,13, '
Billy Graham 8, IS, Tony Orlando &amp; Dawn 10, Theater In
Ameri ca 20; Sinners 33
,
8 30-Movle " Scream of the Wolf",. Movte "Wild Women" 6 N
9 DO-Lucas Tonner 3.4, 15. Cannon 8, 10, Masterpiece Theatre

¥A 10 765

112·2525

.

l 3()-News6. Bevedy Hillbillies 8, Hodgepodge Lodge 20. Get '
Sma't 15, Elee Co 33
,
6 DO-News 34,8, to, 13, 15, ABC News 6, Etec Co 2C: lTV
Utilization JJ
6 30-NBC New s J,4, 15, ABC News 13, Bewitched 6, CBS News
8. 10. Zoom 20 Your Futu'e Is Now 33
7 DO-Truth or Cons J,4, Bowling for Dollars 6: What's My Line
8. News 10 Country Music ~ubllee 13, I Spy 15, Mabs &amp;

• 94

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW
One letter limply stands lor another. In thta sample A Is
used for the three L's, X lor the two O's, etc Stnsle letters,
apostrophes, the length and lormatton of the words are all
biDis Eaeh day the eode letters are different

SNUFFV-- WI;lZ 'IOU· ·
ENI\)IIWHARS NEAR
LUKEV'S HENHOOSE
LAST

lucy Show 8, Bonanza 15

5 DO-FBI 3. ABC Afterschool Special 13, Andy Griffith 8;
Mister Rogers ' Neighborhood 20,JJ

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:

W.VA.

Stop In At the Grice Eplscopai"Oiurch
·Parish House In Pomeroy
OR
Phone in your pledge at 992-3339 or 992-

4

I Dream of Jeannie 4, Somerset 15, .

Gilligan's Is 6, Talttetales 8, Ssame St 20,33, Mike Douglas
13
30-Bewttched 3. ABC At!erschool Spec ial 6, Merv Grifftn 4,

SOUTH

Is

on WMPO AM.fM

4 00-Mr Cartoon 3

wt:sr

a score

FLIMFLAM FUND GETS ITS
BILLIONS '2 - FROM GOUGI NG

DO'M'-)-

Southern

NEW HAVEN

t" d1~cl1argt

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
DOWN
I Reverberate I A Kennedy
5 Early
2 Neighbor
of Peru
phystctan
10 Melt
3 Undergomg
U Funny roke
a mysttcal
(colloq ,
expenence
2 wds.)
(2 wds I
12 Busy place 4 Be tn
13 Proceedings
debt
Yesterday's Answer
14 Samuel's
s Kmd of
IS
Expenstve
26 Ctvtl War
teacher
dancer
18
of
general
IS Couple
6 Consumed
the trade 29 Offtetal
16 Understood 7 Frtendly
19
Ham tt up
decree
17 Plam,
greetmg
22
The
30
Dtd KP work
meager
( 4 was )
Crusaders'
32
Belfry
19 Ratson d'8 Guarantee
demzens
great foe
20 Capricorn"s 9 Most
symbol
unmaculate 23 Wtndflower 35 Grammattcal
21 Fatl the
11 Frequent
24 S Am,
case (abbr 1
mark
frequently
rodent
36 Haul
22 Taste
24 Halley's 2S Indigo dye
26 Petty offtcer
27 Mtnus
!,.,--+-1-+28 Tted, as

4·30 If&lt;

9 18 tfc
----

(

11

~

llver;_ed right to your proJect.
FasJ
and
easy
Free
estimates Phone f92.J2H
Gotgltln Read',! MIX Co.,
Maddleport Ohto

---- ---- --~

r 1 q ), 1.

l'ulrrd•,."•

&amp;OTTA F!Nb OLIT-

News 8, 10

2 D0-2 DO-Days of Our Lives 3,4, IS, $10,000 Pyramid 6,13, .
Guiding Light B. 10
2 3D-Doctors 3,4,15, Big Showdown 6,13; Edge ofNight 8,10
3 DO-Another Wo,td 3,4,15, Geoerai Hospllal 6,13. Price Is
Rrght 8 10, The Luthter 20
3 JD-One Life to Live 13, Lvcy Show 6: Match Game 8,10, On
Aging 2C

A Rt.JNNE R I'-J
THE 6AF:DEN.

TW BHTH.I' YOU TOOK AIN T

11 29 tit
-READY
M
-----------MiX CONCRE Ft de:-'

992 7349

• «'

Now arran~re the circled )etten
to fonn the aurpriH anawer, u

~:::!~:::!:1\,~~==·

Repair Serv•ce Anything
fixed around the home, from
root to basement Vou will
ltke our work and rltll
Phone 742 5081

~-= p TIC - rAN-Ks-~~;:;;;;,

I I

V

12 00-Ja&lt;:kpot 3. tl. Password 6,13 Bob Braun's 50 50 Club 4.

'"

==·=::__:•:•r~r~•:•:;ted by the above cartoon.
-~Prilt~~~~SMISE==·NSW!R=hlt~t':...__.JI D ( 1 I 1]

LITTLE

-------------1nd
.fOME
Improvement

21111&lt;

C'AJNAJJI~
_

II
.

ll 55-Graham Kerr 8, Dan Imel' s World 10

33

ARE "THE
Uf'fiFORMS

c~NAJJJl

10 DO-Celebrity Sweepstakes 3,4,1 5, Joker's Wild 8,10, Dinah •
13
tO 30-Wheel of Fortune 3,4, 15, Gambit 8,10
11 DO-Hrgh Rollers J 4,15, One Life !oLive 6, Now You See It
8,10, Elec Co 2C
11 3D-Hollywood Squa,es J.tl, Brady Bunch 6,13 News 4,
Love of Lite 8 10, Sesame St 2C,33

tO DO-Petrocelli 3.4. 15. Gel Chrlslle Love 6, 13, Man hunter 8;
Billy Graham Crusade tO, News 20, Family al War 33
10 30-Your Future Is Now 20
11 DO-News 3,4,6,8,10,!3,15, ABC News 33
lt 30-Johnny Carson 3,4,tS, Wide World Special 13, FBI 6;
Movie "The Woman Who Wouldn't Ole" 8, 'movte "Ride the
Tiger" 10. Janak! 33.
12 30-Wide Wodd Special 6
I 00-Tomorrow 3.4, J'fews 13

one letter to each square, to
form four ord1nary words

ALLEY OOP

8 2s-Capt Kanga'oo tO
'
B 30- Brg Valley 6
9 DO-AM 3. Phil Donahue ~ . 15 , Bullw1nkle 8, Morning wllh
0 J 13
9 25-Chuck While Repo,ts 10
9 30-Nct FD" Women Only 3. Dinah 6, Galloping Gourmet 8, .
Taltletates to. New Zoo Revue 13

7

6 4S- Mornmg Report 3; Farmtlme 10
7 DO-Today 3,4, 15, AM , America IJ,6,

•

,..,.....-

SAYRE HARDWARE

OUR PURPOSE IJ'f BUSIJ'fESS
IS TO HELP YOU GET A
GOOD PRICE FOR YOUR
PROPERTY. LIST IT WITH
US CALL 992 3325.

15 ,

11 DO-News 3 4 6,7.8 10, 13, IS ABC News 33
11 3D-Johnny Ca'5on 3,4, 15, Wrde World Mystery 13. FBI 6,
Movie Class ot '63" Movre ' Anythin9 Can Happen" 10
Jankl J3
12 30-Wrde World Mystery 6

The name to remember for jobs you'd ltke to forget.

