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16 - The Dally S.nhnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesda), March 12, 1975

..

Policy on sub teachers is
reviewed in Mason County
A ma tter and anoth er board
policy concernmg substi tute member, Btll Brady, satd
Let us stud\
the ad
teachers has resulled m what
spokesmen lor the Assoc1atwn numstrahve pol tcy and make 1t
of Classroom Teachers and the wor k as 1t was destgned
Mas on Co unty EducatiOn Bradl also c1ted the n smg
Assoclahon call a cntlcal tran spo rt ation costs noti ng
slluatlon," \His re\'Je" ed b) the) IH:I. \ e gone from 71 cents lo
the Mason County Board of 84 cents a m1le for school bus
EducatiOn Tuesday evcnm~ transportation alone
l.rtst ni g ht S long SCSSIOfl W.:l S
Jerri Neal ~ tth a delcga twn
made up of Sara Buffington also marked \\I ttl an executive
James Langdon. Wayne sesston apparent!} conter mng
G1beaut Elatne Rouse and s u~pe n s10 n of tl Waha m a
Ri chard Haycraft. discussed student ,md thr r rrnpnJ! Jnr&gt; nf
the substtlute poltc) at length
followtng dtstn~ult on of an
accumulative report to board
members Mrs Nea l explamed
Holzer Mcdtt al t.:e ntt•r
the repor t m deta1 l whtc h
1
Dtscharged. Man h Ill
showed both budgeted amoun ts
Mary H Andet son, Ar thm
as well as an llc1pated ex
Aunc,
Ida Bachner, Arnunta
pendatures
Ball,
Mrs
Davtd Btas and
Charles Wt thers asserted ,
daughter,
Helen
Byet , Pamela
'We need a hghtemng up of our
belts I feel the board has done Chrtsly, Mrs Dor Coa tes and
everything humanly poss tble to daughter, Flora Dav ts Cheryl
Fmr chtld , J ohnny Fer rell ,
a1d the teachers '
It was Supt Wtlhers con- Nanme f ox , Denver French,
tention that "We wtll have Mrs Donald Fun k and son,
Patr1c1a Greenlee WJ! lte~m
substitutes when necessar y "
Jenktns,
Mtchael Kmg, Dons
But Mrs Nea l took tssue wtlh
that, saymg that students are Ktser, San dra I am be rt,
hetn g sent to the gymnastum Char les Long, Ot al Malone,
balcontes at Pomt Pleasant Kw t Mathts, Flora McMtlltn ,
Semor Htgh wtth out proper Conme McNeely , Tara Me
supervtslon, whtle teachers are Fadden, Bonme Metzl er,
trymg to teach classes on the Sa ndra Parsons , Clarmd
Roseberry, Ina Stbley, Mt s
gym floor
This she satd came about due Lewts Smtlh and daughtet ,
to subslttutes not bemg called Mrs Larry Iay lor and son
1n some
Instances when Ralph 1 hom pson Levt Tyo
teachers " ere out of school Sandra Vetth, Btrdte Wtute
Supt Wllhers defended hts Dor IS Wtlbur, Shtrley Wtlbur
(Births)
stand saymg that there are
Mt
and
Mrs Wtlh am H
teachers on duty, watchmg '
Mrs. Neal further wttclzed Campbell, Jr , a da ughter,
the policy, speakmg of students Wellston
" cutting out," addmg, "When
the word gets around to
students that a teacher 1s out,
they split"
WENT TO MOORES
" There are not major
The Pomeroy Emergency
problems, the prmclpals say," Squad answered a call to
Sup! Withers rephed But Mrs Moore's Store on W Matn,
Neal coWJ tered with, "That 's Pomeroy , at 8 58 a m Wednot what they tell us •·
nesday for an employe, Her" I feel some prtnc1pals fee l man Ohltnger, who was Ill He
mttmldated," Mrs Neal satd was taken to the Holzer
Commenting fur ther, she sa1d, Medtcal CenU, r At 9 54 p m
"[ thmk a case ts being built to Tuesday, the squad went to
eliminate substitutes I thtnk West Mam St for Mrs Th omas
the case IS very unfair This IS Yoilllg who was tll at her home
why we went to all Uus trouble
She was also taken to the
to get these reports •I
Holzer Medtcal Center
Board president Harry
Siders asked to have prmctpals
subm1t written report.. on the
DRIVER CITED
POINT PLEASANT -

other delega twm;
In fu1lllf'r tH tum the boa1d
- Adopted ~~ mmac sen es
afte r a de legatiOn compn sed uf
!~ IIzabeth Ma:tux, DHvtd llall
~trl{l
l udy Samples made
pt est' rl lci twns
- App1uvcd agre~ mcnt wtlh
Wes t Vu gtma Umvcr::aty for

the Co ll ege Work -Study
Pr og ram 101 s ummer empiO) tnenl for t~ o co ll ege
studen ts WVU ~ t il pa\ 73 per
ce nt o( the salcu y

HOSPITAL NEWS

MEIGS THEATRE
Tonight ond Thursday
MAR l2and 13
NOT OPEN
Fnday thru Tuesday

March 14 IS
THE STING
(Technlcolor)

Robert Fedford

(PGI

Show Starts 7p m

Veterans Memorial Hospital
Admtltcd - Sally Gloec kn er
Rm: me , Homer Gtlk ey
Mtdd leport Ne llt e Fnzzle
Mtne rsvtlle, Ruth Gosney
Mtd dleport, Mark I hetSs
Rac we. Agnes Slc\e ns
Detrot t, Mtch
Dtsc harge d
Debbt e
Hendnx, Barbdl a Ja mes,
Na ncy Holstn ge r , Tam mw
Reth mr c

She de~

At nold,

Donn&lt;l Sellers, F1 cda Buchaon ,
Barb ar,t McQuatd, Roge r
Kl et n Wtll1 am Robinson
Madalyn Chafin

Pleasa nt Valley Hospital
DISCHARG ES - Oden
Pea rson, Pmnt Pleasant , Mrs
Woodr ow Ru sse ll, Pom t
Pleasan t Denztl Proctor ,
Mtd dleport, Mrs Wtll Martm
G,• lhpohs Ferry Patncta
Stover Ashton, Mrs Paul
Chad well Mtddleport , Charles
Kn,tpp Chiton 1 Mrs Rose
Goodwm Potnt Pleasant Mt s
Benjamtn Castor, Mason
James Jones, Flatwood, Ky
Glenn Gouge, Ga lhpohs, Lee
Hobbs, Mason, Freda Long,
Ga ll lpolts, Lula Wheeler, West
Columbta , Cha r les Ze tgler,
Pomeroy
Brtan Co nd ec ,
Reedsvtllc, Mrs Rt chard
Gt lmore. Pomeroy, Mrs Ca rl
Bmg, Galltpohs, and Ntchole
Wetss , Apple Grove

Simon accused of
favoring the rich
WASHI NGTON (UPII
AFL-C!O pres tdent George
Me any
todav
accused
Treasury S.cretary Wtlham
Simon of trymg to deny tax
reltef to the poor so the rtch can
ge t btg tax rebates to buy dtshwa she rs , ca rs and colo r
televtston set..

Two cars had med iUm
damage and one driver was
Ci ted to mayor 's court as the
result of an accident on Wes t
Second St at 4 44 p m
Tuesday, Pomeroy Poltce satd
MRS. RUSSELL DIES
A car drtven by Carolyn
Mrs
Nelhe
Russell
Woodard, Syracuse. pulled mto
F1
emont,
former
ly
of
the Stde of an eas tbound car
driven by Giles Hysell, Mmet s- Pomeroy, \'lildow of the late
vtlle There were no tnJurles Sheffield Russell, dted MonWoodard was ct ted to co urt on day Funeral serv1ces wtll be
a charge of fa1hng to y1eld the Thursday at the Wiler Wonderl y Funeral Home at
right of way
Fremon t The bod) wtll be
brought to Mtddleport Htll
Cc mete1y Ft1day wh ere
gt'&lt; tves tde ntes \\til be at 1 30
p m Mrs Russell was an aunt
of Norman Alpha and Wtllard
Russell. Pomeroy

At The Inn-Place

TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY. THURSDAY
MARCH 11-12-13

CHAPTER TO MEET
Preceptor Chapter of Beta
St gma Pht S01 on tv will meet at
lite Sltm 'N Trtm m Mtddleport
at 7 45 p m Thursday The
group wtll then go to the home
of Reva Vaughan tn Mtddleport

8:30 TIL 12:30
'

RON BRINKER

for a meeting Members are to

For Your Ltstening Pleas ure
GUITAR&amp; PERCUSSION

~tke TV Stamp Books to the
sess ton

The MEIGS INN
Ph. 992·3629

Pomeroy

For hmaless qualtty
"'-.. at economical prtces

LOCAL TEMPS
Temperature m downtown
Pomeroy today at II a m was
53 degrees under cloudy sk1es

AMANA
3 Door Ice ' N Water

It's £1

sid..by·sido
automatic refrigerator

r/uwu@J[jJ(fJ.

Radaranae
MICROWAVE O~EN
MAOf ONLY IY AMANA

S Moct.k loehootefrem
Starttng At Low At

$259.00

' J

:

.

..:·: :..·=~

:-:::::~-::::.::.-::::::. :x::-:-:·&lt;~=·::.

'

STANS GUll TY
WAS itl NGTON 1U PI , _
M.tura4 r H Stans pleaded
gutlty todav to a fi ve-co unt
masdcmeanor &lt;· harg e
campaagn lmance violations

- the thtrd lormer memher
of Rtchard M Nixon ' s
cabmet to plead guilty or be
com'lclcd 10 con nert10n Y.lth
Walcrgatc

. ld
EagIes will f1e

hired as aide
EAS !'ERN

-

!'I orence

Wyers was htred to assast wtth

the kmderga rten prog ram the
balance of the school term
when the Easten t'Loc.:a l Board
or Educatwn met Tuesday
mght C 0 Newell , clerk
reported
In other busmess the board
approved a nego ti atiOn
agreeme nt wtth the teachers,

and gave fma l approval to the
annual &lt;tppropnahon for the
yea r 1975 Attendt ng were
Ho,.ard
Caldwell,
Jr ,
prestdent, Clyde Kuhn, Dorsel
Larkans, Starling Massar,
board members, John Rtebel,
superm te ndent, and Newell

Loiten of oplaloD •"' wel-.1. Tlle7 .._... lie ...
thaD 300 wordo loa1 (or be ••.te_
ct 1o iediiCIIoa bJ 1lle
edllor) and must be oJcDed wtlh IH llpM't .....__
Names may be wllbbeld UJHIII PlllbllcotloB. However, •
request, names ~Dl be dltc:looed. Letten obaald be Ill &amp;eod
taote, addraalag luu01, not pe-UIIet.

team of veterans
I~ ASI

Er.N

-

1he

1975

cdt ll tJn of the Euslern Eagle
B&lt;~ se L ull

Squad of head coach

He lnC::i wall open tts
Sl'ilSOil un Match 25 at home
ngwn:-) t the Alc~a nd e r Spm-

L.1n )

!&lt;InS

Florence Wyers

---·--·-,-·------,.:..·-·--·--·----·-,-·----·-'-

I Ins yew s Eastt•rn club wtll
feal l.U'C 10 rc turntn g lettermen
frum lust sprm g·~ ~ quad wlut:h

fnushcd the yea t at 12·10, and
ll ney. comers n ho hope to
brea k mto the sta rtmg hneup
Onl) 1\o\ u lette1men ha ve
b&lt;.'Cnlo::;t fl om last vear stea m
b)

g r&lt;.~due~ tto n ,

but two othet s

who le tt ered last :;eason are not
baseball thts yea t
Relurntng lo the Eagle to·
fteld arc Rand y Blake , Robert
Barber an d Gt cg Wmebren ner ,
semors, and Dave Hannum and
Don E1chmge1, JUO!Ors The
re turmng ve terans 1n th e
uulfteld ~til be Mtke Lackm s
Plul Bowen and Ttm Spencet,
semors, e:tnd Tim Kuhn , and
Su,ve Nelson , JUntors
Others hopmg to gel mto the
hneup for Coach Hewes lh ts
season arc Mark Ha\\ k Joe
playtn~

Brauer resigns

Ku hn, John Evans, Steve
rr usoel, Phtlhp La Comb Don
Jackson , Tum Bdtey 81uce
Rtffie, Dave Brown, Brtan
Matthews, Bub McClure , Jtm
Da viS, and Mtkc Hall
F'ollowmg IS the 1975 Eastern
Ht gh
Sehoul
Baseball Flak from the Navy
st hcd ule
MARCil Dear Str
Thts ts a letter to the conumttee agamst annexation of new
2S Alexander
Home
31 Federalllockmg
Ana) area to the Vtllage of Racme
I am" concerned ctllzen and career Navy man who after
APRIL
reading
the articles about the annexahon of new area to Racme
1 RaH·ns\\oorl
A\\'ay
m
the
Daily
Sentinel decided l must speak out I only hope I'm not
2 Rclpn·
A\\aV
too
late
w1th
thts letter to do some good for the town m and
3 North Galha t x)
A\\ay
4 Federllf Hockmg
Home aroWJd whtch I spent mnety per cent of my life pr1or to enlisting
7 South\Hstern t x~
A\\aV tn the Navy
The people agamst the annexatton are condemmng the town
8 ~hiler
Home
to
a
slow and certam death For the past 17 years I have been m
9 Waterford
A\\ay
Racme for only short pertods of ttme due to the way I must move
10 Kyger Creek (XI
A~ay
aroWJd
m my chosen professiOn Each lune I vtsited I could see
tl I nmble
Home
the
town
shrink and busmess close. My wife (who ts also a
16 Wahama
Home
and I often dtscussed the matter and wondered why
Racme
gtrl)
18 Mtller
A"ay
21 Soulhernt XI
A\\aV somebody dtdn't do somethmg
Now that things are begmnmg to look as though the town
22 Fed Hockmg
Home
has a chance to survtve and a group of people are trymg to
23 Waterford
Home
•repare the town for tt , some of the Citizens who can't stand
Home
24 Kyge r Creek l XI
, ogress get mto the act and oppose the one b1g chance Racme
25 rnmble
A"ay
has had m the past 25 years
29 Fed Hocktng
A\\ay
I noticed some rather promment peoples names on the op30 Roncnswood
Hom e
positiOn commtttee, 1 llllght add The b1g concern IS that the
MAY
project m questiOn wtll cost money and will be a burden to the
2 Belpre
Home
resident..
Sure tl's gomg to cost money, but what doesn 't these
5 Hannan Tra&lt; c t x )
A\\aV
days, espectally progress? It's gomg to cost more wtth people
A\\ ay
6Symmes Val lX I
ftghtmg tt tooth and natl To these people I say if you don't want
8 Southern t XI
Home
to help your commumty then get out, but be careful where you go
9Wahama
AYtay
because there might be some progressive people there and you
12 Hannan Tra ce ( x )
Home
13SymmesVal (x)
Home orvon't ftt m
In 1972 I bought the old Pickens place on Yellow Bush Road
15 North Gal ha (xl
Home
wtth hopes and plans of ltvmg and ra1s1ng my daughter there
19 Southwestern (XI
Home
after my rettrement from the Navy in 1978 Now I'm not so sure I
( x) S V.A C Games.
want to live m a commW11ty not wanting to pull 1t..eif up from
years of neglect
Ves, neglect ' The coWJtyhas been neglected by the State and
MARRIAGES ENDED
the Racme area has been neglected by the more populated and
Tw o
dtssolu hons
of prosperous parts of the COWlly
marnages have been ft led m
When I think of the poss1bil1ty of Racme not havtng a school
Metgs County Common Pleas for the kids to attend and no stores for 1ts res1dent.. to shop m I
Court Fthng for dtssoluttons think of the anh-annexallon comnuttee m all1ts glory
were Alfred Eugene Rusche!,
Sa, anti coliUillttee, fight away, and a few years from now
Jr Rt 2, Cheshtre, and when tounsts are driving up SR 124 and stop at the last surviVIng
Frances Mae Rusche!, Mid· busmess (a gasolme station) aod ask the attendant why his
dleport Ruth Ann Mulford, station ts so far from the nearest town, and he answers, "Oh
Pomeroy, and Conme Nea l didn't you know there used to be a town here ," your nuss1on wtll
Mulford, Pomeroy
he accomplished.
Dale E. Hart, Cluef CommWJtcatwns Tech
Box
33B285,FPO New Vork, New York 09540
ARREST MADE
Alfred Lyons, Poltce Chtef of
Racme and Mtlton Vanan,
Pohce Chtef of Syracuse,
arre sted Gerald Eugene
Hendrtcks, 22, Racme, on
SQUAD CALLED
TO HOSPITAL
charges of burglary Henncks
RACINE - The Racme E-R
The Pomeroy Umt of
allegedly broke m the Syracuse
Squad was called at 12 20 a m
Drtve Inn Sunday mght before SEOEMS transported Zellah today for Emmett Stethem,
from
Veterans
mtdnt ght Hendrtcks posted Lawson
RD, Long Bottom, a medtcal
Memor1al
Hospttal
to
her home
$2,000 bond and ts to appear m
patten!, who was taken to St.
Metgs County Court Frtday tn Racme at 2 p m Tuesday Joseph Hospital, Parkersburg

Contmued from page I
The board accepted the res~gnation of Jean H Kuhn , a
teacher of the Pomeroy Elementary School, who IS movmg from
the commun1ty, and Edith Forrest and Joan Culp were added as
substttute teachers
March was proclauned Youth Art Month m the d1stnct and
Art Instructor, Jack Slavm , was named chairman of 1ts achvabes
The board approved the closmg of the Salem Center School
~·e b 24 due to hlgh water and all schools March 10 due to snow
The quote of J Wtlllam Brown to "mspect and service ftre extmgmshers was accepted w1th extmgmshers to be marked wben
they are mspected, as to date .
The board approved the attendance of meetmgs by staff
members mcludlng Susan Edwards, Apnl 11-12, Convention of
Oh10 Speech and Heart.ng Association m Cincmnah; Harold
Sauer and Martha Vennart, March !Band 19, Tour of Chanute Air
Force Base, Don D1xon and Ed Bartels to the Ohto Education
AssoCiation meelmg m Columbus April 4; Leda Mae Kraeuter
and Karen Goms March 20 to Eastern H1gh School to serve as
judges and April 11 and 12 to the State Future Homemakers
meetmg m Columbus w1th students to accompany them to the
latter meetmg
The resignation of Jenmfer Sleets from the PomeroyMiddleport Ubrary Board of Trustees was accepted but the
board tabled a recommendation to appotnt Mary Kay Yost to ftll
the W1exp1red term because of a question as to why restdents
outside of the Mrugs Ulcal DIStrict are hemg appomted to the
board Arequest for $1,000 m annual support to the library board
from the school diStrict was also tabled
A meetmg of the OhiO State School Boards AssociBttOn was
announced for March 31 m Nelsonville lnstallallon of flush fire
hydrants al th~ Salem Center and Hamsonv11le schools were
discussed. Board Member Robert Snowden Will secure more
informatiOn on the hydrants
A letter from Manrung Webster. chatnrum of the Me12s Countv
Board of Retardalion, was read thanking the board for 1ts
cooperation and help over the past years m
provtdmg aSSistance for the Me~gs CommW11ly School
for the retarded Judge Webster commented m hts letter that The
Board of Retardation plans to use the gymnastum m Rutland for
the next school year as offered by the Metgs School Board on a
rental basiS The factltty must meet state approval and the
retardatiOn group must be able to see that tt can fmance the
school at the gym However, Judge Webster asked that the
gymnastwn be reserved
A letter from Mr and Mrs. Charles Karr, Sr., Pomeroy, encouragmg the board to help the semor cttizens m locating a new
center was read It was dectded to sell two unused electriC ranges
m the Harnsonvllle School
The board voted to establish the postltons of g1rls' track coach
at $200 per year and an aSSistant at $100 a year. The recommendations for ftllmg the posttions made by gtrls' athletic
director Joy Bentley, however, were tabled Wlttl the board has
heen adVISed of the qualifications of the two m that field It was
agreed to check further on the mstallatlon of a utility pole and
proposed grading at the Salem Center School.
A letter from Mrs Roberta Wilson, prmcipal of the Salem
Center School, was read thankmg the board for Its help tn several
unprovements at the school recenUy. The board Informally
agreed to continue on a cooperative basis with Eastern and
Southe~n !.Deal School Districts m a health nurse program Me1gs
Local Distr1cl has the nurse, Sharon Btrch three days a week
w1th the other districts havmg her one day a week. Hargraves
agreed to confer wtth Mrs Birch on her general schedule and
work plans
The board informally agreed to g~ve an old hot water tank m
the Rutland High School to the Rutland Ftre Deparbnent
Snowden advised the Board of Education that he recenlly
bad difficulty at the Meigs CoiDity Auditor's Office in securing
figures of a composite on the tu records of the Meigs Local 1
District. He suggested taking lbe matter to the slate auditor.
1
It was reported that a group at Rutland will sand and varmsh E
the Rutland GymnaSium Door if the board so deSires
Board member V1rg1l King stated that at a recent board
meetmg tl had been reported that Landmark pays no taxes King
read the -list of taxes patd by Landmark
The board voted WJarumously agaJDst "SWlshtne Legislation "
hemg COilSidered by the state leg~slature. The legislation would
!"'Ohibtt the Board of Education from holding pnvale or
executive sessxons
Board Member Joe Sayre receommended that a subshtute bus
mechamc he employed because, if a mecharuc ts ill or superviSOr
John Beaver goes onto a bus route, or carries out some other duty
requested by the board, the garage IS short handed He suggested
also a method of constructmg an mexpenslve grease rack m the
old Rutland High School Andilor111m.
He suggested also a direcUve for bus drivers so that some
Wlifornuty can be earned out as to discipline on all buses. He
spoke of tbe damages done to buses, such as ripped seats. He
recoJlllllended that buses be mspected by drivers each day and
that parents be made to pay monetary damages fur destruction
by the1r children.
A leak at the Harrisonville School roof and another at the
Rutland Gymnasium were discussed.
At the conclusion of the long meeting, the board discussed the
long sessions they bave bee'n holding. It was the consensus that
too many matters are conung before the board at regular
meetmgs to be taken up at one hme and that as a result , qwck
deciSions are being made and many necessary functions are not
bemg taken care of at all.
For the past several months a delegation of one type or another
has appeared before the group Board President Carol Pierce
said that the board ts getting !"'Oblems that really should be
handled by school employes
Attendmg the ses&amp;on were Supt Hargraves, Clerk L. W
McComas, and board members Snowden, Pierce, Hoover, Sayre
and King

Elberfelds Home Furnishings Annex

SPECIAL SALE

.·\,.'
'

Apathy persists
i

;;;:

;;~i&lt;mo!!

I

Congn/ss advised to get
tough on rail problems

,.,~

~
WASHINGTON (UP!) -Congress must be willing to
'' Ignore public criticism and abandon one fifth of Amenca's
~ rail hoes tf the needed modernization of the U. S. rail
~~ system ts to take place wtthout huge federal subsidies,
·.'.!..:!
Tradausportatioo Secretary William Coleman satd Wed::i nes y.
::::
"I thmlt one of the most tmportant things In this
~~ country is the restructuring of the railroads, " the new
~ trausportahon secretary said in hls first Washington news
~::; conference.
~~
Coleman said 11 would take vast federal funding to
~; rebwld roadbeds In the Washmgton·Boston corridor, but
~! be expressed hope that once those roadbeds were rebuilt
~ the northeast lines could be turned back over to full
·.:!.!
pnvate operation. He said he hopes federal loans can do
the JOb of rebuilding railroads in lhe south and west,
~~
" 1 don't believe in nationalization," Coleman said.
&lt;::
But he said rebuilding the railroads would require
!iii Wlpopular measures If the diSmal picture of losses was to
;::: be turned into a picture of profitable operations,
@ "You now have raJlroads in place where no matter •.
:·: how you cut It, 20 per cent ought to be abandoned," he

J:·.· :~e%"Itnt~:~::~
=~·~: ~~;~'rn:::t:~~~g~~~~n
will depend upon a Congress that has the gut.. to
f,.,. stand
up and say we need a modem system that serves the
American people," Coleman said.

~

r
§i

-SPECIAL PURCHASE-

JACQUARD BATH ENSEMBLES
All F irst Quality , m blue, gold, green, ptnk.

Bath Towel
Hand Towel
Wash Cloth

Sale '1.89
Sale •1.19
Sale

69~

Matn Store, Annex, Warehouse Open Thursday 9:30 to 5
Shop Frtday and Saturday 9:30 to 8 P.M.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
.'

NO 233

POM EROY-M IDOLE PORT, OHIO

THURSDAY, MARCH 13, 1975

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:;:

c;;oleman said h1s department would send proposed
legislative changes to Congress within a week on new rail
freight regulatory polic1es, within a month on new in·
terstate trucking regulatory policies and wljbln 45 days on
,.,::; new policies to regulate the transportatlon Industry.

I""
...,

.~:.%.~'f.•• : •••• .• o::::::w.~~-.::::::--:::::."»'*::e::x::::::.~::::.:;;.s.,;.-.8!:~ :!»~:::....:.::~

Fuel, food
lift halted
PHNOM PENH (UP!) - The
U.S. airlift of food, fuel and
anunumtion to Cambodia's beSieged capital was halted today
by a rebel-f1red rocket that h1t
an ammumtwn dump at
Phnom Penh's airport and set
off an explosiOn and f1re
"Flights are expected to
continue as soon as cond1hons
at Pochentong atrport penmt,"
an American spoke11man m
Bangkok satd "There was no
damage to any U.S a1rlift
aircraft ' '
Military sources m Phnom
Penh said rebels d1d not make
major penetratiOns of the
Phnom
Penh
defense
perimeter Wednesdal', but
insurgents poured heavy
mortar fire into Neak Luong

w

iJ Jill •• ,;,;.,;:.

and Banam 35 miles southeast
of the capital
A U S spokesman m
Bangkok satd truck convoys
from Thailand filled w1th
supplies were reaching Bat·
tambang m northwestern
Cambodta, w1th the latest
group of 41 trucks leavmg
Tuesday
The supplies are e1ther used
tn Battambang or Down by
Cambodian a1rcraft to Phnom
Penh and other provmcial
cap1tals still under government
control, the spokesman said.
Three U.S ~harte red DC8
cargo 1ets flymg from Saigon
made 11 sorties into Phnom
Penh 's Pochentong Wednesday, hauling 472 tons of r1ce
and 4tl Ions of kerosene.
..

PRICE 15'

North Viets hit
delta rice fields

J

I h

By United Press IntemaiJonaJ
COLUMBUS- ALTHOUGH THE STATE ism better shape
"to weather thts recession" than any smce World War n, the
current recesston 1s "likely to h1t Ohio harder than the United
States as a whole" th1s year, an econonuc consUltihg firm sa1d
Wednesday. Mtdwest Econometrics, Inc., a subsidiary of the
BancOhio Corp., satd Ohto would probably be hit hard because of
" the severe cutback m consumer durable spendmg."
A company report satd the OhiO Wlemployment rate would
ttrobably remam close to 8.2 per cent for the year. "Further
:weakness m the Ohio economy, particularly m the manufacilurt.ng sector, ts likely to show up m the months ahead as th~
•output of Ohio's capital goods slackens, and mventory curtailments grow," said the report.

Co-ordmate an enhre room or bnghten a stngle ptec.e of furniture
wttn these stretch-to-ft! Sltpcovers or versatile Furniture Throws.
B1g se leclton of soltds and prtnls tn all popular sizes.

VOL XXVI

....

11'ews•• in Briefs

Furniture Throws and Slipcovers

en tine

IJevoted To The Interests of The Meigs-Mason Area

*i,·

t~i

..

at

;:l

Coleman was equally outspoken on other trans·
~ portallon Issues. But he presented a down-to-earth
:::1 image, as well, telling reporters to call him " Bill'' unless
j;l the President or a high ranking foreign dlgultary was

He pointed out that a preliminary survey has many errors.
For example, tl states that there are no coal reserves on the
Cormng-Nitro lme, Nathan satd
Nathan sa1d that Cong. Clarence Miller and Senators Robert
Taft and John Glenn must he made aware of the econormc effect
that would take place 1f the line ts abandoned. Cong, Miller has
heen active so far, but needs lo hear from the people, Nathan
pomted out He stated, however, that Senators Taft and Glenn
have not been active m the matter at all
Durtng the discussiOn 1! was pointed out that once railroad
ltnes are abandoned, not only does 11 affect the economy from the
standpomt of JObs and payroll lost, but also from the standpomt
of the lack of any rail serv1ce and taking an area out of the
market as far as 1ndustnal s1tes are concerned.
Statistics were presented md~eating that a great number of
cars and trams do move through the Hobson yards. These figures
were not taken mto consideration m compiling the preliminary
survey, 11 was reported
Anyone w1shmg to offer testunony will be assisted by
Nathan, who said, that he ts the representative of the people, and
may attend the Wednesday morntng meeting.
'

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I

By Bob Hoeflich
Apparent apathy ol busmess people and ordtnarl &lt;'tttzens
generally about abandonment of Penn Central Ratlroad hnes tn
Metgs County was renected for the second tune m a month
Wednesday afternoon
Only about 2i1 persons showed up at a meeun g tn Muldlepor t
V1llage Hall to plan a protest to abandon the hnes and the
resultant expected loss of some 200 JObs and an annual mcome of
two million dollars to this area
Mii&lt;ting With the group was Ron Nathan, a Washmgton, D C
attorney w1th the Ratl Servtce Plannmg Comm1sston of the Interstate Commerce Conumsswn Nathan was astounded that
many busmess people dtd not attend the meettng to exp1 ess thetr
concern on what the loss of 200 JObs and the $2 tmlhon Income
would mean to the busmess structure of Metgs County.
However, near the end of the dtscuss10n on the abandonment
busmess people and others were g1ven a chance to redeen;
themselves between now and next Wednesday At 10 a m next
Wednesday, Nathan wtll return to the Mtddleport Vtllage Hall to
begm worktng up the presentatiOn for a public heanng m Akron
March 24-26
Busmess people and others are asked to prepare statements

BOSTON- MARIJUANA MAY NOT BE THE GREAT
threat to health and society that many studies have Indicated,
accordmg to Consumer Reports magazme "The ltme has come
to take a fresh look at the alleged dangers of marijuana," the
Consumers Umon publication sa1d m 1ts March tssue
The magazme sa1d a "horrifymg collection of martjuana
hazards" - mcluding bram damage, lowered reSistance to
disease, loss of motivation, b1rth defects,lWJg damage, sterility
and Impotence m men - have be.en w1dely pubhctzed m
reputable sc1entific Journals and the news media. But, sa1d the
magazme, "When a research fmding can be readily checked e1ther by repeatmg the exper1ement or by deviSmg a better one
- an allegation of adverse marijuana effects ts relatively shortlived.
"No damage IS found - and after a time the allegatiOn ts
dropped." CU sa1d mar11uana smokers appear to remam m good
health and good sptrlts, showmg none of the adverse effects c1ted
m the studies.
WASIDNGTON - ALTHOUGH the tough strip mmmg
control bill passed by the Senate Wednesday could come up for a
House vote loday, no act1on Is expected before Friday at the
earliest Rep Morrts K. Udall, D-Artz , ch1ef sponsor of ·the
House b1ll, sa1d today the Ford admmtstration and the coal industry would continue trymg to weaken the legislatiOn passed 8413 by the Senate.
The bill was cbanged only slightly durmg floor debate and
maJor moves to strengthen or weaken the bill faded by heavy
majorities. As passed by the Senate, the bill would reqUire the
restoration of laods to apl"'oXIIDately their or1gmal contours
after stnp mmmg IS completed. It would prohibtt the str1p
mining of lands deemed unresfurable.
WASillNGTON- MILK PRODUCTION LAST month was
about equal to a year earlier but farmers found 11 less profitable,
an Agriculture Deparbnent report md1cates. The report
estimated February milk output at 8. 768 billion poWJds compared
to 8 765 billion poWlds a year earlier and 8 932 b1llion poWlds two
years ago.
StatistiCl3ns sa1d, however, that while the February rmlk·
feectpriceratiowasup6per cent from January, 11 was 9 per cent
below a year earlier. The ratio measures comparative trends m
milk and feed prices and IS a general gn1de to Improvements or
declines m the profitability of milk production. Increases m the
(Continued on page 2)

EXCELLENCE REWARDED - Eastern H1gh School cheerleaders were recogmzed for
excellence at the recent school banquet honoring Its athletes Left to rtght are Jan Wtlson
out..tandlng cheerleader; Ctndy Rttch1e, most tmproved reserve cheerleader, Diana Jones:
OJDStlll]proved freshman cheerleader, and Avts Bissell, the "Sptrll" award Absent was V1ckt
Gaul, most Improved varstty cheerleader

By ALAN DAWSON
SAIGON (UP!) - Communist troops exte nded their
SIX-day offenstve to the fertile
Mekong Delta rice growmg
reg• on today, overrunning f1ve
hamlets and puttmg three
dlstnct capitals under heavy
attack, the Sa1gon command
satd
The new assault.. expanded
f1ght1ng to the length of South
Vtelnam Previous CommWltst
thrusts struck at a 4tlt).mlle !me
rWlntng north of Saigon, but
not south of the capttal
V1et Cong saboteurs blew up
a bus w1th a land mme near
Tra On d1str1ct capttal, 60

Bicentennial themes plentiful
By Charlene Hoeflich
The marking of htstortcal
sttes, dramatic productions,
art and penod costumtn g
contest.., and the dtsplaymg of
banners bearmg the biCentenmal theme were among
many prOJects proposed
Tuesday mght to the Metgs
Coun'y B1centenmal CommissiOn
John Rtce prestded at the
meetln g m the courtho use
where representatives of
org a mzahon s discussed
btcentenmal prOJeCts
Mrs
Mary
Bacon,
representmg the Middleport
Bus mess and Professional
Women , suggested ' selltng
btcenlenmal pms and emblems
a nd sponsormg a periOd
costume contes t
On behalf of the Metgs
CoWJty school system, Mrs
Nellte Vale, elementary
supe rvt sor, proposed the

school exhtbtt at the Metgs
Coun ty Fatr tn 1976 be devoted
to tU,ms stgmftcant to the
btcentenmal year.
Renovatton of the old depot
tnto a mmt-park stte was
suggesU,d as a posstble prOJect
of
Mtddleport
vtlla ge
orga mzattons by
CounCil""oman Jean Cra1g Henr9
Wells, spea kin g on behalf of the
Me1gs County CommissiOners,
pledged full cooperatiOn wtth
protect work
Eddte Burkett, represe ntmg
the Oh-Kan Com Club , the
Mtddleport Amateur Gar .
deners , For hiS Wife, and the
Mtdd leport Ftrst Untied
Presbylertan Church, spoke on
the avatlabthty of wooden
commemorative cams
The Rev Wtlltam Mtd·
dleswart of the St Paul
Lu theran Chur ch, proposed
brmgmg m a dramahc group
for a hastoncal production .
Everyone appeared to

ge nerally agree that one of the
best county-wtd e proJects
would be restoratwn and
marktng of th e Ches ter
cow thouse , dtscussed by Leo
Story, acttve \\tth the Metgs
County Pwneer and H1s ton cal
Soctely
Posstble projec ts of the
Ra cme Grange were revtewed
by Ear l Cross, and Fred
Goegle m tal ked of the on gmal
'rol:k sprmgs" and of placmg a
marker there
Another place, whtch Hubert
Prtce of Lebanon Townshtp,
felt should be developed ts
located near the mouth of the
Shade Rtver It \\as forme1ly
known as 0 Dev1l's Hole ''. He
thought tht s area should be
developed mto a recrea hon stte
wt lh sce mc look outs and
prum ttve camping sttcs Mr s
Dolly Wolfe talked b11efly on
tentative plans or a btcentenmal nature for the Letart

area
Rice , Commission chairman,
reported that a semor student
semmar on the b1centenmal
wt ll be offered later thts year
and suggested that perhaps
three students could attend
Fee ts $100 each The student..
would be lramed and provtded
wtth matenals to go from
sc hool to school gtvtng
bi centennia l prese ntation s
Rtce sa td that donatwns
toward sponsormg the students
~til be sohctU,d
He announ ced th e next
meetmg wtll be on Tuesday at
7 30 p m , Aprtl 22, at the
Metgs Coun ty courthouse He
asked that more orgamzattons
be represented and prepared to
present spectfrc prOJect..
It was noted that the ap-

pltcalton has been ftled for
$5,000 approved by the Commtsston at lhe last meetmg for
museum development

m1les southwest of Saigon,
killing 18 civilians and
wounding 20 others, a Saigon
military swkesman said
The command said an Air
Vietnam commercial flight

was believed hit by enemy
antiaircraft fire Wednesday
near Plelku in the Central
Highlands, killing all 26 per·
sons aboard, including three
Americans,
In Saigon, the government
ordered a nationwide mobillza·
U01t, placing every man from
ROADS CLOSED
the
ages of 17 to 35 on milltacy •
The Ga llla·Melgs Post,
call
to meet the CommWJist
State HigHway Patrol
drive.
reported at 11:30 a.m. today
In the Mekong Delta, Comthat two roads In Meigs
mWlist
troops overran five
County and at least three In
hamlets
near Ba Trl distriCt
Gallta County arc closed due
town,
47
miles southwest of
to high water. Closed In
Meigs County were Routes Saigon, the command sald.
Communist troops attacked
681 andl43 . In Gallla County,
but
were repulsed and suffered
Rt. 141 south of Rt. 233 was
~
men
killed m attackll on.
shut off, as were Rl. 218
three district capltaJa-.couhty&gt;'
south of Metcervlll~ and Rt.
seats--in
Ba Xuyen province,
554 from Rt. 325 over toRt. 7.
100
miles
south of Saigon,
Some Gallia schools lei out
command
spokesman
U . Col.
students early Wednesday as
Le
Trung
Bien
smd.
a result of high water but no
The militia suffered 12 killed
school closings have been
and
23 wounded, Hlen sald.
reported In the area thus far.
Government warplanes
»W;:~::..~"J.&lt;..·~.:.:,::;.~~
knocked out eight tanks and
damaged nine others in driving
back a Communist armored
assault near the Parrot's Beak ,
• sector of the Cambodian ..
border and Go Dau Ha dlatrict
ca
pital, 35 miles west of
Two cars were damaged and
Sa1gon,
the command said.
one dnver cited to mayor 's
Pilots said they killed 77
cour t as the result of an acCommunist
soldiers during the
Cident on East Mam St , near
bombing
missions.
Landmark, at 6 am. ThursIn the five-day house-today, Pomeroy poltce sa1d
house
battle for the provincial
A car drtven by Lela
DeLeval, Athens, had stopped capital of Ban Me Thuot, 183
for a school bus whtch was miles north of Saigon, field
ptckmg up chtldren when tl was officers sa1d the government
poured in fresh troops to fight
struck from the rear by a car
drtven by Elmer Parsons, off thousands of tank-led North "
VIetnamese and Viet Cong
Racme There were minor
troops.
damages to th e Parsons
The Saigon command said
vehtcle and medtum damages
goverrunent forces cleared the
to the Del..eval ca r Parsons
c1ty of Communist tanks,
was ctted on an assured clear
destroymg 46 of them, but
dtstance charge
added, "It IS too difficult to say
what part (of the city)
belonged to whom "

Autos collide

on East Main

Democrats urged to cooperate
UP! Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Gov
James A Rhodes has urged
members of the Democraticco ntrolled OhiO General
Assembly to "bury parttsan
differences" and place all four
of h1s economic recovery
proposals on the ballot as a
cohesive program to create
JObs.
If the legtslators declme,
Rhodes repeated, he wtll do 1t
himself. And 1f the people of
Ohio don't approve, he warned,

the consequences wtll be

~~fast

and frtghterung "
The governor extended a
verbal olive branch as he
delivered hts "StaU, of the
State" message to a jomt
sessiOn of the General Assembly
He satd he wtll compromiSe
With the lawmakers on paris of
h1s package of four cottstatutwnal amendments on
housmg
fmance,
trantm·
sportatiOn,
pubhc
provements and tax rehef for

expa nding mdustr1es
But he satd he wtll only
compromtse tf the legtslature
agrees to place all four
measures on the ballot as a
untt
"Ohtoans want the1r leaders
to bury parttsan dtfferences
and get to work on programs to
proVIde JObs, fight crune and
reduce unemployment , ''
Rhodes sa1d. "The rmsery of
the
unemployment lme
overshadows the dtfference
between Republican and

Schools would receive more
COLUMBUS (UP! )
Breakdown of proposed
spending for primary and
secondary education m the
197&amp;-77 bleMium as outlined m
Gov James A Rhodes' $12 2
billion budget submitted to the
OhiO General Assembly
Wednesday ·
- An mcrease of $441.8
million m school funding,
whtch Rhodes called he
"largest planned mcrease•• m
Ohto's history
- Bas1c per-pup1l support
increased from $660 In 1975 to
$760 m 1976 and $1100 m 1977"
- Teachers salaries Increased by a rota I of $2,650 per
teacher

- Pupil transportation sui&gt;- s1des mcreased by $19.2 m1lhon
to cover higher fuel costs
--Special education umls tn·
creased by 500 m 1976 plus
another 350 m 1977 with an
mcreased bienntal approprta·
lion of $32 7 million.
-An increase of 1,400 in the
number
of
vocattonal
educahon Wilts m Ohto htgh
schools to be patd for by an
mcrease of $44.1 million m
appropriations
-An mcrease of $15 4 mtlllon
m the school lunch program
and the state substdy for each
free IWJch mcreased from 5 6
cents to 15 cent~
Rhodes, m his budge! mes·
IJ

sage, also recommended
- The staU, Department of
Educatton and the State Board
of Educahon be forbidden to
mandate standa&lt;ds or programs that mcrease speodmg
for school distncts or for
U,acher trauung mstituttons,
wtthout priOr approval of the
governor or the leg.slature
-The legislature act to
ensure that state funds for
pubhc educatiOn go dtrectly to
local school dtsl"'cts.
- The Jeg1slature propose
legislatton to designate poor
school dtstncts for the purpose
of proVIdtng add1t10nal state
fundmg

Democrat Ohioans don't want
polttiCal biCkermg and ol&gt;struclwrusm."
Rhodes also released a $12 2
billion proposed state budget
for the,next two years, but he
referred only brtefly to 11 m his
speech, telling lawmakers 11 1s
balanced and calls for no new
taxes
'
"It will meet the operatmg
needs of state government for
the next two years," the
governor sa1d "However, it
does not and cannot come to
grtps w•th the top problem
facmg •very OhiO cttlzen
loday,"
That problem, Rhodes sa1d,
ts 284,000 Ohioans out of work
drawmg Wlemployment compensation and 10,000 added to
the ltst each week.
"I have proposed solutions to
thts legtslature," the governor
satd. "I am dead ser1ous about
them. "
Rhodes satd he regards the
most unportant of h1s four
plans as the tax abatement .
program for mdustr1es ex·
panding to mner c1tles.
The program has not been
cleared by e1ther chamber of
the General Assembly, and
maJonty Democrats already
have drastically revised 1t.
"The consequence of failure
to act tn this area ts fast and
~

Lions to push

f rtghtemng ," the governor
satd "We are now losmg jobs
m Oh10 to states which have tax
abatement The loss of jobs
means welfare costs we cannot
Plans for expanding the
afford "
club 's flag program were
Rhodes satd West Vtrgmla ts annoWJced by Prestdent Lou
on the brmk of capturmg a $400 Osborne when Pomeroymtllion coal conversiOn plant Mtddleport Uons met for IWlch
because 1t ts adoptmg tax at the Me1gs Inn Wednesday at
abatement programs for m- noon
dustnes
Members were assigned
"We must act now on tax calls they are to make m the
abatement to stay m the race, fla g program. Under 11,
and brmg the plant to Belmont busmesses pay a fee to have
County where 11 belongs," the U S flag placed tn front of
Rhodes satd, "If we do act, we the1r establishment.. and taken
can make Ohto the coal con- down on holidays A committee
verSion cap1tal of the nation " appotnted to select and buy
The governor also sa1d r.ew flags mcludes C. J .
Cleveland, Akron and Youngs- Struble, Bob Hill, and ~v .
town are on the verge of losmg Wtlll8m M1ddleswarth. A guest
maJor mdustrtes to states w1th of Don Pearch for the luncheon
hetter tax climates
was Kenley Krmn
''Compronuse IS the result of
a healthy exchange of Ideas,"
Rhodes said. "It is the
eSsenhal tool of the political
process I will compr01ruse on
The Zerkle Trucking Co.,
any constructive plan thai
operated since 1929 by the late
recogmzes that these four
programs are dependent on John Zerkle, has been sold to
Gary Chapman, HWltington,
each other "
Rhodes told the legislators W Va.
Chapman Is affiliated w1th
that housmg ts needed, as well
as transportatiOn and pubhc the Chapman Trucking Co.,
Huntington. The Zerkle Co, will
Improvements to help put
Ohtoans back to work on mamtain the same twne, the
same employes and the l(8llle
(Contmued Qn page 2)
serv•ce!l.
~
~

flf)g program

Finn is sold

I

I

�3- 'J,'he Datly Sent mel Mtddleport Pomeroy 0 Tl ursday March 13 1975
2- The Dally Sentmel M ddleport Pomeroy 0 Thursday March 13 1975

Rhodes would hold the line fOr next two years
By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Gov
James A Rhodes has proposed
a $12 2 btlhon state budget for
the next two years holdmg
most major government ser
VICes at current levels and
reqwrtng no new or mcreased
taxes

Rhodes fiSCal plan unve led
Wednesday as an 18 4 per cent
mcrease over the current twoyear budget of $10 3 b II on It
will be sent through the
leg slat ve mill along wtth an
$11 5 b ll on ap~ropr alton supported by Democrats control!
mg the Ohio General Assem
bly
Leg slatave Democrats a!
ready are holdmg publtc
hearangs on thetr own budget
and Rhodes proposal \\Ill be
mcorporated w th that study
The new state budget peraod
begms July I
Rep Myrl H Shoemaker DBournevtlle chaarman of the
House Ftnance Comm ttee
sa d he hopes to get the gaant
appropraatton through the
House by May 15 gtvmg the
Senate SIX more weeks to clear
ll
The governor s budget IS
shghtty tess than the $12 S
b lhon outlay recommeoded by
former Gov John J Gilligan
before he left off ce last
January
But 11 exceeds the $11 5
btllton
fiscal
blueprmt
by
majority
proposed
Democrats m the legtslature
who already are holdmg
hearings on their own plan and
eventually will have to dovetall
the two budgets
State legaslators were unable
to comment on the new budget
proposal Wednesday no! hav
mg read or been briefed on the
500-page document
State Flnllnce Dll'ector How

ard L Call er told newsmen at
a brae! ng that even the
governor had not seen the f nul
budget
Cather satd his staff s rev'll
nue proJecltons fell below tl)e
G lhgan admuustrat on s but
as many existmg programs as
poSSible were crammed nto
the budget caus ng at to approach G Hagan s spend ng
f gure

'fhe other $50 mtlhon as fran
leftover parochaaad federal
re enue sharmg and spec al

rotary funds he sad
Coli er sa td the budget
proposal has been pared as
far as t can be logacally
reduced w thou! hurt ng some
cr heal areas He sa d the
nun her of state emploves w ll

pla~!r~ s~~h~. 7~n~ Advantage
IS

director expla n ng that eve ry

::::~b~ell~~~·;geJevenue

Coil er c ted a slumpmg
economy as the reason for
reducmg the G ll gan admtrus
tratlon s revenue estunates
but predtcled at would began to
unprove next year

General state revenues ex
eluding federal funds were
projected at $7 25 b lllon by the
Rhodes adman stratton
Gall gan recommended
spend ng $7 37 bill on n stale
funds
and
leg slat ve
Democrats are workmg w th
$7 29 b ilton m state morues
In fact Collier satd the
Rhodes admmlstratlOrt was
forced to scrape together $354
mtlhon m excess funds mamty
through bookkeepmg devaces
to mak.e ends meet
The bulk of this money s a
$219 m1lhon cushion the Gilb
gan admmtstratton declined to
budget because fmanctal
advisers said It was needed to
carry the state through low
cash pertods
Collier expWned the $219
million money plus an extra $8:i
million can be spent because of
a proposed new policy which
needs legaslatlve approval of
spreadmg corporation tax pay
ments throughout the year
mstead of rece vmg most of
them in February through
Mav

J

cited for higher
natural gas hills in Ohio

c._, u~s
Decon
roth g
o pr ce of ne"
natura gas at 1 r wellhead w11l
n can h gher na u at gas bUs
n he fu ure bu

u ma ely

wou d mean more athe han
less money n he pockets of
Oh o wage..,arners accord ng
o H Cl !ford Taylor pres dent
of he Oh o Gas Assoc at on
W II ou more gas JObs are
n jeopardy Taylor sa td nan
article publ shed the curren
ssue of he OGA Newsletter
He sa d hat he best
es rna es or he gas ndustr)
are that an average cus omer
would pay an ex ra $13 a year
for he nex len years f he
pr ce of new gas were
decontrol ed at the wellhead
A an average wage of $3
per hour t would lake at least
two years before the ncreases
an the pr ce of gas servace
would cos t a person who holds
a JOb 10 ndus ry as much as f
he were load off for only one
day as a result or curtaa~1 ent
of gas suppl cs 10 nduslr es
Taylor a v ce pres dent for
Columba Gas of Ohto sad
More Important s the fact
that decontrol would en
courage the devetopmen of
nore gas at a pr ce wh ch
would st tt be qu te ow when
compared to other r els he

Income growth projected saT~ylor sad gas producers
are presently discouraged

COLUMBUS (UP!) - In a
projeeUon of Ohio s economy
contained in Gov James A
Rhodes budget message for
the 1976 77 biennium the
governor Wednesday sa1d the
state s personal income Is
expected to gr9w by 9 2 per
centmftscall976andbyneariy
14 per cent In fiscal 1977
Recent changes In the Ohio
economy are very similar to
changea taking place tn the
US economy aaa whole said
Rhodes Projected rates of
growth in Ohto s GNP (Gross
National Product) and per
sonal ~e closely follow the
rates of growth projected for
the entire country
In Ohio m 1974 severe
recession in the automobile
Industry was balanced somewhat by strengthening steel
and machine tools
Au tomoblle andhi hamakppllance
manu1acturers w c
e up
a large portion of Ohio s Industrlal economic base have
alreadycutproductlonandlald

,.

