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•

Weather

Your Wayne National Forest
ByT. Allan Woller
Springs. You could gamble there, and
District Ranger
you could also buy cigarettes there,
IRONTON - Sometimes we thmk which you couldn't in the rest of

"-. ...,,"

Left to right, Mmi-team 1 members are, sttting, Cectl
Thivener, Jr., Barbara Steele. R.N, Htlda Rake , James
Holley, Janet Nibert. secretary; standmg, Stan ley McKean,

Donald Hippensteel, assistant sup erintendent, Carola
Keever, 0 T R ; not pictured are M. Wayne WoUe and Ms.
Gwen Fisher, R.N , Director of Mini-Team I.

GSI ward staff carries
• •
• •
on mmt·team
trammg
GALLIPOLIS
The
Gallipolis State Institute MiniTeam I has completed tts third
course of instruction to the
ward sta ll on Cottage U .
A total of 22 employes who
are assig ned to the Mini-Team
Unit have received thi s
traming. Plans are being made
to provide mstructlon to those
working the night shill. After
this has been accomplished, all
employees working on Cottage
U will have been Mini-Team
traioned. The Mini-Team
consists of Carola Keever,
O.T.R., and Barbara Steele,
R.N., who dev eloped this
course of instruction .
This Instruction has proved
to be of benefit to the residents
as it aids the employees in the
utilization · of fa cili tati on
methods which have increased
the residents' development.
Areas where improvement has

•

JUst Highest
Interest Rates
In The Area

occurred are feedin g, am ;bulation , SOCia l and cogm tJVe

development. Each residen t on
Cottage U 1s assigned to a
Group Parent who has the
responsibility for following .a
care plan based upQil his individual needs . The team
provides both consultations
and follow-up as well as contmmng education for the ward
staff.
Mrs . Steele and Mrs. Keever
have requested a consull&lt;!tive
vistt from Mrs. Haru Lemke,
O.T.R., who will be vtsi ting the
Gaihpohs State Institute on
March 3\ and April 1, \975.
Mrs. Lemke's area of expertise
is in the management of the
sell-abusive residents

CONDUCTED SESSION
POMEROY - Rep. Ron
James conducted a general
question and answer session
when some 40 Democ rats met
in regular session at Grace
Episcopal Church Parish
House Thursday night.

• ~ ·.····

Like a good
neighbor,
State Farm
is tlwre.

5%%
ON PASSBOOK
SAVINGS

~t!h ilt'lplur your
Cdr. home. lile and

5\14 per ctnt YNr paid on
Rogutor Pn-~ Sovlngt.
No Minimum . , ......., from

dote of ct.posll

to

health insurance .

dolt of

me.

withdrew•!. lnt.rut com-

• •
Caroll K. Snowden

pounded Quarterly.

24 Stale Street
Gallipolis, Ohio
446-4290, Home 44~1!_1

..df1,11GS

~~RANCH
TIM Alhtns Count'/ .

fiU.Tl 'AIM

sovlngs .. loon Co.

A

296 Second St.
Pomoroy, Ohio

All Accounts Insured
S-10,000 by FSLtC.

To

By Hobart Wilson Jr.
STATE Representative Ron James, in regular session of the
lllth General Assembly, introduced the lollowmg resolutiOn
recently to pay tribute to Morton L. Dickey who recently retired
as Ga lha County auditor.

+++
THE resolution follows :
WHEREAS, The members of the House of Representatives
of the t lith General Assembly of Ohio wish to recognize and
honor Morton Dickey, on the occasion of his retirement, for his
outstanding and dedicated service to the people of Gallia County;
and
WHEREAS, Morton Dtckey has for the past thirty years
served his community as a former deputy shertll and as an
outstanding Galha Co unty Auditor since 1956 with utmost efftctency and tota l dedication. Mr. Dtckey is truly a fine public
servan t and outstanding cttizen . deservi ng of praise and
emulation by all ; and
WHEREAS, Morton Dickey's unselfish dedicatiOn to the people
of Gallia County has been evidenced by his exemplary record as
an acttve community leader and by serving as an officer of the
Galha County Community Improvement Corporation. Mr.
Dtckey 's expertise as an auditor 1s renown throughout the state
and the high esteem of hts peers was demonstrated when he was
elected president of the State County Auditors Associatwn; and
WHEREAS, In the past thirty years of public service and most
especially the last eighteen years in the post of County Audttor,
Mr. Dickey has observed the many changes, both administrative
and social, which occurred in Gallia County. It is to his credit
' that he has been flexible m changing with the times, but always
w1th an emphasis on the smooth luncttomng of the well-o1led
machine which he has, in effect, created; therefore be it
RESOLVED, That we, the member&gt; of the House of
Representatives of the lllth General Assembly of OhiO m
adopting this Resolution, recogni ze and pay honor to Morton
Dtckey lor his outstanding dedication to the people of Ohio on the
occasion of his retirement from public service.

. ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _•

•

The Fun Place

Enjoy the Distinctive
Style of the

FRANK SISTY
TRIO

COLUMBUS- Performance
standards for the Ohto Surface
Mine Law, which requires the
reclamation of surface mining
areas where mmerals other
than coal are extracted, will go
into effect Monday.
However, surface mine
operators will not have to meet
the new standards until they
are required to have operating
permits under a two-year,
phase-m schedule beginning
July 1.

TUES. , WED., THURS.

8:30. 1:00
FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY

9:30. 2:00

MEIGS·INN POI\'IEROY, 0.

such programs as marine
engineering , scuba diving ,

naval design, and other activities outside of boatmg.
If any organization is int..rested in forming a Sea
Exploring Post, . they should
contact Ron Horn. Exploring
Assistant lor the Exploring
DiviSion , B.S.A. located at the
Trt-SI&lt;Ite Area Council, 1122
Third Avenue, Huntington, or
call 523-3408 for more details.

'

NO. 240

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OH 10

representatives in all sections
of the state during the twoyear, phase-in period to explain the Ohio Surface Mine
Law and the rules which implemenl the law.
Copies of. the rules and the
law ·are available from the
Division of Reclamation, Ohio
Department of Natural
Resources Fountain Square
Colwnbus,43224, for operator~
and interested parties.

At the scene were officers of
Charles A Marcmko, 2\ ,
Rl. \, Mmersvilic, was killed '" the she riff'&gt; department, State
a four car accident Saturday at Highway Patrol, Bernard
8:30 e- m on SR 7, Chester Fultz . Prosecuting Attorney,

ON SALE FOR THE FIRST TIME EVER
SOFT SIDER ' Tricot Bras.

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# 186- Underwire Bra .
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#232- Longline, Tricot Straps
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CROSS YOUR HEARl' ..

"'181- Stretch Bra,
Lace Cups. Reg. $5.50' each "'239- 3/ 4 Length Longline
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Mideast policy

South Vietnam split

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'All XL. XXL -$100 1!10R t aU XXXI. XXXXI.-$2.00 1!10R

Main Store, Annex and Warehouse Open Weekdays 9:30 to 5
Open Fridays and Saturdays 9:30 to 8 p.m.

ELBERFELD$ 'IN POMEROY

NylOn.---,___

FIBER CONTENT llyllllll66, 161.182- C~ BldF. lnll cam. aor.
,
EluO:&lt;

•

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V.'~ ~~..,................:-.,:.:•:•:•
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ews .• in

Briefs~

CHICAGO - THE SEARCH FOR newspaper heiress-turnedfugitive Patricia Hearst has shifted to a farming area 20 miles
southwest of Boise, Idaho, th~ Oiicago Tribune reported Sunday.

#270- Longline with
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..,an. 0.., ~· ~ ~-

demolished. There were heavy
damages to the other three
vehtcles. The accident is still
under inves tigation.
Charles Marcinko was born
Jan. 30, 1954. He was preceded
in death by his lather, Charles
C. Marcinko.
Surviving are hts mother,
Mrs. Vena Marccinko, Rl. I,
Minersville; three sis ters ,
Cha rlotte Marcinko and
Charmame Marcmko, both of
Minersville, and Mrs. Charlene

Mmcrsv11le, a pa:;senger in the

Marcinko car, was fi rst taken
to
Veterans
Memorial
Hosptlal. then later tra nsferred to Hol1.er Medical
Center .

He was hsted today at Holzer
Medic~]

Center m cr iti ca l

condilton su lfenng multiple
lacerations and abrasion s and

fr actures of the left arm and
left leg
Gai ner. hts wile, Phyllis, and
son, Lee, age 11. were taken to
Vet..rans Memonai Hospital,
Robert E. Steffel and Ruth
Steffel, both of Shade, who,
along with Richards, were
taken to Veterans Memoria l

:i:
::::
::!:'

::::

t

By HELEN THOMAS
UP! White House Reporter
WASHINGTON (UPI)-Prestdent F.otd is re~xamirung U..S.
policy in the Middle East as a
result of the breakdown of
Arab-Israeli peace imtiatives,
but there is no imminent
danger of war in the area,congressional leaders said
today.
"Geneva will be the next
step, and will be much more
difficult," Senate Democratic
leader Mike Mansfteld told
reporters following an hour
and a hall White House
meeting.
Ford arranged the meeting
with Secretary of :::tate Henry
A. Kissinger and Democratic

and Republican congressional
leaders followmg the breakdown of Kissmger's shuttle
diplomacy in the Mideast. The
Mideast question now apparently will go to peace talks
m Geneva.
"It's my understanding there
will be a re-&lt;"xamination and
reassessment of the U.S. policy
in the Middle East," Mansfield
satd.
He added that the White
was
House
meeting
"depressing and disappoin ting
because of the lack of success
on the part of Secretary
Kisstnger, whose efforts we
fully support. "
Mansfield said that his expression of disappointment on

By United Press International
Middle East tension rose
today with the collapse of
Secretary of State Henry A.
Kissinger's peace mission.
Syrian army un its held
military exercises with live
arrununitmn , Egypt warned of
new warfare and there was a
flareup of ltghtmg on the

Traffic in
•
weapons IS
endangered
BANGKOK, Thailand (UP!)
- Pfime Mimster Kukrit
Pramoj threatened today to
halt the U.S. atrhlt of arms
fr om Thatland to Cambodia but
said hwnanilarian aid would
continue.

the grimness of the situation ·
renected the views of both
Ford and Kissinger.
In an unusual While House
press center briefing which
diplaye d th e congressional
bipartisanship toward the Middle East, Mansfield was joined
by Speaker Carl Albert, Senate
Republican leader Hugh Scott
and House GOP leader John J .
Rhodes in expressing total
support for Kissinger and his
efforts.
Durmg his 16-&lt;lay shuttle,
Kissinger tried to secure from
Egy pt a nonbelhgeren cy

agreement in return for Israeli
withdrawal from the key
military mountain passes in

the Sinai and the Egyptian oil
field , alt 'of which Israel
conquered in 1967.
Scott said "we ought not to
assess blame" when asked
whtch side had caused the
failure.
"There was no feeling of
despair that war was imminent ," Rhodes said of the
tone of the White House
meeting.
He said the question now is
"where do we go from here."

:;:;:;:;:;::::::::::::::=:::::::::=:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~::::::::=:::::::::

of Christ was bra ken in to . It

Holzer improvements financed

also is located in -Bedford
Township.
Taken were three fire extinguishers, a large fan and

from own ftmds, not grants

Tension rising
Lebanese border.
In Washington, where Kissmger returned Sunday mght,
American officials said danger
of war in the Middle East this
year has increased and that
U.S. liifluence in the Arab
world suffered a major setback
at expense of the Soviet Umon.
They said this was Kissinge r's last trip and they did not
expect any more shuttle diplomacy.

The Meigs County sheriff's
department was busy over the
weekend inves tiga tin g an
alleged armed robbery Sunday
at 9:45a.m.
Sheriff Robert C. Hartenbach and Middleport Police
Chief J . J . Cremeans investigated the incident.
It was reported that Harry
Donald Smith, 68, Coal St. ,
Middleport, was at a local
tavern when three men pulled
a gun on him, drove him to
Poulin Hill where he was left
and robbed of between $45 and
150.
The Sheriff's' Dept. also
reported it is investigating four
brealdngs and enterings.
Some time Sunday the Clyde
E. White Store located in
Bedford Township on SR 681
was broken into and nwnerous
grocery items taken. A padlock
· was broken off the door to gam
entrance. It is believed to have
occurred some time Sunday
morning.
Some time Saturday night
the Bearwallow Ridge Church

•
d
,
e
we
revl
'I

COLUMBUS - A report Sunday that State Health
Director Dr. John Ackerman had approved more than $10
million worth of projects for Improvements In 10 Ohio
hospitals, medieal centers and nuning homes, Including
$201,000 for Holzer Medical Center, referred to Holzer
Medical Center Foundation mouey, not money granted to
HMC by state or federal agencies.
The approval was for Holzer Medieal Center to spend
$167,000 for replacement of x-ray equlpmeut for routine
fluoroscopy and dlaguostic radiology, and another $34,000 to
purchase a mammaography uult and for leasing of a
xeroradiography unit.

UTILITY'S NET OFF
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP! ) Despite an Improved fourth
quarter, net income of the
Colwnbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Co., Colwnbus, Ohio,
fell from $25.86 million in 1973
to $21.06 million last year.
Earnings per share dropped
from $2.97 to $2.04. Operating
revenues were up to $188.59
million last year from $158.45
milhon in 1973.

In Jerusalem, Israeli Prime

Mimster Yitzhak Rabin went
before the Knesset (parliament ) to explain why
Kissmger's 15-day effort to gel
a
new
dtse ngagement
agreement between Israel and

• I

Property
taken from
mobile home
LETART, W.Va. -A Letart
family returned home from
church Sunday morning to find
property valued at U63
missing when someone had
entered through the front door,
which had been left unlocked.
Oscar Grimm told Sgt.
Plants of the Mason County
Sheriff's Dept. that several
things from his traller home
were missing, including a gold
watch, money, tape recorder, a
coat, and a suitcase with
valuable papers.
The trailer home, located
just off Sand Hill Road, was
ransacked throughout. The
incident is still under Investigation.
In a crime report, state
pollee are investigating a case
of alleged rape in Mason
County Saturday riight.
Cpl. J. L. Fitzwater, who
heads the Point Pleasant
detachment, said the complaint was made by a 14-year
old girl. No arrest had been
made by 10 a.m. today.

Mrs. Jay (Jean) Warner,
widely known Pomeroy
resident, of 102. Legion
Terrace, died early Monday
morning at Veterans Memorial '
Hospital.
Mrs. Warren, visiUng at the
home of an aunt, Miss Lydia
Ebersbach, Mulberry Ave.,
Sunday evening, suffered a fall
when a porch railing broke and
Mrs. Warner fell some flve or
six feel to the ground. She was
taken· to Veterans Memorial
Hospital by the Pomeroy E-R
squad at 7:19p.m. The body is
at the Ewing Funeral Home
where arrangements are being
made.
''

'

\

sweeper, and desk drawers had
been ransacked.
A breaking and ent..rlng was
reported at Salem Center
Elementary School some Ume
Sunday night and at Gilbert
and Terry's Grocery on SR 7
below Hobson. Officers are
investigating the last two
reported breaking and enterings today.
The depart~ent
also
reported that due to high water
SR 124 in Rutland Is ClO!Ied, SR
143 from SR 7 to the Athens line
and SR 681 from US 33 to SR
692.
.

Mrs. Jay Wamer
died on Monday

Egypt broke down. Israeli
troops on alert were patrolling
the Lebanese border.
Government sources in
Damascus said Syr~an army
units have completed military
exercises -their third this
month -using live ammunition
in mock attacks on "fortified

"We don •t support the arms
shtpment, but the airlift for
food and other necesstlles must enemy positions . ~~
The exercises • were super: .
~w enforcement ag~ncies in southwe~ern Ida~o and the l-.........go on, for hum!:!nitanan rea;
vtsed
by army chtef of staff Lt.
FBI lii Butte, Mont., demed they were lookmg for Miss Hearst son " he told newsmen . "Th is
Gen.
Hikmat
Chehabi.
near Boise. Police spokesmen in Ada and Payete counties in we ~upport."
'
Palestine Liberation OrganiKukrit
whose gove rn Idabo said they had no knowledge of the report. "If she was in or
' was
mstalled zation chairman Vasser Arafat
rwnored to be in Idaho I wouldn 't be here today," said Charles J. ment
lilepherd, a~ting ~gent in ch'l"ge of the FBI office in Salt Lake only last week said the flew from Damascus to Cairo
Clty.AgentsmBotseandSanFranClSoodeclinedcomment.
Foreign Ministry will take to attend a meeting of Arab
up measures to check whether Foreign Ministers and PalesATHENS, GA. -TWO NETWORK NEWSMEN who covered arms are ·hidden among the tinian sources said with the
failure of Kissinger's mission
the Wat..-gate scandal as it unfolded last year and a woman supplies.
.
strained
relations between
investigative report..- will receive television's equivalent of the
"We wtll check the supplies
Pulitzer Prize - the "Peabody Award"- May 7. The University whether arms are hidilen Egypt and the Palestinians
.
of Georgia Sunday announced the selection of Carl Stenn of NBC among other thmgs. We will may unprove.
andFredGrahamofCBS,along with Marilyn Baker of KPIX-TV have a l&lt;llk (with the Ameri- Conversely, it would mean a
as 1974 winners of the awards.
cans ) about it and I believe coo lmg off of warm U.S.The judges cited Stern and Graham for enterprising that some dtstussion has been Egyptian relations.
Differences developed \:Jecoverage of a !'national crisis," presumably Watergate, and done already," Kukrit said
tween
Egypt and the PLtl
Miss Baker won the award for investigative reporting she dtd
recently followmg PLO critiwhile on the news staff ofKQED-Tv, Sari Francisco. NBC board
ASK TOWED
cism of Egyptian support for
chairman Julian Goodman was cited for "outstanding work in
' Hardman Dugan Grimes , Kissinger 's step-by-step apthe area of first amendment rilmts and privileges for broadJr., 22, Middleport, and Willie proach to tile Middle East
Continued' on page tO
Lou Harris. 22, Middleport
cris1s.

Frederick, Long Bottom; a
grandmother, Mrs. Verneda
Hartung, Mineraville, and a
nwnber of aunts, uncles, nieces
and nephews.
Mr. Marcmko was a 1972
gradua te of Eastern High
School.
Funeral services will be held
at II a. m. Wednesday at the
Ewing Funeral Home with the
Rev. Father , Paul Welton officiatmg. Rosary services will
be held at 8:30 p. m. Wednesday at the funeral home
where fnends may call at
anytime. Burial will be in Our
Lady of Loretta Cemetery near
Long Bottom.

Crime wave
hits Meigs

treated and released .
In the Richards ' car were

:::::::::::::::=::::::::::::;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::·

BELLE, W.VA.- OHIO GRAND DRAGON Dale Reusch
says the Ku Klux Klan will bold a two-day rally here Friday and
Saturday to recruit new members.
Reusch, a KKK candidate for president in 1976, said youths
15 and over will be sought as members and "women are also
allowed to join ." He called the rally a "major offensive to prove
that the Klan will be established in the state with support of the
Klan nationwide. "

#259- Regular Long line
Reg. $8.95' Now $7.95'

BRAS

was not 1njured.
The Marcinko car was

1

DEATH CAR - This twisted ball of metal that once upon
a time was an automoblle, was the death chamber of Charles
A. Marcinko, Rt. I, Mmersville Saturday night. It was towed
to a used ca r lot on Locust St., that mght where it attracted
crowds of curious people all day Sunday.

•

# 293-3/ 4 Length Longline,
Tricot Straps Reg. $9.95'
Now$8.95'

SEOEMS.
Paul Runyon, 32, Rt. I,

Hnspil&lt;li and admitted. Gary
Sebert, who was in the fourth
car damaged in lhe accident,

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

By United Press International
PHNOM PENH - THE UNITED S'J)ATES resumed its airlift
of food, fuel and ammunition to the besieged Cambodian capital
today after a three-day suspension because of increasingly accurate rebel rocket attacks. Government troops reported
retaking lpst ground around Plmom Penh's defense perimeter,
but Cambodian leaders stepped up pressure on President Lon
No! to resign for the good of the country.
Two civilian'fliloted American cargo planes landed at
Phnom Penh's Pochentong Airport this morning, resuming the
massive airlift that has kept the besieged city alive. Rebel
gunners ringing the airport fired a barrage of 15 rockets at
Pochenton earlier in the morning, killing four government
soldiers and wounding 10.

# 132- Comfort Styled!
Reg. $6.95' ' Now $5.95'

U. S. ~3.
The Meigs Co unty Shenff 's
Dep t. said Marctnko wa&gt;
traveling north at an apparen t
htgh ra te of speed when his car
rammed q1e rear of a car
dr1ven by Argell F Gamer, 50,
Rt. 3, Pomeroy , c aus 1ng
Gainer's car to tum over on 1ts
top Marc111ko 's car went left of
cen te r where it struck a car
dnven by Howard James
Rtcha•·ds , Jr ., 26, Canton ,

scene A wrecker and fire truck
were needed to pull the ear
apart tu remove the body

DA NANG, South Vietnam (UPIJ - Communist troops. and iank&amp; swept over TJlm Ky
province capital south of Da Nang iri a four-hour
blitzkrieg today, cutting South Vietnam in two.
Military sources said the former imperial
capital of Hue was under heavy attack and
nonessential troops were ordered out of the city's
walled Citadel for evacuation by sea .
In Saigon, authorities reactivated the
Capital Military District and placed 20,000 troops
within a 15-mile perimeter to guard against
possible Communist assault, military sources
said.
Officers said Communist assaults began
shortly after dawn at Tam Ky, 40 miles south of
Da Nang, and within four hours, North Vietnamese troops were in total control of the city of

SAVE $1.00 ON THESE
UVING"' STRETCH BRAS

and 01' 1 R Pickens, coroner ,
the Pomeroy E-R squad and

on its left side whereupon
another car , driven by Gary M.
Sebert. 25, Addtson , traveling
south, struck it .
The victim was dead at the

57,000.

SAVE $1.50 WHEN YOU BUY TWO
CROSS YOUR HEARr"BRAS.

Town ship , four and ·eight
t.enLhs of a uule from SR 7 and

headon . RlChards' car was
spWl around and tm·ned over

in half by Commrmists

Save up to $2.00 on these great Playtex· .,~...,.c:

15 CENTS

One dead,5 injured
in four-car crash

SO IT WAS, in the early days of the
Forest Service!

The Department of Natural allow~
surface
mining
Resources ' Division of operations which produce less
Reclamation adopted the rules than one-sixth the total
to ensure public safety, protect 'production in coal to come
property bordering surface under the surface mine law
mming
operations
and rather than the Ohio Strip Mine
guarantee that reclamatiqn Law. The strip mine Jaw
standards are met, based on regulates coal strip mining.
planned future uses of mining
Procedural rules on how to
areas.
apply for surface mining
Rules governing incidental permits under the Ohio Surface
coal mining also will go into Mine~walreadyareineffect.
effect Monday. This category
Dtvtston representahves will
meet
with
industry

Five or the last 17 Misa
America winners had the ·
mtddle name Ann or Anne.

PHONE 992-2156

MONDAY. MARCH 24, 1975

hands and applauded, and It went right
over their heads. Sarcasm they didn't
get. They thought the guy meant it, and
the more thay applauded the madder he
got. They don 't know yet what he was
trying to do to them.

ELBERFELD$ IN POMERbY

ment.

The Blue Fleet is the
tradt!IOnal Sea Explormg wtth
advancement program and the
dress blue un iform. This
particular area began back in
1912 and is still active today
with 1ts Sllil and power boats .
The White Fleet is the ship
interested in boating or sa1ling ,
but following the advancement
program. This fleet may adopt
a special uniform or jack~t or
some other kind of group
identity .
The Red Fleet is mterested m

VOL. XXVI

Surface mine law goes into effect on Monday

gr oup 's par ticu lar environ-

Organ, Drums, Guitar

PH. 992·3629

cerns of the next generation of
c1tizens.
Tommy Thomason, Sea
Exp iormg Commadore for the
Trt-State Area Counctl, said
Sea Explonng 1s based on
water related acttvthes and
has been a major part of youth
ctrclcs lor the last 50 years.
The program includes sailing,
power boating , canoe ing,
boahng safety and oth er
related areas. Thomason
explained that the Sea Ex.ploring program offers adults,
males and females, a variety of
programs and achvities that
meet the challenges and enthusiasm of today 's world.
The program 1s divtded into
three areas known as fleets to
allow the program to be conducted in a variety of phases
that lend themselves to the

enttne

Cloudy, colder tornght and
Tuesday. Lows in the upper
30s. Highs Tuesday in the 50s.
Probabtlity of precipitation 80
per cent today, 20 per cent
tomght, 10 per cent Tuesday.

here."
He laid it on , and they clapped their

Sea Exploring program
in Tri-State explained

For

AT .THE

We ran into a spot fire alongside the
road and so we got out and put it out.
Then when we got back on our horses
and started off and beyond the road a
little ways here was another one. So we
had one of those bugs in front of us
setting fires, and he was setting them
as fast as we could put them out.
Chappel, after the second one, had
had enough of that and said,; 'l'll go up
and catch that you-know-what, and I'll
stop that business." So he went on
ahead.
I put. the fire out and got on my
horse and rode along and in a little
ways I found Chappel lighting another
fire. The guy had us over a barrel and
no argwnent about it. We couldn't leave
those fires, and so we had to stop and
put them out, and he just made more
than we could put out fast enough to
catch up wtth him. We never did see
him. Towards the end Chappel's idea
was that the best way to take that guy in
was ever a horse - dead.
He was mad enough to shoot him II
he could have ever caught up with him.
But that country down there
believed in that. The general idea of
burning the woods in the spring was to
make the grass better for the cows,
which we didn't think it did do . It just
made it more visible, and that's all. In
th'e process of doing that they burned
off all the reproduction and scarred up
those white oak trees down there that
we used to make whiskey barrelS, and
generally caused trouble all around. We
had a tough job in our hands trying to
educate those people to the fact that
that was not the thing to do.

+++

HUNTINGTON - Sea Exploring ts a program lor htgh
school age yo uth des1gned by
Insurance Compani es
the Exploring DtvisiOn of the
HornaOfflces: Bloon1l naton,llllnols
• Boy Scouts of America to meet
the needs, desires. and

TO
ENTERTAIN
YOU

..

Arkansas.

TWENTY YEARS AGO, from the files of the Daily Tribune
and weekly Gallia Times ... Dr. John Baker, Ohio University
president, named guest speaker for annual Gallipolis Chamber
of Commerce meeting ... Jerry Evans, GAHS senior, to receive
state awa rd for outstanding efforts in 4-H Junior Leadership
work .. . Twenty-three GAHS baseball candidates report to Coach
Dick Shrider.

STATE

I_F'E-;r._fl

:·.:

we've got 1t tough: indind1ary fires ,

ttmber theft, tight budgets and not
enough time to accomplish all that ·
needs doing.
. It helps put thmgs lii perspective
when we can look mto the hfe of one of
tpe piOneer rangers m forestry. In this
case , R P. Johnson, htred on with the
nedgling U. S. Forest Service in 1908,
barely three years after the Forest
Servtce was born Wtth the spring fire
season upon us, hts recollectiOns about
fire control m Arkansas (about 1910)
are especially appropnate. He wrote:
There I was also introduced to one
ol the problems the Forest Service still .
has m that country and that is ftre. You
know down where they burn the woods
in the spnng and I was there in the
spring, brother . lfought ftre down !here
and worked harder than I had ever
worked before in my life, and I think
accomplished less
But we had Lincoln's btrthday, the
IOOth anmversary of Lincoln's birthday, the one smgle time in the 50 years
that I have been in the Forest Service
that Lincoln's birthday was a national
holiday. What did f do' I fought fire all
day.
Then I came back in and had "fry"
and soda biscUits- soda biscuits so full
of soda they were yellow. The "fry" is
pork cooked up in a pan and it floats
around. · You spear it, grease and all,
and it tasted good .
Well, we started back to Hot
Springs, Ark., which was the
headquarters, Chappel and I. He had a
Luger pistol with him; I didn't have a
gun. We were riding along figuring
what we would do when we got into Hot

They had a big meeting in which
they were protesting against the Forest
Service work and they wanted to get the
Forest Service abolished, and it was so
important they they (the Forest Service 1told some of us to go . I was one· of
them that went to this meeting. It was
run by the edt tor of a small paper there ,
and the Forest Service sent a man from
Albuquerque. He came out there to
make a speech to the people to try to
help educate them on this fire business.
Well, they got up there and they were
ranting and raving along the lines that
you used to hear during World War II
when Hitler was on the radio, about the
Forest Service and what we were .
Finally, the leader got up and he
said, "Now I recommend that we give
the Forest Service two minutes to speak
and two minutes only."
This man had come all the way
from Albuquerque to make a speech.
He had It all prepared, typed out, and in
his hand, and he went up there. He was
redheaded and his face was as red as
his hair, and he was the maddest man.
"He got up and said he had
prepared this speech, laid it out, said,
"Here it is, and I'm not going to do it.
What I'm going to do is talk to you
people here. I have always heard of the
hospitality of the South.! have heard of
the wonderful courtesy of you people

Now You Know

TREASURER SWORN - George CoDins, ·right, Tuppers Plains, began hiB dutieS as the
new Meigs County Treasurer today. Collins, a Republican, was appointed recently by the
Republican Central Comd.ittee to fill the unexpired term of Howard frank who became county
auditor earlier this month. There are three years remaining in Frank's unexpired term. Collins
lS receiving the oath/of office from M'eigs County Common Pleas Judge John C. Bacot]. •
•it
--

.

ROADS CLOSED
,
1be Neigs County Higltway
Dept. ~ ~ - roads
clCIIIed llllB morning due to bl8h
water. They were &amp;ute 124 in
Rutland and l..anglvjlle, Route
143, and Route 681 between
~Utes 33 ,d 692.
"f'

'

�3- The Daily Selllmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday. March 24, 1975
Sentmel, M1ddleoort-Pomerov. 0 . Monda) t M•rch 21, 1975

I

"Gracious! That's not fit for your ears!"

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Ralph Novak

Editorial comment,

Big 3 announce
$9,500 rebates

opinion, features

I

Educating for success
Educa twnal theoraes are a dune a dozen, but occaswnally one (Omes .tlong lh&lt;~t deserves better
than Lhe f1le-cmd-forget treatment
Thr rc\oluuonarv program broached recently by one eduratm wuuld mo1 e 01 less take readmg
\.\Titmg and 'nthm£.t1c out of th e elementary school and defer them unul grade 6 0 1 7 The maJor

purpose of !he elementary years would be to proVIde the background necessary for success at the
tnterme&lt;ltate level, which m tur..n would prepare students fo r ulttmate success 1n h1gh school
' It's better to arrave at the JUmor htgh level hktng a subject such as science wtthout knowl!lg a

ternblc lot &lt;~bout 1t.

sa~ s W1lham D

Rohwer Jr ol\he Umvers1t~ o[ Ca hforma, Berkeley

As 1t 1s nO\\ half or more of the students m schoo l, Irrespecti ve of race, do not reall} rece1ve an
educatiOn, he says The 1nam miSSion of public educatiOn today , he chll rges 1s select JOn - identi fying

persons who are and who are not talent ed - rather than educatmg all
F.1r from causmg general alarm.tndJVId ual mequa hlles m schoo hn,; area sow cc of :seeu Jlty f01
our behef m the vahdity of the procedures of sc hoC~hn g, ' he si:lys · Tims the sa d p1 os pt'Ct IS tlwt
Wli('SS \H' abandon our comnutm ent to the use of the schools as a maJor deVlce for se parating tht•

more from the less talented, fai lure will contmue to be the fate of millions of ch1ld1 en ·
In Hohwcr"s school, the elemental) curnculum ~ ould be desig ned to aff01 d children repeated
ex.penences of what n ork IS hke and what success 10 school work 1s hke Instru ctiOn would not be .1
mandatory, across-the-board reqmrement m the case or readmg , antlunellc, lan gua ge a rts, soctal

studies, science or any other subject, although It would be avw lable accordmg to Ihe students chOI&lt;c
and readiness 1t would be the task of the mtermediate school, not the elemental y school, to look &lt;&gt; fler
formal mandatory mstruc\Ion m these sk11ls and dlSciphnes
'All of the learnmg necessary For success m meetmg h1gh sc hool demands can be acco mpli shed
m on ly h\Oor three years - the JUnior htgh school yea rs,' say::~ Rolm er Dclaymg the beg mmn g or
prescrtbed mstructton until those years holds promtse for man y chtldren of mcreasmg the ultimate

degree or academic success they can a chteve'
Rohwer 's tdea may not have all the answers But when we reflect on how many chtldl en bcgm
school w1lh great eagerness, only to be turned off - somellmes permanently - from lem mng, It has
to be adm itted that somethmg ISfundaniCntally wrong with the time-honOi ed way of domg thmgs

DR. LAMB

Reader keeps losing weight

Fischer-Karpov: a chess lesson
Bobby Fischer has , qwteappropnately, until Aprlll to avoid makmg a fool of himself Agmn
On that day, Fischer's resignation as world chess champiOn "'ll become ef[ectrve and bmchn•
and w11l automallcally go lo Russoa's Anatoly Karpov, unless F1sher has ag reed to play Karpov m
the scheduled title mat ch In Manila
Fisher refuses because of a mtp1ck1ng difference over the ru les woth FIDE , the InternatiOna l
Chess ~'ederat10n
Everybody else m the world wants the match to mntonue unlll one playe r has won 10 games, but
with !he senes lumted to 36 games In the event of a 9-9 toe, the IItle would rcmam with the defender
Fischer's dema nds are Identical, except that he wants no lumt on the number of ga mes pl&lt;r)ed
Of such nonsense are mternatlonal crises made In the world of chessdom
F'or th1s, FIScher renounced the lltle he won from Bons Spassky m Hekjavik m 1912, wh ere most
t\mcncans hrst heard about thts strange fellow wtth the erratic behavtor but forgave Ius anttcs
because of his gemus (or perhaps because of the novelty of 11 ali i.
John McCaru1, president of U S Chess Masters, has sent the followmg tcleg rmn to F1schci
"OUr members and I urge you to reconsodcr and to play Karpov Your bnlhant accomplishments
would bc:.eflt our nat1on, expec1ally during the present clunate of sports and pohllcal &lt;~ Cllvity between the U S and U S S R It Is vital that you agam contnbute to Amen ca 's supremacy and thereby
beneftt the natlon's youth . The mfluence that your favorable action would have ts unmeasW"able

Conversely.It would be wasteful to abdicate your t1tle smce you have perse\cred too long and hard
for 1! "
Fischer is expected to Ignore the plea, and therefrom may flow a grea ter benefit to th e nallon s
youth than another Foscher contributiOn to America's "supremacy ·
Th ts ts the lesson that tf yo u persJst m behavmg hke a perfed ass, sooner or later, no nuttter hov.
brollwnt you may be, you have to take the consequences

By Lawrcm·c E. Lamb, M.D
can affect your abilit y to ab·
DEAH DR LAMB - I had so1b v1 tamm B-12 and m that
some tests £01 nausea and the case permcwus anemta may
tes ts show I do not have enough develop, reqwrmg B-12 shots
CH'Id an my system The doctor
Taking the usual amounl of B·
seem s to be at at l oss to kn ow 12 by mouth will not solve the
hO\\ to tre,11 my condition He problem I presume that you

have some excess gas when

has tn cd scvc1 almedtcmes but
!o no dVat l

be assocta ted wtth nausea

become accustomed to eatmg

"Have you got a dime?'

I ha"e tn ed Metamucil
whtch see ms to g1ve some

Your problem may be [rom
your colon , and the story o[
ge ttin g some relief fr om
MelanlUCI I 1s suggestiVe of
this the MeUimucii provides
bulk wh ich you should be
ge ttmg from a p1 opel d1et
Dlverllculosls. or pockels on
Ihe colon usually mean the

A good sow ce of bulk 1s the
11 hole ce1eal gro up m'llde from
11 hea t The brans and shredded

days are with us again

1eilef

I he X r a} tes ts show

on ly the dtvertlculosJs
I m un a soft diet and a
supplcmcnlai y dtet, but 1 m
los1ng \\ Ctght I have lost 20

po1mds and on\) 11eigh 93
pounds no''
I' m ve ry
nuserablc wtlh tlus cond1hon

wheat are good examples You

might start yow program with
usmg real \\hol e wheat bread
a nd avotding sugar and
pi oducls made with wht te
fl our I don t mean brown

bread sometunes sold as whole
REAH HEADER - ll 1s problem wi th bowel functiOn , wheat bread and s1mply
fdlrly comnwn f01 people to whether or nol they have colored, but the real thmg

have decrel.lscd amow1ts of

ac1d m the stomach after age
50 Often 11 IS not associated
with any symptoms at all It

person has had

lon g~s 1an dmg

1ecogmzed 1t Spastic colon as a made from 100 per cent whole
common accompammcnt of wheat flour and not half whole
d1vertJculosas
"heat and h•lf while now

Many people first learn they
ray because the conditiOn may

Quote/Unquote
Disarmament: Who's
fooling whom?

What people
are saying .. _

ly
WASHINGTON - (NEA I - When the current $10 nulllor
budget for the U S Arms Control and Disarmament Agency wa!
discussed In Congress last sprmg, toght-llsled Rep. H R Gros•
rose to group that taxpayen had for 199 long been ~_pe~dmg
money for weapons limitation they were not gett1ng It s the
b1ggest fraud in the world "
As was usual when the now-retired Gross grumbled . there was
w uncomfortable rmg of reality to his rhetoric The $100 milbon
&gt;r more spent for the ACDA over the years - 11 was created m
\963 - has been about as effective as spitting mto the wmd
l'here·s been precious htUe arms control, and no dasarmament
Actually, weapons probferalion has burgeoned almost out of
llope of control dur1ng ACDA 's lifetime Trade m conventional
weaponry has ballooned over 500 per cent m the last decade to as
much as $18 b1lhon annually As for nuclear arms, at least two
nations (Chma, India), and possibly three (Israel) , have added
•uch to their arsenals smce 1963, and 25 others now are thought
ootentlals The Umted States alone has stockpoled enough nuclear
Yms m the last 12 years to create 615.000 H1roSh1mas, and the
total world atom1c capab1hty Is now sa1d to equal IS tons of TNT
lor every hvlng bemg
The reason lor all th1s is obvious Nations would rather mulbpy than subtract guns And so when something as the ACDA IS
armed 11 Is eyewash a conscience-easing speck of hyperbole m
&gt;verall pohcy Says a veteran agency watcher "Of course their
110 mlihon IS a waste They can't do anything with It To be effeclve, they need a thousand times that budget How the hell else
:an they sta nd up to the Pentagon, the arms ondustry ad

"I don't know what mamage
IS I have no odea Mamage has
nothmg to do With a manwoman relat10nsh1p '
-Ex·Bealle Joha Lennon, say·
lag in an Interview lhal he aad
his wile Yoko Ono are "'sort of
separated but equal and
together "
"For an mstitution of higher
education to focus on fiscal con·
cerns IS always hazardous and
we must guard agamst thm
becommg preoccupations and
turmng mto obsess1ons OUr
1a.usearn1
ftrsl obhgation IS to rematn sen·
Occasionally, the ACDA does try to stand up - to be blown Sitive to the pnmacy of our
town by tlle breath of what dlplomaLs call the greater good When educallonal miSSIOn "
ormer Defense Secretary Melvm Laird dec1ded the agency's an- -Dr. Frank P. Plskor. pres!·
lUal report on arms trade was embarrassing to the U S peace dent of St. Lawreace Ualvenily
mage, the publication was landmlned. When R1chard Noxon oa college ald.
lec~ded some ACDA actions were, good grief. genuinely designed
"You have to defend your
:o hnut arms, he fired the director ' transferred every top official enem~es m order to defend your
1nd cut the budget by half Over the years, the lesson has been
:lear . ACDA IS to be seen, but not acknowledged Even now the fnends I thmk most peop1e
ed"
have come to accept that non·
lgency head describes his boss, Jerry Ford, as " mterest
m dlscrlmmation 15 the heart of
1rmC! control, not " womed'" or even "concerned" but merely
•
hberly "
'interested
..
There seems no doubt the present director of ACDA, former -Roger Baldwlll. founder of
;octal scientist Fred Ikle (pronounced "Eclay'' ). would w1sh h1s the Amerlcu Civil Uberties
lresldent interested enough to do something about 11 Shy, qUiet, Union apoa bls list blr!Way ·
almOI!t estheUc, lkle appears genuinely distressed by a world
"Whatever cho1ce the United
With 22-mllllon men under arms, and a U S that ranks No 1 on Stales makes m deciding where
tile globe m nuUtary spending, but No 13 m mfant mortality In its grain should go, 11 will
recent weeks, m fact, he has been quietly lobbyong woth the become a whipping boy among
1111blic, by speech and mtervlew, to develop a new sense of arms those who cons1der themselves
qency.
left out or given only short
lkle has adopted the mausp1c1ous fret that the spread of arms shrift."
and arms technology IS moVIng the world to the br~nk of calam1-Excerpted from IH CIA's
ty. C1Ung the nuclear menace, as so many have cited belpre, he report "Poleetlal lmpllcadou
worries about the nation's ability to cope with what seems now to of Treads Ia World Pop.lalloa,
bo;. the definite prospect of suJ).naUonal nuclear pqwers What II, Food Prododioll aad Climate."
be asks, a terrorist group bwlds a bomb and detonates 11 in
" What 1 expect is tballnflaCbicago? "How are we going to apply our theories of mutual Uon will drive aU the Western
deterrence, what good then would our missiles and bombers do?" countries 1nto a planned
Fred lkle believes the populaUon IS beading qwckly to the day economy VII price controls
when everyone wakes up toaak, "How did this happen•" When 1t p le wllllmd they can't live
does, be adds as an understatement, "The world will change for ,. wf.lr constantly rising pnces
the worst." can 11 ~ avoided' lkle says It can, maybe But not and Will try to control it by
With an ACDA as a toything. Arms control as window dressing , pr~ce controls aad tbat of
may not be the world's biggest fraud, HR., but it is certainly the
'"nC!t

~crlru

course IS th e en d of the mar ket
system and the end of the free
political order
It may still
take 10 years, but that doesn't
matter much for me because 10
10 years I hope I shall be dead "
- Friedrich A von Hayek, 1974
Nobtl Prizewinner In
economics, in an !Juervlew.
''Most of us m the coven were

from the male Left We were
hipple ·dlpp!e w1th yipple
politics We were militantguerrolla onented We d1d less
ronsciOusness raismg than we

should have "
- Radical femlnlsl Robin
Morgan, founder of WITCH Women's lntenallonal
Terrorist Conspiracy from Hell
- explaining wb.y tbe "motber

coven" In New York folded.
' Sprinkler systems cost
about the same as carpetong
but the former os a necess1ty
the latter a luxury Unfortunately. desogners seem to
look upon sprmkler systems
and carpeting the other way
around where necess1ty and

Il IS a bit d1ff1cult to say thiS Is
your problem Gall bladder
disease and other cond11Ions
also cause nausea A more
detailed h1story of you r
symptoms " ould help
Meanwh ile I would quest10n
the ~se of a soft die t for anv one
with un co mplicat ed d1ver·
licul osis or spashc colon So
often m our culture these
cond1t10ns are the result of a
d~et devoid of bulk , par
tocul arlyce realfiber IIIsa big
change fr om th e old

By Umted Press International
Today Is Monday, March 24,
the 83rd day of 1975 with 282 to
follow
The moon IS approachmg 1ts
full phase
The

mormng

stars

are

Mercury, Mars and Jupiter
The evemng stars are Venus

and Saturn
Those born on this date are
under \he s1gn of Aries
US Treasury Secretary Andrew Mellon was born March
managemen t of dJVerhculos Js, 24, 1855
On thiS day m h1story
but m marl) cases Il Is Ihe
In 1902, one of the earhest
change th at produces the
results
"advtce to the lovelorn'' coFor more detailed 10- lwnn:; rece1ved Uus queshon
formation on daverttculosas, · Can tw o pe ople hve as
wr1I e Io me at P 0 Box 1551. comfor tably as one on $12 a
Rad1o C1ty Stallon, New York, week? ' The answer 'We do
N Y 10019 and ask for the not approve of marnage on a
booklet on diverticuloSIS Be fmanctal bas1s '
In 1934, the Umted SUites
sure to enclose 50 cents and a
long self-addressed, stamped gran ted the Ph1hppme Islands
mdependence to become erfecenvelope.
A large number o[ people ~ve July 4. 1946
I

Berry's World
--r

-wny don1 WE try thiS

"Excuse me," the old fellow
blushed, )) but, wen, have you

got a dune?"
The second man produced
the 'change
murmured, addmg, by way of
explanatiOn "! only had a $10

1 he Almanac

luxury are concerned."
-Charles S. Morgaa, presl-

deat of the Nalloaal Fire
Protection Assn , saying the
danger of fires in high-rise
buildings would be less if tile
slates had laws requlrlag
sprlnklen.
"! hnd 11 sad that producers
and actors are so wllhng to sell
out for money Money Is a big
power 1n Ibis country
Selfishness IS a strong human
characterlsUc. And Its awfully
easy 10 the entertamment field
to talk yourself into justifying
the deg!'adlng things you do."
- AciHII Katbarille Hephua
oa movies Mil monll.

By JOHN LESAR
Umted Press International
A distressed-looking elderly
man emerged from the men's
room
at
New
York's
LaGuardia Airport and
searched the eyes of the crowd
After a moment, he Bi&gt;'
proached another man

"Thanks," the older man

cause no symptoms that have
really bcthered the pattent. So

role reversa l' busmess. and
Ill be the dommeermg one tor a wh1le

bill "

Sm1hng,
he
ambled
gratefully toward the men 's
room
Such dilemma&gt;, some
legislators feel, should be a
thmg of the past on the Land of
the Free Women 's nghts
gro ups have made the pay
toilet a symbol of sex1st
opress10n,
saymg they
discrumnate agrunst women
But 1f the efforts of small
bands of crusaders are realized, pay toilets, hke nickelodeons. could become just
another bll of nostalgic
Americana .

Chicago pwneered the dr1ve
to ban the pay toilet. The
contraptions were outlawed m
the Wmdy City tn 1973.

N

RICHFIEW, Ohio (UP!) There's a little doubt tn my
'lllind regarding tonight's fight,
very little, about as much as
there IS m Muhammad Ali's,
Chuck Wepner's and yours
Nothmg IS sure, 100 per cent
flat-&lt;Jut guaranteed, and !bat
j!Oes double in something like
professional liSt-lighting where
thm-skmned, bull-necked ~
year-&lt;~ld Chuck Wepner could
bring m a right hand from left
field somewhere, lay one of
All's eyes wide open and watch
somebody else bleed lor a
change. There's no law anywhere stipulaljng that can't
happen.
It ISn't very likely to, though
Prunarily m for a pay day,
the best one of hiS life, slow
movmg, truckllke Chuck
Wepner could come out of all
th1s
w1th
the
world
heavyweight title, but there is
the same likelihood of this
happening as there IS of Ali
retlrmg after this f1ght to
satiSfy h1s lifelong ambition of
playmg goahe for the
Philadelplua Flyers.
Carried away, perhaps, by a
$700 bet he made on himself at
10 to 1 odds, Wepner has sa1d
this IS gomg to be "a gang
war," creating the unpression
he '11 be usmg all the devices m
the ring tonight he has been
working on in traming, such as
the rabbit punch, the kidney
punch and the short, straight
butt to the head Words, words,
words Generally when a man
mtends domg something along
these lines, when he's serious
about it, he usually keeps his
mtentlon IAl himself.
Ali also has gone on record
with some statemenLs of his

u

own.
He says he isn't going to
shoot for Wepner's face, and if
he hasn't already forgotten by
this time, when he signed lor
this fight, he also sa1d he was
going to be "a rope lighter"
agam, meanmg he mtends to
lay back up agamst the ropes,
allow Wepner to pWlch himself
out the same way George
Foreman did, and then,
presumably, step in and
deliver what the old Broadway
fight crowd used to call "da
coop da grass."
Ali says a lot of things he
forgets convemently when he
fmds 1t gettmg a httle
overheated m the kitchen.
Maybe he won't go for Wet&gt;ner's face for awhile like he

·-

Kenefick, who lobb1ed for,_
ChiCago's pay-toilet ban, "but: •
11 was really an 1ssue. We .
called 1t the 'Pay as you go .o
plan' and pointed out that some "
people JUSt couldn't keep up,"
w1th the payments."
.c
In California, a bill bannmg ·'
pay toilets was s1gned mto law ~"
last year
The law was authored by 1 ,

Assemblywoman March Fong, .:
now california secretary of _
state, who had argued that pay "
toilets were "discrUlllnatory on
agamst women "
Florida also has banned pay
toilets.
Similar legislation won over-:whelmmg support m the New':.
Mex1m House of Representatives, but was killed by the
Senate
Such leglslatl&lt;mlS pending m •
more than a dozen other states. 111
Marne State Rep. Raymond .. J
Faucher has authored a bill to ::
har pay IAllleLs in his state,
saymg the r~ght to "pursue life, ,.
liberty and happmess without "•
paymg a dime" should be "
among the fWldamental rights
of all Marne citizens.
'
"H the Creator had meant "
folks to use pay toilets," " •
Faucher sa1d, "they'd have

ByWLTONRICHMAN
UPI Sports Editor

:X·&gt;

"
"
"It sounds odd," smd Earl ,

I

JACKSONVILLE, Fla.
(UP!) - You can't blame
Larry Ziegler for bemg a little
bit cautious about that $30,000
check he got for wmnmg the
Greater Jacksonville Open.
But Ziegler really was only
kidding when he said, "! have
my check, but I haven 'I taken
it to the bank yet."
It's not that Ziegler really
doubts that the check is good.
It's just that the only other
time he ever won a
professional golf IAlurnament,
the sponsors didn't have
enough money left to pay him
off.