•n Pomeroy out of h1gh water
Near sewer and water

Movie " Killer Bees" 6 13

Jones 8, Billy G r aham Crusage 10, News 20 Interface 33
10 3()--- Your Future Is Now 20 , Assignment Amer ica 33

IN·SINK·E~i DR•

33 ACRES- Small fresh water
stream and a 3 bedroom
modern home with City water

J()- Hotlywood Squares 3. Hollywood Squa,es 4 Wild Wrtd
World ot Anlmats 6, Bvck Owens 8, New Price Is Righi tO.
To Tell The Truth 13. Spring Street USA IS, The Luthle' 20,

1

5231

3J - Barn, fenced, 19,500
new trees
walnut. poplar,

HOME WITH INCOME -

7

What s
My Lm e'&gt; 8 News 10. Name That Tun e 13, H 1gh School T V
Honor Soc iety IS Antiqu es 20 Lilias Yoga and You 33

10 DO-Polrce Story 3,4, 15 Ma'&lt;vs Wetby, M 0 6,13 Barnaby

oo:z-eR

k !chen , utility 'room on
100x 200 lot Sl5 500 Call after
5 p m for 1nforma t 1on , 667
3739
3 9 61c

6

oo- Truth or Consequences 3,4, Bowl1ng For Dollars 6

8 DO-Adam 12 3,4, Happy Days 6,13 Billy G'aham Crusade IS
Good Times 8, 10, America 20,33

Construction a Rtmollel

COMPNtY
m I'Qrl Strtet

7

Marc o Soortllte 33

MES5Ae&gt; f',
.. THI: NAVY
SAYS PROT ECTIVE AIR
COVEF&gt;. WILL BE MAIN·
TAINED TILl A DE,T~OYE~
ESCORT CAN REACH u,!
RADIO

CAPTAIN~

Commtrclo~ltHidtntltl

SEWING MACHINE, Repalra,
service, all makes, 992·221ot
The Fabric Shop , Pomeroy,
Author1zed Smger Sales end
Service We shllrpen Scissors
3 29 ttc

lots at Rock Sprmgs to be
used for residential home use
on ly B1ll Wrtte 992 1789
2 11 26tc

--------------s ROOM house on Un 1oM

.

Doror, ta.ckhot, Trucks
LimHtont a Fill Dirt

'OW LOW DOWN PAYMENT

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

COUNTRY HOME ~ 6 rms
bath 3 bedroom vmv! srdtng
storm Windows and doors
new furnace on paved road
Chester water dtstnct. I acre
land Phone 9119 595 3
2 26 12tc

~

M

3 11 4tp

Real Estate For Sale
ACREAGE for sale

C BRADF'OkO. Aucttoneer
Complete Service
Phone 949 3821 or 949 3161
Racine, Ohio
Cr•tt Bradford
5 1 ttc

Lovely new homes 1n three
locat ions m Me1gs County
Some with wooded tots we
Will built on your lot or ours
Call 992 5970 or 992 5844 for
more 1nformlt1on
2 27 26tr'

TRAILER-LOAD

3 6 6tc

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

Transfers

a.K EXCAVAnNG

2·17·75c

.. ... ' ' . . .

guar1ntetd.

3 9 6tc

For Sale

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

For lnfonnation

•

1 Mo

7066

TWO bedroom mobile home
corner Broadway and Elm In PIGS for sale Phone 992 7106
M1Cidleport
Phon e 992 2580
) 11 )tp
aft er 6 p m
2 16 lfc 4 GRAVE Jots, MetgS Memory
- - - - - - -- - - - - - - Gardens. clleap Phone 949
'2179
3 BE D RO OM trader , partly
furn tshed
uttl 1!1es paid
3 11 Jfc
Located 1n Burlingham
lrail er park Phone 992 77S1 ONE pa.r corl sprmQ spacers
2 25 tfc
31? " high phone 992 2418 afler
Sp m
3 11 3tp
TRAILER SPA C E J 4 milt
nortll of Me 1gs H 1gh School on
PIONEER SEED CORN - WE
old Rt 33 Phone 99:2 29&lt;41
HAVE AN AMPLE SUPPLY
1 23 ttc
OF HIGH GERMINATING

O UPiEX-23s •-;-waln~f St

l 2

308 Page, Mrddleport
Heat1ng
COOling
Refragerat1on Roof Repa1rs
Gutters
Plumbing •
Electr1ca1 Repa.rs
and
Serv1ce
Caii992-3S09 and
Save on your repa.rs alu
repa1r mowers, co~ pressors
and outboards. Brrnv at In
and save

1970 DODGE Challenger Rt
383 automat 1c, good cond 1t1on
Sl 400or best offer Phone 992
7.tl23
3 9 6tc

Wot.r, Eltdrlc, Goa, Sewor
1.1nta, ln,tolltd. Work

Call

p.J
Home Maintenance

ONE 1972 Ponlrac Cata l ma A 1
condtt1on
One 1966 BuiCk
Wildcat
One two whee l
tra11er, factory buil t Phone
"'2 3165
3 9 Jtc

Professional
WEDDING
Photography

1 (614) 247-3644

6 DO- News 3 4 8, 10, 13, IS, ABCA News 6, Etectrrc Company 20
!TV Utltrzation 33
6 30-NBC News J,4, ISJ, AB C News 13 , Bewrtched 6, CBS News
B. tO Zoom 20, Your Future Is Now 33

~

~

good f1res

POMo~~9lvE~~!9.~. CO. @)

Television log for easy viewing

TIME HE CALLS 1"0

.

HEI,L
RACINE PWMBING
&amp;HEATING

\r eal c ream puff

G M 0 1v 1SIOn car, a1r condltiorung. 350
da r k grey fm 1sh, rad1o

-

'••

TRAC~

Business SP-rvices

.

S4m

Middleport , Oh10 Phone 992
To the Co Ex ecutors of the
2780 or 992 3432
eslate to su c h of the fol low ng
2 19 lfc
as ar e re s •d ents ol the State of
Oh•o
v 1z
the survtvmo
THRU MARCH IS AND
spou se th e ned of k1n , the AV A ILABLE thiS week small 2
APRIL IS FERTILIZER bedroom , double w•de mobtle
benefi Ci aries under the will
SEEDS - TWINE - HER
home near Pomeroy Off Rt 1
and to th e attorney or attorneys
BICIDES
CHESTER
by pa ss No children or oets
repr ese ntmg
any
of
the
AGRICO SERV I CE CEN
afore m ent oned persons
Phone 9~ 1 7017 or 992 7666
TER PHONE 985 3831
3 9 3tc
John C Proff itt De ceased
3 11 3tp
Oh 10 ,
L ebanon
Po rtland ,
Townsh i p, No 21 396
5 RO OMS 111 bath furniShed
You ar e hereb.,. not1f1eCI tllat
on Second Avenue •n M id MASSEY Ferguson 65 D1esel
tractor and loader , $3 200
the
Inventory
and
Ap
d l eport redecorated Call 992
Ford 9N tractor $950 . Two
pre lse m en t of the estat e of !he
52 6/ morn •ngs or even1ngs
Allrs Chalmers WD WD 45
afor em entioned decea seCI la t e
3 S ttc
tractors , 51 ,550, other S1 250
of Sllld Counly wa s f1l ed 1n ttu s
Case VAC tractor S650 , 11 sets
Co u rt
Sa •d In v entory and CO UN T RY Mob1le Home Park
3 pt plows $200 to 5350 each 4
Ap p ra1sement will b e ror
R t 33 , ten m 1les north of
new
lmco 611 tt 3 pt diSc
h ea rmg before lh1 s Co ur t on the
Pomeroy
Large lots With
5300
each
One 8 fl Dunham
24th d ay of M arch 1975 at 10 00
concrete patros
s•dewalks
wheel drsc 5300 each , One
ocl ock AM
r vnn ers
and
off
street
Massey Ferguson No 3 hay
A n y per son d es ~rmg to l i te
park ing PtJone 992 711 79
baler Sl 250 two new 3 pt
exce pt 1ons ther eto must f le
12 Jl ffc
rotary mowers $360 each
th em at l east fiv e da y s pr 1or to
Ermel
Luckett ,
west
the date se t for hear.ng
1634
Washington St
Bo x 95
Gt v en under my hand Brd HOUSE FOR RENT
Lmcoln Hgts
Pomeroy
Albany, Oh10 Phone 698 3032
seal of sa•d Court lh•s 8th day of
Phone Pomeroy 992 3575 or
or 098 7881
Mar c h 1975
GalliPO liS 440 2749
3 11 3tc
2 2 lf c
M an nm g D W ebs ter
MODERN
Walnut
stereo
Judg e -~---:-----console
AM F M
rad 1o
3 and 4 ROOM turn 1snea and
separa t e controls
Balan c e
unfurn tshed
apartments
By Ann B W atson
$107 10 or budget term s Call
Phone 99 2 5434
Depu ty Cl erk
99 2 3965
4 12 lf c
3 3 tfc
()) 11 18 2tc
-- -- --------~ - -PRIVATE meetmg r oom for
aft y organ•zat •on phone 992 IN DIAN Joe s Sport mo Goods397S
buy and sell guns ammo J
3 11 ttc
f•shmg equ•pment, and afte r {
Apr• II. we will have f!St1 ba1t
Stop by at 308 Page s t
APT 3 rooms , ~11 elec t rtc , has
M•ddleport Phone 992 3509
!abl e top r ang e, wall oven
rea l ntce and c lean modern
3 2 30tc
Lo c ated
m
Pomeroy - ove r l ook 1ng""'the Oh io R1ver
STAN L EY Produc t s for sale
Phone Gai i •POI •s day 4&lt;46
Phone 74 2 3762
7699
even.ngs
44.6
9539
Sybtl Ebersbach to Phthp D
l 9 26tc
I 26 tfn