News.

off workers
Rhodes said
While demand for steel has
begun to decrease steeltnven
torles are already relatively
low so that If inventories are
replenished layoffs are ex
peeled to be minamal
A lessening of mflatlon m
general and the use of the
manufacturers rebates ln par
tlcular will encourage cons urn
er spending by lncreasmg real
disposable 1ncome
Rhodes
said
Automobile manufac
lures rebates have been effec
live in mcreaslng sales even
though current new car In
ventories total about 1 6 ntlllion
units
The greatest hope for strong
econontlc recovery however
lies tn housing satd the
governor
Declmmg short-term inter
est rates are drawmg savings
back into the thrift instltu
lions Rhodea said thereby
mcreaslng the funds available
for loans to home buyers and
butlders

• •

$441 8 m 11 on over the curren t
approprtallon but $66 million
below he amount legtslative
Democrats have proposed
Co t er sa d thts amount
state corrections system
would ncrease fundmg from
Single Allocat oo
1 he largest s ngle allocation $660 per pup 1 to $800 per pupil
n I~&lt; Rhodes budget s $2 22 m the state s ti13 public school
b Ilion for pramary and second distracts
But he warned the bud~et
ary education an mcrease of
be red~ced n most areas of
gove nment wtth the except ons of mental health the Oh o
Youth Comm ss on and the

in Briefs

ConUnued from pase I
ratao f1gure show mcreaslng profitability while declines pomt to
shrinkmg profits or losses
AKRON - GOODYEAR TIRE &amp; RUBBER CO has been
awarded the contract for aU tire service on eqmpment used In the
construction of the Trans Alaska Pipeline Goodyear Prestdent
John H Gerstenmater announced Wednesday
Gerste1Ull8ler satd the contract from Alyeska Pipeline
Servtce Co was tbe largest single servtce contract m the rubber
mdustry history He d1d not reveal the dollar value of the pact but
881d Goodyear will servace some 2 OttO vehtcles

from selhng gas to the n
terstate market by the low
pr ce whtch the Federal Power
Commassaon has set for such
gas
In~rstate gas s essenhal to
Ohto Taylor sa d s nee Oh o as
dependent on mported natural
gas o meet ts gas needs
In a normal year Oh o gas
customers consume 1 2 tr ll on
cubtc feet of natural gas but
our sta e produces on ly about a
hundred btlhon cu bac feet of
gas annually
Even
f Oh 0 s gas
product on doubled the sta te
must stll mport a tr tt on
cub c feet of gas every year
he saad
But because of unreal sl c
pr ce regula! on by the Federal
Power Commass on on gas
comm tted to the mlerstate
market producers are selhng
thetr gas mtrastate where t s
not subJect to federal
regulat on Taylor sa d
Th s s understandable
Intrastate produchon of
natural gas s prof table In
terstate production s not
Taylor sa d
He pomted to Lou stana
where last November the top
pr ce patd for mtrastate gas
was $2 12 a thousand cub c fee t
Th s was at the same tame
that the FPC was mchmg t~e
pr ce of nterstale gas up to SO
cents a thousand Taylor sad
Let s face It II you had
natural gas to sell would you
selllt for 50 eents a thousand
cubic feel ir someone else
offered $2 1% per thousand•
Taylor asked

DR. LAMB

Th s docsn
mean that sho tages force mdus res to
de ontrol wou d br ng abou
educe product on leve s and
run vay pr ces It akes me ay off en p oyees
deve op gas f elds so he gas
Taylor emphas zed ha as
" uld be deve oped g adually
mpor ant as decontrol s t s
Cus tomers wou d pay he only one solu on o the gas
h g:l er pr ces on ly for new gas sho tage
and hen o ly when hal gas
He stressed the need fa
ac ua ly became ava lable for mmed a e act on on such
Democrats proposed n
d str bu on Taylor sad
proJects as he explorat on and
creasmg
the current average
He added ha the gas n develop men of gas reserves on
$53
monthly
welfare check by
dustry s concerned about wha
he At an 1c Ou er Con nenta
25
per
cent
but Collaer saad
mpact h gher gas b l s wIt Shelf he development of he
have on the consumer Bu e Alaskan a d Canad an Arct c $2 13 bdllon would only enable
ponte ou hese ncreases gasp pel nes ll e mporat on of the state to malnta n exastmg
nust be we ghed aga ns the l que( ed na ural gas fro n payments because of m
cost to he consumer hat s abroad and the establ shmen creasmg welfare rolls
MaJor welfare allocat ons
fo rced to use much h gher of na ona energy research
are
$816 m Ilion for atd to
p ed al erna e fuels or he programs
dependent
chtldren compared
mpuc on I e econom} f gas
wtth the current $639 m Ilion
and $842 mtllion for health
care compared wath the
current $667 ntlllion
Collier satd he does not
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Holzer Medacal Center
ant
capate a need for mcreased
ADMITTED
Sherwood
iDtscharged March12)
taxes
for two years After
Meredtlh El zabeth Bar
Edna Bryant John Carl Jr
that
I
can t say he added
on Long Bottom Orv lle Mrs
Alv n Cu rt s and
The fmance director pomted
McVay Clar ngton Juan ta daughter Mrs M chae Dixon
out
the budget contams no new
Chapman
Cl !ton
Ruby and daugller Della Dyke
tax
reducllons and he said
Bossard Reedsvalle Paul ne Ruth Evans Nelle Fultz
Rhodes
was more than a httle
J ones Chesh re
Sandra Shawn Goeglem
Beulah
Jcnk ns Sy acusc
Jenk ns Dorothy K t hen
DISCHARGED - Ralph Penny Lepor Kathlme Long
Wells Jesse Morr s R chard Kathryn McAll ster Dolla
EXTENDED FORECAST
Thomas Eugene Young Helen Mohler Ruth Montgomery
Saturday through Monday
partly
cloudy Saturday wath
Jeffers Kathryn Erw n Roger Thelma Morgan
George
a chance of showers Sunday
Shene!teld
N cmsk) Jud th Potter Datsy
and Monday Haghs wall be In
Roush John P Stanley Ella
the lOs north to mad 50s m the
00 Tucker Geneva Tuttle Carnell
south Lo\\s \\Ill be mostly an
Vance Angela Walker Paul ne
the 30s
Walker Stacy Walker Nancy
•~
Wa son Bobby Westfall
~-.. ""'
~:~~,~:;:;:;:~&lt;::::::::::::::::::)
Wh te
Vater e
No charges were f led n a Sherry
wo car headon call s on W 11 ams Wendell Woodruff
Wednesday morn ng n wh ch M nme Wr ghl
I Births)
four persons were nJured on
Mr and Mrs Steven Cump
Rt 7 bet\\een Addtson and
ston a daughter Pt Pleasan
Chesh re
Plans for a pOn) pull have
The Galha Meags Post State W Va Mr 'llnd Mrs Roger been made by he Tuppers
H ghwa) Pa rot sa d an au o I ee Wh te a daughter Pta ns
Pony
Pullers
operated by Debra Clonch 19 Wellston
Assoc at on
of M ddleport ran mto some
Pres d ng at the mee ng at
Pleasant\ alley Hospalal
wa er on the haghway wh ch
A
fred Grange Hall was Elza
DISCHARGES
Mrs
caused her to lose control of
Cr
ckett Pull ns pres dent
James Schuler and daughter
her car The veh cle went left
The
pull wall be held Apr 1 S at
Mrs
James
of the center str k ng a car M dd eport
7 30 p m at the Bar 30 grounds
dr ven by John K ng 25 of Mayes Glenwood Mrs Dallas south of Tuppers Plams A
Ba les Robertsburg Sll)nle)
Belle w va
Brown
ng lfonton
Mrs collecl on for flowers was
Adm lied to the Holzer
taken up J oyce and Rtchard
Med cal Center was Debra Ronald L~ons Mason Jackte Douglas agreed to take charge
Ell ott Po nt Pleasant Mrs
Clonch w th facta! fractures
of the refres hment stand
Arthur
H gg anbotham
whale K ng
and
two
Seventeen
persons attended
Rober tsburg
Mrs
John
passengers an h s car Herbert
Hartford
Joe Ano her mee ng wall be held
Jordan 44 Marmet W Va K•arns
before he pull
and George B Porter 29 Inger ck Po nt Pleasan
Charleston were all treated lor Ja nes C Co tr 11 Syracuse
Mrs Dale F !e Galhpol s
m nor nJurtes
Acoli s on occurred at I 40 P George F ljfper Galhpol s
m on Lincoln Pike Rd eaght Ferry Kevan Barton Mad
Damta Manley
tenlhsofamlenortho!Rt 790 dleport
Mtddleport Mrs Donald
where cars dr ven by Gary Roush Syracuse
Ross ter 26 Rt 1 Scotto"n
and Ivan Clark 59 Scottown
WASHINGTON (UP!)
s desw ped
There
was
Aboug 65 m 11 on years ago a
moderate dama ge and no
long ne~ked beast w th w ngs
COLUMBUS
U PI
c tatton was assued
51
fee t w de soared hke a
Federa sta e summa y of
John Karak s 21 R o Oh o I vestock auct ons vul ure over a west Texas
Grande was c ted to Mun c pal Wednesday
s ream bed n search of a meal
Catt
e
Compared
to
ast
Court for fa lure to stop w th n
from a fallen d nosaur turtle
s augh er s teers
the assured c ear d stance hWednesday
or crocod le
ghe
slavgh e
he fers
follow ng an accadent at 2 50 p steady o 75 cents h ghe
That s the scene that maghl
slaughter
cows
s
eady
to
m on Rt 35 at the Adamsv lle
be maganed on the basts of a
h ghe s augh e bu s steady
Cora Rd
report
by Douglas Lawson m
to
Iowe vea ers 4 lowe
The patrol sa d the Karak s feeder catt e s eady
th s week s ssue of Sc ence
S aughter stee s Cho ce and
car struck the rear of a car
magaz ne
pr
me
900
2SO
y
e
d
grade
2
4
dr ven by John Hand 28 Rt 4 35 J6 90 h gl\d ess ng 37 37 50
Until now most sc entists
Waverly
had not believed any flvtng
cho ce 33 35 50 good 3 34
standa d 24 71 30 60
crea ure could be that bag But
Slavghte he fers Cho ce
La\\son says he found the fossa!
740 00 y eld grade 2 4 3 34
bones
of a such w nged reptle
few 34 36 20 oood 27 95 32 50
S aughfe COWS Uf ty and
n the s ltstone and sandstone
com mere al 785 1665 17 22 80
of" hat once was a stream bed
cu fer 4 20 25
n west Texas B g Bend
Slaughte bu s Y e d g ade
335 2371 25 11-1 2B
Nat anal Park
Vea ers Good 2 5 220 39 SO
Its really unth nkable that
....
lh s partacular b g beast was
Feeders Cho ce steers 300
not a fly ng an mat of some
600 24 27 75 good 300 600 19 so
23 25 cho ce he fers 300 400 22
sort however he managed to
You should also see your 24 25 good 300 500 7 25 23 so do I sa d Dr Wann Langston
Hogs
Ba rows and g Its
lam ly doc or and be sure you steady
Umversity or Texas
US 2 2 5 221 39 BO Jr
don t have some medacal 40 90 us 2 3 212 255 28 85 39 40 geology
professor
who
Sows Steady to SO cents supervised Lawson s work
problem that IS slowmg )OU
US 3 420 575 39 40 80
down 1 ke lo\\ thyroad func lower
whale he was a Texas graduate
US I 2 421 471 37 38
lion Your doctor ma) also
Feeder p gs Steady US 2 3 student
\\ant to check out )Our en 30 40 t8 J6 per head
Sheep S aughte lambs 75
GLENN VOTED YES
do crane hormone ) system
h gher Choice and pr me shorn
WASHINGTON UP!)
La"
thyroid
funct on w th 48 SO so 21 ot fa I sho.-n
Sen John Glenn D-Ohto was
sometimes slows down growth l 21
as does other endoclr ne
one of 58 Democrats voting n
favor
of the strap numng b ll
problems
wh ch passed the Senate by a
Perhaps your mother could
84-13 vole Wednesday Sen
help you 1! she would con
Sho,.ers hkely today and Robert A Taft Jr R-Ohio
centrale on g vmg you foods
ton
ght Lows ton ght m the low was n Cancmnalt recuperatmg
lo\l n fats and carboh) drates
30s Cloudv coolen Frtday from e e surgery and dad no
even for that even ng meal
Send your quest ons to Dr h gh m the lo" 40s Probabality \Ote
Lamb an care of th s of prec p tat on 50 per cent
ASK TOWED
ne,.spaper P 0 Box 1551 toda) and ton ght 20 per cent
Vance 18 Rt 2
Robert
Radto City Statton New York Fr day
Alban) and Donna Jean
NY 10019 For a copv of Dr
Preast 18 Rt 2 Albany
Lambs booklet on losmg
we ght send 50 cents and a
LOCAL TEMPS
long self-addressed stamped
PTA TO MEET
The temperature m down
envelope to the same address to" n Pomeroy at 11 a m today
Pomeroy Elementary PTA
and ask for the
Losmg "as 40 degrees under cloud)
w 11 meet Mondav at the school
at
7 30 p m
We ghl booklet
skies

HOSPITAL NEWS

Cars COllide,
charues are filed

Pony pull date
on April fifth

51-foot wings
carried beast

through air

endurance w th relahvely laght
weaghts
rather
than
progreSSively ancreasmg the
weaghts to very large loads
The ~h s that small
weaghtS
help you to
develop good bone structure
Certa nly any exercuse that
mvolves lifting l our own bod)
ts not harmful Here I would
tnclude develop ng your
capacaly to do push-ups cltin
ups sal ups and at least
modtfted knee bends In
general a good all around
calesthemc exercase program
wall help you develop gOod
muscles and good bones
You don t need to overdo
weight llftang to develop good
muscles Don t try to lift
we1ghts that you can t lift
eastly three times m a row
Liftmg that weaght more than
12 limes more often than three
days a week w1ll not speed up
muscle development More

wrn

frequent I fts n ay even slow
muscle growth
DEAR DR LAMB - I m 16
years old male and am 5-feet
1 I 1 also 20 pounds over
.. eaght I try and try but I JUSt
can l lose that extra weaght I
walk four m les almost every
day and only eat half a
cucumber lor lunch but my
mother makes me eat more for
danner I JUS! don t know what
to do I m afraad I 11 never lose
that much wetght Maybe If I
start to gro11 1t wall help
Please gave me a couple of taps
DEAR READER
Some
young men QO through this
stage And ~ou are raght that
) ou may still grow an hetghl
and get some help that way
Meanwhtle why don t you
make arNlilgements at one of
the gym &lt;acalitaes an lour area
to start some form or weight
tram ng program an addation to
your dally walks That maght
belp more than lou real ze
~

bat upset about lt
However he noted the 10 per
cent property tax rollback will
contmue to be funded at $312
mtlllon a year and real estate
tax relief for elderly homeown
ers IS m the budget at $66
nullion
A d to htgher educat on
would be pushed over the $1
ball on mark for the fll'st time
m Ohio s htslory a $268 null1on
ncrease over the current

approprtahon
But the freeze on fees at
state-supported unaverstties
would be etimmated and the
budget of the Ohto Board of
Regents trammed by more than
20 per cent
Pro bides Fees
Collter sa d the budget would
enable the stale to furnish 6S
per cent of the cost of a
student s education next year
and 70 per cent by 1977
proVIded fees are not ra sed by
Wltvers ties
The Rhodes budget contams

Weather

$308 mUllan for capital Ill
provements at universlti&amp;
Collaer sa1d at would be the ..
major appropraation \&gt;r IIi
purpose for a long tim
because enrollments ar
droppmg
Mental health and ret!~
dation would receive taL
nullion compared wtth Ill
current $501 I million CoUll
satd the administration pllll
to mcrease staffmg at meDia
msl!tutions from 4 794 to 8..
by 1977 one of the few aree
where personnel would bt
mcreased
AppropriBttons for mdustrill
development and the Obk
Environmental Protectlor
Agency were mcreased slighll)
under the Rhodes plan
Coll1er 881d the propollll
budgets of elected state Ill
flc1als most of them DeJDOo
crats were submitted u
receaved from the of
ftceholders They contained
stzeable mcreases

Courses in fitness,
judo, defense for
women offered
RIO GRANDE Rio Grande
College and Rto Grande
Communaty College wall offer
several courses durmg the 1975
Spr ng Quarter to persons
concerned wtth personal health
and fitness
On Monday even ngs from
8 10-9 40 p m a course n
Adult Sl mnastics wall be
offered women mterested m
reducang or controlling waeght
The course w 11 prepare n

Credit bureau
owner will he
sentenced soon
RIPLEY W Va
A Pomt
Pleasant man will be sen
tenced March 27 m Jackson
County Circu t Court m con
neclion w th the ftrst charge
brought under the 1974 Con
sumer Protection Act
Robert Cochran owner of the
Pomt Pleasant Credit Bureau
pleaded gualty earlier th1s
week to a two-count mdictment
accusmg ham or making an
noyang and threatenang
telephone
calls
and
rrusrepresenting himself to a
Sandyville woman
A debt owed by Lisa Rexroad
and her husband had been
turned over to Cochran s credat
bureau for collection satd
Asst Pros Sam Snyder and
Cochran allegedly called Mrs
Rexroad usmg a false name
and S8ld she would be charged
an extra $20 and her property
would be auctioned off if she
dldn t pay the debt In one day
The maxamum penalty for
the offense IS one year m priSOn
and a $1 OttO fme

Market Report

Lift weights in moderation
By Lawr;once E Lamb M D
DEAR DR LAMB I am 13
and started l fting weaghts
regularly Then someone told
me that lifting we1ghls would
hioder by bones He said that
anyone younger than 17 should
not be liftmg weaghls
It was mentioned ar you lift
weaghts now you would not be
able to bwld your muscles to
!hell' full capactly later when
your bones are fmtshed
growang My question as
should I still lift we1ghts or
should I stop until my bones
have matured' Also as It all
raght to do a lot of push-ups and
other msucle developmg
exercases'
DEAR READER - Like so
many other thangs at as
question of getting enough but
not going to wretched excess
Of course you can hft
weights I think though that
very young boys should con
centrale on developmg muscle
~
{J

allows school fund ng only
under the cWTent state subsady
formula wh ch has been
conden ned as anequ table
The rach distr cts have gotten
r cher and the poor distracts
have gotten a I ttte less poor
Collaer con! rmed
Coli er sa d any equaltzation
formula denved by the legtsla
lure wall requ re several
hundred m tt on dollars more
The money s not avatlable he
S8ld
The fmance d rector satd
$400 m Ilion would have been
available to fund equalization
of the formula but the
legaslature dec ded to spend t
n a supplemental school approprtallon n February
Budget Requirements
The Rhodes budget calls for
$2 13 bilhon lor pubhc welfare
compared w th the current
$1 72 b Ilion and legtslatave
Democrats $2 22 b Ilion

CHANGE PROPOSED
State Rep Ronald James (D
Proctorvalle) has nlroduced as
a co-sponsor a ball n the Ohto
House of Represental!ves to
prov de that the nterest
earned on money patd nto the
State Wtldlife Fund be credaled
to that fund rather than the
General Revenue Fund At
present the States wtldlife
programs under the Wildlife
D v saon n the Department of
N~tural Resources are funded
entirely out of the W ldlife
Fund plus 1 mated federal
subs d es Nearly all of the
Waldl fe Fund s mcome '
der ved from hunt ng and
f shmg I censes

dtvtduals to develop exercise
programs based upon an
dtv dual needs The course will
be offered through the
Colleges Contanuang
Education service

Included on the Wednesday
even ng shcdule wall be a
course n body condationmg
from 8 10-10 10 p m for peQple
desmng to mllate a per
sonahzed fatness program
Th s w 11 be a vagorous
program mcludmg joggmg
swmumng resistant exerctseS
and learn ng fundamentals m a
varaety of lifetime sports The
course may be taken for credit
It
1s
or
non credat
coeducataonal
For mdtvtduals mterested an
the marital arts two courses
wall be avatlable Courses m
Self Defense for Women from
8 10-10 10 p m and Judo wall
meet on Thursday evenmgs
both 8 10 10 10 p m Self
Defense as open to only women
nlerested m learmng tactics
and strategaes of self defense
Judo w ll be open to males or
females while the only out
standmg cost for th1s course
other than twtion cost wtll be
that of the judo umform
(Judog )
These courses wtll meet one
evenmg a week for 10 weeks
begmnmg the week of Tuesday
March 25 To parhcpate m
dtv duals must regtster and
complete payment on Monday
March 24 at the College Ad
m1ss1ons Offace Thas wtll be
open from 9 un to 9 p m The
course cost w1ll be $13 for
Communaty College Distract
resadents and $17 for Ohto
resadents who live outs de the
four-county d stract

Democrats

ConUnued from page 1
construction proJects
However for permanent
results espectally m depressed
areas tax abatement as neces.
sary the governor sa1d One
or two of these programs
wathout the others as not
enough to do the job I am
willing to compromtse on any
plan which takes all four mto
account
But I will not compromise
on tbe basic goal-creaUng
jobs for Ohioans Rhodes oon
Unued Oh1oa11S want joba
and they want j~be now The
masery and suffering of
Oiuoans has just begun If we do
not do something munediately
to get them back to work
Democratic legislative leaders have been trymg to decide
whether to place Rhodea $1 34
bllhon transportation bond
POMEROY LANES
T Coun y L eague
ISSue and his housing plan on
Feb 5 1~75
the
November ballot
PIS
46
The governor has indacated
42
he
will attempt to secure more
J8
J6 than 300 000 sagnatures to place
28
26 all four of his measures oo the
H gh nd Game A L
ballot by the initiative methOd
2 9 B
Ra.dfo d
All 'I have asked ts that all
H gh Se es
Ha v
T h omas 566- B
Radio d 564
four of these programs the tu
Team H gh Game
M dwes
abatement the cities bond
S ee Co 905
Team H gh Se es
M d
ISSUe the tranBportatlon bond
wes .S ee Co 26 ?
ISSUe and the housing amendment be placed before the
Ear y Wednesdily M xed
Pts voters said Rhodes I am
Regat a n
48 dead serious about those ,
Young s Supe Ma ket
46
rrograms becauae they create :
Sm h Nelson Mo o s
4
Z de s ,Spor Sl'lop
37
250 000 jobs
•
Ten hF arne s
24
Let us all work together :
NesonOugCo
22
H gh nd Game
La ry
until the dark days are behind :
DtJgl!ln 233 Edwa d Voss 232
us the governcr concluded :
Wo:'TI en
He en Phelps 220
Be y Sm h 94
lel us begin now '!be best :
H gh Seres
Men A L
thing
you can do IS to be able to •
Pne ps
6 3 E Voss. 600
Women
Helen Phe ps 559
return to the wters ol your :
B~ y Sm h 497
Team H gM Game and Seres district and say I have done '
R ~ gat a o 7H and 2 37
my job

Knight named

Fisk suffers broken arm
By United Press International

Carlton Ftsk IS back n
familw surroundings today
baseballs dtsabled 1st
Both Ftsk and the Boston
Red Sox are probabl) shar ng
the same 'what did we do to
deserve this feelmgs but the
fact IS that Ftsk baseball s
most mjury-hexed player s
out agam-thas tame w th a
broken arm
Ftsk whom ssed the hrst 17
games of last season wath a
grom tn)ury and then two
months later was s delmed for
the balance of the season w th a
knee inJury was struck on the
arm Wednesday by a patched
bal from Detroit Tigers
r ghthander Fred Holdsworth
and wall be lost to the Red Sox
for two months
For the Red Sox who lost the
• exhibition game 6-2 the news
couldn t be worse Ftsk s m
JUries last year were generally
• regarded as the baggest reason
the Red Sox fell out of the
pennant race and th s season
thear two closest r vats n the
American League East the
New York Yankees and
Balllmore Onoles
have
strengthened themselves un
mensely through off season
trades
Another pennant hopeful
club the Ne\\ York Mets also
were hlt by the InJUry hex Joe

Torre the Mets most touted
off .,season acqu s ton suffered
an ankle spra n n an exhibtl o
gan e wtth the Yankees
Torre on "hom the Mets are
count ng heavily to supply
some much-needed power this
year spra ned his r ght ank le
n a freak ace dent when he
tr pped over third base wh le
back ng off the bag to pernut
Yankee baserunner Bobby
Bonds to each the base X
ra)S
however
proved
negatave and Torre was not
expected to be s del ned more
than a few days
The n]ury to Torre took
much or the lustre off the
heralded duel of the Ne" York
aces Calf sh Hunter for the
Yankees versus Tom Seaver of
the Mets Seaver backed by a
pa r of solo home runs from
another recent Mets acqws
t on Dave K ngman got th e
best or the four nn ng duel and
held the Yankees scoreless
Hunter gave up only one other
hit but came out the loser m
the 3-&lt;l Mets w n
Elsewhere on the Grapefru t
League carcu t
Ha Breeden s three run
homer off Ste e Carlton and
rook e Bomba R vera s two-run
blast off J un Lonborg powered
the Montreal Expos to a 10-1
rout of the Phtladelph a Phil
1es A three-run homer by

Dave Parker off lefthander
John CUrt s helped the P tts
burgh P rates to a 6-4 w n over
he St I outs Card nals The
Cardinals B tea powered
by homers from Bake Me
Br de Ken Re tz Make Tyson
and Jam Dwyer &lt;,lrubbed the
Chun ch Dragons 14-4 on 18
hits
Joe Fer~:~~son smacked a
hree run homer n the seve1 th
nn ng and Nat onal I eague
n ost valuable player Steve
Garve) pounded out four h ts to
hit U e Los Angeles Dodgers to
a 9 7 tnumph over the
Ball n ore Or ales Newly-ac
qu red Ken Singleton homered
for Baltamore Ret ef p tcher
Pat Zachar~ s bases~oaded
runth nrung walk to Jose Cruz
handed the Houston Astros a
12 It w n over the C nc nnall
Reds m a ragged game that

Predicts

CIN CINNA tI UPl)

close game

COLLEGE STATION Tex
UP!) - Texas A&amp;M coach
Shelby Metcalf says the Aggaes
game agamst C nc nnat m the
hrst round of the NCAA
basketball playoffs should be a
pretty even match
The baggest problem for us
wall be at the pomt posahon
\\here they have a 6-4 aga nst
our 0-10 Metcalf saad Wed
nesday Other than that I
th nk we match up pretty well
I thmk the teams are pretty
comparable Both are good
shoot
ng teams wath good
Freedom Hall thts year wath
hopes of better box office balance and good depth
There as no doubt that this
success m an area known as a
Cine nnall team IS gomg to
basketball hotbed
The sponsors are so con contend for the nataonal tatte
ftdent of that prospect that they nex year or the year after f
have reserved dates for the they stay together I JUSt
next two years an Freedom believe so much 1n thts A&amp;M
Hall an arena seatmg nearly team that I thank we re gomg to
be m the ball game
17 000
The Aggaes meet Cmcmnata
Southern Cal seekmg to
emerge from UCLA s shadow at 7 p m m Lubbock Saturday
Th s team s not ready for
and claun some prestige for
tself n thts tourney has relied the season to end Metcalf
heav1ly on the consummate satd I feel hke we re JUS! now
skills of Wtlliams this season peakmg I d 1 ke to see JUS! how
W llaams a 6-2 semor was good we can be
I m lookmg forward to
named West Coast Player of
the Year by UP! this week over play ng m Lubbock If I could
such stars as Dave Meyers of choose any place to play that
UCLA and Ron Lee of Oregon would be my second chotec to
For Drake ton ght s game here
Tech s student newspaper
wall be a homecommg for
Larry Haralson a 6-9 product called and sad they were
of LoUISVIlle Male H1gh School try ng to get thetr students
who leads the Bulldogs m behind us We d do the same
for them here Our semors
scormg w th a 20 I average
Anzona has overpowered have played well m Lubbock
many of al• opponents this We ve won two games and lost
season wath the InSide play of by two points there
JUnior AI Flemmg and
sophomore Bob Ellaott Ellaott
ts averagmg 22 8 pomts per
game while Flemmg as hilt ng
at a 20-pomt-a game chp
Ball Hosket who starred an
East Carolma has spread 1ts
baske ball at the hagh school
scormg around w th semor
college and professional level
forward Gregg Ashorn s 14 8
w ll be the speaker when the
average h ghest on the team
Southeastern Oh10 Athleltc
League holds als 26th annual
all eague basketball banquet
at Waverly s Lake Whale Club
Monday March 17) Reser
valtons for the 6 45 p m
banquet may be made through
league schools Ttckets are $4
each
Head ng the I st of honorees
w ll be Waverly Coach Carroll
Hawhee named Coach of the
Year and Wellston s Randy
Peoples selected as the Most
Valuable Player Troph es w 11
also be presented o J m Ntday
of Galbpohs and M tch Wr ght
of Logan "ho lted for the
league s free throw leadersh p
Also to be honored w ll be other
members of the all league
team ncludmg honorable

HEAT WITH WOOD

For the Lowest
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Man s s fuel o he a ng was wood and s rna e p ac ca
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Jus se he he mas a o he empe a u e de lf&lt;~d and he
comfo s you s au oma ca r Load he MQf og am Wood
He a e a n gh and u n the he mos a dOwn u ll
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Come n now wtl e we s have hem n sock

Buy N::w &amp; ~ve '50..00
DISTRIBUTED BY

CITY ICE &amp;FUEL
992 214~

Bob
ve
hneman fo the C ncmnati
Bengals "as arrested Wednes
day for possessiOn of hash sh
Maddox 25 and Terry
James CUnn ngham 29 were
arrested at Maddox apart
men! by agents of the Regaonal
Enforcement Narcotacs Un t
(RENEW who sa d they found
defe~

the two men m control of one

and one-half pounds of hashish
Maddox and Cunmngham
were charged w th possess on
for sale of an hallucmogen
off ctals satd The men were to
have a prelammary hearmg
th1s mormng n Ham !ton
County Mumcapal Court
The ra1d was carrted out
wtth a search warrant an
agent sa d There are qutle a
few more arrests to come
There are a lot of drugs m
valved
I m sad to hear at sa1d
Bengals assastant General
It
Manager Make Brown
certatnly poses a quest on for
us And if t as proven as a fact
we ll not have him on our team
I haven t talked to him yet
and would want to before I took
any acllon on the matter
Maddox was a seventh round
draft cho ce from Frostburg
Md ) State College m 1973 He
passed most of his rook e year
on the taxa squad but was a
standout on the spectal teams
last season
The defensave hneman was
the second Bengal arrested n
connection wtlh drugs n the
last SIX months
M ke Ernst a reserve quar
terback was arrested last Oct
28 and later found gutlty of
possession of cocame

POint Pleasant W Va
675-~460

BEND TIRE CENTER
772 S&amp;Bt

Mas~n

W Va

By Mil :roN RICHMAN

UPI Sports Editor
BRADI':N t'ON F a UPI) St 11 slruggl ng n gl t I to I n l
Its wa) back and sweat ng already even though th s was onl~
seco d p tel Steve Blass threw good shder to Do Halm nd
the wnp re called t a st ake
1he reac on frm the eager YWeek-d 1y crowd was n
nedaate 'fhere we e only t 520 a U c P ttsburgh PI ladelp a
con test here but they cheered nd applauded Steve Blass so
spon aneously so loudly so ent us as call) they sound ed 0
mes 1 rger
It was a completely 1npuls ve II g Ou 01 the ou1 d Ste e
Blass mstantly real zed the fans weren cheer ng dcr s vely lx t
delightedly T11ev were l appy fo h and tl ey wanted ot g
so much as to let Steve Blass know thev were
I got goose bu ps says R chte Hebne l e P ales th d
baseman He knows everybod) s pull ng for him AI crap s
what he did for thts club m the 1971 World Seraes alone• He e s
good travaa question Who s U e last p tcher ever to p tc a
complete game n the World Seraes Steve Blass Look l up [you
don t bel eve me He beat Baltm1ore n the seventh game 197
and nobod) has p tched a comp ete game m the Wort! S es
s nee
R ch te Hebner shook h s head then brushed he bat he h d
his hands across the top of his shoes He was standing e r the
cage "a ling h s turn an battmg pract ce
Steve s st 11 got a good sense of humor satd Hcbne
He
hasn t changed Maybe off the f eld he has but I 1 not v th u
there so I can t say
Most guys go down gradually He JUSt went from good o bad
Like fall ng off act If I cant remember anybody else" ' o ever
did t the same way JUS! hke that
Dtck Radatz put n one newsma n
You re r ght Hebner agreed I remember salt ng n the
bleachers m Boston and walchmg him patch for the Red Sox
The conversation got back to Steve Blass
People back home n Boston ask me what s wrong w th h m
sa d Hebner !tell em I dunno He doesn t know h mself
Blass dtdn t dazzle anybody m has [ rst start of the spr ng vhen
be packed up Juan Ptzarro m the seventh mmng of Tuesday s
game wath the Phtlhes He patched three nnmgs gaving up four
runs a half doz~n walks and two h ts n add ton to comm It g a
pa r of wild p tches
He was charged w th the loss n a 7-5 setback and n that
seventh mn ng the one where the crowd gave ham that ova on
he yaelded three runs w thout a hat
Manny Sangu lien the Ptrates regular catcher was n he
bullpen when the fans reached the way they d d to Blass and he
experienced the same sensa t on they did
I felt so good he says When he got that str ke on that £ella
(Hahn I srud that s the same Steve Blass I know Then when
he got him out you know what I was domg I was clapp ng I was
so happy
Sangu llen s happmess had to be brae! though because after
rellrmg Hahn on a soft fly ball to center Blass walked four
straaght batters P tching to Andy Kosco be threw one ball at
least 20 feet wade of the plate
Blass teammates are do ng everything but praytng for him
know ng that after all the control problems he has had and tha(
trap back to the manors last summer t me as run rung out for him
A couple more performances hke Tuesday s and that 11 be the
end of Steve Blass World Sertes hero of 1971 n a Ptltsbu gh
umform
Centerftelder AI 01 ver made t a po nt to have a few words
wtth Blass before he raced the Phtll es Tuesday Ohver wanted to
light a fire under ham If he posstbly could
Get m there and throw that ball because your back s up
agamst the wall 01 ver traed You gotta do t now on else
Blass nodded
When has three mnmg stmt was over Steve Blass knew t
wasn t a good one artist cally anyway but he d d see some ay
of hght even 1! nobody else d d
I was encouraged wath what I d d he sa ad I was gettmg my
slider over the plate and the sl der has always been my best
patch

NEW YORK UP!) - Un
defea ted Ind ana cart es the
stamp of ts coach-an un e
ent ng defense--and Wednes
day Robby Kn ght was an
Ollllced as an overwhe m ng
w nne

of Un ed Press In

ter at ana l sCoacl or t e Year
""

d

Krugh! a noted pe fection s
wl o can be qu re loud when his
team or he orr c als come up
short of perfect on has gu ded
ll t: Hoos ers to a 29-0 record
lh s season v. U an average
" nn ng m rg of 23 3

I an very app cc at ve of
th s Kn ght srud when n
forn ed of the award The
reason 1 apprec a e someth ng

lkeths stha tome t s
something tl e oach rece ves

as a ep esenlatiVe of tile
ean
Th s s an I cat ve of that
coopera on tha has marked
ou pl
I effo t tl t has
gone n o our pt ) ng very well
logethet
Indeed lnd ana s team p a)
s suet that Kn gl t probably
bette known that any of the
players on his team One
reason s h s colorful nareups
dur ng h s 10-year career as a
head coach sax at Army and
four at ind ana but the other
reason IS that the Hoosiers
brand of ball requares perfect

team play wath a delij&gt;erate
offense and a punashing defen
se
The 34 year-old coach
becomes the second Hoos er
boss to wan the UP! Coach of
award as Branch McCracken
won t m 1953
Although has reputation for
defense preceeded ham to
Ind ana Army havmg had the
best defens ve team m the
nation three times under
Knight the 34-year-old coach
qu ckly made conver(lj among
the run-and-gun fans of Hoosier
basketball with a 62-19 record
n h s f rst three years more
vtctortes than m any other
three-year span m the uruver
saty s basketball hastory
But the Hoosiers were just
warmmg up for this seasons
performance when Kntght II
nally ach eved the perfection m
defense he had sought

Steve Snowden
12ll Powell Street
M ddteport
Phone 992 ms
Lkl 1 good ""lhia
$ " ,, , • .,,,

men on p cks
Hosket starred on the Dayton
Be mont team wh ch won the
1963~4 state champ onsh p n
Class AA now Class AAA) and
was named as the state s Class
AA Player of the Year that
season He w!nt on o ga n All
Btg Ten honors three years
wh le at Oh o State Umvers ty
and was an All Amer ca p ck
h s sen or year ( 1967~8 The
Buckeyes fan shed lh rd an the
NCAA tournament h s sen or
year
Haske has been a member of
tw o other champ onsh p learns
he U S Olymptc basketball
team whtch won the gold medal
m Mexaco Ctly an 1968 and m has
second season as a member of
the New York Knacks He later
played for Buffalo He s now a
te lev swn commentator for
OSU baskelba games on
WTVN TV after servmg n a
s m ar capac ty when WLW-C
served as the off c al Buckeye
basketball stataon
Coach Hawhee gu ded
Waverly to ats fourth SEOAL
t Ue n the fave years s nee the
school JO ned the league H s
T ger teams had won s x
s ra ghl Southern Oh o Con
ference titles before Waverly
swtlched leagues then added
three straaght before the slr ng
was snapped by Gall pol s last
year Thts year however the
Tigers were back on top - lhts '

TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY THURSDAY
MARCH 1112 13

8:30 TIL 12:30

RON BRINKER
For Your Ltstenmg Pleasure
GUITAR&amp; PERCUSSION

The MEIGS INN
Pomeroy

arne w th a perfec 14 0 nark
o run the r f ve year record
n the SEOAL to 67 3 Hawhee s
overall record for 28 years as
head coach a Wave1ly s ands
at 442 157
Peoples a 5 9 )Untor forward
lor he Rockets was the top
scorer an he league He scored
257 poants n 14 games an 18 4
average n league play He h t
ItO of 226 shots from the held
487 and added 37 of 60 free
throws 617) wh le grabb ng 62
rebounds n league play
Ntday and Wr ght ed lor the
free throw shoo ng award
walh each hatt ng exactly 80 per
cent N day h t 56 of 70 at
tempts whale Wr gh made 48
of 60
Players named to the f rs
team n addtt on o Peoples
"ere Ntday of Gall pohs M ke
McDonald of Jackson Don
Young of Logan and Doug
Tracy of Waverly Second
team p cks were Make S cklcs
of Gall pohs Dean F tzpatr ck
of Ironton Wr gh of Logan
and Tom Pfe fer Joe Ho land
and T m Dudu
a I or
Waverly
Honorable menton select ns
were Arn e Chonko of A ~ens
Tom Valent ne of Gal pols
Edd e Howard of Ironton
Steve Morrow of Jackson J m

Ba ke ba

Easter's On The Way
Sp ngwe ght g eats
ead ng he pa ade
ou su ngs for Dad and
n an ou t
brothe
s and ng co lect on of
kn s tha
move on
h ough Summer me

Suits

Tou nam

Re!5.u s
By Un ed P e
nlc n Jio a
Wc~ne day

Ca

o

So
M dd

CLASS AAA
A Canton
M K
9 Yo ng
A Day on

e own

A Bow ng G

R

Sport
Coats
Slacks

own

o wood

6

Mad son 60
Ke
ng A e 84 C ll
Ba on
CLASS A

See Em All At

Roge

KERM'S KORNER

ecn

e da e 52 K a da 5

--

A ARM t; friERA
Hm 0 •

Reg on a Oh o H gh Sc oo

At The Inn-Place

Ph. 992 3629

coach-of-year

Sport Parade

All-SEOAL banquet Monday

Beat inflation-

Middleport, OhiO

Bengal is
cited on
drug charge
Maddox a reserve

NCIT action
opens tonight
By BOB WESTON
LOUISVILLE Ky (UP!)
Twelfth-ranked Southern Cal
and 17th-ranked Arazona car
rted the favorate s roles nto
theu- farst-round games ton ghl
m the second annual Nallonal
Conmusstoners lnVItallonal
tournament
Southern Cal (111-7) wtth one
of the nation s most polished
guards m Gus Wazard
Williams takes on Drake 11610) m the mghtcap lollowmg an
encounter berween Arizona
(20-6) and East Carolma (1!1·8)
at 7 05 pm (E DT )
The openmg round of the
eight-team tourney wall be
completed Friday mght when
Purdue ( 16-10) battles Mtssoun
(111-ll) in the fu-st game and
Tennessee ( 111-7) plays Bowling
Green (17 9) m the second
The team emergmg with the
champ1onsh1p m the nationally
televised fmal Sunday af
ternoon wall be hopmg to follow
the trail blazed by last year s
wumer Indiana
The Hoosiers used thetr
championship m the I!Uttal
CommiSSioners Tournament at
St Louis last year as a
springboard to an undefeated
season this year
The tourney fatled to draw m
St Louts so the sponsormg
Conference CommiSsiOners
Assoctahon moved 1t to

featured 17 ott er walks
Two out sangtes by Row a d
Off ee and Marty Perez n th&lt;
runth ann ng produced a pa of
runs and a 2-1 Atlanta Braves
VICtory over the Texas Ra
gers An OS 0t S [Irs! h t or the
spr ng a w nd blown doub e
I rna xed a four-run Kansas
C ty mnth nmng and pusl ed
tl e Royals to an 8 7 w o e
the Ch cago Wh te Sox Tl e
White Sox B team also lost 8
t to a comb ned four hitte
from M nnesota T" ns p tel ers
Dave Goltz Bert Bl) even and
Torr Johnson

o

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Davenpo of Mea gs Pe e
Laswell of Wa erl) and Terry
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�3- 'J,'he Datly Sent mel Mtddleport Pomeroy 0 Tl ursday March 13 1975
2- The Dally Sentmel M ddleport Pomeroy 0 Thursday March 13 1975

Rhodes would hold the line fOr next two years
By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Gov
James A Rhodes has proposed
a $12 2 btlhon state budget for
the next two years holdmg
most major government ser
VICes at current levels and
reqwrtng no new or mcreased
taxes

Rhodes fiSCal plan unve led
Wednesday as an 18 4 per cent
mcrease over the current twoyear budget of $10 3 b II on It
will be sent through the
leg slat ve mill along wtth an
$11 5 b ll on ap~ropr alton supported by Democrats control!
mg the Ohio General Assem
bly
Leg slatave Democrats a!
ready are holdmg publtc
hearangs on thetr own budget
and Rhodes proposal \\Ill be
mcorporated w th that study
The new state budget peraod
begms July I
Rep Myrl H Shoemaker DBournevtlle chaarman of the
House Ftnance Comm ttee
sa d he hopes to get the gaant
appropraatton through the
House by May 15 gtvmg the
Senate SIX more weeks to clear
ll
The governor s budget IS
shghtty tess than the $12 S
b lhon outlay recommeoded by
former Gov John J Gilligan
before he left off ce last
January
But 11 exceeds the $11 5
btllton
fiscal
blueprmt
by
majority
proposed
Democrats m the legtslature
who already are holdmg
hearings on their own plan and
eventually will have to dovetall
the two budgets
State legaslators were unable
to comment on the new budget
proposal Wednesday no! hav
mg read or been briefed on the
500-page document
State Flnllnce Dll'ector How

ard L Call er told newsmen at
a brae! ng that even the
governor had not seen the f nul
budget
Cather satd his staff s rev'll
nue proJecltons fell below tl)e
G lhgan admuustrat on s but
as many existmg programs as
poSSible were crammed nto
the budget caus ng at to approach G Hagan s spend ng
f gure

'fhe other $50 mtlhon as fran
leftover parochaaad federal
re enue sharmg and spec al

rotary funds he sad
Coli er sa td the budget
proposal has been pared as
far as t can be logacally
reduced w thou! hurt ng some
cr heal areas He sa d the
nun her of state emploves w ll

pla~!r~ s~~h~. 7~n~ Advantage
IS

director expla n ng that eve ry

::::~b~ell~~~·;geJevenue

Coil er c ted a slumpmg
economy as the reason for
reducmg the G ll gan admtrus
tratlon s revenue estunates
but predtcled at would began to
unprove next year

General state revenues ex
eluding federal funds were
projected at $7 25 b lllon by the
Rhodes adman stratton
Gall gan recommended
spend ng $7 37 bill on n stale
funds
and
leg slat ve
Democrats are workmg w th
$7 29 b ilton m state morues
In fact Collier satd the
Rhodes admmlstratlOrt was
forced to scrape together $354
mtlhon m excess funds mamty
through bookkeepmg devaces
to mak.e ends meet
The bulk of this money s a
$219 m1lhon cushion the Gilb
gan admmtstratton declined to
budget because fmanctal
advisers said It was needed to
carry the state through low
cash pertods
Collier expWned the $219
million money plus an extra $8:i
million can be spent because of
a proposed new policy which
needs legaslatlve approval of
spreadmg corporation tax pay
ments throughout the year
mstead of rece vmg most of
them in February through
Mav

J

cited for higher
natural gas hills in Ohio

c._, u~s
Decon
roth g
o pr ce of ne"
natura gas at 1 r wellhead w11l
n can h gher na u at gas bUs
n he fu ure bu

u ma ely

wou d mean more athe han
less money n he pockets of
Oh o wage..,arners accord ng
o H Cl !ford Taylor pres dent
of he Oh o Gas Assoc at on
W II ou more gas JObs are
n jeopardy Taylor sa td nan
article publ shed the curren
ssue of he OGA Newsletter
He sa d hat he best
es rna es or he gas ndustr)
are that an average cus omer
would pay an ex ra $13 a year
for he nex len years f he
pr ce of new gas were
decontrol ed at the wellhead
A an average wage of $3
per hour t would lake at least
two years before the ncreases
an the pr ce of gas servace
would cos t a person who holds
a JOb 10 ndus ry as much as f
he were load off for only one
day as a result or curtaa~1 ent
of gas suppl cs 10 nduslr es
Taylor a v ce pres dent for
Columba Gas of Ohto sad
More Important s the fact
that decontrol would en
courage the devetopmen of
nore gas at a pr ce wh ch
would st tt be qu te ow when
compared to other r els he

Income growth projected saT~ylor sad gas producers
are presently discouraged

COLUMBUS (UP!) - In a
projeeUon of Ohio s economy
contained in Gov James A
Rhodes budget message for
the 1976 77 biennium the
governor Wednesday sa1d the
state s personal income Is
expected to gr9w by 9 2 per
centmftscall976andbyneariy
14 per cent In fiscal 1977
Recent changes In the Ohio
economy are very similar to
changea taking place tn the
US economy aaa whole said
Rhodes Projected rates of
growth in Ohto s GNP (Gross
National Product) and per
sonal ~e closely follow the
rates of growth projected for
the entire country
In Ohio m 1974 severe
recession in the automobile
Industry was balanced somewhat by strengthening steel
and machine tools
Au tomoblle andhi hamakppllance
manu1acturers w c
e up
a large portion of Ohio s Industrlal economic base have
alreadycutproductlonandlald

,.