1u

Scientists on track
of
efficient
weed
killer
ways to reduce the vast
By BERNARD BRENNER
UPI Farm Editor
WASHINGTON (UP! ) Government sc1enbsts are on
the track of a discovery that
could greatly ease the natwn's
$5 biU10n a year weed problem,
!he Agriculture Department
says
OffiCials said stud1es by-Drs
Raymond B Taylorson and
Sterling B Hendricks have
1dentof1ed several compoWlds
that may be useful m mducmg
weed seeds to germinate at
times when they can be easily
w1ped out by man or nature
Weeds trad1t10nally have
been costly
pests 10
agriculture, as well as lor
homeowners Farmers and
ranchers currently spend vast
amounts of money applying
weed-control chemicals to
more than 160 million acres
annually, about 50 per cent of
the nation's harvest crop
acreage
These control efforts, widespread as they are, don~klll all
the weeds. The total weed bill,
mcluding the cost of controls
and the damage done by weeds
that Slii'VIVe, is about $5lillion
a year, a speCialist said.
"the need lor extensive
controls could be reduced if
SCientists succeed on findmg

quantity of weed seeds m the
soli The trick IS to get all the
weed seeds to germmate at the
same t1me.,Then, cold weather
would zap them or a Stngle
application of a herb1c1de
would finish them off," a

•

~
..•....

says, and I'm sure he 'll lay
hack up agamst the ropes
agam 11 he becomes tired, but if
he's ever

tn

any serious

trouble, he'll try anything he
can, even untymg Wepner's
shoelaces
He shouldn't have to because
Wepner 1sn ' t that accomplished a boxer to cause
him any great problems.
The only possoble problem
lor All could be Wepner's nght
hand, and that coupled w1th the
fact he 1s 12 pounds overweight, obv10usly not m the
best shape, and hasn't tramed
particularly well, conceivably
m1ght cause him a lew amuous
moments.
The b1gger. a man geLs
aroWld the stomach, the less
effective he os tn so many
regards He can't get around or

do thmgs as easoly as he used
to, and he gets !Ired qmcker.
No matter how loud and long
he talks trymg to gloss over 11,
no matter how much he tr1es
covermg up the fact, Ah was a
very weary ondiv1dual m his
l1ght With Foreman m Zaore.
He was almost as tored as
Foreman, and that's why he
sought refuge tn the ropes. He
managed to outlast Foreman
and beat him, but there were
times 10 that l1ght, a number of
times, when 11 looked hke the
smartest thing he could do
after the f1ght, wm or lose, was
hang up hiS gloves lor good.
There 1s not nearly the old
bounce in Ali's legs there used
to be, and nobody knows that
more than he does.
Wepner has noticed it, too,
and says he's gomg to take
advantage of that I doubt he'll
be able to because he ISn't
exactly a zephyr himself out
there. When Chuck Wepner
gets to huffmg and puffmg, all6
leet5 and 225 pounds of him, he
looks and sounds remarkably
like the No. llocomollve on the
old Rock Island ltne struggl10g
to make 1t up grade
Chuck Wepner has had this
dream where he knocks out
Muhammad Ali m the 13th. It's
a mce dream, but that's all1t
IS, a dream, because the bght
w1ll never go !3 rounds
Six, seven, at most ts the waY
I see 1t
After which, Ali woll flU m the
rest of the aor tune Jettmg
everybody know once more he
IS
"the g~r-e-a-t-u-s-t "
Wherever you are, make sure
you're listening, Joe Bugner.

••
••
..

•
••

report added.
Spokesmen said Taylorson
and Hendricks, experimenting •
With SilVera! compounds JreVIously shown capable of waking
weeds from dormancy, have
found how the process works. :
The test compqunds inactivate •
a seed chem1cal, catalase,
which maintams dormancy
•
"The discovery of the basic ',
mechanism by which (the test
:
compqund) works to stimulate , , ~
germination gives promise for · ~
field use of thiS p:mc1ple,"
Taylorson SBld.
Experiments so far have
involved artificially stimulated
germmation of dormant pigweed Md lettuce seeds. Yet, , ,
more studies are needed to • •
'•·
deternrlne if the process works
as well mother types of plants,
~
off1cals said.
~
Taylol'9Jn added, however, ... :
there haS' already been "some 1n •
corroborative evidence" the " :
new studies may be leading to " . :
a practical improvement in ...!
weed controls.

.,

STARTING
TONIGHT
GALLIPOLIS
EASTER
FESTIVAL
AT

SilVER BRIDGE PLAZA
GAU.JPOUS, OHIO

BIG

THOMAS
JOYlAND SHOWS
RIDES

50

SHOWS

Special discount on all
rides from 1 p .m. til 6
p.m. each day. Fun tor
young &amp; old.

winner In
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
53rd State H1gh School Basketball Tournament will go down
as one of the most exc1tmg m
history.
Seven of the mne games tn
the three days of act10n, mcluding all three of Saturday's
champiOnship contests, were
settled by live pomts or less
Two of the IItie games, Marla
Stem Manon Local's 59-56 wm
over Indian Valley South m
Class A and Warsaw R1ver
V1ew's 77-72 VIctory over
Dayton Silvers m Class AA,
went mto overtime
The Class AAA championship went to Columbus
Lmden McKmley, a 77-72
wmner over
Cleveland
He1ghts, but the Panthers led
by only three pmnts with 17
seconds remunmg
For IJndell : the Cinderella
team of the AM tournament, 11
was the second big-school IItle
m the last nme years,
McKinley havmg won m 1967
when there were only tv. o
classes.
End Regular Seasoo 10-8
The Panthers of first-year
coach Jene Dav1s cut a laney
swath through the tournament
for a team wh1ch ended the
regular season woth a 10-8
record. That mark was somewhat miSleading, however, m
that they had won 13 of their
last 15 games gomg mto the
semifmals
Linden brought a lli-11 mark
mto the tournament, the e1ght
losses bemg four tunes the
number of the other three
teams combmed
The last three teams Linden
played m tournament acllon,
Newark m the fmals of the
Columbus RegiOnal, and

Kettering Alter and Cleveland
Heights m the State Tournament, had a combmed
record of 69-J
Dav1s, who had smd pr10r to
the tournament that the games
his team lost In December and
January were meamngless ,
was apologe ll c abo ut h1s
team's play
" We ca n pia) better
basketball th an we did
out the re tomgh t," sa1d
the Otterbein College g1 actuate
'They
(Heights)
for ced us to make a lot of
mostakes It's hard to play well
agaiiiSt them , they gamble so
much

Allen Nabs 11 ReboWlds
"We d1dn't get the ball to
1Napoleon) Allen enoogh m the
first half, " sa1d DaVIs The 6-1
Allen scored 17 pomts, led both
teams w1th 11 rebounds and
was named the AM tournament' s Most Valuable
Player He had 20 pomLs m the
semtfmals wm and scored the

wmnmg basket w1th 17 seconds
remauung

L1ttle (5-8) Todd Penn paced
the Panthers m scormg w1th 21
pomts, hitting eight of 12 shoLs
from the floor , mostly on his
patented dnvmg layup shots
He1ghts ' guards, Uoyd and
M1ke Franklin and Regg1e
Hannah, kept the T1gers m the
game Uoyd was the top scorer
w1th 24 pomLs, while brother
M1ke had 14 and Hannah got 11,
all m the second half
Linden never trailed after
Allen broke a 45-all he w1th a
pa1r of baskets late tn the thord
quarter The Panthers led by
rune pomts on two occastons m
the fourth quarter and by e1ght
w1th 54 seconds to go.

tit e c ase

M,m on Local, which had

buued top•anked Mansfield
St Peter's In Thursday mght's
Class A seomlmals, almost fell
vu.: hm to coach Charley Hu ggms' magic 1n lts victory over

. Both Manon Local and J,
dian Valley South have ex-

Tourney box scores.

cellent chances of makmg It
back for another VlSit next

MARION LOCAL .59

)em

Mar1on has only one semor
the Hebels
starter m Brunswick and only
Huggh1s Most Valuable
h\O semors on 1ts roster
Trallmg by SIX pomts w1th 34 Huggms only had one :semor on
seconds rema mmg, IVS ca me Ius entu e squad
back to be the score on a
'We JUst go t beat," 1s the
basket by 6-2 Harry Huggons, way Stivers coach Earl
Charley's son. w1th JUSt e~ght Johnson explamed hiS team's
seconds remammg to send the loss to H1ver VIew • A good
game m to overhme
team beat another good temn "
Young Huggms, who scored
Johnson had sllrred up QUite
30 pomts m the losmg effort, a fuss among the R1ver VIew
was named the A tournament fans after Friday's semifmals
MVP
by saying he would eat St John
Marwn Local suffered a blow Arena "bnck by bnck " if his
when Its IHi Steve Hartmgs, Tigers did not wm the AA
who scored 15 pomts m the f1rst crown
half and 2llor the game, fouled They almost did, behmd the
out w1th seven mmutes left. sharpshootmg of tMi Frankie
R1ck Brunswick a nd Jeff Sanders and G-O Enc Sutton,
Luebke p1cked up the scorong but the Black Hears caught
load for the Flyers, however, them at 611-all on a basket by
who won on three free throws John W1lhatns with 44 seconds
m the overtune by Luebke
lo play, sending the game mto
"It was a great effort on our overtime
kids ' part," sa1d MariOn coach
No Subs lor Warsaw
Irv Besecker "I know 11
Wilhams , voted the AA
seemed they had more pmse tournament MVP, and Enc
and confidence than we did, but Budendorf earned the Bears In
1t's hard to beat Charley the second half. The 6-6
Hugg1ns.''
Budendorf scored 17 of hiS 20
Huggms,
bringmg
h1s pomts m the second hall.
IVS
tea'Tl
to
the Williams totaled 25
state tournam ent for the
"We set out to try to stop
fourth stra1ght year, was Sutton and Sanders, but those
disappomted his team failed to guys were fantastic," saod
wm 11 after gomg mto over- R1ver View's Walt Harrop,
lime. "! thought we would wm United Press Internallonal's
1t " he sa1d
Ohio high school AA Coach of
'
Could
Return Next Year
the Year "We weren't too
"The b1g boy (Hartmgs ) successful m that respect, but
killed us m the first half," we won u
Hugg1ns sa1d, "and Brunswick
Harrop used only five
did a super JOb m the second players m the game, the first
lime the whole season he had
half "

INDIAN VALLEY SOUT H S6
' roc ker 0 (0 OJ 0 Brown 1 ( 0

Ul 'l

Huggm s

Me t 1qer 010 11 0 To tal s 10 ( HI
{]) ~6
MM on Local 14 a 15 17 5 59
l nd ran Va ll ey South

F ouled out

were great "

The Wildcats w1ll now be
tested against the luck of
Syracuse, wh1ch took ~d­
vantage of a foul-plagued
Kansas State team m overtune
to post a 95-87 overtune victory
m the East Regwnals at
ProVIdence, R.I.
"Up there, somebody must
love us because someone has
g1 ven us another chance to
wm," smd Syracuse Coach Roy
Danforth after Rudy Hackett's
basket at the buzzer enabled
the Orangemen to send the
game into overtune at 76-76
Kansas State meniAlr Jack
Hartman complamed that
Hackett was walkmg before
the shot, but h1s protest was to
no avail and the fouliJlagued
Wildcats quickly fell behmd on
11 pomts by Syracuse guards
Jim Lee and Jim Wllllams
Syracuse had also been the
benelicoary of favorable
referee10g m 118 78-76 upset wm
over North Carolina 10 the
regiOnal semifmals. Lee's
JUmper with three seconds left
was the clmch10g basket, but

the refs mossed a foul by the
Orange's Dave Parker agamst
the Tar Heels' John Kuester,
which would have g1ven North
Carolina a one-and-&lt;~ne
But no foul was called and
later the ref apologized to
Kuester "'! blew 11 "
Danforth, with that lucky
streak go10g for him, satd
be(ore knoWing h1s opponent
would be Kentucky: "I don 't
care who we play m San D1ego,
whether 1t's the Celllcs or the
Lakers "
UCLA, out at the West
Reg10nals in Portland, Ore ,
had trouble gettfng past Montana m the regiOnal semifinals
and was extended to overtime
m 1ts first•ound game agamst
Mich1gan a week earlier But
w1th Marques Johnson pourong
m 35 pomts from insode and
outs1de, the Bruons easily
topped AriZona State, 89-75.
"That
UCLA
Intangible. that you can't put
your fmger on . did 1!," sa1d
Arizona State Coach Ned Wulk

CLEVELA ND HEIGHTS72
Sack 4 ( 1 1l 9 Dalton 3 (0 OJ
6 Ca rman 1 (0 OJ 2 Hannah S
! I 21 11 L F rankl in 8 {8 1 1) 24,
Abrams '2 {0 l l 4, M Frankl in 7
W OJ 14 Turn er l (0 OJ 2 To lals
) I ! 10 IS) 72

10 ( 10 10 ) 30

Leni r. 6 (J 41 15 K oh l 0 10 OJ 0
D,ly l (Q I )? Bond 2( 11 ) 5
Jlh~ rr ll lO I I 0
Rot h 0 {~ 4) 7

l rngs

12 9 \3 20 2- 56
St ocke r
H ar

B r tm sw rc k

Tolil l l ou is

Ma r on Loca l 21 lndran Va ll ey
Sortll :n A 13 939

DAYTON STIVERS 12
Br e nl 3 I I 31 7 Sa n ders 14 D
Sl 3 1 Postway Q (0 01 0 S nger
I I J Sl 17 Su tlon 10 (0 OJ 70
L CW IS I 10 1 ) '2 Tola ls 3'2 (8 14)

LINDEN MCKINLEY 77
Love 4 {3 5) I I Bryant I ( 4 81
6 A llen 5 (7 8J 17 Owen s 3 (55)
II Penn 8 (59) 2 1 Wil liam s 1
(5 61 7 Shepherd 1 ('2 3) 4
To tal s 23 ( 31 44 l n
Cl eve land Her ghts

20 25 10 27 - 72

l.. mden M cK 1nl ey
21 14 16 26- 77
F ouled
ou t
Hannah ,
Ab ra ms M
Franklin Total
loui s
Cl eve land Heights 30 ,
lln d e nM cK ml e y20 A 12, 178

"

WARSAW RIVER VIEW 17
Moyer 2 (2 21 6 As h c rall 5 (4
I I II Budendort 6 (8 Ill 20 ,
Kanuckel 6 10 OJ 12 W •l l1am s 8

19 Il l 25

To t a ls 27 123 281 77

Dayton Sliv er s 17 16 16 19 4-72
Warsaw Rver Vrew
20 13 18 17 9- 77
Fou l ed ou t Postway Lew1 s
To tal fou ls Ot~ylon St1vers 22
Warsaw R 1\ler V ew 14 A

gone wunout a substitute
''I felt we were m better
shape," he sa1d m explalnmg
his not using the bench, "and if
we stayed with the first team
they would have to stay with
theirs and we m1ght wear them
down a bit. I don't know
whether it worked or not "
Sanders, a f~rst.team AllOhiO selectiOn, put on a
spectacular show, hittmg 32
pomts m the sem1fmals and
commg back w1th 31 m the
fmals. He also had 17 rebounds
Saturday Sutton scored 20
pomts m the finals

auto claim service
wherever you drive.

Steve Snowden
1258 Powell St.
Middleport

PH. 992-7155
like • good
netghbor
Stale Farm
IS there.

p

•

71109 ------~

Frank Sisty

TRIO
Organ, Drums, Guitar

NITET.Y
TUES., WED, THURS , 8:30·1·00
FRI. &amp; SAT .. 9.30-2•00

The Brums, seekmg their
lOth NCM IItle m 12 years,

broke the Sun Devils' full-court
press, with Johnson hitltng 20
pomts m the forst half and
Rochard Washington contributing most of his 16 polnLs
at the begmmng of the second
half as UCLA took a 6040 lead.

TO ENTERTAIN YOU AT

THE MEIGS INN

POMEROY

PH. 992 -3629

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praclicaiiy eve rythmg So why not
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tl! ea m::;'!
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"&lt;el aslll&lt;' from yo ur paycheck and
used tu buy US Savmgs Bonds
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you 'II get a little ncher e\l ery payday.
So donate part of your paycheck to
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GALLIPOLIS

1503 Eastern Ave

,_

lNIUIANCI

cn1ov the Dis1inctive
of the ...

"It 18 tournament experience.

Brg She!
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Turnover &amp;
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ADULT MEAL

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13 498

Ov er m.1n 0 (6'ilJ 6 Luebke J
! 6 81 I ? Harltnqs 9 D 4 ) 2 1
Prc nq er 0 ll -l l I R u rn swrck 6
( 1 71 13 Ponlman 1 (1 21 J
Hart ng o ! O :no T ol&lt;1l s 19 (2 1
1 1 I 59

Stage set for 1975
NCAA championship

By JACK SAUNDERS
UPI Sports Writer
Kentucky, self-styled by
Coach Joe Hall as havmg
"played a great basketball
game" wh1le "Indiana played
a good basketball game," beat
top•anked and preVIously undefeated Indoana, 92-90, Saturday m the NCM M1deast
Reglonals sem1fmals at
Daylon, Ohio.
•
The lourth•anked Wildcats
held off a furious comeback
attempt by the Hoosiers to end
Indiana's 34-game wmmng
The 3f&gt;.year-&lt;~ld St. Lows streak. Trailing, 119-111, w1th
native has won two tourna- 1:42 remaimng, !ndl8!la pulled
ments m a decade on the PGA to wtthm 92-90 w1th 14 seconds
tour. The first was the 1969 left. But, after Kentucky's
Michigan Classic- and that Junmy Dan Conner m1ssed a
was the one that ran out of free throw with one second on
money
the clock, the Hoos1ers' Kent
Ziegler eventually got his Benson, who grabbed the
money, from the general funds rebound, nussed a desperation
of the PGA's Tournament court-long shot.
Players DivlSlon, not the
Mike Flynn led a balanced
Michigan Class1c, but he Kentucky attack with 22 points,
wasn't to return to the wtnner's while Conner and Kevm
c1rcle agam for nearly six Grevey added '17 ap1ece and
years
M1ke Phillips and R1ck Robey
That return took place here ch1pped m with 10 each
Sunday when Ziegler capitalHenson was the game's h1gh
ized on a 25-foot eagle chip shot scorer with 33 points and Steve
to post a flnal.;ound 65 that tied Green added 21 for Indiana.
the course record and wound
The game was not played
up w1th a 12-underiJar 276 that peacefully. Early m the second
gave him a two..shot VIctory hall, a f1st fight nearly broke
over co-runnersup Mac out over a fight for a reboWld
McLendon and Mike Morley. and a battle abnost erupted
Ziegler did not move mto the over Indiana's fouling of
lead SWlday until he sank a :!!&gt;- Conner With one second left.
foot bord1e putt at No'l3 to go 9
"! could tell we were gomg to
under for the to~rnament. He wm," said Hall. "Our strategy
made a 3l).foot bordie putt tv,oo was to go for that early shot
holes later but Morley .)lung..ln-.-. and get it before Indiana set up
there one stroke behmd:---"
the or good half-court 'pressure
Then came No. 16, a 57!&gt;-yard sag' defense
dogleg left.
"Indiana was good but we
Ziegler, one of the longer
'
hitters on the tour despite the right tune," and h1s wife,
weighing in at only 1~. h1t his s1tlmg near by, shook her head
driver and a three-wood to put m agreement. "We Jus! bought
the ball just off the fringe of the a new home m St. Louos and
green, 25 feet from the cup. He were wondermg bow we could
chipped it up, and m, and had a make the first payment."
tw~roke lead
Palmer and a half dozen
Morley got his second others, 10cludmg Ziegler and
straight birdie at 15 and was on Morley, were aU knotted up at 8
the green m 2atl6, needmg two under nudway through~ Sun­
putts to Ue. But Morley three- day's final round. But Palmer,
putted, then bogeyed 18 to wmd 45, and winless in more than
up m a tie lor second, worth two years, took a double bogey
$13,875, With McLendon who 6 at 13 and another bogey at 17
birdied three of the last five to wind up back in the pack
boles
with 7!&gt;-284.
"I'm not that disappointed,"
Jack NICklaus, Johnny
S81d Morley who never fmished Miller, Lee Trevmo, and Gary
higher before than SlXth at Player d1d not play m
Quad Cities last year. "Missmg Jacks&lt;inville The current "big
!hat lour-foot birdie putt at !6 four " IS expected to be reumted
this week at the Her1tage
didn't help, though."
Ziegler, who•had won a little ClaSSic at Hilton Head, S C.,
more than $11,000 thos year where Player will return from
before Sunday, sa1d that South Afr1ca to make •ls 1975 U.
$30,000 "Is really commg m at S. debut.

Ziegler GJO wmn er

been born w1th d1mes or ,:.
quarters m theor hands."
--

I

I

!I

By Ralph Novak
Look out behind you • There IS a bog fat elephant sneakmg up IAl
squort you w1th a trunkful of water (April Fool 1 )
•
The Arabs have ra1sed od pr1ces again and now gas will cost
about $23 a gallon But Saud1 Arabia IS offermg spec1al dlSCoonl
coupons to those American families which send over theor f1rsl
born to work as hour-glass follers aor conditioner repairmen and
camel hops at dr1ve-m restaura~ts. (April Fool 1 )
A network telev1soon sports spectacular show 1s plannmg
Sports Superstar Noncompetltlon w1th D1ck Allen, Bill Walton
and Duane Thomas compebng to see who can s1t and do nothlne
for the longest time (April Fool' )
All the major American car manufacturers have announced
that they will give $9,500 rebates w1th every new car purchased
Th1s was followed by an announcement that the pr1ces of all new
cars were gomg up $10,000 (April Fool')
Cher Bono will appear on the covers of forthcommg 1ssues, of
"Popular Mechan1cs" "Foreign Affairs Quarterly," "Jack and
Joll," "Christian Century," "The Sporhng News" and
"Psychology Today " (April Fool' I
Henry K1ssmger has dec1ded IAl res1gn as Secretary of State and
begm a new career m show busoness, starting w1th a starring role
as the host of an afternoon TV qUiz show, "Medlat1o~
Sweepstakes " (April Fool 1 I
South V1etnam has asked the Umted States for a spec1al
emergency grant of $7~ 37 so they can have theor detailed hst of
fore1gn a1d requests prmted up and bound for submiSSion to,
Congress (April Fool')
All the states woll soon pass laws requiring that couples wan,
tmg to get marned must hve together beforehand for at least a,
year and then subm1t proof that they are compabble before a,
license wlll be ossued D1vorces, however, will be granted IAl
anyone who pays a $2 fee and f1lls out th~ requored form (April
Fool' 1
•
Johnny Carson has announced that there are no possoble poten-.
tial guests who have not already appeared on h1s show 25 times
and no poss1ble potential JOkes he has not already told on h1s show .
25 times so he 1s qwtting (April Fool')
_
The CIA has revealed that 11 has done an lnvesbgat1on of 1tself
and found 11 has done nothmg useful for the country In the last 49
years and has dec1ded to begm usmg 1ts resources to study the:
natiOn's economic problems. (April Fool')
Arthur Haoley's new novelos go10g to be called "Gunk " (April"
Fool'!
•
1\11 of the much-&lt;hscussed potential DemocratiC pres1denbal ,
candidates for 1976 have stated they are dropping out of the racew
10 order to promote the campaign of an obscure small town .
school teacher whose only qualification lor the nommat10n os that.,
he would make a good president (April Fool')
Look out behmd you 1 There probably isn't really a big fat ·
elephant sneakmg up to sqUirt you w1th a trunkful of water th1s "
time, e1ther, but thmgs bemg what they are these days, you can't"
be too sure ( )
"

they start usmg a bulkd1et woth
ce1 eat Th1s w1ll last abcut
Ihree weeks when the dtgesllve
system rs adjusting to a more
normal diet, mstead of the
refined nour , suga r and bulk·
don't have anenua , but tl can less food so many people have

have daverhculosts from an X

Tom Tiede

,

•

,I.,

�3- The Daily Selllmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday. March 24, 1975
Sentmel, M1ddleoort-Pomerov. 0 . Monda) t M•rch 21, 1975

I

"Gracious! That's not fit for your ears!"

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Ralph Novak

Editorial comment,

Big 3 announce
$9,500 rebates

opinion, features

I

Educating for success
Educa twnal theoraes are a dune a dozen, but occaswnally one (Omes .tlong lh&lt;~t deserves better
than Lhe f1le-cmd-forget treatment
Thr rc\oluuonarv program broached recently by one eduratm wuuld mo1 e 01 less take readmg
\.\Titmg and 'nthm£.t1c out of th e elementary school and defer them unul grade 6 0 1 7 The maJor

purpose of !he elementary years would be to proVIde the background necessary for success at the
tnterme&lt;ltate level, which m tur..n would prepare students fo r ulttmate success 1n h1gh school
' It's better to arrave at the JUmor htgh level hktng a subject such as science wtthout knowl!lg a

ternblc lot &lt;~bout 1t.

sa~ s W1lham D

Rohwer Jr ol\he Umvers1t~ o[ Ca hforma, Berkeley

As 1t 1s nO\\ half or more of the students m schoo l, Irrespecti ve of race, do not reall} rece1ve an
educatiOn, he says The 1nam miSSion of public educatiOn today , he chll rges 1s select JOn - identi fying

persons who are and who are not talent ed - rather than educatmg all
F.1r from causmg general alarm.tndJVId ual mequa hlles m schoo hn,; area sow cc of :seeu Jlty f01
our behef m the vahdity of the procedures of sc hoC~hn g, ' he si:lys · Tims the sa d p1 os pt'Ct IS tlwt
Wli('SS \H' abandon our comnutm ent to the use of the schools as a maJor deVlce for se parating tht•

more from the less talented, fai lure will contmue to be the fate of millions of ch1ld1 en ·
In Hohwcr"s school, the elemental) curnculum ~ ould be desig ned to aff01 d children repeated
ex.penences of what n ork IS hke and what success 10 school work 1s hke Instru ctiOn would not be .1
mandatory, across-the-board reqmrement m the case or readmg , antlunellc, lan gua ge a rts, soctal

studies, science or any other subject, although It would be avw lable accordmg to Ihe students chOI&lt;c
and readiness 1t would be the task of the mtermediate school, not the elemental y school, to look &lt;&gt; fler
formal mandatory mstruc\Ion m these sk11ls and dlSciphnes
'All of the learnmg necessary For success m meetmg h1gh sc hool demands can be acco mpli shed
m on ly h\Oor three years - the JUnior htgh school yea rs,' say::~ Rolm er Dclaymg the beg mmn g or
prescrtbed mstructton until those years holds promtse for man y chtldren of mcreasmg the ultimate

degree or academic success they can a chteve'
Rohwer 's tdea may not have all the answers But when we reflect on how many chtldl en bcgm
school w1lh great eagerness, only to be turned off - somellmes permanently - from lem mng, It has
to be adm itted that somethmg ISfundaniCntally wrong with the time-honOi ed way of domg thmgs

DR. LAMB

Reader keeps losing weight

Fischer-Karpov: a chess lesson
Bobby Fischer has , qwteappropnately, until Aprlll to avoid makmg a fool of himself Agmn
On that day, Fischer's resignation as world chess champiOn "'ll become ef[ectrve and bmchn•
and w11l automallcally go lo Russoa's Anatoly Karpov, unless F1sher has ag reed to play Karpov m
the scheduled title mat ch In Manila
Fisher refuses because of a mtp1ck1ng difference over the ru les woth FIDE , the InternatiOna l
Chess ~'ederat10n
Everybody else m the world wants the match to mntonue unlll one playe r has won 10 games, but
with !he senes lumted to 36 games In the event of a 9-9 toe, the IItle would rcmam with the defender
Fischer's dema nds are Identical, except that he wants no lumt on the number of ga mes pl&lt;r)ed
Of such nonsense are mternatlonal crises made In the world of chessdom
F'or th1s, FIScher renounced the lltle he won from Bons Spassky m Hekjavik m 1912, wh ere most
t\mcncans hrst heard about thts strange fellow wtth the erratic behavtor but forgave Ius anttcs
because of his gemus (or perhaps because of the novelty of 11 ali i.
John McCaru1, president of U S Chess Masters, has sent the followmg tcleg rmn to F1schci
"OUr members and I urge you to reconsodcr and to play Karpov Your bnlhant accomplishments
would bc:.eflt our nat1on, expec1ally during the present clunate of sports and pohllcal &lt;~ Cllvity between the U S and U S S R It Is vital that you agam contnbute to Amen ca 's supremacy and thereby
beneftt the natlon's youth . The mfluence that your favorable action would have ts unmeasW"able

Conversely.It would be wasteful to abdicate your t1tle smce you have perse\cred too long and hard
for 1! "
Fischer is expected to Ignore the plea, and therefrom may flow a grea ter benefit to th e nallon s
youth than another Foscher contributiOn to America's "supremacy ·
Th ts ts the lesson that tf yo u persJst m behavmg hke a perfed ass, sooner or later, no nuttter hov.
brollwnt you may be, you have to take the consequences

By Lawrcm·c E. Lamb, M.D
can affect your abilit y to ab·
DEAH DR LAMB - I had so1b v1 tamm B-12 and m that
some tests £01 nausea and the case permcwus anemta may
tes ts show I do not have enough develop, reqwrmg B-12 shots
CH'Id an my system The doctor
Taking the usual amounl of B·
seem s to be at at l oss to kn ow 12 by mouth will not solve the
hO\\ to tre,11 my condition He problem I presume that you

have some excess gas when

has tn cd scvc1 almedtcmes but
!o no dVat l

be assocta ted wtth nausea

become accustomed to eatmg

"Have you got a dime?'

I ha"e tn ed Metamucil
whtch see ms to g1ve some

Your problem may be [rom
your colon , and the story o[
ge ttin g some relief fr om
MelanlUCI I 1s suggestiVe of
this the MeUimucii provides
bulk wh ich you should be
ge ttmg from a p1 opel d1et
Dlverllculosls. or pockels on
Ihe colon usually mean the

A good sow ce of bulk 1s the
11 hole ce1eal gro up m'llde from
11 hea t The brans and shredded

days are with us again

1eilef

I he X r a} tes ts show

on ly the dtvertlculosJs
I m un a soft diet and a
supplcmcnlai y dtet, but 1 m
los1ng \\ Ctght I have lost 20

po1mds and on\) 11eigh 93
pounds no''
I' m ve ry
nuserablc wtlh tlus cond1hon

wheat are good examples You

might start yow program with
usmg real \\hol e wheat bread
a nd avotding sugar and
pi oducls made with wht te
fl our I don t mean brown

bread sometunes sold as whole
REAH HEADER - ll 1s problem wi th bowel functiOn , wheat bread and s1mply
fdlrly comnwn f01 people to whether or nol they have colored, but the real thmg

have decrel.lscd amow1ts of

ac1d m the stomach after age
50 Often 11 IS not associated
with any symptoms at all It

person has had

lon g~s 1an dmg

1ecogmzed 1t Spastic colon as a made from 100 per cent whole
common accompammcnt of wheat flour and not half whole
d1vertJculosas
"heat and h•lf while now

Many people first learn they
ray because the conditiOn may

Quote/Unquote
Disarmament: Who's
fooling whom?

What people
are saying .. _

ly
WASHINGTON - (NEA I - When the current $10 nulllor
budget for the U S Arms Control and Disarmament Agency wa!
discussed In Congress last sprmg, toght-llsled Rep. H R Gros•
rose to group that taxpayen had for 199 long been ~_pe~dmg
money for weapons limitation they were not gett1ng It s the
b1ggest fraud in the world "
As was usual when the now-retired Gross grumbled . there was
w uncomfortable rmg of reality to his rhetoric The $100 milbon
&gt;r more spent for the ACDA over the years - 11 was created m
\963 - has been about as effective as spitting mto the wmd
l'here·s been precious htUe arms control, and no dasarmament
Actually, weapons probferalion has burgeoned almost out of
llope of control dur1ng ACDA 's lifetime Trade m conventional
weaponry has ballooned over 500 per cent m the last decade to as
much as $18 b1lhon annually As for nuclear arms, at least two
nations (Chma, India), and possibly three (Israel) , have added
•uch to their arsenals smce 1963, and 25 others now are thought
ootentlals The Umted States alone has stockpoled enough nuclear
Yms m the last 12 years to create 615.000 H1roSh1mas, and the
total world atom1c capab1hty Is now sa1d to equal IS tons of TNT
lor every hvlng bemg
The reason lor all th1s is obvious Nations would rather mulbpy than subtract guns And so when something as the ACDA IS
armed 11 Is eyewash a conscience-easing speck of hyperbole m
&gt;verall pohcy Says a veteran agency watcher "Of course their
110 mlihon IS a waste They can't do anything with It To be effeclve, they need a thousand times that budget How the hell else
:an they sta nd up to the Pentagon, the arms ondustry ad

"I don't know what mamage
IS I have no odea Mamage has
nothmg to do With a manwoman relat10nsh1p '
-Ex·Bealle Joha Lennon, say·
lag in an Interview lhal he aad
his wile Yoko Ono are "'sort of
separated but equal and
together "
"For an mstitution of higher
education to focus on fiscal con·
cerns IS always hazardous and
we must guard agamst thm
becommg preoccupations and
turmng mto obsess1ons OUr
1a.usearn1
ftrsl obhgation IS to rematn sen·
Occasionally, the ACDA does try to stand up - to be blown Sitive to the pnmacy of our
town by tlle breath of what dlplomaLs call the greater good When educallonal miSSIOn "
ormer Defense Secretary Melvm Laird dec1ded the agency's an- -Dr. Frank P. Plskor. pres!·
lUal report on arms trade was embarrassing to the U S peace dent of St. Lawreace Ualvenily
mage, the publication was landmlned. When R1chard Noxon oa college ald.
lec~ded some ACDA actions were, good grief. genuinely designed
"You have to defend your
:o hnut arms, he fired the director ' transferred every top official enem~es m order to defend your
1nd cut the budget by half Over the years, the lesson has been
:lear . ACDA IS to be seen, but not acknowledged Even now the fnends I thmk most peop1e
ed"
have come to accept that non·
lgency head describes his boss, Jerry Ford, as " mterest
m dlscrlmmation 15 the heart of
1rmC! control, not " womed'" or even "concerned" but merely
•
hberly "
'interested
..
There seems no doubt the present director of ACDA, former -Roger Baldwlll. founder of
;octal scientist Fred Ikle (pronounced "Eclay'' ). would w1sh h1s the Amerlcu Civil Uberties
lresldent interested enough to do something about 11 Shy, qUiet, Union apoa bls list blr!Way ·
almOI!t estheUc, lkle appears genuinely distressed by a world
"Whatever cho1ce the United
With 22-mllllon men under arms, and a U S that ranks No 1 on Stales makes m deciding where
tile globe m nuUtary spending, but No 13 m mfant mortality In its grain should go, 11 will
recent weeks, m fact, he has been quietly lobbyong woth the become a whipping boy among
1111blic, by speech and mtervlew, to develop a new sense of arms those who cons1der themselves
qency.
left out or given only short
lkle has adopted the mausp1c1ous fret that the spread of arms shrift."
and arms technology IS moVIng the world to the br~nk of calam1-Excerpted from IH CIA's
ty. C1Ung the nuclear menace, as so many have cited belpre, he report "Poleetlal lmpllcadou
worries about the nation's ability to cope with what seems now to of Treads Ia World Pop.lalloa,
bo;. the definite prospect of suJ).naUonal nuclear pqwers What II, Food Prododioll aad Climate."
be asks, a terrorist group bwlds a bomb and detonates 11 in
" What 1 expect is tballnflaCbicago? "How are we going to apply our theories of mutual Uon will drive aU the Western
deterrence, what good then would our missiles and bombers do?" countries 1nto a planned
Fred lkle believes the populaUon IS beading qwckly to the day economy VII price controls
when everyone wakes up toaak, "How did this happen•" When 1t p le wllllmd they can't live
does, be adds as an understatement, "The world will change for ,. wf.lr constantly rising pnces
the worst." can 11 ~ avoided' lkle says It can, maybe But not and Will try to control it by
With an ACDA as a toything. Arms control as window dressing , pr~ce controls aad tbat of
may not be the world's biggest fraud, HR., but it is certainly the
'"nC!t

~crlru

course IS th e en d of the mar ket
system and the end of the free
political order
It may still
take 10 years, but that doesn't
matter much for me because 10
10 years I hope I shall be dead "
- Friedrich A von Hayek, 1974
Nobtl Prizewinner In
economics, in an !Juervlew.
''Most of us m the coven were

from the male Left We were
hipple ·dlpp!e w1th yipple
politics We were militantguerrolla onented We d1d less
ronsciOusness raismg than we

should have "
- Radical femlnlsl Robin
Morgan, founder of WITCH Women's lntenallonal
Terrorist Conspiracy from Hell
- explaining wb.y tbe "motber

coven" In New York folded.
' Sprinkler systems cost
about the same as carpetong
but the former os a necess1ty
the latter a luxury Unfortunately. desogners seem to
look upon sprmkler systems
and carpeting the other way
around where necess1ty and

Il IS a bit d1ff1cult to say thiS Is
your problem Gall bladder
disease and other cond11Ions
also cause nausea A more
detailed h1story of you r
symptoms " ould help
Meanwh ile I would quest10n
the ~se of a soft die t for anv one
with un co mplicat ed d1ver·
licul osis or spashc colon So
often m our culture these
cond1t10ns are the result of a
d~et devoid of bulk , par
tocul arlyce realfiber IIIsa big
change fr om th e old

By Umted Press International
Today Is Monday, March 24,
the 83rd day of 1975 with 282 to
follow
The moon IS approachmg 1ts
full phase
The

mormng

stars

are

Mercury, Mars and Jupiter
The evemng stars are Venus

and Saturn
Those born on this date are
under \he s1gn of Aries
US Treasury Secretary Andrew Mellon was born March
managemen t of dJVerhculos Js, 24, 1855
On thiS day m h1story
but m marl) cases Il Is Ihe
In 1902, one of the earhest
change th at produces the
results
"advtce to the lovelorn'' coFor more detailed 10- lwnn:; rece1ved Uus queshon
formation on daverttculosas, · Can tw o pe ople hve as
wr1I e Io me at P 0 Box 1551. comfor tably as one on $12 a
Rad1o C1ty Stallon, New York, week? ' The answer 'We do
N Y 10019 and ask for the not approve of marnage on a
booklet on diverticuloSIS Be fmanctal bas1s '
In 1934, the Umted SUites
sure to enclose 50 cents and a
long self-addressed, stamped gran ted the Ph1hppme Islands
mdependence to become erfecenvelope.
A large number o[ people ~ve July 4. 1946
I

Berry's World
--r

-wny don1 WE try thiS

"Excuse me," the old fellow
blushed, )) but, wen, have you

got a dune?"
The second man produced
the 'change
murmured, addmg, by way of
explanatiOn "! only had a $10

1 he Almanac

luxury are concerned."
-Charles S. Morgaa, presl-

deat of the Nalloaal Fire
Protection Assn , saying the
danger of fires in high-rise
buildings would be less if tile
slates had laws requlrlag
sprlnklen.
"! hnd 11 sad that producers
and actors are so wllhng to sell
out for money Money Is a big
power 1n Ibis country
Selfishness IS a strong human
characterlsUc. And Its awfully
easy 10 the entertamment field
to talk yourself into justifying
the deg!'adlng things you do."
- AciHII Katbarille Hephua
oa movies Mil monll.

By JOHN LESAR
Umted Press International
A distressed-looking elderly
man emerged from the men's
room
at
New
York's
LaGuardia Airport and
searched the eyes of the crowd
After a moment, he Bi&gt;'
proached another man

"Thanks," the older man

cause no symptoms that have
really bcthered the pattent. So

role reversa l' busmess. and
Ill be the dommeermg one tor a wh1le

bill "

Sm1hng,
he
ambled
gratefully toward the men 's
room
Such dilemma&gt;, some
legislators feel, should be a
thmg of the past on the Land of
the Free Women 's nghts
gro ups have made the pay
toilet a symbol of sex1st
opress10n,
saymg they
discrumnate agrunst women
But 1f the efforts of small
bands of crusaders are realized, pay toilets, hke nickelodeons. could become just
another bll of nostalgic
Americana .

Chicago pwneered the dr1ve
to ban the pay toilet. The
contraptions were outlawed m
the Wmdy City tn 1973.

N

RICHFIEW, Ohio (UP!) There's a little doubt tn my
'lllind regarding tonight's fight,
very little, about as much as
there IS m Muhammad Ali's,
Chuck Wepner's and yours
Nothmg IS sure, 100 per cent
flat-&lt;Jut guaranteed, and !bat
j!Oes double in something like
professional liSt-lighting where
thm-skmned, bull-necked ~
year-&lt;~ld Chuck Wepner could
bring m a right hand from left
field somewhere, lay one of
All's eyes wide open and watch
somebody else bleed lor a
change. There's no law anywhere stipulaljng that can't
happen.
It ISn't very likely to, though
Prunarily m for a pay day,
the best one of hiS life, slow
movmg, truckllke Chuck
Wepner could come out of all
th1s
w1th
the
world
heavyweight title, but there is
the same likelihood of this
happening as there IS of Ali
retlrmg after this f1ght to
satiSfy h1s lifelong ambition of
playmg goahe for the
Philadelplua Flyers.
Carried away, perhaps, by a
$700 bet he made on himself at
10 to 1 odds, Wepner has sa1d
this IS gomg to be "a gang
war," creating the unpression
he '11 be usmg all the devices m
the ring tonight he has been
working on in traming, such as
the rabbit punch, the kidney
punch and the short, straight
butt to the head Words, words,
words Generally when a man
mtends domg something along
these lines, when he's serious
about it, he usually keeps his
mtentlon IAl himself.
Ali also has gone on record
with some statemenLs of his

u

own.
He says he isn't going to
shoot for Wepner's face, and if
he hasn't already forgotten by
this time, when he signed lor
this fight, he also sa1d he was
going to be "a rope lighter"
agam, meanmg he mtends to
lay back up agamst the ropes,
allow Wepner to pWlch himself
out the same way George
Foreman did, and then,
presumably, step in and
deliver what the old Broadway
fight crowd used to call "da
coop da grass."
Ali says a lot of things he
forgets convemently when he
fmds 1t gettmg a httle
overheated m the kitchen.
Maybe he won't go for Wet&gt;ner's face for awhile like he

·-

Kenefick, who lobb1ed for,_
ChiCago's pay-toilet ban, "but: •
11 was really an 1ssue. We .
called 1t the 'Pay as you go .o
plan' and pointed out that some "
people JUSt couldn't keep up,"
w1th the payments."
.c
In California, a bill bannmg ·'
pay toilets was s1gned mto law ~"
last year
The law was authored by 1 ,

Assemblywoman March Fong, .:
now california secretary of _
state, who had argued that pay "
toilets were "discrUlllnatory on
agamst women "
Florida also has banned pay
toilets.
Similar legislation won over-:whelmmg support m the New':.
Mex1m House of Representatives, but was killed by the
Senate
Such leglslatl&lt;mlS pending m •
more than a dozen other states. 111
Marne State Rep. Raymond .. J
Faucher has authored a bill to ::
har pay IAllleLs in his state,
saymg the r~ght to "pursue life, ,.
liberty and happmess without "•
paymg a dime" should be "
among the fWldamental rights
of all Marne citizens.
'
"H the Creator had meant "
folks to use pay toilets," " •
Faucher sa1d, "they'd have

ByWLTONRICHMAN
UPI Sports Editor

:X·&gt;

"
"
"It sounds odd," smd Earl ,

I

JACKSONVILLE, Fla.
(UP!) - You can't blame
Larry Ziegler for bemg a little
bit cautious about that $30,000
check he got for wmnmg the
Greater Jacksonville Open.
But Ziegler really was only
kidding when he said, "! have
my check, but I haven 'I taken
it to the bank yet."
It's not that Ziegler really
doubts that the check is good.
It's just that the only other
time he ever won a
professional golf IAlurnament,
the sponsors didn't have
enough money left to pay him
off.

1u

Scientists on track
of
efficient
weed
killer
ways to reduce the vast
By BERNARD BRENNER
UPI Farm Editor
WASHINGTON (UP! ) Government sc1enbsts are on
the track of a discovery that
could greatly ease the natwn's
$5 biU10n a year weed problem,
!he Agriculture Department
says
OffiCials said stud1es by-Drs
Raymond B Taylorson and
Sterling B Hendricks have
1dentof1ed several compoWlds
that may be useful m mducmg
weed seeds to germinate at
times when they can be easily
w1ped out by man or nature
Weeds trad1t10nally have
been costly
pests 10
agriculture, as well as lor
homeowners Farmers and
ranchers currently spend vast
amounts of money applying
weed-control chemicals to
more than 160 million acres
annually, about 50 per cent of
the nation's harvest crop
acreage
These control efforts, widespread as they are, don~klll all
the weeds. The total weed bill,
mcluding the cost of controls
and the damage done by weeds
that Slii'VIVe, is about $5lillion
a year, a speCialist said.
"the need lor extensive
controls could be reduced if
SCientists succeed on findmg

quantity of weed seeds m the
soli The trick IS to get all the
weed seeds to germmate at the
same t1me.,Then, cold weather
would zap them or a Stngle
application of a herb1c1de
would finish them off," a

•

~
..•....

says, and I'm sure he 'll lay
hack up agamst the ropes
agam 11 he becomes tired, but if
he's ever

tn

any serious

trouble, he'll try anything he
can, even untymg Wepner's
shoelaces
He shouldn't have to because
Wepner 1sn ' t that accomplished a boxer to cause
him any great problems.
The only possoble problem
lor All could be Wepner's nght
hand, and that coupled w1th the
fact he 1s 12 pounds overweight, obv10usly not m the
best shape, and hasn't tramed
particularly well, conceivably
m1ght cause him a lew amuous
moments.
The b1gger. a man geLs
aroWld the stomach, the less
effective he os tn so many
regards He can't get around or

do thmgs as easoly as he used
to, and he gets !Ired qmcker.
No matter how loud and long
he talks trymg to gloss over 11,
no matter how much he tr1es
covermg up the fact, Ah was a
very weary ondiv1dual m his
l1ght With Foreman m Zaore.
He was almost as tored as
Foreman, and that's why he
sought refuge tn the ropes. He
managed to outlast Foreman
and beat him, but there were
times 10 that l1ght, a number of
times, when 11 looked hke the
smartest thing he could do
after the f1ght, wm or lose, was
hang up hiS gloves lor good.
There 1s not nearly the old
bounce in Ali's legs there used
to be, and nobody knows that
more than he does.
Wepner has noticed it, too,
and says he's gomg to take
advantage of that I doubt he'll
be able to because he ISn't
exactly a zephyr himself out
there. When Chuck Wepner
gets to huffmg and puffmg, all6
leet5 and 225 pounds of him, he
looks and sounds remarkably
like the No. llocomollve on the
old Rock Island ltne struggl10g
to make 1t up grade
Chuck Wepner has had this
dream where he knocks out
Muhammad Ali m the 13th. It's
a mce dream, but that's all1t
IS, a dream, because the bght
w1ll never go !3 rounds
Six, seven, at most ts the waY
I see 1t
After which, Ali woll flU m the
rest of the aor tune Jettmg
everybody know once more he
IS
"the g~r-e-a-t-u-s-t "
Wherever you are, make sure
you're listening, Joe Bugner.