Property

--

7,. Tge Dally Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Tuesday, March 11, 1975

.
I

"

'

F i e!!~ Ma rke t at Jr
F a1 r Bl dg Ma rch 2 and 16
Spaces avatlab l c P hOn e 593
8160 Htghly adverttS e d
1 18 18tc

Otl

)

Classifi~ds

Auto Sales

remedy when I was a child
P h one BROW N 5
over 70 years ag o As she S&lt;l ) s,
99~ 5 11)
1 7 lf c
the glass was not clear but ha s
a clouded effect and the bottl e F ~ EE k. •ll e ns to a n 1CC llome
L oi t er t r a 1n ed Phone 99133 11
was long and thm wtth rounded
J 11 J tp
shoulders I suppose such
bottles could be constdered PJ,\NO t un1ng P hone 9.:19.:18 11
3 " He
anUques We alwa) s spoke of
lhts as Electrtc Otl bu t my 1 WILL do r oolin9 heat ng
r epa r pt um b •n g a n d e lec
mother potnled ou t to me that tt
tr~ c al work
Phone Cha r les
S• nc la•r 985 J 11 1
was "EleNrtc" Otl Check on
3 4 12 tp
your bottle and sec whtch 11 •
says and do correct me tf I am NEA S E S ET T L E ME NT Chap e l
Churc t• will be o pen tor
wrong - GRAC E
ser v .ces l h •s Sun da y at 10 a
DEAR READERS - All the
m an d even. ng serv ,ces at 7
p m We d s p ra yer mee h ng
many answers we received
l 30 p m E ve r yo n e w elc om e
concerning this were from
3 6 61 C
Canada Many said, us did F LOWER S for Eas t er Ba skets
po ts sprays e t c P hon e 985
Mrs. K. A., that the compan)
JSJ7 Sm alley s G fl Sh op
1NorthroP"McGlllwrary, Ltd. 1
Chester Oh10
J 4 1?t c
was established In 185-1 In
Toronto Old Bottles seem to be
N OW se ll 1n9 ~ u l l er B r u sh
In favor with many collectors
Pr od uc ts phon e 99? 3111 0
1 24 tfc
and I would take this bottle to
an antique shop to see U It has
Help Wanted
any value. Mrs. K. A also told
us that this medicine iB stlll R E SPON SIBL E l ael y to l ve tn
W1fh e! Ci erl y lady Ph one ( 1)
being sold so Mary MeN may
66 7 JJOS
have a comparatively new
J 4 l'ltc
bottle but, we hope, hers may
be an old one. -POLLY.
DEAR POLLY - Lookmg
through my closet I found
several dresses I will never
wear any more They were too
FOR
good to throw away so I cut
them off at blouse length,
MONKEY RUN AREA
allowmg one tnch for the hems.
Several were a bt t snug
Pomeroy, 0. dl&lt;
through the htps so I shd the
stde seams up about four InDai~
ches and whtpped down the
raw edges Now I have some
PH. 992-2156
mce over-blouses to wear with
the pants I seem to wear most
Wanted To Buy
of the time This also works
G AL LO N wat er founl a1n s w1lh
well for !title gtrls' clothes l td$ For poultry Phone (6111 )
696 1105
ANNA
3 9 31C
You wlll receive a dollar II
Polly uses your favorite OL D furniture 1c e bo xes. brass
beds , or complete hou seho l ds
homemaking Idea, Pet Peeve,
Wnte M 0 M iller . Rt 4,
Polly's Problem or solution to a
Pomeroy Oh10 Ca l l 992 7760
10 7 74
problem. Write Polly In care of
this newspaper
JUNK autos
c omplete and

COMMISSIONERS

•

~\THE N S

your
Cos m eti CS

BOAR 0 OF
MEIGS COUNTY

Fast Results Use Senti.n el

co n s.gnme nt s w eJcom r
P h one (JO.H 773 547 1
l 2 ttc

roR

WDGETOMEET
A remembrance basket for
Mrs Helen Lewts wtll be
prepared at a meeting of the
White Rose Lodge at t 30
Wednesday at the Amertcan
Legioo Hall m Mtddleport
Members are renunded to lake
tlems for the baskela.
Age
MEETING SLATED
CHESTER- A countywide
prayer meeting will be held at 2
p.m. Sunday at the Chester
Olurch of the Nazarene wtth
Glen BISSell as class leaders

A~C~I o~. T~",':~~y:~~~:on'For

•

,. .

�I ,

•

•
8 _The Daily Sentinel,fo!tddleport-Pomeroy. 0 .• Tuesday . March II . 1975
fl'ulll ('oluml&gt;t ,l Gi.l :-i uf Ohw
p HUII I\' 1.1 1H tJSt'd :ts &lt;1 ·· n w•r
. I' .. .s t' 11 t ng c nu 11t 11 .t nnt•un c·mJ.: l] wt &lt;1 fou r u~n1
\\:llf I\L'
•oo
C1'.1 1g, II•ICI
lilt rt'&lt;ISt• on g,ts pe l 1.000 l'llb lt'
\\ mnan J l' cl ll
"J
l&lt;
l
flocl\\
tll goonlht• Apn l 2btlb
Continued from page I
I t't ' Oilll\h' !lfIC£I II ltl I Ill l' do.. I
Bill Wilcox of tlw clt'rtn r be patnkd 111 l.IIJ ght l'Oiors anrl Thl' llla \'01 s re purl of 1ct•ct 1i lo
0
f(lt,d J rl~ $1,141 w~ s appr ovp
) I r()l
·
company lllt' l wtth the offi ('Jals b I'll(' I H'S p I .II..' (' d il b lll
It \\ dS Tt•pw lt•d tho.1t Dwtghl
,,:
h
and di SCU~t'd lllf' Ol'dlll(llll 'C Pl'OP It' \\ IlO J l Is I \HHI~11 1l1
\\dlt:h
l
he
Jl\·er
The
.1pprov,d
D
Hobln!ion.
Athens.
wh
o
as
He sa1d that rflli('C ll on of tl11•
m
e ng m e~n ng 1ftrrn would iJe
'
M ddl
s tree l hghttng money ts b{•mg fur pernllttmg the pmn tmg ,u1d
1
done by the elednc cumpdll)' fix up (Jf the exter iOr ()( lhl"' \\ Jlhn g to n• et•t wi th 1 epor
bulldmg
bv
tlw
CllcsaJX'Hkc
nHtual
s
fo
dtscuss
uny
plans
only as a sr1v1ce lo the town
• 1 Wd::i
f 111
~ t·wcr
~rnp rovemc n ts
,
and that the company would a n(I 0 111 0· R ~~ tl r 0.H
Just as soon tha t th,e v1lhtge IMd reCPived dnd pa~scd OJ I to ( li..lse said th&lt;Jt &lt;.1 represcnt,tl! vc of Fl u} d G Browne a rid
another me th od makmg tht' t:Juncil lust mght bv Arnott .lnd
lk
1\:ssoc i ~IIrs \\ho designed the
.
(
collcc t10n
d ('''
ld
lhmt·ver {ounell ger ii:'l';lll\
St \\ ;l ,~L' (ll s po!i&lt;.~ l system wou
The rate I!ICJr .lsf' on streC't
h ght tng dlld uthL•t elcctt l l , I ~ 1'1'('1I I0 flld kC a rHri lll' r JHubabl} met't wi th offiCials
serv1ces m tile 10\\ n h.Ls bet•n 1 . 01 1 1 ~ \ L' I t11 :seL' If the mtcn or of fret· of c h.-1rgc t o disl'uss the
tilt' slna Ill! t.' c o~n also bL
' usl'd
Sdlll~' ma tter
d
h
appro~ ed
In • the Pu UI!(
11alt e
If
IS hoped that
M:t)OJ
Hoffman
sm
t
11
1
1111
11
U!ilihcs CommtsSwn of Ohw It
was pv1nted ou t tha t council ( {1 \1\fll un Jt) groups w1ll L&lt;tke ~·uuu~u~tt~·dAc~~~ P;ho;ra~A~~
' ut r u s
ltci s htt lc chul"e 111 .o:Jcceptmg over tlw 1 quvcnat10n of Ihe
lhe stree t li ghll ng ordma nc.:c If mlt.• rwr an d Px ten or of thE' wo1kc1s w11l not be avai lable
af ter the next 1\\. 0 weeks11
tt w1shes U1c company to bu1 ld 1ng
Mrs Cr,ug .:l lso reported thdl
Howe vel. a youth prog ram~~
contmu r m:1ktng thr eollrctions for tile to\\ n Strrrt she hd s receiVed numcJ ous be earned outk by f the ~t2~
hghtmg dtugrs. .1 1r .!ddC'd to tclt•ph unc ca lls fr om women /\ge ne)' a nd woi ers rom 1-J rll Il l ul L
II l) tn c ludin g fout
yee~ rs of age wtll be avatlable
the btJis of L' USIUIIlCI S
:rhc
vi llage ts to advise the
lcill'het
s,
who
are
anxiOu
s
to
Geo rge Ar nott dnd K(•n
dgcncy
un t11e number of
np c 1 ,li C
SUilliii Cf
Gilkey me l w1th off llJH I ~ to ht•J p
\.\
lJ
Jkcr
s
needed
repor t thai the dep ot on Fron t 1&gt;1ugrmns dl ltl e commufll t)
It was c~n n oun cecl that Ron
St. Is uvml.tblr to thr" t om- p.a rk Sh(' sa 1d lhd t 1t 1s mNathdn
ln tc1sta te Commerce
cllutlc d th at plent'
of
Cunums.s
i(Jn a tt orney wtll be
coopen1t10n wt ll be fut th1n
M1dd
lcp&lt;11t Wedn esday
(unung from lhc publi c tills