News.

off workers
Rhodes said
While demand for steel has
begun to decrease steeltnven
torles are already relatively
low so that If inventories are
replenished layoffs are ex
peeled to be minamal
A lessening of mflatlon m
general and the use of the
manufacturers rebates ln par
tlcular will encourage cons urn
er spending by lncreasmg real
disposable 1ncome
Rhodes
said
Automobile manufac
lures rebates have been effec
live in mcreaslng sales even
though current new car In
ventories total about 1 6 ntlllion
units
The greatest hope for strong
econontlc recovery however
lies tn housing satd the
governor
Declmmg short-term inter
est rates are drawmg savings
back into the thrift instltu
lions Rhodea said thereby
mcreaslng the funds available
for loans to home buyers and
butlders

• •

$441 8 m 11 on over the curren t
approprtallon but $66 million
below he amount legtslative
Democrats have proposed
Co t er sa d thts amount
state corrections system
would ncrease fundmg from
Single Allocat oo
1 he largest s ngle allocation $660 per pup 1 to $800 per pupil
n I~&lt; Rhodes budget s $2 22 m the state s ti13 public school
b Ilion for pramary and second distracts
But he warned the bud~et
ary education an mcrease of
be red~ced n most areas of
gove nment wtth the except ons of mental health the Oh o
Youth Comm ss on and the

in Briefs

ConUnued from pase I
ratao f1gure show mcreaslng profitability while declines pomt to
shrinkmg profits or losses
AKRON - GOODYEAR TIRE &amp; RUBBER CO has been
awarded the contract for aU tire service on eqmpment used In the
construction of the Trans Alaska Pipeline Goodyear Prestdent
John H Gerstenmater announced Wednesday
Gerste1Ull8ler satd the contract from Alyeska Pipeline
Servtce Co was tbe largest single servtce contract m the rubber
mdustry history He d1d not reveal the dollar value of the pact but
881d Goodyear will servace some 2 OttO vehtcles

from selhng gas to the n
terstate market by the low
pr ce whtch the Federal Power
Commassaon has set for such
gas
In~rstate gas s essenhal to
Ohto Taylor sa d s nee Oh o as
dependent on mported natural
gas o meet ts gas needs
In a normal year Oh o gas
customers consume 1 2 tr ll on
cubtc feet of natural gas but
our sta e produces on ly about a
hundred btlhon cu bac feet of
gas annually
Even
f Oh 0 s gas
product on doubled the sta te
must stll mport a tr tt on
cub c feet of gas every year
he saad
But because of unreal sl c
pr ce regula! on by the Federal
Power Commass on on gas
comm tted to the mlerstate
market producers are selhng
thetr gas mtrastate where t s
not subJect to federal
regulat on Taylor sa d
Th s s understandable
Intrastate produchon of
natural gas s prof table In
terstate production s not
Taylor sa d
He pomted to Lou stana
where last November the top
pr ce patd for mtrastate gas
was $2 12 a thousand cub c fee t
Th s was at the same tame
that the FPC was mchmg t~e
pr ce of nterstale gas up to SO
cents a thousand Taylor sad
Let s face It II you had
natural gas to sell would you
selllt for 50 eents a thousand
cubic feel ir someone else
offered $2 1% per thousand•
Taylor asked

DR. LAMB

Th s docsn
mean that sho tages force mdus res to
de ontrol wou d br ng abou
educe product on leve s and
run vay pr ces It akes me ay off en p oyees
deve op gas f elds so he gas
Taylor emphas zed ha as
" uld be deve oped g adually
mpor ant as decontrol s t s
Cus tomers wou d pay he only one solu on o the gas
h g:l er pr ces on ly for new gas sho tage
and hen o ly when hal gas
He stressed the need fa
ac ua ly became ava lable for mmed a e act on on such
Democrats proposed n
d str bu on Taylor sad
proJects as he explorat on and
creasmg
the current average
He added ha the gas n develop men of gas reserves on
$53
monthly
welfare check by
dustry s concerned about wha
he At an 1c Ou er Con nenta
25
per
cent
but Collaer saad
mpact h gher gas b l s wIt Shelf he development of he
have on the consumer Bu e Alaskan a d Canad an Arct c $2 13 bdllon would only enable
ponte ou hese ncreases gasp pel nes ll e mporat on of the state to malnta n exastmg
nust be we ghed aga ns the l que( ed na ural gas fro n payments because of m
cost to he consumer hat s abroad and the establ shmen creasmg welfare rolls
MaJor welfare allocat ons
fo rced to use much h gher of na ona energy research
are
$816 m Ilion for atd to
p ed al erna e fuels or he programs
dependent
chtldren compared
mpuc on I e econom} f gas
wtth the current $639 m Ilion
and $842 mtllion for health
care compared wath the
current $667 ntlllion
Collier satd he does not
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Holzer Medacal Center
ant
capate a need for mcreased
ADMITTED
Sherwood
iDtscharged March12)
taxes
for two years After
Meredtlh El zabeth Bar
Edna Bryant John Carl Jr
that
I
can t say he added
on Long Bottom Orv lle Mrs
Alv n Cu rt s and
The fmance director pomted
McVay Clar ngton Juan ta daughter Mrs M chae Dixon
out
the budget contams no new
Chapman
Cl !ton
Ruby and daugller Della Dyke
tax
reducllons and he said
Bossard Reedsvalle Paul ne Ruth Evans Nelle Fultz
Rhodes
was more than a httle
J ones Chesh re
Sandra Shawn Goeglem
Beulah
Jcnk ns Sy acusc
Jenk ns Dorothy K t hen
DISCHARGED - Ralph Penny Lepor Kathlme Long
Wells Jesse Morr s R chard Kathryn McAll ster Dolla
EXTENDED FORECAST
Thomas Eugene Young Helen Mohler Ruth Montgomery
Saturday through Monday
partly
cloudy Saturday wath
Jeffers Kathryn Erw n Roger Thelma Morgan
George
a chance of showers Sunday
Shene!teld
N cmsk) Jud th Potter Datsy
and Monday Haghs wall be In
Roush John P Stanley Ella
the lOs north to mad 50s m the
00 Tucker Geneva Tuttle Carnell
south Lo\\s \\Ill be mostly an
Vance Angela Walker Paul ne
the 30s
Walker Stacy Walker Nancy
•~
Wa son Bobby Westfall
~-.. ""'
~:~~,~:;:;:;:~&lt;::::::::::::::::::)
Wh te
Vater e
No charges were f led n a Sherry
wo car headon call s on W 11 ams Wendell Woodruff
Wednesday morn ng n wh ch M nme Wr ghl
I Births)
four persons were nJured on
Mr and Mrs Steven Cump
Rt 7 bet\\een Addtson and
ston a daughter Pt Pleasan
Chesh re
Plans for a pOn) pull have
The Galha Meags Post State W Va Mr 'llnd Mrs Roger been made by he Tuppers
H ghwa) Pa rot sa d an au o I ee Wh te a daughter Pta ns
Pony
Pullers
operated by Debra Clonch 19 Wellston
Assoc at on
of M ddleport ran mto some
Pres d ng at the mee ng at
Pleasant\ alley Hospalal
wa er on the haghway wh ch
A
fred Grange Hall was Elza
DISCHARGES
Mrs
caused her to lose control of
Cr
ckett Pull ns pres dent
James Schuler and daughter
her car The veh cle went left
The
pull wall be held Apr 1 S at
Mrs
James
of the center str k ng a car M dd eport
7 30 p m at the Bar 30 grounds
dr ven by John K ng 25 of Mayes Glenwood Mrs Dallas south of Tuppers Plams A
Ba les Robertsburg Sll)nle)
Belle w va
Brown
ng lfonton
Mrs collecl on for flowers was
Adm lied to the Holzer
taken up J oyce and Rtchard
Med cal Center was Debra Ronald L~ons Mason Jackte Douglas agreed to take charge
Ell ott Po nt Pleasant Mrs
Clonch w th facta! fractures
of the refres hment stand
Arthur
H gg anbotham
whale K ng
and
two
Seventeen
persons attended
Rober tsburg
Mrs
John
passengers an h s car Herbert
Hartford
Joe Ano her mee ng wall be held
Jordan 44 Marmet W Va K•arns
before he pull
and George B Porter 29 Inger ck Po nt Pleasan
Charleston were all treated lor Ja nes C Co tr 11 Syracuse
Mrs Dale F !e Galhpol s
m nor nJurtes
Acoli s on occurred at I 40 P George F ljfper Galhpol s
m on Lincoln Pike Rd eaght Ferry Kevan Barton Mad
Damta Manley
tenlhsofamlenortho!Rt 790 dleport
Mtddleport Mrs Donald
where cars dr ven by Gary Roush Syracuse
Ross ter 26 Rt 1 Scotto"n
and Ivan Clark 59 Scottown
WASHINGTON (UP!)
s desw ped
There
was
Aboug 65 m 11 on years ago a
moderate dama ge and no
long ne~ked beast w th w ngs
COLUMBUS
U PI
c tatton was assued
51
fee t w de soared hke a
Federa sta e summa y of
John Karak s 21 R o Oh o I vestock auct ons vul ure over a west Texas
Grande was c ted to Mun c pal Wednesday
s ream bed n search of a meal
Catt
e
Compared
to
ast
Court for fa lure to stop w th n
from a fallen d nosaur turtle
s augh er s teers
the assured c ear d stance hWednesday
or crocod le
ghe
slavgh e
he fers
follow ng an accadent at 2 50 p steady o 75 cents h ghe
That s the scene that maghl
slaughter
cows
s
eady
to
m on Rt 35 at the Adamsv lle
be maganed on the basts of a
h ghe s augh e bu s steady
Cora Rd
report
by Douglas Lawson m
to
Iowe vea ers 4 lowe
The patrol sa d the Karak s feeder catt e s eady
th s week s ssue of Sc ence
S aughter stee s Cho ce and
car struck the rear of a car
magaz ne
pr
me
900
2SO
y
e
d
grade
2
4
dr ven by John Hand 28 Rt 4 35 J6 90 h gl\d ess ng 37 37 50
Until now most sc entists
Waverly
had not believed any flvtng
cho ce 33 35 50 good 3 34
standa d 24 71 30 60
crea ure could be that bag But
Slavghte he fers Cho ce
La\\son says he found the fossa!
740 00 y eld grade 2 4 3 34
bones
of a such w nged reptle
few 34 36 20 oood 27 95 32 50
S aughfe COWS Uf ty and
n the s ltstone and sandstone
com mere al 785 1665 17 22 80
of" hat once was a stream bed
cu fer 4 20 25
n west Texas B g Bend
Slaughte bu s Y e d g ade
335 2371 25 11-1 2B
Nat anal Park
Vea ers Good 2 5 220 39 SO
Its really unth nkable that
....
lh s partacular b g beast was
Feeders Cho ce steers 300
not a fly ng an mat of some
600 24 27 75 good 300 600 19 so
23 25 cho ce he fers 300 400 22
sort however he managed to
You should also see your 24 25 good 300 500 7 25 23 so do I sa d Dr Wann Langston
Hogs
Ba rows and g Its
lam ly doc or and be sure you steady
Umversity or Texas
US 2 2 5 221 39 BO Jr
don t have some medacal 40 90 us 2 3 212 255 28 85 39 40 geology
professor
who
Sows Steady to SO cents supervised Lawson s work
problem that IS slowmg )OU
US 3 420 575 39 40 80
down 1 ke lo\\ thyroad func lower
whale he was a Texas graduate
US I 2 421 471 37 38
lion Your doctor ma) also
Feeder p gs Steady US 2 3 student
\\ant to check out )Our en 30 40 t8 J6 per head
Sheep S aughte lambs 75
GLENN VOTED YES
do crane hormone ) system
h gher Choice and pr me shorn
WASHINGTON UP!)
La"
thyroid
funct on w th 48 SO so 21 ot fa I sho.-n
Sen John Glenn D-Ohto was
sometimes slows down growth l 21
as does other endoclr ne
one of 58 Democrats voting n
favor
of the strap numng b ll
problems
wh ch passed the Senate by a
Perhaps your mother could
84-13 vole Wednesday Sen
help you 1! she would con
Sho,.ers hkely today and Robert A Taft Jr R-Ohio
centrale on g vmg you foods
ton
ght Lows ton ght m the low was n Cancmnalt recuperatmg
lo\l n fats and carboh) drates
30s Cloudv coolen Frtday from e e surgery and dad no
even for that even ng meal
Send your quest ons to Dr h gh m the lo" 40s Probabality \Ote
Lamb an care of th s of prec p tat on 50 per cent
ASK TOWED
ne,.spaper P 0 Box 1551 toda) and ton ght 20 per cent
Vance 18 Rt 2
Robert
Radto City Statton New York Fr day
Alban) and Donna Jean
NY 10019 For a copv of Dr
Preast 18 Rt 2 Albany
Lambs booklet on losmg
we ght send 50 cents and a
LOCAL TEMPS
long self-addressed stamped
PTA TO MEET
The temperature m down
envelope to the same address to" n Pomeroy at 11 a m today
Pomeroy Elementary PTA
and ask for the
Losmg "as 40 degrees under cloud)
w 11 meet Mondav at the school
at
7 30 p m
We ghl booklet
skies

HOSPITAL NEWS

Cars COllide,
charues are filed

Pony pull date
on April fifth

51-foot wings
carried beast

through air

endurance w th relahvely laght
weaghts
rather
than
progreSSively ancreasmg the
weaghts to very large loads
The ~h s that small
weaghtS
help you to
develop good bone structure
Certa nly any exercuse that
mvolves lifting l our own bod)
ts not harmful Here I would
tnclude develop ng your
capacaly to do push-ups cltin
ups sal ups and at least
modtfted knee bends In
general a good all around
calesthemc exercase program
wall help you develop gOod
muscles and good bones
You don t need to overdo
weight llftang to develop good
muscles Don t try to lift
we1ghts that you can t lift
eastly three times m a row
Liftmg that weaght more than
12 limes more often than three
days a week w1ll not speed up
muscle development More

wrn

frequent I fts n ay even slow
muscle growth
DEAR DR LAMB - I m 16
years old male and am 5-feet
1 I 1 also 20 pounds over
.. eaght I try and try but I JUSt
can l lose that extra weaght I
walk four m les almost every
day and only eat half a
cucumber lor lunch but my
mother makes me eat more for
danner I JUS! don t know what
to do I m afraad I 11 never lose
that much wetght Maybe If I
start to gro11 1t wall help
Please gave me a couple of taps
DEAR READER
Some
young men QO through this
stage And ~ou are raght that
) ou may still grow an hetghl
and get some help that way
Meanwhtle why don t you
make arNlilgements at one of
the gym &lt;acalitaes an lour area
to start some form or weight
tram ng program an addation to
your dally walks That maght
belp more than lou real ze
~

bat upset about lt
However he noted the 10 per
cent property tax rollback will
contmue to be funded at $312
mtlllon a year and real estate
tax relief for elderly homeown
ers IS m the budget at $66
nullion
A d to htgher educat on
would be pushed over the $1
ball on mark for the fll'st time
m Ohio s htslory a $268 null1on
ncrease over the current

approprtahon
But the freeze on fees at
state-supported unaverstties
would be etimmated and the
budget of the Ohto Board of
Regents trammed by more than
20 per cent
Pro bides Fees
Collter sa d the budget would
enable the stale to furnish 6S
per cent of the cost of a
student s education next year
and 70 per cent by 1977
proVIded fees are not ra sed by
Wltvers ties
The Rhodes budget contams

Weather

$308 mUllan for capital Ill
provements at universlti&amp;
Collaer sa1d at would be the ..
major appropraation \&gt;r IIi
purpose for a long tim
because enrollments ar
droppmg
Mental health and ret!~
dation would receive taL
nullion compared wtth Ill
current $501 I million CoUll
satd the administration pllll
to mcrease staffmg at meDia
msl!tutions from 4 794 to 8..
by 1977 one of the few aree
where personnel would bt
mcreased
AppropriBttons for mdustrill
development and the Obk
Environmental Protectlor
Agency were mcreased slighll)
under the Rhodes plan
Coll1er 881d the propollll
budgets of elected state Ill
flc1als most of them DeJDOo
crats were submitted u
receaved from the of
ftceholders They contained
stzeable mcreases

Courses in fitness,
judo, defense for
women offered
RIO GRANDE Rio Grande
College and Rto Grande
Communaty College wall offer
several courses durmg the 1975
Spr ng Quarter to persons
concerned wtth personal health
and fitness
On Monday even ngs from
8 10-9 40 p m a course n
Adult Sl mnastics wall be
offered women mterested m
reducang or controlling waeght
The course w 11 prepare n

Credit bureau
owner will he
sentenced soon
RIPLEY W Va
A Pomt
Pleasant man will be sen
tenced March 27 m Jackson
County Circu t Court m con
neclion w th the ftrst charge
brought under the 1974 Con
sumer Protection Act
Robert Cochran owner of the
Pomt Pleasant Credit Bureau
pleaded gualty earlier th1s
week to a two-count mdictment
accusmg ham or making an
noyang and threatenang
telephone
calls
and
rrusrepresenting himself to a
Sandyville woman
A debt owed by Lisa Rexroad
and her husband had been
turned over to Cochran s credat
bureau for collection satd
Asst Pros Sam Snyder and
Cochran allegedly called Mrs
Rexroad usmg a false name
and S8ld she would be charged
an extra $20 and her property
would be auctioned off if she
dldn t pay the debt In one day
The maxamum penalty for
the offense IS one year m priSOn
and a $1 OttO fme

Market Report

Lift weights in moderation
By Lawr;once E Lamb M D
DEAR DR LAMB I am 13
and started l fting weaghts
regularly Then someone told
me that lifting we1ghls would
hioder by bones He said that
anyone younger than 17 should
not be liftmg weaghls
It was mentioned ar you lift
weaghts now you would not be
able to bwld your muscles to
!hell' full capactly later when
your bones are fmtshed
growang My question as
should I still lift we1ghts or
should I stop until my bones
have matured' Also as It all
raght to do a lot of push-ups and
other msucle developmg
exercases'
DEAR READER - Like so
many other thangs at as
question of getting enough but
not going to wretched excess
Of course you can hft
weights I think though that
very young boys should con
centrale on developmg muscle
~
{J

allows school fund ng only
under the cWTent state subsady
formula wh ch has been
conden ned as anequ table
The rach distr cts have gotten
r cher and the poor distracts
have gotten a I ttte less poor
Collaer con! rmed
Coli er sa d any equaltzation
formula denved by the legtsla
lure wall requ re several
hundred m tt on dollars more
The money s not avatlable he
S8ld
The fmance d rector satd
$400 m Ilion would have been
available to fund equalization
of the formula but the
legaslature dec ded to spend t
n a supplemental school approprtallon n February
Budget Requirements
The Rhodes budget calls for
$2 13 bilhon lor pubhc welfare
compared w th the current
$1 72 b Ilion and legtslatave
Democrats $2 22 b Ilion

CHANGE PROPOSED
State Rep Ronald James (D
Proctorvalle) has nlroduced as
a co-sponsor a ball n the Ohto
House of Represental!ves to
prov de that the nterest
earned on money patd nto the
State Wtldlife Fund be credaled
to that fund rather than the
General Revenue Fund At
present the States wtldlife
programs under the Wildlife
D v saon n the Department of
N~tural Resources are funded
entirely out of the W ldlife
Fund plus 1 mated federal
subs d es Nearly all of the
Waldl fe Fund s mcome '
der ved from hunt ng and
f shmg I censes

dtvtduals to develop exercise
programs based upon an
dtv dual needs The course will
be offered through the
Colleges Contanuang
Education service

Included on the Wednesday
even ng shcdule wall be a
course n body condationmg
from 8 10-10 10 p m for peQple
desmng to mllate a per
sonahzed fatness program
Th s w 11 be a vagorous
program mcludmg joggmg
swmumng resistant exerctseS
and learn ng fundamentals m a
varaety of lifetime sports The
course may be taken for credit
It
1s
or
non credat
coeducataonal
For mdtvtduals mterested an
the marital arts two courses
wall be avatlable Courses m
Self Defense for Women from
8 10-10 10 p m and Judo wall
meet on Thursday evenmgs
both 8 10 10 10 p m Self
Defense as open to only women
nlerested m learmng tactics
and strategaes of self defense
Judo w ll be open to males or
females while the only out
standmg cost for th1s course
other than twtion cost wtll be
that of the judo umform
(Judog )
These courses wtll meet one
evenmg a week for 10 weeks
begmnmg the week of Tuesday
March 25 To parhcpate m
dtv duals must regtster and
complete payment on Monday
March 24 at the College Ad
m1ss1ons Offace Thas wtll be
open from 9 un to 9 p m The
course cost w1ll be $13 for
Communaty College Distract
resadents and $17 for Ohto
resadents who live outs de the
four-county d stract

Democrats

ConUnued from page 1
construction proJects
However for permanent
results espectally m depressed
areas tax abatement as neces.
sary the governor sa1d One
or two of these programs
wathout the others as not
enough to do the job I am
willing to compromtse on any
plan which takes all four mto
account
But I will not compromise
on tbe basic goal-creaUng
jobs for Ohioans Rhodes oon
Unued Oh1oa11S want joba
and they want j~be now The
masery and suffering of
Oiuoans has just begun If we do
not do something munediately
to get them back to work
Democratic legislative leaders have been trymg to decide
whether to place Rhodea $1 34
bllhon transportation bond
POMEROY LANES
T Coun y L eague
ISSue and his housing plan on
Feb 5 1~75
the
November ballot
PIS
46
The governor has indacated
42
he
will attempt to secure more
J8
J6 than 300 000 sagnatures to place
28
26 all four of his measures oo the
H gh nd Game A L
ballot by the initiative methOd
2 9 B
Ra.dfo d
All 'I have asked ts that all
H gh Se es
Ha v
T h omas 566- B
Radio d 564
four of these programs the tu
Team H gh Game
M dwes
abatement the cities bond
S ee Co 905
Team H gh Se es
M d
ISSUe the tranBportatlon bond
wes .S ee Co 26 ?
ISSUe and the housing amendment be placed before the
Ear y Wednesdily M xed
Pts voters said Rhodes I am
Regat a n
48 dead serious about those ,
Young s Supe Ma ket
46
rrograms becauae they create :
Sm h Nelson Mo o s
4
Z de s ,Spor Sl'lop
37
250 000 jobs
•
Ten hF arne s
24
Let us all work together :
NesonOugCo
22
H gh nd Game
La ry
until the dark days are behind :
DtJgl!ln 233 Edwa d Voss 232
us the governcr concluded :
Wo:'TI en
He en Phelps 220
Be y Sm h 94
lel us begin now '!be best :
H gh Seres
Men A L
thing
you can do IS to be able to •
Pne ps
6 3 E Voss. 600
Women
Helen Phe ps 559
return to the wters ol your :
B~ y Sm h 497
Team H gM Game and Seres district and say I have done '
R ~ gat a o 7H and 2 37
my job

Knight named

Fisk suffers broken arm
By United Press International

Carlton Ftsk IS back n
familw surroundings today
baseballs dtsabled 1st
Both Ftsk and the Boston
Red Sox are probabl) shar ng
the same 'what did we do to
deserve this feelmgs but the
fact IS that Ftsk baseball s
most mjury-hexed player s
out agam-thas tame w th a
broken arm
Ftsk whom ssed the hrst 17
games of last season wath a
grom tn)ury and then two
months later was s delmed for
the balance of the season w th a
knee inJury was struck on the
arm Wednesday by a patched
bal from Detroit Tigers
r ghthander Fred Holdsworth
and wall be lost to the Red Sox
for two months
For the Red Sox who lost the
• exhibition game 6-2 the news
couldn t be worse Ftsk s m
JUries last year were generally
• regarded as the baggest reason
the Red Sox fell out of the
pennant race and th s season
thear two closest r vats n the
American League East the
New York Yankees and
Balllmore Onoles
have
strengthened themselves un
mensely through off season
trades
Another pennant hopeful
club the Ne\\ York Mets also
were hlt by the InJUry hex Joe

Torre the Mets most touted
off .,season acqu s ton suffered
an ankle spra n n an exhibtl o
gan e wtth the Yankees
Torre on "hom the Mets are
count ng heavily to supply
some much-needed power this
year spra ned his r ght ank le
n a freak ace dent when he
tr pped over third base wh le
back ng off the bag to pernut
Yankee baserunner Bobby
Bonds to each the base X
ra)S
however
proved
negatave and Torre was not
expected to be s del ned more
than a few days
The n]ury to Torre took
much or the lustre off the
heralded duel of the Ne" York
aces Calf sh Hunter for the
Yankees versus Tom Seaver of
the Mets Seaver backed by a
pa r of solo home runs from
another recent Mets acqws
t on Dave K ngman got th e
best or the four nn ng duel and
held the Yankees scoreless
Hunter gave up only one other
hit but came out the loser m
the 3-&lt;l Mets w n
Elsewhere on the Grapefru t
League carcu t
Ha Breeden s three run
homer off Ste e Carlton and
rook e Bomba R vera s two-run
blast off J un Lonborg powered
the Montreal Expos to a 10-1
rout of the Phtladelph a Phil
1es A three-run homer by

Dave Parker off lefthander
John CUrt s helped the P tts
burgh P rates to a 6-4 w n over
he St I outs Card nals The
Cardinals B tea powered
by homers from Bake Me
Br de Ken Re tz Make Tyson
and Jam Dwyer &lt;,lrubbed the
Chun ch Dragons 14-4 on 18
hits
Joe Fer~:~~son smacked a
hree run homer n the seve1 th
nn ng and Nat onal I eague
n ost valuable player Steve
Garve) pounded out four h ts to
hit U e Los Angeles Dodgers to
a 9 7 tnumph over the
Ball n ore Or ales Newly-ac
qu red Ken Singleton homered
for Baltamore Ret ef p tcher
Pat Zachar~ s bases~oaded
runth nrung walk to Jose Cruz
handed the Houston Astros a
12 It w n over the C nc nnall
Reds m a ragged game that

Predicts

CIN CINNA tI UPl)

close game

COLLEGE STATION Tex
UP!) - Texas A&amp;M coach
Shelby Metcalf says the Aggaes
game agamst C nc nnat m the
hrst round of the NCAA
basketball playoffs should be a
pretty even match
The baggest problem for us
wall be at the pomt posahon
\\here they have a 6-4 aga nst
our 0-10 Metcalf saad Wed
nesday Other than that I
th nk we match up pretty well
I thmk the teams are pretty
comparable Both are good
shoot
ng teams wath good
Freedom Hall thts year wath
hopes of better box office balance and good depth
There as no doubt that this
success m an area known as a
Cine nnall team IS gomg to
basketball hotbed
The sponsors are so con contend for the nataonal tatte
ftdent of that prospect that they nex year or the year after f
have reserved dates for the they stay together I JUSt
next two years an Freedom believe so much 1n thts A&amp;M
Hall an arena seatmg nearly team that I thank we re gomg to
be m the ball game
17 000
The Aggaes meet Cmcmnata
Southern Cal seekmg to
emerge from UCLA s shadow at 7 p m m Lubbock Saturday
Th s team s not ready for
and claun some prestige for
tself n thts tourney has relied the season to end Metcalf
heav1ly on the consummate satd I feel hke we re JUS! now
skills of Wtlliams this season peakmg I d 1 ke to see JUS! how
W llaams a 6-2 semor was good we can be
I m lookmg forward to
named West Coast Player of
the Year by UP! this week over play ng m Lubbock If I could
such stars as Dave Meyers of choose any place to play that
UCLA and Ron Lee of Oregon would be my second chotec to
For Drake ton ght s game here
Tech s student newspaper
wall be a homecommg for
Larry Haralson a 6-9 product called and sad they were
of LoUISVIlle Male H1gh School try ng to get thetr students
who leads the Bulldogs m behind us We d do the same
for them here Our semors
scormg w th a 20 I average
Anzona has overpowered have played well m Lubbock
many of al• opponents this We ve won two games and lost
season wath the InSide play of by two points there
JUnior AI Flemmg and
sophomore Bob Ellaott Ellaott
ts averagmg 22 8 pomts per
game while Flemmg as hilt ng
at a 20-pomt-a game chp
Ball Hosket who starred an
East Carolma has spread 1ts
baske ball at the hagh school
scormg around w th semor
college and professional level
forward Gregg Ashorn s 14 8
w ll be the speaker when the
average h ghest on the team
Southeastern Oh10 Athleltc
League holds als 26th annual
all eague basketball banquet
at Waverly s Lake Whale Club
Monday March 17) Reser
valtons for the 6 45 p m
banquet may be made through
league schools Ttckets are $4
each
Head ng the I st of honorees
w ll be Waverly Coach Carroll
Hawhee named Coach of the
Year and Wellston s Randy
Peoples selected as the Most
Valuable Player Troph es w 11
also be presented o J m Ntday
of Galbpohs and M tch Wr ght
of Logan "ho lted for the
league s free throw leadersh p
Also to be honored w ll be other
members of the all league
team ncludmg honorable

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CITY ICE &amp;FUEL
992 214~

Bob
ve
hneman fo the C ncmnati
Bengals "as arrested Wednes
day for possessiOn of hash sh
Maddox 25 and Terry
James CUnn ngham 29 were
arrested at Maddox apart
men! by agents of the Regaonal
Enforcement Narcotacs Un t
(RENEW who sa d they found
defe~

the two men m control of one

and one-half pounds of hashish
Maddox and Cunmngham
were charged w th possess on
for sale of an hallucmogen
off ctals satd The men were to
have a prelammary hearmg
th1s mormng n Ham !ton
County Mumcapal Court
The ra1d was carrted out
wtth a search warrant an
agent sa d There are qutle a
few more arrests to come
There are a lot of drugs m
valved
I m sad to hear at sa1d
Bengals assastant General
It
Manager Make Brown
certatnly poses a quest on for
us And if t as proven as a fact
we ll not have him on our team
I haven t talked to him yet
and would want to before I took
any acllon on the matter
Maddox was a seventh round
draft cho ce from Frostburg
Md ) State College m 1973 He
passed most of his rook e year
on the taxa squad but was a
standout on the spectal teams
last season
The defensave hneman was
the second Bengal arrested n
connection wtlh drugs n the
last SIX months
M ke Ernst a reserve quar
terback was arrested last Oct
28 and later found gutlty of
possession of cocame

POint Pleasant W Va
675-~460

BEND TIRE CENTER
772 S&amp;Bt

Mas~n

W Va

By Mil :roN RICHMAN

UPI Sports Editor
BRADI':N t'ON F a UPI) St 11 slruggl ng n gl t I to I n l
Its wa) back and sweat ng already even though th s was onl~
seco d p tel Steve Blass threw good shder to Do Halm nd
the wnp re called t a st ake
1he reac on frm the eager YWeek-d 1y crowd was n
nedaate 'fhere we e only t 520 a U c P ttsburgh PI ladelp a
con test here but they cheered nd applauded Steve Blass so
spon aneously so loudly so ent us as call) they sound ed 0
mes 1 rger
It was a completely 1npuls ve II g Ou 01 the ou1 d Ste e
Blass mstantly real zed the fans weren cheer ng dcr s vely lx t
delightedly T11ev were l appy fo h and tl ey wanted ot g
so much as to let Steve Blass know thev were
I got goose bu ps says R chte Hebne l e P ales th d
baseman He knows everybod) s pull ng for him AI crap s
what he did for thts club m the 1971 World Seraes alone• He e s
good travaa question Who s U e last p tcher ever to p tc a
complete game n the World Seraes Steve Blass Look l up [you
don t bel eve me He beat Baltm1ore n the seventh game 197
and nobod) has p tched a comp ete game m the Wort! S es
s nee
R ch te Hebner shook h s head then brushed he bat he h d
his hands across the top of his shoes He was standing e r the
cage "a ling h s turn an battmg pract ce
Steve s st 11 got a good sense of humor satd Hcbne
He
hasn t changed Maybe off the f eld he has but I 1 not v th u
there so I can t say
Most guys go down gradually He JUSt went from good o bad
Like fall ng off act If I cant remember anybody else" ' o ever
did t the same way JUS! hke that
Dtck Radatz put n one newsma n
You re r ght Hebner agreed I remember salt ng n the
bleachers m Boston and walchmg him patch for the Red Sox
The conversation got back to Steve Blass
People back home n Boston ask me what s wrong w th h m
sa d Hebner !tell em I dunno He doesn t know h mself
Blass dtdn t dazzle anybody m has [ rst start of the spr ng vhen
be packed up Juan Ptzarro m the seventh mmng of Tuesday s
game wath the Phtlhes He patched three nnmgs gaving up four
runs a half doz~n walks and two h ts n add ton to comm It g a
pa r of wild p tches
He was charged w th the loss n a 7-5 setback and n that
seventh mn ng the one where the crowd gave ham that ova on
he yaelded three runs w thout a hat
Manny Sangu lien the Ptrates regular catcher was n he
bullpen when the fans reached the way they d d to Blass and he
experienced the same sensa t on they did
I felt so good he says When he got that str ke on that £ella
(Hahn I srud that s the same Steve Blass I know Then when
he got him out you know what I was domg I was clapp ng I was
so happy
Sangu llen s happmess had to be brae! though because after
rellrmg Hahn on a soft fly ball to center Blass walked four
straaght batters P tching to Andy Kosco be threw one ball at
least 20 feet wade of the plate
Blass teammates are do ng everything but praytng for him
know ng that after all the control problems he has had and tha(
trap back to the manors last summer t me as run rung out for him
A couple more performances hke Tuesday s and that 11 be the
end of Steve Blass World Sertes hero of 1971 n a Ptltsbu gh
umform
Centerftelder AI 01 ver made t a po nt to have a few words
wtth Blass before he raced the Phtll es Tuesday Ohver wanted to
light a fire under ham If he posstbly could
Get m there and throw that ball because your back s up
agamst the wall 01 ver traed You gotta do t now on else
Blass nodded
When has three mnmg stmt was over Steve Blass knew t
wasn t a good one artist cally anyway but he d d see some ay
of hght even 1! nobody else d d
I was encouraged wath what I d d he sa ad I was gettmg my
slider over the plate and the sl der has always been my best
patch

NEW YORK UP!) - Un
defea ted Ind ana cart es the
stamp of ts coach-an un e
ent ng defense--and Wednes
day Robby Kn ght was an
Ollllced as an overwhe m ng
w nne

of Un ed Press In

ter at ana l sCoacl or t e Year
""

d

Krugh! a noted pe fection s
wl o can be qu re loud when his
team or he orr c als come up
short of perfect on has gu ded
ll t: Hoos ers to a 29-0 record
lh s season v. U an average
" nn ng m rg of 23 3

I an very app cc at ve of
th s Kn ght srud when n
forn ed of the award The
reason 1 apprec a e someth ng

lkeths stha tome t s
something tl e oach rece ves

as a ep esenlatiVe of tile
ean
Th s s an I cat ve of that
coopera on tha has marked
ou pl
I effo t tl t has
gone n o our pt ) ng very well
logethet
Indeed lnd ana s team p a)
s suet that Kn gl t probably
bette known that any of the
players on his team One
reason s h s colorful nareups
dur ng h s 10-year career as a
head coach sax at Army and
four at ind ana but the other
reason IS that the Hoosiers
brand of ball requares perfect

team play wath a delij&gt;erate
offense and a punashing defen
se
The 34 year-old coach
becomes the second Hoos er
boss to wan the UP! Coach of
award as Branch McCracken
won t m 1953
Although has reputation for
defense preceeded ham to
Ind ana Army havmg had the
best defens ve team m the
nation three times under
Knight the 34-year-old coach
qu ckly made conver(lj among
the run-and-gun fans of Hoosier
basketball with a 62-19 record
n h s f rst three years more
vtctortes than m any other
three-year span m the uruver
saty s basketball hastory
But the Hoosiers were just
warmmg up for this seasons
performance when Kntght II
nally ach eved the perfection m
defense he had sought

Steve Snowden
12ll Powell Street
M ddteport
Phone 992 ms
Lkl 1 good ""lhia
$ " ,, , • .,,,

men on p cks
Hosket starred on the Dayton
Be mont team wh ch won the
1963~4 state champ onsh p n
Class AA now Class AAA) and
was named as the state s Class
AA Player of the Year that
season He w!nt on o ga n All
Btg Ten honors three years
wh le at Oh o State Umvers ty
and was an All Amer ca p ck
h s sen or year ( 1967~8 The
Buckeyes fan shed lh rd an the
NCAA tournament h s sen or
year
Haske has been a member of
tw o other champ onsh p learns
he U S Olymptc basketball
team whtch won the gold medal
m Mexaco Ctly an 1968 and m has
second season as a member of
the New York Knacks He later
played for Buffalo He s now a
te lev swn commentator for
OSU baskelba games on
WTVN TV after servmg n a
s m ar capac ty when WLW-C
served as the off c al Buckeye
basketball stataon
Coach Hawhee gu ded
Waverly to ats fourth SEOAL
t Ue n the fave years s nee the
school JO ned the league H s
T ger teams had won s x
s ra ghl Southern Oh o Con
ference titles before Waverly
swtlched leagues then added
three straaght before the slr ng
was snapped by Gall pol s last
year Thts year however the
Tigers were back on top - lhts '

TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY THURSDAY
MARCH 1112 13

8:30 TIL 12:30

RON BRINKER
For Your Ltstenmg Pleasure
GUITAR&amp; PERCUSSION

The MEIGS INN
Pomeroy

arne w th a perfec 14 0 nark
o run the r f ve year record
n the SEOAL to 67 3 Hawhee s
overall record for 28 years as
head coach a Wave1ly s ands
at 442 157
Peoples a 5 9 )Untor forward
lor he Rockets was the top
scorer an he league He scored
257 poants n 14 games an 18 4
average n league play He h t
ItO of 226 shots from the held
487 and added 37 of 60 free
throws 617) wh le grabb ng 62
rebounds n league play
Ntday and Wr ght ed lor the
free throw shoo ng award
walh each hatt ng exactly 80 per
cent N day h t 56 of 70 at
tempts whale Wr gh made 48
of 60
Players named to the f rs
team n addtt on o Peoples
"ere Ntday of Gall pohs M ke
McDonald of Jackson Don
Young of Logan and Doug
Tracy of Waverly Second
team p cks were Make S cklcs
of Gall pohs Dean F tzpatr ck
of Ironton Wr gh of Logan
and Tom Pfe fer Joe Ho land
and T m Dudu
a I or
Waverly
Honorable menton select ns
were Arn e Chonko of A ~ens
Tom Valent ne of Gal pols
Edd e Howard of Ironton
Steve Morrow of Jackson J m

Ba ke ba

Easter's On The Way
Sp ngwe ght g eats
ead ng he pa ade
ou su ngs for Dad and
n an ou t
brothe
s and ng co lect on of
kn s tha
move on
h ough Summer me

Suits

Tou nam

Re!5.u s
By Un ed P e
nlc n Jio a
Wc~ne day

Ca

o

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M dd

CLASS AAA
A Canton
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9 Yo ng
A Day on

e own

A Bow ng G

R

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own

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Mad son 60
Ke
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Ba on
CLASS A

See Em All At

Roge

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ecn

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A ARM t; friERA
Hm 0 •

Reg on a Oh o H gh Sc oo

At The Inn-Place

Ph. 992 3629

coach-of-year

Sport Parade

All-SEOAL banquet Monday

Beat inflation-

Middleport, OhiO

Bengal is
cited on
drug charge
Maddox a reserve

NCIT action
opens tonight
By BOB WESTON
LOUISVILLE Ky (UP!)
Twelfth-ranked Southern Cal
and 17th-ranked Arazona car
rted the favorate s roles nto
theu- farst-round games ton ghl
m the second annual Nallonal
Conmusstoners lnVItallonal
tournament
Southern Cal (111-7) wtth one
of the nation s most polished
guards m Gus Wazard
Williams takes on Drake 11610) m the mghtcap lollowmg an
encounter berween Arizona
(20-6) and East Carolma (1!1·8)
at 7 05 pm (E DT )
The openmg round of the
eight-team tourney wall be
completed Friday mght when
Purdue ( 16-10) battles Mtssoun
(111-ll) in the fu-st game and
Tennessee ( 111-7) plays Bowling
Green (17 9) m the second
The team emergmg with the
champ1onsh1p m the nationally
televised fmal Sunday af
ternoon wall be hopmg to follow
the trail blazed by last year s
wumer Indiana
The Hoosiers used thetr
championship m the I!Uttal
CommiSSioners Tournament at
St Louis last year as a
springboard to an undefeated
season this year
The tourney fatled to draw m
St Louts so the sponsormg
Conference CommiSsiOners
Assoctahon moved 1t to

featured 17 ott er walks
Two out sangtes by Row a d
Off ee and Marty Perez n th&lt;
runth ann ng produced a pa of
runs and a 2-1 Atlanta Braves
VICtory over the Texas Ra
gers An OS 0t S [Irs! h t or the
spr ng a w nd blown doub e
I rna xed a four-run Kansas
C ty mnth nmng and pusl ed
tl e Royals to an 8 7 w o e
the Ch cago Wh te Sox Tl e
White Sox B team also lost 8
t to a comb ned four hitte
from M nnesota T" ns p tel ers
Dave Goltz Bert Bl) even and
Torr Johnson

o

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. ..... Tile Dell)' Sentinel, Middleport-Pomea-oy, 0 ., Thursday, March 13, 1975
4- The Daily Se'ntinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday. March

Southern, :KC {\
•

•

Pro Basketball Roondup
BY UnitL-d Press International
Mike Riordan, pretty much·a
defensive hatchetman during
his career with the New York
Knick,&lt;; , is playing a far different and more important role·
for the Washington Bullets.
He's the "leader of the
break .11
,
'Having more backboard
strength than the Knicks had,
the Bullets are able to utilize
Riordan 's shooting talents
more eff ec tively. And so
Riordan , who has so much
stamina the players say he has
three lungs, has become one of
the National Basketball

wzn zn_tourney
Maue each finished t11e ni gtJI

with 2.

,

AL..'\0 TRAilED

In the second ~a me tile

Kyger C.rcck team also trailed
its opponents at the end of one
canto but c::~ me back to win the
contest over. the Gallipolis Blue
Angels by the fina l scor e of

55~

49.
Leadin g sco rers for the
Bobcat::; were Wanda Saxton

with 24 markers. Mary Bollin
followed wilh 12, Lauri Burnell
had 8, Vicki e Stroud had 7 and
Shirley Cla y and Cindy Hurley
each had 2_
For the Blue Angels the
leader wa s Brenda Wilson who
scored 14 points, Ba r b
Edelman and Amy Carter each
fini shed wi th 10, Cathy Waugh
had 6, Terri Short 4, ;md Cindy
Miller had 1.
Score by Quarters
Southern
10 19 14 6- 49
Meigs
12 8 12 10-42
Kyger Creek
Gallia Acad.

13 21 9 12- 55
14 13 10 12----49

Association's ;'game-busters.' '

AWAY SHE GOES, EYES FOR TilE BASKET, is Pam
Vaughan of the Meigs Marauder girls basketball team. A
sophomore, Miss Vaughan has sta rted all contests this
season and is among the team's top scorers. Ka tie Crow
picture.

Riordan showed his gamebusting talents Wednesday
nigh t when he came out
shooting in the third period and
led the Bullets to a 117-88
victory over the Houston
Rockets.
Riordan hit on seven consecutive shots from farther
than 20 feet and made 9 of 13
shots in the third period as the
Bullets built a ~lead. Nick
Weatherspoon scored 20 points
and Phil Chenier added 19 for
the Bullets, who raised their
season record to 52-18.
The Philadelphia 76ers de-

38th wrestling
meet hegins on Friday

By Bertha Parker
Sabbath School attendance
at the Free Melhodist Chutch,
March 6, was 89. Choir
members present, 15, offering
was $125.65, attendance at
worship service was 69.
A record of the sermon and
prayer by Peter Marshal, who
was once the chaplain of the
White House, was-played at the
l""al church Sunday evening.
Mr. and Mrs . Terry
Whitaker, Newark, visited
recently with Rev. and Mrs.
Floyd Shook.
The W.M.S. of the l""al
CHANGE OF DIRICCTION - Cindy Roush of the Southern High Tornado girls basketball
church met Tuesday evening
team is veering away from Meigs defenders Pam Vaughan, right. Southern, unbeaten,
with Mrs. Pearl Jacobs.
remamed that way. Katie Crow picture.
Mr. and Mrs. Phill Wise,
McConnelsville , attended
church service Sunday at the
l""al church.
SEEKS 18th WIN
Sunday e_vening, March 16,
LOS ANGELES (UP!) _ tonight's featW'e 10-round main record, and 15 of his wins have
Mr. Bob Riggleman of Mansfield, a dellvered·alcholic, wltl Bantamweight Frankie Duarte event at the Olympic, aiming been by knockouts.
Altimirano ha s 21 win s
be guest speaker. The public is of Los Angeles lakes on Mexico for an 18th win.
against
3 losses with 18 kay os.
City's Jorge Altimlrano in
Duarte has one loss on lhe
invited.

Malone advances t 0
NAlA quarterfinals
By CIIARLJE SMITH
Kentucky State, was held to 20 Alcorn , Grand ca nyon (Ariz.),
UPI SPORTS WRITER
by Tri-state.
Wlsconsin·Parkside,
Mi(l ~
KANSAS CITY, lolo. (UPI) "We tried not to be aware of western t Tex .) , Fairmount
Jay Bowerman is sticking to las,! night," he said, "but we {W.Va. ) State, St. Man·'s
his red shirt, red slacks and did have a letdown. There was (Tex . l a nd Winston-Sa lem
blue plaid jacket . -quite no emotion in this game. I feel t N.C. l.
literally.
we can win the tournament
Alcorn defeated Edinboro
The Malone (Ohio) coach now."
(Pa .) Slate, 85-79: Gr a nd
began wearing the outfit 10
Malone was joined in to- Canyon nudged lllinois Wesgames ago after Malone night 's quarterfinals by leyan, 66-63: Wisconsin-Pa rkdropped a 74-73 decision to Rlo
Grande. Since lhen, the Pioneers haven 't lost.
Making their first appearance in the NAIA
basketball tournament, the
EVANSVII.LE. Ind. ( UPI ) - holding the bali for more ''"' n a
Pioneers advanced to the
quarter-finals Wednesday 'Tenne ssee Slate Defeat ed minute before Bernard Bailey
night with wa 80-63 victory over Akron 72-69 in first round ac- scored and Greg Davis thrn
Tri.State (Ind.).
lion in the NCAA Division II added two free throws to put
" I'm going to wear this until basketba ll championships here Tennessee Stale out in front by
we lose," said 'Bowennan, Wednesday , with the help of a six points .
"even if. we go all the' way to freeze in the waning minutes ·of
Akron got a pair of quick
Saturday. I do change the the contest.
baskets on a tip-in by Nate
socks and underwear, though."
Tennessee led 39-33 at the B.1rnett and a shol from the
Malone, which knocked off intermission but Akron tied the corner by Dave Joyner to mak e
top-seeded Kentucky State in · game at 4:.-45 with five minutes it 7!.j)9 but Gilbert Wllliams lui
the first round Tuesday night, gone inlo tbe second half.
a free throw for Tennessee with
wUl face another heavily
The Zips were behind by only six seconds remaining in the
favored foe tonight when the
two points at 67-95 with just game and Akron was WJable to
Plo~ go against Alcorn
over two minutes to play bot · get off another shot .
(Miss.), last year's iunnerup
Tennesse went into a stall,
team.
"They're every bit as physical as Kentucky State,"
Bowerman said, "and IIIey
may be tougher on the boads ."
Oiarles Cox; .a S-8 guard who
averaged only 5.8 points Wtina
the season, hit eight of 12 field
goals wad scored 18 P.mt§
against Tri-state.
"We can't Play against
Alcorn lilte ~did tonight," he
lllid. " It was hard to forget
Estimates- No Obfigalion
lbout Kentucky State. Everybocl,v
saw talked about II.
And il wall aU ov..- tile
newspapers. I hope we got'lt

side up set fourth-seeded
Ma rymounl ( Kan.), 51-48 ;
Midwestern outlasted Norfolk
1Va .) State, 90-87: Fairmount
blitzed Winona (Mimi.) State
102-84: St, Mary 's dumped
Millersv ille ( Pa.l , 75-59; and
Winst on-Salem nipped Central
Washington Stale, 57-56.

COlUMBUS (UP!) - More
than 400 Ohio high school
wrestlers will be on hand
Friday for the opening of the
38th annual state wrestling
championship at Sl. John
Arena here.
Crowds are expected to jam
the arena for the four-session.
tournament which starts at
noon. The spotlight will focus
on 38 returning placewinners
and six defending champions.
One champ in particularJim Hanson of Richmond
Heights- will be seeking his
third straight Ohio championship in Class AA-A.' If Hanson,
a lithe 112-pound senior, can
repeat as the small school
champ, he will be come just the
sixth ~hio sch.oolboy in history
to win three titles.
Those tri-winners who pre:
ceeded Hanson were John
Matteucci (Cleveland West,
1946-47-48); Dick Bonacci
(Cievel~nd West, 1949-50-51);
Jim Drgella (Cleveland Jobn
Marshall, 1952-53-54 ), Carl
Hoppel (Lisbon Beaver Local,
1959.j)l.jl2) and Tom Milkovich
(Maple Heights, 1967-68-&lt;!9).
Matteucci is the head coach
at Eastlake North, considered
to be a top Class AAA threat
lhis year with six qualifiers,
lhe most of any school. Bonacci
is the coach at Cleveland State
University and Hoppel won an
aimost unheard of state title as
a freshman , falling to third the
following year.
Hanson won the 98-poWJd
championship in 1972-73 and
the !05-pound crown last year.
Three others returning in
Class AA-A are Thorn Herold,
132-pounder from Columbus
DeSales; Jess Winke, 112pounder from Oak Harbor and
heavyweight Eric Ctinningham
from Akron South .
Herold led DeSa les to the
small school team title last
year and is one of five stallion
wrestlers to qualify this vear.

-INSULATIONBlown Into Walls

and .lttics

-Fire Retardant- .

Free

our oys!em."

.

Mark Klein, Who .la!Jied 41
points in . the victory over

FOREMAN &amp; ABBOTT
Middleport, Ohio

Maple Heights is the defending Class AAA champ, bot
legendary Coach Milke Milkovich, whose teams have won
10 big school titles,' qualified
juslfour boys out of the rugged
Northeastern District Tourney
~last weekend.
Canton McKinley's Harold
Smith and Bay Village's Mike
Deanna are the only returning
AAA state champs. Deanna,
who won the 145-pound title last
year as a sophomore, can join
the three~time winners by
winning this year and next.
Smith, the 185-pound king
last year, is rated as the top
high school wrestler in the
country by several college
coaches. He is competing at
heavyweight this year.
Smith will have a tough road
to travel, however. He must
defeat three top wrestlers from
the Northeastern District in
l.akewood St. Edward's Tom '
Cousineau, headed for Ohio
State on a football scholarship;
Cleveland St. Joseph's Bob
Golic, destined for Notre Dame
via football and Eastlake
North's Mike Weitzman, who
pinned 14 of 16 foes this year.
Golic defeated Weitzman 8-1
in the semifinals of the Northeastern District and won the
title by beating Cousineau, 3-1.
Grove City and Cincinnati
Oak HiUs join Eastlake North
as the top threats to dethrone
defending AAA champ Maple
Heights. Grove City has two
returning runnersup in Chuck
David (1121 and Dan Chinn
( 119). Oak Hills has three top
matmen in Mark Elliott (175),

Rob Van Albnen (98) and
Randy Hill (167).
A total of 113 schools will be
represented in the AAA-Division and 119 in AA·A.
The quarterfinals are scheduled for Friday at 7 p.m. with
competition reswning at 1 p.m.
Saturday. Finals begin at 7
p.m. Saturday.

By Helen and Sue Bottel

big lead

She Won 'I Be Pinned Down
Rap:
Me and my girl have been going together for four and oneball years. The only thing we ever fought about was other guys.
You see, she doesn 't want to be tied to one person, bot I'm a onewoman man .
_We're abnost 17 and you'd think that's old enough to get
seraous. But she says, "It's good to dale more lhan one." Yet she
turns right aroun~ aod talks about our future marriage. Should 1
break up or just take it? - HAL

COCOA, Fla. (UP!) - Joee
Cruz drew a ninth-Inning
bases:load~ wa~ fr~ C~
cinnatl rehef patcher Pat
Zachary to force in the winninll
run as the Houston Astroo
nipped lhe Reds 12-11 here
Wednesday.
The walk to Cruz was !be 18th
in a ragged game, in which
Houston never led until the
end. Cincinnati had built a 7-4
first-inning lead off Aatr011'
starter Dave Roberts.
·
The Astros still trailed 11-7
entering the ninth. Singles by
Cruz, Rafael Batista, Roger
Metzger and Ray Busse and a
gam~ying double by Cesar
Cedeno highlighted the raUy.
Cedeno earlier hit his first
spring home run in Houston'ofifth inning. Astros Greg Gr088!:
four hits were top for botli:
clubs.

Hal :
Since you 've been "taking it" for over four years, why break
up now' Instead, try being a more-than-one-woman man. Might
shake your girl down a' bit. - HElEN

+++

NEW OFFICERS INSTALLED - Officers of the Point
Pleaoant Junior Woman's Club for 1975-76 were tnstBI!ed
during a dl)aner meeting of the membership held Tuesday
night In the Riverboat Room of Oscar's In Gallipolis. Taking
part In the Installation were from left, Gene Fisher; Installing

Gardeft club views vacation films
The wanual open meeting of
the Winding Trail Garden Club
Tuesday night at Grace
Episcopal Church Parish
House was highlighted by the
presentation oT fibns of Hawaii
by Mrs. Nan Moore.
Mrs. Dollie Hayes introduced
Mrs. Moore who showed
numerous pictures of historic
and picturesque sites of Hawaii
along with the Hawaiian
flowers and shrubs. She also
showed slides of the place
where Hawaii Five-() is fibned .
In her commentary, Mrs.
Moore stressed the friendliness
and hospitality of the people
there. She displayed several
souvenirs and also a scrapbook
·of snapshots she had taken.
Devotions and prayer by
Mrs. Wibna Terrell opened the
meeting. Mrs. Chlorus Grimm,
Meigs County contact chairwoman,
announced the

..

•
••
•
••

WilL RETIRE
•
KANSAS CITY (UP!) - A:;
0. Duer, executive secretary of
the National Association &lt;l
Intercollegiate Athletics .sine&amp;
1949, announced Wednesday hi!
will retire July 31.
,~
Duer, 70, started with lh!l
NAIA in 1940 as chairman Of
what is now District 3 iii
California.
:
Under Duer's leadership, th~
NAIA has grown from a smaU
group sponsoring a basketbaJ!
tournament
into
an
orgwaization wilh 555 membei
colleges and universities t~
now sponsors 15 national
championships.
•

Regatta flower show in June
and noted that Mrs. Margaret
Ella lewis 'will serve as
chairwoman. She also reported
that Mrs.lris Kelton, Region 11
director, OAGC, remains ill at
her home.
An invilation was read from
the Rutland Friendly Gardeners to attend the March 26
open meeting of their club at
the Rutland Church of Christ.
A St. Patrick's Day theme
was carried out in the
refresment table decorations.
The centerpiece of spring
flowers was a gift from Francis
Florist. Yellow and green
tapers were used in silver
candlesticks, and the silver tea
service completed the !able
appoinbnenls. A variety of
cookies, nuts, tea and coffee
were served by the host club
members to gues Is from the
Wildwood Garden Club, the

Delegate is selected

SALE· WRANGLER • SALE.

Mrs. Ann Moon was elected
delegate to the Hocking
District Missionary Convention
Sunday at Rutland when
the Mount Moriah Baptist
Church Missionary Society met
..Thursday,nlght at the home of
·Mrs. Ernest Bowles.
Plans ytere made during the
meeting to entertain the Rio
Grande
Associa lion
on
Saturday .at the church. Mrs.
Arnold Richards read scrip-ture from Matthew 26 and also
presented a commWJication
concerning a child in Haiti

Wrangler thinks Americans spend too much
for Jeans. We are having a sale on men's •
women's - boys' jeans. we· are selling them
below their ususal Low Price.