••
••
..

•
••

report added.
Spokesmen said Taylorson
and Hendricks, experimenting •
With SilVera! compounds JreVIously shown capable of waking
weeds from dormancy, have
found how the process works. :
The test compqunds inactivate •
a seed chem1cal, catalase,
which maintams dormancy
•
"The discovery of the basic ',
mechanism by which (the test
:
compqund) works to stimulate , , ~
germination gives promise for · ~
field use of thiS p:mc1ple,"
Taylorson SBld.
Experiments so far have
involved artificially stimulated
germmation of dormant pigweed Md lettuce seeds. Yet, , ,
more studies are needed to • •
'•·
deternrlne if the process works
as well mother types of plants,
~
off1cals said.
~
Taylol'9Jn added, however, ... :
there haS' already been "some 1n •
corroborative evidence" the " :
new studies may be leading to " . :
a practical improvement in ...!
weed controls.

.,

STARTING
TONIGHT
GALLIPOLIS
EASTER
FESTIVAL
AT

SilVER BRIDGE PLAZA
GAU.JPOUS, OHIO

BIG

THOMAS
JOYlAND SHOWS
RIDES

50

SHOWS

Special discount on all
rides from 1 p .m. til 6
p.m. each day. Fun tor
young &amp; old.

winner In
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
53rd State H1gh School Basketball Tournament will go down
as one of the most exc1tmg m
history.
Seven of the mne games tn
the three days of act10n, mcluding all three of Saturday's
champiOnship contests, were
settled by live pomts or less
Two of the IItie games, Marla
Stem Manon Local's 59-56 wm
over Indian Valley South m
Class A and Warsaw R1ver
V1ew's 77-72 VIctory over
Dayton Silvers m Class AA,
went mto overtime
The Class AAA championship went to Columbus
Lmden McKmley, a 77-72
wmner over
Cleveland
He1ghts, but the Panthers led
by only three pmnts with 17
seconds remunmg
For IJndell : the Cinderella
team of the AM tournament, 11
was the second big-school IItle
m the last nme years,
McKinley havmg won m 1967
when there were only tv. o
classes.
End Regular Seasoo 10-8
The Panthers of first-year
coach Jene Dav1s cut a laney
swath through the tournament
for a team wh1ch ended the
regular season woth a 10-8
record. That mark was somewhat miSleading, however, m
that they had won 13 of their
last 15 games gomg mto the
semifmals
Linden brought a lli-11 mark
mto the tournament, the e1ght
losses bemg four tunes the
number of the other three
teams combmed
The last three teams Linden
played m tournament acllon,
Newark m the fmals of the
Columbus RegiOnal, and

Kettering Alter and Cleveland
Heights m the State Tournament, had a combmed
record of 69-J
Dav1s, who had smd pr10r to
the tournament that the games
his team lost In December and
January were meamngless ,
was apologe ll c abo ut h1s
team's play
" We ca n pia) better
basketball th an we did
out the re tomgh t," sa1d
the Otterbein College g1 actuate
'They
(Heights)
for ced us to make a lot of
mostakes It's hard to play well
agaiiiSt them , they gamble so
much

Allen Nabs 11 ReboWlds
"We d1dn't get the ball to
1Napoleon) Allen enoogh m the
first half, " sa1d DaVIs The 6-1
Allen scored 17 pomts, led both
teams w1th 11 rebounds and
was named the AM tournament' s Most Valuable
Player He had 20 pomLs m the
semtfmals wm and scored the

wmnmg basket w1th 17 seconds
remauung

L1ttle (5-8) Todd Penn paced
the Panthers m scormg w1th 21
pomts, hitting eight of 12 shoLs
from the floor , mostly on his
patented dnvmg layup shots
He1ghts ' guards, Uoyd and
M1ke Franklin and Regg1e
Hannah, kept the T1gers m the
game Uoyd was the top scorer
w1th 24 pomLs, while brother
M1ke had 14 and Hannah got 11,
all m the second half
Linden never trailed after
Allen broke a 45-all he w1th a
pa1r of baskets late tn the thord
quarter The Panthers led by
rune pomts on two occastons m
the fourth quarter and by e1ght
w1th 54 seconds to go.

tit e c ase

M,m on Local, which had

buued top•anked Mansfield
St Peter's In Thursday mght's
Class A seomlmals, almost fell
vu.: hm to coach Charley Hu ggms' magic 1n lts victory over

. Both Manon Local and J,
dian Valley South have ex-

Tourney box scores.

cellent chances of makmg It
back for another VlSit next

MARION LOCAL .59

)em

Mar1on has only one semor
the Hebels
starter m Brunswick and only
Huggh1s Most Valuable
h\O semors on 1ts roster
Trallmg by SIX pomts w1th 34 Huggms only had one :semor on
seconds rema mmg, IVS ca me Ius entu e squad
back to be the score on a
'We JUst go t beat," 1s the
basket by 6-2 Harry Huggons, way Stivers coach Earl
Charley's son. w1th JUSt e~ght Johnson explamed hiS team's
seconds remammg to send the loss to H1ver VIew • A good
game m to overhme
team beat another good temn "
Young Huggms, who scored
Johnson had sllrred up QUite
30 pomts m the losmg effort, a fuss among the R1ver VIew
was named the A tournament fans after Friday's semifmals
MVP
by saying he would eat St John
Marwn Local suffered a blow Arena "bnck by bnck " if his
when Its IHi Steve Hartmgs, Tigers did not wm the AA
who scored 15 pomts m the f1rst crown
half and 2llor the game, fouled They almost did, behmd the
out w1th seven mmutes left. sharpshootmg of tMi Frankie
R1ck Brunswick a nd Jeff Sanders and G-O Enc Sutton,
Luebke p1cked up the scorong but the Black Hears caught
load for the Flyers, however, them at 611-all on a basket by
who won on three free throws John W1lhatns with 44 seconds
m the overtune by Luebke
lo play, sending the game mto
"It was a great effort on our overtime
kids ' part," sa1d MariOn coach
No Subs lor Warsaw
Irv Besecker "I know 11
Wilhams , voted the AA
seemed they had more pmse tournament MVP, and Enc
and confidence than we did, but Budendorf earned the Bears In
1t's hard to beat Charley the second half. The 6-6
Hugg1ns.''
Budendorf scored 17 of hiS 20
Huggms,
bringmg
h1s pomts m the second hall.
IVS
tea'Tl
to
the Williams totaled 25
state tournam ent for the
"We set out to try to stop
fourth stra1ght year, was Sutton and Sanders, but those
disappomted his team failed to guys were fantastic," saod
wm 11 after gomg mto over- R1ver View's Walt Harrop,
lime. "! thought we would wm United Press Internallonal's
1t " he sa1d
Ohio high school AA Coach of
'
Could
Return Next Year
the Year "We weren't too
"The b1g boy (Hartmgs ) successful m that respect, but
killed us m the first half," we won u
Hugg1ns sa1d, "and Brunswick
Harrop used only five
did a super JOb m the second players m the game, the first
lime the whole season he had
half "

INDIAN VALLEY SOUT H S6
' roc ker 0 (0 OJ 0 Brown 1 ( 0

Ul 'l

Huggm s

Me t 1qer 010 11 0 To tal s 10 ( HI
{]) ~6
MM on Local 14 a 15 17 5 59
l nd ran Va ll ey South

F ouled out

were great "

The Wildcats w1ll now be
tested against the luck of
Syracuse, wh1ch took ~d­
vantage of a foul-plagued
Kansas State team m overtune
to post a 95-87 overtune victory
m the East Regwnals at
ProVIdence, R.I.
"Up there, somebody must
love us because someone has
g1 ven us another chance to
wm," smd Syracuse Coach Roy
Danforth after Rudy Hackett's
basket at the buzzer enabled
the Orangemen to send the
game into overtune at 76-76
Kansas State meniAlr Jack
Hartman complamed that
Hackett was walkmg before
the shot, but h1s protest was to
no avail and the fouliJlagued
Wildcats quickly fell behmd on
11 pomts by Syracuse guards
Jim Lee and Jim Wllllams
Syracuse had also been the
benelicoary of favorable
referee10g m 118 78-76 upset wm
over North Carolina 10 the
regiOnal semifmals. Lee's
JUmper with three seconds left
was the clmch10g basket, but

the refs mossed a foul by the
Orange's Dave Parker agamst
the Tar Heels' John Kuester,
which would have g1ven North
Carolina a one-and-&lt;~ne
But no foul was called and
later the ref apologized to
Kuester "'! blew 11 "
Danforth, with that lucky
streak go10g for him, satd
be(ore knoWing h1s opponent
would be Kentucky: "I don 't
care who we play m San D1ego,
whether 1t's the Celllcs or the
Lakers "
UCLA, out at the West
Reg10nals in Portland, Ore ,
had trouble gettfng past Montana m the regiOnal semifinals
and was extended to overtime
m 1ts first•ound game agamst
Mich1gan a week earlier But
w1th Marques Johnson pourong
m 35 pomts from insode and
outs1de, the Bruons easily
topped AriZona State, 89-75.
"That
UCLA
Intangible. that you can't put
your fmger on . did 1!," sa1d
Arizona State Coach Ned Wulk

CLEVELA ND HEIGHTS72
Sack 4 ( 1 1l 9 Dalton 3 (0 OJ
6 Ca rman 1 (0 OJ 2 Hannah S
! I 21 11 L F rankl in 8 {8 1 1) 24,
Abrams '2 {0 l l 4, M Frankl in 7
W OJ 14 Turn er l (0 OJ 2 To lals
) I ! 10 IS) 72

10 ( 10 10 ) 30

Leni r. 6 (J 41 15 K oh l 0 10 OJ 0
D,ly l (Q I )? Bond 2( 11 ) 5
Jlh~ rr ll lO I I 0
Rot h 0 {~ 4) 7

l rngs

12 9 \3 20 2- 56
St ocke r
H ar

B r tm sw rc k

Tolil l l ou is

Ma r on Loca l 21 lndran Va ll ey
Sortll :n A 13 939

DAYTON STIVERS 12
Br e nl 3 I I 31 7 Sa n ders 14 D
Sl 3 1 Postway Q (0 01 0 S nger
I I J Sl 17 Su tlon 10 (0 OJ 70
L CW IS I 10 1 ) '2 Tola ls 3'2 (8 14)

LINDEN MCKINLEY 77
Love 4 {3 5) I I Bryant I ( 4 81
6 A llen 5 (7 8J 17 Owen s 3 (55)
II Penn 8 (59) 2 1 Wil liam s 1
(5 61 7 Shepherd 1 ('2 3) 4
To tal s 23 ( 31 44 l n
Cl eve land Her ghts

20 25 10 27 - 72

l.. mden M cK 1nl ey
21 14 16 26- 77
F ouled
ou t
Hannah ,
Ab ra ms M
Franklin Total
loui s
Cl eve land Heights 30 ,
lln d e nM cK ml e y20 A 12, 178

"

WARSAW RIVER VIEW 17
Moyer 2 (2 21 6 As h c rall 5 (4
I I II Budendort 6 (8 Ill 20 ,
Kanuckel 6 10 OJ 12 W •l l1am s 8

19 Il l 25

To t a ls 27 123 281 77

Dayton Sliv er s 17 16 16 19 4-72
Warsaw Rver Vrew
20 13 18 17 9- 77
Fou l ed ou t Postway Lew1 s
To tal fou ls Ot~ylon St1vers 22
Warsaw R 1\ler V ew 14 A

gone wunout a substitute
''I felt we were m better
shape," he sa1d m explalnmg
his not using the bench, "and if
we stayed with the first team
they would have to stay with
theirs and we m1ght wear them
down a bit. I don't know
whether it worked or not "
Sanders, a f~rst.team AllOhiO selectiOn, put on a
spectacular show, hittmg 32
pomts m the sem1fmals and
commg back w1th 31 m the
fmals. He also had 17 rebounds
Saturday Sutton scored 20
pomts m the finals

auto claim service
wherever you drive.

Steve Snowden
1258 Powell St.
Middleport

PH. 992-7155
like • good
netghbor
Stale Farm
IS there.

p

•

71109 ------~

Frank Sisty

TRIO
Organ, Drums, Guitar

NITET.Y
TUES., WED, THURS , 8:30·1·00
FRI. &amp; SAT .. 9.30-2•00

The Brums, seekmg their
lOth NCM IItle m 12 years,

broke the Sun Devils' full-court
press, with Johnson hitltng 20
pomts m the forst half and
Rochard Washington contributing most of his 16 polnLs
at the begmmng of the second
half as UCLA took a 6040 lead.

TO ENTERTAIN YOU AT

THE MEIGS INN

POMEROY

PH. 992 -3629

You mak e tune payments on
praclicaiiy eve rythmg So why not
make n lew on your hopes and you r
tl! ea m::;'!
·All you have to dots sign up for
the Pay roll Sa"n gs Pian whe re you
'~ u 1 k Then an amount you spec1fy
"&lt;el aslll&lt;' from yo ur paycheck and
used tu buy US Savmgs Bonds
You won't m1ss the money And
you 'II get a little ncher e\l ery payday.
So donate part of your paycheck to
th e mos t deset vmg ca use Ill the
wo rl d your future
Nuv.

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GALLIPOLIS

1503 Eastern Ave

,_

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cn1ov the Dis1inctive
of the ...

"It 18 tournament experience.

Brg She!
Reg French Fnes
Turnover &amp;
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ITAll •.t.IM

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ADULT MEAL

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13 498

Ov er m.1n 0 (6'ilJ 6 Luebke J
! 6 81 I ? Harltnqs 9 D 4 ) 2 1
Prc nq er 0 ll -l l I R u rn swrck 6
( 1 71 13 Ponlman 1 (1 21 J
Hart ng o ! O :no T ol&lt;1l s 19 (2 1
1 1 I 59

Stage set for 1975
NCAA championship

By JACK SAUNDERS
UPI Sports Writer
Kentucky, self-styled by
Coach Joe Hall as havmg
"played a great basketball
game" wh1le "Indiana played
a good basketball game," beat
top•anked and preVIously undefeated Indoana, 92-90, Saturday m the NCM M1deast
Reglonals sem1fmals at
Daylon, Ohio.
•
The lourth•anked Wildcats
held off a furious comeback
attempt by the Hoosiers to end
Indiana's 34-game wmmng
The 3f&gt;.year-&lt;~ld St. Lows streak. Trailing, 119-111, w1th
native has won two tourna- 1:42 remaimng, !ndl8!la pulled
ments m a decade on the PGA to wtthm 92-90 w1th 14 seconds
tour. The first was the 1969 left. But, after Kentucky's
Michigan Classic- and that Junmy Dan Conner m1ssed a
was the one that ran out of free throw with one second on
money
the clock, the Hoos1ers' Kent
Ziegler eventually got his Benson, who grabbed the
money, from the general funds rebound, nussed a desperation
of the PGA's Tournament court-long shot.
Players DivlSlon, not the
Mike Flynn led a balanced
Michigan Class1c, but he Kentucky attack with 22 points,
wasn't to return to the wtnner's while Conner and Kevm
c1rcle agam for nearly six Grevey added '17 ap1ece and
years
M1ke Phillips and R1ck Robey
That return took place here ch1pped m with 10 each
Sunday when Ziegler capitalHenson was the game's h1gh
ized on a 25-foot eagle chip shot scorer with 33 points and Steve
to post a flnal.;ound 65 that tied Green added 21 for Indiana.
the course record and wound
The game was not played
up w1th a 12-underiJar 276 that peacefully. Early m the second
gave him a two..shot VIctory hall, a f1st fight nearly broke
over co-runnersup Mac out over a fight for a reboWld
McLendon and Mike Morley. and a battle abnost erupted
Ziegler did not move mto the over Indiana's fouling of
lead SWlday until he sank a :!!&gt;- Conner With one second left.
foot bord1e putt at No'l3 to go 9
"! could tell we were gomg to
under for the to~rnament. He wm," said Hall. "Our strategy
made a 3l).foot bordie putt tv,oo was to go for that early shot
holes later but Morley .)lung..ln-.-. and get it before Indiana set up
there one stroke behmd:---"
the or good half-court 'pressure
Then came No. 16, a 57!&gt;-yard sag' defense
dogleg left.
"Indiana was good but we
Ziegler, one of the longer
'
hitters on the tour despite the right tune," and h1s wife,
weighing in at only 1~. h1t his s1tlmg near by, shook her head
driver and a three-wood to put m agreement. "We Jus! bought
the ball just off the fringe of the a new home m St. Louos and
green, 25 feet from the cup. He were wondermg bow we could
chipped it up, and m, and had a make the first payment."
tw~roke lead
Palmer and a half dozen
Morley got his second others, 10cludmg Ziegler and
straight birdie at 15 and was on Morley, were aU knotted up at 8
the green m 2atl6, needmg two under nudway through~ Sun­
putts to Ue. But Morley three- day's final round. But Palmer,
putted, then bogeyed 18 to wmd 45, and winless in more than
up m a tie lor second, worth two years, took a double bogey
$13,875, With McLendon who 6 at 13 and another bogey at 17
birdied three of the last five to wind up back in the pack
boles
with 7!&gt;-284.
"I'm not that disappointed,"
Jack NICklaus, Johnny
S81d Morley who never fmished Miller, Lee Trevmo, and Gary
higher before than SlXth at Player d1d not play m
Quad Cities last year. "Missmg Jacks&lt;inville The current "big
!hat lour-foot birdie putt at !6 four " IS expected to be reumted
this week at the Her1tage
didn't help, though."
Ziegler, who•had won a little ClaSSic at Hilton Head, S C.,
more than $11,000 thos year where Player will return from
before Sunday, sa1d that South Afr1ca to make •ls 1975 U.
$30,000 "Is really commg m at S. debut.

Ziegler GJO wmn er

been born w1th d1mes or ,:.
quarters m theor hands."
--

I

I

!I

By Ralph Novak
Look out behind you • There IS a bog fat elephant sneakmg up IAl
squort you w1th a trunkful of water (April Fool 1 )
•
The Arabs have ra1sed od pr1ces again and now gas will cost
about $23 a gallon But Saud1 Arabia IS offermg spec1al dlSCoonl
coupons to those American families which send over theor f1rsl
born to work as hour-glass follers aor conditioner repairmen and
camel hops at dr1ve-m restaura~ts. (April Fool 1 )
A network telev1soon sports spectacular show 1s plannmg
Sports Superstar Noncompetltlon w1th D1ck Allen, Bill Walton
and Duane Thomas compebng to see who can s1t and do nothlne
for the longest time (April Fool' )
All the major American car manufacturers have announced
that they will give $9,500 rebates w1th every new car purchased
Th1s was followed by an announcement that the pr1ces of all new
cars were gomg up $10,000 (April Fool')
Cher Bono will appear on the covers of forthcommg 1ssues, of
"Popular Mechan1cs" "Foreign Affairs Quarterly," "Jack and
Joll," "Christian Century," "The Sporhng News" and
"Psychology Today " (April Fool' I
Henry K1ssmger has dec1ded IAl res1gn as Secretary of State and
begm a new career m show busoness, starting w1th a starring role
as the host of an afternoon TV qUiz show, "Medlat1o~
Sweepstakes " (April Fool 1 I
South V1etnam has asked the Umted States for a spec1al
emergency grant of $7~ 37 so they can have theor detailed hst of
fore1gn a1d requests prmted up and bound for submiSSion to,
Congress (April Fool')
All the states woll soon pass laws requiring that couples wan,
tmg to get marned must hve together beforehand for at least a,
year and then subm1t proof that they are compabble before a,
license wlll be ossued D1vorces, however, will be granted IAl
anyone who pays a $2 fee and f1lls out th~ requored form (April
Fool' 1
•
Johnny Carson has announced that there are no possoble poten-.
tial guests who have not already appeared on h1s show 25 times
and no poss1ble potential JOkes he has not already told on h1s show .
25 times so he 1s qwtting (April Fool')
_
The CIA has revealed that 11 has done an lnvesbgat1on of 1tself
and found 11 has done nothmg useful for the country In the last 49
years and has dec1ded to begm usmg 1ts resources to study the:
natiOn's economic problems. (April Fool')
Arthur Haoley's new novelos go10g to be called "Gunk " (April"
Fool'!
•
1\11 of the much-&lt;hscussed potential DemocratiC pres1denbal ,
candidates for 1976 have stated they are dropping out of the racew
10 order to promote the campaign of an obscure small town .
school teacher whose only qualification lor the nommat10n os that.,
he would make a good president (April Fool')
Look out behmd you 1 There probably isn't really a big fat ·
elephant sneakmg up to sqUirt you w1th a trunkful of water th1s "
time, e1ther, but thmgs bemg what they are these days, you can't"
be too sure ( )
"

they start usmg a bulkd1et woth
ce1 eat Th1s w1ll last abcut
Ihree weeks when the dtgesllve
system rs adjusting to a more
normal diet, mstead of the
refined nour , suga r and bulk·
don't have anenua , but tl can less food so many people have

have daverhculosts from an X

Tom Tiede

,

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4- The Dally Sentmel, Mtddleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, March 24,197~

..

•• •

NBA Standings

8y Unlttel Press. lnternattonal
Eastern Conferenc~
Atl•ntlc DIVtUOn
w t pet . g b
• Boston
s.a '1 1 720
2urtaLo
-'L31L.....S9..S _91 J

••

ew York

36 39 480 18
34 41 447 20' 1
Centul D•v•ston
w 1 pet g b
x Wastungton 55 20 733
Phlladelphta

Cl@veland
Houston
Atlanta
New Orleans

••

38
38
3(1
20

38
39
.a7
54

500 17 1 }
A94 18
J90 '16
270 341 1

Western Conference
MiciWtsf DIVI SIOn

.•
'

Chtcogo
KC Omaha
Detro tl
M tlwaukee

w 1
43 31
42 JJ
37 39

pet

g b

487

7

34

453

9 1}

581
560

41

11 1

PaCifiC DIVIiiOM

I

l·

'

w I
Golden Stat e H 32

/ Seattle

pet

579

36 39

9 b

480

71

JJ ~ .. , &gt;~53
9
Phoenix
30 -ti 400 13 1 1
LosAnge les
28 46 37 8 15
• · Clinched d•vt sio n t1tle
Sunday's Games
KC Omaha 103 Chrcago 101

Portland

1 ;

Boston 9C N ew York 86

Cleveland 101 Hoi.Jslon 95
Oetro1f 125 New Orlean s 11.1
Los Ange les 116 M11waukee 97
Phoen1x 102 Se attle 96
Monday 's Gitmes
( No games scl'1eduledl

••

••

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ABA Standmgs
By Un1ted Preu International

'

.By TODD NEMANIC
UPI Sports Writer
NEW YORK (UP! )
' iSometunes you wm w1th your
body and sometunes you wm
wtth your brains," beamed
diminutive Prmceton Olach
Pete Cartll after his Tiger
cagers became the first Ivy
Lea gue team to wm the
Na tional InvJtatlOnal TOUJi·
nament champtonship in the
38-year htstory of that event,
when
they
whipped
Provtdence, 80-69, at Madison
Square Garden Sunday.
The players left no doubt as

rumored again

WINTER HAVEN, Fla.
(UP!)
- The rwnor that
New York
55 23
Kentucky
Gaylord Perry may be traded
50 26 658
4
Sf lOUIS
27 so 351 27 1 1 to the Boston Red Sox has
Memphis
25 51 329 '19
Virginia
15 6'1 195 391 2 surfaced agam
West
Boston supposedly has been
w 1 per g .b
offered the veteran rtght
x Denv e r
60 18 769
San Anron1o
47 31 603 13
handed pttcher by the Cleve·
Indiana
42 34 553 17
land Indians in exchange for
Utah
33 43 434 26
S1m Diego
31 47 397 29
two Red Sox hurlers - lefttes
K·CIInched diVISiOn IItie
Btll Lee and Roger Moret.
Sund.Jy's G1mes
Kentucky 121 St Lou •s 110
Phtl Seghi, Cleveland's vice
Denver 114 New York 111
president
and
general
Memphis 104 V1rgm•a 101. ol
lnd•ana 117 Utah 11~
manager, has talked freely
San Antonio 122 San Di ego 102
about the posstbility of such a
Mondar ' s Games
Utah at Kentucky
trade, but the Red Sox have
remamed mum.
N H l Standings
By United Press 1nternat1ona1
AcC&lt;Jrdlng to Seghi, Boston
DIVision 1
w 1. t ph gf ga first Pfesented him wtth a hst
K Phlladlph 45 18 10 100 262 169 of seven names and told him to
NY Rangers JS 26 13 83 297 254 take his choice. He rejected all
NY lslanders31 24 19 81 244 202 of them.
Atlanta
31 29 13 75 22 4 215
He says he countered by
Division 2
w. 1. t. ph gf ga asking for a "solid starter, one
Vancou ... er 34 31 9 77 247 243
who wins 13 or 14 games a year,
Chicago
34 32 8 76 248 223 maybe more."
St . LOUIS
JO JO 14 74 248 252
The only pitcher the Red Sox
Minnesota
21 45 1 49 209 318
Kansas Ci1v 14 49 10 36 169 302 have in the 11 maybe more"
Division J
w 1. t. pis gf ga category, m addttion to the
Montreal
43 1l 17 103 341 209 untouchable ace of their staff
Los Angeles 39 I S 19 97 247 168 Luts Tiant, is Lee. The former
Pittsburgh
3326 IS 81 301 267 reliever has won 17 games each
O@tro•t
21 41 12 54 234 307
Wnhlnoton
6 63 5 17 157 408 of the two years since
Division 4
becoming a starter.
w I t ph gf ga
Seghi said he had aiS&lt;&gt; asked
)( Buffalo
46 13 15 107 3'36 22'2

1
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•

''
'
r
I

I.

pet
705

g b

Boston

40 23 II 91 333 228
29 31 13 71 261 288
California
19 42 12 50 200 284
x·Ctincned Cllvls1on
s .anday's Games
Buffi!llo Y Cat•fornia 4
St Louis 3 Vancouver 3
Atlanta s washington 0
Detroit 4 Chlcaoo 4
NY Rangers 7 Boston 5
Philadelphia 2 Montreal 1
NY Islander s 3 Minnesota 3
Monday •, Games
California at Toronto
Toronto

"••

..
' ..

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..,•.
,.
.'
••
, .'

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...

•

Wepner can take
lots ·of punishment
~

'

The 32-year.old AU should be
able to summon enough of his
skills by memory alone to take
out the wtllir1g but slow and
clumsy challenger. Carrying at
least 2231'.! pounds is going to
make MUhammed willing to
end it as qutckly as he can.
Ali has lneUowed m some
IAJnight.
ways and IS not expected to
Another thing the S&gt;year.old punish Wepner the way he
Bayonne, N.J., fighter is proud punished f1oyd Patterson in
otis his ability to take punish· Las Vegas m 1965, when he
ment. He's proven that time carried the back-injured
and again by gazing at his Patterson through 12 cruel
opponent.s tbrough a screen of rounds.
IU own blood Willi either a
Wepner doees have a chance,
doctor or referee can't take it of course, a ~ one, but none
•Y more and tells Chuck be's thelessachance. Any tune,two
bad It for the night.
big men meet there is the
·Tony Perez may have to give outside pos:Ubillty of one big
that lllllllSllge to Wepter almg lucky punch, or a wicked cut,
about the sWh rolKid, if Tony turning every th ing upstde
huu't comted to 10 by tben.
down.

I'
'

the Red Sox to toss m one more
"younger" ptt cher, so the
speculation unmedtately centered on Moret, tile southpaw
Cleveland wanted two years
ago when they thought they
had wrapped up a deal sendmg
Perry to Boston
Seght srud the Red Sox hst of
seven players had been
presented to hun by Boston's
director of player personnel,
Haywood Sullivan, who has
been sC&lt;Jutmg other maJor
league clubs for the past two
weeks
Seght menttoned a pttcher
not on thehst , presumably Lee,
and said he would ac':"pt
someone on the hst, posstbly
Moret . However, he didn't hold
out much hope of completing
that deal.
" If the Red Sox accept the
deal we have made them,
they'd be crazy," he satd. .
Meantune, the Red Sox spht
thetr squad agam, los~ng '"
T~~a t~ Cincmnatl, 1·3, and
wtnnmg m Lakeland 10-4 over
Detroit The hitting star of the
day was DWtght Evans wtth
four hits, mcludmg a home run
and s11 RBis.

Kings gain
NBA playoffs

By U1dted Press International
The Kansas City.Omaha
Kings showed thetr fans .why
WHA Standin~s
they are surprise playoff
By United Press International
East
participants Sunday. But their
w . 1. t. ph gf ga
Kansas
City fans also showed
KNew Eng
38 27 5 81 245 248
the Kings something.
Cleveland
31 37 3 65 202 22a
The Kings, led by Tiny Ar·
Chicago
28 42 l 1 57 237 282
lndlanapols Ia 49 ' 3 39 195 294 chi bald and Scott Wedrnan in a
West
w . I t ph gf ga fourth.quarter victory spurt,
K Houston
48 23 0 96 330 l29 beat the division-lesding
F'hoenlx
37 28 7 81 280 243 Ollcago Bulls, 103-101, in a
Minnesota
37 29 2 76 213 237 nationally televised C&lt;Jntest.
San Oltgo
36 Jo 3 75 113 2.tl The wln avenged a loss to the
Baltimore
18 48 3 39 112 299 Bulls in Chicago Friday night,
Ctntdlan
w. 1. t. pts gf 9a sealed a Kings playoff spot and
Quebec
., 2• o a• 29U6B pulled Kansas Clty.Qmaha to
Toronto
3a 31 2 7a 312 281 within 11'.! games of Ollcago in
Winnipeg
35 31 4 74 290 251 the Midwest Division race.
But the crowd was almost as
Edmonton
33 33 3 69 245 '2.,.4
V4ncouvtr 33 34 2 68 225 229 much of the story as the Kings'
x- Diwision winner
victory. Kansas City has been
Sundey's Results
slow responding to the team's
Minnesota 4 Edmonton 2
Winnipeg.,. Chicago 3
success, with empty Kemper
Phoenix S Indianapolis 3
Arena seats obvious even in
San Diego l vancouver 0. ot
Monday's G11mu·
key weekend games. But
CNo games scheduled )
Sunday, 16,805 cranuned mto
Flnallnternahonal
the new arena that is supposed
Hotkey League Standings
By United Preu lnternahonal
to only hold 16,300 for basket·
North
w. 1. t pts gt ga ball. It was the largest mdoor
x Muskegon
sports crowd in Kansas City
48 2.. 3 99 325 240
history.
Flint
44 26 5 93 267 220
saginaw
.tJ 29 3 89 302 259
"We had a btg crowd today,
Port Huron 35 38 3 73 255 270
and I'm glad we showed them
Kalamazoo l1 SJ s 39 203 318
x Lansing 12 28 I 25 14S 216 something," Kings Coach Phil
South
Jolutson satd "I'd say they got
w 1 t. pts gt ga
x oavton 47 26 3 97 302 259 their money's worth."
Columbus 41 32 4 86 314 280
The crowd had tittle to make
Toledo
34 39 4 72 290 282
Des Moines 31 36 7 69 253 264 noise sbout until the fourth
Fort wavne
26 45 6 58 250 318 quarter The Bulls took the
l d i VIS IOn W 1nner
lead with 6:45 left in the first
x - team disbanded
quarter and the Kings trailed
Sunday 's Results
Dayton 4 Ft Wayne 3
by as much as 11 WJtil the fmal
Flint 4 Port Huron 2
period.
Columbus 7 Toledo 5
Muskegon 4 Kalamazoo 1
But Archtbald and Wedman

RICHFIELD, Ohio (UP! ) Chuck Wepnef'S proudest
boasts are that In all his 41
fights he has never been
counted out, never lmocked
down. He should no longer be
able to boast that way after
meeting Mubarnroi!d Ali for the
world heavyweight title

to which it had been for them.
"We haven't got a really
talented player on the team,".
said semor guard Tun Van
Blommesteyn, who scored 23
pomts m the ftnal game and 87
for the tournament llromcally,
the same total as tourney MVP
Ron Lee of thtrd·place
Oregon ).
Prmce ton players are fond of
talkmg about how httle talent
they have .
And "thought" ts a word that
turns up often m the game
analyses of both coach and
players A small team, even by

Perry trade is

East

w.

clai~s

Princeton

tgnited the vtctory rally in the
fmal eigllt minutes that pulled
the Kihgs even. Archibald hit a
corner jumper to cut the Bulls'
lead to one, 83-87, and then he
hit two free throws for the lead.
Subsequent free throws by
Sam Lacey and Juruny Walker
sealed the victory in the Kings'
last regular season game in
Kansas Ctty
Olicago's Bob Love led all
scorers with 38. Archibald led
the Kings with 35, Including 17
free throws- 15 straight in the
second half .
In other NBA games, Cleveland beat Houston, 101·95,
Detroit downed New Orleans,
125-114, Los Angeles topped
Mtlwaukee, 11&amp;-97, Boston defeated New York, 9&amp;-86, and
Phoenix beat Seattle, 102-96
Cavaliers 101, Rockets 95:
Cleveland, wtth Jtm Brewer
scoring 18 points and Jun
Clones 16, surged into second
place in the Central Divtslon by
beating Houston . The vtctory
left Cleveland a hall-game
ahead of Houston m the
divislon but the Rockets lead
New York by a game in the
battle for the final wtld~ard
playoff spot in the Eastern
Olnference. Houston's Rudy
Tornjanovtch had 30 points,
Pistoos 1%5, Jazz 114:
Dave Bing netted 29 points
and Bob Lanier 26 as Detrmt
turned m an almost flawless
performance at the foul tine to
beat New Orleans. Detroit
missed just two of 39 free
throws and outscored the Jazz,
37·22, from the foul tine. New
Orleans' leading scorer was
Nate Williams wtth 28
Lalrers 116, Bucks 97:
Gatl Goodrtcb scored 36
points and Elmore Smtih
grabbed 17 reboWJda as Los
Angeles routed Milwaukee.
Goodrich hit 18-of.JJ shots but
iromcally neither he nor Smith
were m the game when the
Lakers ran orr 16 consecutive
pomts in the second perind to
take a fi0.43 halftune lead.
Kareem Abdui'Jabbar scored
22 pomts for the Bucks, 10
below his average.

NIT cage title

Ivy League standards, Pnncewn has to carry over tts
academic tradttton to the
basketball court
"Our game plans are so
thorough that we know exactly
what the other leatn wtll do
before they do tl," chipped tn
JUmor guard Mickey Steuerer,
who scored 26 pomts tn the fmal
game and ~akes turns wtth
three other players as htgh
scorer for Princeton .
Coach Car1ll proved htmself
a thmkmg man's coach m more

ways than one m the champtonshtp game, but the best
example was m his startmg
hne-up for the second hall
Leadmg by only one pomt at
38-37 after a wtld , turnover·
plagued 20 mmutes, he left Van
Blornrnesteyn, who had led all
scorers m the first half w1th 14
pomts, on the bench for the
f1rst nme mmutes

"Even though I was scormg
a lot of pomts," Van B was the

reg ulatiOn tlme had expired
tie the game

~p

.

chotce lor the all-tourney team,
as were Frankte Sanders and
!':ric Sutton of Stivers.
Also selected to the first alltournament team were R1ver
Vtew 's Enc Budendorf and
Scott Spencer of Rossford.
Sanders was the tournament's top scorer, gettmg 63
pomts m two games
The S-2 Huggms, son of IVS
coach Ularley Huggins, scored
54 pomts m his team 's two
games,
Young Huggtns, who had 30
points m h1s team 's ~9-56
overttme loss to Manon Local
m thechamptonshlp game, and
Marion's 6-6 Steve Hartings
were the only unammous
chmces for the team, being
named on all 16 ballots. ,
others named to the first
team were Rick Brunswtck of
Mar10n Local, Bryan Lentz of
lnd1an Valley South and Greg
Givens of Mansfteld St.
Peter's
SelectiOns were made by
wnters and broadcasters
covermg the tournamen t.

UPI Sports Writer
Those "big guns" that make
headlmes durtng the baseball
season are beginning to unload
as opemng day fast approaches.
Wtth the season opener only
two weeks away, the game·
breakers like Willie Stargell,
Jolutny Bench, Wtllie McCovey
and Jeff Burroughs are round·
mg into customary form
Stargell and Burroughs, for
example, each hit a pair of
home runs SWJday while Bench
hanunered a homer and McOlvey C&lt;JIIected two doubles m
exhibttion action.
S~ai'gell ' s homers and
--a'Kother by AI Oliver enabled
the Ptttsburgh Ptrates to
defeat the Philadelphia
Phtllies a-4, Bench's blast
helped the Cincinnati Reds
down the Boston Red Sox 7~
and McCovey's hitting paced
the San Diego Padres to a 14-0
rout of the Ulicago Cubs.
Burroughs' two homers
came in a losing effort as the
Montreal Expos edged the
Texas Rangers 8-7. Home runs
by Bob Bailey and rookte Gary
Carter paced Montreal to
VICtory.
In other action, Baltimore's
split squad won a parr of
games, defeating Atlanta 4-3
and St. Lou1S6-3; the New York
Yankees blanked Detrotl :).1);
Kansas City whipped the
Chicago Whtte Sox 9~;
Hou~on topped Mmnesota 7-4;
San FranCISCO outslugged its
Phoerux farm club 12-11 and
Califurma blanked Oakland 1· •
0.

Polly's Pointers

March 18 , 1975

BY PllLLY CRAMER

Tearn

Won Lost

No 4
No 12

31
34

the Orioles' twm vtctory
Robmson smgled home the
winning rWJ m the etghth inmng to beat the Braves and
Duncan, acqutred from
Cleveland late last month, htt a
pair of homers in the VICtory
over the Cardinals

r;57

~~ ~

54

~~ ; ~

~~

No •
No 6

~~

l

0

No 3

~~

44

44

42

46

;~

~~

34

54

No I
26
62
No 7
25
63
N o 13
24
6J
Team No 2 took 8 pomts
from Team 1 Jack Janey (sub)
had h1gh score for Team 2 w1fh
539 pms and Frank Krautter
had h1gh score for Team 1 wllh
487 ptns
Team 4 took 8 po•nts from
Team 3 Menda Shaw had h1gh

score for Team 4 wtth 531 p1ns
and Les Davts had htgh score
for Team 3 with 492 pms
Team 5 took 6 potnts from
Team 6 Bur l Cook had htgh
score for Team 5 wlfh 522 pms
and George Ratliff had h•gh
score for Team 6 w tth 435 p.n s
Team 14 took 6 pom t s from
Team 13 John Henzmann
(sub) had h1gh sc ore for Team
14 w lfh 507 pms and George
Roach had htgh score for Team
13 wtfh 535 pms
Team 8 took 6 points from
Teom 7 Charlte Neal had h1gh
score for Team 8 Nlfh 555 pms
and Bud Spence had htgh score
for Team 7 w1fh 439 pms
Team ~spl i t B po1nls wdh
Team 10 Benny Neal had high
scor e for Team 9 w1th 458 pms
and Danny M tnk had h igh
scor e for Team 10 w1 fh 490 pms
Team 11 split 8 points w llh
Team 12 John Kennedy had
htgh score for Team 11 w1th 495
ptns and Hazel Holley had h1gh
score for Team 12 w1th 481 pms
Jan Robinson had htgh smgle
game for the ladtes wtth a 186
sc ore She also had htgh senes
wllh a fotal p1n score of 490

TAMPA, FLA (UP!) - The
first Clnctnnati Reda ' pitcher
to go seven mnings during the
sprmg tramlllll season ts Gary
Nolan, who IS recuperating
very well from shoulder sur·
gery
Nolan went seven frames
and Johnny Bench hit his
second homer of the sprmg ·
Sonday as the Reds won thetr
loth game in the last II wtth a
7-3 trmmph over the Boston
Red Sox.
Nolan gave up three runs,
one unearned and one on a solo
homer by Deron Johnson,
durmg the seven innings he

March 12 , 1975
Regatta In
Youngs Super Market
Sm1 t h Nelson Motor Co

Pts

56

Reduces Bloat and Swellmg
during the Menstrual CY,fJe
New ODRINJL, a "Natural' Water
pi ll can help you lose excess wetght,
swellmg and uncomfortable bodv bloat
(puflmess 111 ankles, arms, stomach)
due to e ~ce ss water reten tion during
the entn e menstrual cycle ODRINilts
a gentle diuretiC compound conlams
natural herbs m a tablet that IS fast
acting and efl ecllve Helps eltmmate
excess water th at causes pre menstrual

bloat

OORINIL · lhe ' Nalural" Water P1ll ·
gentle effectiVe, economical I Sat1sfac
!ton or money back

NELSON'S DRUG STORE

Z1de s Sport Shop
Tenth Framers
Nelson Drug Co
H1g h •nd •v•dual game
Men , Bill Port er 242 women ,
0 Carson 202 , second h19h md
game larry Duga n 224
women , M Dugan 192
H 1gh senes Men
Bill
Porter 638 , women, Max1ne
Dugan 566 , second h1gh senes
- Men , Gary Wayland 555
women , Pat Carson 55 1
Team h•gh game - Sm1th
Nelson Motor s Co 7J6
• T eam h1gh ser.es Tenth
F ram ers 2028

I

Let's Tallc Soon
DALE C. WARNER
992-2143
Pomeroy

A scheduled game between
the New York Mets and Los
Angeles at St. Petersburg,
na .• was cancelled when the
Dodger team plane developed
engine trouble at Vero Beach,
na.
Brooks Robinson and Dave
Duncan were the.key ftgures in

I

rb ownm~

relephone equ ipnH:: nt- lf )'OU rca phone

&lt;.om pan\' \X1e \ C done 1r fo r ye-ars However. whac's ~ood for us IS nm necessarily
,~.;t.&gt;Od.

for you

A telephone s~s tem srarts ou c cosrm~,b •g money ( You 're buy mF: more
rhan JUSt a black pla!JCte,box: wnh a d1al

.

I

Mr. Nobody from Nowhere
Dear Helen.
1
I'm the kind of person no one remembers, Ordmary is the
word. I blend Into the crowd.lf I meet a girl I was mtroduced to
at a party the night before, she111ook startled when I speak.!'ve
worked in the same office for six months; nobody says hello In
the cafeteria.
!let the other guy do the talking because I don't know what to
say,especlally with women I'd hke to take out but don't have the
nerve to ask.
I read about females being aggressive these days; why are
they so reticent with a man who really needs someone to make
the ftrst move' I feel like- MR. INVISIBLE

the soloist on "He Lives," and
Wolfe and Kern JOllied tu smg
· 0 Swmg lhe Gales Wide
Open " The benedJchon wa s by
lhe Rev Mr B11111garner and
the re cess iOnal hymn was
"Chnst the LOJ d 1s R1sen
Today " For the present&lt;JIJOn,
lhe Semor Cat1zens Chorus was
atltred 1n black robes

MONDAY
IZAAK WALTON I
Mo d
t7
.eag ue
F.~S;~~N ~~A Monda
7 30 P m. at th~ scho~'
Everyone welcome
BEND OF THE RIVER
Garden Club Monday 7 30 p m
al home of Ml s Andrew Cross.
Program by Mrs Clifford

Seven children
(Ire confirmed

Candlelighted
Service iS Set

easter ~ilies

20%
OFF

10:

CASH
AND

CARRY

on ir ) A.td u ll f"VC T mcceases m value

The !on~e r yo.:. use rr che more u depreCiates And so does )'Our on,;:tnal capt tal

rem ts nm as Simple as it may seem
\"(/e've spenr decades at 1t Thar's why

FOOD FOR AMERICANS

we can prov1de you r

busmess wnh the

tn\•estmenr
Then. there s mamtenance

serviCe, equ tpmcm anJ expert adviCe

s1m ple S)'Stem )ou' ll call

Call us for a consultacton There is
noexrrachar~e f or tn(ormatiOn And, of

tn

For a
ours1de help

ver)' Complex ~r-up
ma) re&lt;}Uilt that you put a man on staff
so your vtralcommuniCat lonsdon'r gnnd

now and chen A

ro a hal&lt;'" 1he m1dsr of a bustness day
A ~ )'ou can see, ownm,u a phone sys-

"

you need.
"

course. rhere s no oblt,eacton ro buy any
equtpmcru.

1fi i ¥1

!Ill

GEnERAL TELEPHone
•

A book of postage stamps "Where Seek Ye Chrtsl?" and
wtll be purchased for Mrs there was a poem prayer.
Dana Hamm at the Arcadia
The program was by Mrs.
Nursing Home, and members Leora Stgman, "Why Eggs In
signed roWJd-robin cards for Your Easter'" a reading was
Mrs . Julia Grtmm, Mrs followed by quizzes wtlh prizes
Roush, Bert Boduner, and the bemg won by Mrs Cleo Boyd,
Rev. Clairmont Hoyt of Mrs . Cora Pullen, and Mrs.
Newark, former pastor.
Beulah Whtte. The23members
Devohons by Mrs. Elizabeth responded to roll call with a
Slavm opened with group verse of scrtplure.
singing of "The Old Rugged
Refreshments were served
Cross" and, scrtplure from ·by Mrs. Nelle Werner, Mrs
Luke 24. Heh rneditallon was Eva HarUey, ('irs. Frances

I

- --

Bake- 'e1JJ yourself crackers

By Aileen Claire
NEA Food Editor
.When a food shopper C&lt;lrn·
plains about the cost of a full
marketbasket, does she
separate the food from the non·
food ttems? Or, does the
shopper even consider or total
up the cost each day or each
week of such snacks as
pretzels, crackers, chips, can·
dies?
Try totaling the amount spent
Dear Mr.!.:
for
these each week and you
Corne on now: a truly aggressive woman would scare you
wtll be in for a shockmg revela·
spitless. What you need ts a shy type who will be grateful for your tlon It costs less to make your
attention. She's there - blending mto the crowd. Look for her! own snacks. Popcorn, for exam·
H.
pie, is less expenstve to pop at
+++
horne and you also can make
Dear Helen:
your own crackers.
This latter is something few
My wife is a TV..aholic. She watches everything from soaps
have
done m decades. For those
to old reruns, but never the news or anything educational. She
who
must follow a low·
won't go out because "there's a gond show on." She neglects her
cholesterol diet, making your
work so as not to miss a dumb game show or soupy seriaL
own snacks is a btg encourageAny suggestion to help the .:.. HUSBAND OF A TV ADD!Cf ment At least, you know what
the ingredients are Homemade
Dear Husband:
crackers also may have as
People become addicted to TV when they have nothing better many seasomngs as you want.
to do; or have become so dull and lifeless they won't try for Try these Carefree Promises or
Lo-Cbol Cornmeal Crackers the
something better.
next
time you have some ellra
You might break the cycle with:
time to spend in the kttcben.
A vacation trip that keeps you on the move.
CAREFREE PROMISES
New frienda and interests. Including renewed interest in
3
cupo olllod otl-pur- ftour
your wife.
1/2 lloopoon ull
A mutual bobby; and-&lt;Jr a part· or full-time job for her.
1 cup (1/2 pound) ""''~~"~""
Getting back to husband-wife conversations.
1 cup (1/2 pound) croomod
coltegechOlld turkey: sell the TV set. - H,
ln a large bowl mix flour and
Dear Helen:
salt Add margarme and cotI was Introduced to a man who is absolutely perfect for me tage cheese, cut tn wtth a
pastry blender unbl well blend·
and my two children. And I would be the ideal wife for hun.
ed.
Wrap dough m waxed paper
The problem is that he's going with a woman who is totally
and
chtll at least 1 hour. On a
wrong for him and will never make him happy. I could make him
well-floured board roll out
a wonderful home but she just likes to spend his money. He dough one-eighth·tnch thick.
drinks too much because of her. She says he ts the father of her Cut out dough wtth a 2·tnch
baby but I don't believe tt.
cookie cutter and place on an
How can I make him stop torturing himself wtth a worthless ungreased baking sheet Prick
woman and see that! am the -ONLY ONE FOR HIM
each cracker with a fork. Bake
in a 450-degree oven 12 to 15
mmutes until lightly browned
Dear OOFH:
Go after him! Happen to be where he is. Show you're in- Remove from baking sheet and
terested, but not anxtous. It's always open season m mate.JJunts. cool on a rack. Makes about 100
crackers
If you're a good stalker with a lot of anunurution, you may brmg
this man horne for keeps.
But is he REALLY your type? Seems to me he rather enjoys
"torturing himself with a worthless woman." - H.