Mayor

,,r

MEIGS THEATRE

artern oon

OYEC club
policy is
changed
CHESH1HE - The Employees Recreation Club al
Kyge r Cr eek Power Plant
recently elected new office rs
and made a policy change on
the use -of Jts re&lt;:reatwn area
whtch may effec t loca l groups
who have bee-n ustng the

ra ctllltes
Nev, offu:ers elected were
pretdent, Bill Fugate, vtce
preSident ,
Ja ck
Mtnk ;
treasurer, Conme Mtlchell, and
secretary , Lester Plymale
The new policy on use or the
Kyger Creek Employees Club
f{roun ds states
"Any t1rne t~e clubhou se or
ptcruc area s are to be used
there must be an employee or a
member of h1s or her tmmedla te family who IS a
membe1 of the group usmg the
fac tllhes " The ball fteld and
co nce s.:Hon stand will be
ava tlable for slow p1tch softball
tow-namen ts un a rental basis
as m the past
A bner dtscusswn was held
co ncerntng the 1975 Lillie
Lea g u e Tournament
President Fugate mformed the
group that lhe club could nol
agatn sustam the financtalloss
11 absorbed durmg the 1974
tournam ent If adequate
volunteer help ts not secured tn
the near fu ture there Will be no
tournamen t m 1975. Anyone
mterested m assisttng should
contact Btll Fugate al367-7311.

discuss protest
Tontghl thru Thur sday
~l ct J on agm n~ t the 1emoval of
March 11 ll
Penn Cenlral Ha tlroad lin es A
NOT OPEN
pubhc mectmg w1ll be held at 2
p rn Abandonment of the hnes
Friday thru Tuesday
would mcm1 the loss of 100
March 14.18
workers
and lhe loss of the ratl
THE STING
.serv ice 1n Metgs County, the
{Technlco lor )
11lilj or commented
Rober! Fedforrl
lPG)
Coun ctl voted' to protes t tn
confer w1 th the direc tor , she
the fu ture all ut11Jty mcreases
sa icl
Show Starts 7 p m
A cummumcahon was n~ad wluch arc taken to the Pubhc
Ut1lttles Commtssion Durm g
lh1s d1sc uss10n, howev er,
Chase poin ted out that mcrease!i 10 the VIllage's water
and sewage rates will have to
be made tn lhe near future
Council agreed to place
concrete under a washed out
scc tt on of Powell Sl. It was
reported that the ftre depar tment has purchased two
remove tl ansnu tters so that
Monday at 11 14 a. m on CR
the large doors at the ftre
20m
Saltsbury Twp , the Me1gs
station can be closed after the
County
Sheriff's Deparbnenl
department lea ves on a call
reported
that George Ray
This as a measure to save
Sisson, 37, Rt 3, Pomeroy, was
healing cosls.
Counctlman Horky reported traveling north on CR 20 and
exte nstve vandaltsm laktng because or snow covered htghplace at the Middleport Htll ways went left of center on a
Cemetery and it was agreed to curv e, strikmg a car dr1ven by
tncrea se lh e checks made Bruce W. Blackstone, 17, Rt. 3,
there by the pollee dcparbnent. Pomeroy
There were no mjunes and
The counc1l diSCUSSed also
no
citahon ts.sued. Damage to
hghls for mght games at the
both
vehtcles were severe
Use the safe, convenient, comfortcommuntty park
able way to take care of all of your
obltgat1ons ... pay by chec k.

summer
She sal&lt;! also that she w1ll
VI sit a recrcal\On du ec to1 111
I..&lt;mc&lt;~ s tt'r to learn the dek"l tls
of .a recre.1hon prognun thcrl' .
Mtddlepo11 Pollee Chtef J . J
Ct'e mrd ns an d Coun cilma n
C. u·l Hu1ky w11l probably also
make the 4 mcaster lrtp to

to

Damages severe

checking

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED - Eva Robson,
Pomeroy; Billy Harless,
Langsv1lle; Benjamin Moore,
Bidwell; Debbie Hendrix,
Syracuse; Palric1a Forester,
Racine; George Jeffers ,
Westfield, W. Va. ; Ralph
Wells, Long Bottom; Susan
Clark, Wooster; Wibna Anderson, Long Bottom; Roger
Shenefteld, Vtnton; Albert
Roush, Pomeroy; Mary
Stephany Gardner, Middleport.
DISCHARGED
Dale
Barnhart, Allee Dodson.
VIVIan Johnson, Jo Ann
McLaughltn.

INSURED TO '40,000
Auto Teller Window and Walk-up Window
Open Friday Evenings 5 to 7 P.M.
When You Visit, Park FREE

lltilens J1aUonal
....C.J:INCININATJ

Pleasant Valley Hospital
Dtschargcs - Mrs. Robert
Wllcc lcr. P01nl Pleasant . Mrs
M ~1 nfor d
Ba uer.
Pomf
Plt•asd nt , Ra chel Montgornel') , Pomt Pleasant and
Mrs Vtrgtl Hupp, Chiton.

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
"1'HE FRJENDL l HANK"

Holzer Medical Center
(Discharged, March 101
Arthur Amsbary , Stella
Beagle, Anna Brown, Hulda
Brown, Kenneth Canter,
Charl es Chevalter, Cyn thia
Cochran, Mrs Tex Corfee and
daughter. Stella Cullwns, Anna
Douglass, Mrs Gary Feurer
and son, Heather Hugh es,
Ph1lllp Jenktns, Be\'erly Lewts,
Mrs Randy Mulhns and
daughter, Dorts Notter, George
Shrewsburr. James Spencer.
George Spires, Ahce SwiSher,
Susan Swtsher. Mrs. Melvtn
Stone and son, Ruby Werry,
Earl
Wtlbur,
Rt chard
Wtseman, Lillie Wnghl
(Birth)
Mr. and Mrs Gary Evans, a
son, Racmc .