~

SALE
8.88
8.88
8.88
8.88
7.88
7.88
6.88
- - - - - -- 6.50
5.88
- - - - - - 4.88

"adopted" by the church.
The meeting opened with the
theme song, "Keep Me Every
Day" and devotions by Mrs.
Bowles titled "Please Give a
Devotion' '. Each member
participated in the lesson topic
with Mrs. Ervin Baumgardner
reading "Take No Thought",
Mrs. Julia Williams, "In All
Thy Ways", Mrs . Nellie
Winston, scripture from

~:E~:;s~~!~~:~i ~~r~~~:
Mrs. Bowles served refreshments.

Portland WSCS meets

MIDDLEPORT
DEPARTMENT STORE
OPEN TILL8:00 P.M. FRI. &amp; SAT.

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

specially for
Easter

PORTLAND - Mrs. Haro.ld
Roush hosted a recent meeting
of the Portland United
Methodist Church Women 's
Society of Christian Service.
The meeting opened with a
reading, "No. 40, Significant in
the Bible" and prayer. Mrs.
Kathleen Ward conducted the
program on the subject of
faith. Each member· had a
question on the subject with the
answers given from Bible
references. A Bible quiz was
held and Mrs. Ward read
"Outlook '75". Other readings
were "History of the Cross" by
Mrs.
Ruth
Ebersbach ;
"What's Spelling Among
Friends" by Mrs. Ethel
Johnson; "Lenten Poems and

Readings" by Mrs. Shirley
Johnson.
It was noted during the
business meeting that funds
are available for painting the
parsonage. A discussion was
held on plans for a lay witness
mission . to lake place the
weekend of April 18. A silent
auction was held and a
housewares
party
was
scheduled at the home of Mrs.
Ebersbach.
Homemade ice creain, cake,
lea and coffee were served lo
those named and Mrs. Cora
Hilton, Mrs. Carolyn Price,
and a guest, Mrs. Lanor Wolfe .
Mrs. Charles Hilton wlll host
lhe April meeting.

\

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

i

I

FLOWERS,

CANDY,
TOYS
o;,

Fill e d
Ba s kets ,
Baskets to Be Filled,
Gra ss all the
goodies you need .

r-

ARTIFICIA!:,

B~GS

. TO

EASTER LILIES,

TULIP~

HYACINTHS

MATCH

Ol-IR PACKAGED FLOWER--]
1...22.&lt;!...~~!.~ SEE~..,ARE ~!.,RE
LAWN

DECORATIONS -

Hen &amp;

to

ch icks , duc k &amp;

ducklings, rabbits, fla mingos, gees, bird baths and swan
pla nters. Wire &amp; plast ic decorating fence and corners .

. You'll find yourseH Wearing it ev.ryw~.rel A look
toiJQM·right wrtfl ponh or dl;irts, it's a 'real fo'shion fcr'I'Orite . So
aff~rdable i" a rai"bowof colo". Gr""· yellow,
whtte, bone or come! smooth . AllO in Jhiny black.

-.EN,FAANKUDI
PHONE
· 2~202 East Molin .St..
m-34fll

.

POMEROY. OHI(,

OPE~ FRICtAY &amp; SATUJc:w" Nf(iH 1:. -

' I
Flirtv , skirty IW~ ion with • rom•Hic twi5t
'-'•td! log handbag. '
to tna:e vou loo~ vour feminine
best. Soft dr~ butterfly boN hu a
toud'l of plAtform on 1 strliltlter .

(Jome•

,o

,

• o ~o.

'1JCJJ";

·u,.. 0\lr .Convenltnt .uv-A-WIY
l'lan.
.

$Iimmer heel.

Margueri-e's Shoes

heritage house

Betty Ohfinger

,

102 E. MAIN .

Midle!W.. &lt;MiD

POMEROY

+i+

Dear Helen and Sue:
Here's what I think of my outstanding friend:
She stands behind me, stands beside me, stands up for me,
stands by me, but never stands in my way . She won't stand for
anyone giving me a stand-off and she'd never stand me up.
I couldn't stand to lose her as I'd never find a stand-in half so
understanding . - Sf AND UP AND CHEER FOR MY FRIEND
Dear SUCFMF:
Gos, ge whiz' She sounds way about stand-ard! - HEL.EN

+++
Chesle r Garden Club, the Bend Gardeners;
Mrs.
Dori s
0' the River Club, and the Grueser, Wildwood Club; Mrs.
Middleport Amateur Gar- Rose Reynolds, Mrs. Elizabeth Stand Up :
And may she stand up to your description! - SUE
deners. Shamrock name tags Burkett and Mrs. Pearl
+++
were used. Miss Shirley Beegle Reynolds, all Middleport
Dear
Readers:
was the guest of her mother, a Amateurs ; Mrs . Jean Sum.:. which reminds us (for no good reason) - did you know
member of the host club .
merfield, and Mrs. Pauline
that the word "hwag" (or "hung"), used with other words or
Prizes were won by Mrs. Ridenour , Chester Garden
· phrases has over 20 different meanings? Close your eyes and see
Clara Conroy, Amateur Club.
how many you cwa name. Then open them wad check below :
Hang loose; hang in there; hwagtown; hanaout ; hang ten ;
hangup ; hwagover ; hang down; hang off; real hangln' time
(slang for "good tbne"); hang on; hangface; hangdog, hang low,
hang a right( or left); hung jury; well hung; hangman; hang job;
ALFRED - The U.M.W. of
June Stearns led the World hang tough ; just hangin' aroWld ... etc.
the Alfred Church mel on Day of Prayer program,
And here's another one: Name ten functional parts of your
Friday evening, March 7, at ''Become Perfectly One'', in an body that are identified by three~etter words. If you cwa think of
the home of Genevieve Guthrie impressive manner - with an more than six in three minutes, you're pretty sharp.
to hold its regular monthly offering received to be sent to
Answer: Eye, lip, gum, ear, jaw, hlp, arm, leg, toe, rib. meeting in conjunction with the Church Women United.
SUE AND HELEN
The next meeting will be
World Day of Prayer ob+++
servance . Attendance was Tuesday evening, April15, with
eight members and one visitor. place to be announced later.
The number of sick calls
Rap:
reported was 12. It was decided
I'm worried about my friend. He's male, but not a boyfriend.
to furnish the ham for the
I'm afraid he'll never get married as his standards are too high.
Easter breakfast at the church.
For instance, he won't see a divorced woman (doean't want used
200 AT WORKSHOP
Thelma Henderson offered to
m~rchandlse); he can't s.tand career girls but wwats a college
Over 200 advance reserpurchase and prepare the ham.
vations have been received for grad; she'g got to be of good family, and have "enough money to
Osie Mae Follrod selected
be independent," but she'll have to accept him as the leader; she
the Second Annual OAPSE
the name of _Rev . Ewing
should be good looking, modest, sexy, a homebody but also a
Transportation Workshop,
Carroll, from Si. Petersburg ,
mixer; she can't drink or smoke. And he will only date blondes,
Saturday, March 1&gt;, at the
Fla., an evangelist in Hong
with perfect, petite bodies. He really wants a wife, but will he
Rhodes Center on the Ohio
Kong to support by prayer for
State Fairgrounds in Colum- find one? -TIRED OF LOOKING
March, and a birthday card
was signed to be sent to him . bus. The workshop is being TOL:
sponsored by the TransWhaddayabet he settles for a dumpy brunette who leads him
Nellie Parker accepted the
portation Department of the
prayer calendar for April. She
around by the nose? -H.
Ohio Association of Public
also gave "A Prayer Before
+++
School Employees (OAPSE)
Easter" and a missionary
TOl:
and is open to all school bus
.. and it would serve him right! -SUE
reading, ' 'A-frican Missionary
drivers
and mechanics.
Thrilled to Read the Bible".

Alfred UMW has meeting

Anniversary is planned
As a part of the worldwide
observance of the American
Legion 's 56th birthday anniversary in March, Drew
Webster Post 39 will have a
party Tuesday at 7:30p.m. at
the Main St., Pomeroy, post
home .
The special event is being
handled by a committee under
l!'e chairmanship of Raymond
Jewell, post commander,
assisted by George Nesselroad,
Donald Hunnel and Leonard
Jewell.
Special guest will be
Department
First Vice
Commander Dean Scholl, who
will bring greetings from the
Department of Ohio. Other
guests will be members of
surrounding posts and units .
All Eighth ·District chairpersons of the auxiliary are
invited along with Miss Becky
Roush,
Eighth
District
president of the Junior
American Legion Auxiliary.
Mrs. Ben Neulzling, past
Eighth District president and
of
Unit
39
member
rehabilitation committee, will
have charge of the humorous
part of the program with Mrs.
Gerald Wildermuth to have
charge of refreshments.
Mrs. Neutzling has written a
comic skit tilled "A Wedding
Extravaganza" with 20
members of the post taking
parts. They are : Eddie
Burkett; the preacher: Frank
Vaughan, the bride; Edgar,
Van Inwagen, the groom:
Donald Hunnel, best man;
Robert Morris, maid of honor:
Leo Vaughan, .Clarence
Smucker, Charles Hayes,
Homer Smith and L.ouis B.
Vaughan, bridesmaids. Ushers
will be Allen Downie, Paul
Casci, Clifford Hayes and
Orval Wiles.

8est 8e&lt;::IC:l

"

MAK@:f!W. ROY Y.OUR SHOPPING CENTER
1

officer; Lllna Mallr, oatgolllg president ; Dianna Bragg,
recording secretary; Martha Martin, Incoming president;
Barbara Balch, treasurer : Ivai Wamsley, advisor; Phyllis
Fizer, second vice president; Sharon Beaver, corresponding
secretary and Marianne Sayre, first vice president.

:

Houston right-hwader Doug;:
Konieczny was the game's onl;r•
effective pitcher, permitting
one run wad four hits in foUl'~
innings.
:
The Astros are 3-2 in spring:;
play, while the Reds are now 1-"
••
4.
•

THROUGH FRI. ~ND SAT.

REG.
13.00 12.00 11.50
11.00
10.00
9.00
8.50
8.00
7.50
5.99

Hal :
Why not break up for a month and see how this changes both
your attitudes. You might be surprised. - SUE

.,.

•

Others in the bridal party
will be Raymond Jewell, ring
'bearer ; Richard Vaughan, Sr.;
flower girl: James Gilmore,
father of the bride; Charles
Swatzel, mother 'of the bride ;
Joe Struble and Roy Reuter,
soloists; Hazel Thomson,
pianist. Mrs. Neutzling is
directing the skit. A final
rehearsal will be Monday night
at the hall at 7 and all those
participating are asked to be
present.
Festivities of Post 39 will be a
part of a gigantic anniversary
celebration among the nearly
16,000 American Legion posts
lhroughout the country, in
several overseas countries and
· territories.
The American Legion was
founded March 15-17, 1919,
during a cancans in Paris
attended by representatives of
the various outfits that made
up the American Expeditionary Forces of World
War I. The organization has
since opened its ranks to
veterans of World War II, the
Korean War, and the Vietnam
War , Commander Jewell
explained.
As part of the preparation for
the 56th birthday, Post 39 is
winding up its 1975 mem-

bership drive with 347 already
enrolled. Theme for .the year,
as pointed out by Jewell, is "Be
Counted Again- for America".
All veterans have taken that
step forward to be counted for
their country through membership in the Legion and now
~ve the opportunity to be
counted again for America
through the many service
programs of the Legion .
The women of the auxiliary
will host the s""ial hour which
will take the form of a wedding
recepGon as a conclusion to the
skit by Mrs. Neutzling. The
wedding cake will be baked by
Mrs. Paul Casci. Mrs. Grace
Pratt, president, will present
all distinguished guests of the
auxiliary.

(

,,......_...._.. ..

.

,

'

-

"
~y.. ''

'

I

.
·'I ,

Women plan
breakfast
An Easter breakfast to be
served following the sunrise
service was planned when the
American lutheran Church
Women of St. Paul's lutheran
Church met Tuesday night at
lh e home of Mrs . lillian
Moore, Uncoln Heights.
The women will serve coffee
cake, colored eggs, milk ,
coffee and juice. Members
were reminded to save items
for a rummage sale May 3. It
was also agreed that the ALCW
will assist with the reception
for the Michael leifheil
wedding. Pastor William
Middleswart discussed the
bicentennial meeting he attended recently .
An Easter lily wlll be placed
on the altar Easter Sunday.
Cake and pie were served by
the hostess. Mrs. Jean Braun
will host the April 8 meeting.
Attending besides those named
were Mrs. Veda Davis, Miss
Ern a Jesse, Mrs. Lois Cleland,
Mrs. Judy Eichinger and Mrs.
Barbara Fry.

given by Mrs. Wllllam Smith•
Donations , in a ''bakelesa'l
bake sale were turned In
!
Mrs: Ernest Bowles g~ve a
legislative report noting thai
all but five states now have
returned Veterans Day to ItS
original dale. Mrs. Smith11oted
that the poppies have been
purcha9ed for th~ observance
of Poppy Day, and that they
will be distributed at the April ·
meeting.
Beea use of the absence of
Mrs. John James, Mrs.
Hampton gave the program on
community service em•
phasizing the points of safety,
beautification, community
action, blood donation, health
and home base. _One report on
vete rans affairs was completed by Mrs. Buller.
'
Mrs. Richards presented to
the unit a certificate from Paul
Casci for donations to the Gifts
for the Yanks. A prayer for
peace and the singing of "My
County "l'isof Thee" concluded
the meeting. Mrs . Buller
served refreshments . Mrs.
Nell~e Winston won the door
prize.

MEIGS THEATRE
TONIGHT
MAR¢H 13
NOT OPEN
Friday lhru Tuesday
March 14-18
THE STING
(Tochniclllor) '
Robert Fedtord
(PG)

Show 51arts 7p.m.

Our
handiest
watches
have
no hands
at all!

CARA\JELLE®
DIGITALS
BYBULO\lP\
Tell time the newest way with a
Caravelle Digital. the watch that gives
the exact time at a glance. With 17 jewel
precision. And style. Modern In design,
with contoured chrome and · stainless
steel case, metallic blue dial and largenumbered read-out panels. Hers, with
matching blue strap .. $45.00 .

All snakes feed on other
animals, especially veterbrales . Prey are always
swallowed whole as no snake
has teeth adapted for chewing.
Many snakes simply engulf
prey, swallowing it alive and
killing it with digestive juices.
The word "town~' came from
the Old English "tun" and German "Zaun", both meaning a
hedge or enclosure. Originally a
town was a group of dwellings
surrounded by a hedge or wall .

Goessler Jewelry Store
CoUrt St. Pomeroi

~'·

~aster

~aMs

Flowers, etc.

Smalley's Gift Shop
Chester, Ohio
Phone 985-3537
. .--,
~--------·
The very special way lo remembe•

Thoughts
Kenneth McCullough. R. Ph. , Charlos Riffle, R. Pll.
Open Daily8:00a ..;. lo ,,30 p.m.
Sunday .10:3Dio 12:30andSio? p.m.
PRESCRIPTIONS
· PH. 992-2955
-,
Friendly service .
.
.
117 E. MAIN
.. .
.
EROY, 0 .

"I expect to pass through life
but once_ If therefore, there be
any kindness I can show, or any
good !hang I c~n do to any fellow
being, .let me do it now, and not
defer or neglect it, as I shall not
pass this way again ." .. William Penn, Quaker founder
of Pennsylvania .

.

.

I

Contrabulaon to the heart
fund was made and eye glasses
for the needy to be sent to
Shorthills, N.J. were collected
durmg the Tuesday night
meetmg of the Lewis Manley
American Legion Auxiliary 263
at the Rutland home of Mrs.
Sherman Buller .
Mrs . Allen Hampton opened
the m~eting in ritualistic form
and w•th a roll call. of officers.
The treasurer's report was

NIM!Itys, Gifts,

"

)

..

Generation Rap

I

Akron.eliminated

~~ of.

feated the Portland Trail to one field goal in the Sounds'
Blazers 91-&amp; and the Boston win over Utah. Johnson sank 7
Celtics beat the Phoenix Suns of 12 field goals in the first half.
The win was the SoUnds' 21st in
88-82 in other NBA aames.
In the American Basketball 70 games equalling the total
Association , the Memphis number of victories they
Sounds downed the Utah Stars scored during the 1973"-74
102-87, the New York Nets season.
topped the St. Louis Spirits 124- Nets 1.%4 Spirits 96
Julius Erving scored 27
96, the Kentucky Colonels
whipped the Denver Nuggets points as the Nets ran up a 33108-103 and the San Diego poinl lead in the first half and
Conquistadors defeated the breezed to their victory over
the ice&lt;old Spirits. St. Louis
Virginia Squires 113-103.
rookie star Marvin Barnes
76ers 91 Blazers 88
Bill Cunningham scored :27 didn't score a point until 5:44
points and Fred Carter had 26 was left in the game.
in the 76ers' victory which Colonels 108 Nuggets 103
Artis Gibnore's 30 points led
snapped the Trail Blazers' sixgame winning streak. Portland the Colonels to their win over
had an opportunity to go ahead the R6ckets at lexington, Ky .,
with 16 seconds left but Geoff ending the Rockets' six-game
winning streak. Dan Issei and
Petrie missed a jump shot.
Wilbert Jones scored 16 points
Cellics 88 Suns 82
John .Havlicek scored eight each for the Colonels, Jones
points in the final 90 seconds as getting 14 in the second half.
the Celtics scored the seventh Conquistadors 113 Squires 103
CaldWell Jones scored 30
victory in their last nine
points
to
lead
t)\e
games. The Celtics went ahead
Conquistadors
to
their
fourth
with I :30 to go on a layup by
Havlicek who ther. dropped two consecutive victory, equalling
free throws 15 seconds later their longest winning streak of
and scored again with 54 the year aod moving them
within 2 \2 games of fourth
seconds left to make it 80-78.
place and the final playoff
Sounds 102 Stars 87
Stew Johnson scored 24 berth in the ABA West. It was
points aod held Moses Malone the eighth consecuutive loss for
Virginia.

Ohio~s

Laurel Cliff
News Notes

we

Reds blow

Bullets roll on

•

By Mel Cremeans
RACINE - The ihird night of
girls basketball played here
last night in the Southern Girls
Basketball Tourney produced
two crowd pleasers when the
undefeated Souther Tornado
girls remained unbeaten by
defeating the Meigs Marauder
girls 49-42, and in the second
game, girls from Kyger Creek
defeated the Gallia Academy
ga ls 55-49.
Tonight there are two games
in the double elimination
Iow-ney. The firs! will feature
Eastern Eagle girls against the
Meigs team al 6 p. m. and in
the second game the Southern
team will tangle with the
Kyger Creek girls a! 7:30p. m.
Southern Trailed
In the firs! game last night
lhe girls of Southern trailed !.be
Meigs girls after one period'lly
the score of 12-10 but oame
back to regain the leail in Jhe
second quarter and held on the
remainder of the game to wln ,
49-42. The Tornado girls were
led by Cindy Roush wi lh 22
points. Cheryl l.arkins scored
16, Brenda Lawrence and
Jennifer Mugrage each ended
the contest with S, and Becky
Sayre had 1.
For the Marauders lhe
leader was Mary Weyers~ller
with 19, Demaris Ash followed
wilh 11, Pam Vaughan had.. 8
•
and Beth ' Ivaughan
and Janel'

Mrs~ Butler hosts group ~

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•I

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'

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•

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. _,

'

. ..... Tile Dell)' Sentinel, Middleport-Pomea-oy, 0 ., Thursday, March 13, 1975
4- The Daily Se'ntinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday. March

Southern, :KC {\
•

•

Pro Basketball Roondup
BY UnitL-d Press International
Mike Riordan, pretty much·a
defensive hatchetman during
his career with the New York
Knick,&lt;; , is playing a far different and more important role·
for the Washington Bullets.
He's the "leader of the
break .11
,
'Having more backboard
strength than the Knicks had,
the Bullets are able to utilize
Riordan 's shooting talents
more eff ec tively. And so
Riordan , who has so much
stamina the players say he has
three lungs, has become one of
the National Basketball

wzn zn_tourney
Maue each finished t11e ni gtJI

with 2.

,

AL..'\0 TRAilED

In the second ~a me tile

Kyger C.rcck team also trailed
its opponents at the end of one
canto but c::~ me back to win the
contest over. the Gallipolis Blue
Angels by the fina l scor e of

55~

49.
Leadin g sco rers for the
Bobcat::; were Wanda Saxton

with 24 markers. Mary Bollin
followed wilh 12, Lauri Burnell
had 8, Vicki e Stroud had 7 and
Shirley Cla y and Cindy Hurley
each had 2_
For the Blue Angels the
leader wa s Brenda Wilson who
scored 14 points, Ba r b
Edelman and Amy Carter each
fini shed wi th 10, Cathy Waugh
had 6, Terri Short 4, ;md Cindy
Miller had 1.
Score by Quarters
Southern
10 19 14 6- 49
Meigs
12 8 12 10-42
Kyger Creek
Gallia Acad.

13 21 9 12- 55
14 13 10 12----49

Association's ;'game-busters.' '

AWAY SHE GOES, EYES FOR TilE BASKET, is Pam
Vaughan of the Meigs Marauder girls basketball team. A
sophomore, Miss Vaughan has sta rted all contests this
season and is among the team's top scorers. Ka tie Crow
picture.

Riordan showed his gamebusting talents Wednesday
nigh t when he came out
shooting in the third period and
led the Bullets to a 117-88
victory over the Houston
Rockets.
Riordan hit on seven consecutive shots from farther
than 20 feet and made 9 of 13
shots in the third period as the
Bullets built a ~lead. Nick
Weatherspoon scored 20 points
and Phil Chenier added 19 for
the Bullets, who raised their
season record to 52-18.
The Philadelphia 76ers de-

38th wrestling
meet hegins on Friday

By Bertha Parker
Sabbath School attendance
at the Free Melhodist Chutch,
March 6, was 89. Choir
members present, 15, offering
was $125.65, attendance at
worship service was 69.
A record of the sermon and
prayer by Peter Marshal, who
was once the chaplain of the
White House, was-played at the
l""al church Sunday evening.
Mr. and Mrs . Terry
Whitaker, Newark, visited
recently with Rev. and Mrs.
Floyd Shook.
The W.M.S. of the l""al
CHANGE OF DIRICCTION - Cindy Roush of the Southern High Tornado girls basketball
church met Tuesday evening
team is veering away from Meigs defenders Pam Vaughan, right. Southern, unbeaten,
with Mrs. Pearl Jacobs.
remamed that way. Katie Crow picture.
Mr. and Mrs. Phill Wise,
McConnelsville , attended
church service Sunday at the
l""al church.
SEEKS 18th WIN
Sunday e_vening, March 16,
LOS ANGELES (UP!) _ tonight's featW'e 10-round main record, and 15 of his wins have
Mr. Bob Riggleman of Mansfield, a dellvered·alcholic, wltl Bantamweight Frankie Duarte event at the Olympic, aiming been by knockouts.
Altimirano ha s 21 win s
be guest speaker. The public is of Los Angeles lakes on Mexico for an 18th win.
against
3 losses with 18 kay os.
City's Jorge Altimlrano in
Duarte has one loss on lhe
invited.

Malone advances t 0
NAlA quarterfinals
By CIIARLJE SMITH
Kentucky State, was held to 20 Alcorn , Grand ca nyon (Ariz.),
UPI SPORTS WRITER
by Tri-state.
Wlsconsin·Parkside,
Mi(l ~
KANSAS CITY, lolo. (UPI) "We tried not to be aware of western t Tex .) , Fairmount
Jay Bowerman is sticking to las,! night," he said, "but we {W.Va. ) State, St. Man·'s
his red shirt, red slacks and did have a letdown. There was (Tex . l a nd Winston-Sa lem
blue plaid jacket . -quite no emotion in this game. I feel t N.C. l.
literally.
we can win the tournament
Alcorn defeated Edinboro
The Malone (Ohio) coach now."
(Pa .) Slate, 85-79: Gr a nd
began wearing the outfit 10
Malone was joined in to- Canyon nudged lllinois Wesgames ago after Malone night 's quarterfinals by leyan, 66-63: Wisconsin-Pa rkdropped a 74-73 decision to Rlo
Grande. Since lhen, the Pioneers haven 't lost.
Making their first appearance in the NAIA
basketball tournament, the
EVANSVII.LE. Ind. ( UPI ) - holding the bali for more ''"' n a
Pioneers advanced to the
quarter-finals Wednesday 'Tenne ssee Slate Defeat ed minute before Bernard Bailey
night with wa 80-63 victory over Akron 72-69 in first round ac- scored and Greg Davis thrn
Tri.State (Ind.).
lion in the NCAA Division II added two free throws to put
" I'm going to wear this until basketba ll championships here Tennessee Stale out in front by
we lose," said 'Bowennan, Wednesday , with the help of a six points .
"even if. we go all the' way to freeze in the waning minutes ·of
Akron got a pair of quick
Saturday. I do change the the contest.
baskets on a tip-in by Nate
socks and underwear, though."
Tennessee led 39-33 at the B.1rnett and a shol from the
Malone, which knocked off intermission but Akron tied the corner by Dave Joyner to mak e
top-seeded Kentucky State in · game at 4:.-45 with five minutes it 7!.j)9 but Gilbert Wllliams lui
the first round Tuesday night, gone inlo tbe second half.
a free throw for Tennessee with
wUl face another heavily
The Zips were behind by only six seconds remaining in the
favored foe tonight when the
two points at 67-95 with just game and Akron was WJable to
Plo~ go against Alcorn
over two minutes to play bot · get off another shot .
(Miss.), last year's iunnerup
Tennesse went into a stall,
team.
"They're every bit as physical as Kentucky State,"
Bowerman said, "and IIIey
may be tougher on the boads ."
Oiarles Cox; .a S-8 guard who
averaged only 5.8 points Wtina
the season, hit eight of 12 field
goals wad scored 18 P.mt§
against Tri-state.
"We can't Play against
Alcorn lilte ~did tonight," he
lllid. " It was hard to forget
Estimates- No Obfigalion
lbout Kentucky State. Everybocl,v
saw talked about II.
And il wall aU ov..- tile
newspapers. I hope we got'lt

side up set fourth-seeded
Ma rymounl ( Kan.), 51-48 ;
Midwestern outlasted Norfolk
1Va .) State, 90-87: Fairmount
blitzed Winona (Mimi.) State
102-84: St, Mary 's dumped
Millersv ille ( Pa.l , 75-59; and
Winst on-Salem nipped Central
Washington Stale, 57-56.

COlUMBUS (UP!) - More
than 400 Ohio high school
wrestlers will be on hand
Friday for the opening of the
38th annual state wrestling
championship at Sl. John
Arena here.
Crowds are expected to jam
the arena for the four-session.
tournament which starts at
noon. The spotlight will focus
on 38 returning placewinners
and six defending champions.
One champ in particularJim Hanson of Richmond
Heights- will be seeking his
third straight Ohio championship in Class AA-A.' If Hanson,
a lithe 112-pound senior, can
repeat as the small school
champ, he will be come just the
sixth ~hio sch.oolboy in history
to win three titles.
Those tri-winners who pre:
ceeded Hanson were John
Matteucci (Cleveland West,
1946-47-48); Dick Bonacci
(Cievel~nd West, 1949-50-51);
Jim Drgella (Cleveland Jobn
Marshall, 1952-53-54 ), Carl
Hoppel (Lisbon Beaver Local,
1959.j)l.jl2) and Tom Milkovich
(Maple Heights, 1967-68-&lt;!9).
Matteucci is the head coach
at Eastlake North, considered
to be a top Class AAA threat
lhis year with six qualifiers,
lhe most of any school. Bonacci
is the coach at Cleveland State
University and Hoppel won an
aimost unheard of state title as
a freshman , falling to third the
following year.
Hanson won the 98-poWJd
championship in 1972-73 and
the !05-pound crown last year.
Three others returning in
Class AA-A are Thorn Herold,
132-pounder from Columbus
DeSales; Jess Winke, 112pounder from Oak Harbor and
heavyweight Eric Ctinningham
from Akron South .
Herold led DeSa les to the
small school team title last
year and is one of five stallion
wrestlers to qualify this vear.

-INSULATIONBlown Into Walls

and .lttics

-Fire Retardant- .

Free

our oys!em."

.

Mark Klein, Who .la!Jied 41
points in . the victory over

FOREMAN &amp; ABBOTT
Middleport, Ohio

Maple Heights is the defending Class AAA champ, bot
legendary Coach Milke Milkovich, whose teams have won
10 big school titles,' qualified
juslfour boys out of the rugged
Northeastern District Tourney
~last weekend.
Canton McKinley's Harold
Smith and Bay Village's Mike
Deanna are the only returning
AAA state champs. Deanna,
who won the 145-pound title last
year as a sophomore, can join
the three~time winners by
winning this year and next.
Smith, the 185-pound king
last year, is rated as the top
high school wrestler in the
country by several college
coaches. He is competing at
heavyweight this year.
Smith will have a tough road
to travel, however. He must
defeat three top wrestlers from
the Northeastern District in
l.akewood St. Edward's Tom '
Cousineau, headed for Ohio
State on a football scholarship;
Cleveland St. Joseph's Bob
Golic, destined for Notre Dame
via football and Eastlake
North's Mike Weitzman, who
pinned 14 of 16 foes this year.
Golic defeated Weitzman 8-1
in the semifinals of the Northeastern District and won the
title by beating Cousineau, 3-1.
Grove City and Cincinnati
Oak HiUs join Eastlake North
as the top threats to dethrone
defending AAA champ Maple
Heights. Grove City has two
returning runnersup in Chuck
David (1121 and Dan Chinn
( 119). Oak Hills has three top
matmen in Mark Elliott (175),

Rob Van Albnen (98) and
Randy Hill (167).
A total of 113 schools will be
represented in the AAA-Division and 119 in AA·A.
The quarterfinals are scheduled for Friday at 7 p.m. with
competition reswning at 1 p.m.
Saturday. Finals begin at 7
p.m. Saturday.

By Helen and Sue Bottel

big lead

She Won 'I Be Pinned Down
Rap:
Me and my girl have been going together for four and oneball years. The only thing we ever fought about was other guys.
You see, she doesn 't want to be tied to one person, bot I'm a onewoman man .
_We're abnost 17 and you'd think that's old enough to get
seraous. But she says, "It's good to dale more lhan one." Yet she
turns right aroun~ aod talks about our future marriage. Should 1
break up or just take it? - HAL

COCOA, Fla. (UP!) - Joee
Cruz drew a ninth-Inning
bases:load~ wa~ fr~ C~
cinnatl rehef patcher Pat
Zachary to force in the winninll
run as the Houston Astroo
nipped lhe Reds 12-11 here
Wednesday.
The walk to Cruz was !be 18th
in a ragged game, in which
Houston never led until the
end. Cincinnati had built a 7-4
first-inning lead off Aatr011'
starter Dave Roberts.
·
The Astros still trailed 11-7
entering the ninth. Singles by
Cruz, Rafael Batista, Roger
Metzger and Ray Busse and a
gam~ying double by Cesar
Cedeno highlighted the raUy.
Cedeno earlier hit his first
spring home run in Houston'ofifth inning. Astros Greg Gr088!:
four hits were top for botli:
clubs.

Hal :
Since you 've been "taking it" for over four years, why break
up now' Instead, try being a more-than-one-woman man. Might
shake your girl down a' bit. - HElEN

+++

NEW OFFICERS INSTALLED - Officers of the Point
Pleaoant Junior Woman's Club for 1975-76 were tnstBI!ed
during a dl)aner meeting of the membership held Tuesday
night In the Riverboat Room of Oscar's In Gallipolis. Taking
part In the Installation were from left, Gene Fisher; Installing

Gardeft club views vacation films
The wanual open meeting of
the Winding Trail Garden Club
Tuesday night at Grace
Episcopal Church Parish
House was highlighted by the
presentation oT fibns of Hawaii
by Mrs. Nan Moore.
Mrs. Dollie Hayes introduced
Mrs. Moore who showed
numerous pictures of historic
and picturesque sites of Hawaii
along with the Hawaiian
flowers and shrubs. She also
showed slides of the place
where Hawaii Five-() is fibned .
In her commentary, Mrs.
Moore stressed the friendliness
and hospitality of the people
there. She displayed several
souvenirs and also a scrapbook
·of snapshots she had taken.
Devotions and prayer by
Mrs. Wibna Terrell opened the
meeting. Mrs. Chlorus Grimm,
Meigs County contact chairwoman,
announced the

..

•
••
•
••

WilL RETIRE
•
KANSAS CITY (UP!) - A:;
0. Duer, executive secretary of
the National Association &lt;l
Intercollegiate Athletics .sine&amp;
1949, announced Wednesday hi!
will retire July 31.
,~
Duer, 70, started with lh!l
NAIA in 1940 as chairman Of
what is now District 3 iii
California.
:
Under Duer's leadership, th~
NAIA has grown from a smaU
group sponsoring a basketbaJ!
tournament
into
an
orgwaization wilh 555 membei
colleges and universities t~
now sponsors 15 national
championships.
•

Regatta flower show in June
and noted that Mrs. Margaret
Ella lewis 'will serve as
chairwoman. She also reported
that Mrs.lris Kelton, Region 11
director, OAGC, remains ill at
her home.
An invilation was read from
the Rutland Friendly Gardeners to attend the March 26
open meeting of their club at
the Rutland Church of Christ.
A St. Patrick's Day theme
was carried out in the
refresment table decorations.
The centerpiece of spring
flowers was a gift from Francis
Florist. Yellow and green
tapers were used in silver
candlesticks, and the silver tea
service completed the !able
appoinbnenls. A variety of
cookies, nuts, tea and coffee
were served by the host club
members to gues Is from the
Wildwood Garden Club, the

Delegate is selected

SALE· WRANGLER • SALE.

Mrs. Ann Moon was elected
delegate to the Hocking
District Missionary Convention
Sunday at Rutland when
the Mount Moriah Baptist
Church Missionary Society met
..Thursday,nlght at the home of
·Mrs. Ernest Bowles.
Plans ytere made during the
meeting to entertain the Rio
Grande
Associa lion
on
Saturday .at the church. Mrs.
Arnold Richards read scrip-ture from Matthew 26 and also
presented a commWJication
concerning a child in Haiti

Wrangler thinks Americans spend too much
for Jeans. We are having a sale on men's •
women's - boys' jeans. we· are selling them
below their ususal Low Price.

~

SALE
8.88
8.88
8.88
8.88
7.88
7.88
6.88
- - - - - -- 6.50
5.88
- - - - - - 4.88

"adopted" by the church.
The meeting opened with the
theme song, "Keep Me Every
Day" and devotions by Mrs.
Bowles titled "Please Give a
Devotion' '. Each member
participated in the lesson topic
with Mrs. Ervin Baumgardner
reading "Take No Thought",
Mrs. Julia Williams, "In All
Thy Ways", Mrs . Nellie
Winston, scripture from

~:E~:;s~~!~~:~i ~~r~~~:
Mrs. Bowles served refreshments.

Portland WSCS meets

MIDDLEPORT
DEPARTMENT STORE
OPEN TILL8:00 P.M. FRI. &amp; SAT.

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

specially for
Easter

PORTLAND - Mrs. Haro.ld
Roush hosted a recent meeting
of the Portland United
Methodist Church Women 's
Society of Christian Service.
The meeting opened with a
reading, "No. 40, Significant in
the Bible" and prayer. Mrs.
Kathleen Ward conducted the
program on the subject of
faith. Each member· had a
question on the subject with the
answers given from Bible
references. A Bible quiz was
held and Mrs. Ward read
"Outlook '75". Other readings
were "History of the Cross" by
Mrs.
Ruth
Ebersbach ;
"What's Spelling Among
Friends" by Mrs. Ethel
Johnson; "Lenten Poems and

Readings" by Mrs. Shirley
Johnson.
It was noted during the
business meeting that funds
are available for painting the
parsonage. A discussion was
held on plans for a lay witness
mission . to lake place the
weekend of April 18. A silent
auction was held and a
housewares
party
was
scheduled at the home of Mrs.
Ebersbach.
Homemade ice creain, cake,
lea and coffee were served lo
those named and Mrs. Cora
Hilton, Mrs. Carolyn Price,
and a guest, Mrs. Lanor Wolfe .
Mrs. Charles Hilton wlll host
lhe April meeting.

\

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

i

I

FLOWERS,

CANDY,
TOYS
o;,

Fill e d
Ba s kets ,
Baskets to Be Filled,
Gra ss all the
goodies you need .

r-

ARTIFICIA!:,

B~GS

. TO

EASTER LILIES,

TULIP~

HYACINTHS

MATCH

Ol-IR PACKAGED FLOWER--]
1...22.&lt;!...~~!.~ SEE~..,ARE ~!.,RE
LAWN

DECORATIONS -

Hen &amp;

to

ch icks , duc k &amp;

ducklings, rabbits, fla mingos, gees, bird baths and swan
pla nters. Wire &amp; plast ic decorating fence and corners .

. You'll find yourseH Wearing it ev.ryw~.rel A look
toiJQM·right wrtfl ponh or dl;irts, it's a 'real fo'shion fcr'I'Orite . So
aff~rdable i" a rai"bowof colo". Gr""· yellow,
whtte, bone or come! smooth . AllO in Jhiny black.

-.EN,FAANKUDI
PHONE
· 2~202 East Molin .St..
m-34fll

.

POMEROY. OHI(,

OPE~ FRICtAY &amp; SATUJc:w" Nf(iH 1:. -

' I
Flirtv , skirty IW~ ion with • rom•Hic twi5t
'-'•td! log handbag. '
to tna:e vou loo~ vour feminine
best. Soft dr~ butterfly boN hu a
toud'l of plAtform on 1 strliltlter .

(Jome•

,o

,

• o ~o.

'1JCJJ";

·u,.. 0\lr .Convenltnt .uv-A-WIY
l'lan.
.

$Iimmer heel.

Margueri-e's Shoes

heritage house

Betty Ohfinger

,

102 E. MAIN .

Midle!W.. &lt;MiD

POMEROY

+i+

Dear Helen and Sue:
Here's what I think of my outstanding friend:
She stands behind me, stands beside me, stands up for me,
stands by me, but never stands in my way . She won't stand for
anyone giving me a stand-off and she'd never stand me up.
I couldn't stand to lose her as I'd never find a stand-in half so
understanding . - Sf AND UP AND CHEER FOR MY FRIEND
Dear SUCFMF:
Gos, ge whiz' She sounds way about stand-ard! - HEL.EN

+++
Chesle r Garden Club, the Bend Gardeners;
Mrs.
Dori s
0' the River Club, and the Grueser, Wildwood Club; Mrs.
Middleport Amateur Gar- Rose Reynolds, Mrs. Elizabeth Stand Up :
And may she stand up to your description! - SUE
deners. Shamrock name tags Burkett and Mrs. Pearl
+++
were used. Miss Shirley Beegle Reynolds, all Middleport
Dear
Readers:
was the guest of her mother, a Amateurs ; Mrs . Jean Sum.:. which reminds us (for no good reason) - did you know
member of the host club .
merfield, and Mrs. Pauline
that the word "hwag" (or "hung"), used with other words or
Prizes were won by Mrs. Ridenour , Chester Garden
· phrases has over 20 different meanings? Close your eyes and see
Clara Conroy, Amateur Club.
how many you cwa name. Then open them wad check below :
Hang loose; hang in there; hwagtown; hanaout ; hang ten ;
hangup ; hwagover ; hang down; hang off; real hangln' time
(slang for "good tbne"); hang on; hangface; hangdog, hang low,
hang a right( or left); hung jury; well hung; hangman; hang job;
ALFRED - The U.M.W. of
June Stearns led the World hang tough ; just hangin' aroWld ... etc.
the Alfred Church mel on Day of Prayer program,
And here's another one: Name ten functional parts of your
Friday evening, March 7, at ''Become Perfectly One'', in an body that are identified by three~etter words. If you cwa think of
the home of Genevieve Guthrie impressive manner - with an more than six in three minutes, you're pretty sharp.
to hold its regular monthly offering received to be sent to
Answer: Eye, lip, gum, ear, jaw, hlp, arm, leg, toe, rib. meeting in conjunction with the Church Women United.
SUE AND HELEN
The next meeting will be
World Day of Prayer ob+++
servance . Attendance was Tuesday evening, April15, with
eight members and one visitor. place to be announced later.
The number of sick calls
Rap:
reported was 12. It was decided
I'm worried about my friend. He's male, but not a boyfriend.
to furnish the ham for the
I'm afraid he'll never get married as his standards are too high.
Easter breakfast at the church.
For instance, he won't see a divorced woman (doean't want used
200 AT WORKSHOP
Thelma Henderson offered to
m~rchandlse); he can't s.tand career girls but wwats a college
Over 200 advance reserpurchase and prepare the ham.
vations have been received for grad; she'g got to be of good family, and have "enough money to
Osie Mae Follrod selected
be independent," but she'll have to accept him as the leader; she
the Second Annual OAPSE
the name of _Rev . Ewing
should be good looking, modest, sexy, a homebody but also a
Transportation Workshop,
Carroll, from Si. Petersburg ,
mixer; she can't drink or smoke. And he will only date blondes,
Saturday, March 1&gt;, at the
Fla., an evangelist in Hong
with perfect, petite bodies. He really wants a wife, but will he
Rhodes Center on the Ohio
Kong to support by prayer for
State Fairgrounds in Colum- find one? -TIRED OF LOOKING
March, and a birthday card
was signed to be sent to him . bus. The workshop is being TOL:
sponsored by the TransWhaddayabet he settles for a dumpy brunette who leads him
Nellie Parker accepted the
portation Department of the
prayer calendar for April. She
around by the nose? -H.
Ohio Association of Public
also gave "A Prayer Before
+++
School Employees (OAPSE)
Easter" and a missionary
TOl:
and is open to all school bus
.. and it would serve him right! -SUE
reading, ' 'A-frican Missionary
drivers
and mechanics.
Thrilled to Read the Bible".

Alfred UMW has meeting

Anniversary is planned
As a part of the worldwide
observance of the American
Legion 's 56th birthday anniversary in March, Drew
Webster Post 39 will have a
party Tuesday at 7:30p.m. at
the Main St., Pomeroy, post
home .
The special event is being
handled by a committee under
l!'e chairmanship of Raymond
Jewell, post commander,
assisted by George Nesselroad,
Donald Hunnel and Leonard
Jewell.
Special guest will be
Department
First Vice
Commander Dean Scholl, who
will bring greetings from the
Department of Ohio. Other
guests will be members of
surrounding posts and units .
All Eighth ·District chairpersons of the auxiliary are
invited along with Miss Becky
Roush,
Eighth
District
president of the Junior
American Legion Auxiliary.
Mrs. Ben Neulzling, past
Eighth District president and
of
Unit
39
member
rehabilitation committee, will
have charge of the humorous
part of the program with Mrs.
Gerald Wildermuth to have
charge of refreshments.
Mrs. Neutzling has written a
comic skit tilled "A Wedding
Extravaganza" with 20
members of the post taking
parts. They are : Eddie
Burkett; the preacher: Frank
Vaughan, the bride; Edgar,
Van Inwagen, the groom:
Donald Hunnel, best man;
Robert Morris, maid of honor:
Leo Vaughan, .Clarence
Smucker, Charles Hayes,
Homer Smith and L.ouis B.
Vaughan, bridesmaids. Ushers
will be Allen Downie, Paul
Casci, Clifford Hayes and
Orval Wiles.

8est 8e&lt;::IC:l

"

MAK@:f!W. ROY Y.OUR SHOPPING CENTER
1

officer; Lllna Mallr, oatgolllg president ; Dianna Bragg,
recording secretary; Martha Martin, Incoming president;
Barbara Balch, treasurer : Ivai Wamsley, advisor; Phyllis
Fizer, second vice president; Sharon Beaver, corresponding
secretary and Marianne Sayre, first vice president.

:

Houston right-hwader Doug;:
Konieczny was the game's onl;r•
effective pitcher, permitting
one run wad four hits in foUl'~
innings.
:
The Astros are 3-2 in spring:;
play, while the Reds are now 1-"
••
4.
•

THROUGH FRI. ~ND SAT.

REG.
13.00 12.00 11.50
11.00
10.00
9.00
8.50
8.00
7.50
5.99

Hal :
Why not break up for a month and see how this changes both
your attitudes. You might be surprised. - SUE

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Others in the bridal party
will be Raymond Jewell, ring
'bearer ; Richard Vaughan, Sr.;
flower girl: James Gilmore,
father of the bride; Charles
Swatzel, mother 'of the bride ;
Joe Struble and Roy Reuter,
soloists; Hazel Thomson,
pianist. Mrs. Neutzling is
directing the skit. A final
rehearsal will be Monday night
at the hall at 7 and all those
participating are asked to be
present.
Festivities of Post 39 will be a
part of a gigantic anniversary
celebration among the nearly
16,000 American Legion posts
lhroughout the country, in
several overseas countries and
· territories.
The American Legion was
founded March 15-17, 1919,
during a cancans in Paris
attended by representatives of
the various outfits that made
up the American Expeditionary Forces of World
War I. The organization has
since opened its ranks to
veterans of World War II, the
Korean War, and the Vietnam
War , Commander Jewell
explained.
As part of the preparation for
the 56th birthday, Post 39 is
winding up its 1975 mem-

bership drive with 347 already
enrolled. Theme for .the year,
as pointed out by Jewell, is "Be
Counted Again- for America".
All veterans have taken that
step forward to be counted for
their country through membership in the Legion and now
~ve the opportunity to be
counted again for America
through the many service
programs of the Legion .
The women of the auxiliary
will host the s""ial hour which
will take the form of a wedding
recepGon as a conclusion to the
skit by Mrs. Neutzling. The
wedding cake will be baked by
Mrs. Paul Casci. Mrs. Grace
Pratt, president, will present
all distinguished guests of the
auxiliary.

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Women plan
breakfast
An Easter breakfast to be
served following the sunrise
service was planned when the
American lutheran Church
Women of St. Paul's lutheran
Church met Tuesday night at
lh e home of Mrs . lillian
Moore, Uncoln Heights.
The women will serve coffee
cake, colored eggs, milk ,
coffee and juice. Members
were reminded to save items
for a rummage sale May 3. It
was also agreed that the ALCW
will assist with the reception
for the Michael leifheil
wedding. Pastor William
Middleswart discussed the
bicentennial meeting he attended recently .
An Easter lily wlll be placed
on the altar Easter Sunday.
Cake and pie were served by
the hostess. Mrs. Jean Braun
will host the April 8 meeting.
Attending besides those named
were Mrs. Veda Davis, Miss
Ern a Jesse, Mrs. Lois Cleland,
Mrs. Judy Eichinger and Mrs.
Barbara Fry.

given by Mrs. Wllllam Smith•
Donations , in a ''bakelesa'l
bake sale were turned In
!
Mrs: Ernest Bowles g~ve a
legislative report noting thai
all but five states now have
returned Veterans Day to ItS
original dale. Mrs. Smith11oted
that the poppies have been
purcha9ed for th~ observance
of Poppy Day, and that they
will be distributed at the April ·
meeting.
Beea use of the absence of
Mrs. John James, Mrs.
Hampton gave the program on
community service em•
phasizing the points of safety,
beautification, community
action, blood donation, health
and home base. _One report on
vete rans affairs was completed by Mrs. Buller.
'
Mrs. Richards presented to
the unit a certificate from Paul
Casci for donations to the Gifts
for the Yanks. A prayer for
peace and the singing of "My
County "l'isof Thee" concluded
the meeting. Mrs . Buller
served refreshments . Mrs.
Nell~e Winston won the door
prize.

MEIGS THEATRE
TONIGHT
MAR¢H 13
NOT OPEN
Friday lhru Tuesday
March 14-18
THE STING
(Tochniclllor) '
Robert Fedtord
(PG)

Show 51arts 7p.m.

Our
handiest
watches
have
no hands
at all!

CARA\JELLE®
DIGITALS
BYBULO\lP\
Tell time the newest way with a
Caravelle Digital. the watch that gives
the exact time at a glance. With 17 jewel
precision. And style. Modern In design,
with contoured chrome and · stainless
steel case, metallic blue dial and largenumbered read-out panels. Hers, with
matching blue strap .. $45.00 .

All snakes feed on other
animals, especially veterbrales . Prey are always
swallowed whole as no snake
has teeth adapted for chewing.
Many snakes simply engulf
prey, swallowing it alive and
killing it with digestive juices.
The word "town~' came from
the Old English "tun" and German "Zaun", both meaning a
hedge or enclosure. Originally a
town was a group of dwellings
surrounded by a hedge or wall .

Goessler Jewelry Store
CoUrt St. Pomeroi

~'·

~aster

~aMs

Flowers, etc.

Smalley's Gift Shop
Chester, Ohio
Phone 985-3537
. .--,
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The very special way lo remembe•

Thoughts
Kenneth McCullough. R. Ph. , Charlos Riffle, R. Pll.
Open Daily8:00a ..;. lo ,,30 p.m.
Sunday .10:3Dio 12:30andSio? p.m.
PRESCRIPTIONS
· PH. 992-2955
-,
Friendly service .
.
.
117 E. MAIN
.. .
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EROY, 0 .

"I expect to pass through life
but once_ If therefore, there be
any kindness I can show, or any
good !hang I c~n do to any fellow
being, .let me do it now, and not
defer or neglect it, as I shall not
pass this way again ." .. William Penn, Quaker founder
of Pennsylvania .

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Contrabulaon to the heart
fund was made and eye glasses
for the needy to be sent to
Shorthills, N.J. were collected
durmg the Tuesday night
meetmg of the Lewis Manley
American Legion Auxiliary 263
at the Rutland home of Mrs.
Sherman Buller .
Mrs . Allen Hampton opened
the m~eting in ritualistic form
and w•th a roll call. of officers.
The treasurer's report was

NIM!Itys, Gifts,

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Generation Rap

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Akron.eliminated

~~ of.

feated the Portland Trail to one field goal in the Sounds'
Blazers 91-&amp; and the Boston win over Utah. Johnson sank 7
Celtics beat the Phoenix Suns of 12 field goals in the first half.
The win was the SoUnds' 21st in
88-82 in other NBA aames.
In the American Basketball 70 games equalling the total
Association , the Memphis number of victories they
Sounds downed the Utah Stars scored during the 1973"-74
102-87, the New York Nets season.
topped the St. Louis Spirits 124- Nets 1.%4 Spirits 96
Julius Erving scored 27
96, the Kentucky Colonels
whipped the Denver Nuggets points as the Nets ran up a 33108-103 and the San Diego poinl lead in the first half and
Conquistadors defeated the breezed to their victory over
the ice&lt;old Spirits. St. Louis
Virginia Squires 113-103.
rookie star Marvin Barnes
76ers 91 Blazers 88
Bill Cunningham scored :27 didn't score a point until 5:44
points and Fred Carter had 26 was left in the game.
in the 76ers' victory which Colonels 108 Nuggets 103
Artis Gibnore's 30 points led
snapped the Trail Blazers' sixgame winning streak. Portland the Colonels to their win over
had an opportunity to go ahead the R6ckets at lexington, Ky .,
with 16 seconds left but Geoff ending the Rockets' six-game
winning streak. Dan Issei and
Petrie missed a jump shot.
Wilbert Jones scored 16 points
Cellics 88 Suns 82
John .Havlicek scored eight each for the Colonels, Jones
points in the final 90 seconds as getting 14 in the second half.
the Celtics scored the seventh Conquistadors 113 Squires 103
CaldWell Jones scored 30
victory in their last nine
points
to
lead
t)\e
games. The Celtics went ahead
Conquistadors
to
their
fourth
with I :30 to go on a layup by
Havlicek who ther. dropped two consecutive victory, equalling
free throws 15 seconds later their longest winning streak of
and scored again with 54 the year aod moving them
within 2 \2 games of fourth
seconds left to make it 80-78.
place and the final playoff
Sounds 102 Stars 87
Stew Johnson scored 24 berth in the ABA West. It was
points aod held Moses Malone the eighth consecuutive loss for
Virginia.