Five Easter lilies to be
placed on the altar of the
Middleport First Baptist
Church by the Busy Bee Class
will be delivered to shut-IllS
following_ Easter services, it
wasdectdedatameetingofthe
Class Thursday night at the
church.
,
Due to the . tllness of Mrs.
Lottie Roush, class treasurer
for the past 30 years, Mr~.
Leora Sigman was appointed
assistant treasurer.

-

The Traditional Gift
For Home or Church

DOERS

REGULAR
YOUR TRADE
Ever thought of making your own crackers? It's easy.
VARIATIONS:
Caraway Crackers: Add 4
teaspoons caraway seed to
dough
Sesame-Oilion Crackers: Add
4 teaspoons sesame seed and 4
teaspoons grated onion to
dough.
Poppy Seed Crackers: Add 2
teaspoons poppy seeds to
dough.
Herb Crackers: Add 4
teaspoons chopped parsley, 4
teaspoons sntpped chives and
one-half teaspoon dried dtll
weed to dough.
LO.CHOL
CORNMEAL CRACKERS
1

NOW

1 1h ttllp!UM 1Uf8r

1

t111paan 111t

1

tlllllDDft grated onion

....

2
tablllpaDM margarine
1/4 tuopoon Tllbloco peppor
1

729.95
100.00

..

629~..
M

1 h cupo bolting · -

1

11111 wh~. llltghlly -

In large bowl, combine cor·

nmeal, sugar. salt, onion,
margarine and Tabasro. Add
bothng water and stir until
water ts absorbed. Stir In egg
whtte. Drop by teaspoon on
greased baking sheet. Bake in
4CJO.&lt;Iegree oven 15 ml,nutes.
Remove and cool. Makes 4
dozen cr;a,.~•..c 1

BANK RATE
FINANCING

cup ,.tlow comtnNl

----------,
I EASTER I
Variety

nut fhar chere are :tdvn.nt:t~es

PoLLED POWER PAYS

Garden "

!:!.

spnpg presby~rial to be'neld
In Colwnbus on April a was
annoWJced as was. the mothef.
daughter banquet to be held on'
May 14. Gifts m the one grea,t
hour of sharmg were received.
Mrs Dwtght Zavitz reported
on the mtsstons and gave a
prayer from the mission yearbook Devohons by Mrs. Lewis
Sauer Included scripture from
Matthew and a prayer .
Refreshments were served by
Group I

An
Eas ter
pla ylel Ctndy Crooks, Kim Fraley , and
h1ghhghted the Thursday mght Zandra Vaughan The Rev
meetmg of the Women 's Dwight Zavltz had prayer.
Assoc~alton of the Middleport
Durmg the business meehng
Ftrst Untied Presbyl enan th e annual repo~t of the
Church
lreasure r wa s given The
Narrators for the playlet
c
were Mrs arroll Harper and
Mrs Dwtghl Wallace Roles
The Dai~ Sentiner
DE'VOTED TO THE
were ta ken by Tma SJmlh,
INTEREST OF
Tern Yeauger, Trudy Hall,
MEIGS- MASON AREA
' H ES 1' ER L TANNEHILL
Jeff Ury. Joe McCloud , Chns
. Ex ec Ed
M orns
y
' OBERT HOEFLICH
eauger , Deb1 Colcmun, Cathy
C1ty Ed1lor
FALL Gospclmce tmg at the Coleman, Bec kv Coleman
Publi She d daily ~XCf! IJf
Sa turday by The Ot1lo Val l ey
M1ddlepm t Htgh School March Pam Crooks, o"ndy Crooks: Publ1st1•n
g Company , 111
24 through the 29 at 7·30 p m K1m Frale}, and z.md ra
Court St , Pomeroy , O h iO
45 769 Busmess Othcc Phone
mghlly Evange llSI will be A Vaughan .
99 2 2156 Ed•tor1al Phon£' 99')
Seven children were con- C Estep and H D Cook
Mrs Paul Haptonstall and 2157
SeC Oild class postage pa1d at
ftrmed Palm Sunday at the Featured smgmg gr oups Will L ms Ann Sauer srwg ·we e Pomeroy
, Oh10
1
Tnmty Church m Pomeroy
N a t 1ona l adveri1 Sin9
be the Coy Fam1ly and the You There'' " and " I Gave Ml' r epre
sen lat• ve
Boll m e ll• ·
For
the
confirmatw n
L1le For Thee ." S1n g1ng Gallagher , Inc , I ') East 42nd1
Joyfulmres.
St New Yorlc , N ew Yor k
ceremony the boys and g~r l s
TUESDAY
'Angels m WhJi e" acSu b scr , pt • o n
r a t es•
Yo ere a ttired m whate robes and
Del•vered by car r1 er wh er *
MEIGS AthlelJc Booste rs compamed by Mrs Richard
availabl e 75 cents per week ,
each one was prese nted Tuesday 7 30 p.m at htgh Vaughan, were Pam Crooks,
6y Motor Route Where ca rr1 e r
a Btbie
Co nfirm ed by school
serv •ce no t availab le, On~t
mon th SJ 25 By ma11 •n Oh1Q
the Rev
W. H Per·
BIRTHDAY an d potlu ck
an d W Va , On e Y ear . $22 oo ~
Sill.
mont hs, $11 50
Thr ee
nn were Jan Betz1ng, supper Tuesday 6 p m at
month s S7 00
Elsewhere
daughter of Mr and Mrs . Dun Ha1 n sonville Elementary
$26 00 y ea r , Sn( mon1t1!
$1 3 SO thr ee month s, $1 50
Belzmg, Beth Penm, daughter School
Sponsored
by
Sub scn ptiOn pn ce in Clud es
Holy
W
ee
k
se
rvi
ces
at
of the Rev and Mrs W. H Harnsonvill e Golden Circle
Sunday T•IJ:1~s Sfmtm e l
_ .
Perrtn,
Andrea
R1ggs , Senter Clhzen Club En- Tmuly Churcl1 have been
daughter of Dr. and Mrs Ke1th lertmnrnent by Mr and Mrs. announced.
Thursday a ca ndlelight -'~-----··"-----·-------R1ggs; Mtke Smtth, son of Mr Darold Taylor, Portland
commumon service will be
and Mrs Roy Sm1th ; Harvey
JUNIOR
and
Senwr
Whttlatch, son of Mr and Mrs. Auxthary , Drew Webster Post held at 8 p.m m the Sunday
Harvey Whltlaich, Sr , Lorra 39, Tuesday 7 30 p m at post School room On Good Fnday,
a worshtp service wtll be held
Wtsecup, daughter of Mr. and home.
al a ~.m at the church, and on
Mrs James W1 secup, and
XI Gamma Mu Chapter of
Sunday
rnormng the Easter
Tammy Starcher
Be~1 S1gma Pht Tuesday 7.30
To open the serv1ce all of the p.m. at Columbus and Southern sunrtse servtces w1ll beg1n at
children of the church came m Oh10 Electrtc Co. Electwn of 6 30 and will be followed wtth
a process tonal carrymg palms. officers. Cultural program ·an Easter breakfast 1n the
Ftve large palms decorated the "how to make fnends" to be soctal room All those at·
altar area along with flowers conducted by Vickt Gleckner tendmg the early serv1ce are
mv1led to remain for the
placed there by Mrs and
Carolyn
Gru eser
breakfast.
Marguente ,Meyer and Clara Hostesses wtll be Carole Me·
The Easter morning worship
Gnfftth m lnemory of their Cullough and Sue Ztrkle
service
w1ll begm at 2!i a.m
stster, Freda Fauber, and a
JUNIOR AMERICAN LegiOn Holy communton w1ll be served
vase of hhes by the Ewmg Aux1liary, Fee ney-Bennett
lamtly m memory of Henry Post 128, Middleport, 6 30 lollowmg the regular se rvtce.
Ewmg . The chOir sang "Kmg Tuesday mght at the hail.
of Kmg s ''
mandery 24, Kntghts Templar,
WEDNESDAY
stated
conclave, Pomeroy
RA CINE AMERICAN
Legton Auxthary Wednesday Masomc Temple, 7:30 p,m.
AMERICAN LEGION
7·30 p.m. at hail.
Aux11Jary,
6; 30 potluck Wed·
LODGE TO MEET
WILDWOOD GARDEN Club
nesday
at
Feeney-Bennett
Post
The Ohw Valley Com- Wednesday 7 30 p m. at horne
128, Middleport, followed by
mandery 24, Kmghts Templar, of Mrs. Mason Ftsher
meetmg
at 7 30 p.m Members
wtll attend sunnse servlCes at 6
POMEROY· MIDDLEPORT
are
reminded
to take gifts for
a.m. at the Syracuse Umted Lwns Club, Regular mee tmg,
Methndist Church
Wednesday, Metgs Inn, with ail the Peck of Wee Ones project.
FEENEY-BENNETI Post
hons urged to attend
128,
Mtddleport hall , 7:30
OHIO VALLEY ComWednesda y Members to jom
Auxiliary for potluck at 6· 30
p.m.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

A three-part Eastet· cantata,
was presented by the Me1gs
CoWl ty Semor CJ hzens Chorus
SWlday afternoon at Heath
Untied MethOdist Ch urch,
Mtddleporl, before a well-f1lled
sanc tuary
Mrs Came Neutzhng was
the director, Mrs Ha ze l
Thomson the accompanas t, and
Mrs. Neva Seyfrted, the
narrator The opemng organ
prelude was presented by Mrs
Neulzhng
who
played
"Hosan nah Chorus Magnus,"
and the processwnal. "Tell Me
The Stor) of Jesus " In ·
vocahon was by the Rev
Rober! Bumgarner, hos t
church pastor
F~rst part of the cantata was
enhlled " The Songs of
Calvary" and opened w1lh
scripture by Mrs. Seyfned
from Luke 26 The chorus sang
"God's Love" and "Go To
Dark Gethsemane," and
Wilham Watson sang "In the

. 0if commun#1J
. Wt'l'T1- recetve
. church 's al tar t-tl'l'tes If FLOWERS
s.'hut-tns
,
'J
I ~a~kets,
Some of ou r busmess customers
h.ne been con.stdenn,t: the purchase of
rhctrown phones \X' e .tee rhe firs f to ad-

For information: Mrs. Virginia Anderson, Rt.
2, Box 169, oak Hill, Ollio 45656.

DEAR POLLY - M; Pet
Peeve 1s wtth slacks that have'
the elashc waistband sewed
nght in wtth the cloth. If the
elas hc was left free and rWl
through the band we could
replace tl w1lh new when 1t gets
old and stretchy. - TONY .
DJ&lt;;AR POLLY - I have
foWld tl most con1•ement lo
d1lute concentrated house plan t
ferhhzer m an empty 32-&lt;JWlce
plashc hq111d detergent bottle
I JUSt shake tl up wtth my
thwnb over the top and fmd 1t
tdeal for pourtng small
streams of the water and plant
food mto httle pots and lor
getting Wlder the leaves Also,
an empty clean wmdow
cleaner bottle that squ~rts
makes an mexpens1ve plant
mtster - LARRY.
DEAR POLLY - To make
sure that my flat top sheets do
not get kicked out at the bottom
or Sides of the bed I stmply tte a
knot In each of the lower corners and have a good fitted top
sheets. Just remember to untie
the knots before laundermg. JO,

Helen

Play it safe and 8Ul1l.
It may be time to
have your presenl
policy updated,

102 W. Main

spots and stains belon· pulling
clothes in the wash. This \las
left on a couple of minutes,
riBBed out well and the carpet
allowed lo dry. She says lhe
results are the best she has
had. Good luck. -POLLY.

Helen Hel
By
Us. • •

Pomeroy, Oh1o

.I

52
45
39
28
22

'

In part two of the presentatiOn were "The Songs of the
Cructftxton" With Mrs
Seyfrted readmg Luke 22, 29 to
35 Ira Wolle and Mrs Neutz.
hng sang 14 The Hour IS Come ,"
the chorus dtd " 'T1s Mtdnighl
and on Ohve's Brow" and Rose
Gmther and Clara Thomas
sang "Alone" w1th the Chorus
JOtning in the refrain.
Singmg " Ten Thousand
Angels Could Have Saved
Him" were Ira Wolfe, Mrs
Kathleen Ward, Mrs Sarah
You will receive a dollar If Philbrick, Ralph Kerns and
Polly uses your favorite Mrs. Mane Robinson. "The
homemaking Idea, Pet Peeve, Center Cross" was sung by
Polly's Problem or solution loa Wolfe, Mrs. Phtlbrtck, Mrs
problem. Write Polly In care of Robmson , Mrs
Virgmta
Ibis newspaper.
Gulley, and Kerns, and Wolfe
sang "The Seventh Word. "
"Songs of the Resurrectton"
was the third part of the
program w1th Mrs. Seyfned
-------~-~-~.:;,;;c::::::=~ readmg scnpture from Matthew 27 and 28 The Chorus
sang "Where Have They Left
Htm" and "AIIeluJah, He Is
Risen" wtth Mrs. Philbnck as
solotst. Mrs. Betty Kern was

New!
"
"NATURAL" WATER PILL

'

56 LOTS OF TOP PROSPECTS

re01ove any excess and then
apply a noninflammable dry
cleaning Uuld. Let this dry and
then repeal use of the solvent if
necessary. After drying gently.
brush up the pile. Do nol allow
anything to saturate the carpet's backlog. Test first.
A blg clean blotter could be
held over the spots on the
wallpaper, press over this with
a hot iron bul do not touch the
wallpaper with the Iron.
Hopefully the grease will be
soaked up into the blotter,
Fuller's earth or another absorbing powder also might be
applied to such spots,
Betty, my rlgbt·band helper,
had spots on her carpet thai
resisted many cures until she
sprayed them with thai
laundry product one uses on

FOR THE
PROTECTION
YOU NEED~

Early Wedne sday
Mll(ed league

Stand1ngs

POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - I really
need some help from you or the
readers. My little grand·
daughter rubbed a Jar of omtment into my nylon carpet. i
put a detergent on it hopmg 11
would lift out the grease but tl
did no good. Now there
are
large
dirty
spots
from
walking
on
it.
She also smeared some of thts
otnbnent on my new wallparer. Corn starch dtd not help
remove the grease I hope
someone has some ideas for
me You have helped me before
so I JUSt know you can agam HELEN
DEAR HELEN - What a
predicament. How sorry I do
feel for you. The Carpet lnstltule's recommendations for
oily spots like hand cream is to

plate appearances.
The pttching vtctory went to
Don Hood, a left.JJander acqutred from Baltunore, who
pitched two perfect mnings In
rehef
Saturday, the Indians were
beaten by the Brewers 9-5 as
Gaylord Perry, a 21-game
wmner in 1974, was shelled for
seven rtms m six innings.
Player~oach Tom McCraw
had a home run for the Indians.

Tea m h1gll game - M1dwest
Steel Co 977
Team h1g h se r1es - Roach's
Gun Shop 2648

Senior
citizens
give
!I Social ~ Playlet on Easter
.
three -part cantata lc
d
l
~emepmmn~d
1
,:; aen ar

Granddaughter 's
fun leaves its imprint

pttched. He was mcked for
seven hits.
Rookie Rollte Eastwick
pitched scoreless baD the last
two mrungs desptte issuing five
walks.
Bench's homer was one of 11
hits the Reds got off Don Aase,
James Wright and Diego Segui,
The Reds bunched three of
the htts, one a bases-loaded
double by Tony Perez, for four
runs in the first inning. They
added one In the second and the
!mal two m the seventh on
Bench's homer after a John
Vukovtch smgle.

Robinson in
first appearance

TUCSON, Artz. (UP!) Frank Robinson made his first
appearance as a player this
spring, but tt was the replacement for the Cleveland playermanager who sparked the
lndtans to victory here Sunday.
Leron Lee, fighting tot a spot
on the 25-man roster, C&lt;Jllected
three htts and scored three
runs m leading the lndtans to a
12·8 vtctory over the
Mtlwaukee Brewers
The triumph broke a five·
game Cleveland losmg streak.
"The vtctory did a lot of good
Burl Cook had high smgle for the players m wmning a
game for the men w1th a 222
score Char lie Neal had h tg h game hke that," RoblllSon
senes w1th a total p1n score of
said. He was referrmg to the
555 .
fact the Indians tratled 7-1
after three mnings.
The Indians' httting attack,
Tn- Countv league
March 11 , 1975
which
has been anemtc most of
Standmgs
the
spring,
included 15 hits
Team
Pts
Rawlmgs Aut o Pari s
4S Sunday, 11 off Brewers' relief
Roach s Gun Shop
48
H &amp; R F 1restone
40 ace Tom Murphy. Buddy Bell
Sea rs Cata log Merchants
40 had three hits for the Jndtans
Pomeroy Ceme nt Block Co 32
M1dwes t Ste el Co
32 and Frank Duffy, George
H1gh •nd1v 1duai game - A
Hendrick and Charlie Spikes
L Phelps Jr 234 Sec ond high
two each.
1nd game - A L Phelps Jr
223
Robtnson played three in·
H •gh se nes - John Tyr ee
rungs as a designated hitter. He
614 , second h1gh se r1 es - A L
Phelps Jr 60 2
flted out and walked in his two

Team

Big guns are starting
to
'unload'
down
south
By FRED MeMANE

Friday, March 28th, 7:00P.M.
Rock Springs Fairgrounds- Pomeroy, Ohio

''

to

Panthers' Allen
c0 .1:'ns M
hOn or
COLUMBUS (U PI)
Napoleon Allen , Columbus
Linden McKinley's 6-4 semor
center, was voted the Most
Valuable Player in the Class
AAA State High School
Basketball Tournament
Allen, who scored 17 pomts
and had a game·htgh 11
rebounds m the Panthers' 77-72
wm over Cleveland Hetghts m
the title game, headed the alltourney squad, which also
mcluded teammate Todd Penn
Uoyd Franklin of Cleveland
Hetghts Jtm Paxson of Kellermg Alu;r and Canton McKinley 's Phil Hubbard
Allen also scored 20 pomts m
the Panthers' semtfmal win
over Kettermg Alter and htt th
wtnnmg basket wtth 17 secon~
remaimng
Rtver V;ew's John Wtlhams
was selected the top Class AA
player and Harry Huggms of
lndtan Valley South the Class A
MVP
Wtlhams , who scored 2~
pomts m the Black Bears' 77-72
overtime vtctory over Dayton
Stivers, was also a unarumous

DAN fHOMPSON
FORD BOWLING LEAGUE

first to adimt, '' I wasn't run·

mng the team the way I should
Pete (Molloy) 'came in and got
us out of the fastbreakmg style
we played m the first half and
back mto the dehberate pat·
tern offense that ts our bread
and butter."
Only an Ivy League coach
would th1nk of sttlmg his
highest scorer on the bench to
protect a one-pomt lead
Earlier m the day, tn the
battle fo( the th ird-p lace
trophy, Oregon's Ron Lee put
on the show that probably won
him the tournament's Most
Valuable Player honor. as he
scored 31 pom ts In an a().76
overtime win aga mst St
1
John 's
Lee also scor ed four of
Orego n's e1ght pmnts m the

~~&amp;:!"":..~'!!~:::::.-::::::::::::~::::·.·:·~~

NoJan first to
•
•
go
seven
znnzngs
l:

Weekly Standings

ex tra sesswn after the Ducks'
Gerald Willett sank the second
of two fr ee throws after

Southemm Polled Hereford Sale

'

Local Bowling

II
I
I

of hanging
large pots of
hires, h;Ydra~gea,
. mums, gerantums,j
1small. pots of double
petunt_as,
vergena.
I tmpattens.. several!
Iva r .' e t I e s
o fl
1geramums.

I
I

Bearhs, Mrs. Ehzabeth Searls
wtth Mrs Hamm contributing .
Others attendmg were Mrs.
Gwinnie Wh1te, Mrs Pearl
Hoffman, Mrs Dorothy Evans,
Mrs. Edith Sauer, Mrs.
EhzabethGardner, Mrs ,!essie
Houdashelt , Mtss Freddte
Houdashelt , Mrs.
Ruth 1
Johnson, Mrs. Wtlma Par· j
malee, Kathryn Werner, Mrs
Electa Souders, Mrs Isabelle
Wmebrenner, Mrs RosemAry 1949-4121
Lyons.
L_

1

• Twin Dairy Bars
'

• Deep Door Storage
• Portable Egg Bucket
• Roll-Away Wheels
• Automatic Door Closers

• Juice Can Dispenser
• Separate temperature
controls and lights

.

..•

I
I
1

Q.ELAND
. GREENHOUSE 1
1
I

Racine, OhioJ

- -·- - -

--.-·
..

I

�\

r
•

•

4- The Dally Sentmel, Mtddleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, March 24,197~

..

•• •

NBA Standings

8y Unlttel Press. lnternattonal
Eastern Conferenc~
Atl•ntlc DIVtUOn
w t pet . g b
• Boston
s.a '1 1 720
2urtaLo
-'L31L.....S9..S _91 J

••

ew York

36 39 480 18
34 41 447 20' 1
Centul D•v•ston
w 1 pet g b
x Wastungton 55 20 733
Phlladelphta

Cl@veland
Houston
Atlanta
New Orleans

••

38
38
3(1
20

38
39
.a7
54

500 17 1 }
A94 18
J90 '16
270 341 1

Western Conference
MiciWtsf DIVI SIOn

.•
'

Chtcogo
KC Omaha
Detro tl
M tlwaukee

w 1
43 31
42 JJ
37 39

pet

g b

487

7

34

453

9 1}

581
560

41

11 1

PaCifiC DIVIiiOM

I

l·

'

w I
Golden Stat e H 32

/ Seattle

pet

579

36 39

9 b

480

71

JJ ~ .. , &gt;~53
9
Phoenix
30 -ti 400 13 1 1
LosAnge les
28 46 37 8 15
• · Clinched d•vt sio n t1tle
Sunday's Games
KC Omaha 103 Chrcago 101

Portland

1 ;

Boston 9C N ew York 86

Cleveland 101 Hoi.Jslon 95
Oetro1f 125 New Orlean s 11.1
Los Ange les 116 M11waukee 97
Phoen1x 102 Se attle 96
Monday 's Gitmes
( No games scl'1eduledl

••

••

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ABA Standmgs
By Un1ted Preu International

'

.By TODD NEMANIC
UPI Sports Writer
NEW YORK (UP! )
' iSometunes you wm w1th your
body and sometunes you wm
wtth your brains," beamed
diminutive Prmceton Olach
Pete Cartll after his Tiger
cagers became the first Ivy
Lea gue team to wm the
Na tional InvJtatlOnal TOUJi·
nament champtonship in the
38-year htstory of that event,
when
they
whipped
Provtdence, 80-69, at Madison
Square Garden Sunday.
The players left no doubt as

rumored again

WINTER HAVEN, Fla.
(UP!)
- The rwnor that
New York
55 23
Kentucky
Gaylord Perry may be traded
50 26 658
4
Sf lOUIS
27 so 351 27 1 1 to the Boston Red Sox has
Memphis
25 51 329 '19
Virginia
15 6'1 195 391 2 surfaced agam
West
Boston supposedly has been
w 1 per g .b
offered the veteran rtght
x Denv e r
60 18 769
San Anron1o
47 31 603 13
handed pttcher by the Cleve·
Indiana
42 34 553 17
land Indians in exchange for
Utah
33 43 434 26
S1m Diego
31 47 397 29
two Red Sox hurlers - lefttes
K·CIInched diVISiOn IItie
Btll Lee and Roger Moret.
Sund.Jy's G1mes
Kentucky 121 St Lou •s 110
Phtl Seghi, Cleveland's vice
Denver 114 New York 111
president
and
general
Memphis 104 V1rgm•a 101. ol
lnd•ana 117 Utah 11~
manager, has talked freely
San Antonio 122 San Di ego 102
about the posstbility of such a
Mondar ' s Games
Utah at Kentucky
trade, but the Red Sox have
remamed mum.
N H l Standings
By United Press 1nternat1ona1
AcC&lt;Jrdlng to Seghi, Boston
DIVision 1
w 1. t ph gf ga first Pfesented him wtth a hst
K Phlladlph 45 18 10 100 262 169 of seven names and told him to
NY Rangers JS 26 13 83 297 254 take his choice. He rejected all
NY lslanders31 24 19 81 244 202 of them.
Atlanta
31 29 13 75 22 4 215
He says he countered by
Division 2
w. 1. t. ph gf ga asking for a "solid starter, one
Vancou ... er 34 31 9 77 247 243
who wins 13 or 14 games a year,
Chicago
34 32 8 76 248 223 maybe more."
St . LOUIS
JO JO 14 74 248 252
The only pitcher the Red Sox
Minnesota
21 45 1 49 209 318
Kansas Ci1v 14 49 10 36 169 302 have in the 11 maybe more"
Division J
w 1. t. pis gf ga category, m addttion to the
Montreal
43 1l 17 103 341 209 untouchable ace of their staff
Los Angeles 39 I S 19 97 247 168 Luts Tiant, is Lee. The former
Pittsburgh
3326 IS 81 301 267 reliever has won 17 games each
O@tro•t
21 41 12 54 234 307
Wnhlnoton
6 63 5 17 157 408 of the two years since
Division 4
becoming a starter.
w I t ph gf ga
Seghi said he had aiS&lt;&gt; asked
)( Buffalo
46 13 15 107 3'36 22'2

1
•
•

''
'
r
I

I.

pet
705

g b

Boston

40 23 II 91 333 228
29 31 13 71 261 288
California
19 42 12 50 200 284
x·Ctincned Cllvls1on
s .anday's Games
Buffi!llo Y Cat•fornia 4
St Louis 3 Vancouver 3
Atlanta s washington 0
Detroit 4 Chlcaoo 4
NY Rangers 7 Boston 5
Philadelphia 2 Montreal 1
NY Islander s 3 Minnesota 3
Monday •, Games
California at Toronto
Toronto

"••

..
' ..

..•

..,•.
,.
.'
••
, .'

•

•

...

•

Wepner can take
lots ·of punishment
~

'

The 32-year.old AU should be
able to summon enough of his
skills by memory alone to take
out the wtllir1g but slow and
clumsy challenger. Carrying at
least 2231'.! pounds is going to
make MUhammed willing to
end it as qutckly as he can.
Ali has lneUowed m some
IAJnight.
ways and IS not expected to
Another thing the S&gt;year.old punish Wepner the way he
Bayonne, N.J., fighter is proud punished f1oyd Patterson in
otis his ability to take punish· Las Vegas m 1965, when he
ment. He's proven that time carried the back-injured
and again by gazing at his Patterson through 12 cruel
opponent.s tbrough a screen of rounds.
IU own blood Willi either a
Wepner doees have a chance,
doctor or referee can't take it of course, a ~ one, but none
•Y more and tells Chuck be's thelessachance. Any tune,two
bad It for the night.
big men meet there is the
·Tony Perez may have to give outside pos:Ubillty of one big
that lllllllSllge to Wepter almg lucky punch, or a wicked cut,
about the sWh rolKid, if Tony turning every th ing upstde
huu't comted to 10 by tben.
down.

I'
'

the Red Sox to toss m one more
"younger" ptt cher, so the
speculation unmedtately centered on Moret, tile southpaw
Cleveland wanted two years
ago when they thought they
had wrapped up a deal sendmg
Perry to Boston
Seght srud the Red Sox hst of
seven players had been
presented to hun by Boston's
director of player personnel,
Haywood Sullivan, who has
been sC&lt;Jutmg other maJor
league clubs for the past two
weeks
Seght menttoned a pttcher
not on thehst , presumably Lee,
and said he would ac':"pt
someone on the hst, posstbly
Moret . However, he didn't hold
out much hope of completing
that deal.
" If the Red Sox accept the
deal we have made them,
they'd be crazy," he satd. .
Meantune, the Red Sox spht
thetr squad agam, los~ng '"
T~~a t~ Cincmnatl, 1·3, and
wtnnmg m Lakeland 10-4 over
Detroit The hitting star of the
day was DWtght Evans wtth
four hits, mcludmg a home run
and s11 RBis.

Kings gain
NBA playoffs

By U1dted Press International
The Kansas City.Omaha
Kings showed thetr fans .why
WHA Standin~s
they are surprise playoff
By United Press International
East
participants Sunday. But their
w . 1. t. ph gf ga
Kansas
City fans also showed
KNew Eng
38 27 5 81 245 248
the Kings something.
Cleveland
31 37 3 65 202 22a
The Kings, led by Tiny Ar·
Chicago
28 42 l 1 57 237 282
lndlanapols Ia 49 ' 3 39 195 294 chi bald and Scott Wedrnan in a
West
w . I t ph gf ga fourth.quarter victory spurt,
K Houston
48 23 0 96 330 l29 beat the division-lesding
F'hoenlx
37 28 7 81 280 243 Ollcago Bulls, 103-101, in a
Minnesota
37 29 2 76 213 237 nationally televised C&lt;Jntest.
San Oltgo
36 Jo 3 75 113 2.tl The wln avenged a loss to the
Baltimore
18 48 3 39 112 299 Bulls in Chicago Friday night,
Ctntdlan
w. 1. t. pts gf 9a sealed a Kings playoff spot and
Quebec
., 2• o a• 29U6B pulled Kansas Clty.Qmaha to
Toronto
3a 31 2 7a 312 281 within 11'.! games of Ollcago in
Winnipeg
35 31 4 74 290 251 the Midwest Division race.
But the crowd was almost as
Edmonton
33 33 3 69 245 '2.,.4
V4ncouvtr 33 34 2 68 225 229 much of the story as the Kings'
x- Diwision winner
victory. Kansas City has been
Sundey's Results
slow responding to the team's
Minnesota 4 Edmonton 2
Winnipeg.,. Chicago 3
success, with empty Kemper
Phoenix S Indianapolis 3
Arena seats obvious even in
San Diego l vancouver 0. ot
Monday's G11mu·
key weekend games. But
CNo games scheduled )
Sunday, 16,805 cranuned mto
Flnallnternahonal
the new arena that is supposed
Hotkey League Standings
By United Preu lnternahonal
to only hold 16,300 for basket·
North
w. 1. t pts gt ga ball. It was the largest mdoor
x Muskegon
sports crowd in Kansas City
48 2.. 3 99 325 240
history.
Flint
44 26 5 93 267 220
saginaw
.tJ 29 3 89 302 259
"We had a btg crowd today,
Port Huron 35 38 3 73 255 270
and I'm glad we showed them
Kalamazoo l1 SJ s 39 203 318
x Lansing 12 28 I 25 14S 216 something," Kings Coach Phil
South
Jolutson satd "I'd say they got
w 1 t. pts gt ga
x oavton 47 26 3 97 302 259 their money's worth."
Columbus 41 32 4 86 314 280
The crowd had tittle to make
Toledo
34 39 4 72 290 282
Des Moines 31 36 7 69 253 264 noise sbout until the fourth
Fort wavne
26 45 6 58 250 318 quarter The Bulls took the
l d i VIS IOn W 1nner
lead with 6:45 left in the first
x - team disbanded
quarter and the Kings trailed
Sunday 's Results
Dayton 4 Ft Wayne 3
by as much as 11 WJtil the fmal
Flint 4 Port Huron 2
period.
Columbus 7 Toledo 5
Muskegon 4 Kalamazoo 1
But Archtbald and Wedman

RICHFIELD, Ohio (UP! ) Chuck Wepnef'S proudest
boasts are that In all his 41
fights he has never been
counted out, never lmocked
down. He should no longer be
able to boast that way after
meeting Mubarnroi!d Ali for the
world heavyweight title

to which it had been for them.
"We haven't got a really
talented player on the team,".
said semor guard Tun Van
Blommesteyn, who scored 23
pomts m the ftnal game and 87
for the tournament llromcally,
the same total as tourney MVP
Ron Lee of thtrd·place
Oregon ).
Prmce ton players are fond of
talkmg about how httle talent
they have .
And "thought" ts a word that
turns up often m the game
analyses of both coach and
players A small team, even by

Perry trade is

East

w.

clai~s

Princeton

tgnited the vtctory rally in the
fmal eigllt minutes that pulled
the Kihgs even. Archibald hit a
corner jumper to cut the Bulls'
lead to one, 83-87, and then he
hit two free throws for the lead.
Subsequent free throws by
Sam Lacey and Juruny Walker
sealed the victory in the Kings'
last regular season game in
Kansas Ctty
Olicago's Bob Love led all
scorers with 38. Archibald led
the Kings with 35, Including 17
free throws- 15 straight in the
second half .
In other NBA games, Cleveland beat Houston, 101·95,
Detroit downed New Orleans,
125-114, Los Angeles topped
Mtlwaukee, 11&amp;-97, Boston defeated New York, 9&amp;-86, and
Phoenix beat Seattle, 102-96
Cavaliers 101, Rockets 95:
Cleveland, wtth Jtm Brewer
scoring 18 points and Jun
Clones 16, surged into second
place in the Central Divtslon by
beating Houston . The vtctory
left Cleveland a hall-game
ahead of Houston m the
divislon but the Rockets lead
New York by a game in the
battle for the final wtld~ard
playoff spot in the Eastern
Olnference. Houston's Rudy
Tornjanovtch had 30 points,
Pistoos 1%5, Jazz 114:
Dave Bing netted 29 points
and Bob Lanier 26 as Detrmt
turned m an almost flawless
performance at the foul tine to
beat New Orleans. Detroit
missed just two of 39 free
throws and outscored the Jazz,
37·22, from the foul tine. New
Orleans' leading scorer was
Nate Williams wtth 28
Lalrers 116, Bucks 97:
Gatl Goodrtcb scored 36
points and Elmore Smtih
grabbed 17 reboWJda as Los
Angeles routed Milwaukee.
Goodrich hit 18-of.JJ shots but
iromcally neither he nor Smith
were m the game when the
Lakers ran orr 16 consecutive
pomts in the second perind to
take a fi0.43 halftune lead.
Kareem Abdui'Jabbar scored
22 pomts for the Bucks, 10
below his average.

NIT cage title

Ivy League standards, Pnncewn has to carry over tts
academic tradttton to the
basketball court
"Our game plans are so
thorough that we know exactly
what the other leatn wtll do
before they do tl," chipped tn
JUmor guard Mickey Steuerer,
who scored 26 pomts tn the fmal
game and ~akes turns wtth
three other players as htgh
scorer for Princeton .
Coach Car1ll proved htmself
a thmkmg man's coach m more

ways than one m the champtonshtp game, but the best
example was m his startmg
hne-up for the second hall
Leadmg by only one pomt at
38-37 after a wtld , turnover·
plagued 20 mmutes, he left Van
Blornrnesteyn, who had led all
scorers m the first half w1th 14
pomts, on the bench for the
f1rst nme mmutes

"Even though I was scormg
a lot of pomts," Van B was the

reg ulatiOn tlme had expired
tie the game

~p

.

chotce lor the all-tourney team,
as were Frankte Sanders and
!':ric Sutton of Stivers.
Also selected to the first alltournament team were R1ver
Vtew 's Enc Budendorf and
Scott Spencer of Rossford.
Sanders was the tournament's top scorer, gettmg 63
pomts m two games
The S-2 Huggms, son of IVS
coach Ularley Huggins, scored
54 pomts m his team 's two
games,
Young Huggtns, who had 30
points m h1s team 's ~9-56
overttme loss to Manon Local
m thechamptonshlp game, and
Marion's 6-6 Steve Hartings
were the only unammous
chmces for the team, being
named on all 16 ballots. ,
others named to the first
team were Rick Brunswtck of
Mar10n Local, Bryan Lentz of
lnd1an Valley South and Greg
Givens of Mansfteld St.
Peter's
SelectiOns were made by
wnters and broadcasters
covermg the tournamen t.

UPI Sports Writer
Those "big guns" that make
headlmes durtng the baseball
season are beginning to unload
as opemng day fast approaches.
Wtth the season opener only
two weeks away, the game·
breakers like Willie Stargell,
Jolutny Bench, Wtllie McCovey
and Jeff Burroughs are round·
mg into customary form
Stargell and Burroughs, for
example, each hit a pair of
home runs SWJday while Bench
hanunered a homer and McOlvey C&lt;JIIected two doubles m
exhibttion action.
S~ai'gell ' s homers and
--a'Kother by AI Oliver enabled
the Ptttsburgh Ptrates to
defeat the Philadelphia
Phtllies a-4, Bench's blast
helped the Cincinnati Reds
down the Boston Red Sox 7~
and McCovey's hitting paced
the San Diego Padres to a 14-0
rout of the Ulicago Cubs.
Burroughs' two homers
came in a losing effort as the
Montreal Expos edged the
Texas Rangers 8-7. Home runs
by Bob Bailey and rookte Gary
Carter paced Montreal to
VICtory.
In other action, Baltimore's
split squad won a parr of
games, defeating Atlanta 4-3
and St. Lou1S6-3; the New York
Yankees blanked Detrotl :).1);
Kansas City whipped the
Chicago Whtte Sox 9~;
Hou~on topped Mmnesota 7-4;
San FranCISCO outslugged its
Phoerux farm club 12-11 and
Califurma blanked Oakland 1· •
0.

Polly's Pointers

March 18 , 1975

BY PllLLY CRAMER

Tearn

Won Lost

No 4
No 12

31
34

the Orioles' twm vtctory
Robmson smgled home the
winning rWJ m the etghth inmng to beat the Braves and
Duncan, acqutred from
Cleveland late last month, htt a
pair of homers in the VICtory
over the Cardinals

r;57

~~ ~

54

~~ ; ~

~~

No •
No 6

~~

l

0

No 3

~~

44

44

42

46

;~

~~

34

54

No I
26
62
No 7
25
63
N o 13
24
6J
Team No 2 took 8 pomts
from Team 1 Jack Janey (sub)
had h1gh score for Team 2 w1fh
539 pms and Frank Krautter
had h1gh score for Team 1 wllh
487 ptns
Team 4 took 8 po•nts from
Team 3 Menda Shaw had h1gh

score for Team 4 wtth 531 p1ns
and Les Davts had htgh score
for Team 3 with 492 pms
Team 5 took 6 potnts from
Team 6 Bur l Cook had htgh
score for Team 5 wlfh 522 pms
and George Ratliff had h•gh
score for Team 6 w tth 435 p.n s
Team 14 took 6 pom t s from
Team 13 John Henzmann
(sub) had h1gh sc ore for Team
14 w lfh 507 pms and George
Roach had htgh score for Team
13 wtfh 535 pms
Team 8 took 6 points from
Teom 7 Charlte Neal had h1gh
score for Team 8 Nlfh 555 pms
and Bud Spence had htgh score
for Team 7 w1fh 439 pms
Team ~spl i t B po1nls wdh
Team 10 Benny Neal had high
scor e for Team 9 w1th 458 pms
and Danny M tnk had h igh
scor e for Team 10 w1 fh 490 pms
Team 11 split 8 points w llh
Team 12 John Kennedy had
htgh score for Team 11 w1th 495
ptns and Hazel Holley had h1gh
score for Team 12 w1th 481 pms
Jan Robinson had htgh smgle
game for the ladtes wtth a 186
sc ore She also had htgh senes
wllh a fotal p1n score of 490

TAMPA, FLA (UP!) - The
first Clnctnnati Reda ' pitcher
to go seven mnings during the
sprmg tramlllll season ts Gary
Nolan, who IS recuperating
very well from shoulder sur·
gery
Nolan went seven frames
and Johnny Bench hit his
second homer of the sprmg ·
Sonday as the Reds won thetr
loth game in the last II wtth a
7-3 trmmph over the Boston
Red Sox.
Nolan gave up three runs,
one unearned and one on a solo
homer by Deron Johnson,
durmg the seven innings he

March 12 , 1975
Regatta In
Youngs Super Market
Sm1 t h Nelson Motor Co

Pts

56

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during the Menstrual CY,fJe
New ODRINJL, a "Natural' Water
pi ll can help you lose excess wetght,
swellmg and uncomfortable bodv bloat
(puflmess 111 ankles, arms, stomach)
due to e ~ce ss water reten tion during
the entn e menstrual cycle ODRINilts
a gentle diuretiC compound conlams
natural herbs m a tablet that IS fast
acting and efl ecllve Helps eltmmate
excess water th at causes pre menstrual

bloat

OORINIL · lhe ' Nalural" Water P1ll ·
gentle effectiVe, economical I Sat1sfac
!ton or money back

NELSON'S DRUG STORE

Z1de s Sport Shop
Tenth Framers
Nelson Drug Co
H1g h •nd •v•dual game
Men , Bill Port er 242 women ,
0 Carson 202 , second h19h md
game larry Duga n 224
women , M Dugan 192
H 1gh senes Men
Bill
Porter 638 , women, Max1ne
Dugan 566 , second h1gh senes
- Men , Gary Wayland 555
women , Pat Carson 55 1
Team h•gh game - Sm1th
Nelson Motor s Co 7J6
• T eam h1gh ser.es Tenth
F ram ers 2028

I

Let's Tallc Soon
DALE C. WARNER
992-2143
Pomeroy

A scheduled game between
the New York Mets and Los
Angeles at St. Petersburg,
na .• was cancelled when the
Dodger team plane developed
engine trouble at Vero Beach,
na.
Brooks Robinson and Dave
Duncan were the.key ftgures in

I

rb ownm~

relephone equ ipnH:: nt- lf )'OU rca phone

&lt;.om pan\' \X1e \ C done 1r fo r ye-ars However. whac's ~ood for us IS nm necessarily
,~.;t.&gt;Od.

for you

A telephone s~s tem srarts ou c cosrm~,b •g money ( You 're buy mF: more
rhan JUSt a black pla!JCte,box: wnh a d1al

.

I

Mr. Nobody from Nowhere
Dear Helen.
1
I'm the kind of person no one remembers, Ordmary is the
word. I blend Into the crowd.lf I meet a girl I was mtroduced to
at a party the night before, she111ook startled when I speak.!'ve
worked in the same office for six months; nobody says hello In
the cafeteria.
!let the other guy do the talking because I don't know what to
say,especlally with women I'd hke to take out but don't have the
nerve to ask.
I read about females being aggressive these days; why are
they so reticent with a man who really needs someone to make
the ftrst move' I feel like- MR. INVISIBLE

the soloist on "He Lives," and
Wolfe and Kern JOllied tu smg
· 0 Swmg lhe Gales Wide
Open " The benedJchon wa s by
lhe Rev Mr B11111garner and
the re cess iOnal hymn was
"Chnst the LOJ d 1s R1sen
Today " For the present&lt;JIJOn,
lhe Semor Cat1zens Chorus was
atltred 1n black robes

MONDAY
IZAAK WALTON I
Mo d
t7
.eag ue
F.~S;~~N ~~A Monda
7 30 P m. at th~ scho~'
Everyone welcome
BEND OF THE RIVER
Garden Club Monday 7 30 p m
al home of Ml s Andrew Cross.
Program by Mrs Clifford

Seven children
(Ire confirmed

Candlelighted
Service iS Set

easter ~ilies

20%
OFF

10:

CASH
AND

CARRY

on ir ) A.td u ll f"VC T mcceases m value

The !on~e r yo.:. use rr che more u depreCiates And so does )'Our on,;:tnal capt tal

rem ts nm as Simple as it may seem
\"(/e've spenr decades at 1t Thar's why

FOOD FOR AMERICANS

we can prov1de you r

busmess wnh the

tn\•estmenr
Then. there s mamtenance

serviCe, equ tpmcm anJ expert adviCe

s1m ple S)'Stem )ou' ll call

Call us for a consultacton There is
noexrrachar~e f or tn(ormatiOn And, of

tn

For a
ours1de help

ver)' Complex ~r-up
ma) re&lt;}Uilt that you put a man on staff
so your vtralcommuniCat lonsdon'r gnnd

now and chen A

ro a hal&lt;'" 1he m1dsr of a bustness day
A ~ )'ou can see, ownm,u a phone sys-

"

you need.
"

course. rhere s no oblt,eacton ro buy any
equtpmcru.

1fi i ¥1

!Ill

GEnERAL TELEPHone
•

A book of postage stamps "Where Seek Ye Chrtsl?" and
wtll be purchased for Mrs there was a poem prayer.
Dana Hamm at the Arcadia
The program was by Mrs.
Nursing Home, and members Leora Stgman, "Why Eggs In
signed roWJd-robin cards for Your Easter'" a reading was
Mrs . Julia Grtmm, Mrs followed by quizzes wtlh prizes
Roush, Bert Boduner, and the bemg won by Mrs Cleo Boyd,
Rev. Clairmont Hoyt of Mrs . Cora Pullen, and Mrs.
Newark, former pastor.
Beulah Whtte. The23members
Devohons by Mrs. Elizabeth responded to roll call with a
Slavm opened with group verse of scrtplure.
singing of "The Old Rugged
Refreshments were served
Cross" and, scrtplure from ·by Mrs. Nelle Werner, Mrs
Luke 24. Heh rneditallon was Eva HarUey, ('irs. Frances

I

- --

Bake- 'e1JJ yourself crackers

By Aileen Claire
NEA Food Editor
.When a food shopper C&lt;lrn·
plains about the cost of a full
marketbasket, does she
separate the food from the non·
food ttems? Or, does the
shopper even consider or total
up the cost each day or each
week of such snacks as
pretzels, crackers, chips, can·
dies?
Try totaling the amount spent
Dear Mr.!.:
for
these each week and you
Corne on now: a truly aggressive woman would scare you
wtll be in for a shockmg revela·
spitless. What you need ts a shy type who will be grateful for your tlon It costs less to make your
attention. She's there - blending mto the crowd. Look for her! own snacks. Popcorn, for exam·
H.
pie, is less expenstve to pop at
+++
horne and you also can make
Dear Helen:
your own crackers.
This latter is something few
My wife is a TV..aholic. She watches everything from soaps
have
done m decades. For those
to old reruns, but never the news or anything educational. She
who
must follow a low·
won't go out because "there's a gond show on." She neglects her
cholesterol diet, making your
work so as not to miss a dumb game show or soupy seriaL
own snacks is a btg encourageAny suggestion to help the .:.. HUSBAND OF A TV ADD!Cf ment At least, you know what
the ingredients are Homemade
Dear Husband:
crackers also may have as
People become addicted to TV when they have nothing better many seasomngs as you want.
to do; or have become so dull and lifeless they won't try for Try these Carefree Promises or
Lo-Cbol Cornmeal Crackers the
something better.
next
time you have some ellra
You might break the cycle with:
time to spend in the kttcben.
A vacation trip that keeps you on the move.
CAREFREE PROMISES
New frienda and interests. Including renewed interest in
3
cupo olllod otl-pur- ftour
your wife.
1/2 lloopoon ull
A mutual bobby; and-&lt;Jr a part· or full-time job for her.
1 cup (1/2 pound) ""''~~"~""
Getting back to husband-wife conversations.
1 cup (1/2 pound) croomod
coltegechOlld turkey: sell the TV set. - H,
ln a large bowl mix flour and
Dear Helen:
salt Add margarme and cotI was Introduced to a man who is absolutely perfect for me tage cheese, cut tn wtth a
pastry blender unbl well blend·
and my two children. And I would be the ideal wife for hun.
ed.
Wrap dough m waxed paper
The problem is that he's going with a woman who is totally
and
chtll at least 1 hour. On a
wrong for him and will never make him happy. I could make him
well-floured board roll out
a wonderful home but she just likes to spend his money. He dough one-eighth·tnch thick.
drinks too much because of her. She says he ts the father of her Cut out dough wtth a 2·tnch
baby but I don't believe tt.
cookie cutter and place on an
How can I make him stop torturing himself wtth a worthless ungreased baking sheet Prick
woman and see that! am the -ONLY ONE FOR HIM
each cracker with a fork. Bake
in a 450-degree oven 12 to 15
mmutes until lightly browned
Dear OOFH:
Go after him! Happen to be where he is. Show you're in- Remove from baking sheet and
terested, but not anxtous. It's always open season m mate.JJunts. cool on a rack. Makes about 100
crackers
If you're a good stalker with a lot of anunurution, you may brmg
this man horne for keeps.
But is he REALLY your type? Seems to me he rather enjoys
"torturing himself with a worthless woman." - H.

Five Easter lilies to be
placed on the altar of the
Middleport First Baptist
Church by the Busy Bee Class
will be delivered to shut-IllS
following_ Easter services, it
wasdectdedatameetingofthe
Class Thursday night at the
church.
,
Due to the . tllness of Mrs.
Lottie Roush, class treasurer
for the past 30 years, Mr~.
Leora Sigman was appointed
assistant treasurer.