Mrs. Frederick died on Monday

a two &amp;lory cement block
Mane Frederick, 75, a Rev John Bryant officiating.
Depctrlmcnl w;1 s called at 9 garage wus on f1re. Damages resident of Rt. I, Bidwell, died Burial wtll be in VlntQn
a !II loday lu the Clifford H1ll to the building has been Monday m Holzer Medical Memorial Park.
rc.stdence, Rt. 2, Ractne, where estima ted at $5,100 and $6,!100 Center around 10 a.m.
Frtends may call at the
to the contenls Cause of the followmg an extended illness . funeral home on Wednesday
ftre is unknown . There was She was born m Pomeroy on from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m.
tnsuran ce on the building Aprtl 30, 1899, daughter or the
Seven men answered lhe call. late Claude and Melda Batley
Jones.
POINT PLEASA NT - The
E·H unit called
She
marned
Luther
Black Kmght Rev ue presenFredenck tn Gallipolis on May
Conllnued 1rtm JN!Ce 1
ta tion scheduled lhts week will to- Vinton area
II, 1922 He survives as does a
Center area. The three men
beskoged Thursday and Frtday
The Mtddleporl Emergency daughter, Mrs . Iris Tale, asked the corrurusstoners to
m the Pomt Pleasant H1gh
Squad went to Route I Vinton Brookfteld, Ohio; a grand- send a letter of Intent to
School ~ymnas1 um Instead of
at 6·50 p.m. Monday for Roger daughter, four sisters, Mrs.
Fnday and Sa turd ay as
AORTA that if the program
Shenefield who was havmg Guy (Ruth) Walters, Colwn- develops, the commissioners
prev iOusly announced
chest pains. He was tah~n to bus; MISS Kathleen Jones,
The chan ge wa s announced,
Mrs
Ray would supply a driver. T~!!
Veterans Memortal Hospital Columbus ;
Dtrector Gerald Stewart satd ,
rMildred) Lemley, Gallipohs. comrrusstoners agreed to do so.
where he was admtlted.
m order to allow band sludenls
In a spectal meetuig
At 7:05 a.m. Tuesday , the and Mrs . Alvtn (Martha )
Saturday
and boosters to attend the
the commission$
squad went to 620 Locust St. for Baggy, Pomeroy , and a
regiOnal bas ketball touraccepted
the
resignation Qf
Homer Gtlkey who was having brother, Durward A. Jones,
nam ent Saturday eve nmg at
Howard Frank, as Meigs
difficulty breathmg and was Los Angeles. Three brothers
Parkersburg tn wh1ch PPHS
County treasurer effective
preceded
her
m
death.
expenencirig stomach pams.
wtll be parltclpaling AdShe was a member of the Rio March 6. Frank Is the newlyHe was taken to Veterans
mtssion to the Revue IS $1 50
Untied Methochst Church and a elected county auditor and
Memorial Hospital.
for ad ults, 75 ce nts for
member of the ladies atd of asswned his duties Monday,
children Curtam ttme lS 7:30
March 10.
that church
p .m.
Nina Cummins was apFuneral servtces will be held
Norman Gates
potnled
as acting treasurer
II a.m. Thursday at the Mcan appotnbnent is mad~
uf Vienna is dead Coy-Moore Funeral Home wilh until
by the Republican Central
ROTTGEN TRAINED
comCommtllee .
The
VIENNA , W. Va . - Norman
MASON, W Va . - A Mason
BOOSTERS TO MEET
missioners also agreed to
man has graduated at Chanute _ Gates df Vienna, W. Va., died
EASTERN - The Band advertise for bids for a new or
AFB . Ill. , from the techmcal at hts home Sunday morning Boosters will meellhis evenmg
used diesel engtn~river crawl
trammg course for U S Air follow1ng an apparent heart m the band room at the high
tractor eqmpped with dozer
Force tnslrumcnt sys tems atl&lt;lck. His wife, Susan Holter sc hool at 7.cJ.
and winch. Bids wtll be aceqmpmenl spectahsls He ts Gates, is the daughter of Mr.
cepted
until 10 a.m. Tuesday,
John M Rottgen, Jr., son of and Mrs. Frank Holler, Route
March
25.
Mr and Mrs. John M Rotlgen, 1, Racme.
Altendtng the meeting thi~
Continued from page I
Funeral servtces will be held
Sr who wa s tratned tn the
morntng were Henry Wells,
Penh said the Camb&lt;Jdian
operatiOn and mamtenance or at I p.m. Wednesday at the
Warden
OUrs and Bernanj
government would fall
fhght mslrumenls Complehon Levitt Funeral Home tn
Gtlkey,
commiSSioners,
and
within a month H Congress
of lhe course enables him lo Parkersburg. Mr. Gates was
Martha
Chambers,
clerk.
·
turns down President
rece iv e academtc cred1ts the nephew of Mrs. Eva Hollon
Ford's request for $220
through the Communtty and Mrs. Opal Hollon 'of
Chester
.
million lu additional ald.
College of the Atr Force. The
Foreign embassies
mrman now goes to Pease
speeded up the evacuation
AF'B, N H.. for duty wilh a Witt
Continued from page 1
of their citizens from lhe
of the Sh ategtc Air Comma nd
MARKET REPORT
lain," said Hayes. "Murphy
Camb&lt;Jdlan capital as lhe
Atrman Rollgen ts a .1974
Pt. Pleasant, W.Va.
and the captain never go!
Khmer Rouge lusurgents
graduate of Wahama H1gh
March 8, 1915
along. MIIIPJy would have
tightened their
School Hts "ife. Con me. IS the
SLAUGHTER COWS
been relieved after the mission
stranglehold on Phnom
daughter of Mr. and Mrs Commerclal19 75, Uttltly 21.30.
was completed because of
Penh.
James R Lewis of Potnt
VEAL - Chotce &amp; Prime 190that."
Pleasant.
225 lbs 52.
HOGS - U S. 1-3 240-260 lbs.
36 50-38 70, Sows, U.S. 1-3 300500 Jbs. 31&gt;-36.25, Boars 30(Hl00
IN AMPHIB DRILL
lbs 32.75-25 75, Pigs (by head )
Continued from page 1
Manne PF'C Dame! R. Ellis,
20-40 lbs. 15-19, 40-QO lbs 20-24
said
Monday.
son or Mr Pleasant A. Ellis Jr
STEER CALVES - 300-400
Sohio has also been studying long-range opporlWJities that
of Mtddleporl, has participated
lbs. 22.70
wtll be available to the firm for investing income realized from·
1n an amph ibt ous tratnmg
HEIFER CALVES - Cows &amp; Alaskan inveslmenls. The firm is already active in research and
exerctsc on the Pacific j,sland
Calves (by head ) 143-193, Cows development of various energy sources. "We expect to invest up
of T1man He look part m shtp(by ead ) 120-160.
to $90 million in an underground coal mine complex that is exto-shore landmgs and related
BABY CALVES (by head) pected to reach a production rate of 4.5 million tons-per-year in
taciJ cal maneuvers wtlh the
Beef 36, Holstem &amp; Brown 1961 " the two executives noted in the company's aMual report ·
2nd BatlaiJOn, 4th Manne
SWISS 11-23.
'
for 1974.
Rcgunent . an d supporltng
' .
umts The battalion is based
with the 3d Martne D1v1sion on
HACINf; - The Racme H1 c

Days for Revue
are moved up

Application

Lifeline

Pueblo

News . . . in Briefs

Okmawa

HOSPITAL NEWS

OPEN A CHECKING ACCOUNT
TODAY.

COURT REPORT
Metgs County Court receipts
for the month of February
totaled $2,820 07 according to
Betty Hobsle tler . clerk.
Rece1pls were disbursed as
follows· ftnes to the stale,
$546 96; fees to sheriff, $142 40,
fmes and costs to county,
general fund, $1 ,363 65; law
library fund , $347 13; auto
li cense and gas fund. $419.91.

•QUEEN

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

CASUALS
for g"l" who know lt.e nameofthe game

UNIT CAlLED
The Pomeroy Emergency
Squad was called to the Carl
Campbell home on West Main
St ., al2 .54 p.m. Monday where
two year old Mark Campbell
had swallowed some adult
medtcation. He was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
where he was treated and
released.