Ohio~s

Laurel Cliff
News Notes

we

Reds blow

Bullets roll on

•

By Mel Cremeans
RACINE - The ihird night of
girls basketball played here
last night in the Southern Girls
Basketball Tourney produced
two crowd pleasers when the
undefeated Souther Tornado
girls remained unbeaten by
defeating the Meigs Marauder
girls 49-42, and in the second
game, girls from Kyger Creek
defeated the Gallia Academy
ga ls 55-49.
Tonight there are two games
in the double elimination
Iow-ney. The firs! will feature
Eastern Eagle girls against the
Meigs team al 6 p. m. and in
the second game the Southern
team will tangle with the
Kyger Creek girls a! 7:30p. m.
Southern Trailed
In the firs! game last night
lhe girls of Southern trailed !.be
Meigs girls after one period'lly
the score of 12-10 but oame
back to regain the leail in Jhe
second quarter and held on the
remainder of the game to wln ,
49-42. The Tornado girls were
led by Cindy Roush wi lh 22
points. Cheryl l.arkins scored
16, Brenda Lawrence and
Jennifer Mugrage each ended
the contest with S, and Becky
Sayre had 1.
For the Marauders lhe
leader was Mary Weyers~ller
with 19, Demaris Ash followed
wilh 11, Pam Vaughan had.. 8
•
and Beth ' Ivaughan
and Janel'

Mrs~ Butler hosts group ~

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7- The DaUy Sentinel, Mlddleport·Poineroy, 0 .. Thursday, March J:l, 1975

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1'h11r&lt;rlav., March 13, 1975

Polly 's Poin
RY POI.I .Y CIIAM EH

Decorate with
favored cards

Free clinics .for women will he held fu Meigs

· Class -has
meeting
\u se rve ~~ breakfast
fullow ing the Easter morning
suurisc service were made
durin g the Tuesday nig ht
rncoting of the Hearthstone
Cia~' of rile Middleport First
Baptis t Church al the home of
Mr . and Mrs. Allen Hughes.
The class also voted to
provide three lilies for the
sa nt:luary on Easter. a nd a
committee was appoin ted to
buy ar ticles for lhe kitchen.
J ohn Werner, vice president,
ha d charge of lhe mee ting with
Paul Smart giv ing devotions.
Hev . and Mrs. Cleo Boyd, the
l'hurch's interim pastor, were
wel co med. The program
consisted of Palm Sunday,
F:aster. and spring th oughts
from the members.
Refres hments were served
by Ihe hosts ro the Rev . and
Mrs. Boyd, Mr. and Mrs. Willis
Anthohy, Mr . and Mrs. Mil ton
Hood, Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Hubbard, Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Srn:.rl, Mr . and Mrs. John
Werner.
Pl~u1s

and other e mbroidery
POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - I have a patterns. !5o not usc carbon
you ;tre
large collectiorl or attracth·c paper un.lcss
despera
tC'
.
'If
smeo:1rs
bad ly.
all-occasion cards that have
Buy
&lt;1 trcmsfer pencil wilh a
grea t sentimen t fur me so I will
not throw tht•m away. I would wax b.ase at a nced lecraft .~or
like some sut-:geslions as tn art supply store. Make sure the
.. · what I could do with thtml. - point is snwn t11 and almost
dul l. If \I is Iuo sharp i I will lear
.,
CAROL G.
DEAR CA ROL G. - You thf' paper. Trace the design on
mi ght r ovt•r a thr eP·pa nt•l the reverse side of your putlcrn
REV. CLEO BOYD
sr rren wilh your cards. Paste pressi ng firmly but c arr~ully
on {Usr rubber cement or wth the penl"il. Iron this on
••' thrm
wal!papcr pastt' so they will go yo m· fa bric just as you would
•• un
smoothly\. When cards dr}' an origina l trunsfer but be ~ urc
• appl)'
l'lcar ''arni sh or lacqut·r to l eave your iron on lung
e n ou~h
rur the heat to
• for permanence and t·asy
pcnetr:tlc the paper and mell
• clt·1ming. One wall in bathroom the wax . I use thin shel f paper
or powder room might ha\'C
them appli&lt;•d to gh•e th&lt;• effct·t ins tead of tissue paper as
The n ev . Cleo Y. Boyd from
of wallpap er a nd th en a tissue tears so b.:1 dly . A r ute
Ypsilan ti , Mich., serving as
prott•l·tivt• coating put over idea is to make cop ies of some
interim pastor of the First
th&lt;•m . Readers, I know you will uf yo ur chi ld ren's pictures,
Baptist Churl'h of Middl epor t,
have mor(' ldN1s ror Carnl. Wt• work in crewel and frame to
IS a nati ve of Ohio whose fi rst
have an original art piece tha t
hope to hear from you soon. two pastorates were in Tiffin
will become t.t family hCirloom.
POLLY.
and Cin ci nnati. He also has
Initial or sign your name in the
held pastorates 111 Prttsbur gh,
DEAlt POLLY - My Pet corner and add the date . Detroit and Ann Arbor.
Peeve is with manuf&lt;Jcturers of SUSAN B.
Fur the past seven years he
DEAR POLLY - When
lingerie who fai l to blind stitch
ha s been a member of the
seams where there are but tons doing crewel work I v..~ld so
English facult y of Washlenaw
' and buttonholes. This is often u~ the wrong shade
Commun ity College where he
especially bad on long robes. color . There is such a subtle
has taught courses in English
When such articles are lallll· difference between many of
as
well as Literature of the
dered the facinK rolls up and no them and it is not noticeable
Bible' and Wor ld Religions.
amoun t of ironing will make it until Ihe work is done. Now
On April 28 Rev . Boyd will
THURSDAY
slay flat aKain. - RACHEL. when I open a kit for a picture
lead a 15-&lt;iay tour of Bible
ROCK Sp rin gs Grange, 7:30
DEAR POLLY - Indeed or whatever I carefull y sor t the
lands, which is s till open lo
Mrs. E.l...B. can get more than yarn. I take cardboard strips p.m . at the home of Mr. and people of th is area . Persons
about one -a nd-a-half inches Mrs. William Gruese r .
in terested are invited to ca ll
' . one or two transfers from her wide and six or eight inches
LAUREL Cliff Better Hea lth
Pas tor Boyd at the Firs!
long, punch holes with a paper Club, 7:30p.m. home of Mrs.
Bap tist Church, 992-2755, for
punch for each shade of one ·Jean Wri ghl.
complete
informa ti on.
color. Mark each hole with ' ELEANOR Cir cle, Heath
lighl, medium , da rk, etc., and Uni ted Methodist Church, 7:30
pulllhe matching yarn halfway p.m. al the church. Members lo
By Mrs. ~· ran cls Morris
through lhe hold . If you need lake one wrapped and one
Mrs. Frances Wilcoxen was
The Almanac
red
reac h for the cardboa rd unwrappe d aucti on item.
hostess at her home Monda~'
By
United
Press International
Mr s.
J ohn
evening, March 10, fo r the with the red yarns and lhe Hos tesses,
Today is Thursday , March 13,
:;. Esther Circle meeting which shades are there all log ether . Krawsczyn and Mrs. Steve the 72nd day of 1975 with 293 to
· ~ opened with devotions by Mrs. The white cardboard fr om Houchins .
LAY Visitation Seminar follow .
Lillian Hayman. She used lhe panty hose packa ges is just
The moun is between its new
!SEcond session) 7:30p.m. at
•• topic " Am I the One" after lhe fine for these str ips. No more
Rac in e We sleyan United phase and first quarter .
singinK " Love Found A Way". lan!-( les, no more wrong colors
The mornin g stars Hre
to rip out and the cardboa rd is Methodist Church with Rev.
~ Scripture from Matthew, 11
MercW"y
and Mars .
Gerald Erter.
rn edi ta ti on, "The Lento n free . - CLEDI A.
The evening sta rs are Venus,
MEIGS Co unty Hum ane
Season", and prayer followed
Jupiter
and Saturn.
Soc iety at Middleport Village
•· wilh sing ing "Oh. How I Lcve
Th
ose
born on this dale are
Hall. All member.s urged to
Jesus" . In the business session.
attend and public is welcome. under lhe sign of Pisces.
Whi le Cr oss work was
Swiss naturalist Charles Bon.
Time is 7: 30p .m.
": di scussed , a pa cka!-!e of
nett was born March 13, 1720.
REGULAR meeting, Shade
: cloth in g had been sen t,
On this day in history:
Lodge
453, F&amp;AM, 7: 30p .m. at
~ correspondence wns rca cl and a
In 1B68, Ihe U.S. Senale be gan
temple in Chester . All master impeachment
... nomina ting commi ttee. named .
proceedings
.. A progri.lm entitled .;What is
Guests of Barbara Jordan masons invited .
against Presid ent Andrew John"' Missions" was presented by · and her parents, Mr. a nd Mrs.
PRECEPTOR Beta Beta
son on charges of ,;high crim e
Mrs. Mild red Harl. Scripture, Clay J ordan , thi s pasl wee kend Sorority, meets a l 7: 45p.m. al
and mi sdemean ors.'~ He was
; Matt. 28: 19·20. A reading, were her frie nds. Tom and Slim 'N Trim , Middleport, acqui lled by in May.
, ''Visitation - Go Ye!". Other Marilee Cass ill , Ada , and meeting lo follow at home of
In 1933, banks throughout the
.. , readings by m e mbe rs were:
Chu ck Dixon, La Faye lte, Reva Vaug han .
United Stales started reopening
' Chris Han Service and You OHIO Valley Grange 2612 . after a ban k holiday declared
Ohio.
: The Living God of the Bible. A
by Presiden t Franklin D.
Mr. and Mrs. Vic lor Perry Lelarl Falls. at home of Erma
:;: Vacati on That Was. Do II Now , ~nd niece, Ric kii Edwards , Wilson at :30 p.m. Polluck Roosevelt on March 5.
7
• The Complete Story. Aller spent some ti me with her refreshments.
In 1969 . Apollo 9 returned
: sing ing '· Tell Me lhe Slory of brother-in-law m1d sister , Mr.
FRIDAY
fr om a 10-day earth orbital
• Jesus" the meeting closed with and Mrs. Bob Wiles and family
AUXILIARY of Racine Fire journey which successfully test. prayer by Mrs. Bikacsan . at Greenville, Ohio, and visited . Department i :30 p.m. at fire ed a moon landing craft .
• During the fellowship hour , another br other-i n-law and
In 1972, the United States and
" Mrs. Wilcoxen, assisted by her sister. Mr. and Mrs . Bob J ones stati on.
China ope ned ta lks in Paris, the
" daughter, Helen, served lovely and fam ily in Dayt on, as they
ANNUAL Charter Day firs t resull of President Nixon's
'.• refreshments,
with
Sl. were enrout e home.
luncheon of Return Jonathan trip lo Pekin g.
Pat rick' s Day !heme to
Mr . and Mrs. Raym on d Chapter, DAR , I p.m . at
· Ne 1son. 1ocn 1, and Mrs. T. L. Trinity Church. Musi
fourteen members .
Cl cal
:
Mrs. David Parry is a Brookhart, Albany. joined progra'!l by Mrs .
ora
patient al Holzer Medica l lheir sis ter. Mrs. Leland Lccha r y; winners of good
Moore. Can ion, al lhe home of citizenship test w be honored.
• •Center .
Mrs. Dale Boyd an d Mrs. , their brother and sis ter-in-law .
MARY Shrine 37, White
- Mae Boston are patients al Mr.and Mrs. J ohn Starkey and Shrine of J erusalem, 6" p.m .
Pomeroy Masonic Temple .
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
.
family at Sugar Grove. The Rituals to be turned into scribe.
Mr . W. B. Cr oss IS entire group attended the 35th
; hospilali zed at Veterans we d d . n g a 1111 .I V e r sa r ) , Election of officers, all reports
' on for their cousins. lobe in. Potluck following the
; Memorial Hospital.
celebrati
Mrs. Jack Holman was to Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Jewell in meeting .
.. Holzer Medica l Center fo r a Col umbus and also called to
Ht\ PPY Ha rvesters , Trinity
_checkup of her broken an kle. SEe Iheir aun l. Jessie J ewell. Church, Pomeroy, 7:30p .m . at
• She is slow ly reco\'ering.
Mr . and Mrs. John Culwell. U1e church. Mrs. Neva Seyfried
Mr. and Mrs . Frank Cleland Columbus, visited his brother to have devotions and Mrs.
spenl a lew days in Tennessee . and sister·in -law, Mr . and Mrs. Genevieve Meinhart and Miss
Mr. Stanley of Gallipolis Wil liam Culwel l.
F.rma Smith to be hostesses.
. spent several days with Mr .
Mr . an d Mrs. Earl Starkey
SATURDAY
and Mrs. David Parry.
were in Columbus where he
MEIGS County Retired
Mr. and Mrs . Cla rence "' tended the annual policy Teachers Association, 2 p.m. at
Turley of Sl. Albans, W. Va., holders and directors meeting the Meigs Museum. Mrs .
. ' visiled Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth of the Grnge Mutual Casualty Patrick Lcchary to have the
Turley recently .
Insurance Company, and they, program on historical places in
along with !heir daughter. Meigs County.
Wild a
Mae
Wi seman.
HarrisonVIlle, visited another
BRADB~~~DA ~burch of
Mr . and Mrs. Virgil Wood, daugh
ter. Wanda Starkt&gt;y
"' Spr ingfield, .... ·-were recent Jones of Nelsonville, who has Christ choir will present a
weekend guests of Mrs . Letha undergone
surgery
at program at 7:30 p.m. at the
Wood. Joining them for Sunday University
Hosp ital
in Pomeroy Church of Chr isl.
' dinner were Mr. and Mrs. Roy
Public is welcome.
Columbus.
, Christy.
Mrs. Noble Ham on is also a
• Mr . and " Mr s. Charl es pal
A thought for the day : British
RACINE, OHIO
Eich.inger and Suzannah.
patient at U ni n~rsitr Hospital. author Thomas Paine said,
Co lumbus , spent a recent Colwnbus. for tests and ob- "Character is much easier kepi ' - - - - - - - - - - - - '
weekend wilh Mrs . Opal . servation . Her room is also 735. than recovered."
Eichinger and family .
735.
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Nelson.
Relha Rupe and Marie
;Mooris , Michigan. spent
Rickard , Albany , spent Sunday
several days with Mrs. Hewen
afternoon
wilh Mr. and Mrs.
'
•Nelson.
Mendal Jordan .
: Mrs. Phyllis Daniels Snock,Mrs. Herb Wolfe and Beth
llebron, called on Mrs. Opal Ann spent. the weekend with
·Ehchinger, Saturday:
·. her parents, Re,•erend and
,FOR All YOUR
• Mr. and Mrs. B. K. Ridenour
Mrs. David Whtie, while her
:Snd Mrs. Jean Summerfield
husband was a I Reserve
'attended a Hardware show at
Training . They returned home
the Lausche Building at the
on Sunday evening.
'·
1aitgr ounds in Col umbus
Gold ie Gillogly has returned
recently. They also visited with
lo her home after spending
· · 'Mrs . Zelda Ridenour and
some time in Florida.
Thelma.
: Miss Lucille Smith has been
BARBS
confined lQ her home with the
By PHIL PASTORET
t'fl'Wcl

••

FINANCIAL REPORT
MDT f..
\R,S HS !1-1
OF THE IOAAD ·
Te a chers Corp
\0.000,00
OF EDUCATION
I
Continued
on
page
8)
For Flsul Year Ending
December lht, 1974. Mei g!. FOR RENT
Local School Districl , Mei g , ONE 7 R.M house nn&lt;1 t1t1 111 One
County , Middleport, Ohio .
) rm apf . would pret t'r
March I , 1975.
elderly mnn or woman . Phon ('

Interim pastor
to lead tour
of Holy Land

A free PilP lesl and breast
clihit: for &lt;.J II women of Meigs
Cuunly will be ('cmductcd
m onlhly in the near fUtu re by
Ihe Meigs Unit of the American
Cancer Society .
The unit, meeting Tuesday
nigh! al the headquarters in
Middleport, se l the tests and
clinic on the third Thursday of
each month at Veterans
Memorial Hospital under
spo~r s hip of the Ohio
Depart\'ent of Hea lth a_nd the
American Cancer Society.
During the meeting presided
over by Brenda Ro ush,
president, the group planned
its crusade fund drive in April.
Plans wi ll be fur thered at the

Alfi•cd

Social Notes
Sunday School attendance on
March 9 was 44 , the offering
$23.39.
Worship services were held
at 11 a .m. with Charles D.
Woode leader, and Glen Sin nett
from the Rock land Methodist
Church, speaing from I Peter
4:7. Altendance was 18, offering $14 .50, pledges $42.
Mr . a nd Mrs . Clare nce
Henderson, Clara Follrod and
Nina Rob inson visited Mr. a nd
Mrs. Lee Henderson in Athens
las I Thursday.
Rev . Meece called on Iris
Carr this past week.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles D.
Woode and Nina Robinson
attended the Gospel Hymn Sing
a t North Bethel U. M. Church
Saturday evening, March 8.

next meeting, April J, at 7:30
p.m .

A scltballl ournament will be
slagcd with thiS year's
cr usa de . Th e MiddleportPomeroy alwnni foo tball game

HarrisonviUe
Society News
Mr . and Mrs. Denver Ash are
erec ling a new house on the
Eliza Powell 's property.
Mr . and Mrs. Hoy WiSEman
visited her sister, Wanda
Jones , in a Columbus hospital
recen tly.
Mr. and Mrs . Newhouse and
fami ly are moving back to
Indiana. They have been occupyin g the forme r Kati e
Wilson residence.
The Senior Citizens Club met
Thu rsday even in g. Minni e
McGrath and Mr s. Russ
Eishcnaur served refresh·
ments.

DIED IN POMEROY
While visiting SWlday with
Mr s. Charles Warner , 117
E be neze r Street, Pom eroy ,
Mr s. Grace Mo oney of
Marietta died of a heart attack.
Accompanying Mr s. Mooney to
Pomeroy Sunday to spend the
da y with Mrs. Warner were
John Sewell, Mrs . Warner'S
son, and grandchildren, and
Mr. and Mrs . Paul Sewell and
Heather. Mrs. Mooney was the
mother of Mr s. Paul Sewell.
Also al the Warner home
visiting at the time was Miss
Carolyn Sea rls of Columbus .

played los t Thanksgiving eiteeuti9e secretary ; Ed King,
Mrs. Wallace Hatfield, John
netled $1200 for the society.
II was reported that the and Wilina Reece' Reva Hysell
Eastern ·High School Future and Uoyd Blackwood.
Homemake);; of America have
adopted work for the cancer
unit as a yearly project .
VISIT RELA TJV£il
Members will make house-toMr. and Mrs. Will us West,
houSE ca lls and conduct a Powhattan Point, visited here
te lephone campaign for lhe recently with her brother-inunit.
law and sister, Mr. and Mrs.
Services of the unit were C l a r e n ce
Spu rri er.
reviewed and include up to $25 Harrisonville Road. They were
a month for drugs for cancer called here by the death of his
patients; rehabilitation items, siste r, Mrs. Stella Ponn. Other
dr e1ssing, up to $100 for gues ts of Mr . and Mrs .
masendect omy forms, five Spurrier were Mr. and Mrs.
cents a mile for transportation Henry Eblin Sr., Mrs. Myrtle
of patients to · r eceive treat· Gr over,
Mrs.
Robert
ment, and colostomy bags.
Houda shell, Pomeroy; Mr. and
Others attending the mee ting Mrs. G. S. Eblin and daughter,
were Warren Parrish, South· Elyria, Mrs. Shirley A. Jeffers
eastern Ohio
exec utive and Mrs. Betty Weyersmiller,
director; Sharon Bailey , local Rock Springs.

I cert ify the following report
L. w. McComa s
Clerk, Trenurer of

The USSR stretches more
than 6,800 miles from easl to
Total Fund Balances
wes t "and covers one-seventh of
Dec . 31. 1974
632,258.04 the world's land mass . Within
Depos itory Balances
Far mer 's Bank. &amp;
its 8,649,498 square mile area.
Savings
93, 122 .41 the Soviet Union includes 15
Pom eroy Nati ona l
Bank
100,523 .50 states and 50 ethnic groups.
the Board ol Educatij)n .

CASH RECONCILIATION

Balances

ln\lestl'nents :
Certificates of Oepcsi t

Other In vestments
Sub -Total Investments

News, Event

.'

•

eBLACK &amp;
WHITE TV
•

MASON .FURNITURE
HERMAN GRATE
773-55112
MASON, W.VA.

••
\JI

I

a

.

chain for
any purpose

.Otester

flu.

• Mr: ·and

Mrs. John Hayes
called on. Mr .. and Mrs: John
.. \. ivickham, Sunday' evening.
I

"

~

Chickens aren 't dumb clucks.
Who else can make money for
you by just la,Y ing_around ?

,99'2 ·2709

.

114 ,082 .90

Hdnd
Total

11 4,092.90

ll 4,CJ82.90
Outstanding warrants
Dec . 31 , 1974
!Deduct )
45,007 .59
Total -Clerk Treasurer 's
Bal. , Dec. 31 , 1974 632.258.04
SUMMARY OF CASH
BALANCES, RECEIPTS
AND EXPENDITURES
Balance Jan. 1, 1914
General Fund
198,362.30
Ai d to Depend .
Children
9.38
Dis advantaged Pupils
1,008 .04
Pro~
Other_, State Funded
Programs
2.6 15.63
Bond Retirem ent
134,04 1.56
Lunch Room
605.5 1
Uniform Supplies
14.034 .71
Projec t Inter es t
6,000 .03
Trust
2.640 .89
Career Or ient.
376.70
NOEA Title II\
21,135 .69
NOEA Title V
190.00
ESEA Tit le I
7.823.92
ESES T!Jie II
4,2 47 .24
Head Start Tille II A
3,072 .78
MOTA&amp;ARA
16.090.83
Basic Adult Educ .
824.07
Total
41 3,988 .28
Total Receipts
General Fund
2,476,277 .29
Disadvantaged Pupils
Prog .
34,229, 17
Other State Funded
Programs
19,775.64
Bond Ret irement
219,880 . t 2
Lunch Room
201 ,887 :92
Uniform Supplies
11 ,824.25
Project Interest
0.215.02
Trust
1,693 .68
Scholarship
170.58
NDEATille Ill
107. 42
ESEA Title I
130, 21 3.24
ESE S T itle II
4,587.95
Head Start Title IIA
2t.OO
MOTA &amp; ARA
61 , 44 3.82
Ba sic Adult Educ .
3,000.00
Federal Other
Progs .
60,020.00
Total
3.234,356. 10
Total Receipts &amp; Balances
Genera l Fund
2,389,8-44. 73
Aid to Depend .
Children
0.38
Disadttantaged Pupils
Prog .
35,237 . 21
Other State Funded
Programs
22,391.27
Bond Ret irement
353.930 .68
Lunch Room
202,49 3. 43
Uniform Supplies
•25,858 .96
Projec t Inte res t
16,1 15.05
Trust
4,334 .57
Schola rsh ip
170.58
Career Orient .
376.70
NOEA Title Ill
21 ,2 43 . 11
NOEATitleV
190.00
E SE A Title I
138,037.16
ESEA Ttlell
8 , 835 . 1~
Head Start Title IIA
3,093 . 78
MOEA &amp; ARA
77,543 . 65
Basic Adult Educ.
3,824.07
Federal Other Progs . 60.020.00
Total
3,648,344. 38

LABASTER

\~\

$1.41 Value

POLAROID
j
&amp;
FOSTER GRANT
SUNGLASSES

Famou s
qua fity .

MIO"l.EPORT

lo.ao_____________________.

Reg . $1 3.95

.'

1

COLOR

FILM

$795

5.99 VALUE

1

POWDERED
EASTER
EGG DYE
As Advertised
On TV.

3 9 e_

$34 .95

Value

$2777 $} 06
SMILES

BE READY FOR

2Dc

SITTING RABBIT, I oz .
DANDY ANDY, 20oz.
MONEY BUNNY, 2oz .

COLORED
CELLOPHANE

63c
63c

PET BUNNY, 2112 oz .

72c

CUT IE BUNNY, 3'12 oz.

SSe

FUZZY BUNNY, 3112 oz .

SSe

SUNNY BUNNY, 1112 oz .

$1.99

FUNNY BUNNY, 31h oz .

SSe

•

Pink. &amp; Gree~ .

STANDING
BUKNY

2,674,639.65

CROUCH IN
BUNNY

•2,.'

2-l.6t2.10
15,2if9.16

2,99S,OO

JOl

$419

CHOCOLATE BUNNIES

4,.16.4
·1•500. 00

,,
'

,.

108

PAAS

0

I'

POLAROID

Sunbeam

Exp .
sps0.39
Total Instruct ion
e xp .
1,393,859.97
Total CO ·Ordinate
225.00
Activities Exp .
TOtal Library
10,218.12
Exp .
Total Pupil Transp .
210.637.89
E xp .
Total PlaygroundS ·
70 .90
Recreational Exp .
Total School Plant
Operation exr,.
217,626.57 ·
Total School Pant
Matnt.. Exp.
S5,002 .A2
Total Other AuKIII•ry
e x p&amp;nse
. 350.513.98
Total capital OutlaY
16,.67. ~ 1

' .

•31.95 VALUE

, '.

Easy Cleaning

.l ,,. ,, ,, .•..,, ,, ,,, ·' ·' ' """"''

,,, . •.,,,,,,.,,.,,,,.,,"''""!

,,,,,n,,

SUNBEAM
SHAVER

Pink. with white &amp; gold
trim .

Total Administrati on

~P8.,t;A
saIsic Adult Educ.

0

Two -sided "Micro Twin" shaving head.

Expenditurtt

Tr•nsfer to

• lflOU ·'·"" " ' ''""""

LADY

Total Beginning Balance

Title I
x -OWE

l h ~· · nu n ~ u m '»! ll ''

p!i!l ei!IU !I41 ilyl\1! 9 d l ~\!1

~OFF

•

9,821 .72
1.593.25
13,111.11

I

ULTRABAN
Roll-On .
1.5 oz.

$2.25 Value

$1.37 Value

$2.56 Value

Total Non-Revenue
Receipts .
24 ,532 .08
Transfers From
190.00
Title v
376.70
Career Orientation
5,642.60
t ,658.06
~it.~~
16,598."
MOTA
107.42
Title Ill NOEA
0.38
AOC
Total Transfers
24,582.73
Total Receipts {Revenue,
Non -Revenue &amp;
Trlnsfers l
2,476,277 . 35
PIUS Receipts

SPICED
JELLY BEANS

s oz.

N

Stackable OUT
2perpackage ICE CUBE
11.49 Value
TRAYS

LUDENS

FINAL
NET

16 oz.

Disadvantaged PupHs
Prog .
Other State Funded
Prog.rams
18,263.99
Bond Retirement
168, 440. u
Lunch Room
193,015.82
Uniform Supplies
10,993 .13
Trust
581 . 23
Career Orient .
376.70
NOEATitle Ill
8,672.56
NDEA Tille V
190.00
ESEA Title I
71 ,1 01.72
ESE S Title tt
4.214. 43
Head Start Title IIA
3,093. 78
MOTA &amp; ARA
67,239.36
Basic Adult Educ .
• 2,463. 25
Federal Other Progs . 52,680. 45
Total
3,016,086. 34
Balance Dec. 31. 1974
General Fund
284,794.86
Disadvantaged Pupils
Prog.
t0.331.54
Other State Funded
4,127 . 28
Program s
185,490.54
Bond Retirement
9,477 . 61
Lunch Room
14,865.83
Uniform Supplies
16,11S.OS
Project Interest
3,753.34
Trust
170.58
Scholarship
12.570.55
N DEA Title Ill
66,935. 44
ESEA Tit le I
4,620. 76
ESE$ Title II
10.304.20
MOTA &amp;ARA
t,360~ 82
Basic Adu.t Educ .
Federal Oth er Progs . 7,339.55
632,258 .04
Tot at
CASH BALANCE,
RECEIPTS, AND
EXPENDITURES
BY FUND
General Fund
Bal., Jan . I, 1974
198.362.30
R eceiph- Revenue
Property Ta x IGross)
General - Real Estate 563,744.04
Tangible Personal
130,089.36
Sta t e Subsidies
School Found . (Gross)
Basic Allowance
1,685,256.90
Bus Purchase Allowance
18, 757 .00
18,101.77
Vocational Educ .
4.170.00
Other state Subsidies
Federal PL 874
Tuition - Parents &amp;
Patron s
' 6.024.50
Rental School Prop .
406.00
Other Revenue
612 .97 ·
Total ·R evenue
Receipts
2,427 , 162.54

a.

CLAIROL

100's

Liquid

TWIST

Spill, Proof

BAYER ASPIRIN

PREI!
SHAMPOO

Expenditures
General Fund
2,389,844 . 73
Aid. to Depend .
Children
0.38

OtherNon -Revenue

Valley Lumber &amp;Supp~ Co.

.

4, 177 .73

Refunds
Sales Non .Real Prop .

REMODELING
NEEDS

IJ~·

150,000 .00

Depos itory
Sub -Total Cash on

Adjustments

YOUR
HEADQUARTERS

knowll'dg ~'

409 .005 .00

Receiph-Non ~ Revenue

Star Supply

llll'l l"

sampling d iffcrcnl ai'NtS \l f (' (J I IIi nu i n ~ EdurHt i un f or
.-::r udy.
fur tlwr infurn,'ution 75:i-:l591 .
The
Sprin g
quart er'.s i\11 ill"L' for :1erPf\il hours except
Si.' hedult• of cla,sses ineludt•s llw la st wllit'h is for two .
l'uurses which are appli cabll' 1o
Speech, Wrd., 8:10- 10 :50.
all of the co ll ege's 2:!
Intru. lu P~ y ehol ogy, Tues .,
tcdmologies plus clcct ivl' 8: 10-10 :50.
c.:um·ses offered on the b&lt;tsis of
Dl' vclo~m I(' nltl Psychology ,
student interest.
Mon .. 5: :10-8:10.
The foll owing is a listi,ng of
Cnnununic.:ations lll, Mon. ,
courses which will be offered 8: 10-10:50.

.

Bu:-; irll·ss Law, Wed ., 8: Hl- Thurs ., 5:3(}..8 :10.
IN KENYA
111 :50.
l.aws of Arres t, Search &amp;
Navy Chief Machioist'! Mate
SuJwr·v isi on, Tues .. 5: 30~8 : 10. Seiz ure, Wed., 8:10·10 :50.
Burton R. Larson, husband of
Bet~kcepi n g, Tues ., 7·9.
Crimina listics I. Mon., 6-10. th e former Eleanor T.
Political Science II , Wed .. \ Police Operations, Thur s., Frederick of Long Bottom, has
5: :!0-8 :10.
5::!11-8 :10.
visited Mombasa, Kenyai on
Human Sex u:Jlity, Tue s .,
the east coast of Africa, as a
5::!0-8 :10.
F:lcc . Fundamentals In , T. &amp; crewmember of the nuclear·
Act:utul h11~ Ill , Tues., 5:30- Th .. 5:30-8:10.
powered attack aircraft
Enginee ring Drawing II , T. carrier USS Enterprise. He
8: 10.
&amp; Th. 8:10-10:50.
Mnth ll . Wed ., 5::!0·8: Ill.
also receptly crossed' the
Public Fitmn c.:c, Thurs., 8:10..
equator while on a cruise In the
10 :50.
Pu lice Adm . ll, Thurs. 8:10- Indian Ocean. The Enterprl);e ,
Bask Phutu~nwhy. Thurs., 10 :50.
homepor ted at Alameda ,
8:10-10:50.
Calif.,
is deployed as part of the
Nigh t Field Biology, Mon., 6Adv. Police Photo~raphy , 9.
U. S. Seventh Fleet.

Cash in Transit to

COLOR TV .

Choose

l)ro;~rlt: P

NEI.SONVI Ll.E - Eal'li
quar!L·r H ot' kin ~ 'l'ct'hnkal
Coll l·g~· offers a st•.lt'ctlun of
eveni ng classes. mncmg them
l'Ourses fllr inter:es t on ly and
t rL•clit l'OUI"S('S which prepHrC
anti dhpf' n the sludenJ' s
t'il rerr knuwledgl' .
The program 1s attra ctive to
peuple who are workin~
throughout the day and' a lso
full-lime students who wish to

tla· Wl'Uk of Mah·h
~4 . ( 1r1c nw~, register fur Uu~sc
d :1SSt's lh" first n i ~ h t ,,r
r l!r sst•s , l r l'Unlal'l Hov
Pallllcr, !liet·lu r uf Afl\l i l

154 , 177.73

Cash on Hand :

Racine
·· Social Events

Carpenter

Evenirig' classes listed

Citizens Nit. Bank
215,3 59 .09
Su b-Total Depos itor y

ZENITH

Easy Terms!
Free Delivery!

3 13 J !C

to be correc t.

..•

eSTER EO

991 7 IJ S

l) q~ llltHI I~

..
'•.

�•

7- The DaUy Sentinel, Mlddleport·Poineroy, 0 .. Thursday, March J:l, 1975

'
1'h11r&lt;rlav., March 13, 1975

Polly 's Poin
RY POI.I .Y CIIAM EH

Decorate with
favored cards

Free clinics .for women will he held fu Meigs

· Class -has
meeting
\u se rve ~~ breakfast
fullow ing the Easter morning
suurisc service were made
durin g the Tuesday nig ht
rncoting of the Hearthstone
Cia~' of rile Middleport First
Baptis t Church al the home of
Mr . and Mrs. Allen Hughes.
The class also voted to
provide three lilies for the
sa nt:luary on Easter. a nd a
committee was appoin ted to
buy ar ticles for lhe kitchen.
J ohn Werner, vice president,
ha d charge of lhe mee ting with
Paul Smart giv ing devotions.
Hev . and Mrs. Cleo Boyd, the
l'hurch's interim pastor, were
wel co med. The program
consisted of Palm Sunday,
F:aster. and spring th oughts
from the members.
Refres hments were served
by Ihe hosts ro the Rev . and
Mrs. Boyd, Mr. and Mrs. Willis
Anthohy, Mr . and Mrs. Mil ton
Hood, Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Hubbard, Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Srn:.rl, Mr . and Mrs. John
Werner.
Pl~u1s

and other e mbroidery
POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - I have a patterns. !5o not usc carbon
you ;tre
large collectiorl or attracth·c paper un.lcss
despera
tC'
.
'If
smeo:1rs
bad ly.
all-occasion cards that have
Buy
&lt;1 trcmsfer pencil wilh a
grea t sentimen t fur me so I will
not throw tht•m away. I would wax b.ase at a nced lecraft .~or
like some sut-:geslions as tn art supply store. Make sure the
.. · what I could do with thtml. - point is snwn t11 and almost
dul l. If \I is Iuo sharp i I will lear
.,
CAROL G.
DEAR CA ROL G. - You thf' paper. Trace the design on
mi ght r ovt•r a thr eP·pa nt•l the reverse side of your putlcrn
REV. CLEO BOYD
sr rren wilh your cards. Paste pressi ng firmly but c arr~ully
on {Usr rubber cement or wth the penl"il. Iron this on
••' thrm
wal!papcr pastt' so they will go yo m· fa bric just as you would
•• un
smoothly\. When cards dr}' an origina l trunsfer but be ~ urc
• appl)'
l'lcar ''arni sh or lacqut·r to l eave your iron on lung
e n ou~h
rur the heat to
• for permanence and t·asy
pcnetr:tlc the paper and mell
• clt·1ming. One wall in bathroom the wax . I use thin shel f paper
or powder room might ha\'C
them appli&lt;•d to gh•e th&lt;• effct·t ins tead of tissue paper as
The n ev . Cleo Y. Boyd from
of wallpap er a nd th en a tissue tears so b.:1 dly . A r ute
Ypsilan ti , Mich., serving as
prott•l·tivt• coating put over idea is to make cop ies of some
interim pastor of the First
th&lt;•m . Readers, I know you will uf yo ur chi ld ren's pictures,
Baptist Churl'h of Middl epor t,
have mor(' ldN1s ror Carnl. Wt• work in crewel and frame to
IS a nati ve of Ohio whose fi rst
have an original art piece tha t
hope to hear from you soon. two pastorates were in Tiffin
will become t.t family hCirloom.
POLLY.
and Cin ci nnati. He also has
Initial or sign your name in the
held pastorates 111 Prttsbur gh,
DEAlt POLLY - My Pet corner and add the date . Detroit and Ann Arbor.
Peeve is with manuf&lt;Jcturers of SUSAN B.
Fur the past seven years he
DEAR POLLY - When
lingerie who fai l to blind stitch
ha s been a member of the
seams where there are but tons doing crewel work I v..~ld so
English facult y of Washlenaw
' and buttonholes. This is often u~ the wrong shade
Commun ity College where he
especially bad on long robes. color . There is such a subtle
has taught courses in English
When such articles are lallll· difference between many of
as
well as Literature of the
dered the facinK rolls up and no them and it is not noticeable
Bible' and Wor ld Religions.
amoun t of ironing will make it until Ihe work is done. Now
On April 28 Rev . Boyd will
THURSDAY
slay flat aKain. - RACHEL. when I open a kit for a picture
lead a 15-&lt;iay tour of Bible
ROCK Sp rin gs Grange, 7:30
DEAR POLLY - Indeed or whatever I carefull y sor t the
lands, which is s till open lo
Mrs. E.l...B. can get more than yarn. I take cardboard strips p.m . at the home of Mr. and people of th is area . Persons
about one -a nd-a-half inches Mrs. William Gruese r .
in terested are invited to ca ll
' . one or two transfers from her wide and six or eight inches
LAUREL Cliff Better Hea lth
Pas tor Boyd at the Firs!
long, punch holes with a paper Club, 7:30p.m. home of Mrs.
Bap tist Church, 992-2755, for
punch for each shade of one ·Jean Wri ghl.
complete
informa ti on.
color. Mark each hole with ' ELEANOR Cir cle, Heath
lighl, medium , da rk, etc., and Uni ted Methodist Church, 7:30
pulllhe matching yarn halfway p.m. al the church. Members lo
By Mrs. ~· ran cls Morris
through lhe hold . If you need lake one wrapped and one
Mrs. Frances Wilcoxen was
The Almanac
red
reac h for the cardboa rd unwrappe d aucti on item.
hostess at her home Monda~'
By
United
Press International
Mr s.
J ohn
evening, March 10, fo r the with the red yarns and lhe Hos tesses,
Today is Thursday , March 13,
:;. Esther Circle meeting which shades are there all log ether . Krawsczyn and Mrs. Steve the 72nd day of 1975 with 293 to
· ~ opened with devotions by Mrs. The white cardboard fr om Houchins .
LAY Visitation Seminar follow .
Lillian Hayman. She used lhe panty hose packa ges is just
The moun is between its new
!SEcond session) 7:30p.m. at
•• topic " Am I the One" after lhe fine for these str ips. No more
Rac in e We sleyan United phase and first quarter .
singinK " Love Found A Way". lan!-( les, no more wrong colors
The mornin g stars Hre
to rip out and the cardboa rd is Methodist Church with Rev.
~ Scripture from Matthew, 11
MercW"y
and Mars .
Gerald Erter.
rn edi ta ti on, "The Lento n free . - CLEDI A.
The evening sta rs are Venus,
MEIGS Co unty Hum ane
Season", and prayer followed
Jupiter
and Saturn.
Soc iety at Middleport Village
•· wilh sing ing "Oh. How I Lcve
Th
ose
born on this dale are
Hall. All member.s urged to
Jesus" . In the business session.
attend and public is welcome. under lhe sign of Pisces.
Whi le Cr oss work was
Swiss naturalist Charles Bon.
Time is 7: 30p .m.
": di scussed , a pa cka!-!e of
nett was born March 13, 1720.
REGULAR meeting, Shade
: cloth in g had been sen t,
On this day in history:
Lodge
453, F&amp;AM, 7: 30p .m. at
~ correspondence wns rca cl and a
In 1B68, Ihe U.S. Senale be gan
temple in Chester . All master impeachment
... nomina ting commi ttee. named .
proceedings
.. A progri.lm entitled .;What is
Guests of Barbara Jordan masons invited .
against Presid ent Andrew John"' Missions" was presented by · and her parents, Mr. a nd Mrs.
PRECEPTOR Beta Beta
son on charges of ,;high crim e
Mrs. Mild red Harl. Scripture, Clay J ordan , thi s pasl wee kend Sorority, meets a l 7: 45p.m. al
and mi sdemean ors.'~ He was
; Matt. 28: 19·20. A reading, were her frie nds. Tom and Slim 'N Trim , Middleport, acqui lled by in May.
, ''Visitation - Go Ye!". Other Marilee Cass ill , Ada , and meeting lo follow at home of
In 1933, banks throughout the
.. , readings by m e mbe rs were:
Chu ck Dixon, La Faye lte, Reva Vaug han .
United Stales started reopening
' Chris Han Service and You OHIO Valley Grange 2612 . after a ban k holiday declared
Ohio.
: The Living God of the Bible. A
by Presiden t Franklin D.
Mr. and Mrs. Vic lor Perry Lelarl Falls. at home of Erma
:;: Vacati on That Was. Do II Now , ~nd niece, Ric kii Edwards , Wilson at :30 p.m. Polluck Roosevelt on March 5.
7
• The Complete Story. Aller spent some ti me with her refreshments.
In 1969 . Apollo 9 returned
: sing ing '· Tell Me lhe Slory of brother-in-law m1d sister , Mr.
FRIDAY
fr om a 10-day earth orbital
• Jesus" the meeting closed with and Mrs. Bob Wiles and family
AUXILIARY of Racine Fire journey which successfully test. prayer by Mrs. Bikacsan . at Greenville, Ohio, and visited . Department i :30 p.m. at fire ed a moon landing craft .
• During the fellowship hour , another br other-i n-law and
In 1972, the United States and
" Mrs. Wilcoxen, assisted by her sister. Mr. and Mrs . Bob J ones stati on.
China ope ned ta lks in Paris, the
" daughter, Helen, served lovely and fam ily in Dayt on, as they
ANNUAL Charter Day firs t resull of President Nixon's
'.• refreshments,
with
Sl. were enrout e home.
luncheon of Return Jonathan trip lo Pekin g.
Pat rick' s Day !heme to
Mr . and Mrs. Raym on d Chapter, DAR , I p.m . at
· Ne 1son. 1ocn 1, and Mrs. T. L. Trinity Church. Musi
fourteen members .
Cl cal
:
Mrs. David Parry is a Brookhart, Albany. joined progra'!l by Mrs .
ora
patient al Holzer Medica l lheir sis ter. Mrs. Leland Lccha r y; winners of good
Moore. Can ion, al lhe home of citizenship test w be honored.
• •Center .
Mrs. Dale Boyd an d Mrs. , their brother and sis ter-in-law .
MARY Shrine 37, White
- Mae Boston are patients al Mr.and Mrs. J ohn Starkey and Shrine of J erusalem, 6" p.m .
Pomeroy Masonic Temple .
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
.
family at Sugar Grove. The Rituals to be turned into scribe.
Mr . W. B. Cr oss IS entire group attended the 35th
; hospilali zed at Veterans we d d . n g a 1111 .I V e r sa r ) , Election of officers, all reports
' on for their cousins. lobe in. Potluck following the
; Memorial Hospital.
celebrati
Mrs. Jack Holman was to Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Jewell in meeting .
.. Holzer Medica l Center fo r a Col umbus and also called to
Ht\ PPY Ha rvesters , Trinity
_checkup of her broken an kle. SEe Iheir aun l. Jessie J ewell. Church, Pomeroy, 7:30p .m . at
• She is slow ly reco\'ering.
Mr . and Mrs. John Culwell. U1e church. Mrs. Neva Seyfried
Mr. and Mrs . Frank Cleland Columbus, visited his brother to have devotions and Mrs.
spenl a lew days in Tennessee . and sister·in -law, Mr . and Mrs. Genevieve Meinhart and Miss
Mr. Stanley of Gallipolis Wil liam Culwel l.
F.rma Smith to be hostesses.
. spent several days with Mr .
Mr . an d Mrs. Earl Starkey
SATURDAY
and Mrs. David Parry.
were in Columbus where he
MEIGS County Retired
Mr. and Mrs . Cla rence "' tended the annual policy Teachers Association, 2 p.m. at
Turley of Sl. Albans, W. Va., holders and directors meeting the Meigs Museum. Mrs .
. ' visiled Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth of the Grnge Mutual Casualty Patrick Lcchary to have the
Turley recently .
Insurance Company, and they, program on historical places in
along with !heir daughter. Meigs County.
Wild a
Mae
Wi seman.
HarrisonVIlle, visited another
BRADB~~~DA ~burch of
Mr . and Mrs. Virgil Wood, daugh
ter. Wanda Starkt&gt;y
"' Spr ingfield, .... ·-were recent Jones of Nelsonville, who has Christ choir will present a
weekend guests of Mrs . Letha undergone
surgery
at program at 7:30 p.m. at the
Wood. Joining them for Sunday University
Hosp ital
in Pomeroy Church of Chr isl.
' dinner were Mr. and Mrs. Roy
Public is welcome.
Columbus.
, Christy.
Mrs. Noble Ham on is also a
• Mr . and " Mr s. Charl es pal
A thought for the day : British
RACINE, OHIO
Eich.inger and Suzannah.
patient at U ni n~rsitr Hospital. author Thomas Paine said,
Co lumbus , spent a recent Colwnbus. for tests and ob- "Character is much easier kepi ' - - - - - - - - - - - - '
weekend wilh Mrs . Opal . servation . Her room is also 735. than recovered."
Eichinger and family .
735.
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Nelson.
Relha Rupe and Marie
;Mooris , Michigan. spent
Rickard , Albany , spent Sunday
several days with Mrs. Hewen
afternoon
wilh Mr. and Mrs.
'
•Nelson.
Mendal Jordan .
: Mrs. Phyllis Daniels Snock,Mrs. Herb Wolfe and Beth
llebron, called on Mrs. Opal Ann spent. the weekend with
·Ehchinger, Saturday:
·. her parents, Re,•erend and
,FOR All YOUR
• Mr. and Mrs. B. K. Ridenour
Mrs. David Whtie, while her
:Snd Mrs. Jean Summerfield
husband was a I Reserve
'attended a Hardware show at
Training . They returned home
the Lausche Building at the
on Sunday evening.
'·
1aitgr ounds in Col umbus
Gold ie Gillogly has returned
recently. They also visited with
lo her home after spending
· · 'Mrs . Zelda Ridenour and
some time in Florida.
Thelma.
: Miss Lucille Smith has been
BARBS
confined lQ her home with the
By PHIL PASTORET
t'fl'Wcl

••

FINANCIAL REPORT
MDT f..
\R,S HS !1-1
OF THE IOAAD ·
Te a chers Corp
\0.000,00
OF EDUCATION
I
Continued
on
page
8)
For Flsul Year Ending
December lht, 1974. Mei g!. FOR RENT
Local School Districl , Mei g , ONE 7 R.M house nn&lt;1 t1t1 111 One
County , Middleport, Ohio .
) rm apf . would pret t'r
March I , 1975.
elderly mnn or woman . Phon ('

Interim pastor
to lead tour
of Holy Land

A free PilP lesl and breast
clihit: for &lt;.J II women of Meigs
Cuunly will be ('cmductcd
m onlhly in the near fUtu re by
Ihe Meigs Unit of the American
Cancer Society .
The unit, meeting Tuesday
nigh! al the headquarters in
Middleport, se l the tests and
clinic on the third Thursday of
each month at Veterans
Memorial Hospital under
spo~r s hip of the Ohio
Depart\'ent of Hea lth a_nd the
American Cancer Society.
During the meeting presided
over by Brenda Ro ush,
president, the group planned
its crusade fund drive in April.
Plans wi ll be fur thered at the

Alfi•cd

Social Notes
Sunday School attendance on
March 9 was 44 , the offering
$23.39.
Worship services were held
at 11 a .m. with Charles D.
Woode leader, and Glen Sin nett
from the Rock land Methodist
Church, speaing from I Peter
4:7. Altendance was 18, offering $14 .50, pledges $42.
Mr . a nd Mrs . Clare nce
Henderson, Clara Follrod and
Nina Rob inson visited Mr. a nd
Mrs. Lee Henderson in Athens
las I Thursday.
Rev . Meece called on Iris
Carr this past week.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles D.
Woode and Nina Robinson
attended the Gospel Hymn Sing
a t North Bethel U. M. Church
Saturday evening, March 8.

next meeting, April J, at 7:30
p.m .

A scltballl ournament will be
slagcd with thiS year's
cr usa de . Th e MiddleportPomeroy alwnni foo tball game

HarrisonviUe
Society News
Mr . and Mrs. Denver Ash are
erec ling a new house on the
Eliza Powell 's property.
Mr . and Mrs. Hoy WiSEman
visited her sister, Wanda
Jones , in a Columbus hospital
recen tly.
Mr. and Mrs . Newhouse and
fami ly are moving back to
Indiana. They have been occupyin g the forme r Kati e
Wilson residence.
The Senior Citizens Club met
Thu rsday even in g. Minni e
McGrath and Mr s. Russ
Eishcnaur served refresh·
ments.

DIED IN POMEROY
While visiting SWlday with
Mr s. Charles Warner , 117
E be neze r Street, Pom eroy ,
Mr s. Grace Mo oney of
Marietta died of a heart attack.
Accompanying Mr s. Mooney to
Pomeroy Sunday to spend the
da y with Mrs. Warner were
John Sewell, Mrs . Warner'S
son, and grandchildren, and
Mr. and Mrs . Paul Sewell and
Heather. Mrs. Mooney was the
mother of Mr s. Paul Sewell.
Also al the Warner home
visiting at the time was Miss
Carolyn Sea rls of Columbus .

played los t Thanksgiving eiteeuti9e secretary ; Ed King,
Mrs. Wallace Hatfield, John
netled $1200 for the society.
II was reported that the and Wilina Reece' Reva Hysell
Eastern ·High School Future and Uoyd Blackwood.
Homemake);; of America have
adopted work for the cancer
unit as a yearly project .
VISIT RELA TJV£il
Members will make house-toMr. and Mrs. Will us West,
houSE ca lls and conduct a Powhattan Point, visited here
te lephone campaign for lhe recently with her brother-inunit.
law and sister, Mr. and Mrs.
Services of the unit were C l a r e n ce
Spu rri er.
reviewed and include up to $25 Harrisonville Road. They were
a month for drugs for cancer called here by the death of his
patients; rehabilitation items, siste r, Mrs. Stella Ponn. Other
dr e1ssing, up to $100 for gues ts of Mr . and Mrs .
masendect omy forms, five Spurrier were Mr. and Mrs.
cents a mile for transportation Henry Eblin Sr., Mrs. Myrtle
of patients to · r eceive treat· Gr over,
Mrs.
Robert
ment, and colostomy bags.
Houda shell, Pomeroy; Mr. and
Others attending the mee ting Mrs. G. S. Eblin and daughter,
were Warren Parrish, South· Elyria, Mrs. Shirley A. Jeffers
eastern Ohio
exec utive and Mrs. Betty Weyersmiller,
director; Sharon Bailey , local Rock Springs.