-

The Traditional Gift
For Home or Church

DOERS

REGULAR
YOUR TRADE
Ever thought of making your own crackers? It's easy.
VARIATIONS:
Caraway Crackers: Add 4
teaspoons caraway seed to
dough
Sesame-Oilion Crackers: Add
4 teaspoons sesame seed and 4
teaspoons grated onion to
dough.
Poppy Seed Crackers: Add 2
teaspoons poppy seeds to
dough.
Herb Crackers: Add 4
teaspoons chopped parsley, 4
teaspoons sntpped chives and
one-half teaspoon dried dtll
weed to dough.
LO.CHOL
CORNMEAL CRACKERS
1

NOW

1 1h ttllp!UM 1Uf8r

1

t111paan 111t

1

tlllllDDft grated onion

....

2
tablllpaDM margarine
1/4 tuopoon Tllbloco peppor
1

729.95
100.00

..

629~..
M

1 h cupo bolting · -

1

11111 wh~. llltghlly -

In large bowl, combine cor·

nmeal, sugar. salt, onion,
margarine and Tabasro. Add
bothng water and stir until
water ts absorbed. Stir In egg
whtte. Drop by teaspoon on
greased baking sheet. Bake in
4CJO.&lt;Iegree oven 15 ml,nutes.
Remove and cool. Makes 4
dozen cr;a,.~•..c 1

BANK RATE
FINANCING

cup ,.tlow comtnNl

----------,
I EASTER I
Variety

nut fhar chere are :tdvn.nt:t~es

PoLLED POWER PAYS

Garden "

!:!.

spnpg presby~rial to be'neld
In Colwnbus on April a was
annoWJced as was. the mothef.
daughter banquet to be held on'
May 14. Gifts m the one grea,t
hour of sharmg were received.
Mrs Dwtght Zavitz reported
on the mtsstons and gave a
prayer from the mission yearbook Devohons by Mrs. Lewis
Sauer Included scripture from
Matthew and a prayer .
Refreshments were served by
Group I

An
Eas ter
pla ylel Ctndy Crooks, Kim Fraley , and
h1ghhghted the Thursday mght Zandra Vaughan The Rev
meetmg of the Women 's Dwight Zavltz had prayer.
Assoc~alton of the Middleport
Durmg the business meehng
Ftrst Untied Presbyl enan th e annual repo~t of the
Church
lreasure r wa s given The
Narrators for the playlet
c
were Mrs arroll Harper and
Mrs Dwtghl Wallace Roles
The Dai~ Sentiner
DE'VOTED TO THE
were ta ken by Tma SJmlh,
INTEREST OF
Tern Yeauger, Trudy Hall,
MEIGS- MASON AREA
' H ES 1' ER L TANNEHILL
Jeff Ury. Joe McCloud , Chns
. Ex ec Ed
M orns
y
' OBERT HOEFLICH
eauger , Deb1 Colcmun, Cathy
C1ty Ed1lor
FALL Gospclmce tmg at the Coleman, Bec kv Coleman
Publi She d daily ~XCf! IJf
Sa turday by The Ot1lo Val l ey
M1ddlepm t Htgh School March Pam Crooks, o"ndy Crooks: Publ1st1•n
g Company , 111
24 through the 29 at 7·30 p m K1m Frale}, and z.md ra
Court St , Pomeroy , O h iO
45 769 Busmess Othcc Phone
mghlly Evange llSI will be A Vaughan .
99 2 2156 Ed•tor1al Phon£' 99')
Seven children were con- C Estep and H D Cook
Mrs Paul Haptonstall and 2157
SeC Oild class postage pa1d at
ftrmed Palm Sunday at the Featured smgmg gr oups Will L ms Ann Sauer srwg ·we e Pomeroy
, Oh10
1
Tnmty Church m Pomeroy
N a t 1ona l adveri1 Sin9
be the Coy Fam1ly and the You There'' " and " I Gave Ml' r epre
sen lat• ve
Boll m e ll• ·
For
the
confirmatw n
L1le For Thee ." S1n g1ng Gallagher , Inc , I ') East 42nd1
Joyfulmres.
St New Yorlc , N ew Yor k
ceremony the boys and g~r l s
TUESDAY
'Angels m WhJi e" acSu b scr , pt • o n
r a t es•
Yo ere a ttired m whate robes and
Del•vered by car r1 er wh er *
MEIGS AthlelJc Booste rs compamed by Mrs Richard
availabl e 75 cents per week ,
each one was prese nted Tuesday 7 30 p.m at htgh Vaughan, were Pam Crooks,
6y Motor Route Where ca rr1 e r
a Btbie
Co nfirm ed by school
serv •ce no t availab le, On~t
mon th SJ 25 By ma11 •n Oh1Q
the Rev
W. H Per·
BIRTHDAY an d potlu ck
an d W Va , On e Y ear . $22 oo ~
Sill.
mont hs, $11 50
Thr ee
nn were Jan Betz1ng, supper Tuesday 6 p m at
month s S7 00
Elsewhere
daughter of Mr and Mrs . Dun Ha1 n sonville Elementary
$26 00 y ea r , Sn( mon1t1!
$1 3 SO thr ee month s, $1 50
Belzmg, Beth Penm, daughter School
Sponsored
by
Sub scn ptiOn pn ce in Clud es
Holy
W
ee
k
se
rvi
ces
at
of the Rev and Mrs W. H Harnsonvill e Golden Circle
Sunday T•IJ:1~s Sfmtm e l
_ .
Perrtn,
Andrea
R1ggs , Senter Clhzen Club En- Tmuly Churcl1 have been
daughter of Dr. and Mrs Ke1th lertmnrnent by Mr and Mrs. announced.
Thursday a ca ndlelight -'~-----··"-----·-------R1ggs; Mtke Smtth, son of Mr Darold Taylor, Portland
commumon service will be
and Mrs Roy Sm1th ; Harvey
JUNIOR
and
Senwr
Whttlatch, son of Mr and Mrs. Auxthary , Drew Webster Post held at 8 p.m m the Sunday
Harvey Whltlaich, Sr , Lorra 39, Tuesday 7 30 p m at post School room On Good Fnday,
a worshtp service wtll be held
Wtsecup, daughter of Mr. and home.
al a ~.m at the church, and on
Mrs James W1 secup, and
XI Gamma Mu Chapter of
Sunday
rnormng the Easter
Tammy Starcher
Be~1 S1gma Pht Tuesday 7.30
To open the serv1ce all of the p.m. at Columbus and Southern sunrtse servtces w1ll beg1n at
children of the church came m Oh10 Electrtc Co. Electwn of 6 30 and will be followed wtth
a process tonal carrymg palms. officers. Cultural program ·an Easter breakfast 1n the
Ftve large palms decorated the "how to make fnends" to be soctal room All those at·
altar area along with flowers conducted by Vickt Gleckner tendmg the early serv1ce are
mv1led to remain for the
placed there by Mrs and
Carolyn
Gru eser
breakfast.
Marguente ,Meyer and Clara Hostesses wtll be Carole Me·
The Easter morning worship
Gnfftth m lnemory of their Cullough and Sue Ztrkle
service
w1ll begm at 2!i a.m
stster, Freda Fauber, and a
JUNIOR AMERICAN LegiOn Holy communton w1ll be served
vase of hhes by the Ewmg Aux1liary, Fee ney-Bennett
lamtly m memory of Henry Post 128, Middleport, 6 30 lollowmg the regular se rvtce.
Ewmg . The chOir sang "Kmg Tuesday mght at the hail.
of Kmg s ''
mandery 24, Kntghts Templar,
WEDNESDAY
stated
conclave, Pomeroy
RA CINE AMERICAN
Legton Auxthary Wednesday Masomc Temple, 7:30 p,m.
AMERICAN LEGION
7·30 p.m. at hail.
Aux11Jary,
6; 30 potluck Wed·
LODGE TO MEET
WILDWOOD GARDEN Club
nesday
at
Feeney-Bennett
Post
The Ohw Valley Com- Wednesday 7 30 p m. at horne
128, Middleport, followed by
mandery 24, Kmghts Templar, of Mrs. Mason Ftsher
meetmg
at 7 30 p.m Members
wtll attend sunnse servlCes at 6
POMEROY· MIDDLEPORT
are
reminded
to take gifts for
a.m. at the Syracuse Umted Lwns Club, Regular mee tmg,
Methndist Church
Wednesday, Metgs Inn, with ail the Peck of Wee Ones project.
FEENEY-BENNETI Post
hons urged to attend
128,
Mtddleport hall , 7:30
OHIO VALLEY ComWednesda y Members to jom
Auxiliary for potluck at 6· 30
p.m.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

A three-part Eastet· cantata,
was presented by the Me1gs
CoWl ty Semor CJ hzens Chorus
SWlday afternoon at Heath
Untied MethOdist Ch urch,
Mtddleporl, before a well-f1lled
sanc tuary
Mrs Came Neutzhng was
the director, Mrs Ha ze l
Thomson the accompanas t, and
Mrs. Neva Seyfrted, the
narrator The opemng organ
prelude was presented by Mrs
Neulzhng
who
played
"Hosan nah Chorus Magnus,"
and the processwnal. "Tell Me
The Stor) of Jesus " In ·
vocahon was by the Rev
Rober! Bumgarner, hos t
church pastor
F~rst part of the cantata was
enhlled " The Songs of
Calvary" and opened w1lh
scripture by Mrs. Seyfned
from Luke 26 The chorus sang
"God's Love" and "Go To
Dark Gethsemane," and
Wilham Watson sang "In the

. 0if commun#1J
. Wt'l'T1- recetve
. church 's al tar t-tl'l'tes If FLOWERS
s.'hut-tns
,
'J
I ~a~kets,
Some of ou r busmess customers
h.ne been con.stdenn,t: the purchase of
rhctrown phones \X' e .tee rhe firs f to ad-

For information: Mrs. Virginia Anderson, Rt.
2, Box 169, oak Hill, Ollio 45656.

DEAR POLLY - M; Pet
Peeve 1s wtth slacks that have'
the elashc waistband sewed
nght in wtth the cloth. If the
elas hc was left free and rWl
through the band we could
replace tl w1lh new when 1t gets
old and stretchy. - TONY .
DJ&lt;;AR POLLY - I have
foWld tl most con1•ement lo
d1lute concentrated house plan t
ferhhzer m an empty 32-&lt;JWlce
plashc hq111d detergent bottle
I JUSt shake tl up wtth my
thwnb over the top and fmd 1t
tdeal for pourtng small
streams of the water and plant
food mto httle pots and lor
getting Wlder the leaves Also,
an empty clean wmdow
cleaner bottle that squ~rts
makes an mexpens1ve plant
mtster - LARRY.
DEAR POLLY - To make
sure that my flat top sheets do
not get kicked out at the bottom
or Sides of the bed I stmply tte a
knot In each of the lower corners and have a good fitted top
sheets. Just remember to untie
the knots before laundermg. JO,

Helen

Play it safe and 8Ul1l.
It may be time to
have your presenl
policy updated,

102 W. Main

spots and stains belon· pulling
clothes in the wash. This \las
left on a couple of minutes,
riBBed out well and the carpet
allowed lo dry. She says lhe
results are the best she has
had. Good luck. -POLLY.

Helen Hel
By
Us. • •

Pomeroy, Oh1o

.I

52
45
39
28
22

'

In part two of the presentatiOn were "The Songs of the
Cructftxton" With Mrs
Seyfrted readmg Luke 22, 29 to
35 Ira Wolle and Mrs Neutz.
hng sang 14 The Hour IS Come ,"
the chorus dtd " 'T1s Mtdnighl
and on Ohve's Brow" and Rose
Gmther and Clara Thomas
sang "Alone" w1th the Chorus
JOtning in the refrain.
Singmg " Ten Thousand
Angels Could Have Saved
Him" were Ira Wolfe, Mrs
Kathleen Ward, Mrs Sarah
You will receive a dollar If Philbrick, Ralph Kerns and
Polly uses your favorite Mrs. Mane Robinson. "The
homemaking Idea, Pet Peeve, Center Cross" was sung by
Polly's Problem or solution loa Wolfe, Mrs. Phtlbrtck, Mrs
problem. Write Polly In care of Robmson , Mrs
Virgmta
Ibis newspaper.
Gulley, and Kerns, and Wolfe
sang "The Seventh Word. "
"Songs of the Resurrectton"
was the third part of the
program w1th Mrs. Seyfned
-------~-~-~.:;,;;c::::::=~ readmg scnpture from Matthew 27 and 28 The Chorus
sang "Where Have They Left
Htm" and "AIIeluJah, He Is
Risen" wtth Mrs. Philbnck as
solotst. Mrs. Betty Kern was

New!
"
"NATURAL" WATER PILL

'

56 LOTS OF TOP PROSPECTS

re01ove any excess and then
apply a noninflammable dry
cleaning Uuld. Let this dry and
then repeal use of the solvent if
necessary. After drying gently.
brush up the pile. Do nol allow
anything to saturate the carpet's backlog. Test first.
A blg clean blotter could be
held over the spots on the
wallpaper, press over this with
a hot iron bul do not touch the
wallpaper with the Iron.
Hopefully the grease will be
soaked up into the blotter,
Fuller's earth or another absorbing powder also might be
applied to such spots,
Betty, my rlgbt·band helper,
had spots on her carpet thai
resisted many cures until she
sprayed them with thai
laundry product one uses on

FOR THE
PROTECTION
YOU NEED~

Early Wedne sday
Mll(ed league

Stand1ngs

POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - I really
need some help from you or the
readers. My little grand·
daughter rubbed a Jar of omtment into my nylon carpet. i
put a detergent on it hopmg 11
would lift out the grease but tl
did no good. Now there
are
large
dirty
spots
from
walking
on
it.
She also smeared some of thts
otnbnent on my new wallparer. Corn starch dtd not help
remove the grease I hope
someone has some ideas for
me You have helped me before
so I JUSt know you can agam HELEN
DEAR HELEN - What a
predicament. How sorry I do
feel for you. The Carpet lnstltule's recommendations for
oily spots like hand cream is to

plate appearances.
The pttching vtctory went to
Don Hood, a left.JJander acqutred from Baltunore, who
pitched two perfect mnings In
rehef
Saturday, the Indians were
beaten by the Brewers 9-5 as
Gaylord Perry, a 21-game
wmner in 1974, was shelled for
seven rtms m six innings.
Player~oach Tom McCraw
had a home run for the Indians.

Tea m h1gll game - M1dwest
Steel Co 977
Team h1g h se r1es - Roach's
Gun Shop 2648

Senior
citizens
give
!I Social ~ Playlet on Easter
.
three -part cantata lc
d
l
~emepmmn~d
1
,:; aen ar

Granddaughter 's
fun leaves its imprint

pttched. He was mcked for
seven hits.
Rookie Rollte Eastwick
pitched scoreless baD the last
two mrungs desptte issuing five
walks.
Bench's homer was one of 11
hits the Reds got off Don Aase,
James Wright and Diego Segui,
The Reds bunched three of
the htts, one a bases-loaded
double by Tony Perez, for four
runs in the first inning. They
added one In the second and the
!mal two m the seventh on
Bench's homer after a John
Vukovtch smgle.

Robinson in
first appearance

TUCSON, Artz. (UP!) Frank Robinson made his first
appearance as a player this
spring, but tt was the replacement for the Cleveland playermanager who sparked the
lndtans to victory here Sunday.
Leron Lee, fighting tot a spot
on the 25-man roster, C&lt;Jllected
three htts and scored three
runs m leading the lndtans to a
12·8 vtctory over the
Mtlwaukee Brewers
The triumph broke a five·
game Cleveland losmg streak.
"The vtctory did a lot of good
Burl Cook had high smgle for the players m wmning a
game for the men w1th a 222
score Char lie Neal had h tg h game hke that," RoblllSon
senes w1th a total p1n score of
said. He was referrmg to the
555 .
fact the Indians tratled 7-1
after three mnings.
The Indians' httting attack,
Tn- Countv league
March 11 , 1975
which
has been anemtc most of
Standmgs
the
spring,
included 15 hits
Team
Pts
Rawlmgs Aut o Pari s
4S Sunday, 11 off Brewers' relief
Roach s Gun Shop
48
H &amp; R F 1restone
40 ace Tom Murphy. Buddy Bell
Sea rs Cata log Merchants
40 had three hits for the Jndtans
Pomeroy Ceme nt Block Co 32
M1dwes t Ste el Co
32 and Frank Duffy, George
H1gh •nd1v 1duai game - A
Hendrick and Charlie Spikes
L Phelps Jr 234 Sec ond high
two each.
1nd game - A L Phelps Jr
223
Robtnson played three in·
H •gh se nes - John Tyr ee
rungs as a designated hitter. He
614 , second h1gh se r1 es - A L
Phelps Jr 60 2
flted out and walked in his two

Team

Big guns are starting
to
'unload'
down
south
By FRED MeMANE

Friday, March 28th, 7:00P.M.
Rock Springs Fairgrounds- Pomeroy, Ohio

''

to

Panthers' Allen
c0 .1:'ns M
hOn or
COLUMBUS (U PI)
Napoleon Allen , Columbus
Linden McKinley's 6-4 semor
center, was voted the Most
Valuable Player in the Class
AAA State High School
Basketball Tournament
Allen, who scored 17 pomts
and had a game·htgh 11
rebounds m the Panthers' 77-72
wm over Cleveland Hetghts m
the title game, headed the alltourney squad, which also
mcluded teammate Todd Penn
Uoyd Franklin of Cleveland
Hetghts Jtm Paxson of Kellermg Alu;r and Canton McKinley 's Phil Hubbard
Allen also scored 20 pomts m
the Panthers' semtfmal win
over Kettermg Alter and htt th
wtnnmg basket wtth 17 secon~
remaimng
Rtver V;ew's John Wtlhams
was selected the top Class AA
player and Harry Huggms of
lndtan Valley South the Class A
MVP
Wtlhams , who scored 2~
pomts m the Black Bears' 77-72
overtime vtctory over Dayton
Stivers, was also a unarumous

DAN fHOMPSON
FORD BOWLING LEAGUE

first to adimt, '' I wasn't run·

mng the team the way I should
Pete (Molloy) 'came in and got
us out of the fastbreakmg style
we played m the first half and
back mto the dehberate pat·
tern offense that ts our bread
and butter."
Only an Ivy League coach
would th1nk of sttlmg his
highest scorer on the bench to
protect a one-pomt lead
Earlier m the day, tn the
battle fo( the th ird-p lace
trophy, Oregon's Ron Lee put
on the show that probably won
him the tournament's Most
Valuable Player honor. as he
scored 31 pom ts In an a().76
overtime win aga mst St
1
John 's
Lee also scor ed four of
Orego n's e1ght pmnts m the

~~&amp;:!"":..~'!!~:::::.-::::::::::::~::::·.·:·~~

NoJan first to
•
•
go
seven
znnzngs
l:

Weekly Standings

ex tra sesswn after the Ducks'
Gerald Willett sank the second
of two fr ee throws after

Southemm Polled Hereford Sale

'

Local Bowling

II
I
I

of hanging
large pots of
hires, h;Ydra~gea,
. mums, gerantums,j
1small. pots of double
petunt_as,
vergena.
I tmpattens.. several!
Iva r .' e t I e s
o fl
1geramums.

I
I

Bearhs, Mrs. Ehzabeth Searls
wtth Mrs Hamm contributing .
Others attendmg were Mrs.
Gwinnie Wh1te, Mrs Pearl
Hoffman, Mrs Dorothy Evans,
Mrs. Edith Sauer, Mrs.
EhzabethGardner, Mrs ,!essie
Houdashelt , Mtss Freddte
Houdashelt , Mrs.
Ruth 1
Johnson, Mrs. Wtlma Par· j
malee, Kathryn Werner, Mrs
Electa Souders, Mrs Isabelle
Wmebrenner, Mrs RosemAry 1949-4121
Lyons.
L_

1

• Twin Dairy Bars
'

• Deep Door Storage
• Portable Egg Bucket
• Roll-Away Wheels
• Automatic Door Closers

• Juice Can Dispenser
• Separate temperature
controls and lights

.

..•

I
I
1

Q.ELAND
. GREENHOUSE 1
1
I

Racine, OhioJ

- -·- - -

--.-·
..

I

�•

J

'

J

.. • Mtddleport Cub Scout Pack
24S enjoyed a vtstt to the Pomt
, Vtew Cable TV Studto m Pomt
; Pleasant thts pasl Saturd•l
~mg led m a tour of the studtos
.-by Paul ~rard "ho explamed
how programmmg ts set up and
how news and weather ts
continuously shown on the
screen The htgh potnl of the
lour was u hen the boys sa&gt;~
themselves on televtston
Accompanymg the group of
• 15 cub arouts on the

vlslt

"ere

Den Chtefs John B1ers and
Davtd Hysell Den Moth&lt;rs
Marsha Spauldmg and F:ll 1
1 Mae Soulhern Den D.ads
,Mtllard Spauldmg and Robert
'Southern and Cubmaster Jack
Bacon

Cub Scouts m 1k1ng Ihe 11 1p
\\ere Jotm Bacon lll Ch1 IS
Burdelle Ronme Denny Jun
F arle) Jeffre) Hamson Al•n
Lee Kmg J1 Bobb) Snu th~e111
Mel \ln \ m Meter Johnn)
Blake Brent Ge01 ge Bnan
C.eorge S.:1mnn Plants Kei th

Scott Charles

Dr~vts

md Ahw

Spauldmg
Beglllmng next Sa turd ty the

Boy Scouts and Cub &amp;outs Will
guang to RIO c.randc to take

b~

p 1rt m a S\\tmnung mstruct10n
se \\hlcl IS Op~n IO 11! 80~

CO lli

Scouls and Cub Scouts m the
Metgs-G Jlh.:l MEl son Counc il
Tlus c..uluse w1ll bt! given on
Sa turd l) s for the next ftvt
\\ reks

Services set for Mrs. Swisher
~ POINT

PLEASANT
liuneral servtces "'ll be held
Wednesday at 2 p m for Mrs
Laurah A Swtsher 63 Rl 1
Btdwell formerly of Poml
flleasant who dted Sunda) al
12 10 p m HI Pleasanl Valley
Hospttal

Watson Henderson £our sons

Shellt a J 1cksonv1ll e Fla
George P!llsbur gh Machael
Coltunbus and Ca rl thts c1ly
fou1 s tslt;l s Mrs Myrtle
Watson Mrs Beulah Wtlder
Mrs Lou1sc Wells and Mrs
Pe ggy 1\ ctc kl c
all of
I ,.. Mrs Swtsher was a relired Co lumbus four brothers
-=k for the G C Tow1ng Co of Ronald Ha11 y and Carl
tins Clly She was born Aug 24
S1mpkms all of Columbus and
1911 111 Putnam Co W Va a John of Delaware Ohw 19
daughter of the late Charles ~randchtldr en und one great
and Verme Fetly Stmpkms
grandchtld
Sen ICCS Will be ft Om the
Surv1vmg are her husband
John F Swtsher
four Crow Hussell Funeral Home
daughters Mtss Eltzabeth w1th the Rev George Hoschar
Swtsher Btdwell Mrs Yvonne m clmrge Burtal will be 111
Dennis Cheshtre Mrs Karen Kirkland Mcmonal Gardens
Frtends may call at the
Fahner Columbus Mrs Vwla
funeral home afle1 7 p m
today

Aaron Scarberry

killed in truck
Aaron Scarberry 33 New ROD WINS AGAIN
CARACAS Venezuela (UP! )
;Haven who was kllled
Australia s Rod Laver used
f'i\iturday m a truck acc1dent
near ~rgetown Ky , was h1 s mastery and prectston
born Oct 2 1941 the son of Sunday to bridge a 15-year gap
!Johnson and Emuna Grady between him and yowtg MeXI
can Raul Ramtrez to w10 the
~arberry
1 Besides his parents he IS 20th Altamtra Tennts Cham
pii'Vived by two sons Aaron ptonshtp 7~ &amp;-2
It was laver s third
Russell Scarberry and Stephen
Altamtra
title mcludtng 1961
bWayne Scarberry, both at
borne, two sisters Mrs -Ruth and 1962 champtonshlps and
~cBrtde and Mrs
Betty earned hun $10 000 for the
Kimble both of Portage smgles IItle
Mich
four
brothers
Lawrence of Henderson
BOOSTERS TO MEET
Wilford Point Pleasant,
file
Syracuse Mmersv1lle
Samuel ot Montrose, and Roy
Sports Boosters Assoc1allon
PI Apopka, Fla
·Funeral services wtll be held \1111 meet Tuesda) March 25
ai 1p m Tuestlay at Ute Ewmg al the Syracuse Muntctpal
rurteral Home wtth burial m Butldtng All managers of httle
Graham Cemetery Frtends league teams are requested lo
may call at the fwteral home altend The meehng ts at 7 30
t!)jytlme after 4 p m today
P m

OFF ICE HOURS 9 30to 12,2 TO 5 (CLOSE AT
NOON ON THURS )- EAST COURT ST,

Nurses
wanted.
No matter what you do for a
living, you can do a lot of
good for somebody living in
your community.
And do yourself a lot of good
at the same time.
To see how much, write:
Volunteer, Washington,
D.C. 20013.
Your help is very much
wanted.

Volunteer.
It'll make~
a better bulnati being.
~~A

Pubhc

S..VIee of Th!S ,.,.,,..., • The Ad-. t s '9 CouO&lt; 1

fHE 1937 FLOOD
B) Joe Rosenbaum
that slcmd out m Mcrg.s Count) h1.slory m tha both

TI1ere have bei&gt;n two maJor floods
H I&lt; ll d ,
flood stage of 68 feet or h1gher These were the floods of 1913 and !937
All hough both reached about U1e same sta ge there was a grcaldcal of difference 10 prope1 1 if ss
caused by the two !'he 1913 flood ca ughl everyone umnformed and unprepared so lite• c ~a s 11 uc 1
property l oss and many people were left homeless and hungry lh1s wa s a lesson and so " ht.n no. s
t.: dme that the almost annualflood was gmng to be a b1 g one tn 1937 the people of Me1gs Counly h,n
were to be affected began to prepare
In the years bet\\een 1913 and 1937 the annual spnng tha"' flood came c.~nd went "tthou ;o 11 U( 1
concern Some people hke Fred Rosenbaum would Judge the se\ er1ty of I he comtng flood b' r tv. s

re ports and the amount of snow that had fall en m the moWllamous l'OWitr) durmg the ) 1 1r J ht,
could then delermme according to past experience ho\\ far the "'ater wouJd come up Jlld prq&gt; n
accordmgly If the water \\oBS to be onl) one or two mches mlo lhe house the p1ano rrfngtr 1 Jr

oven and the other large pteces of valuable furmlure would be put up on blocks and so kc p d11
Because of alllh1s careful observa tiOn rtverfront Mctgs Coun uans could predtclth 11 the flood of 19 1
~&lt;a uld be another b1g one ltke 10 1913
As soon a.s the news was out the b1gger pteces of furniture that couldn 1 be laken upstmrs "t n
moved to bwldmg on htgher ground Some of th e butldmgs used we1 e the l':lmhurst1avcl n Ma'!mu
temple and Ca thohc Church 10 Pomeroy the Baptist Church Prcsbylenan Chur&lt;h and slw!l et s cc
Gravel H1llm Mtdtlleporl Some of the btgger homes that were sttuated on htgher ground \\frc lso
used
After the hea Yler articles were moved the rest of the £armly s possessiOns were mo\ ed up st atrs
Knowmg thai the flood could last for several weeks and that there would be no way for them 10 g1
food they stocked up on ca nned goods One famtl} even had a cow kept on the fare escape to msurc
fresh mtlk Tap water was stored mall stzeo and shapes of con tamers because good water \\Oiald I'
unavailable durmg the flood
Small boats usually docked al the nverbank were carried to the fam tly s from yard as thr" , er
began to rtSe
Havmg a boat durmg a flood was a b1g help so at least one restdent !hal dtdn t hav e one but !I Ins
own Mall earner Peter Klem of Mtddleport wenllo the lumber yard bought a load of \\DOd and "
lo work m hts garage Wtth the water rtsmg higher and htgher he dectded lo get tt bull! as soon "
posstble and so worked through the mght By mormng he had a JOhnboat thai proved to 1malu &lt;blr m
lhe followmg weeks
The stores and busmesses to be affected were harder to evacuate than homes All m('rchancll~c
had to be moved etther lo the third floor or to another locatiOn Heavy equ1pment and machmes h.1d ,
be moved
As d1ff1cult as tl was to prepare anyway tt was almost tw1ce as hard 1f a shtpment of goods " "
JUSt arnvmg The bakery on Second St m Pomeroy had jUSt recel\ed a lramcar load of one hur ch, t1
pound bags of flour that had to be earned from the tram Jo the Masontc femple for safekcepmg \\ 1 1
preparations complete the only thmg left to do was to watch the water nse and watt 1l out
The Y.aters rose and boats were kept moored to porches a~ yards became covered fhe Y.a C'r st 1ll
steHdtly rose and soon the upstatrs wmdows became lhe only access to the house 1he Rosenb 1111
fam1ly kept tts boat tted lo one of the bedposts upsta trs
Thts flood had been predtcted lo be a btg one bul some people &gt;~eren t prepared fo r 11 1o gr s
htgh as tl did Although the water didn t make It as high as the second floor m many houses pe ph
moved out anyway for fear that the house might float off 1ts foundation Those ownmg boa1s mo1, t1 ,
many of thetr personal belongmgs as they could to fn ends homes on h1ghet ground The) se up , , s
supplied by the Red Cross
People not ounmg boals shot fireworks from their roofs to get help Boat owners "auld help n , 1,
stra nded people out of thetr half way submerged hom es The Red Cross not only 1ss ued ro1s,, d
blankets but also set up comm1ssanes and soup kitchens to supply food They also set up dtnlC s
where everyone recetved three shots to guard agamst typhoid fe\ er
Alter about a week of dtsgutstng 1ts banks as Vemce the Ohto Rtver began to recede When 1"
water was shallow enough to wade 1!1 wearmg htpboots the people "ould go mlo their do\\ nst 111&lt;
and splash water on the walls to get the mud off When all the water was down the onl) thmg lef " "
mud There was mud everywhere In SO!Ile places 1t "as up to e1ght mches deep
Snow sl1ovels tn some places fashioned oul of 2x4s and old hcense plates were used lo pusl " " s
of the mud out the door Some of the busmesses such as the baker) had Ia ha;e th e fire deparl n , ,
come and use thetr hoses to clear off equtpment and machmery Then eve1 yllung had to be scrubb1 cl
down
These buildings and homes couldn t be moved mlo yet though F1rst the walls had to be d11rd
ThiS was done either by usmg kerosene heaters or slow newspaper fires m the mtddle of ca&lt; h roon
This was a slow process and everythmg wasn t back to normal unttl about the begmmng of sumt , ,
Governmentloans and Red Cross asststance helped to pay for the damages wh1ch were krp o
mmunwn at least when compared to the 1913 disaster
Now wtth the flood controls that we have toda) 11 1s htghly unhkely that we \ltll ever expenenc,
anythmg hke this agam -Joe Rosenbaum
Note Based on mlervtews wtth Rtchard Rosenbaum f ena Guth Francts Kletn and 1 1llt,u 1
Smtih

w~~o\~ 0992~~g1a,;~~i:i;fp For

200,000 remain idled

PIANO lun ong Phon• 9J93 4811
..l tfc

By EDWARD 8 LECIITZIN
UP! Auto Writer

ATTEND s uNDAY S c HOOL
EA S TER SUNDAY
MID
OLEPORT UNITED PEN

DETROIT (UP!) ~ All 58
US car and truck assembly
l10es were rolllng loday for the
fist tune smce last fall but
reduced productton schedules
kept more than 200,000 aulo
workers out of work
The bnght spots m this
week s auto productton
schedule were at Amer1can
Motors Corp and General
Motors Corp
AMC today stepped up
productton of tts new Pacer
and General Molors Corp
began production of 1ts new
small Cadillac
GM offiCials had feared a
strike by 3 7SO workers at a
Detrott body plant, whtch also
halted all Cadillac production
stnce Wednesday, might delay
productton of the new small
Cadillac Seville But union
offtctals promiSed Uteir mem
bers would be on the job today
desptte unresolved grtevances
AMC saytng they have been

New~

unable to keep up with the
growmg deliilllld for the small,
wtde Pacer upped production
of the newly mtroduced wtde
compact by 32 ~r cent
But even wtUt all plants
runnmg some 220 000 workers
-&lt;1 third of Ute tnduslry s blue
collar labor force -were out of
work, nearly two Utirds of Utem
at GM More than 212,000 were
on open-etded layoffs wtthout
any tdea of when they will be
back on tbe job
The mass layoffs began tn
November as lagging sales and
nsmg new car mventones
-forced reduced production
Plant clos10gs reached Uteuhighest poutt m Felruary
when Tl plants were closed
While all plants are
operating this week, many will
be turrung out cars at a slower
rate or with less shifts than
durtng the start-up of 1975
model production last summer
But GM already has announced plans to resume

second shifts at five assembly
plants where the shlfls had
been eliminated 10 January,
and stepped up output at two
others
The cash rebate program,
ended tn February for every
manufacturer except Chrysler,
bouyed sales and dropped
mvenlortes lo a five-month low
at the beginning of thiS month
Even wttbout the rebates,
automakers expect Illld March
sales to be up from March 1-10
pertod alUtough still below last
year s energy depressed
levels
Wall
Street
analysts
esltmate the seven week
rebate program cost the four
maJor U.S automakers more
than $ISO million but say the
money was well spent lo move
out record Inventories

pm

3 19 Ate

~~R

your
Cosmettcs
99:1 5113

AUCTION Thursday n ght 7
p m
at Mason Auctton
Horton Sf In Mason W Va
Constg nm ents welcome
Phone (304) 773 547 1
2 1 tfc

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

FAMILY GATHERING ts held atop 11 year-cld Mark
Harman of London who provtdes ftrm footmg for his moUter
and SISler as he relaxes upon a bed of na1ls Mark has studted
the anctent eastern art for a few years now as a hobby but
lately has complamed about the nsmg cost of nails

oo

VISITORS NOTED
RACINE - Recent vtsltors
at the home of Mr and Mrs
Douglas Ctrcle Racme were
Mr and Mrs Ernest Johnson
and Mr and Mrs John Ours of
Belpre Mrs Mtldred Btssell
and granddaughter Bonme
Welsh of Tuppers Plams Mr
and Mrs Glen Ables of Long
Botlom Mrs Robert Byers
and chtldren of Torch Mr and
Mrs Glen Tuttle and son
Johnme and Mrs Ray Johrson
and son Mmersv1lle Mrs
Gladys Deem of Portland the
Rev Steve Wtlson of Racme
Mrs Dtck Gaul and sons
Chester Mr and Mrs Roger
Holter and son and Evelyn
Holter Mornmg Star Paul
Moore Mr and Mrs Carl
Ctrcle and famtly Racme

307 Sprmg Ave Pomeroy
Ph 992 2318

~I NATIONWIDE
IU,I t~!~~~~~~

CASH pad for all makes and
models of mob l'e homes
Phone area code 614 423 9531
t
4 13 tfc

--------------PUBLIC NOTICE

Route No 4
Pomeroy Oh1o
TO K Drtll ng Company IS
succe ssors or ass1gns
Ayward A Pursley and Jean
Purs ley
their successors or
ass gns
Char l es E Young htS sue
cessors or ass gns
George KtsSitng
Jr and
Freda K1SSI1ng
the r sue
cessors or ass1gns
Darrell Blanton
Deceased
h s successors or ass gns
Ma ck Bamum h s successors
or asstgns
Ivan Block h s successors or
ass gns
Ar thur J
Noble hts sue
cessors or ass gns
Peak Williams Agency
ts
successors or ass gns
Dr Ben J WtiSon h s sue
cessors or ass gns
Dr J A Sl rman h s sue
cessors or ass gns
Oh o Valley Nat 1 Bank of
V1enna
ts successors or
ass gns
Glen Cope h s successors or
ass gns
Oav d Law h s successors or
ass gns

EASTER

Save Money!
Let us clean your clothes tor ":,_,_ :_c:\'hj;'ll

the Easter Parade Our
cleantng will g ve your gar

n

ments that new look and you II
save money 1

SAME DAY SERVICE IF YOU WISH

Robinson's Cleaners
216 E. 2nd

992 5428

Pomeroy
DESTINED for the Gu10ess Book of World Records IS
this 11J0.i&gt;ound Yorkslure Podd10g made m London The
masstve puddmg measures four-and-a-half feet by etght feet
and reqwred 96 eggs stx gallons of water and 30 pounds of
pudding I111X

For Rent

WORLD ALMANAC

Fear festering Kansas
lUFF
HU..L CITY Kan (UPI)
The Iolks tn thts rural Kansas
lown have fretted about crop
prices the energy crtsts and
the weather But a new grun
worry has crept mto thetr qutet
hves
Conversattons m hvmg
rooms beer halls and soctal
clubs are filled WIth gruesome
speculatiOn about stx bodies
found 10 the sparsely populated
norUt-central Kansas county
smce November
The talk recalls killings tn
the 1950s m southwest Kansas
that msptred the novel and
ftlm In Cold Blood -the
story of tbe Clutter murders
One of the new cases mvolved three chtldren t wtns
Beth and Barry Betts S and
Utetr 8-year&lt;tld stster Ehse
who left thetr Marquette home
last summer wtth thetr father
on annual trip to hts WinotS
home
On Nov 11, a hunter m north
west Graham CoWlty stumbled
onto the scattered remams of
the children 10 a brush filled
draw Weeks of analysts
eventually produced tentative
tilentification and federal and
state authortltes sought the
father Emmet Betts. for
quesltOniJI8
ht the oUter case the vtctuns
were Diane Lovette 19 of Fort
Madison
Iowa, Cheryle
Young, 21 of Downey Calif
and her son Guy, 3 They were
last seen alive along htterstate
70 Dec 13 bestde theu- dtsabled
car
A month later , trappers
fowtd Ute boy dead outside ian
abandoned farm house lnstde
were the bodies of the two
women, bolh killed by a
shotgwt
Investtgators reported a
panel van was seen near the
car about the tune the vtchrr.s
di.appeared They also are
By lliEOIJORE A

check10g reports the women
were seen soctahztng m nearby
Wakeeney a month earlier
whtle on thetr way to Denver
Both these cases are wtusually baffimg ' satd Robert
Clester Kansas Bureau of
htvest1gatton western reg10n
supervtsor In each Instance
we had a tune delay between
the deaths and discovery of
remams We lost almost every
th1J18 at the scenes that could
gtve us evtdence for a sctenhftc
tnvesltgation
Clester descrtbed the Young
Lllvette ktli1J18S more com
phcated and frustratmg than
the celelrated Clutter family
killtngs near Garden City 16
years ago that were depleted 10
Truman Capote s book In
Cold Blood
Rtchard Eugene Htckock and
~rry Edward Smtih were
hanged tn 196S for slaymg Herb
Clutter hts wife and two teen
age children Hickock 34 and
Smtth 36 both drtfters gave
Capote Jailhouse tntervtews for
the novel
In the Clutter case
Clester S81d we at least had
Immediate access to the crune
scene But wtth the women11nd
bo) we had a 30-da) delay The
complexa ty makes I he 111
vesligataon worse than 111 the
Clutter case
The mood of restdents 10
Graham County tn north
central Kansas ~n area of
white far'mhouses surrounding
Hill City ~and tts one matn

HOME FOR BREAK
Bill Vaughan a sophomore
at Case Weslern Reserve
Untverslt) Cle•eland ts home
for h1s spnng break He will
relurn to school Easter Sun
da) B1ll IS the son of Mr and
Mrs
Richard Vaughan
M1d~J eport

2 BED RO OM tra ler Browns
Tra l er Court Phon e 992 3324
3 4 ti c
2

Recently oceanographers
revealed that hfe proceeds at a
much slower pace at great
depths tn the oceans ThiS study
also revealed that garbage
dumped tn the ocean may readt
ly be consumed by the more ac
tlve shallow water orgamsms
but much of these wastes may
accumulate on the deep ocean
floor becaus~ tleep sea
creatures have lower consump
tlon levels The World Almanac

Hot

new source

for gas.
Ont.: ot the lzolle\t new

~our~.:cs

notes
N~ WSPA.PER E NTE R Pit St:: ASS!'

tot natural gas as the frozen north

Amcnca badly needs suppltcs of the clean eas energy ava1iable there
to help solve the cncrcy en"'
Columbm has cone to the Arctic l\1
NaiUral ga s ptpelmes from the Arcuc
get

th1 s

- Wt,;

gas

re tmancm_ dnlllm.! programs tn

Alaska and Canada mcludmc
the tar ts.lands of the hu.!h Arcw.:
-wt.: ve I.!Otkn the nght:-; to purchase
~ub:-;tan tmll.!as re:-;ervcs aln.:ady
dt&lt;covcrcd on Alaska' North Slope
Once the Alaskan otl ptpeltnc gets
started a natural gas !me can also be
bUill from I he Nnrlh Slope We can 1
pmdu~,;c the gas unlJI ml prm.luctton 1s
underway
-we rc part1c1paung m &lt;:ostly
C'nymmmcntal and engmcermg
s tudi es~'" how to butld gas hnes rmm
the rrozen north to consumers m
(\llumbla s scrvu.:c area
Th~.::rc s much work yet to cl1 hut gas from
on

REPORT CORRECTED
The Middleport E-R squad s
rwt to Rt 1 RuUand Thursday
evenmg was for Janet Lambert
who was suffer1J18 from a
severe nosebleed, rather Utan
Kathy Lambe! t as reported
earlier

rev1ew

BEDROOM mob le home
washer. and dryer
• baths
ut t es pa d S42 50 week 308
Page St
M ddlepor:t Oh o
3 4 ttc

2 BE DROOM mobtle home n
Syracuse No chtldren or pets
Cal l 992 244 1 after 6 p m
Depos t reQu red
3 11 tfc

lliREE MISSIONS
The Pomeroy umt of
SEOEMS went at 8 21 p m
Saturday to an acctdent scene
on Route 7 and transported
Paul Runyon to Veterans
Memonal Hospttal Al 9 41 p
m the urut removed Rwtyon
from the local bospttal lo
Holzer Medical Center Sunday
1t moved Fanme Dewees
Veterans
Dexter
from
Memonal Hospttal to the
Holzer Medical Center

AAUWTOMEET
The Mtddleport-Pomeroy
Branch of the Amertcan
Assoctatton of Umverstty
Women wtll meet, 7 30 p m
Tuesday at the Pomeroy
Public Library Mrs Thereon
Johnson wtll present a book

3

FACTS

street of small red brtck
storefronts - ts rruxed Some
believe the ktllmgs were
merely comctdence
But Graham County At
lorney Randall Weller who
look offtce the day the Young
Lovette bodies were found,
satd he senses some ap
prehenston tn the county
Parltcularly wtth the
second case ' Weller satd
'there s a certlllil element of
people who feel someone was
at least tn the area before and
they feel they Illlght return
We re seetng a lot more locked
doors than we normally
would

the far norlh w1ll be commg along

( ulumbta Gas '' workmg hard tot/111 to
nH.:d ynur COlr_v need~ tomorrult
•

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

64 A ND older cons pay 24
cent s tor d mes 60 ce niS for
Quarters
Sl 20 for half
dollars Cal Roger Wamsley
742 3651
3 21 5tp
JUNK autos
complete and
del v ered to our yard We ptck
up auto bodtes and buy all
k1nd~ of scrap met(lls and
tron Rtder s Salvage St Rt
124 Rt 4 Pomeroy Oh. o
Call 992 54 68
10 11 tfc

IS

The new management team
ts made up of representatives

OLD furn1ture ce boxes brass
beds or complete households
Wnte M 0 Mtller Rt 4
Po01eroy Oh o Call 992 7760
10 7 74

BARBS

\\Ill be bmlt wnh proper re~ a rd for
Ihe tre 1 they eros:-; A m dy l:!.rour n
wh ch (olumb 1 parttctpolles ha s

By PHIL PASTORET
Sendtng U S mstructors to
teach Arabtan secunty forces
how to scrap ts as useful as
teachmg monkeys to chmb
trees
Old bQsses oever d1e - they
JUSt pass the buck

operated complex t e~t tc s and
comluctcd len~thy field ::.ll11.hes to
ex tm nc the tmpact of a gas I ne on
the lmd and wnterw tys and the
wtldl fe that mJlilbtt 1hem
These stud es t\re prm,td ng the
duta necessa ry to meet c:rowmg:

BEDROOM mob l e home
Phone A lber t Ht I Rae ne
Oh o 949 226 1
3 23 6fc

IRA LER apartments for rent
Pt1one 99 2 5248
3 19 6tc
4 BE DR OOM house wal l to wall
carpet ng a c fen ce d n yard
w th pat o n ce Phone 992
2780 or 992 3432
3 19 ffc
I TRAILER ot for rent
992 5433

Phone

An old ttmer ts a fellow
who recalls when sptlloons
weren't used as Oower plan

ters.
The dlfferen•e betweeo a
recession and a depression
depeods oa wb&lt;i's selling - 8Dd
who 1 buyiDg- the apples from
the comer stand

~MBIAGAS
tnelt wls&lt;Jy

GARY L GIBSON and

WANDA SUE GIBSON

Successors m nterest
to Lessors

(31 24

3 19 41C
TWO bedroom frat er Adul ts
on ly Phon e 992 3975 or 992
2571
J 23 ttc
FURN I SH ED
e)(fra
n1ce
mob l e home m country 10
m n !rom Gav n No ch ldren
or ndoor pets S120 per month
for home and b g yard You
pay ut Itt es
Call 99Z 7328
alter 6 p m
3 2J 3tp
F URNISHED apt
for rent
bache or type no ch ldren
phone 992 513 1 dayt me
3 23 3t c
PRIVATE entrance
bath
bedroom
garage
s eep ng
room
gentleman please
PhOne 992 5508
3 21 3t c
3 and A ROOM urn sned and
uriturn shed
apartments
Phone 992 543&lt;1
4 12 tfc

-----

PRIVATE meetmg room for
any organ1zat on phone 992
3975
3 11 tf(

cnercy need s wnh mm1mum
dt'\Hlrhance of the en.,.1ronmen1

Pursuant to the prov1S1ons of
Sect on 5301 332 of the Ohto
Revt sed Code you are hereby
nottf ed that the Lea$e from
Cl nton Gilkey Jr and LOUtSe
G I key
to the K Dr til ng
Company dated February 23
1968 whtch Lease s recorded m
Volume 48
Page 199
and
ass1gned m Vol 54 Page 101
Vol 50 Page 7 Vol 49 Page 78
Vol 49 Page 79 Vol 48 Page
529 Vol 49 Page 617 Vol so
Page 21 Vol 48 Page 585 Vol
49 Page 637 Vol 49 Page 623
V.ol 52 Page 295 Vol 49 Page
629 and Vol 48 Page 323 of the
Lease Records of Me gs County
Oh o and wh ch lease covers
220 acres of lana more or tess
Me gs
tn Sc 1pto Townsh p
County Oh o bounded on the
North by Roy Elhs on the East
by Howard G Ikey on the South
by Jack Warner and on the
West by Raymond Cotter II s
forte ted
The basts of th e forfeiture
bemg that the Lease calls for a
term of one year or so long
thereafter as o I or gas
s
produced from the lands leased
and royalt es and rental pa id by
the Lessees therefor among
other prov Is ons wh ch spec f1 c
prov ston has been vtolated and
not fulf lied and 1f s the m
tent on of the understgned
successors n ntere st to the
Lessors to ftle tor record an
Afftdav t of Forte ture With the
County Recorder of Me gs
County Oh 10 f Lessees thetr
successors or ass gns ; do not
have sa 1d Lease released of
record w thtn th rty days from
the date of th s publ cation

"coUNTRY Mob te Home~Park
Rt 33 ten m le s north ol
Pomeroy
Large ots w th
concrete pat os
s dewalks
runners
and
off
street
park ng Pl)one 992 7479
12 31 He
TRAILER SPACE
3" m 1e
north of Me1gs H1gh School on
old Rt 33 Phone 992 2941
1 23 tfc
UPLEX -,-j81-;-WilnUf5 t
M ddleport Oh o Phone 992
2780 or 992 3.t3'
2 19 fi e

TO

ltc

PUBLIC NOTICE
Route No 4
Pomeroy Ohto

K Dr lhng company ts
successors or ass gns
Dav s Petroleum Company
ts successors or ass gns
Pursuant to the prov1S1ons of
Sec t on 5301 332 of the Oh o
Rev sed Code you are hereby
not fed that the Lease from
James F Gtbson and Mary V
G1bson
lo the K Dr II ng
Company daled Aprtl 25 1958
wh ch Lease s recorded '"
Volume 48
Pag e 217
and
ass gned n Volume 49 Page 101
of tne Lease Records of Meigs
County Oh o and wh1ch lease
cover s 74 acres of land more or
ess m Sc p o Townsh p Me gs
County Oh o bounded on the
Nortl'l by Frank G bson and
Sta le Route 143 on the East by
All e French on the South by
All te French and on the West
by the Harr sonv1lle Rutland
Road s forfe•ted
The bas1s of the forfe1ture
be ng that the Lease calls for a
term of one year or so long
thereafter as oil or gas tt
produced from the lands leased
and roy all es and rental pad by
the Lessee therefor
among
other provts1ons wh ch spec 11e
provtslon has been VIOlated and
not fulf lied and 1t s the tn
tent on ol the understgned
Lessors to f1le for record an
Aff1dav t of Forte lure w lh the
County Reco,.der of Me1gs
County Oh10
I Lessee
1ts
successors or ass gns does not
have sa d tease released of
record w than th rty days from
the date of this publ cat10n
JAMESF GIBSONand
MARY V GI~SON
Lessor..s
131 24

1tc

OF
QUALITY
1972

CHEVROLET KINGSWOOD ESTATE

INDIAN JOE'S
308 Page St
Mtddleport, 0 992 3509

luggage rack rad10 dark green fm sh L1ke new &amp; loaded
w1th extras

1973

PLY STA WAGON

Radt&lt;ts Antennas Towe rs
Used TV s Buy from the
1nd1an
and save
Wam
Pum
We buy u sed Rad1os
and Towers Rad1os repa red
by FCC licensed serv 1ce
r.ersonnel Stop and see tl'le
Indian
and
Bubbles
Mon tor Channttl 10 and 10

$2705

Suburban 3 Seat V 8 eng me automat1c trans power
steer ng &amp; brakes factory air cond1tlonmg luggage rack
green fm1sh rad1o L1ke new w w hres

MATADOR
• Door fully equipped
pvff
1071

$1595
nc a r dark red A rea l cream

CONS!H~~~ION I

BIOWAIOtO

Walls&amp; AttiCS

STORM

949 3832 or 843 2667

Wtndows &amp; boors

All Types of
BUILDING
and REMODELING

ALUMINUM
Siding Solf11f
Gutters Awnings

Free Estimates

From a shelf to a house
Patntmg s td~ng roofing
paper hangmg
k1fchen
cabmets eMperf carpeltng

Ph 9J2

3H3

LARRY LAVENDER
S¥facuse, tlnro

etc

HEI,I.