Adolph's Dairy Valley

Dazzling

Hrs.: !O :OOA.M. Tilll:OO P.M. Sun .- Thur.
!O: OOA. M. Til 12 : 00 P.M. Fri.&amp; Sat.
992-2556
W. MAIN
POMEROY, 0 .

New Costume
Jewelry

Fashions

,\

At The Inn-Place

Earnngs . charns.
necklaces.

elegant

.)' ""-·~
'&gt;..
./ ,'lJ ........__ ~-:
" :j-t:Jr ---2'\

designs. See our
collection

now

\ "'
~~~.} ~~

,,

'

,v -·

"

~\:!: .

USE OUR LAY AWAY PLAN

'

TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY. ~URSDAY
MARCH 11-12-13
8:30 TIL 12:30

RON BRINKER
For Your Listening Pleasure
GUITAR&amp; PERCUSSION

The MEIGS INN
GOESSLER'S
JEWELRY
STORE
Court St., Pomeroy
Ph. 992·36Z9

,.

Pomeroy

Srmply and sportily sensational .. . timeless coordinates designed
with the pure-bred ease you ' ve come taeJCpectfrom

Queen Casuals Now &gt;n the preH&gt;est of baby cord plaids of
Dacron (rl polyester double knit. Stra&gt;ght-leg, pull-on pant,
s l ~velesS' tu rtleneck,

blazer, A I me skirt,

sh irt , sleevel ess 1ack et In baby blue or peach Sizes 8to20

'

Main Store, Annex and Warehouse Open Weekdays 9:30to 5
Shop Fri,d ays and Saturdays 9:30to 8 p.m.

ELBERFELD$ IN, POMEROY'

The board voted unammously to arrange the day, the date of
which will be set by Hargraves and a represenl&lt;ltive from the
college .
Mrs. Eleanor Thomas, execultve dtreclor or the Metgs
County Council on Agmg, also mel with the board and told or
ac tions now being taken to secure a building for th e exclusive usc
of the semor citizens of the coun ty. The center for seruor c1ltzens
ISnow in the junior htgh butld1ng, but tentaltve plans call for lhe
conversion of that structure to a full-time vocational center. Mrs.
Thomas satd the center's personnel are mleresled m purchasmg
the former senior high butlding and renovating that structure.
She asked the board to grant the semor ctlizens a 14-month
lease on the jWJior high bmldmg with a 6(klay vacating not1ce 1f
the board should need the structure before 14 months hav e
elapsed. The board will try to deterrrune. on the basts of progress
for the establishment of a vocational center at the bmldmg ,
whether the lease can be worked out and will have information .
hopefully, by the next meeting
Boll Field DlsciL'!sed
Ed Kennedy and Tom Grueser mel wtlh the board to discliSS
th e use of the field at the rear of the junior high aud1toriwn for
Pomeroy Ltltle League play thts sununer They were g1ven
perrrusston to use the field and to construct some sort of fence
around it to protect it from vehicles. KeMedy. Hargraves and a
representative from the Btg Bend Regatta committee will meet

at the field m a few days to work out a plan win ch wtll not interfere wtth the re~atl&lt;l actmty and still provtde fteld protection
for the little lea gue.
Tile board moved mto closed session to d1scuss what was
listed on the agenda as a " bus situation" A large delegation of
parents and students, apparently from the Harrisonville area,
and others allended the closed session All persons not at the
meeltng tn relation to the bus situatiOn were asked to leave the
room for approXlmately one hour.
Alt ce Glohokar and Naomi Floyd, bus drtvers, met witll the
board to discuss payment for thetr driVIng a kindergarten route.
They satd they are bemg patd only for tune dnven on the route
whtle, they charged, other bus drivers are bemg p81d a flat two
hour rate regardless if that much time is involved on thetr routes.
Hargraves sa1d that he wtlllook mto the malter
Allen Lee King, a represen taltve from M1ddieport Villag e
Counc1l , met wtlh the board to request tl1at hts town be g1ven any
surplus light fixtures which the school district mtght have so that
the Middleport Conunumty Park can be better lighted. The
hghtmg would also provide for playmg mght games. King satd
Wendell Hoover, board member, satd a professwnal analysis
mtght be available or the llghttng needs for the park. Hoover wtll
mvite such people from the Columbus and Southern Ohto Eleclric
Co to do the survey free of charge.
Contmued on page 16

Lows tomghllow 40s Cloudy
Thursday , showers likely,
h1ghs 10 the 40s The
probabtllty O[ preCipllaliOn •
near 100 per cenl today, 80 per
cent ton gtht and 60 per cent
Thurs1ay.

VOL. XXVI NO. 232

.

AND A LEFT HOOK TO YOU - It was a moment of
action, IS all, in the opening game of the Southern Ohto School
Girls Basketball Tournament at Rectne Tuesday night won
by Kyger Creek, 34,12, in overtime against Eastern. Picture
by Katte a-ow See page 2 for more pictures and game
report.

•

Weather

Now You Know

enttne

The largest kn own ftsh is the
grea t whale shark, some of

which grow more than 60 feel
long and wetgh more than
26 ,000 pounds.

Devoted Tu The Interests Of The Meig.~-M11sot1 Ar1m

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 12, 1975

PHONE 992-2156

15 CENTS

w.·v..~
v.........,.:•n,,-::::-.'«""'W
;,o!•:•:O:·:-;o!..,;
; ,~,~""'-"'~f;l
~,-..."&lt;:&gt;~~.....
.
-~~-·~·
. ........

11 ,ews.. zn

Brzefs

Big 3 recalling
11,000 idle UA W

By United Press International
WASHINGTON - SEN. FRANK CHURCH says his Senate
Intelligence Committee will have to investigate reports the
Central lngelligence Agency may have helped plot political
assassinations abroad. "We will have to get to the bottom of
those accusations," Church, D-Idaho, told UPI. He was commenting on news reports the agency may have considered
assassmalton allempls against Premier Fidel Castro of Cuba,
Premier Patrice Lwnumba of the Congo, Prince Sihaunouk of
Cambodia and other foreign leaders .
No element of the U.S. government IS authoriZed to commit
assassination, Church said. The committee was meeting this
afternoon for what Church called a "housekeeping session."
Public hearings are expected this SUITIIller, probably June.
Sources familiar with the investigation said the committee
staff will need about three months to digest and make a
preliminary evaluation of the constderable matertal becoming
available on the achvittes ilf the CIA, FBI, and some other 17
agencies tnvolved in intelligence.

'·'
I

WASHINGTON - FORMER OIDO GOV. John J. Gilligan
appeared before the Senate for the first lime Tuesday as head of
the new Co\Dicil on National Priorities and Resources and
proposed a nine-point economic recovery program.
Gilligan said President Ford's economic uplift program was
"likely to lead to an even longer aud deeper recession." Gilligan,
testifying before the Senate Budget Committee, called the administration's estimated new deficit budget of $52 billion "too
small" to pwnp up the economy. .
The former governor ssid the economy needs "a large
defiCit, achieved through stgnificant increases in spending and
substantial lax culs ."

Foley taken to prison
The Meigs County .Sheriff's
Department Tuesday transported Q-aig Foley to the Ohw
Stale Reformatory in Mansfield, to begm servJng h1s term
of not less than six months nor
more than ftve years.
Foley was convicted in the
breakmg and entering of
properly owned by James
O'Brien, Nov. 30, 1974, and did
by force, trespass in an
unoccupied structure w1th
purpose to ciiiiiiiiil a theft

offense .
The department also
' 143 between
reported that SR
SR 7 apd Harrisonvtlle and SR
681 between US 33 and the
junction of SR 692 was covered
by htgh water today.
Water was reported rising
fast in nl'flh central watershed
of the coun ly, and is expected
to cover Hiland Church Road
that leads to Veterans
Memorial Hospttal from SR 7.

)

(

I

COLUMBUS - THE PUBLIC UTILITIES COMMISSION of
Ohio has as!led the Federal Power Commission for joint, federalstate hearings on natural gas shortages. The PUCO asked the
FPC to convent the hearings to determine "whether the gas
curtailments proposed by various compames under the
jurisdiction of the FPC reflect a real shortage of natural gas or