I cert ify the following report
L. w. McComa s
Clerk, Trenurer of

The USSR stretches more
than 6,800 miles from easl to
Total Fund Balances
wes t "and covers one-seventh of
Dec . 31. 1974
632,258.04 the world's land mass . Within
Depos itory Balances
Far mer 's Bank. &amp;
its 8,649,498 square mile area.
Savings
93, 122 .41 the Soviet Union includes 15
Pom eroy Nati ona l
Bank
100,523 .50 states and 50 ethnic groups.
the Board ol Educatij)n .

CASH RECONCILIATION

Balances

ln\lestl'nents :
Certificates of Oepcsi t

Other In vestments
Sub -Total Investments

News, Event

.'

•

eBLACK &amp;
WHITE TV
•

MASON .FURNITURE
HERMAN GRATE
773-55112
MASON, W.VA.

••
\JI

I

a

.

chain for
any purpose

.Otester

flu.

• Mr: ·and

Mrs. John Hayes
called on. Mr .. and Mrs: John
.. \. ivickham, Sunday' evening.
I

"

~

Chickens aren 't dumb clucks.
Who else can make money for
you by just la,Y ing_around ?

,99'2 ·2709

.

114 ,082 .90

Hdnd
Total

11 4,092.90

ll 4,CJ82.90
Outstanding warrants
Dec . 31 , 1974
!Deduct )
45,007 .59
Total -Clerk Treasurer 's
Bal. , Dec. 31 , 1974 632.258.04
SUMMARY OF CASH
BALANCES, RECEIPTS
AND EXPENDITURES
Balance Jan. 1, 1914
General Fund
198,362.30
Ai d to Depend .
Children
9.38
Dis advantaged Pupils
1,008 .04
Pro~
Other_, State Funded
Programs
2.6 15.63
Bond Retirem ent
134,04 1.56
Lunch Room
605.5 1
Uniform Supplies
14.034 .71
Projec t Inter es t
6,000 .03
Trust
2.640 .89
Career Or ient.
376.70
NOEA Title II\
21,135 .69
NOEA Title V
190.00
ESEA Tit le I
7.823.92
ESES T!Jie II
4,2 47 .24
Head Start Tille II A
3,072 .78
MOTA&amp;ARA
16.090.83
Basic Adult Educ .
824.07
Total
41 3,988 .28
Total Receipts
General Fund
2,476,277 .29
Disadvantaged Pupils
Prog .
34,229, 17
Other State Funded
Programs
19,775.64
Bond Ret irement
219,880 . t 2
Lunch Room
201 ,887 :92
Uniform Supplies
11 ,824.25
Project Interest
0.215.02
Trust
1,693 .68
Scholarship
170.58
NDEATille Ill
107. 42
ESEA Title I
130, 21 3.24
ESE S T itle II
4,587.95
Head Start Title IIA
2t.OO
MOTA &amp; ARA
61 , 44 3.82
Ba sic Adult Educ .
3,000.00
Federal Other
Progs .
60,020.00
Total
3.234,356. 10
Total Receipts &amp; Balances
Genera l Fund
2,389,8-44. 73
Aid to Depend .
Children
0.38
Disadttantaged Pupils
Prog .
35,237 . 21
Other State Funded
Programs
22,391.27
Bond Ret irement
353.930 .68
Lunch Room
202,49 3. 43
Uniform Supplies
•25,858 .96
Projec t Inte res t
16,1 15.05
Trust
4,334 .57
Schola rsh ip
170.58
Career Orient .
376.70
NOEA Title Ill
21 ,2 43 . 11
NOEATitleV
190.00
E SE A Title I
138,037.16
ESEA Ttlell
8 , 835 . 1~
Head Start Title IIA
3,093 . 78
MOEA &amp; ARA
77,543 . 65
Basic Adult Educ.
3,824.07
Federal Other Progs . 60.020.00
Total
3,648,344. 38

LABASTER

\~\

$1.41 Value

POLAROID
j
&amp;
FOSTER GRANT
SUNGLASSES

Famou s
qua fity .

MIO"l.EPORT

lo.ao_____________________.

Reg . $1 3.95

.'

1

COLOR

FILM

$795

5.99 VALUE

1

POWDERED
EASTER
EGG DYE
As Advertised
On TV.

3 9 e_

$34 .95

Value

$2777 $} 06
SMILES

BE READY FOR

2Dc

SITTING RABBIT, I oz .
DANDY ANDY, 20oz.
MONEY BUNNY, 2oz .

COLORED
CELLOPHANE

63c
63c

PET BUNNY, 2112 oz .

72c

CUT IE BUNNY, 3'12 oz.

SSe

FUZZY BUNNY, 3112 oz .

SSe

SUNNY BUNNY, 1112 oz .

$1.99

FUNNY BUNNY, 31h oz .

SSe

•

Pink. &amp; Gree~ .

STANDING
BUKNY

2,674,639.65

CROUCH IN
BUNNY

•2,.'

2-l.6t2.10
15,2if9.16

2,99S,OO

JOl

$419

CHOCOLATE BUNNIES

4,.16.4
·1•500. 00

,,
'

,.

108

PAAS

0

I'

POLAROID

Sunbeam

Exp .
sps0.39
Total Instruct ion
e xp .
1,393,859.97
Total CO ·Ordinate
225.00
Activities Exp .
TOtal Library
10,218.12
Exp .
Total Pupil Transp .
210.637.89
E xp .
Total PlaygroundS ·
70 .90
Recreational Exp .
Total School Plant
Operation exr,.
217,626.57 ·
Total School Pant
Matnt.. Exp.
S5,002 .A2
Total Other AuKIII•ry
e x p&amp;nse
. 350.513.98
Total capital OutlaY
16,.67. ~ 1

' .

•31.95 VALUE

, '.

Easy Cleaning

.l ,,. ,, ,, .•..,, ,, ,,, ·' ·' ' """"''

,,, . •.,,,,,,.,,.,,,,.,,"''""!

,,,,,n,,

SUNBEAM
SHAVER

Pink. with white &amp; gold
trim .

Total Administrati on

~P8.,t;A
saIsic Adult Educ.

0

Two -sided "Micro Twin" shaving head.

Expenditurtt

Tr•nsfer to

• lflOU ·'·"" " ' ''""""

LADY

Total Beginning Balance

Title I
x -OWE

l h ~· · nu n ~ u m '»! ll ''

p!i!l ei!IU !I41 ilyl\1! 9 d l ~\!1

~OFF

•

9,821 .72
1.593.25
13,111.11

I

ULTRABAN
Roll-On .
1.5 oz.

$2.25 Value

$1.37 Value

$2.56 Value

Total Non-Revenue
Receipts .
24 ,532 .08
Transfers From
190.00
Title v
376.70
Career Orientation
5,642.60
t ,658.06
~it.~~
16,598."
MOTA
107.42
Title Ill NOEA
0.38
AOC
Total Transfers
24,582.73
Total Receipts {Revenue,
Non -Revenue &amp;
Trlnsfers l
2,476,277 . 35
PIUS Receipts

SPICED
JELLY BEANS

s oz.

N

Stackable OUT
2perpackage ICE CUBE
11.49 Value
TRAYS

LUDENS

FINAL
NET

16 oz.

Disadvantaged PupHs
Prog .
Other State Funded
Prog.rams
18,263.99
Bond Retirement
168, 440. u
Lunch Room
193,015.82
Uniform Supplies
10,993 .13
Trust
581 . 23
Career Orient .
376.70
NOEATitle Ill
8,672.56
NDEA Tille V
190.00
ESEA Title I
71 ,1 01.72
ESE S Title tt
4.214. 43
Head Start Title IIA
3,093. 78
MOTA &amp; ARA
67,239.36
Basic Adult Educ .
• 2,463. 25
Federal Other Progs . 52,680. 45
Total
3,016,086. 34
Balance Dec. 31. 1974
General Fund
284,794.86
Disadvantaged Pupils
Prog.
t0.331.54
Other State Funded
4,127 . 28
Program s
185,490.54
Bond Retirement
9,477 . 61
Lunch Room
14,865.83
Uniform Supplies
16,11S.OS
Project Interest
3,753.34
Trust
170.58
Scholarship
12.570.55
N DEA Title Ill
66,935. 44
ESEA Tit le I
4,620. 76
ESE$ Title II
10.304.20
MOTA &amp;ARA
t,360~ 82
Basic Adu.t Educ .
Federal Oth er Progs . 7,339.55
632,258 .04
Tot at
CASH BALANCE,
RECEIPTS, AND
EXPENDITURES
BY FUND
General Fund
Bal., Jan . I, 1974
198.362.30
R eceiph- Revenue
Property Ta x IGross)
General - Real Estate 563,744.04
Tangible Personal
130,089.36
Sta t e Subsidies
School Found . (Gross)
Basic Allowance
1,685,256.90
Bus Purchase Allowance
18, 757 .00
18,101.77
Vocational Educ .
4.170.00
Other state Subsidies
Federal PL 874
Tuition - Parents &amp;
Patron s
' 6.024.50
Rental School Prop .
406.00
Other Revenue
612 .97 ·
Total ·R evenue
Receipts
2,427 , 162.54

a.

CLAIROL

100's

Liquid

TWIST

Spill, Proof

BAYER ASPIRIN

PREI!
SHAMPOO

Expenditures
General Fund
2,389,844 . 73
Aid. to Depend .
Children
0.38

OtherNon -Revenue

Valley Lumber &amp;Supp~ Co.

.

4, 177 .73

Refunds
Sales Non .Real Prop .

REMODELING
NEEDS

IJ~·

150,000 .00

Depos itory
Sub -Total Cash on

Adjustments

YOUR
HEADQUARTERS

knowll'dg ~'

409 .005 .00

Receiph-Non ~ Revenue

Star Supply

llll'l l"

sampling d iffcrcnl ai'NtS \l f (' (J I IIi nu i n ~ EdurHt i un f or
.-::r udy.
fur tlwr infurn,'ution 75:i-:l591 .
The
Sprin g
quart er'.s i\11 ill"L' for :1erPf\il hours except
Si.' hedult• of cla,sses ineludt•s llw la st wllit'h is for two .
l'uurses which are appli cabll' 1o
Speech, Wrd., 8:10- 10 :50.
all of the co ll ege's 2:!
Intru. lu P~ y ehol ogy, Tues .,
tcdmologies plus clcct ivl' 8: 10-10 :50.
c.:um·ses offered on the b&lt;tsis of
Dl' vclo~m I(' nltl Psychology ,
student interest.
Mon .. 5: :10-8:10.
The foll owing is a listi,ng of
Cnnununic.:ations lll, Mon. ,
courses which will be offered 8: 10-10:50.

.

Bu:-; irll·ss Law, Wed ., 8: Hl- Thurs ., 5:3(}..8 :10.
IN KENYA
111 :50.
l.aws of Arres t, Search &amp;
Navy Chief Machioist'! Mate
SuJwr·v isi on, Tues .. 5: 30~8 : 10. Seiz ure, Wed., 8:10·10 :50.
Burton R. Larson, husband of
Bet~kcepi n g, Tues ., 7·9.
Crimina listics I. Mon., 6-10. th e former Eleanor T.
Political Science II , Wed .. \ Police Operations, Thur s., Frederick of Long Bottom, has
5: :!0-8 :10.
5::!11-8 :10.
visited Mombasa, Kenyai on
Human Sex u:Jlity, Tue s .,
the east coast of Africa, as a
5::!0-8 :10.
F:lcc . Fundamentals In , T. &amp; crewmember of the nuclear·
Act:utul h11~ Ill , Tues., 5:30- Th .. 5:30-8:10.
powered attack aircraft
Enginee ring Drawing II , T. carrier USS Enterprise. He
8: 10.
&amp; Th. 8:10-10:50.
Mnth ll . Wed ., 5::!0·8: Ill.
also receptly crossed' the
Public Fitmn c.:c, Thurs., 8:10..
equator while on a cruise In the
10 :50.
Pu lice Adm . ll, Thurs. 8:10- Indian Ocean. The Enterprl);e ,
Bask Phutu~nwhy. Thurs., 10 :50.
homepor ted at Alameda ,
8:10-10:50.
Calif.,
is deployed as part of the
Nigh t Field Biology, Mon., 6Adv. Police Photo~raphy , 9.
U. S. Seventh Fleet.

Cash in Transit to

COLOR TV .

Choose

l)ro;~rlt: P

NEI.SONVI Ll.E - Eal'li
quar!L·r H ot' kin ~ 'l'ct'hnkal
Coll l·g~· offers a st•.lt'ctlun of
eveni ng classes. mncmg them
l'Ourses fllr inter:es t on ly and
t rL•clit l'OUI"S('S which prepHrC
anti dhpf' n the sludenJ' s
t'il rerr knuwledgl' .
The program 1s attra ctive to
peuple who are workin~
throughout the day and' a lso
full-lime students who wish to

tla· Wl'Uk of Mah·h
~4 . ( 1r1c nw~, register fur Uu~sc
d :1SSt's lh" first n i ~ h t ,,r
r l!r sst•s , l r l'Unlal'l Hov
Pallllcr, !liet·lu r uf Afl\l i l

154 , 177.73

Cash on Hand :

Racine
·· Social Events

Carpenter

Evenirig' classes listed

Citizens Nit. Bank
215,3 59 .09
Su b-Total Depos itor y

ZENITH

Easy Terms!
Free Delivery!

3 13 J !C

to be correc t.

..•

eSTER EO

991 7 IJ S

l) q~ llltHI I~

..
'•.

�•

'

l

(Continue&lt;~ from Pago 7l

I UNDERSTAND YOU'R E
UPTO HERE IN

•

Rf' t e• t Is

1 edNa I s ub s oy

99 :nt. 4.!

Tot.at f..!t: C(' pi S

99 3i6 14

CETA
n 750000
Tra11 s fe r s From
L sted under other
Genl!rd r u1d
21611
!!tate programs
T tie I I
1
101, L sted under ott1er
To tal Tr&lt;'llls l er s
7 1 e1J
Fed Prog
Total R ece pts and
Tofal Tn1nsfers
77 91l 18
Trans fe-rs
110 lH(l
To at Beg,nn.ng Balance
Total General F u 1d E )(p
P l us Rece&gt; pts &amp;
and Trm'!sfers
.., 189 8JJ 7J
Tr cu sf~? rs
118 794
General F und B&lt;ll
E ~~:pen d•ture s
Dec J l 19 74
78 J 79J 91
Gener al Ad n ntstrat on
To tal Exp and Transf e r s
Sa ta r es and W itg es
1 140
Plus Bal Dec

x

80
00
80
~ -~

16

Nc 1Ce
UR your
Cos me• C'i
99 7 S11 3

2 SIGNS

011 of M n k
Ph on e B ROW N S

OF
QUAtiTY

1 1 1tc
1 REE k ttcn s o &lt;~ 1 cc home
L ti e r lrtl ned Ptlon C' 991 :1 1 17
1 11 ..\ lp

P I\ NO 1un nQ Phone Cil l9 J811
3 J

00
15 40

fC

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

1974MALIBU2DR H T
$3095
S lver clulo P S P 8 rad10 a 1r co nd w s wt1res
197&lt; IMPALA4 DR SEDAN
S419S
Fully equ1pped 10 800 mil
1972 CHEVROLET KINGSWDDD ESTATE
S289S
3 Seal Wagon less than 30 000 m iles by local owner AOO V
8 P s teenng brakes automa1 c power door locks
luggag e ra c k rad1o dar k gree n fm sh Li ke n ew &amp; loaded
w lf h ext ras
1973 PLY STA WAGON
$2795
Su burban 3 Seat V 8 e ngtne automatic trans powe r
stee r ng &amp; brakes factor~ a tr condJt1on1ng luggage ra ck
green f1n1 s h r ad o L1 ke n ew w w tires

WILKINSON
SMALL ENGINE
SALES&amp; SERVICE
992·3092

OBSCENE: PHONE

Ptofessiooal
WEDDING
Photography

Chain
Precrs1on
Ground

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

7 30- Holl ywood ::lquares J 4 Ohio Lottery 6 New Pri ce IS
R1ght s Co ns um er Survival Kit 20 Wild K1ngdom 10 To
Te ll t h e Truth 13 Amencan Outdoorsman 15
"un s hme 1 4 IS Barney Mi ller 6 13 Th e Waltons 8 10 8111
Moyers Jou rnal 20 33
8 30-- Bob Cra n e 3 4 IS ~ Karen 6 13
9 DO-Archer 3 4 Streets of San Fra n ci sco 6 13 Polynesia 15.
Mov 1e The Tempest 8 Movie Sansho the Bailiff 20,
Mov ie Compulsion 10 Little Princess 33
10 00-Mov tn On 3 .4 IS H ar ry 0 6 13 Woman 33
10 3()- Horace Marshall 33
I I 0()- News 3 4 6 8 10 13 15 ABC News 33
11 J()- J ohnny Carson 3 4 15 Wide World Specia l 13 FBI 6
Mov1e Desperate Search 8 Movie Two Living One
Dead 10 News 20 Janakl 33
12 Jo-- W1de Wo rld Specia l 6
1 oo- Tomorrow 3 4 News 13

ConstructiOft &amp; Rtmodtl

8-K EXCAVAnNG
•
roMPANY
•
777 PUrl StrMt

For Information
Call

1 (614) 247-3644

INDIAN JOE'S

CAPTAIN EASY
E AS Y
YOU R E NOT

D&amp;D
CONSTRUCTION

CB SALES &amp; PARTS

LE AVIt..I G

-z

LOVE- TO STIC K
AROUN D YOWZ..
HI6 HN E5.5 BUT
\k KEE 15-N T

V" "U~E

YOU RE NOT
MA KI N6 A M 5rAKE z
HER DADDY 5 H IE
R:I CHE5 T O IL -HE IK

MY

1\1 ARABIA

FRIDAY MARCH 14 1975
00-Su nrl se Se mtn ar A Svn r lse Semester 10
15-Engllsh 505 3
25- Farm Report 13
JG--F 1ve Mtnules to l 1ve By 4 News 6 Bible Answe rs 8
Publ1c Affairs 10 Blue Rtdg e Quartet 13
6 35- Columbus Today 4
6 45- Mornlng Report 3 Farmtlme 10
7 oo-Tod ay 3 4 15 AM Amer ica 13 6 C B S News 8,10
8 oo-Lassie 6 Ca pl Kangaroos Popeye lO Sesame Sf 33
8 25-Capt Ka.Qgaroo 10
8 J()-MISslon Impossible 6
9 DO-AM 3 Ph il Donahue 4 15 Bvllwlnkle 6 Morning with
D J 13
, 9 25-C huck White Reports 10
9 3()-Not For Women Only 3 Dmah 6 Galloping Gourmel 8
Tattletal es 1() New Zoo Rev ue 13
10 oo-Ce lebnly Sweepstakes 3 4 15 Jokers Wild 8 10 Dinah
13
10 3()-Wheel of Fortune 3 4 15 Gambll 8 10
11 OG-H1gh Rollers 3 4 15 One Life lo Live 6 Now You See It
8 10 Elec Co 20
11 3()- Hollywood Squares 3 IS Brady Bunch 6 13 News 4
Love of Life 8 10 Sesame Sf 20 33
11 55-Graham Kerr 8 Dan Ime l s World 10
12 DO-Jackpot 3 15 Password 6 13 Bob Broun s 50 50 Club 4
6
6
6
6

Buy

.

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

HEtL
RACINE PLUMBtNG
&amp; HEAnNG

.BORN LOSER

FOREST RUN
BLOCK CO.

001l'1 !lOnfl&lt;
~tor;NOO

I'vt;WT AN
IMRJ!&lt;'JANT
c:EL IS\Cll \0
MAKEt

·o

II'S CDMFORrtN0
1'D KNOW WE'
M\IE A~
/&gt;..T i\1€: HEL-M
l.WABL-t; CF
~~-Yo

c:tL\SIONS I

LARRY LAVENDER

.

Real Estate For Sale

~lY~M;u..J:rm~.-Jc

£.
,

o! Thanks

For Sale

Unscramble these four Jumbles.
one lettt!r to each square to
form four ordinary words

ALLEY OOP

Employment Wanted

II JI
I(JN/8/
Y"

FOR
MONKEY RUN AREA

1Prill•SWIISliiiSWIIIIII'I\

---- - - -----

For Rent

fi.I~T CoP DON'T KNOW A
TW~RE

TI-'IKG '7'0U WAS LYIN

The Dai~ Sentinel

SHI! 14APH'T SEEN NOT'HIIi-

· -.,.-------"---=""'

_____

A

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

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

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

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

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

\! ROSS

•r

GASOLINE

ALLEY

Soon
as I

qets

worked \~:-""'"'"'-----J
1n papas

th1nks

II
11

thei.J

1&gt;

mrqht could use hrm

at th

p rckle
plant'

river

'";W';_ For Sale

------

-

checkers
~0 Owned
~~ Transgressed 11 Ntckname
13 Sorruneller s
for a sharp

me

)5

Ill No nay
mx ( 2 wds I
11 lnlens1!y

concern

be~n'

shooter

Y&lt;storday s Ans11er
lM Part of

am

~5 Negative

l7 Outcast

19 My 1Fr 1
11

Slangy
term
for a
mosqutto
•~ Destmed
( 2 wds )
!3 Decline

~9 Medtcinal
plant
II Den
33 Actress
Jeffreys
31 Terror
36 New Guinea
town

'4 Granny

wed'

and others
Laughmg
face g1rl
16 Noble
llahan
fam1ly
• S1lk fabnc
1! Where AddiS
Ababa ts
rabbr l
! 9 C lo)ed
Ill Hard

ULABNER

/F NE'L-SON ROCKEOFELL-ER AN
ONASSIS HAINT r---=::--&lt;
TH' RICHES\
MEN !NTH
WORL-D -

WF~T

EAST

... 9 6 52
'II A 3
t64
.KQ974

•H

opera

IDEAl

l}&lt;E COMPETITION 2

Is

10 PULL OFF A

Here's how to work

It:

SNUffY·· DO 'IE SWEAR
TO TELL TH' TRUTH -TH' WHOLE TRUTHAN NOTHIIIJ
TH' DADBURI\I
TRUTH?

4•

South

PISCES (Feb ZO-March 20)
Take 11 easy on your purse You
have a tendency to lh lnk funds
that may be coming In are
already
1n
th e
bank

Morch 14 1175
Prest1ge will come to you this
year before the material
rewards that should accom
pany It Be pallent The earthly
rewards wont be too far
behind
!NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN I

South ruffed wtth the e~ght of
trumps Mary dtscarded a d1a
mond and now South went after
' trumps Unforlunately for him,
Mary now held the long trump
She watted unt1l South played
ace and one diamond Then she
ruffed m led lhe kmg of clubs
and watched the han&lt;f collapse
'Bnlhanl play partner',
chortled East
11 you had
overruffed South s e1ght of
spades when I led the th~rd
heart he would have made h1s

u:e;l:lt!M?.ttr1

3 ...

Pus

Mary (Mrs Emory l Clement
was one of the best tf not Ihe
best woman br 1dge player of
the early 30s
She had a habit of makmg
very good plays then preten
d1ng they were the result of a
fortunatt accident
Mary who sal West d1d not
conSider a b1d of f1ve hearls
She knew her partner s
preempls were real trash In
any event she thought she mrght
beat four spades She opened
lhe ace of hearts and contmued
the su11 South ruffed led the
queen of diamonds, played
d]my s Jack and watched
E
take his kmg
st led a third heart and

XZC

UXA

RBRLHCQYXJ
PZ!KZORA

CQR

JRXYGO
FQYTR
KQZXR

i\Yi\X C
LYXJ -IUH
LYPQOCZXR
yesterday's Cryptoquote
NOW WE SIT THROUGH
SHAKESPEARE IN
ORDER TO RECOGNIZE THE
QUOTATIONS -ORSON WELLES
lCI 1915 Kl.nt Featwet $yndleatt lne )

BARNEY

Pass

East

LONGFELLOW

YXOKYLUCYZX

iZEULt

North

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

JAMES HIU.

ULil

,.

West

AXYDLBAAXIl

CRYPTOQUOTE

Phone: 247·2961

Some news you re expecting
will not turn out to be all you
desire Keep your hop es wl1hln
reasonable bounds

Thank you partner replied
Mary I had the mne of spades
m w1th my clubs

Opemng lead - A. •

DA!L y CRYPTOQUOTE-

&amp;1UNT LlKE 11-1AT I

AQUARIUS (Jon 20·Fotl 101

The btddtng has been

13

Pass

HAVE THE {}Ol.ll/(tS AND

CENT6

22·Jin

contract

13oltl vulnerable

1Lal l
li - Chnstle
1'1 C heer
10 Czech
rl\ e r

WILO

•Ja

&lt;lo2

lti Magmol 1- Queen

IT MAY MAKE 6ENSE
JANIE BUT WE JU5T DON'T

'IIKJ109752
tK5

'118
tQ\09873

.a Verdi

FOR. US TO BUY BARIDI-1
OUT AND ELIM INATE

13

SOUTH
•AQ87 3

work er

MJJWN T IT MAK/0 SENSE

CAPRICORN (Die

11) A problem may arise today
be1ween a memb"r of your
family and an outsider that In
valves you Stand up lor yo ur
kin

Mary Clement: Lucky as a fox

' I ununox

WINNE I
J UST GOT A

s ituatio ns lest you say or do
something to cause you and
ano ther needless embarrass
me nt

WIN AT BRIDGE

'IIQ64
t AJ 2
&lt;loAI0653

Now

THANK YOU

LIBRA llopt 23·001 23)11 you
e)(peet others to coMoperate
wtth you you must give them
some visible lndlcaUons you In

NORTH IDl
"K 10

One letter s1mply stands for another In this sample A II
used for the three L s X for the lwo 0 s etc Smgle letter~j
a ostrophes the lenglh and formahon of the \\ords are t
hfnts Each da) the code letters are different

WN.PO AM-FM

VIRGO (Aug 23·8tpt 22)
Take care of a paatMdue obUga
lion you have to a friend before
you think of catering 1o one of
your new expensive whims

•,

Southern
Cabbage Plants

FOR YOUR

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

7 Nol for

MiSS
Melba
an'

ALL OF US AT

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

sechon~

10 Chess and

Order Your

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

12 wds l
mtslaken
&gt; I ooked
pleased
6 W1ndow
g lass

SAGITTARIUS (Nov 23-Doc
2t) Be on guard In social

L!O (JUIJ 23-Aug 22) This IS
one ot 1hoae days w~en you ra
going 10 try to sweep things under the rug that you don t want
to face

I Be

a Job

Real Estate For Sale

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

vmce
I l.oafmg

16 Hunganan

---------

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

1s land
Supplied
w1th hands
P nson r s lr
Chant
Cargo

wetght

bank'

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

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

, Chmr

a Sanatonum

Influential enough to pull It oil
Find another source

CANCIII (Juno 21·July 22)
You re not apt to put torth your
boat elloriS Ieday yel you lie•
peel others 10 do that which
you won t do for yourself

DOWN
I Endure

i Indonesian

TAUAUB (April ZO·MIJ 20) A
person you re depending on
lor something you need lsn t

sure all llnanc \al respon
slbllltles are spilt evenly

by THOMAS JOSEPH
fak e on
ca rgo

You re going to be dlllp·
pointed when you learn others
are not as sold on an Idea you
have as you are Don t bully
them Into It

G!MINI (MI, 21-.IUM 20) ll
you have a project In the mill
where friends are ln\lolved be

lh~ •tock

marbl- THEY "GAMBOL

Real Estate For Slle

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

m

tf&gt;t:MJN~

PH. 992·2156

Wanted To Buy

abo••
"[ I I I I I J"

Yettf'rd•J' \ A.Nwer Why lambM• Iuiie llu!lr monrllln

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

TWINE

Now arranp the clrcl. . lotton
to form the turpriH ~n~wer. U
auneoted b1 tho
cutMn.

Jumble• CRAWL GROOM ANGINA CYMBAL

t•.IIC.E A.N PEACEFUL WH!N

HE SHOWID UP- ANt&gt; TI-l
BRAT WAS JUST WAklt.l UP~

BALER

Pomeroy, 0.

,., Frtdoy, Morch 14. 1171
Alll!ll (MI&lt;ch 21-Aprtl 1t)

HOW TO COM5 TO
61l:IP5 WliH A F15H.

(Aalwtn , . . .,....)

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

TRAILER-LOAD

V 't
t-, ..J

1&gt;,

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

CARRIER
WANTED

tiJ

I Kj

....

SCORPIO (Oct 24·Nov 22)1t
will be very dltflcutt tor those
who work with you today to
please you Try no t to be
hypercrltlcaJ or their help will
be withdrawn

II

IFWTIE I

For Sale

Homes For Sale

tend to do likewise

SECAE

Help Wanted

2 ~Days at Our Lives 3 4 15 $10 000 Pyramid 6 13 Guiding
Light 8 10
2 30-Doclors 3 4 15, Blg Showdown 6 13 Edge of Night
8 10 3 ~Ano!her World 3 4, 15, General Hospital 6 13
Price Is Right I 10 Ascent of Man 20
3 3G-bne Life to Llve13 Lucy Show 6 Match Game a 10
4 oo-Mr Cartoon J I Dream of Jeannie 4 Somerset 15
Gilligan sIs 6, Tattletales 8 Sesame St 20 33 Movie Kill
or Cure" 10 Mike Douglas 13
4 3()-Bewl!ched 3 Merv Griffin 4 Mod Squad 6 Lucy Show 8.
Bonanta 15
5 ~FBI 3 Andy Griffith 8 Mlster Rogers Neighborhood
~0 33 lronslde 13
5 3()-News 6 Beverly Hillbillies 8 Hodgepodge ~edge 20 Gel
Smart 15; Elec Co 33
6 ~New. 3,4810,1315 ABC News 6 Elec Co 20 Per
sonallty &amp; Behavioral Development 33
6 3lf-'-NBC News 3,4,15 ABC News 13, Bewitched 6 CBS News
8 10 Zoom 20
7 oo-Truth or Cons 3 Probe The Wrold Aoun~ Us 4 Bowling
lor Dollars 6 WCHS TV Report a Avlofloo
''her 20 33
News10, Jimmy Dean 13 To Be Announced 15
7 30-Porler Wagoner 3, Pop Goes the Country 4, New Candid
Camera 6 Pop Goes !he Coun!ry 8 Tr..,sure Hun! 10 To
Tell the Trvth 13 Ou!doors with Ken Calloway 15 Block
Perspective on the News 20,33
8 DO-Sanford &amp; Son 34, 15, Night Stalker 6 13 Comedy Special
8 10 Washington Week In Review 20 33
8 30--&lt;hlco &amp; the Man J 4 15 We II Get By 8 10 Wall S!reef
Week 20 33
9 ~Rockford Flies 3,A, 15 Hot L Baltimore 6,13 Movie Cage
Without a Kay" 8,10 Masterpiece Theatre 20 Consume•
Survlval Klt 33
9 JO--Odd Couple 6,13 Assignment America 33
10 ~Pollee Woman 3,4, 15 Borella 6,13 News 20 Paul
Nuchlms 33
10 3()-World Press 20
11 DO-News 3,4,6,8 10 13,15 ABC News 33
11 30-Johnny Carson 3 4 15 Wide World In Concerl 13 Movie
'Tower of Terror' 6 Movie "The Two Feces of Or Jekyll "
8, Movie 'Equinox" 10 Janakl 33
1 ~Midnight Special 3,4, 15 Wide World In Concert 6 News

13

I I

MY BELONGINGS R)R
~E ST.o;rE '

News 8 10
12 3()-8 lank Check 3, IS Spilt Se~ond 6 13 Search for
Tomorrow 8 10 To Be Announced 33
12 45-E lee Co 33
12 5~NBC News 3 15
1 ~News 3, All My Chlidren 6 13 Phli Donohue 8 Young &amp;
the Reslleso 10 Not For Women Only 15
1 3()-How !o Sur vive a Marrlage3 4 1S Lets Make a Deal6, 13,
As the Wrodld Turns 8.10

1 1~Movle Muttny In Outer Space' 10
2 30-Star Trek 4
3 30-Movle "Sh11dow over E lveron •
5 30-Movlt 11 Johnny Tiger" •

THILG

~EY THINK I: M DEAI&gt; 1
THEY'RE HE~ 10 C:LAlM

IT'S A

a:

!

log for easy viewing

THURSDAY MARCH 13,1975

WILL. CURE L.EWD
CAL.L.ER 5. "