&amp;HEATING

'Complete plumbtng ...
heating serv1ce and
general sheet metal
works
Free
F.sttmates
Phone 949 5961
Emergency 992 3995
or 992 5700

8 000 BTU Fedders a r con
d I oner 7 h p Huffy R d ng
mower
26
c ut Br1ggs &amp;
Stra it en eng me Two sold
maple bar stools
lea ther
seats I ke new P one 992
3442
J 23 51c

EA STER F= low ers 'o'ar efy of
han g mg baskels large pots of
I lt es
hydrangea
mums
geran ums small pots of
double petunias verbena
mpat en s severa l var ety of
geraniums
Cle and Green
9.73 MALIBU 2 door metal I c
house Rae m e phone 949 4121
brown black vmyt top power
3 23 lfc
steermg power brakes a r
- - --cond EKcettenl cond Pnced MALE S amese kttten 60 h p
very reasonable Phone 992
outboard
motor
auto
3273
washer Phone 992 7201 a tier 5
pm
9 16 81c
3 23 3tp
1961 CHEVROLET r ei able get
t ite-;:-s- 3;-h- p- $210
to work car 249 Broadway
4 h p $235 5 h p $245 8 h p
Phone 992 2082
$369 5 speed Lawn mowers
3 16 12tc
ete c self propelled ndtng
mowers 6 h p a h p 10 h p
and 16 h p
McMurray s
1975 MONTE Carlo 4 000 miles
Supply Company Mason w
all power a1r
AM stereo
Va (Phone (304) 773 5323
tape Call 992 7036 after p m
3 23 61&lt;
3 5 He

ONE TRUCK
4
ton
1970
Chevrolet truck and 1970 Z28
Camara Phone 992 7338 after
Sp m
3 20 5tc

.,2 2067

RO No 1

MmerSYIIIe 0

Blocks
Cement and Mortar
Wood Burnmg Stoves
Heattlators
and
F~replace Accessones

Cham
Prec1s1on
Ground
498 Locust Sl
M1dd leport Ohio

'J 19 1 mo

E«PERIE..CED

Professional
WEDDING
Photography

'

Radlato

Servke

-..,~

·~

Bissell Brothers

,,'-&gt; •

:'

~

Construction Co.

..

'

r- rom the largest Truck o~
Bulldozer Radlalor to the

Chester, Ohto

smallest Heater COre

For InformatiOn

GARDeN

Nathan Biggs
Radlalor Specialist

Ph 985 4102

SMITH NELSON
MOtORS. INC.

Home Butldmg
Room Addttrons
and Garages

•

Call
1 (614) 247-3644
2 17 7Sc

Ph 992 2174

Pomero'f

3 21 75

s

---

-----------

H

1957 FORO Ranchero
good
condtt on Phone 742 6352
3 20 6tc

For Sale

8.

N day old or started
Leghorn pullets Both floor or
cage
grown
ava lable
Poultry
hous1ng
and
automat on Modern Poultry
399 W Ma n Flomeroy 992
2164
3 23 ltc

1965 DODGE Polara stat on
wagon
good mechantcal
condtl on New battery and
neater studded t.res on rear HACKNEY mare .4 years old
3 eKtra t res and wheels Can
48 n Ca n be Reg top blood
be seen at 1628 Lmcoln Hgls
I nes
5125
tsaac Lew s
or call 992 3683
Ct fton W Va 25237
3 19 41C
3 23 2tp

1964 CHEVY Bela1r A 1 shape MODERNSteieOCOrisole AM
Call 992 3105 or contact
F M rad o separate contro l s 4
Kenneth w It
speake r
sound
system
3 19 6tc
Balance 5 103 IOor terms Call
992 ]965
1966 FORD truck call after 5
3 20 ttc
p m Phone 992 3625 or 992
5945
IJSEO parts Frye sTruck and
3 19 6tc
Auto Parts Rutland Ohio
Phone (614l 742 6094
1 22 78tp
1972 SUPER Beetle n good
cond1t on $1 35D Phone 992 SHALLOW well 1et pump and 30
5866
gal tank Call 992 7560
3 18 6tc
3 17 6tp

NEW and used cha n saws
t llers and mowers.
Also
repa~rs
498 Lo cus t St
Mtddleport Phone 992 3092
2 28 26tc
GROCERY bus hess for sale
Bu ld ng for sale or lease
Phone 773 561 8 from 8 30 p m
to 10 p m for appo ntmenl
3 10 tf(

--------

- - - - --

Water E!edrlc Gas S.Wer
tines lnstotled
Work
vuoranleed

P-J •
Home Maintenance
'

fJ

Dozer, INckhott, Trucks

LlmosfOM &amp; Fit! Dirt
Commercial Resldtnlla
Construction &amp; Rtmod•l

'.:
308 Page Middleport
Heating
Coofing
~·
Refngeration Roof Repair!'
Gutters
Plumbing •
Electncal
Repa~rs
anct.
Service
,,

8-K EXCAVATING
COMPANY

Call991lSOO and

CLOSE OUT on new L 1g lag
sewmg machmes For sew ng
717 PUrl SlrHI
s tretch fabrics buttonholes ..
Mldd
leport Ohio
fancy des gns etc Paint
Phone 992 5347 or 992-3161
slightly blemished Cho1ce of
carry ng case or se w 1ng L _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ l
stand S49 80 cash or terms
available Phone 992 7755
12 18 tfc
4 BEDROOM br ic k home n
M ddleport Phone 992 3457
3 18 6tc

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

LADY to stay w th elderly lady
Phone 992 3689
3 23 6tc

Employment Wanted
WILL do babysllng

HI ne1ghbor Tried Blue Lustre
for clean ng carpets? Its
super' Rent electrtc sham
pooer Sl
Baker Furn lur e
Company
3 21 Jfc

D&amp;O TRee trimming 20 yea~

Real Estate For Sale

exp insured tree estimate
Call 992 3057 or coolville
667 3041

3 18 l2f~

3 23 6tc
REMODELING
plumbmg
heat ng
and all types of
general
repa"
Work
guaranteed 20 years eK
pertence Phone 992 2409
3 11 lfc

Mob1le Homes For Sale
SELL your mob le home for
cash 15 homes wanted 1958
tl'1r 1972
d 1 p
mo epol
s s hone [614)
446u1425 Gall
3 9 7Btc

- -----

TILLERS
3!12 H.P. TURF-TILL

4 p m

3 23 6tp

- - --

NOTICE from Berry MIter
Mob te Home Sales - Here s
a new I stmg of the un ts we
now have on our lot due ro the
foreclosure ol another Mob le
Home Dealer
60x 14 New Moon 2 bectroom
60x 1.4 Nashua total electr c 2
bedroom
60x12 Nashua 2 bedroom
60x 12 Globe master 3 bedroom
SOx 12 Buddy 2 bedroom
70K 14
Bev er ly
Manor
3
bedroom 2 bath w th ax 12
expando
60x 12 Dar an 2 bedroom 2 full
baths
60x 12 Ltberty 2 bedroom
60x 12 Schult 2 bedroom total
e lectr c
60)( 12 Tttan 2 bedroom
60x 12 Elcona 2 bedroom
60x12 Parkwood balcony front
k tchen These are mostly all
tate models {some never II owed
m) and W1ll be I QU!dated at a
very large d1 sc ount So tf you
are tnterested tn a Mob le
Home at a huge sa.,. ng don t
wa t stop today at Berry
M l ler Mobtle Home Sa les 705
Farson Sl
Belpre
Ohto
phone 423 9531
3 14 IOtc

gear dnve Ttnes are 12

r epaired? Call now for fast
service at reaso nable rates
free estimates Call now 99;t,
3313
..J
...,.
3 18 6ta

_________

READY MIX CONCRE«

6 30 '"
---------------·
SEWING

IOACRES su table for butld ng
lots or l rLHiers w 11 set I as
whole or sepa rat e Located on
Rt 7 tn M ddleport Phone
992 3278
3 23 6t c

MAC~INE

SJ68~~
9.

1973 KAWASAKI 450 CC drt
b ke 197&lt;1 Kawasaki 125 CC
Enduro
See at Welker s
Ashland 992 3535

3 13 He

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

FARM Lumber See us for your
needs
Pomeroy r=orrest
Products Ba•ley Run Road
Phone 992 5965
3 19 12tc
GASOLINE golf cart and vt I ty
Ira ler Phone 992 5523
3 19 Ate

6

J 29 ~~~

DOf~~~:~~an~:ea~:-J
the acre hourly or contract
Farm ponds roads
etc
Large darer and operator
wtfh over 20 years ex
per ence Pullins Excavating
Pomeroy OhiO Phone 992
2478

house 3 bedrooms 1 h baths 2
porches c1ty water and large
lot Only $4 500 oo

POMEROY - 2 Fam1!y home

MIDDLEPORT -

7

room n ce

older home 3 bedrooms 2 full
baths one enclosed office full
basement garage and neat

l•llle yard
BUSINESS - You can get nto
th1s by paying only for the

stock Can you beat that?
NEW LISTING - Rust•c 2

D
n_l •

bedroom loo ~
Bath
drtlled ~
ners1ble
pump 1.~1-": o 3 acres

5600000

BUILDING LOTS loca flons

on

water

Several
line

up
POMEROY BUSINESS - W th

Sl 500 00
INDIAN Joe s Spo rtmg Goods
buy and self guns. ammo
f sh ng equtpment and after
Apnl 1 we Wtll have f sh bat
Stop by at JOB Page St
Mtddleport Phone 992 3509
3 2 30 t c

all f1xtures and stock

DO YOU WANT TO MAKE
CALL 992 3325

1965 JOHN DEERE dozer 4
c yl nder d1ese1 8 ff blade
new pant c utches t rack s
brakes and canopy S6 000
Phone 985 3594
3 17 6tp
8 N FORO tractor w th s de
mower good rubber Runs
good S95D Phone 985 3594
3 16 ?fp
MIXED hay for
992 3658

- - - --

sale

Phone

3 16 ttc

STANLEY Products for sale
Phone 742 3762
J 9 26tc
AIR CONDITIONER
4 000
BTU Two mag wheels 13 n
NEW 2 pc ltv ng room su tes
Phone 247 3824
starling at \139
Sw vel
J 2.4 6tc
rockers your cho1ce of colors
S99 and up Jack s Furn t~re
WHEAT STRAW e)(tra l arge
&amp; Upholstery Supply 236 E
bales 51 25 each Phone 378
Mam st
Pomeroy Oh10
6257
Phone 992 390J
3 24 6tc
3 18 6tc
- - - - -- - -- - - - - - -

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

ALLIS CHALMERS WD
45 UPHOLSTERY
fa~n ~;
tractor 2 potnt plows and B ft
closeouts values to S9 95 per
2 pt left d sc all for 5T 575
yd
now Sl 99
All other
Case VAC tractor $575 Ford
tabncs 10 pet off lhru month
BN tractor good Sl 150 1959
or March Jack s Furn ture &amp;
Ford 871 PS Select 0 Speed
Upl'1otstery Supply
236 E
S250 New tmco 3 pt d sc
Main St Pomeroy 0 Phone
S325 S425 One new S ft 3 pt
992 3903
rotary mower
S360
John
3 18 6tc
Deere 350 hay rake 5360
Ford 3 Pt corn planter 5310 COMPLETE bedroom su te
John Deere 246 corn planter
studio couch
10 cu
ft
5375 Ermel Luckett Bo)( 95
refr gerator
platform
Albany Oh o Phone 698 3032
ro ckers ant Que cha r other
or 968 7881
1tems Phone 992 3457
3 21 Jtc
3 18 6tc

--

A NEW HOME - Lo~.:ateo on
1 level acre (lots of garden
space) 3 n ce BR s with
close t s very n1 ce k tchen
w th d ning area modern
bath carpeted throughout
Mom with your cho1ce of
co lors Garage all electric
All fman c ng tor ght people

$20 000
LOOK - JUST

$7 900 buys
th1s 3 bedroom s bath n ce
k tchen
paneltng
tile
porches storag e bu ld ng

ground SEE THIS
GARDEN SPACE - I level
acre 2 bedrooms bath n1 ce
k tchen and d nang ut lity
basement
many
other
featur es
Well below the
market at 1u st $13 soo
THINK BIG
If you r house
s bu st1ng at the seams
try ng to accommodate your

growcng lam cly

SEE THIS

- 4 BR w th large clo sets 2
baths basement porches
pal•o garage many other

Strout Realty
RUTLAND -

3 BR bnck
bath &amp; IIJ
full

carpet
basement
2 car garage
F1nancmg available

RUTLAND - New all elec
3 BR
peted

featu res ONLY $19900
IS YOUR HOME TOO
LARGE OR SMA LL ' CASH
FOR IT BUY THE HOM E
THAT SUITS YOU BET
TER - WE SELL YOtJR
PROPERTY OR YOU PAY
US NOTHING Call now
9922259

full basement car
2 baths 10 acres

992 2259

ExcAv iTtNG~doze;-loader
and backtloe work
septit
tanks 1nstalled dump trucks
and lo boys for hire wilt haul
flU dirt top soli limestone &amp;
gravel Call Bob or Rouer
J effers day phone 9927019
n Qh I phon e 992 3525 or 992
5232
2 11 tfc

--------------ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR

Sweepers toa s ters Irons
all small appl1ances Lawn
mowers ne x t to State High
way Garage on Route 7
Phone 985 3825
3 11 26tc
-(OME
Improv eme nt
and
Repa r serv 1ce Anything
ftx~d around the home from
roof to ba se men t You will
ttk e our work and rlltes
Phone 742 5081
12 29 tfc
WILL lr r
o
.. ut trees or
shrubbery
clean
out
ba se ments atf1cs etc Pl'1one
9119 3221 or 742 4.441
2 28 26tc

-

-

-

"'S""EPT IC
TAN KS
clea;;ed
Modern San tat on 992 3954 or
992 7349
9 18 ttc

-------------C
Auctlonee(
BRAD~ORO

Complete ServICe
Phone9.49 3821 or 949 3161
Racme Ohio
Cr tt Bradford
5 rfc

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

PIANO tunmg Lane Dan1e11
Phone 992 2082
3 16 12tc

Real Estate For Sale
9 ACRES of property w1t1'1 a 2

bedroom
tra ler
Phone 742 3471

S7 000

31961p

S35 000 00

RUTLAND - Older home

4

or 5 BR mod k1tchen d sh
washer &amp; d sposal Fenced m

backyard S3S ooo 00
MIDDLEPORT - 3 BR
older home hv ng &amp; dm ng
some carpetmg garage

Make an offer
LOTS- 1 6 a 4 a more or
less 8 a tO a and l4 a If

5

mterested please call

307 Sprmg Avenue
Pomeroy
992 2298
CONTACT
Lots Pauley
Branch Manager

'

\

I

I

1

1

12 19 fie

room

ll rooms n all Could have
another rental Large lot on
good paved street

Repair~

serv ce all makes 992 228
The Fabric Shop Pomero
Authorlred Singer Sales an
Serv1 ce we Sharpen Scissor!ll

(22 5899)

NEW LISTING -

d~

I ve.;ed rtght tO your pro/ect..!
F asl
and
easy
Fre.a
esltmates Phone 992 328'4
Goeglem Ready Mix Co
Mtddleport Ohio

till ng

for Sale

---

BUY NOW &amp; SAVE Low low
down paymenls 6 p et
n
terest 30 yr fman cl n g on new
homes n 3 Metgs County
loc at ons or B U I L 0 on your
lot Phone 992 5976 or 992 5844
3 13 tfc

HOUSE for sa le 5 rooms and
bath o
R t 33 Pomeroy
Phone 843 2684
3 23 6lp

Vert1ca1 shaft Bnggs en
ne extra heavy worm

-~ ~OM HOY LANDMARK
~Jac~ W Carsey Mtr
10K52
MOBILE
home
2
6il Pllont flf2 2111
bedroom approx 11 acre lot
country tocat on ctty water
KAWASAKI
100
cc
ava table Phone 992 7649 1971
tra I b i ke 2 900 m les 85 m les
after 4 p m
per gallon S300 Phone 992
J 18 6tc
2926
3 18 6fp
197J SKYLINE 12 x 60 mob le

home Air cond tton1ng 2 BR
turn shed Call 992 7048 after

BEAUTIFUL n ew home on
lake J bedrooms bath &amp; 1,
carpet ng drapes b g den
Call 992 3493

9

d1ameter
W dlh IS 26

------------......
NEED WASHER or dryo~

6 ROOM house w th bath 3
bedroom lull basement gas 6 RM S
garage
panel ng
heat h w floor wall to wall
breezeway Et acres Ca ll 992
carpet Close to school n
3059
Pomeroy Phone 992 3097
3 16 7f c
3 9 52tc

- ---------

1972 KAWASAKI 500 Showroom
cond f on
Low m lleage
Extras Phone 992 3564
J 21 3tp

n my

home Call 992 7647

HOME for sale
n Chester
Tuppers
Pta ns
water
natural gas 2 bedrooms
completely
remodeled
Sl 3 800 Phone 985 4102
3 16 12tc

,

Save on your repairs also
repair mowers compressorl~
and outboards Bring 11 lrt
and save
,

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

Help Wanted

•

FORESJ RUN
BLOCK CO.

RACINE PLUMBING

For Sale

1969 CHEVROLET Impala V 8
automat c
good cond tl on
S500 Phone 843 2272
3 23 Jtc

Blown
1nsulatron Servtces

3 10 '

POMEROY OHIO
965 CHEVROLET
p ck.up
!ruck e~~;cellent condd ton
Phone 992 3366
3 23 31p

D&amp;O

CB SALES &amp; PARTS

S289S

3 seat wagon less than 30 000 m1les by loca l owner 400 V
S P steermg brakes automat c power door lock s

•

t

Business Services

Pomeroy
Motor Co•

POMEROY
MOTOR CO.
OPEN EVES 8 00 PM

WANTED old upr ght ptanos
any co ndtt on
Pay ng $ 10
cash
F trst floor only and
g•ve dtrect ons to Wttfen
P ano Co
Box 188 Sard s
Oh o 43946
3 19 6tp

P J PAULEY

Mowttaln state fowtded 10
1887, had been scheduled to be
sold at a trUstee's sale here
durmg the weekend The bank
S81d it would set up an account
lo help the college in a student
loan program

--

WantP.tt To Buy

You Na onw da agent can
he p you moe way!l tl'! an
fl mos anyone and m gr.t
usl save you some

Oluo

-

NOW sell ng Fuller Brush
Products phone 992 3410
1 24 tic

One IS all you
really need

mona~

011 of Mmk
Phone BROWNS
1 7 lfc

agents

of the Mansfteld Busmess
College and Ute Middlelown
Business College, both ac
credited bWIIOess schools tn

2 SIGNS

CHURCH

SHOOTING Match Ra e ne Gun
Club Sunday March 23 I

r~--------'---...,..----------------------'--1

Auto Sales

SOUTH
Jrd
AVE NUE
SUNDAY SC HOOL 10 00 A
M TRAN SP ORTATION AND
IN FORMATION
PHONE
992 3824 or 992 2502
3161ltp

count your
insurance

exaggerated

PARKERSBURG W Va
(UP!) - Like Mark Twain
reports of the death of
Mountlllil State College were
greatly exaggerated
Accordtng lo an agreement
revealed by D M R T htc ,
Mansfteld Ohio and the Uruon
Trust National Bank, Parkers
burg W Va the business
college will cont10ue 10 operalion wtth the staff rema10mg as

TECOSTAL

Fast Results Use Sentinel Classifieds

'

l

�•

J

'

J

.. • Mtddleport Cub Scout Pack
24S enjoyed a vtstt to the Pomt
, Vtew Cable TV Studto m Pomt
; Pleasant thts pasl Saturd•l
~mg led m a tour of the studtos
.-by Paul ~rard "ho explamed
how programmmg ts set up and
how news and weather ts
continuously shown on the
screen The htgh potnl of the
lour was u hen the boys sa&gt;~
themselves on televtston
Accompanymg the group of
• 15 cub arouts on the

vlslt

"ere

Den Chtefs John B1ers and
Davtd Hysell Den Moth&lt;rs
Marsha Spauldmg and F:ll 1
1 Mae Soulhern Den D.ads
,Mtllard Spauldmg and Robert
'Southern and Cubmaster Jack
Bacon

Cub Scouts m 1k1ng Ihe 11 1p
\\ere Jotm Bacon lll Ch1 IS
Burdelle Ronme Denny Jun
F arle) Jeffre) Hamson Al•n
Lee Kmg J1 Bobb) Snu th~e111
Mel \ln \ m Meter Johnn)
Blake Brent Ge01 ge Bnan
C.eorge S.:1mnn Plants Kei th

Scott Charles

Dr~vts

md Ahw

Spauldmg
Beglllmng next Sa turd ty the

Boy Scouts and Cub &amp;outs Will
guang to RIO c.randc to take

b~

p 1rt m a S\\tmnung mstruct10n
se \\hlcl IS Op~n IO 11! 80~

CO lli

Scouls and Cub Scouts m the
Metgs-G Jlh.:l MEl son Counc il
Tlus c..uluse w1ll bt! given on
Sa turd l) s for the next ftvt
\\ reks

Services set for Mrs. Swisher
~ POINT

PLEASANT
liuneral servtces "'ll be held
Wednesday at 2 p m for Mrs
Laurah A Swtsher 63 Rl 1
Btdwell formerly of Poml
flleasant who dted Sunda) al
12 10 p m HI Pleasanl Valley
Hospttal

Watson Henderson £our sons

Shellt a J 1cksonv1ll e Fla
George P!llsbur gh Machael
Coltunbus and Ca rl thts c1ly
fou1 s tslt;l s Mrs Myrtle
Watson Mrs Beulah Wtlder
Mrs Lou1sc Wells and Mrs
Pe ggy 1\ ctc kl c
all of
I ,.. Mrs Swtsher was a relired Co lumbus four brothers
-=k for the G C Tow1ng Co of Ronald Ha11 y and Carl
tins Clly She was born Aug 24
S1mpkms all of Columbus and
1911 111 Putnam Co W Va a John of Delaware Ohw 19
daughter of the late Charles ~randchtldr en und one great
and Verme Fetly Stmpkms
grandchtld
Sen ICCS Will be ft Om the
Surv1vmg are her husband
John F Swtsher
four Crow Hussell Funeral Home
daughters Mtss Eltzabeth w1th the Rev George Hoschar
Swtsher Btdwell Mrs Yvonne m clmrge Burtal will be 111
Dennis Cheshtre Mrs Karen Kirkland Mcmonal Gardens
Frtends may call at the
Fahner Columbus Mrs Vwla
funeral home afle1 7 p m
today

Aaron Scarberry

killed in truck
Aaron Scarberry 33 New ROD WINS AGAIN
CARACAS Venezuela (UP! )
;Haven who was kllled
Australia s Rod Laver used
f'i\iturday m a truck acc1dent
near ~rgetown Ky , was h1 s mastery and prectston
born Oct 2 1941 the son of Sunday to bridge a 15-year gap
!Johnson and Emuna Grady between him and yowtg MeXI
can Raul Ramtrez to w10 the
~arberry
1 Besides his parents he IS 20th Altamtra Tennts Cham
pii'Vived by two sons Aaron ptonshtp 7~ &amp;-2
It was laver s third
Russell Scarberry and Stephen
Altamtra
title mcludtng 1961
bWayne Scarberry, both at
borne, two sisters Mrs -Ruth and 1962 champtonshlps and
~cBrtde and Mrs
Betty earned hun $10 000 for the
Kimble both of Portage smgles IItle
Mich
four
brothers
Lawrence of Henderson
BOOSTERS TO MEET
Wilford Point Pleasant,
file
Syracuse Mmersv1lle
Samuel ot Montrose, and Roy
Sports Boosters Assoc1allon
PI Apopka, Fla
·Funeral services wtll be held \1111 meet Tuesda) March 25
ai 1p m Tuestlay at Ute Ewmg al the Syracuse Muntctpal
rurteral Home wtth burial m Butldtng All managers of httle
Graham Cemetery Frtends league teams are requested lo
may call at the fwteral home altend The meehng ts at 7 30
t!)jytlme after 4 p m today
P m

OFF ICE HOURS 9 30to 12,2 TO 5 (CLOSE AT
NOON ON THURS )- EAST COURT ST,

Nurses
wanted.
No matter what you do for a
living, you can do a lot of
good for somebody living in
your community.
And do yourself a lot of good
at the same time.
To see how much, write:
Volunteer, Washington,
D.C. 20013.
Your help is very much
wanted.

Volunteer.
It'll make~
a better bulnati being.
~~A

Pubhc

S..VIee of Th!S ,.,.,,..., • The Ad-. t s '9 CouO&lt; 1

fHE 1937 FLOOD
B) Joe Rosenbaum
that slcmd out m Mcrg.s Count) h1.slory m tha both

TI1ere have bei&gt;n two maJor floods
H I&lt; ll d ,
flood stage of 68 feet or h1gher These were the floods of 1913 and !937
All hough both reached about U1e same sta ge there was a grcaldcal of difference 10 prope1 1 if ss
caused by the two !'he 1913 flood ca ughl everyone umnformed and unprepared so lite• c ~a s 11 uc 1
property l oss and many people were left homeless and hungry lh1s wa s a lesson and so " ht.n no. s
t.: dme that the almost annualflood was gmng to be a b1 g one tn 1937 the people of Me1gs Counly h,n
were to be affected began to prepare
In the years bet\\een 1913 and 1937 the annual spnng tha"' flood came c.~nd went "tthou ;o 11 U( 1
concern Some people hke Fred Rosenbaum would Judge the se\ er1ty of I he comtng flood b' r tv. s

re ports and the amount of snow that had fall en m the moWllamous l'OWitr) durmg the ) 1 1r J ht,
could then delermme according to past experience ho\\ far the "'ater wouJd come up Jlld prq&gt; n
accordmgly If the water \\oBS to be onl) one or two mches mlo lhe house the p1ano rrfngtr 1 Jr

oven and the other large pteces of valuable furmlure would be put up on blocks and so kc p d11
Because of alllh1s careful observa tiOn rtverfront Mctgs Coun uans could predtclth 11 the flood of 19 1
~&lt;a uld be another b1g one ltke 10 1913
As soon a.s the news was out the b1gger pteces of furniture that couldn 1 be laken upstmrs "t n
moved to bwldmg on htgher ground Some of th e butldmgs used we1 e the l':lmhurst1avcl n Ma'!mu
temple and Ca thohc Church 10 Pomeroy the Baptist Church Prcsbylenan Chur&lt;h and slw!l et s cc
Gravel H1llm Mtdtlleporl Some of the btgger homes that were sttuated on htgher ground \\frc lso
used
After the hea Yler articles were moved the rest of the £armly s possessiOns were mo\ ed up st atrs
Knowmg thai the flood could last for several weeks and that there would be no way for them 10 g1
food they stocked up on ca nned goods One famtl} even had a cow kept on the fare escape to msurc
fresh mtlk Tap water was stored mall stzeo and shapes of con tamers because good water \\Oiald I'
unavailable durmg the flood
Small boats usually docked al the nverbank were carried to the fam tly s from yard as thr" , er
began to rtSe
Havmg a boat durmg a flood was a b1g help so at least one restdent !hal dtdn t hav e one but !I Ins
own Mall earner Peter Klem of Mtddleport wenllo the lumber yard bought a load of \\DOd and "
lo work m hts garage Wtth the water rtsmg higher and htgher he dectded lo get tt bull! as soon "
posstble and so worked through the mght By mormng he had a JOhnboat thai proved to 1malu &lt;blr m
lhe followmg weeks
The stores and busmesses to be affected were harder to evacuate than homes All m('rchancll~c
had to be moved etther lo the third floor or to another locatiOn Heavy equ1pment and machmes h.1d ,
be moved
As d1ff1cult as tl was to prepare anyway tt was almost tw1ce as hard 1f a shtpment of goods " "
JUSt arnvmg The bakery on Second St m Pomeroy had jUSt recel\ed a lramcar load of one hur ch, t1
pound bags of flour that had to be earned from the tram Jo the Masontc femple for safekcepmg \\ 1 1
preparations complete the only thmg left to do was to watch the water nse and watt 1l out
The Y.aters rose and boats were kept moored to porches a~ yards became covered fhe Y.a C'r st 1ll
steHdtly rose and soon the upstatrs wmdows became lhe only access to the house 1he Rosenb 1111
fam1ly kept tts boat tted lo one of the bedposts upsta trs
Thts flood had been predtcted lo be a btg one bul some people &gt;~eren t prepared fo r 11 1o gr s
htgh as tl did Although the water didn t make It as high as the second floor m many houses pe ph
moved out anyway for fear that the house might float off 1ts foundation Those ownmg boa1s mo1, t1 ,
many of thetr personal belongmgs as they could to fn ends homes on h1ghet ground The) se up , , s
supplied by the Red Cross
People not ounmg boals shot fireworks from their roofs to get help Boat owners "auld help n , 1,
stra nded people out of thetr half way submerged hom es The Red Cross not only 1ss ued ro1s,, d
blankets but also set up comm1ssanes and soup kitchens to supply food They also set up dtnlC s
where everyone recetved three shots to guard agamst typhoid fe\ er
Alter about a week of dtsgutstng 1ts banks as Vemce the Ohto Rtver began to recede When 1"
water was shallow enough to wade 1!1 wearmg htpboots the people "ould go mlo their do\\ nst 111&lt;
and splash water on the walls to get the mud off When all the water was down the onl) thmg lef " "
mud There was mud everywhere In SO!Ile places 1t "as up to e1ght mches deep
Snow sl1ovels tn some places fashioned oul of 2x4s and old hcense plates were used lo pusl " " s
of the mud out the door Some of the busmesses such as the baker) had Ia ha;e th e fire deparl n , ,
come and use thetr hoses to clear off equtpment and machmery Then eve1 yllung had to be scrubb1 cl
down
These buildings and homes couldn t be moved mlo yet though F1rst the walls had to be d11rd
ThiS was done either by usmg kerosene heaters or slow newspaper fires m the mtddle of ca&lt; h roon
This was a slow process and everythmg wasn t back to normal unttl about the begmmng of sumt , ,
Governmentloans and Red Cross asststance helped to pay for the damages wh1ch were krp o
mmunwn at least when compared to the 1913 disaster
Now wtth the flood controls that we have toda) 11 1s htghly unhkely that we \ltll ever expenenc,
anythmg hke this agam -Joe Rosenbaum
Note Based on mlervtews wtth Rtchard Rosenbaum f ena Guth Francts Kletn and 1 1llt,u 1
Smtih

w~~o\~ 0992~~g1a,;~~i:i;fp For

200,000 remain idled

PIANO lun ong Phon• 9J93 4811
..l tfc

By EDWARD 8 LECIITZIN
UP! Auto Writer

ATTEND s uNDAY S c HOOL
EA S TER SUNDAY
MID
OLEPORT UNITED PEN

DETROIT (UP!) ~ All 58
US car and truck assembly
l10es were rolllng loday for the
fist tune smce last fall but
reduced productton schedules
kept more than 200,000 aulo
workers out of work
The bnght spots m this
week s auto productton
schedule were at Amer1can
Motors Corp and General
Motors Corp
AMC today stepped up
productton of tts new Pacer
and General Molors Corp
began production of 1ts new
small Cadillac
GM offiCials had feared a
strike by 3 7SO workers at a
Detrott body plant, whtch also
halted all Cadillac production
stnce Wednesday, might delay
productton of the new small
Cadillac Seville But union
offtctals promiSed Uteir mem
bers would be on the job today
desptte unresolved grtevances
AMC saytng they have been

New~

unable to keep up with the
growmg deliilllld for the small,
wtde Pacer upped production
of the newly mtroduced wtde
compact by 32 ~r cent
But even wtUt all plants
runnmg some 220 000 workers
-&lt;1 third of Ute tnduslry s blue
collar labor force -were out of
work, nearly two Utirds of Utem
at GM More than 212,000 were
on open-etded layoffs wtthout
any tdea of when they will be
back on tbe job
The mass layoffs began tn
November as lagging sales and
nsmg new car mventones
-forced reduced production
Plant clos10gs reached Uteuhighest poutt m Felruary
when Tl plants were closed
While all plants are
operating this week, many will
be turrung out cars at a slower
rate or with less shifts than
durtng the start-up of 1975
model production last summer
But GM already has announced plans to resume

second shifts at five assembly
plants where the shlfls had
been eliminated 10 January,
and stepped up output at two
others
The cash rebate program,
ended tn February for every
manufacturer except Chrysler,
bouyed sales and dropped
mvenlortes lo a five-month low
at the beginning of thiS month
Even wttbout the rebates,
automakers expect Illld March
sales to be up from March 1-10
pertod alUtough still below last
year s energy depressed
levels
Wall
Street
analysts
esltmate the seven week
rebate program cost the four
maJor U.S automakers more
than $ISO million but say the
money was well spent lo move
out record Inventories

pm

3 19 Ate

~~R

your
Cosmettcs
99:1 5113

AUCTION Thursday n ght 7
p m
at Mason Auctton
Horton Sf In Mason W Va
Constg nm ents welcome
Phone (304) 773 547 1
2 1 tfc

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

FAMILY GATHERING ts held atop 11 year-cld Mark
Harman of London who provtdes ftrm footmg for his moUter
and SISler as he relaxes upon a bed of na1ls Mark has studted
the anctent eastern art for a few years now as a hobby but
lately has complamed about the nsmg cost of nails

oo

VISITORS NOTED
RACINE - Recent vtsltors
at the home of Mr and Mrs
Douglas Ctrcle Racme were
Mr and Mrs Ernest Johnson
and Mr and Mrs John Ours of
Belpre Mrs Mtldred Btssell
and granddaughter Bonme
Welsh of Tuppers Plams Mr
and Mrs Glen Ables of Long
Botlom Mrs Robert Byers
and chtldren of Torch Mr and
Mrs Glen Tuttle and son
Johnme and Mrs Ray Johrson
and son Mmersv1lle Mrs
Gladys Deem of Portland the
Rev Steve Wtlson of Racme
Mrs Dtck Gaul and sons
Chester Mr and Mrs Roger
Holter and son and Evelyn
Holter Mornmg Star Paul
Moore Mr and Mrs Carl
Ctrcle and famtly Racme

307 Sprmg Ave Pomeroy
Ph 992 2318

~I NATIONWIDE
IU,I t~!~~~~~~

CASH pad for all makes and
models of mob l'e homes
Phone area code 614 423 9531
t
4 13 tfc

--------------PUBLIC NOTICE

Route No 4
Pomeroy Oh1o
TO K Drtll ng Company IS
succe ssors or ass1gns
Ayward A Pursley and Jean
Purs ley
their successors or
ass gns
Char l es E Young htS sue
cessors or ass gns
George KtsSitng
Jr and
Freda K1SSI1ng
the r sue
cessors or ass1gns
Darrell Blanton
Deceased
h s successors or ass gns
Ma ck Bamum h s successors
or asstgns
Ivan Block h s successors or
ass gns
Ar thur J
Noble hts sue
cessors or ass gns
Peak Williams Agency
ts
successors or ass gns
Dr Ben J WtiSon h s sue
cessors or ass gns
Dr J A Sl rman h s sue
cessors or ass gns
Oh o Valley Nat 1 Bank of
V1enna
ts successors or
ass gns
Glen Cope h s successors or
ass gns
Oav d Law h s successors or
ass gns

EASTER

Save Money!
Let us clean your clothes tor ":,_,_ :_c:\'hj;'ll

the Easter Parade Our
cleantng will g ve your gar

n

ments that new look and you II
save money 1

SAME DAY SERVICE IF YOU WISH

Robinson's Cleaners
216 E. 2nd

992 5428

Pomeroy
DESTINED for the Gu10ess Book of World Records IS
this 11J0.i&gt;ound Yorkslure Podd10g made m London The
masstve puddmg measures four-and-a-half feet by etght feet
and reqwred 96 eggs stx gallons of water and 30 pounds of
pudding I111X

For Rent

WORLD ALMANAC

Fear festering Kansas
lUFF
HU..L CITY Kan (UPI)
The Iolks tn thts rural Kansas
lown have fretted about crop
prices the energy crtsts and
the weather But a new grun
worry has crept mto thetr qutet
hves
Conversattons m hvmg
rooms beer halls and soctal
clubs are filled WIth gruesome
speculatiOn about stx bodies
found 10 the sparsely populated
norUt-central Kansas county
smce November
The talk recalls killings tn
the 1950s m southwest Kansas
that msptred the novel and
ftlm In Cold Blood -the
story of tbe Clutter murders
One of the new cases mvolved three chtldren t wtns
Beth and Barry Betts S and
Utetr 8-year&lt;tld stster Ehse
who left thetr Marquette home
last summer wtth thetr father
on annual trip to hts WinotS
home
On Nov 11, a hunter m north
west Graham CoWlty stumbled
onto the scattered remams of
the children 10 a brush filled
draw Weeks of analysts
eventually produced tentative
tilentification and federal and
state authortltes sought the
father Emmet Betts. for
quesltOniJI8
ht the oUter case the vtctuns
were Diane Lovette 19 of Fort
Madison
Iowa, Cheryle
Young, 21 of Downey Calif
and her son Guy, 3 They were
last seen alive along htterstate
70 Dec 13 bestde theu- dtsabled
car
A month later , trappers
fowtd Ute boy dead outside ian
abandoned farm house lnstde
were the bodies of the two
women, bolh killed by a
shotgwt
Investtgators reported a
panel van was seen near the
car about the tune the vtchrr.s
di.appeared They also are
By lliEOIJORE A

check10g reports the women
were seen soctahztng m nearby
Wakeeney a month earlier
whtle on thetr way to Denver
Both these cases are wtusually baffimg ' satd Robert
Clester Kansas Bureau of
htvest1gatton western reg10n
supervtsor In each Instance
we had a tune delay between
the deaths and discovery of
remams We lost almost every
th1J18 at the scenes that could
gtve us evtdence for a sctenhftc
tnvesltgation
Clester descrtbed the Young
Lllvette ktli1J18S more com
phcated and frustratmg than
the celelrated Clutter family
killtngs near Garden City 16
years ago that were depleted 10
Truman Capote s book In
Cold Blood
Rtchard Eugene Htckock and
~rry Edward Smtih were
hanged tn 196S for slaymg Herb
Clutter hts wife and two teen
age children Hickock 34 and
Smtth 36 both drtfters gave
Capote Jailhouse tntervtews for
the novel
In the Clutter case
Clester S81d we at least had
Immediate access to the crune
scene But wtth the women11nd
bo) we had a 30-da) delay The
complexa ty makes I he 111
vesligataon worse than 111 the
Clutter case
The mood of restdents 10
Graham County tn north
central Kansas ~n area of
white far'mhouses surrounding
Hill City ~and tts one matn

HOME FOR BREAK
Bill Vaughan a sophomore
at Case Weslern Reserve
Untverslt) Cle•eland ts home
for h1s spnng break He will
relurn to school Easter Sun
da) B1ll IS the son of Mr and
Mrs
Richard Vaughan
M1d~J eport

2 BED RO OM tra ler Browns
Tra l er Court Phon e 992 3324
3 4 ti c
2

Recently oceanographers
revealed that hfe proceeds at a
much slower pace at great
depths tn the oceans ThiS study
also revealed that garbage
dumped tn the ocean may readt
ly be consumed by the more ac
tlve shallow water orgamsms
but much of these wastes may
accumulate on the deep ocean
floor becaus~ tleep sea
creatures have lower consump
tlon levels The World Almanac

Hot

new source

for gas.
Ont.: ot the lzolle\t new

~our~.:cs

notes
N~ WSPA.PER E NTE R Pit St:: ASS!'

tot natural gas as the frozen north

Amcnca badly needs suppltcs of the clean eas energy ava1iable there
to help solve the cncrcy en"'
Columbm has cone to the Arctic l\1
NaiUral ga s ptpelmes from the Arcuc
get

th1 s

- Wt,;

gas

re tmancm_ dnlllm.! programs tn

Alaska and Canada mcludmc
the tar ts.lands of the hu.!h Arcw.:
-wt.: ve I.!Otkn the nght:-; to purchase
~ub:-;tan tmll.!as re:-;ervcs aln.:ady
dt&lt;covcrcd on Alaska' North Slope
Once the Alaskan otl ptpeltnc gets
started a natural gas !me can also be
bUill from I he Nnrlh Slope We can 1
pmdu~,;c the gas unlJI ml prm.luctton 1s
underway
-we rc part1c1paung m &lt;:ostly
C'nymmmcntal and engmcermg
s tudi es~'" how to butld gas hnes rmm
the rrozen north to consumers m
(\llumbla s scrvu.:c area
Th~.::rc s much work yet to cl1 hut gas from
on

REPORT CORRECTED
The Middleport E-R squad s
rwt to Rt 1 RuUand Thursday
evenmg was for Janet Lambert
who was suffer1J18 from a
severe nosebleed, rather Utan
Kathy Lambe! t as reported
earlier

rev1ew

BEDROOM mob le home
washer. and dryer
• baths
ut t es pa d S42 50 week 308
Page St
M ddlepor:t Oh o
3 4 ttc

2 BE DROOM mobtle home n
Syracuse No chtldren or pets
Cal l 992 244 1 after 6 p m
Depos t reQu red
3 11 tfc

lliREE MISSIONS
The Pomeroy umt of
SEOEMS went at 8 21 p m
Saturday to an acctdent scene
on Route 7 and transported
Paul Runyon to Veterans
Memonal Hospttal Al 9 41 p
m the urut removed Rwtyon
from the local bospttal lo
Holzer Medical Center Sunday
1t moved Fanme Dewees
Veterans
Dexter
from
Memonal Hospttal to the
Holzer Medical Center

AAUWTOMEET
The Mtddleport-Pomeroy
Branch of the Amertcan
Assoctatton of Umverstty
Women wtll meet, 7 30 p m
Tuesday at the Pomeroy
Public Library Mrs Thereon
Johnson wtll present a book

3

FACTS

street of small red brtck
storefronts - ts rruxed Some
believe the ktllmgs were
merely comctdence
But Graham County At
lorney Randall Weller who
look offtce the day the Young
Lovette bodies were found,
satd he senses some ap
prehenston tn the county
Parltcularly wtth the
second case ' Weller satd
'there s a certlllil element of
people who feel someone was
at least tn the area before and
they feel they Illlght return
We re seetng a lot more locked
doors than we normally
would

the far norlh w1ll be commg along

( ulumbta Gas '' workmg hard tot/111 to
nH.:d ynur COlr_v need~ tomorrult
•

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

64 A ND older cons pay 24
cent s tor d mes 60 ce niS for
Quarters
Sl 20 for half
dollars Cal Roger Wamsley
742 3651
3 21 5tp
JUNK autos
complete and
del v ered to our yard We ptck
up auto bodtes and buy all
k1nd~ of scrap met(lls and
tron Rtder s Salvage St Rt
124 Rt 4 Pomeroy Oh. o
Call 992 54 68
10 11 tfc

IS

The new management team
ts made up of representatives

OLD furn1ture ce boxes brass
beds or complete households
Wnte M 0 Mtller Rt 4
Po01eroy Oh o Call 992 7760
10 7 74

BARBS

\\Ill be bmlt wnh proper re~ a rd for
Ihe tre 1 they eros:-; A m dy l:!.rour n
wh ch (olumb 1 parttctpolles ha s

By PHIL PASTORET
Sendtng U S mstructors to
teach Arabtan secunty forces
how to scrap ts as useful as
teachmg monkeys to chmb
trees
Old bQsses oever d1e - they
JUSt pass the buck

operated complex t e~t tc s and
comluctcd len~thy field ::.ll11.hes to
ex tm nc the tmpact of a gas I ne on
the lmd and wnterw tys and the
wtldl fe that mJlilbtt 1hem
These stud es t\re prm,td ng the
duta necessa ry to meet c:rowmg:

BEDROOM mob l e home
Phone A lber t Ht I Rae ne
Oh o 949 226 1
3 23 6fc

IRA LER apartments for rent
Pt1one 99 2 5248
3 19 6tc
4 BE DR OOM house wal l to wall
carpet ng a c fen ce d n yard
w th pat o n ce Phone 992
2780 or 992 3432
3 19 ffc
I TRAILER ot for rent
992 5433

Phone

An old ttmer ts a fellow
who recalls when sptlloons
weren't used as Oower plan

ters.
The dlfferen•e betweeo a
recession and a depression
depeods oa wb&lt;i's selling - 8Dd
who 1 buyiDg- the apples from
the comer stand

~MBIAGAS
tnelt wls&lt;Jy

GARY L GIBSON and

WANDA SUE GIBSON

Successors m nterest
to Lessors

(31 24

3 19 41C
TWO bedroom frat er Adul ts
on ly Phon e 992 3975 or 992
2571
J 23 ttc
FURN I SH ED
e)(fra
n1ce
mob l e home m country 10
m n !rom Gav n No ch ldren
or ndoor pets S120 per month
for home and b g yard You
pay ut Itt es
Call 99Z 7328
alter 6 p m
3 2J 3tp
F URNISHED apt
for rent
bache or type no ch ldren
phone 992 513 1 dayt me
3 23 3t c
PRIVATE entrance
bath
bedroom
garage
s eep ng
room
gentleman please
PhOne 992 5508
3 21 3t c
3 and A ROOM urn sned and
uriturn shed
apartments
Phone 992 543&lt;1
4 12 tfc

-----

PRIVATE meetmg room for
any organ1zat on phone 992
3975
3 11 tf(

cnercy need s wnh mm1mum
dt'\Hlrhance of the en.,.1ronmen1

Pursuant to the prov1S1ons of
Sect on 5301 332 of the Ohto
Revt sed Code you are hereby
nottf ed that the Lea$e from
Cl nton Gilkey Jr and LOUtSe
G I key
to the K Dr til ng
Company dated February 23
1968 whtch Lease s recorded m
Volume 48
Page 199
and
ass1gned m Vol 54 Page 101
Vol 50 Page 7 Vol 49 Page 78
Vol 49 Page 79 Vol 48 Page
529 Vol 49 Page 617 Vol so
Page 21 Vol 48 Page 585 Vol
49 Page 637 Vol 49 Page 623
V.ol 52 Page 295 Vol 49 Page
629 and Vol 48 Page 323 of the
Lease Records of Me gs County
Oh o and wh ch lease covers
220 acres of lana more or tess
Me gs
tn Sc 1pto Townsh p
County Oh o bounded on the
North by Roy Elhs on the East
by Howard G Ikey on the South
by Jack Warner and on the
West by Raymond Cotter II s
forte ted
The basts of th e forfeiture
bemg that the Lease calls for a
term of one year or so long
thereafter as o I or gas
s
produced from the lands leased
and royalt es and rental pa id by
the Lessees therefor among
other prov Is ons wh ch spec f1 c
prov ston has been vtolated and
not fulf lied and 1f s the m
tent on of the understgned
successors n ntere st to the
Lessors to ftle tor record an
Afftdav t of Forte ture With the
County Recorder of Me gs
County Oh 10 f Lessees thetr
successors or ass gns ; do not
have sa 1d Lease released of
record w thtn th rty days from
the date of th s publ cation

"coUNTRY Mob te Home~Park
Rt 33 ten m le s north ol
Pomeroy
Large ots w th
concrete pat os
s dewalks
runners
and
off
street
park ng Pl)one 992 7479
12 31 He
TRAILER SPACE
3" m 1e
north of Me1gs H1gh School on
old Rt 33 Phone 992 2941
1 23 tfc
UPLEX -,-j81-;-WilnUf5 t
M ddleport Oh o Phone 992
2780 or 992 3.t3'
2 19 fi e

TO

ltc

PUBLIC NOTICE
Route No 4
Pomeroy Ohto

K Dr lhng company ts
successors or ass gns
Dav s Petroleum Company
ts successors or ass gns
Pursuant to the prov1S1ons of
Sec t on 5301 332 of the Oh o
Rev sed Code you are hereby
not fed that the Lease from
James F Gtbson and Mary V
G1bson
lo the K Dr II ng
Company daled Aprtl 25 1958
wh ch Lease s recorded '"
Volume 48
Pag e 217
and
ass gned n Volume 49 Page 101
of tne Lease Records of Meigs
County Oh o and wh1ch lease
cover s 74 acres of land more or
ess m Sc p o Townsh p Me gs
County Oh o bounded on the
Nortl'l by Frank G bson and
Sta le Route 143 on the East by
All e French on the South by
All te French and on the West
by the Harr sonv1lle Rutland
Road s forfe•ted
The bas1s of the forfe1ture
be ng that the Lease calls for a
term of one year or so long
thereafter as oil or gas tt
produced from the lands leased
and roy all es and rental pad by
the Lessee therefor
among
other provts1ons wh ch spec 11e
provtslon has been VIOlated and
not fulf lied and 1t s the tn
tent on ol the understgned
Lessors to f1le for record an
Aff1dav t of Forte lure w lh the
County Reco,.der of Me1gs
County Oh10
I Lessee
1ts
successors or ass gns does not
have sa d tease released of
record w than th rty days from
the date of this publ cat10n
JAMESF GIBSONand
MARY V GI~SON
Lessor..s
131 24

1tc

OF
QUALITY
1972

CHEVROLET KINGSWOOD ESTATE

INDIAN JOE'S
308 Page St
Mtddleport, 0 992 3509

luggage rack rad10 dark green fm sh L1ke new &amp; loaded
w1th extras

1973

PLY STA WAGON

Radt&lt;ts Antennas Towe rs
Used TV s Buy from the
1nd1an
and save
Wam
Pum
We buy u sed Rad1os
and Towers Rad1os repa red
by FCC licensed serv 1ce
r.ersonnel Stop and see tl'le
Indian
and
Bubbles
Mon tor Channttl 10 and 10

$2705

Suburban 3 Seat V 8 eng me automat1c trans power
steer ng &amp; brakes factory air cond1tlonmg luggage rack
green fm1sh rad1o L1ke new w w hres

MATADOR
• Door fully equipped
pvff
1071

$1595
nc a r dark red A rea l cream

CONS!H~~~ION I

BIOWAIOtO

Walls&amp; AttiCS

STORM

949 3832 or 843 2667

Wtndows &amp; boors

All Types of
BUILDING
and REMODELING

ALUMINUM
Siding Solf11f
Gutters Awnings

Free Estimates

From a shelf to a house
Patntmg s td~ng roofing
paper hangmg
k1fchen
cabmets eMperf carpeltng

Ph 9J2

3H3

LARRY LAVENDER
S¥facuse, tlnro

etc

HEI,I.