whether such curtailmenls are resulting for other reasons."
Ohio "has, to some extent, been bampered by various
proceedings currently pending before the FPC and by vtrlue of
what presently appears to be the lack of a coordmated national
policy with respect to natural gas allocation," the PUCO request
read.

pen-

dants . . . manr
ne w

The New Classics ... our Babycord Plaids by Queen c;asuals

. .

Bob Hoefilch
Acceptance of the resignation of Head Varstly Basketball
Coach Roger E. Brauer and plans were approved for observance
of Rio Grande Community College Day at Metgs Htgh School
highlighted action of the Meigs l.AJCal School Dtstrlct Board of
Education Tuesday mght.
&amp;ipt. George Hargraves read the restgnalton of Brauer.
head basketball mentDr for the past two seasons, from all of his
coaching duties at the htgh school. Brauer has also been servmg
as freshman football coach. The res1gnalion was accepted
lDlanimously by the board. Mr Brauer's team was 1-18 m the
season j!L'!l ended.
Dr. Alphus Christensen, prestdent of Rio Grande College, m a
personal appearance asked that a Rto Grande Commuruty
College Day be held at Meigs High School.
It would not l.llterfere with classes as semors would confer
with a team from the college m perwds when they h~.~e no
classes. The team will be at the school from 6 a.m . until 5 p.m.
and will return to the school after the supper hour.
In addition to semors, parenls are welcome to v1sil with the
team and ask quesltons in reference to the Community College.
"The day IS needed ,'' Ditl. Christensen pointed out, "to better
acquaint residenls With the many facels of the new Commuruty
College which students can attend for only $13 a credit hour, or
$085 a year." (15 hours each quarter )
By

DAYTON, OIDO - LOUIS LUCAS, attorney for the National
Association for the Advancement of Colored People, says he Will
.file notice of appeal and a motion for summary reversal of a
decision provisionally approving a Dayton, Ohto, School Board
desegregation plan.
"The judge has refiL'!ed to order a remedy beyond a token
remedy/' Lucas said.
The ruling Monday by U S District Court Judge Carl B.
Rubin means that, unless an appealts upheld quickly, there will
be no forced busing here this fall . Rubm, who mamtamed
jurisdiction over the case, set up a procedure for implementing
an alternate plan if the hoard's proposal does not accomplish
"adequate progress." He held that a ''comprehensive plan," as
suggested by the NAACP, is not reqlllfed.

Quality Food
at Reasonable
Prices

-Arrimll' Nuw!

Brauer
resigne
as
Marauder
coach
.

WASHINGTON - THE SENATE IS MOVING toward approval of a strip mirung btll similar to one vetoed last year by
President Ford. On Tuesday the Senate voted to perrrut land
owners to veto the strip mtning of government - owned coal
deposils under their land. The provision is mlended chiefly to
protect ranchers and farmers of the West, where the government
retained mineral righls in lands that passed into prtvate
ownership Wider the old Homestead Act.
Sen. Dewey Bartlett, R-Okla., offered an amendment to
strike the proviston, which he said would give surface owners
"Windfall" profits and allow them to hold up mimng companies
seeking to lease the government.,wned .coal. His amendment
was voted down 77-16. The Senate rejected 51&gt;-39 a proposal by
Democratic Leader Mtke Mansfield of Montana to prohibit the
strip mllllllg of federal coal under private lands even if owners
agree to it. Mansfield said he wanted to prevent turning Western
ranch and farmlands into ''rural slums,' ' and ''to protect a way
of life that ought to be preserved.''
The Senate also turned down by a vote of 66-27 an amendment by Sen. James A. McClure, R-Idaho, to permit the strip
mining of coal depos1ls in National Forest lands.

fAKEN TO HOSPITAL
The Pomeroy unit of the
Southeasler9 Ohio Emergency
Medical Service transported
A lhoughl for the day:
Thomas Hysell, Route 2, Amencan author Chrtslopher
Pomeroy, from his home to the Morley sa1d, "If yo u have to
Holzer Medtcal Center Mon- keep remmdmg yourself of a
day
thmg, perhaps it tsn 't so "

Mmty New

.-

Losses heavy in rural fire

}\
GIRL SCOUT FUND DRIVE - Ralph Werry, Pomeroy, drive chairman, confers here with
Mrs. Pat Thoma, Meigs County servtce unit director, Black Dtamond Girl Scout Council. W1th
a go al of $1,000, the drive gels underway this week.

Werry chairing fund drive
+
Ralph Werry, Pomeroy, has
been nam ed chatrman for the
1975 sustammg membershtp
enrollment for the B1g Bend
Neighborhood of the Black
D1amond Gtrl Seoul Council
Mrs . Pat Thoma , service umt
dtre ctor for the Btg Bend
Neighborhood , announced h1s
chatrmanshtp for the fund
drtve today .
As explained by Mrs. Thoma,
the sus tam1ng membershtp
enrollment is a d1sltnct
membership program whereby
tndlvtdual scout fam1ltes and
close fnends, plus tnduslry and
the general pubhc '" areas
where a Umted Fund program
1s not carried out can contnbute to support the gtrl seoul
program
A goal of $1,000 for Metgs
Coun ty has been established by

the Black D1amond Council
In accepltn g the chatrh
mans lp, Werry advtsed th at
he Will be work1ng through the
troop comm1ltees of the 10
act1ve Me1gs County gtr I seoul
I
·
troops Plans are a so be1ng
made to contact Me1gs County
bustnesses to soltct l contnbultons to the gtrl scou t
program.

The money collected w1ll go
to the Black Dtamond Counetl
and used for bndgmg the gap
between the operational cosls
or the Council and the revenue
derived from all other sources,
such as the cookie sales, ca mp

fees, "Untied

Funds

Comrn un1 ty Ches ts of the
counties m Ohw, W~ s t V1rgmia
and Vtrgm1a served by Black
Diamond.
The fund dnve will get un derway lh1s week as a part of
Gtrl Seoul Week

and

Middleport man hurt in wreck
POINT PLEASANT - A
Middleport man was treated
and released at Pleasant
Valley Hospital following a
traffic acctdenl tn Mason
Tuesday at 11:35 a.m.
Mason Police Sgt. Kenneth
Riggs said Amos Fultz, 81, was
taken to the hosptlal for
lrealmenl followmg an accident on Second St., east of
Adams St.
Police said Fultz's car struck
a parked auto driven by Mary
MCDaru'el of Mason, owned by
Glenn Hudson, of Syracuse,
Ohl·o. Pollee sat'd the Hudson
Car Was demolished. The Fultz
vehicle had damage estimated
at $300.

By EDWARD S. LECHTZIN
UPI Auto Writer
DETROIT (UPI) - The
natwn 's
three
largest
automakers have anno\Diced
plans to recall more than 11,000
workers from open-ended
layoffs m anticipation of a
traditional sprmg upturn .
The announced callback
cames as automakers swatted
the first post-reba te sales
report.
The early March report ts
scheduled for release Thursday, but industry analysts say
there will be a sharp dropoff
from sales in the final
February period, the best
penod of the 197~udel year.
The callbacks, Including
another 6,600 workers announced by General Motors
Tuesday. means indeftnlte layoffs in the industry may have
peaked at the 2JI,IJOO.Ievel of
last week -close to one-third of
the mdustry's blue collar labor
force.
In the last week, Ford said
2,000 workers have been recalled to step up production of
three sma ll cars models,
Chrysler said 1,800 are bemg
called back at manufacturing
plants and GM prevtously

Probation for
year ordered

The accident is still under
mvesligalion.
State pollee also mvesttgated
a smgle car accident involving
another Middleport man
Larry Lee Mttch was drtver of
a vehicle when a deer ran into
his path north on Route 2 near
Gallipolis Ferry. Po!tee
estimated damages at $200 to
the car.

Betty Ey non, Rl. 1, Ractne,
was placed on one year's
probatiOn when she pleaded
gm lty to a charge or assault
before Meigs County Court
Judge RobertE Buck Monday .
Mrs Eynon was charged on
Monda y, Mar ch 3, with
aggravated assault when she