Commarcla~Rtsldtilllal

Jl 19 7.1
7 671 6JCil 6'1 Other Ex p a
w L l do r oo f nQ flcatmg
Inst r uc t on ...A1d to Dep e nd ent
rep&lt;~
p um b nq an d e cc
sa tar es and Wag es
61 981 51
Ch lelren Fund
tr co work Pl1on C' Clldrl cs
Otll~r Exp
') J62 87
Ba l Jan 1 197J
''
\ nclr~ r
Cil ll ~ JI ? 1
Middleport, Ohio
9 "
M se e taneous
498 Locust St
Tot al
9JH
3 4 I 21p
Other Exp
l'llotla m 5W or - 1 ~
616 97
Ell p end1 tu re s
Middleport, Oh1o 3 2 ! Mo
2 17 75c
Cap tat O utl ay
Trans len To
FLOWER
S
lor
Eas
ter
Bas
kel
s
2 125 90
Gt!neral Fu nd
9 38 N ew Equ pment
po ts sp ray s etc P h one 985
69 &lt;143 66
Total Transfers
9]8 ToTal Exp
JS H
Smalley s G fl Shop
Tran s len To
To tal Exp &amp;
Ches c r Oh o
Genera l F und
1 658 06
Traflsfers
3 4 171 c
' 38 f oltll EKp &amp;
Total Exp &amp; Tra n s fer s
Tran
s
fe
r
s
1
658
06
Plus Ba l Dec
Br ush
Bal D ec 31 1&lt;,174
57 692 4d NO W se t11ng ~u t ler
31 1Cil74
9 18
Products phOn e 992 3AI O
Total EKp &amp; Tran sf ers
Di sadva ntage d P up tt s
1 24 lf c
P lus Ba t Dec J
Program Fund
PHONE
19
74
1
:711
794
I
ll
308 Page St
Bal Jan I 1914
1 008 OJ
949 3832 or a43 2U7
MR and MR S Rona ld Dougan
E
S
E
A
T1t
le
II
Rt!v e nu e Re ce1pts
OPEN EVES 8:00PM
l08 Pate M1ddleporr
M1dd leport, 0. 992·3509
wou ld 1 ke to mv te you to
Bal J nn I 19 74
4 747 24
State Su bSi dy
? Q 750 00
Heat1ng
Cooling
.
All Types of
atten
d
Sunday
Sc
fl
oo
t
at
th
e
POMEROY,
OHIO
R
ece1
pls
Non Revenue Reef' pts
Refr1gerat1on
Roof
Repa1rs
Un t e d
Pe n
13 BJO 9S " M ddlepo rt
Rad1os Antennas Towers
Other Non Reve nue
BUILDING
J 89 I 1 Federa l Subs dy
Gutters
Plum
b1ng
•
lecos toJ Cflurch Sou 11'1 Th rd 9i3 FORD Country Squ r e
Tota l Rece p is
13 BJIJ 95
Used T V s Buy lrom the
Total Revenue &amp; Non
973
CHEVE
L
L
E
Malibu
t aoor
Electrtcal
Repa1rs
and
I\ venue s tart ng at 10 a m
and REMODELIIIIG
1nd1an
and uve
wam
Revenue Re ce pts
30 239 1 To ta l Beg nn ng Ba lance
wagon
20 000 m les
al I
Serv~ee
melat l c brown bla ck v nyl
Pt us Re ce1pts
18 078 19
3 13 2t p
Pum
We bur U$ed RadiOS
Tran ~fers From
cq u pmen t SJ 500 Phone 997
top P S PB
350 VB a1 r
Call 992 lSOt and
From a shelf to a ha.,e · I·
E xp e nd1tures
and Towers R1d101 repaired
)493 or 99'1 '17 ~0
DPP F 71 7'1
99S 00
cond t oned
E xce ll en t con
Save on your: repa.r s a lso
NEW IMPR OVED
Z pp1es
Patntlng stding, roof1ng
by FCC licensed service
Gene r al Fund
'1 99~ 00 Pia n t Opera hOI
d
ton
Books
a1
S2875
W1il
repa.r
mowers
compressors
111c grea t ro n p 11 now w1 th Want•~ To
P.ersonnel Stop and see the
66 ?0
paper hanging , kitchen
To tal Transfers
3 990 00 D111 er Exp
se 1 lo r $2700 Phone 992 3273
and outboards Bnng tt m
V lam n C Nelson Dr ug
Miscellaneous
1nd1an
and
Bubbles
Total Re ce&gt; pts Revenue
and
save
cab~neh,
expert carpeting; :
3
13
He
Oth e r Exp
~ 11! 13
3 13 ltp C: LO furn1ture ce bol(es brass
Montier Channel 10 and 20
Non Revenue B.
ere
·
Total
El(p
bed
s
o
r
com
pl
e
te
flOus
e
hotds
19
73COu
N
fRv
s
q
lJr
e
4
19J
4]
Trans fe rs )
J~ 2'1Y 11
S
HOO
TIN
G
MATCH
Corn
Wr
te
M
D
M
ller
Rt
4
Tran
s
fers
To
St
at
onwagon
l
or
sa
le
to
Tota i,.Beg nnm g Ba la n ce
Hoi ow Gun Club turn I r st
Porn eroy Oh o Call 992 17 60
:n oo
se ttl e esta te L1ke new Pho ne
P lus Rt'ce 1p !s35 237 21 T ti e
r qh l o lt e r M es Ceme t e r y
10 7 74
To ta l T r.:~n sfe r s
992 349 3
2 I 00
E1 p c nd1fur es
To"\
1.
:
1
1
~IO'n
A.
Rut ;,nd
F aclory c hok ed
J 12 61c
Blown
General Ad min strat on
Tran s fers
4 214 43
gun s only Sunday March 16 WA NTE D o ld upr g hl ptanos
I.
Salar es an d wages
J99 6&lt;1
I p m
lnsulahon Serv1ces
any cond ton
Pay ng SIO 1972 OLDS MOBIL E Cutl ass 350
Ba l Dec 31 19 74
13 A6l 76
ns tru chon
eac h F rst f oo r on ly Wr re
3 13 31c
v 6 'J. dr coupe Cal l 992 3293
Sal ar es and Wa ges
3 31 8 17 To ta l Ex p &amp; Tran s fers
Blown mto Walls&amp; Atttcs
P us Ba l Dec
and g ve d.recl ons to W tlen
or see at 105 Un on A'Jenue
Othe r E li.P
J 883 17
AUCT
ION
Thu
r
~
day
n
igh
t
31 197 4
8 078 19
P ano Co
Box 188 Sa rd s
Pome roy
M scellaneou s
STORM
Oh o 43946
p m
a l Mason Au c ti on
He ad Start T1fle II A
3 11 6t c
0 11'1 er Exp
323 JJ
992 2067
Ho
rton
St
In
Mason
W
Va
W1
ndows
&amp; Doors
Bal
J
&lt;1n
1
197
.
:
1
l
071
78
3
13
6tp
Cap1ta 1 Outlay
Mlnersvtlle, 0
Co
ns
1gn
m
en1s
welco
m
e
RD
No
I
tomplete
plumbmg
,;
Recetp
ts
TW O 1968 t h eve lle s Both S7SO
'"' New Equ p
223 10
Pl'1one {lC4 l 773 5471
ALUMINUM
1964 and Old e r cons W II pay
21 00
Pho ne 742 620 5
Tota l E x p en ditures
18257 41 01h e r Non Reven ue
heatrng serv1ce and
Blocks
Tota l Rece 1p ts
7-tc for dtmes 60c fo r quar
1 2 lfc
21 00
Siding Soff1H
3 9 61 c
Tr a n sfer s To
To
ta
l
Beg
nn
n
g_.
Bal
te
rs
SJ
20
for
halves
Also
general
sheet
Cement
and Mortar
metal
OPP F 72 73
Gutters
Awnings
995 00
Nat onal Curre n cy on the
pt s
3 093 78 c u N s h~ot -saw;:-d;y Marc h
Ge n era l Fu nd
s b42 16 •P lus R ecE e1pend1tures
Free
Esttmates
w
o
r
k
s
1970
DOD
1 ~
7 p m M1te H It Road
G
E
Challenge
r
Rl
F
r
Wood
Burnmg
Stoves
e e
Po meroy
M ddl epor t o r
MOTA
II 00
tac lor y cl'1o ke d guns on ly
383 automa l c good cond1t on
Ph 992 3993
Re
t
und
F
und
ng
Ra
c
m
e
bank
Large
or
small
Est1mates.
To ta l Tr i'lns fers
Heatrlators
b 648 26
Sponsored by the Rac 1n e F tre
\ 1 400 or bes t offer ~o n e 992
Agency
b li s w II buy old poc ket
3 093 78
Total E)(p &amp;
7&lt;123
Depa
rt
me
nt
Phone
949
5961
and
watche s too P hone Roger
3 093 78
Transfers
24 905 67 Total E l( p
3 12 3tc
3 9 61c
Wamsley Rul tand Oh 10 141
Emergency 992 3995
F1replace Accessories
Syracuse, Oh1o
eal Dec 31 1974
10 33 1 5&lt;1 Total Exp P lus Bll l
3651
3 10 75
1972 DO DG E Co li new rad1al
Total Exp &amp;
Dec 31 19 74
3 093 78
or
992-5700
2-19-L mo_:_
3
13
3t
p
( l"d
Transfers P lus Bat
M o T A &amp; A R A
I .res
very good co ndit on
.
$1 200 AlSO 1966 Nova A 1
Dec 31 1974
35137 21 Ba l Jan 1 1974
16 099 83 1 W IS H lo thank eve r yone wllo J UN K autos
comp le te and
Other State Funded
Rece 1pts
hap
e
mu
s
t
se
ll
Phone
992
s
READY
M
IX
CONCRETE
oe
11 s te d me
sent flowers
d e l ve r ed lo our ~ard We p ck
7066
livered right to your pro!act
Programs Combine
Feder al Subs1dy
-4 2 843 98
c ards and g1 fl s While 1n
up auto bcd1es and buy all
Bal J&amp;n I 19 74
2615 63 Tota l Rece pts
A2 8&lt;13 98
3
9
6tc
Fas~
and
easy
Free
hosp tal Also tha.n ks to th e
MODERN
k nd s of scra p metals and
Walnut
s tereo
Tran s fers From
Transfers From
es1 mares Phone 997 32N
nurses a nd s laff at Ve te rans
NEW br ck home n Baum
ron R der s Sa lv age St Rt
co n sole
AM
FM
radiO
General F und
19 775 6.:1 General F und
18 588 84
Goeglem Ready Mix Co
Hos pital Dr Boonsue You
Addit1on
Cheste r
Ohio
separate co nt r ols
1'1 4 Rl "' Pomeroy Oh1o 19 75 MONTE Carlo 4 000 m es
Ba la n ce
Toto'! I Trans fe r s
9 775 64 0 p p F
11 00
Middleport 01'1 o
w 11 n eve r be forgo tt e n God
al pow e r a r AM stereo
L1v 1ng room combtnat on
Cat
I
992
5468
$1C7
10
or
budget
ter
m
s
Call
Total Re cei pts
Tot at Transfers
6 30 tfc
bl ess you l'l ll Mrs Mary
tap e Cat l 992 70J6 after 5 p m
kl c hen
and
dnng
3
992 3965
18 599t 84
tO
17
lfc
!Tran sfers )
\9 ns 6&lt;1 To tal Rece tpfs and
Ho lle r
bedrooms
2
batl'1s
utll1t1es
2
_ _ _ _ _ ...L... _ _ _ _ 3
_5
_ tic
3 3 lfc
Tot al Begmn lng Ba lanc e
Tra ns fers
~ 61 443
SEWING MACHINE Repa irs
3 13 lt p CAS H pa 1d for all ma ke s and
car garage full ba semen t
pus Rece pis
22 391 27
1'173
VEG
A
Hat
c
hba
c
k
.
:
1
speed
service &amp;II makes 992 228-4,
1
8
f1repla ce fully ca rpeted Call
Expendlturu
Total Beg nnln g a lance
models of mobile homes
tra nsm ss on new t res tap e P IGS for s al e Pl'1one 9927106
The Fabr ic Shop Pomeroy
Plus Rec e1pts &amp;
Leonard Erw1n for ap
Phone area code 6\.4 423 9531
Aut flOr,zed Smger Sales and
Instruction
Tran s fers
77 543 65
player exce lle n t co nd1f on
3 11 31p
po 1ntment phone 985 3365
4
13
ffc
S a tar~es and Wages
16 446 17
Expenditures
Serv1ce
We sharpen Sc1ssors
W1ll
se
ll
reaso
nabl
e
Pflone
J
13
3tc
WOMAM to baby s I and do llgh l
47 1 99 General Admin strat on
3 29 tfc
(6 14 ) 992 2377 or 99 21732 after 4 GRAV E lO IS Me gs Memory
Otfler E)(p
hovsework
5
days
week
W1t
1'
1
4 p m
Plant Operat1on
I 345 83 Salaries and wages
1 133 36
Ga rden s cheap Phone 949
o
cc
as
ional
evening
and
1
2179
2 28 lite
~~~&amp; l~ext 31 19 74
~~~ ~~ Other El(p
116 06
Saturday
Meals prov ded
ooteR work land cleartng by
J 11 3tc
To tal ElCp Plu s
Jnsfruct1on
L bera l sa lar y Ca ll 992 2832
REMODELING
plumb ing
the acre hourly or contract
Bat Dec 31 1974
Salar
es
a
nd
Wages
23
19
5
50
22 391 77
or wri t e P o
Box 687
hea t1ng and a ll types of
ONE
pa.r
c
oli
spr
ng
spacers
Farm ponds roads etc
Bond Retirement Fund
Other Exp
5 990 47
Pomeroy 0 45769
ge n e ra l
repa1r
Work
3 , h 1gh p hone 992 2418 after
large dozer and operator
8 &amp;1 J an 1 1974
134 041 56 Tra nsport llt lon
3 13 lfc
guaranteed 2C y e ars ex
5 p m
with over 20 years ex
Rec e ipts
Other E)(p
29 5S
pe n e nce Pl'10ne 992 2409
per ence PUllinS Excavating
3 11 3tp
Property Tax (Gross l
Plant Operat 1on
RES P O NSIB LE la dy lo live n
1 19 tfc G ROCERY bus n ess for sate
Pomeroy Ofllo Phone 992
Ot
fler
E
)(
p
4
719
28
W1
l
h
e
ld
e
r
ly
lad
y
Phon
e
{
1
l
General - Real E s tat e I I 2 936 77 Plant Malntenitn ce
2478
INDIAN
Jot!
S
Sportmg
Goods
66 7 3:1 05
Bu1ld ng for sale or leas e
REMO DELIN G
plumb 1n g
Ta ng ible Personal
4'1 1A6 98 Oth er Exp
12 19 tfc
buy and se I gvns ammo
1 021 89
Other Revenu e
.:1 SOS.,U..
3 4 12tc
Phon e773 S6 18trom 8 30p m
h ea t n g and all l ypes of
'- ---- -- -:...-=--~--t sl'1 ng eQUipment and alte r
Total Rece p rs
:7 19 889 12 MISceiiMeous
to
10
p
m
for
appomtment
ge n e r a l
r e pa r
Work
I
Otfler Exp
Apr 1 1 we w II have f1sh ba 1
E&gt;t;CAVATING dozer loader
1 110 92 L ADIES to do li g ht hOusewo r k
3 10 tfc
guaranteed 20 yea r s ex
Total Beg111n ng Ba lance
Cap tal Ou tl ay
HOME WITH INCOME - 2
Sl op by at J08 Page St
aod bac khoe work
septic
1 day week must be abl e to
pe r ence Phone 992 14C9
P lus Rece 1pts
353 930 68 New Equ pm e nt
12 317 42
M dd le por t Phone 992 J509
houses w1th baths 1n town near
links msta ll ed dump trucks
wo rk around te e nag ers Mu sl
3 11 tf c &lt;; LOSE OUT on n ew Z1g Zag
Expe nditures
Tol a l El(p
50 640 45
and lo boys for hire wilt hau~
have r e feren ces and trans
J 2 30tc stores Want an mvestment
Inter es t On Bonds
51 258 75
Tran s fers To
sewmg machm es For s ew ng
fill d1rt top so!l limestone &amp;
po
rt
at
on
Wr
ite
n
care
of
Th
e
thiS
IS
tt
Bond Red emphon
10.:1 000 00 Genera l Fund
stre tc h fab n cs buttonflOles~ INDU STRIAL 61nch s troke saw
gravel Call Bob or Roger
Dal y Sen t n el
eo)( 729 P
165989 1
Mob1le
fan c y d es gns etc Pant
Other
l3 18 1 39 Total Trllnsfer s
33 ACRES - Smal l fresh water
Jeffe rs day phone 992 7089 •
Pomeroy
Ohio
457
69
S75
18
mc
l'
1
metal
latag
6
nch
1659891
Total Exp
168 440 14
s ll g fllly blem shed Cho ce of
n tght phone 992 3525 or 992 •
J 12 6tc 3 BED RO OM t urn shed mob te
s w ng
comptele
w1th stream and a 3 bedroom
Sal Dec 31 1974
185 490 54 Totllll E)(p and
ca
rry1ng
c
ase
or
sewing
5232
Transfers
67 23 9 3~
t hread ng gears motor and modern home w1th Ctfy water
home and lot loca ted on New
sta nd S49 80 cash or terms
Tota l Exp P lus
8lll Oec Jl 19 74
10 304 29
2 11 ti c
b
ts
$100
2
h
p
220
bolt
smg!e
L
ma
Road
nea
r
Ru
t
a
nd
a v a I able Phone 992 77 55
Bal Dec 31 197&lt;1
353 930 68 Total E xpe nditur es &amp;
pl'1ase m otor ndus t r al type 70 ACRES - On new Route 33
P t~one 741 5943
12 18 lfc
lunchroom Fund
Tran s fers Plus B&amp; l
North Excellent home s1 tes
ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR
with pulley S5D a r com
3 \3 41C
Bat Jan 1 1974
605 51
Dec 31 1974
77 543 65
- Sweepers toasters trons
pressor motor and tank S2S
and spring T P water close
O
N
1966
Jo
hn
D
eere
450
t
ra
ck
Rece ipts
Basic Adull Educ
... 11 small appl ances Lawn
L
n
e
s
haft
3
pulleys
bear
ngs
ROUTE
143
Far
Out
large
II
loader
and
93
hoe
New
Sa te of Lunches
98 338 36 Bal Jan 1 1974
~ ELL your mob le home for
mowers next to State H gh
824 07
and belt SlS Phone 985 4118
Fedetlll Substdy
103 550 00
Receipts
s t eer n g
c lul c fl es
and
cash 15 home s wanl ed 195B
room 2 bath home with
way Garage on Route 7
2
13
26t
c
bra kes pam ! seats Good
Total Revenue &amp; No n
Federa l Subs dy
Tfl ru 19 72 m od el s Ph one (614 )
bus1ness room and drilled well
Pl'1on e 985 3825
soo 00
c ond11 on Pr ced lor qu ck - ----------- ~ -Revenu e Re ce 1pts 201 888 36 Total Re ceipts
446 1425 Gal l iPOl iS
3 11 261c
500 00
and p lenty of parkmg
s
a
le
$6300
Phon
e
(614)992
3 9 781c
From 2 500 oo
247 8
HOUSING SITES- 2'1, Acres
Total Beginn ing Balance
General Transfers
~und
iOME
Improvement
and
3 13 3tc
Plu S Rece1p ts
202 493 87 Total Transfer s
1 500 00
tn Pomeroy out of h 1gh water
Repa 1r Serv ce - Anything
Expenditures
Near sewer and water
Salaries onCI Wages
64 453 63 Tot a l Re cei pts and
f1xed around the home from
E BEAGLE Pups for s ate
1 BEDROOM Ira ler Br owns N IC
Transfers
3 000 00
roof to basement You will
rea
so
na
b
ly
pr
1ced
Pl'1one
991
Food &amp; Food Handl ng
Total Beglnn 1ng Ba lance
Tra ler Cou rt Pl'1one 992 332 4
like our work and rates
125 14 8 88
5302
Supplies
Plus Receip ts &amp;
3 4 ftc
Phone 742 5081
Other Exp
3 411 Jl
Transfers
J
13
3tc
OUR
PURPOSE
IN
BUSlNESS
3 824 07
12 29 tfc
Tota l E x p
193 OIS 82
E
d t
3
BEDROOM
tra
ter
w
th
I
p
IS TO HELP YOU GET A
Bal Dec 31 1974
9 478 05
lCpen 1 ur es
C
H
ES
T
TYPE
deep
freeze
out Unfurn s fl ed wa sfle r
Tota l Exp Plus
ln struc;t iOn
GOOD PR ICE FOR YOUR -s'EPTIC
Pt10n e 949 4761
-10 DOO feet bales
TANKS
cleaned
dry e r atr cond t1oned Phon e
Bal Dec 31 1974 201 493 87 Satll r les and Wages
2 06J 35
PROPERTY LIST IT WITH
3 13 6tc
Modern San It at ton 992 3954 or
992 33 88
Or
Le e
Ray
Other E xp
9 38
992 7349
Un1torm Supplies Fund
Refund - F und ing Agency 390 52
US CALL 992 3325
Laudermllt ar F 1ve Po n ts
-Ask for our cash and carry
LO CUS T POST 85c each 197 1
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ..J... _ __
Bat Jan 1 1974
14 034 71 Tota l Exp
2 463 25
9 18_ tfc
J 11 6tc
PriCe
72 Ford l T D hood UO 00
Sales 01 Wo~:b~~~~,•: &amp;
Bal Dec 31 1974
1 360 82
p a r fe nd e rs 1969 Chevel!e SS
C BRADFORD Auct1onet:1
A ILER aparlmenls fo r ren t
svpplles
11 824 25 Tota l Exp Plu s Bal
US ED p1ano n good s l'1ap e Ca I TRPh
40 OOea Ho me ! te XL 870and '
Complete Serv1ce
one
99
2
5248
\POMEROY
LANDMARK'f
Dec
31
1974
3
824
07
99 2 2958 after 5 p m
Tota l Rece 1pts
11 824 25
F
d
M cC ullo c l'1 250 pow e r saws
Phone 949 382 1 or 9.49 3161
Jack W l .. sev Mgr
0 ther Federal unde
3 I I SIC
Tota l Beg lnnmg Balan c e
3 12 3tp
$100 eac h A 1 exce ll e nt 742
Racme Oh 10
Phone.,. ~ 2181
.
Plus Rece ipts
Prot rams Combine
25 858 96
16 56
Grltt Bradford
1 BEDR OOM m obile home '\in
£ )( penditutes
Receipts
3 1) 31p ,1-~5 1 tfc
Sy r ac use No child r en or pets
Purchll se of Workbooks
Ot1'1er Feder al Su thtd les
Ca
1
992
2441
a
ft
er
6
p
m
Outstand
ng
Jan
1
4 7 510 00
&amp; Su ppl ies
10 77 1 86
IYrt -'
JUH""
Deere dozer 4
Depos 1 r equ 1red
W IL L tnm or cut trees or
KNAP P shoes many sty les on
1974
2000000
Oth er Expense
47 510 00
22 1 27 Totl!ll Recei p ts
cylinder
d
esel
8 ft blade
shrubbery
clean
out
s a e throug h March F amous
Redeemed Our ng Year
3 11- lfC
Transfers Frem
.__
1
new p a n t clu1ches tracks
Tota l Exp
12 SOO 00
0 993 13 Ge n era l Fund
base
ments
att
1
CS
e
tc
Phone
K 58 serviCe O)(ford only
1974
5 000 00
brakes and cano py S6 000
Bat Dec
197&lt;1
14 865 83 Total Transfers
12 so~~() Balance Outs la nd ng
949 3221 or 742 4441
3 BEDROOM mob te 1'10me a r
s 15 99 Call 992 5324
Total
E )(p 31P lus
Ph one 985 3.594
co
nd1f1ontng
corner
of
2 28 16tc
Dec
31
1974
312&lt;1tc
Bill De c 31 197 4
Total
Re
ce
lots
111\rt
15 000 00
25 858 96
3 9 7tp
Br oadway &amp; E lm Pt10 n e 992
tnt Rate
Project Interest
Transfers
60 020 co
3
2580 after 6 p m
OALMATION pups SIO each 1953 F ERGUSON 30
Ma tu n t y Year
1917
Bal Jan 1 1974
6 90C 03 Tota l Beg lnn ng Balance
new
Atsc Registered 12 Arab1an
Sal sbury School Co n s truct on
J 1 1 tf c
Receipts
Plus Recei pts &amp;
motor pamt and good rubber
ge ld ng Sl50 Phon e 992 3885
Property Tax {Gross )
Transfers
60 020 00 O ut s t&amp;n d ~ng Jan
s1 250 Phone 985 3594
E skey H1tl Pomero y Oh o
4 000 00
3 BEDR OO M mob le home
1 197&lt;1
Interest _
Expend1lures
3 9 71p
Redeemed
Our
ng
Year
wa~fler
a
nd
dr
yer
1
baths
3124tC
lnact 1ve Funds
8 359 37 Genera l Ad m 1nls trat on
19 74
1 000 DO
ut I l •es pa d SJ:Z 50 week 308
J7 1 78
Other Revenue
8SS 65 Oth er E xp
1950 FERGUSON
20
all
Ba an ce Ou tstandm g
Page St M ddle po r t Oh o FO R SA LE or lrade for c amper
Total Rece ipts
92 15 01 In s tr uct on
ongmal
e)(
c
e
pt
new
paint
and
LOW LOW DOWN PAYMENT
of equa l val ue a IO X40 mob te
Dec Jl 1974
19 647 21
Total Beg nnmg Ba lance
Salar1es &amp;nd Wages
2 000 00
3 4 tfc
t res S1 550 Phone 985 359.Lovely new homes n three
Oth er E)(p
ln
l
Rate
ho
me
Ca
ll
99
1
3380
after
6
273 28
3
1ocat 1ons In Me1gs County
16 115 05 Plant Operat on
P'lus Receip ts
3
9
liP
JUST
SOLD
pm
Matur
fy
Year
1975 TWO bedroom mobile 1'1ome
Bal Dec 31 1974
16 115 05 Other E)(p
Some w tfl wooded lots We
2 477 ~ M dd teporf E le m &amp; H gl'1
4 PROPERTIES
3 12 3tc TWO mo wers to f t F or~ or
cor ner Broa dw ay and Elm n
w!ll bu111 on your lot or ours
Tru1t Funds
M 1Ce ltaneous
SChOOl Add I on
~-- ----Ferguson 3 pt h 1tch One
M1ddleport
Phone 992 2580
2 640 89 Satar1es and Wages
Call 992 5976 or 992 5844 for
INS DAYS
Bat Jan 1 1974
29 810 19 Ou t sta nd ing J an I
11ilS5 CHEV RO L ET 2 door 1'1ard
S l 25 other $175 Phone 985
after6pm
more mformat1on
Receipts
Totllt Exp
52 680 45
top
1957
Cl"l
evrolet
been
3594
1974
115 000 00
TODAY WE NEED
2 6 tfc
2 27 26tc
Interest On In a c tive
Ba t Dec 31 1974
7 339 55 Redeemed Our ng Year
restored pool ta bl e Phone
F unds
1 693 68
3
9
7tp
742
.:11
11
3
bedroom
home
on
large
1974
16 000 00 TR AIL ER S PACE J.• mile
Total Rece ipts
1 693 68 Total Expend tu res Plus
3 12 3tc ~
3 BEDROOM furniShed mob le
Total Beginn ing Balan ce
Ba l Dec 31 19 74
60 020 oo Ba lan ce Ou tstand ng Dec
nor th of Me 1gs H gh Sch ool on
STA NLEY Products for sale
31 1974
9900000
1'1ome and lot loca ted on new
PlusR:ece 1pts
INTER FUND TRANSFER
4 334 Sl
old
Rt
33
P
hone
99
2
2941
3
bedroom
home
near
Ph one 742 3762
10 ACRES su table for bu ld ng
lnl Rat e
4 7
L1ma Road near Rutland
Trust Fund s
RECONCILIATION
1 23 ti c
3 9 26tc
to ts or !ratters W II se ll as a
Mt.tvr ty Year
1980
Phone 74 '} 5943
Plan t Mam tenance
F rom General F und to
whole o r separa te Located on
Ttlel
2161 '1 80 Pom e roy E leme nta ry Sct10o DU P L EX 238 1 1 Wa nut Sl
3 12 4tc
23
8
Other Exp
5 I
F rom Gene r al Fund to
R t 7 n Mtd d leport Phon e PORTABLE automati c washer
Construct1on
M ddleport Oh 10 Pl'1one 99 2
Total Exp
58123
OWE
99 2 3278
15 2 99 16 Outs ta n di ng Ja n I
MUST SELL new home on lake
:H 80 or 991 343 2
phone 992 7066
Bat Dec 31 19 7.t
3 753 34 From Generlll Fund
1974
'1 170 0000
3 1'1 6tc
3 b edrooms 112 baths carpet
2 19 ttc
3 9 6tc
Total Exp P lus
to OPPT
2 99 5 CO Redeemed Du r ing Year
These homes are needed by
drapes
diShwasher
7
4
Bal Dec 31 1974
4 33 5 From General Fund to
STA RCRAFT trailers 54 924
1974
21
000
00
refr1gerator
doubl e oven
prospects
who
ara
WaJt1ng
to
COUN
TRY
Mob
t
e
Home
Pa
rk
Scholarshlp Funds
OWA
4 476 48
'
now S3 89 5 Fo ld downs 51 400
Balance Out stand ng
stove Phone 991 3493 for
Receipts
Rt 33 len m le'i no r tl'1 of
BUY
up 3 wa y rad o 590 va lue
Dec 31 197 4
196 OCO 00
appomtment
Repo yment- Scholars h P
From General Fund to
Pomero y Large lots w1lh
CALL TODAY
Use our tay a way flnanc ng
4 7
Ba s c Adult
2 500 oo lnl Rate
3 126tc ~
170
conc
r
e
te
pat
os
st
dewatks
Awards
5B From General Fu n d to
a r ranged
Camp
Conley BUY NOW &amp; SAV E low low
992 2259
tur.ly Year
198 3
rvnners and off
s treet
Tota l Re ceipts
170 58
MOTA
18 S£18 B.l Ma
Star c raft Sa les Rt 62 N of
Bedford Construct on
park n g P t·10ne 992 747 9
down paym e n ts 8 pet
n
Bailln ce Dec 3 1
From Genera l Fund to
Pon t Pleasant , Phone 67 5
Outs tand mg Jan 1
-FOR SALEter est 30 yr f lnanc "~on new
12
31
lfc
1974 Career Or.entatlon l70 58
Tea c her Corps
10 ooo 00
5384
914
3 000 00
RUTLAND- CLOSE TO
1'1 omes m 3 Me gs County
Redeemed Dunng Ye ar
3 12 3tc
ea1 Jan 1 197 4
376 70 Fro tn General Fund to
loca t1ons or BUILD on your
Hous e FOR RENT 1634
SHOPPING - 2 BR bath,
1974
CETA
:750000
3 000 00
L
ncoln
Hg
ts
Pomeroy
7
lot Phone 992 5976 or 992 58•4
7
Total
3 6 0 From DPPF 1971 72 to
f1replace
carpeting ,
10
HOR
S
E
wl'1eel
horse
Expend itur es
OPPF' 1972
P hone Pomeroy 992 3575 or
3 13 tfc
tractor
used approx
12
73
Ra te
995
00
paneling
tile,
porch
garage
2'
·
Galllpol
s
446
2749
Transfers To
F rom DP P F to
hour s planter cul t va t or and
Mat ur ty Year
198J
$9
500
00
2 2 li e
Generll l Fun d
37 6 7C
Genera l F und
5 6J2 26 Nort hwes t lmprovenen l
5 R OO M 1'1ouse on Un1on
cart s 050 Pl'1one 985 3534
Totai Transfers
37 6 70 F romDPP F toMOTA
1100 Outsl and n g Jan 1
POMEROY - Lincoln Hts 2
A'Jen ue
large lo t
fvll
R us sell Ct ne long Bottom
Total E)( p P lus Ba ~
Oh o 457 .£3
bCJsement and new furnace
BR ba!h H W floors utility
Oec 31 1974
1974
45 000 Q() 3 and &lt;4 R-OOM furn sl'1ed and
376 70 From T tie l I I to
unfurn ished
apartments
Ca ll 992 3854
3 12 3tc
107 41 Redeemed During Year
R basement, porch large
NDEATttlt!lll
F Genera
T l1Fund
Phone 992 5434
3 9 6tc
1974
9 000 00
21 135 69
rom 11 e V to
tsat Jan 1 1974
lot
SIOOOOOO
4
12
tfc
P IO NEER SEED CO RN - WE
Recetph
Gen eral Fund
190 00 Balan ce Outstandtng
3
BEDROOM
home
large
68
ACRES
- Just off new Rt
---- ------ ~-- - 'T"
HAVE
AN
AMPLE
SU
PP
LY
De
c
31
1974
Federal Sv bs d ~
From
T1tle
t
to
36
000
00
2
107 4
P R 1vA T e m eetmg r oom for
kllcl'1en
ut l1ly room on 33 - Barn fenced 19 500
OF H IG H GERMINAT IN G
Total Receip ts
107 42
General Fund
1 658 06 tn t Rate
) I'
an y organ1zat1on phone 99Z
100x100 lot SI S 500 Ca ll after new trees walnut poplar
S EED IN ALL VARIET IE S
From AOC to
Matur ty Ye ar
1978
• 1Total eeo tnn 1no Balan ce
General Fu nd
3975
5 p m lor mtormat 10n 667
A
ND
MATUR
IT
I
ES
BUT
Northwest
Improvement
938
n PIUS Rece 1pts
21 143 11 From MOTA to
p1ne and others
3 II He
3739
K ERNE L
SIZES
ARE
Ovtst and 1ng Jan 1
Expenditures
LIM ITED
CA S H
P LUS
3 9 61 C _c __ _
"2
2259
165989 1
19 74
...
4500000
General Adm inis t ra ti on
General Fund
_
_ _____J
AP T 3 rooms ~II etectrlc has
V OLUME
DISCOUNTS
Redeemed Our n g Year
Other Exp
200 00 From T ti e I to
table
to
p
range
wall
oven
6
ROOM
house
w1th
ba
t
l'
1
3
T 111e 11
THR
U
MARCH
15
AND
19 74
3 000 00
21 00
..., lnsfruchon
real n ce a nd clean modern
bedroom full basement gas
APR IL 15 FERTILIZER Balance Outstand ~9
143 71 From C(ll reerF Onentat on 37
Othtr E x p
Lo c ated
n
Pomeroy
1'1ea t 1'1 w floor wall to wall
S EED S
TWINE - H ER
Dec 31 1974
~Capital Outlay
tn General und
6 70
18 coo 00
overlookmg"' th e Ohio R ver
carpet Close to school 1n
lnt Rat e
BICIOES
CHESTER
Total E xp Trnsfers
103 582 01
3
P hone Galtq:lol•s day 446
New EQu tpment
8 22 1 37 Tota l Rec Transfers 102 587 Ol Maturity Year
Pomeroy Phone 992 3097
A GRI CO S ER V ICE CEN
1981
4
7699 evenmgs .tA6 9539
Total Exp
8 565 1
ASSETS AND LIABILITIES Metgs H1gh Scfl ool
TER P HONE 985 3831
3 9 52t c
1 26 tfn
General F~~~('Sfers To
107 42
DECEMBER 31 1974
3 11 3tp
Schoo l Construct1on
3 BEDROOM 1'1ouse w tl'1 bath
ASSETS
Outstand 1ng Jan 1
rlTOtll Transfers
107 .:12 De poSI10r-,.: Balances
la rge y ard and garden cdy
1974
765 000 00 2 BEDR OOM m ob ile home MASS EY Fergt.~son t.5 0 e~el
409 005 oc '
Total Exp &amp;
Pho ne 9&lt;t9 2261 Albert H1ll
wa te r Ph one 742 4782
tr a ctor and load er S3 200
Translt!rs
15417773 Redeemed Dur.ng Year
672 56 Invest ments
8
0 8 I 0
Ford 9N tractor S950 Two
3 9 6tc
1974
4500000
JQO 500 00 I
3 10 6tc
31 11lJ4
12 570 55 Inventory
All iS Chalmers WD WO 45
':.r:tal Ee;P i
Land
674 568 00 Balan ce Ou t stand ng
tractors S1 550 o ther \ 1 250
Dec 31 1974
'
A MOD ERN all electrtc home
Transfers Plus Ba L
Bu1ld1n gs
3 59877400
120
Case VAC tractor S650 11 sets
4 180 600 00 ln t Rate
w1th 3 bedrooms k1tct'lefl and
oec 31 1974
212.43 11 ¥~~~ rrsi~:s
3 pt plo ws S200 lo S350 each 4
1990
5 &lt;111624 13 Matur ty Ye ar
d 111 1ng ar ea liv ing room and
NDEA Title V
new lmco 6 ~ fl 3 pi d sc
LIABILITIES
Tot al Bonded Debt bath
F ut i s1ze basemen t
parts
Frye
sTruck
and
USED
Bal J an 1, 1974
5300 each One 8 ft Dunham
190 00 Accounts Payable
147 000 00 Ou ts tand mg Jan 1
par t.a lly
fm lshed
"W 1th
Auto Parts Rvtland Oh10
Total
wfleel d sc 5300 e.a ch One
1974
I 190 000 00
190 00 Bond Indebtednes s 1 086 000 00
Phone (614 ) 1..11 6094
laundry a rea
recreat ion
Expenditures
Massey Ferguson No 3 hay
Total L1ab tl lies
1 233 000 00 Total Bonded Oebr room storage and workshop
1 22 78tp
Tnnsfers To
bater 51 7SC two new 3 pt
E)(cess of Assets
4 184 624 73 Red eemed O ur ng Year
area 1 080 sq ft of floor
Generel Fund
rotary mowers '5360 each
190 oo Total
5 417 624 7J
1974
104 000 06 NEW and used chan saws
sp ace on m a n floor and three
Total Transfers
Ermel
Luckett
West
Total Bonded Debt 190 00
INDEBTEDNESS and two th rds. acres of tand
tillers
and
mo
w
e
r
s
Also
Totti Bel Dec
Was hmgt6n S t
Box 95
Ba lan ce Outstand ng
PART I BONDS
Loc.ated 1n Rac 1ne area on
re
pa
rs
.:t9B
Locust
St
31 1974
Albany Oh o Pflone 698 30 32
190 00 Purpose For Wh 1ch De bt
Dec 31 1974
1 086 ooo 00
C
R 28 between Dorcas &amp;
M dd teporr P hone 992 3092
ESEA Tttle I
or 698 788 I
Was Created
Appl e Grove Phone 949 3457
'1
:18
261c
Bal , J•n 1 1974
13 ) 13 Ire
3 11 3tc
7 823 92 Sal1sbu ry School Cons tru ct1on
3 11 61 p

p.J
Home Maintenance

CAL.L.S.

Water, Eltctrlc, O.s. S....C
tlnos, lnotallad
Warfo
IUirlnteed
o~
Dozer, laclcflot, Trvckl r
Llmtshlne&amp;FIII~

~levision

''MY LAB Ai\JL? THE
TELEPHONE COMPANY.
WILl. ANNOUNCE N EXT
WEEK A DEVICE THAT

West

North

East

South

Pass
Pass
Pass

It
3•
4t

Pass
Pass
Pass

1•
3NT
4•

t•
Pass
4 N T Pass
?
You South hold
• K J 9 4 'II A Q 2 t J4 3 . K 10 S

What do you do now"
A - If you play his call

11

BlackwOod as most people. do, bid
five diamoads Otherwise pan
TODAY S QUESTION
Instead of rebidding three clubs
your partner has reb1d two hearts
Whal do you do now?

Send $1 lor JACOBY MODERN
book to

W111 al Brld~

(c/o ttrla

newapapor) P 0 Box 489 Radio
C•lyStallon New York NY 10019
INEY.SPAPE!i ENTERPRISE ASSN I

LET ME WORO ll&lt;AT
A UTTLE PtFFERENTLI(

'

SUPPORT

DURING HEAaTLINE '75 DAY

I

I

�•

'

l

(Continue&lt;~ from Pago 7l

I UNDERSTAND YOU'R E
UPTO HERE IN

•

Rf' t e• t Is

1 edNa I s ub s oy

99 :nt. 4.!

Tot.at f..!t: C(' pi S

99 3i6 14

CETA
n 750000
Tra11 s fe r s From
L sted under other
Genl!rd r u1d
21611
!!tate programs
T tie I I
1
101, L sted under ott1er
To tal Tr&lt;'llls l er s
7 1 e1J
Fed Prog
Total R ece pts and
Tofal Tn1nsfers
77 91l 18
Trans fe-rs
110 lH(l
To at Beg,nn.ng Balance
Total General F u 1d E )(p
P l us Rece&gt; pts &amp;
and Trm'!sfers
.., 189 8JJ 7J
Tr cu sf~? rs
118 794
General F und B&lt;ll
E ~~:pen d•ture s
Dec J l 19 74
78 J 79J 91
Gener al Ad n ntstrat on
To tal Exp and Transf e r s
Sa ta r es and W itg es
1 140
Plus Bal Dec

x

80
00
80
~ -~

16

Nc 1Ce
UR your
Cos me• C'i
99 7 S11 3

2 SIGNS

011 of M n k
Ph on e B ROW N S

OF
QUAtiTY

1 1 1tc
1 REE k ttcn s o &lt;~ 1 cc home
L ti e r lrtl ned Ptlon C' 991 :1 1 17
1 11 ..\ lp

P I\ NO 1un nQ Phone Cil l9 J811
3 J

00
15 40

fC

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

1974MALIBU2DR H T
$3095
S lver clulo P S P 8 rad10 a 1r co nd w s wt1res
197&lt; IMPALA4 DR SEDAN
S419S
Fully equ1pped 10 800 mil
1972 CHEVROLET KINGSWDDD ESTATE
S289S
3 Seal Wagon less than 30 000 m iles by local owner AOO V
8 P s teenng brakes automa1 c power door locks
luggag e ra c k rad1o dar k gree n fm sh Li ke n ew &amp; loaded
w lf h ext ras
1973 PLY STA WAGON
$2795
Su burban 3 Seat V 8 e ngtne automatic trans powe r
stee r ng &amp; brakes factor~ a tr condJt1on1ng luggage ra ck
green f1n1 s h r ad o L1 ke n ew w w tires

WILKINSON
SMALL ENGINE
SALES&amp; SERVICE
992·3092

OBSCENE: PHONE

Ptofessiooal
WEDDING
Photography

Chain
Precrs1on
Ground

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

7 30- Holl ywood ::lquares J 4 Ohio Lottery 6 New Pri ce IS
R1ght s Co ns um er Survival Kit 20 Wild K1ngdom 10 To
Te ll t h e Truth 13 Amencan Outdoorsman 15
"un s hme 1 4 IS Barney Mi ller 6 13 Th e Waltons 8 10 8111
Moyers Jou rnal 20 33
8 30-- Bob Cra n e 3 4 IS ~ Karen 6 13
9 DO-Archer 3 4 Streets of San Fra n ci sco 6 13 Polynesia 15.
Mov 1e The Tempest 8 Movie Sansho the Bailiff 20,
Mov ie Compulsion 10 Little Princess 33
10 00-Mov tn On 3 .4 IS H ar ry 0 6 13 Woman 33
10 3()- Horace Marshall 33
I I 0()- News 3 4 6 8 10 13 15 ABC News 33
11 J()- J ohnny Carson 3 4 15 Wide World Specia l 13 FBI 6
Mov1e Desperate Search 8 Movie Two Living One
Dead 10 News 20 Janakl 33
12 Jo-- W1de Wo rld Specia l 6
1 oo- Tomorrow 3 4 News 13

ConstructiOft &amp; Rtmodtl

8-K EXCAVAnNG
•
roMPANY
•
777 PUrl StrMt

For Information
Call

1 (614) 247-3644

INDIAN JOE'S

CAPTAIN EASY
E AS Y
YOU R E NOT

D&amp;D
CONSTRUCTION

CB SALES &amp; PARTS

LE AVIt..I G

-z

LOVE- TO STIC K
AROUN D YOWZ..
HI6 HN E5.5 BUT
\k KEE 15-N T

V" "U~E

YOU RE NOT
MA KI N6 A M 5rAKE z
HER DADDY 5 H IE
R:I CHE5 T O IL -HE IK

MY

1\1 ARABIA

FRIDAY MARCH 14 1975
00-Su nrl se Se mtn ar A Svn r lse Semester 10
15-Engllsh 505 3
25- Farm Report 13
JG--F 1ve Mtnules to l 1ve By 4 News 6 Bible Answe rs 8
Publ1c Affairs 10 Blue Rtdg e Quartet 13
6 35- Columbus Today 4
6 45- Mornlng Report 3 Farmtlme 10
7 oo-Tod ay 3 4 15 AM Amer ica 13 6 C B S News 8,10
8 oo-Lassie 6 Ca pl Kangaroos Popeye lO Sesame Sf 33
8 25-Capt Ka.Qgaroo 10
8 J()-MISslon Impossible 6
9 DO-AM 3 Ph il Donahue 4 15 Bvllwlnkle 6 Morning with
D J 13
, 9 25-C huck White Reports 10
9 3()-Not For Women Only 3 Dmah 6 Galloping Gourmel 8
Tattletal es 1() New Zoo Rev ue 13
10 oo-Ce lebnly Sweepstakes 3 4 15 Jokers Wild 8 10 Dinah
13
10 3()-Wheel of Fortune 3 4 15 Gambll 8 10
11 OG-H1gh Rollers 3 4 15 One Life lo Live 6 Now You See It
8 10 Elec Co 20
11 3()- Hollywood Squares 3 IS Brady Bunch 6 13 News 4
Love of Life 8 10 Sesame Sf 20 33
11 55-Graham Kerr 8 Dan Ime l s World 10
12 DO-Jackpot 3 15 Password 6 13 Bob Broun s 50 50 Club 4
6
6
6
6

Buy

.

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

HEtL
RACINE PLUMBtNG
&amp; HEAnNG

.BORN LOSER

FOREST RUN
BLOCK CO.

001l'1 !lOnfl&lt;
~tor;NOO

I'vt;WT AN
IMRJ!&lt;'JANT
c:EL IS\Cll \0
MAKEt

·o

II'S CDMFORrtN0
1'D KNOW WE'
M\IE A~
/&gt;..T i\1€: HEL-M
l.WABL-t; CF
~~-Yo

c:tL\SIONS I

LARRY LAVENDER

.

Real Estate For Sale

~lY~M;u..J:rm~.-Jc

£.
,

o! Thanks

For Sale

Unscramble these four Jumbles.
one lettt!r to each square to
form four ordinary words

ALLEY OOP

Employment Wanted

II JI
I(JN/8/
Y"

FOR
MONKEY RUN AREA

1Prill•SWIISliiiSWIIIIII'I\

---- - - -----

For Rent

fi.I~T CoP DON'T KNOW A
TW~RE

TI-'IKG '7'0U WAS LYIN

The Dai~ Sentinel

SHI! 14APH'T SEEN NOT'HIIi-

· -.,.-------"---=""'

_____

A

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

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

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

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

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

\! ROSS

•r

GASOLINE

ALLEY

Soon
as I

qets

worked \~:-""'"'"'-----J
1n papas

th1nks

II
11

thei.J

1&gt;

mrqht could use hrm

at th

p rckle
plant'

river

'";W';_ For Sale

------

-

checkers
~0 Owned
~~ Transgressed 11 Ntckname
13 Sorruneller s
for a sharp

me

)5

Ill No nay
mx ( 2 wds I
11 lnlens1!y

concern

be~n'

shooter

Y&lt;storday s Ans11er
lM Part of

am

~5 Negative

l7 Outcast

19 My 1Fr 1
11

Slangy
term
for a
mosqutto
•~ Destmed
( 2 wds )
!3 Decline

~9 Medtcinal
plant
II Den
33 Actress
Jeffreys
31 Terror
36 New Guinea
town

'4 Granny

wed'

and others
Laughmg
face g1rl
16 Noble
llahan
fam1ly
• S1lk fabnc
1! Where AddiS
Ababa ts
rabbr l
! 9 C lo)ed
Ill Hard

ULABNER

/F NE'L-SON ROCKEOFELL-ER AN
ONASSIS HAINT r---=::--&lt;
TH' RICHES\
MEN !NTH
WORL-D -

WF~T

EAST

... 9 6 52
'II A 3
t64
.KQ974

•H

opera

IDEAl

l}&lt;E COMPETITION 2

Is

10 PULL OFF A

Here's how to work

It:

SNUffY·· DO 'IE SWEAR
TO TELL TH' TRUTH -TH' WHOLE TRUTHAN NOTHIIIJ
TH' DADBURI\I
TRUTH?

4•

South

PISCES (Feb ZO-March 20)
Take 11 easy on your purse You
have a tendency to lh lnk funds
that may be coming In are
already
1n
th e
bank

Morch 14 1175
Prest1ge will come to you this
year before the material
rewards that should accom
pany It Be pallent The earthly
rewards wont be too far
behind
!NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN I

South ruffed wtth the e~ght of
trumps Mary dtscarded a d1a
mond and now South went after
' trumps Unforlunately for him,
Mary now held the long trump
She watted unt1l South played
ace and one diamond Then she
ruffed m led lhe kmg of clubs
and watched the han&lt;f collapse
'Bnlhanl play partner',
chortled East
11 you had
overruffed South s e1ght of
spades when I led the th~rd
heart he would have made h1s

u:e;l:lt!M?.ttr1

3 ...

Pus

Mary (Mrs Emory l Clement
was one of the best tf not Ihe
best woman br 1dge player of
the early 30s
She had a habit of makmg
very good plays then preten
d1ng they were the result of a
fortunatt accident
Mary who sal West d1d not
conSider a b1d of f1ve hearls
She knew her partner s
preempls were real trash In
any event she thought she mrght
beat four spades She opened
lhe ace of hearts and contmued
the su11 South ruffed led the
queen of diamonds, played
d]my s Jack and watched
E
take his kmg
st led a third heart and

XZC

UXA

RBRLHCQYXJ
PZ!KZORA

CQR

JRXYGO
FQYTR
KQZXR

i\Yi\X C
LYXJ -IUH
LYPQOCZXR
yesterday's Cryptoquote
NOW WE SIT THROUGH
SHAKESPEARE IN
ORDER TO RECOGNIZE THE
QUOTATIONS -ORSON WELLES
lCI 1915 Kl.nt Featwet $yndleatt lne )

BARNEY

Pass

East

LONGFELLOW

YXOKYLUCYZX

iZEULt

North

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

JAMES HIU.

ULil

,.

West

AXYDLBAAXIl

CRYPTOQUOTE

Phone: 247·2961

Some news you re expecting
will not turn out to be all you
desire Keep your hop es wl1hln
reasonable bounds

Thank you partner replied
Mary I had the mne of spades
m w1th my clubs

Opemng lead - A. •

DA!L y CRYPTOQUOTE-

&amp;1UNT LlKE 11-1AT I

AQUARIUS (Jon 20·Fotl 101

The btddtng has been

13

Pass

HAVE THE {}Ol.ll/(tS AND

CENT6

22·Jin

contract

13oltl vulnerable

1Lal l
li - Chnstle
1'1 C heer
10 Czech
rl\ e r

WILO

•Ja

&lt;lo2

lti Magmol 1- Queen

IT MAY MAKE 6ENSE
JANIE BUT WE JU5T DON'T

'IIKJ109752
tK5

'118
tQ\09873

.a Verdi

FOR. US TO BUY BARIDI-1
OUT AND ELIM INATE

13

SOUTH
•AQ87 3

work er

MJJWN T IT MAK/0 SENSE

CAPRICORN (Die

11) A problem may arise today
be1ween a memb"r of your
family and an outsider that In
valves you Stand up lor yo ur
kin

Mary Clement: Lucky as a fox

' I ununox

WINNE I
J UST GOT A

s ituatio ns lest you say or do
something to cause you and
ano ther needless embarrass
me nt

WIN AT BRIDGE

'IIQ64
t AJ 2
&lt;loAI0653

Now

THANK YOU

LIBRA llopt 23·001 23)11 you
e)(peet others to coMoperate
wtth you you must give them
some visible lndlcaUons you In

NORTH IDl
"K 10

One letter s1mply stands for another In this sample A II
used for the three L s X for the lwo 0 s etc Smgle letter~j
a ostrophes the lenglh and formahon of the \\ords are t
hfnts Each da) the code letters are different

WN.PO AM-FM

VIRGO (Aug 23·8tpt 22)
Take care of a paatMdue obUga
lion you have to a friend before
you think of catering 1o one of
your new expensive whims

•,

Southern
Cabbage Plants

FOR YOUR

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

7 Nol for

MiSS
Melba
an'

ALL OF US AT

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

sechon~

10 Chess and

Order Your

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

12 wds l
mtslaken
&gt; I ooked
pleased
6 W1ndow
g lass

SAGITTARIUS (Nov 23-Doc
2t) Be on guard In social

L!O (JUIJ 23-Aug 22) This IS
one ot 1hoae days w~en you ra
going 10 try to sweep things under the rug that you don t want
to face

I Be

a Job

Real Estate For Sale

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

vmce
I l.oafmg

16 Hunganan

---------

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

1s land
Supplied
w1th hands
P nson r s lr
Chant
Cargo

wetght

bank'

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

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

, Chmr

a Sanatonum

Influential enough to pull It oil
Find another source

CANCIII (Juno 21·July 22)
You re not apt to put torth your
boat elloriS Ieday yel you lie•
peel others 10 do that which
you won t do for yourself

DOWN
I Endure

i Indonesian

TAUAUB (April ZO·MIJ 20) A
person you re depending on
lor something you need lsn t

sure all llnanc \al respon
slbllltles are spilt evenly

by THOMAS JOSEPH
fak e on
ca rgo

You re going to be dlllp·
pointed when you learn others
are not as sold on an Idea you
have as you are Don t bully
them Into It

G!MINI (MI, 21-.IUM 20) ll
you have a project In the mill
where friends are ln\lolved be

lh~ •tock

marbl- THEY "GAMBOL

Real Estate For Slle

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

m

tf&gt;t:MJN~

PH. 992·2156

Wanted To Buy

abo••
"[ I I I I I J"

Yettf'rd•J' \ A.Nwer Why lambM• Iuiie llu!lr monrllln

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

TWINE

Now arranp the clrcl. . lotton
to form the turpriH ~n~wer. U
auneoted b1 tho
cutMn.

Jumble• CRAWL GROOM ANGINA CYMBAL

t•.IIC.E A.N PEACEFUL WH!N

HE SHOWID UP- ANt&gt; TI-l
BRAT WAS JUST WAklt.l UP~

BALER

Pomeroy, 0.

,., Frtdoy, Morch 14. 1171
Alll!ll (MI&lt;ch 21-Aprtl 1t)

HOW TO COM5 TO
61l:IP5 WliH A F15H.

(Aalwtn , . . .,....)

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

TRAILER-LOAD

V 't
t-, ..J

1&gt;,

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

CARRIER
WANTED

tiJ

I Kj

....

SCORPIO (Oct 24·Nov 22)1t
will be very dltflcutt tor those
who work with you today to
please you Try no t to be
hypercrltlcaJ or their help will
be withdrawn

II

IFWTIE I

For Sale

Homes For Sale

tend to do likewise

SECAE

Help Wanted

2 ~Days at Our Lives 3 4 15 $10 000 Pyramid 6 13 Guiding
Light 8 10
2 30-Doclors 3 4 15, Blg Showdown 6 13 Edge of Night
8 10 3 ~Ano!her World 3 4, 15, General Hospital 6 13
Price Is Right I 10 Ascent of Man 20
3 3G-bne Life to Llve13 Lucy Show 6 Match Game a 10
4 oo-Mr Cartoon J I Dream of Jeannie 4 Somerset 15
Gilligan sIs 6, Tattletales 8 Sesame St 20 33 Movie Kill
or Cure" 10 Mike Douglas 13
4 3()-Bewl!ched 3 Merv Griffin 4 Mod Squad 6 Lucy Show 8.
Bonanta 15
5 ~FBI 3 Andy Griffith 8 Mlster Rogers Neighborhood
~0 33 lronslde 13
5 3()-News 6 Beverly Hillbillies 8 Hodgepodge ~edge 20 Gel
Smart 15; Elec Co 33
6 ~New. 3,4810,1315 ABC News 6 Elec Co 20 Per
sonallty &amp; Behavioral Development 33
6 3lf-'-NBC News 3,4,15 ABC News 13, Bewitched 6 CBS News
8 10 Zoom 20
7 oo-Truth or Cons 3 Probe The Wrold Aoun~ Us 4 Bowling
lor Dollars 6 WCHS TV Report a Avlofloo
''her 20 33
News10, Jimmy Dean 13 To Be Announced 15
7 30-Porler Wagoner 3, Pop Goes the Country 4, New Candid
Camera 6 Pop Goes !he Coun!ry 8 Tr..,sure Hun! 10 To
Tell the Trvth 13 Ou!doors with Ken Calloway 15 Block
Perspective on the News 20,33
8 DO-Sanford &amp; Son 34, 15, Night Stalker 6 13 Comedy Special
8 10 Washington Week In Review 20 33
8 30--&lt;hlco &amp; the Man J 4 15 We II Get By 8 10 Wall S!reef
Week 20 33
9 ~Rockford Flies 3,A, 15 Hot L Baltimore 6,13 Movie Cage
Without a Kay" 8,10 Masterpiece Theatre 20 Consume•
Survlval Klt 33
9 JO--Odd Couple 6,13 Assignment America 33
10 ~Pollee Woman 3,4, 15 Borella 6,13 News 20 Paul
Nuchlms 33
10 3()-World Press 20
11 DO-News 3,4,6,8 10 13,15 ABC News 33
11 30-Johnny Carson 3 4 15 Wide World In Concerl 13 Movie
'Tower of Terror' 6 Movie "The Two Feces of Or Jekyll "
8, Movie 'Equinox" 10 Janakl 33
1 ~Midnight Special 3,4, 15 Wide World In Concert 6 News

13

I I

MY BELONGINGS R)R
~E ST.o;rE '

News 8 10
12 3()-8 lank Check 3, IS Spilt Se~ond 6 13 Search for
Tomorrow 8 10 To Be Announced 33
12 45-E lee Co 33
12 5~NBC News 3 15
1 ~News 3, All My Chlidren 6 13 Phli Donohue 8 Young &amp;
the Reslleso 10 Not For Women Only 15
1 3()-How !o Sur vive a Marrlage3 4 1S Lets Make a Deal6, 13,
As the Wrodld Turns 8.10

1 1~Movle Muttny In Outer Space' 10
2 30-Star Trek 4
3 30-Movle "Sh11dow over E lveron •
5 30-Movlt 11 Johnny Tiger" •

THILG

~EY THINK I: M DEAI&gt; 1
THEY'RE HE~ 10 C:LAlM

IT'S A

a:

!

log for easy viewing

THURSDAY MARCH 13,1975

WILL. CURE L.EWD
CAL.L.ER 5. "