&amp;HEATING

'Complete plumbtng ...
heating serv1ce and
general sheet metal
works
Free
F.sttmates
Phone 949 5961
Emergency 992 3995
or 992 5700

8 000 BTU Fedders a r con
d I oner 7 h p Huffy R d ng
mower
26
c ut Br1ggs &amp;
Stra it en eng me Two sold
maple bar stools
lea ther
seats I ke new P one 992
3442
J 23 51c

EA STER F= low ers 'o'ar efy of
han g mg baskels large pots of
I lt es
hydrangea
mums
geran ums small pots of
double petunias verbena
mpat en s severa l var ety of
geraniums
Cle and Green
9.73 MALIBU 2 door metal I c
house Rae m e phone 949 4121
brown black vmyt top power
3 23 lfc
steermg power brakes a r
- - --cond EKcettenl cond Pnced MALE S amese kttten 60 h p
very reasonable Phone 992
outboard
motor
auto
3273
washer Phone 992 7201 a tier 5
pm
9 16 81c
3 23 3tp
1961 CHEVROLET r ei able get
t ite-;:-s- 3;-h- p- $210
to work car 249 Broadway
4 h p $235 5 h p $245 8 h p
Phone 992 2082
$369 5 speed Lawn mowers
3 16 12tc
ete c self propelled ndtng
mowers 6 h p a h p 10 h p
and 16 h p
McMurray s
1975 MONTE Carlo 4 000 miles
Supply Company Mason w
all power a1r
AM stereo
Va (Phone (304) 773 5323
tape Call 992 7036 after p m
3 23 61&lt;
3 5 He

ONE TRUCK
4
ton
1970
Chevrolet truck and 1970 Z28
Camara Phone 992 7338 after
Sp m
3 20 5tc

.,2 2067

RO No 1

MmerSYIIIe 0

Blocks
Cement and Mortar
Wood Burnmg Stoves
Heattlators
and
F~replace Accessones

Cham
Prec1s1on
Ground
498 Locust Sl
M1dd leport Ohio

'J 19 1 mo

E«PERIE..CED

Professional
WEDDING
Photography

'

Radlato

Servke

-..,~

·~

Bissell Brothers

,,'-&gt; •

:'

~

Construction Co.

..

'

r- rom the largest Truck o~
Bulldozer Radlalor to the

Chester, Ohto

smallest Heater COre

For InformatiOn

GARDeN

Nathan Biggs
Radlalor Specialist

Ph 985 4102

SMITH NELSON
MOtORS. INC.

Home Butldmg
Room Addttrons
and Garages

•

Call
1 (614) 247-3644
2 17 7Sc

Ph 992 2174

Pomero'f

3 21 75

s

---

-----------

H

1957 FORO Ranchero
good
condtt on Phone 742 6352
3 20 6tc

For Sale

8.

N day old or started
Leghorn pullets Both floor or
cage
grown
ava lable
Poultry
hous1ng
and
automat on Modern Poultry
399 W Ma n Flomeroy 992
2164
3 23 ltc

1965 DODGE Polara stat on
wagon
good mechantcal
condtl on New battery and
neater studded t.res on rear HACKNEY mare .4 years old
3 eKtra t res and wheels Can
48 n Ca n be Reg top blood
be seen at 1628 Lmcoln Hgls
I nes
5125
tsaac Lew s
or call 992 3683
Ct fton W Va 25237
3 19 41C
3 23 2tp

1964 CHEVY Bela1r A 1 shape MODERNSteieOCOrisole AM
Call 992 3105 or contact
F M rad o separate contro l s 4
Kenneth w It
speake r
sound
system
3 19 6tc
Balance 5 103 IOor terms Call
992 ]965
1966 FORD truck call after 5
3 20 ttc
p m Phone 992 3625 or 992
5945
IJSEO parts Frye sTruck and
3 19 6tc
Auto Parts Rutland Ohio
Phone (614l 742 6094
1 22 78tp
1972 SUPER Beetle n good
cond1t on $1 35D Phone 992 SHALLOW well 1et pump and 30
5866
gal tank Call 992 7560
3 18 6tc
3 17 6tp

NEW and used cha n saws
t llers and mowers.
Also
repa~rs
498 Lo cus t St
Mtddleport Phone 992 3092
2 28 26tc
GROCERY bus hess for sale
Bu ld ng for sale or lease
Phone 773 561 8 from 8 30 p m
to 10 p m for appo ntmenl
3 10 tf(

--------

- - - - --

Water E!edrlc Gas S.Wer
tines lnstotled
Work
vuoranleed

P-J •
Home Maintenance
'

fJ

Dozer, INckhott, Trucks

LlmosfOM &amp; Fit! Dirt
Commercial Resldtnlla
Construction &amp; Rtmod•l

'.:
308 Page Middleport
Heating
Coofing
~·
Refngeration Roof Repair!'
Gutters
Plumbing •
Electncal
Repa~rs
anct.
Service
,,

8-K EXCAVATING
COMPANY

Call991lSOO and

CLOSE OUT on new L 1g lag
sewmg machmes For sew ng
717 PUrl SlrHI
s tretch fabrics buttonholes ..
Mldd
leport Ohio
fancy des gns etc Paint
Phone 992 5347 or 992-3161
slightly blemished Cho1ce of
carry ng case or se w 1ng L _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ l
stand S49 80 cash or terms
available Phone 992 7755
12 18 tfc
4 BEDROOM br ic k home n
M ddleport Phone 992 3457
3 18 6tc

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

LADY to stay w th elderly lady
Phone 992 3689
3 23 6tc

Employment Wanted
WILL do babysllng

HI ne1ghbor Tried Blue Lustre
for clean ng carpets? Its
super' Rent electrtc sham
pooer Sl
Baker Furn lur e
Company
3 21 Jfc

D&amp;O TRee trimming 20 yea~

Real Estate For Sale

exp insured tree estimate
Call 992 3057 or coolville
667 3041

3 18 l2f~

3 23 6tc
REMODELING
plumbmg
heat ng
and all types of
general
repa"
Work
guaranteed 20 years eK
pertence Phone 992 2409
3 11 lfc

Mob1le Homes For Sale
SELL your mob le home for
cash 15 homes wanted 1958
tl'1r 1972
d 1 p
mo epol
s s hone [614)
446u1425 Gall
3 9 7Btc

- -----

TILLERS
3!12 H.P. TURF-TILL

4 p m

3 23 6tp

- - --

NOTICE from Berry MIter
Mob te Home Sales - Here s
a new I stmg of the un ts we
now have on our lot due ro the
foreclosure ol another Mob le
Home Dealer
60x 14 New Moon 2 bectroom
60x 1.4 Nashua total electr c 2
bedroom
60x12 Nashua 2 bedroom
60x 12 Globe master 3 bedroom
SOx 12 Buddy 2 bedroom
70K 14
Bev er ly
Manor
3
bedroom 2 bath w th ax 12
expando
60x 12 Dar an 2 bedroom 2 full
baths
60x 12 Ltberty 2 bedroom
60x 12 Schult 2 bedroom total
e lectr c
60)( 12 Tttan 2 bedroom
60x 12 Elcona 2 bedroom
60x12 Parkwood balcony front
k tchen These are mostly all
tate models {some never II owed
m) and W1ll be I QU!dated at a
very large d1 sc ount So tf you
are tnterested tn a Mob le
Home at a huge sa.,. ng don t
wa t stop today at Berry
M l ler Mobtle Home Sa les 705
Farson Sl
Belpre
Ohto
phone 423 9531
3 14 IOtc

gear dnve Ttnes are 12

r epaired? Call now for fast
service at reaso nable rates
free estimates Call now 99;t,
3313
..J
...,.
3 18 6ta

_________

READY MIX CONCRE«

6 30 '"
---------------·
SEWING

IOACRES su table for butld ng
lots or l rLHiers w 11 set I as
whole or sepa rat e Located on
Rt 7 tn M ddleport Phone
992 3278
3 23 6t c

MAC~INE

SJ68~~
9.

1973 KAWASAKI 450 CC drt
b ke 197&lt;1 Kawasaki 125 CC
Enduro
See at Welker s
Ashland 992 3535

3 13 He

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

FARM Lumber See us for your
needs
Pomeroy r=orrest
Products Ba•ley Run Road
Phone 992 5965
3 19 12tc
GASOLINE golf cart and vt I ty
Ira ler Phone 992 5523
3 19 Ate

6

J 29 ~~~

DOf~~~:~~an~:ea~:-J
the acre hourly or contract
Farm ponds roads
etc
Large darer and operator
wtfh over 20 years ex
per ence Pullins Excavating
Pomeroy OhiO Phone 992
2478

house 3 bedrooms 1 h baths 2
porches c1ty water and large
lot Only $4 500 oo

POMEROY - 2 Fam1!y home

MIDDLEPORT -

7

room n ce

older home 3 bedrooms 2 full
baths one enclosed office full
basement garage and neat

l•llle yard
BUSINESS - You can get nto
th1s by paying only for the

stock Can you beat that?
NEW LISTING - Rust•c 2

D
n_l •

bedroom loo ~
Bath
drtlled ~
ners1ble
pump 1.~1-": o 3 acres

5600000

BUILDING LOTS loca flons

on

water

Several
line

up
POMEROY BUSINESS - W th

Sl 500 00
INDIAN Joe s Spo rtmg Goods
buy and self guns. ammo
f sh ng equtpment and after
Apnl 1 we Wtll have f sh bat
Stop by at JOB Page St
Mtddleport Phone 992 3509
3 2 30 t c

all f1xtures and stock

DO YOU WANT TO MAKE
CALL 992 3325

1965 JOHN DEERE dozer 4
c yl nder d1ese1 8 ff blade
new pant c utches t rack s
brakes and canopy S6 000
Phone 985 3594
3 17 6tp
8 N FORO tractor w th s de
mower good rubber Runs
good S95D Phone 985 3594
3 16 ?fp
MIXED hay for
992 3658

- - - --

sale

Phone

3 16 ttc

STANLEY Products for sale
Phone 742 3762
J 9 26tc
AIR CONDITIONER
4 000
BTU Two mag wheels 13 n
NEW 2 pc ltv ng room su tes
Phone 247 3824
starling at \139
Sw vel
J 2.4 6tc
rockers your cho1ce of colors
S99 and up Jack s Furn t~re
WHEAT STRAW e)(tra l arge
&amp; Upholstery Supply 236 E
bales 51 25 each Phone 378
Mam st
Pomeroy Oh10
6257
Phone 992 390J
3 24 6tc
3 18 6tc
- - - - -- - -- - - - - - -

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

ALLIS CHALMERS WD
45 UPHOLSTERY
fa~n ~;
tractor 2 potnt plows and B ft
closeouts values to S9 95 per
2 pt left d sc all for 5T 575
yd
now Sl 99
All other
Case VAC tractor $575 Ford
tabncs 10 pet off lhru month
BN tractor good Sl 150 1959
or March Jack s Furn ture &amp;
Ford 871 PS Select 0 Speed
Upl'1otstery Supply
236 E
S250 New tmco 3 pt d sc
Main St Pomeroy 0 Phone
S325 S425 One new S ft 3 pt
992 3903
rotary mower
S360
John
3 18 6tc
Deere 350 hay rake 5360
Ford 3 Pt corn planter 5310 COMPLETE bedroom su te
John Deere 246 corn planter
studio couch
10 cu
ft
5375 Ermel Luckett Bo)( 95
refr gerator
platform
Albany Oh o Phone 698 3032
ro ckers ant Que cha r other
or 968 7881
1tems Phone 992 3457
3 21 Jtc
3 18 6tc

--

A NEW HOME - Lo~.:ateo on
1 level acre (lots of garden
space) 3 n ce BR s with
close t s very n1 ce k tchen
w th d ning area modern
bath carpeted throughout
Mom with your cho1ce of
co lors Garage all electric
All fman c ng tor ght people

$20 000
LOOK - JUST

$7 900 buys
th1s 3 bedroom s bath n ce
k tchen
paneltng
tile
porches storag e bu ld ng

ground SEE THIS
GARDEN SPACE - I level
acre 2 bedrooms bath n1 ce
k tchen and d nang ut lity
basement
many
other
featur es
Well below the
market at 1u st $13 soo
THINK BIG
If you r house
s bu st1ng at the seams
try ng to accommodate your

growcng lam cly

SEE THIS

- 4 BR w th large clo sets 2
baths basement porches
pal•o garage many other

Strout Realty
RUTLAND -

3 BR bnck
bath &amp; IIJ
full

carpet
basement
2 car garage
F1nancmg available

RUTLAND - New all elec
3 BR
peted

featu res ONLY $19900
IS YOUR HOME TOO
LARGE OR SMA LL ' CASH
FOR IT BUY THE HOM E
THAT SUITS YOU BET
TER - WE SELL YOtJR
PROPERTY OR YOU PAY
US NOTHING Call now
9922259

full basement car
2 baths 10 acres

992 2259

ExcAv iTtNG~doze;-loader
and backtloe work
septit
tanks 1nstalled dump trucks
and lo boys for hire wilt haul
flU dirt top soli limestone &amp;
gravel Call Bob or Rouer
J effers day phone 9927019
n Qh I phon e 992 3525 or 992
5232
2 11 tfc

--------------ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR

Sweepers toa s ters Irons
all small appl1ances Lawn
mowers ne x t to State High
way Garage on Route 7
Phone 985 3825
3 11 26tc
-(OME
Improv eme nt
and
Repa r serv 1ce Anything
ftx~d around the home from
roof to ba se men t You will
ttk e our work and rlltes
Phone 742 5081
12 29 tfc
WILL lr r
o
.. ut trees or
shrubbery
clean
out
ba se ments atf1cs etc Pl'1one
9119 3221 or 742 4.441
2 28 26tc

-

-

-

"'S""EPT IC
TAN KS
clea;;ed
Modern San tat on 992 3954 or
992 7349
9 18 ttc

-------------C
Auctlonee(
BRAD~ORO

Complete ServICe
Phone9.49 3821 or 949 3161
Racme Ohio
Cr tt Bradford
5 rfc

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

PIANO tunmg Lane Dan1e11
Phone 992 2082
3 16 12tc

Real Estate For Sale
9 ACRES of property w1t1'1 a 2

bedroom
tra ler
Phone 742 3471

S7 000

31961p

S35 000 00

RUTLAND - Older home

4

or 5 BR mod k1tchen d sh
washer &amp; d sposal Fenced m

backyard S3S ooo 00
MIDDLEPORT - 3 BR
older home hv ng &amp; dm ng
some carpetmg garage

Make an offer
LOTS- 1 6 a 4 a more or
less 8 a tO a and l4 a If

5

mterested please call

307 Sprmg Avenue
Pomeroy
992 2298
CONTACT
Lots Pauley
Branch Manager

'

\

I

I

1

1

12 19 fie

room

ll rooms n all Could have
another rental Large lot on
good paved street

Repair~

serv ce all makes 992 228
The Fabric Shop Pomero
Authorlred Singer Sales an
Serv1 ce we Sharpen Scissor!ll

(22 5899)

NEW LISTING -

d~

I ve.;ed rtght tO your pro/ect..!
F asl
and
easy
Fre.a
esltmates Phone 992 328'4
Goeglem Ready Mix Co
Mtddleport Ohio

till ng

for Sale

---

BUY NOW &amp; SAVE Low low
down paymenls 6 p et
n
terest 30 yr fman cl n g on new
homes n 3 Metgs County
loc at ons or B U I L 0 on your
lot Phone 992 5976 or 992 5844
3 13 tfc

HOUSE for sa le 5 rooms and
bath o
R t 33 Pomeroy
Phone 843 2684
3 23 6lp

Vert1ca1 shaft Bnggs en
ne extra heavy worm

-~ ~OM HOY LANDMARK
~Jac~ W Carsey Mtr
10K52
MOBILE
home
2
6il Pllont flf2 2111
bedroom approx 11 acre lot
country tocat on ctty water
KAWASAKI
100
cc
ava table Phone 992 7649 1971
tra I b i ke 2 900 m les 85 m les
after 4 p m
per gallon S300 Phone 992
J 18 6tc
2926
3 18 6fp
197J SKYLINE 12 x 60 mob le

home Air cond tton1ng 2 BR
turn shed Call 992 7048 after

BEAUTIFUL n ew home on
lake J bedrooms bath &amp; 1,
carpet ng drapes b g den
Call 992 3493

9

d1ameter
W dlh IS 26

------------......
NEED WASHER or dryo~

6 ROOM house w th bath 3
bedroom lull basement gas 6 RM S
garage
panel ng
heat h w floor wall to wall
breezeway Et acres Ca ll 992
carpet Close to school n
3059
Pomeroy Phone 992 3097
3 16 7f c
3 9 52tc

- ---------

1972 KAWASAKI 500 Showroom
cond f on
Low m lleage
Extras Phone 992 3564
J 21 3tp

n my

home Call 992 7647

HOME for sale
n Chester
Tuppers
Pta ns
water
natural gas 2 bedrooms
completely
remodeled
Sl 3 800 Phone 985 4102
3 16 12tc

,

Save on your repairs also
repair mowers compressorl~
and outboards Bring 11 lrt
and save
,

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

Help Wanted

•

FORESJ RUN
BLOCK CO.

RACINE PLUMBING

For Sale

1969 CHEVROLET Impala V 8
automat c
good cond tl on
S500 Phone 843 2272
3 23 Jtc

Blown
1nsulatron Servtces

3 10 '

POMEROY OHIO
965 CHEVROLET
p ck.up
!ruck e~~;cellent condd ton
Phone 992 3366
3 23 31p

D&amp;O

CB SALES &amp; PARTS

S289S

3 seat wagon less than 30 000 m1les by loca l owner 400 V
S P steermg brakes automat c power door lock s

•

t

Business Services

Pomeroy
Motor Co•

POMEROY
MOTOR CO.
OPEN EVES 8 00 PM

WANTED old upr ght ptanos
any co ndtt on
Pay ng $ 10
cash
F trst floor only and
g•ve dtrect ons to Wttfen
P ano Co
Box 188 Sard s
Oh o 43946
3 19 6tp

P J PAULEY

Mowttaln state fowtded 10
1887, had been scheduled to be
sold at a trUstee's sale here
durmg the weekend The bank
S81d it would set up an account
lo help the college in a student
loan program

--

WantP.tt To Buy

You Na onw da agent can
he p you moe way!l tl'! an
fl mos anyone and m gr.t
usl save you some

Oluo

-

NOW sell ng Fuller Brush
Products phone 992 3410
1 24 tic

One IS all you
really need

mona~

011 of Mmk
Phone BROWNS
1 7 lfc

agents

of the Mansfteld Busmess
College and Ute Middlelown
Business College, both ac
credited bWIIOess schools tn

2 SIGNS

CHURCH

SHOOTING Match Ra e ne Gun
Club Sunday March 23 I

r~--------'---...,..----------------------'--1

Auto Sales

SOUTH
Jrd
AVE NUE
SUNDAY SC HOOL 10 00 A
M TRAN SP ORTATION AND
IN FORMATION
PHONE
992 3824 or 992 2502
3161ltp

count your
insurance

exaggerated

PARKERSBURG W Va
(UP!) - Like Mark Twain
reports of the death of
Mountlllil State College were
greatly exaggerated
Accordtng lo an agreement
revealed by D M R T htc ,
Mansfteld Ohio and the Uruon
Trust National Bank, Parkers
burg W Va the business
college will cont10ue 10 operalion wtth the staff rema10mg as

TECOSTAL

Fast Results Use Sentinel Classifieds

'

l

�a_ Monday, Mardl24, 111'15.

LARRY'S
luxurious,
-low nylon shag

l

,...
. .._T_e_l-ev-i-st-.o-n-lo-g-fo_r_e_a_s_y_VI_·_e_wm_·..g-~..·

WAYSIDE
FURNITURE

'

.

MONDAY , MARCH24, 1975
8'00-Mov ie " The Runaway Barge" 3, 4, IS; Rookies 6, 13; The
Whltf Sai .' Soecial 8,10; Menominee 20k ,33.
8:3Cf-Dr. Seuss 810.
9:00-S WAT 6, 13 ; NW zi &amp; a Hundred Guys 8, 10; Sculpture In the
Open 20,33.
9:3()-Movie ''Crossfire" 3,,., 1S; Romantic Rebellion 20,33 .

Cor. Third &amp; Olive
446-1830
Gallipolis

10:0Cf-Carlbe 6, 13. Medical Center 8, 10; ; News 20; Washington
St raight Talk 33.
IO:JCf-Behind the Lines 33.
11 :00- News 3,4,6,8, 10. 13,15; ABC News 33.
11 :3Cf-J ohnny Carson 3,4,1S; Wide World Mystery 13; FBI 6;

... ,, .... .

'

•• h

....... . . . . .

CUH·H·H ... DO HI.S PUPIL &lt;; HAFTA READ
BOOKS. POP~
NAH~ NUfTII\J'
HARD LIKE DA'C
BUSTER BOY !

P ilot Fi lm 8; Movie "The Power &amp; the Prize" 10; ·JanakiJJ .
12:00-Mov ie " Switch" 8.
12 :3Cf-Wide World Mystery 6.
1:00-Tomorrow 3. --4 ; News 13 ..

DI&lt;E$$ UP I'-! ONE UH ME
WHIT~WI'-! 6 .SUIT.S AN'
60 r · DA GURU 6A500'$
T!.'MPLE WID YER MI'-!D

TUESDAY, MARCH 25, 197S
6:00-Sunr ise Sem inar 4; Sunrise Sem ester 10.

PO/FEI&lt;L V 8LANK· ·
LIKE

6:25-- Farrn Report 13.
6.30-Five M inutes To Live By 4; News 6; Bible Answers 8;

t-J O W~

Concerns &amp; Comments 10; Rev . Cleophus Robinson 13
6.35- -Co lu mbus Today 4.
·

CELEBRATE~

'Bigelow®elegant
nylon shag

BIGELOW'S
150th
BIRTHDAY
WITH A
SPECTACULAR

M. America 6 ; CABS
News 8, 110 .
8 : ~Lassie 6; Captain Kangaroo 8; Popeye 10; Sesame Street
8 10- Your Future Is Now 20 .
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8:30-Mi ss ion : Impossible 6.
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With D J . 13.

9:2&gt;-C huck White Reports 10.
9:3Cf-Not For Women Only 3; Dinah' 6; Galloping Gourmet 8;

'CJ se€, I'M ltJ "- '!ERRIBU"
HVRR'I MID THI5 ().N ~ ctb ,.......,.,
IS AU.. I

Ta tt letales 10; New Zoo R e ~ue 13.

eo ~o

a1, '8Y I.IJa!.,
IF 1/0.1'~ 11-\AT

10 00-Ce lebrlty 3.4.

1 0: 1~Celebrity Sweepstakes 3,4, 15; Joker's Wild 8, 10; Dinah !

HU~~~

10 :3Cf-Wheel of Fortune 3,4, 15; Ga mbit 8,10.
11 00-H tgh Rollers 3,4, 15; One Life to Live 6; Now You See It
8, 10; Electric Company 20.
11 :3Cf-Hollywood Squares 3, 15; Brady Bunch 6 13· Newo 4;
love of Life e.10; Sesame Street 20.
11:5&gt;-Graham Keer 8; Dan !mel' s World 10.
I

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

•••

form four ordinary words .

~

II I I
REPTIL

I

BREATHTAKING NYLON PLUSH
LI'M'LE ORPHAN ANNIE

"''""""'·~

YD•.

DIZAWR

TIME. FO~
::;HOWER6.

I

A

NVIE-THE OLD MASTER

INSTALLED
Bigelow prints a breathtaking pattern on a sturd1
nylon plush carpet. Resu lt? Contemporary beauty
that Will wear for years and years. The elegant
charm of nature with pile of 100% Bigelow ap"
proved nylon. Here 's your chance to make a
style statement and show your decorating knowhow. A choice of fabulous colorations that give
free rein to your imagination.

YEAtt ?
AHD

ME?

V ~

L l_

TO FOOL WllH THIS LITTLE

STUFF - BUT YOU WAlCH ~

~Ml urda,· ·~

Jumhlro": POKER

I

~ ··;

TheLJ·s bein·wed
.. soon as he q it
a job'

That th'
critter
what
ace l.jou

out

with
Miss
Melba.

Rufus?

50RRYrr-

SQ. Yo

ONLY

GASOLINE ALLEY

INSTALLED
Dense and thick. A rich fee ling underfoot. ·That's
what you get wilh this sophisticated shag. And
quality. Quality that comes from Bjgelow construction. Qual ity that comes from pile of 100%
Bigelow approved nylon. Quality that promises
long wear ... easy care. You can gel it all in this
luscious beauty. And gorgeous colorations ...
each a subtle 2-tone combination that adds
elegance to any room .

I WISH TO ADVERTISE:
FOR UNE:MPLOYEP
AMERICANS iO COWO' TO
oce,A-DCO AND DO OUR

NO

COMMO::RCIAL TIME LEFT ON
THAT S HOW FOR 3 YEARS

MENIAL TASKS-

WHAI A~ Al-t.

fi.IOSC CoWJMN~ a=
N~WGf'AF'E:R?

G3igelow®luxurious,
high-low nylon shag

LARRY~S
'

LANDSAKSS,
SAMANTHY!!

'

FUR.NITURE

mi)( persons whose personalities clash . Problems will
result it you do .

Q!MI!II tM•J 21·Juno 20) This

Try not to blame others for
gel cooperation Instead of
complications.

I Actress
Shearer
Z Unnatura-

LEO

3 Standing
Ute test
(2 wds.)

Bailey"
(2 wds.)

8 Lover of
beauty

23· Aug. 22) You

tend to be a trifle too careless
In management of your
material affairs. Aloss that
could be avoided Is likely.

llzed

4 Assent
at sea
5 Handel's
birthplace
6 Mrs.
McKinley
1 Duty for
"BeeUe

(J~Ir

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sopl. 22) This
will generally be a pleasant day
for you unless you re-hash a
Yesterday's Answer
petty
Issue, that should have
9 Kind or
24 Gaucho's
been long forgotten with your
trunk
weapon
mate.
II Backbone 26 John Wayne
LIBRA (Sopl. 23·0ct.23) Some
15 Minuscule
£ibn
lB Sluggish
28 Term Of
WIN AT BRIDGE
• 1 ,. lndl"0"
endeannent
•
&lt;&gt;
29 Criminal
22 Stabili2er 30 Devil
23 Operatic
35 Go wrong
38 Apron part
song

Woman 20;

Witness to

24

.43

• 9 53

tAQJ96
o!oti32
WEST

K WU

SE

KWU

EAST

• Q 7 52
.JI09 88
• 76 4
9KQIO
• 10 4 2
t K 53
o!o985
o!oA4
SOUTH !Di
.AK
9 AJ 8 2
• 87

o!oKQJ 107
North-5outh IJulnerable

Wen

Norlb

East

South

Pass
Pass

It
2.
Pass

Dble.
Pass

I •

Pass

lo!o

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
This evening when out among
friend s. be careful not to tell
something about another
friend that you don't know to be
true.

SAGITTAIIIUS (Nov. ·23· Dec.
21) Don'l leke bows loday for
the accompl i shment of
another, even though you did
have a small part In Its succeu.

CAPRICOIIN (Doc. 22·Jon.
191 A dlscus~o n you'll have

with a close friend will have a
disturbing effect. You'll -read
more Into it than was meant

AQUARIUS !Jon, 20·Ftb. 181
Small OIJerslghts In business

dealings are likely. today 11 you
let your concentration wander.
Double-check bills before pay-

Ing.
'"'PISCES (Fob. 20-Morch 20)
You are a bJI too tndeclsiiJB ror
your own good. Something
you've taken pains to think
thr-ough will be al.tered

foolishly.

-~
Morch 25, 1875

This year you will see an tm.
provement In your baste financial position. Try not to make
too many changes in your
lifestyle, as the status quo will
proiJe fa be your fr iend.

IGCZ

ORP

su

CPVAUFIU . -

XUYVKRKVGP

. Yesterday's Cryptoquole: NOT ENOUGH PEOPLE LIKE TO
HELP THE POOR, WHILE TOO MANY PEOPLE UKE TOi
HELP THE RICH. - SOURCE UNKNOWN

&lt;0 19'U Klna feah&amp;rtl Syndl.eale,lnc, )

the diamond finesse and still
make his ·contract."
Jim : "A slighlly less expert
declarer takes the diamond
finesse at trick two. If Eaet i1
either a beginner or an expert,
he ~rabs the first diamond. 1be
begtnner because he doesn't
know any better; Ute experl
because he sees he can cleat'
the spades and set the hand sur·
ely.'
.
Oswald : "Now lor Ute real
complication. A player wiUt a
little knowledge ducks Ute diamond . If Soulh repeats Ute diamond finesse it works out fine
for the defense, but South .
doesn't. He knoeks out Ute ace ·
or clubs and is sure of nine
tri cks and probably will score.
ten.

3 N.T.

Pass

Opening lead - 2 •

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

VP

of the edge will be taken olf a
kind act you do when you talk
about It In order to get the
credit you feel you deserve.

Simple hand is complicated
NORTH

OWVPUIU

WAYSIDE

social with trelnds today , don't

your mistakes today. It you pull
a boner, 'confess up to it. You'll

WURFY

'IES, MA'AM··

TAURUS (April 20·Mor 20) II
you' re plann ing someth i ng

by JHOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
DOWN

XC l V 0

SHE SHORE CAN

previously lei you down .

arbitration.

CRYPI'OQUOTE

BARNEY

careful who you team up with In
work today. Assign only llmlled
tasks and minor resp on -

favor one side Instead of trying

One letter simply stands for another. In thlo sample A II
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the wordo are all
hin:s. Each day the code letters are dlft"erent.

lf\E gAC::K Of 11-IE .

For TuotldoJ, Morch 25, 1875
AlliES (Morch 21-AprN 18) Be

~

Is

GMAI.t. ~INI /((

:1.; IBornlco Bldt Oaol

tle squabble could pop up at
home an,d you might unwisely

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:

MA~I'EI
6C0~6

SAVE ON AU. BIGELOW rARPET
~i~

6,13;

Is one of those days when a lit-

1/fh' ill

32 - shoestring · m~-t-+­
( 2 wds. )
33 Wahine's
garland
34 Wait upon
36 lll hwnor ·
37 Word in
a hi-li ad
38 Sacred
image
.19 Linger
40 Cw-tsy

tHC:61"0CK

... America's most experienced
carpet maker

" Hurrlc::ane"

.,

Yesterday 33.
•
10:00-Pollce Story 3,4; Spring Event '75 With Oral Roberts
10,15; Barnaby Jones 8; News 20; Interface 33.
10 :3Cf-Your Future Is Now 20; Fine Art of Goofing Off 33.
11 :00- News 3,4,6,8, 10, 13,1S; ABC News 33.
11 :3Cf-Jollnny Carson 3,4.15; Wide World Mystery "The Turn of
the Screw" 13 ; FBI 6; Movie "Firehouse" 8; Movie "The
Opposite Sex" 10; Janak! 33 .
12 :30-Wide World Mystery "The Turn of the Screw" 6.

CANC!R (Juno 21·Jilli' 22)

22 Loosefitting
24 Mistake
25 Multitude
26 Kind of
skirt
27 Brooklyn
campus
(abbr. )
28 Delay
(2 wds.)
31 Guitarist
Paul

LIL ABNER

$1495

t IX I ::o

(An•w•n lo.orro"l
MALADY CENSUS

lil,·j• &gt;40nlt!lhilrg
litt•l"'flltm·- "NOVEL"

wine
district
5 Boy Scout
activity
10 Pabn leaf
11 Cruel one
l2 Ascent
.13 Nebraska
river
U My (Fr.)
JS .Sesame
plant
16 Oriental tea
17 Type or dye
19 Equivocate
ZO Not a bit
21 Boundary

'

ELEGANJ NYLON SHAG

LIVEN

by the above cartoon.

•..,,.!t'

LUXURIOUS HIGtf·LOW NYLON SHAG

breathtaking
plush

to form the aurprl~e anawer, u

An ..~· rr : .••jmmd ~

t t1ANDLE IT AND MAYBE
YOU' Ll lfARN SOMETHtH '-

I ..I..

Now arran1e the circled letten

~~

_:_:
l'riii=.:..
=.:III=.PIII~IISI~INSWBI~Iin~__..J'

v======---,
'f'OU AND lURTLE HAI'4DL E
· lli ' HEAlERS - I HADH'T OUG11l

·

j

I California

INSTALLED
Casual elegance. 1oday's look in home fash ions.
If that's what you're looking tor, look no further.
Here's a luxurious- cut and loop shag that tills
the bill. A variety of surface textures in one carpet. And it 's pile is 100% Bigelow approve.d
continuous filament nylon ... 2-ply yarns that
are heat set to give you long, long wear . . . and .
keep its good looks for years . Come see the
range of gently lustrous c;olorations. You'll fall
in love at first sight.

9:30-Movle

sibi lities to tho se wh o

I~=l~A~:::;::·=~l~j~~~·~·~~~~·~·t~ed
·

$14~~-YD.

5:00-FBI 3; Andy Grlttlth 8; Mister Rogers' Neighborhood
20.33. Ironolde 13.
5:3Cf-News 6; Beverly Hillbillies 8; Hodgepodge Lodge 20; Get
Smar t IS; ElectrlcCompan6 33.
6:00-News 3,4,8,10,13,15. ABC News 6; Electric Compan.y,20;
lTV Utilization 33.
6:30-NBC News 3,4,1S; ABC News 13; Bewitched 6; CBS News
8,10; Zoom 20; Your Future Is Now 33.
7:00-Truth or Consequences 3; Bowling for Dollars 6: What's
My Line? 8; News 10; Nome That Tune 13; High School T. V.
Honor Society 15; Antiques 20; Lilias, Yoga and You 33.
7:3Cf-Hollywood Squares 3; Hollywood SquareS4; Easter 106;
Buck0wens8; New Price Is Right 10; To Tell The Truth 13;
Spring Street USAS 15; RFD 20; MLarco Sporlllle33.
8'00-Adam -12 3.4,1S; Movie " Huckleberry Finn" 6,13; Good
Times 8, 10; Solar Energy 20.33 .
B:JO-Movle "The Dlsappearanoe of Flight 412" . MASH 8,10;
Ascent of Man 20.33.
9:00-Hawall Flve-D 8,10.

AstroGrapt-1

I I I tJ I

'

ONLY

Gilligan's Island 6; Tattletales 8; Sesame Street 20,33;
Movie "The Fas test Gun Alive" 10; Mike Douglas 13.
4'3Cf-Bewllchedo 3; Merv Griffin 4; Mod Squad 6; Lucy Show 8:

SO YOU 'TWO WANTA PLAY ROUGH
EH 7 OKAY, IT'S '!OUR F-1JNERAL! '

~

$15~~-

4:00--Mr . Cartoon J ; I Dream of Jeannie 4: Somerset 15;

1:00-Tomorrow 3,4,· News 13.

'' '

ONLY

•

12 :00-Jackpot! 3,15; Password 6,13; Bob Braun's 50-50 Club 4;
News 8, 10.
12 :3Cf-Biank Check 3,15; Spilt Second 6,13; Search for
Tomorrow 8, 10.
12 :4&gt;-Eiectrlc Company 33.
12 ,5&gt;-NBC News 3,15.
1:00-News 3; All My Children 6, 13; Phil Donahue 8; Young ·and
the Restless 10; Not For Women c;&gt;nly IS.
1:3Cf-How To Survive A Marriage 3,4,15; Let's Make A Deol
6,13; As The World Turns 8, to.
2:00-Days Of Our Lives 3,4,15; $10,000 Pyramid 6,13; Guiding
Light 8, 10 .
2:3Cf-Doctors 3,4, 15; Big Showdown 6,13: Edge of NlghtB,IO.
3'00- Another World 3,4, 15; General Hospital 6, 13; Price Is
Right 8, 10; Llllao, Yoga and You 20.
3:30-0ne Life to Live 13; Lucy Show 6; Match Game 8, 10; Your
Future Is Now 20.

Bonanza 15.

6 : .45~Morning Report 3; Farmtime 10.
7:00-Today 3,4, 15; A.M. America 13; A

ER, MA'f&gt;.M, 1\J()JLO 'OJ MII.P M'{
w~ AI\5AD OF ~oo

I

The bidding has been :

Wesl North Ea&amp;t
Souch
By Oowald &amp; James Jacoby
Jhn: "Here is a sjmple·
3o!o
?
looktnJ hand that really is very
. You. Soulh, hold :
complicated."
.2.AK43 tAK43 ... Y. Q54.
Oswald: " It sure is. A really
What do you do?
·
expert declarer reviews the
A - Double. This ·dooblo lo lor
bidding, decides that East must
takeout. You sllould be pleasH wid!
hold Ute king .or diamonds and
aay ol lbe Olhrr three suits youleads his king of clubs at trick
partner picks.
two. East takes his ace and
TODAV'S QUESTION
knoeks out · South 's last high
What
do you do as dealer wben
spade. South cashes the rest of
not
vul
nerable
with :
Ute clubs. East · must make
•AQJ9 765 92 t73o!o852?
three discards. A heart and a
dla mpnd are easy ; the lasI one
l.mpossible. If he throws Send $1 tor JACOBY MODEIIN
another Giamond, all dummy 's book to: "Win et Brldf/0," (c/o Iilio
diamonds are good ; if he ·newspaper), P.O. Box 489, Radio
Utrows anolher heart, South
City Slat/on, Now York, N.Y. 101)19.
makes the ace and jack ; if he
IN I'.:WSPM'ER ENTERPRiSE ASSN.l
throws a spade, South can lose

THAT MAIL· ORDER

DOH O"I(OR'N CAN
DO ALL SORTS

THeRe'S NO DAN6Eit...
TRVFFLES .OONl 81TE ..

•OFTHI~~

Or. Third &amp; Olive

I

446-1830 Galtipolis

I

~ -itf

/kEP
Uff"'&lt;u.-

•

J

.,
'

'

I

24

I

HERE'S THo WORLD-FAAOOS

TRUFFLE HOOND SfTTIN6
CXfT FOR: TME HUNT ...

•

�a_ Monday, Mardl24, 111'15.

LARRY'S
luxurious,
-low nylon shag

l

,...
. .._T_e_l-ev-i-st-.o-n-lo-g-fo_r_e_a_s_y_VI_·_e_wm_·..g-~..·

WAYSIDE
FURNITURE

'

.

MONDAY , MARCH24, 1975
8'00-Mov ie " The Runaway Barge" 3, 4, IS; Rookies 6, 13; The
Whltf Sai .' Soecial 8,10; Menominee 20k ,33.
8:3Cf-Dr. Seuss 810.
9:00-S WAT 6, 13 ; NW zi &amp; a Hundred Guys 8, 10; Sculpture In the
Open 20,33.
9:3()-Movie ''Crossfire" 3,,., 1S; Romantic Rebellion 20,33 .

Cor. Third &amp; Olive
446-1830
Gallipolis

10:0Cf-Carlbe 6, 13. Medical Center 8, 10; ; News 20; Washington
St raight Talk 33.
IO:JCf-Behind the Lines 33.
11 :00- News 3,4,6,8, 10. 13,15; ABC News 33.
11 :3Cf-J ohnny Carson 3,4,1S; Wide World Mystery 13; FBI 6;

... ,, .... .

'

•• h

....... . . . . .

CUH·H·H ... DO HI.S PUPIL &lt;; HAFTA READ
BOOKS. POP~
NAH~ NUfTII\J'
HARD LIKE DA'C
BUSTER BOY !

P ilot Fi lm 8; Movie "The Power &amp; the Prize" 10; ·JanakiJJ .
12:00-Mov ie " Switch" 8.
12 :3Cf-Wide World Mystery 6.
1:00-Tomorrow 3. --4 ; News 13 ..

DI&lt;E$$ UP I'-! ONE UH ME
WHIT~WI'-! 6 .SUIT.S AN'
60 r · DA GURU 6A500'$
T!.'MPLE WID YER MI'-!D

TUESDAY, MARCH 25, 197S
6:00-Sunr ise Sem inar 4; Sunrise Sem ester 10.

PO/FEI&lt;L V 8LANK· ·
LIKE

6:25-- Farrn Report 13.
6.30-Five M inutes To Live By 4; News 6; Bible Answers 8;

t-J O W~

Concerns &amp; Comments 10; Rev . Cleophus Robinson 13
6.35- -Co lu mbus Today 4.
·

CELEBRATE~

'Bigelow®elegant
nylon shag

BIGELOW'S
150th
BIRTHDAY
WITH A
SPECTACULAR

M. America 6 ; CABS
News 8, 110 .
8 : ~Lassie 6; Captain Kangaroo 8; Popeye 10; Sesame Street
8 10- Your Future Is Now 20 .
8.2s-Capta in Kangaroo 10.
8:30-Mi ss ion : Impossible 6.
9.00-A. M. 3; Phil Donahue 4, 15 ; Rocky and Friends 8; Morning
With D J . 13.

9:2&gt;-C huck White Reports 10.
9:3Cf-Not For Women Only 3; Dinah' 6; Galloping Gourmet 8;

'CJ se€, I'M ltJ "- '!ERRIBU"
HVRR'I MID THI5 ().N ~ ctb ,.......,.,
IS AU.. I

Ta tt letales 10; New Zoo R e ~ue 13.

eo ~o

a1, '8Y I.IJa!.,
IF 1/0.1'~ 11-\AT

10 00-Ce lebrlty 3.4.

1 0: 1~Celebrity Sweepstakes 3,4, 15; Joker's Wild 8, 10; Dinah !

HU~~~

10 :3Cf-Wheel of Fortune 3,4, 15; Ga mbit 8,10.
11 00-H tgh Rollers 3,4, 15; One Life to Live 6; Now You See It
8, 10; Electric Company 20.
11 :3Cf-Hollywood Squares 3, 15; Brady Bunch 6 13· Newo 4;
love of Life e.10; Sesame Street 20.
11:5&gt;-Graham Keer 8; Dan !mel' s World 10.
I

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

•••

form four ordinary words .

~

II I I
REPTIL

I

BREATHTAKING NYLON PLUSH
LI'M'LE ORPHAN ANNIE

"''""""'·~

YD•.

DIZAWR

TIME. FO~
::;HOWER6.

I

A

NVIE-THE OLD MASTER

INSTALLED
Bigelow prints a breathtaking pattern on a sturd1
nylon plush carpet. Resu lt? Contemporary beauty
that Will wear for years and years. The elegant
charm of nature with pile of 100% Bigelow ap"
proved nylon. Here 's your chance to make a
style statement and show your decorating knowhow. A choice of fabulous colorations that give
free rein to your imagination.

YEAtt ?
AHD

ME?

V ~

L l_

TO FOOL WllH THIS LITTLE

STUFF - BUT YOU WAlCH ~

~Ml urda,· ·~

Jumhlro": POKER

I

~ ··;

TheLJ·s bein·wed
.. soon as he q it
a job'

That th'
critter
what
ace l.jou

out

with
Miss
Melba.

Rufus?

50RRYrr-

SQ. Yo

ONLY

GASOLINE ALLEY

INSTALLED
Dense and thick. A rich fee ling underfoot. ·That's
what you get wilh this sophisticated shag. And
quality. Quality that comes from Bjgelow construction. Qual ity that comes from pile of 100%
Bigelow approved nylon. Quality that promises
long wear ... easy care. You can gel it all in this
luscious beauty. And gorgeous colorations ...
each a subtle 2-tone combination that adds
elegance to any room .

I WISH TO ADVERTISE:
FOR UNE:MPLOYEP
AMERICANS iO COWO' TO
oce,A-DCO AND DO OUR

NO

COMMO::RCIAL TIME LEFT ON
THAT S HOW FOR 3 YEARS

MENIAL TASKS-

WHAI A~ Al-t.

fi.IOSC CoWJMN~ a=
N~WGf'AF'E:R?

G3igelow®luxurious,
high-low nylon shag

LARRY~S
'

LANDSAKSS,
SAMANTHY!!

'

FUR.NITURE

mi)( persons whose personalities clash . Problems will
result it you do .

Q!MI!II tM•J 21·Juno 20) This

Try not to blame others for
gel cooperation Instead of
complications.

I Actress
Shearer
Z Unnatura-

LEO

3 Standing
Ute test
(2 wds.)

Bailey"
(2 wds.)