shot her husband, John , tn the
arm wtth a 410 shotgun at the
~v;.::xlf.'f."»;&gt;;:::::.~~ dhome or Ed
hi Saunders, a next
EXTENDED FORECAST
oor netg lOr
The charge of aggravated
Friday through Sunday, a
assa ult wos dropped and the
chance of showers Friday
df d t 1 dd
It t
e en an Pea e gmh Y 0 •
clearing on
charge or assau1t. T e on 1y
sandd Saturday,
HI h fll be In the
b t'
unoray.
s wLows wfll be
prOVISIOn
40s
lowerg50s.
d b J tn
d thBe kpro a thtont
rna e Y u ge uc was a
in lhe 20s on Friday morning
ftrearms owned by the couple
and In the low or mid 30s '
l b t
d
t
Fultz Was removed to the
are o e urnc over o
Saturday and Sunday
h
f th
hospl'tal by the Mason E-R
aut ·od
onhes or e one year
1 g.
squad. No citation was issued. ·:::-".1:-~c~·:~f.dr«fi!iW'//A perl ·
1

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I

I

Rep. Mottl opposes foreign aid bill

WASHINGTON (uP!) - To continue dlsbbig out
billions of dollars to foreign countries while the United
States conlluues to experience a reeesslon would be "short·
sighted and stupid," u.s. Rep. Ronald M. Mottl, IJ.&lt;Ihio,
said today.
Mottl, who Intends to vote against 1¥, foreign
assistance appropriation bill wben 11 comes • r e tbe
houseforacllonThursdSy,said theU.S.-bas "given away"
$72 billion lu foreign aid since World Warn.
~~I will vote against giving even 8 slugle addlllonal
penny of tax money to any foreign nation until our own
natio~J eeonomy has been restored to robust health,"
Mottl said.
" II seems shortofllgbted and stupid for us to continue
passlug out bllllona of dollan lo other countries while our
own people are experienclug what eeoaomJc experts
describe as either a receulon or 8 de(ll'esslon.
"The time has come for us to give lint priorlly to the
pressing needs of our own people.!l we can afford economic
' aid, let us give it to our own unemployed aild OlD' own
struggling industries ... we must recognize lbat onr lint
and major respoasiblllty Is to oar own people."
Mottl said the federal xovenuaent olloald contribute

x:m::~w~ .. 'W

lW8E!BSS:.

..,

I

I
~

"our lair share" to a world food bank to prevent human
starvation in tbe world. But be cautioned that even the U. S.
"Is Incapable of feeding and supporting the entire world."
~
"This does not mean lbal we should turn our backs on
~
starving people anywhere," he said. "We have a mora
11
obligationtoslu!reoursurplns,lfany,wlththem.
"Rulli would be the height offolly to give away billions :;:;
of dollarslu military and economic aid while mllllons of :?.!~;
elderly people are hDDgry In our own COIDilry -and while
secretary of Agrlcnlture Earl Butt jells us that we cannot
:;:;
afford a scboolluncb and breakfast program for our own
~
chUdren. Of course, Mr. Butz Is dead wrong. We cannot
$!
afford to do anything bitt maintain a decent program of
~l,
nutrition for our own youngsters and senior citizens."
~
The frellhman senator told his conslltuents it was
~.~
ridicnlous to give grants and foreign aid to countrieo that
§
reoent the help of the U. S. "and ldck our people and lulerella aro1Dd."
;:-:
"B Is high lbne that we adopt a policY. of pi'udent,
selfish, self-interest," Mottl said. "Otherwise, we will soon
find ounelves, with our wealtl! and resources given away,
pleadlug Ibe help from other aotions. I thlul the reeord
shows how much belp we might expect."
,

1

i

:._,.,eoo,aljJ~Q~•&amp;!ni.JR;'(m~B1ll!~:~.8~i:'l~~fl'c:::~~~~~lll&gt;W~~Mib1

''

announced 600 workers are
needed to man Its Baltimore,
Md., truck plant.
The GM callback Is the
largest smce the automakers
began their massive cutbacks
before Thanksgiving In response to the worst sales slump
since World War II. At one
point m February, close to
270,000 workers were on shorland~ong-term layoffs -40 per
cent of the industry's hourly
work force.
GM satd Tuesday it was
adding 66,000 small and intermediate-sized cars to its
second-quarter production
schedules and now plans to
build 940,000 cars m the AprilJune quarter . That figure

would be just 7 per cent behind
last year's energy-&lt;lepressed
level but 36 per cent below the
record output In the second
quarter of 1973.
To accomplish the Increased
output, GM next month will
resume second-6hift operations
that were eliminated in January at two assembly and two
manufacturing plants and will
step up output at two oUter
plants.
Together wilh workers needed to man stepped-up component plant operaUonB, GM's list
of workers on indefinite layoffs
could be significantly reduced
from Its present 127,000
workers -one of every four at
the giant auto company.

Four injured in
headon collision
Four persons were Injured in
a headon collisiOn at 7:45 a m.
lh1s mormng on Rt. 7 between
Clleshtrc and Addison.
Adm1tted to the Holzer
Medical Center for treatment
or facta! fractures was Debra
Clonch, 19, of Middleport
In JUred, treated and released
at the hospilal were Herbert
Jordan, 44, Marmet, W Va.,
John G. Ktng, 25, Gallipolis,
and George B. Porter, 29,
Charleston
Dcta1ls or the acc1dent were
lackmg since the officer on
duty had not subm1tled his
report to the Gallla-Me1gs Post
Sta te Htghway Patrol by noon
today.
Four traffic accidenls were
mvesttgaled Tuesday m Gallla
Coun ty B11l Ray Housh, 23, Rt
3, Galhpolis, was charged w1th
DWJ followmg an accident on
Rt. 160. four tenths of a mile

p 01•ICe m ake
25 arrests
Twenty-f1ve a rrests were

·made by lhe Middleport Pohce
Depar tment during February
accord in g to the monthly
report of Police Chief J J.
Cremeans.
DISorderly conduct l~d m
offenses with 1four of the 25
arresl.s made tm lhal charge.
There were three charged wtlh
failing to yield the nghl of way
and two each for gomg the
wrong way on a one way street,
assault and battery and
dislurbtng the peace.
There was one arrest each
for speeding, spmmng tires,
assured clear distance, assault
on a pollee of!1cer, properly
damages, accumulation of
trash and one was held for
parole authorilles .. Charges in
three cases were dropped.
Parking meter collections
for the month totaled $960 and
the pohce cruiser was driven
4,901 miles durmg the month.
The department inves~W'ted
10 auto accidenls. r
I

)

west of Gallipolis.
The patrol said Roush lost
conlrol of his car while passing
another vehicle. The car ran
off the right side of the highway
and traveled over an embankment.
A deer was killed ln an acCidenlal3 :40 p.m. on Rt. 7, one
and eight tenths mlles north of
Rt. 35. The amma! ran into the
path of a car operated by
Harold L Sargent, 63, of
Middleport.
Asmgle car mi&amp;hap occurred
at 9:25 p.m. on Georges Creek
Rd ., one and seventh tenths
mtles from Rt. 7. Offtcers said
James H. Holley, 45, Gallipolis,
lost conlrol of hts car which
wen t off the h1ghway striking a
renee ow ned by Ray Hlll!hes of
Rt I, Gallipolis
A f1nal acctdent occurred at
12:10 a.m today on Rt. 7, one
tenth of a mile north of Gallipohs. John J. Eachan, 66,
Cleveland,
mtssed
the
drtveway at the Blue Fountam
Motel. H1s car struck a dilch

Fire, aid units
called 36 times

.

The
Middleport
Fire
Department answered 28 ftrst
a1d and c1ght fire calls In
February, Ftre Chtef Bob Byer
reported Monday.
Of the 28 first ald calls, 14
were 1n town and 14 out of town.
One involved a motor accident.
There were no maJOr fires. The
department
spent
44.7
manhours for fires and 118.5
hours on . ftrst aid calls. The
total mileage for all vehicles
was 894.9 and an average of 10
men answered the fV""&lt;•IIs;
\

•I

BONDS GIVEN UP
Two defendants forf~ited
bonds in the court of Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffmllll
Tuesday night. They are Larry
L. Taylor, 23, Ravenna, $300.
posted for driving . while intoxicated, · and
Wendell
Barker, Mason, 1$30, no
operator's litense.
"
'

I

•

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