Commarcla~Rtsldtilllal

Jl 19 7.1
7 671 6JCil 6'1 Other Ex p a
w L l do r oo f nQ flcatmg
Inst r uc t on ...A1d to Dep e nd ent
rep&lt;~
p um b nq an d e cc
sa tar es and Wag es
61 981 51
Ch lelren Fund
tr co work Pl1on C' Clldrl cs
Otll~r Exp
') J62 87
Ba l Jan 1 197J
''
\ nclr~ r
Cil ll ~ JI ? 1
Middleport, Ohio
9 "
M se e taneous
498 Locust St
Tot al
9JH
3 4 I 21p
Other Exp
l'llotla m 5W or - 1 ~
616 97
Ell p end1 tu re s
Middleport, Oh1o 3 2 ! Mo
2 17 75c
Cap tat O utl ay
Trans len To
FLOWER
S
lor
Eas
ter
Bas
kel
s
2 125 90
Gt!neral Fu nd
9 38 N ew Equ pment
po ts sp ray s etc P h one 985
69 &lt;143 66
Total Transfers
9]8 ToTal Exp
JS H
Smalley s G fl Shop
Tran s len To
To tal Exp &amp;
Ches c r Oh o
Genera l F und
1 658 06
Traflsfers
3 4 171 c
' 38 f oltll EKp &amp;
Total Exp &amp; Tra n s fer s
Tran
s
fe
r
s
1
658
06
Plus Ba l Dec
Br ush
Bal D ec 31 1&lt;,174
57 692 4d NO W se t11ng ~u t ler
31 1Cil74
9 18
Products phOn e 992 3AI O
Total EKp &amp; Tran sf ers
Di sadva ntage d P up tt s
1 24 lf c
P lus Ba t Dec J
Program Fund
PHONE
19
74
1
:711
794
I
ll
308 Page St
Bal Jan I 1914
1 008 OJ
949 3832 or a43 2U7
MR and MR S Rona ld Dougan
E
S
E
A
T1t
le
II
Rt!v e nu e Re ce1pts
OPEN EVES 8:00PM
l08 Pate M1ddleporr
M1dd leport, 0. 992·3509
wou ld 1 ke to mv te you to
Bal J nn I 19 74
4 747 24
State Su bSi dy
? Q 750 00
Heat1ng
Cooling
.
All Types of
atten
d
Sunday
Sc
fl
oo
t
at
th
e
POMEROY,
OHIO
R
ece1
pls
Non Revenue Reef' pts
Refr1gerat1on
Roof
Repa1rs
Un t e d
Pe n
13 BJO 9S " M ddlepo rt
Rad1os Antennas Towers
Other Non Reve nue
BUILDING
J 89 I 1 Federa l Subs dy
Gutters
Plum
b1ng
•
lecos toJ Cflurch Sou 11'1 Th rd 9i3 FORD Country Squ r e
Tota l Rece p is
13 BJIJ 95
Used T V s Buy lrom the
Total Revenue &amp; Non
973
CHEVE
L
L
E
Malibu
t aoor
Electrtcal
Repa1rs
and
I\ venue s tart ng at 10 a m
and REMODELIIIIG
1nd1an
and uve
wam
Revenue Re ce pts
30 239 1 To ta l Beg nn ng Ba lance
wagon
20 000 m les
al I
Serv~ee
melat l c brown bla ck v nyl
Pt us Re ce1pts
18 078 19
3 13 2t p
Pum
We bur U$ed RadiOS
Tran ~fers From
cq u pmen t SJ 500 Phone 997
top P S PB
350 VB a1 r
Call 992 lSOt and
From a shelf to a ha.,e · I·
E xp e nd1tures
and Towers R1d101 repaired
)493 or 99'1 '17 ~0
DPP F 71 7'1
99S 00
cond t oned
E xce ll en t con
Save on your: repa.r s a lso
NEW IMPR OVED
Z pp1es
Patntlng stding, roof1ng
by FCC licensed service
Gene r al Fund
'1 99~ 00 Pia n t Opera hOI
d
ton
Books
a1
S2875
W1il
repa.r
mowers
compressors
111c grea t ro n p 11 now w1 th Want•~ To
P.ersonnel Stop and see the
66 ?0
paper hanging , kitchen
To tal Transfers
3 990 00 D111 er Exp
se 1 lo r $2700 Phone 992 3273
and outboards Bnng tt m
V lam n C Nelson Dr ug
Miscellaneous
1nd1an
and
Bubbles
Total Re ce&gt; pts Revenue
and
save
cab~neh,
expert carpeting; :
3
13
He
Oth e r Exp
~ 11! 13
3 13 ltp C: LO furn1ture ce bol(es brass
Montier Channel 10 and 20
Non Revenue B.
ere
·
Total
El(p
bed
s
o
r
com
pl
e
te
flOus
e
hotds
19
73COu
N
fRv
s
q
lJr
e
4
19J
4]
Trans fe rs )
J~ 2'1Y 11
S
HOO
TIN
G
MATCH
Corn
Wr
te
M
D
M
ller
Rt
4
Tran
s
fers
To
St
at
onwagon
l
or
sa
le
to
Tota i,.Beg nnm g Ba la n ce
Hoi ow Gun Club turn I r st
Porn eroy Oh o Call 992 17 60
:n oo
se ttl e esta te L1ke new Pho ne
P lus Rt'ce 1p !s35 237 21 T ti e
r qh l o lt e r M es Ceme t e r y
10 7 74
To ta l T r.:~n sfe r s
992 349 3
2 I 00
E1 p c nd1fur es
To"\
1.
:
1
1
~IO'n
A.
Rut ;,nd
F aclory c hok ed
J 12 61c
Blown
General Ad min strat on
Tran s fers
4 214 43
gun s only Sunday March 16 WA NTE D o ld upr g hl ptanos
I.
Salar es an d wages
J99 6&lt;1
I p m
lnsulahon Serv1ces
any cond ton
Pay ng SIO 1972 OLDS MOBIL E Cutl ass 350
Ba l Dec 31 19 74
13 A6l 76
ns tru chon
eac h F rst f oo r on ly Wr re
3 13 31c
v 6 'J. dr coupe Cal l 992 3293
Sal ar es and Wa ges
3 31 8 17 To ta l Ex p &amp; Tran s fers
Blown mto Walls&amp; Atttcs
P us Ba l Dec
and g ve d.recl ons to W tlen
or see at 105 Un on A'Jenue
Othe r E li.P
J 883 17
AUCT
ION
Thu
r
~
day
n
igh
t
31 197 4
8 078 19
P ano Co
Box 188 Sa rd s
Pome roy
M scellaneou s
STORM
Oh o 43946
p m
a l Mason Au c ti on
He ad Start T1fle II A
3 11 6t c
0 11'1 er Exp
323 JJ
992 2067
Ho
rton
St
In
Mason
W
Va
W1
ndows
&amp; Doors
Bal
J
&lt;1n
1
197
.
:
1
l
071
78
3
13
6tp
Cap1ta 1 Outlay
Mlnersvtlle, 0
Co
ns
1gn
m
en1s
welco
m
e
RD
No
I
tomplete
plumbmg
,;
Recetp
ts
TW O 1968 t h eve lle s Both S7SO
'"' New Equ p
223 10
Pl'1one {lC4 l 773 5471
ALUMINUM
1964 and Old e r cons W II pay
21 00
Pho ne 742 620 5
Tota l E x p en ditures
18257 41 01h e r Non Reven ue
heatrng serv1ce and
Blocks
Tota l Rece 1p ts
7-tc for dtmes 60c fo r quar
1 2 lfc
21 00
Siding Soff1H
3 9 61 c
Tr a n sfer s To
To
ta
l
Beg
nn
n
g_.
Bal
te
rs
SJ
20
for
halves
Also
general
sheet
Cement
and Mortar
metal
OPP F 72 73
Gutters
Awnings
995 00
Nat onal Curre n cy on the
pt s
3 093 78 c u N s h~ot -saw;:-d;y Marc h
Ge n era l Fu nd
s b42 16 •P lus R ecE e1pend1tures
Free
Esttmates
w
o
r
k
s
1970
DOD
1 ~
7 p m M1te H It Road
G
E
Challenge
r
Rl
F
r
Wood
Burnmg
Stoves
e e
Po meroy
M ddl epor t o r
MOTA
II 00
tac lor y cl'1o ke d guns on ly
383 automa l c good cond1t on
Ph 992 3993
Re
t
und
F
und
ng
Ra
c
m
e
bank
Large
or
small
Est1mates.
To ta l Tr i'lns fers
Heatrlators
b 648 26
Sponsored by the Rac 1n e F tre
\ 1 400 or bes t offer ~o n e 992
Agency
b li s w II buy old poc ket
3 093 78
Total E)(p &amp;
7&lt;123
Depa
rt
me
nt
Phone
949
5961
and
watche s too P hone Roger
3 093 78
Transfers
24 905 67 Total E l( p
3 12 3tc
3 9 61c
Wamsley Rul tand Oh 10 141
Emergency 992 3995
F1replace Accessories
Syracuse, Oh1o
eal Dec 31 1974
10 33 1 5&lt;1 Total Exp P lus Bll l
3651
3 10 75
1972 DO DG E Co li new rad1al
Total Exp &amp;
Dec 31 19 74
3 093 78
or
992-5700
2-19-L mo_:_
3
13
3t
p
( l"d
Transfers P lus Bat
M o T A &amp; A R A
I .res
very good co ndit on
.
$1 200 AlSO 1966 Nova A 1
Dec 31 1974
35137 21 Ba l Jan 1 1974
16 099 83 1 W IS H lo thank eve r yone wllo J UN K autos
comp le te and
Other State Funded
Rece 1pts
hap
e
mu
s
t
se
ll
Phone
992
s
READY
M
IX
CONCRETE
oe
11 s te d me
sent flowers
d e l ve r ed lo our ~ard We p ck
7066
livered right to your pro!act
Programs Combine
Feder al Subs1dy
-4 2 843 98
c ards and g1 fl s While 1n
up auto bcd1es and buy all
Bal J&amp;n I 19 74
2615 63 Tota l Rece pts
A2 8&lt;13 98
3
9
6tc
Fas~
and
easy
Free
hosp tal Also tha.n ks to th e
MODERN
k nd s of scra p metals and
Walnut
s tereo
Tran s fers From
Transfers From
es1 mares Phone 997 32N
nurses a nd s laff at Ve te rans
NEW br ck home n Baum
ron R der s Sa lv age St Rt
co n sole
AM
FM
radiO
General F und
19 775 6.:1 General F und
18 588 84
Goeglem Ready Mix Co
Hos pital Dr Boonsue You
Addit1on
Cheste r
Ohio
separate co nt r ols
1'1 4 Rl "' Pomeroy Oh1o 19 75 MONTE Carlo 4 000 m es
Ba la n ce
Toto'! I Trans fe r s
9 775 64 0 p p F
11 00
Middleport 01'1 o
w 11 n eve r be forgo tt e n God
al pow e r a r AM stereo
L1v 1ng room combtnat on
Cat
I
992
5468
$1C7
10
or
budget
ter
m
s
Call
Total Re cei pts
Tot at Transfers
6 30 tfc
bl ess you l'l ll Mrs Mary
tap e Cat l 992 70J6 after 5 p m
kl c hen
and
dnng
3
992 3965
18 599t 84
tO
17
lfc
!Tran sfers )
\9 ns 6&lt;1 To tal Rece tpfs and
Ho lle r
bedrooms
2
batl'1s
utll1t1es
2
_ _ _ _ _ ...L... _ _ _ _ 3
_5
_ tic
3 3 lfc
Tot al Begmn lng Ba lanc e
Tra ns fers
~ 61 443
SEWING MACHINE Repa irs
3 13 lt p CAS H pa 1d for all ma ke s and
car garage full ba semen t
pus Rece pis
22 391 27
1'173
VEG
A
Hat
c
hba
c
k
.
:
1
speed
service &amp;II makes 992 228-4,
1
8
f1repla ce fully ca rpeted Call
Expendlturu
Total Beg nnln g a lance
models of mobile homes
tra nsm ss on new t res tap e P IGS for s al e Pl'1one 9927106
The Fabr ic Shop Pomeroy
Plus Rec e1pts &amp;
Leonard Erw1n for ap
Phone area code 6\.4 423 9531
Aut flOr,zed Smger Sales and
Instruction
Tran s fers
77 543 65
player exce lle n t co nd1f on
3 11 31p
po 1ntment phone 985 3365
4
13
ffc
S a tar~es and Wages
16 446 17
Expenditures
Serv1ce
We sharpen Sc1ssors
W1ll
se
ll
reaso
nabl
e
Pflone
J
13
3tc
WOMAM to baby s I and do llgh l
47 1 99 General Admin strat on
3 29 tfc
(6 14 ) 992 2377 or 99 21732 after 4 GRAV E lO IS Me gs Memory
Otfler E)(p
hovsework
5
days
week
W1t
1'
1
4 p m
Plant Operat1on
I 345 83 Salaries and wages
1 133 36
Ga rden s cheap Phone 949
o
cc
as
ional
evening
and
1
2179
2 28 lite
~~~&amp; l~ext 31 19 74
~~~ ~~ Other El(p
116 06
Saturday
Meals prov ded
ooteR work land cleartng by
J 11 3tc
To tal ElCp Plu s
Jnsfruct1on
L bera l sa lar y Ca ll 992 2832
REMODELING
plumb ing
the acre hourly or contract
Bat Dec 31 1974
Salar
es
a
nd
Wages
23
19
5
50
22 391 77
or wri t e P o
Box 687
hea t1ng and a ll types of
ONE
pa.r
c
oli
spr
ng
spacers
Farm ponds roads etc
Bond Retirement Fund
Other Exp
5 990 47
Pomeroy 0 45769
ge n e ra l
repa1r
Work
3 , h 1gh p hone 992 2418 after
large dozer and operator
8 &amp;1 J an 1 1974
134 041 56 Tra nsport llt lon
3 13 lfc
guaranteed 2C y e ars ex
5 p m
with over 20 years ex
Rec e ipts
Other E)(p
29 5S
pe n e nce Pl'10ne 992 2409
per ence PUllinS Excavating
3 11 3tp
Property Tax (Gross l
Plant Operat 1on
RES P O NSIB LE la dy lo live n
1 19 tfc G ROCERY bus n ess for sate
Pomeroy Ofllo Phone 992
Ot
fler
E
)(
p
4
719
28
W1
l
h
e
ld
e
r
ly
lad
y
Phon
e
{
1
l
General - Real E s tat e I I 2 936 77 Plant Malntenitn ce
2478
INDIAN
Jot!
S
Sportmg
Goods
66 7 3:1 05
Bu1ld ng for sale or leas e
REMO DELIN G
plumb 1n g
Ta ng ible Personal
4'1 1A6 98 Oth er Exp
12 19 tfc
buy and se I gvns ammo
1 021 89
Other Revenu e
.:1 SOS.,U..
3 4 12tc
Phon e773 S6 18trom 8 30p m
h ea t n g and all l ypes of
'- ---- -- -:...-=--~--t sl'1 ng eQUipment and alte r
Total Rece p rs
:7 19 889 12 MISceiiMeous
to
10
p
m
for
appomtment
ge n e r a l
r e pa r
Work
I
Otfler Exp
Apr 1 1 we w II have f1sh ba 1
E&gt;t;CAVATING dozer loader
1 110 92 L ADIES to do li g ht hOusewo r k
3 10 tfc
guaranteed 20 yea r s ex
Total Beg111n ng Ba lance
Cap tal Ou tl ay
HOME WITH INCOME - 2
Sl op by at J08 Page St
aod bac khoe work
septic
1 day week must be abl e to
pe r ence Phone 992 14C9
P lus Rece 1pts
353 930 68 New Equ pm e nt
12 317 42
M dd le por t Phone 992 J509
houses w1th baths 1n town near
links msta ll ed dump trucks
wo rk around te e nag ers Mu sl
3 11 tf c &lt;; LOSE OUT on n ew Z1g Zag
Expe nditures
Tol a l El(p
50 640 45
and lo boys for hire wilt hau~
have r e feren ces and trans
J 2 30tc stores Want an mvestment
Inter es t On Bonds
51 258 75
Tran s fers To
sewmg machm es For s ew ng
fill d1rt top so!l limestone &amp;
po
rt
at
on
Wr
ite
n
care
of
Th
e
thiS
IS
tt
Bond Red emphon
10.:1 000 00 Genera l Fund
stre tc h fab n cs buttonflOles~ INDU STRIAL 61nch s troke saw
gravel Call Bob or Roger
Dal y Sen t n el
eo)( 729 P
165989 1
Mob1le
fan c y d es gns etc Pant
Other
l3 18 1 39 Total Trllnsfer s
33 ACRES - Smal l fresh water
Jeffe rs day phone 992 7089 •
Pomeroy
Ohio
457
69
S75
18
mc
l'
1
metal
latag
6
nch
1659891
Total Exp
168 440 14
s ll g fllly blem shed Cho ce of
n tght phone 992 3525 or 992 •
J 12 6tc 3 BED RO OM t urn shed mob te
s w ng
comptele
w1th stream and a 3 bedroom
Sal Dec 31 1974
185 490 54 Totllll E)(p and
ca
rry1ng
c
ase
or
sewing
5232
Transfers
67 23 9 3~
t hread ng gears motor and modern home w1th Ctfy water
home and lot loca ted on New
sta nd S49 80 cash or terms
Tota l Exp P lus
8lll Oec Jl 19 74
10 304 29
2 11 ti c
b
ts
$100
2
h
p
220
bolt
smg!e
L
ma
Road
nea
r
Ru
t
a
nd
a v a I able Phone 992 77 55
Bal Dec 31 197&lt;1
353 930 68 Total E xpe nditur es &amp;
pl'1ase m otor ndus t r al type 70 ACRES - On new Route 33
P t~one 741 5943
12 18 lfc
lunchroom Fund
Tran s fers Plus B&amp; l
North Excellent home s1 tes
ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR
with pulley S5D a r com
3 \3 41C
Bat Jan 1 1974
605 51
Dec 31 1974
77 543 65
- Sweepers toasters trons
pressor motor and tank S2S
and spring T P water close
O
N
1966
Jo
hn
D
eere
450
t
ra
ck
Rece ipts
Basic Adull Educ
... 11 small appl ances Lawn
L
n
e
s
haft
3
pulleys
bear
ngs
ROUTE
143
Far
Out
large
II
loader
and
93
hoe
New
Sa te of Lunches
98 338 36 Bal Jan 1 1974
~ ELL your mob le home for
mowers next to State H gh
824 07
and belt SlS Phone 985 4118
Fedetlll Substdy
103 550 00
Receipts
s t eer n g
c lul c fl es
and
cash 15 home s wanl ed 195B
room 2 bath home with
way Garage on Route 7
2
13
26t
c
bra kes pam ! seats Good
Total Revenue &amp; No n
Federa l Subs dy
Tfl ru 19 72 m od el s Ph one (614 )
bus1ness room and drilled well
Pl'1on e 985 3825
soo 00
c ond11 on Pr ced lor qu ck - ----------- ~ -Revenu e Re ce 1pts 201 888 36 Total Re ceipts
446 1425 Gal l iPOl iS
3 11 261c
500 00
and p lenty of parkmg
s
a
le
$6300
Phon
e
(614)992
3 9 781c
From 2 500 oo
247 8
HOUSING SITES- 2'1, Acres
Total Beginn ing Balance
General Transfers
~und
iOME
Improvement
and
3 13 3tc
Plu S Rece1p ts
202 493 87 Total Transfer s
1 500 00
tn Pomeroy out of h 1gh water
Repa 1r Serv ce - Anything
Expenditures
Near sewer and water
Salaries onCI Wages
64 453 63 Tot a l Re cei pts and
f1xed around the home from
E BEAGLE Pups for s ate
1 BEDROOM Ira ler Br owns N IC
Transfers
3 000 00
roof to basement You will
rea
so
na
b
ly
pr
1ced
Pl'1one
991
Food &amp; Food Handl ng
Total Beglnn 1ng Ba lance
Tra ler Cou rt Pl'1one 992 332 4
like our work and rates
125 14 8 88
5302
Supplies
Plus Receip ts &amp;
3 4 ftc
Phone 742 5081
Other Exp
3 411 Jl
Transfers
J
13
3tc
OUR
PURPOSE
IN
BUSlNESS
3 824 07
12 29 tfc
Tota l E x p
193 OIS 82
E
d t
3
BEDROOM
tra
ter
w
th
I
p
IS TO HELP YOU GET A
Bal Dec 31 1974
9 478 05
lCpen 1 ur es
C
H
ES
T
TYPE
deep
freeze
out Unfurn s fl ed wa sfle r
Tota l Exp Plus
ln struc;t iOn
GOOD PR ICE FOR YOUR -s'EPTIC
Pt10n e 949 4761
-10 DOO feet bales
TANKS
cleaned
dry e r atr cond t1oned Phon e
Bal Dec 31 1974 201 493 87 Satll r les and Wages
2 06J 35
PROPERTY LIST IT WITH
3 13 6tc
Modern San It at ton 992 3954 or
992 33 88
Or
Le e
Ray
Other E xp
9 38
992 7349
Un1torm Supplies Fund
Refund - F und ing Agency 390 52
US CALL 992 3325
Laudermllt ar F 1ve Po n ts
-Ask for our cash and carry
LO CUS T POST 85c each 197 1
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ..J... _ __
Bat Jan 1 1974
14 034 71 Tota l Exp
2 463 25
9 18_ tfc
J 11 6tc
PriCe
72 Ford l T D hood UO 00
Sales 01 Wo~:b~~~~,•: &amp;
Bal Dec 31 1974
1 360 82
p a r fe nd e rs 1969 Chevel!e SS
C BRADFORD Auct1onet:1
A ILER aparlmenls fo r ren t
svpplles
11 824 25 Tota l Exp Plu s Bal
US ED p1ano n good s l'1ap e Ca I TRPh
40 OOea Ho me ! te XL 870and '
Complete Serv1ce
one
99
2
5248
\POMEROY
LANDMARK'f
Dec
31
1974
3
824
07
99 2 2958 after 5 p m
Tota l Rece 1pts
11 824 25
F
d
M cC ullo c l'1 250 pow e r saws
Phone 949 382 1 or 9.49 3161
Jack W l .. sev Mgr
0 ther Federal unde
3 I I SIC
Tota l Beg lnnmg Balan c e
3 12 3tp
$100 eac h A 1 exce ll e nt 742
Racme Oh 10
Phone.,. ~ 2181
.
Plus Rece ipts
Prot rams Combine
25 858 96
16 56
Grltt Bradford
1 BEDR OOM m obile home '\in
£ )( penditutes
Receipts
3 1) 31p ,1-~5 1 tfc
Sy r ac use No child r en or pets
Purchll se of Workbooks
Ot1'1er Feder al Su thtd les
Ca
1
992
2441
a
ft
er
6
p
m
Outstand
ng
Jan
1
4 7 510 00
&amp; Su ppl ies
10 77 1 86
IYrt -'
JUH""
Deere dozer 4
Depos 1 r equ 1red
W IL L tnm or cut trees or
KNAP P shoes many sty les on
1974
2000000
Oth er Expense
47 510 00
22 1 27 Totl!ll Recei p ts
cylinder
d
esel
8 ft blade
shrubbery
clean
out
s a e throug h March F amous
Redeemed Our ng Year
3 11- lfC
Transfers Frem
.__
1
new p a n t clu1ches tracks
Tota l Exp
12 SOO 00
0 993 13 Ge n era l Fund
base
ments
att
1
CS
e
tc
Phone
K 58 serviCe O)(ford only
1974
5 000 00
brakes and cano py S6 000
Bat Dec
197&lt;1
14 865 83 Total Transfers
12 so~~() Balance Outs la nd ng
949 3221 or 742 4441
3 BEDROOM mob te 1'10me a r
s 15 99 Call 992 5324
Total
E )(p 31P lus
Ph one 985 3.594
co
nd1f1ontng
corner
of
2 28 16tc
Dec
31
1974
312&lt;1tc
Bill De c 31 197 4
Total
Re
ce
lots
111\rt
15 000 00
25 858 96
3 9 7tp
Br oadway &amp; E lm Pt10 n e 992
tnt Rate
Project Interest
Transfers
60 020 co
3
2580 after 6 p m
OALMATION pups SIO each 1953 F ERGUSON 30
Ma tu n t y Year
1917
Bal Jan 1 1974
6 90C 03 Tota l Beg lnn ng Balance
new
Atsc Registered 12 Arab1an
Sal sbury School Co n s truct on
J 1 1 tf c
Receipts
Plus Recei pts &amp;
motor pamt and good rubber
ge ld ng Sl50 Phon e 992 3885
Property Tax {Gross )
Transfers
60 020 00 O ut s t&amp;n d ~ng Jan
s1 250 Phone 985 3594
E skey H1tl Pomero y Oh o
4 000 00
3 BEDR OO M mob le home
1 197&lt;1
Interest _
Expend1lures
3 9 71p
Redeemed
Our
ng
Year
wa~fler
a
nd
dr
yer
1
baths
3124tC
lnact 1ve Funds
8 359 37 Genera l Ad m 1nls trat on
19 74
1 000 DO
ut I l •es pa d SJ:Z 50 week 308
J7 1 78
Other Revenue
8SS 65 Oth er E xp
1950 FERGUSON
20
all
Ba an ce Ou tstandm g
Page St M ddle po r t Oh o FO R SA LE or lrade for c amper
Total Rece ipts
92 15 01 In s tr uct on
ongmal
e)(
c
e
pt
new
paint
and
LOW LOW DOWN PAYMENT
of equa l val ue a IO X40 mob te
Dec Jl 1974
19 647 21
Total Beg nnmg Ba lance
Salar1es &amp;nd Wages
2 000 00
3 4 tfc
t res S1 550 Phone 985 359.Lovely new homes n three
Oth er E)(p
ln
l
Rate
ho
me
Ca
ll
99
1
3380
after
6
273 28
3
1ocat 1ons In Me1gs County
16 115 05 Plant Operat on
P'lus Receip ts
3
9
liP
JUST
SOLD
pm
Matur
fy
Year
1975 TWO bedroom mobile 1'1ome
Bal Dec 31 1974
16 115 05 Other E)(p
Some w tfl wooded lots We
2 477 ~ M dd teporf E le m &amp; H gl'1
4 PROPERTIES
3 12 3tc TWO mo wers to f t F or~ or
cor ner Broa dw ay and Elm n
w!ll bu111 on your lot or ours
Tru1t Funds
M 1Ce ltaneous
SChOOl Add I on
~-- ----Ferguson 3 pt h 1tch One
M1ddleport
Phone 992 2580
2 640 89 Satar1es and Wages
Call 992 5976 or 992 5844 for
INS DAYS
Bat Jan 1 1974
29 810 19 Ou t sta nd ing J an I
11ilS5 CHEV RO L ET 2 door 1'1ard
S l 25 other $175 Phone 985
after6pm
more mformat1on
Receipts
Totllt Exp
52 680 45
top
1957
Cl"l
evrolet
been
3594
1974
115 000 00
TODAY WE NEED
2 6 tfc
2 27 26tc
Interest On In a c tive
Ba t Dec 31 1974
7 339 55 Redeemed Our ng Year
restored pool ta bl e Phone
F unds
1 693 68
3
9
7tp
742
.:11
11
3
bedroom
home
on
large
1974
16 000 00 TR AIL ER S PACE J.• mile
Total Rece ipts
1 693 68 Total Expend tu res Plus
3 12 3tc ~
3 BEDROOM furniShed mob le
Total Beginn ing Balan ce
Ba l Dec 31 19 74
60 020 oo Ba lan ce Ou tstand ng Dec
nor th of Me 1gs H gh Sch ool on
STA NLEY Products for sale
31 1974
9900000
1'1ome and lot loca ted on new
PlusR:ece 1pts
INTER FUND TRANSFER
4 334 Sl
old
Rt
33
P
hone
99
2
2941
3
bedroom
home
near
Ph one 742 3762
10 ACRES su table for bu ld ng
lnl Rat e
4 7
L1ma Road near Rutland
Trust Fund s
RECONCILIATION
1 23 ti c
3 9 26tc
to ts or !ratters W II se ll as a
Mt.tvr ty Year
1980
Phone 74 '} 5943
Plan t Mam tenance
F rom General F und to
whole o r separa te Located on
Ttlel
2161 '1 80 Pom e roy E leme nta ry Sct10o DU P L EX 238 1 1 Wa nut Sl
3 12 4tc
23
8
Other Exp
5 I
F rom Gene r al Fund to
R t 7 n Mtd d leport Phon e PORTABLE automati c washer
Construct1on
M ddleport Oh 10 Pl'1one 99 2
Total Exp
58123
OWE
99 2 3278
15 2 99 16 Outs ta n di ng Ja n I
MUST SELL new home on lake
:H 80 or 991 343 2
phone 992 7066
Bat Dec 31 19 7.t
3 753 34 From Generlll Fund
1974
'1 170 0000
3 1'1 6tc
3 b edrooms 112 baths carpet
2 19 ttc
3 9 6tc
Total Exp P lus
to OPPT
2 99 5 CO Redeemed Du r ing Year
These homes are needed by
drapes
diShwasher
7
4
Bal Dec 31 1974
4 33 5 From General Fund to
STA RCRAFT trailers 54 924
1974
21
000
00
refr1gerator
doubl e oven
prospects
who
ara
WaJt1ng
to
COUN
TRY
Mob
t
e
Home
Pa
rk
Scholarshlp Funds
OWA
4 476 48
'
now S3 89 5 Fo ld downs 51 400
Balance Out stand ng
stove Phone 991 3493 for
Receipts
Rt 33 len m le'i no r tl'1 of
BUY
up 3 wa y rad o 590 va lue
Dec 31 197 4
196 OCO 00
appomtment
Repo yment- Scholars h P
From General Fund to
Pomero y Large lots w1lh
CALL TODAY
Use our tay a way flnanc ng
4 7
Ba s c Adult
2 500 oo lnl Rate
3 126tc ~
170
conc
r
e
te
pat
os
st
dewatks
Awards
5B From General Fu n d to
a r ranged
Camp
Conley BUY NOW &amp; SAV E low low
992 2259
tur.ly Year
198 3
rvnners and off
s treet
Tota l Re ceipts
170 58
MOTA
18 S£18 B.l Ma
Star c raft Sa les Rt 62 N of
Bedford Construct on
park n g P t·10ne 992 747 9
down paym e n ts 8 pet
n
Bailln ce Dec 3 1
From Genera l Fund to
Pon t Pleasant , Phone 67 5
Outs tand mg Jan 1
-FOR SALEter est 30 yr f lnanc "~on new
12
31
lfc
1974 Career Or.entatlon l70 58
Tea c her Corps
10 ooo 00
5384
914
3 000 00
RUTLAND- CLOSE TO
1'1 omes m 3 Me gs County
Redeemed Dunng Ye ar
3 12 3tc
ea1 Jan 1 197 4
376 70 Fro tn General Fund to
loca t1ons or BUILD on your
Hous e FOR RENT 1634
SHOPPING - 2 BR bath,
1974
CETA
:750000
3 000 00
L
ncoln
Hg
ts
Pomeroy
7
lot Phone 992 5976 or 992 58•4
7
Total
3 6 0 From DPPF 1971 72 to
f1replace
carpeting ,
10
HOR
S
E
wl'1eel
horse
Expend itur es
OPPF' 1972
P hone Pomeroy 992 3575 or
3 13 tfc
tractor
used approx
12
73
Ra te
995
00
paneling
tile,
porch
garage
2'
·
Galllpol
s
446
2749
Transfers To
F rom DP P F to
hour s planter cul t va t or and
Mat ur ty Year
198J
$9
500
00
2 2 li e
Generll l Fun d
37 6 7C
Genera l F und
5 6J2 26 Nort hwes t lmprovenen l
5 R OO M 1'1ouse on Un1on
cart s 050 Pl'1one 985 3534
Totai Transfers
37 6 70 F romDPP F toMOTA
1100 Outsl and n g Jan 1
POMEROY - Lincoln Hts 2
A'Jen ue
large lo t
fvll
R us sell Ct ne long Bottom
Total E)( p P lus Ba ~
Oh o 457 .£3
bCJsement and new furnace
BR ba!h H W floors utility
Oec 31 1974
1974
45 000 Q() 3 and &lt;4 R-OOM furn sl'1ed and
376 70 From T tie l I I to
unfurn ished
apartments
Ca ll 992 3854
3 12 3tc
107 41 Redeemed During Year
R basement, porch large
NDEATttlt!lll
F Genera
T l1Fund
Phone 992 5434
3 9 6tc
1974
9 000 00
21 135 69
rom 11 e V to
tsat Jan 1 1974
lot
SIOOOOOO
4
12
tfc
P IO NEER SEED CO RN - WE
Recetph
Gen eral Fund
190 00 Balan ce Outstandtng
3
BEDROOM
home
large
68
ACRES
- Just off new Rt
---- ------ ~-- - 'T"
HAVE
AN
AMPLE
SU
PP
LY
De
c
31
1974
Federal Sv bs d ~
From
T1tle
t
to
36
000
00
2
107 4
P R 1vA T e m eetmg r oom for
kllcl'1en
ut l1ly room on 33 - Barn fenced 19 500
OF H IG H GERMINAT IN G
Total Receip ts
107 42
General Fund
1 658 06 tn t Rate
) I'
an y organ1zat1on phone 99Z
100x100 lot SI S 500 Ca ll after new trees walnut poplar
S EED IN ALL VARIET IE S
From AOC to
Matur ty Ye ar
1978
• 1Total eeo tnn 1no Balan ce
General Fu nd
3975
5 p m lor mtormat 10n 667
A
ND
MATUR
IT
I
ES
BUT
Northwest
Improvement
938
n PIUS Rece 1pts
21 143 11 From MOTA to
p1ne and others
3 II He
3739
K ERNE L
SIZES
ARE
Ovtst and 1ng Jan 1
Expenditures
LIM ITED
CA S H
P LUS
3 9 61 C _c __ _
"2
2259
165989 1
19 74
...
4500000
General Adm inis t ra ti on
General Fund
_
_ _____J
AP T 3 rooms ~II etectrlc has
V OLUME
DISCOUNTS
Redeemed Our n g Year
Other Exp
200 00 From T ti e I to
table
to
p
range
wall
oven
6
ROOM
house
w1th
ba
t
l'
1
3
T 111e 11
THR
U
MARCH
15
AND
19 74
3 000 00
21 00
..., lnsfruchon
real n ce a nd clean modern
bedroom full basement gas
APR IL 15 FERTILIZER Balance Outstand ~9
143 71 From C(ll reerF Onentat on 37
Othtr E x p
Lo c ated
n
Pomeroy
1'1ea t 1'1 w floor wall to wall
S EED S
TWINE - H ER
Dec 31 1974
~Capital Outlay
tn General und
6 70
18 coo 00
overlookmg"' th e Ohio R ver
carpet Close to school 1n
lnt Rat e
BICIOES
CHESTER
Total E xp Trnsfers
103 582 01
3
P hone Galtq:lol•s day 446
New EQu tpment
8 22 1 37 Tota l Rec Transfers 102 587 Ol Maturity Year
Pomeroy Phone 992 3097
A GRI CO S ER V ICE CEN
1981
4
7699 evenmgs .tA6 9539
Total Exp
8 565 1
ASSETS AND LIABILITIES Metgs H1gh Scfl ool
TER P HONE 985 3831
3 9 52t c
1 26 tfn
General F~~~('Sfers To
107 42
DECEMBER 31 1974
3 11 3tp
Schoo l Construct1on
3 BEDROOM 1'1ouse w tl'1 bath
ASSETS
Outstand 1ng Jan 1
rlTOtll Transfers
107 .:12 De poSI10r-,.: Balances
la rge y ard and garden cdy
1974
765 000 00 2 BEDR OOM m ob ile home MASS EY Fergt.~son t.5 0 e~el
409 005 oc '
Total Exp &amp;
Pho ne 9&lt;t9 2261 Albert H1ll
wa te r Ph one 742 4782
tr a ctor and load er S3 200
Translt!rs
15417773 Redeemed Dur.ng Year
672 56 Invest ments
8
0 8 I 0
Ford 9N tractor S950 Two
3 9 6tc
1974
4500000
JQO 500 00 I
3 10 6tc
31 11lJ4
12 570 55 Inventory
All iS Chalmers WD WO 45
':.r:tal Ee;P i
Land
674 568 00 Balan ce Ou t stand ng
tractors S1 550 o ther \ 1 250
Dec 31 1974
'
A MOD ERN all electrtc home
Transfers Plus Ba L
Bu1ld1n gs
3 59877400
120
Case VAC tractor S650 11 sets
4 180 600 00 ln t Rate
w1th 3 bedrooms k1tct'lefl and
oec 31 1974
212.43 11 ¥~~~ rrsi~:s
3 pt plo ws S200 lo S350 each 4
1990
5 &lt;111624 13 Matur ty Ye ar
d 111 1ng ar ea liv ing room and
NDEA Title V
new lmco 6 ~ fl 3 pi d sc
LIABILITIES
Tot al Bonded Debt bath
F ut i s1ze basemen t
parts
Frye
sTruck
and
USED
Bal J an 1, 1974
5300 each One 8 ft Dunham
190 00 Accounts Payable
147 000 00 Ou ts tand mg Jan 1
par t.a lly
fm lshed
"W 1th
Auto Parts Rvtland Oh10
Total
wfleel d sc 5300 e.a ch One
1974
I 190 000 00
190 00 Bond Indebtednes s 1 086 000 00
Phone (614 ) 1..11 6094
laundry a rea
recreat ion
Expenditures
Massey Ferguson No 3 hay
Total L1ab tl lies
1 233 000 00 Total Bonded Oebr room storage and workshop
1 22 78tp
Tnnsfers To
bater 51 7SC two new 3 pt
E)(cess of Assets
4 184 624 73 Red eemed O ur ng Year
area 1 080 sq ft of floor
Generel Fund
rotary mowers '5360 each
190 oo Total
5 417 624 7J
1974
104 000 06 NEW and used chan saws
sp ace on m a n floor and three
Total Transfers
Ermel
Luckett
West
Total Bonded Debt 190 00
INDEBTEDNESS and two th rds. acres of tand
tillers
and
mo
w
e
r
s
Also
Totti Bel Dec
Was hmgt6n S t
Box 95
Ba lan ce Outstand ng
PART I BONDS
Loc.ated 1n Rac 1ne area on
re
pa
rs
.:t9B
Locust
St
31 1974
Albany Oh o Pflone 698 30 32
190 00 Purpose For Wh 1ch De bt
Dec 31 1974
1 086 ooo 00
C
R 28 between Dorcas &amp;
M dd teporr P hone 992 3092
ESEA Tttle I
or 698 788 I
Was Created
Appl e Grove Phone 949 3457
'1
:18
261c
Bal , J•n 1 1974
13 ) 13 Ire
3 11 3tc
7 823 92 Sal1sbu ry School Cons tru ct1on
3 11 61 p

p.J
Home Maintenance

CAL.L.S.

Water, Eltctrlc, O.s. S....C
tlnos, lnotallad
Warfo
IUirlnteed
o~
Dozer, laclcflot, Trvckl r
Llmtshlne&amp;FIII~

~levision

''MY LAB Ai\JL? THE
TELEPHONE COMPANY.
WILl. ANNOUNCE N EXT
WEEK A DEVICE THAT

West

North

East

South

Pass
Pass
Pass

It
3•
4t

Pass
Pass
Pass

1•
3NT
4•

t•
Pass
4 N T Pass
?
You South hold
• K J 9 4 'II A Q 2 t J4 3 . K 10 S

What do you do now"
A - If you play his call

11

BlackwOod as most people. do, bid
five diamoads Otherwise pan
TODAY S QUESTION
Instead of rebidding three clubs
your partner has reb1d two hearts
Whal do you do now?

Send $1 lor JACOBY MODERN
book to

W111 al Brld~

(c/o ttrla

newapapor) P 0 Box 489 Radio
C•lyStallon New York NY 10019
INEY.SPAPE!i ENTERPRISE ASSN I

LET ME WORO ll&lt;AT
A UTTLE PtFFERENTLI(

'

SUPPORT

DURING HEAaTLINE '75 DAY

I

I

�.

n •.

'

I

..
10- The llally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., ThursdHy. MArch 13, !975

Support invited for tourism project
A tourism promotion meeting will be held at 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday, March 25, at the Meigs Inn, Pomeroy .The meeting is open to the public, especially members of the
business community who would benefit by tourism promotion.
Purpose of tbe session is to make public tbe Regional
Cooperative Tourism Promotion plan designed by the federally funded Buckeye Travel-Tour Project. An audio-visual presentation will be ~ade showing the promotion package, including
What momes will be spent in various media. Cost of membership
and membership benefits will be announced.
The Meigs County advisor on the governing committee of the
Buckeye Travel-Tour Project is Carolyn Thomas, Pomeroy.
Further information about tbe tourism project and meeting can
be obtained by seeing Mrs. Thomas at the Pomeroy Chamber of

BEGORRAI YOU'LL BE SAVIN'
YOUR "GREEN" DURING THIS
SPECIAL THREE-DAY SALE

·Commerce office or by calling 992-5005. Those planning to attend
the meeting are asked to advise Mrs. Thomas.
"fourlsm promotion in Mldeasleru aod Southeasteno Ohio Is
about to take a giant stride forward, it is argued, and local
participation Is vilalto its success. Federal dollars have funded
the organizational work. A finished plan Is now ready. Wben
federal assistaoce ends on June 30 this year, it will be up to local
initiative to determine whether tourism has a future In this
Region of Ohio.
Federal dollars were granted to the region by tbe Appalachian Regional Commission through two of its districts, the
Buckeye Hills-Hocking Valley Regional Development District
and the Tuscarawas Valley Regional Advisory Committee, with

assistance from the Tourism Bureau of the Ohio Department of
Economic and Community Development.
Through a request of the Buckeye Tourist Council, funds
were granted last September to begin a project called the
Buckeye Travel-Tour Project. The project was govcn a one year
b'fant to set up a ce,ntral office, hire a full time staff and a
national consuliJ!nt to produce a professional marketing plan for
tourism in the region.
The forthcoming meeting is expected to show the progress
from that funding and it will be explained how local county and
business people can bring tourism to U1e siJ!tus of an
economically beneficial industry U1roughout Meigs County and
all of Mideastern and Sout heastern Ohio.

)

•

······~······~······~~·

at y

SPORTSWEAR SALE

en tine

Devoted To The Interests of The Mews-Mason Area
,VOL. XXVI ..._
• .....:NO_
. .::..:23_4_ __.. _PO_M_ER_:O_Y-~
M I~DD::L::_EP~OR~T,~O~HI~O---__,_~~R~ID:::AY.:_,~MA~R~CH~l~4.....:_19:!_7~5_ __ _ _ _ _ __ __t:P~RJ~CE~l~S'

SPRING SPORTSWEAR FOR EVERY
MEMBER OF THE FAMILY•..AND ALL
AT SPECIAL SALE .PRICES.
. ·
SPORTSWEAR~

.•COORDINATES,
PANTs, SKIRTs, JEANS, BLOUSES,
KNIT TOPS, SWEATERS, SHIRTS

SALE PRitES

-~ . . . . . .~~A~,S~N·FL··~ . . .
"GROWING WITH MUSIC" - Jeff Nash at Uie piano
wiU be featured In the Tuesday program at' the Pomero;
Elementary School in a duet with Mrs. Gladys Foley,
standing left, performing Schubert's "Marche MiliiJ!ire."

.Men's
and Boys'
Sportswear
.
.
KNIT SHIRTs, SlACKS, CUT AND

Musical program
coming Tuesday

SEWN SHIRTs, JACKETs, CASUAL
SUITS, SPORT COATS, FASHION JEANS

SALE PRICES

Music classes of the
Pomeroy Elemenlary School
wiU present a program entitled, "Growing with Music,"
at 12:45 p.m. Tuesday in the
school auditorium.
1
The program will feature tlie
choir singing Handel's famous
"Hallelujah Chorus" from
"The Messiah" and Jeff Nash,
pianist, performing Schubert's
"Marche MiliiJ!ire" as a duet
with Mrs. Gladys Foley, vocal
music teacher.
Included in the program will
be Easter, spring, patriotic,
state, rhythm, old favorites,
sacred and marching music. It
will involve pianists, tap
dancers, marchers, flutists,
drummers, trumpeters, and

~-···········~····
GIRLS 4 to 14 AND PRETEEN
SPORTSWEAR••. PANTS, SHIRTS.
SWEATERS, COORDINATES, SKIRTS,
JEANS, JACKETS.

SALE. PRICES
.

GIRLS DEPARTMENT, SECOND FLOOR

~······ ..

••••••••••••
•

FURNITURE THROWS
AND SLIPCOVERS
Big selection of all popular sizes
in solids and patterns.

REG. $399.00

At The Home Furnishings Annex

Wa Inut Finish

,.

00

l+

Furniture Dept., Third Floor

.. • .
•~:

••• ••

0

.o

EXTENDED FORECAST
Sun~ay through Tuesday,
a ehanee of some rain or
snow, mainly In southern
sections, about Monday.
Otherwise generally fair
with highs In the 40s or lower
50s. Lows will be In tbe upper
20s and 30s.

Girls pliys-ed

at Eastern to
he upgraded

Two jailed
after raid

EASTERN - A general
upgrading of the girls athletic
I
program was discussed with
HOWARD FRANK
.two parents and a represenA raid at the home of Karleen
tative of the Parent-Teacher
and Ronald Vogler, Rt. 4,
·Student Association when the
Pomeroy, where drugs were
Eastern Local School District ·
confiscated
was made ThursBoard of Ed ucation met
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day
at
6
a.m.
Tuesday night.
The raid was conducted by
It was explained that a
Howard Frank has assumed the Meigs County Sheriff's
woman teacher had been 'his duties as the new Meigs
Department, federal officers,
employed
to supervise the girls County Auditor.
....
CapiJ!in Clyde Beasley of the
•program but she resigned late
Frank resigned from his post Athens Police Department and
By Uoiled Press International
in the summer. At that point, it as county treasurer and Nina
MELVIN CREMEANS
COLUMBUS, OIUO - THOMAS MOYER, executive
was not possible to secure the Cumings, a long-time employe Athens County Sheriff's
deputies.
assistant to Ohio Gov. James A. Rhodes, said Thursday the
services of a woman to fill the in that office, was named to fill
governor has declined a personal invitation from President Ford
post. The girls physical the vacancy until an ap- , Mr. and Mrs. Vogler have
to attend a Midwest gubernatorial conference next MoQdaY at
education program has, as a pointment is made by the been lodged in Meigs County
Notre llame.
result, been carried out by a Meigs County Republican Jail on charges of possession of
Sixteen finalists rcpresen- Southern Local District.
hallucinogen for sale, a
Rhodes will not join six other governors for the South Bend,
male. The board indicated, Central Committee.
·ting
as many sc hools will
violation of section 3719.49 of
Ind., conference, at which Ford is expected to deliver a major
The spelldown is being
however, that it will attempt to
the
Frank
said
Thursday
that
compete
for
the
top
honor
at
the
Ohio
Revised
Code.
The
two
policy address, because the governor believes he needs to siJ!y
slaged
by tHe co unty
hire a woman teacher to work 12 years during which he was
the
annual
Meigs
County
here and work, said Moyer.
superintendent's office with
will appear in county cour t
and ·expand the program .
county lreasurer he had four
!;pelling Bee beginning at 7:30 Supt. Robert Bowen to present
"In ten tion" forms which complete audits and a recent today.
p.m. Tuesday in the Sou thern a trophy to !he top winner and a
WASHINGTON- THE MAJOR U.S. OIL companies will
were sent to the teachers and coun t..out by an examiner from
Hi gh School cafeteria at plaque for the school attended
reap a minimum of $6.4 billion in profits this year - mostly from
returned to Supt. :'f.n Riebel the state auditor's office. These
PETITION FILED
Racine.
Addition
of
Melvin
by the winner. Meigs County
[rice increases. Two opponents of the oil depletion allowance
were reviewed so that the
Jan_e Walton, a Republican,
Steve Wagner, a biology elemeniJ! ry supervisors Greta
say these flgw-es refute arguments .that eliminating the IJ!x · board cou ld es timate the pay audits and the recent coun t has flied her petilion for the Cremeans, 18, of Rutland to the
out show that all money
break will reduce Incentives to increase production.
available siJ!ff for the next received by the treasure r n?mination to run for Pomeroy .news siJ!ff of The Pomeroy- teacher at Southern High Suttle and Nellie Vale are
Sens. Edward M. Kennedy, 0-Mass., and Ernest F. Hollings,
school year. The board also during the 12 years of service is Vtllage Clerk, a position which Middleport Daily Sentinel and School, will pronounce the helping with the event, with
Sunday Times-Sentinel is words to the finalists who have Mrs. Suttle serving as chairD-S.C., Thursday released a Ubrary of Congress study con- discussed sc hedule changes
she is now holding. The clerk's announced.
in
balance
and
property
acsurv ived spelling bees at each person. The county winner will
taining the figures. It said that out of tbe estimated $6.4 billiion in which the teac hers had
treasur~r's post in Middleport
counted
for,
Frank
reports.
Cremeans is beginning a school. Judges will be John
oil company profits, $4 billion was attributed to price rises while recommended on the same
wtll be !tiled this year also. No training program in sports and Riebel, superintendent or the go to the state event to be held
Frank
extends
thanks
to
his
$2.4 billion was the result of tax breaks resulting from the oil forms.
in Columbus on April 26. Each
siJ!ff for their work during the one has filed for thai position genera l news writing with Eastern Local School Dislrict ; school champion wiU receive a
depletion allowance.
The board discussed repair years he served as treasurer. as yet. Filing deadline is 4 p.m.
emphasis on sports under James Dieh l, principal of certificate of award . .
of a roof leak at the Chester
on March 20.
"I'm
now
looking
forward
to
direction of Chester Tannehill, Meigs High School, and Bob The finalists in the fo llowing
SAIGON- TANK-LED COMMUNISt FORCES advanced Elementary School. County
working
the
next
four
years
as
executive
edi tor . Cremeans Ord, superintendent of the
on two district capitals near Saigon today, overrunning a series Superintendent Robert Bowen
(Continued on page 10)
Meigs
County
Audilor",
Frank
has succeeded Denny Fohes,
of bases and shooting down a pair of warplanes in a week-old discussed the school nurse
who resigned.
·,drive across South Vietnam. Military sources said 1ii,OOO program which is being concluded .
DIVORCE ASKED
The son of Mr. and Mrs. Basil
civUJans and hundfeds of militiamen fled Go Dua Ha and Khiem carried out in the county with
Filing for divorce in Meigs
Cremeans,
Depot
St.,
Hanh in panic Thursday as Ct'lmmunist gunners shelled the the nurse, Mrs. Sharon Birch,
County Common Pleas Court
towns.
was Kenda Rainey, Pomeroy, Cremeans graduated from
dividing her time among the
Forty Meigs High School Cindy Glaze, Mary Rusche!,
'!be sources said North Vietnamese and VietCong armor and three local districts.
from Jack Rainey, Pt. Meigs High School in 1974 and
attended Ohio University the students were inducted in to the George Stewart, Donna Thorninfantry were moving on the towns from the northwest and
The board expressed comSnow changing Io flurries Pleasant, on charges of ex- fall quart•r of 1974. He was a National Honor Society during
northeast, storming police and militia outposts along the way. plete satisfaction andagreed to
ton, Andy Hoover, Tamera
l&lt;lnight. Lows tonight in upper treme cruelty. John D. Wolfe, varsity performer on the imp ressive candlelight serStanley, Ginger Culllims, Vicki
Government commanders rushed reinf.orcements to the area, 3li con tinue the cooperative
Syracuse,
and
Brenda
M
.
miles northwest of Saigon, and ·field officers vowed to defend the program with the other two 20s. Utile change Saturday, Wolfe, same address, asked for Marauder footbaO teams his vices Thursday night at the Manley, Mona King, Greg
highs in the lower 40s.
·
junior and" senior years at school.
twin towns against Communist assaults.
Vanmeter, Pam Davis, Karen
dissolution of marriage.
districts and expressed hope of
Qualities for membership, Coleman , Tammy Mowery,
offensive
end
and
defensive
getting even more lime from
explained by Steve Walburn, Julie Hamm, Pam Holcomb,
halfback.
WASHINGTON -SEN. HUBERT HUMPHREY, 0-Minn., the nurse. The board discussed
Carla
Crisp, Sandy Cur tis, and Tammy Jarrell, Tammy
At Meigs High Cremeans
has accepted an In lerna! ·Revenue Service ruling and will pay
the possibility of securing the
was sports ed itor for the Phil Ohlinger, are character, Michael, Bonita Johnston,
back taxes on the nearly $al0,000 he deducted for giving away his services
of
a
school
Yearbook, vice president of the leadership, service and Debbie Janey, Laura Hoover,
Vice presidential papers. Humphrey announced Thursday he psychologist for work in the
would not appeal an IRS auditor's ruling that disallowed the county. A report was also given
The Meigs County Sheriff's medium damar,e. No ciiJ!tion . National Honor Society, a scholarship. The pledge to new Georgene Grate, Crystal Glaze
member of the Varsity M Club, members was given by James and Elaine Fish .
deductions.
.
on negotiations being con- Department investigated two was issued.
·
and
a member of the Prep AJI. Diehl, principal.
"Officers
and
present
He had deducted $199,153 from his federal income taX for ducted between .the board and accidents ThurS(!ay night in
At 11:30 p.m. in Salem
New members inducted were members are, Ric Cou'ch,
America
football
team.
He
is
donating the papers to the Minnesota Historical Society. The teache rs of. the district.
which
to
personal
injuries
were
Township, CR 1, four miles
• former vice president will have to pay taxes on the disallowed,
Joyce Hutchison,
Mike
reported.
north of SR 124 RobertS. Shain, active in the Rutland Church of Nesse lr oad, Sharon Bing , president; Carla Crisp, vice
president;
Anita
King,
~ctlcms- taken between 1969 and 1972 - plus 6 per cent inAt .9:30 p.m. in Chester 21, Racine, was traveling west, the Naz;orene.
SQUAD
CALLED
·.sonia
Justice,
Virginia
McCremeans
has
three
sisters
secretary; Steve Walburn,
terett payments.
.
.
Township, CR 36, .three-tenths
The Pomeroy Emergency of a mil,e west of SR 7, Timothy when crowded off the highway and qne brother, .all older : Cune , Judy Owen, Mike treasurer; April Fraser, Linda
. Humphrey has not received a bill from the IRS, and a
by an unidentified driver of a
spokesman said: "lcan'tevengive you a bellpark figure" on the Squad answered a call to Gil!ilan of Chester, travelin~ pickup truck. The Shain Marvin, of (;olumbus; Mrs. Magnotta, Kim Ohlinger , Williams, Joy White, Phll ·
amoomt he must pay. Humphrey's writeoft was invalidated Laurel St. at U:1ii p.m. Thurs- wes,t, took his eyes off r.he high- vehicle went into a ditch on the Charles (Linda) Boyles, aruce Reed, Mickey Daven- Ohlinger, Sandy Curtis, Debbie
because &lt;ia ruling Uuit disallows deductions for donations· that day for Clifford Murray who way .to tune, a radio and went right . There were minor Middleport; Mrs. Homer port: Judy Radford, Sand)! McLaughlin, Naqcy Gillispie,
was ill. He was taken to off the highway on the right
(Ruth) Smith, Pomeroy, and Carleton , Lisa · Thomas, Bonnie Dillon and Brian Shank.
(Conlil)ued on page 10)
No
citation
was
damages
.
Veterans Memorial Hospital. into a ditch . There was
Mrs. Earl (Betty) Nelson, Charles Marshall, Jim Hutton,
The emblem of the society
issued.
Mansfield. ·
Angie Si.Son: Da~la Harper, was prese~!ed by Ric ceuch. '
,I

Frank now
auditor

16 finalists in
Meigs spelldown

news staff

40 inducted at Meigs

Weather

.

..

narrators.
The combined choir, divided
into soprano and alto sections,
will sing Rodger and Hammerstein's " Climb Every
Mountain" and "The Sound of
Music" with soloists, Belinda
Grimm and Sue Taylor, and
flutists , Beth Perrin and Lorra
Wisecup; the "Ode of Joy"
from Beethoven's Ninth
Symphony, "Chris t the Lord is
Risen Today" from the 18th
Century Lyra Davidica; and
Handel's "Hallelujah Chorus."
All of the students \"ill sing
Bacharach's "What the World
Needs Now is Love, Sweet
Love" preceded by a reading of
the words by Principal Robert
Morris.

•=m&amp;

Andrews, looking toward
reHrement, tw o years ago and was employed by Penn
enrolled in a correspondence Central when it merged with
course to become a locksmith. the New York Central. At one
He mastered the course and time, Andrews was a
· has been called on numerous passenger conductor. In fact,
jobs, although the word of his he was the conductor on the
new skill hasn't been ad- last passenger train which ran
from Charleslon to Columbus
vertised. He's been called upon in
1948.
by several business houses,
Musically
inclined, Andrews
and is bonded now to do the
has
played
guitar
- no lessons
work .
Too, Andrews, a Republican - since he was 15. At one time
who serves as " central he played with a country music
committeeman , thought he band. He still uses his
would like to be mayor of two guitars to present
Pomeroy . With his retirement programs at the Porn- ·
pending, Andrews completed eroy Churc h of Christ
his petition and has filed for which he attends. And, he plays
nomination to run in the June the guitars and an autoharp
primary. So far , he has no often at home. A family
songfest generally evolves .
opposition .
Mrs. Andrews also Is a native
At one time, Andr ews
served two years of an unex- Meigs Counlian . She is the
pired term on Pomeroy Village daughter of the late Mr. and
Council and enjoyed the whole Mrs. J. W. Eskew of the
Community.
bit but couldn' t con tinue Bradford
primarily
a
because of the irregular calls Although
homebody,
Mrs.
Andrews
is
for duty on the railroad.
Now, with time on · his learning to like camping, a
hands, Andrews Is looking hobby thoroughly enjoyed by
forward to a house-to-IJOue her husband. On the camping
campaign and says that he has lrips, Mr. Andrews generally
several ideas he would like to does the cooking, so i lis a way
carry out for the betterment of to get away from the home
chores for Mrs. Andrews.
the town.
The couple has five
Born in Pomeroy, Andrews is
child ren, Bill, of Mason, W.
the son of Clyde Andrews, who
resides next door o,1 Ebenezer Va.; Mary Alice . Wayland'
J ames,
of
St., and the )ale Mrs. Andrews. Middleport;
Hemlock
Grove;
Susan,
at
The elder Andrews, by the
home, and Raymond, at home
way, is 84 years old. Like his
son, he was a railroader. He also, and • student at the Meigs
retired with ii4 years service. Junior High School. The AnAndrews began his work with drews have three grandthe New York Central Railroad children, Jeffrey Andrews who
on June 23, 1943 a sa brakeman. resides in Kentucky and Terry,
11, and Laurie, 4, Wayland of
He later became a conductor Middleport.

comes on

~------··.---1..---------'
·

:;!«@.&lt;;::..&lt;&amp;~•~s,:;:~~.::,.wAA

BY BOB HOEFLICH

The experts advise preparing for retirement and
Clarence Andrews, Ill Ebenezer St., Pomeroy, has
done just that.
On March I0, Andrews retired from the Penn
Central Railroad after nearly 32 years of service.

conduc t contribuLed tn that
gOal. "
Sirica recalled that he
recalled LaRue 's testimony.
But the judge said he "must
also constantly keep in mind
the sentences of others in this
case."
LaRue,
a
wealthy
Mississippi oil and land
developer, pleaded guilty June
28, 1973, to one count of conspiracy to obstruct justice.
He slond in front of the judge
with his hands clasped in front
of him . He refused to make a
siJ!tement to reporters later,
saying that he had given no
interviews since the Watergate
case broke open.
"This defendant has been
punished enough in his per·
so nal life and business ,"
LaRue's lawyer, Fred M.
Vinson, said in opening
remarks in asking that he be
spared from jail. "A jail
sentence here has no relevance
as a general deterrence."

Cremeans

4-PIECE BASSET
BEDROOM SUITES
Sale '198

Others pictured are the choir officers, 1-r, Linda Eason
president; Linda Kovalchik,.recorder, and Chris Judge vic~
president, officers of the Upper Choir; and Sandy Reed: vice
president; Barbara Grueser, president, and John Porter,
recorder of the Lower Choir.

WASHINGTON (UPI) Frederick G. LaRue, who was
former ' Attorney General John
N. Mil&lt;lhell's chief political
aide, was ordered today to
serve six"-months of a one to
three year prison sentence for
his pari in the Watergate
coverup.
U. S. District Judge John J.
Sirica ordered that the balance
of LaRue's sentence be
suspended and that he be
placed on supervised probation
for two years ."
Sirica ordered him to
surrender April!, to begin his
sentence at a place to be
designated by the attorney
general.
LaRue reminded Sirica that
he said during the Watergate
cover-up trial that the overriding issue in the case was
getting at the truth.
"I think my testimony
contributed to that goal, " said
LaRue, the first person to
plead guilty in the Watergate
coverup and to give his
cooperation to the investigalor.
"To the extent my acUvities
contribuled to the whole
tragedy known as Watergate,
I'm sorrv. I'm ~lad my later

ews.. in Briefsl

.

SALE PRICES

Busy retirement
for. Mr. Andrews

LaRue gets
six months

~~-·····~······~······
MISSES, JUNIORS AND WOMEN'S

CLARENCE ANDREWS, retired railroader now
locksmith and candidate for mayor of Pomeroy.
'

••

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•

2 cars crowde.d off road

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~:v.,••~•••-t••••••••••••~-t••••••••••••
.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
'

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