8 Lover of
beauty

23· Aug. 22) You

tend to be a trifle too careless
In management of your
material affairs. Aloss that
could be avoided Is likely.

llzed

4 Assent
at sea
5 Handel's
birthplace
6 Mrs.
McKinley
1 Duty for
"BeeUe

(J~Ir

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sopl. 22) This
will generally be a pleasant day
for you unless you re-hash a
Yesterday's Answer
petty
Issue, that should have
9 Kind or
24 Gaucho's
been long forgotten with your
trunk
weapon
mate.
II Backbone 26 John Wayne
LIBRA (Sopl. 23·0ct.23) Some
15 Minuscule
£ibn
lB Sluggish
28 Term Of
WIN AT BRIDGE
• 1 ,. lndl"0"
endeannent
•
&lt;&gt;
29 Criminal
22 Stabili2er 30 Devil
23 Operatic
35 Go wrong
38 Apron part
song

Woman 20;

Witness to

24

.43

• 9 53

tAQJ96
o!oti32
WEST

K WU

SE

KWU

EAST

• Q 7 52
.JI09 88
• 76 4
9KQIO
• 10 4 2
t K 53
o!o985
o!oA4
SOUTH !Di
.AK
9 AJ 8 2
• 87

o!oKQJ 107
North-5outh IJulnerable

Wen

Norlb

East

South

Pass
Pass

It
2.
Pass

Dble.
Pass

I •

Pass

lo!o

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
This evening when out among
friend s. be careful not to tell
something about another
friend that you don't know to be
true.

SAGITTAIIIUS (Nov. ·23· Dec.
21) Don'l leke bows loday for
the accompl i shment of
another, even though you did
have a small part In Its succeu.

CAPRICOIIN (Doc. 22·Jon.
191 A dlscus~o n you'll have

with a close friend will have a
disturbing effect. You'll -read
more Into it than was meant

AQUARIUS !Jon, 20·Ftb. 181
Small OIJerslghts In business

dealings are likely. today 11 you
let your concentration wander.
Double-check bills before pay-

Ing.
'"'PISCES (Fob. 20-Morch 20)
You are a bJI too tndeclsiiJB ror
your own good. Something
you've taken pains to think
thr-ough will be al.tered

foolishly.

-~
Morch 25, 1875

This year you will see an tm.
provement In your baste financial position. Try not to make
too many changes in your
lifestyle, as the status quo will
proiJe fa be your fr iend.

IGCZ

ORP

su

CPVAUFIU . -

XUYVKRKVGP

. Yesterday's Cryptoquole: NOT ENOUGH PEOPLE LIKE TO
HELP THE POOR, WHILE TOO MANY PEOPLE UKE TOi
HELP THE RICH. - SOURCE UNKNOWN

&lt;0 19'U Klna feah&amp;rtl Syndl.eale,lnc, )

the diamond finesse and still
make his ·contract."
Jim : "A slighlly less expert
declarer takes the diamond
finesse at trick two. If Eaet i1
either a beginner or an expert,
he ~rabs the first diamond. 1be
begtnner because he doesn't
know any better; Ute experl
because he sees he can cleat'
the spades and set the hand sur·
ely.'
.
Oswald : "Now lor Ute real
complication. A player wiUt a
little knowledge ducks Ute diamond . If Soulh repeats Ute diamond finesse it works out fine
for the defense, but South .
doesn't. He knoeks out Ute ace ·
or clubs and is sure of nine
tri cks and probably will score.
ten.

3 N.T.

Pass

Opening lead - 2 •

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

VP

of the edge will be taken olf a
kind act you do when you talk
about It In order to get the
credit you feel you deserve.

Simple hand is complicated
NORTH

OWVPUIU

WAYSIDE

social with trelnds today , don't

your mistakes today. It you pull
a boner, 'confess up to it. You'll

WURFY

'IES, MA'AM··

TAURUS (April 20·Mor 20) II
you' re plann ing someth i ng

by JHOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
DOWN

XC l V 0

SHE SHORE CAN

previously lei you down .

arbitration.

CRYPI'OQUOTE

BARNEY

careful who you team up with In
work today. Assign only llmlled
tasks and minor resp on -

favor one side Instead of trying

One letter simply stands for another. In thlo sample A II
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the wordo are all
hin:s. Each day the code letters are dlft"erent.

lf\E gAC::K Of 11-IE .

For TuotldoJ, Morch 25, 1875
AlliES (Morch 21-AprN 18) Be

~

Is

GMAI.t. ~INI /((

:1.; IBornlco Bldt Oaol

tle squabble could pop up at
home an,d you might unwisely

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:

MA~I'EI
6C0~6

SAVE ON AU. BIGELOW rARPET
~i~

6,13;

Is one of those days when a lit-

1/fh' ill

32 - shoestring · m~-t-+­
( 2 wds. )
33 Wahine's
garland
34 Wait upon
36 lll hwnor ·
37 Word in
a hi-li ad
38 Sacred
image
.19 Linger
40 Cw-tsy

tHC:61"0CK

... America's most experienced
carpet maker

" Hurrlc::ane"

.,

Yesterday 33.
•
10:00-Pollce Story 3,4; Spring Event '75 With Oral Roberts
10,15; Barnaby Jones 8; News 20; Interface 33.
10 :3Cf-Your Future Is Now 20; Fine Art of Goofing Off 33.
11 :00- News 3,4,6,8, 10, 13,1S; ABC News 33.
11 :3Cf-Jollnny Carson 3,4.15; Wide World Mystery "The Turn of
the Screw" 13 ; FBI 6; Movie "Firehouse" 8; Movie "The
Opposite Sex" 10; Janak! 33 .
12 :30-Wide World Mystery "The Turn of the Screw" 6.

CANC!R (Juno 21·Jilli' 22)

22 Loosefitting
24 Mistake
25 Multitude
26 Kind of
skirt
27 Brooklyn
campus
(abbr. )
28 Delay
(2 wds.)
31 Guitarist
Paul

LIL ABNER

$1495

t IX I ::o

(An•w•n lo.orro"l
MALADY CENSUS

lil,·j• &gt;40nlt!lhilrg
litt•l"'flltm·- "NOVEL"

wine
district
5 Boy Scout
activity
10 Pabn leaf
11 Cruel one
l2 Ascent
.13 Nebraska
river
U My (Fr.)
JS .Sesame
plant
16 Oriental tea
17 Type or dye
19 Equivocate
ZO Not a bit
21 Boundary

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An ..~· rr : .••jmmd ~

t t1ANDLE IT AND MAYBE
YOU' Ll lfARN SOMETHtH '-

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Now arran1e the circled letten

~~

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=.:III=.PIII~IISI~INSWBI~Iin~__..J'

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'f'OU AND lURTLE HAI'4DL E
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Casual elegance. 1oday's look in home fash ions.
If that's what you're looking tor, look no further.
Here's a luxurious- cut and loop shag that tills
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9:30-Movle

sibi lities to tho se wh o

I~=l~A~:::;::·=~l~j~~~·~·~~~~·~·t~ed
·

$14~~-YD.

5:00-FBI 3; Andy Grlttlth 8; Mister Rogers' Neighborhood
20.33. Ironolde 13.
5:3Cf-News 6; Beverly Hillbillies 8; Hodgepodge Lodge 20; Get
Smar t IS; ElectrlcCompan6 33.
6:00-News 3,4,8,10,13,15. ABC News 6; Electric Compan.y,20;
lTV Utilization 33.
6:30-NBC News 3,4,1S; ABC News 13; Bewitched 6; CBS News
8,10; Zoom 20; Your Future Is Now 33.
7:00-Truth or Consequences 3; Bowling for Dollars 6: What's
My Line? 8; News 10; Nome That Tune 13; High School T. V.
Honor Society 15; Antiques 20; Lilias, Yoga and You 33.
7:3Cf-Hollywood Squares 3; Hollywood SquareS4; Easter 106;
Buck0wens8; New Price Is Right 10; To Tell The Truth 13;
Spring Street USAS 15; RFD 20; MLarco Sporlllle33.
8'00-Adam -12 3.4,1S; Movie " Huckleberry Finn" 6,13; Good
Times 8, 10; Solar Energy 20.33 .
B:JO-Movle "The Dlsappearanoe of Flight 412" . MASH 8,10;
Ascent of Man 20.33.
9:00-Hawall Flve-D 8,10.

AstroGrapt-1

I I I tJ I

'

ONLY

Gilligan's Island 6; Tattletales 8; Sesame Street 20,33;
Movie "The Fas test Gun Alive" 10; Mike Douglas 13.
4'3Cf-Bewllchedo 3; Merv Griffin 4; Mod Squad 6; Lucy Show 8:

SO YOU 'TWO WANTA PLAY ROUGH
EH 7 OKAY, IT'S '!OUR F-1JNERAL! '

~

$15~~-

4:00--Mr . Cartoon J ; I Dream of Jeannie 4: Somerset 15;

1:00-Tomorrow 3,4,· News 13.

'' '

ONLY

•

12 :00-Jackpot! 3,15; Password 6,13; Bob Braun's 50-50 Club 4;
News 8, 10.
12 :3Cf-Biank Check 3,15; Spilt Second 6,13; Search for
Tomorrow 8, 10.
12 :4&gt;-Eiectrlc Company 33.
12 ,5&gt;-NBC News 3,15.
1:00-News 3; All My Children 6, 13; Phil Donahue 8; Young ·and
the Restless 10; Not For Women c;&gt;nly IS.
1:3Cf-How To Survive A Marriage 3,4,15; Let's Make A Deol
6,13; As The World Turns 8, to.
2:00-Days Of Our Lives 3,4,15; $10,000 Pyramid 6,13; Guiding
Light 8, 10 .
2:3Cf-Doctors 3,4, 15; Big Showdown 6,13: Edge of NlghtB,IO.
3'00- Another World 3,4, 15; General Hospital 6, 13; Price Is
Right 8, 10; Llllao, Yoga and You 20.
3:30-0ne Life to Live 13; Lucy Show 6; Match Game 8, 10; Your
Future Is Now 20.

Bonanza 15.

6 : .45~Morning Report 3; Farmtime 10.
7:00-Today 3,4, 15; A.M. America 13; A

ER, MA'f&gt;.M, 1\J()JLO 'OJ MII.P M'{
w~ AI\5AD OF ~oo

I

The bidding has been :

Wesl North Ea&amp;t
Souch
By Oowald &amp; James Jacoby
Jhn: "Here is a sjmple·
3o!o
?
looktnJ hand that really is very
. You. Soulh, hold :
complicated."
.2.AK43 tAK43 ... Y. Q54.
Oswald: " It sure is. A really
What do you do?
·
expert declarer reviews the
A - Double. This ·dooblo lo lor
bidding, decides that East must
takeout. You sllould be pleasH wid!
hold Ute king .or diamonds and
aay ol lbe Olhrr three suits youleads his king of clubs at trick
partner picks.
two. East takes his ace and
TODAV'S QUESTION
knoeks out · South 's last high
What
do you do as dealer wben
spade. South cashes the rest of
not
vul
nerable
with :
Ute clubs. East · must make
•AQJ9 765 92 t73o!o852?
three discards. A heart and a
dla mpnd are easy ; the lasI one
l.mpossible. If he throws Send $1 tor JACOBY MODEIIN
another Giamond, all dummy 's book to: "Win et Brldf/0," (c/o Iilio
diamonds are good ; if he ·newspaper), P.O. Box 489, Radio
Utrows anolher heart, South
City Slat/on, Now York, N.Y. 101)19.
makes the ace and jack ; if he
IN I'.:WSPM'ER ENTERPRiSE ASSN.l
throws a spade, South can lose

THAT MAIL· ORDER

DOH O"I(OR'N CAN
DO ALL SORTS

THeRe'S NO DAN6Eit...
TRVFFLES .OONl 81TE ..

•OFTHI~~

Or. Third &amp; Olive

I

446-1830 Galtipolis

I

~ -itf

/kEP
Uff"'&lt;u.-

•

J

.,
'

'

I

24

I

HERE'S THo WORLD-FAAOOS

TRUFFLE HOOND SfTTIN6
CXfT FOR: TME HUNT ...

•

�-

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

-

r

- -

•
10 ...: The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, March :'·t, 1!175

, , , , ,~~:;;~~=~:;~~:=~~~;~;:~~i'~'::'' ' Kyger

Talks underway for ambassador
NAIROBJ ( UPil - ·A group .or shuts over the hea rts of a

~'rcne ll

t'l)luln 111 1\lnt·u and

r~a m l'd
Fr ·ne ll
of armed n~tionalists kidnaped large evf' ning cruwd whkh !'o rmi.'rly
Solll&lt;
llilc
md
hus
IJccn
stwkt•Jl
. lhe French ambassador to scuffl ed with lhcm in lry ing lo

Somalia Sunday night shortly
after he left mass. but heav ily
armed police later cornered the
group in a city villa and

negotiations

began for

his

release.

belonged to the Front for the tra de rs.

Au thor itit•s

lease of two colleagues current.
While police surrounded til l'
ly held in French jails in return · building, the Ita lian am ba ssa~
for the life of Ambassador Jean dor began negotiaUons with the

Gueury , 57. They also gave the ktdnapers who refu sed to spe;t k
· French government 36 hours to with So ma li authorities.

yea r ~

Afri ca .

The kidnapers fired a vollev

MEIGS THEATRE
Tonight and Tuesday

Fra nkl in Les lie .·

RATE D IGI
Show Starts 7: 00

('nj ~'yin g

PT. PLE ASANT - Gregory

Da le

Goodnite ,

6357

57t h

St .

2:1, . of

Ave .

P elcro~urg.

No rth ,

Fla., died

cycle friend , but died of his
TOHSOPITAL
The Pomeroy E-R squad
went to Bailey Run Road at
1:04 p.m. Sunday lor Clare nce
Spurrier who wa s ill . He was
taken to Veterans

Mem ori r~ l

LOCAL TEMPS
Temperature in downtown

Pomeroy Monday at 11 a. m.
was 64 degrees, under cloudy
skies .

Spring Time
You 'II fin d a great selection of fine
furniture, floor coverings and
appliances at the lowest possible

injuries later .
FUn eral services will be
conducted Tuesday al 11 a .m.
fru m the' Foglesong Fun era l
Home in Mason with ttle Rev .
George Hosch ar o ffici &lt;-~ling.
nurial will follow in Graham

!:,erving you bas been out business
since 1952.

Baker Furniture
Middleport, Ohio

burg and Ira Dale Goodnile of
Mins ter. Other survivors are
hi.s ste p-father , Larry Gavin ,
St. Pete rsbur g; matern al
grandfather, Les ter Johnson,
~randfat her ,

Geor ge Goodnite, New Haven,

and grandmother , Mrs. Elmer
Goodnite, Minste r, and great-

g:randrather, Osca r Johnson.

Clifton .

Apple Grove
Fairview
News Notes News, Events
lly Mrs. Herbert Roush
Mr . and Mrs. Russell Roush
and children, Mr . and Mrs.
Ronald Russell and Mike and
Mandy were Sw1day dinner
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Dana
Lewis at Clifton.
Bill Donohu e of Detr oit ,
Mich., visited his mother. Mrs.
Mary Donohue and Mr. and
Mrs. David Donohue .
Mrs. An n Radford and
Stephanie, Clara Mae Sargent,
Mabel Shields visited Mrs.
Bertha Robinson Sunday.

prices. Free delivery, convenient

terms, service when you need it.

Cemetery. Fn ends will be
received at the funera l home
fr om 3 to 9 p.m. today.
The deceased, t; mployed as a
truck driver. was a member of
the Ohio Na tional Guard and a
graduate of Dixie Holland Hi gh
Schoo l in St. Petersburg where
he also t~lle nd ed cuJlege.
He wa s born Nov . 29, 1951 ir1
Har tford, a son of Mrs. Donna
Johnson Ga vin of St. Pe ters-

Chiton; paternal

CLUB TO MEET
The Five Point Bucks 4-H
Club will hold its first meeting
of the year at the home of Nick
Leonard this Wednesday at
7: 30p. m.
f AKEN 'TO HOSPITAL

The Middleport E·R squad
answered a cali to Bradbury at
9:02 a. m. Monday for Earl
Werner who was taken to
Holzer Medical Center .

Friday. ltighs iu the :JDs
Wcdnt•sday. warming to th~
50s Thursday and Friday.
I.uws in the 20s Wednesday,
\~.arming to tht· :ms Thursday

and frida y.

HOSPITAL

Gn·gory Loudnitt&gt; killed on 1·yeh·

Sa tu rday tn St. Ri ta 's
tw o prisoners identified as Hllspi ta l 111 Lima, Ohio, a
victi m of a mo torcycle acOmar Osman Rabeh and Onuu·
ciden t. li e was ... na tive of
Elmi Kaireh who were c onv i ct~
Ht~ r tr or d, visiting hls father,
ed of terrorist activities in the
neighboring French territory of lr,a Dale Goodni te a t Minster ,
Ohi o when the accident vcthe Afars and I:;sus and
curred Fridt:ty. It was repor ted
se ntenced to lire terms.
The territory - the l;tst the cy d c hit loose gra vel
ca us ing C:oodn ilt: to lose
t:unlrol i:lnd go into a lake. He
was assisted fr om the lake by a

Hospiwl.
Walt Disney's
THE BEARS AND I
(Technicalorl
eased on the book by Robert

and wa s

h;H\' 1',.."' ' ' r 1"'' '" i• o;;

They demande&lt;l the release of

9:30p.m. Sunday shortly aft er
he left Palm Sunday mass in
the Cathedral at Mogadishu,
the capil&lt;ll or Somalia , a small
dese rt republic on the horn of

r~ rct fltl'

la ter

Uberation of the Somali Coast. tracked the group to " city
demanded the immedia te re- villa.

There was no immediate
response from the French
government in Paris.
According to diplomatic re·
ports. the armed kidnapers
bWldled Gueury in to a car at

on

itnpruved rehttiuns.
Svmuli President Mohammed
Siad Bitrrc today se nt .a
by poli tic;ll unres t for years.
resc ue the ambassudor.
Dip lonw ts twr~: said the h•lc~ rat u to French Pres ident
Heavi ly armed police quickly
threw up a eordon of ro~ d ­ kid n~tp !IIJ4 ~ rt· a ll y embarr assed Vitl ery Cisc&lt;.ll'd d'Estai ng l&gt;ru·
blocks ar ound tile Ind ian Oc&lt;-·~m the Somal i government. Thuugll misin ~-: lu d11 cvc r yt ll in~ pqssi·
eit y, fabled lor its fran kincense nut re li nquis hi n~ its claims to ble lo save ihc ;,~m b&lt;:.~.ssu d or 's
and myrrh in biblical times and the Afars and lssas. Somali a in life.

The kidnapers, who said they for it.&lt;; goldsmiths 11nd ca mel reecn1

pay a $100,000 ransom.

ut l,~c k s

l''riday. t'haucc uf nurril ·s
Wt:dnt•sday nud a 1·hanl'l' uf
rain shuwers Thursday :nld

By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Mr . and Mrs. Homer Warner
spen t Monda y with Mr . and
Mrs. Hoyt f erguson at Pt.
Pleasant .
Mrs. Zelpha Boggess visited
Mrs. Jean ¥uggrage and Mrs.
Gay Ransom Monday.
Mr . and Mr s. Laur ence
Ables, Ron Ables of Ashville
spent a weekend with Mr. and
Mrs. Jack Ables and were
Sunday dinner guests or Mr .
and Mrs . Charles Congo at
Portland .
Mrs. Lillie Hart and
children, Brice and Beth Ann,
Mr . and Mrs. Allen Cun-

Creek band receives
•
superior mark zn district

For the third straight year,
David T. Phillips' Kyger Creek
Symphonic Band received a
superior rating Saturday at the
District XVII Competition at
Portsmouth High School.

Band was the only county
district band participating.
Judges were Robert Griep,
Robert Neumann, Clair Miller,
and R. H. Zepp. Their comment.&lt;; were that the band
Overall, the band received played well lor its small size,
three firs t place voles and a the band had good muscianlwo or excellent rating in sight ship, good balance, good in·

Keep money in a safe sure place by opening a savings

Easter , Vinton, a son .

Mr. and Mrs. Robert Manley ,
Bidwell, a daughter.
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Mitchell, Hamden, a daughter.
Mr. and .Mrs. Arthur Silva,
Pt. Pleasant, a son.
Saturday
Mr . and Mrs . Clarence
Gille nwa ter , Beaver , a
daughter .
Mr. and Mrs . Richy Pendleton, Radcliff, a son .
Mr. and Mrs. Burl Tennant,
Mason City, a daughter.
Mr . and Mrs . Gary Thivener,

Gallipolis, a daughter.
Sunday
Mr . a nd Mrs . William
ningham of Racine visited Beagle, Cheshire, a daughter .
Sunday with Mr . and Mrs.
Mr . and Mrs. Frank Carlson ,
Gerald' Ha)man and Keith .
Jr ., J ackson, a son .
Mr s. Tocie Hayman visited
Mr . and Mrs. William
her brother, Mr . and Mrs. Hurl ow. Gallipolis, a son .
Wallie Slover .
Mr . and Mrs. Lewis Pickett
of Middleport spent Sunday
with Mr . and Mrs . Charles
Pleasant Valley Hospital
Michaels.
DISCHARGES - Charles
Mr . and Mrs. Herbert Roush Wright Jr .,_Middleport; Ollie
entertained Sunday at dinner Candill , Gallipolis; William
Mr . and Mrs . Roger Roush, Browning, Gallipolis; Mrs .
Mrs. Iva Orr, Sharon and William Harris , Buffalo;
Cindy Roush . The occasion was Marian
Thomas ,
Poin t
Mrs. Orrs' 70th birthday . She Pleasan t; Arle Thornton , Point
was presented a cake Pleasant; Mr.s. Earl Cragdock,
decorated in gold, blue and West Colwnbia; Mrs . John
white with
Happy Birthday Barker, Point Pleasant ; Mrs.
Iva
by Mrs. Roger Roush . Jesse McClure, Letart; Ronald
Mr . and Mrs. Homer Warner White, Cheshire ; Mrs. James
were shopping in Parkersburg Marsh, Point Pleasant; Mrs.
Monday .
Howard
Pullins,
Point
Mrs. Herbert Roush. Mrs. Pleasan't ; ~rs. Irene While,
Roy Donohew visited Mr . and Point Pleasan t ; Slephahie
Mrs. Ott Boston at Racine Parsons, Henderson; Mrs .
George Love, Point Pleasant ;
Miss Lorna Bell and friend, Mrs . Clarence Sturgeon,
Geri Acridina, of Colwnbus Vinton ; Robert Errett, Point
spent Wednesday night and Plea sant ; Emma Fisher ,
Thursday
with Lorna' s Gallipolis ferry ; Mrs. Roy
parents, Mr . and Mrs. Don Mayes, Robertsburg; Rhoma
BelL
Tayl or , Gallipolis ; Roy
Bert Hunt had major surgery Daniels, Crown City; Leroy
at Veterans Memorial Hospital Elliot, Gallipolis; Mrs. David
Monday.
I Markham and daughter ,
Mrs. Iva Orr, Mrs. Dale Vin ton , and Mrs. Norman
Dutton were Gallipolis visitors McBrayer, Poin t Pleasant.
Tuesda y. Mrs . Orr consulted
her doctor at Holzer Medical
Center.
INSPECTOR NAMED
COLUMBUS !UP! )'
Richard G. Nuss was named
today deputy inspcclor in
charge of county and township
audit.&lt;; to succeed Glenn A.
Buller, who is retiring, sl&lt;lte
Auditor Thomas E. ferguson

a long term savings certificate? And now . . . for added

•

assurance . , , savings depo_sits are insured for up to

FIRE DOUSED
RUTLAND - The Rutland
fire Dept. answered a call at
1:~5p . m. Sun&lt;\ay to extinguish
a minor brush fife near the
Leading Creek substation in
Rutland.

$40,000. It's comforting ...
Note to Senior Citizens
All Senior Citizens 65 i!nd over qua lily for our
FREE Checking Account Service . May we serve
you!

I

~

•

Farmers Bank &amp; Savings Co.
FEDE~!~=~~ERVE .~FMDp
oo; oo dnou•.~~

' OIJ WHICH FLCOI&lt;.
I'D FIND NIE/.l'S

~

'

SijQeS

wedding anniversary of the

.._ _;&lt;-

-J

~~~

)

.•-.:. - o··,.

DIVORCE GRANTED
Johnell&lt;l June Pearson has
been granted ·a divorce from
Bartow Edward Pearson on
charges of gross neglect of

'

Middleport Village Council Monday night approved a plan to
Ouot;idate tbe village water supply in the near future .
Mayor Fred Hoffman said a representative of the Ohio
Department of Ho!Blth has informed him the cost would be $3,350
with the state to pay 80pct. of thalfigure and the village 20 pet. or
S670. In addition, the state will pay $500 to the village ror the
installation of equipment and provide a six-months supply of
fluoride.
F1uoride in drinking water helps prevent tooth decay, dental
(l'ofessional agree, and the costs to the village of a year will be in
the neighborhood of $200 for the program .
Council members present, Marvin Kelly, Carl Horky, James
Brewer and William Walters voted unanimously to proceed with
the program,
Council again reviewed the "poor" financial condition of the
village. It was agreed, apparently, that programs are going to
have to be curtailed or income must be increased.

C.1inton Gilkey of Albany
called on Guy Bolen on Sunday
Mr . and Mrs. f . 0. Whaley
left Tuesday morning for

Burlington, Ala. to visit the
Don Updegraffs.
Howard Gilkey, who drives
for the Mason and Dixon

VOL XXVI NO. 241

Lawrence

Douglases

By MICHAEL KEATS
BEIRUT !UP!) - King
Faisal of Saudi Arabia, the
most moderate or Arab leaders
and one of the world's most
powerful monarchs, was
assassinated today by a
demented nephew in the midst
of a Moslem religious
ceremony.
His death threatened the
Middle East with a new crisis
that could have unforeseen
effects on future oil prices.
Faisal-a world traveler who

halftime ol the Class AA
Championship game Saturday
night as a nominee for enshrinement in the Naismith
Memorial Basketball Hall of
Fame in Springfield, Mass., lor
meritorio~s service to high
school athletics.
The nominees are selected

by the state board of control of
the Ohio High School Athletic .

Assri.

;..· _.

Nolan, better known as
"Swackie" to his legion of
friends, was born Jan. 11, 1909,
son of the late Phillip and Etta

Reid Swackhamer. His father,
a Iarmer deputy sheriff, was

well known in Republican
circles. Abrother, George, still
resides in Laurelville.
Swackie, who is planning to
retire at the end of the current
school year, is one of three men
in Ohio ever to coach sl&lt;lte
championship teams in two
major sports.
His mighty Glenford Golden
Horde Cagers, sparked by the
talented Dick Shrider, reached
the Class B Sl&lt;lte Tournament
three consecutive years in 193940-41 and finally won all the
·marbles in 1941.
Sixteen
years
later,
Swackhamer piloted the
Middpeort Yellow Jakcets to
the 1957 Class B Slate baseball
championship, the first Sl&lt;lte
ti tie ever for a member of the

ews .. in Brief

on

Sunday.
Mrs . Kathryn Althouse sold
the Bolin house in Downington

to her son.
Mr . Harold Ball visited his
sister and brought her a
hospital bed so she can care for
her husband more easily.

"Better cut down on thy daily bread, Reverend!"

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

By United Press International
WAR IN INDOCIIIN A AND TilE FEAR Of WAR in the
Middle East helped deal the stock market one of its biggest set·
backs in four months Monday, according to Wali Street analysis.
The stockmarket has been one of the few sectors of the economyto show signs of strength this year.
The analyst.&lt;; blamed Monday's drop in prices on the failure
of Secretary of State Henry Kissinger's Middle East peace
mission and rears of another Arab-Israeli war and Arab oil
boycott. Increased war activity in Indochina also discouraged
investors, they said. The Dow Jones industrial average, a key
index of New York Stock Exchange prices, plunged 19.63 point.&lt;;
to 743.43, its worse loss since it fell 22.69 on Nov. 18, 1974, when
Middle East tensions also played a role.

WASHINGTON - NEGOTIATORS SEEKING A compromise tax cut bill made almost no progress Monday in their
first meeting, held in such secrecy that the House and Senate
chairman sneaked out a back door afterward. Final
congressional passage could be pushed beyond an informal
Wednesday deadline unless the two sides can come to grips with
the major issues separating the House's $19.9 billion cut and the
Sel1\lte's cut, now estimated at $34.3 billion.
There are offsetting l&lt;lx increases for big oil companies, so
the net reduction in laxation is $17.6 billion in the House bill and
$30.6 billion in the Senate bill. President Ford originally proposed
a cut of $16 billion. Treasury Secretary William Simon was
reported to have told the closed conference Ford would veto the
bill if the Senate version prevailed.

Select Your

Easter Outfit
NOW!
.SPORTSWEAR
eDRESSES
ePANTSUITS
eCOATS
eJEWELRY
.HANDBAGS
eSCARFS
eHOSIERY

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

NEW YORK- A COMPANY EXECUTIVE says Mobil Oil
Co. will move out of the United States if tax bill amendments
removing tax credits on foreign oil income become law.
·
Hennan J, Schmidt, Mobil vice chairman, told a news
conference Monday that Mobil, a U. S. corporation for more than
100 years, "certainly would" have to move out of the country if
the amendment, paSS\lll by the Senate last week, is enacted. "We
would have to take every step we could to get out ol U. S.
jurisdiction, and that certainly is not in the national interest,"
Sclunidt said.

\'

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY.

DA NANG, lDUTII JIETNAM - South Vietnamese troops
• began abandming the former imperial capital of Hue today in a
World WarD Dunkirk...tyle evacuation. Western diplomats said
· the retreating troop.!! bo8rded boats under fire at the nearby port
of Tan My for the trip down the coast of tbe South Olina Sea to Da
- (Continued on page 8)

.,

•

entine
Interest.~

,

.

"

••

of The Meigs-Maso11 Area

TUESDAY, MARCH 25, 1975

Southeastern Ohio Athletic
League. The Yellow Jackel&lt;;
finished with a perfect 15-0
mark .
Swackie played three years
of varsity basketball at
Laurelville, even though he
was only 5-5. In 1926, he entered
Ohio University, where he
majored in physical education
and played varsity basketball
three years and varsity tennis
two years.

His lirsl coaching and
teaching job was at Adelphi
High School, just around the
corner from his natlve com-

munity.
Swackhamer coached
basketball and baseball at
Glenford from 1932 to 1943 and
then was out of the coaching
profession until 1956.
He returned tb - basketball
and baseball coaching at
Middleport and his first
baseball club took the '57 State
crown. He also coached golf at
Middleport and Meigs from
1961 to 1974.
He played eight years of
semi-pro basketball after
graduating from OU, and of.
ficiated high school basketball
for 25 years and Ohio Conference basketball for two
years.
Swackie
is
currently
teaching American History
and serving as assistant

athletic director at Meigs High
School. He and his wife,
Lucille, reside in Mason , W.
Their son, Richard ,

Va.

coaches junior high basebalL

HUNT ASSURED
MASON - rown council will
sponsor an Easler Egg Hunt
Easter Sunday at 1:30 p.m. at
the city park. Mrs. Charlotte
Jenks, chairwoman, said the
Key Club or Wahama High
School will hide the eggs and
children up to 14 years old are
eligible to hunt.

once tipped a Boston l&lt;lxi
driver with a $3,000 wristwatch
- had been both prime
minister and foreign minister.
He was succeeded to the throne
by his younger brother, Crown
Prince Khalid, 62 who had
served as first deputy prime

PRICE 15'

great loss to the American
position in the Middle East.
U.S. milil&lt;lry personnel in
the Persian Gulf area already
had been on ready status and
the Pentagon said the

assassinaion prompted no

immediate change.
All radio stations in the Arab
minister.
Saudi Arabi's official Radio world interrupted their normal
Riyadh, monitored in Beirut, programs to announce Faisal's
said the 70-year"ld Faisal was death and all immediately
shot several times by his switched to readings of the
nephew Prince Faisal bin Korari1 the holy book of Islam.
Musaed. The shooting occurred Many went into officiHl mourwhile the King, the spiritual ning, and a meeting of the Arab
leader of Saudi Arabia, was ~ague Council in Cairo to
holding court on his gold- consider action against Israel
upholstered chair in the mir- was suspended.
The Arab nations had hailed
rored hall of his palace on the
occasion of the birthday of the faisal as a leader of the oil
producing states which imProphet Mohammed.
The broadcast said the posed an embargo during the
prince was "mentally unsound, 1973 Middle East War, a move
had acted on his own and was that dealt a devastating blow to
not driven by anyone ." It said the Western economy. Saudi is
the prince approached the king the third oil producing nation
to express his greetings and after the United States and the
'
that "when he got near the king Soviet Union .
The oil embargo quadrupled
he fir.ed several shots at his
oil
prices and meant Saudi
majesty and wounded him."
Arabia
earned $28.9 billion last
Robed attendants, each
bearing giant scimil&lt;lrs, ap- year by selling one-firth of all
parently were too surpr,ised to the oil consumed by non·
Communist COWl tries.
act.
A sobbing announcer said
later Faisal died in a hospital
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
of his wounds.
Thursday
through
Secretary of Sl&lt;lte Henry A.
Kissinger, a friend of the
monarch who conferred with

him only last Wednesday,
rushed to the State Department
the moment he heard the news.
A
State
Department
spokesman called the death a

Bridge bids

~:~u~~::rc~::!~ !:~~h:~::;

frtday and then clearing
Saturday. Highs wtll be In
the 40s Thursday and upper
40s and low 50s friday and
Saturday. Lows wtll be In the .
low and mid 20s Thursday
morning and In the 30s
Friday and Saturday.

AWARD WINNERS - These Southern High Schooi .FFA members were recognized for
their outstanding ff Aachievements at a banquet at the high school Saturday night, March ~2.
first Row, 1-r, Dave Kiser, $50 bond as Sl&lt;lr Greenhand and a trophy as Uvestock Award
winner; Debbie Weddle, $10 for scholarship award; Don Shaffer, $5D bond, State Chapter.
farmer Award and $10 lor Leadership award; back row, Dave Roush, $10 for Cooperation
award; Tim Smith, trophy lor Crop Production, and Bob Spurlock FF Aadvi"!'r,

A ...o bs mo b-z·lz.zz·ng
I U

By United Press International
Egypt has called on the Arab
wol'ld to mobilize against
Israel. Israel has vowed to
stand alone against threats and

In Cairo, Egyptian Foreign
Minister !small Faluni asked
the 20-nation Arab League
Monday night to strangle
Israel economically and
Hayman,
Rt. 2, Racine , who politically.
COLUMBUS - Bids for
He blamed Israel for the
replacing the deck, sidewalk was taken to Veterans
Memorial
Hospital
with
a
collapse
or Secretary of State
and lighting system on lhe US
possible
back
injury
.
He·nry Kissinger's recent
33 bridge over the Ohio River
peace mission and accused the
at Pomeroy will be opened
Jewish
state or "playing with
here, April 29, by the Highway
CONCERT TONIGHT
words"
instead of negotiating.
Division of the Ohio Depart-'
MASON - }\'ahama High
" In the face of this Israeli
ment ol Transportation. Tol&lt;ll School's annual Spring Band
arrogance,
we must escalate
programmed estimate for the concert wtll be presented
the
campaign
to isolate Israel
project, including engineering tonight by the senior and
and expel it rrom the internaand construction costs, is $1.5 junior high units In the
tional
community, the United
million. Pedestrian traffic will school gymnasium at 7:SO
Nations
and world societies,
be maintained during con- p.m. Selections will be
like
with
South Africa and
struction. Through US 33 presented
under
the
Rhodesia," Fahmi said.
vehicular traflic .will be routed direction ol Charles Yeago
In Tel Aviv, the Israeli
over Ohio 7 and W. Va. 2 vis and Thomas Phtlllps ranging
parliament
Monday voted in
silver Memorial Bridge at from serious music to
near
rare
unity
- 9M with six
Kanauga.
llroadway mw;lcals.
abstentions -lo back Prime
Closure date will be deterRex Howard and Cheryl
Minister Yitzhak Rabin's hanmined by the firm delivery Weaver wtll be featured in a
dling
of the Kissinger talks.
date for the new steel grid deck trumpet duet. The public Is
flooring . Estimated completion Invited.
date is Nov. 15, 1976.
~;::~·«&lt;=:·~me.ceae.~·~·

•
by April~
m

SUMMON SQUAD
RACINE - The Racine E-R
Squad was called Monday at
9:50 p.m. for Virginia

Fairfield will

vote on school
LANCASTER, Ohio (UP!) The fate of a 3.8-mill
multipurpose l&lt;lx levy for the
fairfield Joint Vocational
Sehool, defeated at the polls
twice before, will be decided by
fairfield County voters June 3.
The State Board of
·Education ha• ordered
esl&lt;lblishment of a vocational
school district in the county
before Sept. I.
If the measure does not paSs,

students from the six-fairfield
County school-districts will be
assigned to vocational school
district.&lt;; -in other counties and
Fairfield
County
will be forced
.
'
to pay tuition to those counties.

A RELAXED, INroRMAL·almo.!phere is stressed in the-adult classes bemg offered at
Meigs High Schoot ..This photograph was l&lt;lken in one of the sewing classes of Mrs. Susan
Miller. Eighteen adult education courses are being offered beginning April I. Registration is to
be held Wednesday, Thll1'9day and Friday at the high school, 8:30a.m. to 3 p.m. fl,lso those
interested may fill in the form running in today's Daily·Sentinel and mail it to Ray Goodman at
•1 the school. See table ofcour~ offeredJ!nd registration form On Page 2.

..

,

pressures.

LOCAL TEMPS
The temperature in downtown Pomeroy at II a.m. today ·
was 51 degrees under sunny
skies.

' \

For the first time in five
years, the hardline Likud
party, the major opposition
group in Israel, solidly supported the goverrunent.
Likud leader Menahem Begin urged total support
because "this is a serious hour

for our country and because of
tbis we mUBt make a supreme

effort to stand together against
tbreat.s and pressure."

Begin also appealed to
President ford to "remain
strong in your friendship to
Israel." In Washington, Ford
ordered a complete reexamination of U.S. policy
toward Israel.
Reminding
Arabs
of
"Egypt's strategic position,"
fahmi said Cairo will keep the
Suez Canal closed. The
waterway has been shut since
1967.
He also asked Arab oil states
to tighten the economic boycott
of companies doing business
with IsraeL He urged Arabs to
"mobilize their ablllties and
their many weapons" against
IsraeL"
Syrian Foreign Minister
Abdel Halim Khaddam joined
his Egyptian counterpart in
calling on the Arab world to
"mobilize all our capabilities

Princess to
be selected

to face our enemy."
Political sources in Cairo
said the Arab leaders may call
a summit conierence In ·
Somalia in June to plan the
next step in their conffontaUon
with Israel.
The Israeli newspaper Ha'aretz said today Israel complained agaln to the U.N.
Emergency Foree that Egypt
had violated the cease-fire
agreement in the Sinai. The
UNEF group is part of the
disengagement agreement
achieved by Kissinger in
January, 1974.
Ha'aretz said Egypt had
more than 100 heavy mortars
in the zone east of the waterway while the agreement
permitted only 36 large-caliber
weapons.

Telethon erred
.on directing
calls to Riggs
Due to an error, f.he business

phone number of Gene Riggs
was flashed on the TV screen
over the weekend fOr persons

in Meigs County to call to make
donations to the Easter Seal
Telethon.
Riggs said that while last
year he was chairman of the
Middleport • Pomeroy Rotary
participation in the telethon,
the club had no local role in it
this year. Therefore, using his
number was an error.

He said many calls were
The Meigs County Dait:y received by him personally and
Service Unit again is spon- over his answering service. He
soring a dairy princess contest advises that pledges have been
in Meigs County. This year's . sent to the Telethon and all
winner will be selected at a calls acknowledged.
dairy banquet April 9.
Higgs makes his apologies to
In order to enter the cqntesi, the public for any in·
a girl must have a dairy farm convenience.
background, must be at least 16
"The interest in Meigs
by June I, this year, and must County lor the Easter Seal
not be over 25 years of age as of program bas always been good
June I, 1975. She must be a high ahd everyone has always
school graduate by June I, this contributed generously to the
year . .
fund," Riggs said.
Application blanks are
Riggs also reported that ·
available by calling the Meigs , "Riggs Kadettes" will be in 1
County' Extension Office, 992· · Pomeroy Saturday to collect •
~895. All entrtes must be in the
lor the Easter Seal drive, the . &gt;I ·
County Extension Office by proceeds of )'hich will remain
-''&gt;pril I.
in Meigs County.
.. \;
~-

·'

I

• r

·'

property near the Rawlings and Son Co. Garage lot. These
meters were l&lt;lken out from the Third and Mill St. area whete
new apartment buildings are being constructed. Chase and
Police Chief J . J. Cremeans will work out details.
Chase advised eoucnil that the street sweeper is going to be In
ne ed or replacement parts costing at least $200 soon. He also
advised that the village will need a new backhoe and a ~w dump
truck within a couple years. Council discussed the manner in
which police officers may spend their $25 clothing allowance
given each lour months, and approved a second r.eading to an
ordinance providing for the continuance of the Columbus and
Southern Ohio Electric Co. to· collect from subscribers the funds
for street lighting in the community .
'

'

TRENTON, N.J.- WHAT TilE COURT did was tell the
little township of MoWlt Laurel, N.J., that its residential zoning
code cannot work just for the well-to-®. What its action may
mean is a key to opening suburbs to the poor throughout the
nation.
The New Jersey Supreme Court Monday struck down zoning
laws that exclude low- and middle-income housing, arid said
communities must .work to provide a wide choice of accommodations for poor and rich alike. Civil rights advocates said
the ruling is a weapon for poorer families to use to attack exci!ISionary zoning practices elsewhere. Suburban Action Institute, a Jl!lbiiC iriterest group seeking to open New York
suburbs
use the dl!!=ision
to prepare chalienges
to
.
' said it would
.
' .
zon~ laws tn New York and Corutecticut.

Shop the Main Store,
Annex and Warehouse
Weekdays 9:30 to 5 p.m.,
Fridays and Saturdays
9:30 to- 8 p.m.

markers .
It was decided to place parking meters on village owned

Saudi Arabia's Faisal slain

mitive sons, was honored at

by Gill Fox

overturned markers will be costly. It was pointed out that persons found guilty of such vandalism can be sentenced to 90 days
in jail and fined $750. Mayor Hoffman said that persons apprehended will be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law.
"Anybody who could do that, would do anything ," Coun-

cihnan Kelly said in reference to the overturning of the grave

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

Nolan P. Swackhamer ,
Meigs High Sehool educator,
one of Laurelville's best-known

SIDE GLANCES

Maintenarrce supervisor Harold Chase said replacement on the

•

Swackhamer honored

afternoOn .

near Columbus recently and hit
a bridge. He required seven
stitches in a head wound.
Mrs .. Glen Haning and
daughter, Dena Raymond of
Downington visited Ava Gilkey
Monday evening .
Mrs. Adrienne french is a
medical patient at Veterans
Memorial HospitaL
Raymond Douglas of Athens
called on the Robert Clarks
recently.
Mr. Althouse had an accident
near Facemire Carry Out near
Albany recently. He received
cuts and bruises.
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Williams
have purchased a new car.
Mrs. May Mason is visiting
her son, Russell and family in
Athens.
Mr. and Mrs. Murl Douglas
were dinner guests or the

Council studied a proposal' to redur(&gt; fhP vi11:1 pP voting

precincts from five to four as proposed by a member of the Meigs
County Board of Elections. Council voted w1animously that it
would prefer to leave the present voting precincts stand.
Councilman Kelly spoke on the need lor tile and limestone in
two locations but was told that the village has no funds for either
purchase.
,
Council again discussed vandalism occurring in the two
cemeteries on Middleport Hill where at least 20 tombstones have
been overturned in the Middleport Hill Cemetery and a nwnber
of markers have been shot with bullets in Riverview Cemetery.

Devoted To The

afternoon at Rutland.

trucking, had a wreck on ice

Clerk-Treasurer Gene Grate said the street maintenance lund
will be "in the red" by the end of this month. It was pointed out
that there is about $2,700 which cato be transferred to that fund,
but even with the transfer, it will be only about "even'·' at the end
of this month .
Rising costs were discussed, as were possibilities of reducing
general fund appropriations in order to provide additional funds
for the street maintenance fWld. It was agreed to hold a meeting
at 2 p.m. Sunday, April 6, for members of the finance committee
and clerk-treasurer Grate to discuss the financial picture of the
conununity at greater length.
Mayor Hoffman annoWJeed a representative of Floyd G.
Browne and Associates, the engineering firm of the community
on the sewage lagoon, will be present at the April 14 meetin-g to
discuss sewer lines in the town with counciL

at

p

I

•

Water fluoridation plan in Middleport approved

in Briefs

duty and extreme cruelty .

AT LEAST II die
COLUMBUS iUPI ) - The
Ohio Highwa y Patrol said
today at least II per'i(lns were
killed in weekend traffic accident.&lt;; aroWld the slate .

'

Harvey Erlewines Sunday

PACKTOMEET
Middleport Cub Seoul Pack
245 will hold its regular pack
. meeting Thursday, March 27 at
7 p. m. at the American Legion
Post Home in Middle~rt.

H Cf~A l D11'0St1 &gt;NSU UNCI (Q I'Otl l iOH

•
'

\

'

J.oin
with
the
:'FRIENDLY ONES"
in attending the church
of your · choice this
Easter Sunday-

MEMBER FDIC

SYSTEM

'

" Contentment makes poor
men rich ; discont e nt
makes rich men poor . "

POMEROY, OHIO

·Mrs. Frances Alkire and

Betty Bishop attended the 35th

• •

ann oWJced.

account here. For even more interest why not opt for
'•
•
'

also received a superior rating

NEWS

Tuesday evening.

Keep snowflres In
fop shape for next
Win fer by laying fltem
flat in a dry cool
place ... away from
electric motors fltaf
can prove harmful.

place his band in the slate
contest April 19.
Gallians will get a chance to
see the band April II at the first
annual Band-0-Rama at Kyger
Creek High Sehool. All county
bands including the Gallia
Academy High Band which

reading.
tonation, plays musically with in PorL&lt;;mouth, will perform.
The school's annual Spring
The band's warm .up tune good contrast and wi th exConcert is set lor friday, May
was " His Honor " by Henry pression .
Fillmore. Other numbers were
Direclor Phillips will now 16.
Veterans Memorial Hospital
"Glenwood" by Erickson and
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS " Lethbridge Overture" by
- Gra ce Whaley, f'omeroy; Polyhar.
Howard Richards , Jr .,. Tw enty-sev en bands parWaynesburg; Robert Steffel, ticipated. The Kyger Creek
Shade .
SATURDAY DISCHARGES
Continued from page 1
- Melissa Riggs, Hugh Bush,
Harrisonville
Nellie Durm , Margaret Justi ce.
casting."
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS In the television field, NBC was cited for five specials:
Society News
Ruth Steffel, Shade ; Erma
"Go!," ' 'IBM Presents Clarence Darrow," "The Execution of
Boothe, Racine ; Evelyn
Mrs. Norma Lee is helping Private Slavik," "The Law ," and "Tornado : 4:40p.m., Xenia,
Wea ver, New Haven ; Rhonda Mrs. frances Young .care for Ohio. "
Snider, Middleport; Lois her brother, Eugene Young.
Wolfe, Racine ; Ward Sayre,
POWERFUL THUNDERSfORMS RAGED OVER the
Mr . and Mrs. fred Diers of
Ra cine; George Turnbull, St. Paul, Minn., were overnight nation's midsection Sunday night, spawning tornadoes and high
Hartford; David Hubbard, guests of Mrs. Eugene Atkins winds and dwnping heavy rains which pushed already glutted
Syracuse; Debra Hager, and Ruby Diehl. They also rivers over their banks.
Cheshire; Milford Bailey, visited at the home of Mary
An elderly couple were injured when a tornado swooped
Athens.
down
on their lannhouse at Altona, Ill., SWlday night. The
Diehl and Mr. and Mrs. felix
SUNDAY DISCHARGES twister ripped out power lines and touched off a fire in the house,
Alkire.
Fannie Dewees, Homer Gilkey,
Mr . and Mrs. M. A. Epple injuring Louis John, 83, and his wife, Ingrid, 77, who were
Callie Metheny .
attended a church supper at hospitalized in serious condition .
Rutland on Monday evening .
li'Ir. and Mrs. Larry Clark,
Hulzcr Medical Center
Tamra,
Penny and Wendy of
Births
FUNNY BUSINESS
Chester
visited
the Bob Clarks
friday
' CAN 40J 1ELL ME.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles R. Sunday.

News.

'

'

•

•

•

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